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PageD6

.ENTERTAINMENT
Dolly Parton ·hungry for hits
Film
review:
'21' goes bust as
with 'Backwoods Barbie' CD
Vegas scheme ~ts on silly action
iunba~ limtf ·itntinel

BY JoHN GERoME

AP ENTERTAINMENT WRITER

NASHVILLE, Tenn.
Dolly Parton knows a good
investment -rhen she sees
one, and these days she sees
· one in the mirror.
·
Parton, whose business
portfolio includes a theme
park and an· entertainment
production company, says
she's spending a lot of her
own money trying to get back
on country mdio with her new
CD, "Backwoods Barbie."
"[' m looking at it like an
investment," she said recently. "I thought, 'I've made
enough money. l can afford
to invest a little in myself."'
For the first time, she selfreleased the disc on her own
label, Dolly Records, and
hired a seven-member promotions team.
Tbe dozen tracks, nine of
which she wrote, are her most
accessible in 15 years after a
trio of bluegrass albums, a
collection of patriotic songs
and a cover~ record,
"I purposely tailor-made
this to try to get some hits,"
Parton explained. "I would
have done this all along, but'
' I couldn't get anything
going and had to resort to
other music I loved."' ·
· The album reached No. 2
on Billboard in its second
week, her best showing in
l 7 years.
But the first single,
"Better Get to Livin' ," a
country-pop song· she
describes as sonically similar to Keith Urban, sputtered at No. 48.
'The problem with that
song is that it had. big neutral scores," said John Hart,
a Nashville-based market
researcher who tested it in
20 cities. "It never turned up
any real appeal to any of the
age groups."
The second single, "Jesus
&amp; Gravity," a gospel-flavored tune in the vein of
recent faith-based chart-toppers like '.'Jesus, Take· the,
Wheel"
by
· Carrie
Underwood and "Believe"
by Brooks &amp; Dunn, is just
now arriving at radio.
"With the right song
Dolly can absolutely have a
hit record," Hart said.
"There is an awareness of
her and a fondness for her." ·
Indeed, at 62 Parton
remains an icon. During a
recent interview at her office
she wore a purple dress and
clear high heel shoes with
her trademark wig and deep
cleavage. She joked and
laughed and told stories, and
you got the feeling she'd
have a played a song or two
if a guitar had been handy.
"I never did it for the
money. I always believed that
if I did it as. good as I hoped,
I would make plent;- of
money. But I'd still do 1t if l
didn't make any money at it."
She began in the late '60s
as Porter Wagoner's duet
partner and built a long and
successful recording career
that she parlayed into movie
roles, business ventures and
philanthropic programs.
Her DollywQOd theine park
in her native East Tennessee
ranks among the top tourist
attractions in the state. Her
children's literacy pro~.
Imagination Ubracy, is m 46
states, Canada and the United

Kingdom. Her entertainment
company,
Sandollar
Productions, has produced hit
TV shows like "Buff}' the
Vampire Slayer'' as l'ell as
the "Father of the Bride"
ftlms. ·
At times she' s been
ranked among the wealthiest female entertainers in
the world.
"I don't think there's anything that woman can't do,"
said rising country star
Keltic Pickler, who calls
Parton her greatest influence. "She just walks into a
room and lights it up. She's
got that 'it ' factor that
money can't buy. She's the
whole package.'
·
Parton is flattered to be
cited by young artists but
says it makes her feel· a little
old. Music Row began . to
lose interest in her in the
'90s as a new crop of country stars emerged. Her last
Top 5 hit, "Rockjn' Years,"
was in 1991 and she hasn't
had a major label record
deal in I 0 years.
"When it changed I was
still as serious as ever and
was thinking I'm still as
good as ever, if I ever was
any good," she re(Il3I'ked,
flashing the self-deprecating humor that's as much
part of her persona as. the
heavy makeup and gaudy
getups. (Her famous quip:
"It takes a lot of money to
look this cheap.")
In recent years she's
watched with interest as
new technology has created
opportunities without the
b1~ labels.
'Now the majors are what
they used to think I was:
history,"
she
says.
"Everything is going in a
new direction. Why not
jump on that bandwagon?
"I thought this is a good
time, but! need to make an
all-out effort. I saw severill
of the other people doing it
too and being successful.
Whatever it takes, you fight
for it. You do what you have
to do to feed your habit, and
I'm a music addict."
With the new album. she
pulls from many phases of
her career, from old-school
country to blues, pop and
gospel. She rounds things
out with a pair of cover
songs, the '80s pop hit "She
Drives Me Crazy" by the
Fine Young Cannibals and
the Smoky Robinson classic
"The Tracks of My Tears."
. She was set to launch a tour
in February but liad to postpone because of back problems'('Tm saying I bent over
to pick up a lucky penny and
my luck ran out," she cracks.)
While still a little sore,
Parton says she's feeling
better and rehearsing again.
She'll kick off her tour
March 28 in Los Angeles
and continue into August.
If she can return to radio, it
wouldn't be the first time a
country veteran has rebounded from a lpng dry spell. One
of her popular duet partners,
Kenny Rogel'S, hit No. 1 in
1999 with "Buy Me a Rose"
after a decade away from the
Top 10.
"I don't want to wait until
I'm dead for my music to
become important," Parton
says. ''I want it to happen
while I'm living because
I'm living it every day."

Cities worldwide
switch off lights to
raise awareness of
global wanning, A2

Swtday, March 30, 2008

In this image
released by
Sony
Pictures,
actors, from
left, Jim
Sturgess,
Jacob Pitts;
Liza Lapira,
Kate
Bosworth,
alid Kevin
Spacey are
shown in a ·
scene from
the film,

BY DAVID GERMAIN
M' MOVIE WRITER

The brainiacs of the gambling romp "21" are smart
enough to expertly count
cards at the blackjack table,
identify hot betting tables
and put on disguises so they
can take Vegas casinos to
the cleaners.
So why are these MIT
'scholars so dumb they fall
into . greedy, grubby plot
holes a C-minus Statistics
10 I student would have
seen coming a mile to the
Nth power away?
The movie's a morality
play preaching sophomoric
ethics - avarice, bad, clean
living and hard work, good.
Yet in doing so, the only
interesting thing "21" holds
up to the light is the gluttony the movie eventually
decries - money, booze,
fast living, the sheer intemperance of making a killing,
Vegas-style.
The characters are reprehensi~le at worst, seedy and
selfish at best. We'd aliiove
to cash in the way they do
and get a taste of the action, ·
but it makes for a thin night
at the movies to watch dreary strangers do it in our
place.
Moving from romantic
comedy into supposedly
heavier material, "Legally
Blonde" director Robert
Luketic takes on this adap- .
tation of Ben Mezrich's
book "Bringing Down the
House," an account' of real
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology students who
beat Vegas at the blackjack
tables.
The drJmatization of their
exploits centers on Ben
Campbell (Jim Sturgess, the
crooning romantic lead of
last fall's "Across the
Uniyerse"), a math whiz
who needs either a free-ride
scholarship or $300,000
hard cash to move on to
Harvard Medical School.
With the . scholarship
looking iffy, how convenient that one of his professors, the flamboyant Micky
Rosa (Kevin Spacey),
approaches Ben to fill an
open spot . on his blackjack
team, an extracurricular
activity for select students
.who spend weekends in
Vegas winning barrels of
cash by counting the cards
to determine the probability
of winning hands.
It's also convenient that a
lovely classmate the slightly
geeky Ben already has his
eye on, Jill Taylor (Kate
Bosworth), is a member of
the blackjack team. (Care to
predict the probability they'll
end up in bed together on one
of their Vegas visits?)
With Micky pulling the
strings, Ben, Jill and their
confederates cash in with a
vengeance before mean old
Mr. Greed makes them . all
start behaving like oafs.
Luketic and screenwriters
Peter Steinfeld and Allan
Loeb bring no grace or subtlety to the shift from team
spirit to me-first the characters undergo. Midway
through the movie: they
simply decide. that the fun's
over and everyone has to

I

~~~~~

start turning on one another.
The part of the heavy goes
to Laurence Fishburne as
Cole Williams, a tough
guardian for the casinos who
does not shy from using. his
knuckles to discourage cardcounters at his establishments. The filmmakers cannot decide whether to present Cole as a good · or bad
guy, so in the end, they just
make him another covetous
soul looking out for himself.
Spacey's fun to watch the
first half of the movie as
Micky mentors his proteges
on the joys of self-indulgence, but an abrupt switch
in his demeanor is shallow
and unconvincing. And we
never do learn why it is tha~
with the foolproof system
Micky's been employing for
decade~. he's still toiling in
the classroom rather than
sipping boat drinks in the
Bahamas.
This is the third movie in
short order in which Spacey
and Bosworth have costarred, following "Beyond
the Sea" and "Superman
Returns."
Bosworth is little more
than window-dressing here,
while Sturgess is merely
adequate as the naive young

"21".
AP photo

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
ro('FNTS•VcJI
,._ ~ , ,, • ~ ~'
·
~ .) /~ ' '

SPORTS
· • Xavier eliminated by
UCLA. See Page 81

f2MONTHS
SAME AS
CASH"

l\'1,\1'(11
'

u
:~ 1 , :!OOn

.

"\\\\ . ltl\(ta ih ..... ntiru·l. t•qiiJ

Grant to affect American Hydrogen
ed ·to split hydrogen from
nitrogen in the ammonia
molecule. Development of
ATHENS
-An this process into · fuel cells
Advanced Energy Grant could result in' a future,
recently received by Ohio alternative power source.
University will affect
The grant,· which is dis- ·
American
Hydrogen tributed by the Ohio
Corporation in ·terms of ' Department
of
research and development Development, was awarded
of its licensed ammoma cat- to OU in the amount of
$972,992 for its Facility for
alytic electrolyzer (ACE).
· The ACE, ·developed by the · 'Development and
OU Professor Dr. Geraldine Commercialization
of
Bottee PhD, reduces the Ammonia-Based
Fuel
amount of electricity need- Integrated Power project.
·

BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

The funds are for OU to create a "Center of Excellence
for .
Electrochemical
Engineering Technologies"
to be housed within its
existing Electrochemical
Engineering
Research
Laboratory.
According to · ODD's
press release, these funds
will enable further development of Bottee's , work
aimed at power generation
for residential and commercial buildings through the
use of the ACE.

Protesters
at AMP's
Columbus
.office ·
0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• Carl Keith Drummond
• Martha Hall

INSIDE

• Sauters places in
archery competition.
See Page A3
• Meigs spelling bee
set for Thursday. .
. See Page A3
.~ Red Hat Society outing
set. See Page A3
• For !he

DIANE POTTORFF

'Acting Wild' was the theme of
Saturday's youth theatl!r workshop
· hosted by River City Players at the
Church of Christ Family life Center
In Middleport. The Imagination
Factory's Joseph Wright from
Tucson, .Ariz., pictured, director of
the workshop, has presented programs to 35,QOO participants 'since
1993: Wright served for three
years as executive director of the
Ariel-Ann Carson Dater Performing
Arts Center in Gallipolis. The afternoon program was open to students in grades 3-12. Students
developed and rehearsed scenes,
reviewed other groups' performances, and per(ormed for family
· members at day's end .

NEW HAVEN, W.Va.A New Haven man will
learn his fate when he faces
a federal judge in'June. ·
R. Gregory Gibbs, 56,
faces 20 years in a federal
prison and a
fine
· of
$250 , 000
after
he
pleaded
guilty to one
count of mail
fraud March
19 in the ·
U.S. District
Court for the
Eastern
.
District of Virginia . in
Richmond, Va., according
to court docu.J;Ilents. He is
scheduled to appear in court
June 27 before U.S. District
Judge Henry E. Hudson.
Gibbs also has agreed to
make full restitution , a special assessment and serve
tbree years of supervised
release.
According to a media
release from the U.S. State
Attorney's
Office
in
Virginia, Gibbs allegedly
admitted he .engaged iri a
scheme to defraud numerous people who had invested in his company, Golden
Summit,
which
was
involved ·in a Foreign
Currency Market (FOREX)
"Ponzi" scheme.
Please see Pleads. AS

Record.

See Page AS
-. Meigs County Court
news. See Page A6

Coun~il

approves village
administrator contract
BY BRIAN

WEAffiER

J.

~EED

BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

MIDDLEPORT - The
Village of Middleport has
· contracted with a private
company . to provide a village administrator to oversee its public works . and
street departments. ·
Faymon Roberts will begin
work in the village on
Thesday. The village will pay
$4,000 per month to ATS in
CinCinnati, who will be
Dolllla on ,.,., A8
Roberts' employer. The con,
tract period IS three years. .
Middleport
Village
Council approved the cqntract at a special meeting
last week.
.,
2 SECI'IONS - 12 PAGES
. The village has been
without an adminAnnie's Mailbox
A3 operating
istrator since October, when
Bradford
Anderson
Calendars
A3 resigned.
Mayor Michael
said· the contract
Classifieds
83-4 Gerlach
arrangement between the
village and ATS will save
Gomics
Bs the
village between $10,000
and
$12,000 per year over
Editorials
A4 employing
an admininstrator
and
paying
Obituaries
As wages and benefits:full-time
~ports
BSection . Gerlach said Roberts will
continue to work for the
Weather
A6 Town of Buffalo, W.Va.,
operating the water plant
@ aooB Ohio Volley PubU.hlna Co. , there. He said Roberts'
I

Bv

· .Brlan J. Reed/photoe

Please IH Protest,. AS

Plains where the company ·
hopes to commercially. produce the fruits of Bot tee's
research of · which it holds
the worldwide license. The
ACE is said to result in "pollution-less power," according to a company official.
The facility is estimaied
to create I00 jobs in the
region with hiring to begin
in June. For those interested
i.n employment, email
· resumes
:
to
Jobs@ AmericanHydrogen
Corporation.com.

OO'OTTORFF@MYOAILYREGISTER.COM

BY BETH SERGENT
COLUMBUS
-On
Friday, around 35 environ. mental activists protested at
the corporate offices of
American ·
Municipal
Power-Ohio in Columbus to
demand a meeting with
CEO Marc Gerken about
the company's plans to
build a coal-fired power
plant in Letart Falls. Ke?t D. Carson, co~u­
mcallons ,director With
AMP-Ohio, said Gerken
agreed to meet with two of
the protesters while others
waited outside with signs.
Carson said the protesters
were ultimately de111anding
time to make a presentation
in front of the company's
board of trustees. Carson
said Gerken poin~ out that
wasn't his call to make, that
decision fell to the chairman
of the board.'
However, Carson said
Gerken told the protesters
he would make the request
to the board on their behalf
and although he couldn't
guarantee it, he felt "reason,
ably sure" the protesters
would be permitted to make
a presentation. This presentation, if approved, would

OU was one of 17 entities which received $12
million in Advance Energy
Grants, also known as Ohio
Third Frontier Awards.
Awards for advanced emergy were selected from the
wind, solar, alternative
fuel, energy storage and
instruments, controls and
electronics sectors.
American
Hydrogen
Corporation has committed
to; opening . a production
facility in the East Meigs
Industrial Park in Tuppers

New Haven
man pleads
guilty to fraud

BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX

SPRING
SPECIALS JUST
IN TIMf FOR
YOURINCOMf
TAX RfTURNS! .

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2Bed/2 Bath 14x70 Only $14,900
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'1 111'·"'' 11\'
·

·•

genius seduced by corrupt
Lack of originality is
influences .
· ·
where "21 " really deals a
The production has plenty losing hand.
of style and flash, but the
'"21," released by Sony's
Vegas imagery is obvious Columbia Pictures, is rated
and rather tired from PG- 13 for some violence;
overuse after all those and sexual content includepisodes of the original · ing partial nudity. Running
"CSI" and the "Ocean's time:· lJ 8 minutes: Twtl
F.leven" movies.
stars out of four.

Dupler Sales .Inc.

Remains in Iraq
identified as
Ohio soldier's
missing since '04, A6

'

"

hours will fluctuate depending on where he is needed
most and what projects are
underway.
Gerlach
comme11ded
Roberts for his credentials.
The Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency requires
Class I and II operating
licenses for water testing
and operating water and
sewerage systems. Roberts
ha~ a Class III license,
·Gerlach said, demonstrating
a higher level of training.
"Th,e . water and sewer
committee, council and I
have much confidence in
(Roberts') education and his
knowledge, and his ability
to ove1see the departments,"
Gerlach said.
"This village has been
playing catch up for years
with infrastructure, and now,
we should be able to stay a
step ahead of the game,"
Gerlach said. "We're very
pleased that a village of this
_size can have a village
administrator with that level
of training and experience."
arrangement
"This
. should allow the village to
m'ake some real improvements and save ·money at
the same time."

Pklue 1M Contract, AI

Easter egg hWit
The annual Easter egg hunt of the
Pomeroy Merchants Association, postponed a week due to inclement weather.
was held Saturday at Bob Roberts Field.
The Easter bunny was.there togreet the
children and the 1700 eggs scattered. on
the field for the preschoolers and around
the bl~acbers and stadium for the older
children ware quickly gathered up and
turned in for prizes. While the number of
youngsters attending was way down this
ye'ar, there was plenty of excitement for
those who came. Here the Easter bunny
greets four-year old Nathan iel Hysell of
Rutland just before Dixie Sayre gives the
signal starting the egg hunt.
c:toaoleM Hoefllch/photM

�•

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Monday, March 31, 2008

Fierce debate expected
over administration plan to
revamp fmancial regulation
in credit markets, this has
been a process that has
been going on for a year,"
WASHINGTON In said
David
Nason,
proposing the broadest Treasury's assistant secreoverhaul of financial over- tary for domestic finance.
sight since the Great "These are very complex
Depression,
the
Bush issues that require a senous
administration has kicked amount of debate."
off a fierce debate. It ·pits
Treasury began work on
those eager to revamp an the review in early 2007. It
antiquated system against came in response to coman 1 mdustry opposed · to plaints from the financial
excessive regulation.
serviCes industry that .U.S.
The administration is businesses were losing their
APphoto aware of the hardening edge in global competition
The Chicago skyline at 7:56 'pm CDST before the World Wildlife Fund's Earth Hour event in Chicago Saturday. The envi· lines. The 200-page plan because of over-regulation
ron mental group WWF urged governments, businesses and households to turn back to ·candle power for at least 60 min· set for release Monday by Washington.
Tbe yearlong review proutes Saturday starting at 8 p.m. wherever they were. Several U.S. cities including Chicago and Atlanta participated and comes with the financial
system
in
the
midst
of
the
duced a plan calling for the
symbolic darkouts or dimmings_of monuments.
·
most severe credit crisis in greatest changes in finantwo decades.
cial regulation since many
That crunch has meant of the current oversight
billions of dollars of losses institutions were created in
for big banks and invest- the I 930s.
merit houses. It has caused
The Federal Reserve
the near-collapse of the would be a big winner, gaincountry's fifth
largest ing new powers to serve as
year- the city's two archi- minating floor after empty investment bank, made it the protector of stability for
that fuel climate change.
BY CARYN RoussEAU
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
In Chicago, lights on tectural icons, the Opera floor of desks and idling harder for consumers and th,e entire tlnancial system.
businesses to get loans and The plan would abolish
more than 200 downtown House a.nd Harbour Bridge, computers.
_CHICAGO - From the buildings were dimmed faded to black against adra"The banks should have pushed the cpuntry to the some institutions such . as
· Sydney Opera House to Saturday night, including matic backdrop of a light- embraced this wholehearted- brink of a recession.
· the Office of Thrift
Rome 's Colosseum ·to the the stripe .of white light ning storm.
ly and they didn't. But it's a
The market turmoil has Supervision
am:)
the
Sears Tower's famous around the top of the
Lights also went out at the start. Maybe next year," said presehted an opening for Commodity
Futures
antennas in Chicago, tlood- John Hancock Center. famed Wat Arun Buddhist Cathy Flanagan, an Earth critics to make the case for Trading Commission; their
lit icons of civilization went The red-and-white mar- temple
in
Bangkok, Hour organizer in Dublin.
strong federal rules to crack responsibilities would shift
dark Saturday for Earth quee outside Wrigley Thailand; shopping and cuiIreland's more than 7,000 down on abuses that they to other agencies.
Hour, a worldwide cam- Field also went dark.
tural centers in Manila, pubs elected not to take part believe were at the heart of
According to a 22-page
paign to highlight the threat
Philippines;
several
castles
in
part
because
of
the
executive,
summary
"There's a widespread
the current crisis.
of climate change.
belief that somehow people · in Sweden and Denmark; risk that Saturday night revBut Treasury Secretary obtained by The Associated
The environmental group in the United States don't the parliament building in elers could end up smash- Paulson, who has led the Press, the Paulson plan
WWF urged governments, understand that this is a Budapest, Hungary; a string ing glasses, falling down effort to rewrite regulations, envisions · a three-stage
businesses and households problem that we're lazy and of landmarks in Warsaw, stairs, or setting themselves rejects that criticism.
process that would lead to
to turn back to candle wedded to our lifestyles. Poland; and both London on fire with candles.
"I do not believe it is fair establishing three main regpower for at least 60 min- (Earth Hour) demonstrates City Hall and Canterbury
J..ikewise,
much
of t¥" accurate to blame our ulatory agencies.
utes starting at 8 p.m. that that is wrong," Richard Cathedral in England.
Europe- including France, regulatory structure for the
The Fed would sit at the
wherever they were.
Moss, a member of the
Gret;ce, an hour ahead of Germany,
Spain
and current turmoil," &lt;~ccording top with expanded responsiThe campaign began last Nobel Peace Prize-winning most of Europe, was the European Union institutions to a . draft of a speech he bilities as the "market stayear in Australia, and trav- Intergovernmental Panel on first on the continent to -planned nothing to mark planned to give Monday bility regulator." But the
eled this year from the Climate Change.and the cli- mark Earth Hour. On the Earth J-{our.
when he outlines the admin- Fed would lose its current
South Paci fie to Europe to mate change vice president isle of Aegina, near
internet search engine istration's p(oposals.
powers over bank holding
North America in cadence for WWF, said in Chicago Athens, much of its popu- Google lent its support to
In interviews over the compantes.
with the setting of the sun.
on Saturday.
The proposal would comlation marched by candle- Earth Hour by blackening its weekend, administration
"What's amazing is that
Workers in Phoenix turned light to the port. Parts of normally white home page officials sought to frame the bine the five agencies now
it"s t~anscending political out the lights in all down- Athens itself, includlng the and challenging visitors : proposals as an effort to responsible for regulating
boundaries and happening town city-owned buildings floodlit city hall, . also "We'veturnedthelightsout. devise a system that would banks. thrifts and credit
in places . like China, for one hour. Darkened turned to black.
Now it's your turn."
help keep U.S. companies unions into a single regulaVietnam,
Papua
New restaurants glowed with canIn Ireland, where environAssociated Press · writers competitive in an increas- tory agency.
Guinea," said Andy Ridley, dlelig)lt in San Francisco mentalists are part of the . Shawn . Pogatchnik
in ingly connected global
The powers of the
executive director of Earth while the Golden Gate coalition
government, . Dublin, Ireland; Tanalee economy.
Securities and Exchange
Hour. "It really seems to Bridge, Coil Tower and lights-out orders wen\ out Smith in Sydney, AustraliiJ;
"Despite the ·fact that Commission would go into
have resonated with any- other landmarks extin- for s.cores of government and · otfier AP reporters there will be a temptation a super agency responsible
body and everybody."
guished lights for ·an hour.
buildings, bridges and mon- wofldwide contributed to to view this through a lens for business conduct and
Earth Hour officials hoped
New Zealand ·and Fiji uments in more· than a this report.
of Y{hat is happening now consumer protection.
100 million people would were first out of the starting dozen cities and towns.
But the international
turn off their nonessential blocks' this year. And in
banks
and brokerages of
lights and electronic goods Sydney, Australia - where
for the hour. Electricity plant&gt; an estimated 2.2 millioo . Dublin's financial district
produce greenhouse gases observed the blackout last blazed away with light, illuBY MARTIN CRUTSINOER
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

Cities worldwide switch off lights to
raise aWarene~s of global wanning

AP NEW·S ANALYSIS

Conflict between government,
al-Sadr show.the realities of IraqBY ROBERT

H. REID

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRI TER

BAGHDAD - The Iraqi ·
capital locked r;Iown by curfew. U.S. dipfomats holed
up their workplaces, fearing
rocket attacks. Nearly every
major southern city racked
by turmoil. Hundreds killed
in less than a week.
A declaration Sunday by
· Shiite cleric Muqtada alSadr to pull his Mahdi
Army fighters off the streets
may help bring an end to the
wave of violence that swept
Baghdad and Shiite areas
after
the
government
launch ed a crackdown
against militias in Basra.
That will ease the violence which has claimed
more than. 300 lives. But it
won ' t bring an end to the
power struggle between
Shiite panies that triggered
the confrontation.
Nor will it ensure government control of Basra,
Iraq 's 'econd- largest city
and headquarters of the vital
oil in dust r\.
And it ,:ould leave Prime
Mini ster 1\••uri ai-Maliki
poiiticall y \l'c,lke ned because
he put hts presuge on the hne
with 'promi ses to crush
Basra's "criminal gangs."
some of which he said were
"worse than al-Qaida."
The
crackdown
has
already dragged the United
. States into a bloody ·inner• Shiite fight at a time when
the U.S. administration
would prefer to talk about
succe ... ~

e x f rl'llll

'·ttl''-1
1

)tt nni
lllat

&gt;"tl1'

Iraq " illl.l il) 1&gt;11 he r&lt;•c~ll tu
stabi I ity.
·
ln~t e ad. the bloody confrontation ~e rvcs a' a reality
check about the situation in

Iraq- even as the top U.S. goal was to weaken their
offici&lt;!Is in Baghdad prepare movement before· provincial
to brief a skeptical Congress elections this fall. AI-Sadr"s
for two days starting April 8 followers expect to make
about prospects for bringing major gains in the regional
home the troops and leaving · voting .at the expense of ala relatively stable country Maliki's Shiite partners in
the government.
behind.
That points to a signifiPresident Bush called the,
Basra crisis ·"a defining cant difference between the
moment" · because
the Shiite crisis and the war
Maliki-led Iraqi govern- agail\St Sunni insurgents.
ment was finally taking on Al-Qaida has been severe! y
the Shiite militias.
weakened because it lost
But the crisis speaks vol- much of its support within
umes about the reality of the Sunni community.
By contrast, ai-Sadr's
Iraqi society and raises new
questions about the effec- movement commands a
tiveness of the country's wide following especially
impoverished
leadership as · America among
debates whether continuing Shiites who feel estranged
the mission here is worth from Shiite parties that
appeal more to the betterthe sacrifice.
Iraqi and American offi · educated urban classes.
For months, al-Sadr and
cials po'rtrayed the crackdown as a move to crush other Shiite parties have
outlaw militias - some been locked in a bitter
with close ties to lran power struggle for control
that have effectively ruled · of the Shiite south - which .
the streets of the country's contains the bulk oJ the
proven
second-la(gest City for near- country's
oi"l
ly three years.
reserves as .well as major
Many of those armed religious shrines that attract
groups are without question mi !lions of pilgrims.
deep into oil smuggling,
Last August, al-Sadr proextortion , murder and rob- c Iaimed a unilateral ceasebery.
fire nationwide in an effort
But the picture is more· to reorganize the force and
complex. It involves deep- rein in factions that had
seated rivalries within the branched O)lt into crime.
majority Shiite community.
U.S.
commanders
Numerous other militias acknowledge that truce
and armed groups operate in helped bring down violence
·
·
Basra and elsewhere in the irr Baghdad .
south - some with cl n\l'
\Jone thek''· U.S. and
ties to political parties in t!1,. lr·•· r• lm .,., L&lt; lll tinued to chip
national and provin· ·
J\va
i1
.;ddrists with
ernmcnts.
• 1 t1._1d nb•'
All signs ind,,
d lCrl
uflic111 h •J• • 1l 1he target wu
crackdown wa' &lt;Ji rcciLJ t'•,
marily at the Mahdi Armr, not ai-Sadr's ml)vement but
the armed wing of ai-Sadr s Iranian-backed renegades
political movement.
who did not abide by alSadr's
cease-fire.
The Sadrists believe the

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The
'

• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

REACii"()'IEFt 1B,OOO HOMES
·IN THE TRI·COUNTV AREA!
i

•

Advertising Deadline.~
MONDAY, APRIL 14, 2008
3:00PM
Insertion Date: ·
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16,2
.

BY THE BEND

Community Calendar
Public meetings

.

Monday, March 31, 2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Get child into safe environment

Library. Norma Torres to
review "Thirteen Moons"
by Charles Frazier. Hostess,
Dana Kessinger.
·
· Friday, April 4
POMEROY
PERI
Chapter · 74,
1 p.m.
Community
Mulberry
Center. Hal Kneen to talk on
container gardening.

Monday, March 31
Bv KATHY MITCHELL
·Jill in the room, and he it's there all the time - it who arrive with a larg&lt;'
RACINE Southern
crazily lunged for her neck. doesn't come and go with party and expect to be seatAND MARCY SUGAR
Local School Bo&lt;1rd, regular
I grabbed her, packed my my menstrual cycle.
ed promptly.
meeting, 8 p.m., high school
I talked to my doctor
Dear Annie: I wa:: mar- bags and we left. I have not
If you number more than
media room.
ried to "James" for seven spoken to James since that about it six months ago and four and are under time conPOMEROY -Veterans
years before our separation nijlht. Our lawyers are han- she said not to worry. I've straints, it · ~ a good idea to
Service Commission, 9
read a lot of stuff online that · make reservations or at least
.
m November. I have since · dling everything.
a.m., I 17 Memorial Dr.
My question is, how says my chance~ of having call ahead to see if the
filed for divorce.
.
PORTLAND- Lebanon
James was always loving could a man who wanted a breast cancer are pretty slim establishment can accom Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
and supportive. We both child so much do this to our and it's not unusual to have modate you .' A little planat the township building,
wanted children from the little girl? How do I deal lumps, but I'm still worried. ning and common sense can
Thursday, Aprii 3
'fuesday, April 1
beginning, but it took three with the guilt of knowing I I don ' t want to upset my leave you with nothing H•
POMEROY - Town hall years to get pregnant after could have stopped the mom by telling her about it. gripe about but the food. - ·
ALFRED ·Orange
. Township trustees, 7:30 · meeting on underage drink- going to numerous fertility abuse earlier if I had only So, should I be concerned'' Former Waiter
p.m. at the home of fiscal ing, 7 p.m., Meigs Hijlh clinics. When I finally gave paid more attention? · -Unsure
Dear Waiter: Thi ; i'
School .Cafeteria, special birth to our beautiful daugh- Kicking Myself
officer Ossie Follrod.
Dear Unsure: Lumps in tru e. although not everypanelists, guest speaker ter, "Jill," James slowly fell
Wednesday, April 2
Dear Kicking: It is diffi- or near the breast are fairly one has the foresight 't&lt;'
POMEROY
-Meigs Mike Trout of . Ohio into a depression.
.
cult to believe the person common and most are not make a reservation for ''
County Board of Health, 5 Attorney General's Office,
I work full time and you married could hurt cancerous. Your doctor la, t-minu te hite
afte r p.m.. Meigs County Health cl!unty-wid_e essay contest · James was left caring for · your child, which is why probably prefers to keep an an other
engagement.
Department, third reading wmners.
Jill. When she was 18 many parents are in com- eye on it rather t!Jan have " Disgruntled" was willing
Saturday, April S
amendments to sewage treatmonths old, I noticed bruis- plete denial when con- you submit to an invasive to wait 30 minute s, bu t
POMEROY - Free car- es. When I asked James fronted with signs of procedure like a biopsy, should have been warned
ment rules·, third reading
increase in food service oper- diovascular health fair, 9 to about them, he said he had abuse. It serves no purpose although it wouldn't hurt to that the slow turno ve r
a.m.
Mulberry no idea where they came for you to wallow in guilt get a second opinion if it . mi ght increase the llclay.
ation license fees in regards 11
Community
Center. from, so I ignorantly let it over the past. What's will put your mind at ease.
to vending machines.
Annie's Mailbox is .writ·
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Appointment needed for pass. Over the next year, I irrtfortant now is providing You should do regular self- tell by Kathy Mitchell and
Township Trustees, 6:30 lipid profile; no appoint- continued to see more bruis- Jil with a safe environ- exams, and if you noti~e Man·y Sugar, loiiJ:fime edip.m. at Pageville Townhall. ment required for other es. Finally, when Jill was 3 ment and seeing that she any change, notify your tors of the A1111 Umder.1
screening. Sponsored by years old and able to talk gets counseling to deal doctor immediately. You column. Please e-mail your
Holzer medical Center, clearly, she asked me why with the repercussions of won't upset your mom by questions to mmiesmailHealth Department, Meigs Daddy hated her. I was sur- the abuse, as well as the telling her. In fact, she may hox@comcast.net, 11r wrill'
Cooperative Parish.
prised and asked her why ·separation from a . father have some family history to: A11nie's Mailbox, 1~0. ·
she thought that. She said he from whom, despite every- information that could Box 118190, Chicago, IL
punished her all the time for thing, she may still want ·prove useful and, hopefully, 60611. 1ll ji11d out """"
Monday, March 31
reassuring.
hugging me and talking to love and approval.
about A1111ie 's Mailbox.
POMEROY - OH-KAN
me
too
much,
or
"because
Dear
Annie:
I
am
an
I
8Dear
Annie:
I
worked
in
and read features by other
·coin Club, 7 p.m. at the
Monday, March 31
year-old
girl
and
have
had
a
.
Mommy
loves
me
more
food
service
for
over
20
Creators Syndicate writen
Pomeroy Public Library.
POMEROY - Maxirie
'fuesday, April 1
Goeglein will celebrat~ her than him." Needless.to say, I lump in my \eft breast, near years and have some advice and cartoo11ists, visit till'
·
.. MIDDLEPORT
the armpit, for about eight for "Disgruntled in Denver"' Creators Syndicate Web
84th birthday tOday, cards was freaked out.
I confronted James with months. It doesn't hurt, but and other potential diners page at www.creaton.cqm.
Middleport Lodge 363, can be sent to 35610,
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. at the Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy,
·Middleport
Masonic 45769.
-Temple. Take non-perishSaturday, April 5
able food items for food
CHESTER
Erma
bank. Refreshments.
Cleland will observe her
Wednesday, April 2
95th birthday on April 5.
BY EUZABETH CRUMP
tant things like a home, edu- important to save for your two to three months before·
' POMEROY
The Cards may be sent to her at
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER,
Cation and retirement.
retirement- even if it's not your birthday, workers 2~
Middleport Literary Club, 2 P.O. Box 23, Chester, Oi)io ·
ATHENS orncE
Saving for retirement is a easy to pan with those extra and older receive· a Social
·p.m. at the Pomeroy 45720.
Security Statement in the
·
critical goal that sometimes dollars.
Social Security is proud gets forgotten in the day-toMany people believe that mail. The Statement gi ves
to be a part of the America day mana11ement of money. low- and moderate-income you an estimate, based on
Saves campaign.
Accordtng to financial families cannot afford to .· current earnings, of wha t
America Saves is . a experts, you will probably save and build wealth. Yet you might expect in Social
campa1gn . need at least 70 percent of research shows that there are Security retirement benefits.
nationwide
involving a broad coalition · your
annual
working "savers" and "spenders" in And by using our online
of more than 1,000 nonprof- mcome when you retire to all income levels and almost Retirement Planner, you can
it, corporate and govern- enjoy
a
comfortable everyone has the ability to personalize various financial
POMEROY Kelsey
ment
agencies,
groups
and
lifestyle.
For
the average build wealth over time.
scenarios to determine what
Sauters, a junior at Meigs
or~anizations. The cam- , American worker, Social
We at Social Security your individual retirement
High School, attended the
was
designed
to
help
Security
will
replace
about
·
sh~ tl:te goal of America
plan should look like. Visi t
pwgn
· state tournament of the
mdividu;lis
and
families
40
percent
of
his
or
her
preSaves:
to
encourage
all
t~e Retirement Planner m
National
Archery
save
and
build
wealth.
retirement
earnings.
The
Americans
to
save,
and
to
www.socialsecurity.gov/retir
Competition in the Schools
America Saves helps peo- remaining 30 percent . will help them do just that.
e2.
Program held in Columbus
You
can
also
use
the
free
For more i11jormatio11
pie
by
providing
inforrnaneed
to
come
from
pnvate
recently.
resources
provided
by
Social
1
•isit
.. www.wnericastion,
advice
and
encouragepension
plans,
savings
or
He took fifth place in the ·
Security.
Every'
year,
about
ave.nveek.org.
on
saving
for
impormvestments.
That's
why
it's
ment
high school level male overall competition consisting
of students from 29 high
schools in Ohio. The tournament was held in conjunction with the Arnold
ALFRED- Participation in the Foothills District UMW
.Sports Festival, headed by
spring
retreat to be held April 19 at the Crossroads Ministr)
California·Governor Arnold
· Kelsey Saut11111
Center in Lancaster was discussed at a recent meeting of
.
.
Schwarzenegger.
POMEROY - · The,ub- Adriahna Patterson, Ali the Alfred United Methodist Women held at the church.
Sauters will now compete Tournament to be held May
lic is invited to atten the Large, Jaden Wolfe, Lauren
Planning to attend from the Alfred group are Mary Jo
in the National Invitational I 0 in Kentucky.
annual
Meigs County Booth;
Barirnger, Mary Jo Buckley, Sarah Caldwell, and Janice
Grade
5
Spelling Bee on Thursday, Cheyenne
Gorslene, Weber. Barringer presided at the meting reading communiApril 3 at 7 p.m. at the Mitchell Howard, Katelyn cations from B. Chandler and 0. Kay Shaw of Granada
· Hill, Calif, .and Sun Sook Kim of Makoti City, Philippines
Eastern Elementary School. Hysell, Kelsey Hudson;
Forty participating stuMeigs Middle School: Officers' reports were given and it was noted that 136
nut bread and beverages.
RIO
GRANDE
dents in grades 4 through 8 Grade 6 - Courtney Holly, friendship calls had been made. Members signed birthda)
Registrati6n has begun for
''This event is a fa.vorite at
will represent Eastern Sara Klein, Sandra Pointer, cards fo.r Gary Stephenson, an associate in Mission' Servic&lt;'
the third annual "Country the farm because of these
Elementary School, Meigs Olivia Cremeans; Grade 7 at White Oak Center in Kentucky and for JoAnn SchaadtRed Hat Society Day" to be lively and enthusiastic ·Intermediate School, Meigs -Alyssa Cremeans, Megim Patterson, a mission~ry in Anchorage, Alaska.
held at the .Bob Evans Farm ladies," Leslie said of the
Thelma Henderson gave the mission report from the New
School,
and Dyer, Shana Gorslene,
Red Ha~rs. "We always Middle
May 17.
Southern ·
Elementary Madelyn Thomas; Grade 8 World Outlook magazine about lack of heath care and home•.
Pre-registration by May I look forward to having them School, after winning
Jennifer
Robinson, in Columbus. The anicle was written by Christie Ho1,1se, ediis required for the event, with at the Bob Evans Farm."
·Steven Mahr, Jeffrey Kimes, tor of New World Outlook and Mari Sunami, executive
spelling
contests
within
The Red Hat . Society
a limited number of seats
director of South Side Settlement' House of Columbus.
1Yler Dunham;
available, said Bob Evans "began as a result of a few their individual schools.
which is a United Methodist-community institution.
Southern
Elementary:
Students
representing
the
Farm assistant manager of women decidin~ to greet
One of the big areas of concern is the number of disabled
are:
Grade
4
Sylvia
Richards,
schools
events Gale Leslie. Open to middle age wuh . ve(ve,
adults
who have filed for disability benefits with Social
Eastern
Elementary: Maddy Quillen; Grade 5 "red and pink hatters," the · humor and e I an," according
Security
and have been turned down because they &lt;\re not
Grade 4 - Holly Johnson, Bethany Theiss. Jacob
day is hosted by the French to the society's official Web
Hoback; Grade 6 - Nathan disabled enough. They cannot .get health care and the)
City Red Hat Flashes. site. Noting that those in the Nick Combs; Grade 5 Melooey
Victory,
Morgan
Leamond,
Darien Diddle; show up_ at food pantries bm u'ually qualify for food
Activities are planned from society share a "bond forged
Chandler stamps tf they have. the wherew1thal to apply and nav1gatc
I0 a.m ..to 2 p.m.
by common life experiences Tackett; Grade 6 - . Erin Grade 7
the system, it was reported.
.
From I 0 a.m. to noon, and an enthusiasm for wher- Swatzel, Brandon Coleman; Drummer, Shelby Pickens;
It was noted that the community has approached the
Marshall Grade 8 - Cierra Bemenet,
guests may check in, tour ever life takes us next," the Grade 7
issue by implementing a pilot project to provide heath serAanestaad,
Derick
Powell;
Shelton.
·
Dustin
the Homestead Museum site says that "red hatters" are
The County Spelling Bee vices to people without insurance by connecting them t&lt;'
and new Quilt Exhibit, .take · ladies who have reached the Grade 8 - Aimee Watson,
is sponsoTP.d annually by the clinics and private doctors willing to provide services.
.wagon rides around the . age of 50, while those under Sam Levacy;
·Meigs
Intermediate Athens-Meigs Educational according to the anicle. It was also reported in the materi farm, visit the craft boutique 50 may be "pink hatters."
al that those providing services have very limited
Service Center (AMESC).
School:
Grade
4
To pre-register for the Red
for shopping and gift items
resources on wh1ch to operate.
.
Hat Society Day call the
and participate in games.
, "Peace: Journeying to Claim It"' was the topic of the
Games will include Red Bob Evan~ Farm at (740)
Easter themed program presented hy Osie Mae Follrnd. Al l
Hat bingo, Nervous Nellie, 245-5305, or write to the
members read the goal and prayer for the program and parCrack the Noodle, Ping farm at P.O. Box 198, Rio
ticipated with readings ahd an at·tivity and concluJcd b)
Pong Ball Toss and others, Grande, Ohio .45674-0198.
MARYSVILLE - Sherry Burke Hawley and Larry singing "Let There Be Peace on Earth ." /1. Lenten mission
The Bob Evans Farm in Lester, Jr. of 210 Woodcrest Drive, Marysville, announce offering was taken for the senior ·citi1.cn' Meal s on Whcds
all provide~ by the Carpe
southeastern "Ohio . was the birth of a daughter, Brielle Morgan Lester, Feb. 19, at program. Next meeting will be April R.
Diem Roses Red Hat Club.
A Bob Evans picnidunch home to Bob Evans, Memorial Hospital of Union Copnty. The infant weighed 8
will be served from noon to founder of Bpb Evans pounds, 15 ounces.
·
~ .) ~,.~,-~~
I p.m. and followed by Farms, Inc., his wife Jewell
Grandparents are Jerry and Joyce Burke, Reedsville and
-"·
A. ~&gt;••
/ / .• .
recognition of clubs and and their six children for Larry and Jennie Lester, Sr., Plain City; and Joyce Lester,
members. "Awards will be nearly 20 years. Today, its Plain City. The great-grandparents are Warren and
presented for the largest attractions incl11de the Charlotte VanMeter, Reedsville and Carlos and Angeline
c;:lub in attendance, the Red Homesteap Museum, an Robinette, Plain City.
·
Hatter and club traveling authentic log cabin village'a
me farthest, oldest Red hat- small ·· animal barnyard in
The Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center
ter in attendance and other addition to RV and primiTaking Applications
Preschool registration for the 2008-2009
. categories," said Leslie. In tive camping .
'
The Bob Evans Farm is
:addition, there will be a Red
sc~ool year will"be held Monday April 14,
Hat contest with first, sec- located in Rio Grande,
2008 at Bradbury Learning Center and
HUD Subsidized
ond and third place awards Ohio, on State Route 588,
April 28, 2008 at Southern Elementary.
Ettlclency/1 Bednoom
for "best use of a patriotic . just off U.S. Route 35. For
50yra or qualifying diMblllty
theme on a red hat.'
· more information out events
are necessary!
The registration fee is $ at the Bob Evans Farm, the .
Low _Income priority
To sc.hedule an appointment con{act
I 0 per person and includes a Homestead M,useum or
74Q-992-7022
.lunch of Bob Evans events at the farm, call
Betsy at 740-992-1740
Silverheels
Sausage sandwiches, chick- (800) 994-3276 or (740)
en sandwiches, cole slaw, 245-5305, or sit the Web
A Realty Company-I;HO
•
baked beans, chips, · banana site at www.bobevans.cQm.

. Other events

Clubs and
organizations

. Birthdays

America saves for retirement

. Sauters places in
archery competition

Meigs spelling bee Alfred UMW meets
set for Thursday

Birth announced

.

_,

..

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REGISrRA710N

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PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Monday, March 31, 2008

Fierce debate expected
over administration plan to
revamp fmancial regulation
in credit markets, this has
been a process that has
been going on for a year,"
WASHINGTON In said
David
Nason,
proposing the broadest Treasury's assistant secreoverhaul of financial over- tary for domestic finance.
sight since the Great "These are very complex
Depression,
the
Bush issues that require a senous
administration has kicked amount of debate."
off a fierce debate. It ·pits
Treasury began work on
those eager to revamp an the review in early 2007. It
antiquated system against came in response to coman 1 mdustry opposed · to plaints from the financial
excessive regulation.
serviCes industry that .U.S.
The administration is businesses were losing their
APphoto aware of the hardening edge in global competition
The Chicago skyline at 7:56 'pm CDST before the World Wildlife Fund's Earth Hour event in Chicago Saturday. The envi· lines. The 200-page plan because of over-regulation
ron mental group WWF urged governments, businesses and households to turn back to ·candle power for at least 60 min· set for release Monday by Washington.
Tbe yearlong review proutes Saturday starting at 8 p.m. wherever they were. Several U.S. cities including Chicago and Atlanta participated and comes with the financial
system
in
the
midst
of
the
duced a plan calling for the
symbolic darkouts or dimmings_of monuments.
·
most severe credit crisis in greatest changes in finantwo decades.
cial regulation since many
That crunch has meant of the current oversight
billions of dollars of losses institutions were created in
for big banks and invest- the I 930s.
merit houses. It has caused
The Federal Reserve
the near-collapse of the would be a big winner, gaincountry's fifth
largest ing new powers to serve as
year- the city's two archi- minating floor after empty investment bank, made it the protector of stability for
that fuel climate change.
BY CARYN RoussEAU
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
In Chicago, lights on tectural icons, the Opera floor of desks and idling harder for consumers and th,e entire tlnancial system.
businesses to get loans and The plan would abolish
more than 200 downtown House a.nd Harbour Bridge, computers.
_CHICAGO - From the buildings were dimmed faded to black against adra"The banks should have pushed the cpuntry to the some institutions such . as
· Sydney Opera House to Saturday night, including matic backdrop of a light- embraced this wholehearted- brink of a recession.
· the Office of Thrift
Rome 's Colosseum ·to the the stripe .of white light ning storm.
ly and they didn't. But it's a
The market turmoil has Supervision
am:)
the
Sears Tower's famous around the top of the
Lights also went out at the start. Maybe next year," said presehted an opening for Commodity
Futures
antennas in Chicago, tlood- John Hancock Center. famed Wat Arun Buddhist Cathy Flanagan, an Earth critics to make the case for Trading Commission; their
lit icons of civilization went The red-and-white mar- temple
in
Bangkok, Hour organizer in Dublin.
strong federal rules to crack responsibilities would shift
dark Saturday for Earth quee outside Wrigley Thailand; shopping and cuiIreland's more than 7,000 down on abuses that they to other agencies.
Hour, a worldwide cam- Field also went dark.
tural centers in Manila, pubs elected not to take part believe were at the heart of
According to a 22-page
paign to highlight the threat
Philippines;
several
castles
in
part
because
of
the
executive,
summary
"There's a widespread
the current crisis.
of climate change.
belief that somehow people · in Sweden and Denmark; risk that Saturday night revBut Treasury Secretary obtained by The Associated
The environmental group in the United States don't the parliament building in elers could end up smash- Paulson, who has led the Press, the Paulson plan
WWF urged governments, understand that this is a Budapest, Hungary; a string ing glasses, falling down effort to rewrite regulations, envisions · a three-stage
businesses and households problem that we're lazy and of landmarks in Warsaw, stairs, or setting themselves rejects that criticism.
process that would lead to
to turn back to candle wedded to our lifestyles. Poland; and both London on fire with candles.
"I do not believe it is fair establishing three main regpower for at least 60 min- (Earth Hour) demonstrates City Hall and Canterbury
J..ikewise,
much
of t¥" accurate to blame our ulatory agencies.
utes starting at 8 p.m. that that is wrong," Richard Cathedral in England.
Europe- including France, regulatory structure for the
The Fed would sit at the
wherever they were.
Moss, a member of the
Gret;ce, an hour ahead of Germany,
Spain
and current turmoil," &lt;~ccording top with expanded responsiThe campaign began last Nobel Peace Prize-winning most of Europe, was the European Union institutions to a . draft of a speech he bilities as the "market stayear in Australia, and trav- Intergovernmental Panel on first on the continent to -planned nothing to mark planned to give Monday bility regulator." But the
eled this year from the Climate Change.and the cli- mark Earth Hour. On the Earth J-{our.
when he outlines the admin- Fed would lose its current
South Paci fie to Europe to mate change vice president isle of Aegina, near
internet search engine istration's p(oposals.
powers over bank holding
North America in cadence for WWF, said in Chicago Athens, much of its popu- Google lent its support to
In interviews over the compantes.
with the setting of the sun.
on Saturday.
The proposal would comlation marched by candle- Earth Hour by blackening its weekend, administration
"What's amazing is that
Workers in Phoenix turned light to the port. Parts of normally white home page officials sought to frame the bine the five agencies now
it"s t~anscending political out the lights in all down- Athens itself, includlng the and challenging visitors : proposals as an effort to responsible for regulating
boundaries and happening town city-owned buildings floodlit city hall, . also "We'veturnedthelightsout. devise a system that would banks. thrifts and credit
in places . like China, for one hour. Darkened turned to black.
Now it's your turn."
help keep U.S. companies unions into a single regulaVietnam,
Papua
New restaurants glowed with canIn Ireland, where environAssociated Press · writers competitive in an increas- tory agency.
Guinea," said Andy Ridley, dlelig)lt in San Francisco mentalists are part of the . Shawn . Pogatchnik
in ingly connected global
The powers of the
executive director of Earth while the Golden Gate coalition
government, . Dublin, Ireland; Tanalee economy.
Securities and Exchange
Hour. "It really seems to Bridge, Coil Tower and lights-out orders wen\ out Smith in Sydney, AustraliiJ;
"Despite the ·fact that Commission would go into
have resonated with any- other landmarks extin- for s.cores of government and · otfier AP reporters there will be a temptation a super agency responsible
body and everybody."
guished lights for ·an hour.
buildings, bridges and mon- wofldwide contributed to to view this through a lens for business conduct and
Earth Hour officials hoped
New Zealand ·and Fiji uments in more· than a this report.
of Y{hat is happening now consumer protection.
100 million people would were first out of the starting dozen cities and towns.
But the international
turn off their nonessential blocks' this year. And in
banks
and brokerages of
lights and electronic goods Sydney, Australia - where
for the hour. Electricity plant&gt; an estimated 2.2 millioo . Dublin's financial district
produce greenhouse gases observed the blackout last blazed away with light, illuBY MARTIN CRUTSINOER
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

Cities worldwide switch off lights to
raise aWarene~s of global wanning

AP NEW·S ANALYSIS

Conflict between government,
al-Sadr show.the realities of IraqBY ROBERT

H. REID

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRI TER

BAGHDAD - The Iraqi ·
capital locked r;Iown by curfew. U.S. dipfomats holed
up their workplaces, fearing
rocket attacks. Nearly every
major southern city racked
by turmoil. Hundreds killed
in less than a week.
A declaration Sunday by
· Shiite cleric Muqtada alSadr to pull his Mahdi
Army fighters off the streets
may help bring an end to the
wave of violence that swept
Baghdad and Shiite areas
after
the
government
launch ed a crackdown
against militias in Basra.
That will ease the violence which has claimed
more than. 300 lives. But it
won ' t bring an end to the
power struggle between
Shiite panies that triggered
the confrontation.
Nor will it ensure government control of Basra,
Iraq 's 'econd- largest city
and headquarters of the vital
oil in dust r\.
And it ,:ould leave Prime
Mini ster 1\••uri ai-Maliki
poiiticall y \l'c,lke ned because
he put hts presuge on the hne
with 'promi ses to crush
Basra's "criminal gangs."
some of which he said were
"worse than al-Qaida."
The
crackdown
has
already dragged the United
. States into a bloody ·inner• Shiite fight at a time when
the U.S. administration
would prefer to talk about
succe ... ~

e x f rl'llll

'·ttl''-1
1

)tt nni
lllat

&gt;"tl1'

Iraq " illl.l il) 1&gt;11 he r&lt;•c~ll tu
stabi I ity.
·
ln~t e ad. the bloody confrontation ~e rvcs a' a reality
check about the situation in

Iraq- even as the top U.S. goal was to weaken their
offici&lt;!Is in Baghdad prepare movement before· provincial
to brief a skeptical Congress elections this fall. AI-Sadr"s
for two days starting April 8 followers expect to make
about prospects for bringing major gains in the regional
home the troops and leaving · voting .at the expense of ala relatively stable country Maliki's Shiite partners in
the government.
behind.
That points to a signifiPresident Bush called the,
Basra crisis ·"a defining cant difference between the
moment" · because
the Shiite crisis and the war
Maliki-led Iraqi govern- agail\St Sunni insurgents.
ment was finally taking on Al-Qaida has been severe! y
the Shiite militias.
weakened because it lost
But the crisis speaks vol- much of its support within
umes about the reality of the Sunni community.
By contrast, ai-Sadr's
Iraqi society and raises new
questions about the effec- movement commands a
tiveness of the country's wide following especially
impoverished
leadership as · America among
debates whether continuing Shiites who feel estranged
the mission here is worth from Shiite parties that
appeal more to the betterthe sacrifice.
Iraqi and American offi · educated urban classes.
For months, al-Sadr and
cials po'rtrayed the crackdown as a move to crush other Shiite parties have
outlaw militias - some been locked in a bitter
with close ties to lran power struggle for control
that have effectively ruled · of the Shiite south - which .
the streets of the country's contains the bulk oJ the
proven
second-la(gest City for near- country's
oi"l
ly three years.
reserves as .well as major
Many of those armed religious shrines that attract
groups are without question mi !lions of pilgrims.
deep into oil smuggling,
Last August, al-Sadr proextortion , murder and rob- c Iaimed a unilateral ceasebery.
fire nationwide in an effort
But the picture is more· to reorganize the force and
complex. It involves deep- rein in factions that had
seated rivalries within the branched O)lt into crime.
majority Shiite community.
U.S.
commanders
Numerous other militias acknowledge that truce
and armed groups operate in helped bring down violence
·
·
Basra and elsewhere in the irr Baghdad .
south - some with cl n\l'
\Jone thek''· U.S. and
ties to political parties in t!1,. lr·•· r• lm .,., L&lt; lll tinued to chip
national and provin· ·
J\va
i1
.;ddrists with
ernmcnts.
• 1 t1._1d nb•'
All signs ind,,
d lCrl
uflic111 h •J• • 1l 1he target wu
crackdown wa' &lt;Ji rcciLJ t'•,
marily at the Mahdi Armr, not ai-Sadr's ml)vement but
the armed wing of ai-Sadr s Iranian-backed renegades
political movement.
who did not abide by alSadr's
cease-fire.
The Sadrists believe the

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The
'

• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

REACii"()'IEFt 1B,OOO HOMES
·IN THE TRI·COUNTV AREA!
i

•

Advertising Deadline.~
MONDAY, APRIL 14, 2008
3:00PM
Insertion Date: ·
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16,2
.

BY THE BEND

Community Calendar
Public meetings

.

Monday, March 31, 2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Get child into safe environment

Library. Norma Torres to
review "Thirteen Moons"
by Charles Frazier. Hostess,
Dana Kessinger.
·
· Friday, April 4
POMEROY
PERI
Chapter · 74,
1 p.m.
Community
Mulberry
Center. Hal Kneen to talk on
container gardening.

Monday, March 31
Bv KATHY MITCHELL
·Jill in the room, and he it's there all the time - it who arrive with a larg&lt;'
RACINE Southern
crazily lunged for her neck. doesn't come and go with party and expect to be seatAND MARCY SUGAR
Local School Bo&lt;1rd, regular
I grabbed her, packed my my menstrual cycle.
ed promptly.
meeting, 8 p.m., high school
I talked to my doctor
Dear Annie: I wa:: mar- bags and we left. I have not
If you number more than
media room.
ried to "James" for seven spoken to James since that about it six months ago and four and are under time conPOMEROY -Veterans
years before our separation nijlht. Our lawyers are han- she said not to worry. I've straints, it · ~ a good idea to
Service Commission, 9
read a lot of stuff online that · make reservations or at least
.
m November. I have since · dling everything.
a.m., I 17 Memorial Dr.
My question is, how says my chance~ of having call ahead to see if the
filed for divorce.
.
PORTLAND- Lebanon
James was always loving could a man who wanted a breast cancer are pretty slim establishment can accom Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
and supportive. We both child so much do this to our and it's not unusual to have modate you .' A little planat the township building,
wanted children from the little girl? How do I deal lumps, but I'm still worried. ning and common sense can
Thursday, Aprii 3
'fuesday, April 1
beginning, but it took three with the guilt of knowing I I don ' t want to upset my leave you with nothing H•
POMEROY - Town hall years to get pregnant after could have stopped the mom by telling her about it. gripe about but the food. - ·
ALFRED ·Orange
. Township trustees, 7:30 · meeting on underage drink- going to numerous fertility abuse earlier if I had only So, should I be concerned'' Former Waiter
p.m. at the home of fiscal ing, 7 p.m., Meigs Hijlh clinics. When I finally gave paid more attention? · -Unsure
Dear Waiter: Thi ; i'
School .Cafeteria, special birth to our beautiful daugh- Kicking Myself
officer Ossie Follrod.
Dear Unsure: Lumps in tru e. although not everypanelists, guest speaker ter, "Jill," James slowly fell
Wednesday, April 2
Dear Kicking: It is diffi- or near the breast are fairly one has the foresight 't&lt;'
POMEROY
-Meigs Mike Trout of . Ohio into a depression.
.
cult to believe the person common and most are not make a reservation for ''
County Board of Health, 5 Attorney General's Office,
I work full time and you married could hurt cancerous. Your doctor la, t-minu te hite
afte r p.m.. Meigs County Health cl!unty-wid_e essay contest · James was left caring for · your child, which is why probably prefers to keep an an other
engagement.
Department, third reading wmners.
Jill. When she was 18 many parents are in com- eye on it rather t!Jan have " Disgruntled" was willing
Saturday, April S
amendments to sewage treatmonths old, I noticed bruis- plete denial when con- you submit to an invasive to wait 30 minute s, bu t
POMEROY - Free car- es. When I asked James fronted with signs of procedure like a biopsy, should have been warned
ment rules·, third reading
increase in food service oper- diovascular health fair, 9 to about them, he said he had abuse. It serves no purpose although it wouldn't hurt to that the slow turno ve r
a.m.
Mulberry no idea where they came for you to wallow in guilt get a second opinion if it . mi ght increase the llclay.
ation license fees in regards 11
Community
Center. from, so I ignorantly let it over the past. What's will put your mind at ease.
to vending machines.
Annie's Mailbox is .writ·
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Appointment needed for pass. Over the next year, I irrtfortant now is providing You should do regular self- tell by Kathy Mitchell and
Township Trustees, 6:30 lipid profile; no appoint- continued to see more bruis- Jil with a safe environ- exams, and if you noti~e Man·y Sugar, loiiJ:fime edip.m. at Pageville Townhall. ment required for other es. Finally, when Jill was 3 ment and seeing that she any change, notify your tors of the A1111 Umder.1
screening. Sponsored by years old and able to talk gets counseling to deal doctor immediately. You column. Please e-mail your
Holzer medical Center, clearly, she asked me why with the repercussions of won't upset your mom by questions to mmiesmailHealth Department, Meigs Daddy hated her. I was sur- the abuse, as well as the telling her. In fact, she may hox@comcast.net, 11r wrill'
Cooperative Parish.
prised and asked her why ·separation from a . father have some family history to: A11nie's Mailbox, 1~0. ·
she thought that. She said he from whom, despite every- information that could Box 118190, Chicago, IL
punished her all the time for thing, she may still want ·prove useful and, hopefully, 60611. 1ll ji11d out """"
Monday, March 31
reassuring.
hugging me and talking to love and approval.
about A1111ie 's Mailbox.
POMEROY - OH-KAN
me
too
much,
or
"because
Dear
Annie:
I
am
an
I
8Dear
Annie:
I
worked
in
and read features by other
·coin Club, 7 p.m. at the
Monday, March 31
year-old
girl
and
have
had
a
.
Mommy
loves
me
more
food
service
for
over
20
Creators Syndicate writen
Pomeroy Public Library.
POMEROY - Maxirie
'fuesday, April 1
Goeglein will celebrat~ her than him." Needless.to say, I lump in my \eft breast, near years and have some advice and cartoo11ists, visit till'
·
.. MIDDLEPORT
the armpit, for about eight for "Disgruntled in Denver"' Creators Syndicate Web
84th birthday tOday, cards was freaked out.
I confronted James with months. It doesn't hurt, but and other potential diners page at www.creaton.cqm.
Middleport Lodge 363, can be sent to 35610,
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. at the Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy,
·Middleport
Masonic 45769.
-Temple. Take non-perishSaturday, April 5
able food items for food
CHESTER
Erma
bank. Refreshments.
Cleland will observe her
Wednesday, April 2
95th birthday on April 5.
BY EUZABETH CRUMP
tant things like a home, edu- important to save for your two to three months before·
' POMEROY
The Cards may be sent to her at
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER,
Cation and retirement.
retirement- even if it's not your birthday, workers 2~
Middleport Literary Club, 2 P.O. Box 23, Chester, Oi)io ·
ATHENS orncE
Saving for retirement is a easy to pan with those extra and older receive· a Social
·p.m. at the Pomeroy 45720.
Security Statement in the
·
critical goal that sometimes dollars.
Social Security is proud gets forgotten in the day-toMany people believe that mail. The Statement gi ves
to be a part of the America day mana11ement of money. low- and moderate-income you an estimate, based on
Saves campaign.
Accordtng to financial families cannot afford to .· current earnings, of wha t
America Saves is . a experts, you will probably save and build wealth. Yet you might expect in Social
campa1gn . need at least 70 percent of research shows that there are Security retirement benefits.
nationwide
involving a broad coalition · your
annual
working "savers" and "spenders" in And by using our online
of more than 1,000 nonprof- mcome when you retire to all income levels and almost Retirement Planner, you can
it, corporate and govern- enjoy
a
comfortable everyone has the ability to personalize various financial
POMEROY Kelsey
ment
agencies,
groups
and
lifestyle.
For
the average build wealth over time.
scenarios to determine what
Sauters, a junior at Meigs
or~anizations. The cam- , American worker, Social
We at Social Security your individual retirement
High School, attended the
was
designed
to
help
Security
will
replace
about
·
sh~ tl:te goal of America
plan should look like. Visi t
pwgn
· state tournament of the
mdividu;lis
and
families
40
percent
of
his
or
her
preSaves:
to
encourage
all
t~e Retirement Planner m
National
Archery
save
and
build
wealth.
retirement
earnings.
The
Americans
to
save,
and
to
www.socialsecurity.gov/retir
Competition in the Schools
America Saves helps peo- remaining 30 percent . will help them do just that.
e2.
Program held in Columbus
You
can
also
use
the
free
For more i11jormatio11
pie
by
providing
inforrnaneed
to
come
from
pnvate
recently.
resources
provided
by
Social
1
•isit
.. www.wnericastion,
advice
and
encouragepension
plans,
savings
or
He took fifth place in the ·
Security.
Every'
year,
about
ave.nveek.org.
on
saving
for
impormvestments.
That's
why
it's
ment
high school level male overall competition consisting
of students from 29 high
schools in Ohio. The tournament was held in conjunction with the Arnold
ALFRED- Participation in the Foothills District UMW
.Sports Festival, headed by
spring
retreat to be held April 19 at the Crossroads Ministr)
California·Governor Arnold
· Kelsey Saut11111
Center in Lancaster was discussed at a recent meeting of
.
.
Schwarzenegger.
POMEROY - · The,ub- Adriahna Patterson, Ali the Alfred United Methodist Women held at the church.
Sauters will now compete Tournament to be held May
lic is invited to atten the Large, Jaden Wolfe, Lauren
Planning to attend from the Alfred group are Mary Jo
in the National Invitational I 0 in Kentucky.
annual
Meigs County Booth;
Barirnger, Mary Jo Buckley, Sarah Caldwell, and Janice
Grade
5
Spelling Bee on Thursday, Cheyenne
Gorslene, Weber. Barringer presided at the meting reading communiApril 3 at 7 p.m. at the Mitchell Howard, Katelyn cations from B. Chandler and 0. Kay Shaw of Granada
· Hill, Calif, .and Sun Sook Kim of Makoti City, Philippines
Eastern Elementary School. Hysell, Kelsey Hudson;
Forty participating stuMeigs Middle School: Officers' reports were given and it was noted that 136
nut bread and beverages.
RIO
GRANDE
dents in grades 4 through 8 Grade 6 - Courtney Holly, friendship calls had been made. Members signed birthda)
Registrati6n has begun for
''This event is a fa.vorite at
will represent Eastern Sara Klein, Sandra Pointer, cards fo.r Gary Stephenson, an associate in Mission' Servic&lt;'
the third annual "Country the farm because of these
Elementary School, Meigs Olivia Cremeans; Grade 7 at White Oak Center in Kentucky and for JoAnn SchaadtRed Hat Society Day" to be lively and enthusiastic ·Intermediate School, Meigs -Alyssa Cremeans, Megim Patterson, a mission~ry in Anchorage, Alaska.
held at the .Bob Evans Farm ladies," Leslie said of the
Thelma Henderson gave the mission report from the New
School,
and Dyer, Shana Gorslene,
Red Ha~rs. "We always Middle
May 17.
Southern ·
Elementary Madelyn Thomas; Grade 8 World Outlook magazine about lack of heath care and home•.
Pre-registration by May I look forward to having them School, after winning
Jennifer
Robinson, in Columbus. The anicle was written by Christie Ho1,1se, ediis required for the event, with at the Bob Evans Farm."
·Steven Mahr, Jeffrey Kimes, tor of New World Outlook and Mari Sunami, executive
spelling
contests
within
The Red Hat . Society
a limited number of seats
director of South Side Settlement' House of Columbus.
1Yler Dunham;
available, said Bob Evans "began as a result of a few their individual schools.
which is a United Methodist-community institution.
Southern
Elementary:
Students
representing
the
Farm assistant manager of women decidin~ to greet
One of the big areas of concern is the number of disabled
are:
Grade
4
Sylvia
Richards,
schools
events Gale Leslie. Open to middle age wuh . ve(ve,
adults
who have filed for disability benefits with Social
Eastern
Elementary: Maddy Quillen; Grade 5 "red and pink hatters," the · humor and e I an," according
Security
and have been turned down because they &lt;\re not
Grade 4 - Holly Johnson, Bethany Theiss. Jacob
day is hosted by the French to the society's official Web
Hoback; Grade 6 - Nathan disabled enough. They cannot .get health care and the)
City Red Hat Flashes. site. Noting that those in the Nick Combs; Grade 5 Melooey
Victory,
Morgan
Leamond,
Darien Diddle; show up_ at food pantries bm u'ually qualify for food
Activities are planned from society share a "bond forged
Chandler stamps tf they have. the wherew1thal to apply and nav1gatc
I0 a.m ..to 2 p.m.
by common life experiences Tackett; Grade 6 - . Erin Grade 7
the system, it was reported.
.
From I 0 a.m. to noon, and an enthusiasm for wher- Swatzel, Brandon Coleman; Drummer, Shelby Pickens;
It was noted that the community has approached the
Marshall Grade 8 - Cierra Bemenet,
guests may check in, tour ever life takes us next," the Grade 7
issue by implementing a pilot project to provide heath serAanestaad,
Derick
Powell;
Shelton.
·
Dustin
the Homestead Museum site says that "red hatters" are
The County Spelling Bee vices to people without insurance by connecting them t&lt;'
and new Quilt Exhibit, .take · ladies who have reached the Grade 8 - Aimee Watson,
is sponsoTP.d annually by the clinics and private doctors willing to provide services.
.wagon rides around the . age of 50, while those under Sam Levacy;
·Meigs
Intermediate Athens-Meigs Educational according to the anicle. It was also reported in the materi farm, visit the craft boutique 50 may be "pink hatters."
al that those providing services have very limited
Service Center (AMESC).
School:
Grade
4
To pre-register for the Red
for shopping and gift items
resources on wh1ch to operate.
.
Hat Society Day call the
and participate in games.
, "Peace: Journeying to Claim It"' was the topic of the
Games will include Red Bob Evan~ Farm at (740)
Easter themed program presented hy Osie Mae Follrnd. Al l
Hat bingo, Nervous Nellie, 245-5305, or write to the
members read the goal and prayer for the program and parCrack the Noodle, Ping farm at P.O. Box 198, Rio
ticipated with readings ahd an at·tivity and concluJcd b)
Pong Ball Toss and others, Grande, Ohio .45674-0198.
MARYSVILLE - Sherry Burke Hawley and Larry singing "Let There Be Peace on Earth ." /1. Lenten mission
The Bob Evans Farm in Lester, Jr. of 210 Woodcrest Drive, Marysville, announce offering was taken for the senior ·citi1.cn' Meal s on Whcds
all provide~ by the Carpe
southeastern "Ohio . was the birth of a daughter, Brielle Morgan Lester, Feb. 19, at program. Next meeting will be April R.
Diem Roses Red Hat Club.
A Bob Evans picnidunch home to Bob Evans, Memorial Hospital of Union Copnty. The infant weighed 8
will be served from noon to founder of Bpb Evans pounds, 15 ounces.
·
~ .) ~,.~,-~~
I p.m. and followed by Farms, Inc., his wife Jewell
Grandparents are Jerry and Joyce Burke, Reedsville and
-"·
A. ~&gt;••
/ / .• .
recognition of clubs and and their six children for Larry and Jennie Lester, Sr., Plain City; and Joyce Lester,
members. "Awards will be nearly 20 years. Today, its Plain City. The great-grandparents are Warren and
presented for the largest attractions incl11de the Charlotte VanMeter, Reedsville and Carlos and Angeline
c;:lub in attendance, the Red Homesteap Museum, an Robinette, Plain City.
·
Hatter and club traveling authentic log cabin village'a
me farthest, oldest Red hat- small ·· animal barnyard in
The Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center
ter in attendance and other addition to RV and primiTaking Applications
Preschool registration for the 2008-2009
. categories," said Leslie. In tive camping .
'
The Bob Evans Farm is
:addition, there will be a Red
sc~ool year will"be held Monday April 14,
Hat contest with first, sec- located in Rio Grande,
2008 at Bradbury Learning Center and
HUD Subsidized
ond and third place awards Ohio, on State Route 588,
April 28, 2008 at Southern Elementary.
Ettlclency/1 Bednoom
for "best use of a patriotic . just off U.S. Route 35. For
50yra or qualifying diMblllty
theme on a red hat.'
· more information out events
are necessary!
The registration fee is $ at the Bob Evans Farm, the .
Low _Income priority
To sc.hedule an appointment con{act
I 0 per person and includes a Homestead M,useum or
74Q-992-7022
.lunch of Bob Evans events at the farm, call
Betsy at 740-992-1740
Silverheels
Sausage sandwiches, chick- (800) 994-3276 or (740)
en sandwiches, cole slaw, 245-5305, or sit the Web
A Realty Company-I;HO
•
baked beans, chips, · banana site at www.bobevans.cQm.

. Other events

Clubs and
organizations

. Birthdays

America saves for retirement

. Sauters places in
archery competition

Meigs spelling bee Alfred UMW meets
set for Thursday

Birth announced

.

_,

..

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REGISrRA710N

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 31, 2'o o8

Monday, March 31, 2008

Obituaries

Apologists
throtving
a
(Fitna'
over
upcoming
film
The Daily. Sentinel

Any day now, a short film
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
connecting the Koran to
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
Islamic violence is expected
www.mydallysentlnel.com
to be released.
The film is by Geert
Wtlders, a Dutch member of
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
parliament who wants to
reverse
the lslanJization of
Dan Goodrich
Europe and believes the
Publisher
Koran should be banned
along with Hitler's "Mein
Charlene Hoeflich
Kampf' for inciting hatred
General Manager-News Editor
and violence. The film is
called "Fitna," Arabic for
upheaval. And just the
thought of "Fitna" has
Europe in an ·upheaval,
Congress shail make n~ law_respecting im
anticipating Islamic outrage
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
expected to range from
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom diplomatic huff, to economic hoycott, to rioting, even
of speech, or of (he press; or the right of the
bloodshed over this still
people peaceably to assemble, an.d to petition
unseen, 10-minute lilm.
·the Government for a redress of grievances.
Similar mass psychosis
has erupted · before Satanic Verses Rage,,Koran
- The First Amendment to the. O.s. Constitution
Rage, Cartoon Rage, Pope
Rage, even Teddy Bear
Rage. But never has an
Islamic "rage" begun to
build without actual cause.
For the first time, we are
•
seeing rage preparations
and precautions before
"offense" has been given or
taken .
In other words, PreEmptive Rage is something
new. It works like this:
Because Wilders ' film is
expected
to criticize Islam,
Dear Editor:
Muslims.
who
brook. no,reliIs it just me or is our country going nuts?
gious
criticism
are expected
We see our elected government go overseas and give millions to nations that don't even try to make ends meet, and to freak outc Therefore has anyone here in America cried out when we see our pres- just as if this were the most
ident go flying around stop after stop handmg out checks for normal, everyday, ordinary
free from the taxpayers back home? I have yet to see anyone state of affairs - Muslims
running for office of the president, senator, Congress say and Europeans are making
their respective arrangelet's cut foreign aid and balance our national debt.
ments.
I guess as long as Americans keep voting for tax issues,
In Afghanistan, Muslims
our government of this great nation for the people by the
taxpaying people they will keep spending all the tax dollars
overseas while we see our children here in America do
without and go hungry and medical care. . .
So America, .Jet's send a message to Washmgton D.C.
Let's all stop voting for new taxes until we cut foreign aid
to balance our nation's budget for good and help our own
people here at home.·
Floyd Cleland

READER'S

VIEW

•

Stop 1t
No new taxes

Diana
West

have been igniting Dutch
, and Danish flags (did I
mention Danish Cartoon
Rage is back?), threatening
to eject Dutch and Danish
troops, and practicing their
"Death to America" chants
Iranian· officials have
promised diplomatic rupture and worse if the film
comes out. Meanwhile, the
Dutch have embarked on a
veritable world tour of preemptive appeasement. The
MEMRI Blog reported that
the Dutch government sent
a letter disavowing Wilders
to
Egyptian
Sheikh
Muhammad
Sayyed
Tantawi, Sunni Islam's foremost figure (who has variously called for ''jihad"
against U.S. forces in Iraq
and sanctioned suicide
bombings against Israeli
· women and children). The
Sheikh's response? He
"demanded
that
the
Netherlands jlOvernr~ent
take more action agamst
· Wilders, and added that protection given to those harming Islam will negatively
affect Egyptian-Dutch rei ations."
Pre-emptive "Fitna" rage
has made European elites
hopping mad- only not at
the rioters arid blackmailers
(the healthy, normal reac-

Such thinking reveals a
tion), but at Geert Wilders.
Here, multiculti Europeans disconnect from both realtand perpetually aggneved ty and morality. Killers, not
.Muslims are linding com- a movie, kill people, and
mon ground.
killers are·duly responsible.
. Thus, as reportL!d by But there's more to considDutch blogger Klem Verzet, er: The unified effort of
the Gran(! Mufti of Syria, Muslims and Europeans to
Ahmad
Badr
Al-Din censor a critique of Islam
Hassoun, admonished the for being a critique of ,Islam.
European Parliament about - something not tolerated
film-related "riots, blood- under Islam. From EU to
shed and violence" for NATO officials, from the
which "Wilders will be head 'of France to (sadly)
responsible.". And thus the head of Denmark, the
Dutch prime minister Jan official European response
Peter Balkenende said to "Fitna" is less in line
exactly the same thing (in with Western traditions of
between begging Wilders free speech than with the
not to release his film). The censorship of Islamic law.
online Dutch site NIS News Indeed, Dutch official s
Bulletin
reported couldn't lind a Dutch law·
Balkenende has "stressed under which .to ban "Fitna,"
repeatedly and with irrita- and they tried. The pressure
tion that Wilders and no one to silence "Fitna," however,·
else was responsible for any reveals tl\e extent to which
violence that might break Islamic law has already
out after his film's release." eroded core conceptions of
'
And when Sheikh fantawi Western liberty.
indicates that providing "proWilders refuses to submit.
tection" for Mr. Wilders is a "I'm not bound to any
bad idea, it not only sounds Afghan or Sufi or Pakistani
like a mafia don calling for a law," he told The Spectator.
hit, it also echoes the dean of "I am bound to the Du(ch
Dutch journalists, Henk law and I'm sure that my
Hofland. As Thomas Landen movie will be within all the
of The Brussels Journal boundaries of the Dutch
reported, Hofland urged the law."
· Dutch government to with,But who besides couradraw state protection from geous Wilders . will act to
Wilders, who lives under uphold Dutch law against
constant threat of assassina- Islamic-style censorship?.
tion. ~'Let him feel what it is
(Diana West is a columnist
like for those whose .lives he for The Washington Times.
. endangers," said Hofland, She is the author of "The
adding that any murders Death of the Growrz-up:
committed in retaliation for How America:, Arre.ned
Wilders' opinions on Islam Development Is Bringing ·
would be the responsibility Down Western Civilization. "
of Wilders, not the murder- She can be contacted via
ers.
dianawest@ verizorz.net.)

GALLIPOLIS - Carl Keith Drummond, on Saturday,
March 29, 2008, our beloved husband, father, father-in-law,
grandfather, brother, brother-in-law, and uncle went home
to be with his Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
Keith was born to Leona E. (Lucas) Drummond and Carl
E. Drummond in Gallipolis, Ohio on September 8, 1950.
Keith was a construction worker, an active member of the
Cheshire Baptist Church, and served in the 3664th
Maintenance Division of the National Guard in Pt.
Pleasant, WV. Keith enjoyed many thin$S in his life on
Earth. He enjoyed spending time with h1s loving family,
playing ~olf, traveling, and meticulous carpentry work.
Keith 1s survived by his wife of 39 Jears, Connie R.
(Swisher) Drummond whom he marrie on October 18
1969 in Ches~ire, Ohio. To this marriage two children were'
born; Tony a LeAnn (Shawn) CoX: of Bicjwell, and Bryan
Keith Drummond of Cheshire . .
Keith was affectionately called B-P by his two grandchildren, Cory Lee and Katy LeAnn Cox. He is also survived
by his siblings, Ellen Mae (William) Russell, Bob L
(Diana) Drummond .and Bon,nie M. Williams; his brotherin-law Michael (Cynthia) Swisher, sisters-in-law Lena
(Rick) McFann, Carolyn (J.D.) Taylor and many nieces and
nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents.
· Keith will be greatly missed by all, but our circle will be
complete when we one day meet him again in Heaven. God
is good ... all the time.
Services will be II a.m. Thursday April 3, 2008 at Wjllis
Funeral Home with Rev. Steven Little and Rev. Clifford
Curry. His final resting place will be in the Gravel HilI
Cemetery, Cheshire, Ohio. Friends may call at Willi s
Funeral Home on Wednesday, April 2, 2008 from 6-8 p.m
Pallbearers will be Jason Shuler, Shane Swisher, Shaun
Swisher, Patrick McClung, Rob Drummond, Rick McFann
and J.D. Taylor. Honorary pallbearers will be RandalI
Davis, Jon Thompson, Mark Darst, Gerald King, Chuck
Bradbllry, Don Hanning, Lee Tyler, Carlos Swisher, Mike
Swisher and 'Dan Stidham. '
·
· In lieu of flowers please consider making a donation in
Keith's name to the Cheshire Baptist Church Building .Fund
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mai I
condolences.

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I'-

. Highway Patrol

.,;

~·

MIDDLEPORT- Two individuals were transported to
Pleasant Valley Hospital by Meigs County EMS followin g
a two vehicle accident on Wednesday.
According to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Highwa
Patrol, Stacy L. Williamson, 27, 134 Nelson Roa
Rutland, and her five-year-old son suffered non-incap~c I·
taiing injuries when the 1995 Saturn .sL she was dnvmg
southbound on ·Ohio 7 was struck by another car at the
intersection of Bradbury Road.
Rhonda F. Neece, 30919 Neece Road, Middleport, was
cited for fai·ling to yi_eld the ri~ht of way after she r~ a stop
sign and struck Wzllzamson s car. The 2000 Mttsubzshi
· Eclipse that Neece was driving sustained funct!onal damage,
while Williamson's Saturn sustamed non-funcllonal damage.

d.

A ·report to true shareholders ifAriel-Dater Center

Published • every afternoon. Monday

Evening clinic

POMEROY -The Meigs County Health DepartmenI
will offer evening clinic hours until 6 p.m. tomorrow
Blood pressure checks, WIC, immunizations, etc.

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
(Editor :1 note: The folunsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
lowing
was .i11hmitted by
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Leiters of
Jeff
Fowle~
president of the
. thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept·
Ariel-Dater Cultural and
ed for· publication.
Performing Arts Centre
Board of Directors in
Gallipolis, on behalf of the
board.) ·
(USPS 213-960)

Local Briefs
. ·.

GUEST VIEW

Ohio Valle6 Publishing ·
o.

Martha Hall
POMEROY - Martha Hall, 52, of Pomeroy .die d
Thursday. March 27, 2008. ArrangeD:Jents will be announced
.by Anderson-McDaniel Funeral Home, Pomeroy

..

Toct'ay is Monday, March 31, the 91 st day of 2008. There
are 275 days left in the year.
'
Today's Highlight in History: On March 31, 1968, at the
conclusion of a nationally broadcast address on efforts to
bring a peaceful end to the Vietnam War, President Lyndon
B. Johnson shocked listeners by announcing he would not
seek another term of office·.
On this date: In 1880, Wabash, Ind., became the first
town in the world to be illuminated by electrical lighting.
In 1889, French engineer Gustave Eiffel unfurled the
French tricolor from atop the Eiffel Tower, officially marking its completion.
·
.
·
In 1917, the United States took possession of the Virgin
Islands from Denmark.
.
In · 1957, the original version of Rodgers and
Hammerstein's."Cinderella," starring Julie Andrews, aired
live in color on CBS.
In 2005, Terri Schiavo, 41, died at a hospice in Pinellas
Park, Fla., 13 days after her reeding tube was removed in a
wrenching right-to-die dispute.
Thought for Today: "All mankind is divided into three
classes: those th.at are immovable, those that are moveable,
and those that move." - Arab proverb.
·

Reader Services

Deaths

,'

TODAY IN HISTORY

The 'paily Sentinel

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

cart Keith Dftlmmond

r

as remarkable in its talent
as it is improbable in its
location.
,
With the benefit of . an
amazing collection ' of'
artists, volunteers, benefactors, and community leaders, The Ariel has grown
'fhe Ariel Cultural and · from being a flickering
Performing Arts Centre is a idea 20 years ago to a stanon-profit . corporation. ble multz-faceted arts orga·That means there are no nization . As one board
shareholders who receive member noted, "We have
any profits. It means that · so many more things going
its board of directors on now than we did just
. reports to no stwreholders. three years ago."
But this is only the case in
In recognition of this ·
a legal sense.
growth, it is now perhaps
In a moral sense, the true time for the board to report
shareholders of The Ariel to you, its shareholders.
are the residents of 'Gallia
As with any growing
County. While The Ariel organization, there are
does not distribute cash growing pains. Lawyers
profits to its shareholders, ft will tell you that a corporadoes try 'to distribute other tion is only a ·legal fiction. It
types of profit.
.is something that the law
Residents profit when pretends is a real thing.' In
their youngest children don reality, a corporation is a
pink ballet garments for collection of human beings
lessons in the second floor - people who have come
ballroom . Residents profit together to pursue a comwhen their teenagers enthu- mon interest. So, when a
siastically participate in all corporation suffers growing
of the different aspects of pains, it always involves
theater
production. disc.omfort among the very
Resident s profit when people who are its most pasrecruiters of physicians and sionate supporters. The
professional s can proudly Ariel is not immune to
describe a professional growing pains. ,
.
sym phony . in a small
Its recent decision not to
Appalachian village that' is continue with its then cur-

--· - -

rent e,;ecuti ve director and
the feelings expressed fol- .
lowing that decision is an·
example of such pain. This
last Wednesday night, The
Ariel Board of Directors
met to conduct an assessment of themselves, the
organization, and its role in
the community. Also in
attendance were County
Commissioner David K.
Smith, DDS, Gallipolis
City Commission member
Dow
Saunders,
and
Quintin Lindsmith,, counsel for the Ariel's most significant benefactor, Ann
'Dater. ·
The meeting involved
candid discussions of
recent events and just as
candid discussions about
the future direction of the
organization. From that
meeting, a consensus was
reached that some structural change needs to
occur within the organization. It was reco~nized that
as the organization continues to grow into a more
com pi icated and multifaceted arts organization;
so its governance structure
must be strengthened to
meet the increasing burdens that ·come with that
growth.
While those structural
changes
are
being

addressed, the ·board agreed
that it needs to move quickly to recruit its next executive sirector. That process is .
now onder way.
.
The board members are
appreciative of the · many
comments
they
have
received from their shareholders. Some comments
have been critical and some'
have been supportive. But
they
have all
been
expressed with a sincere
concern for The Ariel.
. We close with this obser- ,
vation from Mr. Lindsmith:
"The difficult times of the
past few weeks have been a '
sign of health and not of
sickness. It shows that this
organization means a lot to
a lot of people. While folks
may disagree as to how
great things are to be
accomplished, it remains
that everyone.. wants this
organization to accomplish
great things.
"Mrs. Dater receives
immense joy from watching
the perennial blooms of The
Ariel - blooms that presage new shopts that lay
track for new branches. Her
support is undiminished .
And she continues to be·
amazed by every,ane - the
Ariel's board, its artists, its
volunteers, and lis shareholders. "

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Bush:.Tax rebates are coming, help available for homeowners
Bv Dn RtECHMANN

Pomeroy

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

www.mydailysentinel~com

Crash prompts university to
require insurance for int'l students
URBANA (AP) -. The
nine-car crash that killed three
Chinese graduate students last
year has prompted Urbana
University to require international students to purchase
insurance that covers the cost
of sending students' remains
to their home countries.
The students were killed
March 8, 2007, when ··
sport utility vehicle traveling 98 mph went airborne
and landed on their car. All
three were uninsured.
The new student health
·insurance policy provides
emergency medical evacuation abroad for life-threatening illnesses and injuries, university President Robert Head
said on Friday. Before the
crash, carrying the insurance
was not mandatory, l;le said..
The insurance also includes
an accidental death clause that

a

-~ contract
from PageA1
The village plans a $2.4
million
sewer
system
upgrade, mandated· by the
EPA to separate the village's
sanitary . sewer .i11,l ' torm
sewer systems wl1cre they
.discharge into the Ohio.River
during heavy rain events.
The EPA has agreed to
allow a system upgrade along

would pay up to $50,000 ~or
the retuin of students' remains
to their respective countries
The change affects about
50 international students at
the liberal arts university and
brings Urbana in .line wi th
nearby colleges and universities that offer international
education programs.
The University of Day to n,
Wittenberg University in
Springfield and Wright State
University in Fairborn al so
have insurance requiremen ts
for international students.
The Chinese studen ts,
who were pursuing maste r's .
degrees in business ad1111 nistration, were returning to
campus from a shoppi ng
trip in Springfield in we stern Ohio. Jin Bian, 27, was
driving and Bing Xue an d
Yan Sun, both 24, were Ill
the back seat.
First Avenue from Mill Street
to Park Street that would capture 85 percent of the overtlow using separate storm
and sanitary sewer lines, and
improvements to the pump
station and treatment plant.
The engineering firin
URS expects to secure grant
:tnd loan funds to finance
the improvements. The project is now in the final
design phase, and is not
expected to be completed
for at least five years.

WASHINGTON
consumer confidence is on
the skids, yet President
Bush is optimistic that tax
re bates and help for home0 wners will
adequately
JU mp-start t!te economy.
During the past few
weeks, many Americans
have received letters from
th e Internal Revenue
.s ervice, explaining the tax
rebates that will be sent
.o ut soon 3Jl part of an economic stimulus package
Bush signed into law last
month . .
Bus]) said in his Saturday
radio address that the
,checks, as·well as incentives
fo r businesses to invest in
new equipment, will give
the economy a "shot in the

arm."
On
Friday,
the
ommerce
·
Department
c
reported that in February,
consumers turned in tl)eir
weakest spending performance in 17 montps.
consumer spending e(lged
up by just 0.1 percent last
month, the poorest showing
si nee September 2006. If
I he effects of inflation are

removed, spending was flat
in February, the third consecutive month of sluggish
activity.
Consumer
confidence
dropped to its lowest level
in 16 years, further raising
fears of a ·recession.
Trying to allay rising
fears about the direction of
the economy, Bush said his
administration has taken
action to help homeowners
keep their homes.
Democrats . say more is
needed. They want Bush to
endorse their housing assistance proposal, which
would let bankruptcy
judges lower payments for
homeowners staring at foreclosure.
The president has come
out strongly against the
Democrats' housing package, . warning that . an
overzealous governmental
response to the nation 's
housing woes could hurt the
economy's ability to recover long-term. He paid a
quick visit Friday to a nonprofit debt counseling cen..
ter in Freehold, N.J., to
argue . that his administration had acted effectively.
In the Democrats' weekly radio address, newly

'

elected Illinois Rep. Bill
Foster said, "Our plan will
help more families avoid
foreclosure and gives
cities the chance to rehabilitate foreclosed homes
and put them back on the
market."
Foster, who· won a
January special election to
fill retired Republican
Rep. Dennis Hastert 's
seat, also talked Saturday
about middle-class tax
cuts, · using sources of
renewable
energy
to
lessen
the
couniry's
. dependence on oil and
expanding
children's
access to health insurance.
The
administration's
financial moves over the
past about six months
mclude · expanding the
Federal
Housing
Administration's ability to
offer refinancing to homeowners with ~ood credit,
allowing Fanme Mae and
Freddie Mac to buy up
more home loans and brokering help for struggling
homeowners through a privale-sector
mortgage
industry group. That group
has agreed to offer a fiveyear rate freeze for people
who have not missed pay-

ments or a 30-day foredosure pause for those who
fall behind.
.
In October, Bush said,
hi s administration helped
bring together the private
sector group called the
HOPE ' NOW Alliance.
'HOPE NOW helps streamline the process for refinancing and modifying
mortgages, and it runs .a
national hot line to connect struggling homeownI'TS with mortgage counselors.
"If you're a homeowner
struggling with your mortgage, please take the first
step toward getting help by
calling the hot line at ·888995-HOPB," he said.
Democrats are planning
a test vote Tuesday on their
meas ure , which would also
let localities with the highest foreclosure rates access
federal grants to buy foreclosed properties and provide $200 million in counseling to distressed bor· rowers. The proposal fell
short of the 60 votes · it
would have needed to
advance when the Senate
took it up last month, with
all but one Republican
opposing it.

Protest
from PageA1
li kely take place at the next
board meeting in May.
Carson pointed out AMPOhio's boar{~ of trustees are
municipal officials, many of .
whom have attended public
council meetings where both
AMP and its opponents have
made public presentations
0 n the power plant. Carson
said he and other employees
have been to over 80 city
·council meetings to make
public presentations on the
.plant; presentations which
have been open to public
scrutiny and comment.
The protesters belong to a
group called "Mountain
Justice" which is described
by. . member
Adam
Stephenson as "Appalachian
based" with active members
in West VIrginia, Tennessee,
Submitted photo
Kentucky
and
Ohio. · Environmentalists from the group Mountain Justice protest outside the corporate offices of
Stephenson said during American Municipal Power·Ohio on Friday.
Friday's protest there were no
protesters from Mei$s not attend Friday's protest. · coal mining in the area pany might find a greener .
County though Mountam
Stephenson also said last which are two separate pro- alternative to building a
Justice does have members Thursday his group went on jects by two separate com- coal-fired power plant. He
who live in the county. Due to a "listening project," speak- panies. A follow up was added, AMP is the leading
what he called "legal issues" ing to residents in Letart done this past Saturday.
investor in Ohio in green
some members have with Falls and . Antiquity about
Stephenson·said the group energy and felt they might
AMP-Ohio, Stephenson said how they felt about the wishes to make the presen- at least be willing to listen
he requested local .members power plant and proposed tation in the hopes the com- to alternatives.

Pleads
from .Page A1
U.S. Attorney pf!Talegal
specialist Laura Taylor said
Gibbs pleaded guilty after her
office filed an informational
after he waived being indicted by a federal grand jury.
• The informational and
plea agreement were filed
the same day the U.S.
Securities and Exchange
Commission filed a settled
civil injunctive action in the
same case.
In June 2001, Gibbs,
while workjng as an insurance · salesman, became
interested in FOREX,
which is an over-thecounter ~peculative market
in which buyers and sellers
conduct foreign exchange
transactions by trading one .
currency for another. In
2002, he became a "mentor"
for the group.
. Beginning in early 2002,
then increasing· in 2004-05,
Gibbs began trading money
he received from investors
through "loan agreements.''
Between August 2004 and
March 2007, Gibbs allegedly accepted about $21 million from 150 investors in
24 states that included
Arizona,
California,
Colorado,
Connecticut,
Delaware, Florida, Georgia,

Idaho, Indiana, Louisiana,
Michigan, Missouri, New
Mexico, New York, North
Carolina,
Ohio,
Pennsylvania,
South
Carolina, Tennessee, Texas,
Utah, Vermont, Virginia and
Wisconsin through what
was called a "loan agreement." There· also were
investors from Canada and
Great Britain.
Oui of the $21 million, he
put· almost $2 million into
his own account and used
the money to build a $1.14
million home and purchase
a luxury car and items ·for
himself and'his family.
According to the court,
the loan agreements provided that an investor would
loan Golden Summit money
for 12 months and in return
would pay a guaranteed rate
of interest.
Between December 2004
and July 2005, Gibbs was
trading about 59 customers'
funds in a managed account
and apparently lost more
than $1.5 million in the
FOREX market. It was during this time that he came
up with a scheme to misrepresent his . customers with
the "Ponzi" scam.
A "Ponzi" or pyramid
scam is a fraudulent investment program that is not
truly supported .by any
underlying business venture
and creates an illusion for
investors that they . are

investing in a profitable
trading program rather than
a ·fraudulent scheme. This
scheme is a violation of the
Securities Act of 1933 and
the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934.
To pay existing investors
promised returns, the promoter uses a cash-flow generated from newly acquired
investors. The new money
also is used to mask any
investment losses.
It also is charged that
Gibbs did not file a registration statement with the
SEC, and no exemption
from · regis~ration
was
applied to the offer and sale
of the securities.
According to the SEC,
because Gibbs does not
have the amount of money
for restitution, the government will seize all his
investments and personal ·
items, including the house
in New Haven .
Assisting the SEC and

-

-

•

·

f

Personal Removal

.

......
. , ,.. ·---

I

I

Jerri Tucker· Funeral Director In Charge

Jerry &amp; Ray "Red" Tucker- Family OWned
2nd Street

304-773-5561

·----------.......:.- ---·- · ~•'

Mason, WV

~'

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�, PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 31, 2'o o8

Monday, March 31, 2008

Obituaries

Apologists
throtving
a
(Fitna'
over
upcoming
film
The Daily. Sentinel

Any day now, a short film
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
connecting the Koran to
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
Islamic violence is expected
www.mydallysentlnel.com
to be released.
The film is by Geert
Wtlders, a Dutch member of
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
parliament who wants to
reverse
the lslanJization of
Dan Goodrich
Europe and believes the
Publisher
Koran should be banned
along with Hitler's "Mein
Charlene Hoeflich
Kampf' for inciting hatred
General Manager-News Editor
and violence. The film is
called "Fitna," Arabic for
upheaval. And just the
thought of "Fitna" has
Europe in an ·upheaval,
Congress shail make n~ law_respecting im
anticipating Islamic outrage
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
expected to range from
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom diplomatic huff, to economic hoycott, to rioting, even
of speech, or of (he press; or the right of the
bloodshed over this still
people peaceably to assemble, an.d to petition
unseen, 10-minute lilm.
·the Government for a redress of grievances.
Similar mass psychosis
has erupted · before Satanic Verses Rage,,Koran
- The First Amendment to the. O.s. Constitution
Rage, Cartoon Rage, Pope
Rage, even Teddy Bear
Rage. But never has an
Islamic "rage" begun to
build without actual cause.
For the first time, we are
•
seeing rage preparations
and precautions before
"offense" has been given or
taken .
In other words, PreEmptive Rage is something
new. It works like this:
Because Wilders ' film is
expected
to criticize Islam,
Dear Editor:
Muslims.
who
brook. no,reliIs it just me or is our country going nuts?
gious
criticism
are expected
We see our elected government go overseas and give millions to nations that don't even try to make ends meet, and to freak outc Therefore has anyone here in America cried out when we see our pres- just as if this were the most
ident go flying around stop after stop handmg out checks for normal, everyday, ordinary
free from the taxpayers back home? I have yet to see anyone state of affairs - Muslims
running for office of the president, senator, Congress say and Europeans are making
their respective arrangelet's cut foreign aid and balance our national debt.
ments.
I guess as long as Americans keep voting for tax issues,
In Afghanistan, Muslims
our government of this great nation for the people by the
taxpaying people they will keep spending all the tax dollars
overseas while we see our children here in America do
without and go hungry and medical care. . .
So America, .Jet's send a message to Washmgton D.C.
Let's all stop voting for new taxes until we cut foreign aid
to balance our nation's budget for good and help our own
people here at home.·
Floyd Cleland

READER'S

VIEW

•

Stop 1t
No new taxes

Diana
West

have been igniting Dutch
, and Danish flags (did I
mention Danish Cartoon
Rage is back?), threatening
to eject Dutch and Danish
troops, and practicing their
"Death to America" chants
Iranian· officials have
promised diplomatic rupture and worse if the film
comes out. Meanwhile, the
Dutch have embarked on a
veritable world tour of preemptive appeasement. The
MEMRI Blog reported that
the Dutch government sent
a letter disavowing Wilders
to
Egyptian
Sheikh
Muhammad
Sayyed
Tantawi, Sunni Islam's foremost figure (who has variously called for ''jihad"
against U.S. forces in Iraq
and sanctioned suicide
bombings against Israeli
· women and children). The
Sheikh's response? He
"demanded
that
the
Netherlands jlOvernr~ent
take more action agamst
· Wilders, and added that protection given to those harming Islam will negatively
affect Egyptian-Dutch rei ations."
Pre-emptive "Fitna" rage
has made European elites
hopping mad- only not at
the rioters arid blackmailers
(the healthy, normal reac-

Such thinking reveals a
tion), but at Geert Wilders.
Here, multiculti Europeans disconnect from both realtand perpetually aggneved ty and morality. Killers, not
.Muslims are linding com- a movie, kill people, and
mon ground.
killers are·duly responsible.
. Thus, as reportL!d by But there's more to considDutch blogger Klem Verzet, er: The unified effort of
the Gran(! Mufti of Syria, Muslims and Europeans to
Ahmad
Badr
Al-Din censor a critique of Islam
Hassoun, admonished the for being a critique of ,Islam.
European Parliament about - something not tolerated
film-related "riots, blood- under Islam. From EU to
shed and violence" for NATO officials, from the
which "Wilders will be head 'of France to (sadly)
responsible.". And thus the head of Denmark, the
Dutch prime minister Jan official European response
Peter Balkenende said to "Fitna" is less in line
exactly the same thing (in with Western traditions of
between begging Wilders free speech than with the
not to release his film). The censorship of Islamic law.
online Dutch site NIS News Indeed, Dutch official s
Bulletin
reported couldn't lind a Dutch law·
Balkenende has "stressed under which .to ban "Fitna,"
repeatedly and with irrita- and they tried. The pressure
tion that Wilders and no one to silence "Fitna," however,·
else was responsible for any reveals tl\e extent to which
violence that might break Islamic law has already
out after his film's release." eroded core conceptions of
'
And when Sheikh fantawi Western liberty.
indicates that providing "proWilders refuses to submit.
tection" for Mr. Wilders is a "I'm not bound to any
bad idea, it not only sounds Afghan or Sufi or Pakistani
like a mafia don calling for a law," he told The Spectator.
hit, it also echoes the dean of "I am bound to the Du(ch
Dutch journalists, Henk law and I'm sure that my
Hofland. As Thomas Landen movie will be within all the
of The Brussels Journal boundaries of the Dutch
reported, Hofland urged the law."
· Dutch government to with,But who besides couradraw state protection from geous Wilders . will act to
Wilders, who lives under uphold Dutch law against
constant threat of assassina- Islamic-style censorship?.
tion. ~'Let him feel what it is
(Diana West is a columnist
like for those whose .lives he for The Washington Times.
. endangers," said Hofland, She is the author of "The
adding that any murders Death of the Growrz-up:
committed in retaliation for How America:, Arre.ned
Wilders' opinions on Islam Development Is Bringing ·
would be the responsibility Down Western Civilization. "
of Wilders, not the murder- She can be contacted via
ers.
dianawest@ verizorz.net.)

GALLIPOLIS - Carl Keith Drummond, on Saturday,
March 29, 2008, our beloved husband, father, father-in-law,
grandfather, brother, brother-in-law, and uncle went home
to be with his Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
Keith was born to Leona E. (Lucas) Drummond and Carl
E. Drummond in Gallipolis, Ohio on September 8, 1950.
Keith was a construction worker, an active member of the
Cheshire Baptist Church, and served in the 3664th
Maintenance Division of the National Guard in Pt.
Pleasant, WV. Keith enjoyed many thin$S in his life on
Earth. He enjoyed spending time with h1s loving family,
playing ~olf, traveling, and meticulous carpentry work.
Keith 1s survived by his wife of 39 Jears, Connie R.
(Swisher) Drummond whom he marrie on October 18
1969 in Ches~ire, Ohio. To this marriage two children were'
born; Tony a LeAnn (Shawn) CoX: of Bicjwell, and Bryan
Keith Drummond of Cheshire . .
Keith was affectionately called B-P by his two grandchildren, Cory Lee and Katy LeAnn Cox. He is also survived
by his siblings, Ellen Mae (William) Russell, Bob L
(Diana) Drummond .and Bon,nie M. Williams; his brotherin-law Michael (Cynthia) Swisher, sisters-in-law Lena
(Rick) McFann, Carolyn (J.D.) Taylor and many nieces and
nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents.
· Keith will be greatly missed by all, but our circle will be
complete when we one day meet him again in Heaven. God
is good ... all the time.
Services will be II a.m. Thursday April 3, 2008 at Wjllis
Funeral Home with Rev. Steven Little and Rev. Clifford
Curry. His final resting place will be in the Gravel HilI
Cemetery, Cheshire, Ohio. Friends may call at Willi s
Funeral Home on Wednesday, April 2, 2008 from 6-8 p.m
Pallbearers will be Jason Shuler, Shane Swisher, Shaun
Swisher, Patrick McClung, Rob Drummond, Rick McFann
and J.D. Taylor. Honorary pallbearers will be RandalI
Davis, Jon Thompson, Mark Darst, Gerald King, Chuck
Bradbllry, Don Hanning, Lee Tyler, Carlos Swisher, Mike
Swisher and 'Dan Stidham. '
·
· In lieu of flowers please consider making a donation in
Keith's name to the Cheshire Baptist Church Building .Fund
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mai I
condolences.

Cor~ectlon Policy
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be accurate. l.f you know 01 an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
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Member: The Associated Press and

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are: .

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the Ohio Newspaper Association.
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Street. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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I'-

. Highway Patrol

.,;

~·

MIDDLEPORT- Two individuals were transported to
Pleasant Valley Hospital by Meigs County EMS followin g
a two vehicle accident on Wednesday.
According to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Highwa
Patrol, Stacy L. Williamson, 27, 134 Nelson Roa
Rutland, and her five-year-old son suffered non-incap~c I·
taiing injuries when the 1995 Saturn .sL she was dnvmg
southbound on ·Ohio 7 was struck by another car at the
intersection of Bradbury Road.
Rhonda F. Neece, 30919 Neece Road, Middleport, was
cited for fai·ling to yi_eld the ri~ht of way after she r~ a stop
sign and struck Wzllzamson s car. The 2000 Mttsubzshi
· Eclipse that Neece was driving sustained funct!onal damage,
while Williamson's Saturn sustamed non-funcllonal damage.

d.

A ·report to true shareholders ifAriel-Dater Center

Published • every afternoon. Monday

Evening clinic

POMEROY -The Meigs County Health DepartmenI
will offer evening clinic hours until 6 p.m. tomorrow
Blood pressure checks, WIC, immunizations, etc.

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
(Editor :1 note: The folunsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
lowing
was .i11hmitted by
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Leiters of
Jeff
Fowle~
president of the
. thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept·
Ariel-Dater Cultural and
ed for· publication.
Performing Arts Centre
Board of Directors in
Gallipolis, on behalf of the
board.) ·
(USPS 213-960)

Local Briefs
. ·.

GUEST VIEW

Ohio Valle6 Publishing ·
o.

Martha Hall
POMEROY - Martha Hall, 52, of Pomeroy .die d
Thursday. March 27, 2008. ArrangeD:Jents will be announced
.by Anderson-McDaniel Funeral Home, Pomeroy

..

Toct'ay is Monday, March 31, the 91 st day of 2008. There
are 275 days left in the year.
'
Today's Highlight in History: On March 31, 1968, at the
conclusion of a nationally broadcast address on efforts to
bring a peaceful end to the Vietnam War, President Lyndon
B. Johnson shocked listeners by announcing he would not
seek another term of office·.
On this date: In 1880, Wabash, Ind., became the first
town in the world to be illuminated by electrical lighting.
In 1889, French engineer Gustave Eiffel unfurled the
French tricolor from atop the Eiffel Tower, officially marking its completion.
·
.
·
In 1917, the United States took possession of the Virgin
Islands from Denmark.
.
In · 1957, the original version of Rodgers and
Hammerstein's."Cinderella," starring Julie Andrews, aired
live in color on CBS.
In 2005, Terri Schiavo, 41, died at a hospice in Pinellas
Park, Fla., 13 days after her reeding tube was removed in a
wrenching right-to-die dispute.
Thought for Today: "All mankind is divided into three
classes: those th.at are immovable, those that are moveable,
and those that move." - Arab proverb.
·

Reader Services

Deaths

,'

TODAY IN HISTORY

The 'paily Sentinel

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

cart Keith Dftlmmond

r

as remarkable in its talent
as it is improbable in its
location.
,
With the benefit of . an
amazing collection ' of'
artists, volunteers, benefactors, and community leaders, The Ariel has grown
'fhe Ariel Cultural and · from being a flickering
Performing Arts Centre is a idea 20 years ago to a stanon-profit . corporation. ble multz-faceted arts orga·That means there are no nization . As one board
shareholders who receive member noted, "We have
any profits. It means that · so many more things going
its board of directors on now than we did just
. reports to no stwreholders. three years ago."
But this is only the case in
In recognition of this ·
a legal sense.
growth, it is now perhaps
In a moral sense, the true time for the board to report
shareholders of The Ariel to you, its shareholders.
are the residents of 'Gallia
As with any growing
County. While The Ariel organization, there are
does not distribute cash growing pains. Lawyers
profits to its shareholders, ft will tell you that a corporadoes try 'to distribute other tion is only a ·legal fiction. It
types of profit.
.is something that the law
Residents profit when pretends is a real thing.' In
their youngest children don reality, a corporation is a
pink ballet garments for collection of human beings
lessons in the second floor - people who have come
ballroom . Residents profit together to pursue a comwhen their teenagers enthu- mon interest. So, when a
siastically participate in all corporation suffers growing
of the different aspects of pains, it always involves
theater
production. disc.omfort among the very
Resident s profit when people who are its most pasrecruiters of physicians and sionate supporters. The
professional s can proudly Ariel is not immune to
describe a professional growing pains. ,
.
sym phony . in a small
Its recent decision not to
Appalachian village that' is continue with its then cur-

--· - -

rent e,;ecuti ve director and
the feelings expressed fol- .
lowing that decision is an·
example of such pain. This
last Wednesday night, The
Ariel Board of Directors
met to conduct an assessment of themselves, the
organization, and its role in
the community. Also in
attendance were County
Commissioner David K.
Smith, DDS, Gallipolis
City Commission member
Dow
Saunders,
and
Quintin Lindsmith,, counsel for the Ariel's most significant benefactor, Ann
'Dater. ·
The meeting involved
candid discussions of
recent events and just as
candid discussions about
the future direction of the
organization. From that
meeting, a consensus was
reached that some structural change needs to
occur within the organization. It was reco~nized that
as the organization continues to grow into a more
com pi icated and multifaceted arts organization;
so its governance structure
must be strengthened to
meet the increasing burdens that ·come with that
growth.
While those structural
changes
are
being

addressed, the ·board agreed
that it needs to move quickly to recruit its next executive sirector. That process is .
now onder way.
.
The board members are
appreciative of the · many
comments
they
have
received from their shareholders. Some comments
have been critical and some'
have been supportive. But
they
have all
been
expressed with a sincere
concern for The Ariel.
. We close with this obser- ,
vation from Mr. Lindsmith:
"The difficult times of the
past few weeks have been a '
sign of health and not of
sickness. It shows that this
organization means a lot to
a lot of people. While folks
may disagree as to how
great things are to be
accomplished, it remains
that everyone.. wants this
organization to accomplish
great things.
"Mrs. Dater receives
immense joy from watching
the perennial blooms of The
Ariel - blooms that presage new shopts that lay
track for new branches. Her
support is undiminished .
And she continues to be·
amazed by every,ane - the
Ariel's board, its artists, its
volunteers, and lis shareholders. "

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Bush:.Tax rebates are coming, help available for homeowners
Bv Dn RtECHMANN

Pomeroy

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

www.mydailysentinel~com

Crash prompts university to
require insurance for int'l students
URBANA (AP) -. The
nine-car crash that killed three
Chinese graduate students last
year has prompted Urbana
University to require international students to purchase
insurance that covers the cost
of sending students' remains
to their home countries.
The students were killed
March 8, 2007, when ··
sport utility vehicle traveling 98 mph went airborne
and landed on their car. All
three were uninsured.
The new student health
·insurance policy provides
emergency medical evacuation abroad for life-threatening illnesses and injuries, university President Robert Head
said on Friday. Before the
crash, carrying the insurance
was not mandatory, l;le said..
The insurance also includes
an accidental death clause that

a

-~ contract
from PageA1
The village plans a $2.4
million
sewer
system
upgrade, mandated· by the
EPA to separate the village's
sanitary . sewer .i11,l ' torm
sewer systems wl1cre they
.discharge into the Ohio.River
during heavy rain events.
The EPA has agreed to
allow a system upgrade along

would pay up to $50,000 ~or
the retuin of students' remains
to their respective countries
The change affects about
50 international students at
the liberal arts university and
brings Urbana in .line wi th
nearby colleges and universities that offer international
education programs.
The University of Day to n,
Wittenberg University in
Springfield and Wright State
University in Fairborn al so
have insurance requiremen ts
for international students.
The Chinese studen ts,
who were pursuing maste r's .
degrees in business ad1111 nistration, were returning to
campus from a shoppi ng
trip in Springfield in we stern Ohio. Jin Bian, 27, was
driving and Bing Xue an d
Yan Sun, both 24, were Ill
the back seat.
First Avenue from Mill Street
to Park Street that would capture 85 percent of the overtlow using separate storm
and sanitary sewer lines, and
improvements to the pump
station and treatment plant.
The engineering firin
URS expects to secure grant
:tnd loan funds to finance
the improvements. The project is now in the final
design phase, and is not
expected to be completed
for at least five years.

WASHINGTON
consumer confidence is on
the skids, yet President
Bush is optimistic that tax
re bates and help for home0 wners will
adequately
JU mp-start t!te economy.
During the past few
weeks, many Americans
have received letters from
th e Internal Revenue
.s ervice, explaining the tax
rebates that will be sent
.o ut soon 3Jl part of an economic stimulus package
Bush signed into law last
month . .
Bus]) said in his Saturday
radio address that the
,checks, as·well as incentives
fo r businesses to invest in
new equipment, will give
the economy a "shot in the

arm."
On
Friday,
the
ommerce
·
Department
c
reported that in February,
consumers turned in tl)eir
weakest spending performance in 17 montps.
consumer spending e(lged
up by just 0.1 percent last
month, the poorest showing
si nee September 2006. If
I he effects of inflation are

removed, spending was flat
in February, the third consecutive month of sluggish
activity.
Consumer
confidence
dropped to its lowest level
in 16 years, further raising
fears of a ·recession.
Trying to allay rising
fears about the direction of
the economy, Bush said his
administration has taken
action to help homeowners
keep their homes.
Democrats . say more is
needed. They want Bush to
endorse their housing assistance proposal, which
would let bankruptcy
judges lower payments for
homeowners staring at foreclosure.
The president has come
out strongly against the
Democrats' housing package, . warning that . an
overzealous governmental
response to the nation 's
housing woes could hurt the
economy's ability to recover long-term. He paid a
quick visit Friday to a nonprofit debt counseling cen..
ter in Freehold, N.J., to
argue . that his administration had acted effectively.
In the Democrats' weekly radio address, newly

'

elected Illinois Rep. Bill
Foster said, "Our plan will
help more families avoid
foreclosure and gives
cities the chance to rehabilitate foreclosed homes
and put them back on the
market."
Foster, who· won a
January special election to
fill retired Republican
Rep. Dennis Hastert 's
seat, also talked Saturday
about middle-class tax
cuts, · using sources of
renewable
energy
to
lessen
the
couniry's
. dependence on oil and
expanding
children's
access to health insurance.
The
administration's
financial moves over the
past about six months
mclude · expanding the
Federal
Housing
Administration's ability to
offer refinancing to homeowners with ~ood credit,
allowing Fanme Mae and
Freddie Mac to buy up
more home loans and brokering help for struggling
homeowners through a privale-sector
mortgage
industry group. That group
has agreed to offer a fiveyear rate freeze for people
who have not missed pay-

ments or a 30-day foredosure pause for those who
fall behind.
.
In October, Bush said,
hi s administration helped
bring together the private
sector group called the
HOPE ' NOW Alliance.
'HOPE NOW helps streamline the process for refinancing and modifying
mortgages, and it runs .a
national hot line to connect struggling homeownI'TS with mortgage counselors.
"If you're a homeowner
struggling with your mortgage, please take the first
step toward getting help by
calling the hot line at ·888995-HOPB," he said.
Democrats are planning
a test vote Tuesday on their
meas ure , which would also
let localities with the highest foreclosure rates access
federal grants to buy foreclosed properties and provide $200 million in counseling to distressed bor· rowers. The proposal fell
short of the 60 votes · it
would have needed to
advance when the Senate
took it up last month, with
all but one Republican
opposing it.

Protest
from PageA1
li kely take place at the next
board meeting in May.
Carson pointed out AMPOhio's boar{~ of trustees are
municipal officials, many of .
whom have attended public
council meetings where both
AMP and its opponents have
made public presentations
0 n the power plant. Carson
said he and other employees
have been to over 80 city
·council meetings to make
public presentations on the
.plant; presentations which
have been open to public
scrutiny and comment.
The protesters belong to a
group called "Mountain
Justice" which is described
by. . member
Adam
Stephenson as "Appalachian
based" with active members
in West VIrginia, Tennessee,
Submitted photo
Kentucky
and
Ohio. · Environmentalists from the group Mountain Justice protest outside the corporate offices of
Stephenson said during American Municipal Power·Ohio on Friday.
Friday's protest there were no
protesters from Mei$s not attend Friday's protest. · coal mining in the area pany might find a greener .
County though Mountam
Stephenson also said last which are two separate pro- alternative to building a
Justice does have members Thursday his group went on jects by two separate com- coal-fired power plant. He
who live in the county. Due to a "listening project," speak- panies. A follow up was added, AMP is the leading
what he called "legal issues" ing to residents in Letart done this past Saturday.
investor in Ohio in green
some members have with Falls and . Antiquity about
Stephenson·said the group energy and felt they might
AMP-Ohio, Stephenson said how they felt about the wishes to make the presen- at least be willing to listen
he requested local .members power plant and proposed tation in the hopes the com- to alternatives.

Pleads
from .Page A1
U.S. Attorney pf!Talegal
specialist Laura Taylor said
Gibbs pleaded guilty after her
office filed an informational
after he waived being indicted by a federal grand jury.
• The informational and
plea agreement were filed
the same day the U.S.
Securities and Exchange
Commission filed a settled
civil injunctive action in the
same case.
In June 2001, Gibbs,
while workjng as an insurance · salesman, became
interested in FOREX,
which is an over-thecounter ~peculative market
in which buyers and sellers
conduct foreign exchange
transactions by trading one .
currency for another. In
2002, he became a "mentor"
for the group.
. Beginning in early 2002,
then increasing· in 2004-05,
Gibbs began trading money
he received from investors
through "loan agreements.''
Between August 2004 and
March 2007, Gibbs allegedly accepted about $21 million from 150 investors in
24 states that included
Arizona,
California,
Colorado,
Connecticut,
Delaware, Florida, Georgia,

Idaho, Indiana, Louisiana,
Michigan, Missouri, New
Mexico, New York, North
Carolina,
Ohio,
Pennsylvania,
South
Carolina, Tennessee, Texas,
Utah, Vermont, Virginia and
Wisconsin through what
was called a "loan agreement." There· also were
investors from Canada and
Great Britain.
Oui of the $21 million, he
put· almost $2 million into
his own account and used
the money to build a $1.14
million home and purchase
a luxury car and items ·for
himself and'his family.
According to the court,
the loan agreements provided that an investor would
loan Golden Summit money
for 12 months and in return
would pay a guaranteed rate
of interest.
Between December 2004
and July 2005, Gibbs was
trading about 59 customers'
funds in a managed account
and apparently lost more
than $1.5 million in the
FOREX market. It was during this time that he came
up with a scheme to misrepresent his . customers with
the "Ponzi" scam.
A "Ponzi" or pyramid
scam is a fraudulent investment program that is not
truly supported .by any
underlying business venture
and creates an illusion for
investors that they . are

investing in a profitable
trading program rather than
a ·fraudulent scheme. This
scheme is a violation of the
Securities Act of 1933 and
the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934.
To pay existing investors
promised returns, the promoter uses a cash-flow generated from newly acquired
investors. The new money
also is used to mask any
investment losses.
It also is charged that
Gibbs did not file a registration statement with the
SEC, and no exemption
from · regis~ration
was
applied to the offer and sale
of the securities.
According to the SEC,
because Gibbs does not
have the amount of money
for restitution, the government will seize all his
investments and personal ·
items, including the house
in New Haven .
Assisting the SEC and

-

-

•

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Personal Removal

.

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U.S. Attorney's Office in the
case were · the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, the
U.S. Postal Inspection
Service, the West Virginia
State Auditor's Office and
the U.S. Commodity Futures
Trading Commission.

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PageA6

·LOCAL • STATE
MEIGsComm ·Rentains in Iraq identified as .
COURT NEWS Ohio soldier's n1issing since '04

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 31,

•

mer wife, CarolY.n, held a
candlelight vigil Sunday
night outside the Yellow
Ribbon Support Center i~
Batavia, an office they used
to package thousands of
boxes of donated snack$
and toiletries for shipmer¢
to soldiers in Iraq.
·
"It hurts," Carolyn Maupin
said of her son's deat~~
"After you through almost
four years of hop«:, and this i!
what happens, tt's like a lc:J
down, so I'm trying to get
through that right now."
,
. One U.S. soldier remainl
missing in action. Ahmed
Qusai al-Taayie, a 41-ye~
old Iraqi-born reserve soi
dier from Ann Arbor, Mich~
was abducted while visiting
his Iraqi wife on Oct. 23 jll
Baghdad. Capt. Michai!J
Speicher, a Navy pilot, al~
has been missing since the
1991 Persian Gulf War. ·,
Matt Maupin graduatel2
from Glen Este High
School, just east oT
Cincinnati, in 200 I aqd
attend_ed the University of
Cincinnati for a year befoll
joining the Army Reserves~
Dan Simmons, the athlel,t
ic director at Glen Est~
remembered MauJ?in as a
quiet but hardworking backup player on the school'$
football team.
"Matt was a selfless kid ori
the football field," Simmons
said. "He did whatever the
coaches told him. He wasn't
a starter, but he made ~
other kids play harder." ·
A month after his captuf(:,
Maupin was promoted tb
the rank of specialist. In
April 2005, Maupin was
:
· promoted to sergeant.

BY TERRY KINNEY

POMEROY - Meigs County Court Judge Steven L
Story recent! y processed the following cases: ·
· Anthony S. Allman, Edinboro, Pa., $30 and costs, speeding; Lindsay K. Anderson, New Concord, $30 and costs,
speeding; Douglas E. Barnette, Racine, $20 and costs, stop
sign; Daniel F. Bauman, Logan, $30 and costs, seat belt
violation; Darrell R. Beard, Bloomdale, $20 ·and costs,
assured clear distance; Ryan P. Beaty, Columbus, $30 and
costs, seat belt violation; Donald P. Bing, Gallipolis, $550
and costs, 365 days in jail, 335 suspended, hcense suspended, probatiot;~, DUI; Tara D. Blankenship, Albany, $20
and costs, failure to control; Andrea M. Bolin, Guysville,
· · $20 and costs, stop sign; Charles P. Borghese, Columbus,
. $30 and costs, speeding; Michael B. Bowles, St. Albans,
W.Va., $30 and costs, seat belt violation; Darren D.
Br~dges, Huntersville, N.C., $80 and costs, speeding;
Cameron J. Brinager, Portland, $20·and costs, assured cleat
distance; Troy 0 . Brooks, Pomeroy, $350 and costs, ISO
days in jail, 177 suspended, probauon, license suspended,
driving under influence; Rithy Bun, Jacksonville, Fla., $30
and costs, speeding'; Robert C. Burchett, Scotia, N.Y., $30
and costs, speeding; Charles C. Burgoon, Toledo, $30 and
· costs, speeding; Shelly A. Caldwell, Reedsville, $3Q and
costs, speeding; Terri L. Carmichael, Racine, $100 and
costs, 30 days in jail, suspended, probation, wrongful
entrustment; Jeffrey W. Carpenter, Barnsville, $30 and
costs, speeding; Shelly M. Carroll, Tuppers Plains, $30 and
costs, seat belt violation; Kevin F. Carty, Columbus, $20
and costs, assured clear distance; Amy B. Casto, Gallipolis,
$30 and costs, sr,eeding; Gary V. Charles, The Plains, $95,
180 days in jail, suspended, probation, non-support of
dependents; Daniel G. Chong, Potomac Falls, Va., $30 and.
costs·, speeding.
.
·
.
Paul D. Cinereski, Oak Hill, $30 and costs, speeding;
Terrence L. Clark, Racine, $300 and costs, 90 days in
jail, 87 suspended, probation, driving under influence;
Charles R. Clary; Chilhowie, Va., $30 and costs, speeding; Brian J. Clement, Westland, Mich., $30 and costs,
speeding; Evelyn J. Cline, Lancaster, $30 and costs,
speeding; Janelle R. Colburn, Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
seat belt violation; Loretta J. Collier, 1\ippers Plains, $30
and costs, speeding; Kelly M. Collins, Urbana, $30 and
costs, ~peeding ; Teresa L. Combs, Bidwell, $20 and
costs, traffic cont. dev./signs; David W. Coppick,
Middleport, $30 and costs, speeding; David W. Cox,
Martins Ferry, $30 and costs, speeding; William M.
Custer, Well_ington, Fla., $30 and costs, speeding: Henry
J. Daley, Fair Haven, Vt., $70 and costs, illegally taking
~eer; Brad A. Dav_enport, Po~eroy, $30 and costs, speedmg; Joel A. Davidson, Lexmgton, Va., $30 and costs,
speeding; Amy D. Davis, Middleport, $20 and costs, tint_ed glass; Shawna H. Davis, Rutland, $30 and costs,
speeding; Brandon S. Dickson, Hilliard, $30 and costs, .
speeding; Justin L Dillon, Reedsville, $30 and costs, seat
belt violation; Charles S. Driver, Cross Lanes, W.Va., $30
and costs, speeding; Todd D. Eads, $350 and costs, 180
~ays in jail, 177 suspended, license suspended, DUI with
mtox. over .10; Ntcholas G. Economides, Jackson, $20
and costs, improper passing; Alvin L. Emch, Charleston,
W.Va., $30 and costs, speeding; Michael M. Evlmosky,
Hinton, W.Va.: Lucas K. Fackler, Rutland, $100, 180
days in jail, 175 suspended, probation, contributing
delinquincy child, $100 and costs, 180 days in jail, 175
suspended, probation, failure to appear; Kendall V. Ford,
Dublin, $30 and costs, speedmg; Amber N. Fout,
McArthur, $20 and costs, tinted glass.
Ana C. Franz, Miami Beach, Fla., $80 and costs, speeding; ~ic~a~l F. Freeman, Middleport, $200 and costs, 10
days m Jatl, seven suspended,_probation, no operators
license; Michelle J. French, Mtddleport, $20 and costs
failure to control; Mark E. Frye, Cheshire, $100 imd costs:
mtox pedestnan on higbway; Steven S. Frye, Mason,
W.Va., $800, 30 days in jail, suspened, probation, pyh.
cont. veh. intox.: Clyde T. Gardner, Thomasville, N.C.,
$30 .an~ costs, seat belt violation; Jeffrey L. Golden,
Galhpohs, $100 and costs, disorderly while intoxicated;
Glenn A. Gray, Hico, W.Va., $30 and costs, seat belt violation; James R. Greene, Pomeroy, $300 and costs, 180
day~ in jail, 177 suspended, probation, license suspended,
dnvmg under mfluence; Darrell Haney, Bidwell, $30 and
costs, speedi~g.: Jerry J. Haning, Albany, $300 and costs,
180 days m Jail, 177 suspended, probation, license suspended, DUI; Samantha D. Hapney, Reynoldsburg, $30
and costs; seat belt violation; Chester L. · Hardy,
Charleston, W.Va., $198 and costs, probation, phy. cont.
veh. intox; Charles L. Harmon, Middleport, $30 and
costs, seat belt violation; Corey A. Hatfield, Syracuse,
$30 and costs, hunting w/out v.alid NR license, $50 and
costs, hunting w/out special permit; Kyla J. Hedges,
Columbus, $30 and costs, speeding; Michael
!:feidersc~eidt, Sleepy Eye, Minn., $30 and costs, speedmg; Cll;rne A. Henderson, Coolville, $30 and.costs, speedmg; Miles F. Herbert, Gahanna, $30 and costs, speeding;
Sar~ E. . Herrera, .Portland, $30 and ·costs, speeding;
Lausha C. Hood, Charlotte, N.C., $30 and costs, speedmg; James H. Houck, Carroll, $20 and costs, improper
passmll; Casey N. Hubbard, Pomeroy, $150 and costs,
probation, speeding, $200 and costs, 10 days in jail, seven
suspended, probation, driving under suspension; Adam B.
Ingels, West Columbia, W.Va., $30 and costs, seat belt
violation; Shawn K. Jenkins, Sciotoville, $30 and costs,
seat belt violation; Ronnie J. Johnson, Chester, $200 and
costs, _I 0 days in jail, seven suspened, probation, no operators hcense, $30 and costs, probation, seat belt violation.

.

Local Weather
.

Monday...Cloudy with a
50 percent chance of showers. Not as cool with highs
in the· mid 60s. South winds
10 to 15 mph.
Monday night... Mostly
cloudy with a 20 .percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the mid 50s. South winds 10
to 15 mph .
Thesday... Showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the
upper 60s. Southwest winds
10 to' 15 mph with gusts up
to 25 mph. Chance of rain
80 percent.
TUesday night... Mostly
cloudy
in
the
evening ... Then becoming
part! y cloudy. Lows in the
upper 30s.
Wednesday
and
Wednesday nlght ... Partly

cloudy. Hillhs in the upper
50s. Lows m the mid 30s.
' Thursday... Partly sunny
in the morning ... Then
becoming mostly cloudy. A
40 percent chance of rain
showers. Highs around 60.
Thursday nlght ...Mostly
cloudy with showers and
thunderstorms likely. Lows
in the upper 40s. Chance of
rain 70 percent.
Friday...Cloudy
with
showers and thunderstonns
likely. Highs in the lower
60s. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Frldaf ntaJtt...Mostly
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the lower 40s.
Saturday•.. Partly sunny.
Highs around 60.

200~

ASSOciATED PRESS WRITER

BATAVIA- The father
of a soldier listed as missing-captured in Iraq since
2004 said Sunday the military had informed him that
his son's remains were
found in Iraq.
Keith Maupin said .an
Army general told him
DNA testing had identifi~d
the remains of his son, Sgt.
Keith Matthew Maupin, or
"Matt" as he was commonly
known . ·
"My heart sinks, but I
know they can't hurt him
anymore," Maupin said,
speaking in the soldier's
hometown near suburban
Cincinnati.
Keith Maupin said the
Army didn't disclose where
or how his son 's remains
were discovered, only that
officials found a shirt similar to one his son was wearing at the time of his disappearance.
·
The Army was contihuing .
its investigation, he said.
Lt. Lee Packnett, an Army
public affairs officer in
Washington, confirmed that
.
.
AP photo
the Maupins were notified Carolyn and Keith Maupin, parents of missing U.S. Army Sgt.
Sul)day that · their son's Keith Matthew ·Matt" Maupin, pose with a poster inside the
remains had been identified. Yellow Ribbon Support Center in this April 6, 2007 file photo
Packnett said an official state- near Batavia. Keith Maupin says an Army general told him
ment about the identification · Sunday that DNA was used to Identify the remains of his
would be released Monday.
son, Sgt. Keith Matthew Maupin who went by "Matt."
Matt Maupin was a 20year-old private fu:st class beginning that the chances · "ltold them when we'd go
when he was caJ?tured April of finding his son alive were . up to the Pentagon, whether
9, 2004, after his fuel con- only 50:50. .
, he ~alks off a plane or is
voy, part of the 724th
Maupm satd he doesn I earned off, you're not going
Transportation Company, holcl _the Army responsible to leave him in Iraq like you
was ambushed west of f?r his son's death. But he did those 11uys in Vietnam,"
Baghdad.
did hold the Army account- Maupin said.
.
' A week later, the Arab tele- able for the soldier's return.
Keith Maupin and his forvision · netwo* Al-Jazeera
·'
'
...•
aired a videotape showing
Maupin sitting on the floor
~•OJ
surrounded by five masked
men holding automatic rifles.
waald like lhnak aD lh- Ullld
That · June, Al-Jazeera
aired another tape purportlor IUIIIIorUng •r Picture
in~ to show a 0 .s. soldier
Brian Will
Randy Snider
Pat Story
bemg shot. But the dark and
Robert Mash .
George Clrde
Steve Story
grainy tape showed onlv the
Clark's Jewelry
~ Macy Grueser
back of the victim's Jiead
~· Jacks~Jn Balla~
and not the actual shooting.
The Fabric Shop
Mn. Ray Glaze
Canon Crow
The Maupins refused to
BracyKom
Rosalie Story
(In DMIIIOry of Chief
believe ii was their .son, and
Ethel Shank
Thomas Hart
Danny Zirkle)
the Army had listed him as
George F. N118h
Pegy Broderick
Mlna Swisher
missing-captured.
The
Maupins lobbied hard for
Barbara A. Mora
Charles and Betty Faulk Charles Salser
the Army to continue listing
Gertrude Ables
Jane Teoford
Guy Sargent
their son as missing-capStanley E. McFarlan~
Dianne Hawley
Glen Mayes
tured, fearing that another
· MarieCurd
Gerald Rought
GeorgeKorn
designation would underMcDonalds of Pomeroy
mine efforts to find bini.
Ashley Hamilton
Ed Nelson
Keith Maupin said · the
EdwlnG.Ash
Darrell G. Jenkins
Eleanor Blaettner
..
Army told htm from the
Gathel Shaffer
Thomll8 Molden
David Slater
Charles R. Houdashelt
· Ruth A. Smith
PauiMarr
Grace Abbott
Mick Williams
Pandol'li Collins
Pomeroy Chu"'h of Christ ·
Thomas C. Werry
Elolee Adams
Josepb I. Stroble
Edgar Ahbolt
Mildred Humphreys
E.A. Welker
Myrtis K. Parker
Don Anderson
'
Ma~t E. Follrod
Fred Werry
Dean Damitz
Mary
E. Bowen
VIrginia E. Hoyt
Ed Jartels
Leona Cleland
Horace Karr
Hel'n Quivey
Ola
St. Clair
Don Hunnell
Dan Morris
COLUMBUS (AP) ...,... A
Denna J. Eblin
Louise Eads
federal judge dismissed a
Jane Seldenabel
lawsuit filed by SherwinJim and Edltb Hlckert
Teddy A. Warner
Robert Bailey
Williams Co. that sought to
Billy 0' Brien ·
Hazel Eichinger
Loren Neat
keep the city from suing the
Gene Romine
Florence Thpplng
Ron HOI
company to help pay for the
Howard English
Sarah Hun ·
Phil Oblinger
cleanup of properties conta·Lila Mitch
minated with lead paint.
Paul D. White
Tabby Smith
Sherwin-Williams failed
Phyllis Cline
William Sfaklnoti
Raymond Wilcox
to prove any imminent damAnonymous Donor
Keebler Business Services
Donna Boyd
ages, and other courts could
Paul Simon
Erlk.Aanestad
DonCullums
take up any constitutional
Rollin and Nancy Radford
Danny Crow
issues raised by the lawsuit,
Geneva Wigal
said U.S. District Judge
Charles and Sylvia Neece ·
Riverview Motors
Wanda Wllliams
Edmund Sargus Jr.
Mary and Sabra Gibson
James Clark
Betty Butcber
· The city of Columbus
Courtney Sbn
John Musser
Melva Tracy
sued Sherwin-Williams in
Hazll Oliver
Fred Johnson
Charles Lewis
2006, and the case remains
pending in Franklin County
William and Donna Ohlinger
Eula Odegard
Robert Moore
Common Pleas Court. .
Cassie Thmer
Don Smith
Bob Buck
City Attorney Richard
Ed and Hazel Bait
Danny Grueser
Anthony Svoboda
Pfeiffer Jr. said F:riday the
Dan and Barbara Cremeans
Clark's Jewelry
Conrad Belcher
company's suit had no merit.
Roger Leifheit
Charles Moellenberg, ·a
Jamie Deem
Corbet Cleek
lawyer for Cleveland-based
Gregory and Lauren oi
Dorothy M. Jeffers
Lillian Salrbmugh
Sherwin-Williams, said he
Brien
RoyGrueser
Robert Ramsburg
had no immediate comment:
Lloyd and Joyce Haggy
Gary F. Hysell
David Brlckles
Columbus is the only
Ohio VaHey Check Cashing . William and Naomi King
Ohio city still suing
Dave Fife
Sherwin- ~illiams and other
.The Burtrum Family
&amp; Loan
Scott Powell
companies.
Richard Owen
Rachel Jenolngs
Leonard Jewell
A judge: in Toledo threw
Robert Cushner
Martha Camp
Cora Lee
out that city's lawsuit
David Hudnall
Marvin Burt
CarlL. Wore
against Sherwin-Williams
Marjorie Reuter
in December. Other cities,
Rose Corliss ·
Faye Wildermuth
,,
including
Akron
and
Carpenters Local Union 11650 Wild Jfone Cafe LLC
Dale Lilly
Cleveland, dropped their
Larry E. Hofrman
Raymond Jewell
Ronald Daggy
lawsuits.
Sacred Heart Churh
Swisher &amp; Lohse
Robert Smith
Lead paint was banned in
George Stewart
the United States for use in
Erma Smith
Donna Davis
homes in 1978. Exposure to
Lawrence Leonard
Jim Soulsby
Edna Stewart
lead is particularly dangerCharles Kuhl
Patricia McKnight
ou s for young children, who · Lloyd King
Subway
J udlth Jones
Roger Young
can develop a reduced IQ,
Legar Monuments
Peg Carper
behavioral disorders, stomach problems or brain damjean Wright
Bernice Riflle
'age if they breathe in lead
dust or eat lead paint chips.

to

File Deparbnenl

Fuadnl•.

Judge.says city
can continue
with lead
paint lawsuit

•

.'

..
.

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Lady Falcons I~ at Point Pleasant,
Page B2

Monday, March 31, 2008

UCLA shuts down Xavier 76-57 ·
to reach third straight Finru Four
ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP pholo
North Carolina's Tyler Hansbrough (50) dunks over
~oulsvllle's David Padgett, left, during the second half of the
NCAA East Regional final basketball game, Saturday in
Charlotte, N.C.

Tyler Hansbrough leads
~op•seeded North
Carolina past Louisville
83-73 and into Final Four
BY AARON BEARD

to wait for next year.
The Tar Heels have won
all four of their games in this
CHARLOTTE, · N.C.
tournament by double digits.
1Yler Hansbrough always All four Victories came in
found a way for North · their home state, too, allowCarolina, whether it was ing them to celebrate in ·
~arrying the Tar Heels when front of plenty of blue-clad
they lost their point guard or fans Saturday.
making a shot despite every· "My feelings right now
defender knowing the ball are llreat," Hansbrough said.
would end up in his hands. "Thts just kind of takes all
!'low, with ~is ~elentl~ss those b~ experiences away.
dnve and unyteldmg w1ll, . At the same time, we want
Hansbrough has the Tar to accomplish more."
Heels back in the Final Four.
1Y Lawson added 11
. Hansbrough had 28 points points - including a key 3and 13 .rebounds Saturday pointer with about 5 minutes
night to help the Tar Heels left - for North Carolina,
hold off Louisville 83-73 in 'Yhich blew a 12-point halfthe East Regional final. hme. lead, then broke away
Playing in front of a partisan from a tie at 59 to earn their
home-state .crowd, they I 7th trip to the Final Four. .
reached the national semifiLast year, nobody could
nals for the first time since hit a shot when the Tat Heels
winning the championship needed one most against the
in 2005.
Hoyas in a loss that had
The Tar Heels (36-2) stayed with them all season.
advanced to play the But this time, the Tar Heels
Kansas-Davidson winner played with steady poise
next Saturday at San when the third-seeded
Antonio, setting. up a poten- Cardinals (27 -9) erased the
tial matchup between Hall margin and traded baskets
of Fame coach Roy with them in the anxious
Williams and the Jayhawks final minutes.
program he left behind when
First, with the Tar Heels
he returned · to his alma clinging to a 68-64 lead,
Lawson came around . the
mater in 2003.
On this night, however, baseline and knocked down
th!l focus was squarely on a 3 from the comer in front
the
Atlainic
Coast of his bench that pushed the
Conference's player of the margin to seven. Then, after
year.
a basket from Earl Clark
. Battling in a physical con- inside, Hansbrough knocked
test inside, Hansbrough fin- down a straightaway jumper
ished 12-for-17 from the over the 6-foot-11 Padgett to
floor in 38 minutes and was make it 73-66 with 2:27 to ·
pamed regional MVP. That play.
included a pair of clutch
Hansbrough essentially
jpmpers over the out- closed · the door on
stretched arms of 6-11 cen- Louisville on the next poster David Padgett as the Tar session. The 6-9 junior ~ot
Heels desperately tried to the ball on the left wing With
hold their tenuous second- !he shot · clock winding
. half lead in the final min- down, then pump-faked to
Utes.
get Clark up in the air and
· "He does the same thin¥, step in for another jumper
in practice every day, ' over Padgett. The ball
Williams said. "He is the swished cleanly through
most driven, focused player while Hansbrough was
I' ye ever seen in my life. He knocked to the ground,
w'"ts to be .the best player pushing the ·lead to 75-66
he can be and win.
with I :33 left.
"That's Tyler Hansbrough. ."I've been playing with
Jbat's Tyler Hansbrough at him my whole college
practice every day. That's career," said junior Danny
l('yler Hansbrough on . off Green, who had II J?Oints
days. That's who . Tyler despite needing four stitches
Hansbrough is."
to close a cut above his left
: For Hansbrough and his eye late in the first half.· "A
teammates, it was a reversal · lot of shots that he takes and
from last year's second-half makes, it still shocks me to
collapse
against this day. I'm like, 'How did
Georgetown in the NCAA he get that on; and ~ow did
tournament's round of eight. , he. m~e. tt? He s b~~n
This time, the tournament's domg 11 hts whole career.
No. I overall seed got to cut
The
baskets
left
down the nets instead ·of
heading to the locker room
PIHH ... Four, B2
ASSOCIATEO PRESS

'

POMEROY- A schedule o! upcom1ng h•,gh
school vars•tv. sporhog events 1nvolvmg
teamc lrom Me1gs and Ga!ha count1es ..

Monday. March 31
Boys Baseball

River Valley at Eas tern , 5 p m
Ripley at Southern. 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at lronron. 5 p.m.
South Galtia at Huntington St. Joe, 5

BY ANDREW BAGNATO

PHOENIX- After reaching the Final Four for the
third straight time, UCLA
coach Ben Howland called
these Bruins ~ ' by far the
best" of the three.
.
The other two didn't have
freshman Kevin Love, . who
had 19 points and I 0
rebounds as the top-seeded
Bruins blitzed Xavier 76-57
Saturday to earn their record
18th overall trip to the Final
Four.
Love was picked as the
most outstanding player of
the West Regional.
"Obviously, it's unbelievable," Howland said after
taking the last few snips of
the net. "That's really a
credit to how good the players are·and how well we performed under pressure the
las~ three years."
It's the Bruins' longest
string of Final Four appearances since they closed the
John Wooden era with nine
straight trips and added a
lOth consecutive trip in
1976 under his successor,
Gene Bartow.
The Bruins' I 980 Final
Four was later vacated by
the NCAA because of rules
violations.
At times on · Saturday,
Howland's Bruins looked
every bit as dominant as
Wooden ·s finer squads,
annihilating a proud Xavier
team that had set a school
record for victories.
The Bruins '(35-3) lost in

LocAL Scmmm..E

p.m.

Girls Soffball
River Valley at Eastern, 5 p.m
Southern at Roane County, 5 p.m.

Tennis
Gallia Academy at Athens, 4:30 p.m
TutldaY, April 1
Bora Baseball
Parke rsburg South at Eastern, 5 p. m.
SoLJ!hern at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Fairland at Ga!lia Academy, 5 p.m.
South Gallla at Symmes Valley, 5 p.tn.
Glrlo Softball
Eastern at Athens, 5 p.m.
·
Point Pleasant at Meigs, 4:30 p.m.
Southern at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Fairland at Gallla Academy, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Symmes Valley, 5 p.m. ·
Track ond Field
Eastern at Belpre, 4 p.m.
Gallla Academy at Unioto, 4 p.m.
South Gattla at Vinton COl!nty, 4:30 p.m.

·

Wtdneadey Apr!! 2
Boy1 Baseball
Southern at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Girt• Softball
Southern at South Gallla, 5 p.m.

·

·

Tbu!'ldav, April 3

Boya BaHboll
Eastern at Waterford, 5 p.m.
Belpre at Meigs, 5 p. ~.
Southern at Federal Hocking, 5 p.m.
Gh1o Softball
E~stern at Waterford; 5 p.m.
-Belpre at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Southern at Federal Hocking, 5 p.m.

AP photo
Xavier's Stanley Burrell (34) reacts after a call during the
second half of their NCAA men's basketball tournament
West Regional final against UCLA, Saturday in Phoenix.
Xavier lost to UCLA, 76-57.
the Final Four the last two
"We're getting spoiled
years. But they go to San with Kevin," Howland said.
Antonio with Love, who has
love made 7-of-11 shots
given them a formidable from the floor, including 2inside presence and has of-4 from beyond the arc.
raised his game in this tour- Half of his rebounds came at
nament.
the ·offensive end and he
UCLA
plays
the added four assists for good
Memphis-Texas winner in measure.
the national semifinal in San
PIHH IH UCLA, 11
Antonio on April 5.

CoNrAcrUs
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

Fox- H40.446·3008
E·mlll- sports @":~Ydallysentlnel .com
SPOrts Stan

Eric Randolph, Sports Writer
(740) 4.46-2342, axt. 33
erandolphOmydailysentinel.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, .. ~. 33
bwaltersOmydailytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, axt. 33
Ierum@ mydailyregister.com

••

Local Caring:

�•
•

PageA6

·LOCAL • STATE
MEIGsComm ·Rentains in Iraq identified as .
COURT NEWS Ohio soldier's n1issing since '04

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 31,

•

mer wife, CarolY.n, held a
candlelight vigil Sunday
night outside the Yellow
Ribbon Support Center i~
Batavia, an office they used
to package thousands of
boxes of donated snack$
and toiletries for shipmer¢
to soldiers in Iraq.
·
"It hurts," Carolyn Maupin
said of her son's deat~~
"After you through almost
four years of hop«:, and this i!
what happens, tt's like a lc:J
down, so I'm trying to get
through that right now."
,
. One U.S. soldier remainl
missing in action. Ahmed
Qusai al-Taayie, a 41-ye~
old Iraqi-born reserve soi
dier from Ann Arbor, Mich~
was abducted while visiting
his Iraqi wife on Oct. 23 jll
Baghdad. Capt. Michai!J
Speicher, a Navy pilot, al~
has been missing since the
1991 Persian Gulf War. ·,
Matt Maupin graduatel2
from Glen Este High
School, just east oT
Cincinnati, in 200 I aqd
attend_ed the University of
Cincinnati for a year befoll
joining the Army Reserves~
Dan Simmons, the athlel,t
ic director at Glen Est~
remembered MauJ?in as a
quiet but hardworking backup player on the school'$
football team.
"Matt was a selfless kid ori
the football field," Simmons
said. "He did whatever the
coaches told him. He wasn't
a starter, but he made ~
other kids play harder." ·
A month after his captuf(:,
Maupin was promoted tb
the rank of specialist. In
April 2005, Maupin was
:
· promoted to sergeant.

BY TERRY KINNEY

POMEROY - Meigs County Court Judge Steven L
Story recent! y processed the following cases: ·
· Anthony S. Allman, Edinboro, Pa., $30 and costs, speeding; Lindsay K. Anderson, New Concord, $30 and costs,
speeding; Douglas E. Barnette, Racine, $20 and costs, stop
sign; Daniel F. Bauman, Logan, $30 and costs, seat belt
violation; Darrell R. Beard, Bloomdale, $20 ·and costs,
assured clear distance; Ryan P. Beaty, Columbus, $30 and
costs, seat belt violation; Donald P. Bing, Gallipolis, $550
and costs, 365 days in jail, 335 suspended, hcense suspended, probatiot;~, DUI; Tara D. Blankenship, Albany, $20
and costs, failure to control; Andrea M. Bolin, Guysville,
· · $20 and costs, stop sign; Charles P. Borghese, Columbus,
. $30 and costs, speeding; Michael B. Bowles, St. Albans,
W.Va., $30 and costs, seat belt violation; Darren D.
Br~dges, Huntersville, N.C., $80 and costs, speeding;
Cameron J. Brinager, Portland, $20·and costs, assured cleat
distance; Troy 0 . Brooks, Pomeroy, $350 and costs, ISO
days in jail, 177 suspended, probauon, license suspended,
driving under influence; Rithy Bun, Jacksonville, Fla., $30
and costs, speeding'; Robert C. Burchett, Scotia, N.Y., $30
and costs, speeding; Charles C. Burgoon, Toledo, $30 and
· costs, speeding; Shelly A. Caldwell, Reedsville, $3Q and
costs, speeding; Terri L. Carmichael, Racine, $100 and
costs, 30 days in jail, suspended, probation, wrongful
entrustment; Jeffrey W. Carpenter, Barnsville, $30 and
costs, speeding; Shelly M. Carroll, Tuppers Plains, $30 and
costs, seat belt violation; Kevin F. Carty, Columbus, $20
and costs, assured clear distance; Amy B. Casto, Gallipolis,
$30 and costs, sr,eeding; Gary V. Charles, The Plains, $95,
180 days in jail, suspended, probation, non-support of
dependents; Daniel G. Chong, Potomac Falls, Va., $30 and.
costs·, speeding.
.
·
.
Paul D. Cinereski, Oak Hill, $30 and costs, speeding;
Terrence L. Clark, Racine, $300 and costs, 90 days in
jail, 87 suspended, probation, driving under influence;
Charles R. Clary; Chilhowie, Va., $30 and costs, speeding; Brian J. Clement, Westland, Mich., $30 and costs,
speeding; Evelyn J. Cline, Lancaster, $30 and costs,
speeding; Janelle R. Colburn, Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
seat belt violation; Loretta J. Collier, 1\ippers Plains, $30
and costs, speeding; Kelly M. Collins, Urbana, $30 and
costs, ~peeding ; Teresa L. Combs, Bidwell, $20 and
costs, traffic cont. dev./signs; David W. Coppick,
Middleport, $30 and costs, speeding; David W. Cox,
Martins Ferry, $30 and costs, speeding; William M.
Custer, Well_ington, Fla., $30 and costs, speeding: Henry
J. Daley, Fair Haven, Vt., $70 and costs, illegally taking
~eer; Brad A. Dav_enport, Po~eroy, $30 and costs, speedmg; Joel A. Davidson, Lexmgton, Va., $30 and costs,
speeding; Amy D. Davis, Middleport, $20 and costs, tint_ed glass; Shawna H. Davis, Rutland, $30 and costs,
speeding; Brandon S. Dickson, Hilliard, $30 and costs, .
speeding; Justin L Dillon, Reedsville, $30 and costs, seat
belt violation; Charles S. Driver, Cross Lanes, W.Va., $30
and costs, speeding; Todd D. Eads, $350 and costs, 180
~ays in jail, 177 suspended, license suspended, DUI with
mtox. over .10; Ntcholas G. Economides, Jackson, $20
and costs, improper passing; Alvin L. Emch, Charleston,
W.Va., $30 and costs, speeding; Michael M. Evlmosky,
Hinton, W.Va.: Lucas K. Fackler, Rutland, $100, 180
days in jail, 175 suspended, probation, contributing
delinquincy child, $100 and costs, 180 days in jail, 175
suspended, probation, failure to appear; Kendall V. Ford,
Dublin, $30 and costs, speedmg; Amber N. Fout,
McArthur, $20 and costs, tinted glass.
Ana C. Franz, Miami Beach, Fla., $80 and costs, speeding; ~ic~a~l F. Freeman, Middleport, $200 and costs, 10
days m Jatl, seven suspended,_probation, no operators
license; Michelle J. French, Mtddleport, $20 and costs
failure to control; Mark E. Frye, Cheshire, $100 imd costs:
mtox pedestnan on higbway; Steven S. Frye, Mason,
W.Va., $800, 30 days in jail, suspened, probation, pyh.
cont. veh. intox.: Clyde T. Gardner, Thomasville, N.C.,
$30 .an~ costs, seat belt violation; Jeffrey L. Golden,
Galhpohs, $100 and costs, disorderly while intoxicated;
Glenn A. Gray, Hico, W.Va., $30 and costs, seat belt violation; James R. Greene, Pomeroy, $300 and costs, 180
day~ in jail, 177 suspended, probation, license suspended,
dnvmg under mfluence; Darrell Haney, Bidwell, $30 and
costs, speedi~g.: Jerry J. Haning, Albany, $300 and costs,
180 days m Jail, 177 suspended, probation, license suspended, DUI; Samantha D. Hapney, Reynoldsburg, $30
and costs; seat belt violation; Chester L. · Hardy,
Charleston, W.Va., $198 and costs, probation, phy. cont.
veh. intox; Charles L. Harmon, Middleport, $30 and
costs, seat belt violation; Corey A. Hatfield, Syracuse,
$30 and costs, hunting w/out v.alid NR license, $50 and
costs, hunting w/out special permit; Kyla J. Hedges,
Columbus, $30 and costs, speeding; Michael
!:feidersc~eidt, Sleepy Eye, Minn., $30 and costs, speedmg; Cll;rne A. Henderson, Coolville, $30 and.costs, speedmg; Miles F. Herbert, Gahanna, $30 and costs, speeding;
Sar~ E. . Herrera, .Portland, $30 and ·costs, speeding;
Lausha C. Hood, Charlotte, N.C., $30 and costs, speedmg; James H. Houck, Carroll, $20 and costs, improper
passmll; Casey N. Hubbard, Pomeroy, $150 and costs,
probation, speeding, $200 and costs, 10 days in jail, seven
suspended, probation, driving under suspension; Adam B.
Ingels, West Columbia, W.Va., $30 and costs, seat belt
violation; Shawn K. Jenkins, Sciotoville, $30 and costs,
seat belt violation; Ronnie J. Johnson, Chester, $200 and
costs, _I 0 days in jail, seven suspened, probation, no operators hcense, $30 and costs, probation, seat belt violation.

.

Local Weather
.

Monday...Cloudy with a
50 percent chance of showers. Not as cool with highs
in the· mid 60s. South winds
10 to 15 mph.
Monday night... Mostly
cloudy with a 20 .percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the mid 50s. South winds 10
to 15 mph .
Thesday... Showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the
upper 60s. Southwest winds
10 to' 15 mph with gusts up
to 25 mph. Chance of rain
80 percent.
TUesday night... Mostly
cloudy
in
the
evening ... Then becoming
part! y cloudy. Lows in the
upper 30s.
Wednesday
and
Wednesday nlght ... Partly

cloudy. Hillhs in the upper
50s. Lows m the mid 30s.
' Thursday... Partly sunny
in the morning ... Then
becoming mostly cloudy. A
40 percent chance of rain
showers. Highs around 60.
Thursday nlght ...Mostly
cloudy with showers and
thunderstorms likely. Lows
in the upper 40s. Chance of
rain 70 percent.
Friday...Cloudy
with
showers and thunderstonns
likely. Highs in the lower
60s. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Frldaf ntaJtt...Mostly
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the lower 40s.
Saturday•.. Partly sunny.
Highs around 60.

200~

ASSOciATED PRESS WRITER

BATAVIA- The father
of a soldier listed as missing-captured in Iraq since
2004 said Sunday the military had informed him that
his son's remains were
found in Iraq.
Keith Maupin said .an
Army general told him
DNA testing had identifi~d
the remains of his son, Sgt.
Keith Matthew Maupin, or
"Matt" as he was commonly
known . ·
"My heart sinks, but I
know they can't hurt him
anymore," Maupin said,
speaking in the soldier's
hometown near suburban
Cincinnati.
Keith Maupin said the
Army didn't disclose where
or how his son 's remains
were discovered, only that
officials found a shirt similar to one his son was wearing at the time of his disappearance.
·
The Army was contihuing .
its investigation, he said.
Lt. Lee Packnett, an Army
public affairs officer in
Washington, confirmed that
.
.
AP photo
the Maupins were notified Carolyn and Keith Maupin, parents of missing U.S. Army Sgt.
Sul)day that · their son's Keith Matthew ·Matt" Maupin, pose with a poster inside the
remains had been identified. Yellow Ribbon Support Center in this April 6, 2007 file photo
Packnett said an official state- near Batavia. Keith Maupin says an Army general told him
ment about the identification · Sunday that DNA was used to Identify the remains of his
would be released Monday.
son, Sgt. Keith Matthew Maupin who went by "Matt."
Matt Maupin was a 20year-old private fu:st class beginning that the chances · "ltold them when we'd go
when he was caJ?tured April of finding his son alive were . up to the Pentagon, whether
9, 2004, after his fuel con- only 50:50. .
, he ~alks off a plane or is
voy, part of the 724th
Maupm satd he doesn I earned off, you're not going
Transportation Company, holcl _the Army responsible to leave him in Iraq like you
was ambushed west of f?r his son's death. But he did those 11uys in Vietnam,"
Baghdad.
did hold the Army account- Maupin said.
.
' A week later, the Arab tele- able for the soldier's return.
Keith Maupin and his forvision · netwo* Al-Jazeera
·'
'
...•
aired a videotape showing
Maupin sitting on the floor
~•OJ
surrounded by five masked
men holding automatic rifles.
waald like lhnak aD lh- Ullld
That · June, Al-Jazeera
aired another tape purportlor IUIIIIorUng •r Picture
in~ to show a 0 .s. soldier
Brian Will
Randy Snider
Pat Story
bemg shot. But the dark and
Robert Mash .
George Clrde
Steve Story
grainy tape showed onlv the
Clark's Jewelry
~ Macy Grueser
back of the victim's Jiead
~· Jacks~Jn Balla~
and not the actual shooting.
The Fabric Shop
Mn. Ray Glaze
Canon Crow
The Maupins refused to
BracyKom
Rosalie Story
(In DMIIIOry of Chief
believe ii was their .son, and
Ethel Shank
Thomas Hart
Danny Zirkle)
the Army had listed him as
George F. N118h
Pegy Broderick
Mlna Swisher
missing-captured.
The
Maupins lobbied hard for
Barbara A. Mora
Charles and Betty Faulk Charles Salser
the Army to continue listing
Gertrude Ables
Jane Teoford
Guy Sargent
their son as missing-capStanley E. McFarlan~
Dianne Hawley
Glen Mayes
tured, fearing that another
· MarieCurd
Gerald Rought
GeorgeKorn
designation would underMcDonalds of Pomeroy
mine efforts to find bini.
Ashley Hamilton
Ed Nelson
Keith Maupin said · the
EdwlnG.Ash
Darrell G. Jenkins
Eleanor Blaettner
..
Army told htm from the
Gathel Shaffer
Thomll8 Molden
David Slater
Charles R. Houdashelt
· Ruth A. Smith
PauiMarr
Grace Abbott
Mick Williams
Pandol'li Collins
Pomeroy Chu"'h of Christ ·
Thomas C. Werry
Elolee Adams
Josepb I. Stroble
Edgar Ahbolt
Mildred Humphreys
E.A. Welker
Myrtis K. Parker
Don Anderson
'
Ma~t E. Follrod
Fred Werry
Dean Damitz
Mary
E. Bowen
VIrginia E. Hoyt
Ed Jartels
Leona Cleland
Horace Karr
Hel'n Quivey
Ola
St. Clair
Don Hunnell
Dan Morris
COLUMBUS (AP) ...,... A
Denna J. Eblin
Louise Eads
federal judge dismissed a
Jane Seldenabel
lawsuit filed by SherwinJim and Edltb Hlckert
Teddy A. Warner
Robert Bailey
Williams Co. that sought to
Billy 0' Brien ·
Hazel Eichinger
Loren Neat
keep the city from suing the
Gene Romine
Florence Thpplng
Ron HOI
company to help pay for the
Howard English
Sarah Hun ·
Phil Oblinger
cleanup of properties conta·Lila Mitch
minated with lead paint.
Paul D. White
Tabby Smith
Sherwin-Williams failed
Phyllis Cline
William Sfaklnoti
Raymond Wilcox
to prove any imminent damAnonymous Donor
Keebler Business Services
Donna Boyd
ages, and other courts could
Paul Simon
Erlk.Aanestad
DonCullums
take up any constitutional
Rollin and Nancy Radford
Danny Crow
issues raised by the lawsuit,
Geneva Wigal
said U.S. District Judge
Charles and Sylvia Neece ·
Riverview Motors
Wanda Wllliams
Edmund Sargus Jr.
Mary and Sabra Gibson
James Clark
Betty Butcber
· The city of Columbus
Courtney Sbn
John Musser
Melva Tracy
sued Sherwin-Williams in
Hazll Oliver
Fred Johnson
Charles Lewis
2006, and the case remains
pending in Franklin County
William and Donna Ohlinger
Eula Odegard
Robert Moore
Common Pleas Court. .
Cassie Thmer
Don Smith
Bob Buck
City Attorney Richard
Ed and Hazel Bait
Danny Grueser
Anthony Svoboda
Pfeiffer Jr. said F:riday the
Dan and Barbara Cremeans
Clark's Jewelry
Conrad Belcher
company's suit had no merit.
Roger Leifheit
Charles Moellenberg, ·a
Jamie Deem
Corbet Cleek
lawyer for Cleveland-based
Gregory and Lauren oi
Dorothy M. Jeffers
Lillian Salrbmugh
Sherwin-Williams, said he
Brien
RoyGrueser
Robert Ramsburg
had no immediate comment:
Lloyd and Joyce Haggy
Gary F. Hysell
David Brlckles
Columbus is the only
Ohio VaHey Check Cashing . William and Naomi King
Ohio city still suing
Dave Fife
Sherwin- ~illiams and other
.The Burtrum Family
&amp; Loan
Scott Powell
companies.
Richard Owen
Rachel Jenolngs
Leonard Jewell
A judge: in Toledo threw
Robert Cushner
Martha Camp
Cora Lee
out that city's lawsuit
David Hudnall
Marvin Burt
CarlL. Wore
against Sherwin-Williams
Marjorie Reuter
in December. Other cities,
Rose Corliss ·
Faye Wildermuth
,,
including
Akron
and
Carpenters Local Union 11650 Wild Jfone Cafe LLC
Dale Lilly
Cleveland, dropped their
Larry E. Hofrman
Raymond Jewell
Ronald Daggy
lawsuits.
Sacred Heart Churh
Swisher &amp; Lohse
Robert Smith
Lead paint was banned in
George Stewart
the United States for use in
Erma Smith
Donna Davis
homes in 1978. Exposure to
Lawrence Leonard
Jim Soulsby
Edna Stewart
lead is particularly dangerCharles Kuhl
Patricia McKnight
ou s for young children, who · Lloyd King
Subway
J udlth Jones
Roger Young
can develop a reduced IQ,
Legar Monuments
Peg Carper
behavioral disorders, stomach problems or brain damjean Wright
Bernice Riflle
'age if they breathe in lead
dust or eat lead paint chips.

to

File Deparbnenl

Fuadnl•.

Judge.says city
can continue
with lead
paint lawsuit

•

.'

..
.

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Lady Falcons I~ at Point Pleasant,
Page B2

Monday, March 31, 2008

UCLA shuts down Xavier 76-57 ·
to reach third straight Finru Four
ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP pholo
North Carolina's Tyler Hansbrough (50) dunks over
~oulsvllle's David Padgett, left, during the second half of the
NCAA East Regional final basketball game, Saturday in
Charlotte, N.C.

Tyler Hansbrough leads
~op•seeded North
Carolina past Louisville
83-73 and into Final Four
BY AARON BEARD

to wait for next year.
The Tar Heels have won
all four of their games in this
CHARLOTTE, · N.C.
tournament by double digits.
1Yler Hansbrough always All four Victories came in
found a way for North · their home state, too, allowCarolina, whether it was ing them to celebrate in ·
~arrying the Tar Heels when front of plenty of blue-clad
they lost their point guard or fans Saturday.
making a shot despite every· "My feelings right now
defender knowing the ball are llreat," Hansbrough said.
would end up in his hands. "Thts just kind of takes all
!'low, with ~is ~elentl~ss those b~ experiences away.
dnve and unyteldmg w1ll, . At the same time, we want
Hansbrough has the Tar to accomplish more."
Heels back in the Final Four.
1Y Lawson added 11
. Hansbrough had 28 points points - including a key 3and 13 .rebounds Saturday pointer with about 5 minutes
night to help the Tar Heels left - for North Carolina,
hold off Louisville 83-73 in 'Yhich blew a 12-point halfthe East Regional final. hme. lead, then broke away
Playing in front of a partisan from a tie at 59 to earn their
home-state .crowd, they I 7th trip to the Final Four. .
reached the national semifiLast year, nobody could
nals for the first time since hit a shot when the Tat Heels
winning the championship needed one most against the
in 2005.
Hoyas in a loss that had
The Tar Heels (36-2) stayed with them all season.
advanced to play the But this time, the Tar Heels
Kansas-Davidson winner played with steady poise
next Saturday at San when the third-seeded
Antonio, setting. up a poten- Cardinals (27 -9) erased the
tial matchup between Hall margin and traded baskets
of Fame coach Roy with them in the anxious
Williams and the Jayhawks final minutes.
program he left behind when
First, with the Tar Heels
he returned · to his alma clinging to a 68-64 lead,
Lawson came around . the
mater in 2003.
On this night, however, baseline and knocked down
th!l focus was squarely on a 3 from the comer in front
the
Atlainic
Coast of his bench that pushed the
Conference's player of the margin to seven. Then, after
year.
a basket from Earl Clark
. Battling in a physical con- inside, Hansbrough knocked
test inside, Hansbrough fin- down a straightaway jumper
ished 12-for-17 from the over the 6-foot-11 Padgett to
floor in 38 minutes and was make it 73-66 with 2:27 to ·
pamed regional MVP. That play.
included a pair of clutch
Hansbrough essentially
jpmpers over the out- closed · the door on
stretched arms of 6-11 cen- Louisville on the next poster David Padgett as the Tar session. The 6-9 junior ~ot
Heels desperately tried to the ball on the left wing With
hold their tenuous second- !he shot · clock winding
. half lead in the final min- down, then pump-faked to
Utes.
get Clark up in the air and
· "He does the same thin¥, step in for another jumper
in practice every day, ' over Padgett. The ball
Williams said. "He is the swished cleanly through
most driven, focused player while Hansbrough was
I' ye ever seen in my life. He knocked to the ground,
w'"ts to be .the best player pushing the ·lead to 75-66
he can be and win.
with I :33 left.
"That's Tyler Hansbrough. ."I've been playing with
Jbat's Tyler Hansbrough at him my whole college
practice every day. That's career," said junior Danny
l('yler Hansbrough on . off Green, who had II J?Oints
days. That's who . Tyler despite needing four stitches
Hansbrough is."
to close a cut above his left
: For Hansbrough and his eye late in the first half.· "A
teammates, it was a reversal · lot of shots that he takes and
from last year's second-half makes, it still shocks me to
collapse
against this day. I'm like, 'How did
Georgetown in the NCAA he get that on; and ~ow did
tournament's round of eight. , he. m~e. tt? He s b~~n
This time, the tournament's domg 11 hts whole career.
No. I overall seed got to cut
The
baskets
left
down the nets instead ·of
heading to the locker room
PIHH ... Four, B2
ASSOCIATEO PRESS

'

POMEROY- A schedule o! upcom1ng h•,gh
school vars•tv. sporhog events 1nvolvmg
teamc lrom Me1gs and Ga!ha count1es ..

Monday. March 31
Boys Baseball

River Valley at Eas tern , 5 p m
Ripley at Southern. 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at lronron. 5 p.m.
South Galtia at Huntington St. Joe, 5

BY ANDREW BAGNATO

PHOENIX- After reaching the Final Four for the
third straight time, UCLA
coach Ben Howland called
these Bruins ~ ' by far the
best" of the three.
.
The other two didn't have
freshman Kevin Love, . who
had 19 points and I 0
rebounds as the top-seeded
Bruins blitzed Xavier 76-57
Saturday to earn their record
18th overall trip to the Final
Four.
Love was picked as the
most outstanding player of
the West Regional.
"Obviously, it's unbelievable," Howland said after
taking the last few snips of
the net. "That's really a
credit to how good the players are·and how well we performed under pressure the
las~ three years."
It's the Bruins' longest
string of Final Four appearances since they closed the
John Wooden era with nine
straight trips and added a
lOth consecutive trip in
1976 under his successor,
Gene Bartow.
The Bruins' I 980 Final
Four was later vacated by
the NCAA because of rules
violations.
At times on · Saturday,
Howland's Bruins looked
every bit as dominant as
Wooden ·s finer squads,
annihilating a proud Xavier
team that had set a school
record for victories.
The Bruins '(35-3) lost in

LocAL Scmmm..E

p.m.

Girls Soffball
River Valley at Eastern, 5 p.m
Southern at Roane County, 5 p.m.

Tennis
Gallia Academy at Athens, 4:30 p.m
TutldaY, April 1
Bora Baseball
Parke rsburg South at Eastern, 5 p. m.
SoLJ!hern at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Fairland at Ga!lia Academy, 5 p.m.
South Gallla at Symmes Valley, 5 p.tn.
Glrlo Softball
Eastern at Athens, 5 p.m.
·
Point Pleasant at Meigs, 4:30 p.m.
Southern at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Fairland at Gallla Academy, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Symmes Valley, 5 p.m. ·
Track ond Field
Eastern at Belpre, 4 p.m.
Gallla Academy at Unioto, 4 p.m.
South Gattla at Vinton COl!nty, 4:30 p.m.

·

Wtdneadey Apr!! 2
Boy1 Baseball
Southern at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Girt• Softball
Southern at South Gallla, 5 p.m.

·

·

Tbu!'ldav, April 3

Boya BaHboll
Eastern at Waterford, 5 p.m.
Belpre at Meigs, 5 p. ~.
Southern at Federal Hocking, 5 p.m.
Gh1o Softball
E~stern at Waterford; 5 p.m.
-Belpre at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Southern at Federal Hocking, 5 p.m.

AP photo
Xavier's Stanley Burrell (34) reacts after a call during the
second half of their NCAA men's basketball tournament
West Regional final against UCLA, Saturday in Phoenix.
Xavier lost to UCLA, 76-57.
the Final Four the last two
"We're getting spoiled
years. But they go to San with Kevin," Howland said.
Antonio with Love, who has
love made 7-of-11 shots
given them a formidable from the floor, including 2inside presence and has of-4 from beyond the arc.
raised his game in this tour- Half of his rebounds came at
nament.
the ·offensive end and he
UCLA
plays
the added four assists for good
Memphis-Texas winner in measure.
the national semifinal in San
PIHH IH UCLA, 11
Antonio on April 5.

CoNrAcrUs
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

Fox- H40.446·3008
E·mlll- sports @":~Ydallysentlnel .com
SPOrts Stan

Eric Randolph, Sports Writer
(740) 4.46-2342, axt. 33
erandolphOmydailysentinel.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, .. ~. 33
bwaltersOmydailytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, axt. 33
Ierum@ mydailyregister.com

••

Local Caring:

�~

Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

UCLA
from Page Bl

www .myda ilysentinel.cont

.

went the uistunce in her first

BY lARRY CRUM

n)mp lcl e

game

on

the

1-D lead .

However that lead would
not Ia\! long.
.
In the bottom of the next
inning, Darst began a very
hnl frame by the home squad
"' PPHS produced four runs
from Darst, Sommer, Wyant
and Cottrill to take a 4-1
lead.
Wahama answered, tying
the contest in the top of the
firth with three runs before
the Lady Knights put it away
in the seventh.
It was a very strong effort
l&gt;y the visiting Lady Falcons
in only their second varsity
.:ontcst of the year. Point
Pleasant, despite m.issing a
few games due to rain, was
playi'i~g in its seventh contest ot the year.
Wahama returns to work
Tuesuay at Charleston
Catholic.

mound fnr the Lady
Knights. stri~ing out eight
wi th only three 1\alks in
picking up the victory.
·Qffcn,ively. PPHS wa'
once again in rh} thm "'
Tes'a Wyant wem 2-for-3
and Anna Sommer. Devin
Cottrill,
Michaela
Williamson and Jennifer
Wickline had a hit each.
Wahama equaled the
offensive output of the Lady
Knights with six hits led by
Kayanna Sayre and Kylie
Riggs with two hits each .
Mary Kehler and Alex Wood
added a hit api9cc .
Wood also £Ut the start on
the mou1ld, striking out one
in four innings of work
before being replaced by
Rigg s late in the fourth
inning. Riggs tinished with
three strikeouts . .
Point Pleasant 5, Wahama 4
The Lady Falcons were w 001 030 0 - 4 6 0
also first to strike blood, pp 000 400 1 - 564
AleK Wood, Kylie Riggs (4) and Mary
knocking in a run in the top Kabler.
Emily Jones and Alissa Darst.
of the third inning to take a WP ~ Jones. LP - Wood.

PO INT
PLEASANT.
W.Va. - Wahama was nnl
intimidated
by
Point
Pleasant.
producing
a
much
19.
closer
than
expected
contest
Th~ Mu,ketcer' (30-7)
Saturday afternoon.
had IW clll,IICr for Love on
In the end, however, ,the
ada) they 'hot 31i.2 percent Lady Knights were simply
from the tlnor - a cred it to too tough .
UCLA's rclcn tle" man-toThe Lady Falcons ( 1-1)
man defense.
took an early lead and were
"We can play better than tied with their Mason
. we did today," Miller said. County rival going into the
"I cmll dn 't be more proud final inning, but some timeand really at ease right now ly hitting by Point Pleasant
bec"U"' I real l) felt we (4-3) allowed the Red and
went about il'-1 rar as we . Black to squeak uut a 5-4
could ami lust tu a great victory · in a makeup game
team. They're ·unique. I'm from earlier in the week.
Tied 4-4 in the bottom ot
reall y pulling for them: I
the
seventh. Emily Jones
hope we lost to the national
capped
an already .stellar
champion ..,
afternoon
·with the winning
The knock on UCLA is
that it often coasts with a run on a knock by senior
Alissa Darst to give the
big lead. Not this time.
home
squad the 5-4 victory.
Leading by nine at halfAlong
with scoring the
time. the Bruins snuffed out
third-seeded
Xavier's winning run, Junes also
comeback hopes with a 140 run early in the second
half.
" It all started with
defense."
Love
said.
· "That's what really won the
game for us."
The rest of the game was
one long advertisement for .
the powder blue and g\)ld,
with a partisan crowd rncking U.S. Airways Center
wi th chants of "U-C-L-A !''
After the game, the same
fans serenaded Love with
chants of "one more year!"
as he gave an interview
along press row.
This wasn't the time for
Love, projected as a hi gh
NBA pick, to address his
future.
"It feels great ·but we've
got business to take care of
next week and I'm not even
thinking about the next
level right now," Love said.
"I'm living in the now, living in 1he present."
The now is pretty cool if
you ' re a Bruin.
UCLA had tlirted with
trouble in the previous two
· rounds, survi ving upset
bids by ninth-seeded Texas
A&amp;M and No. 12-seeded
We stern Kentucky . . After
the too-tight victory over
the Hill toppers, Love called
the Bruins' play "unacceptable."
But against Xavier they
reverted to the form that·
made them a No. I seed.
Luc Richard · Mbah a
Moute had 13 'points and 13
rebounds and
Darren
Collison added 19 points
for UCLA, which shot 53.8
percent from the floor and
won its 14th straight.
Derrick Brown had 13
points for Xavier.
This matched Xavier's
deepest foray into the
NCAA brackets.
The
Musketeers had reached the
regional tina! once before,
in 2004.
Early on, Xavier looked
MILL OUTLET, INC.
as if it might be able to
hang .with UCLA. After
Your Area's #1 Floor
turning the b~ll over a seaCovering Dealer! . ·
son-high 19 times in the
third round, the Bruins had
Shaw Carpet and Floor Center
I0 turnovers in· the first half
on Saturday.
Residential • Commercial •
But"·the Musketeers only
Wholesale • Retail
scored two points off those
turnovers - and it cost
4247 State Route 160
them when UCL~ finally
Gallipolis, Ohio '
settled down.
Leading 24-20,
the
Bruins closed the tirst half
on a 9-4 run. The leader of
11:11:!!1l
.
Dliiill740·446·l107
the charge was Mbah a
Moute , who has been
slowed by a sprained ankle.
Mbah a Muute scored
five straight points, all of
them as a result of some
gritty work on the offensive
boards.
"All I can tell you is I
didn't have any pain,"
Mbah a Moute said.
Then Collison dribbled
down the clock and hit a
jumper
over
Stanley
Burrell, the Atlantic IO's
Defen sive Player of the
Year, to · send the Bruins
into the dressing room with
a 33-24 lead.
The biggest bucket may
have come when Love
p,ulled down an offensive
rebound on a missed free
throw, then fired the ball to
Collison loitering beyond
the arc. Collison hit the 3pointer and UCLA led 4328.
A few minutes later, Love
buried a 3-pointer and the
Bruins led by 20.

·Monday, March 31, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Four

could handle after halftime .
"We played exactly the
style of play we needed to
fromPageBl
win, " Louis\'ille coach
Ri ck Piti~o said. "( It's)
Louisville's players in simi- very diiTiL'ult sometimes
t'or people to admit when
lar disbelief.
"You see the guy as a the other team is better. But
junior and he's getting his we're a very good basketjersey retired and you're ball team this year, very
like, ' Why?'" said Terrence good, and they were better
William s, who had 14 tonight."
Lawson -· back at full
points for Louisville. speed
after spraining his
''Then. you play against him left ankle .in February and you say, 'That's why.' had nine assists while operHe '11 go through the floor ating as a one-man press ·
just to geta rebound. He' s a break
against
. tbe
great player."
Cardinals'
foUII-coUTt
The Tar Heels went 8- defense all night.
·
for-8 at the foul line to seal
The Tar Heels shot 53
it in the final minute. That percent to become the first
steady hand was quite a team to shoot better than 50
change last year's loss to percent
against
the
the Hoyas, ·in which they Cardinals. The win allowed
missed 22 of 23 shots and William' to move past
let an 11-point lead slip Pltino and Bob Knight aOd
away in the 96-84 overtime into a tie with Ke,ntucky&gt;s
loss.
Adolph
· Rupp
and
Jerry Smith scored 17 Louisville's Denny Crum
points to lead Louisville, with six Final F:our appearwhich shot 53 percent and ances, which is fourth most
gave the Tar Heels all they · all-time.

tEribune- Sentinel -l\e
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are Mmya confidential. • eun.nt rate card appi!M. • All , .. , •tate ilctv.r11Ht'I'IIK11a • • subjecl to the Feder•l Fair Housing Act ol 1968. • This
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OCc-1 ··• -~..... -•, _....
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GALLIPOLIS

CLASSIFIED INDEX

ATHENS

Announcement............................................030
Antlquea ....................................................... 530
Apartment• for Rent ...... ::........................... 440
.. Auction and Flea Markel.............................080

(740) 594-3571 '

Auto Ports &amp; Acceaaorlea .......................... 780
Auto Repalr ..................................................770
Autos for S.le.c.............................., ............. 710
B08t 8 &amp;. Motors for Sale.............................. 750
Building Suppllea.................................. ;,.,.550 .
Busine1s and Buildings ............................. 340
Buslne11 Opportunity .............................. ,.. 210

Equipment and Supplies
CPAP Machines
Mask
Tubing

215-A Sixth Stt:eet
PL Pleasant, WV 25550
304-675· 7036
Fax: 304-675-7387

Filters
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Resmed

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ri•ertitiesins@suddenlinkmail.com

Request Fllmily Olygen
Auto/Home/Business/
Life/Annuity
An Independent Agency
Representing Erie Insurance

.Erie
:zl

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

740-446-0007

•
•

Insurance

TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

•
:

•
•
7.
•

·
:
·:
· •

Bualnual'rlllnlng ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .................. :....... 790
Camping Equlpment ................................... 780
Carda of Thonks .................::'....................... OtO
Child/Eidertr c....,.. ,. ................................ t90
Etectrlcoi/Refrlgeratlon...............................840
Equipment for Rent ..................................... 410
Excavatlng ................................................... 830
Ferm Equlpment. ......................................... 61D
Farms for Rent............................ :................430
Forma for S.le ............,.,.;,........................... 330
For Leaee .................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trade.,....................................... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetablea ....................................580
Furnished Rooma ........................................ 450
General Hauilng ........................................... aso
GIVIII!WIY,. ...... ....................... ,..................... 040
Happy Ada .........................................,.. ........050
Har &amp; Graln ..................................................840
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
Home tmprovementa ...................................810
Homel for Sale ........................................... 310
Houeehold Gooda ...................;................... 510
Houeea for Rent ...................... .-.................. 410
In Memortem ......... ;.................. :.................. 020
lnsurance ..................................................... 130
L.ewn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 680
Uveatock ......................,............................... 830
Lost and Found ........................................... 080
f,.ota &amp; Acreege ...........................................:350
Mlaceilaneoul .............................................. 170
Mlaceilaneou1 Merchandlee ....................... 540
Mobile Home Repalr................... ;........... .,...aeo
Mobile Homea for Rent............................... 420
Mobile Homea for S.le................................320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcyctee &amp; 4 Wheelera..........................740
Mualcaf lnstrumentl ................................... 570
Peraonata ..................................................... OOS
Pets for Sale ................................................ 580
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Professional Servlcea ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 180
Real Eallle Wonted .................................... 360.
School• lriltructlon ..................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 850
SHuatlona Wentad .............~ ......................... 120
~pace for Rent ............................................. 480
$porting Gooda .......................................... 520
SUY'a for S.le........................................~.... 720
Truck• fo·r Sale ............................................ 7t 5
Upholltery ................................................... 170 .
Vane For Slle ............................................... 730

Llfe... Overbrook
Center,
located at 333 Page street,

Mlddlopoo,
l.o ptoaood
to
announceOhio
we are
accepl·
ing applications for full and

(\
1

J .. 'JI

l~tr ~

"ti:ib:::::::::::::11,.

1111

ing about 11-•-Jv nowl
nw'
Aecejve $30-$45 a day
reimbursement, paid respite,
and support for the VOLJth

experience, must have
worked wtth
Plumbing
,....._ ..._,_ C•••""' of being
'"""''JoiU"1
~
lead on commerlcal protect.

~; baaed on experience,
Insurance, 40lK, YIIC8tlon,
pliO·~holiQaua. LOCII to
Accepting eppllcallons lor Ca~e lor moro Information: GoHipollo and P1. P1ouanl.

full-time experienced 88118-tant manager for k)caJ eonvenlence store. Must be
available to work all shifts.
'No phone calls. Apply In
person at Par Mar 1138

Toft Free 1-866-325-1558.
Full time truck drlvernetde(t
with valid drivers Ncense and

Insurance. Must be depen~
able, haw good cuStomer

15289 Hun11ng1on Road, oorvl&lt;oo skills and bo ablo 10
Gallipolis Ferry.

loadandunloadtruclls.Muat

--------'
Acq~aillone Fine Jewelry-Is
fo
taking appl1callons r a

bo abla to woll&lt; weokondl.
•-nd r-·-oa 1o CLA Box
~ ..........

101. clo Ganlpolls Dally

part·tlme employee, please Tribune, P.O. Box •e9,
bring resume. NO PHONE' c:Ga.:.l_,llpol..:. .:':. .OH_4-c563:-'-:-·
Holp wonted o1 Darst Home

~:,~~ =~E;":1E, 2~X!

(careers Close To Home)
Call1i yl.7404-·44&amp;4367,
1-v00 21 0452

00:

=:

-.ga~•oolegudu

1;~cc=

.,_-"':"'.1I

~IM~sctiili""'~'~"~"l;.·

IIIII

..,

s=·

Group Home. 740·99~-5023 cleaning &amp; baking during
non-buolnooo houl8. Apply
An E•cell9111 Wlri 10 earn
ot Emma'o Galley on 22nd
money. Tho New lwon.
Uiq10Clllioa 51. P1. P1oaaan1, M·F 2·4
Call Marlyn 30-4·882·~645

i"""'ly""'m!!lllll'lllll:ll""'11

rocms. Also 1br apt. 34434
SA 124, 1 acres in Rutlanrl

740·742·2951

~-674·3698

Attention!
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PA.YMENr
programs for you to buy your
home instead of renting.
• 100% financing
* Less than pel1ect credit

16X80 3 Bedroom 2 Batt1
Vinyl Siding. Shingle Rool
$230 per month. 740-3859948.
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bed 2 bath Oakwood, 1998
16x80 3 bed 2 bath Forlune
Daylime 388·0000, Evening
388·8017 or 245-9213

Thia newspaper will not

knowingly accept
ad'f'aJ11s•m.nta for real
estate whk:h lain
violation of thalaw. Our
readeraare hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertlald In
this newspaper are
•nilabl• on en equal

"ro
'AND?DDo

House for sale in Racine Bedroom 2 Bath delivered
8nd set up $38,695. 740·
area. Approx. 4 acres, all 385-9948.
professionally landscaped. - - - , - - - - Ranch stvla hollse with 4
'
66 Holly Park 12x65, 2br, 1
bedrooms, living room, din ·
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outside CIA unit, good cond.
ily room , c9ntral air, gas heat
and fireplace. Addkion of a $2500 obo. Please leave
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Looking for an updated tam- larg a Florida room cam· _m_es_sa_g_e-:7.,-40,.,·6-:4.,-5·-02-:90-ily home, on 1 acre rTV1 w/ pletel" coda· opens onto
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backyard pnvacy
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from $199 Month
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Gallipolis. this 2100 SO.Ft. 3 patio &amp; P00 oreal· adabte '"

New 2008 Singlewide

. br. 2 ba. w/ lg. bonus room
vinyl sided ranch has new
Handyman Service. In need root, attached carpo_rt, 2 car
of repairs around the home? garage • refinished hard.R 8 a 8 0 n 8 b 1 e wood floors is ready tQ
ratea.20yr~J.experlence. Ph .# move in, central air &amp; natural

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- Yard Sale-Pt. Plaeaant ................................ 078

'

· ~4x70 112 bath, w/4 bonu s

I 1'\ \\1 II.J

AVON!

- Wanted to R•nt ......................................."... 470

t

FORS.~£

prefer•nea, limitation or
dlscrtmlnatton based on
race, color, religion, sex
tamlllalatatua or national
origin,' or •ny intention to

,

Wontad to Bur- Form Supplies .................. 820
... Wanted To Oo .............................................. 180

I

MOBIU: HOMI:S

adverd1e "anv

ground poo 1enc ose Y pn Midwesl 74'0-826·2750
---.,.-,_.--:-vacy fencing and land mymidwesthome.com
POST'OFACE NOW
scaped. Finished 2 car
garage attached to house Like new 3 bed 2 bath on .so
HIRING
and finished &amp; heated 3 car acres. $400 a month. Owne1
A~g. ~ $20/hr or
garage
unattached. finandng availal?le. 740-446·
F.'::~~~!~~~r.
gas lurnace, stone FP in E"ollenl condillon ready to 3570
740.5()8. 0408
LA. Kitchen has new oak move in. $255,000.00, Call:
Lot 88'x 124"W/ 14'x70' 1rall er
Offered-by E•am
Nood a ride to tho dodor, cabinolS, now vinyl flooring. 1740)949·2217
not olforod w/ U
3 br., 2 b, partially furnished
hires.
shopping, school or work? lg. pantry&amp; laundry room
-866-403-2582
Call(740)25&amp;1438
Spacious master suile wl In town, take over payments. 2 ~oVered porches, 2 ca1
1
F.P &amp; privale entrance. $925/month. Trade your land carport, large block storageAeataurant!Bikery In ·need Need someone to do your PriCed to sell cou1gog Now or trailer for down payment building. $40.000. (740)992·
3057
of nlghl ohm person tor Spring 'cleaning 1or you? $88.000. call (740)645·8751 740·645·7889
Gall 3()4..8 12-80 17

GaHipolls

All Are..l To Buy or
Soli. Shirloy Spears. 304·
675·1429.

which makes II Illegal to

~OH'f ~ccpe::~~nt could be the L....;op:::.:;po;;;."";;;;;;nlty;:,;;ba;;;•;;;••;;.·....1 2008 3 bedroom 2 balh sec·
same as rent.
tiona! home $~79 per month
~:ww;:::w~·=co:m=lc:':·•:o:m:;-;;;;=====::;~·~2t=D='(JIJ==b~y:N:E:A:·:I:n:c·:, Mortgage
740·Sil5·767t.
Locators. DupleJC fo r Sale on Land·
000
ScHools
-.:.(7.::40:cl3::6.:. 7·.:.0=---- Contract. 740-992-5858. -20_0_8_s_e-ct-io-na-l-ho_rn_e_3

W1nted .to Buy ............................................. 090

•

Fair Housing Act of 1968

$79,000

- - , A Participant of the drug- placed In your home.
tree Worttplace program .
Training begins MSich 29 at
Alba ~ Call ~~. F-'er
..,
~
_,

4x4'a For Sale ..............................................72 5

275 West Union Street

"'

~~~~ attl1udos 10 join us In
Ill
•
March 3 ,4,5 , 9801 •4pm at providing outstanding, qu~Nty care to our resldenls No
611 S South Ave,Mkkhport,
.
OH. Tools,clothes,collector Phone calls please. EOE &amp;

,

'6-7619

w.~ I

3 family garage sale, April parttlmeSTNA'Stojolnour
IIEIPWANim
lfEutWANIID
bsrRUCI'ION
2nd &amp; 3rd 9am·5pm corner friendly and dedicated &amp;\!Iff.
of Batha~ Rd. a Tornado Applk:ant's must be dependable, team p1ayers with pas- r:o.t.r Ptrtnta: Been think· Plumber, Minimum 5 years OelllpoUe Clf'Mr College
Ad., Racine

~~f~~~IW~-~~~~~11e:ms:IJI:ns;:.&amp;~mo::ro~. .

435'/, Sec'lnd Avenue

(740)

4

,

This ,
newaptpe
ccepte only hel
1nttd tdl mMtin
OE 1terldardl.

u .... n

Lost·
female German
.IIIIU"
Shepherd last seen Jan.
30th, wlslttchet in belly &amp; tOO WORKERS NEEDED
red
collar, A
bl
fts
ood
CarpenterJOyeavllle, $300 lt::;o ~ Mat:rlals
for sate return, (740)698kled F
Into
tlon
2287 ·
prov
· ree
rma
pkg. 24Hr. 80~-428-4649
Y,\llll Sill:
A
Colo"·allon·
of

1

Den wf Fireplace, 2 car
artached Garage Rodney

77 Hawthorne Ln., Pt.
make any llllch
Pleasant, 3br, 1be, 1015/SF
pr.terence, limitation or
New tloor coverings, fresh .
discrimination."
paint, new heat pump

'- I I\\ I I I "

1110

I
~;::;;~~~=~
Y.uti&gt; SAul- I
.
r PoMotov1A1IDDl.E

In thi• newspaper is

IUbJect to the Federal

I \ H'IIl\ \ I I \I

FOUND

r

0

304-675·2176

losT 4Nil

.

1 Acre, Flat Lot. Spacious

4br, 2 AC, Pool , Ctry New
Haven, $139,500 call after
6pm ,304·593·8871

Small 2 Br. house,Racm(·
area 2 outbuildings.carport
on approx. 1 Acre.Askm '
$45,000. 740-94 9-2539

All r1al estale advertising

3BA. 2BA. Lg. Kll &amp; LA. DR.
$110,000 (740) 245·9125

Shepherd 4 yrs old female,
run some 304·458:1515

New t1ume. never lived in
2BR, 2 baths. 3 acres mor{·
or less 1n Gallipolis. A.skiny
$80,000. 740-446-7029 '

I

dental gold. pre 1935 US

""'"''~'~

Ho:\IES
FOR SALE

HOlliE&gt;

FOR SAlE

children. 740-245·0134

ml•. blk. to

10

HI \ I I " I \II

151 2nd Avenue, GaiUpolia.
Female Golden Retriever, 2 446·2842 1P
yrs old. great with ~da 30-4· :-c----:--'--:-:--::

All Real
Eltl
dvtrtlnmenta .1

' Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to yc)ur classified ads
Jj~
!f"f'l
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

0 down payment. 4 bedrooms. Large yard. Covered
deck. Anached garage. 740-

Codcar Spaniel

HAFFELT'S

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

.

Pofnt Pleasant edges Lady -Falcons, ·S-4
LCRUM@MYOAIL'YREGISTER COM

'·He look' like he's 25
year' PILl 11hcn he\ playing.'' \a\ icr l'oach Sean
Miller '"it! of Luve. who is

Monday, March 31, 2oo8

'IUIINID DOWN ON
IOCIAI.IIICUIIITY IISf?
No Fee Unlm Wo Wlnl
1-888·582·33-45

"llltl ~·t~tntl

�~

Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

UCLA
from Page Bl

www .myda ilysentinel.cont

.

went the uistunce in her first

BY lARRY CRUM

n)mp lcl e

game

on

the

1-D lead .

However that lead would
not Ia\! long.
.
In the bottom of the next
inning, Darst began a very
hnl frame by the home squad
"' PPHS produced four runs
from Darst, Sommer, Wyant
and Cottrill to take a 4-1
lead.
Wahama answered, tying
the contest in the top of the
firth with three runs before
the Lady Knights put it away
in the seventh.
It was a very strong effort
l&gt;y the visiting Lady Falcons
in only their second varsity
.:ontcst of the year. Point
Pleasant, despite m.issing a
few games due to rain, was
playi'i~g in its seventh contest ot the year.
Wahama returns to work
Tuesuay at Charleston
Catholic.

mound fnr the Lady
Knights. stri~ing out eight
wi th only three 1\alks in
picking up the victory.
·Qffcn,ively. PPHS wa'
once again in rh} thm "'
Tes'a Wyant wem 2-for-3
and Anna Sommer. Devin
Cottrill,
Michaela
Williamson and Jennifer
Wickline had a hit each.
Wahama equaled the
offensive output of the Lady
Knights with six hits led by
Kayanna Sayre and Kylie
Riggs with two hits each .
Mary Kehler and Alex Wood
added a hit api9cc .
Wood also £Ut the start on
the mou1ld, striking out one
in four innings of work
before being replaced by
Rigg s late in the fourth
inning. Riggs tinished with
three strikeouts . .
Point Pleasant 5, Wahama 4
The Lady Falcons were w 001 030 0 - 4 6 0
also first to strike blood, pp 000 400 1 - 564
AleK Wood, Kylie Riggs (4) and Mary
knocking in a run in the top Kabler.
Emily Jones and Alissa Darst.
of the third inning to take a WP ~ Jones. LP - Wood.

PO INT
PLEASANT.
W.Va. - Wahama was nnl
intimidated
by
Point
Pleasant.
producing
a
much
19.
closer
than
expected
contest
Th~ Mu,ketcer' (30-7)
Saturday afternoon.
had IW clll,IICr for Love on
In the end, however, ,the
ada) they 'hot 31i.2 percent Lady Knights were simply
from the tlnor - a cred it to too tough .
UCLA's rclcn tle" man-toThe Lady Falcons ( 1-1)
man defense.
took an early lead and were
"We can play better than tied with their Mason
. we did today," Miller said. County rival going into the
"I cmll dn 't be more proud final inning, but some timeand really at ease right now ly hitting by Point Pleasant
bec"U"' I real l) felt we (4-3) allowed the Red and
went about il'-1 rar as we . Black to squeak uut a 5-4
could ami lust tu a great victory · in a makeup game
team. They're ·unique. I'm from earlier in the week.
Tied 4-4 in the bottom ot
reall y pulling for them: I
the
seventh. Emily Jones
hope we lost to the national
capped
an already .stellar
champion ..,
afternoon
·with the winning
The knock on UCLA is
that it often coasts with a run on a knock by senior
Alissa Darst to give the
big lead. Not this time.
home
squad the 5-4 victory.
Leading by nine at halfAlong
with scoring the
time. the Bruins snuffed out
third-seeded
Xavier's winning run, Junes also
comeback hopes with a 140 run early in the second
half.
" It all started with
defense."
Love
said.
· "That's what really won the
game for us."
The rest of the game was
one long advertisement for .
the powder blue and g\)ld,
with a partisan crowd rncking U.S. Airways Center
wi th chants of "U-C-L-A !''
After the game, the same
fans serenaded Love with
chants of "one more year!"
as he gave an interview
along press row.
This wasn't the time for
Love, projected as a hi gh
NBA pick, to address his
future.
"It feels great ·but we've
got business to take care of
next week and I'm not even
thinking about the next
level right now," Love said.
"I'm living in the now, living in 1he present."
The now is pretty cool if
you ' re a Bruin.
UCLA had tlirted with
trouble in the previous two
· rounds, survi ving upset
bids by ninth-seeded Texas
A&amp;M and No. 12-seeded
We stern Kentucky . . After
the too-tight victory over
the Hill toppers, Love called
the Bruins' play "unacceptable."
But against Xavier they
reverted to the form that·
made them a No. I seed.
Luc Richard · Mbah a
Moute had 13 'points and 13
rebounds and
Darren
Collison added 19 points
for UCLA, which shot 53.8
percent from the floor and
won its 14th straight.
Derrick Brown had 13
points for Xavier.
This matched Xavier's
deepest foray into the
NCAA brackets.
The
Musketeers had reached the
regional tina! once before,
in 2004.
Early on, Xavier looked
MILL OUTLET, INC.
as if it might be able to
hang .with UCLA. After
Your Area's #1 Floor
turning the b~ll over a seaCovering Dealer! . ·
son-high 19 times in the
third round, the Bruins had
Shaw Carpet and Floor Center
I0 turnovers in· the first half
on Saturday.
Residential • Commercial •
But"·the Musketeers only
Wholesale • Retail
scored two points off those
turnovers - and it cost
4247 State Route 160
them when UCL~ finally
Gallipolis, Ohio '
settled down.
Leading 24-20,
the
Bruins closed the tirst half
on a 9-4 run. The leader of
11:11:!!1l
.
Dliiill740·446·l107
the charge was Mbah a
Moute , who has been
slowed by a sprained ankle.
Mbah a Muute scored
five straight points, all of
them as a result of some
gritty work on the offensive
boards.
"All I can tell you is I
didn't have any pain,"
Mbah a Moute said.
Then Collison dribbled
down the clock and hit a
jumper
over
Stanley
Burrell, the Atlantic IO's
Defen sive Player of the
Year, to · send the Bruins
into the dressing room with
a 33-24 lead.
The biggest bucket may
have come when Love
p,ulled down an offensive
rebound on a missed free
throw, then fired the ball to
Collison loitering beyond
the arc. Collison hit the 3pointer and UCLA led 4328.
A few minutes later, Love
buried a 3-pointer and the
Bruins led by 20.

·Monday, March 31, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Four

could handle after halftime .
"We played exactly the
style of play we needed to
fromPageBl
win, " Louis\'ille coach
Ri ck Piti~o said. "( It's)
Louisville's players in simi- very diiTiL'ult sometimes
t'or people to admit when
lar disbelief.
"You see the guy as a the other team is better. But
junior and he's getting his we're a very good basketjersey retired and you're ball team this year, very
like, ' Why?'" said Terrence good, and they were better
William s, who had 14 tonight."
Lawson -· back at full
points for Louisville. speed
after spraining his
''Then. you play against him left ankle .in February and you say, 'That's why.' had nine assists while operHe '11 go through the floor ating as a one-man press ·
just to geta rebound. He' s a break
against
. tbe
great player."
Cardinals'
foUII-coUTt
The Tar Heels went 8- defense all night.
·
for-8 at the foul line to seal
The Tar Heels shot 53
it in the final minute. That percent to become the first
steady hand was quite a team to shoot better than 50
change last year's loss to percent
against
the
the Hoyas, ·in which they Cardinals. The win allowed
missed 22 of 23 shots and William' to move past
let an 11-point lead slip Pltino and Bob Knight aOd
away in the 96-84 overtime into a tie with Ke,ntucky&gt;s
loss.
Adolph
· Rupp
and
Jerry Smith scored 17 Louisville's Denny Crum
points to lead Louisville, with six Final F:our appearwhich shot 53 percent and ances, which is fourth most
gave the Tar Heels all they · all-time.

tEribune- Sentinel -l\e
CLASS IF I E·D
Galli a
County
OH .

In One Week With Us ·
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

E·mall

classified@mydailytribune.com
.
.

PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE .

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

To Place
~ribune
Sentinel ·
l\egt~ter ·
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) .. 992~2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... orFaxTo(740)446-3008
OrFaxTo
992·2157 ·

Oeatll:irM ·

Worcl Ads

PLAY COVERALL,- BINGO

Display Ads

Dilliy In-Column: 1:00 p .me
Monclay-Prldey for lnHrtlon
In Next Day•• Paper
Sunday ln..Columns 1:00 p.m.

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

WIN UP TO $1,000 !!!

Por Sundaya

r %~
1'--llliiiiii-_..1

r

Pa~r

All Dl•play: 1:1 Noon :z ·
Bualne•• D•v• Prior To
Publlc.tlon '
Sunday Dl•pla~: 1100
· Thuraday far sunday•

• All ada muat be prepaid*

• St.rt Your Ade With A Keyword• Jndude CompMM'
D.-:rlptlon • Jndude A Prtc. • Avald AblwwvlMion• ·
• Include Phone Number And Aclctr.l When ....._
• Ad1 ShOuld Run 7 Dlyl

1

GIVEAWAY
L_ _ _ _ _ _. . Absolute Top Dollar - ell·
...,
.
var/goid
coins,
any
7 yr old Border Collie. 10KI14KI18K gold jewelry.

POLICI£8: Ohio vsu.y Pubtlehlng.....,... tt. light to «tit, rtljtct, or cancel ·any ad at •nv time. Errors must bt reported on the first day
~....... will bl '"POftltblt kif no more tt\ln tM eoat of the IJIRI occupied by the «ror and only the first insertion. We
I
.nr foil or PpenM thlt I'M4Jftt from the ~bkltton Of Oll"'lttlon of an advertltement. Correction will btl made lfllhe first a"all11ble edllion. • Boll
are Mmya confidential. • eun.nt rate card appi!M. • All , .. , •tate ilctv.r11Ht'I'IIK11a • • subjecl to the Feder•l Fair Housing Act ol 1968. • This
tcOepts only help w.m.d D mMtlng EO! ...,.rds. W• will not
I I In viOlation or lhe la w,

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
kltncarlyleC!Icomcast.net

good home only w/ no young currency, proot/mint sela,

:367-7129.

743·5753

diamonds. MTS Coin Shop,

·

Wanlod 10 buy Juri&lt; Cars,&amp;
Farm Machinery cal 740-

to Good Home German 388.()684 Can Cllll

Collac1

lg. boned reg. needs yard to ~antlng to Suy Junk Cars.

rt..------··I

DILES

Joubf&lt;oct1otheP

HEARING CENTER

Mr Houalng Act

1168.

• Della
Rebecca
Brasheara;

Au.O., CCC·A
We wll not knowl

OCc-1 ··• -~..... -•, _....
Hment In vlolad

GALLIPOLIS

CLASSIFIED INDEX

ATHENS

Announcement............................................030
Antlquea ....................................................... 530
Apartment• for Rent ...... ::........................... 440
.. Auction and Flea Markel.............................080

(740) 594-3571 '

Auto Ports &amp; Acceaaorlea .......................... 780
Auto Repalr ..................................................770
Autos for S.le.c.............................., ............. 710
B08t 8 &amp;. Motors for Sale.............................. 750
Building Suppllea.................................. ;,.,.550 .
Busine1s and Buildings ............................. 340
Buslne11 Opportunity .............................. ,.. 210

Equipment and Supplies
CPAP Machines
Mask
Tubing

215-A Sixth Stt:eet
PL Pleasant, WV 25550
304-675· 7036
Fax: 304-675-7387

Filters
Resper'onlcs

Resmed

.•
,
•

ri•ertitiesins@suddenlinkmail.com

Request Fllmily Olygen
Auto/Home/Business/
Life/Annuity
An Independent Agency
Representing Erie Insurance

.Erie
:zl

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

740-446-0007

•
•

Insurance

TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

•
:

•
•
7.
•

·
:
·:
· •

Bualnual'rlllnlng ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .................. :....... 790
Camping Equlpment ................................... 780
Carda of Thonks .................::'....................... OtO
Child/Eidertr c....,.. ,. ................................ t90
Etectrlcoi/Refrlgeratlon...............................840
Equipment for Rent ..................................... 410
Excavatlng ................................................... 830
Ferm Equlpment. ......................................... 61D
Farms for Rent............................ :................430
Forma for S.le ............,.,.;,........................... 330
For Leaee .................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trade.,....................................... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetablea ....................................580
Furnished Rooma ........................................ 450
General Hauilng ........................................... aso
GIVIII!WIY,. ...... ....................... ,..................... 040
Happy Ada .........................................,.. ........050
Har &amp; Graln ..................................................840
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
Home tmprovementa ...................................810
Homel for Sale ........................................... 310
Houeehold Gooda ...................;................... 510
Houeea for Rent ...................... .-.................. 410
In Memortem ......... ;.................. :.................. 020
lnsurance ..................................................... 130
L.ewn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 680
Uveatock ......................,............................... 830
Lost and Found ........................................... 080
f,.ota &amp; Acreege ...........................................:350
Mlaceilaneoul .............................................. 170
Mlaceilaneou1 Merchandlee ....................... 540
Mobile Home Repalr................... ;........... .,...aeo
Mobile Homea for Rent............................... 420
Mobile Homea for S.le................................320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcyctee &amp; 4 Wheelera..........................740
Mualcaf lnstrumentl ................................... 570
Peraonata ..................................................... OOS
Pets for Sale ................................................ 580
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Professional Servlcea ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 180
Real Eallle Wonted .................................... 360.
School• lriltructlon ..................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 850
SHuatlona Wentad .............~ ......................... 120
~pace for Rent ............................................. 480
$porting Gooda .......................................... 520
SUY'a for S.le........................................~.... 720
Truck• fo·r Sale ............................................ 7t 5
Upholltery ................................................... 170 .
Vane For Slle ............................................... 730

Llfe... Overbrook
Center,
located at 333 Page street,

Mlddlopoo,
l.o ptoaood
to
announceOhio
we are
accepl·
ing applications for full and

(\
1

J .. 'JI

l~tr ~

"ti:ib:::::::::::::11,.

1111

ing about 11-•-Jv nowl
nw'
Aecejve $30-$45 a day
reimbursement, paid respite,
and support for the VOLJth

experience, must have
worked wtth
Plumbing
,....._ ..._,_ C•••""' of being
'"""''JoiU"1
~
lead on commerlcal protect.

~; baaed on experience,
Insurance, 40lK, YIIC8tlon,
pliO·~holiQaua. LOCII to
Accepting eppllcallons lor Ca~e lor moro Information: GoHipollo and P1. P1ouanl.

full-time experienced 88118-tant manager for k)caJ eonvenlence store. Must be
available to work all shifts.
'No phone calls. Apply In
person at Par Mar 1138

Toft Free 1-866-325-1558.
Full time truck drlvernetde(t
with valid drivers Ncense and

Insurance. Must be depen~
able, haw good cuStomer

15289 Hun11ng1on Road, oorvl&lt;oo skills and bo ablo 10
Gallipolis Ferry.

loadandunloadtruclls.Muat

--------'
Acq~aillone Fine Jewelry-Is
fo
taking appl1callons r a

bo abla to woll&lt; weokondl.
•-nd r-·-oa 1o CLA Box
~ ..........

101. clo Ganlpolls Dally

part·tlme employee, please Tribune, P.O. Box •e9,
bring resume. NO PHONE' c:Ga.:.l_,llpol..:. .:':. .OH_4-c563:-'-:-·
Holp wonted o1 Darst Home

~:,~~ =~E;":1E, 2~X!

(careers Close To Home)
Call1i yl.7404-·44&amp;4367,
1-v00 21 0452

00:

=:

-.ga~•oolegudu

1;~cc=

.,_-"':"'.1I

~IM~sctiili""'~'~"~"l;.·

IIIII

..,

s=·

Group Home. 740·99~-5023 cleaning &amp; baking during
non-buolnooo houl8. Apply
An E•cell9111 Wlri 10 earn
ot Emma'o Galley on 22nd
money. Tho New lwon.
Uiq10Clllioa 51. P1. P1oaaan1, M·F 2·4
Call Marlyn 30-4·882·~645

i"""'ly""'m!!lllll'lllll:ll""'11

rocms. Also 1br apt. 34434
SA 124, 1 acres in Rutlanrl

740·742·2951

~-674·3698

Attention!
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PA.YMENr
programs for you to buy your
home instead of renting.
• 100% financing
* Less than pel1ect credit

16X80 3 Bedroom 2 Batt1
Vinyl Siding. Shingle Rool
$230 per month. 740-3859948.
- - - - - -' - 2000 16x70 2 bed 2 balh
Fleetwood. 2002 16~80 3
bed 2 bath Oakwood, 1998
16x80 3 bed 2 bath Forlune
Daylime 388·0000, Evening
388·8017 or 245-9213

Thia newspaper will not

knowingly accept
ad'f'aJ11s•m.nta for real
estate whk:h lain
violation of thalaw. Our
readeraare hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertlald In
this newspaper are
•nilabl• on en equal

"ro
'AND?DDo

House for sale in Racine Bedroom 2 Bath delivered
8nd set up $38,695. 740·
area. Approx. 4 acres, all 385-9948.
professionally landscaped. - - - , - - - - Ranch stvla hollse with 4
'
66 Holly Park 12x65, 2br, 1
bedrooms, living room, din ·
ing room, kitchen. large tam· bath, newer stove/fridge ·
outside CIA unit, good cond.
ily room , c9ntral air, gas heat
and fireplace. Addkion of a $2500 obo. Please leave
1
Looking for an updated tam- larg a Florida room cam· _m_es_sa_g_e-:7.,-40,.,·6-:4.,-5·-02-:90-ily home, on 1 acre rTV1 w/ pletel" coda· opens onto
1
backyard pnvacy
·
fe nee 1n
from $199 Month
I '
H
d.

Gallipolis. this 2100 SO.Ft. 3 patio &amp; P00 oreal· adabte '"

New 2008 Singlewide

. br. 2 ba. w/ lg. bonus room
vinyl sided ranch has new
Handyman Service. In need root, attached carpo_rt, 2 car
of repairs around the home? garage • refinished hard.R 8 a 8 0 n 8 b 1 e wood floors is ready tQ
ratea.20yr~J.experlence. Ph .# move in, central air &amp; natural

Aoasonablo ralos. 304-674· r-----...-...,7"---~
3924

-------.,Spmg c ...nlng lor Lawn &amp;
Gorden 304-675-2221

Inbound Worlr
Take Inbound customer
service cMls fOr Fortune

Customer

S

'
ervlce

Wohltvel,_

c..-

tuiHI,.
sltv~c:e poaltlon In our
main affla..

' SUC&lt;&gt;HOful oppflcon11
,_. bo people orlonl·
ed, enfoy uolng the

1-

phone,

·

and
enJoy - ; wl1fl

computer

number~;.

Poattlon

100 companlos
Including:

TlmeWerMr
Cable
NoW Hiring:
Full Tlmo Day Sltifl
Full Time Evening Sltlfl
• Up to $8.5111/hour
· • Ort-sl1o Dr. Office
OOming in April
• Mad~LIOon1aV401 K
• Paid lralnlng

aNOTICEa
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
lhal you do business whh
people you know, and
NOT to send money
lflroug!llhe mall until you
have Investigated the
of!orfng.

Own a computal? Pu1 k to

worf&lt;l Up lo $150010
$7500/mo PTIFT.
Free lnlormatlon1

www.lamllyblz123.com

1-888-IMC..PAYU
Ext. 2347

--~·.

'

e.

hNithonclllle

,.....,.,.. 401k, pold
VICIIfonlndpetOONtl
doyl.

HQmetown News

~leodar

For emptowment
conaldlrdon, unci
reeume to:

... "

·... and much more.

Ol.lne Hll

c/o GollpoiiiTrlllune

.•

as 1111n1 ""·
Galllpollo, OH 4M31

..
~,,
._. . . ,_
·.•
Jlatlp ttt'fnt~'
'
l\tp*t.
Daily Sentinel
t\.&lt;"

' -;{

:&lt;j,

'.'~

.

·F'~

No Pllone'Citlla P -

IN THE ··
CLASSIFIEDS

•

I

•

'

,",. ·•·Ar~a Shopping ·
• • Local Sports
• (ommunity

-111-ny
. -Including

: lord Sale- GalllpoUe....................................072
• Yard S.le-........,oy1Middle......;., ............... 074
- Yard Sale-Pt. Plaeaant ................................ 078

'

· ~4x70 112 bath, w/4 bonu s

I 1'\ \\1 II.J

AVON!

- Wanted to R•nt ......................................."... 470

t

FORS.~£

prefer•nea, limitation or
dlscrtmlnatton based on
race, color, religion, sex
tamlllalatatua or national
origin,' or •ny intention to

,

Wontad to Bur- Form Supplies .................. 820
... Wanted To Oo .............................................. 180

I

MOBIU: HOMI:S

adverd1e "anv

ground poo 1enc ose Y pn Midwesl 74'0-826·2750
---.,.-,_.--:-vacy fencing and land mymidwesthome.com
POST'OFACE NOW
scaped. Finished 2 car
garage attached to house Like new 3 bed 2 bath on .so
HIRING
and finished &amp; heated 3 car acres. $400 a month. Owne1
A~g. ~ $20/hr or
garage
unattached. finandng availal?le. 740-446·
F.'::~~~!~~~r.
gas lurnace, stone FP in E"ollenl condillon ready to 3570
740.5()8. 0408
LA. Kitchen has new oak move in. $255,000.00, Call:
Lot 88'x 124"W/ 14'x70' 1rall er
Offered-by E•am
Nood a ride to tho dodor, cabinolS, now vinyl flooring. 1740)949·2217
not olforod w/ U
3 br., 2 b, partially furnished
hires.
shopping, school or work? lg. pantry&amp; laundry room
-866-403-2582
Call(740)25&amp;1438
Spacious master suile wl In town, take over payments. 2 ~oVered porches, 2 ca1
1
F.P &amp; privale entrance. $925/month. Trade your land carport, large block storageAeataurant!Bikery In ·need Need someone to do your PriCed to sell cou1gog Now or trailer for down payment building. $40.000. (740)992·
3057
of nlghl ohm person tor Spring 'cleaning 1or you? $88.000. call (740)645·8751 740·645·7889
Gall 3()4..8 12-80 17

GaHipolls

All Are..l To Buy or
Soli. Shirloy Spears. 304·
675·1429.

which makes II Illegal to

~OH'f ~ccpe::~~nt could be the L....;op:::.:;po;;;."";;;;;;nlty;:,;;ba;;;•;;;••;;.·....1 2008 3 bedroom 2 balh sec·
same as rent.
tiona! home $~79 per month
~:ww;:::w~·=co:m=lc:':·•:o:m:;-;;;;=====::;~·~2t=D='(JIJ==b~y:N:E:A:·:I:n:c·:, Mortgage
740·Sil5·767t.
Locators. DupleJC fo r Sale on Land·
000
ScHools
-.:.(7.::40:cl3::6.:. 7·.:.0=---- Contract. 740-992-5858. -20_0_8_s_e-ct-io-na-l-ho_rn_e_3

W1nted .to Buy ............................................. 090

•

Fair Housing Act of 1968

$79,000

- - , A Participant of the drug- placed In your home.
tree Worttplace program .
Training begins MSich 29 at
Alba ~ Call ~~. F-'er
..,
~
_,

4x4'a For Sale ..............................................72 5

275 West Union Street

"'

~~~~ attl1udos 10 join us In
Ill
•
March 3 ,4,5 , 9801 •4pm at providing outstanding, qu~Nty care to our resldenls No
611 S South Ave,Mkkhport,
.
OH. Tools,clothes,collector Phone calls please. EOE &amp;

,

'6-7619

w.~ I

3 family garage sale, April parttlmeSTNA'Stojolnour
IIEIPWANim
lfEutWANIID
bsrRUCI'ION
2nd &amp; 3rd 9am·5pm corner friendly and dedicated &amp;\!Iff.
of Batha~ Rd. a Tornado Applk:ant's must be dependable, team p1ayers with pas- r:o.t.r Ptrtnta: Been think· Plumber, Minimum 5 years OelllpoUe Clf'Mr College
Ad., Racine

~~f~~~IW~-~~~~~11e:ms:IJI:ns;:.&amp;~mo::ro~. .

435'/, Sec'lnd Avenue

(740)

4

,

This ,
newaptpe
ccepte only hel
1nttd tdl mMtin
OE 1terldardl.

u .... n

Lost·
female German
.IIIIU"
Shepherd last seen Jan.
30th, wlslttchet in belly &amp; tOO WORKERS NEEDED
red
collar, A
bl
fts
ood
CarpenterJOyeavllle, $300 lt::;o ~ Mat:rlals
for sate return, (740)698kled F
Into
tlon
2287 ·
prov
· ree
rma
pkg. 24Hr. 80~-428-4649
Y,\llll Sill:
A
Colo"·allon·
of

1

Den wf Fireplace, 2 car
artached Garage Rodney

77 Hawthorne Ln., Pt.
make any llllch
Pleasant, 3br, 1be, 1015/SF
pr.terence, limitation or
New tloor coverings, fresh .
discrimination."
paint, new heat pump

'- I I\\ I I I "

1110

I
~;::;;~~~=~
Y.uti&gt; SAul- I
.
r PoMotov1A1IDDl.E

In thi• newspaper is

IUbJect to the Federal

I \ H'IIl\ \ I I \I

FOUND

r

0

304-675·2176

losT 4Nil

.

1 Acre, Flat Lot. Spacious

4br, 2 AC, Pool , Ctry New
Haven, $139,500 call after
6pm ,304·593·8871

Small 2 Br. house,Racm(·
area 2 outbuildings.carport
on approx. 1 Acre.Askm '
$45,000. 740-94 9-2539

All r1al estale advertising

3BA. 2BA. Lg. Kll &amp; LA. DR.
$110,000 (740) 245·9125

Shepherd 4 yrs old female,
run some 304·458:1515

New t1ume. never lived in
2BR, 2 baths. 3 acres mor{·
or less 1n Gallipolis. A.skiny
$80,000. 740-446-7029 '

I

dental gold. pre 1935 US

""'"''~'~

Ho:\IES
FOR SALE

HOlliE&gt;

FOR SAlE

children. 740-245·0134

ml•. blk. to

10

HI \ I I " I \II

151 2nd Avenue, GaiUpolia.
Female Golden Retriever, 2 446·2842 1P
yrs old. great with ~da 30-4· :-c----:--'--:-:--::

All Real
Eltl
dvtrtlnmenta .1

' Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to yc)ur classified ads
Jj~
!f"f'l
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

0 down payment. 4 bedrooms. Large yard. Covered
deck. Anached garage. 740-

Codcar Spaniel

HAFFELT'S

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

.

Pofnt Pleasant edges Lady -Falcons, ·S-4
LCRUM@MYOAIL'YREGISTER COM

'·He look' like he's 25
year' PILl 11hcn he\ playing.'' \a\ icr l'oach Sean
Miller '"it! of Luve. who is

Monday, March 31, 2oo8

'IUIINID DOWN ON
IOCIAI.IIICUIIITY IISf?
No Fee Unlm Wo Wlnl
1-888·582·33-45

"llltl ~·t~tntl

�Monday, March 31, 2008

NEW 2008 4 BR·2BA
1,700+ sq tt $49,989
trom $397 Month

Prime residential building lot 4BR, 2 F Bath, 2 car
in Rio Grande on Lake Or. altacRed
gar., 2 car
$24.900. P .one 260·495· detached gar., out bldg .,
51,14
fridge., dshwshr., 2.75 acre
oft
Hwy
124,

Midwesl 740-828·2750
mymldwesthome.com

I&lt; I \ I \I "

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. furn1shed and unfurnlshed, and houses In
Pomeroy and Middleport,
security deposit required, no

$214.36 permonth.lncludes

many upgrades, delill9ry &amp;
set-up. (740)385·2434

USED HOME SALE

rlO

H()l!SE~i
t'OR RENT

2BA House lor Rent in

Nice 3BR Singlewides
from $2900 Down~Pmt
Midwest 740-828 -2750

----::---::---- 1br &amp; 2br all ulilltlos

Point

Pleasent, $425/mo, No Pets,
Depo~t Required. Galt 304·
593·5363 or 304·593·0128

WHY PAY RENT' 3 bed 2 3

Bedroom

House

in

bath, $199 a month. 740-

446·3384

r

J..oTs &amp;

Syracuse.
+
depoSit
Hud$500/month
App. No Pets.
(304)675-5332 weekends
1 740·59HJ265

- - -- - - -ACREAGE
~--oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioo_.l 4 Bedroom House for R.. nt
~-"'

3 acres for Sate on Sandhill $600/rent
$600Jdeposit
Ad $ 25_000_304 _895_3929 · (740) 446-4060 or 367-7762

4BR. 2 baths at 91 Cedar St.

Land for sale, two acre lot on $650 per month + $650

Lincoln Hill in Pomeroy, Call

paid In

Loqallon In Galt1poll8 1800

(740)992·5052 and leave deposit. References req.
740-388-ttOO
message
House for rent in Pomeroy,
~OBILE HOME LOT FOR 1650 Lincoln Hill, $375 a
RENT. 1031 Geornes Creek month
plus
deposit,
~
Rd,441 ,·1111
(740)742·1903

r

ACROSS

·

T n~
u•r.,.,•U\.A

SUVs

roR SAlE

2001
Clean and Sharp. a.t;OOO

I

4-Hcl\lb)&gt;igsfor~$125·

Htli s Self

Nerth

·

r.

I

r

I

r:e

•-;:===================;-,

Are you 65.
o·r older?

r

t

Ellm View
Apartments

I

West

Senior Discount'*

• AQ8

I

Graciou&amp; Uvlng 1 and 2
Bedroom Apls. al VIRago
Manor and Riverside Apts.ln
Middleport, from $327 to
$592. 740·992·5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity.
_ _::.....;..:...._.:.....__
Jordan Landing Apartm~ts.
2·3 Bedroom Aparlmen1s
available. All utillttes paid
eJ&lt;cept electric. March Aent
Special $100 off Renl.
Please call304-674-0023 or
304·610-0n6 for more

II '&gt;I 1'1'111 "
,\ I I \ I " I ( II I,
I I~

mrmmr.o;;;;;;;F.~ARM;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

..__.EQuw.:wiiiiiiliiiiiii.._l

2003 Massey Ferguson
2315 with 154 hrs &amp; 6' Brush
Hog. Excellent
Gonet.
$1Q,900. 740·367-7755
-------EBY. INTEGRITY, KIEFEA
BUILT,
VALLEY
HO AS E/ ll v ESTOCK
TRAILERS,· LOAD MAX
EQUIPMENT TRAILERS.
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
information.
CARGO/CONCESSION
Modern 1 Bedroom Apt, , TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE·
Call (740)446·0390
NECK
HITCHES.
CARMICHAEL ' EQUIP·
One BR apt. 76 Vine Street, ME NT / CAR M IC HAE L
Gallipolis. $125/week, utili· TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA·
lies included. 74().367·7886 VICE. SPECIAL 20FT
Rooms for Rent No oeiS. GOOSENECK FLATBED
Call 740·992·7508.
.\
$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE
TRAILER INVENTORY AT
Tara
~ Townhouse WWW .CAAMICHAELApartments, Very Spacious,· TAAILEAS.COM 740--446"·
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2 3825
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby - - - - - - - Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo. Have you priced a John
No .Pets, Lekse Plus Deere lately? You'll be surSocurity Deposit Required, prlsedl Check out our used
(740)367-0547.
inventory
. at
Twin RlvSrs TQWer is acCept· W W W . C A A E 0. C 0 M
ing applications for wailing Carmichael Equipment. 740·
list for Hud-subslzed, 1· br, .446:2412
apartment,for
the r-.:.....-S=H":'Q~P:---,
elderlytdisabled call 6756679
Equal
Housing
.

1
I

Address - - - - - - - - - - - City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
I

Phone,_______________

I
I
I

1
I
1

I
I

Mall or drop off this coupon along
with a copy ol your photo ID to .
Ohio Valley Publlahlng P.O. !lox 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

·-------------------------------

Opportunity

Help Wanted

IMMEDIATE OPENING
GRAPHICS DESIGNER

·

4Jallipoli• 19ad!' t!tribune
~oint ~leafant 1.\.eglster
The Daily Sentinel
6unba!' Utime• -6tnthttl
=.c:..:=c.:..:.=-p------------------------------Subscriber's Name ________
·I

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
;;;~;;;;;;;;;..;;;~;;;;;;;;;ij
&amp; Removal
Help Wanted

Progressive colllpany with a great
lf(lrk atmosphere is currently looking
for a Graphics Designer to prepare ads
for a newspaper and the newspaper
web sites. The following skills are
highly desirable:
• QuarkXPress
~ Photrishop ,
•Multi-Ad Creator
1 Adobe Acrobat
1 and be familiar with Macs.
Should also have knowledge of four·
color and spot-color separation. Full·
time position with benefits. Paid
vacation,
healthcareldentallvision,
paid holidays, 401k.
Send resumes to:
Matt Rodgers
Advertising Director at

The Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or e·mail
.mrndgers@mydailytribune.com

CLASSIFIEDS

CI .ASSIFIEDS

* Prompt and Quality

Work
* Reasonable Rates

*Insured
• Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary .Stanley @

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither
·South

l NT

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

IT'S iiMt TO
G~T UP··· C.A£.L

BARNEY
START AT TH'
B'GINNIN'
FINISH AT
TH' ENDIN' .•.

THE BORN LOSER
,..

'"'I

wrn-\ 1&gt;-li:OII\M'\Tit J~no
~~~Wio..H,tii.E.

·'

::.lif.Of OUR

~~'(f/\00~ ...

y,

I (

tl '

ll

l

qlt'IIPI

'

G

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
. Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric. Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
AdditiO[ls
Local Contractor

740·367-(1544
Free Estimates

740·367-(1536

J&amp;L
Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Wlndowa
•Roofing
•Decks
•Garages
• Pole llulldlngs
• Room Additions
Ownar:
.hlmes Keesee 11
742·2332

NOTHIMG!

NOTHiNC:,
AT ALL!

ABSOLUTEL

LlTE~ALL.'('

NOTtliNC:,!

I

Manley's
Recycling

l-IE EVEN WON

SIIOOfEit.•
ALL IIIAVE
LEFT IS UIIS
M'(

EMm' sACK .•

l..U....

7 tl\71711. . . 1:11 ..

... "

IIIIIUJ. . •12:11111
PIYIIIIIT.. PIICU fll

1111171111.... ·•

REQUEST FOR PRO· award must ba used to
·POSAL
•
serve
out-of·achool
Meigs County
ilapllrtment or Job and
Family Services Is
seeking propoaala to
provide a comprehen·
alva year-round youth
program to eligible
youth agel 14·21 con&amp;latent with Meigs
County's
Workforce
Development
Plan,
provisions or the led·
eral
Workforce
lnveatmanl 'Act (WIA),
and related federal and
state regulations. In
eatabllshlng
youth
. actlvltlea under WIA,
service providers are
expsctad to link progrMnS with local labor
neada, provide
a
strong
connactlon
b a - academic and
occupational learning,
and aatabllah programs which prepare
youth lor post aecond·
ery
education.
or
unaubsldlzed employ·
menl ea lipproprlote.
· \-~UI~ij · Services
should
J
Include: determining
ellglbiiHy lor WIA programe, providing a
comprehensive array
ot aervlcw' to eligible
youth and lncorporat·
lng the ten program
element• under WIA.
Two programs will ba
awarded and program
cost muat not ucead
S1 00,000 each (tubject
to available Iundt) ..,d
shiiP ba tor tile parlod
of July 1, 2008 to June
30,'2009.
Admlnlatretlve coal
may not exceed 10% ol
the toto!
contract
aword.ln addHJon, 30%
ot the total contrect

t&gt;ID

PEANUTS

•••a·r7 n ........,..

=~~~~ The

r~~E.IIf.

BIG NATE

NOTICES
....,.iffl l

I HEARD TH' BESTEST
GOSSIP TODA'(!! IT'S
SO JUIC'f I DON'T
KNOWWHAR TO
START!!

f ' m , r r y ( 1 hl1"1
,' 1

EMPLOYMENT

. -----------··-------'

o ,

WV036725

740-591-8044

Public Notice

youth. Propoeala must
demonstrate tha ca·nablllly to m8et parlocm·
ance atandarda and to
quantlly program out·
comes. A copy ol the
Requeat lor Proposal
msy ba picked up from
Theresa Lavender or
Jane Banke at The
Melga County Job and
Family. Services, 175
Race
Street,
Mlddlepor.t,
Ohio
45760.
Proposals thould be
submitted to The.resa
Lavender,
. Meigs
County Department or.
Job
and
Family
Servlcea, 175 Race
Street, Poet Office Box
191, Middleport, Ohio
45760, no later than
Friday, April 4, 2008 at
12:00 pm. All aubmls·
aiCHIII must ba received
by mall or hen,d dellv·
ery by the above date
and time. No materials
received alter the date
will ba Included In pre·
vloua autlmlaalona nor
ba conaldered. The
department reaervea
the right to reject any
or all propoaale. In
accordence with 29
CFR part 31, 32, Meigs
County Department ol
Job
and
Family
Services Is prohibited
from discrimination on
the baa Ia ol race,
color, national origin,
sex, age, religion, poll!·
leal ballela, or dlsablll·
ty.
(3) 17, 24,31

PUBLIC NOTICE '
Tha Meigs County
Commlesloners
are
now accepting blda ror
conatiuctlon of steps
at
the
Chester
Academy Building at
Cheater, Ohio. Bid
packets may b8 picked
up
at
the
Commlaalonere' Office
and returned ~ April
1Oth at 1:00 p;m.
(3) 24, 31

------Public Notice
------Notice 11 hereby given
that sealed bids will be
received until 12:00
noon ThUrsdjly, May· 1,
2008. Bids may be sant
to the Melga County
Board
of
Mental .
Retardation
&amp;
D·e v e 1o p m e n t a 1
Olsebllltlea, and Meigs
Industries tnc. Plaaee
send bids to 1310
carleton Street, Box
307, Syracuse, Ohio
45779.
Bklltema are 1 School
Bus and 1 Van
Bua
7
1991
Jnternallonel School
B
·
u
8·
1HVBBZ4N4MH303667
Van 121894 Dodge Van
2B7KB31Z3RK134983
Vehlclea are acid aa In
condition. Msy bs aaen
at Carlston School by
calling 1·740-992-6681 .
The Melga County
Board of MRIDD and
Meigs lnduatrleo Inc.
reserves the right to
rejacl any or all bids
aubmtned.
· (3) 28.30 (4) 1, 2, 3, 4

' '

•

7
. . . . . . ., .

IWI'IIIIICC u•JM·CIJI·
' , IMIIIIIIInl
lllll'trC&amp;i•PIICIII

COW and BOY

H&amp;H
G
·
uttenng

THERE A.fiE. FEW WI\YS
. TO MIIJ&lt;E REIIL CHIINGE
IN THIS WORLD. I'M SICK
OF TIIL.KING IIBOUT IT, I
. WANTTO DO SOMETHING.

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
· 740·653·9657

NO, I WANT
TO BEAN
T=S
MY OTHER

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

\
I I \I i'
! c

l '\ ( 1\ I I I

t ! \ '\ ..._

I I\ l \ I It l \

av
GLESS. .

GARFIELD
1 ,tit •&gt;~

I

01,111!1 '"I h";!l d
I

I111H

r~·-· 11 ~

\.111\1

-~~~!)'I~

;nd,,

t"f'5 A 6EOAU"fl FUJ..
PAY!,.._.-

28 Years Exp,rience

\ lu -.q

lo

East
All pass·

Poet and novelist Charles Bukowski
wrote, ~Some people. never go crazy.
What trul~ horrible lives they must lead."
A1the bridge table, though, players who
never go crazy tend to do well. And if
1N!y make good opening leads, they will .
enjoy lru~ happy lives.
Over tl;te nex1 few columns, let us review
some guidelines for choosing an qpen·
ing lead. First, took at the West hand.
What would you lead against three notrump?
The auClloQ Is simplicity ilsell. Note that
South shooldnl ilony about ~s week
olubs. When you have a balanced hand
with the right count, open one no-tfump.
It makes life so easy. Yes, occasionally
you will play in the contract from the
wrong side. but if you open one of a suil,
you will often have no rebid.
We have all heard about fourth-highest
from the longest and strongest, which is
200 years old. dating Irom the early days
of whist. But you should remember that
leading fourth-highest promises alleasl
one honor In the suit. With no honors,
lssd lop of nothing.
West should selett the heart seven.
Although West's tour·card suit is
stronger, length is more .important than
""' strength against a no-1rump contract On
a heart lead, as long as the defenders
WE [(E.t&gt;lE.WE.t:&gt; OUR
keep pl"gglng away a1 hearts e;ery lime
f'RE.~PT\1&gt;.1.. ""-"'•U:.I'~I'~I
they win a lnck, they will set up two long
hearts and deleat the oontrect, taking
two hearts, one diamond and two dubs.
On a spade lssd, one long card I~ established and the delenders ooiiBC1 only
one spade, one diamond and two clubs.
Declarer gets lhrae spades, lhtae
hearts, one diamond and two clubs.

M~ LAnll,
ANt&gt; WfL£.
f&gt;O £.lJNCtl!

Room Addition• &amp;
A1modeHng
NewGtr1g11
Electrtcll I Plumbing
Aoclflng I Gutter•
VInyl Siding I Painting ,
P1tlo 1nd Porch Oec:Q

s

North

3 NT

On lead against
three no•trump

THE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

992-621

West
Pass

Opening lead: ??

YOUNG'S

V.C YOUNG Ill

K Q 54

t

• 863

Hll'dload C*netry And Furntwre

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

• A5I 2
South
• AQ3

• K7

1

when you pay for a 6 or 12 .
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

. • 10.%
• J 10 8

t A9

If so, you qualify for a

TR """'"

East
• 76I

• J 10 9 6
• 7 6 54 3

,.,

(15

n

• Q J 10 9

Advertise
in this
space
for
$64
per
month

I

j

• 'K J

740·992·1611

I

03-31.()8

• K 52
• 7 6

15
CAJ...L.ING/

NA"fUREl

"feLL. If I'M IN A MElE:fiN&lt;il
ANI:' CAN'f !If RElACI-IfP

David Lewis
740-992-6971

q-;;:'

For Remodeling and New House Building

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION .
• Room Additions • Garages 1 Vinyl
and Wood .Siding • Rooling • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

Call:

IIIE W. UICUI, OWNER .

1 Math reaulta 49 Vellow
Pages
8 Unfold,
50 Break
to a pool
or dsy
11 Unfreeze
52 Butterfly
12 Ambler or
catchers
Clapton
54 Auguot kid,
maybe
14 Fall flower
15 Guru's
55 In a frenzy
practice
56 Sourdough '
16 Calcutta
etrlkoa
nanny
57 FICA
17 .Midnight
number
teller
56 5pacs
widths
18 Gave •lob
. to
59 Conllruc·
20 Powerful
lion arM
22 Geol.
DOWN
formations
23 Ssy grace
.24 Vall chasm 1 Mtuy placs
27 Darth's
2 Oopal ·
deughter
(hyph.)
29 Psyable · 3 Pageant ·
oow
ftgures
30 Mild creamy 4 Bee
ChHIID
colonies
34 Downside
5 Hippie attire
37 Pubplnl
6 Rocker psrt
38 lolonsleur's 7 Thailand,
airport
once
39 Scl.fl gOrer 8 Old cattle
41 Prank
town
43 Cry
9 Glazier's
or disdain
goop
44 Family ..
10 Tubs trophy

5 - -&lt;ella!

~·-llliiiiiiiiiiiiii-P
Black lsuzu 'flodeo.

~~-------'

member

46 Appliances

•Phillip
· Alder

11'11""'--:::'::':'---,

r

Re..WW..OOuHISto.-.ge

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

miiH. $6500. 44~~815
~OIIILE HOME'&gt; close 1o hospUal Galt 740·
$l75, Col1740·701-317b or looW rnessaa:'
Stcml~Jf:
~
FOR REliT
• 33!Hl362
n~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;., 740-&amp;42·?773
Vo\16 ·
'
. 2br spoclous spt: rel/stoYe
~ 4·H Fair Pigs. Cal "140-256· '
Foa SAlE
29670 Basl]ljn Road
2Br at Johnsons Mobile wid hookup, w-.ter pd. eloae ___ JTJ..r..-..nvuAXo • 6102
-Racine, Ohio
• New Homes
Home Park. Call446·2003
to hospital &amp; untwrsity on
----,---,
45771
Centenary Rd. no pels, Foi Set 8 a..h.. Bed HI h Jersey Milk Cow, recently 2008 • Chevy, While Cargo
· • Garages
7~949-2217
Ideal for 1 or 2 people, refer·
.......,,
'
g fresh great family or nurse van, V6, with ladder rack &amp;
·Complete
ences. no pets. 5 miles from•-.4..:6..:·9..:.44..:2:.:•::.:tte::.:r..:5p~m;..:.___ Chair 304·675-4830
cow., Gall 740·245·9044 bulk head, 42,000 miles,
Remodeling
Gavin. no calls after Beautiful Apta. at Jack•on
JET
leave 8 message.
Must Sell, looks &amp; runs like
8pm.441·0181
Eala1ea. 52 Westwood
AERATION MOTORS
new 304·437·1448
c - - - - - . , . - - Drive, from $365 to $560.
rlegistered Black Angus
MOTORcr- _,
Small 2 br. mobile home, 740·446--2568.
Hours
Equal Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In au11 · · $1200 · 446•7410 OF
4 WHEELERSu.r.&gt;r
.
Racine, ~00 a mo., $200
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- 441-7205
Stop &amp; Compare
dep., years lease, no pets, Housing Opportunity. This 800·537-9528.
.
7:00AM.; 8:00 PM
institution is an Equal
111411 mo. pd ~~~~~~~~
no calls after 9pm, Opportuhity Provider and NEW AND USED STEEL
2006 HD Softtail Standard '=======~
'-17_40c.)9_9_2·_50_9_7_ _ _ _ Em-'p'-loy.:._•r_
. - - - - - Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar rtb
Atr1'05
Excellent Cond. 10,100 r
, ,.
A 1
miles. 1 1/4"T·Bars, V&amp;H Big · MASON MOWER
. 1 28R 1
1
a mg app •ca •ons or
· Beech St., Middleport, 2 br. For
Concrete,
ng e,
FOR SALE
ShotS pipes. Badlander and
No pets.
$275/month furnished apt. , no pf!!ls, "'
~"'hannel · Flat Bar· Steel "
304-773-5061
' - - - - - - - · Factory seats. Must sell
$200/deposit. 446-3617
dep.&amp;
ref.
required. Gr_ating
For
Drains. '.at
Hyundal
Accent 51 1.BOO. 740 _645- 7963
304-882-3294
r~ ! APARI'MENTsFOR
o-- •
(740)992.0165
. Dnveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L Hatchback. 5 speed trans, - - - - - - - Servicing Lawn
na:.t'~•
Cl
Traclors. Mowers,
1 Cl
1 Cl
1 Strap Metals Open Monda~. 65,310 miles, good condi- 4-wheeler 300EX, $i ,OOQ
Dean
Gealnl: 1- ean T~esday. w_
ednesday
lion. needs catalytic convert- (740)446-4060
Tillers, Murray,
owntown a tpo •s apt., Fnday 8am-4 30pm Closed
Cra'lsman. MTD,
2BRapl. (740)441.0194
R
B h
'
· '
.
er. Asking $2200. Call74().
''
upstairs, 2B
2 at s. Thursday, Saturday &amp; 709-6339
CAMPERS &amp;
B.
&amp; St tt
MOTOR Hor.m;
H-Honest
$500. 446·9209.
sun day· 174O)44s-7300
·
nggs
ra on
02 Camara Z28. $13,500 . . .llliiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiil.,.t
CONVENIENTLY LOCAl·
1- lntegn·l"
Stze 4 Prom dress Beautiful Call 740 3
'
ED &amp; AFFORDA~LEI
. white. $ 150. 44 6- 2815
:-:-=-·.:..79~·9-':-38:..1 _ _--:- AV Service at Carmichael
S-Service
Townhouse
apartments,
03 Oldsmobile Alero , e11cel- Trailers 740-446-3825
10 Years
and/or small hou~s FOR
PETs
lent cond., runs great,
IJf Road tO left above
RENT. Gall (740)441·1111
FOR SALE
73,000 miles $5900. 740· llml""'...;;;.:.:;;;;;;;;;;;;., · Maso" Go/fCoutse
tor application &amp; information. "'~--oiiiiiiiiiiioo._l _57_8_·1_03_0_ _ _ _ _ ·rlO IMI'ROHor.mv~
Harvey Road Mason. wv
AKG reg. mini dachshuiod
1941 Chevy Coupe Street '-.lllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit.,.t
pups, rare colors, Dapples, Rod Project, Rebuilt 350, '
checkad, 1sl shots, 350 Turbo, 10 Boll Raar,
BASEMENT
wormed $375. and up. 740WATERPROOFING
•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments 256 _1498
New Mustang II Front. lots
•Central heat &amp; AIC
of new parts. .
$6500. Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references fur·
DBO 740 645 4243
•Washer/dryer hookup
AKC · while
miniature
·
• ·
nlshed. Established 1975.
·sch nauzers , 2 ma1es, 1
•All electric· a~eraglng
u~ . .
Call 24 Hrs. (740) -446·
$50-$60/nionth
female, serious calls only, • - •"iiFORiiiiiiSiiiAU!iiil-r 0870, Rogers Basement
•Owner pays water. sewer, (740)41&amp;-7403
·
Waterproofing.
trash
fST Dual Wheel Dump Truck.
(304)882·3017
Looks rough, runs tough!
'tV'IVW.tllnkl cs ••koablaetrr.co~
New parts/wench incl.
$JOOO. 446·28151e'ave mes-

i

The Daily Sentinef • Page BS

Chevy Silverado Sin. lift,
Electric Start High &amp; Low big horn tires, wheets clean,
Transmisson, New Rims, $3850. 03 Mustang 6 cyl
Tires &amp; Paint. 2002 tiard pony $SOOO. 740-256-6733
Top For CJ7 Jeep, Ca.!l949-

House or Rent Pomeroy Point Pleasant 304-360· sq. ft. ~ $400 mo. off
Area. No pets_ CBII740-~2· 0163
street pandng call Wayne at
5858
·
tBR Apt, WID hookupo, (404)456-3802

.

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Retaii/Wii~ouHIStorage John Deer A 1947 Tractor, 96

Location in Galllpofis 1800
sq . ft. building $400 mo. off
street parking call Wayne at
(404) 456-3802

S600mol$400dep. 740·742· :..pe_ts_._74_o-_9_92_·2_2_1s_._ _ ::---::-:-::--:--=-- 230stor lnk/rmation.

New 3 Bedroom homes from ~;=:;;;::::::=:, 1151

Monday, March 31., 2008
'ALLEY OOP

39 Karstelevst
40 They h..-.
one hom
41 SuriaHo
42· Welles or
Bean
43 Spiky hair

styles

44 Boon
compsnions
45 Blah
47 Garr of
'"T6otsle"
48 Proofer'a

word
51 Took gold
53 NNW
opposite

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Opher cryptograms arl! created from quotations by famous people, past and present
Each 1ener intns ~stands tor another

Taday's r:lue: I fKIUa/5 0

' B T V MC F L M F H
• TCGNPV

·a T Y

XNDDVL

M C N 0 . ·•

"JFLLFLM

VRVGEBTFLM,

AOB

FH."

DCWANGIF

•

RFLPV

JNLBFLM

FHL'B
BC

JFL

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -'For all my education, accompishments, and SO·
'wisdom' ... I can\ fathom my own heart."· Michael Caine
·

c~led

AstroGraph

0.four
Reorronoe iefttrs of tho
crambl&lt;od WOldt boo
'

l!bur 'lllrlhllllr:

Tuoodoy, Apoll1, 2008
By Bernice Bede O.al
In the year ahead, you will make a more
concerted afton to increase your stature
among your peers and in your community. As a result. you will end up pleasing a
lot more people than just yourself.
ARIES (March 21·April 19) - Tile way
you deal with friends and associates will
reflect quhe tavorably on you, both in
your personal and busit:"~es·s affairs . .
Sif)'lply by being yourself, you will set an'
enviable example to be emulated.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Developments will show that what you
are doing for others is being returned in
far more beneficial ways than you believe
you are giving out. In reality, it's equal.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Someone
you have been admiring from ·a distance
Will make his or her laeli!'lgs known at
this time. The attrac1kln comes from hav·
lng so much in common.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - II might
come to -;our anention that a current
project has far greater potential than you
had calculated. Wnh this revelation, so
many wonderful things become possible.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 - Follow your
Instincts, .because when you're attuned
to the way others think and feel, you can
'make great strides toward developing
more harmonious relationships with
· those Important to you.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) :... Be alen for
hidden opportunities to increase your '
earnings, which might come about
through a s~ond source of income.
They aren't likely to be obvious, however,
so be on your toes at all limes.
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct. 23) - Owing to
your magnetic personality, you wilt not be
wantinQ for companionship. However, in
order to be in position to anract others,
you must get out and go where the

13 Coritributo
(2 wdll.)
19 UFO crew
21 Pate de
lois 24 Supplement
25 Sticker
26 Team cheer
27 Ethel's
friend
28 Reaction to
a mouse
30 - de mer
31 Lao-Tzu's
. "way"
32 Yale athlete
33 Crayola
choice
35 Roused up
36 Vsccaro or
Lee

low Ia form faur limplo worda..

I

DUG E B
r----....;.-;-, ..
!---,~0..,Y...;.A;.,;L;...,_I-1

!

..........

6

....~._~,...~,....~

I

0 NY 0 8 0

'I I ·1

•

.."'

"Dreams," the cutic told her
.frietld, "are tb9ugbls you

didn't have time to think

I

about-tbC-.n

1 8 1~~~~.~:~~~~
d....Joc1-.: ..., No. 3 below.

rm:R~UMBERED I'

YOU

1 1~ I' 1I' I' I' I' 1.
I I 'I I I I Iihel I I I.
2

5

ICRAMoU1'5 ANSWW 3 • 2 8 •o 8
. Orator- Rainy -Junipy- Wdlow- YOUR OWN
"Put your tiJtiR iD good hands,n the pbilosopber told his
audience. Smiling budded, "YOUROWN.n

ARLO &amp; JANIS

actiOn IS.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) -Timing Ia
on your side, so don't be afraid to assert
yourself In order to accomplish your purposes. It's an exceltenttrrte to wrap up a
matter you'we been amcious to get out ot
thewa'/.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- Vou
wilt get the opportunity to tell someone
how much he or She means to you. Don't ·
let this opportunity slip away: these
moments are fEwl and tar between.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)- When
dealing· with those who matter the most, .
let your generous nature prevail and
dominate your behavior, It Is always
those simple and ·kind gestures that
everyone cherishes and rememtiera.
AQUARIUi (Jon. 20-Fob. 19) - You
have a number of trlenda who would be
delighted to h11r lrom you at ttlla time,
ao If you're looking for company, call on•
or more of them. Don't 111 •round waiting
for people to call you.
PISCES (Fob. 20·Morch 20) ~ lllo UIU·
ally boll to llow wllh tho lido of OMnlo
tnlttad Clf awlmmlng agalnat 11. Rather
thon trying to rorouiO thlngo, lt1 mobro
owr wntch 1'011 hlvt no control hl\11
thtir WIW.

SOUP TO NUTZ

47239 Riebel Road. Long Bottom, OH

740-985-4141 ·

I. wes "'L~&lt;~NG "Ro

Cell: 740·416-1834

~

41111&gt; ~ ~~~ CLUr clc:!WS

IOW!ol F1!;&gt;M

· 25+ years experience Free EstimaJes

1

Advertise ·
in this space for
$64 ·per month

,,,

'"'
\

I

..

..

Me.. ..----

�Monday, March 31, 2008

NEW 2008 4 BR·2BA
1,700+ sq tt $49,989
trom $397 Month

Prime residential building lot 4BR, 2 F Bath, 2 car
in Rio Grande on Lake Or. altacRed
gar., 2 car
$24.900. P .one 260·495· detached gar., out bldg .,
51,14
fridge., dshwshr., 2.75 acre
oft
Hwy
124,

Midwesl 740-828·2750
mymldwesthome.com

I&lt; I \ I \I "

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. furn1shed and unfurnlshed, and houses In
Pomeroy and Middleport,
security deposit required, no

$214.36 permonth.lncludes

many upgrades, delill9ry &amp;
set-up. (740)385·2434

USED HOME SALE

rlO

H()l!SE~i
t'OR RENT

2BA House lor Rent in

Nice 3BR Singlewides
from $2900 Down~Pmt
Midwest 740-828 -2750

----::---::---- 1br &amp; 2br all ulilltlos

Point

Pleasent, $425/mo, No Pets,
Depo~t Required. Galt 304·
593·5363 or 304·593·0128

WHY PAY RENT' 3 bed 2 3

Bedroom

House

in

bath, $199 a month. 740-

446·3384

r

J..oTs &amp;

Syracuse.
+
depoSit
Hud$500/month
App. No Pets.
(304)675-5332 weekends
1 740·59HJ265

- - -- - - -ACREAGE
~--oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioo_.l 4 Bedroom House for R.. nt
~-"'

3 acres for Sate on Sandhill $600/rent
$600Jdeposit
Ad $ 25_000_304 _895_3929 · (740) 446-4060 or 367-7762

4BR. 2 baths at 91 Cedar St.

Land for sale, two acre lot on $650 per month + $650

Lincoln Hill in Pomeroy, Call

paid In

Loqallon In Galt1poll8 1800

(740)992·5052 and leave deposit. References req.
740-388-ttOO
message
House for rent in Pomeroy,
~OBILE HOME LOT FOR 1650 Lincoln Hill, $375 a
RENT. 1031 Geornes Creek month
plus
deposit,
~
Rd,441 ,·1111
(740)742·1903

r

ACROSS

·

T n~
u•r.,.,•U\.A

SUVs

roR SAlE

2001
Clean and Sharp. a.t;OOO

I

4-Hcl\lb)&gt;igsfor~$125·

Htli s Self

Nerth

·

r.

I

r

I

r:e

•-;:===================;-,

Are you 65.
o·r older?

r

t

Ellm View
Apartments

I

West

Senior Discount'*

• AQ8

I

Graciou&amp; Uvlng 1 and 2
Bedroom Apls. al VIRago
Manor and Riverside Apts.ln
Middleport, from $327 to
$592. 740·992·5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity.
_ _::.....;..:...._.:.....__
Jordan Landing Apartm~ts.
2·3 Bedroom Aparlmen1s
available. All utillttes paid
eJ&lt;cept electric. March Aent
Special $100 off Renl.
Please call304-674-0023 or
304·610-0n6 for more

II '&gt;I 1'1'111 "
,\ I I \ I " I ( II I,
I I~

mrmmr.o;;;;;;;F.~ARM;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

..__.EQuw.:wiiiiiiliiiiiii.._l

2003 Massey Ferguson
2315 with 154 hrs &amp; 6' Brush
Hog. Excellent
Gonet.
$1Q,900. 740·367-7755
-------EBY. INTEGRITY, KIEFEA
BUILT,
VALLEY
HO AS E/ ll v ESTOCK
TRAILERS,· LOAD MAX
EQUIPMENT TRAILERS.
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
information.
CARGO/CONCESSION
Modern 1 Bedroom Apt, , TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE·
Call (740)446·0390
NECK
HITCHES.
CARMICHAEL ' EQUIP·
One BR apt. 76 Vine Street, ME NT / CAR M IC HAE L
Gallipolis. $125/week, utili· TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA·
lies included. 74().367·7886 VICE. SPECIAL 20FT
Rooms for Rent No oeiS. GOOSENECK FLATBED
Call 740·992·7508.
.\
$3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE
TRAILER INVENTORY AT
Tara
~ Townhouse WWW .CAAMICHAELApartments, Very Spacious,· TAAILEAS.COM 740--446"·
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2 3825
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby - - - - - - - Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo. Have you priced a John
No .Pets, Lekse Plus Deere lately? You'll be surSocurity Deposit Required, prlsedl Check out our used
(740)367-0547.
inventory
. at
Twin RlvSrs TQWer is acCept· W W W . C A A E 0. C 0 M
ing applications for wailing Carmichael Equipment. 740·
list for Hud-subslzed, 1· br, .446:2412
apartment,for
the r-.:.....-S=H":'Q~P:---,
elderlytdisabled call 6756679
Equal
Housing
.

1
I

Address - - - - - - - - - - - City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
I

Phone,_______________

I
I
I

1
I
1

I
I

Mall or drop off this coupon along
with a copy ol your photo ID to .
Ohio Valley Publlahlng P.O. !lox 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

·-------------------------------

Opportunity

Help Wanted

IMMEDIATE OPENING
GRAPHICS DESIGNER

·

4Jallipoli• 19ad!' t!tribune
~oint ~leafant 1.\.eglster
The Daily Sentinel
6unba!' Utime• -6tnthttl
=.c:..:=c.:..:.=-p------------------------------Subscriber's Name ________
·I

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
;;;~;;;;;;;;;..;;;~;;;;;;;;;ij
&amp; Removal
Help Wanted

Progressive colllpany with a great
lf(lrk atmosphere is currently looking
for a Graphics Designer to prepare ads
for a newspaper and the newspaper
web sites. The following skills are
highly desirable:
• QuarkXPress
~ Photrishop ,
•Multi-Ad Creator
1 Adobe Acrobat
1 and be familiar with Macs.
Should also have knowledge of four·
color and spot-color separation. Full·
time position with benefits. Paid
vacation,
healthcareldentallvision,
paid holidays, 401k.
Send resumes to:
Matt Rodgers
Advertising Director at

The Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or e·mail
.mrndgers@mydailytribune.com

CLASSIFIEDS

CI .ASSIFIEDS

* Prompt and Quality

Work
* Reasonable Rates

*Insured
• Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary .Stanley @

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither
·South

l NT

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

IT'S iiMt TO
G~T UP··· C.A£.L

BARNEY
START AT TH'
B'GINNIN'
FINISH AT
TH' ENDIN' .•.

THE BORN LOSER
,..

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wrn-\ 1&gt;-li:OII\M'\Tit J~no
~~~Wio..H,tii.E.

·'

::.lif.Of OUR

~~'(f/\00~ ...

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CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
. Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric. Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
AdditiO[ls
Local Contractor

740·367-(1544
Free Estimates

740·367-(1536

J&amp;L
Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Wlndowa
•Roofing
•Decks
•Garages
• Pole llulldlngs
• Room Additions
Ownar:
.hlmes Keesee 11
742·2332

NOTHIMG!

NOTHiNC:,
AT ALL!

ABSOLUTEL

LlTE~ALL.'('

NOTtliNC:,!

I

Manley's
Recycling

l-IE EVEN WON

SIIOOfEit.•
ALL IIIAVE
LEFT IS UIIS
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REQUEST FOR PRO· award must ba used to
·POSAL
•
serve
out-of·achool
Meigs County
ilapllrtment or Job and
Family Services Is
seeking propoaala to
provide a comprehen·
alva year-round youth
program to eligible
youth agel 14·21 con&amp;latent with Meigs
County's
Workforce
Development
Plan,
provisions or the led·
eral
Workforce
lnveatmanl 'Act (WIA),
and related federal and
state regulations. In
eatabllshlng
youth
. actlvltlea under WIA,
service providers are
expsctad to link progrMnS with local labor
neada, provide
a
strong
connactlon
b a - academic and
occupational learning,
and aatabllah programs which prepare
youth lor post aecond·
ery
education.
or
unaubsldlzed employ·
menl ea lipproprlote.
· \-~UI~ij · Services
should
J
Include: determining
ellglbiiHy lor WIA programe, providing a
comprehensive array
ot aervlcw' to eligible
youth and lncorporat·
lng the ten program
element• under WIA.
Two programs will ba
awarded and program
cost muat not ucead
S1 00,000 each (tubject
to available Iundt) ..,d
shiiP ba tor tile parlod
of July 1, 2008 to June
30,'2009.
Admlnlatretlve coal
may not exceed 10% ol
the toto!
contract
aword.ln addHJon, 30%
ot the total contrect

t&gt;ID

PEANUTS

•••a·r7 n ........,..

=~~~~ The

r~~E.IIf.

BIG NATE

NOTICES
....,.iffl l

I HEARD TH' BESTEST
GOSSIP TODA'(!! IT'S
SO JUIC'f I DON'T
KNOWWHAR TO
START!!

f ' m , r r y ( 1 hl1"1
,' 1

EMPLOYMENT

. -----------··-------'

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WV036725

740-591-8044

Public Notice

youth. Propoeala must
demonstrate tha ca·nablllly to m8et parlocm·
ance atandarda and to
quantlly program out·
comes. A copy ol the
Requeat lor Proposal
msy ba picked up from
Theresa Lavender or
Jane Banke at The
Melga County Job and
Family. Services, 175
Race
Street,
Mlddlepor.t,
Ohio
45760.
Proposals thould be
submitted to The.resa
Lavender,
. Meigs
County Department or.
Job
and
Family
Servlcea, 175 Race
Street, Poet Office Box
191, Middleport, Ohio
45760, no later than
Friday, April 4, 2008 at
12:00 pm. All aubmls·
aiCHIII must ba received
by mall or hen,d dellv·
ery by the above date
and time. No materials
received alter the date
will ba Included In pre·
vloua autlmlaalona nor
ba conaldered. The
department reaervea
the right to reject any
or all propoaale. In
accordence with 29
CFR part 31, 32, Meigs
County Department ol
Job
and
Family
Services Is prohibited
from discrimination on
the baa Ia ol race,
color, national origin,
sex, age, religion, poll!·
leal ballela, or dlsablll·
ty.
(3) 17, 24,31

PUBLIC NOTICE '
Tha Meigs County
Commlesloners
are
now accepting blda ror
conatiuctlon of steps
at
the
Chester
Academy Building at
Cheater, Ohio. Bid
packets may b8 picked
up
at
the
Commlaalonere' Office
and returned ~ April
1Oth at 1:00 p;m.
(3) 24, 31

------Public Notice
------Notice 11 hereby given
that sealed bids will be
received until 12:00
noon ThUrsdjly, May· 1,
2008. Bids may be sant
to the Melga County
Board
of
Mental .
Retardation
&amp;
D·e v e 1o p m e n t a 1
Olsebllltlea, and Meigs
Industries tnc. Plaaee
send bids to 1310
carleton Street, Box
307, Syracuse, Ohio
45779.
Bklltema are 1 School
Bus and 1 Van
Bua
7
1991
Jnternallonel School
B
·
u
8·
1HVBBZ4N4MH303667
Van 121894 Dodge Van
2B7KB31Z3RK134983
Vehlclea are acid aa In
condition. Msy bs aaen
at Carlston School by
calling 1·740-992-6681 .
The Melga County
Board of MRIDD and
Meigs lnduatrleo Inc.
reserves the right to
rejacl any or all bids
aubmtned.
· (3) 28.30 (4) 1, 2, 3, 4

' '

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. . . . . . ., .

IWI'IIIIICC u•JM·CIJI·
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lllll'trC&amp;i•PIICIII

COW and BOY

H&amp;H
G
·
uttenng

THERE A.fiE. FEW WI\YS
. TO MIIJ&lt;E REIIL CHIINGE
IN THIS WORLD. I'M SICK
OF TIIL.KING IIBOUT IT, I
. WANTTO DO SOMETHING.

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
· 740·653·9657

NO, I WANT
TO BEAN
T=S
MY OTHER

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28 Years Exp,rience

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East
All pass·

Poet and novelist Charles Bukowski
wrote, ~Some people. never go crazy.
What trul~ horrible lives they must lead."
A1the bridge table, though, players who
never go crazy tend to do well. And if
1N!y make good opening leads, they will .
enjoy lru~ happy lives.
Over tl;te nex1 few columns, let us review
some guidelines for choosing an qpen·
ing lead. First, took at the West hand.
What would you lead against three notrump?
The auClloQ Is simplicity ilsell. Note that
South shooldnl ilony about ~s week
olubs. When you have a balanced hand
with the right count, open one no-tfump.
It makes life so easy. Yes, occasionally
you will play in the contract from the
wrong side. but if you open one of a suil,
you will often have no rebid.
We have all heard about fourth-highest
from the longest and strongest, which is
200 years old. dating Irom the early days
of whist. But you should remember that
leading fourth-highest promises alleasl
one honor In the suit. With no honors,
lssd lop of nothing.
West should selett the heart seven.
Although West's tour·card suit is
stronger, length is more .important than
""' strength against a no-1rump contract On
a heart lead, as long as the defenders
WE [(E.t&gt;lE.WE.t:&gt; OUR
keep pl"gglng away a1 hearts e;ery lime
f'RE.~PT\1&gt;.1.. ""-"'•U:.I'~I'~I
they win a lnck, they will set up two long
hearts and deleat the oontrect, taking
two hearts, one diamond and two dubs.
On a spade lssd, one long card I~ established and the delenders ooiiBC1 only
one spade, one diamond and two clubs.
Declarer gets lhrae spades, lhtae
hearts, one diamond and two clubs.

M~ LAnll,
ANt&gt; WfL£.
f&gt;O £.lJNCtl!

Room Addition• &amp;
A1modeHng
NewGtr1g11
Electrtcll I Plumbing
Aoclflng I Gutter•
VInyl Siding I Painting ,
P1tlo 1nd Porch Oec:Q

s

North

3 NT

On lead against
three no•trump

THE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

992-621

West
Pass

Opening lead: ??

YOUNG'S

V.C YOUNG Ill

K Q 54

t

• 863

Hll'dload C*netry And Furntwre

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

• A5I 2
South
• AQ3

• K7

1

when you pay for a 6 or 12 .
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

. • 10.%
• J 10 8

t A9

If so, you qualify for a

TR """'"

East
• 76I

• J 10 9 6
• 7 6 54 3

,.,

(15

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• Q J 10 9

Advertise
in this
space
for
$64
per
month

I

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• 'K J

740·992·1611

I

03-31.()8

• K 52
• 7 6

15
CAJ...L.ING/

NA"fUREl

"feLL. If I'M IN A MElE:fiN&lt;il
ANI:' CAN'f !If RElACI-IfP

David Lewis
740-992-6971

q-;;:'

For Remodeling and New House Building

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION .
• Room Additions • Garages 1 Vinyl
and Wood .Siding • Rooling • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

Call:

IIIE W. UICUI, OWNER .

1 Math reaulta 49 Vellow
Pages
8 Unfold,
50 Break
to a pool
or dsy
11 Unfreeze
52 Butterfly
12 Ambler or
catchers
Clapton
54 Auguot kid,
maybe
14 Fall flower
15 Guru's
55 In a frenzy
practice
56 Sourdough '
16 Calcutta
etrlkoa
nanny
57 FICA
17 .Midnight
number
teller
56 5pacs
widths
18 Gave •lob
. to
59 Conllruc·
20 Powerful
lion arM
22 Geol.
DOWN
formations
23 Ssy grace
.24 Vall chasm 1 Mtuy placs
27 Darth's
2 Oopal ·
deughter
(hyph.)
29 Psyable · 3 Pageant ·
oow
ftgures
30 Mild creamy 4 Bee
ChHIID
colonies
34 Downside
5 Hippie attire
37 Pubplnl
6 Rocker psrt
38 lolonsleur's 7 Thailand,
airport
once
39 Scl.fl gOrer 8 Old cattle
41 Prank
town
43 Cry
9 Glazier's
or disdain
goop
44 Family ..
10 Tubs trophy

5 - -&lt;ella!

~·-llliiiiiiiiiiiiii-P
Black lsuzu 'flodeo.

~~-------'

member

46 Appliances

•Phillip
· Alder

11'11""'--:::'::':'---,

r

Re..WW..OOuHISto.-.ge

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

miiH. $6500. 44~~815
~OIIILE HOME'&gt; close 1o hospUal Galt 740·
$l75, Col1740·701-317b or looW rnessaa:'
Stcml~Jf:
~
FOR REliT
• 33!Hl362
n~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;., 740-&amp;42·?773
Vo\16 ·
'
. 2br spoclous spt: rel/stoYe
~ 4·H Fair Pigs. Cal "140-256· '
Foa SAlE
29670 Basl]ljn Road
2Br at Johnsons Mobile wid hookup, w-.ter pd. eloae ___ JTJ..r..-..nvuAXo • 6102
-Racine, Ohio
• New Homes
Home Park. Call446·2003
to hospital &amp; untwrsity on
----,---,
45771
Centenary Rd. no pels, Foi Set 8 a..h.. Bed HI h Jersey Milk Cow, recently 2008 • Chevy, While Cargo
· • Garages
7~949-2217
Ideal for 1 or 2 people, refer·
.......,,
'
g fresh great family or nurse van, V6, with ladder rack &amp;
·Complete
ences. no pets. 5 miles from•-.4..:6..:·9..:.44..:2:.:•::.:tte::.:r..:5p~m;..:.___ Chair 304·675-4830
cow., Gall 740·245·9044 bulk head, 42,000 miles,
Remodeling
Gavin. no calls after Beautiful Apta. at Jack•on
JET
leave 8 message.
Must Sell, looks &amp; runs like
8pm.441·0181
Eala1ea. 52 Westwood
AERATION MOTORS
new 304·437·1448
c - - - - - . , . - - Drive, from $365 to $560.
rlegistered Black Angus
MOTORcr- _,
Small 2 br. mobile home, 740·446--2568.
Hours
Equal Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In au11 · · $1200 · 446•7410 OF
4 WHEELERSu.r.&gt;r
.
Racine, ~00 a mo., $200
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- 441-7205
Stop &amp; Compare
dep., years lease, no pets, Housing Opportunity. This 800·537-9528.
.
7:00AM.; 8:00 PM
institution is an Equal
111411 mo. pd ~~~~~~~~
no calls after 9pm, Opportuhity Provider and NEW AND USED STEEL
2006 HD Softtail Standard '=======~
'-17_40c.)9_9_2·_50_9_7_ _ _ _ Em-'p'-loy.:._•r_
. - - - - - Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar rtb
Atr1'05
Excellent Cond. 10,100 r
, ,.
A 1
miles. 1 1/4"T·Bars, V&amp;H Big · MASON MOWER
. 1 28R 1
1
a mg app •ca •ons or
· Beech St., Middleport, 2 br. For
Concrete,
ng e,
FOR SALE
ShotS pipes. Badlander and
No pets.
$275/month furnished apt. , no pf!!ls, "'
~"'hannel · Flat Bar· Steel "
304-773-5061
' - - - - - - - · Factory seats. Must sell
$200/deposit. 446-3617
dep.&amp;
ref.
required. Gr_ating
For
Drains. '.at
Hyundal
Accent 51 1.BOO. 740 _645- 7963
304-882-3294
r~ ! APARI'MENTsFOR
o-- •
(740)992.0165
. Dnveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L Hatchback. 5 speed trans, - - - - - - - Servicing Lawn
na:.t'~•
Cl
Traclors. Mowers,
1 Cl
1 Cl
1 Strap Metals Open Monda~. 65,310 miles, good condi- 4-wheeler 300EX, $i ,OOQ
Dean
Gealnl: 1- ean T~esday. w_
ednesday
lion. needs catalytic convert- (740)446-4060
Tillers, Murray,
owntown a tpo •s apt., Fnday 8am-4 30pm Closed
Cra'lsman. MTD,
2BRapl. (740)441.0194
R
B h
'
· '
.
er. Asking $2200. Call74().
''
upstairs, 2B
2 at s. Thursday, Saturday &amp; 709-6339
CAMPERS &amp;
B.
&amp; St tt
MOTOR Hor.m;
H-Honest
$500. 446·9209.
sun day· 174O)44s-7300
·
nggs
ra on
02 Camara Z28. $13,500 . . .llliiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiil.,.t
CONVENIENTLY LOCAl·
1- lntegn·l"
Stze 4 Prom dress Beautiful Call 740 3
'
ED &amp; AFFORDA~LEI
. white. $ 150. 44 6- 2815
:-:-=-·.:..79~·9-':-38:..1 _ _--:- AV Service at Carmichael
S-Service
Townhouse
apartments,
03 Oldsmobile Alero , e11cel- Trailers 740-446-3825
10 Years
and/or small hou~s FOR
PETs
lent cond., runs great,
IJf Road tO left above
RENT. Gall (740)441·1111
FOR SALE
73,000 miles $5900. 740· llml""'...;;;.:.:;;;;;;;;;;;;., · Maso" Go/fCoutse
tor application &amp; information. "'~--oiiiiiiiiiiioo._l _57_8_·1_03_0_ _ _ _ _ ·rlO IMI'ROHor.mv~
Harvey Road Mason. wv
AKG reg. mini dachshuiod
1941 Chevy Coupe Street '-.lllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit.,.t
pups, rare colors, Dapples, Rod Project, Rebuilt 350, '
checkad, 1sl shots, 350 Turbo, 10 Boll Raar,
BASEMENT
wormed $375. and up. 740WATERPROOFING
•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments 256 _1498
New Mustang II Front. lots
•Central heat &amp; AIC
of new parts. .
$6500. Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references fur·
DBO 740 645 4243
•Washer/dryer hookup
AKC · while
miniature
·
• ·
nlshed. Established 1975.
·sch nauzers , 2 ma1es, 1
•All electric· a~eraglng
u~ . .
Call 24 Hrs. (740) -446·
$50-$60/nionth
female, serious calls only, • - •"iiFORiiiiiiSiiiAU!iiil-r 0870, Rogers Basement
•Owner pays water. sewer, (740)41&amp;-7403
·
Waterproofing.
trash
fST Dual Wheel Dump Truck.
(304)882·3017
Looks rough, runs tough!
'tV'IVW.tllnkl cs ••koablaetrr.co~
New parts/wench incl.
$JOOO. 446·28151e'ave mes-

i

The Daily Sentinef • Page BS

Chevy Silverado Sin. lift,
Electric Start High &amp; Low big horn tires, wheets clean,
Transmisson, New Rims, $3850. 03 Mustang 6 cyl
Tires &amp; Paint. 2002 tiard pony $SOOO. 740-256-6733
Top For CJ7 Jeep, Ca.!l949-

House or Rent Pomeroy Point Pleasant 304-360· sq. ft. ~ $400 mo. off
Area. No pets_ CBII740-~2· 0163
street pandng call Wayne at
5858
·
tBR Apt, WID hookupo, (404)456-3802

.

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Retaii/Wii~ouHIStorage John Deer A 1947 Tractor, 96

Location in Galllpofis 1800
sq . ft. building $400 mo. off
street parking call Wayne at
(404) 456-3802

S600mol$400dep. 740·742· :..pe_ts_._74_o-_9_92_·2_2_1s_._ _ ::---::-:-::--:--=-- 230stor lnk/rmation.

New 3 Bedroom homes from ~;=:;;;::::::=:, 1151

Monday, March 31., 2008
'ALLEY OOP

39 Karstelevst
40 They h..-.
one hom
41 SuriaHo
42· Welles or
Bean
43 Spiky hair

styles

44 Boon
compsnions
45 Blah
47 Garr of
'"T6otsle"
48 Proofer'a

word
51 Took gold
53 NNW
opposite

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Opher cryptograms arl! created from quotations by famous people, past and present
Each 1ener intns ~stands tor another

Taday's r:lue: I fKIUa/5 0

' B T V MC F L M F H
• TCGNPV

·a T Y

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M C N 0 . ·•

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AOB

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION -'For all my education, accompishments, and SO·
'wisdom' ... I can\ fathom my own heart."· Michael Caine
·

c~led

AstroGraph

0.four
Reorronoe iefttrs of tho
crambl&lt;od WOldt boo
'

l!bur 'lllrlhllllr:

Tuoodoy, Apoll1, 2008
By Bernice Bede O.al
In the year ahead, you will make a more
concerted afton to increase your stature
among your peers and in your community. As a result. you will end up pleasing a
lot more people than just yourself.
ARIES (March 21·April 19) - Tile way
you deal with friends and associates will
reflect quhe tavorably on you, both in
your personal and busit:"~es·s affairs . .
Sif)'lply by being yourself, you will set an'
enviable example to be emulated.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Developments will show that what you
are doing for others is being returned in
far more beneficial ways than you believe
you are giving out. In reality, it's equal.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Someone
you have been admiring from ·a distance
Will make his or her laeli!'lgs known at
this time. The attrac1kln comes from hav·
lng so much in common.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - II might
come to -;our anention that a current
project has far greater potential than you
had calculated. Wnh this revelation, so
many wonderful things become possible.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 - Follow your
Instincts, .because when you're attuned
to the way others think and feel, you can
'make great strides toward developing
more harmonious relationships with
· those Important to you.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) :... Be alen for
hidden opportunities to increase your '
earnings, which might come about
through a s~ond source of income.
They aren't likely to be obvious, however,
so be on your toes at all limes.
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct. 23) - Owing to
your magnetic personality, you wilt not be
wantinQ for companionship. However, in
order to be in position to anract others,
you must get out and go where the

13 Coritributo
(2 wdll.)
19 UFO crew
21 Pate de
lois 24 Supplement
25 Sticker
26 Team cheer
27 Ethel's
friend
28 Reaction to
a mouse
30 - de mer
31 Lao-Tzu's
. "way"
32 Yale athlete
33 Crayola
choice
35 Roused up
36 Vsccaro or
Lee

low Ia form faur limplo worda..

I

DUG E B
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"Dreams," the cutic told her
.frietld, "are tb9ugbls you

didn't have time to think

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about-tbC-.n

1 8 1~~~~.~:~~~~
d....Joc1-.: ..., No. 3 below.

rm:R~UMBERED I'

YOU

1 1~ I' 1I' I' I' I' 1.
I I 'I I I I Iihel I I I.
2

5

ICRAMoU1'5 ANSWW 3 • 2 8 •o 8
. Orator- Rainy -Junipy- Wdlow- YOUR OWN
"Put your tiJtiR iD good hands,n the pbilosopber told his
audience. Smiling budded, "YOUROWN.n

ARLO &amp; JANIS

actiOn IS.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) -Timing Ia
on your side, so don't be afraid to assert
yourself In order to accomplish your purposes. It's an exceltenttrrte to wrap up a
matter you'we been amcious to get out ot
thewa'/.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- Vou
wilt get the opportunity to tell someone
how much he or She means to you. Don't ·
let this opportunity slip away: these
moments are fEwl and tar between.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)- When
dealing· with those who matter the most, .
let your generous nature prevail and
dominate your behavior, It Is always
those simple and ·kind gestures that
everyone cherishes and rememtiera.
AQUARIUi (Jon. 20-Fob. 19) - You
have a number of trlenda who would be
delighted to h11r lrom you at ttlla time,
ao If you're looking for company, call on•
or more of them. Don't 111 •round waiting
for people to call you.
PISCES (Fob. 20·Morch 20) ~ lllo UIU·
ally boll to llow wllh tho lido of OMnlo
tnlttad Clf awlmmlng agalnat 11. Rather
thon trying to rorouiO thlngo, lt1 mobro
owr wntch 1'011 hlvt no control hl\11
thtir WIW.

SOUP TO NUTZ

47239 Riebel Road. Long Bottom, OH

740-985-4141 ·

I. wes "'L~&lt;~NG "Ro

Cell: 740·416-1834

~

41111&gt; ~ ~~~ CLUr clc:!WS

IOW!ol F1!;&gt;M

· 25+ years experience Free EstimaJes

1

Advertise ·
in this space for
$64 ·per month

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"

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 31,2008 !

• M.C. Shah, MD
l11i"""' Ml~lcllfl

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