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www.mydailysentinel .com

Page B6 --The Daily Sentinel

U.S. astronaut
charged with attempted
murder in bimrre
love triangle, A2

Thesday, February 6, 2007

Ohiomakin
change to how itielps
smokers quit, A6

ne

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~

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,-,u (I:\( ,._, • \ ul. ,) h. :\o . 1 ' ~0..

1111

~jzmO~ &amp;'a~~et!

PlDAl POWlRlD ~NOWMAN MAKlR

Tired of the back breaking wo_rk of putting together
a traditional snowman, with the Gizmos &amp;
Gadgets Pedal Powered Snowman
Maker, it's a snap.
P"

....,""' ----'G)

BY BRIAN

• No. 3 Buckeyes
take down Michigan.
See Page81

Cup arms (Dtorm seed
for rolling various sized
snowballs. Patented
"Sure Scoop" blade,®
rolls perfectly rounded snowballs, when pedalled around yard.

''"\\ 1md. 1t h ... tnl11u lt •H II

Community Association begins '07 membership drive

SPORTS

.,

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J.

REED

BREEO@MYDAilYSENTINEL .COM

MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport
Community
Assocation has begun its
2007 membership drive,
encouraging current members and new members to
join . Meeting Tuesday at
Peoples Bank, the association finalized plans for a
direct mail membership
campaign and began plans
for
several
upcoming
events.
2006
members
will
receive renewal letters,
President Brenda Phalin
said. An effort is also underway to encourage new
memberships from both

TRADITIONAL
CHARM'
MODERN
CONVENIENCE
•
Blast-o-matic ''features"
launcher, adds that special
touch. Just light the fuse@
and coal eyes along with standard
size carrot0are launched into place
by the firecracker ejection system.@

easy way to do that is to join
individuals and businesses.
" We want to encourage a the
organization
and
tremendous outpouring of become actively involved in
support this year," Phalin our plans," Phalin said.
said. ''This year, more than
Dues are $10 per year for
ever, the association will individual
me mberships
and
$25
for
business
me mrely on people in the community to make our plans berships.
successful."
"We are especially look Among those pla ns, ing for new members thi s
Phalin
said.
Phalin said. is an a pplica- year,"
tion for the next round of "Anyone who is interested
Tier II downtown revital- in becoming a member and
ization fund s. The assoda- participating in our activition, because it has bee n in tie s is asked to contact one
place for se veral years, has of the members."
Phalin, Donna Hartson,
been selected to apply for
those funds on behalf of Brian Reed and James
Acree will serve on an
the village.
"It's important that we events committee, Phalin
show a united effort to said, which will oversee
improve the vi llage. and one preliminary plans for asso-

ciation events. At last
month 's meeting, the association discussed plans to
eliminate some events from
the 2007 calendar so time
and re source s could be
spent on three larger event s:
July 4, Pumpkinport and
Christmas.
The committee will
meet later thi s month to
begin prelimin ~ ry plan'
for the July 4 celebration.
which will take place in
General Hartinger Park.
Other upcoming events
planned by the association
include a summer garden
tour and tea a nd a ca r
show in the fall. There
will be no Bunny Hop
Bake Sale for Easter or

Pops in the Park Father' s
Day breakfast thi s year.
The asso,·iation 's nex t
fundraising event will be a
BeartBasket Bingo game
on
May
3, at th e
Middleport Firehouse. The
bingo games are held two
times a year, and are a
major fundraiser support ing association eve nts.
Game
prizes
are
Longaberger baskets with a
limited edition Ohio River
Bear product.
The association also discussed plans for a 2008 calendar, featuring hi stori c
homes a nd sce nes from
Middleport. The calendar
will be so ld as a n association fundraiser.

Section of
Ohio 124
to close
Feb.20

Bird beach

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• William Levacy, 63
• Martha McPhail, 66
• Goldie Mills, 81

INSIDE
When drawing a
face with long
proportions, looking
up or down you
need to forshorten
the long axis.

Think in terms
of a football. If it's
laces are toward you
it's taller than if
it's coming straight
at you.

• Members hear
about leprosy colony.
See Page A3
• RACO accepts
scholarship funds,
plans projects.
See Page A3
• Team uses
sonar to find Lake
Erie shipwrecks.
See Page A~
• Local resident
honored at Ohio
University Founders
Day. See Page A~

Can you help Winky find the cheese,
two flags and her computer?

,

Beth Serpnt/photo

Some say life's a beach and for countless Canadian geese, ring-billed gulls and ducks that beach has become the shores
of the Ohio River in downtown Pomeroy. Ye sterday several of our feathered friend s gathered at the river, including some
who were perched on floating slabs of ice for a winter afternoon s pent waiti~g on a good Samaritan to toss them some
crackers or other snacks.
·

Reward offered in recovery of stolen items
. BY

BRIAN

J.

REED

6REEDOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

WEA1HER

- ...

POMEROY - A $1,000
reward has been offered for
information leading to a
conviction in the theft of
hunting equipment from a
Scipio Township property.
Meigs ~ ounty Sheriff
Robert Beegle said Robert
Warner reported the theft of
over $3,000 in equipment
from hi s property. The theft

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Annie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

82:4

Comics

8s

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

EACH SYMBOL STANDS FOR A LEDER

Weather

BETH SER8ENT

BSERGENT@MY'DAILYSENTINEL.COM

ll SECilONS - lll PAGES

~aao~e,uo•~• 0861

800®®0

BY

INDEX

8 Section
A6

is believed to have taken
place between Jan. 27 and
Feb. L
Two Cuddeback digital
cameras, valued at $450
each. a Patriot tree stand.
valued at $189. a set of Lone
Wolfe climbing sticks valued at $100 and five Gorilla
tree stands valued. at $75
each, were reported stolen.
Beegle said Warner is
offering a $1 ,000 reward for
information leading to the

•
Rutland Township
Trustee Joe Bolin reported
the Jan. 31 theft of a rotary
tiller, a three-point post driver and a three-point fertil izer spreader from the county property behind the old
Carson station at .Rutland.
Beegle also reported the
arrest of Ben Morris, 29, of
Racine , on a charge of
domestic violence. He was
jailed pending a court
appearance on Monday.

arrest and conviction of the
person or people responsible for the theft. Those with
infor mation are asked to
contact Don Brooks, the
caretaker of the property, at
698-7115 or the shentrs
departiJ!ent at 992-3371.
Beegle said his department is also investigating:
• John Manley, Ohio 338,
reported that someone had
stolen a wooden deer ornament from his lawn.

Racine water plant online soon

Dotllloon .... AI

Each column, row and square mu$t use Is 3,9,7,&amp;2,plus the
diagonal mu$t add up to the I shown~diagonal1 can repeat ts)

TUPPERS PLAINS Ohio 124 near the Meigs I
Athens County line will
close on Feb. 20 for 70
day s while the Ohio
Department
of
Transportation
(ODOT)
begins its extensive slip
repair project in the area.
Stephanie Filson , public
information officer for district I0 said the area being
repaired is probably less
than a mile in length.
· "If we did nothing it
would only be a matter of
time before we lost the
roadway ," Filson said.
'This repair is absolutely
necessary and we understand while the project is
underway it wi ll be an
inconvenience to motorists
but it's a short term inconve mence.
The sec tion of Ohio 124
in Olive Township was
temporarily closed
in
January 2005 followin.g
flooding a nd the Bell ev ille
Locks and Dam situation
where barges sank to the
bottom of the dam, closing
the locks. Sections of Ohio
124 in Meigs County and
Ohio
144 in Athens
Coun ty suffered subsequent Flood damage and
area slips The Meigs section of road reopened later
that spring after ODOT
made temporary repairs
until a permanent fix could
be made.
ODOT · had anticipated
dosin g the section of roadwav in November but the
proJect was pushed to
February in part to coordinate between other ·nearby
ODOT construction projects to keep roads open to
traffic. avoiding multiple
clos ures. and re-eva luating
the project' s desig n whi ch
may save costs with an
"equall y effective" alternative. Filson said details on
the new design are forth coming as the projec t
moves forward.
The repairs in Olive
Towns hip are tied to the
Hockingport area slip
repair project that includes
upgrading County Road s
59 and 62 in Athen s
Co unt y.
Th is
recent
upgrading resulted in the
transformation of Countv
Road 59 into the new Ohio
144, ~ypa»ing_ the worst
part ot the 'hP m that area.
· F1mshmg work on County
~oad ~9 and the work on
County Road 62 ( Youba
Rid ge) will begin thi s
spri ng .

RACINE - Water treated
and pumped from Racine's
new water treatment plant
may be delivered to village
residents by the end of this
month if not sooner.
1be first of two water samples inay be taken this week
according to Mayor J. Scou
Hill who added the village
must have two consecutive
water samples which meet
testing criteria before the
plant can go online. Hill said
there has been signitica nt
progress at the plant including the installation of teleme-

try work though some work
remains such a~ fini shing the
lab room, rest rooms. etc .
At its most recent meeting. Racine Village Council
approved a time extension
of 65 days on fmi shing the
project .. after ge neral contractor,
Downing
Construction, requested it.
The contractor asked for the
elltension to speci tically
complete fencing. landscaping and o ther exterior work .
that is dependent on warmer
weather. The deadline for
tinal completion of thi &gt;
exterior work is April 30.
The vote on the time
eMension was not unani-

mous with Councilman Ike
Spencer voting against it.
C le rk -Treas urer
Dave
Spencer said the time extension won't cost the village
any
additional
money
because o f the contract it
has
with
Downing
Construction.
Dave Spencer went on to
say after meeting with
Downing he felt a nd Hill
conc urred the significant
problems and delays didn't
rest with the comracror but
the vi llage's e ngineering
frrm. Strand and Associates.
Hill said there were delays
in certi licates from the ;aate
for building permits because .

•

. - -,
.~

he felt the "engineers were
dragging their feet."
''We ' ve had some issues
with the contrdctor but it \
been nothin g major and
they ' ve made su bstantial
.:ompletions at the si te.''
Hill said.
As for the e ng ineering
firm. it · wasn't the initial
tirm Racine sig ned on with.
that firrn but was bought
out by Strand. a "larger"
company according to Hill.
Hill went on to say Strand
used a '·cookie c· utter
desi~n" for the plant and
.. •
.
nev er put the t1me and
Please see Racine, A5

'H

I

I
I

I

�•

The Daily Sentinel

u.s.

BY MIKE SCHNEIDER
AND ERIN McCLAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS WR ITERS

ORLANDO, Fla. - She
was the Robochick. He was
Bill y-0 .
According to police, her
obsession with him led her
to drive 900 miles from
Houston to Orlando, bringing with her a trenchcoat
and wig, armed with a BB
gun am! pepper spray, and
wearing a diaper to avoid
- bathroom breaks on the
arduous drive.
Once in Florida. Lisa
"Robochick" Nowak apparently confronted the woman
she believed was her rival
for the affections of William
"Billy-0" Oefelein. And
this tawdry love triangle has
one more twist it
involves two astronauts.
Nowak, 43, a married
mother of three who new on
a space shuttle in July, was
charged with attempted murder, accused of hatching an
extraordinary plot to kidnap
Colleen Shipman, who she
believed was romantically
involved with Oefelein, a
space shuttle pilot.
Specifically, police said,
Nowak
confronted
Shipman, who was in her
car at the Orlando airport.
and sprayed something at
her, possibly pepper spray.
At first the astronaut was
charged with attempted kidnapping and other counts.
Then prosecutors upped the
· charge to attempted murder,
basing it on the weapons and
. other items they said police
had found with Nowak or in
her car: pepper spray, a DBgun, a new steel mallet,
knife and rubber tubing.
Nowak was released from
jail on $25,500 bail and
ordered to wear a monitoring device.
Her lawyer, Donald
Lykkebak, took issue with
the most serious charges.
"In the imaginations of the
police officers, they extend
· these facts out into areas
where the facts can't be supported," Lykkebak said.
NASA put Nowak on a
30-day leave and removed
her from mission duties.
Agency spokesman John Ira
Petty at Johnson Space
Center in Houston said he
was concerned about the
· people involved and their
families . But, he added,
"We try not to concern ourselves with our employees'
personal lives."
The details of the relationships of all three were
unclear.
Nowak
and
Oefelein, who both live in
· the Houston area, had
trained together as astronauts, but never flew into
space together. Shipman,
30, works at Patrick Air
Force Base near Kennedy
Space Center.
Earlier, Nowak was quoted

NATION • WORLD

JAMEY KEATEN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PARIS Nearly 60
: countries signed a treaty on
: Tuesday that bans govern. ments from holding people
: in secret detention, but the
United States and some of
its key European allies were
not among them.
: The signing capped a
: quarter-century of efforts by
· families of people who have
vanished at the hands of
governments.
"Our American friend s
: were naturally invited to
: this ceremony; unfortunate. ly, they weren't able to join
us,"
French
Foreign
Minister Philippe DousteBiazy told reporters alter 57
: nations signed the treaty at
: his ministry in Paris.
. "That won't prevent them
· from one day signing on in
New York at U.N. headquarters - and l hope they wilL "
Department
State
. spokesman
Sean
: McCormack declined com: ment except to say. that the
: United States helped draft
· the treaty, but that the final
· text "did not meet our
expectations."
McCormack
declined
.:omment on whether the
: U.S. stance was intluenced
by the administration's poli-

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

" I've seen them arguing
before," he said.
Nowak, in a NASA interview last year, before her
mission aboard Discovery.
as we ll as in an interview
with ABC New,, &gt;poke
about the strain her career
placed on her family. She
has twin 5-year-old girls
and a son who is 14 or 15.
" It 's a sacrifice for our
own ~rsonal time and our
families and the people
around us," she said in the
NASA interview. "But I do
think it's worth it because if
you don't explore and take
risks and go do all these
things, then everything will
stay the same."
In an in-flight news conference aboard Discovery last
summer, she talked about
waiting nearly 10 years for
her first space flight . "It's
been a long wait, but it's
worth the wait," she said_
NASA astronauts often
have nicknames, at least
among their crewmates and
Mission Control. Aboard
Discovery last July, Nowak
and crewmate Stephanie
Wilson were known as "the
Robochicks" because they
operated the shuttle's robotic arm that checked the
spacecraft for damage.
A smiling, put-together
woman in her NASA phoAP photo tos, Nowak' s poli ce mug
Space shuttle Discovery astronaut Lilia Nowak, left, holds her daughter Katrina, center, as shot showed a fatigued, hagshe signs autographs during a homecoming ceremony in this Tuesday, July 18, 2006 file gard face with scraggly hair.
Oefelein, a 41-year-old
photo, in Houston . Nowak's son Alexander is at right. Nowak, charged with attempting to
Navy
commander nickkidnap a romantic rival in a love triangle with another astronaut was allowed to go free on
named
"Billy-0" by his
bail Tuesday on \he condition that she not contact the alleged victim .
comrades, trained with
by police as saying she and police, Nowak donned a with Ladies' Home Journal, Nowak but never new with
Oefelein (OH' -fuh-line) had wig and trench coat, board- Nowak said her husband, • her. He piloted a Discovery
something "more than a ed an airport shuttle bus Richard, "works in Mission mission tn December to the
working relationship but less with Shipman and followed Control, so he's part of the space station where astrathan a romantic relationship." her to her car. Then, crying, whole space business, too. nauts rewired the outpost,
installed a new $11 million
Neither Oefelein nor Nowak sprayed a chemical And supportive also."
section
and dropped off a
Shipman could be reach!!d for into the car.
On 1\aesday, a Houston new American crew member.
comment Tuesday, nor could
Shipman drove to a park- neighbor, Bryan Lam, told
Oefelein is unmarried but
Nowak's husband be found. - ing lot booth and soujlht help. The Associated Press that in
has
two children. He began
A police affidavtt made November he heard the
But police found a letter
his
aviation career as a
in Nowak's car that "indi- public Tuesday said Nowak
sounds
of
dishes
being
teenager,
flying Ooatplanes
cated how much Mrs. had ·~stealthily followed the
Nowak
' loved
Mr. victim while in disguise and thrown inside the house arid in Alaska.
The Orlando Sentinel
Oefelein," the arrest affi- possessed multiple deadly the police came.
davit said. And Nowak had weapons."
The affidavit said the circo~ies of e-mails between
Shtpman and Oefelein.
cumstances of the case "creNowak and her husband ate a well-founded fear" and
separated several weeks ago gave inv~stigators "probaafter 19 years of marriage, ble cause to believe that
according to a statement put Mrs. Nowak intended to
out by her family.
murder Ms. Shipman."
"Personally, Lisa is an
Lykkebak
said
that
extremely caring and dedi- Nowak only wanted to talk
cated mother to her three to Shipman. Asked about the
children," the statement weapons, he said, "You can
said. "Considering both her sit and speculate all day."
personal and professional
The· judge also ordered
life, these alleged events are Nowak to stay away from
completely out of character Shipman and to wear an
and have come as a tremen- electronic
monitoring
dous shock to our family."
device upon returning to her
Accustomed to wearing home in Houston.
astronaut diapers during the
A vague profile began to
space shunle's launch and emerge of Nowak, who
return to Earth, Nowak jlraduated from high school
wore them on the drive to tn Maryland in 1981 and the
Orlando so she would not I,J.S. Naval Academy in
have to make bathroom 1985 . She has won various
stops, police said.
Navy service awards .
There , according to
In a September interview

reported Shipman is an
engineer asstgned to the
45th
Launch Support
Squadron at Patrick air
base, and a Federal Aviation
Administration pilot directory indicates she is certified as a studem pilot. ·
Chief astronaut Steve
Lindsey, who new with
Nowak to the space station
last July aboard Discovery,
and fellow astronaut Chns
ferguson
attended
Monday's court hearing.
"Our primary concern is
her health and well-being
and that she get through
this," Lindsey told reporters
afterward.
Ferguson said he was .
"perplexed" by Nowak 's
alleged actions.
NASA
spokeswoman
Ni cole Cloutier-Lemasters
said shuttle crews that fly
for two-week stints do not
go through . psychiatric
screenings. She said crews
assigned to the space station
are screened before, during
and after missions.
NASA will not conduct
an investigation, CloutierLemasters said.
At least one retired astranaut, Jerry Linenger, said
the space agency should
review its psychological
screening process. Wit~
NASA talktng about a 2
112-year trip to Mars, it
would be dangerous for
. someone to "snap like this"
during the mission, he said.
"An astronaut is probably
the most studied human
being by the time you go
through your testing, your
. training," Linenger said. "I
think there's still a lot or
unknowns out there."
AP National Writer Erin
McClam reported from New
York for thi.&lt;story. AP writers Malcolm Ritter i11 New
York, Seth Bo renstein i11
Washit1gton ,
Rasha
Madkour in Houston, Kelli
Kennedv in Miami and Jim
Ellis in Cape Canal'eral
contribwed to this report.

2007

News and Information

for your retirement years.

~

~

[ rellhiaiey a3, '!GoT ]

cy of sending terrorism suspects to CIA-run prisons
overseas, which Bush
acknowledged \n September.
Many other · Western
nations, including Germany,
Spain, Britain and Italy, also
did not sign the treaty.
France introduced the convention at the U.N. General
Assembly in November and
it was adopted in Dece.mber.
Many delegates expressed
hope that other nations will
sign by year-end. Some
European nations have
expressed support for the
treaty, but face cunstitutiun.al hurdles or require a full
Cabinet debate before signing, French and U.N. officials said.
The treaty was officially
opened for stgnature at
Tuesday 's ceremony in
Pari s. It will enter into force
afler 20 countries ratify it.
usually by a parliamentary
vote.
U.N. High Commissioner
·fur Human Ri ghts Louise
Arbour called the rreaty an
important step both in preventing injustices common
ye!ifs ago and barring newer
abuses that often fall
through regulatory loopholes.
Arbour said the U.Wed
Staies had ex pressed "reservations" about parts of the

text, but declined to elaborate, and she urged U.S.
officials to sign and ratify it.
She noted that America
often backs activities of the
UNHCR without formally
signing on to them .
She called the treaty "a
message to all modem-day
authorities committed to the
fight against terrorism" that
some past tactics are now
"not acceptable, in a very
explicit way."
The convention defines
forced disappearances as
the arrest, detention, kidnapping or "any other form
of deprivation of freedom"
by state agents or affiliates,
followed by denials or
cover-ups about the detention and location of the person gone missing .
Nations that eventually
ratify the text would
enshrine victims' rights. and
would require state s to
penalize any forced disappearances in their countries
and enact preve ntative and
monitoring measures.
French ortlcials, who led
the effort. counted more
than 5 1.000 people who
were di sappeared by their
governments in over 90
countries since
1980.
Dou ste-Biazy said. Some
41.000 of those cases
remain unsolved.

The ~ai!y S
.•

.

.

To advertise
in this special

Retirement
Edition
contact your
Advertising

~allipoli!i

llailp ~ribunr Daily Sentinel ,Jloint ,Jilrasant l\rgistrr

740-446-2342

740-992-2156

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

------- - - - - -- - - - - - - -------------------- - -

Woman shouldn't share
finances with shifty boyfriend
BY KATHY MITCHEll
AND MARCY SUGAR

ing, and with all the sexually transmitted diseases these
days, I would be afraid to
become intimate.
l feel extremely guilt y
about what I do, but it
relieves the pre ssure. Am I
wrong to do it? - Lonely
in Indiana
No .
Dear
Lonely:
Masturbation is a perfectly
normal se wal out let. We
understand your reluctance
to date, but it would be
healthy for you to get back
into the game. You were
blessed with a long and loving marriage, and unless
you prefer solitude, we
doubt your husband would
want you to be alone. If
someone offers to introduce
you to an available man ,
please consider it.
Dear Annie: I am
responding to "A Parent in
Any School," who was
appalled that some children
do not go on field trips
because of the cost. "Parent"
should ask her school to
adopt a policy that says no
child will be prevented from
participating in a 11eld trip
based on financial need or
physical handicap.
In my district, children
who could not afford trips
were given "scholarships"
through the school. PTOs
often provided money, and,
on occasion, individual parents donated for that purpose. lf the school felt some
children could not participate in a trip because of
their physical needs, an
alternative field trip was
planned. In other words,
either everyone went on a
trip or no one did. Thus, the
school system did not discriminate among children
based on financial resources
or physical abilities.
Just thought you might like
to know that one indicator of
an effective school system is
that it takes care of all of its
children in all situations. D.H., Retired Principal,
Lexington, Mass.
Dear D.H.: Several
teachers and principa!s
wrote us, saymg thetr
schools also have such policies in place. We hope all
schools will follow sull .
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e·mail your
questions to anniesmail·
box@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, JL

Dear Annie: Last year,
my son and I moved into
my boyfriend's home. I pay
half the utilities arid spend
almost $400 a month on
jlroceries for all of u,,
mcluding "Tom's" 12-ycarold daughter. l also paid for
half of hi s new washer,
dryer and refrigerator.
When we go out for dinner,
I'm always the one who
pays, and we use my car. l
keep the house clean, wash,
iron, make lunches. etc. He
never lifts a linger.
The other day, Tom told
me I should pay half of his
mortgage and the costs of
remodeling his house inside
and out. He says I'm obligated because I live there. He
says the remodeling will
cost thousands, and if I
don't have the money, I
should take out a loan.
. Annie, I feel I'm being
taken advantage of and
don't think I should pay for
anything more. My expenses are higher now than
when I was single. To top it
off, · every time Tom gets
-mad at me, he kicks me out
of the house and then apologizes. We both make the
same amount of money. I'm
considering moving out .
'What do yo u think ? Miserable and Broke
Dear Miserable: There is
nothing wrong with paying
for half the costs of your living arran~ements , including
rent, uulities. groceries,
repair bills, etc. That includes
half (not all) the cost of
entertainment. However, the
house is in Tom 's name. He
can kick you out whenever
he wants, which is not good
for you or your son. He also
can sell the house, and you
won't get a penny.
If he wants half the mangage and remodeling costs,
the house should be in both
your names, but frankly, Tom
doesn't sound like a good
risk for a permanent relation:ship, and we don't think you
.should
entangle _ your
finances with his. If you are
·frnancially belter off without
him, it's time to move out.
Dear Annie: I was married 35 years to my be loved
husband. Our sex life was
good until the last five years
before he passed away.
.Since his death, I've had
"Sexual desires that I've
:taken care of with self-grat.ification. I don't wish to
_date, as it feels like cheat- 606JJ.

· RACINE - Funding for
:three $600 scholarships to be
:awarded to 2007 Southern
·High Schoolllraduates from
Hill 's Classic Cars was
acknowledged at a recent
meeting of the Racine Area
Community Organization.
The funding came from
the annual Hill's Classic car
. show held in cooperation
with Home National Bank.
The next show will be held
.on Saturday, Sept. 8 from
.noon to 6 p.m. in downtown
·Racine . RACO will serve
: tocas in a bag and fresh
.lemonade at the event.
During the meeting with
Kathryn Hart presiding,
several thank you notes for
·Christmas remembrances
·were read. It was reported
.that Hart and Ann Zirkle
:had delivered a total of 120
·treats over the holiday.
·Acknowledgments were
also received from . the
Meigs Cooperative Parish
tor contributions to the food
bank.
Rio
Grande

'

. '·

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Clubs and
organizations

304-675-1333

&amp;nile! N&amp;:ww you
IT'IOITI4Kll 1;11P(U!1fd on

Uni·versity lor scholarship
d M bel B
money, an
a
race
and
It Julia
was Campbell.
also reported that
RACO had sponsored bears
and treat bags for residents
of Overbrook Center residents, and Mary Ball donaled many items for residents
at the Darst Nursing Home.
Purchases of ads in the
Southern High School
Yearbook and the Meigs
County Tourism Guide were
approved .
Bruce McKelvey of the
Oho River producers met
with the group to discuss
way s in which that group
might help RACO. One idea
presented \'IUS a bicycle
event during one of
Racine's festivals. Several
other ideas were presented.
The meeting was held at
Star Mill Park with Libby
Fisher giving prayer before
the potluck dinner. Officers
reports were given. Dave
Zirkle led in the pledge to
the nag .

can own me PK-11.:re of that unbgett.ole

the ,_.~ Pho4ioe become III'T1elltu
whtoll framed Ot pnnled on a mvg or mouN pact.

blut1 butlon .

•

p.m., Mulberry Community
Center.
1\aesday,Feb. 13
POMEROY Meigs
of
County
Chamber
Commerce, business-minded luncheon, noon, Pomeroy
Library, Mike Gerlac h,
Middleport Development
Group, speaking and The
french Chorders Quartet.
RSVP, 992-5005.

monthly meeting, 7 p.m,
town hall.
Saturday, Feb. 10
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Chapter Christian
Motorcycle Association,
"Delivered," regular meeting, 10 a.m., Common
Grounds Coffee Shop, West
Main Street.

Public meetings

Friday, Feb. 9
LONG BOTIOM
Gosp~l sing, 7 p.m.. Faith
Full Gospel Church, with
Dave and Debbie Dailey.
Saturday, Feb. I 0
REEDSVILLE
Valentine) Day spaghetti
dmner, 5 p.m., followed by
special music at 7 p.m..
Reedsville
United
Methodi st Church.
POMEROY - "A Day
for Couples" marriage
enrichment seminar, 10 a. m.
to 3 p.m., Mt. Hermon
United Brethren Church ,

Thursday, Feb. 8
CHESTER
- Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30p.m.,
Maso nic
hall.
Refreshments.
RACINE - Sonshine
Circle, 7 p.m. at the Dorcas
Bethany Church.
TUPPERS PLAINS YFW Po&gt;t 9053, 6:30 p.m.
dinner. 7 p.m. meeting. at
hall.
Thursday, Feb. 8
RACINE - Ohio River
POMEROY - Salisbury
Producers (FFA alumni), 7 Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., Southern vo-ag room. p.m ., town hall.
Friday, Feb. 9
Friday, Feb. 9
RACINE Pomeroy
MARIETIA - Regional
Racine Lodge 164, special Advisory Council for the
meeting, annual inspection Area Agency on Aging
in the Fellowcraft degree, meets at 10 a.m .. in the
Hills-HYRDD
dinner 6:30 p.m.. Racine Buckeye
United Methodist Church, Area Agency on Aging
inspection 7:30p.m. lodge. office in Marielta.
Monday, Feb. 12
1\aesday, Feb. 13
POMEROY - Big Bend
DARWIN Bedford
Farm Antiques Club, 7:"30 Township Trustees regular

Church events

36411 Wickham Road ,
Pomeroy. Presented by Jeff
and Joan Sherlock. Free
lunch and chi ld care.
Information from Pastor
Peter Martindale at 985 4220 or 985-9837:
Sunday, Feb. II
POMEROY - Rev. Dr.
David Rahamut speah at Ihe
10:30 a.m . worshtp service at
the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church. Call (304 l
773-5559 for infomtation.'
SY RACUSE
"Proc laim'· to sing at 6:30
p.m. at Syracuse Community
Church on Second Street.

Birthdays
Saturday, Feb. I0
MIDDLEPORT ·- Irma
Bales. formerlv of the
Kyge r area, will obsene her
birthday on Feb. I0. She is
in room 311 at Overbrook
Center, 333 Page St..
Middleport 45760 and card s
may be sent to her there.

FAMILY MEDICINE

·High fever, body aches and fatigue telltale symptoms offlu
Question: How do I
know if I have the tlu or a
cold? When should I go to
the doctor'' Everyone at
-work is sick. They all seem
to have the same symptoms,
but each.one says they have
a different thing.
Also, if this is the nu. is
there anything the doctor
can do about it?
Answer: This is a timely
question because we are
nght in the middle of nu
season. Whtle you can come
~own with influe~za. at any
ume of the year, 11 ts most
common in the United
States from December to
March, give or take a month
or so. During some winters
it can reach epidemic proportions.
There are three types of
influenza virus: A, B and C.
Two of these, A and B, are
usually the mo,;t severe and
contagious. These viruses
. are cons~antly mutating and
the stratns that ctrculate
around the world change
every year. It's hard for the
body's defense mechanisms
to keep up with these
changes. That' s why it's
important to get a flu shot
each year.
The flu vaccine is gener-

ally made to cover the A and
B viruses. This is because C
usually produces only very
mild symptoms, if its presence is even noticed at all. It
does not produce epidemics
and is not a pubhc health
concern.
Type A and B influenza
attack the nose, throat, and
lungs. The symptoms usually come on suddenly and
may include high fever
headache, cough, sor~
throat, nasal congestion ,
bod~ aches and fatigue_
With a cold, the onset is
more gradual, the fever is
usually low grade if present, and the symptoms are
primarily in the upper respiratory tree: Head, nose
and throat. It's much less
common to have high
fever, body aches and
fatigue with a cold.
Both the flu and colds are
spread by air-borne droplets
from coughing_. sneezing
and even talkmg by an
infected person. You may
be infected and spreading
the virus for several days
before you have symptom'
of illness.
The virus can live on surfaces, like the phone, the
counter top, the door handle

and the remote control. If
~ou touch a contaminated
llem and then rub your nose,
mouth or eyes, you can give
yourself the virus.
There is a rapid test for
influenza that your physician may do in his or her
office. It is a nasal swab that
in about 15 minutes can
determine if you have
influenza type A or B. This
can help the physician
determine if antiviral medications should be used.
Antiviral
medications
shorten the length of the
viral illness and help to
lessen the symptoms as
well . Though anti-viral
medications are being
developed for the common
cold, itone have been
approved by the Food and
Drug Administration at this
time. If you don't have the
flu , the currently available
antivirals will not be of
much help.
If you get the nu and
your doctor rules out antiviral medication, you
should try the standard old·
fashioned
treatments .
These include bed rest,
drink.in~ plenty of fluids,
and takmg medication, like
acetaminophen (Tylenol),

to manage the . fever and
body aches.
If you have a cold, the
treatment is somewhat similar: bed rest, fluids and
ibuprofen
or
acetaminophen . If. you have a
scratchy or sore throat, you
may also find it helpful to
gargle with warm salt water
or use throat sprays or
lozenges.
For both colds and
influenza, the best treatment
is, of course, prevention.
Family Medicine® is a
weekll column. To submit
questtons, write to Martha
A. Simpson, D.O., M.B.A.,
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
Box JJO, Athens, Ohio
45701, or via e-mail to
readerquestlons@famlly·
medicinenews.org. Medical
information In this column
is provided as an educational service only. II does
not reploce the/'udgment of
your persona physicia11,
who should be relied on to
diagnose atul recommend
treatment for any medical
conditions. Past columns
are a~ailable ·otlline at
w w w.familym edicinenews.org.

Members hear about leprosy colony
POMEROY
Olita
Heighton presented a
review of "The Colony" a
non-tiction book by John
Tayman
when
the
Middleport Literary Club
met recently at the Pomeroy
Library.
Heighton said she was
unable to learn much about

RACO. acceptS SChQ1afShip
fu nds, plans PfQleCtS
J

~allipoh~ mailp mrtbune
J)oint ~Iea~ant l\egt~ter

l

PageA3

ANNIE'S MAILBOX CommunityCalendar

IM

Nearly 60 nations -but not U.S. :sign treaty to ban forced disappearances
BY

PageA2

1

the author whose book
revealed the untold history
of the infamous American
leprosy colony on the
Hawaiian
island
of
Molokai . Beginning in
1866, men, women and
children who were suspected of having leprosy were
abandoned ou the island
with little food, liule medicine and very little hope .
According to the book
this exile continued for
more than a century. Many
did not have leprosy, and
most of those who did were
not contagious, yet all
were caught in a shared
nightmare . Nearly 9,000
people were banished to
the colony, _trapped by
poundtng surf and armed
guards and the htghest sea
chtf;, tn the world. Twenty etght hve there sttll.
Hetghton noted .
Tayman tells the fantastic
saga of thi s horrible and
hopeful place - at one
time the most famous community in the world,- and
of the individuals involved.
From the very tirs.t exile, a
gentle parttime lawyer
trapped in an unjust ordeal
beyond his imagination, to
the last remaining residents,
the narrative is peopled by
presidents and kings, cruel
lawmen and pioneering
doctors, and brave soul s
who literally gave their
lives to help.
A stunning cast includes
the martyred father Damien,

passion and heroism.
After the review 15 members and two guests
answered roll call naming a
person who pioneered a
treatment that eradicated or
promi sed to eradicate a

Robert Louis Stevenson,
Jack London, Mark Twain,
Teddy Roosevelt, John
Wayne and more. The result
is a searing tale of survival
and bravery, and a testament
to the power of faith com'

dreaded disease. The next
meeting will be Feb. 14 at
the Pomeroy Library. Pat
Holter will review
"The Sunday Wife" by
Cassandra King . Connie
Gilkey will serve as hostess.

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�•

The Daily Sentinel

u.s.

BY MIKE SCHNEIDER
AND ERIN McCLAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS WR ITERS

ORLANDO, Fla. - She
was the Robochick. He was
Bill y-0 .
According to police, her
obsession with him led her
to drive 900 miles from
Houston to Orlando, bringing with her a trenchcoat
and wig, armed with a BB
gun am! pepper spray, and
wearing a diaper to avoid
- bathroom breaks on the
arduous drive.
Once in Florida. Lisa
"Robochick" Nowak apparently confronted the woman
she believed was her rival
for the affections of William
"Billy-0" Oefelein. And
this tawdry love triangle has
one more twist it
involves two astronauts.
Nowak, 43, a married
mother of three who new on
a space shuttle in July, was
charged with attempted murder, accused of hatching an
extraordinary plot to kidnap
Colleen Shipman, who she
believed was romantically
involved with Oefelein, a
space shuttle pilot.
Specifically, police said,
Nowak
confronted
Shipman, who was in her
car at the Orlando airport.
and sprayed something at
her, possibly pepper spray.
At first the astronaut was
charged with attempted kidnapping and other counts.
Then prosecutors upped the
· charge to attempted murder,
basing it on the weapons and
. other items they said police
had found with Nowak or in
her car: pepper spray, a DBgun, a new steel mallet,
knife and rubber tubing.
Nowak was released from
jail on $25,500 bail and
ordered to wear a monitoring device.
Her lawyer, Donald
Lykkebak, took issue with
the most serious charges.
"In the imaginations of the
police officers, they extend
· these facts out into areas
where the facts can't be supported," Lykkebak said.
NASA put Nowak on a
30-day leave and removed
her from mission duties.
Agency spokesman John Ira
Petty at Johnson Space
Center in Houston said he
was concerned about the
· people involved and their
families . But, he added,
"We try not to concern ourselves with our employees'
personal lives."
The details of the relationships of all three were
unclear.
Nowak
and
Oefelein, who both live in
· the Houston area, had
trained together as astronauts, but never flew into
space together. Shipman,
30, works at Patrick Air
Force Base near Kennedy
Space Center.
Earlier, Nowak was quoted

NATION • WORLD

JAMEY KEATEN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PARIS Nearly 60
: countries signed a treaty on
: Tuesday that bans govern. ments from holding people
: in secret detention, but the
United States and some of
its key European allies were
not among them.
: The signing capped a
: quarter-century of efforts by
· families of people who have
vanished at the hands of
governments.
"Our American friend s
: were naturally invited to
: this ceremony; unfortunate. ly, they weren't able to join
us,"
French
Foreign
Minister Philippe DousteBiazy told reporters alter 57
: nations signed the treaty at
: his ministry in Paris.
. "That won't prevent them
· from one day signing on in
New York at U.N. headquarters - and l hope they wilL "
Department
State
. spokesman
Sean
: McCormack declined com: ment except to say. that the
: United States helped draft
· the treaty, but that the final
· text "did not meet our
expectations."
McCormack
declined
.:omment on whether the
: U.S. stance was intluenced
by the administration's poli-

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

" I've seen them arguing
before," he said.
Nowak, in a NASA interview last year, before her
mission aboard Discovery.
as we ll as in an interview
with ABC New,, &gt;poke
about the strain her career
placed on her family. She
has twin 5-year-old girls
and a son who is 14 or 15.
" It 's a sacrifice for our
own ~rsonal time and our
families and the people
around us," she said in the
NASA interview. "But I do
think it's worth it because if
you don't explore and take
risks and go do all these
things, then everything will
stay the same."
In an in-flight news conference aboard Discovery last
summer, she talked about
waiting nearly 10 years for
her first space flight . "It's
been a long wait, but it's
worth the wait," she said_
NASA astronauts often
have nicknames, at least
among their crewmates and
Mission Control. Aboard
Discovery last July, Nowak
and crewmate Stephanie
Wilson were known as "the
Robochicks" because they
operated the shuttle's robotic arm that checked the
spacecraft for damage.
A smiling, put-together
woman in her NASA phoAP photo tos, Nowak' s poli ce mug
Space shuttle Discovery astronaut Lilia Nowak, left, holds her daughter Katrina, center, as shot showed a fatigued, hagshe signs autographs during a homecoming ceremony in this Tuesday, July 18, 2006 file gard face with scraggly hair.
Oefelein, a 41-year-old
photo, in Houston . Nowak's son Alexander is at right. Nowak, charged with attempting to
Navy
commander nickkidnap a romantic rival in a love triangle with another astronaut was allowed to go free on
named
"Billy-0" by his
bail Tuesday on \he condition that she not contact the alleged victim .
comrades, trained with
by police as saying she and police, Nowak donned a with Ladies' Home Journal, Nowak but never new with
Oefelein (OH' -fuh-line) had wig and trench coat, board- Nowak said her husband, • her. He piloted a Discovery
something "more than a ed an airport shuttle bus Richard, "works in Mission mission tn December to the
working relationship but less with Shipman and followed Control, so he's part of the space station where astrathan a romantic relationship." her to her car. Then, crying, whole space business, too. nauts rewired the outpost,
installed a new $11 million
Neither Oefelein nor Nowak sprayed a chemical And supportive also."
section
and dropped off a
Shipman could be reach!!d for into the car.
On 1\aesday, a Houston new American crew member.
comment Tuesday, nor could
Shipman drove to a park- neighbor, Bryan Lam, told
Oefelein is unmarried but
Nowak's husband be found. - ing lot booth and soujlht help. The Associated Press that in
has
two children. He began
A police affidavtt made November he heard the
But police found a letter
his
aviation career as a
in Nowak's car that "indi- public Tuesday said Nowak
sounds
of
dishes
being
teenager,
flying Ooatplanes
cated how much Mrs. had ·~stealthily followed the
Nowak
' loved
Mr. victim while in disguise and thrown inside the house arid in Alaska.
The Orlando Sentinel
Oefelein," the arrest affi- possessed multiple deadly the police came.
davit said. And Nowak had weapons."
The affidavit said the circo~ies of e-mails between
Shtpman and Oefelein.
cumstances of the case "creNowak and her husband ate a well-founded fear" and
separated several weeks ago gave inv~stigators "probaafter 19 years of marriage, ble cause to believe that
according to a statement put Mrs. Nowak intended to
out by her family.
murder Ms. Shipman."
"Personally, Lisa is an
Lykkebak
said
that
extremely caring and dedi- Nowak only wanted to talk
cated mother to her three to Shipman. Asked about the
children," the statement weapons, he said, "You can
said. "Considering both her sit and speculate all day."
personal and professional
The· judge also ordered
life, these alleged events are Nowak to stay away from
completely out of character Shipman and to wear an
and have come as a tremen- electronic
monitoring
dous shock to our family."
device upon returning to her
Accustomed to wearing home in Houston.
astronaut diapers during the
A vague profile began to
space shunle's launch and emerge of Nowak, who
return to Earth, Nowak jlraduated from high school
wore them on the drive to tn Maryland in 1981 and the
Orlando so she would not I,J.S. Naval Academy in
have to make bathroom 1985 . She has won various
stops, police said.
Navy service awards .
There , according to
In a September interview

reported Shipman is an
engineer asstgned to the
45th
Launch Support
Squadron at Patrick air
base, and a Federal Aviation
Administration pilot directory indicates she is certified as a studem pilot. ·
Chief astronaut Steve
Lindsey, who new with
Nowak to the space station
last July aboard Discovery,
and fellow astronaut Chns
ferguson
attended
Monday's court hearing.
"Our primary concern is
her health and well-being
and that she get through
this," Lindsey told reporters
afterward.
Ferguson said he was .
"perplexed" by Nowak 's
alleged actions.
NASA
spokeswoman
Ni cole Cloutier-Lemasters
said shuttle crews that fly
for two-week stints do not
go through . psychiatric
screenings. She said crews
assigned to the space station
are screened before, during
and after missions.
NASA will not conduct
an investigation, CloutierLemasters said.
At least one retired astranaut, Jerry Linenger, said
the space agency should
review its psychological
screening process. Wit~
NASA talktng about a 2
112-year trip to Mars, it
would be dangerous for
. someone to "snap like this"
during the mission, he said.
"An astronaut is probably
the most studied human
being by the time you go
through your testing, your
. training," Linenger said. "I
think there's still a lot or
unknowns out there."
AP National Writer Erin
McClam reported from New
York for thi.&lt;story. AP writers Malcolm Ritter i11 New
York, Seth Bo renstein i11
Washit1gton ,
Rasha
Madkour in Houston, Kelli
Kennedv in Miami and Jim
Ellis in Cape Canal'eral
contribwed to this report.

2007

News and Information

for your retirement years.

~

~

[ rellhiaiey a3, '!GoT ]

cy of sending terrorism suspects to CIA-run prisons
overseas, which Bush
acknowledged \n September.
Many other · Western
nations, including Germany,
Spain, Britain and Italy, also
did not sign the treaty.
France introduced the convention at the U.N. General
Assembly in November and
it was adopted in Dece.mber.
Many delegates expressed
hope that other nations will
sign by year-end. Some
European nations have
expressed support for the
treaty, but face cunstitutiun.al hurdles or require a full
Cabinet debate before signing, French and U.N. officials said.
The treaty was officially
opened for stgnature at
Tuesday 's ceremony in
Pari s. It will enter into force
afler 20 countries ratify it.
usually by a parliamentary
vote.
U.N. High Commissioner
·fur Human Ri ghts Louise
Arbour called the rreaty an
important step both in preventing injustices common
ye!ifs ago and barring newer
abuses that often fall
through regulatory loopholes.
Arbour said the U.Wed
Staies had ex pressed "reservations" about parts of the

text, but declined to elaborate, and she urged U.S.
officials to sign and ratify it.
She noted that America
often backs activities of the
UNHCR without formally
signing on to them .
She called the treaty "a
message to all modem-day
authorities committed to the
fight against terrorism" that
some past tactics are now
"not acceptable, in a very
explicit way."
The convention defines
forced disappearances as
the arrest, detention, kidnapping or "any other form
of deprivation of freedom"
by state agents or affiliates,
followed by denials or
cover-ups about the detention and location of the person gone missing .
Nations that eventually
ratify the text would
enshrine victims' rights. and
would require state s to
penalize any forced disappearances in their countries
and enact preve ntative and
monitoring measures.
French ortlcials, who led
the effort. counted more
than 5 1.000 people who
were di sappeared by their
governments in over 90
countries since
1980.
Dou ste-Biazy said. Some
41.000 of those cases
remain unsolved.

The ~ai!y S
.•

.

.

To advertise
in this special

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llailp ~ribunr Daily Sentinel ,Jloint ,Jilrasant l\rgistrr

740-446-2342

740-992-2156

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

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Woman shouldn't share
finances with shifty boyfriend
BY KATHY MITCHEll
AND MARCY SUGAR

ing, and with all the sexually transmitted diseases these
days, I would be afraid to
become intimate.
l feel extremely guilt y
about what I do, but it
relieves the pre ssure. Am I
wrong to do it? - Lonely
in Indiana
No .
Dear
Lonely:
Masturbation is a perfectly
normal se wal out let. We
understand your reluctance
to date, but it would be
healthy for you to get back
into the game. You were
blessed with a long and loving marriage, and unless
you prefer solitude, we
doubt your husband would
want you to be alone. If
someone offers to introduce
you to an available man ,
please consider it.
Dear Annie: I am
responding to "A Parent in
Any School," who was
appalled that some children
do not go on field trips
because of the cost. "Parent"
should ask her school to
adopt a policy that says no
child will be prevented from
participating in a 11eld trip
based on financial need or
physical handicap.
In my district, children
who could not afford trips
were given "scholarships"
through the school. PTOs
often provided money, and,
on occasion, individual parents donated for that purpose. lf the school felt some
children could not participate in a trip because of
their physical needs, an
alternative field trip was
planned. In other words,
either everyone went on a
trip or no one did. Thus, the
school system did not discriminate among children
based on financial resources
or physical abilities.
Just thought you might like
to know that one indicator of
an effective school system is
that it takes care of all of its
children in all situations. D.H., Retired Principal,
Lexington, Mass.
Dear D.H.: Several
teachers and principa!s
wrote us, saymg thetr
schools also have such policies in place. We hope all
schools will follow sull .
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e·mail your
questions to anniesmail·
box@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, JL

Dear Annie: Last year,
my son and I moved into
my boyfriend's home. I pay
half the utilities arid spend
almost $400 a month on
jlroceries for all of u,,
mcluding "Tom's" 12-ycarold daughter. l also paid for
half of hi s new washer,
dryer and refrigerator.
When we go out for dinner,
I'm always the one who
pays, and we use my car. l
keep the house clean, wash,
iron, make lunches. etc. He
never lifts a linger.
The other day, Tom told
me I should pay half of his
mortgage and the costs of
remodeling his house inside
and out. He says I'm obligated because I live there. He
says the remodeling will
cost thousands, and if I
don't have the money, I
should take out a loan.
. Annie, I feel I'm being
taken advantage of and
don't think I should pay for
anything more. My expenses are higher now than
when I was single. To top it
off, · every time Tom gets
-mad at me, he kicks me out
of the house and then apologizes. We both make the
same amount of money. I'm
considering moving out .
'What do yo u think ? Miserable and Broke
Dear Miserable: There is
nothing wrong with paying
for half the costs of your living arran~ements , including
rent, uulities. groceries,
repair bills, etc. That includes
half (not all) the cost of
entertainment. However, the
house is in Tom 's name. He
can kick you out whenever
he wants, which is not good
for you or your son. He also
can sell the house, and you
won't get a penny.
If he wants half the mangage and remodeling costs,
the house should be in both
your names, but frankly, Tom
doesn't sound like a good
risk for a permanent relation:ship, and we don't think you
.should
entangle _ your
finances with his. If you are
·frnancially belter off without
him, it's time to move out.
Dear Annie: I was married 35 years to my be loved
husband. Our sex life was
good until the last five years
before he passed away.
.Since his death, I've had
"Sexual desires that I've
:taken care of with self-grat.ification. I don't wish to
_date, as it feels like cheat- 606JJ.

· RACINE - Funding for
:three $600 scholarships to be
:awarded to 2007 Southern
·High Schoolllraduates from
Hill 's Classic Cars was
acknowledged at a recent
meeting of the Racine Area
Community Organization.
The funding came from
the annual Hill's Classic car
. show held in cooperation
with Home National Bank.
The next show will be held
.on Saturday, Sept. 8 from
.noon to 6 p.m. in downtown
·Racine . RACO will serve
: tocas in a bag and fresh
.lemonade at the event.
During the meeting with
Kathryn Hart presiding,
several thank you notes for
·Christmas remembrances
·were read. It was reported
.that Hart and Ann Zirkle
:had delivered a total of 120
·treats over the holiday.
·Acknowledgments were
also received from . the
Meigs Cooperative Parish
tor contributions to the food
bank.
Rio
Grande

'

. '·

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Clubs and
organizations

304-675-1333

&amp;nile! N&amp;:ww you
IT'IOITI4Kll 1;11P(U!1fd on

Uni·versity lor scholarship
d M bel B
money, an
a
race
and
It Julia
was Campbell.
also reported that
RACO had sponsored bears
and treat bags for residents
of Overbrook Center residents, and Mary Ball donaled many items for residents
at the Darst Nursing Home.
Purchases of ads in the
Southern High School
Yearbook and the Meigs
County Tourism Guide were
approved .
Bruce McKelvey of the
Oho River producers met
with the group to discuss
way s in which that group
might help RACO. One idea
presented \'IUS a bicycle
event during one of
Racine's festivals. Several
other ideas were presented.
The meeting was held at
Star Mill Park with Libby
Fisher giving prayer before
the potluck dinner. Officers
reports were given. Dave
Zirkle led in the pledge to
the nag .

can own me PK-11.:re of that unbgett.ole

the ,_.~ Pho4ioe become III'T1elltu
whtoll framed Ot pnnled on a mvg or mouN pact.

blut1 butlon .

•

p.m., Mulberry Community
Center.
1\aesday,Feb. 13
POMEROY Meigs
of
County
Chamber
Commerce, business-minded luncheon, noon, Pomeroy
Library, Mike Gerlac h,
Middleport Development
Group, speaking and The
french Chorders Quartet.
RSVP, 992-5005.

monthly meeting, 7 p.m,
town hall.
Saturday, Feb. 10
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Chapter Christian
Motorcycle Association,
"Delivered," regular meeting, 10 a.m., Common
Grounds Coffee Shop, West
Main Street.

Public meetings

Friday, Feb. 9
LONG BOTIOM
Gosp~l sing, 7 p.m.. Faith
Full Gospel Church, with
Dave and Debbie Dailey.
Saturday, Feb. I 0
REEDSVILLE
Valentine) Day spaghetti
dmner, 5 p.m., followed by
special music at 7 p.m..
Reedsville
United
Methodi st Church.
POMEROY - "A Day
for Couples" marriage
enrichment seminar, 10 a. m.
to 3 p.m., Mt. Hermon
United Brethren Church ,

Thursday, Feb. 8
CHESTER
- Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30p.m.,
Maso nic
hall.
Refreshments.
RACINE - Sonshine
Circle, 7 p.m. at the Dorcas
Bethany Church.
TUPPERS PLAINS YFW Po&gt;t 9053, 6:30 p.m.
dinner. 7 p.m. meeting. at
hall.
Thursday, Feb. 8
RACINE - Ohio River
POMEROY - Salisbury
Producers (FFA alumni), 7 Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., Southern vo-ag room. p.m ., town hall.
Friday, Feb. 9
Friday, Feb. 9
RACINE Pomeroy
MARIETIA - Regional
Racine Lodge 164, special Advisory Council for the
meeting, annual inspection Area Agency on Aging
in the Fellowcraft degree, meets at 10 a.m .. in the
Hills-HYRDD
dinner 6:30 p.m.. Racine Buckeye
United Methodist Church, Area Agency on Aging
inspection 7:30p.m. lodge. office in Marielta.
Monday, Feb. 12
1\aesday, Feb. 13
POMEROY - Big Bend
DARWIN Bedford
Farm Antiques Club, 7:"30 Township Trustees regular

Church events

36411 Wickham Road ,
Pomeroy. Presented by Jeff
and Joan Sherlock. Free
lunch and chi ld care.
Information from Pastor
Peter Martindale at 985 4220 or 985-9837:
Sunday, Feb. II
POMEROY - Rev. Dr.
David Rahamut speah at Ihe
10:30 a.m . worshtp service at
the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church. Call (304 l
773-5559 for infomtation.'
SY RACUSE
"Proc laim'· to sing at 6:30
p.m. at Syracuse Community
Church on Second Street.

Birthdays
Saturday, Feb. I0
MIDDLEPORT ·- Irma
Bales. formerlv of the
Kyge r area, will obsene her
birthday on Feb. I0. She is
in room 311 at Overbrook
Center, 333 Page St..
Middleport 45760 and card s
may be sent to her there.

FAMILY MEDICINE

·High fever, body aches and fatigue telltale symptoms offlu
Question: How do I
know if I have the tlu or a
cold? When should I go to
the doctor'' Everyone at
-work is sick. They all seem
to have the same symptoms,
but each.one says they have
a different thing.
Also, if this is the nu. is
there anything the doctor
can do about it?
Answer: This is a timely
question because we are
nght in the middle of nu
season. Whtle you can come
~own with influe~za. at any
ume of the year, 11 ts most
common in the United
States from December to
March, give or take a month
or so. During some winters
it can reach epidemic proportions.
There are three types of
influenza virus: A, B and C.
Two of these, A and B, are
usually the mo,;t severe and
contagious. These viruses
. are cons~antly mutating and
the stratns that ctrculate
around the world change
every year. It's hard for the
body's defense mechanisms
to keep up with these
changes. That' s why it's
important to get a flu shot
each year.
The flu vaccine is gener-

ally made to cover the A and
B viruses. This is because C
usually produces only very
mild symptoms, if its presence is even noticed at all. It
does not produce epidemics
and is not a pubhc health
concern.
Type A and B influenza
attack the nose, throat, and
lungs. The symptoms usually come on suddenly and
may include high fever
headache, cough, sor~
throat, nasal congestion ,
bod~ aches and fatigue_
With a cold, the onset is
more gradual, the fever is
usually low grade if present, and the symptoms are
primarily in the upper respiratory tree: Head, nose
and throat. It's much less
common to have high
fever, body aches and
fatigue with a cold.
Both the flu and colds are
spread by air-borne droplets
from coughing_. sneezing
and even talkmg by an
infected person. You may
be infected and spreading
the virus for several days
before you have symptom'
of illness.
The virus can live on surfaces, like the phone, the
counter top, the door handle

and the remote control. If
~ou touch a contaminated
llem and then rub your nose,
mouth or eyes, you can give
yourself the virus.
There is a rapid test for
influenza that your physician may do in his or her
office. It is a nasal swab that
in about 15 minutes can
determine if you have
influenza type A or B. This
can help the physician
determine if antiviral medications should be used.
Antiviral
medications
shorten the length of the
viral illness and help to
lessen the symptoms as
well . Though anti-viral
medications are being
developed for the common
cold, itone have been
approved by the Food and
Drug Administration at this
time. If you don't have the
flu , the currently available
antivirals will not be of
much help.
If you get the nu and
your doctor rules out antiviral medication, you
should try the standard old·
fashioned
treatments .
These include bed rest,
drink.in~ plenty of fluids,
and takmg medication, like
acetaminophen (Tylenol),

to manage the . fever and
body aches.
If you have a cold, the
treatment is somewhat similar: bed rest, fluids and
ibuprofen
or
acetaminophen . If. you have a
scratchy or sore throat, you
may also find it helpful to
gargle with warm salt water
or use throat sprays or
lozenges.
For both colds and
influenza, the best treatment
is, of course, prevention.
Family Medicine® is a
weekll column. To submit
questtons, write to Martha
A. Simpson, D.O., M.B.A.,
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
Box JJO, Athens, Ohio
45701, or via e-mail to
readerquestlons@famlly·
medicinenews.org. Medical
information In this column
is provided as an educational service only. II does
not reploce the/'udgment of
your persona physicia11,
who should be relied on to
diagnose atul recommend
treatment for any medical
conditions. Past columns
are a~ailable ·otlline at
w w w.familym edicinenews.org.

Members hear about leprosy colony
POMEROY
Olita
Heighton presented a
review of "The Colony" a
non-tiction book by John
Tayman
when
the
Middleport Literary Club
met recently at the Pomeroy
Library.
Heighton said she was
unable to learn much about

RACO. acceptS SChQ1afShip
fu nds, plans PfQleCtS
J

~allipoh~ mailp mrtbune
J)oint ~Iea~ant l\egt~ter

l

PageA3

ANNIE'S MAILBOX CommunityCalendar

IM

Nearly 60 nations -but not U.S. :sign treaty to ban forced disappearances
BY

PageA2

1

the author whose book
revealed the untold history
of the infamous American
leprosy colony on the
Hawaiian
island
of
Molokai . Beginning in
1866, men, women and
children who were suspected of having leprosy were
abandoned ou the island
with little food, liule medicine and very little hope .
According to the book
this exile continued for
more than a century. Many
did not have leprosy, and
most of those who did were
not contagious, yet all
were caught in a shared
nightmare . Nearly 9,000
people were banished to
the colony, _trapped by
poundtng surf and armed
guards and the htghest sea
chtf;, tn the world. Twenty etght hve there sttll.
Hetghton noted .
Tayman tells the fantastic
saga of thi s horrible and
hopeful place - at one
time the most famous community in the world,- and
of the individuals involved.
From the very tirs.t exile, a
gentle parttime lawyer
trapped in an unjust ordeal
beyond his imagination, to
the last remaining residents,
the narrative is peopled by
presidents and kings, cruel
lawmen and pioneering
doctors, and brave soul s
who literally gave their
lives to help.
A stunning cast includes
the martyred father Damien,

passion and heroism.
After the review 15 members and two guests
answered roll call naming a
person who pioneered a
treatment that eradicated or
promi sed to eradicate a

Robert Louis Stevenson,
Jack London, Mark Twain,
Teddy Roosevelt, John
Wayne and more. The result
is a searing tale of survival
and bravery, and a testament
to the power of faith com'

dreaded disease. The next
meeting will be Feb. 14 at
the Pomeroy Library. Pat
Holter will review
"The Sunday Wife" by
Cassandra King . Connie
Gilkey will serve as hostess.

Heart FaI.,. r·

r------------------------------.
-

·

Special Screening
Available

·

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Blood Pressure Screenings

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Cholesterol &amp; Glucose
Screenings (Non-Fasting)

l i 1i'd l~rolik
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Body Fat Analysis

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Heart Healthy Food Information

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Smoking Cessation

.Cardiovascular Institute Info
•

And Mucb More!!

For this special screening...
Special Presentation at 11 ;30 am
You must PRE-REGISTER
by Michael A. Englund, DO, Cardiologist,
by Tuesday, February 13th.
of the Holzer Cardiovascular Institute
CALL (740) 446-5055
Women and Heart Disease"
Screening includes a
A box lunch. pro•·ided hy
14)..HOU R FAST beforehand
Pfuer Pharmoceuticals, will be availabl~
10 1hose who a1tet11.i the presematiun.

Limited number of appoiutments
available - call today!

Free 11nd Open to the Public
Door Prizes Avt~il11ble

�PageA4

OPINION
Nazanin Afihin-]am sfight for Muslim women srights
The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157

I

www.mydallysentlnel.com

1

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congms shall make tiO laiV respecting an
establishment of religior., or prohibiting the
jree exerciu thereof; or abridgitrg the freedom
of spucll, or of the press; or tile right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petitiotl
the Govermnent jor a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday. Feb. 7. the 38th day of 2007. There
are 327 days left in the year.
Today\ Highlight in History :
On Feb. 7, 1812, author Charles Dickens was born in
Portsmouth. England.
On this date:
In IRol. the general .:ounciluf the Ch1x:taw Indian nation
adopted a resoll.uion dedaring allegian.:e with the South "in
the event a penmment dissolution of the American Union
takes place."
In 1904, a tire began in Baltimore that raged for about 30
hours and destroyed more than 1.5fXl buildings.
In 1906. Pu Yi, 'the last emperor of China, was born in
Beijing.
In 1936. President Franklin Roosevelt authorized a !lag fur
the ofiice of the vice president.
In 1943. the government announced the start of shoe
rationing, limiting consumers to buying three pairs per per£On for the remainder or the vear.
In 1964. The Beatles beg:m their tirst American tour as
they arrived at New York's John F. Kennedy lntemational
Airpot1.
In 1984, space shuttle astronauts 13ruce McCandless the
Se~:ond tmd Rubc11 L. Stewart went on the first untethered
space walk.
In 1999. Jordan 's King Hussein died of .:an~:er at age 63;
he was succeeded by his eldest son, Abdullah .
Ten years ago: The Air Force suspended all its !lights in
restricted training areas on the East Coast after a pair of dose
calls between National Guard jets and civilian airliners.
Mindful of Russian President Boris Yeltsin's ailments,
President Clinton agreed to shift their March summit meeting
from "the United States to Helsinki. Finland.
Five . years ago: Fom1er Enron chief executive Jetfrey
Skilling insisted to skcpticalluwmakers that he knew of nothing improper about the complex web of partnerships that
brought down the company. Authorities in Oklahoma captured the last of four escaped prison inmates from Texas
who'd been on the run for more than a week.
One year ago: 10.000 mourners, including four U.S. presidents, said.goodbye to Corena Scou King during a service in
Lithonia, Ga. Abu Hamt.a al-Musn, a mdical Muslim cleric
linked to 9/ll plotter Zacarias Moussaoui, was sentenced in
London to seven years in prison for inciting followers to kill
non- Muslims. Phoenix Coyotes assistant wach Rick Tocchet
was charged with tinancing a nationwide gambling ring
based out of NeY. Jersey.
Today\ Birthdays: Country singer Wilma Lee Cooper is
86. Author Gay Talese is 75. Actor Miguel Ferrer ts 52.
Reggae musician Brian Travers 1UB40) is 48. Actor James .
Spader is 47. Country singer Garth Brooks is 45. Rock musician David Bryan (Bon Jovi) is 45 . Comediun Eddie Izzard is
45. Actor-comedian Chris Rock is 42. Actor Jason Gedrick is
40. Actor Ashton Kut~:her is 29. Actress Tina Majorino is 22.
Thought for Today : ''The time on either side of 'now'
stands fast.'' - Maxine Kumin. American poet .

•

Correction Policy
Our main ·concern in all stories is 10

be accurate . ll you know of an error
in a story, c-.allthe newsroom at [7 40)

992-2t56.
Our main number is
(740) !lll2-2156.

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News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich . Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed. E:~~ t 14
Reporter: Beth Sergenl. Ext 13

Advertising
Outside Sales: Dave Harris. Ex t. 15
OUtside Sales: Brenda Da VIs. Ext 16

Class/Circ.: Judy Clark. Ext I 0

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Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12

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Bv MIKE LAFFERTY

Goldie Mills

ASSOCIATED PRESS

LAKE WALES, Fla. - Goldie Mills of Lake Wales
Fla., died Saturday, Feb. 3, 2007, at her residence, fro~
cancer. She was 81 .
Born July 3, 1925 in Logan, W.Va., she moved to Lake
Wales from Syracuse in 1979. She was a homemaker and a
member of the Golfview Baptist Church.
She was preceded in death by her husband Homer Mills
in 1993 .
·
'
Survivors include her daughters. Sheila Royal and
Annette McGhee. both of Lake Wales; sons, Homer and
Randy . Mills, both of PotJ!eroy ; sisters : Elestine
McDamels. of Man, W.Va ., Joste Browning of Pomeroy,
and Geraldtne Kames and Velva Amburgey, both ·of Lakt!
Wales; 12 grandchtldren ; 14 great grandchildren and a
great-great grandchild .
Services wi~l be held at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 7,
2007 , at Marton Nelson Funeral Home in Lake Wales,
with Rev. Jim Furno officiating . Burial will be in Lake
Wales Cemetery.
·
Condolences may be sent to www.marionnelsonfuneralhome.com.

Martha McPhail
SYRACUSE - Martha Corson McPhail, 66. of
Syracuse, died Monday. Feb . 5, 2007, ai Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis.
She was born Feb. 8, 1940, in Morgantown, W.Va., to the
late Roland and Evelyn Bomboy Corson. She was a member of the St. Paul Lutheran Church and a member of the
sorority Beta Sigma Phi. She was a homemaker.
Surviving are her husband: Hugh McPhail, Syracuse; her
children: Hugh "Corey" (Sara) McPhail of West Closter,
Douglas "Scott" (Joyce) McPhail of Powell, Heather
Farley of Syracuse; grandchildren: Tristan, Bailey, Marissa,
Lindsay, and Bryson; and a brother, George Corson of
Denver, Colo.
Service will be held at 2 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2007,
at the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home with the
Pastor Robert Gibson ofticiating . Burial will follow at the
Gilmore Cemetery.
Visitation will be held from 6-9 p.m. on Wednesday at the
funeral home .
Memorial contributions may be made to the St. Paul
Lutheran Church, 231 E. 2nd St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Local Briefs

BACK!

Marriage seminar
POMEROY - Mt. Hermon Uniteu Brethren Church,
36411 Wickham Road, Pomeroy, will host "A Day for
Couples," a marriage enrichment seminar with Jeff and
Joan Sherlock, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday.
Free lunch and child care will be provided. Information
is available by calling Pastor Peter Martindale at 985-4220
or 985-9837.

Lodge meets
•
RACINE- Pomeroy-Racine Lodge #164, F&amp;AM, will
hold a special meeting and annual inspection in the
Fellowcraft degree Friday with dinner at 6:30 p.m. at
Racine United Methodist Church, and inspection at 7:30
p.m. at the lodge .

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!If

A wail on two cities
There was a charge for
$29.32 from a company I
didn't recognize (FFCo) on
my charge-card bill. What
is FFCo? I called the billing
department where a Roger
Smith ans.wered the phone .
Ah, yes, FFCo, the
Flimflam Co. They own a
chain of seafood restaurants ·
and they manufacture fiberoptic cable. Did I buy any
fiber-optic
cable
on
Tuesday the 14th at the
Fish Hut by any chance? It
did have the orange roughy
at the Fish Hut on the 14\h. .
l' m sure this coiild he settled with a phone call.
There was something
with the wuy he said "sir"
!hat gave away the fact that
Roger was half a world
awuy in India. Hi s accent
was perfect. you'd have to
really pay attention to know
that he was in the Silicon
Valley of India, Bangalore,
home to many of the highest of the high-lech companies in the world.
Of cou rse, I mean
Bengalooru.
It turns out. the very day I
spoke to Roger Smith.

Jim
Mullen

Bangalore
officially
changed its name to
Bengalooru. If Bengalooru
is the name of the town.
how
did
it
become
Bangalore in the first
place'' No douht some Brit
during the Colonial day '
couldn 't wrap his tongue
around Bengalooru and
wrote down "Bangalore" in
a note to the East India Co.
There seems to be a wave
of name-changing going on
around the world . Madras
changed its name. too. It is
now known as Chennai .
Remember that fad for
" bleeding" Madras shim in
the emly '60s'! It was the
height of preppy fashion . I
guess we were really wearing bleeding Chennai .
The President of China
visited Mumbai a few

molllhs ago to talk trade
und inv~stm e lll ... Mumh&lt;li ''
Where
the
heck
.is
Mumbai'' Oh. yeah it used
to be Bombay. Didn't you
get the memo'!
I know this name chang in g ., nothing new Is tanbLJ 1/C onstanti nople .
Len i ngra\l/S t. Petersburg.
Cape
Canaverai/C1pe
Kennedy/Cape Canaveral,
Ceylon/Sri
Lanka.
S i am/Thlliland .
Rhod e sia/Zimb a bwe .
Olwiously. people who live
in a place h;l\ e the right to
name it anything they want.
What I don't understund is
why we are so selccliv L:.
If it's a big cult mal mis-

take to call Bejing Pe~ing.
why is it OK for English
speakers to call it Rome
when the Italians .:all it
Romu ? Wh y do we say
Florence wh en they "'Y
Firence·' Don't the Italians
deserve as much courte... y
as th e Chine, c·' 1f it' '
wrong tu call Zimh.l b\\·e
Rhodes ia. why is it OK for
Engli sh speakers to ~all
·· Par~ee'' Paris?
For year' I've r~ad that

English speakers call forti "
fied wine sherry 'because it
comes from the town of
Jerez in Spain . Huh? What
am I missing? How do you
get sherry from Jerez? Why
can 't we say Jerez? More
importantly, how did we get
Spain from Espana? Are we
all too dumb to say Espana')
Is it really that hard?
" And why do 1 have to
call India to find out that
the FFCn i' the Fish Hut?
Why don' t they just call it
the Fish l-lut on the bill'l
Why don ' t we call things
what they are:··
" 1 uon ' t know. sir. I don't
know why they call it
orange roughy / · either.
Here we call that fish a
slimehcad ."
"Your name 's not Roger
Smith. is it''"
"No. sir. You .:auld never
pronounce my real · name Thank 'you. have a nice
L1ay. "
(}i111 M11llm is the awhor

of' " It li1kn " Villcrge Idiot:
c,.,,,,fimting th&lt;' Simple
Li fe'' wul . . Ba by !i First
Tl llloo. " )t ,u n ut reach him
at jun_mulle'l (g) m.n ra_\~(·om .)

Bush administration plans user
fees to keep rivers navigable

COLUMBUS The
George
Dunbar
left
Cleveland at 6 p.m. on June
29 , 1902, bound for
Alpena, Mich .
Loaded with coal , the
136-foot ship rode low in
the water as it steamed
northwest into rough Lake
Erie weather, her boilers
running full steam.
By nightfall, the Dunbar
struggled pa st Kelley s
Island, the wind and waves
pulling at her seams. In the
darkness, the ship began to
take on more water than her
crew could pump out. To
lessen the strain, the
Dunbar's skipper turned his
ship into the wind.
But she alreatly was lost.
At 4 a.m., her hull split.
The skipper, his wife and
daughter
escaped
the
Dunbar, but seven crew
members were lost to Erie,
which has claimed an estimated 2,000 ships .
The Dunbar has survived
more than a century of summer squalls, November
gales and winter ice, and the
shipwreck remains preserved 45 feet below the
surface. just over the international line in Canadian
waters.
In 2003, Dale Liebenthal
cruised over the wreck and"
took a ghostly picture of the
ship, still heavy with coal,
revealing her stern. bow and
bulwarks. Her smokestack
lies broken, about 40 feet
off the port stern.
Liebenthal led a team of
state Geological Sttrve:; scientists in a pilot study using
a tool called side-scan sonar
to produce images of 25
shipwrecks around Kelleys
Island and the Bass Islands
to the west.
Their work, just recently
published because of budget cuts, helps the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources comply with a
state law that orders the
agency to inventory, evaluate, protect and designate
underwater
shipwreck
locations.
. Archaeologists and historians sar they need this
information to conserve
wrecks as well as provide
information to divers and
the general public. Sidescan sonar''produces images
similar to aerial photography, but at an oblique angle.
Geologists already use the
sonar to study the lake's bottom.
Distinguishing
between sand, mud and rock
provides insights into fishspawning areas, beach ~ro­
ston and mineral production.
· "We come across things
using the so11ar all the time.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

I
.

•

...
.. ,.•. :
..
•
;1

i • .,;

,•

AP photo

In this photo provided by The Great Lakes Historical Society, a side scan image of the
wreckage of the George Dunbar, which sank in is shown with a chart showing its location.
Ohio waters of Lake Erie, still relatively unexplored, contain an estimated 600 wrecks. A
team of state Geological Survey scientists conducted a pilot study of shipwrecks around
Kelleys Island and the Bass Islands to the west using a tool called side-scan sonar.
0

We wonder if they're
ships," Liebenthal said.
The side-scan sonar is
lowered into the water on a
brace attached to the bow of
the division's 25-foot
research launch.
It operates just below the
surface by bouncing sound
waves off the lake bottom.
Images are produced as the
boat is slowly piloted in a
series of precise, calibrated
runs over wreck areas.
The sound echoes are
recorded in shades of black
and gray, depending on how
retlective and hard a target is.
Scientists look for the straight
lines and angles that might
indicate a hull or superstructure. Some images are more
obvious than others.
The western basin of the
lake is fairly shallow, and
the waters around the
islands are· popular with
recreational divers. Some
wreck sites have been similarly scanned with sonar by
private diving clubs.
Still, Lake Erie remains
almost totally unexplored.
Ohio waters alone contain
estimated 600 wrecks.
"We're pretty far behind
in terms of other Great Lake
states," said Charles E.
Herdendorf, a geologist and
archaeological diver who
served as a consultant on
the study.
"The Canadians are way
ahead of us in mapping their
shipwrecks and opening
them up for diving."
The islands area is particularly rich in wrecks, thanks
in part to two shoals north
of
Kelleys
Island.
Herdendorf estimated that

an

as many as 50 wrecks might
litter the lake bottom around
the islands.
"If ships got hit b~
storms, they could easily htt
the shoals." said Constance
Livchak, a Geological
Survey scientist working on
the project.
And many did.
Nineteen of the 25 wrecks
in the study surround
Kelleys, and etght of those
went down on the rocks.
Only the general locations
of most shipwrecks are
known. One purpose in
searching them OIJt was to
fix their exact positions,
because wrecks can move
with time and the elements.
Ice, in particular, acts like a
bulldozer.
"The ice covering the lake
cracks and grinds together,
pushing up and down ... and
then it scours the bottom,"
Liebenthal said.
Five wrecks were recorded on Gull Island Shoal, but
the sonar failed to find
much of anything left.
Around the islands, wreck
sites can be close together.
A ship's identity can be
uncertain even when sonar
reveals a vessel.
For example, images
recorded off the northwest
shore of Kelleys show
either the Oak Valley or the
LB. Crocker.
Sonar also can reveal why
a ship went down. The C.H.
Plummer, which burned at
its dock in 1888, probably
was lost to a boiler fire and
not to the spontaneous combustion of tts cargo of lime,
Herdendorf said.
"Where the coal was

stored is the only place in
the shipwreck where the tire
had burned completely
through. The rest of the
shipwreck was intact," he
said. Carrie Sowden, a
marine archaeologist with
the Great Lakes Historical
Society in Vermillion, said
she plans to use the data to
plan dives at the sites.
Sowden said she wants to
confirm wrecks as well as
help create dive charts of
the lost vessels.
"We'll go out (with volunteers) and see if we can
locate them. It could be a
shipwreck, a pile of rocks or
ballast. It could be anything," she said. "We can
learn something about the
ship, its construction and
maybe why it sank."
Sowden has dived at six
wreck sites in the past two
years, including the Dundee,
a 200-foot schooner barge
that went down in 1900 in a
storm 14 miles off Cleveland.
"It was under tow. The
first thing that happens in
bad weather is they cut the
tow line. They lost control
of it. The bar~e had no
steering," she satd.
However, the biggest
mystery on the lake for
Sowden is one that hasn't
appeared on any sonar.
In December 1909, the
Marquette and Bessemer
No. 2, a 300-foot fenry
loaded with railroad cars full
of coal, left Conneaut in a
gale for Port Stahley. across
the lake in Canada. The fenry
was never heard from again.
"A lot of people have tried
to t1nd it over the years,"
Sowden said.

Defendant in Boston marketing stunt videotaped police response, attorney says
Bv DAVID WEBER
.1\SSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BOSTON - One of the
men criminally charged
after placing blinking cartoon advertisements around
the city videotaped a police
bomb squad removing one
of the electronic . devices,
but did not tell the officers
the object was harmless.
Surveillance
cameras
caught 27-year-old Peter
Berdovsky
videotaping
officers removing what
they thought was a possible
bomb.
I lis lawyer, Walter Prince,
said
Tuesday:
"Mr.

boats have become more
fuel efficient. The fund had
$250 million as of October.
WASHINGTON - The
At the same time, spending
Bush administration wants to repair aging locks from the
to impose a new user fee on 1930s on the Ohio, the
commercial barges to help Mississippi and other rivers
pay for the soaring cost of has increased dramatically.
maintaining the nation's
"At that rate, you are very
river channels, including the quickly going to exhaust the
Ohio River.
trust fund," Woodley said.
Barge operators say they "The question becomes,
already pay steep taxes to 'What are you going to doT'
keep the Mississippi River
One option, Woodley said,
and other waterways navi- is to tie new fees to how often
gable.
barges go through existing
The proposal, included in locks. Any increase in barge
President Bush's $2.9 tril- traffic would mean more
lion budget proposal. does money in the trust fund.
not specify how fees would
The barge industry, fadng
from PageA1
be assessed.
rising costs of its own, is
HWe' d like to explore user gearing up for a fight.
fee concepts, but we don't
"Operators have already attention into the project
have a proposal that we're paid roughly $1 billion in that they should've."
putting out yet," said John fuel taxes over the past 10
Strand has also told the
Paul Woodley, the assistant years for this purpose," said village its firm stands to
Army secretary who over- Anne Burns, ~ vice presi- lose $60,000 on the project
sees the Army Corps of dent at American Waterways though village officials
Engineers. "We want to hear Operators, a national trade said the company has no
what the industry people and association for the tugboat, legal recourse to recoup
the shippers have in mind.'' towboat and barge industry. that figure because those
Barge operators now pay
a tax of 20 cents per gallon
on diesel fuel. with the
H's easy to subscribe to the
money going into a waterway trust fund . Half the_ c.ost
The Daily Sentinel
of replacing and repamng
Sign up for home delivery
the nation's massive system
of locks and dams comes
or a mail subscription
from that trust fund. while
go to
the other half comes from
www.mydailysentinel.com
the Corps' general revenue.
Sign up todav
The problem. Woodley
said. is that the trust lund
has steadily decreased over
the past decade as barge tow
Bv SAM HANANEL

The Daily Sentinel• Page~

Team uses sonar to fmd Lake Erie shipwrecks

CAMBRIDGE- William R. Levacy, 63, of Kimbolton,
died on Saturday, Feb. 3, 2007.
He was born May 21, 1943, son of the late Everett and
Bernice Vergie Kathilleen Bass Levacy.
There will be no funeral and burial will be private.
Arrangements are under the direction of Bundy-Law
Funeral Home in Cambridge.

THEY'RE

I''

The Daily Sentinel

Obituaries

William R. Levacy

'.'' r.••:'\ ·. \.\'',\'•'

· ullers to the editor are welcome. Thn should be less
than 300 words. All leiters are subject tr) editing, must be
sif!,ned, and include addrr·.u and telephone nwnba No
unsigned lerters H•i/1 bf published. Lellen should be in
good taste, addressing inue.1·, nul persr&gt;rwlities. Leiters of
thanks to organizmions and individtw/.1· &gt;~"ill not b1· accepted for publication.

toward civil liberties. r~li ­ bility in Islam ." He contingious freedoln and interfa ith ues: " Not every Muslim
relations. Th e r rog ram 's female wanb to be Gloria
repeated assoc iation of acts Stcinem or Pari s Hilton. But
or te rrori" n witll Islam will nor do they wa nt a life that
only se rve to im.:rease anti- starts with genital mutilation
Kathryn
Muslim prej udice in our and ends with an honor
Lopez
society.''
~illin g at the hands of your
They were nut random brother-. The overwhelming
tenorists whu alla.: ked us
on Sept. II and who wntin- majority of females m
Cu ntinental
battered
done is particularly signiti- ue to go after our trnops and
"omen's
shelters
ar~
( ant not just because of the allies in Iraq touay. We rc&lt;~ l­
life she 's saved but because ly need to talk about these ~ lu s l i m - which gives you:
In
his
bonk 'ome sense or what women.
it strikes at the heart of the things.
dash of civili zations we are " Ameri ca Alone: The End in the Middle Ea&gt;t might dn
facing today. Consider again of the World as We Know 11 the y had an y women's
that the fact that young It" I Reg nery. 2006). my col - shelters to go to. When half
Nazanin Fatehi killed one or league Mark Steyn write., the population ,,f these sociher assailants is not what that reformin g Islam is kev eties is a potential source of
put her in jail. The issue i' to winning the war on terror. dissent, we need to use it. "
that Islamic law may hav~ It 's s om~thtn g th at non Without being partisan punished this innocent vic- Muslims l'an ' t r~;dl y do but nr even demonizing the
tim anyway. That 's what we "all the free \1 orld " can Iranian government
··create Londilion .., th&lt;It Nazanin Afshin-Jum shone
need to examine .
Instead, though, as a cul - inaease the likelihood of a bright light on a trementure, we give more attention Muslim rel\•rm. or ill an y dous problem we have to'
to a ridiculous press release rutc do '"'t acti;cly impede grapple with . Blaming othfrom the Council on it."
ers for supporting the same·
American-blamic Relations
,-\ n cssc nti.tl part of thi s
war you once did isn't going
denouncing the popular life ~&gt;;:J\' in g ~.: x ~rc i se is 10
to
win this war. Facing hard·
primetime-TV drama "24" su pport rea l wonJc,n's rights .
for daring to pm1ray fi.:tion - Nan.:y P~lu s i may think she questions - harder than.
al terrorists as Muslims. liberated
hundreds
of symbolic, albeit deeply,
After the four-h()ur season American girls to dream of demoralizing, congressional
premiere in January. CAIR one day hecoming Speaker resolutions - will .
( Kwlin·11 Lope ~ is tile ediwhined: "The raw emotion- or the U.S. House of
al impa&lt;:t of tktional scenes Representative s, but there ror of Nmio11 a l Re\'iew
that include widespread are girls out there who arc 011line ( 11'11'1\'. IWiinllalredeath and destruction in reall y actually oppressed. rieH: cmn). She ccm be con -'
America may adversell' Women;s rights are , Mark wctal at klopez @natimwl-'
afTect the public's attitude write,, "the higgest vulnera- re t •it'H '. com. )

www. mydallysentlnel.com

Deaths

.,s,, ·'~: ,',.I
•::~~t
:. • · I 1\.,'\''\\\

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

At the end of January,
Nazanin Fatehi was released
from an Iranian prison. She
had been there for almost
two years for the "crime" of
self-defense against wouldbe rapists. Nazanin, then 17,
fatally stabbed one of the
attackers. But I'm not sure
that matters.
The world should be outraged by what this girl went
through. She should be a
household name.
Her guardian angel was a
former Miss Canada (2003),
Nannin
Afshin-Jam.
Afshin-Jam is a native of
Iran - her family !led during the 1981 revolution, .her
father having been victim of
the Revolutionary Guard's
tyranny. In Fatehi, AfshinJam very easily saw what
could have been her fate and
cesolved to help her.
Afshin-Jam, an aspiring
pop singer whose first
record 's release has been
delaved as she has worked
on saving the life of this
young Iranian Kurd, shows
what a little star-power and
a lot of determination can
do. Self-absorbed celebrities
should put their power to
use . Instead of retlexively
Bush-bashing. they could
put their hearts into a cause
and use their popularity to
make a difference.
What Afshin-Jam has

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

Racine

"WE VELIVER"

Berdovsky didn't do anything inappropriate."
Prince said Berdovsky
had received a call that
morning from a friend who
told him there was a bomb
threat at the Sullivan Square
transit station in Boston. He
said Berdovsky grabbed his
camera and headed out to
the scene, unaware it
involved one of the electronic devices that he and
Sean Stevens. 28. had hung
as part of a guenilla advertising campaign for Turner
Broadcasting, a division of
Time Warner Inc.
"That's what he does. He
fees weren't in the initial
contract.
Despite differences with
the engineering tirm, Hill
said one of the main goals
is to now utilize the new
water system and sooner
than later.

~!¥1

videotapes things. He's a
videotape freelance artist.
He got a call that there was
a bomb threat near his
house and he went to tape
it," Prince said. "When he
got there, he realized what
was going on, and he went
back to his apartment and
called his employer, and
they told him they would
take care of it. That's not an
inappropriate response."
Stevens
was
with
Berdovsky at the time,
according to the Boston

Herald. Stevens' attorney,
Michael Rich, declined to
comment.
A spokeswoman for
Attorney General Martha
Coakley, who is prosecuting Berdovsky and Stevens
on charges of placing a
hoax device and disorderly
conduct, also declined to
comment. ~:iting the criminal case.
Berdovsky and Stevens
have pleaded not guilty.
Their next court date is
March 7.

~

.

All that life has to offer.

~

=

Call for a complimentary bearing consultation.

DWIGHT
ICENHOWER

740-594-6333

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February 10 8 pm
Tickets On Sale Now!

l-800-451-9806
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Athens, OH 4570 l

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~egins Fe\J. 16
The Ariel-Dater Hall
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7411-446-ARTS 12787)

428 Se&lt;. Ave. Gallipolis.

I

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�PageA4

OPINION
Nazanin Afihin-]am sfight for Muslim women srights
The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congms shall make tiO laiV respecting an
establishment of religior., or prohibiting the
jree exerciu thereof; or abridgitrg the freedom
of spucll, or of the press; or tile right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petitiotl
the Govermnent jor a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday. Feb. 7. the 38th day of 2007. There
are 327 days left in the year.
Today\ Highlight in History :
On Feb. 7, 1812, author Charles Dickens was born in
Portsmouth. England.
On this date:
In IRol. the general .:ounciluf the Ch1x:taw Indian nation
adopted a resoll.uion dedaring allegian.:e with the South "in
the event a penmment dissolution of the American Union
takes place."
In 1904, a tire began in Baltimore that raged for about 30
hours and destroyed more than 1.5fXl buildings.
In 1906. Pu Yi, 'the last emperor of China, was born in
Beijing.
In 1936. President Franklin Roosevelt authorized a !lag fur
the ofiice of the vice president.
In 1943. the government announced the start of shoe
rationing, limiting consumers to buying three pairs per per£On for the remainder or the vear.
In 1964. The Beatles beg:m their tirst American tour as
they arrived at New York's John F. Kennedy lntemational
Airpot1.
In 1984, space shuttle astronauts 13ruce McCandless the
Se~:ond tmd Rubc11 L. Stewart went on the first untethered
space walk.
In 1999. Jordan 's King Hussein died of .:an~:er at age 63;
he was succeeded by his eldest son, Abdullah .
Ten years ago: The Air Force suspended all its !lights in
restricted training areas on the East Coast after a pair of dose
calls between National Guard jets and civilian airliners.
Mindful of Russian President Boris Yeltsin's ailments,
President Clinton agreed to shift their March summit meeting
from "the United States to Helsinki. Finland.
Five . years ago: Fom1er Enron chief executive Jetfrey
Skilling insisted to skcpticalluwmakers that he knew of nothing improper about the complex web of partnerships that
brought down the company. Authorities in Oklahoma captured the last of four escaped prison inmates from Texas
who'd been on the run for more than a week.
One year ago: 10.000 mourners, including four U.S. presidents, said.goodbye to Corena Scou King during a service in
Lithonia, Ga. Abu Hamt.a al-Musn, a mdical Muslim cleric
linked to 9/ll plotter Zacarias Moussaoui, was sentenced in
London to seven years in prison for inciting followers to kill
non- Muslims. Phoenix Coyotes assistant wach Rick Tocchet
was charged with tinancing a nationwide gambling ring
based out of NeY. Jersey.
Today\ Birthdays: Country singer Wilma Lee Cooper is
86. Author Gay Talese is 75. Actor Miguel Ferrer ts 52.
Reggae musician Brian Travers 1UB40) is 48. Actor James .
Spader is 47. Country singer Garth Brooks is 45. Rock musician David Bryan (Bon Jovi) is 45 . Comediun Eddie Izzard is
45. Actor-comedian Chris Rock is 42. Actor Jason Gedrick is
40. Actor Ashton Kut~:her is 29. Actress Tina Majorino is 22.
Thought for Today : ''The time on either side of 'now'
stands fast.'' - Maxine Kumin. American poet .

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Bv MIKE LAFFERTY

Goldie Mills

ASSOCIATED PRESS

LAKE WALES, Fla. - Goldie Mills of Lake Wales
Fla., died Saturday, Feb. 3, 2007, at her residence, fro~
cancer. She was 81 .
Born July 3, 1925 in Logan, W.Va., she moved to Lake
Wales from Syracuse in 1979. She was a homemaker and a
member of the Golfview Baptist Church.
She was preceded in death by her husband Homer Mills
in 1993 .
·
'
Survivors include her daughters. Sheila Royal and
Annette McGhee. both of Lake Wales; sons, Homer and
Randy . Mills, both of PotJ!eroy ; sisters : Elestine
McDamels. of Man, W.Va ., Joste Browning of Pomeroy,
and Geraldtne Kames and Velva Amburgey, both ·of Lakt!
Wales; 12 grandchtldren ; 14 great grandchildren and a
great-great grandchild .
Services wi~l be held at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 7,
2007 , at Marton Nelson Funeral Home in Lake Wales,
with Rev. Jim Furno officiating . Burial will be in Lake
Wales Cemetery.
·
Condolences may be sent to www.marionnelsonfuneralhome.com.

Martha McPhail
SYRACUSE - Martha Corson McPhail, 66. of
Syracuse, died Monday. Feb . 5, 2007, ai Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis.
She was born Feb. 8, 1940, in Morgantown, W.Va., to the
late Roland and Evelyn Bomboy Corson. She was a member of the St. Paul Lutheran Church and a member of the
sorority Beta Sigma Phi. She was a homemaker.
Surviving are her husband: Hugh McPhail, Syracuse; her
children: Hugh "Corey" (Sara) McPhail of West Closter,
Douglas "Scott" (Joyce) McPhail of Powell, Heather
Farley of Syracuse; grandchildren: Tristan, Bailey, Marissa,
Lindsay, and Bryson; and a brother, George Corson of
Denver, Colo.
Service will be held at 2 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2007,
at the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home with the
Pastor Robert Gibson ofticiating . Burial will follow at the
Gilmore Cemetery.
Visitation will be held from 6-9 p.m. on Wednesday at the
funeral home .
Memorial contributions may be made to the St. Paul
Lutheran Church, 231 E. 2nd St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Local Briefs

BACK!

Marriage seminar
POMEROY - Mt. Hermon Uniteu Brethren Church,
36411 Wickham Road, Pomeroy, will host "A Day for
Couples," a marriage enrichment seminar with Jeff and
Joan Sherlock, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday.
Free lunch and child care will be provided. Information
is available by calling Pastor Peter Martindale at 985-4220
or 985-9837.

Lodge meets
•
RACINE- Pomeroy-Racine Lodge #164, F&amp;AM, will
hold a special meeting and annual inspection in the
Fellowcraft degree Friday with dinner at 6:30 p.m. at
Racine United Methodist Church, and inspection at 7:30
p.m. at the lodge .

·-

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A wail on two cities
There was a charge for
$29.32 from a company I
didn't recognize (FFCo) on
my charge-card bill. What
is FFCo? I called the billing
department where a Roger
Smith ans.wered the phone .
Ah, yes, FFCo, the
Flimflam Co. They own a
chain of seafood restaurants ·
and they manufacture fiberoptic cable. Did I buy any
fiber-optic
cable
on
Tuesday the 14th at the
Fish Hut by any chance? It
did have the orange roughy
at the Fish Hut on the 14\h. .
l' m sure this coiild he settled with a phone call.
There was something
with the wuy he said "sir"
!hat gave away the fact that
Roger was half a world
awuy in India. Hi s accent
was perfect. you'd have to
really pay attention to know
that he was in the Silicon
Valley of India, Bangalore,
home to many of the highest of the high-lech companies in the world.
Of cou rse, I mean
Bengalooru.
It turns out. the very day I
spoke to Roger Smith.

Jim
Mullen

Bangalore
officially
changed its name to
Bengalooru. If Bengalooru
is the name of the town.
how
did
it
become
Bangalore in the first
place'' No douht some Brit
during the Colonial day '
couldn 't wrap his tongue
around Bengalooru and
wrote down "Bangalore" in
a note to the East India Co.
There seems to be a wave
of name-changing going on
around the world . Madras
changed its name. too. It is
now known as Chennai .
Remember that fad for
" bleeding" Madras shim in
the emly '60s'! It was the
height of preppy fashion . I
guess we were really wearing bleeding Chennai .
The President of China
visited Mumbai a few

molllhs ago to talk trade
und inv~stm e lll ... Mumh&lt;li ''
Where
the
heck
.is
Mumbai'' Oh. yeah it used
to be Bombay. Didn't you
get the memo'!
I know this name chang in g ., nothing new Is tanbLJ 1/C onstanti nople .
Len i ngra\l/S t. Petersburg.
Cape
Canaverai/C1pe
Kennedy/Cape Canaveral,
Ceylon/Sri
Lanka.
S i am/Thlliland .
Rhod e sia/Zimb a bwe .
Olwiously. people who live
in a place h;l\ e the right to
name it anything they want.
What I don't understund is
why we are so selccliv L:.
If it's a big cult mal mis-

take to call Bejing Pe~ing.
why is it OK for English
speakers to call it Rome
when the Italians .:all it
Romu ? Wh y do we say
Florence wh en they "'Y
Firence·' Don't the Italians
deserve as much courte... y
as th e Chine, c·' 1f it' '
wrong tu call Zimh.l b\\·e
Rhodes ia. why is it OK for
Engli sh speakers to ~all
·· Par~ee'' Paris?
For year' I've r~ad that

English speakers call forti "
fied wine sherry 'because it
comes from the town of
Jerez in Spain . Huh? What
am I missing? How do you
get sherry from Jerez? Why
can 't we say Jerez? More
importantly, how did we get
Spain from Espana? Are we
all too dumb to say Espana')
Is it really that hard?
" And why do 1 have to
call India to find out that
the FFCn i' the Fish Hut?
Why don' t they just call it
the Fish l-lut on the bill'l
Why don ' t we call things
what they are:··
" 1 uon ' t know. sir. I don't
know why they call it
orange roughy / · either.
Here we call that fish a
slimehcad ."
"Your name 's not Roger
Smith. is it''"
"No. sir. You .:auld never
pronounce my real · name Thank 'you. have a nice
L1ay. "
(}i111 M11llm is the awhor

of' " It li1kn " Villcrge Idiot:
c,.,,,,fimting th&lt;' Simple
Li fe'' wul . . Ba by !i First
Tl llloo. " )t ,u n ut reach him
at jun_mulle'l (g) m.n ra_\~(·om .)

Bush administration plans user
fees to keep rivers navigable

COLUMBUS The
George
Dunbar
left
Cleveland at 6 p.m. on June
29 , 1902, bound for
Alpena, Mich .
Loaded with coal , the
136-foot ship rode low in
the water as it steamed
northwest into rough Lake
Erie weather, her boilers
running full steam.
By nightfall, the Dunbar
struggled pa st Kelley s
Island, the wind and waves
pulling at her seams. In the
darkness, the ship began to
take on more water than her
crew could pump out. To
lessen the strain, the
Dunbar's skipper turned his
ship into the wind.
But she alreatly was lost.
At 4 a.m., her hull split.
The skipper, his wife and
daughter
escaped
the
Dunbar, but seven crew
members were lost to Erie,
which has claimed an estimated 2,000 ships .
The Dunbar has survived
more than a century of summer squalls, November
gales and winter ice, and the
shipwreck remains preserved 45 feet below the
surface. just over the international line in Canadian
waters.
In 2003, Dale Liebenthal
cruised over the wreck and"
took a ghostly picture of the
ship, still heavy with coal,
revealing her stern. bow and
bulwarks. Her smokestack
lies broken, about 40 feet
off the port stern.
Liebenthal led a team of
state Geological Sttrve:; scientists in a pilot study using
a tool called side-scan sonar
to produce images of 25
shipwrecks around Kelleys
Island and the Bass Islands
to the west.
Their work, just recently
published because of budget cuts, helps the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources comply with a
state law that orders the
agency to inventory, evaluate, protect and designate
underwater
shipwreck
locations.
. Archaeologists and historians sar they need this
information to conserve
wrecks as well as provide
information to divers and
the general public. Sidescan sonar''produces images
similar to aerial photography, but at an oblique angle.
Geologists already use the
sonar to study the lake's bottom.
Distinguishing
between sand, mud and rock
provides insights into fishspawning areas, beach ~ro­
ston and mineral production.
· "We come across things
using the so11ar all the time.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

I
.

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AP photo

In this photo provided by The Great Lakes Historical Society, a side scan image of the
wreckage of the George Dunbar, which sank in is shown with a chart showing its location.
Ohio waters of Lake Erie, still relatively unexplored, contain an estimated 600 wrecks. A
team of state Geological Survey scientists conducted a pilot study of shipwrecks around
Kelleys Island and the Bass Islands to the west using a tool called side-scan sonar.
0

We wonder if they're
ships," Liebenthal said.
The side-scan sonar is
lowered into the water on a
brace attached to the bow of
the division's 25-foot
research launch.
It operates just below the
surface by bouncing sound
waves off the lake bottom.
Images are produced as the
boat is slowly piloted in a
series of precise, calibrated
runs over wreck areas.
The sound echoes are
recorded in shades of black
and gray, depending on how
retlective and hard a target is.
Scientists look for the straight
lines and angles that might
indicate a hull or superstructure. Some images are more
obvious than others.
The western basin of the
lake is fairly shallow, and
the waters around the
islands are· popular with
recreational divers. Some
wreck sites have been similarly scanned with sonar by
private diving clubs.
Still, Lake Erie remains
almost totally unexplored.
Ohio waters alone contain
estimated 600 wrecks.
"We're pretty far behind
in terms of other Great Lake
states," said Charles E.
Herdendorf, a geologist and
archaeological diver who
served as a consultant on
the study.
"The Canadians are way
ahead of us in mapping their
shipwrecks and opening
them up for diving."
The islands area is particularly rich in wrecks, thanks
in part to two shoals north
of
Kelleys
Island.
Herdendorf estimated that

an

as many as 50 wrecks might
litter the lake bottom around
the islands.
"If ships got hit b~
storms, they could easily htt
the shoals." said Constance
Livchak, a Geological
Survey scientist working on
the project.
And many did.
Nineteen of the 25 wrecks
in the study surround
Kelleys, and etght of those
went down on the rocks.
Only the general locations
of most shipwrecks are
known. One purpose in
searching them OIJt was to
fix their exact positions,
because wrecks can move
with time and the elements.
Ice, in particular, acts like a
bulldozer.
"The ice covering the lake
cracks and grinds together,
pushing up and down ... and
then it scours the bottom,"
Liebenthal said.
Five wrecks were recorded on Gull Island Shoal, but
the sonar failed to find
much of anything left.
Around the islands, wreck
sites can be close together.
A ship's identity can be
uncertain even when sonar
reveals a vessel.
For example, images
recorded off the northwest
shore of Kelleys show
either the Oak Valley or the
LB. Crocker.
Sonar also can reveal why
a ship went down. The C.H.
Plummer, which burned at
its dock in 1888, probably
was lost to a boiler fire and
not to the spontaneous combustion of tts cargo of lime,
Herdendorf said.
"Where the coal was

stored is the only place in
the shipwreck where the tire
had burned completely
through. The rest of the
shipwreck was intact," he
said. Carrie Sowden, a
marine archaeologist with
the Great Lakes Historical
Society in Vermillion, said
she plans to use the data to
plan dives at the sites.
Sowden said she wants to
confirm wrecks as well as
help create dive charts of
the lost vessels.
"We'll go out (with volunteers) and see if we can
locate them. It could be a
shipwreck, a pile of rocks or
ballast. It could be anything," she said. "We can
learn something about the
ship, its construction and
maybe why it sank."
Sowden has dived at six
wreck sites in the past two
years, including the Dundee,
a 200-foot schooner barge
that went down in 1900 in a
storm 14 miles off Cleveland.
"It was under tow. The
first thing that happens in
bad weather is they cut the
tow line. They lost control
of it. The bar~e had no
steering," she satd.
However, the biggest
mystery on the lake for
Sowden is one that hasn't
appeared on any sonar.
In December 1909, the
Marquette and Bessemer
No. 2, a 300-foot fenry
loaded with railroad cars full
of coal, left Conneaut in a
gale for Port Stahley. across
the lake in Canada. The fenry
was never heard from again.
"A lot of people have tried
to t1nd it over the years,"
Sowden said.

Defendant in Boston marketing stunt videotaped police response, attorney says
Bv DAVID WEBER
.1\SSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BOSTON - One of the
men criminally charged
after placing blinking cartoon advertisements around
the city videotaped a police
bomb squad removing one
of the electronic . devices,
but did not tell the officers
the object was harmless.
Surveillance
cameras
caught 27-year-old Peter
Berdovsky
videotaping
officers removing what
they thought was a possible
bomb.
I lis lawyer, Walter Prince,
said
Tuesday:
"Mr.

boats have become more
fuel efficient. The fund had
$250 million as of October.
WASHINGTON - The
At the same time, spending
Bush administration wants to repair aging locks from the
to impose a new user fee on 1930s on the Ohio, the
commercial barges to help Mississippi and other rivers
pay for the soaring cost of has increased dramatically.
maintaining the nation's
"At that rate, you are very
river channels, including the quickly going to exhaust the
Ohio River.
trust fund," Woodley said.
Barge operators say they "The question becomes,
already pay steep taxes to 'What are you going to doT'
keep the Mississippi River
One option, Woodley said,
and other waterways navi- is to tie new fees to how often
gable.
barges go through existing
The proposal, included in locks. Any increase in barge
President Bush's $2.9 tril- traffic would mean more
lion budget proposal. does money in the trust fund.
not specify how fees would
The barge industry, fadng
from PageA1
be assessed.
rising costs of its own, is
HWe' d like to explore user gearing up for a fight.
fee concepts, but we don't
"Operators have already attention into the project
have a proposal that we're paid roughly $1 billion in that they should've."
putting out yet," said John fuel taxes over the past 10
Strand has also told the
Paul Woodley, the assistant years for this purpose," said village its firm stands to
Army secretary who over- Anne Burns, ~ vice presi- lose $60,000 on the project
sees the Army Corps of dent at American Waterways though village officials
Engineers. "We want to hear Operators, a national trade said the company has no
what the industry people and association for the tugboat, legal recourse to recoup
the shippers have in mind.'' towboat and barge industry. that figure because those
Barge operators now pay
a tax of 20 cents per gallon
on diesel fuel. with the
H's easy to subscribe to the
money going into a waterway trust fund . Half the_ c.ost
The Daily Sentinel
of replacing and repamng
Sign up for home delivery
the nation's massive system
of locks and dams comes
or a mail subscription
from that trust fund. while
go to
the other half comes from
www.mydailysentinel.com
the Corps' general revenue.
Sign up todav
The problem. Woodley
said. is that the trust lund
has steadily decreased over
the past decade as barge tow
Bv SAM HANANEL

The Daily Sentinel• Page~

Team uses sonar to fmd Lake Erie shipwrecks

CAMBRIDGE- William R. Levacy, 63, of Kimbolton,
died on Saturday, Feb. 3, 2007.
He was born May 21, 1943, son of the late Everett and
Bernice Vergie Kathilleen Bass Levacy.
There will be no funeral and burial will be private.
Arrangements are under the direction of Bundy-Law
Funeral Home in Cambridge.

THEY'RE

I''

The Daily Sentinel

Obituaries

William R. Levacy

'.'' r.••:'\ ·. \.\'',\'•'

· ullers to the editor are welcome. Thn should be less
than 300 words. All leiters are subject tr) editing, must be
sif!,ned, and include addrr·.u and telephone nwnba No
unsigned lerters H•i/1 bf published. Lellen should be in
good taste, addressing inue.1·, nul persr&gt;rwlities. Leiters of
thanks to organizmions and individtw/.1· &gt;~"ill not b1· accepted for publication.

toward civil liberties. r~li ­ bility in Islam ." He contingious freedoln and interfa ith ues: " Not every Muslim
relations. Th e r rog ram 's female wanb to be Gloria
repeated assoc iation of acts Stcinem or Pari s Hilton. But
or te rrori" n witll Islam will nor do they wa nt a life that
only se rve to im.:rease anti- starts with genital mutilation
Kathryn
Muslim prej udice in our and ends with an honor
Lopez
society.''
~illin g at the hands of your
They were nut random brother-. The overwhelming
tenorists whu alla.: ked us
on Sept. II and who wntin- majority of females m
Cu ntinental
battered
done is particularly signiti- ue to go after our trnops and
"omen's
shelters
ar~
( ant not just because of the allies in Iraq touay. We rc&lt;~ l­
life she 's saved but because ly need to talk about these ~ lu s l i m - which gives you:
In
his
bonk 'ome sense or what women.
it strikes at the heart of the things.
dash of civili zations we are " Ameri ca Alone: The End in the Middle Ea&gt;t might dn
facing today. Consider again of the World as We Know 11 the y had an y women's
that the fact that young It" I Reg nery. 2006). my col - shelters to go to. When half
Nazanin Fatehi killed one or league Mark Steyn write., the population ,,f these sociher assailants is not what that reformin g Islam is kev eties is a potential source of
put her in jail. The issue i' to winning the war on terror. dissent, we need to use it. "
that Islamic law may hav~ It 's s om~thtn g th at non Without being partisan punished this innocent vic- Muslims l'an ' t r~;dl y do but nr even demonizing the
tim anyway. That 's what we "all the free \1 orld " can Iranian government
··create Londilion .., th&lt;It Nazanin Afshin-Jum shone
need to examine .
Instead, though, as a cul - inaease the likelihood of a bright light on a trementure, we give more attention Muslim rel\•rm. or ill an y dous problem we have to'
to a ridiculous press release rutc do '"'t acti;cly impede grapple with . Blaming othfrom the Council on it."
ers for supporting the same·
American-blamic Relations
,-\ n cssc nti.tl part of thi s
war you once did isn't going
denouncing the popular life ~&gt;;:J\' in g ~.: x ~rc i se is 10
to
win this war. Facing hard·
primetime-TV drama "24" su pport rea l wonJc,n's rights .
for daring to pm1ray fi.:tion - Nan.:y P~lu s i may think she questions - harder than.
al terrorists as Muslims. liberated
hundreds
of symbolic, albeit deeply,
After the four-h()ur season American girls to dream of demoralizing, congressional
premiere in January. CAIR one day hecoming Speaker resolutions - will .
( Kwlin·11 Lope ~ is tile ediwhined: "The raw emotion- or the U.S. House of
al impa&lt;:t of tktional scenes Representative s, but there ror of Nmio11 a l Re\'iew
that include widespread are girls out there who arc 011line ( 11'11'1\'. IWiinllalredeath and destruction in reall y actually oppressed. rieH: cmn). She ccm be con -'
America may adversell' Women;s rights are , Mark wctal at klopez @natimwl-'
afTect the public's attitude write,, "the higgest vulnera- re t •it'H '. com. )

www. mydallysentlnel.com

Deaths

.,s,, ·'~: ,',.I
•::~~t
:. • · I 1\.,'\''\\\

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

At the end of January,
Nazanin Fatehi was released
from an Iranian prison. She
had been there for almost
two years for the "crime" of
self-defense against wouldbe rapists. Nazanin, then 17,
fatally stabbed one of the
attackers. But I'm not sure
that matters.
The world should be outraged by what this girl went
through. She should be a
household name.
Her guardian angel was a
former Miss Canada (2003),
Nannin
Afshin-Jam.
Afshin-Jam is a native of
Iran - her family !led during the 1981 revolution, .her
father having been victim of
the Revolutionary Guard's
tyranny. In Fatehi, AfshinJam very easily saw what
could have been her fate and
cesolved to help her.
Afshin-Jam, an aspiring
pop singer whose first
record 's release has been
delaved as she has worked
on saving the life of this
young Iranian Kurd, shows
what a little star-power and
a lot of determination can
do. Self-absorbed celebrities
should put their power to
use . Instead of retlexively
Bush-bashing. they could
put their hearts into a cause
and use their popularity to
make a difference.
What Afshin-Jam has

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

Racine

"WE VELIVER"

Berdovsky didn't do anything inappropriate."
Prince said Berdovsky
had received a call that
morning from a friend who
told him there was a bomb
threat at the Sullivan Square
transit station in Boston. He
said Berdovsky grabbed his
camera and headed out to
the scene, unaware it
involved one of the electronic devices that he and
Sean Stevens. 28. had hung
as part of a guenilla advertising campaign for Turner
Broadcasting, a division of
Time Warner Inc.
"That's what he does. He
fees weren't in the initial
contract.
Despite differences with
the engineering tirm, Hill
said one of the main goals
is to now utilize the new
water system and sooner
than later.

~!¥1

videotapes things. He's a
videotape freelance artist.
He got a call that there was
a bomb threat near his
house and he went to tape
it," Prince said. "When he
got there, he realized what
was going on, and he went
back to his apartment and
called his employer, and
they told him they would
take care of it. That's not an
inappropriate response."
Stevens
was
with
Berdovsky at the time,
according to the Boston

Herald. Stevens' attorney,
Michael Rich, declined to
comment.
A spokeswoman for
Attorney General Martha
Coakley, who is prosecuting Berdovsky and Stevens
on charges of placing a
hoax device and disorderly
conduct, also declined to
comment. ~:iting the criminal case.
Berdovsky and Stevens
have pleaded not guilty.
Their next court date is
March 7.

~

.

All that life has to offer.

~

=

Call for a complimentary bearing consultation.

DWIGHT
ICENHOWER

740-594-6333

ulove Me Tender"
February 10 8 pm
Tickets On Sale Now!

l-800-451-9806
. '
499 R1chland An.,
Athens, OH 4570 l

"' Classic Movie- Romance
S1&gt;nday, Feb. 11 • 2 pm
Ballroom Dancing wiDr. Li
~egins Fe\J. 16
The Ariel-Dater Hall
OH
7411-446-ARTS 12787)

428 Se&lt;. Ave. Gallipolis.

I

I
I

I

�The Daily Sentinel

ho•radat
ATHENS - Pomeroy resident Taylor Russell was recqgnized for her M;masseh
Cutler Scholarship at the
Ohio University Founders
Day Celebration on Feb. 2.
The Cutler Scholarship
Prog ram, founded in 1995.
provides students with
tuition, room and board, and
stipends for summer travel
and structured programs. It
is renewable for up to four

years. Recipie nt s are chosen
based on an extensive set of
criteripn including, academic standing, leadership
potential , physical vigor.
personal integrit y and
extracurricular
ac hievements. The program is modeled after the prestigious
Rhodes Scholarship at
Oxford and the Morehead
Scholarship
at
the
of
North
University

PageA6

OHIO·

~ednesday,February7,2007

Local Weather

Founders
Ohio University's rit·h histoCarolina-Chapel Hill.
"Thi s day gives us an ry and acknowledges current
opportunity to recogni ze the individual contributions thai
htghesl achieve ments of our make it an outstanding acadfa culty and students," emic institution lhal looks
Provost Kathy Krendl says. ahead to a vi brant future.
'' And it lets us give all
Th~ day alS&lt;• featured H
update on where we a r~ in po s t ~r pre .,~ nt ati o n tied to
term s of our goals and the Vision OHIO academic
objecti ves related to .the plan as well as an evening
academic plan."
lecture by the winner of this
Distingui shed
The Founders Day cele- year 's
bration observes and honors Professor Award.

Prep notebook, Page 86

Today's Forecast
Forecast for Wedneld1y, Fell. 7

ctty/Aeglon
High I Low temps

te· &lt;r

PQMER()( -

. Minefield•

1eams from Ga~ and

Youno-town•
t6• 13'

~

Clnclnn811
• 2Q• t9•

~ ~- ~

:r-1.17

Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 49.87

6

'''''

Showers

r:=;·~

Flurnas

~~ ~
~

Ram

~

W

.:.:.

Snow

kle

~
•• • • •

Federal Hocking at Southern, 6:30p.m.
Gallia Academy at Logan, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Belpre, 6'30 p.m
Ea&amp;tern at Waterford, 6:30p.m.
Buffalo at South GaiUa, 6 p.m.
Rock Hill 81 AiWlr Valley, 6 p.m
OVCS at Grace. 7:30p.m.

Weather UI'IOergmu'ld • A~

Wednesday ... Mo s tly
cloudy
in
the
morning ... Then becoming
mostly sunny. Highs in the
lower 20s . West winds I0 to
15 mph.
Wednesday
night ...
AP photo
Barbara Dale says she is free of smoking while standing outside the city office building she Partly cloudy. Cold with
works in, Monday, in Cincinnati. Dale successfully quit smoking using the quit smoking lows around 6 above. West
winds 5 to 10 mph.
lines sponsored by the Ohio Tobacco Prevention Foundation.
Thursday .•. Mostly
sunny.
Highs in the lower
low-up calls.
more people quilling. University of California al
20s. West winds 5 to I0
"Our counselors spend experts say.
San Francisco.
about half an hour on the
"Smoking is a semiconHe predicted a health ben- mph.
.
phone, per call," said scious activity. nol some- efit thai will become eviThursday nlght ••• Mostly
William
Alstetter. thing people think much dent within six months of cloudy with a 30 percent
spokesman for National about When you have to go enforcement of Ohio's ban, chance of snow. Cold with
Jewish. ''They help identify outside to smoke, it takes a which took effect Dec.7.
lows around I0 above. Weol
the triggers thai make peo- conscious decision," said
"Expect a big, immediate winds 5 to 10 mph.
ple smoke ... and talk cop· Dr. Stanton Glantz, profes- drop in heart auacks,"
Frlday... Partly sunny. A
1ng strategy. There's a lot of sor of cardiology at the Glantz said.
chance of snow in the mornpersonal contact; a number
of our counselors are former
smokers."
Ohio's quit line has
helped more than 15,000
people slop
smoking,
Renner said, and 25 percent
of people do not return to
smoking a year after they
.............
quit - about 36 percent if
treatment incorporales use
of the nicotine patch.
Experti . say \II~ .fllll.l for
people who try 10 quit cold
turkey is about 3 percent.
Renner said the goal of
the new triage operation
will be determine whether
some form of face-to-face
consultation might be more
effective or convenient for a
particular smoker than
working with a counselor
by phone .
"There are now more exsmokers in the United
SIHtes than current smokers.
and in the past two decades
we've made a lot of headway in helping smokers
quit," said Dr. Sleven
Schroeder, director of the
Smoking
Cessation
Leadership Center in San
Francisco.
Schroeder estimates lhe
number of smokers at 44.5
million, and the number of
ex-smokers al 50 million.
Clean-air laws, the rising
cost of cigarettes and a cultural swing thai stigmatized
lhe tobacco habit have
helped people quit, he said.
"Our call volume has
gone through the roof since
the smoking ban was
approved," said Natalie
Palmatory, spokeswoman al
Norlhlich, the Columbus
public relations office thai
handles ad campaigns for
lhe
Ohio
Tobacco
Prevention Foundation.
Smoking bans lead to

ing. High s in the lower 20s.
Chance of snow 30 percent.
Friday night through
Saturday
night... Partly
cloudy. Lows around I0
above . Highs in the mid
20s.
Sunday and Sunday
night... Moslly clear. Highs
in the upper 20s. Lows
around I0 above.
Monday•.• Mostly sunny.
Highs around 30.
Monday nlght •.• Mostly
cloudy. Cold with lows 15
to 20.
Thesday... Partly sunny. A
chance uf snow in the afternoon. Highs in the lower
30s. Chance of snow 40 percent

700 W. Main Street
Pomeroy

992·2891

Motorola Prepaid
Wirless $

GlriiBIIkotball

aves 81 Grace, 6:15p.m.

99
each

$ 99
Trash Can
Variety Pack
$ 97

Girt• Bakatt.ll
SEOAL Champ100ships (at Jackson).
TBA
Point Pleasant at River Valley, 6 p.m.

WrnUing
Meigs, TVC League Championship. TBA

Meigs seventh
grade boys advance
in tournament
RACINE - The Meigs
seventh grade boys basketball team defeated Symmes
Valley 46-33 in a semifinal
contest of a tournament held
at Southern High School.
Meigs outscored the
Vikings 11 -0 in the fourth
quarter lo break open a
close game . Leading the
defensive effort · in . the
fourth were Austin King.
Nathan Rothgeb, Colton
Stewart and Cole Turner.
Scoring for Meigs were
Ryan Taylor with 17 points,
Jesse Smith with nine,
Nathan Roberts eight ,
Steven Mahr seven, Jeffrey
Roush and Dijaun Robinson
two, and Cody Manox hit a
free throw.
Meigs improved to 11-3
and will face South Gallia
in the title game.
Meigs also defeated River
Valley 44-39 in the first
round. Roberts had I),
Taylor and Manox nine
each. Jesse Smith eight.
Roush three and Robinson
two.

Boy• Stondlngo

Tampico
Punch

Sugardale Shank
Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)27.91
Ohio V.lley Bane Corp. (NAS.
DAQ)-25.40
BIT (NYSE) - 42.83
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 28.87
.,_k:o (NYSE) - 84.38
Premier (NASDAQ) - 111.21
Roekweii(NYSE) --62.42
Rocky Booto (NASDAQ) 15.74
Royal Dutch Shell - 88.33
Sears Holdln&amp; (NASDAQ)178.05
W~art (NYSE) - 48.58
Wendy'a (NYSE) - 33.22
worthlncton I NYSF.) - 19.08
Dally atock reporto are the 4
p.m. ET closlllfl quot" ol transactions for Feb. 8, 2007, provi- by Edward Joneo ftnanc:lat
advisors loaac Millo In GaiNpotls
at ( 740) 441·9441, Trent
A0111h In Pomeroy at ( 740)
992-3875, and Leoley Marrero
In Point Pleaoant at ( 304) 8740174. Member StPC.

Ham Portions

98¢
lb.

p;g~...

.$

Pasta Sauce

&amp;pack
6.75oz
btls

Good Thru Saturday, Feb. 10, 2007 • We reserve the

to limit

COLUMBUS (AP) - Michigan's offense.
Mike Conley Jr. scored a
Conley and Oden were
career-high 23 points and teammates at Lawrence
Greg Oden created havoc at North Hi~h School in
the defensive end lo lead Indianapolis, guiding the
No. 3 Ohio State past school to slate champiMichigan 76-63 on Tuesday onships their last three seanight .
sons
before
enrolling
Conley was a constant for together at Ohto State.
the Buckeyes (21·3, 9- 1 Big . Courtney Stms h~d 17
Ten) as Oden ballled foul pomts and Dton .Hams and
trouble and sal out R 1/2 Ekpe Udoh 14 ap1ece tor the
minutes of lhe second half. Wolvermes 0 6· 8·.4· 5 ), who
.
.
.
have lost four strmghl.
The freshman pomt guard
Ohio State's fans pointed
htt 9-of-12 .shots from the at Michigan's bench and
field, mcludmg two 3-potnl- chanted "N-1-T! N-1-T!" in
ers, and made all three of h1s the final minute.
foul shots. He also had .stx
A snowstorm thai dumped
asststs, one .steal a~d JUSI . up 10 ) inches of snow on
one turnover m 38 mmutes. the Columbus area brought
Oden added 15 pomts. traffic to a standstill and
eight rebounds at~d six delayed the arrival of the
blocked shots, tn addmon to officials. An Ohio State oftiallering the traject~ry. of cial said they normally
numerous other shots ms1de. arrive 90 minutes before a
Jamar Buller added II game but two of the three
point s for Ohio Stale, which game officials did tiol gel to
has won its last eight games the arena until 15 minutes
overall and its last 23 home before the tip.
games.
A capacity crowd was
The Buckeyes blocked 14 expected, but the arena
shots in the game, putting a
serious
damper
on
Please IH OSU, B6

'' t's

TVC

ALL .

Federal Hocking . . ... 7·0 .. 14·2
Miller . . .
. .. .... .. 5·2 .. 11 ·4
Waterford
... 4·3 ... 9·6
Southern
. . . .3-4 .. .5·12

Eastern
Trimble .

CLEVELAND (AP)
LeBron James and the
Cavaliers want to run, run,
run. Coach Mike Brown
isn't ready to let his team
loose.
With their offense sputtering during a rough patch in
an Lip-and -down season,
some of the Cavaliers, most
prominenlly James , are
questionin~
the club's
defense-onenled philosophy.
Jame s. whose scoring
average is down five points
from last season, believes
the Cavs would be bener off
playing at a faster pace, ·
pu~hing the ball up the floor
to quicken the game's
tempo, and, to score more
points.
Larry Hughe s has the
same opinion. as do other
Cleveland players.
That contradicts Brown's
AP photo offensive style: a deliberate,
Ohio State's Greg Oden. center. pulls down a rebOunc half-court flow of screens
between Michigan's Courtney Sims, left, and Reed Baker durPlease see Cavs. Bl
ing the first half of a basketball game Tuesday in Columbus.

earn

ort"

Introducing the Family Medicine Office Staff of
Nancy B. Lares, MD &amp; Carrie Lockhart Dillard, MD

Hooking

. . .1·6 .. . 1-15
. . .. 1·6 .. .2·13
OhiO

TVC
Vinton County
Alexander
Belpre
Nei-Vork ..
Wellston . .

Meigs .

.. 8·0
.5·2
.4·3

..

ALL

16·0
10·5
.9·6
.7-6
" .J.4
" .. 2·5 . ' .3·13
.3· 13
" " " .. 06

Putting The Patient First

O!rla Standing•

medical office
left, and

Tri-Vallay Conference
Hocking

TVC

ALL

.. 7·0 .. .15·2
.......... .5·3
11 ·7
Eastern
8·10
F&amp;d.eral Hocking . . . ... 5·3
. .. 3-5
7· 11
Trimbkl
4·13
.......... 2·6
Miller
Southern
.. . . .1-6 . .6· 11

Ohio

TVC

·49
26oz
jar

Alexander .
. ...
Vinton County
Nels-York
..
Meigs . . . . . . . . . . .
Welliiton
.. ..

ALL

.9-0 . .. 17·2
.6·2 .. 14-3
,5·3 ... 15·3
.3-6 . .. 9-10

1·7 . .. tH2
.. 1·7 ... 1-16

B&amp;lpre

CoNTAcrUs
OVP ScoreLine

(5 p.m.·1 1.111.)

1-740..446-2342 ext. 33

8oz

Fu- 1·74()..446-3008
E-mail- sportsOmydailysentinel.com

pkg

Sll.Ql'!oJ&gt;tofl

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33

•
•
•
•

Adult &amp; pediatric medicine
Women's health care
Minor office procedures
Sports physicals

bShermanO mydailytribune.com

Larry

Crum, Sports Writer

(740} 446-2342, ext 23
lcrumOmydail'yregister.com

7.3-11oz pkg

Piease see Haranc. Bl

Cavs urge
coach to let
them run

No. 3 Buckeyes take
down Michigan, 76-63

"

Fish Stick MeaL Chicken Fried
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&amp; Tamale Combo Meal
Banquet Frozen Meals
Pnces

tion by coming lo me with
thi s type of deal before I was
a free agent ," said Harang,
who could earn $47.25 milli on to $48.5 million over
fi ve years if the 20 II option
is exerci sed.
General manager Wayne
Kri vs ky talked to agents
Sam and Seth Levinson
about an ex tension last summer. but the y were far apart
in years and money.
·'We kind of had a stalemale." Kri vsk y said . "We
both agreed we were too far
apart . We decided 10 rekindl e tho se talks once the
numbers were filed for arbi-

Waterford

K~~ft Cheese $ 79
Cubes

CINCINNATI - Ri ghthander Aaron Harang avoided arbitration by agreeing to
a $36.5 million, four-year
contract Tuesday that made
him the Cincinnati Reds·
highest-paid pitcher.
Harang emerged as one of
the NL's top starters last sea·
son despite pitching· in a
ballpark thai is one of the
most homer-friendly in the
major leagues. He tied for
the league lead with 16 wins
and led the NL with 216
APphoto strikeouts and six complete
Cincinnati Reds pitcher Aaron Harang, left, shakes hands with Reds owner Bob Castellini at games.
"They showed me dedicaa news conference Tuesday in Cincinnati. The Reds signed Harang to a four year contract.

-n-:J·VIIIey Conference

Plastic 32 Cial.

each

BY JoE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Saturday'• IIIDIU

PREP BASKETBAU

TracFone

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE)- 45.05
(NASDAQ)- 83.06
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 89.39
Bi&amp; Lota (NYSE)- 28.80
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 33.94
Bor&amp;Wamer (NYSE) - 70.00
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)41.78
. Cllamptnn (NASDAQ)- 9.24
Charm In&amp; Shops (NASDAQ) 13.30
City Holdtllfl (NASDAQ)- 40.82
Collins (NYSE)- 89.&amp;9
Dollar General (NYSE) -17.00
DuPont (NYSE) - 50.81
US Bank (NYSE) - 31.02
a.t•'letl (NYIE) - 80.45
I o.n.noi 'Eiectrlc (NYSE)' 38.31
.
-,.oa.tdlon ( NYSE) j 89.91
Jl' Morpn (NYSE) - 51.00
K...... (NYSE)- 25.72
Limited Brands ( NYSE) -

Fridly'a Qlll'fll

Boy1811ketboll

02007

Cloo1~ ~

Meigs IXU!Iies.

Tbundly'a aamta
Qlrta BuQtball
Fairland at Rilt'Eir Valley. 6 p.m
Trimble at Southern. 6 p.m.
Meigs at Alexander. 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Eastern. 6 p.m.
Soum Gallia at Teays Valley, 6 p.m

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRIT ER

P•"'v

Harang gets 4-year
deal from Cincinnati

up;:orrWlg college

Wtdnttdly'a MOll'
Bor• a..kt!tball
Atver Valley v&amp;. Gallia Academy (a! RIO
Grande), 5 p.m
Olrta Balll:etbllll
lron)on at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
•
Wreatlinu
Ri~o~er Valley a1 Fairtand, 6 p.m.

w 1o· t:.__::)

Cloudy

" tdwdullt of

ana hl(.fl &amp;d'lool wra.ty lpOI'bnQ 8llef'lls II'WOiw'lg

1

6

VVednesday,February7,2007

LocAL ScHEDULE

Toledo•

BY TERRY KINNEY

Akzo

Colts return to frigid lndy, Page 82
Ohio AP basketball poll, Page 86

Ohio making change to how it helps smokers quit
CINCINNATI - Ohio is
retooling its quit smoking
campaign to handle a leap
in the number of smokers
who are trying to break the
habit becaus~ uf the stat~ 's
new ban on most indoor
public smoking.
Instead of all quit line
calls going straight to a telephone counselor, the Ohio
Tobacco
Prevention
Foundation is taking bids to
create a triage center to
determine the best way to
help smokers quit .
"We think the new system
will increase our effectiveness by referring sonie people to local programs,
maybe community programs right around the corner," said Mike Renner, the
foundation's
executive
director.
Barbara Dale, 56, of
Cincinnati, is sold on the
quit line. She had stopped
smoking for several years
but after starting again
finally decided she had to
quit for good.
"I had a couple of family
members die of cancer." she
said. " I wasn 'I feeling as
good as I used lo feel. My
doctor diagnosed me with
high blood pressure."
She started cutting back
when she began talking to a
counselor, and stopped
smoking completely in
about two months. That was
two years ago.
"Now by blood pressure
is under control," she said.
"My clothes smell good
now, and my car smells
great."
In 1998, cigarette makers
agreed to pay $206 billion
to settle lawsuits with 46
states thai claimed smoking
added to the states' health
care costs. Some slates created s'top-smoking help
lines, while others fed .a cottage industry of quit lines
whose yearly revenue could
be $50 million, according to
some estimates.
The Ohio Quit Line is
answered by counselors in
Denver, where the National
Jewish
Medical
and
Research Center operates
quit lines for Ohio,
Colorado, Montana and
Idaho.
The $1.8 million contract
to operate the Ohio line.
which generales about
4,000 calls a month, was
won by National Jewish in
competitive bidding three
years ago and is up for bids
again this year.
There are about 20
providers
nationwide,
according 10 the North
American
Quitline
Consortium.
Wherever
someone dials the national
quit line number, 1-800QUIT NOW, the call is routed to the provider thai
serves that state.
Typically, a counselor sets
up a series of live or six fol-

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

Bryan Walte1'8, Sports Writer
.. (740) 446-2342. ext 33
bwalters @myda1lytribune.com

• Geriatrics
• Skin procedures

nt Vailley M"""."'
qf,~$th Street &amp;,,~, .,....,
Pleasant,

I

I

I

I

�The Daily Sentinel

ho•radat
ATHENS - Pomeroy resident Taylor Russell was recqgnized for her M;masseh
Cutler Scholarship at the
Ohio University Founders
Day Celebration on Feb. 2.
The Cutler Scholarship
Prog ram, founded in 1995.
provides students with
tuition, room and board, and
stipends for summer travel
and structured programs. It
is renewable for up to four

years. Recipie nt s are chosen
based on an extensive set of
criteripn including, academic standing, leadership
potential , physical vigor.
personal integrit y and
extracurricular
ac hievements. The program is modeled after the prestigious
Rhodes Scholarship at
Oxford and the Morehead
Scholarship
at
the
of
North
University

PageA6

OHIO·

~ednesday,February7,2007

Local Weather

Founders
Ohio University's rit·h histoCarolina-Chapel Hill.
"Thi s day gives us an ry and acknowledges current
opportunity to recogni ze the individual contributions thai
htghesl achieve ments of our make it an outstanding acadfa culty and students," emic institution lhal looks
Provost Kathy Krendl says. ahead to a vi brant future.
'' And it lets us give all
Th~ day alS&lt;• featured H
update on where we a r~ in po s t ~r pre .,~ nt ati o n tied to
term s of our goals and the Vision OHIO academic
objecti ves related to .the plan as well as an evening
academic plan."
lecture by the winner of this
Distingui shed
The Founders Day cele- year 's
bration observes and honors Professor Award.

Prep notebook, Page 86

Today's Forecast
Forecast for Wedneld1y, Fell. 7

ctty/Aeglon
High I Low temps

te· &lt;r

PQMER()( -

. Minefield•

1eams from Ga~ and

Youno-town•
t6• 13'

~

Clnclnn811
• 2Q• t9•

~ ~- ~

:r-1.17

Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 49.87

6

'''''

Showers

r:=;·~

Flurnas

~~ ~
~

Ram

~

W

.:.:.

Snow

kle

~
•• • • •

Federal Hocking at Southern, 6:30p.m.
Gallia Academy at Logan, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Belpre, 6'30 p.m
Ea&amp;tern at Waterford, 6:30p.m.
Buffalo at South GaiUa, 6 p.m.
Rock Hill 81 AiWlr Valley, 6 p.m
OVCS at Grace. 7:30p.m.

Weather UI'IOergmu'ld • A~

Wednesday ... Mo s tly
cloudy
in
the
morning ... Then becoming
mostly sunny. Highs in the
lower 20s . West winds I0 to
15 mph.
Wednesday
night ...
AP photo
Barbara Dale says she is free of smoking while standing outside the city office building she Partly cloudy. Cold with
works in, Monday, in Cincinnati. Dale successfully quit smoking using the quit smoking lows around 6 above. West
winds 5 to 10 mph.
lines sponsored by the Ohio Tobacco Prevention Foundation.
Thursday .•. Mostly
sunny.
Highs in the lower
low-up calls.
more people quilling. University of California al
20s. West winds 5 to I0
"Our counselors spend experts say.
San Francisco.
about half an hour on the
"Smoking is a semiconHe predicted a health ben- mph.
.
phone, per call," said scious activity. nol some- efit thai will become eviThursday nlght ••• Mostly
William
Alstetter. thing people think much dent within six months of cloudy with a 30 percent
spokesman for National about When you have to go enforcement of Ohio's ban, chance of snow. Cold with
Jewish. ''They help identify outside to smoke, it takes a which took effect Dec.7.
lows around I0 above. Weol
the triggers thai make peo- conscious decision," said
"Expect a big, immediate winds 5 to 10 mph.
ple smoke ... and talk cop· Dr. Stanton Glantz, profes- drop in heart auacks,"
Frlday... Partly sunny. A
1ng strategy. There's a lot of sor of cardiology at the Glantz said.
chance of snow in the mornpersonal contact; a number
of our counselors are former
smokers."
Ohio's quit line has
helped more than 15,000
people slop
smoking,
Renner said, and 25 percent
of people do not return to
smoking a year after they
.............
quit - about 36 percent if
treatment incorporales use
of the nicotine patch.
Experti . say \II~ .fllll.l for
people who try 10 quit cold
turkey is about 3 percent.
Renner said the goal of
the new triage operation
will be determine whether
some form of face-to-face
consultation might be more
effective or convenient for a
particular smoker than
working with a counselor
by phone .
"There are now more exsmokers in the United
SIHtes than current smokers.
and in the past two decades
we've made a lot of headway in helping smokers
quit," said Dr. Sleven
Schroeder, director of the
Smoking
Cessation
Leadership Center in San
Francisco.
Schroeder estimates lhe
number of smokers at 44.5
million, and the number of
ex-smokers al 50 million.
Clean-air laws, the rising
cost of cigarettes and a cultural swing thai stigmatized
lhe tobacco habit have
helped people quit, he said.
"Our call volume has
gone through the roof since
the smoking ban was
approved," said Natalie
Palmatory, spokeswoman al
Norlhlich, the Columbus
public relations office thai
handles ad campaigns for
lhe
Ohio
Tobacco
Prevention Foundation.
Smoking bans lead to

ing. High s in the lower 20s.
Chance of snow 30 percent.
Friday night through
Saturday
night... Partly
cloudy. Lows around I0
above . Highs in the mid
20s.
Sunday and Sunday
night... Moslly clear. Highs
in the upper 20s. Lows
around I0 above.
Monday•.• Mostly sunny.
Highs around 30.
Monday nlght •.• Mostly
cloudy. Cold with lows 15
to 20.
Thesday... Partly sunny. A
chance uf snow in the afternoon. Highs in the lower
30s. Chance of snow 40 percent

700 W. Main Street
Pomeroy

992·2891

Motorola Prepaid
Wirless $

GlriiBIIkotball

aves 81 Grace, 6:15p.m.

99
each

$ 99
Trash Can
Variety Pack
$ 97

Girt• Bakatt.ll
SEOAL Champ100ships (at Jackson).
TBA
Point Pleasant at River Valley, 6 p.m.

WrnUing
Meigs, TVC League Championship. TBA

Meigs seventh
grade boys advance
in tournament
RACINE - The Meigs
seventh grade boys basketball team defeated Symmes
Valley 46-33 in a semifinal
contest of a tournament held
at Southern High School.
Meigs outscored the
Vikings 11 -0 in the fourth
quarter lo break open a
close game . Leading the
defensive effort · in . the
fourth were Austin King.
Nathan Rothgeb, Colton
Stewart and Cole Turner.
Scoring for Meigs were
Ryan Taylor with 17 points,
Jesse Smith with nine,
Nathan Roberts eight ,
Steven Mahr seven, Jeffrey
Roush and Dijaun Robinson
two, and Cody Manox hit a
free throw.
Meigs improved to 11-3
and will face South Gallia
in the title game.
Meigs also defeated River
Valley 44-39 in the first
round. Roberts had I),
Taylor and Manox nine
each. Jesse Smith eight.
Roush three and Robinson
two.

Boy• Stondlngo

Tampico
Punch

Sugardale Shank
Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)27.91
Ohio V.lley Bane Corp. (NAS.
DAQ)-25.40
BIT (NYSE) - 42.83
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 28.87
.,_k:o (NYSE) - 84.38
Premier (NASDAQ) - 111.21
Roekweii(NYSE) --62.42
Rocky Booto (NASDAQ) 15.74
Royal Dutch Shell - 88.33
Sears Holdln&amp; (NASDAQ)178.05
W~art (NYSE) - 48.58
Wendy'a (NYSE) - 33.22
worthlncton I NYSF.) - 19.08
Dally atock reporto are the 4
p.m. ET closlllfl quot" ol transactions for Feb. 8, 2007, provi- by Edward Joneo ftnanc:lat
advisors loaac Millo In GaiNpotls
at ( 740) 441·9441, Trent
A0111h In Pomeroy at ( 740)
992-3875, and Leoley Marrero
In Point Pleaoant at ( 304) 8740174. Member StPC.

Ham Portions

98¢
lb.

p;g~...

.$

Pasta Sauce

&amp;pack
6.75oz
btls

Good Thru Saturday, Feb. 10, 2007 • We reserve the

to limit

COLUMBUS (AP) - Michigan's offense.
Mike Conley Jr. scored a
Conley and Oden were
career-high 23 points and teammates at Lawrence
Greg Oden created havoc at North Hi~h School in
the defensive end lo lead Indianapolis, guiding the
No. 3 Ohio State past school to slate champiMichigan 76-63 on Tuesday onships their last three seanight .
sons
before
enrolling
Conley was a constant for together at Ohto State.
the Buckeyes (21·3, 9- 1 Big . Courtney Stms h~d 17
Ten) as Oden ballled foul pomts and Dton .Hams and
trouble and sal out R 1/2 Ekpe Udoh 14 ap1ece tor the
minutes of lhe second half. Wolvermes 0 6· 8·.4· 5 ), who
.
.
.
have lost four strmghl.
The freshman pomt guard
Ohio State's fans pointed
htt 9-of-12 .shots from the at Michigan's bench and
field, mcludmg two 3-potnl- chanted "N-1-T! N-1-T!" in
ers, and made all three of h1s the final minute.
foul shots. He also had .stx
A snowstorm thai dumped
asststs, one .steal a~d JUSI . up 10 ) inches of snow on
one turnover m 38 mmutes. the Columbus area brought
Oden added 15 pomts. traffic to a standstill and
eight rebounds at~d six delayed the arrival of the
blocked shots, tn addmon to officials. An Ohio State oftiallering the traject~ry. of cial said they normally
numerous other shots ms1de. arrive 90 minutes before a
Jamar Buller added II game but two of the three
point s for Ohio Stale, which game officials did tiol gel to
has won its last eight games the arena until 15 minutes
overall and its last 23 home before the tip.
games.
A capacity crowd was
The Buckeyes blocked 14 expected, but the arena
shots in the game, putting a
serious
damper
on
Please IH OSU, B6

'' t's

TVC

ALL .

Federal Hocking . . ... 7·0 .. 14·2
Miller . . .
. .. .... .. 5·2 .. 11 ·4
Waterford
... 4·3 ... 9·6
Southern
. . . .3-4 .. .5·12

Eastern
Trimble .

CLEVELAND (AP)
LeBron James and the
Cavaliers want to run, run,
run. Coach Mike Brown
isn't ready to let his team
loose.
With their offense sputtering during a rough patch in
an Lip-and -down season,
some of the Cavaliers, most
prominenlly James , are
questionin~
the club's
defense-onenled philosophy.
Jame s. whose scoring
average is down five points
from last season, believes
the Cavs would be bener off
playing at a faster pace, ·
pu~hing the ball up the floor
to quicken the game's
tempo, and, to score more
points.
Larry Hughe s has the
same opinion. as do other
Cleveland players.
That contradicts Brown's
AP photo offensive style: a deliberate,
Ohio State's Greg Oden. center. pulls down a rebOunc half-court flow of screens
between Michigan's Courtney Sims, left, and Reed Baker durPlease see Cavs. Bl
ing the first half of a basketball game Tuesday in Columbus.

earn

ort"

Introducing the Family Medicine Office Staff of
Nancy B. Lares, MD &amp; Carrie Lockhart Dillard, MD

Hooking

. . .1·6 .. . 1-15
. . .. 1·6 .. .2·13
OhiO

TVC
Vinton County
Alexander
Belpre
Nei-Vork ..
Wellston . .

Meigs .

.. 8·0
.5·2
.4·3

..

ALL

16·0
10·5
.9·6
.7-6
" .J.4
" .. 2·5 . ' .3·13
.3· 13
" " " .. 06

Putting The Patient First

O!rla Standing•

medical office
left, and

Tri-Vallay Conference
Hocking

TVC

ALL

.. 7·0 .. .15·2
.......... .5·3
11 ·7
Eastern
8·10
F&amp;d.eral Hocking . . . ... 5·3
. .. 3-5
7· 11
Trimbkl
4·13
.......... 2·6
Miller
Southern
.. . . .1-6 . .6· 11

Ohio

TVC

·49
26oz
jar

Alexander .
. ...
Vinton County
Nels-York
..
Meigs . . . . . . . . . . .
Welliiton
.. ..

ALL

.9-0 . .. 17·2
.6·2 .. 14-3
,5·3 ... 15·3
.3-6 . .. 9-10

1·7 . .. tH2
.. 1·7 ... 1-16

B&amp;lpre

CoNTAcrUs
OVP ScoreLine

(5 p.m.·1 1.111.)

1-740..446-2342 ext. 33

8oz

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E-mail- sportsOmydailysentinel.com

pkg

Sll.Ql'!oJ&gt;tofl

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33

•
•
•
•

Adult &amp; pediatric medicine
Women's health care
Minor office procedures
Sports physicals

bShermanO mydailytribune.com

Larry

Crum, Sports Writer

(740} 446-2342, ext 23
lcrumOmydail'yregister.com

7.3-11oz pkg

Piease see Haranc. Bl

Cavs urge
coach to let
them run

No. 3 Buckeyes take
down Michigan, 76-63

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Fish Stick MeaL Chicken Fried
Chicken Meal or Beef Enchilada
&amp; Tamale Combo Meal
Banquet Frozen Meals
Pnces

tion by coming lo me with
thi s type of deal before I was
a free agent ," said Harang,
who could earn $47.25 milli on to $48.5 million over
fi ve years if the 20 II option
is exerci sed.
General manager Wayne
Kri vs ky talked to agents
Sam and Seth Levinson
about an ex tension last summer. but the y were far apart
in years and money.
·'We kind of had a stalemale." Kri vsk y said . "We
both agreed we were too far
apart . We decided 10 rekindl e tho se talks once the
numbers were filed for arbi-

Waterford

K~~ft Cheese $ 79
Cubes

CINCINNATI - Ri ghthander Aaron Harang avoided arbitration by agreeing to
a $36.5 million, four-year
contract Tuesday that made
him the Cincinnati Reds·
highest-paid pitcher.
Harang emerged as one of
the NL's top starters last sea·
son despite pitching· in a
ballpark thai is one of the
most homer-friendly in the
major leagues. He tied for
the league lead with 16 wins
and led the NL with 216
APphoto strikeouts and six complete
Cincinnati Reds pitcher Aaron Harang, left, shakes hands with Reds owner Bob Castellini at games.
"They showed me dedicaa news conference Tuesday in Cincinnati. The Reds signed Harang to a four year contract.

-n-:J·VIIIey Conference

Plastic 32 Cial.

each

BY JoE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Saturday'• IIIDIU

PREP BASKETBAU

TracFone

Local Stocks
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Fridly'a Qlll'fll

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Cloo1~ ~

Meigs IXU!Iies.

Tbundly'a aamta
Qlrta BuQtball
Fairland at Rilt'Eir Valley. 6 p.m
Trimble at Southern. 6 p.m.
Meigs at Alexander. 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Eastern. 6 p.m.
Soum Gallia at Teays Valley, 6 p.m

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRIT ER

P•"'v

Harang gets 4-year
deal from Cincinnati

up;:orrWlg college

Wtdnttdly'a MOll'
Bor• a..kt!tball
Atver Valley v&amp;. Gallia Academy (a! RIO
Grande), 5 p.m
Olrta Balll:etbllll
lron)on at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
•
Wreatlinu
Ri~o~er Valley a1 Fairtand, 6 p.m.

w 1o· t:.__::)

Cloudy

" tdwdullt of

ana hl(.fl &amp;d'lool wra.ty lpOI'bnQ 8llef'lls II'WOiw'lg

1

6

VVednesday,February7,2007

LocAL ScHEDULE

Toledo•

BY TERRY KINNEY

Akzo

Colts return to frigid lndy, Page 82
Ohio AP basketball poll, Page 86

Ohio making change to how it helps smokers quit
CINCINNATI - Ohio is
retooling its quit smoking
campaign to handle a leap
in the number of smokers
who are trying to break the
habit becaus~ uf the stat~ 's
new ban on most indoor
public smoking.
Instead of all quit line
calls going straight to a telephone counselor, the Ohio
Tobacco
Prevention
Foundation is taking bids to
create a triage center to
determine the best way to
help smokers quit .
"We think the new system
will increase our effectiveness by referring sonie people to local programs,
maybe community programs right around the corner," said Mike Renner, the
foundation's
executive
director.
Barbara Dale, 56, of
Cincinnati, is sold on the
quit line. She had stopped
smoking for several years
but after starting again
finally decided she had to
quit for good.
"I had a couple of family
members die of cancer." she
said. " I wasn 'I feeling as
good as I used lo feel. My
doctor diagnosed me with
high blood pressure."
She started cutting back
when she began talking to a
counselor, and stopped
smoking completely in
about two months. That was
two years ago.
"Now by blood pressure
is under control," she said.
"My clothes smell good
now, and my car smells
great."
In 1998, cigarette makers
agreed to pay $206 billion
to settle lawsuits with 46
states thai claimed smoking
added to the states' health
care costs. Some slates created s'top-smoking help
lines, while others fed .a cottage industry of quit lines
whose yearly revenue could
be $50 million, according to
some estimates.
The Ohio Quit Line is
answered by counselors in
Denver, where the National
Jewish
Medical
and
Research Center operates
quit lines for Ohio,
Colorado, Montana and
Idaho.
The $1.8 million contract
to operate the Ohio line.
which generales about
4,000 calls a month, was
won by National Jewish in
competitive bidding three
years ago and is up for bids
again this year.
There are about 20
providers
nationwide,
according 10 the North
American
Quitline
Consortium.
Wherever
someone dials the national
quit line number, 1-800QUIT NOW, the call is routed to the provider thai
serves that state.
Typically, a counselor sets
up a series of live or six fol-

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

Bryan Walte1'8, Sports Writer
.. (740) 446-2342. ext 33
bwalters @myda1lytribune.com

• Geriatrics
• Skin procedures

nt Vailley M"""."'
qf,~$th Street &amp;,,~, .,....,
Pleasant,

I

I

I

I

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Wednesdi',Y• February 7, 2007

www .mydailysentinel.com

tl!:rihune - Sentinel - l\egister

Colts return to frigid Indy and rally at Dome

AP photo

·Cleveland Cavaliers coach Mike Brown gives direction to
:players during the second quarter of an NBA basketball
game against the Charlotte Bobcats Friday in Clewland.

Cavs
fromPageBl
and patience he learned
working on San Antonio
coach Gregg Popovich's
staff- a system that helped
the Cavs advance in last
season's playoffs.
James, though, feels it's
time for a change. It's time to
run.
"I think so," he said.
"We've got enough athletes
where we can get up and
down the coun. At times the
coaching staff feels the same
way, at other times, no. We're
kind of playing basketball for
the playoffs. Our offense is
geared toward half-coun basketball instead of getting out
and running."
James said he has told the
coach that, too.
Brown, in his second season as Cleveland's coach,
won't make any radical
changes and he doesn't mind
if the Cavaliers run more. But
when they do press the action.
he just wants them to be smart
about it.
'This thin~ is ever evolving," he satd. "You tweak
stuff, you don't make
changes. I don't believe in
that. Whatever you have,
especially what's working for

you, you make a tweak here
and a tweak there and do use
repetition and that's how you
get better."
Right now, the Cavs and
their coach are begging to differ. It's a debate - nothing
more. But having players on
one page, and the coach on
another is never a good thing
for any team. And not wHen
the res1dent superstar isn't satisfied.
The Cavaliers have lost
eight of 12 and are sliding in
the standings after being atop
the Eastern Conference for
much of the season's first
half. However, since the
opener they've had trouble
pulling the ball in the basket.
Following a 90-78 loss to
the Detroit Pistons on Sunday.
the Cavs rank 24th in the
league in scoring (95.3 points
per game), 26th in field-goal
percentage and 30th (last) in
free-throw r.ercentage.
And whtle the Cavaliers
(27-21) haven't _played up to
their expectations. they don't
have any problems a liltle
running can't cure.
"I still don't think it is tiJlle
to panic. we need to keep an
even keel," Hughes said. "I
definitely think we should run
more, 11 suns our team.
Somewhat, we're trying. I
think that we're a much belter
running team than we've
showed."

INDIANAPOLIS (APJ About 40,000 Indianapolis
fans s how~d up to thank the
Colts for their Super Bowl
run and all the players watlt·
ed to do was prdise their boisterous supporters.
A frenzied .:rowd descended
on
downtown
Indianapolis and filed into
the RCA Dome for a homecoming rally Monday night
to celebrate the Colts' 29-17
victory over the Chicago
Bears in the NFL championship. The fans chanted
"dee-fense. dee-fense" and
basked in the city's first
major pro sports title in more
than 30 years.
"You guys are the 12th
man," defensive end Dwight
Freeney told the crowd during the rally.
The Colts, who finally
found a defense in the playotfs to complement Peyton
Manning's potent offense,
returned to Indianapolis late
Monday afternoon, stopped
off at their training facility
and boarded buses for a trip
back downtown and a frigid,
bone-numbing parade to the
Dome.
Most of the fans waited
inside the Dome, although
hundreds went back out onto
the streets as the rarade
approached. Many o them
shared triumphant shouts and
high-fives with the players

Harang
fromPageBl
tration. We made an offer,
and they weren't that far
apart."
Harang made $2.35 million last season, and wanted
$5 .5 million in arbitration.
The Red &gt; countered with a
$4.25 million offer in arbitration, then went about trying to avoid the hearing by
getting a long-term deal.
Harang gets base salaries
of $4.25 million this season,
$6.75 million in 2008, $11
million in 2009 and $12.5
million in 2010. There is a
club option for 20 II at
$12.75 million with a $2
million buyout.
If Harang pitches 210
innings in 2010, the option
increases to $13 million. If

AP photo

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning speaks to
the crowd during a ratlyin Indianapolis Monday. The Colts
defeated the Chicago Bears to win Super Bowl XLI.

who were riding atop the
slow-moving trucks and
floats.
Inside, the fans were just as
loud as they were when the
Colts left two weeks earlier
with the AFC championship.
"This is remarkable," tight
end Dallas Clark said. "I didn't know Indianapolis had
this many people. You guys
are the greatest.
Many of the fans were
wearing Colts blue. Many
held signs such as "We love
our Colts" or )ust a simple
"Thank You.' Two giant
inflatable balloons resemhe is traded, the option
and
becomes
mutual
increases to $14 million,
with a $2.5 million buyout.
The 28·year-old pitcher's
deal eclipses that of leftbander Eric Milton, who is
entering the final season of
a $25.5 million, three-year
contract.
Cincinnati
acquired
Harang from Oakland as
part of their 2003 midseason trading splurge. The
ballclub moved into Great
American Ball Park that
season. and fired general
manager Jim Bowden when
it failed to contend. The
Reds traded their veterans
for prospects, and obtained
Harang for outfielder Jose
Guillen.
Since he joined the Reds,
Harang has been the most
dependable member of a
pitching staff that has been

bling Colts players flanked a
stage that was set up on the
floor of the Dome. Amid a
barrage of camera flashes
from the stands, many of the
Colts - coach Tony Dungy.
too - brought out their own
cameras to record the
moment.
"You guys are awesome,"
Dungy told the crowd. "We
had a team party (in Miami)
... but we were looking forward to coming home. This is
more than we could have
ever expected. Thank you for
this turnout."
Manning, the MYP of the
the club's biggest weakness.
He had his best season last
year, going 16-11 with a
3. 76 earned run average in
35 stans.
Harang was the only Reds
player in arbitration. Less
than an hour before the
Reds held a news conference to announce his signing , Krivsky received a
copy of the brief that
Harang's agents had prepared to argue for the bigger
amount in arbitration.
The agents' brief pointed
out that Harang is one of
only eight pitchers since
1960 to lead the NL in wins
and strikeouts. The others:
Randy Johnson, John
Smoltz, Dwight Gooden.
Steve Carlton, Tom Seaver.
Sandy Koufax and Don
Drysdale.
''So Aaron had a heck of a
year," Krivsky said. "He's

Colts' win in rain-soaked
Miami on Sunday night, also
thanked the fans, as well as
Dungy and the entire organization.
"It sure feels good to be
back in this Dome after playing in that weather last
night." Manning said. "On
hehalf of the players, we
want to thank the greatest
fans in the world."
Hunter Smith, the team's
punter, also praised the fans
and thanked Manning and the
Colts' offense for making
him "the least-used person at
my position in the history of
the game."
The Colts earned their first
title since the 1970 season.
when they played in
Baltimore, but the victory
over
Chicago
gave
Indianapolis its first title in
any major sport since the
Indiana Pacers won their
third ABA championship in
1973.
Fan Roger Fairchild, a construction
worker from
Brownsburg, helped build
the RCA Dome.
·•J spent a lot of cold days
in here before the roof was
on. This is great," he said.
The Colts will play one
more year in the Dome
hefore moving into the new
Lucas Oil Stadium, which is
expected to be completed in
time for the 2008 season.
just gotten better and better
every year. He keeps setting
the bar higher each year."
He also got some help in
the rotation after the Reds
acquired
right-hander
Bronson Arroyo from
Boston during spring training. Arroyo went 14-11 with
a 3.29 ERA in 35 starts, and
led the team by pitching 240
2-3 innings. Arroyo will
make a total of at least
$8,075,000 during the two
remaining years of his contract.
Harang is impressed with
the .way Krivsky has
retooled the team since he
took over a year ago.
'T m looking forward to
the direction we're going."
Harang said. "I think
they've done a lot to
improve it. Just last year. it
showed in how much better
we got."

CLASSIFIED
Gallla

County
OH

E-mail
classified@mydailytribune.com

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lhori9fltlo

eel~ ,

r

ANNOUN&lt;.lMI:NIS

r:I

Must

the

•

prepared by Roger W.
Ctauo,
Registered
Surveyor No. 6456,
basod on an actual
field survey of January
6, 2003; .. ld aurvoy
being aubjocl to any
facta thai may be dis·
closed In a lull and
accurate title search.
Lot 4 Llmberger Ridge
Road
Olivo Townahtp, Ohio
PPN: 09-00551.004
Bruner
Forshee
Protective Covonanta
1) Tho following protecttvo covenant• are
covenant•
running
with the land until
11112075, and may be
enforced
(through
injunction or olhar·
wise) by any owner
acquiring any part of
the land acquired by
the undersigned In the
township of Olivo by
Deed recorded in O.R.
Vol. 160 pg. 559 In the
land recorda of Meigo
County, Ohio.
2) No more than two
residences per tract
ahall be parmltted,
though tracts may be
further aptll and built
on with government
approvala.
3)
Permanent
dwalllnga ohatt be
rutrtcted to the opecl·
flcatlono
of
HUD
approved
ooctlonal
homoo, the Ohio Bulc
Building Code on moclutar homao ootttng
upon tither 1 crawl
opaco or baaomont
and now conotructod
the buiH llomoa. Any
hornaa will be new II
tho time of ptaeemont
and buill with new
matarlala.
4) Single wide mobile
6456".
laeo then ftve
Tho bearlngo in this veara of aga II plac•
description art for mont witt be permltlad
angle calculations only on tho above oubjocl
and are beNd on the property.
Eul Hno of Frocllon 35
5) No lnoperotlvo or
uaed ao North 01 dog. unllcanaed vohlcr.o
08' 40" Eaot.
may be placed on ..ld
lot. No accumulation of
A plat of tho
peroonal
deocrlbed survey has dlocardad
been aubmltlad lor lila ofloclo, -Is, waola,
or
any
at
the
Coun!y garbage
unsightly object or
Englnoar'o Olllco.
Tho above description matter will be permitRay M. and Ina J.
Weaver properly;
Thence, with tho
South Uno of said
Weaver
property,
South 89 deg., 00' 17"
East a distance of
1,177.03 feat to lha
point of beginning,
passing through an
Iron pin sot at a dla·
lance of plus 1,147.03
feet.
Containing
6.071
acres, more or less,
being a now apttt out of
Auditor's Parcel No. 0900551 .000.
Subject to all legal
rlght·of·waya, euemont,
restrictions,
reservations, and zoning regulations of
record.
Subjocllo tho right-olway of Townohlp Road
No. 270.
Subject to the IOO.Yoar
Flood Plain reolrlclions, if applicable.
Subject to a 30.00 feel
wide easement being
reserved unto tho
grantoro (Bruner Land
Company, Inc.), their
heirs, and or assigns,
forever. Said easement
being lor lhe purpose
of running utilities to
other pan:elo of land
on or near Township
Road No. 270. Satd
euemant runo In a
north-ooulh direction
acrou tho east ond of
tho abovo-deocrlbed
property with tho till
line of uld eeHment
being the eenterllne of
Town~hlp Road No.
270. Containing 0.315
acre, more or ieoo, of
oasemont.
All Iron plno oat are
518" x 30" reblr capped
ond labeled " Claus

-v•

13) Any residence
erected on told Iota
ahlll be al least 900
square r.et of Indoor
heated area (e•cludlng
basement and garatl")
and shalt have a linlshed aiding such ao
ruollc wood, frame,
brick veneer, praao
board or contemporary
oldlng.
14) Any building or
structure placed on
ssid propel'l'/ shalt be
sat back a minimum of
75 r.et from the center
of the existing road
unless a lesser eelback Is requoated by
public authority.
15) Whore protective
covenants and Meigs
County
of
Olivo
Townohtp
zoning
Onllnancu are In confilet,
tho
atrtcier
requirement
pr•
vall.
16) lnvolldatlon of any
of 1 - covenanho by
judgment of court
order ahlll, In no way
allocl any of the other
provlalona, which ohall
romiln in full force and
ofloct
17) Nothing . contained
horotn ohall be conotructed 11 creating
any obligation on the
part of Bruner Lantt
Company,
Inc. to
enforce
thoao
Protoctlvo Covenanto.
18) Tho purchasero of
thta farm, lor them·
Hlv•. lhotr hotro and
111lgno, by the accept·
ance · of the convoyanca of thltt r.rm,
agrae to be bound by
tho covonanll contelned herein and are
the primary ontorc.rs
of lheH covananto.
Said party or partiH
sre required to anower
on or balore the 28th
cloy following the 1111
publication, 28th Doy
of February, 2007 of
tho within nolle. or
default judgment or
other ]udgmant may be
had agalnatthem. Said
publication shall be
made In thil newa,._
per at leaot onco a
week lor aix (6) con-

'

will

Public Notice
Sheriff Sales Case No.
06CV098
Home
National Bank Plaintiff
Vo.
Steven
Hill
DefendantS Court o1
Common Pleao, Melga
Couh!y, Ohio.
tn purauance of an
order of sale to be
directed from aaid
court In tho above ontitied action, I wilt
expose to 11le at publie auction on the tront
otepo of· tho Melge
County Court Houle
on Friday, March 9,
2007 altO a.m., of Nld
day, the following
daocrlbod raaleltato:
The
following
deocrlbed noel 11lalo
olluated
In
the
Townohlp of Letart,
Coun!y of Molga, and
Stale of Ohio, bounded
and deacribed 11 lo~
Iowa: Being the Real
E1tato deeded by
David and Margery
Cowdery to Msuda
Aahley, 11 recorded
Auguat 31, 190i, vat:
101,
Page
525
deocrlbed oa followo:
Situate In Soc. Slxtaen
(18). Town Ona (1),
Rongo (12) 1\Mivo of
the Ohio Coll)pany'e
Purchaoo, and baing
tho Southoeol hell of a
._ acre lot originally
told and dHded by
Mary W. Chapmen to
William Rand, bounded
on tho Southweat by 1
lot owned by Mro. John
B. Koaler on tho
Soulhoaot by lola
owned by Mro. Dolle
Coulton and Mro.
Mollie Barriger and on
the
Northeaol
by
County .Roecl and runnlng wllh oald road
Northwaal far enough

lei make one (1) acre.
Excepting therefrom a
parcel conveyed to
General
Telephone
Company of Ohio by
deed dated 8104152 and
recorded In Vol. 171,
Page 167 of the Motga
Coun!y Deed Recorda
and further deacrlbed
as follows: Beginning
at a point In tho cantor
of State Highway 338,
which point Ia In the
oaotorly boundary of
the one (1) aero troct
now
owned
by
Elizabeth V. Roush;
thence In a southwest·
orly direction ninety
(80) loot ato.ng tho
-tarly boundary line
of 1ald one (1) acre
troct to a alike; thence
In a northwesterly
dil'9!'1ion parallel wllh
tho right-of-way of ..td
highway thirty (30) r.et
1o a alake; thence in a
northeasterly direction
ninety (90) r.etto point
In tho center of Stale
Route 338; thence In a
southoaalerly direction
thirty (30) r.et along
tho center line of Nid
highway to the piaca of
beginning. Subject to
on eaaemont oH of tho
northoaoterly end for
highway purposes.
Referenced Deeded:
Vol. 33, Page 881,
Melg1 Coun!y OHiclat
Rocordo.
Auditor'•
Parcel
No,:
08·
00571.000
Property
Addrau:
4!1481 State Route 338,
Racine, Ohto 45771
Property
Ownor:
Steven Hilt
Appralaed
ol
$40,000.00 torma of
Nle can not be ooid lor
tell then 213rdo of tho
apprataed value. t 0
percent down on day
of Nle, caoh or cortlfled check, balance
dua on confirmation of
Nle.
Tho appraloal did not
Include an Interior
oxamlnatlon ot' tho
houao.
Robert E. Beegle,
Maigo Coun!y Sheriff.
Attorney
for
tho
Plaintiff Little Sheato

Public Notice
Tho Home National
Bank will auction tho
following Item on
Saturday, February 10,
2007, at 10:00 a.m. at
the Bank's parking lot.
2000 Ventura Van
1GNDX03EOYD321228
2002 Kla Sportage
KNDJA723425118244
11194 Muda 626
IYVGE22DXR5117459
2004
11
HP
Cra1taman Mower
1966 Academy Mobile
Home
481021222
The Mobile Homo Ia
located In Pomeroy.
Tho Nle witt be at the
Bank'll parking lot.
Tho Home National
Bank resorveo the
right to reject any and
all btdo. All vehicles
and mobile home are
sold, as 11 whore Ia,
wllh no warranttea
e•prused or Implied.
For an appointment to
see, call 949-2210, aak
for Shalla.
(2) 7, 8, 9

r--=--.,..,:-----,

Get AJump
r

On

"''VINGS

~

Shop the
Classlfleds!
\

r~~!!~~~~~l r

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

10

..

kitncarlyleO~omcAit .net

Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Oivis1on of
Financial
Institution's
Ottice
ol
Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you retinance vour home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE

BlaCk cOlOred miX&amp;d breed
10 week old puppies. 1
Female. 2 maiO. 740·441 ·
1289.
-------Free to good home. Black
puppies 2 Female aM 1
Male. 740 _256. 1360_

www.comics.com
Accepting applications lor
cashiers. Must be avatlable
to work all shifts. No Phone
Calls. Apply at Par Mar 1142,

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcament ............................................ 030
Anllquoa ....................................................... 530
Apartment• lor Ront ................................... 440
Auction and Ftoa Markot .............................oeo
Auto Parts &amp; Ace&lt;eooorleo .......................... 760
Auto Repalr .................................................,770
Autoolor Sar. ..............................................710
Boall a Motoro for Sate ............................. 750
Bulidi"'J Supptleo ........................................550
Bualneoo and Butidtngl ............................. 340
Buitneoa Opportuntty.................................210
Bualneu Training ....................................... 140
Campara a Motor ttomea ........................... 780
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
of Thanko .......................................... 010
Chtld/EI&lt;*Iy Care ....................................... 180
l!tectrtcat/RIIrlgaratton ............................... 840
Equipment lor Rant. .................................... 480
E•cavattng ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpmant ..........................................&amp;10
Farmolor Ront. ............................................ 430
Farm• tor Sato ............................................. 330
For L -..................................................... 480
For Sale............................................ :........... 585
For Sate or Trade ......................................... 580
FruHI I Vagalablea .....................................580
Furnlehed Rooma ........................................450
Qenoral Haullng ......................................,....850
otv-ay......................................................040 ·
Happy Adi ....................................................050
Hay a Gratn ..................................................l40
Help Wanted ................................................. ItO
HOinl tmprovementa ...................................l10
Homeo for Sale ............................................ 310
Houoehold Goodo ....,.................................. 510
11ouon for Rent .......................................... 410
In Momortom ................................................020
tnauranee ..................................................... 130
Lawn a Gardin Equlpmont ........................eao
Llvutock ......................................................830
Loatand Found ........................................... oeo
Loho Acraatl"······...................................... 350
Mtocotlonaoua.............................................. 170
Mlacollanaoua Morchandlol....................... 540
Mobile Home Ropatr .................................... eao
Mobile Homeofor Rent .................... :.......... 420
Mobile Hom• for Sale ................................ 320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycleo I 4 Wh•tero ..........................740
M\lalcat tnotrumento ................................... 570
l'ersonalo ..................................................... 005
"--I for Sate ..................... :.......................... 560
Plumbing a HoaUng .................................... 820
Pro!Mslonat SanriC81 ................................. 230
Radio, TV a CB Repair ............................... 160
Real Eotate wanted ..................................... 380
Schootl tnotructlon ..................................... 150
Seed Plant a ForttliUr .............................. 1150
sttuadona Wanted ....................................... 120
sPace lor Ront .............................................480
. Sllortlng Goodo ........................................... 520
· SUY'I for Sate.............................................. 720
Ttuoko lor Silo ............................................ 715
UphotoiiiY ................................................... 870
Vona For Sate ............................................... 730
Wanlid to Buy ............................................. 080
Wanlld to Buy- Farm Supptlea .................. 820
Wanlld To Do .............................................. 180
Wanlld to Rant ............................................ 470
Yard Gatllpotla....................................U72
Yard Safe.Pomoroy1Mkldle .............:.....:..... 074
Yard -Pt. Pla1Nnt ................................ U70

c-

a.

L,l".b..".w
..w.M'ml
.......ll"o

15054 Stale Route 160.
Vinton.

Accepting Applications lor
Oil and Ga• Drilling.
Positions Open: Toot Pusher
and Drillers. e•perience
reQUired. Floor hands no
experience necessary. Pid!
up apphcation 0 J.D. Drilling
in Racine, Ohio. Apply in
person no phone calls
please

Hair Stylist- Michael &amp;
Friends is seeking a talented
creative stylist with man agers license for Booth
Rental. $125 per week. Call
Patty lor inler"View (740)379·
9145, cell (740)645·5895

local Manufacturing Facility
Accepting Resumes for
General Labor. Welding and
machine experience a plus.
Resumes must be sent to:
An Excellent way to earn
PO Bo• 176, Rio Grande,
money. The New Avon.
OH 45674.
Call Marityn 304-882-2645
MANAOEMENT
Werle at General and Assistant
Appalachians
home.
(617)436·4624 Managor positions at new
Boston, Ma.
concept carryout piua store
located at 900 Second Ave.
Ar1hur Treachers!Twtn Oaks
GM salary a1 $30K+, Profi1
accepling applications for Sharing. Health insurance.
e•perienced ·cookslanen· and other benefits available.
dants. Apply 0 J.D. Drilling OpportlJnity for ad\lancein Racine, OhiO. Apply in ment, including operating
person no phone calls parlll8r and franchising. To
please.
learn more send tesume to
-AV
_O_N_I-A-11-A,-.-.,-,-To_B
_u_y-or 72 N Plaza 81\ld., Attn: HR,
Sell
Shirley Spears, 304 . Chillicothe, OH 45601 or go
675·1429.
to www.zanzls.com. or call
Selinda al
Ohio Job
Bartender wanted to start Services. EOE.
immediately. Apply in person ~N'-ow-.Hi.-rin..:.g_e_&lt;_pe-ri,-enc---:&amp;d
at Halfhill's Ta~rn. 234 3rd Sawmill help. Apply in perAvenue, Gallipolis, OH
son .
Twin
Rl'ver

H1rdwoods

Bob Evans of GalliPolis. Soutt)Side
Hiring n~ht &amp; day Shih Grill
Cooks. Excellent Pay &amp;
Benefits 811ailable. Stop in.

llmiii!Uon or
dlscdmlnatlon baNd on
r~. color, reltglon, ux
lamlflal •t..u• or national
origin, or any lnt.ntlon to
maka any •uch

knowingly ISCC8pl
advartiHJMntl tor rul
1atate which Ia In
violation of thl law. Our
r"dera ar• hereby
Informed ttwl: •ll
dwlllngl ltdvtirtluel In

and troubleshoot ooncrete
paving machines. local
work, no travel. greal · pay
with benef its and more
Contact Nick Sa\lko &amp; So11B

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS

!I You Ha\18

Arry auestions

~~t.actst~~UieD!vue':~~~~~

ewnc~ to•

Vacations-FTIPT
HOME HE~LTH ~IDES· t-600·584· 1775 Ext. ,.8923
SIGH ON BONUS home
USWA
health care of SE Ohio IS
currently hiring home health · Tow Truck operator. MVR
aides · competitive wages. and drug screen required

740-388·8S47

Jndepe(!Qtnl

1116

l\t&amp;l£ll...\NEOlS

I

Seasoned tire wood. Oak
and Hickory split. You haul
or I hau!· Take CAA&amp; HEAP
· 740· 949-2038·

"'-------r
IUIO

WANTIW
To Do

....,

(304)675+0022

rid

•NOTICI•
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
that you do business with

o1 Rio Grande Is

Wanted: Direct Supervision
employees to oversee male
1dou1h ',n a s~affnmsoconu re :~u&amp; 1·
en 11a en\llf
. lVI
pass
ph','sical
training ,
requirement. Pay based on
eKJ)erience. Call (140)3799083 between 9·3 Mon·Fri

1

INO A JOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

51

people you know. and
NOT to send money
through the m811 until vou
have mvestigated the
offering

~~~~~==~~

loolung for experienced
cook. Please apply at the
cafeteria.

0

8~

OwoRll.JNfiY

~~···

•••

TNE

2·3
Bedri"Jom
Duplex.
$420/mo plus deposit &amp; utilities in Downtown Gall ipol~ .
No Pets. (740)446·0332
Sam-5pm Mon-Sat.

I

~c~e:;~~nt

RF.:vr
r.,._.,;iiiiioiiiiiii-_.1

~~; Ca~~~gl: ~=i. ~:k

about our (3) 14.:70 homes.
3000 sq f1 . 2 Story home. 3· Daytime
{740 )388 "0000 ·
740
5 Bedrooms, 3 Bath, Large Evenings, (
)388 -8017 or
Kitchen , Custom Cabinets. (7401245 "9213 ·
Wrap around porch, 2 car 2007
312
Doublewide.
naram~ with carport on 3 $37,970 Midwest (740)828·
•
•acres, close to A.ddaville 2750.
School $220,000. (740)367- ::....C'-----~::-:
Move in today! New 2007 3
0244
-:---::-:--:-::--"':' bedroom 2 bath.
Only
3BR,
28A,
LA
wiltl $199.88 per month. Set up
Fireplace, DR. Kitchen. minutes from Attlens and

C
2 BR, antral Air, Large Yard
w/Fenced Playground &amp;
Storage Bld:g ., .Water Paid
Between Gallipolis &amp; Rio
Grande. Married Couple
Preferred. Call (7 40 )245·
5211 or (740)448·0123

Detached 2 car 1)8.rage, on ready for immediate occu1711185 l ot. Within walking pancy. Call 740·385·4367 .
Distance ot new SGHS.
Asking !80.000. (740)256NEW 2007 4 bed D.Widel
8170
S49.179. Midwest (740)828·
4 rental houses "For Sale" 2750
=-:iroo~~-----,
In Gallipolis. Call Wa~·ne PI
(404)4S6·3802 .
BUSINm
:..:.:.::..:.:~='----A.'IDBl:ILDINGS
5 PllJS Acres , 2 Sr., Kit., - Din.: Frool Am.. FuN base. . F&amp;S Tire SA 7 &amp; SA 681 ,
story and 112 · AC , single Tuppers Plains. Oh. includes
garage/20 X 20 shop. 11
t F k Wells
Racine. Route 124
740· a eQUipmen ' ran
740 985 -3518
949-2253.
-----LoTs &amp;
2
5
Plus Acres,
Sr.: Kit.. L,--·Ail(iiJIEAii
-iiiliGiiiE-~
D!n .. Front Rm ., FuU base..
story and 112 · AC. single 47 acres +I· Lle\llng Road,
20 X 20 shop.
garage/
Racine, Aoule
ountry water. septiC. pvnv
124 _ 14
_
&amp; barn. et&amp;ctriC, many hOme
949
2253
•
.
~.:...:.='------ sttes.
.; 125.000 1nm
!
1
Attenton
(304)882·31 31
L al
.. . ~ ·o
oc
comcany
o
nng
'"
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· Uobllt HolM Lot for N111:

Mobile Home Lot in Johnson

r

o- c

N() JK4
WHAT ,•iiiiRI
'STYlE.

pets.

1984 14x17. 3 Bad. Mobile
COlJ td be the
Home.
Remodeled ,
same as rent
3 Bedroom, 1 314 Baths. $12.000. Free lot rent lor 6 Mortgage
Loca tors
Kitchen, LA. FR. Central Air. months, Pomeroy. {7401418·
367
0000
740
Many extras. 2 13 acres 6154
( )
"
located on Chris Lane. close
Moan£ HoMt:S
to new GAHS, AedlJced to 2003 16x76 Fleetwood.
FOR
$129.900. (740)245·5909
3BA. 2 Ba1h, Vinvt Siding,
Shint;~le Roof . CIA. Very Nice
3 Bedroom. 2 Bath, fireplace Home.
1998
16x80 2 Bedroom. Bulaville Pike.
Trash/Water Pd. No Pets.
on Pleasant Va!ley Ad, 1/2 Ri\lerside, 3BA. 2 Balh, "Vinyl
mil~ from Rio Grande,
C
Deposit &amp; References.
9
[740)388-1100
A\lailable with 1. 5, or 8

Drywall and painting servlces. 740-985·3779.
acres. (740}709-1166
God's Rejoicing Carpenter
building, temodeling. plumblog, prayer. John Moore 992·
2839.

no

2br, House in Pt. Pt. $465
Homestead Really Broker
For Sale: Ranch Style
1304)675·4024 1304)675
Home, 4 Bedrooms, 3 Ba1h,
0799 ask for Nancy.
6 acres. (740)388:8639
3BA. 1 bath, LeGrande
Green Twp, 1 112 mi hom
Blvd, no pets, $825 mo. +
town, 1 112 m1 trom New
sec dep. (740)446·3644.
GAHS, 3BR Br1ck Ranch.
$140,000. (740)446-8131
Accepting
applications
through 2/14 . Nice 2 story, 3
House lor eele : 2br. 1 ba
badroom, 1 Bath, 571 Carttlr
on Monroe A\le. Pt. Pleasant
Road . Propane heat, No ·
needs some work , good
Indoor Pets. Stove. Fndge.
starter, home or rental unit
Water and lrash included
$19.500. 304-675-6349
Deposit $400. Rent $450.
HUD HOMEI 3bd $112/mo. (740)258·1106
3bd 2ba $155/mo. More
Anentlon!
homes available! 4%dn,
loc:al company offering "NO
30yrs @ 8%. For listings DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
800·559-41 09 •F144
'-1!F.~.;.;.~:---, grams tor you to buy your
111
MOBB...E HO\Wi
hOme 1nstead ot rent1ng.
l'OR SAU:
• 100% financing
• Less than perfeC1 credit

i

Col~

ar.d School&amp; 121.a

Fax reslJme to 74D-266·
6671
·

Uni\lersity

0 Down e\len with less than
perfect credit is available on
this 3 bedroom. 1 bath

Payment around $.5SO per

Walling till Spring to
. to
clean your CarnAl?
AN, immediate ope(llng r
·...DON, experience preferred
No Need!
Call for additional informslow Moisture carpet
Hof) or lntet'vlew. Contact:
cleaning dries In an houri
Marjorie
Huston
0 Cat\lin leportfCiearly Clean

Testing Assistant needed
part time to perfOrm drug,
alcollo!. and other testing
medical background unnecAN's, Dialysis Technicians, essary· will train . Fax
and UM Clerk needed lor
10 (740)2666671
Pleasant Valley Dialysis. an resu,.~
or caM 888-269-6344.
independently owned outpa·
.~ Drr"ver -eded
to haul
tient dialysis facility in •r·
IIUU\
'""
..
,.
w.v.
a•d
K~--~y
1
Pt.Pieasant,WV. E•perlence va "
"
..............
'
orelerred. Please send Caii-74Q-416·I795.

4109 •254

Accredited 'hmber Acc•&amp;dilinll

Chestlire,
OH.
lnt..-estinoJl.Ow Stfess woo
Environment.
Great
Opportunity to Earn Ewtra
Cash! Call B88·2S9-S344 or

$16.53-$27.58/hr., now hiring. For application and fr&amp;e
governement ;oo· Info, call
American Assoc. of labor 1•
913·599-8042, 24/hrs. emp.
serv.
resumes 10 Cancty Bartram,
Louisa-Fort Gay Regional
Full-time 1omp needed for
Dialysis, 2145 Highway
busy office. Job may
2565. Louisa, KY 41230 or
become permanent. Position
tax to 606-638·3404
IS m1xed secretarial and
medical. Resumes may be
POST OFFICE NOW
dropped off at the office of
HIRING
John A. Wade. MD. 2520
A11g . Pa~ $20/hl or
Valley Dri\le, Suite 112.
S57K annually
Point Pleasant, Feb. 1st. 2nd Including Federal Benefits
and 5th. NO Phone Calls.
and OT,Peid Tra1ning,

Call740-662·1 222

limited, Appli~tions Will Be
Accepted Until Feb. 9, Full
Time And Part Time Par1
Time Positions Available To
Those Qualified Individuals
Completing The Class
Be
Applicants
Must
Dependable (Anendance Is
A. Must) Team Players With
Positive Attitudes To Join Us
In Pro\liding Outstanding,
Quality Care To Our
Residents.

AN's needed to perform
basic first aid at business In

at 614-461-WOAK. EOE
Custodian needed $7.50 per
hour -+. Retail floor experi·
en&lt;:e a plus. Please call 304·
617-2782 0&lt; Fax 216·862·
0452.

home. Comer lot, fireplace,
modern kitchen, jacuzzi llJb,

(740}384·3485 or (740)384·
2678. Huston
Nursing
Home, tnc. 38500 St Rt.
160, Hamden, Ohio 45634.

operator to set up, operate,

II

month. 740-367·7129.

2 or 3 Br. house.
740-992-5858

this Mwap~~per are

4:30pm.
II
You
Are
Interested In Joining Our •
Friendly And Dedicated GaiNpolle Clreer CoU~e
S1."11 ' Please Slop By Our (Careers Close To Home)
Front Otlice Mon·Fri., 9am- Call Today! 740 _446 _4367 ,
5pm And F!ll Ou' An
1·800-214-0452
18 -. ~JipoHsc•M·E~~rcolleoe-oom
Application,
Space

lr..-oilr-mliiiiiiioct'IONiiiiii_.l

town. No Pets, Rel"\0\'ated.
All
new carpet.
Call
(7 40)446·7425

avallllbte on an equal .
opportunity bula.

$185/ mol 3bd 2111 HUD
$23,3341 5% down, 2(l years
@ 8%. For listings 600·559·

".......

2 Nice Remodeled Homes in

This I'MIWSpA~Mr will not

Work 110m home. not get
rich quic~ . work lnvol\led. For
into. send S.A.S.E to PO
Box 454, Hamden OH
Holding An STNA Class, 45634.
Scheduled For Feb. 2D- -.!'"'"~~----,
vu '"
March 7, Hours WIi I Be 8amoX.-11'.~

•iY

2 bedroom house located in
Gallipolis. (740)441-0 194.

.,.t.rence,llmltllllon or
dlacriminatlon."

Ir..i.o....:-~.~-_.1

Overbrook Center located
0 333 Page Sl., Middlef)Ort,
Ohio
Is pteased To
Announce We Will Be

Coord!·nalor @ 740 . 992 .
6472
0\lerbrook Center Is An
E.O.E. And A PartiCipant Of
The Drug Free Workplace
2612 US At 35, Pfogram.

PAVING.
CONCRETE
Columbus contractor is
seeking an e•perlenced
Gomaco concrete paver

HEIJ&gt;WAMID

I '

100 Uberty Street $500 plus
utilities 2 bedroom Out of
T
$650 1
"lrt.·
3
1own
pus ut1 leS
bedroom Contact ERA Town
&amp; Country Real Estate, 675·
5548

advwtt• "•ny

1-1!88·582-3345
ld \ I I ...,

HOME! 4o/..On, 30yrs 0 8%
For listings 800·559·4109
)(1709
·

p~hrence,

TURNED DOWN ON

~

SUimo! Buy lbd HUD

aubtee' to "-F.-rei
Fair Housing Act of 1968
whit:h makn tt lllega;l to

SOCIAL SECUIUTY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!

2007 by NEA, Inc.

@

..

All ruleat~~a.advertlalng
In this n.wtpap.r Is

service announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

-.. 1 I{\ II I "

Gl
=
.

of requests for any 1a1ge
ol
.dvance Pa"menls
1
lees or insurance. Can the
Office
ol
Consume1
Affairs toll tree at 1-868·
278-0003 to laam if the
mortgage
broker
or
lender
IS
properly
licensed (This is a public

0

How:s
roRSAu:

---I

r-----~--~r~ '.a...FORibNr
~
. .....
~ ~

H~OTI(;IlH'

r1

CLASSIFIED INDE.X

Warner PO Box 886 S.
2nd St. Pomeroy, Ohio
457&amp;9
740-1192-6689
(2) 7, 14,21

POLICIES: Ohio V&amp;l6ey P\lbllllllng r-.rvu 1M r~ttn ta edtt, r.tect. 01 c.nc.J .ny ed al any UrM. Er1on mutt 1M reported on tM flrlt illy of
TriDu.,._S....tlnei-A.g'-t• 111111 bli rMponalblrl lot no mor• thin thl cotI of 1M~ occupteo by ttl• tn'Of Md onty the flret lnHf11on. W•
any kNII or n,.nM tt\lt multi ffom thl pubbtion or omiRion ot.,. ldv-.11...,...1. CorriC16on witt blo madto tn the flrel •vallebtllditlon. • Box
'"' elw•v• ~. • Curr.nt r.t. card appliel. • All rMI Mlltl actwert!Mmentl '" •ubtect to the Flder1l Fair Houllng A~ ot I MI. • Tl'lil
ICC~II only help Rf1tld adl mMtlnQ EO£ atendard1. W• .,Ill not knowingly Kcapllft)' adllert:IU'Ig In Vklilllon ol IM LIW.

r~1

P11-ahllc: '""""•-••.tc:.._.,s I n ro..Je"""sp,..pca-s.
~ell"'Ve:!!.-~c:l R ·t g h t ••• ......,...,..,._..- ~ ..... .-..

oeculiva -kl.
Marlene Harrlaon
Clerk of Courts
Meigs Coun!y, Ohio
David Brian Bonnett
Attorney for PlaintiH
126 N. 9th Street
Cambridge, OH 43725
(1) 24, 31 (2) 7, 14, 21 ,
28

• All ads must be prepaid•

I \11' 1 0\\ 11 \1

newspaper and learn

led on any lot.
6) No noxious or otr.nslvs activity ahall be
carried on upon any
lot.
7) Before occupancy of
any house, a oowage
dlapot1al ayllem shalt
be lnolallod In conformlty with the min~
mum
atandards
required by the County
Board of Hoahh.
8) Before any conatrucllon takes place
purchaoer must contact the local govarnment authority to make
aure they are in compttance with the local
laws.
9) All loll are to be
used for residential,
agricultural and recrO.
allonal
purposes,
(though tho lot owner
may store equipment
and material used In I
bualne11 In a welt conotruclod
enclosed
building on the proper·
ly). Tho property 11 not
to be used lor commer·
clot enlarprl•• (wllh
cuatomero coming and
going) wHh tho exeeplion of chun:hoa, rldl"'l
otabloa, horaeo larmo,
cattle farrno, or truck
Ia,.. (lruHo and vogotabloa)
10) No owlne aheH be
perm- on tho above
oub]oct
proparty.
~·ra.r domutlc farm
anlmalo (Including but
not limited to horaao,
colllo, ahoep, goal•
and ttame1) are permit·
loci. Tho pHture shell
not be ovor grued but
ohall be healthy snd
.thick, lnd ohell
ba controlled. Noise
and odoro from any
animal shall be controtted 10 thai neHher
ohall be offwnolve to
edjolni"'J nolghboro.
11) Doge, cato and
other houaehoid pota
allaH not bo bred or
malnlllned for commorctat purpooao.
12) No lent, camper,
ochool but, or rtc,..
atlonal vohlcleo ihall
bo uaad 11 a roof·
denca, elthor temporory or permanent.

All Dl•play: ll. Noon 3
Bu•ln••• Daye Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dleplay: 1:00
Thursday tor Sundays

Buying Junk Cars.Trucks &amp;
Wreclcs, Pay Cash J D
Sai"Vage
(304)773·5343
1304)674· 1374

Read your

LEGAL NOTICE
North 01 deg. 08' 40"
In the Melg1 Coun!y Eail1 a dletance of
Court of Common 1,111.531eetto an Iron
Pleas Pomeroy, Ohio
pin
1a1
at
tho
Bruner Land Company, Southeast corner of a
Inc.,
40 acres tracl as conPlaintiff.
veyed to Ray M. and
Va
Ina J. Weaver by Pa~l
Stephen E. Bunner, No. f of Deed Volume
Deceased, etal, •
261, Page 335 of the
Dor.ndantl
Meigs
County
Case No.
Recordal''s Olllcs:
Stephen E. Bunner, Thence with tho South
whose lui known line of said Weaver
addresa waa 1416 property, North 89 deg.
Hocking Road, Belpre, 00' 17"Westa distance
Ohio 45714, Nancy of384.92 feel to a point
Bunner, Spouse of In tho center Uno of
Stephen E. Bunner, lownahlp Road No. 270
whose 1111 known (Limberger
Ridge
addreas
Ia
1416 Road), being the true
Hocking road, Belpre, point of beginning for
Ohlo 45714, and the this description;
unknown heirs at law Thence, from said
of Stephen E. Bunner, point of beginning and
decoasod, tho current running with tho can·
addrosaos of same torttno of Township
which are unknown, road No. 270, the lo~
and cannot wHh rea- lowing four courses:
sonablo diligence be (1) South 02 dog. 54'
found or ascertained, 52" Will a dlotance of
ohall taka notice thai 66.51 feet to a point;
on
_ day
of (2) Thence South 12
December,
2006, deg. 19' 50" Weola dlo·
Bruner Land Company, tanca of 75.04 feel to a
Inc., Bye•vllle, Ohio point;
43723, filed its com· (3) Thence South 23
plaint agalnot oald deg. 43' 24" Wool a disparty praying for ]udg- lance of 80.03 feel to a
mont quieting tHta In point;
the Plaintiff relative to (4) Thane. South 39
tho forectooure of a deg. 12' 06"Westa dtaland lnotaltment con· ranee of52.57 feel to a
lroct regarding the .fol· point;
lowing deocrlbed real Thence, leaving tho
oa-, to-w~:
road, North 89 dog. 07'
Situated
tn
tho 40" Wut a dlotanct of
Townohlp ol Olive, 1,ot9.41 feet to on Iron
County of Melgo, and pin Htln tho East line
Slate of Ohio, being In of o 51 .6807 ocr.. tract
Fraction 35 of Old u convoyed to Eric L.
Section 34, Range 11 and
Sharon
R.
Wilt, Town1hlp 4 Johnaon by Official
North, of "The Ohio Roconlo Volume 106,
Company
Firat Page 321 of tile Meigo
Pure- of 17&amp;7", and Coun!y
Rocomr'o
being bounded and Olllca,
palling
deocrtbod aolollowo: through ._ Iron plno
Commencing
for Htat dlsllncel of pluo
Raflrtnea all 518" Iron 25.80 feet and piuo
pin found at tho 125.80 feel, rupocll'l•
Soulhoaol cornar of ly;
Fraction 35 (Noll: Thonctl, with the Eut
Rar.rence bHring on line of Nid Johnson
tho Eaat line of property, North 01 dog.
Froctlon 35 uaed a1 25' 18" Eall 1 dlotance
North 01 dog. 08' 40" ol200.00 feet to an Iron
bot):
pin • oat
at
the
Thence, with trie Eaot Southwell corner of
line of Fraction 35, tho
aforo"18ntloned

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-friday for ln . . rtlon
In NeJCt Day"• Paper
Sunday In- Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sunday• Paper

AbSolute Top Dolla" u.s.
Silver and Gold Coms.
Prootsets, Gold Rings, Pre·
1!135
U.S.
Currency,
Solita1re Oiamoi"IOS· M.T.S
Coin Shop, t51 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis. 740.446·
2842.

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ad ot any limo.

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I

· •·"

3 Bedroom Mob1le Home
Union Avenue, Pomeroy,
Completely
Renovated .
$450/mo. (740)416·6154
Mob1le

Home

Park

in

Gallipolis. OH .
Phone
(740)446·2003 or (740)446·
1409
_:_:,.:__ _ _ _ __
Nice 141170 3 Bedroom. 2
Batn
home.
Located
between
Athens
and
Pomeroy. $365.00
per
mooth. Call (740)385·9948

r

APAR11\IE'US
FOR Rt..."\il"

1 S. 2 Beclroom Apartments
tor Rent. Mei~ County, In
town . No Pets, DepoSit
Reqwed . {740 )992·5174 or
1740)441 -0 110
- - -- - - 1 and 2 Mdroorn apart ·
ments. turn1shOO and unlur·
nishPd . sec:urit~·1 depOSit
reqUired. no pets, 740·992·

orams for you to buy your near Vinton . Call (7401441 · _22_,_a_ _ _~-....,11 11
hQir,e instead of renung .
2br Apt on 5th Street $375
• 100% financing
~&gt;\n:
ask tor Don (304 )593·1994
• less than perfect credit
accepted
3 and 4 room turn1shed apts.
• Payment could b&amp; the '
clean W/0 hookup. No pets.
same as rent
Need to s&amp;ll your home? Rei. and deposit required .
Mortgage
Locators. late onstepayments~~~vorhco. 74()-446·,519
( 740)J6J·OOOO
job tran r or a uo:mt .
can buy your home. All cash For lease. t600 squart t6et,
Located i, Gallipolis Ferry. a"nd quick clOSing. 74()-416- beautiful, unfurnished. two
lar96 yard. wl18x80 Mobile 3130
bedroom apt. . 2nd floor. LA.
Horne, 3br. 2ba, 11au1t&amp;O ceil·
DR. 1 112 baths. downtown
mgs. island kitchen. new
Gallipolis, ielea! lor couple
refridg., All electric, covered
References requi red, no
front porch. 2 large Garages
pets. security deposit, $600
plus OU!builc&gt;nos 13041675·
PB' 'l'onlh. Call 1740)4463161 asking $80,000
_.
......
4425 or (740)446·3936

j

"l·"'1m

1 1

'-lilt..,...._

··-- --- ------- -

I

RE.u
"'---ioiliiiiiiiit-r

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Wednesdi',Y• February 7, 2007

www .mydailysentinel.com

tl!:rihune - Sentinel - l\egister

Colts return to frigid Indy and rally at Dome

AP photo

·Cleveland Cavaliers coach Mike Brown gives direction to
:players during the second quarter of an NBA basketball
game against the Charlotte Bobcats Friday in Clewland.

Cavs
fromPageBl
and patience he learned
working on San Antonio
coach Gregg Popovich's
staff- a system that helped
the Cavs advance in last
season's playoffs.
James, though, feels it's
time for a change. It's time to
run.
"I think so," he said.
"We've got enough athletes
where we can get up and
down the coun. At times the
coaching staff feels the same
way, at other times, no. We're
kind of playing basketball for
the playoffs. Our offense is
geared toward half-coun basketball instead of getting out
and running."
James said he has told the
coach that, too.
Brown, in his second season as Cleveland's coach,
won't make any radical
changes and he doesn't mind
if the Cavaliers run more. But
when they do press the action.
he just wants them to be smart
about it.
'This thin~ is ever evolving," he satd. "You tweak
stuff, you don't make
changes. I don't believe in
that. Whatever you have,
especially what's working for

you, you make a tweak here
and a tweak there and do use
repetition and that's how you
get better."
Right now, the Cavs and
their coach are begging to differ. It's a debate - nothing
more. But having players on
one page, and the coach on
another is never a good thing
for any team. And not wHen
the res1dent superstar isn't satisfied.
The Cavaliers have lost
eight of 12 and are sliding in
the standings after being atop
the Eastern Conference for
much of the season's first
half. However, since the
opener they've had trouble
pulling the ball in the basket.
Following a 90-78 loss to
the Detroit Pistons on Sunday.
the Cavs rank 24th in the
league in scoring (95.3 points
per game), 26th in field-goal
percentage and 30th (last) in
free-throw r.ercentage.
And whtle the Cavaliers
(27-21) haven't _played up to
their expectations. they don't
have any problems a liltle
running can't cure.
"I still don't think it is tiJlle
to panic. we need to keep an
even keel," Hughes said. "I
definitely think we should run
more, 11 suns our team.
Somewhat, we're trying. I
think that we're a much belter
running team than we've
showed."

INDIANAPOLIS (APJ About 40,000 Indianapolis
fans s how~d up to thank the
Colts for their Super Bowl
run and all the players watlt·
ed to do was prdise their boisterous supporters.
A frenzied .:rowd descended
on
downtown
Indianapolis and filed into
the RCA Dome for a homecoming rally Monday night
to celebrate the Colts' 29-17
victory over the Chicago
Bears in the NFL championship. The fans chanted
"dee-fense. dee-fense" and
basked in the city's first
major pro sports title in more
than 30 years.
"You guys are the 12th
man," defensive end Dwight
Freeney told the crowd during the rally.
The Colts, who finally
found a defense in the playotfs to complement Peyton
Manning's potent offense,
returned to Indianapolis late
Monday afternoon, stopped
off at their training facility
and boarded buses for a trip
back downtown and a frigid,
bone-numbing parade to the
Dome.
Most of the fans waited
inside the Dome, although
hundreds went back out onto
the streets as the rarade
approached. Many o them
shared triumphant shouts and
high-fives with the players

Harang
fromPageBl
tration. We made an offer,
and they weren't that far
apart."
Harang made $2.35 million last season, and wanted
$5 .5 million in arbitration.
The Red &gt; countered with a
$4.25 million offer in arbitration, then went about trying to avoid the hearing by
getting a long-term deal.
Harang gets base salaries
of $4.25 million this season,
$6.75 million in 2008, $11
million in 2009 and $12.5
million in 2010. There is a
club option for 20 II at
$12.75 million with a $2
million buyout.
If Harang pitches 210
innings in 2010, the option
increases to $13 million. If

AP photo

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning speaks to
the crowd during a ratlyin Indianapolis Monday. The Colts
defeated the Chicago Bears to win Super Bowl XLI.

who were riding atop the
slow-moving trucks and
floats.
Inside, the fans were just as
loud as they were when the
Colts left two weeks earlier
with the AFC championship.
"This is remarkable," tight
end Dallas Clark said. "I didn't know Indianapolis had
this many people. You guys
are the greatest.
Many of the fans were
wearing Colts blue. Many
held signs such as "We love
our Colts" or )ust a simple
"Thank You.' Two giant
inflatable balloons resemhe is traded, the option
and
becomes
mutual
increases to $14 million,
with a $2.5 million buyout.
The 28·year-old pitcher's
deal eclipses that of leftbander Eric Milton, who is
entering the final season of
a $25.5 million, three-year
contract.
Cincinnati
acquired
Harang from Oakland as
part of their 2003 midseason trading splurge. The
ballclub moved into Great
American Ball Park that
season. and fired general
manager Jim Bowden when
it failed to contend. The
Reds traded their veterans
for prospects, and obtained
Harang for outfielder Jose
Guillen.
Since he joined the Reds,
Harang has been the most
dependable member of a
pitching staff that has been

bling Colts players flanked a
stage that was set up on the
floor of the Dome. Amid a
barrage of camera flashes
from the stands, many of the
Colts - coach Tony Dungy.
too - brought out their own
cameras to record the
moment.
"You guys are awesome,"
Dungy told the crowd. "We
had a team party (in Miami)
... but we were looking forward to coming home. This is
more than we could have
ever expected. Thank you for
this turnout."
Manning, the MYP of the
the club's biggest weakness.
He had his best season last
year, going 16-11 with a
3. 76 earned run average in
35 stans.
Harang was the only Reds
player in arbitration. Less
than an hour before the
Reds held a news conference to announce his signing , Krivsky received a
copy of the brief that
Harang's agents had prepared to argue for the bigger
amount in arbitration.
The agents' brief pointed
out that Harang is one of
only eight pitchers since
1960 to lead the NL in wins
and strikeouts. The others:
Randy Johnson, John
Smoltz, Dwight Gooden.
Steve Carlton, Tom Seaver.
Sandy Koufax and Don
Drysdale.
''So Aaron had a heck of a
year," Krivsky said. "He's

Colts' win in rain-soaked
Miami on Sunday night, also
thanked the fans, as well as
Dungy and the entire organization.
"It sure feels good to be
back in this Dome after playing in that weather last
night." Manning said. "On
hehalf of the players, we
want to thank the greatest
fans in the world."
Hunter Smith, the team's
punter, also praised the fans
and thanked Manning and the
Colts' offense for making
him "the least-used person at
my position in the history of
the game."
The Colts earned their first
title since the 1970 season.
when they played in
Baltimore, but the victory
over
Chicago
gave
Indianapolis its first title in
any major sport since the
Indiana Pacers won their
third ABA championship in
1973.
Fan Roger Fairchild, a construction
worker from
Brownsburg, helped build
the RCA Dome.
·•J spent a lot of cold days
in here before the roof was
on. This is great," he said.
The Colts will play one
more year in the Dome
hefore moving into the new
Lucas Oil Stadium, which is
expected to be completed in
time for the 2008 season.
just gotten better and better
every year. He keeps setting
the bar higher each year."
He also got some help in
the rotation after the Reds
acquired
right-hander
Bronson Arroyo from
Boston during spring training. Arroyo went 14-11 with
a 3.29 ERA in 35 starts, and
led the team by pitching 240
2-3 innings. Arroyo will
make a total of at least
$8,075,000 during the two
remaining years of his contract.
Harang is impressed with
the .way Krivsky has
retooled the team since he
took over a year ago.
'T m looking forward to
the direction we're going."
Harang said. "I think
they've done a lot to
improve it. Just last year. it
showed in how much better
we got."

CLASSIFIED
Gallla

County
OH

E-mail
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lhori9fltlo

eel~ ,

r

ANNOUN&lt;.lMI:NIS

r:I

Must

the

•

prepared by Roger W.
Ctauo,
Registered
Surveyor No. 6456,
basod on an actual
field survey of January
6, 2003; .. ld aurvoy
being aubjocl to any
facta thai may be dis·
closed In a lull and
accurate title search.
Lot 4 Llmberger Ridge
Road
Olivo Townahtp, Ohio
PPN: 09-00551.004
Bruner
Forshee
Protective Covonanta
1) Tho following protecttvo covenant• are
covenant•
running
with the land until
11112075, and may be
enforced
(through
injunction or olhar·
wise) by any owner
acquiring any part of
the land acquired by
the undersigned In the
township of Olivo by
Deed recorded in O.R.
Vol. 160 pg. 559 In the
land recorda of Meigo
County, Ohio.
2) No more than two
residences per tract
ahall be parmltted,
though tracts may be
further aptll and built
on with government
approvala.
3)
Permanent
dwalllnga ohatt be
rutrtcted to the opecl·
flcatlono
of
HUD
approved
ooctlonal
homoo, the Ohio Bulc
Building Code on moclutar homao ootttng
upon tither 1 crawl
opaco or baaomont
and now conotructod
the buiH llomoa. Any
hornaa will be new II
tho time of ptaeemont
and buill with new
matarlala.
4) Single wide mobile
6456".
laeo then ftve
Tho bearlngo in this veara of aga II plac•
description art for mont witt be permltlad
angle calculations only on tho above oubjocl
and are beNd on the property.
Eul Hno of Frocllon 35
5) No lnoperotlvo or
uaed ao North 01 dog. unllcanaed vohlcr.o
08' 40" Eaot.
may be placed on ..ld
lot. No accumulation of
A plat of tho
peroonal
deocrlbed survey has dlocardad
been aubmltlad lor lila ofloclo, -Is, waola,
or
any
at
the
Coun!y garbage
unsightly object or
Englnoar'o Olllco.
Tho above description matter will be permitRay M. and Ina J.
Weaver properly;
Thence, with tho
South Uno of said
Weaver
property,
South 89 deg., 00' 17"
East a distance of
1,177.03 feat to lha
point of beginning,
passing through an
Iron pin sot at a dla·
lance of plus 1,147.03
feet.
Containing
6.071
acres, more or less,
being a now apttt out of
Auditor's Parcel No. 0900551 .000.
Subject to all legal
rlght·of·waya, euemont,
restrictions,
reservations, and zoning regulations of
record.
Subjocllo tho right-olway of Townohlp Road
No. 270.
Subject to the IOO.Yoar
Flood Plain reolrlclions, if applicable.
Subject to a 30.00 feel
wide easement being
reserved unto tho
grantoro (Bruner Land
Company, Inc.), their
heirs, and or assigns,
forever. Said easement
being lor lhe purpose
of running utilities to
other pan:elo of land
on or near Township
Road No. 270. Satd
euemant runo In a
north-ooulh direction
acrou tho east ond of
tho abovo-deocrlbed
property with tho till
line of uld eeHment
being the eenterllne of
Town~hlp Road No.
270. Containing 0.315
acre, more or ieoo, of
oasemont.
All Iron plno oat are
518" x 30" reblr capped
ond labeled " Claus

-v•

13) Any residence
erected on told Iota
ahlll be al least 900
square r.et of Indoor
heated area (e•cludlng
basement and garatl")
and shalt have a linlshed aiding such ao
ruollc wood, frame,
brick veneer, praao
board or contemporary
oldlng.
14) Any building or
structure placed on
ssid propel'l'/ shalt be
sat back a minimum of
75 r.et from the center
of the existing road
unless a lesser eelback Is requoated by
public authority.
15) Whore protective
covenants and Meigs
County
of
Olivo
Townohtp
zoning
Onllnancu are In confilet,
tho
atrtcier
requirement
pr•
vall.
16) lnvolldatlon of any
of 1 - covenanho by
judgment of court
order ahlll, In no way
allocl any of the other
provlalona, which ohall
romiln in full force and
ofloct
17) Nothing . contained
horotn ohall be conotructed 11 creating
any obligation on the
part of Bruner Lantt
Company,
Inc. to
enforce
thoao
Protoctlvo Covenanto.
18) Tho purchasero of
thta farm, lor them·
Hlv•. lhotr hotro and
111lgno, by the accept·
ance · of the convoyanca of thltt r.rm,
agrae to be bound by
tho covonanll contelned herein and are
the primary ontorc.rs
of lheH covananto.
Said party or partiH
sre required to anower
on or balore the 28th
cloy following the 1111
publication, 28th Doy
of February, 2007 of
tho within nolle. or
default judgment or
other ]udgmant may be
had agalnatthem. Said
publication shall be
made In thil newa,._
per at leaot onco a
week lor aix (6) con-

'

will

Public Notice
Sheriff Sales Case No.
06CV098
Home
National Bank Plaintiff
Vo.
Steven
Hill
DefendantS Court o1
Common Pleao, Melga
Couh!y, Ohio.
tn purauance of an
order of sale to be
directed from aaid
court In tho above ontitied action, I wilt
expose to 11le at publie auction on the tront
otepo of· tho Melge
County Court Houle
on Friday, March 9,
2007 altO a.m., of Nld
day, the following
daocrlbod raaleltato:
The
following
deocrlbed noel 11lalo
olluated
In
the
Townohlp of Letart,
Coun!y of Molga, and
Stale of Ohio, bounded
and deacribed 11 lo~
Iowa: Being the Real
E1tato deeded by
David and Margery
Cowdery to Msuda
Aahley, 11 recorded
Auguat 31, 190i, vat:
101,
Page
525
deocrlbed oa followo:
Situate In Soc. Slxtaen
(18). Town Ona (1),
Rongo (12) 1\Mivo of
the Ohio Coll)pany'e
Purchaoo, and baing
tho Southoeol hell of a
._ acre lot originally
told and dHded by
Mary W. Chapmen to
William Rand, bounded
on tho Southweat by 1
lot owned by Mro. John
B. Koaler on tho
Soulhoaot by lola
owned by Mro. Dolle
Coulton and Mro.
Mollie Barriger and on
the
Northeaol
by
County .Roecl and runnlng wllh oald road
Northwaal far enough

lei make one (1) acre.
Excepting therefrom a
parcel conveyed to
General
Telephone
Company of Ohio by
deed dated 8104152 and
recorded In Vol. 171,
Page 167 of the Motga
Coun!y Deed Recorda
and further deacrlbed
as follows: Beginning
at a point In tho cantor
of State Highway 338,
which point Ia In the
oaotorly boundary of
the one (1) aero troct
now
owned
by
Elizabeth V. Roush;
thence In a southwest·
orly direction ninety
(80) loot ato.ng tho
-tarly boundary line
of 1ald one (1) acre
troct to a alike; thence
In a northwesterly
dil'9!'1ion parallel wllh
tho right-of-way of ..td
highway thirty (30) r.et
1o a alake; thence in a
northeasterly direction
ninety (90) r.etto point
In tho center of Stale
Route 338; thence In a
southoaalerly direction
thirty (30) r.et along
tho center line of Nid
highway to the piaca of
beginning. Subject to
on eaaemont oH of tho
northoaoterly end for
highway purposes.
Referenced Deeded:
Vol. 33, Page 881,
Melg1 Coun!y OHiclat
Rocordo.
Auditor'•
Parcel
No,:
08·
00571.000
Property
Addrau:
4!1481 State Route 338,
Racine, Ohto 45771
Property
Ownor:
Steven Hilt
Appralaed
ol
$40,000.00 torma of
Nle can not be ooid lor
tell then 213rdo of tho
apprataed value. t 0
percent down on day
of Nle, caoh or cortlfled check, balance
dua on confirmation of
Nle.
Tho appraloal did not
Include an Interior
oxamlnatlon ot' tho
houao.
Robert E. Beegle,
Maigo Coun!y Sheriff.
Attorney
for
tho
Plaintiff Little Sheato

Public Notice
Tho Home National
Bank will auction tho
following Item on
Saturday, February 10,
2007, at 10:00 a.m. at
the Bank's parking lot.
2000 Ventura Van
1GNDX03EOYD321228
2002 Kla Sportage
KNDJA723425118244
11194 Muda 626
IYVGE22DXR5117459
2004
11
HP
Cra1taman Mower
1966 Academy Mobile
Home
481021222
The Mobile Homo Ia
located In Pomeroy.
Tho Nle witt be at the
Bank'll parking lot.
Tho Home National
Bank resorveo the
right to reject any and
all btdo. All vehicles
and mobile home are
sold, as 11 whore Ia,
wllh no warranttea
e•prused or Implied.
For an appointment to
see, call 949-2210, aak
for Shalla.
(2) 7, 8, 9

r--=--.,..,:-----,

Get AJump
r

On

"''VINGS

~

Shop the
Classlfleds!
\

r~~!!~~~~~l r

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

10

..

kitncarlyleO~omcAit .net

Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Oivis1on of
Financial
Institution's
Ottice
ol
Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you retinance vour home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE

BlaCk cOlOred miX&amp;d breed
10 week old puppies. 1
Female. 2 maiO. 740·441 ·
1289.
-------Free to good home. Black
puppies 2 Female aM 1
Male. 740 _256. 1360_

www.comics.com
Accepting applications lor
cashiers. Must be avatlable
to work all shifts. No Phone
Calls. Apply at Par Mar 1142,

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcament ............................................ 030
Anllquoa ....................................................... 530
Apartment• lor Ront ................................... 440
Auction and Ftoa Markot .............................oeo
Auto Parts &amp; Ace&lt;eooorleo .......................... 760
Auto Repalr .................................................,770
Autoolor Sar. ..............................................710
Boall a Motoro for Sate ............................. 750
Bulidi"'J Supptleo ........................................550
Bualneoo and Butidtngl ............................. 340
Buitneoa Opportuntty.................................210
Bualneu Training ....................................... 140
Campara a Motor ttomea ........................... 780
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
of Thanko .......................................... 010
Chtld/EI&lt;*Iy Care ....................................... 180
l!tectrtcat/RIIrlgaratton ............................... 840
Equipment lor Rant. .................................... 480
E•cavattng ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpmant ..........................................&amp;10
Farmolor Ront. ............................................ 430
Farm• tor Sato ............................................. 330
For L -..................................................... 480
For Sale............................................ :........... 585
For Sate or Trade ......................................... 580
FruHI I Vagalablea .....................................580
Furnlehed Rooma ........................................450
Qenoral Haullng ......................................,....850
otv-ay......................................................040 ·
Happy Adi ....................................................050
Hay a Gratn ..................................................l40
Help Wanted ................................................. ItO
HOinl tmprovementa ...................................l10
Homeo for Sale ............................................ 310
Houoehold Goodo ....,.................................. 510
11ouon for Rent .......................................... 410
In Momortom ................................................020
tnauranee ..................................................... 130
Lawn a Gardin Equlpmont ........................eao
Llvutock ......................................................830
Loatand Found ........................................... oeo
Loho Acraatl"······...................................... 350
Mtocotlonaoua.............................................. 170
Mlacollanaoua Morchandlol....................... 540
Mobile Home Ropatr .................................... eao
Mobile Homeofor Rent .................... :.......... 420
Mobile Hom• for Sale ................................ 320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycleo I 4 Wh•tero ..........................740
M\lalcat tnotrumento ................................... 570
l'ersonalo ..................................................... 005
"--I for Sate ..................... :.......................... 560
Plumbing a HoaUng .................................... 820
Pro!Mslonat SanriC81 ................................. 230
Radio, TV a CB Repair ............................... 160
Real Eotate wanted ..................................... 380
Schootl tnotructlon ..................................... 150
Seed Plant a ForttliUr .............................. 1150
sttuadona Wanted ....................................... 120
sPace lor Ront .............................................480
. Sllortlng Goodo ........................................... 520
· SUY'I for Sate.............................................. 720
Ttuoko lor Silo ............................................ 715
UphotoiiiY ................................................... 870
Vona For Sate ............................................... 730
Wanlid to Buy ............................................. 080
Wanlld to Buy- Farm Supptlea .................. 820
Wanlld To Do .............................................. 180
Wanlld to Rant ............................................ 470
Yard Gatllpotla....................................U72
Yard Safe.Pomoroy1Mkldle .............:.....:..... 074
Yard -Pt. Pla1Nnt ................................ U70

c-

a.

L,l".b..".w
..w.M'ml
.......ll"o

15054 Stale Route 160.
Vinton.

Accepting Applications lor
Oil and Ga• Drilling.
Positions Open: Toot Pusher
and Drillers. e•perience
reQUired. Floor hands no
experience necessary. Pid!
up apphcation 0 J.D. Drilling
in Racine, Ohio. Apply in
person no phone calls
please

Hair Stylist- Michael &amp;
Friends is seeking a talented
creative stylist with man agers license for Booth
Rental. $125 per week. Call
Patty lor inler"View (740)379·
9145, cell (740)645·5895

local Manufacturing Facility
Accepting Resumes for
General Labor. Welding and
machine experience a plus.
Resumes must be sent to:
An Excellent way to earn
PO Bo• 176, Rio Grande,
money. The New Avon.
OH 45674.
Call Marityn 304-882-2645
MANAOEMENT
Werle at General and Assistant
Appalachians
home.
(617)436·4624 Managor positions at new
Boston, Ma.
concept carryout piua store
located at 900 Second Ave.
Ar1hur Treachers!Twtn Oaks
GM salary a1 $30K+, Profi1
accepling applications for Sharing. Health insurance.
e•perienced ·cookslanen· and other benefits available.
dants. Apply 0 J.D. Drilling OpportlJnity for ad\lancein Racine, OhiO. Apply in ment, including operating
person no phone calls parlll8r and franchising. To
please.
learn more send tesume to
-AV
_O_N_I-A-11-A,-.-.,-,-To_B
_u_y-or 72 N Plaza 81\ld., Attn: HR,
Sell
Shirley Spears, 304 . Chillicothe, OH 45601 or go
675·1429.
to www.zanzls.com. or call
Selinda al
Ohio Job
Bartender wanted to start Services. EOE.
immediately. Apply in person ~N'-ow-.Hi.-rin..:.g_e_&lt;_pe-ri,-enc---:&amp;d
at Halfhill's Ta~rn. 234 3rd Sawmill help. Apply in perAvenue, Gallipolis, OH
son .
Twin
Rl'ver

H1rdwoods

Bob Evans of GalliPolis. Soutt)Side
Hiring n~ht &amp; day Shih Grill
Cooks. Excellent Pay &amp;
Benefits 811ailable. Stop in.

llmiii!Uon or
dlscdmlnatlon baNd on
r~. color, reltglon, ux
lamlflal •t..u• or national
origin, or any lnt.ntlon to
maka any •uch

knowingly ISCC8pl
advartiHJMntl tor rul
1atate which Ia In
violation of thl law. Our
r"dera ar• hereby
Informed ttwl: •ll
dwlllngl ltdvtirtluel In

and troubleshoot ooncrete
paving machines. local
work, no travel. greal · pay
with benef its and more
Contact Nick Sa\lko &amp; So11B

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS

!I You Ha\18

Arry auestions

~~t.actst~~UieD!vue':~~~~~

ewnc~ to•

Vacations-FTIPT
HOME HE~LTH ~IDES· t-600·584· 1775 Ext. ,.8923
SIGH ON BONUS home
USWA
health care of SE Ohio IS
currently hiring home health · Tow Truck operator. MVR
aides · competitive wages. and drug screen required

740-388·8S47

Jndepe(!Qtnl

1116

l\t&amp;l£ll...\NEOlS

I

Seasoned tire wood. Oak
and Hickory split. You haul
or I hau!· Take CAA&amp; HEAP
· 740· 949-2038·

"'-------r
IUIO

WANTIW
To Do

....,

(304)675+0022

rid

•NOTICI•
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
that you do business with

o1 Rio Grande Is

Wanted: Direct Supervision
employees to oversee male
1dou1h ',n a s~affnmsoconu re :~u&amp; 1·
en 11a en\llf
. lVI
pass
ph','sical
training ,
requirement. Pay based on
eKJ)erience. Call (140)3799083 between 9·3 Mon·Fri

1

INO A JOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

51

people you know. and
NOT to send money
through the m811 until vou
have mvestigated the
offering

~~~~~==~~

loolung for experienced
cook. Please apply at the
cafeteria.

0

8~

OwoRll.JNfiY

~~···

•••

TNE

2·3
Bedri"Jom
Duplex.
$420/mo plus deposit &amp; utilities in Downtown Gall ipol~ .
No Pets. (740)446·0332
Sam-5pm Mon-Sat.

I

~c~e:;~~nt

RF.:vr
r.,._.,;iiiiioiiiiiii-_.1

~~; Ca~~~gl: ~=i. ~:k

about our (3) 14.:70 homes.
3000 sq f1 . 2 Story home. 3· Daytime
{740 )388 "0000 ·
740
5 Bedrooms, 3 Bath, Large Evenings, (
)388 -8017 or
Kitchen , Custom Cabinets. (7401245 "9213 ·
Wrap around porch, 2 car 2007
312
Doublewide.
naram~ with carport on 3 $37,970 Midwest (740)828·
•
•acres, close to A.ddaville 2750.
School $220,000. (740)367- ::....C'-----~::-:
Move in today! New 2007 3
0244
-:---::-:--:-::--"':' bedroom 2 bath.
Only
3BR,
28A,
LA
wiltl $199.88 per month. Set up
Fireplace, DR. Kitchen. minutes from Attlens and

C
2 BR, antral Air, Large Yard
w/Fenced Playground &amp;
Storage Bld:g ., .Water Paid
Between Gallipolis &amp; Rio
Grande. Married Couple
Preferred. Call (7 40 )245·
5211 or (740)448·0123

Detached 2 car 1)8.rage, on ready for immediate occu1711185 l ot. Within walking pancy. Call 740·385·4367 .
Distance ot new SGHS.
Asking !80.000. (740)256NEW 2007 4 bed D.Widel
8170
S49.179. Midwest (740)828·
4 rental houses "For Sale" 2750
=-:iroo~~-----,
In Gallipolis. Call Wa~·ne PI
(404)4S6·3802 .
BUSINm
:..:.:.::..:.:~='----A.'IDBl:ILDINGS
5 PllJS Acres , 2 Sr., Kit., - Din.: Frool Am.. FuN base. . F&amp;S Tire SA 7 &amp; SA 681 ,
story and 112 · AC , single Tuppers Plains. Oh. includes
garage/20 X 20 shop. 11
t F k Wells
Racine. Route 124
740· a eQUipmen ' ran
740 985 -3518
949-2253.
-----LoTs &amp;
2
5
Plus Acres,
Sr.: Kit.. L,--·Ail(iiJIEAii
-iiiliGiiiE-~
D!n .. Front Rm ., FuU base..
story and 112 · AC. single 47 acres +I· Lle\llng Road,
20 X 20 shop.
garage/
Racine, Aoule
ountry water. septiC. pvnv
124 _ 14
_
&amp; barn. et&amp;ctriC, many hOme
949
2253
•
.
~.:...:.='------ sttes.
.; 125.000 1nm
!
1
Attenton
(304)882·31 31
L al
.. . ~ ·o
oc
comcany
o
nng
'"
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· Uobllt HolM Lot for N111:

Mobile Home Lot in Johnson

r

o- c

N() JK4
WHAT ,•iiiiRI
'STYlE.

pets.

1984 14x17. 3 Bad. Mobile
COlJ td be the
Home.
Remodeled ,
same as rent
3 Bedroom, 1 314 Baths. $12.000. Free lot rent lor 6 Mortgage
Loca tors
Kitchen, LA. FR. Central Air. months, Pomeroy. {7401418·
367
0000
740
Many extras. 2 13 acres 6154
( )
"
located on Chris Lane. close
Moan£ HoMt:S
to new GAHS, AedlJced to 2003 16x76 Fleetwood.
FOR
$129.900. (740)245·5909
3BA. 2 Ba1h, Vinvt Siding,
Shint;~le Roof . CIA. Very Nice
3 Bedroom. 2 Bath, fireplace Home.
1998
16x80 2 Bedroom. Bulaville Pike.
Trash/Water Pd. No Pets.
on Pleasant Va!ley Ad, 1/2 Ri\lerside, 3BA. 2 Balh, "Vinyl
mil~ from Rio Grande,
C
Deposit &amp; References.
9
[740)388-1100
A\lailable with 1. 5, or 8

Drywall and painting servlces. 740-985·3779.
acres. (740}709-1166
God's Rejoicing Carpenter
building, temodeling. plumblog, prayer. John Moore 992·
2839.

no

2br, House in Pt. Pt. $465
Homestead Really Broker
For Sale: Ranch Style
1304)675·4024 1304)675
Home, 4 Bedrooms, 3 Ba1h,
0799 ask for Nancy.
6 acres. (740)388:8639
3BA. 1 bath, LeGrande
Green Twp, 1 112 mi hom
Blvd, no pets, $825 mo. +
town, 1 112 m1 trom New
sec dep. (740)446·3644.
GAHS, 3BR Br1ck Ranch.
$140,000. (740)446-8131
Accepting
applications
through 2/14 . Nice 2 story, 3
House lor eele : 2br. 1 ba
badroom, 1 Bath, 571 Carttlr
on Monroe A\le. Pt. Pleasant
Road . Propane heat, No ·
needs some work , good
Indoor Pets. Stove. Fndge.
starter, home or rental unit
Water and lrash included
$19.500. 304-675-6349
Deposit $400. Rent $450.
HUD HOMEI 3bd $112/mo. (740)258·1106
3bd 2ba $155/mo. More
Anentlon!
homes available! 4%dn,
loc:al company offering "NO
30yrs @ 8%. For listings DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
800·559-41 09 •F144
'-1!F.~.;.;.~:---, grams tor you to buy your
111
MOBB...E HO\Wi
hOme 1nstead ot rent1ng.
l'OR SAU:
• 100% financing
• Less than perfeC1 credit

i

Col~

ar.d School&amp; 121.a

Fax reslJme to 74D-266·
6671
·

Uni\lersity

0 Down e\len with less than
perfect credit is available on
this 3 bedroom. 1 bath

Payment around $.5SO per

Walling till Spring to
. to
clean your CarnAl?
AN, immediate ope(llng r
·...DON, experience preferred
No Need!
Call for additional informslow Moisture carpet
Hof) or lntet'vlew. Contact:
cleaning dries In an houri
Marjorie
Huston
0 Cat\lin leportfCiearly Clean

Testing Assistant needed
part time to perfOrm drug,
alcollo!. and other testing
medical background unnecAN's, Dialysis Technicians, essary· will train . Fax
and UM Clerk needed lor
10 (740)2666671
Pleasant Valley Dialysis. an resu,.~
or caM 888-269-6344.
independently owned outpa·
.~ Drr"ver -eded
to haul
tient dialysis facility in •r·
IIUU\
'""
..
,.
w.v.
a•d
K~--~y
1
Pt.Pieasant,WV. E•perlence va "
"
..............
'
orelerred. Please send Caii-74Q-416·I795.

4109 •254

Accredited 'hmber Acc•&amp;dilinll

Chestlire,
OH.
lnt..-estinoJl.Ow Stfess woo
Environment.
Great
Opportunity to Earn Ewtra
Cash! Call B88·2S9-S344 or

$16.53-$27.58/hr., now hiring. For application and fr&amp;e
governement ;oo· Info, call
American Assoc. of labor 1•
913·599-8042, 24/hrs. emp.
serv.
resumes 10 Cancty Bartram,
Louisa-Fort Gay Regional
Full-time 1omp needed for
Dialysis, 2145 Highway
busy office. Job may
2565. Louisa, KY 41230 or
become permanent. Position
tax to 606-638·3404
IS m1xed secretarial and
medical. Resumes may be
POST OFFICE NOW
dropped off at the office of
HIRING
John A. Wade. MD. 2520
A11g . Pa~ $20/hl or
Valley Dri\le, Suite 112.
S57K annually
Point Pleasant, Feb. 1st. 2nd Including Federal Benefits
and 5th. NO Phone Calls.
and OT,Peid Tra1ning,

Call740-662·1 222

limited, Appli~tions Will Be
Accepted Until Feb. 9, Full
Time And Part Time Par1
Time Positions Available To
Those Qualified Individuals
Completing The Class
Be
Applicants
Must
Dependable (Anendance Is
A. Must) Team Players With
Positive Attitudes To Join Us
In Pro\liding Outstanding,
Quality Care To Our
Residents.

AN's needed to perform
basic first aid at business In

at 614-461-WOAK. EOE
Custodian needed $7.50 per
hour -+. Retail floor experi·
en&lt;:e a plus. Please call 304·
617-2782 0&lt; Fax 216·862·
0452.

home. Comer lot, fireplace,
modern kitchen, jacuzzi llJb,

(740}384·3485 or (740)384·
2678. Huston
Nursing
Home, tnc. 38500 St Rt.
160, Hamden, Ohio 45634.

operator to set up, operate,

II

month. 740-367·7129.

2 or 3 Br. house.
740-992-5858

this Mwap~~per are

4:30pm.
II
You
Are
Interested In Joining Our •
Friendly And Dedicated GaiNpolle Clreer CoU~e
S1."11 ' Please Slop By Our (Careers Close To Home)
Front Otlice Mon·Fri., 9am- Call Today! 740 _446 _4367 ,
5pm And F!ll Ou' An
1·800-214-0452
18 -. ~JipoHsc•M·E~~rcolleoe-oom
Application,
Space

lr..-oilr-mliiiiiiioct'IONiiiiii_.l

town. No Pets, Rel"\0\'ated.
All
new carpet.
Call
(7 40)446·7425

avallllbte on an equal .
opportunity bula.

$185/ mol 3bd 2111 HUD
$23,3341 5% down, 2(l years
@ 8%. For listings 600·559·

".......

2 Nice Remodeled Homes in

This I'MIWSpA~Mr will not

Work 110m home. not get
rich quic~ . work lnvol\led. For
into. send S.A.S.E to PO
Box 454, Hamden OH
Holding An STNA Class, 45634.
Scheduled For Feb. 2D- -.!'"'"~~----,
vu '"
March 7, Hours WIi I Be 8amoX.-11'.~

•iY

2 bedroom house located in
Gallipolis. (740)441-0 194.

.,.t.rence,llmltllllon or
dlacriminatlon."

Ir..i.o....:-~.~-_.1

Overbrook Center located
0 333 Page Sl., Middlef)Ort,
Ohio
Is pteased To
Announce We Will Be

Coord!·nalor @ 740 . 992 .
6472
0\lerbrook Center Is An
E.O.E. And A PartiCipant Of
The Drug Free Workplace
2612 US At 35, Pfogram.

PAVING.
CONCRETE
Columbus contractor is
seeking an e•perlenced
Gomaco concrete paver

HEIJ&gt;WAMID

I '

100 Uberty Street $500 plus
utilities 2 bedroom Out of
T
$650 1
"lrt.·
3
1own
pus ut1 leS
bedroom Contact ERA Town
&amp; Country Real Estate, 675·
5548

advwtt• "•ny

1-1!88·582-3345
ld \ I I ...,

HOME! 4o/..On, 30yrs 0 8%
For listings 800·559·4109
)(1709
·

p~hrence,

TURNED DOWN ON

~

SUimo! Buy lbd HUD

aubtee' to "-F.-rei
Fair Housing Act of 1968
whit:h makn tt lllega;l to

SOCIAL SECUIUTY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!

2007 by NEA, Inc.

@

..

All ruleat~~a.advertlalng
In this n.wtpap.r Is

service announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

-.. 1 I{\ II I "

Gl
=
.

of requests for any 1a1ge
ol
.dvance Pa"menls
1
lees or insurance. Can the
Office
ol
Consume1
Affairs toll tree at 1-868·
278-0003 to laam if the
mortgage
broker
or
lender
IS
properly
licensed (This is a public

0

How:s
roRSAu:

---I

r-----~--~r~ '.a...FORibNr
~
. .....
~ ~

H~OTI(;IlH'

r1

CLASSIFIED INDE.X

Warner PO Box 886 S.
2nd St. Pomeroy, Ohio
457&amp;9
740-1192-6689
(2) 7, 14,21

POLICIES: Ohio V&amp;l6ey P\lbllllllng r-.rvu 1M r~ttn ta edtt, r.tect. 01 c.nc.J .ny ed al any UrM. Er1on mutt 1M reported on tM flrlt illy of
TriDu.,._S....tlnei-A.g'-t• 111111 bli rMponalblrl lot no mor• thin thl cotI of 1M~ occupteo by ttl• tn'Of Md onty the flret lnHf11on. W•
any kNII or n,.nM tt\lt multi ffom thl pubbtion or omiRion ot.,. ldv-.11...,...1. CorriC16on witt blo madto tn the flrel •vallebtllditlon. • Box
'"' elw•v• ~. • Curr.nt r.t. card appliel. • All rMI Mlltl actwert!Mmentl '" •ubtect to the Flder1l Fair Houllng A~ ot I MI. • Tl'lil
ICC~II only help Rf1tld adl mMtlnQ EO£ atendard1. W• .,Ill not knowingly Kcapllft)' adllert:IU'Ig In Vklilllon ol IM LIW.

r~1

P11-ahllc: '""""•-••.tc:.._.,s I n ro..Je"""sp,..pca-s.
~ell"'Ve:!!.-~c:l R ·t g h t ••• ......,...,..,._..- ~ ..... .-..

oeculiva -kl.
Marlene Harrlaon
Clerk of Courts
Meigs Coun!y, Ohio
David Brian Bonnett
Attorney for PlaintiH
126 N. 9th Street
Cambridge, OH 43725
(1) 24, 31 (2) 7, 14, 21 ,
28

• All ads must be prepaid•

I \11' 1 0\\ 11 \1

newspaper and learn

led on any lot.
6) No noxious or otr.nslvs activity ahall be
carried on upon any
lot.
7) Before occupancy of
any house, a oowage
dlapot1al ayllem shalt
be lnolallod In conformlty with the min~
mum
atandards
required by the County
Board of Hoahh.
8) Before any conatrucllon takes place
purchaoer must contact the local govarnment authority to make
aure they are in compttance with the local
laws.
9) All loll are to be
used for residential,
agricultural and recrO.
allonal
purposes,
(though tho lot owner
may store equipment
and material used In I
bualne11 In a welt conotruclod
enclosed
building on the proper·
ly). Tho property 11 not
to be used lor commer·
clot enlarprl•• (wllh
cuatomero coming and
going) wHh tho exeeplion of chun:hoa, rldl"'l
otabloa, horaeo larmo,
cattle farrno, or truck
Ia,.. (lruHo and vogotabloa)
10) No owlne aheH be
perm- on tho above
oub]oct
proparty.
~·ra.r domutlc farm
anlmalo (Including but
not limited to horaao,
colllo, ahoep, goal•
and ttame1) are permit·
loci. Tho pHture shell
not be ovor grued but
ohall be healthy snd
.thick, lnd ohell
ba controlled. Noise
and odoro from any
animal shall be controtted 10 thai neHher
ohall be offwnolve to
edjolni"'J nolghboro.
11) Doge, cato and
other houaehoid pota
allaH not bo bred or
malnlllned for commorctat purpooao.
12) No lent, camper,
ochool but, or rtc,..
atlonal vohlcleo ihall
bo uaad 11 a roof·
denca, elthor temporory or permanent.

All Dl•play: ll. Noon 3
Bu•ln••• Daye Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dleplay: 1:00
Thursday tor Sundays

Buying Junk Cars.Trucks &amp;
Wreclcs, Pay Cash J D
Sai"Vage
(304)773·5343
1304)674· 1374

Read your

LEGAL NOTICE
North 01 deg. 08' 40"
In the Melg1 Coun!y Eail1 a dletance of
Court of Common 1,111.531eetto an Iron
Pleas Pomeroy, Ohio
pin
1a1
at
tho
Bruner Land Company, Southeast corner of a
Inc.,
40 acres tracl as conPlaintiff.
veyed to Ray M. and
Va
Ina J. Weaver by Pa~l
Stephen E. Bunner, No. f of Deed Volume
Deceased, etal, •
261, Page 335 of the
Dor.ndantl
Meigs
County
Case No.
Recordal''s Olllcs:
Stephen E. Bunner, Thence with tho South
whose lui known line of said Weaver
addresa waa 1416 property, North 89 deg.
Hocking Road, Belpre, 00' 17"Westa distance
Ohio 45714, Nancy of384.92 feel to a point
Bunner, Spouse of In tho center Uno of
Stephen E. Bunner, lownahlp Road No. 270
whose 1111 known (Limberger
Ridge
addreas
Ia
1416 Road), being the true
Hocking road, Belpre, point of beginning for
Ohlo 45714, and the this description;
unknown heirs at law Thence, from said
of Stephen E. Bunner, point of beginning and
decoasod, tho current running with tho can·
addrosaos of same torttno of Township
which are unknown, road No. 270, the lo~
and cannot wHh rea- lowing four courses:
sonablo diligence be (1) South 02 dog. 54'
found or ascertained, 52" Will a dlotance of
ohall taka notice thai 66.51 feet to a point;
on
_ day
of (2) Thence South 12
December,
2006, deg. 19' 50" Weola dlo·
Bruner Land Company, tanca of 75.04 feel to a
Inc., Bye•vllle, Ohio point;
43723, filed its com· (3) Thence South 23
plaint agalnot oald deg. 43' 24" Wool a disparty praying for ]udg- lance of 80.03 feel to a
mont quieting tHta In point;
the Plaintiff relative to (4) Thane. South 39
tho forectooure of a deg. 12' 06"Westa dtaland lnotaltment con· ranee of52.57 feel to a
lroct regarding the .fol· point;
lowing deocrlbed real Thence, leaving tho
oa-, to-w~:
road, North 89 dog. 07'
Situated
tn
tho 40" Wut a dlotanct of
Townohlp ol Olive, 1,ot9.41 feet to on Iron
County of Melgo, and pin Htln tho East line
Slate of Ohio, being In of o 51 .6807 ocr.. tract
Fraction 35 of Old u convoyed to Eric L.
Section 34, Range 11 and
Sharon
R.
Wilt, Town1hlp 4 Johnaon by Official
North, of "The Ohio Roconlo Volume 106,
Company
Firat Page 321 of tile Meigo
Pure- of 17&amp;7", and Coun!y
Rocomr'o
being bounded and Olllca,
palling
deocrtbod aolollowo: through ._ Iron plno
Commencing
for Htat dlsllncel of pluo
Raflrtnea all 518" Iron 25.80 feet and piuo
pin found at tho 125.80 feel, rupocll'l•
Soulhoaol cornar of ly;
Fraction 35 (Noll: Thonctl, with the Eut
Rar.rence bHring on line of Nid Johnson
tho Eaat line of property, North 01 dog.
Froctlon 35 uaed a1 25' 18" Eall 1 dlotance
North 01 dog. 08' 40" ol200.00 feet to an Iron
bot):
pin • oat
at
the
Thence, with trie Eaot Southwell corner of
line of Fraction 35, tho
aforo"18ntloned

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-friday for ln . . rtlon
In NeJCt Day"• Paper
Sunday In- Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sunday• Paper

AbSolute Top Dolla" u.s.
Silver and Gold Coms.
Prootsets, Gold Rings, Pre·
1!135
U.S.
Currency,
Solita1re Oiamoi"IOS· M.T.S
Coin Shop, t51 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis. 740.446·
2842.

ro)oc1 or cancel any
ad ot any limo.

on

%~

.se;.

Now you con have borders and qraphics
lL-'
added to vour classlfted ads
1m
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I!
Graphics SOC for small
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Websites:
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I

· •·"

3 Bedroom Mob1le Home
Union Avenue, Pomeroy,
Completely
Renovated .
$450/mo. (740)416·6154
Mob1le

Home

Park

in

Gallipolis. OH .
Phone
(740)446·2003 or (740)446·
1409
_:_:,.:__ _ _ _ __
Nice 141170 3 Bedroom. 2
Batn
home.
Located
between
Athens
and
Pomeroy. $365.00
per
mooth. Call (740)385·9948

r

APAR11\IE'US
FOR Rt..."\il"

1 S. 2 Beclroom Apartments
tor Rent. Mei~ County, In
town . No Pets, DepoSit
Reqwed . {740 )992·5174 or
1740)441 -0 110
- - -- - - 1 and 2 Mdroorn apart ·
ments. turn1shOO and unlur·
nishPd . sec:urit~·1 depOSit
reqUired. no pets, 740·992·

orams for you to buy your near Vinton . Call (7401441 · _22_,_a_ _ _~-....,11 11
hQir,e instead of renung .
2br Apt on 5th Street $375
• 100% financing
~&gt;\n:
ask tor Don (304 )593·1994
• less than perfect credit
accepted
3 and 4 room turn1shed apts.
• Payment could b&amp; the '
clean W/0 hookup. No pets.
same as rent
Need to s&amp;ll your home? Rei. and deposit required .
Mortgage
Locators. late onstepayments~~~vorhco. 74()-446·,519
( 740)J6J·OOOO
job tran r or a uo:mt .
can buy your home. All cash For lease. t600 squart t6et,
Located i, Gallipolis Ferry. a"nd quick clOSing. 74()-416- beautiful, unfurnished. two
lar96 yard. wl18x80 Mobile 3130
bedroom apt. . 2nd floor. LA.
Horne, 3br. 2ba, 11au1t&amp;O ceil·
DR. 1 112 baths. downtown
mgs. island kitchen. new
Gallipolis, ielea! lor couple
refridg., All electric, covered
References requi red, no
front porch. 2 large Garages
pets. security deposit, $600
plus OU!builc&gt;nos 13041675·
PB' 'l'onlh. Call 1740)4463161 asking $80,000
_.
......
4425 or (740)446·3936

j

"l·"'1m

1 1

'-lilt..,...._

··-- --- ------- -

I

RE.u
"'---ioiliiiiiiiit-r

�'
Wednesday. February 7, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 7, 2007
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sen line! • Page B5

NEA Cronword Puzzle

CI ,ASSIFIEDS

BRIDGE
ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

EMPLOYMENT

1 llold fllltr
(hyph..

groins

e lltiyond

41

benal

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
112 mile west on SR
124 to Rutland, Oh

Belterra Casino
Resort &amp; Spa

740-992-5682
9am · 6pm

3 Oay·2 Night Gelaw'y
March 22, 2007 to
March 24, 2007
$175/peraon baaed on
double occupancy
Package includes dinner on the
first night and breakfast on the
second morning
Single rooma can be purchased
for $275/person
Must be 21 years of· age
(No refunds)
Gladly accept cash, money
order, check &amp; credit cards
Please call PVH Community
Relations to make reservations, '
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326

MINtErS
SELF STOOGE
97 Beech Street

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635
"Middleport'• only
Sell-Storax••

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
N•w Gar•!Jt•
Electrlc•l A Plumbing

I r•o

Auro;
mKSAu;
~ow-..,;iiiiiiiiiiiiii--'

male 1 female 3 black and -

Police

Impounds

$50.00 each. call days 740- Cars trom S500 1 For hslings
446·3398 eve 740· 379· 800-559-4086 ~t3901

2467

r

1995 Bu1ck Centur~ . 4 dr.,
Mul~ swans for sale year- 137.000K. 1uns great. good
ling male &amp; female, call tor body &amp; tires, $1 ,800 080.
prices 304·576·2999
or 740·992·3453.
304·593·559 t

Ir M~~ I- - - - - - -

AoomiiEI'liS
Aoomlmm;
AII\RlMfNI"S
_
_
FOR_JbNr
__
._.J
lw--FORiliiilbNiiiilior
_.J
Lw-.;,llllliliiilbNfiiiilioaa-'
L,
-.

I

laurel

-.

Townhouse
Gracious li'Ving. 1 and 2 bed· Tara
room apartments at Village Apartments, Very Spacious,
Manor
and
Ri~Jerside 2 Bedrooms, C/A, 1 1/2
Apartments 1n Middleport Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
From $295 -$444. Call 740- Pool. Patio. Start $425/Mo.
992·5064. Equal Housing No Pets, Lease Plus
Opportunities.
Security Deposit Required,
(740)367 -7086

Commons

Apartments La rgest in the
areal Beautifully renovated

throughout 1nclud1ng brand
new kitchen and bath
Starting at $405. Call today'
(304)273·3344

JET
AERATION MOTORS

2000 Neoo. Auto. Air, 4cyl. ,
$2200 0 80. 96 VJtul t~

Sc hnauzers. Min1, AKC. 2
Dodge
Females. 11 weeks old. sip.

Shuts utd and groomed

i

F

'-'.

_ _______ 1.---U•R•.-.•\•t•.:-"""

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angle
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Drams,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;

_

Comme rcial building "For
Sale" 1600 sq ft. oft street
parking. Greaftocation Calf

I \1 \\ 1..,1 1'1 '11 1..,
,\ I I\ I . _, 1111 h.

')9 2
~~ Y l'&lt;~r~

L .. ,dl

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Ractne, Ohto
45771
740.949-2217

·

s'*~ S'x1.0'

6169.
'I'Rl!l'K.."i
tl)R SAl£

~,,.._.

'

l\10JUHCYLU~-J

1,-~~~\iiViiHiiil-:il•l;;;.liiil&lt;iiS-_.J
1996 Suzuki mtrueler 800.

$3500. Call lor mora information. 740·25&amp;1567

4x4

S:OO pm lo 9:00pm
March 3rd tU:OO am

1A0-992-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

r

'\ 11{ \ HI . _,

tO

Hll.\11:
hU'RO\"I:'UXIS
BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
m11es, automatiC, bedl1ner
Excellenl t:Ondit1on. no rust Unconditional lifet1n1e yuarBooks for $6500 Sell lor antee. Local rtllarences h.lr 5.99% Fixed Rate on John $5,000. 740-367 -7129.
ni st',ed Established 1975
Deere Gatore Carm1chael
Call
24 Hrs (f40) 446Equipment (740)446-2412. -2004
--,Po:-w-er-·s-:-1-ro-ke-rc-Fc-2-50 0870. Rogers Basement
Fx;4 loaded , auto, 45,000

ESTATES, 52 Westwood

miles. black . sharp truck. call

Drive from $349 to S448.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740·446·2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

740·379-2651

Waterproofing

Get A Jump

on
SAVINGS

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED A AFFORDABfEt
Townhouse
apartments.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

vi1TI4
/

~AN/&lt;

-

l&gt;lll~CT

r&gt;EPOSIT OF YOIJ/t PAYGI4~GIC
ANI&gt; AUTO PAYM~NT Of YOU/t
II,_L~.

wE GOMPUTt,_Y

1&gt;0 AviAY WITI4 T~f'
,,_I.USION T14AT YOU
ACTIJA,_L Y WElt
SfE ANY OF
YOU/t MONfY.

••

Hardwood Cabme1ry And FurnlCure
.....,;w.u.ab&lt;l...,...okoab~netey.oo•

740.446

I'M

GITIIN'

SET

COULD'JA

ICITCHEN,

UP OFF TH'

JUGHAID ...

A.OOR FER

2459 St. Rt. 160 •

ME ? r---"i
I I \\ I.._,

I\ I I I

(I''\ " I hl ( I l l l'\

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

Al11)'pes0f
Concrete Work
2&amp; Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971

• Custom Baths
• Complete
Renovations
• Hone)' Do

List~

• Plumbing/Wiring
• Free Estimates

Owner

. Rhonda Peters
Manager
• Janel Jeffers

~ocal

Downtown Point Pleasant
modern one bedroom Apt

Second floor, stove and

70

German

style

breakfast

nook $100.00. unfinished
bunk beds w/ matching
chest of drawers $75.00,

'(£~-'iCM:. FOOT""'

I""\'liE. E.~I\E.t&gt; '{()OJIZ. !&gt;1'££0\ "''

I1-1 '(OU~ ~"ffi!

11&gt;\i'Et&gt;llo\UillO 11\e:.
WO&lt;l!&gt; '(OIJ'It£ TO
VI!&gt;IT I

2005

Forest River 19ft.

Camper 5 year warranty on

appliances $11500.00.
Oak firewood tor sale.
Delivered
or
pickup.

(740)44 !-0941 , (740 )645·
5946. CAA HEAP aCCBPied.

Sherlft S.tea
Caoe No. 06CVOSO
HSBC Bank USA, ao
truatee, ale. Plaintill VS
Pamela Bentz, aka
Pamela Q, Bonll ot ol,
Defendanto. Court of
Common P'"•· Meigs
County, Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of sale to be
directed from oald
court In tho above entitled action, I will
axpou to sale 11 public auction on the fronl
ateps of tho Meigs
County Court Hou10
on Frldly, March 8,
2007 at 10 Lm. ol aald
d1y, the following
described real 11tato:
Sttualtd In the Slllte of
Ohio, County of Meigs
and VIllage of Racine:
Being ~ot No. 16 and
17 In the Myers
Addttlon to lhe Incorporated Village of
Racine, Meigs County,
Ohio, ra10rvlng to the
State of Ohio, however,
all oil, gao, coal and

other mlneral1, with
the rights of entry lor
tho
purpoao
of
prospecting, develop·
lng, producing or operallng lor the ume and
tho rlghl of occupancy
In oo far aols eaoenllal
to auch proapectlng,
developing, operating
or producing; aloo
reserving to the state
of Ohio lhe uae of
atreams
flowing
through said lands or
obufflns upon the
tame and 110 much of
the banks thereof, as
moy be necessary lor

ouch anjoylng, and lho expose 10 sale at pubprotection of such lie auction o the front
streamo from eroalon, ilepo of lhe Meigs
contamination,
or County Court House
de~tt ol oedlmenl.
on Friday, March 9,
Propeny addreas: 410 2007 at 10 a.m., of said
flflh Streel, Racine, day, . lhe following
Ohio.
Property described real Hiate:
Owners: Pamela Bontz Sltuoted In the Village
and Timothy Bentz. of PomtfOY, county of
Prior Deed Rele,..,ce: Molga, and State of
O.R. 154, Page 425. Ohio.
PPN NO. 19-00412-oDO Baing ~nown and dell·
and 19-0041 1-oo.
lgftllltd on a map of
Appraload
at Lincoln Helghto, m $25,000.00. Termo of by Breece and Carper,
sale: Cannot be sold reglotered
Civil
lor leas than 213rda ~ EnglnHro,
Hunting
the appra11ad value. ton, Wtst VIrginia, dale
10% down on day of October 17, 1942, aa
ule, cash or cert~led recorded December
check, balance due on 17, 1942, In the Office
of the Recorder of
confirmation of sale.
The appralaal did not Melga County, Ohio, In
Include an lnlerlor Plat Book t3, Plgea 43
examlnallon of the and 44, aa Lot No. 38,
house.
Robert
E. and being more partieBeegle, Meigs County ularly described aafol·
Sheriff. Attorney lor lows:
tho Plaintiff Reimer Being al the poln1 of
Lorber Arnovitz Co. PO intareection of the
Box 968, 2450 Edlaon Soulh line of ~incoln
Blvd., Twlnobury, OH Road with lhe West line
44087. (330• 425-4201
of Polnl ~ane : thence
(2) 1, 14, 21
with the said line of
'
~lncoln Road, North 63
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ , degrees 51 minutes
Weal SO feet; thence
Public Notice
with the said line
between ~ots 37 and
Sheriff Sales
38. Soulh 26 degrees
COI8 oomber 06CV046 09 minutes West 200
Cnlbank NA plainliff vs teel; thence Soulh 63
Otis and Ronda Core degrees 51 minutes
Defendants Court ol East 27. 4 feet to a

MY

NE i&lt;OHBoR
IS M
Oil.THO ·
DOtJTIST.

PEANUTS
1

I Sj.jOULD 6E E!ACK

1M 601N6 IN TO TOWN
TO 8U't' VALENTINES FOR ALL
TloiE GIRLS WllO LOVE ME ..

IN TEN SECONDS..

SUNSHINE CLUB

the appraised value. 10

percenl down on day
ol sale, cash or corllfled check. balance
due on confirmation of
sale.
The appraisal did not

include an lnlerlor
examination or the
house.
Roberl E. Beegle ,
Meigs County Sheriff
Atlorney
for
lhe
Pl aintiff
Reimer.
Lorber, Aronov itz Co.
Common Pleas. Meigs point in the said line of PO box 96ll . 2450
County. Ohio.
Point Lane ; t hence Edison
Blvd .•
In pursuance ol an with said line, North 32 Twinsburg, OH 44087 .
order of sale to me degrees 36 minutes 330.425-4201
directed from said Easl201 .28 !.eel, lo lhe (2) 7, 14, 21
court In the above enti- point of beginn ing;
tled action. I will reserving however. the

Marcum Constructl• and
lanaral Contracting
St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
Mike W. Marcum, Owner
Additions
Garages
Roofing
Vinyl Siding
Ne" Constru&lt;·tion Interior Remodeling
Residential &amp; Commercial
740-985-4141 Office
740-416-1834

Manley' a
Rac:yc:llng

··It·
-· ....,...,...
...- .......
11111111111.
140-912
.... . . . . .

~.,

. . . . . . . .12:11 ..

PlYING TIP PIICES . .

........... -

1 Chlckon

..... 111

hllllllc CIIU .. I• CIDer
ICIIII'tr Cll1• friclll

GRIZZWELLS
A'VI£ 'loU m:u~
USEI.E~ 'lbl'r\'1:

w-wda..

"'a~\\1~

w-.

49 -

35 Make ' IOUP I~ 24 tt h11 long 50 Walloch or
311 Jazzy refnrin
dlont
onno
Ully
31 Phone but· 8
buy 26 Chock on 51 FMI_,
ton
12
27 Oiva'a
52 Hill pint
40 Bout
9 t-tannlo . rendttlon .
windup
dlv28 Up In the air

no--

apparent bicks. But ~ you do lhat, West
will ruff the third heart and shift to dia·
monds. Instead, immediately lake your
remaining club tricl&lt;s and - this is nee·
essary - discard a heart honol' trom the
dummy.' (If West runs the third dub, overruff on the board and hope he has at
least three hearts.)
In this way, you need West to hold only
two hearts. Yoo take those heart win·

'il" ,........,.,,...

..

,L ..

~-

AstroGraph
-'llllthdoir:

Thunc:t.y, F•b. 8., 1007
By Bernie• Bede o.ol
Most of the endeavors you originate or
direct ha\Je a better-than-average
chance lor achieving success. However,
should you leal a need to partner with
somoone , be very sm&amp;ctive of whom you
choose.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Your
ego-denying qualities will enable you to
identify with and help others try to solve
all their problema. But if you lake on too
much of the world's woes, wearine!iS is
apt to set in .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - A fflla·
lively harmless manifestation ot day·
dreaming could set in and put you in a
world of your own. But if you carry it too
far, it could go tull·scale and have you
totally evading reality.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - Guard
against putting yourself out for another to
the polnt ol jeopardizing your personal
interests. It's line to be concerned about
their welfare, but be equally attentive to
your own.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -Your kindness will comm a"d attention, even
though you might not dehberfttely seek 11.
Be careful ol your demeanor. because
the impression you make could make
one think you're easy.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20)- tn order to
achieWI an important objective , it will be
necessary for you to proceed in a logical,
. methodical manner. If you shoot from
your &amp;motions, the results won't be too
good.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Stri\le to
ba tactful and diplomatic when dealing
with associates, but not to the point of
doing all the accommodating without
good reason. Someone might percei~~e
you as a sap.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - If you are
required to handle an 1mportant matter
lor another, treat it as consclepliously as
you would if it were your own personal
affair. Yoo 'll be judged by tho in terest you
take in il.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - While try ·
ing to be a good pal, it's best not to take
sides with someone who has had a dis·
pule with another. Once thtl~ make up,
you could bEl held accountable for what
was said.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Your powers
of observation co uld be more acute than
usual. Just bEl sure you dOn't tocus solely on what you like about people and
ignore seaing them in totality lor what
they really are.
SCORPiO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Be
uxtremely careful how you manage your
resourc~ at th1s point in time, because
all thoae lo\lely luxury 1tems oou ld be
beclo;oning you in greater measur• than
you can afford.
SAGITIAAIUS (N0\1. 23-0ec. 21) - S.
as clear aa possible In your communications with others. Serious mlsimpt"eslions may occur thai co uld •nd up being
quit• confusing and disturbing In your lite
and difficult to unwind.
·
CAPRICORN (O.C. 22-Jan . 19) -Your
sense or \lalu•• may be more aplritue.l
and l$atl.z~ . which are high prlndptes
to hold. Take care you don't becofne,
careteu with your poe..aalons In the
proceN.

~~m

22

47 Doatree

48 - Hdt

. lalkor

whether hu19Y or not, derive great
pleasure from playing "unnecessary"

G

BIG NATE

=

coal and all other minerals in and underlying
the above described
property. Together with
the right to mine the
same wlthoul encumbrance 10 I he surface.
and subjecl lo tan
easemenl for sewage
liner ditch or leaching
ditch as sol forth and
deacrlbed In thai cer·
lain lnatrumant Bering
dale November 26,
1943, and recorded In
said recorder office In
Deed Book t 51, Page
178.
Property
Address:
1680 Lincoln Slreet
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Properly Owners: Oils
Core and Rhonda Core
Prior Deed Reference
O.R. 118, Page 201
PPNt1600491000
Appraised
al
$12,000.00 terms of
sale: Cannot be sold
for less than 213rtls of

21 FMihortd

now"

Many ~· enjoy shopping, ospocial~
when thO purcnasas 618, striCtly spook·
ing, unnecessary. And bridge players,

ners, cross to your hand with a spade.
and ruff your last heart on lhe board,
overruffing West if necessary. You taka
klur spades, two hearts, three clubs and
the ruff on the board.

Free Eetlmatea

BLIC
NOTICES

or

pureuM

45 lhlo lpOI

Hmm.

•

740..367·0536

Pine Slrett • Gallipolis
446-0007

HCOnd

atrlkM
8 "- do lor

43 - . . ...
booll
44 FoHow In

piece of advice: "Eat bolo&lt;o shopping. II
you go to the store hungry, you are likely to make unnecessary purchases.·

trump, which would have cruised home
here, bu1 with a tow doubleton, he under·
standatll)' used Stayrnan to try to uncover a 4·4 spade fit.
1oot&lt;s tamp!ing 10 try to cash 1hose 10

Contractor

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

daughter

s Three

VIPI
31 Moray
37 Ulce
lightning
39 Marchant
41 H l -

"The A.merican Heait A-ssociation
Cookbook. contains this interesllng

i

740..36.7·0544

(iamihJ •""'"o"':"'i~1"'M_4,.:""'•

refrigerator, included. all
ei9C1rlddeposit required No
Pets
call
after
5pm
(304)675-3788

Coup Piol·

toro

3G Bu1m.a

you open one dub, your rebid wm be

CORNER STONE
High and Dry CONSTRUCTION
Roofing. Siding,
Storage
Soffit. Decks.
33195 HIIIRd IIIII Doors.
Windows,
(7 40) 992-5232

10 .,_tne
oxoco
11 Held-andllrouldtro
sculpture
12 From
1 dlotanca
16 Trouurs
18 Somlnro
lelture
20 or

DOWN

3 Room to
maneuver
4 lllrd'o

Trebtk

misleac;ing one way or another.
North might: have raised to three

THE BORN LOSER

(740) 416-1568

Electric. Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

oenlence

2 -up

IIN8Itnll

diately describes your hand to partner. H

Now Re11/i11g

Pomll'll, OH

t:?ld
Oiogrem •

CELEBRITY CIPHER

n

Insured

Free Eatimat

laatlng
Coato wnh

olngor
26 -tal
29 fregmant

34 S.jall

I
t

Baer Builders
&amp;Developers

-1
vloltors?
FuMy

25 -Ago

33 Rowr'a

It is fun to play
honors unnecessarily

1,_11

would you continue?
Note the one-no--trump opening. It imme--

GIT

E\I'RYTHIN'

52 P*- under

12 Sit right
13 Dlaqulot
53
14 olghtl
54
15 Burgoo and
daube
55
16 Halrteao
17 Hooray lor 56
mel (hyph.)
18 Wintertime
IOUnd
18 Gravy no-no
23 Quick 10 1M 1
helm

honor cards.
In this deal, you reach lour spades. West
leads the club nine. Thinking )'OU have
10 top tricks, you win in your hand with
the ace and cash the spade ace, but
East unkindly discard&amp; a hear1. How

BARNEY
TO MOP TH'

· 411 Dilute

-kfalt

Nortll
2 ,.
4A

Hn the

•'-'

32 Bod-anti-

Opening lead: • 9

W\1. w.auc1ionLip.com

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Hometill System
• Helios System

for application &amp; infmmation.

Modern 1BA apt. (740)446·

740-416-1164

tNT

We Deliver To You!

andlor small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441-1111

0390.

Auctioneer
Rilly R. Goble Jr.

Wes t
Pass
Pass

2.

350AT 3'susp. J'body hft Kit.

Friday. 8am -4:30pm Closed ~m;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;; 35· tires. Ac Cd Sharp
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
iO
F&lt;\RM
$5500. OBO. 140·367 0638
Sunday. (7401446-7300
"'"
"11'!\UNI"
L-A.I'J
1994 Chevrolet Sil~·erado .
V8 . loaded. longbed. lOW

BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT
PRICES AT

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

1.. \ 1'- 1..

Hours

1999 Cavalier. $2500. 2003

1500

March 2nd

So~th

r ~ ~&gt;ertt·n.e

111411 mo 00

Chevy

AUCTION
Middleport Depl
Store
Su~ 's Se~lables

62 1 ~

7:00AM· 8:00PM

CavAlier $4500. 740·256•

1988

Dealer: S.ulh
Vulnerable: Neither

Ill

2002 Pont1ac Sunfire $3800

1

•AKQ

P tli&gt;H'Itl'f Oh tO

Ram Van 1500
series.
$1500
OBO
(740)256-1233 or t740)256-

Repaired. New &amp; Aebuill In Visa/Mastercard Accepted. 1652
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1· 5325 eactl. (740)767 -4875
800·537-9528

• J • 2

7 0 Pint:: Sl1 t::d • Gal lipuli ~
740-446-11007 Toll Frn· 877-669-11007

·New Homes

¥ 1011863
t A Q 10 9
.. J 10 52

K 7
9 8 7 6

South
• A Q J tO
• 1 52

P•Uo and Porch Decks

I R \ '" l'tll: I \ I I! l\

white. 2 tan and white . $500!

• J.
t
•

·-

East

. 98783

Vinyl Siding 6 Painting

wv 036725
V.C. YOUNG

Husky pup p1 es 5 wks old. 4

WHI

MONTY

Roofing I Gutters

Proceeds Bene tti Svracuse Communtty Centm

.~~

• 8 65 3

•• 3

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

CDIImUCDIII

drown

..

rJamibJ (t)3'lfl§:l
"ROBERT
BISSEll

II Cheat of

=~
2
• A K Q

Middleport, OH

Memorial
Basket Bingo
Syracuse Community Center
Thursday, Feb . 8th 6 pm
Doors open at 5:00 Advance ttckets
740-992-3804 or 740-985·3818

r

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

41 - Plai-

42Every
441 C«eaa

...--r- \\01
ESI'E.C IA\..L'-i

SOUP TO NUTZ

by Luis Campos
Celetdi CirNr C!Yf*:9.,. n creallld .-am ~ tJo; IIITIOUII paooie. paa n1 lftiB
Ead'IIIIW II lie ci!:1tW 9Wid:lltlr IIIOihlll

Todlly"s due: l eq&lt;JB!s M

"JCCWN
HZUAP

RPU
CSG

~ATZHV

KCP

TCCM
SRV ,

UOCXTZ

JXH

JYCCMVUNN

YAKU ."

HZUV

AG
RPU

R

NXJNHAHXHU

• PCJUPH

YCXAN

NHUIUGNCO
PREVIOUS SOlUTION - "Poetry is mostly hunctltrs.• · John Ashbery
"I intend to become ARI8fica's black lemale Proost.• - Maya Angeloo

·=~~· s~~~\\-"t.trs· . ..
WOII

f,jjlo4

-y Ct.AV I . POu.AN

Roorra"'o Ionon of tho
0 lou•
rcromblod word• below •o for01 four

""'~'I• word&amp;

KITANE

)

"Alii have to do," sigbcid the
not so smart toed, "is open m)

AZ O EL T

I0

mouth ant! my foot---."

1-..,1_,.;;..1..:...,1,;7_;;,1',.....,1~

Com~lttt

iho chucklt quoted
by filltnv in the miaing words
L....J.......JI-...L......J-..L.....J 1QU develop ~... 11tp No. 3 below.
.

•

_

.

_

•

e
() ~~f~t:BlEFOII I I I I
PRINT NUM8ER!O

UTTERS IN SQUAR!S

t

I III

SCI4"-lm ANSWIU 2 ~ il-o7
EveDiy - l&lt;.Dave - Feecb -Yonder ·- HAVE TO
I've CQftCiuded 1hat the wheel was Invented soco•dd move lUter. Tbc credit card was Invented
so wo would HAVE TO.

ARLO&amp;JANIS

�'
Wednesday. February 7, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 7, 2007
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sen line! • Page B5

NEA Cronword Puzzle

CI ,ASSIFIEDS

BRIDGE
ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

EMPLOYMENT

1 llold fllltr
(hyph..

groins

e lltiyond

41

benal

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
112 mile west on SR
124 to Rutland, Oh

Belterra Casino
Resort &amp; Spa

740-992-5682
9am · 6pm

3 Oay·2 Night Gelaw'y
March 22, 2007 to
March 24, 2007
$175/peraon baaed on
double occupancy
Package includes dinner on the
first night and breakfast on the
second morning
Single rooma can be purchased
for $275/person
Must be 21 years of· age
(No refunds)
Gladly accept cash, money
order, check &amp; credit cards
Please call PVH Community
Relations to make reservations, '
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326

MINtErS
SELF STOOGE
97 Beech Street

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635
"Middleport'• only
Sell-Storax••

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
N•w Gar•!Jt•
Electrlc•l A Plumbing

I r•o

Auro;
mKSAu;
~ow-..,;iiiiiiiiiiiiii--'

male 1 female 3 black and -

Police

Impounds

$50.00 each. call days 740- Cars trom S500 1 For hslings
446·3398 eve 740· 379· 800-559-4086 ~t3901

2467

r

1995 Bu1ck Centur~ . 4 dr.,
Mul~ swans for sale year- 137.000K. 1uns great. good
ling male &amp; female, call tor body &amp; tires, $1 ,800 080.
prices 304·576·2999
or 740·992·3453.
304·593·559 t

Ir M~~ I- - - - - - -

AoomiiEI'liS
Aoomlmm;
AII\RlMfNI"S
_
_
FOR_JbNr
__
._.J
lw--FORiliiilbNiiiilior
_.J
Lw-.;,llllliliiilbNfiiiilioaa-'
L,
-.

I

laurel

-.

Townhouse
Gracious li'Ving. 1 and 2 bed· Tara
room apartments at Village Apartments, Very Spacious,
Manor
and
Ri~Jerside 2 Bedrooms, C/A, 1 1/2
Apartments 1n Middleport Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
From $295 -$444. Call 740- Pool. Patio. Start $425/Mo.
992·5064. Equal Housing No Pets, Lease Plus
Opportunities.
Security Deposit Required,
(740)367 -7086

Commons

Apartments La rgest in the
areal Beautifully renovated

throughout 1nclud1ng brand
new kitchen and bath
Starting at $405. Call today'
(304)273·3344

JET
AERATION MOTORS

2000 Neoo. Auto. Air, 4cyl. ,
$2200 0 80. 96 VJtul t~

Sc hnauzers. Min1, AKC. 2
Dodge
Females. 11 weeks old. sip.

Shuts utd and groomed

i

F

'-'.

_ _______ 1.---U•R•.-.•\•t•.:-"""

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angle
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Drams,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;

_

Comme rcial building "For
Sale" 1600 sq ft. oft street
parking. Greaftocation Calf

I \1 \\ 1..,1 1'1 '11 1..,
,\ I I\ I . _, 1111 h.

')9 2
~~ Y l'&lt;~r~

L .. ,dl

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Ractne, Ohto
45771
740.949-2217

·

s'*~ S'x1.0'

6169.
'I'Rl!l'K.."i
tl)R SAl£

~,,.._.

'

l\10JUHCYLU~-J

1,-~~~\iiViiHiiil-:il•l;;;.liiil&lt;iiS-_.J
1996 Suzuki mtrueler 800.

$3500. Call lor mora information. 740·25&amp;1567

4x4

S:OO pm lo 9:00pm
March 3rd tU:OO am

1A0-992-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

r

'\ 11{ \ HI . _,

tO

Hll.\11:
hU'RO\"I:'UXIS
BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
m11es, automatiC, bedl1ner
Excellenl t:Ondit1on. no rust Unconditional lifet1n1e yuarBooks for $6500 Sell lor antee. Local rtllarences h.lr 5.99% Fixed Rate on John $5,000. 740-367 -7129.
ni st',ed Established 1975
Deere Gatore Carm1chael
Call
24 Hrs (f40) 446Equipment (740)446-2412. -2004
--,Po:-w-er-·s-:-1-ro-ke-rc-Fc-2-50 0870. Rogers Basement
Fx;4 loaded , auto, 45,000

ESTATES, 52 Westwood

miles. black . sharp truck. call

Drive from $349 to S448.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740·446·2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

740·379-2651

Waterproofing

Get A Jump

on
SAVINGS

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED A AFFORDABfEt
Townhouse
apartments.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

vi1TI4
/

~AN/&lt;

-

l&gt;lll~CT

r&gt;EPOSIT OF YOIJ/t PAYGI4~GIC
ANI&gt; AUTO PAYM~NT Of YOU/t
II,_L~.

wE GOMPUTt,_Y

1&gt;0 AviAY WITI4 T~f'
,,_I.USION T14AT YOU
ACTIJA,_L Y WElt
SfE ANY OF
YOU/t MONfY.

••

Hardwood Cabme1ry And FurnlCure
.....,;w.u.ab&lt;l...,...okoab~netey.oo•

740.446

I'M

GITIIN'

SET

COULD'JA

ICITCHEN,

UP OFF TH'

JUGHAID ...

A.OOR FER

2459 St. Rt. 160 •

ME ? r---"i
I I \\ I.._,

I\ I I I

(I''\ " I hl ( I l l l'\

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

Al11)'pes0f
Concrete Work
2&amp; Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971

• Custom Baths
• Complete
Renovations
• Hone)' Do

List~

• Plumbing/Wiring
• Free Estimates

Owner

. Rhonda Peters
Manager
• Janel Jeffers

~ocal

Downtown Point Pleasant
modern one bedroom Apt

Second floor, stove and

70

German

style

breakfast

nook $100.00. unfinished
bunk beds w/ matching
chest of drawers $75.00,

'(£~-'iCM:. FOOT""'

I""\'liE. E.~I\E.t&gt; '{()OJIZ. !&gt;1'££0\ "''

I1-1 '(OU~ ~"ffi!

11&gt;\i'Et&gt;llo\UillO 11\e:.
WO&lt;l!&gt; '(OIJ'It£ TO
VI!&gt;IT I

2005

Forest River 19ft.

Camper 5 year warranty on

appliances $11500.00.
Oak firewood tor sale.
Delivered
or
pickup.

(740)44 !-0941 , (740 )645·
5946. CAA HEAP aCCBPied.

Sherlft S.tea
Caoe No. 06CVOSO
HSBC Bank USA, ao
truatee, ale. Plaintill VS
Pamela Bentz, aka
Pamela Q, Bonll ot ol,
Defendanto. Court of
Common P'"•· Meigs
County, Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of sale to be
directed from oald
court In tho above entitled action, I will
axpou to sale 11 public auction on the fronl
ateps of tho Meigs
County Court Hou10
on Frldly, March 8,
2007 at 10 Lm. ol aald
d1y, the following
described real 11tato:
Sttualtd In the Slllte of
Ohio, County of Meigs
and VIllage of Racine:
Being ~ot No. 16 and
17 In the Myers
Addttlon to lhe Incorporated Village of
Racine, Meigs County,
Ohio, ra10rvlng to the
State of Ohio, however,
all oil, gao, coal and

other mlneral1, with
the rights of entry lor
tho
purpoao
of
prospecting, develop·
lng, producing or operallng lor the ume and
tho rlghl of occupancy
In oo far aols eaoenllal
to auch proapectlng,
developing, operating
or producing; aloo
reserving to the state
of Ohio lhe uae of
atreams
flowing
through said lands or
obufflns upon the
tame and 110 much of
the banks thereof, as
moy be necessary lor

ouch anjoylng, and lho expose 10 sale at pubprotection of such lie auction o the front
streamo from eroalon, ilepo of lhe Meigs
contamination,
or County Court House
de~tt ol oedlmenl.
on Friday, March 9,
Propeny addreas: 410 2007 at 10 a.m., of said
flflh Streel, Racine, day, . lhe following
Ohio.
Property described real Hiate:
Owners: Pamela Bontz Sltuoted In the Village
and Timothy Bentz. of PomtfOY, county of
Prior Deed Rele,..,ce: Molga, and State of
O.R. 154, Page 425. Ohio.
PPN NO. 19-00412-oDO Baing ~nown and dell·
and 19-0041 1-oo.
lgftllltd on a map of
Appraload
at Lincoln Helghto, m $25,000.00. Termo of by Breece and Carper,
sale: Cannot be sold reglotered
Civil
lor leas than 213rda ~ EnglnHro,
Hunting
the appra11ad value. ton, Wtst VIrginia, dale
10% down on day of October 17, 1942, aa
ule, cash or cert~led recorded December
check, balance due on 17, 1942, In the Office
of the Recorder of
confirmation of sale.
The appralaal did not Melga County, Ohio, In
Include an lnlerlor Plat Book t3, Plgea 43
examlnallon of the and 44, aa Lot No. 38,
house.
Robert
E. and being more partieBeegle, Meigs County ularly described aafol·
Sheriff. Attorney lor lows:
tho Plaintiff Reimer Being al the poln1 of
Lorber Arnovitz Co. PO intareection of the
Box 968, 2450 Edlaon Soulh line of ~incoln
Blvd., Twlnobury, OH Road with lhe West line
44087. (330• 425-4201
of Polnl ~ane : thence
(2) 1, 14, 21
with the said line of
'
~lncoln Road, North 63
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ , degrees 51 minutes
Weal SO feet; thence
Public Notice
with the said line
between ~ots 37 and
Sheriff Sales
38. Soulh 26 degrees
COI8 oomber 06CV046 09 minutes West 200
Cnlbank NA plainliff vs teel; thence Soulh 63
Otis and Ronda Core degrees 51 minutes
Defendants Court ol East 27. 4 feet to a

MY

NE i&lt;OHBoR
IS M
Oil.THO ·
DOtJTIST.

PEANUTS
1

I Sj.jOULD 6E E!ACK

1M 601N6 IN TO TOWN
TO 8U't' VALENTINES FOR ALL
TloiE GIRLS WllO LOVE ME ..

IN TEN SECONDS..

SUNSHINE CLUB

the appraised value. 10

percenl down on day
ol sale, cash or corllfled check. balance
due on confirmation of
sale.
The appraisal did not

include an lnlerlor
examination or the
house.
Roberl E. Beegle ,
Meigs County Sheriff
Atlorney
for
lhe
Pl aintiff
Reimer.
Lorber, Aronov itz Co.
Common Pleas. Meigs point in the said line of PO box 96ll . 2450
County. Ohio.
Point Lane ; t hence Edison
Blvd .•
In pursuance ol an with said line, North 32 Twinsburg, OH 44087 .
order of sale to me degrees 36 minutes 330.425-4201
directed from said Easl201 .28 !.eel, lo lhe (2) 7, 14, 21
court In the above enti- point of beginn ing;
tled action. I will reserving however. the

Marcum Constructl• and
lanaral Contracting
St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
Mike W. Marcum, Owner
Additions
Garages
Roofing
Vinyl Siding
Ne" Constru&lt;·tion Interior Remodeling
Residential &amp; Commercial
740-985-4141 Office
740-416-1834

Manley' a
Rac:yc:llng

··It·
-· ....,...,...
...- .......
11111111111.
140-912
.... . . . . .

~.,

. . . . . . . .12:11 ..

PlYING TIP PIICES . .

........... -

1 Chlckon

..... 111

hllllllc CIIU .. I• CIDer
ICIIII'tr Cll1• friclll

GRIZZWELLS
A'VI£ 'loU m:u~
USEI.E~ 'lbl'r\'1:

w-wda..

"'a~\\1~

w-.

49 -

35 Make ' IOUP I~ 24 tt h11 long 50 Walloch or
311 Jazzy refnrin
dlont
onno
Ully
31 Phone but· 8
buy 26 Chock on 51 FMI_,
ton
12
27 Oiva'a
52 Hill pint
40 Bout
9 t-tannlo . rendttlon .
windup
dlv28 Up In the air

no--

apparent bicks. But ~ you do lhat, West
will ruff the third heart and shift to dia·
monds. Instead, immediately lake your
remaining club tricl&lt;s and - this is nee·
essary - discard a heart honol' trom the
dummy.' (If West runs the third dub, overruff on the board and hope he has at
least three hearts.)
In this way, you need West to hold only
two hearts. Yoo take those heart win·

'il" ,........,.,,...

..

,L ..

~-

AstroGraph
-'llllthdoir:

Thunc:t.y, F•b. 8., 1007
By Bernie• Bede o.ol
Most of the endeavors you originate or
direct ha\Je a better-than-average
chance lor achieving success. However,
should you leal a need to partner with
somoone , be very sm&amp;ctive of whom you
choose.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Your
ego-denying qualities will enable you to
identify with and help others try to solve
all their problema. But if you lake on too
much of the world's woes, wearine!iS is
apt to set in .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - A fflla·
lively harmless manifestation ot day·
dreaming could set in and put you in a
world of your own. But if you carry it too
far, it could go tull·scale and have you
totally evading reality.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - Guard
against putting yourself out for another to
the polnt ol jeopardizing your personal
interests. It's line to be concerned about
their welfare, but be equally attentive to
your own.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -Your kindness will comm a"d attention, even
though you might not dehberfttely seek 11.
Be careful ol your demeanor. because
the impression you make could make
one think you're easy.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20)- tn order to
achieWI an important objective , it will be
necessary for you to proceed in a logical,
. methodical manner. If you shoot from
your &amp;motions, the results won't be too
good.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Stri\le to
ba tactful and diplomatic when dealing
with associates, but not to the point of
doing all the accommodating without
good reason. Someone might percei~~e
you as a sap.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - If you are
required to handle an 1mportant matter
lor another, treat it as consclepliously as
you would if it were your own personal
affair. Yoo 'll be judged by tho in terest you
take in il.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - While try ·
ing to be a good pal, it's best not to take
sides with someone who has had a dis·
pule with another. Once thtl~ make up,
you could bEl held accountable for what
was said.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Your powers
of observation co uld be more acute than
usual. Just bEl sure you dOn't tocus solely on what you like about people and
ignore seaing them in totality lor what
they really are.
SCORPiO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Be
uxtremely careful how you manage your
resourc~ at th1s point in time, because
all thoae lo\lely luxury 1tems oou ld be
beclo;oning you in greater measur• than
you can afford.
SAGITIAAIUS (N0\1. 23-0ec. 21) - S.
as clear aa possible In your communications with others. Serious mlsimpt"eslions may occur thai co uld •nd up being
quit• confusing and disturbing In your lite
and difficult to unwind.
·
CAPRICORN (O.C. 22-Jan . 19) -Your
sense or \lalu•• may be more aplritue.l
and l$atl.z~ . which are high prlndptes
to hold. Take care you don't becofne,
careteu with your poe..aalons In the
proceN.

~~m

22

47 Doatree

48 - Hdt

. lalkor

whether hu19Y or not, derive great
pleasure from playing "unnecessary"

G

BIG NATE

=

coal and all other minerals in and underlying
the above described
property. Together with
the right to mine the
same wlthoul encumbrance 10 I he surface.
and subjecl lo tan
easemenl for sewage
liner ditch or leaching
ditch as sol forth and
deacrlbed In thai cer·
lain lnatrumant Bering
dale November 26,
1943, and recorded In
said recorder office In
Deed Book t 51, Page
178.
Property
Address:
1680 Lincoln Slreet
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Properly Owners: Oils
Core and Rhonda Core
Prior Deed Reference
O.R. 118, Page 201
PPNt1600491000
Appraised
al
$12,000.00 terms of
sale: Cannot be sold
for less than 213rtls of

21 FMihortd

now"

Many ~· enjoy shopping, ospocial~
when thO purcnasas 618, striCtly spook·
ing, unnecessary. And bridge players,

ners, cross to your hand with a spade.
and ruff your last heart on lhe board,
overruffing West if necessary. You taka
klur spades, two hearts, three clubs and
the ruff on the board.

Free Eetlmatea

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NOTICES

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you go to the store hungry, you are likely to make unnecessary purchases.·

trump, which would have cruised home
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1oot&lt;s tamp!ing 10 try to cash 1hose 10

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In this deal, you reach lour spades. West
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East unkindly discard&amp; a hear1. How

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PREVIOUS SOlUTION - "Poetry is mostly hunctltrs.• · John Ashbery
"I intend to become ARI8fica's black lemale Proost.• - Maya Angeloo

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so wo would HAVE TO.

ARLO&amp;JANIS

�COLUMBUS (AP) Edward
Lakewood St.
moved into the top spot
among the big schools in the
tifth weekly Associated Press
Ohio high school boys basketball poll released Thesday.
St.
Edward replaced
Cincinnati Moeller, which
lost its first game of the season. 58-50. to Cincinnati
Elder on Friday.
Moeller dropped to No. 3
in the poll and TrotwOOdMadison moved up to No. 2.
Elder moved from No. 6 to
No. 4.
Greenfield
McClain,
Findlay Liberty-Benton and
Russia maintained the other
·top spots. McClain leads
Keltenng Altar by 51 points.
Liberty-Benton .has a _100poim lead over Archbold and
Russia is ahead of New
Knoxville by 52 points.
The poll continues until '
Feb. 20.
How a state panel of sparts
writers and ._broadcasters
rates Ohio high school boys
basketball leCUIIS ill the fifth
weekly Associared Press pall
of2007. b_v OHSAA divisions.
wirh won-lost record and
total points (first-place votes
in parrmrheses):
DIVISION I
1, Lakewood St Edward (22) 16-0 289
2, Trotwood-Madison (3)
15-1 232

16-1
15-1
14-1
17-0
16-1
15-2
13-3
14-2

211
201
193
156
153
66
54
43

Tol. Scott 22. 12, Can. McKinley 15. 13,
Warren Harding 13.

Copley

4, Tipp City Tippecanoe ( 1)
5, Zanes&lt;JiUe
6, Sandusky Perkins
7, Day. Dunbar
8, Upper Sandusky
9, Van Wert
10, Olmsted Falls
Others

rect~iving

17-0 295
15-1 244

17-0 230
16-0 176
14-1
16-0
13-4
13-2

160
138
t11
106

14·1 66
13-2 43

12 or more points: 11.

Painesville Harvey 22
DeSates 14. 13, Dover 13.

12,

Cols.

DIVISION Ill
1. Findlay liberty-Benton (29) 14-0 300
2, Archbold
15-2 200
3, Day. Oakwood (1)
15-1 179
4, Rocky River lulh. W. (1)
15-2 178
5, Sugarcreek Garaway
14·2 155
6, Zanesville W. Muskingum 14·2 153
7. Vour1gs. Ursuline
11·2 129
7, Cle. VASJ
9-3 129
9, Wheelllrsburg
15·2 61
10, Utica
14·3 29
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11
(tie•. Andover Pymatuning Valley,
Warren JFK 19. 13 (tie), W. Salem NW.
Convoy Crestview 15. 15 (tie) , Defiance
Ayersville, Cin. Purcell Marian, Cots.
Hartley 12.

DIVISION IV
1. Russia (24)
2, New Knoxville (3)
3, Tol. Christian (2)
4, Cots. Harvest
5, McDonald (1}

6, Van Buren
1 , Continental
8, Bertin Hiland
9, Worthington Christian
10, lockland

17-0 303
15-0 251
15-0219
14-0 182
15-0 172
14-1 156
13-2 104
13-3 93

t0-3

n

13-4 53

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 ,

Windham 111 23.

BY RUSTY

MtUER

A.SSOCIATEO PRESS

The sweater vest was a
dead giveaway.
Ohio State football coach
Jim Tressel was in attendance at Cincinnati Elder's
"Pit" on Friday night to
watch Kyle Rudol_ph . a
football star who also IS
Elder's top basketball player.
Rudolph , a 6-foot- 7
junior. had 20 points to lead
Elder past Moeller 58-50
before a seliout crowd of
about 2.000.
Tressel IS recruiting
Rudolph as a tight end,
with Rudolph also consid·
ermg
Notre
Dame.
Michi gan, Tennessee and
Virginia for football .
"I knew he was up there."
Rudolph said of Tressel. "I
think it's pretty neat that he
was
here
at
Elder.
Hopefully, we made him
proud."
Elder (15-1 ) and Moeller
( 16-1) have lost only to
each other this season.
BUCKS TO BE: With 67
points in a 106-10 I over·
time win over Shelby,
Upper Sandusky's Jon
Diebler moved into second
place on Ohio's all-time
sconng list. He now has
632 points on the season,
an average of 42.1 per

game. and 2.738 in his
career. Diebler was the
team's only double-figure
scorer for the Rams . At his
current pace . he would
break Jay Burson 's all-time
scoring mark in the
Division ll sectional finals .
''We did everything we
could to try and slow him
down," Shelby coach Troy
Schwemley said . "There
were times we had him
defensed about as well as
we cou ld ."
Canton GlenOak's Kosta
Koufos, like Diebler an
Ohio Swte signee, scored
33 points and grubbed 30
rebounds 111 a 73-72 win
over North Canton Hoover.
Koufos, a 7-2 center. added
nine blocked shots to lead
GlenOak to its I Oth straight
win.
NUMBERS, PLEASE:
Louisville's
6-7
Dan
Boudler had 2 1 points and
20 rebounds in a 62-59 win
over Alliance;
Eiliott
Mealer of Wauseon scored
23 points and grabbed 17
rebounds in a 60-50 loss to
Archbold; Berlin Hiland 's
Jena Stutzman scored a
career-high 34 points in a
97 -20
victory
over
Newcomerstown-;
and
Chanetta
Lockland's
Simmons had her fifth
triple-double of the season

with 31 points, 12 rebounds
and 10 assists in a 74-42
win over Miami Valley
Christian.
HALEY'S
COMET:
Jefferson Area's Haley
Kapferer
became
the
school's all-time scoring
leader and the third-highest
scorer in Ashtabula County
history (girls or boys) last
week. The 6-fool-3 senior
center has 1,633 points. She
broke the school record formerly held by her older -sister, Kel~ ( 1,588).
LATE
HEROICS :
Lexington's
Allison
Soderberg's stickback at
the huz.zer not only gave
Lexington a 52-50 win at
Orrville. it gave Lady Lex
an outright ' league title ;
Fredericktown 's
Shawn
Johnson hit a 30-l'ooter at
the buzzer as the Freddies
knocked off Danville 4239; Elida trailed bv seven
points and Defiance. had the
ball in overtime. but somehow Elida ended up pulling
out a 58-52 win in 30T;
and Courtney Ritzier 's 18footer at the buzzer gave
unbeaten
Bascom
Hopewell-Loudon a 43-41
w1n
at
Fostoria
St.
Wendelin.
N0 T E W0 R T H Y:
Defiance Tinora's girls
scored just two points in the

first and third quarters. but
still defeated Holgate, 21 16; Trenton Edgewood
clinched at least a share of
the Fort Ancient Valley
Conference
Scarlet
Division
championship
with its 69-55 win over
Oxford Taluwanda. capturing the first league title in
any league the boys program has won in its 37
years; Copley's boys are
nearing their first Suburban
League title since 1988-89;
West Chesler Lakota West 's
girls set school scoring
records in a 93-33 win over
Milford with 32 points in
the first quarter and 54 at
the half; Orwell Grand
Valley ' s girls have 14 wins.
their most since the 1997·
98
season;
Ashtabula
Lakeside, which began play
in 2001-0:( when Ashtabula
and Ashtabula Harbor consolidated. set a record with
its lith girls win, a 64-26
triumph at Ashtabula Sts.
John and Paul; and
Plymouth freshman Brook
Turson was 14-of-15 at the
free throw line and scored
28 points as the Big Red
took over first place in the
Firelands Conference with
a 58-49 win over Colli-ns
Western Reserve.
WARMING TREND:
Mount Notre Dame has

MASSILLON (AP) - A
hard play or an assault that's what authorities are
trying to figure out after
looking at film of a player
being injured during a high
school basketball game last
weekend.
"They were going up for
the ball and one guy got
cracked in the eye." Perry
Township Police Chief
Timothy
Escola
said
Tuesday. "Was it intentional or an accident? It's very
hard to tell looking at
tape."
Kenny
Frease
of
Massillon
Perry
was
injured midway through
the third quarter of his
team's 68-54 win Saturday
at Canton Central Catholic.
Cory Berry's right hand
contacted the right side of
Frease's face as the two
players pursued a rebound.
Frease, a 7-foot junior, suffered two broken bones in
his right eye socket and he

osu
fromPageBl
appeared to be no more than
one-third full at the start and
was just over half full in the
second half.
Ahead 33-29 at the half.

HOLZER

won eight straight games _as ,
it gears up 10 defend 1ts
Division I state title . MND
is now 83-1 against fellow
Cincinnati area teams since
February 2002. The lone
loss was to Seton 53,-40 on
Dec. 7, 2006. but MND
avenged that by beating
Sewn 43-23 on Jan . 18,
2007. MND has won two uf
the last three big-school
state titles.
STAYING PERFECT :
Since the Wayne County
Athletic League consolidat·
ed before the 1954-55
school year, not one of its
member schools has go ne
through the league 's foot·
ball season unbeaten and
returned to go undefeated
in boys basketball. But
after a 7-0 campaign in
which it won the school's
first outright football championship. Northwestern's
basketball team is 12-0 in
WCAL play with two
games remaining.
"It's something I've wondered about ... but something we hadn ' t even talked
about until we got through
this past weekend," said
Northwestern coach Mark
Alberts Jr.. who played at
Akron . "Going undefeated
in this league is not something that happens very
often."

has potential damage to his
right eyelid.
Escola watched film
recorded by both teams but
said he hasn't finished
interviewing witnesses. He
hopes to wrap up the investigation in a couple days.
Frease's coach, Rob
Toth, watched enhanced
video of the play and said
his player was hit with "a
closed fist." He called the
play "an intentional cheap
shot."
Chris Newlon, an attorney for Berry who was sit·
ting in the stands near
where the play in question
happened, said the 6-foot
senior at Central Catholic
did nothing wrong in his
pursuit of the ball.
"I didn't see a fist. 1 challenge anybody to show me
a fist," said Newlon, who
also viewed a replay.
"What it looked like to me
is he went up and 'made an

effort to swipe at the ball.
and in the process hit the
kid in the face. That's a far
cry from blatant. cheap
shot. intentional."
Berry
was
verbally
abused by Perry fans at the
game and has been threat ened, Newlon sa id .
"Everyone feels bad the
young man from Perry
ended up with the injuries
he ended up with .... But if
anyone is owed an apology,
it is my client," Newlon
said.
Frease's
right
eye
remained swollen shut
Monday. when he visited
teammates at practice. It is
the second time this season
he has been hurt , having
missed nine earlier games
with a wrist injury.
"''m hoping I get back in
the next couple weeks, but
I'm not sure if that's possible," said Frease, who was
· scheduled to visit doctors

Wednesday and Thursday.
''The eyelid may have
some muscle damage," said
his mother. Marge Frease.
"The muscle that controls
the eye movement may be
snagged in the break. and
he may need surgery."
Massillon
City
Prosecutor John Simpson
said authorities must determme whether Frease was
injured in a physical play
or a criminal act.
"There's
a
certain
amount of stuj'f that's part
of the game," Simpson
said. "It certainly has to be
something that stands out
and it's over and above
playing ."
There have been previous
cases of criminal charges
filed because of a player's
actions during a sporting
event at both the high
school and professional
level.
Bob Goldring, assistant

commissioner of the Ohio
High School
Athletic
Association, said a soccer
player m southeast Ohio
was charged with a misde·
meanor a few years ago for
throwing an elbow and a
baseball player in the
Youngstown area was
charged 10 years ago for a
high slide into second base .
"It's rare for something
like that to occur. but
there's other examples of it
happening," Goldring said .
In the NHL, Todd
Bertuzzi of the Vancouver
Canucks
punched
Colorado's Steve Moore in
the side of the head and
drove him face-first into
the ice. breaking three vertebrae in Moore's neck in
March 2004. Bertuzzi later
pleaded guilty in
a
•Vancouver court to crimi·
nal assault. He faced up to
18 months tn prison. but
was given a conditional
discharge.

the Buckeyes got some
breathing room when Ivan
Harris hit a 3-pointer on the
first possession of the half
and Conley followed with
one from the right corner to
push the lead to I 0.
Oden picked up his third
foul with Ohio State up 4132 at the 17:20 mark and the

Wolverines took advantage
when he went to the bench.
Forcing the ball inside
and pounding the offensive
boards, they cut the lead to
47-43 on a pair of foul shots
by Lester Abram.
The Buckeyes bridged the
next 8 112 minutes with
Othello Hunter and Matt

Terwilliger on the front line.
trying to keep Sims and
Udoh from hulling their
way to the basket. When
Oden returned at the 8:52
mark. the lead was 56-52.
Hunter had five of the
Buckeyes ' blocked shots
and also had nine rebounds.
While the Wolverines

were managing just a free
throw over the next 4 minutes. Ron Lewis hit a 3.
Oden tossed on a long hook
shot and then he and Hunter
each blocked shots at the
other end. Conley then
scored on a drive through
traffic and the lead was
back to 65-53.

0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0

;;o ('I ."

rs • \ .ol.

:i(&gt;, No. t :It

Avoid close contact with people who are sick.
If possible. stay. away from others at work, home, or when
running errands.
Cover your mouth and nose with a tissue when coughing or
sneezing. After disposing of the tissue, please wash your
hands!
Clean your hands by washing them with soap and water
often to protect from germs.
Keep your skin intact by using lotion to reduce the ways in
which infection could be introduced in the body.
Avoid touching your eyes. nose and mouth. Germs are
often spread when a person touches something
contaminated with germs and touches their eyes, nose and
mouth.
Get plenty of sleep.
Engage in physical activity.
Manage stress.
Drink plenty of water and eat healthy foods.
Avoid or limit tobacco or alcohol.
Clean your home well using disinfectants -· especially
during the flu season. Some things that kill the flu virus are
heat, chlorine, hydrogen peroxide, soap detergents, and
I

• Winebrenner taking
game to next level.
See Page81

Gallipolis
Pt. Pleasant
Meigs
Jackson
Athens
Proctorville
South Charleston

Local Caring.-

Everywhere

I{&lt;.,)! \ ' .

I I 1\1{ 1 \ 10 H . ~ .... ..

.. .. 1\ . Ill\ •Ia ii"I'IIIIIH'I .... "

J.

REED

POMEROY - The first
steps m implementing
Meigs County 's Enhanced
911 service were outlined
Wednesday when the county 's
911
Planning
Committee met with Meigs
County Commissioners.
Skip Dalton of Verizon
Communications discussed
preliminary steps in implem~nting the service, includ-

ing the verification of house
and telephone numbers.
establishing
emergency
response zones and han dling funds from the 50cent telephone line charge
approved by voters in
November.
Members of the commit·
tee also discussed how the
system will operale. where
it will operate and what
agencies it will dispatch to
emergency
- scenes.
Yesterday's meeting was the

first time the comminee has
come together since the
telephone line fee was
approved in November.
Dalton has worked with
other counties in implementing a 911 serv ice . He
said while collection of the
50-cent telephone line
charge could begin as soon
as April 1, the county will
probably not begin receiving the funds until July.
Meanwhile. the county
must undertake the daunting

task of coordinating tele phone numbers with house
numbers to form a countv·
wide database. a proJC.CI
Dalton said will be time
consuming. The proce"
also provides for the establishment of emergency
response zones. boundaries
for various law enforce·
ment, fire and emergency
medical service agencies.
Commissioner
Mid
Davenport said the commissioners plan to meet with

FrcJ Dee!. the di1w1 ur Dflh e
Governor's
O!Tice
or
Appalachia. lo di,cu" the
il\ uilabillt\ or rumh from
1he Appalachian Re gio nal
Commi:-.~iun

pre\ iou~ l )

pledged to the cmml y for the
purchase of lJ II equipment.
Fi11anl·ial L:On~ilkration~
mu :-.1 govern
proce:-.~.

the

entire

from the location

or 1he 911 call center to
sraffing,

Shceh

~aid.

Please see Database, A5

Clearing the way
.----

BY BETH SERGENT

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Ear1 Knight
• William R. Levacy

INSiDE
• Meigs County
Gil1 Scout Diary.
See Page A2
• For the Record.
See Page AS
• Archaeologists find
prehistoric Romeo and
Juliet locked in embrace.
See Page A~

WEATIIER

BSERGENT@MYDAILY SENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - If you
think you make too much
money to qualify for energy assistance funds to pay
your heating bill you may
be wrong.
Sandra Edwards, emergency services division
director of the Gallia Meigs
Community
Action
Emerg.:ncy
Agency's
Home Energy Assistance
Program (HEAP) said, "A ll
residents of Gallia and
Meigs Counties should pay
special attention to the
income guidelines, because
we are able to serve customers that were never eligible in the past."
Eligible households are at
or below 175 percent of the
federal poverty guidelines
this year as in 2005. This
Charlene Hoefllch/photo
means the allowable eligible
There
was
plenty
of
action
in
downtown
Pomeroy
Wednesday
morning
as
merchants
got
out
the
ir
shovels and shop
annual income for a one per·
son household is $17 ,150; brooms to clear the snow from entrance ways. Jim Anderson of Anderson Furniture was one of several hard at work with
two persons, $23 .100: three a shop broom.
persons. $29.050: four persons. $35,000; five persons.
$40.950, and six persons,
$46,900. Households with
more than six members
in the news," Cheryl Gergely. a
BY BETH SERGENT
should add an additional
BSERGE NT®MVDAI LYSENTI NE L .COM
spokespe~son with the Red Cross
$5.950 to the yearly income.
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
said.
"Every day. patients undergo
Edwards said as of Jan .
HOEFliCH@MYOA.ILYSE IIJ TIN EL.COM
POMEROY - The American Red surgery, treatment for cancer or
31. S563.520 had been Cross will be holding a blood drive
spent in HEAP assistance from I :30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. on other chronic illnesses and condiPOMEROY - The four chaplains
funds for clients in Gall ia Wednesday, Feb. 14 at the Meigs tions requiring blood transfusions . who went Jown on the U.S. lroop ship
and Meigs County com- Senior Citizen's Building as part of And when that need arises. a safe. Dorche5tcr during World War II will
bined . Edwards added the its "Someone's Waiting , Donate sufficient blood supply mu st be be remembered at a memorial ~e n· ice
need has "definitely" gone Blood" donor recruitment campaign. readily available . It's too late to at the 10:15 a.m . service Sunday at
recruit donors to give blood when
up over the years and added
Trinity Church_ Lynn and Second
Each donor who prese nts to donate the need arises."
she wouldn't be surprised if blood at any area Red Cross blood
To make a donations you must be Streets. Pomeruy.
the final price tag for this drive will receive an embroidered
Drew Wehster Post .19. American
season ended up near $1 fleece scarf in appreciation for taking 17 years of age or older. weigh at Legion. annually hosts a special sen·i,·e
least
110
pounds
and
be
in
generally
million. HEAP will contin- time to donate blood . All types of
good health. Those with spec ific eli- in tnbute to the bravery ofth~ four ~hap·
ue through March 31.
blood are needed with types 0 nega· gibly questions should call 1-KD0- lains aboard the Dorchesler when it san~
Possibly due 10 the tive
and positive , B negative and A 542-5663. Donors should bring their on Feb.~- 194~ resulting 111 the death of
income guidelines being
negative
in especially high demand ,
Red Cross donor card or other forms nearly 700 men on hoard .
raised. Edwards said she's
According
to
the
Red
Cross
every
of
positive identification to the
Commander Tom Anderson requcsh a
seeing more of what is
two
seconds
someone
in
the
United
donor
site.
good
attendance from Pos(
members
called the "working poor"
States
needs
a
blood
transfusion
and
The
Greater
Alleghenies
Re
gion
and
also
invites
othlT
kginnnaire~
and
which are people who have
just
about
every
week
the
region
directly
se
rves
hospitals
,
patients
veterans to join in the memorial tribute
steady jobs but have trouble
County
in
a
1
00-countv
area
in
that
serves
Meigs
and
donors
to those four du1plain~ who ha' ~·
paying for skyrocketing fuel
announces
critically
low
blood
sup·
Kentucky.
Maryland.
·
Ohio.
become
a national ~vmhol of seltle .......
bills. Before the income
plies
in
one
ore
more
blood
types
.
Pennsylvania,
Virginia
and
West
servic.: and unity . Tliey gave up their
guidelines were raised .
Virginia
with
more
than
five-dozen
0
negative,
the
uniTypically
type
own
life jackets and remainl'd on btlard
many of these potential
products
and
related
services
.
blood
.
versal
blood
type
is
needed
or
type
to
comfort
and pray "ith thp hundreds
clients made too much to
The
region
also
supports
blood
0
posi1ive
wh1ch
can
benefit
85
perof men who '"~rl' hl~t that night.
qualify for the program but
cent of patients in need .
needs experienced by patients else·
Three c ro~ sc~ and a Star of Oa\·id
now that has changed .
"You '11 never read or hear about where in hospitals served through
Please see Service. AS
most blood recipients or their stories Red Cross services.
Pleue see En•'1Y• AS

Red Cross to visit senior center

j ~

'

INDEX
ll

su·noNs -

16 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
A3
Calendars
A3
Classifieds
Bs-6
Comics
87
Editorials
A4
Obituaries
· As
Places to go
A8
Sports
B Section
Weather
A3
© 2007 Ohi.o Valley Publishinx Co.

Medical Excellence.

BY BRIAN

BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Income
eligibility
raised for
energy
assistance

Details on POle A3

Flu Vaccine is Available at all Holzer Clinic Locations:

I Ill

Developing database is first step in 911 process

SPORTS

Season?

At the start ofthis flu season, many clinics, including ours, had a shortage of flu vaccine. Fortunately, the supply of
vaccine increased. We now have vaccine available if you need to h've a flu shot. Flu activity has been slow so far, but
the chance of catching the flu is still a possibility. If interested, please see your Holzer Clinic physician for the flu
vaccine. In addition to getting the flu vaccine, here are some tips that may help protect you from the flu:

River City Blues contest
gets underway, AS

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Is Your Family Ready for Flu

Cl. . INIC

0

U.S. casualty pace
in Iraq combat
higher than ever, A6

Police, prosecutor investigating prep basketball injury

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 ,

DIVISION I
1, Greenfield McClain (23)
2 , Kettering Aller (5}
3.
(2)

•

Prep basketball notes or Buckeyes recruiting news?

OHioAPBovs
BASKETBAll Pou.

3, Cin. Moeller (2)
4, Cin. Ekklr (1)
5, Tot Libbey (1)
6, Cols. Northland (1)
7, Dublin Scioto
8, Newark
9, Can. GlenOak
10, N. Can. HOQVer

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Four Chaplains
Service set for Sunday

'9

Call Back to Health Chiropractic today!

740.446.7460
'"

'

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