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. Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.oom

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Disney buying
Pixar for $7·4 billion
instock,A2

Lady Hornets sting Ri~er Valley
BY

BRAD SHERMAN

BSHERMAN@MVDAil'fTRIBUNE.COM

COAL GROVE - The
Ohio Valley . Conference's
best team, Coal Grove, continued to roll with a 54-28
girls basketball victory over
last-place River Valley on
Monday.
·
.
Chelsea Markins made four '
3-pointers and scored 24
points for the Lady Hornets
(12-2 ). who stayed unbeaten
in the conference at 7-0.
Samantha Hall also reached
double figures for the winners
with 14.
·
Coal Grove trave'IS to South
Point Thursday with first
place and at least a share of

the conference title on the
line. The L;~dy Pointers are 5I and only lost by one possession in their first meeting.
River Valley, just two days
removed from snapping an
11 -game losing skid on
Saturday. was unable to fol low it up with another win on
Monday. The Lady Raitlers
fe II to 3-13 overall and are 17 in the ave.
No one reached double figures for the Lady Raiders in
the setback. Beth Payne
scored nine while Kirsten
Carter and Kayla· Smith each
added four. Ashley Marcum
went for three and Rach.el
Walburn , Margo Fraley,
llianna Corfias and Brooke

Taylor all chipped in two.
Coal Grove doubled up
River Valley in each of the
first two quarters by identical
14-7 scores and led by 14 at
intermission.
The home squad' stayed
around that sa me scoring pace
the rest of the galne. scoring a
dozen in the third period and
14 again in the . fo_urth .
Meanwhile, Coal Grove
coach Nick Mill's defense
continued to hold the Silver
and Black in single digit scoring in each of the final two
stanzas .
In the junior varsity contest,
Coal Grove won 39-32.
·
River Valley is at South
Point on Feb. 2.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio .
:;o CENTS • \'nl. 55 . Nn.

• Cavaliers slam Indiana.
See Page 81

over the. team. That move moil since they- moved into
prompted Larry Beinfest to Great American Ball Park in
leave and become Florida's 2003. General manager Jim
Bryan Walters/photo
generalmanager.
Bowden and manager Bob
Gall ia Academy 's Jackie Wamsley '(10) dribbles between Point Pleasant defenders Jody
Castellini began rcorgan1z- Boone' were fired midway
Hartley (25) and Leah Eddy (11) during Monday's contest in Point Pleasant, W. Va. Wamsley
ing the Reds' front oftice a day through the inaugural season,
had
a game-high 18 points in the Angels' 54-49 non-conference victory.
after the sale was approved. with Kullman helping to till in
.
'
He limited chief operating until 0' Brien was chosen after ·
officer John Allen's duties to the season.
overseeing business operaKullman will have the free. tions, with the general manag- dam to work on trades, which
16-5 edge .on the offeirsive the' tina! lead change in the
BY BRYAN WALTERS
er reportin~ to Castellini. would .be approved by
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM
glass, but Point was down contest.
Under previous owner Carl Castellini. For example,
only
one ( 15-14) in that colAfter exchanging baskets to
Lindner, the general manager Kullman said teams have
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.
umn
at
halfiime.
The
guests
start
the fourth (40-39), Point
shown an interest in outfielder
reported to Allen.
Va.
Gallia
Academy
hits
outrebounded
PPHS
23-9
Pleas·
ant never got closer than
It was a prelude to .change. Austin Kearns, but haven't
been
a
second
half
team
most
over
the
tinal
16
minutes,
two
the
rest of the way. 1
..
Castellini said the next general offered what the Reds want in
of
the
girls
basketball
season.
including
a
9-2
offensive
Gallia
Academy,
which
shot
manager will decide if more· return.
Monday night was no edge.
.
50 percent from ·three-point
change is needed.
"So I wouldn't be surpri sed .
exception.
Those extra .chances, as territory, hit 3-of-6 during the
"I'm not going to get more if in the next week. we trv to
The
Blue
Angels
(7-8)
ralwell
as the cold finish, didn't second half. Point was 2-for-6
involved operationally," he do something," Kullman said.
lied
back.
from
a
seven-point
provide
the _finish that Point in the setback. and both
said. ·'We' re going to hire a "Whether it's possible or not, I
halftime
deficit
by
going
on
a
coach
Mitch
Meadows had makes came in the opening
general manager and he's don't know."
32-20
second
half
run
to
claim
hor,ed
for.
frames .
going to assess his personnel."
The Reds also have two
hard-fought
54-49
victory
.
·We
played
a
great
.
tirst
Wamsley paced GAHS
a
Baseball operations director . pending arbitration ·cases over cross-river rival Point haiL The offense just kind of with 18 points and five steals,
Brad Kullman will serve as with Adam Dunn and All -Star
·Pleasant.
· went away from us," said while Elliott added 17 markinterim general manager until shortstop Felipe Lopez.
GAHS
used
a
16-8
surge
in
Meadows. '·G.allia Academy ers and a team-high four
a replacement is picked.
0 ' Brien 's top goal was to
the
pivotal
thi
rd
period
to
grab
can
score a little bit. and that's assists. Lindsey Niday had
Kullman told Castellini that he . rebuild a farm system that had
just
its
.
second
lead
.
of
the
where
we strLioFgle. We must eight points and 12 caroms in
would like to be considered for failed to produce pitchers durgame at 3g-37. then sank 7- have used it al up in the first the Will.
the job.
ing Bowden's tenure_. Durin,g
ofII free throws down the half."
Sommer and Bibbee had IS
Castell ini offered Lou hts two years 10 Cmcmnall.
stretch
to
never
trail
a(;ain.
The
Red
and
White
jumped
and
II points, resrectively, to
Piniella a chance to become a ·0 ' Brien restructured the
The Blue and White shot · out to an early 10-2 lead mid- lead Point. Trista Van Matre
special adviser, but the former minor league . s~stem and . just 37 percent in the contest, way through the first and fin- was next with nine markers.
Reds and Devil Rays manager tmposed pllcll limns to end a . but an 11 -of-25 effort in the ished the opening stanza with · The · Angels claimed a
is taking adear off afterTampa tren~ of pr?spects gettmg hurt.
second half allowed the guests a 15-7 edge.
sweep Mon~a~ with a 49-28
Bay agree to buy out the final . 0 Bnen s biggest acqu1s1- .
to overcome a hot start by the
Galli a Academy started the wm m the JUmor varsity tilt.
year of his contract.
. liOn was left-hander ·. Enc _ host Lady Knights.
second quarter with a 5-0 run Michelle Johnson led the visi"Lou really had a year that Mtlton, who made $8 Imlhon
PPHS (5-8) shot .50 percent to pull within a possession. tors with a game-hig h 24
he had to stay away from last season while giving up a
( 11 -of-22) and held a cbm- but the hosts went on a 14-10 points, while Devin Cottrill
major . lea,gue baseball," club-record 40 homers and has
fortable 29-22 lead at the ~urge over the linal 6:40 for paced the Lady Knights with
Castelhni said. "I didn ' t know two years left on his contract.
. break.. but a 36 percent shoot- the seven-point edge at half.
12 markers.
that at the time we talked O'Brien also traded pQpul ar
inu performance in the second
The guests opened the secGAHS led 11 -2 after eight
about it. It's just not going to . first baseman Sean Casey to
lu~f all but sealed the deal on and half with a 9-2 run to tie minutes and was ahead 23-12
happen this year. And I would Pittsburgh last month.
the outcome.
the contest at 31. then both at the break.. The guests
expec\.Lou to go back to man'
Ca~telhm said the change
Gallia Academy coach teams exchanged baskets to improved to 9-6 overall this
agmg.
.
wasn t made because ot anyDuane Estep thought a few be tied again at 33. with 2:18 season. Point evened its
Reds manager Jerry Narron thing O'Brien did.
adjustments at the break made left.
record tli .500 at 6-6.
is under contract through
"I wanted someone in this
ali the difference in the result. . Char Bibbee gave the Lady
Galli a Academy travels to
2006. with a mutual option for vitally important job who I
"We pushed a little too Knights a 35-3.1 lead 25 sec- Vincent Thursday to take oil
.2007. Castellini expects him to have selected to lead the team
much in the first half and got onds later, but Brittany Warren in a Soutlleastern
manage the cl ub this season. · and baseball o"rganization,'·
in a hurry," said Estep. "We Elliott' s 3-pointer at the I :27 Ohio · Athletic
League
The Reds have been in tur- CasteUini said. .
told them at halftime to match mark llanded GAHS it fitst matchup. Game time is slated.
the defensive intensity, and to lead of the evening.
for 5:30p.m. ·.
slow it down and mn some
.Anna Somp1er gave Poilll
Point Pleasant returns to
offense. We were able to get its tina! lead with a·minute .left · action Thursday when It hosts
some open looks and tini sh.'" in the third. but ' Jackie Si ssonville in a Cardinal
The Angels outrebounded Wamslev\ I R-frx1ter with 26 Conference contest. Game
the
hosts 38-23. including a seconds- remaining served as time is slated for 6 p.m.
PITTSBURGH (A P) -It's been it long wait
for another chance at "one for the thumb."
In a city and region where football is in the
blood, "the Steelers' victory over the Denver
Broncos on Sunday has taken on an air of destiny. Super Bowl XL in Detroit will give the
Steelers a chance to win their fifth NFL championship - a ring for eveiy finger.
'
Many fans SllY they never douqted the team,
even wheil'they were 7, 5 and on a three-game
losing streak, or when they nearly lost to the
Indianapolis Colts on a fumble .
Just ask Bruce Barnes. a city planner who
was talking Steelers after getting a shine at
Walt's Comer Shoe Shine on Monday afternoon.
"I was the one who said the Steelers are
AP photo
going·to win it all,.even before the playoffs,'' he . This· photo provided by the NFL shows tickets
said. "They won seven games (in a row.) The to Super Bowl XL, whiCh will be played Sunday,
rest i.s just a formality."
Feb . 5 in . Detroit . between the Seattle
· A longtime Steelers fan , Barnes said his first ·seahawks and the Pittsburgh Steelers.
job was. selling soda in the 1960s at Forbes
,
Field, where the Steelers played "when they football," said Barnes, who claimed he didn't
·
even touch a basketball until high school.
·
were Sad ."
.
"Jerome's .going home to get one for the
Dianne "De De" .Metro, a season ticket holdthumb," Barnes said of Jerome Bettis, the 13- er who hasn't missed a game since 1970, said:
year veteran NFL running back from Detroit. ''It's n tough team. It's a tough sport. It's a
Walt Butler Jr.. son of the shoeshiner Walt tough city."
· Butler Sr., offers: ''To finish playing football ·in
A file clerk at Hanus Wagner, a downtown
the place where you played midget footba ll , sports store, she too, sees an inevi!able win.
you can't write a better script. "
'They play as a teain ," she said. "Even
The script nearly went awry last week, after though Bettis is our big s'tar, look at (Sunday),
the Steelers almost blew a playoff game against we had about 30 stars."
the Co lts when B'ettis fumbled with I :20 ' At Hanus Wagner and other stores, Steelers
remaining. Only a shoestring tackle by quarter- · ge"ar was flying off the shelves about as fa,t '"
back Ben Roethlisberger &gt;aved the Steelers.
it could be stocked.
The Steelers have four" tit les, all won during
"It's just out-of-control , Steeler-mania everythe six seasons from 1974-79. and fans in this where, · Metro said. "I always say, how can a
. football-mad town have hungered for a Super 53-man roster do thi s to a city ''"
Bowl win ever since.
The Hometowne Sports shop in Station
Not for a decade has the mantra of "one for Square stayed open until about 9 p.m . Sunday
the thumb" - a rallying cry for a fifth Super night - much later than usual - and nearly
Bowl ring- seemed so close .
·
so ld· al l its first all otment of 500 AFC
Fans want to see the job done not only for Conference Champions T-shirt,, Shawna Kosik
Bettis, but also for coach Bill Cowher, who lo&gt;t said. By midmorning, a couple hundred more
in his only other Super Bowl appearance in had heen 'old, with more coming in.
19% to Dallas. And they want to see it fo'r
"It\ bri·sk. very brisk." K,osi k said.
Roethlisberger. And for the team . And for the "Everyone is so excited .... You would have
city.
thought we won the Super Bowl already."
Pitt sburgh's other profes,innal team' Amon-g those stoppin g in for shi rt&gt; -for
baseball 's Pirates and hockey\ Pengu in.s - friends was· Paula Bamdol lar, of Ch arleroi .
have lately_ been somewhere between lack lu.ster who was sporting a black-and-gold "''eater
Dave Harris or Brenda Davis
and awful.
.
·
along with earrings and a necklace bearin g the
But football i's 'a ll that matters to mah y sports Steelers' diamond-shaped hypocycloid logo.
992-2155
fans .here.
· 'There is no such thing as too much Steclers
"Thi&gt; is football country. The on ly reason gear, too much Stcclcrs paraphcm ali a. too
•
ycur pare~t.l had· you _was so you ~ould pluy much Steelcrs decorations," she said .

Blue Angels rally past Poin~ 54-49

q

"''"'"'"~· dail~-.·ntim·L•·um

\\' EUNESDAY, .JANUARY 25,2006

J.

rates by one percent and
changing the means by which
- - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - ' sewer service is billed, reducMIDDLEPORT
ing the burden for minimumMiddleport Village Council use_ customers and placing
increased water and sewer· more of the cost burden on
rates, and interest and penal- housellolds wllich use more
ties on unpaid income taxes, water. Customers who use a
and began the process of rais- minimal amQunt of water will
in g refuse fees, Mayor·'s see a reduction in sewer
Court costs, rental property charges because of a new
fees and building permit fees sewer rate schedule approved
at Monday evening's regular last night, but the action is
council. (See related story.)
designed to increase the fee
Water and sewer
proportionately with ' the.
Council passed emergency amount of water used.
ordinances increasing . water
The water hike will
BY BRIAN

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTlNEL.COM

increase a minimum monthly
Sewer rates are now calcH- effect with April water and
water bill by nine cents, from lated at a base rate of 140 per- sewer bills . Anderson said the
$9.21 to $9.30. It is designed cent of the customer's mini - increases. which are provided
to help qualify the vi llage for mum water bill at the mini- through ·an existing ordigrant programs, which usual- mum ' of 2,000 gallons of use, nance. will likely be annuaL
ly require the village to and $5 incremental increases
Fines and costs
demonstrate a reasonable rate wi.th mes at just over the
Council conducted tht; first
structure.
minimum . Under the new of three reading s on an ordi'·We've known for- several ordinance, the rates will be nance increasing Mayor 's
years that in order to be in calculated a~ !50 percent Court .co,ts. Costs u~der the . ·
contention for grants ·we ·across the board. For those new ordinance will increase
must show as a community billed for the minimum water from $50 to $65. A portion of
that we' re being self-reliant use, there will .be a decrease the costs go to the state, and
as· much as possible. That's of over $3 per month. Village
$1 0 of the total costs paid
the purpose of these increas- Administrator
Bradford . will · go towatd a computer
es," Council Member Jean Anderson said.Craig said.
The increases wi II go into
Please see Fees. AS

AEP
BY BRIAN

J.

REED ,

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE Hundreds
viewed displays and heard
presentations by American
Electric Power and its
experts on clean-coal technology at a public meeting at.
Southern ElementarySchool
Tuesday evening.
The open-house included
displays outlining AEP's pla1i
to construct a $1 billion integrated gasification combined
cycle power plant in Lebanon
Township, and question and
answer opport unities with
engineers and other IGCC
experts working on the. proPage AS .
posed plant.
• William Thomas, 93
AEP has begun site prepa. ration on its site on tile Ohio
River near the Ravenswood
Bridge, while awaiting . a
decision on its cost recovery
plan from the Public Utilities
• Army stretched to
Commission of Ohio.
Among those attending
breaking point by
were village and county offi,
repeated deployments
cials from Meigs , Atllens and
to war fronts, study says.
Jackson County, W.Va ..
members of the building
See Page A2
and the general public
• Bertha M.- Sayre Society trades
interested in how IGCC techmeets. See Page A3
nolqgy will work.. where the
plant will · be situated and
i Alfred UMW gets
why
the plant is needed. The
mission lesson.
meeting was offered as part
See Page A3
of the power company's
upcoming permit application
• Installation of new
with
the Ohio Power Siting
officers highlights DofA
Board, which will grant or
meeting. See Page A3
deny AEP permission to build
• Firemen elect new
the facility.
The OPSB application will
officers; makes plans for
be filed in March. according to
2006. See Page A3
data provided at last night's
• Family Medicine.
meeting, and the application
will be followed by a 90-day
See Page A3
Bnan J. Reed/ photo
hearing process-. OSPB is Frank Blake, right, a Meigs County native work ing on AEP's IGCC plant proposal. discusses the
• Sago mine survivor's
expected to complete its project with Meigs County Chamber of Commerce President Donald Vaughan at a public meet·
· condition continues to
ing at Southern Elementar¥ School on Tuesday evening. ·
· ·
Please see AEP, A5

0BITUARIFS

INSIDE

.

'

Steelers fans set sights on Detroit

Meig$. Co(lnty Visitors Guide

improve. See Page AS

Procedural matters
concern Pomeroy
Council members

WEATHER

Meigs Local Board
of Education presi·
dent Norman
Humphreys. left,
and Superintendent
William Buckley prti- ·
sent a resolution of
commendation and
a plaque to Lorri
Barnes . the dis·
trict's fi rst .teacher
to receive nat1onal
certification.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTlNEL.COM

Detatto on Page A6

INDEX
2

DON'T MISS OUT ON HAVING.YOUR BUSINESS
OR ORGANIZATION fNClUlJED

S.:niONs -

A3

Classifieds

B3·4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3
A4
As

Obituaries

B SeCtion

Sports

A(~

Weather
(i.:)

1---

12 PAGFS

Calendars

Editorials

The Dail Sentinel

l

I

Middleport Council hikes water, sewer, ·court fees

SPORTS

New Reds owner fires 0' Brien
CINCINNATI (AP) - New
Cincinnati' Reds owner Bob
Castellini fired general manager Dan O' Brien on Monday.
the first major change since he
took. control of the team.
0' Brien was entering his
third season as general manager and lmd a year to go on his
contract. The Reds are coming
off their fifth straight losing
season. their longest streak in
50 years.
·
Castellini said he was leaning toward changing general
managers when maj_or league
owners approved the . Reds'
sale last Thursday. He met
with 0' Brien on Monday and
iold him he wanted to bring in
·his own baseball executive.
"There is no criticism of
ban," Casrellini said. ''I just
. needed my own person.''
Even though the ·c lub was
changing owners. O'Brien
didn't expect to get tired.
"I do understand that it's
new ownership 's prerogative
to make changes and hire new
people," O' Brien said in a
phone interview. "I was somewhat surprised by the move.
It's not something that was in
niy mind 24 hours ago."
Castellini expects to interview six to eight candidates
during the next three or four
weeks. Reds pitchers ·and
catchers report to Spring training in Sarasota, Fla., on Feb.
16. .
It's not uncommon for new
owners to change general
managers so close to the start
of the season. New Boston
owners fired Dan Duquette
during spring training 2002.
Omar
Minaya
became
Montreal's · general manager
three days before teams reported for.camp that year, after the
commissioner's Office took

Montgomery decision
· adds new twists to
campaign landscape, A6

2006 Ohio Valley

~-

·'

l'ubli"'hin ~

Co .

POMEROY - Pomeroy Mayor
John Musser may seek a lega l opinion about the validity of action taken
by Village Council earlier this
month, after members of council
rai sed questions Monday night about
the validity of votes and an executive session .
Councilman Jim Sisson di sputed
the minute s of the last meeting. saying Robert's Rules of Order were
violated when the meeting left the.
prepared agenda . Sisson said parliamentary'. procedure · states council
cannot go out of order or sequenc~
of the agen&lt;kl without first taking a
vote with a two-thirds majority. ·
Si sson and Councilwoman Ruth
Spaun were concerned that if the
rules of order were violated, newlyappointed Co uncilman Shawn
Arnott may not have been legitimately sworn into office. and other
votes. including Arnott\ in favor of
Councilman George Stewart for
Council Pre,ident. may not be valid.
Sisson requested that all lli~ vote'
Please see Pomeroy, AS

. Charten~ Hoetllchj photo

·Meigs Local honors teacher attaining national certification
and ~ plaque b) SupcrintenJeni William
·Buckley and Board pre,ident :-.lorman
Humphre~ ' ·
POMEROY - Lori Barnc,, a 'iJecial
"It entailed a trcmendou, "mount of
eduqtion teac her at the Meig' effort. to al'hieve thi :-. nati onal recngni lntem1cdiatc S.:hool i' the Me_ig, Local tion.'_· said Buckley, de,cribing Burnes "'
School District\ lirst teacher to bc.:ome "very deserving of the .:crtiticauon."
certified by the National Board of
The purpose of the National Board cerProfe"ional Teaching Standanh ( NB PTS l. titicatio n program i' 10 ath an ce the 4ua1I ·1.n recognition l.\f h~r a~: hi e\'clllenl. ty -of teachiii g.and leammg .
Barnes was honored b) the Meig' Lllc,al
Cand idate ~ seeking National Bo;ml. ccrBoard of Edu.:ation at Tucsda) night's · titication arc requireJ to put together a
meeting . On behalf of the BolH'd. she wa;
pre sented a re,olution of t"Ommendation
Please see Teacher, AS
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Middleport
considering
rental
inspections,·
fee hike
Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

.

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL. COM

MIDDLEPORT -A proposed increase in fees
assessed to rental property
ow ners in Middleport will
help finance a new rental
property inspection program
anc!, the building inspector
said, improve .the quality of
rental housing available in
the village.
At Monday evening's
meeting, village council gave
a first reading of an ordinance that would increase the
annual fee charged to landlords from $12 to $20 per .
unit .' The increase will llelp
finance annual inspections of
the near! y 400 rental houses.
apartments and
mobile
homes in the vi llage . .
Such inspections would be
a new policy, and according
Please see Rental, AS

A smoother
ride through
.downtown
Pomeroy
BY BETH SERGENT .
· BSERGENT@MYDA ILySENTINEL.COM

. POMEROY - Rocky road
can be used to describe a flavor of ice cream as well as
the condition of State Route ·
833 thwugh downtown
Pomerov but that Is· scheduled to' change poss ibly as
soon as. th rs summer.
According
to
Ollio
Departriient 'o f Transportation
&lt;ODOT&gt; Public lnfo~m ation
Officer Stephanie Filson the
project to resurface Ohio 833
was originally scheduled to be
sold in 2007 but was bumped
up to sell thi s June due to the
condition of the road .
Fi I son added that ODOT
project' that sell or have a
June award tlate are likely to
be wmpleted by Oct. 31
though a completion date has
not vel been determined for
the Ohio ~33 repair.
, The pri ce tag for the proje~t i' C&gt;timated to be around
SROO.OOO at no cost to the .
Yillage.
The repair i&gt; described as a
"regular mill anc:I fill process"
that' does not require thanhe
wad's suii'&lt;li:C be completely
removed .
At thi , "eek\ meeting of
Pomerov Villaee Council
Mayor .John Mu;,er sai d that
he under,tood two mills of
'"Jlhalt "uuld he remtived
Please see Smoother, As

------~--~----,-----C-..--------~~--..__-----:-----~----:----

'

�•

The Daily Sentinel

Page.A2

NATION • WORLD

Wednesday, January 25, 2006

DISNEY BUYING PIXAR FOR $7.4 BILLION IN STOCK
BY GARY GENTILE
AP BUSINESS WRITER

LOS ANGELES - The
Walt- Di sney Co . said
Tuesday it is buying long.time
,partner' · Pix ar Animation
Studios Inc. for $7.4 bill ion
in stock in a deal that could
restore Di sney's clom in animation while vau lting Pixar
CEO Steve Jobs into a powerful role at the media conglomerate.
Disney 's purchase of the
maker of the blockbuster
films "Toy Story and "Finding
Nemo" wou ld make Jobs
' Disney's largest shareholder.
.Jobs. who owns more than
half of Pixar 's shares and also
heads Apple Computer Inc ..
will also jo'in Disney 's board.
. "With this transaction. we
welcome and embrace Pixar's
uni que culture, which for two
decades. has fostered some of
the most innovative and successful tllms in history. "
Disney Chief Exeruti ve
Rube n lger said in a statement.
Disney has co, financed and
.distributed · Pixar 's animated
films for the past 12 years,
splitting the profits . But that
deal expires in June after
Pixar delivers "Cars'' and it
had once appeared the .companies wou ld not renew it
amid fri ction between Jbbs
and former Di sney CEO
Michael Eisner.
But the talks revived under
Iger. Di sney. the theme park
ow ner that also owns the
ABC and ESPN TV net·works, and PixaP ha ve been
talking · for month s about a
.new relationship.
(&gt;i xa r Exec ut ive Vice
President Joho Lasseter will
become chief creative officer
of the animation studios and
princi pal creative adviser at
Walt Di sney lm ag ineering.
which designs and builds the
company 's theme parks. · .

.

AP Photo

Jake Rothenberg, 4, greets Pixar's "Toy Story" character Buzz Ughtyear, with h'is brother Zack Rothenberg, 7, center back, during an autograph session at the Magic Kingdom at Walt Disney World, near Orlando, Fla. Tuesday. The ·brothers are visiting from
visiting from Bergenfield, N.J. ,Walt Disney" Co. announced Tuesday an agreement to buy Pixar Aoimation Studios Inc. for $7.4 bill.ion. Pixar pioneered computer animation with such blockbusters as "The lncred ibles;" "Finding Nemo; " and the "Toy Story" f1lms ..
Pixar President Ed Cat mull "Now, everyone can focus on
will serve as p,resident of the what is most irnpo!1ant, creatnew combined Pixar and ing innovative stories, 'charDi sney animation studios, acters and films that delight ·
. reporting to lge r and Dick millions of people around the
Cook, chai rmari of The Walt world ."
Disney Studios.
Under the deal, Disney said
"Disney and Pi xar can now it will issue 2.3 shares for
.collaborate without the barri - . each share of Pixar stock. At
ers that come fro m two: d.if- Tuesday 's closing price of
t'erei'lt companies with two $25.99 fqt' Disney,' Pixar
differen t sets of sharehold- shareholders would get stock
ers," Jobs said in a s tatement. worth $59.78, a 4 percent

premium over Pixar's closing Di·sney's theme park s and
price of $57.57. The deal was other units.
amiounced after the markets
Pix ar has served as
closed for the day.
Di sney's de facto ' animation
With 'Pixar, Di sney gains a unit for a decade.. Two Pix-ar
company that has produced a movies. "Finding Nemo" and
long-running string of ani- "The lncredibles," ha ve won ·
mated blockbusters. lger Academy Awards for . bes\
wants to strengthen Di sney 's · animated feature film .'
animated ·features, the hallPi xar films have been a
mark of · the company since financial windfall for Di sney,
its founding and a steady which receives (iO percent of
source of characters for the profits.

By contrast, Disney's own
animation unit has struggled,
producing some modest successes. such us 2002's "Lilo
&amp; Stitch," and l)lany flops,
including "Treasure Planet"
and ·'Home on the Range."
Its first full y coin'put~r- ani­
mared effort, "Chicken
Little." grossed more than
$100 million domestically
since its release last year and
will likely be protitable. But
that figure fall s well short of
the more than $200 milli on
domestic gross of 4004 's
"The Incredibies."
With Jobs. Disney also
. tightens its link with Apple
Computer, ·the innovative
tec hnology company behind
music and video iPods.'
Jobs could help lger push
his plans to marry films, TV
shows, video ga mes and
other content to computers,
iPods, handheld game consoles and even cell phones . .
Disney and Pixar had been
discussing an extension of
their dis.tribution deal since
early 2003. Last year, analysts said striking that agreement was lger's top priority.
The talks stalled in 2004
after Pi xar demanded that it
own I00 percent of all future
film s and pay Di sney a
straight distribution fee, similar to the deal "Star Wars"
creator George Lu c~s had
with Twentieth Century Fox.
Pixar also wanted o,wner:
ship of all the tilms already
produced as well as two that
were rem ainin g under the
existing agree ment ill the time.
Jobs broke off talks with
Disney in 2004 and said he
would begin talking to other
studios. inc luding Fox and
Warner Bros. Rel ations
so ured even more after
Disney announced it would
. make the sequel "Toy Story
3," a project strongly
opposed by Pixar.

Army stretched to breaking point by repeated deployments to war fronts, study says PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE. , .
BY ROBERT BURNS
Army .broken. He said his
Assessments, a nonprotlt polorganization has been ·able to
AP MILITARY WRITER

fulfill every request for
WASHINGTON
troops that it has received
Stretched by frequent troop from field commanders. ·
l'raq
ana
rotation s to
The Krepi nev ich assessAfghanistan. the Army has ment is the latest in the
become a "thin green .JiiJe" debate over· whether the wars
that could snap unless relief in Iraq and AfghaNi stan have
comes soon. according to a worn out the Army. how the .
study for the Pentagon.
strai ns can be ease d and
Andrew Kre pinevic h, a whether the U.S. military is
retired Army offi cer who too burdened to defeat other
wrote the report under a threats.
-Pentagon contract. concl udRep. John Murtha . the
ed that the Army ·cannot sus- Pennsylvan ia Democrat and
tain the pace of troop Vietnam veteran. created a
deployments to Iraq long pol itical storm l ~s t fall when
eno)lgh to break the back of he called for an early ex it
the· insurge ncy. He al so sug- from Iraq. arguing that the
ges ted that the· Pentagon's . Army wa~ ''broken, worn
. deci ~ ion.
anno un ced ' in out" and fueling the insurDecember, to begin reduCing gency by its mere presence.
the force in Iraq thi s year Adminiltration offici als have
.was driven in part by a real- hot ly contested that view .
ization that the Army was
George Joulwan. a retired
.overextended .
four-star Army genera l and
As evidence, Krepinevich former NATO commander.
points. to the Army's 2005 agrees the Army is stretched
recruitin g sl ump - missi,ng thin.
its recru iting goal for the first
"Whether they· re broken or
time since 1999 - and its not. I th1nk i wo uld say if we
decision to offer much bigge r don't change the way we· re
.enli stment bonuses and other do in g business, they ' re 111
·incentives.
dan ger of heing,fractured and
: "You rea lly begin to won- ·broken. and I would . agree
·der'just how much stres~ and wi th th at." .Joulwan told
.strai n there is on the Army. CNN last month .
:how much longe r it can conKrepincvich did not con·tinue." he said in an inter- clude that U.S. forces should
: view. He added that the Armv qu,it Iraq now. but said it may
· :is still a hi ghl y effec ti ve be possible to reduce troop
·fighting .force. and is imple- level s below I00.000 by the
mentin g a plan th at will end of the year. There now
.expand the number of combat are about 136.000, Pentagon
.brigade s ava ilable for rot.a- offi cials said Tuesday.
·tions to Iraq and Afghan istan.
For. an Army of about
· The 136-page report rep- 50().000 sold iers not
.resents a more sobe rin g:pic- coun ting the thou ,ands of
:turc of the Army's condition National Guard and Re serve
than mil itary officials offer ' oldiers no w on act ive .duty
' in publi c
Whil e not
th e commi tment of
released publicl y, a co py of 100.000 or so to Iraq might
.the · report was pro vided in not seem an excess1ve bur·respon se to an Associated · de n. Ru t because the war·has
:Press inq uiry.
lasted lon ger th an expected.
: Illustrating hi&gt; level of con- the Arm y has had to regularly
· cer n about strai n on the rotate lrc'h unit' in whil e
:Army. Krepinevich tith!d one ma intaining its normal train:of hi s repon ·s chapte". "The ing effo'rt~ and reorganizing
. Thin Green Line." .
the force from top to bottom .
· He wrote that the Army is
Krepi nevich \
uila ly, i&gt;.
:"in a race again't time·· to whi le consisten t with th e
:adjust to ·the demands of war c:o ndu:-.ion~ of :..ome uut~ide
:·'o r ri'k 'breaki ng' the fo rce the Bush admini stration. is in
·,i n the form of 'a catastrophi c stark contra\! with the public
:·decline" in recruitment · and sta tement.\ . of
Defense
·re-enli stment.
Secretary
Donald
H.
·Col.
Lcw i;
lloo nc . Rum,fe ld and \enior Army
spokesman 'for Arm y Forces · officials .
Army Secretary Franci .,
Com mand. which is responsible fi&gt;r providin g troops to Harvey. frir. examp le. upc nct!
war commanders. 'a id it li Pentagon new' con J'e rence
would be "a ve ry extreme la.,t weel- by denying the
·characteri zati on''. til ca ll the A~m y was i'n tro uhl e. '.

U.S. troop levels fall In Iraq ·

There are currently around 136,000 U.S.-troops in Iraq. The number·
of American troop,s in Iraq has increased since the low reached
nearly two years ago.
Key Mal'lll 2003:

May: President

dates Invasion oflraq Bush declared
200.000 .

192,000

mluton
accomplished

. . ........... 1ol8,300

Januery
December:
2005: First Par1iamenfllry
Iraqi election
etec:tlon
15t,DGO

150,000

100,000

50.000

SOURCE: Oolen,. Doportmeni

"Today's Army is the most
capable, best-trained, be stequipped and most experienced force 'our nation has
fielded in well over a
decade," he said, adding that
recruiting has· picked up.
Rumsfeld ~a s argued that
the experience of fighting in
Iraq and Afghani stan has
made the Army stronger, not
weaker.
"The Army is probably as
stron g and capable as it ever
has been in the hi story of this
country," he said in an
appearance at the Paul H,
Nitze School of Advanced
International Studies in
Washington on Dec . 5. "They
are more experienced, more
capable, better eq uipped than
ever before."
· Krepinevich said in the
interview that he understands
why Pentagon officials do
not state publicly that they
are being . fo rced to reduce
troop levels in Iraq because ·
of stress on the Army. '·'That ·
gives too much e n~o urage­
ment to the enemy," l)e said,
even if a number of signs,

such as a recru1tmg slump,
point in that direction.
Krepinevich is executive
director of the Center for
Strategic and Budgetary

icy re search institute .
He said he concluded . thai
even Army leaders are not
sure how much longer tl1ey
can keep up the unusually
high pace of combat lour&gt; in
Iraq · before . they tri gge r an
in stitutional crisis. Some
maj or Army di visions are .
serving their second yearlong
tours in Iraq, und some smaller units ·ha ve se rved three
times.
Michael o· Hanlon, .a military · q pert at the priv;1te
Brookings Institution, said in
a recent interview that "it \ a
judgment call " whether the
ri sk of breaking the Army is
great enough to warrant
'
expanding its size.
"I say yes. ' But it 's a judgment call , because so far the
isn'.t
broken,"
Army
O' Hanlon said.

The Daily Sentinel
SW&gt;scribe today • 992-2155
ww~'~mydaily.sentinel.com

PageA3

BY :THE BEND
Plagiarizing priest gives no
comfort to mourning daughter

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, January ~5.

Community Calendar
PubUc meetings
Monday, Jan. 30
PORTLAND -Lebanon
Township Trustees, 7 p.m. ,
townsh ipbui !ding . .

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Jan. 26
RACINE
. Racine
Ame ri can Legio11 Auxiliary,
Post 602, 7 p.m .
POM EROY - Alpha Iota
Masters, II :30 a.m. at St.
Paul Lutheran Church for
. pizza party and meeting. ·
REEDSV ILLE
Riverview Garden Club, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Frances
Reed. Take ariicles for auc,
tion .
TUPPERS PLAINS YFW 9053 7 p.m. at the hall
·
.
in Tuppers Plains. .
POMEROY - Caring and
Sharin g Support Group, I
p.m.. Meigs Senior Center,
Medicare D discussed.
Monday, Jan. 30
POMEROY - The OH-

Kan Coin Club meeting and
coin auction will be held at 7
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.
Thesday, Jan. 31
· RACINE RACO to
meet at 6.:30 p.m. at Star Mill
Park. Potluck refreshments.
Potluck dinner will be
served. New members welcome. Meeting changed due
to other meeti ngs.
Friday, Feb. 3
POMEROY
- Meigs
County PERl Chapter 74, 12
noon, Meigs Sen10r Center,
with Diana Coates ·speaking
about di saster preparedness.

music by "Freed by Christ."
Public invited.
Thursday, Jan. 26
POMEROY
Winter
meeting of the Ohio Valley
Crusade for Christ will be at 7
p.m. at the fellowship hall,
First Southern Baptist Church.
POMEROY
Ohio
Valley Crusade for Christ
meeting , 7 p.m., First
Southern Bapti st Church.
Sunday,Jan.29
MIDDLEPORT
Evangeli st and singer Art
Bush will be in concert at
9:30 a.m. and preach at the
I0:30 worship hour at the
Bradbury Church of Christ,
39558 Bradbury Road.

..

Church events

DEAR · ABBY: My 81year-old mother died suddenly, and as her oldest daughter,
I was asked to give her eulogy. I was told by our church
that I needed to submit my
Dear
remarks to the priest beforeAbby
hand, to make sure they .were
"appropriate ."
At the funer al Mass, when
th e priest,' who knew my
mother only by sight, began
his homily, he used the exact
On one hand, I feel my
words and phrases from my mother would be upset if I
own eu logy. I was, naturally, create a co nflict with the
taken aback at hi s using my pari sh. On the other, I wonder
own heanfelt words, which I how many ot her grieving
had labored over and .mourners wi ll sit in a front
rehearsed for two days . When pew during a funeral Mass,
it was time to speak, I was astounded when this priest
able to recover enough to ref- pre-empts thei r eulogy.
erence "Father's." remarks Should I write a letter to the
earlier - but it was ex treme- priest or let it go?- UPSET.
ly upsetting to suddenly ~ea r · IN UPSTATE NEW YORK ·
my words coming out of hi s · DEAR UPSET: Your feelmouth. I could understand if ings are justified . The priest
he had wanted to coordinate who plagiarized your eul ogy
hi s remarks with mine, but he was a thief. He stole vo ur
outright stole them.
intellectual property to make
I feel thijt by requiring fDe himse lf look good at yo ur
to submit my eulogy in expense, and he should be
advance, the priest was pro- ashamed of hi s laziness .
vided with the "CiiffsNotes" Clearly, however, he is riothe (leeded to do his homily. I because accord ing to the
was also l)pset that he did not funeral director he has done it
counse l my family, attend her · before, and he'll continue to
wake or the interment.
do it unless held accountable.
When I returned to the
By all means write a letter
funeral home to pick up the .to the priest telling him
·photographs of my mother, I how, rather than comforting
di scussed my feelings of pro- you,. his homily upset you .
found disappointment with Then copy the bi shop .with
the funeral director. He told the letter.
DEAR ABBY: I'm a colme it wasn't the first time
he' d heard thi s complaint . lege student who live s in a
about thi s priest, and I should dorm. My problem is I li ve
write the priest a ktter.
next door to a moocher. One

Wednesday, Jan. 25
MIDDLEPORT - Hobson
Christian Fellowship Church, · ·
below Middleport, John
Saturday, Jan. 2'9
Elswick, preaching, and
RAVENSWO.OD, W.Va .
Marti Short, singing, at 6:30 - Free women's health clinp.m. service .
ic, 9 a.m. to noon, Jackson
POMEROY - Community County General Health
prayer and praise service, 7 Center. Clinical breast examp.m. at the Pomeroy Church inations,
pap
smears.
of Christ in conjunction with Refreshments, door pri zes.
the
Enterprise
United Appointments required at
Methodi st Church. Special · (304) 273-1033 .

Other events

Bertha M. Sayre Society meets
RACINE - .Linda Grimm
hosted .a recent meetin g of the
· Bertha M. Sayre Society
attended by nine members.
Mary K. Yost had devoti ons titl ed ·'Where 's Home"
and "Spi rit of Chri st'' and
read scriptures from Psalm s.

Roll call wa s take n by
Nondu·s Hendrick s with
each one respondin g with a
Bible verse . Cards were
sig ned for shutins. Mildred
Hart had a program on
Maril yn Musg rave , ancf
Hendicks closed the meet-

\
in g with prayer.
Attending were Grimm,
Lillian Hayman, · Barbara
Gheen,
Mildred
Hart ,
Geraldine C leland , Martha
Lou Beegle. Mary K. Yost.
Nondus Hendri cks, · and
. Linda Grimm.

Alfred UMW·gets ·mission lesson
ALFRED - . A mi ssion ·program titled "God of· all
Peoples'' ·by Soonae Kang
taken from the Response magazi ne was give n by Thelma
. Henderson at a recent meetin g
of the Alfred U nited Methodist
Women at the church.
Kang is ·a Korean minister's
• ass isrant for the women's
Divi sion . of the United
Methodist General Board· of
Global Mini stries. In the article, he commented on the
Lord's Prayer and how it

applies to the J&gt;:orean people
and culture.
·
Janice Weber 's program
was on " Meditation - Peace
that
Surpasses - All
Understanding." There were
prayers, respon sive readings
and a discussion on the topic
of peace, along with the hymn
','Peace in the Valley."
Thelma Henderson gave the
ble ssing before refreshments
served by Osie Mae Follrod.
Ruth Brooks, presided at ihe .
meeting with Henderson-.giv"

ing the prayer. A thank you ·
note for a Christmas gift was
read from Eva John so n.
Fl9rence Spencer expressed
th anks · from her mother,
Eleanor
Boyl es
for a
Christmas gift.
The prayer calendar birthday card was signed 'for Hee
Cho Om of Gra.nada Hill, who
is in community se rvi ce .
Members were reminded
about the upcoming breakfast
and auction, and the next
meetit:~g was set for Feb 14.

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Question: I recentl y took
my 14 year-old dau ghter in
for her regular check up, and
the dpctor gave, her a new
vaccine, a tetanus and diphtheria booster with whooping
cough vaccine .added . He told
me that this is \1 new booster
shot and that adults will be
getting it soon. Why is there
such concern about whooping cough? I thought we gave
.
.
that vaccine to babies.
Answer: Whooping cough
is caused by a bacterium
CHESTER . - New offi- man for a co mi cal style Roger Bi ssell , and for Jack called Bordetella pertu ssis. ·
cers were installed for the · show as a money-making Frederick and his family.
Doctors, therefore, often
· Past Cou ncilors Club of project. Parti ci pant s were
Reports were given by refer to this disease as pertusChester Council 323 durin g a judged by Helen Wolfe, a Grant, secretary, and Opal sis. Up until the 1940's when
re cent me eting at th e visitor, with Ruth Smith Hollon , treasurer. It was a vaccine was de¥eloped ,
Masonic hall .
being selected as the winner reported that Jo Ann Ritchie pertuss is was a major killer
ln.stalled we re Jean Wel sh, and receiving a gift.
ha s a · new great-grandson . of children . The vaccine was ·
president: Dori s Grueser. . At the Feb . 21 meeting. · Esther Smith · and Julie very effective and saved
Esther members are to take valen- Fleming served refreshments. many lives.
vice
pres ident ;
Smith , secretary:
Ruth tines to be signed and sent to Jean Welsh and Mary Jo
In the last 30 years or so .
S mi th, . .treas urer ; Erma shu tin s. Laura Mae Nice Barrin ger had games, and however, we've seen &lt;i draCleland , !lower committee.. presided at the meeting which door prizes were won by lnzy matic increase in the number
und Mary K. Holter news opened · with the Lord 's Newell , Opal Hollon. Laura of cases of the disease'. In
reporter.. In sta llin g officer Praye r. . pledge to the Mae Nice and Dori s Grueser.
1976 there were just over 100
Others attending were c·ases of pertuss is in the U.S.,
were La ura Mae Ni ce, out - Ameri can fla g, and a silent
going president.
prayer for· the Margaret Barbara Sargent. Dorothy and in 2004 there \\!ere over
Charlotte Gra nt was chair- Bisse ll family on the death of Myers, and Opal Eichinger.
25,000 docume nted cases! Of
'
those. more than 25 percent
were in adults 19 to 64 years
old. Man y authorities 'feel the
number of actual cases is signewest fire truck logged .over nificantly hi gher. and this
CHESTER - . Bruce A. and Larry Lee.
As for reports on 2005. it 1.000 miles since b~ing. put in disease is dramatically underMyers \Vas e lected president
of the Chester Volunteer Fire was noted that the annual serv1ce.
diag nosed.
Department at a recent meet-· · Memorial Day and Labor
As fo r 1006 . plans will
For yo un g children who
ing of the tire men.
Day chic ken barbecues were include the annm11 chicken have not been immunized. the
Other officers elected held, . that the department blirbecues and fi sh fri es, disease begins like the comwere Bob ' Woods. vice. pres- made 86 ntn s, inCl uding II . along with worki ng wi th the mon cold. but after a couple of .
ident: Marv in' Taylor, sec re- stru cture fires, fi ve· grass Morgan Raiders when they weeks causes violent ti ts of '
tary: and Ch:trles Radford. fires, and four ve hicle fires; pass throu gh Che ster in the coughing. punctuated by a
·
treasurer.
and purchased and put into fall .
"whooping" soLmd as the child
Regular meeting s are he ld struggles to· breathe. Vomiting.
Elected chief was Larry service a new fire truck
Cleland, 1st Assistant Chief which brought their equip- at the station house on the dehydration and weak ness are
and
fourth · often present. Wi thout treatJQhn Ridenour, and 2nd ment line up to modem stan- second
·
Wed nesdays of ew;h month . ment. the whooping stage can
Assistant Chief Bruce D. dards.
Elmer
Last year the fi re men Times are 7 p.m. standard last a ·month and n1ay end· in
Myers, . Capt'a in
Newell. engine and equip- logged 2.937 miles on. the time and 8 p.m. daylight sav- fmal pneumonia.
ment lieutenants, Marvin equipment and logged 1.355 ings tim e. Resident s are
ln general th is disease is
Taylor. Charles Radford. man-hours in training, runs, invited to come join and less seriou s in adults atid
Pearl Edwards. Roy Bailey, and ' maintenan ce. Th eir work wi th the volu nteers.
teens. It is also more subtle

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•

Family Medicine ® is a
weekly column. To wbmit
questions. write to Martha A.
Simpson, D.O., M.B.A ., Ohio
University
College. . of
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
Box 1/0, Athens, Ohio 45701,
or via e-mail to readerquestions @familymedicinenews.o
rg. · Medical informatioll ill
this colum11 is provided as an
educational sen•ice 011ly. It
does not replace t1re judgmellt
of your perso11al . physicia11.'
who should be relied on to
diag11ose and recommend
treatment for a11y medical
conditions. Past colum11s are
available o11liire at www.fam ilymedicillenews.org.

Middleport Village Rental Fees of $12.00 per rental
are due by February 1, 2006. If you own and .rent
property in the Village of Middleport, you must
pay this fee. These fees must be paid no later than
february 28, 2006 or a fine of
$100 will be imposed.
Sandy lannarelli, MaJor
. Village of Middleport

;I

hip $2 ..'\0:

r~· rr\.·runl

333 or 1-800-451-9806

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SI1 .00Tra:

1111 ' du\ · Prl~rtl hH!Ittfl
" 'ejoie Wednt:tda y
2 H\11 Dll~' \\ /,tut . .·c &amp; ,Ja~.~ ~2 00
SL•niorC ttiil'n D:t~ 10 1·i oft Dl'll 1\:. tbJ...l·r~ • E \ 1.: lud m~ SJX'i:l ~ll
Sour.' 1•/ rh1· d111 -STit/!l'd l;l'!'!'l! i't'flf'' 'r s,.,,fl
I hi rsn Thursdu'
l&lt;J tV. PqN fnunt .u n ~:"1.' \\1&lt;1 pu r~· ha'L' \ll a· ~kh 'J.IlLhl. h:h
~ H am &amp; Ch~..·l·,~ . 1 ,1, dllfh L\: It~ tv PL·r,t ~ .~ ~o
\ot1/11 1/ rlu dti\ Cl111 J.,, 11 \o,•illt
Frank Frida)
2 Dt l~' ) 2 tXt • -+tk l.l.lll!!' \oUJ' ol rhl' d 11\ C'l11i1
Saturda' Soup &amp; S ub $650

.'•lr•/lfl ••f

l.iCl'R!il-d :\udiuiOJli"l

Frame that nowspaPfH

anticipated in the near future.
At that time, it is antic ipated
that thi s vaccine will become
widely available for adults. It
will be primarily recommended for those who will have
close contact wi th infants le»
than 12 months of age, including women who plan on
becoming pregnant. There
will also be guidelines as to
who should and shouldn't get
thi s vaccine. Infom1atio n concerning vaccination of people
of 65 or older is not avai lable
at this time .

NOTICE

Ta(O Ill

Brandit' Sance. \1 ,\ .l'CC· ;\
Jam• :\nn Karr Aancslad . "A. Cl't '·A

eondoo,edby

and harder to diagnose accurately. Often the sufferer will
come into the office with
cold-rype symptoms accompanied by a dry cough. He or
she 'usually doe sn't whoop or
vomit. However, the cough
may . interfere with daily
activities and sleep patterns,
and may even be violent
enough · to break a rili:
Though less frequently than
in children, adults can also .
end up with pneumonia.
The bigges t ri sk is that
adults or adolescents with
pertuss is can transmit the
infection to infants under two
·months old who have not yet
been immunized. This is one
of the main reasons that it · is
now recommended by the
Advi sory Committee on
Immunization
.Practices
(ACIP) that . all adolescents
bet ween I0 and 18 be i mmu,
nized against penu ssis as well
as tetanus and diphtheria.
Your doctor was following
good public health guideline s
when he gave your daughter
the adolescent vaccine . A similar vacci ne for adults aged 19
to 64 is under review by the ·
federal govern ment upon the
recommendation of the ACIP.
Final recommendations are

Breakthrough ln
Hearing lnstrument Technology

s

'·

time. "Ms. Moocher" caine
into my room and asked if
she cou ld unplug my TV and
take it into her room to watch
"The O.C." on it. Another
time , ~he came waltLing in
my room carrying my hai rbrush, which ' he had taken
without my perrni s!&gt;ion .
Recentl y .1 returned from a
weekend llway to 'find that
half my popcorn wa s gone . It
turned out that Ms. Moocher
had taken and eate n it. ·
, She . has my cell phone
number and can eas ily call
·and ask me when she wants
to borrow my things. I have
_ nd problem wit h sharing wi th
her, but her taki ng my things
without asking is just plain
rude . I know I need to talk to
her, but I don' t know what to
say because I have to coexist' with her for the rest of
, the year. Please help! - FED
UP IN ATHENS, GA.
DEAR FED UP : Unless
yo u can find the backbone ,to
· face your neighbor and tell
her firmly, " I .do not want
yo u taking my th ings without asking first," it's time to·
buy a lock for your dorm
room door and us'e it when
yo u're not there.' Either way.
Ms. Moocher will. get the
message .
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
a11d was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write · Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 694.40, Los {l.ngeles, CA
90069.

Teenagers, not just infants, now need whooping cough shots

Firemen elect new officers, makes plans for 2006

C8 HEALTH
• PROJEO

2006

FAMILY MEDICINE

Installation of new officers highlights DofA meeting

'9.95~

•

�The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Jan. 25. the 25th day of 2006. There
are 340 days left m the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
Twenty-tive years ago. on Jan. 25, 1981. the 52 Americans
held hostage by Iran for 444 days arrived in the United States.
On thi s date :
In 1787, Shavs's Reoelhon suftered a setback when debtridden farmers ·l ed oy Captam Daniel Shays failed to capture
an arsenal at Spnngfield. Mass.
In 1890, reporter Nellie Bly (Ehzabeth Cochrane) of the
New York World completed a round-the-world journey in 72
da)o s. six hours and II nunutes
'
In 1890, the United Mine Workers of America was founded.
In 1915. the inventor of the telephone, Alexander Graham
Bell, inaugurated U.S tran scontinental telephone service.
In 1946. the United Mine Workers rejomed the American
Federation of Labor
In 1947. Amencan gangster AI Capone died in Miami .
Beach. Fla.. at age 48 .
In 1959, American Airline s opened the jet age in the United
States wtth the tirst scheduled transcontinental flight of a
Boe1ng 707
In 1961. Presi dent Kennedy held the first presidential news
conference camed l1ve on rad1o and televisiOn.
In 1971 . (::harles Manson and three women followers were
convicted 111 Los Angeles of murder and conspiracy in the
1969 slayings of seven people, includ1ng actress Sharon Tate.
In 1990. actress Ava Gardner died in London at age 67.
Ten years ago: With Republicans bruised by two government shutdowns, the House overwhelmingly approved legislation to keep federal agencies running through March I 5,
1996.
,Five years ago: A jury in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. , found 13year-old Lionel Tate gw lty of f1rst' degree murder in the death
of a 6-year-old family friend (Tate had said he accidentally
killed the g1rl while im1tatmg moves by pro wrestlers).
One year ago. A videotape showed Roy Hallums, an
American kidnapped in Baghdad the previous Novembe'r,
pleading for his life (Hallums was rescued by coalitiOn troops
on Sept. 7, 2005.) A 'stampede during a Hindu festival in western India k1lled at least 258 people. Architect Philip John son
died in New Canaan , Conn , at age 98
'
Today's Birthdays: Journali st-author Edwm Newman is 87.
The former president of Georg1a, Eduard Shevardnadze, IS 78.
Actor Dean Jones is 75. The former president of the
Philippmes, Corazon Aquino. IS 73. Blue.5 smger Etta James is
68. Movie director Tobe Hooper 1s 63 . Actress Leigh TaylorYoung IS 62. Actress Jenifer Lewis is 49. Actress binah
Manoff is 48. Country mus1C1an M1ke Burch (River Road) is
40. Rhythm-and-blues singer Kma is 37 Actress China
Kantner is 35 .' Musician Matt Odmark (Jars of Clay) is 32.
Actress Mia Kirshner is 31 . Rhythm-and-blues singer Ahcta
Keys IS 25.
Thought for Today: "Love must be learn~d : and learned
again and again; there is no end to it. Hate needs no mstructJOn, but wants only to be provoked." - Katherine Anne
Porter,. American author ( 1894- 1980).

The Beltway demagogues
who sound alarms about
abortion opponents seeking
to ruin (and end!) women 's
lives, ought to stop and
think about the women
who've had and are currently suffering from abortions.
T])e South Dakota recently did just that. The South
Dakota Task Force to Study
Abortion , created by the
state legislature to look at
how best the state could
"protect the rights, interests
and health . of pregnant
mothers," just churned out a
report. Besides "experts"
and activists, just short of
2,000 women who have had
abortions - perhaps the
real experts - communicated with the committee.
The report relays testimonies of, "a pattern of
shared experiences and trauma and a common sense of
·loss." As one woman told
them of her abortion: "I
carry the guilt and shame
with me every day"
On a topic usually drownmg in euphemisms, where
''choice" is used more often
than "abortion," some
women testified that for
them, legal abortion gave
them no precious "choice."
To the contrary, the report
says: "The overwhelming
majority of women test1fied
that they would never have
considered an abortiOn if it
were not legal. Many
revealed that they feel that
the legalization of abortion
simply gave a hcense to
others to pressure them into
a decision they otherwise
would not have made."
Others "relate that they
were coerced into having
the abort10n by the father of
the child or a parent, and

report of their own for some
of these reasons. But even
with flaws - reading the
report reveals it is unnecessarily, heavy-handed, for
instance - there's someKathryn
thing that resonates' about
Lopez
the testimony it describes. It
echoes the sentiments of
many women who have had
abortions . It's 'not an in-andthat the abortion clinics also out-and-it's-over procedure.
apply pressure. They almost It is · "l ife altering," as one
uniformly express anger woman told the task force.
toward
the
abortion And the "choice" affects
providers, their baby 's more than {.ust the woman
father or society in general, undergoing he abortion.
To be honest, though, I
which promotes abortion as
a great right - the exercise might be heavy-handed, too.
of which is good for Cons1der. for instance, the
women. "
attitude emanating from a
Women told the task force new year's "Washington
that they believe they were Post" piece bemoaning how
lied to. "If I had known that rare abortion has become in
there was an existing living South Dakota - a state
human being whose life where abortionists are
would be terminated, I imported from other states
would have factored that because South Dakota docinto my considerations, and tors have determined that
I surely would not have "offenng the procedure is
submitted to the procedure, not worth the stigma of
and I would not have con- being branded a baby
sented to it."
killer." Perhaps pangs of
Ju st excuses for behavior conscience, as they rememregretted' m hmdsight? ber the doctor's do-no-harm
Maybe. But when you con- oath of Hippocrates ? And
sider the hearhwrenching not just the sentiments of
life-and-death fmality of pro-hfers In a January
abortion, and the perversely interview with "Nightline,"
unnatural
mainstream an Arkansas abortionist
acceptance (at least in our adm1ts he kills life when he
law) of mothers reJeCting proudly _performs an abormotherhood in the most tion. "I consider the mothfinal way ... we ought to lis- er's life to be much more
ten.
important than that httle
As you can imagine, the blob of ussue, and that's all
report is not without its con-, it is at that time," he said.
troversy. Abortton advocates
One otherwise thoughtful ·
have complained about an abortion advocate told the
anti-abortion btas from the South Dakota task force,
start
and . last-minute . "1'he decision to have an
changes to the report abortion is still voluntary
some members of the task even if some women ex~n-­
force have issued a minority ence sadness or other feel -

The Daily Sentinel
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ings at some point after the •
dismJSSIO!J·
procedure,"
"assertions'' "that there are
unique and significant psy~
chological harms as a result
of abortion." In a prebuttal
to the report, Planned
Parenthood of the Southern.
Finger Lakes used a regula.:
t1on to explain why the stare
of "accessing abortion" in·
South Dakota is "pretty
dire," .South Dakota " has a
mandatory delay law requtr- .
ing a woman .to wait 24,.
hours before she can get an;
abortion ."
In a country that feels the
need to take what should,
JUSt be common sense parental-notification laws
and partml-birth abortioiJ :
bans - to the Supreme
Court for resolution and has
influential folks who think a
24-hour delay is a heavy
Impediment to a life altenng
(and endmg) decisiOn, we
could use a few more task
forces on abortiOn, examming what 33 years of Roe v:·
Wade has wrought. The"
South Dakota report isnT
perfect, but the instinct to '
be li stening to the v1ctims
of abortions who are still '
around (more than half,
obviously, never able to:
speak for themselves) is no(
a bad one. As my fnends at:
Feminists for Life like to
say, "Women deserve bet..
ter," as do the children who
never get to be born and a
society that has let a fauli
pursuit of happiness trump
the once-inalienable right tiDlife.
( Kathrvn Lopez is the editor of National Review'
On/me (www.natimwlreview.com). She ca11 be cmitacted at k/opez@ nationar:
review.com.)

' '

~ NEW TAP£ IS
V£1&lt;¥ H~Lr:fUL 10

'"
' '

OUR CAUSE. ...

'

.

"·

"'

"

. '

"Tiffany's going on a class
trip with the other G and Ts,"
smd her mom.
'
What is a G and T. I wondered, some kind of pre-ined
program ? The k1d 's only 13,
that's not possjble, is it?
"G and Ts ?" I asked.
"Tiffany's a little young for
Gin and Tome s. don't you
think?"
Ttffany's mom looked at
me as if! were a lump of cellulite she had just discovered
on one of her thighs.
"G and T. Gifted. ahd
· Talented," she smd.
It was hard to keep a
straight face . She must have
forgotten that I know
Tiffany. I have met Tiffany.
If Tiffany has a gift for anythmg. it's being R and U
(rude and unpleasant). She
also has a gift for bemg M
and S !moody and selfabsorbed ) He r on ly talent to
speak of Is for making people want Io leave the room .
I'm not pi cking on
Tiffany, she JS no different
than any other 13-year-old.
That's just the way they are.
But to call her teenage pouting gifted and ' talented ts hke
calling a pet who has JUSt
chewed up a family heirloom C and A (cuddly 'and
adorable).
You may have guessed by

You don't thmk Ttffany is
the kmd of child to lord 11
over the other kids, do you?
She's gifted, Wh1ch mean s
she's smart enough to wait
until there are no adults are
Jim
around to tell everyone how
'Mullen
smart she is. After all , she's
13 and 1f 13-year-ulds are
known for anything, it' s
thw "M and S" (maturity
now that Sue and I don 't and sensitivity)
have children or I would
l have a 'friend, a profeshave known what G and T .sional violm player•. and It
meant. We don 't go to PTA upsets him to no end when
meetings or Parent-Teacher people who aren't viohn
conference s. We don't know players say they wish they
the new lingo in the ed uca- . had hi s "gift."
lion tleld, we don't know
"Pract1cmg every day for
any the acronyms. We just hours is not a 'gift.' I work
pay the taxes.
very hard to keep my chops
But once, long ago. in a up Learning to read mu sic
galaxy far, far away we were was not a gift Memorizing
children ourselves. And m scores is not a g1ft Teaching
that u_niverse , telling a young kids to suppleniem my
child that he or she was gift- 1ncome 1s nut a gift.
ed and talenteu would have Worrying about whether
been considered a yery D arthrip s or carpal tunnel sy nand S (dumb and st upid ) dJOme will end my career is
thing to do Labehng some- not gift. It 's a lot of . hard
one gifted and talented at a · work. Odd. ISO' t II , that the
young age doe&gt; not do them harder I work, Ihe more giftany favors. Need I ment1on ed I become."
M and J (Michael and
If yo ur chdd trul y is gifted
Jackson ) or T and 0 (Tatum and talented. do you re ally
O'Neal) and 10.000 others'
have to tell anyone" Don't
I wonder how the non-U yo u think we ' II find out ·
and T kids feel about the1r abo ut it all by ourse ], es?
favored classmates Nothing 5ven the most ungifted of u&gt;
but good thou ghts, IJ!l doubt. would surely notice a head·

ot

Deaths

•

line that read "Thirteen -'
Year-Old Discovers Cure for
Cancer" or ''Eighth-Grader
Proves Stephen Ha~Nklng
Wrong."
~
I know 'what Tiffany 's
mother would say, "Why
should my child be bored
with all that unchallenging"
stuff at school""
"Because ll 's school, not .
MTV," l might answer
Besides, Tiffany's JUSt as B
an·d L (bored and langUid) at
home as she is in school -"
do you have a special pro-,
gram for her at home?'
Maybe ·she shou ld oe'
enrolled in the H and 5"
(hardwork ing and self-motJvaled) program right there m
your. house. Maybe she
cou ld set ~he table or load
the dishwasher oefore she
gets to watch "The O.C." ' '
I wonder 1f they tested: '
Tiffany ror "M and H"
(modesty and humility)? Are
they noi gilts and talents?;·
Would her mom brag about
them'
U1m Mullen is the author of
" It lakes a VIllage Idiot:
Complicating Ihe Siniple
L1fe" and "Baoy's F1rst
Tattoo." You can reach h1m at
.
'
Jun_mullen@myway com.)

GLENWOOD. W.Va. -William "Forrest" Thomas, 93, of
Glenwood, W.Va., died Monday, Jan. 23, 2006, at St. Mary 's
Medtcal Center 111 Huntington, W.Va.
Service will be 2 p.m. on Thursday, Jan . 26, 2006, at
Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Visitatton
will be 4 to 8 p.m . on Wednesday at the funeral home. Burial
w,ill be in Beale Chapel Cemetery.

Local Briefs
Repc:ut available
REEDSVILLE - The annual report for 2005 of Olive
Township is available for inspection at the otlice of ihe clerk,
by appointment. at 378-616 1.

Correction

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2006

William ·Fon est Thomas

Sharp as a Tic- Tac

Letters lo !he editor are welcome. Th ey olwuld be less 1h011
JOO words. All lette rs are subject to edllmJi. ""'·' 'he stsned,
and i11clude address and telephone numba No un signed let·
ten w1il be publ1shed. Letten 11Jould be in good taste,
address in!? issues , 110t persona/iii e. Lett en of thanks tu orga·
lll&lt;.ations and llldll'lduaf.l &gt;1'111 not be accepzedfor publication.

Correction Policy

Wednesday, January 25; 2006:

A look into post-abortion misery

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

PageA4

OPINION !

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, January 25,

Sago mine survivor's conditi9n continues to improve
MORGANTOWN, W.Va .
"He appears to be awaken(AP)- The sole surv1vor of . ing from his coma." sa1d hosan explosion that k1lled I 2 pital spokes man Bill Case.
men at West Virginia's Sago
McC loy, who survived the
Mine can respond to simple Jan. 2 bla st and more than
commands as he continues to 41 hours of expos ure to
emerge from a light coma, deadly caroon monoxide,
doctors at Ruby ,Memorial al so is recei ving phy sica l
Hospital said Tuesday.
therapy.
Authorities said one of the
Ranta! L. McCloy Jr., 26,
of Simpson, can now follow 12 may have died in the
movements Wlth hi s eyes but explosiOn and the remaimng
remains unable to speak, said II died from carbon monoxDr. Larry Roberts.
ide poisonm g. The cause of

the exp losion remains ,under
investiga tion .
Doctors have sa id that
McC loy may have suffered
some brain damage, but the
extent of that damage is not
yet known Robert s sa1d
McCloy continues to show
slight neurological improvements each day.
Hi s kidne ys are slowly
regaining fun ction. and hi s
heart function is oack to
normal.

The acc1dem at Sago. fol lowed by one that killed two
mmers three weeks Iuter in
Mel vi ll e, &lt;.!rove Go&gt;. Joe
Manchin to personal ly shepherd a mine-safety bill
throu gh Ihe Legt&gt;lature v,J th
unusual speed Monday The
bi ll reqwres mine opermors
to call for help Immediately
after an acudent. keep extra
breaihing pacb underground
and eqwp mmers with per·
'anal !Jacking devices

Saddam trial plunges deeper into disarray with judges squabbling
Bv HAMZA HENDAWI
o\ND '

QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

BAGHDAD, · Iraq
POMEROY - The' Cancer Survivors Appreciation Dinner Judges in the tnal of Saddam
to be held in March is to sponsored by the American Cancer Hussein tried to remove a
Society, not the Meigs County Health Department.
. newly appointed chief judge
Tuesday, a dispute that forced
coffee but would return it in an abrupt postponement of
the proceeding's and deepfull to Hysell's office .
ened
the turmoil 111 what was
Musser announced that
rebids for the parking lot wall supposed to be a landmark in
from Page A1
repair would open on Feb. Iraq's political progress.
Saddam's lawyers were
from the previous meeting be I0. The esumated cost of the quick to capitalize on the disrecon sidered and possibly project is now at $190,000 array, saying the confusion
rescmded If the meeting pro- due to the historical preserva- .prov1ded fresh evidence the
tion procedures that FEMA
cedures were not legal.
former leader could not get a
Musser said a legal opinion requires the village to follow. fair trial in Iraq. Former U.S .
The tmtial plan was to
may be neces sary on the
shoot
concrete into the wall attorney general Ramsey
votes that ensued after movClark, a memoer of the
ing off the agenda, but said, but FEMA is now requiring defense team, said the tnal
as Mayor, he can set the that sandstone be used . should be abandoned.
agenda and has the qght to Musser asked for and
Since its Oct. 19 start, the
rece1ved penmssion of counchange it.
trial
has been defined by
·He also said the agenda is cil to see if it was·tegal to sell
delays. chaotic outbursts by
usually prepared by Clerk- sandstone that the village Saddam, the assassination of
owned
to
the
contractor
for
Treasurer Kathy Hysell and
he sees it for the first time the repair for revenue for the two defense lawyers and a
judge's decision last month to
'·
when he amves at ·the meet- village.
FEMA is paying for 75 per- step down after learning that
ings- just as the other councent
of the repair, the state one of the defendants may
cil members do
Council also di scussed an and Appalachian Regional have been responsible for his
executive session called at Commission are paying 12.5 brother's execution.
After the tri'al's last session
the Jan. 9 meeting. The offi- percent each of the costs,
which
would
leave
the
vilCial reason for gomg into the
executive session was to dis- lage owing nothing for· the
cuss sewer hne easements repair.
Council also passed three
and right-at-ways. Spaun
readings
of Ordinance 718
said she did not believe that
from PageA1
was a vahd reason for going which approved the Ol)io
of
into
executive
session Department
Transportation's
plans
for
fund. Mayor Sandy lannarelll
according to Ohio's Sunshine
resurfacmg
portions
of
State
said
the village must have all
Law.
Route
833
possibly
this
sumCourt records on
Mayor's
She also said more than
mer.
cqmputer by year's end.
one issue was di scussed durMusser
said
ODOT
has
Refuse rates
mg that executive session,
plans
of
milling
off
two
inchCouncil
will hkely approve
which Musser did not disrepladng
it
es
of
asphalt
and
increases
in
refuse rates at a
pute , though no legal opinion
with
two
inches
on
Ohio
833
special meetmg. set for 4:30
was available at the meetmg
for
2.45
miles
though
downp.m.
Wednesday. January figon whether any violations
town
Pomeroy
at
no
cost
to
ures
show
a near-deticit operwere made.
the
village.
ation in the refuse operation.
' The previous meetmg 's
minutes were not approved, · Council passed resolution a fter cost increases imposed
and Arnott abstamed from 2.06 which included transfer- under a new contract with
voting for the remainder of ring $9500 from the general Rumpke of Wellston went
to the street fund.
mto effect in January When
the meeting.
During the council meeting receipts were compared to
Other business
Mary January billing from Rumpke.
Spaun. inquired into what Councilwoman
McAngus
announced
that
the the VIllage realized $374.75
happened to an old truck
2005
with
only
village
ended
for department operation.
owned by the v11lage that was
in
the
general
fund.
$2.98
Mayor Sandy lannarelli recto be sold for scrap. Street
Hysell
announced
that
the
ommended rates of $16 perSuperintendent· Jack Krautter
said that two of ))is employees village received the state's month, and $14 for senior citiFederal zens, but members of counc1l
from the Street Department share of the
Emergency
Management
voiced concern that the cost
towed the truck to Marietta
Agency's
FEMA
3
fund
mcrease for senior cllJzens
sometime in December and 1t
money for the January 2005 should be le ss. They will
was scrapped.
Krautter told Spaun the flood The amount was address that issue' tillS evening
Accordmg to lannarelli . the
driver was paid in cash and $3,725.
Council passed a motion to refuse department pays part of
explained this was part of the
scrap metal yard 's business fix a floodmg problem-at the wages of three employees, a
procedure. Krautter said t~e bottom of Union Avenue by third of the postage on public
dnver returfled with the installing a curve drain and works b1llmg, costs assocmted
money and wetgh in slips. laying eight mch pipe at a w1th autumn leaf removal and
He sa id there were two cost of $865.
the wages of street department
Council approved paying workers dunng leaf pickup. a
weigh ins that day, one for
the truck and the other for $388 to remove 194 old tires monthly payment on the vilscrap metal his department from behind the Pomeroy lage's ch1pper and other speJunior H1gh School under the cial village clean-up projects.
had sent in the truck.
lt was esumated that the recommendation of Musser
Res1dents now pay 12 75
total amount due the village who had spoken with a sal- and 11.25, respe~tively. for
· was $884. Clerk-Treasurer vage dealer that will p1ck the standard account s and senior
Kathy Hyse ll sa1d $526.50 tires up,
At the last counc1l meetmg
had been turned into her
office for the truck while a motion was passed approvKrautter said , the remaining ing the hiring of a full time
money for the second weigh code enforcement office1
in of scrap metal was 111 hi s though no one has been hired
from Page A1
office, locked in a cabinet yet. The officer would be put
' and bemg used as coffee under the superv1sion of the to Build1ng Inspector Randall
money for the
Street Pomeroy Chief of Police . The Mulhns, would allow the viiDepartment. He said he ·also officer would be a fully Iage to closely monnot the
retamed the weigh in slip for tramed pohce officer and the condition of rental properties.
job would entail 1~ s pecting enforce buJidlllg codes and
the scrap metal.
Krautter told Spaull' his rental property, and enforcmg force needed repa1rs. and
department has already spent trash p1ck up and the mowmg ' improve the overall condJtlllll
around $30 of the money on of yards and lots.
of rentals.
He sa1d the mspec 11 ons
would include electric,tl.
effectiveness and JUdgment
It takes a minimum of five plumbing ,- and heat1ng and
air condiuonmg system s. anu
months and between 200 and sa nitary health and en\ iron ·
400 hours to complete the mental standard s. An lllspe&lt;" from PageA1
requirements
Applicants tion for rodcms would also be
must
describe,
analyze. lllcluded
·
·
portfolio where they present
explain.
and
reflect
on
their
Once an 111spec l10n I' comthe1r actual classroom practice over a specified ume teaching practices for evalua- pl eted and the propcrtv
period. The portfolio is tion by the National Board deemed in satisfactory com)].
designed to reflect act1vitJes which makes the determina- t1on. " rental certificate
the teacher engages in dunng tion as lo whether the teacher would be tss ued . Mull1n s smd
properly owners woulu he
the school day. along with qualifies for certification.
Seei&lt;ing
cet1ifJcat1on
1&gt; vol ·
]llCSCIII.
1f they uesn c. al the
verification nf work 111 the
untary
procedure
and
is
open
mspecuon
school settmg.
In the C\ent that repa1rs arc ·
Portions are completed in to anyone with a bacculaure·
ate
degree
and
three
years
of
JeqUJred. the landloru '"'uld
the classroom and in cludes
classro01i1
'expenence
111
typ1cally be prov1dcd :JO da\'
students' work . videotapes
either
a
pubhc
or
pnvate
to make them. Mullm s saiu i1c
and other teaching artifacts
co
uld con'demn prnpen1es 1f
which support Ihe teacher 's school

Pomeroy

Fees '

Rental

on Dec . 22, the confusion
worsened.
The chief judge resigned,
complaining about critic1sm
by politicians that he was not
doing enough to rein in
Saddam.· Saeed al -Hammash,
the member of the five-Judge
panel tnitially named to
replace h11n , was suddenly
removed , and a new chief
judge, Raouf Rasheed AbdelRahman, was brought in.
After a nearly five-hour
delay Tuesday, court official
Raid Juhi told reporters the
heanng had been put otT until
Sunday because several witnes~e s
and complamant s
v,erc performmg the hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia and
cou ld not appear in court .
The annual Muslim ntual
ended nearly two weeks ago,
and Tuesday's session had
been scheduled more than a
month ago. J uhi refused to
take questions.
But two JUdges involved in
the case told The Associated
Press the real reason for the
delay was disagreement over
'~ho ,should replace chief
judge Rtzqar Mohammed
Amin, a Kurd who had
shown patience and composure in dealing w1th repeated

attempts by Saddam and others to delay the proceedmgs.
According to one judge,
some JUdges wunteu alHammash rein stated whde
others supported AbdeiRahman 's ~ppointment.
The second judge appeared
to complam about outs1de
interference with the coun.
When asked what the proolem
was, he replied : "Matters are
not in our hands," - a possible reference to the influence
of US. offiCials providing
legal and logi stical support to
the Iraqi High Tnbunal set up
to try -crimes committed hy
Saddam and otllcmls of h1s
23-year regime.
· The two JUdges were members of the tribunal, th ough
not nece ssanly sittmg on the
panel heanng . the current
case. They spoke on condi tion of anonymity smce court
rules bar most judges from
being named or speak mg to
the medm.
"There's too much violence
in the country. there's too
much divisiOn and too 'much
pressure on the court." Clark
told CNN after Tuesday' s
postponement. "The project
ought to be abandoned. It was
a creature of the Umted
States m the first place.''
· He said political pressure s
on the court "make It imposs ible for fa1mess'' and warned
fmlure to hold a fair trial w11l
"lead to more war, no possibility of reconcJhallon .,
Saddam. his half brother
Barzan Ibrahim and six other
defendants are on trial m the
kilhn g of more than 140
Shiite Mushms after a 1982
attempt on Saddam 's !1fe m
the town of DujaiL They
. could face death by hangmg
if convicted
U.S. and Iraq1 offic1 als had

hoped the trial v.ould markr'a
polillcal turnmg pmnt lor the
VIolence- torn cou nt ry. helping It dea l w1th 1ts pa't and
look forward to a nev. pohtical system
In stead. ii has hc1gh1Cned
divisiOns Sunni '\rabs 'ympathenc to the former leader.
their patron, were heartened
by S&lt;tddam \o utbursts during
the hearing s. ~Nh1ch arc tele' ised nat1onv, 1de
But Shutes and Kurds. who
make up abou t RO perce nt of
lraq"s e' ll 111 al ~d n mlihun
people and bo re the brunt of
Saddam \ oppression. lound
the re lau ve treedom he has
had 111 the co ~rtroo m an
artrulll .
"ThiS does n't sene the
people, 11 serves the d1clator
Saddam." sa1d school teacher
Aodui -Waheed Sh.o~Nkat. a
28-year-old Shute !rom the
nonhern Ci ty of Mosul
"It's a pollttcal game." sa1d
Khaled Khal II Mohammed. a
Sunm Arab construct ion
worker from Fallujah . west of
Baghdad
"Thi s trial 1s a tarce .. Its
fina l verdict alreadv has been
made anu 1I's m the hands of
the Americans." s3).id Aqeel
Omar M o ham ~ a retired
Sunni Arab lecturer from
Tiknt , Saddam · s hometown
The DuJa ll case " one ot
several~repared aga1nst
Saddam and members ol hJS
reg1me They include the 1990
in vas1on of Kuwmt. Ihe suppre&gt;s Jon of Kurd1sh and Shiite
re\ olts 111 1991 and the .olleged
19~~ gas attac k by Saddam's
army agai nst the Kurdi sh
town of Halabja Some ) .000
people d1ed in that attack,
including several reJall\es of
the Hal .thJa-tJorn Ahdel·
Rahman. the Judge named 10
take O\er trom Amm

AEP

plan s if the pla111 "to he constructe&lt;.! It could be operatmg by mid 20 I0 ·
AEP esllmates th ai tht: plan!.
1f constnJcied here." Ill engage
at least 1. 200 prote"Jon.tl and
skilled-tr.Jues worke" dunng
constnJCtJOII. and 125 employees to operale and mwnt.un Ihe
facliitv It "111 contribute about
$ 10 ni1lhon 111 annual p1openy
l&lt;LX and income tax to kJ&lt;:al
go\·emtncnt'.

Smoother

fll' !J ght localed ne.u Ihe
Pomero\ \\ ,11er Work' Park. Fibon."ud ODOT ueienmnes
\\ h11.:h ro,Jch arc rcpa' cJ ani!
\\hen b~ ,L.,..,tgmng them Lt ptJ.\e-

citizen customers, and an
increase of $6 per ho~sehold
is necessary, accordmg to village calculations. in order to
reahze the ne~essary operat.mg fund s. Council will determine how that $6 increase
will be d1v1ded up.
Other business
Mary Wise di scussed the status of the M1ddlepon Freight
Depot restorauon proJect.
which she and other volunteers
oversee . She sa1d county commissiOners are expected to
award a bid for mterior renovation work at their meeting on
Thursday. The project IS funded primarily through S83,500
from
the
Community
Development Block Grant
Community D1stress program
from PageA1
She srud uuditJonal funds are .
required to complete the pro- rev1ew and 1ssue the necessary
ject because of increases in permits for construction m the
construcuon costs. Counnl third quarter of thi s year
authorized the sale of slate
Tlte
engmeenng and
from the depot's roof to sup- design process for the plant
plement the project oudget v,ill be completed in
Approxm1ately 2.000 pieces of
slaie 111 varying cond1tions wJII October. Both the OPSB and
PUCO musi appro\'e AEP's
be sold. Counc1lman Fennan
Moore voted against the sale .
lannarelh sa1d demoht1on of
homes under the CDBG
Commumty DIStress program
will be under w.Jy in a maiter
from PageA1
ot days. begmnmg wiih demolition of home s on Vine Street
and two mills ot aspha lt
and North Second Ave nue.
There were no bill s submll- would be replaced uunng the
ted f01 approval and no depart- apprOXII11atC!y 2.5 mde s Ih\11
the repa1r wlil cover.
mental repons subm1tted
Filson '""J the repav1ng
Al so present were Council
members Stephen Houchm,, v. ill begm .2 mil es north a t
Rooert Robinson anu Jeff I the Pomero1 M.ISon Bndue
Peckham.
. and end JUst. south nl the tJ ,;f.
nnpro' ements are nee &lt;.led and
not corrected in a tunel y lashJon . oul sa1d he would 1101
have :Aahonty to cvJCI tenants
because of poor condllJOns .
"M.1n y rental owners are
lanuowners.''
abse ntee
Mulhn s said. "They' re pockeiing rent money month after
month and .1re not spend1n g a
dime to keep thc1r rental propenies in a ~ullah l e conduion "
"That's why M1ddl eport

has the problem' 11 does\\ 11h
slumlords. ·
Council also condul'lcd a
lust of three readmgs on propo~ed lll lT~ao.,e~ m hulldmg
permit lees. the llrst mcreases
SJ nce 1962 The tee, will
1ncrease from $ 10 to S25. w1th
,Jddinonal char~cs oased on
Ihe scope ot' ~ the proJeC t
Projects requlflng huild1ng
pernllts mclude ne" rools .
home addu ion ' .md rell(h .1-

ment conLhttnn

rating_

~UlJ

tf that

r.ll111g Iill i; rclo\\ a c'Crt&gt;Lin number 1)11 roaLb. I hn-.e n nb are
gt\ en pnon~ tOr resurtw.:mg.
TmHIL· Ll'llllt" .mJ nlt--etmg-... "1th
OOOT CPuni\ M.UJ.Jgcf\ are
l~~l u fal'tl)t 111

i...'hc"J'mg \\htLh

roacb get rqxured
tton .... ft:th:tng.. "'' Jlll!lllllg rx'ol
l·nn ... t rttL"I ttl ll. .md the ,Jddi t um
ol pot l ht'' .mJ p~ttlll"

. Ctllllll'llm~n
S1cphcn
H&lt;&gt;uchllb .onJ Ferman \ h h}fc
"'i.itJ thL'! felt . . ume PI the pro-

posed pen1111 kcs 1111gllt be
e\~.·e...,~l\e.

\\ ht.:~n tile :"1\•.' 0p('
dlld total co't of the prn_1ect

are u.;;cJ to dctcnntlh.~ th(' tC'~ ,
The tee' wlil l'e L'&lt;'"'''lered
t\\ n mm e lill h.~.., bet nrc the\
'''111c' lor a\ ote on Feh 20 . -

Teacher

Steak Night
Frid&lt;!Y Night
'Til 7:00pm

Judy Kay's has Re-Opened!
He ..\:ure to come in &amp; check out our ne,.. addition s to til e .Hem1 .
/Jaily Special.~ • Homemade pies

740-992-1622·
•

�The Daily Sentinel

PageAb

OHIO

'

Tueaday's games
High school boys boakelboll
Gallia Academy 54, Point Pleasant 38
Belpre 73, Eastern 67
Wahama 71, Ohio Valley Christian 33
Symmes Valley 75, Hannan 58
Wellslon 71, Southern 70
High school girl a basketball
Roane County 47, Wahama 46

Local Weather
Today's Forecast
Forecast lor Wednesday, Jan. 25

, Toledo•
. 33" 126'

city/Region

Wednesday, January ·25, 20o6

High I Low ten:&gt;ps

·~

~'\1.~'

Southern falls by one to Lady Rockets

•u!;1·2s·'

~

•

Youngstown •
31' 128'

Bv Scon WoLFE

,. -, &gt;i

f--..

SPORTS ~O RR ESPOND ENT
t

..'

*Columbus ~

·;.;

L.__")

35' I 28 '

LocAL SCHEDULE
GALLIPOLIS- A ~hedu le of upcoming C'QIIegv
high School ~ar!;ity sPorting ~nls involVing
teams from Gallia, Me1gs and&gt;Mason counties.
~:~n d

Wtdnesday 'l aama
Wrestling

Cincinnati
• 40' 128'

Meigs at Wellston
Thymday'a ggmgs
Girls Basketball

J'Y...... .· Portsmouth •
t:__:)

40" I 32'

-Bl

The Daily SentiQel

LocAL ScOREBOARD

Wednesday, January 25, 2oo6

'

Sissonville at Point Pleasant. 7:30p.m.
Gallia Academy at Warren, 7 p.m:

.

Meigs at Vinton Count¥. 7:30 p.m . ·

WELLSTON
After
trailing early in the game by
15 points, the Southern
Tornadoe s battled back to
lead with under one minute
left in the game. Well ston
fired back with one last
offensive blast to take the
lead just under the I0 second mark to win the game
71-70 on a Eric Henry ,stop·
and-pop.

Southern edged closer as
the · game progressed and
momentarily took the lead
with 49 seco nds left when
.tosh Pape hit a pair of free
throws, first to tie 69-69 then
to give Southern a 70-69
advantage. Wellston worked
for the last shot and took the
lead on Henry's jumper.
Southern tried for a last shot,
Counts ·
Sellers
but did not get off ail atlempt.
Afte~ a slow star1. Sou_thern
fought back into the ga me by however, Wellston Jed 23- 19.
the end of the first period, . Wellston maimained a bit of

an edge in the second round,
but Southern continued to
stay close at 42-36 at the
intermission.
Outscoring the hosts 15- 11
in the third frame. Southern
pulled to with in two points at
53-51 at the conclusion o f the
fram e. Weston Counts had a
great fourth quarter, scoring
mne
pomts
to
keep
Southern 's hopes alive.
Wellston held the edge umil
Southern took the lead on
Pape's ·free thro ws . The

Rockets went on to daim the
71-70 win .
We, ton
Counts
led
Southern with 18 points,
Patrick Johnson 'had I I, Josh
Pape 10 and Corbin Sell ers
12. Seller' also had a .good
noor game . and led in
rebounds and steals. Darin
Teaford h·a d eight, Jesse
McKnight sixi"-Brad Crouch
three and Jacob Hunter two.'
Eric Henry led Well slon
Please see Southern, Bl

Eastern at Miller, 7:30p.m.

·&lt;l:l 2006 Wunderground.

South Gallia at Teays Valley, 6 p.m.
Southern at Trimble,.6 p. m.

~

~

Partly

Cloudy

0

Cloudy ,

,....~

Tnunder· /:r&gt;~
Flurries ,....r::r"'"'-.....
storms ~· • . . . ._ -~~
~.'.,:)

~

t:i!~~ ~~":.t:l cQ

1 ; 1;1

S~owers

~

Aa1n

AP Photo

Republican Betty Montgomery annou'nces the end of her campaign for Ohio governor Tuesday in the same courtroom where she
'once prosecuted rapist,s, child abusers and murders at the Wood c·ounty Court House in Bowling Green' She announced she
will seek a return to the position of Ohio Attorney General.

Montgomery decision adds new
twists to campaign ·landscape

Wedn~sday ... Cioudy

with
a 30 percent chance of snow
showers . Cooler with highs in
the mid 30s. West winds 15 to
20 mph wirh gusts up to 35
mph.
Wednesday night ... Partly
cloudy. Cooler with lows
around 20. Nor1hwe st win d'
I0 to 15 mph with gusts up to
25 mph . .
Thursday ... Mostly sunn y.
Highs around 40. West winds
around 5 mph.
Thursday night ... Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower 20s.
Southwest winds aro'und 5
mph.
sunn y.
F.riday ... Mostly
Warmer with hi ghs in th e
lower 50s.
and
nigh I
Friday

-&lt;

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
The Daily Sentinel

Saturday... Partl y
doudy.
Lows in the lower 30s. Highs
in the lower 50s.
Saturday nig hi ... Mostly
cloudy wi th rain likely. Lows
in the mid 30s. Chance of rain
60 percent.
Sunday and Sunday
riight ... Rain likely.' Hi ghs in
the lower 50s. Lows in the
mid 30s. Chance of rain 60
percent.
Monday ... Mostl y cloudy
with ·a 30 pcn:e nt charJCe of
ra in showers. Highs in the
lower 41k ·
Monday
night ... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of rain
showers. Lows in the lower
.30s. Chance or rain 30 percent.
1\tesday... Mostly . cloudy.
Highs in the inid 30s.

-

nses past
Eastern

Ravenswood a~ Point Pleasant, 7:30p.m.
Wood County at WShama , 7 p.m .
Mei.Qs at Wj:~ llslon , 8 p.m.

.BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM.

INSIDE

-2:._.

Swiss
Colby Provolone Honey Ham
14 50 lb.
1379 lb.
'3" lb.
' 4 eo lb.
Salami , Capicollo Sand. Pepperoni
1 5
1399 lb.
4° lb.
'4" lb.
· Donuts, Cookie'&gt;, Cannn li. Turnover.., &amp; Mnn.·
Grumm' Hmtri M-Sat t\ am- 9 am J5~ 'coffee
16 oz. CappUccino. Cocot~ 89~ every day

At the cornerstone of our System is O'Bieness Memorial.
Hospital. Our team can c are far you at several locations
in our region.
Our commitme[lt to meeting community need and .
providing individualized core is ongoing . We are growing
to provide accessible, advanced healthcore for you progressive coring close lo home.

16ol. Pep si Fountain 89rt

• Steelers choose to wear .
white. See Page B6
• Herd heads to No. 9
V'NU. See Page 86
.• Prep Scoreboard.
SeePage 82

Bobcats claw
past Akron
ATHENS (APJ - Leon
Williams and · Jeremy Fears
both hit a pair of free throws
in the final 10 seconds to
push Ohio past
Akron 66-63
on
Tuesday
night.
The Bobcats
held the Zips
withou't a tield goal over the
final 2:22 and outscored the
Zips 32-22 in the paint.
Williams led Ohio ( 12-3, 61 Mid-A nlerican) with 16
points and 10 re bounds.
· Jerome Tillman had II point s
off the bench. and Mych&lt;il
Green and Johnnie Jac~ so n
each added I0.
Romeo Travis led- Akron
( 13-4. 6- 1) · with 17 points.
Dru Jo{ce scored II and Nate
Linhart added 10.
The Bobcats held Akron to
33 percent shooting in the
second half and never trai led
after Fears' jtll'lper gave
them a 34-33 halftime lead.
The Zips scored the game's
ti rst I0 points and led 21- 11
with 9:03 left in the first half.
The Bobcats went on il 9-0
run and grabbed a 32-31 lead
with I :39 left in the half

..·CONTACfS

Progressive

Cari ngfor .
SoutheasternOh ..

. Phone -

Fax -

1·740·446·2342

ext 33

1·740-446-3008

E-mail - sPorts@mydallysentinel.com
Spor1s Stlirf
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor

10

(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
bsherman@ myd,ai!ytribune com

Bryan Watters, Sports Writer

www.OblenessHealthSystem.org

(7 40) 446·2342. ext. 23
bwaltcr s@ mydailyt r bune.corn
1

55 Hospital Drive • Athens, Ohio • (740) 593-5551

Subscril)e today • 992-2155 • www.mydailysentinel.com

larry Crum, Sports Writer
(7 40) 446-2342. ext. 33
lcrum@mYdallyreglster.com ·

-~--

•

Warren at Gallia Academy, 7 :30 p.m.

Teays Valley a! OVCS, 3 p.m.
Meigs at Wells ton. 8 p.m.
Point ~leasant at Wayne, 7:30p.m.
WOOd County at Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Teays Valley at OVCS, 4:30p.m .

Drne-Thru, carrv aut
Calllhlld far Plck·D•In lhl Drive-Thru

Through the O'Bieness Health System, a regional network
of .doclors, nurses, technicians, support staff and modern
facilities, you cmd your family have convenient access to
advanced technology and heallhcare services .

••

Belp~e .

992-6121

close to home.

.

;,::.";

Friday's gamea
Boys Baakelball
Southern at !;astern. 8 p.m.
Hannan at Sbuth Gallia, 7:30p.m

"-u-~-----=----·C:- .
.!--- Party Barn

HEALTH SYSTEM

ACI- 87.22 '
ltd.- 23.01
NSC- 45.80
AEP -37.94
Oak Hill Financial Akzo- 47.10
.
31.92
Ashland Inc. - 64.94
OVB -· 25.25
BLI-13..37
BBT- 39.39
Bob Evans- 23.94
Peoples - 29.40
BorgWarner- 56.45
Pepsico - 58.04
CENX- 30:89
Premier - 15.79
Champion - 4.31
Charming Shops _;_ 12.46 Rockwell ~ 65.29
City Holding- 37.50
Rocky Boots - 19.90
Sears - 121.70
Col- 44.10
· Wai-Mart - 4S. 72
DG -16.94
Wendy's- 57.86
DuPont - 39.26
Worthington- 20.16
Federal Mogul - .35
Dally stock reports are
USB- 29.18·
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
Gannett - 61.26
General Electric - 32.96 of .t he previous day's
transactions, provided by
GKNLY- 5
Harley Davidson - . 53.42 Smith Financial Advisors
, of Hilliard Lyons In
JPM- 38.11
Gallipolis.
Kroger- 18.99

Snow

W

Wahama at Hamlin. 7 p.m.

- ~Bl.JN'S~, -)

O'BLENESS

Local .Stocks .

•

Ice ·

Weather Un'derground • AP

too early to comment on up in the corruption scandal,
· Republican primary.
Sykes then said Democrats,
"I don't wunt to win that such a proposal.
Meanwhile,
Rep:
Barbara
including herself, were part
way,'' said Montgomery, who
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT
Sykes,
an
Akron
Democrat,
of
t)1e problem.
had tried to position . herself
"I haven 't seen any · soluCOL UMBUS .
State as a moderate Republican announced Tuesday she
for
auditor
just
would
run
tion
s· . co me
from
the
who
would
lead
responsibly.
Auditor Betty Montgomery
weeks
after
saying
she
was
But she trailed in fundraisdid more than narrow the
Republicans
.nor
the
·
tield for governor Tuesday by . ing and said the money raised leaving politics.
Democrats," Sykes said with
Sykes, a former Akron city a few· dozen House and
dropping out of the race. Her by Secre tary of State
councilwoman
and Summit Senate Democratic colKenneth
Blackwell
and
an'nouncement forced candiCounty
deputy
auditor, ran leagues standing behind her
dates for. other-races. includ- Attorney General Jim Petro
ing auditor and attorney ge n- . allowed them to get their unsuccessfully for stale trea- at the Statehouse.
1994 against
eral, to make new deci sions messages out and raise their . surer in
''Since I'm a Democrat ,
Blackwei.J.
profiles.
·
or reconsider old ones.
and proud to be one, I' m part_
Sykes'
announcement . of the problem," Sykes said.
Montgomery pledged to
That scramble comes
against a backdrop of use the attorney · general's means there could be contest- . She added that she would be
Republicans fighting to keep office to reform state govern- ed primaries for both parties an independent voice in the
made
the in campaigns for treasurer, auditor's office.
control of government during ment : She
. ·
an. ongoing corruption scan- announcement in ·Bowling governor and attorney generWithout blinking, Ohio
dal that has Democrats eager Green where she began her al.
John Reardon, Mahoning Democratic Party Chairman
career as a prosecutor. ·
to break the GOP lock.
Chris Redfern - a prominent
"A
month
agq. no
"It 's no ·Secret that some County 's Democratic treasur- critic of Republicans caught
Republican wanted to run for Ohioan s think too · many er, has 'also said he'll run for up in the scandal - said
attorney ge nera l," co m- politician s have put special aud itor.
Sykes struck an unusual Sykes has. always spoken her
plained
Sen.
Timothy interests before the public
Grendell , him~elf an attorney interest.". Montgomery said. tone for someone hoping to · mind.
general ·candidate. "Now. . "In a few cases - involving win a campaign by first · " It takes a great deal of
Democrats
candidates are coming out of both
and' explaining lhat she'd still political courage to 'point out
Republicans - that's been prefer to walk away from that Democrats in the past
the woodwork."
have made their share of miselected life .
Grendel! said he was stay" 'true."
takes,
and that Republicans .
In a year when most
ing in the race·and he encour0 ' Brien said he would stav
aged a three-way primary in the race. pointing out he Democrats are pointing fin - today co'ntinue to make misbetweeJ1
himself, co ntinu ~d his campai gn gers at Republicans caught takes," Redfern said.
Montgomery and Franklin based on Montgomery 's
County Pro secutor . Ron promise late last year that
she ''d stay out.
O'Brien.
, '
''I'm not angry. I'm di sapOhio's government scandal
included Gov. Bob Taft's pointed," 0 ' Brien said.
, endorsed
Petro
conviction on ethics charges
last year for failing to repor1 Iylon(gomery for attorney
golf outings and other gifts. ge neral while Blackwell said
In ·october, federal prosecu- Petro
should
follow
tors charged Toledo-area coin Montgome ry's lead and drop
dealer and prominent GOP out.
Moving ahead with hi s
fundraiser Tom Noe wi th illegall y funnel,ing $45.000 in campaign, Blackwell then
campaign contributio ns to announced a . proposa l to
lease the Ohio Turnpike to
President Bu sh.
Montgomery,
atto rney private investors to raise $4
general from 1994 to 2002, billion to $6 billion.
Petro , who se campai gn
said she is unwilling to· run
You deserve quality medical care in familiar
an attack campaign to try to says he · has. no plan s to
it
was
.
leave
the
race.
said
win
th~
upcomin g
surroundings where you feel at ease --: ·
BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

•

•... .

r

·- ------- - '

- -...,-----

AP photO'
Cleveland Cavaliers' Donyell Marshall (24) dunks in front of Indiana Pacers' Austin Croshere (44) during the second quarter of an NBA basketball game Tuesday jn Cleveland .
·

Cavaliers slam Indiana, 96-66
ClcEVELAND (AP) ·The Indiana Pace rs · niay
have bigger problems than
just. finding ,a new team for
Ron Ar1cst.
·
With a proposed trade
sending
Art est
10
Sacramento apparently on
hold, the Pacers scored j ust
2S points in the second half.
lost Jerniaine O'Neal to
.another injury and weie
drubbed 96-66 by the
Cleveland Caval iers on
Tuesday night. ·
. "We sure have had enough
bad luck for a year." said

O'Neal. who may have torn
a groin mu scle in the fourth
qu arter. "I'm real ly. reall y
concerned, I ·heard it pop.
Hopefull y. I · wo n't need
surgery:·
0' Neal. who said he has
felt ti ghtness in the groin for
weeks. al so hu11 hi s right
shoulder aqd was playing on
· a · tender left ankle. He
limped to the locker room
wi th 9:30 remaining, but by
then the Cava li ers were
ahead by 20 . .
Lc.Bron James met with
Oscar Robertson before the

game and thei1 flirted with a
triple -double in front of the
man 1yho patented them.
James scored 23 points with
e ight assists and seve n
rebounds for the Cavaliers,
j u ~t back from a 1-5 trip to
the West Coast.
Before the game. Pacers
coach Rick Carlisle and
CEO D,Hmie Walsh said that
no trade .involving the
Yolatile Artest was immi ·
nent.
''There is no trade right
now and there may not be a
said.
trade...
Carli ,le

"There's nothing to ta lk
about because there is no
trade."
Th e Pacers could have
used Artest. a defensive
stopper who held James to
19 points on 6-of-20 shooting earl ier thi s season. But
they could,n'i do much to
slow CleYeland's All -Star in
the third when he scored 12
points - one less than the
Pacers - and the Ca1·,
out scored Indiana .27 -13..
Please see Slam •.Bfi

BELPRE
Eastern
dropped its fifth straight basketball decision Tuesday with .
a 73-67 setback to Belpre in
Tri- Valley
Conference
non-league
action.
The Eagles
(7-6) trailed
5 1-48 after
three quarters of play,
but a 10-0
run over the
Guess ·
opening 2:30
...--=-..., .of the fourth
gave
the
hosts a comfo rtable 13point edge.
The Green
and White
battled back
to within six
(71-65) with
30 seconds
remaining,
Carroll ·
but
!he
guests would get no closer.
Eastern , which concluded a
win less four-game road
stand. battled back from a
horrendou s 17-3 first quarter
star1 to tra il 23-15 after eight
minutes. EHS then went on a
15 -7 second quarter' run to
enter halftime netted at 30.
The lead changed hands six
times over the opening 4:45
of the third quarter. and
Eastern was left with a 40-39
edge at that point. l t was the
final lead that the vis itors
· held.
The Oran~e and Black
went on a 12--8 run over the
lin al 3: 15 to take a one possession lead into the stretch
run .
Eastern ·fini shed the game
21-of-61 from the tlaor for
:14 percent. incl udin g a I0-of25 effort from behi nd the arc.
The Eag les were also outrebounded 26-24 and had 15
turnovers in the loss. five
more than the host school.
Belpre 110-4 ) concluded
the evening 27-of-57 for 47
percent. incl uding a 50 per. cent effort 17-of-14) from
behind the arc.
Nathan ·Cozart had 24 ·
points. 12 in ca.:h half. to
pace EHS. while Mark Guess
Please see Eastern. Bl .

Wahama pounds OVCS
sta11 but fin i, hed ' tru11~ ,in ih~ ~ames final 16 minutes
swee ping the · two -g~ mc wi th~Ciark and Roush phty·
seri6 with the Ddentler' on in g ·a htr ~e role in I he WH S
"·oring a.'Sau lt.
GALLIPOLIS - Brenton the year.
Clark scored a game-hi gh'2-l
."We started a little slow
"C lay I Roush ) was a force
points and Clay Roush while try ing to cqahli'h our · in iht• miJd le for us and
grabbed
I fi
rebounds rhythm," Falcon a'&gt;i,tant Brenton tCiarkl p l ayc~ll
Tuesday ewning to help the coach Mike Wolfe said fol - dcfcrhil·eh anJ that led to
vis iting Wahama While lowi ng the Bend Area te.arn' 'ewra l tnln,iti,)n oaskets for
Falcons snap its brief three- o ne -sided victory. . "We '"·" Wolfe said .
game losing sk id with a con· stepped it up defc nsi1el y
De&gt;pitc "hat "'"'deemed
vi ncing 7 1-3:1 basketball win with I he be gi nnin g ol the as a slo11 ,tart for Wahama
over Ohio Valley Christia n. sewnd h'alf and that ~ai'C us· (',~;,ch lame, . Toth\ White
Clark was the lone double · t_he ..spark we were loo~i&gt;ig Falcon' jumped \lUI to a 15-R
li gure scorer for ei ther leam tor.
advantage at tlw lir&gt;l turn .
in !he UY tin g, while Rou 1h
It was the ddcn ~ il' c intcn· The 1 i&gt;itin~ \VIIS ca~cr'
proved to be 'a force ·inside'" sil) that Wolfe wa, talking c.xte nded ll 'c lead ''' a· c71 m- .
Wahwna pulled away in.thc aboul with the beginning uf mandin~ ::!t&gt;- 1::! mar~in at the
Charlie Shtippardlphoto
1ccond half w gai n its ni nth the ilmd 4uartcr th&lt;tt '* " halfwa1~ itmcturc Wanama
·s
Clay
Rousn
p,ulls
up
for
a
wmper
agamst an OVCS
· victory of I he season again&gt;t ignited the Maso11Co,untian'
Am ·tliougl1h Ohi&lt;• Valley
four defeat, . The White nffcr\1c. W.i11ama CllJO)Cd a
·
' 'defender dunng the . Wh ite Falcons' 71-33 vtctory Tuesday
Fa lcon; overcame a slow 45-2 1 ed ~ ,· "' ,coring durtng
Please see Pounds, Bl
night in Gallipolis.
··
BY GARY CLARK

SPORTS CORR ESPOND~NT

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, January

25. 2006

Wednesday, January 25, 2006

·High School Basketball Scoreboard
Hil:h School
Lea~:ue Standin~:s
Boys Basketball
SOUTHEA,STERN OHIO ATHLETIC
SEO
ALL
Warren
5 1
12 1

Manana
Jackson
Galha Academy

5 I
52
33
1-6
0-6

Lo~an

Athens

85
95
76
3 10
I 14

TR~VALLEY

Ale~a nder

Belpre
Nels York
Vrnton Co

Wellston
Meigs
Tnmble
FedHock
Waterford
Eastern
Mrller
Southern

CONFERENCE
Ohio Dlvlsron
TVC
51
42
42
42
15
06
Hock ing DIVISIOn
TVC
51
42
42

ALL

12 3
10 4
86
7 7

59
1 12

All
114
105
74
76
68
2 13

33
15

15

OHIO VALLEY CONFERENCE
OVC
ALL

Chesapeake
Farrland
Rock Hrll
South Pornt
Arver Valley
Coal Grove

60
51
33
24

12 1
94
77
67

24

5-8

06

4 10

OTHERnNDEPENDENTS

All
Soulh Gallla

112
94
53
2 13
1 13

Wa~am a

Hannan

aves

Porn! Pleasant
Grrls Basketball

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC
ALL
SEC
Warr~n

62

Jackson

11 6
11 3
88
11 4

52
52
53
2s
08

Manetta
Logan
Gall a Academy
Athens

1

a

l 15

TAl-VALLEY CONFERENCE
Ohio DIVISIOn
TVC
ALL
A exande r
6 1
12 3

Belpre
Nels York
Vinton Co
Me1gs
Wellston

Tn mble
Waterfo rd
Fed Hock
Eastern
M Uer
Southern

5 1
43
33
15
06
HoCking DIVISion
TVC
6 1

87
96
B6
4 10
2 11
ALL
14 2

51
'3
34

113
4 11
69

24
07

78
87

OHIO VALLEY CONFERENCE
ave
ALL
70
12 2
Coal Grove
South Po nt
5 1
10 4
Fairland
52
75
Rock H II
24
59
Rtver Valley
17
3 13
Chesapeake
17
4 10
OTHERnNDEPENDENTS
ALL
South Galha
Wahama
Po nt Pleasant

66
76
5·6
411
I 13

ovcs

Hannan
BOYS BASKETBALL

GALLIA ACADEMY 54,
POINT PLEASANT 38
GALLIA ACADEMY (7-6)
Chns McCoy 0 0 p 0 Matt Mooney 0 0 0 0

~r~;:n ~~~~~;~n°3°1-~~r ~e~~~~~e~ ~;
2 14 Jayme Haggerty 2 1 3 7 BraQ Caudill
0 0-0 0 Alex Kyg er 4 3 4 11 Shaphen
R~blnson 3117 Da vd Rum ey 2 00 4
Totals- 20 B 12 54
POINT PLEASANT (1 12)
Step/len Walker 0 0 0 0 Wtll Slone 1 1 2 3
Tad Bonecutter 0 0 0 0 Jay Eilts 2 0 0 4
Kenny Durham 0 0 0 0 Nathan R mrney 3
8 Lasse Bartelso o 1 0 Josh Stover 4
5·6 15 Steven Perry 0 0 0 0 Stephen
Brownmg 1 1 2 3 Bobby Erret1 2 1 3 5
Totals- 13 B 14 38
Gallla
11 17 14 12 54
Point
9
11 10 8
38
3 Potnt Goals- GA 4 (Jeff Gold en Jayme
Haggerty 2) PP 4 { Nathan Rtmmey Jostr
Slover 2) Fouled Out~ GA 1 (Shawn
Thompson)
PP
1 (Josh Stove r)
Rebounds--GA 31 (Shawn Tho mpson B)
PP 24 (Josh Stover 11) Asststs- GA 4
(Jeff Golden 2) PP 7 (Josh Stover 3)
Steals-GA 8 (Jayme Hagg erty 4) PP 5
(Josh Stover 3) Blocks-GA 2 (Shawn
Thompson Alex Kyger) PP 3 (Bobby
Errett 3) Team Fouls-GA 17 PP 13

o-o

SYMMES VALLEY 75 HANNAN 58
SYMMES VALLEY (5-6)
Tyler Sm1th 2 2 2 6 Bnce Sexton 0 0-Q 0
Jacob Johnson 0 0 0 0 Ktrt Shtpley 5
Jon Combs 0
0 Chns Capper 3 o
2 6 Seth Saunders 3 1 2 8 Kyle Meadows
2 0-0 4 Jushn Wtseman 0 1 2 1 Mat1
Owens 5 2 2 14 Jerry Johnson 1 1 2 3
,.,,chael t-:t umphrey 9 0 0 1B Alex Burnet12
0 0 4 Totals 32 82 7 12 75
HANNAN (53)
Patnck. Flora 1 0 0 2 Kev n Blake 10 0 0
25 Ryan Canterbury 4 1 2 9 Alan Dye 0 0
0 0 Aaron Payne 2 0-0 5 Joe Kmnard 0 0
0 0 Travts Bowman 0 0 0 0 Wesley Gue 3
3 4 9 Jared Taylor 0 0 0 0 Joe Kelly 0 0 0
0 Brad ley Edmonds 4 0 0 B Justtn
Eastam 0 0 0 0 Totals 24 65 4 6 58
Symmes
27 21 19 B
75
Hannan
23 11 6 18 58
3 Po nt Goals -SV 4 16 (Owens 2
Sh pley Saunders) Hannan 6 (Blake 5
Payne) Fouled Out-none RebouhdsSV 57 (Sh ptey 9) Hannan 23 (Gue 10)
Asslsts-SV 7 H annan 9 (Bl aKe 4)
Steals-SV B (Sm tih 3) Hannan 6 /Blake
2 Canterbury 2 ) Blocks-SV 4 (Meadows
2) Hannan 3 (Gue 2) Turnovers -SV 14
Hannan 14

1,

o-o

o-o

BELPRE 73. EASTERN 67
EASTERN 17-6)
Nathan Cozart 7 4 5 24 Alex McGrath 1 4
6 6 Mtehael Owen 1 2 2 4 Ma rk Guess 6
0-0 13 Nathan Carron 3 3 4 12 Kyle
Rawson 0 0 0 0 Derek Roush 3 2 2 8
Totals 21 61 15 19 67
BELPRE (10-4)
Brad Layland 3 1 2 7 Alex Earley 1 0 0 2
, Zach Alktre 4 0-0 9 Jordan Th ornhill 10 9
9 34 Dustin Adams 6 1 2 14 Brae
Ptt1enger 2 0 1 4 M1 cah Pfalzgraf 1 1 2 3
Totals 27 57 12 16 73
Eastern
15 15 18 19 &amp;7
Belpre
23 7 21 22 73
3 pont goals-E 10 25 (Cozart 6 Carroll
3 Guess) B 7 14 (Thornh II 5 Alk1re
Adams) AeiJounds-E 24 (Guess 6) 8 26
(P1 ttenger 7) Ass1sts-E 2 /Cozart
Roush) 8 5 (Thornhtl 2) Steals-E 6
(Guess 2 Owen 2) 8 14 (P tten_ger 6)
Blocks-E 3 (Cozart 21 8 1 (Pttteng er)
Turnovers-E 15 B to Team 1outs-E 17
B 16 JV score-B 55 E 30

WAHAMA 71
OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN 33
WAHAMA (9 4)
Clark 11 1-'1 24 C Ro~sl" 4 1 2 9 Harr son
4 1 1 9 Wasonga 3 2 2 8 Sayre 3 0 CJ t1
Fowle I 3 6 5 Pearson I 2 2 5 Arnold 1
0 0 3 Russell 1 0 0 ~ Pautey 0 1 2 1 (,
Roush 0 0 0 0 Horn g 0 0 0 0 1otafs £9

•

11 16 71
OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN (2·14)
St nson 2 4 6 8 Scouten 2 4 B 8
Coughenour 2 2 2 7 Weber 2 1 2 5
W1lhams 1 1 4 3 Wnght 0 1 2 1 McCreedy
0121 Brown 0000 Totats9t42933
3 Potm Goats...... Wahama
2 (Clark
Arnold) OVCS 1 (Cougheno'tJ r)
GIRLS BASKETBALL

ROANE COUNTY 47, WAHAMA 46
ROANE COUNTY 17-7)
Carmolteta Chambers , D-0 3 Heather
Btrd 3 0 2 9 Sammt Sloan 0 0 0 0 Ash 1
Knotts 2 0 4 5 Kalla Jones 3 1 2 9 Mane
Hedges 3 2 2 8 Myndta Boggs 2 4 5 8
Jesstca Aobens 1 3 4 5 Totals 15 47 10
19 47
WAHAMA (7-6)
Amber Tully 0 2 2 2 At ref Oer held 3 3 4 9
Jesstca Hoffman 3 0-0 6 KetthAnn Sayre 9
7 9 26 Mary Keble1 0 0 0 0 Beth Keyes 0
2 4 2 Kayanna Sayre 0 1 2 1 Totals 15 42
15 21 46
21 13 47
Roane Co
9 4
Wahama
14 7
4 21 46
3 potnt goals-RC 7 1 9 (Btrd 3 Hedges 2
ChamDers Knotts) W 1 6 (Ke Sayre)
Rebounds-AC 26 (Roberts 13) W 27
(Ka Sayre 1 0) Ass sts- RC 6 (Ro berts 2
Knotts 2) W 3 (Ka Sayre 2) Steals-AC 6
(Hedges 2) W 4 (Dertfte ld 2) Blocks-AC
0 (non~)
W 2 (Halfman Keyes)
Tu rnovers-AC 13 W 15 Team fouls- AC

18

w 12

New Concord John Glenn 58 Thornvtlle
Sherrdan 33
New Lebanon Otx1e 60 Preble Shawnee

39
New Phtladelphla Tuscarawas Cen1 Cath
53 Masstllon Tuslaw 33
Ntles McKinley 64 Warren Howland 58
OT
Old Washington Buckeye Tratl 73 New
Matamoras Frontier 56
Ottawa Glandorf 79 Tot Wa1te 55
Pamesvtlle Harvey
K rtland 38
Pandora G lboa 56 Bluffton 44
Par ma His Valley Forge 63 Parma
Normandy 53
Pembervtlle Eastwood 66
Elmo
WoOdmere 45
Ptarn C1ty Jonathan Alder 71

53
Porlsmouth Clay 49 Port outh Notre
Dame 26
Rocky Rrver Lutheran W 79 Sulltvan
Bleck River 36
Russ a 48 Jackson Center 24
S Webster 73 Lucasvtlle Valley 31
Salem 54 Struthers 42
SarahSVIlle Shenandoah 48 Be lmont
Unton Loca l 46
Sardtn a Eastern Brown 48 Atpley Rtpley
Unmn LeWIS Huntrngton 43
Solon 83 Macedonta Nordonta 64
Southtngton Chalker 93 N Bloomfield
Bloomfield 41
Spencerville 75 Kaltda 60
Spqng Kent on Atdge 67 S Charleston

SE 43

OhiO High School Boys Basketball
Tuesdays Results
Akr Buchtel 77 Akr Garfield 61
Akr E 56 Ak r Central Hower 51
Akr l&lt;'enmme 60 Akr F restone 55
Akr SVSM 66 Youngs Ursu me 54
Andover Pymatumng Valley 68 Warren
Lordstown 58
Antwe rp 50 Ft Jenn tngs 32
Ashtabula Lakestde 55 Madtson 35
Aurora 60 Newbury 35
Baltimore L berty Umon 65 W Jef1erson
64
Beaver Eastern 65 Frankl n Furnace
Green 50
Bedford Chanel 57 Eastlake N 55
Bellvtlle C lear Fork 51
Mansfteld
Chnstlan 32
Belott W Branch 47 Akr Sprtng 41
Berea 52 Brecksvtlle Broadvtew Hts 35
Berli n Center W Reserve 65 N Ltma S
Range 63
Beverly Ft Frye 45 Caldwell 35
Bowling Green 66 Holland Spr1ng 46
Br stolv lie Bnstol 62 Vtenna Mathews 53
54
Borton Berks hire 80 Garrettsvll e Gart1eld
W lloughby Cornerstone Chr 55 N
56
RtdgevUie Lake Rtdge 48
Byesv1lle Meadowbrook 39 Zanesvtlle 37
Wtlloughby S 60 Chagrm Falls 52
Wdmtngton 72 Htllsboro 68
Ca mbndge 45 Manetta 42
Campbell 57 Warren JFK 53
I W1ndham 66 Mantua Crestwood 47
1 Woodslteld Monroe Cent 68 Barnesv1lle
Can Cent Cath 57 Mtnerva 47
Ca n Herriage Chnstlan 75 E Liverpool 57
Woost~;.~ r 66 Manst1eld Madtson 64
39
Ca n McKmley 86 Bedford 46
Youngs Austmtown Fttch 73 Youngs
Ca nal Fulton NW 65 Green 51
Mooney 60
Can f1eld 61 Poland Semtnary 50
Youngs Chnsttan 56 Warren Chrstlan 42
CarroUton 48 Gnadenhut1en lndtan Valley
Youngs L berty 39 Newton Falls 32

45
Cenlervtlle '70 Ctn Coleratn 3B
Ohio High School Girls Basketball
Chagrm
Falls
Kenston
68
Cle
Tuesdays Resulta
Benedtcttne 53
Akr Elms 48 Har1v111e Lake Center Chr
Chardon 64 Ashtabula Edgewood 40
43
Akr Manchester 73 Zoarville Tuscarawas
Chesterland W Geauga 62 Gates Mills
Gtlmour 46
Valley 37
Gin Chnsttan 45 Ham lion New M1am1 37 1 Amanda Clearcreek 66 Ashville Teays
Ctn E der 59 Kettenng Alter 56
Valley 63
•
Ctn St Xav1er 53 Ct n Mt Heathy 41
Archbo d 41 Napoleon 38
Ctn Summtl 52 C n Country Day 51
Aurora 71 RIChmond Hts 39
Cle Cen Gath 64 Huntin g Valley
Batnbrtdge Pant Valley 61 Frankforl
Un verstty 57
Adena 40
Balttn'lore Ltbe rty Umon 54 Lancaster
Cle Glenv ille 74 Cle S 60
FLSher Cath 48
Cle Honzon Sctence 74 Cle L ncoln
West 69
Bascom Hopewell Loudon 47 Fostona 23
Cle JFK 118 Cle E Tech 81
Bellbrook 46 Waynesvtl e 36
Bryan 54 Htcksvtll e 45
Cte John Marshall 67 Cle MLK 59
Cle Rhodes 59 Cle C ollinwood 57
Caledonia Rtver Valley 41 Sunbury Btg
Cots Alncentrtc 67 Cots Walnut A dge 59 Walnul 40
Cots Beechcroft 54 Cols Nonhland 47
1 Canal Wrnchester 37 Bloom Oarroll17
Cols Bnggs 73 Cots S 68
Casta! a Margaret1a 58 W liard 44
Co ls Brookhaven 78 Cols M film 63
Chtlttcothe Hunlmgton Ross 67 Ptketon
Co ts DeSales 75 Zanesvt lle Rosecrans 40
47
Chtlhc othe Un1oto 56
Wtlltamsport
Cots E 73 Cots Centenn al 68
Westfall 53
Cots Franklin He ghte 8 1 Granville 76
Chtltcothe Zane Trace 54 Rtchmond Dale

20T

SE 32

Cols H gh Street Chnst an 70 Zanesv111e
Ch 1sttan 31
Cols Independence 65 Cols Eastmoor
64
Cols
Li nden McKmtey
56
Cols
Whetstone 47
Cots Manon Franklin 117 Cots w 84
Cots St Charles 54 Cots Ready 53
Cols Tree of L1fe 50 Delaware Chr s!lan
45 20T
Cots Watterson 75 Worthmglon Chr shan

C1n lnd1an H II 66 Ftnneytown 57
Ctn Readmg 61 C1n Deer Park 29
Cm Ursuline 55 Cln McAuley 53
Cm Walnut H lis 56 L berty Twp Lakota
E 43
Cm Wyom1ng 46 Cm Madetra 32
Ctrclevtlle Logan Elm 55 Cols Hamtll on
Twp 41
Cle Glenvtlle 61 Cle S 38
Cle JFK 63 Cle E Tech 47
Cle Rhodes 86 Cle Call nwoQd 36
Clyde 62 Old Fort 30
Coldwater 47 Jay County lnd 43
Cots Atncentnc 70 Cots Walnut Rtdge 12
Gals Bexley 74 Newark LJCktng Valley 57
Cots Brookhaven 58 Cols M1ffhn 54
Cots DoSales 57 Dubltn Sctoto 48
Cols E 45 Cols Centenntal 40
Cots Ea strnoor 54 Cols lndepender ce

Columbta Stat1on Columbia 66 Welltngton

60
Columbtana Crestv ew 50 Ltsbon Oavtd
Anderson 46
Cortland Lakev tew 69 Warren Champton

62
Cortland Maplewood 58 Ktnsman Badger

54
Cu\ ahoga Fa Is CVCA 72 Hudson WRA

51
Danv lle 70 Howard E Knox 53
Cm
Day
Cham tna dP. Jultenne 59
MeN cholas 46
E Palesttne 49 Saltnevtlte Southern 43
Elyr a 58 N R1dgevtlte 50
Fa rborn 81 W Carrollton 43
Fa rfteld Chnstlan 62 Grove C1ty Chr stan

32
Frankhn 80 Monroe 68
freder cktown 67 Ut ca 61
Fremont Ross 66 T1fftn Co urnb an 46
Ft Jennmgs 50 Antwerp 32
Gahanna Cos Academy 66 Cols
Welhnglon 65
Garf eld Hts 53 Lakewood 48
Geneva 68 Pat nesvll e AIV€tStde 58
Genoa 74 B oomdal e Elmwood 61
Greentteld McCiatn 72 Washing ton C H
44
Grove Ctly Cent Crosstng 67 Westervtl e
N 55
Groveport 77 Cols Hamilton Twp 76
Htll ard Darby 50 Ptcker ngton Cent 45
Houston 59 Anna 52
Hubbard 65 Brooklteld 61
Hudson 76 Mayf1eld 48
Independence 74 Elyr a Open Door Chr

54
Jefferson Area 51 Orwel Grand Valley 44
Johnstown Norlhrtdge 57 Louoonvll e 44
Johnstown Monroe 93 Centerburg 69
Ktngsway Chrtsl1a:11 B 1 Mentor Chrtstta r

29

•

latham Weslern 90 Peebles 83 OT
Lea/lrtsbu rg LaBrae 69 Gtrard 50
Lebanon 67 Loveland 59
Leetoma 59 Hanoverton Untied 57
liberty Chr sltan 56 Northstde Chnstta n

TMALONEY@MYDAILYREGISTER COM

43
Cols L nden 56 Cols Whets tone 38
Cots Manon Fra nkl n 65 Cols W 28
Cols Northland 60 Cots Beechcro!t 37
Cots S 54 Cols 8 nggs 51
Cory Rawson 53 Ada 49
Crestline 81 Gal on 41
Day Chr shan 44 Yellow Sprrngs 30
Delaware Buckeye Va lley 53 Lew1s
Center Olen!angy 38
'
Delphos Jefferson 58 Havtland Wayne
Trace 33
Dubhn Coffman 86 Powell Olentangy
L berty 31
Fatrfteld Chnsltan 30 Gahanna Chn stian

27
Ftndlay 46 Mans!teld Sr 43
Ga hann a 45 Ptckenngton N 44
Grandvtew 40 M1lferspart 35
Grove Ctty Cent Crosstng 60 Htlltard
Davidson 52
Grove Ctty Chrtsllan 60 Cos Wellington
40
Hamler Patrick Henry 52 Miller C1ty 39
Heath 51 Whtleha ll Yearling 24
Hebron Lakewood 52 Granv1lle 41
Hudson WRA 37 Cuyahoga Falls CVCA

28
Lancasrer 74 Chillicothe 40
Lancaster Fat rf eld Un on 57 Clrclevtlle 40
Ltberty Chns tlan 36 Northside ChrJS!Ian

ASHTON, W Va - The
Mason County Board of
EducatiOn Tuesday h1red
Huntington H1 gh School
offens1ve coordmator Brad
Fuller as the new football
coach at Hannan H1gh
School
Fuller 's
hmng
was
approved unammously by
lhe board &lt;IS part of 1ts consent agenda under wh1ch
many 1tems are grouped
together There was no d1s-

27
Mansfield Temple Chrtst1an 4B Gt ead
Chr stan 35
Manon Elg n 64 Morral R1dgedale 39
Marysvtlle 46 Worthmg ton Kilbourne 41
Metamora fivergreen 72 Ptoneer N Cenl

57 Troy 48
Cent Calh 52 Wapakoneta 38
Perry 67 DeGraff R vers de 64 OT
Shawnee 70 Manon Hardtng 44
Sr 57 Troy 48
Temple Chnsttan 60 Mar on Cath

43
London 53 Clarksvt,le Clinton Ma ss e 46
Lou svt te Aqutnas 61 Youngs Rayen 47
Lyndhursl Brush 49 Cuyahoga Falls 45
Magno4ta Sandy Valley 58 Strasburg
Franktm 56
Malvern 66 Newcome rstowll 54
Mansf1eld St Peter s 54 Lucas 51
MarysVIlle 73 Belt efonlatne 6 1
McDona d 64 Lowellville 49
Mechantcsburg 66 Stdney Chr sltan 51
Mentor (1-4 E Cle Shaw 68
M ddleburg His M dpark 43 Avon lake 39
M lford 52 C1n Glen Este 49
M lford Center F'a1rbanks 66 Waynesl eld
Goshell 63
Mineral R1dge 76 N Jackson Jac~o~son
M1lton 46
Mtnford 54 Portsmou th W 51
Mogadore 86 Hartvt lle LakP Center Cht

70
Morrow
L ttl e Mtam 1 55
Trenton
Edgewood 62
Mt Orab Western Brov. n 72 Batav1a 48
M! Vernun Aci.ldemy 1'13 Onto DPal18
r...
M dd etown S pr ng 7U Sebr ng
MrK rley 47
N Olmsted 56 W"'stlake 47
New Boston Glen wood 66 Portsm-outh
Sr1r'1 t lte 48

Mt Blancha rd A verdale 42 Arlington 35
Navarre Fatrless 42 Wooster Trtway 33
New Knoxvtle 50 Van Wert L ncolnvtew

28
New Lebanon Otx1e 41
New Par s
Nattona Tra11 31
New Rtegel 57 Van Buren 38
New Wa sh rgton Buckeye Cent 53
Syc:a.more Mohawk 29
Oh10 Deaf 44 Mt Vernon Academy 37
Pauldtng 43 Del a nee Ttnora 37 OT
PettiSVIlle 51 Montpet er 34
Plam Ctty Jonathan Alder 64 W Jefferson
21
Port Chn ton 64 Fremonl Ross 53
RIChwood N Un1on 69
Rtdgeway
Ridgemont 40
Sandusky Perkms 51 Bellevue 35
Sandusky S1 Mary 49 Fremont St
Joseph 47
Shaker His Laurel 47 Pepper P ke
Orange 26
Shelby 76 Plymouth 70
St Bernard Roger Bacon 61 Ktng s Mills
Ktngs 54
Summ1t Stat1on L ckmg Hetghrs 53 Cots
Harvest P ep 31
Tho mt]soh Ledgemonl 56
Fa~rpor t
Harbor Ha dtn{:l 35
Un ontc wn Lake 68 Norton 44
UppPr Arling ton 70 Thomas Worthtngton

61

'

Upper 5a'1dusky 71 Bucyrus 55
W M lton Mr ron Unton 67 Eaton 58
Wauseon 50 Sherwood Fii! v ew 39
Ws:.tervtl ff CenJ 52 OutJh n Jerome 41

Sentinel - 1\egtster
CLASSIFIED
Colw..'-7
We

Malt•, .......
AndMaa~

to prepare the Hannan team
to represe nt Mason County
m a po s1t1ve manner
"The pnmary thmg 1s stu dent athlete safety." W1lson
sa1d. "I want them to be
prepared properly, and
show good sportsmanship
on and off the field "
Mark Swann, the new
asSistant
pnnc1pal
at
Hannan, has a long military
background and has sa1d he
1s eage r to get Involved
w11h the trammg of the
footbd ll team, as well

Countlee Like
NoOne

i!IH Cilnl
G~lll.a

~egtster
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
.,.c~a_II_T_o_d_a_y_••_.__o:. .r.,. ,F~ax.r_o (740) 446-3•o.,oe;......,_ _ _o.:..r:...F.::a::..xJ::..:o:....:(7:...4::..0l:...:9::..92=-·=-21-=57;.__,.675-5234

Oftfee llo«P-~

MASON. W Va
Sometimes bad thmgs hap
pen to good people
G1rls basketball IS no
exception.
Wahama's
KellhAnn
Sayre made
7-of-9 free
throws dur·
mg
her
game-h1gh
26-ro•nt
e f o r t
against

Eastern
from Page 81
and Nathan Carroll followed
w1th 13 and 12 markers.
respectively Gue" ,,! so h,ld
a team h1gh s1x rebounds 10
the setback
De1ek Roush contnbuled
e1gh1 pomts. Alex McGrath
ch1pped m &lt;~X and Mlch&lt;~el

Southern
from Page Bl
with 23 pomls and I 0
rebounds, Zane Holzapfel
had 18 Jusun M1ller I I,
Josh Osborne mne Jacob
Walburn SIX and Seth
( ethcne lour
Sout hern hll 2~- !or -.f 7

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~
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aper
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• Start Your Ada With A keyWord • Include Complete
Deac:rlptlan 8 Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 Days

Items
\\\01 \(I \II \ I...,

rI

rL--..-----,1
I'ERSONAI_S

GMAWAV

1

Free pupptes Cocker Lab
m1x Lovable adorable 21/2
SWM seekmg
SF for mo (740)446 7696 11 N/A
Romance and more Please ptea.se leave message
ma I picture and number to

R o a n e

County, but
those two m1sses came at the
worst lime Tuesday m an
acuon-packed 4 7-46 setback
to the Lady Ra1ders
The Lady Falcons (7 -6)
tra1led 47-46 with 3 5 seconds remammg m regulatiOn, and Sayre was at the
!me for two shots w1th a
chance to avenge a 75-54
loss back m late December
Sayre, the team's top free
throw shooter, had both
attempts hit the back of the
1ron, but the rebound
bounced off a Roane County
player and Wahama retamed
possessiOn
Followmg a umeout with
3 5 seco nds st1ll remammg.
Sayre was able to get off a
three-pomt attempt over
three defenders. but the shot
bounced off the short s1de of
the nm as the horn sounded
Those m1ssed opportumtJes thwarted a 21-13 surge
over the tmal e1ght mmutes
and allowed RCHS (7-7) to
hold on to a 34-25 th1rd
quarter advamage
The Red and Wh1te made
15-of-42 f1eld goal attempts
for 36 percent, and Sayre
had mne of those makes
The hosts also wem 15-of21 at the foul Ime tor 71 percent
Sa) re also had all 14 of
Wahama s pomts m the hrst
quarter fur a 14-9 lead

Sentinel

{![;rtbune

To Place
Your Ad,

BWALTERS@MYOA LYTRIBUNE CO M

Derlfleld

PO Box 1177
OH 45631

r
---

WHS also led 21·13 at 10termiSSIOn
The b1ggest turn10g po10t
of the game came m the second halt, part,Jcularly the
th1rd quarter
Roane County came out of
halft1me on a 12 4 1un lhat
ued the contest at 25 w11h
4 48 remammg, then closed
out the quarter with a 9·0
run for a 34-25 edge headed
down the stretch
The Lady Ra1ders h1t 8-of
19 field goals dunng lhat
ptvot~l stanza, mcludmg 4of-7 from three-pomt tern·
tory In all , Roane County
h1t 15 -of-47 f1eld god!
attempts for 32 percent "and
7-or-19 tnfectas for 37 per
cent The guests &lt;1lso sank
IO·ot-f9 tree throws for 53
percent
A1rel Denf1cld to! lowed

Sayre w1th mne pomts and
JeSSICa Hoffman Chipped 10
SIX markers m the los s
Kay anna Sayre led Wahama
with I0 rebounds
Heather B1rd and Kaue
Jones paced Roane County
v.1th mne pomts ap1ece. and
the duo o,t Mane Hedges
and Mynd1a Boggs added
e1ght each m the tnumph
JesSica Roberts led RCHS
wnh 13 caroms
Wah am a outrebounded
the guests 27 26 overall. but
trailed m 1he oftens1ve c.ttegory by a 13-7 marg1n The
hosts also had 15 turnovers ,
two less than the VICiors
There was no JUniOr varsJty contest
Waham,I returns 10 action
Thursday v.hen 11 travels to
Hamlin Game ume IS slated
for 7 p m

Ov.en added fo ur to round
out the Green &lt;~nd Wh1te s
sconng
Jordan Thornhill led the
Golden Eagles and all scor·
ers wuh 34 pomts Dustm
Adams contnbuted 14 m,lrk·
e1s to the wm . v-hile Z&lt;~ch
Alk1re and Br,1d Luyland
added n1ne and seven
respectively Broc P1ttenger
led BHS with seven caroms
Thornhill had 20 ol h1s
gdme-hjgh pomts 111 the cru·

c1al second half
The
Gulden
Eagles
clanned a sweep w1th a 55
30 VICtory 10 the JUniOr var·
Slty t1lt Jord,m K11nes paced
Eastern with , even pomts
while Aaron Lopreste led
the VIctors w1th 19 pomts
Belpre led 24 15 &lt;~I halft1n\e
Eastern relurns to acuon
Fnday when It hosts county ·
mal Southern 111 a TVC
Hock1ng llldtch~p Game
tune 1s slated tor 6 JO p 111

for 58 pe1cen1. hllt!ng 24·
for·36 1wo s, 4·11 th rees,
and I 0 for 21 al the !me
Sou1he1n had 27 rebounds
(Sell ers 7, McKm ght 5) 15
dS"sts (Sellers 4) , 13 sleal s
(P&lt;~pe 3) 15 turnovers and
24 touls
Wellslon h11 26 to1 57
overall hilling 19-lor-42
1wo s 7 15 1h ree\ and 12
tor 25 al the !me Wellston
hdd 41 rehOLinds ( Hen1 y

Pounds

n1.1ke 1hc lma!t,llly 7 1·11
In adchuon lo C!,1rk s 24
po1111 s were Roush .1nd
from Page Bl
Cl\ey Hdrnson w1th n111e
po1n1 s ap1 ece wnh Kc\ 111
Wason glt l: Omtn g otl the
m1gh1 have enterldmed for benLh lo Iall y e1ght llldrkers
Ihe second h,dl we1e ~UI&lt;:kl y tm the Wh1te F,dcons
smolhCICd '" WHS henet11
Oh1o V,dlc y go! e1g h1
ed !rom .111 ottem1 vc oul · pn1n1s .1p1ece 11om Luke
burs! lllltl,lled hy lhc Rene! Si ni'on w1d Drew Scoulcn
Are&lt;~ le,um delen'I\C pi.J)
\1 11h Br,mdon Coughenou1
Wdh,un.t exp.mded II\ cu\ h .1dd1ng ,c,en po1111s lor lhe
1011 lo 5 1·21 aflcr 111ree pen· hnsl Dek1HJe1s
od' he lore -.. t. t k tng clLtlml o Ll
W.!h.!m ,l '" Il l 1 ~ 1U1n 111
211- 12 fourth penod hl111 10 .Ill Inn on Fmld) "hen 1hc
I

--

·-----

I 0.
Holzaplel 8) I 0
'"s 1sts mne steals and 22
loui s
Well ston won the resene
g&lt;~ mc 55·41 led by Kevm
Lan,m e w1th 2 I pmnts ,md
Seth Mullin s 14 Southern
was Jed by Br) an Ham s
w11h II. Breit Beegle I0,
and K1 e1g Klesk1 six
Southern goes to Eastern
tor lhe cross county shuwU0\0 n on Fnd,Jy
While Falwns hoq Wood
Cour11 y 111 .1 lnplc-header ot
ba \ kelh,lll ,lctlon
The
L1dy F,ilcon g1rl s varsity
h.t skclh,J!! le.un gels lhmgs
slarlcd .11 5 p m fo llowed by
I he IUilllll 1 .t tsl ly ,md v.~rs1ty
ho ys contests
Oh 1n V,ille:. will dlso hosl
" plur ot

gdl11t:'i

on FndLIY

lhe '·II'IIY boy' v.el co mlng TC,l)' Valle y al \
p 111 In! lowed by the OVCS
g11b ldiSit) squad meeung
the Tc,1ys V,11ley !,tdles al
.t 10 p Ill
\lith

•

Gallipolis

ANNOUNCEMINfS

•

r

iniTAND
FOUND

I·------

r

%~

edit reject or cancel any ad at any time Errore muat b. reported on tt1e flflt dav of
Tribune-Sentinel Reglaler will be reaponalble for no more than the eo.t of the apace occupied by the error and only the firat ln..rtlon We
any to .. OJ exptlnM that r11autb from tHe publication Of omtaalon of.,. advertltemen1 Corrac:tlon will be made in the linn available edltJon
are atwaya confldenttal • Current rate card applln • All rul ••tat• advertlnmenta are aub)Kt 10 the Federal Fair Houetng Act of 1968
accapla anly help wanled ada meetlng EOE atand...da We will not knowingly accept any advertlatng tn
th• taw

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

SoiOOLS

Local B ustness ookmg for
Secrelary/
Recepi!Ontst
Mus! hav61 good telephone
SkillS &amp; good wtlh publtc
Knowledge n computers &amp;
computer ~ccounttng pro
grams &amp; all other ott1ce
machtnes
Monday Frrday
20 hours a week
Send resu me 10
Local
Busmess
2709
Jackson Ave
P01nt Pleasant WV 25550

Wanted To Buy
Metg s
County Store Script Store
Tokens and currency from
A acme
Pomeroy
and
Middleport Banks 740 992

6040
I \!I'll•\ \II \ I
' I 1&lt;\ II 1 ..,

Local Company
Gallipolis based company 1s
seek1ng canct.dates for lull
and pari t me posrt ons
We offer compelttive salary
and complete benef tts
package
Applicants must send
resume to
Personnel
242 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631

r

r

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Business Opportumty ....
Bus1ness Tra1nlng
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
Camping Equlpmenl
Cards of Thanks
Chllci/Eiderly Care
Electr1cai/Retngeration
Equipment for Rent •.
Excavallng
Farm EqUipment.
Farms far Rent
Farms for Sale
For Lease
Far Sale
For Sale or Trade
FrUits &amp; Vegetables
Furnished Rooms
General Hauling
Giveaway
Happy Ads
Hay &amp; Gram
Help Wanted
Home Improvements
Homes for Sale
Household Goods
Houses for Rent

In Memonam ........... ...... .................
Insurance
Lawn &amp; Garden Equ1pment
Livestock
Lost and Found
Lots &amp; Acreage
Miscellaneous . .
Miscellaneous Merchandise

Mabile Home Repair
Mob1le Homes lor Rent
Mobile Homes lor Sale •••
Money Ia Loan
Molarcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
Muslcallnstruments

•........210
140
790
780
010
190
840
480
830
.610
430
330
490
.585
590
.580
450
.. 850
040
. 050
640
•• 110
810
310
510

4AO

*130
660
630
060
350
170

mg for 2 full ttme AN s 12 Call 1 -800.:SS2 2362
hour
Shifts
Excellent --~-...,--...,--8e ne ftls Come ]otn o ur
Drivers Needed
Team Call Tere sa Woods at COL Dnvers w1lltng 10 dnve
(740)446 7 1 12Jf tnterested
for local ready mt)( co 11 crete
AVON' All Areas' To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears 304
675 1429
C AD TECHNICIAN
Full ltme permanen1 poS1110n
ava lable m architectural ftrm
tn
grow1ng
commumty
Mtntmum 3 years expert
ence w1th AutoCad (or equal
softwa re apphcatLon) plus
arch te clur al!cons truct10n
expenence or educat on
requm~CI Salary plus bene
ftts to quahfted applicant
Send resume wtlh cover lel
ter no later than February 1
2006 to
RVC Archllects Inc
131 West State Street
Athens Oh1o 45701
Attn Oft ce Manager
No phone calls please

540

860
4~0

.320
220
• 740
570

NO E•PE R ENCE NECESS AA'I'
~ JLL 1 ME CLASS ES

CDL H1AINII-ro

company Expertence tS
preferred but not necessary
Med msurance &amp; other
bene!tt s ava table after watt
ng penod Dnve r musl be
wdl ng to do pre ma tnte
nance on trucks &amp; eqwp
ment yard work &amp; other
mtsce11aneous chores
Expenence operatmg equ1p
ment &amp; extra sktlls such as
weldmg a plus

Call (304)937 34 10

Located m Maso n County
near Bulfp lo W V

Expenenced ofltce he p
needed lor busy chtropracttc
offtce 25 hours per week
Mon Fnday Please hand
deliver resume to Back to
Health Ch1ropracl tC 750
Ftrst Avenue m Ga hpohs
Resume w tl be accepted
througn February 3 2006
Fast paced ohystc1ans offtce
seeks recepttontst Ouahl ted
applicants should have ab11t
ly to multt task use bas c
computer sk1Hs comm unt
cate effecltvely and pleas
antly send re sume to PO
Boll 1o Pt Peasant WV

25550

F NANCING A, VA l).6L[
J08 PU.CE MENl

Personals
Pets for Sale
Plumbing &amp; Healing .
Proless1onal Services
Radto TV &amp; CB Repair
Real Estate Wanted

005
560
820
230
••160
360

TAAC'TOR TRA LEA
TRAINING CENTERS

Schools lnsrtactlon

.. 150

WVTHEVILLE VA

Seed • Plant &amp; Fertilizer
Situations Wanted
Space for Rent
Sporting Goods
SUV s for Sale
Twcks lor Sale
Upholstery
Vans For Sale
Wanted to Buy
.
Wantod to Buy· Farm Supplies
Wanted To Do
Wanted to Rent •
Yard Sale· Gal11polis •
Yard Sole·Pomeroy/Middlo
Yard Saie•Pt. Pluoant

650
120
460
520
720
71 5
870
73
09
6 0
180
470
• 072
.. 074
076

1·800 334 1203
Desk Clerk needed Please
apply
at
Budget
Inn
Jackson P ke Gathoo ts No
phone ca~s please

POSTAL JOBS
15 94 522 56/hr now htr
tng For appltcatton and tree
governement JOb tnfo cal
Amer can Assoc of labo1 1
913 599 8220 241hrs emp
serv

Under New Management
Russ M urdoc~ General
Manager
Has open ngs tor 3 Sale
ssoctates
Top Pertormers earn a
verage $80 000• Yr
5 day work ..teek 40 hrs
Closed on Sund~ys
Benet IS tnclude Health
BlueGrass Blue Sh 1e1
med1cat
dent a
eye
OIK
Fax tesume to (7 40 }446

599
II you are looking for a
Career Leis Talk

Concealed P1stol C ass All
States Feb
11 2006
$75 00
9 OOam VFW
Mason WV Ph (740)843

5555
--------~

Gallipolis Career College
(Ca reers Close To Home)
Ca I Today 1740 446 4367
I 800 414 0452
www !Jilll pohscareerc:oltege com
Accredited

Membe

Ac~rf!tlllng

TIRED OF GAS PRICES &amp;
COMMUTING?
CAREER DISTURBED ?
Ch nst1an Owned Company
Offenng A Home Managed
Busme ss Part lim e or Full
ttme FUll S upport and
Tram tng
Fully f1nanced
o,pportumty 11 quahf1ed
1 800 946 7572 Ptn 00
(Ltsten &amp; Leave Contact
Inial

Counc11 lor ndeparldenl College5

j;;&amp;::~,Nf~ ~t;~~m~l\-~t~~[:~~N:~
1

For sale
Power Lit and
Recliner Chatr Call 740
992 7349

**NOTICE**

l arge whtle and brown eggs
(open range) $1 50 per
dozen 740 985 4442

Physical Therapist

© 2006 by NEA Inc
110

110

1.

Hu.PWANIID
Full time position
In Meigs County.
Must be self·

starter, service
and able
to work well w1th

oriented

the public. Must
have valid driver s
license and reli-

1.

Hu.P WANIW

Medl Home Health Agency
has an exc111ng opportuntty
tor a full t1me part 11me o r
per d1em PhysiCal Therapts1
10 JOin
our
Medtcare
Cert1f edJJCAHO accredtled
agency m Cabell and
Putnam Counttes

HOLZER SENIOR CARE
CENTER

We offer a competitive S1ng
On Bonus
flex1bll ty m
localized or
If you are rnterested 1n a part schedu lmg
el(pancted servtce area
t1me postlton there IS an
options
mileage re1mburse
opemng In
men! 40 1K Program and
full beMflt package
Housekeeping/Laundry

800 939 6865
If you are tnteres ted m a
posttlon please stop by and
I 11 out an apphcat on at 380 Cal V1Ckt Chadwtck AN for
details
Colontat Dnve Bidwell Oh10
or g1ve Mark Haner or Paul
Regt•tered Nurse (RN) for
Sword a call at (740)446
full I me and temporary (90
5001
day) work 1n.a 114 Bed Long
Term C"re Fact llty Fu lltme
employment oilers all exten
s1ye bene111 package tnclud
ng State ctv l1 servtce ret re
men t earn up to 15 days
vacaMn per year 18 days
s1ck leave and 12 ph,.1s pa1d
Sentinel
holid ays health/ lite nsur
HOLZER SENIOR CARE
PO Bo• 729
CENTER SEEKING FULL ance s avatlabl e Salary tS
commensurate wtth exoerJ
TIME UNIT MANAGER
Pomeroy, OH
ence Contact Ktm Billups
48189
DON at Laktn Hosptlal
otzer Senter Care Cente
Lak m wv
at (304)675
s a 70 bed long term car
0860
exl
126
Monday th ru
urs1ng
tact
I
ty
located
1
H C S G Inc 1s now accept
F.rtday !rom 8 OOam-4 OOpm
ural Gall a County whas
tng
applications
at
laktn Hosptta IS an EEO/AA
1ss on focuses on quail
R ockspnngs
Rehab
tn
Employer
are lor our residents
Pomeroy for 2 part t1me
posJttons m housekeeptng
eporter
Absolu tely no phone calls
able tf'ansportation. POSitiOn
offers all company
benefits lncludmg
health, dental,
vision, and life
insurance, 401K,
paid vacation, and
personal days
Please send
resume to
CLA Box 200
cfo Pomeror O.ily

Gen~ra.l A s~ J gnme ut

Hatr Stylist w1exp Manager
Busy
Ltcense Requt red
atmosphere
Phone 740
992 2550 and ask tor Paula
Having Trouble
Fmdtng a Schedule
that Works tor you?
Need Full Ttme?
You got tl'
Need Part T1me?
You got til
Need Oaysh tt?
You got 11

Call Toll FrN

1·888-IMC· PAYU
( 1 aa8 462 7298)

ext 2457

AN expe nence preferred
enet ts Include
•Compel ttve wages
•Elcpenence cred 1
• Healt h / Den ta i! Ltt
Insurance
·40ik (after I year)
•Un iform allowance
•Vacatton
•Regular rate tncreases
If work tng m a tnendly
team onented
tac11tt
ppea ls to you pleas
ome m and see us at 38
olomal Ortve Bidwell
h1o or gtve Stephant
ratner AN BSN DON o
eresa Remy MHA LNHA
SN
AN
Sy~te
dmtniSirator for Lon
crm Care a call a
(740)446 500 1

APPLV IN PERSON!
Otftce Hours
Mon-Frl 8-4

Et.,IAOLL NG NOW

ALLIANCE

BUSNEli.'i
OPPORTIJNITY

lNsrnucrtoN

C lement ne our Bassett
Hound has been FOUND
We would like to thank the
AttentiOn
James 40 yr Laughter tS people of the C1ty of Potnt
ttle Best Med t ctne~ Please Pleasant tor your help
**********,.**'**
ca 1
Hot
Republtcan
Lost small brown Dog on
(304)593 5321
Sandhill Ad between Oak Dr vers COMPANY
Dedicated Roundtrips
Foater Parents Needed G rove &amp; Plam Valley Ad
In the Coalton KY area
Homes lleeded tn Jackson weanng a collar answers to
lamtly
Pet
Vtf'IIOn
,Metgs
Athens Crlckel
41&lt;¢ Per All Miles+
Washtngton count 1es tor Aeward(304)675 6245
Beneflte
youths 0 1 OaSIS provides
Apx 2350 mtles weeky
the tram ng You wtll rec eiVe
!-lome 3 4 Ttmes Weekly
daly retmbursement ot $33
COL AJ 6 mas OTR exp
S48 a day pald resp!le and
req
suppo rt tor the youlh placed Absolute Top Dollar U S
Call Today I
tn your home
Trammg Stiver and Gold Cotns
866-713-2778
beg ns January 28 Albany Proolsets Gold Rmgs Pre·
www cretmelone com
US
Currency
Call Oasts Foster Care for 1935
more nformat1on Toll free 1 Sotrra re Diamonds M T S
Con Shop 1 51 Second
877 325 1558
W'NW com1cs com
Avenue Galhpolts 740 446 ·- - - - - - - - 2842
100 WORKERS NEEDED
GIVEAWAY
Assemble crafts
I buy Junk Cars (304)773·
wood 1lems
5004
To S4801wk
Beauttfu l 7 M old Bnndle
Mater als proVIC:Ied
Boxer!Temer m1x housebro
Free tnformatton pkg 24H r
ken 1st shots good w1th
DRIVE
801 428 4649
Ch ildren
Needs room to
run 7 40 992 544 7
PLACE TO Best Driving Job
A GREAT
Available
WORK
Chow Boston Terner mtx 2
female few weeks old
Local
Fam ly Or ented
MACHINIST Skilled
1740)709 1996
Carner wtlh Open Door
4 or more years recent Po tcy IS looktng for OTR
mach nlng expenence req d Class A COL D rivers wt th
4x4's For Sale ..............•.................... ............. 725 _,Je:fs tn Ashton WV near one ~ar expenen ce
Announcement ..
030 ( PI easant and Huntington
Non mok1ng camJ'uS
• SSOO Sing On Bonus
Antiques
530
• 40Cpm- All Miles
Apartmenls lor Rent .•
440
Call 866 231 2567 ext 106 •Weekly Pay
Auction and Flea Market
080
to request an appl catton
· Late Model Fretghtllner
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
760
Condos
Auto Repair
170
An Exce llent way to eam •No NVC
Autos lor Sale •.
•
710
money The New Avon
•95% No Touch Freight
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
750
Call Manly n 304 882 2645
• Hospitalization and 401 K
BUilding Supplies
550
• Hometlme on Weekends
Arbors at GallipOliS IS look
Bus1ness and Buildings
340

a

Bryon Walters/photo

Wahama's Ke1thAnn Sayre (22) ctnbbles past Roane County
ctefencter Jess1ca Roberts (44) ctunng Tuesday's 47 46 loss
1n Mason Kayanna Sayre (42) 1s 1n the background

Cor,uny OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

BY BRYAN WALTERS

34
L,1ckmg County Chnshan 52 Torah
Acactemy 2 1
Mansf1eld St Peters 40 Norwalk St Pau1

CUSS! On Or OppOSitiOn to the
hmng, which was recommended
by
Assistant
Superintendent
Vana
Bordman. who mterv1ewed
Fuller
Alter lh e meeun g, board
pre sident Jun Wilson, who
IS from the Hannan area and
s&lt;11d dunng last fall's tootball season that he wanted
to see the team better p1 epared. sa1d Bordman told
hun she was unpre ssed w1th
Fuller s 1nterv1ew
W1!son smd he would be
lookmg lor the new co,1ch

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

~rtbune -

Wahama falls to Roane County

34

55
Ltma
Ltma
Ltma
L rna
Urna
Ltma

BY TIM MALONEY

sa

St Pans Graham 66 P qua 63 OT
Falls 62
Tw insburg
Stow Munroe
Chamberl n 45
Sugarcreek Garaway 56 Berltn Hiland SO
Sytvan1a
Northvtew
68
Sylva n1a
southview 57 OT
Tallmadge 83 Streetsboro 83
Tot Chnsltan 75 Oregon Str tch 59
1
Tol Emmanuel BaptiSI 57 Lakestde
Danbury 49
Tot Ottawa Htlls 55 Northwood 40
T!ll St Francts 71 Findlay 32
Torah Academy 66 Llcktng County
Chnsttan 57
Upper Arlington 52 Thomas Worthtngton
51
1
Vandalia Butler 54 M am1sburg 51
Vanlue 53 Bascom Hopewell Loudon 32
W Chester Lakota W 5 1 Hamt ton 33
W Un on 63 Seaman N Adams 43
Washmgton C H M1amt Trace 86 Lo~don
Madtson Plams 67
Waverly 47 Sctolo McDermott NW 32
Wellsville 58 Oolumbtandl-52
Wheelersburg 68 Oak Hill 34
Whttehouse Anthony Wayne 68 Rossford

69

Huntington assistant
hired to lead Hannan

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Ot11ce loca ted tn downtown
Galhpol s JUSt one block
tr am the ctty park at
242 Third Avenue
Loca! bus ness ookmg for
Secretaryi AecepttonJst
Mus! have goord telephOne
skt11s &amp; good w th th e pubhc
knowledge tn 'co mputers &amp;
compuler account1 r'1Q pro
grams &amp; all o!her offt ce
machmes Hours 8arl 5om
Monda~ Fnday
8 12
Saturday
Send resume tO
Local Bus ness
PO Box 775
Galltpo ts 01-1 45631

Reporte r to wme and
develop featurts cover
new s event s a nd handle

some local govtlrumeut
reporttng for dally news

PAlO TRAINING
ndtv duals w lhng to tratn tor
ctencal poSitiO"''s Must be
AGE 55 OR OVER and meet
ellgtt:&gt;lltly
requ rements
Addlttonal Ira 111ng DQStiiOPS
avallailte Call the Se nter
Employmen1
Center

1666)734 2301
True+; Drtver Needed
985 4384

740

9492945
Chrtst lan mom
chtldcare m my
5 30pm Have
non smokmg

wtll prov1de
home 7am
references
Call
K1m

(740)446 3128
Computer Trouble Shoot
and Aepatr Expert Servtce

740 992 2395
House Cleanm g General
and In Depth Cleanmg
$11 OOp hr wtth your spls o r
S1500phr wt!h my sp ls
can tor Apt 7 40 508 0763
WI Pp r and Pntg

Ttred ot worktng all
the holidays?
T ed o! worktng lon9 12
hOur shtfts?
Come home and ~o n us al
Medi-Home Helllth 1
.tQpentng tor a Full T me
AN tull benefits package
tnctud ng 401 K Sign on
I
Bonua $:2 500
., OpE!ntng to' a PanT ma
AN Sign on Bonus

l1 500
I
ICafl Judie ANte

AN C
Clinical Manager at
(740)441 1779 Ot
1-800-481-633-4

•a••········

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We W1n 1
1 888 582 3345

J&amp;C
Tree
Serv1ce
&amp;
Ex:cavat ng 25 years e:-:p
Free esttmates 304 675
22 13

HOlliES

IURS.u.E

1500 SQuare It home w/tull
fm shed Walk out basement
Hardwood floors sol a oak
doors and tr m 2 kttchens 2
large storage room 5 Br
o3 5 baths fireplace all elec
tnc
large dec~ concrete
2 car aetacneo
Wtl do babystttrng tn my drtve
garage
on 3 ac
Qwet
house or yours
C PR
ne1ghOorhood 1ea r Meigs
Certtf ed Call (7 40 1441
H 9h Schoo l
Asktng
9744 ask lot An Ia
$179000
Call 740'16
W1ll tato:;e care of the Elderly 4765 after 4 pm
tn lhe lf home have t O years
ex per ence cal (304)675 1995 Doublew•de '3br 2ba
v. attached
Garage
3264
Breezeway &amp; Barn
1 56
.. 1,\" 1\1
acres Sandhill Ad S72 000
l 304 )895 3068
10
Need your loved one cared
tor? I have room tn my home
to care tor one lady Cat
Dodnlf s Pnvale Home Care
@ (7 40)388 a 193 ask lor
Pnscilla

8LSIN~N;

Olrorn"m
Huddle House- Franch se
Opportuntt es tn Galltpohs

OH

,Huddle House IS a !am1ty
restaurant w1th 41 yea rs
paper m southea~tern
eJC.per ence ofler tng a
Ohto Expenence pre
umque elmer conc epl a
vanety ot breakfast lunch
ftlrred but tl l!try ilwel Js
and dtnne r opl!ons w th the
acceptable
back ng ot strong corpora 1e
Send r-esume and cltps \o
support and brandtng You
Ke\ in Kelly Man!Lgtn g
can JOin our w nn1ng team
' Edit or Ohto Valle,t
wtth as 1ttle as $100 000 up
Iron! capJial wtth our Butfd
Pubhshmg Co 82t'i Thmi
to Sun opportunmes
A'o'e Galhpoll &amp; OhiO
Huddle House tS a1s0
45631 P hone (740)446
pleased to announce NEW
23 42 ext 18
mOCJtfted hOurs (6am
M dn1~ht wee kday 24 hOurs
Treatment
ResJdenttal
weekends) Cal l today to
Faohty taktng appl catiOns
tmd out more mformat1on at
for youth worker Pay based
404\317 5316 orv sttus
on
'"'ex pe r ence
Patd
ani ne at www huddle
In surance Ca ll betwee n
"1ouse com
9 OOam 3 OOpm Mol'lday
Everyone lo.nows a HOUSE
Fnday (740)379 9083
ts a greal nV('st-nent

······•••a••

Home Hea th Care of SE
Oh10 S' currently h r ng
Home
Health
A1des
Compettltve wages
Call
740 662 1222

Ch1ldcare ava1lable 1n my
home n Aacme
740

oN TI CF o
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO recommends tna
ou do bustness•wlth pea
e you lo. roo w and NOT I
end mon ey lhrough lh
atl until you have 1nvest1
ated the oHenn

FIND
AJOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

20 acre tarm wtth custom 2
story home I'J\.llll m 1999
located between R o Grande
ancl Jackson 3 m les off At
35
$249 000
7 40 384

St82
3
bedroom
hOuse
n
PomerO)
Of' ma1n road
R, 1ve r v eW 52 7 000 1 740

992 2593
3 Bedroom 2 Bath wlfh
F1replace n R o G ande
area 8 acres m I 40X60
barn 51 20 000 { ~40 17 09
1166
3 br 1 bath 1 5 acre tot f'1
Pomeroy new root leave
message 740 517 5388
3-4 bearoom home 1 1t.:
bath w1th tam11y room
recently
remodeled
$98 500
Ca I (7 40 )4 46
4028
7BR 5BA Foreclosure onl~
$18 000 For ts!lngs call
800 391 5228 e)lt F254
AHentlonl
Loca l company oHertng "NO
pro
DOWN PAYMENT
grams to1 you to buy you
hOme nstead of renttng
too.. ~ trnanCH"ig
Less tnan oertect credtl
accepted
Payment COU ld be the
same as rent
Mor tgage
Locators
1740)36 7 .(){)()()
Syracuse 3 Br anached
Dbl Ga rage- New root on 7
acre Block Ulill!tes bU1Id1ng
$85 po
740 949 1082 0!
7404162 7 86

�Wednesday, January 25, 2~

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

· W.ednesday, January 25, 2006

'www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

ALLEYOOP

&amp;
22 acres, wonderful view,
ridge top property, close to
main highway pertect tor 4wheeler tra1ls, (740)707·
2109

r

All real . .tate advertl.tng
In this nawapaper Ia .
aubjeot to the Federal
Fair lioualng Act ol1968
whk::h m11k.. It Illegal to

IUAL Es1:.11:
WAI'ffill

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spac~ous,
2 Bedrooms. CIA, 1 1/2
Bath , Adult Pool &amp; Baby
----~--- Pool, Patio, Start $395/Mo.
1 BR apt. Convenient loca· No Pets, Loaso Plus
tion, references. deposit. No Security Deposit Required,·
pets. (7-40)446-0139.
(740)367-7086.

1 Bed Room Apartment.
Ohio St. $350 plus Deposit.
Water &amp; Sewer paid
i304)675-6668

Late on paymenls1 diVorce.
JOb transfer or a death? I
can buy your home. All casn
and quick closing. 74D-416·
3130
Ul \ I \I""'

PAfwrence, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon baled on
race, color, religion, •••
t•mlllal status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make M'IY such

preference, limitation or
diKrlmlnatlon.:·

HoosE.~
FOR RENT

This newa~per will not

knowingly accept
advertisements for real

2 or 3 Bedroom House 1n
Pomeroy. No Pets. 740·
992-5858

et,late which Ia In
vlolatlon of the law. Our

reillden are hereby
infonl*t t hat all

3 Bedroom house for Rent.
Close to Power Plant in New
Haven . 740-949·1183.

dwellif.gs advertised In
this newspaper are
nallabla on an equal
opportunity basea.

4 bedroom . t 'bath. HUD
approved house, $550 per
Country setting in Gatlia mo .. Meigs Local School'. 12
County! 3 bedroo ms. 2 . minute~ from Pomeroy.
baths. fir eplace. $85.000. (740)594·3031
(740)709· 1166. .

4br

in

Syracuse,

Fabulous 4br. 3 full baths. 560.0/mon th &amp; Deposit
Completely
Remodeled Water/Sewer included. No
House tor Sale (304)882· Pets (304)675-5332
2391
House 4 Sale 2500 sq. -tOot,
4br, w'/2ba. Attached 2--car
Garage.
Great
Neighborhood, 858-Poplar
Heights Ad , Just off R12
near
Roosevelt
Elem.
School.
(304)675·4435
after/Spm

A.Hentlon-1
. Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
grams lor you lo buy your
home instead of renting.
• 100''1a financing
• . Less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Localors
Mortgag~
i740)367-0000

AKC' Siberian Hus~ys.
6weeks old , blue eyes.
Black/white,
brown/while
$300/each , white $350/each
first shots/wormed. Call
(740)286·9855.
---------Black Lab Pupp ies, AKC
registered. All males. First
shots
and
wormed.
Adorable. 740-992-3506.

Black 1994 Ford F150, 5.8L,

ACROSS

short bed, 'great condition,

r.

Phillip
Alder

$3,500.i740)367·7~45 .

-~--~----,
I

VANS

FOR SALE

L._.;..:;,:::,;:::,_.,J

~

REMOVAl

L.-------.,1 748-992-1153

hoUS:~.Id

2 bedroom apartment Meigs
County, ' very nice, clean.
$425 per month plus
depoSit, no pels, references
required. (740)992-5 174

..__ _,;FORiiiiiiRENTiiiliii1.,._.1

~

r ..

I

~~~
L.~-ooi"iiii"iiii'"il
~liii"=ili"o .,l 'Lreo A~:

-

riO

Ir

Downtown Office Sp e· 5
AtJT():;
room suite $65
, 1 room ..__ _,;FORolliiiSiiALEiiiiiO.-,J
office· $225/mo.; 2 room suite $250/mo. ~ecurity $500! Police Impounds!
2 bedroom apt . WID hookup deposit re(!uired . You pay C8rs from $500. For lisl'\ngs
Water, trash, sewer pd. utilities. All spaces very nice. 800-39 1-5227 ext. 3901
$400.
Elevator. Call (740}446·3644
1 bedroom apt refrig, stove, 1o
·
'98 2Dr. Black Explorer
~r~awo~~m~lm~e~n~.1~----.., Sport 4x4. Pwr. everythihg.
Houses for sale in New$325, wa~er, sewer, vash pd. r.::
Ha\len,4 br. On Mayo Dr.
rear vent. 94k mi. $5800.
(740)367·7746- (740)367WANIID
sas.ooo (romodeled)
709-1:276eve . 446·1113day.
1o1s- (740)446-4734.
"~--•ro•RENT••-•
Slop
renting
Buy
4
'
bedroom
4 br. on Haven Heights
foreclosure $15.000. For list· 2B,R apartments .' Starting at Small 6 member hullting· 1987 P!ymouth Sundance.
$79;000 (remddeled)
ings 800·391-5228 e;~~t. $375/month, Located on SA group looking to lease Good condition, $1 ,600. Can
3 br. on Midway Drive
1709
$130,000 (new const)
t60,
SR
B50,
Bob Gallia, Meigs, or near-by i740)441-7390.
304-882·31 311882·2728
McCormick
Ad
Call county farm for tur ~ey or
Two Bedroom House, Rent (740)441-0194 or (740}441 -· deer hunting. Corltact John 1993 ·Chevy 4x4 $4,695;
New 2005 Redman home
, 2m-407-4B35.
1998 GMC Jimmy 4x4
1700 sq.tt. 3 bedroom, 2.5 $425 per month. Deposit 1184
$425.
References
required
'
$5,695;
1997
Dodge
bath. Green Township. 6
2~ A apt. , washer dryer
Ram150 $3,695; 1998
(304)675·4469
he ~
1
1 h
't I
acres. (740)446-2 188.
• ·(OBILE Ho•=
I o u1p0, c12ose, o osbpl!da, j10
H ..... "-"~":"~ ....... ..,
Honda Odyssey van $5,995;
420 1y
5 orage
ln£LO
a so
x
g.
uu~LDULU
t998 Chevy Metro $2,995;
74 44
117
FUR RENT
_
i _ _01__J_-o_ _ _ ·_ _ _ _
2000 Cavahor $3,995. Otho r
" - - - - - - - - · 3-Bedroom, 2·Bath Mobile
!rucks, vans and cars in
stock: 328 Jackson Pike,
14X70 with 24F1 Expando. Home. 517 Burdette Street.
Cook Motora, (740)446·
$300.00 a month .1st &amp; last Deposit _anq , Reference
0103
months Rent required. Nice required. No Pels i304i675·
Appliance
yard ,Camp
Conley 5402
1995 Ford Crown Victoria
(304)675-2031
-------LX 135k miles. good condiBeautiful 2-story townhouse
Warehouse
tion,
new tires, $2,600. Call
Newly remodeled, 3 or 4 2 · Bedroom all electric .in overlooking Gallipolis C,ity
bedrooms. cen tral air, full' Middleport $375.06 plus. park. Kitchen , D.A, L.A., in Handel'lon, WV. Pre- (740)441 -9282.
basement. hardwood floors. deposit.
3 Bedroom all study, 3BA, 2 baths, laundry
owned Applicanes start fng 1998
Pontiac
Firebird
m
detached garage, large cov- electric
Middleport area. Referen ces required ,
at $75 &amp; up all under Coupe. T·Bar root, 5·speed
ered patio. fenced back 5425.00 Plus depos1t. No security deposit. no pets.
Warranty,
also
have manual, sharp, low mileage,
yard: close to schools, Point iriside pets. 740·416-1354. $900 mo. Call (740)446·
Household
Mise: Items · only
$6,890
phon e
Pleasant.
$69.500
2325 or (740)446·4425.
2 bedroom mobile home in
starting at .99c &amp; up (304)675-3275
(740)709- 1382.
Racine, $375 mo. plus $375
(304)675-7999
www.orvb.com· · deposit, years lease , no
pe ts. no calls after 9pm.
Home Listings.
(740)992-5039
L1st your home by calling
i740)446-3620 .

.r·

10

HOME

IMPRoVEMFNI~

Now Renting
A·J Mini Storag·e

I!::;;:=::;::;::::;;:=!~!
.179 R d St
an
.
Ga111poII a, OH

•
•
•
•

I.

2.

w

992-5682

#

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

.I fAT . LOTS Of FMT
fOOl&gt;, .I GU~S'S TtiAT

. E)(PLAI/IIS wttY
TttH SAY
"ttASTf MAt:~$
wAIST:'

7 4

Hill"s Self
Storage

ROBERT
BISSELL
• New Homes
• Garages

29670 Bas han ~n,,n · I
Racine. Ohio
45771
74().94!J-2217

'·

,•

WHAT AILS CHARLIE
SNOPES ? HE'S SEEN
BA'II·MOUTMIN' YOU
OVERTH'
HOLLER

· Remodeling

740-992-1611

CURRENT EVENTS

. . ......

PARNEY

• Comple!e

COUPONS

Stop ~ Compare

JEST .JEALOUS
'CUZ I BEAT MIM
AT HIS OWN GAME !!

·ENTERTAINMENT

MIKE MARCUM

97 Beech Street

Call
The Daily Sentinel .
992-2155
To Subscribe

Middleport, OH
10x10x10xl0 ·
992·3194
or 992-6635

Il

Roofing &amp; RamOO&amp;IIng Go
Rubber ROOfilg, Room . .
Add1li0fls, Decks, Shingle&amp;,
Siding. Windowa, Pole EJams.
• Garages. New Homes 1 '
Residential &amp; Commercial ~ •

-

....

s

I

740-24!5-0437 lOY_.

. . . _ • ...._

,

i
I

!

TECHNOLOGY

MDlEn
SElF STIRIGE

1
~

11

COMICS SPORTS

tHE: BORN LOSER
!i:.L-"-'i&gt;'&lt;S, t l&gt;\'i&gt; '&lt;OV WRONG "'I 'QI-\,KO'iOU t&gt;OI'\1! YQU'R(
:::mt;;&gt; t ~POLOG&gt;IZE. 1
t-10\ C£\1\K(, Of"F
H\1&gt;\\

';ou oo~\ mow row ~D""l

I

I WOI&lt;'.K(D TO n c . /
/'., MI&gt;..KTYR!

"Middleport's only
Self-Stor•ce·

•

3368

BIG
. NATE

j

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Phlebotomist-Per Diem ·

.

FORS~L~ I

MOBILE
.

In lhe (olfuwihl!l

+i.A.P

AND &gt;lOW SH!O 'S

H~ll!i:

GONE'

W+tERE
\$ S.HE?

3 bedroom, 1 ,2
bath. A.C .. wheels, axles &amp;
block, Must be moved
i740)388-6976.
14 ;~~70 ,

16x80 'homes starting at
$25995.00. Includes vinyl'
siding/ shingle roof. Call
Russ 740-385-2434

specimens. Experience in drawing blood

1-----------------

on the older adult.

2005 Pqntiac Sunlire, Red,
12.400 miles.
5 . Speed
$8200 .00. Call 304 -5931343

2006 16x70 3 Br/2 bth
Vinyl/Shi ngle $229/mo. Call
i740)385-9946.

experience preferred.

2003 PT Crui ser. Power win·
dows and locks; CD Player,
Very
good
coridition,
$7500.00. (740)388-0140
2004 Jeep ·uberty, excellent
condition. less than .15.000
miles.
$1.7,000.
Call
i740)446-4028.

1996 Skyline 28x64, 3BA.
2BA. fireplace . cathedral
'ceiling, S35 ,000. (740)709·
1166.

Phlebotomist. Applicants must have a
· valid driver ' s licehse. Six monlhs

.

.

Position involves drawing blood ln .a
nursing home setting and transporting

SEPTIC TANK PiJMPING $95.00
PORTABLE TOflfT RENTAl ·
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY

For more information:

Pleasant Valley Hospital
C/0

Human Re so urces
2520 Valley Drive

Pl. Pleasant, WV 25550

..
PEANUTS
1

'· f.IERE 5 THE WORLD FAMOUS
HOCKE'( PLAYER ON HIS
WA'I' TO niE GAME ..

50 I M16f.IT AS WELL
GO I-lOME NOW ..

591·8757 .

304-675-4340

AA/EOE
www. pvalley.ol'g

II·E(:ono1ny Beef $7.35

'91 Skyline 16xao 3 Br/2 Bth
$145/mo. Call (740)38.5.·
7671 .
'96 Fleetwood 3 BR/2 Bth Mobile hbme s~;~aces m
$169/mo. IncludeS Delivery. Country Mobile Home Par~ New Haven . 1 bedroom
unfurnished apartment, no
Call (740)385-9948.
[740)385-4019
pets, deposit &amp; previous
Good clean . used. mobile Trailer tor Rent ·2br. all rental references, (740)992·
homes
for
sale.
Day Elactnc, AC. $300/month 0165
{7 40)388·8513, Evenings plus utilihes, Deposit, No
Pels {304)675·4874 '
Nice one BA unfurnished
(740)388-801 7
~r!l!'-~~.,.----. ~~-------., apartment.. Range &amp; refrig .
B l)SJNESS
APAirTh-IE:NTS
provided. Water &amp; garbage
.
FOR RENT
pai~ . Depos1t reqUired. Call
AND B UILDI NGS • ___
(740)446·4345 after 6pm .
For Rent. 3 Buildings for 1_ and 2 bf)drbom apartBusiness Use. Located 1n ments, fur nished and unfur- One · bedroom Apt. on
Pomeroy . Also , 2 Upstairs nished, security deposit Second floor loCated in Point
in requ1red . no pets, 740·992· Pl easant. Calf (304)675·
Unfurnished · AptS.
6645 Lea\le message 11 nO
Pomeroy lor Rent. Call 740· 2218
answer. Wil' return call
58~·71i2 .

1 r'

BUSINESS
ON THIS PAGE FOI'f
!

AS LOW AS·
'.

FOR SALE
1985 Chevy 1-ton dump
truck; ·new motor, cab &amp;
JET
paint. Used daily. Asking
AERATION MOTORS
Aepairad. New &amp; Rebuilt In $3,000.(740)256- 1253.
Stock. Call Ron Evans, '1 •
2000 Dodge Ram 1500
800-537-9528.
Sport, Excellent Condition,
Must see to Appreciale
Manual Treadmil1 $15, regu· i304)675-3476
Jar/queen quilting frames
$20, ladies leather jacket '2001 Dodge Ram truck
fleece lined, medium $35. 2500 SLT Heavy Duty,
(740)446·8896.
springs, camper special, 10:._:.:.__:_:.:._:.____ ply 1jres. $7,500. Call Ed
New and UseQ Furnaces. (740)367-0624.
Installation
avail8ble.
(740)441 ·2667
2003 Tahoe, LT. RedMetallic, garage kept like
NEW AND USED · STEEL new, on star satellite radio
S'~e I Beams, P1.PB Aebar loaded 10.000 mites
For
Concrete.
Angle.
_ 5..
304 67 3753
Channel , Flat Bar, Steel
. For
Drains, .
SUVs
Grating
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L .
FUR SALE
•
Scrap Metals Open Monday, 1.,~-------_.l
Tuesda", Wednesday &amp;
1
2000 Tahoe-LT. l oaded.
Friday, 8am-4: '~m . Closed
"""4'
leather healed seats, moonTh ursday.
Satu ~dav . &amp;
'
roof, excellent ex&gt;ndition ,97
. Sunday. i740)44&amp;-7300
K Milos. $l 4.soo. 740 _742 _
_
Trim package tor sale. 6 2675
panel pine doors, poplar
base and casing. Oak slair 2004 Chevy Trailblazer
Kelly
system tor $3.100 (304)674- 4WD , w/tow pkg..
Bluebooks @ $22,000
0100
mariy eKiras 10,500 miles,
e;~~;cellent condition, garage
·B UDlJING
kepi . $18.900 1304)675 Sl!PI'I.ID;
1408

r

$26.00 PERMONTH! r
992·21"5·5

j

I'

Block , briCk, sewer p1pes,
4x4
windows, lintels, etc Claude
FOH SALE
Winters 1 Rio Grande , OH ~~---liiiiiiiiiiiiiii.-,J
Call740·245·512 1.
2000 Jeep Wrangler 5
speed , 4 cyl., 2 tops mclud·
ed . Calf after 5pm (1 40)4466541 .
AKC Lab · pups. lleld and
waterfowl huntmg blood- 2001 F'ord Expedition. Edd1e
lines, calm and family anent- Bauer Edition, fully loaded ,
eO. excellent pups, eJ~:cellent moonroof, running boards,
67 ,500 m1les. grea1 shape.
· pr•ce. [7 40)418·8388.
red and tan exterior. tan
CKC Sh1h T.tu puppieS. Two lea ther 1nte nor.
as~ 1n g
lemale. one male. $400. $19 ,500. Call 441 · 1417 after
(7 40)388-8965
Spm or le.ave niessage

The·Daily .Sentinel t fUR%
.

Beef $8.10

TRuCKS

Corn $6.45/Bag
Corn $7.45/Bag

Meal $13.25/Bag
I·Shade River Hog.Feed.$8.85
.Why Drive Anywhere Else?
1-So~·bAan

Shade River AG Service, Inc
Public Notice·
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given
i hat
on
Saturday, January 28,
2006, at 10:00 a .m ., a
public aalo will be
held at 211 W. Second
S t.. Po meroy, OH . The
Farmers Bank a'nd
Savings Company Is
selling for cash In
hand
or
certified
check the following .
C 0 II ale r al : 1 9 9 4
CHEVY ASTRO CONVERSION
VAN
1GBDM19W8RB10562
2, The Farmers 'Bank
and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right 1o bid al this
sale 1 and to withdraw
lhe above collaleral
prior to sale , Further,
The Farmers Bank
and .
Sav.l ngs

35537 St Rt 7 N •

Public Notice
Notl~e of Lien Sale
The personal property
and conlenh of the
following
storage
units wilt be ·euc·
lloned lor sale to sot-.
lafy
tho
lien
of
H artwe II Storage.
The ... sale will be hi:tld
at
the
Hartwell
Storage facility, 34055
Laurel
Cliff
Rd.,
Pomeroy, Ohio on
February 1 I, 2006 at
10:00 a.m. ·
Unll
t6
Owner:
Shannon Bare 30875
Bowles Rd. , Dexter,
OH 45741 , Unit 129
Owner : Jennie Wilson
3
Peach
Circle,
Middleport, OH45760,
Unit
N46
Owner:
Veronica McCarty. 200
N
OgdenAve.
Columbus, OH 43204,
Unit
149
Owner:

Ohio

·
,

.SUNSHINE. CLUB
! IX1-,l'T w!&gt;NT 1D
\.I.AT(f-1 1H~ IJ!::WS ,
\UILlER .. rT D£.PR£S%!.
lll\b-

45769

Advertise.
in this ·
space ·for $'104
.per.month.

$ARFIELD
II' YOU ATE LE ~!&gt;.
...OU WOUL. t&gt; WE.IC#H l-E55

IF ONL-Y THERE.
AWAYTOTE.5T

snoagrass' Upholstery
Racine, OH

740·949-2202
Cu slom Window Treatme nts

&amp;

U pholstery

~:::::;::::;:::::::~

Company
reserves , DBena Hardwick Rt.1 ,
lha rlghl to reject any
Box
131
Wall · ;
or all bids submlriod.
Columbia, WV25287,
N ow Available At
Tho above described
Unit ISO Owner: Jaye
collateral will be sold
Mitchell PO Box 159,
" asia · where Is" 1 with . Syracuse , OH45779,
no
expressed
or " Unit 167 Owner: Tony
Implied
warranly
Connolly 114 Brick St.
" Taking The Sting Orll Of
glvon.
P.omeroy, · OH 45769,
For furlher .Jnforma·
Unit 173 Owner: Paula
Hard Work! "
lion, or tor an appointClark
7501/2
Mid
Sjze
4Wneel
Dri ve Tractur
menlto lnSJ?tiCI collal·
y c a m o r e ,
eral , prior lo aale dale
Middleport, OH45760
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines
conlact Cyndle , Stacy
I:Jnlt
194
Owner:
or Randy at 992·2136.
Ellzabelh Ollar 736
(1) 25, 26, 27. ·
Jrd Middleport, OH
45760
(1)25(2)1

HAlJM Llll\1BER

Scorpion Tractors

s

BAUMLUMBER

St. Rt. 124 .Chester 985-3301

GRIZZWELLS
WI\ AT~
:-loU lll15T
~\HtS\t-16
~

East

4.

2 olo

Pass
. All pass

A

Get that honor
onto the table
Diana, Princess of Wales. said. "l'd like to
be a queen of people's hearts, 10 people's
hearts, but I don't . See myself being
Queen of this' country- ·
She knew the basics of bridQe. but was
never a regular player. However, _
1'- she
kept that thought in her mind during this
deal, she would find the key defensive
play. You are sitting East. looking at you r
hand and the dummy's on your right.
Against lour sp~des, your partner leads
,the heart ~ce. How would you plqn the
defense?
South's two-spad~ rebid promises a six·
card suit. With only five, he would bid a
new suit, raise -clu~. or' go into no-trUmp.
Wheri you defend, always keep in mind
your target: the number of tricks you need
to defeat the contract.. Here, 1hat is four.
Which four tricks would you hope to win?
Either one spade, two hearts and one
diamond. or two' hearts . and two dia·
monds. But if you are to get two diamond
tricks, you (East) must lead the suit
through declarer. In which suit can you
gain the lead? The answer is hearts, park
ner's ate having promised the ace and ·
klng. At trick one, drop the hear t queen.
Unless you have a singleton queen
(which is impossible here), this guarantees that you also have the heart jack. At
Irick two. West should underlead his
heart kmg. You· will win with that jack·and
shift to the diamond queen .
Note that if y{)u signal with the heart
three, West will assume it is diScouraging .
Playing you for the ,diamond King. he will
ca"sh the heart king before shifting to the
ace and another diamond.

.-----...

! ?i.J5f'fCITD 1\

/

cautious
13 Bungalow
14 Scallions
15 Temple
Imago
16 -de mer
18 h mar be
abstract
19 Pie
lngreqlont
21 Desktor,
symbos
25 Weirder
29 Floodgate
31 Ship or
plane part
33 -tape
arade
34 nlernal

DOWN
1 Urgeon
2 Mr. Moto"s
reply
(2 wds.)
3 Quit.
so to speak
4 Command
to Fldo
Not allow
6 Where
Japan is
7 Son of Odl~
8 Dollar
fraction
9 Hundreds of

scratch
42 Slatlstlcs
44 PoiniS

of eonver~
gence

45 Peeve
46 Like
vinegar
47 Smidgen

garden?

48 Wool cap

28 Bulruah

mlns.

. 35 famod
sloryteller
(2 wds.)
37 loOks after
38 Is bold
• enough
40 Pollop
43 Salt moas.
44 Keg-party
site

41 Need

22 Muse
cil history
23 Ow!
24 Winged
gOddess
26 Run In
neutral
27 Early

s

a

21 Devotee

30 Unpredlcl- 49 A thousand

10 Sprint rival
11 Stadium

able.
G' s
32 MD
51 Dull routine
walkwav
assistants
12 Big waves
36 Soph .
17 Goodall
and jr.
. subjecl
39 Fencer' s
blade
19 Move up the
.ladder
40 Superman's
20 Breaks out
mom

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebfl!y Cipr.er CT')'PIOQra!M are Cleat.OO trom QLJOtaMns by lamous DeOOif! pasI and prese~!
·
Each letter mtM c1oner stanas '1)1" anr:'llher
Today"s r:lue· ·A equals P
" I

X NV

PNSY

PNSYDZTH .

AN C ' 0

KNXKTSDBLZ
PNS

0 YZ

OXX

A N X' G

OKKZR~

OAWBYOGBNX.

ZLBAZXKZ

00

GM0 G

V N X A Z Y H S· T .
TOXAZYO

PREVIOUS SOLUT ION - "Doubt i&gt; the •eslibule wh ich all must pass belore
they can enter into the temple ol wisdo~ • ~ C C Colton
,

AstroGraph
-

'llirlh&lt;III\Y:

By Bernice Bede Oao l

accepting applications for a Per- Diem

pioneer
54 To) 55 Neck and
neck

organ

North

Thursday, Jan. 26, 2006

Pl~asant Valley Hospital is currently
2002 Olds Alero. Silver, 4dr,
auto, air, CD, full power.
remote entry, 81 ,000 miles.
$4 ,850. i740)388·0332 or
(614)562.0204 cell.

10 used homes under
$3,000.00. Must Go! Cal l
"Elaine 740-385-0698

,,

I

H El&lt;.. 1'.1"-HT H~E .

Parkershurg/Raven ~wood/Jack.&lt;oo n

HoMtS

West
Pass
Pass

lhHI·Iull
10 Soh

r.

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

G

View photos/info online.
New H~en . WV, 4
Bedroom. 2 Bath. 2 Car
Garage, Outbuildings, Close
to town. PRICED TO SELL!
Codo 6505 or calli~04)882-

A K J 10 9 4
10 8 6
K 8

Opening lead: •

(740) 992-0496

CONSTRICnlll

• QJt 063
... 7 4 2

South

Licensed Home -Builder

Repair
Pomeroy,OH
on State Rt. 124

QJ 32

A5 42
8 6 '

... J 3

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling .

3 miles west of

5

•
•
•

Owner

1

•

•

FIX: 140-143-1214

C huck Wolfe

ROGER HVSELL i
GARAGE

7 6 2
A K 5 4

Soulh

CONSTRUCTION~

Rick Johnson, Jr.
Owner
Insured
Free Est.

. East

West

WOLFE~ .

Complete Tr.. Cere
ACE TREE SERVICE

·

MONTY

. 1'11111
....IMYIIIIIIVP
WICUIIIIml riiiii@*IIIIIUs.CI•

Units 10x20 10x12

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetlme guar·
antee. Local references fur·
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. i740i 4460870, Rogers Basemen\
Waterproofing.

"---Gooo&gt;·-··--'

IIIIi ~~~~~en . .

740·992·6396
.
740•992·2272

I Auto &amp; Truck

AID FIIIIICW "
SERVICES

3

• g 7
• 9 7
olo AKQt 095

~- P.D.Btl119
llfdle..n.Ohlt
"ur.:} Plllle:740-143-5214

IOllr .....

s so.

fNSURANCE

01 2.1 06

• Q8

·&amp; ROCIY HUPP

1 Chhchats

5 Cookie

12 less

North

URII

48 JapaneBI!
mat
50 Beetho..n 'a
Third
~2 Cold place
53 Geometry

sweater

I

1989 Ford Club Wagon XLTTHE MAPLES
1T. 99k miles, well main·
ment. quiet area. suitable for 100 E. MEMORIAL DRIVE
lalnod .
$2800.
Call
740 441 -9282.
POMEROY
1 adult, private driveway
wtcarport,
new
WID.
740-992-7022
Bulldog puppios 1or· salo.
MOTORCYQJ;li/
(740)446-4782.
Subsidized Residential
$500 each. 4 males and 1
4 WHEFLERS ·
Housing b 50 yeere of
female. Vet c~ecked. Call
1ST MON . FREE RENT
"illtt
and older. PRIORITY 1740)452-8468 or i740)450· 2003 Suzuki 4wD ' VInson
WITH PAID DEP. NEW
SOO ATV with 34 miles.
GIVEN TO AF'PUCANTS ' 8755.
ELLMVIEW
WITH INCOME AT OR
-~---'---TOWNHOUSEIAPTS
BELOW
Full blooded Husky puppies $4900.
CARMICHAEL
NOW LEASING!
$10,900 1or 1 person or
for sole $300-450, 4 males, EQUIPMENT.
(740)446SPACIOUS
1 female.
2412 .
· s12.450 ror 2 porsons.
-------2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
.Maximum inoome effective Also
AKC
&amp;
APAI Honda 700
BOTH FLATS &amp;
Magna ' •cyl.
Regislered Siberian Husk"1
02111/2005 for 1 person
E
11 1
c,on d l11 on
TOWNHOUSES .
$18,150or$20,7001or2
stud available tor breeding. · xce en
Call( 7401707 _1964.. (613)365·1928 or seen al
AVAILABLE
2
persdns.
3208 Lewis st. Pt. Pleasant
•ALL ELECTRIC
·
HUD/20218
M
"CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
us! meet
crl!e·
·sTOVE, -REF..
ria for
cofT!posi"DISHWASHER
MANAGED BY Silll8rheels, ,
,
• •
"GARBAGE DISPOSAL
Console Organ- Gulbransen
lncorpo raled, A Really
BUDGET
TRANSMIS·
"WIND BLINDS
Company
1151 kw double manual.
SIONS, Alllypes. (740)245"CEILING FANS
I
G
1
h
_
Equal Housing Opportunity
real or ome or smal
"WATER, SEWAGE, &amp;
church . $950 1 (740)256· ~ 677 or 740 645 "7400
"TRASH INCLUDED
Twin Rivers Tower is accep1- 1428. See bc-sales.com for
CAMPERs &amp;
PETS CONDITIONAL
ing applications for waiting pictures.
MoroR H~
i304)882-3017
list for Hud-subsized, 1· br,
apartment , ca ll 675·6679 Several Violins for sale. 2000 Dutchman, Class ·c. ·
Starting at $100 each. Call Motor Home. Steeps 6·8
EHO
(740)379-2754.
SPACE
~

Need 10 s.ell your home? 18A, nicely fu rnished apar1·

advertise "any

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

In th'e year ahead. you shOuld be better
able to e11press your thoughls and ideas to
rnftuent ial contai::ls who can open doors
tor you because yo1/ll have developed a
clear plan ot action th at they know w1ll
work. SucceSs is highly likely.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) -Things rn
· general should work out fortunately for you
today, but th is won't be due to pure tuck .
· Good ,things will haPpen for you because
you'll use yt~ur smarts to get what you go
after
.PISCES (Feib. 20-March 20)- Don't feel
anllious or uneasy about somelhing
another nas ' volun te ered to do tor you
today, thinking rl will make you look weak.
On the contrary, 1t'll make you look very
deserving
ARIES (March. 21 ·Aprrl 19) - GQ forward
w1th the knowledge that you have what ,rt
takes to accomplish your goal today when
involved in ,;i competitiVe Situation . When
you concentrate On wmnmg. the odds wrll
be nl your favor.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - You m1ght
be a b1t slow in gett1ng started today &lt;;~ue
to takrng lt'le t1ma to cons1der all your
options and gellrng your plans irl gear.
Once you start ro lling'. however. the results
will be ·great.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - Although
your first rda~s ma~ not be your best ones
today, you 'll be tully prepS.red to mak:e the
necessary adjustments as needed . Your
second thoughts w111 prove to be much
wiser.
CANCER tJune 21-July ·22) - Hems you
purchase on the run today· may n·eed to be
exchanged later on. but when you take
ample time to do some Compan sqn shop·
'ping, you'll end up getbng exactly what
you want.
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) ~ Parsons With
whom you'U be Involved _\ n a ono-on-one
exchange ol ideas· today Will imitate your
modus operandt. It'll behoove you to be
easygo1ng, so tha t your counterpart wtll do
hkewtse.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 221 - Someone
you know on a lnendly .bas1s may be rn a
pos1t10n today to open some doors for you
that could g1Ye your career a boost, but
th1 s 1nd1V1dua! may not know that you want
help 'uri!ess you ask.
'
liBRA !Sept. 23-0cl 23) - Votce your
Ideas or tnlentlons IO a tnend today belore
]Unip1ng rn and dOing somoth1ng that your
pal might'find d1sturb1ng. You II be able to
expla1n th 1ngs so that the a11 wtll be
cleared.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 221 · Today. you
must be very careful not to· 1ump to con-cluSIOns conc er n1ng a !am tly member
tlofore all the tacts are rn· and analyzed.'
Your early 1ntormauon m1ght be either lif{llted or distorted
SAGITTARIUS [ Nov 23:Dec 21)- Thos IS
an excellent day for all types ot Intellectual
~ C IIV!hes . but your tempo mtghl be A h1t too
energetiC at 11rst to put your thoughts to
good use 0!"1ce you relax ypu II accom·
phsh a lot
CAPRICORN .(Oi:!c 22-Jan 19) - Your
possibilities lpr personal accumulatoon are
excellftnt today. prov1ded you recognoze
your cpportun111es as they develop Onre
you do ycu rt know exactly what to do w11t1
th em
·

SOUP TO NUTZ

Tll.IT PAll!
PUULU

~crrRJl~-lt~zr~e ::!~

- - - - - - . : . ·. IGittcl lty CUY • . POIJ.AH - - - - - - -

0 Reorronge · letlert

of ~~.
four scra mbled words be·
low to form four slcnpl&amp; wc rds.

T

A YDEH

Q,crhear d in

W0 R G I.

I I I" I

I

"Inter

ofti\.':e memos arc more often
written not Lo' in funn the
reader.

hut lQ protect tl1e

A~11PRI

' I I I I ·1'

e

PI1 1N i NUM![R£0 LETTEI!3 ,N

mm

SQUARES

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 112-1&gt;116

Unfold - Atlas - Jingo -- Repose - GET PAlD
One old timer laughing lu ht ~ friend. ··A clue~
factory

is

where people

PAID!"

ARLO &amp; JANIS

make faces

.

and

(i ET

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentin~l.com

Wednesday, January 25

2006

Steelers' Super Bowl uniform choice bucks tradition
Super Bowl and the first to
knock off the No. I, No.2 ami
No . 3 teams in a conference to
PITISBURGH- To coach get there. They have won in
Bill Cowher, 'the Pinsburgh successive
weeks
at
Steelers simply look right in Cincinnati, Indianapolis and
white .
· Denver.
The Steelers will huck years
The Steelers also will go
of tradition and wear their against another tradition by
while away uniforms · in the not llying to Detroit until
Super Bowl against Seanle. Monday ·- normally, teams
even though they .are designat- travel t.o the Super Bowl site
ed by the NFL as the home on the Sunday before the
team and could wear their game. With Pittsburgh located
more imposing black jersey so close to Detroit. Cowher
tops.
said ~~ere waS no reason to go
The black jerseys ami gold any earlier since the tirst big
pants are the Steelers· tradi- Super Bowl-related event is
tional ·Jook, and numerous Tuesday's media day.
sports teams have 'switched to
But it was Cowher's deciblack uniforms in recent years sion to wear white that caused
because thev believe it creates the biggest st ir in a town
a more intimidating presence. where it's difficult to drive
Cowher made the choice bx past more than one or two
himself and without consult- houses without seeing a black
ing with ownership. saying, and gold Terrible Towel or
"We're not playing at Heinz banner. Cowher became perField so, in my mind, it's an plexed at the constant quesaway game."
tioning about the issue at his
The Steelers' unprecedented weekly news conference,
success as a road team no finally saying, ·'You want to
doubt factored into Cowher's know what shoes r m wearing,
decision to wear white for the too.')",
.
fourth consecutive game. The
··1didn't think it was that big
Steelers are the only sixth- a deal what jersey color you ' re
seeded team to reach the wearing, " Co wher said.
BY ALAN ROBINSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photo
Pittsburgh Steelers coach Bill Cowher faces the media at his
weekly press 'conference Tuesday in Pittsburgh. The Steeters
will buck years of tradition and wear tJ1eir white road uniforms
in the Super Bowl against Seattle, even though they are designated .bY the NFL as the home team and. could wear their
·
more imposing black jerseys.
.
"Maybe that's just me, OK? it's a sensitive issue to people,
To me, if you're not playing at I'm sorry."
Heinz Field it's an away
Sensitive issue, maybe . But
game. I think anyone can could it be superstition?
understand that rationale. If
"We.'ve been playing. well

last three weeks on road, and especially since the Steelers
this is another fourth game on arc favored agamst Seattle
the road - I don't know if after being underdogs the last
two weeks.
that's superstitious," he said.
Uniform
issues aside.
''They're just as hungry as
Cowher effectively revealed we are," Cowher said. ·'It's a
the Steelers' theme for the golden opportunity for us, bul
nex.t two weeks, and it's a don't underestimate the chalfamiliar one-· we ain't done lenge that's in front' of us ....
nothing yet. Despite rhe You realize how hard 11 ts to
Steelers' 3-for-3 AFC road get there, but don ' t lose sight
sweep, he said any Super that the go'al is to win a chamBowl finalist' s season is pionship. ·
defined by what it does in this
"N obody remember&gt; that
game and not. how it gets you lost a Super Bowl, they
.
remember who won a 'Super
there.
·
"The deal isn't done yet,'' ~e Bowl."
said. "This is going to be our
Cowher did reveal one other
\Oughest challenge. Seanle. is thought he had after the
playing at an extremely high Steelers ended a streak of
level, and we haven't accom- .three consecutive losses in the
plished anything yet. That's AFC title game by beating
the thing to keep in mind.... it Denver 34-17 Sunday.
.
all can change in one play. one
"Thank go9dness I'm not
quarter, one bad game."
goi ng back to Hawaii," he
The Steelers know all about said.
that; having lost four.AFC title
The .losing coach in each
games at home and a ,'Iuper conference . championship .
Bowl in the last dozen sea- game .handles the Prl\ Bowl
sons, gaining them a reputa- teams, so Cowher has coached
tion of beiQg a team that can't the AFC four times since the
stand up to the challenge of 1994 season. This is his secbig games. While this road .run ond time in the Super Bowl;
may be altering that theory, the · Steelers lmt 27-17 to
Cowher understands it will be . · Dall~s in January 1996 as a
stamped on his te11111 again - . IWO·lOUchdown underdog.

Annual prom
style revue at Ariel
this Sunday, A6 ·

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

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Slam
from Page Bl
Indiana shot just ll.-for-3R
in the second half and lost its
·fourth in a row.
'·We' re nor a very good
basketball ream right now.''
said Carli sle. "This was very·
disappointing . We couldn't
hit a bull in the butt with a
bass fiddle. The ball not
going in in the third was
key.''

O'Neal. who has been outspoken about Artest's uncertain future , refused to use it
as an excus~.
" I don't care about dist~ac ­
tions or trades," O 'Neal said .
· "We are miss ing one · player.
Anybody who says that bothers them. they have to be a
better pro Tht s is the hand
we've been dealt. and we go
play it." ·
Zydrunas llgauskas added
18. points .. Sasha Pavlo ~ic a·
season-high 16 and Drew
Gooden 14 with I0 rebounds
for the Cavaliers. who had
little trouble wnh one of their
Cenlral Di vi..,ion riVab .

Before the game. James
met for the firq time with
Robcrt"m . the Hall of Fa mer
with whiom he is often com pared.
"Hi. Oscar Robertson.'' the

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SPORTS
• Cleveland soars past
Hawks. See Page 81 .

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MAKS!l .-11.1.

Marshall (7-9) at No. 9 WVU (14-3)
Dawn. after averagino 3.4 points and hitting
just 12 3-pointers in 4Z attempts, .went fivefor-six from· behind the arc againS\ WVU last
xear, including making three in the final four
mmutes. Hamtlton also went five-of-stx from
3-point range.
.
"It was a memorable game (last yea~). a
great game," Whitted said. "Both teams were
playing from emotion. We 'weren 't thinking
about it. We were just having a good time
playing basketball. A lot of people on campus
are asking about it and hoping to get tickets.
It's an exciting time. No one wants to get
embarrasse.d in front of the whole state. Both
teams want to step up their game.''
_
West Virginia enters with a 12-game winning streak, its longest since it won 22 consecutive games in 1988-89 and currently the
nation's longest streak. It has beaten two top
10 teams and won at No. 17 UCLA on Jan. 21.
The Mountaineers are in the top 10 for the
first time since they were No. 8 on March 2,
1982.
"We've played some great teams already
this year." Jirsa said. "And now, another
ranked team . in West Virginia coming up. So
we've got to !)ear down and play a very good
game Wednesday to be in that position we like·
to be in. We' re really focused on the defensive
end."
West Virginia has the Big East's top scoring
tandem in Naismith candidates Pi,tsnogle and
· Mike Gansey. Both average 19.8 points per
game.
Marshall is led by Patton's 13.8 points.
Travis Aikens and Joe Miles both average
11 .5 and 11.3 points, respectively.
"They say il's going to be one of the biggest
games I've ever played in," said Marshall
point guard Chris Ross, a junior college transfer. ''It 's sold out and it's a great atmosphere
where the fans really get into it. We're mally
trying to get ready because it's going to be
noi sy from the beginning.:·

lege nd said, extending his in when tempers flared durhand to the 21-year-old ing
the
thir.d
under
superstar.
Cleveland's basket when
"LeBron James,'' the · kid Indiana's Jeff Foster commit· said.
ted a hard foul' on Gooden.
· Robertson. the only player The
Cavaliers
forward
to average a triple-double' for grabbed a handful of Foster's
a season. was not yet in his jersey . before . O'Neal.
courtside seat in the first Pavlovic
and
others
quarter when James fed exchanged words, pushes and
Gooden with a gorgeo us no- shoves.
look pass before Pavlovic
"What skirmish?" joked
threaded ,him a bounce pass Gooden , 'sporting a cut on the
for ope of James ' signature bridge of his nose. "There ,...
windmill dunk&gt;-.
were a lot of ski rmishes out
James began toying with there."
hi s seventh career triple-douNotes: Robertson, who had
. ble right away. getti ng I 0 ' 181 career triple-doubles,
points. four assists and three thinks Jat)·ies can ohe day
rebounds in the first 12 min- average a triple-double for 82 ·
utes. James didn' t score in ga me s. "The key are the
the second period but tacked rebounds,'' the Big 0 said to
on three more a~s i 'its in a a nodding James. ''He can do
ragged quarter for both clubs. it. Eventually, I think he
Indiana's troubles contin- wi ll." ... The Cavs are 10-1 at
ued in the third as the Racers home against teams with a
needed 7:23 to score their record Of .500 or better. ...
first two tield goals and they Pavlovic made hi s second
had just seven points in the
first 9:54 before a 6-0 run straight start as the latest
matie it 69-51 entering the guard to fill in for the injured
Larry Hughes, who is ou) at
fourth .
"I don't think we've had a least another month followdefensive performance like ing finger surgery. The Cavs
this." James said. "We came are 4-7 without Hughes ....
in wnh a defensive 'mind -set James mother. Gloria. sat in
thai we wanted .to get stops. her usual baseline seat just
Even in the games we lost on day s after ;he was arrested in
the trip. we played some Akroh on several charges.
good -defense. hut we just including drunken driving
were n't .able to hit a big and disorderly conduct. She
shot. "
·
pleaded . innocent and will
Arrest would ha ve fit right have a pretrial hearin g Feb . 6.

Needle to somehow tly above
"We're not :'laying •it Heinz
Ford Field on Super Sunday. ·Field so, in my. mimi. it's an
And what the Steelers (14-5) away game,'' Cowher said of
If ever a Super Bowl was won't have is the opportunity his 4-point favorites.
made to be played m a home to shatter yet another oppo"We· ve been playing well
stadium, Steelers-Seahawk~ is. nent's air of in vincibility at the last three weeks on the
it.
·home after winning at road. and th,is is afourth game
Just think: The .road warriors Cincinnati, Indianapolis and on the road - I don' t know if
against the un'vanquished Denver inthe playoffs.
that 's·s(IJlCrslitiou s."
hosts. A dominant sixth seed
Too bad.
·so if Cowher is S(i comfonneedlng one more away victoCertainly Seahawks owner able taki ng his team on the
ry, and needing it at the NFL's Paul Allen, who raised the 12th road. why not switch the site to
toughest venue for visitors.
man tlag at Qwest Field before Seattle and give everyone the
How juicy that would be..
the rout of Carolina for the delicious matchup the champiSorry,- folks, but the big NFC championship, wouldn't onship game deserves 0
game is so BIG it needs to be mind another home game.
· That's pure fan'tasy. The
"If you're a fan of NFL foot - showdown will come in
planned years in advance. And
2006 was reserved for Ford ball, how great is it to be able Detroit.
Field in Detroit, where thou- to root on your team to win the
Still, it's · been a lo ng time
sands of Pitt~burgli fans figure . Super Bowl.,.. he said . ''It just since the two Super Bowl
to drive in and paint the city doesn't get any better than that teams have had such dtverse
black and gold.
in football. It's incredible.
home-road characteristics. Of
Many, perhaps most of
No more special than in the course. without their skills
them. won ·r have tickets, Steel City, which has seen it&gt; away from Pittsburgh, the
though. So the Seahawks share of big NFL games. Bill wi ld-card Steelers would have
could get something of a fair Cowher has led the Steelers to had qo shot at getting this far.
shake in the stands on Feb. 5. six
AFC
championship
And had the Seahawks been
What the Seahawks (15-3 matchups in his 14 seasons as any less dominant at home,
overall, including I0-0 at coach, But they are a mere 1-4 they easily could have gone
Qwest Field) won't have is the at home in those g·ames.
the way of the three AFC divi" 12th man," the boisterous
So another road trip would- sion winners who lost to
crowd that every player and n'l be such a big deal for a Pittsburgh in the flOSiseason.
roach credited with providing team that is 9-2 awav from
But here the~ are. And there
that extra impetus to get to the Heinz F'ield. In fact, aithough they will be, on a neutral tield
NFL title game. One player the Steelers technicall y are the in ~troit. And. heck . the
even claimed (mischievously home team for the Super Bowl. Seahawks were 5-3 away from
and anonymously) that he - it 's the AFCs year to be the Seattle. with the last loss in a
expected the 12th man flag host- they chose to don road meaningless game at Green
that sits atop the Seattle Space whites.
·
Bay.

BY BARRY WILNER
AssociArEo PRESS

Meigs County Visitors Guide

Fourth building on Middleport block now.condemned

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Osa Marie Palmer, 63
• Oris L. Smith, 75

INSIDE

.

Mullins condemned it, is most often
BREEO@MYDAilYSENTINEL.COM
remembered as a dental office.
Mayor Sandy l.annarelli. who owns
MIDDLEPORT - . Another build- the building in the center of the block
ing on Middleport's North Second of three condemned in December,
Avenue has been condemned, form- said she asked Mullins to inspect the
ing a block of four · abandoned and building after she nearly fell through
unsafe storefronts in the heart of the the roof while discussing the.demolidowntown shopping district.
tion of the block with a contractor.
The owner of this building, Jack
Mullins said he deemed the buildCarsey of Haye s Realty, said ing "structurally unsound.'' because
Wepnesday he plans to repair the of water damage . Mullins said the
building.
damage could have been the result of
Middleport Building Inspector water from the fire in the building
Randy Mullins told Middleport adjacent to it. He said the lloors in the
Village Council Monday evening the building are unsafe, the roof must be
bttilding owned by Jack Carsey of repaired and other code enforcement
Hayes Realty. located between an . issues must be addressed if the buildundamaged apartment house and the . ing is to remain standing.
~uilding owned by Rex and Brenda
"(Carsey) ·is already working on
Darst damaged by fire in September roof repairs, and has indicated he
and condemned in December, has plans to repair the building ami bring
been unsafe and ordered repaired or it up to, code," Mullins said. "As part
demolished.
of the process. he will need to meet
Carsey has been given 90 days to with the · planning commission and
either repair the building to make it council as work progresses ...
safe or demolish it, Mullins said . The
. building, vacant and for" rent until
Please see Building. A5

This building on
North Second
Avenue in

Middleport has
been condemned by the
village buolding
mspector. Randy
Mulli.ns. It is the
fourth buildin~
on the block to
be deemed
unsafe .
Blian J.

Middleport
grants ·
income tax
amnesty

interest charges on unpaid
income taxes.
Penalty
and
interest
remained·
charges
have
WEATHER
unch~anged
si nce
1988.
Monday night.
cou ncil
appro~ed
increasing the
half-perce nt interest and
""
half-percent penalty to three
percen·t and six percent.
respectively .. Council also
approved a six-pe rcent
penalty .for those employers
who do not file tax reports in
a timely fashion .
.
"lncrca:-,i ng our col lec tions
and enforcing the village tax
Details on Page AS
code and inc.reasing penalties and intere&gt;t on unpaid
taxe s is the on ly means
Middleport has of increasing
its income tax revenue ,"
Ca ntrell said, •·without pass2 SECTIONS - 16 PAGES
ing a levy inc reas in g the
Calendars
A3 one-percent tax now being
Classifieds
ss-6 collected ."
Anvone
with
earned
Comics
B7 Income who lives or works in
the vi llage is required to file.
Dear Abby
. A3 an iricome titx return wfth the
vill age. Cantrel l said. includEditorials
A4 ing
those who pay income
Obituaries
As tax in another vi llag·e. Tht"e
who do li ve in Middleport
A6 and p~y income tax elsePlaces to go
B Section where are not req uired to pay
Sports
income tax . in Middleport.
AB but m.ust file a return.
Weather
© ~ob6 Ohio Va lley PublishlnJ( Co.

Please see Amnesty. AS
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Open house held at Meigs~
new administration building

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SERGENT

POMEROY Overall
there ar~ 117 new cases of
cancer annually diagnosed in
Meigs County and 64 cancer
deaths. and although · the
incidence rate uf cancer is
be low the state a1 erage. the
O\'erall cancer mnrta litv rate
fo r the county is Joo;e the
stare average.

The'e statistics are according to the latest statewide
cancer study done by the
American .Cancer Society
I ACS l ·and . The
Ohio
Department
of
Health
I I ODH) The ;~udv is c'alled
"Ohio Cancer Facts and
Fi'~ure s cOOS ...
.At Jaq 11eek\ ri1eeting of
the . M e i~.., Count\' Cance r
Task force. mcmbe~s of the
ACS nr ·southeastern Ohio
1~-----­

HOEFLiCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - ,;\n open .
house to show off the new
administrative offices of the
Meigs local School District
in . the renovated Salisbury
building was held Tuesday
night preceding the. regular
Board of Education meeting .
· NUJi1erous residents turned
out to get a look at the faci li ties which marked the final
.phase of a massive building
Imp rovement program which
the district began more than
five years ago. The ,high
school has be~n renovated. u
new elementary school has
been built along Route 12.J
near Rutland. the Meigs
. Middle School has bec'n constructe&lt;,! on· the hill overlooking the high se houl. and a ne"
sports wmplex was build on
the .high ~chool campus.
· The ·ea'st wing of the
Salisbury building h'b spacious otTke.:: .... for the su perin tendent. tic'asurer. board or

Sonshine Circle
turns noodles into
I roof repair money
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BY

BETH

SERGENT

BSERGE r--T ~tz' M'I" D ~ L~

SENTINEl:. COM

PQ\1EROY - :--;nudb
may bt: ta,t y but th~) arc::n"t
rtft~ n tlwu~ht of a:-. u~c;-ful
tunk'' ~~1u·r~ u'in~ J wet
nnodk 1\1 beat ;.nmenne 1
hO\\ t'\CL rCI..' t'lll 1\ IHIOd]e:-.
\\ere qu;tl' u,eful '~hen bei11g

Bill Spaun presents to Norman Humphreys. Meigs Local Board of 'old Ill mi''' S 1.000 for root
Education president. a photograph of t11e old girls softball f1eld · ,rq1air at the \1u lberry
take n at the last game in 2000 before the fie ld ·was disbanded Communit~ Center a.., a gift
fn1111 tlw Snn,hine Circle ..
to make way for construction of the Meigs Middle School.
The Sonsh inc Cii·cie. ba,~d
Bcthan1 lnited
eUucation. · and clerical per- stonlge space . Drew \\'eb&gt;ter '1 t tih'
\-kthoJi,t
Chur(h-in
Dorcu,.
sonne l. a~ v.:e! l as ·a i'eceptilln Post 39. Am~num Leg.i•'n.
am.! waiting art•u fo r Yisitor&lt;.. continue-.·tn le;.l:-.t' tht' £\ 11111..1 - ()ft&lt;-n . . cit . . . homemade llO(land aJey~wte -; tor~lgc '-~pal'L'. · sium and kitchen ~t rr:t~-l)f the d lc ~ :I" a funJra i..,er for lol:al
l;h ;\rt tl l'" ·
In thL' we ... t wtn~ are the building.
E.\tcrlor chang~' inr luJt• a
La'l .\ ca1 the nmn~\. rai:-.L·U
r.L..,truolll..,, a meeting room. a
.
break 1\~om . •md adJitinnal
Please see Meigs, A5
Please see 5onsJ.1ine. AS

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,.,,,... ...-...

BUFFET

II LUN~H
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$2.00 Off!T.\No Adults

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ofi.lNER
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$4.00 Off/Two Adults

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1o&amp;~\:~AB8n'i-r llsAf.ftiJ~.A ~u~feTIIsAf.ft'Jr;'~ P~feTI
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$4.00 Off/T\No Adults

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L ( ..., .. , ,,,. ..... ,.,_ -. -.. _.,,

'K.•

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The Dail Sentinel
~--

BY BETH

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENT INEL.COM

Please see Cancer. AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

$2.00 Off/Y\No Adults

----·------

R~d/photo

Meigs .cancer
mortality rate
higher than
state average

BY BRIAN J. REED
• survivor of mine
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
explosion out of coma.
See Page A2
MIDDLEPORT - Those
who
live or work in
• For the Record.
Middleport who have not
See Page A3 .
filed a village income tax
• TOPS recognizes
return in years past can do so
through
April 15 without
weight losers ·
paying penalties and interest.
See Page A3
· Middleport Village Council
• Tired all the.time?
has au thorized .a .tax amnesty
program through the April 15·
Energy boost needed.
fili ng deadline. at the request
See Page A3
of
the
Income
Tax
• Seven adopted children Administrator. Carol Howe
Charlene Hoefllch/ photbs
killed in fiery Florida crash. Cantrell. Council also Nancy• Carnahan, secretary to Superintendent William Buckley, conducts a tour at the open
increased the penalty and house for the new adntinistrative offices of the Meigs Local School District.
See Page A7

INDEX

Dave Harris or Brenda Davis
992-2 155

.

BY BRIAN J. REED

'

DON'T MISS OUT ON HAVINB YOUR BUSINESS
OR ORBANIZATION INClUDED

"'"' ·"'ld"il)"'"lio,..l.&lt;·ono

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TilliRSDi\V , .JA~l : i\IH' :.!6, :.! OIIb

511 CENTS • VuL 55, No. 115

No. 9 WVU prepares for Marshall Steelers-Seahawks: a Super Bowl
that shouldn't be at a neutral site·

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) - West
Virginia acknowledges that it had trouble getting motivated to play Marshall last season.
Don't look for euh~r team to struggle with
that intangible this year . 0fter WVU center
Kevin Pittsnugle guaranteed a win.
''We'll win:· he said. •·we're going to do it.
l have faith in my teammates., I know coach
doesn't like it, but 1' m going to do it any~ay.
I guarantee a win .
·
"Mysdf and the other seniors have a pact.
We know we're going to· win. There is no
doubt. I gua rantee i(.''
Marshall coach Ron Jirsa didn't ninch when
told of Pittsnogle 's prediction.
·'We've got a lot of respect for West
Virginia," .Jirsa said Tueiday: "They're playing real well rig ht now. They 're ranked (9th)
and rightly so. And we're going to have to
play a. good game. hopefully to be in it at the
end."
,
But Pittsnogle's remarks likely won't sit
well with Mountaineers coach John Beilein,
especially after then-No. 24 West Virginia was
upset; 59-55, by the Thund~ring Herd, then 2IO, last season. Thi s season, the No. 9
Mountaineers ( 14-3) are again heavily
favored against a Marshall team with a losi ng
record (7-9).
"They are much improved from last season." Beilein said. "But -I'm not sure how
much beiter we want them to be. Every game
has come down to the last possession, the last
.30 seconds.''
In their last three meetings. neither team has
won by more than .four points and each of the
past seven Capital Classics has been decided
by less than ., 0 points. Two .have gone into
overtime. WVU leads the all-time series 24-9.
"It 's a great atmosphere on the court, seeing
one side in green and white 'lnd the other in
blue and gold," Marshall guard Tre Whitted
said. ''I'm looking forward to going to
Charleston and hopefully taking care of business."
Marshall , in its first season in Conference
USA, has lost its last three games. The
Thundering Herd let a 51-39 lead over No. 14
George Washington with 7:30 left slip away
and lost in overtime. 79-73.
"They had that game," Bei.lein said. ''They
have more senior leader~ hip now. Mark Patton
is a player. And thank good ness Ronny Dawn
and 1\.W. Hamilton aren't there any more .".

Governor to focus on
better preparing students
for college, work, AS

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                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
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    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="16019">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="16018">
              <text>January 25, 2006</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="5">
      <name>thomas</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
