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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday,' January 17,

2006

NFL says ref got Polamalu call wrong; .no comment.on Porter remark
BY DAVE GoLDBERG
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The NFL said the referee made a
mistake: Troy Polamalu caught the
bal!.
The
league
acknowledged
'Monday that referee Pete Morelli
erred when he overturned on replay
Polamalu"s interception of a Peyton
Manning pass Sunday in the playoff
game between . Pittsburgh ang
Ind ianapolis.
Mike Pereira, the league 's vice
president of officiating, said in a
statement that Morelli should have
let the call on the field stand.
"He maintained
possession long
enough
10 establish a catch,"
Pereira said. "Therefore, the replay
review should have upheld the call
on the field that it was a catch and
fumble .."
After the reversal, made with
5:26 left in Pittsburgh's win over
the Colts, Indianapolis went on to
. score a touchdown and a 2- point
conversion, cutting the Steelers' 2 110 lead to 21- 18. That led to a wild

Star witness in Oklahoma
City bombing trials
scheduled for release, A2

final few minutes. filled with unbe- ball. It came out, and so we made take the game away from us like
lievable twi sts an\1 turns , including the play an incomplete pass."
that."
NFL spokesman Greg Aiello had
Colts kicker Mike Vanderjagt's . Under leag ue officiating procemissed 46-yard fie\d-goal attempt dure, an "act common to the game" no comment on Porter 's statement.
that clinched it for Pittsburgh.
is defined as controlling the ball
In · the past, players who have
On the play, Polamalu made a long enough to hand it, pitch it or made such · statements have been
diving catch of Manning's pass, pass it. But Pereira noted that this subj ect to fines.
tumbled with it in hi s hands and got definition only applies when there
Polamalu 's overturned intercepup to run. As he did, he fumb led the is "contact with a defensive player lion wasn ' t, the only unusual call.
ball, then recovered, Colts ·coach and the ball comes' loose, which did Earlier in the game, when the
. Tony Dungy challenged the call, not happen here ."
Steelers were preparing to go for a
and Morelli ruled Polamalu had not
The NFL almost never makes fourth -and -inches
fro m
the
completed ·the catch,
public the · result .of its reviews, Pittsburgh 48, two 'Colts defensive
Had the ~a ll stood, the Steelers . although it did three years ago, lineman ran across the line of
would have had the ball at their when Pereira said offici'als should scrimm age, pointing at the Steelers
own 48 with an 11 -point lead.
have called pass intert'ercnce as if one of the linemen moved.
fi
Shortly .after · the . ga me , Morelli against San Francisco on the 1nal
The officials stopped the game,
· offered the·fo llowing explanation: play of a wild-card game with the but called no penal ty.
"I had the defender catching the New York Giants. The correct call
Replays appeared to show Alan
ball. Before he got up, he h1t 1t wllh would have g1v7n New York a sec- Faneca barely flinched. But
' h1s leg w1th h1s other leg st1ll on the ond chance .to k1ck a.game-wmmng Steelers coach Bill Cowher argued
AP photo
ground. · He never had possessiOn f1eld goa \ 1~ a 39:38 loss. .
the Colts made contact with the Pittsburgh Steelers' Troy Polamalu
with his leg .up off the ground, The callm lndianapoli~ mcensed linemen, which wou ld have forced tries to recover his own fumb le after
doing an act common to the game Pittsburgh linebacker Joe~ . Porter, an offside call and a first down. he apparently intercepted a pass
ot footba ll . He was losmg It wh1\e who smd after the ga~e: . I know Instead, Ben Roethlisberger rau a thrown by Indianapolis Colts quarterhi s other leg w~s still on the they wanted Indy towm this game; quarterback sneak for a first down, · !Jack Peyton Manning in the fou rth
ground . Therefore, he did not com- the whole world loves Peyton · which allowed Pittsburgn to use quarter of NFL playoff football action
· ph~te the catch. And then he I&lt;;!St the . Manning. But come on, man, don ' t · another 5:02 before punting.
· on Sunday in l~di anapoli$.

ne
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o CENTS • Vul. :;:;, Nu, lOI)

job.
.
·The Jets als() spoke to three
other candidates: former
· NEW YORK
Eric
Saints coach Jim Haslett, for- .
Mang ini started ·hi s NFL
mer Rams"interim coach Joe,
career in the public re lations
Vitt and Giants defen sive
department for the Cleveland
coordinator Tim Lewis.
Browns.
'
Edwards ·parted ways with
Now he is making the head· the Jets in a me ssy split.
lines.
.
Speculation for the better part
The New England Patriots
of the season linked him to
'defen sive cootdinator and. to'p
the Chiefs. Though iohnson
disciple to Bill Belichick has
told the team in November he
accepted · an offer to become
wanted Edwards to stay, he
the next New York Jets coach.
made few comments publicly
a person familiar with the si·l" ·
to squelch the rampant specu.uation said Monday night.
lation the Chiefs wanted his
The person spoke on condi coach.
tion of anonymity because no
The idea that Edwards
official announcement · had
would ask ·for an extension
been made by the team.
after going 4-12 may have
Mangini, who turn s 35 on
rubbed some in the organi zaThursday,
become s the
tion the wrong way, leaving
youngest head coach in the
them no choice but to let
league. He replaces Herman
Edwards · go, After severa l
Edwards, who left for Kansas
days of negotiating, the Jets
City after five seasons.
AP photo received a fourth-round pick
A Jets spokesman said· the
as compensation fo r Edwards
club had no announcements New England Patriots defen- fro
m the .Chiefs.
· to make and declined further sive coordinatdr Eric Mangini ,
Mangini
inherits a team that
comment.
right, looks across the field has its share of questions.
"We ·haven't heard any- during the final minutes of a
thing," New England Patriots 27-13 loss to the Denver That is the big reason why
spokesman Stacey Jame s Broncos during their AFC Edwards wanted an extension, because he anticipated it
said.
Divisional Pl ayoff footb all might take a few years· to
A few hours after praising game in Denver Saturday.
rebuild the team.
Vikings coach Mike Tice for
Chad
Quarterback
his interview. general manag:
he'
ll
probably
have
a
lot
of
Pennington
is
coming
off
hi s
er Terry Bradway, assistant
in
this
league.''
second
major
shoulder
injury.
success
GM Mike Tannenbaum and
owner Woody Johnson moved . Mangini also has close ties Though he vowed to be re&lt;~.d y
to Tannenbaum and was an for the stan of training camp,
quickly to hire Mangini.
ass
istant with the Jets from the Jets plan to bring in a vetHe emerged as the leading
1997-99,
working
with eran to compete for the startcandidate for the Jets last
,
'
.
wee]\. Though he is youn g Belichick in the secondary. ing job.
Belichick
has
talked
Mangini
Another
major
question
is
and has been a coordinator for
out
of
taking
coordi
nator
jobs
whether
veteran
running
back
one season, he is regarded as
one ofthe brightest defensive in the past, but was· unable to Curti s Martin will return.
Edwards planm!d to have
minds in the game after do the same thi s time.
In
a
strange
twist,
Belichick
Martin
bac k, but Mangini
spending I 0 of his 11 seasons.
was
Jets
head
cOach
for
one
mi
ght
have
different thoughts.
in the NFL working under
day before changi ng hi s mind The 32-year-old back is comBelichick.
The Jets hope some of the and bOlting for New England ing off knee su(ge ry ,'and
Belichick genius rubbed off in 2000. That connection did- might nut be viable as a
n't seem to bother New York starter anymore. The Jets also
on his protege.
"He definitely has the abili- and Johnson, who is desperate need help at offensive line
ty to be a grea,t coach in this to gain on the Patriots in the and receiver.
The defense should be the
league," Patriots defensive AFC East.
With Mangini in, defensive strength of the team. and
end Richard Seymour said
after the Patriots were elimi- coordinator
Donnie could be even better , with
nated from the playoffs. "He Henderson. offe nsive coordi- Mangini at the helm . But the
has a lot of tools that it takes. nator Mike Heimerdinger and Jets must make a decision on
He's very poised. He 's · a special teams coordinator · .whether t~ put the franchi se
smart guy. He understands Mike Westhoff would proba- tag on defensive end John
defenses and how to take bly be out. All · three inter- Abraham or sign him to a
things away from offenses. so viewed for the head coaching lbng-terrn contract.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

SPORTS
• Meigs falls to Falcons.
See Page 81

kept runnin g, I'd get three
yards, seven,-one , then we 'd
air it out and go deep. When
the game was close and it
was time to run out the clock,
I eventuall y broke one ."
Pittman admitted he got
excited when the Buckeyes
began their last possession
with 5:27 to go.
"I knew I was going to. get
73 carries as a fre shm an a lot of to uches,'· he said. "I
playing behind Lydell Ross . prepared to .hold on.to the
and Maurice Hall , Pittmaw ball."
fin ished his sophomore year
Wells ended his season on
with I ,33 1 y,ards. more than a.. hi gh note as well. being
Maurice Clarett's 1,237 · named MVP of the All- ·
yards during the national American Bowl iA San
championship season of An tonio. Playing for the
2002.
.East, Wells rushed for 67 .
Pittman scored all seven of yards on 13 carries and three
his touc hdowns in the final scores in a 27- 16 win agai nst
five games, · endin g · his the West.
drought w.it·h a 67-yarder in
"It was exciting for mej u ~t
the th1rd quarter Oct. 29 at to go down there and show
Mmnesota that some thought , people what 1cou ld do," said
was one of the turmng pomts he 6-foot-2, 230-pound
of the season.
Wells. "Because it was. an
He received a huge boost all,star game , I really wasn't
of cont1dence in the final two ex pecting to play that
games, beati ng Michigan much ."
.
with a 3-yard touchdown run
Maybe Well s received
with. 24 seconds left. then.. preferential treatment . The
clmch1ng the VIctory over East coac h was Glenville
Notre Dame with a 60-yard coach Ted Gin n Sr., whose
tou chdown.
son is Ohio State wide
lt was the perfect fini sh for receiver Ted Ginn Jc.
whai could have been a frusWells will grad uate early
. trati ng day for Pittman , who from Garfi eld. His last day
totaled 136 vards on 21 car- of school is Tuesday.
ries. ·He also caught a 10"My cl asses at Ohio State
yard pass on third-and-9 on start in March," he said. "I'm
Ohio State's final drive.
.ready to go·down there, ·stan
"Go·ing in with a month to . school and be part of the
prepare; we knew it was team . I'm a little nervou s
going to be an exc it ing about that but I'm more ncrgame," Pittman said. '' We vous about leaving home,"

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILVSENTIN EL.COM

offices, including those of
Governor,
Attorney
General, Auditor of State ,
Treasurer of State, and
, Supreme Cou rt Ju sti ce ·are
up fo r election thi s yea r.
Candidates
for.
State
Representative wi ll also be
on the ba ll ot.
The terms of several county officeholders al so expire
this year, according to
· Director Rita Smith of the

Meigs County Board ·of
Elections. The term of
County Comm issioner Mick
Davenport will expire at.
year's end; and voters wi ll
elect a Common Pleas Court
Judge, Cou nty Court Judge
and County Auditor.
The auditor's race may be
the most closely-watched in
th is year's electio n. A•uditor
Nancy Park,e r Grueser ha s
annou nced she will ·not seek

re-e lection. leaving that
position open. Grue&gt;er. ti ·
Republican completin g her
twelfth year in office, sa id
Tuesday she has decided not ·
to run for anothe r term . so
she can spend time with
family.
Two Republican candidales
are circulating petitions for
that post, but have nut yet
filed.
Smith
said
no
Democratic candidates have

filed for the Auditor\ post.
Candidates wi II have
until Feb . 16 -to filed peti ti on; for their re spective
primarie s. Write-ins , can
fi le "' ca ndidates until
'
March \3.
Member&gt; of the Meigs
County Democratic and
Central
Republican
Committee&gt; will also be
elected in May from each
voting precinct in the county.

Rice named Local youth leagues benefit from motorists' donations
BY
president of
BETH SERGENT

8SERGENT®MYDAILY5ENTINEL.COM

Eastern

POMEROY - So often
when people are asked tq
donate 'to . state programs
throu2h the Bureau of
Motor Vehicles (BMV) they
wonder if any of that money
eve r find s its way back to
Meigs County.
·The answer to that question

school board
STAFF .REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENT INEL.COM

. TUPPERS PLAINS
The Eastern Local Board of
Education elected Jolin Rice
pre sident and · Shelia Taylor
as vice pre si d~nt ·during its ·
org;mizational meeting .
Charle s Weber was named
legi slative liaison and Taylor
student achievement liaison .
The board approved the fo llowing com mittee appointments: Policy, Greg Bailey
and Taylor: Building and
Page AS ,
:Grounds. Bailey and Howard
• RoiJer Lewis Bissell, 67
Caldwell: Finance, Rice and
Weber: Personnel. Ri ce and
• Jack McGuire, 67
Taylor; Publi c Relation s:
• Catherine M. Stacy, 60
Caldwell and Weber.
. The board app roved the
bond for the treasurer at
$50.000. with cost to be
paid by th e Board of
f:ducat ion.
• Sago Mine Survivor
The
board
approved
of
a
McCloy moved out of ICU. appoi ntment'
.finance/audi
t
co
mmittee
to
· See. Page A2
meet periodically with board
• Council looks at past,
treasurer and superintendent

is

OBITUARiES

INSIDE

plans for future activities.
See Page A3 .
• Weavers announce
birth. ~ Page A3
• Clinic's advanced
CT scanner aids early
diagnosis. See Page AS
• Woman acquitted
of baby's death.
See Page AS
• Law You Can Use.
See Page A6
• Bill to end worker
residency laws raises
constitutional question ..
See Page A6

.· Meigs County Visitors Guide

Please see Eastern. AS

Cheshire to
celebrate
new council,
annexation
BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CHESH IRE - Assured of
a future through a successful
annexa tion move, Cheshire
ha' forged ahead for the new
year ·with the appointment or
a new village council.
The appointments were
WEATHER
made when council reorganized for 2006 on Jan . 3.
Mayor Jim Rife and me_rnbers
of the.oUigoing cou nci l made
the.
appoinlmcnts
at
December's m eet in~.
The new coun cil consists
of ·Dann v Palme r. Glen
Beebe, G;Iry Rife . D. Paul
"Stinson, Connie' Palmer and
Jim · Schmoll. Danny and
Connie Palmer wi ll serve two
years. fillin g out the remainDetails on Page A6
der of th e terms held by Doris
Zerkle and Terry Lucas, who
resigned. Th e others will
serve four-vcar terms.
A1ipoi nt1i1ent s were necessary
· because the annexation
2 SECTIONS - 12 PAGE.,~
· wasn' t offi cial until Oct. 26.
Ca lendars
A3 2005. too \a le to enter names
on the Nov. 8 ballot that cov,
Classifieds
B3-4 cred vilia&lt;'e elect ions. vi ll age
Fisca l Otlf·icer April Stin son
Comics
Bs explained .
A ce lebration honoring for:

Behind

Polamalu's interception with somehow stuck out an arm to...
5:26 (emaining.
make perhaps the most fortuThe mistake had to be a itous tackle in team hi story,
major one for the NFL to Bettis might have ended a
from Page Bl
ac knowledge it, since the Hall of Fame career with the
league almost never makes mistake of a lifetime.
They have been wildly suc- public its rev iews of the offiBut Colts kicker Mike
cessfu l this way, playing with ciating.
. Vanderjagt prevented that by
confidence and an on-theBut the Steelers made a far missing a ga me-tying 46edge aggression that was vis- worse gaffe of their own with . yard fie ld goal attempt on the
ibly missing when they were I :20 remaining. With 'Bettis Colts' fi nal play.
15-1 and the top-seed in last carrying on a first down at
Not since Franco Harris
season's playoffs before los- the Colts' 2 arid his team ' caught a fast-tumbling
ing to New England 41-27 mate; already celebrating on deflected pass off his shoefor the conference title,
the sidelines, the Colts Gary tgps and scored the most
"Everybody counted us out Brackett slammed hi s helmet remarkable touchd own in.
about six weeks ago, so don't into the bal l and knocked it NFL
hi story
the
change now." linebacker loose . se nding it boun cing Immacu late Recept ion . Joey Porter said. ··Everybody upfield.
against the Oakland Raiders
was against us. so keep it that
Normally, Bettis carries the in 1972 have the Steelers
way. It keeps a chip on our ball protectively, tuc ked high been involved in such a
shoulder, .it makes u5 play . 'aga·inst his chest, but this bizarre and miraculous finlike we know how to play ...
time the ball seemed to be ish .
Well , at least for 55 min- more in rrunt of him tnan
"When Jerome fumbled,
utes Sunday in Indianapolis it usual That was all that ·we were over there talking,
did.
Brackett needed to create saying, ' Well. there must be a
After dominating the Colts· Bettis' first .fumble all sea- · reason, because he doesn't
for three quarters 10 open a son. one that almost rivaled fumble.' " Roethli sberger
21 -3 lead, the Steelers admit- Earnest Byner's famed The . said. "So, somehow. sometedly may have gone into a Fumble on what would have thing's supposed to happen."
protect-the-lead shell too , been a go-a head touchdown
Sunday in Denver, they'll
early, and the Colts surged for the Browns late in their find out what that something
back to make it 21-18 .
1988 AFC championsh ip is supposed to be .
Of course, it didn't help game loss to Denver.
"We know that everythat the second Colts' TD
If the Colts' Nick Harper body's against you, and all
came after what the NFL said hadn 't been running on two we
have
is
us,"
· M(lnday was a blown c~ \1. ' &gt;Ore ·Jeg s after scooping 'up 'Roethlisberger said. 'That's
·referee Pete Morelli \ rever- the ball , and if quarterba~k what makes this team so
sa! of Steelers safety Troy Ben Roethlisberger hadn 't strong."

www, Jn)&lt;hril~"·ntirwl.t·•un

:.!()(1(}

Candidates circulating primary·election petitions
POMEROY - Candidates
have begun to circulute. petitions for county otlices in
preparation for the May·2 primary election.
· This year's election will
draw atten tion to statew ide
and distric t candidates, as
Wel l us four co untv -widc
races. Severa l state- level

Ohio State's Pittman for starting job

AKRON (AP) - Not even
a I ,300-yard season th at
included big plays against
Michigan and Notre Dame is
enough to guarantee 'Ohio
State
tailback Antonio
Pittman the starting job ·next
s·eason.
. And the player who cou ld
take the job away from
Pittman, or at least cut heavily into his playing time, is
still a high school senior who
won't officially sign as an
Ohio State recruit until Feb,
I.
But the three-touchdown
performance by Akro n
Garfield's Chris Wells on
national television Jan .. 7 in
the high school AllAmerican Bowl ~hawed why
he's a threat to take Pittman's
job.
.
Pittman is well a.ware he
cim't slack off after the No.4
Bu ckeyes completed a I 0-2
season with a 34-20 ~ictory
over Notre Dame on Jan. 2 in
the Fiesta Bowl.
He is already working out
on his own even though winter conditioning doesn't
begin until mid-February.
'The fact he's coming is
going to be a natural 1-2
. pun ch, two kid s from
Akron," said Pittman who
attended Akron Buchtel.
"I'm all for it. Still, I' ve got
to work even harder."
The 5-foot-11 , 195-pound
'Pittman made a huge leap
last season in understanding
the film study and dedication
required' of a starter.
After gaining 38 J .yards on

WEDNESDAY, .JANUARY 18,

-.

·Mangini to become next Jets.coach Freshman·RB Wells to challenge
BY ANDREA ADELSON

Redmen collect
•
Win
over
Shawnee State, Bt

Beth Sergent/ photo

Residents who made a $1 donation when renewing their license plates at the Bu reau of
Motor Vehicles (BMV) helped four l(lcal .youth ball associations In Meigs County rece1ve free
he lmets with face protection thro ugh the Save Our Sight program. Mode li ng the helmets are
(front row ) Grace Edwards, Maddison Woodyard, Cody and Co lten Rayburn , all players for the
Chester·Ball Association who were JOined by their coaches (back row ) Angie Edwards (also of
the BMV) and Shawn Rayburn. ·

DON'T MISS OUT ON HAVING YOUR ·BUSINESS
OR ORGANIZATION INCLUDED
Dave Harris or Brenda Davis

992-2155

The Dail Sentinel
.

.

.

,___,

Please see Youth, AS

Fire damages home on Hysell Run
BY BETH SERGENT

Chi ef panny 'Davis said this home ai the time of I he fir&lt;: .
his department recei ve d an
Davis said it appeared the
alert time of 7:5.:1 p.m. on fire began around the chimMIDDLEPORT
A · Monday c:oncerning the tire ney and that it was contained
structure fire heavily dam- and responded to the home of · to the b:1ck of the· hnuse.
aged a home ·on Monday · Terry and Ni cole Smith at Da1·is . added thai I he house
el'ening
outside
of 32855 Hv.se \1 Run Road . was not '&lt;~ total Jm,.., but \\'a..,
Middl epnrt
thnugh
no MiddlepLH:L·
not livable as it was paniall y
injuries were reported
Mr. Smilh was away work- demovcd.
·
No ~o fficial catiSe for the
Rut land . Assi&gt;tant Fire ing though Mrs. Sn1ith was
BSERGENT®MY DAILYSE~TINE L . COM

tire ha' been relea,ed and it
remain' under invc&gt;~igation.
The Rtnland Volunteer
Fire Department responded
v. i1h f&lt;\ur truck s and 19 men
a11d "as ass i,led bv the
Pom enl\ Volunteer · F1re
Departniem who , re;ponded
with
t"L' truck.s . and
mne men .

Potential buyer on tap for Highlander plant
BY DtANE 'POTTORFF
DPOTIORFF@MYDAILYREGISTER .COM

th at was formed to own and
&lt;iperme the
plant.
Ed
McDe1·it1 with the law o(fice
of B•m·Je,. Rice . McDal'id.
Graff and Lon .LLP of
Chark,h&gt;n. who i, reJ1rc,ent - ·
in~ Felmai1 Production .· Inc..
saiJ. The company is pan of
tht' Pri1·at Group, a large
1\'

NEW HAVEN . W.Va . - A
potential. buyer may ha ,.c
bee n found for (he Global
Industries High lander Alloys
pl :u1t in New Hai'Cil "hich
ha.s been shut down si nce
October.
internal it 'nltll
,1.: orporat inn
Felman Produciion Inc. a Jo,·aicd 111 the U~rain~. .
Delaware Corp. company. ha'
"The) kn"w wh at the y are
expressed an interest in pur- Joing. " \kDe\ itt said of the
the plant and ha&gt; gnmp , "The~ arc C\perienccd
Dear Abby
A:3 mer council m e mber~ and chasing
pl aced a $20 mill ion bid on
the new ones ha' the table. according to Point in the all&lt;ll bu,inc\1 and hti\C
Editorials
A4 welcomin~
been set for Saturllav at , I Pleasant at tnmcy Micht]el had their ~nginccrs looking at
' the plan!. ..
p.m. in the Cheshire ·Baptist
Obituaries
As . Church
Shaw.
On Oct. .1 I. thc• plam. \ocatfel luwship hall. .
A
federa
l
·
judge
ha1
cJ
on W.Va. 62 north of :-.le\1·
Sports
B Section
The celeb ration will . d ~o .apprcl\ ed the ;a le and 1'\0W ·
welcome 1he more tl\afl IlXl
Ha,·en. wa\ ·"~hut dn\ltll ~ttL:r a
Weather
A6 new reside111s to the ,·ill age both &gt;ides arc fine tuning the fire blew a hole in the boll om
agreement. Shaw said. .
Please
see
Cheshire,
AS
The cnm pan) is a new cn ti ~ 20o(, Ohio Valle~· Publhhlng Co .
Please see Plant. AS

INDEX

,~yes."'

Motorist&gt; who made a
nonrefundable $\ donation
to the Ohio Department of
H e~ lih · s Save Our Sight program when renewing their
license pla1es contributed to
free batting helmets and protective eyewear for yo un g
athletes on vouth baseball
teams, t eam~s th at are in
Meigs County.
The .four Mei gs County
you1h league; that benefited
fron\ . the program were
Ea stem
Youth
Ball
Association.
Midd leport
Youth League of the Big
Bend. Racine Youth League
and Southern High School
Soflball. This according to
the Ohio Opt)thalmological
Society which oversees the
program ·also known as Play
Hard. Don't Blink . .A lways
Wear Protective Eyewear.
Chester
Youth
Ball
As&gt;ociation President and
Coach Shawn Rayburn said
1ha1 ihe Eastern Youth Ball
Association received 75· helmets with face protection
masks. of which his teams in
Chester and team s in Tuppers
Plains benefited from .
Ravburn sa id eventuall v he
belie\ep the special helmet
would be mandatory to pre. vent eve injurie~ in children ..
Tile· EaSiern Youth Ball
.- \"odmion has. around 270
. children !both boys anq

Dian' Pottorffj j&gt;hoto
The Highlander Alloys plant in New H ~ven has been Sitting idle
s1nce Oct. 3i. when a f1re destroyed the only remammg furnace tha ~ was working.

�' ' '

...

.

..

Page A2

NATION ·• WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

•

be&lt;:ome more stable. said Dr.
La rry Roberts.
McCloy. the onl y miner on
a cre1v or 13 to survive the
aftermath of a Jan. 2 explosion. has not yet regai ned
CO il S(.:iULI Sil~SS .
.
Robe rts said McCloy's
heart and liver fu nctions are
recovering slow ly. but he
rema ins on dialysis because
of his kidney damage.
McCloy, of Simpson. has
bee n breathi ng without ass istance for Se\!e ral dl1ys.
Meanw hile. state and fed-

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

MORGANTOWN. W.Ya
- The sole Sl l rvi vor u r the
Sago Mine disaster was
moved Tuesdav out ·of the
intensive care ~u n i t at Ruby
Memorial Hosp it al as his
condition
co ntinue J
to
ttnprove.
.
Randal McCloy Jr. ·. 26.
was tra nsferred 'to a stepdown unit with less intensive
monitori ng because his co ndition. whilestill serious. has

Poem brightens bleak holiday Community Calendar
for woman mourning her mom Church events Fellowship Church,

eral inves ti gators began inter- Representati ves fo r Ashland, pened at Sago. because the
view ing the first in a long Ky.-based In te rnational Coal tru th is that when it comes to
stri ng of wi tnesses Tuesday Group Inc. also were ex pect· safe ty~ we . represent every
at a fe deral courth ouse in · ed to attend.
miner in America and Canada
Clarksburg. The exact numThe Sago Mine is nonunion whether he or she chooses to
ber of peo pl e subpoe naed but several miners have des- pay du es to this union or
was not immedi ately cle ar. i'gna te d the Uni ted Mine not," Roberts said in a news
Nor was it clear how long Workers as their representa· re lease.
'
those interviews might take. . ti ve in the in vesti gation . The . Lara Ram sburg. spokesJoe
The meetings are being un io n's safety represe ntati ves ·woman fo r Gov.
m nductcd itl' private, wi th were to arri ve at the mine Manchin. said public he arl)ffi cials from the Mine Wedn esda y, UMW President in gs will be held later. proba"
Safety
and
Health Cecil Roberts said Tuesday.
bl y· in March.
Admini stration and the state
"Be ass ured that we will
·Efforts to ventilate deadl y
Otficc of Min ers' Health pursue every ave nue as we gases from the mine also conSa fety
and
Training. seek to understand what hap· tinued Tuesday. and a spokes-

woman for !CG said the company does .not know when it
will be sate for 111vestt gators
to re-e nter and beg in collecting physical evidence. .
Twelve miners were killed
in the di saster. On e is
believed to have died imme·
di ately in the blast. while
state official s have said the
others died of carbon monoxide poisoning .
They were remembered
Sunday, al ong wi th McCloy,
at a communi ty . memo'rial ·
service in Buckhannon.

DEAR ABBY: While visit·
ing my aunt over the
Thank sgiving holiday, I
noticed
yo ur
booklet,
· " Keepers," on her coffee table.
While thumbing through it, I
'bear
came across a poem that made
Abby
me think of my mother, who
died in ea'rly September. I was
mi ssing her tenibl y at that
·. moment, and the poem lifted
my sptnts and comforted me. l
asked my aunt where she had being selfish? What should .I
gotten the booklet, and she do? - FEELING GUILTY
told me she had ordered it IN THE MIDWEST
"'
from you last spring.
DEAR
FEELING
Is -it- still available, and how- GUILTY: The person who's
can l get some of them '? I'd being selfish is your fath er.
Jove to share that poem and He's trying to talk you into
some of the others in your. ass uming the responsibility
collecti on with my sisters and he assumed
when he
brothers. ·- ISLAND GIRL promised to " love, honor and
FROM OAHU
, cherish" your mother •at the
DEAR ISLAND GIRL time of their marriage. if your
Pl ease accept my sympathy mother were in her right
fo r the Joss of yo ur mother. mind, she would not want
I' m sure the holidays th is you to sacrifice your indeyear
were · es pecially pendence . Do not allow your
poignant for you and your father to guilt you into movsibl ings, but ple ase know . ing pack . This is hi s problem .
that you r mother would not Please do not allow him to
have wanted her death to make it yours.
bring you sadness. She gave
DEAR ABBY: l have a ISyou lite. and would want you · year-old son. "Max" has just
to make the most out of announced that he has a girlevery day th at you are given. friend . He talks to her on the
Yes, my Keepers booklet is phone constantly. I have met
still availabl e. It contains her, and she's a very nice girl. ·
some of the most frequently
I had the "sex" ialk with
requeste&lt;.l poem s and essays Max . I explained about AIDS
th at have appeared in this and oiher sexually transmit- ·
column . To order it, send a ted diseases, and how some
busine ss-sized,
self- girls who say they're on the
addre ssed envelope , plus pill re ally aren' t, and that the
check or money order for $6 pill doe s not protect either
(U .S. funds) to: Dear Abby · partner from STDs. I also
- Keepers Booklet, P.O. gave my son condoms (only·
Box 447. Moun t Morri s, IL two) and explained that it
6 1054-044 7. (Po stage is was not permi ssion to have
sex . However, I' m afraid he
included in the price .)
DEAR ABBY: After 26 might not listen and do it
yea rs of marri age, my parents anyway. · lf that happens, I
seem headed for divu rce. My want my boy' to be p'rotected.
I have gotten confli ctin g
.father is the one who wants it,
and it sent ~1y manic-depres- opinions from friends about
sive mother into the hospital having given Max the con doms. Do you think I did the
with thou ghts of suicide . · ·
DON 'T
Npw I am in the middle. right thing ?
WANNA
BE
A
GRANDMA
My mother· doesn' t want to
ta lk to my. father, so the only (YET) IN MANHATTAN
informati on he can get is BEACH
. DEAR DON'T: I absolutefro m me. He has mentioned
several times the idea of my ly think you did the right
moving back home and tak· thin g, al so the intelligent and
in g care of her. (H e is plan- pragmatic thing · - an4 in
ning to move out in a month .) exactly the right order.
Dear Abby is written by
Abby, I only recently got
out Qn my own, and I am Abigail Van Buren, also
enjoying my independence. I . known as Jeanne Phillips, and
Jove my mother and don't was founded by her mother,
want to lose her, but I am Pauline Phillips. lliile Dear
resistant to moving b ac~ .into Abby aJ www.DearAbby.com
a hou se where I have experi- or P.O. Box 69440, Los
enced so much pain . Am .I A!lgeles, CA 90069.

Star witness in Oklahoma City Sup~e~e &lt;;ourt: Bus~
bombing trials scheduled for release a~stra~~n w~ong m
Bv SEAN MURPHY

.

.

.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

OKLAHOMA C ITY -·
Michael Fortier. the prosec tition's star witness in the
Oklahoma ·Citv bombin g tri·
als. is sche-duled · to~ be
r~ J ea se d from· fe deral. prison
Friday, vic tims' relatives sai&lt;.l .
The Federal Bu re au of
Prisons has notified famil y
members of several bombing
victims ,of Fortier's impend in2 release. the rel atives said
Tue sdav. He still must serve
three ye ars of supervised
release.
Fortier sened in the Army
with bom bing co nspirators
Timothy Me Veigh and Ten y
Nichols.
He was sentenced
in
.
.
J99R to 12 years in pri son for
know ing abo ut .the bomb pl ot
and not 1ellin 2 authori ti es.
He also pleaded guil ty to ·
hel pin g
McVeig h
and
t\.i chol s mo ve and se ll
stole n guns.·a nd fur lying .to
fede ra l auth ori ties aft er the
Okl ahoma Ci ty bo mbing.
Th e 1995 allack dest roved
th e A Ifr ed P. M u r~r ah
Federal Building and killed
168 people.
: Fortier. 37. formerly- of
\&lt;,ingman. Ari z., has been in
fede ra l custody since the year
of the bombing.
··r th ink he's· served enoueh
time." sa id. Bud · Welch. ·
.whose daughter Julie. a
Soc ial Security offi ce staffer,
was kill ed in the bl as t. ''!
think Michael wa's probably
involved in some of the stuff
that was going on in Arizona,
but l hope he's in line to be a
good citizen now."
Welc h and other victims'
famil y members received a
one-page form letter from the
Bureau of Prisons thi s week
listing Fortier's release date.
Neither the forrp nor the

AP Photo

Mic hael Fortier ts escorted from the Pitts burg County
Courthou se in McAlester, Ok la .. i'n a file photo from Tuesday,
Ap ril 20 , 2004, after testifying in the state murder trial of bombing conspirator Te rry Nichols. Fortier, a former resident ·of
Kingman , Ariz. , has been serving a 12-year federal prison sentence for knowing about the bomb plot and not telling authorities. He is scheduled to be released from federa l prison on
Friday, Jan. 20 , bombing survivors say. The Fed.eral Bureau of
Prisons has notified fami ly members of several· bombing victims
that Fortier stil l must serve three years of supervised release.
bureau's Web site indicated
where Fortier was being held.
Messages left with the bureau
after hours were not immedi-

ately returned.
Jim Denny, whose · two
children were seriously
injured in the bombing, said

. he also believes Fort ;er
should be released.
"Me Veigh already got hi s
punishment , and Nichols will
be in pri smi for the rest of his
life," Denny said. "Ler this
guy get out and. get on with
his .life."
McVeigh was executed in
2001 at the U.S. Penitentiary
in Ten e Haute, Ind., for his
role in the \Jombing. Nichols
was convicted on both federal and State charges and is
serv ing a sentence of life
.
without parole.
Jannie Coverdale, whose
two grandsons were killed in
the blast, said she doesn' t
. believe that Fortier's testimony was needed to convict
McVeigh and Nichols.
· '' I am very angry,'.'
Co ve rdale said. "l feel like
Fortier .should ' ve gotten life
in pri son without parole.'·'
Forti er and hi s wife, Lori .
both
testi fied
against
McVeigh and Nichols during
their fede ral trial s and
acknowledged helping the
pair in their plat, to blow up
the building, said McVeigh 's
attorney, Stephen Jones.
~' It 's intellectually indefen sible to say'that they weren ' t
conspirators, becau se they
were . Their own testimony
indicates that," Jones said .
"They kn ew the date , time
and place of the bombing
and both of them assisted
·
materially."
Lori Fortier testified that
she helped make a fal se ID
card that MeVeigh used to
rent the truck used in ~ the
bombing, Jones noted. she
was granted immunity for her
testimony and never served
any prison time.

assisted SUICide dispute
BY GINA HOLLAND
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRIT ER

WASHINGTON The
Supre me Court on Tuesday
blocked the Bush · administra·
tion 's ;mempt to puni sh doctors
who help terminally ill patients
die, protecting Oregon 's oneof-a-kind assisted-suicide law.
It was the first loss for
Chief Justice John Roberts,
who joined the court's most
conservative members Antonio Scalia and Clarence
Thomas - in a long tiut
restrained dissent.
The administration improperly tried to use a federal
drug law to pursue Oregon
doctors who prescribe lethal
doses of prescription medicin es, th e co urt said in a
rebuke to fo rmer Attorney
General John Ashcroft.
·
The 6-3 111ling could encourage other states to consider
copying Oregon '~ Jaw, used to
end the lives of more than 200
seriously ill people in that state.
The decisi on, one of the biggest
expected from the court this
year. also could set the stage for
Congress to attempt to outlaw
assisted suicide.
"Congress did not have thi s
far-reaching intent to alter the
federal-state bal ance," Justice
Anthony M. Kenn edy wrote
for the tiiajorit y - himself.
retiring .Justice Sandra Day
O'Connor and Justices John
Paul Stevens. Davi&lt;;l Souter,
Ruth Bader Ginsburg and
Stephen Breyer:
With thi s decision Kenned y
showed signs of becoming a
more influential swing voter
after O'Connor departs. He is
a moderate conservative who ·

sometimes joins more liberal
m ~ mbers on cases involving
such things as gay rights and
capital punishment.
ln some ways, the decision
was an anticl imactic end to
the court's latest clash over
assisted suicide . ·
The case was a~g u e d in
October 011 Roberts' second
day on the bench , . and: he
stron gly hinted that he would
back the Bush administration .
Some court watchers had
expected O'Connor to be the
decisive vote, which could
have delayed the case until her
successor was · on the court .
The Set1ate is set to vote soon
on nominee Sam )lei Alito.
Ju sti ces ha ve dealt with
end-of-li fe. cases before. most
recentl y in 1997 when the
CO Uf\ unanimously rul ed that.
people have no constitutional
ri ght 10 die. That decision, by
then-Chief Ju stice Willi am
'H. Rehnquist. left room for
states to set their own rules.

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MARCHIONE
AP MEDICAL WRITER

TUCSON. Ariz. - French
doctors treating the world''
fi rst face t ran~plant patie nt
~ay she. "tlfered a (.iss uerejection episode that th reat·
ened tO cost her her new fea'
, ·tu res, but ,he is doing we ll
now - so \ve il that the sttr·
geo ns hope ILl uo five more
such operatiom soon.
·. "She can swal low and eat.
That was impo.s.sihle before
the surge ry. P.sychological ly.
she ·s ·very .happy ... said Dr.
Jean-Mtchel Dubernard. a
surgeon fr.om Lyon. France.
. "For '"· ih is experience is.
the hest proof that we are
right'' to have &lt;.lone the tramrfant in &gt;Lead' of try ing rou tine
recon~t r uctive
surgery.
Dubernard said. referring to
criticism of the ope ration.
However. hi.., revelation of

Lhe rejec.tion episode illustrates a dan~cr ·the woman
wi ll live witl1the rest of her
life. and the extraordinary
risks in face , transp lants.
\Vhich several U.S. surgeons
also httpe to offer soon .
The 38-year-old French

· wom~n received ~ new no...,e ,

chin and lips from a braindead donor un Nov. 27 . She
\vas 1evcrcly disfl~ured last
spring when her pet Labrador
bit and sc ratched at her face
wh ile trying Ill wake her.
DubCrnard spoke in an tnte r' view before the 'iart of a transplan t surgery conference, in
. Tucson where he. was to make .
the fiN scientific prc1cntation

un the operation. He brought
dramatic photos. wh ich he
would not make puhl ic, showing the hotTillc injuries suffered by the wo man. who one
&lt;.lortor said rcfc n ed to he"eif
as "a skeleton. a dead head."
The lower .two-tti irds of her
nose had been rip ped away.
Both lips were gone. leaving
he r teet h bared in a grotesq ue
gn macc. The holes where
nos tril s once . we re ga ped
open and gha" ly.
Doctor\ di d a seri es of
computer i;llli mations tQ

~ i m­

ufate the best they thought
they could do· for her wi th
routine plas tic surgery, but
the resu lts &lt;\ppeared w &lt;.lisma l they &lt;.lecidcd to attempt
.
the tra nspl ant. •.
About three week&gt; after the
operation. doctors noticed the
.transplanted skin tu rn tng red
&lt;.lllu suspected tlJ&lt;tt she had an
ini'ectlon. Bui a htopsy showed
the true culprit: her immune
.system actua ll v was a tt ackin~
and rejecting the new l~ce. .__
The) tried to treat this by
increasing the dose ot the
steroid
prednisone ,
an
immune-suppress ing drug .
They even gave her a face
t:ream and mouthwa:-.h ~on ­
raining the medication. but
they dtdn ' t help.
.
On Dec . 30. doc tor) resort ·
ed to giving her huge doses ·
of the stero id urug, and fin[d ly succeeued in hailin~ the
rejection epiwdc on J an~ 2.
"She wa~ alarmed" at the
prospect of Josi ng her nc1'f'face.
hut was relieved when ith&gt;ked
norrnul again alter ~~ few day'.
sai&lt;.l Dr. . Erntnwlllel MoreJon.

another of her phy.sicians.
Since then. the woman has
done so well that she can go
out in a crowcj· without drawing lots of anention. as she
did Sunday nig ht with her .
psychiat rist, Dubernard said.
"They walked Otllhe street,
they we 111 in a bar. I cannot
tell yo u what they had to·
dri nk." Du bernard said .
Dr. Beno it Lenge le, ;moth·
er of i)er phys ician' from
Brusse ls. Belg ium . showed
rece nt photog raph s of her
with j ust a thin , ropelike red
scar aroun d th e edges of the
tra nsplant ed face.
,
Mag netic reson ance imag·
ing. or MRI. tests show that
bnli n areas "l ight up'' when
her new. face i.s light ly
touched. ''the objecti ve prour·
that she is regaining ~ehsat io n .
said Dr. Bernard Dcvauchelle.
a surgeon at UniversitY
Hospital· of Amie ns. Fran ce,
who did a brge share of the
· t.ranspla nt operation.
It is too soon to say
whether a second experimental procedure the woma n
received - two infu sinns ·of
whole hone marrow .fro m the
dead do nor - wi ll help. prevent rcjc&lt;;tion. as ~ cr doctors
h\&gt;pc. or acltta lly aggravate it
b)'. pro,·iding more foreign
tissue for her hody to attack .
Duhcrnar&lt;.l has been crili·
cited for tryi ng that. as well
a"' for arranging for the
woman to sel l the rig ht s to
photographs of herse lf tu a .
longtttnc . friend of his.
Dubcmar&lt;.l insisted th~ t he
did this to keep her from
heing taken advantage ·of.

· Saturday, Jan. 21
PORTER
Everett
Keinper to sing and Bob
Hersman to preach at 6 p.m.
at the Clark Chapel Free Will
Baptist Church.
. MIDDLEPORT .- ·Th e
White Oak Quartet, 7 p.m. at
the Middleport Church of the
Nazarene. Pastor . Allen
Midca p in vites
public.
Refreshments.
VVednesday,Jan.25
MIDDLEPORT
Hobson
C hri stian

6:30
p.m. with servi ce featuri ng
music by Marty Short.
· Thursday, Jan. 26
POMEROY
Wint er
meeting of the Ohio Vall ey
Crusade for Christ will be at
7 p.m. at the fellowship h all ,
First. Southern
Bapt ist
Church.

. Public meetings
Saturday, Jan. 21
PORTLAND ._ · Publi c
meeting for those interested
in the Portland Community

Center/Civ il War Museum or
join ing the cen ter\ board , .1 0
a.m. to noon, at the center.
Monday, Jan. 23
RAC INE
Racine
Vill age Cou ncil, recessed
session. 7 · p.m.. Racine
Mu nicipal Bu ild ing.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Jan. I 9 ,
POM ERO Y .
Meigs
County America n Cancer
Soc iety Taskforce, . reg ular

..

mee ting. noon. basement·
confe rence room of Pomero)
Library, lunch provided.
RSVP with Courtney Sim ,
'.l'.l2 -6626.
. T UPPERS PLA INS
VFW Post9053 wil l observe
20th anniversary with 6 p.m.
(!in ner prepared by Ladies
Auxiliary. Member; of po&gt;t.
wives and guests invi te&lt;i, 10
dinne r at Tuppers Plains hall.
• Tuesday. Jan. 24
RAC INE .RACO to
meet at 6:30 p.m . at Star Mi ll
Park . ' Potl uck refre1hmetm .
New mem bers welcome.

Council looks at past, plans for future activities
A
MIDDLEPORT
review of activitie s in
November and December was
given and plans . were made
for sevetal .activities thi s year
at a recent meetin g of the
Lydia Council of the Bradford
Church of Chri st.
It was noted that fruit baskets. were delivered, .that members parti cipate in an angel
tree. thai a live. nativity scene
was held, that a money tree
was made and shopping trips
·were taken. The Christmas services went well, it was report·
ed, and over $500 was collected with the !ish banks.

An upd ate Was given on the
food pantry and it was suggested bringing donated
goods to the Lydia meetin gs.
It was noted that the Lydia
Circle is continuing to college
old Christmas &lt;1nd greeting
cards to be sent to St. Jude 's
Hospital. Contributions need
to be made before the end of
February.
· Plans were made to con tinue the memoring program and
a signup sheet for participa·
tion was Circulated. Members
were al s-o reminded of
KYOWVA ·to be held in
September.

For the meetin g Paul
Pickens, presi dent, had the
ope nin ~ prayer. Reports were
gtven tor the Lydi a fund . the
curt ain fund , the mi ssions
fund and the mother-daughter
banyuel fund. A decisio n y;as
made on who would receive
the missions fun d and who
sunshine bags would be prepared fo r.
~repo rt was give n on cards
se nt out durin g the month . II
was noted that shutin meals
are not needed at this time.
and hostess sheets and communion signup sheets were
di stribut,ed.

· Devotions were read hy ·
Pickens ti tled "The Molt" qnd
·'Best Gifts." Sheny Shamblin
passed out a work sheet with a·
memory verse and a ·few
things to work on at home and
bring (o next mee.ting and then
gave the closi ng prayer.
Anend ing · were Di ana .
Ma xwel l. Mi sty Deweese.
Sherry Smith. Na ncy Morris.
Bec ky Ambe rger, Phyllis
Baker, Brenda Boli n, Caro lyn
Nicholso n. Jackie Reed, Ru th
Durst. Suzie Will. Madeli ne
Paint er. Kathy Dyer. Neva
C hapm ~ n. · a .rid
hos tesses
Pickens and Sham blin

•

Evidence of piracy, makeshift studio found in W.Va. Capitol basement .
BY LAWRENCE MESSINA . Schafer 's memo said . ·
Fergu son
confirmed
Tuesday that. his staff 'found
CHARLESTON, W.Va. the makeshift audio-video
State investigators have studio amid hi s widening
stumbled onto a basement probe into spending and'other
office in the West Virginia . abuses at the state General
Capitol · outfitted with com- Servi ces Division.
puters, video and audio gear,
The review found t.hat
and software used ' to pirate someone in General Servi ces
movies and mu sic' re cord- sidestepped state purchasil)g
ings. according to a docu- rul es to buy mqre than
ment obtained by The $.88,000 worth of computers
Associated Press:
and related equipment over
"Specificall y, one hard the last three years, including
drive cqntained approximate- the items discovered in .the
ly 40 full length motion basement bffice. Nol all the
videos."
state
Chief purcha sed conwuters and
Technology Offi cer Kyl e gear can be located, Ferguson
Schafer said in the Jan. 5 said. ·
memo to ·Admini stration
Geheral Services maintains
Secretary Robert Ferguson. the Capitol Complex grounds
"1\vo other hard drives con- and buildings, among other
tained over 3,500 MP3 music duties. Yet Schafer 's memo
file s consuming more than 14 sho\vs that ii purchased
( g i gabyte ~ ) of hard drive
$51 ,000 worth of computers
space.''
during the 2005 budget year
Hundreds of blank DVDs, alone, compared to the
CDs and. jacket covers were $45 ,726 worth bought by the
also found, as was software state auditor's office.
"The (purchase) card sys"commonl y used to crack
header codes on copyrighted tem was abu sed, in what
materials such as movi es and seems to be an intentional
music to allow duplication ," attempt to bypass rules to buy
ASSOCIATED PR ESS WRITER

equipment that for General finds. Ferguso n sai d. He
Servic.es 'was out side the de clin ed to identi fy who
norm ," Fe rguson said . ."There made the purchases. or whose
was no question on what they office ·
cont ained
the
could do with a P-card , in my makeshift audio-v ideo studio .
"We will hold accountable
opinion . As a cabinet secretary, l would say that it was those people who ha ve
out of control."
abused the lener and the spir·
Both the FBI and th e 'it of the law and undew1i ned
Legislature's Commission on my res ponsibil ity to safeSpecial l·n v es ti g~t.ion s are guard the reso urces of the
investi gatin g his department 's state." Ferg uson said.

,.--rB.~ t· -)

?/~ P;tyBarn ~~~
. . 992-6121

IriVe-T11111. C•rn eut &amp; 1111111 Pldellllaa
Cllllbll• ~r Pl~-111• rae 111ft.Tbru
Monday: .Soup, Salad, &amp; Breadsticks Sm. $5.50 tg. 59.2;
Tuesday: Pepperoni Pizza .55f1Siic. $6.60 Tray
Wednesday: Senior Citizen Day-10'% OfT Deli &amp; Bake~·
\\'einie Wednesday-2 Hot Dogs $2.00 w/Sauce &amp; Sla•·
Thursday: Ham &amp; Cheese. I oz. Chips &amp; 20oz .. Pepsi Fountain $3.50
Friday: 4tle Wings-Hot. Mild &amp; Honey
2 Hoi Dogs:Sl.1101•'1Sauc• &amp; Slaw
Saturday: Soup &amp; Breadsticks Sm. $3.50 ·Lg. $6.25

Weavers announce birth of son
HAMILTON , TEXAS Staff Sergeant an&lt;.l Mrs.
Anthon y Joseph Joel Weaver,
the former Candice Ni cole
Christian . of Hamilion , Texas
announ ce the birth of twin s,
Tristan Mathew and Madison
Bell e, on Sept. !9, 2005 , .
The infants, both just over 18
I/2 inches long and weighing a
litt le over fi ve pounds each,
were born at Fort Campbell,
Ky. The· Weavers have a

Woman who got face transplant
·battled.tissue rejection, surgeon reveals
BY MARILYNN

VVednesday, Januaryt8, 2oo6

•

SAGO MIN·E SURVIVOR MCCLOY MOVED OUT OF ICU
BY VICKI SMITH

BY THE.BEND.

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesd~y,Januaryt8 , 2006 .

PageA3.

•

daughters; Bailey Marie, age 2.
Sgt. Weaver is a form er resident of Meigs County. He is a
member of the I0 Ist Airborne
Divi sion of the United States
Arm y and is currently servin g.
a seco11d tour of duty in Iraq
where he is expected to remain
for at least the next 12 months.
During thi s absence, Mrs.
Weaver and the children Will
res.ide with her parents, Glenn
and Livda . Chri sti ah of

Hamilton, Texas, and her parents- in-law, William " Bill "
and Betsy Weaver of Victoria,
t exas, who are al so former
res idents of Meigs County.
· Friends may write to Sgt.
Weaver at the followin g
address:
SSgt WEAVER , Anthony)
2nd Pit Ceo 2.-506 ln f
Camp Prosperit y
Uni t #41002
A PO AE 09348- 1002

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Oh1o Valley Publishing Co .
Jim Freeland
· Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today ts Wednesday. Jan 18. the 18th day of 2006. There
are 341 days lett tn th-e year
Today's Htgh light m History·
On Jan 18. 1912. English explorer Robert F Scott and his
expedttton reached the South Pole, only to dt scover that Roald
Amundsen-had beaten them to 11 (Scott and h1s pany penshed
dunng the return tnp )
On thts elate
In 1778. Engltsh navtgarot Captatn James Cook reached the
Haw a nan lsldncls. which he dubbed the "Sandwich Islands."
In 1788. the l11st Engl"h sertlets arrived in Australia's
Botany Bay rn establish ; penal colony
In I862. the IOth prestdenr ot the Umted States, John Tylef,
cited in Rtchmond. Va . at age 71
In 1919 the World W,u I Peace Congress opened in
Versailb . Fr,mcc.
In 1936. author Rud}ard Ktpling,died tn Burwash. England.
In 19-13 dut mg Wm ld Wat II. the Soviets announced they'd
broken the long Nuzt stege ot Lerungrad.
In 19-D. .1 warl!me ban on the sale ot pre- sliced bread in the
U.S ~ armed at reducing bakeries· demand for metal
replacemen t parts - went into effect
In 1990. a JUlY 111 Los Angeles &lt;\cquttted former preschool
operators Raymond Buckey and hrs mother, Peggy McMartin
Buckey. of 52 child molestatron charges.
Ten years &lt;~go· Russtan Pres tdent Barts Yeltsin announced
that 82 hostages were treed when hrs forces wiped out
Chechen fi ghters lll Pervomayskaya, endiQg a, weeklong
standoff. however. he satd 18 other hostages were missing
Lr sa Mane Presley-Jackson tiled for dtvorce from Michael
Jackson.
Ft'e years ago. President Clinton, in a farewell from the
Oval Offtce. told the nat ton that "Amcnca has done well" durmg hts presidency. wtth tecOJd-breaking prosperity and a
deaner environment Electrictty-strapped California 'aw a
second day of rollmg blackouts Ctvtl rights leader Jesse
Jackson revealed an cxtramarnal attarr that resulted in the
blrlh of a daughter.
One year ago Seuetat} &lt;)f State nomtt]ee Condoleezza
Rtce, at her Senate conltrmallon heanng: msisted the Umted
States was fully prepared for the Iraq war and its aftermath
and, refused to gt"-e . a ttmetable for US troops to come home
The wotld's l,ugest comnterctdl jet. an Atrbus A380 that can
carry 800 passengers, was unveiled m Toulouse. France.
Today 's Birthdays: Mov te dtrector John Boorman ts 73.
Singer-songwttlet Bobby Goldsboto is 65 Comedtan-st ngernmstctan Bt ell Hudson ts 53 Actor-d nector Kevm Costner ts
51 Country s111get Mark Collte is 50. Actress Jane Horrocks
IS 42. Comedian Dave Altell is 4 1. Actot Jesse L. Martm
("Law &amp; Order") ts 37 Rappet DJ Qu tk ts 36. Rock singer
Jonathan Davi s ( Kor n) ts 35. Smger Christtan Burns
(BBMak) ts 33 Actor Jason Segel ts 26 Actress Samantha
Mumba is 23.
, Thought for Today: "The co_mpensallon ot growmg old was
stmply thts : that the pass ton s remain as strong as ever, but one
has gamed - at last' - the powe t whtch adds the Sl\preme;
flavor to ex tstence. the power of taktng hold of expen ence, of
tummg 11 round. slowl y, 111 the !tght. " - Vtrgtnia Woolf,·
English duthor (I g82- 1941 1

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Leu en 10 lit e eduor &lt;lie 11 el&lt; ome Titer should be leiS than
300 &gt;~ord;. 41/lellen -{//e whwrr 1o t'chl111g, IIIli\/ be " gned,
and rndudP udd1e11 and lt'lepitmtt' number No 111111gned letlen will IJe publ~&gt;l1ed Leuen 1hou/d be 111 good ta;te,
addrn\·mg !HIIei. nor penonal11ie1. Le11e1.\ of' tlwnk.l to Ol~a­
nr::attmn and mdt 1 rduo/' H til not he au epred for publj( utwn

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OhtO Valley Publishing Co.

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'53 55

In
September
2003,
President George W Bush
started something of a sexual revolution .
Speaking to the U.N.
General Assembly. the presKathryn
ident, known more popular-~
Lopez
ly by left-wmg groups as
the man who would "turn
back the clock on women 's
rights." challenged his fellow leaders to crack down part because, according lo
on the sex trade in their Congressman Chris Smtth
countnes, promt sing to lead (R-N.J.), " they know we
by example at home.
mean business."
George W. Bush IS wagOn Jan. 10, President
ing a wat on modem-day Bush signed the biparttsan
slavery with a wmning plan 2005 Trafficking Victims
for : success, involving an Protec!Jon Reauthonzat1on
'
essenttal
mgredtent: bmld- Act, providing $36 1 milhon
ing coalitions. And what over the next two years to
was once under most ot our combat trafficking domestiradars is now a figkt that so cally. At the signing ceremany are now involved 111 mony, the president noted,
that it's tmpossibfe to give "Over the ' past four years.
them all adequate credit for the
Department
of
their work - which, in its Homeland Secunty has
way. 1s an excellent prob- taken new measures to prolem to have
tect ch1ldren from sexual
US. predators, as well as
Accordtng
to
lmmtgration and Customs pqrnography and prostituEnforcement, invesl!gal!ons tion rings. The Department
into trafficking "increased ,of Health and Human
by more than 400 percent in Services has partnered wtth
the first six months of fiscal fatth-based and commumty
year 2005, compared to the organizations to form antttotal number of cases in fis- traffickmg coalitions in 17
cal year 2004." Although major cities across our
keepmg true . nun;tbers on country."
these etfus1ve crimes IS next
The bill renewed 2000
to impossible, accordmg to legtslation that made human
the U.S. Department of trafficking a federal crime
Justtce, between !4,500 and It
was
authored
by
I7 ..500 people are being C1mgressman Smtih,· who
traded within the Untted was already a veteran of the
States. Internationally, the fight, having participated in
estimate ts between 600,000 the rescue of llkramran gtrl s
and 800,000, mostly women in bondage in Montenegro
and ch ildren. But natwns - long before tratfrcking
plagued with sex traffick- was on most people 's
mg. who ' ve enabled sex radars. Closer to home, be
trafficking , are changing in sees the fruits of hts labor

GALLIPOLIS - I Jolzcr
Clinic announced lls has
.tdded .r sldle-ol-thc -.ut
Computed
multt-sltce
Tomography (('TJ sc,mner to
tl s factltty
The new B11lltan&lt;:e CT
scanner from Philips Mcdtcal
Systems features advanced
tech nology that produce'
spltt-sccnnd htgh 4uallly
tmages. pcrmmmg doctors to
see mot e an,Jlomtcal detatl tn
a fractton of the lime needed
tor other tests.
•
Wtth th ts new CT "anner.
Holzer Clmic', doctor' will
be able to more eflel' ttve ly
detect and trear d range of life
threatcmng illnesses. incluuing he:_u t J~:-.. e.t..,e. cltnccr.
stroke, ancllung dt,easc. The
posstbtltty .ot discovenn g dtsease in dn early stage. when a
v.tder artay 'of elleclive treatment options may be avatlable. will help doctors n1.1ke

stve tmage mformation we Adams 'a td "Our new l'd ... t'"' lu ~' ctlu ..t!e the exte nt
get lrom lhc Bnlli ance CT Bnllt.tnLe 'canner lcaturc' nt JlliLtltL'"' to 11 traumd
technology
that patient. ,u,·h as 't&gt;meone
,L·artner to !,(Cner,Jte ve ry untque
uctatled JD tmage' v.htch emures v.c: ~et ~xceptton.tl tn\ol\ed 111 .tn .tutomobrle
can be used lor diagnosis tmages v.nh 'tg ntft Lant l) &lt;JLCJd t·nt DuJtng the non,JJld ,JI,o ,h,JJed very 4utckly lowet do'e to the pauent tll\&lt;l,t\e tl''t. the pallent ts
wtlh rekrnng phystctans Also, It has spcl'i ttc built-tn plac0d 'on d table and mowd
and surgeons, where needed, pedtatric protocols that I ut - incrcmcntall) through lhe
lor pre-surgical planning and ther mmim tLe the do'e to ''lllated oil donut -,haped
lm treatment evalu.rtton and children."
scanner "llilc an X-r,tY beam
loll ow up "
Another ·adva ntage the ~&gt; p!O!Clled through cross
·'Older patrents and those clime anticipates ts the ability 'euion' of thetr anatomy
with breathing dtfticu lttes or to provtde larger pau~nts The X-ra: energy pa"e'
some other dt stress wrll really wnh a CT scan opuon. The through the pa11e111 and i&lt;;
apprecrate the shorter exams," new Brilliance sca nner has a recorded 011 ei~Llront c detecAdams s,IJd. ·'We ' ll have them table wetght cap.tcity of up to tor ... 111 the ..,Ldnner
tn and out much fastet, and 440 pounds
1 hts rnlormallon ts then
thetr doctors wtll be able to
''In the past, bemg able to sent to a 'pectalized computdccess detailed, defimttve handle some larger patients er rh.ti reutnsfluch the tnforwas somettmes a chal lenge. . m.ttion tnto tncltvHJual slices
results within minutes"
All CT scanners use :X- because most equtpment snn- and combmc' them sequenaccommod;!le tially 11110 a cornprehenstve
rays, however, the new ply can't
Brilliance scanner uses·.~ Stg- them,'' Ad&lt;~ms satd "Wtth the volume un&lt;tge of the entt re
111 ft canlly lower amount of .. Bnlhance CT. we can ' handle are.r \L dn!led The th111ner the
X-ray energy than many of · the additional body wetght. sl tccs. the more reveal111g the
the older CT systems on rhe and these patients wtll be able detatl ts tn rhe re&gt; ultJng
market.
to benefit from this great dtag- 11nage.., c~nd the more defJni an accurate dwgnos1~ und
"Whil~ we need the cnttcal
nosttc technology ds well:''
tJve the exdm re\ulh
recommend appropnate treat- unatomtcal thformallon we
A CT ;can produ ces a.
Holt.er Cl111 1c IS pleased to
ment for thetr pmtents.
get from a CT s ~:an, we cross-sectJOnal tmage of the be ahle to otter tht ' nnportant
According to Ted Adams . always want to ,limtt the X- human atldlomy which helps rmp ro vement 111 he,drhLare to
Holzet CltntL Dtugnosttc ray dose to the patten! to the the cltntctan to rule our or tts p.tlletm Palient referrals
Testing Center dtmcal man - absolute mmtmum posstble.. conftrm the presence of cer- llldY be m.1de by calling r740J
ager,. "We ca n use the ex ten- especi all y for children." tain dt sease. &lt;tnd tn 'ome .f-16-52X9

Roger Bissell

In Smtih's own New Jersey
thi s November. one Xochil
Nectalina Rosale s Martinez,
pleaded guilty to charges
stemming from her role in
runnmg a trafftcking ring
that smuggled Hon!iuran
women - some younger
than 2 I - into the United
States to be forced to work
at Union City bars .
Donna M Hughes, a professor of women's studtes at
the Untvemty of Rhode
Island, has been an actlvtst
on the issue for some 17
years. She describe s the se&lt;l
change over the last decade:
For
whi le there, during
the Chnton admimstratton,
she says, her fellow femtmsts were more mletested
in "sex worker' s rtghts"
than 'tcttms' suffermg, and
won government support for
the1r approach . And there
was littl e promtnent outrage. Hughes remembers,
"Dttnng the late 1990s, all
the media stones were
aboLtl how empowetttlg
prostitutton was, how much
money the women made,
how ptmps were dtsappearmg and the w01hen were
mdependent
bu sinesswomen, how women m
India were forming unions
and collecttves to light for
their nghts as sex workers,
etc." But. nov. , she notes.
·'the media ston es more
often tell horror stones of
how women and girls are
beaten. raped and enslaved.
On the surface thai , may
sound more depress mg, but
to me it is much bettet
because rt's the truth ." The

"the truth about prosttttition/sex
trafficking
is '
emerging and agcnc1es are
respondmg m a way that ,_
never have previously. "
Of course, we have only
begun to tight. The State
Department 's 2005 status
report - whtch works oli
an effective tier system and
promtses sanctions against
countnes who don't fix.
thctr problem (I 0 of the
worst-off countries immediately jumped to action),
notes "the involvement Of '
poltce and tmmtgration offictals in trafficking seriously '
hobbled efforts to free vice· :
tim s of their misery and
prosecute those responsible ,
for rnodetn-day slavet y Too
many Jaw enforeemen1 _,
,operattons were unsuccessful
as brothel-keepers,
sweatshop owners, or traf·
fickers were ttpped oft by
corrupt otfictals." Human
trafficking is an evt! web
that ensnares too many,
with too many enablers
But abroad and at home,
folks are at work , educating,
mvestlgaung, enforcmg and
healing. This ts a ftght til&lt;; '
United States is in to win ·
becau se tt is qLtintessentially ,
what we· re about as ~
nation As one slave ill
North Korea wrote to a rescuer-pdstor in South Korea:
"I want to It ve like a human
."
bemg for one day. I am a
human be mg. How can I be ,
sold like thi s? I need free-

awareness

'~'~t' IVUJm). She can be COilra•·ted at k/ope~@natrrmal­

a

m

Washington and in the press
- has meant. she says. that

TUPPERS PLAINS
Roger Lewts Bt"ell, 67, ot
Tuppers Plam, , "ent to be
with the Lord, on Monday.
Ja'lt 16, 2006 at O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital. Athens.
after &lt;ill ex tended til ness.
He w.rs born June 29. 1938
in Long Bottom , son of
Margare t Smger Btssell and
the !dte Charles Lcwi&gt;
Btssell He was a retired
self-employed restdenti,tl
and commer~:ial custom
builder. He had an a"octatc
degree tn ht story !rom Ohto
University and 'an a"ou.rte
degree in engineering ltum
Hocking Technical College
ttnd was a State ol Ohto
Roger Lewis Bissell
Certifred Electric tan
He attended the Fust Unned Pentecostal Church of
Ravenswood, W,Va. and was a U.S. Army veteran h.rving
, graduated from JUmp school 111 Oct 1957 111 Fort Campbell.
Ky. while servtn g 111 the 502nd lnf.mtry Combat Group of the
IO! st Atrborne dtvtston. He started his gospe l mustc career
smgmg wt th the gos pel group , The Messengers of Colut1lhus,
where they recorded their !trst album TlliS led to the gospel
ministry of The Btsse ll Brothet ~. Throughout the years. he has
performed wtth many gospel and bluegrass groups.
He IS survtved by hts wtfc of 17 ye,trs, B,1rbara Jan e
Spurlock Bi sse ll , seven htothet s, Chdrles Dame!. Delbert
.md Donn,t, Douglas ,md Carolyn. Dwtght and CarQiyn, Glen
,mel Mehssa. Davtd and Nancy and Robert and S,t!ly Btssell;
five sisters. Hel en and Sheldon Garv,rnck .' Frana Rtfne. Ada
and Curtis Randolph, Karen ,JJ1d L.ury Bowcotl and Naumt
from Page A1
,md Ketth Hawes : duldren, Joyce Ann and Ronnte
Clat borne, Alrsha Bi ,e ll. Roger and Sherry Btssell , Lorena
and Ken 1-ltckman, Ttn.t Wolfe &lt;tncl Amanda and Aaron "to montlor the dtstJJct's
Williams , step -daughters . Angela and Thomas Kelly. linancial status.
Chn~tma and Matt Mtller and Michelle and Enc Peterson;
Regular boatel meetings
21 grandchtldren. three great-g r.tndchildren. 1,7 tlteces and tor 2006 w't ll be held at 6 30
nephews , and counlless friends'
p.m on the thtrd Wednesday
In addttton to hts lather, he was preceded tn death by a of each mon th 111 the elebrother-m-law. Frank Rillle
mentary !tbrary conference
Servrces wtll be heid I p m Thursday. J,m 19. 2006 at JOUnl
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home. Coo!vtlle. wllh Past&lt;t- Davtd
The board approved an
Johnston of!tctatr~. Entombment wtll be 111 the Meigs agreement with AthensMemory Gardens. t'Omeroy
Mergs Educational Serv tce
Friends may call at the funcr,tl home Wed nesd;ly. from 2-4 Center fur the school year to
,md 6-8 p.m
provtcle educattonal and
su pent sory services 111 the
amount of $324,289 47
After mceung in cxecuttve
POMEROY - Ctthenne M. Stacy 60 . Pomeroy passed sess ton . the board approved
dWay Monday. J.tn 16 2005 ,It Holzer Medtcal Center 111 ghmtJng unpmd leuve to
Betsy Marund:t!e for M,rrch ·
Galltpolis
She was born Oct. 12. 1945 m Elyna. daughter ol tl1 e late 20-24. .t pproved Lester
Fred and Hazel Smtth Catherine was a dedtcated v.tfe. moth- Stewart as custodtan on a one
er, grandmother and f11end ·Her tannly w.t' her enttre world yc&lt;~ r &lt;:nntracl ,mel .tpprovect
and v.e wt ll mtss het greatly She helped start the Metgs Bttdn Bowen ,ts Wctght
Chapter of M.A. D D and wa' .t former Cub Scout Leader. .
Room Coordmator
Beside s her p.uents she w,ts pt eceded 111 death by a sttllborn
son Mtch ,tcl Joseph Stacy
She IS survived by her husb,md of :14 wonderful years James
(Jtm ) Stacy . .t d,lughter Meli"d Btandt Stacy. a son Michael
Brandon Stacy. live grandchtluren. Katclyn Stdrr Stacy.
from Page A1
Dakota James Rtce. Alexandra Rtce. Brennan Stacy. and Jess
Stacy all of Pomeroy. and spec tal triends, Rtck and Pam
Patterson , Bt!l and Julie Gtlkey. Artte and Betsy Rtce. Betty gtrls), ages four to 17 who
Caldwell. Todd Anderson, and Shannon and Jumor Phipps.
parttetpate m the league
Services will be II a.m. Friday Jan. 20,2005 at th~ Pomeroy
BMV Pomeroy Deputy
Chapel of Ftsher Funeral Honie. Rev Bob Robinson wtll .be Regtstrar Sue Matson smd
offictating and bun a! wtll follow 111 Beech Grove Cemetery 111 the citizen s m Meigs County
Pomeroy. Friends may call on Thursday from 6 to 8 p.m. at the have always been "generous"
funeral home. In lieu of flowers donations may be made to when donatmg their money
Rick Patterson, 11 2 Bnck Street, Pomeroy, OhiO 45769 to to vanous state programs
help with funeral expenses.
through the BMV and the statistics prove that.
Maison added that she was

The board .tpproved the Football Coach elle&lt;:tt\'e
'
tollowmg supplememal con- Jan 6.
tracts for the 2005-06 school
• Appro\·ed Joshua Wt!l In
yeat Bttdn Bowen , Head · provide home insltuct toll set Baseball Coach;
Bryan vtces for a student
• Approved a contract wtth
Durst. Assistant Base ball
Coach, Pam Douthttt. Head NEOLA to pro vtde electrontc
Softball
Coach,
Bnan board polictes
Cumtmns,
Co-Reserve
• Approved a proposal wnh
Softba ll Coach: Gayle Salyer, lndexBiue for the des 1gn. I PARKERSBURG. W Va
&lt;\ Parkersbu rg
Co-Reserve Softball Coach, qevelopment and hostmg of (API woman '"I' o~c~u tlted on
Josh Fogle, Head Track the distncr's v.ebsrte.
• Approved the Class of Tue 'tfa) ol ,h,uge' thm she
Coach: and Sue Arnold,
2006 Sent or Tnp to Flond.t &lt;:a used the de,uh of an tnfant
Juntot Htgh Track Coach
she \.lodS bJb) ·stlt tng
The board approved the for May 13-18
fhe Woud County Ctrcun
• Approved an agreement
following substitute teachers
for the remainder of the wtth SEOVEC for baste. Court 1ury found Tammy
fmanctal, EMIS and student Lyn n Mor11son not guil t) 111
2005-06
sc hool
year
Alex,mdra Brandt. Cindy serv1ces and sol tware provtd- a retr wl Morn&gt;on ·s ftrst
Parker, Joan Barton , Leslie ed for fi s~: al vear 2006 at .t- tnal ended in .t 1111 stn a I 111
Jul y 21HI:i at tet that ]ury
Chewmng,
Ry,m
Hill. rate of $ 10 80-pet ADM
• Approved membership de.rdlocked
Christopher F. Ltght. Autumn
Mormon. -\5. h,ld been
Hill Lts!e, Amanda Parry. with the Ohio School Board
Patnck Quinn , Misty Rogers. Assoctaltnn for ca lendar c hat ~ed v.tth death ol ,J child
Dtane Stock, Ttflany S year 2006 111 the amount ul by .r'custodtan 01 guardtan m
Teoftlo, Mtchael D Wallace $2.46 7, and approved par- the Mdy 2002 de.tth ol srxticipation tn rhe Oht&lt;) "eek old Jn, hu.t Wat&gt;nn
and Michael Ztemke .
School Board AS'octatton
W.rtson "d' nne ot' several
The board also·
Legal
Asst&gt;tance
Fund
lor
chtldren
Morrr;on ",ts b.Jbv• Approved the re stgnauon
of P,n Newland as Head calendar. year 2005 at a co't 'tlltn g ,tt ChmLcs Chtld C 1re
of $250
a contractor \\ tlh the qate
• Tabled the purchase nf Dcp.mmcnt nl He,tlth and
glad to see these program s two 72-passenger buse'
Hum,ln Re,ourLe'
~ ffectmg local people such as
• Approved· a 2006 tax
Pro,ec utors allegetlthat the
the county's youth
budget.
mtant cited tram tnJunes conThe Save Our Sight 'pro• Set 7 p m on Wednesddy. stsrent with 'haken habv '' ngram is meant to educate Fcb. 8 tor the next regul ar drome The delen'e ,irgued
fam thes about the benefits of meeting of the Board of there v.a~ no so lid proot and
weanng protective eye gear Education at the elementaf\ thar shaken baby svndrome ts
and to make tt "coo l" rn the !tbrary conference room
. a .theory and not a ·fact
mmds of children and the1r
parents
through
public
Ohw 7 North to Cook Road.
awareness campa1gns and
across Rou sh Lane, down
other incentives.
one stele off Watson Grove
Since the program began
ftve years ago over 28, I6 I
Road ro Ohto 55-l and back
from Page A1 ·
protecuve battmg helmets
rnto the vtllage
have been donated to orga- since the annexatton of 393 7
It "as the second artempt at
mzed youth leagues m Ohio
annexm~ the area alter a 200-l
acres became offictal.
"Now we've expanded our effort ; as turned Jnwn by
November where the compa- stze, so we conttnue on:· .Galh.t Count\ ·cummt,'&gt;toners. The 'ec01id rn . howe' er.
ny 's bankruptcy status from Stmson satd.
The mO\e took Cheshtr~·, tnLiuued t.tlk' \\Jth .-\mencan
Chapter II to Chapter 7
Bori s Bannai dtd not ,mend popu lat ton trom 20 to 1-+0. Elcctnc Po11 er. 011 ner ol the
from Page A1
the heanng. but dmwered another step m the ,,,ga ot netghh,,nng Gen Jame' ~~
the vtllage's ellons to stay G,t, 111 Po\\ er Plant ,mu hackol th e only work ing furnace . quesllons through teleconfer- In ·existence ,J'fter ~0 per- ers ot the pettlJ&lt;)J\ drl\e c:onThe lire w,1s nne of se\eral encing He was ordered ro cent ot Chcshtre ptnpert\ u:·ntJ c~ted thr: 11 ett tlJ h nn
rn cidenh th,tl colltJJbuted to lmw,u d all ol the tnfotm.J- O\vncrs .tgtct:U to d buyout Clhllllllg: dll I ~l..jlltll.!lll~nt" tor
tton about the plant lor .t prntile c:lnsmg ol the pl.tlll
ftom &lt;\mencan Elecrnc .tppn)\J.l \\l;?tl..' met
Bac k til M,l\. ont' of the po,ed sale
H. td rile antw\allllt t 1.11kd
Sh,nv s.Jtd he w,t, optt - Pn\&lt; er 111 2002
cump._1n y'.., O~\ net .... But j..,
A mo; e to dt"ol\e the 'ii - \tiLi~C Jc·.1Jt:J' \\t'l't' _:!0111~ 10
Barllhll. h.tll shut tile pl.mt mtsttl about the potential J a~c fatleu 111 ,1 Fchtu :rn ~t.'t&gt;p the.• uuro r &lt;ltH Hl ~UHI_g
dm11\ ,titer cmplclyecs' pa:- bu yet ,tnd the sale of the 2cXU 'pect,tl electtun
· unul 20117 . utd rhcn ,·"n'tda
pl.ml Once the sale rs co mdlL'Lk~ \\~Jc rL'lllt ned tor
dJ,..,tll ulton
The
annexed
,ue.l
tndude'
pleted. rhe nev. company h
lll ... ulltLJelll
luJH.h.
dliU
Bann ,u h.td lelt the coun tn ,,ud rn have pl.tns tOt reopenlor htael M.tson County tng tl1e pl.mt.
The B.m n.tt' and Bmson
Cttcutl Jud~e Do~vtd Nthert
lta\e
no ttes to Felm.tn . Middleport Village Rental Fees nf $11 . 00 per rental
~~ttJ ,..,..,uecl ~Ill ctite..,t '"'"lrrdnt
Inc not' the Ptt\ at
Produ,rton
lor Bannat That ts when the
are due by Februat~l I, 200(,, lf~ou OIHl and rent
othet owtlers. Ltco b Butson. Group. Me De' ill 'atu The
proper!~ in the Village of '\liddlepnrt. ~ ou mu't
purch,t'e ol the plo1n1 1'
h 1.., Lllli..,Jn . .1 nd B.tnlldJ\
pay this fee. These fees must he. paid no lall-r than
broth er. ll t ll ,Lk. ltled .t l,tw- sLhcduled tn dose ,tround
Ltn 2-l
'
..,ull .H!.un..,t 13otJs B.Hllhll
February :!R. 2006 or a line of
H L' ... aaJ Ulh.T the l!d11..,ttt - ..
On ' .tune 2 the Lornp.ttl}
$IOO 11ill he impnsrd.
ttbl to r .t Ch.rplet I I bo~nh ­ tlllll ts completed the gtoup
Sand~ lannardli, \la~or
tuptcy procecutng The pat - wtll tmmeclt,ttely ,t,trt \\ork lie' "ere to meet til feckr;1l mg oq th L' pl.mt ldct! tttl'' to
\ illagc nf \liddlepnrl
COU II
In C'h.trlt'\ll\ ll In set Jl h.Jck Ill opentl!On

Eastern

dom "

I Kwhrrn Lop e~ 1s 1he ed1·
tor of' Nalw11al ' Revrew
Online
(11'\\ \I.IWI/onalre-

catherine M. Stacy

tt'VH:' H ' ( 0111.)

UN\IEILING?
NQ ...
THEY'RE

Woman
acquitted of
baby's death

Youth

HIDING
IT.

OHTIO

-

Deaths

. •.

CROWN CITY - J,tck M McG uu e. 67. Crown Ctty, cited
Monday. Jan 1-+. 2006. at Scentc Htll s Nurstng Centet
His wile. Dot othy Shaler McG utre. survt\Cs.
Setvtce "til c l1 eld . 11 I p.m on Fnd,t). J,1n 20. 2006 . .tl
Cr~mcens Funeta l Chapel 111 Ga lltpolts wllh
Boh
Anmtrong ollt ctattR g ,tnd hllli al 111 Bethesda Ce metety 111
Walnut Tq\\ nshtp
Fn ends m.ty L.i ll Itom 6 to 9 p m nn T-hwsday at rhc
tunet a! home.

Someone's been reading too many shelter mags
pan, the ones th,!l look chance to be outdoors
hrand new
Then suddenly my dream
Sornettmes. I wonder if turned mghtmansh I was
the TV chefs wash thetr w.tlking around the dream
pan s or they JUSt throw them kttchen carrymg a frozen
out after edch show and use ptLZd and I couldn 't trnd the ;
Jim
new ones. Memo to self microwav e Maybe it wa~ ·'
Mullen
Rememher to go dumpster" htddcn behmd some fancy
dtvmg out behmd the Food cabinet door'' I opened them
Network headquartet s some- all I found sp1ce gnnders
ltme
and Kosher salt and sea salt
to them in 1890.
TV ·cooks have a p,lll for and while pepper and a
Each cabmet door was everythmg They have saute pantry full of cltfterent olive
made from a smg le ptece ol pans , they have s,wcier s, otis and spectalty vtnegars.
wood . The eabtnet pulls they have ft sh poachers.
My ptU,J wa' st,utmg to
were custom-made, one-of- crepe pans. omelette p.rn s. s,tg. "Thi s rs a btg overa-kmd ·pieces carved from double boilers and ramek tn '
stght." I'm lhtnking, " Don 't
cherry wood by a local I' ve lieen watchtng cookmg these people know how to
craftsman in the shape of shows for years and there cookry"
local bnds The cabm ets are two words I've nevet
1 hope my next dream
were a thousand steps above he,lflJ them use - trym g kttc.hen will he m01e sutted
the ones I have now, one&gt; pan - whtch outside the io my life style. Four
that are warped and don't dteam ts about the only pan microw.1ves A beer cellat
shut proper! y_and desperate- I own. If I can find it.
One It tr.lge JUSt tor sodas.";
ly need another coat of
The clteam kuchen had h,tlf-emply mncliment bot- •
pain!
.
everythtng anyone cou ld ti e' and leftovers. one JUSt
The floor of the dream want tn a ktlchen. stdle ol tor stuff that h,ls to stay ;
krrchen was a marbl e mosa- the an refngerators. wmc tefJJ getated unlll 11 gets ~
IC imported ptece-by-piece
Lell.u~.,, d bdktng ..,tallon,
thrown om.
from
a
I4th L·entury mtxers.
blender,.
food
Thete v.on' t be .r pot tiller '
Moorrsh castle in Spam It p!OCCSSOI\, - you lldlllC 1\. It 111 tillS kttchcn. hut ,, mnp ,
has a warmth that the was there WhJCh is odd. filler · ,( 'Ptgot on th e "
linoleum with bare spots &lt;:on~tdenng I ,,IJI 't cook kilchen wall about mop ,
that 's 111 my real kttchen except hamhurgc" on d bucket htgh I tigUJc wtth .
can't seem to marc h.gtrll
the money we s,tvc on thts ;
AII the pots and pans 111
Maybe u's not so odd
kttd1en. we .tlfnrd to eat out
the dream kilchen were watc h b.rseball and I chm't mure ol!cn.
,
those stam le" 'reel heaLtltes play. I wat&lt;:h bass ft,hmg
Umr Mu/11'11 1.\ rlrc awlwr ,
you see the TV c:oob usc. ,11\d I don t ft ,h. I w.t tch ~ oil fl/ ' fr lol.. n " Vrl/agl' Idiot. :
The ones t h ~l never ha\c and I do pl.ry goll But 111} Cump/11 tJ!JII~ th e Simple :
burned spots on them . the golftng ts .thou! lt h' my Lije" and " Bob1 \ Fir.1t •
ones without the crusty stuff cooktng . I only d&lt;t 11 7(lfloo · Ytw c 011 !Ca( h hun ~.
hetwecn tile h.mdle and the het~tLI'·,e 1t g1ve... me d at Jlm _mulh·n([l m,\'1\U\ com) •

Local Briefs
I

Cheshire

Plant

Jack
McGuire
·,

In the dream , over my
$12.000, alway s-on Aga
oven, was a pot-tiller In my
old kttchen, I had to fill the
pot in the sink and lug 11
over to the stove. In the
dream kttchen, there was a
faucet over the stove Swmg
it out, turn on the tap and
voila 1 Saved me enough
time to make my own fresh
pasta whtle I watted for the
pot to boil.
In the dream kttchen, the
counlertops were po!tshed
bldck gran,lle The farmers '
smk was carved from one
piece of soapstone. There
was an tsland wtth a smk in
11 A double-stnk.
Under the island was a
double-drawer dtshwasher · I
never have to unload 11.
Whil e one drawer was
washmg a load ot dr shes, I
used the clean dtshes from
the other drawer to set the
table ~ eltm111at111g tha t
bothersome, ttme-consum mg step of puttmg the dtshes back tnto thetr custom
cabinet\.
Dtd I mention the custom
eahinet, ·• They were made
out of ftrst-grov.th hemlock
recovered from the bottom
t~f Lake Mrchtgan They
were logs that sank a hundred years ago, and -had
heen pamstakmgly mtlle&lt;l
by sk illed craftsmen who
only used the tool s that
would have lreen available

The Daily Sentmel • Page A5

Clinic's advanced CT sc~nner aids early diagnosis

'

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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Obituaries

VVednesday,January18,2006 ,

Trumping a modern-day slave trade

The Daily Sentinel
.

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,Januaryt8,2oo6

NOTICE

Woodmen to host brurich
'
POMEROY - Modetn Woodmen ol Amenc,m. Camp
6335. ·wtll h:t\C lamtlv l&gt;runch lrom lJ to II 10 ,Jill .tl
\1tllte, Rcst.tur.tnl. BtdiJhury Rnatl The L'amp v.tll pay $2 50
towatd the coil ol c.tLh rct,Oil's tnedl. A t,ml!ly dp or ptl/C
wtll he dW,allkd

Sing canceled
PORTER - A s!llg te,Jlunng E\elyn Rou sh scr for Saturddy
at the Cl,u'k d1.1pcl FW B ChurL It hds lwcn c·.rtlLeletJ due to
lamtly tlln c"

liDr.. n~eny tK. \J$1iles
·\(lh\l~9&gt;.R~9f~R
Auto Aarde111.1 Worken'

JlJJI&lt;
\ f! \\\ ( hlrl ~lr.li.11~ \ ti(I CI\
\llmt-..•r i..f &gt;\mt nt.\1\ Hnmd ,,,
\ ltt fHI'f,ttlllf nil he I I:. II

I ~lf t' lblt..

t't1.'(t·•~,.,..,:tl,

21\H'l'l"ntl). t:
\kntlo.:r •11 -\Ilk Hl .m A ~.- 1\.lt nl\
11! \h\.11d 1\ t U['llf1KIIJI"r

Digital lhhnolug) for
Better Hearing and Bctll'r Lh ing!
II ear forvmmelf (1/ lt.arr .·llldio/og\' &amp; Hearmg A rd' lro.- digtlal
lu·armg aub rt1 ~tort' tilt treasu red wuml~ nf\·our world agam .. .
a tecluwlogh.Yll rerolurio,.

Fn.' t Hearing

Compen.mtion
• 'P' 'II' lnjl.lfh.'"
"-1 t~llt.\fC

4

• \ t.tfru n•l llfr

1

\1o•( \ [l,ur:lfll.1.'

• 'l o.~ml

,J"

1Jif11

.Kavenswood
·ChiroprJct:c ~cftt~r
~

316 washln
· ~--- ·

Con~ulhltion

304-273-5321 ~
n St.

Ravenswood, WV

499 Richland Annue, Athens. Ohio 45701

94-6333 or 1-800-451-9806
AUDIOLOGY
HEARING AIDS

�•

Pa.geA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Local Weather

·Know about eviction procedures.in Ohio
Q.: Mv 1vife and I .fbmml action for non-payment of
an LLC .for a propeny renwl rent. However. Ohio law says
business, wu/11·e numage rhe that a lanolord may collect
properties ourselws. Are ll'e actual damages and attorney
allowed to .file e1•icrio11 fees il' the tenant does not:
I . kee p his or her unit safe
actions against ft'lumts awl
sue rht'mjVr . damages. or and ~ unit ary:
2. di spose of all garba!(e in
must fill attom er do rlw r:'
A.: Yes and · no. You can a safe and sanitary manner;
J. keep all unit plumbing
only fi le evictions if you own
the rental property your- fi xtu re.-. as del.ul a~ their conselves. Becau se the corpora- dition permits;
-1 . Mwne all electrical ami
tion (LLC) technically owns
· the rental property. only an plumbing fixtures propaly:
5. comply with state and
attorney· can file an evil'lion
local hou sing , healih , and
action or sue for damages.
Due to a recent S11preme safetv codes:
Court of Ohio ruling, howev- . ti. ;e frain from and forbid a
er. you now may fi le com- guest fro·m intentionally or
plaint in small claims 'court neglige mJ y uestroying. defacon behalf of the LLC for ing. dama gin g. or removing
· damages agaimt the tenant.s. an y tixture. app liance or other
as long as you do nut ac t as a part' of the premises:
7. ma1111ain in good worklawyer would at trial by arguing or cross-examin'ing wit- ing condition any app li ance
nesses. or· en gaging in other (e.ig. range or refrigerutor)
acts of ad v oca~ y. Note . supplied by the land lord:
8. behave in a way that will
though, that in small claims
court. you can seek no more not disturl)the neighbors and
requ ire guests to do the
than SJ .OOO in damages.
same : and
9. allow the landlord reaQ.: When mar a landlord
sonable
access (upon 24
co/leer arrorney .fee.\' or punitive damages ill an action hours notice) to enter the
against a.renant ?
premi ses to inspect, make
A.: A landlord generall y is repairs. deli ver parcels, supnot entitled to collect puni- ply necessary or agreed- upon
tive damages (a fine intended service s. or show the unit to
as punishment). A lardlord prospective or act ual buyers.
also is not entit led to collect mortgagees , ·te nants, workattorney fees -in an evktion ers. or contractors.

a

· Q.: Assuming

we 11era ll'ril

of restirurion f rom rhe co11rt
to forcibly rl'mvve a tenant
from his unit, 'ho w can we
enforce. tlwr order :' AI;Y). do

we have cwr responsibilitv
for the tencmt 's belonRing.1 :'
A.: Generally, you ma}&lt; ask
the same court that ordered
. the writ of restitu tion to al so
issue a writ of execution by
filin g a precipe with the clerk
of courts, along with a filin g
fee . With,in I0 days after
receivin g a writ of executiQn,
depending on jurisdi ction ,
the sheriff. police officer,
constable. or bailiff must
execute the writ to restore.
' y to you.
yom proper!
Generally. th e sheriff or
anothe r co urt officer will
allow you to open the unit.
re move all of the tenant's
belongings, and then place
them next to the curb or
.street. Even though the sheriff (o r other appoi nted officer) is technicall y responsible for restoring your property, in actuali ty. you as the
landlord will need to arrange
and obtain your .own movers
to physically move the tenant's belongings in a reasonable amount of time on the
move-out date. Because yo u
are helping the sheri ff execute a court order, you would
not be Iiable to the tenant for
anything that happens to the

belongings, ·&lt;lurin g or after
the move. as long as .you do
not intentionally damage the
belongings. For example ,
you would not he respQn sible
if th e tenant 's belongings
were accidentally damaged
during the move .. or stolen
after having been. placed on '
the curb.

A.: The Ohio State Legal
Services
Association
(OSLSA) provides info'rma lion about evictions and 111her
landl ord/tenant
;ssues
through http://www.ohiole galservices.org .

Law You Can Use is a
weekly consumer legal
injormatio11 colum11 prlfvid- .
ed by the Ohio State Bar
Associati011 (OSHA). This
article was prepared by Neil
P. Agarwal, Esq., all attorney
with the Akrorr firm of
Agarwal&amp;!;l.garwal. · These
articles are illfended to provide broad, general information about·the law. For more
irrforf7Ultiorr 'orr a variety of
legal topics, visit the OSHA 's
Web site at wwwolliobarorg.
Befare applyirrg this ill/ormation to . a specific legal
problem, readers are urged
· to seek the advice of a
licemed attomey.

Residency bill before Ohio House ·

ASSOCI ATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS
Local
governments wqu ld be banned .
from requiring their employees to live within their houndaries under a bill set for a vote
Wednesday, in the House.
If the measure becomes
law. Speaker Jon .Husted and
constitutional ex per.ts said it
would surely wi nd up in a
court dispute over the constitutional ri gh ts of cities and
towns to set the ir own rules.
"It's .the most blatant violation of home rule that has been
before the House and Senate
in a very long time." said John
Mahoney, deputy director of
the Ohi'o Municipal.League. ,
The Senate passed the bill
. 19-1 3 ·in June - with splits in
opinion within p&lt;uties &lt;md even
between lawrnakers from · the
·same city. Gov. Bob Taft has
long indicated his support of
lifting residency requirements.
spokesman Mark Rickel said.
About 125 cities and 13 vi llages ha:ve some sort of
requirement for employees to
li ve either within citv limits or
within a certai n distance. such
as within the county. according to the Municipal League .
The bi ll would invalidate the
local ordinances.· and provi·sions in umon contracts would
expire with the contracts.
Communities still could pass
laws. requiri·ng some workers
to live in the same county or a
neighboring cou nty.
Sen . Timothv Grendel I. the
Geauga Coun-ty Republican
who wrote th~ bill. says
another part of the constituti on trump s the home rule
prov; sion - allowing law-

· WHAT: The Ohio House will consider a bill Wednesday
that would invalidate. city and village requirements for
police. fire and other employees to ltve in the community
or withii1 a certain dista nce. The reyuiremen ts could be
replaced by allowi ng workers to li ve within the county or
a neighboring county.
A~GUMENTS FOR: Supporters say it's not fa ir to ·hire
someone based Qn where they live instead of job.performance. A!so. some city employees say that cities have
denied exemptions even in cases of family medical emerge ncy or threats to'\ safety worker's fami ly.
ARGUMENTS AGAINST: Opponents say many city
requirements were overwhelmingly adopted by a vote of
the residents. and that the Ohio Co nstitut io n gra nts local
governmt nts the right. to set their own rules in most cases. .
make rs to· pass· laws gove rn- fted before a House commiting wo rkpl ace safe ty, health tee, which approved the bill
14-2 last week , that it would
and welfare.
Whether the bill qualifies · override the wi II of voters in
under that pan of the constitu- that citv and several others.
tion isn't so clear-cut. which is includin g Akron, Cleveland
why the courts likely will and Toledo. , City and police
dec(de. said Mel;vyn Durchslag, oppone nts cited the hom e
law professor at Case Westem rule argu ment as well.
Reserve University.,
Safety is also a concern,
·'Obviously the answer is : said Robert Bates. an ass isWho knows what the answe r tant fire chief in southern
is''" he .~aid .
Franklin County and a memEven though the constitution ber of the Ohio Fire Chiefs
says no other pan of the docu- Association'.
ment limits lawmakers' power
Bates disagreed with supto make employment. law, it porters who said mutual aid
probably cou ldn't be used by agreements among neighborthe stale to set overtime pay ing police and fi re departrates· for all city employees. ments end the need for hav. Durchslag said.' just like a·city · ing e mpl oy~e s li ve close by
can 't u•e home ru le to override to report for emerg·e,icies.
minimum wage laws.
Few departments in the state
When both home rule and have 24-hou'r staff, he said.
employment law passed in and many have a limited staff
I'I 12. the idea was that work- and a neig,hborin g depart . er wCi fare was a matter of ment with no full-time ·staff.
statewide cOilcern . What bill
Several police officers and
supporters mu st prove is that firefighters, however. gave
residenc y rules are of impassioned testimony that th.e
statewide concern , he said .
requirements hurt · them.
Dayton C'i ty offi cial s testi - Several said their families or

Local Stocks
ACI- 86.51
AEP -. 37.38
Akzo- 47
Ashland Inc. - 65.07

BLI-12.64
Bob Evans - 23.76
BorgWarner - 56 ·
CENX - 29.42
Champion - 4.29
Charming Shops _;_ 12.08
City Holding. 35.90 .
Col - 45.26
DG -17.46
D,uPont- 39.95
Federal Mogul - .35
USB- 30.03.
Gannett- 64.80
General 'Electric - 34.94
GKNLY - 5.08
Harley Davidson - 52.06
JPM- 39.71
Kroger - . is. 79

Ltd.- 22.17
NSC- 42.41
Oak Hill Financial -

. 32.35
OVB- 25.30

BBT - · 41.67

Peoples - 29.32
Pepsico - 58.43
Premier- 15.50
Rockwell - 65.71
Rocky Boots - 19.61
Sears -121.99
Wai-Mart- 44.95
Wendy's - ~ . 57

Worthington - 19.38
Dally sto.c k reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Financ,lal Advisors
of Hilliard Lyons in
Gallipolis .

their panners· ·families have
been threatened because people
they arrested fou nd OU! where
they live. Others said they were
·denied residency. exemptions
even though they needed to
move so a disabled child could
attend a pruticular school or to
care for ailing parents.
'"I have had criminals call
my home. I have had criminals drive past my home."
Si!id Barb Sclesky-Gannon,
the . wj fe of a C leveland
police officer.
Rep . Joyce Beatty\ . a
Columbus Democr.at sworn in
Tuesday as the new House
minority party leader. said he r
c:aucus is divided. Senators
from Cleveland differed on
their opinions in tloor debate.
Beatty said she su pports
resi dency
requ irem ents
beca use they- help a city
maintain a middle class and
help children· .look up to
police and firefighters who
are their neighbors.

High school girls basketball
OVCS 58, Grace Christian .SS

Today's Forecast

College basketball

city/Region

Rio Granda 76, Sllawnee State 66

Redmen collect win .
over Shawnee State

Toledo•

32" 131 "
Youngstown •
Mansfield•
33" I 28"

35" 132"

~
~;t~

Dayton• ~
32"' 127''

·: -·

est Break

&lt;&gt;

0

locAL SCHEDULE

*Columbus

~

GALLIPOLIS - A schedule ol u~omi ng collage
and high school_11arsity spo11ing events lnYOivlng
teams lrom GaN1a , Meigs and Ma son cou nties.

32" 1.28'

~ ~ Q

·

Wednuc:lay's game
Wrestling

Cincinnati

Gallia Academy at J ac~son , 5":30 p.m

• 36" 129"

Tbursdgy's games
,
Glrla Basketball
Southern at Eastern, 6 p.m .
Jackson ·a t Gallia Academy, 7 p.m.

~ Portsmouth •
~# 38" 130°

Wellston at Meig ~. 6 p.UJ.
.
Point Pt~san t at Wayne. 7:30 p.m.

-,

River Valley et Fairland, 7:30p.m.

&lt;1:12006 Wunderground.

.6--..
t:. . . ___')
Partly
Cloudy

C.loudy

Q

~

~

Thuncler· ~
Runies /~
stom1s ~~
~

/~,,..- ~,,

Showers

~

,\\ _ ~
1

Aa1n

•

•

Friday 's gam.p

Bo.va Basketball

Ice

Fairland at River Valley. 7:30p.m.

·

··.:.::·

~

Snow

• • • •.•

.

Weather Underground • AP

Wednesday... Cloudy with
a 40 percent chance of sriow
showers. · Much colder with
highs in the mid 30s. West
winds 15 to '20 mph with
gusts up to 30 mph.
Wednesday night. .. Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
20s. Southwest winds 10 to
15 mph with gusts up to 25
mph .
Thu~da y... Partly cloudy.
Much warmer with highs in
the mid 50s. Southwest.winds
JOto 15 mph.
Thursday
night .•. Partly
cloudy wi th a 20 percent
chance or showers. Not as cool
with lows in the · IO\ver 40s.
Southwest winds arou nd I0
mph with gusts up to 20mph.

Friday ... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 50s.
Frida y
night•.•Mostly
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the lower 40s.
Saturday...Cloudy with
showers likely. Highs in the
lower 50s. Chance of rain 60
percent.
·Saturday night ... Mostly
cloudy. Cooler with lows in
the lower 30s.
Sund~y... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper 40s .
Sunday
night ... Mostly
clear." Lows in the upper 20s.
Monday
through
1\Jesday... Partly · cloudy.
Hi ghs in the upper 40s. Lows
in the lower 30s.

Herber'! Hoover at Pt . Pleasant, 7:30 p.m .
Bel pre at Meigs, 8 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Jackson. 6 p.m.
·
Sou th Gallia vs. OVCS (at Rio) , 5:30 p.m .
Eastern at Waterlord, 8 p.m .
Hannan at HUnting ton St. Joe, 7:30p.m.
Federal Hocking 91 Southern, 6:30 p.m
Wahama at Wirt County. 7:30p.m.
Girla Basketball
Sou tti Gallia vs. OVCS (at Rio), 7 Prm.

'

Wrestling

WSAZ tournament
Saturday 's games

Boys Busketball
OVCS al Southern, 7 p.m.
Point Pleasant 91 Poca, 7"30 p.m.
Girts Basketball
. Trimble at Southern, 10:30 a .m.
A1ver Valley at Meigs , 6 p.m.
Unloto at Gallla Academy 1 p.m.
· South Gallia at Notre Dame, noon

Wrestling
WSAZ tournament

Wahama at Calhoun Co.
College Basketball
Tiff1n at Rio Grande . 8 p.m .
Women 's College Baskelball
Tiffin at Rio Grande. 6 p.m . .

. INSIDE

• Rebels stroll past Teays ·
Valley. See Page 82

Reds to play in
HOF exhibition

Anjali Ambekar, M.D., Radiatiol) Oncologist
The O' Bien ess Health System welco mes Anjali Ambekar, M.D., to th e
Athens C ancer C ente'r, located at the north end of th e C astrnp C enter.
Dr. Ambekar has been tra ined in radiation ";..m ingy at S ina i Hospital
of Detroit and has special interest in the treatm ent of breast canc.e r.
Dr. ·Ambebr received h e r medical deg ree at the Fl.). Medi cal Co ll ege in
Pune, India. She cmnpletcd h er res iden cy in obstetri cs at)d gyneco logy
at the Sassoon Hospital in Indi a and in pathology at the Detnli t
Memorial H ospital in Mi chrgan . She is a memher of the American
Society fo r Therapeut ic Radi ology and O nco l(1gy.
.·

CINCINNAT I lAP)
· Unless sometl1 ing une xpec ted happens again , the
Cincinnati Reds wi ll be play in g in Cooperst 6wn , N.Y..
this sea'son. ·
The · Reds
and
the
Pittsburgh Pirates have been
chosen for the 60th ann ual
Hall of Fame Game , an exhi bi tion in Cooperstow n on
May 15.
The Reds have been selected for the game seven. times.
but haven"! made it the last
two ti mes ..The players' strike
wiped out their scheduled
appearance 111 1981 . and
mechanical probl ems with
the ir plane forced them to
m1 ss th e
1989 game.
Citll'innati last pl &lt;,yed in the
game in' I 96 7.

CoNTAcrs
Phon e - 1· 7 40·446·2342 ext 33
Fax- 1·740-446·3008
E· mall- sportsOmyda11ysemine1com

llQ. Q)U't $MQ~J!t~ ~r! ~gQ~ZC ,
Fre-ed o m From Sm ~k i ng• Onl ine, available 24 hours a day,

on you r own sched ule, from your uwn ho me .

Regitter today to begin your journey toward a

smoke ~ free

life

....Quality Information, When v - ·11eed lt 'Most
www.ohiolung.org • For your near~!
office, call· 1-800-lUNGUSA

t

SRorto Stoll

O'BLENESS
HEALTH SYSTEM

Brad Sherman, Sparta Editor
(140) 446·2642: 9&lt;1. 33
·bsherm an C mydaily1 ribune tom
Bryan WeUers, Sports Writer
(740) 446-234:2, e-.:1. 23
bwalters 0 myda1lytnbuna.com

AMf"IC.N

Larry Crum. Sport• Writer

ASSOCIATM)N

(740) 446·2342. ext 33

&gt;I ...,

lcrum@mydallyreglster co m

lUNG

VVednesday,Januaryt8,2006

Women'S"college basketball
Shawnee State 77, Rio Grande 44

High I Low temps

Forecast for Wednesday, Jan. 18

Dr. Amhekar's p ra c ti ~e at the Athens C ;m }:er Ce11ter h as a designated
entran ce and parkin g. It is loca ted a t the nmth end of th e C astrop
Center, O' Bieness Medi ca l P&lt;~rk , 75 Hosp ita l Dr., m A the ns. To
schedu le an appoi..;nnent m for mo re in formMion , ca ll (740) 566-4600.

. We can help with that, too! WWW.FFSONLINE.ORG

._./

· High school boya basketball
Sissonville 41 , Point Pleasant 31
South Gallia 84 , Teays Valley Christian 56
Miller 46, Meigs 38
Ale)(ander 53, River Valley 39 .
Hannan 65, Grace Ch ristian 62
Buffalo 76, Wahama 59

Q.:. \¥/JeJP r an I g(~ / more
informclfion ahout el'ictions ?

Bill to end worker residency laws raises constitutional question
Bv CARRIE .
SPENCER GHOSE

2006.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday's garMa

Wednesday, January 18,

LAW YOU CAN USE

LocAL SCOREBOARD

' BY MARK WtUIAMS
SPECIAL, TO TH E SENTIN EL

RIO GRANDE - In order
to make the American
Mideast Conference to urmi'
ment next month, the
University of Rio Grande
Redm en basketball team
faced a must-win situation on
Tuesday night. just to keep
hopes alive . The Red men rose
to the challenge and defeated
vi siting Shawnee State, 7666. at the Newt Oliver Arena.
Rio Gra nde (9- 12, 3-6
AMCS) and Shaw nee State
(7- 14, ·3-6 AMCS) played a
nip-and-tuck game for nearl x
35 minutes before the
Redme n fi nall y pulled. away
down the stret'h to capture

the victory.
With th~ victory. Rio snaps
&lt;1 three-game losing skid.
Both teams shared leads in
the first half as Bryan
Robinson kick -started the
Shawnee a !lack scoring I 0
first half points. Robin son left
the game late in the first half
with an injury and did not
return.
Ri o countered Robin son
and the Bears inside game
wtth perimeter shooting.
Freshman .sha~ p s hooter Joe
Mendenhall nailed a pair of
trey s to give Rio a 23 - 16 lead
with 7: 18 remaining in the
first half. The second trifecta
capped a 13- 1 run by the
Please see Collect. B&amp;

.

.

Brad Sherman/photo

R1o Grande Redmen semor guard James Pattman (10) adjusts his shot as Shawnee State's
Terrance Davison (12) goes for the block and Aaron Mauk (25 ) looks on . Rio Grande. needing a
. v;ctory to stay 1n postseaso.n contention, defeated its r~val 7EH36 at Newt Oliver Arena on Tuesday.
'

'

Marauders fall to Miller, 46-38
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAI LYTRIBUNE.COM

ROCK SPRINGS - A
12-4 second yuarler surge
enabled Miller to leave
. Larry
R.
Morrison
Gyn1nasium Tuesday with
a 46-38 victory over
Meig s
in
Tri- Val lev
Conference non-league
action.
. The vis- ·
i t i n g
Fal,ons
( 6 - 7 )
turned a
one-point
f1rs1 quarter cd"c
into a 2'415 ha lfPoole
time
advantage. then held on the rest
of the way to pull within
one game of .500.
The Purple and White
shot 43 percent ( 18-of-42)'
in the triumph and ·had
three plavers swre double
fi gures. '·led by Shane
Luning's 15 poi nts. Kyle
Fisher follo,ved with 14
points.
while
Du .&lt;t in
Householder chi pped in 12
point s, seven rebounds and
four steals for the guests.
The Marauders (I - II ),
on the other hand . managed just 35 percent (15of-43) from the field and
had only one player reac h
.
double-digi t points.
David Poole paced the
Marooh and Gold with a
game- high 19 points. Eric
:VanMeter was next with
seven, while both Aaron
Cordell and Andy Kinnan
added four apiece in the
setba ck . Cordel l al so had
.
Bryan Walters/photo
. team-highs of seven car- Meigs· Michael Blaettnar [32) hauls in an offens1ve rebound during the fourth quarter of
Tuesday's contest against Miller at Lar ry R. Morrison Gymnasi um in Rock Springs. The
Please see Meigs, Bl
Marauders lost to the visiting Fal cons. 46-38.
.
·
·

Redwomen
stumble to
No.5 SSU
BY MARK WtUI~MS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - A cold
shoo1111 g. first half put the
University of Rio Grande
Red women basketball team
in a huge hole of which they
could not climb out of against
NAIA Divi sion II No. 5
Shawnee State on Tuesday
evenin2 at the Newt Oliver
Arena.· Shawhee State rolled
to a 77-4-1 victor\.
Rio Grande · IR- 11 , 3-6
AMCS J had plen ty of good
looks at the bu&gt;kei in the
• opening half. · bu t· could n't
ca'pita lize. Rio shot only 33 .3
percent {'1-of-271 from the
tl oor in the f;rst half. The
onl y player th at hnd any semblance Of a hot hand was
fre , hman ~ uard Ka'Yanna
fea ster. Feaster wen t 3-for-3
· from the iloor and scored the
fiN se ven points of the game
for Rio Grande .
Feaster ended the night
with I0 point s on 4-of-5
·
· shooti ng.
Rio ~ '!s also plagued by
turno,·e". committing 15 in
the ti rst hal f. The Redwomen
impro,·ed in the second half
and fini shed "ith 20 for the
!lame.

· Shawnee State 11 7-~. 7-2
AMCS I broke open a 19- 13
Please see Stumble, B6

.Buffalo stampedes past Wahama
BY Q·ARY CLARK
S20RTS CORRESPONDENT

MASOI\' . W. Va - Just in.
· Rayn es ignited a late first half
Ju ., tin
rall y
before
Whitt ington cau ~ hl fire in the '
second - halt to' Icad fourth
ranked Buffalo past an up., et
mind ed · Wahama Whi te
Falcon
squad
Tuesdav
er ening w i th' th e vis it ing
Bi .,on coming ""'""· with a
76-5'1 hardwood triumph mer
the White f' ak &lt;Hh.
Shoot ing"'"' by far the difference in the ~ a me Tue,dal
e\·enin g as Bu tlalo O\'ercame
a &gt;ilt ggish be gi nni ng 10 bom-·
bard Wah:t ma with an out burst of th ree poi nt goals.
The Putnam CD&lt;illl) teain was
red hot fw ml:&gt;c1ond the three
point arc in ' in'king 10 of 18
trey attempts in add iti on to
shootin g -+7 pe rcent fro m th e
tl 00r for the game un 29-of62 tries. "Obviou&gt;l' I rea lII
didn't expec·t th em' Ill sho&lt;it
the biill quite sn " ell.' ' \\'HS
coilch Jame s Tnth ,aid i&lt;'llm' · ·
Bryan Walters/photo
mg th e F" b "" '&lt;'rund · cnnWahama ·s Kameron Sayre (34) dribbles past Buf falo 'e ~ \1 1 1\e
'cl had. "We
defender Justin Ray nes (10 ) dunng Tuesday's contest 111 allowed them too numy open
look, from three point ran£c
Mason. W. Va. Buf falo defea ted the Whi te Falcons . 76-59.

and they knocked them do wn . ' "a,on . Wahamu . despite a
Every time W•', n1 a'de ,·) fUll :1t
. post
_ ' trong e l't'on by semor
th em thev would hit fr om th e pla1-cr Cl ay Roush. nmt1red
outs.· t·de ,·,·nd turn us· a".....L,,,._..
t 111 tUl1 1 11~11 1y ~' a~y ,..1e ld goa I
It '" ''
Ranle &gt; · anll attemph an d committed too
Whi.ttin gton who· we.re most many tu rn&lt;wers to &gt;tay with
re&gt;ponsible for ne ga ting a the tale nted BISo n ca~ ers.
coupl e of Wah ama com e"We pli,ecl well i 1~ stretc hlrom-behinll ralli es. Rii\'ile' e' bu t "e nm;ed sneral bas- ·
di aled in frll m I on~ rimge keb fr(l m d ose ran 2c· we
wi th three tre ys io side a three should ha\'e made... Totti siatminut e . , rretl' h dur ine. the ~ec - eJ . "Th~ hL' .mi-.-..ed opportuond ·&lt;] Uil rtcr after the Wh ite ni1i c' c&lt;&gt;m bi nccl "ith our
Fu lLOih canic fr&lt;Hll behind 1&lt;&gt; tU rll&lt;'ICt margin put us in a
liike a Mri ef 13- 12 leil d . hole .utJ th e w'" the' shot the
Whin ingwn eq uakd Ra1 nes' h'"' cthal l we ,:uul di1'1 climb
accompl i, hm cnt in the thi rd out of it."
period with succ·esshe tliree
Rnu'h ex perie tKed one of
poi nt ha,keb 10 turn another hi, hc&gt;t ~ame' of the season
Fa l~on ilouri sh aw av.
n ffen •i,el) in · fini ~ hing the
"We didn' t ge t off to a '&lt;!') outing \l ith a.game 'hi gh 20
good start." Buffa lo Coac h pnint&gt; for the White Falcons.
Chuck Elkin s said . "We did- Brandon Fowler added 16
n' t hn ve &gt;c'hnol toda,· an d I marker' "hile sophomore
think we &gt;lept a little ioo 'i on~ Ca&gt;e' Harri son contributed
before waking up in· th e sec'- i 1 t&lt;ilhe' and Brenton Cl ark
ond half. Th i~ is th e nest ,•,ght fn r the Bend Area cage .
ih ree ·poi nt &gt;h&lt;H11in2 night · team .
we· , e had ,il l \ enr. the , et"er- ·w ahama Jo , t It!. 1econd
&lt;~n ca~,. co&lt;ic h ·added."
&lt;tra,~htc·••nt~'t t&lt;&gt; f&lt;i ll to 10-3
The ,·ontc' t tcat urcd but &lt;'n the'"·"
one tie and on I\· four lead
·Buff:dn placed f~•u r playe rs
ch &lt;~n ge '
h c fm~
BufL1In 111 dnuhlc lli~ll ,conng with
,· m c r ~cJ w i1h· 11' I Ot h , ll'ton
Please see Wahama, Bl
111 i 1' g:n 11 e, 011 the llMI)-0(\

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

High School Basketball Sc·oreboard
B ovs BASKETBALL

SOUTH GALLIA84,
TEAYS VALLEY CHRISTIAN 56
TEAYS VALLEY CHRISTIAN (6·7)
B ryan DaVIS 0 0 a 0 Bryan Hill 4 0 0 8

Noah Osborne 3 2 3 9 Mtchael Mtller 4 02 10 Chns McCombs 0 0 0 0 Stephen
NZJshura 0 0-0 0 Mtchael Wrtghl 0 I 2 '1

Chnslian Newman 3 0-0 6 Matthew Jones
4 0-0 8, Ben Hannah 0 0 0 0 Ethan Young
0 o-o 0, Jon Phoon•x 0 1·4 1 Abe Wtlhams
~ 0-Q 4 Jared DaVIS 3 3-6 9 Totals 23 7 11
56
SOUTH GALLIA (1 0.2)
Dusttn McCombs 7 3-3 17 Josh Wnght 5
1 2 15 Bernte Fulks 2 0 0 5 Curt Waugh 3

2-4 9 Tyler Duncan 7 3 3 18

Se th

Wtlhamson 1 0 0 3 Aaron Phtlllps 1 0 0 2
Mtchael Pope 1 0 1 2 Josh Sktdmore 0 00 0 Tyler Porter 2 1 1 5 Der riCk Beaver 0

0-1 0 Robert Courey 0 0 0 0 Ryan Getger
1 0 0 2 Justm Trtpleu 0 0 0 0 Travts
¥cCarty 1 2 3 4 Dewey Cantrell 0 0 0 0
Steven Call 1 0 0 2 Tota ls 32 12 18 84
TVCS
10 18 17 11
56
$ Gallla
27 25 22 1o 84
3 Pomt Goals-TVCS 3 (Miller 2
Osborna) SG 8 (Wnght 4 Fu lks Duncan
Williamson Waugh)

ALEXANDER 53,
RIVER VALLEY 39
RIVER VALLEY (5·8)
Jason Jones 0 1 3 1 Bryan Morrow 5 2·3
12 M1chael Cordell 4 0 0 8 Tyler
Thompson 3 2-2 8 Ryan Henry 0 2 2 2
Gory Ehman 0 2 2 2 ian Lew1s 1 0 0 2
Sco1Wa rd 1 0 1 2 Hugo Hern andez 1 0-0
2, Matt N1bert 0 0 0 Totals 15 35 9 13 39

ALEXANDER (10.3)
N1ck Malesko 4 0 0 8 Zach Hedr ck 4 1 1
10

Dame I Skidmore 5 2 2 12 Matt
Oe mo s~y 7 3 6 17 Seth Fowle r 2 0 0 4
Rya n Th omas 0 2 2 2
Michael
0 1Benedetto 0 0-0 0 Shawn Hows on 0 0 0
0 Mike Bolin 0 0 0 0 Tota ls 22 44 8 II 53
RlverValley
9
7
12 11
~ 39
Alexander
17 8
12 16 53
3 po1nt goals- RV 0 9 (none) A 1 7
(Hedr ck) Aebounds- AV 19 (Co rdell5) A
20 (Ma lesko 8) Steals-RV 3 (Ehman 2)
A 11 (Malesko 3) JV score-A 52 AV 49

OT

Chn::;t an 35
Balt1more L1berty Un1011 51

Bucyrus Wynlord 47 Mansfield Ontano

32

32
Can S 57 M1ner va 50
Can T1mken 49 Mancheste r 39
Canton S 57 M1nerva 50
Carrollton 42 BelOit W Branch 39
Cedarvlle 47 W Li berty-Salem 45
Cellnevtlle Southern Loca l 56 Sebnng
MCK!f'lley 50 OT
Chesapeake 75 Wm 11eld (W Va ) 67
Chillicothe 64 Portsmouth 45
C1n Glen Este 57 Cm Anderson 55
Cm Oak H1lls 58 Cm Sycamore 44
Cm Seven H 1lls 55 Hamilton New M1am1

37
Cols Cententlla l 75 Cols Beechc!roft 38
Cots E 47 Cols Mifflin 36
Cols Manon Franklin 7 1 Cols Walnut
Rtdge 34
Co ls N orthland 45 Cols Lmd en
McKmley 40
Cols Watterson 52 NewarK 45
Crest! ne 62 Bucyrus 60
Day Chr~sltan 68 Day St1vers 46
Day Cot White 7 1 Trotwood-Ma dts®n 42
Day Dunbar 56 Cm W1throw 54
Def1ance 52 Bryan 51
Eaton 43 Hamil ton (lnd) 36
Edg erton 47 P1oneer N Cent 26
Fremont St Joseph 52 , Norwal~ St Paul

37
Cm W nton Woocls 7 I Harnson 50
Cm Wyommg 60 Goshen 36
C1rclev1lle 62 Bloom Carroll 52
C!rclev!lle Logan Elm 81
Amanda·
Clearcreek 45
Clarksville
C lm ton Mas s1e
66
Blanchester 45
Cle Benedicti ne 66 Burton Berksh1re 60
Cols Acaclemy 56 Granv1lle 5 1
Co ls Afncentnc 66 Cols Eastmoor 65
Cols Beechcroft 70 Cols Ce nlenmal 57
Cols 811ggs 83 Cols W 70
Ools Bro o~haven 7 t Cols Wtietstone

46

f.?.

Ft Loram1e 62 Russ1a
Gallon Northmor 53 Gahan 41
Genoa Area 53 Tontogany Otsego 37
Greenville 55 Lebanon 45
Grove C1ty 90 Galloway Westland 38
Grove C1ty Cent Crossmg 7l Cols
Hartley 58
Hilliard Darby 51 Cols Franklm Hts 31
Independen ce 73 Cols S 53
Kahda 41 Def1ance Tmota 37
Lakes1de Danbury 55 Sandusky St
Mary 45
Lewistown lnd1an Lake 78 Sidney 33
Londo n Madison Pla ms 39 Green field
McClam 26
Lucasv lie Va tJ.ey 52 Waverly 44
Man sfield St Peter s 35 Ashland 24
Mal'la Ste1n Mar on Local 42 Calma 33
MaFion Hard1 ng 42 Delaware Buckeye
Valley 40
Miller C ty 68 McComb 20
Mt Blanchard R1ve rdalt: 58 Ftndlay
l1berl y Benton 40
Mt G lea d Gilead Ch r1st1 an 43 Mt
Gilead 38
New Albany 51 Cols Acad emy 31
New Carli sle Tecumseh 55 Vandalia
Butle r 44
New Knoxville 39 Lehma n CatholiC 36
New Mad1son Tr1 Village 54 Lew1sburg
Tn County N 49
New Was h ngton Buckeye Cent 46 N
Robmson Col Crawford 4 1
Oak Harbor 55 Tiffrn Colu mbia n 51
Ottov1lle 67 Pandora Gilboa 29
Port Cli nton 58 Elmore Woodmore 36
Rea d1ng 50 0 1n Deer Park 36
Richwood N Umon 43 W Jefferson 38
Rossford 61 Bowl1ng Green 24
Spencerville 64 Rockford Parkway 51
Spr ng
Kent on A1dge 91
Spnng
Greenan 42
St Bernard 48 Cm SCPA 29
Sugar Grove Berne Un1on 54 Fa1rf1dld
Chnst1an 49
Sunbury B1g Wal nu t 63 Spar ta H1gh land

44
Cols Hamilton Twp 66 . Ashville Teeys
Valley 58
Cols Harvest Prep 93 Sugar Grove
Berne Un on 60
Cols Mar ion Franklm 7.7 Cots Walnut
A1dge 57
C ols Mllflltl 62 Cots E 58
Cols Northland 74 Cols L mden
McK nley 53
Cots S 75 Independence 66
Cort land Maplewood 59 Orwel l Grancl
Valley 55 OT
Cov1 ngton 58, Ansoma 54
Danv1lle 69 Centerburg 56
Day Jefferson Twp 75 Yellow Spr1ngs

54

MILLER 46, MEIGS 38
MILLER (6·7)
Shane Lunmg 5 3 4 15 Jacob E ng 0 2 3'
2 Kyle Hl!e 0 1·2 1 Trevor Mclean 0 0 0 0
Kyle F1sher 7 0 0 14 Coday Bauer 1 0-0 2
Dusl n Householder 5 1·3 12 Totals 18 42

7 12 46
MEIGS (H1)
Aaron Cordell 1 2 2 4 Michael Blae"nar 1

0 0 2 Er1c VanMe ter 3 0 1 7 Andy K1nnan
2 0 0 4 Andy Garnes 0 0 0 0 Dustm Van
lnwagen 0 0 0 0 Casey Richardson 0 0 0
0 Brad Ramsburg 1 0 2 2 Dav1d Poole 7
57 19 Totals 15 43 7 12 38
Miller
12 12 12 10 46
Meigs
11 4
10 13 38
3 pomt goal s-Mtller 1 7 (HousehOlder)
Me1gs 1 10 (Van Meter) Aebounds-Mt!le r
n/a (Householder 7) Me gs 31 (Cordell 7)
Offens ve rebounds-M1Her (nl a) Me1gs 9
(K1nnan 3) Ass sts- Mtller 11 (Lu n ng 5)
Megs 10 (Cordell 4) Steals-Miller 9
(HousehOlder 41 Me1 gs 6 (Cordell 3)
Tu rnovers-Miller 12 Me1gs 1B Team
fouls-M11ler 12 Me1gs 18 JV scoreM lie 35 Me1gs 32 OT

HANNAN 65,
GRACE CHRISTIAN 62
HANNAN (4·2)
Ryan Canterbury 4 4-8 12 Kevm Blake 3
56 12 Bradley Edmonds 51 4 tt Wesley
Gue 7 6 17 20 Aaron Payne 1 t 2 3 Joe
Kmnard 1 3· 7 6 Jared Taylor 0 1-2 1 Totals
21 21 46 65
GRACE CHRISTIAN (nla)
Devon Seiber 2 0 1 5 Marty Clay 2 0 1 6
Jared Lache 2 3 4 8 Zack F1sher 1 0 0 2
Adarn Hoverton 0 0 1 0 Zack Huff 1 0 0 2
Josh Wllhams 3 4 6 10 Steven Wray 4 4 8
12 J 0 Thompson 4 2 3 10 T1m Brakke 3
0-0 6 Totals 22 13 24 62
Hannan
10 16 18 19 65
Grace
17 16 14 15 ..,.... 62
3 Pont Goals-Hannan 2 ( Bia~e
Kinnard) GCS 2 (Sei ber Lache )

BUFFALO 76, WAHAMA 59
BUFFALO (nla )

a

.s

o-

SISSONVILLE 41 ,
POINT PLEASANT 31
SISSONVILLE (6·4)
L,an ce Walker 2 1 2 6 Kyle Snyder 2 3 4 7
T1mmy Debarr 1 1 1 3 Adam Lowe 2 0 0 4
M1che! Hoga 3 1 2 7 Noah F1 scher 3 0 t 9
Mike Evans 0 0 0
Chns Boggess 2 0-0
4 EriC Myers 0 0-0 0 Aobte Harfllilon 0 0
0 Will Black 0 0 0 0 JeSSB Boardman 0
12 t Totals- ~ 57 12 41

a

a

aa

Tra sawn Bonecutter 0
0 Stephen
Walker 1 2 4 4 W II Slone 0 2 5 2 Tad
Bonecutter 0 0 0 Jay Ellis 0 0 1 0 Kenny
OurhafTI 0 0 0 Na than R mmey 0 0 0 0
Lasse Bartels 0 0 0 0 Josh Stover 7 0 2
t5 Steven Pe•ry 0 0 0 0 Stephen
Brown ng 0 0 0 0 Bobby Errett 50 4 10
To tals- 13 4 16 31
Sissonville
6
18 ' 8 9
~ 41
Pt Pleasant
9 4
12 6
31
3 Potnt Goals- S 4 i Noan F sher 31 PP 1
(Josh Stover 1) Fouled Out~ S 1 (Adam
Lowe ) PP (nonel Aebounds~S 18
(Michel Hoga 6) PP 36 (Josh Stover 12)
Ass sts- S (none) PP 4 (Josh Stover 2)
Sleals-S 7 (M cnel Hoga Noah F1sher 2)
PP 6 (Will Slone 3) Blocks-S (none) PP
1 (Bobby Erren) Team Fouls-S 19 PP

a

a

14

GIRLS BASKETBALL

OVCS 58, GRACE CHRISTIAN 55
QRACE CHRISTIAN (nil )

e

Krllttn Lawlnl 4 4 12 Aah ley Weoer 0
1 Amber S!zemor11 4 1 9 Ambtt
Wtbtr 1 1 2 3 ~tbe cct Bon1na\z Q 4 Q
22 1&lt;11 e Hood t 0·0 2 Jua1c• Smnh 2 2

t•e

H

TOiolo-

21

e

il 3261

OVCII4•1)
RIC~IIi l Blan"• n•hip 0 ~ 10 a SaraA
BurltltQ n 2 ~· 6 8 ~ ndre11 V~tnMeto r 0 0·2
0 Kalil leJ,~toMftl 1 1 2 :.1 9afa" JeMklfll
1 I · t I 23 b nd111y t'.; iiH l 0·0 l Kr111t
7 3 ·6 11 To!ala-. 18 ~ 1·3ft 6ft
Qrooo
~ 10

c.... ,.

OVCI

a 21 8

11 10 "

3 PolfH ()ea •-- Oraeo

"

11

58
Geneva 65 Eastlake N 58 20T
Greenv1lle 64 M1ddletown Fenwick 49
Hamilton Bad1n 72 Trenton Edgewood
41
Hamler Patn cl&lt; Henry 54 Elmwood 41
Hi lliard DavH::Ison 79 Lew s Cenler
Olentangy 70
Huron 81 Port Cl nton 70
Ironton 60 Ashland Paul Blaze r (Ky ) 49
Ironton Roc k Hill 56 Coal Grove
Dawson Bryant 43
Jackson Center 65 Wayne sfteld Goshen
55 2 OT
Jamest dwn GreeneV1ew 58 Sprm g
Cath Cent 46
Je fterson 75 Yellow Spnngs 54
Kmgs MillS Kmgs 61 M11rrow L1ttt e
M aml51
Lancaster Fa1rf1e ld Un1on 74
Canal
W1nc hester 71 OT
Lancas te r F1sher Cath
57
Cols
Grandview Hts 47
Latham We stern 76
New Boston
Glemliood 73
LebanQn 79 Ol&lt;ford Ta lawanda 75 2 OT
L1ckmg C ounty Chnst1an 51 Zanesvi lle
Chn stta n 50
L1ma' Cent Cath 62
Pemb e1v1lle
Eastwood 53
Lo u1svlle 71 All ance Marlmgton 65
Magno! a Sandy Valley 62 Sugarcreek
Garaway 52
Mason 71 Am elia 5 1
Massillon Tu slaw 69 Rill man 52
MaSS!IIOn Was h1ngton 74 Ca n GlenOak

1

Swanton 48 Pelt!sv lle 35
Sylvama NOrthv ew 58 Perrysb urg 51
Sylvan1a Southv1ew 64 Springfield 2a
Th ompson Ledgemont 64 Cle Hts
Luthe ran E 42
Tol Rogers 36 Del1a 25
Tol Whitmer 42 Fremont Ross 40
Un1on C1 ty M1 ssrnawa Vall ey 55,. W
Ale11a ndna Tw1n Valley S 42
W Salern NW 66 Su llivan Black R1ver
39
Wause o n 52 Stryker 40
We st~vlle N 60 Mar ysvi ll e 43
Whitehouse
Anthony
Wayne
63
Maumee 40
Youngs Chnst an 46 Ash tabula Sts
John &amp; Paul 44.

- 0&amp;

54
S Pomt 80 Hunrmgton st Joseph (W

va J 41

S Webster 55 Wheelersburg 49
Shelby 68 Galion 50
Spr1ng Ema nuel Chnstlan 73 Spr ng
Valley 61
Spr ng NE 56 Mechantcsburg 48
Spr ngboro 74 Franklin 60
Strasburg Frank lm 68 Ber 1n H iland 59
Summ1 t Slallon L1ckmg Hts 80 Newark
Cath 46
S ur-~bury Big Walnut 69 London 57
Thompson Ledgemont 70 Fa1rt:&gt;ort
Harbor Hard1ng 46
fhornv 11ie Shen dan 56 Crooksville 36
To Erranuel Bapt1st 55 Betts v111e so

or

To Maumee Valley 63 Millbury Lake 59
To l Scott 67 F1ncl lay 47
t~ Start 55 To l Woodw ard 53
Troy Chr~st1an 70 Midd letown Chrterlan

38
Washington C H
63
Wl lll am1po rt
Wes tfall 60
Waverly 67 Oa~ Hill 39
Whll llng Par~ (W Va ) ea E Liverpool

67
Will ard 87 Fo1t0r11 70
Wllmm gtofl "1 , Ctn Turp1n 8Q
Woodlflt lel MonrQI C01'11
S.rahtVIIIt

91'\on•naoa, •e

Wooatar Tr1~11y 66

eve;. &amp;o

Andov•r
~ym11unmg
V1 ll ty
61
BriiiO IYtll l Br lat ol 49
Archbola 63 Met1mor1 Evergreen 33
At.S!IMOu·g Orand R1ver 55 War·en

CuylhOQtl Filii

~3

Onlo Mig~ lo~ooJ Olrlt lukllboll
Tutodoy'o ~tou ll o

(nona) 0VC8 I

Onto Hlgn lo~ool love lllkllboll
Tlltldoy'o Rtoullo

ao

Xs n1a Chrlltllfl 'J3 O~y Ct1rilllllfl ~~
Z'l rlli¥1111 MtYIYIIII IS&amp; Ntw boxmqton

&amp;8

ALBANY - Alexander
shot 50 percent (22-of-44 )
hom the field and p1cked up
tis lOth vtclory m the process
dunng l'uesday's 53-39 nonconference VICtory over
Rtver Valley
The
Spartans
(10·3)
JUmped out to a 17-9 lead
afler etght mmutes of play,
then OUISCOI Cti the VISI(tng
Rau.lers 36-30 the rest ot the
Wd} Ill SCCUie lhe 14·p01nt
mumph at The Alle y'
RVHS (5·8) shol "
res pectable 43 perccnl ( 15·
ot-35) 111 the setback but an
0- for-9 effort trnm tht eepotnt tetntory all but
slammed lhe door on any
kmd ot comeback hopes
The Stiver and Black had

nine players
redch
the
scoring col·
umn.
but
only three
had
more
than
two
pomts.
B 1 y a n
Morrow
paced
the
Morrow
Ra1de1S w1th
12 potnt s.
!ollowed by M1 chael Cordell
and Tyler Thompso n w11h
etght ap1ece.
Ryan He111 y. Cory Ehman,
l;m Lew1s, Scot Ward &lt;1nd
Hugo Hernandez each hdd
two m the loss Jason Jones
10unded oul the scon ng w1th
a free thro w
Mall Demosky led AHS
and all sc01ers with 17

eo

Ann,
liitl!ltlurg Franklin M or~r? l 3d
Ap!lll
Creutk
Wayneda ll
~,
JtromtiVIIII Hlllldl ll 2Q
Arc anum '1 C•mdtn Prtolt $r'I•W'"'tl

28
Beav1r Euwn 66 Wer lion !!18 OT
BAIItlrOok 44 MadiiOI" :35

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

BSHERMAN@MYOAILYTRIBUNE COM

MERCERVILLE - H1gh·
scon ng South Galha p1ckf!d
up 1ts I Oth VICtory of the
boys basketball season, and
d1d so wnvmcmgly, wnh an
84-56 poundmg ot overmatched
Teays
Vall ey
Chn st1an School on Tuesday
Donme Saunders' Runnm'
~ebe,l s blitzed the Lton s m
rne f1rst half sconng 27
pomts 111 the flfSt quarter and
addmg 25 more m the second South Gallia's lead was
m excess of 30 potnts mosl
of the second half en route to
'
the easy wtn
Tyler Duncan scored a
career-h1 gh 18 pomts lo lead
all scorers, the sophomore.
smce makmg h1 s varsu y
debut tou r games ago, h.ts
reached double f1 gures m all
of those Dustm McCombs
scored 17 pmms and Josh
Wnght na1led four 3-pomters
en route to I 5 pomts
Curt Waugh addeu mn e

Wahama
fromPageBl
Whttttngton pavtng the way
with 18 pomls wtth 17 ol
those commg 111 the second
half
David Robinson
dropped m a qUiet 17 pomls
Wtlh Adam Scolt and Ntck
Hams nentng 12 ap1ece
Raynes ju st m1 ssed double
ftgures wtth nme markers on
the mght v.llh allmne pmnts

pOint s whtle Berme Fulks
and Tyler Portet both
ch1pped m live as 12 d1f!cr·
ent Rebel s found the sconng
column T1 av1s McCarty
went for tour followed by
thtee from Seth W1lhamson
and two ap 1ece by Aaron
Pl11lhps, M1chael Pope, Ryan
Ge1ger and Steven Call
The wm marked the fourth
straight for South Galha,
wh1ch saw lis record
tmprove to I 0-2 overall
teays Valley Chnst1an,
meanwh1l e. tell to 6-7
M1chae I MII ler led Ihe
L1ons wnh 10 pomts wh1le
Noah Osborne . " laiented
e1ghlh grader: added mne
pomts Jared Davt s also
tossed tn mne m the setback
Bryan H1ll and Ma11hew
Jon e~ each cl11pped m with
etght
The Rebel s, on 1he
slt ength of hot 3-pomt shootmg by Wnght and I 0 pomts
from McCombs, JUmped out
lo a 27- 10 · lead after one
commg in the second quarter
Wahama avo1ded the
sweep m Ihe two game set py
commg alive m the second
halt to capture a 62-45 dec."on 111 the JUiliOr varsity
encounter Coach M1ke
Wolfe \ Ltftle Falcon sq uad
outscored lhe B1son 22·5
o~er the ti nal etghl nunutes
to tmprove to 5·5 on the season
Damn Reece to pped the
)qcals With 15 pomts tol -

quarter and never looked
back
The second qum ter saw
Duncan. Waugh and Fulks
tally the hon 's share of the
Rebel offen se m the second
penod, help1ng South Galha
clmm a 52-28 halftime lead
Hill scored e1ght pmnts for
the Ltons 111 the frame
The thtrd peqod saw the
Rebels contmue to pull away
wuh seven pomts each by
McCombs and Duncan The
home team led by 29 enter·
mg the hnal stanza and
cnn sed the resl of the way
There was no Jumor varsi ty game Instead , lhe South
Gallm sophomores defeated
the lreshmen m a scnm ·
mage

South Gal Ita take s on Oh10
Valle:. Chmt1.tn Fnd.1y at the
Newt Oltver Arena on the
campu s of the Umverstty of
R10 Gr,mde It w1ll be a doubl eheadet wtth the varstty
g1rls game tlppmg at 6 p m
and the boys v.1ll follow
lowed by Justm Arnold w1th
12 and Keuh Pearson with
nme Garrell
Burdelle
totaled a game h1gh 25 w1th
Corey Greene · add mg etght
pomls 101 lhe Buftdlo J"yvee
Unit
WHS telurn s to act1on on
the road on Fnda:. when the
White Falcons hope to end
tts modest tv.o game losmg
sk1d at Wlrt Coumy Tip-off
Innes ,ue 6 p m for the preltmmary contest wtth the var·
stty ttlt to lollow at 7 30 p.m

Tuesday s Results
Girls
Bluef1eld 54 Shady Spring 28
Braxton Co unty 56 Gtlmer County 51
Bndgeport 59 L ncoln 29
Brooke 50 Indian Creek Oh!O 34
Burch 46 Matewar1 18
Clay County 78 Calhoun 52
Cross Lanes Chnst1an 56 Parkers burg
Chnslian 27
Elkins 73 Buckhannon Upshur 30
Fa1rmon1 Sen or 46 Preston 27
Frankfort 58 Northern Garrett Md 3 1
Gra ft on 39 Noire Dame 30
Guyan Valley 53 Duval 45
Hamlm 53 Hart s 47
In dependence 50 Meadow Bndge 46
Logan 62 Ct'lapmanv Ue 57
Morgantown 75 Un1ve rs ty 42
Musselman 48 Berl&lt;eley Spnngs 25
N!cholas County 32 Lew1s County 3 1
Parkersburg Cathohc 61 R1tCh1e County

56
Parker sb urg South 55 Magnol 1a 53 OT
Robert C Byrd 57 Liberty Ha mson 45
Scot! 52 Sherman 23
S!SSonvtlle 77 Herbert Hoover 33
Summers County 75 Wests ide 32
Jntl!ty 28 Va ll ey Wetzel 26
Tucker County 51 Ph1ltp Barbour 46
Tyga rts Valley 52 Pendleton Couf)ty 42
W lilamstown 67 Ravenswood 39

Boys
Beth Ha t~en Chnsr an 90 Elk Valley
Ctwshan 54
Blueheld 69 Shady Spnng 64
Burch 56 Ma lewan 20
Cha rlestofl Cathohc 56 Richwood 47
Chesapeake Oh1o 75 Wmf1eld 67
Cross Lanes Chr s11an 70 Parkersburg
Chnsllan 37
Fa!!11 Chnsl an 57 Cal.v ary Chnst1an
Md 50
G1les Va 66 James Monroe ?5
Harts 62 Hamlm 54
Hedges ville 38 Musselman 36
Hundred 74 Valley We tzel 64
Huntington 74 Cabell M!dland 39
John Marshall 79 Magnoli a 62
Logan 60 Way ne 47
Madonna 7~ Toronto Oh io 47
Martinsburg 103 Berkeley Spr ings 34
Meadow Br idge 80 Naw Ufe Chrlltlen

'

51
Mldlln d Tr1H 68 Valley Faytttt 59
Mount Hope 63
Gr eater Btcklly
Chrl tt l•n 48
Mount alf\ S1a11 Ac1 d1m~ 72 Montoalm

a•

PIICIIV 64 ~1\ID III d!J 01
Ao1n1 Cour'll~ 0" Gilmer Cou nty 0 1
SQOII
Wllll.mt on ·~
91tllonyJI!t 141 ~omt Jlltuanl 31
9outl'! Chll rlntan
HI,.I,ICinl

e,

ae

11 A'"' "' ~~. ~"""""" eo

ao

SummtHI C~;~ur'IIV e1 ktb orty ~altHQh 01
To1111 el I C1'18PmM\Itlll 42
Waltrlo ra 01'11CI 811 WeCid Ct:~un ty
Ch" " 111n
W111 88 lrn11an Cr~ttk Ot11e 08
Wut V1rg1nla School tor 1n1
v rg 1n11 School For Tha Dt1t 22
Whfl lln g Perk 68 E l.lvtroool Oh io 61
Woodrow Wll1o n 73 N11ro 34
W ~om tn g Eu1 75 11'108P81'1denc e 52

n

D••' e,

•

fromPageBl

••

om s four asst sts and three
steals
M1chael Bl acnnar and
Brau Ram sburg each had
1wo pomts to conduue
Me1gs scormg
Both te.t ms strugg led
from thrce- poml terntory
Metgs ttm shed 1-ut-10 tor
I() percent . while Miller
ended Ihe m ~ ht 1-of- 7 for
14 percent ~
Lead1pg 36-2 5 .ttt~t
three penod s, lhe Falcons
mcreased lhetr lead 10 as
much as I 3 m1dway
through the tmal fram e
Me1gs m a n &lt;~ged to 1r1m
li s deftctt to 46-18 wtlh
. I 12 rem,nmng, but llel·
Iher tea1n scored the rest nf
the way
Millet com m1t1ed 12
turnovers 111 'lhe vtctory
stx less than lhe hosls
It lOOk overtime, but
Miller was abl e 10 clmm a
sweep Tuesday wnh a 3532 VICtory Ill the JUiliOr
\ ars1 ty Itil
Jesse Mullm s led Me1gs
and all SCOIet S With 11
pomts, while Kyl e Hne
paced the Falcons wtth 14
markers M1ller led 17-16
al mterm1ss1on
Meig&gt; returns 10 Larry
R M01 nson Gymrumum
F11duy when It hosts
Belpre
in TVC Oh1o
Bryan Waltera/photo
Mel&amp;s ' Andy Garnes releases a jumper over the outstretched DiviSIOn act ion Gumc
arm or Miller defender Jacob Elni (21 ) Tuesday.
tnne 1s &gt;luted tor 6 ~0 p.m

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Real Estate Wanted
360
Schools Instruction ................... , ...... 150
Saed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer . ...
650
Situations Wanted.
120
Space for Rent........ .
.. .. 460
Sporting Goods . ..
520
SUV'slor Sale
.720
Trucks for Sale .. ....
715
Upholstery .
870
Vans For Sale
..730
wanted to Buy
090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies ....... .. . 620
Wanted To Do .......
. 180
Wanted to Rent
470
Yard Sale· Gallipolis
.. 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle
.074
Yard Sale-PI Pleasant
076

accapta on ly help wanted ads meeting EOE atanduda We wm not

any

ad~tertlalng

In violation of the law

KIT &amp; CARL.Yl.E

MUN~\
ffiWAN

I wnght2005@comcast net

I

DRIVE

VS~

II

vJf-\~N~V~P..

DtV!SIOn 0
InStitUtiOn
Consume
Ha1rs BEFORE you ref!
ance you r home o
blair) a loan BEWAR
f request s for any larg
dvarlt-e payments o
ees or 1nsu ra nce Ci=~l
he OH1ce ot Consume
ffa1rs tol l free at 1 866
78-0003 to learn 1! th
broker
o

MY

(\l!MMJ'L:. i-AP 17
l)NAVAI L..ABl-G'.

NO EXPERIENCE NECESS ARY
• FUll Tlt.IE CLASSES
'COL TRA!NING
' FI"!ANCING AVA LA6LE
• J09

HO\IES

FOR SALE
Fabulous 4br 3 full baths
Comp letely
Remodeled
House for Sale (304)882
2391

TO

PLACEME~

• ENI'OLLING NOW

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

House 4 Sate 2000 sq toot
4br w12Da Atta ched 2-ca
Garage
Great
Neighborhood 858 Pop lar
He ghts Ad
Just of1 Rt2
ne ar
Roosevelt
Elem
[30 4)675-44 35
School
after/5pm

1·800·334· 1203
***************

PRnFF•....,InN\1

Dnvars CO MPAN Y
Dedicated Roundtrips
In the Coalton KY area

SEA\ ILl.';

41c Per All Milas
Apx 2350 m les weeky
Home Weekly
COL AJ 6 mos OTR exp

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI7

www com res com

req
Call Today!
866-713-2778
www.crstmalona com

****************
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood 1tems
To $480/wk
Matenals prO\ilded
Free 1nlormat on pkg 24H r

Attent•on Onvers
A&amp;J
Truck.ng
s io okmg tor
Dnvers
wl 1 yr OTR
Expenence for Reg 1onal
Hauls Average pay 40 s to
m1d 50s Home ever.,
Weekend
ca ll
Kent

(600)462 9365

1

~10

===
.

HELPWANTID

Full time position
In Meigs County.
Must be self-

star:ter, service

oriented and able
to work well with

the public. Must
have valid driver's
license and reliable transportation Position
offers all company
benefits Including
health, dental,
ViSIOn, and life
insurance, 401K,
paid vacation, and
Please send

resume to:

C:U. Bo• 200

675·1429

c/o Pomeroy D•Ur

11t0
.

llaPWMmD

COL TRAINING
EIIIROLUNG NCHO

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRA INING CENTERS
WYTHEVIL LE VA

'

1·800·334·1203
Desk Clerk need ed Please
ap ply
at Budget
Inn
Jackson P1ke Galltpolis No
phone calls please
Oommos PIZza Now Hi nng
Safe
Onvers
Pomt
Plaasan l
Galltpol s
&amp;
Pomeroy locations A pply n
Person
Dnvers COL A w1th 1 year
ve nl 1able Tractor Trailer
requ~red
expenence
Reg1onal Aun l G~at pay
benet Is bonuses home
t1 mel MARTIN TRANSPORT
866 293 7435 '
a

omea

Galllpollt , Ol:llo
U nd er New Manage menl
Russ MurdocK General
Manager
Has open~ngs for 3 Sate
ssoc1ates
Top Performers earn a
verage $80 000+ Yr
5 day work week· 40 hrs
Closed on Sundays
Benefits mctude Health
lueCross Blue Sh 1el
Oer"'tal
eye

8)( resume to (7401446

599
If you art looking lor a
Career Lets Talk

FOR S\LE

calls No Ph one Calls

Physical Therapist

Medt Home Health Age ncy
has an excltmg oppo rtunity
Pomeroy, OH
tor a fuiHtme part-t1m e or
per dtem Phys 1cal The rap1st
to JOin
our
Med1care
Home Health Ca re of SE Cer!111ed/JCAHO acc redited
Ohto s cu rrently h!r ng agency m Cabell and
Home
Health
Atdes Putnam Count1es
Compet111 ve wages
Call
We offer a compet1t1Ye Smg
740·662 1222
On Bonu s fie• b1llty m
La borers take tr~es out schedulmg
locallzfld or
fro m so1l process for sh 1p expa"ded serv1ce area
Starling opt1o ns m1teage re1mburse
men! mm wage
Feb 15th Clements Nursery ment 40 1K Program and
(304)675 1820
lull beneht package
Local tJusmess took1ng for
Secretary/ReceptiO nist
Must have good telephO ne
sk1lls &amp; good w1th the pubhc
knowledge 1t1 computers &amp;
compu ter accounting pro
grams &amp; all other olfl ce
mach1nes Hours 8am-5p m
Monday Friday
8 12
Saturday

Pt Pleasant Moose Lodge
needing bartenders apply tn
ott1ce at LocJge only no
phone ca lls please

Se nd resume to
Local Business
PO Box 775

portet
Gener&amp;l Anlgnment

Oat11polis OH 45631

Reporter to writ e a.nd

Office Clerk needed lor fast
pace off1ce lnd1v1dual must
be a sa lt starter dependable
and energet1c, Skilled In
Microsoft Word and Exclll
Requtre ments 5upe nor ora l
and Writte n commumcatlon
sktlls and knowledge of gen

develop reat.ures, cover
news events and ba.ndle
some loon.l government
report.mg for da.lly news
paper in aout.heutflrn
Ohto E•penence pre

eral oftce/buslness proce
dure s h1gh school diplo ma
and two (2) years ex pen·
ence m off1ce and compu1er
skills bookkeep ng proce
dures a plus

&amp;ecepta.bl e
Send reaume a.n d cllpa to
Kevtn ~lly Managing
Edttor Ohto Valley

Send resume by Ja nuary
20 2006 to FACTS 45

AH Oa.lltpolls Oh1o
4M31 Ph one (740) 446

BOO 939·6865
Call Vtck1 ChadwiCk AN lor
deta1ts

(erred but entry leve l Ia

Publuhtng Co 826 Tttird

The
Athens Me1gs
Edu cat1onal Servtce Cen ter
Govern ng Board IS acce pt
mg letters of mtere st and
resumes from persons nterested •n ftlltng a vacancy on
th e
Goverm ng
Board
Appl cants must be a rest
dent of the Tn mble Local
School D1stn ct T he letter of
mterest should hst qualif1ca
t1ons and reasons why the
person would like to serve
Letters and res umes
should
be
ma!led
to
M1chael
St rubl e
Boa rd
President
Athens Me gs
ESC 507 Rtchland Avenue
Su!le Jl 108 At hens OH
45701
Apph ca t on
Deadline January 24 2006
12 00 Noon

•••••••••••
•
T ired of work•ng all
the holidays?
T1red ol wor ~ ng lonQ 12
hour sh1fts?
Come hOme and JOin us at

Medi·Home Heolth1
-.I Open ng tor a Full Time

RN tull benelits package
including 401 K Sign on

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close T9 Home)
CaHTodayt 740 446 4367

1 800 214 0452
ga ltpo! S"areeroollego com
AccreCI!IBd Member Accred'!'"g
WYow

-.iQpenmg for a Pa n T1me
AN Sign on Bonus

$1,500
Call Judie AHie, RN, C,
Clinical Manager. at

(740)44Hn9

or

1.:800-481-8334

••••••••••••

20 acre fa rm w'!1h custom 2

2 Bd 2 Bath must be
moved
sa 500 oo 740
742·2357

1996 Skyltne 281164 38R
2BA !!replace cathedra~
ce~ hng $35 000 (740)709
3 Bedroom 2 Bath w1th 1166
For sa le
Pov. er lit and F1repla ce 1n Ato Grande
Recline r Cha1r Call 740 area 8 acres m I 40x60
992 7349
barn $120 000 (740)709 2006 161170 3 Br/2 bth
V nyi/Sh1ngie $229/mo Call
1166
(740)365 9948
New D1shwasher Baby bed
W/mattress 95 Grand Pr x 3 br/ 1 bath t 5 acre lot 1n
runs and looks great 740 Pomero y new roof leave
91 Skyline 16x80 3 Br 2 Btl"
message 7405175388
4 l64139or740 4 l 66035
S145 mo Call
7401385
3 4 be droom home 1 112 7671
bath With la mtly room
tao
W\~111&gt;
recently
remodeled
lo Do
96 Fleetwood 3 BRI2 8t h
S96 500
(740)446
S
1t)9 mo Includes Delivery
4028
Call (740)385 994a
Compamon for the elderly
transportation babys !!!lng 7BR 5BA Foreclosure only
tor k1ds my home or yours $1a 000 For l st1ngs call
BL"I"~~
Cleanmg
ref erences 900 ~9 1 5228 ext F254

'17U Ml'iQJ ,l. \NEOUS .

35

$249 000

740 384

51a 2

Call

fJ«'

(740)339 0943

Local company oHenng ·NO
DOWN PAYMEN T
pro
Computer Trouble Shoot
grams for you to buy your
and A epa~r Expert Serv ce
home 1nstead of rentmg
740 992 2395
• 100go I nancmg
Less man periec t cred!t
Georges Portable SaNm lll accepted
don 1 haul you r Logs 10 the
• Payme nt could be the
M1ll JUSt cal1304 675 1957
same as rent
Now 2 Open mgs Elderly
Reasonable $1 200 Meals
&amp; Snacks Leave Message

Mortgage
(740f367 0000

S1!

Wllh

,,,,,c
IO

1\1

Rttsll&lt;l-:xo;
0PKJR11.!';m

•NOTI Ch
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO recorn.,ends lha
ou do bus1ness w1th peo
le yo~r~. know ana NOT t
end money through th
at\ un111 you have 1nvest1
aled the offenr"'

CAREER DISTURBED?

~r~--~-~--..,

[..()n; &amp;
AllU...\( .t.

22 acres wonderfu l v ew
ndge top prol:lertv dose to
ma1n h!gl'lway per1ect for 4
wheeler tra IS l' ol0J7.07

Elderly

(304)675 1347

For Rent 3 Bulla,mgs lor
BuSineSs Use
LOC&lt;!!ed tn
Porrteroy
Also 21 Upsta1 rs
Unt urn shed
A.pts
PQmeroy tor Rent Call 740
589 7122

Locators

(304 )882 3880
Wtll

~~ll Btll.l&gt;l'l&lt;.~

Anentlonl

Wa nted Cook wtth exper!
ence n menu planmng for
treatment fac1hty, Pay based
on
expenence
Pa1d
TIREC OF GAS PRICES &amp;
Insurance Call between
COMMUTING?
Monday Fr day
9am 3pm

(7 40)379 9083

10 used homes under
$3 000 00 Mus! Go 1 Call
1900 square foot 3 bedroom Ela1ne 740 385 0698
2 bath house for sale sets
on 3 ac res oil of State At 7 16x80 homes st art mQ at
m
Chester
Townsh1p $25995 00 tnclueles vmyl
Eastern Schoo! Oi stnct 2 Sldmgl Sh!ngle rool Cal~
car attached garag e 2 out Russ 740 385 2434
build ngs Call
(740 )985
4321 alter 6pm
1987 Schultz Mobile Home

sto ry home bUill 1n 1999
Counc11 lor !naepenoont Colleges located between A o Grande
and Schools 12749
and Jackson 3 miles oH Rt

Bonue $2,500

Ohve Street Gallipolis Oh1o t11,._..,:23;;&lt;~2~•:=•~
t
4563 1 or FAX. to (740)446 "'
--------8014 EOE MIFIH
Res 1denha1
Treatment
Wanted
Ommgroom
F~c1i1ty tak1/'lg apphcai!Ons Wattress tullt1me A fnend 1y
POSTAL JOBS
lor youth worker Pay based sm1le and Serv1ce onented
$15 94 $22 56/hr now 1'\lr
on
expene nce
Pa!CI would be ,.;;leal tor th1s pos1
ng For appl icatiOn and tree
Insurance Oall between t1on Apply m person at
governement 10b tnfo call
9 OOam J OOpm Monday HOliday Inn Galhpohs No
1\mencan Assoc of Labor 1
Fnday 1740)379 9083
phQ.ne calls please
9 13 599-8220 24/hrs emp
serv
At 35 Adult v oeo &amp; Book
Truck Dnver Needed 740 Store need Mtdntght Clerk
985 4384
Full I rn.e t304)937-4900

,.;1;;,8--.11

MOIIII.E HO\It;&lt;;

HOMf1;
FOR SALE

liELPWANliD

PCA

45769

• FINANCING AVA LA.Rl ~
• JOB PLACEMENT

.

Ohio Valley Home Hea lth Aockspn ngs Rehab1htat1on
Inc h1r1 ng Full T1me AN end Center IS loo~1ng for ded1cat
Pe r D1em MSW Accept ng eo compass1Qnate State
apPlications lor LPN CNA T~sted N urSing ASSIStantS
Compel t1ve wages health
STNA
CHHA
Compet1t1ve Wage s Mileage and dental benei!IS and
We take
and
benefits
molud1ng 401K available
Health Insurance Apply at pn de n our fac1 h1y and rest
1480
Jackson
P1ke dents and need great team
If you
Gallipolis o r 2415 Jackson players tO JOtn us
A\ienue Point Pleasan t WV ha Y€ these qual1ficat1ons
apply
to
o r phone to ll free 1 866 441 dease
~bckspnngs Aehab!ltla!IOn
1393
Center 36759 Rocksprmgs
Pomeroy
Oh 10
Part -t1me Bartender a,pply Road
E~~:tend1care Health
1n perso n at JeH s Carry Out 45769
Pomeroy
Betw een 8 00 Servtces Inc •s an equal
am and 10 00 am Monday opportutl!ty employer that
workplace
thru Frtday Must be able to en courages
work wee~end No phOne d1vers ty M1F ON

PO 8011:729

NECE!SSARV
FUll T ~E Cl ASSES

I

t to

Sentinel

NO EXPER HI CE

No Fee Unless We W1n !
l-888-582 3345

© 2006

Newly rem ode led 3 or 4
oedrooms centrat atr full
basement hardwood floors
detached garage large cov
ered pat1o fencecl :tack
yard close to schoolS 0 omt
S69 500
Pleasant
740 709 1382

IH\11-.1\11

personal days.

AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
Sell
Sh rley Spears 304-

.. ................... .490

For Sale
585
For Sale or Trade
.. 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables . ...................... ...... 580
Furnished Rooms
..450
General Hauling
......850
Giveaway . .......
...............................040
Happy Ads ......
.. ........050
Hay &amp; Grain .
......640
Help Wanted....
. .....1t0

POLICIES Oh1o Vartay Publlahlni ~serves the right to edit reject, or cancel any ad at any time Errore muat be reponed on the tlrat day of
Trlbun•Sentmei·Reglatar will be r..ponalble !Of no mora than the cost of thelptiC. occupied by the error end on ly the ftflt mnrtton We
any to.. or expenn that r..ulta lrom the publication or om\aalon of an adven lnmant Correction will be made In the llrat available ed1tlon
are alwaya confldeo!Jal • Current rate card applies • Al l real eat.te adver1laement1 ere subject to the Federal Felr Hous1ng Act of 1968

LEARN

801 428-4649

4x4's For Sale ... .
725
Announcement.... .
...... 030
Antiques
. ....... . .. .530
Apartments for Rent ,
440
Auction and Flea Market.. ......................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .... , ,,.......
760
Auto Repair .. ..
.... 770
Autos for Sale...
710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ...,..... ......
750
Building Supplies
..
550
Business and Buildings ........ ..... .... 340
Business Opportunity ..............................210
Business Training..
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ...
790
Camping Equipment ....................... , ..... 780
Cards of Thanks
010
Child/Elderly Care .
190
ElectrlcaVRefrlgeratlon .. ......... .. ...... 840
Equipment for Rent
.....480
Excavating
830
Farm Equ1pment
......610
Farms lor Rent.
. .. 430
Farms lor Sale ..
330

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
Buslne•s Day• Prior 1"o
Publication
Sunday Display. 1:00 p.m .
Thur•day for Sundays

• All ads must be prepa1d•

~~=~:~:~~

HFLP WANTED

'
An Exc ellent way to earn
Found Female Rottwelle r
money The New Avon
m1x Stale St area Call
Call Marilyn 304-882 26 45

For lease..

'rl•day

a Start Your Ada With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Inc:lude A Price • Avoid Abbrevlationll
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• ~ds Should Run 7 Day5 ,

Lost
Male long ha~red
Chihuahua
Vanco Ad
ch1ld s pet Call after 4 30pm

(740)446-9357

Now you can have borders an.d graphics
~
addedtoyourclassifiedads
{p~
Jr1'o
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large,

Disolay Ads

Dally In-Column : 1·00 p m
Monday- Friday for In•ertlon
In Next Day' 5 Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p m .
For Sundays Paper

liio llaPWA~
po&gt;nt

Oeacl£ire.s'

Word Ads

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

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Meigs

The Daily Sen.tinel • Page 83

C.• ll •• Cou nty OH

Rebels run by Teays Valley Christian
BY BRAD SHERMAN

www.mydailysentlnel.com

{!tribune .. Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

p01nts,
while
Dame!
Sktumore dnd Zach Hedrick
followed with 12 and I0
markers, respectively N1ck
Malesko ch1pped 111 etght
markers to the wm
The hosts had an I I· 3 edge
m steals and also cla1med a
20-19 edge on the glass
R1 ver Valley tratled 25- 16
at 1nterm1 ssion and 37-28
wtth etght mmute s remamtn g
The Spm t.ms were just 1of· 7 trom bchmd the arc
Alexander cl.t lmed a
sweep with "52~49 overtime
vtctory m the JU111or varsny
lOnte&gt;t
Rt ver Vall ey return s to
Ohw Valley Conference
act1 on th1s Fnday when It
hosts Fa1rland T1p-otf IS
slated for 6 p m

W.Va prep basketball scores

Maumee 59 L1berty Center 46
M1nford 55 Sc oto Mc Dermott NW 51
Mogadore 86 Malvern 82
Navarre
Fa1rle ss
44
Zoarville
Tuscarawas Valley 38
New Alban~ 56 lakewood 27
New Concord John Glenn 80 Zanesv1lle
W Muik1ngum 55
New Phi lad elphia Tuscarawas Cent
Cath 55 W Lafayette Atdge.... ood 54
Newark L!ck1ng Va ll ey 71 Whitehall
Year lmg 66
Newbu ry 57 Jefterson Area 55
Newco merstown
55"
Bowerston
Con oaon Valley 46
Orrv!lle 73 M1 lle~sb urg W Holmes 55
Pa nesvlle Harvey 63 Chardon 49
Pa nesville R1vers1de 50 Maple Hts 48
Per r ~ 71 Madison 65
Pla1n C ty Jonathan Alder 5 1 Powell
Olentangy l berty 49 OT
Po rtsmouth
Cl ay
43
Sc!Otovlll e
Commutllly SchoOl 28
Portsmouth W 64 Lucasville Valley 41
Reynoldsburg 75 Zanesv1lle 66
Rtdge v!lle Chnst1an 62 Day M1am1
Valle~ 50
R!pley R!pley Un1on-Lew1s H unt ngton
59 Batav1a 50
S Charleston SE 57 N Lewisburg Tnad

(JtnM:IA4l

'

38

70

Justm Wh1tt1ngton 7 1 2 1
Dav1d
Aob nson 7 3 4 17 N1ck Hams 52 2 12
Adam Sco" 4 2 2 12 Justm Rayne s 3 0 0
9 Chad Stotts 3 0 0
Josh G lbert 1 0 0
2 Adam Hudson 0 0 0 0 Rav1 Parl&lt;er 0
0 0 Total s 29 a 10 76
WAHAMA (8-3)
Clay Rous h 9 1 3 20 Brandon Fowler 6 4·
4 16 Casey Hamson .1 2 4 11 Brenton
Clark 3 l 3 a Kameron Sayre 1 2 2 4
Brandon Russell 0 0 0 0 Gabe Roush 0 00 0 Thorsten Horn1g 0 0-Q 0 Ke1th Pearson
00 00 Total s 23 1016 59
Buffalo
12 24 23 17 76
Wahama
11 16 18 14 59
3 Pomt Goals-BuHalo 10 (Ray nes 3
Wh11t1ngton 3 Scott 2 Sto tts 2) Wahama 3
(Hamson Clar~ C Roush)

POINT PLEASANT (0·9)

Dover 65 Mar1etta 37
Dre sden Tn Valley 66 McConnelsville
Morgan 51
Fairborn 74 A vers1de Stebb1ns 70
Fran klin Furnace Gree n 77 Portsmouth
Notre Dame 16
Frederrcktown at Loudonville ppd
Fremont Ross 59 Tol Bowsher 48
Gahanna 71 Cols Frankl1n His 45
Gahanna Chnst1 an a8
Norths 1de
Chns t1an 62
Galloway Westland 59 Upper Arhngton

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTilJBUNE COM

t anal Fulton NW 70 Co111ngton 34
Card1ngton- Ltncoln 6l Marion Cath 30
Caslal a Margare tta 80 Tal Bowshe r 60
Chardon 57 Eastlak e N 40
G1n M:~de1 ra 45 Cm lndran H1ll 40
G1n N Coll e.Qe H II 63 C1n Shrader 34
Cm Purcell Mana n 50 Rog er Bacon 42
Cm Syca more 5 1 Cln Mercy 37
Cm Turpm 56 New R!chmond 5 1
C1rclev1 11e Logan Elm 44 Fra nkfort
Adena 43
Clayton Norlhmont 51 W Ca rrotlion 36
Coldwater 82 Lima Sr 51
Cols Af rlcentnc 62 Cols Eastm~o r 58
Cols Bnggs 57 Cols W 44
Cols Brookhave n 58, Cols Whbtstone

BarnesYtlle 80 Bellaire St John 46
Beaver Eastern 92
W1llow Wood
Symmes Valtey 47
Bellevue 72 T1ff1n Columb1an 65
CadiZ Hamson Cent 59 Byesville
Meadowbrook 53
Caldwell 62 New Matamoras Front1er 38
Cambndge 57 Rayla nd Buckeye Local

2006

Spartans conquer River Valley

44

Millersport

Wednesday, January 18,

2109
All real eetete .dvert!llniJ
In th is newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Ael ot 1968
wnlch makes 11 11189•1 to
advert ise any
preference limitation or
dtscrlmtn et lon bltsed on
race color religion sex
fam !llel •tatvs or national
origin or any Intention to
make any such
preference limitation or
dllcrlmlnatlon ~
This new•pape r wtll not
kno win g!~

accapt

advertlumenta for reel
eatate which a In
vlplatlcn or the law Ou r

Re ntal Properly !o1 Sale
1972 TrBIIer on 50X225 lot
current ly rented $1 5 000 00
740 742 4011

RfAL F.\TATI
~\-~Till
Need to se n your home?
Lale on oayments d vorce
JOb transtar or a death? I
can Ouy your hOrne All casn
and qwck clos ng 740 4 I 6
3130

IU ' I \I "'

reader• ara hereby

Informed that 111
Christian Owned Company
dwellings advertised In
Otter ng A Home Maflagea
th 1s newapape1 are
Busmess Part 1me o Full
eva1leble on en equal
t1me Full Support and
opport unity baaee
Tra m ni,J
r:'uil)
I ~" anced
oooortur11ty I oua l f1eo
T BOO 946 ... 572 P1n 00 Countly St'l tl no "' Gall a
(l 1s1en &amp; Leave Contac t Coun1y 3 Dedrooms 2
Into)
oaths ' reo1ace S85 000
(7 40)709 1166

I SHOP CLASSIFIEDS FOR BARGAINS I

2 o 3 Bedroom House
Pome r:Jy
992 5858

No Pets

If"'

.. 40

-------~
28A Muse $325 mor"'th
$150 depoStt vou pay all
ut!illte$ washe r dryer hook
uo stove and efr1gerator
furn1sMa No ms1de pets
(740) 44 6 9061

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday; January 18,2006 .

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Senlinel • Page B5

ALLEY OOP
IUR

HELP WANTED

28R, 1.5 bath, 3 m1les from

HMC.

·$4i51month

deposit
\ equired
2651 .

plus

References
Call (7 40)446-

3 Bedrooms 1 &amp; 1/2 baths.
basement. garage.
Central Heat and Ce'l tra l
A1r. all appliances. $550 00
a month and Deposit. In
Syracuse. 740-992·0 t6 7

lull

4br
ir'1
Sy1acuse.
$600/month &amp; Deposit.
Water/Sewer included, ·No
Pets 1304)675-5332
570 S 2nd, Middleport. 3-4
bedroom, gas Jvrnaceicentra l ai r. very clean. no pets.
and
HUO
approved.
$500.00 per month and
deposit . 740-843-5264 .
AHentlon!
Local company olt~nng "NO
DOW~ PAYMEN T' wograms for, ydu to buy your
!lome instead of 1enting.
· 100% fina ncing
• Less tha n perlect cred1t
accepted
• Pay ment could be the
same as renl.

Mo r,gage

'Locators.

14x70 mobile home. $425
rent. $425 deposit Call
(740)446-4060,or (740)367·
7762.

2 bedroom mobile home m
Racine, $375 mo. plus $375
deposit, yea rs lease , ·no
pets, no calls alTer •9pm,
(740)992·5039
2 bedroom mobile hOme,
Centenary. no pets. refer·
ence. $375 month plus
deposit. (740)446-7275.
2 Bedroom Trailer $400 per
month and · $400 deposit.
Water and Sewer. Garbage
included . Carport.
ard
Porch . All E tectr~c . Ref. and
Stove included. No Pets.
In !own A acme. References

required .

74()..949-2217.

7:00A.M. to 7·00 PM.
2 BA all electric near Holzer.·
$350 montn . {740)446·6865
or (740)379-2 923
3 bedroom doublewide.
$400 month, $400 deposit.
ref . HUD
No pets.
approved. (740)388-0d1 1

a

~ bedroom mObile home In
the Shade area . Water,
sewer, trash included. $325
a month plus deposit. No

pet~

allowed .

{740)385·

4019
3br, 2ba. Heat Pump. 2
mites tram Po1 nt Pieasant
$400/ month pluS deposit
(304)675·6233 ·or (304)593·
2138
.

RESPIRATORY CARE
PRACTITIONER

Phillip
Alder

_•I
'

·&amp; ROCKY HUPP

•

...

~.r -~-F-O!o\~-R.wr-IEN',,.I__.~I

e

:=======::;.=======::.
Help Wanted

'

Help Wanted

Walk to shop &amp; movies. C&amp;ll
Equal
740-446-2568.
Housing Opportunity.

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED '&amp; AFFORDABLE I
Townhouse
apartments .
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441-1111
fOr application&amp;. information.

•

Pleasant Valley Hospital
.Phlebotomist-Per Diem
In the following an:as:
Pa rktn.bu rg/Raven..&lt;•~·oodfJackson

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting applicatios for a Per-Diem ·
Phlebotomist. Applicants must have a
valid driver's license. Six months
experience preferred.
Position involves drawing blood in a
nursing home setting and transporting
specimens. Experience in drawing blood
on the older adult.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartmentS ·at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport
From $295-$44'4. Call 74D992-5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities.

I

r

L

Warehouse

lion .
77,000
miles.
CKC ,Biack Labs, 4 months 18121mpg. $1 2,000 Must
old, male &amp; female. $100. se ll (304)288-3335.
ln Henderson, WV . Pre - Call (740)379·2697.
owned Applicanes starting c:----,---,-::-:-~ 1972 Chevy P.U., LWB,
at $75 &amp; up all under Full blooded Pitt Bull pup- 2WD 350 Automatic Good
.Warranty, ~so
nave pies for sale S100, 5 m'ales. Condi tion. $ 1,800 080 for
· Household
Misc. Items 1 female call \304)593-3423 mbre info (304)675-2799 ·
startmg at .99t &amp; up
Reg . AK~ 9dorable Lab 1985 Chevy
(304)676-7999
. 1-ton dump
puppies. Born 11111/05. vet truck. new motor. cab &amp;
checked.
1st
shots. paint. Used daily. Asking
Taylorsville sofalloveseat,
$ 3.000 _1740)2 56. 1253,
great condition $400, · desk. Yellowfblack/ch6c .
price

r

$25, baby swing, exer- $200. (740)446-1062.
saucer, like new. $35 each. _S_h_a-r--Pe-i--p-,-p-p-re-,. --2
(740)245-5575

Thompsons Appliance &amp;·
Large I Bedroom Apartment Repair-675·7388. For sale,
re-conditioned
au tomat·ic
s4so/month. Utilities inctud·
washers &amp; dryers, rGfrigeraed!! (3D4i 675-5819
tors, gas and electric
Middleport 1 and 2 Bedroom ranges , air conditioners, and
furnished Apts . No Pets, wringer washers . Will do
deposit, and previous rental repairs on major brands in
reference~ . 740·992·01~5 .
shop or at your home.

SUVs

•"'R SALE

~e,males, 740-992-9105 .

---

Toy Poodles, Can be CKC
.Reg. $30Cf Call (740)4461672 .
£~:r:--~!"'"----,

1999 · Ford Explorer exc.
cond ., loaded 113,000 miles
$6500. 304 -675-7059 or
304·675·5034 from Sam-

'

•

rro

I\1USICAI.

INsrR~tENI'S

I.

4x4

f5
m.

r.,_,.;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiirr_.l

SALE
.__ _oiiiiiitiiiiiiiit-r
FOR

Console Organ- Gulbransen
1151kw double manual.

MANlEY'S

SElF STORAGE

r

·
r

97 Beech Street

r

L

I ••
~

LLETIN BOARD
'9"'coiU(IIII inch weekQays
116"' column Inch ·SUnday
CALL OUR.OFFICE AT Q92·2155'

Atlantic Ci)y Getaway
Feb . 24, 2006- Feb. 26, 2006
_ $200 per person
· Prjvate 1et oul ol Charleston, WV
Nice accommodations at Harrah 's
Resort &amp; Casino

(double occupancy)
Mus! be '21 years ol age
Please call (304 ) 675-4340
Ext. 1326lo make reservations
Hos ted by PVH Community
Relations

SEARS HOME
APPLIANCE
PROMOTIO~
,JAN. 19TH- 21ST 2006
12% C.ash Back on any
Appliance $399 or more
and Freezers
•
$299 or more*
. w1th Qua lifying Sears C red1t C ard
purchases Cannot be combin'ed with
0~~ financ1ng (show n as Delayed Tota l
on your rece1pt)

2200 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, OH
740-446-1546

area . References required ,
secu rity deposit. no pets. Moving Sale- Quality bedroom. livingroom furniture,
$900 mo . Call (740)446treadmill. console organ and
2325 or (740)446-4425
·
more, (740)256-1 428. See
bc .sales.com for pictu res
~odern' 1 bedro·om apt.
and info.
(740)446-0390.

ADV·ER. TISE YOUR
-

.

'BUSINESS

frO

-

~

CAMPERS&amp;

MO'IUR HoM~

"'---~;;;;;~;,;o,iiiii,..i
2600 Dutchman. Class C.
Motor Home. · Sleeps 6·8 .

~

I""'"·.,..--,..-,-----,

Get A Jump
On

SAV·INGS

Ti\KC. IT OUT

. FO~

(&gt;,

Wl-.lKI

!

1
!

~

•
~
~~~~~LO~· ~==~~~LO~

0

Se"Q.,,' .•
.Rocky "RJ"
Hupp

I

MEAN , WHY

SHOULD

CAf&lt;.E

WE

I F ..

~ArT' A t11NUTE' .-

IMPORTS
Athens

WI\AAIIIT
A MINUTE~

t1ATERNlTY

LEAVE~'

.

P~ANUTS

SEPTIC TANK Pi/MP!NG $95.00
PORTA8lf TOilET RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMf~T TODAY
591·8757

TELL Tf.IE
EHI5 To ~URR~

I

liP .. J'M

T~INK

I'M IN f.IERE
SOMEPLACE .

TO DEATH~

'

SUNSHINE CLUB

. WV'T

STAK'rlt-J 00
Ml&gt;, LOIS

"

..

'

-

Advertise ...•
in this
space for $1 04
per month.

Shop the

GARFIELD
HAVE f1ER 5MEL.L.
M~ 6R€AIH

YOU ATE \HE

1 60UGHI FOR

Snodgrass' Upholstery
Bank will Auction the

Saturday, January 2~,
~006,

Racine, OH
740·949·2202
Cus tom Window Treatments

&amp; Upholstery

at 10:00 a.m. at

1997 · Ford Explorer
1FMDU34E9VUC45730
1998 Dodge Caravan
- 2B4GP44R3WR541789
The Home National
Bank

11

reserves

the

rlghl to reject any an.d
all bids. All vehicles ·
are sold, as is where

Is, with no warranties
9xpressed OJ implied . .

Now Available At

HAUM LUMBER
Scorpion Tractors
"1ltking Tlte Sti1111 Out Of
/-lard Work!"

Mid -Site -! Whee l Dri ve Tractor
wit h l l!hp &amp; 40hp Kubnla Eng ine s

For an appointment t~
see! call949-2210 , ask

BAUM LUMBER

lor Sheila.
(1) 18, ~9 , 20

St. WI. 124 Chester 91!5-3301

'
'

.

AKQJR5:t

¥

K

26 Self--esteem

living
28 Bang
29 As a group
(2 wds .)
31 .Medal
reciplen1
32 Burglar's
"key "
33 Pound the

K 6

4•

Pu ss

Pa ss

3.
East
Pass

·

Hold up

27 - out a

J 7

Nort~

17 Tlghl spot
mistakes
18 Snap11h01 55 Thick
21 Respecllut
ol lhlngs
U!le _
56 Place
23 Ge11he
message
DOWN
2 " Grand

-Opry"
3 Femtnine
principle
4 Car rental
name
5 Peas and
beans

6 S1urdy
Iabrie

pavement

(hyph.)

12 Skulks
aboul
13 Three-

41 Processes
cotton
43 Dignitaries

45 like cran·

seater

18 Kitchen
gadget
19 Let pass

berries

46 " Ben·Hur"

Jack
23 Private eye
24 Employee

25. Chews the

'Chong
51 Flighl .

28 Quiet!

board data
52 Male parent

'

~~enery

7 .P C system
8 Beijing

37 Prlmale ·
name
38 Goller's peg - 9 Natural
39 Gas-pump
elev .
abbr.
10 Of course!

studio
Onassis
nickname
48 Fictional
collie
50 - Dawn

20 - oostroog 47
22 WoHman

30 Lemon
cooler

34 Wilhs1and
35 Odds-lakets .
40 Black
billiard 'b all

opponents buy the contract. usually you
. will have given their declarer a much bet·
ter road map than if you had passed
throughout- someth ing that 'is ~ignored"
by the wild pre-emptors whose rule of
thumb is to bid with 13 cards, a long suit
and a weak hand.
After East opens three d1amonds, South
should as~ume that his Partner has about
sil( high-card points. Based on that, he
'
jumps straight to lour spades.
West leadS the diamond live, high from
his doubleton. East wins with his ace and
shifts to the club Jack, South's king losing
to West's ace. West cashes the club
queen and plays a third round, hoping his
partner wi ll trump to defeat the contract,
.
but it is declarer who ruffs.
Now Sou1h draws trumps. What has he
learned ? He knows that East began with
two spades. seven diamonds (from his
opening bid) a~d .at least three clubs . So
he has at most one heart . The contract
has become a certainty. South cashes his
heart kin g, then rUns the JSCk through
West.
Some players find it hard to count a deal
like that. For them, there is an easier but slightly l~ss r91iable - method.
Ass uJlle tha t any m1ssmg key card here, the .heart queen - is not'1n t~e preemptor's hand

•

AstroGraph
-.r&lt;JII~:

Thursday, Jan. 19, 2006
By Bernice Bede Osol
Your poSSi bilities for advancem'ent 1n your
chosen l1eld of .endeavor 1n the year ahead
look better than they have for some time .
Of cou rse. you'll have to put forth .the efrori
.lQ prove yourself every step you take up
thai ladder
CAPR ICORN (Dec 22-Jan . 19)- Th1ngs
can run rather smoothly lor you today 11
you do not take yourse lf or anyth1ng .that
develops toQ ser1ously. ·Hold onto that opti·
mistic th 1nk1ng you do so well and all will
be nght
AQUARIU S (J&lt;H'i "2Q·Feb.•19) - S1tua11ons
olhers may not want lo touch tend to work
in your favor today. especially 11'1ose that
have corpmerc1al overto nes Analyze them
tor hid den o pportun itie s tt1at they are ~ He r­

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celetmti Cipher cr;·ptog~ams a1e ceare&lt;t •rom quO!ab!YlS o~ lafTlOt•&lt;, peoole oasl ~n~ piesent·
·
Each letter ~the :l011er stands 101 ar,othE"r

Toelay sctue NequalsM
.

"lANG·
NADG

'

TGJKZPXKC
PNFDG IIPOG

p . N.. FGOI!GSZ ·
EPMECV
CJ

ZEJL

ZEPLM I
. BEGL

JOG
CGXZ

Z ,P, A

BEGL

XPLPIEGv. ··
DASEGXAKSJKCY

PREV)OUS SOLU TION -"Few great men could pasS personnel ''
- P8u1 Goodman
.
"The y're only truly great wh o are truly good ·· - George Chapman

T~~~~t:~y S©R~}A-~t~~·

¥(OlD
GJMI

£dlttd b~ ClAY • . POLL«..s - - - - - - -

0 four
Reorrorq~e lerle·s cl
scrcmbled worCJ

the
be-

lo w to form lovr worci1 .

EMPPAR

II

It I I" I·

CHEEN '

-II ~:

1---,....r_A,.,..v-,.,-F..:.r~.

I I' I' I _:

PISCES
(Feb
20-March 20)
Partnership aHangemenls 1nto wh1ch you
enter today could p!Ove to be ta r more
beneflctal than you anticipate at thiS tlflle.
Treat them with lhe ser.ous respect they
des erve
ARIES (March 21-Aprd 19) - In more
ways t11an one 1t's 10 you r benefit to per·
form at yoUr best loday, esoec1a11v 11 your
perlormance IS betng observe o and evaluated Prai SI?S could turn mto ralse~ as well
as a promot1on ,
TAURUS (April 20- Ma~· 20) - That cool.
pleasant and unrultled mann er you d1splay
when you have to deal with a senous errsis gives others lhe percep 11on 'th ai you're
a respec led 'adviSOr They 11 turn to yciu
aga1n today
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- A .f lnanoal
s1 tuahoO that has · had you a b11 warned
has a good ch ance of betng taken c·are of
today. All the loose ends that nave been
d1 f1 1cull tor you to t1e up can now be knot·
ted
CANCER (June 21- July 22'1- Your com·
mon sense g1ves you tremendous ability lo
accu rately nssess th1 ngs loday m way &amp;
I hat please e~·erytJOay Have ,191th 1n your
JUdgmen t Md don·t be afra1d to spea H. up
LEO (July 23-.A ug. 22)- Keep H1e prot1t
_mptive uppermost 1n your lhough1s 1oday.
because by d01ng so. 11 w1ll encow .:~ge you
' IO be more lndu_stnous Remembe r what
you ·re do1ng now nelps m mstmng your

F~ I N1 ~u,v. s:~ ·w
Lni£115 I~&lt;, S:)Ut- RES

I'

SCilAM-LETS ANSWER~ I '17·~•

ARLO &amp; JANIS

~ectm l y

Clossifieds!

following Items on

J I0 3

West

records

54 TypeseUing

mg .

FREEZING

'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?

•

•
Soulh

9 6
;,
A Q 10 9 H 7 4

South

•

BIG NATE

~====74:0:-9:85:·3:8:31====~·:

. the Bank 's perking lot:

992-2155

P"

35537 S! Ri 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

The Home National

The Daily Sentinel

f\.PPU~ I

"

Shade River AG Service, Inc

Public Notice

PERMONTH!

\1--\0RN-

-.,

B\,)'\l fl.,(&gt;,1/( !&gt;.,
PC\ I'E£.1/(. 10
B!l.ll'\GUP 1

10

'

$26.00

1'\0T t-IOW,

BUDGET
TRANSMIS·
SIONS, All types. (740)2~55677 or [740)645-7400

:· .

-AS LOW AS .·

P"

Al!IU PARTS &amp;
_ACOX&lt;;ORIF:S

'

ON THIS PAGE :FOR
.

Garages. New Homes_
Res1denllal &amp; Commerc ial '
740-245-o437
u..... _ ,
_
:Ill,_

~

2003 Suzuki 4WD Vinson '
500 ATV with 34 miles.
$4900.
CARMICHAEL
EQUIPMENT.
(740 )4452412

95 Z-28 Camero 350 Auto .
greero. tan leather $5000.00. ·
740·742·4011
--::--::---:--B
96 Bl"e Pontiac Grend AM
UIWING
SE . $2,500 080. Call
L_ _...;S;;,UiiPP!.ioirililfSi
-0..-,.J
i
(740)446-2558 or (740)6456786.
Block, brick, sewer pipes, - - - - - - - - windows , lintels, etc. Claude 97 Pontiac Grand AM . 4 cyl
Winters , Rio Grande, OH sedan, Well maintained 1
Call 740-245-5121.
$1 ,500. (740)44 1-9951 .

r

.• 1

.

;

2003 PT Cruiser, Power· winBASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
dows and locks, CD Player,
Very
good
condition .
$7500.00 . (740 )388 _0140
· tJncondit1ona1 liletime guar·
antee. Local references lur2004 Jeep Uberty, exce llent nished . Established 1975.
condition. less than 15 ,000 Call
24 Hrs. (740 ) 446 miles,
$17,000
Cal\ . 0870, Rogers Basement
XBox 360, used 2 days.
(740)446-4028.
Waterproofing.
20GB HD 2 Wireless con·
trollers. 2 'unopened plug +
play chargers , 4 games &amp;
extraS. $800 OBO. (740)339·
2160.

SMIFS !!

"Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

2do3 Honda Rancher 4x4
350 like new call 740-256·
1375.

SP

3bd apt for rent. 1,000 sq ft.
washerldryer hook-up, hardwood floors . Gallipolis city,
Housrnow
$600/month plus deposit,
6oou;
references required , . no
pet~. (740)441·0110.
•
New Serla Perfect Sleeper
Beautiful 2-story townhouse King s1ze bOx springs and
o verloo~lng Gallipolis City mattress. purchase price
Ask rng
$600
park . "Kitchen . D.R. L. R., $1065.
study. 38A·. 2 b~ths , laundry (740)446-1282.

S1ding, W1ndows, Pole Bam&amp;,

or 992-6635

4 WHEELERS

LQQking for
ANew Home?
TrY the
C lassifieds-!!

With ADaily Se!Jlinel

I CAN CHARGE YA TH'
TOURIST
RATE

THAT'S

GREAT,

YEP ! ! GONNA GO
TAKE IN TH'
SIGHTS!!

10x10x10x20
992-1194

40 MamRCVa .F.s/

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

· Get Your Mes,sage Across

.. ·~ ·
·,
...

4

dramatically .

53 Medical

These bids h?ve drawbaci&lt;s, 1ho,gh. It the

..,

Rubbe• Rooting. Room
Add1lions, Decks, Shingles,

46 Bad-mouth
49 Rose

A pre"emp'!ive openmg bid has destructive
and constructive a1ms. Primarily, you hope
to upset the oppOnehts: but if partner's
hand is strong, you assume he w11t knOw
what to do because you have given a ,
good picture ol yours- soma 5- 10 highcard points and a .respectable long suit:

_r
''t I

98 Chevy Astra Conversion
van , low miles, with elec.tric
wheelchair ramp , $6.000
(740)742-8612

r

Home. 517 Burdette ,Street.
Deposi t and Reference
required . No Pets '(;304)6755402

I

VANS
. FoR SALE

1989 Ford Club Wagon XLT·
1T. 99k miles . well maintained
$2800.
' Call
(740)44 1-9282.

f

ANn~

YOU'~r

Middleport, OH

Mi!@(!ltlljii!H

r

,

7:00AM· 8:00PM,; '

Rooting &amp; Remodefing Co.

.

Ea!it

one's hand

MIKE MARCUM -'

•

house

14 Kindly
15 Liver
go-wt1h
charges

Pre-empts describe

WE'RE TAKIN' TH' DA'Y
' OFF, S·~ll~~~S~·~'!----~====~

Hours

Stop &amp; Compare

1/14/1 mo. pd

New Haven, 1 bedroom Used Furniture ~ Appliance Great lor home or small
For more informtaion:
unfurnished
apartment. no Store. 130 Bulaville Pike, church $950. (740)256·
Pleasanl Valley Hospital
pets, deposit &amp; previous Gallipolis,OH • (740)446- 1428. See be.sales.com for
C/0 Human Resources
' t
rentai references. (740)992- 4782. Hrs. 1 t ·3, M·S. Stop
~520 Valley Drive
I \IHI "il l'l'l ll . _,
0165
by and ~heck us oU1 .
PI 'Pieu, unl, WV 25550
~\II\ I "i l41( h.
Nice one BA unfurnished
Washer $95; dryer $95;
304-6 75-4340
apartment. Range &amp; refrig. refrigerato r $95; electric
provided. Water &amp; garbage range S95; chest freeze r
LIVE&gt;TOCK
paid. Depos11 required. Call $125: new gas dryer $200;
(740)446-4345 after ~pm.
www.pvall ey.org
. couc!l · $150:
full size
Tara
,
Townhou se waterbed $125; hutch with 2 Angus Bull, 3 yrs old, sired
end stands $125 : wood by Echelon, easy yalving.
APAJm\IENfS . Apartments, Very Spacious,
&lt;UO MOBil.E HOI\IES
$1,500.
Call
,
2 Bedrooms,. C/A , 1 1/2 burning stove $200: decorat- Asking
R&gt;H. R£vr
1
ed Ch ristmas tree $75 , 24 .. (740)446·6157 or (740)~79L.~--..iiFOiiRiioiRENriiO,;,;._.,t Batn, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
9238 after 6.Em.
....,
Pool, Patio, Start $395JMo. electric range $125 . Come
check
out
our
new
location.
Located in Centenary on 1/2 1 and 2 bedroom apart- No
Pets.
Lease
Plus
acre lot 12x60 2 BR with ments. fu rnished and untur- Security Deposit Required. 1216 Eastern A'le , Skaggs
10 .
Appliances. (140)446·7398
Auras
outbuilding. no ·pets . $350 nished . security deposit (740)367-7086.
per · mo. plus deposit. required , no pets, 740-992FORSALE
THEMAPL~S
(740)446-0945
2218.
500
!
-P·
o
-liciiieiiiiilimj)
iiiiiO·u·n d.,J
sr
100 E. MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY
1
Bed
Room
Apartment.
f\.:1obile Home for Rent locatCars from $500. For listings
740·992-7022
ed in Gallipolis Ferry, Ohio St. $350 plus Deposit.
B'uy or sell.
Riverine 800-391-5227 ext. 3901
Subsidized
Residential
Water
&amp;
Sewer
paid
&amp; References
Deposit
Antiques, 1124 East Main
Housing for 50 yean of
$375/month, $375i deposit 1304)675-6?68
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy. 740- '98 20r. Black Explorer
Ql: and older. PRIORITY
can (304)675-3423
992-2526. Russ Moore, Sport' 4K4. Pwr. everything.
1 BR apt . ConVenient locaGIVEN TO APPLICANTS
owner.
rear vent. 94k mi. $5800
. Mobile home spaces in tion. referehces . deposit. No
WITH INCOME AT OR
709-1276eve. 446-1113day.
pets.
(740)446·0139
MISCELLANEO(JS
Country Mobile Home Park.
BELOW
$10,900 for 1 person or
{740)385-4019 .
1BA, nicely furnished apart1994 Honda Shadow; 1994
MERCHANDISE
$12.450 for 2 persons.
ment. quiet, area, ·suitable for
lzuzu Rodeo 4x4 , lront damJET
1 adult, private driveway Maximum Income effecli'{B
age $1,000: 1997 Ford
02/11/2005 for 1 person
AERATION MOTORS
wfcarport.
new
W!D.
E'xt.Cab 4x4. ~S. diesel
$18 ,150 or $20.700 tor 2
. (740)446-4782.
Repaired, New &amp;. Rebuilt In $9,500:
2001
Hornet
persons.
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1· c
a
m
p
e
2 Bedroom Apartment avail - Must meet HUD/2.02/8 cnte· 800-537-9528.
bunkhouse.(740)441·1 501.
able 10 Syracuse. $200.00 ria for hO,LJsehold composi·
deposit $350.00 per month
1995 Ford Crown Victoria
tion .
rent. Rent includes water, MANAGED BY Silverheels. New and Used Furnaces. LX 135k miles, good condisewer, trash . No pets.
Installation
available. iion . new tires. $2.600 . Call
Incorporated . A Realty
Suff1cient Income needed to
(740)441-9282
1740)441-2667.
Company
qualify. 740-378·611 t.
Equal Housing' Opportunity
NEW AND USED STEEL t998 Firebird V-6 Auto T2 bedroom apartment Meigs Twin Rh1ers Tower~s acceptSteel Beams. Pipe Rebar Top. $4,800.00. 740·742County, very nice , clean , ing applications for waiting
Concrete,
Angle , 2357.
For
$425 per month plus list for Hud-subsized, 1· br,
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
deposit, no pets, references apartment. call 675·6679
Pontiac
F~rebird
Grating
For
O~alns. 1998
req uired . {740)992-5174
Coupe. T-8'ar roof, 5-speed
EHO
Driveways'&amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday, manual, sharp, low mileage,
2BR apartments. Starting at
phone
$6,890
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; only
$375Jmonth . Located on SA
FOR 1\CE
1304
)675-3275
Friday, Bam -4:30pm . Closed
SA
850,
Bob· " - - - - ·
160 ,
&amp; 2001
Thursday,
Saturday
McCormick
Rd.
Call --.
Mercury
Grand
Sunday. ( 740)446 ~7300
(740)441-0 194 or (740)441·
Marquis, 4DR, 7~ ,000/miles,
1184
Good
Shape,
$10,000
(304)674-4621
3-Bedroom." 2·Batt1 Mobile

ANEOE

141-992-1671

44 Homerhitter Mel _:

36 Ocean flier

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Aft/Y60l&gt;Y 6UT
YOU~S~Lf wiTH
~· THAT MAS!'.
...'
CYCLOPS!

.
.·:

i1ems

~6 'Prefer

Opening lead: • ·5

BARNEY
~

llh

Dealer: Ea,;t

NOi FOOLING .

''. sriea&amp;'X'IOI'~l. ::

to 1.0'x30' ,,

Ill

Vulnerable: llolh

Licensed Home Builder

(740) 992-0496
:;;;;;;;;;-iiiiiiiiii~W~V~#;Oi3i9~7~14i
Hill 's Self
ROBERT
Storage
BISSELL
Bashan Road
CONSTRUCTION 29670
Racine . Ohio

•\IJ 9i

-'i

.Ot:AY, IUT

45771
740-949-2217

UJ

I0 7 4

+K

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

'

West
.. 3
¥ Q 86432
• 5 2

MONTY

clock

numeral

13 Upper

A 10 9
• J 6 :1
... /l .. j.; 2

INSUUNCE .

43 Grandfather

6 Mannequin

¥

woLFE 4

m~~ I "'~1,. 5_,TR-UCKS
----,1

1 Fit lora
queen
11 Relish-tray

North

A:!.-r-~-;r;~

;====~Fa~·x~:(;7:40;);5;92;·9;4;44=E~O;E;:=:;;::::;l~

40 Pyramid
site
42 51ore Info

ACROSS

To place an ad Call992-2155

.,.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BF!IDGE

-

Stop renting Buy 4 bedroom
foreclosure $15 .000. For listings 800·391·5228 ext.
1709.

ffiRRENr

Business Services
BARN
REMOVAl

For
Rent: Available
30.
3
bedroom
furnishedJan.
house,
1
tota l electric, Central air.
$755.00 per month. plus
$750:00 securitY deposit.
Teleph one 740-992-5421 .

.J4'll MOBILE HoMES

•

Help Wanted

Gallia-Mcigs Communi ty Action is
O'BLENESS
seeking a Housing Developer
O'BLENESS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL currentlv has
Assist.1nt. Must possess strong
Blloilless Cdrd . S26.00 col.m11l ·1ch per l'iorrll
full-lime
and
pan-time
openings
in
our
Cardiopulmonary
background working in residential
DepanmenL These positions are rolaling shift
construction, be self-motivated and
Tbe Cardiopulmonary Departmenl provides all aspecls of
need
minimal
supervision.
respiratory 1herapy serv ices. We are seeking licensed
Familiarity with building codes
Respiratory Care Praclilion~rs. We offer a competitive salary
"~
preferred but not required, have
and comprehensive benefit package.
• "' -.-UD FIIIIJICIIl
141-992-0153
For more information contact: ·
some computer ski lls, abl.e to relate
Bozer Bai:Uioe
.
Ituman Resources
with people of limited income and
55 Hospilal Drive
P.O.I11188
contractors, willing to attend
O'Bieness
Me~i1orial Hospital
Now
Renting
Mlddlepll'l,
Ohle
educationa l training in field and
__
Athens,
Ohio
4570
I
A:J
Mini
Storage
Phene: 740-143-5264 •
work flexible hours if necessary.
www .obleness.ore:
_ _
New
Medicare
1111
FU: 140·143·1214
40 992 6396
Valid driver's license and reliable
Phone (740) 592-9227
PIM Gil Ytl llltJP
E·DIIII
transporta.tion
required.
WICIIHII.ftll
I'IIIIJ@
driUIIBilS.c•
'
40-992-2272
Units
10x20 10x12
Applications with resumes will be r:::
accepted until 4:00p.m. o n January
27. 2006 at Gallia-Meigs CAA, 859
riO H = w
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
BEAUTIFUL
APART:
Lab · P"Ps.' lield and
IURSAu:
CONSTRUCTION
'
'
·•
45631. GMCAA is an Eq~al . MENTS AT . BUDGET
waterfowl hunting bloodPRICES AT JACKSON
tines . calm and larhily orient· 01 Ford F150 XLT 4dr,' auto,
Chuck Wolfe
Opportlmity Employer.
ESTATES, 52 WeStwood
Appliance ed, excellent pups, excellent 5.4L , va . bedcover~ 6CD
price. (740)418-8388.
player, sunroof, good condiOwner
-========~-:======== Drive from $344 to $442.

(,7·_:4.::01:::36:::7_:·00=0.::0_ _~- -

-

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted ·

RENr

Help Wanted

QAIZZWELLS
I ~ It\\&lt;. iUCKEia:\l eEEH WASi\1-\Cl

'111&lt;\t ico~I\1-C.
~\l\1-D Wli~

·

'100 MUC~

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 2?1 - Don·! teave
anythmg up to chance Ieday m Sltuahons
wlla1e you ~1 ave some th 1ng personal at
slake By ooerat.ng as the man age r. 11 conSidera bly enMnces your ooSSibllllleS for
Success
LIBRA (S ept 23-0c t 23)'- You could be
, luck1er than usual loday at t1nBII Z1ng those
thmgs tnat have ap pear ed loo dltf1cult lo
d.o and brmQ to successt~l concluSIOn s .
several matters that are Important to you
SCORPIO {Ocr' 24-Nov 22 ) - As long as
yo1..(rA Clrum lng. you miQhl 1.1 wall oraa m
big tod ay S om e~h t n Q yov o 1111.1 to accor'"lpll sh 11 not 1htllt tar out ot 111ch provtCIIO
yo1 r combme 1m1glnlt10n with tl l'\fl
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0t' 2 I ) - Todty_
you could· bt luck.y 1n not ort• Out two
1110111 Tnw fl rt i .O'll Will bo wt11r 1 you··
Clllltt II COI'\C i rl \10 I nC H• t IICtHI(I Ofll
p1r tl lnl 10 yow tlf\11'\CII I 1nvo1 ve me ntli
Oaltleu yli ltl" 1n ll011'1

~E-RE:'&amp; DOME.&amp;TI C~TE.D,

· A~D fHE.Rt.'6 ~U I UT

SOUP TO NUTZ

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�Page B6 • The ~y Sentinel

Hannan squeaks past Grace, 65-62
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYOAJLYTRIBUN,E COM

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. It wasn't easy, in fact. it was
downright scary.
Visiting Hannan had tO rally
from . a 16-point first half
deficit. an'd didn 't lake the
lead for good until late in the
founh quarter, en route to a
65-62 boys basketball victory
over upset-minded Grace
Chri sti an School on Tuesday.
Wesley G ue scored 20
points and grabbed II
rebounds· for Hannan and was
one of. four Wild.:ats to reach
doubl e figures . Bradley
· Edmonds also posted a double-double with II points and
14 . rebounds white Rvan
Canterbury and Kevin Bl-ake

Wednesday, January 18,

www.mydailysentinei.com

scored
a 33-28 at intermission. Hannan
dozen apiece . rode that momentum and took
It marked the lead in the third quarter.
back-to-back
Grace answered, though,
wins
. for and was able to re-claim the
D a n n y aelvantage briefly at 48-46 in
Dewhurst's the final. stanza. Hannan
squad, which pulied even at 50-all before ·
improved to pulling ahead and holdmg on
4-2 on the for the hard-fought victory. ·
season.
Steven Wray scored a dozen
Gue
But
win points to lead the Soldfers.
No.4 was in· Josh Williams and J .D.
doubt early, Grace Christian · Thompson each scored I0.
jumped out to a 17-10 . lead
Also for Hannan, Joe
after one quarter, then built Its Kinnard added six points
lead as large as 16 points in while Aaron Payne and Jared
the second quarter.
Taylor chipped in three and
The Wildcats, ·on the . one respectively. Canterbury
strength of an effective 1-2-2 handed out eight assists.
press. was able to make a late
Hannan IS at Huntmgton St.
. ru n near the end of the second Joseph, a posSible sectiOnal
period and pulled ro within foe , on Friday.

2006

RHP Harang gets $2.35
million deal from Reds
CINCINNATI (AP) Ri ght-hander Aaron Harang
agreed to a $2.35 million,
one-year
contract
on
Tuesday, avoiding salary
arbitration
with
the
Cincinnati Reds.
The agreement left Adam
Dunn and All -Star shortstop
F~lip e Lopez as the only
Reds still in arbitration .
Dunn is asking for the sel'ond-higgest · salary increase
amon g the 44 major leaguers
in arbitration.
Dunn. who wi ll move to
first base this season ' now
that Sean Casey has been

tracjed to Pittsburgh, is asking for $8.95 million. The
club has countered with a
$7. I inillion offer.
Dunn made $4.6 million
last sea'son, when he batted
.247 with 40 homers, 101
RB!s and 11 4 walks. He is
the only player in Reds history to have two seasons wtth
100 runs. walks-and RBl s.
· . Washington's
Alfo nso
Soriano is the only player
see king a larger salary in
arbitration. He made $7.5
million last season , and is
asking for $12 mi llion.
Lopez made $415,000 last

season, when he made the
All-Star team for the first
time. He is asking for $3 million in arbitration, and the
Reds have offered $2 . 15 million.
'
Harang was the Red s: most
consistent starter last season1
when he made $440,000. He
went 11-!3 with a 3:83
earned run average in 32
starts, and had one of the
club's two complete games.
Harang led the staff with
II victories, 163 strikeouts
and · 211 2-3 innings, the
most by a Reds pitcher si nee
1996.

. Indians scalp Point Pleasant, 41-31 .Teixeira ·gets $15.4 million,_two-year
deal; Soriano asks for$12 million

Judy Kay's to

reopen,A2

50 CENTS • Vnl. 55, No,

Collect
from Page Bl
· Redmen .
Shawnee closed the first
half strong with a 14-6 run to
take a 30-29 lead to the locker room .
The' 0a a me was sti ll back.
'
and-forth throughout the second half with neither side
able to stand pro,peri ty.
Finally. the Red men pulled
away on a three-baH by fresh man ~ u ard Brett Beucler to
make -the score 62-49 wi th
5:07 to play.
Rio .wou ld pu sh the ad va n. tage to 16 points (65-49) wit h
4 :39 remaining . th e gaf[le.
Shawnee would get as close
as seven points. hut could not
overcome the 'urge by the
· Redmen.
Ri o had perhaps its' mo;t
balanced scoring attack of the
season with five players tallyin g double figure·s. . Senior

Stumble
from Page Bl
game to take a 35-20 lead to
.halftime.
Rio\ shootin g fell off even
more .i n the second half as
they hit only 7-of-35 (20 percent) attempts. For the game.
the Red women shot. 25 .8 per.cent ( 16-of-62) from the ·
field . 29.4 pe[ce nt (5-of-17)
from . long ran ge and 58.3
percent !7-of-12) fro m the
foul line.
Jun ior guard Btindi Kandel
matched Feaster\ 10 points
with ·10 of her own.
Erin
. Fres hman
forwa rd
Kume led the Redv. omen 1n
rebound s with eight.
Shawnee State placed three ·
players in double fi gu res . led
by · Heather Schilling's 14

Reggie Williamson notched a
double-double of 13 points
and · .J I rebounds and fresh man cen ter Will Norwell
added I I points and I 0
boards .
Mendenhall also scored 13
points as he nailed fou r huge
three-pointers on the night.
Beucler and seA ior guard
James Pattman each tossed in
.II points.
.
Shawnee State was led by
Terrance Davison with 23
points ( 18 in the second half) .
Ri o. shot -14 .2 percent (23of-52) from the ·lloor. for the
game. 50 percent (8-of-16)
from beyond the three-poin t
arc· and 62.9 percent 122-of35) from the free throw line .
Shawnee .:oun te red with
41.5 percent (27 -of-65 )
shootin~ from the field , 20
percen·t- (3-of-15 I from the
three-po int line and 56.3 percent (9-of-16) trom the chari ty stripe .
Rio out-rebounded SSU.
44-34 and , _co mmitted three
,.

.

.

more turn overs (I R- 15 ).
"We tiad to have this one
against a team that' s, to 'be
honest Wit h yoq, been stru ggling a lot like we have," said .
Rio Grande head coac h Earl
Thomas. "We kind of fo und a
way and overcame our own ·
obstacles." ·
Thomas said that his team
was able to make the plays to
win the ga me. "We finally
made enough play s in the
second half, offensively, and
some guys stepped up a little
bit." he said. "W~ were able
to get them 'off the boards a
little bit, the last few minute s
of the game and kind of
sewed things up." .
Rio Grande wiII look to
. build on the v.in .on Saturday
when . the Tiffin Drago ns
come to the Newt Oli ver
Arena. Tiffin swept the season series from Rio Grande a
year ago.
Tip-off' will be approximately 8 p.m. following the
women's game.

out-worked us in just about
every phase of the game,'"
Smalley said.
"We did 0 few thin gs well , ·
in the second half. we limited ·
, IJ\e C&lt;HOI11\ .
our turnovers to live. we just
Shawnee State won the dug a hole lor ourselves,"
rebou nding category. 4 7~ 41 . Small ey added. " When you
The Lady Bears also .:ommit- shoot 26 percent for the
entire game. you· re not going
ted .15 turnovers.
The Lad y Bears shot 45 J to beat very many people."
percent 129-of-64) from the
Rio Grande has now
noor. 5~ 8 perceni I I0-of-17 ) dropped five consecutive
from three-point land . and games and seven of the last
47..+ percent 19-of-191 from eight.
Shawnee State avenged the
the free thmw line.
"S hawnee State is a good two-point lo&gt;s to Rio last
ball club. no doubt about it.'' year at the Newt. The two
said Rio Grande head coach .sc hools wi II hook up again.
David Smalley after the February 14 at "The Ca\e" in
·ga me. "They are hitt ing on Port, mouth .
The Red women "'ill look ·
all cv lindw•. "
to
Satwday to re,·er'e their
Smalley sa id thm Shawnee
just "'anted the game more fortunes "'flh a home game
·than his team did . "They again't Tiffin on ~atu-rday.
basically out-hu,st led us and Tip-off i' set for 6 p.m.

He batted .268 last year wi th
34 homers, I04 RB Is and 30
steals.
Teixeira, who gets $6 million this year a nd $9.4 million in 2007, hit .30 1 with 43
home runs and 144 RBis last
season. The RBi s were the
file cases, swapping figures mo st for a swilc h-h itter,
with pitchers Mark Prior and breaking the record set by
Carlos Zambrano along with George Davis, who had 136 .
new leadoff hitter Juan for the New York Giants .i n
Pierre.
1896. In three major. leag ue
Aft er opting out of the seasons, the ·forme r first'final year of a contract that round pick has a .282 career
would ha.ve paid $2.75 mil- average with 107 homers
·
lion next season, Prior asked and 340 RBis.
fo r $4 million and was
" I'm happy to get this deal
offered
$3.3 · million . done and kind of get the
Zambrano. the Cubs' ace last business out of the way,"
season. hope &gt; to nearly dou - Teixeira said. "I enjoy play,
ble hi s earnin~s from $3 .76 ing the game. · This isn't
million to $7..L million. The always an easy part of it. I'm
team submitted $6 million.
glad to get ready to play the
Pierre. acqui red in a trade ga me ."
.
. ·
with the Florida Marlins. is
Schneider led NL catchers
seeking $6.5 million after by throwing out 38 percent
earning $3.6 ·· million in the of wou ld-be ba se stealers
fi nal season of a multi yea r last season, and he hit .268
contract.. The Cubs are offer- with I0 homers and 44
' RBl s. He ge ts $2.7 tllii'Iion
ing $5 million .
Catcher Josh ·Paul fi led the this year, $3.5 million in
lowest request. $750,000, 2007 and $4.9.(. million in
and Tampa Bay ' madc him each of the fin al two years.
the lowest offer. $475,000. a
"Brian ·is one of the ~e s t
ra ise of just $25,000.
defensive · catchers in base- Sori ano, acquired from the ball and we' re glad t'o be
Rangers l&lt;t&gt;t momh. was ab l ~ to keep h1m 111
offered SIO million by th~ Washington for at least the
Nationals, a ritise of $2.5 next four years." Bowden
said .
million.
"There's just a difference
Tampa Bay and pi tcher
of opinipn." Washington Travis Harper 's $ 100.000
general
man ag~r
Jim gap was the sma llest. The $2
Bowden said . "There' s kind million differen·ce between
of an agreement to disagree Sori ano an.d Washington was
on where he fa ll s·." ·
the largest.
.
While the National s want
Seattle and utilityman
to move Soriano to the out- Willie Bloomyuist agreed to
tield·. he prefers to remai n at a two-year contract worth
they
second base. He is eli gible $ 1,525.000. . but
for free agency after the sea- exchanged figure s anyway
son. and it' s possible because the deal 'is pending a
Washington could trade him . physical.

TllliRSilAY, ,JANUARY

110

'

.

"'""·""'l.oil"&lt;'nliowl."'nr

II), 200(1
'

Latest snag for new Pomeroy-Mason Bridge construction

SPORTS
•.Bettis: Fumble might
have forced him to return .
SeePageB1

BY lARRY CRUM

NEW YORK (AP)- AllStar first ba seman Mark ·
Teixeira signed 'a $ 15.4 million, two;year contract with
the Texas Rangers . Alfonso
Soriano, · his former tea me
mate, asked the Washington
Nationals for illmost as
much for one year.
Sori ano's $ 12 · mill ion
req uest was the highest submitted among the 44 players
who swa~ped · proposed
salaries wt th thetr teams
Tuesday. More than half of
the 100 players who filed for
salary arbitration Friday settled · before
Tuesday's
exchange of figures, and
. nearly all will reach a~ree­
ments without hea rt ngs,
· · wh ich will be scheduled for
next'
month
in
St.
Petersburg. Fla.
More than two dozen players r eached agree1.nent s
Tuesday,
.includ ing
Washington catcher Brian
Sc hneider ($ 16 million over
four years). Houston closer
Brad Lidge ($3,975,000).
Los Ange les Angels closer
Francisco
Rodriguez
($3 ,775,000), St. Louis
pit cher
Jason
Marquis
($5. 15 million), new Texas
pitcher Adam Eaton ($4.65
million), PiJtsburgh pitcher
Kip Well s ($4. 15 million)
and Toronto pitcher Ted
Lilly ($4 million).
Cin cinn ati 's Adam Dunn.
·who · II move to firs t base
this season following th e
trade of Sean Casey to
Pittsburgh. asked for the second-highes t amount. $8.9~.
mill ion. The Reds offered
$7. I million , . up )'ro1n the
$4.6 million Dunn made last
season , when he batted .247
with 40 homers. 10 1 RBis
and 11 4 walks .
'The Chicago Cubs have
some of the most hi gh-p ro-

I ,

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER .COM

POINT PLEASANT. W.· Va. - In a hard
fought battle trying to grab their first win of
the season, the Point Pleasant boys ran into
the sa nie troubles that have plagued them all
season as Sissonville took a four point lead
with six minuies to play and opened it .up .to
41 -31 victory Friday night in Point Pleasant.
The Bi g Blacks did come out strong in the
contest: taking the advantage in a low scoring
9-6 firstyuarter, hut from there Sissonville did
its damage .
The Indians took the lead for the first time
in the contest with 2:53 left in the second
quarter and hit a hot st reak as Sissonville hit a
game hi gh 18 pomts while hmttmg Pomt
Pleasant to onlv four as the Indians pulled
ahead by II at the half.
Both teams . struggled th rough the thi rd ·
quaner: but Point PletNllll rna1ta ged to edge
the Indians 12-g in the quarter and climb withLarry Crum/photo
in seven heading into the final cantos.
The third quarter charge wa~ led by Josh Point Pleasant'·s Stephen Walke r goes up for a
Stover. who 2rabbed six of his ga me high 15 s hot during the fourth quarte r of the Big
. points. and B-obby Errett, who grabbed six of Blacks' 41-31 loss to Sissonville Tuesday
· his 10 points, as the Big Blacks made a run at night.
the lead·.
While Point stru ggled to hit shots,
Point Pleasant continued to fight back in to
the contest. climbing within four \v ith six min- Sisson, ille connected on 48 percent ( 15-ofutes to play, but Chris Boggess grabbed a steal 3 1) of their shots from the floor and hit 58 per ..
and took it the l~ngth of the court to go back cent (7-of- 12) from the· fo ul line.
Point Pleasant did domi nate the boards in
up by si x.
.
the
game. g•abbing 36 rebounds led by Stover
The Big Blacks responded when a missed
with
12, wh ile Sissonville could only come
shot was rebo unded and put back in by
Stephen· Walker as Point again positioned down with 18, led by Michel Hogan with six .
The Indians were led on the ni ght by Noah
themselves wit hin four.
Fletcher
with nine points, Kyle Snyder and
But on . the next trip down the floor,
Hoga
with
seven points, Walker with six
Sissonville's Walker smashed a three to go up
by seven 'and the ,;isi tors never looked back. points, Chris Boggess and Adam Lowe wi th
Point Pleasant struggled to hit shots down four points. Timmy Debarr with three points
the stretch both on the floor and at the foul and.Je &gt;se Boardman with one poi nt:
Poi11t Pleasant was led by Sto ver with hi s
hne, as the B1g Blacks only managed a 30 percent ( 13-of-43) effort fro m the fl oo r and a 25 doub le-double of 15 points and 12 rebounds.
. percent (4-of- 16) nigh t fro m the charity stripe. Errett with I 0 point s and six rebounds ,
The numerous mi &gt;sed free throws came Stephen Walker ,with fou r points and six
back to haunt Point as Sissonville did ju s.t rebounds and Will Slone with two points, six
enoug h with solid passing to keep the game rebounds and three steals.
The Big Blacks will again play at home 7:30
out of reach and hold Point -Pleasant win less
p.m
. Friday when they face Herbert Hoover.
on the season. ·

Quintet to play at
Valentine dance, A6

INSIDE
• Recorder posts land
transfers. See Page A2
• Meigs introduces
HI-Y leadership program.
See Page A3
• 4-H Club meets.
See Page A3
• TOPS losers prize
winners. See Page A3
• Family Medicine.
See Page A3 ·
.• Freshwater mussels:
Overlooked species.
See Page AS

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The old
saying, "If it isn 't one thing,
.it's another," could describe ·
the construction of the new
Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge
which has hit its latest snag in
th e form of shale found ·
embedded in .th e rock face
above what will be the
Pomeroy approach to the
bridge.
·
Don Tillis, project manager
for the Ohio Department of
Tran sportation (0DOT) said
that the_layer of shale creates
a problem because once
exposed to moisture it can
deteriorate quick ly.
Thi s deterioration cou ld
lea:d to slippage of part of the
hillside that has been recently
stripped of trees and debri s in
preparation of blasting the
rock face for the Pomeroy
approach below. .
.
Tillis said the discovery of
the shale was made last week
and that a design consu lt ant
wi ll be on site today to look
at the problem and determine
the best tix ·fro m several solutio ns to prevent fut ure deterioration of the hillside.
ODOT Public Informati on
·Officer Stephanie Filson said
the unexpected discovery of
shale should not translate into
a significant delay or expense
in the projecl that has already
see n its share of delays and
unforeseen expenses wi th a
slip on the Ohio side and a
bad batch of concrete on the
West Vi rginia side.
Fil son said once the soluti on to the shale is determined th e blasting of the

Beth Sergentj photo

Construction on the Pomeroy approach to the new bridge continues despite discovering a layer
of s hale in the rock face that is to be blasted soon to make way for the road . Shale can deteriorate quickly when exposed to moisture and a design consultant is on the site today to determif1e a solution to prevent future deterioration. No s ignificant delays or expenses are expected
with this latest snag in construction. ·
rock face will commence
qui ck ly though not at the
expense of safety.
·
" I believe that by the end of
February. first o( March we
will be doing blasting ."Filson
said ·of the shale-related snag
and ODOT's litllermination
to accommodate the current
construct-ion sc hedule.
It is estimated th at around
40 blasts are .anticipated to
complete the process of

clearin g the rock face for the
approach. These. blasts
would occur once. possibl}
twice a day for a period of
two months.
The blasts will probably
occur towards evening with
an at[e·mpt to avoid peak
hours of traffic to reduce
co ngestion .
Shortly . before the blasts
traffic will be stopped on the.
Pomeroy side and on the

BY BETH SERGENT

'

.WEATHER ·

ule s per blast.
"It won't be an ideal situa-

RUTLAND - -During a
recessed session of Rutland
Village Council the new
counci l aJdre,sed how tn collect the ,·illage·s unpaid fine'
for revenue and the liahi litv

saiarics: S-+95 .60 spent for
fuel: 6.0R7 miles driven on .
the crui ser: 81 citation' written: • and I00 char ges filed
against ddendants.'
'
Councilman Dean Harri s
asl;.ed Rut land Fiscal Officer
Deborah Whitlach to compile
a lisi of dclipquent acc·ounts
bdonging to customers of the
water and .sewer office.
Whitlach said &gt;he would
have the list at the next meeting a, well as an idea of when
the rc:l l estate tax payments
·
·
would arril'e .
· Il arri s also asked if the ,·illagt: had d .written agreement ·
with the 1\kigs Emergency
MediCal Services to house a
s4uad at tile Rutland Ci1 1c
C'cmer. citing the· f;.ct .that if
"l.lmeihinc.· -.Uch a:-. a fin: \\ t:n:
t&lt;-i happen at the c·c nter that
the 1i ll age mav be held liable.
Harri,' said 'he wnuiJ call

"We' re aJ·so gatnfflg in
property valuat ion so our
state share of funding per
TUPPERS PLAINS
pupi l is decrea, ing."
Cuts 111 some fundin g
State. fund ing per student is
sources at the state and feder- based on a formula which issues facing the vi li Jge ;.it
al leve ls wi ll make operating begin s ·with an annual the Rut l;lnd Civic Center.
Rutland Police Officer
local schools more diffiL:ult. allowance of 55.283 per .,Illand with no operating levy in dent. That figure " then sub- Steve Williams reported I(&lt;
place, ihe Eas tern Local ject to a factoring proe·ess cnuncil that his department
School District wi ll closely which considers the di strict's has $7.000 in outstanding
monitor its finances in the ' enrollment total. property fine~ from ntriuu .~ l'itation s...
Williams said he ll'as sendyear ahead.
value s and adj usted property
At last week's organiza- val u t~tion in the district.
ing out letters to the otkndcrs
tional me eting , the Eastern
and
discussed with council
Ritch ie said the distric·t 's
Local Board uf Education state funding share was the pnH.:(:'dure for arre~ting
appoi'nt ed Pre sident John approximately 75 percent nf these (lllender' "ith ilUt,tandRi ce and Charles Weber to the tot al budget. Now it ing fine' inl\la~or· , Court.
serve with Superin tendent makes up at about 69 pcn.:cnt
Williams alsc1 ga1·c cou ncil
Rick
Edwards
and of the dtstrict\ $8.2 million a year end rep(;rt that saw
Treasurer Lisa Ritchie on a annual budget. The formula '5 1U71 in t'ine' cited:
finance COillfllittee. to peri; uses a 23-n1i II base. anti the S I 0,278 .93
spent
for
odicallv moni tor th e dis- state then adds or subtracts
trid's financia l status. 'tt is funding dollars per stlldent to
the second year 1the com- meet that base.
' ·
mittee. has been in place.
A sli ght decrea., e ii1 enrollEdw:\rds said.
ment also threatens 'the disBY CHARLENE HOEFI.ICH
is l0 res.tore .lh~ .wa ll ;.t-. it
The committee will se rve trtct s . finan&lt;:i&lt;tl securi ty.
to keep board n't emtlers Ritchie said. because the per- · HOEFLIC H@MYDAI l YS ENTI N~L . COM ".:a.;, takinu nut !'llllll~ of th~
deteriorat i flu · .-..anJ~tone :md
aware of the district's finan - student share from the state is
POMEROY
~...·tming l1t:\\~ nne~ to replace
cial picture. Edward, said, affected when Cllf'IJllment
I {llprovemenh to downtown them:· s:tid \1u&gt;&lt;er. --o,'t·r
and its c,reat ion last year is drops.
Pomeroy ~tnd plans for ~K~ti\ ­ IO(htllne' are in\'oh ed hut
not to he seen as a sign of
Ritchie said t!Jc stat e's
financial worries ahead. eliminati01i of much of the ities and prn g rarnmin g in . the wall ha' Ill be rc,tored t\&gt;
Se\TCtarl'
of . the•
Wh.il e holding steady finan - personal property tax will 2006 are llfl the agenda of the the
Merchant' Interior's stanJard o fllr hi'c ially. th e cli&lt;tri ct. which hurt ;til school di&gt;trich. but Pnmeruv
tom· prcsc·r, .1tion.
has, an average enrrllmcnt ,·n uld !affect the u1unt y's A!-&gt;~llciaiJon.
Meetin~
thi..,
week
at
of 790 students, fa ces rev- oth er two districts more
A' fnr ho\\ the pn1.kc t.'1 iII
Fttrmers Bank, John Mus.scL be paid f11r. ~1U11 C r saiJ it IS
enue cuts in , a ,number of than it will Easterq Local
areas, including fed~ra l That 's because the di,tnct presiuc'llt and mayor of expe.:tcd that mo•t of ·t he
fund ing for special ecluca • doe,n.' t have a' much per- Pomeroy. reporte·d to the monn · "ill. come from
Pomer,,v ·s·
tion and programs for di s- sonal property ta'x tq col- merchants Ill! the ' latus nr FE~1A "ith
abled studen ts. ch.1 nges in · lect. since inost of th e pmp- repair to the parkfflg ion wall match tu he· handled throti~h
the state tax law th;n elimi- crtv in the district is re11 - · cau,ed hy Jaq ) eat's llooJ . an ARC' gr;mt. The damage 'a,
1-k noted that the rrnjc•ct i, ,·et h.ts not c;,u,eJ a problem
nate ~ many t axe~ nn person- ·
de1itial or agricultural.
hcing rchid at the rClJliCSt of "ith the actual p.trking .trca
al property. and change\ in
The di ., trict cnntinue's to J
the 10\:al economy thut actu ' operate wi.thin i,t .s hudEt'tarv FEIIIA \\.ith the nell' hid, to ll&gt;C if. .KL' &lt;lrJin~ IO ~1UIIt:r .
i\1u .. ..,~r. a' m;.nor. al . . ~ 1
ally work again•t the dis - restraints. hilWCI'er, and he opened nn' Feb . Ill.
trict's fin anrial base .
!\1
u
"cr
'aid
FE!\'1..'1
had
reponed
th ;tt pl,ttts 'ar\' being
Edwards said a propert} t;f\
a•l-,ed
for
the
rebiJdin~
made to se~ th;,t the c1ld
"We have to retogn ite kYV is no longer a 'iahk ·
some things about our o\·er;tll rnc :m ~ nf casing ~my finanLial l hec·at\sc' the nri~inal b1d cli tl Pomc'f'&lt;l\ Junior Hidt Sch&lt;l&lt;ll
finan cial picture:· Ritdt ie hmden. Bec,fll•e nf the not pnl\ ide fllr-:· hhtl·lf'fca ll y budding 1• dt'I1I&lt;'lf,h,·d . He
n.··,h)rin{' th~ \\all htJ t ,..,im -. nntcd th ~1t ~'' u ~..· nrnpan ic...,
said Wedne•day. "We ' re l&lt; hchange" ln .the \\ 'tt) lhC -..tate
in~ enrollment so we're not
fund,
,chool
districts. pi~ lor fill1ng the· 1oiJ \\ith ha\ 1..' hi.?L'll c'mla~-.· tcJ .!b(1 Ut
getting as much ba,ic aid
~,:oncrct~-.~ .
the .lltH •u nt ol .t ... hl'"hb 111 the
from the state as we did."
Please see E11tern. AS
"\\' hat FE~1 A ":n)h dllllt' builclin~ . llnc·e th:ll 1s d1111c.
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL .c'OM

• Photography featured
at ·Kennedy Museum of
Art See Page A3

on av ~ ra ge about fi ve min-·.

Edwards: Eastern ·. Unpaid fines and liability issues
budget holding steady discussed·at Rutland Council
but closely.watched
BSERGENT@MYDAI l YSENTI ~EL. COM

Meigs County Visitors Guide

bridge or West Virgin ia
approach though that is yet to
be determined . A serie s of
horn blasts will then warn
workers on the site and th en
the actual blast. all thi s followed by dehris collection.
Filson said during a si milar ODOT proje~c t near
Marietta traffic was stopred

ti on but it wi II be done as
efficient ly as possibly,"
Filson sa id about the traffic
delav. --we wi II do our best to
keep some kind of sc hedule
to give motorist an idea of
when the blasting occurs.''
Tilli; said the hill side area
ODOT _is dealing with in
regards to blasting is 600 feet
long and that th e blast holes .
wi ll be drilled in a tight pattern and loaded "extremely
light'' with an ammonia
nitrate and fuel mix :
''Our intention is to crack
th e rock with explosives and
then scrape off the hill with
excavators,'' Tillis added,
estimating I0 to 12 large
trucks will be needed to liaul
away the debris over · the
entire blasting period.
Hilltop Energy of Lisbon
wi ll be doing th e 'drilling an'd
"shooting'' of explosives.
Filson stressed that ODOT ·
does not anticipate the \&gt;lasting to :iffect the existi ng
Pomeroy- Mason Bridge 'during what she called a "delicate process."
She explained that ODOT
has monitors currentl y on the
.old bridge to pick up any
vibration that might affect it
and that. there are very "stringent" gui de lines on how
much vib ration is permitted ·
wit h construction and she
added. '' We have stayed well
below what is permitted."
Despite the latest snag the
price tag for the new bridge,
incl uding · the approach,
remains at $51 million and
Fi lson said, "Safety remains
our first pri·ori ty."
The completion date for the
new bridge is mid-2Q07.

Meigs EMS to lind out if there
was 'a written agreement.
Harri s was also concerned
that th ere wa;; no agreement
that exempted the vill age
from liability issues wi th
those · that rented the
Rutland Civic Center for
e1·ent s. He added that there
is currently a co urt liability
case pending against the village due to an incident that ·
happened at the center.
Street Commissioner Dave
Da,·i, also gave a report on
the ;e"' er plant.
.,;
The meeting went · into
e.xecutil'e ,e,sion once to discu" personnel matters, and
more ,p.;(·iticall y to distuss
the employee handbook and
\\'hnlach\ re qu est to go to a
part-time employee .
All members. of council
and Mayor April Burke were
prc•ent for the meetin$ .

Pomere;r Merchants .set agenda for 2006

poinh . Tara Walker produced
a· doubl e-doubl e of 13 ,points
ani.I
I0 rebounds and
Shllnll\in. Thomli' chipped in
I) po1111s and pulled down

Detalla on Paee A2
..

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

DON'T MISS OUT ON HAVING YOUR BUSINESS
OR ORGANIZATION INCLUDED
Dave Harris or Brenda Davis
992-2155

Calendars

.A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Places to go

A6

Sports
Weather

The Dail Sentinel

12 I'AGFS

B Section
A2

(£: 2006 Ohio \'uiiC)' l,.ubliNhin,.; l u ,

' '

-

.

--

-~.,.----

'

.

••

"

tt''&gt;tflnine EPA clearance.
then the building '-'.ill be tom
do\\'n. he said.
During the meeting . t,he
me rchants ·discussed the
•
nien1bership drin~ . Dues·will
· remain at S60 this year and
merc:hants arc bein~ encouragc·J to join the group and
ac·tiw l: participate .in the
1·arious projects to enhance.
the' illa~e.
.". di,~u"iol1 held on the
hnliua\ sea,on and merchants at the meeting indicated it \\ '" pn,itive not onlv for
ihe ,c;bon hut generall)· all
war. \kmhers were encour;tgeJ about the number of ·
businesses c:oming in and the
•111refronts being tilled pro' idi ng a positive o~t look for
the ,·iJiage .
Better cooperation on
things like st.aying open for
ntendc·d hours at special
tffncs and p;trticipattng in
Please see Merchants, AS · '

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