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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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�PageA2

REGIONAL

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, January 12,2006

•

has

Mine operator says company
made improvements before accident
BY DAVID DISHNEAU
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BUCKHANNON, W.Va.
- The operator of the Sago
Mine said Wednesday that
the company had spent heav. ily on safety improvements in
the mom))s before an explosion that led to the deaths of
12, miners.
·
Ben Hatfield, chief executive of International Coal
Group Inc., said the company
rebuilt two miles of primary
escapeway, upgraded the
mine's rail transportation system
and
implemented
employee ·safety training that
exceeded legal requirements.
' In the last six months of
2005, there was a 60 percent
reduction in lost-time injuries
at the mine.
"In my opinion, the Sago
Mine was a safe operation:·
·Hatfield said.
Hatfield's comments came
a day after the federal Mine
Safety
and
Health
Administration released documents showing that 17 of the
208 alleged safety violations
.at the mine in '2005 were for
serious problems. including
the accumulation of •·combustible materials" such as
loose coal and coal dust.
Hatfield said, however, that
company officials "have
heard nothing in the course of
all this debate about the safety
violations that even remotely
connects" with any possible
· cause of the explosion .
Officials · have said the
explosion likely occurred in
an area of the mine that was ,
sealed in December. While· in
the mine, · rescue workers
found the mine seals which are to ' be checked
weekly. - had been ''blown
toward the . surface," Ray
McKinney, MSHA's ,administrator for coal mine sa(etv
and health, said Wednesday
in Washington.
Also Wednesday, Hatfield

;;;::.:

said the mine shou ld' be sufticiently.vented of toxic gases in
four to seven days, allowing
investigators to enter for the
first time since the disaster.
ICG has said it inherited
many of the mine's safety
problems from its former
owner and had been working
to correci the violations. ICG
formally took control of the
former Anker Energy mine in
November, but started work
there as management consultants in June, Hatfielq said
Wednesday.
All of the 17 citations were
for "aggravated conduct constituting more than ordinary
negligence." · according to
MSHA documents.
Tony Oppegard, a former
MSHA official and mine
safety
prosecutor · in
Kentucky.· said it's that fact
- not just the number of vidlations - that should be a
concern.
"This type of violation
indicates that the operator
knew ·the .condition existed
and didn 't do anything to fix
it," he said. "It sl1ows an
indifference to safety or an
extreme lack of clU'e."
In the last citution issued
before the . accident, dated
Dec. 14, an MSHA inspector
said a failure to address coal
dust and excessive amounts
of loose coal - in some
places 29 inches deep "showed a high degree of
negligence for the health and
safety of the miners."
But th e inspector who
issued the citation did not
think the violation would
lead to a miner's death or permanent disability - the two
most severe risks that wuld
have beeri cited. None of the
17 citations listed de~llh as a
risk, .and only one violation
was .considered highly likely
to lead to injury.
Most of the 17 citations
found that the violations were
"reasonably like! y" to resu It

in "lost workdays or restricted duty."
Ronald Grall, a 40cyear
veteran of coal mining,
worked at the Sago mine for
four months before the accident as ap inspector of the
min e's air intake system ,
escape passageways and
water pumps.
"They have made vast
improvements in the ventilation since I've been here,"
Grall said. "This company.
ICG. they really' go safety
first."
·
The 208 violations - a
number higher than normal
. for a mine of its size- were
up from just 68 citations the
year before . The mine's.
injury rate for employees per
· hours worked of 17.4 in 2005
was nearly three times higher
than the national average rate
· or 6.54.
.
Hatfield
acknowle&lt;:)ged·
most of the violations came
in the second half of 2005 ,
but said that was a result of a
31 percent increase · in the
number of "inspection days"
hy · MSHA officials. Robert
Friend, MSHA'S acting
deputy assistant secretary of
labor, said there was an 84
percent increase in MSHA's
inspection hours at the mine
from 2004 to 2005 .
,
"We believe the high number of violations is attributable to a significant increase
in enforcement standards by
the MSHA inspect~Jrs that
examined this mine virtually
every day," Hatfield said.
Dennis O'Dell, the administrator of occupational
health and safety for the
United Mine Workers of
America, said federal offi cials were cracking down on
mistakes made at Sago.
"I think they were trying to
go in the right direction," he
said. "They were writing
some pretty serious violations
at that mine .... That mine was
headed for closure."

The Daily Sentinel

Wife
nowhere to tum
to escape abusive husband

Submitted photo

Lance Clifford of Patriot , left, ts congratulated by Ray G. Burke, Tudor's Biscuit Wor!d vice president, after Clifford won a new Ford Ranger, above, and a vacation package to a Ma rriott Hotel
in the recent Tudor's promotion .

·Local man wins pair of Tudor's prizes
"The quality, , service and
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - customers something special
value
at Tudor's is exceptionLance E. Clifford from for being so Joyal to us .
al,"
he
said . "But now, all- the
Patriot. Ohio. won the Giving our cu stomers this
Tudor's Biscuit Wodd 2005 opportunity to win the truck great meal s a.nd ·visits have
Ford Ranger · and a Marriott and vacation package is · our really paid off:" .
vacation package.
, way of saying thank you:'
Drawn from the thousands Burke said.
of entries receiv.ed since the
Jim · Sayre ,' . Gallipolis
campaign began in October, Tudor's operator, was thrilled
.Clifford was one of the 48 the winning entry was drawn .
finalists who won Marriott from his Gallipolis location.
'vacation packages. .
· "When I heard the name I
His t1ame was drawn by knew it was one of our reguiW".
Tudor 's Bi scuit World Vice Joyal customers who visit us
President Ray G. Burke at a just about every day,'' Sayre
Y"" buddy llotl
television
studio
in sa.id. "I couldn't .be happier."
• 11 t-md lddMMI wfttl Wtbmllfl
Clifford .. eats at the
Charleston on Dec. 23.
• fRfE T""""
··we · wanted to offer o~r GaJ.Iipolis Tudor's every week . • Custom Stitt P1Q1 · News, Wt&amp;N'&amp;nw;ttl
r

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PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LJllE,.:t
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· Thur.sday, Jan. 12
SYRACUSE Sutto.n
Township Trustees ' will
meet in special session at 7
p.m . at Syracuse Village
halL
·
POMEROY - · Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District, II :30 a.m., Meigs
SWCD office , 33101 Hiland
Road .
Monday, Jan. 16
LETART FALLS - ·Letart
Township Trustees, 12 noon.
office building.

Clubs and
organizations .
'

Thursday, Jan. 12
CHESTER- Shade River
Lodge 453. stated meeting.
7:30 p.m. Refreshments.
HARRISONVILLE · Harrisonville Lodge 411
F&amp;AM special session, 7:30
p.m. Work in Master Mason
· degree.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Po st 9053, 7 p.m .,
Tuppers f&gt;lains hall. Dinner
at 6:30 with meeting m follow.
Saturday, Jan: 14
POMEROY - , Meigs
Chapter
of
County
Christian
Motorcycle
' Association, regular meeting. 9 a.m ., Common
Grounds CofJee Shop.
Anyone interested in joining invited .
CHESTER - Shade River.
Lodge 453 annual inspection
in the entered apprentice

a·ovER
L·DS!
T~e

'D aily Sentinel ·
(740) 992~2155

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Thursday,Januaryt2,20o6

Ariel selects architectural finn

.

.

Submitted photo

Darryl Rogers, principal of Rogers Krajnak Architects, l~c. and Craig Vander Veen. project manager with Rogers Krajnak.Architects, Inc., are shown comparing a draw ing of the new marquee
plan for Ariel Dater Hall with the original facade of'the Ariel Opera House .
organization as a permane1it
home for The Ohio Valley
Symphony, the Ariel Players
and Junior Theatre and the
Ariel Dancers. The facility
includes retail space, a banquet room, meeting and
rehearsal rooms and a ballroom.
"We've been able to expand
our offerings," said Snow.
"We nave a variety of dance
and music classes, a much
larger offering of theatre

classes and performances and of this importan t project. The
have opened our doors to the new marquee and .w indo -..
local
Sweet
Adelines. design will inc.;orporate ele Ballroom dance will begin in ments that relate to the origiJanuary as well.",
nal. now covered.
opera
Rogers Krajnak A,chitects, house.facade. but al so bring a
. Inc. has been busy drawing · fresh new look to the front of
up plans for the work that the building . " remarkeu
will occur in the front por- Rogers.
lion of the complex which
Actual construction . will
will include a ·new marquee, beginshortly to coincide with
windows. roof and brick a Dedicatory hent on Apri I
repainting.
·
22 featuring The Ohio Valley
"We are honored to be part Sympho,ny.

Area man wins prize from Civil War organization

Public meetings

•

BYTHEBEND

GALLIPOLIS
- The
Ariel-Ann Carson Dater
Performing Arts Centre has
DEAR ABBY: I am JO
the Columhus firm
selected
years old, married seven
of
Rogers
Krajnak
years, the mother of three
Architects,
Inc.
to
handle
the
children, and 'I'm at the end
archfrectural
work
on
the
of my rope . My husband has
1895 building that houses the
quit or been fired from .
Dear
Morris
&amp; Dorothy Haskins
numerous jobs because of his
'
Abby
.Ariel Theatre.
"poor attitude. " He calls the
Darryl Rogers and Peter
women he works with "fat
Krajnak
lead the firm that
b
es" and blames everyspecializes in renovations and
one else for his problems.
He 's addicted to weed and MedicAlert necklace but she additions to historic churches ,
alcohol, and g~ts extremely has problems grasp,ing ~nd theatres, and other building
upset 1 ~ I don t J)Urtak~ of . remembering . the major types. Krajnak was involved
tl)ese thmgs With h1m .
things that need to be done with . the restoration of the
·· Theatre
in
When he does work, he outside her home as well as Southern
Columbus
which
was
origicalls . ~e an average_ of IS setting up her medication
nally designed by the same
.t1mes a day, or he mstant- regimen.
that designed the
architects
messag7s me constantl_y Betty 's son lives'250 miles
and he s only · gon: SIX . or away, but he visits only a Ariel, Yost &amp; Packard.
The Southern was built in
seven hours. If I don t answer couple of times a year. He
the _Phone or respond t,o hts e- arrives late one day, stays the 1896; a year after the ArieL
ma1l tmmedtately, he II drop. next two nights, and leaves Rogers Krajnak Ar_chitects,
everythmg and race home to early the third morning . Her Inc. has also been involved
accuse me of_ cheaung or other children live in other .in four other projects originally designed by Yos( &amp;
betraymg htm m some way. states and rarely visit.
On three dtfferent_ occastons
Betty is beginning to rely Packard.
In 1988, the M.asonic
he has slapped me m the fa~e, more and more on us neighLodge
signed a lung term
then Immediately dented bars to get things done for her.
domg 11.. He has also grabbed While we don't mind helping . lease with the Ariel Cultural
me around the throat a few out in emergencies, we feel &amp; Performing Arts Centre.
limes. He says very hurtful someone else should take over "We began our work the very
thmgs to me, and then denies her · everyday needs. She is . next day," saysAriel founder
saymg them. He ts verbally adamant about not going to a and Arti stic Director Lora
abus1vc to my eldest ~on nursing home .- which I Lynn Snow. "We restored the
from a prevtous relationship. agree with - but there are theatre with a close eye on
I have flO fnends or lamlly . less-confining possibilities historic accuracy but also
I can turn to. I am extremely that 1think would be better for knowing it had to meet curdepressed and at the 'point of her and would 'relieve· us of rent codes."
either run~ing away or killing the responsibility and liability . Earlier this year, Ariel
benefactor, Ann Carson
myself. I m scared all the of tending to her.
Dater,
purchased the entire
time. I'd le;~ve, but he tells
Should we contact her son
facility
and gave it to the
me he will hurt me or tak.e my or just start to let things g~
k1ds away and never let me until things become serious?
see them if! do. Can you help
WORRIED ABOUT
.me ? - NANCY IN NEW BETTY, GRAND JUNCMEXICO .
TION, COLO.
GALLIPOLIS - James
DEAR NANCY: If ever I
DEAR WORRIED: You
heard of a woman who need- . should absolutely contact Oiler. · commander of the
ed to contact the National your neighbor's son and tell Cadot-Blessing Camp 126 of
Domestic Violence Hotline, it him exactly what you have the Soi]S of Union Veterans
IS you, dear lady. The tolltold me. His mother may of the Civi I War, announced
free number (which won't need the help of a visiting thai the local camp sold one
show up on your phone b1(l) · nurse, or .even a caseworker of the winning tickets in · the
is (800) 799-7233 (SAFE). to make sure she has what 2005 raffle, which were sold
The people on the hotline can she needs and her property is statewide and I0',000 tickets
help you to formulate a safe well-kept. You appear to be were sold.
There were three prizes
. escape plan from the drug- caring . neighbors, but th'is
~warded and the local ca mp ·
addicted bully you married. should not be your responsi- · sold the second prize ticket ·
(If this. seems harsh, he quali- bility. If Betty's son dqesn't · to Jim Proffitt of Mason,
ties .) Please make the call know where to look for help, W.Va .
TODAY, not only for your . please tell him to contact a
The camp sold a total of
own sake but also for your local senior center or the 450 of the 10,000 tickets and
Colorado state agency on would like to thank all those
children's.
DEAR
'ABBY:
The aging, which should be listed who purchased tickets and
"Smiths" and our family live in the 'phone book .
· the camp will again sell tickon either side of "Betty," an
Dear Abby is Hlrinen by ets on .a raffle ·for a period
84-year-old widow. Betty is a Abigail Van Buren, also . weapon (to be determined) ·
wonderful , caring neighbor known as Jeanne Phillips, for 2006.
most of the time. However, and was founded by her
Mike Harbour, a member
she is beginning · to deterio-. mother, Pauline Phillips. of the camp. so.ld the winning
ratementally and physically. Write
Dear Ablly at ticket for the Cull' I 861 Navy
She has a cleaning service www.DearAbby.com or P.O. revolver, powde_r flask ·and
that comes in. a teenager to Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA measure.
mow her lawn and a 90069.

Community Calendar

•C

PageA3

•. ,

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Submitted photo

Mike Harbour, left, a member of Cadot-Biessmg Camp 126 of the Sons of Union Veterans of
the Civil War, presents the Colt revolver to Jim Proffit of Mason. W.Va. , who was the'winner of
the se€ond place prize in the· SUV 's 2005·raffle.

Local.Scout council earns quality council award

HUNTINGTON, WVa. Tri-State Area Council, BSA.
degree . Dinner at 6:30 p.m. which serves Boyd. Carter.
Inspection at 7:30 p.m. All part ·of Greenup . and
Counties
in
Lawrence
Masons invited .
Kentuc~y : Lawrence. Meigs
and Gallia Counties in Ohio ;
and Mason. Lincoln, Wayne
and Cabel~ Counties in West
Friday, Jan. 13
Virginia eamed the Quality
MASON, W.Va. - Benefit Council Award presented by
concert
for
Raymund the National Council, BSA. ,
Cundiff. · 7 p.m . Christ
The local Scout counci I
Brethren Church. Singers to was the only council in Area
, include Glory land Believers, IV which includes all counEarthen Ve sse ls, Proclaim cils with offices in We st
and Marti Short .
LONG BOTTOM - A
hymn 'sing will be · held at 7
p.m. at the Fa.ith Full Gospel
Church, Long Bottom. Dave
and Debbie Dailey will be the
singers.
CLEVELAND (AP) -.
Saturday, Jan. 14
Ohio 's biggest community
PORTER Brian and. college announced plans
Family Connections to sing Wednesday to use a $ 1.86
at the Clark Chapel Freewill million fedeml job-training
Baptist Church, 6 p.m. Bad grant to educate nurses and
X-ray technician s for the
weather cancels.
Cleveland
Clinic. ·
POMEROY .- Hysell Run
The three -year Cuyahoga
Community Church, soup
College grant,
Community
and sandwich ~upper. 5 p.m ..
one
of
70
nationwide,
will
community invited.
help set up a program to train
Saturday,ian.21
cli ni c employees who wimt to
PORTER - · Evelyn Roush beC(}ine nurses or X-ray techat the Clark Chapel Freewill nicians.
. Baptist Church. {l p.m. Bad
Gay Gilbe11, administrator of
weather cancels .
the. U.S . Department of
Labor's Ollkc of Workforce
In vest ment . said the government hopes tht• projed
hecomes a national mtxlcl. The
Wednesday, .lan. Ill
college hils received numerous
MIDDLEPORT
re4ues1s for infonnation ahout
Josephone
Smith
will the project. collcgC' prcs id~m
observe her 96th bin hday '"' Jerry Sue Thomton , a.id .
.
Jan. 18. c~rds may be sent to
The research hospital. "liich ·
her at Overbrook Center, ha~ abOut 220 Vilcancic.., tnnonb
333 Page St., Middleport. it&gt; I .700 riuf\i ng johs. \\ill suhOhio 45760.
sidiz~ tuition ti'r students.

Church events

William
VIrginia and most councils in meeting standards in finan- Superintendel)t ·
Ohio to earn the prestigious cial management and stew- Smith . Almost 900 \outh
award . The award will be ardship. membership growth, joined during the A-ug u&gt;t
presented to Tri -State Area service to Scout units and the through December member·
.CounciL BSA at the Eagle · strength of the council's vol- 'hip drive .
Each )·ear Tri-S tate Area
Scout
and
Volunteer unteers.
Tri-State
.
Area·
Council.
Council.
BSA ,en es 7.000
Rece ption and Meeting to be ·
held at · the Huntiil'gton BSA experienced strong ' throughout the tri -state anu ,,
the large st non-profit
Muleum of Art 2:30 p n1: on growth thi s year during its one
Sunday, Feb: 12. The award Fall Round Up chaired hy yo uth del'lopment organita recognizes the council for Cabell
County
School tions in the cnmmunit\ .

of

'

Community college ·
to train nurses for
Cleveland Clinic

XAet.ruf Medkare

AdvantraRx

HUMANA

Mt:t/lcarf' Prr.\'criflti'm D,.wK Plmt..~ Mad~ EiJ.,_v
'

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ram.munity
"CareRx .
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Birthdays

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Rime R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992 - 295 5 .
112 E~st Main Stre.et
Pomeroy,.Ohio

HOURS
Mon - f ri 8a..i - 8p m
.Sol. Sam- 5 ~m

Sun. CLOSED

Qual it) Prcs&lt;-ription Sn'' ;,.,.
at Compt•1 in!

l'rkt·~

l' tilit~ Pa~ mt•nt~

'lon- Sa18am-6pm t
Sal. Kam - Jpm

'TillS • Friendly Service

�•
Thursday,Januaryt2,2oo6

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Bush

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

..

.Ohio V$illey 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 exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
· of speech, or of the press; or th~ right of the
. -people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN -HISTORY
Today is Thursday, Jan. 12, the 12th day of 2006. There are
353 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan. 12, 1945, during World War II. Soviet forces began
~huge offensive against the Germans in Eastern Europe.
On this date:
: In.l519, Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I died.
. In 1773, the first public museum in America was establjshed, in Charleston. S.C.
· In 1915, the U.S. Hou~e of Representatives rejected a pro'Posal to give women the right to vote.
: In I 932, Hattie W. Caraway became the first woman elect-.
·
ed-to the U.S. Senate.
In 1942, President Roosevelt created the National War
Labor Board.
: In 1948. \he Supreme Court ruled that states CO\-lld not dis·~riminate against law-school app licants because of race.
; In 1964. leftist rebels in Zanzibar began their successful
revolt againsrthe government.
.
.. In 1966, President Johnson said in his State of the Union
·address that the U.S. should stay in South Vietnam until
Communist aggression there was ended.
: In 1976, mystery writer Dame Agatha Christie died in
Wallingford, England, at age 85 .
·. In 1986, the shuttle Columbia blasted off with a crew that
•included the first Hispanic-American in space, Dr. Franklin R.
Chang-Diaz.
_
·
:: Five years ago: The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights con:oluded a two-day hearing on Florida's presidential election,
with members accl!sing Secretary of State Katherine Harris of
presiding over a "disaster" and trying to shift blame to others.
William Hewlett, co-founder of Hewlett-Packard Company,
died in Palo Alto, Calif., at age 87.
Today 's Birthdays: Actress Luise · R&amp;iner is 96. Former
South African President P.W. ~otha is 90. Country singer Ray
Price is 80. Singer Ruth Brown is 78. Singer Glenn
Yarborough is 76. The Amazing Kreskin is 71. Country singer
William Lee Golden (The Oak Ridge Boys) is 67 . Former
heavyweight boxing champion Joe Frazier is 62. Singer-musician George Duke . is 60. Rock musician Cynthia Robinson
(Sly and the Family Stone) is 60. Actor Anthony Andrews is
58. Movie director Wayne Wang is 57~ Radio commentator
Rush Limbaugh is 55. Actress Kirstie Alley is 55. Writer
Walter Mosley is 54. Country singer Ricky Van Shelton is 54.
Radio personality Howard Stern is 52. Rock musician Tom
Ardolino (NRBQ) is 49. Broadcast_ journalist Christiane
Amanpour is 48. R()ck musician Charlie Gillingham
(Counting Crows) is 46. Actor Oliver Platt is 46. Actor Olivier
Martinez is 40. Rock singer Rob Zombie is 40. Rapper TBird
· (B-Rock and the Bizz) is 39. Model Vendela is 39. Actress
Farrah Forke· is 38. Rock singer Zack de Ia Rocha is 36.
Rapper Raekwon (Wu Tang Clan) is 36. Singer Dan Haseltine
(Jars of Clay) is 33. Rock. musician Matt Wong (Reel Big
Fish) is 33. Singer-Melanie Chisholm (Spice Girls) is 32.
Rhythm-and-blues singer Amerie is 26. Actor Will Rothhaar
is 19. Actor Andrew Lawrence is 18.
Thought· for Today: ''Love is the strongest force the -world.
possesses, and yet it is . the humblest imaginable." Mohandas K. Gandhi , Indian spiritual leader ( 1869-1948).

J

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mt:~st talk

PageA4.
'

Thursday, January 12,

2006

OMuch as he reached out
prehensive ,measure, with or immigrant campaigns don'J
without McCain-Kennedy. win .
last week to former secre:
taries of State and Defense on
there's a danger that it would
In Southern Californin, Jim
·Iraq policy, President Bush
be rejected in the House as Gilchrist, co-founder -of the
should call in his radio talkMorton
100 lenient. And the House's much-publicized Minuteme)1
show supporters for a frank
Kondrack enforcement-only bill wottld Project, a civilian border-conchat about immigration.
be tilibustered in the Senate.
trol group, got only 25 per,
Sean
e
It's up to Bush to avoid cent of the vote and fini shed
Bill
O'Reilly,
Hannity, Rush Limbaugh,
stalemate -· and there are third in a special election 10
lots of good arguments he succeed Rep. Christopher
Hugh Hewitt and Laura
Ingraham certainly aren't as
· can use to pull hi~ party Cox ( R), who now heads the
as
ex- is supposed to take up immi- · together. ·
distinguished
Securities and Exchange
Secretaries James Baker, gration reform this month.
On the merits, he can show Commission.·
·
Madeleine Albright and
Chairman Arlen Specter, that enforcement-only immiAnd
former
Virginia ·
Robert McNamara, but they R-Pa., has dratied a com pre- gration policy simply doesn't Attorney Gen. Jerry Kilgore
the
ones
fueling hen'sive bill that includes work.
are
(R) lost to Lt. Gov. Tim
Republican uproar over ille- beefed-up border controls,
According to the Migration Kaine (D) despite ads that
gal immigration.
stricter internal employment Policy Institute, overall
- attacked Kaine's support for
Yet they support Bush checks and- a work permit spending on immigration
ardently and they ought to be system· to aJ1ow new immi- enforcement increased from a day-labor site in suburban
open to an · argument from grants and illegals to · have $1 billion in 1985 to $4.9l;&gt;il- Herndon and education I~
him- an argument that hap- legal employment in the . lion In 2002. Appropriations immigr~nt .children. The ad
pens to be correct - that the United States for up to six for the border patrol went up conc_luded, "What part of
only way the United States is years.
tenfold, and the ,number of illegal· doesn't -Kaine understand?"
.
'truly going to solve the probIt's a far better approach agents rose eightfold.
There
's
a
foreign
policy
!em of illegal immigration is than the House bill, but busiYet, according to the Pew
with a comprehensive plan, ness and pro-immigrant Hispanic Center, the number angle . to be argued. Eveq
like his, that not only controls groups are concerned that the of illegal immigrants entering though Mexico's current
the borders but create~ legal bill will contain a provision the United States has aver- president, Vicente Fox, has
means for immigrants to sponsored by Sens. Jon Kyl , aged from 480,000 to bolstered the anti-immignu~f
work.
R-Ariz., and John Cornyn, R- 660.000 and a total of 9 mil- cause with his loud comBush also · needs to mal;e Texas, that would require lion have entered since 199Q. plaints about U.S. poliL:y, the
the arg11ment to GOP House workers to return to their
The National Immigration United States has every i nter~
Members, who voted over- home countries after their Forum, which advocates both est in encouraging the elecwhelmingly last month for an six-year work visas expire. · , stronger _ enforcement . and tion nex t year of Felipe
enforcement-only bill that
That
would
disrupt earned legalization, estimates Calderon, the Harvard alum,
beefed up border security. employment patterns and that the average cost of mak- nus who is the . nominee of
made it a felony to be an ille- family life and discourage ing an arrest at the border has Fox's PAN party.
gal alien and authori zed illegals from reporting for increased from $300 in !992
Current ly, the 2lXJ6 favorite
building a fence along some work permits in the _first - to $1.700 in 2002.
is former MexicO City Mayor
of the border with Mexico.
place.
Talk-show hosts are right Andres Lopez Obrador of the
Bowing to pressure· engenA far better solution would . to argue that illegal immigra- left-wing PRO party dered by the talk-show be for the Senate to adopt tion is out of control and that someone w)lo's likely to get
claque, Bush tilted right him- :·eamed legalization" provi- terrorists can smuggle their financial assistance from
self, delivering a pair of · sions of the bill sponsored by way into the United States Venezuela 's radical President
speeches. that emphasized Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., along with workers. To the Hugo Chavez and. if elected.
stricter· enforcement, but and Edward Kennedy, D- extent possible, the border
could pursue economic polidownplayed his traditional Mass., which would allow should be sealed, and- Bush
cies that cause a surge in ille;
support for work permits and illegals and temporary work- should vow to do it.
.
But he also should make gal. immigra tion.
declaring opposition to ers · to stay in the United
Finally,
there
·s
ev
idence
in
"amnesty" for illegals.
States if they pay fines, back the
obvious
case
to
House Members went taxes, learn English and pass Republicans - and get' help a Tarrance Group poll that &lt;i
home able to tell angry con- through a clearance proce- from the U.S. Chamber of combination of tough border
enforcement and McC:tinCommerce in doing so stituents that they'd cracked dure. .
.
. . .
lmm.tgratton restncttomsts that there aren't enough U.S. slyle eamed legalization i ~
down on immigration, but the
truth is they've done nothing. denounce
the
McC~m - workers to fill the jobs immi- popular. That plan beat an
enforcement-and-deportation
No bill has passed the Senate Kennedy
provision
as grant~ generally take.
and what's in the offing is a "amnesty," but it's _really a . He also .should make the plan 58 percent to 33 percent
stal em~te- unless Bush can recognition of reality: The~
political cast; that his efforts - and that was just among
ral-ly his party to do some- are II mtlhon tllegal tmmt- to woo Hispanic voters into · likely Republican voters.
thing sensible.
,. grants ·m the Um_ted States, the GOP - which has been · Doing the right tiling is
; If it's not d':layed by hear- and it would be far more efti- success~ul when backed by win-win for Republicans. if
mgs on NatiOnal Secunty ctent -to concentrate law welcoming rhetoric - will only Bush can convince Sean
·
Agency wiretaps on top of enforcement resources . o_n. suffer if the patty develops an Hannity. .
confirmatiOn proceedings for fmdmg and expelling cnmt- exclusionist reputation .
(Morton Kml(/racke 1s
And he can cite evidence execuril'e eduor of' Roll Cell!.
Supreme Court nominee nals among them than tryin_g
Judge Samuel Alito, the to corral them all.
from 2005 elections in rhe new.\paper ·of Capiro/
Senate Judiciary/ Committee
If the Senate passes a com- Virginia and Califomia: Anti- Hill !
.

A purely Republican·scandal
.American politics offers
few · spectacles quite so
diverting as the pious hypocrite unmasked. For your
entertainment dollar, nothing
beats Congress in full scandal mode. Particularly, it
_must De said, a Republican
Congress. So brazen and
nefarious were . the schemes
of former GOP House
Majority Leader Tom DeLay,
for example, that it appears
"The . Hammer," might with
more accuracy have been
dubbed "The Chisel."
. What with GOP super-lobbyist Jack Abramoff having
pleaded guilty to five felony
counts of conspiracy, fraud
and tax evasion, and agreeing
to help prosecutors, .there's
no telling how many highflyers he'll take down with
him. Abramoff boasts he's
·got the goods on as many as
60 congressional leaders and
their staffs . . He's probably
blowing smoke, but plenty of
name-brand Republicans are
having trouble sleeping
nights.
But God forbid anybody
call a spade a spade. In keeping with Republican National
Com·mittee talking points,
many in the media are 'loath
to call it a partisan scandal.
Every TV account I've seen.
whether on CBS, ABC or
·CNN, has stressed that voters
blame
Democrats
an·d
Republicans equally for cor.ruption .
GOP editorialists prefer
equivocations like "bipartisan Tsunami .'' The Wall
Street Journal editorial page.
which published several fat
vol umes of inve~tive about
Whitewater. Bill and Hillary
Cl inton ·s ill-fated real estate
i!J vestrnent (w hi~h became
perhaps the Ionge;! .;haggydog story in A~erican political history before eventua ll y
petering out with no evidence

·

Gene
Lyons

they did anything wrong)
finds itself reduced to philosophical bromides about how
" Washington power can ·corrupt absolutely."
Democrats who state the
obviou s are accused of
exces s·
, partisanship .
Democrati c .
national
Committee
chairman
Howard Dean shocked poor
Wolf Blitzer almost speechless during a recent appearance on CNN's "The
Situation Room."
"Should Democrats \vho
took money from Jack
Abramotl, who has now
pleaded guilty to bribery
charges," Blitzer wanted to
kno\", " ... give that money to
charity or give it back?"
"There are no Democrats
_·w ho took money from Jack
Abramoff," Dean answered.
"Not one, not one - single
Democrat. Every person
. named in this scandal i.l · ii
Republican . Every person
under in ves tigation i' a.
Republi can. Every pen;on
indicted is a Republican. Thi s
is a Rep~bli.can finance &gt;Candal. There is no evidence 'that
Jack Abramoff ever gave any
Democrat any money. ... I
know
the
Republican
National Committee would
like to get the Democrats
involved in thi s. They're
scared. They ' hould be
scared. They raven't told the
truth ."
But. but, but. Blit£er 'puttered, what about Sen . Byron
Dorgan of Nortl-f Dakota ''

Obituaries

Fire

'

sense to Republicans on immigration

Indeed, Dorgan did accept behavior of its leaders."
legal campaign donations wdtes my colleague Joe
from American Indian tribes Conason. "been so starkly
Abramoff represented, even exposeq as in -the Abramoff
as the super-lobbyist report- scandaL"
edly privately referring to
An
orthodox
Jew,
their leaders as "morons.'' Abramoff
missed
few
"monkeys"
and chances to pose as a man of
"troglodytes" and swindling God and philamhropist while
them for lobbying services he bribing legi slators with casinever performed. ·
no cash. Former Christian'
It's for pulling things so Coalition choirboy Ralph
bluntly that Howard Dean ·s
Reed played along. admonoften derided as a wild man. ·
ln thi s instance , however, i&gt;hing the faiihful in Texas
he's right. See, Abramoff . and Louisiana to fight the ·
wasn't just any GOP lobby- morai scourge of gambling
ist. "Casino Jack." as he was while helping himself to milwidely known, was the King lion s froin Mi"i'&gt;ippi cas iof the K Street lobbyists, and nos he was secretly working
the principal financier of the . for.
DeLay has r;trely n~issed
"Republican revolution,' ' an
an opport.lmity to stress his
insider's insider.
The former head of the personal relation ship with
'College
Republicans. . God. He 's repeatedly lamAbramoff qualified as · a basted D~mocra ts for having
"Pioneer" for raising more the ·:wrong worlclview. "
than $1 OO,(J(XJ for President Meanwhile. hi s "U.S. F\unily
Bush's 2000 can1paign. He Network." was building the
boasted of his close working nation 's "moral fitne ss" by
relation ship with White taking $1 million dollar
House political advis~r Karl checks from Russian oli-·
Rove. In 200 I, Abramoff's garchs presumably in return
personal assistant. Susan for services rend ered .
·
Ralston, became Rove's .
And while thi ' pious co~
Until
quite
rece ntly. hort has. been linin g its pock- ·
Abramoff and fellow GOP 'ets, taking lobbyist-paid golf.strategist Grover Norquist ing excu rsions to Scotland.
were giving interviews boasting o.f their creation of a one- enjoy ing sumptuou' Ieasis in
puny political machine. With Mal ays ia. and sight&gt;ceing irt
Republican ' holding the Moscow. American familie s
White House along with both have gotten little or np help
hou ;es of Congress, anybody_ with issue, politician.\ can
who wanted anything out of actu_ally do wmeth ing ahou t.
the United States gove rn - ' uch a~ stagnating wage~ .
ment needed to contribute va nishi ng .'pensions and
heavily to GOP caus~s. hire atfordable medical lnsura tKe.( Arkarna.1. .
IJemo crat tilcir pmteges aml drop the
Ga
::.Piff'
·
columnisl
Gene
Democrats like a bad h;tb it.
If Democrats -have any LymB /, u 'llllimwl mogo :.ifltJ
'ense. they' ll emphasi1c two qward 11 !I IIII' r,mul co-owlwr
"'peels of the 'camlal : FiN. of " The Hun1ing r~( thr
the ma"ive betrayal of fai th PrfJidmt ·· 1St. Martin:,
and · trust. " Rarely has the Prt'-'-'· 2000). Yrm n111 e-.r.Jwil
contrast between the rhetoric Lyo11.1 ar gmelwn.,2 0Jsh.-.
of the religi&lt;ius right anu the · g/ollll/.ner. 1

Joshua Neutzling

BY KEVIN KELLY

Local Briefs
No meetings

,.
I

GALLIPOLIS - The Jan. 16 and Feb. 20 meetings of the
Gall ta-Jackson-Meig s Board of Alcohol , Drug Addiction
and Mental Health Services have been canceled. The board
will hold a special meeting at 7 p.m . on Jan. 30 to conduct
'business.
~
·

Small governments meet
MARIETTA - District- 18 Smail Government Committee
will meet at 10 a.m. on Jan. I'J at the Holiday Inn in Marietta
to select 10 small government-eligible projects to submit 'to
the Ohio Public Works Commission. The project will .compete for state government funding with projects · from
throughout the state.

Taft signs bill to help
state, local officials
terrorism . was passed by legislators last month and takes
effect }\pril 11.
The law requires the state
to develop questionnaires to
determine if ·an applicant for
a state job, contract or
license has supported organi-zations on the federal list of
known
terrorist s.
The
Department of Public Safety
will be ab le. to pick some job
categories where the terrorism support questionnaire
i ~ n 't needed .

GALLIPOLIS - Fire of
as -yet unknown origin
struck buildings on the 500
block of Second Avenue at
the intersection with Locust
Street, one of them the lon1g:--+....._Y..
time base for a real estate
agency.
Gallia County 9-1-1 reported late Wednesday that the
-.
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
''.
· Department was dispatched
"•
to the scene at 10:02 p.m. on
reports of flame~ coming
from building s. One of the
structures affected is the one
at the corner of Second and
Locust that houses Wi seman
Real Estate and upstairs
apartments.
It was no't immediately
known if the fire Jriginated
in the Wiseman r~ilding err in
one of the adjoining empty
structures next to the agency
on Second Avenue .
"The fire was coming out
at multiple points when the
officer arrived," a 9-1-1 dispatcher said.
Oc&lt;;upants of the apartments above the realty
office and on the Locust
Street side were evacuated,
the dispatcher said. Second
and Locust were blocked off
and traffic diverted around
the site as .Gallipolis was
assisted by fi'refighters and
equipment from Pomeroy,
W.Va.,
Point
Pleasant,
Springfield Township and
District 2. Firefighters were
still 'combating the blaze
before midnight.
'The fire marks the second
·major blaze along Second
Avenue since 'the June 8,
2005, conflagrati on that gut. ted an &lt;fpartmen.t building at
the intersection with Cedar
Street. The early moming fire
was spotted by off-duty
G,allipolis Police Officer
Greg Frazier as he drove by
on his way · home. Frazier
alerted 9-1-1 and with the
assistance of fellow officer~
evacuated the nearly dozen
residetlts of the bullditig
before the tire spread.
Charlie Shephordjpbo\o
The tire also damaged the
home of Alice Saunders next' Fi(eflghters from several area fire departments battled a fire that struck bu1id1ngs at the Interdoor. Mrs ..Saunders was also section of Second Avenue and Locust Street in Gallipolis late Wednesday. One of the builcf1ngs
affected by the fire housed the Wiseman .Real Estate offices.
evacuated.

TOPS losers honored
COOLVILLE - Pat Hall
was named weekly best
weight-lo,s . winner
at
Tuesday 's meeting of TOPS
&lt;T&lt;ike Off . Pounds Sensibly)
Chapter#OH 2013. Coolvtlle.
.There were 24 members
present with Betty Coen being
recognized for her upcoming
birth.day. Welcomed were
Pam Washburn, Kim Allen,
and Debbie Moodispaugh .
December monthly winners

were Doris Buchanan, perfect
attendance: Dottie Bond.
Penny 'Brooks. Buchanan,
Joan Cole. Sharon Powell.
Connie Rankin, and Pat
Snedden. exercise charts; atid
Bond, Buchanan. Cole, and
·Powell. food charts.
The weekly best weightloss winner for the final week.
in December was Cindy Hyde
· i.vtth Powell being named
monthly best weight-loss

Board

rates whenever such funds
are available; an&gt;! to revise
appropriations at the fund
level ~s needed and submit
the inodifica\ions or corrections to the Board for
approval at the next possible
meeting.
Walton was named to the
Ohio School Boards legislative liaison for 2006, and ·
Logan to \epresenl the board
on the Ohio School Boards
student achievement liai son
for the year.
In the regular meeting
which followed the organizational meeting, Ralph Werry,
cheer leading coach , report on
the 'cheerleaders 1rip to
Orlando, Ra. to perform at
, the Capitol I. Bowl. He
described everything about
the trip as "wonderful" and
commended the cheerleaders ·
on their behavior and performance. He also noted that the
Meigs group had been invited
back for 2007.
Rhonemus presented information ori a planned reduction
in the bond retirement tax levy
from 3.40 mills tv 3. mills for
tax year 2005 for taxes collected in 2006. He noted that .
only the neecled dollars to
make the bond retirement

from Page At
from , $80 per month :
Following an inquiry from
David Ramey. a visitor
attending the meeting and
parent of children in the
Meigs Local Schools, about
·the innease, Superintendent
William Buckley said the
amount wh1ch school board
members can be paid is set by
the legislature. The legal
maximum amount is $125
which is ·what the board
voted to pay members.
·
· In addition the board establi shed a board service fund
for-board expe nses at a. maximum of $2 per pupiL
As in previous years the
board authorized the treasurer. to pay all bills as they are '
presented , provided that
fund s are a\'ailable, and to
repm1 monthly to the Board
of Education those bill s that
were paid: authorized him to
sec ure tax &lt;u)vances from the
Meigs County Auditor \l'heri
the funds arc available and
payable to the school' di strict :
to in vest· mactive and interim
funds ar the most prodttctive

Council
from PageA1
Administrator
Bradford
Anderson. it would tuke the
vill age approximately six
mon'ths tn rec&lt;),er $25.000
if the water- improveme nt
fund ts u'ed for the :si_tc

preparation work. Council
must carefully consider how
that fund ca n be used. and,
.how it is most effectively
u;eu. in light of the statu s of
fund in~ the $4 million trcatmeni p'lant.
Both Anucrson and Fi,c;ll
Officer Susan Baker sa id
Monday the work now underway at the Park Street ,; tc i'
necessary tf the pi am is to he

-

strueblres

KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

POMEROY - Joshua Neutzling, 19, Pomeroy
(Pagevtlle), passed away on Monday,- Jan . 9, 2006, at Grant
Medtcal Center m Columbus from injuries received in an
automobile accident.
.
.
He was born June 24, 1986, to Charles and Mandy Reeves
Neutzlmg of Pomeroy. He was a 2005 gra&lt;;luate of Meigs High
School and was employed at Luigino's of Jackson .
Also survi vi ng are paternal grandparents, Charles and
Carolyn Neutzling of Middleport : maternal grandparents,
Eugene (J')ke) and Juamta Reeves of Pomeroy; a special friend,
Manah Losey of Shade; and several aunts, uncles and cousins.
_Services will be at II a.m. on Friday, Jan. 13, 2006, at
Btrchfield Funeral Home in Rutland, with Rev. Theron
Johnson officiating, with burial following at Riggs Cemetery
111 Pagevtlle.
The family will receive friends from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. on
Thursday at the funeral home.
·
Memorial cotltributions toward burial expenses may be
made to Btrchlteld Funeral Home, P.O. Box 188 Rutland
Ohlo~7~.
'
'

COLUMBUS (AP)
Gov. Bob Taft signed a bill
Wednesday that allows police
to arrest people who ref.use to
cooperate when police who
suspect them of committing
or witnessing felonies ask
them their name.
Police will be allowed to
ask the suspect's age and
address, but the person being
questioned would not be
required to provide them .
The bill, designed to help
state and local officials fight

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

---~---··

'

-

Deaths

clc crossed the center line and
collided with a southbound
pickup driven by David A.
Plybon, 38.· Prichard. W.Va.
Roush and Plybon's pa,senger, Donald R. Plybon. 70.
!'richard. died of injuries suffered in the crasli. '
The Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. obtained the BAC level on
Roush from the Mason
County _Sheriff's _Department
a
Freedom
of
tmder
Information Act request.
Sheriff Scott Simms. initially
declined to release the reading .
Rou ~ h had been convicted
twice before in Mason
County for DUI. once in
1996 and ag,tin in 1998.
_according to Morgan.
Since 1981. local courts
have bad no jurisdiction as to
the length of suspensiOns of
driver licenses for DUI
offenses. The length ot
Roush 's suspens ion woul ,d
have bee n decided by the
West Virginia Division of
Motor Vehicles. Morgan said.
Even though the 1998 second offense DUI charge
o.lg a i n~.;t Rou sh v.as redut:ed in
·the ·local court. the sec:onu
DUI "ould still have been

from PageA1
winner. A pin was awarded to
Hyde for perfect attendance
ve n by 43 -year-old Hartford
in 2005, .
The program presented was resident Mark T. Gilkey.
Thomas L Merritt. 42.
the first of a series regarding
Charleston.
a passenger in
trans fats.
The group meets every Parsons' vehicle. was killed
Tuesday at Torch Baptist in the crash .
ParsDns was indicted last
Church. Weigh-in is · from
5:15 to 6:15p.m. with a meet - week for driving under the
influence causing death . DUI
ihg at 6:30 p.m. For informa- causing
bodily mjury. DUI.
tion, call Pat Snedden at 662negligent homicide and rac2633 or attend a free meeting. ing on the highway.
' His' blood alcohol content
payment can be collected. was not released bv Mason
"When valuations go up the County Prosecuting ·Attomey
rates come down because. we Damon B. Morgan Jr.. because
can only collect the amoun.t it is part of the evidence in the
of money we need,'' explamed case aga inst Parsons.
Jonathan G. ·. ~oush , 30,
the treasurer.
New
Haven. dri\'er of one
The annual tax budget for
the 2006-07 fiscal year was of the vehicles in a twopresented and discu ssed at vehicle crash on W.Va. 2 on
the meeting with Rhonemus Dec. 23, had a blood alco-,
pointing out that from Jan. ·I hoi co ntent (lf 0.34 percent
through June 30, there should at the tim e of the crash. The
be an ending cash fund bal- lega l limit is 0 08 ..
Roush was northbound in a
ance of.$128,369.
pi
c
k~p truck near Eckard
The superintendent wa'
Chapel
Road when his veh iauthorized 10 make offers of
employment directly to candidates and to accept resig nations which are submitted at
the time submitted subject to
board approval.
Hired during the meeting
were Ryan Hill and Autumn
Hill Lisle, teachers; Joyce
Frye, aide, and Pam Whiie.
health handica,ifed 't ucknt
tutor.
An overnight tield ttip was
approved to allow Chelsea
Manley to attend the Skilb
USA-Regional
· Ofllcers
Leadership Trai ning institute on
Jan. 15-20 in Washington. D. C.
A board member~attcnding
EVERYTHING, IN
in addition to Humphrey,.
Abbott. Logan. and ' Walt~r
was Victor Young.

If You've Been Waiting

~r

recognized as wch by the
state for license , uspensio'n
purposes, \1organ said.
The last DUI with death
prosecution in Mason County
was in September 2003.
" It 's been awhile since we
. had a case to pro,ecute on
DUI causing death. thank
God ... Morgan said. · ·
·
Two separate cmshe&gt; cau~­
ing three deaths obviously is ·
too many, he said.
"It's twO more than I would
like to see.:· '.1organ said.
The prosecutor said he did
not notice any meaningful
increase or dccrea'e on the
numhcr of DUI cases handled
by hi s oftice in 2005.
In
Ohio.
the
State
Hichwav Patrol inve'li~ated
e i g~ht f;it al acciden ts i'n· its
·,.c),eragc area. with five in
Meig s Co unt y and three in
Gallia Count1.
Of those. t(,ur \\ ere related
to either drunk dri,·ing or. in
one or them. drtl~ tha£e. said
S2t . John Sill~e\
the
G:tllia-Mci2s Post." When \ ,·c 'ay related.
,,e·r~ nut ~ayi n g it ne~essari­
ly cau,cd the ,-ra,h. bqt 11 was
in their &gt;~ · stem ... he said.

of

The Big one ·

THIS IS IT! ·
OUR STORE WILL BE SOLD FOR

10%·20%·50%·40%

constructed - but it may not
pe huilt.
'

··we· re C'I'U~Il"~ to ha"e tu

have

~u&lt;trant ced rundln~ to

to one half off!

proc~e-d with the proj~ct.~ and
\Ve need w ddermine ril.!hl

away wher:~ we arc going'" to
\tup _.:.pending mmrey on pr~ ­
hminar) '"'r" 1f' the project is
not to proce~u." Coun cil
Pre,iucnt Stephen Houchin'
said MotiJa~ .

---···--

MASON
· 2nd Street

NITURE CO.

304·713·5592
-------

·Masen.WV

�.PageAb

COMMUNI1Y

The Daily Sentinel

· Thursday, January 12,2006

LOcal Weather

'

Today's Forecast
Forecast for Thursday, Jan. 12

clly/Ragion

Thursda~January12,2006

High I Low temps

MICf'.·

Aikman, Reggie White among Hall of Fame finalists ~

Toledo•
51 " 135"
Youngstown •

1
.53' I 34"

~ Pt'-

~

54" 133"

I

ss· 133• ·'

~

Mansfield •

Dayton• ~

LocAL SCHEDULE

*Columbus

L._')

GALLIPOLIS - A schedule of upcoming college
and high school varsity sporting events involving
teams from Gallia , Meigs and MaSOI'l_ COI..mties.

57' 134'

Ihw:l_d.ay's agmBB

.Cincinnati ·
• 59" t34"
(• )

Portsm:uth •

63" 136".

Submitted photos

Members of Jobs Daughters of the local Bethel are left to right, front, Jessica Freeman, Rainey Herman and Harley Fox; mi(jdle
row, Emily Babbitt, Betty Holeman, Lindsey Myers, Ashley Freeman, and theresa, Fahey: and back, Jam1e Bailey, Knsten Dav1s,
Lindsey White, De1ra Peters, and Susan Brauer.

6
f'artly

Cloudy~

Q

Cloucty

,.,,.,,

ShOwers

Girls Basketball
Athens at Gallia Academy, 7 p.m.
Belpre at Meigs . 7:30p.m.
Eastern at Waterford , 6 p.m .

0

South Gallia at Symmes Val ley, 7:30 .p.m . .

River Valley at Rock .Hill , 7:30p.m.
Federal Hoeklng at Southern. 7:30p.m.
College Basketball
,Cedarville at Rio Grande. B p.m.
Women's College Basketball
Cedarville at Rio Grande, 6 p.m.

''

'.

Thunder ·~
.
. Flurries ~......
slonns

~

~\~
\\ \ \

~

Rain

Ice

&amp;"-.....
~~
~ ..... ~
•

*·

Snow

•••••

Weather Underground • AP

jOB'S DAUGHTERS
INSTAllS NEw OFFICERS, ·
INITIATES NEW MEMBERS
•

.
•'

•

. MIDDLEPORT New ity member. past Bethel
officers were installed and five guardian , recipient of the
new members initiated i11to degr~e of royal purple, and
secretary,
as
Bethel #62 of the International guardian
Order of Job's Daughters. at a installing · recorder; Lon
the Hatfield, past honored queen,
recent meeting a!
Middleport Masonic Temple. as installing senior cust9dian;
Initiated into the Bethel and Shawna White. past hanwere Theresa Fahey, Ashley ored queen, as installing
Freeman, Jessica Freeman. junior custodian.
Harley Fox, and Rainey
The new officers were preHerman .
sented at the altar where each
Officers in stalled · were was invested with the honors
Kristen Davis as honored of their respective 'offices and
queen; Lindsey Myers as given the obligation. The ·
senior princess ; Diedm Peters Installing guide and installing
as junior princess; Susan marshall presented the honBrauer as marshall ; Betty ored queen elect at the altar
Holeman as chaplain; Jamie and placed her hands on the
Bailey as musician ;. Ashley open Holy Bible. ·she was
Freeman as librarian; Theresa · then given the oath of office,
Fahey as first messenger; presented with her cape and
Rainey Herman as second crown, along with the laws
. .
messenger; Emily Babbitt as and rules of her office. ,
Kristin Davis was installed as honored queen of Bethel 62,
fifth messenger; Harley Fox as
Esq,Jrted and introduc~d International Order of Jobs Daughters in ~erernoni~s .@t Ui.~
senior custodian; and Jessica were Chris Davis, associate Middleport Masonic Temple .
Freeman as inner guard.
Bethel guardian. past associFor the installation the ~te Bethel guardian, Bethel a gavel from her parents, and of filling all Bethel offices.
Bethel and social rooms were . #26 Hagerstown . Md., and she in turn presented gifts to
The Bethel Closed with a
decorated i.n the honored father of the honored queen the installing officers. Several tlow!lr ceremony where each
queen 's colors of red and elect; Greta Davis. past hon- gifts ·were presented to meni ber presented Lindsey
pink. the cross. her emblem. ored queen , past · Bethel Lindsey· White. past honored White with a red rose. A friendand pugs, her mascot.'
. guardian. recipient of the queen , ·including a framed ship circle was formed as she
Lindsey White. past hon- degree of royal purple, and photograph a&gt; honored queen signed the Bethel's Bible, and
ored , queen, Grand Bethel mother o( the honored queen_ and her pin and card.
the members formed a cross
third messenger. and Jay Pee. elect:As·h!e1gh Dav1s, s1ster ot
Awards presented were by before moving to ihe social
member. served as the the honored queen elect; Gret&lt;i Davis to Lindsey room for refreshments.
'
installing officers. A s~ i stin g Dorsel Thomas, past associate Myers, a proticiency · certifiInspection was announced
were Kimberly Mattox , past Bethel · guard tan;
John cate; and Chris Davis to Doug for 2 p.m. March 19.
honored queen and guardian Nicholson., past associate Bell, Dorsal Thomas· and Paul
director of Epoch s, as Bethel guardian. Bethel #22. · Bell, "blue man" pins. offiinstalling guide ; Melody Alexandria, Va.; George cially welcommg them to the
McKay, past honored queen. 1acl&lt;son. grand royal patron, Bethel 's functions. ·
as installing marshall; Jessica Order of the Amaranth:
There wete remark s by
Marcum, past honored queen Barbara Jackson. grand asso- Kristen Davis, Lindsey
and guardian treasurer, as ciate conductress, Order of White, John Warner, Mary
installing chaplain: Kathy the Amaranth: Mary Lou K.. Holter, Greta Dav1s,
Thomas, past honoree) queen. · Hilderbrand; supreme chanty, Chns Davts, Kathy Thomas,
past Grand Bethel honored Order of the Amaranth ; and Ann
Mattox ,
George .
queen, past Bethel guardtan, Doug Bell , JUlliOr warden, Jackso n, and Mary Lou
and recipient of the degree of Middleport Lodge #363.
H1lderbrand. It was noted
The honored queen was pre- that the Bethel Daughters
royal purple, as installing
.musician; Ann Mattox , maJor- sented several gtfts 1ncludmg were ne~r mceung the1r goal

.

Thursday... Sunny, Highs
in the lower 60s. South winds
5 to 10 mph with gusts up to
20 mph.
·
Thursday night...Partly
cloudy with a 20 percent
chance of showers. Not as
cool with lows in the upper
40s. South winds 5 to 10 mph.
Friday... Mostly
cloudy
with showers likely with a
chance of thunderstorm s.
Highs in the upper 50s. West
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance
of rain 70 percent.
. .
Friday nigbt. ..Cioudy with
a chance. of rain and snow

showers . Much cooler with
low s : in the lower. 30s.
Northwest winds 5 to I0 mph
with gusts up to ·20 mph.
·Chance of precipitation 50
percent. ·
,
.
Saturdoy...Cioudy w1th a
40 percent chance of snow
showers. Much cooler with
highs in the upper 30s.
Saturday
night
and
Sunday... Partly cloudy. l,.ows
in the lower 20s. Highs in the
lower 40s.
Sunday
night:.. Mostly
clear. Not as cool with lows in
·the lower 30s. ·

Local· Stocks ·
ACI- 84.05
.AEP -:37.19. .
Akzo- 47.50.
Ashland Inc. - 64.41
BLI-12.98
Bob Evans - 23.24
BorgWamer - 58.30
CENX- 28.31
Champion - 4.35
Charming Shops 12.50
City Holding - 36.38
Col- 46.28
DG -17.81
DuPont "- 41.14
Federal Mogul - .36
USB- 30.52
Gannett - 62.78
. General Electric - 35.43
GKNLY- 4.95
Harley Davidson - 54.08
JPM.- 40.70
Kroger - 18.58 .

Ltd.- 23.45
NSC- 42.50
Oak Hill Financial 32.68
OVB- 25.10
BBT- 41.94
Peoples - 29.36
Pepsico - 58.86
Premier - 15.15
Rockwell - 65.03
Rocky Boots - 20.01
Sears·- 124.71
Wai-Mart- 46.57
Wendy's ~ 57.49
Worthington- 19.64
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Ananclal Advisors
of Hilliard Lyons In
Gallipolis.

Meigs .County Visitors Guide

OU School of Art faculty showcases work .
ATHENS - The table s
have been turned. In stead of
art professors giving critical
evaluations of projects pro. duced by their students, the
faculty
of , the
Ohio
University School of Art has
submitted their recent work
for public review for the
2006· School of Art FacultY.
Exhibition now on view at
the Kennedy Museum of Art
at the Ridges in Athens. The
exhibition runs until Sunday,
March 12.
Thi s biennial exhibition
features works by both hew
and seasoned facu lty mem~
bers wo~king in ceramics.
graphic design . paintin g.
photography. printmakin g.
sculpture , in stallation art. and
time-based medta. Over halt
of the. School of Art's 29 fa~ ­
ulty members ha ve been
hired within the la st five
years. says Robef( Lazuka,
direcror of the School of Art.
· Thi s change inform s the
exhibition's aim : to showcase
the creative ideas and
research the entire Scho(ll of
Art 't udio facult y are producing, he ;ays . ·
·
'' Ha vi ng this man y new,
young arti sts on ou r facult y
represent s a sweepin g change

for the School of Art:s pro- ty members enjoy · interna- ·
gram. Tlie 2006 School of Art tiona! recognition and are
Faculty Exhibilion wil l featured in various European
afford the regional and local museums and corporate
community the opportunity buildings.
to enjoy seeing everything
. Gallery hours . at The
from the traditional arts to Kennedy Museum of An are
video and installation works ·Tuesday, ,Wednesday, Friday,
by our tai.ented faculty,'' he· noon to 5 p.m.; Thursday noon
says.
to 8 p.m.; and Saturday and
The faculty 's diverse aca9- Sunday, I to 5 p.m. The museemic backgrounds are retlect- um is closed Mondays and
ed in the variety of mediums holidays. Admission is free.
. and methods .used by the Visit www.ohio.edu/museum
artists to create their work, &lt;http://www.ohio.edu/museum&gt; or call (740) 593-1304
&gt;ays Lazuka. .
for
more information about the
''In addition to the traditional fine art s di sc iplines museum's current and upcom·
represented at -the exhibition, ing exhibitions.
.the innovative usc or electronics and digital media signify the facu lt y's wi llingness
to grow and ex pand the . ·
boundaiie s of art-making ,"
says Lazuka .
·
.Jhc School of Art faculty
PORTSMOUTH - Two
has exhibited in various area stud ents have been
mu~um s ac rvss the country. · named to the fall quarter
including · The Fogg Art 2005 Pre&gt;ident 's List at
Mu seum
at
Harvard Shawnee Unive"ity.
They are Kaleb Sias of
University in Camhridge,
Mass., The Mu seum of Bidwell
and
Jeremy
Modern Art , New York , N.Y. , Blackston of Pomeroy.
The de Young Museum in
To be named t&lt;:&gt;thc list. !&gt;tuSan Francisco. Calif., and the den'~:. mu st be full-time and
Whitney Museum of Art, in have achieved a grade point
New York. N.Y. Many tacu l- a~e ra ge of 4.0.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

LocAL SCOREBOARD

friday's Qames
Boys Basketball
Alexander at Meigs. 8 p.m.
Rock Hill a11;1iver Valley, 6 p .m.
Gall Ia Academy at Athens. 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Winfield, 7:30 p.m
Eastern at Federal Hocking. 8 p.m.
Grace at OVCS, 5:30p.m.
Cross Lanes at South Gallia, 6:30p.m.
Miller at Southern. 6:30pm.
Girls Basketball
Cross Lanes at South Gallia, 5 p.m.·
Wrealllng
Point Pleasant at W1nner's Choice. TBA
. Saturday's gamea
Boys Basketball

River Valley at Rose ~ill (Ky.}, 6 p.m.
·
Girls Bas'ketbali
Point Pleasant at River Valley, 7:30p.m.
Wellston at Meigs. 6 p.m
Wrestling
Point Pleasant at W1nner's Choice
, River Valley at Columbus Br1ggs
College Basketball
Rio Grande at Walsh . 4 p.m.
Women 's College Basketball
Rio Grande at Walsh, 2 p.m.

,

WVU continues
historical start
MORGANTOWN. W.Va.
(AP) Kevin Pittsnogle
scored 23 points as West
Virginia agi1in rallied past a Big
Beast foe, (1eating Georgetown
68-6·1 on Wednesday for its
.best start in the league's history.
TI1e . No ... 16 Mountaineers
(II "3, 3-0 Big East) trailed by
as many as II points in the tirst
half agains\ the Hoyas, one
game after being behind by 15
points at No. 3 Villanova and ,
coming back to win. This time',
West Virginia pieced together a
13-0 run spanning both halves
to take a 25-23 lead .
West Virginia's 3-0 conference record is the best start in
its II years in the Big East and
puts the Mountaineers in lirst
, place over Georgetown ( I0-3.
. 2, I).

·

Atier Georgetown tied West
Virginia at 33 with .14:36
remaining, the Mountameers
hit live 3-pointers for a g&lt;lmehigh 57-45 edge at the 4:00
mark. Patrick Beilein, WVU's .
all-time 3-point leader, hit two
and Pittsnogle added a 3-poiiiter and · three-pomt play, m.the
push.
.
·
·
Georgetown .pulled ·within
five point~.66-61, with26,sec:onds left. Pittsnogle arid MOO:.
Gansey added one free .lhrow
each for the tina! margin.
·
Gansey and Beileip had I5
and 13 points, respec~yely, for
WVU. which had fou~ players
in double ligures. Georgetown :'
was led by Jeff G{eel),'s · 17
points while Roy Hilipen h;td
16.

1-11'

Georgetown's detense -was
ranked tirst in the Big E:iSt in
total scoring, with 57poi.nts per
game coming into the yontest,
but West Virgin ia's 68 points
· tied the most all&lt;)wed by it this
~eason. ·The Mountaineers
Scored 47 second-!'t'alf points. ·
the most Georgetown has
allowed in any half iliis year.
. WVU · won a '"sl:'aso11rbest
nine games in ·.a' rqw · llnd
snapped Georgeto'!VIl'S sevengame winning streak.
A moment of ·;silence was
observed for the"d 2:. miners
killed at the Sago .Mtne in
Tallmansville. 75 miles south
of Morgantown.1t 'wa&amp; Wvu·s
first home game~irice-.the Jan.
· 2 explosion. . ~. :· ~· .

Area students
earn
. ssu listing

CONTACTS
Fn - t-740-446·3008
E-mail- sports@f"nyda•lysentlnal.com
Sport~

Brad SheJman, Sports Editor
bsherman@myda•lytnbune.com

Dave Harris or Brenda Davis
' 9 2-2155 .

The Da

Sentinel

Bryan WaHers, Sports Writer
{740) 446·2342, ext. 23
bwal1 ers @myda•ly1r ibune .com
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342. ext. 33

lcrurt:l@ myda ilyreg1ster.com

.,....--,::,....,...,..,. Bowls with achievement of my athletic back on the Buffalo team that ·
Gre.en Bay , career,"
Aikman
said won f'our straight AfC titles
and
was Wednesday in u prepared from 1990-93. Moon threw
elected to 13 statement. " It's not some- for nearly 50.000 yards in the
straight Pro !bing that I choose to spend a NFL after staning his career
Bowls as a, lot of .time talking about, in the Canadian . Football
member of because I think that kind of League. ,
The two seniors candidates,
the Packers talk is unfair to those men
and Eagle s. who have · already earned · former Dallas offensive tackThe defen- their place in the Hall of le Rayfield Wright and forsive lineman Fame.
mer Oakland coach arid curWhite
is second on
''I came into the NFL want- rent
broadcaster
John ·
the all-time ing nothing more than to win Madden , were chosen by a
sacks list with 198 and led a championship. My career special committee
last
the league twice in the cate- unfolded in a way that August and went straight to
gory, including 1987 when he exceeded all expectations and the finals. The other 13 fi.nalhad 21.
I am gtateful to those who ists were selected from a Jist
· "If I were to be selected for helped me along the way and of 25 semifinalists.
induction, it would be the ·shared in that success"
Please see HOF, Bl
most meaningful individual
Thomas was a star running

.Ohio State steamrolls Boilerma~ers,' 80-64

.... ,-..,

Redmen

CR-.

Basketball...,~

WEST LAFAYETTE,
. Ind. (AP)- Je'Kel Foster
was just too quick for
Purdue. .
.
The Ohio State guard
tied his career high with
six steals,
repeatedly
leading the
BY MARK WtWAMS
I 9 t h SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL
ranked
Buckey es
WJLBERFORCE - After
to
easy
taki
ng two steps forward with
baskets in an 80-64 victory
a
pair
of nail-biting wins the
Wednesday night.
University of Rio Grande
·'It was the defense. The
Redmen
basketball took a
coach gave us a halftime
back on Tuesday
huge
step
speech. more or less to get
night as lady luck went
us motivated on defense,
against
them in a 64-63 loss
to play harder. We did a
at
Wilberforce.
good job of sharing the
Rio Grande (8- tO, 2-4
ball and took some great
AMCS)
jumped out to a
shots." said Foster, who
quick
start
gaining two ninealso had I0 points and five
point
leads
at
15-6 and 28-19.
rebounds.
Freshman
forward
Joe
Ohio State forced 21
of
Mendenhall
hit
a
pair
turnovers that led to 30
three-pointers
to
give
·
the
points.
Thirteen . of
Redmen the 15-6 lead at the
Purdue's errors were steals
II :00 mark of the tirst half.
by the Buckeyes.
. Wilberforce (3-12,- '2-4
"Defense is always the
AMCS)
. closed out the first .
key to the .g11me," said J.J.
half with an 8-0 run to get to
Sullinger, who led Ohio
within a point at halftime,
State with 17 points . "Our
trailing 28-27.
best offense is in transi· The Bulldogs stayed close
tion; and we can only run
and finally took the lead at
whe.n we stop them at the
35-33 at the 16:52 mark of
other end. Playing the
the second · half, from th.at
passing lanes the way we
point on .the lead see-sawed
did tonight was in our
back-and-forth with neither
favor and we got some
side gaining a significant
easv baskets from it."
advantage. ,
The six steals by Foster
Rio Grande placed three
tied hi s care,er high set last
players in double ligures led
month against Gardnerby
senior forward Reggie
Webb.
Williamson
with 16 points, .
"You can't even describe
Williamson was 8-for-8 from
whar type of player Je' Kel
the
field and scored 12 of his,
is," Sullinger said. "He's
team-high
total. in the second
tough, he's nasty, he's .
half. Freshman center Will .
tenacious on defense. He's
Norwell added 15 points on our leader, man."
.
7-of-8
shooJing and collected
The Buckeyes ( 12- 1, 2-1
seven rebounds. Senior guard
Big fen) built a 14-poinl
James Pattman chipped in 12
halftime lead, forced four
points.
: , turnovers by Purdue in tlie
Wilberforce received out· first. 2 minutes of the' secstandin.
g play from their
ond · half and led by as
backcourt
, Antonn Melton
many as 25 points midway
the
Bulldogs with 18
paced
through the period. The
points. Cameron Phillips
Boi Iennakers never came
17 points off the bench
added
· closer than 16 .points the
and
Rome!
Murray tossed in
rest of the way.
AP photo
15
points
and
pulled down
Terence Dials added. 13 Ohio State's J.J. Sullinger, right gets two of his 17 po1nts in fron t of Purdue's Matt. Kiefer
fi\'e rebounds .
poin(S for Ohio State .
.
during
the
second
half
of
college
basketball
action
In
West
L
afayette,
Ind
.,
on
·
Wednesday.
while Matt Sylvester had
Please s~ Bite, Bl
Ohio State defeate(l Purdue 80-64.
·
10.
"Yo u'v~ got to give
yourself a chance," Purdue
coach Matt Painter said.
''They shot the ball well.
We had a. c hanc~ . but we
turned the ·ball over. ...
There's no doubt we were
careless.
"When they have three,
fou r of tbose (turnovers
leading to baskets)'. that's
not eight points, that 's a
16-point swing,". Painter
said.
·
valci&lt;H H~,soital could spend
Matt Kiefer had 15
points and D rebounds for
"l..fl~'"~
· ly installed
Purdue (6-8, 0-3). which
lost its tirst home ga me of
the season . and it s lith
straight against a ranked
ore corl:lh10nly knq~n . allow~ .P'{)1
opponent. Marcus White
added 13 points .
1
ph~rs i&lt;)1~'fl~l~:is• a patient'~
radiology images~d
te s t
'
.
Purdue scored the first
b~.Lsket of the game. bui
results witlj a'$troke of the keybowd'
Ohio Stme went on a 12-0
\~ ~·~
1
~
•
"'
J run , including six points
availabilil))'·of x-raya:andlrepor\S•me1111s le»
by Sylvester. and turn~d
t .
2520 Valley DriYe
• bill:~ every ~omeback by
. waiting tlrile fur our paqcnts.
\
.
' .
the Boilermakers wi th
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
timely 3-pointef'. Ohio
PAc·s is settingJtlie stjlndllrd
qu~litY s~: n· ic&lt;.: and
I
, ~(;!', ,~,. _: ,..
~
I -It
'/
'
. '
.
State · was 11 -of-22 from
behind the arc.
Pleasant Valky llo~pital is utilizin g ih features .

Bulldogs
bite URG

42

'

I!'

• '

&lt;

\

1

'

'

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

"

tor

Please.see OSU,.Bl

'

Rarltofo!/1 Oe-t~t/f(e-l(t

Jnstrult

!?tsff

(740) 446·2342. ext. 33

dass will ~e
the weekend
of Aug. 5-6 . .
A j k man
q ua rte rb a c k e d
Dallas · to
three Super
Bowl titles
between the
1992-1995
Aikman
seasons. He
·
was one of
, the league's most accurate
passers and his 90 wins in the
'90s rilake him the · winningest starting quarterback
of any decade.
·
White, who died on Dec.
26, 2004, went to two Super

'

Phone - 1·740·446·2342 ext. 33

tJON'J,MISS OUTON I-lAVlNG YOUR BUSINESS
OR ORGANIZATIONINCLUDED

CANTON (AP)- Two of
the most dominant players on
either side of the .ball during
the 1990s could be 6ntering
the Pro Football Hall of Fame
together.
Troy Aikman and the late
Reggie White were among
the 15 finalists announced
Wednesday for tlfe Hall · of
Fame, joining Thurman
Thomas and Warren Moon as
finalists in their tirsr year of
eligibility.
·
Three io six of t~e finalists
will be selected for the Class
of 2006, which will · be
announced Feb. 4, the day
before the Super Bowl in
Detroit.' Enshrinement of the

301-675-1310

\

�BY MARK WILLIAM&amp;

SEOAL

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

SEQ ALL
40
90
4 1
3 ,

WILBERFORCE - The
Umverslly ot Rto Grande
Redwomen b&lt;isketball team
suffered a second stratght
)ough loss on the road 111 the
Amencan
Mtdeast
Conference, dwpptng a 68·
65 deciSion at Wt Iberlorce at
tbe G.tston Lewis A1ena on
Tuesd.ty e\enmg
Rto Grande (8-8, 3-3
AMCS) wds t'orced to pl,ty
wtthout the servtces of Its'
10p two scorers Sophomore
Bruney Walker was til &lt;~ nd
played on ly one mmute and
freshman lorward Sarah
Drabtnskt W&lt;IS not ,tble to go
wtth a bothersome ankle
InJury that occurred m the
Malone loss last Saturdav
Desptte pl aymg wnliout
their top two offenSive
weapons the Redv.omen
started well , spurred on by
the play at a pa11 ot freshmen both from MaiiOn m
forward Enn Kume and
gu&lt;trd Lauren Flowers
Rto grabbed the lead e,trly
&lt;111d butlt the adv,mtage to
25-15 wnh 7 17 rematmng
m the hrst half Wtlberlorce
(5-9. 3-3 AMCSl used brute
force on the ot!ensl\ e glass
to get back m the game and
closed the gap to two pomts
at 33-31 headmg tnto half, lime
The Bulldogs would take
the lead at 44-42 wnh 14 42
to play m the second half
and from that pomt on controlled
the
game
Wtlberforce used a 14-5 run

6·4
63

1 3. 4 6

Gallia Academy
Logan
Att1ens

14
04

3-6
,_ ,

TVC
40

ALL
74

3·1

83

2·2
22

63

I3

46

04

I9

TVC·OHIO
V1nton co
Alexander
Belpre
Nels York
Wellston
Metgs

1

65

TVC-HOCKING
TVC
Trimble

40
3 t

Eastern

22

Fed Hock
Waterford
M1ller
Southern

22
t 3

0-4

ovc

OVC
40
31
22
22
13
04

CheSf.tpeake
Fairland
SOuth Poml
Rock H1ll
Arver Valley
Coat Grove

ALL
73
73
84
54
46
011

ALL
91
74
54
55
46
38

OTHER
ALL
Wahama
South Galha
Hannan

82
82
32

Potnt Pleasant

08

aves

2 10

Girls Basketball

SEOAL
SEO ALL
Warren
Jackson
Logan
Mar•ena
Gallta ~cademy
Athens

5 1

84

41

92

42
32
15
06

93
58
55
t It

TVC

ALL
83
73
74
56
37

TVC-OHIO
Alexander

4 1
3 1

Nets York

Vmton Co

31

Belpre

2 t

04
04
TVC·HOCKING
TVC

Me•gs
Wellston

www.mydallysentloel.com

Boys Basketball

~arlet1a

Tnmble
Waterford
Mtller
Fed Hock
Eastern
Southern

3-1

72
46
29
47
64

O&lt;l

Coal Grove
Fwrland
South Pomt
A1verValley
Chesapeake
Redo; Htll

ALL
10-0

2·3
23

OVC

27

40

22

ave

14

3 7

14

48 I

54
74
28

OTHER
ALL
54
46
36

Hannan

38
18

Goree was btg down
the stretch for Wilberforce
scon ng all I0 of her pomts
111 the second hall
Wtibet Ioree controlled
the glass 49-41 , and held a
21-11 edge on the olfens1 ve
boards Rto commllted 16
turnovers to only 13 for
Wtlberfmce
Rto shot a respectable
42 6 pe1cent (21i-of-6 1)
Irom the floor and 41 2 percent (7-of-1 i) from beyond
the three-paul! arc Rto
struggled at the free throw
ltne. whtch m the end was
It kel y the t.ltlterence 111 the
game The Redwomen htt
only 6-ot-13 (46 2 percent)
tnes trom the chanty stnpe
WJiberlorce shot 34 7
petcent (25-of-72) from the
floor, 40 percent (6-of-15)
!rom three-po mt land and
63 2 percent ( 12-ol- 19 )
tram the foul hne.
It was the second stratght
ttme that Wtlberforce has
beaten Rto Grande at home
The two team s hook up
agaw on Febt uary 7 at the
Newt Oltver Aren,t
Rto wtll return home on
Thursday trymg to snap a
two-game
losmg
sktd
agamst NAIA Otvtston II
No 2 and AMC South
favonte Cedarvtlle
Cedarvtlle defeated the
Red women, 89-71, m a
game that was closer than
the fmal score mdtcated, 10
the fmt match-up thts season. November 29, at
Cedarville Ttp-off tS slated
tor 6 p m

g u a r d

Kamsh,t Coward
A late comeback .by the
Redwomen was keyed by
sentor guard Tana Rtchey
who natled a couple of
three's to get Rto to wnhm "
pomt m the final mmute
Wtlbertorce answered with a
tnfecta from Kwdra Taylor
to gl\e the Bulldogs the
breathmg room they needed
to hold on tor the wm
Rto was not &lt;tble to get a
tl11ee oft at the buzzer that
would have tied the game
Kume led the Redwomen
w1th 14 pot nt s and seven
rebounds 111 her seco nd start
of the se,tson Kume was 7ot-9 trom the l1eld m 27
mmutes at &lt;tctton Jumor
I orward Candace Ferguson
. added 12 pomts and mne
rebounds and Flowers tossed
m mne pomts (all m the hrst
half)
R10 Grande ktUer Jasmm
Jones led the Bulldogs wtth
a double-double performance of 16 po10ts (12 10 the
first half) and II rebounds
Taylor added 16 pomts and
etght , boards whtle Coward
tossed m 12 poults and
pulled down stx rebounds

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscnbe today

992-2155

had
p111nts
I

Court ol Common
Pleal Meigs County,
Ohio
Countrywide Home
L.oans,
Inc
dba
America's Wholesale
Lender
AND
Mortgage Electronic
Registration
Systems, Inc
C/o
Countrywide Home
Loans, Inc Plaintiff,
VS

Paul Barlhetmas, at
at. Delendants Case
No. OSCV093
Judge Fred W Crow
Legal Notice
Notice 1n Su1t For
Foreclosure
of
Mortgage
Mary Kathleen Day,
whose last known
address Is 27526
North Slllte Route 7,
Cheshire, OH 45620,
and the "nknown
heirs, devisees, tega·

tees,
executors ,
admlnlstratlors,
spouses and assigns
and the unknown
guardians of mmor
and/or Incompetent
heirs
ol
Mary
Kathleen Day, all ol
whose
re'sldences
are unknown and

and being more particularly described In
plaintiff's mortgage

Fargo Bank, National

point, Thence North

Association,
as
Trustee for Morgan

recorded

Stanley Capital I Inc ,
Trust
2004 OP1
Mortgage
PassThrough Certillcetes,
Series 2004-0P1, C/0
Option One Mortgage
Corporation ,
filed
their Supplemental
Comptaont In Case
Number 05-CV-023, In
the Court ol Common
Pleas
of
Meigs
County, Ohio, allegIng that the delendanl(s) John Doe,
Real Name Unknown,
the Unknown spouse
1f any, of Pauline F
Davis, and John Doe
and/or Jane Doe Real
Names unknown, the
Unknown
he~rs ,

14 Deg 47' 20" East
165 09 Feet to an Iron
Rod, passing an Iron
rod at IS leetlor reference, Thence East
221 95 Feet to the
point of beginning
containing
1 18
acres, more or less,
excepting all legal
rights ol way. The
bearings In the above
description are based
on the reference deed
votum 127, Page 122.

1n

Mortgage

Book 163, page 25 ,
Instrument
No
200300000400, olthls
County Recorder s
Off1ce
The above named
defendant IS required
to answer within
twenty-eight
(281
days after last publl·
calion, which shall be
published once a
week for Slit consecutive weeks, or they
m1ght be denied a
heanng 1n th1s case
Lerner, Sampson &amp;
Rothfuss Attorneys
for Plaintiff P 0 Box
• 5480, Cincinnati, OH
45201-5480 (513) 241 ·
3100 attyemaii@Isr·
law com
(12) 22, 29, (1) 5, 12,
19 26
Pubhc Nottce
Legal
Court
Pleas,
Ohio
Bank,

NOIIC8 In the
of Common
Meigs County,
Welts Fargo
National

Association ,

Trustee for Morgan

America's Wholesale
Lender
AND
Mortgage Electronic
Registration
Systems, Inc c/o
Countrywide Home
Loans, Inc. filed Its
Complaint In the
Common Pleas Court
of Meigs County,
Ohio In Case No
05CV093, on
the
docket of the Court,
and the object and
demand lor relief ol
which pteadl~g Is to
for:ectose Ihe lien of
ptalnllff's mortgsge
recorded upon the
following described
r•at eslllte to wtt
Pr,operty
Address
33356 Crouser Road,
Rutland , OH 45775

Pauline

F

Davis
have

or

have an
mterest m the real

diligence be ascertatnad,
will
lake
notice that on the
19th
day
of
September,
2005,
Countrywide Home

dba

devisees
legatees,
adminstrators, exeeu·
tors and ass•gns of
deceased
claim to

cannot by I1HII&amp;onable

Loana, Inc

~........

as

Stanley Capilli! I Inc.,
Trust
2004·0P1
Mortgage Pass
Through Certlflcales,
Series 2004·0P1 C/0
Option One Mortgage
Corporation Plaintiff
VS Ronald E Davis,
at at , Defendant Case
No 05·CV.023
Delendant(s), John
Ooe , Real
Name
Unknown,
the
Unknown Spouse 1f
any, of Paultne F
Davis, whose last
known address 11
35646 Carpenter Hill
Rd , Langsville , Ohio
45741 , and John Doe
and/or Jane Doe, Real
names unknown, the
unknown
He1rs,

Devisees , Legatees ,
Adm1nstratlors ,

Executors
and
Assigns of Pauline F
Davis deceasd will
t~~e not1ce thai' on
October 6, 2005, Wells

estate
described
below Situated In the
Township of Salem,
County ol Meigs and
State ol OhiO. Situate
m Salem Township,
Me1gs Countv, Stale
ol Ohio and being In
Section 5, Town 8
North, Range 15 Wesl
of the Oh1o Purchase
and being described
as
follows
Beginning at an Iron

Rod West about 2640
f!!OI and south aboul
1095 Feet from the
Northeast corner of

Sectoon
480 5,
thence South 9 deg
18 20 ' West 151 45
feet to an •ron rod,
thence South 28 Dilg
41 ' 20' west 16311

Descrlptton

per

Survey of Robert H.
Eason,

Registered

Surveyor Ohio R S
t~o
s-06546, dated
April 1984 Premises
commonly known

note

according to Its tenor
the conditions of a
concurrent mortgage
deed g1ven to secure
the payment ol said
note and conveytng
the

premtses
descrtbed , have been
broken and the same
has
become

absolute
The plolnlllf demands
thot the defendants
named
above be
requtred to answer
and set up their inter·

est

~lgl-.t

Slllnley Capital I Inc.,
Trust
2004-0P1
Mortgage
Pass·
Through Certificates,
Series 2004·0P1 C/0
Option One Mortgage
Corporallon Mark A
Poland
(0071988)
Attorney for Ptamt!lt
Carlisle,
McNellle,
Rim, Kramer &amp; Ulnch,
LPA, 24755 Chagrin
Blvd., Suite
200,
Cleveland, OH 44122,
216-360·7200 Phone,
216·360-7210
Facsimile ,
mpotond@ carlisle·
law com
(12) 15, 22, 29, (1) 5,
•
12, 19

as

35646 Carpenter Hill
Rd, Langsville, OhiO
45714 The Platnlllf
further alleges that
by reason of default
tn the payment of the
promissory

.-

1n. said real estate

or be forever barred
from

asserllng the
same, for forclosure
of satd mortgage the

Public Notice
NOTICE TO CON·
TRACTORS
Sealed proposals lor
the Damohlion and
Removal of three (3)
untls In the Village of
Mtddteport,
Meigs
County, Ohio, will be
received by the Meigs
County
CommiSSioners
at
their off1ce at the
Courthouse,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
unlit
1 00
pm ,
Thursdoy, February 2,
2006 .and then at 1 15
p m at saod office

I

~I.

HOF
fromPageBl
Madden, known as much
lor hts 'Ideo game und com
mentatmg as~ hiS coach mg.
has been ehgtble lor the
Hall ol Fame lor 27 years
The other tmahsts are
Demck Thomas, the Kan s.ts
Cny hnebacker who dted 111
2000 after a cdr .tcudent,
hnebacker Harry C:arson
who played fm the Nev.
York Gtants and 11as a
member of the 1987 Super
Bowl champtons; detenstve
end L C Greenwood, a
member ot Plltsburgh 's
"Steel Curtam" teams of the
1970s,
defenstve
end
Claude Humphrey who
played for Atlanta ,md
Phtladelphta between 1968-

Russ Gnmm a member
of W,tshmgton s f.tmed
Hous" oltenstve !me Bob
KucZhcnbetg . an ottenstve
Imem.m on Mt,um 's 1972
undefeated Super Bowl
ch.unpmns Mmnesota .tnu
Demet
t&lt;tcklc
G,u)
Zunmettn &lt;~n who pl,t)Cd
I rom
1986- 1997
v.tde
recetvet Mtchael hvtn .1
member ott he D&lt;tllas te,uns
thdt won three Super Bov.ls
bet\\een 1992 .Hill 1995
and wtde Je~ct\er Art
Monk. a memb~t ot thtee
Supet Bm1 I "mners wnh
W,tshtn£ton
A 39- member p,me l "til
vote on the ftnahsts A candtd,ne must get 80 percent
ol the vote to be elelled It
fewet than three get 80 percent the candtdate wt!h the
ne xt highest per~entage \\til
be elected

Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
Attention ol bidders
Is called to all of the
requtrements
con·
talned In this bid
packet, particularly to
the Federal Lobor
Standards ProviSions
and

Davls~ Bacon

the requirement for a

Removal of three (3)
umts In the Village ol
Middleport,
Meigs
County Ohio

payment bond and
performance bond for

named above are
reqUired to answer on

each set of plans and

point , thence North
53 Deg 43 10 West
109 69 Feet Along the

or before the 16th
dey of February, 2006
Wells Fargo Bank ,

centerline

National Assoctatton
as Trustee for Morgan

pro·

vtded In bid petket
Speclfocellons , and
bid forms may be
secured at the off1ce
of Meigs County
CommiSSioners ,

Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
Phone 740-992· 2895
A depos1t of 0 dollars
wilt be requored for

100% of the contract

pnce No bidder may
withdraw hts bid with·
In thirty (30) days
, after the actual date
of the opening there·
of The Meogs Countv
Commissioners
reserve the right to
reJect any or all b1ds

Mlck
Dovenport,
Prdsldent
Meigs
Counly
CommiSSioners
(1) 10, 12, 16

apeclflcallo~s.

check
mode payable to- The
full amount will be
returned wlthtn th•rty
l30J days after receipt
of bids

1"&gt;~··--~-~£1

g1ven

that

on

Saturday, January 14,
2006, at 10 00 a m , a
public sole will be
held at 211 W Second
St , Pomeroy, OH The
F~rmers Bank and
Savings Company Is
selling lor cash In
hand or cerl!lled
check the following
collateral
1993
CHEVROLET
C A M A R 0
2G1 FP22SOP2t 31785
1999 FORD MUS·
T
A
N
G
1FAFP4046XF200443
The Formers Bonk
and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at thos
sate end to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to sale Further,
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company

reserves

the right to reJect any
or all bidS submiUed

·~i~,Jtl .. t_

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Is hereby

. . C' ..

" " '• • . _ . _

The above described
collateral will be sold

colloteral
t996 FORD

"as

is • where Is·,
with no expressed or

T

Implied

The Farmers Bank
ond
Savtngs
Company Pomeroy
Ohio reserves the
nghl to bid at this
sale, and to Withdraw
the above collateral

warranty

gaven
For further lnlorma·
t1on ,

or

for

an

appointment
to
Inspect
collateral,
prior to sale dole con·
teet Cynd1e, Stacy or
Randy at 992·21 36
(1) 11, 12 13

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE· Is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, January 14,
2006, at 1000 am, a
public sate will be
held at 211 W Second
St , Pomeroy, OH The
Farmers Bank and
Savmgs Compony IS
selltng lor cash tn
hand or certified
check the followtng

Good
to the

Last
Word
That's the word from
subscnbers who read
our newspaper datly
for capttvattng news
stones, dtntng and
entertatnment revtews,
travel deals, local
weather reports and so
much moret

A

3FALP6~2TM141383

pnor to sale Further,
The Farmers Bank

and
Company

Public Notice

CON

U

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AM AD

\\,\0\ \1 I \II \ I '

r

Savings
reserves

the right to reJect any
or all bids submitted
The above described
collateral woll be sold
as 1s • where Is ,
With no expressed or
1mpl1ed
warranty
given
For further mforma·
han,
or
for an
appomtment
to
mspect
collateral ,
pnor to sale date con·

tact Cyndte , Stacy Or
Randy al 992·2136
(1) 11 , 12 13

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

All Display: 12 Noon 2

Monday-Friday for Insertion

Buslne•• Day• Prior To

In Next Day's Paper
s0 ,ru•lncldotaYy In-Column· 1 DO p.m

.r

For Sundays Paper

11"6

HF.l.P WANftD

Publication
Sunday Display: 1 00 p m.
Thursday for Sunday• Paper

Foster Parent• Needed
Homes needed In Jackson
Vmton
Me1gs
Athens
Washmgton count es lor
youths 0-18 OaslS prOVIdes
the tram1ng You will recetve
da1ty reimbursement ol $33
$48 a day pa1d respite and
support for the youth placed
m your home Tram•ng
beg1ns January 26 Albany
Call Oas1s Foster Care for
more 1nlormaUon Toll tree 1
877 325 1558

r

G~"EAWAY

r w'!"'---11111'-...

Al'mD

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

tO

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Per D em MSW Accepltng to Buckeye Communtly
appllcattons for LPN CNA Serv tces PO Box 604
STNA
CHHA
PCA JacKson
OH
45640
Com pet tFVe Wages Mtleage Dead! ne lor applicants
and
benefits
mclud ng 1/ 19/06 please tndtcate
Health Insurance A ppl~ at pos1t1on Eaual Opportunity
1480
Jackson
P1ke Employer
Galltpolls or 2415 Jackson
Avenue Pomt Pleasant WV 150
or phone toll free 1 866 441
IN.\TRUI"nON
1393

LEARN

TO
DRIVE

10 8uY

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Sliver and Gold Co•ns
Proolsets, Gold Rmgs Pre1935
US
Currency
Solitaire D•amonds· M T S
Com Shop, 151 Second
Avenue Gallipolis 740-446·
2842

NO EXPEAIEf\ICii NECESSARY
FULL TIME ClASSES

• JOB PLACEMENT
E:NROLLING N(;HJ

I buy Junk Cors (304)773

Female Stack and

Tan Coon Hound 740·985·
3540

Physical TherapiSt

ALLIANCE
TPIACTOA TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS

Med1 Home Heallh Agency
has an exctttng opportumty
for a full ttme part ttme or
per dtem Flhys1cal Theraptst
lo JOtn
our Medicare
Cert1f ed/JCAHO accredited
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Wtll pay up to $40 00 for
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away 740·992-o413 11 no
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seen @ Mason County
525·4163 for no obhgat ton
Atrport 1/7106 Please help
l \ll'lt)\ \ 11 ' 1
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us ftnd our Daughter Boyd
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• FINANCING .t.VAil.ABL£

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7 Pupp1es Boxer/Chow 74(). 5004

L.-------,.1
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1

liD..P WAN1B1

4x4's For Sate
. • • .. • •• •• . . . . 725
Announcement
030
Antiques
.• •.. ..•• •. •••. .•... •.
. .530
Apartments for Rent .. .• • • . • •••.•.
440
Auction and Flea Market
.•.•..••080
Auto Parts 8o Accessories.............
760
Auto Repair...................... • ••..•• •.
.....•..770
Autos for Sale.....................................710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sate................. ... • . 750
Building Supplies • ... . .
................550
Business and Buildings • . .•. •.•...•••••••• 340
Buolness Opportunltv .
•..•..•...•.210
Business Training.. • •. •
. ... 140
Campers 8o Motor Homes .. ..
. .•.• 790
Camping Equipment •.• .
•••..... 780
Cards ol Thanks...........
. .••...•.•..••. 010
Child/Elderly Care......... .. ••• .• . ...
• •• 190
Electrical/Refrigeration . • .......................840
Equipment for Rent.. •.•• ••• •......................480
Excavollng ••. ............... • ...... .... •.........,... 830
Farm Equipment .•
...•••.•.•....•• 610
Farms lor Rent
430
Farms for Sale
.• • • • 330
For Lease . .
. 490
For Sale .•...
585
For Sate or Trade
590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables
580
Furnished Rooms. • • .
450
General Hauling. • • • .......... ... ..•••. . • •• 850
Giveaway
• • ..................... . . . - 040
Happy Ads.
. ..................... . .
050
Hay &amp; Grain .
........................... • .640
Help Wanted .•..
.•.... ................. • ••.•• 1t 0
Home Improvements
••. at 0
Homes for Sale
310
Household Goods
5t 0
Houses lor Rent
• 410
In Memoriam
020
Insurance .. • ..
130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
660
Uveslock ..................... •....••.• .
630
060
Lost ond Found • • ........ .• ..•••.
Lots &amp; Acreage............................
350
Miscellaneous............................ ••••• ... .... .170
Miscellaneous Merchandise..................540
Mobile Home Repair..... ............. • • •........860
Mobile Homes lor Rent.. . ...••.••• • • •••. 420
Mobile Homes lor Seta
.....................320
Money to Loan ......• . ..• • .••. ... • • • ...... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers . ... • .•...•••••740
Musical Instruments ...•..•. •• •. ••••.
..670
Personate . .•.• • • ..•. •••••... .• ••••...
. 005
Pels lor Sele .
• .. •.• . . •• ..•.••.
· 560
Plumbing 8o Hullng .•••. •. ..••..••..
. 820
Professional Services. . .• .. •
.•..• 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair . • •• ••
.•..•..• 160
Real Estate Wanted..... . ... ..
•••••..• 360
School• tnatrucllon . .•
••....••.•• t 50
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer..............
• ... 650
Situattona Wanted ................................... 120
Space for Rent ••..••••.•. •• .. .• .. ...................460
Sporting Goods ............ ............................ 520
SUV's for Sate ... .. . •
. • ......:. ....... .•• 720
Truck&amp; lor Sate .................................. 715
Upholstery .......................................... 870
Vlllt For Sste
• ...................730
Wonted to Buy .• .• .. •
. ................ 090
Wonted to Buy· Form Supplt• ...............820
Wanted To Do . • •. •..
•• • . •............ 180
Wenlect to Rent . •
• • •••••.•...••.. 470
Yard Sal .. Gatltpolla .•
.072
.••.•.•••...••.074
Yard Sai..Pomeroy/Middta
Yard Sate·Pt. Pteaeont
...•. 078

100WORKERSNEEDED
Assemble crafts

wood items
To $480/wk
Matenals provtd ed
Free tnlormatlon pkg 24Hr
801 428-4649
Anent1on Dnvers
A&amp;J
Truckmg IS looking for
Drtvers w/1 yr OTR
Exper1ence for RegiOnal
Hauls Ave rage pay 40s tQ
f'Tlld 50s Home every
Weekend
call
Ken1
1600)462 9365
AVON ! All Areas' To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears 304
675 1429

BELIEVE ITt

1- 1'1--

~
®

www cormcs com

2006 by NEA, Inc

riO Hu.P W~NTHJ
Dental Asstslanl
The Metgs County General
Health Otstnct 1s acceptmg
applicatiOns for a Dental
Assrstant
The
Dental
Ass•stant works under gen~
eral superv 51on &amp; reqUtres
consrQerable knowledge of
dental off1ce practtces &amp; procedures &amp; dental operalory
prachces &amp; procedures 1n
order to asstst dentiSt n
fou r handed denial treat
ment &amp; to pertorm cha1rstde
asststance Mtntmum quahft
calton s 1nclude completton
of assoctate core program tn
dental ass tsl tng technology
proof of mocutatton or tmmu
n1ty to hepatttts B wus and 2
years exper ence Applicant
musl submtt three IaMers of
recommendalton With appl
catton
to
Healt h
112 E
Commtss1oner
Mem onal DrtVe Pom eroy
Oh io 45769
Sala ry •s
dependent on expenence
and
qualtftcat ens
ApplteatJOns Will be accept
ed unttl pOSit iOn IS filled

Full Time· up to S81ht1\olr
Part Time also available
Make calls thai make a
dttferencel
Call of beh alf of the NAA
2nd Amendment R1ghts
and other Political
Organtzattons
•Weekly pay and bonus
plan
•Paid tra1n1ng and holtdays
•Pa1d vacations every 6
months
•Top notch work
en,vtronment
Call NOW and start a new
career!
Dental Cltntc Admm strator
1-8n-46~247 Ext 2311
The Metgs Counly General
Health District IS accepttng
n own
appltcalton tor a Dental
Cltnte Admm1strator Dut tes
mclude ,plannmg dtrectlng
Earn over
&amp;J or coordlnat ng all ct1ntcal
$1,200/Month
ftscal &amp; support serv1ces
M1ntmum
qualtftcattons
Your hours and pay are
Include a BAIBS 1n Bus1ness
GUARANTEED each
Admlmstratlon or equivalent
week'
degree 2 years expenence
n a cllntca l selttng Applicant
Work with th e Natton s
must submit three letters of
leadmg non prof1t
recommendatiOn w1th apph
orgamza110ns lncludmg
catton
to
Health
Comm 1ss 1oner
112 E
• The American Caner
Memonal Dnve Pomeroy
Society
Ohio 45769 Salary Is
+The American Heart
dependenl on e~tpenence
Association
and
qualtf1cattons
Application s wt lt be accept
We also ofler the llE&amp;I
ed untll pOSitiOn IS fttled
work1ng environment and
benel1ts package 10 our
Desk Clerk needed Please
employees
apply at Budget Inn
Jackson P1ke Gallipolis No
Don 1 sante for th e rest
phone calls please
when you can work w1th
Ortver Needed Mond ay~
!he ll£lll
Fnday No Evenmgs or
Wee~end s
Patd Beneltts
For Immediate
mclude
VacatiO
n St ck ~
Consideration please
Holiday pay Valtd Dnvers
contact our olftce at
Ltcense
required
t ·888·1MC·PAYU
Expe rtence helpful or we wtll
(1 888 462 7298)
tra• n you App ly tn person
ext. 1911
only to Ruth Atce Mason
CoUnty Actto n Group Inc
Career Oppor!un1ty
{Pt Pleasant Semor Center)
6 Figure tncome potential 101 2nd Street Pt Pleasant
strong closer Gre at work WV EOE M!F
enwonment RO travel lull
beneflls medtcal dental Dnvers CDL·A with 1 year
401 K 5 day work week FaK vertltable Tractor Tra1ler
expertence
reqwed
resume (740)4-46 3599
Aegtonal Ru n• Great pay
oenefrts bonuses home

Expenenced paint &amp; bOdy Local business looktng lor
Secretary/Receptlontsl
man needed lor Restoratton
Shop contact H li s Classic Must have good telephone
Cars (7 40)949 22 17 7am sktlls &amp; good w1!h the public
knowledge m compulers &amp;
7pm
co111puter accounltng pro
Fruth s of Po1nt Pleasant 1s grams &amp; all other ofl1ce
Now Hmng Apply at the machmes Hours Bam 5pm
Monday Fnday
8 12
Store
Saturday
Full
positton
Send resume to
in Me1gs County.
local Bustness
Must be self·
RO Bo&lt; 775
starter, service
Gallipolis OH 45631

time

oriented and able
to work well with

1 . Med Home Heatlh Agency
Inc seek1ng a full hme AN
Patten! Care Coord1na1or or
Accoun l
E)(ecut tve
lor
able tran5portaGall1pol s Oht o and Sur
tlon. Position
roundt ng
area
Out es
offers all company
tnclude establish ng and
benefits mcludmg
matnta•n •ng open lines of
health, dental,
communtcatton N1lh area
v1slon, and hfe
phys1ctan s and health care
Insurance, 401K,
fac tht es tn the deltvery of
pai[J vacation, and
Home Health servtces We
personal days.
oJter a compet1ttva salary
and beneftts package for full
Please send
resume to
t me EOE Please send
resum e to Jud1e Reese
CLABo.: 200
Chntcal
Manager
352
c/o Pomerov Dellv
Second Aven ue Galhpohs
Serltlnel
OH 45631

the public Must
have valid driver's
llcenilie and rell·

PO Bo.: 729
Pomerov, OH
45769

Nurstng Mgmt
'

L------.;.,.1

Heartland of Jackson tS cur
renlly seet~..ng an

Hmng lor EMT WV EMT B
current card holders lcr FT &amp;
ASSISTANT
PT
secunty
pos•hons
DIRECTOR OF
$8 50/hi wlbenef ts Call M
NURSING CARE
F 9·5
!304 )526 5780
•Duector
of Quality of Ltle
Htgn area EDE MEDV
pr09rams
Holiday deOt? Ea rn eKtra •Fall Management coordma
ncome wtlh Avon Ca l! lor
•Superv1ses ca1e and sys
Leslie
c.
740 985 3362 Or 740 645 terns management
Current OH nursmg license
_1_51_8_ _ _ _ _ __
req'Utred In exchange we
Home Health Care at SE after compehttve pay and a
beneftts
Oh1o tS currenlly htnng comprehen s1ve
Home
Health
A•des package Please forwa rd
to
Deborah
Call resu me
Compe!lhve wage s
"Thoma s AN ADNS at
740 662 1222
Heartland of Jackson 8668
lmmeqiatc part 11me open St At 93 Jackson OH
mg for assisted hv1ng care 45640 Fax 740 286 0295
www her manorcare com
grve~ send resume w/refer
ences &amp; salary requ re EEO/O(ug Free Employe
men1s to Dall y Senttnel PO
Box 729 7 Pomeroy Oh
45769

IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE
Secretary/Aecept1 0I11Sl
Must have proloss onal
appearance and phone
sktfls good wtth put111c
knowledge m compute rs
Mlcrosolt Olf•ce abi lity and
destre to learn
Hours85MF
Send resume ro
Recepttontst
PO Box 63
POSTAL JOBS
Galhpolls
OH 45631
lome MARTIN TRANSPORT
$15 94·$22 _5~r now htr 866·293 7435
Loolon~J for babysma r 1r'\ my
tng For ap~hon and free
governement ,lOb tnfo can Pt Pleasant Moose lodge home Approx 11 days a
American Assoc of Labor 1 needtng bartenders apply m month 2 ktds on day sh1lt
913 599 8220 24/hrs emp office at Lodge o nt~ no wtth no weekends Please
call ~740)645 3204
phone cal ls pease
serv

'

VISA

POLICIES Ohio Valle~ Publl1t1ing reaerve• the right to edit, reject, or c•ncel •nv ad •t any time Errora must be repot1ed on the lir•t day of
I 1
Trlbun..Sentlnel Aeglller will be re•I)Onalbte tor no niote then the COlt of 1hl 1pac:a occupied by tha error 8'1"1d only the flrll: ms•rtton We 1hall not be II
•ny lola or ~pense thai resull• from the publication or oml•llon ol an advertl~ement Correction will be made 1n the first available edttton • Box':;:':~~:~
are alway• confidential • Current rate card appllea • All ra1l ntat• advertlallfll•nl• •r• 1ub.-c;:t to ttl. Federal F~~r Hou11~ Act of t968 • Th a •
accept• only help wanted ad• meel•ng EOE atandardri We will not knowingly accept •ny advertlllng ln violation of the law

:1

Terner Wtth black collar
Bunce Road area Please
callj740)446·4706

•

.51;.

• All ada must be prepaid'

• Alb Should Run 7 D•y•

JUST SAY
CHARGE IT!

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your clossified ads
Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
l!
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

De•criptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl8tlons
• Include Phone Number And Addres1 When Needed

r ANN&lt;M~ I Wh•l~=:ussell ~~=~=~=~~
LOst

Oead'l:ire.?

• Start Your Adl With A Keyword • Include Complete

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

CLASSIFIED INDEX

.~ .......... -~

0

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
Register
m:ribune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 44&amp;-aoos
or Fax To (740) 992·2157

An ExceUent way to earn
Found Old Schnauzer Dark money The New Avon
color ta tl docked Found on Call Mart~ 304 882 2645
Harr sburg
Ad
Call
(740)339-3265 or (740)845
2732
Dommo s Pizza Now H1nng
Dnvers
Pmnt
Lost McCormtck Ad area Sale
Gallipolis
&amp;
Large brown and white male Pleasant
dog Answers lo George Pomeroy locations Apply In
Person
1740)446·3439

P-..1~11-.::: ~ •• a.J-.::.:-~ I•• N~_,-.,-.,~.-- ~

Commass1oners
Courthouse

and

read

the centerline of said
county Road 10 to a

county road 10 to a

than 10% of the bid
amount In favor of the
aforesaid
Meigs
County
Commissioners Bid
Bonds
shall
be
accompanied
by
Proof of Authority of
the offiCial or agent
signing the bond
Bids shall be seated
and marked as Bid
lor
Middleport
Housmg Demolition
and mailed or delivered
to
Meigs
County

Demolition

and

centerline of County
!load 10, passing an
Iron rod at 143 feet for
reference,
Thence
north 46 Deg 58 30""
West 99 68 feel along

sa1d

amount of not less

aloud lor the follow·
lng·

opened

Spec1f1eations

of

Each bid must be
accompanied
by
either a bld bond In
an amount of 100% of
fhe bid omount with a
suretv satisfactory to
the aloresetd Meigs
County
Commissioners or by
certified
check,
cashoers check, or tetter of credit upon a
solvent bank In the

(

osu

IF&lt;.,..-..""".,.

Wages, various msurance requirements,
var1ous equal oppor·
tun1ty provisions, and

marshailng of any
liens, and the $ale of
sa1d real estate, and
the proceeds of sa1d
sate opphed to the
payment of plalnllffs
claom In the proper
order of Its pnonty
and lor such other
and further rehet as ts
JUSt and equltpble
The
defendants

feet to a pomt m the

t .....

-,.S,e ntinel - l\.e
CLASSIFIED

rebounds
He entered
the game "'
the conference's leadtng
scoret, averagmg 20 2
pomts
Oh10
held
Eastern
Mtchtgan scoreless over ,,
6 05 st1etch and outscored
the Eagles 17- 1 to take "
22-6 lead
1 he Eagles cltmbeu
Withlll etght pomts late 111
the ftrst halt, but the
Bobcdts scored stx pomts
tn the fmc~! 10 seconds to
push theu le,td to 14 pomts
dt the bic,tk

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

....
._.c:::
....

~ribune

16
and

wtthm fnu1 pomts mtdw,\y
through the penod
I he Botlerm,tkers shot 52
percent and outrebounded
from Page Bl
Ohto State 16- 11 m the ftrst
h,tll, but
II
Purdue
turnovets
led
to
16
pomts
"We dtd a mce JOb movIng
the
basketb,tll."" lot the Buckeyes The thtrd
Buckeyes coach Thad Matta of tht ee 3-po tnters by
s,!ld "A couple of those (3- Sulltngcr pushed the le,td to
pmntets) were pretty deep. 40-26 wnh under 3 mmutes
to be honest But to then to 20, and ,titer Purdue
credtt, they found the open ~:cor'ecl tvdce, the Buckeyes·
luMI b&lt;iskets of the hall
guy"
The Buckeyes htt ctght wetc 3-pomters by Ron
from long range 111 the first Lewts
We dtdn't dtsrupt any half, mcludutg consecutive
Lhtng
the&gt; were dotng.""
shots by Foster and Ivan
HdrrtS alter Purdue pulled P,Jtnter satd

cent (22-of-52) from the
tloor, 27 3 percent (3-of-11 l
from three-pomt land and 81
percent (17-of-21) from the
free throw h ne
Rw
out-rebounded
Wtlberforce 28-24 and the
Bulldogs commttted 13
turnovers
Rw Grande will return
home on Thursday to face
NAJA DtvlSlon II No II
Cedarvtlle Tip-off is set for
8 p m or approxtmately 20
mmutes after the women's
game
Cedarvtlle defeated Rto
Grande,
I 00-57,
on
November 29 at Cedarvtlle
m the first game between the
two nvals

Two key factors led to the
demtse of the Redmen,
turnovers and poor free
throw
shootmg Rto turned
from PageBl
the ball over 20 ttmes and
made only 9-of-16 (56 3
Dwtght Cass gave the percent) attempts at the foul
Bulldogs the lead at 64-63 hne
R10 shot 61 9 percent (26when he spill a pair of free
throws with mne seconds of-42) from the field, mcludrema10mg m the game
mg a bhstenng 66 7 percent
The Redmen, who had ( 14-of-21) m the second
been makmg the come back half Rto htt only 2-of-1 0
VICtory an art form m the (20 percent) attempts from
last two games, ran out of beyond the three-pomt arc
R10's leadmg scorer,
late game magtc as Chns
Dmwiddte's game-wmmng freshman
guard
Brett
attempt rolled off the nm Beucler struggled from the
and a two-game wmmng floor , gomg 0-tor-4 and
streak by Rto Grande fatled to score
became a part of htstory
Wtlberforce shot 42 3 per-

ALL

a2

South Galha
Wahama
Potnt Pleasant

Kume

YPSILANTI, Mtch (AP)
- Sonny Troutman scored
I 'I potnts and Leon
Wtllmms added 14 to le,ld
Ohto to a 75-63 victory
over Eastern Mtchtgan on
Wednesday mght
Mychal Green added II
for the Bobcats (9-2, 3-0
Mtd-Amertcan
Conference), who have
won three straight gaines
and &lt;~re off to their best
conference stmt 111 f1 ve
seasons
Fre shman Gtno S tnllh
scored a career-htgh 18
po1n1s to lead the Eagles
(3-8, 0-3), who h,ne lost
four stratght and lt ve of
thett la st stx Johrt Bowlct

Sh&lt;~y

surge
to
ahead
by
nme p01 nts
at
58-49
With
7 30
rema1111ng
tn the contest
The
1un
was
capped by a
three-potnter
from

Bite

4o
41
3 1
14

aves

2006

Redwomen lose at Wilberforce Bobcats claw EMU

Hieh School
'
Leaeue Standin~:s
Warren
Jackson

Thursday, January 12,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Office Cleric needed for last
pace offtce lnd1 vidual must
be a self·slarter dependable
and energetiC: sk1lled m
Mtcrosoft Word and Excel
Aequ1rements supenor oral
and wnlten CQmmuntca!IOn
sk1Hs and ~nowledge ot gen
erat ott ce bus•ness proc e
dures htgh school dtploma
and two (2) years e)(pert
ence m offiCe and computer
sk Us bookkeeplrlg proce
d uu~s a plus
Send resume by Ja.nua1y
20 2006 to FACTS 45
01 ve Street Gallipolis OhtO
45631 or FAX to -(7 40)446
8014 EOE MtF H

We offer a ~o mpet ttve S1ng
On Bonus flex1b ll it~ 1h
scheduling localized or
expanded serv1ce area
optiOns mtleage re1mburse
ment 401 K Program and
lull bene t1t package

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Toda~• 740 446 4367
1 800 214 0452
_.,; Qalllpoitacareorcol ege com
Accredl led Member Accred•tmo

Counc1 tor lnoe~nOOnl Colleges
and SchOOls 12746
-----'---'----·
Shoto Kan Ka rate Classes
beg1nn1ng Monday the 16th
at Carelton School
m
Syracuse
Classes o1e
Monaay ana Thursday lrorr
6 00 to 7 DO PM every week
For more n!ormatton con
tact Ken ny To ltver at 740
378 6144 or Steve Kempton
740 667 3039

1995 Doublew•de 3br 2ba
w/attached
Garage
Breezeway &amp; Barn
1 56
acres Sandh II Ro $72 000
(304)895 3068
3 Bed room 2 Batn w1th
F1replace m R c Grande
area 8 acres mil 40~60
barn $120 000, 1740\709
1166
3BR attached garage 71
acre lot block bu1ld ng new
root stdmg Syracuse 740
416 2786 or 740 949 1082
4BR
Foreclosure
only
S14 900 For hsttngs cal!
BOO 391 5228 ext F254
8 Acres Chalet Stytle Log
Home
4 Bd t2Bath
AC1FAF tree gas Ea.stern
H1gh School by Sr;aae R1ve1
on Route 7 ard Barn
$159 000 304 863 3610

At1enttonl
Local cor-1pant after "9 NO
DOWN P~Y ME Npro
grams for you to b~.;y pour
home •nstead of renting
• 1ooo o frnanctng
lBO
W\1\"tl-JJ' .
less than perlect credtt
800 939·6865
accepted
loDo
Paymenl -.ould be th e
Call Vtck• Chadwtc~ AN tor
same
as renl
Compamon for the elderly
deta1ls
locators
Cteamng transportatiOn to Mortgage
(740)367
0000
Aes1dent1al
Treatment doctors appotntments gro
Facility takmg applicatiOns eery store references Call
for youth worKer Pa~ based Martha (7 40)44 6 3659
on
experten ce
Patd
Insurance Ca ll between Computer Trouble Shool
9 OOam J OOpm Monday and Repa•r EKpert Servtce
740 992 2395
Fnda~ (740)379 9083
AI! real estate advertls.ng
At 35 Adul1 Vtdeo &amp; Book Georges Portable Sawm11t
Store ~eed Mtdntght Clerk don t haul your l ogs 10 the
M1ll JUSt call 304 675 I 957
Full ttme (304)937 4900
Sales person needed for
Jamtonal supplies• eqUip·
ment and ktlchen servtce
products Commtsston pay
wtth estaottshed route Must
have valid dnvers Jcense
and transportatton to call on
customers Send resume to
Spa rkle Supply LLC PO
Bo)C 278 Galt1oolts OH
45631
Team or Sm9le Dnver to
haul A 1 Fretght must 11a11e
clean COL
2yrs e-p
(304)266 7617
~..:__ _ _ _ __
Telephone
1nterv1ewer
excellent computer &amp; com
muntcal1on sktlls full t1me
no beneltts $10 per hour
atter 4 weeks tram ng $B
per hour durmg tra n1ng n
Pomero~ start 1mmedtately
call Mark 800 556 3583

loa~ ng to take care of or
set wtth the elderly or handt
cap Monday Fnday Call
(740)446 6743

Wtll take care ol wornan tn
rny home for more mforma
tton call (740)388 8193

10

I

Medl Home Health 1
.IQpen ny for a Full Ttme
RN full benef ts packagP.
mcl ud•ng 401K S1gn on
Bonus $2 500
.,.. Openmg tor a Part TtMe
AN Stgn on Bonus
$1 500

Call Judte Reese AN c
Cllntcal Manager at
(740}44,·1779 or
1~800-481-6334

••••••••••••

()1,, fR'll 'rn
•NOTI CC •

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tha
ou do bustness w th peo
le you know and NOT t
end mont:v 1nrough th
atl un ttl you hate nvest\
ated lhe offenn

::=======
l\IONf\
IJl•~

.............

T red of work ng all
I
tne hOI days?
T1r ed of wotKtnQ long 12 )
nour shifts?
1
Come hOme and 10 n us at

BtSN!&lt;.'i

m

1n th1!1 newspaper Is
subject tc tha Federal
Fatr Housmg A.ct of 1968
whtch makes it Illegal to

adverttse any
preferem:•, hmttallon or
dlscrimmatton based on
race color rel lgton sex
familial status or nattonal
origin or an)' mtent•on to
make an~ such
preference ltmltatlon or
dlscnmtnatlon
Th iS newspaper w tll not
l&lt;nowmgly accept
adverttsemen ts for real
estate wht ch IS In

"•olatlon ol the law Ovr
raaders are hereby
mformed tnat •II
dwellmgs adverttsed tt'l
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases

Courwy se 1t ng n Gall1a
Counry 3 bearO&lt;'fT'S 2
oaths ' reota{;e S85 OCC
t'"' 40 )~09 1166
Hoube 4 Sale 2000 sa foot

**"'OIHf.**
orrow Smart Contac
he Oh o 0 V1S10n o
nanc al
lnst tiJl•on
f•ce ot Consume:
Hate" BEFORE you rei•
ance your home o
blatn a lo~n BEW'AA
I requests tor any \arg
dvance payme nt::; o
ees or msurance Cal
he Otf1ce of Consume
lla1rS toll lree at 1 866
broker o
ender
s
properl
tcensed (Th s IS a pubh

Wanted Cook wtth eo:pen
ence m men:..~ planntng 'or
trealment fa c.l!ty Pay cased
on
eKpertE) nce
Pa•a
Insurance Call between
9am 3pm Monday Frtd ay
1740)379 901j3

PRof.l:\.."'il{)f\.\1

4br w 2tJa
Garage

A ttc~ched

2 c .. r
Grea
Ne 1~hborho0a 856 Popla
Hetghts Ad Just ::;tH Rt2
near
Roos.eve I
Eter
School
(30416 .....5 4435
alter 5pm

Newly remOdeled 3 cr 4
bed ooms cen tra l a r ful l
basement 'hal\twood flobr5.
detachec garage large CO\
ered pat o fe nced tiilC'-.
varc clo se 10 schoOlS Pot'1t
Peasant
~69 500
a ~o)709 t382

'I()!jiLl

SF.R\ let:&gt;.

.." " "

1"011 SAil

WANTED Pa rt ~1me PQS!tton
avatlable to asstsl tndtvtdu
als wth menial retardatton
at a group home tn Btdwell
1) 35 hrs 1 tp m 8am Th
1 1pm·9am Fn Sat 7pm
9am Sun
2) 35 hrs 8am 5pm Sun 2
10pm M1TuW
31 27 5 h"' 4 10 30pm F
8 45am 6 45pm Sat 9am
6pm Sun
4) 26 hrs 3 9pm Th 2 1tpm
Fr 1Dam 7pm Set
Must have h1gl) school d1plo
maiO ED
valid dr ve r s
1cense and th ee years
gOOd dnvtng expenence

,

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unless We W1n1
t -a88 582 3345
U I \I I "I \I I

p;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;__.,

.;31";1

''"'

Ho'l}~

HJK Su.a:;

1900 square foot 3 beOroom
2 batn house for sale sets
on 3 acres ott o State Rl ..
m
Chestet
To wnshtp
Eastern School Otstnct 2
car attached garage 2 out
bUtldmgs Call
(7 40)985
43:21 after 6pm

t 0 use41 homes un der
$3 000 00 Must Go Can
~ E!atne 740 385 0698
t6x80 homes sta tttng al
$25995 00 Includes 111nyt
s•d ng shtngle roof Call
~ uss ... 40 385 2434
1996 S ~tvl ne 25;.;t:.J
26A t repl a r ~
C,811tng S35 00(

&lt;iiR

11 66

1997 Fl eetwood 2br tba
large ~ ttchen central au
$1 2 000
(1 4 0)~56 6124
evenmgs

�•

Thursday, January 12, 2006
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com ·

Phillip
Alder

,,

BAll
pm
Mondays &amp; Wednesdays

ROCKY HIPP

IEMO"IL

.INSURANCE

141·192·1153

AND FIIWICIIl

\iNow R~ntirig

PVH Wellness Center

-~.J

1
w '" :~:...
Sport 4x4. Pwr. everything.
rear venl. 94k mi. $5800.
709- 1276eve. 446-t113day.

members

$3/non-members

PVH Wellness Center
(304) 675-7222

1991 red Mercury Topaz GS.
Low mileage, e)(cellent condi tion.
$1.650.(740)367·
0889, see at 6586 SA 554.

ONLY A FEW SEATS LEFT!
Atlantic City Getaway
Feb. 24, 2006- Feb. 26, 2006
$200 per person

green.
'Sun·
roof. factory
sony spoiler,
cd
player
w/remote,4«;1oor,a/c,plw,p/s,
cruise,
automatic,
looks/runs good. Driven
daily to athens . 145k miles.
$2000 OBO. Cell 740-416·
3949 l~ave message.

...__tilliiiiiiiliiit_
HOUSES
FOR RE!Vf
2006

t6x70 3 Br/2 bth 4br
in
Syracuse.
. Vinyl/Shingle '$229/mo. Call $600/mo nth &amp; DepoSit
(740)385-9948.
Water/Sewer included , No
Pets (304)675·5332
'91 Skyline I 6x80 3 Br/2 Bth
$145/mo. Call (740)385Attention!
Local company' Offering "NO .
7671 .
DOWN PAYMENr · pro-·
'96 Fleetwood 3 BR/2 Bth grams for you to buy your
$169/mo. Includes Delivery. home instead Of renting .
• 100% financing
Call (740)385-9948.
;;,.,.;..,;;,;;,;,;.,;,;..;.._ _~ ·• Less than perfect credit
B~
1· accepted
AND BUIWINGS . • -Payment could be the
same as rent.
For Rent 3 Buildings for Mortgage
Locators.
Business Use. Located - in (740)367·0090
Pomeroy . Also , 2 Upstairs
· · . .
. Unfurnished
Apts.
m For Rent: Avail~ble Jan. 30.

r

Pomeroy1ur
~ Aen1. Ca11 74o- 3 bedroom
furnished
. c · house,
.
589-7122
. Iota1 e1ectnc.
entra 1 au.
$755.00 per mpnth, plus
·
Lois &amp;
$750.00 secunty deposit.
[- ACREAGE
Telephone 74Q-992·542i.
House
for
Rent
in
Rental Property for sale
HendersOn .
No Pets
1972 Trailer on 50X225 lot.
(304)675-6463
currently rented' $15,000.00.
7 40-742-4011 '
House. 3 bedrooms in
$325.00 per
Pomeroy.
Trailer lot for rent behind Month plus deposit 740Krodel Park (304)675-33 12 416-4906.
Off Jackson Pike- 3BR. 1.5
bath house. 2·car garage.
'$600/mo. plus sec. dep. You
pay utilities. References and
min . 1 yr. lease required. Can
(740)446·3644 for more info.

Small · 2 Bedroom. no pets,
WID hookup.
$350.00
month. $300.00 deposit :
Need to sell your home?
304-773-9192
Late on payments , di110rce,
job . transter or a death? 1 Stop renting Buy 7 bedroom
can buy your home. All cash foreclosure $18,000. For listand quick closing. 740.416· ings SOq-~3 91-5228 Bill .
3130.
1709.
I\ I \ I \ I "'

to

Ir

~~

~----------·

2 or 3 Bedroom House in
Pomeroy., No Pets. 740c
992·5658.
3 Bedroom newly remodeled House. $400.00. Total
electric in Pomeroy with
Pr1vate ParkinQ . 740·949~3 or 740-591·3920.
~Bedrooms 1 &amp;1 /2 b&lt;;~ths.
lull basement, garage.
Central Heat and Central
~ir, all appliances. $550.00
a month . and Oepos1t. In
~yracuse . 74Q-992·0.t 67.

Help Wanted

MOBILE Hrnm;

r".,P-------,

1,--··

I.

2 BQdroom Apartm'ent avail· Middleport 1 and 2 Bedroom

able in Syracuse. $200 .00
deposi\ $350.00 per month
rent . Rent includes water,
sewer. trash . No pets.
Sufficient income needed 1o
qualify. 740-378-6111 :

Modern 1 bedroom ~pt.
(740)446·0390.
Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, Cf A, .1 1/2
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby ·
Pool, Patio. Start $395/Mo.
No Pets, Lease Plus
Security Deposit Required .
(740)367-7086.
--------New Haven , 1 bedroom
unfurnished apartment, no
pets, deposit &amp; previous
rental references, (740)~92·
0165 .
-----'-----'
Nice one SA unfurnished
apartment. Range &amp; refng .
prov.ided. Water &amp; garbage
p,a1d . Deposit required . Call
(740)446·4345 after 6pm.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

SALES CONSULTANT .
At John Sang Ford-Lincoln- Mercury w e've
established a

35

year reputation of honesty.

integrity and outstanding c ustomer servicebefo re and afterthe. sale. With the hottest
products on the market and as the fastest
g rowin g dealership in our region, we ' re adding sale s profe;sional s

orientation classes with

continued ongoing

to

help expand our

•market penetration and to -help maintain

our

extremely loyal customer base.
If yo u are a professional looking to start a '
new career or maybe you don't feel you're
p aid or treated as well as you should

b'

and

i f you're tired of working for someone who
i;ti ' t working for you, give Brad Sang a call
today 1-740-446-9800. You may.al so apply
in person at 195•UpperRiverRD.,
Gallipolis, Ohio
, Monday- Friday

Commission. bonuseo;;.
spiffs. Health Care.

·

Disabi1lty, long Term
Care. Great st&lt;Jr1ing·
. compensnrion and
more~·

@ ' LINC'OU~

mriit~D;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;;.,

furn ished Apts. No Pets ,
HOUSEHOIJ&gt;
Cleposit, and previous rental ..__ _ _Gooo;iilii
__,...
references. 740."992.0165 . ··

PROFESSIONAL

• Two wee·k· initial &amp;

_.l

2 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Rio 3bd apt for rent, 1,000 sq ft.
NEW ELLM VIEW
TOWNHOUSE!APTS
Grande Area. $375/mo., washer/dryer hOok-~p . hardwood floors. Gallipolis city,
$375 deposit. '
NOW LEASING'
3 Bedroom Doublewide, 2 $.600/month plus deposit ,
SPACIOUS
Bath, Close to Gal,lia County ret9rences required , po
2 &amp; 3BEDAOOM
BOTH FLATS &amp; ,
Schools, $5001mo, $500 pets. (740)441-0110:
deposit
TOWNHOUSES
4
rooms · and
bath,
AVAILABLE
No Pets. 1740)367-7025
stove/refrigerator, utilities
'ALL ELECTRIC
3 bedroom mobile home in paid, $425/month, na pets,
'CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAl
the Shade area . Water, 46 Olive St . (740)446·3945.
'STOVE , REF..
sewer, trash included, $325
'DISHWASHER
a month plus deposit. No Beautiful 2-story townhouse
'GARBAGE DISPOSAL
pets allowed. (N0) 385 • overlooking Gallipolis City
' WIND BLINDS
park. Kitchen, D.A, L.A .,
4019.
'CEILING FANS
- - - - - - - - - study. 3BR. 2 baths. laundry
'WATER. SEWAGE. &amp;
3br, 2ba, Heat Pump. 2 area . References required,
'TRASH INCLUDED
miles from Point Pleasant
security deposit, no pets.
PETS CONDITIONAL
$400/month plus deposit $900 mo. Call (740)446'
(304)882·3017
(304}675-6233 Or (304)593· 2325 or (740)446-4425.
~
2138
BEAUTIFUL
APART- EQU11t1ovaong Opi&gt;&lt;J&lt;!Uni!oi
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
APAR"IMENTI;
i.FOR1iiiliRENr---~ PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Twin Alvers Tower is accept1 and 2 bedroom apart- Drive from $344 to $442. · ing applications for waiting
ments, turnished and unfur. Walk to shop &amp; movies. Cal1 list for Hud-subsized. 1- br.
Equal apartment, can 675-6679
nished, security deposit 740-446-2568.
F.Ei:iHii0.;·_ _~----,
required, no pets, 740-992· Housing Opportunity.
2218
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· filiO
.
SPACE
- - - - - - - - . ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
FOR RFNr
1br Apartment for Rent in Townhouse
apartments .
·
Point Pleasant.
Utilities
and/or small houses FOR Commercial Property, 240
paid.
$350/month plu·s
A6NT Call (740)441-1111 Upper River Road, Available
deposit (740)446-2200
tor application &amp; information. 2·1-06. (740)446-6865 or
1BR. nicely furnished apart(7401379 -2 923.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
ment. quiet area . suitable for
room apartments at Village
1 adult, private dr1veway
Downtown Office Space- 5
Manor . and
Riverside
w/earpott,
new
WID.
room suite $650/mo; 1 room
Apartments in Middleport.
(740)446·478?.
office$225/mo.: 2 room
From $295-$444. Call 74().
Surte $250/mo. Security
992·5064
.
Equal
Housihg
1br-Balcon'{, all Utilities .
deposit required . You pay
very qUite, deposit/refer- Opportunitie s.
utilities. Ali spaces very nice.
ences a must , Free Satellite
In town 1BR, references , Elevator. Call (74())446-3644
TV, $425/month (304)675deposit, no pets. (740)44&amp;- lor appointment.
6676
0139 .
\ II Ht II \\ 11/".l

2 bedroom apartment Meigs
FOR RFNr
County, very nice. clean,
$425 per' month plus
14x70 mob1le hOme, $425
rent. $425 deposit. Call deposit, no pets, reterences
(740)446·4060 or (740)367- requ1red , (740)992·5174
7762 ..
'
2 BR ' Apartment for rent on
2 Bedroom Trailer $400 per MI.
Vernon 'Ave.
Pt.
month and $400 deposll. Pleasant. $350/month plus
Water and Sewer included . $350/~eposit Call (304) 773·
Garage, Carport, and Porch . 6061 or (304)593·1B5B
All E19ctriC. Ret and Stove
included. No Pets.
, In 2bedroom apt WID hookup,
toWn Racine, Refe rences . water, Sewer, trash pd.
required.
740 _949 _2217 . ~400/monlh.
l :OO A.M. to ?:DO PM .
1bedroom apt w/retrig &amp;
- - - - - - - -stove, ·water, sewer, tras h
Mobile home spaces m pd .
(740)367-7746CoUntry Mobile Home Park. (740)367-70t5· (740)446·
(740)385·4019.
4734

Help Wanted

lcnDne

· Pill Ill Yll BillY~
l-1111
WICIIIIIIIDI
rllll..@d,....IIS.eem

·

. M I.RCURY

Equal Opportunity Employer

Appliance
Warehouse

1995 Ford XLT 4)(4 $4 ,595;
1992 Explorer 4x4 79k
$2.696 ; 1997 Blazer 4x4
$4 ,795: 1996 S' 10 LS auto
57k $3,995. Other trucks,
·cars and vans in stodcCook

r ·~=~S

~g0;:ra

cloth9s. ""
200o--D-o_d_g_e_N_eo_n_a_ut-o.-a-i-r,
(740)446·6602
$2,500 OBO
· JET
2002 Dodge Neon auto. air,
AERATION MOTORS
$3,600 OBO
Repaired, New &amp; Rebu ilt In . 95 Dodge Grande Caravan
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1· auto, air. 51,000 OBO.
7401256 1233
800-537·9528 .
·
'
·
2001 Dodge Ram Truck fully
New and Used Furnaces. loaded
60.000
rni les.
Installatio n
available $ 14.000.
2003 Chevy
Caviler $7.000.00. Cell740(740)441·2667 .
985-4291
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar 2001
Mercury
Grand
For
Concrete,
Angle ; Marquis. 4DA, 71 ,000/miles.
Channel. Flat Bar. Steel Good
Shape,
S!O,OOO
Grating
For
Drains, ' (304)674-4621
•
Driveways ·&amp; Walkways . l&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday, 2003 PT Cruiser, Power winTuesday, Wednesday &amp; dows and locks, CO Player,
Friday. 8am-4:30pi"n. Closed. Very
good
condition.
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; $7500.00. (740)366·0140
Sunday (74~)446-7300 •
97 Pontiac GranO AM. 4 cyl.
Queen size Craftmatic Bed,
sedan. well maintained.
$300 phOne (304)675·2046
$t,500. (740)441-995)
between the hours of 11 am
&amp;5pm ·
S&amp;W K-model 22, Cannon
EOS camera + stand, wheel
chair, porta-potty, walker. air 01 Ford Ft50 XLT 4dr, auto,
mallress,
crutches, 5.4L , VB. bedcover, BCD
(740)446-9'635 .
player. sunropf, good cond1·
- - - . , - - - - -- ·lion,
77.000
miles.
Vent Free 3-Plaque
1.B/21mpg. $12.000. Must
Propane Gas f1eater. Man sell (304)288·3335.
Control (Was $143.95) Now
$122.36 Save 15% on all 1985 Cllevy 1-ton dump
other Gas And Electric · truck. new motor. cab &amp;
Heaters
paint. Used daily. Asking
(Limited to 'Heaters in stock ) ' $3,000 (740)256· 1253.
1990
Chev.
1/2
ton
Cheyenne matching topper,
94,000 m1. $3.000' firm or
Vitamaster Pro Treadmill, trade for 4·wheeler ol equ~l
sPeeCl , time. distance, calo- value or small farm tractor_
ries + pulse read outs. $75., (740).446·7983 aHer 5 00
Call (740)446·3988.
Paint Plus Hardware
675-4084

r~.,__.~.~-~~.N.~.;_,.1

r

Washer $95 ; dryer $95 : Dhu pp~esd. Borr:~ t 1f
h· vet ....4ioiWioiiHfii~ii:iit.ERSiii_ _,...
lf:lfflgerator $95: electric c ec...e ·
st
s at~.
range $,95: chest freezer Yellow/blackichoc
price
2003 Suzuki 4WO V i n~on
$125: new gas dryer $200: $200. (740)4 46- 1062.
500 ATV wltll 34 miles .
couch
$150; full size Toy Poodles. can be CKC $4900 .
CARMICHAEL ·
waterbed $125, hutcll with 2 Reg. $300. Call (740)446· EQUIPMENT
1740)446end stands $125 : wood 1672 ,
burning stove $200: decor9 t-·
t \I(\
1'1'1 tt'
PAtrrS &amp;
ed Christmas tree $75 . 24"
,\11\I
"
II
H
h.
electnc range $125. Corne
L._::ii!::~:i-~
check out our new locat1on . · !Z'li:--..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
1216 Eastern Ave , Skaggs
BUDGET
TRANSMtSAppllances, (740) 446-7398
SIONS. All types. (740)24511105

I,,

i

s!'!~~(;
~

~IVESTOCK

MAILEY'S
SElF STORAGE

/

IOxiOxiOx20
992·3194
or 992-6635

Hours
•
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM
111411 mo 'pd.

High and Dry

Storage:
'

THE BORN LOSER
P"f.\C.LLO, SOt-\! Wf.\£RE.'S MOt'l '?'""'1

33795

Self-Storage"

Hiland Road

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

•

r ,

See:·,,t;

~

i

.

•

BIG NATE

ROcky "RJ"

'

AstroGraph
I

Melge Co.lnld•ntaH!

BUCKEYE Sanitation
SEPTIC TANK PIJMPfNG $95.00
PORTABlE TOflfl RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY
591·8757

PEANUTS
Ti-lEV DON'T BELIEVE
YOU COULD 6ET A
PERFECT SCORE ON A
•' TRUE OR FALSe"
ii::ST, SNOOP'!' ..

Ti-l EN
t'M 601N6
1-lOMi: ..

SO YOU KNOW WI-IAi
Ti-lEV WANT VOU TO DO?
TI-lEY WANT YOU TO
TAKE AN ESSAY TEST

I

~

Angus Bull, 3 yrs old, sir~d ·by Echelon , easy calving. =,...-~~----,
S1 ,500 .
Call
tq ·
HoME
PaintOalls · Zap tournament
(74())446-6157 or (740)379·
IMPROVEMENTS
brand, 2000 in bQ)c ror
$25.00 Caii 44H417
eASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
ANTIQlWS
Unconditional llfet1me guarantee. Local references furBuy or . selL Rtver 1n e
nisllad. EstiaOIIshed • ~975 .
Antiques . 1124 East Main $500 1 Pollee lmpounds 1 Call 24 Hrs, (740 1 446on SA 124 E Pomeroy, 740 - Cars from $500. For 11sMgs 0870, Rogers Basement
992-2526 Russ Moore . 800-391 -522 7 e)(1 3901
Waterproofing
owner

·12% Cattle $7.75
·Econo Beef $6.85
·Whole Corn $6.25/Bag
·Cracked Corn $7.25/Bag
·16%Hog Mix $8.75/Bag
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

D065 DON'T DO
. E55A'f' TESTS I

SUNSHINE CLUB
~STE.R,

DO 'rl)() 11-l l/01&lt;. &lt;,W WOULD
HAVJ; &amp;W HAPPtr,R. (()!TI-\ f+ trORt;
IIVTE LL.IGWr IU)MA!v?

Shade River AG Service. Inc
35537 St Rl 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740·9KS-383 1

Advertise
in this
space for $1 04
per month. &gt;~ ~: ·~

I

l·t

I

!L---------~--------------~~~-~~

I
GARFIELD
"AL-L· REMOTE:"
CHANNELl.

IT'!I'ff.-110

J &amp;0 PUT THAT ReMOTE PoWNJ...-F-1-N-~--W-~-~-A-C_H_A_N_N_E_L_T_H_A_T_.,
we

G-UYS!
CLICK Tf.-IROOOH ~ TAKES ALL THE WORK OUT
EVERY C\'IANNEL FOR YOU! f OF BE IN&amp; LAZY
0

l

1
'

A•
y..

A-'"?7"~.1~

f

/

I,

Snoayrass' Upholstery

BAlJM LUMBER
Scorpion Tractors.
"Takiflg The Stiflg 0111 Of
Hard Work!"
Mi&lt;.I -Si;c 4Whe el Dri1 e Tractor
with 30hiJ &amp;. 40hp Kubota Er1gmes

l.:

- CL-ICK

,

1
10

::: ~t:~~

~n

0

~

·
'

_ CL..IC.K
- O..ICK

-

tll

~~ ~

1

740·949-2202

Now Available AI

"',

CL..tCK
: C.L.I C.K

"./ , •. ,··

~ ..

- \

Racine, oH

Custom Window Treauncn t~
&amp; U phol &gt;tery

•
• 0
~
~

~. /

~

~

·)

19 Swift horses 47 Interest
20 Bridge
amt.

1 Apprehend

together

23 Ironic
24 Cigarette

a suspect

• tower
22 Shaggy
beast
23 Reporter's
question
' 25 Skill
27 Gumshoe's

48

:

Ma~

beveroae.:
49 Spenlth •
title
51 Rookie
soclal~e

53 Wimple'
wearer

flnda

•

28 Substantial 55 Incoming-.
3t Golf coup
plane sial '

33 Help-

56 Malll oubl-

wanted

57 Home tel. •

. abbr.

35 Goddess
ofdawO
39 Arbors
41 Premiered

44 Half a beef
46 More weird

fLoRA

1\\'i. 1-ftl'aE

\lo 1ru .. .I D\OO'T \1/&gt;.IJE. \\IE \:::1
· MI&lt;!,.Y To NiH.. 1-\Et&lt;. 'tlllAI 1\-IE ti'\1-\Q D::&gt;t\6

"AD 111t

A SL~

~~~~~~c'~cy l}ve

by Luis Campos

Cel~brrty Cipher cryllfoqrans ar~ created rrQm aootatl0fl5 0'; lam:JJS DeOOie Po1SI af'l(l oresent.
Eacn lener 1n tne C1phe1 stancls tor anomer .

Today's clue:0 eQuals w1
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ORCJ

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·y ~sterday IS a canceled chec~ : tomorrow is a
promissory note ; today IS ready cash -use· it • - Kay Lyons

wolo
G~MI

Qfour

\elttrs of' the
scrambled words bo-

R:eorrgnge

low

lo

form lout words.

NUKILE

I

CLUG H

I I I I'

l

Gramps alwa y s told me lhat
1ts betler

I

to be

a

nobody

w ho '

ac:omplishes .someth 1ng th~n
a · so:neboay who acc~m ­
p lishes -- - •. -.I

Q

Cornplere: th e o:hud:!f'! Q:J'Jied
i::y hl!1ng il'l the m n 1ng w.yds ·
yo~ de., elo'p lrom ~~ep No 3 beb....·

f). P!INT

~lUMBERED L!lltRS I
. IN !~ESE SOUAm

0

UNSCiAM!LE lETTEII TO
GET ANSWER

I
.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

i /11106

Humane - Troth - Dregs -' Viable - OVERHEAR
My college roommale was a g ossip She believe s that
whal you hear never sounds ha lf 0s Important as what
you OVERHEIIR

ARLO &amp; JANIS

you could be extremely

LIBRA (Sept 23·0Ct 23) - Even 'lth109S
don 1 loo&lt; too 900d eacly on today con·
cern1ng your wor k or career. keep on wor k ·
mg toward what yo~ knoW to be smart
Before the day 15 out, you II be the wmner
SCOR PIO (Oct 24-Nov 221 - Fresr1 ,
ambJIIons may be aw~kened m you loda}•
for sometllmg that was go1ng QUite badly
Begm to oullme your new program and get
movmg Qr1 11 because 11'11 turri out to be all

~11 - Stnve·
to be bOih p10tect1ve ana •etn1t':a1 1n you1
commerC1i'll rtea11ngs TnrtAy 'be~a11se The
more yO\J g1ve to t11e ot'ler yuy even the
ones whO are greedy the more You Will get
back m retu'r0

)
' /

5\l.t w~r:,
IAL¥-1\\q

i'IEW't 'b CALL

M~

Friday, Jan. 13, 2006
By Bernice Bede Osol
In the year ahead , you w1tl begin to' f1gu re
out ways to Oreathe Trash lite into ventures
or activitJes wh1ch you were consi.dering
writing Off. What clidn't work before will
work now and lead to a big success.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19} - You
might not be able to. accomplisll what you
want to do at first today. but on,ce you realize that you need to look at the big plan.
you'll turn your efforts toward winning ·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 19)- II you ftrst
set an 1ndustnous examp!e today, it Will
encourage th6se who laOor at your side to
be more product1ve as well. Collectively,
you"ll all get wnat yo u ·want by joming up
iorces.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- The key to
success today !S to commit your mind t01al,
ly to the acttvity in whtch ~ou're involved.
Even if you thought !I was a tedious t,ask , 11
somehOw w!tl become tun and easy to do
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) - Eve'rythmg
should tinally begin to fall 1nto place today
pertammg to an 1mportant matter you did·
n't th1nk' would ever get on !rae~ . Wrap it up
now while everyth'i nQ. IS go1ng your way.
TAURUS (Apni20-May 20)- Do not.worry
about things today that may never llappen
Instead, adopt a posrtrve att11ude. v1sual1z tng vtctory, wh1le, domg what needs to be
done and everythmg w1 11 come oUt just ftne.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Conditions
look ex:tremaly favorable tor· you today
wnere your matena l mterests are COt'l ·
cer ned " In lact. you -could be lucky at
mcreasmg both your earn1ngs ·and a.dd1ng
to your holdings.
C~NCER
(June
2~ -J ~Iy
22)
Enterpr1ses. projects or 'soCial aCliVI!Ies
that you organ1ze 'and per sonally take care
of can be adv a'1ced 1n an cxtremcly ·bene ficlal manner today Gel tn1ngs mo v1ng
Without wa iting on others
LEO (July 23·AU9· 22) - Somethmg IS st1r·
nng behind the scenes tOday that could
turn out.lo be ma ter1aJ1y fortun ate tor,you. It
ma~ be 1n an area where you never· had
luck prev1ously, but you'll. w1n out b1g t111ie
now.
.
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22l - Talk to your
fnends 10da~· about yqur problems and
chances are one or more wlll haVe a solu·
' non tor you that you hadn 't thougnt ot The

CELEBRITY CIPHER

-~SAGITTARIUS 1N'Ov 23-Dec

\

GRIZZWELLS
~f~E 1 Lt.li
\\1\S ~111\-\G

,

"'our '111~:

IMPORTS

.
11

East

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Pass

Milan Kundera , a Czech author and critiC,
wrote, "A mystic must not fear ridicule if he
is to push all the way to the limits of humility or thE! limits of delight .~
Pre-empt s push you to the limit at the
bridge table. Usually the best defense. is
to push back. Don't let the opponents
bully you into silence. lf you might act, do
so.
Look at the South hand in ·the diagram.
West opens one heart. North passes, and
East raises pre:emptively to tour hearts.
.What shOuld South do?
, East. with his weak hand. knows at a
I'M THtNKIN'
...)EST .FER TH' card fit, so leaps to the 10·tricK level. Th1s
pressures South .. He miQht double, which
OF GOIN' BACK
NAPTIME !!
w'ou\d probably be pasSed oul. Here, that
TO TEACHIN'
would produce a 200-po1nl penalty. But
I&lt;INDYGARDEN
. there is a reliable guideline: Bid four
spades O\ler four hearts whenever you .,
can. So, let's assume South overcalls four
spades.
West leads the heart ace and continues
with the heart ktng. How should South
plan the play?
' There appear to be _
10 easy tricks ftve
spades. two diamonds and three clubs.
What IS the danger? A 4·1 trump break. if
declarer ruff s the second heart, he can be
defeated . If he' draw s trumps. Easi·West
...
'"'l will run the hearts when 1n with the club
P"
""'
WOt-I~UL! LE.f....R.NI~ f.... . Sf-\€. Sl&gt;-11&gt; Sf.\t.'S SPO'IT So
ace. And if South attacks clubs early, West
DUICIOIJS N.Q.J
.
1'\UU\ TIME. WI\TC.f.\11'( dUcks one round. wins the second. i:i.nd
g1ves his partner a club ·ruff..Bul at tnck
t&gt;IN.N.t.l&lt;:.
\oJ f:~ GOt.! t-Il\ fJAVt.
two, South does not ruff. instead discardN.O
I
TO ~R. PILl~ I
ing his inevitable diamond loser. Tllen the
contract is safe . A thi rd heart would be
~
ruffed on the board.
.~
Watch out for the elusive and delightful
loser-on·loser play.

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must
Virgo
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needs
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••

~-

�Page· 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, January 12,

www .mydailysentinel.coin

Agencies
slate King
Day events

AT THE MOVIES

: f·

'Hoodwinked'
Bv CHRISTY LEMIRE
P.P MOVIE CRITIC

L

ike a poor man's
"Shrek," the fractured
·
fairy
tale
"Hoodwfnked"
is wa itin eu for
.
you in theaters with big f,!ars,
big eyes and big teeth. but little bite.
Yet another prodttct of
· three-dimensional. computerge nerated
animation.
"Hoodwinked" takes the story
of Little Red Ridin Q· Hood
and overstuffs it with smartalecky humor and contemporary pop culture references.
Be sides "Shrek.'' it also
borrows · heavily
from
"Fletch" - , so wou ld th at
make it "Shletch"')- featuring a Big Bad Wolf who's
reall y an undercover investigative repor.ter wit h fake
names and a Lakers jersey,
and an electronic score that
sounds like something Harold
Faltermeyer pounded~out.
''Hoodwi nked" is also the
late st in a never-ending ser,ies
of
movies
to
use
"Rashomon"-stylc
story- In this photo provided by The Weinstein Co, Little Red Rid ing
telling to explain its convolut.~d comic mystery from a vari" "Hoodwinked."
ety of perspectives - though goodies throughout the f~rest · except for Stiers' · detective
it took three people, the writ- and instead finds · the Wolf charac ter, a. dapper frog.
ing-directing team of Cory (Warburton) dressed in a named Nicky Flippers who
Edwards, Todd Edwards and nightie and wearing a rn'ask. looks and sounds like the
Tony Leech. to co me up with Granny. meanwhile. is tied up gecko from the Geico c;omit
and gagged in the closet
· rnercials.)
If you hadn 't figured it out
Red turns to fight off this
The repeated tel lings of the
by now, "Hoodwinked" dues- intruder, using her prodigious da y's events . reveal that no
. n't have an original idea in its karate skill s.· "You again°" one is who he or she initially
head. Kids' might be enter- she asks, annoyed. "What do I seems, including (and most
tained .by the colorful acsth~t­ have to do, get a restraining obviously) the furry, flamboyics. and nonstop energy ; order''" But , just then, in busts ant bunn y rabbit , Boingo
there 's an overcaffeinated the axe-wielding Woodsman (voiced by Dick), the film's
squirrel, appropriately named (Jim Belushi), who really funniest character.
Twitchy, Y!ho serves as ihe wains to be an actor.
Granny,·. meanwhile, is
Wolf's overzealous photograCrime-scene .tape goes up, forced to admit that she's
pher. But adults, clearly the reporters swarm outside , and secretly into extreme sports,
script's real target, will see the the rest .of the movie consists which drives a wedge
film for what it really is: of Police Chief Gri zzly (rap- between · her and Red, who
hackneyed. inferior imd -irrel- · per Xzibit) and Detcrtive· feels she's been lied to her
evant.
Stork ( t1nthon y Anderson') whole life. Not only is thi .~
And that's too bad. because interviewing the suspects to subplot a tlim sy source of
"Hoodwinked'' brings togeth- determine what really hap- conflict. it's also a forced
er a talented vocal cast, pened in this apparent break- attempt
at
injecting
including Anne Hathaway. . ing-and-entering and whether "Hoodwinked" with hipness.
lenn Close , Andy Dick , it might be related to the work
Bu t even before Granny
·d Ogden Stiers and of the Goody Bandit. who's utters the phrase "Fo' shizzle"
voiceover veteran Patrick been stealing recipes from the to he'r I:tomies, something
Snoop Dogg doesn't gven say
Warbunon .
·. local bakeries.
(Naturally, all the cops have anYlnore , this conceit is
Red (Hathaway) -arri ves at
. home of her Granny Brooklyn acce nts and they painfully awkward. It's like
(Close) after delivering baked say things like "Book '·e m,'' when a snack food or a soft

CHARLESTON - As part
ot: the observance of the
national Martin Luther Kin g
Day hoi iday, the Martin
Luther Kil)g Jr.,West Virginia
Holiday Commission, the
West Virginia Divi sion of
Cultu re and H istor)' and West
Virginia State Univers ity
(WVSU) will sponsor three .
events from Saturday, Jan . 14,
through Monday, Jan. 16..
Activities
include
an
awards ceremony, an evening
gala featuring performances·
by West Virginia artists and an ·
ecumenical ceremony servi ce,
a symbolic march, the annual
bell -ringing cere mony. All
activities are free and open to
the public, with the exception
-of the awards ceremony.
The weekend 's activities
begin on Saturday with a private ~vyards ceremony honoring 19 young people, fiv e
individual s and three service
organizations. The awards
ceremony will be held at the
Cultural Center in the State
AP Photo
(:apitol Complex.
Hood is confronted by a wolf, posing as her grandmother in
Awards will be given for the
Y'WCA's 13th annual "Project
.
on Raci sm Essay Contest," a
poster con test, the Service
Organization Honor .Roll and
the "Living the Drea m''
awards ,
On Monday. Jan . 16, an
G - General audiences. All ages admitted.
ecumenical service of ,tribute
PG - Parental gu idance suggested. Some material
and remembrance of Kin g
may not be suitable for children.
will begin at 10 a.m. at
PG-13 - Special parental guidance strongly sug- .
· Asbury Ut\ited Methodi st
gested for children under 13. Some material may be
Church .. 5o' I Elizabeth St.,
Char leston. The sy mbolic ·
inappropriate for young children .
march and bell -ringing cereR - Restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying
mony will take place from the
parent or adult guardian .
church to the north face of the
NC-17- No one under 17 admitted .
Stat ~
Capitol at noon .
Participants are invited for
cake in the Great Hall of ihe
drink comes out · with a new underground while investigat- .Cultural Center immediately
marketing campaign that fea- ing the Goody . Bandit and following the ceremony.
tures a tiger on a snowboard utters to hi s buddy the squirFor more information or to
or a polar bear breakdancing rel: "Why couldn't I write
fi
nd
0111 more ·oboui th e state :r
- totally transparent and out movie reviews '"'
Martin Luther King Day holiof touch.
'
Hey, it ain't. all f;;~iry-tale day acti,·ifies, call the di vision
Wh at criti cs think doesn't endings on this end either, pal
at ·(304) 558-0 16?. ur visit 1he
matter, though, when ii comes
"Hoodwinked,"
a
Weinstein
cvmmiuion 's Wt•b silt' a/
to family film s. If Mom and
Co.
release,
is
rated
PG
for
W\1 '\V, wl'lnl k ho i ida yco mm isOad and the kids can all see a
,
sion.org.
movie together, they do. And some mild action and thematThe national Marrin· Luther
the makers of "Hoodwinked" ic elements. Runn ing time: 86
know it. as evidenced by thi s minutes. One and aI half stars King Day lwlidoy \\'aS design(l ted bv the U.S. Congress in
littl e dig: Wolf gets stuck out of four.
1983. It is observed on the ·
.

Mothm Picture Association of
America rating definitions

'

OU faculty showcase diverse artwork in exhibition

Dads will flock to
OU this weekend

2006

third M ondav in Jcmuarr.
falling on or near King's Jai1 .
15 bi rthdm·.
The mission u.f the Marrin
Lwlrer Kin g Jr: , Wesl- Virxinia
Holidm• Commission is to
pro\'ide programs celebrming
th e life wrd princ iples of
King:~ philosophy of 11011 -vio,
fence . .fengthming his legacy.

ATHENS - The tables have been 14th and 15th ce mury Italian and
After beginning the project from slides
: ATHENS - Actor/comedian turned. Instead of art professors giving Flemish painters to produce it.
taken in St. Louis in 1999, the piece went
Jeff Garlin. of "Curb Your critical evaluations of projects'produced
Cardenas received her master's of fine · through starts and stops due to unre Enthusiasm'' and ''Daddy Day by their students, the faculty of the Ohio art s in painting· at Drake · University in solved questions about composition and
Care" fame, will perform his Universitv School of Art has submitted Des Moines, Iowa, in 1979, and did her the need to find a way to prepare a can;tandup routine this Dads their. recent work for publi c review for post- ~raduate research Oil Renaissance vas in such a way that would allow hitT)
Weekend at Ohio University.'s the 2006 School of Art Faculty paintlllg materials and methods at the to achieve his. goals.
·
Templeton-Blackburn Alumni Exhibition now on view .at the Kennedy University of Arizona in Tucson, Ariz.
"I was still lacking what I felt was the
Memorial Auditoriumd at 9 p.m . Mu seum of Art at the Ridges in Athens.
Cardenas' recent work focuses on thi s right method of painting to achieve .the
Saturday, Jan. 14. The .show is
The exhibition run s unti I Sunday, tempera technique to "put the viewer double sense of deep space, · vibrant
~ponsored by The Uni versity March 12.
· ·
into the role of an ad hoc anthropologist color, and yet intricate detailed natural
Program Council fU PC).
· This biennial exhibition features works . who examines and que stions cultural structure," he say s.
· Tickets can be purchased at by both ne w and seasoned fac1.1lty mel!l- scenarios , throu gh the detritus presentSabraw pi cked up the project during
the
Templeton -Blackburn bers work ing in ce ramics, gr;Jphic ed." ~he says.
2001-02 only to get "stuck" aga in . In
Alumni Memorial Auditorium de,ign, paintin g, 'photography, prtntmak''I like the egg/oil tempera technique, 2003, he says, comr,osi tional and 'fram·
Sttident
tt
.
cket'
.
·
ing
.
-sculpture
..
installatton
an
and
.timethe
ort'gt·nal ' tnt' xed technique ' · because
. tssues
.
. rcso ve db.Y tl stng
. a com,ce.
Box 011
'
· tng
were
,are $ 6 and ticket s for non-st u- based media. Over half of the School of it provides a uniquely lucid vehicle for
, h. h 1 d
d
GALLIPOLIS
"The
An's · 29 facu lty members ha ve been expressing personal imagery. I can clear: putcr, 'w tc e me to a new un er10
dents are $S.
hired within the last Jive years. says · ly observe tn great detail the spaces and standing of how
speak in two Jan- Melody Lingers On," a musi. Before the show. students . Robert Lazuka, director of the S.chool of objects that evidence human behavior,". guagcs on the same canvas," he says . cal revue ce lebrating the ·
~nd • dads can watch the An. Thi s change informs the exhibition's she says.
Layers to the paintin g were added over songs·of .Irving Berlin. will be
Clrdenas has also worked with· mixed the next three years. and the project was sta ge d by the River City
Bobcats basketball team take aim: to showcase the creative ideas and
on Central Michigan at 2 p.m. research the entire School of Art studio media and in coll age and say s thi s work completed in October 2005.
Players at the A ri ei~Ann
lit the Convocation Center. For faculty are producing, he says.
has· broadened her range and extended
"Once I gave myself permi ssion to· go Carson Dater Performing Arts
. tickets, call (800) 575-CATS.
'.'Hav ing this many new, young 'arti sts' her craft as an artist.
with pure instinct the painting seemed to Centre in Gallipolis on
For those interested 'in the on our fac ulty represents a sweepin g
"My goal in utili zing a variety of tell me wliat to do and the process· Saturday, Jan . 14 at 7 p.m .
Ath!lns music scerie. the Black change for the School of Art\ program. media (with special consideration of a became a pleasurabk dance and meditaMusic and lyrie&gt; are by the
Student
Communication The 2006 School .· of Art Facu lt y historical'one) is to manipulate the best tive time,'' Sabraw says. ''The resulting prolific Berlin, with dialogue
Caucus, Black Student Cultural Exhibition willpfford the regional anc! possible mater.ials appropriate to each pajnting contain s the most time I' ve ever taken from the book " Irving
Programmi ng Board and Young local com mut]\ty ' the opportumty to tndi vidual concept," ,she says. " My pur- put into one pie~e . and perhaps the most Berlin :
A
Daughter's
Black and Talented are sponsor- enjoy see,ing ever~thing from the tradi- pose I S to commlllitcate the lllherent rewarding breakihrough for me." ·
Memoir" by Mary Ellin
ing the: Dad' Weekend Biennial tional arts to v,idco and mstallation works power of visual art through both sociall y
School of Art faculty have exhibited in Barrett and conceived by
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at
7
p.nl.
,·it
the
Baker
by
om
tule'nted
facu
lt
y,"'
he
says.
·
potent
content
and
fine
craftsmansh1'
p
to
·
·
JdL.Ll' ,
.
·
, •
vanous
mu seums across . the coun try, Karin Baker.
··
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c
B
11
The
fa··ulty's
diverse
academic
back·
d.
l'f
th
h
·
see or mary Le roug a microscope including the Fogg Art Museurn at
Umvers1ty .enter a room .
Songs include "Wh&lt;J t' .fl I'
The Ohio University grounds are retlcctcd in the variety of and, as in that experience, reexamine tt s Harvard University in Catnbridge. Do '?," ~ ·Puttin ' 'On the l&lt; it;."
ums and method&gt;' used by the artist&gt; visal;!e through the aiel of minmiae , to sec Ma" .. the Mu seum of Modern Art, New "A lways."
"Whi t&lt;:
Sc h00 I 0 f An wt·rr presen t a medt
to
create
their work, savs
· d"
- Lazuk a.
rnagtc where we I houg ht .none extste
.
York , N Y, The de Young Museu m in. Chri stma.1." "God Ble »
Ceraml.cs· Reg,··onal Art' Show
'' lti addi.ti·, ,n to the tra·'I.tJ.onal
l.t.tle arts.· -Another faculty member. John Sabraw. San J-rancJ&gt;en . Ca lif., and th e ' "'h itnc y
On Fri.day ' 10 am
Amaica," ''I' ve Got Mv Lm·~
. . t&lt;J 4 p.m.. at
. d' . 1·
d u I
I .b. .
.,
ISCLp 111es represente at t te ex li ttton. wi l.\ show "Twil ight at Euclid and Museum ••f Art in Ne.w York , N.Y. Many . to Keep Me Warm,''· " Biu~
the Oh'tcl U11 1·ve rsi.·tY Art · tile·
·,·IltJOV•il
McPh erson. " 2()()&lt;
· G 11
tl 0 or of
, i·ve us.·e of'electroiii'cs and dig~
·'• an ot·1 on canvas fa cultv mem.bers e. n_·loy interna tional Skie s" and many more.
011 .th e t-1fth
a·g·ery
·
it
al
media
sig
ni.fv
the
.facult
v's
will
in.g·
·
S
b
·
·
J
~
pamun g. · a ra w ts an ass~&gt;tant
pro 1·essor recogn· ition and are featured in various
Sel t'red Hall ·
The producti on is directed
ne's
·
·'
•
· 1 k. 1·
d
' to gr(&gt;W an&lt;f expand the boundartes 111 the S
' t~t d.10 Foun d &lt;IItons
uepartmenl
European
museums and corporate build- by Amy Perrin . with choreogW
" e re oo tng orwar to of art-mak ing... says Lazuka .
and holds an i1ssociate of arts degree in .
raphy hy Paulette Harrison
ha vi ng fa thers and other speOne example of thi ~ vigorou' explo- illu stration from Pratt' Institute iir New mgs.
and
Gerald Pflwe ll . ·
cia! guest' of students on earn- · ration in (irt has been submitted by York , N.Y.. and a master's of fine al1s in . G&lt;tl le;y hours a_t the ~enncd~ Musc~m
Tickets arc avai lable at the
pus for the weekend.'' said Carolyn.Cardcna\. professm of painting pai nttng from Nonhwestern Umvcr&gt;~ty . of Art are Tuesd,ty. V. edncsday, Frtddy,
Oh io Univer&gt;it y Dca~. of· and a;sona te director and !!raduate pro- 111 Evanston , Ill. Sabraw has worked pro- noon to 5 p.m.: fhursday noon to 8 p.m.; Ariel-Dater Performing Arts
Students Terry Hogan . The gram chair nt the School ol Art.
fe,si&lt;)nally as a designer. il lu strator. and Saturday. and Sunday. I to ·5 p.m. Centre box office at 446-27H7
tbe
Micldkpor't
planned events should provide
The work. en titl ed "West of Eden," is a author. admi&gt;sions offi cer. recruiter, .and The museum ts clo,&gt;cd Monday' and hoi - and
D~partmcnl Store &lt;ll &lt;.!&lt;.!2-·
something for everyone."
·tripti'Ch painting proJCct that hcgan in career cou nselor.
idays . Admission is free.
Foro complete li hedul~ of I&lt;.iS) and one Carden&lt;" say\ she wtl l
·~rwi li ,ht at Euclid and McPherson "
Viril ll'llll '. ohin.ei/u!mmt•um m' ca ll :1 14X. Further information i'
Dads Weekend erent.&lt;. ~o to: continue to work nn until her death . repre&gt;enf., the ~tru ggle that even sea- (74U) 59.!- /304 j(Jr more inf{mnation aqilahlc at I 740) 992-7396 or
hup:/lc.'c"wwcius.ohiou .edu/ Ci rdena&gt; used egg/oi l tempera : a 1nncd artists encounter while creating a ai)(Ju/ille must' /1111 ,.\ &lt;'urrent wul upcmn- I740 ) 992-6 759. or rivercit yplayer,ohio.org.
familyrveekends/dads/
Renaissance painting material used by pi ece. Sabraw s'ays.
inx e.rhil&gt;itioln .

Irving Berlin
revue at Ariel
Saturday ·

1

I

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