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Page BS • The Dhlly Sentinel

'

Patrols, radar increase on
highway to Super Bo~l
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Super Bowl runs through
Ohio for Pittsburgh Steelers
fans - at least those driving
to the game in Detroit
The Ohio Turnpike is
quickest route for the 4 1/2hour, 285-mi le trip from the
Steel City to the Motor City.
With that in mind. the Ohio
State Highway Patrol is gearing up for the anticipated
Black-and-Gold caravan.
State
troopers · have
increased
their
patrols,
including more radar to help

enforce the speed limit , said
Sgt. Tony Bradshaw, a
spokesp1an for the highway
patrol.
·
,
He insisted it isn't a plot by
disgruntled
Cleveland
Browns and Cincinnati
Bengals fans
to
slap
Pittsburgh fans with speeding
tickets.
··we· re out there to make
sure traffic is running smoothly regard less of whatever
alliances someone may have,"
he said. "We want everyone
to get to where they 're going

smoothly and safely."
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette cartoonist Rob Rogers noted in
his online sketch journal that
he saw seven troopers with
radar guns when he made the
trip Monday afternoon.
Turnpike
spokeswoman
Lauren f1akos said the agc,ncy
will increase staffing at a few
key interchanges leading into
Michigan to collect tolls.
Pittsburgh fans taking the
most direct route wi II puy
$6.55 for a one-way toll.

Hasselbeck enjoying Super Bowl
DETROIT (AP)
Oh, Roeth)isberger was ·asked
brother. This was the 3,456th what he Jislikes abou t going
question already this week play ing away fro m P1ttshurgh
asking
unuer-appreciated for a· fourth c-onsec utive
Seattle about being a four- game .
.
point underdog to . Pittsburgh
"My dog, .. he said, speakin the Super Bowl.
ing fondly of the Rottweiler
But instead of the rote, pat named Zeus that stayed back
response of "whatever," Mall in Pittsburgh. "If I cou ld have
• Hasselbeck used the tired my doo.here it would be perquery during media day feet. abut Coach Cow her
Tuesday to add to a season m · wouldn' t let me bring him."
It 's al l laughs now for
which he has risen from
.unknown to the NFC passing Roethlisberger, after a playoff
leader and Pro Bowl starter.
flameout and acknowledged
He put ,standup comedian "fatigue ended his rookie seaon his resume.
son of 2004.
With his team cap on backIt 's also all fun for
wa rd.
the
dry-witted Hasse lbeck. thanks to 24
Hasselbeck exci ted ly spread tou chdown passes, just nine
his arms wide to pantomime interceptions - · his careerexc itement. His high voice - low for an entire i"nj ury-free
"You kn ow. kind of like ... a season - and a 66 percent
girl." according to his playful compi&lt;!tion rate.
antagonist, teammate Robbie
''It al l came together this
Tobedc -. climbed higher.
.s·easnn and. he has had his best
·"Do we in the locker room season." HolmgreAsaid.
even say, 'OK. We're favored
But it wasn't always a gas
by 2 1/2 points. All right !'? for Hasselbei:k in Seattle.
No, no one does that ."
In 2001. the joke was on
Hasselbeck said. shaking lli s him .
·
bald head fo r emphasis.
Holingren. in hi s third sea"As
Coach
(Mike) son coaching Seattle after
Holmgren likes to say, all that leavino Green Bav, had just
stuff is minutia. I don 't know tradect"with the Packers to get
what that means, but I hear Hassdbeck to be his starting
him say it."
quarterback . He had j ust finNext came the inevitable ished hi s third season learning
intrusion by roving t~ l evision behind Brett Favre .
"reporter" and comedian
Hasselbeck had zero career
Gilbert Gottfried.
starts. He was a sixth-round
"Oh ,
hi
Gi lbert," draft choice from Boston
Hasselbeck droned. feigning Col lege. Holmgren 's Packers
annoya.nce.
were the onl v team to call him
The comedian loud ly asked for a pre-drah tryout - yet he
Hasselbeck for a joke.
now acknowledges he was
Without hesitation , the arrooa nt and difficult to
quarterback said: "There are coacl1.
three kinds of people in this
But
Holmgren
loved
world. :rhere are people ·who Hasselbeck 's intelligence.
know how to count. And there
Those brains got a beating
are people who don't.''
in hi s second game as
Silence. And blank stares Seattle's
200 I
starter.
-even from Gottfried.
·Phil adelphia hit tile new quar"Anybody else?" he asked. terback so often in a 27-3
"That was pretty good, eh7 Eag les' win the Seahawks
Just made that up. Thank you. almost had to peel him off the
Tharik you very much."
turf at old Veterans Stadium.
'Hasselbeck was n·t the on ly
The following week, he
quarterback crack ing jokes strained a groi n muscle. He
during Amateur Hour at Ford sat the nex.t two ga 01eS behind
Field.
Trent Pilfer. Hasselbeck
Pittsburgh' s
Ben eve ntually returned for nine

Wednesday, February l,

www.mydailysentinel.com

more starts- live were losses- before he hurt his passing shoulder.
"Instead of people sayin~,
' Hey, I feel bad for you,' tt
felt more like people were
applauding ... No, it didn't
feel that way, it WAS that
way," Hasselbeck iraid. "lt
was tough. It was very, very
toug h.''
..
Before 2002, the Seahawks
.kept Pilfer from leaving as a
free agent by promlSing he
would start. But in the first
p~eseason game, Pilfer hurt
hts knee. Hasse lbeck came
back again. And struggled
again. Pilfer returned in Week
2.
.
Then, on Oct. 27, 2002, at
Dallas, Pilfer tore an
Achilles·. tendon. Hasselbeck
entered and led the Seahawks
·to a IJ- 14 win. He started the
final nine games, pas.sing for
300 yards four·times and over
400 yards twice .. both
Seahawks' season records.
He 's started ever since.
"Well. it' s taken a litt·le
while,"
Holmgren
said
Tues.day. "But right now we
are in a very, very ·good
place."
, Hasselbeck completed 67
percent of. hi s throws with
three touchdown s and no
interceptions in two playoff
wins: He almost single-handedly took over the di visionalround wir over Was hingtot;~
after leag ue MVP Shaun
Alexander le ft in the fi rst
quarter with a c"oncu~sion .
''He's just matured," said
receiver Bobby Engram, who
arri ved in Seattle with
Hasselbeck in 2001. ;.'He's
taken hi s lumps like any star
quarterback. but he 's d ~a lt
with it ext re m ~ly well .
.
"He is the leader of this
team.''
Tuesday, Hasselbeck was
their leade r in laughs.
Especially at his own
expense.
.
"A nybody losing your hair,
you can root for us, too," he
said . "Anything to get the
home-field advantage here in
Detroit.''
'

These backup QBs can do super things

Steelers~fans

2006
'

'

ringing up registers.
around Browns, Bengals country

W.Va. governor asks for
halt in coal production
for safety checks, A7

Icenhower
returning to Ariel, A6

I

BY JOHN SEEWER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Karen Crawford is one
Cleveland· Browns fan in
Ohio who doesn't mind that
· ·the Pittsburgh Steelers are in
the Super Bowl.
Sales of Steelers jerseys,
hats aild shirts are booming
at her sporting goods store in
Findlay - hometown of.
Pittsburgh quarterback Ben
Roethlisberger. But it's not
just the Big Ben items that
are popular.
"It ' s Stee lers stuff, too. ·
That's ' what's so weird ,"
Crawford said. " If you're at
all a Browns fan, it's tough to
root for the Steelers." .
' Sales at sports stores all ·
over the state are booming
because of the Steelers hated rival of both the
Browns and Cincinnati
Bengals.
Hotels in the Toledo area
are expecting to see an
increase in business too from
fans who plan to wat~h the
Steelers play the Seattle
Seahawks on Sunday at Ford
Field in Detroit, about an
hour 's drive north.
Plenty of black and gold
AP photo
"got ben7" T-shirts and Tel[lvision reporter Edson Jorge Zuniga carries around a
Terrible Towels were for sale Pittsburgh Steelers hand puppet as safety Troy Potamalu watchthis week at the Tower City es during Super Bowl XL Media Day at Ford Field in Detroit
mall
in
downtown Tuesday. Super Bowl XLwill feature the AFC Champion Pittsburgh
Cleveland.
Steelers against the NFC Champion Seattle Seahawks.
"For every I0 Steelers
items we're .selling, we're week. 1 only have about four l1e grew up and his ·parents
selling ·one Browns item," left," said Chris Koch, owner still li ve. trying to prevent
said Scott Jefferson, who of Koch Sporting Goods in too ti1any onlookers. "That's
runs· a kiosk in the mall.
Cincinnati.
what we're afraid of," said
One store owner in the
" I tried to order more Al issa Simpson, spoke small who was keeping his ·
shelves free of Pittsburgh shirts, but the manufacturer woman for visitors bureau.
And they're not mentionmerchandise said he . mi ght is all sold out," he said.
ing
that most folks around
have to make an exception · Restaurants and retai I
town
are Browns fans.
thi s week.
shops in Findlay hope that
" I need , heat," said Jeff ·plenty of Steelers fan s stop "We're trying to keep that
Wade, adding that lie would- for a vi,sit in Big Ben 's under wraps," Si mpson said
n't feel good about .sell ing hometown on their way from wit h a laugh. "It' s just insane
Steelers stuff Hl don't thiflk Pittsburgh to Detrott -even to see everyone one in a Ben
any Browns fan is happy see-. if .it means an h our or two jersey or a Steelers shirt."
Crawford, who runs the
ing that crap."
' dnve out of th~tr way.
Even in Cincinnati, some
The lo~al vtsrtors bureau House of Awards &amp; Sports ·
stores don ' t have euough has taken out ads on Steelers sporting goods store ·downSteelers gear. That might fan Web sues. Employees town , said sales of Steelers
come as a surprise given that have gtven dtrecttons to fans merchandi se are comi ng dur- ·
the Steelers road to the Super who want to see hts htgh ing what is usuall y otie of the
Bowl began with a 31-17 school stadium and a down ~ store's slowest months.
playoff v ictory over the . town billboard picturing· "People ar6 finding that ·
Bengals.
Roethlt sberger tn h1s old extra cash.'' she said. "You
never know when it 's going
. "I didn't have a lot of the Findlay uniform .
jerseys to begin with, but I
But. they' re not givin g out to come this close to home
probably had a dozen last directions to the house·where ilga111. "

Lewis says .he will deal·with Henry
CINCINNAT I (A P) Receiver Chris Henry'.s
arrest has clouded his future
with the Cincinnati Bengals.
The third -round draft pick
wa s arrested in Orlando ,
Fla.. over the weekend in
. what police ·sa id was an
altercation. The third-round
draft · pick from West
Virginia already was facing
dru g charges that resulted
from a traffic stop last
month iri the Cincinnati
area.
Coach Marvin Lewi s said
in a statement Tuesday that
Henry 's arrest "is unfortunate and does not shine a.
· good li ght on the Bengals
organization," adding that
he "will deal with Chris in
re lation to his standing on
our football team. "
Lewis benched Henry for
one game in December after

Henry moved toward a
limousine in the street and,
threw the gun inside the car,
the report says. The officer
pulled Henr:r away from the
limo and pushed hi m to the
ground. acco rding to the.
. report.
Police
sa id
Henry
appe;ired to be preparing: to
fight wit h a group . on the
the receiver's arrest on drug sidewalk. Officers fo und a 9
charges . . Henry; the team 's 111111 Luger on the hack seat
No. 3 receiver, was- charged of the li mo usine .· and a
w.ith posse ssion of mariju a- loaded magazine in a gutter
na fo ll owing a traffic stop in where Hcn.iy was standing,
northern . Kentucky. Those the report says. The Pasco
charges are pending.
Cou nt y Sheriff's Office had
The latest charges fol- li sted the gun as stolen.
lowed his arres t ear ly
Henry was charged with
Saturday in Orlando, where · fe klrly count s of possessio n
police said he pulled a 9 mm of a conceakd fire arm ,
pistol on a group of reve lers.· improper exhibition . of a
An officer directing traffic firearm ,1nd aggravated
aimed hi s gun at Henry and assault· wilh a firearm. He
ordered him to drop the pis- posted $3,000 bai l and was
tol, the police report stales . released .
·

DETROIT (A P) - A dis- should the defense r~lax. he make .
combobulated kic.ker made can air it .out.
The Bengals' defense was
the most surpri si ng flin g in
"Whe never he is in there, so
flummoxed
that
Super Bowl history - (iaro he is a threat and you never Roethli sberger had two
:Yepremian's oar-Of-soap pass know what he is going to do ," receivers wide open downattempt that resulted in a offensive coordin ator Ken fie ld. Hi s 43 -yard touchdown
fumble and provided a comic Whisenhunt s~i d . "That gives pass to Cedrick Wil son put
ending to Miami 's perfect you more of an element of the Steelers in control.
1972 season.
· · unpredictablli·ty." .
Whisenhunt. trusts Randle
· A co uple .o f . undersized
Only 5-foot-1 0 with elusive El with anything . .
players who know how to moves, Randle El was one of
"He is so much more of a
grip the laces could provide the toughest playe rs to catch threat because he is a fullthe most unexpected throw in college. At Indiana, he was . time starter:" he said. "He is
- or catch - in the .latest the first Division l-A player on the field a whole lot more
You've worked hard for your
title game.
to throw for 6.000 yards and than in the past. You can put
Pittsburgh :s
AiHwaan run for 3,000. The Steelers him in anywhere, and whatmoney. Will it return the favor?
Randle El and Seattle 's liked the way he returned ever you need him to do he
Seneca Wallace are the "X" kicks, and. turned him into. a can do those things . lt gives
The gap between Wall Street and Main Street has gotten
factors in Super Bowl XL.
receiver to get him on the you an extra element."
· smaller. Investing isn't just.for business tycoons and
"You never know." Randle field more .
So, what tricks are in
supermodels anymore.
El said mi sch ievous ly.
Occasionally. he'll line up Sunday's game plan?
And that 's the point. behind center - an ol d,
'·Next question," Randle El
I'll work with you to develop a plan for maximizing your
During the playoffs. both of familiar spot - for a direct said, breaking into a knowing
financial futu re, regard!ess of your resources.
therri stun ned defenses and snap. Every so often. he' ll get smile .
put their imprints on 'oome of a handoff and take off. And.
Wallace suggests that the
the NFL's biggest ga me s. occasionally, he'll make a Seahawks are going to play it
Randle El set up a trick play napping defense pay for tor- straight on Sunday, which
steqe · ~
in a first- round win ove r ge tting that he's sti ll a quar- means he' ll be on the sideline
· Cincinnati. ·and Wallace had terback at heart.
as · the No. 2 quarterback . (740) 992-3381 or Toll-free (800) 454-1096
the sweetest catch in the NFC
l-Ie took a handoff from instead of lining up as a
title game.
·
Duce Staley and threw a 51- stealth receiver - which is
"Some guys can do it. &lt;tnd yard touchdown , pass to .. exactly what he did in the
PILOT.
some guys can't do it.'" Hines Ward in a Nov. 13 win conference
champion ship
Randle El said Tuesday. " You over Cleveland. In four NFL- game.
Wallace , a third-year quarcertainly .can't force it on ,easons. ,Randle El is 7-for-8
+ Investments &amp; Annuities
them. and you can't teach it. for 8} ya rd~ and a pair of terback out of Iowa State.
Jf they' ve got it. they can do touchdowns as a passer. . sometimes lines up as a. + Retirement Plans for Individuals and
it. If not , then they can't.'.
In the playoff wi n at receiver and a defe.nsive1back
Businesses
These two defini tely ha ve Cincinnati , he showed off his during practi ce. Coach Mike
it .
arm in another way. He rook a Holmgren sen t him in as a
+ College Funding
In hi s fourth &lt;&gt;cason. Randle Ji rect ' nap from center, ran receiver in .the NFC title
El has developed into th e ri ght. then turned and threw a game against Carolma. and . + Life Insurance
Steelers · most versatile play- beautiful lateral across the he set up the Seahawks' first
er. The former lodi ana quar- fi eld to quarterback Ben touchdown by puttmg a douterback return s punh and Roet hli , berger -. the kind · ble move on Ken Lucas to get
starts as a rece iver. And . that on ly a real passer could open along thes tdelme.

Ui .{7~~~~~7~~

en
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;;o &lt;"l ·:l\:·Js • Vol. ;,;,. No. 1:!0

""" ·"'"lad) " 'ntuwl .&lt;·"'"

TIH II&lt;SD.\Y , I' EBRli .\HY :!, :!ooh

CS panel seeking participantS for long-term study

SPORTS
• Three more Tart:Jiooders
will be wearing scarlet and
gray. See Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

samples to the project, asking
them to authorize a scientific
panel to contact them for
POMEROY - Those who more information for a long,
partic;ipated in the C8 Health term health study.
Project are now being asked
VI sitors to the Pomeroy C8
to provide addi tional . infor- . testing site and three others
mation to a sc.ienti fic panel.
are now being asked to conB~ookmar, Inc., the firm
sent to provide additional
operating the C8 Health in formation to the C8
Project, has. begun to mail Science Panel, composed of
informatio"n and release · three epidemiologists who
forms to those who provided will conduct a communit y
health hi stories and blood s~udy incorpora!ing the data

collected during the CR
Health Project, as well as
other information .
The Science P'anel is asking participants to agree to l)e
contacted at a later date in
order to obtain continuing
information
for
health
longer-term stqdies iiHo the
possibl e health ·effects of
exposure to the chemical.
used by DuPont in the manufacture of Tenon anJ other
products.

In formation ·
c·olle cted tamers in the Parkersburg.
through the CK project is con- W.Va. area who were exposed
fidenti al. but those who con- Ill the c~ chem ical through
se nt to give their names and thei r water suppl y. While
addresses to the Scie nce there has been no ' oiTicial
Panel may be con tacted at a · determination that C8 causes
later Jate for more informa- health com plication'. the
tion. In some cases. they will study is dc&gt;igned to deterbe asked for additional access . mine if there i' a link between
to their health records for the C8 exposure atid illness.
purpose of the stud y.
Earlier thi s week, the ·cs
The C8 Health Project is a
result of a class-action lawsuit Healih Project announced it
filed against DuP.ont by CU.\Please see C8 study, AS

.Spring.story time sessions ·undenvay at libraries · Seats filled

.
on Rac1ne
Council

.
BETH ~ERGENT

.

BY
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES .
Pag!! A5
• Philip Del Call, 46
o JackL, Frederick, 56
'

INSIDE
·• Civil War groups hear
about 'March to the Sea.' .·
See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS.
• For the Record.
See Page AS
o Death toll climbs to
eight in postal .worker's
rampage. See Page A7
• Transfers P.osted.
See Page AS

PO"lEROY
Spring
story time sessions are now
going on at all Meigs County
District Public Libraries and
BY BETH SERGENT
will continue through Apri l BSERGENT@MYDA"ILYSENTINEL.COM
27 for children of all ages.
· Story time sessions are a
RACINE - The problem
chance f~r parents to intro- of empty council seats was
duce their children to reading solved shortl v before the tirsl
while· those childre n make regu lar ses i ion of Racine
new friends and· create ,their Vil la£e Council last month
own craft project s.
whe11' Ja,.on Shain_ Ivan .
This week during ·story Powell. James Harmo n and
time Bostic Ea,on. 2. and Tom Reed were appointed to
Jeffrev Dolan. 4." li stened as a four year terms.
With these appointments,
new story was read to them at
al
l
,ix se at ' · on- Racine
the
Pomeroy
Libtary.
Afterwards the boys colored. Counci.l ha1 e. now been
cut out and con structed a filled. The other two seats are
paper octopu s that they could .held by Councilmen Ike
hang in their bedrooms. and Spencer- and P:IUI Cardone:
Tom Lane. who also
learned that the word octopus
e xpress~d an interest in a
be gi ns with the letter "0."
Emily Sanders. who is council seat was appoi nted to
Children's
·Services the Racine Board of Public
Coordinator for the Meigs Affairs by Mayor J. Scon Hill
County
Di strict
Public to complete the term vacated
Library. .said that crafts that by Doug Rees, The term is
follow story time change for two years.
from ·'week to week, with
Please see Racine, AS
Valentine's Day being the
theme of the next &gt;torv time
craft. . ·
· Time&gt;, Jates and locations.
ft1r
sto rv time arc as follow s•
2 p.m .·. Mondays. Racine ·
Library: 2:30p.m.. Tuesday,.
Eastern Library: 2 p.m ..
Wednesdays.
Pomeroy
Library: 2 p.n1 .. Thttrsdays .
Middeport Lihrary.
Beside, stnry time . the
Bet~ Sergentj photo
Jeffrey Do lan,4·, (left) son of Jeffrey and Jennife r Dolan of Pomeroy completes a craft project Meigs County District Puhlic
BY DiANE PoTTORFF .
alongside Bostic Eason, 2, son of Huey and Susan Eason of Pomeroy fo llowing story time at Libraries are tllfering the fol- DPOITORFF@
MYDAIL\'REG!STER .COM
the Pomeroy Library.
Piease see Libraries, AS
I POINT
------~----------------------------------------------~------------------PLEASANT. ·
I W.Va . - Offic ial s are crmtin1 uing their investigation into
Tuesda \ \ pl ane crash that
killed an Ohio· man.
LalllL Bruce Bricker. 25. of
Have you noticed the
Salem. Ohio. who " ·as pilot-.
walls of dirt being creal- ing the 1981 Piper singleed near the constrwction en~ine that is also known as a
of the new bridge?.The
Cl~erokee. Ji ed following the
walls are officially catted ' cra.,h after he had tried to
an 'Earthen de rm" and · · take off frnn1 a make; hift
BY PAUL DARST
PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
ar.e constructed as a
ru nw a1• alun~.. U. S.. 3:i . LB .
I
sort of dam to catch
I INt ra n c~ .-\~~nc1 Inc. of
GALLIPOLIS - Gall ia
falling debns from tile
Camcin. Ohio~ i' J(qed a' the
and Meigs counties are par. hillside . Yesterday the
plane ·, .,,,·ner.
taking in a statewi de pro;
"Earthen derm " did its 1 A team from "the Federal
gram aimed at endi ng
job and made a nice
A\iat i&lt;'n Aclm ini,tration
homelessness in our part of
catch when these rocks I ,and
the
'irti11 nal
Ohio.
were unexpectedly
Tra n,p&lt; n lati •lll
SMet•·
The
Rural
Homeless
knocked loose from
B&lt; wrd i' cund uctin ~ inYesInitiative is a program of the
excavating work on the
li~&lt;lliCIIb int"o tile acci detll .
Osteopathic
_ · Heritage
'H'' f1C .-\ lex anJ~·r. an indch1lls1de above . In add 1Foundations in conjunction
t,on to the strategically
r~nJ~Ill claim ., aJju, ter. &gt;aid
with 17 local Continuum of
placed wails of dirt are ·f that her in'e't\gation into the ·
Care Commi ttees and the
concrete barriers to pro-' 1 ""''dent \\as .J USt hegmnmg .
National :A-lliance to End
teet motonsts on nearby : She" as althc~ .\ tasDnCount:
Homelessness, said Terri
west Ma 1n Street .
AlrJ'•'rt \\ ~ Jilt·, dal &lt;n'pcct',.

WEATHER

Details on Page AS

INDEX ·
2 SECTIONS -

16 PAGES

Calendars
A3
Classifieds
B4-6
Comics
B7
Dear Abby
A3
Editorials
A4
Obituaries
As
Places to go
A6
Senior News
A2
Sports
B Section
Weather
AB
,© 2006 Ohio VIt tl e~· :ubli!'hing Co.

Gallia, Meigs
part of Rural
Homeless
Initiative

Please see H!)meless, A8

"•

Investigation
under way
into fatal
plane crash

I

..

Nice catch!

1

Beth Sergent j photo

Please see Crash, A8

�"

Page A2 • The Daily Sentinel ,

Thursd~y, F~bruary 2, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Feb-06

Public meetings

Discussion will include
ongoing restoration work of
the Chester Academy, 2006
Thursday, Feb. 2
events,
including upcoming
POMEROY -Salisbury
Township Trustees, 6:30 period dress and culture program, period dance workp.m., township hall .
shops, progress with grant
Monday, Feb. 6
RACI~E
Racine funds, and fundrais ing for the
· Villa~e Council, regular upcoming Morgan 's Raid.
TUPPERS PLAINS meetmg, 7 p.m., Racine ·
VFW Post 9053 Ladies
Municipal Building.
Rutland Auxiliary, regular meeting, at
RUTLAND c_ouncil meeting, 6 p.m. in the hall.
Friday, Feb. 3
vtllage council chambers.
POMEROY
-. Meigs
SYRACUSE
-Sutton
County
PERI
Chapter
74, 12
Township Trustees, regular
monthly meeting, 7 p.m., noon , Meigs Senior Center,
with Diana Coates speaking
Syracuse Village Hall .
about
disaster preparedness.
RUTLAND
·- Rutlantl
MIDDLEPORT OHTownship Trustees meet in
KAN
Coin
Club
to
have
regular session ai 5 p.m.,
t:x hibit of coins and currency
Rutland Fire Station . .
and do free appraisals from 9
Wednesday, Feb. 8
a.m.
to 3:30 p.m. at the
POMEROY Meigs
County Board of Health, reg- Peoples Ba nk lobby 10
ular meeting, 5 p.m., confer- Middleport. Drawings for
'
ence room Meigs County door prizes.
Saturday Feb. 4
Health Department. _
·
SALEM
CENTER - Star
Thursday, Feb. 9
Grange
#778
, Star Junior
POMEROY . - Meigs
County Commissioners regu- Grange #878 , potluck supper
lar meeting, II a.m., instead at 6:30 p.m., followed by
'o f I p.m.
meeting at 7:30. Degree .team
practice . Final plans for
March 12 soup dinner.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrsonville Lodge 41 I, 7:3Q
p.m. at the hall. Members to
Thursday, Feb. 2
take non-peri shable f()Od for
·
CHESTER Chester- pantry.
Shade Historical Association
SYRACUSE - Baseball
will be held at 7 p.m. at the sign ups, Syracuse Youth Ball
Chester
Courthouse. League, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., fire

Menu Is Subject to Change

Plums

Wheat Bread

Beans &amp; Franks
cauliflower &amp; Cheese Sauce
Com·
Banana
Bread

Biscuit

Macaroni &amp; Cheese
Green Beans
Stewed Tomatoes
Chocolate Chip Cookie
Grape Juice

~wedish

Meatballs
Mastied Potatoes
Sauerkraut
Bread

Turkey Tetrazzini
Peas
Cranberry Mold w/Oranges
Roll

Beef Stew
Bread Pudding w/Raisins
Pineapple JuiCe

Veal Chop w/ Gravy
Mashed Potatoes
Glazed Carrots
Frult Cocktail ·
Banana Muffin

Chili
Coleslaw
Spiced Peaches
Vanilla Pudding
Crackers

BBQ Patty
Boiled Parsley Potato
Succotash
, Honey Bee Ambrosia Salad
Graham Cracker

Johnny M~;~rzetli
Italian Green Beans
Peaches
Sweetheart Cake
Garlic Bread

Fish Square
Oven Brown Potatoes
Hot Spiced Pears
Perfection Salad
Bun

Chicken Nuggets
Au Gratin Potatoes
California Veggies
· Apricots
Peanut Butter Cookie

1
Navy Bean Soup w/ Ham'
Garde!" Cottage Cheese Salad
Tomato ~uice
Apple Crisp
Cornbread

..
Salmon Patty
Broccoli
Rice Pilaf
Jello w/ Fruit" Cocktail
Cornbread

Pimento Cheese Sanclwich
Cream of Tomato Soup
Pudding w/Banana Slices
Wheataread

Roast Beef w/ Gravy
Mashed Potatoes
Mil&lt;ed Vegetabl~s
Apricots
Bread

Chicken &amp; Noodles
Pea &amp; Cheese Salad
Mandarin Oranges
Frosted Cake
Biscuit

Baked Ham
Sweet Potatbes
Brussel Sprouts
Pineapple Upside Down Cake
Bread

1

SWiss Steak
Baked Potato
Creamed Cauliflower
Blueberry Cobbler
Wheat Bread

Ground Beef Stroganoff
Noodles
Harvard Beets
Buttered Cabbage
Pudding
Juice ·

February Activity Schedule
'.

Clubs and
organizations

(

AZZ~night baking
station.

Child's birth certificate
required . March 4 is registration deadline .
1\aesday, Feb. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers
Plain s
Youth
Ba se ball/Softball
Association, monthly meeting, 6 p.m., firehou se.

Suggntild donation for luncm I• $2.00 for, lhostt over 60.
'
.

Day. Activities
Valentine's
.

those in the same situation.
• The Stroke Support Group will meet on .
We will celebrate Villentine's Day on Tuesday, . February 14 from 1-2:30 p.m. Lia Tipton from
February 14 with a party, Valentine 's Day Queen and Holzer Rehab Center is -the host.
King, and a valentine exchange. You will be able to
• The Diabetes Support Group . will meet on
vote for your choice of King and Queen at the front February 16· at 10:30 a.m. Jane Staley from PVH is
desk. Dress up in your best Valentine's Day clothing the Co9rdinator.
and join us for the party. Who knows, you may be King
Other Bits and Pieces
or Queen for the day! Don't forget to bring your
V~entine cards,. Activities begin at 11 a.m. in the Center
Room. Bring your Valentine and spend the day with us.
• The girls from the Pomeroy Library will beat the
Center on February 14 to do crafts. The girls have ·
some really cute ideas and are great to work with.
Health and Fitness
• February 23 will be the date for the monthly birth• February 7: Linda will give a . presentation on day party. Come celebrate your birthday with us.
•·Choir Practice resumes on February 2 at I p.m.
"Heart Healthy Tips 'for the New Year." Both pro(Note the change in time). Practice will be held every
·
grams begin at 11 a.m.
• PACE class is held every Tuesday and Thursday Thursday with Shirley Hamm as the director · and
in the ~enter Rdom. Join Bryan , Hoffman, our Debbie Finlaw as the pianist. If you want to join, just
show up on February 2.
Fitness Director, for these easy going exercises done
• Bible Study is held every Wednesday at I 0 a.m :
from your chair. PACE (Persons with Arthritis can
in the Conference Room. The group is led by Bill
Exercise) will be held from 10:30-11 a.m. Wear
·
and Maxine Little.
something comfortable and join Bryan for some fun.

Church events

Other events

School events

Birthdays

°

The Meigs Multipurpose Center is open MondayFriday from 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Regularly scheduled
activities held throughout the week include sewing,
knitting, euchre, working puzzles, .bingo and much,
much more! All ages are invited to attend the activities scheduled.
• Line dance practice is .held each Monday at I
· p.m. The cost is $1 per session.
• The Knitting Circle meets on Wednesday from
10 a.m. until noon.
• Lunch is served daily at II :45 a.m. The suggested donation for the noon meal is $2 for those age 60
and older. The charge for those under 60 is $4.
• A representative from the-Athens Social Security
Office will be at the Meigs Senior Center to assist
people with Social Security problems and/or to provide information on February 8 and 22 from .10-11
a.m. No appointment is needed, but be sure to sign in
at the front desk.
·
• lncome Tax Assistance, sponsored by AARP,
will be available for low-income seniors by Herman
Carson, Shirley Hamm and Rusty Wallace Huff. Tax
assistance will be available beginning Thurs.day,
Fun. Fun. Funb
Support
Groups
February 2-April 11 from 9-11 a.m. at the Meigs
.
Something for Everyone .
Senior Center. Appointments ca_n be made by calling
• Bingo will be held on February 16, hosted by
992-2161. Bring copies of last year's taxes and your
Rocksprings Rehab Center. Bingo starts at II a.m.
2005 forms .
,The Support Groups meet in the Conference Room. • Euchre is played every Thursday at 10 a.m. (or
• February 7 at 10 a.m. Karr Audiology will have
• The Caring and Sharing Support Group will any other day you want to come).
a representative. at the Meigs · Senior Center to meet ~n February 23 at I p.m. ~enora Leifheit is the
• Paint class is held every Friday at 9 a.m. with
answer questions about hearing aids and problems Coordmator for the group. Th1s group is for care- , Michelle Musser as the instructor. There is a fee
associated with hearing aids.
givers and their families to share their- stories with associated with this class.
• February 21 at II a.m. the gh'ls from ,Holzer
HEAP
Hospice
will be ·here to sing. Come and hear them
.
smg.
The Home Energy Assi~ce Program (HEAP~ Is one of several proJ!l'~
• February 28 at II a_m _ Charles and Ellen Rife offer.d by the Ohio Deportment of Development (ODOD) to help low-income
Ohioans pay.their utility bill!. Households may be.eligible for assistance if the
will be at the Center to sing.

Art Colony featuring special display
GALLIPOLIS The
Frenc h Art Colony is hosting the .Bowling · Green
State
University's
Faculty/Staff Exhibit from
now until Feb. 26.
The di splay is a unique collection of artwork from the
original show at BGSU 's
Dorothy Uber Bryan Gallery.
It includes large-sca le oil
pieces, digital photograph s,
metal sc ulptures, glasswork,
fiber art.· and audio features.
The ex hibit is sponsored by
The Ohio Arts Council ;
Burnett' s Heating &amp; Cooling ;

·C he rrington, Moulton &amp; Rozene, · Hans Ruebe l, Paul
Evans; Sears Roe buck of Running, Gary Setzer. Lynn
Gallipolis;
and
Steve Whitney,
a nd
Denni s
Chapman, CPA.
Wojtkiewicz.
Artists Include : Michael
The French Art Colony is
Arrigo, . Janet
Ballweg, located at 530 First Avenue,
Jennifer
Bennett , · An'ne Gallipolis·. Ga llery hou rs are
Behrnes,
Gabi
Brandt, . from I 0 a.m. to 6 p.m . on
Dominic Catalano, Steven Tue sday through Friday, and
.Cothern , ·· Dailielle Crissman, ·from I p.m. to 5 p.m. on
Dena
Elisabeth
Eber, Sunday. Admis sion is free .
_Kathlee n
Hagan,
Lou More information about the
Krueger. Mary Magsamen, FAC and its upcom in g
Colleen McCubbin Stepanic. ·event s can be · found at
Shawn Morin. Tom Muir, http :// facart.home .zoo mC iayton Peterson , Steven net.net or by calling 740Roberts ,
Stephanie
A. 446-3834.

MEPIC~L

Below""' guidelines for the 2005:2006 HEAP prowairl:
Size of Household!

2
3
4

s

6
7
8

Total Gross Hou,.hold Income
uptoS 16,748
up to$ 22,453
up_to S 28,158
up 10$ 33,863
up loS 39,568
up IO $ 45,273
up IO $ -50,978
up IO $ 56,683

For households with more than 8111embers, add$ 5,705 per member.

If you need more information aboU1 the HEAP Program, contact Joy Matthews .
or Kathy Goble at the Meigs Muhifl\UllOse Senior Cent&lt;r al 74(]-992-2161 If you
ne~ assistance with completing a HEAP application, please call to schedule an
appointment Kathy is also avallable to make home visits for individuals that are
disabled or homehound.

-

-- - - - - - - -- ; --

- - - ' -- - - - , - - - --_.:__

'

.. By-Pass video viewing
set for weight loss group

.

" We Care About Patie11t Care''

• Home Oxygen
• Hospital Beds
• CPAP Machines. • WheelChairs
• Oximetry
• Nebulizers
JCAHCl Accredited

24 Hour Emergency Service • Free Delivery

1-800-458-6844
'
Ohio River

765 E. Main St.

540 W. Unio n

_ _---:--_ _ _ _-----:-_:___ _--=--~

GALLIPOLIS
The
Center
for
Hol zer
Comprehensive Weight Loss
will feature a special Vfdeo of
an actua l gastric by -pass
surgery at its Support Group
evening session at 6:30 p.m.
Monday.
Support Group meetings of
the Hol zer Center for
Comprehensive Weight Loss
are held the tirst Monday of
every month at 10:30 a.m.
and 6:30 p.m. at the Holzer
Medical Center Educati on &amp;
Conference . Center
in
Gallipolis . An informational
meeting is hel ~ at 5:30 p.m .

prior, to the even ing support
gro up.
·
Those who are contemplating gastric by-pass surgery
are encouraged to attend to
learn more about weight loss
·surgery. All who are interest-·
ed in the viewing of the gastric by-pass surgery video are
encouraged
to
attend
Monday's meeting. An e"perien ced surgeon wi II also be
on hand to . guide viewers
step-by-step through the procedure. and be available for
questions afterward.
,· .For- more ir~format;orJ ,
please call 1740) 446-51!25.

Subscribe today •992-2155

• lnatan~ Mesnging . kwp your buddy hs!l

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Cholesta-ol &amp; Glucose

Tht s scroolr ng nl?asures
• Total Cholesterol

•

Body Fa! Analysis

•

Heart HESithy Food Information

• HDL (Good cllolestetOII

•

Smoking Cessation

• LDL (Bed cholesteml 1
• Trig lycendes

•

Cardiovas:ular Institute Info

. . And MuchMore!!

Spe:iia! Presentation at 11:30 ' am
.

By MichaB S.VnDl, 00, Ca'dioiOOI'a:tc &amp;lrge:Jn
mMichaB,( Engluoo, oo. Ca-dioiogi&amp;,
· both frcm the HolM Ca'cliOYEIIJ:lllar lll!litllte

Ha:~rt

Disease Update''

A box ltneh, provided by Pfim
PharrrBCetJicals, wil l be available

to those v.M attn.the prE!I!S1tati on.

L imit'oo numbEr of appointmmts
available- call today!

Free and ()pErl to the Public
Door Pri213SAvailable .

C&amp;lt Tod11y &amp; Save'

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(7401992-6260

•

Do not 811 a: dr ink fa lhe 10 nours pnor to )O..J ld10ClJed
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Sign IJj;i Onlln•l www.LociiNet.com
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Blood Pre5sureScreenings
Screenings (Non-Fasting)

·For this spErial screening ...
You must PRE-REGISTER
by Mondctf, FS&gt;ruay 13
CALL (740}446-5055.
Screening i nd udes a
10-HOUR FAST bEtoreha'ld

• FREE' 2417 Ttchn+c:al support

both parent s las I. Jul y. I am
the second-oldest child and
cou ld reall y use some good.
advice. - SAD IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR SAD: You have my
sy mpathy for your · los&gt;.
However, I advocate for
telling the truth. un-le ss it 1s a
cruel one. In a case li ke this,
where your mother has no
short-lerm memory, eac h
time your mother hears th at
her husband is dead it will be
as if she 's hearin g it for Ihe
first time. II wou ld be a kindness not to put her through
that- again and again.
P.S. At her stage of illne ss.
I doubt that she'll be asking if
your father has died. And it' s
OK · not to vo lun teer the ·
information .
DEAR ABBY: I operate a
home-based busi ness. Mv
home ph'one number double·~
as my business fax number. A
day does not go by that we
don 'It get one or two unsolicited faxed adverti sements
with the late st "hot" stock tip
or resort vacati on package. I
have called the ..do not fax ...
number li sted on the faxes
.each time , but they continue
.to arrive - often at 3 a.m. If
you hang up, they just kee p
calling. Jsn ' t there so me federal or state law to regu late
this practice? - LOSING
SLEEP IN OHIO
DEA R LOSING SLEEP:
The federal government has a
Do Not Call Re gistry. The
number to call to sign up is:
888-382- 1222. (You mus't
renew every five years to
remain on it.) If. after thre e
· months of signing up. you
still rece ive unwanted faxes. '
you may file a complaint by
calling the same phone number or logging on to
www.donotcall .gov .
(Alternatively. unplug your
'phone when you go to be(l to
guarantee you won "t be disturbed. )
" ·
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Va11 Burell, also
k11ow11 as Jeanne Phillips,
and . was founded by .her
mother, Pauli11e Phillips.
Write
Dear Abbv at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los A 11geles, CA
90069.

•

Lipid P1·of1le

Proud to be apart of your life.·

Dear
Abby

He

CENTER

Special Screa1ing.
Available

.

household's income is at or below the I50'/o feden&gt;l poverty guidelines.

binges cause man to
question wife shealth .

Civil War groups hear about 'March to the Sea'

•

ln..onk you for your •upport.
'

Thursday, February 2, 2006 ·

Monday, Feb. 6
RACINE
Racine
Chapter 134, OES regular
meeting, 7:30p.m. Mock ini·
tiation. All officers asked to
attend. Refreshments .
DEAR ABBY: My beloved
POMEROY
· Meigs
wife may be killing herself,
Band Boosters to meet at
and
I can' t stop her. Once or
· 6:30 p.m. in the band room.
twice a week she stays up all
1\aesday, Feb. 7
.nigh!
baking cookies for her
MIDDLEPORT
·'fri ends" at . work - huge
Middleport Lodge #363,
numbers of cookies. Over
Sunday,
Feb.
5
F&amp;AM, . monthly business
she was up night
Christmas,
conBIDWELL
Gospel
meeting , 7:30 p.m . Lodge
officers to report at 6:45 for cert by the Forgivers 4 at6:30 after night baking, and it 's
meeting with district deputy. p.m. at the Poplar Ridge f'ree very worrisome . .
My wife is 63 and in a
All members urged to bring Will Baptist Church.
COOLVILLE - Healings demanding profession. I can· non-penshable food 1tems for
M ir'acles
service s, not believe that the body can
th e Grand Masters Food and
Bank Program. All Master Evangelist Ken Greene, I0 tolerate sleepless nights like
Masons
in vi ted. a.m. and 7 p.m . at Faith this. She says she takes "a
· Harvest Church.
na p" in her car at lunchtime,
· Refres hments.
Thursday, Feb. 9 ·
but I doubt it.
CHESTER.- Shade River
How can I stop ' her from
Lodge 453 w1ll meet at 7:30
this self-destructive habit?. r
· p.m.
at
th e
hall.
do n't want to lose her, but I
Saturday, Feb. 4
Refres hments.
RAC INE - Straw give- don ' t know what to do . If I
SYRACUSE- Wildwood
try to dissuade .)ler from
Garden Club,6:30 p.m. at the away for pet bedding, I 0 a.m. cookie-baking, she gets
home of Joy Bentley. to 2 p.m ., Hill 's Citgo and extremely hUffy, and it's hurtCo unt y
Meigs
Program on techmques of behind
Humane
Society
Thrift
Store, i~g our marriage . - MARbasic flower arrangmg .
RIED TO THE COOKIE
Middleport.
MONSTER IN CALIF.ORNIA
PEAR MARRIED: ·You
Saturday, Feb. 4
appear to be a concerned and
Friday, Feb. 3
· TUPPERS PLAINS
lovi ng spouse. Sleep patterns
REEDSVILLE
Guy can vary from individual to
Signups for the Tuppers
Plains Youth Baseball and Calaway will observe his individual. and different peoSoftball program will be held 93rd birthday. Cards may be ple require different amounts
from 9 · a.m. to noon at sent to him at 48184 S.R. of sleep to Junction well.
Eastern Elementary school. 681, Reedsville, Ohio 45772 . . However, becau se you are
co ncerned about how your
wife 's sleep pattern could
affect her general health. suggest to her - and possi bly
MIDDLEPORT - Dr. Carl agriculture cens us to determine
New officers of Brooks- battle park . The group asked her physician - that she
Denbow, professor of history what parts of Georgia were Grant Camp were installed by that allyone interested inwa r- might benefit from discussing the subject with a
ai.Ohio University, presented supplying the Confederacy and Past Ohio · Department corn- ticipating call 992-7974.
A report on a meeting by an sleep disorder specia li st to
a video on the celebrated then led hi s march there. mander, Terry Frost of
Sherman's. March to the ~ea Sherman was . heavily con- Athens . The new officers are ofticer of th e camp with Rep. determine .whether she 's getat a recent meeting of Brooks- demned by 'the.South for using Alan Holter of Five Points, Jimm'y_ Stewart was givefl. ting the amount of rest she
Grant Camp Sons of Union captured rebel troops to locate commander.
Thomas Concerns about the proposed needs, (And if she isn "t, how
Veterans and the Maj. Daniel land mines, an invention of the Galloway &lt;;Jf · Huntington, actions
by
the
Ohio she can get it .) I hope this
McCook Circle Ladies of the war, along roads. Neither side senior vice· commander, Scott Preservation omce on the helps.
DEAR ABBY: Last May,
Grand Anny of the Republic. lost many troops in battle dur- McElroy of Columbus, junior battlefield was the subject of
the six of us had to put our
The personal video shown·by' ing the march. ·
vice commander; James the meeting.
85-year-old
mother and 90the professor of history at Ohio
Denbow pointed out that Mourning of Middleport ,
An additional donation to
University, featured Edwin had it not been for the success treasurer; Keith Ashley of the battlefield at Franklin, year-old father into an assist·
Bearhs, a retired National Park of this march, Lincoln knew Rocksprings, secretary; Frank Tenn : was approved: The bat- ed-living facility - Mom for
Servic~ Civil War historian. It he. would lose the 1864 presi- Sisson of ·Pomeroy, patriotic tlefield is currently in danger Alzheimer's a nd Dad for
was noted that several false- dential election to the Peace instructor an'd. camp council- of urban. Ci vii War preserva- heart problems and kidney
hoods about the march still pre- Democrats. who would nego- man; Tom Hopton of Racine, tionists.will be able 10 save it failure. Our mother is in the
vaiL Union trOOps did not com- tiate a truce re sulting in .a split chaplain; Greg Michael of if fundli are obtained. It was late middle stages of her disease.
mit mpe on Southern women; of the U.S. into two nations . Huntington, historian; John
runners did not notify slaves of The
march
ended
in F a k f R d 'II
noted that more rebel troops
Dad died on July 2. My two
r n
ee svi e, camp were killed in the Tennessee
siblings who live less than
his approach·, Union troops did Savannah, which was not councilman· Paul Ditty of
'
QOt drag bodies out of tombs burned . He captured many Piketon, guide;
and Rhett battle that at the more famou s two hours away from Mom
and replace them with Union cannons and cotton there .
Millhoan of Echo. guard. Picket's Charge of the Battle decided that it would not be a
good idea to tell. her that her.
dead; and Shennan did not
The OU professor noted Greg Michael, retirin g com- of Gettysburg. •
bum everything in his. path. that at the end of the war, the . mander, was presented a past
The camp approved two husband had passed away.
Furthermore, Shennan asked largest nlilitary parade in U.S. commander"s badge and a honorable discharges. It also Three of us don't like that
the governor of Georgia to history, the "Grand Review" Civil War book for his term.· accepted into · membership decision. In fact, two of my
It was announced that a David Spencer of Rac ine brothers have .stopped calling
withdraw from the Civil War was held in Washington, D.C.
and the U.S. government would While other Union troops .protesi march is being based on hi s ancestor, Pvt. . Mom because they're afraid
pay for any destroyed or confis- · were issued fre sh uniforms planned by Civil War groups John H. Adams ·of Cb mpan y she will ask if our father has
died, and they don 't want to
cated property, but the governor and white gloves, Sherman's at Harrisburg, Pa., on the last -G, 4th W Ya. In fan try.
refused. according to Denbow. me11 marched · in what tl)ey of April to try to stop the proIt was noted that a member lie to her. She has been told
It was noted that the march had . Some men were report- posed casino at Gettysburg . of the camp, Cody Smith, was that he is "sleeping a lot."
was 7.40 miles long and 60 edly literally diapered with The casino would cause wounded in Iraq around
What do yo u think about
miles wide . Ohio soldiers filled the fragments of the ir tattered encroachment by · affiliated Thanksgiving but recovered 'the way this is being hanone fourth of Shennan's ranks- . ·uniform s from the harshness businesses on the battlefield and has remrned to duty. The dled '' I cannot tell you h.ow
more than any other state . of the marc h. The public was and a strain on the already next meeting wi ll be hel d in sad I am about this and the
fact that we actuall y "lost"
Shennan used the 1860 U.S. shocked by the scene.
taxed highway system in the . March.

· Menus prepared by Linda Myers R.O. L.D.
The Senior Nutrition Maar Is served Dally at 11 :45
Info, contact Sharon Matson~or Theniaa Marcinko. For low-fat or low..odlum
a 48 hour noticed Is
For

Pork Chop
Scalloped Potatoes
Seasoned Spinach

BYTHEBEND

Community Calendar

NEWS ABOUT
SENIOR CITIZENS IN MEIGS COUNTY
MEIGS' COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM

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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
Thursday, February 2, 2006

TODAY IN HISTORY

Bush's cinematic war on terror

TO
EDITOR

o

Local Briefs

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

Jack L Frederick

·For the Record
Ci'lil suits

Outreach immunization clinic

'

In his s"tate of the Union
former CBO . Director taxes - which is why the
speech Tuesday night,
Douglas Holtz-Eakin told insurance industry opposes
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740} 992·2157
President Bush plans to
me in an interview. And, repeal.
www.mydallysentlnel.com
"I am institutionally and
asked what kind of procall for making all of his
·ductivity and GDP growth intestinally against huge
tax cuts permanent. That
O~io Valley Publishing Co.
Morton
rates it would take to pay · blocks
of
inherited
will cost at t.east $2 trillion
over 10 years - probably
Kondracke currently promised retire- wealth," Frank Keating,
Jim Freeland
ment benefits , he said, president of the American
nearer to $4 trillion- and
Publisher
kill chances for balancing
" There aren't any on this Council of Life Insurers,
the budget
planet that I am willing to said . last year. "l don ' t
Charlene Hoeflich
·. A'rguably, Bush's tax
put out there.
·think we need a Viscount ·
cuts brought the economy 2012 to 2016, the . end of
"You ' d have to have of Enron or the Duke of
General Manager-News Editor
out of the 2001 recession, the CBO budget window, one-in- .100 years produc- Microsoft."
but . budget experts say for a net 2007-2016 cost tivity growth and ·you'd
Actually, the father of
they won't pay for them- of $2 trillion, including haye to have it every year the king of Microsoft, Bill
selves. Nor can the econo- interest.
for 50 years. You. don't Gates Sr., is one of the
co·ngress ~hall make no law respecting an
my grow its way out of the
And this does not count make it. Don ' t even think foremost opponents of
establishment of religion, or prohi~iting the
baby
boomer the cost of adjusting the about it."
. coming
complete "death tax"
free exe1cise thereof; or abridging the freedom
retirement crisis.
Alternative Minimum Tax ,
A CBO study last year repeal. · ·
The responsible answer which practically everyone showed that, at best, a 10
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
Under
current
law,
to
the nation 's fiscal fix is agrees should not burden percent across-the-board
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
increasing
numbers
of
to cut back on Social the middle class. The CBO reduction in income tax
the Government for a redress of grievances.
Security and Medicare estil!lates that doing this rates would recover 22 wealthy families will be
percent of the revenue it shielded from paying
benefits, preferably on a will cost $630 billio!l.
On top of current deficit , cost through supply-side inheritance. taxes until
means-tested basis, and to
-The First Am~tndment to the U.S. Constitution
projections in the $250 and stimulative effects in 2009. Then, for one year,
raise taxes.
But in the current polar- billion range from 2006 to the first five years. That all will be, But the next
ized
environment
in 20 II - ancl these may be is, it would cost 78 per- year and thereafter, all
estates worth more than $1
considering cent of its face amouni.
Washington, .
' D.C., optimistic,
B.ut in the second five million will be taxed · at a
Republicans want only tax that this year's deficit inay
Today is Thursday, Feb. 2, the 33rd day of 2006. There are
Cl!tS and benefit. reduc- be . $360 billion the years, depending on eco- 55 percent rate.
332 days left in the year. This is Groundhog Day.
Clear-ly, the law should
tions. Democrats want big- total 2007-2012 debt pile- nomic conditions, it would
Today's Highlight in History:
·
be
changed - but not to
ger
benefits
a
richer
up
could
be
$3.8
trillion.
produce
no
revenue
recov·
On Feb. 2, 1943, the remainder of Nazi forces from the
prescription drug plan for
Such deficits .are .sustain- ery and. increase the deficit extent of total elimination.
· Battle &lt;if Stalingrad· surrendered in a major victory for the
in a gtowing econo- by 5 percent to 32 percent. A middle-ground solution
seniors,
for
instance
able
Soviets in World War II.
and tax increases. The my - they'd amount to 2
Administration officials · that excludes the first $3.5
On this date:
.
.
In 1536, the Argentine city of Buenos Aires was founded by , · twain never meet .o They percent to 3 per~ent of'the say that Busl:t plans to rec- million from tax and hits
Pedro de Mendoza of Spain,
·
.just shout at each other.
gross domestic product ommend new reductions in the remainder · at the top
In 1653, New Amsterdam - now New York City - was
To me. the most sensible but the CBO and other Medicare · and Medicaid . individual rate of 45 . perincorporated.
first step to fiscal sanity budget projectors all antic- benefits at the same time cent would cost about
In 1848. the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, ending the
would be to reform, but ipate a ballooning of ·he proposes much bigger $360 billion over 10 years ·
Mexican War, was signed.
not repeal, lhe estate tax, health-related costs as the long-term tax reductions.
- · a lot less than $1 trilIn 1870, the "Cardiff Giant," sup~sedly the petrified
Some tax cuts surely lion, the cost of repeal.
which cou ld save as much baby
boomers
retire,
remains of a human discovered in Card1ff, N.Y., was revealed
as $4,00 billion pver 10 threatening to swallow the should
be
extended,
Opponents of the esiate
to be nothing more than carved gypsum.
years. But Republicans are entire federal budget by . including creation of a I0 tax say it amounts to douIn 1876, the National League of Professional Base B.all
wedded to the idea of 2050.
· percent rate that took .mil- . ble taxation· of . income.
Clubs was formed in New York.
repealing what they call
As the CBO put it, lions of lower-income
But the fact is that most of
In 1882, Irish poet and novelist James Joyce was born near
2016,
Social earners off the tax rolls
the "death tax," even beyond
the money in big estates is
Dublin . .
though it applies . to only Security, Medicare and entirely, as well as reducIn 1897, fire destroyed the Pennsylvania s(ate capi'tol in
the richest 0.5 percent of Medicaid "will exert pres- . tions in capital gains and accumulated capital gains
Harrisburg. (A new statehouse was dedicated on the same site
taxpayers.
.
sun~s on the budget that dividend ' · tax .
rates that .have never been
nine years later.)
.
.
·
The . · Congressional economic growth alone is designed to encourage taxed .
In 1945, President Roosevelt and British Prime Minister
Bush won't propose tax
Budget Office's new bud- unlikely to alleviate."
investment.
Winston Churchill departed Malta for the summit in Yalta
get outlook, issued last
Its report concluded that
But if there's a tax break i'ncreases, but Congress
with Soviet leader Josef Stalin.
·
week, shows that the fed- "a sizable reduction in the that shouldn't be perma- ·can impose them by not
In 1971. l.di Amin assumed power in Uganda, following a:
. era! budget actually could growth of. spending, and nent, it's the elimination agreeing to a permanent
coup that ousted President Milton ObOte.
be balanced and go into perhaps a sizable increase · of ihe inheritance tax, extension of his tax cuts.
. Ten years ago: Dancer, actor and choreographer Gene Kelly
small surplus i11 2012 if in taxes ·as a share of the which. not only discour- That, plus some cutbacks
died at his Bevefly Hills, Calif., home; he was 83. A deep .
Bush's · tax · cuts are not economy wlll be necessary ages charitable giving, but in. entitlement benefits,
freeze continued in the Plains, the Midwest and much of the
extended. '
for fiscal stability to be at also benefits only the very could put the country on
South, breaking temperature records that had stood for a cenBut if they are all made all likely in the coming richest families in the the; road to fiscal health.
tury.
(Morton Kondratke is
permanent - · and some of decades." · ,
country.
Five years ;l.go: Former President Clinton and Sen. Hillary
Rodham Clinton said they would pay for $86,000 worth of
them should be ·the
Contrary to GOP theolo- . Most of those families exec;utive editor of Roll
White House gifts they chose to keep.
·deficit rises $300 billion · gy. tax cuts don't pay for can afford to buy life Call, the newspaper of
One year ago: In his State of the Union address, President
to $350 billion a ~ear from themselves. "They don't," insurance policies to offset Capitol Hill.)
Bush called for changes in Social Security that would combine reduced government benefits for younger workers with
"a chance to build a nest egg" through personal accounts.
German heavyweight boxer Max Schmeling died in
Hollenstedt, Germany, at age 99.
· ,
Today's Birthdays: Actress Elaine Stritch is 81. Actor
Robert Mandlm is 74. Comedian Tom Smothers ·is 69. Rock
singer-guitarist Graham Nash is 64. Actor Bo Hopkins ·is 64.
Television executive Barry Diller is 64. Country · singer
Howard Bellamy . (The Bellamy Brothers) is 60. Actress
Why do Republican-oridown · like the murderous was, he writes "there was
Farrah Fawcett is 59. Actor Brent Spiner is 57. Rock musician
.
lunatics they are.
ented
pundits
spend
so
a sense of spectacle and
Ross Valory (Journey) is 57. Model Christie Brinkley is 52.
much energy lashin g out at
But AI Qaeda is not a drama about it that was litActor Michael Talbott is 51. Actress Kim Zimmer is 51. Rock
Hollywood
for
its
sins?
threat
to the integrity of erally .unreal to those of us
musician Robert DeLeo (Stone Temple Pilots) is 40. Rock
jealou$y.
Professional
these
United
States or our who watched it on televimusician Ben Mize (Counting Crows) is 35. Rapper T-Mo is
Partly because so many
constitutional government. sion. This was fear put to
34. Actress Lori Beth Denberg is 30. Singer Shakira is 29.
Gene
Americans imagine the
Historian Joseph Ellis music, with dramatic title
. Thought for Today: "It was naive of the 19th century optiLyons
world beyond Wal-Mart as
recently made that point in treatments · and a soaring
mists to expect paradise from technology - and it is equally
a movie set, the Bush
naive of the 20th century pessimists to make technology the
a New York Times column. voice-over."
scapegoat for such old shortcomings as man's blindness, cruadministration does its
"(W)here does Sept. II
Constantly invoking that
elty, immaturity, greed and sinful pride." - . Peter F. Drucker,
best work iii the realm of .
rank in the grand sweep of fear, Bush has turned bin
authority on business management (1909-2005).
illusion .
viewing the whole world American hi story as a Laden into a political asset
'
I was remi nded of this as · an action/adventure threat to national securi- - evilincarnate, Satan in
when
a Kansas student film, as many Americans ty?" he asked.
a turban. Thai's one reason
LETTERS
THE
recently . asked President seem to . How else does
Not very high. '' Here is the president remains so
Bush what he. "as a ranch- one explain the apparent my version of the top tier," popular io the Deep South,
er," thought of "Bro'keback willingness to scrap the Ellis wrote ' "the War for where
fundamentalist
Letters 10 the editor are welcome. They should be less than
Mountain."
On
. cue, , U.-S. Constitution and Indep endence,
w~ere
black/white
thinking' and a
300 words. "All letters are' subject to editing, must be signed,
Cowboy W said he hadn'l allow the president to defeat meant no United taste for authoritarianism'
and include address and telephdne number. No unsigned letseen it and would rather claim dictatorial powers in States of America; the War . run strong.
"ranching." The his cinematic· "war on ter- of 1812, when the national
discuss
ters will be published. Letters should be' in good taste,
But it's worse than userorT"
TV networks ate it up.
capital was burned to the less against the actual
addressing issues, .nor personalities. Letters of thilnks to" orgaPerhaps because the guy ground ; the Civil War,
Never mind that it was
nizations and individuals will nor be accepted for publication.
threat. Granting the presisheer fakery. Bu.sh is no writing the script is Osama whi.ch threatened the surdent
kinglike p~&gt;wers to
more a "rancher" than he bin Laden , a charismatic vi-.cal of the Union; World
spy on anybody he choosis a brain surgeon. He may · religious fanatic thought to War II, which represented
not only diminishes our
es
know somethin g about the be hiding somewhere in a totalitarian threat to
tax advantages of cattle the Pakistani outback . democracy and capitalism; own freedoms, it · simply
Reader Services
· !USPs 213-960)
or
his Nobody really knows . The the Cold War, most specif- doesn't work. FBI and
. depreciation,
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
ac&lt;;ountants do, but about way Bush acts, you'd 'ically the Cuban missile CIA agents complain ·of
.Our main concern in all stories is to be . Published every afternoon, Monday
actual livestock? Nothing. think the evildoer was crisis of 1962, which made being flooded with a
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
accurate. If you know of an error in a
He bought the Crawford lurking under the presiden- n_uclear annihilation a di s- · tsunami of useless infor- .
Pomeroy, Ohio . . S8cond.-cl888 postage
story, call the newsroom at (740} 992·
matiori they can't ' even
paid at Pomeroy
spread in 1999 as a back- tial bed . Almost everything tinct possibility."
2156 .
·uember: The Associated Press and the
drop · for' his presidential . the administration has
Thi s strikes me as inar- translate, much less use.
Ohio Newspaper Association . '
run . Otherwise, he's ·spent done since letting bin guable . The purpose of ter- Real investigations grow
. Po1tm11ter: Sand address ·corrections
Our main n~mber Is
. Laden slip away in the rorism is to induce irra- narrower. not wider, as
his whole life in cities.
to The DailY Senlinel, 111 Coun Street,
(740) 992-2156.
Even today, Bush owns mountains of Afghanistan tional ; disabling fear. ·In they proceed.
Pomeroy, OMio 45769.
Department extensions are:
Mearrwhile, such tactics
no cattle and doesn ' t ride in 2002 couldn't have been this sense. comments the
Subscription Rates
horses . He ropes · and· better
calculated
to brilliant blogger Digby . as torture, kidnapping
By carrter or motor route
News
brands mountain bike s advance AI Qaeda's cause. (digbysblog. blogspot.com) · combatants' 'wives, firing
One
month ....... ; ...'10.27
Editor! CMarlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
How big a threat is , "AI Qaeda has. a power- mis si le s from pilotless
from golf carts. He doesn't
One yoor .... ........'123.24
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Dolly .................. 50'
walk 'that way beca.use he,_ Osama bin Laden to what ful ally
the Bush drones into Pakistani vilReporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
Sentor Ctazen rateo
leg-weary from time in the !=owboy W calls " the Administration, which for lage s don't make terrorists
One month ............'9.24
saddle; he 's imitating John Amurkin way-.a-Jife " any - . four years has ... worked fear us . They merely drag .
One yt•r .......•....'103.90 .
Advertising
Wayne
and · . Clint way? Let 's get real: AI ceaselessLy to instill in us down to their level, ,
Subecrbers shoukj remit in advance diAD
Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
tothQ- Daily Senfhel. No subscription by
Eastwood. Even the lacon- Qaeda has no army, no . Americans an overarching eroding America's moral
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Outside Sales: Brenda Davis, E•t16
ic mumbling 's partly an navy, no air force, no and excessive fear
of ter- authority while sowing
,
carrier service is available
· ClassJCirc.: Judy Ctart&lt;, Ext. 10
means· of conducting an ron sm ."
act.
rage like dragon's teeth.
Bush is the living effective mil itary 5trike
(Arkansas
DemocratMalt Subscription
But are we ·truly terrified
lnalde Mtlga County
General Manager
embodiment. of the Texan against tile U.S. mainland . by · the boogeyman under Ga zette co lumnist . Gene
13 Weeks ............. '32.26
Charlene Hoeflich·~ E•t . .12
·proverb "all .hat and no What it can do, all it can · Bush 's bed ·~ Digby thinks Lyons is a national maga · 26 Weeks .............. '64.20
cattle." ·The 'French word do, is to sta ge hu ge. the- not. We 're more like zine award winner and co52 Weeks .
. .'127.11
E·mall:
atrical atrocities like Sept. tee na ge rs watching a hor- aur!Jor of "The Hunting of ·
is "poseur."
news@mydailysentinel .com.
Outalde Meigs County
But aren ' t all politicians II and last year's London ror movie, psychologically rile ' President"
(St.
13 Weeks ............ .'53.55
subway bombings .
in
the
TV
age'
actors
amped. but as spectators, Martin's Press, 2000). You
Web:
26 Weeks ....... .. .. .'107.10
se
atrocities.
For
tho
Basically,
yes.
.
not · parti cipanh . Ghastly can e-·mqil Lyons at gene52 Weeks ... . · ... .'. '214.21
www.mydailysentinel.com
The . danger comes from they sho uld be hunted and horrifying as Sept. II · lyons2 @sbcglobal.ltet.)
'

·Obituaries

Congress should not extend all tax cuts

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

I

Thursday, February 2, 2006

POMEROY - A civil suit was filed in Meigs County
ALBANY - The Meigs County Health Department and
MIDDLEPORT - Jack L. Frederick, 56, Middleport
Common
Pleas Court by Genesis Financial Service~. Inc.,
pllssed away on Jan. 31, 2006 at his residence after an Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club will hold an outreach clinic
Beaverton,
Ore., against Samatha A. Lee, Pomeroy~ demandextended illness.
.
from 5-7 p.m. on Feb. 9 at Columbia Township Volunteer Fire
He was born on Feb. 20, 1949 in Mason, W.Va. to Goldie Department. Bring child's shot records. Children must be accom- ing judgment in the amount of $22,638.90.
Personal injury lawsuits were filed by Lisa G. Froelich.
Biggs Frederick and the late Norman Frederick. Jack worked panied by a parent or legal guardian. Bring medical cards if applicAlbany,
against Brcrtt M. Counts. Racine, and others. and by
at . Mid-West Steel for many years. He also attended the able. A $5 donation appreciated but not required f01' services.
Nara
E.
Hartman, Long Bottom. against Rocksprings
Middleport Church of Christ.
•
Flu shots will alse be offered at the clinic for Meigs Counry res.
He is survived his wife, Kay Frederick of Middleport; chil- idents. The cost is $10 per J?I:TSOn without Medicaid or Medicare. Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy. and others.
A
complaint
for
partition
of
real
estate
was
filed
l)y
Franklin
dren, Jeff ,(Mary) Brown of Racine Jackie Frederick of Bring Medicare or Medic&amp;d cards to the outreach clinic.
Real
Estate
Co
.•
Columb!JS,
against
Edmond
Cooper,
Denver,
Dresden, Jodi (Steve) Martin of Gallipolis. Cylinda (Angelo)
Col.,
and
others.
.
Cross of Columbus, Kristen (Gary) King of Middleport; his
A foreclosure was granted to Credit Express, Inc., from
m~ther, Goldie Frederick of Long Bottom; brothers, Jerry
'·
Ryan C. Foster, and others .
(Diane) Frederick of-Long Bottom; and grandchildren, Cory
POMEROY - · Ohio Department of Transportation will
and Tyler Wamsley, Shannon Brown , Kenneth, Krista and close Gallia County Road 13, Gravel Hill Rd., located less
Jacob M~in, Amanda and Alex Cross, and Me gail Ki~g; and than a quarter-mile west of Ohio 554, will close Feb, 6 for a
several n1eces and nephews .
bridge replacement project. The project will also include a
POMEROY -. A dis solution was granted in Meigs
Besides his father, he was 'preceded by his mother and 1,300-foot- new roadway se~ment. The road will be closed for
father-in-law, Otis and Kathryn Chapman.
265 days. Motorists are advtsed to use Ohio 554 to Ohio 7 and County Common Pleas Court tq Debra Lee Stewart and
Kelly Dean Stewart.
·.services will be held at I p.m Saturday, Feb. 4, 2006 at the back to C.R. 13 as a detour.
F1sher Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating will be AI
Hartson and Rev. Jamie Fortner. Burial will follow at Meigs
Memonal Gardens in Pomeroy. Visitation will be held from 2
to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m.on Friday Feb. 3, 2006 at the funenil home.
' POMEROY - A divorce was granted in Meigs County
CHESTER- Blair Windon was named president and Alan
Online condolences may . be sent to www.fisherfUiieralCommon
Pleas Court to Sheila M. Guthrie and Otis D. Guthrie.
Holter vice president of the Chester Township Trustees. Elmer
hornes.com ·
Newell serves as the third member of the board. Monthly
meetings will be held at 7 p.m . ori the first Tuesday of every
Supplies will be furni shed.
·.
month at the Chestt;r town Hall.
Adults and children are
also invited to a Family Craft
., POMEROY -A memorial service will be held for Philip
Night beginning at 5 p.m. on
from PageA1
Del Call who passed away in the early morning hours of Jan.
Thursday, Feb. 9 at lhe.
3), 2006 at 46 years of age.
RACINE- The Meigs County Humane Society will have lowing upcoming events for Racine Library. This eyent
The service will be at the Fisher Funeral Home, 590 E. Main
will allow participants to crea straw giveaway for pet bedding from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at both adults and children:
St., Pomeroy, on Feb. 3, 2006 at 6 p.m.
·
Hill's Citgo as well as . behind the Meigs Couniy Humane
An Adult Craft Program ate their own personalized
Del was born Oct. 16, 1959 and was a lifelong resident of
Society Thrift Store in Middleport..
.will be held from noon lo 2 'valentine bear card box or
Middleport and the surrounding area. He attended. Meigs High
door
hanger.
p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 4 at valentine
School and thereafter worked many years .with Local219 probe
furnished.
Supplies
will
the Pomeroy Library and providing asbestos removal services. He was active with our
water districts last August.
All events are free .
vide adults with, an opportuyouth in the community and coached the Harrisonville
The three-physiCian panel nity to ·Create their own
Call the Meigs County
Bulldogs to their only championship season. Del and his famwhich will oversee the long- Valentine's Day card using · Library at 992-5813 for mclre
ily enjoyed fellowship, and worshiped at the Common
term analysi's of medical scrapbooking
from PageA1
tethniques. . information.
Grounds Coffee Shop. Del also has been affiliated with'
information includes Dr.
Midway Church in Langsville.
Tony Fletcher, is an environDel was a loving father, devoted husband, son, and brother, had exceeded its goal of mental epidemiologist at the
ll,nd a wonderful friend to all that were blessed with his 60,000 participants, and that London School of Hygiene
)lcquaintance. He is survived by his beloved wife Cheryl Ann, only about 3,000 more Partic- and Tropical Medicine, Dr.
who he married .in 1980; his two sons, Benjamin William and ipants will be accepted. The Nelson Kyle Steenland, proStevt;n Wesley; his mother and father, Mary Ann and Woody; prqject began collecting fessor at the School of Public
his sister; Debbie (Tim) CunditT; and brothers, Woody health data and blood sam- Health at Emory University
(C/uisty), Davy, Stevie (Debbie) and t&gt;;lichael Call·; along with . pies from customers in the in Atlanta, Ga., and Dr. David.
Tuppers
Plains-Chester, Savitz, of Mount Sinai
~vera! aunts. and uncles, nieces and nephews. May God
Pomeroy Village and other School of Medicine.
embrace him and bless his soul with eternal peace.

Road .to close

Dissolution

Divorce

Trustees organize

Libraries

Philip Del Call

Straw giveaway for pets

CS study ·

.

'

·Racine

bership into the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce.
· Council approved purchasing garage doors for the annex
from PageA1
building at a cost of $2,850 ·
from Ga)lia Overhead Doors.
: . In accordance with state law
Council agreed to purchase
;p1d since no one filed for the a new 2006 Ford Crown
office of mayor, Hill retained Vicioria with police package
his position until a successor from
the · Ohio
Law
is elected and ·qualifies.
Enforcement Support Office
· Hill carried on his mayoral for $24,058 .75 for the Racine
duties during ·the· organiza- Police Department.
tional meeting where. he made . The car would be paid for
the following appointments with a loan from Racine Home
as directed by village ordi- National Bank for five years at
nances: John .Holman, water ·5.26 percent interes! with the
operator and street commis- first payment due in 2007.
sioner; Jamie Jones, fire ,
This concluded the busichief; Curtis Jon~s. · police ness discussed at last month's
marshal; Douglas Little, vil- regular session.
lage solicitor; David Spencer,
Business discussed and/or
grants administrator.
motions approved at the most
Counci I
· elected recent, . recessed session of
Councilman Ike Spencer to council last month included:
serve as president of council.
Council approved · the Ohio
After the organizational Risk Management Plan as premeeting council went directly sented in regulllf session by
into regular session where the Ray McComas from ·the
2006 appropriations (budget) Kinder ,insurance Agency. The
were approved in the amount Ohio Plan is liability insurance.
of $529,601.90.
Th'e plan was approved by
Resolution 594 was passed council for a three year period.
authorizing the clerk-treasurRacine Volunteer Fire
to issue blanket certificates Department Chief Jamie
and/or purchase orders and/or Jones reported thai in 2005 his
then and now certificates by department responded to 13
fund account when needed structure fires. 27 motor vehifor 2006 . The blanket certifi- cle accidents, II brush fires
cate shall not exceed $5,000. and 22 miscellaneous runs for
Council renewed its mem- a .total of 77 incidents. The

er

department averaged 13 firefigllters per run for a total of
1698 total man hours.
.
Council entered into a oneyear agreement between the
village and Friel'lds and
Neighbors Community Food
Center to use the 1:\asement
kitchen in the Racine
Municipal Building as· a "community food center" and begin
·a community food pantry.
Friends · 'and Neighbors
· Community Food Center
would be responsible for any
maintenance and repairs and
will hold a general liability
·insurance policy for · the
activity. It was suggested that
the panty be open from 5
p.m, to 7 p.m. one ·evening a
week by the center's director
Lisa Roberts . The center
would supply shelving, food
and make any improvement
needed to serve those that
meet income guidelines.
The pantry will initially be
staffed · by Friends and
Neighbors of Athens County
and Meigs County volunteers.
·'Friends and Neighbors"
would also operate a migrant
farmer outreach center out of
the same room at the munic'ipal .building on a . different
evening of the week.
"Friends and Neighbors"
formerly worked out of the
Portland Community Center.
Hill also made appoint'

' to
ments of council members
special committees · to help
better serve the village. The
appointments were as follows:
Shain · and .
Spencer,
· Harmon to the police and fire
committee. ·
Cardone; Powell and Shain
to the financial and audit
committee ..
Reed, Cardone and Harmon
to the street committee.
Spencer, Powell and Harmon
to the 'ordinance committee.
· Shain, Cardone, Spencer and
Reed to annexation committee.
Cardone, Reed, Spencer to
human resources conunittee.
Also,
Hill
appointed
Spencer to serve as . village
council representative on the
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce.
Hill also wishes to appoint
recreation coma parks
mittee to be made up of council members and citizens. Hill
wants those that are interested
to call his office at 949-2296.
The next council meeting
will be at 7 p.m. on Monday,'
Feb . 6 at the Racine
· Municipal Building.
The information for this
article was based on the
unapproved minutes from the
organizational, regular and
recessed sessions of council
for January and are subject to
amendment or change.

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Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

-- -------·--

www.mydailysentinel.com

-...---

Elvis tribute artist
returning to Ariel

CHARLESTON, W.Va. West virginia Di.vision of
Culture and History and the
West Virginia Commission on
the Arts will host ''Arts Day at
the Capitol" · at the State ·
Capitol Complex on Monday,
· Feb. 6, from I0 a.m. to 3 p.m.
The event ·celebrates · the
vitality of the · arts in West
Virginia ; the impact the arts
has on cultural growth, e'COnomic development and education; and how the arts
brings together artists, arts
organizations and art enthusiasts from across the state. ·
There ~ill be information
tables, performances and
demonstrations in the rotunda
of the
State
Capitol.
Participants will include
Appalachian Fiddlers of
Charleston: Doris Fields of
Beckley, a jazz musician;
Bonni
McKeown
of
Charleston. a blues musician; ·
Scoil Damsha of Jane Lew, a
traditional Irish danee group; ,
West Virginia Storytelrers
Guild. based in Thomas;

Owl~t

Icenhower

Sleigh Bell Ball set at Moose Lodge Saturday··
MALONEY

TMALON EYCiilMYDAILYREG ISTER.CDM

POINT PLEASANT. W.Va.
- A 12-year tradition of a
good time for a good cause
will be renewed at the Point
Pleasant Moose Lodge on
Saturday, Feb. 4.
.
The Sleigh· Bell Ball has
served as both a yearly night
of entertainment and a
. depepdable fund-raiser for
Main Street of Point P.leasant.
"It's a great time," said
Director Charles Humphreys.
· Beginning at 8 p.m.; the
Sleigh Bell Ball will. include
good food and good music, to
be provided again this year by
the Ga'ry Stewart Quintet.
Humphreys said he has heard
nothing but praise for the
Stewart band.
."They're really good;: h_e
said. "They play all kinds of
good music that people seem
to really enjoy."
Tickets are on sale now at'
the following locations: the
Main Street office at 305
Main St. , Siders Jewelers.
Harris Steakhouse and Ohio
Valley Bank.

The Gary Stewart Quintet

"We'd like to have a lot of ment in Mason County .. He
people come out," Humphreys said it is particularly imporsaid. "It's a huge event to bring tant' that the Main Street orgain money for our programs."
nization's fund-rai sers are
· Humphrey s predicted that successful this yem so that its
2006 will be a pivotal year i11 · program can be advanced.
terms of economic develop-_ "We have more opponuni-

ties in Mason County rhi s year
· than ever before." he said. "I
invite everyone to buy a ticket.
With that money. you'll be
gc;i~g out and having a great
time, and you'll be helping to
support Mason County."

Entertainment Briefs·
FAC hosting
art exhibition

Sculpture now
on display

GALLIPOLIS . - French
Art Colony.· 530 First Ave,.
Galli polis , wi II feature the
faculty staff exhibition from
Green
State
Bowling
University Jan , 27 through
Feb. 26.
The exhibition is a selection
of pieces from the original
show recently ending at
Bowling Green's Dorothy
Uber Bry.an Gallery. Local.
sponsors of the exhibition are
Burnett 's . Heating
and
Cooling,
Cherrington ,
Moulton and !Ovans, Sears
Roebuck of Gallipolis and
Steve Chapman. CPA.
· The FAC gallery is open to
the publi c Tuesday through
Friday from I0 a.m. until 6
p.m., and on Sunday from I to
5 p.m . For information. call
446-3834

JACKSON - · Artwork . by
Dave Snyder of Rio Grande
will be on display at the
Lillian Jones Museum , 75
Broadway St., Jack son, in
February and March .
Thi s versatile artist has created many notable
pieces-of sculpture in wood,
ceramic, metal and glass, and
the upcoming exhibit will
showcase a sampling of these.

Victorian
Valentine
workshop
JACKSON - The Lilfian
l one&gt; Museum in conjunction
with the Tea Ci!ddy of
Jack son will be hosting a
Victorian
Valentine

Work shop . All &lt;!ge' can m&gt;. or visit' the Web site at
attend 'the worhhop and ht~p:lllillianjones . museum.co
make a be&lt;tutiful Victorian fan . m.
and learn th'e "lan~uage" of
the fan on Saturday. Feb 4,
from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. There
is a cost per person. and the
workshop will be held at the
Tea Caddy (across the street
GALLIPOLIS - A special
from the tm"eum). Register
concert
that will benefit the
by Feb . I if planning ro
families of the Sago Mine
attend .
trage.dy
ha s be en set for
For more information. or to
register, ca ll the museu.m at Friday, Feb. 3 at the ArielCarson .
Dater
(740) 2~6-2556.
' Ann
Perforniing
Art~
Centre
in
Leave a message if calling
after hours &lt;tnd the call will be Gallipolis.
A local favorite. Stephen
returned.
Winter hours at the Lillian Cochran. and sensational cou nJones Museum, 75 Broadway · try Mnd Last Man Standing
St .. Jack,on. are Tuesdays and will be petforming . There will
Wedne sdays from I to 4 p.m . also be a 'ilenl auction held
Additonal hours and group that. night tn fun her help these
tours can be scheduled by families. Ticket' can be purappointment . For more infor- chased at Big C&lt;iulllry 99 or the
mation. call the · mu~eurn at Ariel Theatre box oflice . For
!740) 286-2556. or e-mail ;it 1i1nre information. call (304)
&lt; IiII ianjoncs (g' dr.agonbh, .co 675-2763.

'

$30 Flret Ayenue

P.O. ,Boll 472
GalllpollS,,OH 45631
(740) 448 834

Tu.. •
1tJ.6 pm
Sunday 1-5 pm
Admission Is FFIEEf
J{~e i nn;d

\lulti- \o' l •

( •· llt &lt;'f'

O!f!ct Hours:
M-F9-5pm

Annual Silent Auction
•everything's' Rock -N. March 4th •• 6:30
call for tickets

(!Udlu, ?4-/4,,(~
April Educational Exhlbltwe are looking for any ·
memorabilia from the
islands to borrow during
this exhibit.
Contact the FAC if you can help .

r

Benefit concert
slated Friday

,, -·
•

small ensembles of the West .
Virginia Symphony, from ,
both
Charleston
and
Parkersburg; and Jl10r~.
,.
lt1 addition. several schoolS ·
and at;ts organizations, as well ·
as individual artists, wtll be ·
on hand to demonstrate and
answer question s.
These..
groups include · the Actors Guild of Parkersburg, Allied :
Artists. .
Appalachian :·
Education Initiative, Carnegie'
Hall Inc. , Charleston Stage
Company. the Clay Center far ·
the Arts and Sciences , ·
Huntington Mttseum of Art;:
MountainMade . Mountain
Whispers, Museum in the '
Community. Tyler CountY,'.
High School and Waharla
High School.
'"'
Fur more information aho11t
"Arts Dar ar 'rhe Capitol," '
conracr ihe West VirginitJ, :
Dit•isinn . t~f Culmre and'
History 's direcror of ats :
Richard Res.Hneye1; or Jeff
Pierson. inaivid11al artist
coordinat01; at (304) 558 ~ '
0240.
· ,.

Women artists' exhibition::
opens at HMA . ...

. '
. Even · so, it was pot until.
1986 that the classic, more · ·
used an history text, H.W. .
Janson 's History . of Art,
included a single womah

HUNTINGTON. W.Va. .:.. .Never Done: Works by
Women Artists from the
Puzzuoli Miller Collection"
has opened at the Huntington
Mu seum of An. The exhibit
nit1 s at HMA thorugh April 9. artist.
A small illustrated cat;fThis important and impressive collection pulled together . Iogue will accompany this.
by Charleston-based psychia- exhibition featuring contributrist Dr. Gina Puzzuoli Miller tions by Dr. Gina . Puzzuoli
focuses on the art of women Mille(, HMA Senior Curator
artists. Thi s collection of Jenine Culligan, and indepenbetween 250 and 300 works deht art historian and artist
includes paintings, prints, col: Brice Brown. The catalogue
lages. drawings, small-scale will . tie·.. available in the ·
sculpture and decorative arts.
and features many well- Museum Shop.
::
known artists. including Anna
This exhibition is sponsore(l'
Rosa by Bank One Foundation; Mr. ·
Claypoole
Peale.
Bonheur,
Mary
Nimmo . and Mrs. Edgar 0. Barrett;
Morgan.
Lilly
Martin Breast Health Center at
.Spencer, Sonia Delaunay. Cabell Huntingt&lt;;m Hospital;
O'Keeffe, Cabell Huntington Hospital ;
Georgia
Marguerite
Thompson Huntington Mall Complex::·
Zorach, Blanche Lazzell ; Junior League of Huntington:
f h
Dorthea Tanning, ls)lbel
Bi shop. Lee Krasner. Miriam the Macy's Fund 0 1 e
Schapiro.
Helen 'Federated Department Store~ .
.J'rankenthaler, Joan Mitchell, Foundation;
Marshall .
Nancy Graves, Kiki Smith. University · Women 's Center:
Leslie Dill and hw1dreds of Dr. Gina Puzzuoli Miller and
others.
· Jeff Miller: the Montclaire •
· l.n the late 1960s, scholars, String Quartet; the Charlotte
art hi storians•. aild artists first R. Schmidlapp Fund, Fiftli '
began dtscuss~ng and bnngmg Third Bank Tru stee: West'
to the publtc s awareness of Virginia. Division of Culture
the 1act that women and van.
,
. . .•
ou,; racial and ethnic groups and HtstoryN.e st Vtrgmta·,
were grossly under-reprdent- C?mmts"on on the Arts; Wes!,
ed in museum collections. Vtrgtnta Humamues Council:
major an exhibitions. and art and West Virginia Women's :
galleries.
Commission.

Stuart's to host Knight concert.'
NELSONVILLE
Kentucky singer/songwriter
Chris Knight will be appearing in concert at 8 p.m.
Friday, Feb. 3 adt the historic
Stuart's Opera Huse . in
Nel,onvi lie.
Knight has been called
"Dark as mid·night and ·mean
as a rattlesnake...... bv
Billboard Magazine. He i~s
also known for accurately
portraying rural Kentucky life
through his songs. Born and
. raised in the country outside
Slaughters, Ky.. Kni gl:tt still
lives with his wife and children on a 40 acre fmm. miles
from his cl;tildhood home.
Labeling Knight's music
has never been easy. Trying ld
capture
the blaLing grace and
..

BOWLING GREEN STATE UNIVERSITY

FACULTY STAFF EXHIBIT
January 27th thru February 26th
Sponsored by: The Ohio Arts Council, Burnelt's
Heating and Cooling, Cherrington, Moulton &amp; Evans,
Sears Roebuck of Gallipolis, and Steve Chapman,
CPA. Gallia Manor,. Spring Valley, Brookside and
·Frenchtown Apartments
Pictured: Colleen McCubbin Stepanie, ''SG3" ·
. 72"x72", acrylic on canvas

WoRLD

PageA7
Thursday, February 2,

'·

gut-punch power of his music,
has often been the least easy
of all. Yet over the cou·rse of
five years and two acclaimed
albums, critics and fans alike ·
have taken the one-of-a-kind ,
ride with Knight though a sin- ·
gularly vivid landscape of '
stark musical honesty. Th~
bottom line remains the truth ;
Chris Knight is · one of th~
most compelling singers,,
songwriters and performers in
America today.
·
The performance will ta~~.·
place in Stuart's intimate
backstage performance arefl.
Limited seating is available. '
~or tickets Vr it~furmwio,t, '
call (7.J0) 753- 1921 or visit
H 'H · ~' ·.stuart :,opera house. o rg,

2006

W.Va. governor asks for halt in coal production for safety checks
BY LAWRENCE MESSINA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

2006

WEST VIRGINIA CAPITOL:.
TO HOST ARTS DAY .',·.

GALLIPOLIS -A special valentine's _concen, "Love Me
Tender," will be presented by Elvis tribute artist Dwight
Icenhower at 7. p.m. on Saturday. Feb. 18 at the Ariel-Ann
Carson Dater Performing Arts Ce ntre .
·
Icenhower will be performing many of the favorite Elvis
lpve songs. and more.As an added bonus to hts performance,
Icenhower will be performing with a live band, complete wuh
back-up singers. for a true concert feel.
The Meigs County native recently relocated to the Orlando,
Fla .. area. This com:ert will be his first return visit to the area.
The Ariel-Dater Hall will also offer a dinner optiori for a lim ited numb.er of guests attending the concet1. The Ariel Theatre
Guild, a group ofdedicated volunteers. wtll prepare a spagfletti dinner. Seating for the uinner is limited. The cost is $10.
''Jhis is a won&lt;krful way forour gueststo celebrate
Valentine 's Day and Elvis. Few legends have a repetoire of
love sonos that have had such an impact as Elvis;·and few tribute artisfs can bring that ma~ic to life as honestly and completely as Dwight Icenhower.'· said Joseph Wright, director of
the Ariel-Dater Centre.
· ·
Tickets for the Icenhower's performance are on sale
now. Reserved seating is available on the main noor for $15
each. and in the balcony for $12 each. Seating is still available.
The performance will take place in the Morris and Dorthy
Haskins Ariel Theatre in the Ariel-Dater Hall. Doors will open
for seating at approximately 6: 15 p.m . Guests who have purchased dinner ticket&lt; should arrive by 5:30p.m.
The dinner will be served in the Ariel-Dater Banquet Hall.:
on the second Ooor of the building.
-Tickets for thi s..and other events. may be pun.:hased by visiting the Ariel-Dater Hall Box Office at 428 Second Ave ..
Gallipolis . Box Oftlce hours arc .JO a.m. to 3 p.m. Munday
through Friday. and 90 minutes prior to showtimes.Guests may
also purchase their tickets by calling the Ariel-Dater Hall at
(740) 446-ARTS (446c2787)
.

BY TIM

Thursday, February 2,

NATION •

The Daily Sentinel

'
"
•.CHARLESTON, W.Va. Gov. Joe Manchin called for
all coal companies in West
Virginia to· shut down for
safety cl1ecks after two more
mine workers were killed
Wednesday in separate accidents.
While Manchin's cali was ·
v'iiluntary, he also ordered
mine inspections speeded up
so that all 544 of the state's
surface and underground
mines are examined by regulators as soon as possible.
"We're going t&lt;J check !'or
un&amp;afe conditions, and we're
gping to correct any unsafe
conditions· before we mine
.another Jump of coal."
M[mchin said.
~ bavid Dye, acting U.S.
. assistant secretary of labor for
· n1ine safety- and health, later
u~ged coal mines nationwide
' tq conduct safety and training
se~sions on Monday for
workers · at ..the beginning of
each shift. He cited the recent
upsurge in mine accidents.
. "I am .asking miners and
management at every mine
AP Photo
operation to do the right · West .Virgihia Gov. Joe Manchin, at podium. calls on coal companies to cease production in the ·State until safety checks can
thing: take one hour out for be completed, at the Capitol on Wednesday in Charlestown, W.Va. Two mine workers were killed Wednesday in separate accis;l.!'ety's sake this Monday," dents in West Virginia. Joining Manchin are, from left in front, Senate . Majority Leader Truman Chafin, D·Mingo , House of
Dye said in a statement.
Delegates member and UMWA member Mike Caputo , D-Marion, Senate P.resident Earl Ray Tombl in, D·Logan, and West Virginia
.,Both death s Wedne sday . Coal Association President Bill Raney. In the back row are four United Mine Workers members who declined to be identified .
o.ccurred at mines .in southwestern West Virginia, offi- reviewing mine .:ond itions,
"They were immediately way and a safe way to do ground miner was killed at
cials said. One miner was safety checklists and desig- complying," Raney said. things and ... recommit our- Long Branch Energy's No.
killed at an . underground nated escape routes.
West Virginia is the nation's selves to the whole philoso- . I R Tunnel Mine in Boone
mine when a wall support
The West Virginia Coal second-largest coal producer, phy of safety." said Consol County. He was pronounced
popped loose. And a bulldoz- Association, whose members after Wyom)ng . .
Energy spokesman Thomas dead at a hospital.
er operator died at a surface account for 80 percent of the
International Coal Group Hoffman.
The bulldozer operator
mine when the vehicle struck state's coal production , said · and Consol Energy said they
Names of ihe two mine · died at the Black Castle
a gas line and sparked a fire. its members would heed the will conduct the safety workers
who
died Sutface Mine. also in Boone
. The deaths brought to 16 governor's
request. checks sought by Manchin Wednesday were not imtn'e- Countv, Gresham said. Black
tile number of mining-related Association President Bill not only at their West diately released.
Castle. is operated by Elk Run
fatalities in West Virginia Raney . expected the safety Virginia operations but also · .Caryn Gresh-am, a spokes- Coal Co .. a subsidiary of
checks would take a matier of an hose in other states.
since Jan. 2.
woman for the state Oflice of Massey Energy Co . . The
Manchin said the safety hours. depending on the mine
"It's a good time to remind Miners' Health Safety and death was the ihird at a
checks
would
include type and size.
everybody that there ·s·a right Training, sa id the ·under- .· Massey sub.sidiary in less
o

•

I

'

Judge_pushes ahead With trial despite
·.:Saddam's absence, defense boycotts
. BY HAMZA HENDAWI
•

~SSOCIATED

PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD. Iraq - A
female · witness, testifying
Wednesday at . Saddam
Hussein's trial, said she was
st'ripped naked in prison,
hung by her feet and kicked
in the chest by the former
. Iraqi leader's half brother.
The woman provided some
of the most gripping testimony so far in the trial, which
went ahead despite a boycott
by Saddam and four other
dc;fendants, who demanded
the removal of the chief judge.
Weeping several times during her testimony, the woman
described being stripped
.nl!ked, hung by her hands.
b~aten and given electric
s hocks.
Then , she told . the court,
Barzan Ibrahim - Saddam's
half brother and the top codefendant in the trial - told
. gaards to instead hang her
from her feet, ttren he kicked
her three times in the chest.
"I told him (Ibrahim). 'For
God's sake. I'm a woman.
Master. 1 have nothing to confess. Why are you doing this
to me?"' said the woman, who
spoke from behind a beige
curtain to protect her identity.
The woman was .one of five
witnesses who took the stand
during Wednesday's 4 1/2-h&lt;iur
session - all of whom were
hidden behind the cunain.
The woman's testimony
· directly implicated Ibrahim,
Saddam 's one-time head of
the Mukhabarat intelligence
agency. She recounted her
torture at the Mukhabarat's
Baghdad headquarters. where
'she said she and family members were . take·ti after ·being
arrested .in a crackdown fo llowinn &lt;i 19R2 assussination
attempt against Saddain in
the Shiite vill'age of Dujail.
She ·said she was later
taken to the nowrious Abu
Ghraib prison. One day, she
was d.rivcn back to the
I¢Iukhabarat headquarters for
ibterrogation with her (ather.
when g uards threw a dead
baby into the car andordered
it taken "to the Mitkhabarm
!lllrage ."
·
• "What crime have we all
tununined to go through this
agony'!" she asked, sobbing.
Chief judge Raoul AbdelRahman . who took over last
week. pressed ahead with the
proceedings Wednesday at a
rapid pace. taking advantage
of the calm in a courtroom
that ha s been plagued by

BY TIM MOLlOY

AP Photo

· shouting matches , scuffles
and protests si nee the ' trial
began Oct. 19 . .
But the boycott by five of
ihe case's eight defendants ·
and their defense team was
likely to further undermine
the trial , which has been cast
as a key plank in Iraq 's Iransition from dictatorship to
democrattc rule.
.
. President
~~sh
satd
Wednesday he \\as not warned about the dt sarra~ surrounding the Saddamtnal..
. "Hopefully the tnal ~til
resume and ·be conducted m a
fair" way. Bu sh told The
Assoctated Press 111 an mtervtew. " It certamly stands 111 a ·
stark contrast to ho": Saddam
treated hts people. I d ltke to
see th~ tnal move 1orward ...
. That s what dethocractes d~;
They gtve people a fatr lnal.
Abdei-Rahman .. a Kltrd.
appomted new defense attarneys, and the three defendants
who accepted them and
attended Wednesday\ proceedtngs sat qutctly. surround ,
ed by the empty chrurs lett by
Saddam and the others. .
Saddam and ht,s co:delenc
dants are on tnal lor the
ktlltng ol more than 140
Shiites after the 19H2 anempt
on the former rul er s ltle 111
Dujail. north of Baghdad._
They. face death by hangtng tl
convtcted ...
The ongmal defense team
chosen hy Saddam and h"
co-dekn J ams ha., pcuuoncd
the tnbun;d to remove. Abdel Rahman . , aymg they wtll not
&lt;~!tend until h,e ~oe.s .

They
acc use
Abdel.Rahman of having a ·:personal feud'' with Saddam
becau se the judge was born
in Halabja, a Kurdish village
hit by a poi·son gas attack
allegedly ordered by Saddam
in 1988. Some 5.000 Kurds
were killed in that attack.
incl uding several of Abdei Rahman·s relatives.
"The judge is an enemy to
my client," Saddam 's original chief attorney. Khaled aiDulaimi. told the AP in the
Jordanian capital. Amman.
Abdei-Rahman "shouldn't be
allowed to preside over the
hearin gs because he ca n't be
fair in this case:·
AI-Dulaimi also claimed
that Saddam·s regi me tried
Abdei-Rahman in absentia .
and sentenced him 10 life itr
prisqn in 1977. He said the
judge was a memher of a
Kurdish party that was
opposed to· Saddam and so
"ho lds' political animosity
with the defenua nC
AI-Dulaimi\ claims could
'not be immediate ly- c·on rirmed. When " a· defense
lawyer raised the i"ue at the
end o'f Wedn ~sday's hearing.
Abdei-Rahman 'a id the court
had yet . to receive·
a .formal
.
note uskmg lor hts removal.
The judge .nrdercd the prnCl'edings clo~ed for the fiN
half-hour Wednesd&lt;ty h&lt;trring
press and tek1 is ion from the
courtroom . It wa~ not clear
whether SadJum was brouuht
for the hcarinc. at1J col.trt
offi t: iab did n~&gt;t say what
loo~ place .

.

,

Death toll climbs,to eight in
·postal worker's rampage
' A$SlJC.IATED PRESS WRITER

The chair of Saddam Hussein remains empty, as his co-defendants Mohammed Azawi Ali , and Abdullah Kazim Ruwayyid sit
in the front row of a court in Bag~dad's heavily fortified (Jreen
Zone. whi le second row center ts Ali Dayim Ali, Wednesday.
The Iraqi High Tribunal convened ·wednesday for the ninth
hearing of the trial· of Saddam and seven co-defendants,
accused in the 1982 killing of more than 140 Shiites after an
assassination attempt against the president in Dujail.

than two weeks.
The fatalities followed the
deaths of a dozen miners from
carbon monoxide poisoning
after a Jan. 2 explosion at
International Coal Group
Inc.'s Sago Mine. The explosion trapped the men hundreds of feet underground.
The sole survivor. Randal
McCioy ·Jr.. is r~covering in a
rehabilitation hospital.
Less than three weeks after
Sago, two miners died in a
belt line fire at Massey's
Aracoma Coal Alma No.· I
mine in Melville, about 180
miles away.
Manchin responded to
those earlier tragedies · by
pushing a 'tate mine-safety
!;&gt;ill through the Legislature in
a single day. Among other.
things. the bill requires coal
compan ies to provide miners
with emergency communicators and tracking devices. and
to store extra air supplies
. underground .
West Virginia's congressional delegation followed up
those effort~ Wednesday.
introducing similar federal
legislation.
The Lon g Branch mine .
employs around 59 people.
according to the fede ral Mine
Safety
and
Health ·
Administration. Eight workers were injured during the
first nine months of 2005.
more than 2 1/2 times the
national average. according
to MSHA figure s.
·
.Federal inspectors i»ued
50 citations against the mine
last year. 19 of which were
considered ':significant and
substantial."
Two employees were
injured at the Black Castle
during the tirst nine m.onths
of 2005 . .below the national
average. The mine has about
186 workers.
·

GOfETA, Calif. -·
A
. womafi wounded in a ram page by a former postal
worker died. Wednesday. and
investigators
said
the
assailant .also killed a former
neighbor just before the
attack, bringing the deatli toll
to eight.
A ·former po stal worker
said the attacker had spewed
racist commeots in the past,
and six .of the victims were
minorities. but investigators
have refused to discuss a
motive in the slayings.
The eighth victim. Beverly
Graham, 54. was found
Tuesday. dead of a gunshot
wound t.o the .head. at a Santa
·Barbara condominium complex where former postal
employee Jennifer San Marco
li ved up until a few years ago.
Sheriff's Sgt. Erik R,aney
.~a id authorit-ies believed
Graham's death was "the
beginning nf thi s rampage.. "
Investigators matched several 9 mm shell ca'sin gs found
at Graham's condo to casings from the postal dist.ribu.tion center.
A neighbor of Graham's
reported' hc;irin g a gunsh ot
Mond~ y el'en ing. before San
Marco went to the mail-processi ng .ccnter.
.
San · Milrco 'h(it six posLai

employees to death and com- was held for three days at a
mitted suicide in what was psychiatric hospital, but the
believed to be the nation's sheriff did not know if any
deadliest workplace shooting- diagnosis was made.
by a woman. It was also the
TabaJa sai d he watched
nation's b[oodiest shooting at deputies pull San Marco out
a postal installation in nearly · from under a mail-sorting
20 years.
machine and wheeled her
A postal worker who was away in handcuffs pn a mail
shot in the head. Charlotte cart, but it was not immediColton, 44, died of her ate! v unclear whether that
wounds Wednesday. s.aid occurred separately from the
. Teresa Rounds, spokes- 200 I incident.
woman for Santa Barbara
She returned to the plant
Conage Hospital.
several months later but
Former plant worker Jeff "people started coming to me
TabaJa recalled that San and saying. ·she's acting
Marco, who was white, erratically."' TabaJa said.
seemed particularly hostile to "She was screaming. She was
Asians while working for the saying a lot of rac.ist comPostal Service.
inents . It was pretty ugly.''
He said all of the slain.
San Marco was escorted
postal workers .wcre minori-- out of the building by manties: Three were black. one a£e mem and never returned.
was Chinese-American. one TabaJa said.
was Hispanic and one was
"She seemed tO be ha,ing ·
Filipino . Authorities said conversation s and there wasGraham was white:
n't anyone around her. She· d
ln)'estigators ga,·e no be just jabbering away."
motive for the postal ram - TabaJa said.
page but 'atd San Marco h~d
After leaYing her postal job.
been put on medical leave in San Marco moved to New
2003 for psychological rea- Mexico in late 2003 or early' ·
snns and had to be removed 200-l and lived in an i,olated
from the buildingby deputies desen home. A. deputy clerk
&lt;tt least once .
for the ci ty of Milan. N.M ..
Santa Barbara Countv said she once applied for a
(She riff J im Anderson said ousine" licen se ft\r a publica- ·
officers took San Marco tion called "The Racist Press"
away from the postal center but diu not qualify.
on Feb. 5. 2001. heca"'e "she
It was unclear when she
Wil.' acting itfa tiunaf. '.' She
remrned Ill Cali forma.

..

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�LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

"~TOPS honors loser
Walk to be held on April 22.
POMEROY
Mei ~ s
Leader Pat Snedden pre- Countv Recorder Kav Htll
sented a program entitled reported the following· transbeverage "Waist."
fers in real estate :
Medings are held every
Garfield E. Pau ley, Jr. ,
Tuesday at Torch Baptist Evelyn Jane Pauley. Evelana
Church, with weigh-in from J. Pauley, to James Robert
5: I 5 to 6: I 5 p.m. followed by Pauley, Patricia Iva Pauley.
a meeting at 6:30. For infor: deeCl , Lebanon.
Escanaba Timber. L.L.C ..
mation, call Snedden at 6622633 or attend a free meettng. to Scioto Land Co., L.L.C. ,
deed .
Clyde E. Sayre II, Michelle
A. Sayre. to Clyde E. Sayre
II, deed. Sutton.
Denise Ann Birchfield to
Ronald A. Whittington ,
Emma M. Whiuington, deed,
lion a year earlier.
COLUMBUS (AP)
Full-year earni.ngs for the
American Electric Power Co.
·said on Wednesday that it lost Columbus-based company
money in the . founh quaner , fell to $814 million. or $2.09
because of $261 mi Ilion charge per share. from $1.09 billion,
fromPageA1
related to its Texas operations. or $2.75 per share, in 2004.
The nation 's largest power On an adjusted basis, profit
:generator reported a loss of was $2.73 per share. while Donlin H~esman , director of
$149 million, or 38 cents per revenue slipped 16 percent to programs for the foundation.
The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
.share. for the quaner ended $11.9 billion .
· of
Care
Looking
forward, Continuum
Dec. 31. A year ago, AEP
is
part
of
the
iniCommillec
&lt;ecorded gains of $I 77 n1il - American Electric held its
tiative.
lion, or 45 cents per share, target for 2006 earnings of
"The foundation is looking
and announced that it had $2.50 to $2.70 per share. but
sold its natural gas pipeline increased its.projected capital 'to be supp01tive of the mission
company. a move that slight- expenditure budget by $400 to end homelessness. in
Southeastem Ohio," said Teri-v
million to $3.7 billion.
.ly bumped up profits.
Analysts are predicting year- Donlin Huesman, director of
Without- one-time charges.
including the $261 million ly income of,$2 .61 per share programs. "We are engaged
with the National Alliance to
charge at AEP Texas Central on $12.25 billion in rev&lt;;nue.
Hmnelessness.
In .
Co. over a cost recovery dis-· · AEP owns more than 36.000 End
essence,
we
want
to
help
.
the
pute with the Public Utility · megawaus of generating
Commission of Texas, earn- capacity in the United States individual Continuum of Care
ings would have been $J.l5 and has more thitn 5 million Comminees with capacity
million. or 29 cents per share customers in its 11 -state trans· building and needs assess- 4 cents ahead of estimates · mission and distribution grid. ment ."
Huesman allended last
Shares of AEP have traded
of analysts surveyed by
month's
Gallia-Jacksonbetween $32.25 and $40.80
Thomson Financial.
Meigs
continuum
committee
Revenue decline 17 percent in the last 52 weeks on the
meeting
along
with
a repreto $2.9 billion from $3.5 bil- New York Stock Excha~ge ,
sentative from the National
Alliance to discuss the ·Rural
Homeless Initiative. Members

AEP posts·Ioss because of
.regulatory charge in Texas

Homeless

Columbus detectives acc.used of
attending classes while qn duty

office, as well as tampering
with evidence. If convicted,
they face up to five years in
prison on each theft ·charge.
The detectives were on
restricted duty for five months
during the investigation. They
turned themselves in to police
supervisors Tuesday and were
sent home with pay, said officer Belly S~hwab, a police
spokeswoman.
Both men have worked for ·
the department for 14 years and
earn about $58,000 annually.

Local Weather

Totlats Forecast

City/Region
High I Low

Forecast lor ThurSday, Feb. 2
MICH .

Youngetown •
47' 134'

PA.

.J
'

1oayton•~
. .

*Columbus

~

!50'136'

51 ' 137'

Clnctnnat
• 53° 136°

~
~

Portamout•
53'138'

.~

Thursday, February 2, 2006

vv \1 t\.

'
The ·group also wants to help holder anal ysis, community
assessment
and
them find employment, need s
receive training, get away resO!Jrce survey.
In June, they will conduct a
from abusive partn\!rS and
planning
summit for mem:
assist them with other problems that led them to become . bers of the participating conhomele ss . It is a multi: tinuums . . Huesman said:
faceted approach that must Then, they will 'move on to ·
pla.nning and implementa, ·
i'nvolvc numerous agencies.
:
' The
Rural
Homeless tion. she said.
·
Successful
plans
will
Initiative is aimed at helping
each county 's Continuum of include recommended strateCan; .Committee develop gies in each key area that i~
ideas, seek fundin g. provide identified, estimated needs
technical assistance for and resources available to
implementation of. the plans implement strategies, part·
that are developed ·and lever- ners responsible for imple;
age existing and new mentation of each strateg~
and a timeline for imple111en:
resources, Huesman said .
·
.
The four,vear ·initiative tation.
Involvement
of . tht;
started last month. she said.
"We're just getting start- · National Alliance is impor:
ed." she said. "The first year tant for the success of the ini •
really will be capacity build- tiati ve. she said.
ing."
"The National Alliance can
The initiative is in the give direction because theY,
needs assessment phase now. · are in tune with funding," she
which involves determining said. "For a number of years
each community 's baseline .. . they have been the nation.
data , conductinoe an afford- al spokesperson on homeless
able 'housing · survey, stak~- .· tssues.
,

.

I

ll

Crash
from Page A1
ing the wreckage that is being
housed in one of the airpmt 's
hangars.
On Sunday. Bricker and his
friend, George Bowling, who
is an employee with the
insurance company, were fly- .
ing back to Ohio from South
Carolina when they made an
emergency landing in . the
field owned by Darrell Stover
after the plane ran low on gas
Sunday, Senior Trooper J.M.
Finnicum said. Cpl. Wes
Bu'mgarner of ·the Mason
County Sheriff's Depanment
went and investigated the
Sunday landing.
Finnicum said that Bricker
had returned to Mason County
early Tuesday morning to tly
the plane back to Ohio. He
also said that Brirker had his
pilot's'Jicense but was not sure
Diane Pott~rHjphoto
for how long.
The cockpit of the ,Piper airplane that crashed Tuesday morning was cut away by the Point.
After re ceiving i'nquiries Pleasant Volunteer Fire Department 'to get to the pilot. The plane is being housed in a hangar
about the accident. Ben at the Mason County Airport.
Rou sh. owner of Raven
Aviation and manager · at
Butcher said
Bricker may have been a factor for a utility pol e and electric
Mason County Airport, bought six gallons of I 00 the emergency landing.
lines before banking to the
began checking to make sure pe'rcent low lead aircraft fuel
"He did a good job landing left info an inverted position
all of the airplanes that are from the pumps at the facili- the plane Sunday:· Butcher and landin g nose first near a
housed at the airport wer~ ty. Bricker put the fuel into said of the emergency land- group of trees on the other
accounted for and that none two containers.
ing. "His mistake was the side of U.S. 35.
The plane barely missed a
had taken oiT that morning.
"He pumped it himself," wet grass and mud , there ~vas
Likewise over .at the Butcher said. 'Then he paid . not enough speed to get the passing tractor~ trai Jer.
Gallia-Meigs
Regional for it."
plane 'up."
Though several truck driwhere
Harold
A irpor·t,
He said that the transaction
At 10:15 a.m., Bricker was vers ·and nearby residents
Butcher,' manager, took times showed that Bricker atte1ilptihg to take off from attempted to hel'p him,
in ventory of his plane s. began getting the fuel at 9:20 .the field when the left wing Bricker was pronounced dead
Bricker had traveled over to a.m. Tuesday and finished at · of the plane struck a wooden at the scene by par&lt;1medics
·the Gallipoli s airport to pur- 10:04 a:m . ·
. ·
post that had a I 10-volt outlet with · the Mason County
chase aviation fuel for the
Roush said he believes that on it. The plane then went up Emergency
Medical
airplane.
Sunday's windy conditions about 30 feet in the air. struck Services.

Thursday, February 2, 2006

•

Three·more Tarblooders will .be wearing scarlet and gray
BY RUSTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS Pretty
soon, that sprawling universjty in the state's capital might
be called Cleveland Glenville,
South Campu s.
Three more Tarblooders
became Buckeyes - making
it I0 Glenville players in Ohio
State coach Jim Tressel's last
five recruiting classes - on
Wednesday, the tirst day for
signing national letters of
intent.
"You stay as objective as
you can," Tressel said of his
evaJuation of Glenville players. '"Well, we can't recruit
that guy because , he' s the
fourth guy from Glenville' I hope we don't do ,that."
· Ohio State signed 20 players, 10 from within the state
and I 0 from elsewhere. There
were three. from California seldom a hotbed for Ohio
State in recruiting - along
· wjth 12 .on defense and eight .
on offense .
The Buckeyes have losi
every starter at linebacker and
in the secondary from last
year's 10-2 squad thai shared
the Big Ten title with Penn
State and tinished fourth in
the national rarikings. The latest recruiting class includes
five ,linebackers. led by
junior-college transfer Larry
Grant from City College of
San Francisco and AII·Ohinan
Ross Homan of Coldwater.
Homan has a!fcady enrolled
an~ is ready to vie for playing
time this fall. ·
.,
· ·
"The main thing is I wanted
to get' an early start on everything, a jump, not just academically,' Homan said. "When
I get into (fall) camp I want to
feel comfonable with every-

· mer guys on our .staff when
we made the deci sion to offer
A.J. Hawk a s(;holarship . he
said, ' Oh, man. that ' ll he like
a 1-AA fullback · co ming
here,"' Tressel said. "That fAA fullback is goin g to he
able to bux a liul e bit here in a
few days.·
Hawk, who became one of
the best linebackers ever at
Ohio State. is a lock tO be a
first-round NFL draft pick.
"I 've been here tlve .yea"
and I can tell yo u exactl y
what our record was all li ve
years," Tressel said. ".1 can't
tell you where we · were
ranked in recruitin g in. those
five years." '
'
Ohio 's other ei ght Di vision
I colleges also stocked up on
Wednesday. Bowlinl! Green
locked up 24. Akrc!n and
Toledo each signed 23. Miami
22. Ohio and Youne stown
State 20, Cincinnati T8 and
Kent State added 14 .
Akron delved deep into
florida to pocket eight players. Amon e Cincinnafi's
~ignee s was - ,he brother of
four-y ear Bearcuts quarterAP photo back
Ben Guidugli . Th e
Garfield High School's running. back Chris Wells (28) is chased out of bounds by Buchtel's Ron Bearcats al so got · Freddie
Pfiake (10) at the Akron Rubber Bowl in this Oct. 28, 2005 photo in Akron. Ohio State and the other Lenix , a Glenville linebacker
eight Division I football programs in the state announce their top fncoming freshman players who "'ashed out at Ohio State.
Wednesday on the first day for the signing of national letters of intent. Wells signed with Ohio State.
Ohio 's
rei gmng
Mr.
Football. Copley 's Delane
thing."
· Tressel put it. The pearls of
Another member of that Carter. made it offi cia l by
On the offensive side, the Ohio State 's 2001 recruiting recruiting class was a little.- signing with Syracuse. He
prized pick was running back class were a stud linebacker known kid that Ohio State 's rushed for 2,788 yards on 30 2
Chris Wells, who rushed for named Mike D' Andrea and coachin g staff almost grudg- carrie s and .scored 49 tou ch2.134 yards and 27 touch- all-.world
quarterb,ack ingly offered a scholarship. downs Jaq fall.
downs as a senior at 'Akron prospect
Justin Zwick . Tressel picks up the story ...
Ohio State, which usu ally
Gar(ield. Some. recruiting ser- D'Andrea has barely played
"I remember one of our for- •has it&gt; pick. of the state's top
vices rank him among'the pre- for the Buckeyes and Zwick is
mier recruits in the country, cemented to the sideline s,
and pinpointed the entire watching Troy Smith run the
Ohio State class among .the offense. (Smith, by the way,
. along with his favorite target,
top 15 in the nation.
That's what makes recru1t- Ted Ginn Jr. , are both
ing "an inexact science," as Glenville products.)

Par11y
C,loudy

Cloudy

· ~ ~= ~

~

' 1

1

1

1

Showers

~
.~

'''

•

Rain

Flurries

~
•

*

W
••• ••

teo

.·

~

S~w . • • • ••

Weather Underground • ·AP .

Thursday... Mostly cloudy
. with a 50 percent chance of
rain. Highs in the upper 40s.
South winds 5 to I0 mph .
Thursday
night. .. Rain .
Lows in the lower 48sl southeast winds 5 to 10 mph .
Friday... C!oudy ·with a 30
percent ·chance of showers .
. Highs in the upper '40s.
Southwest winds 5 to I0 mph. ,
Friday
night ... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of sprinkle s. Lows in the mid 30s.
Southwest winds 5 tD I0 mph .
Saturday... Cioudy with ·a
30 percent chance of rain
showers. Hi ghs in the lower
40s. .
· Saturday night ... Clo udy
with a chance of snow and
rai n showers. Cold with lows
in the upper 20s. Chance of
prec ipitation 30 percen t.
- Sunday... Mo; tly cloudy
with a 30 pe rc ~ nt chance of
snow showef' . Highs ) n th~

The Area's Most C.omprehensive Medical
Imaging MRI is Now Available
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upper 30s.
Sunday night through
Wedl)esday ... P4rtly cloudy . .
Lows in the mid 20s. Highs in
the upper 30s.

'

Close to You

February 24, 2006

playef'. l~a ' g" tlen JUst nne.
of the l.u\1 -:.ix Mr. F oo t b~ l l
winnas . The one the
Buck eye' got wa'· Mmfrice .
Cla re ll . who . helped !he
Buckeye ' win the 2002
nationJI
cha mpi on,hi-p
before ' lidi ng off the team.
nu t of col lege and th en out of
pro foo tbal l.

Recruiting

Class of
2006
Jake Ballard
Spr ngbaro

Bryant

-

Brow~lng

TE .

-

6-6 . ' 255:

OL, 6-4 320.

Glenvil le HS. Cteve1ana
Chimdi Chekwa - DB. 6· 1, 185 East
Ridge HS. Clermont Fla .

·
Kurt · Coleman DB. 5· 11. , 80.
Northmont HS. Clayton. Ohm
,
Walter Dublin DB 6· 3 235.
Sarasota Fla .
·
Aaron Gant - 0 8 6..(), 205. St Mary -s
HS . Orchard Lak e M1ch
·
Thaddeus Gibson LB 6-2. 215.
Eucl id, Oh1o
Larry ,G rant - LB. 6-3 22 5. C1t y
College ot ? an F ranCISCO
Antonio Henton - 08. 6-2. 210. Peach
County HS, Fort Valley, Ga
·Ross Homan ......- LB 6- 1 230 .

Coldwate r. Ohio
Mark Johnson - LB. 6·4 , 230, Dorsey
.HS. Los Ang'eles '
Oe11 Larimore DT. 6-3. 250.
Merrillville. Jnd
Andy Miller - TE . 5-6. 250 . Trmtty HS.
Wash1ngton, Pa
Tyler Moeller - LB 6-1 205. Cole ram
HS. Cmcmnat1
Aram Olson - FB. 6-2. ~45 . Irma HS,
Columb1a. S.C
Robert RoSe - DE. 6 ·4 260 Gle:nvtlle
.
HS. Cleveland
Grant Schwartz _,__. DB, 6'·0. 200 . D ~ na
Hills . Ca lli
Raymond Small - WR-0 8. 6-0. 178.
Glenv1lle HS, Cleveland
Connor Smith ,___ OL . 6-5 ._ 295. Colerai.n
HS. Cmcinnat1
Chris Wells - RB, 6-1. 225 , Garf1eld .
.HS, Ak ro n. Oh10

These are just a fe"· of the man~ · sen ices.
at Pleasant \"alley Hospital \rhere you \rill
lind millions of dollars m&gt;rth of teclmolog~· .
medical and technological specialists
. and dozens of options, all to treat
just one condition ...THE 1-H '\L\\ 0\E.

Call:
3~

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• Home Oxygen · • Hospital Beds
• Porlllble Oxygen • Wheelchain
• Homefill System • C·Pap
• Helios System
·•'iebulizm
• Pulse Oximetry • Much \lore!

HOLZER

®nl~ipolis

ilBnilp m:ribunr • 446-2342

~ ~oint i!lensnnt largi!lter • &lt;?75-1333

The Daily Sentinel• 992'-2156
~

CLINIC

We Delirer To You!
70 Pine Street • Gallipoli s

Jackson

740·446-0007

(740) 395-8854

Toll Free 877 -669·0()()7

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Ad Deadline 2-16-06

r]ainihj c•Ul?M•

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MRI, CT, Bone Density &amp; Ultrasound
Nuclear Medicine
Rehabilitation Services
Sleep Disorders Center
Neuro-Physiology Center
Cardiac Rehabilitation
Same Day Surgery
24-Hour Etnergency Services
Cotnprehensive W01nen 's Health
&amp; Support Groups

KY,

6

Bl

•

Wadneaday'a games
High achool boya baakalball
Roane County 64, Wahama 58

Schrader,
Scotl
Columbia.
Tru st to Countrytyme ALC, Ann
Little Johns LLC to Cool Ltd., Anthony Land Co ., Ltd ., Schrader, to Judith Ann
Williams, deed , Village of
Country Corp., deed, Orange. deed, Salem.
.
Everett Paul Smith, Sharon
Countrytyme ALC, Ltd ., Pomeroy.
Meig s United Methodts
K. Smith, to Thomas D. Ball, Anthony Land Co .. Ltd ., to
Jr. , deed; Rutland .
·
Robert E. Burns, deed, Cooperative Pari sh . to Old
Pari sh, LLC. deed, Vtllage of
Rebecca Jean Harvey to · Salem. .
Robert E. Burns. Carol Pomeroy.
Geron Olan Harvey, deed. ·
Dawn M. McCombs, John
Columbia.
·
. Burns, to R:mdy A. Jewell ,
P.
Byrne. to Marci a A. Oyler, .
. Georgia Ruth Er~in to Jessica A. Jewell , deed .
deed.
Columbia.
Georgia Ruth Erwtn, L. Salem.
Nick D. Johnson, ·Cathy L.
Steven Erwin. Crystal Figiel,
Gerald R. Thompson , Alice
Johnson,
tO Marcia A. Oyler,
deed , Chester.
K . Thompson . to George C.
deed,
Columbia.
·
Anna L. Roush, deceased, Thompson, deed, Chester.
Ralph
E.
Steinmetz,
Faye
to
Walter
F.
Roush,
Bank of' New York to
deceased, deed , Village of Harold W. Hanson, deed, A. Steinmetz. to J.P. Morgan
Chase Bank, Bank One ,
Syracuse.
Village of Pomeroy.
John E. Berend Chariiable
Jane Ann Williams, Jane N.A.; sheriff's deed, Scipio.
of the local committee were
enthusiastic about patticipating i11 the program.
The Osteopathic Heritage
. Foundation is a philanthropic
organization that serves a
total of 18 ,0hio counties. The
'Osteopathic
Heritage
Foundation of Nelsonville
serves Jackson and Meigs
cou.niies. Callia County will
ben efit from .the Rural
Homelens Initiative because
it .is part of the multi-county
continuum that includes two
counties 'in the service area,·
Huesman said.
·
The Continuum of Care
Commillee brings together
representatives from a variety
of area organizations to
develop ideas to solve the
problem of homelessness.
Although homclessness is not
as evident in a rural area as it
is in an urban one, it does
exist, committee members
said.
The continuum's goal
involves more than-just find Ing homes for 'the homeless.

The Daily Sentinel

LocAL ScOREBOARD

TRANSFERS POSTED

COOLVILLE -· Kim Allen
was named monthly best
weight-loss
wmner
at
Tuesday 's meeting of TOPS ·
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly)
Chapter #OH 2013 , Coolville.
· Plans were made lU elect
officers at the March '7 meeting . The group discussed
.chapter participation in The
C,hristopher . &amp; Banks MS

COLUMBUS (AP) - Two
detectives have been accused
of· taking college classes
while they were supposed to
be investigating killings.
An internal investigation contends that Brian Carney, 43, and
Christopher Rond, · 36, were
attending Capital University
classes for more than two years
while scheduled for duty.
according to court documents.
Carney and Rond were
charged Tuesday with two
felony counts of .theft in

VageAM

Gallipolis
,, (740) 446-5289

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
2520 Vallev Dri1 0 • Poin t Pkasant. \\'\

~

20 1-bcJ faci lit:

301-675-tf310

.Medical Excellence.
Local Caring.~
·Everywhere ·

r

.

~--~"--~----------------------------------------------

·----

-·--~------~.

--,.....-----'--~-~-· -

�•

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February :z,

2006

SUPER

COLUMBUS (AP) - Players who have signed with or verbally
committed to play Division I college football with Ohio schools.
or :NhO have committed to play with out-of•state programs:
AKRON
Aaris Reed, rb, 5-10, 185, Westlake HS. Waldorf. Md. · ,
Amin Kabir, s, 6-1 , 185, Warrensville Heights HS, Warrensville,
Ohio
Andre Boone. rb, 5- 10 190. Franklin W. Co&gt;c HS, Vlrginia ·Beach,

Va.
Anthony Barnes, db, 6-1 180, Kempsville HS, Virginia Beach,

Va.

.

Anthony Mirando, lb-p, 6-2, 230, Jefferson Area HS, Jefferson
Ohio
,
'
Nate Reed, k-p, 5-9, 170, Wadsworth HS, Wadsworth, Ohio
Pat Reedy, ol, 6-4, 265, AUstintown-Fitch HS, Youngstown , Ohio
Kurt Belgrave, cb, 6-1, 195, Norfolk, Va,
.
Ja-Darrin Bell, s, 6:1, 185, Ellenwood, Ga.
Phil Garner, wr. 5-11, 175, -Coral Springs, Ra.
Leneric: Muldrow. wr. 5-8, 170: Greenville. N.C.
Quinton Rainey, fb, 5-11,235, Virginia Beach, Va. ·
Darren Rogers. qb, 6-1., 185, Quaker Valley HS, Leetsdale, Pa.
Jason Rogers, QB, 6-0, 205, College Park, Ga.

,

MIAMI (OHIO)

Blake Smith, de, 6-3,220, El9anor Roosevelt HS, Chicago
.Corey WOOds, ol, 6-5 255, Bceter Township HS, Reading , Pa.
Curtis Brown, wr, 5-t1 171 , Glades Central HS. Belle Glade,
Fla.
D.J. Henderson, wr: 6-5 , 220, Potter 's House Ch ristian
Academy, Jacksonville, Fla.
Dantley Cline, dl , 6-2 290, Trl Cities HS, East Point, Ga.
David Harvey, wr. 5-11 160. Penn Hills HS. Penn Hills, Pa .
Delvin Davis, cb, 6· 1, 165, Flanagan HS. Pembroke ~ines. Fla.

Jordan Gafford. db, 6-1 , 19~ Kilbourne HS, worthington dhio
Armand . Robinson, wr. 6-1, 192, AeynoldSburQ .. Hs,
Reynoldsburg, Ohio
·
AleK Stewart, dt, 6-2, 265, DeSales HS, Columbus, Ohio
O.J. Svabik, dl, 6-6, 230, van Wert HS, van wert, Ohio
_
Be B
tt lb
G
n anne_' ' -0, 210, wynn Park HS, Capitol Heights, Md.
Caleb Bostic, lb, 6-3. 226,. Westland HS, Galloway, Ohio
.•
~o:r~e~~~~~n, at, 6-8, 330, Co~yvlll~ Community' College,

Oerron Smith, lb, 6-2, 207, Woodland Hills HS, PittsbUrgh
Igor lveljic, k., 6-0, 160, Mentor HS. Mentor, Ohio
Jacquian Williams. lb, 6-2, 197, Riverview HS, Tampa, Fla.
Jason Seklnger. at, 6-9. 320, Westland HS, Galloway, Ohio
Jerrel Stoudemire dl, 6·5, 295, Lake Wales HS, Fla.
Mark Jacksqn , at, 6-6, 285, Brookhaven HS, Columbus, Ohio
Mickey Baker. lb, 5-11, 225, Dodge City Community College,
Dodge City, Kansas
.
Mik w
6 a.rd, ol, 6,J, 285, St. John's College,HS, Fairtax, Va .
MPait.chell Magloire, lb. 6.-1 . 217, Valley F.orge Academy, Wayne,

Martin Channels, dt, 6-1", 3od, Huber Heights wayne HS, xenia
Ohio
'
Jeff Cleveland, lb, 6-1, 220, Huber Heights Wayne HS, ·Huber
Heights, Ohio
T
revor ook, k, 6-2. 185, Washington HS, Sioux Falls, S.D. .
Paris Edwards, cb, 6·2, 190, Rogers HS, Toledo, Ohio
Bob Gulley, 61, !3·4, 275, Berea HS, Berea, Ohio
Donnie .Hardy, lb. 6-1 . 210. Tucker HS, Stone Mountain , Ga.
Eugene Harris Ill, wr, 5-10, 160, McNair HS, Atlanta, Ga.
Dexter Korto, lb, 6-3, 200, Northwes1 HS, Germantown. Md,
Jamal Miller. rb, 5-11. 188, Tallmadge HS, Tallmadge, Ohio
Mark Paun, dt, 6-3, 235, Strongsville HS, Strongsville, Ohio
Donovan Potter, wr, 6-3, 185, Chaminade-Julienne HS , ·

Sean Hakes. qb, 6·3, 200, Nolan Cathdlic HS, Fort Worth , Texas
Sheldon Dennis, rb, 6·2 , 206, George Jenkins HS. Lakeland,
Fla.
.
.
Tevlin Petite- Frere, de. 6-3. 200. North Miami HS, North Miami,
Fla.
Wayne Cobham, db, 6-2, 190, Flanagan HS, Pembroke Pines.

s

c

l'ro~od.
Ohio
Sean Redwine, te , 6-3, 240, Moeller HS, Cincinnati

Brandon Stephens, cb, S.-9, 170, Strongsville H·s. Strongsville,

.

·.

~

~

BOWLING GREEN
Orlando Barrow. dl, 6-2, 268, Deer Park HS , Chesapeake, va .
Derek Bnghton,' wr, 5-10, 180, Allen P.ark HS, Allen Park,
Michigan
Jahmal Brown. db, 5-10, 185, Benedictine HS, Cleveland
.
v 1ncent Corner, rb , 5-9, 200. North HS, Springtield, Ohio
Michael Culberson-Fehling, de, 6-5 , 230 , Libertyville HS,
Libertyville .. Ill.
·
•
·
Kelvin Davis, wr, 5-;11, 170, Vanguard HS, OCala, Fla.
Tyler Donahue , ol , 6·6, 252, Naperville Central HS, Naperville

Jordan Stevens, de, 6·4, 241 , Gateway HS, Monroeville, Pa.
Nate Williams, te, 6-5, 275, Holy Name HS, Parma Heights,
OhiO

.

OHIO
.
., .
Kody Carr. de , 6-5, 200, Jerome HS, Dublin , Ohio

Kris Luchsinger. de, 6-4, 226, Watterson HS,,Columbus, Ohio
TaylOr Price, wr, 6-2, 180, DarbY HS\ Hilliard, Ohio
Jacob Black, at, 6-6, 265, Miami · Trace, Washington Court
House, Ohio
Cole Bunner, ot, 6·5, 300, Mount Mjchael HS, Omaha, Neb.
111.
' Pete O'Aguanno. ol, 6-2, 291, Fox Lane HS, Pound Ridge, N.Y.
Sean Ellis, k. 6·6, 189, Cocoa HS, Merritt Island, Fla.
Donovan Fletcher, ath, 6-1, 190. Liberty HS, Youngstown. Ohio
Eugene Fells Ill, lb, 6; 1, 209, Palatka HS. Palatka, Fla.
Chri~ Garrett, wr, 5-8, 175, Fork Union Military Academy, Mouth
Anthony Glaudj qb, 6-3. 216, Winslow Township HS, Sicklerville, ol Wtlson. Va .
'
N.J
,
Staflord Gatling, rb, 5-11 , 190. l=tugh M. Cummings HS,
Brandon Jackson. lb. 6-2. 220. Briarcrest Christia"n HS, Burlington. N.C,
'
·
Gollierville, rennessee
Alan Goff, de. 6-4, 263, College of the Desert, 'Palm DeSert,
·
Tarell Lewis, db, 6-10, 180, ,Lee M. Thur'ston HS, Radlord, Calif.
Michigan
-Robert Hightower. rb, 5·1 1, 190, l 1berty HS, Youngstown , Ohio
Angelo Magnone. lb, 6-3, 218, Steubenville HS, Steubenville
Ernest Hodge , dt. 6-2. 250, Hargrave Military Academy,
Ohio
' Chatham. Va .
·
P.J. Mahone, db, 5~11 , 201 , Elyria HS, Elyria, Oh 1o
Horace Hubbard, de, 6-5, 240, Hargrave Military Academy,
·Calvin Marshall, db, 5-11, 175, Dillard HS, Miramar. Fla
Chatham. Va .
.
Lewis Parks, te . 6-2, 225, Slarr's Mill HS, Fayet1eville, Ga.
Terrence McCrae, wr, 6-4, 205, Connellsville HS, Vander.bilt. ~a .
Tyrone Pronty, wr, 6-0 , 182, Maple He 1ghts HS, Maple Heights. Robert Mercer. wr, 6-5, 185, Harmony Community School
'
Ohio
Cincinnati
·
Nick Rieke, te , 6·4, 220, Crystal L~ke South HS, -Crystal La ~(a, Andrew Mooney, te , 6·3, 223, New Mexico State, Las Cruces,
Ill.
.
', N.M.
,
.
· Alonso Rojas, p, 6-3, 200 , Killian HS . Miami, Fla.
Chldo Nwokocha , wr, 6·0, · 190, Sacramento City College.
J8rett Sanderson, db, 6-0. 180, Fork Union Military Academy · Sacramento, Calif.
' Julian Posey, cb, 5-1 1. 165, LaSalle HS. Cincinnati
Mouth of Wilson . Va .
Tyler Sheehan, qb, 6·3, 210, LaSalle HS. Cincinnati
Pete Reese, de, 6~4. 245, Scott HS, Toledo, Ohio
Darius Smith , de. 6-2, 210, Euclia HS, Euclid, Ot'110
Marcellus Willi"emson, dt, 6·1, 316, Warrensville Heights HS,
Carlos Tipton , Jr., de, 6·3: 209, Winton Woods HS, Cincinnati
Warrensville , Ohio
D.J_ Young , dt. 6-5 . 278 , SeKton HS, Lansing, Michigan
•
TOLEDO
.
CINCINNATI
Lorenzo Best, db. 6-0. 180, lnctependence HS, Coluri'lbus, Ohio
Robbie Armstrong , lb, 6·2. 220, Franklin ReQional HS, Nali Cole, dl, 6·2, 28q, Madison HS, Trotwood. Ohio
.
.
·
Skylaar Constant, de, 6-4, 265, Bedford HS, Bedford, Ohio
Murrysville, Pa.
Marcus Barnett, wr, 6·0, 165, Frederick Douglass H~ . Upper J~red Dewalt. ol, 6·4, 295. Brush HS, Lyndhurs1, Ohio ·
.
Marlboro, Md.
Matt Fought, te , 6-4, 210, Ottawa-Glandorf HS, Ottawa , Ohio
Toby Boeckman, ot. 6-7, 240, St. Heni'y HS. St . Henry, Ohio
Bruce Frieson, ttl. S-8, 185, Glenville HS, Cleveland .
C.J. Cobb, at, 6-4, 325 , Sandalwood HS ,1Jacksonvlll~ . Fla.
L~l George, ol, 6-1. 302 , Harding HS, Warren , Ohio
Mark Jackson, db, 6·0, 195, McKinley HS, Canton, Ohio
, Mario Duenas. ot. 6·3 , 280. City College of San Francjaco
John Goebel . rb, 6·1 , 200, Brother Rice HS, Birmingham, Mich. Jerome Jonl8, te, 6-7, 220, UrsuiiM HS, YouMgstown, OhiO
Ben Guiduglii lb, 6-0 , 200, Highlands HS , Fort ThOmas, Ky.
Desmond Marrow, cb , 6·3, 196, Mooney HS. Youngstown . Ohio
_Chria Harrison ; de. 6·4, 265, L1berty HS, Youngstown , Ohio
Chria MeeMan, ol , 6·7. 310, Woolter HS, Wooater, Ohio
Rlca_
rdo Mathews , dt, 6-2. 260, Terry Par1&lt;er HS , Jacksor~vllll, Harriet Moore, db, 6-2. 200, McKinlay HS, Ca!'1tOn 1 Ohio
Fla.
.
·
· Aaron Opelt, qb, 6·2, 205, Roll HS, Fr.emont, Ohio
Brandon Miller, cb , 6-2, HiS, Withrow HS, Clnc1nn111
Alex Sh!ligerwald,k, 5-11 , 170, Benedictine HS, Cleveland
Kan "f'Odrlguez. 01, 6-3 , 30~ . Cltrua College, Glendora, Calif.
Joe UnQerwood, lblde, 6-3. 240, Uraullnt MS . Youn;atown , Ohlp
Aaron Wtbattr, 1, 6·3. 195, Birmingham Qravea HS. Southfield,
YOUN08TOWN ST. .
Mich.
·
Kyll Banna, 01. 8·0, 240, Confltld HS, C,onllold, Onto
Jaaon Whllthead , a, 6·2, 185, Firat Coast HS, Jtcktonvlllt,·Fit
Bobby Coal81 1 ol, 6-4, 215, ClltnOak HS, Canton, Ohio
Ortn Wilton. d1, 15·2, 280. Teaneck HS, Teaneck. N.J.
Jordan Edwardt. tb, 6·0, 18&amp;, Sandusky HS, Sandutky, Ohio
Freddie Ltnhc. lb. 6-0, 215, Glenville HS, Cleveland . tranaler
Chrla Gsmmon . dt, 8-3 , 250, Ellt HS, Akron, Onio
Jacob Ram11y, rb, 6..0, 211 , lndepencence HS. Columbua, Ohio Louis Irizarry, It, 6-5, 24S, Uraullne HS. Youngatown , tranaltr
Rtllton Rttvel, dt, 6·3 . 240, Murray-Wright HS, Detroit ,
Ylann l K•rvounldta, ol, 8•3, 285, Tallmadge HS, Tallmadge,
l'ettr Carriere. db, 6-0, 202 , St. Leonard ' Cotlaglata HS, Laval, Ohio
.
·
Quebec
Brian Mellott, dt, 6·3, 255, .A.uitln1own·Fitch HS, Youngatown .
KENT ST.
Ohio
Curtla Eaton, s, 6-1 , 180, Buchtel HS, Akron . Otllo
Nick Mtr!'ladakls. lb. 6-2 . 218 , Central HS . Pickerington , Ohio .
Dan Hartman, s, 6·2 . 200 , LaBrae HS, Leav lttaburg, Ohio
Torrance N1choleon , dl, 6·3 , 215, Marlon·Franklln '"'S,
Columbus. Ohio
· ·:
Chrlatan Haywood. rb, 5."8. 195 , Davidson HS, Hilliard , Ohio
Kevin Hogan, ol-dl , 6·4 . 215. Chardon HS. Chardon. Ohio
Aoshon Simons. lb. 6·1 , 226, Eastmoor Academy, Columbus,
Tony Howard, rl:l, 5-10, 21 0. Garfield He1ghts HS, transfer
OhiO
·Jske Kilroy, P. !5-10, 215 . West HolmeS HS. Millersburg, Otllo
Jeue Smedl. ot . 6-4, 260, Lakev1ew HS, Cortland, Ohio
Brloin Lainhart .. s, 6-1 , 185, Colera1n HS, Cllicinnall
.
DeOn 'te Williams, de, 6-4, 200 . Glenville HS, Cleveland, Qhlo

(

' - --·--

---

BOWL

a a

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

S E A TTL E l5 E AHA W K S

XL '~~

F'ORO

F'IELO

OITIItOIT

Porter mad about Seahawks' ~ear-guaranteed wm
•

BY ALAN ROBINSON

BY RALPH D. Russo

College.Football Signings - Ohio

www.mydailysentinel.com

2006

_ ':.!"f.! S.. ~i:!- ~0 ~ -~~-T _EI~I.~_E l'tS

Meyer, Weis come up
first-class on signing day
returned the Fighting Irish to Josh Portis, transferring,
ASSOCIATED PRESS
national prominence with a Tebow has a chance to shoot
9-3 season and No. 9 final up the Gators' depth chart as
Charlie Weis and Urban . ranking. The straight-shoot- a freshman.
Meyer proved to be first- ing disciple of Bill Parcells
Percy Harvin, a receiver
class recruiters, too.
has brought the mystique from Virginia rated the No. I
The new coaches for Notre back to Notre Dame and the recruit in the country by
Dame and, Florida followed big-time ·recruits have fol- Rivals.com, was committed
up successful debut seasons lowed.
to Florida but was waiting
by bringing in top-notch · Notre Dame's class is rated until later in the day to.ink a '
recruiting
classes among the best in the' coun-. letter of. intent.
Wednesday, ·the first day of try by the analysts, someTexas coach Mack Brown
the national signing period. . thing that hasn't happened and USC's Pete Carroll are
As usual, national champi- for a while in South Bend, college football's current
on Texas and Southern Ind.
kings of signing day, scoopCalifornia restocked their
Offensive lineman Sam ing up high school allrosters
with
blue-chip Young, a 300-pounder from Americans by the bushel in
prospects. And Penn State, Florida considered one of the recent years.
whos~
resurgence upder top-20 players in country by
The Rose Bowl rivals were
coach Joe Paterno last season most .e xperts, is th.e jewel of at it again Wednesday, signwas aided by a stellar 2005 Notre Dame's class.
ing · up classes that should
recruiting class, has another
Weis has proved to be .a keep the Longhorns and
promising group headed to perfect fit at Notre Dame, . TroJans in championship
Happy Valley.
but he probably wouldn't be contention.for years.
We is came to Notre Dame there if Meyer dido 't turn the
Brown, derisively labeled
and Meyer .to Florida after Irish down to take the 'Coach February' when he
the 2004 season with well- Florida job.
seemed to win more recruitearned reputations as offenMeyer's 9-3 debut in ing battles than bfg· games,
sive gurus, but some ques- Gainesville, Fla., wasn't met has consistently lured most
tions abou~ohow well they'd with as much euphoria as of the best prospects from
recruit in their new jobs.
Weis's, but the first group of the Lone Star state to Austin.
Weis was hired in Gators recruits Meyer can
The Longhorns latest class
December 2004 and didn 't take full credit for answered has 23 players ·from Texas,
have a chance to immerse any questions about whether highlighted by defensive end
himself in recruiting because the Midwesterner could Eddie Jones from Kilgore
he was busy helping the recruit in the Southeastern and linebacker Sergio Kindle
l'atriots win a .third Super Conference.
.
from Dallas, both ranked
·Bowl in four s·easons.
Meyer's marquee signee is a1nong the best in the counTaking over for Tyrone a highly touted quarterback try at their positions.
Willingham, the former New and local hero, whose deciCarroll and hi s staff tend to
England offensive coordina- sion to become a Gator reach farther ln recruiting,
tor -did his best to work the received national television and that was the case again
phones, but in the end last coverage.
as USC got commitments
Tim Tebow of Ponte Vedra from top players from Utah,
year's Fighting Irish recruiting class was cor1sidered just Beach, Fla., picked the Colorado, Texas and New
so-so.
·
Gators over and Alabama. In JerseY. to go with many of the
Once Weis was able to the minds of many Florida best California prospects.
focu s all his attention on his fans, landing Tebow was as
The Trojans are looking
alma mater, he quickly built big as for Meyer as his wins for immediate help in the ·
a reputation as a . relentless over Florida State, Georgia backfield, where there are no
recruiter, securing ·a dozen and Tennessee.
clear-cut successors . to
commitments before he
With quarterback Chris Reggie Bush and LenDale
coached a game. .
Leak entering his senior sea- White, who botll entered the
Then Weis went out and son and last season's backup, NFL draft as juniors.

Thursday, February :z,

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Brad Sherman/OVP File

Ironton High School running back Darius Lewis (24) runs over a Gallia Acad·emy defender in this
Sept. 9, 2005 file photo. Lewis has signed to play at Marshall.
.

Redick David, that is
·signs.to play.at Marshall
BY JOHN RABY

class for Marshall coach
Mark Snyder, Redick should
get the chance to catch the
ball in the future. Perhaps the
most ~o ught -after recruit was
quarterback · Brian Anderson ·
of Male High School in
Louisville, Ky.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHARLES
.
.
TON, W.Va. Add another famous narrte to
Marshall 's roster.
David Redick, the brother
of Duke basketball star J.J.
Redick, signed a national letter-of-intent Wedne'sday to
play
foptball
for the
Thundering Herd.
David Redick, a 6-foot-4,
235-pound tight end, caught
22 passes for 473 vards and
three touchdowns last season
at Cave Spring High School
.
near Roanoke, Va.
Redick said hoperully in
time he'll step out of his allAmerican brother's shadow.
"This is only my second
year playing football. l guess
!' II just make a name for
myself, I guess,'' he said.
Redick joins :another wide
receiver with a hou sehold
name - · ·junior Marcus
Fitzgerald, brother of Arizona
Cardinals wide receiver Larry
Fitzgerald.
.
Redick
picked
Marshall
c
1c r
over . oasta · aro 1na and
V1rguua Tech. He v1sited
Huntington last month.
Marshall uses as many as
three tight ends in some for-

Anderson threw for 2,700
·yards and 24 ' touchdowns
mat ions, and they don 't with only four interceptions
always have blo.cki ng assign-. last year. He was recruited by
ments. Jeff Mullins ranked several Big Ten schools.
sixth on the team with 10 Anderson played for Bob
catches last fall .
"Definitely, I think their Redman , whose son, Chris, is
offense is perfect for me ," an
NFL
veteran
and
Redick said . ''[ thought the Loui sville's all-time pa,sing
coaches were great and I felt leader.
like I could bond with the
Marshall's recruiting cla~s
players. The town rallies of 26 includes tive linebackaround their football team."
ers, four offensive linemen,
· Redick's mother, Jeanie,
thought it was a perfect fit , four defensive backs, four
too. She wanted him to attend defensive linemen and 'three
·a college no more than five . wide receivers.
hours away ,- Marshall was
Marshall al so previously ·
four.
signed players for next sea- ·
"Good size. Great coaches. son, including kicker Anthony
Good distance
from home ," Binswanger. a transfer from
·
she sa1d Wednesday. 'They California who cou ld take the .
have a great history and a new
staff there that has great presstrre off the tough-luck
vision." .
· duo of !an O'Connor and
Based on the .first recruiting David DeFatta.

WVU _gets small recfuiting .class
BY JOHN RABY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
Sugar Bowl champion West
Virginia got the most out of a
thin scholarship year, filling :
needs on the offensive line,
defensive backfield and at
linebacker Wednesday.
The 15 players signed to
national
letters-of-intent
Wednesday was the smallest offensive linemen to graduanumber in · coach Rich tion and signed four on
Rodriguez's six years because Wednesday, including 300the Mountaineers lost a small pounder Jake Miller of
senior class ·and the school is Tuscarawas Valley, Ohio, and
· at the 85-scholarship limit.
Eric '
Rode moyer
' of
"I like the quality. I like the Hermitage, Pa.
character and temperament of
Among the three linebackour ):'Dung men," Rodriguez ers is J. T. Thomas of Fort
said. "But the Sugar Bowl Lauderdale , Fla., the son of
win will really help us more former WVU linebacker J.T.
next year. There might have Thomas, who played fo r the
been only .a few that we were Moun'taineers in 1994-95.
on hard that ·i t might have
"He has been coming to
swayed."
·
camp since he was in eighth
The seven defensi-ve backs grade because his dad played
signed Wednesday could help at West Virginia. Hopefully
soften the loss of four starters he will get even big¥er than
in
the defensive backfield
daddy," Rodrjguez sa1d.
'
.
tncluding · safeties Mike
The lone wide receiver on
Lorello and Jahmile Addae the list is 6-foot-6 Wes Lyons
and cornerbacks Dee McCann of . Pittsburgh's . Woodland
and-Anthony Mims.
H1lls H1gh School. He turned
WVU landed defensive down the chance to play with
back Greg Davis of Dyke, h1s brother, Devon. a ;ophoVa., after learning that Florida more free safety · at Ohio
safety Brandon Heath opted Stat~ .
·
for Big East rival Louisville. · We' Lyons caught 21 /assThe 'Eers lost two starting. es for 446 yard s an six
'
..

.

touchdowns last fal l.
"He's · one of those tall
receivers we like so much,"
Rodriguez said. ''He gives us
a. chance to have that tall
wideout outside.''
,
Rodriguez puts little stcx;k
in recruiting li sts, especially
the · so-called
marquee
.recruits.
Last year, Jason Gwaltney
was West Virginia's highestranked recruit since Robert
Alexander in the mid- 1970s. ·
Gwaltney turned out to be a ·
bust and had left the program .
by December. Instead. little- ·
hailed Steve Slaton became
one of the nation's top freshman running backs in 2005.
'Those recruiting rankings ·
don't get you a first down," :
Rodriguez said.
.. West Virginia didn't sign an
m-state player thi s year
because no one was available
for the positions where WVU
needed them.
"l have said this a million
times," Rodriguez said. "![:
there is an in-state kid who .
can help us coll)pete and win
Btg . East championships and . .
he Is as good academically
and all that, I'd much rather
take· the in-state kid. I know
his town, I know he won't get ·
homesick . But they have to ·
play at a high, high level and
the~ have to fit us and what
we re trying to d~ ."

'

PONTIAC, Mich. - Steelers line·
backer Joey Porter minded hi s manners and said nothing derogatory
about the Seahawks during his first
two days at the Super Bowl. That
changed Wednesday after Seattle tight
end Jerrarny Stevens effectively guaranteed a victory
Po~r said Stevens' remarks were
all he needed to get him going for the
Su~r Bowl.
' I've been asleep all week but now I
*~t woke up," Porter said Wednesday.
· I ve got my first taste of blood and
now I'm thirsty {or more. Until now, it
· w~s ,'~ate~ what I say,' 'I can't say
th!s,, I ca~ t say that,' 'Don't do anythmg stlly, but I'm ready now.
"You. look for the guys that say
somethmg that aren't supposed to say
nothmg, and I feel like he definitelr,
was out of pocket to say what he said, '
Porter said. ''I'm going to make sure
he owns up to those words."
·
Porter was agitated about Stevens'
comments Tuesday regarding Steelers
star Jerome Bettis' much-publicized
return tO his hometown of Detroit to
try to win a Super Bowl in what likely
is his final season.
' '
.
"It's a heartwarming story and all
that, but it will be a sad day when he
leaves .without that' trophy," S!lid
Stevens, who said later he wasn't
guaranteeing a victory but was only
saying wh!lt he felt.
· .
Stevens also said Porter will have a
.difficult time whenever he is matched
up with Seahawks All-Pro tackle
Walter Jones.
"He had a huge game in the AFC
championship game coming off the
edge on the blitz," Stevens said of
Porter. "I don' t think he is going to
have such an easy day against Walt,
though.''
,
Porter said Stevens' remarks made it
even easier to get himself ready to
.play in his first Super Bowl.
.
"He's too soft to say .something like
that," Porter said. "He's going to have
the opportunity to back up his words:
l' m going to have the opponunity to
back up my words. So it's something
I'm looking forward to and J'rn ready
to get going."
.
Porter also called Stevens "a firstround bust who barely ·made some

"You look for the
guys that say

GALLIPOLIS- A sched ule o f upc;orrung C(.lll&amp;ge
and h'!lh school varsll)l spof11ng 911811!5 101/0iv~
teams from Galha M eigs and Mason countieS

Thurtday'• gam11

something that
aren't

suppos~d

Boya Basketball
OVCS a1 Hannan, 7 30 p m.
Glrla Basketball
logan at Galha ACademy, 7 p.m.
OVCS a.t Hannan. 6 p m
Roane Co. at Potnt Pleasant. 7 3"0 p m
Nelsonville-YarN: at Me1gs 7:30 p.m
Eastern at Trimble. 6 p.m.
R1ver Valley a! Squth Pomt, 7:30 p m
Waterford at Southern . 6 p m

to

say nothing~ and I
feel. like he definitely
was out of pocket

Friday'• games

'

Boys Basketball
Wahama at Hannan. 7 ·30 p.m
Logan at Point Pleasant. 7 30 p.m.
Eastern at Mil.ler. 8 p.m.
Gallia Academy {II Logan . 7 30 p.m.
Me1gs at V1nton County, 8 p.m
River Valley at Chesapeake. 7 30 p.m
C ross Lanes at OVCS, 7 p.m. '
Ironton St Joe at Souftl Gatha . 7 30 p m
Southern at Trimble , 8 p.m
Girls Basketball
Point Pleasant at Logan, 7.30 p.m.
ovc;s at Cross Lanes, 5:30 p.m

to say what he
said; I'm going to
make sure he owns
up to those words."
- Steelers' Joey Porter

plays this season." He also said a player of Stevens' stature "has a lot of
nerve" to say what he said about
Benis.
.
.
' Porter and Stevens had productive
seasons. Porter had I 0 1/2 sacks in the
regular season and has three more in
the playoffs. Stevens had 45 catches
and five touchdowns during the season and has eight catches and another
TD in two playoff games.
Porter's outburst was the latest in a
series of strong or inflammatory comments by him during these NFL playoffs.
.
.
He riled up the Colts during the divi~
sional round by saying they relied on
tricks and wouldn't play smashmouth
football, then accused the NFL officiating crew of cheating the Steelers
during their 21-18 upset of the Colts.
He was not fined for those remarks.
Steelers coach Bill Cowher subsequently cautioned Porter and other
players about making comments that
opposing teams might use for motivation. Cowher also called Porter's officiating comments "ridiculous," and
Porter subseq!Jently had little to say

Soturdav 'a qam11
Boya Buketbatl
Whee lersburg at Gallia Academy. 7;30 ~. m
Girls Batkllb•U
.Sciotovilfe at South Gallia, 7:30 p.m.
Wrestling
Point Pleasant at Cardinat Conference
· Me~g s, River Valley at John Deno ClaSSIC
College Basketball
Walsh at Rio Grande 8 p.m.
Women's College Baaketbetl
Wals h at Rio Grande , 6 p.m

AP photo
Pittsburgh :steelers linebacker Joey Porter talks to .reporters during a mOrning
team interview session Wednesday at the Steelers' hotel in Pontiac , Mich.
The Steelers are preparing to face the Seattle Seahawks in Super Bowl XL this
weekend in Detroit.
'
·

b

.

·

'

·

before Pittsburgh's 34-17 victory over
Then, re1lecting on what Po.rter said,
Denver in the AFC champiqnship he added, "He said I' ll be on my
back?"
game.
And what might Cowher think of
S,tevens flashed a smile:
these comments?
· -~·we '11 see."
"I do what I have do to get myself
going and he likes to see me gorng,"
Porter said. "He knows once l get
going, he knows what kind of player
he's going to get. That's going to make
me play at a high level."
.
· Steelers players also were cautioned
before the Super Bowl about not saying anything that the Seahawks could
use for motivation, but Porter didn't
seem to care. .
"When a guy says something who
lines up in front of me·on every play, l
have to like that," Porter said. "He has
·to see me. There's no way he ~an hide
from me. We have to meet - over and
over and over. '" I'll remind him every
t1me l put him on his back."
Stevens found Porter's comments
amusing.
·"'I think that will make it more exciting. That fuels the fire," Stevens said.
"He's an up-tempo guy and playing
that way is why football is fun .''
Jerramy Stevens

Steelers' -Bowman goes from
·w all Street to the Super Bowl

Sunday's game

B_oya Basketball
South~ast Di strict Dra.w. noon

Mondgy Fobryarv 6

Girls Basketball
Gallia ACBCiemy at Eastert1 . 6 p m
River Valley at Point Pleasant. 7.30 p.m
Coal Grove at South Galha . 6 p,m
OVCS at Fairtand. 6 p.m.
Vinton County at Southern, TBA.
Wahama at Buffalo, 7 ~ m. ,

CONTACfS
Phone- 1-740.446 -2342 ext. 33
Fu- 1·740·446·3008
· ~:-mall-

SP.Qt!4 '$!~"
Brad SheriJ'IIn, Sporta Edtlor
(740)446-2342 . ext 33
bsherman@mydailytnbune.co m
Bryan Waltet!l, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342. ext' 23 ·
bwalters@mydailytribune.com ·
L.erry Crum 1 Sports 'I_Yrtter
(740)446-2342. ext . 33
Ierum@ mydailyregister.com

It's Time To

.

Es: ......

BY ANDREA 4DELSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DETROIT - The Pittsburgh
Steelei-s signed Grant Bowman
right off the street last week.
Wall Street, that is.
· Bowman was working in
global futures in the heart of
New York's financial district
. when he looked at his cell
phone and saw he missed a call
· from the Steelers.
They'd cut him after training
camp. Could they really want
him back now ? For the Super
Bowl?
"At first, I thought they were
going to try to sign me to send
me to NFL Europe," the defensive tackle said this · week at
Ford Field. "I didn't think they
were go,in9 to actually bring
me in now.'

·

They did. When linebacker
Andre Frazier broke his ankle
in the AFC championship
game, the Steelers promoted
.
AP photo
Arnold Harrison. to the active Pittsburgh .Steelers defensive tackle Grant Bowr:nan is surroster. That left a spot on the rounded by reporters during Media Day Tuesday at Ford Field
practice squad, and it went to in Detroit, site of Sunday's Super Bowl.
Bowman.
"''m still trying to figure out Ohio, and the Steelers called
His primary job on the pracwhat's going on, why rm h'ere and invited him' !O camp.
tice squad is the same as a color what I did to deserve such a
Bo.wman was able to hang lege scout team - giving Ben
great gift," he said. ·
onto his practice squad spot Roethlisberger, Jerome Bettis
Bowman has never played in before getting let go last sum- and the rest of the offense the
an NFL ganie, having spent his mer. He hung up the cleats and same looks they can expect to
only y~ar in the leag~e on the decided to go into the financial see from Seattle's defense.
practtce squad wtth the world, ~sing some Michigan
On gameday, he'll be on the
Steelers last season. He won't fnends to make contacts and sidelines, albeit not in his uniplay in the . Super Bowl on get interviews in New York.
form.
Sunday, either, becau~e he is
Bowman started work in · "He must have been living
on the practice squad.
mid-December. But his bpsses his life right," Steelers backup
The Philadelphia Eagles were completely supporttve of nose tackle Chris Hoke said.
made a similar. move before h1s two-week break for a little "He's on Wall Street comes
the. Super Bowl last season, gaine calied the Super Bowl.
back for'this week and he· gets
signing tight end Jeff
"They were fired up," to go back to work. He worked
Thomason to . replace an Bowman said. "They were hard to make this team. It didinjured
Chad · Lewis . . exc.ited for me. they didn:t hes- n't work out for him . But to be
Thomason was. working as a itate for a second toJet me go. able to come back for the
project manager for a construe- Nobody questioned it , every- Super Bowl, I'm pretty happy
tion company in New Jersey body sort of made it happen.' I for him."
when the Eagles rang.
didn't even have to ask. I said.
Bowman ~ot Super Bowl
Even though Thomason was The Steelers called me· and tickets tor h1s parents and a
out of the league fottwo years; they started . yelling and few friends . He also sent back
he actually got into the game screaming. They were really a huge box of Steelers shirts,
against New England .
-awesome."
programs and Terrible Towels
Nonetheless, being back in ·Bowman was in Pittsburgh to his oltice in New York .
Michigan is enough . for last Tuesday, ready for hi s first
Even though he is living a
Bowman, who played for the workout m four. months. It was dream. Bowman is a realist. He
Wolverines .
slightly difficult to get back has no future in football The Tennessee Titans signed into it. '
.
· on ly in hi ' job with fuiur~
him as an undmfted free agent
''My legs were cooked after sales.
in 2004 but he ¥ot cut three. a day of practice," he said. "I
"I enjoyed what I wa, qoing
days before triuning camp. hadn 't been doing much exer- and I'll start doing it again in~
Bowman · returned home to cise. By much, l mean none." week ." Bowman sai d.

sports@mydailysentinel.com

Race tor the Nextel

Previ·ew

.

.

Februarv 11, 2006
1

\•

~alltpolil1 . 19atlp ~rtbune
446-2342

Joint Jlea,ant l\egt!lter
675-1333

The Daily Sentinel
'992-2156 \
Don't miss out on this great opportunity·
to have your business included! ·
Adn~rtising

Deadline is February• 9. 2006

.

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, February 2, :aoo6

www.myclailysentinel.com

able to turn this program
around," Meagan Cowher, 19,
said Wednesday. "We've had a
rough couple of seasons, but
this is our best in I0 years, so
it's exciting."
Before heading to Detroit to
join her family this weekend,
Meagan Cowher will play
Yale on Friday and then
Brown on Saturday night.
"I've got two games that
I' ve got to take care· of, and
that's what . J' m thinking
about. lbat's where my mind
is," she said. "Then I'll st:u:t to
think about the Super Bowl."
While they are favored this
year, Cowher's Steelers lost
their last Super Bowl appearance 27-17 to the Dallas
Cowboys. His daughter still
remembers the "devastation"
in her father's eyes after he
came off the field.
"Hopefully things
be
different this time around,"

will

she said.
Meagan Cowher said she
Meagan Cowher comes chose Princeton because of its
from an athletic family. mix of athletics and academics
Besides her father's achieve- and because she "didn't want
ments, both her mother and an to sacrifice .her education."
aunt played basketball in colFor her first six months at
lege and went on to play pro- the school,' no one knew
fessionally. The varying sports whose daughter she was, and
experience shines through then the whispers started.
"People have bei:n really
when Cowber's parents go to
her games.
respectful about it," she said.
"He's much more subdued. "Some of my guy friends are
You hear ·my mother's voice · gamblers and have · asked me
more, piercmg through the some questions ahead of
crowd and noise," she said. · Sunday, but it's nothing seriMeagan Cowher is known ous. It's all really lightheartas composed and graceful on ed."
the court, a stark contrast to
Princeton must win the Ivy
her sideline-stalking father, Leag1-1e regular season to
who she characterizes as "a make 'the NCAA Tournament.
maniac" on the sidelines.
While Meagan Cowher and
"We don't see that at home. .her father mal\:e it a point to
He's a big softie. We veto his talk after each other's gaines,
,clothes when he comes down she expects he'd make the trip
in the morning. It's tough for for any tournament games.
him in a four-woman hous~"M~ dad and I are each
hold," she said.
other s biggest fans," she said.

ATHENS (AP) - DeAndre
Haynes scored 16 points . and
Nate Gerwig added 15 to lead
Kent State to a 73-60 victory
over Ohio on Wednesday
night.
Jay Youngblood had 12
points and Omni Smith I0 for
the Golden Flashes ( 15-6, 91), off to their best start iri the
Mid-American Conference.
Sonny
Troutman
and
Whitney Davis each had 12
points, Leon Williams scored
J I and Jerome Tillman had I 0
for the Bobcats (12-6, 6-4),
who ·have lost three in a row.
The loss was Ohio's third m
its. las I 25 home games .

mrthune ~ Sentinel ..
CLASSIFIED

Ahead
35-31 at
the half,
the Flashes
ran off the
1\
...
next five
..
points with
SQiith hitting a 3_-pointer and Haynes
making a layup. The Bobcats
got as close as '55-50 on
Davis' 3-pointer .with 11:35
left before . Youngblood
answered with a 3. Tlie lead
never dropped below six
points again.
Kent State shot 63 percent
from the field (17 of 27) in
the second half.

CINCINNATI ( AP)
Atlanta Braves vice president
Frank Wren has been added to
the list of candidates for the ·
Cincinnati Reds' general
manllgerjob.
The Reds now have eight ·
candidates for the job that
opened when new owner Bob
Castellini fired Dan O' Brien
last week. Interviews began
this week .
Four in-house candidates
are on the list : Brad Kullman,

~

C. Jill! CDUnty, O H

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
,
2 .....
PLUS YOUR AD NOW
To Place
~rthune
Sentinel ·
l\egtster
Your Ad, (7 40) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 {304) 675~1333
Call TOday... or Fax To 446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992·2157
&lt;:... -;"? ....

Word Ads

who is serving as the Reds'
general manager durin~ the
search; special assistant
Leland Maddox; intef\lational
scouting director Johnn y
Almaraz, and special adviser
Jim Beattie.
Philadelphia Phillies assistant ge neral manager Mike
Arbuckle, Minnesota Twins
assistant Wayne Krivsky and
St. Louis Cardinals asststant
John 'Mozel iak also are candictates. 1

Buckeyes football,
basketball tickets
·going up $1 in 2007
COLUMBUS (AP)- The
cost of watching the Ohio
State Buckeyes in person 'is
going up.
A Board of Trustees committee approved $1 increase
Wednesday in the ticket
prices for football and men's
basketball starting in 2007.
Football ticket s. will .cost $59,
not counting a $3 handling

a

·fee. The face value. of basket,
ball tickets will range from
$ 15 to $26.
The board also announced
that beginning this year, new
members to the university's
golf course will pay a onetime initiation fee
$1 ,000
for alumni memberships and
$800 for faculty and staff
memberships.

of

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

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Items

r
.I

~

' ' ' 111 ,. I \I I ' I "

r

longer responsible tor
debts Incurred by Victor L.
Roush II. as of Ja~uary

GMlAWAY
5· 7 week-old Blue Healer
pups, !ails dod&lt;ed 304·
458·1860.
Beautiful white Indoor cat,
blue eyes, very playful bu1
.timid. (740)99H2a6

Boxer mix needs good
home. Great with kids.
Needs to be loved . Call
740-379·21'53 ..
Used hospital bed, in
good cond. 304.;175·61 B3

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1

Public

Notlc~!!O

ln Ne"WNpllpers.

In lhe Meigs County
Court of Common
Plea a
Pomeroy, Ohio
Claron G. &amp; Gloria P.
Schultz
PlalnliHs, .

•

wlae, you must file a calion, or repeat of
"FINAL ACTIONS"
responsive pleading
orders (other than are actions of the
wllh lhe Clark of emergency orders);
director which are
Courts oHice a1\d the Issuance, denial, effective
upon
serve legal counsel
modtflcallon or re~ Issuance or a stated
lor Platnllllo no later calion of licenses, eHecttve
date.
than March 3ta~· 2006 permtls, teasea, varl- Pursuant to Ohio
vs
Reapectlutly submit- ancea, or cert~lcateo;
Revised
Code
·A.J. Watson, el. at. led by:
and lhe approval or Section· · 3745.04, a
defendants.
Frank A. Lavette, . disapproval of plana final ·action may be
Case
No.O&amp;,CV-10. Eaq. AHornay lor and apectficallona. appealed
to
the
Legal Notice '
PlalntiHa; Reg. No. "DRAFT ACTIONS" Environmental
To A.J. watson and 0010195 Lavelle Law are wrtnen alate- Review Appeals
J.B Phillips and/or OHiceo, L.P.A.
menlo of lhe dlracior Commission (ERAC)
their unknown spoua- · 6 North Court Street, of
Environmental (formerly known as
as, assigns, .auccas- Sel:!&gt;nd Floor,
P r o t e c I t o n ' a the Environmental
sors, admlnistratiors, Pool OHice Box 661 , (Director's) Intent
Board Of l'!evlew) by
executors, devises, Athens, Ohio
wtlh reopect lo the a person who waa a
ned of kin or helra at
45701.()661
laauance, denial, ole. party to a proceeding
law, II deceased, and
(740) 593-3347
of a pennlt, license, before the director by
spouses of same, H (740) 592-6656- Fax
oi'cler, etc. lnteresled ftllng an appeal within
(1) 26, (2) 2, 9, 16, 23, persona may oubmll 30 days of notice of
any.
.
written comments ·or lhe . Final Acllon.
Certain mineral (oil (3) 2
and gas) rights were
request a public Pursuant to Ohio
severed or proaslbly
meeting
regarding revised code section
severed from lhe surPublic Notice
Draft
Actions . 3745.07,
a
Final
. lace ' In apx. 54+ AC
Comments or public . Action Issuing, denylocated In lhe SW QU Columbia Township meeting
requests lng, modifying, revok·
of Set. · 12 and 2.5+ 2005 FIMnclal Report muol be aubmlnad tng, · or renewing a
AC located In·the NW. Ia complell end avail- within 30 day• of permit, license, or
QU of Sec. 11 , Olive able lor review at lhe notice of tha Draft variance which Ia not
Twp.; Meigs county, . clerk'a oHice.
Action. '"PROPOSED preceded
by · a
Ohio by A.J. Watson Mory Wingo, Clark
ACTIONS" are written Proposed
Action ,
and J: B. Phillips, In (740) 61H204
atatementa of the . may be appealed to
dlrector'a Intent wtlh lhe ERAC by filing an
deed recorded on or (2) 2
about February 16th,
reapecl
lo
lhe appeal wllhln 30 days
1915. 'The last lllled
Issuance,
denial , ot Issuance ot the
· transaction Involving
Public Notice
modHicatlon, revoca- final action . ERAC
A.J. Watson and J.B.
lion, or ranewal of a appeals must be filed
Phlilipa concerning The 2005 annual permit, license, or
with: Environmental
such mineral rights. financial report lor variance.
Wrlnen
Review · Appeals
·Ia a Deed recorded on · Bedford Township Ia comment•
and Commlaalon ,
309
or about February complete. The report requests for o public South Fourth
16th, 19151n Vol. 111 , con be viewed by msetlng regarding a Street, Room 222 ,
Page
548, Melga appointment at the propoHCI action may Columbus,
Ohio
County
Deed fllcal oHicer'a home, be tubmltted within 43215. A copy of lho
Gruaaer 30 deya of notice of appeal
Records .
No title Barbero
must
be
.transactions
con· (740) 6116-1244•
lhe Proposed Action. served on lhe diracearning such severed Barbara Gruaur .
An ad)udlcalton hear- · lor within 3 days after
minerals exist of , Flacat OHicer
lng may be held on a filing lha appeal with
record
In · Meigs (2) 2
propoHCI action H a the ERAC.
County since that
hearing ·r equut or Final ·taauance of
time.
oblectlon Ia r...lvad CertHicetlon ·
The currant ownera,
Public Notice
by lhe OEPA within 30 Ohio Department · of
.Claron G. and Gloria
'diya of taauance of Tranaportatlon
P. Schultz, aubmll PUBLIC NOTICE
thl propoHCI action. Sallobury Twp. OH
lhal under Ohio Rev. County: Melga
Wrlnen commtntt, Action . Dale: 01119 ,
The
following · requeata for public 2006
Code Sec. 5301.56
·
el.aeq., 'none of the application• and/ or meeUnga, end sd)udl- Receiving
Wstere:
conditions
axial, verified complalnla cation
hearing Thome• Fork
which would Hrva to were recalved, and requeala muat be ldenllllcatlon
No. :
preserve such sev- the following · draft, aen'l
lo: Hearl ng 060126B001
ered mineral Interest, propoaed, or final Clerk, Ohio
Thla ltnal action not
that those minerals actions were · laa-uad, EnvIron men I l l pr!tCeded by prohave therefore re- by
lha
Ohio Protection Agency,' posed action and lo
merged wllh lhe sur- • Environmental P.O.
Box
1049, appealable 10 ERAC.
Pertain•
lo
401
lace Interest In aald Protection Agency · Columbua, Ohio
tract , and '41re riow (OEPA) laot waek.
4 3 2 1 8 - 1 0 4 9 . · Certification, .Grant:
. owned by lhem. II " ACTIONs:· Include (Tolephone: 614-644- · pertains
to
you conten d other- the adoption, modlll- 2128) .
Huntington Dlslrlcl

Corps of Engineers
Public Notice (H)
200500182.
.
(2) 2

:
'
,.

•
'

-b-- .·1
Pu ttc Notice

NOTICE
The 2006 Annual
financial report of

~;.;:1~~~~:~fi~

••
,

,

Place YourPaid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
~~~~:~;~~:tl~~~ !. Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Re~ster, or
~J;t~~:~~~ ~.:;: ! . Daily Sentinel, And It Wiii.Run For FREE In ·
li~i~
The Tri·County Marketplace!
!:

·

and Ia available lor

Bonnie Seon,
Fiscal Officer

Township . :

..I

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L._i~.!~·-·--·-\~.~.~.-..;...-.J.~.~~~-J
.

.

•

Bu•ln••• D•v• Pr.or To

Missing since 1/1106 from

llunce

Ad. area. Please
~~ (740)446-4706 leave

message.
home. 14- 16 months

Found Black lemale puppy,
\l11 Sand Hi!l Rd call 304675-2679

•

.

All Dlsplilly : 12 Noon z

Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sund•Y•. Pa~er

Sunday Dlspl•y: .1 :00 p.m.
Thur•day tor Sund•v•

Publlca~on

,

r:._. B·UY-·

R~n

7 D•ys

POLICIES: ~lo Vei'-V Publishing rnerv• the right to edtt, fettct, or Cllnceleny IICI M eny time. ErrCH'e mutt be. reported,on thfl flrat day
Trlbun•s.ntlnef..R-ut.a.r will be rdpOnalb&amp;llor no mono ttwl the CO$t of the epKa occupied by the error and ontv th• flrat inMrtlon. W•
not
eny lou or expen• thllt rMuttl ttom the publication or omiHion of et:~ •dvtrUtement eorr.ctlon wilt be mede In m. rtrat avallabtt ..::lltlon. • Bo•
ar• alw•y• confkt.ntlll. • Current rat. card .,tiM. • All rill
lldv.rtl......ma ar-. aubptct to the Fed•al Fafr tiou~ng Act of 1968.
sccepu only l'lelp wemtd tda mHIIng EOE ••ndtlrda. W. will n01 knowingly ICCaPI any 1ctnnlalng In vlol_.on of th1 llw'.
'

"ta._

Mal e dog found ·neat"
Homewood Or:. Bid well.
Ca ll (740 )388-8624.

r
r

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.. EI)

Reporter
Oenenl Aasignmeni
Reporter to write and
develop features, cover
news event.l and handle

aome local governmen\

reponing for daily
neWBpaper in aout.liea.s\
ern Ohio. ExpeJieoc:e
pnferred., bu\ ent.ry

Store Tokens, and cu rrency f_rqm Racine, Pomeroy,
and Middleport Banks.
74ll-992.fill40

level is

r.ooept.a.ble.
Sen d res\)me a.nd clips

Wan ted: Saw mill with
power unit. Call (740)245·
9393 or 17401441-4883.

Garage Sale Fri·Sun. 12·
4pm, 638 Jay Drive.
Refrigerator, Craftsman
tool chest, baby crib &amp;
mattr&amp;Ss, stroller, car seat.

to Kevin Ke~y,
Ma.naging Editor, Ohio

0

.."'

Will buy Junk Cars for
Scrap $60.00 ' Ca1t 74059H936.

Valley Publishing Co.
825 Third Ave .,
GaUipolis, Obio .U.631 .
Phone (740)446-2342

I \ ll'lll\ \1 1 ' I

"I

1~ \

Fri . Feb. 3 starts at 6pni.

t

Asserllble crafts.
wood items.
To $480/wk
MateriBis provided. .
Free information pkg.
24Hr.
80 1-428-4649
An Excellent

wgy to earn

money: The New Allan.
Call Marilyn 304·682·2645

www.comlca.com

no

I
.

HELP WMmiD

Experienced
Office'
Assistant with computer
skills. For more info call
1740)441-7295
or
1740)379-2245.

I buy Jl.!nk Cal'$ (304)773-

5004

AVON! All Areas! To Buy Or
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304·
675-1429

Full time position

. ©®.1!.

oriented and able
ta work well with
the public. Must
have valid dri-

CLASSIFIED INDEX

In Melgl county.
Must be self-

starter, aervlce

4x4'o For Sete ........ ~ .....................................725
. Announcemeni ............................................ 030
530
~~ntolor Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Markat... .....................,....O&amp;O
Auto Perla &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Aulo Repair .................................................. no
A.utoolor Sale .............................................. 110
Boals to Motorolor.Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles .........·...............................sso.
IJuelneso and Buildings ............................. 340
•uolneas Opportunlty.................................210
· t· uolneso Trelnlng ............................... :....... 140
· mpers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
'Qamplng Equlpmenl .......... :........................ 780
Cards of Thanks ..........................................OtO
Child/Elderly Core ......................: ................ t90
£tectrlcaURelrlgerallon ...............................640
Equipment tor Rent..................................... 480
Excavallng ....................................... :........... 830
Farm Equlpmanl.................................. ~ ....... 610
fannolor Renl...................:.........................430
lfarmotor Sale ..................................:.....:.... 330
For Laase ................:.................................... 490
I'or Sale ........................................................ 585
for Sate or Tradl ......................................... 590
Frulla &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Furnllhod Rooma ........................................ 450
General Haullng ...........................................850
Glveaway...................................................... !)40
Happy Ado.......................................... :.........oso
Hay &amp; Graln.................................................. 640
Help Wanted .................................................11 0
Home tmprovementa ................................... 81 0
Hcimeolor Sllt.e............................................ 310
Household Goode ....................................... 510
Houuafor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
tnaurence ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equ(pment ...................·..... 660
Liveatock......................................................&amp;30
Loal·and Found .......................;................... 080
Loti &amp; Acraage ............................................ 350
Mlacellaneouo ...............:.......... :................... 170
Mtscellaneoua Merchandtae .... :.................. 540
Moblie Home Rapalr....................................880
Mobile Homealor Renl ............................... 420
Mobile Homea lor Sete................................320
Money to Loan .....,.........:............................. 220
Motorcyclu &amp; 4 Wheelera ..........................740
Muolcallnatrumenll ................................... 570
· Peraonala .............................. ..... : .• : ... ........... OOS
~ell. lor s.1e ................................................
Plumbing &amp; Heotlng .................................... 820
Proleoolonal Servlcea........ .........................230
fladlo, TV &amp; CB Rapalr ........... :................... 160
Real Eallte Wanled ..................................... 380
Schoolalnatructlon............. ,...... :................ 150
8eed , Pllnl &amp; Fertttlzar .............................. 650
Slluatlona Wantad ....................................... 120
Specefor Rent .............................................480
Sporting Gooda ........................................ ,.. 520
SUV'olor Sale..............................................720
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
Uphotatery ........ ......................... .................. 870
Vane For Seta............................................... 730
Wanted to auy ..................... ..... ................... 090
Wanted lo Buy- Farm Supplte1 .................. 620 ·
Wanted To Do ............................... :........:..... 180
Wanted to Rent ........... :................................ 470
Vard Sale- Galllpolla .................................... 072 .·
.Vard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
V1rd Sale-Pl. Pleasant ................................ 076

with vaults, ir'!
Memorial Gardens. price
nOQ .. (740)992·3479

!Aniiques ....c..................................................

ver's (lcense and
reliable trans·
• NO IOXPERIENCE NECESSARY
• FUll·TII.IE ClASSES
' COl TRAINING

' FINANCING AVAILABLE
' JOO PlACEMENT
' ENAOLLINO "'&lt;JW

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR-TRAILER

TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHE\IILLE , VA

1-800-334-1203
WWW.IH18nc81ractor\11111111'.COm"

portatlon.
Position offers all
· company benefits
lncludif'ID health,
dental, vision,
and ltfe lnlurance, 401K, paid
vacation, and '
penonlil days.
Please send
resume to:
CU. Box 200
cJo Poineror Dallr
lentlnel
PO Box 729

Pomerow, OH
417t8
~~.CKHANOSl lnQram
Ddrge Co. will be accept
ng applications at the
D9pt . to( Employmen
Services
225
Sixtl1
~~~e~t , Point Pleasant
nest
Virginia,
o

n/2006
lhroug
21812006 1rom 8:00am ti
3:oopm MUST HAVE

ears heavy tabor

won.

experience {i,e. farmin g
ogglng , constructi on
etc,) Generous dall
wage and excellent· ban
iefit . package. EOE

FN.
De sk
Clerk
needed.
Please apply at Budget
Inn,
Jackson
Pika,
Gallipolis. No phone cells
please_
Drivers NHdld:

coL · orho~ers willing to
drive for local ready-mix concrete company.
Experience is preterred
but not necessary Med.
insurance &amp; other benefits
available after wa iting
period .' Driver must be
willing 10 do pre·malf1tenance On trucks &amp; equipmont y8.rd work &amp; other
mlscelfaneous chores. '
Experience operating
~quipment &amp; extra skill s
such as
welding a plus.
Ca ll l304i937·3410
Located in Meson County
near BuHeiO WV.

Experienced . light dut~
wrecker operator. Cleaf'l
record. , Call
dr'lvlng
(740)388.a545

Full time teacher's .assistan t,
$6,70/hr
sana
resume to Early Education
·,Station 2122 Jefferson
Ave . Pt. Pleasant wv
25550 .•

Tired of being under
apprecl~tad end
under paid?

uo

l.

110
HELP Wi\NilD

Gallia County Council on
Aging is seeking • an
Executive
Direct or.
Responsibil ities. · inclUde'
implementation ot policies
and
programs ,
staff
erhploymentldevetopment,
liScal managefnent,
posel preparation, program evalu ation , maintain
· reltitionships with other
agencies, ex-officio member of County Counci l.

Pro·

Bachelor's degree
m
Social Service/Business or
related tield with a mini·
mum of three years soc:ial
services/business experi·
ence
required . Basic
' knowledge o.f senior citizen needs and availabte
services
needed .
Demonstrated organiza tion~! , managerial, administrative '
experiei')Ce
required. Computer skills
including Microsoft W~rd
and internet nav igation
required . Must be bond·
able and hav8 a valid dri·
ver's license.
Submit Spplications with
resume to GCCOA, Attn:
Council Pr esident. 1167
State
Route
160,
45631
by
Gat1ipolls ,
3:30pm on February 17,
2006. GCCOA is an Equal
Opportunity Employer.

and great bene11ta?
If yOu are looking for a
better career opportunity.
we may have a position
fo r you.
We otter:
·Up to S81hr
•Full·tlme 6 Part·tlmt
lhlfta
• WHk1V Payc:heckl +
w.ekly bonus potential
·Paid vica11onl Pold

holidaya
• Friendly. prat.~tlonel
offlc:e envlronmeot
Call today to lind out how
. you c~n join our team.

JWWAN11!D

local business looking br
Secretary/Receptionist.
Must have good tele,:~hone

skills &amp; good wl1h !he i&gt;&lt;Jblic. knowledge In comput·
ers &amp; atl other office
machines. Hours: Bam·

5pm Monday·Frlday. 8·12
Saturday.
Send resume to :

Local Business

RO. Box n5

Help Wanted: Start your
Own ln1ern8t Business.
For details email
szmensan 0 aol.com

Home
Health
Aide,
Classes Agency is lookinr;l tor Peo·
pte interested In having a·
ca·reer in the home health
field. Classes wilt last 2
weeks and help with job
placement . Class Start
date IS Feb. 13th. Please
cell (740~4,·1377 ' or
(740)992·0990 tor details,
Home Health Care ol SE
Ohio is currently hirtng
Home
Health
Aides .
Competitive wag~s . Call
740-662-1222.

Local business took1ng for
Secretary/Reception ist.
Must
have good telephone
'1-&amp;n-4&amp;3-8247
sk1IIS &amp; QOOd wi th the pubad. 2456
liC, k nowledge in compu1www.lnfocis lon.com
. ers ·&amp; all otMr. offlpe
mach ines . Hours: Bam·
Housekeeping and laun5pm Monday-Friday. 8-,2
dry positions eva il a~e at
Saturday
ArDors of Gallipolis , Apply
Send resume to ·
1n person at 170 Pinecrest
Local Bu siness
Drive ,
Gallipolis.
P.O. Bmc 775 .
Absolutely No Phone Calla
Gallipolis.
OH 45631
Pl ease

attached garage. 3 acres
Chester Township. Eastern
school d!suict. Ott At 7
near Memorial Gardens.
Call (740)985-4321 after

For all your storage needs
I
r
o
m
5x10,10x10, 10lt20,20x30
boats ,RV's, campe rs, cars ,
trucks , fenced outsi de
parking, 1st mon . tree with
4 month lease, Hours Bam
- dark 304 ·7.62· 1n7 or
304·638·5981 or 304·762·
2014.

6pm.

78R. 5BA , Foreclosure.
only $18,000 For listings
c:all 800-3 91·5228 ext.
F254 .
AHentlon!

~=--~~--...,

180. . . WANil'D
I
1"-·_,.To
,.Do.__.~ ·

The
Athens-Meigs
Educational
Service
Center has ·an anticipated
position for a PayroWEMIS
Clerk in the Treasu rer's.
Office :
An . A5soc iate
degree
prefe rred
in
BuSiness Adm inistration.
or 3 years experience in a
Fiscal or Pavroll Office.
This position has Board
approved benefi!S. Submh
letter of Interest, resume,
and refe rences to · Br;an
Swann , Treasurer, Athens - .
Meigs ESC, P:O. Box 684,
Pomeroy, OH
45769.
Application
Deadline :
Monday, Februarv 13;
2006 at noon.
The
A.MESC is an Equal
Opportunity .
Employ'eri Provider.

Are you in need of: A. new '
root , p\UrQblng fixed , framing a building or any kind
ot carpenter repairs it so
give The Handy·Man a call
@ 304·675·5857
Computer Tr'O!Jble Shoot
and
Re patr.
Expert
Service . 740-992-2395.
House c leaning ServiceS
or sining 'with Elder!~ in
the ir· hOme, In Meson
County
area
Call
(304) 895· 32 17 to leave
message or for inlormatlon

J&amp;C

Tree Service &amp;
Excavating 25 years' exp.
Free estimates 304-675·
2213
Will care lor elderly, I have
relerences _Please call
Beverly at. 304-675·1 064
11\\\1 I \I

Loool Company
Gallipolis based .comparw
Is seeking candidates for
lull and p'arHime positions.
we otter competitive
salary and complete bf;)n elils
package.
Applicants must send
resume to:

Personnel
242 Third Avenue ·
Qolllpollo, OH 45631 .
Now acpepting applica·
tions for walters/waitress·
es, bartenders , drivers .
and busboys . Pick up
applications at
KNICKERBOCKEAS
2407 JaCkson Avenue
Point Pleasant . WV
'Open Interviews will be
conducted on 217 !rom 5·8
p.m.

Under New
Management Russ
Murdock, General
Ma·nager

tor

rs
ClosGcl on Sundays
Benefits
Include·
~eatth . -BiueCross Blu
~P'lield medical , ·dental
401 K.

!"v••

l=ax
resume
740)446·3599

'

•NOTt Ch

Seeking full time secetary
/Paralegal exp. reQuired.
Please sand resume &amp;
requ irements to EB1 200
Ma1n St ?!.Pleasa nt WV
25550

n.wap.~per

is

Fllir Hou•lng Act of 1968
which rn.kn h Illegal to
edvertiM '"any
prefet'ence, limitation ex

dlacrlminatlon beled on
race, cotor, religion, MX
familieletatua Of natiooal
origin, or any lntl(ltlon tc
meke any a~h

reacMra are hereby
lnrorrn.d lhst all
dWellings sdvertised in

this newapeper ere
1valtable on sn equal

r

opportunity bues.

House tor sale in Pomeroy
o land con tract. (740)992·
5858
Houses for sate 1n NewHaven.4 br on Mayo Dr
$85,000 (remodeled )
4 Or. on Haven He•ghts
$79,000 (remodeled)
3 Or. on Midway Dnve
$130,000 (new const .)
304·882·3131 /882·2728 .

www.or-vb.com
Home listing•.
list your home oy calhng
(740)446 -3620
View photos/into online,

package.
Including 401 K. Sign on
Bonua $2,500.
·· ..-'Opening for a Part
· Time AN . Sign on
· Bonue S, ,500.
Call Judte ReeH , RN,
C , Cllnk:al Manager, It

(740)« 1-1n11 or

1-80().481-6334.

••••••••••••

New Ha~;en , INv. 4 •
Bedroom, 2 Bath. 2 Car
Garage. Outbulld•ngs.
Close to town· PRICED
TO SEL L 1 Code .6505 or
ca ll (304)882·3368

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
ISS!?
No Fee Unless We W1n!
10 used homes under
$3.000.00. Must Go l Cali
Etame 7.-40-385-0698

1-888·582· ~5

1.: I \I I "I \II

Concealed Pistol Cl ass A.tt
States Feb . t 1 2006 ,
$75.00.
9:00a m. VFW
Mason 'WV. Ph. ~7 40)84 3·
5555 .

GaHipolle E:areer
College

(C areers Close To Hamel
Call Today! 740-446-436 7.
1-800-21 4.()452
g~l!i~tKar~rcol'-gt! ,oom
Accr&amp;dot.cl Member a.ccrtdll+f'\g
CCUlCIIIor lndep8nclollnl College•
ll&gt;d
127 46

s.:no..:.

ISHOP CLASSIFIEDS FOR BARGAINS GALOR~! I

'

Country: setting in 9tama
Coun ty ! 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, f1 reptace, $85,000.
(740}709-1 , 66.

"'Opening for a Full
T1me AN . tun benefits

If yOu are looking for

Res idential
Treatment
Facility taking applications
fo r youth worke r. Pay
baSed on experkmce. Pa1d
Insurance , Call between
9:00am-3:00pm Monday·
Friday. (1401379·9083

In tNs

subJect to the Fedenll

violation of the l•w. Our

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

to

• Carttr.... Leta Talk

AH rea{.,_tat. Mtvertl.. ng

Thla l'leWSpeper will not
knowingly accept
edver1tMrMnts,,or r.. l
eetate whk:h is in

HIO VALLEY PUB
i·SHING · CO. recom
ends .that you do busi
ess with people yo
now, and NOT to sen
oney through the mai
ntli you have invest1ga1
d the offenn .

Healthl

Has openings
Sales Associates
Top Performers ear
n a.verage $80 .000
Yr.
•
•
.
5 day work week· 4

Beautiful 4 bt., 3 full oaths.
2 car garage, tenced in 101.
completely
remodeled
304-882-2391

dl.crlmln.tlon. "

The Children's Home society if WV Reg ion II office
has an opening for a Youth
Services Social Worke r in
Mason County. This is a
WVOHHA
Contract
Positl('ln. Position requirements include: Bachelor's
degree In a Human
Services field, Social Work ·
l icense or Temporary
Social Work liCense etigi·
ble, previous .experience .
working with children and
families is preterred. To be
considered tor this position , qua lified applicants
shOuld submit tetter of
interest, and resume to:
Amey Gill
Cabell Co. DHHR
2699 Park Ave . Suite 110
Huntington, WV Z5704
B.y close it business.
February 5, 2006 EOE
Tired ol work1 ng all
the holidays?
Tired of working long 12
hour shifts?
Come home and join us
at Medi·Ho•e

OlkWOOCl 110me1

Local company oflering
"NO DOWN PAYMENT"
programs for you to t&gt;uy
your home instead ol renting.
• 100% financing
• Less th8n pertect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rei]!.
Mortgage
Loc at ors
(740)367 ·0000

preference, limitation or

Gatllpoli s, QH.45631

Olilllpolle. Ohio

tor

Searching
a lob with
a11xed work achedule

.
1

Sq .lt. lull basement. 2 car

leaaga Mini Storage

e.J:t.. 18.

HELP WANTID

3BA: 2 full bath . 1, 900

·2 lots

I• I -..

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Auction
House
at
GlenwOod WV. beside
GlenWOOd Post Office, lots
of new furniture, hOusehold goods &amp;.misc.

.,..,opapo•ll

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

~bsolutS Top Dollar: U.S.
school,Rlpley Ad . you ng
Sliver arid . Gold Coins,
Proofsets, Gold Rings ,
male dog,White &amp; multi
colored wl chain coll~r · Pre-1935 U.S. Currency,
30H75-1138
SOlitaire Diamonds· M.T.S.
Coin Shop, 15, Second
Lost: Purse @ Spring
Avenue, Gallipolis , 740·
Valley Cinema. Return with
446·2842.
no _question asked, Any
jnformation please call
Wanted To Buy. Meigs
(740)339·2008 .
County :
Store Script

seo

.

I

·

1

~ Reward for ruturn ·of

(I.W)446-7595.
,.

Reaeh 3Counties

Dally In- Column: 1:00 p . m .
Monday•flrlday for ln•ertlon
In Next Day•s P•per

• All ads must be prepaid*

• Adt Should

White Jack flussell Terrier..

O)d, very good natured:

~---~·---~-·----------~l '

~oo:o

Now you con hove borders and graphics
"'-"
added to your classified ads · (.~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

Display Ads

• I nclude IJIIhone Number And Addren When Needed

Found near Aoosevel1

I, Alicia Roush , am no

good

'

/Jecul~ir~

• Stllrt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • lndudtl A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•

. F'emale Bla ck Lab to a

Your RIKhi tdo Know. Delivered Right to Your n,,.,,,

-.htpCeuruy, Ott

b··. ,I

Wren latest Reds
GM candidate

Spotlightshines on refs on·Super Bowl Sunday
DETROIT (AP) - They're
Pete Morelli and his seven- ·crucial call to change the out0 back Who is right all the time?
the guys in black and white. man crew found out firsthand come of the game."
Of course not. If you're propNo names needed.
while
working·
the
Super Bowl officials are erly prepared, you' ll do a good
Unless they make a bad call. Indianapolis-Pittsburgh play- picked based on their regular- job. If not get out of the busiThen, everyone finds out off game last month.
season performance. They ness."
who these NR.. officials are.
Morelli overturned an inter- must have worked five full
Markbrei t said he was
Criticized and vilified, their ception by Steelers safety seasons in the NFL, and can- "scared to death" .before his
eyesight and sanity are called Troy Polamalu on video not work consecutive Super frrst one in 1983. He wept on
the sideline before his last one.
into question. And a ·lot of review late in the game, and it Bowls.
them are making names for nearly cost them. Pittsburgh
Most ofticials wait about 10 realizing that would be his
themselves lately.
held on to win 21·18 - line- years before getting called .up .final Super B&lt;JWI. He.retired in
· In a postseason filled with backer Joey Porter later said to the big game. Many never 1998.
~uestionable calls, the spot- the officials tried to c.heat make it there.
·
Jerry Seeman worked two
hght will be harsher than ever them out of a victory, and the
Retired
official
Bob Super Bowls and later was
for referee Bill Leavy and. his NFL said Morelli made a mis- McElwee, the head referee for head of officiating. He espeofficiating
crew
when take.
three Super Bowls, recalled · cially remembered the New
Pittsburgh plays Seattle on
A few days later, a rock was being on the road in Maryland York Giants' 20- 19 win over
Super Bowl Sunday.
thrown through the front win- when he got the news that he .Buffalo in 1991 when Scott
"What we want to do is to dow at Morelli 's home in got his first assi~nment.
Norwood missed a field goal
·pick up the paper Monday.and Stockton, Calif. Police said it
"I must have Jumped out of at the end.
"You di\ln't even know we
read about the game, not the was unclear whether the van- the phone booth," McElwee
officiating,"
said
Mike dalism was related to his said this week-while on vaca- were on the tield," Seeman
Pereira, who oversees NFL school job or his role as a ref- tion in· Hawaii . "My dad was said -in a telephone interview
sitting in the car looking at from his wmter home in
refs. "We all want to be eree.
anonymous."
In Denver's 27-13 win over me, he saw me-holding my fist Rancho'Mirage, Calif.
That can be tough some- New En~land on Jan. 16, the in 'the air."
.
.
To prepare for the Super
times. With more than 130 Broncos first touchdown was
Like the players, officials Bowl, the crew is sent videos
million people watching the set up by a 39-yard pass inter- can get nervous. But that can . of both teams so they can
Super Bowl in 234 cou ntries ference call on Asante Samuel also make them ·better, become more familiar with
around the world, a wrong in the end zone. Replays McElwee said.
the formations and alignmove can lead to outrage.
showed contact by both plax'The pressure raises you a ments. The officials arrive for
"There's no such thing as ers and Patriots coach B1ll level," he said. "S ure you the game Thl!rsday and for the
perfection. Mistakes happen~· . Belichick was irate.
know what it is. But doggone only time all season are
Jer'ry Markbreit, the. only per"l don 't really · complain it, I always felt if 1 was prop- allowed'to bring their families
son to be the head referee in about the refs too much," erly prepared and I was ready, with them.
four Super Bowls, said .· se.attle cornerback Andre I was going to be . oK. The
On Friday, they start
Wednesday.' "Officials are. So Dyson sai~. "We're all h,uman. · nature of this business is reviewing more video, then go
hard on themselves. When . They don t get to see mstant you're not always gomg to be to the field and practice the
they make a mistake, nobody replay on. every play. The right.
coin toss. Yes, even that has to
feels worse than they do."
biggest thing is not to make a
"But do you see a quarter- be perfect.

www.mydallysentlnel .coln

Golden Flashes
pound Ohio, 73-60

.Cowher's daughter · ~hows prowess of her own
PRINCETON, N.J . (AP)Bill Cowher isn't the only one
in his family having a bang-up
season.
As· he prepares his Steelers
for Sunday's Super Bowl.
Cowher's eldest daughter is
earning accolades as a forward
for Princeton University
· women's basketball team.
Meagari Cowher, a 6-foot-1
sophomore, has been Ivy
League Player of the Week
twice this year and has the
Tigers riding a six-game winning streak to a tie with
Dartmouth for first in the
league.
. Against Columbia this year,
she poured .in 32 points - the
ll)OSt by any Princeton ·player
since 1989. according to the
league.
But she prefers to talk about
her team. rather thari her own
accomplishments.
"It's great that we've been

Thursday, February 2, 2006

I
1995 Ooublew1ae 3br 2ba
w/anached
Garage .
Breezewa.y &amp; Barn. , 56
acres
Sandhill Ad
$72 000 1304)895· 3068

16x80 hOmes star!;ng at .
$25995 .00 1nclu~s vmyl
sld•ngl sh ingle roo! t;:: all
Russ 740-385·2434
, 1964 10x50 · Ae mbranal
w1fh tur niSh •,ngs. -$1 000
0 80
(937198 1-2 111
days

20 acre tarm tM!h custom 2
stary home bull! m 1999
loca ted belween
R1o
Grande !\ nd JAckson, 3
m1les off Fill 35 $249.000
?40-:J84-5162

1968
Mob•le
Home
Needs
Approx 10X50
work
A.sk1ng
SSQO OQ
Musl ' ITIOve ASAP. -40
949-7322 atter 5 PM

3 Bedroom. 2 Bath w1th
Ftreplace tn A10 Grande
area. S ac res rn/1 , 40x60
bafn. $120 000 17-40)709·
tt66

1979
Schultz
14X70
mobile home 2 8d 1 Ba ,
CA Must see 10 appreciate. sa.ooo OBO 740·
992, 41-46

�Thursday, February 2, 2006
~LLEY OOP
·

H OUSES

FOR REm'
1BR apt. close to Holzer.

2 or 3 Bd. Am . house 1n
Middleport $425.00 M..

1989 Belmont 14x~O . New
heatpump, furnace. Mtwater tanlo; Must be moved.
$1 O,BOO.
Very
clean.

WID hookup. DeposiVreference required . (740)339036:2 cell number.

$200.00 Depos1t, 740-'949·
2025 or 740-949-0007 .
HUO Available .

(7 40)388·8375

1ST MON. FREE RENT
WITH PAID DEP. NEW

......

3 Br Pomeroy, $375 .00
per month plus deposit

1996 Skyltne 28~64, 38R,
2BA. fireplace . cathedral
ceill('lg, S35.000. (740)709-

EllMVIEW

TOWNHOUSEIAPTS

740·4 16·4906.

1166.

NOW LEASING!

3 to 4 b8droom home in

2006 16' wide Special
Price
$181 /mo
Call

Pomeroy. HUD available,
$450 mo., $450 depoSII,

(740)385·7671 .

call (740)992·2979

2BR mobile horne for sale
or iand contrac1 S3.000,

48R house in town. near
school. $700/mo., deposit
&amp; reterneces· reqUired. No
pets. (740)388-tl 00.

$1.000 down

(740)446·

4107

AVAILABLE

4br
in
Syracuse.
$600/month &amp; Deposit
Wate rfSewer included. No
Pets {304 )675·5332

'96 Fleetwood 3 BR Only

$169/mo. Call (740)3859948.
Good clean , used, mobile
homes for sale. Day
(740)388-8513 , Evenings

Anentlon !
Local company oftermg

"NO DOWN PAYMENT"

(740)388·80 17.

mg
· • 100% financmg
• Less than perfect cred1!
accepted .
• Payment could be the
same as renl.
Mortgage
Locators.
(740)367-0000

Like new 2002 Clayton
$t48/mo
Call
· 14x52

(740);l85-9948.
Mobile Home 12·65. 2br,
all
Electnc
Cheap
(304)675-3927
before

Stop renting Buy 4 bed·
room foreclosure $15,000.
. For listings 800-391-5228
ext. 1709.

9pm ..

Rental Pro·perty for Sale.
1970 Hillcrest on 50X225
lot Harrisonville. Currently
Rented. $15.000.00. 740·
742-4011 or 740-742- ·

B USINFX'l
AND B l'll.DINGS

r""

MOBII.E H OME;

FOR RENT
2 bedroom mob1le home in·
Rac1ne . $375 mo. plus
$375 deposit, years lease.
no pets, no calls after 9pm,

apartment.
clean.
utilities paid

downstair~.

(740)446·15 19.

.

2bd upstairs apt. stove .
2BA house tor rent $500
per mo. $500 deposit. In
Kanauga,
no
pets
(·740)446·4t 07 .

fridge '
furnished ,
pa1d.
water/trash
$325!moll1h plus deposit. ,
3bd house $350Jmonth
plus depos1t. (740)4467620 or (740)441-9872.

2BR, furnished . no pets .
reference $375 mo. $300
deposit, water paid . Phone

2BA apartments Starting '
at $375/month. LocateQ on
SA 160. SA 850. Brib ,
McCormick
Rd .
Call
or
(740)441.·0 194
(740)44 1-11 84.

(740)44 1-0829.

22 acres. wonderful view.
ridgetop property, close to
main highway perfect fOr 4·
wheeler trails . (740)7072109

3 bedroom mobile home 111
country. (740)256 -6574.
3Br.
Refridg
&amp;
$iove,Washer · &amp; Dryer
1ncluded (304)576-2934

REAI. E.&lt;rrxn:
WAN'ffll

Apartmen t available now
Aiverbend
Apts . New
Haven WV. Now accepting
applications
tor
Hud·
Subsidized, ·one Bedroom
Apts
Utilit1es included.
Based an 30% of adjusted
Income. Call (304)8823121 available tor Senior
and D1sabled People.

Mobile home sp-aces in
Country Mobile Home
'Park .. {740)385-401 9.

Need to sell your home?
Late' on paymems, divorce,
jOb transfer or a death? I
can buy your home. All
cash and quick clOSing

·Newer 2 Bd . Am_ trailer.
Central heat and air.
Covered porch cind patio.
Partly fu rnished $425.00
740-243·581 1.

740-416·31 30.
It I ' I \I "'

E.H.O

Nice 2 Bd. Am . trailer in
Middleport. $350.00 M.,
$200.00 deposit, 740-9492025 or 740-949-0007
HUD Available.

e

2 Bd. Rm . house with large
kitchen . Ott street parking
As~ing
and storage .
$425.00. Possible HUD.
740-243·58 1 i

AI'I\R1111ENTS
FORR~&lt;:~n

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442,
Walk to shop &amp; movies.
Call 740-446-2568. Equal
Housing Opportunity.

In Memory

Memory
----,-

.

·-

.

- ~-=--::;

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!

PJI!' In Loving Memory Of ~ !
~I

Lyle E Baker
'(Mower Man)

,

r . May 14th 1929 ·· February 2nd 2004

Townhouse ?1-Par tments,
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441 -1111
tor applica tion &amp; information .

I know not where on ea rth to find you
I kn ow not when or where to· start
I only know I' m here wlthoui yOu
I've got pins and needles in my heart

Gracious living. 1 and 2
bedroom apartments at
Village
Manor
and
Riverside. Apartments in
Middleport . From $295·
$444. Call 740~992·5064 . '
Equal
· Housing
· Opportunities.

I always see your face btilfore m e
Your smile is work o f Heavens a rt
but now you 're smiling at another

Middleport 1 and 2
Bedroom lurnished Apts
No Pets, depos~. and pre·
vious rental relerences .

PINS AND NEEDLES IN MY HEART

740·992~0165 .

and there's pins and needles 1n my hean ·

Modern 1 bedroom apt.

'

Someday, somewhe re I know I'll find you
and love will make the teardrops start
and then you' ll k.ndw how long I've waited

(740)446-0390.
Moder'h 1 bedroom apt. No
pets_ $265/mo includes
water.
S200
depoSit.

with these pins and ne~d l es in my h~art

(740)~46-361

Written by V. Baker
Sadly Missed &amp; Deeply Loved
~
Th,e Baker Family
~I

b.

J

---=--~

-

(304)675-5806 . E.H.O
Shadylawn
Apartment .
Stud10 &amp; 1 bedroom ap'artments . ' oepostt requ1red .
App'ty
at
Jahnsons
Supermarket In Gallipolis
l;ara
Townhouse
Apartments.
Very
Spacious. 2 Bedrooms ,
CIA, 1 112 Bath , Adult
Pool &amp;. Baby Pool. Patio.
Start $395/Mo. No Pets,
Lease
Plus
S9Curity
Requi red , .
Deposit ·

(740)367. 7066.
· Twin River$ Tower is
accepting applications for
waiting list for Hud-subsized, 1- br.' apartment, ·
call 675-6679 EHO

SPM.'E
IOH

REr&lt;r

r

W ANTFJ&gt;
roRFJ•{f

Responsible non-smoking
couple loo~ing to rent '
hOuse or mobile home In
northern Me1gs County
Must be in a country sel·
ling and allow pets Please
call late afternoon or

ililiiiil
P10

HOlbFJIOW
GOOflS

Appl iance
Warehouse
in Henderson, WV. Preowned Applica nes start1ng
at $7S &amp; up ali under
Warranty,
also
have
Household
Mrsc. Items
·starting at .99e

&amp; up

(304)675,7999

Beautiful 2-story town.o verlooking
house
Gallipolis
City
park.
Kitchen, D.R, L.A., study,
3BA . · 2 baths. laundry
area. References reQuired ,
security deposi t, no pets.
$900 mo. Call. (740)4462325 or (740)446-4425

1 and :2 bedroom apartments.
furnished and
unfurnished,
security
deposit required , no pets,
749-992-2:218. .

2 br., 1 ba .• 7 miles on At. 2
North from PT Pleasant
rent $375.,dep $300 no
pets 304-675,236 1

I

2 room furnished etficien·
cy

1740)992-5039

I.m~ &amp;
ACRI~&lt; ;E

r .

2 bedroom Apt. available
in Syracuse . $200 deposit
$350 per month ren1. Rent
includes water, sewer,
trash. No pets. Sufficient
income needed to qualify.

4734

For
Sale- . Lawncare
Business, all eqwp., 97 314
ton Four Powerslrake
Gravely. 260-Z Gravely
Pro
50
16 '
trailer.
(740)742-8504 evemngs

-

(740)992-5 174

wv

740·378-61 11

388-82n

For Rent 3 Buildings lor
BUsiness Use. Located m
Pomeroy
Also, 2
Ups tairs
Unfurnished
Apts. 1n Pomeroy tor Rent.
Call 740-589·7122

2 bedroom apartment
Ma1gs County, very nice.
clean, $425 per month
plus deposit. no pels, references ·
required,

Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are
now
taking
Appl1cahons lor 2BA. 3BR
&amp; 4BA. , Applications are
ta~en Monday thru Friday,
from 9:00 A .M .-4 P.M.
Off1ce is Located at 1151
Evergreen Drive Point
Pleasant,
Phone No is

Downtown Office Space- 5
roam SIJite $650/mo; 1
room office- '$225/mo.. 2
2· bedroom apt. WID
room
suite
$250/ mo
hookup. Wate r, trash,
Security deposit required.
sewer pd. $400.
1 bed room apt refrig, . You pay Utilities. All spaces
very nice . Elevator. Call
stove; $325, water, sewer.
(740)446-3644 lor appoint·
trash pd. 1740)367-7746·
men1
(740)367-7015- (740)446·

Three bedroom House in
Pomeroy. Rent is $450
and deposit is $450.
References required;. Gas
heat and electric ai r. 740-

5009.

In

'ALL ELECTRIC
'CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
'STOVE , REF.,
'DISHWASHER
'GARBAGE DI§POSAL
'WIND BLINDS
'CEILING FANS
'WATER . SEWAGE. &amp;
'TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)882-3017

programs for yptJ to buy
your home 1nstead of rent-

Great location, 3br, 3br,
!+acre. LA, FA, DR. many
extras {304)593-0852

r

SPACIOUS
2&amp; 3BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES

Nice or'je BA unfurnished
apartment. Range &amp; retng.
provkled. Water &amp; garbage
paid. Deposit reqwred
Call (740}448-4345 alter
6pm.

7,

; New Haven , 1 bedroom
unfurnished apartment no
pets. deposit &amp; previous
rental
references,

1740)992-0' 65

G.e.

washer heavy duty
'$95; G,E. dryer $95; relrig·
erator 2 door frost tree
$t25; Maytag· washer like
new
$ 165.
'Genes
Appliances 76 Vine St.
(740)446-7100
or

(740)367-7666 .
Longaberger For sale.
Bas~ets and Pottery. Cal!
740-446-31 68.
Moving Sale- Quality bed·
room, livingroom furniture .
console organ and more,
{740)256-1428. See
bc-sales.com for pictures
and mto. ·

Inside/outside Sale. Feb.
3, 4, 5, 6 at the home of
the Late Kenny Stewart.
43724 Carr Road . From
StAi. 7 in Tuppers Plains.
OH take St. AI 681 West
Go Approx . 7 Miles to Elk
Run Road Turn right Go
1/2 miles 10 the tee 1n road.
tu rn right on Carr Road.
1st mobile home on left.
Everything will be sold.
1994 Buick Century 4
door. Water bed. dining
room enci living room
tables and odds and ends.
Tools computer w/printer.
other computer. and PC's,

.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt
In Stock . Call Ron Evans.
1-800·537-9528.
Large womens clathmgJ
hospital scrubs size 3x ·4K
baby clothes &amp; househOld
itBIT!S 304-675-2801
New and Used Furnaces.
Installation
available.
(740) 441 ·2667.

NEW AND USED STEEL
Staat Beams, Pipe Rebar ·
For
Concrete.
Angle ,
Channel , Flat Bar, Steel
Gra'ting
Fo r
Drains,
Driveways ~ Walkways .
L&amp;L Scrap Metals Open
Monday.
Tuqsday,
Wetlnesday &amp; Friday, Sam·
4:30pm. Closed Thursday.
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

(740)446· 7444 .
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Aepair·675-7388 . For sale.
re-conditioned automatic
washers ,&amp; dryers. refrigerators, gas and electric.
ranges, a1r conditioners,
and wringer washers . Will
do repairs on ll'laJor brartds
in shop or at your home.

r

AN'I1QliES

Buy · or sell. Riverine
Antiques. 11 24 East Main
on SA . 124 E. Pomeroy.
740 -992-2526
Russ
Moore. owner.

5&lt;10 MJSCELI~\NWUS
MffiOUNDISE

AKC
Lab
puppies
Chocolate' blac~ . Pric·e
$100.CaU {740)446·t062.
· AKC Lab pups,. field and
water1owl hunting bloodlines, calm. and family ori·
ented . excellent pups,
excellent pric.e. (740)418-

6366.
Alaskan Malamute puppies tor sale. Can 't regis·
tGr, but we have both parents. (740)256-6414 or
(740)645-236 I.

All types of parts for
ptumbmg.
hot
water
beater, faucet s, washer/
dryer parts. AlsO Healing &amp;
Coohng too ls &amp; par·ts
S t .700 tirm . Call (740)441 :
1236 tor appointment to
VI9W.

Help Wanted

At John Sang Ford-LinColn-Mercury we've
establi shed a 35 year reputation of honesly,

integrity and outstanding custome r sc rvlcebefore and after the sale. With the hottesl
pruduc ls on the mark~l and as the fastest
growing dealership in our region, we're adding 'diesel technicia ns: w better sen ic~ ·ouf

customer. Ford Service trainmg preferred
btu not required.

.

a profe»ional lecluiician looking
tu -,tart a new carl'er o.r muybc you dn1.1' t fe el
you're paid or treated as. well as you shouiJ
If yo u are

he and if you're 1ired of working for some• The he.;;t manAgcnlent
team 1n the country to
as~;is T

yml.

&lt;.:OMPENSATIO'i ...
f-1&lt;~1 Rate.
Care, Di ~abi lll~

Bonuses.
He..tlth

one who i'\n'' l wdrking fnr you. gi\'c J 1111
Thomas a ca ll today 1-740-446-Q~OO or
You m&lt;ty &lt;t lso apply
person a1 195 Upper Ri1·cr RD ...
. Galli pol", Ohiu Monday-Fmla)

1-R00-272 -5179 .

111

Long Tcrn1 Care anJ

Border Collie pups $125

(304)695·3326
Cocker Spaniel puppy,
registered . buf1/1an color,
$175
Approx. 3 112
months old. (740):256·

6346.
Full blooded Hus~y puppies for sale $300 -450, 4
males, 1 tamale
Als'o . AKC
&amp; . . APR I
Registered Sibenan HuSky
stud ava1lable lor breeding.

t 985 Chevy 1-ton dump
truck, new motor, cab &amp;
paint. Used d~ily. Asking

$3,000. 1740)256·1253.
1993 Ford Ranger 4114 ext.
cab, loaded V-6 , autOmatic

$3500. 304-576-3231

P.O.B•118

fu: 7411-143-1214 .
PIM 811 Ytl IIIIYP
E-111111
WICIIIIIIIillll
ltlllll®*lllna.c-

NlwiiiiiiCMIIIM

Auto· &amp; Truck
Repair

992-5682

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

200 1 4dr V-6 Dakota aUto·
malic, 90.000 ·rnHes. 4WD.

$6,500 (740)339·1620.
200 1 Dodge Aam tru.ck
2500 SLT Heavy Duty.
springs. camper special.
10-ply tires. S7,50p. Call

Ed (740)367-0624 .

Chevy Colorado Ext. Cab
'05. Auto, 2WD, w/bedlin~r.
excellent cand 1tion . Kelly
Blue Book $14.600. will ·
se ll for $13.600. (304)5231179

SUVs
FOR SAI.F.

2004 Chevy Trailblazer
4WD w/1ow pkg
Kelly
61ueboo~s @ $22,0,00 . ·
many extras 10.500 flliles.
excellent condrtion , garage

500 ATV wi.lh 34 miles.
$4900.
CARMICH~EL
.EQUIPMENT. (740)446- ·
2412 .
Harley Davidson 1999
Xl883 Sportst!)r w/extras .

55,500
080.
(740)245-5 165.

fill AliiU PAKIS

Call

&amp;

· A~Ril.'i

BUDGET
TRANSMISSIONS,
All
)ypes.
(740)245-5677
or
7 40 645· 7400

CAMPmtS&amp;
MmoaHoMK~

kapt .$16.900 (304 16751408

$6.0bo OBO. (740)245·

r

·FORS..\LE

2001 Ford Expedition ,
Edd1e Bauer 'Editton , tu lly
loaded. moonroof. running
boards, 67,500 miles.
great shape, red and tan
exterior, tan leather inten·
or.,asking $19.500 . Call
441 -1417 after 5pm or
leave ·message.

.'
•

F.RANK &amp; EARNEST

~'VE 1'1~ t-OTS OF PSYCI'IOt.OGIC:AL
/
TI'IE~APY, JUT NONE OF IT

(740) 992-0496

SEEMS. TO

714

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiii!WIVr=;r;i
Hill's Self
ROBERT
Storage
BISSEll
Bashan Road
CONSTRUCTION 29670
Racine, O hio

iiliiiiil
~lD

HOME

IMPIIOVEMENI'S
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditiona l
lifetime
guarantee. Local referen-ces
furnished .
Established 1975. Call 24
Hrs
(740)
446-0870,
·
BaSemffn t
Rogers
Waterproofing .

• New Homes

• Garages
·Complete

........

I'I~LP.

MA'YB~ YOlJ'Rt
SI'I~IN~ ~~SISTANT.

45771

740·949-2217

WHAT . MAKES
'&lt;A THINK

Remodeling

740-992-1611

so?

l r"HE-so:U:f"":T;:II\'R""'i~---~~~:eJ~:---:~
I

i

~

Stop &amp; Compare

~

i ~_c~$:::::;J
MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE

J

~==~~~~~~-Y~~

97 Beech Street ·

Middleport. OH

'£HE BORN LOSER

10x10x10x20
992· 3194
or 992-6635

~·~E.'-'~' HIE. 6ROUr-lt&gt;fl.O~
':cf&gt;..Mf. OJ\ 01' fl. I~ 1-\0LE N-\1&gt; ..

r

For Sale· Black Angus
bull. aprox 1.200 lbs. Call

li@§iQ!ifihi'ifH
710

AlTIUS
fUR SALE

$500 1 Police Impounds!
· C8rs from SSOO For listlllQS 800·391·5227 e.xt.

"Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

1989 Ford Club W?~gon
XLT-n 99k miles. well
ma1ntamed . $2800. Call

•

1995 Ford Crown VrCtona
L'x 135k miles . good con·
dtt1on, n t~w trre&amp; $2.600
Call (740)441-9282
2002 Cl1evy Malrbu pw pi
crUise a1r cd 106k m1les
LOO ks' &amp; runs great
SS JOO (304 )5~3 - 3178

· M-ERCURY

Equal Opportu.n1ty Employer

2004 J ~C~D L1t)erty excel
lent conrlitwr les~ rr.a n
15 000 rnlleS S 17 000
C.1tl 17-l f)I J4F- 40?8

crane

30 Baseball .
greal Mel
· 31 Ron who
played

20 Dagwood'i
money
pooch
45 Fraclure

Implement
3 Your,
·

22 Finish third

old-slyle
4 Oolong

24 One
- - time
· 25 Alpha

brewers

followers

5 PrDbabilitles 26

Tarzan

at a circus
· 33 onoman Iitie 9 Carton

35 In motion
of milk
37 " - caoll"
10 This,
38' E~tlnct bird
in Havana
40 Pumice
14 Bone-ctry
source
15 Lei In
41 Converted 17 Trano1erred

software

sofa

photo
~hyph . l

46 Mystery
wrller -

Kellerman

47 Wine valley .
complexion 49 Pipe-fitting
27 Ms.
51 OrO.,
Sed~wlck
behind
29 Mod1cum
52 "FDtlcaun's

6 Pita treat
7 Wand
8 Polntadarch

32 Cries

D~rk

34 Curdle,

Pendulum"

as milk
(2 wds.)
36 Hiner
39 Comics

author
53 Jell

canine ,

· 43 Worn-down

though, how should Soulh plan lhe play
1n four spades? West leads the club king .
Mer three suits have been bid around
lh_e table, if the fou rth player doubles. it is '
called snapdragon.ll shows length in the
lourth suit and to leranGe t)'p1ca lly
honor-doubleton ~ 'tor partner's suit. ·

suit, he ' is warning of shortness 1n his
partner's suit.
West's two-heart ·rebid guaranteed fourcard sUppor t With only three hearts, he
would have made a support double.
(Co'nven~onal doubles get ·.everywherel)
East competed to three hearts because
he knew of · a nine-card fit. With nine
trumps , b1d to the nine-trick level.
In four spades. you have only nine win·
ners: seven spades, one diamond and
one club. You must establiSh a long diamond. Since that will require ruffing three
diamonds in hand, you will need four
dummy er1tries: three for the ruffs and
one ·to get to the established card. Those
four entries must be the diamond ace and
three spades. So :you must nat · draw an

a loser. Nicely done

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

C-elebrMy C1rtoer ctyPio;jrams ~re crealed !rom qootallons by lalll0).,1 people. past aro:: preSirt
Each ;etter 1n lhe opller Slill'di !o-r aootr".er

Toda{s clue· H f!(luals C

" V

KXEXO

, CNYXGU,
APP

ALSA ' Y

p

v'c

s

u

R·V G G

s

V' C

TPW

AP

WP

YIVOVAJSG
CSOVSL

IXOYPK ."

.,._-of

Ap

AOVXW

SUOSVW

A L S. A .

HSOXN

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "lmag1nation w1ll often carry us to worlds that never
were . But without lt, we go nowhere · - Astronomer Carl Sagan

.

Astro- .
Graph
-.r'lllrthdB,y:
'
Friday, Feb. 3, 2006

SPECIAL
BINGO
Friday, Feb. 3

Over

$8000
Up for grabs!!

·See our ad on
Page AS

•

'

SEPTIC TANK PIJMP/NC $95.00
PORTABlE TOilET RENTAl
~ll FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY
591·8757

' PEANUTS
WI-IAT 1-!APPENS I~ YOU CAN'T SPEAR
A POLAr(. BEAR OR A MOOSE ?

'(OU SPEAR TI-lE WILD
CIWCOLATE CHIP COOKIE!

Beef $7.35
Beef $8.10
Corn $6.45/Bag
!·Cracked Corn $7.451Bag
l·S0~1 bean Meal $13.25/Bag
River Hog Feed $8.85

Why Drive Anywhere Else?

Shade River AG Service, lriG
35537 St Rt 7 N •

Ohio 45769

~

"z
w

•

~

1

~ ~.-

~
~
" L-----------------~--~

Hardwood Cabinetry And Furnleure

$ARFIELD .

www.tbnbe.......,Jtc&gt;ot&gt;ln&lt;ltey.colll

i"iN
(l
••
~

1740)379·9297

1995 Chevrolet Lumina LS
tor sale Runs bul needs
wor~
$500 080. Call
(740)446-7005 .

28 Derrick or

1 Mournful.
2 Boalhouse

British psychologist Havelock Ellis wrote.
"Jealousy, that dragon which slays love ·
under the pretense ol keep1ng 11 alive ."
This deal does not contain a dragon, but
an elllension called a snapdragon. F1rst.

•

IIIG NATE

.(740)44 ' ·9262

'98 2Dr Blac~ EKplorer
Sport 4x4 Pwr. everything.
rear vent. 94k mi. $5800. ·
709-1276eve
·446·
1113day

1992
Cadiltac
Sedan
Deville · Great condition
95,000mi., leather Interior.
CD player and system,
runs
great
$2 .000.
(740)446· 7820
or
(740)709-9532 .

penpils

44 - - for the

VA_,.;

'

•1987 Chevy van malo;e
good work van $800
t8t1 . du81 axle car trailer.
w1re tloor NeW tires. small
wmch .. good shape. $800.

Pass

19, Oahu

welcome

In essays

!!;a st.

t

DOWN

25 - choy

To snapdragon or
not to snapdragon

FoRS..\LE

Pt. Pleasant, WV

t

U\'FSIOCK

Pass

jack. discarding

Console
OrganGulb,ransen 1151 kw double manuaL Great for
he!me or small church
$950. (740)256-1428. See
beals
l
t e

Hause WV loca110n. home
&amp; property within 10 miles
of PT. Pleasant. ranch
· style
1200-1600
sq
ll.,central a1r!heat. .garage.
prefer rural setting please
call 304-593-3207

piece

23 Na·me .

immediate round of trumps. After winning
with dummy's club ace, cash the diamor:1d
ace and ruff a diamond m hand . Play a
spade to dummy's eight and trump another diamond_ Lead a· spade to dummy's tO
and ruff a thirr;j d1amond. Finally, cross to
the spade king and cash· the· diamond

INSTRUM~'NTS

I· \K \ 1 "'I 1"1'1 II'
,'\.:U\1·. '\10( k.

Pass

I

57 Lingo

. When fourth hand 1nstead bids the fourth

7245.

r

,...

North

West

concern

21 LP Speed
22 Chair-back

'Opening lead: "'K

'

1997 Hornel 23ft. 5th
wlleel, w/air. awning. selfcontaine~. ligh t weight ,

4x4

South

Licensed Home Builder

2003 Suzuki 4WO Vinson

,. 2. 3t..

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: Both

CONSTRUCTION~
Chuck Wolfe
Owner

19 Bother

5
KJ983
Qt0. 96
10 7 4

• 3
... 8 5 2

WOLFE · ~

3 miles west of
Pomeroy, OH
on State Rt. 124

•
.
t
•

South
. AQJ9743
• Q 6

M USICAl.

~--~---------

_L rNC.OU..

TRUcKS
IURSAIE

ty!ONTY

ll.....lrt. IIIII
Phtll: 'MIJ-U3.5284'

ROGER HYSELL
GHRHGE

Phllly team
13 Tree~
Onion·
15 Fiery
flavored roll
16 Nol genuine 55 Nobel Prize
18 Sweater
category
letter
56 Wr"or'o

East

West
• 6 2
• A tO 7 4
t K5 2
... K Q J 9

junk mail

50
54

praeliC&lt;Jrs

... A 6 J
.

Jack Russell/ Rat Terrier
puppies, 3 males, 7 wee~s
old. tails doc~ed. wormed .
$50 each. (740)37.9-9098.

12~3

'iti

5009

.

IID 'FIUW '
SERVICES

140-992-0153

'$250. Call (740)707-1964.

2002 Dodg e Neon J9,lX&gt;O
molt's 4 ~yl
auto a1r
S3 500 OBO ( 7 40 1 ~ ::.6 -

~

95 Z·28, 350 auto T· Top,
looks and runs excellent
$5000.00. 92 Corsica V-6,
4. door auto $1800.00.
740-742·4011 'or 740·N2·

15

REMOVAl
lozer IICUIOI

Black 1994 Ford F150,
5.8L. short bed. great con·
dition. $3,500. (740)367-

(740~46-2514.

DIESEL TECHNlCIAN

• T wo week initial &amp;
orientati on cla!'lseS w ith
cont inued ongoing
training.

C548.

ROCKY HUPP
INSURANCE

BARN

12 Asana

•

North
O:.! -tr~ -ll6
• K 10 8
• 5 2
t A J 8 '7 4

New Furniture 5450 . Call

PROFESSIONAL

TRAINING ...

94 Honda Accord, $700.
Cars tram $500. Ford list·
ings 800-391·5227 . ext.

~roo..·~'•u•~•§•~...~.;~~ r:

,3901

Help Wanted

9665

i

most of

1 - voce
43 Put the
(ooftlyJ
ldbooh on
6 Fumble
4~ Gontng
11 Sighed
lighter
w~h delight 48 Lfke most

2004 bluEI Pontiac Sunfire

6772.

weeks old. Shols and
wormed $150.00.
740992-9 105. May call on
Sunday.

Phillip
Alder

lion, great gas mileage, 5
speed, $9,000 (payoff),
black interior. (740)4,.4.,1·

42 Make the

,,

30,000 mi. excellent condi·

SUPI'UI1l

2 Fema le Shar-Pej pups 9

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

0140

BUUJ)ING
·
Block, brick. sewer pipes.
windows . lintels,
etc.
Claude
Winters.
Rio
Grande , OH Call740-2455121 .

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

BRIOGE

:2003 PT Cruiser, Power
windows and loc~s . CO
Player, Very · good condi·
tion , $7500.00. {740)388-

98 Chevy Slit. cab 4x4, 350
Vortec 5-'speed , $7,500
080. Must sell . U40)256·

(740)446-7300

www~ mydailysent i nel.com

Now Renting
A-J Mini Storage

740-992·6396
740-992·2272
Units 1Ox20 1Ox12

~

are
ACE TREE SERVICE
Complete Tree

.

17.9 Rand St.
Gallipolis, OH
R ic k Johnson , Jr.

1

Owner
Insured

Free

Est.

"'ow Available At

BAlJM LlJl\lBER
Scorpion Tractors
''Ttlkitrg·The Sti11g Out OJ

tI

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OUT

ROT

r( ~:~
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O~DER

I

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/

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GRIZZWELLS
,,

1m-/ ~~ 'lbll ..----

~~-~~1\l'i:~

~~. WARREN

By Bernice Bede .O sot
There's a good chance that in the year
ahead you could make some important
adjusl ments where your work is concerned, making cons1derable advancement and recognition 1n yoUr chosen f1eld
a stron!il pos!tibllity. ·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - A group
of persons who haven 't lived up to your
expectat1ons recently may do an about·
lace today. Where you were denied cooperation. ,yOu should now begin to l1rtd the
support you need.
PISCES (F'eb. 20- Mafch 20) -· Conditions
rn general k:lOk quil e favorable tor you
loday. The areas · that show considerable
advancemenls could concern your reputation and status. Ma~e these your p(1me tar·
gets.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Creative
involvements. should prove- to be pleasurable tor you today it you select act1vrt1es I hat
stimulate your mental faculties and a!19w
you 10 work with your mind and hands collectively
·
•
TAU RUS (April 20-May 20) - Follow off·
beat leads today to t~nd merchandise thai
yo.u've discovered to oe a b1t dlftlcult to
acquire. You're a good detect1ve and you
m1ght find an 1tem that could be rather oljtstandlng
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - There are .
some improved conditions in the ol1ing lot
you today where yow soc1al lite IS concerned . Don't be surpnseo it you sta rt see·
ing lots of· signals of increased popularity
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - It witt oe the
little thmgs - that could mean a 101 today
where your work ·1s ·concerned Take
advantage of small opporti.Jn11ies; you 'll
later diScover how Important rt was to do
so. '
LEO {July 23·Aug 22) - Spm-ofts stemming tram your socral alflliatlons could pro·
v1de r·ou With . some valuattl8 intormat10n
today. Be extra anent1ve to what s bemg:
satd whenever you 're With a group
VIRGO (Aug . 23-S~pt. 22 ) - You m1gnt
benet1t 1n an unusual way raday !hrough
the K.1ndnes!) ot a tam1ly member or tram
one of yof.H relative's contacts What tran spires could occur with m1n1mum tantare
but w1th b1g resulls .
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23)- II you 've been
a 011 restless lately, today s a good day to
get out ~nd start movmo;;) around a bit A
short tnp 'to a fresh venue where you can
see rtew laces and siQhts may prove to be
upliftmg
SCORPIO _(Oct . 24 -Nov 221 -... Don 't
aesparr 11 lhings 1'\aven't been gorng too
well l or you l1 nancialt~ or protess1ona!ly tn
tile pest couple ot weeks The wMel tS
atway!l revolving aM w111 be com1ng up to
yoUr turn ·aga1n Soon
SA.GtTIARIUS (Nov 23-0ec 21 I - Vou
ar!!j now ente r1ng a One! cycle where you
could be luckoer than usual Ill enterpnses
lhat you ongmate, manage or- recond•t1on
in some manner TI'Hnk bujjj
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22; Jan 19) - It you ,
11tart 11hqr 1ng uP th• tound a!10n tod ay
regardmg e matt•r th111t ha'l&gt; b•en d•layed
tor so me 11m•. you thoU id be aole ic altrt
to r•ao IOI'fle ol th• dts1;e results you

THAT OAILI

PUIZtU

~ S©"RJ11A-!Gt-zrss :::~

----~--- Edi1•cl 111'1' CUY • . 'OUA.N - - - - - - -

0 lour
ReoponQe le ~teo c! lht
JCrombled word s be-

I

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I

CEMNUA

TAGOL

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5

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ARLO &amp; JANIS

Bur •F wu Do ~a1; OoEst/r
THaT Ma&lt;e THE UNE&lt;f'KI~D
E.•Pec~D?

Hard Work!"
Mit.I -Si1e 4Wheel Drive Traclor ·

with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kuhota Engines:

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt.' 124 C hestel' 985-3301

--- - ---- - -~-

bv l ~ /..,;;

.I\

2 2/fl{~

'lll'll f'!fj

th~ 1'11S:O•.,-; wo· :h

!f.j

Donkey- Senna- Notch- Hiatus - TAKE OUT
lnco.me tax is paid on what goc~ into your wallet
and sales tax is paid on what you TAKE OUT of

q\~\.I"K\tiWS

"'

~C "!"j')lt"!(' ~l'c ~" 'l&lt;'kln

SCRAM LETS ANSWERS 2/1106

SOUP TO NUTZ

~tE.\-1

married on

._--'----'--'---'----'--' yo~.: de,e lcp ;:om stez ."-10 3 ce- !o... .

ell.pect

--r-!'11\

gel

·
a diving hun~d hecRuje I'm
r.--:-P-R-, -,~-.-J-E-5--.
. ~rcadv to tal-e the--·-·· '"

-------

-·

�Page BS • The Daily Sentinel

WW\V .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, February 2,

Cleveland cuts down Nets, 91 ~ss
CLEVELAND (AP) Cleveland Clinic on Tuesday.
LeBron James capped his sevPerhaps tired following
enth career triple-double
their win over the Pistons, the
when he rushed Jason Kidd
Nets shot just 25 percent from
into a miss and grabbed the
the floor in the first quarter. It
rebound in the final minute of
was a ragged first 12 minutes
for both clubs, who were
' the Cleveland Cavaliers' seventh straight win, 91-85 over
equally inept in a sloppy secthe New Jersev Nets on
· ond period which ended with
Wednesday night:
New Jersey leading 35-34.
New Jersey shot only · 33
James scored 26 points 22 in the second half .- and
percent in the first haiL but
added II rebounds and 10
the Cnvs didn't take advanassists as the Cavaliers held
tage as they shot .only 4 1 and
off the cold-shooting Nets,
committed II turnovers ..
who snapped Detroit"s . IINotes: It's a tough back-togame Winning streak Tuesday.
back for the Cavaliers, who
James, who averaged 32.8
play m Miami on Thursday in
points, 8.1 rebounds and 7.5
a nat ional TV game .... Cavs
assists in January, began ·
G Damon Jones, a journeyman who spent last season
February 'with his third tripledouble this season and helped
with Miami, is anxious to see
Cleveland end a five-game
how he'll be received by Heat
losing . skid against New
fans . in his first game there
Jersey.
since leaving as a free agent ·
Drew Gooden had 18 points
last summer. "I'm not even
and Sasha Pavlovic added 14,
nervous about the gam'e, _just
' the fimal
~~
including seven 111
the fan reaction," said· Jones,
three minutes. as the Cavs New Jersey Nets' Jason Kidd , right, strips the basketball from who described his one year in
closed it out.
Cleveland Cavaliers' Eric S.now during third quarter NBA bas- South Florida as "the best of
;
·
Vince C.arter ha d ;- 9 pomts, ketba ll action Wednesday in Cleveland.
my. 29 years." Jones, too.
Richard Jefferson 19 and made four free throws in the an 83-76 win with 2:57 to would like to meet with Heat
Kidd 14 onjust4-of-15 shoot- final 29 second s as the play. Pavlovic, whose inser- coach Pat Riley, who was
ing for the Nets.
Cavaliers improved to 17-5 at tion into the starting lineup angered by comments Jones
· Although New Jersey made home.
.
has coincided with the Cavs' made earlier thi s season after
on'Iy 38 percent (29-of-77) of
Unable to take over like he · win streak, hit another jumper Stan Van Gundy quit as
its shots, the Nets were sti ll has done so · often lately, and added t.wo lree throws Miami's coach. "Hopefully,
within 85 -81 when Kidd James stumbled across the w1th 44 seconds to go.
. \ve can go back .to being
made a steal near midcourt foul lane but was able 10 flip
Cavs forward Ira Newble bestest buds," Jones said ....
lmdheaded up the tloor for a .
f
. remamed hospltal tzed w1th Next Tuesday, Cavs G Larry
· h'l b .
possible layup. But James 111 a ·10 - 00 1er w 1 e · emg what the -team is calling a Hughes will have.a better idea
caught up to him and crowded fouled. Hts free throw put facial abscess. Newble, who how long he 'II be out followhim under the basket without Cleveland ahead 79-75 wah missed 23 games earli er thi s ing finger surgery. "We' ll see
making contact. and Kidd's 4: 15 left.
season with inflamed tissue in what the doctor says," said
shot was short .
James made one free throw .his foot, was sidelined for Hughes. who hasn't played
James tipped out the miss and picked up assist No. · 10 Monday's game in Charlotte since Dec. 31. Hughes was
and ran down his lOth when he fed Pavlovic for a 3- with it migraine headache. initially expected to miss at
rebound in the corner. He pointer that gave Cleveland .before he was admi tted to the. least eight weeks.

Frye hopes to follow Roethlisberger to Super Bowl
'·

' BEREA (AP)
Charlie 41-0. The Steelers sacked
Frye knows he will always be Frye eight times.
compared with Pittsburgh
Maybe that's why he's pickquarterback
Ben ing them to win the Super
Roe\hli sberger.
· Bowl.
!"fe can only hope that his
'They 're just playing at a
career takes a similar path.
whole other level than every"He's the starting quarter- body else is in the NFL." he
back in the Super Bowl," Frye said. "They were at a whole
said Wednesday. "That's oti)er speed and they 've been
obviously ·a dream that 1 had playing that way ever since."
when 1 was a kid. 1 want 10
Frye wants Cleveland to be
play in the Super Bowl.''
more competitive against
Frye, back at Browns head- Pittsburgh next season and
quarters after time off in' has committed to working out
Phoenix , is used to 'the at Browns headquarters durRoethlisberger comparisons.
ing the offseason to get ready.
"We've been compared to
He is hoping to build camaeach other ever since . high raderie with wide receiver
school," Frye said. "We grew Brayton Edwards and tight
up an hour aw~y from each end Kellen Winslow Jr., who
. other. It's been that way since are in Cleveland over the winwe wereJ8 years old."
ter to rehabilitate from knee
They left their rural north- injuries.
ern Ohio hometowns to play
He also plans to bulk up,
in
the
Mid-American adding 10 pounds to his 215Conference and were drafted pound frame. to ·better witha year apart by AFC North stand a 16-game schedule :
ri vals
Pittsburgh · and
Frye went 2-3 as a starter
Cleveland.
after taking over for Trent
But the similaritie s end Dilfer at the end of the season
there.
but didn 't win coach Romeo
Roethlisberger has the Crennel's endorsement to be
Steelers in the Super Bowl in the starter next season·.
just his second season, while Crennellias said there will be
Frye, entering his second an open competition at quaryear, still has to prove he can terback during training camp.
lead the Browns' offense. ·
Frye though will prepare
While not promising a trip thi s offseason as if he will be
to the Super Bowl · next sea- the starter.'
son. Frye said he can be as
"1 played pretty good in the
successful as Roethlisberger. last five games,'' Frye said.
"I believe in myself that I 'T m on fy going to get better.
can go out and do the same The rookie quarterback that
things," Frye said. ·' He's you saw this year, you won't
doing a great job of managing see that guy next year."
the game, He's going out
While Frye doesn't expect
there and when he has an the 'Roethlisberger comparopportunity to make a big isons to go away, he' s tired of
play, he's making· it."
critics 4uestioni'ng hi s arm
Frye saw that firsthand , strength.
when the Steelers 'came to
"We can go get on the field
Cleveland on Christmas Eve right now and I'll show you
and embarrassed the Browns how far I can throw it," Frye

.said sm iling. "Everybody's
been talking about it for so
long. They were saying the
same things about Bernie
(Kosar). I feel I can make all
the. throws. I've made all the
thro"ws. I'll show ~nybody 1
can make all the throws.
Hopefully, after this season.
we can end that."

Bowl. the NFL combine and
'his rookie. season with the
Browns.
· Frye will spend the next
few months working out at
Browns headqu arters and
meeting wiih coaches four
days a -week. As for his Super
Bowl weekend plans, he
won't be traveli ng to Detroit

He ·acknowledged that hi s
.arm felt tired at the end of the
season and he was exhausted
in general. having no break in
football from his senior year
at Akron through the Senior

for the game.
"That's tuo painful to go
· up . there and watch that,"
Frye said. ''I' ll go to · the
Super Bowl' when we are
playing in it."

PREP GIRlS BASKETBALL

2006

I AP POLL

Infant's heart goes to
3-month-old girl in
rare transplant, AS

Top teams unchanged in
AP girls basketball poll
COLUMBUS (AP) - The top teams were unchanged
in the fourth weekly Associated Press girls state high
school basketball poll for the 2006 season, released
Wedne sday.
.
With two more weeks remaining , i~ the medw balloting, Cincinnati Princeton remains No . I in Division .1,
Morrow · Little Miami tops Division II, South Eucltd
Reg ina leads Division Ill and Columbus Africentnc con 7
tinues as the team to beat in Division IV.
There was little movement below the front-runners,
either. The top three team s stayed in the same order in
the first three divisions. In Division IV, No. 3 Newar~
Catholic's 57-46 loss to Zanesville West Muskingurv
paved the way for East Canton and Ottoville to slide past
.the Green Wave into the No. 3 and No. 4 ·spots.
Champions in the 22nd annual AP poll will be declared
on Feb . 15 on the eve of girls sectional tournament~
around the state.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o (.'1·.'\i'l S • \ 'ol. ;,:;, :-.lo . t!.!t

• Nelsonville wins big
over Meigs. See Page 81

Ohio high school girls basketball teams in the third weekly Associated Press poll of
2006, by OHSAA divisions, with won -lost record arid total points (first-place votes in
parentheses):

DIVISION I

Cin. Princeton (25) 16-0 ..
2, Sylvania Southview (2) 14-0 . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... , . . ..
3. Avon Lake 14-1 . . . ..
4, Cin. Mt . Notre Dame (1) 15-2
5, Stow-Munroe Falls 14·2 .
6, N Can. Hoover (1) 14-2 .
7, Pickerington Cenl. ( 1) 13-2
B. Chardon 14- 1
9, Dublin Scioto Pl 14·2 . . . .. ... . .
10, Amherst Steele 14-1 ... . . . .. ... .. . .. .... . . .

.· . ' .
' ' .'
. ' .. '
.. '

.300
.231
,207
184 '

.146
" " " " .147
. ...... . 127

.... 100 •
" " " " .69
'' '''' 67

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11, Wadsworth 26. 12. PICkerington N, 17.

DIVISION II
1, MOrrow LiWe Miami ( 16) 17-0 .
2, Louisville (5) 16-0 . . , . a. • •• • • • •
3, Washington C.H. Miami Trace (3) 14·1
4, Cuyahoga ~ails Walsh Jesuit (1) 14-1
5, Warsaw Ai"ver View (4) ,16-1. .. ... .
6, Utica 16·0
7. Cots. OeSales 12-2 .

' .. ''' .264
' .240
' ' .202
" " " " 166

.. -.. ...

174

. • • • I • • • • • • • •'

'' .172;
... . . . . . . .. . ...... 110 ~.

a. Shelby 14·2 . . . . . . . . .. .

. ..... . .83 -

9. Cols. Eastmoor (1) 13-4 . . .
10, Kettering Alter'(!) 14·2 .. .. ..... . . . .

.59 .•

. ... .30 ::

Others rece iv1ng 12 or more points: 11. Cirde11ille 23. 12. Cin _ McNicholas · 19. 1'{;,
Chagrin Falls Kens ton 16. 14, Millersburg W. Holmes 13.
::: .

-

DIVISION Ill

3m ~

1, S. Euclid Regina (29) 17·0 ..... . . .
2, Plain City Jonathan Alder (1) 14-1
. ... ..•.
3. Ironton 13·2 . . . . . . . . _
' 4, Garfittld Hts. Trinity 1 ~-3 ..

5, Carey14· 1 . ... . . . . . . .
6. Cle . Cent. Cath . 12·3

•

•

r

0

0

•

0

. • , .. . . . ...

0

•

•

•

:

.. ·

:259~·

. . .204 ·:
. 157~

- -- -- ~ -

.OBITUARIES

. . 149•

... ....

7, Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 15-0 .

0

.. .. . .. 115'·

. ...... ... . . . . .69
. .85 -

8, Coldwater 12·3 .
9, Sugarcreek Garaway 14·2
10. Apple Creek Waynedale 15·2 .

.. .. 76 ~

' ' . ' ''' ' ' "

. Page AS
• Rachel D. Hawk Pullins

. ''' .48

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 , Columbus Grove 37. 12. Middlelown Fenwa
(1) 3 1.1 ~. Marion Elgin 2~ . 14 . Sarahsville Shenandoah23. 15. Marion Pleasaot 18.
16, Castalia Margaretta 14.
·
~

.. ".279
" . " .252

2. Hamler Patrick Henry (7) 14·0
3, E. Can: (1 '114·1

.. ... . 197

4, Ottoville 15·1
5., Newark Calh. (2) 15·1
.
6, Bel-lin Hiland (1) 12·2 " . .

. . . .. . .. 183

' '' '' .166
........ 161

7, New Riegel15· 1 , . .. .

. . ·.· . .. . ,. , .. 132

8, New Knoxv1lle 14-1
9. Jackson Center 1 3-3
10, Ft. Loramie (1 ) lS- i

.. . . . .. ' . ..... .. . .107
' '' ''.57
'

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

......37

Others recetving 12 or more potnts : 11. Monroeville 33. 12. Glouster Trimble 18. 13.
S. Charleston SE 13. 14 . Ft. Recovery t2

.,

'

; ~ . :.!IIUh

authorize cost recovery and including
the · county,
construction of the clean-coal Lebanon Township and ·
plant, the region could expect Southern Local
School
POMEROY
Meigs I ,200 building trade jobs dur- District would be of "tremenCounty
Commissioners ing the three-year construc- dous benefit" to the county's
passed a resolution in sup-· . tion period, and 125 "head of economy, the resolution says.
.port of American Electric household" jobs · once the
Pullins Excavating of
Power '.s proposed IGCC plant is operational.
Pomeroy was the apparent
power·plant on Thursday, citAEP&lt;estimates that the $1 .2 ·low bidder on the demolition
ing the potential payoff to billion plant will provide component of Middleport 's
local governments in taxes i( nearly $10 million each year Community Development
the plant is !milt.
in property taxes and income Block . Grant Community
•If the Public Utilities taxes for local governments.
Distress grant project, with 'a
Commission of Ohio and the
The jobs created and rev- bid of $ 11 ,680. Bids were
Ohio Power Siting Board enue to local governments, also received from Jeffers

""" ·111\llaih .,,· nli oo.-l .no n•

Trucking of Pomeroy, in the
amount of $15.400, and
Hash' s Construction of
Bidwell, in the amount of
$14,704.
The . project involve'S the
demolition of three aban :
doned and condemned
houses
near
the
Middleport/Pomeroy line
and on Vine Street. It is part
of a larger half million -dollar grant project which also
includes new fire equipment and firehouse repairs.

~ix- tnoffi W(!(!i&lt;!: of 'tnild' wint(!t!

Water·to
•
run agmn
in London
Pool,
hopefully ·
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SYRACUSE
The
London Pool has sat sile'nt
since the September 2004
flood but last night Syracuse
Village Council voted to turn
• AHuriger For More.
the water back on in the form
See Page A2.
of accepting funds from the
Federal
Emerg~ncy
•· Common courtesy
Management
Agency
and hospitality not so
..a'EMA) for the pool's re1.1.iili:
coirim6n.' see··fage A2.
. The .vote was unaninl.bi.ls
despite
some concerns ·that
• Four Chaplains
there is no money in the -genSunday service set.
eral fund to operate the pool
See Page A2.
or Pi'Y for the villa_ge's share
of
the repairs. ·
• For the Record.
"I know this is taxing for the
See Page AS
vi II age but anything good is
• Governor in Mason
.hot easy," Syracuse resident
.
Elob Wingett said to council
C9unty to discuss IGCC
during its regular session.
plant with execs.
Wingett and other conSee Page AS .
cerned citizens are aware that
it will take more than. a hand• Congress extends
out
from FEMA to get the pool
Patriot Act for another five
reopened which is the dilemweeks. See ·Page AS
ma council has been struggling with for over a year.
• Del Monte to stop
.· FEMA w.ill only pay 75 .
growing pineapples in
percent of the repair costs
Hawaii. See Page AS
which is estimated at roughly $75,000. The state will
• Smith lands job.
pay
for 12.5 percent of .that
See Page A6 ·
$75.000 and the village will
• Holleys announce birtb. have to come up with its
See Page A6
12.5 percent which amounts
to
$16 ,270 ,
• Daughter gets safely
That is $16,270 the village
upgrade at rail crossing
does not have at this time.
where dad died.
Besides lacking its share of
the repair costs, the village is
See Page A8
also facing 'footing the bill
for t~e pool's plumbing
repairs and operational. costs
which are not covered by the
FEMA award.
Those $7 5,000 worth of
repairs ate o,nl y to get the
pool to hold water and to .
repair part of the concrete
decking that surrounds it. '
In addition to the $16,270,
Syracuse Councilman Kenny ·
Buckley estimated that the

INSIDE

DIVISION IV
1. Cols.- Atncentnc (19)16·0 .

FKlllAY , FEHK li Ain

Commissioners approve support resolution for AEP plant

SPORTS

COLUMBUS (AP)- How a state panel of sports writers and broadcasters rates

t.

. Lady Tomcats
~e Eastern, Bt

Yesterday Punxsutawney
Phil saw his shadow on
Grount;lhog Day and
declared, "Six more
weeks of mild winter
there will be." Yes, the
old groundhog said "mild
winter," which would be
just fine for these
Southern Elementary
Kindergartners who were
enjoying the nearly 60
degree temperature yes·
terday on their play,
ground. Pictured below.
Emeleemanhattan
Deming (left) and Randy
Moore get·a helpful
shove from their class'
mates Kyle Lawson and
La'l'lrlile Blevins on the
swings, while .. pictured at
left, Hannah Evans (left)
and Carlene Carroll
"hang out" together. The
children are students of
teachers. Karen Hill and
Christy Essick .
Beth Sergent/ photoo

WEATHER
'

''

Please IH Pool, AS
Detallo on Pace A8

Nobody gets you money faster.
With an Instant Money Refund Anticipation Loan, you can
walk in with your taxes and walk out with a loan check ,*·
· . your tax guy that fast?
·

ll SECrJONS -

Call 1·800-HRBLOCK or

visit hrblock.com for an
office near you.

618 East Main st.
Pomeroy, OH
740-992,667 4

'

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HBrR BLOCK"

Hours
1\1-F 9-6

Sat 9-5 ·

"Credit. PrOvided by HSec· Bank USA . N A . membe r f&lt; DIC An account lee and
tinance charge are charged by HSBC You may not qualify for an mstan1
refund anticipation lcia"n (RAL ), 0~1 may qualify lor a classic R AL~· aS soon
later Amount rece111ed may oe reduced ·by debt awned for a prior RA L
to H&amp;A Block At part1c1palmg offiCes T hose who e-f1le w1th d1 reC1 dep·05'11
i I ·recef11e refunds 1n 8- 15
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Inc

••
• Eye Mai«!Up

•
•

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to loosen ana
· bnmediatel)')

Appetiwsa•d

DOOR PlUZESU
·Lower Face Tberrnal~C
~ Two (2) Mil:n•&lt;lerrnat•rasi~
o Mascll•·a and [_\{"liner
Two jl) l:tldt·l'ml)lt&gt;gir· T n:at mt·:th

¢:

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t6 PAGFS

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A4
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As
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AS
Weather
© 20o6 Ohio Valley Publi•hlng cO.
'

ing balance on a mongage on

th e prosecuting allorney's
on We,t Second Street.
The I0-year mortgage to

offi~:e

Please see Plant. AS

911 issue
still under
consideration
for November
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MVDAILVSENTINEL:COM

POMEROY
Meigs
County Commissioners will
not place a funding i»ue for
911 service on the May ballot,
but they · are forming a new
committee to consider options
for the service and may try to
tlnance it in so me way with a
November ballot issue.
Meigs
County
Commissioner Jim Sheets said
''there is no way" the 'issue can
be placed on.'the May primary
ballot. because !he tiling deadline for the primary is two
weeks awav, However: he said,
a second attempt at a- telephone
surcharge or another means of
timlncing the service. such as a
sa les tax. could be placed on
the November ballot.
''It is a possibility in the
fall. but it will depend on the
finding ., and recommendation s of the 911 committee."
Sheets said.
A 911 committee appointed
. by commi,sioners will reevaluate recommendations of
a previous wm minee:which
re r~rned to commissioners a
recommended sales tax to
pay for the serv ice . That recommendatton.
howe ver.
called fm " major building
. project to house the 911 operation and other emergency
and emer~enn medical ser,·il·e,. ·and" a traininQ center.
· Commis,ioner' took a more
conscrvatil e approach in their
propo,al to Meig' County I'Oter, la.,t year. They proposed a
50-cent nionthly surcharge 11n
all conwntionai telephone
lines in the countv. whic~ voters · reje~ted overwhelmingly
in November. That telephone
line charge would ha1e generated about 535 .000 for the
operation. which commissioner.; hoped to operate from the
sheriff\ department. as it is
opemted in Vinton County.
Grant funJing through the
fede r~l and state governments is
available to purrhcbe Jispatc·h;
ing equi pnlenL CummJ~~ioners
could also benelit from
Meigs Colintl' remains the
on !I c:ClUnt\ in ·ohio witho~t
a 9 il scr1·icc.

Meigs Local school bus involved in accident Gallia County bus-vehicle ·
STAFF REPORT,
NEWS@MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

.INDEX

new ' idcwalk s. and re-roration
work
on
the
Middleport Frcight _Depot
in Dave Diles Park.
Commi ssioner&gt; aut,horized
transfer of S 1.1 .276.32 into
the gener.al fund debt &gt;c rvice
line. whic h will allow the
cou nt y to pay off the remain-

POMEROY - A Meigs
Local school bus was
involved in a traffic accident
Wedne sday
aftern'oon
according ' to a traffic crash
report filed by Officer Brent
Rose of the Pomeroy Police
Department.
The ·accident occurred at
around 4:54 p.m. when the
school bus driven by Patti K.
Arms, Pomeroy, was turning
left onto East Main Street
from Condor Street. The
report said Arms then "failed
to yield the right of way" and
hit a vehicle driven by Dan a
S. Ire land, Long Bottom .

There were nine children
on the school bu s and three
passengers in Ireland's vehicle. All the children were
released into the custody of
'their parents without any
report of injuries to the children or Arm s. Ireland and
the three passenger~ were
transported to O'Blene' s
Memorial . Hospital
in
Athens by Meigs County
EMS for what was described
as "poss ible injuries'' on the
. report.
.·
The report al 'o stated no
one was ejected or trapped in
· either vehicles which were
described · as sustaining
"functional damage" after the
accident.

Meigs
Local
Transportation Director Paul
McElroy stated that the damBY KEviN KELLY
age to the bus consisted of a
KKE ll¥@MY041LYTR,I BUNE .COM
bent bumper and side panel
that was bent toward s the rear
RIO GRANDE - .-\ co ll iof the v~hicle. . .
McElroy said officials 'ion between a 'dli&gt;ol bu,
and a sports uti lit) 1ehicle nn
· from the Ohio State
Ohio 5H8 JUSt ca&gt;t of Rio
Highway Patrol would be at Gran,de Wedne1day killed the
the bus · garage today for driver of the SUV. the Galliainspection of the vehic.le and .Meigs Post of. tile State
'he anticipates that the hus Highway Patrol reported .
will - be back on the road
According to the State
soon after th~t inspection . Highway Patrol. Rachel D
He added tha t the bus wa; Pullin,, 61. of Bidwel l. went
not a new model on the di,- left of center 1i·hik tra1 cling
tri t t's fl~ei.
east on Ohiu 5SR and hi t ·a
Anm 1\iJS cited for failure Gallipoh, Cit!' School hu'
to yield .
head on .

crash leaves one dead

.

•

Ri,·hard E. \'alentine . the
driver uf the' 'dwnl bu&gt;. and
three of the 52 &gt;tudenr- l&gt;n
til&lt;' hus we re- · tran sp,med
from the scene to H,1l1er
~kuical Center for treat- .
ment nf mmor in_juric . . . the
rcpl)rr.-..a JJ

Pull11" '"" pmnounced
dead al tlw scene' h1 G:tllia
Count\

C ornn~r.

Dr

Dan

Whitcle: . She " as tmnsp,,rted to Will" Funeral H(•me in

Galiipoli' .
The fe11 IIIJ Urcd ltudcnts
"ere taken \, ff the bu' and
·attended h1 emergency med-.
. Please see Crash, AS

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