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Page 86 • The Daily 5entinel

Football
•

from Page Bl

programs have more th;rtgs
m common than not: Most

notably, these are - or at
least once wefe - schools
where football was·king.
Nothing against the basketball p,rogmms, but success in football, drives success in everything else at
most universities. It's the
sheer fact of numbers. With
the exceptions of a few elite
basketball programs. there "s
simply more money to be
made by filling 105;000
seats in .the Horseshoe, or
90,000 at the Swamp, than
. by filling a basketball arena
one-fifth their size.
"The correlation between
105.000 people on a
Saturday afternoon m the
Shoe definitely helps all
programs," Ohio State
coach Thad Malta said. "I
think it 's helped us through
the recruiting process. The
notoriety of the football

•

•

.'

www .mydailysentinel.com

program is something we
try · to work hand-i n-hand
with."
·
Thanks in large part to
revenue from the football
program, Ohio Siate led the
NCAA in revenue last year,
bringing in nearly $1 OS mil1ion. Florida brought in $78
million. Both . programs
made enough money that
they were able to donaie to
their schools instead of having the school supplement
them .
The days of basketball
coaches defending their
programs status on these
campuses are long gone.
Instead, they bask in the
football teams, taking
recruits to games and bringing those coaches in for
motivational speeches to
their teams.
''It's everythin g at Florida
that's good," Gators coach
Billy · Donovan
said.
"Certain ly the football program is terrific. As I said
earlier. !think where there's
problems on campuses with
· coaches is when all the
focus is totally just on one

Reds
from Page Bl

sport."
. ·
. .
And Malia: "My goal is .
not to make Ohio State a
basketball school. I think
my goal is to make it the
best basketball program that
we possibly can."
Harmony aside, this isn 't
to say these progr~ms are ·
perfect. It's just t~at their
solutions to the problems,
when they arise, are better.
The OSU football program has .moved on from
the
Maurice
Clarett
imbroglio. The star of the
2002 national championship team, Clarett created
problems while he was in
school by accusing administrators of not caring about
him and caused even more
drama afterward when he
lied about receiving thousands of dollars in improper
benefits.
In basketball, Matta was
hired to cleiin up the program afterformer coach Jim
O'Brien was fired for' giving $6,000 to a recruit,
which helped land the •
Buckeyes on probation.
The probes led to the

Monday, April2,

departure of embattled at hlet1c director Andy Geiger,
who said he was burned out
from · all the turmoil.
Despite that, he laid much
of the groundwork for the
current success, and his
replacement, ,Gene Sr:nith ,
has overseen a smooth Iransition for what 1s largely
regarded as the country's
biggest athletic department.
"Certainly, you'd have to
put Jeremy Foley and Gene
Smith in the finalists of the
most · respected athletic
directors 111 country,"
Neinas said.
Foley runs a department
that is not so lovingly
known by some as 'The
Firm," for. its dispassionate
ability to make problems go
away.
Of late, the NCAA hasn't
been a problem. But when
Florida hired Ron Zook to
replace Steve Spurrier and
that experiment started spiraling out of control, Foley
pulled the plug on The
Zooker, his good friend,
after 2 1/2 years and did
everything he could to land .

New schoolhouse
welcomes Amish
students, As '

;;o ( I '&gt; I S • \ ol. :;fl . :\o. I hi)

SPORTS
• Marauders pick up
first win. See Page 81

'] I ' l .S ll

n . \1' R II

:~ .

""" .m~ dail~ M: nlhwl.tom

!!Oil';'

Police investigate two Saturday B&amp;Es
Officers spent over 10
hours
at
Manley's
and
the
Recycling
MIDDLEPORT
American Legion Annex
Middleport
Police building a'fter break-in s
Department and the Ohio were
reported
early
Bureau
of
Criminal Saturday. Police Chief
. Identification are investi- Bruce Swift said someone
gating
two
weekend gained entry into the recybreak-ins.
cling business on Mill
Bv BIIIAN

J. REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Street through a window,
and tried to pry open a
vending machine.
Swift said it is believed
that an employee reporting
for work in the early hours
on Saturday may have
scared the subject away.
Several items were found
lying on the floor, and BCI

was called . to pro~ess the
scene.
While officers were on
the scene investigating the
Manley 's incident, officers
were called to the FeeneyBennett American Legion
annex on South Fourth
·Avenue, where someone
had gained entry and bro-

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TODAV'S

NUMBER

Page AS
• Bryan Durst, 29
• Corbett Lavere
'Pat' Patterson, 80

INSIDE
• OVCS begins
kio&amp;rgsrten enrollment
process. See Page A3
• Local teen is state
finalist. See Page .A3
• Seventh Leading
Creek Stream Sweep.
See Page AS
• Literary Club .hears of
chase for Lincoln's killer.
See Page A6

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·
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·
lease with the. county.

New

J.' REED

UiVBS

ments and the U.S. Open and winning
the West Virginia Open two times. He
also lived and played professional golf
POMEROY - Mike White, the new in South America and South Africa.
owner of Pine Hills Golf Course, . said
He said the county's golf course is
it's every professional golfer's dream to perfect for him.
·
run his own course, and now·he does.
"I ·love a ' little nine-hole golf
The Beckley, W.Va. native moved to course," White said, "and when you
Pomeroy in January to take over the can't compete on a professional scale,
course, which is owned by Meigs you have to go to work."
County Commissioners. He ha s a
White said there are no plans for
three-year lease with a renewal option. major changes at the course, other
White was a profes'sional golfer for . than some minor improvements to the
12 years, playing in three PGA tourna- green and clubhouse. He commended ·
BY BRIAN

BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

touch

Pat 0' Brien for improvements he
made to the course during the years he
operat'ed it.
White's son, John, will be the superintendent of the course, and son, Greg,
will oversee the operation of the clubhouse kitchen. White said he is also
relying on help from Steve Trussell, a
local resident with golf course experience who will serve as a consultant.
There has been one notable change
at the course. Green fees have been
lowered to $18 for 18 holes on weekdays, and $20 on weekends.

United Fund distributes contributions
LWC

Health/Anulty
An Independent Agency

740-446-0007

INDEX
2 SECTIONS~ 12 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4
As

Obituaries

B Section

Sports

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Police Department
reported recent arrests and
investigations invol.ving
alleged disorderly · conduct
and petty theft.
On Friday afternoon the
Pomeroy Police Department
responded to the Colonial
Park
Apartments
on
Mulberry Avenue in reference to complaints of male
subjects allegedly drinking
and shooiing paint ball guns
in the playground area of
the apartments.
Arrested at the scene were
Dana R. Williams, Jr., 31,
Pomeroy, Jesse A. Williams,
26, Logan, Jeremy D.
Counci I, 27, Rutland, Larry
0. Napper, 29, Pomeroy.
Heather White, office manager for the Pomeroy Police
Department, reported all
four suspects were cited for
disorderly by intoxication in
Pomeroy Mayor's Court.
Officers at th e scene
included Pomeroy Chief of
Police Mark E. Proffitt,
Assistant Chief of Police
Alan Queen, Patrolmen
Adam Holcomb, Ronald

' Arrests. AS
Please see

University of
Wisconsin
students offer
financial seminar
Bv BEiH SERGENT ·
BS,RGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Unjted Fund for Meigs County distributed ·Students
· from
the
its first quarterly contributions to agenUni versity of Wisconsincies it funds at last wee.k's annual m~et­ Madiso n's (U W-Madison)
ing. President Geoige Hawley, second
Students In Free Enterprise
from right, back row, and Teresa Porter,
(SIFE) team will be travelwhO serves as co-chairman of the 2007
ing to Middleport on
fund drive with her husband, Mark, disThursday to present a pertributed checks to, front, Margaret
sonal financ.e seminar enti- .
tied. "Break Free: A
Parker of the Meigs County Historical
Society, Dixie Sayre of the Meigs County Seminar ·on Achieving
Humane Society, Hilda Stotts of Serenity Financial Freedom." .,
The seminar is from 5-7
House, Diana Coates of the Meigs
p.m.,
Thursday at the Help
County RSVP, Mary Wise of the
Me
.
Grow · office in
Riverbend Arts Council, and back, 'Brent
Middleport.
Help Me Grow
Watson of God's NET, Sharon Shull of
is
providing·
the spaceJor
Holzer Meigs Hospice, Jenni Dunham of
the
seminar.
'
the Mulberry Community Center, and
Brittany Burr of UMT~m Reed of Gallia·Meigs Community
Madison's
SIFE team said
Action Agency, who also serves on the
Middleport is one of five
United Fund board. Last_year the UFMC
stops
on the seminar tour
distributed $12,500 in contributions;
including Harlan, Ky.,
this year's fundraising goal is $12,006.

Details on Paee A&amp;

Weather

A6

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ken through several interi- "
or doors.
Swift said desk drawers ·
and cabinets were gone
through. but nothing was
discovered missing.
Swift asked that anyone
with information about the
incidents contact the police
department at 992-6424.

Pomeroy
reports
arrests

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Middleport• Pomeroy, Ohio

WIOS.

They fired chief executive
officer
Andy
MacPhail, decided not to
bring back Baker, and
went one of baseball ' s
biggest spending sprees.
The Cubs committed more .
than $300 million to free
agents and players already
on the roster, including a
$136 million deal for
A1fonso Soriano.
Despite the infu sio n of
.new money, the Cubs open
fhe season with an old
problem: Mark Prior and
Kerry Wood still aren't
right. The starting tandem
that gave them so· much
hope IS out of commission
again - Wood on the disabled list with a sore
shoulder and Prior pitchin§ in the minors.
'No, it's not a distrac·tion, it really isn' t,"
Piniella said . "They 've
been important cogs here
in this organization for a
long time. I can understand the interest. We said
comiijj! in that. if we got
them ready by opemng
day, it would be a bonus
for us. Unfortunately,. it
hasn 'f happened . But it
doesn ' t mean that. they
can ' t help us sometime
this summer."
:Right-hander
Carlos
Zllmbrario will start the
Cubs' opener for the third
year ·in a row, ' hoping to
finally get beyond .hi s
first-game
proBlems.
Chicago has scored , 16
runs
in · each ' . of
Zambrano's two openers,
but he fai led to get the win
because he couldn't make
it . through the fifth inning
of either game.
'
"Now everybody tells
me I'm .the ace of this
team, al)d I appreciate
tbat," Zambrano said. "I
have to earn that." .
An opening-day win
would be a good start.

Students visit
State
House,
A6
.

.

[french City

'Friday's
Number

WIN UPTO $1,000 !!!

then I couldJI't leave until
after he left the clubhouse.
"I had to break it up. That
kind of threw me off a lillie
bit."
It turned ·out to be the
worst moment in Harang's
best season. The right-hander tied for the NL lead with
16 wins and led the league
in strikeouts last year, He
had a hard time forgetting
that first game: Matt
Murton homered in .a five-run -first inning that started
the Reds' historically bad
day.
Cincinnati hadn' t given
up so many runs in a season
opener since 11!77, when ·
they lost to Louisville 24-6
during the third month of
Rutherford B. Hayes' presidency.
"I know what I have to'
do," Harang sai~. '.'It's def!nitely not going to be as
hectic. I don 't have to work
around one other person,
I'm definitely on my schedule. I'm looking forward to
another opportunity to go
out and pitch the way I can.
''That was one of my few
sour notes last year. I can't
dwell on it. It's a new season a,nd let's get us on a roll
right off the bat."
The Cubs' first-game
magic hasn' t translated
over the long term. They
won only 78 more games
after scoring 16 runs m the
2005 opener, and finished
at the .bollom of the NL
C!?ntral last year with 66

chance to pull back into a
tie.
The tally at'Ohio State is
football 4, basketball I.
For all th'e. money and
suecess these pro~rams
have generated, the tnps to
the title games aren't big
money makers all by themselves. In fact, most money
earned from a Final Four or
Bowl Championship Series
trip is divided evenly
among all the teams in the
participant's conference. In
some cases, these trips are
actually money losers for
the sc hools, after all the
expenses are paid.
But when Monday's game
is over, it will be hard to call
either of these schools
losers.
"I think it's a coincidence
they've met in the national
championships in both
sports," Housel said. "I
don't think -it's a coincidence that they're in the
mix every year. It's a compliment to the fan bases, the
alumni , the leadership. It's
two programs on very solid
footing."

Urban Meyer.
Many feel Florida will
pay whatever _it takes to
keep Donovan 1f Kentucky ·
comes calling after Monday
night's .game. Rumors are·
circulating that Foley is
willing to pay $1 million for
a new women's basketball
coach in an attempt to
rebuild the only lon'g-struggling,program in the departme1n.
..
"There's tremendous, outstanding leadership there in
Jeremy Foley," said David
Housel, the former Auburn
athletic director who competed against Horida for
most of his career. "He has a
professional and personal
commitment at Florida.' He
worked his way up through
the depanment. He knows
the department, knows the
school , he hires great
coaches and they all tend to
mirror his personality and
his work ethic."
In the football title game
in January, Florida won 4114 to earn the school's second national championship.
Now, basketball gets its

,PLAY COVERALL BINGO

2007

•

•

•

�'

. I

.

'

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

The. Daily
. Sentinel
'

.,
\

.The·Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, April ·3,' 2007

Community Calendar.

-TSUNAMI SWAMPS
VRLAGES IN SOLOMON ISLANDS, .
.
KILLING AT LEAST 13 AND LEAVING mOUSANDS HOMElESS
.

.

'

BY GEORGE HERMING
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

were too scared to rerum to
the coast amid more than lWO
dozen aftershocks. including'·
at least four of magnitude-6 ·
or srtonger.
Initial reporrs from other
islands. suggest similar or
worse leveb of damage, tHe
Red Cross said. Roads were
inaccessible and there , was
heavy damage to infrastructure, ·me 1ud'mg phones an d
electricity. said Martin
Blackgrove,
the
International Red Cross'
region al disaster nianagement coordinator for the
Pacific, based in Fiji .
Because ofGizo's proximity to the quake's epicenter,
the tsunami struck before an
alarm could be sounded.
"There wasn't .any warning _ the warning was the
eanh tremors," Lokopiu toll!
New Zealand's National
. Radio. '·It shook us very,

HONIARA.
Solomon
Islands- Bodies floared our
to sea and thousands of residents camped out overnight
Tuesday on a hillside above a
devastated town in the western Solomon Islands after a
tsunami that struck without
warning• washed awav'
coastal villages. killing at
least 13 people. The death
toll was expected to rise.
A wall of water reportedly
30 feet high struck the island
ofChoiseul and swept a third
of a mile inland. whi le smaller but still destructive waves
surged ·ashore elsewhere in
the western part of the
impoverished archipelago.
causing widespread damage
and lea ving thousands
homeless.
·
The-tSUf)ami was triggered
by a magnitude 8.0 quake
that struck .shm1ly after 7:39 very strongly and we were
a.m. Monday six miles frifhtened, and all of a sud- beneath the sea tloor, about den the sea was rising up."
25 miles from the western
Within five minutes, a wall
island ofGizo and 215 miles of water up to 16 feet_ high
nonhwest of the Solomons' plowed mto the coast, muncapital , Honiara, the .U.S. • datm~ homes, busmesses, a
Geological Survey said.
hospttal: schools and t:-vo
The quake _ the strongest police s tatiOns, an~ dumpmg
: in the Solomons in more than boats .mto streets .m G1zo •. a
three decades _ set off popular spot for dtvmg, Wittsunami alarms from Tokyo nesses and officials said.
to Hawaii and closed beachOutlymg VIllages. where
es along the east coa~t of many houses are. flimsy
Australia .mo!'e than 1.250 wooden structures, may
miles away. Lifeguards with · have fared worse, based on.
bullhorns yelled at surfers to scattered reports from .resiget out of the water at de,?ts wnh twocwa~ rac;Iws.
Sydney's famous Bondi
It was JUSt a nmse like an
Beach.
underground explosion,"
The danger passed quick- Gizo resident Doro.th,Y
ly, but officials rejected sug- Parkmson told Austr.al,ta s
gestions they overreacted, Nme Network televtsto·n.
adding" that the emergency :·The wave came alm~st
tested procedures put in mstantaneously., Eve!)'thmg
place after the 2004 Indian _ that ~as standmg ts flat·
Ocean disaster that left tened.
230,000 dead or missing in a
Judith Kepnedy said water
dozen countries.
"right up to your head"
Up to 4.000 people were swept through town. · Her
canipedonahillbehindGizo father, dive sl)op owner
(pronounced GI;:E-zoh), a Danny Kennedy, said Gizo
town of about 7,000, said was devastated when the
Alex Lokopio, premier of wave subsided.
_
hard-hit Western Province.
"There are boats in the
Floodwaters subsided, but middle of the road, buildings
the Red Cross reponed about have complete! y collapsed
500 houses were damaged or and fallen down," he told
destroyed, leaving 2,000 The Associated Press.
. homeless._ Many people
Alfred
Maesulia,
a

Saturday, April 7
RACINE
- Meigs
Community Action Network,
4 p.m., Racine American
Legion, discussion of environmental justice issues.•
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange #778 and Star Junior
Gmnge #878 meet in regular
Thesday, April 3
session with potlu'k supper
MIDDLEPORT
at 6:30 p.m. followed by
Middlepon Lodge 363. meeting at 7:30 p.m. All
F&amp;AM, 7:30p.m. at the hall. members are urged to attend.
All Master Masons invited. Work session at the hall at 4
Refreshments.
POMEROY - Post 39, p.m.
American Legion, will meet
for a 7 p.m. dinner and short
meeting at the post home in
the old Salisbury Elementary
Friday, April 6
School.
RUTLAND - Paul E.
CHESTER
- Chester Taylor Memorial Good
Council 323, Daughters of Friday Hymn Sing, .7 p.m.,
America, 7:30 p.m., Masonic Rutland Freewill Baptist
1-jall. Gary Holter, Virginia Church, five groups singing,
Lee, Mary Kay · Holter as refreshments will follow.
hosts.
Saturday, April 7

Clubs and
organizations

Church events

Other events
Wednesday, April 4
LONG BOTIOM
Hearts and Hands Clothing
Pantry opening for season, 911 :30 a.m., call Jill Holter,
949-2603 for more infonnation.

Youth events
Saturday, April 7
POMEROY - Easter esg
hunt, noon, at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church for
children 12 arid under. For
more infonnation call 304773-5~59.

PORTLAND - Easter
egg hunt at Ponland
Conimunity Center, I p.m.
Ages 1-4, 5-8, and 9-12. .
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
, Church of the Nazarene will
have an Easter egg hunt, II
a.m. SatUrday.
HARRISONVILLE
The Harrisonville Volunteer
Fire Department will have an
egg hunt for children 12 and
under Saturday at the ftre station.

ENROLLMENT PROCESS .
GALLIPOLIS · - Ohio · chronologically old enough to conducted by the school nurse
Valley .Chris~iaJ_I ~chool · Stllrt kinderganen, but they when school stans.
(OVCS) IS tJt:gmrung tts 31st rnay not ·be developmemally
Ohio Valley Christi an
year of enrolling kindergarten ready. explained Williams. Elementary School is located
students.
This screening helps the in Fir~t Bapti&gt;t Chur~ h at
In announcing registration, school discuss the needs of II 00 Fourth Ave. in
OVC~ administrator, Dr. each child and make appro- Gallipolis. On school days.
Fredrick W. Wilhams encour- pnate recommendations. . the office is open from 8:30
aged Christian parents to
"This is an invaluable a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
enroll their child in kinder- resource for parents who want
Parents with children in
ganen where an agressive to make the best decision for other elementary grades than
reading program is in place their child. Starting kinder- kinderganen should call 446along with Christian trllining ganen before being develop- 3960 for information. High
as provided by 30-year veter- mentally ready creates diffi· school students should call
an teacher, Sue Murray. · culty for the child even if they the high ·school campus· at
Parents are_encouraged to call are age appropriate. It also 446-0374. · Ohio Vallev
the school, 7408-446-3960 makes is it difficult for the Christian School is a nOllfor · registration information parents if they realize later denominational. evangelical
and applications at which that their ·child would have educational mini stry of First
time reading skills with the been better served by waiting Baptist Church seeking to
schoolls aggressive reading for .e~rollment," said the educate children in the tradiprogram._ Ap_pomtments are admmtstrator.
tion of the Judeo-Christian
currently .bemg to arrange
Ch1ldren must be five years ' belief system for the kingdom
kindergarten screenings and old before Sept. 30, 2007 tor of God. The school has a tracan be made even if a child is enrollment in kindergarten dition of excellence in the
already. reg1ste~ ~t a publ!c and SIX years old by the same Gallia Coul)ty area and is a
school Ill anr ~!StriCt m Ohto date to enroH 111 first grade. chanered, non-public school
or W,es.t VIrgtma. .
Sometimes ch1ldren who turn by the Ohio Depanment of .
.Wtlhams descnb~d the five m the summer months Education.
kindergarten progrdlll ts a full are not ready 'for kmdergarten
day, every day program, and need a screening by an
which is known for its educator to reveal this. ALL OUR TAX
Biblical emphasis and for Parents must provide a copy
teaching kindergarten stu- of the child's official birth RETURNS
dents to read. Students typi- certificate (not a hospital cercally score above the 95th tificate ),
immunization COME WITH A
percentile on nationally stan- · record, SociaJ Security card, GUARANTEE.
· dardized tests.
and custody papers (if
The school office schedules divorced) with the application ·
We stand behind
appointments to interview the forms at the time of screening.
parents and screen the stuImmunizations required are
our work with out
dents for kindergarten readi- 5 diphtheria, whooping
ness. The school asks that cough, and tetanus (OPT's), 4 Basic Guarantee.
both parents accompany the polio (IPV ,s); ·2 measles,
, We know all the latest tax
child if al all possible, but one mumps and rubella (MMR); 3
law changes
parent is required. Each child Hepatitis B. and I Varicella
• We find all theuedits &amp;
receives ·an . individualized, vaccine.. Each child must
deductions you deserve
personal screening by Murray illso have a TB skin test after
and a review by the school Jan. I, 2007. These immu• FREE electronic filingw1th
administrator. The cost of the nizations may be obtained
paid rax preparation
application and screening is from family doctors or the
$S5, and is refundable if the Gallia
County
Health
school judges the child is not Department at 499 Jackson
ready for kinder~arten and is Pike (take your child's imrnu50% refundable if the parents nization record with you for. Call f.-800-234·1040
decide not to enroll. updating).
Screening fm
orvmr u1 ar ~.JaclsonheWln.com
Sometimes a child may be hearing and vision will be ,,,,., ...•.,,. ...,.~,.,,,"' ""' '"'""'''"'
.
•

JJ

-·

Its okay to give campus life a later lry
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MAAI;Y SUGAR

• ~alhpoli~ llatlp ntributte
• t)oint t)Iea~ant l\egi~ter
• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

REACH OVER 18,000 HOMES
IN THE TAl-COUNTY AREA!.
4.

Advertising Deadline:
FRIDAY, APRIL 1'3, 2007
12:00Noon
Insertion Date:
FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 2007
,• ,·.

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*atlipDii~ ·ll'all!' ~ribhne 446-2342 ¥Joi~t lUea~ant 1\egt~ter 675-133~
¥The Dally Sentinel ~92
..2155 .
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RutLAND - The Easter
play, 'The Three. Nails," 7
p.m. tonig~t and tomorrow
night, Rutland Freewill
Baptist Church.

TUPPERS PLAINS - advanced to varsity captain
"This is not a beauty,
Hannah Helgesen of Tuppers her junior year. She also was bathing suit, . cheer skill or
Plains, the daughter of on the varsity competition talent competition," said
Tawny, and John Helgesen, squadforthepastthreeyears. Pageant Cqordiilator Lucy
has .been selected as a state Hannah plans to attend Ohio Wiesend. "The judges are
finalist
in
the Miss University to pursue a career trained to look for the allCheerleader of America's in counselins. after she grad- American girl, who nonnally
Selection to be held on April · uates from htgh school.
would not even think about
21 and April 22, at the
The program is offered to being in a pageant."
Holiday Inn in Worthington, female high school cheerThe winner will be
175 Hutchinson Avenue, leaders,-grades nine through crowned
Miss
Ohio
' · 12. The competition include~ Cheerleader of America
Columbus. ·
Sheisajuniorrepresenting short interviews, an evening 2006-2007, and receive· a
Eastern High School in -gown contest; an essay con- tiara, _plaque and official
Reedsville. As a state finalist, rest: Preliminary judging was sash. Each high school will
Helgesen will be competing made from an application receive the cheerleader's
for cash scholarships and distributed by high school name and photo on a plaque
awards .which she will be counselors or coaches, and for placement in the sports
able to use at a private or pub- the girls were chosen trophy case. Each partictpant
lie college, university or because of their ability. The receives a personalized
trade school of her choice. participants were requtred to · school sash, tiara, State
Helgesen was junior-varsity write an essay. Following Finalist plaque, certificate,
. co-captain her · freshman judging on the state level, and Miss Cheerleader of
year, varsity co-captain her plaques will be awarded .io America souvenir gifts.
and the participant~.
There is no national pageant.
sophomore
year,

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Dear Annie: I'm a second-s.;mester ·college student who is having a horrible time transitioning back
to school. Since classes
started up again, I've
called home every night;
sobbing and miserable.
I had a wonderful first
semester and ~an 't figure
out why I'm so unhappy
now. All I want to do is go
home. I miss my parents
incredibly, and all _ the
friends I met here la!l't ·
semester aren't nearly as
nice as I thought they
were.
I spend every day _feeling more and more alone.
I've lost motivation to do
anything. I can't enjoy my
classes and don't even
have -fun practicing with
my rugby team, something
I used to love. I stopped
going to parties and nev\!r
feel like doing l)'luch.
Everything feels so empty.
1- talked to the· schobl
counselor once and also
went home for a weekend,
which helped a little bit,
but now I'm right ·back
where I star-ted.
., I'm considering becom. ing a · commuter student,
because I just can't stand
feeling this way anymore .
Do you have any advice?
- · Homesick and -Lonely
·Dear Homesick: It's not
unusual for college students who are living away
from home for the first
time to experience some
depression. Please go back
to the school coJmselor
today and ask· for more
help. Also, phone your
parents and discuss this
with them, and on your
next trip home; consider
the possibility of seeing a
therapist. If, after a couple
of weeks, you don ' t feel
more cap'able of handling

2007

OVCS BEGINS !GNDERGARTEN

Local teen is ·state.finalist

A SPECIAL SECTION
In The·

promised a workshop later
this month for the department to brief members, "so
that ·we can hit 'the ground
running when the rule
becomes effective in June."
The new rules require
facilities found to be high
risk, estimated at about
7,000 plants nationwide, to
complete
.vulnerability
assessments and security
plans.
The . Homeland Security
Department had said in
December, when it issued a
draft form of the new rules,
that although many plants
had invested in voluntary
security upgrades, "voluntary efforts alone will not
provide sufficient security
for the nation."
.
After the high risk facilities have filed their assessments, they will be divided
by department officials into
four tiers. The highest risk
plants will receive the most
stringent scrutiny.
Homeland Security will
set performance standards
that include securing the
perimeters of the plant,s and
any potential targets inside,
controlling access to the
facility, deterring theft ·and
preventing sabotage.
The rules allow . the
department for the first
time to force recalcitrant
plants to fall in line, either
by issuing civil fines of up
to $25,000 per day or in
the most extreme cases
shutting a plant down.
P)ant
operators
are ·
allowed some flex-ibility in
devising ways to meet the
performance . standards.
Chenoff told reponers at a·
briefing Monday that he
wants to ~unleash the ingec
nuity of the _private sector."
Activists were disappointed the rules are not
more p~escriptive .

' .

Thursday, April S
TUPPERS PLAINS · The Tuppers Plains VFW
Ladies Auxiliary will met at
7 p.m. at the hall. Officers
·will be nmninated.
CHESTER
The
Chester-Shade Historical
Association will meet at 7
p.m. at the Chester
Courthouse.

Tuesday, April 3,

ANNIE'S MAILBOX.

BY BEVERLEY LUMPKIN strongest chemical security making the nation safer and
laws in the nation in pan
bec~u~e it asks companies
WASHINGTON
to identify high-risk chemiRules to allow the govern- . · cals and works with those
ment to track security at companies io replace them
the nation's 15,000 chemi- with safer ones,." said Sen.
• cal plants were released Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J.
Monday to a mixed chorus "The Bush administration's
of praise from the industry proposal would prevent
and disappointment from New Jersey from finishing
lawmakers in several states. that job."
About half of those facilEchoing his colleague,
ities are deemed to be at Sen. Roben Menendez, Dhigh risk for an accident .or N.J., added that the federal
attack, Homeland Security rules do not yet go far
Secretary Michael Chertoff enough to protect citizens.
told reponers.
.
"As the threat evolves
'Aboul 70 regulators from and new ideas emerge,
the Homeland Security states that _want to improve
. Department will begin this security should not have
summer carrying out audits their hands tied by the fedand
site
inspe~tions, eral government," he said.
Asked whether the CederAssistant Secretary Ruben
Stephan said. Homeland al rules would prevent New
Security officials estimate Jersey or other states from
300 to 400 facilities are of enacting stronger laws than
the highest concern.
exist today, Chenoff waved
Plants that fail to comply off the question as hypoface substantial fines or thetical.
even may be shut down.
"It's going to get
Chenoff said many facil- resolved the way it always
ities have already taken is - someone's going to
ships on their own to go to court," he said.
address security issues. but
The t6p Republican on
because they are such the Senate Homeland
attractive targets ·to terror- Secu,rity Committee said
ists. more needs to be done. s~e was pleased that the
"The important thing is regulations will ·allow the
to make sure we bring even process uf securing chemithose that are laggards up cal facilities to begin. But
to the standards the pu!M Maine Sen. Susan Collins
has a right to expect si nce" added she was disappointed
the terrorist attacks of Sept. that the regulations were
II , 2001, Chenoff sai;!. . . "overr.eaching" when .it
In a bow ro concerns comes to state regulatory
from states that already laws.
have stricter rules, notably
She said Chertoff called
New Jersey, the final rules her to · offer reassurance.
allow existing state laws to "But it would have been far
remain unchallenged.
preferable had the depanChertQff insisted the rules ment's
regulations
· will not interfere with any remai~ ent on the issue
current regulations in New · of preempti
as the law
Jersey or any other state.
directed "
Some dawmakers were
S e an Scott · Jensen
not reassured.
of !he merican Chemistry
"New Jersey has .the Cou·ncil praised the rules as'

Thesday, t\pril3
PAGEVILLE _ Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30 p.m.
at the Page ville town hall.
ALFRED
_ Orange
Township Trustees regular
meetmg, 7:30 p.m. at the
home of the fiscal officer,
Osie Follrod.
CHESTER
-Chester
Tow~sbip Trustees regular
meeung. 7 p.m., Chester
Town Hall.
/

Montas said in New York.
The Australian government pledged $1.6 million in
emergency aid and said helicopters already in the
· 'Solomons as part of a multinational sec urity mission
. had been made available for
rescue and relief.
The .
International
Federation of Red Cross and
Red -Crescent Societies said
it was' releasing $53,000 in
in itial aid to the national Red
Cross.
The archipelago has more
than 200 islands with a population of about 552,000 and
lies on the Pacific Basin's socalled "Ring of Fire," an arc
of volcanos and fault lines
where quakes are frequent.
The quake occurred when
the Australian tectonic plate
suddenly dived beneath the
Pacific plate, said David
Wald of the USGS National
,
AP photo
Earthquake
Information
Beachgoers at Bondi return to the water despite it's closed in Sydney, Australia Monday. Center in Colorado.
Ocean beaches along Australia's Pacific coast have been closed due to a tsunami warning
The undersea temblor liftafter a magnitude 7.6 earthquake struck off the Solomon Islands Monday morning.
ed the ocean.bottom, gener'
ating deadly tsunami waves
spokesman for
Prime
Sogavare · declared a Disaster
Management near the epicenteF, Wald
Minister
Manasseh national state of emergency Office spokesman Julian said.
.
Sogavare, told the Sydney and held meetings with his Makaa said.
'
· "It would have been a
Morning Herald that some impoverished country's aid
Helicopters made the first
coastal villages were struck donors about getting help. drops of tents, drinking much worse situation if the
by waves up to 30 feet tall, "My heart goes out to ;111 of water and other supplies to cities were heavily populatalthough most reported you at this very trying time," the crowd on the hill behind ed," Wald said.
On July 21, 1975, a large
heights of between 9 and 15 he said in an address to the Gizo, ·said Peter Marshall,
tsunami
hit Bougainville,
the Solomons' deputy police
nation.
feet.
killing
an
estimated
200 peoDebris needed to be commissioner. Flights were
"There are reports that
some villages were com- cleared before Gizo's air- expected to resume Tuesday. ple, according to the U.S.
pletety washed away," he field could be fully operaOne boat carrying relief Geological Survey and
supplies left Honiara fqr World Health Organization.
toldAP.
tional, the Red Cross said.
Fresh water was in shon Gizo; and at least three more That tsunami and a 1956
Maesulia said the death
supply
in some areas, while were expected to go wind storm, which also
toll was expected to rise as
temporary,
localized food Tuesday, Makaa told the killed 200, are the deadliest
the cleanup progressed.
natural disasters to strike the
"Some people were seen shortages have also been British Broadcasting Corp.
floating on the sea during the reponed, it said. Some of the
U.N. Secretary-General nation.
big waves but it was very dif· · affected areas can only be Ban Ki-moon said the
The Solomon Islands has
ficult to go near them," he reached by boat.
United Nations had u been rocked by several
A damage assessment humanitarian team ready .to strong eanhquakes in recent
told the AP. "The number at
the moment is 13. It's possi- team flew over the tsunami deploy to the Solof\lon history. The region was hit
ble that number will zone· late Monday, th\ln Islands and offered assis- by temblors of magnitudes 8
increase, maybe double. up reponed back to the govern- tance to the government; and 8.l'-..in 1971 and 7.3 in
or even more."
ment in Honiara, National U.N. spokeswoman Michele 2003.
Villagers on Simbo,
Choiseul and Ranunga
islands reported deaths and
widespread destruction, he
said.
"Sasamun~ga village is
quite a big village .... It was ·
reported that 300 houses
were completely destroyed
in that village alone."

Chemical plants put under federal
rules forfighting terror, accidents .ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER '

Public meetings

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BY mE BEND

PageA3

the distance, it might be the point where I avoided .
wise to become a com- contact. When I ran out of
muter student to finish out options,
I underwent
the semester. You can surgery. It was virtually
always give campus living pain-free, and I was out
another try next year.
with my friends the same
Dear Annie: My 20th day. Ever since, I've had
wedding anniversary is only minimal sweating and
approaching, and I have a my social life has been ·
dtlemma. When my wife great. I strongly suggest
and I first married, · our anyone afflicted with
priorities were to buy a excessive sweating talk to
home and raise a family. ·their dermatologist about
She never asked for an surgery.
R.H. in
engagement ring, but she Florida
certainly deserves the
Dear R.H.: Several
finest I can get.
readers said t~ surgery
In past years, I've given was a godsend. For referher diamond earrings and rals and more information
a matching necklace. If on hyperhidrosis, contact
left to my own devices, I the .
International
Society
would likely · purchase a Hyperhidrosis
matching ring.
(sweathelp.org),
Suite
I would like to surprise 1160, 520 Walnut St.,
her, but is it better to let Philadelphia, PA 19106.
her pick out her own ring? Here's one more:
I know that even . if she
Dear Annie: I am a derhated the one I selected, matologist in downtown
she'd never let me know. Chicago . Excessive sweat- Torn in Thlsa, Okla.
ing can be a problem of
Dear Torn: This is one great magnitude affecting
of those f11rch11.ses where" not only social relations,
it's best i 'you know what but the ability to work.
your wife would like. You The latest and best therapy
can ask her. sisters or is Botox. These injections
friends if she's ever will eliminate sweating for
expressed an interest in a six months or more, and
particular style', you can SQmetimes are covered by
take her window-shopping insurance. - J.B. Pinski,
past jewelry stores, inno- M.D.
Happy Passover to all
cently discussing her likes
and dislikes until you get a our Jewish readers.
sense of what she wants,
Annie's Mailbox is writor you can try something ten by Kathy Mitchell and
more playful. Perhaps give Marcy Sugar, longtime
her a huge plas!ic ring and editors of the · Ann
present it to . her with a Landers column. Please
note saying it's a stand-in e-mail your questions to
for the real thing that you anniesmailbox@com·
will buy when she is at cast.net, or write to:
your side to select ·it. We Annie's Mailbox, P.Q.
think she'll be thrilled . Box 118190, Chicago, IL
either wa:t. .
606-II. To find out more
Dear Annie: I am an 18- about Annie's Mailbox,
year-oid male who, like and read features by other
"Sweating in the Palms," Creators Syndicate writsuffered from palmar ers and cartoonists, visit
hydrosis and medication the Creators Syndicate
alone was not enoush. It Web page at www.creaffected my social life to ators.com.

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, , Your. Once A Year ·
.. · ... . Opportunity · . ·

TiJ'Showcase Your Business
-W~h ~Story 1!1. Th#s
'fri-f:ou'!tY Edition .

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The Daily Sentinel

The Daily-Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Dan Goodrich
Publisher
I

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting .the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Ame~dment to the U.S. Constitution

.T ODAY IN HISTORY

t

· Pag~A4

OPINION.

Tuesday, April3,

· Today is Tuesday, April 3, the 93rd day of 2007. There
are 272 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History :
On April 3, 1860, the legendary Pony Express began ser·
vice between St. Joseph, Mo., and Sacramento, Cahf.
On this date:
.
In 1865, Union forces occupied ·the Confederate capital
of Richmond, Va.
In 1936, Bruno Hauptmann was electrocuted in Trenton,
N.J., for the kidnap-murder of the Lindbergh child.
In 1946, Lt. Gen. Masaharu Homma, the Japanese·commander responsible for the Bataan Death March, was executed outside Manila, Philippines.
·
In 1948, President Truman signed the Marshall Plan,
designed to help European allies rebuild after World War II
and resist Commtmisrrt.
.
In 1968, the day before he was assassi~ated in Mer:nphis,
Tenn., civil rights leader the Rev. Martn'ILuther Kmg Jr.
delivered his famous "mountaintop" speech to a rally of
striking sanitation workers.
In 1968, North Vietnam agreed to meet with U.S. representatives to set up preliminary peace talks.
·
In 1974, deadly tornadoes struck wide parts of the South
and Midwest before jumping across the border into
Canada; more than 300 fatalities resulted.
In 1982, Britain ·dispatched a naval task for~e to the south
Atlantic ro reclaim the disputed Falkland Islands from
Argentina.
.
In 1996, an Air Force jetliner carrying Co_mmerce
Secretary Ron Brown and American business executives
crashed in Croatia, killing all 35 people aboard.
Five years ago: Israeli tanks rolled into the West Bank's
largest city, Nablus, and other troops la1d s1ege to a refugee
camp in Jenin, battling Palestmians who ·barncaded
entrances and fought back With bombs and guns. Soldiers
a) so encircled hundreds of Palestinian gunmen, holed up in
the Bethlehem church marking 'esus' birthplace.
.
Today's Binhdays: Actress'singer Doris Day is 83.
Actress Miyoshi Umeki is 78. Former German Chancellor
Helmut Kohl is 77. Jazz musician Jimmy McGriff is 71.
· Actor William Gaunt is 70. Actor Eric Braeden is 66.
Actress Marsha Mason is 65. Singer W~;~yne Newton is 65.
Singer Billy Joe Royal is 65. Singer Tony Orlando is 63.
Comedy writer Pat Proft is 60. Singer Richard Thompson
is 58. Country musician Curtis Stone (Highway 101) is,57.
Rock musician Mick Mars (Motley Crue) is 51. Actor Alec
Baldwin is 49. Actor David Hyde Pierce is 48. Comedianactor Eddie Murphy is 46. Rock singer-musician Mike
Ness (Social Distortion) is 45. Rock singer Sebastian Bach
is 39. Rock musician James MacDonough is 37. Actress
Jennie Garth is 35. Comedian Aries Spears is 32. Actress
Cobie Smulders is 25.·Actress Amanda Bynes is 2 I.
Thought for Today: ''The difference between gossip and
In ruling that Abraham
news ·depends on whether you hear it or tell it." Lincoln had gone too far in
Anonymous.
'
suspending habeas corpus
during the Ci vii War, the
LETTERS. TO THE
Supreme Couit (ex Parte
Milligan, 1866), emphasized
EDITOR
that the civilian courts were
Letters ro the editor are welcome. They should be less still open when Lincoln had
than 300 words. All letters are subject to.editing, musr be espionage suspects tried
signed, and include address and telephone number. N_o before · military tribunals.
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be m Today, with the hearings and
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. ·Letters of subsequent trials of suspected.
thanks to organizations imd individuals will not be accept- . terrorists at Guantanamo Bay
ed for publication.
also far removed from our rule .
of Jaw, former senator Bob
Kerrey, a member of the 9/11
Commission, urges that these
Gitmo prisoners be tried in
(USPS
213·960)
.
our federal courts.
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing . . Citing the skepticism both
Correction Polley
Co.
here ~dabroad about Khalid
Published every afternoon, Monday
Sheikh Mohammed's CIA·
Our fnain concern in all stories is to
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
censored
"confessions" at his
be accurate. If you know of an error · Pomeroy, Ohio.
secon!S~Iass
Gitmo
hearings,
Kerrey says
in a story, ~II the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
(New York Daily News,
992-2156.
Member:· The Associated Press and
March 18): "The families of
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
the victims and the people of
Poetmae~r: Send address conec-Our main number Is
Uons to The Daily.Sentinel, 111 Court
the
United States deserve to
(740)992·2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
know niore about what is true
Depanment extensions are:
and false about his 'confes·
Subec:rlptlon Rates
sion'" from which
By carrier or motor route
reporters
were
banned.
News
One month
'1 0.27
•
Moreover, Mohammed's
Edhor: Cha~ene H~flich, Ext. 12
One yNr
'115.84
Deily
.
50'
written.
submission about his
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Senlor
Citizen
rlllea
all!ged torture by the CIA in
Reporter: Belh 5ergent, Ext. 13
One month
'1 0.27
its secret prison was omitted
One yNr
'1 03.110
from the official transcript of
&amp;t&gt;sat&gt;ers shoUd I9IT1it " adYanai
Advertising
his confession. · As Anne
dimct .m lhe oOt,- - . No subOutalde Slllu: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
Applebaum, an eKpert on
scription by mail pennitted in areas
Outalde Slltes: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where nome carrier service ts avaif..
Stalin's gulags, emphasizes
Ctaaa./Circ.: Judy Clar1&lt;, Ext. 10
able.
(Washington Post, March 20):
'The mystery sw:rounding
. Mall Subec:rlptlon
(MohaJiuned's
interrogation
(;eneral Manager
Inside Meigs County
over the years in that CIA
C:ha~eoe HoeHich, Ext. 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
·secret prison) renders any
26 Weeks
'64.20
'confession he makes com·
52 Weeks
' 127.11
E.,.li:
pletely null, either in a court of
newsC mydailysentinel.com
Outside llelga County
law or in the court of interna13 Weeks
'53.55
tional public opinion."
Web:
26 Weeks
'1 07.10
Also, so deeply flawed are
52 Weeks
'214.21
WW'If.mydailysentinel.com 1
the proc;;edures at Giuno that

THE: MOOD oF AMERICA ...

.

RUTLAND - The sevent h annual Leading
Creek Streain Sweep will
be held Saturday, April 21
at "Jim Vennari Park in
Ru.tland.
In the past, the stream
SW eep was held at the
Ru tland Fireman's Park,
bu t is being moved this
ye ar to the more-accessible

•

to intervene - along with
Congress - to forestall that
possibility by fostering real
democracy. Four Senators,
including Foreign Relations
Chaimlail Joseph Biden, DDel., wrote Mushan-df a polite
Jetter on March 12 urging him
to Jet Bhutto and Sharif cam-

Bryan Durst ·

Local Briefs

that stifling democmcy only
helps foster terrorism.
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the ·
newspaper of Capitol Hill. ) ·

Fish

•

planned

CHESTER - Tlie Chester Volunteer Fire Departme nt
will hold a fish fry, with serving to begin at 11 a.m., on
Saturday at the fire house.

Kindergarten registration set

~AHlER-

POMEROY - · Registration for kinderglll'tCn students in
Meigs County have been set as follows: Eastern LocaI,
May 3 and 4; Southern Local, April 19 and 20; .and Mei gs
Local, April 24 to 27.

1 H&amp; COL\INlB'US OISPJfJt=li ·

Hymn sing
RUTLAND - The Pa11l E. Taylor Memorial Good
Friday Hymn Sing will take place a_t 7 p.m. this Friday at
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church. Smgers mclude Agapee
Jubilee, The Gracemen, Forgiven Four, Reif Herman •
Earthen Vessels. Refreshments will follow.

Easter play
RUTLAND - . The Easter play, "The Three Nails" will
be presented at 7 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday at the
· Rutland Freewill Baptist Church.

the London Daily Telegraph, a
pro-American newspaper,
predicts
that
when
Mohammed is convicted by
the Gitmo tribunal, "the world
will condemn the procedures
by which the verdicts were
reached." Not all the world
wiU be that critical, but many
citizens of our allies will be.
And among our enemies,
Mohammed wiU get his wish
by becomirig a "martyr'' of the
Crusaders' injustice.
Even the members of the
9/1 r Commission, Kerrey
points out, were denied access
by the CIA to Mohammed and
other high-level "detainees."
Kerrey, now the president
of New York's New School
University, answers those
who insist that putting such
prisoners as Mohammed in
our civilian federal courts
would greatly endanger
national security. He points to
"the 10-year history of terrorist prosecutions in (our) federal and state courts (that) has
established bringing those
accused to justice."
'This has happened," he
continues, "without weakening the rule of law, making the
accused international heroes
or damaging the cases against
other terrorists."
Among the ZO successful
prosecutions · of terrorists in

'.

dispose of the trash.
"Tons of trash and debris
have been removed . from
Little Leading Creek and ·
Leading Creek over the
past seven years," Fulks
said. "I think we are starting to see a difference, 6ut
there are some areas that
are chronic problems. You
definitely get a feel for
what brands of beer and
fast food that litterbugs
prefer."

Pomeroy.
Mae Vineyard to Mary F.
Vineyard, certificate of
transfer, Olive.
Judith Marie Herrmann,
deceased, to Wendol W.
Herrmann,
certificate,
Salisbury.
Judith Marie Herrmann,
deceased, to Wendol Wade
Herrmann ,
affidavit,
Salisbury.
Edward Anderson to
Oxford Oil Co., right of
way, Salem.
·
Wetzel T. Bailey, . Jr. to
Oxford Oil Co.,- right of
way, Salem.

' Barbara
Charles J. Neece,
J. Neece. to Oxford Oil Co .•
right
of
way,
Salem/Rutland.
Wachovia
Bank.
Ocwenfederal Bank, Ocwen
Loan Servicing, j..LC, to S
and D Income Properties,
Dave Bumgardner, Shirley
Bumgardner, deed, Village
of Pomeroy.
Bruner Land Co. · to
Thomas E. Withers, deed,
Bedford. ·
Dorsel Randolph, Sr.,
Rosemary Randolph, to
Dorset Jova Randolph, Jr.,
deed, Chester.

Randal A. Cooper, Phyllis
J. Cooper, Dorinda F.
Cooper, to Randal A.
Cooper, Dorinda F. Cooper,
deed. Lebanon.
Evelyn Stewart ·to Jackie
Cummins,
·
Vickie
Cummins. deed, Letart.
Stephen L. Ohlinger, Jr.,
Vicki A. Warner, to Gregory
A. Taylor, Cheryl' A. Taylor,
deed.
·
Mildred Wallace to Julia
Proctor. deed, Village of
Middleport.
.
Donna Rae Hawk, Phillip
E. Hawk, to Phillip E.
Hawk, deed; Salem.

O'Bleness Memorial Hospital to offer childbirth class .

'U!07 -

Nat
Hentoff .

by the Meigs Soil and·
Water
Conservatiort
District and also t orre. sponds with Earth Day,
said Raina Fulks, Leading
Creek
Watershed
Coordinator. Other sponsors include the Rutland
Township
Board of Trustees, which
provides a dump truck to
haul the refuse. and the
Meigs County Transfer·
Station which has agreed to

LAND·TRANSFERS

Deaths

paign and also to step up
efforts to control the Taliban.
The outgoing U.S. ambassador to Pakistan, Ryan
Crocker, now ambassador to ·
lrdq, told Pakistanis that the
.U.S. would not pressure
Musharraf on elections. It's
probably good diplomacy not to apply the pressure publicly, :
but Bush should have a friend- ·
ly phone call soon with his
strategic ally and warn him

For the Record
Divorces

our civilian couns, Kerrey
Meanwhile, some House
notes that Alma! Kansi, killer Democrats - among them,
of two CIA employees, was · James Moran of Virginia C'!ptured iri Pakistan and, hav· . are trying to gather support to
ing been brought back here, move Guantanamo captives
was tried in Virginia courts- to military brigs in this counand executed.
try. Defense Secretary Roben
And tried in the U.S. Gates agrees that persistent
District Court in New York world criticism of Gitmo
City was Ramzi Yousef, a sus- would then cease, and the
peeled chief planner of the prisoners · wou)d be held
1993 terrorist attac~ on the securely here. The president
World Trade Center. After he and Alberto Gonzalez. have
was arrested and returned rejected Gates' proposaL
from Pakistan, Yousef and
But that approach doesn't
two terrorist associates were restore our rule of law when,
· sentenced to 240 years - for- under
the
Military
bidden all contact with the Commissions Acl, "unlawful
outside world.
enemy combatants" could •be
I asked Kerrey about the held in those brigs indefinitely
reaction to his proposal to while subject to "coercive"
return to our actual rule of law interrogation that could lead
in these cases~ 'What struck to suspect "confessions."
me," Kerrey said, "was how
The Supreme Court was
many 'usually knowledgeable right
in - 1866: "The
people were sUrprised to learn Constitution of the United
about the successful prosecu- States is a law for rulers and .
tions in our fedeml courts of people, equally in·war and in
these terrorists - .without peace. and covers with the
danger to national security, as shield of its protection all
parts of the proceedings were classes of men. at all times,
classified. And by having the and under all circumstances"·
trials here, Americans learned - including prison~rs of
so much about these convict- Guantanamo Bay.
ed terrorists and how they . Whether the John Robens .
. operated.':.
..
_
Supreme Court agrees would
If Congress amends the ·affect - as.terrorism contin, Military Commissions Act, as ties indefinitely - how much ·
kerrey suggests, so that Confidence thefree world will
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed have in the United States as a ·
"can defend himself- and, . key protector and fighter for
· quite likely, lind himself con- the. values that are wholly
victed - in a U.S. court," the opposed by the terrorists.
results will include, says
(Nat Hentt!ffis a nationally ·
Ketrey that
renowned authority on the
"Justice will be served, Firs/ Amendment and the Bill :
national security protected ofRights and aurhor of many :
and secondary damage, either books, including 'The War im
to other cases or to prospects rhe Bill of Right~ and the
for peace and stability around Gathering
Resisrance ",
the world, will be avoided."
(Seven Stories Press. 1003).) .

Vennari Park .
Community groups and
individuals who wish to
participate in the event can
contact the Meigs Soil and
Water
Conservation
District at 992-4282.
Participants will receive a
Loading Creek Stream
Sweep T-shirt and lunch
will be served afterwards.
Gloves and trash bags are
provided.
The event is sponsored

POMEROY
- Meigs
county Recorder Kay Hill
re poned the fo llowmg
tr·ansfers Qf real estate:
Dorothea P. Riffle to
Brandi Ann Buchanan,
deed, Sutton.
Meigs United Methodist
cooperative Parish to Vicki
Ann Hanson, deed. Village
of Pomeroy.
Gregory A. DeQuasie,
Brenda K. DeQuasie, to
Delbert H. Bollinger, deed,
Vi llage of Pomeroy.
Bryan M. Durst, 29, of Point Pleasant, W.Va. died Friday
Sean Ray Will to William
evening, March 30, 2007, at Pleasant' Valley Hospita I, L. Smith, Rebecca J.
Point Pleasant.
Autherson, deed, Village of
Service will be held at I0 a.m. on Thursday, April 5•
2007, at the Crow-Hussell Funeral. Home, Point Pleasant,
with Robert L. Patterson II officiating. Burial will follow in
Eddy Cllapel Cemetery.
.
Friends may call from 7-9 p.m. on Wednesday at. the
· funeral home. Online e-mail condolences may be sent t0
ATHENS - Expectant
the family at crowhussell @suddenlinkmail.com.
mothers · arid . their birth
coaches or companions are
attend
encouraged · · to
Memorial
0 'Bleness
Hospital's childbirth class
s unday, April 15; from 2
p.m. to 6 p.m. The location
f the class will be in lower
0
fry

Alternative to discredited Gitmo

.The Daily Sentinel

. STAFF REPORT
NEWS4PMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Corbett Lavere "Pat" Patterson, 80, of Syracuse, passed
away at 7:~0 a.m. IV!opday, April 2, 2007, il! the Charleston
Area·Medtcal Center. General Division, Charleston, W.Va.
Born October 12, 1926, in-Kenna, W.Va .• he was the son
of the late James Corbett and Elva Ercell Casto 'Patterson.
He was a retired self-employed carpenter and was a WWII
U.S. Army veteran.
·
.
He is survived by: his wife, Daisy M. Cross Patterson,
whom he married June 21, 1949, in Wilkesville, Ohio; his
children, Jeannie Patterson, Dayton, Ohio, Bobby (Rachel.)
Patterson, Point Pleasant. W.Va., Cindy (Dennis) Wolfe,
Racine and Michael Patterson. Syracuse; 12 grandchildren
a sister, Isabelle Cora, Vienna, W.Va. ; two brothers, Otis
(Mary) Patterson, Vienna, W.Va. and Victor (Karen )
Patterson, Waverly, W.Va.; and several nieces and nephews
Graveside services will be 2 p~m. Th~rsday, April 5•
2007. ip the Meigs Memory Gardens. Qfficiatmg will be
Sorlny McClure. Friends may call from 6-8 p.m
Wednesday at the Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine.
Military graveside services will be conducted by Racine
American Legion Post #602 and Tupper Plains Post #9053 •
Veterans of Foreign Wars.
•
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by
visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Seventh Leading Creek Stream Sweep

Corbett a..vere "Pat' Patterson

elections and. is planning to
rely on the parliament elected
in 2002 ~ in what widely was
regarded as rigged voting - ·
to elect him president. When
Pakistan 's chief justice threatened to block that move and
insisted that the country 's constitution be respected which also re()uires f\:!ushan-Jf ·
to quit the a~my - he had the
justice arrested. which led to
demonstrations by lawyers
and a subsequent cmckdown
on news organizations reporting on the protest~. His popularity is plunging, though there
is no threat - yet - of the
massive popular unrest of the
kind that Jed to the Shah's
ouster in 1979 _
This is a moment for Bush

· -\vww.mydallysentinel.com

·obituaries

2007

Bush should push Musharnif on elections .this year in Pakistan·
' thing else, but you can't shut
. A~ a maner of hardheaded
down the mosques. If you shut
realism, not just pro-democrddown secular parties, as
tic ideology, President Bush
· shpuld pressure Pakistan's
Mushamlf is doing, the only'
ruler,
Pervez
military
other choice the people have is
Musharraf, to hold free electhe ISlamists." Bhutto noted
Morton
tions this year. That's because,
' Konclladle that Pakistan's.fooner military
perhaps sooner than later, the
dictator, Zia-ul=Haq, who in
increasingly
unpopular
1977 overthrew and executed
her father, Prime Minister
Musharraf could go the way of
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, formed an
the Shah of Iran, who was toppled by Islamic extremists. to oust the Taliban from his alliance with radical lslamists .
And also, Musharraf's leading country, but the provision was in Pakistan and, with U.S.
Democratic opponent, former pulled from the Senate bill at help, aidedAfghan rebels who
Prime Minister Benazir the administration's request.
became the Taliban.
Bhutto, says she would do a
Thwarting a new Taliban
Musharraf, who carne to
bener job than Musharraf in offensive is uppermost on the power in a coup in 1999, con. fighting the resurgent Tali ban . U.S. priority list, followed by tinued recognizing the Tali ban
that's menacing Afghanistan. concern that nuclear-armed until the U.S. demanded his
"As prime minister," Bhutto Pakistan not be taken over by support after the Sept. . II .
told me in an interview. "''d Islamic
fundamentalists. 200 I . terrorist attacks. but
control the' tribal areas of Democratic development in Bhutto said he has continued
Pakistim," where Osama bin Pakistan is somewhere on the fostering fundamentalism Laden is believed to be hiding list, but it's not at the top. It partly by starving public eduand the Taliban is ascendant. needs to be, because democra- cation and allowing funda"1did it before, when the drug cy is intimately connected to mentalist ·madrassas to flourlords were in control and I'm controlling
extremism. ish instead. 'Bhutto told me
confident I can clear out the Americans - including Bush that she hopes the Bush
Taliban." Opposed to the ho~- have the idea that administration wiU follow up
tile
relationship
that Musharraf, like Egypt's Hosni on Bush's own call last year
Musharraf maintains with Mubarak, is all that stands for "open and honest elecAfghan President Hamid between stability and Islamic tions"
by
pressuring
Karzai, Bhutto adds that, "a fundamentalist rule. That view Musharrat to allow her and
democratic Pakistan would is stoutly disputed by Bhutto her former democratic rival,
help Afghanistan stabilize, and Pakistan expen~ such a~ Nawaz Shanf, back into the
relieving pressure on NAlD Boston University's Husain country to campaign, and by
troops."
.
Haqqani, both of whom point- funding "robust" election
Bush late last month dis- ed out to me that in Pakistan's observer teams to watch the .
scheduled
for
patched Vice · President 2002 elections, Islamic partie$ voting,
Cheney to Pakistan to read the received just II .3 percent of November.
riot actio Mlisharraf about ris- the vote. According to · Haqqani told me he thinks
ing Taliban inftltration into Haqqani, a former Pakistani that the administration fears
Afghanistan, reportedly warn- . diplomat and government that if Bhutto were elected
ing that Democrats in · official, the United States has prime minister, the Pakistani
Congress might cut off aid to contributed to a "Middle army would refuse to allow
his regime if he was not more Eastemization" of Pakistan, hertogovem. Butthatopposiaggressive. In fact, House actually strengthening Islamic tion might be overcome if.
Democrats, as part of their first forces while bolstering mili- Bhutto agreed to let Musharraf
" I00 days" homeland security tary rulers who prevent demo- stay on as president. She told
me it is "premature" to discuss
bill, conditioned future mili- cratic political development
tary aid to Pakistan on Bush's.
'The Islamists are slowly Musharraf's future. It's obvicertifying that Musharraf was expanding tor one simple rea- ously a bargaining chip.
making "all possible efforts·" son: You can shutdown every- Musharraf ·is resisting free

•

· Tuesday, April3, 2007

POMEROY - Actions for divorce were 'filed in Me igs
·County Cc:iminon Pleas Court b~ _Reba. Virginia Til lis,
Portland against Denms Buck Ttlhs, M1ddlepon; CarIa
Kimes, Long Bottom, against Randall Kime~. New Hav en,
·W.Va.: and Eri~; Cunningham, S_yracuse, agamst Sandra K.
Cunningham, Gallipolis.

Dissolution

The class focuses on include a tour . of the
level rooms 008 and 010.
First-time parents, as well breathing and relaxation O'Bleness Birth Center.
as experienced parents, will techniques as well as other
The class is free of charge
learn what's new in mater- pain-relie~ options. The class and will be held six limes
nity care. Expectant parents also provides information on alternating months . this
will also Jearn the stages of about hospital procedures · year. For more information
labor and delivery and what and variations of labor. An or to register, call the
to expect-before and after introduction to the matemity O'Bieness Birth Center at
services at O' Bieness will (740) 592-9275 .
the baby is born.

New schoolhouse welcomes Amish students who-survived rampage
'

'

Bv MARK SCOLFORO .

.

. propane-heated, with bath-

AssociATED PREss WRITER
NICKEL MINES, Pa. A bell summoned Amish students to a new, more cheerful and more secure one·
room schoolhouse Monday,
six months to the day lUter a
gunman shot I0 of their
classmates, killing five.
The building replaces the
West Nickel Min.cs Amish
School, which was · tom
down I0 days after the Oct. 2
attack by. a neighborhood
milk-tanker driver who killed
himself as police closed in.
Blacktop was installed on the
driveway insteaq of gravel,
Bait Township zoning offi~er
John Coldiron said because
the children remembered the
sound of the gunman's tires .
spitting rocks.
"They're elated that they
have a new school, but nevertheless it's going to bring
·
bac k forcefuII y that day stx
months ago," said . retired
teacher D&amp;n Baughman, 81 ,
a longtime neighborhood
resident.
On Monday morning,
children carried mulficol.
ored lunch coolers as. they
walked past state troopers
guarding the school's private lane for the stan of
classes. A few were accom-

POMEROY - An action for dissolution of marriage was
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Melissa D.
Ryder, Pomeroy, and Jared M. Ryder, Pomeroy.

rooms in an outbuilding.
Sod was purchased so
students don't have to walt
for grass to grow before they
can play in the school yard.
In a touch of modernity,
the traditional blackboard
was replaced by a whiteboard that Coldinm said
adds to the cheery atmosphere. A religious message
hangs near the front door.
"I guarantee you, it (cost) a
· good deal more than they normaJiy spend," Coldiron said.
The school's construction
was paid for in part with a
ponion of more than $4 million in donations to tile
Nickel Mines Accountability
Committee, the primary
. organization
collecting
donations on behalf of the 10
victims. Donations, some _
sent directly to the school
board, have also helped pro·
vide care for the five wounded girls who survived.

t¥.

AP photo

· .
Amish children, accompamed by an adult, center, are greeted
by a State Police Trooper, ri~ht, guarding a road to the nEJwlyreopened schoolhouse m Nickel Mmes, Pa., Monday, built to
replace the razed West Nickel Mines Amish School where a
gunman killed five students and himself 1n October 2006.
panied by adu lt~.
During the rampage, a
· , go1· ng to be a red • teacher had to run to a neigh. "Th'Is· IS
letter day in their life, boring farm to call911.
because it is a school of
"for an Amish one-room
their own," Baughman said. schoolhouse, this one is
The New Hope Amish spectacular," said Coldiron.
School has a steel door ,that who inspected it last week.
locks from the inside. It has
The building, within sight
no phone, but its location of the old school 's location.
behind a row of non-Amish lacks electricity, per Amish
homes provides a way to custom, but skylights and
quickly summon help in an windows make it bright
emergency, Coldiron said. inside, ~ Coldiron said. It js

Arrests·

A~t;!~
BACKSTAGE
Broadway Revue
April 13 at 8 pm
April 14 at 2 &amp; 8 pm
Tickets $10 &amp; $8

Pomeroy Mayor's Court in petty theft· in Pomeroy
reference to items allegedly Mayor's Court was James
taken · from the Dollar Eakins, 22, Syracuse. for
Auditions:
a
General Store on East Main . allegedly · stealing
from PageA1
Disney's tOI Dalmatians Kids
Street. Both Patrolmen Playstation Two video game
POMEROY - Meigs County Grand Jury will conv ene
Apri122-23
from a residence on
Spaun and Aaron Metzler. Spaun and . Holcomb are device
on May 16.
Mulberry
Avenue.
The
Ariel-Dater
Hall
Pomeroy was assisted by working on the case as well Patrolman Spaun is the
428 Sec; A~"A ~~~i~~~;~,?H
personnel froin the Meigs as a separate, pending inves'
ligation
of
alleged
petty
investigating
officer.
County Sheriff's Office.
'
Also on Friday, Lacey D. theft involving Childress ar .....---~---------------,
POMEROY . - A civil action filed in Meigs Cou nty Childress, 19, Racine, was Powell's
Food Fair.
Common Pleas Court by Auto Owners Insurance Co. cited for petty theft in
Also recently cited for ·
against Linda Zimmer has been dismissed.

Grand jury
Dismissal

Seminar
from PageA1
'

·' l

. ·.

,.

Wise, Va., Welch, W.W. and
a stop in Tennessee. Burr
added these areas were cho. sen using data froffi: the
Appalachian
Re~10n~l
Commission which Identified counties ranked as economically "distressed."
Burr said, . "W1th the
growing amount of c~edit
card debt and low sav mgs
levels plaguing Americans,
our seminars are intended to
provide people with strategies to relieve debt and
understand the importance
of budgeting." .
.
Seminar top1cs . mclude
. debt reduction, savtngs, and
budg~tin g. In addition; a

professional credit counselor from Debtscape, Inc.
·will be on hand .to answer
any individual finance
questions.
·
Burr safd -if .only one person comes away with a better understanding of developing a s~vings acc.~unt,
and mailagmg or ehmmating credit card d~bt then
the seminar is worth it for
her group.
The seminar is are open to
the public for $5 and is free
for indi~idual~ receiving .
government aid. Fre.e food
will be provided for all
attendees.
SIFE is a global. :nonprofit organization for colleg~ students whq apply the
knowledge they learn in the
classroom to real-world ·situations.

~~H.Ulsl~tte t.Baptist Cliutcli
. would lile to invite you
to come and join us for the Easter weekend
starting Friday ilfternoon!!!

GOod PJ'I'itltw,~Jeroire ·
Starting at I :00 p.m. we will have
special singing by.. ,.
*The Gospel Bluegrass Gentlell)en .
*The Clonch Family
*Jamie Humphrey
Followed by a message from
Or. James R. Acree Sr. and
· a dinner from
Hillside Baptis t Chun:h
Pomeroy, OH
info call 992-6768

With H&amp;R Block,you have more than a company behind you.
. Vou have a one-on-one relationship with ·one ol H&amp;R Block's
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Sat. 9·5
992-6674
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· PageA~

OHIO
Students visit State House literary Clu~ hears ofchasefo~ Iinco{n 1 killer

The Daily Sentinel

Tu~day,

Submitted photo

As an extension of their classroom studies. these third and fourth grade students and staff
of Mid-Valley Christian School traveled to Columbus to tour the Ohio State House and meet
with Governor Ted Strickland. In the group pictured here with the governor are left to rjght
front, Nikole Smith and Ethan Reitmire; middle row, Brandon Johnson, Wesley Reitmire,
Andrew Briles, Mi racle Davidson , Alyssa Deemer; 1 and back, Beth Edward, Pam West
(Strickland) Jessica McDade and Kim Reitmire.

Local
·stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 49.81
Alao (NASDAQ)- 76.70
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) 64.90
'
Big Lots (NYSE)- 32.34
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 37.52
BorgWamer (NYSE) 75.64
· Century Aluminum (NAS.
DAQ)-47.68
Champion (NASDAQ) 8.20
Channing Shops (NASDAQ)
-13.00
City Holdlll&amp; (~DAQ) 40.77
Collins (NYSE)- 67.00
Dollar General (NYSE)-

..

Local
weather
Tuesday ... Sunny. Highs
in
the
.lower
80s.
Southeast winds around 5
mph ... lncreasing to southwest I0 tu 15 mph with
gusts up to 25 mph in the
afternoon.
Tuesday night..Showers .
and thunderstorms ·likely.
Lows in the mid -50s.
.Southwest winds I 0 to 15 ·
mph. Gusts up
30 mph
after midnight. Chance of
rain 70 percent .
·Wednesday ... Mostly
' cloudy with sprinkles.
Breezy and much cooler .
with highs in the mid
50s. Temperature falling
into the upper 40s in the
afternoon. West wind~ 10
to 20 mph with gust~ up
to 30 mph.
·
W e d n e s' d a y
riight...Mostly cleudy and
breezy. Much cooler · with
lows in the mid 30s. West
winds I 0 to 20 mph .
Thursday ·
through
clo~dy.
Friday ... Mostly
Highs in the mid 40s.
· Lows in the upper 20s.
F.riday
night, .. Panly
cloudy. Cold with lows in
the lower 20s.

told to sleep iifthe tobacco bam;
The Garren sons didn't uust
Booth and locked the bam door.
The 16th Cavalry anived
during the night and set the bam
on frre when Booth refused to
come out. Sergeant Richard
Corbett watching through a
cmck in the bam saw Booth
raise his gun as though to ,shoot
his way out and Corbett shot
Boothinthebackofthehead.lt
was the same type of fatal
injury that Lincoln had
received Booth lived for about
25 t6 30 minutes. The wild 12day chase was over.
After the review, 15rnembei's
answered· roll call by naming
another real or fictionalassas~­
nat1on. The neKt meetm.\l will
be held at the Pomeroy Library
onApriiii.Theprogmmcomminee will lead a discussion of
"The Memory Keeper's
Daughter" by Kim Edwards.
Olita Heighton will be the hostess.

;:.-.

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CENTER
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Todav's gamas

Pnop Softball
Meigs at Eastern, 5 p.m.
SOutham at Roane COunty, 5 p.m.

PnopBaoeball

s~

Lady Rockets shut
down Meigs, 8-2
who struck
OUt four and
didn' t issue
ROCK SPRINGS
a walk in
Meigs softball had shown
the
complenty of offensive prowess
plete game
m its first twu outings this
dec i ~ ion.
spring, outscoring oppo·
S t u r g i II
nents 24:4 in a pair. of v1ctoallowed one
ries over Alexander and
run apiece
River Valley.
in both the
· But Monday night against
Whan
second and
defending
Tri- Valley
fifth frames,
Conference Ohio Division but the southpaw made sure
champion Wellston, the the Blue and Gold never
Lady Marauders could only · trailed.
muster five hits while. com- · WHS (3-), 2-0 TVC
milling six---erro~s. i.n. an 8-2 Ohio) jumped out to a 2-0
setback to the VISiting Lady lead during its first at-bat as
Rockets.
~ leadoff
hitter
Amber
The Maroon and Gold Lambert started the game
Bryan Walters/photo
struggled against reig\iing with a walk. Sturgill Meigs pitcher Amy Barr, right, applies a tag on Wellston baserunner Charity Exline (32) at
TVC Ohio Defensive Player
home plate during the fourth inning of Monday's Tri-Valley Con~erence Ohio Division contest
of the Year Erin Sturgill,
Please see Melp, Bl
•at Rock Springs. Exline was called safe on the play, and the Lady Rockets won 8-2.
BY BRYAN WALTERS

Meigs at Eastern, 5 p.m.

BWAlTERS@MYDAil)'TRIBUNE.COM

Track and Field

Eastern, Southern, Meigs at River
Valley Early Bird Invite. 4:30p.m.

Wadnttday. Aprif4

Pntp Softball
SOutham at Meigs, 5 p.m.

Pnop Baoaball
Southem at Meigs, 5 p.m.
TbU£1diY, AQt1! 5

Pntp Softball
Belpre at Meigs. 5 p.m
Miller at Eastern, 5 p.m.
..
Federal Hocking at Southam, 5 p.m.

Prep Baoaball
Belpre at Meigs. 5 p.m.
Miller at Eastern, 5 p.m.
. Southern at Federal Hocking, 5 p.m.

Eastern
outlasts
Lady 'Cats

Eagles

pound

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWAlTERS@MYDAilVTRIBUNE ..COM

GLOUSTER- Two run's
in the top of the fifth inning
allowed . visiting Eastern to
claim its first Tri- Valley
.Conference
Hocking
Division
victory this
spring following a 2l decision
o

v

e

Trimble
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWAlTERS@MYDAilVTRIBUNE.COM

GLOUSTER - Eastern
. baseball picked up its first
Tri- Valley
Conference
Hocking Division triumph
Monday by making shon
. work of host Trimble during
a 16-1 rout
m
fiv.e
innings. ·

r,

defending
champion
Trimble
Cummins
Mo n d a Y
.
night. .
The Lady Eagles ,(2-2, l-1
TVC Hocking) fell behind
1-o·after four full innings' of
play, but an error, a hit batsman and two hits in the fifth
gave the Green and White
all of the offense they would
need to .even their record to
.500 this spring - both
overall and in the league.

con•

StOI'!Ilge
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•

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WATERFORD -· The
Southern Tornadoes of
Coach Ryan Lemley are off
to one of their best starts of
·
the
-past
decade ,
remaining
undefeated
both in the
league and
overall
with an 8-0
shutout win
over
the
Waterford
Riffle
· Wildcat s
Monday
night.
The Tri- Valley
win
puts
Conference
Sout!Jern atop the Hocking
Division at 2-0 and leaves
Southern with a 4-0 overall
mark.
Monday, Southern threat·
ened in the first but could
not plaie a run. then relied
Please see Cl,bber. Bl

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Southern
clobbers
Wildcats Marauders pick up first win, beat Wellston 4-1

Meigs senior Dave Poole (30) slides safely into third base ahead of the tag of Wellston third baseman Chris Comer (10)
during the ·fourth inning of Monday's Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division baseball contest at Rock Springs, Poole went 2for-3, including a solo home run in the sixth, and also pitched six innings in guiding the Marauders to a 4-1 victory.

Pleasant'
Valley
Hospital

OVP Scorellne (5 p.m..! a.m.)

It's Just

Around The
Corner

-

---------------------------------------------------------------Inside .
The Daily Sentinel

. Fddav. April 6 . •

PLAY COVERALL BINGO

21.15 .

DuPont (NYSE) ....- 49.06
US Bank (NYSE) ..,... 34.67
Gannett (NYSEI- 56.31
General Electric (NYSE) 35.29
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 59.29
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 48.24
Kroger (NYSE) - 28.55
Lknlted Brands (NYSE)26.43·
Norfolk South8m (NYSE) 50.57
Oak Hill- Financial (NASDAQ)
-24.45
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ) - 25.25
BBT (NYSE) - 40.27
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 26.47
Pepsico (NYSE)- 63.39
Premier (NASDAQ) - 15.94
Rockwell (NYSE) - 60.95
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 11.44
Royal Dutch Sheil --:- 66.84
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 181.15
Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 47.40
Wendy's (NYSE) - 30.90
Worthington (NYSE)21.60 .
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for April 2,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
1588c Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
(304) 67~174. Member ·
SJPC.

POMEROY - ,Marlene Lincoln was ooming to the theKuhn presenled a rev1ew of the aterthat evening for the perfornon-tiction book, "Manhunt: mance. He realized that this
The 12-Day . Chase for would be a perfect opportunity
Lincoln's Killer" at a recent to assa~sinate the president he
meeting of the ,Middleport haled so much and called a
. Literary Club at the Pomeroy tyrant.
Library. Written by Lincoln
Kuhn told of Booth's plan to
scholar James L. Swanson, the · leave Washington, D.C. and
book has received high acclaim escape to Vlfginia after the
as an indepth, well documenled shooting with a companion,
account of the assassination of David Herald. What he didn't
President Abraham Lincoln. planforwasthebreakingofhis
This murder set offthe.greatest leg when he leaped from the
manhunt in American history - thea!er booth and having to go ·
the pursuit and capture of John to the hdme of Dt. Samuel
Wilkes Booth.
Mudd to receive medical attenThe reviewed described tion. After leaving there he
Booth aS a handsome and pop- spent the neKt nfue days living
ular professional actor, . a in pine thickets and sleeping on
Southem sympathizer and one· the ground and eluding the
uf the few • people in army and authorities.
Washington who weren'tjubiOn the lith day the two
lant to see the end of the Civil arrived at ihe farm of Richard
War. When Booth went to Garrett near Bowling Green,
Ford's Theater on Good Friday Va The were fed and allowed to
April. 14, 1865 It&gt; pick up his sleep in the'house the first night.
. mail, he learned that President The following night they were

April3, 2007

.

1·740-446-2342 ext. 33
fiX- 1-741l-446-3008
E-mail- sportsOmydailysentinet.com
Soorta Staff

Brad Shennan, Sports Editor
(740) 445·2342 , ext. 33
bshermanOmydailytrlbune.com

-Larry Cruin, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext. 23
km.JmOmydailyregister.com

'Bryan Walteril, Sports
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
. bwattersOmydailytribune.com

. ~

.

····---

Writer

ROCK SPRINGS- Dave
Poole had a pretty good day
in the home opener for
Meigs baseball Monday.
The senior southpaw
allowed Just one earned run'
and four hits in his six
innings as a starter, plus
went 2-for-3 and hit his firs!
career home run in guiding
the Marauders to a 4-1 victory over defending Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio ·Division
champion Wellston.
Poole also struck out
seven, walked one and hit
one batter in picking up the
triumphant . decision for
Meigs, which improved to
1-3 overall and 1-1 in the
Ohio Division.

Story

Delong

Early on however, it was
the Golden Rockets (2-2, II TVC Ohio) that enjoyed a
good start.
·Scoreless through two
innings, WHS struck in the
third when a pair of doubles
gave the visitors a 1-0
advantage. L.B. Wilson led
off the frame with a twobagger, then two outs later

Chris Comer drove Wilson
home for the short-lived
lead.
The score stayed that way
until the bottom of the fifth
when the Maroon and Gold
plated two runs on a trio of
singles by Caleb Smith,
Clay Bolin and Bryan
Delon!l.
·
Dav1s led off the fifth with
a base hit up the middle,
then Austin Dunfee moved
Davis over to second with a
sacrifice · bunt. Bolin's oneout single plated Oavis to tie
the game at one, then
Delong provided the eventual game-winner two batters
later.
Then in the bottom of the
sixth, Poole helped his own
cause by-leading things off
with a homer to left-center

for a 3-1 edge. Aaron Story
followed with a double, then
Corey Hutton banged out a
single that plated Story fpr
the 4-1 final.
Dunfee came in for relief
of Poole in the top of the
seventh, issuing on Iy one
walk in closing Ol!t the victory.
'The · Marauders pouniled
out" 10 hits off of WHS
starter TYler Gill, who went
the distance in the losing
cause. Gill · allowed four
earned run s and fanned four
in the setback.
Both Poole and Story
paced Meigs with two hits
apiece, followed by Bolin,
Delong , Hutton, Davis,
Jacob ·Well ~nd Clayton
Please see First. Bl

h

e

Eagles (31, 1-1 TVC
Ho ck ing )
pounded
out 16 hits
against
three different
Tomcat
hurlers, and·a 10-run fourth
gave the guests more than
enough offense to get
through the r!'!sl of the
evening.
· EHS starter Joel Lynch
allowed no runs and just
two hits in his winning
effort over three frames,
while
reliever
Justin
Browning s urrendered a run
and two hils dunng h1s two
innings of work . Lynch •
recorded six strikeouts and
issued one free pass.
The Green and White .
jumped out·to a 6-0 i\dvantage through three frames ·
on THS starter Tyler
Barrell, who lasted three
inni·ngs before . giving up
eight hits and a walk in the
losing decision.
Both Joel Barrett and
Blake Fout~ worked relief
in the fourth inning during'
th at double-digit explosion.
Joel Barrett gave up nine
runs and seven hits in his
two-thirds of an inning, then ·
Fouts worked the final
inning plus - surrenderi ng
one run and one hit.
Cory Shaffer led Eastern's
offense. going 4-for-4 with
a triple, three runs scored
and a pair of RBls. Jake
Please see Pound, 81

Gators win another title ·
ATLANTA (AP) - Some
3-pointers are worth more
than others.
Florida specializes in
those 3s, the ones that not
only put three points un the
scoreboard
but
steal
moment_um from an opponent.
The Gators hit 10 3-pointers Monday night in the 8475 victory over Ohio State
that sealed their place in college basketball history as the
first repeat champion in 15
years.
.
Not ·an were the backbreakers from beyond the
arc,' put enough were.
The Buckeyes had two
problems: They couldn't
stop Florida from making 3s
and they couldn't make any

the~selves. They kept missing and miss.ing and missing.
Lee Humphrey, Corey
Brewer and Taurean Green
-Florida's trio of 3-makers
started hitting early
a\lainst Ohio State and didn t stop1 finishing I 0-for-18:
They combined . for 43
points with Green getting
16, Humphrey 14 and
Brewer 13.
"I think it wasjust taking
what the defense was giving·
us." Green said. "Coach
always tells us, once you
have a crack, let it go, shoot
the ball with confidence.
When they made runs. I
think we did a good job of

Florida's
coach Billy
Donovan ,and
his team hold .
up the NCAA
Final Fdur
championship
trophy. following their victory over Ohio
State at the
Georgia
Dome in
Atlanta on
Monday.
AP photo

• Please see Gltors, Bl

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

�Page B2 • The Qaily Sentinel

Tuesday, April a,

.

www .myditilysentinel.com

•

'

2007

'

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

Waterlord downs Lady·TornadOes~ 6-2 Eastem.competes at
Bv 'scoTT WolFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

WATERFORD
The
Waterford Wi Ideals. long a
league contender over the pa.~t
decade, ruffled the tail feathers
of the Southern Lady
Tornadoes Monday night io
defeating the visitors 6-2 during a girls Tri-Va lley
Conference Hocking Division
softball game at Walerford.
Waterford {2-1) took an
early lead and fe nding off
Southern's ( 1-3. 0-2) foorth
inning threat.
Waterford threatened in the
tirst but Southern pitcher
Sarah· Eddy struck out the
third and fourth batters to
close .the inning. The Wildcats

of Coach
D .o u g
B a ldwin
then plated
three runs in
the
third
inning when
M. Thatcher
walked, K.
Ro bin s on
singled. and
Eddy
Bosner doubled honie
two runs. Marti n and Hill
·walked to force home the third
run and blank the Tornadoes ~~
3-0.

Southern scored two runs in
the fourth inning when
Whitney Wolfe-Riffle singled
and scored on a Kasey Turley
double. Stephanie Cundiff

Pierce followed with a safety.'
Griffin and Jake Lynch
eac h drove in three run s,
from Page Bl
whil e Joe l Lynch followed with a pair. Griffin
Lyoch. Joel Lynch, Derek al so scored four times in
Griffin, Matt Morris and the win .
Derek Banik drove in
Kyle Gordon each had two
hits api ece, while Titus the lone run for Trimble , .

Pound

Gators
from Page Bl
just coming back and
knocking down 3s."
They'd done this before
in this NCAA tournament,
starting with the regional
·final. win over Oregon after
many
had questioned
Florida\ ability to put away
opponen"ts early in the first
three rounds.
. On
Monday
night,
Brewer, just a 33 percent 3point shooter, hit the first of
the big ones.
Greg Oden. Ohio State's
· ?-foot freshman, pinned a
shot by Brewer against the
backboard and the crowd at
the Georgia Dome Jeacted .
heartily for the first time.
Ohio State's Jamar Butler
missed a 3 at the other end
and Brewer came right back
down and hit a 3, giving a
little skip as he passed the
Buckeyes'
bench and
extended the Gators' lead to
20-1 3 halfway through the
tirst half.
Then it was all three of
the Gators' shooters hitting

Meigs

Clobber

reached on a lielder's choice
that erased Chapman's 'single. J.R. Hupp then singled
and Nick Buck had an RBI
from Page in
single to give SHS the 1-0
lead. In the fourth inning
Leml
ey's warriors plated
on the pitching of its undefeat ed (3-0) ace ·hurler, two more runs. With two out
junior Ryan Chapman to set Jake Hunter walked and Wes
down the side in the bottom Riffle hammered a home run
of the innin~. With the help over the left field fence for a
of good detense, Chapman 3-0 SHS lead.
After
a · scoreless
led his team to a flawless
mark entering the top of the Waterford home fifth,
third when the offense took Southern plated another sinthe . reigns of the Southern gle run. Buck doubled and
offensive machine.
stole third, then scored on 1Additionally, Southern 3 ground out by Kreig
· played errorless balL
Kleski
that
knocked
With one out, Pat Johnson Waterford' starter Jordan

Outlast·
from PageBl
Freshman starter Sami
· Cummins - . who went the
distance in · picking up · the
decision - took care of the
rest, surrendering only two
hits and a walk over the
final . three · innings.
Cummins did not allow an
· ·earned run and surrendered
only six hits and two walks
in the triumph while fanning two.
Her counterpart - Katlyn
Walton - allowed just one

Stephanie Cundiff a double.
Waterford hitters were
Bosner1 Martin, Hill, and
Robinson.
Sarah Eddy pitched well for
Southern but endured the loss
with seve n strikeouts, four
walks, three hit batters and
four hits allowed. Kasey
Turley came on in relief with
fi ve strikeouts, no walks and
no hits in two innings of work.
Bosner was the winning
pitcher with six strikeol!tS,
three walks., and one hit batter.
She gave up six hits.
WATERFORD 6, SOUTHERN 2

Southe rn 000 200 0 Watertord 003 300 X -

266

660
Sarah Eddy, Turley and Wolfe- Riffle.
Basne r and Tratcher.
WP - -Bosner. LP - Eddy.

who fell to 1-4· overall time is sc heduled for 5
and 0-2 in the TVC p.m.
Ho~kin g. 'lack Craig led
, TRIMBLE 1
the hosts with two hits EasternEASTERN
321 (10)0 - 16 16 t
and Fouts collected the ~ Trimble 000 ' 10 - 1 II 2
Eastern (3·1, l - 1 TVC Hocking): Joel
other safety.
Lynch. Justin Browning (4) and Jake
Eastern
return s
to Lynch
•
action today when it hosts Trimble (1 ·4, 0·2 TVC Hocking): Tyler
Joel Barrett (4), Blake Fouts (4)
Meigs in a TVC non-con- Barren,
and Kasey Cruse
ference matchup. Game · WP ---:- Jo. Lynch; LP - T. Barrett

By

LARRY

CIIUM

LCRUM@MVDAILYREGISTER.COM

WiLLIAMSTOWN, W.Va.
- Even with a fi rst place finish by Eastern ·s Michael
Owen, the Eagles boys track
iearn still could not claim alop
10 finish at the Ryan Jobes
Invite in . Williamstown
Saturday- linishing·just one
point out.
Eastern finished lith on 25
points, 'w ith Parkersburg
South takin~ the meet w1th 78
points. Wilhamstown was second with 69 points. followed
by St. Marys (60) and Ritchie
County (59).
.
Rounding out the top 10
were Ravemwood (50),
Mogan
County
(48).
University (46), Gilmer
Counry (26) and Waterford
(26}.
Owen took fi rst place in the
1600-meter on a time of
4:39. I I. He also ancl)ored the
third place finishing 4x800
team (9:07 ,06) cons1sting of
Owen, Josh Collins. Keith
Aeiker and Josh Hupp.
Rounding out the point
scorers for Eastern was Alex
McGrath, who ·took sixth
place \n the high jump on a
Jump of 5-08.
In the girls event, the Lady
Eagles finished tied for eighth
with Gilmer County and Point
· Pleasant with 25 points, while
Ritchie County grabbed the

I .
earned run and four hits for
the Lady Tomcats (3 ~2. 1-1)
over seven innings. Walton
also struck out 10, walked
one and hit three batters in
the losing effort.
The. game was scoreless
through three-and-a-half
innings of play, but THS
struck first blood in the bottom of the fourth when a
one-out double by Abby
Withem gave · the hosts a
scoring opportunity. Megan
Yore reached on a fielder's
choice, and ~n error at home
· plate allowed Withem to
score for a 1-0 advanta~e.
The lead was short-hved,
however, as EHS started the

First·

win wi th lOO points.
Parkersburg South (81 ),
Morgan
County
(78),
University (77) and Waterford
(46) round out the top five.
The fest of the finishing
order was St. Marys (41),
Williamstow n (30), Eastern
(25). Gilmer County (25) and
Point Pleasant (25). ·
The Lady Eagles were led
by their very strong team
events, scorin~ points in four
team races lea by the 4x400
team of Erin Weber, Katie
Hayman, Lauren Cummings
and Alyssa Newland which
finished second with a time of
4:37.38.
In other team events, the
4x200 team .of Katie Hayman,
Auclriaana Pullins, Darcy
Winebrenner and Cummings
placed fourth (2:01.46) and
the 4x800 team of Weber,
Newland, Sarah Martindale
and Beth ·Hysell also took
fourth (II :26.16). The other .
team eve nt scored for the
Lady Eagles was the 4x I00
team
of
Hayman,
Winebrenner, Cummings and
Bun taking sixth (58.03). .
In
individual
events,
Cummings took sixth in the
100-meter dash (13.85),
Weber took sixth in the 800meter (2:37.40) and Hayman
took third in the 300-meter
hurdles (53.90).
Eastern will return to action
at the River Valley Invitational
later today in Cheshire.
Tuppers Plains for a TVC
non-conference matchup
with Eastern. Game time is
scheduled for 5 p.m.
MEIGS 4, WELLSTON 1
Wellston 001 ooo o - 1 4 0
Meigs • 000 022 x - 4100
Wellston (2-2, 1·1 TVC Ohio): Tyler Gill
and Zach Fisher
Meigs tt -3, t -1 TVC Ohio): Dave Poole.
Austin Dunfee (7) and J.T. Evans
WP - Poole; LP - Gill

HA -Dave Poole (sixth Inning, nobody
on. nobody oul) 1

when Lian Hoffman tripled
with two outs and then later
scored to make it 7-2.
The Lady Rockets added
their final score in the seventh when a leadoff walk to
Becky Perkins turned to
fruition
when Mikyla
Perkins reached safely on
an error, making it 8-2.
Cassi Whan led the hosts
with two hits, · while
Hoffman, Amy Barr and
Kel sey Fife provided the
other, safeties. Fife also had
,an RBI in the setback.
Barr was· the pitcher of
losing record, allowing five
runs , five hits and two
walks in her 3.1 innings of .
work. Hailey Ebersbach
relieved Barr in the fourth

and surrendered three runs, ·
no hits and a walk. Barr did
not record a strikeout and
Ebersbach had three.
Lambert, Sturgill, Mikyla
Perkins, Stephanie Trainer
and Amber King each had a
hit in the victory for
Wellston.
Meigs returns to action
today when it travels to
Tuppers Plains to take on
Eastern in a TVC non-divisional matchup. Game time
is st:heduled for_5 p.m.
WELLSTON 8, MEIGS 2
Wellston 210 220 1 - 8 5 t
Meigs
010 010 , 0 - 2 56
Wellston ( 3·1 ~ 2·0 TVC Ohio}: Erin
Sturgill and Peggy Fleming
Meigs (2-1. 1-1 TVC Ohio): Amy Barr,
Hailey Ebersbach (4) and Amber BlJrton
WP - Sturgill; LP - Barr

Tuten out .of the box. Scott ihe ·strikeout and got theHut:k came in to put out the gJDund ball when he needed.
SHS fire but Southern led 4- He faced just six batters over
0.
the minimum 21. two of
A Hunter single and Riffle which came on back-to-back
triple combined with an walks in the first inning.
Chapman gave up four
error to score two n\ore SHS
runs in the sixth, the score 6- hits (McCutcheon, Mike
0. Buck, who went 3-4 on Mayle, and two singles to
the night played a role in the Alex Lang).
Southern hitters were
final two SHS runs with a
lead-off single. A walk, steal, Riffle a triple and home run,
passed ball, ani! pair of Chapman a single, Buck
errors . allowed Buck and ·three hits, Hupp a single, and
Kleski to score the final two Hunter a single.
runs in the 8-0 win.
SOUTHERN 8, WATERFORD 0
Chaprrian had the Wildcats Southam
001 212 2 - 8 8 0
eating out of his hand. Like a Watertord 000 000 0 - 0 4 2
Ryan Chapman and J.R. Hupp. Jordan .
Dutch master. Ch!lpman Tuten
, Scott Huck (5) and McCutcheon.
painted a perfect set-up for WP- Chapman. LP - Tut_e~ .
.

.'

fifth with a baserunner after
Hannah ·Cozart reached
safely on an error to start
the inning.
Walton retired the next
two batters, then hit Alyssa
, Baker with a pitch to give
the visitors runners at first
and second with two outs.
. . Kelsey Holter delivered a
double that plated Cozart
for a one-ali tie, and it also
gave the Lady Eagles runners at second and third. .
Brittany Bissell immedi-'
ate followed with an RBI
sin!!le that plated Baker,
givmg the guests their 2-1
advantage.
Holter, Bissell, Kate

Wilfong and Kathryn Bland
provided a hit apiece in the
triumph.
Withem paced the hosts
with three doubles, followelt( by Tabby Jenkins
· with two hits a9d Allie Jago
with a safety.
Eastern returns to action
tod11y when it hosts Meigs
in a TVC non-conference
matchup. GallJe time is
scheduled for 5 p.m.
EASTERN 2, TRIMBLE 1
Eastern 000 020 0 -'- 2 4 2
Trimble 000 100 0 - I 6 2
Eastern (2-2, t -1 TVC Hocking): Sami

Cummins and Kathryn Blan(j
Trimble 13-2. t -t TVC Hocking): Katlyn
Watton and Abby Withem
WP -. Cummins; LP - Watton

~

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to the Ftderel Ftlr Housing Act of 1968.
wanted Ida
EOE atllndlrds. We will not knowingly
violtUon of the law.

Trlbu....s.ntiM~ will N

••PMM

--LosT--AND-··I KIT &amp; CARLYLE
F~

190 Cmm'EtoF.RLY

·

Riverside Golf Club
Mason, WV ·
Hiring Cool&lt; &amp; Server
Posilions:
Open Interviews:

~~"""""""""""""""'~~

Thursday, April Sth
7P:_m_·_ _
,--_ _5:_prn_·_:

$100 Reward! Lost: 1512
Woodsmill Ad area, Boxer,

We, the children of Harold 0.
Jordan Jr., are not responsible for any ol his debt ol
3129/07

Named Buster, Call
(740)446-0057 days,
1740)388·8268 after 6:00,
1740)645-5505.

r

With the growth that we
are experiencing/.We currently have openings in
'lwo departments.
Maintenance
Technician
Experience with light
maintenance on light
duty and heavy duty
vehicles required. We will
provide Ford Motor
Company
Training.
CorTflensation based on
experience.
Contact
Servl?;e Manager Jim
Thomas if you are looking to join
winning
learn . t-800-272 -5179

lost 5yr. old Tricolored
Basset Hound. 65 lbs. Last
seen on 3/17 Korr 'Road,
3mo old Pltbull mix · puppy BidwelL Cash reward. call
white &amp; brown with blue 446-4266 or 446·4197
eyes call 304-395·2601
-------Missing tiny black and tim.
Free lab puppies. Call 740- lemale, Vqrkshire Terrier
245-0125
tVorkie) In Middleport
Children's
pBt.
Free, Neutered male ratter· M!crachlpped.
Reward .
rier. 4 yrs. old. High Spirited. · Please call740-992·0056
· loves to run and play. After 1111!"_ _ _.;.._...,
GfVF.AWAV

5. 304-674-3251

Moving need to lind good
home for cats 304·675·6720

r

LosTFOINlAND

__

1
•

• ---

•

3
Family
Garage
Sale,Baker's,Tanners Run
Rd.,Racine.Apr.5&amp;6 .740·
949-2723

NEA,Inc.

1110

Automf;ltlve Sales

~"~ I' IUO
-W.•~

nur
u
-

I

lfw&gt;WANJm

L,r.'a_Hru&gt;-·W·ANim--

Accepting applications for
.Restaurant General
Manallers. Please send
resUlT)&amp; to: RGM
Ann: Tanya Howell
PO Boi 1591
Ashland, KV 41105·1591

MAKE MORE MONEYI
Full Ume- up to $8.60/hour
l'llrt Ume 1110 IVIIIIbJt.
Make calls that make
a differeincel
Call on behalf of major
. Pomlcal Organizations.

An Excailent way to earn
money. The New Avon.
Call Marilyn 304-682-2645
------,Are you lOOking for 8 posi- .
live -career change?
WRYV 101.5 Tho Rlis looking for Account
Ex8Clltives to cover the
Attlens, Gallipolis arid
Jackson, Ohio area. if you
are a self starter, motivated
by success and want to join
a winning. leam, fax your
resume to 304·399·9608 or
send your r~sume to PO
BOX 404 Huntington, WV
25708. Attention: Sales
Manager tNo Phone Cal~
Please). Connoisseur Media
LLC. is an equal opportunity
employer and offers an
· be nefit package.
attracttve

• Week.ly pay and bonus

plan
4K4's For Sate .............................................. 725
• Paid training and holidaYs
Announcement ........................................: ... 030
t Paid vacations every 6
Antlques ....................................................... 530
3 family large garage saleApartments for Rent ................................... 440
months
.rain or shine, 3202 Syracuse
Auction and Flea Market... ..........................080
•
Top·notch
work
formerty
Jo's
Gift
ShOp,
At.
Auto' Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
environment
124
abo\le
piua
shoP
on
Auto Repatr .......... :....................................... T70
Cell NOW and atart a new
left, April 2, 3, 4. lois ol
Autos for Sate .............................................. 710
jean's,
.microwave,
real
nice
Boats &amp; Motors for Sate ............................. 750
careerl
1-877-4113-6247 eK1. 2301
Building Supplles ...... .................................. 550 · clothes, dresses for women,
little girls. nice clothing for
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
-------children, what-nots, flowers,
Business Opportuntty ............. ~................... 210
o.ur busy dental office is
shortS, shirts, jad&lt;:ets. coats,
Business Training ....................................... 140
searching for a bright. enerreal
good
condition,
Campers &amp; MotorHomes ........................... 790 •
gelic, motivated person who
(740)992·5958
Camping Equipment ..............., ................... 780
enjoys a fast pace. We need
Carda of Thanka .......................................... 010
61 t s. Second Ave.,
a people orien1ed person
Chlld/Etderly care ....................................... 190
Middleport,
Ohio
on
Fri.
6th
who .can and would like to
Electricat/Refrigeratton ............................... 840
&amp; Sat. 7th, 8 ~5pm, will have
deal With the buSinesstinsur·
Equipment for Ront. ..................................... 480
tools, guns, clothes, collecance portion of the practice.
Excavating ................................................... 830
Weoffe r excellent. compentor ~ems, antiques, knives
Farm ~qutpment ...... :...................................610
salion ~nd bene fi ts. If you
Farms for Rent. ........ :...........................,.. :, ... 430
A•~'MW&lt;ET""~'"
~· .. ~
A"ONI
All Areas1••O Bu y or are seek'tng career edvanee.v
Farms for Sate ............................................. 330
S
304
·
11
7'"~''1
SeII · Sh ·•
lney pears,
• ment, Cl:l us at ~ •
For Leaae ..................................................... 490
675·1429.
0123
For Sate ......................................... : .............. 585
Auctiori. Tuesday, April 10th - - - - - - - - ----~--For Sate or Trade ......................................... 590
11 :00 AM · NeW Haven Darst Adult Group Home
,
has an opening for a day Overbrook Center, 333 Page
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Supermarket,
New Haven, position, must be able to do St., Mid;dleport, Ohio is curwv
Furnlsh.e d Rooms ........................................450
'
T.
General Hauttng ...........................................850
Hob.art
Meat
Shop h eavy l1'ft tng.
.emporary rentty accepting applications
· for the position of AN
Glveaway ......................................................040
Equipment,
Hussmann pass ibl Y permanenI postManager. The successful
1 740-992 ·5023.
Happy Ada....................................................CJ51!
Coolers-Freezers, Gondola ton.
candidate must have 2 or
Hiy &amp; Grain..................................................640
SheMng. Stock, 1984 Ford - - - - - - - - more years of tong term
Help Wantad .................................................110 · Ford Bo• Truck. Monroe
FEDERAL
care experience and must
Home tmprovements... ,..... ,.........................810
Meadows WVALf53. 304POSTAL JOBS
have a workiQg knOwledge
· Homes for Sale ....... ...................... , ........ ,..... 310
466-3341
www !DQ&amp;d- $16 .53-$27 .58/hr.. now h.Ir- of s1ote and lederal regula·
Household Gooda ....................................... 510
ing. FDf' application and free lions as well as quality
Houses for Rent ......................................... 410
governement job into, call assi.J'8nce standards. If you
In Memortam................................................ 020
American Assoc. of Labor 1- aralnterested, plese slop by
lnsurance ..................................................... 130
913-599-8042. 2.n,rs. emp. our front office and pidc up
Lawn &amp; Garden Equtpment ............., .......... 660
an application. Competitive
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. serv.
Llvestock...............................................,...... 630
wages and benefits peckSilver
and
Gold
Coins,
.
;
.
.
,
.
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
ages availabte. EOE and a
Proorsets,
Gotd
Rirlgs,
PreFull
time
Infant/Toddler
Lots &amp; Acreage .... ......................................,.350
1935
U.S.
Currency, AssistBnt.
$6.70 hour. perlicipant of tile Drug Free
Mlscettaneous .............................................. 170
SotHaire ();emends- M.T.S. UmHed benefits. M·Fiday- Workplace Program:
Miscellaneous Merchandise ......................,540
Coin S~op. 151 Second time. 5end resume to Early - - - - - ' - - - Mobile Home Repair....................................B60
Mobile Homes for Rent............................... 420 1 Avenue,·Gallipolis, 740-446· Education Slation 2122 ~art time administrati'lle
2842.
Jefferson Ave. Pt. Pleasant, assistant, (to work with the
Mobile Homes for Sale........................:....... 320
WV I'ossso
~ 30
, Oflica Managar), ovg. •v
Money to Loan ......................,...................... 220
Bu~ng .look CIIIS,Trucks &amp; r--'['E!QIR"-I ' hrs. per Week. Job deseripl!otorcyclea &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
wrects, Pay cash J
lion to Include but not: limi1ed
Musical tnstrumeiits ................................... 570
Salvtlge
(304)773-5343
TO DRIVE
to: answering the phol)e,
Personats........................-........................... 005
1304)674-1374
ALLIANCE
working wiiM cus1orners;
Pets for 'Sale :............................................... 560
scheduling and organiZing
Plumbing &amp; Heating ..............................: ..... B20
Buying junk cafs. Paying
TRACTOR-TRAILER
concrete &amp; stool orders; dis·.
Professional Servlces ................................. 230
from $50 - $200. If no"
TRI;NING CENTERS
tch'
truck
1'
pa ong
s. opere ong
Rldlo, 1V &amp; CB Repair ....................;.......... 160
·~~s·
~weigh scales; batch·
Raat Estate Wl~lld ........ - ......................:.... 360 answerleavemessage.7401
388-00} .
lng Concrete 'Wiautomated
• FINANCING AVAilABlE'"
· Schools tnstruc:tlon .... ;...,.............. - .... ~--- .. 150
• JOB P\ltCEMENf".
computer batch program,
Seld , Plant &amp; Fertilizer.,............................ 850 We are . buying anything
~~:-..-:-and
the
SittMtlona Wanllld ...~................,................ 120 doing with Shrtey Temple.
.., .. _ _ .. _.
officegeneral
area. deaning
F•""'•""•ofwith
1-800-334·1203
~ .........,
Space for Ront ....................:.....................: .. 460 Dais, bool&lt;s, clothes, etc.
_ .....................r;un
the Ouldt Books . ~~
Spoftfng·Goocla.: ........................................ 520 Also buying Sulfide MaJbles
~ re: accounts, trlVOI~ng.
and German Swirls. Call
' SUV's for Sale .................;........... _............... 720
I:Dcol ......,_
IIMKltory.), and the ability 10
'&lt; Trucful for Sate .......................................:.... 715 after 8:00pm 1740)441-1236
Looking for 9 p/1 reps
use Word and Ex"'" , pioUpholstery ... , ............... -: ............................. 870
l\11111,\11'1
C8l
grams • .rTf negoVana For s.te...................................._,, .....730
'I 1\\ II I "
b&lt;lnutos.
No salary. WI&lt; 5- liable, $7.00 to $9.00/hr.
WM!IId to Buy .................. :.. :........................ 090 .
15 hrs weekly. $29 refund- depending onskilandexpeWlnted to Buy- Farm SuppiiM .................. 620
I able·start-up cost. 740-441· rience.
Valley BrOOk
Wanted To Do .............................................. 190
1 Concrete &amp; Supply, Inc.
llo.PWAN'IlD
1982
1~-----!"'",..1-----~·
Wanted to Aent. ........................................... 470
~lanl 13 0 Robertsbum,
~
Vanl Sate- Gatlipolta ......................... - .... - ...072 ~
Rooters: Metal roofing, sld- WV Call 304-937•3410.
Ylnl Sate-Pomlroylltllddle......................... 074 Summer help needed lor ing anlt EPDM. Top pay and Call to interview 01 soon as
Vlnl Sate-Pl. Plleant ......,......................... 078 ·yard wort&lt;. 74().645-2192
benefits. n4-229-8020
possi1lte

F'r.F.A

I

o

-:.'!:'•.

comm .. -

DOWNI~G

CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER

INSURANCE

110

RADIO SHACK
&amp; Picture Gallery
Middleport, OH

--

'
•

'

..

·•

Part-Time

Dayshllt

$7 .D0-$7.25/hr
1

1•

Great job working wiftt
non-profit orgs.
Convenient schedules
• Health Insuran ce·
• Tq&gt;-quality
environment
1·888-IMC-PAVU
·Job

ext. 1999

Consultant
If you are a motivated
indiVidual that is looking
for a career, not just a
job and wanting an
employer that is willing
to work for you; look nQ
furthei. We currently
h8ve two positions open
for professionals that
have !))Od people skills
and desire to Detter
themselves. We will pro·
vide Ford .Motor
Company training, you
provide the motiVation.
Contact Pat Hill or Brian
Ross today if you are
looking to
better yourself and your
lami ~. t ·600·272·5179.

www.infocisioo.com

'JiiliiM!I!I

POST OFFICE NOW
H-IRING
·
p s o~
~ '.1 "" "" . ... ,...
Avg. ay 2 ",r or
· $57K annually
EOE
Including Federal Benefits
and OT,Paid Tr8inlng,
Vacations-FT/PT
l-800·584· 1775 Ext. lfS923 · ~150
ScHOOlS
_ _ _u.:_S:__W.:_A_ _ _
INsri!UctlON .
pr AN 2 Weekends Per
Month. Applicants May FOSTER PARENTS .AND
Appl" By Forwarding A
'
PR.OVIDERS
Resume'
lo·. PT R~ . 1113 RESPITE
,.
NEEDED. Become state
Washington
St.,
Ravenswood, wv 26164 OR licensed by attending f1ain·
ings held on Saturdays.
Fax To:
(304)273-9236
Earn $30·$45 a Clay lor the
Re&lt;lUi"ld E.O.E. care of a child livi ng in your
home. Homes are needed

HOMf:S
FOR SALE

Angie's Little Angels Home
Day care, located 1.5 miles
off 35. Have openings for
county and private care. Call
740·682-1370.

Brand new log home sitting
on approx. 1.44 acres.
almost ready to move into.
Custom Amish Kitchen with
solid surface counters. 3BR.
2BA,
$142.000
Call
~~~::---""'"., (740)256-9247

r•o

I

BUSL'I·~

OPPoR111Nm'

Charming 1940's co nclge,

L,--iiiiiiiiliililitit.-J·

close to lawn, CIA, Gas·
.--""!"!~~--.. heat, Replacement win•NOTICE•
dows. newly remodeled
OHib VALLE Y PUBLISH- kitchen. partially finished
attic. h_
ardwood floors, 2BR,
lNG CO. recommends
that you do buslnbss.with 1 Bath , (? 4f&gt;)?0 9·12S 5.
people you know. and
NOT to send money
through the mail un til you
have inves'tigaled · the

G)
=..

o H~ring .

:;:::;:~==~
advertising
MoNf:Y
I All inrealthisestatenewspaper
Is

r

--•lii'Oiil.oiiiiiAiiN-_.1 .
...
--

a

r
· =:;:::;::;:=:;
'I r ~~ I
YARD SAU

10

C ARE
Wanted:
Full
Time
Equipment
Delivery
Driver/Yard
Personnel.
Some mechanical ability
preferred &amp; Class A CDL:s
requirecj. Call 740·992*1438
or apply in person' at Gtleen
Rentals on State Route 7 in
Five Points.

i

PLEASE REMEMBER:

Mond•y-Prldey for lnaertlon

How you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

Conceal &amp; Carry Training
NRA Certinst.1 Day class.
4n, Sam sharp.Mercervllle
Fire Dept $100. 25S&lt;;5t4

CLASSIFIED INDEX

'·

DisPlay· Ads
All Dl•pl•y: 12 Noon 2

In Next Dev•• Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p . m.
For Sunday• Paper

Found: Set of 2 keys w~h fin- 830 First Ave. April 4,5, and
6 Sam·?
gernail clipper &amp; Disney ~F~-~--.,
World key chain on Eastern U14
YARD SALE·
Ave. 446·0995
J'oMEROY/MmoLE

f.ind ·the

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

• SUn Your Adl wtth A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevlltlon1
• Include PhOne Number And Addreu When Needed
• Adl Should Run 7 Oayt

All Real Eatat
dvertlaements a
'ubject to the Federa
air Housing Act o

Cl.ue For Monday
April 2nd

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· \!tribune - Sentinel - l\egt~ter
.C.LASS 1.-F IE D

Ryan Jobes Invitational

big shots.
blocked · a shot. But season. The Gators' oppoIvan Harris hit Ohio Humphrey hit a 3 when nents hit just 213 percent
State 's second and last 3 of Florida
corralled
the from beyond the arc.
the tirst'half with 5:37 to go rebound.
On Monday night, the
to bring the Buckeyes withMike Conley Jr. got the numbers were even better.
in 24-22 and again bring the Buckeyes within 53-46 with Florida finished at 55.6 perfans to life.
a reverse layup. Humphrey cent The Buckeyes were 4Humphrey, the most pro- hit a 3 on the next posses- for-23 ( 17.4 percent).
lific 3-point shooter in s1on .
"I think we 'd rather give
NCAA tournament history,
Ohio State got within 66- . up a two instead of a 3 any
hit one 16 seconds later. 60 with 5:Q3 left on a free .day," . Florida's Chris
Brewer nailed .another with throw by Oden. Green Richard said. "They had· a
4:28 left after Af Harford nailed a 3 12 seconds later few 3s, not anything major
from PageBl
h~d grabbed an offensive and the Buckeyes got no . to get them into ·the game.
rebound .. Green capped the closer.
We did a good, job defend·'Blackston with one safety
9-0 run with 3:48 left and
"It was real deflating. You ing the perimeter."
·
Florida had a 33-22 lead.
try to make a run and they
And the Gators were pret- each.
Ryan Darnell and Zach
"I thought the 3-point line come back every ~ime," said ty impressive from there.
was key," Humphrey under- Ohio State's Ron Lewis,
Brewer, the defensive Fisher had the other hits for ·
stated. "That's one of our who was ·0-for-4 on Js. stopper, was 3-for-8. Green, the Blue and Gold.
Meigs returns to action
main goals on defense, stop "When· you 're trying to get the point guard; was 3-fortoday when it travels to
the 3-point line. Any time back in the game, you 're out 3. Humphrey was 4-for-7.
you can hit a string of 3s in · there shooting, thinking alid
That's I0 3s among them.
a row, get a good rebound knowing it's · about to fall Somehow . it seemed like a
like AI did, kick it out for a for you, but it's not going in lot more than 30 points.
3, it's good for kind of stop- for you. It's real frustrat"They just· did an
ping momentum for a little ing."
incredible job of making
bit."
·
Butler was 1-for-6 on 3s 3s," Buckeyes coach Thad
The Gators finished the and Harris finished 2-for-8. Matta said. "That was one ·
half 6-'for-9 on 3s, including Ohio State came into the of the things that we
a half-court heave by ' game shooting 37 percent wanted to hone in on and
Brewer at the buzzer. The on 3s and the Buckeyes had really try to limit an(~ take
Buckeyes were 2-for-12.
upped that to 39 percent in away from their 3s . .. . But
It was more of the same in the tournament. · ·
they just hit a couple of
the second half.
·Florida came into the those freaki sh type 3s
Oden had a big rebound game shooting ·41 percent that, you know, just were ·
dunk to make it 46-38, then from 3-point range for the daggers for us."

almost out of trouble in the
inning, but a sq11eeze bunt
by Lambert went successfrom PageBl
fully and allowed Perkins to
.score for a 3-0 edge.
The hosts responded with
knocked home Lambert a run
in their half of the secwith a single for 1-0 advan- ond when Whitney Smith
tage, then Sturgill scored on reached on a ffelder's
a sacrifice fly to center by choice,
then later scored on
Amber King.
an . error that allowed
The guests increased their · Chalsie Manley to reach
lead to three during the top- safely. Meigs trailed 3-1
half of the set:ond wheri a after two complete.
leadoff error allowed Becky
After a scoreless third,
Perkins to get on base safe- Wellston plated two runs in
ly, then Paige Patterson was the fourth and two more in
hit by a pitch to put a pair of the fifth to jump out to a
runners on the bags.
comfonable 7-1 lead after
The Lady Marauders (2- . four-plu s innin'gs.
I, 1-1 TVC Ohio) recorded
Meigs added it final run
two straight outs and were in the bottom of the lifth

·,

then doubled to put runners on
second and third. Turley then
came home on a passed ball
after a Southern strike-out, the
score now 3-2. •
Southern threatened in the
sixth when Wolfe-Riffle doubled and Turley walked, but a
double-play erased Riffle and
a ground out ended the inning.
In the fourth inning.
Waterford gained some insurance when three walks and
RBI doubles from Martin and
Hill pushed across three mor,e
runs for a 6-2 score that stood
to the ti nish.
· Southern hitters were Sarah
Eddy, Virginia Brickles,
Whitney Wolfe-Riffle with a
single and double, Kasey
Turley a double, and

www.mydally,entlnel.com

subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act ot 1968
which makes it Illegal to
advertise "any ·
prelerenee, limitation or
discrimination baaed on
race, eolor, religiOn, sex
familial t latus or national
origin, or any lnt•ntlon to
m8ke any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination."

Borrow Smart. Contact
ttle Otlio Division ol
Financial
Institution 's
Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you reli·
nance your hofne or
obta in a loan. BEWARE
This newspaper will not
of requests for any large
knowingly accept
advance paymen ts of
advertisements
for real
lees or insurance. Call the
estate which is in
Office of Consumer
violation of the law. Our
Affairs toll tree at .1-966- .
readers are hereby
278·0003 to learn if the
Informed that all
m01tgag e broker or
dwtlllinga advertised in
lepd er
is
properly
this newspaper are
licensed. (This is a .Puljic
a\lallable on an equal
se'r vice announcement
opportunity bases.
from , the Ohio Valley
Pullishing Company)
Cou ntry setting New Ha ven
area. 48A, Home. 2,600
sq.ft . 2 acres. Hardwood
floors,
lnground
pool
$148,500 Serious inQuiries
only (304)67 4-592 1 or
Palmer's Ta)( Prepa ration 37 {J04)593·887 1
Yea rs experience. Call any- - - - - - - - lime 367-7412.
Hou se on Land Contract
Pome(oy. 740-992-5 8.
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 1551? l ovely Coun!ry horne.
R.
2 BA. 24x28 garage . l rge
No Fee Unless We Win!
screened deck Front porch,
1·888·582-3345
and Oeauttlul landscaped
HI \I f ' i\11
yard_$11 2,000. 9 miles from .
Holzer.
740-398·0 140
10

Ho~m;

t..-oiiiliiiiliiliiili-,..1 L.--ttiHiiliiKIISii,\Lilflit:_,...
-----.
0 Down even wtth tess than
perfect credi t is available on
this 3 bedroom . I bath
nome. Corner lot, fireplace.
modern kitchen. jacuzzi tub.

Mini ature tarm. UmOu'ilt
home on 4 acr~s, on SR
160. 3BA, 1BA. Pead1es.
berries. grapes. Swimming
pool. New appliances. Wood
Durner. 595,000. 740·388·
o
_s_t_5 _ _ _ _ __

Paymen t around $550 per Move in ready 3 bedroom AU
month. 74()..367-7129.
new tnside and out Full
in your county. Call Oasis
basement. wood lloms. gas
t04
Tatum
Dr.
New
toll free t -877-32 5·1558.
Haven.WV. 3bd/2ba: Ranch. fireplaCe. calhedral ceilings.
Training will begin Marctl 31 tg.sunroom. 2 car gar_great No land contra~ls . (304)675in Albany.
2364_ __
•
area. D; 304-675·3637 E: _
__ __

4 _ __ _
23_3_
Gallipolis Career College ~30.:_4.:_·68
:.::.:..2·_
(Gareers Close To Hom e)
Call Today! 740-446-4667,
'
'
t -600·214·0452 .
'ffNW.ga!llpoliscareeroollege.rom
. I I ,1,
Accredited Member Accred 11mg
Coonc11 for lnOOpendent Coll&amp;ges

.

.

and Schools 127.&lt;19.

I' ,·; .

~~

''-;

1842 sq ft, 3BR. LR. FR.
Kitchen, t 314 Baths. CIA.
Garden leisure Hot Tub Plus many eXtras, located
.BXB, lea1her CO\Ier, all chem. on Ch ris. l ane, Close to new
included. Excellent condi· GAHS, 2. 13 acres. Ask1ng
129.900. (740)245-5909
The Village ol Syracuse ,;w lion. 740-446-9780
be accepting resumes for - - - - - - - - 3 Br.- 1 112 bath. 2 car
the position of, london Pod Six burial lots lor sale in garage, central air. gas heat.
Manager. deadljne is noon Mound Hill Cemetery.
C K Holzer $71,500. 740-992-6926.
April 4th, resume can be Add. Sec.2. al1 ay 740·
mailed to P.O. Box 266, 245·5859 after 4pm, or 3bd,
GALLIPOLIS,
Syracuse. Oh 45779. or Cemetery at 446·3565..
Foreclosure! Bur for only
$54,900! More homes
dropj,ed off at Village Hall. liM_
WANTED
.available. For toea listings
Clerk's Office, 2581 fllird
To Do
Street.
.·
cal 800-S59-41011 'XF254

s

... ~ Drivers COL Closs A
'A~red. minimam of 5
yea- dro'•.:nn elljl. 2
,..
"'· ··
...
Experience ·
. on
Overdeimensional toads.
Must have good driving
recant e·arn up 10 $2,000
weekly. For application Cel
(304)722-2184
M-F
8:30am-4pm

v-

:::=::...:!:;::______

WANTED: Satellite and
Broad Band Technicians.
Must haY&amp; own trudt, good
driving record, FIT,' industry
oompetitlw wages. Please
callorstopby: McDisl1212t
Jackson Avenue, Point
Ple...nt, 675-5100.

S

Attention I

::;~~~~~~~~~ t~lcompanyofleri~g "NO
oowN PAY MEwr'
pro·
•

Mill just call 304-675- 1957.

WHI care for 91derfv.
"' Ma.le or
Female. 16 yrs eKperience.
Will do, light housework.
laundry and cook. Win work
2ndl3rd shift , or 24·5's. 740388·9783 or 740-591·9034
Yard· need Mowed?
Hedges need Trimmed?
Call304-6752208
Reasonable Rates

,.........,=,....,....,.,,..,.._.,
fiND A'JOB ·
.

IN THE CLASSIAEDS

grams tor yoU to buy )uur
home instead of renting.
• 1000to financing .
• Less than perfect credit
accepled
' Payment could be the
same as rent
t-~ortgage
locators.
1740)367-0QOO

Racine.2br.. W/ca&amp;alc. Fb., 1
Cg,20X20W.IS;fully
floor
upstairs.3.29 acres.$82.500.
740·949·2253. On Rt. 124.

Momu: HOMlS
FOR S.\t.f:
16xBO.set up on rented lot.
Close to new GAHS. E)Cc.
Cond. Mighl heip finance.
$23.500 1740)446·4053

BEST BUY
NEW 2007 4 Bed

$49,989
llfiiiiiM8.UI.21511
mymidwesthome.com

24f7 HOME .
STORE
Midwest Homes
mymidw~sthome. com

EK!ra Nice- 1998 Oakwood
14x80, 3 bed, 2 bath . CIA.
All electric, fridge. stove &amp;
dishwashe r, musl mo'lle.
1740)446-4234 . 1740)208 ..
7861. 1740)256·1871.

For Sate: Mobile Home in
sale or rem 1600 sq. tee1 Cheshir'e,
2BR.
2BA.
home located 9f' hve acres. 1·5 Garden Tub, Huge covered
miklslrom P1 . ~1e•.58111 ' Newer. &amp; front porch. Huge deck on
bedrooms, 2 baths. gr&amp;at room, b ck' .
kitchen, d;~ng . lo"''~"omond a woth buill on Shed .
2 ,.r , ...... ean '"" , ,co 304· Must See! Must be moved.
59J-o205 or304-566·200J
$t J,OOO. (740)44Hl775

Fo~

•

�Tuesday, April 3, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

The
. Daily Sentinel• .Page 85

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE
Need to S8111 I 998 16x80
A111ntlonl
traHer with 314 acre land in Local company offering "NO
Gallipolis Ferry ' (304)593- DOWN PAYMENr pro24~
grams lor you to buy your
home instead of renting:
-------Rental Trailer. 1970. 12x60, • 100% financlng
2 bedroom well main\ained * Less than perfect credft
on
50,;248
lot
in accepted
Harrisonville, currently rent- • Payment could be ·the
ed S300 month Plus ut•l•ties. ·same as rent.
$12,000 (7401742-401 1
Mortgage
Locators.

..

i

I

&amp;

~GE • .•

Grewe area tor details call $198/mo.More homes avail·
419-8E;4.6783
able. 5% dn, 20 yrs @ 8%.
·
For listings 800-55g·4109
ec:.."..:·_F_t44-:-::
. -::--::-::-:-::-~
Newer 3 BR. 2 BA. Double
wide Yard, Near Wai-Mart
Need to sell your home? $575 .mo + dep. and utilrues.
late on p8yments, di\K&gt;roe,
2515
job transfer or a death? t 446canbuyyourhome. All cash. Pomaroy, 2 or 3 BR.,
and .Quick clOSing. 740-416· Nayters Run/Condor. No
3130.
pets, yards. sir; WID hoo4&lt;·
up. Aelerences. Call 992·
I~ I ' I \ I "
6886.

.t

r

lUll RENr

2 story house lor rent, , 3
BR, 1 112 BA, Gas heat.
$500/mo. $500 dep~ no pets,
«6-3481 .
22842 Bucktown Ad., letart
3 Be&lt;froom, WIAC, reoently
remodeled. 740·!l49· 22 53.
3 Br. house in Pomeroy

r

n~~

MOBRliiER

AIC,

lor rent.

1·2

~'40:r9•. ~----...,

n--

APAR'IMINfS
~

3br all Appliances.fumished ..,
304·S?6-2QJ4
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
3Br house for rent in Point for Rent, Meigs Coonty. In
Pleasant. Hardwood fl oors. town, No Pets, Deposit
Required, (740)992:-5174 or
all appliances furnished (740)441·10110.
=sit required 304-675- ---:"'= -,.----1 and 2 bedroom apart·
4br, $400 month + $400 ments, furnished and unfurdeposit, Co-owners. 1/2 int nished, and houses in
• tor sale $17,500 cau 304· Pomeroy and Middleport.
675-7381 leave message
no
Accepting applications for 3bedroom, 2·bath &amp; laundry 1 Am. effec., All ut~ . pet,
.•ep.; 6 rm. Rg. &amp;
$3001mo ......
room 2 story house with out
building. Stove &amp; refrigerator Refridg. Furn .. $375/mo +
dfitp &amp; uti l. in City. [740)441·
induded. Nice corner lot in
0596
Point Pleasant. 1st month S
deposit required . $6001 l·br Apt.&amp; 2 br Apt. near
month, $600 deposit No downtown al utilities indud·
pets. Available April 1st. ed Security deposit and rei·
7.W·446-9595.
erence required . no pets
(304)360·0163
House for. rent · 3·4 Br. - - - - - - - Midd. CIA. 740-843·5264.
2 bedrooms, living room,
kitchen, 1 bath, apartment
have central air. ·Furnished
In Memory
with couch, ,chaJrs. washer,
dryer, · stove, microwave,
beds, dinning table and
In Memory or
· chairs $400 deposit, $450 a
month call 304-882·2523
18ave a message and num-

=~r~g.:~;~uired.

Lola E. Clark

beriI notal home

April3 , 1997 .

2bdr, newly decorated..WID

We love and

hookup: range &amp; !ridge lur·
new cond·. no pets
nl·s•·•.
•tt:IU
R.l &amp;D.p 13041675.5162

miss you

3 and 4 room furnished apts.

Beautiful1 br/t ba, available
right away. must see 10
appreciate, cable hookup,
first, last. plus deposit, referonces. (7401992·3543 ,
BEAUTIFUl
MENTS
AT

experience

and

~G-rac-,,.-.ou-s-:li-:.,,-ng-.-:1-an-d-:2:-:bed--:-·
"
room apartments at Village
A'tverstde
·
Manor
and
Apartments in Middleport.
From $327·$592. Call 740·
064 E
1H ·
992-5
· qua
oustng
Opportunities.
Large 1 BD, 900sq .ft apt
Washer/Dryer, frldge.314
bath, partially furnished
includes bSd.First mo. rent+
deposit . Must fill out appli·
catio'n. No pets. 740 _441•
073t
-------Lg. Apartment in Pt.
Pleasant. mostly furnished,
Central AC $300 plus utili·
ties bep Req. 304-675·7783

·

Help Want~

Riverside Golf Club
Muon,WV
Hiring Cook &amp; Sene,r

beyecserv@yahoo.com.

Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer

Glass top dining room table
&amp; 6 chairs, Good Cond ,
$150; GAHS Band Jad:et
(L) . never worn, $SO ; 2 band
shins. (740)441 ·9844
,

WANm&gt;

ro ~

Positions Open
lntet'vlew:
Thunday, April 5th

I'

..,._ _iiiiiii.iiiiiiii;;.,_.l
02 F150, 58,000 miles. 740·
379 _241 0
2 Willy's Jeeps for sale. 59 &amp;
61 . Both run, both have hard
1ops. $2200 .00 . Ph . 379•·
·
2706

1725

I ·

4x4

FOR SAI.E

1990 4' 4 Toyota picl&lt;up,

S276o~4Qill9-2615

Appliance Warehouse
in Henderson. WV.

Pre-

Mollohan Furn. 202 Clark
Chapel Ad. New furn, If you
~keto save moo ey, check us
out. Drive a little, .Save alot!
3B8 0173

·

----~---

.

I

F,\R;FARM

I:'Ln'

Kiefer Built· Valley-Bison·
Horse
and
Livestock
Trallere·
Loadmax·
Gooseneck, Dumps, &amp;
Utility- Aluma Aluminum
Trailers· B&amp;W Gooseneck

Moving: Electric range &amp; Hitches·

2005 Kawasaki KLA 650
5.700 miles new tires &amp; .bat·
tery, waterproof nylon sad·
die bags 304-675-7071
94 Suzuki DA400, dirt/street
bike . Nice1.$t400. Honda

I

oroR H~

•

5pm·7pm

DIABETES SELF·
MANAGEMENT CLASSES
April 9, 10 and ~1
4:00 pm - 7:00 pm
HMC French 500 Room
Please have a prescription
from your physician to
attend. Call446-5971 to
register or for more
information.

2003
lnn sbruck
Gul(
Stream, 28ft, fully furnished

$6,500 ceti740·7~4-Q016

Slide-In Truck Camper for
sale. Fits in an Bit bed. Fully
self contained , AC/Heater,
Stove/Overr
and
Relr.igerator. Very good condition. $1,250 or trade for a
Pop-up Camper of equal
value~-593-8974

HMC Education &amp; Conference
Cente~

Call 446-5030 for more

Ll~~ Ttl~ ~tS'T .

·of YOU GUYS!

Trailer

AJ1_~·

)~~
BARNEY

HoME

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

JUGHAID !!

. THE BORN LOSER

• Garages
Remodeling

J40-992-1611
· Stop &amp; Compare

Marcum ConslrucUan •d
General CoabacUng
St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
Mike W. Marcum, Owner
Additions

Garages

Rooting

Vinyl Siding

New Construction

IT MEAN~ I 'M Gol/116
To

Interior Remodeling

PEOVLE ....t&gt;.E t;OIN&amp; TO

IMIT....TE ME'.

PEANUTS

(Jtvni/.tt.••,~.)"':"i~'ll'!d".~4~:...
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007 .

Fair Show Pigs for sale, burrows and gilts. 740-446·
6741 or 740·339·0944

7~3-2497

Quality 4-H show pigs. Now
Private Treaty at farm. 521
Ewington Road, Vinton ,
Otlio 74Q-:J88-1lt83 or 645·

1644.

buality "Show Pigs" from
Triple P Farm- From
National Winning Breeding
Stacie Available for viewing,
by appointment, on March
26. B.rrows starting @
$t50; Gins II $200. 304·
675 ·1798

Thil application Ia
on ·llle lor public viewing at the
Meigs
County
Recorder's
OBO. Oflil:e, Melga County
··eourt Houle, 100 E.
second
Streel,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
and ohall remain so lor
at le111t thirty deya lotlowing lhe 1111 dale ol
1980 Fo d
4 4 302 publlcat(on ol this
wltr P ~· •
• notice. Written com·
1990
Mu:".;; hatch. bad&lt;, manta or r&amp;qt.tHta lor
2.3 eng., 5500 17401742. an Informal conference may be filed with
390
the Division ol Mlnentl

=
2

a

·

CARPENTER
SERVICE

l

WONDER HOW THE
COMPOSER COULD WRITE
SOMETHING SO 8EAUTIF'UL ..

[ WONDER. HOW TI-!E
VIOLINIST CAN. REMEMBER
ALL THOSE NOTES ..

I

WONDER !-lOW TI-lE'( CHANGE
THOSE Ll61-lT EIUL85 WAI{ UP
Tl-lERE.IN THE CEILIN6 ..

SUNSHINE CLUB

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

wv

w

GARFIELD

••m•ll .....

l:llai.....
SIIIIUIJI:II•lt.ll•

r• PIICIS f11
C..-........

fiYIII

llrllllll•

7•

5

+

50 Actionll

52r.=
SallyEatuary
56 Ruahed
57 Plano pert

' brand

36 Compelled
37 Frootings

also a splinter

39 Encrusted
40 Fix, as an
elec:lion
41 Pullafasl
one

58 Type of doll

DOWN ·
Pakis1an's
language
2 Marianas
Island
3 Tough fiber
4 Gawks
5 Removed
the peel
6. Entirely
7 Olivia
NewtonJohn tune
8 Alimony

records
39 Funny
24 I knew it!
movie
25 Calf~ength 41 Judy of
"Laugh-In "
26 Baldwin of
films
42 Some
27 A1om
poems
tragmen1s · 43 Dogpatch
28 Meryl, in
cartoonist
" Out of
44 Swing

-"!!"'.

Company reurvaa the
rightto f818CUny or all
bids submitted.
The above described
collateral will be lold
· "11
Ia", with
no
axprealed
or
implied
warranty
gfven.
•
•
For lurther Jnlorma·
lion, or for an appoint·
ment to Inspect collet·
oral, prior to sale dale
contact Cyndle, Ken,
or Randy al992·2136.
413,4,5

accent

event

Your par1ner has opened wi1h one ol a
major. Yoo ha\10 at leaslloor-card support, game values and a ~ngleton . You
are just about to make a splinter bid,
when your · right-hand opponent overcalls in your singleton suit. What do

voo

do now?
Neld,look allhe Nor1h and SOuth hands.
You are in seven spades 8fter West over·
. called in ~ubs . WeS1 leads the hean
lOng. How would you plan the play?
A jump cue-bid is a splinter- you make
a single jump in lhe overcallefs s~t. In
lhis deal, Nonh does exadly lhal ..;lh
his four-club response. Now South, who
can visualize ruffing his loW dubs on the
board, control·bids (cue·bidsl lour dia·
monds to ·eKpress some slam interest.
After North shows his lirsl·round heart
control, Soulh does the same in dubs.
Then lhe pa~ners show lheir red·su~
second•rourd controls al the live-leve l
t&gt;eforo Norlh j"""'s lo seven spades,
knowing Soulh would not bid like lhis
wilhoullhe spade ace. Who said lhal all
slams require BlackwOOO?
You have lo find lhe diaroond queen, so
sel oul on a voyage of discovery. AHer
winning oMth dummy's heart ace, draw
trLmPS in IWO rounds, cash your dub
· ace, and crpssruff, trumping three clubs
on the board and three hearts ·in your
hand. What have you learned?
Thai Wesl began wi1h two' spades, lour
hea(ls and six clubs. SO he has precise·
ly one diamond. The .contract has
t&gt;ecome a certainty. Play a diamOnd lo
dummy's king, lhen run the diamord
jack !~rough East.
Beautilully llid and played!

You are not
likely to be afraid to make some big,
important decisions If you have taith In
your judgment. II your first thoughts are
negative·, negate that with a pOsitive attitude.
CA.NCEA (June 21·July 22) - Your compassionate nature will have an aptitude
for so rting oulthe problems of others In
ways that re structure their affairs In a .
more positive fashion. Don't .hesitate to
hear people out.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Involve yourself
as much as possible In activities that
stimulate your mental faculties but also
give you the freedom to move around
physically as well. You'll soa r, in these
cases.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 - ll you teet
conditlons·ca n be improved upon consld·
erably where your job iS concerned. lake
the InitiatiVe to Implement these changes
yourself instead of waiting for co-workers
to do so.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - It is OK to
temporarily set aside your worldly needs
and focus nstead on cor'ldltlons !hat
have an effect on yoursociallite~ This will
be where your greatest opporlun~ies tie.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. .22) - Don't
leave situations that are meaningful lo
you llnanclalty. If you put forth the effort
on situations that are threatening to
show tosses, you can conclude them to
your satlstadlon.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) - Your
greatest ability will be concfiming Issues
that call for leadership qualities: You'll
insllnctively know how to get what vou
want for yourself and others wilhoOt creating Chaos.
·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Heed
your hunches, especially If you come up
with some bright ideas regarding ways
and means to add to your resources.
Your Instincts In flnanclel or.materlal mat: ters are better than usual.
AOUAAlUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - Even
though things may start a blt sour, the
po~lbllllles for lutfllllng your aspirations
look very hdp"aful because you'll view
things reallatlcelly and not through roseCOiorea glaSHa.
PISCES (Ftb. 26-Mareh 20) - When It
c·omes to co mpetitive devtllopments,
you'U have much more reserva upon
wt11ch to draw fhan your competitors do.
Thlels the critical diHtrence that-wMI give
You ao edge.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos ·
Cel£bty QPie ~s n a!Bed 1rom qootatO'lsby tlliiO.IS people
in.lhe ~ Slarlls 9" illJiher

Eao:l•

!U: .00 lfeserll

roday'sdue: ReqiJ~S M

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100

KBIWPCWH FAOTCDHIIOM. " • J . T.

WBIYNABO
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' I can1 ~ay pertect every day.' ·Teddy, Martinez,
after committing five errors in five games

~~!~:t:~~

S© ~(l1A- ~ t,;rs·

WOlD
UMI

- - - - - Edilol ~r ClAY l, IOUAN - - - - -

-() loorro•;•

lolltB ol lho
four scrombled words be·
low 10 form leur ,:,.pJo words.

LUBSHE

S CT H E
IJ

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I~

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s

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I

: I had not don.: well on a

i

me that there are always
hurdles co clear on JIW road 10

science project . Gramps told

••

t-..J-...L-...L.......t......J •

'IIIRSCE
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f3 PRINl f,/U/1.6[RE0 tEllERS
IN

@)

Cc~r.:&gt;iete !be · ~hvt~le quoted
by f1lling in the m1uing wordt

deve! o~ !tOm step No. 3 b~low.
1

THE IC SQUARES

g~;c:~~~~E~ tETTtRs 10 1

1 1 1 1 1 1

j

• ~ z~ o7
Yeoman-Grand - Pouch - Devour - PAY ror HER
"A friend you deed to buy," gramps wame4·me, "will
not be worth what you PAY for HER." ·
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

ARLO &amp;•JANIS

I

j.
\'

I

Ia·"'*'

.'
•

46 Laird's

31 More hazy 47 Mel
getters
33 Wuin
hlgllli;rt
9 -Chomsky
' charge of
48 H~chm
10 Busy bugs 35 Bob
plans
13 Bow Bells
36 Thick head 51 Talk, lalk,
. native
of hair
talk
t9 Then
38 Did a
(2wds.)
laundry
21 Gold
chore

SOUPTONUTZ

••

.locale

Africa"
29 Wa1erfron1

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -

Angus Bull $700. 446-7410
or645·1946
.LEGAL NOTICE
R e 8 o u r c e 8
Southern Ohio Coal Management,
2045
YOUNG'S
Company has oubmH- Morse Road, Building
ted an application to H-3, Columbus, Ohio
revise a coal mining 43229-6693, wilhin thir·
permit (APR) jR.()354- 'ty days alter the laat
Roofing, Siding,
57
to
the
Ohio data of pubilcalion ol
Room Additions &amp;
Soffit, Decks,
Department ol Natural this notice.
Aemodtllng
NewGarag11
Resources, Divlalon ol (3) 20, 27, (4) 3, 10
Doors, Windows,
Elec1rlcal &amp; Plumbing
Mineral
Resources
Elecrric, Plumbing,
Roofing &amp; Gutters
Management.
This - - - - - - - VInyl Siding a Paln11ng
Drywall,
ARP 11 located in
Pallo and Porch Dtcks
Public Notice
Remodeling,
Room.
036725
Meigs County, Salem ' - - - - - - Additions
Township, SOclion 34, PUBLIC NOTICE
V.C. YOUNG Ill
Local Contractor
sild Ia located on lhe NOTICE: Is hereby
992 6215
740-367-0544
Wilkeavllle
7 1/2 given that on Saturday
1-'r1111C'roy Olllu
Free Estimates
minute U.S.G.S. quad- April 7, 2007 at 10:00
2"1 H~Loc IF • prrl('f1('
740-367-0536
rongla map, approxi- a.m., a public sale will
mately 2.0 miles east be held at • 21 1
of Wilkeaville, Ohio. Second St., Pomeroy,
Thla ARP proposes to Ohio. The Farmera
inslail two boreholes Bonk and · Savings
and
appurlanances Company Is selling lor
necessary to tranlfer cash in hand or cartl·
water .! rom the under- fled check the follow·
ground workings ol ing coila1eral:
the Meigs Mine No. 2 2002
Audl
A6
into tha underground WAI,ILD64B32N136674
workings ol the ~gs The Farmers Bank and
Mine No. 31. This · Savings
Company,
inatallatton will lacill· Pomeroy,
Ohio,
tate poat-reclamatlqn lftefVOI the right to
water handling· and bid althls ule, and lo
.............. . -. .
traatmenllor Southam withdraw ·lhe ·above
. . .:::.
·
. ..
11
0hlo Coal Company's collateral prior to sale.
..:.
. -,.....:::.
-•
Meigs
Mine.No.
No.312 . and Furiher,
The Farmers
- __
-_
·_
-_
"_
- _"!'"'_,.;.a
Meigs Mlne
Bonk and
Saving• .__ _ _iiiiii

Pass

34 l,.emon cooler
,35 Walkman

cess.

4-H Pigs for sale born
between 1128 &amp; 211. 740·
594·3031 .

Folr Plga
Doughty's Club Pig
Albany (740)696·6231

4

Wednesday, April 4, 2007
By Bernice Bede 0.01
A nur~~ber ol new interests and Involvements are likely to be In the oHing lor
you. Fresh. previously unaiJaMable oppor·
tunnies could develop In areas that can
lead to your advancement.
ARIES (March 21-Ap.rii19) - Yourimag·
lnatlon is a vital lactor In whether things
work out to your satisfaction or not. Strive
to visualize Important dealings or events
In ways where they erd up In gJ positive
manner.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - A desire
lor having some of the nice things In llfe
will supply you with the lrx:enllve you
need to be an ·achiever. Senlng personal
stakes will enhance your surge for sue·

SET TREMI&gt;S , oF

COURSE~ 'I ' M GOiNG
TO LIVE M't' LIFE, A.ND

Commercial

• Home O"ygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System·
• Helios System

Pass
Pass

E..t
P.-ss
Pass
Pass
All pass

W~!P!,

BIG NATE

we Deliver To You!

Unconditional lifeline guar·

North

RSVP

~Astro-

740·985-4141 Office
7~0-4 I6·1834

.

•· ~·ov•·~~
1MI'K
.~:o~..-I.LI .... .,
L,.-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiorl

GALS,
'!''KNOW,

• Complete

;:;:;--~:----,

r10

KITCHEN .
WORK AIN'T
JEST FER

ROBERT
BISSEll
c•STIICDII

45771
740-949-2217

Residential &amp;

antee. Local references fur·
nished. Established , 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (7401 446·
oe10, Rogers Basement
Parts. 650 Nighthawk. $1400. 740· Wat8f'proolinQ.

Show pigs lor sale , starting
t\pril 3rd. Ferguson Farm.
740-245-9157'

PREPARATION FOR
CHILDBIRTH
Sunday, April B ·
2:00 - 6:00 pm

30 Yrs. Exp. In s.

Du1 h
28ft rth sfd
05
c man
w
t e
out &amp; BB. lots of storage,
excellent shape. $10,900.
367-7755
--::--:--::----:1987 Prairie Schooner. 36'.
Sth
whe91.
EKcellent
Condition . $8200. 740·4469543 or 740-794.()691

r

·SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

oNe~ ~·D Ll~~ ro
G~T ASSIGN~l&gt; TO S'LOTt4
/
0~ (jt..UTTONY

Jusr

Owner·Ronnie Jones
Free Estimate s ...ll

HardWood Cabinetry And Furnnure

...¥

West

32 Part ol

FQR~A~NKw&amp;~;~AR~N&gt;E7~~~~==~~?r,~~~~~~~~~· AjumpcueiS

1-800-950-3359

740 _992_6971

31 Cells, to
Romans

Opening lead: • K

740-367-0266/

H1ll's Self
Storage

•
refrigerator, $30/pair; alec· Carmichael
Trailers. 379-9242
17401446 2412
tric range, $35; Kenmore ir.J:~------, ,....,;c";;-;-31:-;::;;~,...-,,.....~rr,;;;;"""";;::;:.,.-,
wasMr &amp; dryer, super cap.,
heavy duty. $300/pair; kids
LMSTOtK
wardrobe, $20: Antique cab- ___
inet withllour bin , $300; Oak
raltop desk, $50; Antique 4 month old Nanny &amp; Billy.
Schwinn bike, $75. Call &amp;ie percentage goats. 3677755
(7401446·2880
Thompsons · Appliance &amp;
Rapair-675·7388. For sala,
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp;dryers, refrigerators, gas and electric
ranges ·air conditiooers and
wringer · washers. Will do
repairs on major brands in
shop or at your home.

Senior Citizen
Discount

17, 50hp, Nissan motor wilh
www.-""'""""'kcabhsetry.oom
tilt 7 trim, 9.9 Mercury with
tank &amp; tiller. depth tinder,
new \ires, cover. Excellent
condition 304:-675-3313 can
be seen at 2320 Washington
ave. Point Pleasant
'---..JooO~....,......I.I:
-_- - : : - : - : : - : - : - Carver 26ft Cabin Cruiser,
Marine PI:., lull galley. sepa·
rate sleeping cabin , good
condition $l t ,500/neg 304 _
697 _2986 Huntington
29670 Bashan Road
CAMPm'&gt;&amp;
Racine, Ohio
• New Homes
M

r

Vi\115
FOR SAlE

00' HD Sportster 1200 Buell
heads, screamin eagle
F.QuiPM~:.~·u
cams. custom built carb. 03
HO 883 custom. lOOth
Anniv. Many eKtras. Nice
0% Financing· 36 Mos. bike. $S500 each . 740•388 .
-available now on John 9758
Deere Z Trak Zero Tuma &amp;
5.99% Fixed Rate on John 1987 Harley D.avidson FTC
Deere Getore Carmicha~l eocublc Inch, leather bags,
Equipment (740)446-2412. runs ·strong, $7150. 740·
- - ' - - - - - - - - 441-8953.
Farmall A with cu ltivators &amp; - - - - - - - 2000 Harley Davidson Soft
side dre~er, JD 3 bottom
1s'plows, JD8'disc, JD609 Tail Douce 15,000mi. 2tone
. d·
Rottery Cutter, JD sprayer bl ack·red· D eIachabl e wtn
h' ld 2
.1
d
15
with 100 gal tank 6 ton s te ,
sea , mm con .
wagon gear 304-593-4750
$13,700. 740·794·0250
r1D

•

Station House
Saturday,
April 7th, 2007
11 am until?
ETES SUPPORT
GROUP
Sunday, April 8
2:00 pm - 6:00 pm
HMC FrenGh 500 Room
Call 446-5971 for more
infonnation

FOR SAlE

...- -...-,

Meat Goats·. born wk of
1114/07. $75.00·$100.00.

Fish Fry!!

iriii--"::"----, - - - - - - - r15
'fRucKs
BassTrackerTournamentTX

r=

· GooDs

••

• trim • Stump
Grinding • Bucket
Truck
Full insured

David Lewis

740·992·2432

,...••. ... .

Pile up

Senae
30 Aloha S1ate
port
I

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: North-South

South

22Revenuer
23 Joke with

24

+ A 10 3

"H 1' Ill

15 r.:;!:tup
16 Woody's
11011
1.7 Uncluttered
18 Sports
olflclal
20 Gulfs

27

... A 8 6 5

r BoA~~onms I

r

HOUSDfOID

. A \ 0754
• 2

• Top • Remova~

r

pups. Spring lap babies.
Looking for a Mobile 74()-645-6987
c.,:~.;..;.~---...,
Home/House or Apt. tor ~
Rent out Rt2 toward Ripley
MUSICAL
2002
Dodge
Caravan,
or Rt62 toward Eleanor or
NI'RUMINTS
86000 miles, runs great.
Lw-iiiliiiiiiiiililiil_.l $3200, OBO 740-256·1233
on 35 toward Southside ..,
,or::j2~56-90~:;:3:.;1,;,.---~
304-674-5889 or 304-675- Wurlitzer Piano, eMcellent rv
3487 or 304·593-3567
. oondi1lon. 740-441-7098
4 ~=cw;l
~
,

rto

Iom·. . I t'l'l

A 1 t 3

Eut
• 2
• 9 e
• K Q J 6
• 10 9 8 5
• Q98 764
• 5
• KQJto 73 ... 9 •
Sou1b

MONTY

49='=
55

West

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

2002
Saturn. SO,OOOK
$5995.00--2000 Plymouth *Insured
Bre'eze~
$3995.00··2000 *ExperiCnced
Ford Escourt ZX2 .S3795.00· References Available!
·99
Mercury
Tracer
C II G S 1 @
$33~5.00 and many more to
a ary tan ey
choose from Riverview
740-742-2293
Motors 2 blocks above Please leave messa e
McDonalds Pomeroy, OH ~~~~~~;~
(740)992·3490.
r--C_o_n_c_re_l_e_W_o_rk_-,
Jim's Small Engine
Cook Mol
Repair
26 Years Experience

14~11

• ,. J 2
... 2 ·

7 0 Pin e Street • Ga llipolis
·740-446-IKJ07 Toll Free 877-669-0007

and Quality

Wurk
*Reasunable Rates

2002 Cavalier Z-24 37 .000

Goats tor Sale. Boer Goats,
Club kids, Born Jan &amp; Feb,
· 2007. Call (7401256·9247

CHESTER FlRE
DEPARTMENT

~~--ooiiRIRiiiiiiiSAIEiiiii;;.,_

~~1' :~=~esc~~:h: rm

iii!'""~

* Prompt

I

AERATION MOTORS
miles, like new $4900. 2005
. Gel ready lor spring
Repaired, New &amp; Reoon In Sunlire Sport 2D Sunroof
also selling ATV Parts
S1ock. Cell Ron E110ns, 1· 24 •000 miles $6900. 2002
32119 Welchlown Rd .
•~537 9528
Cavalier 40, 5 C! ..nnn~
·
~ ·
·
"""""
Pom.eroy, OH 45769
59,000 miles .$4500. 1999
Little Tyke outdoor Play Set Jeep Wr.angler$6900. 1999
$100 needs to be spray Malibu S3100. 2000 S-10
washed 304-675·3639
LS Auto $4700. 1999
Taurus $2~. 1993 Honda
NEW AND USED STEEL Del Sol 20 $2800. Others in
2002 t9.5x20 seaDoo Jet
stock 3 monll\s/3,000 mile
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar wa•amy.
boat with trailer &amp; many
For
Concrete,
Angle,
accessories. $23,000. 740·
Channel. Flat Bar; Steel 740·44S.Ol03. J2&amp;Jackson
845-1)324
Gt'
For
DrainS,
'
Pike
ra mg

t!ir~~~---., -----~---

i

A~

•

·fJamihl l•5:tld3:1

S'anley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

oro

JET

Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L

owned Appliances, all under
Warranty, also have recondi·
·
tioned Big Screen TV's
304 5 7999
Middleport, N. 4th Ave., 2 _1_l_ffl__._ _ _ _ _ _
room eHiency. Dep.&amp; refer- Bedroom suite $100, blue
ences. No pets. Utiiilies paid.
h. $
C
740-992-0165.
lift c atr 150• a11 740"446•
-,---::-:::--~-- 1909
•
_:_
· ~-----New 2BR apartments. For Sale: LA, BR, OA lurni ~
Washer/dryer
hookup,
lure, Exc. Cond., Kitchen Aid
stove/refrigerator inckJded.
Also, units on SA 160. Pets Washer &amp; Dryer, Heavy
Welcome! (740)441-0194 .
Duty. Call 1740l446•3380

P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640
to

--~-----

15)

· Buckeye Community Services ·
e- mail

1984-Toyota mini Motor
Home 84,000 miles $2,000,
okjer Golf-aut, gas. good
condition $900 304-773·
5132

-

package., $7.25 hr. Send resume' to:

Deadline for applicants 419/07.

'"""'

.

r

adequate

automobile insurance. Excellent benefit

"~

commercial building "For Scrap Metals Open Monday,
AentM1600 square feet , off Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments street parking. Great "loca- Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
•Central heat &amp; AJC
tion! 749 Third Avenue in Thursday, Saturday &amp;
•Washerfdryerhookup
.., Gallipolis. Rent $400/f\IO. Sunday. (740)446-7300
•All electric··averaging
Call Wayne (404)456-3602 llll"'--:::----,
$50-$60/month
PEls
.....,....
~
• Ow ner pays w81Sf,. sewer, Commerical Space for rent
r\.11\ S"
tu.£
trash
Main St. Pt. Pl. $400/mo call ..,._ _iiiiiii.iiiiiiii;;.,.,J
( 04)88
Julio 703·528.()617
3
2 3017
Eng,Mastiff puppies. 12 wks
Prime commercial space for old. AKC Reg . Excellent
rent at Springvalley Plaza. f;lloodlines . 740·245-5823' or
Call645·2192.
74o-645-1912

valid driver 's license, three years good

. or

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments. Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Pool, Palio, Stan $425/Mo.
No Pets, Lease Plus
Security Deposit Required .
(740)367·7086.
.:.__ _ _ _ _ _ _
Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications for waiting

c

Ell v·
m I8W
Apartments

Must have high school diploma or GED,
driving ,

L--·RJR-iiRENTiiiiiliio--"·

r ~ I' r~

APART. lisl lor Hud·subsized, 1• br,
BUDGET apartm.ent,lor
.
t~e

dean WID hookup. No pets.
· d
AeI. and depostt· requ1re
.
·
. 0•445- 1519 _
New Haven, 1 Br., furnished,
74
Larry &amp; Joy
no pets, dep.&amp;relerences.
Modern 1 BR Apt. Call 446· 740·992·0165.
&amp; Families
3736
Second floor apt. o.verlooking Gallipolis city park. L.A. ,
Heln Wanted
Help Wanted
2 B.A. , 1 112 baths. fully
eqUippo d kl tchon, dinlng
area, laundry hookups.
WANTED:
Full-time
and
pan-time
Relerences and security
positions available to assist individuals
deposit required. $600 mo.
call 446-2325 or 446·4425.
with mental retardation i n Meigs Coumy:
I) 40 hrs: as scheduled:
2) 40 hrs: Fri 4 pm thiu 8 am Sun:
3) 28 hrs: 3-9 pm M!fu!W:

;===~=====:..::=======:;
•

sewer, trash pd. Middleport.
$425.00. No pets
Ret.
· · ed 740 843 5264
reqwr ·
~ , •
·
Apts. Available- Gallipolis
area, WW)Y.sprlng-vaHeyproperties.com or call 740441 ·9668 or 740-339-1)362 .

'""I!'""_AP._iY!IMENJS
____..,I

I

L,.-..,;·-~;o"""'iiiiiliio'-•

who passed away

866-564-6679 .

·

r.:r

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

II you own your land.

PRICES AT JACKSON elderly/disabled call 675·
~
"""'
, ESTATES, 52 Westwood 667g Equal Housing
Drive lrom $365 to $560. Opportunity
h
I
t
2 BR ''-"'le
m~•
orne or ren · Walk to shOp &amp;mo~a&amp;. Call v
· 2 BR APt 10
·
$325/mo. Dep. &amp; Ref. ·740ery nice
367-0632.
740·446·2568.
Equal Ravenswood .. Fully lur-::-::-::::-:--:::--:--:--- H
__ou_s_in_o_OWo_,..rt_un_ity_.::c:--::- nished:~lllinens, cookware,
3BA, 2BA, Rio Grande area. CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- TV/IJ\/0, washer. dryer. new
No
pets.
References ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
carpet and paint. All utilities
required. $425/mo. $425 Townhouse
apartments, included. Short term lease
dep. 740·367-7025
and/or small houses FOR no problem, $650. (3041532·
- -7:--:--:---,.--:--- RENT. Call (7401441.· 111 1 5268 1new •I
Mobile Home Lot in Johnson
Mobile ·Home PB.rk in forapplication&amp; information.
SPACE
~on-OH . Phone
Gallipolis,
ftl'..l'll

large &amp; very clean, 1 1/2
bath,
hardwood floors. (740)446-2003 or (740)446full basemenl, 2 car garage.
small back yard, 740-9492303, or 591·3920

GOTLAND~

mineral

North
04-ol-07
6KQJ 63

Answer to Prevlotll Puzzt.

have

53 Saber kin
54 FB11 dancer

12 Chlllky

~(304=1e:27"3'-'·3344=::.....--­

:~:~:. ~~:at~~~~ ~~~: ~~~ ~~~~~- ~~~ ::;.m~,~:~~c.~:a:~

•IO_..,;iiiHiiot.5El&gt;iiiiiiil_rl

11 Regret

A HIDDEN TREASURE!
Laurel
Commons
Apartments. Largest in the
areal Beautifully renovated
throughout including brard
new kitdhen and bath.
Starting at $405. CaH today!

4

1 Yuki
4 Hcll(lring
1 w.oor
Print:HI

·Owner financing.

Rent Mobile Home space _m_:essa_::.ge_.- - -- - · Apartment

42~kin

ACROSS

. 45 1l1ey

Phillip
Alder
&lt;

(7401367-1JOOO

OupleM
tor
rent
in
Middleport, 2 bedroom
3 acres on Sandhill Rd. apartments. both recently
$40,000 (304)895·3929
remodeled, $450 · upstairs
and S475 downstairs, Extras
Mobile Home Lot for rent like new deck, sunroom ,
near Vinton . Call (7 40)441- garage,
storage, · 1Call
1111 .
(740)992·5094 and leave

.- -

.t

�..
'

Page 86 - The Daily Sentinel

'

'

.

'·'

www.myrlailysentinel.com

Thesd;ly, April 3; 2007

'

Women's Club
donates to HolZer
Hospice,A2

p••
I

. Syra~use woman

'' •

completes development
program,·A3

what? )

'

FASTER
THANA
POLE._T
AT· A
PERFUME
FACTORY

ad,·ertise in this space

Caii99Z-2155 .

ADVERTISERS VISIT:

GIZMOSIDS.COM

PABLO

WINKY

the CHEESE

SPORTS

Middleport officers·outline drug enforcement efforts

• Meigs sweeps Eastern ...
SeePageB1

MIDDLEPORT - Street
drugs and people who sell
them are corning from other
cities to Middleport, and
police officers are challenged
in their efforts to keep drugs
off the streets.
Police have even witnessed
drugs being delivered to customers by boat, Police Chief
Bruce Swift told the
Middleport
Community
. Association Tuesday. Swift
and Lt. Jeff Miller presented
a detailed program about law
enforcement and the drug
problems in the village as
pan of a community education program they plan to
t.&amp;e to other organizations.
Miller said the police
department plans to make the
presentation to c·ommunity
groups in an effon to educate
the public . about the work
involved in law enforcement,

PEPPER}ET

a

With precise balance of exotic spices,
the Pepper Jet flashes through the sky.
When dual hammers G) are activated by
the pilot, a firie cloud of pepper is emitted
from two standard shakers@. This powder causes
the two Argentinian "large lunged" anteaters@to expell
spasms of rearward thrusting propulusion@.
.

w

'

@

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

m. underhill.

· ·0~~0

particularly in drug enforcement efforts, and the time and
effon· that go into the cases.
While natives are also
involved in the community's
drug problem, much of it
originates from outside the
community, Miller said.
Suspects from Dayton,
Akron, Canton and Detroit,
Mich. are all involved in supplying drugs in the community, and all of them seem to be
connected to one another in
someway.
The Middleport Police
Department has identified 32
positive locations in the village where dfllgs are sold,
undercover buys have taken
place, or search warrants
have been executed. Since
June of last year, Miller said,
the village has executed
more warrants in search of
drugs than any other community, and two of the
largest investi~ations result·
ed in the setzure of I00

grams of crack cocaine.
Use of crack cocaine and
sale and abuse of prescription
medications are the biggest
drug problems facing the
community, but Miller said
law enforcement officers are
seeing an increase in the use
of. methamphetamine and a
type of heroin known as
"black tar."
'- ·
Swift estimated that the
sale and use of illegal drugs
has tripled in the past six
years.
.
Miller and Swift said they
and an undercover informant
recently arranged a drug buy
at the village levy on · Nonh
First Avenue, met a dealer
traveling by boat; and by the
time the transaction had been
completed , another boat
arrived also used for drug
trafficking had arrived.
Swift said residents can
proteci themselves, their

Please see Offlcen, A5

OBITUARIES

When the time comes to
do a finished piece, I usually
·use tracing paper,over
my rough sketches.

Can you help Gizmo find the cheese, ·
two
and the hammer? .

sEn!

Br
SERGENT
BSERGENT@MVDAILYSENTINELCOM

WEATHER

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..

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

a4 -6

..

.· POMEROY --'-. Tuesday
evening hundreds ofyoungsters
clutching Easter baskets or plastic bags swanned onto the
Pomeroy football field in search
ofcolorful plastic eggs.
It ·was the Pomeroy
· Merchants Association's annu_al Easter egg hunt postponed
from Saturday afternoon
because of the mil). Each egg a
child found wru; turned in for a
small prize, while the finder of
the golden eggs, one in each
area designated for three different age groups, received. gift
baskets.
The Easter bunny (Dixie
Sayre) was there for a time to
greet the children but soon disappeared when the heat became
too much to bear in her fluffy
rabbit outfit Michelle Noble
was chairman of the egg hunt
The finders of the golden
eggs were MaKenzie Gilmore,
2, daughter of Amanda and
Lany Gilmore of Middlepon;
Hannah McKinley, 7, daughter
of Mary Sheets and Scott
McKinley of Pomero;r. and ·
Haley Kennedy, I 0,daughter of
Mike and Carrie Kennedy of Four-year-old Alexia Russell of Long Bottom patiently waits
Middlepon.
·in line to trade in the eggs sh!J found for prizes.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MVDAILYSEI'ITINEL.COM

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

.

,.,

raster tree·

Cha~ene Hoeftlch/ photo

From 11\rge inflatable rabbits. ·to decorative signs. to trees
decorated with colorful eggs, Easter decorations are springing up everywhere. This beautiful flowering tree, all d.ecorated With plastic eggs an.d carrots, is at the home of the
Zirkle family on Mulberry Avenue in Pomeroy.

Association·contiliues July 4 plans

A3 . MIDDLEPORT I·-The

© o007 0b1o Volley PUblishing Co.
' .

Please see Relay, AS

.

Annie's Mailbox

A6

.

set for 5:30p.m., April 12 in
the basement of the
Pomeroy
..
Library.
Refreshments will be provided and door prizes
awarded.
"The Relay co!l'mittee
want survivors to share their
experiences." · · Courtney
Sirn, Relay team recruitment
chair said. "Cancer survivors are a main motivation
to Relay because they show
. the progress being made
with dollars·· raised with.in ·

BY CiwltetE Ho&amp;uclt
HOEfl.JCH@MYOAILYSENllNB..coM

B7

B Section

Hoeftlch/photos

Makerizie Gilmore, Haley Kennedy and Hannah McKinley, left to right, finders of the golden
eggs in tl'\eir respective age groups, pose with their gift baskets.

Comics

Weather
' ' "if-' .-'

Cha~ene

2 SEeTIONS- 16 PAGBS

Sports
~

POMEROY - If you're a
cancer survivor or have been
recently diagnosed, the
Meigs County Relay for
Life Planning Committee
·
\9. hear from you, literally.
The committee is hoping
survivors
and
current
patients may want to speak
about their experiences with
the disease during the "Hope
Springs Eternal" Relay for
Life Team Captains Meeting

INSIDE ~
• Nationally aired
hunting sfi'ow comes
home. See Page A2
• Chester group hears
about breast cancer.
See Page A2
• Governor signs
transportation budget bill.
See Page A2
• Party honors family
members. See Page A2
• Past Councils of
Chester Council meet.
See Page A3 .
: • Toot sweet! French ·
train sets rail speed
record with a 357.~ mph
run. See Page AS
• Supporting 'the 'Walk.'
See Page A6
• Holy Week services.
·See Page A6
• Health Department
reports on 2006 services.
. See .Page AS

J. Reed/photo

Cancer survivors_sought
for 'Relay' meeting

Page AS .
•Dave Haggy
• Paul PuiUns
• Elijah Lee Mowrey
In order to practice your
in~ing~ I suggest doing rough
sketches in pencil, and then
adding ink oyer top. Don't
worry about erasing the ·
pencil, this is only practice.

B~an

Middleport Police Chief Bruce Swift, · left, and Lt. Jeff Miller
mad~ a presentation about law enforcement. and particular·
ly efforts to address · drug trafficking in the village, at
Tuesday's meeting Of the Middleport Community Association.

Middleport
Com!f1unity
Association continued..planning
the
community's
Independence Day celebration at Tuesday's monthly
meeting.
Agospel sing will be held at
Dave Diles Park prior to a tree
concert by Phil Din and the

DozersattheMiddleponfoot- President. Brenda Phalin also BearBasketBingogamefor6
ball field later in the evening. discussed a possible parade p.m. on May 3 as a fun~raiser
The free concen has been route to begin downtown and for July 4 and other upcoming
organized by the River City conclude in the area of the activities. The game, will be
Players,: and business spon- ·football field on Pearl Street. held at the firehouse, and
sors are being solicited for
Phalin discussed the status Longaberger baskets have
donations toward the concert. of the 2007 membership . been ordered as prizes. The
The association will pay half drive. So far this Y,ear, 50 association will also offer a
of the cost for the stage.
· members have joined or special bingo-themed bear .
The associatioti also plans . renewed their memberships. · with each prize basket.
to sponsor fireworks at the Dues are $15 for individuals Tickets will be available for
end of the evening, to be visi- · and $25 for businesses.
purchase at the Ohio River
ble from the football field.
The association plans a Bear Co. and at Peoples Bank.

Phalin said a m~nager has
been· hired to operate· the
farmers' niarket planned for
downtown Middleport again
this summer. The market will
be held on the comer of Nonh
Second Avenue and Mill
Street every Friday evening
during the growing season,
and the county health department plans a weekly walk to
Please see July C, AS

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