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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

'

•

Protesters torch Danish
mission in Beirut
as violence escalates
over caricatures, A2

Sunday, February 5, 2006

HOLZER CLINIC

Procter &amp; Gamble steps
up innovation pa~e, A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

·Bringing you the latest Healthcare News

!)0 ('1-.1\TS • Vol.!)!), No. I:!:!

Meigs E-911 funds in state escrow pending plan

SPORTS

Holzer Clinic Introduces ·New Technology

Bv

BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL&lt;;OM

• Steelers win Super
Bowl. See Pa~e 81

the charge began in August , is onl y county in the state withremiued to the Public Utilities out 911 serv ice, or concrete
Commission of Ohio and plan s lo initiate the service,
POMEROY - State ,legis- deposited into the Wireless · and therefore, 'the funds set
lation passed last year could Government Assistance Fund. aside fro m Meig s County
be a financial boon to Meigs · The PUCO estimates Meigs wireless customers will sil in
County 's 911 service, if vot- ·County's proceeds from the escrow until the end of 2008.
ers can be persuaded to help fund at $29,978.69. There is. · En hanced 9 11 . or E-9 11 ,
finance the service through an however, a catch. In order to allows 911 to improve the
added tax or fee .
begin receiving ·those month - effecti ve ness and reliability
House Bill 361, which ly disbLtrsements, a county of wireless 911 scrv i c~ by
became law in May, 2005, must first amend its county - ·providin g 91 1 dispatchers
sets a 32-cent monthly charge wide 911 plan for the provi - with addi tion al information
on all wireless phone num- . sion of wireless enhanced ser- on wireless 911 call s, includbel's in Ohio. Collection of vice. Meigs County is the ing their locati on.

'

Ruth M·. a 72 year old femal e has been hospitalized six times in the h st five years because of
recurring anemia and obscure intestinal bleeding.
During · this time she has unde.rgone numerous
invasive scope tests which revealed no abnormalities and she continues to require iron therapy and
oc.casional tran~fusi.ons to remain well. This new
.technology oflercd at Holzer Clini c may lead t? a
diagnosis and possible treatment for her problems.
The tec hnology. · wireless video capsule
endoscopy (VCE) for the first time allows physicians to visualize the entire intestinal tract and to
identify diseases particularly in the 22 foot length
of small intesti.ne that previously could not be
diagnosed or required surgical exploration-of the
open abdomen. The patient swallows a tiny camera about the s ize of a. kidnev bean which then
passes through the entire intestinal tract takitig
video pictures as it moves along. During the
course of the study approximately 50,000 images
are transmitted to a recorder worn on a belt. A
physician, typically a gastroenterologist trained in
the proc,edure can then review the video in about
60 minutes and determine if there are ·small bowel
diseases causing bleeding, anemia, or other
· symptoms.

.

'

W\\W.m~dail~••·nlinl'l .•·um

MONil \ Y, I'EHRUAKY 6 , :.!006

cannot obstruct the bowel unless there is a stricture which then requires surgery to remove
capsule and fix the stricture. A capsule can
be retained due to slow transit time through
bowel. A retained capsule usually causes
symptoms and is detected on th e video .\\.the:n
reviewed . Plain x-rays of the abdomen can
obtained after several days to see whether
capsulepasses spontaneously. If it does not,
gery could become necessary to remove it.
far, experience reveals a 5% retention rate wit
less than' I% of cases requiring surgical retrieva l.

In
November.
Meigs vtce .
Count y voters rejected a proCommissioners have pro·
posed 50-cent monthly sur- posed running the 911 service
charge on conventional tele - from the sheriff \ department.
phone customers, which using · a ·specially-trained
would
have
gene rat ed deputy t\) administer it. A
approximately $35,000 pe r. similar arrangement in. Vinton
year for 911 operations ..· County has proven adequate
Commissioners
said fo r the county's needs and reiThursday they will appoint
ative ly inex[lensive td opernew 9 11 committee to review ate.
the county's 911 pl an, develSheriff Roben Beegle said
oped by a previous commit - last year he is wi lling to work
. tee, and to recommend fund- with commi ~sioners to proing alternatives for the ser- vide support for a 911 service.

a

PVH sponsor$ Gold Wz11gs and Ribs Festival

The only definite contraindicatioris to the procedure are patients who are nonsurgical candidates,
who refuse to entertain the idea of surgery. or who
are known to have strictures.
Findings identified as a
result of VCE can then
be treated . If Crohn 's
disease is found, the gastroenterologist will give ·
medications to improv~
the condition. A gastroenterologist 'who performs VCE will also•
work with a surgeon 'as
part of the team.
In
some p&lt;~tients, the .finding of active bleeding
will require intraoperative endoscopy ·or surgical· remova l of the
involved bowel.

Wirel e~s capsule endoscopy has revolutionized
eval.uation of the ·gastrointestinal tract. The
·Given Pill Cam wireless capsule was developed
four years ago and is only now nioving out of tertiary care centers to smaller communities like
Athens, Gallipolis, and Jackson. Those who
should receive the test are people with unexplained intestinal bleeding, chronic diarrhea, ane- · The technology requires
mia, and patients suspected of having Crohn's · regular upgrades and the
di sease. Initial experience with the capsule sug- fee to the patient is gengcsts that it may reveal the source of unexplained erally around $400 and
' bleeding or anemia in 50-75% of patients being ts covered by n:w st
tested. and it is rapidl y replacing x-rays as the insurance companies.
' best way to identify small bowel Crohn' s disease.

Preparation ·includes nothing by mouth for six
hours bcforc.ihe procedure and sod ium phosphate
bowei prep ..The capsule is swallowed with water
at a physician's office or ambulatory surgery center, and a recorder is attached to the patient with
an adjustable Velcro belt system.. Thepatient then
goes .about their normal d~y for the next seven
hours but returns for removal of the belt and
recorder later in the day. The patient is allowed
clear liquids after two hours; f'lod and medication
are permitted four hours after ·ingestion of the
capsule . After detachment , the reco rder is
attached to a computer work station, . and the
recordin gs are down loaded, processed , a:nd
reviewed by the gastroenterologist. The capsule
is eventually passed in a subseq uent bowel movement l;&gt;ut the patient is. frequently unaware of it.
Possible compl ications exist with any procedure
and VCE is no exception. The major iss ue is capsule retention as a result of failure to pass through .
a narrowed. strictured bowel. The capsule' itself

Gastroenterologists may
see as many as ·8- 10
patients a month who
might require VCE. The
ofVCE into
introduction
'
the Athen s, Gallipolis, ·
and Jack son area · will
now elim'inate the need
to send patients needing
the test to uni versity
referral centers iri distant
cities.
'

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Kathryn Mora
Cha~ene

INSIDE
• Families of ferry
passengers lash out at .
.·Egyptian government over
response to tragedy.
See Page A2
· ·
• Lawmaker says he
was wrong about
increase in donation limit.
See Page A3
• Reporting Iran to the
Security Council,
significant step or
diplomatic distraction?
See Page AS
• Specter says Gonzales'
rationale for spy program
'strained and unrealistic.'
See Page AS
• Other states given more
time to implement
curriculum changes.
See PageA6

WEATHER

Details on Page A&amp;

INDEX
2 S..:cnnNs ...,_ 12

PAGES

A3

Calendars
Classifieds .
Comics

'.

·B3-4
Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

MEIGS STIJDENTS EXCEL IN
SCIENCE PROJECfS
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Kimi
Swisher and Catie Wolfe , ·
both freshmen at Meig s
High School, captured the
"best of show" award in the
sc hool' s annual science ·fair.
Their
.e ntry • in the
earth/space sciences category
won out over projects .sub. mitted by the more than one
hundred students taking part
in the fair.
.
' First. sec.ond and. third
place winners in the various ·
are:as of competition will
now advunce to the regional
contest to be held at Ohio
University on March 4.
Winners in the respecti ve
categories of competiti on
were · as follows :
Behavioral sc ience: Bryan
DeLong, first; Jamie· Bailey.
second. and · ·A my Barr.
Leslie. Preece. Angela Stuart
and Caitlin Leslie. third .
Botany : Crockell Crow.
first. ·
·
Chemi stry: April Oiler,
firsl; Molly Smith and Casey
Smith, second , and Chad
Bonnett. third .
'
. Earth/space sciences: Kimi Kimi Swisher and Catie Wolfe proudly display the ribbons they
Swisher and Carie · Wolfe. were awarded after having been selected for the "best of
show" award for their earth/ space exhibit 111 the Meigs High
first: Erin Perkins. second.
·
Engineering:
Andrew School science fair.
0 ' Bryant, tirst.
Envi ronmental
scie nce· . Judging the emn es which School: Man 1\'kCaulia. ·per- .
Cheh;ea Sm&lt;1ll wood , first : iVere on display tn the cafe - fonnimce and inJu ,trial tcchAshley Life , second.
· teria ' for an eve ning ope·n nicicm at Ga,·in P l1w~r Plant.
Medicine and. · Health : house for. parents and teach Jndi c Rnu,h . ,·hcmistn
Amber · Hockman. first: ers
were
Dr.
Janies t~acher :11 Wahama High
Morgan Letlles, second: Eric With erell:
MaryLou Scho&lt;&gt;l: Jason Ki i1~. physical
Toler. , Cura Lawless and Moegling. librarian : . Jenny tllerapi,t: Denise Arnold .
Mei )! '
Middle
Josie VanMeter. third.
Ridenoiur. education coordi- tca,·hc·r.
Mi crobiology :
Caylce nator, Mei gs Soil and Water schl1nl: Jnhn Bent ky. retired
Reeves, Lindsey Mye rs. first. Cnnservation District: Ke1·in \l'ICilL.' e tCad1ec M~lis . . a
Physics: Amai1da Gilkey. Shepp;~rd. MHS teachn: Hll lmaJl. substitute teach er
fi"I. Lian Hollman . second. Jad f'lemmin~. chc mi ,try "i1h &lt;kgrce 111 hiology:
Znology:
Stephanie teacher at Belpre High Danie lk Dugan. science
Donaldson, first.
School; Vi.Lki Hill. scienre teache r.
~k i" '
Middle
Kathy Hudson. ninth grade teacher at Southern Middle School: cmd Rick Cooksey.
science teacher. was coordi- Sehoul: Ginger Wilh . bi olo- 'cien ce · tc al'11er. Southern
nator for the fair.
gy teacher ·at Eastern. High Middle Scholll.
•

•

Hoeftlch/ pholo ..

Pleasant Valley Hospital is a sponsor for the annual Gold
''Mngs ~rw ·1'1ibs Festival to ta ke place , June 2 at&lt;Q. ~.; ori the
P'on1ef5~ parking lot. Here Amy Leach , on behalf drtfii3)iost~i­
tal, presents a $750 check to Pau l Darnell , festival chairman .
Charlene Hoeftlch(pholos This ·is the hosital 's .second. year to help sponsor the festival
Jack Flemming, chemistry teacher at Belpre High School, talks to Katie Thomas, left, and which attracts tourists from several states.
Alexa Venoy about their science project called "Grease Busters."

·•

'

..'

-'

Beth· Se~ent(pholo

Workers from the Meigs County Health Department joined the
rest of the country in recently obserxing Go Red for Women
which raises awareness about heart disease, the number one
killer of women in the United States ·Pictured in red are (sitting, from left) Sandy Cunnmgham , ·Barbara Vujaklija. Brenda
Curfman .. Becki Ball: standing (from left)· Larry . Marshall.
Sherry Hayman. Cou rtney Sim, Edwina Be ll. Beth Cremeans.
Ke'ith Litt le. Andy Brumfield, Frank Gorscak. Connie Little.

Go Red for Women raises
heart disease awareness
BY BETH SER~ENT

di&gt;comfl111 .

ti~htne!.&gt;

or full -

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

ne~s . inJige:-.lipn that · isn't

POMEROY - Dtd vou
'notice a lot of people dreised
in rea last Friday'' If you did.
good' If yo u did11 ·t. vou
missed the local ob,en ance of
the
American
Heart
Association's Go Red for
Women meant to rais~ aware ne ss of the number one kille r
·nf women in America · heart
disease.
In fact nl(lre women die of
. heart disease than men .
"This event \ purpose is ·Ill
.en-:ourage women &lt;to take ron trol of their own . health ."
Meigs Coun11 Cardim ascular
Health Cotirdinator Andv
Brumfield \aid. "Women f,ir
·too lo ng have been concerned
with the hcallh of the famil1
and ha1 e neglected the ir ow i1
health...
S! mplmm of he art di,ea,e
in women ·arc "''mew hat d1fferent than for . mt' n. These
· 1uu¢
• chest
•symptoms c"an me

alleviated b' antacicls. breathb1ness. r(Jtigue. jaw pain. ·
ann pain. chest pain felt during
exercise that Jisappf:ars afterwarcl .
R1'k facto" for heart dis- .
ease in women are smoking.
post-menopavsal status. ele, ated cho lesterol. high hlood
pre"ure. diabetes . famil~ his!Of\. being m·erwe ig ht , slres.s.
little or no exercise.
1.t is sugge~ted thai if a
women falls into anv of these
· ri'k categoric\. she should talk
to her doctor about a heari disease prevention strategy. and
ask a,bout getting a ,creening
te st to ,ee tfshe\ in immediate
·danger.
"Women have just as much
risk developing heart disease
as nwn ... B,rumfield said about
the" arnin~1 and ri'sb of hcan
disca'c ·0Bcing physically
acti1·e and eat in~ a healthy diet
Plene see Red, AS

�.

;

AROUND THE WORLD
Protesters torch Danish
mission in Beirut as violence
escalates over caricatures

The Daily Sentinel

I

PageA2
Monday, February 6,

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

20~6

'

.

BEIRUT, lebanon (AP) Muslim rage over caricatures
of the prophet · Muhammad
grew increasingly , violent
Sunday as thousands of rampaging protesters - undaunted by tear gas and water cannons - torched the Danish
mission and ransacked a
Christian neighborhood. At
least one person reportedly
died and atiout 200 were
detained, officials said.
Muslim cleri·cs denounced
the violence. with some wading into the mobs trying to
stop them. · CQpynhagen
ordered Danes to leave ·the
country or stay indoors in the
second day of attacks on its
diplomatic outposts in the
Middle East.
In Beirut. a day after violent
protests in neighboring Syria,
the crowd broke ihrQugh a
cordon of troops and police
that had encircled the
embassy. Security forces fired
tear gas and loosed their
weapons into the air to stop
the onslaught.
The protesters, armed with
stones and sticks, damaged
police and fire vehicles and
threw stones ·at a Maronite
Catholic church in the
wealthy Ashrafieh area - a
Christian
neighborhood
where the Danish Embassy is
located.
Flames and smoke billowed
from the 10-story building,
which also houses the
Austrian Embassy and the
residence of Slovakia's consuL Protesters waved green
and b)ack Islamic flags from
broken windows and tossed
papers and filing cabinets outside.
Witnesses said one protester, apparently overcome by
smoke, jumped from a window and was rushed to the
hospital. Security officials
said he died.
Thirty people were injured,
'half of them members of the
.security forces, offic'ia!s said ..
making it the most violent in a
· string 'of . demonstrations
across the Muslim world. All
the injuries were · from beatings and stones.
Prime . Minister
Fuad
Saniora said before meeting
with top Islamic leaders that
·about 200 people were
det!\ined, and police said they
included 76 Syrians, · 35
Palestinians and 38 Lebanese.
The ftrst apparent victim of
the political fallout from the

'

F~lies

...

.-·- -· - '

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'

violence was Interior Minister reprinting the caricatures and,
Hassan Sabei, who submitted in a statement Monday, the
his resignation. It was not newspaper apologized and
immediately clear if the resig· expressed "profound regret
nation was accepted. ·
over the unauthorized publicaSabei said authorities had tion." The Sunday Tribune was
tried to prevent the protest the only newspaper in mainly
from tummg violent.
Muslim Malaysia to reprint
"Things got out of hand any of tht&lt; caricatures, ·and a
when elements that had infil- government official warned
trated into the ranks of the that the newspaper may lose its.
demonstrators broke through license if it fails to give a sarissecurity shields," he said . factory explanation.
"The one remaining option
Islamic law is interpreted to
was an order to shoot, but I forbid any depictions of the
was not prepared to order the Prophet Muhammad for fear
troops to shoot Lebanese citi- ·they could lead to idolatry.
zens."
·
Denmark's Prime Minister
Sabei. like other Lebanese Anders Fogh Rasmussen has
politicians and Grand Mufti said he disapproves of the carMohammed Rashid Kabbani, icatures, ·but insisted he canspiritual leader of Lebanon' s not apologize on behalf of his
Sunni Muslims , suggested country's independent press.
Islamic radicals had fanned
Thousands also took to the
the anger.
streets elsewhere in the
Kabbani said outsiders Muslim world and parts of
among the protesters were Europe, including some 3,000
trying to "distort the image of Afghans who burned a Danish
Islam."
!lag and demanding that the
The United States accused editors . at Jyllands-Posten be
the Syrian government of prosecuted for blasphemy.
backing the protests in
Afghan President Hamid
Lebanon and Syria. ·
Karzai urged forgiveness.
U.N.
Secretary-General
"God instructs us to forgive.
Kofi Annan said in a state- Therefore. we - as much as
meht that the resentment over we condemn · it strongly the caricatures "cannot justify must stay above this dispute
violence. least of all' when and not bring ourselves ... to
directed at people who have equating ourselves to those
no responsibility for, or con- who have published the cartrol over, the publications in toon~" he said on CNN's
question."
"Lare Edition."
.
The
Danish
Foreign
Stepping up the pressure, the
Ministry urged Danes to.leave Islamic Army in Iraq, a key
Lebanon.
The · violence group in the insurgency fightSaturday · in
Damascus ing U.S.-Ied and Iraqi forces,
prompted a similar warning.
ppsted a second Internet state'The government has no men! Sunday calling for viaintention to insult Muslims," lence against citizens of counDanish Foreign Minister Per tries where the caricatures
Stig Moeller said on public have been published.
A Lebanese security offiradio in Copenhagen. "WI! are
trying to explain to everyone cia!; who spoke on condition
of anonymity because he was
that enough is enough."
The Syrian state-run daily not allowed to speak to the
newspaper AI-Thawra said press, said Danish diplomats
Denmark was to blame had evacuat.ed·.the mission ·.in
because its government had Beirut two days earlier, anticnot apologized for the ipating the protests. ·
.
September publication . of the . The protesters, who came in
caricatures in Jyllands-Posten·. buses tram all over Lebanon.
The drawings - including waved flags and banners.
one · depicting the prophet
·"There is no god but God
wearing a turban shaped as a and Muhammad is the mesbo)llb with a burning fuse- senger of God!" they shouted
have since been republished as they pushed against riot
in several European and New police.
Zealand newspapers as a
Many Muslim clerics were
statement on behalf of a free among them.
press.
.
"Regretfully, the march did
In Malaysia, an editor· at a more harm to the prophet than
small newspaper on remote it did good," said Sunni Sheik
Borneo Island resigned for · Ibrahim Ibrahim. who was in

1\Jesday, Feb. 7
POMEROY
- Orange
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m., home of Fiscal .Officer
Osie Follrod.
Wednesday, Feb. 8
POMEROY
Meigs
County Board of He'alth,
regular meeting. 5 p.m .. conference room Meigs County
Health Department.
Wedn~sday, Feb. 8
REEDSVILLE - Special
meeting of Olive Township
Trustees, 6:30 p.m. , office,
with regular meeting follo'!&gt;'ing.
'

Thursday, Feb. 9

Wednesday, Feb. 8
POMEROY
- Meigs
County
Ministerial
Assoctation,
I0
a.m. ,
Rocksprings
United
Methodi st Church. All
Meig s County pastors invited.

Friday, Feb. 10
NELSONVILLE
Region
14 · Workforce
Investment Board, 9:30 a.m .,
Thursday, Feb. 9
Inn at Hocking College.
CHESTER
· .
Shade
Monday, Feb. 13
CHAUNCEY - Region River Lodge 453 will meet
14 Youth Council meeting, 9 at 7:30 p.m. at the halL
'
a.m., Athens County DJFS , · Refreshments.
RACINE
BethanyOhio 13.
Dorcas Sonshine Circle, 7
p.m., at the Bethany ~ Dorcas
United Methodist Church.

Clubs and
organizations

Monday, Feb. 6
RACINE
Racine ·
Chapter 134. OES regular
meeting, 7:30 p.m . Mock
initiation. All officers asked
to. attend. Refreshments.
POMEROY . . Meigs
Band Boosters to · meet ·at
6:30 p.m . ·m t he band room.
1\Jesday, Feb. 7
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge #363 ,
F&amp;AM , monthly busines s
meeting, 7)0 p.m. Lodge
officers to re.port at 6:45 for
meeting
with
district
deputy. All members urged
to bring no~ ' peri s hable
food . items for the Grand
Masters
Food
Rank
Pt'ogram.
All
Master
Masons
invited .
Refreshments .
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Community
Association. 8:30 a.m. ,
People s Bank.

SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club, 6:30 p.m. at
the home of Joy Bentley.
Program on techniques of
basic flower arranging.
,
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters, II :30 a.m. St. Paul
Lutheran Church. · Julia
Proctor and Joan Corder,
hostesses .
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053, · 7 p.m.
Thursday at the hall. Meal at
6:30 p.m.

Youth events
Tuesday, Feb. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers
Plains
Youth
Baseball/Softball
Association, monthly meeting, 6 p.m. , firehouse.
Saturday, Feb. II
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Youth Ball League, baseball
sign-ups, 9 a.m. to ·1 . p.m .,
Syracuse Fire Station.

DEAR ABBY: When I
was 7, J spent the night at
the home of a friend and
was molested by· her father.
It happened again when I
was oldef. That time it was
a cousin who"spent the night
with us. I never told my
mother. l was a'fraid she
would blame me. My father
·never spent time with me I am one of several children
·- so it didn't occur to me
to tell him.
l have li'ved with thi s all
my life. ' J have suffered
from low se lf-esteem and
had relationship problems
since childhood. Few days
have gone by th at l haven 't
thought about it and felt
deep personal guilt. I never
told anyone what happened
until after my mother died;
.when I finally confessed it
to a psychiatrist.
Now I would like to tell
my older brother. Should I?
Or would it be more difficult for me if my family
knew? - SAD, SCARED
AND
CONFUSED
IN
FLORIDA
DEAR SAD: Not knowing
your family,. I can't predict
how they'll react. However,
this I do know : You were
victimized twice as a child.
You have done nothing for
which to feel guilty. THE
VICTIM . IS NEVER AT
FAULT
Because you still have
difficulty accepting this, it
appears your sessions with
the psychiatrist were not as
helpful as they should have
been . Please pick up the
phone and call the Rape,
Abuse , Incest Naiional
' Network (R.A.LN.N.). The
toll-free number is · (800)
656-4673. Counselors there

When asked Friday if the who . opposed increasing the '·&gt;
. COLUMBUS (AP) -· A
''i·.·- ·&gt;. r·:)~&lt;.t,,-,, .
Republican state senator limit should be dropped, limit, said leaders · should
who helped shepherd a bill Ohio Democratic . Party consider introducing a bill tb
that quadrupled the amount spokesman ·
Brian · reduce it. . ·
Ohio
candidates
could Rothenberg said, "We are
"Maybe it's time we check
accept from donors says he trying to abide by the rules with other House and Senate
was wrong about the change,
The Daily Sentinel
members to see if there is
which he believes has creat- that they created."
Subscribe
to®y • 992-2155
Ohio Sen. Randy Gardner, additional support for recon- ·
ed an elite class of donors.
"I think I took it too far," a Bowling Green Republican sideration," Gardner said.
said Sen. Jeff Jacobson, of
suburban Dayton ..
He made the comments
last week after campaign
finance · re'ports showed the
Democrats' likely nominee
for the governor's' race, U.S. ·
Rep. Ted Strickland, has collected the most $10,000
donations since ·the limit
increase. The Democrats
opposed allowing ,the larger
contributions.
"I was wrong and perhaps
the Democrats right about
$ 1o.ooo:· said Jacobson, the
GOP-controlled
Senate's ·
second-in-command.
He helped get individual
contribution limits increased
from $2.500 to $10.000 in
2004 as part of an overhaul
of Ohio\ ~ ampaign 'finance .
laws.
Because only a small number of donors have given the
$ 10.000 maximum, ·. the
change has created a group
that cmi ld have disproportionate influence. Jacobson
said.
" I tho(tght $10.000 was
low enough that more people
would get to it, and it W(luld
hccome the default number
like $2.500 was." he said.
About 300 donors gave the
maxitnum in 2005 . Most of
those who typically gave the
prev ious $2.500 limit stayed
there or increased slightly.
Reports fikd Tuesday
showed Strickland received
K6 contributions of $ 10.000
in 2005. That compares to
63 for Secretary of'. Stale
Kenneth Blackwell and 19
for Allorney General Jim
Petro, RepUblican candidates
in the governor's race.
Strickland said Jacobson's .
com ments were .puzzling.
"It' s hard for me to accept
... that after a couple reportin g
perinds
vhcn
a·
Democratic ca ndidate for
governor &gt;eems Ill be doing
pretty well under the &gt;ystem
he worked so liard to put m
@allipolis ~ailp Ul:ribune • 4..4&amp;2342
place, that he would sudde n.~
ly have· it cha1.1ge ol hean •.
Strickland said . .
tl Jloint Jllrasant l\rgister. • 675-1333
When Republicans argued ·
for the c han g~. they smd the.
The Daily Sentinel• 992-2156
increa'e would allow can"di- ·
dates to continue raising th'e
~
'ame amouilt. of money
without resorting to rilancuvcr' sud1 as passing donations through county politipl rartiC.).
llemocrals
said
Republkan' were trying to
increase their already siwble
fLi n~raising advantage.
·

.PROUD:t'OBBAP~T
· OFYOUREIFE. ·

AP Photo

Protestors wave Islamic flags in front of the-burning building housing the Danish .mission dur·
ing a protest against publication of caricatures of Jslam's revered prophet'in European newspapers. in Beirut. Lebanon , Sunday. Security forces shot tear gas .into the crowd and fired their
weapons in the air in a desperate attempt to. stop the onslaught. Casualties. fires and damage
of 'public property were reported in the violence, which came day after protesters in neighboring Syria torched the Danish and Norwegian embassies in Damascus.
·

a

the crowd. He said he and others tried to stop the mob, but
"we got stones .and insults.'·
European leaders also urged
calm and respect - both for
religion and freedom of the
press.
'The violence now. particularly the burning of Danish
mi ssior1s abroad. is absolutely
outrageous and totally unjustified , and what we ·want to see
is this mauer being calmed

down,"
British
Foreign
Secretary Jack Straw said in
London. adding that the medta
must exercise its free speech
privilege responsibly.
Lebanon's most senior
Shiite Muslim cleric, Grand
Ayatollah .
Muhammad
Hussein Fadlallah, issued an
edict banning violence, say•
ing it "harms Islam and
Prophet Muhammad the same
as the others (the publishers .

of the cartoons) did.''
But Iran \ Foreign Ministry
announced
Tehran
had
recalled its ambassador to
Denmark. joining Syria, Saudi
Arabia and Libya in pulling·
diplomatic representatives.
Iraqi Transport Minister
Salam al-Maliki also said his
country would cancel its cnntract&gt; with Danish firms and
reject reconstruction money
from Copenhagen.

Egyptian Red Sea port of · Fire broke out ih the ves- core of discontent among other ferries owned by the and an -in ves tigation was
Hurghada. Most of the passen- sel's parking bay as it · was Egyptians, who are suffering company had sunk in. the past under way into the ship's seagers were Egyptian workers abOut 20 miles from the Saudi from an economic downturn . 10 years. without the govern- worthiness.
returning from Saudi Ara~ia.
snore where it had sailed
Tens of thou sand5 of ment proP,erly investigating or
But Maj. Gen. Sherin
Outside the Red Sea port in from, survivors said Sunday. Egyptians work in Saudi putting the' company's owner Hasan. chairman of the mar-•
Safaga. _where survivors were The crew decided to pu sh Arabia and other J&gt;ersian Gulf on triaL
· tttme
sect ion
of
the
Mustafa al-Bakri, part of a Transportation Mini stry, said
beitig taken , about 100 family across the Red Sea, to try to countrtes - . many of them
members shouted at police reach Egypt's shores II 0 from impoverished families in delegation of 20 members of there were more than enough
and criticized Egyptian miles away:
southern Egypt who spend parliament who went to lifeboats for the number of
President Hosni Mubarak for
As· it burned, many passen- years abroad to earn monev. Safaga, said · lawmakers ]'mssengcrs 011 the ferry.
not providing more informa- gers .moved to one. side of the They ·often travel by ship to ~auld try to investigate why
Hasan said the captain of
tion. On Saturday, at similar 35-year-old ship. An explo- .and from Saudi Arabia . .
Egyptian officials received no the vessel, whom he did not
demonstrations in the . port sion was heard. and high
Independent
Egyptian distress calll'ron1 the sht'p. .
· ·
280 'I
h
fC . .
. d h I d
I
h
name. was tl1Jssmg.
m1 es sout east o a1ro, Wtn s e pe
topp e t e newspapers ·ha ve accused
He al so said the &gt;arne i:omThe &gt;hip was owned by El
family members threw stones unbalanced vesseL
Mubarak' s government of pany operated ships involved Salam Maritime which issued
at police..
Initial offers of help in the protecung
· thc sh'tp ·s owner, · in past tragedies·, including a st'tteJncnt declart'ng t't com
"Where is the· president, rescue effort from the 'United who they say is close to a top one that sank last year. ,
plied "wnh all the internation:
where are our sons? Where States and Britain were reJ·ect- or·t··ICta
· 1 ·rn government.
Mubarak
spokesman a! sa fel y T'""U iatt'ot1 s· and
;u-e the. bodies? We want to ed. and four Egyptian ships
Th e weekly independe~t · Suleiman Awad said the ferry treaties
· and (was)
cb
·
certified
to
know the fate of the children,'' reached the scene only b&lt;&gt;1 paper Soutelomma said two did not ,have enough lifeboats m·1ke i'ntern·ttt'onal vt•yages"
yelled the protesters, who had Friday afternoon. about 10
been waiting in the .area for hours after the ferry was .
two days.
.
.
·believed tb have capsized.
"If you don't have the bodSurvivors c~me . forward '
ies, , at least give us ,(death ) Sunday with more tales of
certificates and let us go. You crew errors before the sinkhave been torturing us for ing.
day s," shouted He shmat
Khaled Hassan, a ,27-year- ·
Mohammed . Hassan, whose . old' survivor from the village
brother is still missing.
of ai-Dhobiyah near Luxor
The families need death who was traveling home after·
certificates to claim a pay- working in Kuwait , said he
ment of $5,200 that the presi- .s_aw the ship's captain jump
dent has sai d should go to t.he into a lifeboat as passengers
family of each victim. The were left behind . Hi s story
president said survivors could not be .verified .
would each get $2,600.
, Abdui r.:tuhsin Rayan, a 35Mubarak flew to Hurghada. year-old from Sohag who had
about 40 miles north of been working in Saudi Arabia,
Safaga, on Saturday and visit- said as .1moke engulfed the
ed survivors in two hospital s. ship, crew members told the
Television pictures of the visit. passengers not to put on life
which normally would have jacke,ts that were nearby,
carried sound of Mubarak's because that wo uld panic
. conversations, were silent.
wome n and children .
Smile 1 Now you can own the picture of that unforgenable
"We pray thin God altnlghty
'' Frol)1 the captain on down .
moment captured in the newspaper. Photos become timeless
may count (the victims) no one gave us any instruc-.
when framed or printed on a mug o~ mouse pad.
among his ·martyrs,'' Mubarak lions on what to do." he said
sai d during his visit, in from a hospital beet
Visit WWW.mydailysentine.l.com and click the blue button,
remarks that were televi sed .
The · ttagedy 1truck . a deep

------- - - - - - - - -

POMEROY
- Meigs
County Commissioners regular meeting, I 0 a.m.,
instead of I p.m.

. Lawmaker says he was wrong about indease in donation limit

of ferry passengers lash out at Egyptian government over response to tragedy ·

SAFAGA, Egypt (AP)
Family members of pas sengers on a ferrx that sank in the
Red Sea protested on Sunday
as they waited in vain for
news of their loved ones.
accusing Egypt's government
of mishandling the. rescue
after the ship went down with
more than I ,400 people on
board.
Only a handful more passengers were pulled from the
. d h'
h
•.
sea, as mg opes ,or some
800 people missing and
feared dead.
_
Egyptian officials said the
captain was ' miss ing, and
some survivors alleged he had
jumped into one of the first
lifeboats out rather than stay
with the crippled ferry. A lawmaker said ships operated by
the same company had been
involved in past tragedies,
including one that sank last
year.
Late Sunday, police put the
number of those rescued at
401 - up from 376 reported
on Saturday and an indication
that few more survivors
.would be found. It 'was
u'nclear when the additionaL
25 people had been rescued.
A total of 195 bodies have
been rec\)ver.ed..
Ambng the survivors was 5year-old Mohammed Ahmed
Hassan, kept afloat for more
than 20 hours by a life ring.
Doctors said the boy was in
good condition but apparent ly
had lost' his parents, sister and
brother.
The AI-Salaam Boccaccio 98
was carrying more than 1.400
passengers and crew and 220
cars when it quickly sank early
Friday ;~bo ut 55 mile&gt; from the

t

Monday, Feb. 6·
RACINE
- . Racine
Villa~e · Council ,
regular
meeung, 7 p.m. , Racine
Municipal Building.
RUTLAND Rutland
Counci l meeting, 6 p.m. ·, in
yillage council chambers.
SYRACUSE
- Sutton
Township Trustees, regular
monthly meeting, 7 p.m.,
Syracuse Village HalL
.
RUTLAND ·_ Rutland
Township Trustees meet in
. regular session at S p.m.,
Rutland Fire Station.
LETART FALLS -. Letart
Township Trustees, 6:30
p, m., office building.
RACINE
Southern
Local School Board, 6 p.m.,
spec ial session to pass resoluti&lt;'ln to . process and int(!rview treasurer candidates.

r----------;___....;.________. .;._·____,____:_·.. ,·

··---- --

February 24, 2006

Ad Deadline 2-.16-06

Call:

I'

'

Monday, February 6, 2006

Childhood molestation still haunts woman as an adult

Community Calendar
Public meetings

PageA3

Dear
Abby

HORRIFIED , IN HOUS TON
DEAR HORRIFIED
would hav e handled it '"
you did. having !o,t 111)
appetite . 100 . Howe ve r. if
your brother and hi' girlfriend have a ui,hwasher
w-ith an extra-hot a,nd ,anitizing cycle. the plate ' were
probably "safe " Lu ea~ from
(Yech' )
PEAR ABBY : 1 rece nt!)
purcha,cd a ·' moth er's ring ··
for .mv. mother and am hav -

will guide you to specialized services that can help
you. Their enti're focu s is on
helping victim s of sexua l
assault, and the fact that
·your assa ult happened long ing all of my siblings'
ago should not be a deter- stones added to iL However.
rent.
last Thanksgrvin g.
my
After you have been coun- brother, the baby "f the
select, and accept that you family. passed away unexwere never at fault fw what pectedly.
Shou ld 1 , ~ i ll add hi s
happened, it will be safe to
tell your brother becau se, at birthstone to the ·ring . or
that point, his reac tion 'Yill just the survivors"' . Your .
not be all -importa nt to ,yoo .
DEAR ABBY: 1 recently thoughts. ple~se . - TORN
attended a birthday dinner · IN TE;NNESSEE
celebration for. my father at
DEAR TORN : By all
my brother and his girl- meam, add your brother \
friend 's hom e. Whjle the birthstone to tpe ring. To do
girlfriend , "Cheryl," was otherwise would imply that
eating, she speared a bite of h.e ne ver ex isted . Please
her food with her fork and believe me when 1 say that
then held it down to th e when you r mother looks ai
floor for the . dog to eat.
Then she put anot))er bite of the ring. yo ur brother' s
food onto her- fork and ate stone will rem rnu her of the
it. Thi s continued throu~h- precious time she had wi th
out the dinner. with Che(y) him. What would make her
and the dog alternating bites sad would be knowtng that
off the same fork.
one stone was mi ssing . .
When she was . finished
Dear Abby i.i written by
eating. she · placed her din- Abigail Van Buren, also
ner plate on the floor for the known as Jearwe Phillips,
dog to finish eating. It was and was foutrded by her
revolting. Dad and I just sat
there. stunned. and stopped mother, Pauline Phillips.
eating, not knowing how Write Dear Abby at
sanitary the plates and din- www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
nerware were . How would Box 69440, Los Angeles,
you have handled this'' - CA 90069.

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
Monday, February 6, 2o,oft
'

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Streer • Poineroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 ~FAX (740) 992·2157

www.mydailysenllnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
G~neral Manager-News Editor

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

READER'S

VIEW

Irrelevant
GOP slunvs gross hypocrisy
Dear Editor:
Concerni ng O'Reilly's Jan. 29 column. "Left-Wmg blues."
Like all hiS columh s, this one" poorly written; pathetically
so. I' ve chosen to toc us on his commends regardmg the Alito
heanng. The Democrats' perform.ance was abysmal. Only
Kennedy and Shumer demonstrated any spunk. includmg a
case of the vapors 111 Mddame Alito, and caus111g her to bolt 111
tears from the chamber.
She is used to a di ffere nt atmosphere tea and crumpets. tin·
kling glasses. soft mu s1c and merry laughter, rubbing shoulders Wi th other pampered and pnvileged who take great
delis ht 111 each other's company. She has spent a significant
portwn of her hfe v1ewmg the world through the windowpanes of an air-conditioned stretc h limo.
Her husband has spcrit his career sidmg with big business.
against workers and denymg the little people their day in
coun. In other .words. he has acted hke a normal Republicanappointed Judge I wonder if this has ever caused her eyes to
moisten? I thmk not.
Ri ght-wmg knuckle-draggers would surely reply With a lecture about Kemiedy 's hypocrisy. It ts not relevant. Merely to
prove that an mdi v1dual 1s a hypocnte IS not necessanly to
prove him wrong. A preacher, for example, who delivers fistpounding sermons against adultery while shamelessly cheating on hi s wife. IS a hypocrite because he doesn't practice
what he preaches But his sermons agamst adultery are not
valid.
And Its the grossest hypocnsy for 'the Republicans to complain about hatred and meanness when they have used these
to achieve power of the last 30-odd years. The Republican
party could not function without cultivating hate, fear and
divtsion . These are the compositional elements of its natural
manure - i n the ferl!hzmg sense
Jeff Fields
Syracuse

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today IS Monday, Feb. 6, the 37th day of 2006. There are
328 days left in the year.
Today's Highl ig ht in History:
On Feb. 6, 1911. Ronald Wil son Reagan, the 40th president
of the United States. was born in Tampico, Ill
In 1756, Amenca 's thi rd ·vice president, Aaron Burr, was
born in Newark. N.J .
Thought fo r Today· "Politics is not a bad profession. If you
succeed there are many rewards, if you disgt\!ce yourself you
can always wnte a book." President Reagan ( !'911-2004)

,

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EDITOR
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Monday, February 6, 2006

Obituaries

Hamastan dreaming
There ~omes a point, sometimes, when logic is denied.
reason is abandoned, and that
vital connection tO reality IS
severed. Once upon a time, we
called this a nervous breakdown and prescribed a rest
cure. Now, we call it a press
conferenL-e and take notes.
The fact is, with the Hamas
VICtory- the democratic election by Palestinian Arabs of a
Nazi-like terronst organizatJOn
dedicated to annihilating Israel
and replacmg tt w1th a Shllila
state- something m the common culture of world elites has
snapped. From the White
House to the European Union,
the Hamas VIctory, with its disastrous Implications for peace
and democracy, 1~ more than
any one powert'ul person
seems able to accept. So they
don't They are, as the therapeuuc community nught say,
m denial.
Tlike President Bush's analysis of those election results
'The people are demandmg
honest government,'' he said
'The people want serv1ces.
They want to be able to mi&gt;e
thei,r children m an environment in which they can get a
decent education and they can
find health care."
Honest
government?
Services? Hama' is "honest,''
all right. when It comes to its
bloodlust for Jews, and maybe
1! can dch ver to i!s constituents
"services" related to Israel's

Diana
West

destruction, but I doubt that's
what the president had in mind.
But neither did he have in
mind anything connected to
the reality that Palestinians
have voted tor terror w1th no
"peace process" (Hamas). ·not
a "peace process" with terror
(Fatah). Not much actually
separates Hamas from Fatah,
but it's enough to send the
global-erati over the edge.
Such as the Umted Nation's
Kofi Arman, who said that he
thinks "most of them" - .
"them'' being Palestinian voters, who, kind of like "Mr.
Smith Goes to Washington,"
sent Umm N1dal, proud
"Martyr Mom" of three suicide
bombers•. to parhament ''were voting for peace. they
were voting for better conditions, they were voting for an
honest govemment." Funny
how he didn't mention they
were voting for terrorists.
EU diplomat Javier Solana
also looked the other way. "It's
my guess that a good number
of people who voted tor

Hamas didn't vote for the
Hamas platform. They voted
for a group of. people they
believed was less corrupt. ... l
don't think that the majority of
the people that voted for
Hamas voted to be an Islamic
Palestine,"
I
A polite term for this is wi~h­
t'ul thinking. It's OK when
you're a kid trying to e~tend
the myth of Ho-ho-ho for just
one more Christmas; it's not
OK when you are a world ·
leader trying to rationalize milhans m md to a maniacal
ktlling machine. And therein
lies the rub. Between Europe
and the United States, the PA
receives about $850 million a
year, and the election of
Hamas brought the Western
moneybags to a moment of
truth.
But only brief\y There was
talk m Europe of WI!hholdmg
money from Hamastan until
.the terror-gang exchanged 1ts
covenant of ma~ s murder for
the Boy Scout pledge, but that
went on just long enough to
lind a new, supposedly tempomry, rationale to fund the PA.
Eureka: "Of course Hamas is a
terrorist organization," a
European diplomat smd, no
doubt exhausted after several
hours of standing on principle.
"But cutting off md to the
Palestmian Authonty would
play straight into the hands of
the e~tremists among thern."
Funny, I didn't know there

Kathryn Mora
were non-extremists among
them. "If their leadership
(Harnas) can tinct a way to live~
up to the oblig,ations that have
been undertaken, to peace, to '
the existence of Israel, Ill'
renouncing violence, I think ;
there's a very good way forward," satd Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice.
If?
''
Once, there was realpolitik ~ '
now. we are deeply into ·
dreampolitik, where policy W
based on an irrational wish of
what might he. Secretary Rwf: :
seems particularly af0 1cted~:
lately given to ravi ng tha(
Palest1mans have "long beei1 '
known for their tolerance."'
Tolerance of what - Hamas?·'
Harvard psychiatry instruc!
tor Kenneth Levm has wntten'
an Illuminating new study ¢ ·
such pohttcal denial called
"The
Oslo , Syndrome:
Delus1ons ol a People uncter
S1ege" (Smith &amp; Kraus, 2005).
In th1s book. Dr. Levin applies'
the lessons of psychopatholo-'
gy to explarn self-destructi ve
patterns of delu sion and
appeasement that have chara~­
terized the Israel i expenence in
recent years I'm afraid this
dangerous syndrome IS proving contagtous to the rest of the
world man em when there's no
time for a rest cure.
(Diana We,·r ts a columnist
for The W.:tlhington Times. She
can be coli/acted vw
dwnOl vest@' ·e ri~on.1ret. )

WILL

MINING EVER

BE SAFE?

Law You Can Use: Consumers Should Seek
Legal Advice Before Establishing Trusts

POMEROY- Kathryn Karr Mora, 72, of Pomeroy passed
Recently, a un animo us
away on Saturday, Feb. 4, 2006, at St. Joseph 's Hospital in Supreme Court of Ohio
Parkersburg, W.Ya.
directed a Cleveland-based
She was born on April9, f933 to the late Purley and Altona co mpany,
Sharp Estate
Bare Karr She graduated from Chester High School in 1951. Services, to stop marketmg
She was a member of the Chester United Methodist Church or selling living trusts or simUnited Methodist Women,Chester Garden Club, a past office; ilar estate planning tools m
ot the Chester Courthouse Restoratton Project, and an avid Ohio.
supporter of the athlettc program at Eastern High School.
The Court also imposed a
She rs survtved by a loving liusband of 55 years, Woodrow civil penalty of more than $ 1'
Mora, Pomeroy; two sons, George (S ue) Mora and Richard mtllion. Why ? Because, the
(Demse) Mora, all of Pomeroy; three daughters: Jackie Sharp parties 111 question pro(Steve) Frost, Long Bottom,Janet (Greg) Eblin, Pomeroy, and vided legal coun sel and preJudy (Larry) Bunger, Pomeroy ; grandchildren : Mike (Carrie) pared and sold legal docuFrost, Long ·Bottom, Deb (James) McDaniel , Coolville, ments even though they were
Heather (Mel) Ongulau, Columbus, Andy Mora, Columbus, not licensed to practice lavy
Beth (Dav1d) Gaul, Chester, Brandon Floyd and Amy Davis, in Ohio. Anyone considering
Mas~n .. W. Ya., Jenmfer (Brian) Case, McArthur, Jason a li ving trust should be sure
(Marjone) Mora, Hillard, Ashley Eblm, Parkersburg, W.Va., to consul t with a qualified,
Juley_ (Larry) Napper, Pomeroy, Kitchel (Tara) Bunger, licensed attorney.
Bowhng Green, Va., and Sammy Bunger, Bowling Green,
Va .; and 13 great grandchildren; two brothers, Paul (Ruth)
Q .: Why would l need an
Karr, Long Bottom, and Horace Karr. Pomeroy, and several · attorney to fi II out a si mple
meces, nephews and cousins.
livmg trust document?
Bestdes her parents, she was preceded in death by her sisterA. : Living trusts are not
in-law, Dorothy Karr.
•
advisable for everyone, and
Services :Viii be conducted at I p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 8, an attorney experienced in
. 2006,, at F1sh.e r Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Rev. Jane estate plannmg iss ues can
Beatue otltCiatmg. Burial will follow in Pme Grove help you decide tf a living
Cemetery.
trust is really in your best
Friends may call 5 to 8 p m. on Tuesday at the funeral home. interest. Further, 1f a living
trust does make se nse in your
situation, a licensed ·Ohio
attorney experienced in
estate planning· matters can
make sure your living trust is
drafted accurately and fits
wllh your broader estate
plan.
Bv NICK WADHAMS · .
malic debate at the United
Q .: I thought everyone
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Nations on the issue has needed a living trust to avoid
focused on two words probate Isn't that true?
UNITED NATIONS "reporting" Iran to the counA.: It 1s true that assets
The campaign to Stop Iran cil or "referrinf it,
within
a living trust generally
from developing a nuclear
The distinction reflects a do not come urlder the JUnsweapon has now moved to fundamental difference in
tj)e U.N. Security Council, view. The Russians and diction of the probate court,
QUI countnes there have vast- Chmese do not mind if the whereas assets owned in an
ly different ideas of what the . council is informed of the indtvidual name that are not
council should do.
IAEA's dealings with Iran,
The fi~ e permanent council but they do not want the
members are split, with the IAEA to ''refer" Iran to the
On.ited. States, Britain and council. That, they believe,
Bv HOPE YEN
France hop111g to pre ssure would g1ve the impression
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Iran into backing down with that the IAEA was washing
the ultimate threat of sanc- !IS hand s or Iran and asking
WASHINGTON
tions.
'
the council to take the lead.
Attorney
General Alberto
However.
China
and
"We and China can accept
Gonzales
has
not adequately
Russia do not ~~;ant to incite tnformin g of the Security
T~ hran and would prefer that
Council, which is quite nor- justified why the Bu sh adminthe council play a limited mal,"
Russ ia ' s
U.N. istration failed to seek coun
role, w1th the International Ambassador Andrey Denisov approval for domestic surveilAtomic Energy Agency keep- said. "That 1s the right of the lance, said ·the senator m
mg the lead 111 handling Iran . Security Council to get any c~arge of a he,anng Monday
The lran(an government on tnformation it needs. But not on the program
Sen. Arlen Specter said
Sunday ended all voluntary referral, not official submitcooperation with the IAEA, ting, not handing it to the Sunday he believes that
President Bush viOlated a
say ing 11 would start uramum Security Council."
enrichment and reject surThe debate is so irnponant 1978 law .specifically calling
prise inspecttons of Its facili- m pan because the Secunty for a secret court to constder
ties. Uranium enriched to a Counctl ts uniqUe among and approve such monitoring .
low degree can be used for U.N. institutiOnS as the lone The Pennsylvania Republican
nuclear reactors, w~ile highly body w1th the power to brandeQ Gonzales' explanaennched uramum is suitable impose saqetion s or other tions to date as "strained and
for warheads.
·
punit1 ve measures, deploy unrealistic."
The top Democrat on the
However, 111 an apparent peacekeeping missions, and
reversal. Foreign Mmi stry grant or deny legitimacy to Seqate Judi~1ary Committee,
Vermont Sen. Patnck Leahy,
·spokesman Hamid Re za military action
predicted
that the committee
Asefi sa1d the government
And though Its resolutions
was open to negotwtions on sometimes go ignored or would have to subpoena the
Moscow's proposal that Iran unheeded. there is also. a admm1stration to obtam mtersh1ft 1ts plan for large-scale symbolic shaming that goes nal documents that lay out the
enrichment to Russian terri- along with bringing a country legal baSIS for the program
tory in an effort to allay sus- before a body whose man- Justice Department officials
piciOns. A day earlier, an Iran date IS to maintain lnte,rna- have declined. citing m part
the confidential nature of
representative at the lAEA tional peace and secumy.
mee tm g said that proposal
In Iran 's case, the counctl'.~ legal communications
Specter said he would have
was "dead."
options mclude issumg a
hi
s
committee consider such a
For the U.S -led faction, public statement without
if the attorney general
step
the IAEA's deciSion Saturday tmposmg any action or
· to report I ran represented a adopting
a
resolutiOn does not go beyond his prior
suc cess.
U.S . demandtng Iran stop 1ts statements and prepared test!gre at
Ambassador John Bolton had act ivities and threatening mony that the spy1ng is legal,
pushed tor Iran to be 'brought pumshment 1f it does not. necessary and narrowly
before the counci l since h1 s The
pumshment
could defined to fight terrorists
'This issue of the foreign
days as U.S. undersecretary include an oil embargo, asset
intelligence surveillance court
of st,Ite for arms control and freeze ·and travel ban.
International sec urity 111
Standing in the way of any ts really btg, big, b1g because
2001 -2005
such actwn 1s Chma, wh1ch the president, the admmistra" It mev ltably changes the has been blunt abo4t its dis- tion. could take th1s entire
pro grain ani,! lay, It on the line
political dynamic when the ir taste for punitive measures.
to
that court," Specter told
nucl ear weapons program
"I think, as a matter of
NBC's
"Meet the Press."
has been considered in the principle, China never supSecunrv Council. which is ports sanctions as a way of ' The Foreign Intelli gence
charged w1th the mamte- e~e rc i s ing pressure because Surveillance Act of 1978
nance ot mternat10nal peace It is always the people that established legal procedures
and security by the U.N. would be hurt," China's UN. for conducting mtelligence- .
chaner. rather than in a spe- Ambassador Wang Guangya related .searches and surveillance 1nside the Umted States
cific agency of the U.N. sys- said.
.Specter said the FISA court
For at least a month, m the
tem," Bolton satd Fnday
"The lram ans know full meantime, the council will "has reall y an outstanchng
well what they' re do ing, not do anything publicly. record of not leaking, and of
wh1ch (s try ing to acqmre a According to the lAEA deci- bemg experts. And they
nuclear weapons capability, SIOn passed Saturday, the would be pre-eminently \\'ell and I understand why they council must ~~;au unttl the qualified to evaluate th iS prodon't want peop le talking IAEA's Board of Governors gram and either say it's OK or
about it in the full light ot meets aga111 ne xt month it's not OK."
Leahy charged th at Bush
before considerin g what to
day. "
n11Sied the public when 'he
In recent days, the d1plo- do abo ut Iran.

Reporting Iran to the Security
Council, significant step or
diplomatic distraction?

methods that often st mpl y fall wording. sett1ng and context of
shon of completing the JOb. the key break-up conversation,'
Boys and men tend to use guns the name and credenliab of the
or ropes, wh1ch result m a therapist she's seeing
"
much higher "completion
The lem1n1st moven1enf
rate," to use the experts ' ian" helped us recogmze that we
Joan
guage ..
needed to be expiK'l! 111 teacliRyan
But to chalk up boys' h1gh
su1cide rate simply to a differ- mg g1rl' that 11 wa; OK to tie
ent choice of method IS to smart , competitive lllld mde"
ignore the reasons they make pendent Now we need to [)(,,
those chmces. They could, of explicit in teachmg our boy•
he said. "As e~ecutive director, course, choose methods that that l! IS OK to be 1ulnerable
,I have to pay attention to fund- are not so i\'flJllediately lethal, and to ask l(&gt;r help We need to·
able proJects."
They don't, which means they g1ve them the emouonal ian·
So the assoctation has an don't give anyone a chance to g u~ge that lloes not come natuexpert on female suicide but help them, and this seems to be rally to them. At home and at
none on male suicide, even the crucial factor in under- school. we need to teach boys
though suicide Is an ov~r­ stlmdmg the suicide disparity - and IClnfOICC io1 girl; -"
whelmingly male Issue well between males and fema les
that the hrain need' lendmg
beyond adolescence. Of the
Thts 1s what Bem1m1 of the Jl!St as the body does. &lt;&gt;nd that
30,622 Americans of all ages suicidology association found
who took therr own lives in a few years ago when he put when brams get sick. they nw l
2001 ,24,672 were men. I have together the assocmtHm ·s one doctors to help them heal
Just as we enlisted lathers to
been thinking about the people report on the top1c, thanks to a
I know who comrrutted sui- small grant. Women are soc~a l ­ empowe1 their daughters, we'
cide. My grandfather. My !Zed to feel little or no shame need them now to empower.
Uncle Tonuny. Two of m;y of about being vulnerab le or thetr sons We mother' can tell
lather's closest friends. And, dependent But for men. seek- our sons to talk ahout their
·most recently, the UC DaviS mg help suggests weakness fee ling;. to teach them the
freshman who ts my friend's and incompetence It b anti- signs of clcprcsSion. to say it '~
son. All men I had never thel!cal to the trad!ltonal male OK to ask lor help But they"
nouced.
mle Power and conuul are letU11 how to be men from thetF
And it's not just an cntH:ally un ponant to men. fathers.
American
phenomenon. ddling hack surely to the days
If fathers s,1y openly tmd
Worldwide, men are three when a man 's JOb was to· hunt
times moll! likely to commil dangerous prey. In their mind~. repeatedly that acknowledging
suictde than women. (China is seeking help means ced111g dcpres&gt;~on and sadne" IS not a
the only counl!y where men power and control to someone Sign of per&gt;tmal weakness but'
and women ktll themselves tn else. It means allowmg them- Of SUpei i01 juJgmmt. it the~/
say that gettmg help '' -theu
about equal numbers.)
selves to be vulnemble.
obligation
as men so they can
Some will argue that these
I am always surpnsed statistics don' t tell the whole though I shouldn't be by now be good partners ,mu
story and are even miSieadmg. - at how differently men and pnlVlders. then maybe w·e hdve
And to some ex tent, they women connect w1th each ,, chance at changmg the ceii!
would be right. Girls and other, part icularly dunn g a tunes of hill d-11 1nng thlit
women attempt sutc!de at time of ciisiS My husband and llldkes hoys anJ men so muc'l;
much higher rates thm1 boys h1s friends can spend the whc\le more 1iolent than women _:
and men. So there IS good rea- day together playmg gulf or whethc1 toward others ,;
son to be concerned abm1t watch1ng a ball game and go toward thcm scl~es.
::
girls, too.
home without havmg gleaned
And
mavbe
more
ol
our
son;
But most g1rls and women, any pcn.onal information. A
' fonunately, surv1ve. They live guy c,m he going tl1rough a will hvc l;mg euough to paiiii
to tel l about It. They can get d1vorcc and hi s friends might along tlmse lessons to thOO:
..,.
cou11seling and address the never know The topiC might ~Oil~
(Joan
RHm
1'
o
1
ollfmll;;;
problems that made them sui · IICVCI come up. even 11 the guy
for lil t' .\on
l"lun1 t\l:;;
cidal Tiley SUfVI VC, 111 greal "c'!'u,hed hy the spl it
Clumru
1~
\('WI
(
om111nll\
,;
part, because they chO(hC
Women. or at lea't the
metl10J, - taking p1l b or cut- women I know, would return he1 ut, ct11 1 of tim 'li' H'\fNIJ';.
ting themselves - that allow home with Lhc complete histo- 01 \end ht , c-tnml 01 JO(/fTI#
for re~&lt;:ue or a change of hew1. ry of the rclc~tlon,h!p . the exau t ,\lm(a \f( hnmu ll' U'f/1 )
._:

payable on death generall y
will be subJect to probate.
However, you can use
other methods to keep certain
assets from being subject to
probate. For example, jointly
owned assets wtth rights of
survi vorship are not considered probate assets. Payable
on-deatli accounts such as
life insurance or pension benefits, transfer-on-death re gistration for sec uriti es and
transfer-on-death deeds for
real estate also will avoid
probate.
Q .: Won't I save estate
taxes with a li ving trust, as
compared with a will1
A: No. It is a common
misconception that you can
save on estate taxes with a
hvmg trust, but not with a
will. While using a li vuig
trust may avoid probate pro·
ceedings, avoiding probate
does not mean avoidmg
estate taxes. The assets in
your li vmg trust are part of
your gross estate for estate
tax purposes, just as probate
assets are. Nevertheless, both
the will and the living trust,
when properly wntten and
with advice on the proper
ownership of assets dunng
your lifetime, may allow you
to avmd estate taxes.
Q.: Can a liv111g trust
provide any income tax savings?
A.: No .
Q.: Can I keep assets in a
liv mg trust and still qualifyfor Med1catd?
A.: Probably not. In most

said during the presidential
campaign 111 April 2004 that
his admmistratlon was follow·
mg the law by getting warrants for wiretapping.
"I think ultimately we ' re
going to have to subpoena
them." Leahy said on CBS'
"Face the Nation," ex pressmg
doubt that lawmakers would
get the material otherwise.
Under,the National Security
Agency program put in place
after the attacks of Sept. II.
200 I, the government has
eavesdropped, without seeking warrants, on international
phone calls and e-mails of
people withm the United
States who are deemed to be a
terrorism risk .
·
In testimony prepared for
Monday's heanng, Gonzales
argues that Bush had authority
under a 200 I congressional
resolution authorizing force in
the fight against terronsm and
that heeding the 1978 law
would be too cumbersome.
''The terronst surveillance
program operated by th ~ NSA
requires the maximum in
speed and ag1hty, smce even a
very shon delay may make
the dtfference between suecess and failure in preventmg
the next attack." Gonzales
said in statements obtained bv
The Associated Press.
·•
Specter was not so sure.
"I believe that coment1on is
very strruned and unreahstH:,"
Specter said . If the FlSA law
was made4uate, he smd, Bush
should have asked Congress
to change it mther than Ignore
11. "The authorizatiOn for the
use of force doesn 't say anything about electronic survei llance."
Sen Russe ll Fcmgold, DW1s .. was expected to press
Gonzales on why. during
Gonzales' confirmation hearings las t year to 'be attorney
ge neral. he UISI11ISsed as
"hypothetical" a situatton in
which the government conducted warrantle ss eavesdroppmg. The NSA program was
long 111 place by then. and
Gonzales was White House
counsel
AssiStant Attomey General
William Moschella, in a letter
Fnday to Femgold. satd

~

USY PIYIEIIT Plll*

$10
---

~-.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As'

cases, trust assets are countable resources for Medicaid
purposes.
Q.: Why wouldn't everyone want a living trust 0
A.: A hving trus1 can be
a helpful estate planning tool
tor many people. Advantages
include privacy, personal
control, possible cost savings
after death, speed of transfer
to benefiCiaries, and the
avmdance of muluple probate proceedings, especially
wherl real propeny is owned
in several different ,&lt;tates.
There are also disadvanlages. One disadvantage IS
that a living trust likely will
take more time and effort
than a will. Simply creatmg a
h vmg trust ·document' is not
enough. You also must transfer mynersh1p and title of
your assets into the trijstee's
name, wh1ch means you will
have to re- register, retitl e or
otherwise validly transfer the
assets to the trustee of the li ving trust. Also, after you have
'created the li ving trust, you
must make sure that assets
you acquire later are placed
into
the
livmg
tru st.
Otherwise, those assets may ·
pass through probate.
While, a li ving trust may
save probate ex penses after
your death,, mamtaming a hving trust generally costs more
than creating a wi II. AIso.
most people need a wtll as
well as a li vmg tru st to di spose of assets not mcluded 111
the Iiving trust.
The admmlstratimi of a hving trust is not supervised by
any court While this may be

les; complicated and expensive than gomg through probate. your appomted trustee
will not be accountable to a
JUdge for distributmg assets
honestly and accurately
unless a beneficiary bnngs a
lawsuit
There also maY. be tax disadvantages . If a living trust is
in effect after you die, your
trust must report to the IRS
accordmg to the calendar
year, whereas an esta:te created from a. will can establish a
ftsca l year. While an estate
can get a personal tax exemption of $600 per tax year, a
"simple" li ving trust exemption IS 5300 and a "complex"
livmg trust exemption is
$ 100. However. 1f the trustee
of a living trust chooses, the
law allows a trust to be taxed
ltke an estate. ·
Consumers sti ll must be
careful when making important legal decisions Do your
homework Ask lots of questions. And take advantage of
competent legal services
fro m li censed. experienced
attorneys.
Law You Ca n Use is a
weeki\ cmis111ner legal informatton co/um11 provided by
0/uo
Sta te
Bar
the
Aswcwtton (OSBA ). Arrrcles
appearmg. in this colum11 are
tntmded to provrde broad,
general information about
the la w For mformatron
about a vanery of /ega/topics, vrsit the OSBA Web site
at www.oluobarorg. Before
appl) rng !Iu s information to
a specifrc legal problem,
readen are urged to seek the
adl'tce of a licensed attorney.

Spec~er says Gonzales' rationale for spy progra·m 'strained and unrealistic'

Sorting out puzzle of male suicide
In a recent column, about a
UC Davis freshmtm who shot
himself, I included a statistic
from the national Centers for
Disease . Control
and
Prevention: Boys commit 86
percent of all adolescent SUIcides.
Eighty-s1x percent.
The number floored me, particularly as the mother of a son.
Yet not a single e-mail, phone
call or letter about the wlumn
mentioned the striking statistic.
It occurred to me that 1f 86
percent of adolescent suic1des
were girls, there would be a
national commission to find
out why. There'd be front-page
stories and Opt1ib shows and
nonprofit foundal!ons throwmg money at sociologists and
psychologists to study female
self-destruction. My feminist
sisters and I would be a'king,
ngbtly, "What's wrong w1th a
culture that drives gtrls, much
more than boys, to take their
own lives?"
So why aren't we askmg
what's wrong w1th a culture
that drives. boys, much more
than girls. to take their own
lives' Even in academia,
where you can find studies ou
the most obscure topics, there
is little research explai mng
why boys are disproportionately killing themselves The
Center for Adolescence at
Stanford, a natio n&lt;~l l y recognized deannghousc on teen
behavior, has no one on its
long roster of experts who can
speak on the topic. Neither
does tl1e Ameiican AssociatiOn
of SutC·Idology. an organizatiOn
dedicated to suicide preventiOn
since 1968.
''A, much as I ~~;ould love to
lead the charge (m finding out
why boys kill themsefves). try
to go out and get fundmg for
n." 'a1d Lanny Be1man. the
execut1 ve director of the tL,oocwtion . He i'&gt; frustrdted that
funder' aren't Interested m
studying boy' ,md men .'
"If there IS no researc h
money availahle. no academician '' gomg to go that route,"

www .mydailysentinel.com

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _._!,
. _

a• ·$10 PEl IIIli FOR
' SEE STill JIIIEIIIS

Gonzales was referring to as
"hypothetical" the Idea that
Bush would allow warr;1ntless
monitoring that was illegal.
That statement is accurate,
Mosc hella wrote in a letter
obtained by the AP. because
the a~mini stratwn' s position
IS that Bush had legal authonty under the 2001 congresSIOnal resolution
Gonzales has acknowledged disagreement with former Justice Deparunent officials. including Attorney
General John Ashcroft and
,Deputy Attorne y General
Jame&gt; Comey, about the
legalily of the program.
In responses to written
questions from
Specter,
Gonzales challenged media
ponrayals about the scope of
the spy program. saymg 11 IS
not "a dragnet that sucks m all
conversations and uses computer searches to pick out
calls of mterest "
The Washington Post. cilmg
unnamed sources. reported
Sunday that the program
mvolve s computers situng·
through hundreds of thousands of commumcauons to
select for humiu1 review The
program has resulted in thousands of conversa tiOnS in
which someone in the U.S .
has been at least briefly momtored. the Post sa1d
The Post report smd that
nearly all of them were quickly d!smtsscd as 111Slgmlicant
and that perhaps no more than
I0 &gt;olid leads a vear have
been pursued wiih further
domestic surveillance. usually

with a court warrant.
But Gen Michael Hayden,
the No 2 intelligence official
in the government , said it was
"not true" that "we somehow
grab the content of communications and then use the content of the communicauons 10
determme ~~;h1ch of the commumcatwns we really want to
listen to "
"When NSA goes after the
content of a communication
under thi s authorization from
the president, the NSA has
already established its reasons
for being interested m that
spect,fJc 'commumcation,"
Hayden sa1d on "Fox News
Sunday."
"
In addition to possibly pursuin g documents about the
program's legal bas1s. Specter
said he might seek testimony
from Ashcroft and Comey
"If we come to it and we
need 11, I'll be. open about 11,"
Specter sa1d. refemng 10 subpoenas. "If the necessity anses. l won't be umid."
Specter also smd the admmts trauon should tread carefully when 11 came to usmg subpoenas against JOUrnalists to
m vest1 ~ate leaks of classified
mfonn;t1on The New York
Times m December disclosed
the existence of the NSA program. wh1ch IS classified.
"] thmk 1f yo u move into the
area of really serious nanonal
security ISsues. that there may
be JUSU!ication for it." he
sa1d.

Red

and cool do" n dunng the last
f11 e to I0 mmutes.
Accordmg to Brumfield
some of the local orgamzanons that participated in Go
Red for Women were The
Me1gs
County
Health
Department.
Hea lth
Department CVH. Me1gs
County Hea lth Department
Tobacco Pre,ent ion Program,
Hol zer Meig s Clime. Me1gs
Countv
Senior
Cen ter.
Suutncrn and Eastern Local
Schools. The ~1ei gs County
CL\uithou,e. Pomerov Post
Office. Pomeroy Library,
Me1gs Cllullt} TB Clim e

from PageA1
are ways to reduce your nsk
factors and become healthi er
The Amencan Soc1et) ol
Spon s Med1cme rec·om mends
exercise three to fi 1e da) s
eac h ~~;eek. mcludm~ "'armmg up for five to llfminute'
before aerobic acti1it&gt; ThiS
exerCise shou ld be ma1iHa1ned
fo r 30 to 45 mmutes \1 ith the
workou t gradua ll y dccre.ISmg
111 inten sil y with stretching

a

�'

Page A~'

OHIO

The Daily Sentiriel

Monday, Fet&gt;ruary 6, 2ooq

Satu.rday'a games
Boys Basketball
Whee lersburg 55, Gallia Academy 39
Girls Baskatball
Sciotov111e 45, South Gallia 44

Procter &amp; Gamble steps up innovation pace
Bv DAN SEWELL
AP BUSINESS WRIT ER

CINCINNATI - The venerable Mr. Clean beefed up,
adding new tools, and even
ventures outside to wa'h cars.
Olay, the decacles-old face
cream, dropped the "Oi l qr·
froin its bran(! name an(! now
has products . for the entire
body. Febreze. born as a fabric odor remover. has broadened into an air freshener for
use throughout the home, car
and even combined with other
products.
Procter &amp; Gamble Co. has
long been a leader in devising
new consumer products, new
looks or new uses for its popular brands,
The co-mpany has a fresh
barrage hitting shelves now.
including the ·Fusion fiveblade shaver line, from its
newiy acquired Gillette oper-·
ations. set for television .debut
during Sunday's Super Bowl
telecast.
"There are very few companies in the league of where
Procter is in tem1s of their
success and ability to inno. vate," said Bruce Cohen. a.
strategist for Kurt Salmon
Associates. a retail and consumer products . tonsu lting
firin.
A.G. LaOey. the company's
chief execu!ive since June
2000, said P&amp;G's robust innovation pipeline. boosted by
Gillette. has helped its steady
growth.
. "I think we have a pretty
good understanding of family
needs and wants and con.cerns, and we · are trying· to
stay reall y close (to . con sumers). We are' tryin g to
make sure that our brands and
our product l.ines and our
innovations represent superior
value for her, {or him and for
family." he said during a Jan .
27 conference call with amtlysts. "So far. so good .''
He spoke the same day that
P&amp;G posted a 29 percent
increase in second-quarter
profits that .led P&amp;G to up its
2006 outlook. The company's
stock has hit new, split-adjusted. all-time high s severn!
times over the last -two
months. · including trading as
high as $60. IS a share last
week on the New
York Stock
'

shelves. Cohen said there also
are risks of diluting brand
identity and alienating loyal
customers.
"There are more failures
than there are successes," said
Gary Stibel, who heads the
New England Consulting
Group.
Cohen and Stibel cited
Church &amp; Dwight Co.'s Arm
&amp; Hammer, the baking soda
brand that has been extended
into toothpaste, underarm
deodorants and even kitty litter, as among the companies
that have been able to build
on existing products to make
new ones.
. P&amp;G uses surveys and scientific research along with
personal observation to identify potential new products or
uses. Researchers spend hours
asking consum ers questions
and si mply watching them go
about household tasks.
"They will let the consumer
lead. and they will follow
them to where, and importantly. when , they lead," said
Stibel. a former P&amp;G executive.
"Sometimes consumers can
· articulate what their unmet
AP Photo needs.
are,"
said
Don
An original Mr, Clean figure is shown next to two original bot- VanFossen, Mr. Clean brand
tles of Mr: Clean while a ·new Mr. Clean figure stands near sev- manager for P&amp;G. "They talk
eral new Mr. Clean products at Procter &amp; Gamliles headquar- about things they are frustratte rs in Cincinnati. Procter &amp; Gamble Co. has long been a ed with, things they enjoy
leader in devising new consumer products. new looks or new doing, things they wish they
could do more of."
~ses for its popular brands .
. Mr. Clean's Auto Dry line,
•
Crest's
Whitestrips
which
uses tiltered water. is
Exchange.
Renewal,
a
stain-removing
aimed
at
answering consumer
A sampling &lt;Jf new P&amp;G
products rolled out wi thin the entry into the anti-aging mar- frustration with car-washing
ket, adding to Crest's line of messiness and tedious drying
past month includes
wh
itening strips. toothpaste to avoid spots. Watching pea. • Febreze 's Noticeables. ;,
and
brushes.
ple clean their bathrooms
plug-in air freshener meant to
havtt longe r-lasting presence , • The Swifter Sweeper that hunched _(jver or straining to
by alternating between two introduced P&amp;Q 's quick - reach the top of the shower
scents. It's · added to the 6- cleamng household brand line · stall led to Mr. Clean's Magic
yea r.old brand's praclucts that in 1999 has been redesigned Reach, a pole with cleaning
'
iAclude room sprays and with new color, handle and pads.
cleaning
sheets.
Those
products
have joined
upgraded
"scentstori cs" fragrance.discs.
~ Duracell, another acquisi- the Magic Eraser, a wall"spot• Olay Ribbons. a body
tion
throu gh the $57 billion cleaner, to help spark the 48wash that combines cleansing
Gillette
Co. merger that took · year-old Mr. Clean brand to
and moisturizing and joins the
effect
last
October, started triple -sales over the past three
myriad face. hantl. !Judy. antiaging and vitamin products PowerPix. a longer-lasting ye,ars, Vanfossen said.
And even a young brand
P&amp;G has added to the brand battery for the rapidly growcaljlera
market.
such
as · Febreze can get an
ing
digital
since acqu iring it in 1985.
Marketing e)l.perts say that overhaul.
Kash Shaikh. a communica"We found our heaviest
tions manager for Olay, says developing new or revised
is
tricky
business
users
were using it every day
products
new products for the brand are
· fueling g~owt h sn fast tha! the: co~ tly in research and market~ all over their house, whether
brand. which posted SI billion ing with the potential for .there was an odor prdblem or
in sales in 2003. soon cou ld hit brand-undermimng flops that not." brand manager John
stores w1ll quickly jerk from Sebastian said . Besides new
$2 billion in anrma·l sales . .

Febreze products, P&amp;G also
has added Fcbreze to other
brands - Tide detergent,
Downy fabric softener and
Bounty dryer sheets.
Along with the growing Mr.
Clean portfolio, VanFossen
keeps on display in hi s office
the products of such compelmg brands as Clorox and
·Lysol.

•

"It helps me to remain cog;
nizant there 's. a lot of smaf\
people out there,"
he
explained. "It's one thing to
. be focused on your own busi·
ness, burl think it's criticall~
important that you have ml
appreciation for what's hap~
pening in the, broader market
to make sure you ' re ldflnttfy,
ing needs and trends."

Todav's Forecast

City/Region
High I Low

Forecast for Monday, Feb. 6

By BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN®MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

teams !rom Gallla, Meigs and Mason counlies.

Monday's games
' Girls Basketball

•
·rotiKto•

Gallla Academy at Eastern, 6 p.m.

31'120'

32' I 20'

~Dayton • b--..

Coal Grove at Sou th Gallia, 6 p.m.
OVCS at Fa1rland , 6 p.m.

Youngstown • ,
'31 ' 120' '

Ma~sfleld • ~ . ·

35' 120'

Vinton County at Southern. TBA
Wahama at Buffalo, 7 p.m .

'

•

Tuesday 's games
Boys Basketball
Athen s at Gallia Academy, 6 p. m.
Southern at OVCS.' 7 p.m.
Alexander at Eastern, 7:30p.m.
, Raven swood at Point Pleasant. 7:30p .m.
Hannan at Buffalo, 7 :30 p.m.
South Gallia at Teays Valley Chnstia n.
7 :30p.m.
Glrl13 Basketball
Wahama at Meig s, 7 p m.
. College Basketball
Wilberforce at'Rio Grande. a p m.
.
Women 's Coll~ge Basketball
Wilbert~rce at Rio Grande, 6 p m

t:__:)

' *Columbus
36' 121 ' '

~

Ctnclnnat
• 39' I 20'

-~

.

.~
~~

·

RiVer Valley at Po1nt Pleasant, 7:30p.m.

Portsmout• ·

40''120?

~;

I

INSIDE

'\},\

6

1;1,1

Showers

Weather Underground • AP

Local Weather

'·

Friday... Partly cloudy with
Monday... Mostly sunny.
Highs aroUJ)(i40, West wjnds a chance of rain· and snow
showers. Highs in the upper
10 to IS mph .
Monday night ... Mostly 30s. Chance of precipitation
clear. Cold with lows in the 30 percent.
Friday
night . and
lower 20s. West winds 5 to 10
Saturday ... Mostly cloudy
mph.
Thesday... Mostly sunny. · with a 40 percent chance of
Highs around 40 . West winds snow showers. Lows in the
lower 20s. Hi ghs in the lower
5 to 10 mph.
Thesd;ty
night...Mostly 30s . .
Saturday night •.• Mostl~
clear. Cold with lows around
20. West winds around 5 cloudy with a 30 perc~;m
chance of snow shdwer~ :
mph.
through Cold with lows in the lower
Wednesday
."
Thu1"sday
night ... Partly 20s.'
Sunday ... Partly
cloudy.
cloudy. Highs in the mid 30s.
Lows in the lower 20s.
Highs in the lower 30s.

Imaging MRI is Now Available

Advanced
Technology
.
.
'

.

Close to You

HOLZER
CLINIC
(740) 395-8854

(740) 446-5289

/Wedical Excellence. ·
Local Caring:
Everywhere

Eye Examinations and Qmplete Eye Oare
,

How the game was won.
See Page 86
• 'Rio basketball action.
See Page 82
• Aikman leads HOF class.
See Page 86

~

Bobcats win in
double overtime
BOWLING GREEN (AP)
.- Antonio Chatman scored ·
19 p0ints, including the free
throw that put Ohio ahead
with 16 seconds left -in double overtime. to lead the
Bobcats to a 93-90 win over
Bowling Green on Saturdav.
The 'Bobcats ( 13-6. i-4
Mid-American) had five
players in . double figures.
· including Sonny Troutman.
who scored 17 points and had
the tip-in thai tied it at 77
with 3 seconds to go in the
.first overtime.
'
Jerome Ti II man scored 16
for Ohio. Reserve Jeremy
Fears added I l and Leon
Wil)iams had l 0.
· Bowling Green (8- 13 . .:~ : 7)
had four players in dn~ble ­
di git scoring. led by Martin
Samar~o with 28 points.
. Steven Wright had 23 off the
bench. John Floyd added 22.
and Patrick Phillip, "ored
10.

, Ohio led 32-26 at the hiilf
and a 13-pnint kad with 3:05
kft in regulation . Samarco
tht;n scored l-1 points in 95
'econds for Bowling Green.
No one scored in- the final
' l :22 of regulation . and
Samarco mi"ecl a JUmper
with 2 'eco nJs to go.

CoNTAcrs
1-7 40· 446-23 4:2
Fax- t-740-446-3008

, PhOne -

Dr. Reaves is aKtifted t1f the American Board of
Ophthal~
.
. ·.

HOLZER
CLINIC

.' ·

740.446.5421'
•

Well ston Hi gh School in
one sec tio nal semifinal.
The winner faces either
No . 2 seed Trimble , or the
winner of the No. 7 Miller
ve rsus No . lO Southern
game .
The To.rnado es, who
defeated the Falcon s earlier thi s year. face them for. a
third tim e at 8 p.m.
Monday, Feb. 20.
Eastern
Pike
( I 5-2)
received tlie 'No . I seed at
the Wellston sectional.

Gallia Academy (8-8).
which has made a late
surge to get back to .500 on
the season was awarded the
fowth seed at the Logan
sectional in Division II . ·.
The Blue Devils. winners
in seven of their last nine
games, ' face fifth -seeded
Fairfield Union 8 p.m. on
Wednesday, Feb . 22 . Th e
winner face either topseeded Warren (I S- 2) or
the w.inner of the play -i n
game between No. 8
Sheridan and No. 9 Meigs .

The Maraude" ( 1- 16)
face Sheridan 7 p.m.
:'vlonday. Feb . 20.
River Valley, in the pa;t a
Div " ion II 'choo l, &lt;.jropped
to D-Ill . - which easily
features the mo&gt;t teams in
the d is tri ct.
The Raider; drew the No.
8 seed and will face No. 9
Oak Hill at f'i : 15 p.m. on
Yue,d ay, Feb . 21 at Athens
High School. The winner
will tak e on top-seed
Alex ander that following
Friday .

PITISBURGH 21, SEATILE 10

·Pittsburgh.Wins Super Bowl XL
,

-

.

I

BY BARRY WILNER

Cloudy~

Partly
Cloudy

Gallipolis

contenders .
·
A rematch between South
Gallia and Eastern is . one
of · the more intr ig uing
match-up s to come out of
the
annual
Southeast
Distri ct tournament draw
on Sunday in Jack son.
Coach Donnie Saunders'
Rebel s ( 13-3) earned their
highest see d ever, a No. 3.
while Howie Caldwell 's
Eag les (10-6) received a
sixth seed , its lowe st in
years. The two will meet 8
p.m. Tuesday. Feb . 21 at

critical fourth-quarter intercepti'On of Matt Hasselbeck
just when the NFC champiDETROIT
The ons seemed ready to take the
Pittsburgh Steet;rs finally lead.
gave coach Bill Cowher some
Instead. Pittsburgh ( 15,5) •
Super. Bowl satisfactioq.
got the clinching score with
Moments after the Rollin g the kind of trickery that has
'Stones rocked a Ford Field carried it lhfough an eightfilled with Terrible Towels, game winning streak.
Willie .Parker broke a record
Versatile wide receiver
75-yard · touchdown run. Antwaan Randle El. a quarsparking Pittsburgh's 21-l 0 terback in college. took a
victory Sunday over . the handoff from Parker, sprinted
Seattle Seahawks.
right and threw perfectly to
Not only did the Steelers Super Bowl MVP Hines Ward
earn th at elusive fifth champi- for a 43, yard TD with 9:04
onship ring and their first remamm g.
since 1980, but they completBetti s' role ·was minimal in
ed a magic Bus ride that made what might be the final game
Jerome Bettis· homecoming for the NFL's No. S career
- and farewell - a success. rusher.
'Tm a champion. I think
So was quarterback Ben
the Bus' last stop is here ·in Roethlisberger's impact .Detroit," Bettis &gt;·aid. "li's the most note'worthy play for
official, like the referee whis- the youngest quarterback to
tle."
win a Super Bowl was a horOn this night, satisfaction . rid pass that Kelly Herndon of
was more than Mick Jagger's the Seahawks ( 15-4 J returned
signature song that closed· the a record 76 yards.
halftime show.
That set up the Seahawks ·
It was sweet validation for· only touchdown .. a 16-yard
Cowher with a title in hi s 14th pass to Jerramy Stevens season as their coach. the Joey Porter. his verbal sparlongest tenure in the NFL ring partner all week. was
The tough guy, who lost his nowhere in sight. Neither.was
only previous Super Bowl 10 All-Pro safety Troy Polamalu.
years ago, teared up as .he
But with Parker's burst and
walked to midfield to Seattle's self-de,tructive tenembrace Seahawks coach dencies. the Steelers completMike Holmgre n.
ed their postseason march
"It's surreal .'' Cowher said. through the NFL's top ·four
going to tell you. this is teams :
Cinc-innati.
a special•group of coaches. a Indi anapolis. Denver and'
special group of players. I Seattle. with all · the wins
was one small part of this."
com1ng away from Heinz
Sa.n Field .
Pittsburgh · .tied
Francisco and Dallas with it&gt;
Ward had fiv e receptions
five Super Bowl titles .
fo r 123 yards and a touchAnd the Steelers ce11ainlv down.
got
plenty of help from the
Seattle. looking nothing
.
AP photo
Seahawks.
too.
Seattle
was
like
a team that rampaged
Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Hines Ward (86) reacts after catch ing a 43-yard touchdown
plagued by penaltie s. drops.
pass from wide receiver Antwaan Randle El in the fourth quarter against the · Seattle
poor clock management and a Please see Champions, Bl
· Seahawks during the Super Bowl XL football game Sunday in Detroit. ·
ASSOCIATED PRESS

6

Jackson

JACKSON - Eastern,
which lost a double digit
lead in the first half, probably felt like it should have
beaten South Gall,ia in the
buys bas,ketball seasonopener.
Now the Eagle s, will get a
chance to make a mends
for that loss, while the
Runnin' Rebels will again
set out to prove lhey are
legitimate Distric.t title

•

KY.

Other states given more time to The Area's Most Comprehensive Medical
implement curriculum changes

Lisa H. Reaves, MD

Rebels-Eagles rema~ch one of many interesting pairings

GAL~J POLIS - A schedule of upcoming college
and h1gh school vs rs1ty sporting events involving

.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov.
The proposal allows parents
Bob Taft"s plan for a tougher to opt out of the requirements.
About 24 perc~nt of Onio
high school curriculum in 18
months does not give educa- high school students enrolling
tors much time compared in college have t&lt;~ken the kind
·with other states that have of classes proposed in Taft's
plan. according to a 2005
adopted simi lar measures:
"There have not been seri ~ report by the Ohio Board .of
ous issues because this was Regents. In contrast, nearly
not dropped on schools out of 70 percent of graduates in
the clear blue. " said Dan Texas were taking harder
Clark ·of the Indiana State cou"es by 2004. the-first year
Teachers' Association.
the curricu lum was made
In Indi ana, officials had mandatory. state dat a shows.
Some Ohio educators have
more than a decade before the
"Core 40" classes were satd they approve of the prorequired. Texas made a more gram's Intentions but worry
ngorous cumculum mandato- about the co't and finding
ry in 2004, more t.haR 10 · ~ nough qualified teachers to
years afte r the . state began carry it out.
offennf th~ prog\~m tn 1993.
Tile Ol1io Department of ·
The· Oh1o Core plan wou ld Education is surveving · disrequire high school students to tri ch to determine "the--costs
take four years of math and and staffing that would be
English. three years of science necessary ' fo1: the plan .
and socwl studtes and two Officials say the y expect
years of a foretgn language demands to be differe nt in
beginning in the fall of 2007 . rural and urban areas and to
Taft plans to get a bill intra- vary betwee n districts.
duced to lawmakers in th e
next few weeks and wants it
passed thi s year.
Some educators· unions and
others in Ohio have expressed
fears'that forcing a large num, her of students into harder
classes so quickly will require
more resources than schools
can provide with thei r already
tight budgets.
Taft says it will be cha llenging to put the new program in place on sc hedule .
but argues th e state cannnl
wait.
.
"It takes a long time. to
make any change. but· we
don ' t 'think we can afford to
wait." Taft said last week. " I
didn't want to put thi s out any
farther because I think we
need to move from this direction as rapidl y as we can .··
Taft did not estimate the
cost of the plan. which would
start with students now, in
seventh grade. It )WOuld make
the completton of the curricu•
lum a condition of admission .
· to Ohio's state-funded. fouryear colleges and universities.·

Monday, February"6, 2006

LocAi SCHEDULE

MlCH.

...~ i

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

LoCAL SCOREBOARD

.

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring:

&gt;? (t

33

E-mail - sports@ myda1tysentrne1 com

Sports StaH
Brad Sherman. Sports Editor

(740) 446-2342 ex1 33
'
bsherman@myda rly!nbtrne com
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 44 6-2342 ext 23
owaliers@mydarlytrrburl e com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446 -2342 . ext 33
, lcrum@ mydarlyregrSter com

--rm

.

'

'

Buckeyes take down Gophers Bearcats fall to WVU
MORGANTOWN. W.Va.
(A Pl.
We; t virginia
rcm amed the onlv unbeaten
tea rn in the
Bi ~ .
Ea't
be.caus c
of
another
3point bin ge.
T
h
e
Mi1untaineers
hit 'ev-en '3pointer'
111
th eir first I0
shot.' of the second half and
went llll to a 66-57 vi&lt;.:ton·
over Cincinnati on Saturda\.
West Virginia t 17--1. 8-0l
became (Usl the fifth B1c
East 'l'llliol - and the fir;t
since Con n ectiL~Ut 111 199.19-1 - to 11 in its first eight

BY RUSTY MIUER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS - After a
month of not being able to
hit a shot. Je' Kel Foster
broke . out of his length y ·
slump in a big way.
Foster made a career- hi gh
sc¥en .'\-pointers in eight
attempts and .\Cored 25
points to ·lead No. 20 Ohio
State to a 67 -53 victory over
Minnesota on Saturday.
" lt feels real good to get
back my stroke," !he senior
guard said . "The basket's
still I0 feet tall. I just tried 10
take my time and knock my
shots dnwn.''
Foster's on ly miss behind
the arc came Lin the
Buckeye' · · fir&gt; I ~hot after
they won 'the opening tip .
He wa.s ~ - of- 1 0 from the
fie ld . made both of hi' free
throws and had three a"ist s
and two 'teals in 37 minute, .
Asked if Fv,ter was one of
.
AP photo
the few people in the confer- OlliCi State 's Terence Dtals dunks th,e ball agalllst Mlllnesota
ence who could plit on ,uc;h a during the second half of an NtM basketball game Saturday
shotltin g
perftinnam·e. 1n Columbus.
MIIHlCS&lt;·Ha
coach
Dan
lic.lLI. J~ pe rcen t &lt;lll .1-point Mon~nn "aid. ·' llm\·cn·l ... ccn \IIJUIJ qualify." .
h
&gt;
,tcr
had
hit
just
37
pera1.1ybotly go 7-for-.K ag a111 ' 1
us on .1s. "' I g ue'' that ce nt of hi s 'hot, fmm the Plea~e see 8uckeyes&gt;B6
•.

-'

-·

;ii;

c-TI

conference !lame~.

"\Vc' wanted Ill plav lll&lt;&gt;re
a ggi'c~~~' c in the ;ci..'nnd

.

wa' hard." 'aid Pittsnogle.
who wa.s -1 -of-l 7 from the
fie ld. "1\lentall \. I cou ld
focus . and m1· ·teammates
needed me . "011 I just want
to takt; the next few days and
rest. .
Eric Hicb had ~2 points
and 11 rd,ounds - . hi'
e i ~ hth dc&gt;ublc -dDuble in the
last II ~ame'
for
Ctncinnali ( 1~ - S. -1 -51.
West Virg i1iia · trailed by
three IXlint' at halftime due
tn ;l combination &lt;&gt;f lackluste r &lt;&gt;IJense and Cin cinnati's
~Lipcr i llr tn;..ide prc . . c:nce.
The \ •lnuntai nct•rs mi"ed
13 nl theJr fiN 17 .1 -point
shoh before tweakin~ the
offense at halttinw. ' '
The· dl ; tn~,- - llllirc hal·kd6&lt;1r .-ut' I,' oren up the
perimeter - 1rurrcd a 2-112 run In st:trt !he 'econd
half All ti1c West Vireinia
slarter' htt at least m1e .1Plllnter Juring the nm "
Sixth-man ·
Patrick
Bcilc in· , _-,~ ga1c We,t\ .Jrginia ih l ar~e' t lead. 57-

haiL" said West Vircinia\
Mike Gan'~' - 1\ lw ~cored
1-1
pnini, .
" KeYin
1Pittsnoglc I hit stlllle _1 , anJ
nur cnerg: turned up ...
Pittsnpgle. 11 ho " ·ored all
12 ,~f his · puinl' nn 3-pnlnl~r.... hecaml' a fir-.l ~ time -15 :. . \\ tth h . J ~~ re ma1ning .
father on l-'mla1 e1e111n~ Pnt,nt~gk hit t\\ Ll J-poi nt e r ~
\\ l1en hi' \\ ife_' Heather. tn 'tan the ru n.
I.! OJ\ L'
htnh t~) K \\ yn . . ic
Ptttsnngk haJ been up all
James .
"E ncrg: -wi,e. e1ay1hing Please see .Bean:ats, B6

.

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Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, February 6, 2006

Monday, February 6, 2006

www.mydallysentinel.com

Redwomen avenge Walsh with overtime triumph Redmeri drop
BY MARK

WtLUAMS

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEl

RIO GRANDE - After one half of
play tt looked as tf the Umverstty of Rto
Grande women's basketball team would
have to prepare to play out the remrumng
stnng of games and wait for next year.
Rio Grande was able rebound from a less
than stellar first half to collect a huge
overtime vtctory over Walsh, 91-78. on
Saturday night at the Newt Oliver A:rena
and thus keep hopes alive for a spot in
the American Mideast Conference
Tournament to be played later thts
month .
Rio Grande ( 11 - 13. 6-8 AMCS) fell
behind early as they have plenty of ttmes
this season. Walsh (12-10, 8-5 AMCS)
surged out to a 20-8 lead thanks to a
great start from sharp-shooting guard
Beth Sternberg Sternberg lit up the
Redwomen for 15 of her 17 points in the
opening half of play.
The Redwomen go t a good first half
from sophomore guard Bntney Walker
as she brought the Redwomen to within
four pmnts at 32-28 late m the first half.
Walker scored 12 of her, game-htgh, 19
pmnts m the ftrst half. Walsh would
close out the first 20 mmutes on a 13-4
run to take what seemed like a commandmg 45-32 advantage to the locker
room.
It y,as the Redwomen who had the
quick start to begm the second half Rio
used an 18-4 run to get back tn the game
and ultimately take the lead.
The final I 0 mmutes was back-andforth wtth neither stde gammg a sizeable
lead as the two teams were dead even at

71-71 at the end of regulatiOn
It was all Rto Grande tn the extra session, out-scoring the Cavaliers, 20-7 to
come away with a 91-78 win. The win
avenged a moe-point loss (78-69). at
Walsh. January 14 and keeps post-season hopes ahve for the Redwomen.
It was the inside game of . the
Redwomen that proved be the key as
senior Tiffanie Hager and freshmen
Sarah Drabinskt and Erin Kume did the
JOb in leading the second hatf·comeback
Drabmskt posted yet another doubledouble wtth 17 pomts and 13 rebounds
whtle Hager added 14 p01nts and etght
boards and Kunte chipped tn etght points
and hauled m II caroms
Junior point guard Carlesha Chambers
tossed m I 0 pmnts. She had the key
hoop of the game, sconng on a lay-up m
OTto put the Redwomen up 79-73 . She
also sustained an t!lJUry on the play that
could keep her off the court for the
remainder of the season.
Senior guard Tana Richey htt three
shots from beyond the arc to total mne
points
Walsh was led by Dwnna Hammett
wtth 18 pomts whtle Sternberg and
lngnd Bra!nard added 17 points each.
Lindsay Becherucci chipped in nine
pomts and collected 13 rebounds
R10 out-rebounded the Cavaliers, 53-

49. and handled the ball exceptiOnally
well, commttting 011ly 13 tu1 novers
while forcing the visitors 111 22 miscues
Rto shot 40 percent (32-ot-8Q) from
the tloor for the game, 23 I percent (3ot-13) from three-pomt land and 72 7
percent (24-ol -3 3) f10m the free throw
lme. Walsh countered wt th 36 I percent
(26-of-72) from the fie ld, 50 percent (6ot-12) from lung range and 80 petcent
(20-of-25) ftom th'e loullme. Walsh dtd
not niake a thtee Ill the second half, commg up empty on all lour ,tttempts after
nailing 6·ot-8 from deep 111 the t11st half
Rto Grande head coach Dc~v1d Smalley
was not very happy about the first half
effort that hts team put llllth "We wete
very slow drtd solt !'trst hc~lf, " satd
Smalley "Wal sh came m, playmg w1th
the tntent and urgen( y, they were m second place (111 the AMC South ) ,md they
wanted to stay the re and I felt they outplayed us, they out-hustled us, they we1e
getting secoml -~ hance eftmts because ol
our mabtltty to rebound .md box out
properly.''
The halftune chat changed everything
for the Red.,.omen "We challenged
them at halltune. hey thiS ts 11, 1f we
don't get a W. we ,ue not, p10bably
gomg to be 111 the tournament ,md we
J-tad to wtn tomght to get to Wtlberforce
(on Tuesday)," Smalley s,ud "Th1ngs
changed, I thought W,1lsh cdme out llat
and we had that hunge1 tiM they had 1n
the first half and good thmgs happened "
Rto Grande wtll play host Wtlhe1iorce
m another mu st wm ga me on Februar) 7
at the Newt Ttp-oll ts set 101 6 p m
Wilberforce knocked of! R1o, 68-6S,
January I 0 111 ~tlberfotce

Ohio State girls deflate Hoosiers, 61-45
Bv STEVE HERMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BLOOMINGTON, Ind.
Oh10 State was ready for the
btg Jndtana run .
Jesstca Davenport scored 23
pomts and Brandte Hoskms
added 17 as the No. 7
Buckeyes held off lndtana's
second-half comeback to beat
the Hoosiers 61-45 Sunday .
"Every ttme we play IU, it's
a tough game," Davenport
satd 'They ' re aggressive
defenst vely, but if we take our'
time, we'll get good shots."
It was the ninth straight vtctory forthe Buckeyes (18-2, 91 Big Ten) and their fifth in a
row over Indiana ( 12-10, 6-5).
Ohio State never trailed and
led by as many as 12 pomts m
the first half The Buckeyes
sttll led by eight at halft1me,
but baskets by Whitney

This

wa~

BY TIM DAHLBERG
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DETROIT - As grand
extts go, tt wasn't much
The Bus didn't win the·
Super Bowl for the Pittsburgh
Steelers m the final game of
hts career Dtdn ' t even have a
lot to do wtth It, unttl he was
gtven the ball to gnnd up
some yards and run down the
clock toward the end.
Don ' t beheve for a rmnute,
though, that tht s wasn't
Jerome Bettts' game.
He ran onto the fteld alone
because hiS teammates wanted to grve htm one final tnbute. He walked off t\ for the
last time .as a champion ,
beloved m two ctlles. both of
whtch can clatm htm as thetr
own
And he dtd what most athletes never can - walk away
on top.
"I thtnk the Bus ' last stop ts
here m Detroit." Betti s satd.
It was qUite a nde_ Bettt s
wasn't the same back who
pum shed defenders tn the
NFL for 13 years, but he dtd-

Champions
from PageBl
throu ~ h

Its conference. damaged ttself all day. It had four
penalties for 40 yards m the
opentng half. one that nulltfted a touchdown pass.
The seco nd half wasn't
much better, and Ike Taylor's
24-yard
return
w1th
Hassel beck's poor throw
gave Ptttsburgh the one last
opportunity tt needed.
"Th1 s ts a tough p1ll to
swa ll ow," Holm gren satd.
"but we accompltshed a lot
this year. While you don't
have a great feeltng after a
game ltke tht,s . I want them to
remember thts feelmg . so
they can build on tt ·
The
23-year-old

Thomas and Cyndt Valentin
started Indiana's comeback at
the-start of the second period.
Hoskins hit one of two free
throws fo( a 32-271ead, but the
thtrd of Nikki South's four 3pomt baskets pulled · the
Hoosters wtthin 32-30 with 14
mmutes to go. Valenun,
lndtana 's leadmg scorer thts
season, then went out wtth her
fo urth foul and Oh1o State
went on an 11-2 run.
lndtana never recovered
"It's inevitable when you
pia) a good team, they're
going to make a run," Ohio
State coach Jtm Foster satcl. "I
thmk we handled It You have
to execute ,your offense, and
when a team is trying to take
things away from you, xou
have to fmd other answers.·
One of the Buckeyes'
answers was to keep the pressure on Valentm, who returned

but fouled out wtth just over 5
mmutes to go
Two straight baskets by
Davenpon, a steal and layup
by Ktm Wtlbum and another
basket by Hoskms pushed the
Buckeyes' lead to 56-42. The
final score, on another basket
by Davenpon m the closing
seconds, marked the biggest
lead of the game.
Srruth Jed Indrana wtth 12
potnts, all on 3-pomters
·"I felt they were taking away
a lot of other opttons," Smith
said of her long-range shooting. "We were attacking their
mne and· that opened up our
shooters Luckily, they were
falling for me."
Davenport, the Big Ten 's·
scoring and reboundmg leader,
had 13 points and eight of her
mne boards in the first half,
when the Buckeyes appeared
to take control from the start.

Alter a basket by Valentm, who
fintshed wtth e1ght pomts,
Ind1ana was scoreless for more
than 6 minutes, and two free
tlm;lV-&lt;S and ,r basket by
Davenport ·and a fast-break
layup by Hoskms put Ohto
State up 13-2
"Davenport and Hoskms put
on a great dtsplay together,"
Versyp satd "We got off to a
poor start, and that pretty much
sealed the deal."
The Hoosiers came w1thm
22-18 after consecuttve 3-point
baskets by Smtth, but
Davenport scored the next five
pomts before Thomas h1t one
of t"o free th10ws wtth a 30
seconds left to make 1127-19 at
the break
lndtana's Jenny DeMuth had
one steal, lea,mg her two short
of the school-record 21 0 set by
Tisha Htll m 1989-92

Bettis' game for him
n't need to be on tbts team.
Hts role wasn't so much to
run as it was to lead. He came
back for another year because
quarterback
Ben
Roethlisberger promised him
a trip to DetrOit, and once he
got here he made them all feel
at home
'
Hts teammates wanted to
wm one tor Pittsburgh, one
for Bill Cowher, one for the
thumb and one for them selves
They never lost Sight.
though, of the one they wanted to win so badly for: btg
No. 36.
"It was all lor Jerome,"
MVP Hines Ward said. "We
were gomg to f1ght for htm "
The n1ght between the end
zones y,as largely forgettable.
Bett1s
'helped
though
Roethltsberger score the
Steelers' ftrst touchdown with
a block late m the second
quarter He wasn't the best
runmng back on the field. not
even the second best
Bettis dtdn't even play durmg the first quarter, and
Roeth It s berger achteved tt
more wtth hts legs than ht s
arhl He dtved tnto the end
zone from the I late m the
f1rst half - the TD was
upheld on replay - and converted enough second- hall
f1rst down s to wmd down the
clock
Usuall y, that IS Bettts' JOb
But th1s Sunday, he was JUSt
along for ht s fmal nde.
What a JOurney tt has been
The Steelers were 7-5, then
wbn their final four regularseason games to secure the
AFC's last playoff spot They
went to Cincmnatt and won a
wild-card game They won at
Jndt anapolts. wh1ch had the
league's best record And
then they handed Denver tts
ltrst home loss 111 the AFC
champwnshtp ganle
And now they - and 73year-old owner Dan Rooney

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - It was
over almost before it started as the bottom squared
off ·with the top in the
Amencan
M1deast
Conference South DtvJSIOn
on Saturday ntght at the
Newt Oliver Arena. AMC
South leader and NAJA
D1vt ston II No. 3 Walsh
mvaded the Newt Oliver
Arena and thumbed the last
place Untversity of Rio
Grande Redmen 95-63.
Rw Grande (9-17 , 3- 11
AMCS) scored the · ftrst
basket of the game and
would never lead again as
Walsh (20-5. 11 -2 AMCS)
stormed out to leads ot. 364 and 41-7 in th e first half.
Turnovers and torrid
shootmg by the v1St tors
spelled doom tor the
Red men. Rio commttted 23
mtscues and JUSt could not
overcome an 11 -for - 15
ellort by Walsh from
beyond the three-potnt line
Ill the first half
,
The Cavaliers earned a
55-2g lead to the locker
'
room
Rto managed to put tht ee
players In double ftgures
led by semor point guard
James Pattman and freshman wtng man Brett
Beucler wtth 13 .jlOints
each Jumor guard Chns
Dtnwtddte added I 0 potnts
while
semor
forward
Reggie Williamson ,md
lte shman
center Will
Norwell both were on the
verge ol double ftgur es
with nine points each.
Walsh was led by
Brand on Weems wtth a
season~htgh
23 potnt s.
Wee ms
began
the
onslaught makmg four ol
hiS ftrst five shots from
beyond the arc . l-ie also
handed out eight as ststs
and had four steals. Corey
Jones added 17 potnts
while Jason Hicks and
Derek
Chappell
each
tossed in 14 pomts . H1cks
dished out six assists.
Rto shot 43.4 percent

(23-of-53)
from
the
field for the
game, 20
percent (4ol -20) from
three-pomt
land
and
92 9 percent (13of- 14) from
Beucler
the
free
throw line .
Walsh, who
made it 's
fir st · n1ne
shots of the
second
half, shot
61 percent
(36 -of-59)
from
lhe
floor, for
the j!ame ,
Dinwiddie
64 percent
( 16-ot-25) from beyond the
arc and 53.8 percent (7-of13) !rom the foul line
Walsh
out-rebounded
Rio. 32-24. and took better
care ol the ba ske tball ,
commtttmg 19 turnovers to
23 lor the Redmen
··we JUSt couldn't handle
thetr pressure." sa td Rio
Grande head coac h Earl
Thomas "We turned it
ovet about ntne t11ncs durIng that (36-4) stretch,
whtch led to a lot of their
baskets and we we1e JUSt so
soft on the defenstve end "
that 's
"Unfortunately.
becommg
a
pattern ,"
Thomas added.
Rio now possesses a ·
five-game losing streak ,
whtch ts the longest of the
season. The Redmen also
dip under .500 at home thts
season wtth the loss at 6-7.
Wal sh sweeps the season
senes wtth Rto Grande.
The Cavaliers had already
beaten the Redmen 86-60,
January 14 in North
Canton.
Rto will look to bounce
back with a win at home
agamst Wtlberforce The
Redmen owe the Bulldogs
after a 64-63 upset win on
January I 0 Ttp-off is set
for 8 p.m
after the
women's game.

and two cities ·- . . .- to win

'

AP photo

Ptttsburgh Steelers' Jerome Bettts holds up the Vmce
Lombardi Trophy after their Super Bowl XL football wm over the
Seattle Seahawks Sunday 1,n De\ro1t
ended the game with just 43 n' t a Sl&lt;\rter. but he was the
yards on 14 carries He was- only Steeler on the fteld for a
have their "One for the
Thumb" - the ftrst four
came tn thetr Steel Curtatn
days, won by the likes of
Me an Joe Greene. Terry
Bradshaw and Franco Harns.
"I've been waiting a long
lime to do thi s," Cowher satd
to Rooney· before himdtng
htm the Vince Lombardi
Trophy 'Thts is yours. man."
Cowher had the Steelers m
the Super Bow I m 1996 but
they lost to Dallas.
Early on. the nmse seemed
to unnerve the Steelers, who
had two monon penalttes on
thetr ftrst offensrve senes. Of
course. none of the1 r acttve
players Sunday ever played
111 a Super Bowl
Seattle forced another
three-and-out on Pittsburgh's
next po"e"ton. keep 1n g
Bents on the 'Ideltne, then
took the lead,

m:ribune - Sentinel - 1\e
CLASSIFIED

fifth straight game
BY MARK WILLIAMS

few moments as hts teamDetrott ce lebrated with
mates let htm sa~or hi s final them. pet haps hopeful that
run out of the tunnel by him- tht s was a good omen of
self
thmgs to come 111 a city that
"Joey Porter told me, ' It's so de speratel y wants to
only right that you lead us out tmprove m elt It was almost
there. It's your home You as tf a ctty 'Nhose O'Nn team ts
need to bnng us in," ' Bettts woeful had somehow clatmed
satd. "I was tn awe. They a title of sorts of tts own
wanted me to bnng them tn
Bents made .l11s retiremem
and I brought them tn. It was offtcml even before he left the
incredtble . It gave me a field . He held the Super Bowl
trophy aloft. satd he was
moment I'll never forget "
Bettts responded by trymg through. ,md then went to.
to gtve the Steelers some- have some tun 111 the lockerthmg they would never tor- room
get He rooted teammates on.
"It's official. ltke the referspnnting onto the field to ee wh"tle .. Bett" satd
congratulate them after btg
Assun11ng 11 t's olftctal.
plays and gtv1ng them wo1ds Betti s leaves after ru shing for of encouragement when the ftlth-most vards Ill the
thtngs went bad.
htstory ol the NFL. He leaves
When tt was over, BettiS much ltke John Elw.ty lett finally had .ht s Super Bowl nn h1 s own term s aod wtth d
champ1onstitp, the onl) thmg gi itLy new nng on h1s finger
mt s5tng from what wtll surely , Not many athletes do that.
be a Hall of Fame resume He Th ey hang on bel1evtn g they
celebr,tted on the fteld . whtl e can recapture thetr glory
ht s mother - who had never days, ctllatd that tt they leave .
miSsed a game smce Bett iS t)'l e t,ms WhD adore them wtll
leave olS well
began pJay1ng football cned ,mel hts dad celebrated
That won't happen wtth
111 a luxury sutte above
Bettts.

Josh Brown made a 4 7- Marquand Manuel , stdeltned
yard field goal wtth 22 sec- 111 the second quarter w1th "
onds lett in the first q11arter r~ g ht
ankl e
IOJUI ).
after the Seahawks lost " Roet hl"berger beg,m ltndtouchdown
on
Darre ll lllg open 1ece1vers W&lt;~ru .
Jac kson· s pass mterference ga1ned 12 yards. Cedr1ck
m the end 10ne Jackson st tll W1lson got 20 ,md, mtllnents
had 50 yards on live recep- alt ct Wwd dropped" pass 111
tions tn the quarter
the co1 ne t ol the end mne
Bett1 s made hts Super he ouii\ICstled Boulv.are lor
Bow l debut 2.47 1nto the a 37-y,lld COlltpl etio11
second qua1te1 w1 th the
The Bus cou ldn 't rollin 011
Pittsburgh offense 111 dtrc two t11 es then the 6-luot-5
need of a boost The Steelet s Roethl"herger dtvctlleli a11d
got It but from an R-yard bc~reJ y SljUCCICd the ball 0'CI
completion to Randle El fo1 the goal l1ne A replay
thc1r mtllal f11·st down - 19 rntev. upheld the •touchminute s 1nto the c.tme
tlov.n wnh I 55 remaintng 111
W,m.l tollollcu \1 nh c~ n I H- the h,lil
)arcJ ru n on dll enLl - dr(JUrHJ
Perh ,tps unnerved thcm hut Roctlt l"hc, ger s 111 - scllcs h)' the rul1ng. the
"dv "eu loh on the next pl,1y Sc,th,l\1 b squc~ nderecl mud1
"'" p1ded ott h) sc~fety ol th&lt;tt time hdore Brown
Mlch.,el 13oul \\c~re at the 1111"cd .t 5-l-).trd f1eld goa l
Sc.tttle ~.,-.
11 tdc nght Holmg1cn c~rgued
Wnh Scc~ttk- s othe r s:tk l). '" he walked off the field

•

tha t til e ball never crossed
the goal I me. but referee Bill
Lec~vy told h11n 11 dtd
s~attlc also cou ld bemoan
a hold1ng c,tl l on Pete r
Warlllk s 3-2 -y.trd punt
retutn to upen the &gt;econd
qu.trtcr. and a goa l-lme completion to Jackson lin wh1ch
he bar~ly ''·" lllll o f bound s
It Ullin t gt· t a lot better 111
the wwnd half lor Seatt le .
o~nd llolm gren
l,11led to
hcu1111e the llrst ctlclch to
W il l Sup~' Bov. I&gt; with two
lr,utchtsc' In 1997. hiS
Green Bo~:r P,tckets beat
Den vc1
But lm Seah.t\.1 ks dttln't
~1\C thCill &gt;C iles 111lldt of ,[
Zhancc . By the end. the
UO\Hl \hi~ ~1ngtng .. Here We
(; " Stcckrs. He1 e We Go ..
· \\ hn J..no,,·,. mo~ yhc Ja gge r
\hl"' ... 1ugn1t! .tlong

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

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2nd Ave Ch1ldrens items,
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CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sate ............................................ 725
Announcement
.......................•....... ,... 030
Antiques.. .
. . .. ........... ................ .. .. 530
Apartments lor Rent. . ... ..... . .. ................ 440
Auction and Flea Market ......................... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ......................... 760
Auto Repair ............................................... 710
Autos lor Sate ............................................ 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
B'ulldtng Supplies . ................................. ... 550
Business and Buildings ............................ 340
Business Opportunity ............................2tO
Business Training ...................................... t 40
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .......................... 790
Cainplng Equipment .................................. 780
Cards of Thanks ....................................... 010
Chlld/Eiderty Care ...................................... t 90
Elect rlcat/Relrlgerat ton.................. .• •. ..•.... 840
Equipment lor RenL ........................... ... .480
Excavallng.. . .. ............................. ..... . 830
Farm EqutpmenL.......................... .. . . ... 61 0
Farms lor RenL ..................................430
Farms lor Sate........ .............................. . 330
For Lease ...............
490
For Sate .................................................. 585
For Sale or Trade ..... ....... ...... 1..................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .................................... 580
Furnished Rooms ...................................... 450
General Hauling ....................................... 850
Giveaway. .................. ...
. .. . . .. .. ... 040
Happy Ads................. .... ..... .. ........... 050
Hay &amp; Grain........... ... ..
..
............ 640
Help Wanted................... .. .. ................ 110
Ho111e Improvements ........ .................... 810
Homes lor Sate .......................... , ............... 310
Household Goods ...................................... 510
Houses lor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memoriam ................................................ 020
Insurance ... .............................. ..... ......... 130
L•wn &amp; Garden Equipment... .................... 660
Livestock.................. .. . .
. . ........... 630
Lost and Found ............................ .. &lt;... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ..... c..... . . ... . . . ....... 350
Miscellaneous.......... . .. . ... . ............. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise ....................540
Mobile Home Repair......... .. ...... .'.............860
Mobile Homes lor Rent ........................... 420
Mobile Homes for Sate ............................... 320
Money to Loan ............................................ 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ....................... 740
Musical Instruments .................................. 570
Personals..... ...........
. ............... 005
Pets lor Sate ................. .. .. .... . .. ....... 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing .... ..
........ 820
Professional Senrtcea .
. ............. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ... .. ................. t60
Real Estate Wanted .............................. 360
Schools Instruction ................................... .150
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Slluallons Wanted ....................................... t20
Space lor RenL .......................................... 460
Sporting Goods ........ , .............................. 520
. .............................. 720
SUV's lor Sate... .
Trucks lor Sate.... .. . ..
. ............. 715
Upholstery.... ...........
. ,, .
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Vans For Sate .
Wanted to Buy .... ..
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Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies ................ 620
Wanted To Oo .................................. 180
Wanted to RenL ........................................ 470
Yard Sate- Gallipolis ................................... 072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middte ......................... 074
Yard Sale-PI Pleasant .... .. .................... 076

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POLICIES Ohio Valley Publlehlng rHei"'YHihe right to edit, reject, or cancel any ad at any lime Errora must be reported on the ftrat day of
Trlbun•Sentlnel-fleglstu will be '"ponslble for no mDI"tllhan tha cost of the space occup1ed by the error and only the f1rattnsert1on We shall not
any loaa or ••penH thet,..ulta rrom ll'le publication or omission alan adOJertlaement Correction will be made m tl'le ltrst avlulable edition • Box -,.,,,.,,....
ere alw8yS confld.nllal • CurNnl ntte card applies • All real eatete advertlnmenta are aubject to the Federal Fa1r Houa•ng Act of 1968 • Ttus ""
ecceptl only help wanted Ids mHtlng EOE st1nd11ds We will not knowingly accept any adv•r'l•alng In violation of the taw

I buy Junk Cars !304)773·

1

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50ct for small
$1 .00 for large

• All ads must be prepatd•

• Ads Should Run 7 Days

HELrWANil'D

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

100 WORKERS NEEDED

YARDSAU:-

4 mo old muo;ed breed pup·

675-5234

Display Ads

• Start Your Adl With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed

r~=-::::::;==~ ro
r
YARDSALE

992-2157

OeculifirtU'

Word Ads

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

Or Fax To

~--~~~~~~~

1.

HEI.P WANm&gt;

Home
Health
A1de
Classes·
Agency IS looktng for people mteresled tn havtng a
career m the home heal1h
fteld Classes w111 last 2
weeks and help wtlh jOb
placement Class start
date ts Feb 13th Please
call (740)441-1377 or

!740)992·0990 for da1aols

EXTRA! EXTRA!

• NO E)(PEAIENCE NECESSARY

' fULl TIME CLASSES
• COL TRAINING
' HNANCING ".VAILABLE
' JOB PLAC!i:MENT
ENFlOLLING NOW

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAINING CEN TEAS

WYTHEVILlE VA

1-800-334-1203

Molar Route Dnver
needed In the Leon area
Pay over $1 000/monlh
Must have Reliable
Transportation
Contact
Sean M Cullen
(304 )675 1333 ext 20
Full ttme teachers assistant
$6 70/hr
send
res ume to Early Education
Sta.Mn 2122 Jefferson
Ave PI Pleasant WV
~5550

Home Health Care of SE
Ohto ts currenlly htrmg
Home
Health
Aides
Compet1t1ve wages Call

740-6£2-1222
Local busmess looking lor
Secretary/Recept1ontsl
Must have good tek!phone
SkillS &amp; good With the pubhe knowledge 1n comput~
ers &amp; all other olltce
machmes Hours 8am5pm Monday-Fnday, 8-12
Saturday
Send resume to
Local Busmess

PO Bo• 775
HOLZER SENIOR CARE
CENTER NURSING
OPPORTUNITIES

&lt;............................ . ...

olzer
Senter
Car
enter tS a 70 bed ton
erm care nurstng tac1h
ocated 10 rural Galli
ou nty whose m 1ssto
ocuses on quality care fo
ur residents We have

Galhpohs OH 45631
Local Company
Gallipolis based compa ny
rs seektng cand1dates lor
lull and pari-time posr
liOns
We otter compel tltve
salary and complete ben eftts
package
Applicants must send
resume to

Pereo,nel
242 Third Avenue
Galllpou,, OH 45631
sk us about our

EW WAGE STRUC
URE
'

Desk
Clerk
needed
Please apply at Budget
Inn
Jacksort
Ptke
Galllpolts No phone ce lls
please
Drivers Needed'
COL Dnvers Wllltng to
drive for local ready moe
concrete company
Expenence IS pre ferred
but not necessary Med
tnsurance &amp; other benefits
avatiBble aher watttng
penod Or1ver must be
wtiUng to do pre matntenance on trucks &amp; equtp
ment yard work &amp; other
mtscellaneous chores
E)(ponence operating
eqwpment &amp; extra skills
such as
welding a plus

enef1IS lflduda
·Compet!ltve Wages
• Expenence Credtt
·Regular Rate Increases
·Hea lth / Den ta l/L it
Insurance
•401 k (aher 1 year)
·Untlorm Allowance
•VacaiiOn
orne be part of th
OLZER difference sto
n and see us at 38
olomal Ortve
tdwell OhiO or gtv
tephante Tra1ner AN
SN DON or Teres
Aemy MHA LNHA , BSN
N System Adm•n•slrato
or Long Term Care a cal

1(740]446-5001

Call !304]937 3410
Located 1n Mason County
near Buffalo WV

Expertenced hght ciuty
wrecker opera to r Clean
tWvtng
record
Call

17 40]388-8545

Housekeep1ng ttnd laun
dry postttons avatlabte at
Arbors of Gall1polts Apply
tn person at 170 P1necrest
Dn11e
GalllpOIIS
Absol utely No Phone Calls
Please

Now acceplmg applications for wa1ters!wattress·
f!s ba rtende rs dr1vers
and busboys
Prck up
apphcattons at

KNICKERBOCKERS
2407 Jackson Avenue
Porn! Pleasant WV
''Open 1nterv1ews Will be
conducted on 2n from 5-8
pm
Part ttme poSifton av'atl
able tor a Su pport Group
Faci litator tor a Women s
Shelter Th1s tS a co ntract
poSIIKHl for apprmumately
four ' hours
a
week
Applicants shOuld be lam11
1ar wtlh crtsls mtervent1on
techn tques and group
dynamics Interested appll
cants should send resume
to Personnel PO Bo)(
454 Galhpolts OH 45631
Res1denttal
Treatment
Factl!ty tak1ng appi!CehOns
tor youth worker Pay
based on expenence Patd
Insurance Call between
9 00am·3 OOpm Monday
Fnda~ (740 )379·9083
Seek1ng full ttme secetary
/Pa ralegal axp requtred
Please send resume &amp;
reqwremems to EB1 200
Ma tn St Pt Pleasant WV

25550

- IJl.eporter

Sf.R' 1( Eli

La,aQe Mint Storage
For all your st orage needs

r

1

o

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIA.L SECURITY

m

5x10, 10x10 10)(20 20x30
boats RV s campers cars
trucks
fenced outstde
parkt ng 1st man tree w1th
4 month lease Hours Sam
dark 304 762-11 17 or
304 638 5981 or 304-762
2014

/SSI?
1-888 582 3345

Country selling tn Gall1a
County! 3 bedrooms, 2
baths fireplace $B5 000

Ill 111'"11

(740]709·1166

No Fee Unless We W tn l

1-' 10

HoMES
FOR SAt.f.

General Aas1gnment.
Reporter to wnte and
WANil'D

develop reatun!a , cover

To Do

news events and handle

some local government
"!porting ror dally

tnewspa.per m southeast
ern Ohio B~nence
prefer"d, but entry
levelts
acceptable
Send resume and chps
Lo ICevtn ltttUy,
Managtng Edt Lor, Ohto
Valley Pubhsbmg Co.
82~ Thtrd Ave

Gallipolis, Ob10 46631.
Phone (740)4f6-2342
ext 18
The
Alhe'ns Metgs
Educattona l
Servtce
Cen ter IS seekt ng a HEAD
START BUS DRIVER tn
the Tuppers Plams area m
Metgs County Mmtmum ot
Htgh School dtploma or
eqwvalenl
reqwred
Reqwres COL wtlh school
bus
ctasstftcai!On
Prevrous bus dnvmg expenence and workmg wtlh
preschool children pre
!erred Abthty to lift 30 lbs
Must be willing to partiCI·
pale tn drug/alcohol test
tng Preference gtven to
qualified present or past
Head Start parents ancl
employees
Thts poSitton
has Boa rd approved benefits Submtl letter at tnter
est resume and refer
ances
to
John
D
Costanzo Supenntendenl
Athens-Metgs Educational
ServiCe Genter PO Box
684 Pomeroy OH 45769
Application
cleael lme
Noon Feb
10
The
AMESC IS an Equal
Opportun•ty
Em p 1aye r / P rev rd e r
The
Athens-Me•gs
EducatiOnal
Ser111ce
Center tS seek111g a HEAD

START TEACHER AlpE
tn the Tuppers Pta1ns area
tn Me1gs County M1n1mum
at Htgh SchOOl diploma or
eqwvalent requtred CDA
and previOus O)(pertence 1n
early chtldt10od settmg
prefened
This posl!ton
has Board approved t&gt;ene
fitS SuDm11 letter of tnter
est
resume and refer·
en ces to
JoM 0
Costanzo supenntendent
Ath8F1S-Me1gs Educational
Serv1ce Center P 0 So)(
684 Pomeroy OH 45769
Apphcatton deadline
Noon Feb
10
The

Are you tn r eed of A new
roof plumb1ng ft)(ed !ram ·
•ng a butld•ng or any kmd
of carpente r repa1rs 1! so
g111e The Handy·Man a call
@ 304-675 5857
Complete yard work and
small home repatr 20
years e)(p Call (7 40)446·

3682
Computer Trouble Shoot
and
Rspatr
E)(pert
Servtce 740 992-2395
House Clear1 1ng Ser\ll(:es
or Sitting .vuh E c;1 erl y 1n
the •r home tn Masnn
County
area
Call
(304)895-32 17 to leave
message or for mtormallon
J&amp;C Tree Ser\ICe &amp;
Excavatmg 25 years e)(p
Free est•mates 304 675
22 13
Wtll care for elderly I have
references Please can
86\lefiy at 304 675 1084

I
10

112 Pleasa nt Street 3
bedrooms I 112 baths
New Central AC New
Wlndows
New Water
Tank Gas Budget $88
1304)6i5 4034
1Q95 D ou b le~ro. t d e 3Dr 2ba
wratta ched
Garage
Breezewa~ &amp; B8J:n
1 56
acres
Sandh1il Rd
$72 000 (3041895 3068

3 Bedroom hOuse 6 years
otd has two ba thS new
washer and dryer also
sto11e and refngator Large
garage storage bulldtng
ha s approx 2 400acres
Slls on corner ot Eag le
Rtdge
Road
and
Ptnegrov"f- Road n Me•gs
Ccu• t\
E 'IS If " Schcoo.
Orst f!ct 1 ..,_.~ ole ;J' I Ro .. te
R7
Appra sed Va iLe

B ~s"'~'

Ot,, lR'I1 ~m

3 Bedroom 2 Bath wtth
F ~replace tn Ato Grande
area 8 acres mil 40x60
barn Sl20 000 (740)709
1166
3 br 1 bartl 1 5 ac re lot m
Pomeroy new roo t leave
mes5age 740 511 5388

Q

~66

- - ~-~~

36R 2 ' &lt;.~t oath 1 900
sq tt lull baseme nt 2 car
a !1ach~d garage 3 acres
Chester Tov. nsh•p Easte rr'l
SChOOl diSinCI 0'1 At 7
ne a r Memor al Gardens
Call t7 40)985 432 1 atte1

•NOTI CE •
I:JH IO VALLEY

PUB

ISHING CO recom
tnenas that you do bust
.-, ess wtth people yo
r-now and NOT to sen
~oney through the rna•
t mt1l you have tnvesttgat
led the of1enno

6pm
4barm

TIRED OF GAS PRICES
&amp; COMMUTING?
CAREER DISTURBED ?
Chr• st •an
C v..n e&lt;:l

C ompa ny

O t•.-. r•ng

~

Home M anagec B u sm11s~
Part lime o Full t1me FlJII
Support aCid Tta tnmg Fully
f tnan cea opportun•ty tf
quahfted
1 800 946 7572 Ptn 00 (II
no answe1 Please leave
message )

IND A J B
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

Houses tor sale 1n NewHa.,.en 4 br on Mayo Or
sas 000 jremodeled)
4 br on Haven Hetghts
$79 000 (remodeled)
3 br on Midway Dnve
S130 000 (new canst J
304 882 313 1'882 2728

wwworvb com
Home Listings
L•st your hOf"''e by call•ng

1740 )446-3620
Vtew photOSJtnto onhne
New Haven WI/ 4
Bedroom 2 Bath 2 Car
Garage Ou!but!dtngs
Close 10 town PRICED
TO SELL 1 Coae 6505 or
call ( 304 )882 3368

\loBil.l.

mR
10

USE'O

HO'II:&lt;;

S\t.f

110I"l 8 S

unde r

S3 000 00 Mus• Go1 Call
Elatne 740-385 ·0698

S97 ()()() 7JO Q92 1527

3 4bd part •al t&gt;r•cli house
'"'al•es 646 Sand H1l Ad
P1 F e a~ a ·
Needs sor1e
e1.,.&lt; !7 50"JC 1740DO S

I'"&lt; 'Ill

mlormed that all
dwellings adverttsed m
11'11• newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases

2 5- bat h r. ard
'lOOT!\ ne.v root
aopr o:..
3 OOOsq 11
R •ve- · v•ev.
!:lt 7 soutn
s · ?o; 000 N: land con
• .., - -11 ~" I V2q9
~NQ od

-r.r~

5BA

~=" ·~·.lo~ .Ji e

on I\ S18 000 For 1st n9s
call 800- 39 1 5228 ext

F254
Attention !
Loc al compa ny olferm g
NO DOWN PAYMEN T ~
programs tor you to buy
toor home 1n steaa at rer1t
•ng
• 1 OO"e hna nC1n g
• Less than oer1ect cred1t
accepted
• PAvment could be tf":e
same as ·p,.., '
Mo tga gf:
Lor ators
(... 401367-0000
Bea utifUl 4 br 3 fu ll baths
2 cat garage tenced m lot
CQfTi pletely
remod eled

304 882 2391

16:.80 ho mes st&lt;tr!lng at
s-2 5995 00 InClu des 111nyl
S1d1ng• sh •r&gt; gle root Call
RusS 740· 385-~4 3.4
1964 10•50 Re mbrandt
With IU11, 1Sh1ngs $ I 000
0 80
t937 )98 1 2 11 1
davs
1968

HOme
i'.lee ds
work.
A s ~ung
SSOO 00
Must moVE AS.A P ~ 40
9.4 ~ ~322 after 5 P M
A ppr o ~

Mobile
1o x so

1996 S ~ · •ne 28)(64 3BR
2BA f~reot ace cathear al
ce•ilng $35 000 (.,.401709
1166

200 6 '6 w1o e Sp~c 1 a1
PfiCE'
S181 me
C all
("1'401 385 76 - 1
2BA rnobtle home tor sale
or lana con tract S3 000
$1 000 J OW I1 t7 4Q1446
41 07
9€ Fleetw ood. 3 BR Onlv
$ 169 me Ca l t7 40)385·
~a ., ~

Gooo cte an used Mob•le
hornes tor sa le
Day
(7401 188·8511 Even.ngs

(740• 388·80P
Great toca!IOn 3or 30r
t .. acre LA Fi::l ;) A rnary
e•t r ~ s (30 4 1 5~ 3 38,52
L1~ e

., ew 2002 Clay \Of'
$ 1 &lt;~ 8 mo
Call
1"7401 385 994 8
1 4~ 52

Fenra l Property h,11 ~a l e

1970 Htllcres l on SOX22 5
10; h dffiSOf'lV I le l ' "111\
Renteo $15 00&lt;"
.~
- 42 40 11

5009

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

�r

1rM'==~~1 r

B~~

For Rent 3 Bu•ldmgs tor
Busine ss Use. Located m
Pomeroy
Also. 2
Upsta1rs
Unfurnished
Apts. 1n Pomeroy tor Rent

r

Syracuse. Washer/Dryer.
$400.00 plu s deposit and
UtlllliCS 740-992-7680.

...0

t

APARTMENIS

1 aM 2 bedroom apartments ,

lurn•shed ' a-nd

unfurniShed,

secur~ty

deposit required , no pets,
740-992·2218.

REAL E.'irAn:

1BR apt close to Holzer.

W&lt;NIID

WID hookup DepoSitJret-

House WV locati'On, home
&amp; property wilhm ~ 0 miles
of PT. Ple as ant . ra nch
style
1200-1600
sq.
ft ,central air/heat, garage,
prefer rural setting please
call 304-593·3207

1BR, nicely furn1shed
apartment, quiet area.
su1table for 1 adult, Pnvate
driveway w/carport , new
WID. (740)446·4782.

1ST MON . FREE RENT
WIT H PAID .DEP. NEW
ELLM VIEW
TOWNHOUSE/APTS
NOW LE ASING!
SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUstS
AVAILABLE
. ·ALL ELECTRIC
'CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
:STOVE , REF. .
'DISHWASHER
"GARBAGE DISPOSAL .
"WIND BLINDS
'CEILING FANS
'WATER. SEWAGE . &amp;
'TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)882-3017

lll\l\1'
Hous~
FOR RENT
2 Bd . Rm . house· w1th l,arge
k1tchen . Off street parking
and storage
Ask 1ng
$425.00 . PoS Sible HUO.
740-243-5811

3 Bedroom house in
Middleport S450.00 per M.
Plus $450.00 deposit. No
1nside pets. 740-416-1354
or 740-992·3194 .

New Haven. 1 bedroorr1
un!urn1shed apartmen~ . 110
pets, depoSit &amp; previous
rental .
references ,
(740)992-0 165

i!:i

Ec"~ i-!0\l$1 ~

N1ce one BR unfurnished
apartment. Range &amp; refrig
prov1ded. Waler &amp; garbage
paid Deposit requi red .
Gall (740)446·4345 all er
Gpm.
Shadylawn
Apartment
·studio &amp; 1 bed roOm ap~rt­
ments. Deposit requ ired .
Apply
at
J o~nsons
Supermarkel in Gallipolis.

t

3 Br. Pomeroy, $375. 00
pe r month plus l;leposit
7 40·416·4906
4BR. house in town . near
school, 5700/mo., depoSit
&amp; referneces required . No
pets. (740)388- 1100
4br
in
Syracuse.
$600Jmonth &amp; DeposJt.
Water/Sewer included. No
Pets (304)675-5332
Attention!
Local companil offering
~ NO , DOWN PAYMENr
programs for you to bu)l
your home instead of renting
• I 00°'0 financmg
• Less than pertect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators
(7401367·9()00
Stop rent1ng Buy 4 bed, room foreclosure $15,000.
For listings 800-39) -5228
e}l;t. 1709

Three bedroom House 1n
Pomeroy. Rent is $450
and deposit · tS $450.
References required Gas ·
Mat and electric air. 740388-8277:.

420 MOUILE HOMES

FOR REl'Vf
14X70 trailer 3 bedrooms.
Electdc heat.. $300.00 a
month
and
$250.00
· deposit. No pets. Hl.)d
approved .' 740-742-27 14
2 bedroom mobile home in
R acine. $350 mo. plus
$350 depOSit, years lease.
no pets, no calls after 9pm,
(740)992-5039
2BR house !or rent $500
per mo. $500 deposit . In
Kanauga .
no
pets_
{740)446-4107
2BR. furnished . no pets.
reference $375 ·mo. $300
deposit , water paid. Phone
(740)441.0S29
3Br.
Relridg
&amp;
Stove ,Washer &amp; Dryer
·Included (304)576-2934
Mobil e Home Lot w/carport ne)(t to Meth od1st
Church tn Kanauga . OH.
Pr1vate . Call (740)446·
4782.

bedroom apartment
Meigs County. o.iery nice.
clean . $425 per mon th
plus deposit, no pets. references
required ,
(740)992-5 174

Downtown Offit:e Space- 5
room suite $650/mo; 1
room office- $225/mo.,; 2
room
sui te
$250/mo.
Security deposi t 'required .
You pay utilities. All spaces
very nice . Elevator. Ca ll
(740)446-36441or appo int- '
ment.

2 bedroom Apt. available
in Syracuse_ $200 deposit
$350 pe r mohth rent Rent
1ncludes water. sewe r,
tras h. No pets. Sufficient
mcome needed lo quality.
740-378·6111

\II~(

SMITH
SUPERSTORE
Your Silverado
Sweetheart Sale
06 Chev. Silverado
~eg . Cab New,
Auto Trans; Air cond ·
Buy Now for $14,820
All rebates to dealer
1911 EasternAve.
Gallipolis

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
,ConCrete,
Angl e,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways
L&amp;L Scrap Metals · Open
. Monday.
Tuesday,
Wednesday &amp; Friday, Bam4:30pm. Closed T hursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday
(740)446~7300

446-2282

BINGO

bedroom apt. W /0 ·
hookup
Wat er
trash ,
sewer pd. $400.
I bed room 'apt relrig,
stove. S325. Water. sewer,
trash pel. (740)361-7746(740)367•7015- (740)446- .
" 4734 .
2 room 1urnished etliciency
'apartment,
clean ,
downstairs. utilities paid
(740)446-15 19.

Appliance
Warehouse
. in · Henderson, WV . Preowned Applicanes starting,
at $75 &amp; up all under
Warranly,
also
have
Household
Misc. Items

2bd upstairs ~ apt ~tove ,
fridge
furn ished,
water/trash
pa1.d.
$325/month plus deposit
3bd house S350/month
plus deposit . !740)4467620 or (740)441·9872

. starting at' .99¢
(304)675-7999

&amp; up

G .E. washer hEiavy duty
$95: G.E. dryer $95; refrig·
erator 2 door frost ·free
$125: Maytag washer. like ·
new
$ 165 . ·
Genes
Appliances 76 Vine St
or
(740)446-7100
(740)367-7886.

2BA apartments. Starting
at $375/mon th . Located on
SA 160, SA 850 . Bob
McCormick
Ad
Call
or
(740)441-0194
(740)441-1184.

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Aepa ir-675·7388. For sale,
re-condi ti oned automatic
washers &amp; dryers. refrigerators. gas and electriC
ran.ges. air conditioners,
and wringer washers . Will
do repairs on major brands
in shop or at your home. ·

Beautilul 2-story townhouse
ove rlooking
Galt1pohs
City
park.
K1tchen, D.A. L.A .. study, .
3BR. 2 baths. laundry
area . References required.
secunty deposit no pels.
$900 mo. Call (740)446·
2325 or (740)446-4425.
BEAUTIFUl,
APARTMENTS
AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Orwe from $34 4 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movies.
Call 740-446·2568 _ Equal
HOUSing Oppai'lunl!y .

Used Furniture Store. 130
Bulaville · Pike. Wflshers,
dryers.
gas/electric
ranges, refrigerators, mattresses , couches, din6t1es,
chests ,
much
more.
(740)446-4782, Gallipolis,
OH H rs. 11 ·3 (M-S)

r

A~11QIJES

Bu)' or sell. Riverine
Aniiq ues. 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy,
740-992-2526 ,
Russ

Regular Bingo
Starts 6:30pm

....,.,I

AKC Giarman Shep. pups
top blood line. ready 2·26·
06 $275 (304)675·5724

CoC~er

Spaniel puppy,
registered . buff/tan color.
1/ 2
$ t 75 . Approk. 3
months old. (740)256·
6346_
Full blpoded Husky puppies for sale $300-450, 4
mates. 1 female
AlsO
AKC
&amp;
APRI
Registered S1berian Husky
stud available for breedi ng.
$250. Call (740)707-1964 .
1

Jack Ru sSe ll /Rat Te rrier
puppies, 3 males. T weeks
old, tails docked, wo rmed ,
$50 each. (7401379-9098.

I \In I"' 1'1'1 II ..,
8. I I\ \ .., lfH h.

For Sale- Black Angus
bJ.I U, aproK ~.200 lbs. Call

it¥ pt!!i ""'*

. .40.46· 2514

$5001 Police Impounds!
Cars from $500. For listings aop-391 -5227 ext.
390 1

AlJIU;

15

FOR SALE
95 Z-28 , 350 auto F~op ,
looks and runs e"'cellen1
$5000.00. 92 Cors ica V-6,
4 door auto $1800.00.
74()..742-4011 or 740-7425009 .
Cava liers.
Sunfires ,
Saturns·, Ford , Chevy and
Dodge Tr1,1ck. Blazers and
Vans In stock . 3 months3.000
mile
Warranty.
Qua lity vehicles for t1
years. All prices listed on
the vehicle. No pressure
sales.
Cook · Motors
(7 40)446-0103

r

2004 Chevy Trailblazer
4WD wftow pkg
Kelly
Bluebooks @ $22,000.
many e:o.:tras 10,500 miles,
6)(Cellent co ndition . garage
ke pi. $ 18 .900 (304)67 5-

.~ui~ I fa

.es
~

~

t985 Chevy Hon dump
truck, new motor. cab &amp;
paint. Used daily. Askmg
$3.000. (7401256- 1253

SUVs

mRSALE

4x4
J.&lt;oRSALE

Black 1994 Ford F 150,
5.8L, short bed, _great condition, $3,500. (740)367-

7U5 .
1993 Ford Ranger 4)( 4 e)(t.
cab, loSd~ \1-6. automat ic
$3500. 304-576-3231
1999 GMC l.v/e,.tended
cab. loaded. 305 engine.
au to transmission . 67.000
miles. good clean. sol id
truck. excellent con'dition,
$8,500. (740)44 1-1014 .
2001 4dr V-6 Dakota auto:
matic. 90.000 miles. 4WD.
$8,500. (740)339- 1620.
2001 Dodge Aam truCk
2500 SLT Heavy Duty,
spr inQs. campe r special .
10-ply tires. $7,500 Call
Ed (740)367-0624.

1989 Ford Club Wagon
XLT-1T. 99k miles, we.ll
maintained. $2800. Call
(740144 1-9282.

41 MOTURCYQ.ES/

4 W 111-T,J..ER';
2003 Suzuki 4WD Vinson '
500 ATV with 34 miles.
$4900
CAR MICHAEL
EQU IPMENT. (74014462412.

LIC
NOTICES

1233 .
2004 blue Pontiac Sunfire
30,000 nli, e"'cellent-condi·
lion . .great gas mileage. 5
speed. $9.000 (payoll) .
black in terior. (740)4419865.

PROFESSIONAL

DIESEL TECHNICIAN

• Two week ir11tH1l &amp;:
orie ntati on clu&lt;;scs v.1ith
cominu ed ongo it'l g
training .

• the heM management
team in the crnnltr;{ to
-a "si st you.

COMPF.:'&lt;ISATIUN...
Bon use&lt;;. Rat R ate.
H ealth Care. Di !&gt;.aflill t\ .
Long Term Care anti ·

If you
to

-;tart

professional technic1an looking
new career or maybe you don't feel

a re a
a

yo u're ·paid o r treated as well as y ou sho uld
he·and i fyo u're 1ired of Working for som eone who isn· t work in g fo r you. give Jim
Thomas a cal lioday I -74D-44fi-980() or
1- 800-272 -5 179. You m ay also apply i n
person at 195 Upper Ri ver RD ..
Gallipol is, O hio Monday-Frida y

~

$

.LINCOLN ·

·~lRCU RY

Equal Opportun ily Employe(

(2) 6

Plalns - ChEtster Water

. District
from
the
WSRLA · .Is con diPublic Notice

tioned upon success -

9 7 ij
8 5 3 2

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

Stop &amp; Compare

(740) 992-0496

PISf'oSAit-1 .
CoNTACTS .
I

J NT
Pass

t-:.. !jt
Pass
Pas s

Pass

41 He Jilted
Medea
42 Storytelling
dance
43 - - fool
pole
.
44 Lemon peel
4li Provide
lemportrfly
47 Name In
blue jeana
48 The-the
limit!
50 Mart&lt;
ofZorro
51 World
Series mo.
52 MelodraiNI
shoU1 .

measure

25 Pavarotll
piece
26 Seance
sounds

27 Loal one's
fooling
28 Talk Wiklly
29 Apartmenl
31 Rhine port
33 Citrus
35

cooler
Grazl~g

area

36 Oval-nest
builder
38 Whimper
39 TabbY

' Trees come in many va neties, including
knowledge. We can also go out onla limb.
In this deal. though . the tree has only one
limb. Do you have the bridge knowledge
to spot it, at]d would it hold you without
breaking?
You are South . the dec larer in lour
spades. West leads tht! hear·! five . East
takes dummy's jack with his queen, cash. es th e heart ace. and Shifts to a diamond.
How would you continu(!?

'' •
' •

99 Harley Fat ·Boy, 9,400
m1les, lots of Chrome and
- ~.11. tra s . (740)446-9954 .

60 Aurn PARTii &amp;
AcCIS'lORIES

BARNEY

Hardwood Callineiry Alld Furnliure

740.446.9200;

1ypes.
or

l

WHAT'S THIS I HEAR 'BOUT TH'
CMORCH. HAVIN' BINGo .ON
_ _,
MONDAY NIGHTS?!
I'M TURRIBLE DiSAPPOINTED
IN YOU,
PARSON!!

. W"WW~ti111bei"ot'eekcatdnetry . com

TRANSMIS-

CAMI'EHS&amp;
MOTORH~

~

Stop by &amp; L: hed out our ne w addition s tLJ nur
.menu as well as yDur t1ld f.a v , J rilc ~
Homemade desserts • Brcakfa... t·...c r v~d all day .

• Daily

1997 .H ornet 23 ft . 5th
wheel , w/air, awning, sellcontained , ·light wei.Qhl,
$6,000 080 . 1740 )2 45·
9109 or (740)441·7632 .

lu nc h

"'11n I&lt; 1...,

high-card values for game. Th1s is a simpler method than the Jacoby Forctng
Rai se. which would requ 1re North to bid
lwo no-trump. Oppos~e etthe r response
South , with a minimum Openin g. rebi ds
four spades,
Declarer won trick th ree on the boar.d and

Ir

1

~

i

special . .

i.:!=:Ja.Jia..~L:J

L.......L....I....-..1-

THE BORN LOSER
P"

.

'IOU N&lt;£ WRO"'G, \:,RU:tUS ,~

~YOU fi..F.£. WI&lt;:.OI'\G 1\Nl&gt; l'LL"'l
PROV£ II- I'l-l\
GE:.Ti ("'Co Tfl.E
Eti.C.YC.LOPE'-1&gt;11&gt;..!

195 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport, OH
740-992-1622

H(l&gt;'IE
[MPROVEMENfS

North responded three no-trump to show
at least four-card spade support and the

l

1

O(iginal sa~ Fridays -·Sieak nl1e Starts 4 pn
,, New,chbi~ BJIIcloangus pliilly steak.sub.
" ~~'hatn~r made fresh not frozen! .

NEARLY ·ENUFF "

M

'·

Wed. - Wing Niteslntts 4 pm with homema&amp;i.

ENNY FOOL KNOWS ONCE A

WEEK

I

Judy Kay's Has Re-opened!

1980 Chevy Motorhome
23' Travelcra lt, 32,600
m1les. New T1res. BraKes.
Battery &amp; Tune-up $3,300
neg. /304)675-4022

~ )1-\EE.SI-\!

1-\0W LOW - "'i
Rt.')()I':.Tli'\G TO fN:.TS 10

II r - --

S(TTLE. ~ "'-R.GUI•\E.-1'\T I

BASEMENT
WAtERPROOFING

i

Unconditional
lifetime
guarantee. Local refer ences
furnished .
Established 1975, Call 24
· Hrs . (740)
446·0870,
Rogers
Basement
Waterproofing ..

~

-'-.

~

•
'I

( .•

See

GI T- IT-DONE
'All Tvpes Home Repairs
25 yrs. EKperience, ,
Free Estimates.
24 Emergency Service.
(304)675-3733 or
(304)593-Q129

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

SfPTIC TANK PIJMPING $95.00
PORTA8lf TOILET RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY
59f-8757

the apppeal is based.
the
Environmental
Review
Appeals
Commission
within
Thirty ·(30) days after ·
notice
of
the
Director's action.
A'
copy of the appeal
mu~t be served ,on
the Director of the
Ohio Environmental
Protection
Agency
within three (3) days
of llllng with the
appeal may be flied
with
the
Er1viro1'1me.ntal
Review
Appeals
Commission at the
following Mdress :

Middleport.

OH

10x10x10x20

Review
Appeals
Commission ,
309
So~th Fourth Streel,
Room
222 1
Columubu·s ,
Ohio
43215.
Goples of the assistance agre~ment and

992-3194
or 992·6635
"Middleport'$ only
Self-Storage"

Now Renting

associated
Enviromental
Assessment
docu·
ments are available

A-J Mini Storage

740-992-6396
740-992-2272
1

ful complet,on, operalng
to:
Ohio
Public
Notice tion , and mainte E11vironmental
Approval
of nance of the ·e ligible
Protection Agency,
Application for Water · activities.
Division
of
Supply . · Revolving This final aCtion of
Environmental
and
Loan
Account the Director may be
Financial Assistance,
Supplemental Loan to · apppealed to the
122 Front Street , P.O.
Tuppers
Plains- Envlonmental Review
Box 1049, Columbus,
Chester
Water Appeals Commission
OH 43216-1049.
District.
.
pursuant . to Section
Questions regarding
The Director of the
3745 .04 and 6109.22
lhe projecl should be
Oh i(l Environmental
(N) of the Ohio
directed . to
Larry
Protection Agency .is
Revised Code . The · Berintend . at
the
prov.id ing notice' of
appeal must be in
above address or by ·
the approval at an
writing and shall set
cal ling (614)644-2798.
forth the action com·
appllcalion
for
(2) 6
Supplem,ent finanCial
pla ined of and lhe
Assistance from . the
grounds upon . which

r!

AND''A
SAND TRAP
RUNS
TI.JROU61-1 IT "

SUNSHINE CLUB
f..X&gt;.. IT Jusr Yfi'S
't:al»JHILL '

35537 St Rl 7 N • PqmeroJ", Ohio 45769

97 Beech Street

Environmental

!

Shade River AG Service, Inc

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE

1An

Units 10x20 10x1 2

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road '
Racine. Ohio
4577 1
740-949-2217

1 14/t mo pd

ree

Complete
Care
ACE TREE SERVICE
· 179 Rand Sl.
Gallipolis, OH
Rick Johnson , Jr.

O~ner

Free

Est

Now Available AI

BAUM LUMBER
Scorpion Tractors
" Takiug Tile Sti"K Our Of
Hard 1·\ l~rk !" ·
Mid-Sit.c -+Wh eel Umc· Traelur
v, ilh .10hp &amp; .\Oh p f.11 l11 •1" f: n g 11ws ;

BAUM Ll!MBER
l{t,

124

I LOVE A
PARADE

Hours
7 :00AM - 8:00PM

~;;;;:,:;;;~~:~.;:~~===::!~~
II
-

Sl.

GARFIELD

Sizes 5'x1 0'
to 10\x30'

·tnsur'ed

C h esl~r

&lt;JXS-.HO I

Today's cfue. W aqua!s v

" UMT Y

p R

PNKS

PR

J RS,

before taking the trump finesse. he
should have p layed~ club. He would have
learned that Easl had started with the
ace-queen of hear1s and the ace of Cll.lbS.
So. since East did not open the bidding
as deafer, he could nol also have the
spade king . South would have cashed the
spade ace, hoping lor the best.
In a newspaper column , if the dealer

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'I'd love lo w1n an Oscar. . il would be

passes, It wtll be cnticalto the card-play.

magnificent .. . not 10 mention I think I'd gtv,e a great speech .' - ~ierce Brosnan

FKX

YKGR

JHWR ,

PR

K

Tue•d•y,Feb. 7,2006

BUCKEYE Sanitation

11 must be filed wllh

A moment later. Ecist wo n a·trick with the

ZHWHXJ ;

K

NTPRWRM ,

It

S.

YKGRO

KMSNEM

ZHUR ."

PN

KONR

-....~:

Meigs Co. Residents!!!

Bee1$7.35
Beef $8.10
Corn $~.45/Bag
craclted Corn $7 .45/Bag . ~::,;;;,
-Sovlbean Meal $13.25/Bag
River Hog Feed $8.85
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

Campos

CE!Iebril') C1phl&lt;r cryptogr am~ are·aeal8d frOm quotations by !ampus peQ(je. past arc:! present
Ead'l letter '"lht Cll)'ler stands fOr anott"er

·~ Graph
... BUr n1 I'&lt; Ho&lt;J&lt;.EY
PLAYER, AND HOCK.EY
rLA'(ERS ARE; TOUG.H 1•
~OTHIMG CAN GET
U5 OFF THE I CE!

IMPORTS
.
Athens

by Luis

.ran the spade 10 to West's singleton· king.

~Astro­

·BIG NATE

Rocky "RJ''
Hupp

CELEBRITY CIPHER

club ace to deleat the con tract.
South thought that he was unlucky. but

~

by calling (614)6442798.
Also, copies
ar.e available by writ-

Pous!'l
Pass

.~orth

23 Tummy
muscles
24 Elec.

PolitiCal debates bring out some eKcellent
oratory. For example, Adlai Stevenson
silid, "Nixon· is the ktnd ol polit ician who
would cu t down a redwood tree , then
mount the stUmp lor a speech on co nser·
vation ."

MOTCJRCYCL!SI

Commission .

West

Going out on
the only limb

t..,4WHEELERS I

10

Q 10 6

Opening lead: ¥ 5

Owner

Licensed Home Builder

¥ AQ 9. 4
• l 0 tl 5 2
• A 9 7

Dealer: East
Vu lnerable: Neither

Chuck Wolfe

140-992-lm

• a3

• ·' 2
t A4 3

I •
4•

Publk Notkrs i nN1,wsp•pe1~.
Your Righllo Know, O.liwred Righllo Yoor

. PUBLIC NOTICE
Water
Supply
Pomeroy
Village
has
Loan
Revolving
ED &amp; AFFORI;)ABLE!
for sale the following
Accounl (WSRLA)to
Broi-lco Spitfire Wood/Coal
Townhouse apart ments .
· vehicles. 1995 Ford Tuppers
PlainsStove. Paid $ 1,200. Two
and/o r small houses FOR
2004 Jeep Uberty. eltcelMob1le hom e spaces 10.
Crown
VIc
and
a
1996
Chester
·
Water
po
rtable
diShwashers.
RENT. Call \740)441 - 1111
lent condition. less than
Ford Crown Vic. Bids
Col!hlry Mobile Home
District, for lhe lollowlor application &amp; mforma- . 740-742-0519.
15,000 miles. $17.000
Park. (7 40)385-40 19..
ing water treatment
must be received In
lion.
Call (740)446-4028
JET
the Clerk's office by
system
activitieS:
Newer 2 Bd Am. tra1ler.
Large modern upstairs
AERATION MOTORS
February 13, 2006 at reimbursement
of
Central heat and air.
apt .. 2 Br.. near Tuppers
94 Honda Accord, $700
Repaired, New &amp; Rebu il t
11 :00 a.m. Pomeroy arch,tectural
engiCover.ed porch· arid patio.
Ptams. no pets. $425.00
Cars from $500. Ford list·
ln Stock. Call Ron Evans,
Village reserves the . neering tees associatPartly fum1shed S425 00
pl us deposit.
740-985 ings 800-39 1-5227 e)(t
1-800-537-9528
right to accept or ed with the, construcl740-243-5811
G548.
4169 or 6 14-264-6409 .
reject any · and all
ton of a new SOO,OOO
bids. Vehicles can· be
water storage tank,
seen at the Pomeroy approximately
800
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Pollee Department
feel of water line,
Conlact Chief Mark telemetry equipment
Proffitt.
and other necessary
(1) 30, (2) 6
appurtenances_.
This
approval
is
based upon tho Ohio
EPA staff 's recollJPublic Nbtlce
mendatlons following
PUBLIC
NOTICE
,
a review conducted
AI John Sang Ford -Lincoln-M ercury we've
The annual Financier under
applicable
cs1abli she d a 35 year repulation o f honesty.
Report of the Tuppers
requirements of the
integrity and outsl anding c ustomer serv ic.ePlains-Chester Water assistance applica'District has· been
before and afler the sal e. W ith th e holiest
tion tnaterlals and any
completed. and Is
other
Information
produc ts on' the market and as the faste st
available for review at regarding the pro·
:grcJwmg de:Jiershi p in our reg io n. we're add the District 's main
posed activities. This
ing diesel techn icians 10 better service our
office
localed
al approval
and
all
c ustomer. Ford Se rvice !raining preferred
39561 Bar 30 Road; financial assistance
TRAIN ING ...
ReQdsvllle, OH .45772. provided to Tuppers
but not required .
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT-

•
•

Sou th

1995 Ford Crown Victoria
LX 135k mites. good co ndilion, new tires. $2,600 .
Call (740)44 1-9282.
2002 Dodge Neon 49,000
miles, 4 cy l., auto, air,
$3500 080. (740)256-

1086 5 3

'

'

K J

.

P.D.BII119
'
IIWIIedltft DIIID ·Mlddlepen, Ohll
Pin Ill Y11 llltJ:t Phone: 748-143-5214'
FIX: 740-143-1284
WICIIIII.IIU

CONSTIUCnON

¥

Soutb
. AQJ54

ROBERT .
BISSELL

FOR SAUl

1179

'

• t..A'T1i,~o

992-5682

TRucl\S

Chevy Colorado E"'t. Cab
'05. Auto, 2WD, wlbedliner.
excellent conditio n. Kelly
Blue BOOk 514,600. will
sell for $13,600. (304)523-

/

109762

t K QJ
• KJ 4
East

West
K

AIID FIIIAIICIAL ;
SERVICES
~

02 ·06·06

.

•

ROCKY HUP~
INSURANCE ,

State Rt. 124

SIONS,
All
(740)245-5677
740 645-7400

La b
puppies
Chocolate
black. Price
$ 100. Ca ll (740)446-1062 .

Malllllll Youlattvil
Give Us ACalllt: · ·

3 miles west of
Pomeroy, OR

BUDGET ·

AKC

New Furniture $450. Call
!740)446-7444 _

Apartment available now
R1verbend
Apts . New
Haven WV. Now accepting
appl1cations .l or
Hud·
Subsidized. one Bedroom
Apts . Utilities mcluded.
Based on 30% of adjusted
Income . Call (304)882 3121 available lor Senior
and Di sabled People.
E.H.O

Tuesday &amp; Saturday
Middleport American
Legion
·
Early Bird Game 5 pm

r.___.ro.,~i isi iALEi i i

2

lnvestllents

Repair

Ol)

North

Are Your

ROGER HYSELL ;
GARAGE
Auto &amp; Truck
I

NEW AND USED STEEL

AKC Lab pups, field and
waterfowl hu_nting · blobd·
lines. calm and family oriented . e)(cel!ent pups .
e)(cellent pri,ce . (740)4 188388

49 Comanche
kin
1 Throw In
SO Busy placet
4 CoHontall 53 Onion kin
8 Nol many
54 Gultariat
11 lr,aollarget
-Paul
13 F nlshes up 55 Parrot
14 Make the
56 Groed'a
moal of
cousin
15 Atlanta
57 Crumb toter
stadium
58 Br~lah
16 Scholarly
achool
org. ·
59 Bad-moU1h
17 Wind dlr.
18 Proddad
DOWN
· 20 Answerad
a judge
1 Eager
21 " Bali-"
2 Display
22 Spree
model
24 Gold unit
3 Firat 007
27 Auto import
film (2 wds.I
30 Sw.aler
4 Kid's
31 Diner
classic
aaodwiches 5 Landers or
32 Compilation
SO!her.n
34 Thigh
6 Hwya.
neighbor
7 Ballpark fig.
35 Ms. Lane
8 Furnace's
36 Roman poet
need
37 Go up
9 To be,
39 Knossos
to Brutus
site
10 Dandelion,
40 Left In a
to many
hurry
12 Accident
19 Chow down
41 -alai
42 Vague
20 Nicklaus'
45 Coral
org.
Islands
22 Proiects

•/ I

New and Used Furnaces.
Installation
available.
(740)44 1-2667 .

It \ \111"1

NEA Croasword Puzzle

r

i

2

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

Phillip
Alder

BUIUJING
Twin' Rivers Tower IS
accepting applications lor
~
Slll'l'lmi
waiting lis t lor Hud-subSIZed . 1- br, apa rtment, . Block. brick. sewtfn pipes ~
windows,,
lintels.
etc.
call 675-6679 EHO
Claude
Winters,
Rio
SPACE
Grande, OH Call 740·245·
.-oR RENT
5121 .

Clf&gt;rnrtumy

www.mydailysentlnel.com

ACROSS

Large womens clothi ng,
hospital scrubs size 3X-4k,
baby clothes &amp; hOusehOld
items 304-675-2801

Modern 1 bedroom apt.
(740)446-0390.

-

Monday, February 6, 2006
ALLEY OOP .

BRIDGE

Inside/outside Sate. Feb.
3, 4, 5, &amp; at the home of
the Late Kenny Stewart
43724 Carr Road. From
St.Rt. 7 1n Tuppers Plains,
OH take ,St. Rt. 681 West.
Go Approx . 7 Miles to Elk
Run Road . Turn right. Go
112 miles to the tee in ro~d,
turn right on Carr Road .
1st mobile home on left.
Everything will be sold.
1994 Buick Century 4
door. VJater bed, dining
room and liv1n g room
tables and Odds and ends.
Tools computer w/printer,
other computer. and PC 's.
Call 740-696 - 1227.

Middleport
1' and
2
Bedroom fU rnished Apts .
No Pets, deposll, and previ ous rental references.
74D-992-Q165.

erence r_eqwed. (740)339.0362 cell nUmber.

Need to sell your home?
Late on payments, divorce.
job transle1 or a death? I
can buy your home. AH
cash and Quick closing .
740-416-3130.

.1rM~~ ~

Gracious living. 1 and 2
bedroom apartments at
V111age
Manor
and
Riverside A'p artments in
M1ddleporl. From $295$444 . Call 740-992·5064.
Housing
· Equal '
Ogportun it1es.

mRRtl'IT

' won derful V1ew.
22 acres.
ridgetop property. clOse to
mam hiW'lway perfect tor 4wheeler trai ls, (740)707·
2109

~=

Garage Apt. on Roush St.
Mason .
Furnished.
$325/month + utilities.
$100
utility/deposit.
Available
Immediately
(304 )773-5054

N1ce 14X 70 two bedroom
with new carpet in

Call740-58!!-7122.

I..oTI; &amp;
Anu:&lt;cE

Monday, February 6, 2006;

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

GRIZZWELLS
CAN'T 1-lW' !lUT FEtL·-nw MY LIFE
MT KN~W
\1 ,17 O~[R

'Nm , AT
L'iA7T TLi-

\IAVE

MY

t-\~Mo'R\1: '5

1'1&lt;1 ~£TIY ~U~~
fOOT ~ALL '&gt;•A501--\
I!JI\.L ?1/1-1&gt;:1 \JI'
A6A\l4 11\:XT fA\.v,
GUNI\\tl&lt;. ..

By Bernice Bede Osol
The year ahead could be an extremely
f£tvorable one lor you where romance is
concerned. Both you and the one you lo\le, .
or a person you'll meet 1n the ·months
ahead . are apt to be on the same idealistic wavelength.
AQUARIUS -{J:an. 20-Feb. 19) - YOur bet tar ·qualltieS will be eYidont today and Olh ers can't help being drawn to you . But what
they like the most 1s that the examplE! you
set is also bnr"Jgmg out the best In them
PISCES (Feb, 20- March 20)- Th1s 1s one
at your better ,days to enterta in at your
place persons to whom you·re e1ther obligated soc1ally or those you'd like to know
better Being 1n you r own space brings out
your best.
ARIES {March 21-Apri1' 19)- Somethmg
quite hOpeful 1s presently developing tor
you and you may get your first. inKimg of
what 11 1s ·today A fqend or ass oc1ate m
-whOm you place cons1derable trust m1ght
be 1!'\VOIVed
TAURUS (Apnl 20·May 20) - You are par·
tlcularly capable ol a~;:h 1 evmg Important
object1ves today, e:sp·ec1ally those where
e1ther lmanc es 01 yaw careet IS concerned Now IS the t1me to aim tor Iotty tar·
gets . ·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - The only
person you may have to convince today
that you can be a winner 1s like ly to be
yaurselt Whatever it 1s that you set yow
m1nd1o do w1ll be well Wllh1 n the realm ol
poS,Sibl lily
CANCER !June 2 t ·July 22 } - Th1s is th e
day to Ja ke on any perplex1ng problems
·that may hav e been conlront1ng you fo r
sOme hme You'll be espeetally adept al
salvmg tncky predicaments or myslenous
!l.!IU8110nS
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) -'--- The nght types ot
compamons. e$pec1atly those with whom
you havtl SI!O ilQ bonds 1 can help put you r
sp1 ril and mmd 1n e•cellent bal ance today
Once estab hshed yoU ca n be or do any - '
Jhm g.
\IIRGO (Aug. 23 ·Sep t 22) __.: Ac!1ons you
take tod ay Will call favora ble aHent1 on ~o
you 1n lhe eyes ot those wt)o are 1n pos1·
lions to. furth er )'Our proless1onat mterests
Place your focus on eH1C1ency and E:ffecliveness
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) - What rna ke s
you so populat today IS when deal1ng w1th
others you'll do so w1th both au!h0r1ty an d
compass1on You'll make allowances tor
tho1 r lta11t1es 1,n stoad at rak1ng ad\'antage
of the m
SCOAPI9 ~Oc t 24-N,av 22) - Your efforts
will be !he most reward!ng today when you
engage 1n 91tuat1ons that can 1mprove th e
tor ol those you tov e Let your heart dirac!
your acli ons and you 11 make thi S the case
SAGITT4.RtU S (Nov 23-0ec 21 1- Thos e
~n c t llia tl ons you teet today to !I eat others 1n
a la1r and generou ~ la sh10n Will prove to be
the most advantageous cpurse you cou lo
follow Wh at you g1ye·w1lt return to o;ou tenlaid
C APRI CORN 10 ec 22-Ji'l.n 19\ .- Th1s IS
a nay thi'lt holds targP. prohtabl e nosslblll!les tor you espec1ally m ar ea s Wllo rc you
earn your mon ev by the sweAt ot ycur
br(M Th e ha tder you,WOIM. the mor e vou
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''Aller all these years,'' mused the elderly man,
"I'Ye decided finding a w~y to li1·c simply is a
very complicaled PROBLEM.'.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

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�Monday, February 6, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Aikman leads big Hall of Fame tlas~; Irvin left out
is."
ASSOCIAToD PRESS
Aikman , who led the Dallas
Cowboys to three Super 'Bowl
DETROIT - Troy Aikmim title&gt; in the 1990s, and Moon,
and Warren Moon shared a the first black quarterback in
warm embra~e. John Madden the Hall , surelv remember
nearly cried. Rayfield Wright what a White ;a~k felt ·like .
stopped in midsenterKe to
White had 19 g of them in
steady his voice.
15 seasons with Philadelphia ,
And the late Reggie White's Green Bay an~ Carolina. One ,
wife. swore the Minister of of t.he first 111 ajor free-agent
Defense was in the room .
signing s in !993, he tielped
Even Michael Irvin was turn around the storied
franchise.
The
able to celebrate, des pite Packers
missing out Saturday.
Packe r~_ won th e 1997 Super
There's never been a mo_re B wl and lost in 1998.
,
••
•
,
emotronal announcement of a 0 1 •
.
Pro Football Hall of Fame · V. hr~e hegan hts c.r~ecr rn
.class- which also included th~ :US FL , but bythe ume he
Harry Carson. making fo r the "-'•1' Iunshed rn. ;he NFL, he d
biggest group since 200 1.
gone 10 IJ str.rrght Pro Bowls
"Every ci ty embraced ar~d" b~e n c hos~ n .tor . ~he
Reggie as a player, and as a lea, ue s 75 th anmvers.rry
person," Sara White sa id of te am .
.
The srx new members wrll
her husband. the NFL's alltime sac ks leader when he · ~~ rni.lucted . on the weekend
retired in 20001 four yea rs of Aug. 5-6 tn Canton, Ohr.o.
,
Arkrnan and Moon lolbefore he died.
''The wonderful thin g I can low~d Dan Marino, Steve
say about my husband is there Young and John Elway rn a
can't be anything i1egative stnng ot great4ua rterbac ks to
said about him . Nothing," he make the Hall Ill the rr flfSt
said . " I wish he was here, that tqes.
is the only regret 1 have. But
No black quarterback had
you know what, he is here. He come L'lose to election ~efore
B¥ BARRY WILNER

Moon .
''To be the first AfricanAmerican quarte1back into
the Hall of Fame, all AfricanAmerican QBs )'lho played
before me shou ld share in
this," M'oon said . " 1 don't
want to make this a racial
thing. but I think it is sign ificant. It ~hows _that we have
arnve.~ at the prnnacle of our
sport. ,
.
.
Mosm s t~an s rent career
tpok hun from., the CFL,
where he won ftve strarght
9rey Cups .. to Houston as a
tree agent Ill 1984. He also
played for Minnesota, Seattle
and K&gt;i nsas City and completed his career with 51 ,061
yards of total offense and 31 3
touchdowns.
Aikman credited his coaches and teammates. mentioning
in particular Emmitt Smith.
the NFL's career rushin g
leader, and Irvin.
"When I think , of all the
great players who have played
the game over the history of
it," said Aikman, "to be consi dered nne of the great players .that helped define the
game itse lf. it is a humbling
experience."

ASSOCIATED PRESS

DETROIT - Talk about a
· mi stake-filled Super Bowl. ·
That's what the world saw
Sunday when the Pittsbutg h
Steelers wo n their first title in
26 years by beating Seattle
21-10.
Mistakes''
To put it ' si mply. the
Steelers won hecause the
Seahawks made more errors,
far more .
They
included
three
dropped passes by tight end
Jerramy Stevens, who spent
last week as the party of the
seconp part in a woofing
match with Pittsburgh's Joey
Porter.
They also included a series
of damaging penalties at the
worst possible t.imes, including a holding call on right
tackle Sean Locklear after an
IS-yard completi on that
would have giv.en the
Seahawks a first and goal at
the Pittsburgh I ear.ly in the
fourth period ahd a chance to
go ahead 17- 14.
And those came after a first
half in which Seattle lost 10 to
14 points because of mi s-

Buckeyes
from Page81

tak:e s.

In .fact. while Pittsburgh
had two superb ly executed
, long touchdowns - a Super
Bowl record 75 -yard to uchdown run by Willie Parker
and a 43-yard reverse pass
from An twaan Randle El to
Hines Ward - thi s was a
~a me Seattle lost as mu t h as
the Stee lers won.
Mistakes''
The Seahawks were onlv in
the game be~a use Pittsburgh's
Ben Rnethli sberger made a
hu~e error of his own. underthrowing what should have
been a TD pass to Cedrick
Wilson in the third quarter.
In stead. Kellv Herndon took
the underthrown ball back 76
yards, leadin g to a Seattle
touc hdown that made it 14- 10
when it should have been 21 3.
..
Start wi th tile fi rst half,
when the Seahawks con. tro lled play but went off. trai lin n 7-3.
::_Darrel l Jackson w:1s
called for offensive pass inter~
ference for pushing off Chris
Hope on what wo~ld have
been a 16-yard completion
from Matt Hasselbeck. The
call was a lit tle ti cky-tacky,

but ii was a penalty.
- A holding penalty on
Chris Gray that negated an
1 8 ~ ya rd completion from
Hasselbeck to Jackson th at
would ha ve g'iven the
Seahawks a first down at the
Piltsburgh 23.
.
- A 34-yard pu nt return by
Peter
Warrick , to
the
Pittsburgh 46 was called back
by a holding penalty on Etric
Pruitt. Although to be fair,
there's nothing unusual about
a penal ty on any punt or ki ck
in any game 0 •
- . Fi nall y, some dubio us
clock management and play
calling th at forced Josh
Brown into trying a 54-yard
fie ld goal late in the half. 1t
\was wide right, so the Steelers
led 7-3 at intermission despite
being outplayed for· most of
the half.
But that only was a preface
for the mistakes in the second
half - the Roethli sberger
interception , a couple of more
Stevens drops, then finall y,
the decisive penalty on
Locklear.

Oh io State:s players all week.
"We had to li ve with two
tough losses to those guys a
year ago," Matta said.
Di als added. "Thev had
coming
in
confidence
because they beat us twice
last year. They came in here
thinking they cou ld win ."
Minnesota, which had a 30·24 rebound advantage, stayed
in contact wi,th the Buckeyes
until J..J . Su llinger scored on
a follow midwa y through the
second · ha.lf and Foster made
a 3-pointer in front of Ohio .
State 's bench off an in bounds
play.
That made it 52-42 wi th 9
112 minute' rem aining and
the Golden Gophers never

ers, and averaged 10 points in
Big Te.n play after sho9t in g
65 percent and 57 percent
while scoring 16.5 points a
game in the Buckeyes' games
lead ing up to ·conference
play.
·
"Je · Kel ·Foster had an
incred ible game ," Ohio State
coach Thad Matta said .
"Once we got going there a
little bit we were looking to
·
go to him."
Terence Dial s had 15
points and nine rebounds for
the Buckeyes ( 16-3, 5-3 Big got. clb ~er than ~even point.-,
Ten ). wh ile Jamar Butler aQa rn .
·
added I0 points.
-..There were stretches of
The Buckeyes fini shed 9- the game' when neither tearn
of-20 on 3 - pointe~s and shot scored ... Dial&gt; said. "Wi th the
59 percent from the field in type of defense they play. you
the second half to pu ll away. juq have to fi ght thro ugh it.
Freshman Jamal Abu - We did a good job of dni i1g
Shamala had a career-best 16 that.··
po]nts and Adani Boone
Vincent Grier. who had 22
added I0 for the Gopher' poinh and 12 · rebound ' as
.
(10-9, 1-7).
Minne'-!ota won in overti me.
Minne sota
beat
the at Value Cit y Arena· a year
Buckeyes in both meetings ago. wa' ' limited to nine
last season: a fact that nettled poinh and,e1·en rebound' on

Saturday;
"We made our guys realize
the last three days (at practice) how good he is and how
he likes to score," Matta said.
"Last year -here we had a lead
and then he got goi ng."
Ohio State led J3-28 .after a.
sloppy, phy sical ·first half.
Over one 2 112-minute span·,
th e .teams traded seven
turnovers.
Foster was clearly the dif- .
ference, hitting four consecutive 3-pointers after the earl y
miss. He had half of the
Buckeyes ' points as they took
a 24- 17 lead by the 7:30
mark.
"1 just tried to get down the
court and get open before
the y cou ld find me," Foster
said.
The Bu ckeyes are content
to be a game out of first in the
Big Ten midway through the
conference 'chedule.
" We're happy wi th the .way
thing; are going," Sullinger
said . " You can look at our
three losses and can say that
it ; houldn ~ l be th at way. But
there's a lot of basketball left,
and we have ye t to play om
best basketba ll."

but the \1 ounta ineers didn ' t perimeter jumpers and those
wait for . a nail-biti ng fini'h thin gs come and go."
thi ; time.
.J ihad Muhammad . had 15
.
We't
Vi
rg
inia
forced
th
e
.
points
. for the Bearcats and
from Page 81
Hearcah into I X turnover' James White added 10.·
overall and limited th em to
.West Virginia head&gt; into
of Thursday night when. hi ' 36 ·. percent shorlling in the
the tou ghest part of it' conwife went in to labor.
'eClllld h:il f.
ference ;chcdule wi th three
"Kev in is younger th an
The Moumai neer' al"' shot ' traight road games at No .. 9
most of our seniors. and :,o m ~ 36 percent lor t h ~ game but
1No .
17
· men co uld not handle all the com mitted just fi ve foul ' in Pitt sburgh,
Georgetown
and
Seton
Hall
attention the ' way he ha\ ... th eir fir't meetin g with
Weq Virgini a coac h Joh n Cincinnati in M or!.!l.lnlow n in before returnin g home to play
Beilein said . "He is a •c ry 27 year\.· Cincinmlti attempt- top-ranked Con necticut .
Fi ve of rt.' eight remaining
special person...
ed ju \ t four free throw ,.
Bi
g Ea\t ga mes arc or1 the
Cincinnati got no c lo,cr
" It ·' hard for · this team to
n&gt;ad
.
·
,
than seven .point., after th e pl ay catL'h- up agarn't a qu ali "Today's win was much run and We \t Virginia hit fi v~ ty tea m in thi' enviro nment."
needed
hefo re the road trip."
of six free thro w' down the (:inunna ti interim coach
Andy Kennedy ; aid . " I John Bedc in ' aid. "I c;t'n 't
. stretc-h to seal the win .
·West Virginia blew large th ough t our shot selec ti on really \ay : I am ·comforta hle
second-half lead&gt; in it.' last' wa' a litt le bit .poor.. We're nuw. !think our.,chedule ha'
dependent
"n . making hd ped."
two game' - b\lth wrn' -

Bearcats

COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio State likely will wait
three to tive weeks to find
out whether its athletic program will face more sanctions over alleged NCAA
violations after a hearing
Saturday
to
determine
whether self-imposed punishments were adequate . .
Ohio State banned the
men 's basketball team from
postseaso n play last year and
fired coach Jim O'Brien. The
sc hool· conceded to violation s including extra benefits
for players, such as a booster.
giving . housi ng, meals · and
cash to former baske tball
player Boban Savovic.
"Over. the next number of
weeks, the committee . will
make· de.c ision,s on which of

the , allegations are .. infraclions and decide on penal ties," NCAA spokesman
Kent Barrett said after the
two-day heari ng in Chicago.
Athletic director Gene
Smith "had been instructed
by the NCAA not to comment on any aspect of the
heari ng or the case," Ohio
State spoke sman Steve
Snapp said .
The university has conceded nine violatrons, seven in
,the men 's basketball program and one each for tbe
women 's basketball and
foo tbaH teams. Ohio State
argues th at it shouldn' t .be
held liable for some violations because O' Brien made
it. impossible for athletic
administrators to know about

th em.
The university also said it
would have II men's basketball scholarships this season
instead of the maximum 13..
0' Brien was fired after
retired athletic director Andy
Geiger said the coach
ack now ledged · giving a
recruit $6,700.
O'B rien, who attended the
NCAA hearing, is suing the
university for $9.5 million
saying he was wrongfully
.fi red. O'Brien says the loan
of his own money to
Aleksandar Radojevic, a 7foot-3 prospect from Serbia,
was not a violation because
· he knew Radojevic already
had fo rfeited his amateur status by playing professionally. . .
·
· ·

It's Time To
NEs:......

Race for the Nextel Cup Preview

Februarv 11, 2006

The Daily Sentinel
. 992-2156

;;o t' E NTS • \ ol. :;;; . No.

·1 l ' I·:S U .\ Y , F I·. H IU I:\ K \' - .

1:!;!

:!Oil(&gt;

" "" . "" " "

• Eagles lose on late
3-pointer. See Page 81

ble problems with traftic tlow Llesigns for the new pol ic-e
and any other concerns the cruiser which will be arriving
village may have concerning sometime in April .
RACINE - Racine is mak- the logistics yf the project and
Jones informed corrn 1·i1 un
ing every effort , to ge t pre- · how it may affect everyday the status of two inui'vlchials
pared for an influx of traffic life in Raci'ne.
suspected
in
hurg !Jite;
once the construction of the
Hill hopes to have an AMP- throughout t he village. Jones
new coal tired power plant Ohio representative at the said one of the suspects, Gary
by
Ame ri ca n meeting as we ll as 'representa- Johnson. was sentenced to one
planned
Municipal Power (AMP)- tives from the Racine year in prison yesterday in
Ohio gets underway.
Volunteer Fire Department. Meigs County Common Pleas
When thai actual construe- M,e igs County Economic Court for hi s alleged cri mes.
tion begins wi ll be one of the Development Director Perry Jones added that burglary wsquestions planned for a future Varnadoe, Meigs Collnty peel Joshua Rowe failed to
meeting on the subject at the Commissioners and Racine show up in Meigs County
Racine
Volunteer
Fire Council .members.
Common Pleas Court yestcr:
The $ 1.2 billion pl ant day and anyone with informaDepartment though a date for
l hat meeting has not been con- planned by AMP-Ohio is 'tion on his whereabouts are
firmed.
. ,
anticipated to go online by , asked to call the Racine Police
. At las~ mght s regular ses- 2012 and provide 600-800 Department at 949-2296 or
sron of Racme Vrllage ·construction jobs and employ the Meigs County Sheriff\
Counci l Mayor J. Scott Hill 150 permanent employees.
Office at 992-3 37 1.
sard he had bee.n m contact
Also during last night' s
Jones then recommended
wrth a representatrve fro m council meeting Racine Police fo rmer Syrawse Chief of
AMP-Ohro concern rng setti ng Marshal Curtis Jones present. up a meetrng to dr.scuss pos&gt;t- ed co uncil with striping . Pleas!! see Racine, AS
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Beth Sergent; photo

Racine Vi llage Council· met in regular session· last night and for
the first time in several months al l six co unci l seats were
filled . creating a full house. The latest versio n vf counci l is (sitting, from left) Counci lmen Ivan Powell, Jason Shain , Ike
Spencer, Clerk-Treasurer David Spencer; (standing, from left)
Councilmen James Harmon, Pau l Cardone, Mayor J. Scott Hill .
Coun cilman Tom Reed .

TPRSD faces empty .
board table next month

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Lany 'Dobie' Thomas

BY BRtAN .J. REED

.BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE
• Senators challenge
Gonzales' defense of
eavesdropping.
See Page A2 .
• Iran tells IAEA to
remove surveillance
cameras, ag~ncy seals
by next week.
See Page A2 ·
• Chester-Shade plans
clothing and cultural
workshop. See Page A3
• Meigs County court
news. See Page A3
· • States rush to stop
church from picketing
soldier funerals.
SeePage AS
• Almost all Ohio drivers
still have Social Security
numbers on licenses.
See Page AS
• Grangers learn ways to
protect against identity
theft. See Page A5
• Block grants struck by
proposed federal budget
cuts. See Page A6

•

~-

Submitted photo

Meigs High School students look over material pertaining to the new .Qh lo Graduation Tests.

STIJDENI'S .GEf OVERVIEW OF
arid hi g h~r ei.lucatitm . .
At the conference Dennis
Eichinger. principal. disPOMElWY - What stu- cussed resources and tool s
dents need to know and how available to st uden ts to assist
they can bN prepare for the ·them in preparing for the tests
new Oh io Graduation Tests and emphasized that students
(OGT) was detai!Cd at a stu- will be required to pa" the
den t-parent awareness ~onfer- OGT in order to receive a
ence held last week at Mei gs diploma in 2007.
Hi gh School.
·.
,
"This is why we had the
The Ohro Nrnt h-Grade . conference · becau'e it is
Proficiency Tesb · are being essential that both the sl\1phased out and replaced with · dents· and ·their parems are
the new OGT to en&gt;ure that awa~e of the new. require students are anned wtth the ments." said Ei c hin ~er.
kn owledge th ey need in
Thi s week a practice test i'
today 'global economy to be being taken as a first step in
successful ttl the work Ioree getting prepared. "This way
B)'

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

they would hope someo ne
would be wi lling Ill donate to
them .
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. . ·'What if the tal)les we re
- Very few people ge t .th e turned'' I would 'ti re hope
chance to save 'o meo ne's life . th at S&lt;•meone would give · fiu·
But for Mason County resi- me. If it were my child. I
dent s Steve Click and Andrea woLJid want everybody P'"·' iHender,on, that chance has hie to sign up." Hender,nn
become a realit y.
said ..
After registering with th e
Click agreed. "tyi ng that
National Marrow Donor through personal ex perience.
Pro·~ ram at a marrow Unve in h~ knew what it wa:-. ll~ e tn he
Point Pleasar1 t last vcar. both nn the othe r siLie or the tab le.
Click and Hender;on went Two year&gt; ago. hb brother.
about their dai ly live'. (' lid John. ne~dcd a ., tcm cell
a\ a husband and dad in tran,p lant during hi ' .. h;rttle
Mount Alto. W,Va .. and a re11-- with le ukem ia. Th&gt;rnkrul l\.
istered nurse at Holze r Clime · Clic-k was a .mat ~ h fo r hi,
in (ia lli poli '. '.llld Hende rson brpthcr. who ha.' bt•e n in
a~ a wi fe amJ mother 'in re mi~ ~ ion for th ~ ra-..t year.
Hendc,rsnn. w.V&lt;t.. and a
That ri N c~ pcriell l'L' he lp~d
teac her at Po int Plc:t&gt;an t prepare Clic·~ lor l' hatc,er
Inte rmediate Schnol.
might happen th i' time
Both 'aid they reg istered to .· .~,. &gt;und .
tlonate marrow he~: a use if i ~
·· 1 wh' nL·n ou' the fir' I
were the other way around. time. hut I J rd rr ·t ha\c an~
BY NICOLE FtELDS

NFIELDS@MYDAILYR EGISTER.COM

Details on Page A6

INDEX
2 SF.CTIONS- 12 PAGES

A3
B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby ·.

A3

Obituaries
· Sports
Weather

A4
As
B Section
Afr

© aoob Ohln Vnlh~~· l'uhlist,ii:IJI: ('o,

TUPPERS PLA INS - The
Tuppers Plains Re gional
Sewer Di,trict "'ill hav e no
board and no employees next
month unless li\·e volunteers
corne forw ard to fill vacancies on the board. The futt~re
control af the board wil l likely rest ill th e hands of a Ioral
court if no volun teers are
found .'
There wil ! be fi ve vacant
·positions on the board as
March 14. repre sen tin g all
board posit ions . Despi te a
public ap peal and attempts to
persuade residents to take
board ' positions, none have
. ste pped forward. accordin g. to
Loretta
· Murph )·.
secretarvltreasurer of th e
board , ·
What happens if no volun teer~
L•ome
forwa rd.,
Common Pleas Court Judge

Fred W. Crow Ill has asked
Prosec uting Attorney Patri ck
Story to in vestigate possible
recourse in the matter. to
determ ine what will happen
to th e bQard· s operat ion s if
willin g board me1i1 ber' do not
&gt;tep forward
The board nreanc ie&gt; have
been pubiished in The Daily
Sentrnel. and several people
in the comm uh ity ha\·e been
a;ked tn fill the po,ition; ..
"If no one comes fort h at
the March 13 sewer board
meeting. the di,tri.:t will no
lon ger ha ve an ac ting board .
mafntenance
wo rker or
clerk ... Murph y said . "The
authori ties ha1·e heen notified
of the 'ituation hut the district
ha's ye t to be informed· of
what \\·ilLtuke place if no volunteers &gt;tep forward."
meh1 ber\
are
· Board
app~inted hy Crow. Murphy
Please see TPRSD, AS

NEW GRADUATION TEST
the 'tudcnh wil l know where
they arc riow and what they
need to stud y." commented
the princi pal. "There are web
sile&gt; and different tools to
suppurt the student&gt; 'b they
move along." The fir&gt;1 re&lt;tl
teq \\ill be ci&gt; en on March
15.
'
Eichinger ~aid that ~e nior~
thi , vear are 'ti ll on the prnfi cienq te\1 hu t th i' year\·
junior d a&gt;S 11 ill have to pass
th e r1c w te&gt;t which abo deal s
with read i n ~. \\:rit in e. mut he ~
matlcs. ~ci~ m;e. i.ul ll soc ia l

studic,. All ,tudcnts mu st take
Please see Test. AS

Residents saving.lives by donating niarnJ'w, stem cells

Calendars ·

i h -.·nt in.-1."""

Racine prepares for traffic from AMP-Ohio plant

.SPORTS

Editorials

Advertising Deadline is February 9, 2006

tne

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Classi fieds

Don't miss out.on this great opportunity
to have your business included!

•

at

WEATHER

~allipoli• JBailp Utrtbune
446-2342
Joint Jlea,ant l\egt~ter
675-1333

NASA Glenn losing
jobs, searching for role in
space exploration, A6

~

and lost Hearings end into OSU allegations ·

How the game was won
BY DAVE GOLDBERG

Irvin sat , in the audience
Madden has the best win- Jones, perhaps the greatest
when Aik'man's election !WaS ·ning percentage of any NFL defen sive end ever.
"I kind of wanted to change
announced. The wide receiver coach wirh 100 victories
didn't make the finals in his (.759). He coached the my mind," he joked.
Oakland Raiders for I0 years
"I never dreamed I would
second year of eligibility.
Smith claimed Friday the and won the 1977 Super be a profession;tl football
.
· player, didn't even want to
panel of 39 media members Bowl.
who vote were swayed
"1 was coming over here play football. I am so overaga inst Irvin because of his and saying. 'They can' t take whelmed at this time and so
off-fteld problems, including this away. can they?"' he said. honored."
pleading no contest .to felony Then Madden pumped his
Carson, in his seventh year
cocatne
posscsswn
Ill fi sts and banged the podium, as a fma li st, was on a t)ight to
excliange for. four years 1of hi s jowls turnin¥ red , the Hawaii . and un avai lable for
deferred probation, a $ 10.000 smi le never waverrng. ,
comment. A. nine-t ime Pro
fine and dismi " al of misde"People always ask are you Bowl linebacker who retired
meanor marijuima possession a coach or a broadcaster or a from the New York Giants in
charges.
video game guy?" he added. 1988. he has been a freq uent
Th-e Hall'' vot ing bylaws "I'm a coach, always been a critic of the process, even saying he wanted off future balpreclude consideration of coach ."
non-fbotball issues.
Raiders owner AI Davis lots .
"Any level of disappoint- saw it the same way.
'Tm just elated by Harry's
"I think someday the e~i - electi on." said Dallas coach
ment 1have is undermined by
my joy for Troy," Irvin said. taph that shall be his will Bill Parcells, who coached
"Last year this time, I was in read: ' He was a . football Carson wi th the Giants. "He
my room crying. 1 cou'Jdn 't coach, he was a brilliant foot-. was a tremendous pl~yer and
move. Now, I'm out here and. ball coach,"' he said .
an integral part of one of. the
Wright, like Madden, .vyas NFL's , best two or three
I'm going to laugh and enjoy
.
elected by the seniors com- defenses for several years,"
this moment for Troy.
"It's not about me, it's about mittee after their eligibility on
Running back . Thurman
Troy." ·
the reg ular ballot ex pired. The Thomas , the 199 1 league
And abput Madden , the long wait didn ' t temper any MVP and the catalyst of
coach-b ro adcas t er-video excitement for the converted Buffalo's four straight AFC
game entrepreneur whose tight end who recalled hi s first. championships in the early
boyish exci tement lit up the assignment as a Cow boys .1990s, fell short in his first
ballroom.
·
· tackle was to block Deacon try.

'I have a face like everyone
else,' transplant
patient says, A2

ch&lt;lice - I had to \Ct\e mv
hrnthcr\' life. Thi' time . l'ri1
not · a' ltcn·nus . That's ,;·hat .
it'., all aboLit : 'aving li1·es." he.
'ai d
...
Sn Click &lt;llld Heni.le Nl!l
rc~ i,t cred · tn d01wW Lie spite
' t:tti,ti c.' that ' Lt ug,·,ted their
chann~.., nf . hl'inf.._; l f'OIL'Iltial

tll&gt;th Sergoni/PI&gt;oto

Excess dirt from the new bri dge co~struction is being dumped
on a .tot along West Main Street in th\' hopes that one day in
the tar distance futu re it will become a new access road 1nto
Monkey R.un and a possible s1te for ·new commercial de velo pment by the v11tage. The d~rt IS be1ng dumped and bulldozed
free of charge by contracto rs C.J. Mahan. Thrs dun1ping sho uld
continue througH July.

Dil't .to lay foundation for ·
new road into l\lonkey Run
BY BETH

SERGENT

'BS.E RGENT@M 'rD~I~Y SENT!NE LCO M

lll ah..' h for :-ot\lllL~o ll l' \\l' rc \t'f\

'lint. In la,·t. man~ pc&lt;&gt;pl~
fL'gi :-. t~r. an d

arc

llC\'~ r

a

nlar,.: h.

.-\cc &lt;'rJi n~

r l'nl

P0:-.1EROY -

Pomerov

... i tl'

alung

\\ ·~...,,

~1ain

.-\II that J rrt Srrcc·t r' the c'l&lt;&gt;&gt;e't Llum r site

bei ng dumpL'd ~IL' n ~ ...... frnm
~h: Di..llla h.h.

10

\LI ~\)1" Jl1hll'\ t u ...... cr the cuf-

C.J . \lah.tn l'UulJ ha\c: and
I..' I)Jl!ra~.·ll11'"' .m.· Jb•.' Jona t ~

on · \\'c..,t · :\t a i·n tl11..'

Hut tl1at ~&gt;a 'l r·l 1hc ,.,t,c St rce·t 11ill 'omeda1 lx- tile' · i n~ bu lld1l!er 11m ~.
here. lk ndcNrn ;aid 'he \\as · t'olmdaiion f&lt;&gt;r " 1ie11' road
' The gt~;tl '' ·'"'the 1illage
notified la,t September that 1 into ~h&lt;nl.n Run . iu't nnt tn c'\cllluall' fill up tilt' bot·
\ h~ \\ ll"' a prc]imin ,tr~ !llllll'h t \(lllll'da) rea'] "0011. .
lulll .111d huild .1 Ill'\\ rnaJ
fnr d -+ 5 ~ \-ear-old \\lHil&lt;m h~tt - I

tlinc ktikcnna . .'lftc·r additiu n'"al hlnqd \\uri-. wa" · Jon~.

Th!.! Jin j, lJrlginat i n~ twm

tile eon,tnrc:tion &gt;i te ncar th,·
IW\\ hridcc and j.., hl'in~ .
. , Ill' ,,.a.., l\)ld in Octnbcr that r J~ll11PL'd ·a{ no c.harge to th~
..,ilL' '' ih .1 u 1111plL'tl' m:llL' h . .1 ' 1l Llgc · h~
C ..l . . !\ 1ahan
:1nd 1111 Ja n. 26· 27 ,hi.' \\Cil t to CoJhtl'u~.· tilHl. the L·n ntr;h..·tpr,
Co lumhth. Oh1n. h&gt; h:t1e her · huildin e the ne11 hrrd~e .
hone ql&lt;tn." ll\\ L'X~rarted .
\ 'illai!l'... Adlllllll"lratnr J{;lm
.A.nlkf·,on •. , l l\'cr ... ccm~ the
Please see Marrow, AS
1iro i~c· t.

ht.ll'l-. tn ~1onl-.c' Run. th&lt;)LH!h '

thJt cnal ma1 ·be far rn th e
tutur~ .

·

"' At 'om..: po int in ' I1111C if
"c 12L' l !..'r~mh '' C '' nuld hu i lc..l
t..:u rJ), .tlld pa'e the-qrecl and

tiM! '"'ulJ' "e the bc,t &lt;tet·e"
1111') \h )nk~' Rlln ... Mu !&lt;~~Cr
Please see Road, AS

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