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                  <text>Pa!f Bo - The Dail) Sentinel

•

I

l'

Tue-.d&lt;~) .

ww" .mydailysenlinel ..:om

March 27 . 2007

Pentagon sponsors job
fair for vets severely
wounded in Iraq, As

FUN, GAMES AND.'PUZZLES

Gonza1es meets
with prosecutors

m0hio,A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,) t)ll\1"'•\ld

SPORTS

NO SNOW DOWN HILL SKIIN' KFr ·,~~

Mouse motivators (!)energize the long claWed Ti~ta.rr

snow cats@. The clawing action, against dUal tee
blocks@, produces the perfect powder@) .
for down hill skiing.
·

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1

I

Middleport Council approves funding reductions

• lady Rockets
push past Eastern.
See PageB1

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYDA.ILVSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
has taken a tirsl slep toward
gaining control of expenses
and moving lhe village out
of its ftscal crisis toward
some linancial stability.
At Monday night 's meeting Council members. fol lowing a lon g and somelime heated discussion .
unanimously accepted lhe
recommendations of Susan
Baker, fiscal officer. for
reductions in funding 111

CATS SOLO
SEPA~ATELV .

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ADVERTISERS VISIT:

IIZIDSIDS.CDI

three areas which offered
that option - exlm police
officers. mayor 's staff and
income lax .
Baker emphasized thai
village operations cannot be
funded to the levels lhey
have been in the past. She
said there are only two possible solutions - get more
money in or reduce spe nding. " Reducing spending is
our only option," she said.
"We cannot operate the way
we operated in 2006."
Baker said the appropriations for village expenses
had to be passed by the emer-

gency method at that meetin~ because lhe deadline for
fihng is March 31. She again
emphasized that things have
to change. that the village
does not have a~ much estimated money to appropriate
as it did lasl year.
Presenting a series of ligures. Baker gave $471.281
as lhe estimated tigure in
the general fund from which
the cuts have 10 be made.
(Lasl year's appropriation
10 the general fund was
$519,000.) She detailed
meas where reductions cannot be made, including uti!-

tiles. insurance. postage.
salary for the mayor's clerk.
and three police otlicers.
She then ellplained that
she took from the appropriations everything thai has lo
be funded if the village continues to operate and that
left a balance of $1.10.928
for taking care of remaining
police. mayor's staff. and
mcome tax operallon.
"Lasl year expenses in
those three areas totaled
$202.50 I.
representing
$137.800 for police. $33.800 '
for the mayor's staff, and
$30,90 I for income tax .

That's $71.572 more than
the village has." said Baker.
She explained how she
had prorated those figures
to hring the total down to
what is available . the
$13 0.92~. which would provide $~li.03 1 for additional
police over 1he three oflicer,;, $22,257 for lhe
mavor" s staff. and $ 19,639
for. income tall operation.
··we· re running ut rock bottom."
stressed
Baker.
"We· re in crisis management. There are no frills.

Please see Fundlnc. AS

nO

WINKY

the CHEESE

&lt;&gt;o
oo @

Smoother dan butta
on a snails unda belly

Village rents
building space
to auction
operator

© m. underhill

OBITUARIES

No kidding! ~

Winter
responsible
for lower
jobless rates

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY KEVIN KELLY

Page AS
• Russell Williams, 76

INSIDE

Note the differences in the noses. "A" has sharp transitions and "B" has
smooth. Note the differences in the mouths. "A's"lower lip is set
back, "B's" juts forward. The line weight is determined by the form furthest out.

• Australian group

To
advertise
in this space
call

captures 'monster' toad

· the size of a small dog.
See Page AS

992-2155

Can you help Giz
find the cheese,
two flags and the bread?

• Easter egg hunt
set for Saturday.
!lee Page A3
• Beech named director

fiRTH FIDD

of quality at O'Bieness.
See Page A3
• Real grandson
inducted into Civil War
group. See Page A3

WEATHER

Each column,row and square must use ~s 9.4, 1.&amp; 5. plus the
diagonals must add up to the #s shown.ldiagooals can reoo1at•llsl "~olij
Unscramble the letters to form ordinary words. Then place them in the
'
I crossword grid. Then unscramble the circled l
I
H'MIM
letters to form todays coded message.
. tl!Ditl! .

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-

...... All

INDEX
2 SEL~ONS - 12 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4 ·

Comics

B5

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

A5

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

MIDDLEPORT A
wing
of lhe
former
Middleport
Elementary
School now owned by
Middleport Village has been
rented to Jim Wi !son.
owner-operator the Old
Glory Auction House.
Middleport
Village
Council at Monday night's
meeting agreed to the relllal
effective immediately al
$600 a month with the
renter to provide Insurance,
pay utilities. and handle
repair costs of any dama~es
which might occur dunng
his occupancy. Wilson is
moving his operation from
South Third Street in
Middleport.
Dan Thomas spoke at the
meetin¥ in support of
Wilson s request. notin~ the
need to keep lhe busmess
located in Middleport. He
said the auctions draw in
people from everywhere
who not only support the .
auction but local restaurants
and other businesses. Also
speaking in support of renting a section of the building
to Wilson was Sabra Ash.
A request to relocate a
trailer in Middleport made
by Brenda Darst was denied
by a tie vote with Jeff
Peckham , Bob Robinson.
and Steve Houchins, who
presided al the meeting in
the absence of Mayor Sandy
lannarelli,
voted
yes.
Ferman Moore, Jean Craig
and Sandra Brown voted no.
There was a discussion on
the village 's trailer ordinance and the legality of the
removal of one trailer for
replacement by another.
Darst said the trailer she
would be pulling in place is
a newer and better one,
meaning she would be
improving the site.
Following the vote. Eric
Chambers referred counci I
members to a website on the
federcil law regarding trailer
locations, which. he said.
stated that restriction on
location cannot be made on
the basis of age and that
every trailer since 1975 must
have a HUD plate on it
A report was given on
work of the building inspector. It was reported that
inspections have started and
that he ha&gt; visited several
properties. Brown said she
had requested thai he either
be at meetings to report on
progress, or thai he send a
report, noting whetber or not
properties pas~ inspection.
Per.:kham reported on
some step repair he had
made at Hartinger P..rrk and
the possibility thai additional work. will have to be done
since it could be a safely
hazard. Craig noted the need
to bring a deep drain at Fifth

Pla1se ... ~Wd~Ge.AS

·'

•

KKELLY@MYOAIL'r'TRIBUNE. COM

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GALLIPOLIS - A drop
in Ohio 's unemployment
rate for February that was
aho seen in Gallia. Meigs
and surrounding counties
was more attributable 10
weather conditions than job
growth. ,;tate Department of
Jobs and Family Services
oflicials believe.
Lasl month· s jobless rates
were released Tuesday by
the Ohio DJ FS and reflected
an unemployment decrease
following a rocky January.
when the age nc y's data
reported that joblessness
went up .
Galli;i's rate dropped fivetenths of a percent from 6.4
percent in January to 5.9
percent in February. Meigs·
rate, which had inched back
into the double-digit range
in January to 10.2 percent.
fell four-tenths of a percent
to 9.8 percent last month.
Athens
County
also
dropped four-ten th s of a

Please see Jobless. AS

Concrete
pour at KC
slated Friday
Belh Serpnlf pholo

No swimming? No kidding! Although the Ohio River is going down, its current remains swift
and most people don't need a sign to warn them against swimming in it, but for those that
do, 'Here's your sign."

Grain exporter speaking at FFA banquet
BY BETH SEIKIEifT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

RACINE- Pat Klein , an
ellecutive wilh An&lt;)ersons
Inc .. one of the largest grain
exporters in lhe world will
be speaking at the Racine
Southern FFA Banquet at 6
·p.m., Thursday at the
Southern . High School
Auditorium.
Andersons Inc. have been
in prdiminary talk s with
American
Municipal
Power-Ohio about possibly
putting in a fertilizer planl if
AMP-Ohio chooses to utilize the Powersp:in process.
a new multi-pollutanl control technology capable of
producing a "valuable" fertilizer co-product instead of
synthetic gypsum produced
fro~ traditional limestone
scrubbing technologies at
power plants.
"AMP-Ohio has not ,-hosen who will run the phmL
·nothin g is etched in stone :·
William Wolf of Andersons
Inc. &gt;aid after con tirrning
discussions with AMP-Ohio

Pat Klein
which is currently focused
on the permitting process.
''There are a lot of vari ables in this process and we
don., h&lt;~ve the (power) plant
permitted "' this point,"
Kent Carson. director of
member relations for AMPOhio said. " We don ' t have a
final decision to use the
Powerspan process. Those
( permiuing) hurtles come
tirst and then we ' II decide
on who will be the contractor for the fertilizer plant ...

New technologies aside.
Racine
Southern
FFA
Teacher Butch Mitchell
described keynote speaker
Klein as a "seasoned veteran" .whose speech will focus
on Andersons Inc.'s fertilizer
operations and the opportunities for FFA members with
the company. Kleirt will be
available to talk with students. parents and members
of the agriculture community
before and after the banquet.
Klein grew up on a farm in
Wyandot County where he
was an active 4-H member
for 10 years. He graduated
from Ohio University with a
lxlchelor of arts degree and
spent two years in the Peace
Corp' in Thailand raising
peanuts and
providing
potable water to local farm s.
Klein has spent the lasl 34
years in fertilizer sales and
plant management and the
last
24
years
with
Andersons. H.: i&gt; currently a
territory manager se" ing
125 re1ail fertili zer farm sup,
ply dealers in four States .

BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@ MYDAI LYTAIBUNE .COM

CHESHIRE- A 12 -hour
concrete pour on one part of
lhe ami-pollution tec hnology construction &lt;lithe Kyger
Creek Power Plant has been
rescheduled.
Ohio Valk v Electric
Corp. officials·said a continuou,; po uring of concrete
at the plant - rcqutring a
consta111 tlow of concrete
truck traffic in and out of
the plant - se t for today
will now be done on
Fridav. Marc h 30.
Th~ pour is on the
absorbt-r vessd roumlation
of lhe flue gas dcsulfurizalion 1FGD) syste1m ,!;ned
for the plan! The p&lt;.1ur is
scheduled to begin &lt;~t 5
a.m . and L'Ontinue for up to

12 hours .
Addition of FGD ,;yslems
to the plant will bring the
more than 50-vear-old electricity generating facility in
compliance with regi onal
and national air quality
standards. Planl Manager
Ralph Amburgey s&lt;~id.
, Amburgey and OVEC
officials estimate that while
a comi nuous p&lt;.1ur occurs.
up to 80 truck s will travel
Ohio· 7 to and from concrete
batch plants in Gallipolis
anJ Addison.

P111se see •••quet. AS I

Pluse see Potlr, AS

•

�:The Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD

PageA2
Wednesday, March a8,

2007

Senate signals support for with~rawing Iraq
troops by next March, challenging Bush
BY DAVID ESPO
AP SPECIAL CORRESPONOENT

liP photo

A youth smashes an advertising display during clashes with

French police officers at the Gare du Nord Metro station in
Paris, Tuesday. The standoff between officers and youths
left several station windows shattered and seven people
were arrested.

Youths clash with riot police
at Paris' Gare du Nord station
BY

JAMEY KEATEN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PARIS - Riot police tiring tear gas and brandishing
batons clas~ed Tuesday
with bands of youths who
shattered windows and looted shops at a major Paris
train station. off1cials said.
Nine people were arrested.
Ofticials said about l 00
people were involved in the
melee at Gare du Nord. one
of Paris· most important
transport hubs. Officers,
some with police dogs. tired
tear gas and charged at
groups
of
marauding
youths, some of them wearing hoods and swinging
metal bars.
The youths responded by
throwing trash cans and
other objects at the officers.
A group of youths sm;1shed
the windows of a sporting
goods store and looted
boxes of shoes. Others
attacked automatic drink
dispensers and set lire to an
information booth.
Commuter Cyril Zidou, a
24-year-old electrician, said
he was coming home from

the gym "'when I just got
gassed." One woman was
evacuated by paramedics
for inhalation of tear gas.
The violence did not
appear directly related to
France's presidential election Jess than a month away,
but it highlighted the social
and economic tensions that
the country's new leader
will inherit when he or she
takes power in May.
The train lines from Gare
du Nord mdiate out to the
same suburbs north of Paris
where three weeks of riotillg erupted in 2005 . That
violence was born of pentup anger especiall y
among youths of Arab and
African origin - over years
of high unemployment and
·
racial inequalities.
The melee spilled onto
the surrounding streets late
Tuesday as officers cleared
the station. Police ordered
spectators to disperse and
threatened to charge as
small groups of youths set
fire to wooden barricades
and garbage cans and pelted
passing tourist buses with
stich.

WASHINGTON - The
Democmtic-controlled Senate
narrowly signaled suppon
Tuesday for the withdrawal of
U.S. combat troops from Iraq
bv next March, triggering an
i1istant veto threat from the
White House in a deepening
dispute between Congress
and comrnallder in chief.
Republican attempts to
scuttle the nonbinding timeline failed, 50-48, largely
along pany lines.
The vote marked the
Senate's most forceful challen~e to date of the administrail on's handling of a war
that has claimed the lives of

the threat a few hours
before the VOte - and again
afterward. "The president is
disappointed that the Senate
continues down a path with
a bill that he will veto and
has no chance of becoming
Jaw," it said.
Similar legislation drew
only 48 votes in the Senate
earlier thi s month, but
Democratic leaders made a
c hange that persuaded
Nebraska's
Democratic
Sen. Ben Nelson to swing
behind the measure.
Additionally, GOP Sens.
Chuck Hagel of Nebraska
and Gordon Smith of ~o.n
sided with the Democrats,
·
h
f h
· ·t
assunng t em 0 t e maJon y
they needed to tum back a
challenge Jed by Sen. Thad
Cochran, R-Miss. "The president ·5 strategy is taking
America deeper and deeper
into thi s quagmire with no
exit strategy," said Hagel, the
most vocal Republican critic
of the war in Congress.
Vice
President Dick
Cheney· traveled to the

more than 3,200 U.S.
troops. It came days after
the House approved a binding withdrawal deadline of
Sept. I , 2008. and increased
the likelihood of a veto confrontation this spri ng.
After weeks of setbacks on
·
the Senate floor. Majority
Leader Harry Reid said the
moment was at hand to
"send a message to.President Capitol in case his vote was
Bush that the time has come needed to break a tie, a meato fmd a new way forward in sure of the importance the
this intractable war."
administration places on the
"lt is a choice between issue.
stayi n¥ the course in Iraq or
~he debate cam_e on legis~
changmg the course in lauon that provtdes $12lraq," he said.
b1lhon to fund the_wars m
But Republicans _ and ' Iraq and Alghamstan as
Sen. Joseph Lieberman, an well as. domestic . pnont1es
independent Democrat such rehet to humcane VICargued otherwise.
ttms and payment~ to farmSen. John McCain, R- ers. Fmal passage IS expectAriz., a presidential hopeful, ed Wednesday or Thursday.
Separately, a mmtmum
said "we are starting to tum
things around" in the Iraq wage mcrea~e was attached
war and added that critics to the spendmg b11l wtthout
"co~ceive no failure as worse controversy, along with
than remaining in Iraq and no companion tax cuts that the
success worthy of additional Repubhcans have demand- ·
sacrifice. They are wrong."
ed as the pn~e for thet.r supBush had previously said port of the mcrease m the
he would veto any bill that federal wage floor. The
he deemed an attempt to House and Senate have
micromanage the war, and passed different versions of
the White House freshened the minimum wage-tax

package, but they have yet
to reach a compromise.
The House has already
passed legislation requiring troops to be withdrawn·
by Sept. I, 2008 . The
Senate vote assured that
the Democratic-controlled
Congress would send Bush
legislation later this spring
that call s for a change in
wa,r policy. A veto appears
to be a certainty.
That would put the onus
back on the Democrats. who
would have to decide how
long they wanted to extend
the test of wills in the face of
what are likely to be increas-'
ingly urgent statements from
the administration that the
money is needed for troops
in the war zone .
"I hope he will work with
us so we can come up with
something agreeable for
both" sides, Reid said at a
post-vote news conference.
"But I'm not anxious to strip
anything out of the bill."

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

As drafted, the legislation
requires a troop w;thdrawal
to begin within 120 days.
with a nonbinding goal that
calls for the combat troops
to be gone within a year.
The measure also includes
a series of suggested goals
for the Iraqi governm~nt to
meet lo provide for its own
security, enhance democracy and distribute its oil
wealth fairly - provisions
designed to attract suppon
from Nelson and Sen. Mark
Pryor of Arkansas.
Despite the change, Pryor
voted with Republicans,
saying he would only support a timeline if the date
were secret.
The vote w.as a critical
test for Reid and the new
Democratic majority in the
Senate nearly three months
after they took power.
Despite several attempts,
they had yet to win approval
for any legislation challenging Bush's policies.

12. Each egg found can be
turned in for candy treats
and/or sma ll toys. There
will also be a golden egg in
each area with the priLe
being a large basket with
toy s,. candy and special
surpnses.
In the event of rain. the
hunt will be postponed to
5:30 p.m. on Tuesday.
April 3.

~

Beech named director
of quality at O'Bieness
ATHENS - Amy Beech
has be.en named director of
quality
at
0' Bleness
Memorial Hospital. She is a
registered nurse who previously worked at O'Bleness
and at the Athens Surgery
Center.
Beech manages all aspects
of the ongoing hospital
accreditation process. which
is reviewed by the Joint
Commission
on
Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations every IRto 36
months. She also supervi ses
all performance improve. ment and risk management
activities at O'Bleness.

Amy Beech

N. 2nd Avenue • Middleport. Ohio
740-992·5884

Church events
Thursday, March 29
POMEROY - The Ohio
valley Crusade for Christ
meeting will be held at 7
p.m. at the First Southern
Baptist Church. For more
information call 740-9926779.
Saturday, March 31
CARPENTER - 'Everyn
Roush will be hosting an
annual gospel si ng at the
Carpenter Baptist Church
30711 S.R. 143 . Albany. at
7 p.m . Fealllred groups will
be "The Voices of Faith"'
Sandra
Wi se,
Evelyn
Roush, and Chester and
Erma Manin. A love offer-

ing will be taken. Pastor
Whitt Akers, 591-1236.
Friday, April6
TUPPERS PLAINS
The United Singers will be
at the 7 p.m. Good Friday
servit:es of Amazing Grace
Church in Tuppers Plains.
The church is located at
42019 Mai11 Street. Tuppers
Plains.

Clubs and
organizations
Wednesday, March 28
POMEROY
Middleport Literary Club
will meet at 2 fl.m. at the
Pomeroy Library. Marlene

BY KAtHY MITCHELl.
AND MARCY SuGAR

Dear Annie: J' m an
aUractive, sman, 26-year- .
old female with a great job
and a rich social life ,
friends-wise . The problem~
Lately, it seems l' m destined to be alone. It's not
that l don ' t meet guys. It's
that I keep attracting the
wrong types. And if I actually like a guy, there's
always some catch. It's really starting to get me down.
Case in point: I've had a
crush on '·Mark," a co-worker. for a few months.
Imagine my delight when I
discovered he was attracted
to me, too. After two weeks
of heavy flirting,
we
exchanged phone numbers.
A week later, he called and
invited me out for dinner. We
had a wonderful conversation and a good time - until
he said he is in a relationship
that's "on the rocks." Red
!lags popped up everywhere.
Now I'm in the dumps
because I feel stupid for setting myself up for that one .
Why would a guy ask me
out on a date just to lower
the boom' Why not te II me
from the staning gate so I
wouldn't get my hopes up~

The worst pan? I still want
to get to know him better. I
think Mark is a genuinely
nice guy, and I believe he's
telling the truth and not setting me up to be "the other
chick" (which I refu se to
be&gt;'. I guess I just want to
know what would motivate
a person to do this. Confused and Fruslrated
in California
Dear Confused: Many
women learn the hard way
if someone is oiherwise
involved, and this is not
your fault. If you believe
Mark is honest, his motivation is simple. He likes you, ·
his current relationship is
ending, and he's looking for
someone new. If you don 't
mind dating a co-worker
(often problematic), you can
stick around and see where
this goes - but give yourself rules and a deadline.
Tell him you won't date him
until his current relationship
is completely. over, and
decide how long you're ·
willing to wait. In the meantime, make sure your
friends know you are looking. It's often the best way
to meet decent guys who are
reliably available.
Dear Annie: Our daughter is getting married next

Kuhn
will
review
"Ma11hunt: the 1\velve Day
Chase for Lincoln 's Killer"
by James L. Swanson.
Norma Torres will be host ess. Members will have a
book exchange.
Thesday, April 3
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, 7 :30 p.m. at the
hall. All Master Masons
invited. Refreshments.

Public meetings
Friday, March 30
POMEROY
The
Meigs County Board of
Elections will be closed so
that employees can attend

an out-of-town meeting.
Monday, April 2
SYRACUSE Sutton
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
at the Syracuse villa~e hall.
Thesday, April 3
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees. 6:30
p.m. at the Pageville town
haiL

Birthdays
· Monday, April 2
MIDDLEPORT
Doloris Kruskamp will
observe her birthday on
April 2. Cards may be sent
to her at Overbrook Center,
333 Page St., Room 405,
Middleport, Ohio 45 760.

Real grandson inducted into Civil War group
POMEROY Harry
Bailey of Min..rsville, one
of only a few real grandsons
of Union veterans still living, was inducted into membership of the Brooks-Grant
Camp Sons of Union
Veterans of the Civil War at
·its recent meeting. His
grandfather was Pvt. John
Wesley Bailey of Company
B. !40th Ohi&lt;&gt; Volunteer
Infantry.
During the meeting the
death of Lvle Anderson, a
member h'om Vancouver,
British Columbia was noted
and Tommy Hopton . chaplain, draped the camp charter in his memory.
· The camp completed
plans for the placement of a
mar)(er at the grave of
Meigs County's last living
Union soldier. Pvt. Henry
Dixon will be honored with
the dedication of a special

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The

• ~allipolts ltailp {[ribune
• l9oint l9leasant ~egtster
• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

REACH OVER 18,000HOM'E$,
IN THE .TRI·COUNTV;AREAI ·. "

Advertising Deadline:
FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 2007
12:00Noon
Insertion Date.·
FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 2007

Birth
announced

"

¥eaUipoli!~ llail~ G:rthunt 446-2342
¥joint l}ltaMnt ~tHi-ttr 675-1333

· ¥The Dally Sentinel 992-2155

YourOnceAYear
. Opporlunity ·

'

1b Showcase Your Bus.iness

Wilh A Story In This
Tri.County Edition

THE PLAINS - Marcy
and Chris Kennedy of The
Plains &lt;mnounce the birth of
a son, Dawson Carter
Kennedy. born on Feb. 14 at
the O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital.

marker at his grave on
Saturday, May 19. The
descendants of Pvt. Dixon
have been contacted and
will be preo;ent. There will
be Civil War gun lire and
bu~ling in the ceremonies .
Th1s will be the official
Memorial Day ceremonies
rather than the ones usually
conducted at the Civil War
monument by the courthouse . The public is invited
to attend this once-in-a-lifetime
ceremony.
More
details will be released in
May.
The cam p also finished
preparations for its annual
Appomattox Day Bean
Dinner. Beans will be prepared over a campfire as
was Civil War custom. This
celebrates the surrender of
the Confederate General
Robert E. Lee, an!-1 hi s
forces to Gen. Ulysses S.

Grant. The camp will fur- chosen to serve along with
nish shelter if needed . · all past camp commanders
Attendees are to bring lawn and current commander.
chairs and a covered dish . Alan Holter. This will be a
The event will be held at 6 one-day convention thi s
p .m., Saturday, April 7, at year at Veterans' Memorial
the James Mourning farm at building
in downtown
the end of Railroad Street in Columbus in June.
The camp is looking to
Middlepon. Guests are welcome. For more informa- participate in the re-burial of
a
Union
soldier
at
tion, call 992-7874.
Huntington,
W.
Va.
in
May
The camp voted to issue a
letter of support for the 12. lt is also looking to fmd
of the
Ohio copies of the West Virginia
request
Historical Society to obtain Adjutant General's report s
a federal appropriation for for the Civil War in order to ·
work at the Buffington j\et them reprinted. The origIsland Battlefield. The camp mals are rare and expensiVe .
Thomas Galloway of
expressed thanks to the
Meigs County Commission Huntington presented a
for keeping the McDade video" program on the histoand Old Portland Roads ry of Confederate General
Albert Gallatin Jenkin' s
open at the battlefield.
Delegates for the upcom- plantation at Green Bottom,
ing Ohio Depanment con- W.Va.
Frank and Carol Sisson
vention were selected. Scott
.
McElroy of Columbus was furnished refreshments
•

Principal in 'good' condition
GALLIPOLIS Gallia Academy High School
Principal Bruce Wilson was listed in good condition
Tuesday at Cabell Huntington Hospital after he and h1s
wife suffered inJuries in a motorcycle accident Sunday
on W.Va . 2.
Wilson and his wife, Cindy, were transported to the
Huntington. W.Va .. hospital followin g the accident. Mrs.
Wil son was treated and released. Cabell Huntington
spokesperson Kathy Cosco said.
Details ·on the accidcnl were not available.

ARMS

ARM WRESTLING TOURNAMENT
Hosted By GOOD TIMES
f'taat lie

Sa~::'!•!o~!~~i!lll · 21{i:!f Of

·Weigh In SPM · 7PM
·
Tournament Begins 7:30PM
Entry f'ee $15.00 for First Class, S111.00 Each Additional Class
Info. ContlKt 740-992-5787 or 740-963-4018 •
Good Times, St. Rt. 7 Pomeroy, Ohio

•

•

Proud to be apart

ofyour life.

year. What is the etiquette versation. always with
for inviting people? Are we open-ended
questions.
obligated to invite people They'll answer me. but then
we know will not come, the conversation is over.
even though they are immeThis bothe" me so much
diate family?
I've co me home in tears. All
Both sides of the family I ask is to he acknowledged .
are fairly big . and I know 70 Am l just too nice'' Should l
percent of niy husband's just get over it? lt makes for
side isn't going to attend. a lon g day when your coDo we still send them invi- workers ignore you. tations? I don't want to look Confused and Baffied . in
like we are trolling for gifts. Michigan
- Mother of the Bride
Dear Confused: Your coDear Mother: Yes, invite worker' may 'imply be
the immediate family , even accustomed to silence at
if they might not attend. work. Pick one person who
You never know, and the seems reasonably nice and
choice should be their s. ask them to join you for cofMany people who might not fee or lunch. lf they refu;e.
be able to attend the festivi - ask directly if you are doin g
ties would be highly insult- anything inappropriate . The
ed if they were not on your rest just takes time.
A-list . (Inviting every dis Ant1ie 's Mailbox i.~ writtant acquaintance and busi- tell by Kathy Mitchell and
ness associate who cannot Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
attend is trolling for gifts .)
tors of the Ann lAnders
Dear Annie: I just staned column. Please e-mail your
a new job. I love the job, but questions to annieslliailhate the people I work with. box@comcast.nel, or write
I know I'm the new girl and to: Annie's Mailbox, P. 0 .
must give it time , but they Box 118190, Chicago, IL
are just so rude .
606ll. To find out more
l always say "hi" with a about Annie's Mailbox,
smile . l never receive a and read features by other
smile back and barely a Creators Syndicate writers
hello. When I walk into a and cartoonists, visit the
room, they all ignore me. Cuators Syndicate Web
I've tried striking up a con- page at www.creators.com.

OU Southern Campus hosts
Health Literacy conference
related to health literacy.
The April 5 event , ""Health
Literacy: Helpmg Patients
Understand" is geared
specifically towards health
care professionals. including nurses and students in
the healthcare fields. The
forum will focus on
improving both health literacy awareness and ski lls
for effective communication in overcoming the
c hallenges professionals
and patients encounter in
local sett ings.
Guest speakers include
Sharon Denham. D.S.N.,
R.N, School of Nursing,
Ohio University; Nagesh
Rao, Ph.D.. School of
Communication,
Ohio
University; Jeff Famine.
M.A., Director of the Center
for
the
Study
and
Development of Literacy and
Language, Ohio University
and Ann Rathbun , Ph D..
Morehead State University.
The forum is being sponsored
by Ohio University, the
American
Cancer
Society/Ohio University pannership. Appalachia Reads
and the Ohio University
College of Osteopathic
Medicine/ AHEC.
Continuing professional
education credits arc being
offered. For more information on the forum, please
contact Ms. Pam Porter.
Ohio University Southern
Campus, (740) 533-4600.

IRONTON - In support
of Health Literacy, the Ohio
Southern
University
Campus will host a health
literacy forum on Thursday,
April 5. 8:30a.m. to 3 p.m.
in the Bowman Auditorium,
located in the Collins
Center, Ironton.
to
the
According
American
Medical
Association, poor health literacy is "a stronger predictor of a person's health than
age, income, employment
status, education level, and
race" (Report on the
Council
of
Scientific
Affairs, Ad Hoc Committee
on Health Literacy for the
Council
on
Scientific
Affairs. American Medical
Association. JAMA. Feb.
l 0, 1999).
The National Center for
Education Statistics echoes
this sentiment and notes the
health of as many as 90 million people in the United
States may be at risk
because of the difficulty
some patients experience in
understanding and acting
upon health information.
All health care information providers have a
respo nsibility to ensure that
the information given to
patients is communicated
in a way that is understandable and truly accessible .
This forum will provide
clear
communication
strategies and information

It's easy to subscribe to the

The Daily Sentinel
Sign up for home delivety
or a mall subscription
go to
www.mydailysentinel.com
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"WE DELIVER"

S\ll&gt;scribe 1~ • 992-21SS

s

~ :i'l-.:;~·
~ ....

28,2007

All snot lost. in new relationship

Community Calendar
..,- March 31st 9pm - 1 am
Bub Williams
.....- Dollar Beer Sunday!
...-Draft &amp; Import Specials
every Tuesday Night!

Wednesday, March

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Easter egg hunt
set for Saturday
POMEROY - The annual Easter egg hunt of the
Pomeroy
Merchants
Association will be held at I
p.m . Saturday on Bob
Roberts football field in
Pomeroy.
Michelle Nohle is chairman of the event. For the
hunt children will be divided into age categories. I to
4 years old, 5 to K and 9 to

PageA3

op

Purina Mills

Hosted By Dettwiller Lumber

Aprll5,2007
@6:30PM
MEIGS COUNTY ANNEX

(lksidt tiM ~qp;. Count)' [xtf'mion ()ffke)

l· t':tl ttn·d ...,pl·:th.l'l"'•
l ' ttll l\ I

I

• jll l l\1

\ u

""l•t \ tt ll'l ll •ll l \ 111 111 11

, It IJ . t h., , 1,\ \I

I

�:The Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD

PageA2
Wednesday, March a8,

2007

Senate signals support for with~rawing Iraq
troops by next March, challenging Bush
BY DAVID ESPO
AP SPECIAL CORRESPONOENT

liP photo

A youth smashes an advertising display during clashes with

French police officers at the Gare du Nord Metro station in
Paris, Tuesday. The standoff between officers and youths
left several station windows shattered and seven people
were arrested.

Youths clash with riot police
at Paris' Gare du Nord station
BY

JAMEY KEATEN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PARIS - Riot police tiring tear gas and brandishing
batons clas~ed Tuesday
with bands of youths who
shattered windows and looted shops at a major Paris
train station. off1cials said.
Nine people were arrested.
Ofticials said about l 00
people were involved in the
melee at Gare du Nord. one
of Paris· most important
transport hubs. Officers,
some with police dogs. tired
tear gas and charged at
groups
of
marauding
youths, some of them wearing hoods and swinging
metal bars.
The youths responded by
throwing trash cans and
other objects at the officers.
A group of youths sm;1shed
the windows of a sporting
goods store and looted
boxes of shoes. Others
attacked automatic drink
dispensers and set lire to an
information booth.
Commuter Cyril Zidou, a
24-year-old electrician, said
he was coming home from

the gym "'when I just got
gassed." One woman was
evacuated by paramedics
for inhalation of tear gas.
The violence did not
appear directly related to
France's presidential election Jess than a month away,
but it highlighted the social
and economic tensions that
the country's new leader
will inherit when he or she
takes power in May.
The train lines from Gare
du Nord mdiate out to the
same suburbs north of Paris
where three weeks of riotillg erupted in 2005 . That
violence was born of pentup anger especiall y
among youths of Arab and
African origin - over years
of high unemployment and
·
racial inequalities.
The melee spilled onto
the surrounding streets late
Tuesday as officers cleared
the station. Police ordered
spectators to disperse and
threatened to charge as
small groups of youths set
fire to wooden barricades
and garbage cans and pelted
passing tourist buses with
stich.

WASHINGTON - The
Democmtic-controlled Senate
narrowly signaled suppon
Tuesday for the withdrawal of
U.S. combat troops from Iraq
bv next March, triggering an
i1istant veto threat from the
White House in a deepening
dispute between Congress
and comrnallder in chief.
Republican attempts to
scuttle the nonbinding timeline failed, 50-48, largely
along pany lines.
The vote marked the
Senate's most forceful challen~e to date of the administrail on's handling of a war
that has claimed the lives of

the threat a few hours
before the VOte - and again
afterward. "The president is
disappointed that the Senate
continues down a path with
a bill that he will veto and
has no chance of becoming
Jaw," it said.
Similar legislation drew
only 48 votes in the Senate
earlier thi s month, but
Democratic leaders made a
c hange that persuaded
Nebraska's
Democratic
Sen. Ben Nelson to swing
behind the measure.
Additionally, GOP Sens.
Chuck Hagel of Nebraska
and Gordon Smith of ~o.n
sided with the Democrats,
·
h
f h
· ·t
assunng t em 0 t e maJon y
they needed to tum back a
challenge Jed by Sen. Thad
Cochran, R-Miss. "The president ·5 strategy is taking
America deeper and deeper
into thi s quagmire with no
exit strategy," said Hagel, the
most vocal Republican critic
of the war in Congress.
Vice
President Dick
Cheney· traveled to the

more than 3,200 U.S.
troops. It came days after
the House approved a binding withdrawal deadline of
Sept. I , 2008. and increased
the likelihood of a veto confrontation this spri ng.
After weeks of setbacks on
·
the Senate floor. Majority
Leader Harry Reid said the
moment was at hand to
"send a message to.President Capitol in case his vote was
Bush that the time has come needed to break a tie, a meato fmd a new way forward in sure of the importance the
this intractable war."
administration places on the
"lt is a choice between issue.
stayi n¥ the course in Iraq or
~he debate cam_e on legis~
changmg the course in lauon that provtdes $12lraq," he said.
b1lhon to fund the_wars m
But Republicans _ and ' Iraq and Alghamstan as
Sen. Joseph Lieberman, an well as. domestic . pnont1es
independent Democrat such rehet to humcane VICargued otherwise.
ttms and payment~ to farmSen. John McCain, R- ers. Fmal passage IS expectAriz., a presidential hopeful, ed Wednesday or Thursday.
Separately, a mmtmum
said "we are starting to tum
things around" in the Iraq wage mcrea~e was attached
war and added that critics to the spendmg b11l wtthout
"co~ceive no failure as worse controversy, along with
than remaining in Iraq and no companion tax cuts that the
success worthy of additional Repubhcans have demand- ·
sacrifice. They are wrong."
ed as the pn~e for thet.r supBush had previously said port of the mcrease m the
he would veto any bill that federal wage floor. The
he deemed an attempt to House and Senate have
micromanage the war, and passed different versions of
the White House freshened the minimum wage-tax

package, but they have yet
to reach a compromise.
The House has already
passed legislation requiring troops to be withdrawn·
by Sept. I, 2008 . The
Senate vote assured that
the Democratic-controlled
Congress would send Bush
legislation later this spring
that call s for a change in
wa,r policy. A veto appears
to be a certainty.
That would put the onus
back on the Democrats. who
would have to decide how
long they wanted to extend
the test of wills in the face of
what are likely to be increas-'
ingly urgent statements from
the administration that the
money is needed for troops
in the war zone .
"I hope he will work with
us so we can come up with
something agreeable for
both" sides, Reid said at a
post-vote news conference.
"But I'm not anxious to strip
anything out of the bill."

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

As drafted, the legislation
requires a troop w;thdrawal
to begin within 120 days.
with a nonbinding goal that
calls for the combat troops
to be gone within a year.
The measure also includes
a series of suggested goals
for the Iraqi governm~nt to
meet lo provide for its own
security, enhance democracy and distribute its oil
wealth fairly - provisions
designed to attract suppon
from Nelson and Sen. Mark
Pryor of Arkansas.
Despite the change, Pryor
voted with Republicans,
saying he would only support a timeline if the date
were secret.
The vote w.as a critical
test for Reid and the new
Democratic majority in the
Senate nearly three months
after they took power.
Despite several attempts,
they had yet to win approval
for any legislation challenging Bush's policies.

12. Each egg found can be
turned in for candy treats
and/or sma ll toys. There
will also be a golden egg in
each area with the priLe
being a large basket with
toy s,. candy and special
surpnses.
In the event of rain. the
hunt will be postponed to
5:30 p.m. on Tuesday.
April 3.

~

Beech named director
of quality at O'Bieness
ATHENS - Amy Beech
has be.en named director of
quality
at
0' Bleness
Memorial Hospital. She is a
registered nurse who previously worked at O'Bleness
and at the Athens Surgery
Center.
Beech manages all aspects
of the ongoing hospital
accreditation process. which
is reviewed by the Joint
Commission
on
Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations every IRto 36
months. She also supervi ses
all performance improve. ment and risk management
activities at O'Bleness.

Amy Beech

N. 2nd Avenue • Middleport. Ohio
740-992·5884

Church events
Thursday, March 29
POMEROY - The Ohio
valley Crusade for Christ
meeting will be held at 7
p.m. at the First Southern
Baptist Church. For more
information call 740-9926779.
Saturday, March 31
CARPENTER - 'Everyn
Roush will be hosting an
annual gospel si ng at the
Carpenter Baptist Church
30711 S.R. 143 . Albany. at
7 p.m . Fealllred groups will
be "The Voices of Faith"'
Sandra
Wi se,
Evelyn
Roush, and Chester and
Erma Manin. A love offer-

ing will be taken. Pastor
Whitt Akers, 591-1236.
Friday, April6
TUPPERS PLAINS
The United Singers will be
at the 7 p.m. Good Friday
servit:es of Amazing Grace
Church in Tuppers Plains.
The church is located at
42019 Mai11 Street. Tuppers
Plains.

Clubs and
organizations
Wednesday, March 28
POMEROY
Middleport Literary Club
will meet at 2 fl.m. at the
Pomeroy Library. Marlene

BY KAtHY MITCHELl.
AND MARCY SuGAR

Dear Annie: J' m an
aUractive, sman, 26-year- .
old female with a great job
and a rich social life ,
friends-wise . The problem~
Lately, it seems l' m destined to be alone. It's not
that l don ' t meet guys. It's
that I keep attracting the
wrong types. And if I actually like a guy, there's
always some catch. It's really starting to get me down.
Case in point: I've had a
crush on '·Mark," a co-worker. for a few months.
Imagine my delight when I
discovered he was attracted
to me, too. After two weeks
of heavy flirting,
we
exchanged phone numbers.
A week later, he called and
invited me out for dinner. We
had a wonderful conversation and a good time - until
he said he is in a relationship
that's "on the rocks." Red
!lags popped up everywhere.
Now I'm in the dumps
because I feel stupid for setting myself up for that one .
Why would a guy ask me
out on a date just to lower
the boom' Why not te II me
from the staning gate so I
wouldn't get my hopes up~

The worst pan? I still want
to get to know him better. I
think Mark is a genuinely
nice guy, and I believe he's
telling the truth and not setting me up to be "the other
chick" (which I refu se to
be&gt;'. I guess I just want to
know what would motivate
a person to do this. Confused and Fruslrated
in California
Dear Confused: Many
women learn the hard way
if someone is oiherwise
involved, and this is not
your fault. If you believe
Mark is honest, his motivation is simple. He likes you, ·
his current relationship is
ending, and he's looking for
someone new. If you don 't
mind dating a co-worker
(often problematic), you can
stick around and see where
this goes - but give yourself rules and a deadline.
Tell him you won't date him
until his current relationship
is completely. over, and
decide how long you're ·
willing to wait. In the meantime, make sure your
friends know you are looking. It's often the best way
to meet decent guys who are
reliably available.
Dear Annie: Our daughter is getting married next

Kuhn
will
review
"Ma11hunt: the 1\velve Day
Chase for Lincoln 's Killer"
by James L. Swanson.
Norma Torres will be host ess. Members will have a
book exchange.
Thesday, April 3
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, 7 :30 p.m. at the
hall. All Master Masons
invited. Refreshments.

Public meetings
Friday, March 30
POMEROY
The
Meigs County Board of
Elections will be closed so
that employees can attend

an out-of-town meeting.
Monday, April 2
SYRACUSE Sutton
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
at the Syracuse villa~e hall.
Thesday, April 3
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees. 6:30
p.m. at the Pageville town
haiL

Birthdays
· Monday, April 2
MIDDLEPORT
Doloris Kruskamp will
observe her birthday on
April 2. Cards may be sent
to her at Overbrook Center,
333 Page St., Room 405,
Middleport, Ohio 45 760.

Real grandson inducted into Civil War group
POMEROY Harry
Bailey of Min..rsville, one
of only a few real grandsons
of Union veterans still living, was inducted into membership of the Brooks-Grant
Camp Sons of Union
Veterans of the Civil War at
·its recent meeting. His
grandfather was Pvt. John
Wesley Bailey of Company
B. !40th Ohi&lt;&gt; Volunteer
Infantry.
During the meeting the
death of Lvle Anderson, a
member h'om Vancouver,
British Columbia was noted
and Tommy Hopton . chaplain, draped the camp charter in his memory.
· The camp completed
plans for the placement of a
mar)(er at the grave of
Meigs County's last living
Union soldier. Pvt. Henry
Dixon will be honored with
the dedication of a special

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The

• ~allipolts ltailp {[ribune
• l9oint l9leasant ~egtster
• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

REACH OVER 18,000HOM'E$,
IN THE .TRI·COUNTV;AREAI ·. "

Advertising Deadline:
FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 2007
12:00Noon
Insertion Date.·
FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 2007

Birth
announced

"

¥eaUipoli!~ llail~ G:rthunt 446-2342
¥joint l}ltaMnt ~tHi-ttr 675-1333

· ¥The Dally Sentinel 992-2155

YourOnceAYear
. Opporlunity ·

'

1b Showcase Your Bus.iness

Wilh A Story In This
Tri.County Edition

THE PLAINS - Marcy
and Chris Kennedy of The
Plains &lt;mnounce the birth of
a son, Dawson Carter
Kennedy. born on Feb. 14 at
the O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital.

marker at his grave on
Saturday, May 19. The
descendants of Pvt. Dixon
have been contacted and
will be preo;ent. There will
be Civil War gun lire and
bu~ling in the ceremonies .
Th1s will be the official
Memorial Day ceremonies
rather than the ones usually
conducted at the Civil War
monument by the courthouse . The public is invited
to attend this once-in-a-lifetime
ceremony.
More
details will be released in
May.
The cam p also finished
preparations for its annual
Appomattox Day Bean
Dinner. Beans will be prepared over a campfire as
was Civil War custom. This
celebrates the surrender of
the Confederate General
Robert E. Lee, an!-1 hi s
forces to Gen. Ulysses S.

Grant. The camp will fur- chosen to serve along with
nish shelter if needed . · all past camp commanders
Attendees are to bring lawn and current commander.
chairs and a covered dish . Alan Holter. This will be a
The event will be held at 6 one-day convention thi s
p .m., Saturday, April 7, at year at Veterans' Memorial
the James Mourning farm at building
in downtown
the end of Railroad Street in Columbus in June.
The camp is looking to
Middlepon. Guests are welcome. For more informa- participate in the re-burial of
a
Union
soldier
at
tion, call 992-7874.
Huntington,
W.
Va.
in
May
The camp voted to issue a
letter of support for the 12. lt is also looking to fmd
of the
Ohio copies of the West Virginia
request
Historical Society to obtain Adjutant General's report s
a federal appropriation for for the Civil War in order to ·
work at the Buffington j\et them reprinted. The origIsland Battlefield. The camp mals are rare and expensiVe .
Thomas Galloway of
expressed thanks to the
Meigs County Commission Huntington presented a
for keeping the McDade video" program on the histoand Old Portland Roads ry of Confederate General
Albert Gallatin Jenkin' s
open at the battlefield.
Delegates for the upcom- plantation at Green Bottom,
ing Ohio Depanment con- W.Va.
Frank and Carol Sisson
vention were selected. Scott
.
McElroy of Columbus was furnished refreshments
•

Principal in 'good' condition
GALLIPOLIS Gallia Academy High School
Principal Bruce Wilson was listed in good condition
Tuesday at Cabell Huntington Hospital after he and h1s
wife suffered inJuries in a motorcycle accident Sunday
on W.Va . 2.
Wilson and his wife, Cindy, were transported to the
Huntington. W.Va .. hospital followin g the accident. Mrs.
Wil son was treated and released. Cabell Huntington
spokesperson Kathy Cosco said.
Details ·on the accidcnl were not available.

ARMS

ARM WRESTLING TOURNAMENT
Hosted By GOOD TIMES
f'taat lie

Sa~::'!•!o~!~~i!lll · 21{i:!f Of

·Weigh In SPM · 7PM
·
Tournament Begins 7:30PM
Entry f'ee $15.00 for First Class, S111.00 Each Additional Class
Info. ContlKt 740-992-5787 or 740-963-4018 •
Good Times, St. Rt. 7 Pomeroy, Ohio

•

•

Proud to be apart

ofyour life.

year. What is the etiquette versation. always with
for inviting people? Are we open-ended
questions.
obligated to invite people They'll answer me. but then
we know will not come, the conversation is over.
even though they are immeThis bothe" me so much
diate family?
I've co me home in tears. All
Both sides of the family I ask is to he acknowledged .
are fairly big . and I know 70 Am l just too nice'' Should l
percent of niy husband's just get over it? lt makes for
side isn't going to attend. a lon g day when your coDo we still send them invi- workers ignore you. tations? I don't want to look Confused and Baffied . in
like we are trolling for gifts. Michigan
- Mother of the Bride
Dear Confused: Your coDear Mother: Yes, invite worker' may 'imply be
the immediate family , even accustomed to silence at
if they might not attend. work. Pick one person who
You never know, and the seems reasonably nice and
choice should be their s. ask them to join you for cofMany people who might not fee or lunch. lf they refu;e.
be able to attend the festivi - ask directly if you are doin g
ties would be highly insult- anything inappropriate . The
ed if they were not on your rest just takes time.
A-list . (Inviting every dis Ant1ie 's Mailbox i.~ writtant acquaintance and busi- tell by Kathy Mitchell and
ness associate who cannot Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
attend is trolling for gifts .)
tors of the Ann lAnders
Dear Annie: I just staned column. Please e-mail your
a new job. I love the job, but questions to annieslliailhate the people I work with. box@comcast.nel, or write
I know I'm the new girl and to: Annie's Mailbox, P. 0 .
must give it time , but they Box 118190, Chicago, IL
are just so rude .
606ll. To find out more
l always say "hi" with a about Annie's Mailbox,
smile . l never receive a and read features by other
smile back and barely a Creators Syndicate writers
hello. When I walk into a and cartoonists, visit the
room, they all ignore me. Cuators Syndicate Web
I've tried striking up a con- page at www.creators.com.

OU Southern Campus hosts
Health Literacy conference
related to health literacy.
The April 5 event , ""Health
Literacy: Helpmg Patients
Understand" is geared
specifically towards health
care professionals. including nurses and students in
the healthcare fields. The
forum will focus on
improving both health literacy awareness and ski lls
for effective communication in overcoming the
c hallenges professionals
and patients encounter in
local sett ings.
Guest speakers include
Sharon Denham. D.S.N.,
R.N, School of Nursing,
Ohio University; Nagesh
Rao, Ph.D.. School of
Communication,
Ohio
University; Jeff Famine.
M.A., Director of the Center
for
the
Study
and
Development of Literacy and
Language, Ohio University
and Ann Rathbun , Ph D..
Morehead State University.
The forum is being sponsored
by Ohio University, the
American
Cancer
Society/Ohio University pannership. Appalachia Reads
and the Ohio University
College of Osteopathic
Medicine/ AHEC.
Continuing professional
education credits arc being
offered. For more information on the forum, please
contact Ms. Pam Porter.
Ohio University Southern
Campus, (740) 533-4600.

IRONTON - In support
of Health Literacy, the Ohio
Southern
University
Campus will host a health
literacy forum on Thursday,
April 5. 8:30a.m. to 3 p.m.
in the Bowman Auditorium,
located in the Collins
Center, Ironton.
to
the
According
American
Medical
Association, poor health literacy is "a stronger predictor of a person's health than
age, income, employment
status, education level, and
race" (Report on the
Council
of
Scientific
Affairs, Ad Hoc Committee
on Health Literacy for the
Council
on
Scientific
Affairs. American Medical
Association. JAMA. Feb.
l 0, 1999).
The National Center for
Education Statistics echoes
this sentiment and notes the
health of as many as 90 million people in the United
States may be at risk
because of the difficulty
some patients experience in
understanding and acting
upon health information.
All health care information providers have a
respo nsibility to ensure that
the information given to
patients is communicated
in a way that is understandable and truly accessible .
This forum will provide
clear
communication
strategies and information

It's easy to subscribe to the

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28,2007

All snot lost. in new relationship

Community Calendar
..,- March 31st 9pm - 1 am
Bub Williams
.....- Dollar Beer Sunday!
...-Draft &amp; Import Specials
every Tuesday Night!

Wednesday, March

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Easter egg hunt
set for Saturday
POMEROY - The annual Easter egg hunt of the
Pomeroy
Merchants
Association will be held at I
p.m . Saturday on Bob
Roberts football field in
Pomeroy.
Michelle Nohle is chairman of the event. For the
hunt children will be divided into age categories. I to
4 years old, 5 to K and 9 to

PageA3

op

Purina Mills

Hosted By Dettwiller Lumber

Aprll5,2007
@6:30PM
MEIGS COUNTY ANNEX

(lksidt tiM ~qp;. Count)' [xtf'mion ()ffke)

l· t':tl ttn·d ...,pl·:th.l'l"'•
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�'

.OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

TODAY IN HISTORY

Andrew Breitban wrote a
used to these kinds of people. Variations of ''die, b- remembrance: "Before I
h, die" are standard fare in met Cathy. I knew no one.
the inbbx of a writer - · After, I knew everyone.
much meaner, and personal, And her group of friends
if
you're lucky. It comes came in every shape, size
Kathryn
with the territory, and usual- and ideology. Rich , poor,
Lopez
ly you just ignore it. Yet journalist, blogger, controonce in a while you are versy staners and stoppers,
film
jarred. not by the lowlifes rainbow-headed
who wish you were dead. reviewers, a sex goddess, a
but by the inhumanity that babe named ·Moxie ,' an(j
tics.
Political people genemlly people will attribute to you. even the occasional literate
keep their transgressions Is that really the view this Onhodox Jew porn conagainst good sense and san- person has of those he dis- noisseur. As a pronounced
conservative she was quite
ity to a tolerable level. But agrees with politically''
Democrat John Edwards liberal in that regard. And
with the anonymity of the
Internet, it is easier to be held a press conference to her bohemian Silverlake
atrociously uncivil . An explain that his wife has aesthetic only added to the
angry person can post, with had a recurrence of the package of joyful contradicno attribution, to a political breast cancer she was diag- tion."
Her friends, her editors,
blog thai he is upset that the nosed with in 2004. I post
her
readers even - · we all
we
are
praying
online
that
vice president of the United
States didn't die when for the Edwards, and I gel watched her struggle with
"So, cancer, never whining,
Islamic terrorists tried to e-mails like this:
kit! him in Afghanistan ear- Edwards is about to drop always looking for somelier this year. There are out of the race because his thing constructive. Before
probably people who dis- wife's cancer had reiUrned? all that. we had watched her
agree with, even dislike, Looks like your prayers get mad, take aim, and be
Dick Cheney. But if you have been answered. I sup- brutally honest in a wellwant him to be murdered, if pose you' II also be 'pray- crafted way - always surfor
the
other passing mere politics, never
you have thai son of hatred ing'
for the man ... well, perhaps Democratic
candidates. with equivocation. It should
you think there's more to You're not fooling anyone. have been entirely impossiWe see right through you." ble for anyone ever to forget
politics than life.
Maybe the people who
This on the same day we thai Cathy was human. But
posted those comments at were memorializing one of if all you know is who's a
the Huffmgton Post didn't my
nationalreview.com Democrat and who's a
really want Cheney dead; contributors,
Catherine Republican, it is a lot easier ·
maybe they just meant to Seipp, a clever, funny writer to divorce yourself from
convey how much they dis- ou1 of Los Angeles who basic human empathy. And
agree with his views. But passed away the day before. that's not good f9r anyone
that's not what they wrote. She was a lively, colorful, · - or politics.
And what a thrill it must fun, loyal gal. And she had
(Kathryn l.cpez is the edihave been for them, to write all kinds of friends - the tor of National Review
such things. ·
kind of friends who could Onli11e ( www.nationalreIf you are in the business only be brought together in view.eom). She can be eonof publicly expressing your the same room because of WL'ted at klope:@nationalpolitical opinions, you're Cathy.
rel'iew.&lt;·om.)

ITS THE FIRST S/6N
OF SPRIN6.

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The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Pentagon sponsors job fair for
vets severely wounded in Iraq

Russell Williams

PORTLAND - Russell Melvin Williams, 76. of 3.0745
Barringer Ridge Rd., Ponland, a loving father, husband and
grandfather died Monday, March 26, 2007 at his residence . BY MICHELLE ROBERTS
ASSOCI ATE D PRESS WRITER
He was born May 25, 1930 in Little Washington, Pa., son
of the late Sard and Clara Della Green Williams.
SAN ANTON IO - Joh
He is survived by his wife, Nola Jean Basim Williams ;
a
pplicants
with mi"ing
two sons, Sard Melvin Williams and Tommy Lee Basim;
li
mbs
anJ
sev~re burm
three daughters. Marlene Ray Williams, Crystal Faye
a
rrivcd on crulc'hes and in
Williams Swiger and Brenda Lee Williams Brinkley : and
w
heelchair' Tuc,Jay al u
13 grandchildren.
b fair desi~ned 10 help
JO
In addition to hi s parents, he was preceded in death by his
v
eterans
rehu1ld their live'
daughter. Clara Della Williams; and hi s sis1er, Lousie
af
ter
being
severely woundGreen Smith.
d
in
Iraq
.
Graveside services will be held 11 a.m.,Thursday, March e Some veterans wore ban29. 2007 at Middle Swan Cemetery, Long Bouom, OH .
d·ages, fatigues anJ dark
There will be no visitation_
10 cover !heir combal
Arrangements are by White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, stnuits
juries
as lhey mel with
Coolville.
·
cruiters that includeJ
You can sign I he online guest book at www. white- breanks,
finandal planners,
schwarzelfuneralhome.com.
military contractors anJ
fe deral agencies. It was the
ni nth in a series of job fairs
sponsored by the Pcmagon.
Spc. James Johnson. 3S.
0 f Middletown , Ohio, suf~ered a broken ankle and
I hird-degree leg hurns after
a suicide bomber blew a
POMEROY - Cakes are still being accepted for the tr uck up near a sec urity
cake contest and auction held tomorrow night at the Meigs checkpomt. He said 1he job
County Senior Center. Entry into the cake contest is free fair was convenient for
and registration forms can be picked up at the center wounded service members
Cakes can be registered and dropped off up until 3 p_m.' recovering at Fort Sam
Thursday, the day of the auction. Cakes will be judged in Houston, which houses the
the following categories: Chocolate cakes; cakes made Army's only burn unit and
with fruit or vegetables like carrot, apple. applesauce ' h as a new rehabilitation
spice; decorated cakes; any yellow or white cake; coffee center for amputees.
cakes, crumb, pound.
,
"It's a huge advantage.
because I wouldn't get a
second glance looking like
I his," Johnson said, glancRACINE - The Racine American Legion Post 602 wil I I ng down at his crutches and
have a public sirloin tip steak and noodle dinner Sunday Army nylon track suit.
The event is also an
with serving to begin at II a.m. The dinner at $6 include s
0 pportunity
to
meet
iced tea or coffee and dessen.
in
a
non-threate mployers
.
envtronment.
·
e mng
Wounded veterans "can still
get out there, and the big
CHESTER - The Chester Court House benefit dinne r world is saying, 'We still
and auction will be held at 6:30 p.m. in the Meigs High want you. You have skills
School cafeteria. Proceeds will go toward the operation of we want,"' Johnson said.
the counhouse. Auction items can be delivered to th e
Getting badly wounded
counhouse or taken to the high school the night of th e was a twist in life veterans
event. Tickets for the dinner can be purchased at Baum hadn '1 counted on. said
Lumber, Summerfields Restaurant, Farmers Bank and lh e Patricia Bradshaw, the
Chester Counhouse.
Pentagon's deputy undersecretary of civilian personnel.
Job fairs "provide the hope
have skewed labor marke t and inspiration there is life
data as job seekers were less after the military," she said.
likely to be looking for work
More than 23,000 military
while employers also repon service members have been
from PegeA1
ed a decline in employ - wounded in combat in Iraq.
ment," Helen Jones-Kelley
percent, from 6.2 percent to director
of the ODJFS, sat '
5.8 percent, and Jackson in a statement on Tuesdayd
County's rate dipped eight- "Nearly half of the employ
tenths of a percent, from 9 ment decline for the month
percent in January to 8.2 was in construction."
percent
in
February.
Pike County had the high
Lawrence County's decline est rate of unemployment in
In this
was smaller. from 5.5 per- February at 10.8 percen t,
photo
cent in January to 5.4 per- while Delaware County had
supplied
by
cent last month.
I he lowest rate at 3.9 percen t.
Frogwatch,
Vinton County saw a
The number of worker s Bob Gonion
seven-1en1hs of a percent unemployed in Ohio in
holds a 40
drop in February 10 9.1 per- February was 295,000
'
centimeter
cent, after posting 9.8 per- down from 320,000 in
(15 inch)
cent in January. Washington January. The number o f
long cane
County fell four-tenths of a unemrloyed has decreased
toad near
percent from 6 percent in by 2 .000 in the past I 2
Darwin,
January to 5.6 percem in months from 316,000. The
Australia.
February.
February unemploymen t
Ohio's,unemployment rate rate for Ohio was dow n on Monday.
was 5 percent in February. rrom 5.3 percent
Weighing
n
down from 5.3 percent in February 2006.
nearly 1
January. the state said.
The county and city rate s kilogram (2
The national unemploy- are unadjusted, meanin g
pounds),
ment rate for February was they do not take int0
the toad is
4.5 percent. down from 4.6 account seasonal adjus 1amongst
percent in January.
ments in employment.
the largest
"The severe winter storms
(The Associated Pres s
specimens
in mid-February appear to comributed to this story.)
ever
captured in
Australia.
mending council members
AP photo
for foregoing their salari es
and requesting that th e
from PageA1
mayor do the same becau se
of the village's financial crI·
and Palmer up .to street level sis, presented a woode n
and displayed a bag of nails paint-by-number "levy tax
pig" to Houchins, Council
thrown in her driveway.
Chambers, after com- president.

Local Briefs

Cakes still being accepted

Dinner planned

.

Benefit dinner set for Friday

-

-

AP plloto

U.S. Army Sgt. Chad Rozanski, 21. who was injured by an roadside bomb in Iraq, left. talks
,with Alan Thompson, right, during a job fair for wounded soldiers at Fort Sam Houston in
San Antonio Tuesday.
Because of advances in battlefield medicine, some of
. the worst wounds, including
burns and limb losses, are
increasingly survivable.
Sgt. Chad Rozanski, 21,
lost both legs above the
knee in an explosion last
July. He had planned to
work as a firefighter or for
the Transponation Security
Administration after his
military career, but the blast
shattered those plans and
put him in a wheelchair.
Rozanski has been so
focused on rehabilitation
that he's only begun thinking about his post-military
life. The job fair, he said,
was a comfonable place to
stan.
''I'm going to be able to

want to lose weight? You
want to find Mr. Right? You
want a better job? You think
positively about it, and
you'll get it. That's "The
Secret."
Jim
Oh. there's a lo1 of new
Mullen
age, mumbo-jumbo like
"we are stardust, we are
golden," happy-hippy talk
that goes along with it duced them as "my good energy being thought and
gay friends" at the Rotary. the entire Universe is just
Sorry, guys, I thought one big positive thought,
everyone knew. In shon, if and you can just tap into it
you want to keep a secret, and ... oh. who cares? I just
don't mention it to me.
want my million dollars.
Which is why I was so
Right now I'm thinking
surprised to hear Oprah how positive it would be to
Winfrey lalking so openly have $1 million in the bank
about "The Secret." If she instead of the $23 that was
keeps talking about it, it' II in there yesterday. I'm not
be on all the morning thinking about all the taxes
shows, it' ll be on the I'd have to pay on $1 milnational news, it'll be on thj: lion, I'm not thinking about
Internet, it might sell two how many begging relatives
miUion copies. of a book. would stan knocking on my
Then it's not a secret' door once I have it.
Shssssh!
I wonder if I should tell
"The Secret" says you can Bob about "The Secret?" I
get anything you want ·just don't think he sees much
by
thinking
positive TV. He could use a new
thoughts about it. You want box. And Mrs. Nussleroad
$1 million? All you have to could positively think her
do is think posit.ively that. way out a tew lawyer bills.
you need $1 million and
I should stop by the bank
poof' You'll get it . You this aliemoon and see if that

million 's been added to my
account yet.
Some people might ask,
"Exactly what's the difference between "wishing" or
" daydreaming" and "The
Secret?" I would answer
them by saying, "You are
bringing me down, man.
You're full of negative
thoughts and I hope you die
in a fiery car crash - but in
a positive way. I don't think
they 'd let Oprah put this on
TV if it were just a bunch of
hooey, do you'&gt;"
When I think of all the
years I've wasted thinking
my lack of education and
my aversion to hard work
were holding me back, I just
want to spit. Whoops!
Negative thought. It's that
kind of thinking that will
lose me my $1 million.
Whoops 1 That was another
negative thought.
The bank just caJJed. I'm
overdrawn. Again! Whoops!
That was supposed to be a
secret.
,
ilim Mullen is the author
of "It Takes a Vilk1ge Idiot:
Complicating rhe Simple
Ufe " and "Baby's First
Taltoo. " You can reach him
at jim_mu/len@mywav.com)

Auction

need lo lake a good long
view of this situation and
make se nsible deci sions.
We
have to step up to the
from PageA1
plale and take care of the
problem. We can '1 remain
vaJues FFAofficers represenl. But again let me stress in the status quo. It is quite
Mitchell said the banquet Council has to make the evident something has to
is open to all members of decision."
be done now, tonight. or
In the discussion before we· re a done deaL What
from PageA1
the public and voluntee rs
are busy preparing a quarter the vote on the appropria- are we golng io do lll save
tions ordinance w~kh
In addition to Klein, Abby side of beef, half of a hog &lt;IS included the line ilems this villag~ ·&gt;"
With lhat Bub Rubinson
Snyder.
Ohio
FFA well as 30 pound~ of chic k- where reductions were
Association District Seven en and lamb for the comm u- made. several members made a moliun lo delay
adinn until th~ finatKe
president will speak about nity dinner.
expressed their concern committee c·ould meet again
aboul village tinances.
In bring recommendalions
Councilman
Ferman 10 Council by the end of
time during these pours."
Moore reponed 1ha1 the Mav as 10 how 10 meet the
Friday's event is expected finance commiuec had met obltgalions for 1hc rest of
to be the last continuous but no action was taken on 1he year. 10 nail "'mc1hing
pour on FGD chimney ·and proposals made a1 that down specifically. 10 do
from PageA1
absorber vessel foundatio n meeting . He said he had some creutiw thinking ."
proposed culling back on The motion failed on a lie
"During the times of the work for this month.
The
plant
will
employ
a
employees'
lime ami out - vote. with Jeff Peckham .
continuous concrete pour, the
··s sourcing the income tax Robinson.
Gallia
County
sherifl
and
Steve
trucks will travel on State
Route 7 and enter and exit the deputy to manage trafftc as work as a way of cutting Houchins . who presided in
plant," Amburgey said. concrete trucks leave the expenses but there was n'' the ahsence of Mayor Sandy
consensus among ''''mnit- lannare lli . votin~ ves: and
"Drivers should take extra plant, OVEC officials said
by
OVEC.
created
in
1952
tec members. '
Craig. Moore iiiJ Sandra
care when tmveling in the
"We
15
sponsoring
utilities.
h
as
can·,
put
a
fiscal
Brown. voting no. Again 1he
area of the plant. This volume
nc
employed
American
Elect
emergency
on
a
personal
fiscal
offker reminded
of truck traftic coulJ create
some traftk ·slow-downs. so Power Service Corp. to basis and keep lhi s village members of 1hi' week\ tildrivers may want to plan a serve as the manager of t he going." responded Cou nc·il ill'' deadline .
More em phasis on ~olle.:tm&lt; ber Jean Craig . "We,
few extra ntinutes of· drive construction project.

Funding

Banquet

Pour

come up here and not going construclion
company
to be continually turned Kiewit Corp.
Lamar Small, a human
down," he said, adding lhat
manager
for
he would also be spared the tesource
chore of repeatedly explain- Kiewit , said the company
offers jobs that require
ing his wounds.
For' employers, the job ~mployees to move frefair offers a chance to sur- quemly. which can be a
vey a pool of disciplined. good fn for ve1erans.
Those wi1h severe disabil- ·
hardworking applicants,
many of whom have already ities will not be able to work
obtained the security clear- in construction, but they
ance that is imponant for could be engineers or
accountants or fill other
defense jobs.
Federal agencies must positions lhat are not physigive hiring preference to cally strenuous. he said.
military veterans. The
Veterans often bring anothroughly 70 employers at the er strength for Kiewit, which
Fon Sam fair included the has a number of federal conCIA and the TSA. as well as tracts: They understand
pri vaie employers such as paperwork . "And paperwork
aircraft maker · Northrop is very imponant to the govGrumman Corp. and heavy ernment," Small said.

Australian group captures 'monster' toad the size of a small dog

-

It's no secret ...
Shhhh! Promise not to tell
anyone; it's a secret! I heard
about it on Oprah Winfrey's
show, so practically nobody
knows about it yet. But I'm
passing it along to you
because, well, I'm one of
those people who just can't
keep a secret.
·
When my old neighbor
Bob told me he was having
an affair with the school
lunch lady, I only told five
pr six people - tops and before you know it, it
was all over town. Who
could have guessed? Bob
now lives in a cardboard
box down on Main Street,
h.is wife moved to San
Diego.
When I told the congregation that I ran into Mrs.
N ussleroad at the liquor
store, I had no idea that her
ex-husband would use it as
an excuse try to take her
kids away. ·Funny thing, it
turns out she wasn't buying
liquor, sbe was asking the
owner to donate money to
the Community Chest. The
good news'? She's almost
paid off all the lawyer's
fees.
Pete and Andre haven't
spoken to me since I intro-

Obituaries

Jobless

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Leiters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed. and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Le1ter.1· should be in
good taste, addressi11g issues, not personalities. Leiters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will n01 be accepted for publication.

www .mydailysentinel.com

28, 2007

Wednesday, March 28,2007

Compassion transcends right and lift

A reponer recently told
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
me that there is more to life
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
than politics, this while I
www.mydallyaentlnel.com
was in the middle of a
crazed D.C. day - running
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
from meeting to meeting.
sending a few dozen e-mails
Dan Goodrich
a minute, checking the
crackberry while "listening"
Publisher
to a lunch companion. If
you're in D.C. , politics is
Charlene Hoeflich
everywhere.
And in the
General Manager-News Editor
midst of it all, for just one
second that I'm not at all
proud of, I thought the
reponer
was crazy.
Congress shall make no law respecting an
You can get a bit too
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
~aught up io it sometimes,
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom but politics is really and
truly important That's why
. of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
some of us spend so much
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition of our time arguing, quibbling and squabbling in the
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
political realm. It does matter
who wins elections.
- The Firat Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
whether it be Clinton or
Obama, Giuliani or Romney
br McCain - and their fundamental beliefs, their character,
the people they trust
Today is Wednesday, March 28. the 87th day of 2007.
- it's all monumentally
There are 278 days left in the year.
tmponant.
Today's Highlight in History:
Yet, no justification for
On March 28, 1979, America's worst commercial nuclear
accident occurred inside the Unit 2 reactor at the Three how imponant politiCs is is
ever an excuse for surrenMile Island plant near Middletown, Pa.
dering one's sense of comOn this date:
In 1834, the U.S. Senate voted to censure President mon decency and human
Jackson for the removal of federal deposits from the Bank compassion. It's one of
of the United States.
those "A II I Reali y Need to
In 1854, during the Crimean War, Britain and France Know
I Learned in
declared war on Russia.
Kinderganen" kinds of
In 1898, the Supreme Coun. in United States v. Wong points. And it's also a point
Kim Ark, ruled that a child born in the United States to that you'd better take to
Chinese immigrants was a U.S. citizen.
hean if you are going to get
In 1930, . the names of the Turkish cities of mvolved
in
politics.
Constantinople and Angora were changed to Istanbul and Otherwise, you' II likely be
Ankara.
the ugly occasion for people
In 1939, the Spanish Civil War effectively ended as to remark that there is, alier
Madrid fell to the forces of Francisco Franco.
all, more to life than poliIn 1941 , novelist and critic Virginia Woolf died in Lewes,
England.
In 1942, during World War II, British naval forces raided
the Nazi-occupied French pon of St. Nazaire in Operation
Chariot.
Five years ago: The Arab League. meeting in Beirut,
Lebanon, agreed on a peace plan that offered Israel normal
relations in exchange for a full withdrawal from war-won
lands and a Palestinian state. Archbishop Juliusz Paetz of
Poznan, Poland, announced · his resignation, but also
protested his innocence, following accusations he'd made
sexual advances toward young clerics. U.S. Air Force Staff
Sgt. Timothy Woodland was convicted in a Japanese coun
and sentenced to nearly three years in prison for raping a
woman on the southern island of Okinawa.
One year ago: Struggling to revive his troubled presidency, President Bush replaced longtime chief of staff Andy
Card with budget director Joshua Bolten. More than I million people poured into streets across France and strikers
disrupted air, rail and bus travel in the lar~est nationwide
protest over a youth labor law. The Kadtma Pany won
Israel's parliamentary elections. Former Defense Secretary
Caspar W. Weinberger Jied in Bangor. Maine, at age 88.
Today's Binhdays: Former White House national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski is 79. Country musician
Charlie McCoy is 66. Movie director Mike Newell is 65.
Actress Conchata Ferrell is 64. Actor Ken Howard is 63.
Actress Dianne Wiest is 59. Country singer Reba McEntire
is 52. Actress Tnll'ey Needham is 40. Actor Max Perlich is
39. Country singer Rodney Atkins is 38. Actor Vince
Vaughn is 37. Rapper Mr. Cheeks (Lost Boyz) is 36. Actor
Ken L. is 34. Actress Julia Stiles is 26.
Thought for Today: "Those who say they give the public
what it_wants begin by underestimating public taste and end
by debauching it." - T.S. Eliot, American-Anglo poet and
critic (1888-1965).
·

Wednesday, March

DARWIN, Australia (AP)
- An environmental group
said Tuesday it had ~aptured
a "monster" toad the size of
a small dog.
With a body the size of a
football and weighing nearly 2 pounds, the load is
among the largest specimens
ever captured in Australia.
according to Frogwatch
coordinator Graeme Sawyer.
"It's huge. to put it mildly." he said. 'The biggesl
toads are usually females
but this one was a rampanl
male ... I would hate 10 meel
his big sister."
Frogwatch, which is dedicated to wiping out a toxic
toad species that has killed
countless Australian animals, picked up the IS-inchlong cane load during a raid
on a pond oms ide 1he nonhero city of Darwin late
Monday.
Cane toads were imported
from South America durin~
I he 1930s in a failed allempt
to control beetles on
ingold fines as a way of raising revenue was again discussed and it wa~ noted by
Baker that the police depanment is sending out letters
and in some cases suspending drivers' licenses until
fines are paid. Questions
about the need for the po 1ice
depanmenl to have lllree
cruisers were again raised
and discussed. without am·
aclion being taken.

Ausualia's nonhero suga(
cane plantations. The poisonous loads have proven
fatal to Australia's delicate
ecosyslems. killing millions
of native animals from .
snakes 10 the small crocodile s that eat them.
As pan of its so-called
-·Toad Buster" project,
Frogwatch wnducts regular
raids on local water holes,
blinding the loads with
brighl lights then scooping
them up by the dozen.
-·we kill them with carbon
dioxide gas. s10ckpile them
in a big freezer and then put
1hem 1hrough a liquid fenilizer proce ss" that renders
the loads nonloxic. Sawyer
said.
"It lllrns out to be se nsalional fenilizcr," he added.

·

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�'

.OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

TODAY IN HISTORY

Andrew Breitban wrote a
used to these kinds of people. Variations of ''die, b- remembrance: "Before I
h, die" are standard fare in met Cathy. I knew no one.
the inbbx of a writer - · After, I knew everyone.
much meaner, and personal, And her group of friends
if
you're lucky. It comes came in every shape, size
Kathryn
with the territory, and usual- and ideology. Rich , poor,
Lopez
ly you just ignore it. Yet journalist, blogger, controonce in a while you are versy staners and stoppers,
film
jarred. not by the lowlifes rainbow-headed
who wish you were dead. reviewers, a sex goddess, a
but by the inhumanity that babe named ·Moxie ,' an(j
tics.
Political people genemlly people will attribute to you. even the occasional literate
keep their transgressions Is that really the view this Onhodox Jew porn conagainst good sense and san- person has of those he dis- noisseur. As a pronounced
conservative she was quite
ity to a tolerable level. But agrees with politically''
Democrat John Edwards liberal in that regard. And
with the anonymity of the
Internet, it is easier to be held a press conference to her bohemian Silverlake
atrociously uncivil . An explain that his wife has aesthetic only added to the
angry person can post, with had a recurrence of the package of joyful contradicno attribution, to a political breast cancer she was diag- tion."
Her friends, her editors,
blog thai he is upset that the nosed with in 2004. I post
her
readers even - · we all
we
are
praying
online
that
vice president of the United
States didn't die when for the Edwards, and I gel watched her struggle with
"So, cancer, never whining,
Islamic terrorists tried to e-mails like this:
kit! him in Afghanistan ear- Edwards is about to drop always looking for somelier this year. There are out of the race because his thing constructive. Before
probably people who dis- wife's cancer had reiUrned? all that. we had watched her
agree with, even dislike, Looks like your prayers get mad, take aim, and be
Dick Cheney. But if you have been answered. I sup- brutally honest in a wellwant him to be murdered, if pose you' II also be 'pray- crafted way - always surfor
the
other passing mere politics, never
you have thai son of hatred ing'
for the man ... well, perhaps Democratic
candidates. with equivocation. It should
you think there's more to You're not fooling anyone. have been entirely impossiWe see right through you." ble for anyone ever to forget
politics than life.
Maybe the people who
This on the same day we thai Cathy was human. But
posted those comments at were memorializing one of if all you know is who's a
the Huffmgton Post didn't my
nationalreview.com Democrat and who's a
really want Cheney dead; contributors,
Catherine Republican, it is a lot easier ·
maybe they just meant to Seipp, a clever, funny writer to divorce yourself from
convey how much they dis- ou1 of Los Angeles who basic human empathy. And
agree with his views. But passed away the day before. that's not good f9r anyone
that's not what they wrote. She was a lively, colorful, · - or politics.
And what a thrill it must fun, loyal gal. And she had
(Kathryn l.cpez is the edihave been for them, to write all kinds of friends - the tor of National Review
such things. ·
kind of friends who could Onli11e ( www.nationalreIf you are in the business only be brought together in view.eom). She can be eonof publicly expressing your the same room because of WL'ted at klope:@nationalpolitical opinions, you're Cathy.
rel'iew.&lt;·om.)

ITS THE FIRST S/6N
OF SPRIN6.

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The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Pentagon sponsors job fair for
vets severely wounded in Iraq

Russell Williams

PORTLAND - Russell Melvin Williams, 76. of 3.0745
Barringer Ridge Rd., Ponland, a loving father, husband and
grandfather died Monday, March 26, 2007 at his residence . BY MICHELLE ROBERTS
ASSOCI ATE D PRESS WRITER
He was born May 25, 1930 in Little Washington, Pa., son
of the late Sard and Clara Della Green Williams.
SAN ANTON IO - Joh
He is survived by his wife, Nola Jean Basim Williams ;
a
pplicants
with mi"ing
two sons, Sard Melvin Williams and Tommy Lee Basim;
li
mbs
anJ
sev~re burm
three daughters. Marlene Ray Williams, Crystal Faye
a
rrivcd on crulc'hes and in
Williams Swiger and Brenda Lee Williams Brinkley : and
w
heelchair' Tuc,Jay al u
13 grandchildren.
b fair desi~ned 10 help
JO
In addition to hi s parents, he was preceded in death by his
v
eterans
rehu1ld their live'
daughter. Clara Della Williams; and hi s sis1er, Lousie
af
ter
being
severely woundGreen Smith.
d
in
Iraq
.
Graveside services will be held 11 a.m.,Thursday, March e Some veterans wore ban29. 2007 at Middle Swan Cemetery, Long Bouom, OH .
d·ages, fatigues anJ dark
There will be no visitation_
10 cover !heir combal
Arrangements are by White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, stnuits
juries
as lhey mel with
Coolville.
·
cruiters that includeJ
You can sign I he online guest book at www. white- breanks,
finandal planners,
schwarzelfuneralhome.com.
military contractors anJ
fe deral agencies. It was the
ni nth in a series of job fairs
sponsored by the Pcmagon.
Spc. James Johnson. 3S.
0 f Middletown , Ohio, suf~ered a broken ankle and
I hird-degree leg hurns after
a suicide bomber blew a
POMEROY - Cakes are still being accepted for the tr uck up near a sec urity
cake contest and auction held tomorrow night at the Meigs checkpomt. He said 1he job
County Senior Center. Entry into the cake contest is free fair was convenient for
and registration forms can be picked up at the center wounded service members
Cakes can be registered and dropped off up until 3 p_m.' recovering at Fort Sam
Thursday, the day of the auction. Cakes will be judged in Houston, which houses the
the following categories: Chocolate cakes; cakes made Army's only burn unit and
with fruit or vegetables like carrot, apple. applesauce ' h as a new rehabilitation
spice; decorated cakes; any yellow or white cake; coffee center for amputees.
cakes, crumb, pound.
,
"It's a huge advantage.
because I wouldn't get a
second glance looking like
I his," Johnson said, glancRACINE - The Racine American Legion Post 602 wil I I ng down at his crutches and
have a public sirloin tip steak and noodle dinner Sunday Army nylon track suit.
The event is also an
with serving to begin at II a.m. The dinner at $6 include s
0 pportunity
to
meet
iced tea or coffee and dessen.
in
a
non-threate mployers
.
envtronment.
·
e mng
Wounded veterans "can still
get out there, and the big
CHESTER - The Chester Court House benefit dinne r world is saying, 'We still
and auction will be held at 6:30 p.m. in the Meigs High want you. You have skills
School cafeteria. Proceeds will go toward the operation of we want,"' Johnson said.
the counhouse. Auction items can be delivered to th e
Getting badly wounded
counhouse or taken to the high school the night of th e was a twist in life veterans
event. Tickets for the dinner can be purchased at Baum hadn '1 counted on. said
Lumber, Summerfields Restaurant, Farmers Bank and lh e Patricia Bradshaw, the
Chester Counhouse.
Pentagon's deputy undersecretary of civilian personnel.
Job fairs "provide the hope
have skewed labor marke t and inspiration there is life
data as job seekers were less after the military," she said.
likely to be looking for work
More than 23,000 military
while employers also repon service members have been
from PegeA1
ed a decline in employ - wounded in combat in Iraq.
ment," Helen Jones-Kelley
percent, from 6.2 percent to director
of the ODJFS, sat '
5.8 percent, and Jackson in a statement on Tuesdayd
County's rate dipped eight- "Nearly half of the employ
tenths of a percent, from 9 ment decline for the month
percent in January to 8.2 was in construction."
percent
in
February.
Pike County had the high
Lawrence County's decline est rate of unemployment in
In this
was smaller. from 5.5 per- February at 10.8 percen t,
photo
cent in January to 5.4 per- while Delaware County had
supplied
by
cent last month.
I he lowest rate at 3.9 percen t.
Frogwatch,
Vinton County saw a
The number of worker s Bob Gonion
seven-1en1hs of a percent unemployed in Ohio in
holds a 40
drop in February 10 9.1 per- February was 295,000
'
centimeter
cent, after posting 9.8 per- down from 320,000 in
(15 inch)
cent in January. Washington January. The number o f
long cane
County fell four-tenths of a unemrloyed has decreased
toad near
percent from 6 percent in by 2 .000 in the past I 2
Darwin,
January to 5.6 percem in months from 316,000. The
Australia.
February.
February unemploymen t
Ohio's,unemployment rate rate for Ohio was dow n on Monday.
was 5 percent in February. rrom 5.3 percent
Weighing
n
down from 5.3 percent in February 2006.
nearly 1
January. the state said.
The county and city rate s kilogram (2
The national unemploy- are unadjusted, meanin g
pounds),
ment rate for February was they do not take int0
the toad is
4.5 percent. down from 4.6 account seasonal adjus 1amongst
percent in January.
ments in employment.
the largest
"The severe winter storms
(The Associated Pres s
specimens
in mid-February appear to comributed to this story.)
ever
captured in
Australia.
mending council members
AP photo
for foregoing their salari es
and requesting that th e
from PageA1
mayor do the same becau se
of the village's financial crI·
and Palmer up .to street level sis, presented a woode n
and displayed a bag of nails paint-by-number "levy tax
pig" to Houchins, Council
thrown in her driveway.
Chambers, after com- president.

Local Briefs

Cakes still being accepted

Dinner planned

.

Benefit dinner set for Friday

-

-

AP plloto

U.S. Army Sgt. Chad Rozanski, 21. who was injured by an roadside bomb in Iraq, left. talks
,with Alan Thompson, right, during a job fair for wounded soldiers at Fort Sam Houston in
San Antonio Tuesday.
Because of advances in battlefield medicine, some of
. the worst wounds, including
burns and limb losses, are
increasingly survivable.
Sgt. Chad Rozanski, 21,
lost both legs above the
knee in an explosion last
July. He had planned to
work as a firefighter or for
the Transponation Security
Administration after his
military career, but the blast
shattered those plans and
put him in a wheelchair.
Rozanski has been so
focused on rehabilitation
that he's only begun thinking about his post-military
life. The job fair, he said,
was a comfonable place to
stan.
''I'm going to be able to

want to lose weight? You
want to find Mr. Right? You
want a better job? You think
positively about it, and
you'll get it. That's "The
Secret."
Jim
Oh. there's a lo1 of new
Mullen
age, mumbo-jumbo like
"we are stardust, we are
golden," happy-hippy talk
that goes along with it duced them as "my good energy being thought and
gay friends" at the Rotary. the entire Universe is just
Sorry, guys, I thought one big positive thought,
everyone knew. In shon, if and you can just tap into it
you want to keep a secret, and ... oh. who cares? I just
don't mention it to me.
want my million dollars.
Which is why I was so
Right now I'm thinking
surprised to hear Oprah how positive it would be to
Winfrey lalking so openly have $1 million in the bank
about "The Secret." If she instead of the $23 that was
keeps talking about it, it' II in there yesterday. I'm not
be on all the morning thinking about all the taxes
shows, it' ll be on the I'd have to pay on $1 milnational news, it'll be on thj: lion, I'm not thinking about
Internet, it might sell two how many begging relatives
miUion copies. of a book. would stan knocking on my
Then it's not a secret' door once I have it.
Shssssh!
I wonder if I should tell
"The Secret" says you can Bob about "The Secret?" I
get anything you want ·just don't think he sees much
by
thinking
positive TV. He could use a new
thoughts about it. You want box. And Mrs. Nussleroad
$1 million? All you have to could positively think her
do is think posit.ively that. way out a tew lawyer bills.
you need $1 million and
I should stop by the bank
poof' You'll get it . You this aliemoon and see if that

million 's been added to my
account yet.
Some people might ask,
"Exactly what's the difference between "wishing" or
" daydreaming" and "The
Secret?" I would answer
them by saying, "You are
bringing me down, man.
You're full of negative
thoughts and I hope you die
in a fiery car crash - but in
a positive way. I don't think
they 'd let Oprah put this on
TV if it were just a bunch of
hooey, do you'&gt;"
When I think of all the
years I've wasted thinking
my lack of education and
my aversion to hard work
were holding me back, I just
want to spit. Whoops!
Negative thought. It's that
kind of thinking that will
lose me my $1 million.
Whoops 1 That was another
negative thought.
The bank just caJJed. I'm
overdrawn. Again! Whoops!
That was supposed to be a
secret.
,
ilim Mullen is the author
of "It Takes a Vilk1ge Idiot:
Complicating rhe Simple
Ufe " and "Baby's First
Taltoo. " You can reach him
at jim_mu/len@mywav.com)

Auction

need lo lake a good long
view of this situation and
make se nsible deci sions.
We
have to step up to the
from PageA1
plale and take care of the
problem. We can '1 remain
vaJues FFAofficers represenl. But again let me stress in the status quo. It is quite
Mitchell said the banquet Council has to make the evident something has to
is open to all members of decision."
be done now, tonight. or
In the discussion before we· re a done deaL What
from PageA1
the public and voluntee rs
are busy preparing a quarter the vote on the appropria- are we golng io do lll save
tions ordinance w~kh
In addition to Klein, Abby side of beef, half of a hog &lt;IS included the line ilems this villag~ ·&gt;"
With lhat Bub Rubinson
Snyder.
Ohio
FFA well as 30 pound~ of chic k- where reductions were
Association District Seven en and lamb for the comm u- made. several members made a moliun lo delay
adinn until th~ finatKe
president will speak about nity dinner.
expressed their concern committee c·ould meet again
aboul village tinances.
In bring recommendalions
Councilman
Ferman 10 Council by the end of
time during these pours."
Moore reponed 1ha1 the Mav as 10 how 10 meet the
Friday's event is expected finance commiuec had met obltgalions for 1hc rest of
to be the last continuous but no action was taken on 1he year. 10 nail "'mc1hing
pour on FGD chimney ·and proposals made a1 that down specifically. 10 do
from PageA1
absorber vessel foundatio n meeting . He said he had some creutiw thinking ."
proposed culling back on The motion failed on a lie
"During the times of the work for this month.
The
plant
will
employ
a
employees'
lime ami out - vote. with Jeff Peckham .
continuous concrete pour, the
··s sourcing the income tax Robinson.
Gallia
County
sherifl
and
Steve
trucks will travel on State
Route 7 and enter and exit the deputy to manage trafftc as work as a way of cutting Houchins . who presided in
plant," Amburgey said. concrete trucks leave the expenses but there was n'' the ahsence of Mayor Sandy
consensus among ''''mnit- lannare lli . votin~ ves: and
"Drivers should take extra plant, OVEC officials said
by
OVEC.
created
in
1952
tec members. '
Craig. Moore iiiJ Sandra
care when tmveling in the
"We
15
sponsoring
utilities.
h
as
can·,
put
a
fiscal
Brown. voting no. Again 1he
area of the plant. This volume
nc
employed
American
Elect
emergency
on
a
personal
fiscal
offker reminded
of truck traftic coulJ create
some traftk ·slow-downs. so Power Service Corp. to basis and keep lhi s village members of 1hi' week\ tildrivers may want to plan a serve as the manager of t he going." responded Cou nc·il ill'' deadline .
More em phasis on ~olle.:tm&lt; ber Jean Craig . "We,
few extra ntinutes of· drive construction project.

Funding

Banquet

Pour

come up here and not going construclion
company
to be continually turned Kiewit Corp.
Lamar Small, a human
down," he said, adding lhat
manager
for
he would also be spared the tesource
chore of repeatedly explain- Kiewit , said the company
offers jobs that require
ing his wounds.
For' employers, the job ~mployees to move frefair offers a chance to sur- quemly. which can be a
vey a pool of disciplined. good fn for ve1erans.
Those wi1h severe disabil- ·
hardworking applicants,
many of whom have already ities will not be able to work
obtained the security clear- in construction, but they
ance that is imponant for could be engineers or
accountants or fill other
defense jobs.
Federal agencies must positions lhat are not physigive hiring preference to cally strenuous. he said.
military veterans. The
Veterans often bring anothroughly 70 employers at the er strength for Kiewit, which
Fon Sam fair included the has a number of federal conCIA and the TSA. as well as tracts: They understand
pri vaie employers such as paperwork . "And paperwork
aircraft maker · Northrop is very imponant to the govGrumman Corp. and heavy ernment," Small said.

Australian group captures 'monster' toad the size of a small dog

-

It's no secret ...
Shhhh! Promise not to tell
anyone; it's a secret! I heard
about it on Oprah Winfrey's
show, so practically nobody
knows about it yet. But I'm
passing it along to you
because, well, I'm one of
those people who just can't
keep a secret.
·
When my old neighbor
Bob told me he was having
an affair with the school
lunch lady, I only told five
pr six people - tops and before you know it, it
was all over town. Who
could have guessed? Bob
now lives in a cardboard
box down on Main Street,
h.is wife moved to San
Diego.
When I told the congregation that I ran into Mrs.
N ussleroad at the liquor
store, I had no idea that her
ex-husband would use it as
an excuse try to take her
kids away. ·Funny thing, it
turns out she wasn't buying
liquor, sbe was asking the
owner to donate money to
the Community Chest. The
good news'? She's almost
paid off all the lawyer's
fees.
Pete and Andre haven't
spoken to me since I intro-

Obituaries

Jobless

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28, 2007

Wednesday, March 28,2007

Compassion transcends right and lift

A reponer recently told
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
me that there is more to life
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
than politics, this while I
www.mydallyaentlnel.com
was in the middle of a
crazed D.C. day - running
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
from meeting to meeting.
sending a few dozen e-mails
Dan Goodrich
a minute, checking the
crackberry while "listening"
Publisher
to a lunch companion. If
you're in D.C. , politics is
Charlene Hoeflich
everywhere.
And in the
General Manager-News Editor
midst of it all, for just one
second that I'm not at all
proud of, I thought the
reponer
was crazy.
Congress shall make no law respecting an
You can get a bit too
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
~aught up io it sometimes,
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom but politics is really and
truly important That's why
. of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
some of us spend so much
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition of our time arguing, quibbling and squabbling in the
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
political realm. It does matter
who wins elections.
- The Firat Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
whether it be Clinton or
Obama, Giuliani or Romney
br McCain - and their fundamental beliefs, their character,
the people they trust
Today is Wednesday, March 28. the 87th day of 2007.
- it's all monumentally
There are 278 days left in the year.
tmponant.
Today's Highlight in History:
Yet, no justification for
On March 28, 1979, America's worst commercial nuclear
accident occurred inside the Unit 2 reactor at the Three how imponant politiCs is is
ever an excuse for surrenMile Island plant near Middletown, Pa.
dering one's sense of comOn this date:
In 1834, the U.S. Senate voted to censure President mon decency and human
Jackson for the removal of federal deposits from the Bank compassion. It's one of
of the United States.
those "A II I Reali y Need to
In 1854, during the Crimean War, Britain and France Know
I Learned in
declared war on Russia.
Kinderganen" kinds of
In 1898, the Supreme Coun. in United States v. Wong points. And it's also a point
Kim Ark, ruled that a child born in the United States to that you'd better take to
Chinese immigrants was a U.S. citizen.
hean if you are going to get
In 1930, . the names of the Turkish cities of mvolved
in
politics.
Constantinople and Angora were changed to Istanbul and Otherwise, you' II likely be
Ankara.
the ugly occasion for people
In 1939, the Spanish Civil War effectively ended as to remark that there is, alier
Madrid fell to the forces of Francisco Franco.
all, more to life than poliIn 1941 , novelist and critic Virginia Woolf died in Lewes,
England.
In 1942, during World War II, British naval forces raided
the Nazi-occupied French pon of St. Nazaire in Operation
Chariot.
Five years ago: The Arab League. meeting in Beirut,
Lebanon, agreed on a peace plan that offered Israel normal
relations in exchange for a full withdrawal from war-won
lands and a Palestinian state. Archbishop Juliusz Paetz of
Poznan, Poland, announced · his resignation, but also
protested his innocence, following accusations he'd made
sexual advances toward young clerics. U.S. Air Force Staff
Sgt. Timothy Woodland was convicted in a Japanese coun
and sentenced to nearly three years in prison for raping a
woman on the southern island of Okinawa.
One year ago: Struggling to revive his troubled presidency, President Bush replaced longtime chief of staff Andy
Card with budget director Joshua Bolten. More than I million people poured into streets across France and strikers
disrupted air, rail and bus travel in the lar~est nationwide
protest over a youth labor law. The Kadtma Pany won
Israel's parliamentary elections. Former Defense Secretary
Caspar W. Weinberger Jied in Bangor. Maine, at age 88.
Today's Binhdays: Former White House national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski is 79. Country musician
Charlie McCoy is 66. Movie director Mike Newell is 65.
Actress Conchata Ferrell is 64. Actor Ken Howard is 63.
Actress Dianne Wiest is 59. Country singer Reba McEntire
is 52. Actress Tnll'ey Needham is 40. Actor Max Perlich is
39. Country singer Rodney Atkins is 38. Actor Vince
Vaughn is 37. Rapper Mr. Cheeks (Lost Boyz) is 36. Actor
Ken L. is 34. Actress Julia Stiles is 26.
Thought for Today: "Those who say they give the public
what it_wants begin by underestimating public taste and end
by debauching it." - T.S. Eliot, American-Anglo poet and
critic (1888-1965).
·

Wednesday, March

DARWIN, Australia (AP)
- An environmental group
said Tuesday it had ~aptured
a "monster" toad the size of
a small dog.
With a body the size of a
football and weighing nearly 2 pounds, the load is
among the largest specimens
ever captured in Australia.
according to Frogwatch
coordinator Graeme Sawyer.
"It's huge. to put it mildly." he said. 'The biggesl
toads are usually females
but this one was a rampanl
male ... I would hate 10 meel
his big sister."
Frogwatch, which is dedicated to wiping out a toxic
toad species that has killed
countless Australian animals, picked up the IS-inchlong cane load during a raid
on a pond oms ide 1he nonhero city of Darwin late
Monday.
Cane toads were imported
from South America durin~
I he 1930s in a failed allempt
to control beetles on
ingold fines as a way of raising revenue was again discussed and it wa~ noted by
Baker that the police depanment is sending out letters
and in some cases suspending drivers' licenses until
fines are paid. Questions
about the need for the po 1ice
depanmenl to have lllree
cruisers were again raised
and discussed. without am·
aclion being taken.

Ausualia's nonhero suga(
cane plantations. The poisonous loads have proven
fatal to Australia's delicate
ecosyslems. killing millions
of native animals from .
snakes 10 the small crocodile s that eat them.
As pan of its so-called
-·Toad Buster" project,
Frogwatch wnducts regular
raids on local water holes,
blinding the loads with
brighl lights then scooping
them up by the dozen.
-·we kill them with carbon
dioxide gas. s10ckpile them
in a big freezer and then put
1hem 1hrough a liquid fenilizer proce ss" that renders
the loads nonloxic. Sawyer
said.
"It lllrns out to be se nsalional fenilizcr," he added.

·

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Offering Afternoon and
Morning Classes
For Ages 4-5
For more information
call 992-6245

�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March

28, 2007

CINCINNATI - Attorney
General Albeno Gonzales,
lighting off calls for resignatiOn in Washington. focused
on the battle against online
sexual predators while here
Tuesday.
"This really is a campaign
to protect the innocence of
our children." Gonzales said
during a discussion with fedem! and local law enforcement ofticials and children's
advocates. He said the effon
against child exploitation is
like a war, and that progress
is being made.
Gonzales has been pro.moting
"Project
Safe
Childhood" during stops
around the country. while
also holding meetings with
U.S. attorneys to discuss the
controversy over !.he f1ring
of eight federal prosecutors.
Questions
abo ut
Gonzales· credibility in
dealing with the firi ngs
have added to calls for his
resignation, which he has
continued to reject. Critics
say the dismissals were
politically motivated.
The Cincinnati Enquirer
greeted Gonzales with an
editorial urging his resignation.
"Misstatements. mismanagement and a misunderstanding of the role of the
attorney general have made
Alberto Gonzales' continued service a liability for
the United States. He should
resign, now," the newspaper
editorialized in Tuesday 's
editions.
Gonzales has maintained
he was not closely involved
in the firing s, and did not
help select which prosecutors would be told to resign .
He added during hi s
Midwest trip on Tuesday
that he directed the depanment of Justice's release of
3,000 documents on Friday
relating to the firings. and
requested two internal
investigations of the matter.
Before
heading
to
Chicago. he met here with
about half a dozen U.S. attorneys from the region in the
office of U.S. Attorney Greg
Lock han, a 200 I appointee
of President Bush who is federal prosecutor for southern
Ohio. A message seeking
comment was left with
Lock han 's oflice; Gonzales
didn' t take questions from
the news media here.
In Chicago, he touched
only brietly on the controversy.
" I look f'qrward to work
with Congress," Gonzales
said at a news conference he
cut shon after just a few
minutes. " I believe in .. .
accountability. Everything
that I've done in connection
with this matter supports
that principle."
·
He also said he had taken
steps to "reassure the
American people that nothing improper happened
here," referring to the firings.
Gonzales was in Denver
on Monday for a similar

AP photo

U.S. Attorney Gen. Alberto Gonzales listens to a panel during
a discussion on Project Safe Childhood Tuesday in Cincinnati.
event and meeting .
New public service ads
for television and radio
were played in Cincinnati.
With the theme, "Think
Before You Post ," they
warn teen girls about the

hazards of posting their
photos and sharing personal
information online.
The ads are a joint project
of the Department of Justice.
the Ad Council, and the
National Center for Missing

lndepend~nt

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Trimble at Southern. 4:30p.m.

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RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
- Over the years Southern
and Ravenswood have
established a torrid. but
friendly
rivalry .
Although
Southern
s lightly
dominate s
the serie s.
the
Red
Devils have
dominut ed
the
past
Johnson
decade.
Tuesday
n i g h t
Southern
grabbed
both the big
win
and
notched
another
mark on the
wall
for
what
is
now a 2-0
Hunter
season after
defeating the Red Devils 53 in seven innings in the
non-league baseball contest .
Southern jumped all over
staning pitcher C.J . Johnson
as Jake Hunter continued a
red-hot streak with a leadoff triple. Hunter then
scored whe n Wes Rit'tle
walked, stole second. and
advanced on an error that let
Hunter trot safel y home. 10.
Chapman hit a 4-~
squeeze bunt advancing
R•ffle home with the second
run, the Pat Johnson doubled and scored on an RBI
single by J.R. Hupp. the
score 3-0 SHS.
Ravenswood came back
and it seemed an offensive
onslaught was in the making .
Derek Cavender
walked, C.J. Johnson was
hit with a pitch and Brenden
Ritz singled to load the
base~. Joel Miller walked
home a run and Steve
Burdette hit a 6-3 ground
out to score a run, the score
now 3-2. ·
The offensive tires began
to subside . All was quiet in
the second inning for both
contingencies,
however,
both clubs scored single
runs in the third and SHS
led 4-3. Johnson settled
down for Southern and
pitched near perfect ball
over the last four innings.
Ravenswood's Johnson also

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otock repottl • • the 4 p.m .
cloolntl quotes of tranoactlone
lor March 27, 2007, pro.- by

a

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Champion (NASDAQI - 8.23
Cllumlllll Shops (NASDAQI -

~

.11h. Northeast winds 5 to I 0
W~dnesda)· ... Partly
sunny in the morning .. .The11 mph .
Friday and
Friday
becoming doudy. A l·hancc
night
...
Partly
cloudy.
Highs
of thunderqorms. A chance
of sh(&gt;wer' in the morn- in the mid 60s. Lows in the
ing ... Thcn showers likely in mid 40s.
Saturday...Panly sunny. A
the afternoon . Cooler with
highs in the upper 60s . chance of showers and thunNortheast winds 5 to 10 derstorms in the afternoon.
mph . Chance of rain 70 per- Highs in the lower 70s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
cent.
_Saturday night and
Wednesday
night ...
cloudy
Cloudy. Shower' likely with Sunday... Mostly
with
a
chance
of
showers
a chan~,.:~ of thunder~turm ~
in the cvening ... Then a and thunderstorms. Lows in
chance of showers after the lower 50s. Highs in the
midnight. Lows in the upper upper 60s . Chance of rain
40s. Northeast winds 5 to I 0 50 pen.:ent.
Sunday night ... Mostly
mph . Chance of rain 70 percloudy. Low s in the upper
cent.
Thursdav ... Mo s tl v 40s.
Monday... Mostly sunny.
cloudy with
20 percent
chance of showers . Highs in Highs in the upper 60s.
Monday night
and
the lower 60s. Northe&lt;Jst
Thesday... Moqly cloudy.
winds I 0 to 15 mph.
Thursday night ... Mostly Lows in the mid 40s. Highs
clear. Low s in the upper in the lower 60s.

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n

Ernie Allen. head of the
center. said the ad campaign's rollout was planned
lon ~ before the controversy
fac1n g GonLales, and he
prai,cd th~ atwrney general
for wminuing to bring the
online exploitation problem
to light .
"Clearly. what you saw
today was no reluctance on
the pan of local. state and
federal law enforcement to
come together to talk about
the se issues," Allen said.
"We cannot suspend the
attack on those who are
preying upon children to
wai t for this to pass."
Among participants who
welcomed Gonzales was
Hamilton County Sheriff
Simon Leis. an anti-pOrnography veteran who as county prosecutor went after
Hustler magazine publisher
Larry Flynt.

PLAY COVERALL BINGO

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Oden voted AU-America team, Page 82

Eastern at Logan (OH ), I p.m.
Southern al South Point (OH). noon

Employees,

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

ran to Phlllies, Page 82

•\

&amp; Exploited Children.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Reels

WVU, Clemson in NIT final, Page 86

Local Weather
Bv DAN SEWELL

lnside

Soutlaana. 1e

CONrACI'US

i,con •

Fax -

HNr what odoets an s.yillc o11out
Oticon Dolta.

1&gt;11

I ....

Il l \){)\( ,

(1\111{

GALLIPOLIS
4.15'/, S«ond AHnue
I

\....n..,,

lr&lt;JI II p.,,l t)1!k_ t·t

Opt·u .\ I PrL · Thur"

~ \() . ~p nt

(7401446-7619

BY SCOTT WOLFE
SPORT S CORRESPONDENT

HARTFORD, W.Va . - It
was a game of patience and not
physical force. Neither team
erupted offensively. but when
the dust had sett led the
Wahama Lady Falcons had
out lasted
the
Southern
Tornadoes 6-5 to remain undefeated after posting the non league softball win. Wahama
remains perfect at 4-0, while
Southern falls to 1-1.
Southern went ahead 3-0 in
the top of the first inning when
with one out Sarah Eddy

ext . 33

1-74QP446·300B

E· mell - sportsU mydailysenllnel.com

SIIQT.\1. Sill!

Brad SMnnan, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342. ext. 33
bsherman@mydailytribune .com

larry Crum, Sports Writer
(74()) 448-2342, ext. 23
lcrumQmydailyregister.com

Bryan Watters, Sports Writer
(740) 448-2342. ext. 33
bwalters@ myda11ytnbune.com

Southern
junior
Wh itney
Wo lfe-Riffle
(221crosses home
plate during
the third
inning of
Tuesday's
non-league
softball
contest
against
Wahama in
Hartford.
w. Va .

·Jc·hed on an
then
after another
out
both
Kasev Turley
and Stephanie
Cundiff
walked to load
the
bases .
Vir g inia
Bri .:k les
Brlckl81
knocked home
a run with an
RBl single then Turley and
Cundiff caine home on passed
balls. the score 3-0.
~nor,

Larry Cruml
photo

PIHn see Slips, le

Eagles fend off Wellston
BY BRYAN W~LTERS
BWALTERS@MVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS The more things change, the
more they stay the same.
Eastern baseball had little
trouble at River Valley in the
season opener Monday after
posting a 22-4 victory in
five innings, but its home
opener against defending
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division champion Wellston
figured to be a little more
challenging .
It was. but not enough to
keep the Eagles from staying unbeaten this spring following a 6-5 victory
Tuesday in non-conference
action.
The Green and White
received a pitching ge m
from junior starter Kyle
Gordon, who worked 6.1
innings in picking up the
win. Gordon allowed five
earned runs and II hits in
the decision, but he also
held the Golden Rockets ( II ) scoreless with only five
hits between the second and
sixth innings.
The Eagles (2-0) made the
most of that starling effort,
tacking on a pair of runs in
each of the second. third and
llfth frames to take a 6-2
lead into Wellston's half of
the seventh.
Bryan Walters/photo
The Blue and Gold loaded
Eastern starte r Kyle Gordon delivers a pitch during the fi fth inning of Tuesday's home open- the bases against Gordon on
er against Wellston in Tuppers Plains,
an error. a walk and and a hit

Morris

Pierce

before freshman Titus
Pierce came in for relief.
After a balk and a double
cut the lead to 6-S with two
out s, Pierce got Caleb
Williams lo look at strike
three - preserving the save
opportunity and a successful
start to the 2007 hoine campmgn.
Afterwards EHS coach
Brian Bowen was proud of
the way his ball dub showed
up ready to play, particularly
hi s starting hurler.
"I wa' a little concerned
about us coming back
focused &lt;Jfter last night 's
game. but I was pleased
with the way they were able
to respond to that," he commented. "Kyle did a really
good job tonight all the way
through. This was really his
first quality varsity stan and
he did very well."
Early
on
however.
Wellston .had his number.
The guests pounded out
three straight hits and had

Please see Eagles. Bl

David Felder, MD
General Orthopedics, Surgery &amp;
Specializing in Total Joints &amp; Sports Medicine

IJ/fu.·
Bryon Walters/photo

Eastern sophomore Kate Witfong, right. is tagged out at the
plate by Wellston catcher Peggy Fleming during the fourth
inning of Tuesday's softball game in Tuppers Plains.

Lady Golden Rockets
ground Eastern, 4-1
BY BRYAN WALTERS

OVP Scoreline (5 p.m.· I a.m. I
1· 740-446·2342

Unbeaten Wahama slips
past Lady Tornadoes

BWALTERS®MYDAJL'fTRIBUNE.COM

) 675"'127~1

knocking
out four hit &gt;
ap1ece
in
the c·omest.
But the
difference
in the game
was WHS
starter and

TUPPERS PLAINS Anything you can do,. I can
do better.
Unfortunatelv for the
Eastern softbal.l team . that
adage lit visit[ng Wellston
perfedly during a 4- 1 setreigning
bark Tue&gt;day durin ~ Tri TVC Ohio
White
Valley Conference non-di viDefensil'e
sional act[on .
Player of the Yt&gt;ar Erin
Both the Lady Rockets Sturgill. who &gt;Lruck out
and host Eagles battled
Plrase see Ground, Bl
thwu ~ h a pitrhc•r', dual.

••

'

A_cepti .New
~·

.'J

,.

t

tients-

.~

~PiiEASANT~YJ\ll~t.&amp;Y HOSPITAL

p~-·~
·- -

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

- -

�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March

28, 2007

CINCINNATI - Attorney
General Albeno Gonzales,
lighting off calls for resignatiOn in Washington. focused
on the battle against online
sexual predators while here
Tuesday.
"This really is a campaign
to protect the innocence of
our children." Gonzales said
during a discussion with fedem! and local law enforcement ofticials and children's
advocates. He said the effon
against child exploitation is
like a war, and that progress
is being made.
Gonzales has been pro.moting
"Project
Safe
Childhood" during stops
around the country. while
also holding meetings with
U.S. attorneys to discuss the
controversy over !.he f1ring
of eight federal prosecutors.
Questions
abo ut
Gonzales· credibility in
dealing with the firi ngs
have added to calls for his
resignation, which he has
continued to reject. Critics
say the dismissals were
politically motivated.
The Cincinnati Enquirer
greeted Gonzales with an
editorial urging his resignation.
"Misstatements. mismanagement and a misunderstanding of the role of the
attorney general have made
Alberto Gonzales' continued service a liability for
the United States. He should
resign, now," the newspaper
editorialized in Tuesday 's
editions.
Gonzales has maintained
he was not closely involved
in the firing s, and did not
help select which prosecutors would be told to resign .
He added during hi s
Midwest trip on Tuesday
that he directed the depanment of Justice's release of
3,000 documents on Friday
relating to the firings. and
requested two internal
investigations of the matter.
Before
heading
to
Chicago. he met here with
about half a dozen U.S. attorneys from the region in the
office of U.S. Attorney Greg
Lock han, a 200 I appointee
of President Bush who is federal prosecutor for southern
Ohio. A message seeking
comment was left with
Lock han 's oflice; Gonzales
didn' t take questions from
the news media here.
In Chicago, he touched
only brietly on the controversy.
" I look f'qrward to work
with Congress," Gonzales
said at a news conference he
cut shon after just a few
minutes. " I believe in .. .
accountability. Everything
that I've done in connection
with this matter supports
that principle."
·
He also said he had taken
steps to "reassure the
American people that nothing improper happened
here," referring to the firings.
Gonzales was in Denver
on Monday for a similar

AP photo

U.S. Attorney Gen. Alberto Gonzales listens to a panel during
a discussion on Project Safe Childhood Tuesday in Cincinnati.
event and meeting .
New public service ads
for television and radio
were played in Cincinnati.
With the theme, "Think
Before You Post ," they
warn teen girls about the

hazards of posting their
photos and sharing personal
information online.
The ads are a joint project
of the Department of Justice.
the Ad Council, and the
National Center for Missing

lndepend~nt

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- Over the years Southern
and Ravenswood have
established a torrid. but
friendly
rivalry .
Although
Southern
s lightly
dominate s
the serie s.
the
Red
Devils have
dominut ed
the
past
Johnson
decade.
Tuesday
n i g h t
Southern
grabbed
both the big
win
and
notched
another
mark on the
wall
for
what
is
now a 2-0
Hunter
season after
defeating the Red Devils 53 in seven innings in the
non-league baseball contest .
Southern jumped all over
staning pitcher C.J . Johnson
as Jake Hunter continued a
red-hot streak with a leadoff triple. Hunter then
scored whe n Wes Rit'tle
walked, stole second. and
advanced on an error that let
Hunter trot safel y home. 10.
Chapman hit a 4-~
squeeze bunt advancing
R•ffle home with the second
run, the Pat Johnson doubled and scored on an RBI
single by J.R. Hupp. the
score 3-0 SHS.
Ravenswood came back
and it seemed an offensive
onslaught was in the making .
Derek Cavender
walked, C.J. Johnson was
hit with a pitch and Brenden
Ritz singled to load the
base~. Joel Miller walked
home a run and Steve
Burdette hit a 6-3 ground
out to score a run, the score
now 3-2. ·
The offensive tires began
to subside . All was quiet in
the second inning for both
contingencies,
however,
both clubs scored single
runs in the third and SHS
led 4-3. Johnson settled
down for Southern and
pitched near perfect ball
over the last four innings.
Ravenswood's Johnson also

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cloolntl quotes of tranoactlone
lor March 27, 2007, pro.- by

a

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Champion (NASDAQI - 8.23
Cllumlllll Shops (NASDAQI -

~

.11h. Northeast winds 5 to I 0
W~dnesda)· ... Partly
sunny in the morning .. .The11 mph .
Friday and
Friday
becoming doudy. A l·hancc
night
...
Partly
cloudy.
Highs
of thunderqorms. A chance
of sh(&gt;wer' in the morn- in the mid 60s. Lows in the
ing ... Thcn showers likely in mid 40s.
Saturday...Panly sunny. A
the afternoon . Cooler with
highs in the upper 60s . chance of showers and thunNortheast winds 5 to 10 derstorms in the afternoon.
mph . Chance of rain 70 per- Highs in the lower 70s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
cent.
_Saturday night and
Wednesday
night ...
cloudy
Cloudy. Shower' likely with Sunday... Mostly
with
a
chance
of
showers
a chan~,.:~ of thunder~turm ~
in the cvening ... Then a and thunderstorms. Lows in
chance of showers after the lower 50s. Highs in the
midnight. Lows in the upper upper 60s . Chance of rain
40s. Northeast winds 5 to I 0 50 pen.:ent.
Sunday night ... Mostly
mph . Chance of rain 70 percloudy. Low s in the upper
cent.
Thursdav ... Mo s tl v 40s.
Monday... Mostly sunny.
cloudy with
20 percent
chance of showers . Highs in Highs in the upper 60s.
Monday night
and
the lower 60s. Northe&lt;Jst
Thesday... Moqly cloudy.
winds I 0 to 15 mph.
Thursday night ... Mostly Lows in the mid 40s. Highs
clear. Low s in the upper in the lower 60s.

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n

Ernie Allen. head of the
center. said the ad campaign's rollout was planned
lon ~ before the controversy
fac1n g GonLales, and he
prai,cd th~ atwrney general
for wminuing to bring the
online exploitation problem
to light .
"Clearly. what you saw
today was no reluctance on
the pan of local. state and
federal law enforcement to
come together to talk about
the se issues," Allen said.
"We cannot suspend the
attack on those who are
preying upon children to
wai t for this to pass."
Among participants who
welcomed Gonzales was
Hamilton County Sheriff
Simon Leis. an anti-pOrnography veteran who as county prosecutor went after
Hustler magazine publisher
Larry Flynt.

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Oden voted AU-America team, Page 82

Eastern at Logan (OH ), I p.m.
Southern al South Point (OH). noon

Employees,

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

ran to Phlllies, Page 82

•\

&amp; Exploited Children.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Reels

WVU, Clemson in NIT final, Page 86

Local Weather
Bv DAN SEWELL

lnside

Soutlaana. 1e

CONrACI'US

i,con •

Fax -

HNr what odoets an s.yillc o11out
Oticon Dolta.

1&gt;11

I ....

Il l \){)\( ,

(1\111{

GALLIPOLIS
4.15'/, S«ond AHnue
I

\....n..,,

lr&lt;JI II p.,,l t)1!k_ t·t

Opt·u .\ I PrL · Thur"

~ \() . ~p nt

(7401446-7619

BY SCOTT WOLFE
SPORT S CORRESPONDENT

HARTFORD, W.Va . - It
was a game of patience and not
physical force. Neither team
erupted offensively. but when
the dust had sett led the
Wahama Lady Falcons had
out lasted
the
Southern
Tornadoes 6-5 to remain undefeated after posting the non league softball win. Wahama
remains perfect at 4-0, while
Southern falls to 1-1.
Southern went ahead 3-0 in
the top of the first inning when
with one out Sarah Eddy

ext . 33

1-74QP446·300B

E· mell - sportsU mydailysenllnel.com

SIIQT.\1. Sill!

Brad SMnnan, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342. ext. 33
bsherman@mydailytribune .com

larry Crum, Sports Writer
(74()) 448-2342, ext. 23
lcrumQmydailyregister.com

Bryan Watters, Sports Writer
(740) 448-2342. ext. 33
bwalters@ myda11ytnbune.com

Southern
junior
Wh itney
Wo lfe-Riffle
(221crosses home
plate during
the third
inning of
Tuesday's
non-league
softball
contest
against
Wahama in
Hartford.
w. Va .

·Jc·hed on an
then
after another
out
both
Kasev Turley
and Stephanie
Cundiff
walked to load
the
bases .
Vir g inia
Bri .:k les
Brlckl81
knocked home
a run with an
RBl single then Turley and
Cundiff caine home on passed
balls. the score 3-0.
~nor,

Larry Cruml
photo

PIHn see Slips, le

Eagles fend off Wellston
BY BRYAN W~LTERS
BWALTERS@MVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS The more things change, the
more they stay the same.
Eastern baseball had little
trouble at River Valley in the
season opener Monday after
posting a 22-4 victory in
five innings, but its home
opener against defending
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division champion Wellston
figured to be a little more
challenging .
It was. but not enough to
keep the Eagles from staying unbeaten this spring following a 6-5 victory
Tuesday in non-conference
action.
The Green and White
received a pitching ge m
from junior starter Kyle
Gordon, who worked 6.1
innings in picking up the
win. Gordon allowed five
earned runs and II hits in
the decision, but he also
held the Golden Rockets ( II ) scoreless with only five
hits between the second and
sixth innings.
The Eagles (2-0) made the
most of that starling effort,
tacking on a pair of runs in
each of the second. third and
llfth frames to take a 6-2
lead into Wellston's half of
the seventh.
Bryan Walters/photo
The Blue and Gold loaded
Eastern starte r Kyle Gordon delivers a pitch during the fi fth inning of Tuesday's home open- the bases against Gordon on
er against Wellston in Tuppers Plains,
an error. a walk and and a hit

Morris

Pierce

before freshman Titus
Pierce came in for relief.
After a balk and a double
cut the lead to 6-S with two
out s, Pierce got Caleb
Williams lo look at strike
three - preserving the save
opportunity and a successful
start to the 2007 hoine campmgn.
Afterwards EHS coach
Brian Bowen was proud of
the way his ball dub showed
up ready to play, particularly
hi s starting hurler.
"I wa' a little concerned
about us coming back
focused &lt;Jfter last night 's
game. but I was pleased
with the way they were able
to respond to that," he commented. "Kyle did a really
good job tonight all the way
through. This was really his
first quality varsity stan and
he did very well."
Early
on
however.
Wellston .had his number.
The guests pounded out
three straight hits and had

Please see Eagles. Bl

David Felder, MD
General Orthopedics, Surgery &amp;
Specializing in Total Joints &amp; Sports Medicine

IJ/fu.·
Bryon Walters/photo

Eastern sophomore Kate Witfong, right. is tagged out at the
plate by Wellston catcher Peggy Fleming during the fourth
inning of Tuesday's softball game in Tuppers Plains.

Lady Golden Rockets
ground Eastern, 4-1
BY BRYAN WALTERS

OVP Scoreline (5 p.m.· I a.m. I
1· 740-446·2342

Unbeaten Wahama slips
past Lady Tornadoes

BWALTERS®MYDAJL'fTRIBUNE.COM

) 675"'127~1

knocking
out four hit &gt;
ap1ece
in
the c·omest.
But the
difference
in the game
was WHS
starter and

TUPPERS PLAINS Anything you can do,. I can
do better.
Unfortunatelv for the
Eastern softbal.l team . that
adage lit visit[ng Wellston
perfedly during a 4- 1 setreigning
bark Tue&gt;day durin ~ Tri TVC Ohio
White
Valley Conference non-di viDefensil'e
sional act[on .
Player of the Yt&gt;ar Erin
Both the Lady Rockets Sturgill. who &gt;Lruck out
and host Eagles battled
Plrase see Ground, Bl
thwu ~ h a pitrhc•r', dual.

••

'

A_cepti .New
~·

.'J

,.

t

tients-

.~

~PiiEASANT~YJ\ll~t.&amp;Y HOSPITAL

p~-·~
·- -

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

- -

�Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, March

www.mydallysentinel.com

28,2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83
-

~rihune

'

Durant, Oden on AP All-America team Reds fall to Phillies, 6-2
BY JIM O'CONNELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS

If Kevin Durant and Greg
Oden play onl y one season
of college basketball . it will
have been as All-A mericans.
The freshmen were voted
to The Associated Press' AllAmerica team Monday. the
first members of their class
so honored since 1989.
The 6-foot-9 Durant, who
led Texas to the Big 12 title
game, was the only unanimous choice of the 72-member national media panel that
selects the weekly Top 25 .
Oden. the 7-footer who
helped Ohio State to its first
No. I ranking in 45 years,
was joined on the team by
seniors Alando Tucker of
Wisconsin and Acie Law IV
of Texas A&amp;M and junior
Arran Afllalo of UCLA. The
voting was conducted before
the NCAA tournament.
Since freshmen became
eligible to play in 1972, the
only ones selected to the first
team had been Wayman
Tisdale of Oklahoma in 1983
and Chris Jackson of LSU in
1989.
Durant, the first Texas AllAmerican since T.J. Ford in
2003, averaged 25 .6 points
and 11.3 rebounds, but it was
his all-around game and penchant for big shots in the
clutch that had people ranking him as one of the best
freshmen ever.
"There ' s no question
Kevin deserves every individual accolade that he will
receive," Texas coach Rick
Barnes said, ''but the one
thing I respect most about
Kevin is that he is the ultimate team player. He really
doesn 't care about the imlividual numbers and awards.
All he cares about is the success of his team . When
you' re around a guy like
that, it makes coaching him a
joy."
Durant. the Big 12 player
of .the year. backed up his
coach's sentiments.
"I am not very big on .individual honors, but I am very
humbled to be included on
the Associated Press AllAmerica team," he said.
"When you look at the other
four guys who are on the
team, I am honored Ill be
mentioned with them. I have
so much respect for how
each one of them has led
their respective teams and
handled themselves, both on
and off the wurt. I look up to
each one of them."
Oden. the first Ohio State
All-American since . Jim
Jackson in 1992, missed the
first seven games as he
recovered from offseason
surgery on his right wrist. As
he rehabilitated from the
injury he learned to shoot
free throws left-handed and
didn't miss a beat when he
returned to the Buckeyes,
averaging 15.5 points, 9.7
rebounds and 3.5 blocks
while shooting 61.4 percent
from the tield.
''I'm very surprised,"
Oden said of being selected.

IHIOs.-

~(1
'

Ohio State center Greg Oden gets a slam dunk against
Central Connecticut during the first half of a first-round bas,
ketball game of the South Regional of the NCAA Tournament
in Lexmgton , Ky., in this March 15 file photo. Oden was
selected to The Associated Press 2006-07 AI~America college oasketball team Monday.
"Just with hllw things went. I Ten player of the year who
didn't really play a whole helped the Badgers to their
season. and I know there are first No. I ranking, averaged
points and 5.4
a lot of other guys with better 19.9
numbers than me. I'm just rebounds.
surprised, but I'm honored
Law led the Aggies' resurand the best I can do is keep gence from an 0-16 Big 12
on playing...
record in 2003-04 to this seaHis
Buckeyes
face son, when they ranked as
Georgetown on Saturday in high as sixth in the country.
the Final Four.
The 6-3 guard averaged 17.9
Oden had a quick answer points and 5.3 assists while
when asked about the sue- shooting 51 percent from the
cess of himself and Durant in field.
their first seasons in college.
"It doesn't get any bigger
"It 's just younger guys than that as flU as individual
coming in an,l just playing accolades," he said. "Your
basketbalL not worried about team ran do more, but firstage or anythmg." he said.
team AP Ali-American'l
Both played in college in That's unbelievable. I'm
large pan because of the new very excited and happy."
rule that prohibits the NBA
Afflalo submitted his name
from drafting players until to the NBA dmft last season
they turn 19 and are out of after leading the Bruins to
high school for one year.
the national championship
not sold that the rule game. but returned and averis right or wrong, but I think aged 16.7 points and was
it shows you the impact and selected Pac-1 0 player of the
the intlux of how many great year.
players are out there," said
"First and foremost team
Ohio State coach Thad goals are always most
Matta. "I think that's why important, but when it come&amp;
there's so much parity nowa- to the All-America team it's
days in college basketball ." a positive thing," Aftlalo
Tucker and Law were said. "It shows that other
Wisconsin's and Texas people who know the game
A&amp;M's first All-America of basketball understand my
selections, while Aftlalo was contributions and imporUClA's first since Ed tance to my team."
Durant's 72 first-team
O'Bannon in 1995.
The 6-6 Tucker, the Big votes gave him 360 points.

· "''m

Ground
fromPageBl
seven of the first nine batters she faced
before finishing the night with 10
strikeouts and zero walks.
Sturgill held the Green and White
without a hit until the · bottom· of the
fourth, but two hits and an error
allowed the Lady Eagles to finally get
on the board - cutting their delicit to
2-1.
EHS ( 1-1 ) never came closer, managing Only a single apiece in the ftfth
and seventh frames.
The Blue and Gold, on the other
hand, got to Eastern sophomore starter
Sasha Collins very early.
The Lady Rockets (1-1) turned two
walks, an error and a fielder 's choice
into two first inning runs. and the
guests never looked back.
Wellston tacked on a pair of insurance runs in the fifth, concluding the
scoring at 4-1.
Afterwards EHS coach Pam
Douthitt acknowledged Sturgill 's fine
effort, as well as her team's inability to
put the ball in play - espe~ially after
knocking out ll hits in an 8-3 win
over Kari McFann just 24 hours earlier in the season opener.
"We didn't get as many hits as we
did last night. Sturgill was a little
slower than McFann. but she had really good control. We were swinging
really early at the ball,'' she commented. "We had tv.o or three errors. but
that isn't gomg to kill anybody. We
dido '·t hit the ball. and that was our
main thing tonight."
After Coll in, 'truck Amber L a mb~ rt

CLEA RWATER. Fla. (AP)
- Thi' is the way the
Phi lade lphia Ph illies hope
their pitchers perform when
the games count.
Jamie Moyer pitched seven
strong inni ngs, Geoff Geary
worked a perfec t eighth and
Tom Gordon fi nished with a
scoreless ninth in a 6-2 win
over the Cincinnati Reds on
Tuesday night.
Pat Burrell and Rod Bamjas
hit solo ho mers for the
Phillies. Edwin Enc;mmcion
had a twll-run shot for
Cincinnati .
The Reds survived a scary
moment in the fi rst inning
when center tielder Ryan
Freel robbed Aaron Rowand
of extra bases with a spectacular diving catch on the warning track. Freel crashed into
the wall and appeared to hit
his head awkwardly. He sat
on the ground while a trainer
attended to him, but somehow
stayed in for the final out.
Freel left after the inning
because of spasms in the middle of his back and went back
to Sarasota during the game.
The hard-nosed, gritty Freel
took over as the starting center fielder for Ken Griffey Jr.,
who was moved to right field.
The
bullpen
is
Philadelphia's btggest concern heading into the regular
season. But Geary and
Gordon
gave
manager
Charlie Manuel reason for
optimism.
Geary hadn't pitched in a

game 'ince March 15 because
Df a ham, tring injury. He
,hnwcd he ,hould be ready
lor the opener against Atlanta.
Gordon, the 39-year-old
closer who was hampered by
'hnulder rroblem, in the secnnd half 11fter going to the AllStar game. has pitc hed every
other day his last lour outings
after taking it slow early on.
He's allowed one earned run
in 6 2-3 innings this spring.
Rowand tripled off Rhea!
Connier to stan the bottom of
the seventh and s&lt;:ored on
Burrell' s bloop ' ingle with
one out to gtve the Phillie' a
3-2 lead.
Reds lcft -hander Jon
Coutlangus. hoping to eann a
roster spot, helped hi s
chances by striking out Chase
Utley and Ryw1 Howard with
the bases loaded in the fifth .
Howard fanned against
Com1ier with runners on ftrst
and third in the seventh and
fini shed 0- for-4 with three
strikeouts.
The Nl MVP is batting just
.203 ( 12-for-59) with two
homers and nine RBis a year
after swatting 58. homers .
Howard has just one ltit in ltis
last 25 at-bats and has struck
out 23 times. Manuel doesn't
think the slugger needs a day
off.
..
Moyer gave up two runs
and eight hits in seven
innings, his longest outing of
the spring. The 44-year-old
left-bander struck out the side
in the sewnth and fanned
live.

out to start the game. both Stephanie
Tramer and Sturgill received back-toback walks. A th rowing error allowed
Trainer to score for a 1-0 lead. then
Amber King grounded into a fielder's
chotec that plated Sturgill for a 2-0
advantage.
The ' ' ore Mayed that way until the
bottom of the fourth when sophomore

·Gallia
County
OH

E-mail

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To Place
~rihune
·Sentinel
l\egister
ca'ur Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Today... or Fax To (740) 446-3008
Or Fax To (740) 992·2157
Word Ads

Oead'l:ir~

Monday-Friday for In-rtlon
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column : l:OO p . m .
For Sundirlys Paper

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

POLICIES: Ohio 'RI"y Publiahlng reaen" the right to «tit, r•l*;t, Of ~ an';' ad at In';' t1me. Eno.-1 mu11 M rtpOf'tMI on the tnt
1'ribi.IM-Sentlnei-Reglttw Wll bl ~tor no·I'JM)felftln the coat of thll ...-ce oc:cupiftd b';' lhli•nor and onl';' the first inMrtton.
any toll Of U.I*\H the! reaulta from~ pubiAc.a&amp;lon Of oml..ioo of an adv.,.IMmenl Corr._lion will o. madlln the hrst avallab'- Mlhion . • Box
•r• ahdya conftdltnllal. • Cutrwtl ra.. c.rd IIPP""- • All rMI •••._ MW•r1 1MI'flentl 1,.
to tht ftderll F1ir Houl lng A~:t ol 1MB. • This ,..,..
ect.II'IMting EOE atanclarda. We will nol know119Y ~t •ny
in wloa.tion of tN law.

Description • lndude A Price • Avoid Abbrevlatlons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Day1

1.\\111 \t I \II \I'\

r

,,.,I

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

YIHIISALEGALUI'tH.l'\

GIHA\I~W

All Dlapl•y: 12 Novn 2
ausln••• &lt;Days Prior To
Publication
Sund•v Display: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays

• All ada mull be prepaid'

• Start Your Ads With A keyword • Include Compa.te

Items

Now you can hove borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclass!Hedods
J'!~
Borders S3.00/per ad
I!
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for Iorge

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

MOIIU.t 11&lt;&gt;\D:&lt;;
lUll SAt£

kitnearlytectcomeaat.net

Ma1 30. 9 to ?. 5927 SA 588
Plus Si ze . g111s. household.
20JC40 In grOUnd Pool. Must books. lots of misc. Ve1y
t~ l in and landscape area . cheap pnces.
740· 388-880 3

3438

Female English Pointer with
papers 740-441 -0405

Dog Sitter Needed· occa·
Slona lty, 1n your home, smal l
dog, tra1ned, spotled. 1 o yrs
ol d, not used to other an1·
mals, likes to snuggl e
IndoorS OOI 740 591·6486

YIHJ) SALEt·t~ Pt£ \!i-WI'

Yard Sale Sat 8 -? 30 10
Furn1 tllfe
To good home 7mo old Pa rnsh Ave
baby
1tem s.
Lab/Retriever m1x. good w1th c lothes.

child ren 740-44&amp;-9966
Weimaraner (F) dog. house
broken. great pe t 740-44 1-

Eagles

Absolute Top Dol lar : U.S
L&lt;~t~T \'il
Si lver and Gold Coins.
FutND
Proolsets Gold R1ngs. Pre1935
US.
C u ~re n c y.
Found, black and whit e Solita1re D1amonds· M.T S.
Border Coll1e. Lanes Branch Com Shop. 151 Seco nd
Ad. in Crown C1ty. 7'4 0-25 6- Avenue. Galli poliS. 740-4 466998
2842

5yr. old Tr1colored

} · ].1

Pol ~;

ar

www.comics.com

I'

·------,.1

r

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Rent .......... .........................

a

Motoralor

Ac~~:~~r~:~~:::~:l

e~epenence

ti40

Gtveaway ......................................................

Guods ................ .......................

1-877-463-6247 ut. '2331

9aad , Plant &amp; Fertlllw ............................ .. 650

-p.-,H-,m~a~O.-n1ai_As_s_lSI-a-nt

nu.r

~ .. ~

Secretanal I clinical person
needed in very busy doctor's
OffiCe. GOOd typing SkillS and
experience worktng wllh the
publiC would be beneficial .
~ly tn person at the office
of Or John Wade. Suite 112.
Pleasant Valley Hospital .
Security Officer needed in
New Ha11en. WV. $7.66 hour.
all shifts. Must "have a high
school diploma. clean criminal history. pass a drug
screen and backgwund
chaci&lt;. Call 1·800·275·8359.
M·F 8 30 1o 5.00. EEO·
MFOV.
The Village of Syracuse will
be accepting resumes tor
the position of London Pool
Manager. deadline is noon
Apnl 4th. resume can be
mailed to P.O. Box 266.
Sy racuse. Oh 45779 Of
dropped off at Village Half
Clerk's Otftc e. 2581 Th ird
.

With the growth that we
are experienc 1ng. we currenlly ha\le opemngs 1n
two departments

Maintenance
T.chnician
Exp enence With hght
ma1ntenance on light
duty and heavy duty
vehicles raqu11ed We w11f
provide
Ford
Motor
Company
Training.
Compensauon based on
ex.perienc e.
Contact
Serv1ce Manager J1m
Thomas if you are looking IO JOin a Winning
team. 1-800-272-5179

Automotive Salu

Consultant
If you are a moti11a1ed
individual that IS look1ng
for a career. not just a
job and wanting an
empl oyer that is will ing
to work f01 you. look no
further. We currently
have two positions open
for protessionats that
ha11e good P9QPie sk1lls
and des1 re to better
them sei •JE~ s . We will provide Ford Motor
Company tra1n1ng, you
proVI de the motwat ron .
Contact Pat H1 ll Of Bnan
Ross today 1t you are
look1ng to
bet1er yourselt and your
family 1·800-272-5 179

HVAC Co. look1ng lor a profession al 1nsta lhtr, w1th 1
yea 1 01 more experience .
Also a helper with some
kn owl edge of H VAC Pay
based on expenence . Send
1esume to. HVAC PO Box
572 Kerr. OhiO 45643 or call
740- 11 •. ·1236

vana For Sale............ .:................................. 730

Wanted to 8uy .... .:.......... .. .. ...................... .. . 090
Wionteclto 8uy- Farm Supplleo ........... .. ..... 620
- T o Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rant.. ... ................... .. ............. .... .470
Ya'd Gllllpolto ....................................072
Ya'd -Pomoroyllllddla ......................... 074
Ya'd
l'tuaant ... .. ....................... .... 076

-Pt.

--.

--

PCST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
AvQ. Pay $20/hr or
$57 K anrtUally
lncludmg Fede ral Benef1ts
and OT. Paid Tra1ning ,
Vacat 1ons-FTIPT
1-800·584-1775 Ext. t8923

USWA

EOE

pu mp
Mason . small lot.
$7 5. 000 304·77 3· 5169.

3 81.- 1 112 bath. 2 car
!JCl rage, cent ral a1r. gas heat.
$71.500. 740·992·6926 .

1'1761111"
1 _____

a~allable.

--tl

MN.'I'JJANUllS

.

GALLIPOLIS,
Forec6osure! Buy tor only

$54,i001

More

butldmg

2004 16x76 total elec tr 1c
Clayton two bedroom . two
bath . large walk·ln closet 1n
master bedroom . large mas·
te1 bath w1th garden tub.
separate shOwer. all ap ph ·
ances inc luded. liVIng room
k.1t chen. d1nmg ar ea all open
lloor pla n. continuous gut ters. 10x1 6 treat ed wood
porch With an al umi num
Mu st be mo11ed
root.
$30.000 lirm
Senous
1nquues only ! Call 304-675
8625 after 3:30pm

-~
-~-~
-c-~-'--·-~-,
-­

.....

NEW 2007 4 Bod

homes

For loca listings

caii8Q0..559-4109 xF254
Attention!

Baby Browning 25 cal automat1c PIStol. excellent $375.
Also. Barrels ~on ly" bOth 15
GA . Both Aemu"'gton. 1100
&amp; 870. excellent. $295 for
both. 740-533-3870

..........at.2JN
mymldweathome.com

l ocal company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMEN T" PIO·
grams fe»1 you to buy your
home Instead ol rentmg.
' 100% hnancmg
Homes
' Less than pertect cred1t
mymldwes1home.com
accepted
UIJ
W.-\'rJ:ID
· Paym ent could be th e
lo'N&amp;
.
To
same as rent
AUIEAGE
Mortgage
l ocators
W1ll wash trai ler. dou· 1740)367·0000
3 acres on Sand hill Rd.
blew1des. houses. etc. Have
$40.000 1304)895·3929
references. 740-339-0924

I

24n HOME
STORE
Midwest

r

Do

1 1\\\ t i \ J .

r'd

4 acre lotto, sala (304 )743·
6323

BtJSINfNoi

OrtUtctlJNrn

Mobile Home Lot ror rent

oNOltCEo
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recom mends
that YOJJ do business w1th
people you know . and
NOT to .send money
throu!jl the mall until you
ha11e in ii&amp;Stlgal ed the

1o:ff;•r:in:g·:;::==~

i

All real ••tala advertising
In this newspaper Is
subjer;t to the Fed•ral
Fair Housmg Act of 1968
which makes il ille;al to
Ml~o~•rtise "any
preference, limitation or
ditc:nmtnation based on
rae•. color, religion , nx
familial status or nt~tional
orlgm. or any Intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination.
H

MONH

:;

~~:::'I'O:L&lt;:•~:N:'

This newspapt~r will not
knowmgly accept
advertisements lor r•al
estate which Is in
violation of the law. Our
rtaders .,. h•reby
Informed that all
dwellings advertised in
this newspaper are
awailabl• on an equal
opportunity bases .

Bo1r0Yo Smart. Contact
the OhiO DIVISIOn Of
Fma nc1al
ln st1t uhon 's ·
Ot11ce
of
Consumer
Atfa~r s BEFORE yo u refi nance your home or ~~~~~:::::~
Obtam a loan BEWARE
Country seMing New Haven
of req uests for any large area . 4BA Home . 2.800
advan ce payments of sq tt. 2 acres . Hardwood
fees or 1nsurance. Call the floors.
1ng1oun d
pool
Office
of
Consumer $148.500 Serious 1nqwn es
Atfa11s toll tree at 1-866- only (30 4l674 -592 t
or
278·0003 to learn 11 the
(304)593-8871
mortgage
broker
or
is
properly
Duplelt. 2BR s each 1n Po1nt
tender
licensed. (ThiS is a publ 1c
Pleasant GOOI:'I Investment
ser11ic e announce ment
Pays fo r 1tsell. live 1n one
Rent second (304 )675-8635
from the Oh1 0 Valley

IP:u;b:lis;hi:ng:C:o:m:pa:n:yl=~

Jll

f'Rol.l...~)NAL

SEN.\'K]~:.~

t..-lllliiiiiitiiiiiitito-pl
Mobila Home set· up ser 111C·
es, w1ndows, doors, steps &amp;
supplies
(30 4)3 91·5863
located 1n N1tro.
- - -----Palmer's Tax PreparatiOn 37
Years expenence Call any
ume 367·741 2.
- ------TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUFIITY /SSt?
No Fe e Unl ess We wm r
1.888•582 . 3345

rto

"'~'II:'
!UK S.\LE

I

~ooo-lllliiiiliiiiiio-pl

0 Down EWen With less than

CLASSIFIEDS

3 Bd .. 2 bath all elactn c heat

3bd,

perfect cred1t 1s ava1 lable on

SHOP

1642 sq ft. 3BR. LA FA.
Kitchen. 1 3/4 Baths. C1A.
Plu s man )' extras. locat ed
on Chn s Lane, Close to new
GAH S 2. 13 acre s. Askmg
$129.900 (740)245· 5909

Accredlt eCI Member Acc,e,dltfng
tor ll\d&amp;porldelll Colleges
and Scho.:lls 1274 8

111111

Street.

;;'j. "'"·" . . .. , ...

Upholatory ............................................ .. .. .. . 870

- ---------·

taktng
Appli cations
(304 )675 9726

needed for Dental office 1n
Pt. Pleasant area. Pl9ase
Host a Stanley Parl y for send resumes to. Dental
great g1fts and greal prod· OH1ce, 3984 Indian C1eek
ucts Phone (304)733·5630 Road, Elkview, WV 25071

SJtuattons Wanled ....................................... 120
Space for Ront .. ...... .. .................................. .460
Sportlnv Goods ....................................... .. .. 520
suv·. for Sale.... .... .. ............ ........................ 720
Trucks lor Sate .. .................... ...................... 715

® 2007 by NEA, Inc .

Clayton ,
bath .

$16,500 neg 304-675·
2954

Counc~

1!'11!"------, 11'1111""'"-----., 1
11116
WM~IID 11110 u ...... Wn.""" I.
r-""'[D:Qr-l

RNI Eatats W&amp;nled ..................................... 360
SChoola tnotructlon ............. ....................... .150

Ne w 1999 14X70

gal lopoilsca r &lt;:~&amp;r collegll

~

ApprOll I acre of land within ll'lllr-"-----.,
Basset Hound. 65 Lbs Last
16 Hll.r "AN'IID
HEl..r
bject to the Federa
seen on 3/1 7 Kerr Road. 5 to 6 miles ol
B10well Cash reward call Pleasan1 1304 )675 ·3248
air HOUSing Act 0
,
446-4266 or 446·4 197
968.
Buy111g Junk Cars,Tru cks &amp;
COMMUNITY OUTREACH
Wrecks. Pay Cash J D
SPECIALIST
Salvage
(304 )773-5343
new1pape
TO DR1VE
YAMIJ S.u.E
(304)6 74· 1374
ccep1s only hel
Unique Col umbu s-ba sed,
ALLIANCE
anted ads meetln
- - - - -- - - non·prolit
organization
TRACTOR ·TRAILER
BU)'Ing jun k. cars Paying seeks full-time communtty
0Eo1Aindardl.
YARtJS~u:­
from $50 · $200 If no
TRAINING
Ct:!NTEAS
out1each specialist for grant
GALUI'OI.l~
' FULL· TI ME ClASSES'
health-related
answer leave mossage.740- fund ed .
We will not knowing
' COl Tf\AINING'
388-Q01 1
accept any adver
' FINANCING AIIAILA8l.E'
proJect
in
- - - - - -- - awa1eness
'
JOEl
PlACEMENT" '
Ohio.
isemenl in violatl
Mar30 &amp; 31 9am -? Rodney We are b uym g anyth1ng Southern
c.~~tw~ll 1111 a w-r•ln au.t....
ResponSibilitieS
will
include
I the law.
Commun1ty Center l ots ol do1ng with Sh1rl ey Te mple
'Nylheo.~•lle , 'J1rg1rua
Baby rtems and other rtems. Dolls. books. cl othes. etc pla nn ing , implementatiOn
I -800·334·1203
and p10mot10n of community
Also buy1ng Su lfide Marbles
edu catio n proJect in an
and Ge1man Sw1rls. Ca ll
eleven-county area The
Local bualneu
atter 8 OOpm (740)4 41-1236
4x4'a For Sale .. ........ .......... ...... .................... 725
ide al cand1date for this chal·
Look1ng for 9 pit reps
Announcement ..... ............ .... ...... .................030
I \11'1 0\ \II\ I
lenge w1ll have wefl · de~el ·
Comm.. bOnuses, car
Antiques .............................. .......... .............. .530
opetl presentat1on skills, bonuses. No salary Wk 5"I R\ It I '
Apartments tor
440 ·
tmr-"_...;.....;....;;.;;;;.;, stron 9 interpers onal and 15 h rs weeldy $29 refu ndAuction and Flea Market... ............ .............. oso
1u
orga niz ational skills, and a able start-up cost 740·441·
Auto Parts Accessories ........ .............. .... 760
HU.P \\'A\~Il:O
desire to mak.e a difference.
1982
Auto Repair ......... ....... ............ .... ... .. .......... .. .170
._______rl Protect and event plann1ng _ _ _ _
____
Autoa for Sala.............................................. 710
l ocal delivery person need·
ex
penence
a
plus
Qualified
Bolts &amp;
Sale ...... .. ................. .. .. 750
100 WORKERS NEEDED
ed Must have d~enclable
Building Supplies ...... ............. ..... ... .............550
Assembl e crafts. wood candidate must reside in the
South ern Ohio area ser11ed transportation. Competitive
Buolne. . and llulldlnga .......................... .. . 340
1tems To $480Jwk Mat ena1s
by
this project. own a ca r pay 304·633·4445
Buolneaa Opportunlty ................. ....... .,....... 210
provi ded Free 1ntorma110n
and have the ability to work ,..,.--- - - - - Buolnua Tralnlng .. .......... ........ .. ................. 140
pkg 24Hr 801 -428·4649
out ol a home oHICe. A bac- Middleton Estates will be hlr·
Campara &amp; Motor Homea ........ .. ................. 78Q
- - - - - - - - calaure ate degree in com· ing direct care employees .
Camping Equipment... ....... ........ ................. 780
tor mun 1cat1ons .
ed ucat1on .
Carda of Thanko .... .. ........... ....... ..................010
No
needecl ,
ma rketmg, or related work train1ng
Child/Elderly Care ............ .,,{.! ....... ........... .. . 190
wil l be pro11ided .
Managers Please send
Elee1rtca11Relrlgeratton ............................. ..
,esume 10 . RGM
expen ence IS reqUired We mu st have \lal id driver s
Equlpmen1tor Rent.. .......... ....................... ..480
Attn· Tanya Howell
otte1 an excellent compen - license ApplicatiOns will be
Excavatlng ................................................... 830
PO
sat1on package and an envi - taken Monday thru Friday
6 011 1591
Farm Equlpmant ......................... ................. 6t0
Ashland, KY 411 05-1591
ronment conductive to per- 8:00·4:00 at 8204 Carla
Farms lor Ront ............................. .. ..............430
-----~-- sonal a11d protess1onat Drive-no phone calls please .
Farmalor Sale ........................... .................. 330
An Excell ent way to earn growth Plea se ma11. lax or
For Loase ............................., ....................... 490
money The New AIIOn
e-ma11 resume. references Ohio Val ley Home Health,
For Sale .. .......... ...... ........... ......................... .. 585
Call Manl yn 30 4 -882 ·2645
and salary 1equirements. No Inc. Pasaport/Pri11ate Ca re
For Sllle or Trade .... .........'.. ......................... . 590
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ phOne calls please
Dept. i.s hiring CNA 's,
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Human Resources
AVONI Al l Areas ' To Buy or
STNA's, CHHA's, Personal
Furnlahed Rooma .... .............. ...... ................ 450
Lifeline ol Ohio
Sell
Shirley Spears . 304·
Care Aides. Competitive
General Haullng .. ... ............................ .......... 850
770 K1nnear Ad, Suite 200
675· 1429
wages w1th benefits includ040
Col umbus. QH 43212
mg health insurance and
Happy Ads .. ................................... .. ... .......... 050
Fax: 614-298-6724,
Here Is Your Chance for a
mileage. Apply at 1456
Hay &amp; Graln ............ .. .. .................................. 640
h uman resources 0 llfaltneoEmployment
Bener
Jaclo:.son Pike Su1te 3.
Help Wanted ............. .. ........................ .......... 110
tohiO org.
OppOrtunity!
Gallipolis. or phone 740Home lmprovements .................. ... .. ............ 810
www.l1felineoh1o.org
441·9263.
Homea1or Sa le .. .. .. .. ............ .... ................... . 3t0
lifeline of Oh10 is an equal
We
oHer·
Houllllhold
510
opportuOity empk&gt;yer
Houaae lor Rent .......................................... 410
• Up to $8.50/hour •
Overbrook Center, 333 Page
In Mem ~rlam ........................ .... .................. .. 020
St, Middleport, Ohio 1s curwe ~ly bonus potenhal
Darst Adult Group Home rently accepting appl1ca1100S
lnaural'lce ......... .. .... .. ......... ......... ............... ... 130
has an openmg for a day tor the pos1t1or1 of AN
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment.. .................... .. 660
• Pa1d tra1n1ng, vaca110ns
Llv. .toek ............................................ .......... 630
pos1110n.
must be able to do Manager. The successful
and holidays
Lost an.t Found ..... ............. ..... ;................ ... 060
heavy liftin g
Tem porary candidate must ha11e 2 or
• Full and pa1t t1me sh1fts possibly permanent pOSILola &amp; A•·reage ................. ........................... 350
m ore years of long te rm
Mtacellaneuus....... ... .. .................. .... ............ 170
IIOn. 740-992-5023.
care expe r~ ence and must
• Med1cal dental and v1S10n
Mtscellaneo\IS Merc:handlse .... ................... 540
have a working knowledge
1nsurance
Mobile Honu Repalr .. ............ .... ...... .. .......... 860
FEDERAL
of state and federal regula·
Mobile Homos lor Rent ... .......................... .. 420
• Fnendly. professional
POSTAL JOBS · tiO ns as well as quality
Mobile Homes lor Sale ..................... .. .........320
work
cnwonment
$1 6 53-$27.58/h r. , now hir - assu rance standards. 11 you
Money to Loan .. ....................... .. .. .. ... :......... .220
are tnterested, plese stop by
Ing. For app lication and fn~e
Motorcycles i 4 Wheelero .......... .... ............ 740
our front oft1ce and p1d( up
l
et
us
sh
ow
you
wha
t
Muolcatlnotrumento ............ .. ................... .. 570
!)Overnement JOb 1nfo, call
an application. Competitive
makes lnfoCISJOn a great
Pero......,ts ........ .............................. ............... 005
Amencan Assoc . of labor 1·
wages and be nefits pack·
place to wo1k. '
~Ia tor Sale ........................ ................... .... . 560
91 3·599·804 2. 24/hrs. emp
ages avaJiable. EOE and a
P•umblng &amp; Heatlng ........ .. .... .... ................. . 820
ser 11.
part icipant of the Drug Freo
Pr.,..ulonal9arvle&lt;~s ................. ................ 230
Call today to st:hEtdute an
H
- .- ,-,15- S
- te_a_
k _H_ou_s_
e _lS_ n_ow
_ Workplace Program.
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr .............................. . 160
interview!

ertiaementt

D•

- -- - . . . , . - - - 12x1 2

Tra1nmg will beg1n March 31
1n Albany.
---:---:---:---:- -,---GaUipolis Careor College
(Caree rs Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446·4367.
1·800-214-0452
_,
com

7098

l ost

Tatum

bedroom,

FOSTER PARENTS AND
RESPITE
PROVIDERS
NEEDED. Become stat e
licensed by aMe nding 11ain·
ing s held on Saturdays
Earn $30-$45 a day for the
care of a ch1 ld l1ving 111 you r
home. Homes are needed
1n your cou nty. Call Oas1s
toll lroe t -877 -325· 1558.

367· 7123

Real

104

H"'en.WV 3bd/2ba. Ranch. 3
2
tg.sunroom. 2 ca1 gar. great
area D. 304-675-3637 E. central air, very clean.
304·882 ·2334
wheels &amp; axles. w•th

SOIOI H.~
L..,-IIIUCIU~

9mo boys clothes. maternity,
other mise clothes, old di sh·
es, collectables

Female Seal Po1nt Sl\mese
ca t. must stay Indoors. 740-

-~~

'

Meigs County, OH

March 30- 3 1. Apnl 1 9-4

Tucker received 64 firstteam votes and 344 points,
followed by law (59, 320
points). Afllalo (52, 304},
and Oden (34, 263).
The second team consists
of seniors Nick Fazekas of
Nevada and Jared Dudley of
Boston College. juniors
Chris Lofton of Tennessee
and Joakim Noah of Florida
and
sophomore
Tyler
of
North
Hansbrough
Carolina.
The third team has seniors
Aaron Brooks of Oregon, AI
Thornton of Florida State
of
and
Aaron
Gray
Bryan Walloralphoto
Pittsburgh and juniors Jeff
Eastern
shortstop
Cory
Shaffer,
left,
attempts
to make a
Green of Georgetown and AI
throw to first on a double-play attempt in the fifth inning of
Horford of Florida.
The
preseason
All- Tuesday's non-league baseball contest against Wellston .
America
team
was
but four errors and three
Hansbrough, Noah, Ronald
free passes also benefited
Steele of Alabama, Glen
the cause.
Davis of LSU and Brandon
Pierce led the offense
from Page 81
Rush of Kansas.
with two doubles, while
La~t year.'s first team was
Griffith. Shaffer. Gordon,
J .J. Redick of Duke and five safeties overall in the Joel Lym:h and Derek
Adam Morrison of Gonzaga, top-half of the tirst, estab- Young each provided a safeboth unanimous selections, lishing a 2-0 advantage.
From there, WHS man- ty. Both Morris and Pierce
Shelden Williams of Duke,
scored twice apiece, while
Randy Foye of Villanova and aged only one hit in each of the trio of Gordon. Morris
Brandon Roy of Washington. the next five innings, and and Joel Lynch each providthe hosts took full advaned an RBI.
tage of that offensive lull.
Gordon also recorded one
Amber White doubled to lead off the
Eastern tied the game at
strikeout
and three walks on
inning . Classmate Kate Wilfong two in the bottom of the
reached on an error. giving the hosts second when two ~mors , the mound. Pierce fanned
two hits and a wild pitch two and walked one, allowrunners on the corners with one out.
Senior Brittany Bissell delivered an came back to haunt ing only one hit.
The Golden Rockets were
RBI single, platmg White, to cut the Wellston starter Casey
led by Molihan with three
deficit to 2-1 after four complete.
Molihan.
hits,
followed bv Zach
Then in the fifth, Wellston received
Senior
Matt
Morris
l. B. Wilson and
Fisher.
back-to-back singles from Paige reached safely on an error
Patterson and Beck~ Perkins to lead with one out, then advance Matt LlK·kard with two
each.
Kevin
things off. Perkins hit knocked in to third following a double safeties
Lamme,
Tyler
Gill
and
Patterson for a 3-1 edge, then Mikyla by Pierce. The wild pitch
Teddy
Johnston
provided
Perkin s grounded into a fielder's plated Morris and moved
choice to plate her namesake for the 4- Pierce to third, making it 2- the other hits.
Mol ihan. w
worked
1 fmal.
1.
four-plu
&gt;
innings
and
led
Collins, who worked three innings
freshman Jake Lynch
WHS
with
two
RB!s,
was
in the loss, allowed two runs, one reached safely on another
earned run and one hit in the decision. error, giving EHS runners saddled with the loss.
Bowen admits this was a
Coli ins also walked two and fanned on the comers. Gordon then
big
win for his squad. espetwo.
helped his own cause with a
cially
early on . However.
Sami. Cummins took over in the cir- single that plated Pierce for
with
defending
TVC
cle during the fourth, allowing three a tie game.
Hocking
champion
Federal
hits and two runs, one unearned, over
Then in the bottom half of
her four frames of work. Cummins the third, a leadoff single by Hocking coming to town
also struck out one and didn't issue a sophomore Derek Griffin Thursday, time for celebrafree pass.
followed by a walk to senior tion is short.
"I r~ally hope this gives
Bissell led the Lady Eagles with two Cory Shaffer proved profus
some confidence. We
hits and a run batted in, while White itable when junior Joel
have
a big game Thursday
and sophomor~ Hannah Cozart pro- Lynch delivered the govided the other safeties. Whit~: scored ahead run with an RBI sin- .and we need to carry this
the only Eastern run.
gle that plated Griffin for a momentum into that,"
Bowen said . "Hopefully
Patterson paced the lady Rockets 3-2 edge.
with two hits, while Peggy Fleming
Morris hit a sacrifice tly we' II be ready to get after
and Becky perkins provided one to center that scored them."
The Eagles host the
apif?Ce in the win.
Shaffer. giving the home
in the Hocking
Lancers
Eastern returns to action Thursday team a 4-2 advantage after
opener
for
both school,
when it hosts Federal Hocking in the three full frames .
Thursday
at
5
p.m.
TVC Hocking Division opener. Game
Morris also scored in he
time is scheduled for 5 p.m.
fifth on a wild pitch after
EASTERN 8, WELLSTON 5
walkin¥· and Pte rce also Wellston 200 000 3 - 5 12 4
WELLSTON 4, EASTERN 1
Easlern
022 020 x - 6 7 3
scored 111 that frame after a
Wellston
200 020 , o
441
Wellston ( 1-1 ). Casey Mol1han. Ryan
Eastern
000 100 0
1 4 ·3
double and an error. Eastern Darnell (5) and Zach Ftsher
Wellston (1· 1). Enn SturQIII and Peggy Flem1ng
led 6-2 after five complete. Eastern (2·0) Kyle GorOon , Titus Pierce
Eastern (1-1 ). Sasha Collins, Sami Cumm1ns (4) and
and Jake Lynch.
The Eagles produced just (7)
Ka thryn Bland
WP - Gordon. LP - Molthan. S WP - Sturgill : LP - Collins
seven hits in the triumph. Pte rce

.

.·1

CLASSIFIED

Border Collies to good
30 47
Bul avil le
Pike.
Home
Good w1th other
Gatl ipo~ s. Furn1ture. in fantdogs &amp; ch11dren 304-882-

no

Bryon Waltera/photo
Eastern shortstop Brittany Bissell
ma~es a throw to first base during
Tuesday's .softoall r;ontest against
Wellston in Tuppers Plains.

- Sentinel - l\egister

th1 s 3 bed room . 1 bath
home. Corner lot lirepl ace.
modern kitchen . jacuzzi tub,
Payment around $550 per
month,. 740· 367 ·7129

near Vmton Call (740)441·
1111
Tr ai le1 lot to1 re nt
1740)446·7834

Ph

lb~\L E.~tAn:

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Late on payments. d1vo rce
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and QUICk ClOSing 740·416·
3130
t&lt;l\ l \1'

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BR . 1 112 BA. Gas heat
$5001mO $500 dep. no pets
446· 3481 or eve 44 6· 1567 .
22842 Buck town Rd.. Letart
3 Bedroom. WIAC recenlly
remodeled 740-949-2253_
2BR hOuse f01 rent m
Pt Pl easan t $40 0/mo No
pets Deposrt requ11ed 304 ·
593 -5363 Available Ap ril 1

3 Br hOu se m Pomeroy
Large &amp; 1191)' clean. 1 1!2

bath A/C hardwood floors
full basement , 2 car garage
Ga llipOliS· Gl eat loc ation.
sm all back ya1d 740 -949CIXner lot 2 bedrooms, t
2303. or 591 3920
bath, Remodeled K1tchen.
Ha1d wood Floors MUST Accepbrlg applications tor 3·
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room 2 story house w1th out
Hou se on land Contract bu1ldmg. Stove &amp; refr~ga ra to r
IOCiuded. N1ce corne1 lot 1ro
Pomeroy 740·992·5858
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House pnced to sal e Large depoSit reqw red
$600
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·-~---------------·-- ---· ·-· - - - - -

Attention!
Local company oHenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT' pro·
gram s tor you to bu~ your
hom e 1nstead ot 1en t1ng
• 1OO"'o hnanc1ng
• Less than perfect Cl adit
accepted
• Pay me nt could be the
same as rent.
Mo1tgage
Loc ators
17 40)367·0000
HUO HO ME S ~ 4 bedroom 2
bath S199t mo. 3 bedroom.
$t 98/mo.More ho mes BIIBIIable se~,., dn. 20 yrs @ 6%.
For hst1ng s 600- 559-4 109
ext. Ft44

�Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, March

www.mydallysentinel.com

28,2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83
-

~rihune

'

Durant, Oden on AP All-America team Reds fall to Phillies, 6-2
BY JIM O'CONNELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS

If Kevin Durant and Greg
Oden play onl y one season
of college basketball . it will
have been as All-A mericans.
The freshmen were voted
to The Associated Press' AllAmerica team Monday. the
first members of their class
so honored since 1989.
The 6-foot-9 Durant, who
led Texas to the Big 12 title
game, was the only unanimous choice of the 72-member national media panel that
selects the weekly Top 25 .
Oden. the 7-footer who
helped Ohio State to its first
No. I ranking in 45 years,
was joined on the team by
seniors Alando Tucker of
Wisconsin and Acie Law IV
of Texas A&amp;M and junior
Arran Afllalo of UCLA. The
voting was conducted before
the NCAA tournament.
Since freshmen became
eligible to play in 1972, the
only ones selected to the first
team had been Wayman
Tisdale of Oklahoma in 1983
and Chris Jackson of LSU in
1989.
Durant, the first Texas AllAmerican since T.J. Ford in
2003, averaged 25 .6 points
and 11.3 rebounds, but it was
his all-around game and penchant for big shots in the
clutch that had people ranking him as one of the best
freshmen ever.
"There ' s no question
Kevin deserves every individual accolade that he will
receive," Texas coach Rick
Barnes said, ''but the one
thing I respect most about
Kevin is that he is the ultimate team player. He really
doesn 't care about the imlividual numbers and awards.
All he cares about is the success of his team . When
you' re around a guy like
that, it makes coaching him a
joy."
Durant. the Big 12 player
of .the year. backed up his
coach's sentiments.
"I am not very big on .individual honors, but I am very
humbled to be included on
the Associated Press AllAmerica team," he said.
"When you look at the other
four guys who are on the
team, I am honored Ill be
mentioned with them. I have
so much respect for how
each one of them has led
their respective teams and
handled themselves, both on
and off the wurt. I look up to
each one of them."
Oden. the first Ohio State
All-American since . Jim
Jackson in 1992, missed the
first seven games as he
recovered from offseason
surgery on his right wrist. As
he rehabilitated from the
injury he learned to shoot
free throws left-handed and
didn't miss a beat when he
returned to the Buckeyes,
averaging 15.5 points, 9.7
rebounds and 3.5 blocks
while shooting 61.4 percent
from the tield.
''I'm very surprised,"
Oden said of being selected.

IHIOs.-

~(1
'

Ohio State center Greg Oden gets a slam dunk against
Central Connecticut during the first half of a first-round bas,
ketball game of the South Regional of the NCAA Tournament
in Lexmgton , Ky., in this March 15 file photo. Oden was
selected to The Associated Press 2006-07 AI~America college oasketball team Monday.
"Just with hllw things went. I Ten player of the year who
didn't really play a whole helped the Badgers to their
season. and I know there are first No. I ranking, averaged
points and 5.4
a lot of other guys with better 19.9
numbers than me. I'm just rebounds.
surprised, but I'm honored
Law led the Aggies' resurand the best I can do is keep gence from an 0-16 Big 12
on playing...
record in 2003-04 to this seaHis
Buckeyes
face son, when they ranked as
Georgetown on Saturday in high as sixth in the country.
the Final Four.
The 6-3 guard averaged 17.9
Oden had a quick answer points and 5.3 assists while
when asked about the sue- shooting 51 percent from the
cess of himself and Durant in field.
their first seasons in college.
"It doesn't get any bigger
"It 's just younger guys than that as flU as individual
coming in an,l just playing accolades," he said. "Your
basketbalL not worried about team ran do more, but firstage or anythmg." he said.
team AP Ali-American'l
Both played in college in That's unbelievable. I'm
large pan because of the new very excited and happy."
rule that prohibits the NBA
Afflalo submitted his name
from drafting players until to the NBA dmft last season
they turn 19 and are out of after leading the Bruins to
high school for one year.
the national championship
not sold that the rule game. but returned and averis right or wrong, but I think aged 16.7 points and was
it shows you the impact and selected Pac-1 0 player of the
the intlux of how many great year.
players are out there," said
"First and foremost team
Ohio State coach Thad goals are always most
Matta. "I think that's why important, but when it come&amp;
there's so much parity nowa- to the All-America team it's
days in college basketball ." a positive thing," Aftlalo
Tucker and Law were said. "It shows that other
Wisconsin's and Texas people who know the game
A&amp;M's first All-America of basketball understand my
selections, while Aftlalo was contributions and imporUClA's first since Ed tance to my team."
Durant's 72 first-team
O'Bannon in 1995.
The 6-6 Tucker, the Big votes gave him 360 points.

· "''m

Ground
fromPageBl
seven of the first nine batters she faced
before finishing the night with 10
strikeouts and zero walks.
Sturgill held the Green and White
without a hit until the · bottom· of the
fourth, but two hits and an error
allowed the Lady Eagles to finally get
on the board - cutting their delicit to
2-1.
EHS ( 1-1 ) never came closer, managing Only a single apiece in the ftfth
and seventh frames.
The Blue and Gold, on the other
hand, got to Eastern sophomore starter
Sasha Collins very early.
The Lady Rockets (1-1) turned two
walks, an error and a fielder 's choice
into two first inning runs. and the
guests never looked back.
Wellston tacked on a pair of insurance runs in the fifth, concluding the
scoring at 4-1.
Afterwards EHS coach Pam
Douthitt acknowledged Sturgill 's fine
effort, as well as her team's inability to
put the ball in play - espe~ially after
knocking out ll hits in an 8-3 win
over Kari McFann just 24 hours earlier in the season opener.
"We didn't get as many hits as we
did last night. Sturgill was a little
slower than McFann. but she had really good control. We were swinging
really early at the ball,'' she commented. "We had tv.o or three errors. but
that isn't gomg to kill anybody. We
dido '·t hit the ball. and that was our
main thing tonight."
After Coll in, 'truck Amber L a mb~ rt

CLEA RWATER. Fla. (AP)
- Thi' is the way the
Phi lade lphia Ph illies hope
their pitchers perform when
the games count.
Jamie Moyer pitched seven
strong inni ngs, Geoff Geary
worked a perfec t eighth and
Tom Gordon fi nished with a
scoreless ninth in a 6-2 win
over the Cincinnati Reds on
Tuesday night.
Pat Burrell and Rod Bamjas
hit solo ho mers for the
Phillies. Edwin Enc;mmcion
had a twll-run shot for
Cincinnati .
The Reds survived a scary
moment in the fi rst inning
when center tielder Ryan
Freel robbed Aaron Rowand
of extra bases with a spectacular diving catch on the warning track. Freel crashed into
the wall and appeared to hit
his head awkwardly. He sat
on the ground while a trainer
attended to him, but somehow
stayed in for the final out.
Freel left after the inning
because of spasms in the middle of his back and went back
to Sarasota during the game.
The hard-nosed, gritty Freel
took over as the starting center fielder for Ken Griffey Jr.,
who was moved to right field.
The
bullpen
is
Philadelphia's btggest concern heading into the regular
season. But Geary and
Gordon
gave
manager
Charlie Manuel reason for
optimism.
Geary hadn't pitched in a

game 'ince March 15 because
Df a ham, tring injury. He
,hnwcd he ,hould be ready
lor the opener against Atlanta.
Gordon, the 39-year-old
closer who was hampered by
'hnulder rroblem, in the secnnd half 11fter going to the AllStar game. has pitc hed every
other day his last lour outings
after taking it slow early on.
He's allowed one earned run
in 6 2-3 innings this spring.
Rowand tripled off Rhea!
Connier to stan the bottom of
the seventh and s&lt;:ored on
Burrell' s bloop ' ingle with
one out to gtve the Phillie' a
3-2 lead.
Reds lcft -hander Jon
Coutlangus. hoping to eann a
roster spot, helped hi s
chances by striking out Chase
Utley and Ryw1 Howard with
the bases loaded in the fifth .
Howard fanned against
Com1ier with runners on ftrst
and third in the seventh and
fini shed 0- for-4 with three
strikeouts.
The Nl MVP is batting just
.203 ( 12-for-59) with two
homers and nine RBis a year
after swatting 58. homers .
Howard has just one ltit in ltis
last 25 at-bats and has struck
out 23 times. Manuel doesn't
think the slugger needs a day
off.
..
Moyer gave up two runs
and eight hits in seven
innings, his longest outing of
the spring. The 44-year-old
left-bander struck out the side
in the sewnth and fanned
live.

out to start the game. both Stephanie
Tramer and Sturgill received back-toback walks. A th rowing error allowed
Trainer to score for a 1-0 lead. then
Amber King grounded into a fielder's
chotec that plated Sturgill for a 2-0
advantage.
The ' ' ore Mayed that way until the
bottom of the fourth when sophomore

·Gallia
County
OH

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-p.-,H-,m~a~O.-n1ai_As_s_lSI-a-nt

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Secretanal I clinical person
needed in very busy doctor's
OffiCe. GOOd typing SkillS and
experience worktng wllh the
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~ly tn person at the office
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Security Officer needed in
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all shifts. Must "have a high
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M·F 8 30 1o 5.00. EEO·
MFOV.
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the position of London Pool
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Apnl 4th. resume can be
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dropped off at Village Half
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With the growth that we
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Wionteclto 8uy- Farm Supplleo ........... .. ..... 620
- T o Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rant.. ... ................... .. ............. .... .470
Ya'd Gllllpolto ....................................072
Ya'd -Pomoroyllllddla ......................... 074
Ya'd
l'tuaant ... .. ....................... .... 076

-Pt.

--.

--

PCST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
AvQ. Pay $20/hr or
$57 K anrtUally
lncludmg Fede ral Benef1ts
and OT. Paid Tra1ning ,
Vacat 1ons-FTIPT
1-800·584-1775 Ext. t8923

USWA

EOE

pu mp
Mason . small lot.
$7 5. 000 304·77 3· 5169.

3 81.- 1 112 bath. 2 car
!JCl rage, cent ral a1r. gas heat.
$71.500. 740·992·6926 .

1'1761111"
1 _____

a~allable.

--tl

MN.'I'JJANUllS

.

GALLIPOLIS,
Forec6osure! Buy tor only

$54,i001

More

butldmg

2004 16x76 total elec tr 1c
Clayton two bedroom . two
bath . large walk·ln closet 1n
master bedroom . large mas·
te1 bath w1th garden tub.
separate shOwer. all ap ph ·
ances inc luded. liVIng room
k.1t chen. d1nmg ar ea all open
lloor pla n. continuous gut ters. 10x1 6 treat ed wood
porch With an al umi num
Mu st be mo11ed
root.
$30.000 lirm
Senous
1nquues only ! Call 304-675
8625 after 3:30pm

-~
-~-~
-c-~-'--·-~-,
-­

.....

NEW 2007 4 Bod

homes

For loca listings

caii8Q0..559-4109 xF254
Attention!

Baby Browning 25 cal automat1c PIStol. excellent $375.
Also. Barrels ~on ly" bOth 15
GA . Both Aemu"'gton. 1100
&amp; 870. excellent. $295 for
both. 740-533-3870

..........at.2JN
mymldweathome.com

l ocal company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMEN T" PIO·
grams fe»1 you to buy your
home Instead ol rentmg.
' 100% hnancmg
Homes
' Less than pertect cred1t
mymldwes1home.com
accepted
UIJ
W.-\'rJ:ID
· Paym ent could be th e
lo'N&amp;
.
To
same as rent
AUIEAGE
Mortgage
l ocators
W1ll wash trai ler. dou· 1740)367·0000
3 acres on Sand hill Rd.
blew1des. houses. etc. Have
$40.000 1304)895·3929
references. 740-339-0924

I

24n HOME
STORE
Midwest

r

Do

1 1\\\ t i \ J .

r'd

4 acre lotto, sala (304 )743·
6323

BtJSINfNoi

OrtUtctlJNrn

Mobile Home Lot ror rent

oNOltCEo
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recom mends
that YOJJ do business w1th
people you know . and
NOT to .send money
throu!jl the mall until you
ha11e in ii&amp;Stlgal ed the

1o:ff;•r:in:g·:;::==~

i

All real ••tala advertising
In this newspaper Is
subjer;t to the Fed•ral
Fair Housmg Act of 1968
which makes il ille;al to
Ml~o~•rtise "any
preference, limitation or
ditc:nmtnation based on
rae•. color, religion , nx
familial status or nt~tional
orlgm. or any Intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination.
H

MONH

:;

~~:::'I'O:L&lt;:•~:N:'

This newspapt~r will not
knowmgly accept
advertisements lor r•al
estate which Is in
violation of the law. Our
rtaders .,. h•reby
Informed that all
dwellings advertised in
this newspaper are
awailabl• on an equal
opportunity bases .

Bo1r0Yo Smart. Contact
the OhiO DIVISIOn Of
Fma nc1al
ln st1t uhon 's ·
Ot11ce
of
Consumer
Atfa~r s BEFORE yo u refi nance your home or ~~~~~:::::~
Obtam a loan BEWARE
Country seMing New Haven
of req uests for any large area . 4BA Home . 2.800
advan ce payments of sq tt. 2 acres . Hardwood
fees or 1nsurance. Call the floors.
1ng1oun d
pool
Office
of
Consumer $148.500 Serious 1nqwn es
Atfa11s toll tree at 1-866- only (30 4l674 -592 t
or
278·0003 to learn 11 the
(304)593-8871
mortgage
broker
or
is
properly
Duplelt. 2BR s each 1n Po1nt
tender
licensed. (ThiS is a publ 1c
Pleasant GOOI:'I Investment
ser11ic e announce ment
Pays fo r 1tsell. live 1n one
Rent second (304 )675-8635
from the Oh1 0 Valley

IP:u;b:lis;hi:ng:C:o:m:pa:n:yl=~

Jll

f'Rol.l...~)NAL

SEN.\'K]~:.~

t..-lllliiiiiitiiiiiitito-pl
Mobila Home set· up ser 111C·
es, w1ndows, doors, steps &amp;
supplies
(30 4)3 91·5863
located 1n N1tro.
- - -----Palmer's Tax PreparatiOn 37
Years expenence Call any
ume 367·741 2.
- ------TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUFIITY /SSt?
No Fe e Unl ess We wm r
1.888•582 . 3345

rto

"'~'II:'
!UK S.\LE

I

~ooo-lllliiiiliiiiiio-pl

0 Down EWen With less than

CLASSIFIEDS

3 Bd .. 2 bath all elactn c heat

3bd,

perfect cred1t 1s ava1 lable on

SHOP

1642 sq ft. 3BR. LA FA.
Kitchen. 1 3/4 Baths. C1A.
Plu s man )' extras. locat ed
on Chn s Lane, Close to new
GAH S 2. 13 acre s. Askmg
$129.900 (740)245· 5909

Accredlt eCI Member Acc,e,dltfng
tor ll\d&amp;porldelll Colleges
and Scho.:lls 1274 8

111111

Street.

;;'j. "'"·" . . .. , ...

Upholatory ............................................ .. .. .. . 870

- ---------·

taktng
Appli cations
(304 )675 9726

needed for Dental office 1n
Pt. Pleasant area. Pl9ase
Host a Stanley Parl y for send resumes to. Dental
great g1fts and greal prod· OH1ce, 3984 Indian C1eek
ucts Phone (304)733·5630 Road, Elkview, WV 25071

SJtuattons Wanled ....................................... 120
Space for Ront .. ...... .. .................................. .460
Sportlnv Goods ....................................... .. .. 520
suv·. for Sale.... .... .. ............ ........................ 720
Trucks lor Sate .. .................... ...................... 715

® 2007 by NEA, Inc .

Clayton ,
bath .

$16,500 neg 304-675·
2954

Counc~

1!'11!"------, 11'1111""'"-----., 1
11116
WM~IID 11110 u ...... Wn.""" I.
r-""'[D:Qr-l

RNI Eatats W&amp;nled ..................................... 360
SChoola tnotructlon ............. ....................... .150

Ne w 1999 14X70

gal lopoilsca r &lt;:~&amp;r collegll

~

ApprOll I acre of land within ll'lllr-"-----.,
Basset Hound. 65 Lbs Last
16 Hll.r "AN'IID
HEl..r
bject to the Federa
seen on 3/1 7 Kerr Road. 5 to 6 miles ol
B10well Cash reward call Pleasan1 1304 )675 ·3248
air HOUSing Act 0
,
446-4266 or 446·4 197
968.
Buy111g Junk Cars,Tru cks &amp;
COMMUNITY OUTREACH
Wrecks. Pay Cash J D
SPECIALIST
Salvage
(304 )773-5343
new1pape
TO DR1VE
YAMIJ S.u.E
(304)6 74· 1374
ccep1s only hel
Unique Col umbu s-ba sed,
ALLIANCE
anted ads meetln
- - - - -- - - non·prolit
organization
TRACTOR ·TRAILER
BU)'Ing jun k. cars Paying seeks full-time communtty
0Eo1Aindardl.
YARtJS~u:­
from $50 · $200 If no
TRAINING
Ct:!NTEAS
out1each specialist for grant
GALUI'OI.l~
' FULL· TI ME ClASSES'
health-related
answer leave mossage.740- fund ed .
We will not knowing
' COl Tf\AINING'
388-Q01 1
accept any adver
' FINANCING AIIAILA8l.E'
proJect
in
- - - - - -- - awa1eness
'
JOEl
PlACEMENT" '
Ohio.
isemenl in violatl
Mar30 &amp; 31 9am -? Rodney We are b uym g anyth1ng Southern
c.~~tw~ll 1111 a w-r•ln au.t....
ResponSibilitieS
will
include
I the law.
Commun1ty Center l ots ol do1ng with Sh1rl ey Te mple
'Nylheo.~•lle , 'J1rg1rua
Baby rtems and other rtems. Dolls. books. cl othes. etc pla nn ing , implementatiOn
I -800·334·1203
and p10mot10n of community
Also buy1ng Su lfide Marbles
edu catio n proJect in an
and Ge1man Sw1rls. Ca ll
eleven-county area The
Local bualneu
atter 8 OOpm (740)4 41-1236
4x4'a For Sale .. ........ .......... ...... .................... 725
ide al cand1date for this chal·
Look1ng for 9 pit reps
Announcement ..... ............ .... ...... .................030
I \11'1 0\ \II\ I
lenge w1ll have wefl · de~el ·
Comm.. bOnuses, car
Antiques .............................. .......... .............. .530
opetl presentat1on skills, bonuses. No salary Wk 5"I R\ It I '
Apartments tor
440 ·
tmr-"_...;.....;....;;.;;;;.;, stron 9 interpers onal and 15 h rs weeldy $29 refu ndAuction and Flea Market... ............ .............. oso
1u
orga niz ational skills, and a able start-up cost 740·441·
Auto Parts Accessories ........ .............. .... 760
HU.P \\'A\~Il:O
desire to mak.e a difference.
1982
Auto Repair ......... ....... ............ .... ... .. .......... .. .170
._______rl Protect and event plann1ng _ _ _ _
____
Autoa for Sala.............................................. 710
l ocal delivery person need·
ex
penence
a
plus
Qualified
Bolts &amp;
Sale ...... .. ................. .. .. 750
100 WORKERS NEEDED
ed Must have d~enclable
Building Supplies ...... ............. ..... ... .............550
Assembl e crafts. wood candidate must reside in the
South ern Ohio area ser11ed transportation. Competitive
Buolne. . and llulldlnga .......................... .. . 340
1tems To $480Jwk Mat ena1s
by
this project. own a ca r pay 304·633·4445
Buolneaa Opportunlty ................. ....... .,....... 210
provi ded Free 1ntorma110n
and have the ability to work ,..,.--- - - - - Buolnua Tralnlng .. .......... ........ .. ................. 140
pkg 24Hr 801 -428·4649
out ol a home oHICe. A bac- Middleton Estates will be hlr·
Campara &amp; Motor Homea ........ .. ................. 78Q
- - - - - - - - calaure ate degree in com· ing direct care employees .
Camping Equipment... ....... ........ ................. 780
tor mun 1cat1ons .
ed ucat1on .
Carda of Thanko .... .. ........... ....... ..................010
No
needecl ,
ma rketmg, or related work train1ng
Child/Elderly Care ............ .,,{.! ....... ........... .. . 190
wil l be pro11ided .
Managers Please send
Elee1rtca11Relrlgeratton ............................. ..
,esume 10 . RGM
expen ence IS reqUired We mu st have \lal id driver s
Equlpmen1tor Rent.. .......... ....................... ..480
Attn· Tanya Howell
otte1 an excellent compen - license ApplicatiOns will be
Excavatlng ................................................... 830
PO
sat1on package and an envi - taken Monday thru Friday
6 011 1591
Farm Equlpmant ......................... ................. 6t0
Ashland, KY 411 05-1591
ronment conductive to per- 8:00·4:00 at 8204 Carla
Farms lor Ront ............................. .. ..............430
-----~-- sonal a11d protess1onat Drive-no phone calls please .
Farmalor Sale ........................... .................. 330
An Excell ent way to earn growth Plea se ma11. lax or
For Loase ............................., ....................... 490
money The New AIIOn
e-ma11 resume. references Ohio Val ley Home Health,
For Sale .. .......... ...... ........... ......................... .. 585
Call Manl yn 30 4 -882 ·2645
and salary 1equirements. No Inc. Pasaport/Pri11ate Ca re
For Sllle or Trade .... .........'.. ......................... . 590
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ phOne calls please
Dept. i.s hiring CNA 's,
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Human Resources
AVONI Al l Areas ' To Buy or
STNA's, CHHA's, Personal
Furnlahed Rooma .... .............. ...... ................ 450
Lifeline ol Ohio
Sell
Shirley Spears . 304·
Care Aides. Competitive
General Haullng .. ... ............................ .......... 850
770 K1nnear Ad, Suite 200
675· 1429
wages w1th benefits includ040
Col umbus. QH 43212
mg health insurance and
Happy Ads .. ................................... .. ... .......... 050
Fax: 614-298-6724,
Here Is Your Chance for a
mileage. Apply at 1456
Hay &amp; Graln ............ .. .. .................................. 640
h uman resources 0 llfaltneoEmployment
Bener
Jaclo:.son Pike Su1te 3.
Help Wanted ............. .. ........................ .......... 110
tohiO org.
OppOrtunity!
Gallipolis. or phone 740Home lmprovements .................. ... .. ............ 810
www.l1felineoh1o.org
441·9263.
Homea1or Sa le .. .. .. .. ............ .... ................... . 3t0
lifeline of Oh10 is an equal
We
oHer·
Houllllhold
510
opportuOity empk&gt;yer
Houaae lor Rent .......................................... 410
• Up to $8.50/hour •
Overbrook Center, 333 Page
In Mem ~rlam ........................ .... .................. .. 020
St, Middleport, Ohio 1s curwe ~ly bonus potenhal
Darst Adult Group Home rently accepting appl1ca1100S
lnaural'lce ......... .. .... .. ......... ......... ............... ... 130
has an openmg for a day tor the pos1t1or1 of AN
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment.. .................... .. 660
• Pa1d tra1n1ng, vaca110ns
Llv. .toek ............................................ .......... 630
pos1110n.
must be able to do Manager. The successful
and holidays
Lost an.t Found ..... ............. ..... ;................ ... 060
heavy liftin g
Tem porary candidate must ha11e 2 or
• Full and pa1t t1me sh1fts possibly permanent pOSILola &amp; A•·reage ................. ........................... 350
m ore years of long te rm
Mtacellaneuus....... ... .. .................. .... ............ 170
IIOn. 740-992-5023.
care expe r~ ence and must
• Med1cal dental and v1S10n
Mtscellaneo\IS Merc:handlse .... ................... 540
have a working knowledge
1nsurance
Mobile Honu Repalr .. ............ .... ...... .. .......... 860
FEDERAL
of state and federal regula·
Mobile Homos lor Rent ... .......................... .. 420
• Fnendly. professional
POSTAL JOBS · tiO ns as well as quality
Mobile Homes lor Sale ..................... .. .........320
work
cnwonment
$1 6 53-$27.58/h r. , now hir - assu rance standards. 11 you
Money to Loan .. ....................... .. .. .. ... :......... .220
are tnterested, plese stop by
Ing. For app lication and fn~e
Motorcycles i 4 Wheelero .......... .... ............ 740
our front oft1ce and p1d( up
l
et
us
sh
ow
you
wha
t
Muolcatlnotrumento ............ .. ................... .. 570
!)Overnement JOb 1nfo, call
an application. Competitive
makes lnfoCISJOn a great
Pero......,ts ........ .............................. ............... 005
Amencan Assoc . of labor 1·
wages and be nefits pack·
place to wo1k. '
~Ia tor Sale ........................ ................... .... . 560
91 3·599·804 2. 24/hrs. emp
ages avaJiable. EOE and a
P•umblng &amp; Heatlng ........ .. .... .... ................. . 820
ser 11.
part icipant of the Drug Freo
Pr.,..ulonal9arvle&lt;~s ................. ................ 230
Call today to st:hEtdute an
H
- .- ,-,15- S
- te_a_
k _H_ou_s_
e _lS_ n_ow
_ Workplace Program.
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr .............................. . 160
interview!

ertiaementt

D•

- -- - . . . , . - - - 12x1 2

Tra1nmg will beg1n March 31
1n Albany.
---:---:---:---:- -,---GaUipolis Careor College
(Caree rs Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446·4367.
1·800-214-0452
_,
com

7098

l ost

Tatum

bedroom,

FOSTER PARENTS AND
RESPITE
PROVIDERS
NEEDED. Become stat e
licensed by aMe nding 11ain·
ing s held on Saturdays
Earn $30-$45 a day for the
care of a ch1 ld l1ving 111 you r
home. Homes are needed
1n your cou nty. Call Oas1s
toll lroe t -877 -325· 1558.

367· 7123

Real

104

H"'en.WV 3bd/2ba. Ranch. 3
2
tg.sunroom. 2 ca1 gar. great
area D. 304-675-3637 E. central air, very clean.
304·882 ·2334
wheels &amp; axles. w•th

SOIOI H.~
L..,-IIIUCIU~

9mo boys clothes. maternity,
other mise clothes, old di sh·
es, collectables

Female Seal Po1nt Sl\mese
ca t. must stay Indoors. 740-

-~~

'

Meigs County, OH

March 30- 3 1. Apnl 1 9-4

Tucker received 64 firstteam votes and 344 points,
followed by law (59, 320
points). Afllalo (52, 304},
and Oden (34, 263).
The second team consists
of seniors Nick Fazekas of
Nevada and Jared Dudley of
Boston College. juniors
Chris Lofton of Tennessee
and Joakim Noah of Florida
and
sophomore
Tyler
of
North
Hansbrough
Carolina.
The third team has seniors
Aaron Brooks of Oregon, AI
Thornton of Florida State
of
and
Aaron
Gray
Bryan Walloralphoto
Pittsburgh and juniors Jeff
Eastern
shortstop
Cory
Shaffer,
left,
attempts
to make a
Green of Georgetown and AI
throw to first on a double-play attempt in the fifth inning of
Horford of Florida.
The
preseason
All- Tuesday's non-league baseball contest against Wellston .
America
team
was
but four errors and three
Hansbrough, Noah, Ronald
free passes also benefited
Steele of Alabama, Glen
the cause.
Davis of LSU and Brandon
Pierce led the offense
from Page 81
Rush of Kansas.
with two doubles, while
La~t year.'s first team was
Griffith. Shaffer. Gordon,
J .J. Redick of Duke and five safeties overall in the Joel Lym:h and Derek
Adam Morrison of Gonzaga, top-half of the tirst, estab- Young each provided a safeboth unanimous selections, lishing a 2-0 advantage.
From there, WHS man- ty. Both Morris and Pierce
Shelden Williams of Duke,
scored twice apiece, while
Randy Foye of Villanova and aged only one hit in each of the trio of Gordon. Morris
Brandon Roy of Washington. the next five innings, and and Joel Lynch each providthe hosts took full advaned an RBI.
tage of that offensive lull.
Gordon also recorded one
Amber White doubled to lead off the
Eastern tied the game at
strikeout
and three walks on
inning . Classmate Kate Wilfong two in the bottom of the
reached on an error. giving the hosts second when two ~mors , the mound. Pierce fanned
two hits and a wild pitch two and walked one, allowrunners on the corners with one out.
Senior Brittany Bissell delivered an came back to haunt ing only one hit.
The Golden Rockets were
RBI single, platmg White, to cut the Wellston starter Casey
led by Molihan with three
deficit to 2-1 after four complete.
Molihan.
hits,
followed bv Zach
Then in the fifth, Wellston received
Senior
Matt
Morris
l. B. Wilson and
Fisher.
back-to-back singles from Paige reached safely on an error
Patterson and Beck~ Perkins to lead with one out, then advance Matt LlK·kard with two
each.
Kevin
things off. Perkins hit knocked in to third following a double safeties
Lamme,
Tyler
Gill
and
Patterson for a 3-1 edge, then Mikyla by Pierce. The wild pitch
Teddy
Johnston
provided
Perkin s grounded into a fielder's plated Morris and moved
choice to plate her namesake for the 4- Pierce to third, making it 2- the other hits.
Mol ihan. w
worked
1 fmal.
1.
four-plu
&gt;
innings
and
led
Collins, who worked three innings
freshman Jake Lynch
WHS
with
two
RB!s,
was
in the loss, allowed two runs, one reached safely on another
earned run and one hit in the decision. error, giving EHS runners saddled with the loss.
Bowen admits this was a
Coli ins also walked two and fanned on the comers. Gordon then
big
win for his squad. espetwo.
helped his own cause with a
cially
early on . However.
Sami. Cummins took over in the cir- single that plated Pierce for
with
defending
TVC
cle during the fourth, allowing three a tie game.
Hocking
champion
Federal
hits and two runs, one unearned, over
Then in the bottom half of
her four frames of work. Cummins the third, a leadoff single by Hocking coming to town
also struck out one and didn't issue a sophomore Derek Griffin Thursday, time for celebrafree pass.
followed by a walk to senior tion is short.
"I r~ally hope this gives
Bissell led the Lady Eagles with two Cory Shaffer proved profus
some confidence. We
hits and a run batted in, while White itable when junior Joel
have
a big game Thursday
and sophomor~ Hannah Cozart pro- Lynch delivered the govided the other safeties. Whit~: scored ahead run with an RBI sin- .and we need to carry this
the only Eastern run.
gle that plated Griffin for a momentum into that,"
Bowen said . "Hopefully
Patterson paced the lady Rockets 3-2 edge.
with two hits, while Peggy Fleming
Morris hit a sacrifice tly we' II be ready to get after
and Becky perkins provided one to center that scored them."
The Eagles host the
apif?Ce in the win.
Shaffer. giving the home
in the Hocking
Lancers
Eastern returns to action Thursday team a 4-2 advantage after
opener
for
both school,
when it hosts Federal Hocking in the three full frames .
Thursday
at
5
p.m.
TVC Hocking Division opener. Game
Morris also scored in he
time is scheduled for 5 p.m.
fifth on a wild pitch after
EASTERN 8, WELLSTON 5
walkin¥· and Pte rce also Wellston 200 000 3 - 5 12 4
WELLSTON 4, EASTERN 1
Easlern
022 020 x - 6 7 3
scored 111 that frame after a
Wellston
200 020 , o
441
Wellston ( 1-1 ). Casey Mol1han. Ryan
Eastern
000 100 0
1 4 ·3
double and an error. Eastern Darnell (5) and Zach Ftsher
Wellston (1· 1). Enn SturQIII and Peggy Flem1ng
led 6-2 after five complete. Eastern (2·0) Kyle GorOon , Titus Pierce
Eastern (1-1 ). Sasha Collins, Sami Cumm1ns (4) and
and Jake Lynch.
The Eagles produced just (7)
Ka thryn Bland
WP - Gordon. LP - Molthan. S WP - Sturgill : LP - Collins
seven hits in the triumph. Pte rce

.

.·1

CLASSIFIED

Border Collies to good
30 47
Bul avil le
Pike.
Home
Good w1th other
Gatl ipo~ s. Furn1ture. in fantdogs &amp; ch11dren 304-882-

no

Bryon Waltera/photo
Eastern shortstop Brittany Bissell
ma~es a throw to first base during
Tuesday's .softoall r;ontest against
Wellston in Tuppers Plains.

- Sentinel - l\egister

th1 s 3 bed room . 1 bath
home. Corner lot lirepl ace.
modern kitchen . jacuzzi tub,
Payment around $550 per
month,. 740· 367 ·7129

near Vmton Call (740)441·
1111
Tr ai le1 lot to1 re nt
1740)446·7834

Ph

lb~\L E.~tAn:

W,WITJl
Ne ed to sell you1 home?
Late on payments. d1vo rce
Job llansler or a death? 1
can buy your home. All c ash
and QUICk ClOSing 740·416·
3130
t&lt;l\ l \1'

Hotlst~

tnR lb:vr
2 story house for rent . 2
BR . 1 112 BA. Gas heat
$5001mO $500 dep. no pets
446· 3481 or eve 44 6· 1567 .
22842 Buck town Rd.. Letart
3 Bedroom. WIAC recenlly
remodeled 740-949-2253_
2BR hOuse f01 rent m
Pt Pl easan t $40 0/mo No
pets Deposrt requ11ed 304 ·
593 -5363 Available Ap ril 1

3 Br hOu se m Pomeroy
Large &amp; 1191)' clean. 1 1!2

bath A/C hardwood floors
full basement , 2 car garage
Ga llipOliS· Gl eat loc ation.
sm all back ya1d 740 -949CIXner lot 2 bedrooms, t
2303. or 591 3920
bath, Remodeled K1tchen.
Ha1d wood Floors MUST Accepbrlg applications tor 3·
SEE TO APPRECI ATE 1 bedroom 2·bath &amp; laundr}
S65.000. 1740170 9· 1285.
room 2 story house w1th out
Hou se on land Contract bu1ldmg. Stove &amp; refr~ga ra to r
IOCiuded. N1ce corne1 lot 1ro
Pomeroy 740·992·5858
Po1nt Pleasant 1sl month S
House pnced to sal e Large depoSit reqw red
$600
Ranch Close to Town C1ty month $600 depo s1t No
Schools. Cal! 1 740 ) 645~ pe ts Avai labl e Apnl t st
5058
. 740 -446-9595
Move 1n ready 3 ~droom All
new •nslde and out
Full
basement, wood ttoors, 9as
fi replace. ca thedral ce1t1ngs.
No land contracts (304}675-

2364

1\'klBILE li&lt;.IMI.'S
FOil. S..\LE
16xBO set up on rented lot
Close to new GAH S. E:(c
Cond . Might help tinance.
$23. 500 (740)446-4053
---,-----Need to Sel\ 1 1998 16x80
tra1ler w1t t1 314 acre land 1n
Gall1 pol1s Feny 1304)593·
2454

·-~---------------·-- ---· ·-· - - - - -

Attention!
Local company oHenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT' pro·
gram s tor you to bu~ your
hom e 1nstead ot 1en t1ng
• 1OO"'o hnanc1ng
• Less than perfect Cl adit
accepted
• Pay me nt could be the
same as rent.
Mo1tgage
Loc ators
17 40)367·0000
HUO HO ME S ~ 4 bedroom 2
bath S199t mo. 3 bedroom.
$t 98/mo.More ho mes BIIBIIable se~,., dn. 20 yrs @ 6%.
For hst1ng s 600- 559-4 109
ext. Ft44

�Wednesday, March 28, 2007
ALLEY OOP
Ellm VIew
Apartments

~
to&lt; renl in
U1ddleport, 2 Dedtoom
apartments. both recentl)'
remodeled. $4 50 upstairs

=

7::.'7009 $450

House for rent ·

peiS. yard6. sir: WiD ,__

.
.
r

=

-,--------

I

"'1111""':~--:':'"".....- ,
~~.~
I.L......
.. ..-...
.~ 0~~rrns

1

~"""'

0:::

BASKET A DAY
GIVEAWAY
April1 thru April 30, 2007
$15.00 Ticket or 2 Tickets
for $20.00
All proceeds go to Meigs
County Relay for Life
Questions or Tickets call
Jerry or Donna Aleshire

Manressea. bunk beds, &amp;&amp;de, AI in Good Cond.
Dinenes, recliners. Ntce (7-40)208-837&amp;
2002 Bass Tllld&lt;or lishing ;__c.__ _ _ _ __
Kieler Built- Valley-Bisonboel.
(7401446-4782 Horoe
attd
Livestock
Gallipoli$, OH, Hrs 11·3 (M- Trlllefa·
Loadn'wl -

up. Referel'lees. CaM 992· GraciOUS living. 1 and 2 bed-

6886.

=. ~~'c,':.":; ' ~!..~':;

Used furniture ttore, 130 1953 GokMn Jubiee Tracklt,

•

Pomeroy. 2 or 3 BR..
Naylers Aurv'Condor. No

Phillip
Alder

Mos.

gas and et.ctric avlilable now on John
ranges. aif coucltiouen, and Detft Z Trak Z.O 'TUmll
wringef washers. Will do 5.11'.4 F!Md Rate 01'1 JoM
repaks on majol blar\1S 1n Deere QMora C&amp;riT'Iid'IMI
shop or 81 your hOmO.
Equipmenl (740)44&amp;-2412.

ei

Mtdd CIA 740-843-5264

ACROSS

!Of's,

(304)882-3017

34 Br.

iilfiiliiiiiiiiiio_.l

Repair-675-7388. For l&amp;le, ..._ . .
re-condittoned &amp;lltomatic ..,
washers &amp; cltyera, refrigefl- O'IWt Financing· 36

garage,
storage,
Call •Washer/aryer hOOkup
(740)992-5094 and klave •Atl electriC· avet&amp;Qif'IO
message.
$5()-$Wmon1h
•Owner pavs water, HWef,
For rent 3 beQ'oom, 2 bath
I rash

IF)! r--::",_.....,,_--, Gooseneck.

room apanmems a1 Village

Dumps.

&amp;
Utility· A.luma Aluminum

~...,

.:vut~.Jli"IU

Gocll:wt,

Tral..,.- B&amp;W Gooseneck
Hitches·
Trailer
Parts.
Carmi(:h&amp;el
Trailers.
• From $327·$592 Col 740- Model 11-87-sps 12 ga.
7 r"i446---2•4•12_ _ _...,
992·5064 . Equal Housing Spuer·Mag, auto. 2 314· 3-3 il
l 40
11
Manor

and

Riverstc»

Apartments in Middleport.

r

14x70 Trader lor Rent in Opponunnies.

113 1nch chamber, Mossy

Ewington,

oak Break-up in bol S600:
LIVOOOCK
Mos&amp;bef'g 9200 12 ga , auto __
turkey, auto, WO()(jlands
Camo, 24 inch, V-R-b b L-1- 12 y-r.old Arabian sonel. tull
in box, $400; 45 cat KnigN, blooded Gelding. $300 OBO
7 2 1652
D.I.S.C
w/Simmons _40-__56-__ _ _ _ _
21C10x44 Scope,
$300. 4-H Pigs for sale born
vaVIJI
r40!992-3992
between 1128 &amp; 211 740- ..._ . .tji'OiliiiSAL£iiiiii·. ._,.

$3,25/mo.

(]40)388-8?26
Immaculate 1 Bedroom Apt,
- - - - - - - - Newly Carpeted. Freshty
38R, 2BA. Rio Grandi area. Painted &amp; Decorated. New
No
pets.
References appliances, WID Hookup,

~~;: 36~~~~0-

~~~~cy

PrivRioa~e

Fence, tr
1
~....,.-'-------- n:onung, 2 m1n. om
Mobi&amp;e Home lot In Johnson Grande, Must see IO appre$425

Mobile Home f:lark in
Gallipolis. &lt;Wt
Phcme
(740)446-2003 or (740)4461

~----,
1140r9·-AYr\JnMFNrs
tl.Mt. lhNJ.·

r

loo~--oiiiiiiiliiot-pl

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments

lor Rani, Meigs County, In
town, No Pets, Deposit
Required, (740)992-5 174 01
(740)441-0110.
-------1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unturnished, sewrlty deposit
required, no pels, 740-9922218.
::::,:.::._______
2 bedrooms. living room .
kl1chen, 1 bath, apartment
have central air. Furnished
with C'OIJCh, chairs, washer,
dryer. stove, microwave,
beds, dinning table and
chairs $400 deposit, $450 a
month call 304-882-2523

~;~:=~~~. )

14 595

-

Immaculate 2 bedroom
apartment New carpet &amp;
callina1S. lreshly
/Dpeinledk &amp;
·decorated, W
hoo up.
Beauti1ul country setting.
Must see to ctpprec~ate .
$400/mo. (6141595-n73 or
l-800-798_4686.
'
-------Middleport, N. 4th A.ve .• 2
lfienc Dep&amp; re~
room 8
Y·
·
mrences. No pets. Utilities paid.
74()-992-0165.

~rillidi""'-•A":',.....
~~·---,~

mini

Motor

2 Sludded Snow tires 14' off
S-10 set of Snow chains
304-812-2359
3 steel shipping crates 22ft 11.
12ft. 11-h high 304-675·

on the first month's rent
AERATtQN MOTORS
2BA Apts. 6 mites lrom Repaired, New &amp; Rebuih In
Holzer. Water, sewer, trash Stock. Call Ron Evans. tpaid. 74()-682-9243 or 988- 800-537-9528.
6130

- - - - - - - - light blue lift chair 2
New 2BR
apartments. weeks,okl,tag still attached.
Washer/dr~er
hookup~ Firm $500. 992-2546 or 992stove/reh'igeratOf indudad. 6517.
Also, units on SA 160. Pets - -- - - - - leave 0 message and num- Weloome! (740)441·0194.
NEW AND USED STEEL
bar ~ not 01 home
- - - - - . , . - - - - - Sleet Beams. Pip&amp; Rebar
- - - - - - - - lara
TOwnhouse For
Concrete,
A.ngle,
2 room elfidency apl. lot Apar1men1S. Very Spacious. Channel. Flat Bar. Sleel
rent. 7 mites from Gallipol~ 2 Bedrooms. CIA. 1 1/2 Grating
For
Drains,
on At.7 South. Furnished- Balh. M.r~ Pool &amp; Baby D&lt;i...,.Y. &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
room for only 1 car. Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo. Scrap Metals Open Monday,
$250/month + deposit. CaiI No Pets, Lease Plus Tuesday, Wednestt.w &amp;
_,
446-4514.
Se&lt;:urit)' Deposit Required, Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Cklsed
2bdr. - l y decoroied, WID (740)367·7086.
Thursday, Saturda,
&amp;

,,klge '"··

Aef. and deposit reQUired. 6679

::.40;.:_4c_46c_.!_~l~'---•

Equal

Housing

_""'""'
__·~·-·
.....,.........
' on· ':______

Yery nice 2 BA Apt in
Ravenswood. Fully fur·
nished. AJIIinens, cookware.

~·~·D
I YIUY , washer, dryer, new
carpet and paint All utilties
i~l~. ~ t~m t~

no problem. $650. (304)S32·

i

A HIDDEN TREASURE' a811411'.7•-~----,
laurel
Commons
Sl'A.t.'l:
tUR lbNr

Apartments. largest in the
area! Beau!Wul~ reno•alad

"'(304=)2'-'73-=3=344"'----- lion' 749 Third Avenue· in
Aperlmenl lor rani, 1-2 Gallipolis. Rani $400/mo.
Bcttm., remodeled, new car· Call Wayne (404}4.56-3802
pel, slove &amp; !rig .. wale•. - - - - - ' - - - sewer. trash pel. Middleport Prime commercial space fof
$425.00. No pelS. Rol. rani a1 Springvallay Plaza.
required. 740-843-5264.
Ca1164&amp;-2192.

7 - 172

(740)742-2357

Five

tOO% baby goats 2002
Saturn
SO,OOOK
Boers. Male. Father. reg with $5995.00-·2000 Pl~mouth
paper$. call 740..256-6931 Breeze
$3995.00--2000
k:H' more into.
FOf'd Escourt ZX2 $3795.00-'--'-----M
T
Meal Goats, born wk of -99
ercu~
racer
1114/07. $75.00-$100.00. c$3395hoosa.OO andlr""'~.mor.,,e,_lo.
74(1-643..2497
vo"
"'
--'-- - - - - - - Motora 2 blocks above
Quality 4-H ShOw pigs. Now McDonalds Pomeroy, OH
Private Trea~ at latm. 521 1740 )992-3490.
Ewlngton Road, Vinton.
Ohio 740-388-0IS3 Of 645. 98 S1ratus, Aula, 4Jr, CO,
$1600. OBO 256·1652 01
1644
- ' - - - - - - - - 256-1?33
Quality ~show Pigs• from - - ' - - - - - Triple p
FarmFrom
Cook Moton
National Winning Breedng 2002 Cavaier Z-24 37,000
Slock. ~vailatlla lor viewing. milea. liko new $4900. 2005
by appoinlmont. on Maroh Sunfire Spor120 Sunrool
26. Bartow&amp; 5tarting 0 24,000 miles S6900. 2002
$150. Gills
$200, 304· Cavalier 4D, 5 Speed
675-17g&amp;
59,000 mile$ $4500. 1999
_:_:_:..::__~--- Jeep Wrangle&lt; $6900. 1999
Show pigs tor sale· starting Malibu $3100.2000 S· 10
•-•·1 ,_
Fe~·~ Farm
.....,.
· LS Auto $4700. 1999
24..JOu.g 57 .__.......
740- 5- 1
Taurus $2500. 1993 Honda
U..w &amp;
Del Sot 2D $2800. Olhers in

Dodge

r"'--•GiwN••--"I

~.

2003 E250 Ford Cargo Van.
bins. ladder rack. ac. towing

r-

~

AI1IUi
~ . . .,..
rr..__ ~

I

--

-~~ ~hr......
An.
package, 1,;01l ~""""· 7-.v698·2613

J.;r;~;;;~~:i;il
11

1.,--

[.'g--~lR-OCKSiiiiiiilo-,.1

4x4
FOil SAL£

74Q-256-1233

- -- - - - - -

swl~n3tymon.

r

oeo

I

1987 Harley Da•idson FTC
SOcubic inch, leather bags,
runs strong, $7150. 740-

441·8953.
2003 Honda XA-80. Like
new condition. St500 Phone

446·0941
2004

Kawasaki, Vulcan,
500cc, 1509 miles $4,000

and Quali1y

850 Nighlhawk. $1400. 740379- 9242

r. Mole~~~-~
.,_ ~ ·I
1998

24ft

Dutchman

Camper,freezer.
ACffurnace,
stove,
fridge,
microwave,
walk around bed, excellent
condilion. $700). 740-4466982

Call Gary Stanley @

Concnt"' Removal
and Replac-t

Jim's Small Engine
Repair
740-992-2432
Get ready tor spring
also selling ATV Parts
32119 Welchtown Rd.
Pomeroy. OH 45769

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors. Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling. Room
Additions
Local Contractor

ancea (7401992-3543
BEAUTIFUL
MENTS

APART-

AT

PRICES AT
ESTATES,

52

1

,

'\, \

\ ! \

"'

AU~Of
ConmteW\ld&lt;

David Lewis
74D-992-6971

I~~~~~~~~

30 Yrs. E&gt;p. Ins.
Owner Ronnie Jones

lnsu

Free Estimates

FrMEt.tkna

.'
t

Deale r South
South

,.
,.
I •

6t

We!\l
Pa.ss
Pa:.s
Pass
Pass

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

www.*'Wbl:ta"ICIIC"•N= by.....

~VMPTY IS ST~P.TING

TO
fAI,.Lf

I

(\""',-,.·''"'
(

All pass

wife

wrongdoi~

thought
47 Oppoood
22 Damper
48 Swarm
24 Spa ameniaround
ty 12 wds.) 49 Tarzan

25 Sltulka

· style
P~c119s,

32 1.* bloomor
33 Footlights
35 Playing
mar1lle
37 Boigs
38 Wyoming
range
39 Journal YIPs
40 HUe....,..

tO Drink with

34 Malitious

Jallin•llt

scones

elves

6

as clouds

43 AN better
45 Help in

19 Summer
top
20 Form a

50
52
53
54

around

26 Clanched
aa a ship
hand
7 Lamb's pen
27- as we
name
8 Bonfire
speak
residue
28 Mice feet
9 - been
29 Urn

companion
Grauland
L.amprey

Tovornfare
"Tht", IO
WoHpna

homophone

had!

When the mator·sUII limit raise - a
game-invitational jump-raise of one ot a
major to three of that major - gan)9d
acceptance in this coontry, there was a
need !Of' a game-forcing raJse.

EN\1'1 IS A SIN !! -......__ THAT'S TH' FOURlM
THOU SHALT NOT COVET TIME TH' PARSON'S
TH'( NEIGHBOR'S
PREACHED THIS
POSSESSIONS !!
SERMON !!

SINCE HE GOT THAT

FANCY TV!!

-------y-

This became known - surprise. surpnsel - as the Jacoby Forcing MapSuit Raise. It is a great convention. txJt
with unusual rab1ds by opener. A new
suit that is bid by opener at the three·
level shows not length in that su1t but
shortage - a singleton. or perhaps a
vo1d Then the respond~r can judge
whether h1s honors are working

This deal ISa great advertisement for the
Jacoby Forcing Raise.
Aller Soulh opens one spade. Nonh can

dubs.(You don't count any card beyond
three 1n a suit as a loser.) But when
Soulh reb ids lhrae clubs. showing a ~ n­
gleton or void, North's losers there evap-

1•111
IIDEll
ClllmKI.
• New Homes
• Garages

•Complete
Remodeling

---1171
Slop &amp; Compare

by Luis Campos
;n crootoo lrQm QI.Kita:\Ons ttY 1arrous oeoo1e DaSI :n:l presert
Each I!lief mtnt a ~ Slaros lor cn:nner

~ C1~ ~ograms

doses ol Blackwood belore bidding

~ 1-\"'\/E. TO RW &lt;y;&gt;
11\AA'l ~t&gt;S
EK.f\ tlt&gt;.'i, W€. ~'I
t&gt;I(Lt&gt; "'~ Cto,R!

Tooay·s due: 1equals Z

SB\Ien spades.

THE BORN LOSER

,..PI..EME.! I'ro\ OOT

West led a tru mp. South saw that 11was
a case ol hunl the lady - lhe diamond
queen. He set out to discover as much

,..-a.\E."'- YOU &lt;-OUL t&gt;

PIC.to::t'- E.I/~ "-"

DRII/E. IT10 N~K

about the distribution as possible, rutting

Ot.t&gt;..)U~~

mt&gt; l't&gt; KE£1&gt; cv~&lt;:
GOOt&gt; (_~ "'' t\Vr'\&lt;-'1

three clubs in his hand and one heart on
the board. Declare• learned lhat East
had begun with one spade. six hearts
and five clubs - hence only one dia·
mond. So South cashed his diamond
king , then played a diamond to dummy's
tack to land the grand slam .

wtu. oo!

St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio

Mike w. Marcum, Owner

Additions
Garages
Roofing
Vinyl Siding
New Construction Interior Remodeling
Residential &amp; Commen:ial
740-9&amp;5-4141 Ollke
740-416-1834

CELEBRITY CIPHER

orate because he knows South can ruff
them 1n his hand. So, North uses two

...... Cllbaclllt

24 Hrs. (740) 446• 0870. Rogets Basemen!

llass

container

1t Makealypo 36 CJooO.byoo
13 Pedro's
42 Recto by,

see several losers: one spade, ooe
heart, one or two diamonds and two

IMPRovnt.ttNIS

CaU

East
Pass
Pass

Game-invitational
to game-forcing

. . . . Clablcllll ...

WATERPROOFING

North
t NT
4 NT
5 NT
7•

Opening lead: • 6

BARNEY

SAVINGS

Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.

.'\ 6 3
K :i 4

4t Civil War
aotdier
1 Yollow parts 42 Dolhi
6 Say by
honorific
heart
43 TV net-k
12 L.atge planot 44 Fond du14 Cromwell 's 46 Perfume !aname
bol-d
t5 Protein
48 Boach near
souru
Loa Angeles
t6 Straioht
51 Like junk
17 FNight
mail , usually
weight
55 Unwrapped
18 Youth
56 TV19 Get amove
Rali..,ron
57 j!ears and
2t Startled
tigers
cries
· 58 Lazybones
23 Codlj&amp;rs'
quenes
OOWN
26 Novelty
27 Before,
1 Mr. Brynner
2 Crude metal
to poets
28 Lymg down 3 Fall behind
30 Dot in the
4 Coach Seine
Rockne
31 Huge
5 WrestUng

To !ill the 'IOid. Oswald Jacoby proposed
using two no-lrump as the response.

•

BIG NATE
H!Y '
NO

Astro. ·
Graph
-

&lt;lllrthdlt':

Thursdalv. March 29, 2007
By Bemice &amp;.d. 0.01
You Will get an opportunity to add to your
warehouse t&gt;f knowledge in your chosen
field of endeavor. Fn1d the lime to take
advantage of it , because it will greatly

" U VIIGB

OAB

POEDOUKT
PBSUKT

RAEVVBKTB

EO

AIIN

IBDII
VCRA

ERRIIVFVUPA ."

MS

BGBOW

HEW

EKH

U REK

• VEDOAE

POBNEDO

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' What's past rs prologue.· - William ShakespOare

'I""""' lhink ol the luture ~comes soon enough.' ·Albert Etnstetn

~~~:~~~ S©"R~~-~"B~se
141to4

Q Reorronge

~~

WOlD
lAIII

ClAY l. POUAN _;__ _ __

lett•rs of tl\e

1&lt;rombled words be·
low to form four sirnplt word, .
lour

I

CR!TOV

enhance you r earn1ng capabilities

L--------'

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homeftll System
• Helios System

ty days att.r tll9 last 1, at "-ge 487; thence being the Northeast

ARIES !March 2 1-April19) - Someone

We Deliver To You!

who isn't too smart about whom they milt

w1th in soctat Situalions might invite you
to an event. Belter check to see whom is
1n'llited before you dectdo to toin the
group.

T(.IE BIJ514AD
COME, I'D 6E ON
IT,ANO 1'0 6E AAI.F
WA'( TO SC(.IOOL
I~

70 Pine Streel • Gallipolis
446-0007

led an appllclllon ,to (3) 21 , 28, (4) 4, t1

courue:
centerline and along
revlu a Coal Mining (1) North 23 dagraea tll9 North Una of uld
l'lrmh (APR) fR-35449' tO" East a distance LotS North 55 do8-•
62 to lite
Ohio
Public Notice
ot 13.70 leetto a point; 19' 12" W..t paning
Department ol Natural
(2) North t3 do8,_. through 518" Iron pin
RMou-. DtvlaiOn of SHERIFF SALES
43' 08" East a dlalance ut at a dlatance of
' Mintral
RnourcN CASE
NUMBER ol134.971eettoapoint 37.00 r..t, 182.76 teet
Ma~nt
Tll9. 08CV143
being the
and 337.00 feet and
t\ppllca~ to Revl• 1 Deutsc119
Bank ot said '*'*lint and going a total distance
Ptnnlt (ARP) 11 localtd National
Trust the
centtrllne
of of 357.00 feet to t119
In Fractional S.Ctlona Company N Trull"
Township road t173;
principal point o1
2and 12, T-8 N, R·15 W., Plaintiff
Thence ltaving uid beginning, containing
Salem
Township, va
County Road t3 and · 3.0836 acres, more or
Melp County, Ohio, on Paul E. Laudertnlh et al along 1119 cen..,llne of leoa.
the
property
of Defendants
Township Road t173 Subject to all lepl
Southern Ohio Coal Court of Common the following four .....,..,ta and rightsCompany.
Tll9 Pleea, Mlllga County, couraas:
of·way.
AppltcallontoRevlua Oblo
(1) South 78 ,..._ -rings wera darlvod
Permit (ARP) encom- In pureuance of an 45' 00" Eaat paaalng from a previous survey
P8aMe 11.0 ac,.. and OI'IMr of .... to ,.. through a point at a racordod In Deod Book
Ia locatod on the dlrttetod from said distance ot 148.17 teet 284, at "-ge 101. Tll9
Rutlltnd 7.5 minute court In the above anti- being the Northwest above daecrlptlon waa
USGS
Quadrangle tlod action, I will corner of lllid 0.617 prepared from an actumap, epproxlrnalely 2 expoM to tale at pub- acre, more or leso, at survey made on the
ntllea' Nortll9aat of lie auc:tlon on the front tract and going a total 3rd day of August,
Salem Centar, Ohio. IIepa of the Meigs · diatanc:e of 203.76teet 1989, by c . Thomas
The purpoaa of .the Courtly Courthouse on to a point;
Smith,
Ohio
propoud ARP Ia to Friday, lilly 4, 2007 111 (2) South 7Q degrees Professional Surveyor
allow tor conatructlon 10:00 a.m., of uld day, 20' 00" East a distance H844.
modlllcaUona to Pond 1119
followlllfl of 84.78 laet to a point Properly
Address :
013. POnd 013 Ia a por· daecribod rtal "ta"': being the northeast 33756 New Lima Road,
tion of 1119 overaN Situate In the County corner of aald 0.617 Rutland. Oho
lnlloltatlon of wa"" ot Motlp, Townslllp of acre, more or less, Property Ownt,.: Paul
E. Laudermllt ond V.
handling and trtat· Rullend and State of tract:
ment teciNtlu tlllll wll Oblo, to-wit
(3) South 62 dagraea Louise Laudertnlh
be utlllzod to handle Belllfl a 0.617 acre, 39' 43" Eaat a distance Prior Deod Referant:9:
415
tll9 comblnod mine more or tess, tro1ct ot of 143.29 teet to a O.R. 221,
drainage
frono land 11 recorded In point;
PPNt: 11-41063.00
Southern Ohio Coal DMd Book 284, at (4) South 54 degrees Appraised
at
C"""*'y'a Mine No. 2 Page
101,
Melga 011' 14" East a distance $75,000.00
andlllnello.31.
County
Rec:order'a ol114.291eettoapoint Terms ot Sale: Cannot
Thla eppllcatlon Ia Office, Melp County, being the lnterMctlon be sold tor lua then
on flte lor public v...,. Oblo, II*&gt; being U.W of uid centerline ot 2l3rda of the -alsod
lllfl II the Melp tracts or land as Township Road t173 value. 10% down on
County
"-corder's recordod In Deod Book and the c:enlarlint ot day o1 ute, calli or
Office, Melge County 314, II "-ge 213, al.o Little Leading Creek; certlflod check, bel·
Court House, 100 E. being a part of Thence
ltavlng ance due on conflr,.
Sllconcl
Sm,t. Frectlon
No
3, Township Road t173 lion of - ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 457H Township • 6 North, and along the - · The -lllul did no&amp;
and allall rentaln .a lor RMge
14- Wut, line of lllid c'"k the Include an ln*lor
II '-1 thirty doya fol. Rutland
To•nshlp, following th'" cour&amp;- examination of the
loWtnv lila teat liMe ol Melp Counly, Slaa. of aa:
houu.
pubtlcllllon of thia Oblo and mora partlcot- (1) South 34 degrHtl Robert E. Beegle,
notice. Written • - larty deacrlbod 11 fof.. 52' 10'' Wast a distance Meigs County Sheriff
or raquolla tor Iowa:
of 159.74 teet to a Attorney
for
the
an lnlormel con..,auce Beginning at a point In point;
PlainUH
nooy be flied willl the 1119 cen..,llna
of (21 South 79 degr09s Reimvr, Lorber It
Dlvlalon of MI-ll County Q which 49' 52" Waat a distance Arnovetz
A • • o u r c e a Ia asaurod to be the of 147.00 teet to a P.O. Box 968
Man..-,
2045 most NorthwHtarly point;
"
24SO Edlaon BlVd
Moria lloed, Building cor- of Lot 8 of (31 South 34 degrees TWIIIIIIurg, 0+144057
K-3, Columbue, Ohio Qraltem'a ~ . . tor 06" w..t. distance ~1
~. wllhln lhlr- recorded In DHd Book ol63.67 to a point (31 28 (4) 4, 11

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Be realistic as to what your capa bilities and tal·
enl s are before takmg on a large ob/ective. If it is something you've never OOoe
before, do lots of homework befOre tack·
ling the projecl.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - A taclless

PEANUTS

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

MUilfAL
Southern Ohio Coal date of pubtlcallon of along uld centerline corner of uld Lot 8;
INsntUIIHNTS
the following two Thence leaving uld
"--oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil_.l Compllny hu aubmh· this notice.

Modern 1 BR Apt. Call 446· selling a1 hoW price. 7403736
339-0681.
;

740-367-02661
1-800-9SO-J359

26 Years Experience

(j=am1/lJ ...~.,"="~"'·ti'!!H"4!!ft:••

JACKSON owned Appliances, all undar 74()-645-6987
Woslwood Warranly. also have recon- lrr;..;,~~----, LEGAL NOTICE

Walk lo shop &amp; movies Cwl
740·446·2568
Equal by 1304)675·7999
Housing Opporlllnily.
- - - - - - - - - Wurhtzer Piano, excettent
Moving sale. All must gal
condition. 740-441-7098
CONVENIENTLY LOCAl· 119 Raven Crest Drive
EO l AFFORDABLE!
Apltl .Gallipolis, Ohio. off
Townhouse
apartments, BulleviMe Pike, Mn on to
ancilor small hQuses FOfl linwood and go to the dead
RENT. Call (740)441·1111 end Everytlting on~ abou1
lor application &amp; information. 1 year okl. Most things are

Senior Citizen
Discount

on

BASEMENT

'

.J ~!l752

• 7
.. KJ984

I I):)

•

• Top • Removal
• Trim • Stump
Grinding • Bucket
Truck
Full insuri:d

1l\

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
•
4577t
740--2217

and Appiehoad Chihuahua
Pre- pups. Spring lap babies.

Drive from $365 to $560. ditioned Big Screen TV's

I,\ 1

Pine Hills GQII Course
April 3rd 5:30
All churches welcome
inlo call740.378·6t44

-os.

Appliance Worehouse

~I

H111 s s ,· !t
S t,lr,1\ ]t'

.

¥

II 1\ h
'

Christian Fellowship
Golf League
at

'--•iiiii-_.1 ::--=--:--,--::-:-Tiny Toy
(F) Rag.

BUDGET in Henderson, WY.

Ea,s t

Suuth
6A.ll 08 7t

F-.Eatlmates

~. . . . . . . . . . . . . .~

.

U·Q7

t\ 763

6 5
lJ l 0
Q ':.t ll 63:!

.. Q

UJ

Vulnerable: East·West

Beau!iful 1 brl 1ba, available
Eng.Mastiff puppies. 12 wks
right away, must see to •'111""~~----. old. AKC Reg. Excellent
HovsoiOW
Bloodtines. 740-245-5823 or
appreciate. cable hookup,
first. last. plus deposit, relet(i()(U
740..645-1912

riD

•

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

-. 1 I~\ ll I "

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS
FOR BARGAINS

•

.

l:iiF;.;.;~~,;;,;;~
u....IE
.-.uf'

riO

MONTY

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

740-367.0536

94 Suzu~ DR400. dirllstraet
N'
$I400 H nda
1 e. 1ce 1..
. o

4

Wt&gt;sl

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Work
*Reasonable Rate!-.
*Insured
*Experien4.:ed
References A-vailable!

2006 Honda 400 ATV, 4x4,

1990 4x4 Toyota pickup, Wate~proofing.
• $2700 (740)379-2615
·
ises,
Heritage
Farms
r'"31n''n~~"::l~~rl~~i'l.n'•nn~,
$350/lirm (304)675-5724
BBTO'jola Carmy. Good con-I
dition. Great gas mileage.
CKC Toy Poocle puppies, $700.740-446-7017
females. Shots and WOtmed.
Cream in ootor. $300 each.
740-256-3188
D'liD

*Prompl

74D-367-o544

b'k

North
6 K Q ':f 4
• K &lt;
t A J 10

{]amibJ I•OOijJ:I

Stanley Tree. Trimming
&amp; Removal

(304)675·7243
or 2x4, Auto Of Manuel Shift,
4yr warr81lty, winch, bags,
Racks, Ramp&amp; &amp; Alx .. 200
mile. $5500. (740)446-6970

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

t

Caravan,

or256·9031

o

Sunday.(740)446-7300
lhs/3.000 mile
- ·..
Oak firewood for sale.
740-446-D103. 328 Jackson
Delivered
or
pickup. (150) Round BaJes Hay dry Pike
(740)441·0941, (740)645· &amp; covered $15 each lrlii--~----,
5945_ CAA HEAP .............
...............--.. "-(304;_)6_7_5_1_82_4_ _ _ _
_
FOR SALE
Round bales of mixed hay.
Retired Trudl diMir selling Nevel wet. 446-2485
headache rack. 4" straps &amp;
02 F150, 58,000 miles. 740portable wenches, heavy
379-24 10
chains,
heavy
screw
binders, iod( over binders, 2 used rKiing lawn mowers 1995 Ford Ranger 411.4
24x24 tarps. ttu~
rolooffer
hlel.
All need
,,......., CO«&lt;s and 'used
Make
' 740
256 $3,500 304-675·3164 after
of var. sizes. 304-675-2051
repll'.
·
·
• 5pm
_&amp;ro
__1_____________
SOars 12.5 HP Riding Lawn
2 Willy's Jeeps lor sole. 59 &amp;
Mower Runs good $250 John Deere 425, $4400. 61 . Both run, both have hard
304-675·1504
John Deere G110, $3000. ' lops. $2200.00. Ph. 379-D.R. Walk Behind, $3000. 2706
740-446-nJl
lltlr---:-:~--,

throughout including brand Commercial buildinn "For AKC G
S"-ph d
• off
erman
rra
er .
new kitehen an d bat h· R&amp;nt" 1600 squcue feet.
Starting at $405. Call today!
G
I
pups. Top bloOdline, large
street parking. real oca- breed both parents on prem-

$3200,

~12::33::..:0!;.:2::56-c:....:l.:c652::..__ _ _

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

Please lea\'C mcssa c

1979Bayliner, 17'. 75hpout- 2002

$300 . 080 call 740-256- trailer. s1600 080: 1998
Jeep Wra~r. 4cly, auto,
Home Golf84.000 mHas $2~ Fwr Moat Goe!S, R&lt;iady lo 4x4, 89,000 miles, $7.000
old&amp;r
-cart, gas. """""' go. Born early January. 060: 1998 Pontiac Firet:Wrd,
condition $800 304-773- $75 .00
each.
Steve V-6, auto. Hops, 113,000
5132
Stapleton. 740-256-1619 or miles.
$4,000
OBO.
1984-Toyola

AU lypes co!Krele

740-7~~ - 229J

~

Blade. Mare. blOke to ride. board motor w/m1racte lift 86000 miles, runs great.

- - - - - - - . . , . - _20_5_1_____ _ _
Move in now and save $100
JET

.-up: renga &amp;
Twin Rivers Tower is acceptnished. new oond: no pets ing applications for wailing
75
5162
Ret &amp; Dep (304)6 lis! for Hud-subsized, 1· br.
3and4roomfurniShedapts. apartmentfor
the
Clean WID hookup. Nc pels. elderly/disabled call 675-

i

~~~~~IS 1 -594
- ·303_1_._____ '
19 ~

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

BRIDGE

ThorllpSON Appliance &amp;

and $475 Qownslalrs. Extras • 213 bedroom apattments
like new deck, sunroom, •Central heat &amp; AJC

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydailysentinel.com

tongue ot an 1rtitating indi\lidual m1ght
make you the target of hislher remarks
Consider lhe source and remain cool
CANCER (June 21-July 22) ~ Even il
'10u're domg bus1ness with a well·known
t~rm . shll gel guarantees or warrants in
case you need them in the l uture . Their
pohc1es for repairs or returns may not be
what you expecL
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Be careful ot
whom you allow to maKe decisions lor
you. If you're doing so just to be a goOO
guy/gal. it might turn out to be one of the
dumbest things you 've done in a long

8V NOW, AND I

'""''""'ton

...ge

t1me.

SUNSHINE CLUB

VIRGO iAug. 23-$8pt. 22) -

97 Beech Street
Midcileport. OH
10x10X10xl0
991·3194
or991-6635

Eioctri&lt;al l Plu~ng
Roofing. Gutlert

'iln~l

Sld6ng 6 Painting
Plltio Mel Porch DecO

WVOM726

\ C YOUNG Ill
-1'-/_ ·'

I -.,

'

"Mltkllatlorfs only

-'

......, ...
'

'

s.II-SIIIr....

'

GARFIELD

Raaycl•••

I'LL HAVE 11-IE PI-IONS
ef"I7E ME ALL NI~H1"

:•••••

-··=,=··~~:r:•
Ill 7 --1HI-

. ---··

Dl

....

'I?''

...

. . .. . . .

'PI . . . ....

GRIZZWELLS
~'t\\Elt , '+loi.ILI'
'*'1.1 ST\U.. 9E /11'1

~ \F~E.

00 'I~~~
COMPI..na'f
HUTS?

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Oblige - Crown - Le\lgc - Dogged - DO GOODER

Should you use a set ol muscles tor a

" l have found," the speaker at a big environment rally,
"that much hvm can be done by a IX&gt; GOODER."

heavy job that requ•res se&gt;Jera l sets lo
handle, you'll pa.,- the price lor a long

ARLO &amp;JANIS

time

Room Additiona I

.

Be reahst1c

about what your phy s1cal capabilitieS are.

Ct\RPEN TER
SERVICE

-ng
-Gor-

LOCERE

"lbere IS no remedy for love,"
the mom told her smitten
daughter, "but to- ---·-."

before raac!Lng

WOULDN'T eE
14ERE FOR 'I'OU
TO ASK ME!

YOUN G'S

0\ AG0

LIBRA (Sept. 2J·Oct. 23) - In most
t:ases. a persons bark. IS usually bigger
than hiS btte. But you could encounter
someone who has a habit of back1ng up
his words w1th h1s list. TSJul care who you
take on.
SCORPIO (Qct_ 24-NO'-' - 22) - II there IS
something that you need another to help
y ou with . be prepared to but1er him/her
up firsl or you aren't apt to get the assistance you need. 4rrogant means will be
met with res•stance
SAGtnARIUS (Nov 23-Dec 21) Subdue any inclination to rep ly in a rash
of anger should someone not share your
op1nion or v1ew on something that's
important lo you . Don't try to impose your
1deas on others
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) Mutual interests must be served in proper balance, or someone won't think ~i nd­
ly ol you lor not Ql\ling h im/her a fatr
share. She/he IS likely to use other
mea ns to even the score .
AQUAR IUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Usually
you're a pretty even-tempered 1ndiv1dual,'
but your luae might be far too short ltx
your own good. You could yell at someone who doesn·t deserve 1t and lose a
friend.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marctl 20) - Be pre·
pared to ha"'e to l•ke cere ot sometMing
that you l!lhOuld have dOne day&amp; ago. It
isn't likely to be the b•t hm1ng lor you
and cause you all kinde ol aggravation If
you rush .

SOUPTONUTZ

�Wednesday, March 28, 2007
ALLEY OOP
Ellm VIew
Apartments

~
to&lt; renl in
U1ddleport, 2 Dedtoom
apartments. both recentl)'
remodeled. $4 50 upstairs

=

7::.'7009 $450

House for rent ·

peiS. yard6. sir: WiD ,__

.
.
r

=

-,--------

I

"'1111""':~--:':'"".....- ,
~~.~
I.L......
.. ..-...
.~ 0~~rrns

1

~"""'

0:::

BASKET A DAY
GIVEAWAY
April1 thru April 30, 2007
$15.00 Ticket or 2 Tickets
for $20.00
All proceeds go to Meigs
County Relay for Life
Questions or Tickets call
Jerry or Donna Aleshire

Manressea. bunk beds, &amp;&amp;de, AI in Good Cond.
Dinenes, recliners. Ntce (7-40)208-837&amp;
2002 Bass Tllld&lt;or lishing ;__c.__ _ _ _ __
Kieler Built- Valley-Bisonboel.
(7401446-4782 Horoe
attd
Livestock
Gallipoli$, OH, Hrs 11·3 (M- Trlllefa·
Loadn'wl -

up. Referel'lees. CaM 992· GraciOUS living. 1 and 2 bed-

6886.

=. ~~'c,':.":; ' ~!..~':;

Used furniture ttore, 130 1953 GokMn Jubiee Tracklt,

•

Pomeroy. 2 or 3 BR..
Naylers Aurv'Condor. No

Phillip
Alder

Mos.

gas and et.ctric avlilable now on John
ranges. aif coucltiouen, and Detft Z Trak Z.O 'TUmll
wringef washers. Will do 5.11'.4 F!Md Rate 01'1 JoM
repaks on majol blar\1S 1n Deere QMora C&amp;riT'Iid'IMI
shop or 81 your hOmO.
Equipmenl (740)44&amp;-2412.

ei

Mtdd CIA 740-843-5264

ACROSS

!Of's,

(304)882-3017

34 Br.

iilfiiliiiiiiiiiio_.l

Repair-675-7388. For l&amp;le, ..._ . .
re-condittoned &amp;lltomatic ..,
washers &amp; cltyera, refrigefl- O'IWt Financing· 36

garage,
storage,
Call •Washer/aryer hOOkup
(740)992-5094 and klave •Atl electriC· avet&amp;Qif'IO
message.
$5()-$Wmon1h
•Owner pavs water, HWef,
For rent 3 beQ'oom, 2 bath
I rash

IF)! r--::",_.....,,_--, Gooseneck.

room apanmems a1 Village

Dumps.

&amp;
Utility· A.luma Aluminum

~...,

.:vut~.Jli"IU

Gocll:wt,

Tral..,.- B&amp;W Gooseneck
Hitches·
Trailer
Parts.
Carmi(:h&amp;el
Trailers.
• From $327·$592 Col 740- Model 11-87-sps 12 ga.
7 r"i446---2•4•12_ _ _...,
992·5064 . Equal Housing Spuer·Mag, auto. 2 314· 3-3 il
l 40
11
Manor

and

Riverstc»

Apartments in Middleport.

r

14x70 Trader lor Rent in Opponunnies.

113 1nch chamber, Mossy

Ewington,

oak Break-up in bol S600:
LIVOOOCK
Mos&amp;bef'g 9200 12 ga , auto __
turkey, auto, WO()(jlands
Camo, 24 inch, V-R-b b L-1- 12 y-r.old Arabian sonel. tull
in box, $400; 45 cat KnigN, blooded Gelding. $300 OBO
7 2 1652
D.I.S.C
w/Simmons _40-__56-__ _ _ _ _
21C10x44 Scope,
$300. 4-H Pigs for sale born
vaVIJI
r40!992-3992
between 1128 &amp; 211 740- ..._ . .tji'OiliiiSAL£iiiiii·. ._,.

$3,25/mo.

(]40)388-8?26
Immaculate 1 Bedroom Apt,
- - - - - - - - Newly Carpeted. Freshty
38R, 2BA. Rio Grandi area. Painted &amp; Decorated. New
No
pets.
References appliances, WID Hookup,

~~;: 36~~~~0-

~~~~cy

PrivRioa~e

Fence, tr
1
~....,.-'-------- n:onung, 2 m1n. om
Mobi&amp;e Home lot In Johnson Grande, Must see IO appre$425

Mobile Home f:lark in
Gallipolis. &lt;Wt
Phcme
(740)446-2003 or (740)4461

~----,
1140r9·-AYr\JnMFNrs
tl.Mt. lhNJ.·

r

loo~--oiiiiiiiliiot-pl

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments

lor Rani, Meigs County, In
town, No Pets, Deposit
Required, (740)992-5 174 01
(740)441-0110.
-------1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unturnished, sewrlty deposit
required, no pels, 740-9922218.
::::,:.::._______
2 bedrooms. living room .
kl1chen, 1 bath, apartment
have central air. Furnished
with C'OIJCh, chairs, washer,
dryer. stove, microwave,
beds, dinning table and
chairs $400 deposit, $450 a
month call 304-882-2523

~;~:=~~~. )

14 595

-

Immaculate 2 bedroom
apartment New carpet &amp;
callina1S. lreshly
/Dpeinledk &amp;
·decorated, W
hoo up.
Beauti1ul country setting.
Must see to ctpprec~ate .
$400/mo. (6141595-n73 or
l-800-798_4686.
'
-------Middleport, N. 4th A.ve .• 2
lfienc Dep&amp; re~
room 8
Y·
·
mrences. No pets. Utilities paid.
74()-992-0165.

~rillidi""'-•A":',.....
~~·---,~

mini

Motor

2 Sludded Snow tires 14' off
S-10 set of Snow chains
304-812-2359
3 steel shipping crates 22ft 11.
12ft. 11-h high 304-675·

on the first month's rent
AERATtQN MOTORS
2BA Apts. 6 mites lrom Repaired, New &amp; Rebuih In
Holzer. Water, sewer, trash Stock. Call Ron Evans. tpaid. 74()-682-9243 or 988- 800-537-9528.
6130

- - - - - - - - light blue lift chair 2
New 2BR
apartments. weeks,okl,tag still attached.
Washer/dr~er
hookup~ Firm $500. 992-2546 or 992stove/reh'igeratOf indudad. 6517.
Also, units on SA 160. Pets - -- - - - - leave 0 message and num- Weloome! (740)441·0194.
NEW AND USED STEEL
bar ~ not 01 home
- - - - - . , . - - - - - Sleet Beams. Pip&amp; Rebar
- - - - - - - - lara
TOwnhouse For
Concrete,
A.ngle,
2 room elfidency apl. lot Apar1men1S. Very Spacious. Channel. Flat Bar. Sleel
rent. 7 mites from Gallipol~ 2 Bedrooms. CIA. 1 1/2 Grating
For
Drains,
on At.7 South. Furnished- Balh. M.r~ Pool &amp; Baby D&lt;i...,.Y. &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
room for only 1 car. Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo. Scrap Metals Open Monday,
$250/month + deposit. CaiI No Pets, Lease Plus Tuesday, Wednestt.w &amp;
_,
446-4514.
Se&lt;:urit)' Deposit Required, Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Cklsed
2bdr. - l y decoroied, WID (740)367·7086.
Thursday, Saturda,
&amp;

,,klge '"··

Aef. and deposit reQUired. 6679

::.40;.:_4c_46c_.!_~l~'---•

Equal

Housing

_""'""'
__·~·-·
.....,.........
' on· ':______

Yery nice 2 BA Apt in
Ravenswood. Fully fur·
nished. AJIIinens, cookware.

~·~·D
I YIUY , washer, dryer, new
carpet and paint All utilties
i~l~. ~ t~m t~

no problem. $650. (304)S32·

i

A HIDDEN TREASURE' a811411'.7•-~----,
laurel
Commons
Sl'A.t.'l:
tUR lbNr

Apartments. largest in the
area! Beau!Wul~ reno•alad

"'(304=)2'-'73-=3=344"'----- lion' 749 Third Avenue· in
Aperlmenl lor rani, 1-2 Gallipolis. Rani $400/mo.
Bcttm., remodeled, new car· Call Wayne (404}4.56-3802
pel, slove &amp; !rig .. wale•. - - - - - ' - - - sewer. trash pel. Middleport Prime commercial space fof
$425.00. No pelS. Rol. rani a1 Springvallay Plaza.
required. 740-843-5264.
Ca1164&amp;-2192.

7 - 172

(740)742-2357

Five

tOO% baby goats 2002
Saturn
SO,OOOK
Boers. Male. Father. reg with $5995.00-·2000 Pl~mouth
paper$. call 740..256-6931 Breeze
$3995.00--2000
k:H' more into.
FOf'd Escourt ZX2 $3795.00-'--'-----M
T
Meal Goats, born wk of -99
ercu~
racer
1114/07. $75.00-$100.00. c$3395hoosa.OO andlr""'~.mor.,,e,_lo.
74(1-643..2497
vo"
"'
--'-- - - - - - - Motora 2 blocks above
Quality 4-H ShOw pigs. Now McDonalds Pomeroy, OH
Private Trea~ at latm. 521 1740 )992-3490.
Ewlngton Road, Vinton.
Ohio 740-388-0IS3 Of 645. 98 S1ratus, Aula, 4Jr, CO,
$1600. OBO 256·1652 01
1644
- ' - - - - - - - - 256-1?33
Quality ~show Pigs• from - - ' - - - - - Triple p
FarmFrom
Cook Moton
National Winning Breedng 2002 Cavaier Z-24 37,000
Slock. ~vailatlla lor viewing. milea. liko new $4900. 2005
by appoinlmont. on Maroh Sunfire Spor120 Sunrool
26. Bartow&amp; 5tarting 0 24,000 miles S6900. 2002
$150. Gills
$200, 304· Cavalier 4D, 5 Speed
675-17g&amp;
59,000 mile$ $4500. 1999
_:_:_:..::__~--- Jeep Wrangle&lt; $6900. 1999
Show pigs tor sale· starting Malibu $3100.2000 S· 10
•-•·1 ,_
Fe~·~ Farm
.....,.
· LS Auto $4700. 1999
24..JOu.g 57 .__.......
740- 5- 1
Taurus $2500. 1993 Honda
U..w &amp;
Del Sot 2D $2800. Olhers in

Dodge

r"'--•GiwN••--"I

~.

2003 E250 Ford Cargo Van.
bins. ladder rack. ac. towing

r-

~

AI1IUi
~ . . .,..
rr..__ ~

I

--

-~~ ~hr......
An.
package, 1,;01l ~""""· 7-.v698·2613

J.;r;~;;;~~:i;il
11

1.,--

[.'g--~lR-OCKSiiiiiiilo-,.1

4x4
FOil SAL£

74Q-256-1233

- -- - - - - -

swl~n3tymon.

r

oeo

I

1987 Harley Da•idson FTC
SOcubic inch, leather bags,
runs strong, $7150. 740-

441·8953.
2003 Honda XA-80. Like
new condition. St500 Phone

446·0941
2004

Kawasaki, Vulcan,
500cc, 1509 miles $4,000

and Quali1y

850 Nighlhawk. $1400. 740379- 9242

r. Mole~~~-~
.,_ ~ ·I
1998

24ft

Dutchman

Camper,freezer.
ACffurnace,
stove,
fridge,
microwave,
walk around bed, excellent
condilion. $700). 740-4466982

Call Gary Stanley @

Concnt"' Removal
and Replac-t

Jim's Small Engine
Repair
740-992-2432
Get ready tor spring
also selling ATV Parts
32119 Welchtown Rd.
Pomeroy. OH 45769

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors. Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling. Room
Additions
Local Contractor

ancea (7401992-3543
BEAUTIFUL
MENTS

APART-

AT

PRICES AT
ESTATES,

52

1

,

'\, \

\ ! \

"'

AU~Of
ConmteW\ld&lt;

David Lewis
74D-992-6971

I~~~~~~~~

30 Yrs. E&gt;p. Ins.
Owner Ronnie Jones

lnsu

Free Estimates

FrMEt.tkna

.'
t

Deale r South
South

,.
,.
I •

6t

We!\l
Pa.ss
Pa:.s
Pass
Pass

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

www.*'Wbl:ta"ICIIC"•N= by.....

~VMPTY IS ST~P.TING

TO
fAI,.Lf

I

(\""',-,.·''"'
(

All pass

wife

wrongdoi~

thought
47 Oppoood
22 Damper
48 Swarm
24 Spa ameniaround
ty 12 wds.) 49 Tarzan

25 Sltulka

· style
P~c119s,

32 1.* bloomor
33 Footlights
35 Playing
mar1lle
37 Boigs
38 Wyoming
range
39 Journal YIPs
40 HUe....,..

tO Drink with

34 Malitious

Jallin•llt

scones

elves

6

as clouds

43 AN better
45 Help in

19 Summer
top
20 Form a

50
52
53
54

around

26 Clanched
aa a ship
hand
7 Lamb's pen
27- as we
name
8 Bonfire
speak
residue
28 Mice feet
9 - been
29 Urn

companion
Grauland
L.amprey

Tovornfare
"Tht", IO
WoHpna

homophone

had!

When the mator·sUII limit raise - a
game-invitational jump-raise of one ot a
major to three of that major - gan)9d
acceptance in this coontry, there was a
need !Of' a game-forcing raJse.

EN\1'1 IS A SIN !! -......__ THAT'S TH' FOURlM
THOU SHALT NOT COVET TIME TH' PARSON'S
TH'( NEIGHBOR'S
PREACHED THIS
POSSESSIONS !!
SERMON !!

SINCE HE GOT THAT

FANCY TV!!

-------y-

This became known - surprise. surpnsel - as the Jacoby Forcing MapSuit Raise. It is a great convention. txJt
with unusual rab1ds by opener. A new
suit that is bid by opener at the three·
level shows not length in that su1t but
shortage - a singleton. or perhaps a
vo1d Then the respond~r can judge
whether h1s honors are working

This deal ISa great advertisement for the
Jacoby Forcing Raise.
Aller Soulh opens one spade. Nonh can

dubs.(You don't count any card beyond
three 1n a suit as a loser.) But when
Soulh reb ids lhrae clubs. showing a ~ n­
gleton or void, North's losers there evap-

1•111
IIDEll
ClllmKI.
• New Homes
• Garages

•Complete
Remodeling

---1171
Slop &amp; Compare

by Luis Campos
;n crootoo lrQm QI.Kita:\Ons ttY 1arrous oeoo1e DaSI :n:l presert
Each I!lief mtnt a ~ Slaros lor cn:nner

~ C1~ ~ograms

doses ol Blackwood belore bidding

~ 1-\"'\/E. TO RW &lt;y;&gt;
11\AA'l ~t&gt;S
EK.f\ tlt&gt;.'i, W€. ~'I
t&gt;I(Lt&gt; "'~ Cto,R!

Tooay·s due: 1equals Z

SB\Ien spades.

THE BORN LOSER

,..PI..EME.! I'ro\ OOT

West led a tru mp. South saw that 11was
a case ol hunl the lady - lhe diamond
queen. He set out to discover as much

,..-a.\E."'- YOU &lt;-OUL t&gt;

PIC.to::t'- E.I/~ "-"

DRII/E. IT10 N~K

about the distribution as possible, rutting

Ot.t&gt;..)U~~

mt&gt; l't&gt; KE£1&gt; cv~&lt;:
GOOt&gt; (_~ "'' t\Vr'\&lt;-'1

three clubs in his hand and one heart on
the board. Declare• learned lhat East
had begun with one spade. six hearts
and five clubs - hence only one dia·
mond. So South cashed his diamond
king , then played a diamond to dummy's
tack to land the grand slam .

wtu. oo!

St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio

Mike w. Marcum, Owner

Additions
Garages
Roofing
Vinyl Siding
New Construction Interior Remodeling
Residential &amp; Commen:ial
740-9&amp;5-4141 Ollke
740-416-1834

CELEBRITY CIPHER

orate because he knows South can ruff
them 1n his hand. So, North uses two

...... Cllbaclllt

24 Hrs. (740) 446• 0870. Rogets Basemen!

llass

container

1t Makealypo 36 CJooO.byoo
13 Pedro's
42 Recto by,

see several losers: one spade, ooe
heart, one or two diamonds and two

IMPRovnt.ttNIS

CaU

East
Pass
Pass

Game-invitational
to game-forcing

. . . . Clablcllll ...

WATERPROOFING

North
t NT
4 NT
5 NT
7•

Opening lead: • 6

BARNEY

SAVINGS

Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.

.'\ 6 3
K :i 4

4t Civil War
aotdier
1 Yollow parts 42 Dolhi
6 Say by
honorific
heart
43 TV net-k
12 L.atge planot 44 Fond du14 Cromwell 's 46 Perfume !aname
bol-d
t5 Protein
48 Boach near
souru
Loa Angeles
t6 Straioht
51 Like junk
17 FNight
mail , usually
weight
55 Unwrapped
18 Youth
56 TV19 Get amove
Rali..,ron
57 j!ears and
2t Startled
tigers
cries
· 58 Lazybones
23 Codlj&amp;rs'
quenes
OOWN
26 Novelty
27 Before,
1 Mr. Brynner
2 Crude metal
to poets
28 Lymg down 3 Fall behind
30 Dot in the
4 Coach Seine
Rockne
31 Huge
5 WrestUng

To !ill the 'IOid. Oswald Jacoby proposed
using two no-lrump as the response.

•

BIG NATE
H!Y '
NO

Astro. ·
Graph
-

&lt;lllrthdlt':

Thursdalv. March 29, 2007
By Bemice &amp;.d. 0.01
You Will get an opportunity to add to your
warehouse t&gt;f knowledge in your chosen
field of endeavor. Fn1d the lime to take
advantage of it , because it will greatly

" U VIIGB

OAB

POEDOUKT
PBSUKT

RAEVVBKTB

EO

AIIN

IBDII
VCRA

ERRIIVFVUPA ."

MS

BGBOW

HEW

EKH

U REK

• VEDOAE

POBNEDO

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' What's past rs prologue.· - William ShakespOare

'I""""' lhink ol the luture ~comes soon enough.' ·Albert Etnstetn

~~~:~~~ S©"R~~-~"B~se
141to4

Q Reorronge

~~

WOlD
lAIII

ClAY l. POUAN _;__ _ __

lett•rs of tl\e

1&lt;rombled words be·
low to form four sirnplt word, .
lour

I

CR!TOV

enhance you r earn1ng capabilities

L--------'

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homeftll System
• Helios System

ty days att.r tll9 last 1, at "-ge 487; thence being the Northeast

ARIES !March 2 1-April19) - Someone

We Deliver To You!

who isn't too smart about whom they milt

w1th in soctat Situalions might invite you
to an event. Belter check to see whom is
1n'llited before you dectdo to toin the
group.

T(.IE BIJ514AD
COME, I'D 6E ON
IT,ANO 1'0 6E AAI.F
WA'( TO SC(.IOOL
I~

70 Pine Streel • Gallipolis
446-0007

led an appllclllon ,to (3) 21 , 28, (4) 4, t1

courue:
centerline and along
revlu a Coal Mining (1) North 23 dagraea tll9 North Una of uld
l'lrmh (APR) fR-35449' tO" East a distance LotS North 55 do8-•
62 to lite
Ohio
Public Notice
ot 13.70 leetto a point; 19' 12" W..t paning
Department ol Natural
(2) North t3 do8,_. through 518" Iron pin
RMou-. DtvlaiOn of SHERIFF SALES
43' 08" East a dlalance ut at a dlatance of
' Mintral
RnourcN CASE
NUMBER ol134.971eettoapoint 37.00 r..t, 182.76 teet
Ma~nt
Tll9. 08CV143
being the
and 337.00 feet and
t\ppllca~ to Revl• 1 Deutsc119
Bank ot said '*'*lint and going a total distance
Ptnnlt (ARP) 11 localtd National
Trust the
centtrllne
of of 357.00 feet to t119
In Fractional S.Ctlona Company N Trull"
Township road t173;
principal point o1
2and 12, T-8 N, R·15 W., Plaintiff
Thence ltaving uid beginning, containing
Salem
Township, va
County Road t3 and · 3.0836 acres, more or
Melp County, Ohio, on Paul E. Laudertnlh et al along 1119 cen..,llne of leoa.
the
property
of Defendants
Township Road t173 Subject to all lepl
Southern Ohio Coal Court of Common the following four .....,..,ta and rightsCompany.
Tll9 Pleea, Mlllga County, couraas:
of·way.
AppltcallontoRevlua Oblo
(1) South 78 ,..._ -rings wera darlvod
Permit (ARP) encom- In pureuance of an 45' 00" Eaat paaalng from a previous survey
P8aMe 11.0 ac,.. and OI'IMr of .... to ,.. through a point at a racordod In Deod Book
Ia locatod on the dlrttetod from said distance ot 148.17 teet 284, at "-ge 101. Tll9
Rutlltnd 7.5 minute court In the above anti- being the Northwest above daecrlptlon waa
USGS
Quadrangle tlod action, I will corner of lllid 0.617 prepared from an actumap, epproxlrnalely 2 expoM to tale at pub- acre, more or leso, at survey made on the
ntllea' Nortll9aat of lie auc:tlon on the front tract and going a total 3rd day of August,
Salem Centar, Ohio. IIepa of the Meigs · diatanc:e of 203.76teet 1989, by c . Thomas
The purpoaa of .the Courtly Courthouse on to a point;
Smith,
Ohio
propoud ARP Ia to Friday, lilly 4, 2007 111 (2) South 7Q degrees Professional Surveyor
allow tor conatructlon 10:00 a.m., of uld day, 20' 00" East a distance H844.
modlllcaUona to Pond 1119
followlllfl of 84.78 laet to a point Properly
Address :
013. POnd 013 Ia a por· daecribod rtal "ta"': being the northeast 33756 New Lima Road,
tion of 1119 overaN Situate In the County corner of aald 0.617 Rutland. Oho
lnlloltatlon of wa"" ot Motlp, Townslllp of acre, more or less, Property Ownt,.: Paul
E. Laudermllt ond V.
handling and trtat· Rullend and State of tract:
ment teciNtlu tlllll wll Oblo, to-wit
(3) South 62 dagraea Louise Laudertnlh
be utlllzod to handle Belllfl a 0.617 acre, 39' 43" Eaat a distance Prior Deod Referant:9:
415
tll9 comblnod mine more or tess, tro1ct ot of 143.29 teet to a O.R. 221,
drainage
frono land 11 recorded In point;
PPNt: 11-41063.00
Southern Ohio Coal DMd Book 284, at (4) South 54 degrees Appraised
at
C"""*'y'a Mine No. 2 Page
101,
Melga 011' 14" East a distance $75,000.00
andlllnello.31.
County
Rec:order'a ol114.291eettoapoint Terms ot Sale: Cannot
Thla eppllcatlon Ia Office, Melp County, being the lnterMctlon be sold tor lua then
on flte lor public v...,. Oblo, II*&gt; being U.W of uid centerline ot 2l3rda of the -alsod
lllfl II the Melp tracts or land as Township Road t173 value. 10% down on
County
"-corder's recordod In Deod Book and the c:enlarlint ot day o1 ute, calli or
Office, Melge County 314, II "-ge 213, al.o Little Leading Creek; certlflod check, bel·
Court House, 100 E. being a part of Thence
ltavlng ance due on conflr,.
Sllconcl
Sm,t. Frectlon
No
3, Township Road t173 lion of - ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 457H Township • 6 North, and along the - · The -lllul did no&amp;
and allall rentaln .a lor RMge
14- Wut, line of lllid c'"k the Include an ln*lor
II '-1 thirty doya fol. Rutland
To•nshlp, following th'" cour&amp;- examination of the
loWtnv lila teat liMe ol Melp Counly, Slaa. of aa:
houu.
pubtlcllllon of thia Oblo and mora partlcot- (1) South 34 degrHtl Robert E. Beegle,
notice. Written • - larty deacrlbod 11 fof.. 52' 10'' Wast a distance Meigs County Sheriff
or raquolla tor Iowa:
of 159.74 teet to a Attorney
for
the
an lnlormel con..,auce Beginning at a point In point;
PlainUH
nooy be flied willl the 1119 cen..,llna
of (21 South 79 degr09s Reimvr, Lorber It
Dlvlalon of MI-ll County Q which 49' 52" Waat a distance Arnovetz
A • • o u r c e a Ia asaurod to be the of 147.00 teet to a P.O. Box 968
Man..-,
2045 most NorthwHtarly point;
"
24SO Edlaon BlVd
Moria lloed, Building cor- of Lot 8 of (31 South 34 degrees TWIIIIIIurg, 0+144057
K-3, Columbue, Ohio Qraltem'a ~ . . tor 06" w..t. distance ~1
~. wllhln lhlr- recorded In DHd Book ol63.67 to a point (31 28 (4) 4, 11

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Be realistic as to what your capa bilities and tal·
enl s are before takmg on a large ob/ective. If it is something you've never OOoe
before, do lots of homework befOre tack·
ling the projecl.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - A taclless

PEANUTS

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

MUilfAL
Southern Ohio Coal date of pubtlcallon of along uld centerline corner of uld Lot 8;
INsntUIIHNTS
the following two Thence leaving uld
"--oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil_.l Compllny hu aubmh· this notice.

Modern 1 BR Apt. Call 446· selling a1 hoW price. 7403736
339-0681.
;

740-367-02661
1-800-9SO-J359

26 Years Experience

(j=am1/lJ ...~.,"="~"'·ti'!!H"4!!ft:••

JACKSON owned Appliances, all undar 74()-645-6987
Woslwood Warranly. also have recon- lrr;..;,~~----, LEGAL NOTICE

Walk lo shop &amp; movies Cwl
740·446·2568
Equal by 1304)675·7999
Housing Opporlllnily.
- - - - - - - - - Wurhtzer Piano, excettent
Moving sale. All must gal
condition. 740-441-7098
CONVENIENTLY LOCAl· 119 Raven Crest Drive
EO l AFFORDABLE!
Apltl .Gallipolis, Ohio. off
Townhouse
apartments, BulleviMe Pike, Mn on to
ancilor small hQuses FOfl linwood and go to the dead
RENT. Call (740)441·1111 end Everytlting on~ abou1
lor application &amp; information. 1 year okl. Most things are

Senior Citizen
Discount

on

BASEMENT

'

.J ~!l752

• 7
.. KJ984

I I):)

•

• Top • Removal
• Trim • Stump
Grinding • Bucket
Truck
Full insuri:d

1l\

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
•
4577t
740--2217

and Appiehoad Chihuahua
Pre- pups. Spring lap babies.

Drive from $365 to $560. ditioned Big Screen TV's

I,\ 1

Pine Hills GQII Course
April 3rd 5:30
All churches welcome
inlo call740.378·6t44

-os.

Appliance Worehouse

~I

H111 s s ,· !t
S t,lr,1\ ]t'

.

¥

II 1\ h
'

Christian Fellowship
Golf League
at

'--•iiiii-_.1 ::--=--:--,--::-:-Tiny Toy
(F) Rag.

BUDGET in Henderson, WY.

Ea,s t

Suuth
6A.ll 08 7t

F-.Eatlmates

~. . . . . . . . . . . . . .~

.

U·Q7

t\ 763

6 5
lJ l 0
Q ':.t ll 63:!

.. Q

UJ

Vulnerable: East·West

Beau!iful 1 brl 1ba, available
Eng.Mastiff puppies. 12 wks
right away, must see to •'111""~~----. old. AKC Reg. Excellent
HovsoiOW
Bloodtines. 740-245-5823 or
appreciate. cable hookup,
first. last. plus deposit, relet(i()(U
740..645-1912

riD

•

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

-. 1 I~\ ll I "

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS
FOR BARGAINS

•

.

l:iiF;.;.;~~,;;,;;~
u....IE
.-.uf'

riO

MONTY

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

740-367.0536

94 Suzu~ DR400. dirllstraet
N'
$I400 H nda
1 e. 1ce 1..
. o

4

Wt&gt;sl

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Work
*Reasonable Rate!-.
*Insured
*Experien4.:ed
References A-vailable!

2006 Honda 400 ATV, 4x4,

1990 4x4 Toyota pickup, Wate~proofing.
• $2700 (740)379-2615
·
ises,
Heritage
Farms
r'"31n''n~~"::l~~rl~~i'l.n'•nn~,
$350/lirm (304)675-5724
BBTO'jola Carmy. Good con-I
dition. Great gas mileage.
CKC Toy Poocle puppies, $700.740-446-7017
females. Shots and WOtmed.
Cream in ootor. $300 each.
740-256-3188
D'liD

*Prompl

74D-367-o544

b'k

North
6 K Q ':f 4
• K &lt;
t A J 10

{]amibJ I•OOijJ:I

Stanley Tree. Trimming
&amp; Removal

(304)675·7243
or 2x4, Auto Of Manuel Shift,
4yr warr81lty, winch, bags,
Racks, Ramp&amp; &amp; Alx .. 200
mile. $5500. (740)446-6970

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

t

Caravan,

or256·9031

o

Sunday.(740)446-7300
lhs/3.000 mile
- ·..
Oak firewood for sale.
740-446-D103. 328 Jackson
Delivered
or
pickup. (150) Round BaJes Hay dry Pike
(740)441·0941, (740)645· &amp; covered $15 each lrlii--~----,
5945_ CAA HEAP .............
...............--.. "-(304;_)6_7_5_1_82_4_ _ _ _
_
FOR SALE
Round bales of mixed hay.
Retired Trudl diMir selling Nevel wet. 446-2485
headache rack. 4" straps &amp;
02 F150, 58,000 miles. 740portable wenches, heavy
379-24 10
chains,
heavy
screw
binders, iod( over binders, 2 used rKiing lawn mowers 1995 Ford Ranger 411.4
24x24 tarps. ttu~
rolooffer
hlel.
All need
,,......., CO«&lt;s and 'used
Make
' 740
256 $3,500 304-675·3164 after
of var. sizes. 304-675-2051
repll'.
·
·
• 5pm
_&amp;ro
__1_____________
SOars 12.5 HP Riding Lawn
2 Willy's Jeeps lor sole. 59 &amp;
Mower Runs good $250 John Deere 425, $4400. 61 . Both run, both have hard
304-675·1504
John Deere G110, $3000. ' lops. $2200.00. Ph. 379-D.R. Walk Behind, $3000. 2706
740-446-nJl
lltlr---:-:~--,

throughout including brand Commercial buildinn "For AKC G
S"-ph d
• off
erman
rra
er .
new kitehen an d bat h· R&amp;nt" 1600 squcue feet.
Starting at $405. Call today!
G
I
pups. Top bloOdline, large
street parking. real oca- breed both parents on prem-

$3200,

~12::33::..:0!;.:2::56-c:....:l.:c652::..__ _ _

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

Please lea\'C mcssa c

1979Bayliner, 17'. 75hpout- 2002

$300 . 080 call 740-256- trailer. s1600 080: 1998
Jeep Wra~r. 4cly, auto,
Home Golf84.000 mHas $2~ Fwr Moat Goe!S, R&lt;iady lo 4x4, 89,000 miles, $7.000
old&amp;r
-cart, gas. """""' go. Born early January. 060: 1998 Pontiac Firet:Wrd,
condition $800 304-773- $75 .00
each.
Steve V-6, auto. Hops, 113,000
5132
Stapleton. 740-256-1619 or miles.
$4,000
OBO.
1984-Toyola

AU lypes co!Krele

740-7~~ - 229J

~

Blade. Mare. blOke to ride. board motor w/m1racte lift 86000 miles, runs great.

- - - - - - - . . , . - _20_5_1_____ _ _
Move in now and save $100
JET

.-up: renga &amp;
Twin Rivers Tower is acceptnished. new oond: no pets ing applications for wailing
75
5162
Ret &amp; Dep (304)6 lis! for Hud-subsized, 1· br.
3and4roomfurniShedapts. apartmentfor
the
Clean WID hookup. Nc pels. elderly/disabled call 675-

i

~~~~~IS 1 -594
- ·303_1_._____ '
19 ~

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

BRIDGE

ThorllpSON Appliance &amp;

and $475 Qownslalrs. Extras • 213 bedroom apattments
like new deck, sunroom, •Central heat &amp; AJC

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydailysentinel.com

tongue ot an 1rtitating indi\lidual m1ght
make you the target of hislher remarks
Consider lhe source and remain cool
CANCER (June 21-July 22) ~ Even il
'10u're domg bus1ness with a well·known
t~rm . shll gel guarantees or warrants in
case you need them in the l uture . Their
pohc1es for repairs or returns may not be
what you expecL
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Be careful ot
whom you allow to maKe decisions lor
you. If you're doing so just to be a goOO
guy/gal. it might turn out to be one of the
dumbest things you 've done in a long

8V NOW, AND I

'""''""'ton

...ge

t1me.

SUNSHINE CLUB

VIRGO iAug. 23-$8pt. 22) -

97 Beech Street
Midcileport. OH
10x10X10xl0
991·3194
or991-6635

Eioctri&lt;al l Plu~ng
Roofing. Gutlert

'iln~l

Sld6ng 6 Painting
Plltio Mel Porch DecO

WVOM726

\ C YOUNG Ill
-1'-/_ ·'

I -.,

'

"Mltkllatlorfs only

-'

......, ...
'

'

s.II-SIIIr....

'

GARFIELD

Raaycl•••

I'LL HAVE 11-IE PI-IONS
ef"I7E ME ALL NI~H1"

:•••••

-··=,=··~~:r:•
Ill 7 --1HI-

. ---··

Dl

....

'I?''

...

. . .. . . .

'PI . . . ....

GRIZZWELLS
~'t\\Elt , '+loi.ILI'
'*'1.1 ST\U.. 9E /11'1

~ \F~E.

00 'I~~~
COMPI..na'f
HUTS?

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Oblige - Crown - Le\lgc - Dogged - DO GOODER

Should you use a set ol muscles tor a

" l have found," the speaker at a big environment rally,
"that much hvm can be done by a IX&gt; GOODER."

heavy job that requ•res se&gt;Jera l sets lo
handle, you'll pa.,- the price lor a long

ARLO &amp;JANIS

time

Room Additiona I

.

Be reahst1c

about what your phy s1cal capabilitieS are.

Ct\RPEN TER
SERVICE

-ng
-Gor-

LOCERE

"lbere IS no remedy for love,"
the mom told her smitten
daughter, "but to- ---·-."

before raac!Lng

WOULDN'T eE
14ERE FOR 'I'OU
TO ASK ME!

YOUN G'S

0\ AG0

LIBRA (Sept. 2J·Oct. 23) - In most
t:ases. a persons bark. IS usually bigger
than hiS btte. But you could encounter
someone who has a habit of back1ng up
his words w1th h1s list. TSJul care who you
take on.
SCORPIO (Qct_ 24-NO'-' - 22) - II there IS
something that you need another to help
y ou with . be prepared to but1er him/her
up firsl or you aren't apt to get the assistance you need. 4rrogant means will be
met with res•stance
SAGtnARIUS (Nov 23-Dec 21) Subdue any inclination to rep ly in a rash
of anger should someone not share your
op1nion or v1ew on something that's
important lo you . Don't try to impose your
1deas on others
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) Mutual interests must be served in proper balance, or someone won't think ~i nd­
ly ol you lor not Ql\ling h im/her a fatr
share. She/he IS likely to use other
mea ns to even the score .
AQUAR IUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Usually
you're a pretty even-tempered 1ndiv1dual,'
but your luae might be far too short ltx
your own good. You could yell at someone who doesn·t deserve 1t and lose a
friend.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marctl 20) - Be pre·
pared to ha"'e to l•ke cere ot sometMing
that you l!lhOuld have dOne day&amp; ago. It
isn't likely to be the b•t hm1ng lor you
and cause you all kinde ol aggravation If
you rush .

SOUPTONUTZ

�Page B6 ~ The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.coll,)

Wednesday, March 28,2007

WVU wins, to fac~ Clemson for NIT title
NEW YORK (AP) Tmiling by two with 2 se.:-'
onds
remai nin ~.
West
Virginia was thinkmg victory
instead of overtime.
Darris Nichols hit a
buzzer-beatin~ 3-pointer to
lift West Virgmia to a 63-62
victory over Mississippi
State in the semifinals of the
NIT at Madison Square
Garden on Tuesday night.
'"We said we were not
going to take a 2, but we
would win the game,"
Mountaineers coach John
Beilein said. ""The ftrSt option
was Darris, and the second
would have been Frank
(Young). If they guard one,
you know we felt good about
either one."
Nichols fmished with 17
points and Young added 16to
help the Mountaineers (26-9)
advance to the NIT linals for
the ftrst time since winning
the title in 1942. West
Virginia, which will face the
winner of the Air ForceClemson game in the linals
on Thursday night, had lost
its last three appearances in
the semifinals.
Nichols, whose basket
capped a wild sequence in
the tina! minute. wasn't sure
if his basket was a 2-pointer
or a 3.
"I knew we needed a 3 to
win it, so I just stepped
back," Nichols said. ··1 was a
little in doubt because I didn't know where I was on the
floor."
.
Beilein said he got the winning play from one-time
Nebraska coach Danny Nee
at his coaching clinic in
November.
"We had a scrimmage at
the end of our clinic with a
couple hundred coac he s
there:· Beilein said. '"It ended
up being a tie with like 2 se&lt;·onds to go ... I had Danny
huddle with my team .... We
didn't make it, did we?"
After Young confirmed
they didn't, Beilein added:
''I'm glad we made it in (the
game) and not in the coaching clinic."
West Virginia came back
from a 14-point deficit in the
second half and took a 60-59
lead when Jamie Smalligan
made 2-of-3 free throw~ with
53 seconds left.

Southern
from P..tge 81
settled down. but gave way
to reliever Burdette in the
fifth.
Burdette suffered
through a double and walk
in the fifth, but retired the
side in order in both the
sixth. then yielded a run in
the sevemh for the host Red
Devils.
Coach Ryan Lemley's
club gained an insurance
run in the seventh when
Jake Hunter walked and
advanced on an overthrow.
Wes Ritlle then hammered a
double to score Hunter with
no outs. Riftle advanced to
third. but was left stranded.
Leactihg 5-3. senior Pat
Johnson showed much

Slips
from PageBl
Wolfe led off the White
Falcon lirst by reaching on
an error, Davis walked, and
then with two outs Tully
walked. One run caRle
home on a wild pitch and
another came home on a 1-3
groundout by Kebler.
After a scoreless Southern
irming. Wahama went up 43 when Riggs and Derifteld
each reached on errors,
Davis hit a sacriftce fly and
another run came home on
an error.
Southern tied the game in
the third when Whitney
Wolfe-Riffle singled and
scored on a wild pitch after
Stephanie Cundiff walked,
the score 4-4. Wahama
came right back. with a run
to take the lead when Tulley
reached on an error and
scored on another Southern
error, the score 5-4.
Wahama added what
proved to be the winning
run in the sixth when
Ashley Wolfe led off with a
single, advanced on a bunt,
and scored on a Kayanna
Sayre single. Wahama
threatened for another run.
but the Southern defense
held tight.
Southern fought back in

Barry S!ewart's jumper Mississippi State. Young was
regained Mississippi State's 4-for-8 to increase his singlelead 9 seconds later.
season school-record to Ill .
The Mountaineers then had
The Bulldogs used a 22-5
three· chances on the ollen- run spanning halftime to take
sive end. Young missed a 3, a ~- 30 lead with 15:51 left
Sma!lisan got the rebound in the game.
and missed a short jumper,
West Virgi nia missed its
and Da' Sean Butler missed a tirst six 3s of the second half
layup
attempt.
lamont until Young hit his fourth of
Gordon got the rebound for the game to start a 7-0 run
the Bulldogs. was fouled by that pulled the Mountaineers
Butler and made one free to 4~-43 with 9:45 left.
throw with 163 seconds left Butler made a free throw and
to giw Mis~ssippi State a a layup, and Nichols hit a 3 to
62-60 lead.
get. West Virginia within 50Nichols missed a 3 with 5 49 with 8:23 to go.
seconds
left,
but the
Slater's third 3 pushed the
Mountaineers
got
the Bulldogs' lead to 55-51 nearrebound and called timeout ly 2 minutes later, and
with 2.1 to go.
Rhodes and Gordon had
On the ensuing play, layups to make it 59-53 with
coach
Rick 4:05 left.
Bulldogs
Stansbury was on the coun
Smalligan hit a 3 and Ruoff
screaming for a timeout had a drivin~ layup to get
before Alex Ruoff inbounded West Virgima within one
the ball, but the coach wasn't with 2:40 to go, and set up
seen by the officials. After the frantic tina! minute.
Nichols' game-winning shot,
Clelll'iUn 68, Air Force 67
Stansbury slammed the table.
NEW YORK (AP)- K.C.
·· tt was a great play,"
Gordon said. "(Nichols) set
me up like he was going to
come off a double screen and
he just faded away. I got
screened a little bit and he
knocked down the shot."
The postgame hand~hakes
were delayed brietly as the
officials huddled around the
wurtside monitor to check if
any time remained after
Nichols' basket. After about
3 minutes, the officials ruled
the 3-pointer good, and no
time was left.
"They made that last play
they had to make to win the
game," Stansbury said. "I
told our team that's just one
play, a play that changed the
score at the end of the basketball game:·
Dietric Slater had IS points
and nine rebounds to lead
Mississippi State (21-14 ).
Gordon added II points, and
Charles Rhodes had I 0
points and 10 rebounds.
Ruoff had 10 points and
Robert Summers grabbed
nine rebounds for West
Virginia.
The Mountaineers, who
made 17 3s in a win over
Providence in the Big East _
tournament at the Garden on
March 7, finished 7-for-23
from beyond the arc against
poise as he fanned the lirst
batter, then used his defense
to set down the side 1-2-3 in
the seventh for the Southern
win.
Hunter had a triple, single
and walk; Riftle a double
and walk, Ryan Chapman a
single, Johnson a double,
J.R. Hupp a single, and
Jordon Pierce had a single.
Cavender. Johnson, Cody
Brown. and Jared Richards
had hits for the hosts while
Ritz had two singles.
Southern goes to River
Valley Wednesday and
hosts Trimble Friday.
SOUTHERN 5, RAVENSWOOD a
Southern

301 000 1

-

57 3

Ra~Jenswood

20 I 000 0

-

36 1·

Rivers ;,cored 19 points as
Clemson held on to beat Air
Force and advance to the
National
Invitation
Tournament c h\impionship
with a 68-6 7 victory Tuesday
night.
Trevor Booker added 13
points for Clemson (25-10),
whi.:h will play We;,t
Virginia (26-91 for the champion;,hip Thut"&gt;oday night. The
Mountaineers
beat
Mississippi State 63-62 on
Darris Nichols' buzzer-beating J -pointer in the earlier
game.
Clemson, which tied the
1986-87 Tigers for wins in a
season, reached the NIT
finals for the second time and first since losing to
California in 1999.
Nick Welch scored 16
points and Matt McCraw 15
for Air Force (26-9), whkh
had its three-game winning
streak stopped after reaching
the NIT semifinals for the
tirst time in program history.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:; n l I:\ IS • \ ul. ,)h . :\u. Jhh

• Big men take
center stage in Atlanta.

AP photo
West Virginia's head coach John Beilein reacts to a call during the first half ot" basketball action against Mississippi
State Tuesday during the National Invitation Tournament at
Madison Square Garden in New York.

SeePage81

BY

........

011 tu--

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Patricia Ann Bauer, 78
• Clair W. Giles, Jr., 81
• Naomi Reed, 85

'
'

• Family Medicine.
See Page A2
•. ot«J..Ufliversity.
revokes ~er's
~· Set Page A2

•

~ r:ele¥85

.

SIMP'~~ AS

April2

• Meigs native in
training for dosimettist

Atlanta

See~

Mln:h31

A.8

•

National Champion

WEA'lHER

T•• •sa•
Ohloll.

South

Southern (2-Q): Pat Johnson and J.R

Hupp.
RavenswOOd : C.J. Johnson and O.W.

Mahan .
WP - Johnson; LP- C.J. Johnson

the seventh, scoring once
and placing the tying run in
scoring position only to lose
out on missed opportunities.
Lindsey Buzzard walked
and scored on a sacrifice fly
by Turley. Sarah Eddy
reached on a single and
advance to third bas with
just one out, but was left
stranded with a last out
strike out from Wahama
hurler Riggs (the final6-5).
Kylie Riggs picked up
the win with etght strike
outs. five walks and
allowing just three hits,
and surviving three errors.
Sarah Eddy suffered the
loss to even her record.
Eddy fanned four. walked
six, hit two, and gave up
four hits in a good effort.
Southern hitters were by
Eddy.
Riffle.
and
Brickles-all
singles.
Wahama was led by
Wolfe 's 2-2 with a walk, a
Sayre sing le , and Kayla
Young double.
Southern goes to River
Valley Wednesday. The
Trimble , game slated for
Thursday has been moved
to Friday to accommodate
the FFA banquet.
WAHAMA a, SOUTHERN 5
Southern 301 000 1 53 3
Wahama 221 001 x
643
Sou thern (1· 1). Sarah Eddy and
WhltnO)I Wolfe--Riffle.
Wahama (4·0 ). Kyhe Riggs and
Kabler

WP - A1ggs . LP - Eddy.

Mary

INDEX.
2 SECI10NS - 16 PA.GES

216 Upper River IN. Gallipolis, Olllo
''• Mile south of tiMI Silverllrldte

446-2404
l-~~7- ... 001
~~17-10011 .... 001

GEORGETOWN

Annie's Mailbox
A3
Calendars
A3
Classifieds
Bs-6
Comics
87
Editorials
A4
Obituaries
As
Places to Go
B3
Senior News
A7
B. Section
Sports
Weather
A6

supervisor for the school district.
live years; Matt Simpson, network
technician, two years; Steve
Ohlinger as middle s.:hool athletic
dtrector and Rusty Bookman as district safety coordinator for one year.
Other personnel matters handled
by the board included hiring Gloria
VanReeth as a tutor of a health handicapped student at $20 an hour not to
exceed five hours a week; nonrenewal of the contl1ll&lt;:t of D&lt;miel
Romuno as district safe and drugfree coordinator at the expiration of
his current contract due to a lack of
funding; and the acceptance of the
resignation of Paula Morrison as
high school yearbook advisor effective at the end of this school year.
Hired as substitute teachers for
the remainder of the school year
were Martha Black , Josha Crosier,

Pleue see IMrd. A5

c.......,._../ plloto
Meigs Board of Education members Scott Walton and Norman Humphreys
view -one of numerous tMold posters showing students in learning activities .

Community
teams secure
grant funds
for projects
BY

~tlist.

Atlanta

CHARLENE HOEF\.ICH

POMEROY - Several supervisory contracts were renewed and the
revised permanent appropriation for
the 2006-07 fiscal year in the amount
of $235,578,454 was approved when
the Meigs Local Board of Education
met Tuesday night at the Meigs
Elementary School.
Mary Hawk, principal of Meigs
Middle School, was given a renewal of her administrative contract for
five years effective with the beginning of the 2007-08 school year.
Also renewed was the supervisory
contract of Karla Brown, special
education coordinator for the district, for a period of three years .
Other contracts renewed, all
effective to begin with the 2007-0S
school year. included Paul McElroy.
transportation and maintenaoce

INSIDE
East

Approves districts revised appropriation
HOEFLICH@MYOAI LYSENTINEL.COM

. . . . Clii'IU

BRIAN

J.

•

Friends of
the Library
funding
'extras'
BY BETH

REED

SERGENT

BREEDIIMYOAJLYSENTINEL. COM

BSERGENT@M\DAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - Groups
representing the ChesterShade Historical Asso.:iation
and
the
Middleport
Development Group have
secured $3.000 investments
from the Governor's Office
of Appalachia for local
improvement projects. after
participating in a two dayworkshop this week.
Gerald and Mary PowelL
P.dlll
Schatz,
Jeanie
Ridenour and Becky Grate.
representing the historical
association. and Brenda
Phalin, Donna Hartson,
Mike Gerlach and Brian
Reed of the developmenl
group traveled to Piketon
Monday to participate in the
two-day
Appalachian
Community
Learning
Project workshop. The
workshop was created by
the Rensselaerville Institute.
The ACLP uses citizen
"sparkplugs" to create a
community change needed
to jumpstart the local economy. Five communities,
also including Piketon,
Nelsonville and Beaver,
participated in the session
and were awarded grants
from
the
Appalachian
Regional Commission.
The historical association
will use its $3,000 to grant

Nelsonville, creating significant traflic problems.
'"Th.: Route 33 bypass
projed is not only important for relieving traffi.:
congestion and makin g our
roads safer. but it "iII be a
key tool in growing the
lo.:al economy by attracting

POMEROY - The old
song goes. "you got to have
frit'nds '" and the Meigs
County District Public
Library (MCDPL) is no different, relying on a few
friends to fund those
··extras" that their annual
budget doesn · t cover.
The Friends of the Library
is a nonprofll group of local
citizens who contribute to
programs at the library to
help fund everything from
prizes for the summer readi.ng program and the annual
Easter egg hunt.
'"They do things we're not
able to do with taxpayer
money. like buy items to
give away such as prizes for
summer reading, food and
refreshments," K.risti Eblin.
director of the Meigs County
District Public Library said.
Eblin said the Friends
generate funds for library
programs by running the
spring and fall book sales
and ye~tr-round book sales.
The Friends also raise
money by selling bookmarks and bracelets at each
library bnm&lt;·h .
Emily Sanders . .:hildren·s
'ervi&lt;:e' 'coordinator for the
MCDPL, said the program'
she coordinate' would be
sen:rely affe&lt;:ted without
the ;,upport of the Friends.
""They basically fund programs that we normally
wouldn't have extra money
to offer."' Sanders said.
'"Events like the Easter egg
hunt
wou ldn "t
happen
because funding for tt IS not
in my budget. Plus thev help
us fund Sternwhed Festival
activities and .:ontribute
nwnev for incentives for
our diildren and adult sum mer re&lt;Oding programs."
The Friend;, are desc·ribed
as a group of citizens whcl

Please see Bill. A5

Plaue see Library, A5

Plaue HI F11nds. A5

Plooto courtesy of Hllny Whan

Jill Holter of Long Bottom displays her ··hometown hero" award after l:leing nominated by
meml:lers of the Bethel Worship Center for work at her Hearts and Hands Clothing Pantry.
Holter is pictured with Pastor Rob Barl:ler.

Local woman reco~ed
as 'hometown hero'
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAJLYSENTINELCOM

LONG BOTTOM - Jill
Holter of Long Bottom has
been recognized as a
"hometown hero" for her
efforts at the Hearts and
Hands Clothing Pantry
which she runs out of a
farmhouse on her property.
Holter was recently presented with the award by

Tony Cavalier of WSAZ
dunng a clothing drive at
Bethel Worship Center.
"I was · so shocked,"
Holter said. "I was completely taken by surprise. I
thought he (Cavalier) was
just there to do a piece on
the church. We were having a clothing giveaway
and I was focused on that
and wasn't paying atten tion to what was going on

around me.'"

Holter was told Cavalier
was there to do a story on
the church so she bought the
exc use and the elaborate
e.xcuses of all her family
that just happened to show
up as well.
'"I just bought it," Holter
laughed about the fibs to
keep her in the dmk.

Please see 'Hero,' A5

Senate-approved bill ensures Nelsonville project
BY BRIAN J.

REED

BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

COLUMBUS
- State
Senator Joy Padgett, RCoshocton, voted Tuesday
to approve House Bill 6 7,
the state Transportation
Budget. which includes an
amendment designed to
protect the Nelsonville

Bypass project from delay.
The
Transportation
Review
and
Advisory
Council prioritizes transportation projects for the
state. The amendment in
H.B. 67 would ensure that
the state maintains its commitment to this plan - by
requiring
the
Ohio
Department
of

Transportation to begin construction on all current priority Tier I projects l:lefore
any new Tier I projects are
undertaken.
The U.S. 33 Nelsonville
Bypass \VOUld create a new
four-lane highway around
the city. The .:urrent road is
only two lane s and cuts
directly
through

Back to Health Chiropractic

1065 Second Street
Mason, WV

YOUR CAR A TRUCIC SUPfiiSTOifE NEXr TO WN.·AW11

304-773-5773

14{)-446-2282 • 877-446.-2282

OHIO STATE

FLORIDA

I 900 EASTERN AVE. • GALLIPOLIS. OH

would like to welcome Dr. Chris Good
For an appointment with Dr. Good or Dr. Nick! Please call:

740.446.7460
+

----

•

""'' '"" !."''" "'' ....

!Ill I{Sll \\ , 'I \Klll :!•J . :! &lt;Ho -

Board of Education extends supervisory contracts

SPORTS

•

UCLA

\..

•·

•

West

Community Easter
cantata slated for
this weekend, B3 ·

Spring Sports Guide
inside today's Sentinel

•

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