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iunba~ lime~ -ientinel

PageD6

GARDENING

Sunday;Januarx15,2oo6

•

Eastern students to
present drama, A3

Sprucing up the yard? Don't ignore ·the boulevards
grasses, as the Lenderma,ns
did . Moderately salt-tolerant
perennials like showy aster,
seaside goldenrod and yucca
also are good options.
But make it easy on yourself. Go low maintenance,
Select plants that don't
require much water, fertilizer
or tending. Avoid. addi ngsuch ornamentals as Amur
sil ver grass or ribbon grass to
your boulevard . Both a~e
considered invasive in certarn
communities and their seeds
could wind up dominating
area wetlands. Boulevards
can he a great place for rainwater gardens. which capture
and retain runoff arfd
snowmelt. Misdirected surface water will soak slowly
into the ground rather than
flow down curbs and storm
sewers, eventually finding jts
p_olluted way into lakes a:hd

Bv DEAN FOSDICK
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES•

ST. PETERSBURG. Fla.
- Whe.n Candy Lenderman
.landscaped her two overgrown lots in the dty's Old
Historic Northeast nei ghbor- ·
hood , she didn't 'restric t the
job to fo undation, emries and
yard. Thq retired school teac her also beautified the
boulevards.
Residential boulevards can ·
be the botanical bane of
urban dwellers. They · re that
no-man 's land between public sidewalk and busy street.
Boulevards generally are
city-owned or munic:ipal itics
can access them through
easements. Either w;ly.
~omeowners are responsible
for their mainten ance .
.· Whoever coined the te rm ·
"benign neglect" could .ha ve
had residential bou levard,; in
mind . Those rectangular
patches of ground often
~emble the set of a Western
movie after a cattle stampede.
Anything growing there. particularly tmf grass and ever·
green foli age. must wi thstand
road ~alt. meandering pt"l~ .

'

.

·\

searing s'lm and snow com"
pacted into ice .
Sounds impossible . doesn't
it? Not worth a homeowner's
time or ri1oney. Lenderman i'
here to tell you it doesn't
have to be that way.
"When we built on thi s mrner. we decided we didn 't
want to go with the tradition al lawn~ We had had that
experience at a different
house:· she said. "As far as I
can tell, it' s (grass) not all
that good fo r the enviroilment. anyway, because of the
ferti lizers and other thin us.
"We also didn't wa ri t to
mow. The trees were already
here so we added some ornamental grasses. That combi nation g ive s 111e . exerci~e

'

each day and if hurried
pedestrians are scuffing
shortcuts into the ground.
Think twice about placing
driftwood, statuary or stone
on the boulevards. They may
make attractive· add itions but
they also may tnp up foot
tnrffic
.
"It is best to include plants
that will survive the wet and
dry of the area." Brown said.
'·J
would
recommend
native s."
Choose so me attracti ve
plume-topped ornamental

New membe~ sworn in on Southern School Board; budget approved .

SPORTS

,BY ,BETH SERGENT

-• Stealers stun Colts.
See Page B1

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTIN E'L.COM

RACINE - The Southern
Local School Board, which at
its recent organizatiomll meeting swore in new members
and elected a new president,,
will be dealing this year with
a general fund that shows an
· overall decline in money on
which to operate it s schools.
According to the di strict's
fiscal year 2006 tax budget
the general fund will $64,443
. less to operate than in fi~cal
year 2005. The board has
been advised that significant

decreases in funding are pre- ing an1ounted to $3.283.246
dieted from tangible personal in the general fund while
property taxes that went from $3,292.000 is expect\!d in thi s
·
bringing ·in $48,000 in rev- current fiscal year.
enue in fiscal · year 2005 to
These numbers were part
$26,000 in fiscal year 2006.. of the district's fiscal year
Revenue predicted. from gen- 2006 budget presented to the
era! property taxes are slight- . board
by
Southern
ly up from $1,237,284 in fis- Superintendent
Robe·rt
cal year 2005 to $1 ,250,000 Grueser and Interim Treasurer
in fiscal year 2006, it was Dennie Hill . The budget was
noted.
approved by board members
Revenue from state funding at a recent meeting.
The members of thi s latest
sources are ·predicted to raise
slightly in the 2006 fiscal ·year vetsion; of the school board
although not by much, it was are Janet S. Grueser. Richard
reported. In fiscal year 2005 . B. Hill; Larry Fisher, Don P.
various state sources for fund- Smith and Peggy S. Gibbs.

All put Gibbs sat on the the Southern Loca l Board of
school board la' t year. Education in the amount of
Grue ser was ele&lt;:ted pre si dent $1500 .
ancj Hi ll was named viceBoard members were
president.
appointed to the .fo ll owi ng
Dennie Hill was reap- posi tions: Leg i s l~tive liaison, .
pointed as interi m trea surer · Fi sher ; negotiations represenfor a term beginning Jan. I 0 ta tives for Ohio Association
·though Feb .,2 7.·A motion wa' of Public Sc hool Employees
passed to pay each board (0A PSE). Richard Hill and
member $80 per meeting for Grueser; negotiat ions repre ~
up to 25 meetings in a year.
'c ntati ve' for Southern Local
The board set regular Education
. Association
meeting dates for 7 p.m. fSLE A). Smith and Fisher;
every fourth Monda y of the manage ment
co mmittee
month at Southern Hi gh member for SLEA, Gibbs;
S~hool. A mot io n was pas'&gt;ed labor committee member for
to establish a scrl(ice fund for OAPSE.• Richard HilL

AEPtohold
info session on
power plant

RECRUITERS .VISIT

On the Net:

Fin· more abuu! /)(~(/uti/V :
ing boulevards , check your
local ordinances or neighbor/rood Cf!l 'eiWII/S. See
also some guidelines prepared In lir e Sustainable
Reso urces Ce nter~' Urban

Lund.1

""'" · "'~dail~wntirwl.cum

MO:'&gt;JDAY , .JANt:ARY th , :!Ooll

:;o CENTS • Vol.!).') , No. 107

Let water stand too long,
though, and your ramwater
garden will become just
another breeding site for mosquitoe s. Twenty-four hours to
two days is a good infiltration
objective. You can tinker with
that rate as you build.
·..
Set your rain garden in the
. AP Photo
tf yo u·re planni ng a major landscaping makeover' of your yard, consider atso beautifying the bouleVard - that no-man's land lowest point s around yqbr
· between public sidewalk and busy street. Homeowners are responsible for their maintenance although the city usually holds an · boulevard - places wh~
·easement on residential boulevard s. That means they can break ground on them at any time. It also means you should check water naturally tlows or co\:
lects.
,.
with IGcal government before forking over any time and money on a boulevard project.
with the boulevard project
Permits often are required
before any money is spent on for boulevard project s but.
planning or plants," said Pam especi:Uly when incorporat8\·own. a Un ivers ity of ing plants taller than 18 or 24
Florida extension horticultur- inches. That's especially the
ist ass igned .to Pinellas · case near intersections,
County. "Certain ly. (you) alleys, traffic signs and
would not want to be hit with hydrants . Blocking the view
having to remove it after the with shrubs makes driving
fact :" Consider. then. all the hazardous. Boulevard plants
plumbing and wiring running grown taller than a wai1aerbelow growrd as well as the ing toddler makes things
open sight lines needed by . downright dangerous. Add
drivers and pedestrians above walkways to your boulevard
ground when drawing up project, especially if curbside
parkiryg spots fill quickly
your plans.

.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

streams .

wh ile the tree&gt; oive me
"
mulch." .
A bi~ cauti on. however:
Man v Lciti es and deedres tricted co mmunities ban
any land,caping work on residential bo ulevard s except
that done by their own crews.
Unsupervised digging , they
conte,J:ld. leads to severed utility lines. muddied streets and .
sidewalk s and introduce s
sewer-clogging roots. among
other th ings.
"Make sure that there are
· no restrictions associated

Thieves benefit when
·stolen tagS aren't
reported, polic~ .say, A6

. STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Pmgr"m · 111
1\1inn.:

1\1 irmeupu/is,

IH tp :1/Hwwmppeace .orgldo
"'!lloa,/slbouI el'CI rd. pdf

OBnuARIES

•••

You can Clllltact Dean
Fosdick ·
'
at
de a nfosd ick @II &lt;' tscape. n eI .

Page AS
• Anna Roach

INSIDE
• Laura Bus~ backs
domestic spyirig program ..
as criticism continues on
Cap~ol Hill. See Page A2
• Olmert, in first test as
acting prime minister,
approves Palestif)ian
voting in Jerusalem.
See Page A2
• Crusade forChrist
committee to meet.
Page A3
• Sonshine Circle plans
activities. See Page A3
• City tries to oust
tiomeless around
convention center.
SeePageA3
• Low registration in'
United States for Mexico's
first absentee voting
program. See Page AS
• Agency backlogged with
heating help requests.
SeePage AS
• Diabetes rates on·the
. rise in Ohio. See Page A6

See

WEATHER

•

.

B~an

J. Reed/ photo

U.S. Air. Force recruiters met for lunch in Pomeroy on Friday to meet folks, plan their recruiting efforts and enjoy a day of sight·

seeing. The recruiters are primarily based in Athens, and work throughout OhiO and West Virginia . Visits like Friday's to Pomeroy
are part of a new public awareness mission designed to promote Air Force careers anp foster public support of their mission.
They lunched at Court Street 4rill .
·
·

RACINE
- Cnlumbus
Southern Power · Co.. and ·
Ohio Power Co. will hold a
public informational meeting
next week to outline plans fnr
a new · power plant in
Lebanon Township.
The meeting. scheduled for
6:30 p.m. on Jan. 24, at
Southern Elementary School.
is part of· the formal siting
procc s&gt; established by the
Ohio Power Siting Board and
will allow residents to obtain
information concerning the '
need for the project. the project sc hedule. the planfs
design and other information
about the project.
· AEP has proposed a 600mcgawatt facilrty to satisfy
the growing energy needs of
the I ,4 . million customers
served by AEP's ·Ohio subsidiaries. The plant will use
lntegra td
Gasificatinn
Combined. Cycle clean·-coal
technology. the first commercial-scale use of the technology for power generation and
the large st IGCC plant to
date .
The power plant · will be a
baseload facility designed f6r
·

has new Extemion 4-H educator
New book chronicles Meigs' past and present Meigs
BY
Bv BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLIC H@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Cas sie
POMEROY -Want to see
Turner, a native of Auglaize
a. photo of the old Meigs
County, has been named 4-H
Theatre in Pomeroy? Hnw
Extension educmor for Meigs
about a photo of some of the .
Cou.nty.
first settlers in Portland ?
'Announcement ol . he r
What about stories and photos
appointment . to the position
about the modern staples,
which' has been vacant for sel'businesses and festivals of ·
eral munths wa' made las t
Meigs County from all four
week by the Ohio State
comers? If so "The Meigs
Univer&gt;ity Exten,ion Serv rce
County Chronicle'' may be
in Meigs County.
for you.
Turner will be responsible
"The
Meigs
County
for supporti ng the .191 youth
Chronicle" is a 56 page hardcurrentl v enrnlleJ in the 4- H
Cassie Tumer
back book published by the
prograni .
.
including
Meig s County Chamber of
Clover'buds and .l.J .J -H cl ubs.
Ttie new -1-H educator
Commerce that chronicles the
as well as ""i&gt;ting in the .J-H emphasized that -1-H is "not
events, attractions, scenic
ca mping programLa t Cirner·, . .
for farm .,kids.:· She
beauty, trivia and maps of
Cave and with the 695 cx hib1ts · Jes.:nhcclrt a&gt; otl en ng someimportant sites in the county.
at the Mei~' C'nu rm ' Juni&lt;'r thing fnrel'e ryone runn ing the
The book s, which were .
Fair.
,.
·
'Jlec·tnrm of di1er'e programprinted as a limited edition.
Turner. who lia' m&lt;"~J tc• min ~ rclnging from life 'kilb,
are $35 and can be picked up
Racine. will also be '"' rkin ~ kccring fi t. · and , raying
at the Meigs County Chamber
on deyejopin g future 'nuth healrhy and indy de' sel fof Commerce on West Main
leader' in varinL" .J ~ H lt' adc·t·· detennrncd pnlJCCh.
.
Street while supplie s last.
~hip opportunit ic... .
..Our gu_
al_no\\ j.., to mak~ ~The book is a chronicle of
She &gt;aid ,he j, currc·nth in H mnre ""blc and to recruit
both the past and present with
th ~ pro~..:e:-.~ nf a... -.e:-...,in~ ·tilt.' member' and lcw. .kp, :· . , he
photos of early Twentieth
· needs and find i n~ our" hat the l'nm mt•nted . descTi hin g herCentury coal miners preced~.:ommunity wa 111, and ,cc' ~b 't:lfa, hein g :·pa ...... ionmf atlout
.
-1- H ...
ing photos of ~roundbreak­
the needs for 111rr )&lt;'ung pco·
ings for new hrghways and
pic . Amo ng her goals arc· tn
Turner" as a member of -1-H
trctinin~
for
for
II· years w;rth prOJCC" of all
the new Pomeroy . Mason
offer
leader,hip
Beth Sergent/ photo
(!ridge, and of course the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce President Donald tee ns irnd tn irrtrndu,·e" peer s&lt;&gt;rts . irh·ludmg live&gt;toek. She
"as .t1unrcrr leader and &gt;erved
bu sinesses of Meigs County. Vaughan and Chamber Coordinato r Erin Rou sh show off the .. education pn_lgram ...
With nea~ l y 400 photos the chamber's new hardback book "The Meigs County Chronicle .~
She .stre.ssed the important lln th~ Junior Fair Board. She
book has captured more than . The "Chronicle" is for sale at the chamber off1ce for $35 and role ol adulr , nltmrcc'" 11 ,,1in~ alto: nJed the lJ ni l'ersi ty of
tiHtt thcr~ a r~ ,· urrent ly
Fi ndla1 "h~re she earned a
several familiar faces and chron icles Meigs County's past and present.
n,&lt;&gt;hd
in,
the
Jc)(a
l
-1
-11
pr(
hcid1d;,r
nf ,;:jer\.:C in bi ology
•
places of interest.
.
1
1
"It's a_ nice piece," Meigs dence and pride in what tha·t have made the &lt;:nu ntv ~ram . "Those voluntc,rs are 11 rth an e111J1hasi ,' in agricul- ~ ital rua ..,Ul'L'C'"ful prn~ r.un .·· lurl' .tnd 111e ...,~1l'I1 C~S. She
County Chamber Commerce. tomorrow might bring. Some hctter."
Coordinator Erin Roush said businessc., ha ve chan ged over · 'Reside' till' faces. the boo~ ,he' ,aid. " \\'c 11 ant tu utili;c 11cnt on to The Oh ro State
·
·
·
· L' nl\Cf\11\ lo e·1rn her ma~ter
of the book. "It looks at histo- the vear' but some arc &lt;1 iII :il'n mntains hi,tnric lac·h therr
l'~JlCr"ncc and expcnrsc
·
' ·
ry and the m unt y's business there which is a testa ment tn
to continue and further dl'\·d Please see Book, AS
Please see '·"· AS
but also give, U&gt; some confi- the people within the cou nt)
op .J-H prograrlh here ...

i'"'

Details on Page A6

INDEX
'

CHEOK
OUT THE

Calendars

ALL-NEW

Classifieds

2 SEC110NS -

2006 RAV4!

SUPERIOR TOYOTA

3101EAST SEVENTH STREET
PARKERSBURG, WV • 304-424-5122

'BASED ON R.L POlK [Y 'J4REGISTRATION\ fM fll/Mlto !.lPG fO~ 2006 MODEll CAMRY 2514 5IPlfD AUTO, COROllA 180 I, SIENNA 5326 2WD, HIGHlANDER 6910 2WD. ACTUAL MllfAGf Will VARY .. PURCHASERS CAN RfctiVf CASH BACK FROM TOYOTA OR CAN APPlYCASH BACK TO DOWN PAYMENT.
....TUNDRA LEASE OFFER CUSTOIMR II RfiPONSIBlf fO~ L((fSS WEAR AND f[AR AND fKCfSI MlltAGf CHARGfiTHAf Will VARYDEPENDING ON MODEl AND PRJ(f PAYIMNT MAY VARY BASta ON fiNAl NfGOTIAlfD PRICl. NOT ALL CUSTOMERS Will QUALIFY. TUNDRA 0CAB IRS MSRP133.1500
FOR DflMS, CAlt T·80Q.41J.TOYOTA 'MilrAGf fRTANKfl!l CAlCUIATtD BY MUlTIPlYING fPA HIGHWA' fSTI\\AlfD MPG BY fUrl TANKCAPACITY. ACTUAl MllfAGf Will VARY AND OfPfNDI UPON MANY fACTORSNOT CONIIDfRfDIN fPA TESTS "39', APR FINANCI~G UP TO 60 MONTHS AVAIIABlf TO OUAllflfD
SU'IfRS THRU TOYOTA fiNANCIAlSfRVICfS TOTAL fiNANCW CANNOl fX([ED MSRP PlUS OPTIONS, TAX AND liCfNSr fffl 60 MONtHLY PAYMfNTS Of I 18.37 fOR fACH S1000 BORROWfO. NOT ALL BOYERS WILL QUALIFY. '"2.9 . APR fiNANCING UP TO 60 MONTH\ AVAIIABlf TO OUAUFifD BUYfRS
THRU TOYOTA fi~ANCIAl ·lrR'iiCfl TOTAlfiNANCfO CANNOT fXCfto MSRP PlUI OPTIONS. TAX AND liCfNS[ ft[l 6C MONTHlY PAYM[IITS Of I 17.92 fOR tACH I I 000 BORROI'IfD. HOT All BUYERS Will QUALIFY. All OFHRI JNO I/31/06 .

12

I'AGES
. A3
82-4

Comics

Bs

·Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4
As

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

BSection
A6

© :mo6 Ohio V•lley Puhli.oohing·c o.
'·
"

70

- -·---- - ,y

Please see AEP. AS

•'

�The Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD

'

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, January 16,2006

• Bv DEB RIECHMANN

PubUc meetings

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITE'R

. Monday, Jan. 16
LETART FALLS -Letart
Township Trustees, 12 noon,
office
· building.
. Tuesday, Jan. 17
RUTLAND Rutland
Village Council, 6 p.m. ,
council's clwnbers, special
session to discuss financial
m a t t ·e r s .
CHESHIRE ··_ Siloam
Lodge 456, regular meeting,
. 7:30
p.m.
POM EROY
Public
meeting to be held at 7 p.m.
at Pomeroy Village hall for
· the purpose of discussing
· Nature Works grant program for development of
the
area
around
the
Mulberry Heights pond.

.

.

I

)

Monday, Jan. 16
MIDDLEPORT - · Meigs
County Right to Ufe, 7:30 p.m.
Middleport Church of Christ

RSVP with Courtney Sim,
992:6626.
Saturday, Jan. 21
PORTLAND - Portland
Community Center, elect
new hoard members, 10 a.m.
to
noon
at
center.

Wl:dnesday, .J an. 18 ·
POMEROY - · Middleport
Literary Club, 2 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Public Library.
Saturday,
Jan. . · 21
Connie : Gilkey, hostess;
PORTER
Evelyn
Roush
Frankie Hunnell to.· review .
''The Blessing Stone" by at the Clark Chapel Freewill
Barbara
Wood. Baptist Church. 6 p.m. Bad
weather
cancel s.
Friday, Jan. 20
MIDDLEPORT
-The
POMEROY
Meigs White Oak Quartet wil sng
County American Cancer
Society Taskforce, regular . adt 7 p.m. at the Middleport
meeting, noon, basement church of the Nazarene.
conference room of Pomeroy Pastor Allen Midcap invites
Library, . lunch provided , ·public. Refreshments.

Church events

Submitted photo

Southern FFA meml)ers winning a silver medal in parliamentary procedure competition were
from the left, Rusty Carnahan, [)ustyn Johnson, Whitney Wolfe-Riffle, Grant Phillips, Miranda
· McKelvey, Mallory Hill, Timmy Sands, Wes Harmon , and Brittany Moriarity.

Racine-Southern FFA fields a·
parliamentary procedure team

Olmert, in first test as acting prime minister, approves Palestinian voting in Jerusalem
JERUSALEM (AP)
Hamas, which calls for
.
Acting Prime Minister Ehud Israel's destruction, are runOlmert faced his first major ning. Palestinians threatened
. ...,_
test on Sunday when he ·led to cancel the election if Israel
'
his Cabinet in a unanimous banned Jerusalem voting.
· decision to let Palestinians
.The Cabinet decision - '
vote in Jerusalem later this which came ·in · the wake of
month, defusing a crisis that U.S. pressure- said the vptthreatened to derail the parlia- ing could proceed as long as ·
mentary elections.
armed groups were not on the
The move came hours ballot. The vote would be held
before . doctors performed a under a compromise used in
tracheotomy on Afiel Sharon previous
elections
that
to .help wean him off a respi- allowed Jerusalem Arabs to
.rator II days after he suffered cast absentee ballols in post
·a stroke, J-ladassah Hospital offices. .
.
.
,
said in . a statement. On
"! welcome this decision,"
Saturday night, the 77-year- Palestinian negotiator Saeb
old leader was taken off the Erekat said.
last of the Sedatives that kept
However, · in a phone conhim in a medically induced versation with Secretary of
coma,. the hospital s~id. But State Condoleezza Rice,
he remained unconscious.
Palestinian leader Mahmoud
. Attorney General Meni Abbas compl,ained about
Mazuz also directed Olmert Israel's restrictions.
on Sunday to continue serving
"All candidates should have
as acting prime rninister. freedom of movement, freeOlmert, seen as Sharon's like- dom 'to campaign," he said,
ly heir, has been running the according to his office.
Hamas spokesman Sami
government since the prime
minister's Jan. 4 stroke.
Abu Zuhri termed the deciIn the West Bank, Israeli sion "unacceptable," but said
troops shot and killed a it would not delay the elecPalestinian mother and her tions. "We don' t need Israeli
armed 20-year-old son in permission to participate iq
what appeared to be a mix-up. the elections," he said.
AP Photo
sparked by a village feud, resShortly after the Cabinet Acting Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert chairs the weekly cabinet meeting in the Prime
idents said.
vote, poliee scuffled with Minister's office in Jerusalem Sunday with the chair of ailing Prime Minister Ariel. Sharon
Although Sharon is not Hamas
members
in vacant at nght. The Israeli Cab1net on Sund.ay unammously approved voting in east Jerusalem,
expected to resume his offi- Jerusalem's Old City and defusing a crisis that threatened to derail Palestinian elections.
cial duties. the attorney gener- raided a Hamas office in east ~ .
.
·
·
al sidestepped an irreversible Jerusalem that Israel believed with.a nfl~ a\ler arson attacks
decision to declare him per- was being used for election- on ~IS family scars..
manently incap~citated and related activities. Police . Residents sard soldiers shot
instruct the Cabinet to choose detained six ·people, including first, and Dwekat returned
a successor. Instead, he told three held on suspicion of ille- fire. But the mthtary· said the ·
Olmert to remain acting pre- gal campaigning, said police army patrol was shot at first
mier,
presumably
until spokesman Micky Rosenfeld. and returned fire.
A violent standoff between
Israel's' March 28 elections, Mohammed Abu Teir, No. 2
Israeli officials said:
on the national Hamas slate, Israeli police and Jewish setThe ministers from the was among those detained, tiers in the volatile West Bank
hard-line
Likud · Party relatives said.
city . of Hebron presented
"Israel police will continue another challenge for Olmen.
resigned from the Cabinet
effective this week, preferring to close down all Hamas He denounced what he called
to run against Sharon's new, activity in east Jerusalem
centrist Kadima Party from related to the upcoming electhe opposition . With only tion," Rosenfeld said.
Kadima ministers remaining,
Hamas is expected 'to make
the Cabinet ·voted .unanimous- a strong showing in the elecly to allow JerusalemArabs to tion, appealing to Palestinians
vote in the dty during the Jan . · angry at the ruling Fatah
25 _Palestm1an parliamentary PartY' s corruption and inabilielectiOns.
ty to maintain order in
Both Israel and the Palestinian areas.
www.mydallraentlnel.com
Palestinians want Jerusalem
In the West Bank village 'Of
. as their capital. creating con- Rojib near Nab! us, soldiers
tlict over any i&gt;Sue ~een as who apparently thought they
strengthening either side 's had come across a militant
·
hide-out fired at a hou se.
claim to the city.
. .J.srael had threaten~d to bar Residents said the shots killed
'"~·: voifng in east Jerusa lem 20-year-old Fawzi Dwekat
because candidates from the and his ~0-year-o ld mother.
· Islamic
militant
group The son was standing guard

Clubs and
organizations

the "unbridled" behavior of
the rioting settlers and sai.:j he
had instructed authorities · to
"act strong~y to stop such
behavior."
About 500 settlers live
among 170,000 Palestinians
in Hebron .
In recent days, settlers
angry at orders to evict eight
families living· in an empty
Palestinian market rampaged
through the city, torching
Palestinian shops, stoning
Palestinian homes and con'fronting Israeli police. Eight
people were arrested on
Sunday in co'nnection with the
rioting. police 'said.

RACINE - The Southern
High Schopl Future Farmers
of America was awarded a
silver medal for demonstrating exemplary skills at a
recent parliamentary procedure contest held at Federl)l
Hocking High School.
For the opening ceremony
. of the contest, students had
to memorize their roles for
officer training, and demonstrate their skill s by using the
· .correct parliamentary· proce:
dure during a mock meeting.
. The judges of the contest
asked each member of the
team a question concerning
the parliamentary rules.
Southern received high
marks fqr · their procedural
: effort and t~l so for knowledge

of the format in the question
and
answer
segment.
Through demonstrating outstancjing skills, the Southern
team was awarded a silver
award in the Southeast
District.
"Parliamentary. procedure
is a skill every leader needs"
said SHS team advisor
Dwight Mitchell. "One especially needs these skills to be
a proficient member of the
Racine-Southern FFA. The
students did an excellent job
and performed well."
The members · met . ~very
day at lunch for three weeks
to practice for the contest.
Said team member Whitney
Riffle
said,
"Everyone
worked hard to do their best:

We were disappointed we
didn 't 'get . the gold, but
pleased that our · hard work
paid off with a silver medal.
We would like to thank Mr.
Mitchell and Mr. Richard
Stephens for all the great
help in succeeding io a high
level. · Next year the team
will be shooting for .the
gold."
·
The team consists ·of nine
·members: . Pre s ident ~ · Wes
Harmon. president; Grant
Phillips. vice president ;
Whitney Wolfe-Riffle, news
reporter; Miranda McKelvey,
treasurer; Mallory Hill, secretary; Brittany Moriarity,
sentinel; Tim Sands, advisor;
and Rusty Carnahan and
Dustyn Johnson.

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

Eastern students to present drama
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• Eastern High School drama students will present "Shallo.ween" at 7 p.m . on Saturday, Jan. 2.
in the high school gymnasium. The ·cost is $2. The cast members are Thomas Dowell, Alyssa
Baker. Shana Snyder, Lance Griffin, Braden .Batey, Cheyenne Trussell, Amanda Paker, and
Shan nan · Loscar.

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BY ·THEBEND

Community Calendar

Laura .Bush backs"domestic spying program as criticism continues on C~pitol Hill
not think Bush had the legal authority to order
the program. She lamented the administration's decision to bypass checks and balances
provided by the 1978 Foreign Intelligence
ACCRA, Ghima - First lady Laura Bush
Surveillance
Act.
·
said Sunday that the U.S. government is right
Under the act, the atlorney general can
to eavesdtop on Americans with suspected ties
authorize a warrantless wiretap for up to 12
to terrorists, but a top Senate Republican
hours. But he must give the presiding judge of
joined a chorus of lawmakers who think
an I I -member FISA court a head's up and jusdomestic spying is on shaky legal ground.
tify the s urveillance later. lf·the attorney gen"1 think the American people expect the
eral fails to do so, the court has discretion to
United States government and the president to
.
notify the target of the survei llance.
do what they can to make sure there's not an
"If you're going to wiretap Americans, if
attack by foreign terrorists," Mrs. Bush said
may wiretap whomever an American
you.
just before landing here to begin a four-day
stay in West Africa.
·
might call, if you're going to put that information in a database - and I said if, because we
President Bush is concerned that media disdon't exactly know ·what happened - follow
.closur!l of the program will cripple work to
the law, and do it legally," Feinstein said.
foil terrorists, she said. "I think he was worOn her second trip to Africa, Mrs. Bush.
ried that it would undermine our efforts by
alerting terrorists to what our efforts are,"
plans to join Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice in Monrovia. Liberia, on Monday to
Mrs. Bush said.
attend the ·inauguration of President-elect
Bush's · secret order gave the National
Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, the first woman presiSecurity Agency permission to listen ·in on
dent on the continent.
international phone calls and peek at e-mails
between Americans and suspected terrorists.
"The centerpiece of this trip is women's
empowerment, with Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf as
Administration officials claim a congresan exan1ple, a shining example for all of us,
sionat' resolution passed after the attacks of
for women around the world," she said.
Sept. II, 200 I - a resolution that authorized
him to use force in the fight against terrorism
Mrs. Bush also is highlighting U.S.-backed
-gave th~ president the authority to order the
. education and 'HIV-AIDS program~ in Ghana
program.
.
and Nigeria.
"I thought they were wrong," Sen. Arlen
In a 12-minute exchange with reporters on
Specter, R-Pa. , said on ABC's. "This Week."
the plane, Mrs. Bush rebuffed criticism that
Specter is· one of several Republicans and .
too much of U.S. assistance for battling AIDS
Democrats who are questioning the adminisin Africa is focused on abstinence programs.
trlllion's authority to engage in domestic spyShe said abstinence, the use of condoms and
being faithful to one's sexual partner are all
. ing without court warrru.lts. Attorney General
Alberto Gonzales has agreed to testify at hearimpottant il) curbing the spread of disease.
ings next . month before the Judiciary
"I ' m always a little bit irritated when I hear
Committee, which Specter chairs.
the criticism of abstinence, because abstinence
Committee members, including GOP Sen.
is absolutely 100 percent effective in eradicat- ·
Sam Brownback of Kansas, have expressed .
ing a sexually transmitted disease," she said.
doubt about Bush's legal argument for the proIn countries where girls feel obligated to
gram.
comply with the wishes of men, girls need 'to
"We're not goil)g to give him a blank check,
know that abstinence is a choice:'
and just because we're of the same party does"When girls are not empowered, when girls
n't mean we're not going to look at this ·very
are vulnerable ... their chances of being a.ble to
closely," Specter said. "And I .moved immedinegotiate their sexual life with their partners
ately when the matter was disclosed to say that
,
AP Photo and to encourage or make their . partne~s use a
I would use my authority as chairman of the U.S. first lady Laura Bu$h hugs 10-yearold Aisha Garuba who presented her with flowers upon condom are very low," she said. "So it's realJudiciary . Committee to have hearings, and her arrival as Senior Minister John Henry Mensah, righ(, and Deputy Mini.ster of Information ly important for all three to be part of a sue -.
we're going to pursue it."
Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, obscured second right behind, look on in Accra, Ghana, Sunday. Laura cessful eradication of AIDS, and that is ...
Speaking on CBS' "Face the Nation," Sen. Bush will attend Liberia)l President-elect Ellen Johnson Sirleafs inauguration .on Monday and abstinence, be faithful to your partner. and
Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., said she too does also travel to Nigeria. Woman at left is unidentified.
then use condoms. correctly and consistently."

.

The Daily Se,ntinel • Subscribe today • 992-2155

~Qnday,Januaryt6,2oo6

·visitor must learn house·rules
before worshipping in 'church
DEAR ABBY: In a recent
column, you wrote that only
practicing Catholics may
receive Communion In a
Catholic service. That is not
entirely correct, Abby.
Canon law allows memDear
hers of the Orthodox churchAbby
es, the Assyrian Church of
the East and the Polish
National Catholic Church to
receive Communion during. a
Catholic service if they
choose to take it. - do' is check beforehand with
CATHOLIC READER IN the clergyperson. For · quesBOSTON
tions regarding the rites an'd
DEAR READER: Thank sacramehts of the Catholic
you for pointing it out. l sup- · Church, consult the chancery
pose it's time to drag out the of the local Catholic diocese
old wet noodle, because mail or archdiocese and someone
poured in from readers point, can provide the correct informg out that Communion is a mation.
sacrament practiced by many
DEAR ABBY: A couple
Christian denominations, not of months · ago, I got a call
just Catholics.
from an ex-boyfriend 's attorThe person whose letter I ney informing me that he
was answering had written · had passed away. He said
that she was a non-Catholic that I'd been !'eft something
who, at her Catholic grandfa- in "Luke's" will, and told me
ther's funeral in a Catholic the date, time and place of
chur~. had .been urged by a the reading. A close friend
fami!)i friend to approach the and J. attended.
altar and take Communion. It
I was · flabbergasted to
was 'my understanding that learn that Luke had left me a
only someone who has been ring that had been in hi s
to confession - and is in a family for years. At the read"state of gra\:C" - · may par- ing, I also found out that he
take of Communion in a had married and had two
Catholic church without its sons and a daughter.
being sacrilegious. However,
My problem: Luke and I
I did not communicate my dated back when I w·as - 18
thought clearly. Mea culpa'
and very immature. (I am
When visiting a house of now 32.) I knew at the time
worship, whether it is that Luke was head over
· Christian, Jewish, Muslim, heels about me, but I was
Bahai, etc., if you want to be not at all serious about him
absolutely "correct" in your - and ' I let him know it
deportment, the wise thing to from the beginning . . Our

relationship ended badly.
I don't believe I deserve
this ri ng: I talked it over
with a couple of friends. One
says I should keep it because
Luke wanted me to have it.
Another thinks it would be a
good idea to give it to his
wife. But she was extremelv
offended · that he left me the
ring in the firs t place. What
do you .think abou-t thi s.
Abby 0 And if I dq decide to
give her the ring, what is the
most considerate way to do ·
it? - UNDESERVING IN
ARKANSAS
DEAR UNDESERVING:
It would be interesting to
know what was going on in
your ex-boyfriend's mind
when he decided that the
ring should go 10 you . It
appears that you always had
a piece of ,hi s heart that he
was never able to reclaim.
Because the item inspires
guilt in you instead of pleasure. it mi'ght be better if it
remains in Luke's family.
Feeling as she dpes about the
situation, his wife . may ·not
want the ring for herself
However, it would be gracious to offer it back,
explaining that because it:s a
family heirloom. hi s daughter might like 10 have · it
when she's grown.
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, . Pauline Phillips:
Write
Dear Abby
at
www.DearA,bby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.
,.

.Sonshine ·Circle plans.activities
RACINE - , Future fund
raising projects and group
activities were discussed
when the Bethanv-Dorc'as
s·onshine
Circ'Ie met
Thursday
at the Bethany
church building .
It was noted that the group
will be making homemade
noodles on · Monday and
Wednesday to sell. Decision
on other projects was postponed unti I the February
meeting. It was · noted that
cookbooks are still being
sold ·and anyone interested in
purchasing one should contact Kathryn Hart. A committee was named to plan the

annual mot~er -daughter ban'
quet in May.
· Officers. reports were given
by Jacki~ White and Julie
Campbell, correspondence
was read. and 59 cards to be
sent out were signed. Fifteen
cards had been sent out earlier in the month and seven
thank you cards were read
with one donation being
noted.
.
Opening devotion s and
prayer was given by Evelyn
Foreman with passages being
read from Mini Moments
with Angels and the scripture
reading from Psalms L9: 14.
The program was given by

Edie Hubbanj and Blondena ·
Rainer with the theme being
a New Yel!fs Eve Party.
Others attending · were
Martha Lou Beegle. Mattie
Beegle, Mabel Brace. Judy
Gilmore,Mildred ·
Hart.
Lillian Hayman, Nondus
Hendricks, Melanie Holman,
Denise Holman, Meli ssa
Holman, Hazel McKelvey.
Letha
Proffitt.
Ruth
Simpson. Wilm a Smith.
Bernice Theiss, and Sheila
Theiss. ·.The' next meeting
will be held on Feb. 9 at 7
p.m. at the Bethany Church.
All area women are invited
to attend.

City tries to oust Cmsade for Christ committee to meet
homeless around POMEROY - The Ohio Pomeroy levee.
Valley Crusade for Christ
The committee meets each
convention center Committee
wiU hold it's quar- tifth Thursday: however, when .
CLEVELAND . (AP) The city will step up enforcement ·of a law that bans
homeless people from spending the night outside .the
Cleveland
Convention
Center after fire damaged
steel doors on the building.
The Jan. 3 tire started when
a homeless person's belongings were ignited for warmth,
Assistant Fire Chief David
McNeilly said. Damage was
estimated at $15,000.
Piles of clothing have littered the area around the convention ~enter in recent years
while police looked the other
way, said Bri an Davis. executive
director of · the
Northeast Ohio Coalitio~ for
the Homeless.
A city law, which has been
on the books for years, prohibits anyone without a permit from being in the area
be1ween 10 p.m. and 5 a.m.
Violating that law is a misdemeanor. It qrries a penalty
of up to 60 days in jail or a
maximum of $100 .
Police began enforcing the
law Wednesday. said Lt.
Thomas Stacho. a police
spokesman. Police patrolling
the area have been asking
homeless people to ~"'l eave .
Arre sts are a last resort.
Stacho said.
About 20 homeless people
took up long-term residence
near .the cetiter, said Donna
Kelly. a nurse with Care
Alliance. which provides
health care to the · homeless
and uninsured.
Local homeless advocale s
are working to relocate people who have tieen staying
there. Volunteers of America
of Northeast and North
Central Ohio sends a van to
the area. -offering a ride to an
emergency shelter or another
outdoor location. .
·

terly meeting 7 p.m. Jan. 26
at First Southern Baptist
Church, 41872 Pomeroy Pike.
The Crusade Committee
has sponsored several events
for the ~ounty including the
Power
Team, . Freedom
Experience with Brach Gill
and · several events on the

events are being ·planned tl1e
committee meet'
necessary.
At the Jari. 26 meeting a
time for election of officers
will be set.
Membership is open to · all
churches and individuals interested..are invited to attend.

a'

www.mydailysentinel.com ·
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Pagei\4

OPINION

~ :The Daily Sentinel
.
'

The Daily Sentinel

~onday, Januaryt6,2oo6

Monday, January 16, 2006

Obituaries

An open letter to Germany's chancellor

Anna Roach

Bush in a letter this week his Hezbollah masters with
.
I
Good morning, Madame
by Michael Ledecn at Iraqi terror connections.
posted
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
Chancellor.
National Review Online.
But doing business with
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
· Here you are, Germany's
"
He
wouldn't
give
in
to
the
terrorists
doesn't buy peace.
www.mydailysentinel.com
·
Angela Merkel , on yo ur first
the
terrorists,"
It
just
buys
more business .
demands
of
trip to Washingt\)n, D.C.,
who wanted him to scream l:m guessing that publicly
,. Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
preparing for your meetiJ1g·
Diana
into a transmitter for air- confronting President Bu~h
with President Bush. As you
.'
plane
fuel. "He ·would not . over Guantanamo is,. along
West
look out of your Blair. House
Jim Freeland
the
honor and dignity these same lines, bu siness as
allow
window over Lafayette
Publisher
of America to be intimidated usual -· doingjihadists' bidSquare toward the White
by the fea r and pain that ding in a craven bid to spare
House, consider the hi storicCharlene Hoeflich
ity of the era: the beginning you told the German news Hammadi and terrori sts Germany a 911 1. a 3/1 1 or a
717. lt 'sjust. a hunch; but :it
of Mr. Bush's lifth year lead- magazine Der Spiegel this everywhere represent."
General Manager: News Editor
Such
is
the
Hezbollah
'tertns a d1spmtmg pattern of
ing hi s country, and the week. "Different ways and
you,
.
Madame
surrender.
rorist
that
beginning of your first year means must be found for
Such a pattern never
leading. your country in the · dealing with these prison- Chancellor, cset free . And
fu nn y thina: Shortly after. mar ked Robert Stethem, as
so-called War on Terror. Or ers."
Congress shall make no law respecting an
is that the War on
I have a suggestion: How your own Ge rman hostage i'n his.brother's letter reminded
establishment of religio11, or prohibiting t.he
.. Guantanamo Bay ? I · ge t about' if we ship all these Iraq . Suzanne Osthoff. was the president: "You have
released from ca ptivit y. truly said that 'We are in a
. , free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom .
them confu sed . .
guys - . untlushetl Koran s Which
is quite a coinc;i - · fight for our principl'es, apd
That's be'cause in just and all - to Germany''
.· of speech, or of the press; or the right of the .
dence.
But
so was the fact our ·responsibility is to li'i'e
about every account of your Maybe "72 Virgins" Airlines
.· people peaceably to assemble; and to petition
that
afte
r
the
hostage-take rs by tl)em,"' Kenneth Stethem
American trip -· bi ggish would cut us a deal. Then
news in Europe - it. is you - Germany - can said Ms. Osthoff would be wrok. " Robert Iivcd by
the Gover'!ment .for a redress o.f grievances.
killed unl ess Germany them. Robert also died by
prominentfy mentioned that parole them to Lebanon.
Guantanamo. Bay is prom iThat, of course , is just stopped training Iraqi securi- them. ... 1 hope that his
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
nently high on your li st of. · what you did just before ty forces, the Iraqi govern- example, and the example of
· well, prominent concerns. Christmas with Muhammad ment announced, according the o•her h010es like him,
Trouble spots. Global things Ali Hammadi , the convicted to the news Web site can inspire you to underwhy
allowing
.
.
you lose sleep over.
HeZbollah killer of Petty Deutsche Welle, that lr&lt;\q starid
.
would
be
seeking
security
·.
Germany
to
release
This is, with due respect, Officer
Robert · Dean
tratning
ehewhere.
And
Hamm
adi
'vas
a
.
wrong.
bizarre. Iran is go ing Stethem. In case you d,idn' t
nuclear, Europe is going know, Mr. ·Stet hem is one of there was more. Osthoff says Justice was not done. Robert
Islami c, Russia is going off our American heroes , a .Germany paid a ransom to was not honored and
the reservation, Chil1a is a courageo us young Navy secure her freedom, maybe Americans are not safer by
fearsome thing; and your big diver who became an early as much as $5 million, allowi ng Hammadi to return
concern is sendin g what is casualty of the , war on according to a German wire to Lebanon and Hezbollah-"
Of course. Germany isn'i
called a "clear message'' to Islamic terror. In 1985, 'at servke report iranslated
Mr. Bush about Gu antanamo age 23 , he was beaten to an . online by Transatlanti c ~afe r either, .nor is any _other
Bay. the tropical jail where unrecogni zable pulp by . Intelligencer. In other words. Western natron. Thts 1s the
the United States keeps Hammadi and his gang, shot despite your refusal to be "clear message" I certainly ·
Dear Editor:
jihadis on ice - and keeps through the head and "blackmailed" over Ms. hope · you hear · froin
, I have a tcw quest ions for the big spenders of our county,
the rest of the world safer as dumped onto a Beirut run- Osthoff's release." Germany President Bush. .
. otherwise known as Meig; Coun ty Commissioners .
(Dimw West is a columnist
a
result. But that's not what . way during the .Hezbollah seems to be a country terror, If "other equipment'; in the hospital is still "s uitable for .
ists
can
do
bu
siness
with
for
71re Washingtml Times.
hijacking
of
TWA
Flight
you say. "An institution like
use." v.hy aren't the floor. roof. walls. etc. still "suitable?"
including,
very
possibly,
Site
can he contacted vi.cr
. Cannot the grant money for the pu rchase of high-tech med- ... Guantanam'o can and sh.ould 847 .' But. as hi s brother Robert Stethem's killer. and dianawest@veri~on . n et.)
not ex ist in the longer term," Kenneth reminded Pre sident
ical equ 1pment be used for e4u ippin.g a hospital that has
already been erected. iiEtcad of expecting the citizens of
Meigs County to ·pay for construction of a new hospital and
approximat ely $1 million to eq uip it'.'
'
What has kept our electe\,l commbsioners from using their
. time and talents to figure out a way to make use of what we
· have now "
,
If we are unable to pay the salaries of our county law .
· ·enforcement. how can we be expected to pay for building
another hospital whi le une ·sits empty''
· · We are well-served in the area by Holze r and Pleast~nt
Valley.' Another hospital so close to the one no longer in use
U.NATIONS
. makes no se nse at all.
Nina Butcher
; Middleport

:. REA D'E .R' S

. HARTFORD, W.Va.- Anna Roach, 70 of Hartford, W.Va.
d1ed Sunday, Jan .. IS, 2006 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Arrangements will be announced by Foglesong Tucker
Funeral Home.

Low registration in United

States for Mexico's first
absentee voting program
Bv ABE LEVY

Frank Garcia of Amistad
Cristiana church, a dual citizen of Mexico and the United
SAN ANTONIO - · A frac- States. He couldn't register
tion of the eligible voters reg- for lack of a voter ID card but
istered for their first chance ' said he passed out fo.rms to
to vote by absentee ballot in congregation members who
· Mexico's presidential elec- .do have cards.
·
tion, authorities said Sunday.
Volunteers across the
Voting advocates said the United States also had orgalow registration demonstrai- nized voting drives in malls,
ed a need for fundamental Ilea markets, churches, banks
changes to the pr6gram, but and tromes.
election officials called it a
A group of ·Houston busigood first step toward'greater ness owners organized weeks
·democracy.
of voter drives that tbey said
·"If thi s very same informa- netted more than 1,400 registion had been out there for trations in Texas. They
nine months , the turnout offered free advice on lilling
would have been different," . out forms along with the
said Pilar Alvare z of the roughly $9 postage for the .
Federal Electoral Institute, necessary certified mail.
the independent government
However, about 60 percent
agency which oversees elec- of the people who showed
tions in Mexico.
interest had to be turned
The expatriate voting law away because they . didn't
was passed last summer by have voter lD cards, said
Mexico's Congress, and Jose Luis Rodriguez, who led
allows citizens abroad to vote the Houston group.
'in the July 2· presidential
"There are people in
election. Citizens were given Mexico who .say we are not
until Sunday to apply for an interested," he said. "That
absentee ballot.
was one of the key factors for
But of an estimated 4 mil- me to push for this right."
lion eligible voters worldAmong the few to· COil\;;
wide, Mexico's Federal plete the registmtion process
Electoral Institute said only was Julio Cesar Aragon, 42,
about 18,600 participated.
an immigrants-rights advoAmong the biggest · prob- cate who lives in Providence,
lems, critics said, was the R.I.
required voter ID cards were
"This is my lirst iime I'm
. issued only· in Mexico.
· going to· vote in my life. I
."I feel like I am tied up, can't explain to you how
that I cannot· speak up for my happy I feel and how despercountry to say that I am here, ·ate I've .been to try to make
I have a voice," said things change," said Ara~on ,
Armando Cld, 38, of who has dual U.S--Mextcan
Houston, who didn't :have an citizenship. "I don't care for
ID card.
' what party I vote. The thing
Gabriela Gambino, 23, is I get to vote."
who lives in Albuquerque,
Alvarez, the official from
N.M., but is originally from Mexico's election agency,
Michoacan, Mexico, said said it would be expensive
most illegal immigrants and logistically diflicult to
would be leery of making the issue voting credentials outtrip to Mexico to obtain cards side Mexico and still guaranbecause of travel costs and tee protection from fraud.
fear they would no.t be able to
Roberto Rosas, a San
return to this country.
Antonio law_ professor who
"1 think they want to vote lobbied in Mexico City for
hut a lot of them can't go," the absentee system last year,
she said. "If. they are already will be among those asking
here, they don 't want to risk Mexico's Congress this year
going back."
. to issue voter cards in the
The Mexican Embassy and U.S. and elsewhere.
consulates · in the United
"If they only give it out in
States remained open on Mexico, the numbers will
Sunday to distribute registra- remain ·low;·· said Rosas, a
consultant for Mexico's fortion forms.
The · co nsulate in San eign affairs .department.
Antonio drew only a handful "This is a lesson so we know
of people, including the Rev. what to do the. next time."
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

VIEW

Suitable

Existing lwspital building adequate

PRINCIPAL

~

TODAY IN HISTORY

.

Today is Monday. Jan. I 6, the 16th day of 2006. There are
349 days left 111 the year. This is the Martin Luther King Jr.
. holiday.
Today's High li ght .in Hi story:
, . One hund red years ago, on Jan . 16. 1906. Chicago depart~ JTient stor~ founder Marshall held died in New York City at
, age 7 1.
. On thi.s date :
. : In 1883. the US Civil Serv ice Commission was estab; fished.
' .In 1'91 9, Nebraska, Wyoming and Missouri became the
36th, 37 th and 38th states to rat ify Prohibition, which went
· into effect a year later.
. In 1920. Prohibition began in the United States as the 18th
, Amendment to the U.S. Constitution took effect. (It was later
; repealed by the 21st Amendme nt. )
In 1,944. Gen . Dwight. D. Eisenhower took command of the
. Allied ln va.~io n Force in London.
, In 1964. the musicai" Hello, Dolly"' opened on Broadway,
_begi nning a run of 2,844 performances.
.
; In 1967. Alan S. Boyd was sworn in as the first secretary of
.; .transportation .
· .
; lhought for Today : ·~Right or wrong, the customer is always
' . right." - Marshall Fie ld. department store fou nder ( 18341906).
.
.

'

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.EDITOR

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- - · - · - - - - --~--'---'---__,_j

UDD
·A woman,· a batterer and agun
Rebecca took out a life
insurance policy on herself
four years ago. She made her
daughter the beneficiary.
She was 51.
She believed that her hu sband was going to kill her. It
was just a matter of time .
She believes it still, even ·
though she l ~ft hTii1 in 200 I ,
and she went underground
through the Ca lifornia
Confidential .
Address ,
Program. She uses a phony
address in Sacramento provided by the program (and is ·
not using her real name for
this column ) to remain hidden.
Last summer. there we re
signs he had found her.
So Rebecca started carrying a gun in side a pouch in
her purse.
What happened next is a
sobering re minder of how
the legal system is still struggling to understand the complex and vu lnerable lives of
battered women.
·
Rebecca had owned the
gun since escaping from her
hu , hand. She bought it after
the required I 0-&lt;,Jlty wai ting
period and re gistered it in .
her name. She knew the
poli ce couldn't always be
around to protect he r. A gun
leveled the playing fteld
against a man bigger and
stron ger than she was :
Ma ybe it wou ld 'ave her
from becoming one of the
1..300 . people killed in the
United States each y.ear in
domestic viokncc· attack.s.
One eventng la.lt AugusL
Rebecca was making th e
long drive home from Mill
Valley. where she had to

Joan
Ryan

drop off some papers for a

~t~~~isgnhse s~tpoff~~rk'~\ ·:~
Half Moon Bay, She paid for
her groceries, picked up. the
shopping bag and her wallet,
but left her purse at the e11d
of the checkout counter.
The momentary lapse
plunged her into a legal mess
that has turned ber from victim to criminal. She wa'
arrested for carry ing u
loaded gun and sentenced
last month by a county court
tO 10 days in jail and 1R '
months' probation . Her con viction means she can no
longer possess a gun , and it
migh t jeopardize her participation in the Confidential
A~d~ess Program.
.,
I m 55 years old,
Rebecca sa id by phone. ·
'Tve ·n7vcr commi tted ~.
crune 1 m not a threat to
at)yb&lt;;dy.' '
· Rebecca didn 't think she
needed a permit to carry a
concealed wc.apon .because
California law waive&gt; the
perniit requ irement for anyone
who
"reasonabl y
bel iev" that he or she i&gt; in
grave danger because or cirCll ll!&gt;tance&gt; forming the
has is of a current restraining
i&gt;fCler." . Rebecca had a
re&gt;tra ining order again &gt;t her

busband. ·
''I' tn usually not in the
What she didn't know was busi ness of tryi11g to get anythat the restru ining order. body's gun back. but with
which she understood to be this conviction, she couldn ' t
permanent, had ex pired in huvc it even in her house
June.
anymore.'' said attor ne y
"The restraining . order Myra Weiher, who is trying
would have been enough to to ge t the conviction set
take it to . a jury trial ,·· said as1·de.
Ben L amarr, the lawyer who
"This IS scnry stuff she's
represented her in court. "It fac ing (from her batterer).
would have created a tec hni- G
lk h. d , b h
cal defen se, but without that , . uys .1 e 1 IS on t e ave
she didn 't have anything.··
iTnlways regullalrcrTinh1in?l s doll.
Rebecca's appeal of the . ley re ste&lt;~ . t 1.
ey re a
sentence was approved this about terror.
wee k. It means she ca n
Rebecca kn~ws she mad,e
spend. her 1'0 days wo rking -1J·1 btg m1.s take 1n leavt ng her
1 1 d d
in the jail. but won't have to
urse Wit 1 a oa e gun at ~
sleep there. Sti ll , the sen- . public place. Her lapse was a
tencc will ·cost her $20 per potentially dangerou ~ one; it
.!lay plus an additional $60 should not be .minimi zed .
fee , not to mention 10 days , But how do we balance her
of lost wages, the gas to m.istake aga in st .the danger
drive from the county where she faces every day from a
'he li ve~ Lo !he county jail violent man w ho left her
a mi the . $160 line she crushed and tearlul. whose
al~eady pa1d.
beatings and threats drove
"It would ..cost me l.ess to her into hiding·&gt;
do the tune, Rebecca sa1d.
The law against carrying
. More. tmporta nt , the con- concealed guns makes good
VICll?n leaves Rebecca more sense. But so man y women
vul nerable th~111 ever to. her every year are killed by. their
0 !le.
dbus tve hu sband.
abusive ]')oyfriends and hu~the dtstrtct attorney s ol I ICC bands. Restraining orders ~
mtstaken ly mcludcd her we know can't -ro th~
actual street address on all Tl
r ' ft
P. m.
it&gt; documents, whi ch . are
lC po ICC ,o _en can t, st~
publi c record. The· oll 1ce them: I dnn t know what t~
wa&gt; &gt;crambling on Friday to so lutt on IS. Bul &gt;omethmg ,,s
de lete the infnrmation.
wrong when .. 1n try 1ng .tv
And t\\n . , he now h;" no keep herscl i alt vc. the te rrm:protect ion .
(I
wonder · tt~d woman heconies tiJe
v.hc thcr San Francisco vot - cnm tnal.
.
·'
ers considered dome&gt;tk vio- . (Jocw Rrwr 1.1 a culumn.!~'
lencc situations when they for the Swr r I'{IIIC'ISC!J
\'()ted in November to bali al l [ 'hrrmicle. s.-m! ('(}1/1/llell lt'i
handg:un~ and what &lt;.:on ... c-, r J he r;, cart' f~j"this ne~npOqucnccs
wi&gt;mcn
Iike i'"" or .\I' lid her. e-mail til
Rchccca m1gl1! pay I
;oallr\wi(Q ,F·hrrmicle.com.j

Parishioners maintain
vigil at closed church
KANSAS (AP) - Twice a
week. Fran LuCius sits alone
in a chair by the· altar and
prays. She stays overnight
once every other week, praying for divin,e intervention or
a change o1 heart from the
bi shop.
Lucius and other members
of the shuttered St. )ames
Roman Catholic Church have
been keeping
round-theclock prayer vigil in the
church since May, hoping that
it will somehow be saved.
"''m hopeful we' ll get to
stay open,'' said Lucius, 56.
''I'll just keep praying."
The
Toledo
Roman
Catholic Diocese closed' St.
James along with 16 other
churches on July 1 to account
for s])i fting populations and
the declining number of
priests. Twelve churches
merge d to form four new

a

parishes
the largest
restructuring in the 19-county
·
diocese's history.
. About 50 members of St.
James have maintained the
vigil without intermption. .
· Lucius has been a member
of St. James all her life. So
were her parent~ . · grandparents and great-grandparents.
"We gave the bishop so
many different option's, so
many things they could have
done instead of closing," she
sa.4_d.
But the diocese and Bishop
Leonard Blair have no plan to
change · the decision . "He is
not considering keeping it
open as an option for the
future,' : said Sally Oberski , a·
spokeswoman for the diocese .
The Rev. Michael Billian,
episcopal .vicar ofthe diocese,
said he was willing to meet
with the pari shioners.

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Vigil for student shot by police·
Justice will not seek
held pellet gun at school
re-election to fourth tenn as BvheTRAVIS
REED
Bv ERICA RYAN

ing for a tidal change because
of an investment scandal and
other ethics troubles involvCOLUMBUS
Ohio ing prominent Republicans,
Supreme Court Justice Alice including Gov. Bob Taft and
Robie Resnick, the lone Ohio Congressman Bob Ney.
Democrat
holding
a
"There's always a chance
statewide elected office, said that a Democrat won 't be
Saturday that she will not run elected," Resnick said. ,"Just
for re-election to a fourth because of the Re~ublican
term .
problems, that doesn t necesResnick, 66, whose term sarily mean Democrats ·are
expires M the end of this year, going to be elected."
sa1d she is confident she
Resnick's decision will
could win re -election ·but make the job of electing a
wants to spend more time · Democrat more difficult, said
with her ailing husband, fam- state Rep . Chris Redfern:
ily and friends.
who took over as chairman of
"There comes a . time in the state Democratic Party
everyone's life where you last month. But he said the
,just have to say that's party has good candidates
enough," Resnick told The . ready.
·
Associated Press from her
Cuyahoga County Juvenile
home in Toledo.
Judge Peter Sikora intends to
·One of four. women on the run for Resnick's seat, and
seven-member court, she two other Democrats have
added she hopes a woman is announced they will chal electeq to replace her.
lenge Rerublican Justice
"There are so many well Terrence 0 Donnell this year,
9ual ilied women of both par- . Redfern said.
ttes," she said.
State GOP Chairman Bob
She said a public repri- Bennett said the, Republicans
mand last month did not will endorse a candidate for
influence the decision. A Resnick's seat in the next few
panel of state appellate weeks. The executive comJudges ordered the discipline mittee has screened appeals
because her drunken dnving court judges for the nominaconviction violated the tion, Bennett said.
state's· judicial code of conResnick's presence on the
duct.
court will be missed by those
Resnick pleaded guilty to. . concerned about crime, edudrunken
driving
last cation and pressure s on
February, paid a $600 fine working familie s, said her
and had her driver's license friend and former campaign
·suspended for six months. manager, Bill Burges.
She apologized at her sen-·
"Th1s is a woman who peotencing hearing and said she ple have a good deal of belief
liad suffered a relapse of a in," Burges said. "I believe
drinking problem . .
that that' s why she would
"I really had made up my have been re-elected."
mind after the 2000 election
, Resnick, a former prosecuit was going to be my last tor, was first elected a Toledo
term,"
Resnick
said. municipal judge in 1975 and
"Eighte'en years on the served two terms on the 6th .
Supreme Court 1s long Ohio District Court of
enough."
. Appeals. She became the secHad she sought and won a ond woman elected to the
fourth six-year term, it would Supreme Court in 1988 and
have been her last because of was re-elected in 1994.
age limits.
She defeated 0' Donnell 57
Chief Ju stice Thomas percent to 43 percent to win a
Moyer said he has enjoyed third six-year term in 2000.
serving with Resnick, whose The campaign sparked condecision not to run was lirst troversy over · tel'evi sion ads
·reported Saturday · in The paid for by business groups
(Toledo) Blade. Moyer and . that implied campaign donathe · other five justices are tions influenced Resnick 's
Republicans.
vote on court rulings .
"She ·has made ' a major
She said she wants to spend
contribution to the jurispru- · more time with her husband,
l'lence of Ohio," he said. "I who is on dialysis, and on
look forward to working with pursuits such as gardening
her for the remainder of the and swimming.
term. "
Resnick' s departure is
Resnick said she was trou- uiilikely to affect the balance
bled about giving up her seat of the court, said Jonathan
when Republicans have dom- Entin, a law professor at .Case
inated statewide offices since Western Reserve University.
1994. She became the last
" I suspec! the prospect of
Democrat when · Justice running another difficult
Franci s Sweeney retired campaign coupled with the
because of age limits in 2004 embarrassment of the repriand the GOP won the open mand made thi s, if not an
seat.
easy, an understandable deciDemocrats have been hop- sion ," Entin said .
ASSOCIATED PR ESS WRITER

Man sentenced to attend
chitrch for threats, racial slurs

gun.
No one else at the 1,100student ;chool. in suburban
LONGWOOD, . Fla.
Orlando was injured.
Family and friends gathered
The media was barred from
at a private candlelight vigil the memorial service near
Sunday to mourn a 15-year- Penley's
neighborhood,
. old they knew as a troubled which was reeling from the
but friendly boy who was shooting. Fami ly and friends
shot during a confrontation say the boy was emotionally
with police at his middle troubled, reportedly bullied
· school.
at school and had run away
Christopher Penle y"" was from home several times.
de ad ·early
pronounced
Mourners emerged from
Sunday, according to the · the church carrying candles,
Seminole County Sheriff's sobbing and hugging each
Office Web site, t\'o'O days other.
after a deputy gunned him
"There were a lot of songs,
down as the ·boy brandished a praying, the minister spoke a
pellet gun that closely resem- few time s - trying to com- .
bled a 9mm handgun.
fort the fa mily that he's in a .
boy . had
been better place," said Heather
The
described as clinically brain Sinclair, who mentored
dead Saturday, and was kept Penley in elementary school
alive so his organs could be in Winter Springs.
harvested, said Mark Nation,
Pastor Robbie Hall said he
a lawyer for Penley's patents. addressed . the rough! y 135
On Friday, he ·was in a people in the church with a
Milwee Middle School i:1ass- messag·e of peace. ·
·
room with the pellet gun
Outside ,
18-year-old
when another boy scuffled Steven Lewi s, who had
with him for control of the known Christopher for five
weapon. Christopher was years. sa id the teen "got
later cornered by sheriff's along with everyone."
deputies and a SWAt team in
"Everyone was his best
a bathroom, authorities said.
fri end." Lewi s said. "He's
Seminole County Sheriff still with me in my heart."
Don Eslinger said the · boy
Funeral arra ngeme nts were
was suicidal and couldn ' t be pending .
talked ·into surrendering ·the
" It 's just unbelievable to
weapon. The teenager was me that. he's gone." said
shot after he raised the gun.at Bucky Hurt, a family friend ·
a deputy, Esljp@er said.
who had been with the boy's
. The sheriff said it wasn' t father, Ralph Penley, at the
until after the incident that hospi.tal. " It's very, very devauthorities
realized the astating. Good kid too - it's
weapon was only a pellet a tragedy."
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Police arrest two in kidnapping,
robbery of Miami student
'

OXFORD (AP) - Police Way~e County. Ind ., and
have charged two people .in the Sydney Jones, 24, froll)
kidnapping and robbery pf a Richmond, Ind., is in jail near
Miami University student Irvine, Ky.
.
one of three crimes against stuBoth are charged with kiddents in a week that had the napping , aggravated robbery
campus area tense.
and felonious assault and are
)\uthorities said Saturday ' being held on $300,0CXJ bonds.
they still are searching for a
A warrant for Seth Jett, 21,
third person suspeCted in the also . of Richmond, Iisis the
'. Friday morning abdu~'l.ion of a same charges. Police believe he
19-year-old man, who was is in the Richmond area Police
beaten, robbed and dumped just credited students who saw the
across the state line in Indiana. abduction with helping identify
Katrina Jones, 18, is jailed .in the suspects.

AEP
from PageA1
continuous operation under
normal conditions. The esti-

Book
from PageA1
such as the name s of the
county's first elected commissioners, .Levi Steadman.
William Alexander and
Elijah Runner among other
historical tidbits that begin.
with the for.mation of Meigs
County from Gallia and
Athens counties.
· The book switches from
the past to the present touri st
attractions, bu sine sses and
individual s that currently
prosper in the county such as

mated cost is $1.2 billion .
In March , AEP Ohio filed
an application with the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio
seeking authority to recover
costs related to building and
operating the new clean-coru
techolog y power plant.
inn s, restaurants, sc hools.
festivals, supem1arkets, retail
stores and the history behind
them all.
Broken down into sections ·
the · book begins with an
introducti on de scribing the
county's history as a whole
followed by the hi stories of
Middleport. Pomeroy a nd the
Eastern ·and Western ends of
the county.
· The book . which was
designed by Falcon Design
and Marketing, Inc., is dedicated to the chamber' s fifteenth anni versary 'and individual s 'who have donated
time not on ly to the chamber
but to their community.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A told Haines. "That's OK
judge sentenced a . s ubur ~ with me. But you have to
ban Cincinnati man to u'nderstand that you are at
attend se rvices for six the whim and authoritv of
weeks at a predominantly . a black judge.' '
black church for . threa ten The church service s
ing to punch a black cab could expand Haine s' cul driver · and using racial tural awareness. Mallory
sa id. He told Haine s he
slurs.
Brett Haine s, 36, of inu st go to six consec utive
She has scheduled a 4-H
Anderson
Township. Sunday services and get
committee meeting for Jan. 24
picked church over .spend - the · mini ster to sign a
as a kickofffor this year's proing 30 . days in the church program to prove
~ram. ·'We need to stan thinkfrom Page A1.
Hamilton County ·ja il. he att ended.
ing
about recruitment of new
The judge said he 'w;ts
Judge William Mallory Jr.
volunteers and 4- H members
offered Haines the choice conce rned ab'Out mai ntain Friday after Haines ' was ing a separation of church of science in human and com- and to talk about special pro- .
conv icted of disorderly and state. so he asked munity 'resource pevelop- gra1i1s. The committee meetmg will get us gea red up for a
.
Haines whether the option ment.
conduct.
· She ·has·worked with 4- H as . you th ki ckoff which will take
Haines was arrested in would offend him .
·Haine s said he would an educational assistant at the .place on March 4. I want to .
November for threatening
cab driver David W,il so n like to try it. although he State Fair and also worked for hear from anyone interested in
.and Wilson' s wife and · does not usuall y attend Extension in the Community becoming active in 4-H here."
Development Depanment as a she said.
telling them he hated black church.
Anyone interes1ed in volunpeople. Prosecut ors . said
Wilson. the ca b driver. gradu ate research assistant .
Haines was drunk .
said he would have pre- Most recently she worked for teering or with questions or
the Boy Scouts of Ameri'ca. suggestions for programming
· " It see ms read ily appar- ferred the jail sente nce ..
"Church . don ' t change wi th an emphasis on co-edu- can contact Turner at the local
ent to me that yo u don ' t
Extension office , 992-6696.
t'lltion teenage programs .
li ke black people." Mall ory everybody."· he said.

4-H

\or

1

'

EASY

PIAr

S1IIIWI. $11PEIIIIll FOIIIE YEll
--~-·-·-- -- -- -------------.----------------------------------

�· PageA6

OHIO
Thieves benefit when stolen tags aren't reported, police say

The Daily Sentinel

CANTON (AP) - When
. the state issues replacement
license plates, at least some of
them end up taking the place
of stolen tags.
People report when their
cars are stolen, but not nece ssarily thei r plates. So the
stolen plates are used to throw
·police off a match on a stolen
car, police said.
"People figure it (a plate)
must have fallen off. then they
. won't report it," said suburban Perry Township Police
Chief Tim Escola.
Stolen plates often are di scarded after they're used in a
crime. Others end up on vehicles stolen separately. Esco la
said.
Christina Marie Hatterv and
her son were returning· from
New York last month when a
Norton poli ce officer pulled
the m over near Akron. The
officer said the plate on the
_ back of Hattery's 1996 Jeep
· Cherokee didn 't match the
vehicle, Hattery said.
"I said, ' You must be mistaken ~··· said Hattery, who
lives in nearby Sugar Creek
·
Township.

~onday,January16;2oo6

AP Photo

Christina Marie Hattery is pictured with her Jeep on Wednesday in Navarre. Hatte ry realized her
rear license plate was stolen when a Norton police officer stopped her. Someone had switched
·hef plate with one from a Saturn . She has· since repl aced the license plates on her vehicle.
Then she looked at her front Someone had replaced her rear . when or where 'it happened.
plate and back plate. and dis- plate with one from a Saturn.
" It makes me wonder what
covered they didn't match, . Hattery said she doesn' t know they're doing with my plate,"

she said.
The Ohio Bureau of Mot{)[
Vehicles , whiCh handles registrations for I 2.1 million
vehicles, offers replacement
plates but didn 't have an
. immediate breakdown Friday
of which involved stolen, lost
or damaged plates. Peop le
seeki ng repJacemenl plates
must certify what happened to
the originals.
·
Temporary 30-day tags may
he at special' risk for thieves
determined to take a stolen
vehicle out-of-state and
quickly get it registered elsewhere, · according to BMV
spokesman Fred Stratman. '
In Cleveland, 2,5 19 plates
were reported stolen last year.
including 83 temporary tags
and one handicapped plate. In
Canton, police say that since
2002 they' ve received reports
of more than 200 license plate
thefts a year.
Among the victims were
Christine
and
Donald
. Kuemerle of Canton. Front
and rear plates were stolen
from their 1989 Ford E-150
van in November.
"I think we just felt viola!-

ed,'' said Kuemerle, and the
motive "puzzled us." ·
People "steal ti]em to use
them in the commission of a
crime ," said Canton police
Capt.
Doug
Shackle.
''(Witnesses) get a plate number and guess what? It doesn't
come back to the right vehicle, so we never catch the
rig~t owner.... I've seen them
used in everything li ke bank
robberies, aggravated robberies down to simple thefts."
Escola said that when he
was a state trooper, he
encountered dozens of vehides whose license plate did,
n't match the vehicle.
ShackJe sUid thieves· will even
.
put stolen plates on their vehl'cies to help them flee from a statioil without paying for gas.
Earlier this month, Stark
County sheriff's deputies ·
stopped a 28-year-old woman
in Louisville who was sus. pected of involvement in a
gasoline theft. A sheriff's
report said her vehicle had a
stolen license plate. She was
charged with a felony count of ,
receiving stolen property.

.B l

The Daily Sentinel

LocAL ScOREBOARD
Saturday's gameil
High achool glrla baoketball
Point Pleasant 54, River Valley 49,
High ochool boya beakatbatl
Rose Hill 68, River Valley 50

•

·

~onda~Januaryt6, 2oo6

.Syracuse knocks down No. 25 Cincinnati; 77-58
.....

BY

JO£ KAY

ASSOCIATED PRESS

:...,Break
LocAL

SCHEDULE

GALLI PO~ IS -A schedule of upcoming callege
and high school &gt;Jarsity sporting events involving
teams from Gallla, Meigs and Mason counties

Mpnday'• pamtJ ,
Girls BaaketbJII

Easlern at River VBIIey, 7:30 p.m.
Southern at South G'allla, 7:_30 p.m.
Wahama at Hannan. 7 p.m.
Gal!ia Academy at Fairland, 7:30p.m.
Meigs at Miller, 6 p.m.
Chesapeake at OVCS, 6 p.m .
Point Pleasant at Roane Co., 7:30p.m.

East)
trailed
most of the first
half, .
when
Cinci nnati' s
starti ng lineup
he ld its own
with ti)e help of
a freshman tight
end fresh off the
football roster.
It wasn ' t nearly

CINCINNATI Gerry
McNamara cut the small-innumber Bearcats down to
size.
McNamara scored 29
points, and Demetris Nichols
started a second-half surge
that carried Syracuse to its
I 2th straight win Saturday enough.
night, 77-58 over depleted
The Bearcats (13-4, 2-2)
No. 25 Cincinnati.
were dominated in the second
The Orange ( 15"2, 3-0 Big half, unab le to keep·up with a

~

"'"~

balanced and deep Syracuse
attack l~ by McNamara. The
senior guard was 7-of-10
from the field for 22 points
after halftime.
"When Gerry · gets going
like that, it's disheartening,"
coach Jim B'oeheim said. " He
can pull up and ·make it from
anywhere inside the half
court.,,

·

McNamara, who made
seven 3-poin ters in -a win at
Notre Dame on Wednesday.
went 5-of-9 from behind the

arc during his sixth 20-point
game of the sea&gt;on. Nichols
added 16 points and made a
pair uf jumpers that started
the second-half surge thai left
the Bearcats discouraged.
·' Jn the second half, we
came ·out with our uniforms
o'n but left our hearts in the
locker room ," Cincinnati
power forward Eric Hi cks
said glu mly.
James White s&lt;.:ared 16
points for Cincinnati. which
go t outrebounded 51-27 and

Jueadoy'a games
Boys Basketball
Miller at Meigs, 8 p.m.
Sissonville at Point Pleasant , 7:30 p.m.

River Valley at AleKander, 7:30 p.m.
Hannan at Grace Chris tian ~ 7:30p.m.
Teays Valley at South Gallia, 7:30 p.m.
Buffalo at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
Girls Basketball

Grace at OVCS, _5:30 p.m.
College Basketball .

COLUMBUS (AP) - The Ohio counti es offer additional
state agency administering a assi'stance.
In
Franklin
federal program that helps County, Project Warm-Up
low-income residents heat provides up to $400 to those
their homes in the winter said who make 200 percent of the
it's behind on openi ng new poverty level.
app lications because of a
Paul Cain. the Franklin
surge in requests.
Cou nty coordi nator for the
Betwe·en Nov. I and Jan. 5, Salvation Army. said the line
163,473 Ohio . residents for assista nce must be drawn
applied for· he lp from the somewhere.
Home Energy Assistance
"There are other programs,
Program, up from 9 1,285 at
like
food pantries or clothing
the same point las t win ter,
said Holl y Pendell of the banks, that people can use to
Ohio
Department · of help divert money for those
items to pay for heating costs:
Development. ·
There
are so many people
About 40,000 peop le, a
fourth of those who applied. who have to make those kinds
have been turned down thi s of decisions every day," he
year because they earn too said.
much to qualify or submitted · If customers can't pay their
incomplete fo rms, Pendell bills, they risk getting their
said.
· .
gas shut off because Ohio
"We get calls every day does not have a law preventfrom people who might be ing it, said Mat! Buttler of the
just 'over the li!Tlil," she said. Public Utilities Commission
Cus10mers say high natural of Ohio . Customers can
gas prices are breaking their regain service by paying $ 175
heating budgets. The ave r~ge toward their bill through a
residential bill· for Columbia prog ram that can be used
Gas customers increased to once each winter.
. $280 this month, compared to · Jablonski said Col umbia
$2 13 a year ago, spokes)nan
Gas is w.illiilg to work with
Steve Jablonski said.
But res idents don't qualify customers on payment plans.
for the heating assistance pro- The company won ' t discongram unless their income is nect the gas if the temperature
no more than 175 percent of is below 20 degrees for 24
the federal poverty line . or hours or more.
About 87,000 . Columbia
about $33,800 for a family of
four. The average payment Gas residential and small from the program is $309 business customers had their
gas shut otT in 2005 , although
once each winter.
For those who can't receive most were reconnected quickfederal help, abou t half of ly, Jablonski said.

Local Weather
Todats Forecast
Foreca~t

City/Region
High I Low

for Monday, Jan. 16

/ ' MICH.
Toledo•
39" I 24°
Youn·gatown •
Mansfield •
. 39" 121 "

I

37" I 17"

~

~-

PA. ·

l

. I

···loayton .~
16" 130"

*Columbus
44" I 30"

~

.I .
Clnclnnat

: . . • saoI 33c

'-·

~•~

•

Portamoul•

50'130"

~
W.VA.

KY.
. ~ - Cloudy

~ ~;!,':'· ~ Flurries ' ~ ICe
Partly~ ' ' ~
.
~ ·

Cloudy

ShoWers

~

1
.Jdtia ' luther King Jr.
D~}.J;tPaJtly tloudy. Warmer
with ~igl1s in the . lower 50s.
So1,1th 1/p.\inds 5 to I0 mph . .
MrtdlQ' night ... Showers
likel . No1 as cool with lows
in the upper 40s. South winds
5 to I0 mph . Chance of r-ain
60 percent.
Tuesday.,.Showers likely.
Highs in the upper 50s. South
'winds . I0 tel 15 mph with

Rain

c·.:.::
•

•

Snow

Women's College Basketball

Diabetes rates on the rise in Ohio

.......

Weatt1er Underground • AP

gusts up to 25 mph . Chance
of rain 70 percent.
·
Tu~sda y night ... Showers
like'iy. Cooler with lows in the
. mid 30s. South wmds 10 to 15
mph with gusts up to 25 mph .
Chance of rain 70 percent.
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of snow and rain
showers. Much cooler with
highs in the upper 30s. Ctiance
of precipitation 4\) percent.

COLUMBUS (A P)
Health officials say the number of diabetes cases in Ohio
has almost doubled in about a
decade, which some attribute
to poor eating habits and
inacti vi'ty.
The rise among children is
·especially grabbing attention,
as more ar.e being di ag nosed
with type 2 di abetes, which is
0ften re Ia ted to obesity and is·
the most common form of the
di sease.
'''That is due · largely to
overweight issues. Children
eating too many calories and
not getti ng enough exercise,"
said Elizabeth Bonfield,
assistant direc10r . at the
Central
Ohio
Diabetes
Association.
In the past, a child who
de veloped diabetes almost
always had type 1, which
occurs when the body makes
little or , 110 in sulin, the hormone that regulates blood
sugar, said Dr.. Samuel
Cataland, who specializes in
diabetes at Ohio State
University.
The number of diabetes
cases in Ohio almost doubled
trom 1994 to 2003, said Jay
Carey, a spokesman for the
Onio Department of Health.
The department estimates
about I million people in Ohio
have the di se~se, although
about 267,000 cases are undiag nosed. About 20 million
Americans have diabetes.
Most of the roughly
177,000 Americans under
age ?O with diabetes have
type I, but type 2 cases are
growing.
Columbus
Children 's
Hospital has seen the number
of diabetes cases increase dramaticall y in the last 10 to IS'
years. said Wynola Wayne, a
diabetes nurse clinician.
· "Overall , we are averaging
about 150 new .cases a year
just in ·our center," Wl)yne
said . "That is pretty hi gh considering we used to average
about one Hew case a week."
Ashlee Townsend, 18, of
Sedali a in Madison County,
has struggled to manage her
diabetes since she was diagnosed with type 2 as an . 8year-old.
" I was fa lling as leep. I wasn't able to concentrate. The
school sent me to the hospital
to h&lt;}ve tests. That is when ·
they found out," she saiq.
Her fa ther and other relatives alsO have the disease,
· whi ch Town send manages
with insulin injections.
·Some type 2 diabetics can
use exercise and diet alone to
control the disease, wh ich
impairs the body 's abi lity to
properly
use
insu lin ,
Cataland said . Many have to
take pi ll s or inject insulin .
Without treatment. diabetes
can cause seri ous complications .such as blindness. kidney failure, nerve damage
and heart disease. Diabetes is
the fifth-le ad ing cause of
death in Ohio.
· ·,
Wayne sa id managing a
child's diabetes requires the
entire family's support .
" If one child is obese and
predispo,ed to di·a bete,,·
eve ryone in that fami ly needs
to be involved in . changing,
behavior an.d lifestyle by getting more involved in physical activiries. walking more ,

Please see Bearuts, 8:1

River
Valley girls
fall to Point

Shawnee State at Rio Grande. 8 p.m.

Agency backlogged with
heating help requests

,hoi . 33 percent from the
tield.
''Thi' . team ha&gt; worked
extremely h&lt;!rd in the last two
months 10 earn cred'ibility,': .
coach Andy Kennedy said. " I
hope they did not lose that
nedibility in the . la st two
hours ."
The Bearcat&gt; had little lime
to adjust to the loss of 6-foot8 forward Armein Kirkland,
their ta'llest starter and one of

Bv LARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

Shawn~e State at Rio Grande, 6 p .m.

Wednesday's ljJIWft
Wrestling ·
Gallia· Academy at Jackson, 5:30 p.m.

CHESH IRE- It may ·have
been winter outside of the
River Valley gymnasium. but
inside it was verv much
Sommer.
· Point Pl easant 's Anna
Sommer lit up the floor with
a career high 19 point~ to go
along with five rebounds,
four steal s and even a block ·
for the 5-foot-3 fre shman
guard, as the Lady Knights
(4-6) survived .a late scare
from River Valley (2- 10). but
held on for a 54-49 victory
Saturday night in Cheshire .
Point Pleasant came right ·
out of the ga tes with the early
' lead ahd never re linqui shed it
as they continued to pile on
point s and create a seemingly
·t:omfurtable lead.
But Riv er Valley made
thing&gt; ve ry inte(esting in the
fourth quarter as they slowly
chipped away at the Lady
Knight lead and closed within nine with. a minute
. to go.

Thyrld1nr '1 Qlmll

Qlrll -etboll
Southern at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Jackson at Galliil Academy, 7 p .m.
Wellston at Meigs, 6 p.m
Point Pleasant at Wayne: 7:30 p.m.
' River Valley at Fairland, 7:30p.m.
Friday'• ljJIIDI'

Bovo Baokelball
Fairland at Rtver Vallev. 6 p.m.
Herbert Hoover at Pt. Pleasant, 7~ 30 p.m.
Belpre at Meigs, B p.m.
GaiUa Academy at Jackson, 6 p.m.
Sou th Gallla vs. OVCS (at Rio) , 5:30p.m ..._
Eastern at Watenord, a.p.m.
·
Hannan a~ Huntington St. Joe . 7:30 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Southern, 6:30 p.m
Wahama at Wirt ·County, 7:30 p.m.
Glrla Basketball
"'
Soutli Gal!ia vs. OVCS (at Rio) , 7 p.m.
Wreatllng
WSAZ tournament
Saturday Jgnuarv 21

Boy&amp; Baskelb•ll
QVCS at Southern, 7 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Poca, 7:30 p m

GIN Basketball
Trimble at Southam1 1"0:30 a.m
·
River Valtey at Meigs, 6 p.m
Uniolo at Gallia Academy, 1 p.m.
Sou th Gallia at Notre Dame. noon
Wreattlng
WSAZ. tournament
Wahama at ~ .Q:l.
•. ·.. ~
· COllege Balllcolbatl
Tiffin at Rio Grande 6 p.m. ·
Woman 'a Collegl Baaketball
Tiffil) at Rio Grande. 6 p m.

.

1

Please see Pol'nt. 8:1

AP Photo

Travis Grimm, is, right, and brother Kyle, 13, check their blood sugar at their Heath home late
Thursday night Jan. 12. Both have type 1 diabetes and were diagnosed at an early age. Health
officials say the number of diabetes cases in Oh10 has almost dout)Jed in about a decade,
which some attribute to poor eating habits and inactivity.
'exercising as a family unit,"
she said.
Travis Grimm of Heath ,
about 30 miles east of
Columbus, has been using a
pump to deliver insulin to his
body for about . five yearsc

The 18,year-o ld was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes
when he was 7 and started
giving himself shots at! 0.
"You have to accept it and
realize that it is going to be a
· part of your life for the rest of

Raiders fall
to RQse Hill

·INSIDE

your life ," said Grimm,
whose 1 3~year-old brother,
Kyle, also has the di sease. "If
you don't, you will be sick
again, yo u will be back in the
hospital and you will be miserable."

Bv LARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

· Meigs _County Visitors Guide

ASHLAND. ,Ky - Led by
Dakota Euton and Kyle Blair.
Ro s~ Hill took a close halftime affair and held Ri ver
AP phoio .
Valley to only two points in
Indianapolis Colts qu arterback. Peyton Manning (18) is sacked by Pittsburgh Steelers' James Farrior for an 8·yard loss in
the third ·quarter as Rose Hill
the third quarter of the1r NFL divisional playoff foo tball game .Sunday in Indianapolis . The Steelers upset top-seeded
ro lled to a 68-50 victory
Indianapolis 21-18 to advance to 'the AFC hampionship ga~e against the Denver Broncos.
Saturda) night.
Along wilh !';:uton·s 20
po int&gt; and Blair's. !? points,
Rose Hill also dominated (he
~ las' wirh a -!5 -28 advantage
und 'hot a much better 38
perct~nt (2:1-of-61) from the
floor
while River Valley
Bv BARRY WILNER
Colts' dream season with a yards.
Vander/agt then improbable winning wudl·
. coulu only musrer a 29 perASSOC IATED PRESS
· 21-18 win. Pittsburgh ( 13-5) slammed his he met to the down .
t:cnt 11.7 -c&gt;J-59 l 111ght , of
became the first sixth seed to. tu rf. ob viously forgetting
But Steclcrs quarterback
shootin~ . ·
INDIANAPOLI S - The make a conference champi- how·· fortunate he · was to Ben Roethli sberger. bri lliant
The ib1ders did come out
Pittsburgh Steelers gave the onship game and will jour- hare the chance.
all game with his . ann and
Colt&gt; every opportunity to ney to Denver next Sunday
After Pittsburgh's fero- head. rumbled. rea ched ou t a . strong ·in 1he fi rst two quarSteal .their playoff game for a shot at the Super Bowl. ciou .s defense spcked a hantf and made a ""·iqg I ler, . grahbifl'\~ 1.' points in the
first ~uartcr and adding 14
Sunday.
They will do so brealh- be,fuddlcd Peyton M;mning . tack le at the lndv -!2.
m"re in rhe 'ec11ntl to only be
In the final moments of lcssly.
twice. taking the ball 011
"I was fruqnired.'' Belti,
down ,i,, a1 the half.
one of the most thrilling
Thi s victory should have downs al the Colts 2 wi th said. "That shouiJn't hapBut tk Rose Hill defen se
playoff games anyone can been so much easier. The just more than a minute lcfl. pen. I' m &gt;uppused to take
s1eppcd
up in 1he third quarremember,· Ind y cou ldn 't Steelers dominated the Colts Belli s fumbled whe n hit hy care of. the fombal l. I wa,
lc'r
and
limited Michael
figure out how to take it.
. ( 14-3) until a fourth quaner Gary Bracket!. Nick Harper. upset that it happened . M)
So the Steelers survived a. w.ith almost unimaginabl e whose kn e~ was cut with a defen se bailed me &lt;&gt;Ut. I can I. Cordell. who haJ 15 poBints in
lhe
ga me . anc1
rvan
goal-li ne fumble bv Jerome , twists and lurns thai ended knife' Saturday in an appar- leave l1ere with IllY head itp
~·l
cnToii·
.
who
had
13
in
·the
B'ettis and one · of the mosl ·when Mike Vanderjagt ent domestic . dispute with high ."
mysterious replay reversals missed his first lield goal at his wife. ~rabbed the ball .
Please see Raic!ers, 8:1
Please see Stun, 8:1
1
'in NFL .history to shatter the home, w1de n ght from 46 · and headed 1oward a highly

Steelers stun Indianapolis

• Broncos haH Patriots
chance at three straight.
See Page B6
• Lebron commits to U.S.
olympic team.
See Page 82

BRIEFS

Hoops tourney
coming to area
RUTLAND - Pomeroy
Youth League will hold a .
baske1ball tournament Jan .
30 through Feb. 13 at the '
Rutland Civic Center for
boys and girl s in grades 4-6.
Teams interested should
Contact Ken McC ullough, Jr.
at (740) 992-5322 or Tony
Gi lkey at (740) . 992-4067 .
Deadline is Jan. 25.

CONTACI'S
Phone -

TJON'T MISS OUT ON HAVING YOUR BUSINfS$
.OR ORGANIZATION INCLUDED
'

Fax -

1·740 -446 -2 342 ext. 33

1· 7 40-446-JOO:B

E-mail - sportsOmydaitysentinet.com

SRort•.St.a" .
llrad.Sherman. Sports Editor'

(740)446·2342 . • ,, 33
bsherman@ myda1lytnbune .com

Dave Harris or Brenda Davis
992-2155

The Dail Sentinel

Bryan Walters, Sparta Writer
(740) 446-2342 . OJI:I 23
bwa tters C myda1lytribune .com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, BKI 33
Ierum 0 mydaityreg1ste, com

I

I

Spartans topple Ohio.State
Bv Rusrr MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS
COLUMBUS - Michigan
State had been here before
- overtime, away · from
home, with a game teetering
on th~ brink .
Ju st like befure, the
Spartans reac hed down for a
little extra.
:
Drew Nei tze l hit a runn er
and two free throws in the
final .44 sel'onds ·of the second overtime to fead No. 1-1
Michigan State to a 62-59
victory over No. 19 ·Ohio
State on Sunday night.
"I told them in. I he huddle
that we played G011L.rga and
Arizona - we pJ.tycd all

. those overtime games anu
we've earned the rigl111n win
the ~a mc ,'' coach Tom la o
said~ referring to hi, team 's
games against r~\nkcd le;um
in the Maui ln vilalio nal la'l
November. ·,They lonkcJ
back at me and said. ·Damn
ri ght we did ."' .
•
Even Ihough I he game leaturcd two of the Big Ten·s
top three offense&gt;. hnlh
playetl physical. hand&gt;-e&gt;n
dcfcn,e .
Paul D&lt;tris. whn scored I X
points for rhe Spart:JI~&gt; 't14-·l.
·2-21. cemellleu 1he lead wilh
two free rhrows '' ith II second, kft .
The Bu ckeye&gt; lamar

Rut lcr then mi"cd a 3-poinl er and M&lt;tlt Sv lv esrer - who
had earlier hi.l 1wo big 3&gt; to
pull hi' team hack ~ fa ilc.d
un ~~ 'hort I(&gt;Jl ow tn lhe final
st'u&gt; nd,. Davi s rcb oulllkd
for the Spartans. rai &gt;ing his
.lrtll in ,·clrhr~llinn while lzzo
and

hi~

-,id~tine .

qa tf huggl'd nn thl'
.

·

" Even lite officials looked
&lt;~t

me

h~fl)r\.'

the

~amc

and

'aid th i~ j, -.p~c~a l. " lt/o
'aid ... It ''-'a' a hig \\in :·
Tht.' \· iclor~ · g(t\'C' thi.?
Spctr\4111\ a . . plit in~~ gruelin g
cnnf~ rc ncc ..,tan a~;lin . . t tour
r;u tked tt'am.s - 1tm·c nn lllL'

Please see Topple; 86

AP photo
Michigan State forward Matt Trannon t20 ). nghl. dunks against
· Ohto State guard J.J. Sulltnger (01 dun ng the second overtime
1n the NCAA men's basketball game Sunda) .rn Columbus

�•

ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHOENIX
LeBron
James has committed to playmg for the U S team at th1s
year's world championships
and the 2008 Olymp1cs.
"It's offiCially official in his
case and I know he's excited
about
1t,"
sa1d
Jerry
Colangelo. maoagmg dtrector
of USA Basketball. "He's
obviously one of the core guys
you want because of h1s talent,
h1s age. h1s matunty at a very
young age"
Colangelo met with James
before the Cleveland Cavaliers
played the Phoemx Suns, but
thought the 21-year-old Cavs'
star already had committed m
a meetmg m Ch1cago on Dec.
22 However, James was quoted as saymg he st1ll had to talk
to Colangelo before making
any commitment
James smd after the game
that his talk w1th Colangelo
eased any qualms he had about
bemg mvolved.
"I JUSt wanted a more clear
v1sion of what I was gettmg
myself mto th1s time around,"
he said. "I kind of had a VISion
but really didn' t the last time,
and I suffered because of it
But he came to me. gave me a
great explanation. We sat
down and we talked and cmne
up with some great things and
I feel comfortable about 11 "
He was part of the U S team
that struggled to wm a bronze
medal at the Athens Olympics
in 2004, but saw limned playmg ume for coach Larry
Bro&lt;Nn's team · He played m
eight games, averaging 54
points and 11 4 nunutes per
contest.
''He had a bad experjence,
you know, m Athens,"
Colangelo said "He wasn't
happy about how thmgs

ASSOCIATED PRESS

DENVER - It took a
Champ to knock off the
champs, a crazy 100-yard
sprint by Denver's star cornerback that helped the
Broncos stop their long streak
of playoff futihty and bnng
the New England dynasty to
an end.
Huffing, puffing, dashmg
down the sideline, Champ
Bailey got caugbt and
knocked down at the ! -yard
lme Saturday mght But h1s
mterception of Tom Brady
did the damage, settmg up the
game-changmg touchdown m
Denver's 27-13 victory over
the defendmg Super Bo&lt;N 1
champions
"It was a great play by me,"
Bailey said. " I made t~e play.
but it was something we'd
talked about the whole
game."
The first playoff game in
the h1stol1" of lnvesco F1eld
resulted m Denver's first
postseason wm since the
1998 Super Bowl, John
Elway's last game.
Next' week in the AFC
championship game, the
Broncos will play the winner
of Sunday's meetmg between
Indianapolis and Pmsburgh.
Th1s game also marked the
end of· the Patnots' shot at
history ·
Trymg to become the first
team to wm three stratght
Super Bowls , the Patnots (117) Simply d1dn' t have enough
to overcome Demer' s steady
play, a few bad breaks or theu
five turnovers. That was one
fewer than they had dunng
their entire, record-setting I 0game playoff wmrung streak
that ended at the hands of the
Broncos ( 14-3).
"ObviOusly, we're dtsar.pointed," Patriots coach B1ll
Belich1ck smd. ''We weren't
able to make the plays we
needed to make to win, that's
why we didn't wm."
And when it counted the
most. they also couldn't
match Bailey.

Raiders

Stun
fromPageBl
Given hfe, Manning passed
the Colts into field goal
range, but VanderJagt missed.
"It IS d1sappomtmg We
had a great regular season,
didn't play well enough in
the playoffs." Colts coach
Tony Dungy said "That IS
dtsappomtmg. we have to
pick 1t up from here
Pittsburgh came m and ratcheted thmgs up and played a
great game."
With 5:26 remammg and
Pittsburgh on top 21 - 10, referee Pete Morelli overruled
Troy Polamalu 's divmg mtercepuon at the Pmsburgh 48
Replays shown m the stadium and on CBS clearly
showed Polamalu catchmg
the ball as he fell, then fum bling it as he got up to run.
Dungy had no chmce but to
challenge; the Colts were
reeling
.
After keepmg the ball,
Manning made some vmtage
throws - somethmg m1ssmg
almost all day Passes of 20
yards to Marvm Hamson and
24 to Reggte Wayne set up a
3-yard TD run by Edgemn
James. When Wayne got a 2pomt conversion pass, the
lead was down to three.
The Steelers, who won at
Cmcmnatl last week while
the AFC South champ1on
Colts were off, built their
advantage thanks to a superb
game plan they sec med to
steal from Ind y Bill Cowher
showed why he has been a
wmmng coach for 14 seasons
m Pmsburgh. which has won

two straight road playoff
games for the first time
Plltsburgh has one of the
league's most var1ed running
attacks, but Cowher, mmormg Indy's Image, opted to
open It up. Roethli sberger
threw for two first-quarter
touchdowns while Manmng
was wildly missing his first
four passes and feeling pressure from everywhere. He
wound up bemg sacked five
umes mall .
When the Steelers needed
to run, they , turned to the
speed of Wilhe Parker and
the power of Bettis
Then everything went
wacky
The Colts were left to won·
der where the magic went.
They starled 13-0, threatenIng the 1972 Dolphms' perfect season, only to drop
three of ~heir next four mcludmg the most meanmgful game, Sunday's defeat.
It was a bitter loss for
Mannmg, who has few maJOr
wins to go With his mdtvidual
honors U nti I the frenzied
final minutes, he was mostly
a non-factor
And It was a sad endmg for
Dungy, whose son died of an
apparent suictde last month
Dungy's team clearly was the
NFL's best for 13 weeks. But
m the most important weeks,
they faltered. '
Antwaan Randle El's 6yard TD reception for a 7-0
lead was h1s first since the
season opener, hardly an
Impressive stat for a startmg
receiver. But It capped one of
Pittsburgh 's most Impressive
dnves of the season , 84 yards
m 10 plays, with seven pass·
es, mcluding 36- and 18-

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AP photo

Denver Broncos safety John Lynch celebrates an InterceptiOn aga1nst the New England
Patnots dunng the fourth quarter of their AFC diVISional playoff game at lnvesco F1eld at M1te
H1gh Saturday Denver beat New England, 27·13, to advance to the AFC Champ1onsh1p game.
The Patriots were movmg
the ball well m the third quarter They cut a 10-3 deficll to
lour pomts on a field goal and
had moved eastly to the
Denver 5 for what could have
been the go-ahead score
But on third down from the
5, Bmley stepped m front of
Brady's pass in the end zone
for the piCk He sprinted
down the Sidelme and when
he felt Kevin Faulk swipe at
h1m helplessly about 70 yards
mto the trek, he thought he
had it cinched
Champions don't ~o down
easily, though, and ttght end
Ben Watson wasn't quitting.
Watsorr took an angle, and
With Bailey slowmg and
bnngmg the ball down to his
h1p, Watson got there,
knocked Bailey down and
sent the ball flymg out of
bounds at the I
Or maybe through the end
zone.
With Ba1ley lymg on h1s
back, grimacmg and gaspmg
for air, Belich1ck challenged
the call, saymg the ball 11ew

Point
from Page Bl

Cincinnati led most of the
first half With mtense
defense and a gritty performance by White, who played
all 20 minutes and scored 14
pomts. Hts dnving bank shot
gave the Bearcats their
biggest lead , 23-17
Kennedy stayed with h11
starters lor the first 8 nunutes, a s1gn of the lack of
depth that staned to take ns
toll at the opemng of the second half
"I know the loss of Armem
is gomg to Impact the team.''
Kennedy smd "I refuse to
allow that to be an obstacle
we cannot overcome I
refuse to allow these kids to
say, ' Well , what could have
been!' It's my JOb to conlln-

J

The Lady Rmders, who
had trouble holdmg onto the
ball all ev~nmg, tned to
complete the comeback in
the closing minutes of the
game, but Pomt Pleasant was
able to score JUSt enough at
the free-throw lme to hold on
for the five pmht victory.
Helpmg the Lady Rmdcrs
storm back from a defiCit
thdt at one pomt stood at 21
points early m the fourth
quarter, was the play of Beth
Payne , who equaled her
counterpart With 19 pomts,
SIX rebounds and three
assists of her own, as the
two ~Irls battled on the court
all mght long
Payne scored I 0 of her 19
pomts m the fourth quarter,
but earl y turnovers and
missed shots at the charity
stnpe took tne1 r toll on the
gray and black as Sommer
.1ccounted 101 all SIX ol the
Lady Kmght's lourth quarter
po1nts, mcludmg h1tt111g one
of her lour 3-pomters m the
game, as Pomt Pl easant
smothered the comeback
attempt,
Pomt Pleasant grabbed a
total of I R stea ls .I S River
Valley made bad passe s
through most of the game.
but the rest ol the statiSt 1~:al
categoncs helonged to the
Ldd) Ra1der'
R1vcr V,ill cy ou trchound·
ed Po1nt 41 ·.16 led hy
Bmokc T.1ylnr w1 1h ,1 g.une
h1 gh J(, IChound ,, .md shot a
hetter ildd
per~:cnt,,ge
111 the gw11c. h1t11hg 36 per-

!!''·"

out of the end zone, wh1ch
would have g1 ven them the
ball back on a touchback
It was the kind of call a
championship team might
have gotten. The Pats didn 't,
though, and on the next play.
Mike Anderson scored his
second !-yard touchdown of
the mght and gave Denver a
17-6lead
.
"I never saw the guy coming, but I was gomg as hard as
I could," Bailey smd of the
longest non-scotmg mtercepllon 1etum in NFL playoff
history
Always reliable Adam
Vmatien. the difference in all
three of New England's
three-pomt Super Bowl victo·
ries, mi ssed 'a 42-yard field
goal wide right on the next
possessiOn Shortly after,
dependable Troy Brown fumbled a punt return to set up
Jake Plummer's lone touchdown pass of the night, a 4yarder to Rod Sm1th for a 24·
6lead.
Plummer finished 15-for26 for 197 yards with the

nt ( 17-of-47) from the
oor
The L1dy Kmghts on the
her hand, took a lot ot
shots m the game and could
only come up with a 26 percent ( 15-of-57) effort from
the tloor.
Both teams had trouble
hlltmg free-thro&lt;N s m the
game, as Point Pleasant
could only hit 45 percent
(17-of-38) and River Valley
could only manage a 41 percent ( 12-of-29) effort.
·Early on 1n the game,
however, ll looked like It
would be all Pomt Pleasant
The Lady Kni ghts came
nght out with a I 0-0 run.
taking an Il - l lead in the
opemng mmutes of the first
quarter and held on for a 12·
7 lead after one.
In th e second quarter.
Polllt Pleasant began to
show s1gns of the same
problems that have plagued
them all year by miSsing
numerous shot s as River
Valley closed the gap to lour
With 1 10 lefl m the tirst
halt
' But the 1ed and black got
hot late as Sommer and Char
Bibbee s~:ored e1ght pomt s
each. includmg two str.11 ght
treys 11om Sommer. as the
L,tdy Kn 1ghr- ope ned the
four pomtlead back up to 13
dl the half
The 1h1rd quarter SdW a
much lower scormg (jUal1el
·" Poml could onl y come up
w1th 1-+ pom(s and R1 ver
V.dley cou ld on ly m.m.•ge
lllne. out a s llon~ dclen" vc
si,Jnd from the I :;d) Kn1 ~hts
iOICCd the home S(jUUU llllll
numcrnu :, lu rnover~ .tnd
kert them ,ll t&gt;,Iy as the red

touchdown and one Interception, a mce play by Asante
Samuel that led to New
England's first field goal
And while the Denver
quarterback won't be miStaKen for Elway, or even Brady
- who threw tor 341 yards m
defeat - that was kind of the
pomt As has been proven all
year. Plummer doesn't have
to do It all for the Broncos to
Win.

There's the running game,
held m check for tnost of this
night. but good enough to
punch the ball in under duress
at the goal hne. There 's the
defense; Al Wilson made no
fewer than four b1g play s in
the tlrst half to keep the game
scoreless for the first ~6 minutes
Special teams were good,
too
Punter and kickoff specmiIst Todd Sauerbrun, of all
people, got his helmet on the
ball on a kickoff return late m
the first half to force a
turnover and a Denver field
goal for a 10-3 lead
ue to try to lind a way."
N1chols
made
three
jumpers m a 10-pmnt run
that put Syracuse up 44-37.
its biggest lead to that pomt.
Orange
guard
Enc
Devendorf got hi s fourlh
foul dunng the spurt. torcmg
McNamara to assume a b•gger role
No problem ' McNam&lt;Ira
hit consecutive 3s from the
top ot the key, .and Ntchols
made a three· point pl&lt;\Y off a
dnve . to the basket as
Syracu se challenged the
Bearcats' depleted front hne
McNamara made a pair of
free th1ows and another 3
from the top of the key durmg a spurt that put Syracuse
in control at 66-51.
and black opened their lead
to 18 headmg into the final
quarter
From there, R1ver Valley
took over
The Lady Raiders held
Pomt to SIX pomts 1n the
quarter and ptled on a game
h1gh 19 pomts , but missed
shot&gt; at the chanty stnpc
from both teams allowed the
Lady Km ght s to hold onto
the n.mow lead and finally
sea l the f1&gt; e pomt VIctory
Le.Idmg Pomt Pleasant to
VlCtOI y were Sommer and
B1bbee, alung with Tnsta
VanMatre who posted 11
po111ts .md fmlr rebounds
Tessa Wyant wnh tlve pomt s
and three steals, Skye Smith
With four points and live
rebounds, Leah Eddy with
two po1nts tluee rebound s
and three steals, Melissa
Adkm s w1th two po111ts ami
SIX
rebounds.
Dev in
Birchfield With two pmnts
and four 1ebounds and
Bnllany Clonc h w1th one
p01111
River Valley was led by
Payne, followed bv K11Sten
Carter with c1g ht pomts.
Taylor wuh SIX pomts and
16 ,•ebounds.
Rachae l
Walburn wu h li ve p01111s
and three rebounds. Margo
Fraley With nve pomts and
seve11 rebounds , Ashley
Ma"um w1th four points
and Kayl.1 Sm1th &lt;Nith two
p01nts , th1ee rebdund s and
two blocks
Po1111 Ple.Isant returns to
the hardwood 7· 30 p m
Mond.1y when they llavcl to
Ru,HK' County whi le the
Rt\cr V.II lcy g1rls ge.Ir up
lur ,, 6 p.m. Monday
m.Itthup ag.11nst Eastern at
home

1\.egtster

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(740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• (7 40) 446-2342
Or Fax To
992-2157

•

Bearcats

---

mrtbune

To Place

his No. 51 uniform when he
got into the game with 5:07
left m the frrst half, drawmg
an ovation. Fifty-two secfrom PageBl
onds later, he was at the lme
for a free throw- he mi ssed
their
best
defenders. off the back of the rim
Kirkland tore a knee ligaHe got h1~ first rebound
ment on Monday mght, leavWith
18 seconds left in the
ing the already short -hand!!d
Bearcats without enough half, got fouled and got a
standing ovation for makmg
players to practice 5-on-5.
both
free throws Nichols
Kennedy invited footbalt...
players to try out for the turned tliat moment into the
fmal
highlight
for
team
on
Wednesday. Cincinnati
'freshman light end Connor
Nichols' 3-pointer at the
Barwin showed up and, after buzze1 tied It 34-all at halfonly three practices, was in a time and silenced the
B1g East game.
Bearcats ' fu st capacity
The 6-foot-4 blocker· crowd m 13 home games,
turned-rebounder
didn ' t the fallout from coach Bob
have h1s name on the back ot Huggms' ouster m August
yarders to rookie tight end
Jieath M1ller.
Quite a dtfference from the
Steelers' previous trip to the
RCA Dome, where the crowd
nmse caused several false
starts and the Colts scored on
an 80-yard pass to Hamson
on theu f1rst offensive play
With the defen se plagumg
Manmng. the Colts d1d nothmg earl} Then Hmes W~d
broke two tackles on a 45·
yard completion, leading to
Roethlisberger's 7-yard TO
pass to Miller. With 3 12
remammg m the flfSt penod,
It was 14-0
Shockmgly,
Pittsburgh had the 14
Shortemng
Mannmg's
drops, at times slidmg the
blocklllg pocket, the Colts
marched 96 yards m 15 plays,
takmg up nearly 10 mmutes
of the second penod But
their best dnve , on wh1ch
Mannmg went 6-for-6, ended
w1th only Vanderpgt 's 20yard field goal
Could three pomts be ,my
more deflatmg to the team
that scored them'
The potent Colts had all of
123 yards at halfume. 74 m
the mr, and trmlcd b) II .
It d1dn 't get beuer early 111
the second halt Mann1ng
saw pressure for rush line·
backers, ends, blnzmg bacb
anll even nose t&lt;Ickle Cascv
Hampton He nearly wa~'
sacked fo r a safety late m the
thud penod and was downed
at the I. wh1ch eventually led
to Bettis ' 1-yard dnve for h"
lith TD of the season - ami
mnth smce the Steele" ~6-7
lo" here on Nov 28
They haven 'tlnst smc c o~ntl
now have a shot at the1r f1rst
Super Bowl tnp 111 I0 yew,

The Daily Sentinel • Page 93 '

'atrthune ·- Sentinel -

BY EDDIE PELLS

turned out there, the outcome
and hts own personal experience there. He sees this as an
opportunity and he buys mto
represenung your country and
wmning a gold medal, and
doing it the appropnate way.
He wants to hi: a part of that."
Colangelo was named the
sole head of the U S. basketball federation last year and
given the responsibility for
restonng the nallonal te3/ll to
the greatness it once enjoyed.
He will select 20 players and
has already ptcked Duke's
Mike Krzyzewsk1 to coach the
team.
"It looks pretty good,"
James satd. "He's gettmg a
good group of ~uys together
that want to wm, that want
revenge for what happened
two summers ago "
A training camp will be held
in Las Vegas, to begin around
July 18, to choose the 14 or so
players who will participate m
the world championships latet
this year m Japan.
Next year, the group will
gather for a week and a half of
trmrung and maybe an exhibition game, then will reconvene
again in 2008 to prepare for the
Olympics.
Colangelo plans to announce
the participants four at a ume
m a series of news conferences
after the NBAAII-Star break m
nud-February Those players
undecided about a commltment, includin~ Shaqutlle
O'Neal, have until the All-Star
break to make up their mmds,
Colangelo said.
He satd two players, T1m
Duncan and Kevin Garnett,
have mforrned him through
their agents that they won't be
a part of the U S team.
HoweV,er, Colangelo satd he
sllll planned to ask Garnett to
meet with h1m when the
Minnesota
Timberwolves
come to Phoerux on Feb 6.

and shot only 50 percent (13of-26) from the chanty stripe.
Rose Hill on the other hand
h1t 5-of-16 shots from
' from Page Bl
beyond the arc and converted
on 77 percent (17-of-22)
game, to only two total pomts from the foul line.
m the quarter.
Offensively, the Raiders
River Valley responded were led by Cordell and
wnh a game high 19 pomts m Morrow, followed by Tyler
the fourth quarter, but agam Thop1pson with six points,
Rose Hill trumped them with Jason Jones with five points,
a 20 pomt effort to walk Ryan Henry and Scot Ward •
· · away with the 18-pomt victo· with four points and Cory
ry.
Ehman with three points.
River Valley d1d force 12
Rose Hill was led by Euton
Rose Htll turnovers and limited their own giveaways to and Blatr, followed by Chad
only mne, with Ryan Henry Jackson ' with 14 pomts,
coming up with nme steals, Michael Fuller With seven
but the offensive effort came pomts, Caleb Snyder and
Davtd Chmn with four pomts
up short in the end
Henry also led the Raiders and Chase Jackson with two
with SIX rebounds while points m the vtctory.
The Ratders will now
Morrow walked away With a
return to action 6 p.m.
team high six assists.
wht;n they travel to
Tuesday
The Rmders were only 3of-23 from the 3-point line face Alexander.

Monday, January 16,2006

Broncos halt Patriots dynasty

LeBron James commits
to playing for U.S. team
BY BOB BAUM

~onday,Januaryt6,2o06

www.mydailysentinel.com

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Ohto
and sur
Apartments for Rent.... ... ... ...... ...... ..... 440
roundtng
area
Duties Medt Home Health Agency
Auction and Flea Markel ...........................080
rnclude establtshmg and has ar'l excttmg opportunity
Auto Pans a. Accessories . ..... ...... .. .. 760
mamtatntng open ltnes ot for a fuii-Ume, part-ttme or
Auto Repair..... .. ................................ no
communtcaMn wrth area per dtem PhystcBITheraptst
Autos for Sate .............................................. 710
phystcrans and health care to 10m our Medtcare
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale... ..... . ... . ..... 750
• FULL TIME CL.ASSES
tactlttteS
In the delrvery Of CertthediJCAHO accredited
' COl TRAI NING
Building Supptles........................................ 550
Home Health servtces We agency tn Cabell and
' FINANCING '*'VA!LABLE
Business and Buildings... ........ ...... .... 340
orter a compettl!ve salary PIJlnam Counltes
' JOO PL'*'CEMENT
' ENROlLING l¥:m
Business Opportunlty................................. 210
and benefrts package for full
Business Training ................................. 140
time EOE Please send We offer a compettttve StngCa111pers &amp; Molor Homes ........................... 790
resume to Judte Reese On Bonus flextbtltty rn
ALLIANCE
Camptng Equipment............... ........... 780
CltniCal
Manager 352 scheduling localized or
TRACTOR-TRAILER
Ca!dS of Thanks ..... . .... . ...... ................ 010
Second
Avenue
Galhpolts expanded servtce area
TRAINING CENTERS
Child/Elderly Care ................................... 190
WYTHEVILLE VA
o__H_4_56_3_1- - - - - options mtleage rermburse:I'J'lent 401 K Program and
Eleetrlcat!Rel rlgeratlon . . ...... .. . .... .. .........840
Need
a
person
to
clean
my full-beneftt package
Equipment for Rent ..................................... 480
1-800·334-1203 home tn Ewmgtqn Call and
Excavating. .... ....... .... ......... ..... ....... 830
L...:-=J!!a!!e'~~'"'•"'"'""'"''""-'"'"m
" --' leave message (740)388·
600·939·6865
Farm Equlpment ..........................................610
Desk Clerk needed Please _o3_9_6______
Farms for Rent............. ........ .. ............. 430
apply at Budget ~nn Nursmg Mgmt
Call Vtckt Chadwrck AN for
Farms lor Sate .. ,.... .... . ..................... 330
Jackson
P1ke GalltpOJIS No
deta11s
For Lease ............................................... 490
phOne calls please
Heartland of Jackson tS cur- -----'-'C'C'-::-For Sale .
.... . ................................... 585
For Sale or Trac:te .......................................590
POSTAL JOBS
Drtvers COL Awtth 1 year '""tly seekong an
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..... ...... .. .......... 580
S15
94-$22 56/hr now hrrvenfrable Tractor Tratter
Furnished Rooms ......................................450
mg For appltcatlon and free
ASSISTANT
expenence
requtred
General Hauling... ... . ...... ..... ..........850
governement jOb tnfo call
Regtanal Runl Great pay
DIRECTOR OF
Giveaway .... ... . .....................................040
benefrts, bonuses h0me- NURSING CARE Amertcan Assoc ol Labor 1913-599-8220 24, hrs emp
Happy Ads.... ....... ... ........ ........ ..........050
tlme1 MARTIN TRANSPORT ·Director ol Qualtty of Life serv
Hay &amp; Grain
....................................640
866·293·7435
programs
-------Help Wanted ....... .. ............ . .... ... .. .. II 0
•Fall Management coord1na- PI Pleasant Moose Lodge
Full time position
Home Improvements ..............................810
In Meigs County
tor
needtng bartenders apply m
Homes lor Sate...................... ...... . .. .310
•Supervtses care and sys- otJtce at Lodge only no
Must be &amp;elf"
Household Goods. .. .................... ........... 510
terns management
phone calls please
starter, service
Houses lor Rent.............................. .. ..... 4 I 0
Current
OH
nursmg
lrcense
----::--oriented
and
able
In Memoriam ................... .................. .. 020
requtred
In
exchange,
we
Res
Treatment
to
w.ork
well
with
1denttal
Insurance....... ........................... . .. . ...... 130
orter
compettllve
pay
and a Facrhty takrng appltcat1
ons
the public. Must
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment... .. .. ........... 660
comprehensrve
benettts
for
youth
worker
Pay
bal1ed
have valid driver' s
Livestock ...............................................630
package Please forward on expenence Pard
llc::ense and rell·
Lost and Found........... ..... . ................ 060
resume to
Deborah Insurance Call between
able transportaLots &amp; Acreage ......... : .................................. 350
Thomas AN ADNS at 9 OOam-3 OOpm Mondaytion. Position
Miscellaneous .... .... ............................ 170
Heartland ol Jac,.kson 8668 Frrday (740)379.9083
offers all company
Miscellaneous Merchandise .....................540
St
At 93 Ja&lt;;;kson OH
benefits including
Mobile Home Repair.,. ....
... . ....
..860
45640 Fax 740-286·0295 Team or Smgte Dnver to
health, dental,
Mobile Homes lor Rent ........... ..... .............. 420
www her manorcare com
vision, and life
haul Atr Fretght must have
EEO/Drug Free Employer clean
Mobile Homes lor Sale . .•
.... ....... ...320
insurance, 401K,
CDL 2yrs e)lp
Money to Loan ............................................220
paid vacation, and
(304)266-7617
Psople Strength
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .... ..... . ...740
Muslcallnslruments ................................... 570
Personals ... .. .. .. ... ..
. 005
Pels lor Sale . .. ... ,.................................. 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating .. ....... . ... . ....
..820
Professional Services ... . .................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; Ci,Jlepalr..... . ... ..... . ... 160
Real Estate Wanted ... ...... ................... 360
Schools Instruction... .....
.... . .... ..... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer ..... .................. 650
Situations Wanted ..................................... 120
Space lor Rent. .. .. ....... . ................... 460
Sporting Goods ......................................... 520
SUV'slor Sale.. , .. . ...
.. . ........... 720
Trucks lor Sale ......................................... 715
Upholstery.... ...... .. ...... .... . .. .. 870
Vans For Sale.. .. ..................................... 730
Wanted to Buy......... ....
... ... ... ... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies ............... 620
Wanled To Do ..... .....
..... . ..... .. .
.. 180
Wanted to Rent
............................. 470
Yard Sale· Gailtpotls...... ... .... . ....
.... 072
'l'ard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle .... ............. 074
Vard Sale·PI. Pleasant ............... ...... .. .. 076

iii

Now you can have borders and grap,hlcs
~
added to your classified ads
.lr1"l
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SO¢ for smoll
S1.00 for large

Display Ad;t;

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Ins.,rtlon
In Next Day·s Paper

• Start
Ads With A Keyword • lnc:lude Complete
Description • Indude A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include
Number And Add~• When Needed

Sueeessful Ads
Should Inelude These Items
To Help Get Reoponse ...

Oear/lfir~

1- ((,

1~~

£.&lt;.A&lt;tot-tf
Cl2006

by NEA, Inc

-r-------.
~116

HD.P\VANTED

Compamon for the elderly
CleSntng transportatiOn to
doctors appomtments gro
eery store, references Call
Martha (740)446·3659
Complete yard work and
small home repatr 20 years
e)lp Call (740)446·3682
Computer Trouble Shoot
and Repatr Expert Serv1ce
740-992-239&amp;
-'----'--,...--_~
Georges Portable Sawmtll
don't haul your Logs to the
Mtll jiJSt call 304-675-1957
Looktng to take care ol or
set wtth the elderly or handrcep Mondau' FHday Call
(740)446-6743
Now 2 Openrngs Elderly
A easonabl e $1 200 Mea 1
s
&amp; Snacks Leave Message
(304)882-3880
I I\\ \t I \I

1

•NOTICE•

nRED OF GAS PRICES &amp;
DISTURBED?

Owned Company
A Home Managed
Busrness Part trme or Full
t1me Full Support and
Trammg Fully ftnanced
opporluntty 11 qualll1ed
1·800-946-7572 Prn 00
(Ltsten &amp; Leave Contact
Wanted Cook wrth 91(pen- Info)
ence m menu planntng for
treatment taciltty Pay based
on expenenoe
Pa1d
Insurance Call between
9am 3pm Monday-Frtday
17401379·0063

r

WANTED Part ttme postlton
avarlable to ass1st tndtvlt1Uals wtth mental retardation
at a group home In Btdwell
1} 35 hrs 1 1pm-8am Th
11pm ~am Frt Sat 7pm9am Sun
2) 35 hrs Sam Spm Sun 2IOpm MrfuiW

3) 27 5 hrs 4 10 30pm F
8 45am-6 45pm Sat 9am6pm Sun
4) 26 hrs 3·9pm Th 2 11pm
Fn 10am-7pm Sat
ortgage broker o
Must heve htgh schpol dtplo- ander
ts proper!
ma/GED \alrd dnver s tcensed (Tt"'IS IS a pubh
license and three years ervrce an nouncemen
good driving e)lpenence rom the Ohto Valle
F.:.:-;l.i-i.:-i.r:.:-.::T•::T•'
:
'
•
'
:
'
•
T'
1
$7
25/t"]r Pre-employment
Comrr11rmenr
Ttred of.Worktng alt
Drug Testing Send resume
Office Clark needed tor tas1
the hoirdays?
to Buckeye Communrty
pace otf1ce lnd1vrdual must Tired ol wor~ong long 12 Servrces P0 Box 604
I'Rofl.~l
MoLJr shifts?
Jackson OH 45640
be a sell-starter dependable
~'EN\ l{_'EJ&gt;
and energettc skilled tn Come home and 1010 us at Deadltne tor applicants
Mterosott Worel anel Excel Med.i-Home Health• 1/19/06 please ndrcate
TURNED DOWN ON
FleQUtrements superro{ oral .ropentng for a Full T•rn~ posttton Equal Opportunrty SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
aRd written commurucat1on AN lull benefrts package
Employer
No Fee Unless we Wtnr
sk1lls and knowledge ot gen· rncfudtng 401 KSign on \'50
1 888 582 3345
eral olfrcelbusmess prQ(:e
Bonus $2,500
IH\11.., 1 \ 11
dures high school diploma .tQpenmg tor a Part Ttme
and two m years e)Cpen·
AN Sign on Bonus
Gatllpolll Career ColleQe
ence tn olfrce and computer
$1 ,500
(Careers Dose To Home)
sktiiS bookkeeptng proce
Call Todayl 740·446·&lt;4367
dures a plus
1 B00-2t4 ().(52
Send resume by Janu ar~
20 2006 to FACTS 45
Ohve Stree! Galltpolrs Ohro
45631 or FA.X to (740)446
8014 EOE M'FIH

r

lUI! SAIJ-.

Bedroom 2 Bath wllh 1996 Skyline 28x64 3SR
Ftreplace m Rto Grande 2BA. fireplace ca1hedral
area 8 acres mil 40~C60 ce1hng $35 000 (740)709·
barn $ ~20 000 (740)709 1166
1166
91 Skylme 16x80 3 Brf2 Bth
3·4 bedroom home 1 112 $145/mo Call 1740)385
bath with !amtly room 71371
recently
remodeled
$98 500 Call (740)446 '96 Fleetwood 3 BR/2 Btn
$169/mo Includes Delivery
4028
Call (740)385 9948
3BA anached garage 71
acre lot block bu1ldmg new
roof Sldtng Syracuse 740
416-h86 or 740-949-1082
For Aenf 3 Bwldtngs for
7BR 58A Foreclosure only Bustness Use Located tn
$! 8 000 For IISttngs call Pomeroy Also. 2 Upstarrs
800-391-5228 ext F254
Unfurnrshed Apts In
Attention!
Pomeroy for Rent Call 74QLocal company oflenng ~No 589 7122
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· fl50
J.ms &amp;
grams for you to buy your L.l_
. _oiA.iiCREiiiii~iiGiiE-_.J
home tnstead of rentrng
--.
· 100% hnanctng
Rental Property tor sale
· Less than perlect credit 1972 Tratler on 50X225 lot
accepted
currently rented $1 5 000 00
· Payment could be the 740_742 -40it
same as rent
f.lr~~~~........,
Mortgage
Locators
Rf.AL EsTATE
(740)367 0000
~
WAN'tlD

i

,....---::~:------1

Neecl to sell your home?
Late on payments drvorce
tob transfer or a death" I
can buy your hOme All cash
and QUICk CIOSIOQ 740-416All real ..tate advertlalng
3130
In tl'lla newapeper is
I~ I \I \I ...,
aubject to the ~al
Ftrlr Housing Act of 1968
which mak11 It Illegal to
advertiM " 1ny
preference, Jlmltat1on or
dl•crlminttlon based on
race, color religion, MK
2 or 3 Bedroom House tn
familial alldus or national
Pomeroy No Pets 740
origin or any Intention to
992·5858
make 1ny eucl'l

Thia new•paper Will not
kno~lngly accept
advenlaementa for real
violation of the law Our
reader• are hereby
Informed that all

In
ere
an equal

dwellings 1dvert1Md
newspepet"
availeble on

thl•

2BR house $325/month
you pay all
uttht1es washer1dryer hOOk
up stove and refngerator
lurmshed No rns1de pets
1740)446·9061
2BA 15 bath 3 mrles !rom
HMC $475tmonth plus
deposrt
References
requrred Call (7401446
2651
S 150/deposn

'"::::::::::::::::::= 3fullBedrooms
1
basement
opportunity ba. . .

Country senmg tn Gallta
Countyl 3 bedrooms 2
baths Itreplace S85 000
(7 40)709-1166
Fabulous 4br 3 tull baths
Completely Remodeled
House tor Sale (304)8822391
House 4 Sale 2000 sq toot
4br W/2ba AMached 2-car
Garage
Great
Nerghbornood 858·Poptar
He1ghts Ad Just off R12
near Roosevelt Elem
School
(304)675 4435
after/5pm

rrow Smart· Contac
rnanc1al lnstttiJhon
fftce of Consume
rta1rs BEFORE you rel1
ance your home a
ta1n a loan BEWAR
J requests tor any Jarg
dvance payments o
ees or msurance Cal
he Othce of Consume
ttii.trs toll free at 1 866

MOBILE HOMES

3

prelertnce, ltmttatlon or
d~acrlmlnatlon "

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO recommends tha
u do busrness wtth pea
le you know and NOT I
end money through th
atl unhl you have 1nvest1
ated the ol1enn

r

Newly remodeled 3 or 4
central arr full
basement hardwoocl ttoors
detached garage large cov
ered patro tenced back
yard ctoSE! to schools Po1nt
Plea'sant
$69 500
J;l7;!40r"7
;:0:;9';:;1;::
382
::;.,:-:"'_....,
b~rooms .

!\lotllLF: HO'-lfS

L.w-...iiUiiiiiR,;;Siii.U.IiiioE-.,1
--.
10 used hOmes under
$3 000 00 -Must Go Call
Elute 740·385 0698
16x80 homes startrng at
$25995 00 Includes vmyl
stdtngl shtngle rool Call
Russ 74D-385-2434
1987 Schultz Mobile Home
2 Bd 2 Bath must be
movfd $8 500 00 740
742-2357

&amp;1 12 barns

garage
Central Heat and Central
Atr all appliances $550 00
a month and Oepostt In
Syracuse 740-992 0167
4br
tn
Syracuse
$600/month &amp; DepoS!I
WateriSewer 1ncluded No
Pets (004 )675 5332
570 S 2nd MiCIClleport 3-4
bedroom gas lurnaceJcen
tral atr very clean no pels
and H UO approved
S500 00 per month and
deposn 740 843 5264
Attention•

Local company otfenng ~NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro
grams lor you to. buy your
home rnslead of renllng
• 100"-e frnaocmg
' Less than perlect credrt
accepted
· Payment could be the
same as renl
Locators
Mongage
1740)367 0000
For Rent Avarlable Jan 30
3 ~room turn1shed ho~se
total elecltiC Central rm
S755 oo per month ol us
$750 00 secunty depos1t
Telephone 740-992 5421
For rent 4 oooroom neuse
on S~1dmore Ad $600
month plus deposit Phone
(740)446 2565
Oil Jaclo.son p,t.;P. 38R 15
batn house 2 car garage
$600/mo plus sec dep Y.ou
pay utrhlles References and
mrn 1 yr lease requtred Call
1740)446 3644 tor more 1nlo
Stop renhng Buy 4 bedroom
loreclosure $15 000 For list
mgs 800·391·5228 ext
1709
.,., Mo1m.1 Hm n·,
FOR Rl,:&gt;-T

14x70 mobrle home $425
rent $425 aepoStl Ceil
(740)446-4060 or 17 40) 367
7762

·

�Monday, January 16, 200~

www.mydaiiysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

ALLEY COP

AI'AKI'I\&amp;N~

MOIIILE Ho~&amp;~
HlR R ENr

Monday, January 16, 2006

FOR RENT

www.mydailysentlnel.com

CI .ASSIFIEDS

2 Bedroom Apartment available 1n Syracu~e . S26o 00
depos1 t $350.00 per month
rent Rent mcludes water,
sewer
trash
No pets.
2 Bedroom Tratler $400 per Sulhcient 1ncome needed to
p10nth and $400 deposit. quahly. 7 40-378-6111.

2 bedroom mob1le home.
Centenary, no pets. reference, $375 month plus
dOP,OSII. (7.401446-7275.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

.

ACROSS

EMPLOYMENT

Phillip
Alder

lliater and Sewer included.

~arag~ . Cawort. and Porch

2 Qedroom apartment Meigs
All Elttctnc. Ret. and Stove County. very n1ce. clean
Included. - No Pets
In $425 per mon th plus
pwn vacine. • Relerences depas1t. no pels, references
req Uired.
740-949-2217. requ1red . (740)992-5174
7:po A.M. to HlO P.M.
2bedroom apt. WID hooKUp.
f BR all electric near Holzer. wate1, sewer, trash pd.
1 350 month. (7401446-6665 5400/month
or (740)379-2923.
1bedroom apt w/ refrig &amp;
stove. wate'r, sewer. trash
3 bedroom mobtle home 1n
pd.
(740)367-7746 -

fhe

Shade

area. Water,

sewer, trash •ncluded. $325

·BARN
'

740-992-0153

Ill FIIIICW

lazar ·aacUJI8

SEIIICES

(7401367-7015- 17401446-

WICIII...I~I

Fio

96 Bloa Pontiac Goand AM
SE . $2,500 060. Call
17401446-2558 or (74016456786
·

2138
Mobile Home for Re nt located 1n Gallipolis Ferry.
.; Deposi t &amp; References .
• $375/mo nth, $375/deposlt
·: call (304)675-3423

·

sedan,

well

• ~ .and 2 bedroom apart ; ments. furnished and unf!-lr, mshed, security deposit
• req uired. no pets ,' 740-992-

'9"'column inch week(lays
'16"' column inch Sunday·

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992-2155

Tuesday &amp; Saturday

Middleport American ·
_Legion
Early Bird Game 5 pm

Regular Bingo
· Starts 6:30 pm
ONLY A FEW SEATS LEFT!
Atlantic City Getaway

Feb. 24. 2006 - Feb. 26, 2006
$200 per person
.Private jet owt of Charleston . WV
Nice accommodations at Harrah's
Resort &amp; Casino
(double occupancy)
Must be 2t years of age
Please call (304) 675-4340
Ext. 1326to make reservations
Hosted by PVH Community
Relations ·

9 87 2

kW

UC

I R \'o.,;l'tml \Ill I'\

• New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

in Henderson, WV · Preowned Applicanes slarling
at $75 &amp; up all und er
W&lt;irranty.
also
have
Household
Misc. Items
starting at .·99tt 1!. up

(7 40)367-7086

(3041675-7999

AIN'TCHA

GOT NO

VISION,

Hours
7:00AM -8:00PM

MIKE MARCUM

Thompsons

Appliance

&amp;

L.---Siii.JPt'l;;,;,~iiilfli'S_

FUTURE

100 E. MEMOtliAL DRIVE

Aepair-675-7388 . For sale, Block, brick, sewer pipes,.
· re-conditi oned
automatic windows. lin!els, etc Claude
washers &amp; dryers. relrigera- Winters. Rio Grande, OH
.to rs , gas and electric Call 740-245-512 1.
1998 Firebird V-6 ·Auto Trange
. 5, ~lr conditioners, and •
~rl.,
Housing lor 50 years. of
T
op 54.600.00. 740-742 wnnger washers. Wil l do
.-r.•~
W and older_PRIO RITY
2357.
repa1rs
on
maior
bra11ds
in
'
FOR
SALE
·
GIVEN TO APPLICANTS
shop or at your home.
WITH INCOME AT OR
1996
Firebl rd
Pont1ac
AKC Lab pups. field and Coupe. T-Bar root, 5-Speed
BELOW
Used Furniture &amp; Appl iance
$10.900 for 1 person o r
waterfowl hu,nling b_lood- manual . sharp. low m11eage.
Store, t30 J3ulaville P i k~ .
$12,450 for 2 persons.
· $6,890
phone
Gallipolis, OH
(740)446- lines. Calm and family orient- only
Ma)(imum Income effective 4782. Hrs. 1~ ·3, M- S. Stop !"d. excellent pups. excellent 13041675-3275
price. (740}418-8388
02/ 11 /2005 lor 1 person
by and check us out
2001 Dodge Ram Truck lully
$ 18,150 or $20,700 for 2
Wa sher $95; dryer . $95; AKC Miniature Dachshund. loaded
60.000
miles.
, persons.
2003 Chevy
Must meet HUD/20218 crite- refrigerator • $95; electric 1 mate. 1 female, 5 week.s $14.000.
. ria for household co mposi- range $95; cheSI freezer old. Call (740)446·2751
Caviler $7 ,000.00 Call 740tion.
$~25 ; new gas dryer $200; CKC BlacK Labs. 4 months 985-429 1
POMEROY
740-992-7022
Subs1dized Residen ti al

r&gt;-~r

..__'C--::i'!::t t:~---'1 ~

~~2-~~~~~~~~--~~
THE BORN LOSER
TR'I Tl-\1~ t-IEW
PE"-C.I-\ fROZEN

.

Ir'~ Ff..T• F~f.E fo.J'-11&gt; -.q .

'"'!

.SIJG"-R- I"~E:.(

r

couch $150; full
size
waterbed $ 125; hutch' with 2
end stands $1 25; wood
burning stove $200; decorat·
ed Christmas tree $75. 24~
electric range $125 . Come
check oul ou r new location.
1216 Eastern Ave, Skaggs
Appliance$. (740)446-7398

r

1

II

YO&amp;UR\!

BIG NATE

'

_..,.

PO )'OIJ •

IMPORTS
Athens

TtltNK
SHE: ,
Is &gt;. /
tl '

«l MaroRcvcu,;/
4 WHEl:LEHS

"

•

1

IT'S HARD
I TO TELL .
I

), -- -

'

'

.,.

. --- :WHAT
• ABOUT
' +tER?

'

It

''

,,

It

, ....
1

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

LOOK CAREFULLY
,O..T HER BODY.

-,,

-,, -

-

II

-

--

Tt-lE!tcE

A~E

SOME

CONVERSI'&lt;TIONS YOU
WANT TO GET CAJT OF

t!EFoRE THEY GO ANY

fURTHER .

"

BUCKEYE Sanitation

60

SEPTIC TANK PiJMPING $95.00
· PORTABlE TOilET RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOitlTMENT TOVr4Y

Auro P-\lffii &amp;
L--oiAtiicciiiii·EiO'SiiiSOiiiiiKiiiiliO·~"'iio.

or

PEANUTS
MARTIN LUT~ER KING
~A I I7, '' I I-lAVE

A DREAM"

591-8757

pies for sale $100, 5 males. (304)674-462 1

BEI=ORE T~AT WE LliULILIIN
BE 51TTIN6 HERE .

AND I WOULDN'T BE
TRAI7tN6 YOU A
CARROT STICK FOR
A FREMCI-l FRY ..

T~AT'S MOT AN EVEN

TRADE, FRANKLIN .

1 female call (304)593-3423
Reg . AK C adorable Lab
puppies. Born 11 / 11!05. vet
checked .
1st
shols.

BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
price .2004 Jeep Uberty. exc8Uent
$200 1740)446-1062
condition. less than t5 ,000 Unconditional lilehme guaJ2 miles.
$17.000 .
Call antee. Local references furShar-Pei
puppies.
nished . Established 1975
1740) 446-4028.
fema les. 740-992 -9 105
C:,.ll
24 Hrs . (7 40) 446Toy Poodles, can be CKC 95 Z-28 Came10 350 Auto, 0870. Roge rs Baseme nt
Reg . $300 Call . 1740)446- gre(tn, tan leather $5000.00. Wate1proofi ng.
1672.
740-742-4"011

ON THIS PAGE FOR
AS LOW AS
$26-.00 PERMONTH!

-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?

SUNSHINE CLUB

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 Sl Rt 7 N •

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

740-9R5-3R31

.

Advertise
in this

·.

~pocefor$104

1'HEY ALL- SAY, "OH, .JON,
YOU'RE 00 NICE ... YOU'LLMAKE eciME:ONE A WONC&gt;e:RFULHU58AN17." 8UT I'M NEVER .
. RIGHT FOR 1'HEM

WHY, GARFI€1.-P.
WHY?!!

Snodgrass' Upholstery
Raclne, OH
740-949-2202 '

Cu~tom Window Trcmmcnt s

&amp; Lphul,tery

Now Available At

992-2155

GARFIE:LD, WHY PON'T
WOMEN LIKE ME:?

\

.

The Daily·Sentinel

GARFIELD

per month.

11

BAUM LU!\-1HER
Scorpion Tractors

GRIZZWELLS
'1'.\\S YtAR I ~111\SED r.IYSE\.F 'i:&gt;
~LY

DE/&gt;.1. W\1\.1
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7

8
9
11
12
18

Y.-y-

Af.\D Affi'I.' I:(EAUW
lV

5~W5

-AstroGraph

by Luis Campos
Celetj,f)' Cl;:tler ~•ams are crl!llted t~ Qi,datil)15 tTy lllTllm Pf!OJ:H pat and Pftsenl

Each IMiel on~ ~r st¥ds b wthet
TodBy's due: A equals J

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EPABTSK

W' R II P

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EPABTSK

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.

LEPN

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Pal Monla was a'truly gonerous ac101 , a giftOd
comic and tin even greate r friend" - Ralph Macchio

By hrnlce B~ Osol
You migh t enter into an interesting
arrangement in the year ahead w1fh some one who Is etther older than you or more
experienced. It's an association that could
prove to be quite rewarding in several
ways tor both.
CAPRICORN '(Dec. 22 -Jan. 19) Because yo.u won 1ttake things personally,
you're likely to be better at managing the
resources of oth8rs today than you will be
your own. However. even here your handling may not be up to par.
AQUAR IUS {Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - It might
take a little conscientious effort on your
part, but fry to keep your life In prope r balance today. Don't be all work and no play;
nor all play and no work. Parity is essential
for happiness
PISCES (Feb. .20- March 20) '- Today you ·
might be feeling that vou receiVed little
recognition in return tor something you d1d
for another while, in rea lity, you did receive
the proper acknowledgement. You ask to r
to6 much.
AR IES (March 2t·Apnl 19) - Even small
slights will breed rese ntments today, so
watch your act ions, words and deeds. and
do (\O f pl ay favontlsm 1n your Involvements
Anyone who teels rebUffed will not readily
bgive.
T~RUS (April 20-May 20) -The ·way to
generate respect !rom your associates
today Is by mOdestly emphasizing your
virtues. Corwersely. if you tend to be flam boyant or pretentious, it will have the oppoSite effect.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) -Your luck is
apt to rem ain inl8ct In areas where you\•e
previously been fortunate . However, developments could be dubious today in Situa tions where' you have not established a
track record.
The
CANCER (June 2 1-J uty 22) prOspects for personal success Co uld be a
litt le iffy today, so proceed cautiously 1n
any invotverrienl that might be v1ewed as
self-servmg. It won 't tal&lt;e much to 11p
things against you, .
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) - ,It m•ght be best
11 you and your co-worker's keep your
hand s off the otllc,e supply cata logs today
Don't order any parts or supplies without
lirst checl&lt;ing with the purch8s1ng agent'
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) - ae realistiC
today in disc ussing a maner tha t could
affect your soc1al stand1ng amonQ your
peers. You miQht have a tendency to take
the blame tor ·a bad ,situat1on not ol your
making.
LIBRA (S&amp;pt . 23-0ct. 23) ;,_ Avoid the lines
of least resistance today. because what
may appear to be simp le cou ld be fraught
with complicatiOns. while that WhiCh
appears difficult w11l be slower. but more·
aocurate.
SCO RPIO (Oct 24·NO\i. 22) - G1ve full
expression to your ambitions 1octay. but
·also be realistic regarding that which you
hope to achieve . Don't establish obJechves
lor yourselt that you know would be diffiCul.t
to attain .
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov 23-Dec 21 I - If you• •
compan•ons aren 't m complete accord With ·
your 1deas or suQ9ASflons loday. you
might .·Uncharactenslically. be a bit difhcult
to gel alonQ With Str1ve not to be d1ctat01 o·
at.
·

I

$tudents were discussing
t11e problems of the future .
,,;:--~lr-i~ "Don't worry aboul the future;" :
the professor lectured ." until ·
-~-:---:--:-::-:--.,-,you ' ve learned to- -- -- - the
ME L A F E
prese ntl"
·
:

GNRUW

i--r-1.---,

I0

-.,,s~r,::.. ._"16-rl::...._rl-l
_

.

_

.

.

Comol•&gt;e 1he chvctle quoted
' by Mi1n g in . the I"IIUI~'~fi word1
vov develop . from s.r~p No 3 below.
.

--'---L-l---L-'-----'

&amp; Pi iNl NUM8EIEO

LEITERS IN

. THESE SQUARES

UNSnAM&amp;IE A&amp;OVE lElHRS
10 GET ANSWER
. SCRAM -LETS ANSWERS ~ l llll&gt;6

Laet1c- Elder- Drawl- Knight- CANDIDATE
We all would like to vote for the best people for the
olfice.bul th ey usually do
become a CANDID~TE 1

not

ARLO &amp; JANIS
5t,t,, DAD, I'~ GOHU.. Tll15
/o\U51C iu ~ FI!OII. ...
)

SOUP TO NUTZ
I

THjnk

[G&lt;;PT &lt;,bu.

wil h .lOhp ,\,· 40h p Kub.ow Engines

BAUl\·l LUMBER
Rt. 124 Chestt•r 9115 -3301

•

Ve~

snakes
Tide over
Maul
I'(&gt;Okoul
Give oft
heat
Fleur-dt- -

CELEBRITY CIPHER

r.&gt;

5\\.\Fr

" Takirrg Tir e Stirr g Out Of '
/lard Work! ".
Mid-Sit.L· 4Wheel Drive Traclor

St .

6

&lt;Jirthde,y:
.Tuetday,J•n.17, 2006

..
Altentian
Melt• Ca. R.,Jdenls!!!

2003 . Suzuki 4WD Vinson
500 ATV with 34 mile s

2412

-

.,.""'
MAYBE .

.....,,_.....

I J

$4900.
CARMI CHAE L
EQUIPMENT.
17401446 -

G

' &lt;,1-,'io\

Hupp

ADVERTISE YOUR
BUSINESS
,

lodged.

•

See . .
Rock}t·\•-AJ•u

queen-jack-doubleton of spades might be
- and ·is - waste paper. Also, a borderline one·level opening should ·include at
least one ace or two kings .
After South opens, it is ha rd for North not
to power into game, but the opponents
prob ably take the first five tricks: four
spades and one diamond. No~e lhat even
if dummy has the spade 10 , the contract
might sti ll be beaten.
I think South should pass, North shOuld
open one diamond, South shou ld
respond two no-trump, inviting game, and
NOrlh should pass . What would happen ·in

pushes a heart through the' North hand
be fore the diamond ace has been dis-

I

17401742-86 12

4
5

·

the play?
The defense comes out on top if We st

~-

old , male &amp; female , $100.
2001
Mercu ry
Grand
Call (740) 379·2697.
Marquis. 40R, 7 1,000/mites,
Shape ,
$10,000
Fu ll blooded Pitt Bull Pup- Good

Y~ l l ow/b t ac k/choc .

· Buy
or
s8 11.
Ri verine
Anllques, . t 124 East Main
on SA f24 E. Pomaroy. 740992·2526
Russ Moore.
owner.

~

II P..LSO SE.E-1&lt;\S TO ·
E£ I'E:.!&gt;I.C.I-\- F'RU.!

- ~

98 Chevy Astra Conve rsion
van. tow miles, with electric
wheelchair ,ramp, $6.000

All pass

Pass

3

20. But I think this hand should pass. The

IS NOW!!

:1

_.

1
2

22 Con. hactlcoll
23 Deftanl
reply
26 Emlnenl
30 List det,all
3t Cow's chew
32 Woosnam
or Fleming
33 Fide's
warning
34 Go-dill
35 Rer,air
' 36 · Sk oa
39 Vamplre'a
teelh
40 ShadatrM
41 Technique

RetleYH
tension ..
Slopo
ollfng
Extremely
eccentric
Aow ltowly
Rockies
aklresort

South has 12 high-card po.ints and eight
cards in the two longest suits : a total of

Roofing &amp;_£lemode~ng Co.,'
Rubber Roofing Room •
Addittons. Decks, StunQ!es.
Siding. W1naows. Pote11a.ms)
Garages. New Homes
·Residential &amp; Commerc1al
740-245-Q437
u_..., ,a
....WT_, ',

''

3NT

point- no rebid problem.

MAW?
TH'

EOS ca mera "' stand, wheel
chair, porta-pol1y, wcilker. air
mattress.
crutches .

'i;::;,.--=----•
BUIIDIN(;

Ea11L

38
cough
20 UN member
Malo cat
22 Skywalker'a 39
Contonled
guru ·
murmurs
23 Near
- 41
24 Raison
Tux·rtnlet
d' event
42
Fortunale
25 Name that 43
Singer
means
Torf44
'1rue"
Lagal
26 Cell
profession
hab"anto
'S
Admiral's
27 Muy -I
46
)all
28 Director
Fritz47
Nessle'a
hideout
29 Runs""
Kid
course
50
Indiana
31 Thwack
52
eager
35 Willie
Bull ' a noise
olbleeball
Polite
37 TV knob

Se\len
cards in the two longest suits : a lotal of
19. This suggests a pass. but 1 would
always open that hand. It has two aces
and a king . good intermediates (the 10s
and 9s ol our worl~), and - an important

BARNEY

1/1 4/ 1 mo. pd

Tnm package for sale. .6
panel 'pme doors, popla r
base anct casil)g. Oak stair
system lor $3,100 (304)6740·100

DOWN

hand, would you open or pBss?
North has 12 high-card points and

17401446-9635

Townh ouse
Apartmenl s, Very Spacious,
'2 Bedrooms. CI A, 1 1/2
Bath. Adull Po ol &amp; Baby .
Poot, Patio, Start $395/Mo.
No
Pets,
Lease
P lus
Security Deposit Required ,.

code
54 Kimono
matartlla
55 Collin alck
56 Urban train•
57 Notice
58 Navajo foe

total is 20 or rno re , open; if it is under 20,
pass. I disagree With th is. Why? Look at
the North an d South hand s il'! the dia. gram. If you were the dealer with each

S&amp;W K-model 22, Cannon

Tara

Thunnan
53 Poll Office

and an opening bid al the one-level. If the

.10x.1 0x10x20
992-3194,' :.:
or 992·6635
~ppliance

eoueln

49 Chooee
51 Mt.

The Rule of Twenty tells you to add you r
. high-card poinls 19 the nu mber of cards in
your two longest suits. It was po pularized
by Marty Bergen. He recommends using

I

Stop &amp; Compare

Pass

="orlh

••

t Faucot
4 Chtmltt't
htngout
7 Diner order
10 Thole tiller
11 Cahtmounla
t3 Garden
planting
14 Electrical
un.tt
15 Squirrel
snack
16 Here,
In Parli
17 Wal_lops
19 Musl
21 Allentlon

il wheQ deciding between an initial pass

,,$19~ ~!p~·.,
·· to 1'p1JOO' ~1 1

740-992-1611

Pass

Do you pass
or open one?

.

Middleport, OH

Warehouse

NOTICE TO · CONthe aforesaid Meigs · reject any or all bids.
TRACTORS
. C o u. n t y Mick
Davenport,
Sealed proposals tor
Commissioners or by
President
the Demolition and
certified
check , Meigs
Counly
Removal ol three (3)
cashiers check, or letCommissioners
units in the Village of ter of credit upon a (1) 1(}, 12, 1 ~
Middleporl,
Meigs . solvent bank in the
Counly, Ohio, will be amount of not less
received by lhe Meigs
than 10% of lhe bid
Pub.lic Notice
County
amount in favor of the
Commissioners
at
aforesaid
Meigs
their office at the
County
Public Notice
Courthouse , Commissioners. Bid
Notice
is hereby
Pomeroy, Ohio 457~9
Bonds · shall
be
given that the Meigs
unlil
1':00
pm., ac companied
by
Cou~
Records
·Thursday, February 2, Proof of Aulhority of
Co
· ion
shall
2006 and then at 1:t5 the official or agent
meet
anuary 23,
p .m. at said oftl~e signing the bond.
2006 at 10:00 a.m.'al
o.p ened and _ read
Bids shall be sealed
the Meigs County
aloud tor the t61low- and marked as Bid for
Commissioners'
tng:
M i d d l e p o r t office .
Demolition
and
Demolition
and
Nancy Parker Grueser
Removal of three (3) mailed or delivered
Sec;retary
unlls in the Village of to : Meigs County
(1) 16
Middleport,
Meigs Commissioners
Counly, Ohio.
Courthouse
Specifications providPomeroy, Ohio 45769
Public No,t ice
ed In bi(l packet
Attention of · bidde~s
Specifications, and
is called 10 all ot the
The
Rulland
bid forms may be
requirements
con·
Township
Annual
secured at the office tained in this bid
Financial Report Is
of
Meigs County
packet, particularly to
complete and availCommissione rs , the Federal Labo r
able for review at the
CoUrthouse , Standards Provisions
Clerk's Office ~pon
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 , and
Davis-Bacon
request.
Phone 740-992-2895 . Wages, various insurOpal Dyer, Clerk
A deposit of 0 dollars
ance requirements j
740-742-2805
will be required for
(1) 16
various equal oppdr·
each set of plans and
tunity provisions, and
~pecltlcations , Check . the requirement for a
rnade payable to·. The
paymenl bond and
Public Notice
full am,Ounl will be
performance bond for
teturlftd Within. thirty
10011/o of .the contract
Public Notice
(30) c!'ays alter receipt
price . No bidder may
Tuppers
Plaina
J&gt;f bids .
withdraw his bid with·
Sewer
Regional
Each bid must be
in . @rty (30) days
District's
Financial
accompanied
by
after the actual' date
Statemenl 2005 is
either a bid bond in
of the opening thereready for review Upon
an amount of 100% of of, The Meigs Counly
appoinlment
call
the bid amount with' a Commisslo ·ners
(740) 667-9805
surety satisfactory to
reserve the right tO
(1) 16

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

29670 Bashan Road•
Racine , Ohio
'
45771
74()-949-2217

97 Beech Street

Nice one BR unfurn ished
apa rtment. Range &amp; refrig
provided. Weter &amp; garbage
pa id . Deposit required . Call
[740)446-4345 after Spin .

MANAGED BY Silverheefs,
Incorporated , A Rea lty
,
Company
Equal Housing Oppo~ tunity

Jfe

Hill's Self
Storage

ROBERT
BISSEll
COISTRUCnOI

MANlEfS
SElf STORAGE

New Haven, 1 bedroom
unfurnished apa rtment; no
pet·S, deposit &amp; previo us
rental references. (740)9920 165

THE MAP.L ES

I NT

We~;l

I

42 Footblll
lhlpes
45 ~IChe
48 NATO

~tier

Q J
Q 6 2
Q J 5
K'J 7 6 3

Dealer: South ,
Vulnerable: Neither

WV#03 714

Angus Bull, 3 y1 s old, siied
$3.000. (740)256-1253.
by Echelon. easy calviri g.
$1 ,500.
Call
Aski ng
Chev.
1,12 lon
17401446-6 157 or (7401379- 1990
Cheyenne matchirfg topper.
9238 after 6pm.
94,000 mi. $3,000 fi rm or
Regi slered black Ai1gu s lrad e for 4-wheeler of equal
butts lor sale, Call (740)256- value or small farm tractor
1520.
(740)446-7983 after 5:00.
Middleport 1 and 2 Bedroom
tu rn1sh ed Apt s
No Pets.
deposit, and previous rental
references. 740-992-0 165.

0

"' Q 2

Opening lead: • 2

(740) 992-0496

TRUCKS
FOR SALE

1985 Chevy Hon dump ·
truck, new motor, cab &amp;
paint. Used daily, Asking

PUBLIC
NOTICES

.\

•

•
•
•
•

Licensed Home Builder

sell (3041288-3335 ..

:2218.

•

A 6
8 5 4

Soutb

New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

•

mainlained ,

0 1 Ford F150 XLT 4dr, auto.
5.4l , VB, bedcover , 6C D
player, sunroof, good condilion ,
77,000
miles,.
'1S/2 1mpg, $ 12,000. Mu st ·

APAKil\lt:l\1~
FOR REI\'f

&gt;

t
•

South
I olt

Owner

$ 1,500. 1740)441-9951 .

15

Ch

: 1740)385-4019

t:ll"l'I&gt;'ILCE'fiN BOAR

K 9 6 5
K 9 7

rfii~IIUIII.I:I•

·

97 Pontiac Grand AM , 4 cyl .

~ Mobile home spaces m
• Country Mobile Ho·me Pa ri&lt; .

. Get Your Message Ac19ss
Wi!h ADaily Sentinel .·

•
•

0

I CONSTRUCTION~
WOLFE -~

FORSALE

A J 8
K 10 4 3
A 10 9

East

.

A=~

•

West
• A 10 4 2
•
I U 54 3

••are

4734

K 7 3

•

MONTY

01 · 111-06

•

t

P.O.hx11B
MldtiiiPIR.Ihll .
1'11118: 140-143-5284
FIX: 141-IG-1214
llew
Drug
E•H ,
.Pi11 1111 Yll ·IIIV~

3br. 2ba. Heat Pump, 2
miles from Point Pleasant
. $400/mcmth plus deposit
p!)4)675-6233 or (304)593-

:~

North

ROCKY HUPP.
INSURANCE

REMOVAL

a month plus deposl1 . No
pets allowed . {740)385- 3bd' apt for rent . 1,000 sq ft .
•l 019.
washerl dryer hook~up, hardwood floors. Galhpolis city,
3 bedroom mobile horne on
$600/month plus deposit.
Ada msville Ad. $375 month/
references required . no
deposlt reqUired. no pets.
pets (740)441 -b110
Call (7 40)446:4562 ,aft er
Spm.

NEA ·crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

__._.. ,. ____

'

--;

-·-- ..,.

�... .
. Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

~onday,January16,2006

www .mydailysentinel.com

Russia and China join
in demanding Iranian
nuclear compliance, A2

· Trailblazers edge Cleveland Panthers overpower Bears
Bv ANNE. M. PETERSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

. PORTLAND. Ore. - After
Rullen Patterson made sure
LeBron James didn't 'beat the
· Portland Trail BlaLers, he took
bit of. good-natured ribbing
from
teammate
Zach
Randolph.
·
· Randolph
serenaded
l'atterson in the locker room :
"If Ruben can't do it. nobody
.;an!"
.
Patterson and Randolph
each had 16 points and seven
rebounds. and ·the Trail
l3lazers edged the depleted
Clevel,and Cavaliers 89-87
Sunday night.
· LeBron James had 29
'points, 13 rebounds and seven
assists for the Cavaliers, who
lost their fourth straight. James
had just seven points in the
second Mlf. with Patterson
leading the way on defense.
"Ruben came in and gave us
big energy." B)azers coach
l'/ate McMillan said. "He wore
LeBron down."
The Blazers. who have won
three straight for just the ·second time this season, led by as
many as II points in the second half. but the Cavaliers cut
their deficit to 83-81 on Alan
Henderson's layup. James followed with a 3-pointer to give
Cleveland an 84-83 lead with
3:10togo.

a

Juan Dixon answered with a . against the Suns with a
3 to put Por:tland back in front strained right. thigh. The team
before Cleveland's Zydrunas said Gooden was day-to-day
llgau skas tied it with a jumper. and scheduled to see a doctor .
With 47 .7 secoQds left, on Monday.
Henderson fouled Randolph.
"This is a tough time for us,"
who made both . his shots to Jaines said.
give the Blazers an 88-86 lead. The loss of Gooden, who
Eric Snow . missed one of has had six double-doubles in
two free throws to make it 88- his last I 0 games, put an added
87 with 37 .I seconds to go. burden on James, who had 22 .
After both sides missed long points i.n the tirst half.
jumpers, llgauskas fouled out
']J1e Cavaliers trailed by as
and Patterson 111ade just one of many as seven points in the
his foul shots.
half, but James kept making
James took the ball down the sure the game didn't get out of
coun, and Snow was off with hand - his rim-shaking dunk
his long jumper as time wound made tied it at 43.
down.
.
After the Blazers led 51-46
"I just didn't make the shots at the break, the Cavaliers
1wanted to in the second half," came out with a 13-2 run
James said .
capped by Damon Jones' 3Afterward.
McMillan pointer to take a 59-53 advar\embraced Patterson.
tage·.
'
"He just said 'Great D,"'
The Blazers came back to
Patterson said.
take a 77-67 lead on Theo
The Cavaliers have been Ratliff's dunk.
hurt by the loss of Larry
"Ruben is a good defender
Hughes, who is expected to ... that's what he prides himself
miss eight weeks 'after having in ,'' Cleveland coach Mike
surgery on his broken right Brown said. "He did . a great
middle finger. Cleveland is 2-5 job on D, making it tough on
without him, including a 115- LeBron, and he had a lot of
106 loss Saturday at Phoenix. help from his teammates," , ·
James had 46 points, eight
Portland was coming off a
assists and seven rebound.s 113-108 victory over the
against 'the Suns.
Orlando Magic on Friday
The Cavaliers also were night. and 113-103 victory
without'
forward
Drew . over the Los Angeles Lakers
Gooden, who left the game . two nights earlier.

Bv JENNA FRYER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO - It took Steve Smith and
the Carolina Panthers just 55 seconds to
prove the Monsters of the Midway aren't
·.
so scary afler all.
By the time the Chicago Bears regained
their swagger, it was too late to save their
season.
Smith had 12 catches for a career-high
2 18 y.ards and two lon g . touchdowns,
including a 58-yard scoring reception on
the second play from scrimm age, to lead
Carolin_a to a 29-21 victory over the
Chicago Bears on Sunday. It sends the
Panthers into the NFC championship game
for the second ti1ne in three years next
'
week at Seattle.
Carolina,. just the· third No.' 5 seed since
. 1990 to advance to the championship
game, did it by striking early before letting
its defense challenge Rex Grossman , who
was starti.ng just his second game of the
season as Chic&lt;~go's qu&lt;~rterb&lt;~ck.
Grossman, who mis sed most the season
with a broken ankle and had attemptedjust
39 passes heading into the playoffs, was
decent once he settled down. He led the
Bears on two second-half scoring drives to
rally them out uf a 16-7 halftime deficit.
Grossman was driving the Bears again
late in the fourth quarter when they trailed
29-21, but he was intercepted by Ken
Lucas - Carolina's big-money offseason
acquisition - with 2:27 to play, then was
incomplete to former Panthers rece1ver
Muhsin Muhammad on fourth-and-1 to
hand the Panthers the win .
II spoiled a resurgent season for the sto-

Members inducted into
Honor Society, A3

•
.'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;,o CENTS • Vol.;;;; . No. toH

Middleport VFD elects officers, plans for 'o6

SPORTS
AP photo

Carolina Panthers' Ken ·Lucas stops a run by
Chicago Bears' Justin Gage during the third
quarter of their NFC divisional playoff football
game in Chicago Sunday.
~
ried Bears, who. used outstanding defense
to return to the playoffs for the first time in
four years. Thetr run included a 13-3' dominatin g victory over the , Panthers in
November, when the Bears had eight sacks
and two interceptions against Jake
Delhomme.
But the Panthers • rebounded · in the
rematch, using Smitll to prove thi~
Chicago team is still a ways away from its
glory days:

www.nt)&lt;.l:oilrwntim·l.t·""'

TlJESili\Y, ,Ji\Nll/\RY 17, :!OOb

• Eastern drives past
:River Valley. See Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED
8REED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT -David
Hoffman will se rve as
Middleport Fire Chief for
2006, and while the department answered fewer calls in
2005 than the year prior, last
year· still presented "gre.at
changes" for the department.
Jeff Darst, who served as
t1re chief last year. issued an
annual report to Middleport
Village Coupcil at year's end,
outlining the department's
activitie s in 2005 and plans
for 2006. The department's

menlbership met in December
''Runs were down sli ghtly
to elect department ofticers.' from 2004. bul we were faceu
Other officers e lected were: with greater ~ halle n ges."
Bruce Swift, assistant chief; Darst said in his annual
John Newsome, captain; John report. "We operated at three
Bechtle, first lieutenant; working tires in the hu,;iness
Keith Darst, · second lieu - di strict and did out&gt;landing
te1\ant; Jonathan Acree, third jobs on all of them."
lieutenant; Jeff Darst, presiThe report shows 11 8 fire
dent; Bruce Swift. vice presi- run s fo r 2005, including 16
dent ; Larry Byer. treasurer; \tructure fires, six ve hic le
and Jacob .Davi s, secretary.
Jires, 37 rescue calls ·and 24
Firefighter Don Stiver was calls for mutual aid for other
honored for 30 years of ser- departments. The structu re
vice to the department, Larry and vehicle fire&gt; caused
Byer for 25 years, William $346,100 in damage .
Fink for IS years. and Keith · In November, Middleport
Darst for live.
·
Village Council aut ho rized

I he deJiartment io oru~r a
$323,000 fire c n ~ i ne .

nev.. ur l&lt;&gt;r renewal next year. and
The ~ mter' rejett that le"Y - as
truck will take over a year tu they Jill a levy for street
build and will rcpl'ace · a 20 ld1h 111 November - counyear-old model now in the cil wi ll he Faced with a
department tleet , Darst said. )'OIUKJO uebt fo r the truck.
The old truck wil l be sold to
The department al'o spent
another department.
ncC&lt;rl} 'h 7,000 tu repair the
At the time of the \'ole. two dcparl ment's Ladder 16 truck,
outgoing members of council. and new ha) heaters and rear
Roger Manley and Shawn Ll Vl'rhcad door we·re inqaJied
Rice voted ·against the pur- "th
t'uncls
from
the
chase.
while
Council· Cummunily . Development
President Stephen Hou ~ hin s . . HI&lt;K' k Gram Community
Jell Peckham and Robe rt Di stress progr;un. a half-milRobinson voted in J'a\'or. A lion dnl lar Qranl award to be
tax le vv which wi ll fin zmce used frl1 Lva nous villa~e
lhe 'truck's purchase wi ll be improwments.
'

·Topple
from Page 81
road. They lost at Illinoi s and
Wisconsin and beat Indiana .
at home.
·
"They.' ve been in a lot of
games like that," Sylvester
said. "They're very tough
mentally and phy sically. I
think it reflects on the character of Tom lzzo."
Shannon
Brown
led
Michigan State, which has
won its last four trips to
Columbus, with 20 points.
Davis had 12 rebounds, while
Matt Trannon had 14 points,

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away," lzzo said.
and hit both to make it 60-56.
In the second overtime,
Sylvester hit an NBATrannon, a wide receiver on length 3 with 12 seconds
the football team, scored the left to cut the lead to one,
Spartans' first' four points, but Davis closed the scorwith Brown hitting a pull -up
jumper for a 56-53 .le&lt;ld . ing with hi s two foul shots.
"Both teams played hard.
Sylvester, the hero uf Ohio
State's stunning upset of No. · Both . teams played great
sai&lt;l.
Dial s
!-ranked and
unbeaten defense ,"
Illinois in last year's final "Mkhigan ' State just made
regular-season game, coun- more plays at the end to ·win
tered with a 3-pointer for the the game. It was a battle."
Buckeyes to tie it.
The win was a flashback
With 44 . seconds left,
Neitzel drove the lane and of sorts for the Spartans.
'Tm really excited," lzzo
banked in a · shot with a
defender &lt;lraped on his' back . said. .. A lot of our older
Sullinger missed at the ·other players were here. I felt like
end before Neitzel was the old guys were back and
fouled with 17 seconds left we played our old style." .

'
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Reaeh 3 Counties

·~-···-···-···-···

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when leading scorer Je ' Kel score in the fmal 7:20 of regand II rebounds.
Maurice Ager. averaging Foster fouled out early in the ulation. The Buckeyes man21 points a game, mustered second overtime. He had an aged just two baskets in the
just two on 1-of-11 s)Jooti ng. otT shooting night with just last 8:40 as the teams traded
Terence Dials led Ohio eight points - almost half body blocks and bruises.
State ( J 2-2, 2-2) with 19 his average - but he had
In the first overtime, Ohio
points and 10 rebounds , with nine rebounds, three assists State trailed 50-48 before
Sylvester 4dding 17 points on and didn't have a turnover in Sylvester rebounded in traffic .
4-of-6 shooting behind the 40 minutes.
and muscled the ball back in
arc.
"It killed us," Matta said of with I 5. seconds left.
. The Buckeyes ' losses. have the loss of foster .
The Spartan s hurried the
Ohio State (greed the first ball down the court before
come by two and three points
overtime by scoring the final calling a timeout. With the
to ranked teams.
· .."It's not a game that makes four points of regulation - a capacity crowd . n;&gt;aring,
or breaks our season," coach jumper by Butler with 5:54 Davi s put up a shot that
Thad Matta said. "Just like left and a sweeping left-hand- missed the mark and Ager
any win or any loss, you have ed hook by Dials with 34 sec- tipped it. The ball bounced
\O luok at it quickly and rriove . onds left. Ager misfired over twice before caroming away
on. We have to lind a way to Foster 's tight defense with a as the buzzer sounded .
·
second left.
get back."
"I thought we had it won a
The Buckeyes were hurt
The Spartans failed to couple of times and let it slip

.

:

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.
i Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
i Gallipolis Daily Tribulle, Point Pleasant Register, or
i Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run 'For FREE .In
I
The Tri-County Marketplace!
•

•

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••

HOLIDAY FUN
OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Roger Bissell
• Oliver 'Gene' Bailey
• Norman Milliron
· • Anna Carroll Roach

INSIDE
• NASA set to launch
spacecraft to Pluto, last
unexplored planet.
See Page A2 ·
• C()urt urges Austria to .
retum Klimt paintings stolen
by Nazis to heir of Jewish
owners. See Page A2
• PVH physician named
vice president of Board of
Medicine. See Page A3

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/®allipoli5 llailp m:ribunc The Daily Sentinel ,Jloint ,Jllcasant ~cgistcr!
L· . . ~. !~!.~~~.234~-···-···~... ~..r~~!&gt;2.~:.~?.._...- ... - ... -.~~)..ill.:!~1-... _..J
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Josh Lavender of
Pomeroy, pictured here,
Jan Macknight, of
.Pomeroy, and their
friends , Mike Lavender'
and Butch Camp of
Mason, W.Va ., to'ok
advantage of a warm
and sunny holiday to
ride skateboarqs and
try a few stunis on a
vacant lot on Pomeroy's
West Main StrElet yesterday. Water Works
Park in Pomeroy was
another popular holiday
spot for brother and sis,
ter Troy (left) and Aliyah
Gant of Pomeroy who
enjoyed the playground
and ate lunch with their
mother Sharon in the
park. The. Martin Luther
· King, Jr. Day observance closed' I schools.
banks and public ·
offices, and unseason:
ably warm temperatures
allowed for a number of
outdoor activities for
those lucky enough to
have a day off work or
school.

STAFF REPORT

INDEX

NEWS@MYDAIL~SENTINEL.COM

2 S ECI'IONS- 12 PAGI'-"

. Calendars

' A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

ss

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

A'i

'
Weather

.

.

BY

in Co lumbus with approxillliltely 1.000 f;lir managers
' "nd suppuners attending. The
POMEROY
pre,entution "a' made at .the
Recognition for an nu t&gt;tan d- annual mectin~ between the
ing 2oos c·ounty fair "'h director of agriculture and
given tn the ~lei g' Cuunt~ Ohio'&lt; 9-1 agricuhural &lt;ociAgriculturul Soc·iet\ b1 Ohio . el ie' "hic,h ,;:1, held in conAI!rinliture Di rcct(&gt;r Fred L. jun,·ttoit mill the lair manDZtiley at the recent Ohio f'air

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
· HOEFLICH@MYDAicYSENTINEL.COM

Manager~ A~su~iat ion.

TheLco m:ention wa' h e l~ at
the Ohio Cnn1·entic&gt;n Center

Please see Fair. AS

Submitted photo

The Me igs County Hea lth De partment l~a s bee n tak•ng its flu
vaccine to the public dunng seyeral outre ach. clill&lt;CS where 84
county residen!S were rece ntly moculated. One of those restdents was Ari zona Tay lor who was with hiS moth er Carol at a
clinic held at th e Salem Ce nter Fire Departmen t where Sherry
priate eligibility anJ vc nfica• Parti cipat)ts arc a,k,·d ne&gt;t . Hayrnan. RN . hel ped ad mims ter flu shots.
tion document s.
to hring e\lra pen p i ~ "hn arc
Some things to know bcfC1re no~ be1n~ te,lcd. The site
..
.:oming to he tested include uni1s arc L;m :dl and 'cat in~ .
the following : ·'Pilc'e is 1cr~ limited .
" '
• Th ere are nd puhli c
• Some waler bill, do not I
restro01m at the ! ~stin g sites. h e~le resilient·, name on lhem .
t&lt;-+ l ' ll l / t.:' ll ...
BY BETH SERGEI'IT
• Children can nnly )l&lt;tl11ci - only the addres.s: participants BS(RGfNTL!'MYD~Il\ SE~T i ~Et c o~1
\lCHD
,.\"istant
pate in the project if their par- using those bills 111 ducunwnt _ _ _ _
..\dmi ni-..tratnr Cl1Urt'ne\ Slm .
entllegal guardian 1s present. ·. th,·ir rc,ideuce 'hould he sure
PO~lER O ) _ ·1he \ic- 1 ~, I'C k.l"'l'd the IP il n\\ ing ~- linic:-,
!Grandparents or relati i'Cs their name 1s pnnlcd on lh e~t Coullll Hc"t lth ))e p:Hilllc'l ll .md nu 111her uf "hnh gnen at
cannot ·,bring them unless they hil l.
...
.
1 tMCHb l i.' ma" n~ lll ' I•' ' a t..':h.:li
, 11 ~
Ccdumhia
pro1·c the y are the le gal
• Posl Oll lc'c' B'" Is not :m dd:11 111 tis ,1Jil&gt;l11c' l11 ot ll u Tll ll n'h' l' Fir,· l),·p :u1ffi&lt;'l11 ~.
guarl\ian .··
al:L'l'pl tlble clddrl'""' · .\1] dutll - . \~h..' l'Hll' h~ hl!l i ll ~ lhl' rP.td S.tklll
Cctilc r
Fire
• An adu lt ,·annnt r"train a 111\'l!lali••n 111U st ha1 c the· par' .mci'Ltkin ~ ~h e· ""''·"w ll.• 1lw l)vp.ll't nwnt · 1. Rc1tland Fir~
child or fnr..:e him/her to ha1e tic·ipant's l' hl , lc ,d aJdrc" .
· puhl.~c· &lt;nil w l••rm ,,r II LI!IL'.&lt;c·h 11c r·.trlnll..' n l ~o. Reed'\ ille
hln1&gt;d drawn .
• The · hlrih c·c·nil'icate ! c:illllc'' lili'&lt;•LI FI.i,u: the' •'&lt;Hill!) . hi e I lcpan me'ill . ,J . I he Ctxil .
• Partic-ipant s may be at the. re,·eiiL'd •Uthc ,hu,li llai l' ll&lt;'t '
Dunn~ &lt;&gt;&lt;i li &lt;': tdJ ,·li n&gt;&lt;; S I'' &gt;I lll'llll he1 2 •Tupper'
t ~sti~ g ,i tc' .fur an hour or -· "· ,,1
.
·II hcl~l nn J"n 4. ,' - h. e~nJ I '
nwrc.
,,
Ple'll'se see Testing, AS
. ~1( Hll 11 11rh· r, :nllc ul. &lt;tc·d
Please see Vaccine, AS

C8 tips offered for those ye't to undergo testing

Details on Page A2

Sports

2005 Meigs County Fair
recognized for excellence
I

Brtan J. Reed/ Beth
sergenl/photos ·

••

•

e

.. WEATHER

On behalf of the Meigs County Fair Board
accepts a certificate of r-ecogn.ition for an outstand ing 2005
county fair from ·Ohio Agriculture Fred L. Dai ley.

· B Section
A2

(c- 2006 .Ohiu Vu llt') l"uhli .. hin.: (.' o , ·

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va .
- The C~ Health Project.
conducted by Bmokmar Inc ..
is seeing approximately .160
. people at its , six 'testing sites
(m a daily basis.
The complete information
ahnut eligibility and docu·mcntation requirement s i;
a1ailahlc via th e web
1wwM .c~ hcalthproject.org ).
Brookinar ha' formulat ed a
list nf aduilional tip' fnr those
preparing to .come to their
testing appointment to insure
flarti'cipants amvc at their
appointment with the appro-

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Outreach clinics vaccinate
.
84 people against flu .

-,.

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