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                  <text>Page B6 ~ The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel'.com

•

Tuesday, January 10, 2006

'

Palmer.absolves von Oelhoffen .over play·
Kitna was the starter during Lewis' first season, leading the Bengals to an 8-8
CINC INNATI
One
fmish while Palmer watched
replay was · all Carson
from the sideline as a rookie.
Palmer needed to see.
Kitna has bee(l the backup
The Pro-Bowl quarterback
each of the last two seasons.
won't dwell on the play that
He took over after Palmer
doomed the Bengals' tlrst
got hurt·on Sunday and led
playoff appearance in 15
the Bengals. to a 17- 14 halfyears. He tore a knee ligatime lead. going 14-of-20
ment on his first pass during
for 109 yards and a toucha 31- 17 loss to Pittsburgh.
down without an intt;rcepPalmer slowly shuffled
tion. In the second half, the
around the locker room on
Steelers changed covera~es
metal crutches Monday,
and Kitna crumbled , gomg
unsure when he'd have
10-of-20 for 88 'yards with
. reconstructive surgery and
two interceptions and a fum.unable to say definitively
ble .
· that he ' ll be fully recovered
Palmer said . Kitna is hi s
in time for training camp.
m11in offseason 'concern . .
As for the tackle that led
'T m not worried about
to it ali: Palmer said Kimo
anybody else other than
von Oelhoffen did nothing.
Jon," Palmer said. "He has
some opportuni ties to go
"I do~:\ knl'w Kimo p~ r­
and play some other places.
sonall y, '·' 'Pall\ler 'atd.
"From what I've heard, he's
I know the organi zation
a classy guy: Football is
wants him back. It's a matter
football. I don 't think it was
of what he wants to do.
malicious at al l. He's a guy
"I wish him the best. I
with a high motor that plays
want what 's best for him .
hard and was playing hard . ·
But I'm also se lfish, and I
"It just happened. I don 't
want him back ."
think in any way he was tryPalmer's teammates are
ing to do anything. ·It's just
wondering whether he' 11 be·
part of the game."
AP photo back for training camp. He
The Steelers lineman was Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer tal~s with the set a franchise record and
stumbling as he came off a media at Pau l Brown Stadium, Monday in Cincinnati. The Pro led the NFL with 32 touch- .
block and lunged at , Sowl quarterback tore a ligament in his Jeft knee on his first down passes, and made the
Palmer's legs on hi.s firs t pass Sunday against the Pittsburgh Steelers. Palmer hopes to Pro. Bowl in his second year
as a starter.
pass· S)lnday, crashing into return in time fo'r training camp.
the side of hi s left knee.
Palmer sat in a lo~ker and ·
Palmer tore the anterior cru- body who knows Kimo going to.be stupid about it. I shared small talk with hi s·
ciate ligament when the leg knows he plays hard. He 's realize I've made a commit- linemen and rece ivers on
bowed.
not a bad player or bad per- men! to this organization for Monday,
occasionally
l:le couldn't bear to watch son. He's a good person. But the future, and I need j
laughing at a joke. He
the rep lay.\_
it's unfortunate and it hap- think about that, too.
seemed upbe~~t , but team"! saw it once;· he sai d, pened." ·
"I'm not going to do any- mates couldn't help but
. with a pained expression. ·~1
Palmer expects to have thing that's going to affect notice the metal crutche s
didn 't need to see it a whole reconstructive surgery soon , me in a couple of years or leaning against the side of
bunch more than that."
. Every injury is different, so later on this next football the locker.
Although Palmer absolved there's no way to tell pre- season. I'm going to take
''The guy they're buiiding
vo·n Oelhoffen, . coach cisely wh,en he' ll be ready to precaution s. I'm going to ·our franchise around goes
Marvin Lewis thought the pl ay again. The typical work as baed as I can with- down with an ACL ," left
officials should hav.e penal- recovery time is six to nine out doing too rnuch ."
tackle Levi Jones said. "You
ized him for a late hit. No months.
That means that his back- don't want that to happe n to
flag was thrown on the play,
Although Palmer hopes to up will have to 'run the anybody, but for that guy
a 66-yard completion to be ready for . the start of offense durin g minic amp, there to get hurt - basically.
Chris Henry.
training camp in six months, and maybe longer. Jon Kitna where our team is goi ng to
"That kind of pl ay is the he knows he can't afford to is a free agent after the sea- go, he's going to tak:e us. It 's
play by the rules in place to push too hard in rehabilit&lt;i- son. Lewi s declined io talk definitely hard to. see.
be a penalty;· Lewis said tion and suffer a setback.
about Kitna 's future on
"That's definitel y a con"There'sdefinitely a time- Monday, but Palmer lobbied cern. I'm just going to hope
.Monday. "The official didn't
see it that way. I think every- !ine," he said. "But I'm not for him to stay.
. and pray for the best."

Jobs unveils new Macs
rising Intel chips, A2

Bv JOE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

e

Brad Sherman/photo

River Valley's Brooke Taylor shoots against a group of South
Pomt defenders during the third quarter of the Lady Raiders'
· 70-48 loss Monday night in Cheshire.
·

South Point defeats
River Valley, 70-48
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBU NE.COM
. CHESHIRE·- South Point
st~yed in comcmion for the
Ohio Valley Conference
championship with a convincing 70-48 girls basketball
win q,t River Valley on
MondaY,
Jessi Craft scored 19 points
and Amy Frasure added a
dozen as the Lady Pointers
(7-4) improved to 3- 1 against
OVC foes. They, along with
· Fairland, are just game back
of Coal Grove.
Coal
Grove
defeated
Fairland 47-45 in a key OVC
matchup , also on Monday.
The Lady Pointers and
· , Fairland meet Thursday for
outright possession of second
place.
Ri ver Valley (2-8), though ,
saw its cohference mark dip
to 1-4 following its seveO\h
straight defeat. Beth Payne
paced the Lady Raiders with
14 points while Brooke
Taylor had a strong second
half to .fin ish with 10.
South Point jumped out in
front 21-8 after one quarter
and never looked 'back. The
game was even at four apiece
early-on, but the Lady
Pointers used a 15-0 run later
in the quarter .to comfortably
pull a h ~ad.
The Lady Raidet:s were
again held to eight points in
the second period, and· it was

a

another big quarter. for 'the
visi tor&gt;, who posted 20 to go
pp 41 - 16 at halftime.
River Valley managed to
outscore its guests 32•29 in
the second ·half, but it fell
well short of the· big lead
South Point spent the first
half constructing. .
South Point's Whitney
Woody knocked down a pair
of tleld goals and free throws
for seven points followed by
six apiece by Mi ssy Wheeler
and Raven Blake, who also
hauled in I0 rebounds.
·
.Kirsten Caner had a teamhigh eight reb!)unds to go
along with six points for
River Valley. Rachel Walburn
also scored six followed by
Kayla ·S mith and Margo
Fraley with four apiece.
Ashley Marcum hi t a free
throw. · '
In the jun ior varsity game,
South Point won by a 44-26
count. Tara Bailey scored I0
points for the winners and
Courtn·ey Circ le paced the
Lady Raiders with 12. .
River Valley is at Rock Hill
on Thursday.

three stea ls and five
rebounds. Hayman with eight
poin ts and 13 rebounds,
Jess ica . Hupp with seven
from PageBl
points, five rebounds and five
assists
and Jenna Hupp with
Marauders
slowed
the
six
points.
four rebounds and
Eastern offense to on ly nine
steals.
points, gi·ving the Lady four
The
Lady Marauders were
Eag les a slim six point edge
·
led
by
Barr with 12 · point s
heading into the break .
and
six
rebounds,
Wolfe with
With a few halftime adjusteight
points
and
three
steals.
ments, Meigs came .out with
with seven points,
a slow third quarter only Clelland
Joey
Hanin
g wi'th three pcints
scoring nine points, but it
and
four
rebounds
and Lesley
was all the Marauders needed
Preece
and
Melissa
Grueser
as the Jefense temporaril y
·paralyzcJ the Lady Eagle . with two points each.
·offense. holding them to j ust . Following the win , Eastern
four ,points as Meigs clawed will return to action 7:30p.m.
.when they travel to
to within oSJe heading into the Thursday
meet Waterford wh ile the
tina! cantos.
From there. Meigs tack the Lady :\1 arauders return home
lead and held it for a few for a 6 p.m . matchup against
minutes until Eastern final ly . Belpre.
awoke from their offensive
slumber and we nt on its I 0poinl run to take away the
eight point vic'tory.
Helping Eastern walk away
with the victory was a strong
effort on the glass. grabbing .
43 rebounds while Meigs
could only mahage 25. led by
Amy Barr and Lesley Preece
• lnltlfrll ~uglng · ~Cap yoo.r bqddy lilt!
with ·&gt;ix each .
• 10 t-fiWI!Idd,..... wtUt w.twM•r
The Lady Eagles aho .held. • FJIE! Tt(1lr'ICII ~
a deci &gt;ive edge in the
• Cuatom tt.t ,._,.. Nvwt, WM!tler &amp; mtn!
turno ver department. forcin g
(~
'
19 turnovers ahd grabbing 12
!~n
up
10 6Xt!st:~
steal s while Meigs could only
come up with 14 turno vc"
Stgn Up Onl6net ~- LocatNet . com
and seven stea ls.
Offensively. Eastern wa1
led by Weber with · 14.
Brannon with nine point s.

Home Equi
.

.

Rates
\

~~·

~

At Fcirmers Bank.
7

Eagles

•t.f5~

\.

·~

DISCOUNTED INITIAL RATE/APR

One Year Fixed Discounted Rate!
•

;; o ( 1.:\ IS • \ ol. ;;;; . :\o. to.t

'\ .c

• Rebels breeze past
Southern. See Page 81

......

,

I

992.2136

773.6400

446.2265
I .,

667.3161

Please see Plant, AS

At this particular tirne the
plant propcsed by AEP is .
awaiting a decision from the
POMEROY - The Meigs Public Utilities Commission of
County Chamber of Commerce Ohio on il cost recovery plan
met yesterday for its tirst busi- that would recoup expenses in
ness-minded luncheon of .the cotistrueting the plant due to its
year with new Chamber experimental. new, clean cOal
President Donald Vaughan pre- technology. The decision is
siding over a topic that was all expected soon.
business.
Varnadoe · also announced
. Meigs
Economic AEP ha' tentatively scheduled
Development Director Perry a public. meeting for Jan. 24 to
Varnadoe gave a presentation inform residents on .various
on the big business of the large aspects. of the plant to comply
power plants proposed for with a permit filed with the
Meigs ,County by American . Ohio Siting &lt;;:ommission.
Electric Power (AEP) and
Varndoe added that· he··has
AMP-OHio.
personally talked"to AEP offiBoth plants would generate cials about how local people
about 125 permanent jobs each can get JObs. including what
and thousands · of temporary could be .a training program for
construction jobs. ·
those workers and how local
.. Varnadoe encourilged local vendors can bid on work at the
re~!dents and busi nes s" owryer;~ . plant. However all that. is tentato let thetroptmons be known tive at this point as the cost
about the plants commg Into recovery decision .from the
Meigs O;JUnty. acknowledging ·
·
that there might be opposition
Please see Ch•mber, AS
to the plants.
·

INSIDE
• Turkey scrambles to
contain deadly outbreak.
· See PageA2
• Sweet deal:
Homeowners can get
sugar maples from city. ·
See Page A3
• Holze~ named
employees of the month.
See Page A3
• OU professor to
speak on Civil War.
See Page A3
·• Langsville youth
recognized. See Page A3
• Justice watchdog says
he lacks authority to probe
eavesdropping program.
~Page AS
• Sheriff: man admits to
killing ailing wife, .stabbing
self. See Page AS
• Court to hear case
challenging parole
auttiority. See Page A6
• State school board
rejects attempt to reopen
evolution debate.
See PageA6

,
Cha~ene Hoeftlch/ photo
The Appalachian Dental Clinic in Middleport is temporari ly closed. Effor ts are being made by
The Meigs County Hea lth Department to recruit a dentist.

Appalachian ·nentaiCiinic closes temporarily
,

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
"The facility is only temHOE'FLICH.@MYGAILYSENTINEL.COM porarily · closed,"
~aid
Courtney Sim. Meigs County
MIDDLEPORT - ' The Heillth Department adminisAppalac hian Dental Clinic trati ve ass istant, ildding that
which has operated in Dr. Dale M . White of Athens
Mid,dleport since August, who has been there si nce
200 I to serve uninsured, March. 2003 left for other
underin sured. low and no employment.
income fam ili es in Meig s . She emphasized that the
County has closed.
cli'nic is closed .on ly· on a

County
takes option
on potential
hospital site

''temporary basi s - j ust until
we can locate a dentist." A
recruiter has been retained to
help us get a dentist, she said.
Applications are also ·being
taken for a dental clinic
administrator and · another
dental assistant.
Bethany Cremeans who has
. p'lease see Clinic, AS
,.

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on Page AS

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

IL"'l 2006 Ohio Valle)· Publi!ihing Co.
(•

PO'\IEROY ·
- Meig s
County
·Commi ss ioners
signed . an option Mond ay
morning to purchase real
estate 1~ear Pomeroy from Jay
HulL Jr:. as the site for a new
medical campus.
The one-year option· cal ls
for a $500.000 purchase price
for the site , loc;!led near
Meig s High School on
Pomeroy Pike. just ac ros s
from ·the First Southern
Baptist Church . .
Meigs
County
Commissioner
. , · Mick
Davenport . who ha s led
efforts to develop a new
·coun ty 'hospital thnlllgh n
health care 'leering commit tee. said the option will give
commissioners an opportuni ty to as'~'' whet her the site i.,
appropriate for ltse a' a h&lt;hpital ' ite.
·
"Thi ' will give us a chance

Please see Hospital, AS

Beth Sergent/ photo

.

Ttie latest vers ion of Rutland Village Council met for the first
time in regular session this week and "1ncludeil' (from left)
Councilmen Jake Thomas. bean Ham's. Fiscal Officer Deborah
Whitlacn, Mayo r April Burke and Counctlman David Rob tnson.

Rutland Council hoping to
'chip a·way' at village debt

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

fiJIC

• ·Potneroy • Mason •GalflpOiis • T• fJPf.IS Plains

Block Grant funds and
$ 100.000 in loan funds from
the Ohio Wat.er ·Development
Authority to help offset the
cost of the new plant, to be
combined with add itional
grant funds
from
the
Appalachian
Regio nal
Comm ission and funds collected from water customers ·
each month for a water
improvement fund .
Minutes from village council meetings show no official
action to advertise for bids for
construction. according to
Fiscal Officer Susan Baker,

BY Bmt SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Page AS
• Richard M. Lodwick
• Joshua Neutzling

2 SE&lt;:rtONS -

--

.

.

Department of Development,
Even tho ugh the vi ll age has
to. determine if it would be not secured any sign ificant
more cost effective to pur- funding assistance for th e
chase . treated water from an plant. site preparation work
adjoining water company continues. The engi nee ring·
rather than build a new treat- firm has subcontrac ted with
ment plant in the vil lage:
BBC&amp;M Construction for
The new plant would treat that site work. which includes
water from a new well field elevation check's. identifying
which was purchased three " construction location, and
years ago in anticipati0n of checking soi l quality. At
the new plant. Its construction Monday evening's regular viiwill also be necessary in onler lage council meeting. cnunci l
to provide water to residents discussed but did not agree to
of Hobson. as they were pay outstanding hill s to FBG
promised 15 years ago as part . and BBC&amp;M totaling over
of their agreement on village $25.000.
.
annexat ion, and again last
FBG has sought $400.000
year.
in Community· Development

OBITUARIES

INDEX

Farmers Bank

than funds set aside in. its
Water Improvement Fund,
Crace Construction Co..
Piketon, was the apparent low
bidder, with a price of
$3,305,000. Other bidders
were Kirk Brothers of Alvada,
wi th a bid of $3,552 ,000, and
Kokosing of Westerville,
$4, 11 5,800.
The village has been working with its engineering firm,
Floyd Browne Group, to
secure funding for the plant.
but has been unsuccessful.
Late last.'year, counci l authorized FBG to complete a secand cost anal ysis at the
request
of
the · Ohio

First Chamber meeting all
about l?usiness in Meigs

Detail~

.

.

'"-

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport 's engineering
firm opened bids on the construction of a new water treatment plant on Tuesday morning, but the vi ll age has no
means to pay for the plant and
will not likely approve a contract with any of three, bidders.
A new water. treatment J?lant ·
will cost between $3 mtllion
and $4 million to bu ild, judging from bids opened yester-day, and counci l has virtually
no money to build it; other

- - P'"J"''o..J

'

"""·mydail)~&lt;·ntitwl.t·um

\\'EDNESDAY •.L\Nltt\RY 11, :!OoC.

,

8,

~

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Contract uitlikely (or treatment plant construction

SPORTS .

•offer available for home equity loans of mtnimum ·$ I0,000 or more with a loan to value ratio of 80% or. less. The advertised discount
5.75% APRjrate wt~llnge after.the first 12 mbnths. Without this discount the rate would have been 6 75% APR. based 0n prime rate
as published in th
Street JournaL .Rate is subject to change annually. As of 10.17.05, and Annual Percentage Rate (A PR) ranged
from 5.75% to 6.75
erms are for I0 years. Minimum monthly paymeQI_(j %of balance or $I00, whichever is greater. APR for
home eqUity lines will not exceed 18%. Customary closing costs for fl~rmi nation search, Me exam and recording fees will be at
least S19J Please cpnsult your tax advisor regarding deductibility of inteiW.. Advertised APRbased on loan amount of SI 0,000 .
Annual membership of $50 IS 1m posed on anntversary, watved first year Transacnon fee of SI0 tn excess of five advances per month.
Property 111Surance "':'II be reqwed Ftnanong ts subject to credit approvaL Some reSD'Ictions apply

V~ ·

•

Middlei)Ort • Pomeroy, Ohio

WEATHER

J7

Ohio pleased with
about• 12.
percent
•
•
•
participation m
dn.Ig discount, A6

Emergency
Manage.ment
BY BETH SERGENT
BSE RGENT@MYDAI LYSENTI NEL .COM Age ncy t FEMA) fund s
an.IOng· other&gt; . With all fund s
RUTLAND - The topic of totaled 1incl uding the negavillage debt was high on the ti,·c balance from the general
agenda when Rutland Village fund ) the balatk·c can1c to a
_ . Council. met this week in reg- po&gt;itivc · $56.461 '.17, though
ular sess ion with Mayor April S.I -1:8-I'S -lc wa&gt; e:lrmarked
Burke pre &gt;iding.
.
for FEMA proj~c ts within the
Councilmen Dean Harri ,. 1illa~e . l&lt;merinc ·that total
Ga rv " Jak e·~ Thomas anti amnLull
ali' fund' to
0;11:id Robinson 'pent most $2 1.6 12.95.
of the mee ting learning ahnut
Of particular ro nrern to the
B~an J. Reed /~olo
Sandra Fultz Brown, left; took the oatt1 of office as a new ·mem- the '"rious 1illage fund' a11tl cou nc·iJ . " a' th'e negative
ber of . Middieport Village Council on Monday. from Mayor the amount of indet&gt;teJnc s' $77.H%.18 balance in the
they wnuld be gr;t pr lin~ '"" er fund . Wh itlac h ·and
Sandy lannarelli .
wit h:
Street C'nm t]1i"i oncr Dave
Ru tl.md Fi,.:~l · ' Officer Da1 i~ told cou nci l that the
I Deborah Whi tl3c'h rep&lt;lrt~J ,e we r funJ rctlected e.,pens•
·'[ to council anJ BurJ..c thut e' thin J..cpt the 'ewer operaDcc·~·mnn·, . rCl'OIKi ltation tinn ;d . "It ha' been very
! ,wtcmc nt f&lt;&gt;r th ~ 'illa ~c c\pcnsh e to keep up with.''
\~'I1 I age Counc1·1 a~ a new 1v- 1· rcllcctcJ
a ~cncral 1\.tnd 1tl;;lt \\'hitlal·h 'aiJ about the
By BRI ""•N J. REED
c 11: , t) ,,_
1
ongoing prn[llem.
BREEp@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM. formed council with three w;H" ·' ·" ·,'1 ·'" 1h11 t1lC rc]l] .
O \ \('\L'L
ut c r \1 ; t ~l'
In 111 inc to under,tand the
new membe" met MnnJa, 1. d
·'
1
1
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un,
V!
ere
...
lO\\
l
llt!P'l
")
l't;
Jcbt.
llarrl, 'aiJ he needed to
fVIIDDLEPlll&lt;l - Stephen evcntnr'.
h 1
h
1
co
1
a
a
nee'
sue
1
a'
t
c
'tree!.
Houchins " ·" re -elected
presi dent · of Middleport . Please ·see Houchins, AS I 'ci vic' c~ ntcr anti Federal
Please .see Rutt•nd; AS

or

• to }ea d 'new
Houc hIllS
Ml.ddlepo·rt.Counct",l

·.

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ATI 0 N .•

The Daily Sentinel

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W
. 0 RLD

PageA2

Wednesday, January u, 2006
----~--~----~~~~~~~~--~~~~==--~~~~~~~--·

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BY THE BEND

The Dally Sentinel .

Community Calendar
Public meetings
VVednesday,Jan. 11
ALFRED - . Orange
Township Tru stees organizational meeting followed by
appropriation meeting, 7:30
p.m. at the horne of Clerk
Osie Follrod.

.

HARRISONVILj:.. E
Harrisonville Lodge 41 I
F&amp;AM special session, 7:30
p.m. Work in Master Mason
degree:
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m.,
Tuppers Plains hall . .Dmner
at 6:30 with meeting to fol low.

and Marti Short.
LONG BOTTOM - A
hymn sing will be held at 7
p.m. at the Faith Full Gospel
Church, Long Bottom. Dave
and Debbie Dailey will be
the sing~rs .
Saturday, Jan. 14
PORTER - Brian aiid
Family Connections to sing
· at the Clark Chapel Freewill
Baptist Church, 6 p.m. Bad
.weather cancel s.
·. POMEROY - Hysell Run
Community Church, soup
and sandwich supper, 5 p.m.,
' community invited.

Clubs and
organizations ·

•

AI&gt;'Photo

A ch1ld surre nde rs his ducks fo r destruction in Istanbul 's Gazi

Osman Pasa district. Anothe r Turk tested pos itive for the
deadly H5N1 strain of pird flu Tuesday, .bringing the nu mber
who have contracted the disease to 15, a Turkis h Health
Ministr y offi cial .said. Imams issued warnings about the dead·Jy virus through minaret loudspeakers and authorities distrib,
uted leaflets urging people to avoid, fowl.

Church events
Friday, Jan. 13
MASON, W.Va. - Benefit
concert
for . Raymond
Cundiff, 7 p.m. Christ
Bret~ren Church. Singers to
include Gloryland Believers,
Earthen Vessels, Proclaim

Birthdays
VVednesday,Jan. 18
MIDDLEPORT
· Josephone
Smith
will
observe her 96th birthday on
Jan. 18. Cards may be. sent to
· her at Overbrook Center, 3,33
Page St. , Middleport. Ohio
45760.

Thrkey scrambles to
contain deadly outbreak
ANKARA. Turkey (AP I - di seases, said Tuesday the
Turkev raced to contain an Turkish outbreak appeared to
outbreak of bird tlu Tuesday. be contined to cases in which
destrovi.nQ JOO.OOO fowl and ·t he illness spread from bi'rds
blari ng ~ warn ings
from to humans. rather than person
mosq ue loudspeakers. ·afte r. to peFSOn.
preliminary tc.sts showed at
" It seems to be clear that we
Jenst 15 people haYe bee n are dealing with a si tuation
infec ted w.it h the deadly simil ar to what we have seen
H5N I strai n.
in As ia . wllich means in pracThe
Worl d
Heal th tice a number of small sites.
Organi ?atnn .
meanwhile . famil y du sters of di sease
repo rted Wedne &gt;da y that two invo lving many children and
rno1e people in Ch ina died always with documented or
from the viru lent ' train ·. reported contact with infected
bringing the death tol l on the birds. typically backyard
Chinese mainland to fi ve and poultry:· he said,
the worl dw ide toll to 78.
Preliminary tests Tue;:day
· As Turkey recorded the first showed anpther 'person had
human deaths ·outside ea s te r~ tested positiwe for the HSN I
Asia, jittery European gov- strain, bringing the riumber of
ernments stepped up border suspected and confirmed
checks · and hosed down . cases to 15 , a Health Ministry
Turkish trucks wi th dis infec- offici al said on cund'it-ion of
tant.
anonymity . be.cause she was
Turkey's 15 cases. in one not authorized to speak to the
week is a record for the cur- medi.a. The mini stry ·had
rent bird tlu outbreak. Never given the toll as 15 on
before has such a high num- Monday, but on Tue sday said
ber of cases· been s·een in such one of the earlier cases had
· a short tiine in Asia, where not beet\ validated.
Two children- siblings in
nearl y all the death s have
occurred .
·
the eastern city of Van governm ents. have died from the disease
European
scrambl ing to avoid the over the past week.
specter of a mutation that
The newest case reported
could tri gger a pandemic Tuesday, a woman hospital capabl e of killing millio ns. ized in the central Anatolia
sprayed trucks from Turkey city of Sivas, tested positive
with disinfeCtan t. In Ital y. a for H5N 1 in Turki sh Jab tests.
consumer gro up urged · the whioh the WHO. has vet to
government to im pose a ban contirin. the Health Ministry
un t r&lt;Iv~ l to Turkey. and in .. offic ial said.
Greece . veterinary inspectors
In China. a 10-year-old girl
stepped up border chec ks.
from Guangxi province in the
Underscoring the vu lnera- south and a 35-year-old man
bility neighbori-ng cou ntries from Jiangxi province in the
fee.!, Bul garia began iss ui ng e&gt;!St di ed last month ·from
its citizens special inltruc- complicatioi1 s from the dislions on how to deal wit h an ease. said Roy Wadia. a
outbreak . .
· spokesman fur t~e WHO in
Tu rkey 's government. anx- Beijing.
ious to demonstrate to its citi Another bird tlu outbreak
zens
and
the
European
Union
killed
16.000 qu ail s in the
1
. ·that 11 was taku1g de c~Sl\' e south\ves tern
Chi nese
.~"'.' ac t1on. ordered more than province of Guizhou thi s
300.00!] tu:;t:J, cle str&lt;~.f.'A,.",;\,\\~.)110nth . and officials c ul led
·· · precau t!DI1'. f.l ealth " fli c1a b another 42,000 birds. China 's
simi Tu es d a~ must nt the 70 Ag ric ultu re Mi nistry saiL!
or so people IHlSJlll&lt;t li leu "1 th Wednesday .. Tests confirnled
llu -l.1ke symptom s had tes ted the hi rds V.·ere infected with
negatl\'e lor h1rd llu.
. the HSN bird ll u viru s.
Prime ,\1in iste r Recep
WHO nffl ciab "' id in itial
Tayy ip Erdogan di snmsed the i n ve" t 1ga ti o n ~ ~ u g g:e-..t there i~

AP Photo

Apple Computer Inc. CEO Steve Jobs is silhouetted in front of an Apple iMac computer at the MacWorld conference in San
Francisco: Tuesday. Apple Computer Inc.'s historic shift. to Intel Corp. microprocessors came months earlier than expected ·
Tuesday as Jobs unveiled desktop and notebook computers q?sed oo new 1wo-brained chips from the . wo rld 's targest semiconductor. .company.
··
.
.
...
'

~

JOBS UNVERS NEW MACS.USING

formance. Jobs said Apple's
Though the change to Intel $1.299 for the 17-inch model
ent.ire Mac line will be con- has occurred faste
and $ 1.699 fur the 20-inch
ve'rted to Intel by the end of expected, · it still poses ·
computer. Jobs claimed the
SAN FRANCISCO .this calentlar year· a move risks.
nelv models are two to three
Apple Computer Inc .'s his- · anatysrs say could boost . Besides potentially alienat- · times faster than the iMac G5.
toric shift · to Intel micro- Apple's computer sales. ·ing a fan base that's accus- ba sed on an IBM chip.
processors came months earh- which crackep 4' percent of tomed 'to doing things differ"Witll Mac QS X plu s•
er than expected a~ CEO the U.S. market last year after ently, Apple' s rriove opens up Intel' s latest dual -core proce sSteve Jobs debuted personal hovering around 3 percent.
thr;! issue of bac~ward com- sur under the hood. the new
computers based on new two"Companies don't typically patibility and the possibility iMac delivers . performance ·
brained chips from the under promise and over deliv- that I&gt;&lt;; users might run pirat- that will knock our cu sworld's largest semiconductor er, and that's exactly .what ed versions of Mac OS X. tamers· socks off.'' said Jobs.
company.
Apple has done," Sam Apple's critically acclaimed · The MacBopk Pros - with
The company's stock shot Bhavnani ,
analyst
with operating system , on their 15.4-inch displays _ start at
to a 52-week high as Current Analysis, said of the generally cheaper non-Apple $1.999. Jobs touted it as the
Tuesday' s news coincided early launch.
computers.
·thinne st and fastest operating
For . years, Apple shunned . Jobs demonstrated new laptop in Apple's portfolio.
with word on impressive holiday sales' numbers for Apple 's Intel, which has provided software, called Rosetta, that
All the new computers will
hugely popular iPod music chips that power a majority of will Jet owners of the new include Apple's Front Row
players.
the world's PCs along with lntel-based Macs · run ·'older software .arid a remote conThe first Macs to deploy Microsoft's Windows. In the applications. But he did not trol, which lets users watch
Intel Corp.'s Core Duo late 1990s, Apple even ran TV comment on how the compa- video s. li sten. to mu sic, or
processors will be the latest ads with a Pentium II glued to ny will lock its operating sys- browse photos from across a
iMac desktop, whose circuitry a snail.
tern to its hardware.
is all built imo the slim dis- But Apple, looking for
With Intel Pf'OCeSSO\S inside ro~~~ machine s al so will be
play, and the all -new · faster, more energy-efficient the new Macs. their owners bundled with Appl~ 's newly
MacBook Pro laptop.
chips, became increasingly could choose to ru.n Windows · announced iLife '06 suite of
When it announced the frustrated in recent years as ·its and software designed for it at digital lifestyle program s. In
. massive switch in June, Apple chip suppliers.. JBM C_orp . and full speed ·
one of the updates. the lat~ st
said it expected to begin mak- Motorola Corp.' s spinoff,
Toough Windows sales version of ·iPhoto will let Mac
ing the tran sition by mid- Free scal e
Semi conductor could benetit , Microsoft risks
"'
2006. On Tuesday. Jobs was Inc., failed to rneet its needs. losing ground unless its ope r- shutterou gs share pi cture s
joined at the Macworld Expo
Of particular concern ·was ating systems keep up_ with . much like bloggers. &lt;md pod.by Intel chief executive Paul IBM 's apparent inability to the Mac OS X . Wir1dows casters share content.
Otellini to un ve il the new develop a GS chip that would Vista. the next major update.
"This is podcasting for phojointly designed computers.. work ·well in notebook com- won't be available until later tos: · Jobs sa id .
· tJ11·s·. year· _ a11d 1·ts pro 1111·s·.ed
With a few clicks. ll sers can
Tile .Shl·t·t comes
· . as. Apple ,·s pu ters.
on a tear with ih iPod players
Intel, on the other hand, has feaiure~ copy many of those post an online feed to which
and iTunes Music Store. Tlie been focusing· on developing alreadv in Mac OS X.
others - including Window s
con1pany tiad a record ,$5.7 chips specifi cally tailored for
The-change does \lOt; how- users - can subscribe . As
billi on in sales during (he hoi- notebooks. In 2003, it ever, appear to have alienated changes are mad e to the
iday lfUarter as it sold 14 mil - launched its Centrino note- Microsoft. which offers a Mac album. suhsc ribers automatili on iPods - nearly three book r.echno logy with a · ve rsion of its popular Office cally recc iYe the updat es.
. times as man y as it did in the processor that. boosted battery productivity suite.
The ilifc suite al so will
same period a year ago. Apple lite by minimizing it s power
"We' re formali zing our enable the one-c li ck expo.rt of
lO &lt;;late has sold .more than 850 demand without hurting per- commitm ent to thi s pl at- video to 1Puds '" well as a
million songs and 8 ·million forma nee much.
form ;" said Roz Ho, general simpk.
drag-and-drpp
During . l~ s t . week' s man ager of the Mic rosoft's meth od of creating DVDs.
videos at its online store.
But Tuesday 's focus was International
Con sumer Macintosh Busine ss Unit. The progrum al so wi ll support
.on Apple's Macintosh com- Electronics Show, Intel "We ' ll cpntinue shippin g third-party DVD burners.
pu lers, and the repercussion s unveiled the Iillest generation. Office (for the) Mac for ·a Another iLife progrum, iWeb,
ctl.uld be enormous for other the Core Duo. which fe ature s minimum of tl ve years."
helps users build Web sites.
majo( industry players,indud- two computing engines on a
The new iMacs will have . · Shares of .Apple closed at
no chan!..!e i n how the Ji \ca~e ing Microsoft Corp.
single piece of silicon .
the same all-in-une · design $80.86, up $4 .~ 1 .o r 6.3 per1\ . , pre;_~d - and expe rt o,; -' are
For one, Apple e r(~&gt;ed conIt was that chip that the and screen sizes as the previ- cent, on the Nasdaq Stock
hoping tl1ere may ·be snme cern s that its Macs lag behind · Apple decided to fit into the ous models. with prices rang- Market. Shares of Intel fell 35
d i ffc re n c ~ ., in the behavior of
Windows-based PCs in per- new iMacs anu MacBooks.
in g remaining stead y at cent s. to $26.12.
poul try fanni ng fa milies in
Turke y. tu ex pl ain the high
number of cases . Another
pmsibilit y i' a chan ge in the
virus. Tes ts we re unde r way.
the officia ls \aid .·
·
WHO ,(, far ha, confi rn1ed
on ly four of Tu rke y's I')
reported ca'e ' "' H'lN I. hut
said it j, confiden\ the
rc ma inin ~ sam ple s wou ld be
posit ive. Th e a g~ nc y ha ' .
BY MAY WONG

1

noti ori tha1 '"an rd eu l) f panic

was created. '" t h o u ~h the
countn w ~ s 'i nl'aded ... ' ' h · e rv thin ~ i&gt; under con trol." lie ,ald. addmg that
Tu1le1 had no shonagc of
vacc irie or medici ne;.
·
Erdoga n ' pok e during a
yi ,_it by Prime Min ister
Junich1 ro Koi1umi of Japan .
whose unve rnmcnl said
Tuesday up to 77 Jap;.1nc'e most of them chid.cn farm
wmkers - mav ha'e beco me
infected by (t ~ \;2. a less
I)Otent strai n not prcv iou, Jy
kno wn to inft:c t huma n\.

Th e hird fl u llll thrca k i n c rc a·,c~ the \l rus· chance\
.comes at a di fficu lt iimc ·for of mu t atin~ into a fo rm ca)il-y
Turkey
pa11ed fro1J1huma n tu human.
The counti-v h'J\ hL:c n cageJ ... parking a panL!em ic.

to ji1111 tl1e EL'. &lt;~nd i' v.mi- ing
10 impHl\e 1.1.11 l nwgc

Authoriti es

distribu ted

.mo s t ::aJt'e~ fd

hy the outh r~a R-~'' cL1u t ion in l;' rk'o plc not
to I ouch fow l. v. hlic tele1 ision &gt;plits urged people to
· wa,h their hands alte r con t;lct
"i til poulu-y .

MIDDLEPORT- Dr. Carl
Denbow of Ohio University
will be presenting a video
program on the Civil War at
the riext meeting of BrooksGrant Camp Sons of Union '
Veterans of the Civil War and
the Maj. Daniel McCook
Circle Ladie s of the Grand
Arm y of the Republic. T he
meeting
will be held
Tuesdav, Jan. 17, at 715 p.m.
at the" Middleport Masonic

Temple Building in downtown Middleport. The public
is· invited to attend. Anyone
wishing assistance in locating
a Union. sold.ier ancestor · in
order to join either group will
receive help at the meeting.
Installation of officers of
the Sons of Union Veterans
will be held. I'nformation on
the upcoming protest of the
proposed
casino
at
Gettysburg will be given .
.

·

Coming Thursda~}~ the Sentinel ..,

~~cpf~e~ ·f(; ~ (!) T/dng~ r~

announced
SHADE Billie and
Travis Shockey of Jone s
Road. Shade. announce · the
birth of a ·daughter. Trinity
Eli zabeth Shockey. The
infant was born on Jan. 5 at
the O' Bieness Mem ori al
Hospital in Athens.

.

d$)(9"

'

~9.95m»

To lind out mo1e about our auto insurance-Call me ... Stop by.. . - it's your dnice !

•I \

OV

Sign lJp Onlm.t

~

D

DON7 MISS Olll ON HAVING YOlJR BUSINESS
OR ORGANIZATION INCllJDHJ

Nationwide'
On Your Side·

. www. loa~INet. com

Dave Harris or Brenda Davis

C.ll Toe.y a Saw!

.Pomeroy
JEF.F WARNER

992-2155

113 W 21'1(1 S1ree1

The Dail · Sentinel

~2- 547~

Reliable InternE! ! Access Smco 1994

•

Birth

Driving Record Bent Out
of Shape? Head Straight
to ·Nationwide.

LocoiNef 740-992~260

•

LANGSVILLE - Eric D.
Montgomery received a 3.9
GPA fpr the fall quarter at
Institute
of
The Art
Pittsburgh. He is in his fifth
year. at AlP and is currently
working on a second degree
in advenrsin[. He is the son
of Larry ~ and
Linda
Montgomery of Lang svi ll e
and live s in Pittsburgh, Pa.
with his wife and children .

Anvone with a direct
ancestor whd fought for the
Union in the Civil War or an
ancestor ' whose prather
fo.ught for the Union may
join their respective organization .
In case of inclement weather, call 992 -7874 the night of
the meeting to confirm it
being held. Call the same
number for ;my further information.

JUIII3~

594-6333 or 1-800-451 -980.6

ber of sugar maples along
streets dwindle by about 200 ,
to just u·nder I 00 tree s.
The city has tried to plarit
replacements on publi c land
- typically' on tree lawns but the maples' roots were
confined by the surrounding
pavement, and ·salt that
splashed up from · icy roads.
damaged tree trunks.
"We 've planted them over
and over, but they don' t make ·
it," Miller said. "We can't get
them to grow on tree lawns."
Moving the sugar map]es·
onto front lawn ), I0 to 15
feet from th e sidewalk .
should give them a better
chance for survival, Miller
said.
The city plans to plant the
tree s thi s SUfTlmer ·and provide follow-up care for at
least t'wo years befon~ turning
responsibility O\'er to the·
homeowner. ·

OU professor to speak on Civil War

( surl' up to 6X fastrtr!J

'

~

Meigs County Visitors Guide

~;u

ma n l' d · l c ai ·l e t ~ i n CJ\t'..: rn._. r cgi on "

by alkgauon '. o l . hun\a n
righh a hu ~·c~.. at! i.\ 111 "! m ~r~ q nt y
Kurd s.
.,
Gucn&lt;le l Roc li ~r. a sen"''
Wo rl d fl ca lth Or~a n i t a t 1n n
niTi cial fo r com niunici!hlc

Holzer named employees of the month

• lnllaf1t Mlalgirlg ~ KMp your buddr IWJ
•10Hnllllld. . . . . . w.brnill
• fAfE Tild'lnlcll Support .
• CUlton'! lbrt Plgt · Ntwl. Wltii'IW &amp; men!

499 Ridtland An•., Athel)s, OH 45701 tJr

DEAR ABBY: I ha ve
not have been a breach of
owned a busine ss for 13
etiqu et te: it ·.wouhl have
years. Recently one of my
shown con; id era tio n for
employees forged a cusyo ur date.
tomer 's check in the amount
DEA R ABBY: My fia nce .
of $1,000.
"Thornton,
.. and I are being
Dear
I have tried to talk to him
married in two months. Thi,
Abby
and ask why, and I have
is a seco nd Cand final) marthreat ened to go to the
ri age for bottJ of us. We
police. We have more than
dated for several years and
just a working rel ationship .
wen t to -counseli ng so tha t
We did a lot of th ings
this marri age wo ul d last and
together outside of work , at 7 p.m. We. li'rri ve d a cou- our love wo ul d sta y strong .
but never had a sexual rela- pie of minutes befor e t.Jle We bot h ha ve children from
tionship.
appoi nted time.
our fi rs t marri ages who are
· Thi s man worked for me
Checking with the hos t- exc ited abo ut the wedding.
for more than two years ess. we found that a table
Thornton and I are in ~i s - .
and , other than thi s crime. for four had been reserve d. agree ment. hOw eve r, about
was a perfect employee. He and she offered to se at us whether or not to in vite o ur
insists that he didn 't "forge" even th ough our frie nd s had ex-spouses - althoug h we
the check that he had cashed nOt ye t arri ved.
I
re main friendl y With them.
at the customer 's bank and
My date said we ' hould Pl ease tell me the appropri tries to justify it by saying hav e been se at ed so we aie th.1ng to do. - ABOUT
he felt he "de serv ed" the could wait. fo r our friend s. TO BE' WED IN HO US''extra" money. I alw ays who were 10 minu te' !'at e. I TO N
.paid him on time and gave . disagreed, poin ting out that
DEAR ABOUT TO BE
him many extra perk s. for us to be ·seat ed would WED : Generall y speakio g.
Please help me. -. LOST have been a breach of eti- if the rel ation ship betwee n
BIG-TIME IN ILLINOIS
quette becau se it e mpha- the ex-spouse s is cordial DEAR LOST BIG-TIME : sized that our fri ends were anu e motionall y di;co nnettWake up! Your "perfect
late . Who's right'' - TOM ed enough - I see nothing
employee" is a thief, a forg- IN TENNESSEE
DEAR TO'M: It appears wrong wi th inviting them to
er and a sociopath . He may
be a charmer- aren't they you were more con cerned th e weddin g. However. in
all! - but that's what has about the com fon ot- yo ur yo ur case , bet au &gt;e there is
enabled him to reach the . hosts than the comfort of di sagreement on the subject.
point he has . For your own your date. As ho sts, the cou - it would be th e better part of
emotional well-being and pie who invited you should wisdom to set sail on the sea
for the sake of your busi- have been on hand to greet of matrim ony without the
ness, please tell the polic e you . How lon g did yo 4 exes standin g on the dock.
Dear Abby is written by
what you have learned. If intend to stand around ?
you don't, the next person After all , you had no id ea if Abigail Van Buren, also
to be burned will be YOU . they 'd be held up for 10 known as Jeanne Phillips,
minutes or for 30 minutes and was founded by her
Bank on it!
DEAR ABBY: A couple - · and your date was proba - motl1er, Pauline Phillips.
invited . my date and me to bly standing there in hi gh Write Dear Abby a/
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
an expensive restaurant for heels .
·To have taken the hostess ·Box· 69440, Los Angeles,
dinner. We were to meet in
the lobby of the restaurant up on her kind offer would CA 90069.

CHARDON (AP) .
Hop.ing to. halt the deCline of
thi s community 's sugar
maples, City Council is planning to spend $3,000 of tax
money on planting up to two
dozen of the trees in people's
Submitted plloto
fran t yards.
.
Debb ie Evans , LPN, left. and Teresa Ross, LPN ; share the title of Employee of the Month at
·Residents who want a tree
Holzer Medical Center for January 2006.
·
won' t have to pay for it, but
their home will have to be
chosen by the city.
"We're hoping people will
see
the value in this and
GALLIPOLIS - . Debbie Charlotte
Grant,
Evans
Ross is the daughter of the
Evans. LPN, and Teresa Ross, resides in Racine with her late lienry and Donna agree to let xhe city plan.t a
LPN. both quality manage- ' husband . Marlin, a self- She'line. She resides in Patriot sugar maple in their yard,''
ment specialists in the Quality employed block layer, and with her· husband Robert, and said Ken Miller, chairman of
Managemei11 Department at son Samuel, 14, a student at son Robert If, a junior at the city 's Shade Tree
Hol zer Medical Center, have Eastern Elementary.
Morehead State. Her daugh- Commission. "We all benefit
Ross graduated from Gallia ter, Laura, resides in from the beauty of these
been nained January 20@6
Employees of the Month.
Academy 1-tigh School . in P.roctorville, with her hus- trees. It's part of the
Evans graduated from 1979, and the Buckeye H1lls band .Donnie. and four chi! ' ambiance of thi s town. and
Eastern High School in 1978 Career Center Licensed dren, Arealle. Don IV, Tyler, that'snot something we want
.
to lose."
and the Buckeye Hills Career Practical Nursing Program in and Bianca.
Over
tl{e
past
15
years,
thi s
As Employees of the
Center licen sed practical 1982. .
community
25
miles
east
of
nursing program in 1979.
She began her career at Month, · Evans and Ros s.
Cleveland
has
seen
the
numShe began her career at Holzer .Medical Center m received each received a $100
Holzer Medical Center in ' February 1978 as a central U.S. Savings Bond, a
October 1979 as a full -tin\e supply tech, and transferred reserved parking space desig-staff LPN, tran sferred to the to the operating room as a nated in their name, a compliHospit al's
· Quality tech in 1979. She has also mentary meal in the hospital
Manage ment Department in worked as a staff LPN and on cafeteria, their picture di sNovember I998 as the quality the ambulatory surgery unit. played on the Employee of
management tech, arid was Ross be!!an her · current l?osi- !he Month wall near the
recently -renamed quality, tion
m
the
Quality employee entrance. and their
management speciali st, her · Management Department in name engraved on the 2006
current position.
November 2002 as a ~uality -Employee · of the Month
plaque.
· The daughter of Everett and management specialist.

Ears .to Ya!

v. arncd eac h llC \.\ human ca~c ·

•

Sweet deal: Homeowners can Langsville youth
recognized
get·sugar maples from city

INTEL CHIPS

AP TECHNOLOGY WRITER

Wednf:!sday, January 11, 2006

Perplexed boss is at a loss over friendly forger on staff

· · · Thursday, Jan •. 12
Saturday, Jan. 14
SYRACUSE -. Sutton , POMEROY
Meigs
Town ship Trustees will meet County Chapter of Christian
in special session ai 7 p.m. at Motorcycle Association, regSyracuse Village halL
ular meeting, 9 a.m.,
POMEROY - The Meigs Common Grounds Coffee
Soil and Water Con servation · Shop. Anyone interested , in
District will meet at II :30 joimng in-.:ited .
·
a.m . at the Meigs SWCD
CHESTER - Shade River
Saturday, Jan. 21
office, 3310 I Hiland Road .
Lodge 453 annual in~pection
PORTER- Evelyn Rou sh
in the entered apprentice at the Clark Chapel Freewill
degree. Dinner at 6:30 p.m. Baptist Church, 6 p.m. Bad
Inspection at 7:30 p.m . All weather cancels. ·
Masons in:vited.
Thursday, Jan. 12
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453 . stated meeting,
7:30 p.m. Refreshments .
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters, II :30 a.m. luncheon
at St. Paul Lutheran Church.
Hostesses. Ruth Riffle and
Carol McCullough,

PageA3·

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r

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel
f•

.

.

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel .com

Ohio Valley Publishing .Co,
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Jan. II , the II th day or'2006. There are
354 d[!ys left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History :
On Jan. II , 1964. U.S. Surgeon General Luther Terry issued
the first _government report saying smoking 'may be hazardous to
one's health .
On 'this date :
In 1757, the first secretary ·of the U.S. Treasury, Alexander
Hamilton, was tJom in the West Indies.
In 1805. the Michigan Territory was created by an act of
Congress.
_
In 1815, Sir John A. Macdonald. the tirst prime minister of
Canada. was bern in Glasgow. Scotland.
In 1861, Alabama seceded from the Union.
In 1913. the first sedan-type automobile, a Hudson, went on
display at the 13th Automobile Show 111 New York.
In 1935, aviator Amelia Earhart began a trip !rom-Honolulu to
Oakland, Calif , that made her the first woman to fly solo across
the Pacific Ocean·. ·
In 194~. Japan declared war against the Netherlands. the same
day that Japanese forces invaded the Dutch East Indies.
In 1943, the United States and Britain signed treaties relinquishing extraterritorial rights in China.
In 1977. France ·set off an international uproar by releasing
Abu Daoud, a PLO ofticial .behind the massacre of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics.
.
,
In 1995, 52 people were killed when a Colombian airliner
crashed as it was preparing to land near the Caribbean resort of
Cartagena; a 9-year-old girl survived.
Five years ago: The Army acknowledged that U.S. soldiers
killed an "tm\mown number" of South Korean refugees early in
the Korean Conflict at No Gun Ri . President-elect Bush ·chose
Elaine Chao to be secretary ,of labor after Linda Chavez with-·
drew. The Federal Communications Commission approved the
merger of America Online and Time Warner.
One year ago: President Bush nominated federal judge
Michael Chertoff to be the new homeland security chief, succeeding Tom Ridge. Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi publicly
acknowledged for the tirst time that parts of Iraq probably
wouldn' t be safe enough for people to vote in the upcoming
elections. James Griffin, foundin g member of 1970s pop group
·
Bread, died in Franklin, Tenn .. at age 61 .
Today's Birthdays: Producer Grant Tinker .is 80. Producer
David L Wolper is 7R. Actor Rod Taylor is 76. The forn1er
prime minister of Canada, Jean Chretien, is 72. Actor Mitche.ll
Ryan is 72. Rock musician Clarence Clemons is 64.' Movie
director Joel Zwick is 64. Country singer Naomi Judd is 60 .
Golfer Ben Crenshaw is 54. Singer Robert Earl Keewis 50.
Musician Vicki Peterson (The Bangles) is 48.-Actress 'Kim Coles
is 44. Actor Jason Connery is 43 . Rock musician Tom Dumont
(No Doubt) is 38. Rhythmcand-blues singer Maxee Maxwell
(Brownstone) is 37. Singer Mary J. Bli ge is 35. Musician Tom
Rowlands (The Chemical Brothers) is 35 ."Actor Marc Blucas is
34. Actress Amanda Peet is 34. Actor Rockmond Dunbar is 32:
· Thought for Today: "The essence or taste is suitability. Divest
the word of its prim and priggis h impli cations, and s~e how it
expressenhe ·mysterious demand of the eye and mind for symmetry, harmony and order." - Edith Wharton. Al)1erican author
(1862-1931).

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,

VFW to sponsor awareness class

Justice watchdog says he
lacks authority to probe
eavesdropping program

ELKHART.
IND.
MASON. W.Va. The Vetentns of Foreign Wars,
Richard M. Lodwick, 54, of
Stewart/Johnson Post 9926, of M&lt;L,On. w Ya. and the Ladies
Elkhart , Ind., died Wednesday,
BY KATHERINE SHRADER
Auxiliary will sponsor a meth lab &lt;lw&lt;u·eness clas- tu a"ist residents
·atxJUt the prngr&lt;un's le~al ju,tifi*
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Jan. 4, at 'v}'ishard Memorial
of the Bend area in gaining infonnation on the dlUlger of drugs.
catton.
Hospital. Indi anapo li s, . Ind .
.The class will be held 6:30 p.m. Jan. 19 at the Mason Fire
Bush and hi' top aide' o,ay the
following a lengthy illness.
WASHINGTON The acti ville' of the natllm \ largest
Depm1mem with Trooper Chris Zerkle of the West Virginia State
'He was born May 8. 1951, in
Police as the facilitator. For more information contmct Ray Varian, Justice Department's indepen- spy agency were narrowly . tar·
Gallipolis. to· Harry and
773-5884.
dent watchdog says it does not geted to intercept caJJ, and eJuanita Lodwick. He is surhave jurisdiction to open an mails of American' and others
v·ived by his parents; a daughinvestigation into the legality of imide the United States with
ter, Sarah Lodwick of
the Bush administration's suspected ties lu al-Qaida.
Mishawaka. Ind.; sister, Diane
domestic eavesdropping proBut a growing &lt;:horu.' of legal
(Don) Rou sh, Pomeroy; brothgmm.
~
experts fmm hotl1 p;ulie' are
er, ~ames Lodwick, Pomeroy;
Also Tuesday, the Pentagon rai sing doubt&gt; ·about Bu&gt;h\
a mece and three nephews.
referred
a De1nocratic retjUest authority to order 'uch monitorSIDNEY (AP) - A man
They were tlown to Miami
three great nieces and one .
admitted that he stabbed his V&lt;rll ey Ho's pital in Dayton , for an internal review on the sub- ing on U.S. soil tmd questioning
great nephew. He was preced\vife to dedth th~n tried to and Treva Huelsmeyer was ject to the National Security · .whetller the White House ' hould
ed in death by a brother
have ;,ought changes in law
Richard M. Lodwick
kill him &gt;e lf the day before, pronounced dead. Willard Agency's inspector·geneml.
Gregory. ·
In
a
three-paragraph
letter,
Cungres&gt; also plan., to investishe was scheduled to enter Hu elsmeyer had a si ngle ·
Richard graduated from
Justice's
Inspector
General
gate.
As part of ib work. the
Eastern High School in 1969 where he participated in Student the Al zheimer 's. ward o'r stab wound to the chest and · Glenn Fine forwarded the
· House ~md Senate intelligence
Council , scholarshif! team, annual staff. star staff, class plays. their retirement community, was ho spitalized Monday in
request
·to
.
the
department
\
commlltees v.'tll '&lt;Xltl' hear trom
basketball, · Librarian , Latin Club. mixed chorus and prom the sheriff said.
serious condition .
of
Professional
Office
fom1er NSA ofticer Ruso;ell T
Willard Huelsmeyer. 82.
committee.
Treva Huelsmeyer wa s Responsibility, which reviews Tice . The v-h istleblower told
He worked as an over-the-road truck driver in the RV indus·- said after the stabbing
st~bbed numerous times in ·allegations
of misconduct lawmakers in Dec. 16 letter that
Sunday that his 83-year-old
try for many years. receiving numerou s safety awards.
..
the
chest,
authorities
said
.
involving
employees'
ac tions he hi!d infonnation al:x1ut '"prub-·
· Arrangements were handled by Harry Moore Mortuary, wife. Treva, had suffered
She
was
to
enter
an
when providing legal udvice.
able unlawful · lUld unconstituAll isonville Road Chapel, Indianapolis, Ind ..
enough, Shelby County
Alzheimer's
care
section
on
President
Bu
sh
~'
deci:
&lt;
&gt;ion
to
tional act;'" involving the.NSA
There will be a family gathering in his honor on Saturday Sheriff Kevin O' Leary said.
director. the deiCnsc secretarY
Jan. 14, 2006 at the James Lodwick residence.
The couple, who had bee n Monday at the Dorothy authorize tl1e NSA tu monitor without
warrants
people
lUld other otlicials as pa11 of
Love
Retiremen
t
Richard will be greatly missed by family and friends.
·married more than 60 years, ·
inside
the
United
States
has
highly da"ilied government
were discovered Sunday Community in Sidney. about
sparked a tlurry of questions operations. ,
morning at their house by 35 miles north oY Dayton .
their
daughter,
Linda
Manager Kathy Fife reponed
Other
tt'nnouncements
Freeman.
when
she
arrived
' POMEROY - Joshua Neutzling . 19, Pomeroy (Pagevi lle),
that the store was doing welL
included:
.
to take them to breakfast.
passed away on Monday. Jan. 9. 2006, at Grant Med.ical
did Lenore Masor. executi ve
• The Ri ver City Pl ayers at
Center in Columbus from injuries received in an automobile
dire10lor
for
Goodwill the Ariel Theater to perform
from PageA1
accident .
Industries of Southern Ohio 'The Me lody Linge rs On'" on
He was born hme 24, 1986, to Charles and Mandy Reeves
PUCO is a big piece of that who was joined by fellow Jan. J·-+ 111 Gallipolis.
Neutzling of Pomeroy. He was a 2005 graduate of Meigs High
employee Joann Adkins.
• Relay for Li fe Kic~ - Off
puzzle.
'
from Page A1
School and was employed at Luigi no's of Jackson.
The three women thanked Rally. '3 p.m. to 5 p.m .. Jan. 1-+
Another piece of the puzzle
Also surviving . are paternal grandparents, Charles and
concerning busi nesses - ir the community for donations. at the Pomeroy Library.
Carolyn Neutzling of Middleport; maternal grandparents, been with the clinic smcc it Meigs County is keeping them They explained that Goodwill
• Mei~'-Gallia - Mason merEugene (Jake) and Juanita Reeves or Pomeroy: a special opened will re1nain as a den- connected which is what the Industries recycled and ,aved chants ~neeting . 6:30 p.m..
friend . Mariah Losey of Shade; and se veral aunts, uncles and tal assistant, but a second chamber is all about according . tons upon tons of goods from Gallipolis Conve ntion · and
cousins.
.
landfills and that th~ business Visitors Bureau. contact
assistant is needed. said Sim. to its coordinator Eric Roush.
Services will be at 11 a.m. on Friday, Jan . 13, 2006. at Tammy Taylor who has been
Roush spoke about the bene- finds uses i11 all its donations.
Roush at 992-5005 .
Birchfi eld Funeral Home in Rutland with burial following at · employed at the clinic . for . tits of being a chamber mem• R a~·i ne Area Community
Mason pointed out that she
Riggs Cemetery in Pageville.
·
. sometime has accepted other ber such as the newsletter, bu si- felt Goodwill Industries was Organt zati on ·meeting. 6:30
The family will receive friends from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the employment.
ness of the week promotion abcut giving employment to p.m .. Jan . 2-t Star Mill Par~ .
funeral home.·
• Meigs Chamber Board of
Sim said that the Ohio and the "power in numbers" the disabled which a tilm preMemorial contributions toward burial expenses may be Department of Health rece nt- the organi z~tion brings to oth· . se ntation late.r in the luncheon Directors meet mg. 8 a. m.. Jan.
made to Birchfield Funeral Home, P.O. Box 188, Rutl and. ly awarded $85,500 for ' the ers.
confirmed. Adkins added that 31. chamber boardrqom .
Ohio 45775.
Vaughill1 agreed and spoke the Middleport store was a . • Mtddl eport Communi!}
chnic operation . Some of the
$200.000 grant made by the abcut keeping chamber mem- . work site for the Meigs Association meettn g. 8:30
Regional bers infonned on the growth -m County Jobs and· Family a:m .. Feb. 7. Peoples Bank.
tinuing it s ongoing L·ontract- Appalachian
·
wirh FBG. questioning the Commission in late 2004 is the county that Y&lt;m1adoe spoke Services and those fultllling Middleport.
• Mei gs .Chamber of
Economic community service req uirecost of a continued ·relation- also still avairable for opera- abcul.
ments.
'
Commetce
··bu..,Jne..,..,-mind growth
;tlready
in
the
county
tional
expenses,
Sim
reportship
with
the
firm
.
from Page A1 .
ed··
luncheon.
mxm. Feb. 14,
Chamber
member
John
was
demonstrated
by
speakers
.
"This council's decision to ed.
the
Wildhorsc'Cafl'.
Musser
announced
that
from
Goodwill
Industries
of
seck b-ids was premature." · The dental clinic is adminbook the . '"Meigs County
• Pomeroy Men.:h•mts t11eetwho said the action mu st Mooie said. · "There . is no istered by the Meigs County Southem Ohio.
Goodwill
Industries. Chronicle" was now availahJe, ing. 8:30 a.m .: .Feb. 14.
have been , taken when coun- certainty thai n:wney will Health Department and Larry
_an.k.
cil authorized FBG to com- ever be found to build the Marshall admini strator has Middleport Store has been in for sale at the chamber oftice Peoples B
$35
each.
Pomeroy.
for
operation
smce
2004
and
plete a seco nd cost analysis plant. and the contractors been overseer 'for the facili study. Council President who submitted bids spent . ty"s operation. However.
.
.
•
'
'j-Stephen Houchin s said he hundreds of dollars to pre- when the clinic reopens
Department . of Natural · Dewhurst also ' let the
Marshall wants. someone at
remembered voting against pare them."
Resources that the village council know the nllage is
starting the bidding process,
"What is Floyd Browne the clinic on a daily basis to
had a "fairly good chance" in need. of around S500 in
because there was no money doing for us that costs tens watch over the finances arid
of
receiving an Ohio Trail s donation s to purchase a ·
from PageA1
to build the plant ·
·
of thousands of dollars time handle fiscal planning.
Grant for a walking trail. . new. gill;&lt; ani zed picnic table
As for the patient care, .Sim do as such so-that the council
'Plans·call for the new plant after time?''
Council gave Dewhurst to be pfaced at Bi centenn ial
to be constructed on pro;rny
Village
Adminisirator . said the clime is not making could determine a plan to permission to apply for a Park .
·
the village purchase on llradford Anderson said the referrals. "We ' re hoping to move forward and as pe put 2006 Ohio -Na ture Works
Council approved comPage Street adjacent . to . villase should reconsider the get up and going again soon "chip awa" at ihe debt.
Grants for the walking tratl . bining the Park s and
Overbrook Center.
·
relatiOn ship, .also, saying . so that we can continue to
The
grant must "be in by Recreati on-and Civtc Center
"We · can, t keep robbing
Councilman
Ferman . ·that while loan funds could ·provide dental services." A Peter t&lt;l pay Paul," Harris Feb. I.
·
Committees into one to take
Moore , who sat at the coun- be secured to pay for the full range of services includ- said. "All we're doing is a
Dewhurst ' added that it· ,care of re creat io n and civic
cit table for the first time on project, the village cannot ing dentures has been offered numbers shuffle and it does- would probably take one cettter actil·itie, . ·
Monday evening. asked afford to ass ume the debt to at the clinic since it opened n' t correct or change the more work day in the sprin g
The mee ti tig wa&gt; called
five years ago.
·
council to consider di scon- build the plant.
mto
e~ccuti1· e session once
to
get
Vennari
Park
ready
botlom line·."
Although village fi hances for its second grand open - to discu'&gt;. personnel matters
a central location near new ical equipment for the new were top on the agenda. ing. thi s time with the play- at the se wer department.
Joinin~
cnuncil 1.1as
hospital. The grant was there was good news from ground equtpment, horse highways.
·shoe
pit
s
and
new
park
mg
.
Whitl.1ch.
De
lli'
. Ru tland
In
September. awarded for purchase of a Rutl and
Grant s
Officer
Steve
Mick digital imaging system. Administrator Jay Dewhurst Dew hur st said this ~rand Pol ic e
Commissioner
from PageA1
Davenport sa id o· Bl ene " chemical and hematology who reported that he wa s opening should also- take Williams. Abe and Ktp_
Gruese r
Memorial Hospital in Athens · analyzers. treadmill sys tem told by a person at the Ohto place in the spring .
to determme tf the · site' has ha s ex pressed interest in and EKG machines.
Commissioners say other
potential as a location tor a . operating the facility once it
equipment
. in the Veterans
is
bu
ilt.
The
Meigs
Medical
new hospital." Davenport
Mcmnrial
Hospital
building
said. " We are grateful· that Clinic. which O ' Biene ss
(1-1~11) has beetl willing to opened earlier this yea r in I he is still suitahle for use. while
work with us to make that Medical Arts building acros&gt; other equipment will have to
from the abandoned' Veterans be purchaseLI . They e't imate
determination ." ·
Commissioners will" have Memorial Hospital is now the cost of equipping a new
until Feb. I, 2007 to exercise expitnding it s cl inic services . bthpital at approximatdy S I
have rnillion above co n . . truct inn
Commissioners
their option on the property.
already
been
assured
of a COSt S.
They have discussed iS&gt;uin g
The cost of constructing
bonds for the land purchase · $235.000 ~rant award from
and con struction of a new th e ·u.s. ' Department of the new hospi!al will not he
hospital building , which Health and Human Services. known until it 1s de..,igned.
Asha Yellamara;u, M.D.
. would serve the county from to yurc~ase necessary med- Da ve nport said .

Sheriff: rrian admits to killing
ailing wife, stabbing self

Joshua Neutzling

Chamber

'I

as

Clinic ·

Plant

,,

Our main cOnc~ rn in all stories 15 10 be Published every afternoon, Monday
accurate. If you know of an error in a through Friday, 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohto. Second-class postage
story, call the newsroom at [740) 992· paid at Pomeroy
21 56

Local Briefs

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Ohio Valley Pubtlshli'og Co.

Obituaries

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Correction Polley

www.mydailysentinel.com

Richard M. Lodwick

E1TA@'Ul0~ fO~ WO~T\1 f"T"Ait·"rel£.6~~

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

VVednesday,January11,2006

hard, dangerous, ugly work Mercifully for humanity, but
The media coverage of the
,
for newsmen who wanted to not for the media.
West Virginia mining disasIt is obvious· a lesson wa~
be involved. In the ugliness
ter played out like arc hi val
of debris and desperation , not learned if the mining-dis·,
news footage - "Dewey
some newsmen . made the aster coverage is any indica"'
Defeats Truman," only with
tion. And if Brian Williams'
.
tragedy worse..
heartbreaking consequences.
Kathryn
By late September, the predecessor Tom Brokaw is
And more importantly, it was
Lopez
New
Orleans-based "Times- representative of the official•
just like a more recent story
Picayune" would report: "As newsroom Katrina assess•
- Hurricane Katrina.
the fog of warlike conditions ment, we have failed to learn
Mistakes were made in
in
Hurricane . Katrina's after- anything. On a year-end edi~
West Virginia, that's apparmath has cleared, the vast - tion of "Meet the Press," he
ent. The media were swept comparison.
up in -the story, wanting to
The NBC anchor devoted a majority of reported atroci• claimed. "there were no gray
believe what family · mem- large portion of his broadcast ties committed by evacuees areas in Katrina."
The irony in Brian
bers of an ultimately deadly that somber Wednesday night have turned out to be false.
Williams
pointin·g blame
explosion wanted to believe to the mining disaster and the or at leas~ unsupported by
- that the miracle of finding media's coverage' of it. In any evidence, according to right away at "officials" ~
all the miners alive had hap- teasing his evening-news key military. law enforce- presumably the mining come'
pened. But that miracle was- plans on an NBC We~ site, ment, medic11L and civilian pany - is that the mentality
n't to be, yet almost everyone Williams wrote: "In the light officials in position~ to Of making a bad story worse
seems to be a trend among
reported that it did, in fact, of day, media types and civil- know. "
happen.
ians alike were asking a · Of course we didn't need news "officials."
Some press outlets went so question last asked during to wait until autumn fell to · But there's a back-tofar as to "report"' that ambu- Katrina: Weren' t they (offi- know · that some of what basics solution: just report
lances carrying the 12 res- cials) WATCHING the cov- appeared in the press during, the facts. And if you don't
and immediately following. know what's going ·on on the
cued miners had arrived at erage on television?"
ln the midst of tragedy, ooe Katrina was false- A colum- ground, go ahead and say
"the local hospital" early
Wednesday morning, Jan. 4. reflex is otien io want to nist for the London "Sun" you don't know until you do.
The accounts, -as we would blame someone. And in the told a tall tale of Marine heli-· There's no long-term pres•.
learn during the· day, had mining disa~ter, mining offi- copter gunships shooting tige that comes 'with being
been based on unconfirmed cials obviously made serious starving black people in New wrong fjrst. And it's hard to
secondhand sources.
errors. But, so did NBC and Orleans. A writer at a "The undo, the damage done when
So; again, the media their fellow "media types." Huffington Post" reported your voice carries
messed up 'in a direct and And it wouldn 't be the first cannibalism. Both those sto- whether it be stoking racial
. tragic way. But you may be time the press simply got ries were, of course, wholly flames or compounding fan-..
thinking: "To err is human, · swept up in emotion and fabricated. But you didn't ilies' grief.
to forgive is divine. Quit · wound up reporting witlt have to look for batty writers . (Kathryn Lopez is tile edi-harping on the media." I their. bleeding hearts instead to read such alarming fiction. tor of National Review
(www:nationalrewould, perhaps, if it weren't of their news judgment.·
It seemed everyone was Online
for Katrina. And you can
When Hurricane Katrina reporting the worst. The view.com). She can be conblame Brian Williams for ravaged the Gulf Coast last worst, which mercifully did- tacted ar klopez@nationalrealways
pan
out. view.com.)
pointing me toward that summer, reporting news was n't

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

. Wednesday, January 11, 2bo6

Media turns mining tragedy into a disaster

'·

Tbl;.Daily Sentinel
...

.PageA4

At first I thought she was
kidding.
·
"You met someone on the
.Internet?" Here was an intelligent, .attractive, accom-·
plished womaq telling rn,e
Jim
she was dating online.
Mullen
Doesn't she know about all
the scams out there'' All the
imposters, all the poseurs. all
the psycho-killers?
Melanie rolled her eyes real name was Allen and his
and looked at tne as. if I was wife's name was Maureen .
"People say why can' t you
the last one in my class to
f.igure out where 'babies meet people thetloold-fashcome from. l was, but she ioned way? They a'ct as if the
couldn't know 'that, could old-fashioned way worked.
Half the . people who met
she?
"You ' re
right,
the ·each other the old-fashioned
Internet's a cesspooL I'm way are divorced . The other
going to stop , looking for half hates each other, but is
love online and go to that staying together for the sake
seedy bar d·own the road of the kids. If that 's the sucwhere all the smart. intelli- cess rate for the old-fa~h­
ge nt, good-looking single ioned way. I'll take my
men h;mg out. Oh yeah, I . chances on the Internet ,
forgot , all the men in there thank you very much.
" Besides," she added, "the
are ·drunk. And married. And
not that intelligent. Th~ only old-fashioned way on ly
thing I know about them is works when yo u' re youn g.
that they' re at a bar, not oli You meet boys at school, you
know your brother"s fri ends,
the Internet .
"Online - I can Google you meet guys at work. You
' them. 1 can do a background know people fro m yo ur
check. I can sec the ir pic- church. Now I'm 55 years
ture,'" she cmiti nued. "Try old . I don't live· in my homethat .in. a bar. Yes. ·g uys can ·town. All the guys my age
lie onl.ine. But guess w.hat"' are married. And if th ey' re
Guys can li e to you offline. ·not, there's a good reason
. too. I dated a guy named Gu s why.
I met at a traditional · ·'Why do you think a man
. C hri ~tmas party for three is single at 55'J"' she asked.
weeks before ·1 founcf out hi s "Because he 's so rich and

good looking 0 Because he
"There\, no way they can
really knows .how to show a find out who I am without
girl a good time ? Because he my permission. and if I tind
was faithful and monoga- so m~one interesting we can
mous? Because he was self- /!-mail each other to lind out
less and mature? J;m not more. After a few e-mails we
saying I don' t have my own usually decide to go our sepbaggage . I'm divorced, too. arate ways. It 's politics or
Myron needed · hi s own he's got young kids or he
'space.' Well, he's got it. And l,ikes bass fishing or we don't
· I hear he's sharing it with a have the same · sense of
woman half hi s age .
humor or a hundred other
"It's hard enough to lind things. I've · been doing this
Mister Right when you ' re for three months now and .
young, at my age it 's last week was .the tirst time I
' Mission: Impossible .' You , talked to a guy I' d been ecan laugh all you want about mailing on the phone. We
Internet dating, but it's work- had a · great time, we talked
ing for me, · without all the for three hours. We' re trying
hassle of dating. I don't even to lind a restaurant in neutral
have to dress up or put on territory to have dinner next
make-up.
··
week.
" I tell the service what
"I know, you think I'm
kind of guy I would like to crazy. The guy could be a
meet - his age, his hobbieS: crazy-wacko-nut. · Like my
hi s likes, his dislikes, his pol- ex·husband wasn't? I mel
itics, his religion - and a few· ,Myron at a friend 's wedding.
pictures pop up. If I like the No one thought that was
way th ey look I can see what crazy. How did I know that
th ey have to say about them- he 'd turn out to be the
selves.
world's most egotistical,
·'You learn to· read between faithless , demanding, slob?
the lines to see if someo ne is · The only thing that would
seriou s or
not,"
she turn me off to Internet dating
· explained. ''1 hate it when is to lind out that's how he
guys say they are looking for found the woman he' s living
. a W()man yo un ger than they with now."
are. What is that aJI about?
(.lim Mullen is the autlwrof
They"re 60 and ihey' re look- "" It Takes cl Village Idi ot:
ing for a date that 's 30? Who Complicating the Simple
do you think you are '' Clint Life " lmd "Babr 's First
Eastwood'! Well. you get the Tcmoo: .. You CWI recJCh him 01
drift. I just X them oil
jim~mullen @ m \W£1\:com.)

Rutland

·-

H.ospital

•

e·~~ical
•

Welcome to Our·Team

Internal Medicine

Houchins
•
•

from Page A1

Sandra Fultz Brown. Je an
Craig and Ferman Moore
assumed positions on vi llage
council last ni ght. They were
elected in Novem ber. Other
co un cil members attend ing
were Hott ch ins and Roheil
Rob in son.
Cou ncil also upptH tlled
Jennifer Sheets of Pt&gt;mcroy
as vtllage solicitor. She· wi ll
replace Rab.crta Hill : who ·
was appointed 'two years
ago. and who had asked to
tJe re -appntnt cd. Counctl
contract s with an atlorn~y
an nuall y in Januar y. Rick
Hedges of ;A. then s. a fnrn~er
ass.istant pro sec ut or tor
Meigs Coun ty. also submi tted an application for. the
position .
Council also:
• Appro~cd rul es of ciiUn-.
ci l for 2006 . · wit h Jctt
Peckhamuh-..taining.

• Appro vecl th e ma yor" s
report of fees and fines collec ted in Dece mber. in the
amount of $2,2l:i I.
• Approved transfers and
ap pr(lpri ation adju stment s
totaling. $25.272.95.
• Approved
D ec~m b e r
repm:t s from the public
work s. refuse. tn co mc tax
and po lice -depart.ments
.. . and

approved the annual report ·
of the fire dcp&lt;irtment.
• Approved . co mmitt~c
Gppoinlment&gt; dS recom mended by . Ma) nr Sand y
lannare lli .
• Accepted the res ignation
of R.J . Gihhs .1s part,-lime
police d is p.ttcher and hired
Jcnna Parson s a.s his replacement.

lm~.. l&amp;¢\~y lK. \)~A~

(lu n~'lf1k:lil( c ~ 11\· .1c:m

\ P. '\ \

~fti~~~n~~@J~,
Auto Accidents W11rkers'
Compensation
• M t'JK'ar\' , •

• \1 t.,.,l lmurark.· ~·,

• A\'upun~:tu rc

• S tun~·r.tt' "l'lx

1m

&lt; 'h m ~Y,Jtilf ""'lt. h..'l~

\ kmt"'-r ,,( Amrn'-&lt;m

H . ~rrd

,,t

OtT,:e hpl,r·s o . . TuescJ .. s

• Internal Medicine

• Pocliafry and Podiofric Surgery

1!1 ~ r• 1' \J'.'nt'lll.:L'
~km~r 1f ;\ nK'fK.m &lt;\~:.tdt·•n'
!11 \1 \'tlh.~d l :\ ll~1tllll1 UH'

304-273-5321 ~

316 Washln ton St.

• Obslefrics and Gynecology

• Ga,sfroenterology

h'ft'!i.\1~ Pn-.tc,4 ( 'f!al~

!tavenswoud
Chit?9t"Jcric Center
:

Phys icians associated w ith the
O'Bieness HeaJth System are. available
by ~ppointment at our c linic at·
I 13 East Memorial Dr. in Pomeroy.

Ravenswood, WV

Coming Soon - Cardiology and Family Practice

o\sfEN'iss ~.
HEALTH SYSTE M

�'

PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel,

VVednesday,January11, 2006

Tuesday's games
High school boys basketball
Hannan 64, Ohio Valley Christian 51
South Gallia 79. Southern 54
South Poinl 62, 'River Valley 44
Wahama 51, Hamlin 35
Roane County 46, Po1n1 Pleasant 4.1
High school girts basketball
Ohio Valley Christian 47, Hannan 41
Winfield 73, Poinl Pleasant 32

State school board
rejects attempt to
reopen evolution debate
BvANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

's Bfsr R\

AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT·

t=~-~di_scounts
out drugcovefage.
f!~e and e~sy. ·
·-~~

l.-'423-7879
trx.org

Ohio pleased with about 12 percent participation in drug discount
Eligibility and sav.ings under
state drug discount program

A

•

Court to hear·case challenging parole authority
'

.

COLUMBUS (APJ- In a case that could five years after the fact. decide to change the
affect thousands of people. the· Ohio Supreme sentence ... Parker said.
Court hears arguments Wednesday on whether
ff Hernandez prevails, the state could be
ex-felons should be exempt from more prison required to rev iew more than 5.000 sentences
time if ·thev weren't told at se ntencing they issued , ince 1996, said Kim Norris, spo kes"
would be ,[,perv i,ed after release .
woman tor Ohio Attorney General Jim Petro.
The case involve' a Cuya hoga County man ·'That would be very harm ful ," she said.
released after servi ng ;even year; on a cocaine
The state is within its rights ·because a law
posses, ion charge. then returned to pn .son. ]a,t pa,-,ed in 1991i ' tipulate' that people convicted
year for leav ing the state Wit hout nCJtifyi ng. the .of lirst- ur ,elimd-uegree lelomes are to be under
Ohio Adult Parole Authority as req uired. state .&gt;upcrvision tor fi ve years after release,
Henry Hernandet.. 33. has been in the Lora in :-.lorn s said . The state is guided by law.. not the
Correctional Institution ' ince October 'erving judges who sentence defendants. ,he ,aid. ,
a 160:day sentence.
.
Hernandez\ lawyer. John Parker, argues, "The judge ju't didn ' t inform. We don 't
. that si n•c the trial j udge did not include !)O&gt;t- be.lieve that negate' the law. Po,t-rc lcasc conrelease contro l in the ori~ina l sentence. the trol is part of the law. There, i; n't any discre. state has no authority to enforce supe rvis ion tion there." !'/orris said.
and shou ld release Hernandct. immediatelY. If
After the law took effect. a fiN-degree
· the state wa nted authority to coii trol . fe lony that drew a sentence of I0 to 25 years
Hernandez afte r his release . .it should have was fixed at seven year,.
appealed the orig inal sentence. Parker 'aid.
If a j udge wailts to order post-release con"The Oh io Adult Parole Authority ha' tro l. it's up to the judge to make that clear, 'aid
known about this problem since 2000. If they Stephen Hardwic k an as,; istant Ohio public
don 't like it. they can appeal it. They cann ot. defender. Hei&gt; not' involved with the case but

.
'

What's at stake in sentenCing case
BY THE ASSOCIAliED PRESS

STATE SAYS: The Ohio Adult Parole Authority can exercise control over felon s after
their release from pri son - even if a judge didn't include it in sentencing- because it's
in a 1996.sentencing law.
NO, IT CAN'T: A lawyer for an ex-convict says the state cannot assume a judge·s
authority by, in effect, resentencin g the inmate. Only a judge can do that , the lawyer S&lt;IY'·

a

TJIE CASE: The Ohio Supreme Court on Wednesday hears the ca~e of Cleveland-area
man who was released after a seven-year sentence, then impri,oned last year for leav ing
Ohio without telling authorities . ·
.

Knicks rise
above
Cleveland,
92~84
.
BY ToM WtTHERS

lilliiFiast Bleak
LOCAL SCHEDULE
GALLIPOLIS- A schedule ot upcom1ng e&lt;:~llege
and high school varsity spor11ng events involving
teams from Gallla, Meigs and Mason counli95 .'

Wednesdaw's games
Boys Basketball

Wahama al Calhoun County, 7:30 p.m.
Gifts Basketball

Wahama at Wirt County, 7 p.m.
Wrestling

, Gallia Academy at Wellston. 5 p.m.
Thursday's g'ames
Girt&amp; Basketball

to.'' Hardwick said. "The j udge 1111poses the
sentence and the executive lbranch') executes
the sentence:·
The state has w unt ercd that si nce the law
requires jud_ge; to impose the po~ t- relca sc
supervision on ex- felon, sll ch '" Hernandez,
the parole authoqty automal'ically imposes the
condition, .

'

Athen s at Gallia Acaderriy. 7 p.m.
Belpre at Meigs, 7:30p.m
Eastern at Waterlord, 6 p.m.
,
South Gal1ia at Symmes Valley, 7 :30 p.m

River Valll'!'y at

R oc~

HUI, 7:30 p:m.

Federal Hocking at Sol,l thern. 7 :30p.m.

College Basketball

Cedarville at Rio Grande. a p.m.
Women 'S College Basketball

. Cedarville at Rio Grande, 6 p.m.
Friday's. games
.Bovs Baske1:ball
Alexander at Meigs. p.m.
Rock Hill at River Valley, 6 p m.
Gallia Academy at Athens, 6.p.m .
Point Pleasant ·at Wi nlie!Q, 7:30 p.m .

a

Eastern at Federal Hocking. 8 p.m.
Grace at OVCS, 5·30 p.m.
Cross ~anes at South Gallia. 6:30 p.m.
Miller at Southern, 6:30 p.m ·

Girls Basketball .
Cross Lanes at South Gallia, 5 p.m .

Wrestling
POint Pleasant i'lt Winner's Choice, TBA
1

.

Saturday's games
Bovs Basketball
River Valley at Ro se Hi11 (Ky.), 6 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Point Pleasant at River Valley. 7:30p.m
Wellston at Meigs. 6 p.m.

Wrestling
Po1nt Pleasant at Winner's Cho ice ·
River Valley at Columbus Brigg;;

.
College Basketball
Rio Grande at Walsh , 4 p.m.
Women's College Basketball
Rio Grande at Walsh. 2 p.m.

INSIDE

• OVC falls to Hannan.
See Page 82
• What's in a name?
See Page 86

BRIEFS

Meigs 7th grade
boys beat Southern
ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs sc,·enth grade boys
basketball team defeated
Southern 29-20 on MOnday.
Ryan . Pa yne led the
Marauders with 12 points, .·
Austin Sayre added . five
while Jon McCarthy &lt;tnd
Nicholas Ingles chipped in
four apiece. Heath Dcttwiller
and Joelan Nutter each
scored two. Bradley Young
and Daniel Stewart grabbed
two rebounds each and Aaron
Maxson and Connor Swartz
had s teal ~.
Eric Buzzard ami Adam
Warden scored eight point s
each · for the Tornadoes and
Jake Pillow added four.

comAcrs
Phone - 1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

Fax- 1-740-446-3008
E•mlll - sports@ mydal!ysent,nel.com

Sport.. St•H

has worked on similar cases.
Hardwick said a judge typically adj usts the
'entence if parole supervision is included . The
parole authority i.; crossing the line that separa tes the power- in 'uch cases , he said . ·
"Th e court speaks through its journal. The
important thing that a court docs is what it
puts in its judgment and a judge put s hi s .name

VVednesday,Januarytt,2006

National Basketball Association

Evolution vs.
intelligent
design in Ohio

COLUMBUS - The state
school board Tuesday narfor
rowly rejected an attempt to
Bv THE AssociATED PREss
1:
reopen debate on whether
•
Ohio's lesson plans for sciACTION: A proposal
ence
promote
a
type
of
cre"'
by state school board
ationism as a means of chalmember
Martha Wise to
'
lenging evolution.
remove a board-approved
'
The board vqted 9-8 agaihst
lesson on evolution that
a proposal by board member
she says is flawed and
Martha Wise. to remove a lesimproperly
challenges
son on evolution that she
evolution.
argues . is flawed and opens· .
. the state to a lawsuit over the
VOTE:
A narrow
teaching of intelligent design.
majority of the board, 9-8,
Intelligent design is the the- .said the plan_ should not be
ory that an unspecified higher
and
the
removed
power designed life because
Department
of
of its complexity.
Education's
normal
· Wise, ari elected member '· review process should go
forward.
representing northern Ohio.
said the plan contains misDEBATE: Opponents
takes about the continuity of
of Ohio's lesson plan says
the fossil record, ainong other
it drew information from
errors.
intelligent design. the the"We should have -the best
ory that life's complexity,
darned science plan in the
proves it was created by a
state of Ohio that we possibly
higher power. Proponents
can," Wise said. "This lesson
•
.AP Photo
say
the plans are some of
is
bad
and
should
not
be
plan
Robin Ford from Canton holds up a state prescription discount card as Ohio Gov. Bob Taft stands behind her Jan. 11, 2005, in
the
country's
most rigorColumbus. Ford was the first person to be enrolled in Ohio's Best Rx last year. The program, created. by a coalition of unions and in our science documents."
ous
in
favor
of
evolution.
The plan, approved in 2004,
drug makers. has had only 60.000 Ohio sen iors out of an estimated 1 million eligible signed up in the first year of the program.
is part of an optional set of
QUOTE: "We have a
lessons for schools to use in
set of standards
solid
the teaching of science standeveloped
in a very .thordards for the new lOth grade
ough,
solid.
intense
ten out well ," Hagan said. graduation
BY CARRI.E
tests.
Wi se
process
where
we
listen
'to
"We
didn't
put
a
Jot
in
the
opposed the plan then, too.
SPENCER GHOSE
mdividuals
on
both
sides
budget
for
ads."
A.SSOC IATED PRESS WRITER
Wise pushed the issue fol - ·
of the issue."
No more state money is lowing last month's decision
- Jennifer Sheets, a board
coming for promotion, said by a federal judge that a
COLUMBUS
When
member from Pomeroy
both House Spe':lker Jon Pennsylvania school board
Robin Ford urged her brother
· BY ,THE AsSOCIATED PRESS
• who ~oted against
Husted and Senate President violated the U.S. Constitution
and several friends si.gn up for.
removing the plan
Bill
Harris,
both
Republicans.
the state's prescription drug
with its mandate on evolubout 60.500 Ohioans have signed up in the first
The program was created to tion.
discount that saved her
year of Ohio's' Best Rx drug discount program, with
thorough, solid, intense
be self-supporting.·
·
$7,200 in a year. they all
.
about one-third of them saving a combined . $3.3
U.S. District Judge John E. process ' where we listen to
'.'It's a hard population to Jones ruled the Dover, Pa., individuals on both sides of
replieo that they never heard
million on prescription drugs.
promote
to, the uninsured, school board violated the the issue," said Jennifer
of the program.
To be eligible , -an Ohioan must not have any prescription
·
because
it
kind of goes across constitution by ordering that Sheets, a board member from
Ford. whose family was the
drug insurance coverage and either be at least 60 years old
a
lot
of
spectrums," said the district 's b.iology 'curricu- Pomeroy also appointed by
first to sign up for the dis·
or have an income less than 2 1/2 times the fede ral poverJenny Camper, Ohio spokes- !urn include the notion that Taft.
count a year ago Wednesday. · ty level - about $24,000 for a single person or $48.400
for
the life on 'earth was produced by
said medication costs for her
for a family of four.
· woman ·
Removin g Ohio's lesson
Pharmaceutical
Research
and
husband;s heart condition and
· A ,~tate lawmaker and the program's designers have proan unidentified intelligent plan on evolution doesn't put
Manufacturers Association.
her migraines were cut in_ posed expanding eligibility to 'three times the poverty
. the issue to res.t since another
The organization is part of the cause.
· half.
level. or $28,700 for a single person and $58.100 for a
Jones
said
intelligent
design
member could easily
coalition behind the pro~_am is . merely repackaged ere- board
'There's a ·lot more the y
family ot four.
,
propose a different plan nexL
with the AFL-CIO, ll(lio
. could be doing to make peo·
Here is a sampling of sav ings under the program m
ationism
and
the,
board'
s
poli
month.
prolonging the debate,
Council. of Churches and
ple aware," said Ford. 40. of
December for some of the most commonly prescribed
cy
represented
an
impermissisaid
Michael
Cochran. an
AARP.
Canton. "''d put a billboard
drugs. with the drug name, function, average savings per
ble
government
endorsement
elected
board
member
from
Seniors are being bombardhere in the middle of town
prescription and average percentage savings:
suburban Columbus and suped with advertising for other of specific religious views.
and have that 800 number
Some
scientist
~
who
a're
porter of the lesson plans in
discount programs and the
plastered up there:·
Generics
opponents
of
ih'e
'standards
the
past and again Tuesday.
new Medicare prescription
About 60.500 0 1 er-60 or
• Hydrocodone-acetaminophen. a narcotic pain reliever
He said qualified scientists
drug coverage - . which and intellige nt design say
low-income Ohioans signed
(generic for the brand name Vicodin). $16. 72 percent
Ohio's
plans
continue
to
conwrote
and reviewed the plan.
would make its enrollees inelup through Jan ..4 for Ohio' s
• Hydrochlorothiazide. ~ diu~etic that Jowers blood prestain
inaccurate
information
subjecting
it to repeated
igible · for Best Rx . Some
Best Rx. organized by union;
sure and swell ing from fluid retention, $4. 45 percent
scrutiny and editing .
seniors who use few prescrip- abol)t evolution.
and drug makers. Promoters
' 'Metoprolol tartrate. lowers blood pressure. $8. 55 perProponents,
including
some
Critics of the plans are the
tions might be better off stick- ·
said one year ago that I .2 milcent
ing· with the discount card. supporters of intelligent same people who opposed the
lion uninsured Ohioans would
• Furosemide. diuretic that lowers blood pressure and
since the monthly Medicare design, say the plans are some state's science standards and
be eligible. but the true numfluid ·retention. S3. 35 percent
drug premiums might exceed . of the country's most rigorous then these le»on plans, and
ber is probably closer to
·
they haven 't brought any new
their ou't-of-pocket costs. in favor of evolution.
500.000. said Jennifer Lopez.
Brand names
Eric Okerson , a board information to the discussion,
who directs the program for
Lopez said.
•
Norvasc,
lowers
blood
pressure,
$10-$
14
depending
on
member
from Cincinnati said Deborah Owens Fink. an
the state welfare department.
The state and the, private
dosage
.
171-8
percent
dep·
e
nding
on
dosage
appointed
by
Gov. Bob Taft, elected board mel)1ber repregroups promoting the proLopez said ·she's pleased
• Plavix , reduces blood clotting from heart attack, stroke. gram say they're doing their lamented that . the board was senting northeastern Ohio
with enrollment so far. which
or
poor circulation, S15 , 12 percent
·
·
is about 12 ' percent if the
best. Supporters say what dis- forced to deal with the debute including Akron . ·
Toprol
XL,
lowers
blood
pressure
and
treats
chest
pain
•
instead
of
issues
like
achieve"Nothing
has
involved
in
number eligible is, 500,000.
tinguishes Best Rx is that peoand heart failure, $8. 22 percent
She·added thqt it increased by
ple younger than 60 can ment ' gaps and school flmd- t.hi s debate ," Owens Fink
•
Lipitor.
lowers
cholesterol
,
$16,
18
percent
about 3 percent every month
· apply; so far, they're about 44 ing. But he voted in favor of said. "Our science standards
removing the plan out ·of a are some of the best i1i the ·
with no lulls.
percent 9f enrollees.
"I don 't consider it ' low
Descriptions of the program concern that Ohio will be na'tion and I am very proud of
Largest percentage discount in December
them."
enrollment," she said. About
were sent .to about 750,000 sued.
• Oxycodone with acetaminophen, pain reliever, $23, 73
Ohio's
plan
"does
reflect
a
.Americans United for
'six other states · have asked
households receiving child
percent
Ohio for advice on setting up
support, as well as to pharma- compromise -where it was Separati·on of Church and
similar discounts.
cies,
health fairs, refugee ser- clear intelligent design was State. which joined the
Largest
dollar
discount
in
December
·
Savi ngs for the year totaled
vice groups and food banks, competing for a place in the American Civil Liberties
• Metformin hydroc hloride, lower' blood sugar in adultstandards ," Okerson said.
Union . in suing the Dover
$3.3 mill1 on dollars. wi th the . onset diabetes. $32. 68 percent
Lopez said .
Still, a majority of board school bmird in Pennsylvania,
average di scount about 3 I
Coalition members also
percent. About one-third of
paid for phone calls to about members said the lesson plan · is reviewing documents relat SOURCE: Ohio Department of Job
card holders have used them,
600.000 households in low- was acc urate and the ed to Ohio' s lesson plans .
and Famil\' Sen·ices
so sav ings averaged about
Such ac tions indicate
income Zl P codes and started Department of Education's
$155 . a person . departmen t
the sign-up process, Camper , process for reviewing its les- Ohio 's vul nerability to a .
Republican plans to introduce people with higher incomes sa id . . It also has paid for son plan s should not be short- Dover-like lawsuit, said
spokesman Jon Allen said. ,
State Rep. John Hagan leg islat ion this week · that apply. That might add 5(),000 broadcast ads and recently circuited.
board member Robj_n Hovi s. a ·
would like to see more people wo uld ~llow signing up over eligible people, Lopez sai'd.
fini shed an ad ·campaign in
"We have a solid set of Taft appointee who voted 10
enrolled.
The
Alliance the p ho~e or Internet and let
"The message has not got- black-owned newspapers.
standards developed in a very remove the plan .

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

LocAL ScOREBOARD

\

,

Brad Sherman, Sport1 Editor
(740) 446·2342 , ext 33
bsherman@ myda1tyt nbu ne co m
Bryan Wallars , Sport• Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext 23
bWalters@myaall ytnbune com
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-234 2. ext 33
' 1crum @ ~yd a1 1yreg1Ste r com

their longest winning streak point ers (28) than free
since 2003-04. "Jt takes throws (20) and were outreawhile. but the guys are bounded and outplayed .
CLEVELAND - Larry communicating and we're
Cavs guard Damon Jones
wh&lt;tt
coach went 1-for-5 on 3-pointers,
Brown's verbal taunts, moti- executing
vational talks and coaching wants.''
and is just 6-for-37 on 3s in
tech niques are finally taking
Cleveland wasted another his last.seven games.
hold.
.
superb game from LeBron
"I'm officially in~ slump ,"
The New York Kmcks are James', who finished with 36 Jones said.
starting to believe they can · points, seven rebounds and
He wasn't albne in the
beat anybody.
seven assists in 46 minutes. fourth quarter, as the Knicks
Jamal Crawford scored 26 · James became the fir st c!idn' t let Cleveland score a
points, 20 in the second half, NBA player !Qget at least 30 , field goal for a 7:29 stretch. ·
and
New York . held points, seven rebounds and New
York
outscored
Cleveland to 12 pomts tn the five assists in seven stniight Cleveland 15-6 over the final
fourth quarter as the Kntcks games
since
Oscar 7:47, and as the Cavs left the
won their season-high fourth Robertson in 1-966.
floor , to embark on a sixstraight, 92-84 over the
"That kid is playing great," game West Coast road trip,
Cavalters on Tuesday ntght. said Brown, who coached they were sent off with boos
Stephan Marbury added 22 James on the 2004 U.S. from their fans.
points as the Knicks, sudden- Olympic team. "I don't know
." ! don't think we were
ly playmg thw best ball of how you can guard him. He's ready to play from the open the · seasm1, won their first getting better and better and ing tip," James said. ·•·once
road game since Dec . 6.
better."
AP photo
you get to the point where
James, though, got very lit- . every game means the same, New York Knicks ' Stephan Marb~r y (3) tries to drive pa~t
"We're getting a better
grasp of this," Crawford said tie help from the other
Cleve land Cavaliers' Alan Henderson (44 ) in the first quarter
Please see Knlcks, Bl
after the Knicks extended Cavaliers, who stiot more 3in NBA basketball action Tuesday in Cleveland.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Wahama
South Gallia storms past Tornadoes whips
Hamlin

.High School Boys BaskEtball

'

BY BRYAN .WALTERS

BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRlBUNE.COM

RACINE - They don't
call them the Runnin '
Rebels for nothing. . . .
South Gallia used a 13-0
first quarter surge
to overcome an
ea,ly five p o i n t
Southern
deficit . .

BY GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

MASON,
W.Va .
· Sophomore guard Casey
Harri son scored 14 of his
game high 17 points in the
second. half as
the
Wahama
White Falcons
overcame a s lu~­
t h e n
gish start tn
out stored
defeating vi sitthe hosts
ing
Hamlin
04-4
7
the
Tuesday
evening
Johnson
rest of the
by a 51-35 score.
way to secure a fast-paced
Harri son led a trio of
79-54 victory Tuesday at
Falcon starters in double figCIJarles W. Hayman
ure scoring .as Wahama
Gymnasium.
claimed its seventh con secuThe Rebels had 32 more
ti'le hardcourt victory of the .
shot attempts than the
2005-06 season. The win ele-·
Tornadoes
&lt;!nd
also
vated the l3end Area teams
claimed a 36-23 reboundseason record to 8-1 on the
. ing edge in the triumph,
vear. .
including an astounding
· Coach James Toth 's WHS
·f4-2 margin on the offensquad was 'oted as the IOth
sive glass.
rated Class A basketball team
That. along with a 34-ofin the Mountain State earlier
77 shooting performance
in the day. Hamlin dropped to
for 44 percent, allowed the
6-3 following the loss.
Red and Gold to improve
Brenton Clark and Brandon
to 8-2 on the season.
Fowler each tallied I0 points
including a two-game winon the night tor Wahama to
ning streak. SHS remains
go with Harrison's game high
winless this year. falling to
17 markers. Kameron Sayre
0-11.
and Kevin Wason2a also con;
The G.old and Purple
rributed greatly in the · White
stormed out to 5-0 advan ~
Falcon win with Sayre protage just 65 · seconds into'
vidi n2 the Bend Area team
the conte st, then traded
with several qual it y· mirnutes
baskets with SGHS to hold
offensively and defensively
a 7-2 lead . with 6: 14
while Wasonga gave the local
remaining in the opening
c:agers a spark with his defe,nperiod.
· ·
.
Bryan Wallerslphoto
l ivc play. Fowler also finThe guests responded Southern's Brad Crouch (32 ) attempts to dribble past South Gallia defender Curt Waugh dur·
ished wJth a double. double
with I0 rebounds to go with
ing Tuesday's contest at Charles W. Hayman Gymnas ium in Racine . Crouch had 10 points
Please see Storms, Bl
hi s 10 point; on the day.
and seven ~ebo~nds in the Tornadoes · 79-54 loss to the Rebels .
"C iiSC\' ,tHarrison'\ is get- ·
tin2 better and better with
eac-h game and tonight he
gave u' a so lid performance.
i es p~dal ly during the second
ha lf.'' Toth sai d. "Brenton
1Clark I
and
Brandon
I Foll lerl are two of our most
cnnsistent players and that
I
wa ' the c·ase again tonight .'
Plavcrs needed 390 \'Ote'
K;i me ron I Savre) does a lot
t75 percent) io gain election .
Boston Red Sox ' lu £ ~ t· r Jnn I of little thin~' for us that
doc~n 't ne..:e~~ari ly show up
Rice fell 53 .short. linisilin£
in the 'roreho,,k while Kevin
NEW YORK !API _ second "'ith .H7 'o.te' (n-1.1~
1\\a,nnga
) reallv ~ave us a
Bru•e Sutter was elected tO per~e nt). one ahead of ·
lift
"iih
,· hi ~ 'defensi ve
the Hall of Fame on relie\er CJm),e Gos.,a£c .
effort
...
Tuesday. jmt the fo urtti
Sutter was nn tile ' hallnt
Harrison hel ped WHS pull
relief pitcher gi,·en base- for the 13 th time. the fir&gt;t
d\\ i.l\ from J. lli.lf!'O\\ one
ball 's hi ghe st honor.
player dec·ted "' late 'ince
P'' in't lead at th e half with the
Sutt er7 the first pitcher Ralph Kiner in 1975 . Rice
'ophomme point guard lead-,
elected ·to the Hall with no was appearing for the 12th
ing the Falcons to a 2.1 -9
career start s. · was li&gt;ted on time and has three \eaf'
76.9 percent of the bJiiots remaining on the wrher' , edge in third period scoring .
cast bv I0-vear members of · ballot. Gossage was on· the ' The th iru ·quarter scoring
,. 'pun offse t. a ·disappoint
the · Baseball
Writers' ballot for the se venth time.
beginn ing to. the c nnt~st for
Association of America. The
It might be diftl cult for
Wahama as the Bend Area
split-finger pi on.eer collert - Rice and Gossage to gain
ed -100 of a record 520 bal- ,·otes next year. when Cal
t~~m ap peared to simply gq
·
R1pken
Jr..
Tony_
Gv.ynn
and
through the motions of playIots.
·
.
'' It · was a· c:all that 1·ou !\lark 1\lcGwire appear un '
ing a ha, ketball game .
always hope for. but ~·ou the ballot for tht• fir,t time .
"We pla1·ed terrible in the
ncv~r really expect it to hap- Each 10ter ma\ 'elec:t up tu
first half to put it mildly.:·
p-en .~· Sutter ,aid . addmg 10 pla)ers.
'aid Toth . "We 'ort of sleepAP photo th ;Jt he n ied . '"1en he
The other pl;l\a' in the
" ill ked thr,lugh the first 16 '
St. Lou is Cardinals relief pitcher Bruce Sutte r is seen warm· rec·eiled the notification . "I Hall "h'' pi'imari l ~ \\ere
minute' : before findi ng our
ing ~P in a photo from ea rly m the 1981 baseball season in didn't - thin~ Jt \COuld affect relJner' arc Hmt Wilhelm
leg' in the third quarter.
St. Louis . Sutter was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame me or hit me ,,, hard a' it
Please see Sutter, 86
. Please see Wahama. 11
on Tuesday.
did."
•'

Sutter elected to ·
MLB Hall of Fame I
Rice, Gossage
come up short

I
1

'

,.

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

BY BRAD SHERMAN

BASKETBALL

G '\LLIPOLIS - Hannan
s,wcd 1ts be&gt;t !01 l.tst - .Is 111
the l.1'i·quarte1
The Wildc.ns scmcd 22
pOintS Ill the fourth peTiOd,
enough to pull aw.ty and
dete.n Oh10 Valley Ch1 1St Jan
64-51 at the F1rst BaptiSt
Church ActiVIties Buildmg
on Tum.d.ty
It was the second wmght
boys basketball IICtOJy tor
co&lt;~ch D.tnn y Dewhur\1 s
c Iub wh1ch unpwved to :l 2
on the year Both losses have
come to W Va state-r&lt;~nked
te.uns Buffalo and Wahama
Wes Gue led a balanced

HANNAN 64,
OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN 51
HANNAN (3-2)
Kevm B la~e 3 1 1 7 Rya 1 Canterbury 4 4 9 12

Aaron Payne 5 0 0 13 Joe Kmnard 1 I 4 3
Wes Gue 6 2 4 14 Jarsd Taylor 1 0 0 2

Bradley EPmonds 53 4 13 Totals 2Q 61 11 22
64
OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN (2·1 0)

MICh ael

Williams 0 0..0 0 M chael Wnght 0 1 3 1 Kyle
Scouten 0 1 2 1 Nath an Bra'-"'" 1 0 0 2 Zack
Carr 500 13 LukeSwneyOOOO Luke

Stinson 6 5-1 0 l7 Drew Scouten 50 2 10
Totals 19 9 20 51
~

Hannan

17 11

14 22

ovcs

9

11 16 . -

15

64
51

3 Po1nt Goals - Hannan 3 9 (Payne 3) OVCS
4 25 (Carr 3 Coughenour) Fouled Out- Gue
Edmonds StinSon Total Rebounds-Hannan
43 (Gue 11) aves 33 (St1nson 15) Off
Aebounds-Hannan 18 (Gue 5) OVCS . 16
(Sim son 5) ASSIS1s-Hannan 8 (Gue 3)
OVCS 3 (thr ee !led w/ 1) Steals-Han nan 9
(Gue 5) OVeS 1 (Brown) Blocks-Hannan 3
OVeS 0 Turnovers -Hannan 19 OVCS 16

SOUTH GALLIA (8-2)

BY BRAD SHERMAN

Tyler Porter 2 0 0 4 Dust n McCombs 13 1 2
28 JoshWrght 20 05 Bernie Fulks 72 517
Seth Williamson 1 1 2 3 Aoben Coury 0 0 0 0
Cun Waugh 2 o 0 5 Tyler Duncan 5 0 0 11
Aaron Pt11tl1ps 1 2 4 4 Michael Pope 0 0 0 0
Josh Skidmore 1 0 0 2 Totals 34 77 6 13 79

8SHERMAN@&gt;MYDAILYTRI8UNE COM

GALLIPOLIS - Knsu
Dav1s and Sarah Jenk1ns
took over m the second hull
and Oh1o Valley Chnst1an
held on to defeat VISttmg
Hannan 47-41 at the F1rst
Baptist Church ActJVIIJes
Buildmg on Tuesday
Dav1s and Jenk1ns, who
each scored 16 pomts, combmed tor 23 of OVCS's 28
second h.tlf pomts - helptng: the Lady Defenders to
b.tck-to-back g1rls b.1sketball
v. 1ns to1 the lirst tnne lhts
settson

SOUTHERN (Q-1 1)

PatriCk Johnson 7 4 7 18 Jacob Hunter 0 ().()
o Josh Papa 312 8 Wes RHie 100 2
Corb n Sellers 2 0 0 4 Bryan Harns 0 0 0 0
Brad Crouch 4 0 1 10 Weston Counts 2 ~0 5
Jess1e McKn1ght 0 0 0 0 Dar1n Teaford 3 1 3 7
Totals 22 45 6 13 54
s Gallla
22 12 15 30 - 79
Southern
11 12 10 21 - 54
3 pomt goals-SG 5 17 (McComs Wnght
Fu ks WauQh Dunuan) S 4 13 (Crouch 2
Pape Countsl Rebounds- SG 36 (Duncan
8) S 23 (Crouch 7) Offens111e rebounds-SG
14 (McCombs 3 Waugh 3) S 2 (Johnson
Hams) ASSisls-SG 12 {Waugh 6) 9 6 {Pape
2) Steals-SG 14 (Waugh 5) S 9 (Joh11son 3
Pape 3) Blocks-SG 2 (McCombs Duncan)
S 2 (Sellers CouMs) Tu rnovers- SG 20 S
23 Team Fouls-SG 19 S 1-J JV sco re--SG
46 s 31
RIVER VALLEY (4-6 1 3)
Cory Ehman 4 0 1 B Jason Jones 2 0 0 6
Bryan Morrow 3 6 7 12 Matl N bert 2 0 0 6

BY lARRY CRUM

M1chael Cordell 2 2 2 6 Ryan Henry 2 0 0 6
Totals- 15 8 10 44
S0UTH POINT (5 4 2 2)
Hea th Bndges 1 o 0 2 Kyle Hughes 0 2 2 2
J T Terry 3 2 2 9 Beau Weed 1 0 0 2 Jerrell
Dean 1 2 2 4 J oe~ Stephens 0 2 2 2 Cllase
McWhort er 5 3 3 14 Jeremrah Taylor 12 3 4
27 Total ~- 23 14 15 62
R1verValley
o
11 14 13 - 44
South Pomt
t7 14 15 16 - 62
3 Po1nt Goals-R'IJ 6 (Jones N1bert Henry 2)
SP 2 (Terry McWhorter\

LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER COM

POINT
PLEASANT
W V.t - When pl.\ymg d
team th.tt " dmong the eltte
111 the state. the key IS to
keep your composure and
put together smart shots
On Tuesday mght. Pomt
Pleasant had a little troubl e
wtth both
The Lad) Kntghts fell
behmd early and never
managed to take control of
the game as B1e Kyle , who
posted 11 pomts and eight
tebounds, and the rest of the
No 2 ranked Wmf1eld Lady
Generals cru tsed to a 73-32
VICtory 111 Pomt Pleasant
" It IS not a b1g secret that
we are not a great shoottng
team v.ms or losses we stli l
talk about I he same p1 obi em
of not be1ng able to shoal,'
sa1d Po1nt Ple,JSant g1rls
head
eo&lt;~ch
M1tch
Meadows They are b1gger
than us they are qutcker
th,m us. they are stronget
than us and they shoot better than us and that IS why

WAHAMA 51 , HAMLIN 35
HAMLIN (6-31

Andr ew 8 as 6 0 0 12 Rotherdam 2 2 2 8
Edwards 2 0 0 4 Adkms 2 0-D 4 Ashworth 1
1 4 3 Cooper 1 0 0 2 Stower s 1 0 0 2 l'ota1s
15 3 6 35
WAHAMA (81)
Harnson 5 4 4 17 Clark 3 2 5 10 17owler 4 2

3 10 Sayre 2 0 0 6 :=loush 1 4 '7 6 Wasonga
1
2 Totals 16 12 19 51
13 15 - 41
Hannan
6 7

oo

11

14 14 -

l.lyup m Ihe pamt by Stmson,
but Hannan responded w1th a
7-2 run and never allowed
the home team to senou&lt;ly
ch,tllenge agam
Kevm Blake added se;en
pomts f01 Hannan while Joe
Kmnard and Jared Taylor
ch1pped m three and two
respectively
Coughenour timshed wtth
seven p01nts 111 the loss
Nathan Brown scored two
while M1chael Wnght and
Kyle Scouten e.tch made u
free throw
Ohto Valley Chnsttan 1s at
Grace Chn sttan on Fnday,
while Hannan will lace that
s.une Grace Chnsttan club
next Tuesd.ty

Davts am.tssetl 13 ol her
p01 nts after hal ftnne and
Jenkms added 16 rebounds
as Oh1o Valley Chnstlan
Improved to 3-8 Meanwhile,
Hannan saw us record fall to
1-8 - that lone wm commg
over Elk Valley Chnsttan
Brtttany
Hannan's
Sabolsky had a b1g game m
the losmg effort, she scored
21 pomts and grabbed 18
rebounds Summer Stover
added I ~ pomts and was the
only othe1 Lady 'Cat to score
mo1 e than three pomts
The g.1me was light the
entire way OVCS v.as only
up 8-6 at the end of one

quarter and 19-13 ,It halftime
Davts. scored seven pomts
111 the lhtrd quarter, when the
Blue and Gold was able to
shghtly extend the lead to
33-26 Sabolsky scored
seven pomts and Stover stx
10 the quarter to keep
Hannan wtthm stnkmg dtstance
Hannan pulled to w1thm·
ft ve after a Tabttha Bowman
layup w1th 5 00 left m the
contest The Lady 'Cats were
as close as f1ve once more, a
lillie more than a mmute
later, alter a Sabolsky offenstve rebound and suck-back.

But the Lady Defenders
were able to get to the free
throw line , and although
they ·struggled from there,
made enough to stay 111 front
for the vtctory OVCS,
whtch made 17-of-38 from
the chanty stnpe for the
game, was 6-of-19 m the
final quarter
Hannan also struggled
!rom the foul hne , messmg
only 8-of-19 Both clubs
shot poorly from the field
OVCS was 15-of 53 v. hile
the West Vtrgmmns were 15of-54
Blanken ship
Rtchelle
scored stx pomts and had

hve steals for the Lady
Defend€rs Lmdsay Carr
added three ma1 kers and
Sarah Burleson and Laura
Turner chipped 111 a bucket
each
Tabttha Bowman added
three pomts for Hannan
whtle Ananna Blake and
Kalah Perry went for two
each Perry also pulled down
e1ght rebounds
Ohto Valley Chnsuan
plays host to Chesapeake
Thursday H.tnnan ts at
Huntington St Joseph on
Fnday

Point Pleasant crowned by No. 2 Lady Generals, 73-32

S POINT 62, RIVER VALLEY 44

8

16. Carr connected on a 3pomter from the left wmg.
then followed that up wtth a
mtd-rangc JUmper Brandon
Coughenour than stuck back
an offenstve rebound that
made tl 25-23
Payne answered wtth u b1g
3-pomter for Hannan that
helped 11 keep the lead,
wh1ch stood 28-24 at mtermtsslon
The Wildcats padded th.tt
lead shghtly th,mks to a 1411 sconng edge in the thnd
penod, but weren' t able to
put the Defenders away until
late 111 the fourth
OVCS was as close as five
pomts w1th 5 40 remammg
m the game after a strong

tshed wnh a
baker's
dozen Drew
Scouten also
reached
double ligures wtth 10
Hannan,
behind
seven edrly
pomts from
Gue
Edmonds,
1umped out
to a L7-9 lead after the first
e1ght mmutes
Stm son
recorded seven of the nme
OVCS points
But the Defenders fought
back late 111 the ftrst half and
was able to pull to wtthm
four at the half Tra1hng 25-

47

3 Pomt Goals~Ham 1n 2 (Rotnerdam 2)
Wahama 7 (Harrrson 3 Clark 2 Sayre 2)
GIRLS BASKETBALL

WINFIELD 73, Pt PLEASANT 32
WINFIELD (9-1)

Bre Kyle 9 10 10 31 Ama nda Asli ey 0 0 0 0
Nat1l1eKine66 918 JesscaJohnson 10 02
Meredith Stalnaker 0 0 2 0 Kn sten Workman 1
00 2 K atie CIOX!Gil 5 14 12 Rebecca
Stidham 0 0 0 0 Bmtany Lee 0 0 0 0 Au ston
Hazle11 0 0 0 0 8 dgelle Harper 3 1 2 7 Jul1e
Thompson 0 1 2 1 Totals- 25 19 29 7 3
POINT PLEASANT (3 6)

Leah Eddy 1 0 0 2 Anna Sommer 3 2 5 9
Cha1 B bbee 3 0 0 6 Tr1s1a Van Matre 0 0 0 0
L12 Sommerv1ile 0 0 0 0 Bnttany Clonch 0 0 0
0 Tessa Wya nt 2 4 4 8 Jody Hartley 0 0 0 0
Melissa Adk ns 0 2 2 2 Devm B~rchi1eld 0 Q 0
0 ~kye Sm th l l t 5 Totals- 11 9 12 32
Wmf1eld
16 13 22 22 - 73
Po1nt
7 11 iO 4 - 32
3 Po1nt Goals-V.. n'1eld 4 (Br e Kyle 3) PP 1
(Anna Sommer) Fou led Out- W1nf1eld (non e)
PP 1 (Tessa iNyant) Rebounds-W nfmld 34
(Natalie Klme 10) PP 33 (Jody Hartley 7)
ASSIStS- W1nf181d 9 Kalle Cloxton 5) PP 4
(Leah Eddy 2) Seats- Wmlleld 13 (Ka11c
Claxton 4) PP 12 /Tessa Wyanl 4) BlocksW nf1eld 5 (Na!ahe Kl1ne Br dge11e Haroer 2)
PP (none) Team Fouls - W nJ eld 12 PP 21

Wahama
from Page Bl
Ob'!ously the e1ght m1nutes
tollowmg the half v. as the
dlffeJence
W.th.Jma s1rc1ched out "

they are the No 2 team 111
the state "
And the stats backed up
the score Wmlteld shot a
strong 46 percent (25-ot54) I rom the floor whtle
Pomt Pleasant could only
manage to hn 21 percent
( 11-ot-53) of thw shots,
mcludmg a poor 14 percent
(2-of -14) effort dunng the
fourth quarter
Regard le ss of the struggles, the tact was that Pomt
Pleasant s1mply could not
h1t the needed shots
The
Lady
Kmghts
allowed Wmlield to open
up a low sconng f1rst quar
ter with a 4-tl lead, but
qu1ckly edged to w1th1n
one led b) Anna Sommel
who jlOsted all se\en of ihe
teams lirst qu.trter ponlts,
but lhe one pmnt game was
all the closer Puml Pleas.tnt
wou ld get 111 Ihe contesl
Led by Kyle and Kat1e
Cloxton, W1!1f1eld slowly
began to pull av. ay trom the
home squad and took a 16-7
lead Into the second quarter
as the Lady Kmghts strug,gled early to cover some of
one pomt h.Jift1me .tdvan
t.1ge 10 a 41 28 edge after
th1ee qua1ters "We got
some bteathmg room a!ier
our huge th1rd quarte1 and
they started gelling phys1cal
w1th us try111g to get back
11110 the game, stated Toth
"Fortu nately we comerted
enough of our tree throv. s

the offens 1 v e
sc heme s
Wtnfteld
was drawmg up
P 0 I n I
Pleasant
came out a
ltttle
stronger 1n
Sommer
the second
quarter, as
tough defenstve play from
Skye Smtth, Tessa Wyant,
Leah Eddy and Jod y
H.lflley kept the sconng
close .md only allov.ed
Wmfteld to post 13 pomts,
whtle the Lady Kmghts
posted II , gomg mto the
locker room only, down II
to the state power Generals
From there, the Generals
went on the march
Kyle posted II pomts and
Claxton scored ftve tn the
th1rd quarter as Wmf1eld
put up 22 pomts and held
Pomt Pleasant to a mere I 0,
led by Char B1bbee who
scored all SIX of her po1nts
m the quarter
W1th a comfortable 23
down the stretch to come
aw.ty w1th the wm
The While Falcons al so
captured 1ts second stratght
w1n 111 the prelimmary con test w1th foUl WHS cagers
sconng m double fi gure s
lor a 60 50 tnumph Justm
Arnold totaled a game h1 gh
16 po111ts for Waham a v. ilh

' Wmlield aga1n
pomt lead,
went on the attack as Kyle
posted 14 pomts to lead the
Lady General s to 22 more
pomt s and held the Lady
Kmghts to only four as
Pomt Pleasant threw up
numerous s~ots try1ng to
get back tnto the game
Along wtth the strong
shoottng percentage , the
Generals also held a 34-31
edge 111 rebounds led by
Natahe Klme, who completed her double-double
wilh 18 po1nts and I 0
rebound s, \1 h1le P01nt
Pleasant saw Jndy Hm tley
come up w1th seven
rebounds
Winfield also held a slig ht
13 12 edge 1n steals and
sav. a much more efficient
game passwg the ball w1th
mne assiSts led by Clox ton
wtlh live, as P01nt Pleas.mt
could only come up wtth
four ass1sls 111 the g&lt;~ me
Offenstvely Winfield wds
led by Kyle and Kline, tol
lowed b&gt; Cloxton w1th 12
pomts , f1ve .tss1 sts and tour
steals , Bndgette Harper
With seven potnts With s1X
Josh Pauley addtng 13 and
Gabe R0ush and Darn n
Reece I 0 ap1ece as Coach
M1ke
Woll e s
Little
Fdicons lmprtwetlio 4 I on
the season Jeffers scored
15 for Hamlin w1th
Browmng netting 12 .md
Ashv.01th II 111 a losmg
cause

rebou nds &lt;tnd t"o blocks
Jess 1ca Johnson .tnd Kmten
Workmdn wtth lwo pomts
each arrd Julie Thompson
wilh nne ponH
Pomt Pleas,mt \\as paced
by Sommer With mne
potnts four rebounds and
three ste als Wvant w1th
c1ght pomts, t1ve rebounds
and four steals , Btbbee w1th
SIX pomts. Smith wllh f1ve
pomts and three rebounds
Leah Eddy w1th two pomts
four rebounds, two steals
and two asSists and Melissa
Adktns w1th tv.o pomts and
tour 1ebounds
Earliet 111 the day, Pomt
Pl easant came away w1th a
42 40 v1ctory o;er Will!leld
111 ihe JUlliOT va1s11y game
led by Devm Cotnll wilh 1:2
poillts and Chelsea Scheuer
wtth et&amp;ht pomts lor Poillt
Pleasant
and
Jess1ca
Johnson with mne p01nts
for W1nfteld
The Lady Kn1ghts will
now prepare to tr.Jvel across
tbe nver tor a game agamst
the R1ver Valley Lady
Ratders 7 30 p m Saturday
111 Chesh1re
The White F.dcons will
h.tve lml e tnne to sa\or 1ts
late st wm as the Bend Area
leam IS slated to return to
.tcllon tomght With C.tlhoun
County sc hedu led to VISit
Tip ofl l1me for 1Un1or va rSity ,Jl!IOil IS 6 p m Wilh
v.JrSJt\ pl.1y to tollov. at
7 iO p m

OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN 47
HANNAN 41

Storms

HANNAN (1 8)

Tabby Payne 0 0 0 0 Sumr1er Stover 4 4 8 13
Ar anna BlaKe 1 0 3 2 Jessey Shannon 0 o-o
0 Tabitha Bowmar 1 1 2 3 Br 11any SAba sKy
9 1 2 21 K &lt;~lah Perry 0 2 4 2 Celes t"
Campbe I 0 0 0 0 Tct als 15 ~4 8 19 41

from Page Bl

OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN (3 8)

R1chelle Blankensn1p 2 2 7 6 Sarah Burleson
1 o 2 2 Andre&lt;J Vof"Merer 0 0 0 0 Ka lee
Edmonds 0 2 2 2 Laura Turner 1 0 0 2 Sarah
Jenk ns 5 6 9 16 Lmdsdy Carr 1 1 2 3 Kns11
Dav1s 56 16 16 Totals IS 17 38 47
Hannan
6 7
13 15 - 41
eves
a 1t t 4 14 - 47
3 Poln Goals-Hannan 0 0 OVCS 3 9
(Sab a sk~ 2 Stover) Fouled Out-Stover
Bowmar1 Perry BurlesOI" Total ReboundsHannan 40 (Sabol$ky 18) 0VC6 44 (Jenkins
16) Off Rebounds-Hannan 13 l $abolsky 7)
OVCS 19 (DaVIS 6) ASS iS!S- HannAn 4
(Stoller 3) OVCS 2 (lwo •lea wl 11 S1ealsHannan 6 (Stover 6) OVCS t3. (8 lankensh p
5) Blocks-Hannan 3 ISabo sky 3J OVCS 5
(Edmonds 2 Jen~1ns 2 Turnove s - Hannan
23

ovcs 20

Knicks
fromI Page Bl
where eve1y g.1111e you pluy
for 4K m!nUICS then you
be~ome u greu1 teum R1gh1
now, we ,Jrc not ·
In the tounh. Crawlord ,md
Marbury did most o l the
damage. pulling up lor short
1umper1 or c,Jiil y dn vt ng pa1t
Cleveland 1 backmurt of
Jones, Enc Snow and M1ke
Wllb 1nto the lane for
lay ups

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

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(304) 675:1333

Lady Defenders-finish strong in 47-41 win over Hannan

SOUTH GALLIA 79 SOUTHERN S4

ovcs

Hannan sconng attack with
14 po1nts and also led the
Wtldcats 111 reboundmg wnh
II, .1s well as asststs and
steals Bradley Edmonds and
A&lt;110n P.tyne each scored 13
dnd Ryan Canterbury went
I or .1 dozen
As for the Defenders, 11
was .mother gntty effort that
tell short The Gal hans, now
2 I0, lost lor the mnth
str,ught lnne E1ght of those
tleleats came 011 the road , as
Tuesday's conlest was the1r
l1rst at home smce Dec 3
Luke Stmson scored 17
p01nts and h.wled 111 15
rebound~ tor Oh1o Valley
Chnst1.tn Zack Carr nmled a
tno of 3 po1nte1 s and fm

www.mydallysentlnel.com

mrthune - Sentinel - l\egister
CLASSIFIED

Wildcats roar past Ohio Valley Christ~an, 64-51
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE CO M

Brandon Coughenour 2 2 3 7

Wednesday, January 11, 2006

2006

-

H.S. Hoops
Scoreboard
Bovs

Wednesday, January 11,

www. mydailysentinel.com

wnh " b&lt;~ker s dozen over the nex t
4 01 tor u 15 7 leatl then closed th e
quaner out on" 7-4 run to lead 2211 u!tet e1ght mmutes of play
South Galhd hll l!-of- 16 shots 111
the opemng slanza "h tie the Does
sank JU SI S of 13 shol opportumues
The Rebels also outrehounded the
host' 9 2 1ncludlll g 4 0 on the
ot tem 1ve end 111 that opemng
frame
Brad Crouch got Southern gomg
111 the second. reeling otf etght
unansv.ered pomts to pull the hosts

Crawfm d and M.1rbury
outscored the Cns' triO 57II
We play cd perfect 111 the
fourth · said Brown whose
team 1s 4-1 smce he crlt1cl7.ed
Marbury lollowmg a Dec 28
lo" to Orlando "That wus
huge We pluyed the fourth
quarter us well us we've
pluyed any yuarter ull year '
The K111cks tra1 led 72-67
cntenng the fourth. but
pulled even at 81-,dl on
Marbury' 17-toot JUmper
The Cu val1ers who went 4nf-20 from the f1eld m the
final 12 llllllute s couldn t get

v.ilhm three (22- 19) at 6 24
South Gallm responded with a 124 run th.n \\.ts due, 111 large part, to
10 SHS IUillOvers 10 t.tke a 34-23
lead mtu the IntermisSIOn The hosts
limshed the ICsl of the quarter JUSt
2-of-6 from the field, wh1le the
guests strugg led d b1t wtth a 5-of-20

sconng column led by Dustm
SHS shot 49 percenl (22 of 4'i )
McCombs' game-h1gh 28 p01nts from 1he field 111 the loss
Berme Fulks followed w11h. 17.
South Gallia made 1t a clean
Tyler Dunc an added II, and both sweep With a 46-31 VICtory 111 the
Josh Wnght and Curt Waugh con- JUiliOr vars1ty uh
tnbuted f1ve ap1ece to the vtctory
Stev.m Call led the Rebels with a
Duncan hauled m a g.tme-htgh game h1gh 16 pomts. whlle Trav1s
e1ght caroms, while Waugh f1mshed McC.Jrly followed With 13 111 the
outmg
the mght w1th game-h1ghs of SIX Will
SIIS was I0-ot-22 shootmg (45 ass1sts and f1ve steals Tyler Porter
Brad Brov. n Brett Beegle and
percent) at the break, and South and Aaron Phtlltps each contnbuted We ston Roberls each h.td s1x m the
Gallw ended the ftrst half 14-ot-36 four pomts for the Rebels
Srluthern lo"
from the floor for 39 percent Both
Patnck Johrlson gutded the
The Rebels Jetu1n tn aciJon Fnday
tedms had 15 rebounds at haltume
Tornadoes wuh 18 pomts. wah when lhey host Cross Lanes
The Rebels 1nneased thetr lead to Crouch followmg wtth I0 pomts Chnsuan Game nme 111 Merce1 Ville
49-13 afler ihree quarters of play, and a team-htgh seven rebounds
ts scheduled for 6 30 p m
then h1t 13-of 20 field goals 111 the
Josh Pape ch1pped 111 etght markSouthern w1 ll host Mtller 111 a Tnfma le to wrap up the 25-pomt VICto- ers, Dann Teatord added seven and Valle~
Conference
Hockmg
ry
Weston Counts had f1ve for OIVISJon matchup Fnday at 6 30
SGHS had n111e players reach the Southern
pm

anythmg to drop and - ilfSt half, scortRg 14-potnts tn
Crawford made two baskets the th1rd as the Cavs opened
before rookie Chanmng Frye thetr ftve-potnt lead
dr,uned a IUmper to g1ve the
Wtth Cleveland down 57Ktlwks an R7-81 lead
56 m1dway through the third
The Cavs didn't get unoth· und
center
Zydrunns
cr bucket until James scored llgauskus on the bench 111
wnh l 7 seconds to go, but by foul trouble, James found hts
then 11 wus too lute, und New ran¥e and buried three
York ~nupped u !I ve-ga me stratght JUmpers in an 11·1
road IQslng streak
'
spurt that put the Cavs up by
"We never felt ltke we were 11
out of 11" Marbury sa1d
James scored I B 111 the
''Collectively. everyone com- openmg half, buttrymg to do
mu111cated so well on defense too much, he forced shots
111 Ihe fourth "
and went only 7-of-17 from
James stuck wnh Ill JUmp the floor llgauska~. who tin shot that wasn't there 111 the 1shed With only etght pomts,

spent most of the second
quarter stuck on the bench
with three fouls. and New
York eKploned hts absenee
ms1de to open a 45-44 halfume lead.
Notes: James' seven-game
streak of scoring at least 30
ts the longest in the league
stnce Tracy McGrady hacf 14
tn a row in 2003. .. James
hasn't dectded yet 1f he 'll
play on the U S team at the
2006 World Champtonsh1ps
or 2006 Olymp1cs He didn't
get much playmg ttme for
Brown at the Athens Games
and adn11t1ed that wasn't all

--------

because ot Brown "1 was a
l!ttle air-headed" Jame1
stud " It was my fnult also,
not knowmg whut l wus gettmg
myself Into"
.
Although ut one pomt lust
summer he wus rumored to
be Cleveland bound, Brown
1nmts he wus ne ver close to
becoming the Cuvs couch
C Zcndon Hamtlton s1gned a
I0-duy contract With the
Cuvs le» than , one week
.tfter they w'ltved h1m .
Murbury has played 111 276
str,ught garnes , the ftfthlongest streak among acuve
players

675-5234

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

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e Start Your Ada With A Keyword e Include Complete
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Items

r

\Y\01 '\(I \II '\l"'i

a Include Phone Number And Addrf!ll When Needed
e Ads Shourd Run 7 Day•

I \ 11'111\ \ 11 '\ I
~I I(\ li I ~

r

877 325 1558

GtVEAWA\

7 Pupp1es Bo11er/Chow 740

992 2542

---~-----'­

Lost M1sS1ng Fam1ly Pet
Male We1maraner
dark
grey scar on left h1nd leg
very lr1endly housedog Last
seen on 314 road between
George Hottman and Rood
larm 1n Letart It found
please call The Roush s at
304 882 3574
304 593
1078 or 304 674 3737
lost Wh te Jack Russell
Terner With black collar
Bunce Road area Please

call (740)446 4708

t

Beau11lut black 3/4 Lab
WANilD
male
pupptes
born
09/03/05
Wtll be large
fr endly dogs that need room
Ia run (740)441 1417 after Absolute Top Dollar U S
Sliver and Gold CoinS
5pm
Proolsets Gold A1ngs Pre
US
Currency
1935
I...o\1 ANIJ
Sohta1re 01amonas M T S
FOUND
Com Shop 151 Second
Basset Hound Female last Avenue Gall1polls 740-446
seen @ Mason Counly 2842
Airport 1n106 Please help
us l1nd our Daughter Boyd
I btJy Junk
&amp; Robin (304)586 1169

Cars

(304)773

5004

W111 pay up to $40 00 for
unwanted vehtcles to haul
away 74().992 0413 1f no
answer lea11e message

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4 s For Sale . ........ .
Announcement

are

110

I wnght2005(!eomcaet net

LEARN

ro

DRIVE
NO EIIPERIENCE NECESSAA'I'
FULL TIUE ClASSES
CDL TAAININO
FlNANC NG AVAILABLE

'JOB PLACEMENT
' ENROLLING NOW

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

1-800-334-1203

• .. 725
030

Antiques
530
Apartments for Rent _
440
Auction and Flea Merkel
080
Auto Parts &amp; Acc~ssorles
760
Acto Repair
770
Autos for Sale
71 0
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
750
Bu1id1ng Supplies
550
Bus1ness and Buildings
340
Business Opportunity
.. 210
Business Training
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
790
Camping Equipment
780
Cards of Thanks
010
Child/Elderly Care
.190
Electr!caiJiilefrlgerat!on
.. 840
Equipment for Rent
........... .... 480
Excavating
830
Farm Equipmenl
610
Farms for Rent
430
Farms for Sale
330
ForLease
490
For Sale
.585
For Sale or Trade
590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables
580
Furnished Rooms.. ... ... ... .
--- 450
General Hauling..........................................850
Giveaway .. . .. ...................................040
Happy Ads ......................................050
Hay &amp; Grain.... .......... ...........................640
Help Wanted
_ . .. .... . .. . .. . . 110
Home Improvements................ ..............810

Homes for Sale
............................ 310
Household Goods
...... 510
Houses for Rent
........ 410
In Memoriam
. .. . . 020
Insurance
......
130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpmenl . .. ........ 660
Livestock
. 630
Lost and Found
- 060
Lots &amp; Acrlltge
.350
Miscellaneous
. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise
540
Mobile Home Repair
,
860
Mobile Homea for Renl .. ...420
Mobile Homes for Sale
320
Money to Loan.
220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
740
Musical Instruments ... _ .
..570
Personals . ................ ...
005
Pete for Sale
.. 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating........
820
Professional Services. ..
230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
160
Real Ealllle Wanted...... . .
360
Schools lnstrucllon
150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertlll•er ..
650
S!tuatlona Wanted... ....
120
Space for Rent . . .
460
Sporting Goods. . . ..
520
SUV's for Sale .
720
Trucks for Sale..... ....... . ...
715
Upholstery .. .. , .. ......... .........
...870
Van• For Sale
730
Went 0d to Buy. . . . . . .
090
Wanted lo Buy- Farm Supplies
, 620
Wanted To Do .
1SO
Wanted lo Rent
470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis
072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle
074
Yard Sale-Pt Pleasant
076

$150 Plus free pictures
lnv1te your lnends to your
home for a glamour pteture
party
ScheduhnQ
lor
Valent1ne P ctures Call 740525 4163 for no obhgabon
Information

~

www com•cs com

Dnvers COMPANY
Dedicated Roundtrlpa
In the Coallon KY arell

****************
100 WORKERS NEEDED

Assemble crafts
wood 1tems
To $480/wk
Matenals prov1ded
Free Information pkg 24Hr

Earn over
$1,200/Month
Your hours and pay are
GUAAANUEP each

week'
Work w1th the Nat1on s
lead1ng non prof 1
orgamzat1ons mclud1ng
+The American Caner

Society
+The Amencan Heart
Association

801 428 4649

An EKcellent way 10 earn
money The New Avon

Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
Atte ntton Dr1vers
R&amp;J
Trucking Is looking for
Drivers
w/1 yr
OTR
E~enence for
Reg1onal
Hauls Average pay 40 s to
mid 50s Home every
Weekend
call
Kent
(800)462 9365

We also offer the ~
workmg environment and
benefits package lo our
employees
Don t senle for the rest
when you can work With
theestl
For Immediate
Cons1derat1on please
contact our offtce at

1-888-IMC-PAYU

AVON 1 All Areas 1 To Buy OJ
Sell
Shirley Spears 304

(1 888-462 7298)

ext 1911

675 1429
BELIEVE ITI

Full Time- up to $8/hour
Part Time also available
Make calls that make a
dtfferencel
Call of behalf of the NAA
2nd Amendment R1ghts
and other Pollt1ca
Organ zahons
•Weekly pay and bonus

pan
•Paid tra1mng anC:l holidays
•Pa1d vacations f!Nery 6
months
•Top notch work
environment

Call NOW and atart a neW
career!

1-en-413-8247 Ext. 2311
Full time position
In Meigs County
Muot bo oolf·
at•rter, aervlce
oriented and able

to work well with
the public. Muot
h•v• v•lld driver's
licente and reliable transportation. Po•ltlon

offel'l all company
beneflto Including
health, d•nt•l,

vlllon, and life
lntur•nce, 401K,
p•ld vacation, and
perton•l day•
Pleate send
reaumt~

CUI llox

to

aoo

C/o PomeNy Dellr
Ientine I

POIIox7H
Pomeroy, OH
•57811

150

lli:LP WANTEIJ

Career Opportun+ty
6 F1gure mcome potent1al
strong closer Grea1 wo r ~
enwonment no travel full
benef11s' med1cal denla
401 K 5 day wor~ week Falc
resume (740)446 3599
Denlal Ass1stanl
The Me1gs County Genera
Health D1stnct IS accepting
appl cations tor a Oenta
Ass+stant
"f.he
Denta l
ASSIStant works under gen
aral superv1S1on &amp; requ1res
considerable r knowledge of
dental office practices &amp; pro
cedures &amp; dental operatory
practices &amp; procedures 1n
order to ass1st dentist 1n
lour handed de ntal treat
ment &amp; to perlorm chatrslde
BS$1stance Mlmmum quallfl
cations Include completion
of assoctale core program In
dental ass sting lechnoiOgy
proof ot mocu taMn or 1mmu
nlty to hepatllls B v1rus and 2
veers exper ence Appli cant
must submit lhree letters ol
recommendation w1th appll
cation
to
Heallh
t12
E
Commissioner
Memorial Dnve Pomeroy
Ohio 45769
Salary IS
dependent on expenence
and
quallfiC&amp;ltOns
AppltcaMns will be es::cept
eo until poSit on 1s f1lled

200&amp;

~
by

NEA Inc

SCHOOlS
CnON

HlRSALE
1900 SQuare loot 3 bedroom
2 bath house lor sale sets
on 3 acres off of State At 7
1n
Chester
Townsh p
Eastern School D1stnct 2
car anached garage 2 out
bul ldtngs Call
(740)9854321 afte r 6pm

Concealed P stol Class Jan
14 2006 $50 00 900 am
VFW Mason WV Ph
(740)843 5555

- - - - - - - -Gallipolis Career College
(Caree rs C ose To Home)
Call Today ' 740 44 6 436 7
1 800 214 0452
ww~&lt;~ ga 1 po11sca1eef o &amp;QE com
Acc1ed11eo

Membe :

Acc~dll

Dental Cl1n1c Adm mstrator
The Me1gs County General
Health District Is accepting
appl icatiOn for a Demal
Chn1c Admlntstrator Dut1es
Include planmng d1rectmg
&amp;J or coord 1nat 1ng all cilmcal
fiscal &amp; support serv1ces
Mm1mum
quahl1c8t1ons
lnclud. a BAIBS In Bus'n.ss
Admm1straho n or equ111Bient
degree 2 years expenence
1n a chn+cal settmg Applicant
must submit three letters of
recommendation w th apph·
cat1on
'fa
Health
112 E
CommiSSIOner
Memonal Dnve Pomeroy
Ohto 45769
Salary 1s
dependent on expertence Microsoft Off1ce ability and
qua l1f1ca110ns des1re to learn
and
Appltcatlons Will t&gt;e accept
Hours 8 5 M F
ed until position IS tilled
Send resume to
AecepiK&gt;n iSI
Do you want high wages
PO Bo&gt; 63
same day pay and to make
Galhpohs OH 45 63 1
your own schedule') Call
Tay lors
Staff ng
@ Kn1ckerbockers now accept
(740)446 3305
lor
an mg applicatiOns tor cooks
appomtment
Monday wa1terslwa tt resses delivery
hostsJhostesses
Thursday lOam 2pm We dnvers
are now hmng Stale Tested Apphcahons can be p eked
Nurs1ng Ass1stants LPN s &amp; up at 2407 Jackson Ave at
the Horns an d Halos
RNs EOE
Bouh que
Tuesday
Dom1no s Ptzza Now Hmng Wet;l nesday and Thursday

1995 Doublew1de 3br 2ba
w/attached
Garage
Breezeway &amp; Barn
1 56
acres Sandhill Ad $72 000

ng

Coo.mcol lor ndepl!ndent Col eges
and Schools 12748

Shoto Kan Karale Classes
be g1nn ng Monday the 16th
at Carellon Schobl
m
SyracuSe
Classes are
45631 or FAX 10 (740)446 Monday and Thursday 1rom
8014 EOE MIFIH
6 00 to 7 00 PM fNery week
For more 1nforma1on con
Phys1cal Thorap1st tact Ken ny Tolliver at 740
378 6144 or Steve Kempton
Med1 Home Health Agency 740 667 3039 ..
has an exc1tlng opportunity
W\N'Il"D
for a full 11me pari t1me or l80
per d em Phys1cal Therap1sl
I o I}()
to JOin our Med1care
Certlfled/JCAHO accred 1~ Computer Trou ble Shoot
agency 11 Cabell and and Repa1 r Expert Serv ce
Putnam Count1es
740 992 2395
We offer a compet1t1ve Smg

Sale
Or vers
Po1 nl
Pieasant
Gallipolis
&amp;
Pomeroy OCSIIOnS Apply In
Person
Or1ver Needed Monday
Fnday No Evenmgs or
Paid Benelits
Weeke nds
mclude Vaca110n SIC~ &amp;
Holiday pay Valid Drivers
L cense
required
Expenence helpful or we wil l
tra n you Apply tn person
only to Ruth A1ce Mason
County Act on GrQup lf'IC
(Pt Pleasant Senior Cen ter)
10 1 2nd Street Pt Pleasant
wv EOE M!F
•
Onvers COL A w1th 1 year
venllable Tractor Trader
e11penence
reqwted
Regional Run Great' pay
benefits bonuses home
tirilet MART IN TR'ANSPOAT
866 293 7435
Expenence.d pa1n1 &amp; body
man needed tor RestoratiOn
Shop contact HillS ClassiC
Cars (740)949 2217 7am
7pm
----~---- .

11~ CHI~~]{!\

Restdentlal
Treat ment
Faclll ly tak ng apphcai!O ns
tor youth worker Pay based
Pa1d
on
exper ence
lnsuraneil Cal belween
9 OOa m 3 OOp m Monday
Fr1day (740)379 9083

_.,::::::::=:....:.:.:...:::::::.:...:_

Fruth s ol Po1nt Pleasant 15
Now Hmng Apply at the OH 45831
Slqre
Oh1o Valley Home Health
Hmng tor EMT WV EMT B Inc h1rmg Full T1me AN and
current card holders tor FT &amp; Per Otem MSW Acc epting
PT
secur1ty
pos111ons appiiCitiOr:tS fo r LPN CNA
CH HA
PCA
PAID TRAINING
$8 50/hr wlt&gt;ene111s Call t.\ STNA
lnd•v1di.Je.ls w• lllng lo tratn for~ (304)526 5780 Competlttve Wages M1leage
and
beneltts
mcludmg
clencal pos1t1ons Musl b9 Htgn area EOE MEDV
HeeJth Insurance App ly at
AGE 55 OR OVER and meet
Jackson
P 1ke
el glb ltty
reqwrj:!:me nts Holiday Oebf? Earn extra 1480
Add1t1onal 1ram1ng pos1t10ns 1ncome w1tl'l • Avon Call GalltpOitS or 2415 Jac~so n
A'Wen ue Pomt Peasant WV
ava1lable Cal the Ser'llor Leslie
Employment
Center 740 985 3362 Or 740 645 or phone toll free 1 866 44 l
\518
1393
(866)734 2301

I

Bo nme s Pr vale Childcare
Now
has
Openmgs
Conven1ept y J~t ed by new
hghway on SRT7 Cal740

•••••••••

Cell Judlt RH&amp;e AN C
Clinical M1nager It
(7•0)441·1179 or
1.U00481 6334

••••••••••••
Wanted Cook wllh e)(pen
once n menu pla nnmg lor

(304)895 3068

3 Bedroom 2 Bath w lh
F replace m R1o Grande
area 8 acres m.l 40x60

barn S120 000

(740)709

1166

3BR attached garage 71
acre at block bwldmg new
roof s1d1ng Syracuse 740416 2786 0 740 949 1082

8 Acres Chatel Stytle Log
d
Bd /2Bath
Home
AC/FAF free gas Eastern
H1gh Sctlool by ShadeR ve
on Route 7 and Barn
$159 000 ' 304 863 3610
Attention!
Local company otlenng 'NO
pro
DOWN PAYMENT
grams tor you to buy your
home Instead of rent1ng
1OOg'&lt;. fmancmg
Less than perfect credit
accepted
Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
locators
(740)367 0000

All real ealate advertlalng
tn th1s newspaper Is
subfect to the Federal
Fair

Hou~nng

Act of 1168

which makes tt Illegal to
advertise any
preference llmttatlon or
discrimination bated on
race color rellg1on sea:
tamlhal s'atus or natlon111
or1g1n or any Intention to
make any auch
preference ltmttatlon or

dtscnmination

985 4326

Thts newspaper wm not
knowingly ICCip1
advertisements for real

At 35 Adult VIdeo &amp; Book
Store need M1dn1ghl Clerk
Full I me (304)937 4900

Sales person needed lor
1allllor1al suppl1es equ1p
ment and kitchen serv1ce
produ cts Comm1ss on .pay
w1th establ1shed roule Mu st
~1:.
0..:5---~~-­ have val d dnvers hc.Pnse
local bus1ness looking for and transportal on to c.:tl! on
customers Send resume to
Secret ary/A ecepllonlsl
Mu st have good le ephone Spa rKle Supp ~ LLC PC
8011 27 8 GB llpa IS OH
s~tlls &amp; good with the public
knowledge 111 computers &amp; 45631
compute r account ng pro
grams &amp; all olher otf 1ce Team or S ngle 011ver to
machmes Hours .aam 5pm haul A r Fre1ght must have
2yrs ex p
Monday Fnday
8 12 clean COL
1304)266 7617
Saturday
Send resume 10
Telep hOne
1nl6fv ewe r
Local Business
excellent comp uh)r &amp; com
PO Box 775
muntcai!On skills lull time
Gallipolis OH 45631
no Oenehts $10 per hour
Med1 Home Health Agency after 4 weeks t ra1n ng S8
Inc see~mg a full t1me AN per hour dunng tra1n1ng m
Patient Care Coordinator or Pomerov start 1mmedlatety
Account
Executive
for cell Mark 800 556 3583
Gall1poi1S Oh a and sur
area
Dulle s
round ng
T1red ot work mg all
mclude establishing and
the h0l1oays"
mau:11amlng open l1nes o1
T red of workmg tong, 12
commun cat+on w th area
hou r sh1hs?
phystc1ans and health care Come home an d JO+r' us at
taclht es In the delivery ot
Me ell Home Hooltb 1
Home Health serv1ces We
.10pen1ng fore Full T1me
otter a comf-'dtltlve salary
AN full benefits package
and benefits pad&lt;age tor full
ncludmg 40 11&gt;:; Sign on
11me EOE ~ lease send
Bonua $2 500
resume to Jud1e Reese
.IQpemng tor a ~art T1me
Cl tn+cal
Manager
352
RN Sign on Bonus
SEK:ond Avenue Gall1pohs
$1 ,500

""'"P'Ipoo·l

HOMES

I~ORI

Do yo u need a Care G1ver
On Bonus llexlbllJty rn Compamon"
I Have
scheduling
rocallzed or References
Ca I Beverly
expandecJ serv1ce area (304)675 1084
optiOns mdeage re1mburse
ment 401K Program and Georges Portable Sawm II
Home Health Care of SE lull benefit package
don 1 haul your l ogs to the
Ohto IS currenlly h1rmg
M111 JUSt call 304 675 1957
Home
Health
A1des
aoo 939 6865
Competitive wages
Call
Look ng to take care of or
740 662 1222
Call V1c~1 Chadwick AN for set w1th the elderly or hand
·_ _ __:______
datal s
cap Monday Fr1day Call
lmmed ate part t1me open - - - - - - - - , - - {7 40)446 6743
lng for asslste~ liVI ng care
POSTAL JOBS
gtver send resume w/refer $15 94 S22 56/hr now htr .W1 I
do
babysttlmg
ences &amp; salary requ~re
F
d
1ng or application an 1ree Flatwoods Ad area m
ments to Dally Sentinel PO governemenl fOb 1nfo ca ll Pomeroy M Fr' (days) 6am
Box 729 7 Pomeroy Oh Amer~can Assoc of Labor 1 5pm cell 740-41&amp;-3484
45769
913 599-8220 24/hrs emp
Will take care of 'woman 1n
IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE
serv
my home tor more 1nforma
Secretary/ReceptiOn st
Must have profess onal Pt Pleasant Moose Loelge ton cAl (7 40)388 81 93
appearance ana phone need1ng bartenders Ap ply n
sk11ts good w1lt1 public ol1tce at Lodge only no
knowledge 1n computers phone calls please

***************

41 c: Per All Mllee
Apx 2350 miles weeky
Home Weekly
COL AI 6 mps OTA e~e:p
req
Call Today!
866-713-2778
www.cntmalona.com

.
1

Office Clerk needed for fast
pace off1ce lnd1111dual must
be a self starter dependable
and energetiC sk1lled m
Mtcrosott Word and E11cel
ReqUirements supenor oral
and wntten commun1cat1on
sk1lls and knowledge of gen
eral ofl1ce/bus ness proce
dures high school dlploma
and two {2) years expef
ence m ot11ce and computer
skills bookkeep1ng proce
dures a plus
Send resume by January
20 2006 10 FACTS 45
Ollll'e Streel Galllpol s Ohto

mBUY

t

Found
Black ana White
cockerspan1el
Approximately 6 m1tes from
Aacme oh Torna~o Road
Call 740 992 7582

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publishing reaervea the right to edH reJect Of' cancel any ad at any time. Errors mual be repof'\ecl on lhe tlrtl day ot
T'lbune-Sentlhei·Reglater wlll be raaponalble for no more than the coat of thaapeca occupied bV the errof and only the first maert1on We ahall not
any IOM or expense thlt raeult. from the publication or omlattOn of an edll'artltement Correction will be made In the lira\ available edlt1on • Bo•
alwav.a confidential • Currant rata card appliH • All real aatata ad~ter1iaementa are subject lo II'MI Fl!tderal Fair Houalng Act of 1968 • Thta
accepts only help
ada mHt lng EOE atandarda We w11l not
I accept any advertla.ng In violation of \he law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Foster Parents Needed
Homes needed 1n Jac~son
V nlon
Me1gs
Athens
Washmgton counties lor
youths 0-1 B Oasis prov 1des
the tra1n1ng Ypu Will rece1ve
dally reimbursement of $33$48 a day paid respl!e and
support for the youlh placed
In your home Tra mmg
begms January 28 Albany
can OaSIS Foster Care lor
more 1nlormar1on Toll free 1

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(. ~
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

estal~

wtnel'\ ta In

YlolattOn. of the law Our

•NOTICE•
HlO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tha
ou 00 bus1ness With pea
le you ~&lt;now a'10 NOT 1
ef'la money tnrough tn

readers are hereby
informed that all
dwellmgs advertised In
th11 newapaper are
on an ~ual

avatlab~

opportunity baMs

Country sell ng 1n Ga!l1a
County 3 beorooms 2
bath::. t1reotace ~$85 000
!7401709 1166

arrow Sma rt Con1ac
nanc1al

1nst1tu! on
of Consume
tfa1 rs BEFOFIE you rel1
ance yol'Jr horne o
bta n a loan BEWA~
f requests tor any targ
dva nce payments o
ees or lr'1 Surance Cal
he Off1 ce ol Consume

House 4 Sale 2000 sq foot
40r w'20a At1acned 2oear
Ga rage
Great
Neighborhood 858 Pootar
He1ghts Ad
Just off At2
nea(
Roosevelt
Elem
(304)675 443 6
School
after Spm

tl ce

78 0003 to lea rn I I
ortgage

enaer

Newly remodelecl 3 ot 4
bedrooms centra l a1r lui
casement hardwood floors
detached Qarage large cov
ered pat to lencect back
yard close to schools Pomt
Pleasan'
$69 500
7407091382

MOIJIL£ l:lo•u:,;
IUR S't.E
TURNEO OOWN ON
SECURITY 1551?

SOCIA~

No Fee (Jnless We W n1
1 888 582 3345

I.CI \I I "d \II

HO\It~

treatment fac ~~~ Pay based
on
elloenence
Pa1d Foreclo sure
only
Insurance Call between aet=l
9am 3om Monday F• day $14 900 For I Slings Cl!l!
aoo 39 t 5228 e.:t F254
1740 1379 9{)83

t...--.;,HIIli iRoiiSi Al..i iEioo-,.1

10 used names unaer
$3 000 00 Must Go Call
Eta1ne 740 385 0698
161180 homes st a tin~ a1
$25995 00 Includes v ny
s1d1nQ srungle oo Ca
•AU;S 7 40 385 2434
1994 14,.. 70 C A new car
pet 1ke new con01t+on up
on ""hee s elldy to mo~
$12 000 Q BO

9686

1740)388

�wviw.mydallysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel
Hel p Wa~ted

Get Your "msgt

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Wednesday, January 11 , 2006

A

Wednesday, January 11, 2006
ALLEY OOP

Help Wanled

www.mydailysentinel .com

Wllh AClt1y Seutiual
&gt;I

--

......

..

PROFESSIONAL

...
•

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

SALES CONSULTANT
35 year reputation of honesty.

irncnllloniol

BARN
REMOVAL

before and after the sal e. With the h ottest
products on the market and as !he fastest
growi n g dealership in o ur region, we're add-

ics6:30 pm
$3/ non-members
Center

If you are a professional l o&lt;;&gt;king 10 start

new career or maybe you don ' t feel you ' re

• T)1e best management
re.nm in the country to
assist you in sales. ·

paid or treated as well as you sh o uld be and
i sn '1 working for you . give Brad Sang a call
today

l-740-446-9800. You may

also apply

full or part time per-

M o nday-Friday

lot

4:30pm

STYtf. ..
'

$2/PVH employees _&amp; members·
'"'

$- LINC~ l ~

PVH Wellness Center
(304) 675-7222

i

Card of Thanks

MOBil£

Hows

APARTMENTS

;

2 138

r ,_

i.

ceiling, $35,000. (740)709 - total electriC, Central air,

$755 .00 per month , plus 2 BA Apartment for rent ori
$750 .00 secur1 ty ~epos11. MI.
Vernon.. Ave. Pt.
1997 Fleetwo'oct 2br, 1ba. Telephone 740-992-5421.
Pleasant. $350/month plus
large kitchen ,. central air,
Rent
in $350/deposit Call (304) 773$12 ,0.00.
(740)256-6124 House
for
Henderson
.
No Pets 6061 or j304)593-1858
evening~ .
(304)675-6463
WI D h00k
2bed
2006 -16x70 3 8 r/2 bth
room apt
up,
bedrooms · in water. sewer. trash pd .
House
.
3
VinyVShingfe $229/mo. Call
400/month
Pomeroy.
$.325.00 per $
(740)385-9948.
Month plus deposi1. 740- 1bedroom apt w/refrig &amp;
stove. water. sewer, trash
'91 Skyline 161C80 3 Br/2 Bth 4 16-4906.
pd
(7401367-7}46$145/mo. Call (740)385 767 1.
.
3
1166. '

. ~;~~~:~~~;~~;~~~ d~;a;o: ~~1367-7015·

'96 Fleetwood 3 BA/2 Bth
$169/mo. Includes Delivery. pay utilities: References and
Call (740)385-9948 . ·
m1n. 1 yr. lease required. Call
{740)446·36'44 for more info.
Small 2 Bedroom, no pets ,
AND BlJJJ ,[)JNGS
WID hookup .
$350.00
For Rent 3 Buildings fo r month
SJOO .OO C!eposi t
Business Use. Located in 304-773-9192 .
Pomeroy
Also. 2 Upstairs Stop renting Buy 7 bedroom
Unfurn1shed
Apts.
in foreclosure $18.000. For listPomeroy tor Rent. Call 740- mgs 800-391-5228 ext .
58£-7122.
1709.

r
r

17401446·

8USI~

Lars&amp;
ACREAGE

;;:::=::;:;::===:, .
H OUSF.S
Ji"OR RE:rt.'T

2 or 3 Bedroom t;iouse 1n
.Pomeroy, No Pets. 740992 -5858 . .
·- - - - -- -- -·
4br
1n
Syracuse,'
$600/month &amp; Deposit.
Water/Sewer 1ncluded . No
Pets (304)675·5332

$375 depoSit.
3 Bedroom Dciublewide. 2
Bath. Close to Gallia Cou'nty
School~ . $500/mo., $500
deposit.
No Pets. (740)367•7025
· '
3 Oedroom mobile home in
the Shade area Wate r,
sewer, trash Included; $325
a month plus depOsit. No
pets allowed (740)385 401 9

sell.

r

"STOVE , REF.,
"DISHWASHER
'GARBAGE DISPOSAL
'WIND BLINDS
:CEILING FANS
'WATER, SEWAGE, &amp;
'TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)B82·301 7
Equol -.....gOppo&lt;t.rn,.-

New Haven, 1 bedrQom
unfurnished apartment, no
pets. dep"osi t &amp; previous
rental references. (740)9920165
Nice one BR unfurnished
apartmer.tt. Range &amp; refrig.
provided. Water &amp; garbage
Pai d. Deposit required. Call
{740)446-4345 after 6pm .
One bedroom. nicely fur·
nished apartment, quiet
area, suitable tor 1 adult, privale driveway With carport.
new washer and dryer.
(740)446-4782.
•

New and Used Furnaces.
lnstal l~lion
available.
(740, 441_2667 _
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
. Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tue sday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday. Bam-4 :30pm. Closed
ThUrsday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. {140)446-7300

2000 Dodge Neon auto. air,
$2.500 080
2002 D.odge Neon auto, air,
$3.600 080
.
95 Dodge Grt:lnde Caravan
auto, air, · St ,000 OBO.
(740)256·1233.

I

j

; : k, b r i : : : pipes
windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winte rs. Rio Grande, OH

i

1 1 74 0 2 4 5 5 1 2 1

~Czar:;;;;;;·:;;:;;~·:-;.:..:;·---,
PETs

· FOR SALE

97 Beech Street

1980 GMC Dump

Middleport, OH

Is)

TRUCKS
FOR SAJ.E

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635

BARNEY
WHAT'RE WE
HAVIN' ,
AUNT
LOWEEZY ?

lJ
I
~

TOO

BOILED

LATE !!

T~IPE

AN'
BAKED
TURNIPS II

i!

Phone

~

C:::::i-.....l.....::::...J;;;rs;.:::=::::::.:::::;j i

I · It

THE BORN LOSER

:~OW RKI--\ 00 'iOU Tl-\it'.K ·"&lt;&lt;

1-\10-'S SO IZ\c.t\ ... "&lt;&lt;

V(E:.['&gt;LE.n:.::&gt;ITR IS '?

Janet Jeffers
33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

"lloliddleport's only
Self-Storage"

p-fl\' (

I

I

C.I-\OUoStE.ROL c,ocs UP "l
JUS\ &amp;.11\11; II'&lt;,T~(
W\( WOr-\ Will\
1-\ I tv\ I

Are you in the market
onewcor

'

SUVs

S

- ~ t999 Ford Explorer exc.

4x4
FOR SAJ,..E

{740)388-8743

red and tan exterior. tan
leather interior, asking
AKC Labrador Retriever with $19,500 . Call 441 -1417 after
field and waterfowl hunt1119 5 m or leave messa e.
bloodlines that are calm and
family oriented. (740)418-- .
VANS
8388.
FOR SALE

" as Is- where Is", with .
no
expressed
or
Implied
warranty
given. ·
For further lnformatlon, or for an appointment lo inspect collat·
eral, ·prior to sale date
contact Cyndle, Stacy
or Randy at 992-2136 .
(1) 11 , 12. 13 • .

I

·

I

ON THIS PAGE FOR

AS LOW
. AS.

an

PER MONTH!

ADVERTISE

YOUR

BUSINESS'
IN THE
CLASSIFIED$

Pas~

·

AstroGraph
. otbur 'lllrthdol,y :
LET ME ,O,SK YOU
THIS, TEDDY· DID
'(QU DO ALL THE

IMPORTS

ASSIG·NED
11-EADINE. &gt;

Athens

SO You· HAV E.

Thursday, Jan . 12. 2006

NOT\11N6 TO

By Bernice Bede Oaol
You'll have a rn'!rvalous asset going for
you m the year ahead, wh1 ch is your ability to make friend s with people lrom all
walks ot•lite. These rela tionships will aid
you greatly both personally and proles,
sionally.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan .· 19) - Th ere
usually is strength in 11n1on .ind U)iS r"flay
be the case lor you today. The likelihood of
a~Vanci ng your personal mterests will Oa
doubled through reami nQ up with tn e n9h t

F E AR IF WE

'DO HA.\/E
A

POP

QUIL .

CHEVROLET
C A
M
A
R 0
2G1FP.22SOP2131785
1999 FORO MUSTANG
1FAFP4046XF200443
The Farmers Bank and
Savings , Corilpany,
Pomeroy,
Ohio, ,
reserves the rlght to
bid at this sale, and tQ
withdraw the above
collateral prior to sale.
Further, The Fanners
Bank and Savings

all bids submitted.
The above described
collateral wl. ll be sold

Pass

Pass

_Here is another .deal played at Bridge
Base Online (www.bridgebase.co m).
What is your critique of the auction? Hqw
should the card-play proc eed in the ambitious live-diamond contract?
Through North's one-heart response, the
auction is above reproach . East's onespade ov"ercal! 'is in the ..modern style:
when you have 13 ca rds, do somethinQ!
South's three diamonds. though, is hor·
ret~dou s, greatly overstat1 ng me quality of
th.e diamOnd suit. It is much better to rebid
two clubs, showing the suit with 100 honors (lour of -the lop hve ca rQs ).
West stiould not pass over three dia _.
· monds .. Knowin~ of a nme-card fjt. he
should raise to t1'1ree spades. bidd1ng to
!he nine-lrlck level. Yes, that might push
the opponents into a making game that
they were about to m1ss. But one cannot
worry about that possibility : on'e must
fight for what one assumes IS a partscore
deal.
North should bid, three no-trump now. He
should anticipate a spade lead, six dia·
mond winners and a couple mdre in the
wash since South promised extra val ~ es ·
with his JUmp-rebid. But when Norlh
raised to lour di8.monds, I guess South
·assumed North had his values outs1de
spades.
'South ruffed fhe Second spade and mysteriously. led his heart seven towE!rd !he
dummy. West duckmg . Declarer drew two·
rounds of trumps and now had to lose
one trick in each swt for two down . He
would have done better to drive out the
heart ace . Then he could have discarded
his .club 10 on dummy's heart queen and
escaped lor one down .

•

' 11993

t.,~--ooiFOoiiiRiiiiAiiiLEiiio_....

Pass
Pass
Pass

F..asl
P3ss

Puzzle

Crossword

46 Woodland
dolly
48 Take the
wheel
49 Wlohe&amp; for
52 Shtrtreature
53 Kind of
knight
54 Order

12 Willingly
13 Furry.
swimmers
of'business
14 Pluck
55 Country
15 Deliver
mualc's
a speech
- Tucker
16 VItality
56 HardiV
17 Pith helmet
wordy
18 Briefcase
item
DOWN
19 Just
18 Shore up
scraped by
Kind
20 Zen
23 Singer
of rock8t
question
V lkkl 2 Saloon sign 21 Kelt ot R&amp;B
25 Habitual
(2 wd s .).
22 Mysterious
26 Orowseoff 3 Lyrical
24 Paclno
·
29 A little crazy 4 Patrick 's
and Unser
32 Had some
dOmain
26 Robin
food
5 Almostbeaks
33 Fury
grads
27 Popular
34 Step on
6 .Cheers
cook_io .
the gas
· for toreros
28 -Begin
35 Doze off
7 More recent
a hand ,
36 Form
8 Insect killer 30 Hall-moon
·droplets
9 Pipe fitting
tide
38 Hurty
to Blended
31 Fabric
40 One and
whiskey
meas .
only
11 Cheer on
37 Help pay
41 Veggle·trav 12 Feels (hyph.) 39 Pitcher
must
16 Took aim
41 Check lor
42 Hllo guitars
(2 wds .)
prints

43 Drying
ovens
44 Skirt the
Issue

45 lnoculante
47 Paquin
of " The
Piano ''
48 Venetian
magistrate
49 Up to

this t ime
50 Big Band 51 Son

of Prince
Valiant

52 Tabby or
calico

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Getebnty Qphe r Cl"')p!ograms 11re oealed hom qUDta~oo~ oy la'mc\.s ooc-ple pas1 ar'(l P'~n!
,
Ea-ch lettef •r.lh!l oohet Slarw;ls loi anothe-r

Toda)i'S c;lue . N equals S

" D Z N A Z E VS D . V N
XFZXO ;

ALWLEEL_T

KELWVNNLED

EZSVD
-

OSD

s

X. SGXZJZV

G LA Z ;

XSNF

s

y N

A LV S 0

PNZ

y N

YA ."

JDLGN

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "11 IS

not death that a man shoul d fear he should

, fear never{)eginmng to live.n- Marcus Aurehus

~:~t~~!g;~~~r~~~~~n~ ~~~~~~~~~ f~:~'.!:~~: .

r

,.
••
••
No rth

Pass

More bidding
that is not good

tl

(740) 992-5232
SxlO, lOxlO,
10xl5, 10x20,
10x30

•West

Opening lead: • Q

SUPPER'·S ALMOST
READ'Y, DON'T SPOil..
YORE
APPETITE

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, January 14,
2006, at 10:00 a.m., a
public sale will be held
at 211 W. Second St.,
Pomeroy,
OH. The
F
B
k
d
armers
an
an
Savings Company Is
selling for cash ' in

2001 Ford Expedition, Eddie
AKC 8
T
·
·
oslon .erner pups, 7 Bauer Edition, full y loaded,
weeks . old, first shots &amp; moonrool , run!'ling bpards, ·Company reserves the
wormed
$250
eac h. 67,500 miles, great shape, right to. reject any or

•

3t
5.

· Public Notice

r:L

992-2155

It

• Complete
· Remodeling

Rd. Racine, OH
.
4577t

pies, parti-colored coats.
First shots, , and wormed ,
healthy,
vet
checkeO .
(740 )446 _1000

r

' South

4341 0 Dutchtown

r«J

The Daily Sentinel

• Garages

North

Vul nerable: Neither

714

· Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

K 7

Dealer :

29670 Bashan ·Road

• New Homes

(By Sealed Bid)

Sutton Township

FOR SALE

,.

• Q J.
... 9 .

8 6 4

+K i 08764
... A K Q 10

Hill 's Self
Storage

ROBERT
BISSEll
CINSTRICDDN

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE

,

nd 1 "•d 3 000
co ., oa""' 11 ,
mites
"~--ooitiiiiiiiitiiii.;,'_ ... $6500. 304 -675·7059 or
'
2 male iKC Pekingese pup· 304-675-5034 from Bam -

1

J 75 3

Al0932

•

Soulh

J

Appliance
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
AKC Miniature Dachshund , 1993 Plymouth Voyager SE
Townhouse
apartmen ts.
Warehouse
1 male, 1 lerflale. 5 weeks Van. Goqd Shape , runs
and/or small houses FOR
old_ Call ~740) 446- 2751 .
RENT. Call (740)441 -1111
good.
28mpg,.. Asking ·
$1700. Call 441-1417 after
for appliCation &amp;, information. iri Henderson ,. WV. Preowned Applicanes starting AK C Miniature Schnau2ers 5pm or leave message
Grac1ous hv1ng : 1 and 2 bed· at $75 &amp; up all under Paren ts under 15 tb s, 1
room apartments at Village Warranty.
als'o
have male, 1 lemale. Borh 98 Chevy Astra Conversion
Manor
and
Riverside Household
Misc. Items 1213105. Call (740)388 - van, low miles. with electric - - - - - - - - Apartments in Middleport. starting at .99rot &amp; up 0435.
wheelchair ramp . $6,000
Public Notice
From $295-$444 . Call 74o- (304)675-7999
(740)742·8612 .
puppies.
1
white
Chihuahua
992-5064. Equal !-lousing
PUBLIC NOTICE
MmoRCVCLEN
New Kenmore Heavy- Outy male, 2 black .lemales. Vet
Opportunitie!&gt;.
NOTICE: Is hereby
4 WHEE.l.E:Rs
Super Capacity Dryer, $200. c hec~ed , first shots. Call .
given
that
on
In town 1BR, relerehces , W~ir l pool Washer, . $80_ (7 401245·5984
Satui-day, January 14,
deposl), no pets. (740)446- White Westing hoUse Natural
Full blooded Pitt Bull pup ~ 200~ Suz~kj 4WD Vinson 2006, at 10:00 a.m ., -a
0139.
Gas Stove. $50. (740)245pies for sale $100. 5 ma'les. 500 ATV With 34 mites. public sale will be held
5946 after 5pm.
CARMICHAEL at 211 W . Second . St.,
1
female call (304)593·3423 $4900.
Middleport 1 and 2 Bedroom
EQUIPMENT.
.(7 40)446. lu~ni~hed Apts . No Pets, Thompsons Appliance . 8.
Pomer9y, OH. The
2412
deposit,· and previous rental Repair-675·7388. For sale, Gold Relrlever AKC pups.
Farmers Bank and·
relerences. 740-992·0165. re-conditioned au tomat ic 1st shots &amp; Wormed. Ready
Savings Company is
Amn PAJUS &amp;
selling for cash In
washers &amp; dryers, refrigera- to Go (740)256·2764 or
A~RIE'&gt;
Modern 1 bedroom apt. torS, gas and ·electric (740)44 1-5190
hand
or
c itrtlflod
(740)446·0390.
check
the
following
ranges. air conditioners. and
TRANSMISToy Poodles. can be CKC
collateral :
•
wringer washers. Will do A
$ 300 _ C 1
)
1
1740 446
1996 FORD CONTOUR
repa1rs on major brands in , :~2 .
a
•
shop or at your home ,
·
3FALP6532TM141383
I U \ \..., f'( ~~ ~ I\ I If 1\
The Fermitrs Bank and
Used Furniture &amp; Appliance
Savings
·Company,
Store, t 30 Bulevllle Pike: ~10
A
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
Gallipolls,OH
(740)446n)R~~E
reserves the right to
4782 . Hrs. 1"1·3, M-S . Stop , .__ _ _ _ _ _ _...
bid at th is oale, and to
by and cnecl!: us out.
BASEMENT
withdraw lhe above
$500! Police tmpounCisl
WATERPROOFING
collateral prlor ·to sale.
Wa sher $95: drye r $95; Bars from SSOO. For liStings
Unconditional l1fet1me guar- Further, The Farmers
refngerator $95; electric 800-391-5227 ext 3901
antee. Local references lur- Bank
and· Savings
range $95 ; chest freezer
$125 : new gas dryer $200: ,'98 2Dr. Black E11.plorer nished. Establishecl 1975. Company reserves the
couch $150; lull SIZe Sport 4:oe4. Pwr_ everything. Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446· right to reJect any or
blda submitted .
waterbed $125: hutch with 2 rear vent. 94k mi. $5800. 0870 , Rogers Basem9nt
The above described
end " stands $125; wood 709-1276eve. 446·11 13day. Waterproo fing
.
bur11lng stove $200; decor8.1collateral will be aold
ed Christmas tree $75 24" , 1991 red Mercury Topaz GS.
" as Is - Where Is", with
no
expreasa'd
or
electric range $125. Come Low mileage. e~~:cellent con·
chec~ out our"nfiw location. dillon .
$1 ,650 .(740 )367·
Hnpllad
warranty
1216 Eastern Ave , Skaggs 0889. see at6586 SA 554 .
giVen.
Appliances. (740) 446-7398
For further 111forma1995 Ford XLT 4X4 S4 .595:
tion, or for an appoint1992 Explorer 4._4 79k
ment to Inspect c ollat$2,696 : 1997 Blazer 4x4
eral, prior to sale dat~
$4,79,5: 1996 S-10 LS auto
contact Cyndle, Stacy
57k
$3 .995. Other !rucks.
Pa intbatls • Zap toUrnament
ot Randy at 992-2136.
brand, 2000 m box lor cars and vans in stock.Cook
(1) 11 , 12. 13.
Motors (7 4~ ) 446 -0 103
$25.00 Call 4"41 -1417

ADVERTISE YOUR·
BUSINESS.

$26.00

WV#O

For Sale

AS

3 2

•

Stop &amp; Compare

Truck (S o ld

•

•

6

.. 8

J40-992-1671

I

Easl

TOO,

(740) 992-0496

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

01 green Ford FI.SOXLT 4dr,
auto, 5.4L, VB, bedcover,
6CD player, sunroof, good
~w,·n
A:'veaccept- (Limited to Heaters in stocK } conditiOn , 71,000 miles,
r
·~ 'ower,·,
,,
ing applications for waiting ·
18/2 1mpg, ,$ 13,000 OBO.
Paint Plqs Hardware
list for HucJ-suOsized . .1· Or,
~
(304)288-3335.
675 084
apa,rlment. ca ll 675-6679
EHO
~lJJJJJING
1985 Chevy 1-lon dump

~-~~

RIGffi,

Licensed Home Builder

Minimum bid.
2001 Dodge Ram Tru e~ fully . $2500 .00. Bids must
loaded , 60.000
miles.
be received by
$14,000
2003 Chevy
Feb. 1, 2006.
Caviler $7 ,000.00. Call 740·
985·4291.
.
Mail To:

Tarel
Tow"nhouse
Apartments, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms. CIA. 1 1/2
Vent Free 3-Piaque
Bath , Adult Pool &amp; Baby Propane Gas Healer. Man
Pool, Palio~ Start $395/Mo. Cpntrol (Was $143 .95) Now
No Pats, Lease Plus $122.36 Save 15% on all
Security Deposit Required,
olher Gas And ElectriC
(740)367·7086.
Heaters

t

CAN'T PO IT---IT

.FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• New Homes • Additions
·• Remodeling

-

...THE

I

1999 Olds 88 LS. Well main·
JET
talned,
leather
seats,
AERATION' MOTORS
loaded, H27k, Miche lin tires.
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. can Ron Evans, 1- $4,200 080 . .(740)245800-537-9528.
5934.

ll:t

· MONTY

hunter

Antiques, 1124 East Main green, factory spoiler, sunroo f, sony
cd 'player
992 -2526 . Russ Moore. w/remote,4door,a/c,p/w,pls.
owner.
· cru1se,
autqmatic,
MlscELtANEous looks/runs good. Driven
A..t.....
daily to athens. 145k miles.
LYJ.r..KCHANDISE
$2000 OBO. Cell 740-416·
3949 leave message.
Gas heater, ext. ladders,
metal post, metal wardrobe, .1998
Pontiac
Flrebird
TV antenna. cherry gun cab- Coupe. T-Bar roof, 5-speed
inel, black plastic drain , 1i1e, man'ual, sharp, low mileage,
various
bed
clothes. only
$6 .890
phone
(740)446-6602.
(304)675-3275

L.--H•(oiJUSEiii.liil'*li-·Jl-.,JI.

Wanted land in Meig s Coun·
ty to Lease for hunting Call
6:00PM to 7:30PM and ask
· lor Eric or leave message
14x70,
,280.
2Ba,
304-372-6745.
stove/refrigerator.
C/A.
propane heat , very n1ce .
$375fmonth, deposit. reference s. no pets. (740)3889686
Need to sell your home?
Late on payments , divorce. 2 bedrQom mobile home ,
job transfer or a death? -1 Center;ary. no pets. refer;
can buy yOur hOme. All cash ence, $375 month plus
and qu1ck closing. 740-416· deposit (740)44.6-7275.
3130.
2 Bedroom. 2 Bath , Rio
Ul \I \I~
Grande Area . S3751mo.,

or

... 642

,...ll®dn......

Owner

QJ93 .2
A 5

WeRt
.. Q J , .
• A 10 5

Chuck Wolfe

(!)

Amu;

on SA 124 E. 'pomeroy, 740·

4
rooms
and
bath,
stove/refr igerator, l)tilities Commercial ,Property, 249
paid. $425/month , no pets, Upper River ~oad , Available
46 OliVe St. (-740)446·39 45. 2·:1 -06 . .(740)4.46·6865 or
(740)379-2923
Beautiful 2-story townhouse ::----::-::--c::--overlooking Gallipolis City Downtown Office S~~ce- 5
park . Kitchen, D.A , L..A. , room suite $650/mo: 1 room
study, 3BR, 2 baths, laundry office- $225/mo. ; -2 room
area. References required. suite $250/mo: Security
security deposit, no pe ts., deposit required_ You PP.Y
$900 mo. Call (740)446- utilities. All spaces very nice.
2325 or (74d)446 -4425. 1 • Elevator: Call (740)446-3644
10r app0.1n1men t·
BEAUTIFUL
APART~ MORD.. E HOMt:&lt;;
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
FOR .Rllir
PRICES AT JACKSON
10
14x70 moOile home. $425 ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Gooos
rent, $425 deposit Call Driv,e from $344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
(740)446- 4060 or (740)367Equal
740 _446 _2568 _
7762.
Housing Opportunity.

Trailer lot for rent behind
Krodel Park (304)675-3312

Cr 10

TOWNHOUSEJAPTS
NOW LEASING!
SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
80TH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABI,.E
·ALL. ELECTRIC
'CEN.TRAL AC &amp; HEAJ

·

.
"'
. Mobile hpme spaces m
thL'ir appreciation 10
Country Mobile Home Park
the memhers of.tht'
(740)385-4019.
,
U· d
3 Bedroom newly remod- . ~~;;..":'"--"':""':"...- ,
Asoun.. IJ ife
'
.
eled House. $'t00.00. Total
tu'ARTJ\tFNrS
1
n-.--... ..... ·
. C/
A1et Iw d fSt
wrc I
electric in Pomeroy with
FOR~~
for their .\·upport
Priva1e · Parking .. 740-949 ·
during rhi.\ dijfint!i
2303 or 740-591-3920.
1 and 2 bedroom apart· time, with special
3 Bedrooms 1 &amp;'1 /2 baths, menls. furnished and unfurfull basement , garage, nished. security deposit
rlwnh·for (h e hll'e/,\" Central Heat and central required . no pets. 740-992 dinner to Bi{{
Air. all appliances, SS50 OO "22 18.
Wir~dJre mt et: Roy
a month and Deposit In
tbr Apartment for Rent in
l.enkim, Kimherl_r
Syracuse. 740-992-0167.
Pomt Ple.asan1.
Utilities
Jenkin.~. Rochellt~
Attention!
paid, $350/mpnlh
plus
Local company' oflenng "NO d epos1t· (740)446 -2200
Ham~n. Dit:k &amp; Berry
DOWN PAYM.ENT" proAsh. Jean Stout.
grams for you to· buy your 1br-Balcony, all Utilities .
Reginn &amp; Brwm .
home iristead ot renting.
ve ry quite, depositlrefarHpmiitrm. /) 0111 ; ,\ &amp;
· 100~''0 financing
·ences a must , Free Satellite
Kathy Moore. Mary
' Less than perfect credit · TV, $425/month '304)675accepted
6676
Li.\"/e, Ruth Crouch ,
; Paymerlt co uld be the - - - - - - - - Mark &amp; \iickie
same as rent:
2 Bedroom Apanment avaii,M
1 ~ 1
Mortgage
Locators. aOie in Syracuse. $200.00
orrow Oil(. f f"f:'l ' 1
deposit $350.00 per month
(7 40)367 -0000
Wilson
ren l. Rent includes water,
Beautiful 3 bedroom house sewer, trash. . No pets.
In country, taundryroom, Sufficient income needed to
large livingroom , appliances ~ualify. 740-37,8-611 1.
included.
MOBILE HOMES (614)595-7773 or$400/mo.
1-800· 2 bedroom apa rtment Meigs
~
FORSALE
798-4686.
County, very ni'ce, clean ,
$425 per month plus
·1996 Skyline 2BK64, .3BR, For Rent Avai lable Jan . 30. deposit, -no pets, references
2BA, fireplace, cathedral 3 bedroom fuJnished house, requited , (740)992-5174

.-

(

I FlO .
I.
Aiverin~ ~94 For:u:HSO~

ANTIQUES

::

m1les !rom Po1n1Pleasant
$400/month plus deposit
{304)675-6233 or (304}593-

280, 1Ba, in country,
stove/relrigerator, propane
heat , pay own i,itlilties,
$375/month, deposit, references. no pets. (740)3889686

T" efamily l~{
An:hi"e £. Lee
ll"ishes to e.1.pri!Ss

_.~I .RCURY'

Equal Opportunity 'Employer

I'r
Ii
eo ~~~r I,.: 2ba~::::mp. '"~-·N·E·W·:·L·:·~·
V·I·E·W-·
;:;;:=====:;~ . ___tiiiiitiitiiii,;,;,-r~
!-

...

.
t

~Qu~f.~4 :

NOMA
WHAT

Mondays &amp; Wednesdays

$3/ non-members

SERVICES

WIC111111m1

in p erson . at 195 Upper Ri ver RD ••
Gallipo li s, Ohio

t ime personal se&lt;:retnrv.

AID FIUIICW

Ol-ll-06

.. K 6 5

PJ.IU111 ·
·IM!Ielllfl.lllll
PhiAl: 740-143-52114
. IIIW ...len Dill
Fix: 148-143-1214 .
,._ltiYIIBiltVP
E-mail
~

if you ' re !ired of working for- so meone -who

including a full or

North

· IISIRIIICE

lozer laelllll

a·

M.\NAGEMENT•••

SALES SUPPORT...
• Superior sales '"1'1'"'"·

NOW AVAILABLE!
Step Aerobics with
Weight Training ·

market penetration and 10 h elp maintain o ur
extremel y loyal c u stomer base.

ROCKY HUPP

140-992-0153

ing sales professioQals lo help expand o ur

• Two week initial &amp;
orie ntat ion cl:1s~!i wit h
~;ontinued ongoing
training.

$2/PVH employees &amp; members .

standing

11 French

integrity and ou!Siandlng cu smmer service-

Mondays &amp; Wednesdays

1 Cables

6 Of longer

At Jo hn Sang Ford-Lincoln-Mercury we've
establi shed a

Wellness

NEA

BRIDGE

BULLEnN

PVH

The Daily Sentinel • Page, BS

4\11. .( -

-c

c..

"" OAI\1 CJ~ 1)
f)
!h.
WOlD
PUUIII \J~ ~"lj ~'~ LJ'f'iJ . 'AMI
- - - -·- - 14hoo ly CLAY l . POUAN - - ' - - - - -

0 four
a&amp;Orror~oe· 'letttrs of
Kromb ltd wo rd1

lht

be -

lo w 10 form f\7\11 wordl.

I
I

ENHUU1

I I I' I I
R/111 0

, group.

SfPTIC TANK PIJMP/NC $95.00
PORTABlE TOilET RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY
591·8757
'1"'- Cattle $7.75
I·Econo Beef $6.85
Corn $6.25/Bag
!·Cracked Corn $7.25/Bag
1• 11'"'· Hog Mix $8.75/Bag
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

PEANUTS ·

NO. SIR .. I DIDN'T HELP
141M .. I DIDN'T KNOW SOME
OF T~E ANSWERS MlfSELF ..

YE5, SIR .. 14E 60T A
PERFECT SCORE ... NO,
DIDN'T CHEAT..

NO. SIR,WE'RE NOT MAK.IN6
FUN OF YOUR SC1400L ..

1- 1

SUNSHINE CLUB
11--/IS T£(/-mOGY STVF F IS NOT
~SS A!Nl .. rr'S

Shade River AG Service,Inc
35537

St Rt

7 N .'

Pomeroy, Ohio

5TUPID

45769

Advertise
-in this
space for $1 04
per month.
Snoctgrass' Upholstery
Racine, OH

740-949-2202
Window Treatment s
Uph o l stery

&amp;

Now Available At

BAUM LUMBER

W/\15
·RIGHT.
Ft:lP
JUST

W-P

/V'()/(It;

!'

~

OL L - - "

t/n

GARFIELD
DINNER
WIL..L.. Bf. .A
L..l'fTL..E: L..ATE

"ROA~I C'LJMM'o' ;
"fAKE511ME
TO PREPARE:.

A6UARIUS (Jan. 20-FeO. 191 ~ A finan clal Situa tion that may have had you a bit
wor•1ed cou ld take a pos1tive turn tocl aY
from out of th e blu e It'll be an area thai
has been a liabihry but now Indica tes protliable pote ntial.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Most anything you do today Will be done w1th style
and lla1r whu::h friends and assoc1ates
al 1ke wi ll find e~tremely app ea ling Your
meH1ods w1t1 be admired . remembered
and even copied.
ARIES (March 2 t ·Apnl 19 ) - Strong
hunches you get or 1nlwtive perr:ept10ns
you have today snould not b~ taken lightly
and jgnored . ThiS is esp ecially true 11 they
are of a positive nature that would set ve
you weli
TAURUS (April 20 -Mny 20) ~G et out and
m1rlgle with ne w pcoole too ay 1f al a11 possible, Persons who meet you lor the first
!!me Will be lavoroOiy im[?ressed and you'll
be able 10 cultivate a tnendsh1p or two
GEMINI {May 21-June 20) ~Be 'part1cu -.
!arty wmchlul lor unusual wRai th opportunities that cou ld cross your path today
Lady ,Luck want !'; to help and may send
them to you 1n many different d•sgwses
CANCEA !June 21-July 22) ~ Tr11ngs YC?U,
hear or rE;!ad tooay cou ld serve !o enhance
your fofth and philosophical Oehets, so pay
close anent1on What they g1ve you could
strengthen your resolve tor weeks to
come
LEO (J uly 23-Aug 22) ~ It always
behooves 'YOl! to be llcxibte and hopeful
regarding events that take place Today
thiS Will De espec1a lly tmportanr because
g1ven hall a c hance. your attons c'an work'
out as you·w,sn
VIAGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) ~ Your Judgmef1t will be eJt:ceptlonalty keen today.-so
don't be hesitant or doubtful a"bf!ul any ol
your decis1on. even 11 they are on es wh1ch
you mey have to make m haste and on the
' Un
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) ~ Becau se you
Will be strongly mo tiVated at th iS t1me.
objectives that others mtght !eel are too
tough to altempt can t:Je eas1ly achieved by
you today Mountams can be move when
stimulated
.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov . 22) - Spur-olthe·mo.me nt hapoen1ngs Ieday will be the
· OneS that prov•de you with th e molt stimuli to make life lw1 end 9/( Cit ln ~ Better
Je&amp;ve plenty o1, wom lor ad)Uitlng you r
t Cilfldu!e
SAOITTAA IUS (Nov 23-0ec. 2! ) - An
opportun ity y0!/11 lo\llnl ro tl._l advanfllilt
Ol Wh1
Ch II ~I J vt iy unul ul l ni !I.HI m1y
COrt11 lbout tt'lrough . Ol a!! PIOOII , yOu r l r'1•
lawt or 1 relative It could O:r•n g you t OrT'1 1 •
!l"ung ol valut
'

~ -~ , I ~ I I

~G,.:.',R.,.E_·r.D-rS--1~~
.

.

.

.

~

BA L 1 V E

M1•c oll ege ro:Jmmate was a
gossrp She be \1 eves t hai what
you hear ne·;er sounds hair as
1m. p011an: as ~•.h al yoc-- - - .- .•

I

1_-,1'_-'-'lr.·:-1
0 ,bvCo.....1.1p 1,n9l~l e
\r,::-TI-TI-'
.
.
_
_

rh~ c~vckl e

q .JOied
wor d\
you d e~elop Item ~l e- p No 3 below.

&amp;lt

P~!Nl N LIMSERED

'{:1

tEllER S IN SQUARES

on

the

m1U•I'IQ

1

.:\ UNIC!AMBtE f OR
~ ANSWER

SCRAM·LETS

ANSWERS t 'IO:r&lt;i

Docket . Waxen - Opine - Pal ate - TAYE a rvAP
A favorite t)umper slicker read. 'U you want the world
, 10 b eal a oalh to y our door try to TAKE a NAP·

ARLO. &amp; JANIS

SOUP TO NUTZ .

Scorpion Tractors
''Takit!l:. Th e Sting Ottt Of

liard Work!"
Mid - Si z e 4 W h eel Dri ve Tractor

with 30hp &amp; 40hp

Kubota

Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St.. Rt. 124 Chester 985·3301

w~f!'\ Do I ~T To
Do M'i ~' li"'GU: St&gt;!&lt;&gt; j'"

�.
Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.corit

Former Rams receiver Jack Snow dies
ASSOCIATED PRESS

-

Cowher:.Ste~lers lost composure against Bengals

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;;o ('1::-./TS • \ ol. :;;; . :-./o. tll!i

Tlll'I&lt;SI&gt;.\\' . .1.\!\l '. \1{\'

'""' ·"1\tlail"' '" tinl'l .c·nn l

1:! , :!0116

Council to pinpoint uses of water improvement fund

SPORTS
• Ohio State steamrolls
Boilermakers. See P¥ _p1

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
will clarify how it can properly use fund s in a water
improvement fund established years ago for capital
improvements.
The fund now has a balance of $3 12,000. Its sole
source of revenue is a $5
monthly water improvement

charge included on every
water bill issued by the publie
works , department.
Council inHiated the fee· in
2000, when issues with water
quality arose.
The fund was established
so the village ·would have
leverage funds and matching
money ·for grant and loan
programs, allowing the vii!age to more easily . afford
major capital improvements
to. the water system. Part of

the fund has been used .to
develop th,e vi llage's new
well fi eld at' Hobson, but
council members hesitated
Monday to use the fund to .
pay $25,000 in pending bill s
mcurred for site preparation
work at the Page Street site of
· a new water treatment plant.
Floyd Browne Group and
BB C&amp;M Constru ction Co.,
its subcont ractor. have submilled $25.372 in bills for
.site evaluation ·work 'at the

plan! , although Ihe vi llage
·has no means to build the
pl ant. Bids were opened on
the project Tuesday.
Payments to BBC&amp;M were
previou sly made through the
water operating fund 's engi neering lin·e, but that fund
was depleted at year 's end.
'leav ing o nl y the water
improvement fund to foot
those bills for now.
Counci I member Jean
Craig and others questioned

the criteria for spending
money · in the fund, which
were .not fully outlined when
the fund was establi shed . She
suggested that council check
the terms of the fund to see if
site preparatic&gt;n work or engineering fees are legitimate
ex penses for the furid, and
counci I took no action on the
three pending bills.
Accotding to Village

Please see ~undl, AS

HUMPHREYS NAMED MEIGS LOCAL BOARD OF EDUCATION PRESIDENT
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
' HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSEN TINEL.COM

POMEROY - Longtime
board member Norman
Humphreys was elected president, and Roger Abbott was
named vice president, of the
Meigs Local Board of
Education · for 2006 at
Tue sday's night meeting.
A swearmg m ceremony was
also held
for Scott
Walton
who
is
beginni ng
his fo urth
term and
Ron Logan,
Page AS
his second
Norman
• Joshua Neutzling, 19
term.
as
Humphreys
members of
the Board .of Education. The
two were sworn in by
Treasurer Matt: Rhonemus.
Both were elected for addi·
• Local man wins
tiona:! four year terms in the
pair of Tudor's.prizes.
November general election.
In other organizational
See Page A2
the Board set regubusiness.
• Job's Daughters installs
lar meetings for 7 p.m. on the
new offic_ers, initiates new
second and fourth Tuesdays
of each month at the school
members. See Page A6.
administration building.
The salary for board members per meeting attended
,.
,
,
CharleM Hoeftlch/ photo
was set at $125. an increase
Scott Walton. left, \Yas sworn in for hiS fourth term, and Ron Logan for his second term as members of the Meigs Local Board
Please see Board, AS
of Educat1on by Board Treasurer Mark Rhonemus.

OBITUARIES

INSIDE

Sheriff reports
internet scam
complaints

•••

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINE L.COM

• Fire hits downtown
Gallipo(is structures.
See Page A5

WEATHER

Sutter

NOTICE

At the Movies:
'Hoodwinked,' B6

Senior Quarterly
inside today's Sentinel

Raiders fall to South
Point, lose 4th straight

What's in.a·name? A
lot if you're an Angel

J

.'

WedneSday, January 11, 2.006

during practice.
. "He always Jtad great words
to say about you as a player
point victoSTAFF REPORT
SPORTSOMYOAI.LYSENTINEL.COM
ST. LOUIS - )ack Snow
and person," star wideout
ry.
South
Torry Holt said. "I used to go
could always be counted on to
Point was
make big receplions · for the
by his office and see him getSOUTH
POINT
led
by
ting ready for game day.
Behind the stiong shooting
Los Angeles Ram s. Over the
Taylor
with
·
of
Jeremiah
Taylor,
who
put
middle. down the sideline or in
"He always had things we
27 points
up 27 points, the ·south
·the open field, Snow simply
needed to do to win."
and eight
Point Pointers cruised to a
had a knack for catch ing the
Rams iniernal medicine
rebo·und s,
football.
physician Douglas Pogue Said
62-44 victory "'''u!! sda)'
followed by
"Jack .had the greatest hands
last week that Snow's staph
evening in South Point as
C h a s e
'the Raiders drop.ped their
in that time period," Hall of
infection originated .as a sinus
Morrow
McWhorter
infection, then entered the
fourth straight game.
Fame defensive end Deacon
with
14
bloodstream ·and infected an
Jones said. ''You won't talk
Taylor and the Pointers (5points,
J.T.
Terry
with
nine
about his speed. but his speed
artificial hip joint. His s!aph
4, 2-2) came our strong from
the beginning, putting up 17 points, . Jerrell Dean with
was de~eiving. He would calch
infection was not the kind that
points in the first quarter four points and Heath
that slant pattern over the midis resistant to tirst-line antibiwhile holding River Valley Bridges, Kyle Hughes, Beau
· otics,like the one several Rams
dle and rve seen him outrun
(4-6, 1-3) to only six points. Weed and Joey Stephens
players suffered three years
some guys that we THOUGHT
were fast."
ago, Pogue said.
The Raiders continued to scored two points each .
For River Valley, the
struggle in the second' as
Snow. a star wide receiver
In a widely publicized health
Raiders
were led by Morrow
for the Rtlms from 19&lt;15-75
episode reported last February,
South Point put up 14 more
&lt;;:ory Ehman with ·
with
12,
and alonglin1e team broadca,t- .
five Rams players who had
and held River Valley to II
points, led on the night by eight points; Jason Jones,
er. died Monday night, the club .
.
.
AP photo suffered turf burns in 2003
Nibert,. Michael
said. He was 62.
St. Louis Rams radio &lt;;Jhnou ncer Jack Snow sits in the booth 'det~elt~pedth at .type. otf tsrtaph • Bryan Morrow with 12 Matt
'Cordell and Ry an Henry
points
in
the
contest.
.
. Snow had been hospitalized befo. re the.· Rams'. Mo.nday night footba.ll gpme a. gainst. th. e cmomecmtoonn an~'bti.sotri.ecsiksnanownoaas
River Valley fin&amp;lly with six points each.
on
and off
past two lnd1anapol1s Colts tn thts oct. 1 7 . 2005 f1le photo . tn st. Lou1s. methicillin. "
months
withfora the
blood-borne
·
Following the loss, River
picked up the pace in the
staph infection. His Jillllily was
An article in the New
second half, keeping up with Valley tries to get back on
the Pointers, but it proved the ·winning track when they
with him . when he died at period." Jones said. "He was 75.
.
.
· Englund Journal of Medicine
too much as South Point's return home for a 6 p.m.
Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. one of the few guys we had
"'When I came m he had said a few members of the San
early lead held on as the matchup Saturday against
Louis, said Duane Lewis. a that would ~o across the mid- been in the league four or five Francisco 49ers developed
. team spokesman.
die and catc'h that football. He . vears. He was well-established, infections after playing the
Pointers grabbed the 18- Rock Hill.
·"He was a great teammate, was tou gh - tough as nails.'' it great route runner, very dedi- Rams early that Season.
one of the hardest-working
After aA All-America career cmed to the game with outLast week, Joe Vitt, who
guy&gt; that I played with," Jones at. Notre Dame, Snow was standing hands.and he had the served as the Rams' interim
said. "A terrible loss. a terrible drafted eighth overall by ,the ability to relate to younger coach for the last II games of
shocker. Jack was a young Minnesota Vikings in 1965 but players and he lp them adapt tq the season, checked into a hasman."
soon traded to Los Angeles. professional life. He was a pitaf for treatment of a lingerSrJOw, the father of Gold where he spenl his entire II- great. gre;~t man."
i'ng strep infection on his hand.
.
. McCutcheon, a live-time Pro It was initially mischaracterGlove tirst baseman J.T. Snow. year NFL career.
. was an analyst on the Rams·
"This is a very sad time for Bowl running back, said he ized as a staph infection.
ANAHEIM , Calif. (AP) the ·Angels have been in a
Ousted Rams coach Mike
radio broadcasts. moving to St. all of us," Rams owner Georgia and Snow stayed· in almost
-Charles
Richter roots for "demo graphic box" in
Louis with the team I0 years Frontiere said. ''Jack was a spe- constant comact - even after Martz was treated this past fall
the
Angels.
i'Jot the terms of fan base, broadcast
ago. His las t game in the booth cia! pan of the Rams' family their playing days ended.
for endocarditis, a bacterial
Anaheim Angels, not the contracts and sponsorship
"Jack, all the time I ·knew infection of the hean valve.'
was Nov. 20 during the Rams· for many years. It 's very
Los
Angeles Angels of deals.
· Hi ghli ghting
home loss to Arizona. .
. painful when a lo ved one is· him. was a pretty healthy guy." Pogue said the infection .most
Anaheim,
not
the
California
"Anaheim''
didn' t ca~ it a l ­
Snow was selected to the Pro taken from us, but fortunatel y McCutcheon said. "To see him likely was strep infection from
Angels. Just the Angels.
ize on being part of the secBowl in 1967 and' still ranks we are left wi th so many excit- have to struggle with this type, the teeth or sinitis, and "was
For
Richter,
that
's
the
end-largest
media market in
among the team leaders in sev- ing and beautiful memories of thing was gut-wrenching.
definitely not staph.'' ,
eas.
i
est
.way
to
keep
ahead
the
nation.
he
has sa id .
era! receiving categories. He thitt we shared with Jack on
"I think Jack had a sense of
Snow is survived by three
_of a game that took ·a
"The fact is, if you put
humor. I've always thought of . children, J.T., Michelle and
had 340 receptions for 6,0 12 and off the tield."
strange
twist
last
year.
people
in a box. whether
,.
yards· ·a 17.7"yard average
In add ition to Snow's broad- him as a no- nonsense guy who Stephanie. ..
That's when owner Arte it's racial or ecqnomic or
·- and 45 touchdowns in 150 .cast du tie,, he helped out dur- took life by. the horns. He
Funeral services will be held
Moreno renamed the 2002 marke'ting-wise, . you don !t
enjoyed life, enjoyed his kids at St: ioseph 's Shrine in St.
career regular-se&lt;.ISOil ga mes· ing prac tice: voluntarily.
World
Series chafiiltions the give them a chance . to
fur the Rams. In 1967. he aver"Jack r asa true profession- .·and was very proud of them. Louis at II a.m. Saturday. In
Los
.
Angeles
. Angels · of grow," More no told The
aged 263 yards on 28 recep- al."
said
. Lawrence It's a sad day for everybody lieu of flow ers, the family
Anaheim - and the city Orange 'County Regi ster
McCutcheon. the Rams' direc- who knew him."
·
requested dqnations be made to
tions and scored eight TDs.
slapped the team with a shortly after announcing
'The guy ran the best pat- tor of player personnel, who
Before he. fell ill; Snow often the Juvenile Diabetes Research
lawsui t, claiming tens of the name change. "We're
terns of any receiver during our played with Snow from 1972- helped the Rams ' receivers Fouildaiion.
millions in lost publicity.
not changi ng where we
"It's the players, the li ve. We're not changing
team, it's the Angels we the Angels.'·
root for. Not what's behind
And with that, Moreno
the word :;'-ng,els ' .or in,, st ~rted ,marketing hi s team
front of 1t, sa1d ·)hchter, to Los Angeles - even
PITTSBURGH (AP) -·
The penalty down pass on the Colts· first momentum and tempo.· The
·
35, who runs the popul ar slapp·ing up Ange ls billSteelers
have
been
one
of
the
play
from
scrimmage.
Pittsburgh Steelers coach Bill
came after
fan
site boards blocks from Dodger
The Steelers also were NFL's best row.! team~ the last
Cowher often talks about
a
third· www.angelswin.com.
Stadium, the home of LA' s
walking a fine line. usually to
·d o w n bothered by the crowd noise two seasons, winning 14 of
· But many fan s do care, original team. ·
incomp le- inside the RCA Dome, which · 17, including seven of nine'
desc ribe the tin y differences
and say the war of words. Anaheim Mayor Curt
that sepa~ate winning from
lion.
and led to five false-start penal- this season.
obscurt!: what the debate is Pringle refused to attend a
losing. Thi s time, he is conthe Bengals ties. Cow her's decision to
Another obstacle for the
really aboul : A ge neral fail- sin gle ga me. though he
Notebook
took advan- attempt an onside kick to start Steelers is their recent inabili- .
cerned ·his team might have
stepped over that ·imaginary
tage of it to the secqnd half also proved ty to win more than one playure to recognize that caved when the Aogel s
Orange County. population made last year 's playoffs .
line durin g a taunting-filled score a touchdown and take a costly when the Colts recov- off g~ me in a season. They
ered, giving them a short lield have opened each of their
playoff victory Sunday in 17-7 lead they later lost.
Still , he's one of the law3 million . is a strong comCincinnati .
·
·'There's a rine line between on a drive ·that ended wilh eight playoff appearances
munit y with its own identi- suit's bi ggest backers. Filed
Cowher on Tuesday defend- goi ng in there and be ing emo- Mannin g's 12-yard "oring since the 1994 season by winty that doesn' t need LA's shortl y · after the name
ed defensive .Jineman Kimo tiona! and allo.wing it to have pass to Bryan Fletcher.
cachet.
change became official last
ning their first game, but have
von Oelhoffen's hit that side- an adverse effect, which I , ·:we're playing the No. I . won their second game. either
"You can sell 'The OC' or January, the suit claims th e
lin ed Bengals quarterback think happened to us last seed in the AFC and in many in the divisional round or the
you can sell ' Beverly Hills team violated a 1996 conCarson Palmer with a· badly week," Cowher said. ··we set- people 's eyes the No. I team AFC championship game,
90210.' Well , one of them 's tract
that
required
injured left ktlee . and the tied dow n more in the second in the National Football only once. ·
kind of outdated," said John "Anaheim" be featured
·
Cowher
said.
coach said there is no basi s to half of that. ga me bur we lost League,"
. Ward, an Angels fan who prominently in all team"When you're in a hostile
call the Steelers a dirty team: our compos ure at times . I "We ' re going to have to play environment, and you're dealsold his. season tickets after related merchandi se and
"No one fel t worse about it don ' t wan t us to lose ouremo- so much better than we played ing witti the finality of the
the name change. "It's thi s advertisements.
than Kimo or, really, our foot- tio n. but ,ve can 't lose our the last time we pl:Jyed them, playoffs, you. re the underdog.
1960s mentality of Orange
The city spent $20 mil ball team." Cowher said. "We cop1posure. There 's a fine line and we' re goi ng to have to You are. Face it ," Cowher ..
County, that it's a suburb of lion fixing up the stadium
have a lot of respect for that and at times we kind of play better than .we played last said. "We understand ' that
Los Angeles. It' s a slap in and leased valuable land to·
football team."
·crossed that. but we have to week . It's goi ng to take a going in . We' re going to go in
the face."
the team with the underHowever. Cowher acknow l- play with that same emoti()n, flawless effort&lt; on our part .
Opening
·statements
.will
··
standing Anaheim would
there
and
give
it
our
best
edged some players lost their that same leve l of desperation We' re going to have tO' bring
begin Friday. Jury se lection get international name
composure during the 31- 17 or else we are not going to every thing · we · have · and chance. You lose and you go
began Tuesday and was recognition.out of the deal, ·
home,
but
it's
been
that
way
.
mOre ."
victory, which featured .sever- move on."
scheduled to continue. on . said Andrew Guildford, the
the
last
five
weeks.
We
underTo Cowher. that means limal shouting matches and a vis- · No doubt aware some play city's co-counsel. The city
Wednesday.
'ible air of tension fo ll owin g · ers were watching his tele- iting turnovers and getting the stand the level of desperation
The
Angels
began
play
in
'
wants the name change
·that
we
have
to
.Play
at,
and
Palmer's injury. Cowher said vised news conference on same balance between the run
1961
as
the
Los
Angele
s
reversed and is seekin g
the Steelers can' t afford such their day off. Cowher chal- and the pass the Stcelers have it's going to take . our best .
Angel s, then changed their damages, arg uin g that' lost
lapses in judgment during lenged them to play their best had. wh ile averagi ng 29.5 football. We ' ve got to be able
name to the California income from the leased
to
slay
foc
used."
·
Sunday's divisiona l playoff game. of the season - some- point s in their last six games .
Angels
when they moved' .iand and publicity the city
game in lndianapirl is.
. thing he sai d was .a must to They al so need more mistake- .The Steelers will be without .
from Los Angeles to would otherw ise get each
free
play
from · Ben Quincy Morgan , the wide
. Cowher did n 'I! name anv heal the Co lts.
Anaheim in 1966. They time the Angeb play - soand
kick
returner
receiver
names. but undoubtedly wa~s
The Steelers lost in Roethli sberger. who has been
becam.e
the .· Anaheim called ''impressions· · ~ is
refer ring to All-Pro 'a(ety Indianapolis 26-7 on. Nov. 28 intercepted only twice during who wi ll have surgery
Angels in 1997. Since worth at least $ 100 million.
Troy Polamalu. who drew a de;,pitc limiting the Colts. to the S1eelcrs' five- game \~in­ Wednesday to repair a broken
Moreno announced the !atFans such as Ward see
fibul a. Morgan· was replaced
costly I 5-yard unsportsman;,- one touchdown ·over the fin al ning streak
est
name
change
a
year
ago.
broader
impli cations for
by
wide
receiver
Lee
Mays,
like conduct penalty for jam- three-plus qua rte~s followin g
The solution to handling the
the saga has dragged on Orange County; whose resi "
ming a footbal l in the face of an 80-yard Peyton Manning crowd noi se is simple , who has spent most of the last
like a 15-inning game . ·
dent s . accoun t for twothree
seasons
with
the
team.
Bengals
.center
Rich
Braham.
to
Mar
vin
Harri
son
tou·
c
h-·
the
Cowher
.said:
Control
.
'
.
.
Moreno has suggested he thirds of the team's ticket
might move the team, some sales ,
,
Star and the 1979 NL Cy should be 'in the HalL
hi~he s t percentage o.f votes
fans have boycotted games
''Arte Moreno has said
"I ju st think sometimes that ga med by a player who wasYoung Award winner, comand the city unsuccessfull y that one · of Orange
. pili ng 300 &gt;&lt;.1ves during a 12- the vot ~rs try to compare us n't eJected in a later year
asked court s to block the CouMy' s hi ghest profile
season major ca reer ith the with the starting pitchers," ·he was 63.4 QY Gil Hodges in
name change until the cur- things - the Ange ls from Page BJ .
Chi cago Cub.\. St. Louis and said. "We can' t compete with 1,983, his final time of the.
rent .lawsui t was resol ved. aren 't a part of · Orange
Allanta. He is · 19th on the their statistics. their innings ballot.
Citing the trial' s start, County," Ward said. who
(e lected in 1985 ). Rollie career saves list.
Ore! Hershi se r (58 votes)
or 1heir strikeouts. l think if
Moreno and team attorne ys hopes a jury can set th ings
Finger\ (1992 )- and Dennis
He credited Fred Martin . a you com pare us agai nst each and Albert Belle (40) were
declined interv iews with right . ·'Who is th is team and
Eckersley (2004 1 ·
. Cub'' minor league pitching. other. I think you'll see we're the &lt;;ml y players among the
The Assoc iated Press who are they playi ng for?
Andre Dawson was fourth coach , with teaching him the all pretty eq ual. .... Without 14 first-time candidates to
through a spoke sman.
The only thing I can hope
receive 5 pe.rcen t, meaning
with 3 I 7 vo tes. followed by splitter and Mike ' Roarke, us, it' s tough to win ."
Moren9.
Major for is that · 12 anonymous
But
Bert Blyleven , (277). Lee another Cubs· coach . .,v ith
When he first appeared on he will remain on the ballot
League Ba seball's fi rst people in Orange County
Smith (234). Jack Morri s working on it with him. · · the ball ot in 1994, Sutter , next year. Among those
Hi spanic owner, has said qn fix this problem." ,
(214). Tommy John ( 154 )
'' It just ti ck les rile still re ceive d 109 -vo tes (23.9 dr.opped were Will Clark (23
when
you see
Ro ge r . percen t). Hi s percentage votes), Dwight Goo,den
and Steve Garvey ( 135).
Pete Rose. basebal l\ Clemens. as great as he is. rose to 66.7 last year, when (I :7), Willie McGee ( 12) and
banned career hit' leader. throw a 'Pii l-finger and the Wade Boggs and Ryne Chicago White Sox manager
Middleport Village Rental Fees of $12.00 per rental
-received I0 write-in votes in hitler j ust swings and mi sses. Sandberg we re elected and Ozzie Guille n (5) . ·
what would have been his · They don't see that ball that Sutter-fe ll 43 votes short.
Sutter wi ll be inducted
are due by February 1, 2006. If you own and rent
" Were my &gt;t ats good into the Hall during cerefinal year of eligibility. well.'' Sutter said. "Jack
property in tlte Village of Middleport, you must
Stricken from the ballot after Morris threw an awful good· enough" I · did n't know," monies o n . July 30 in
pay this fee. These fees must be paid no later than
going on the banned li " for one and Mike Scott. There's a Sutter ;,aid. ·' You just ki~d Coopersto wn. N.Y. The
of'keep
hoping
.''
Veteran
s
Committee
doesn'
t
betting on Cinci nnati while lot of great pitchers over the
February 28, ~006 or a fine of
Ri ce's ·
percentage " vote thi s year·. but a specia l
managing the team. Rme w;" year;, th;it I think that pitch
$100 will be imposed.
helped
their increased to 64 .R from 59.5 Negro leagues and pre written in on 2-lll of 7,207 definitely
,.
last yea r. and Gossage's rose Negro league's se lection
ballots 0.5 percent) over I 5 career
· Sandy Iannarelli, Mayor
to
64.6 from 55.2. wh ich comm ittee meets Feb. 27 in
Sutter said fellow relievers
yea rs.
Village of Middleport
Sutler was a ,ix-t imc All - Go..,.,age and Smith also bode1 well for the pair. The. Tampa. Fla.
BY JIM SALTER

'

Details on Page A6

INDEX
.2
I

SECTIONS-

12 PAOES

'

Calendars
Classifieds ·
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Places to go
Sp&lt;;&gt;rts
Weather

A3,
B2- 4

Bs
A3

A4
As
B6
B Section
A6

rc)' :l.Ofi(J Ohio Valley l'ubli!'ihing Co.

POMEROY - A recent case of internet
fraud .may be an indicaticin of new money.
scams ,' tn the area , accordmg to Shenfl
· Robert Beeg le.
· Beegle said a local resident, whose name
has been withheld. reported that she was the
victim of a cash scam involvi ng a man living
in England whom she 'met on the internet.
According to Beegle, the local woman
received a $2,500 money order, issued on Wal Mart, for he~ birthday and Christmas, fron1 the
m ali she met in an online chat room. Shortly .
after the woman received the money order. she
received an e-mail from the man reporting that
he \\'US in the hospital and that he needed part
of the money back for expenses.
.
"He advised her that he knew the money
order was a gil't. bLithe needed the mohey and
'he would return it once he was released from
the hospital." . Beegle said, "because in hi s
words, "it was a birthday and Christmas gift .'"
The woman returned $2.0 14 to the rrian
through hi s "manager" in Nigeria. and is no":
being held responsible for $2,500 by her
bank because the money order was discovered to be coumerfe it.
'
Beegle said he has recei ved ·other -reports
from residents abou t receiving checks from ·
Canada and Ni~eria. informing them Ihey are
sweepstakes wmncrs.
·
"A ll they have to do to clai' m the prize .
money. is to ca-sh the check and se nd the
. money back Ic• the ~ende r as a handl-ing fee."
Beegle said . "They are then responsible for
the bad check."
One local resident de posited one of the
checks into a We st Virginia bank. and is now
being held responsible for it. .
"These are clearl y scuns." Beegle said.
"Any leg itimate. legal sweepstakes will deduct '
any handling fee from the prize money.''
The bottom line. Beegle said: "If it soupds .
too good to be true.· it probably i, ...

·•
Brian J. R -( photo

It's a long way up - and a long way down - for these men work~ng on the new Pomeroy/ Mason Bridge. Pictured
on one of the bridge's towers·. which are going up on the Ohio side. the workers continue to make up for lost time
with unseasonably warm January temperatures.
·
·
·

Drunken driving ..responsible in three 2005 deaths
death handed down- hy a !\lasnn
·
County gra nd jury.
:The driver in anot l1cr accidenl.
who wa' one of the two individual'
POI NT PLEASANT. W.Va .
Three deaths 111 two fatal col h'lnns who died from injuncs in the ,.,.a,h .
1n Mason County dunng 2{Kl5 were had a hlood akohol It-vel nf four
the result of drunken driving. time s the leeal limil.
&lt;IUthorities haw dctcrmine,r. " • . The incident\ are c;liling·.t" atiellA ;.urvivor i't1 one of the ac,·idcm, tion to lora!. 'tale ami national plea'
now faces a &lt;:hnrgc uf c·au'lng ur~ing pen pie not to drinJ, and dri 1 c .
BY KEVIN KELLY
MANAGING EDITOR

-.

Cody Lee Parsons, 23, Red
House. is facing indictment.s in
connection wit h a May 25 accident
on W.Ya 62 in Mason .
He '"" allegedly driving at a
high rate of speed when he lost
contml nf the pickup he drove and
collided with . another pickup dri-

Piease see Deaths, AS

--- •

--~

--·-·---

-- ------

.. -

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