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                  <text>Page 86 • Lne LJally ::.enbnel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, March 13.2006

Four shot then hanged .
by Mahdi anny in
revenge for Sadr
City bombings, A2

Johnson_passes Ken~eth
for last-lap win at Vegas

,

· APphoto

Team U$A's. Derek Jeter, left. greets Alex Rodriguez after Rodriguez hit the game winning base
hit in the bottom of n1ntl1 inning again st Japan in the World Baseball Classic in Anaheim, Calif.,
O'n Sunday. USA won 4-3. '

United States rallies past Japan, 4-3
ANAHEIM . Calif. (A P) Alex
Rodri guez
ca me
through with the winning hit
for the United States· afte r
Japan appeared . to ge t the
short end of a controversial
call .
Rodriguez hit a ba sesloaded, two-out single in the
ninth Sunday to give Team
USA a 4-3 victory in the
opener of Round 2 in the
inaugural World Base ball
Classic.
Vernon Well s opened the
ninth with his third hit. at1d
Randy Winn sacrificed. but
reac~ed first when sec ond
baseman Tsuyos hi Nishioka
drew an error for coming off
the base whi le catching' third

baseman Akinori Iwamura 's eighth when lwamura flied
to left with ·one out and the
throw.
Lose r Kyuji Fujikawa bases loaded . Nishioka beat
threw out Wells at third on Winil's throw home. but
,Mi chael Young's attempted umpi're Neil Poulton ruled
sacrifice , and Derek Jeter Nishioka left the base before
was ·hit by a pitch to load the the catch was made . It didn't
bases. .
·
·
seem· that way on the televiKen Griffey struck out sian replay, and manager
before Rodriguez appeared · Sadaharu Oh argued to no
to be jammed on a I -I pitch, avail.
but hi s grounder got past
Japan loaded the bases in
Fujikawa arid Nishioka 's the ninth on three walks
sliding attempt behind sec- before winner Brad Lidge,
and was unsuccess ful. The Team USA's sixth pitcher,
run was unearned because. of struck out Hiyoshi Tamura tQ
Nishioka's .error. · Rodriguez end the· inning.
Derrek Lee and Chipper
went 2-for-5, making him 7ot'- 14 in the Class ic.
Jones also homered for the
Japan appeared to take a 4- United States. lchiro Suzuki
3 lead off Joe Nathan in the homered for Japan.

RB ·Edgerrin.James signs
.$30 million deal with Arizona
BY

gone after month's ' Super Bowl, Will
settmg team receive $ 11.5 mil·lion in
Edgerrin Jame s ' prides
records for · guara.ntced money,' an offihimself on taking risk s. .He
r u s h i n g cial within the league said
a t t e m p t s on condition of anonymity
just took the biggest one of
hi s career.
(. 2 , I 8 8) , becau se
the
Redskin s
· James ran off to the
y a. · r d · s haven ' t announced the deal.
Cardinals · on
(9,226) and
The signing comes one
Arizona
Sunday, agreeing to a fourtouchdowns · day after the Redskins sent a
year, $30 million contract
(64).
third-round pick in this
with a long-downtrodden
James will year's draft and a fourthfranchise that had the worst
James
r e c e 1 v e round selec tion in · 2007 to
runnin g game in the NFL a
$ 11.5 mil- San Francisco for receiver
¥ear ago .
lion in bonus money, mak- Brandon Lloyd . Receiver
: The two- time league· ru sh- ing hi s first year compensa- was the top free-agent priorjog champion , who became tion $14.75 million, accord- ity for the Redskins, who
.n free age nt after 'eve n se a- ing to hi s agent, Drew .needed someone to complel;ons with the Co lt s, knew Rose nhau·s. The remaining ment Pro · Bowl wideout
there was little cha.nce he $ 15.25 million will be paid Santana' Moss. The surprise
would return t.o Indianapol is out over the final three is that the team landed not
when the season ended in a yea" of the deal.
one, but two.
loss to Pitt sb urgh in the
Jame s joins a franchi se
As for Brees, age nt Tom
AFC division~! ro und .
' that has had one winning Condon declined to charac : Now. he. llj!USt face life season si nce coming to terize negotiations but said
without Pey ton Manning. Arizona in 1988, but the a deal" Was unlikely before
Marvin Harrison and Regg ie Cardinal s will move into Monday at the earliest, with
Wayne . Of co urse. Jam es their long-·awaited new sta- Brees pl anning io remain in
be lieves the Cardinals have dium - with a ret.ractable Miami overnight.
.a pretty good· trjo in ·Kurt roof- thi s fall.
.In other moves Sunday:
Warner, Anquan Boldin and
Boldin lobbied hard for
- The . Texaos signed
.
James, telling him that he quarterback Sage Rosenfel s,
Larry FitLgerald.
. "OK it: , a risk. But hey. was the key mis sing piece. defen·siv.e end Anthony
J'm a pok er pl ayer.. You ca n
''We ' re se rious about win- Weaver an.d rullback Jameel
take it to the ri ve r,'· James ning,'' Cardinals vice presi - Cook.
·
&amp;aid . 'T m not scared to take dent Mic hael Bidwill said.
- Punter Dave Zastudil
a cha nce. I'm not scared to "The new stadium allow s Us signed a five -year contract ·
go out the re on a limb and to do some things that we with the Cleveland Browns.
(jo something different"
haven't been able to do the third free agent with
The Viking s also made a before.··
' Ohio football roots to sign
The Vikings ha ve been with the club in the past two
stron g pu sh to upg r~de th eir
offen se Sundily. signirrg All- ac tive. too.
days. On Saturday, the cl ub
Pro Ste ve Hutchin so n to the
Hu tc hin son ·arri ved in the signed two-time Pro Bowl
ri chest offe r sheet fo r a Tw in Citi es for ·a visit center LeCharl es Bentley
guard 111 NFL history. Saturday nig ht ami signed and WR Joe Jurevicius, who
o!Te.r~d the offe r sheet Sund ay after- both · grew up in the
Minnesota
H ul ch in son a seve n· year · noon . The Seatt le Seahawks CJeveland area rooting for
dea l worth $4~ mil li on. with placed th e tran siti.on tag on the Browns.
$16 million in guaranteed Hutc hin son in the offseason,
- Receiver Andre' Davi s
money, a person close. to the giving them ·a week to signed with the Buffalo
toJ.d
The match the deal or lose him Bilh, the team's third freenegotiatio ns
to the Vikings wi thoutco m- agent additi on· in two days.
Assoc iated Pre'·' ·
- The Baltimore Rave ns
The Red sk ins also had pensation.
another eventful da y. agreeThis se aso n. Hutchinson re-s igned .linebacker Bart
ing to tenm wi th Antwaan ·and Walter Jones paved the Scott after he turned down a
Ra ndle El on il 'even-yea r way for NFL rushing cham- large r, longe r-term offer
con tract that could he worth pion Shaun Alexander, who from the Cleve land Brown s.
up
to
$31
mlil·ion . had a team-record I ,880 · They al so signed DT Justin
Meanwhi le. free-agen t quar - yarlh and .·a league-record Bann an. Late Saturday, they ,
reached an agreement in
terback Drew Bree s com- n touchdow ns.
The Seahaw ks refused to principle with four, time Pro
pletcd a visit wit h the Saint '
in New Orleans an·d then co mm e nt Su nd ay. Seattle Bow l defe nsive end Trevor
flew to Miam i to ta lk with entered th e weekend about Pryce, a starter for th e
~ 1 7 million below the $ 102 Den ver Broncos for the last
Dolphins officials.
·But the biggest surpri se of million sa lary ca p,for 2006. mne seasom .
the day was Ja mes.
With · suc h a large offer on · -Defen sive end Darren ··
Co lt\ president Bill Polian the table. ho wever, th e How ard visited the Eagle'
admilled last month he was Vikings have 1.n atle it a'·dif- a nd wa' to re main in
taki ng a gamble by deciding ficult as Cil n he fo r the Philade lphia
ove rni ght.
, Howard said he didn't have
again't putting the fran c hise Seah.awk,.
tag on Jame,,
which
Randle EL a ve rsatile .ta l- any oth er visits pla nned and
all owed him hi.t the free - ent who .threw a touchdown hoped to work out a deal .
age nt ma rket : Now J &lt;~me.; i&gt; P"'·' for ~ill sb u rgh. in las t wi thth e Eagles . .
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LAS VEGAS (AP) - ..- - - Jimmie Johnson took advantage of a late-race caution
flag Sunday at Las Ve~as
Motor Speedway, catchmg
and passing Matt Kenseth in
a two-lap overtime sprint to
the fini sh in the NASCAR
Nextel
Cup
UAWDaimlerChrysler 400.
·
Johnson' s
No.
48
Chevrolet
surged · past
II Kenseth's Nn. 17 Ford on the
outside after the . two sped
side-by-side through the
third and fourth turns on the
1.5-mile oval for the final
time. The winner crossed by
finish line 0. I 15 seconds about half a ~ar-length ahead as he led a lap for the
only time in the 271-lap
event
.
It was· Johnson's second
stmight win here, but this
one was a lot harder than
2005 when he led 107 laps.
"That was so much fun,"
Johnson said. "I knew if I
could get to his outside and
get around him I knew the
,
car was going to drive good.
~......;.....:,'_ __JL.__ _
I just didn 't want to push the
.
·
AP photo
issue. Then they had that Jimmie Johnson holds up a trophy belt as he celebrates his
green-white-checker at the victory in the Nascar Cup series UAW·DaimlerChrysler 400 at
end."
. ·
,
Las Vegas Motor Speedway in Las Vegas on Sunday.
It appeared through !)lost of
·
·
the race that Kenseth was son have gone into overtime
With lead engineer Darian
going to get an easy win after because ollate-race cautions. Grubb stepping in for Knaus, '
being handed a vtctory two
After getting out of the car, Johnson wtll head to Atlanta i
weeks ago in California when Kenseth said, "Nobody likes Motor Speedway next week
front-runners Greg Biffle and to run second. We led all day. with a 52-point lead over
Tony Stewart succumbed to ... If I tried any harder, we Kenseth in the standings.
late-race engine problems.
were going to wreck. I just
Local boy Kyle Busch, who
Kenseth, who won here in . got beat"
ran second to Johnson last
2003 and 2004, led a race- · Asked if he thought about year, finished third •. followed
high 146 laps and was out trying to block Johnson 's by Kasey Kahne, Jeff Gordon
front and almost assured of move to the outside, Kenseth and Mark Martin.
•
victory before a collision said, "I , was running in the
Two-time and reigning Cup
between
rookie
Denny groove where my car was the champion Stewart had his
. Hamlin and · Kenny Wallace fastest If 1had to redo it right second straight disappointing
brought out the last of seven . now, I don't think there was finish after running fifth in
caution flags on lap 264 of the anything I jcould have . done Daytona. He led 54 .laps
race scheduled to go 267 laps. different" ·
.
Sunday and stayed in the top
. A dejected Kenseth told
Johnson 'is off to a great five until the last few laps
him crew by radio his engine strut in 2006, winning the when he had a tire rllbbing
didn't feel strong for the Daytona 500 and finishing and fell ba~k into the pack,
restart, but , he was' able to second in California before finishing 21 st.
hold off Johnson for a lap and taking his 20th career win on
Stewart became angry at
a half after the green flag Sunday. And he's' doing it Busch late in the race. reachwaved for the final ume on without crew chief Chad ing out the window and shaklap 270.
Knaus, banned by NASCAR ing hi s fist at the younger dri"Sorry, you guys won a for th~: first four races of the ver and bumping the rear of
race and I lost it," Kenseth season after . making unap' Busch· s car at one point. The
said to hi s crew, "Can't do no proved modifications · to defending champ lS 19th in
more, I don't know."
Johnson 's car in Daytona the siandings, already 236
All three Cup races this sea- qualifying.
points behind Johnson.

ijtbe

maflp.$!nttnel

2Q,~Q6 ,. &amp;,P.RING

SP8:
&amp;
t:s
GUIDE
,. :,: '. coOlin!!
·

.
Thursda~~\ March
'

.~.

";.

.

'

~

.

30.• 2006

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:; o ( I:vrs • Vol. :;:;. :"'in.

t..r

Pomeroy Code Enforcement Officer one step.closerto reality

SPORTS

BY BETH SERGENT

• Women's tournament
,dtaw. See Page 81

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

0BOUARIES

POMEROY- Slum lords,
high weeds, irresponsible pet
owners ~eware! Th~ Pomeroy
Code Enforcement Officer
may be on your heels in the
coming weeks.
At last night' s meeting of
Pomeroy Village Council the
first reading was held for
implementing the position of
Pomeroy Code Enforcement
Officer I . Village Police
Officer.
The enforcement officer
will in fact have all the powers of a Pomeroy Police
Officer, includi,ng the power
'to arrest:
.
ln.order to achieve this stli· tils of Pomeroy Police Officer
the enforcement officer will
have to pass a physical. The
enforcement officer would
also be paid the rate of a fulltime Pomeroy Police Officer
which is $8.79 per hour.

In order for the enforce- · cussion re garding personnel
ment officer to hit the streets in the police department
of Pomeroy and begin issuing resulted in Tammy 'Smith
citations, ordinance 718 must being appointed as a full-time
have two more reading s and police di spatcher, while
be approved by council. Heaiher Wise was appointed
Other details such as building the clerk of Pomeroy Mayor's
inspections fees that the offi- Court and office manager.
cer would enforce but the
Council al so made motions
general fund would receive to improve conditions at
the proceeds from have not Beech Grove Cemetery by
been fin~lized.
agreeing to purchase a new
Council adjourned into flag pole for the cemetery and
executive session once to dis- pay Jones Tree Service $6500
cuss police department and . to trim and/or remove danwater department personnel gerous trees in the cemetery.
issues. The personnel issues The money for these purchasfor the police department es will be taken from the
were in regards to personnel cemetery fund .
,
in char_ge · of mayor's court
Council also agreed to
while t11e personnel issues for allow
the
Pomeroy· the water department were Middleport Lions Club to
never elaborated on.
·
take over maintenance of the
However, nd motion was cemetery:s gazebo. The club
made after the executive .ses- will place a commemorate
sion discussion regarding per- plaque on the gazebo as well
sonnel issues in the water as at the stage on the parking
department.
.lot where the club has
The executive session dis-- worked, and benches the club

• Report: One in 10
companies with GSA contracts owes federal taxes. ·
See Page A2
• Republicans observe
Uncoln Day dinner.
See Page A3
• Ohio First scholarship
awarded to Zach Weber.
See Page A3
i Stewart announces
funding for OU library
renovation. See Page A3
• Judge orders
competency test for man
accus8d of threat on plane.
SeePageA6 .
• Meeting set to discuss
joint marketing initiative.
SeePage AS
• Transfers posted.
SeePage AS
• Pot!'!ntial Meigs County
Court jurors. See Page A6

SIGNS OF SPRING

Charlie Daniels
band returns to
area June 24
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYTR IBUNE .COM

.

,

Yesterday the temperature rose to nearly 80 degrees before the thunderstorms rolled in and dropped ·us back into winter. Shortly
before the rain began to fall Angelina M&lt;Jstrippolito (left) daughter of Angela and ·AngeloMastrippol ito took a moment to make a
new friend, Maddie Combs, daughter of Shelly and Rob Combs next to the daffodils outside the Me igs County Hea lth Department

12

PAGES

A3

'

Call' Dave or Brenda
, .at 992-215.5 I

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

A3

Sports
Weather

.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILVSENTINELCOM .

INDEX
Calendars

Beth Sergont j photo

.

Health Department's 2005 report reflects variety of services

Details on Page A8

2SEcriONS -

J

tire s to a dump site in
Weston , W.Va. whi ch charges ,
$100 per ton. It is estimated
th&lt;!l the tire ~ ·can be delivered
in one trip, wei ghing ·approximately one ton. ·
Out of regular session
Vill age Admini strator John
Anderson announced that the
sewer department will be
smoke te sting sewer· lines
sometime this week, weather
permitting. The testing should
last for one da and be releY .
gated to West Matn Street
nea~ the Wlid 1-!orse Cafe up
· to and mcludmg part s of
Butternut Avenue .
. . Anderson satd the smoke
is harmless and is used to
alert workers ol places where
odor can escape m the hnes.
All members of Council
were present for the meeung .
They were JOmed by HyselL
Anderson.
Kuchen
and
Pomeroy Chief of Police
Mark E. Proffitt.

INSIDE

-

• '

has provided throughout the
village. ·
Jim Kitchen presented
council a new American Flag
on behalf of the Pomeroy
Ameri can Legion for the
cemetery.
. Mayor
John
Musser
reported that the Village still
ha s nor heard from the
Federal
Emergency
Management · Agency in
regards to ,accepting the bid
to re]Jatr the park mg lot wall .
Counctl approved no more
than $700 for the installations
of a drof ceiling and two
addition a light s in ClerkTreasurer Kathy Hysell 's new
office on the second floor of
the municipal building. . ·
· Council approved up tg
5750 for chemicals to remove
algae .in the Mulberry Pond .
Due to a previous vendor
backing out of removing the
old tires from behind the
Pomeroy Junior High SchooL
council agreed to haul the

..

Page A3
• Arbeautis.Rice
Walburn ·
• Bill H. Bretz
• Frances Clark
• Helen (Leifheit) Carper
• Herbert 0 . Hoover

WEATHER

your advertising space today! .
Advertising deadline is
Friday, Minch 24, 2006

" " " · "'~&lt;l.•il "' ' "';""' · •·um

ll!ESI&gt;AY, MARCil 14, 20oh

.

Reserv~

Rio baseball, softball
continues spring trip, Bt

B ·section
A6

© 2006 Ohio Valley Publ,lshinx Cu. -

POMEROY - · Healthrelated activities ranging
from pre'ven tati v~ care to
treatment programs along
.with achieving environmental issue solutions .continued
to be the focus of the Meigs
Coun.t y Health ·Department
in 2005.
It was a bu s~ year for the
agency, according to stallstic s contained in the annual
report on services released
today by Larry MarshalL '
health commissioner.
. He•again defined his philosophy as commissioner in
the report - "to proviqe
· quality health care services
and knowledge in. a spirit of
trust and confidence to all
persons independent of their·
soc ial and economic circumstances, thereby empower·
ing the·m as individuals who
Charlene Hoeftlch/ photo
arc able to make informed
choices about their i\ves and Personnel of the Me igs County Health Department includes. left to right. Andrew. Brumfield.
well being ."
Dortha Riffle . Dawn Tatvm. Beth Cremeans: second row. Sherry Hayman. Courtney S1m. Beckt
Most programs at the Ball . Brenda Curfman . Sandra Cunnmgham . and Pam Sharp: thtrd row. Conn1 e Little . Edwma
Bell and Kyle Ord. and fourth row. Keiltl Little. Sherry W11cox, larry Marsha ll. ·Frank Gorscak.
Please see.Servlces.'As
and Don Hodge. Personnel not pictured are Debbie Howell
and Barbara V11aki 1J a.
.

GALLIPOL.IS - The "legendarv man and hi s band" are
returning io Gallipoli s. ·
The Charlie Daniels Band
will be perfenning live in
concert on Saturday, June 24
at the Kanauga Drive-In on
Ohio at 7:30p.m. The band's
last area appearance at the
Gallia County Junior Fair in
2003 set an all-time attendance record at the fair. ·
Known for . the hit songs.
The Dev il Went . Down to
Georgia,
Long
Haired
Country Boy. Uneasy Rider
and manv more. the COB has
'been a force in music for over .
30 years. Daniels ~o ntinues .
to play America's music as he .
has won many awards.
including Grammys , in coun try.
roc k. gospel and
Christian music categories.
His devout faith and patriotism &gt;how&gt; in man y of the
songs he has written thoughout hi' career.
Opening act for the Charlie
Dani els Band will be
Sissonville. W.Va.. native
Ada til D. ·Tu cker and hi s
'Custom llui ll Band .
Tucker has been building a
. career and fan followi ng
th roughou t the regi1ln from·
New York to Florida over the
past two . years. He has performed with Darryl Worley.
Tracv Bvrd. Trace Adkins
and rnam' ot hers and he is set
to head line several fairs and
festiYaJ.s thi s summer. He is
currelllil in the studto in·
Na,hYille working on his first
major recordi'ng project.
Ad1·atKe ti.:kcts are now on
'ale for S2.~ and can be pur,·ha,ed h1 phone at ( 304)
342-5757 or onhne at
w ww .ltc ketma&gt;t er.co m .
Sen·i&lt;'c ,·harge' and handling ·
fees will appl) . Ti ckets may
abo be pur,·ha,ed loca lly in
Gal lipoli' at the Ka nauga
Dri' e In 1740-44h- I088) or
the .l\.1o1·ie St:tt ion 17 40-446~
'

Pleilse see Daniels. AS

.

. I

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�-The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Tuesday, March i4,
'

FOUR SHOT 'IHEN HANfiE11 BY
I
IN
GE FOR SADR CI'IY BOMBINGS
BY ALEXANDRA ZAVIS
ASS(X;IATED PRESS WRITERS

BAGHDAD,
Iraq
Scorched pavement, destroyed
shops, burned out cars and fourmen shot in the liead then
hanged from electricity pylons
- victims of revenge killings
·- · awaited Shiite residents
emerging from their homes
Monday in Baghdad's Sadr
,City slum.
.
The scene. although grue. some, was not what many had
feared: That deadly explosions
the previous night in Sadr City
would ignite all-out civil war,
pitting majority Shiites against
minority Sunriis.
·
1\vo car bombers and four
mortar rounds shattered shops
and market stalls at nightfall
. Sunday when residents were
buying groceries for their
evening ineal. At least 58 people were killed and more than
200 wounded.
·
A key to Monday's relative
peace was anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's refusal to
be provoked: With thousands
of his Mahdi Anny militiamen
-ready to fight, the Shiite leader
called for calm and national
unity. It was the second time in
less than t~ree weeks that
Iraqis stOOd at the precipice of
civil war but pulled back.
Britain, the United States'
largest military partner in Iraq,
showed its confidence Monday
by announcing a •10 percent.·
about 800-troop - reduction
by Mi\y. ·
'"This is a significant reduction which is based largely on
the ability of the Iraqis themselves to participate and
defend themselves against terrorism, but there is a long, long
way to go," British Defense
.Secretary John Reid said in
London. ·
: Washington hopes to begin
withdrawing some of its troops
by this summer if a new Iraqi
government is in place and
judged sufficiently in controL
But sectarian violence and
political bickering has stal'ed
the process.
Iraq's new parliament will
.convene for the first time
Thursday, three months after it
was elec.ted, to begin the
process of forming the next .
.government.
Bomb blasts and shootings
in Baghdad and north of the
capital, many of them targeting
Iraqi police patrols, killed at
least 15 people Monday and
· wounded more than 40. They
included a U.S. soldier who
died in a roadside bombing,
the military said. A U.S.
Marine was reported killed

Sunday in insurgent-plagued
Anbar province.
The
American deaths
brought the number of U.S.
military members killed to at
least 2,308 since the beginning
of the Iraq war in March 2003,
according to an Associated
Press count.
Police and Sheik Arner alHusseini, a senior aide to aiSadr, said the four men shot
and hanged in Sadr City were
captured by members of the
cleric's militia. Police said they
cut the bodies down and took
them to a hospital · morgue
Monday morning.
"We know notlling about
their nationalities but (fsidents
reported that they were arrested yesterday by Mahdi Army,"
,said police Lt. Lai th AbduiAal. 'Two of them were wearing explosive belis and two
others had mortar tubes."
Al-Husseini identified the
men as .three Iraqis and a
Syrian.
Iraqi police manned checkpoints Monday at main
entrances to Sadr City, and
armed .militiamen fanned out
inside the neighborhood. Many ·
peOple ventured out only to
buy fOOd.
Under the watchful eye of .
armed militiamen, market vendors picked through the
charred, twisted remai.ns of
their stalls to salvage what they
could. ·
Abdel Kanm al-Bahadli, 42,
wept when he sa-,v the devastation at the market close to his
home. He blamed the extremist
Sunni Takfui sect of terrorist
boss Abu Musab al-Zarqawi,
leader of ai-Qaida in Iraq.
'
"This is not resistance
because there were no U.S.
·troops in the markets yesterday," he said. "The Takflris are
only after Shiites. We will not
be silent any more."
Sadr . City residents had
feared an attack like this one
after ai-Sadr's fi'ghters stonned
out of the slum to take revenge
on Sunni Muslims and their
mosques after the Feb. 22
bombing of a Shiite· shrine in
Samarra.
Politicians
scrambled
Monday to keep a lid on violence.
President Jalal Talabani said
terrorists bent on civil war had
taken advantage of a power
vacuum caused by the delay in
forming the government.
"It is the duty of the political
groups to accelerate efforts to
form the government, and the
armed forces and security bodies should act swiftly to eliminate such crimes," he said.

:Report: One in 10 companies with
: GSA contracts owes federal taxes
Bv MARY DALRYMPLE
AP TAX WRITER ·

WASHINGTON -One in
:10 companies contracting
:with the General Services
:Administration owes unpaid
.federal taxes - · a total of $1.4
:billion
congressional
·:investigators say.
: Neither federal law nor the
;agency's policies require goy.ernment officials to consider a
company's tax debt when
awarding a government con~ tract ,
the
Government
Accountability Office said.
: The investigators studied
;the GSA contracting practices
:for a Tuesday hearing of the
:Senate Homeland Security
·and Governmental Affairs
:investiga_tions . subcommittee.
·The panel, which has been
:probing tax evasion· among
:government
contractors,
:released the report Monday.
· "It is simply unacceptable
:that tax cheats who owe the
:government millions in back
:taxes get million s of dollars
:from American taxpayers,"
:said subcommittee chairman
:Sen. N0rm Cole'man, R·Minn.
: The GAO discovered evi:dence of abusive or potential
criminal activity among 25
;contca~tors who diverted pay·roll taxes for personal or busi:ness use. Failure to transfer
.payroll taxes withheld from
employee paychecks to the
·government is a criminal
:felony.
: Despite owing between
$100.000 to more than $9

----

million-to the government, the
owners and officers of some
companies had substantial
personal assets, including
homes worth more than $1
million and luxury vehicles.
For example, a security services company, which got at
least $1 million in contract
payments, owed the government more than $9 million in
federal taxes. The owner
withdrew large amounts of
money for personal use and
spent $100,000 gambling.
A human resource services
company got at least
$100,000 in contract payments while it owed more
than $400,000 in federal
taxes. The owner has multiple
properties and several' luxury
vehicles · and made multiple
large cash withdrawals at
The
company
casinos.
obtained a contract for hurricane relief efforts.
· The GAO examined contracts used .from October
2003 through June. 2005.
About 85 percent of the taxes
owed were corporate income
and · payroll taxes. The
remainder included 'personal
income, excise and. other
taxes.
The investigators said their
$1.4 billion figure probably
underestimates the amount
owed because, in part, they
did not examine contractors
that fai led to file tax returns or
underreported their income.
Federal laws can bar a company from winning government contracts in cases of tax
evas1on.

..

..

County
informed

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She was born April 2, 1917, in the Swan Creek
Community in ·aallia County, daughter of the late Alva and
Veva Richie Waugh.
·
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in deaih by
her husband, Harry Walburn.
Arbeautis was a retired employee of the Gallipolis
Developmental Center, and volunteered for the Red Cross at
Holzer Medical Center. She was a member of the Nazarene
Church in Middleport.
She is survived by a daughter, . Janice' Houck {Robert)
Bur~e of Houston, Texas; a stepdaught~:r. Aunda (Gene)
Klem of . Middleport; two grandsons, Erin Burge of
Charleston, S.C., and Andrew Burge· of Honolulu, Hawaii;
· two stepgrandchildren, Michelle Wilson of Shade, and
Eugene Klein h . of Columbus; four step-great-grandchildren; a sister, Justine Neal of Crown City ; and a brother,
Calv.in (Lenice) Waugh of Crown City.
· Services will be II a.m. Friday, March 17, 2006, at the
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home, with the Rev. Alfred
Holley officiating. Burial will follow in G.ravel Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6 to 8
p.m. Thursday, March I 6 , 2006.
In ,lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the charity of your choice in hyr memory.
· •· To send condolences, please visit us at www.timeformemory.com/whw.
.

.Bill it. Bretz

Widows defy age to contend
for bride's wedding bouquet ·

Masters food bank program.
Monday, March 20
DEAR A8BY: I couldn't
ATHENS Southeast
Tuesday, March 14
believe
your response to the
Ohio Woodland Interest
POMEROY Bedford Group, 7 p.m. at the Athens widow who wanted to particTownship Trustees regular County Extension office, ipate in the throwins of the
meeting, 7 p.m., town hall.
West Union Street. Speaker, wedding bouquet. It ts meant
PORTLAND - Portland Jonathan Sowash of Sowash, for single women only. not
Community Center Board, Carson and Ferrier on liabili- widows or . women who've
regular meeting, 6:30 p.m.
ty issues for woodland own- run through ·a legion of husPORTLAND - Special ers, including ATV riders on bands . For goodness' sake. is
meeting Lebanon Township personal .property. Call' 593- · it too much to ask that only
Trustees, 5 p.m. township 8555.
TRULY single wornen partic. .
building.
ipate in this ritual? It amazes
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
me that you sided with the
Pool 'Committee, 6:30 p.m. at ·
writer. The daughter-in-law
the home of Bob Wingett.
who objected was right on
Wedne!j((ay, March 15
Tuesday, March 14
the money. The woman
TUPPERS .. PLAINS POMEROY
-Meigs should have respected that,
· d to rememEastern Local Board of Athletic Boosters winter sat down an d tne
Education, 6 p.m ., Eastern sports banquet, 6 p.m., hi~h ber that the weddintwas not
school cafeteria. Meat, s1l- about her· - . LA RIE F..
Library Confaence Room.
· Thursday, March 16
verware, drinks and rolls pro- ODESSA, FLA.
POMEROY
Local vided. Bring vegetable and
DEAR LAURIE F. : That's
Professional Development dessert.
exactly what the wounded
Committee of Athens-Meigs
Saturday, March 18
· widow did. She retreated to
ESC, 3 p.m. at Athens office. . POMEROY
Meigs her table, and the wedding
POMEROY - Salisbury · youth baseball camp, grades was no longer a happy celeTownship Trustees, 6:30 3 to 8, 10 a. m. to 2 p.m. Work bration for her. I felt, and still
p.m., township hall.
on basic skills and terminolo- · do, that being allowed .to join
gy. &amp;egistration 9:30 a.m.. the throng to participate
For more information contact would have impinged on no
Coach Nick Dettwillei', 416- one, and the daughter-in-law
0344.
was out of line. Read on:
RUTLAND- Last time to
DEAR ABBY: Good for
signup for Rutland ball, I to you regarding the Texas
Tuesday, March 14
POMEROY
Meigs 4 p.m. adt the Rutland Fire widow! At my daughter 's
wedding reception·. my "80County
Genealogical Department.
plus-year-old widowed mothSociety, 5 p.m., Meigs
er caught the bouquet and
Museum.
immediately shoved it into
. Wednesday, March 15
POMEROY- Middleport
Tuesda~y, March 14
the hands' of a 60-year-old
Rev.ival widow. I wish you could see
POMEROY Literary Club. 2 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library. Connie services 7 p.m. each evening the video. What I ·think is
Gilkey to review "Beautiful through March 18, Calvary wrong is letting anyone under
Jim Key: The Lost History of Pilgrim Chai?el; Ohio 143. B. 18 out there. - ALL FOR
a Horse and a Man Who J. Walker w1ll be evangelist. tHE TEXAS WIDOW
Changed the World" by Mim Special singing each evening . · · DEAR ABBY: At my son's
Friday, March 17
wedding, my 85 -year-old
Eichler Rivas. Gay Perrin,
hostess.
_
PLEASANT, widowed mother, who was
POINT
Thursday, Man:h 16
W.Va. -. · The Kingsmen walking with a cane at the
POMEROY - . Meigs Quartet in concert, 7 p.m., time, got up and caug ht the
Count_y · Retired Teachers National Guard Armory. bouquet: The man who
Association noon luncheon at Doors open at 6 p.m. Free- caught the garter put tt on my
Trinity Church meeting room will . offering to benefit mom like she was a 25-yearSecond Street entrance. Jacob's Well Ministries in old .woman, and Mom
blushed .like a schoolgirl. We
Michael Gerlach to speak on New Haven, W.Va.
the. Civil War in Meigs
Saturday, Man:h 18
were all delighted for her.
MASON, W.Va. - Benefit She died at the age of 92, and
County. Make reservation at
sing for missons at Christian this is one of my fondest
992-3214: Guests welcome .
MIDDLEPORT - Special Brethren Church, 7 p.m. memories of my. son's wedmeeting of Middleport Lodge Singers include Proclaim, ding.
In our golden years, we
363 F&amp;AM , 7:30 p.m. to Earthen Vessels, Gloryland
practice for inspection. Believers, Randy Parsons deserve to enjoy life as much
and Marty · Short. Contact as any young person. Please
Officers to attend.
Pastor John Elswick, 593- tell that Texas widow not to
Saturday, Man:h 18
.
let anyone stop her from
· MIDDLEPORT· . Special 7390.
FLATROCK, W.Va. · -· . doing things that will give
meeting of Middleport lodge
36.3, R&amp;AM, 7:30p.m. at the Mason County Area 'Gospel her pleasure. - M.J. IN
.
Masonic Temple for annual Choir's first gospel sing, 7 CHATTANOOGA
DEAR ABBY: A dear
inspection in entered appren- p.m., Good Shepherd United
tice degree. All offtce to Methodist Church. The friend of my mother's attendFamily
of ed our wedding. She was 70
attend. Meal, 6:30 p.m. with Humphreys
Dunbar,
W.
Va.
and
.
the
at the time, and brought her
members. to take pies for
Mason
County
Area
Gospel
.
80-yearold gentleman friend
dessert. Take' non-perishable
to the celebration . (Both had
food items for the Grand Choir featured.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - been widowed .) Whether it
was quietly planned, I don't
know, but she caught the bou-

Youth events

· Clubs and
organizations

Church events

MINERSVILLE -Frances Eileen Clark , 87, of
.Minersville, died Monday. March 13, 2006, ai Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis, following an extended illness:
She was born Oct. 21. 1918, in Minersville, daughter of
the late James and Edith Bath Hood. She was a homemaker
and attended Asbury United Methodist Church in Syracuse.
She was a member of the Daughters of America in Chester.
Surviving are a daughter, Mary Donna (Jim) Davis of
Minersville; two sons, Jimmy Joe Hemsley and Rollie Dee
Hemsley. both of Minersville; . six grandchildren: Tom
(Karla) Rou sh, Dee ( Randy) · Lee, Joe Bob (Christy)
Hemsley, Karen (Joe) Fares, and Jay and Breanna Hemsley;
nine great grandchildren: Emily Dillard, Justin and Jason
DeMoss. James and Tia Hemsley, Katie Marie and Wyatt
Hem~ley. and Simone and Shelby Fares; a special nephew,
Maurice Smith; and a special friend, Sue. Morgan.
She was preceded in death by her beloved husband, Harry
Clark; sisters : Lillian Smith, Alma Hysell, and Thelma
Hawley; and brothers , Paul Thomas and James Allen.
Services will be held at I p.m. on Wednesday, March 15.
2006, at Ewing Funeral Home with Rev. Robert Robinson
COLUMBUS _ Approval
Alden Library, built in
officiating. Burial will follow at Gilmore Cemetery. ·
· of $150.000 by the . State 1968, is the main library.
Friends may call from 5 to 8 p.m . on Tuesday at the funer- · Controlling Board to reno- for Ohio University.'s Athens
a! home.
.
vate
Ohio
University's Campus. The library serves
Alden ,
Library
was 20,000 students and houses
announced Monday by Slate a collection of 1.5 million
Representative
Jimmy printed volumes and 2.7
Stewart
(R-A
ibany).
The million microforms, as well
POMEROY - Helen (Leifheit) Carper went peacyfully
funding
secured
today
as an extensive collection of
state
· to be with her Lord, March I0, 2006.
.
.
Helen was born Aug. 18, 1920 in Shade, Ohio to George wiJI help Ohio University to other non-pri nt materials.
and Edith Fulton Grim .. After being a homemaker and rais- upgrade the library while The annual number of visitors to the library exceeds
ing her family. Helen took a job with the Bureau of Motor keeping it in operation.
"'Improving the libraries in one million people.
Vehicles and retired from the State of Ohio to care for her
"With reforms .to the tax ·
our
state' s institutions of
late' husband.
learning
is
essential
system
and Medicaid prohigher
. Helen was a member of the Free Methodist Church of
gram established in the budColumbus for more than 50 years. She and her first husband to the educational and future
. success of both our young get, rassed earlier this year.
raised their family of four children, three daughters and one peopl~ and our economy," the top priority · for the
· son, in north Columbus.
·
Stewart said. "The money Gene.ral Assembly in the
She was preceded in death - by her parents. husband, approved today helps in our coming year is to improve
Sidney R. Leifheit. originally from Pomeroy, daughter, continued efforts in the higher education in Ohio.
Pauline "Polly" M. Schmitt of Vandalia, Ill. ; son, Thomas House to ensure that each and libraries are an imporRay Leifheit of Kirkersville ; brother, Sam Grim of Phoenix, chiid who seeks a higher tant component to these
Arizona; and brot(ler-in-law, Oryn Johnson of Wellston .
degree has access to the · improvement efforts," said
She is survived by her ~us band, Charles Carper, founding tools they need for success." Stewart.
father of Central Ohio Beekeepers Assn., previously of
Kirkersville·; two daughters, Joyce Leifheit of Waynesville ..
and Sidney (Mark) Fouty of Granville; son-in-law, Fred
Schmitt of Vandalia, Ill .; stepsorr, Reed Carper of Mt.
POMEROY ,- Over ·200 judge. Both Senator Joy Padgett
.Vernon : grandchildren, Kelly (Pat) Mitchell of Illinois. Cara
dDckson and Pam Wood both of Missouri , Steve Schmitt of attended the Lincoln Day din- and Representative Jimmy
Vandalia, Ill, Nathan (Cheri) Fouty of Granville , Sabrina ner of the Meigs County Stewart made statements about ·
(Jacob) Warner of Granville, Joshua (Balinda) Fouty of Republicru1 Party held recently their upcorhiilg elections.
Karen Sloan spoke on behalf
Newark, and Zebulun Fouty of Granville; several great- in the Meigs High School cafeteria.
·of
Dewine's bid for re-election ..
grandchildren, sister. Pauline Johnson of Wellston: brother,
Dave
Warner
and
Marco
TWenty-four
door prizes were ·
Richard (Glena) Grim, of Athens and 11 sister-in-law,
Jeffers were hosts for the event awarded during the evening and
Marilyn Grim of Ptroenix , Arizona .·
.
Funeral services will be held at II :30 a.m. Wectn·esday. which included a dinner, invo- recognized were studentS from
March 15, 2006 at tl)e Schoedinger East Chapel, 5350 E. cation by Ronnie Salser. talks Eastern and Southern High
Livingston Ave.. Columbus. where family will receive by Bernard Fultz and Judge• School. one home-schooled stufriends from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p·.m.Tuesday. Pastor Anthony · Clyde Evans, and comments' dent, all· Republican elected
from candidates.
officials, courthouse employSchramm officiating . No graveside serv ices will be held .
Speaking On their own behalf ees. township employees. viiMemorial contributions may be made to Hospice of
Marty
Cline, Mary Byer-Hill.
!age clerks. county garage and
Central Ohio. 2269 Cherry Valley Road. Newark, Ohio
Carla
Shuler
and
Fred
Hoffman.
Ohio Dept. of Highways. Ohio
43055 . Envel,opes will be available at the funeritl home.
candidates for county auditor. Repubficau Pany, EMS .House
l)&lt;;e Spencer spoke on his bid for Speaker Pro-Tern, Chuck
County Commissioner, and Blasdel,
Athens
County
Danny
Hannan
on
his
run
for
Auditor,
l
Thompson
and
Pete
,
· Colaudis,
all · Central
.MIDDLEPORT - Herbert 0 . HoO\;er, 77. of Middleport , Congres;.
Jim Sheets noted that Judge Committee member&gt;, and
died Sunday night; March 12. 2006 at hi s re .~ iden ce.
Vi sitation' at the Acree Funeral Home in Middleport will Rick Cnlw l'ould not be present Charlie Barrett. president of the
Executive
be held Thursday evening, 5 to 9 p.m. A full obituary will but that he W&lt;LI running for re- Repu.b!ican ·
election · as Common Plea&gt; Comminee.
be printed in Wednesday 's paper.

Dear
Abby

quet , and ·he caught the •
garter. They were married
within a year.
.
Whenever r see a vid~o of
other receptions, 1 remember
that gracious and loving coupie _ and my guests, who
stOOd auietly and made only
"toli.en•1 motions toward the
item s. GINA IN FT.
COLLINS , COLO.
. DEAR ABBY: That ,daughter-in-law n.eeds a sense of
humor and to e&lt;15e up a bit.
Weddings are about celebrating family, love and happiness. She showed none of
these when she chasti zed her
mother-in-law. She owes the
bride and her mother-in'law
an apology. - CELEBRATlNG
BRIDE,
GREAT
FALLS, MONT.
· DEAR ABBY: A woman in
her 60s caught the bouquet at
my weddin? . The younger ·
women didn .t have a chance . .
Actually, TWO 6U.year-old
women fought over it . It's
one of the most memorable
memories frqm our reception.
We have a great picture of the
best man putting the garter on
her. She was wearing kneehighs and granny glasses. CELESTE . IN ENFIELD,
CONN.
. DEAR ABBY: That daugh- . ·
ter-in-law was certainly a pill.
The family ·shou ld feel lucky
to have a grandmother .who is
able to participate physically.
My dad was m a wheelc~air
and didn't have that privilege. I lost him 1 two · years
ago. and I would give .anything to have him here to
hold his hand and tell him
how much I love him. Thin
dau~hter-in-law should reorgamze her priorities.. thank
her lucky stars. and keep her
mouth
shut.
You go.
Grandma' Thanks for letting
me vent, Abby.- PATRICIA
IN PUEBLO , COLO.
Dear Abby is wrinen by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne ' Phillips,
and was founded · by her
mother, Pquli,e· Phillips.
Write
Dear , Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, .CA
90069. ·

675..:1812
Point Pleasant , WV

173-5536

·: . ---- ------------·-----

Helen (Leifheit) Carper

Republicans observe Lincoln

RIO GRANDE - Ohio
Valley Christian School
Weber.
s.en1or
Zach
Langsville. has been awarded
the
Ohio
First
Scholarship
at
the
University of Rio Grande
and Rio Gran,de Comll}unity
College.
The
Ohio
First
Scholarship program recognizes
the
outstanding
achievement of Ohio high
school valedictorians and
salutatorians with a full
tuition scholarship. ·
Zach is the son of Dallas·
arid Tammy Weber. He plans
on majoring in radiologic
technology at Rio Grande.

-------- - ---·--·--•

-------- ·-

Zack Weber

Day dinner

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88

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

Stewart announces ·funding
for OU library renovation Ohio First scholarship
awarded to Zach
Weber
..

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Public meetings

COLUMBUS - Bill H. Bretz, 61, Columbus, passed
away Thursday, March 9, 2006, at his residence.
Born Nov. 13, 1944, in Franklin County, he was the son of
the late Robert Lewis and Reba Evelyn Bretz. He was
emplo-yed for 30' years by the Ohio Department of
Transportation in Columbus, before his retirement.·
. Surviving are hi s wife, Sandra Jean Hutton Bretz, whom
he married July 29, 1968, at Columbus; two sons, William
Kevin Bretz and Brian Hutton Bretz, both of Cqlumbus; a
daughter, Doreen Margaret (Jason) Aristide of Columbus;
tW&lt;'l granddaughters, Casey Mae and Sydney LeAnn; a
grandson , Orion Nathaniel; four brothers and sisters-in-law;
three sisters and brothers-in-law; and several nieces and
nephews . ·
.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by 'his
father-in-law and mother-in-law, Chester and Margaret
Hutton; and a sister.
.
Services will be at noon on Wednesday, March 15 , 2006,
at Evans Funeral Home , 4171 E. Livingston Ave .,
· Columbus. Friends may call from 2-4 and · 6-8 p.m. on
Tuesday at the funeral home. Burial will follow at
Rocksprings Cemetery in Pomeroy.

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Community Ca.lendar

Ga~lipolis, died Saturday evening, March II, 2006, at her

The Daily Se1uin,el

Baghdad Shiite slum when bombers blew apart two markets -shortly before sundown, killing at
least 44 people and wounding about 200,on March 12. The bloody assaults on Sadr City came
only minutes after Iraqi political leaders said the new parliament will convene on March 16.

Obituaries
Arbeautis Rice Walbum

Metgs .

~-

BYTHE B .END

2006

Keeping

.
.
.
People console an Iraq man, whose relative was killed, during Sadr city explosions, in a hospi·
tal, 1n Baghdad, Iraq, clonday. The feared resumption of mass sectarian violence erupted in a

The Daily Sentinel

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�.OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free e-xercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of tl1e press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Governnu'11t for a redress of grievances.
- The Fi fst Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

READER'S

Worried
voting system concerns
Dear Editor:
I am senuu, fy umcerned about the upcomtng elecllons Do
we need to worry &lt;~bout the w,ay our votes are counted?
According to a fvl,m h 9 arllde Ill the Akron Beacon Journal,
the1e was a h1gh l,ul we rate" m the computer memory cards
of the new opt•cal-,can vot111g eqmpme nr at the Summil
County Board ot Elellwns
Election Systems &amp; Software (ES&amp;S) had a second batch of
cards sent to Akron on Tuesday. but those cards expenenced a
similar tmlure rate It IS my understanding that Metgs County
will be u s m~ the s,tme ES&amp;S opllcal-scan voting equipment
as that ot 's ummtt County this May The Government
Accoun(ab!l!ty Of11ee (GAO) now confirms that electromc
voung machmes provide an open door to fltp an entire vote
count wnhout detection and wuld be done by just a handful
of hackers. When pmate corporations are allowed to count
our vote&gt; tnstead of our local tntsted election offictals, will
tht s stgnal the demtse of democracy m America'1
Sherry Athertoll

..

Long Bnttllm

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today ts Tuesddy, Mdrch 14 the 73•d day of 2006. There are
292 days left m the year
Today'' H1ghl!ght m HIStory
On March 14. 1743. the tirst recorded town meetmg 111
Amenca was held. at Faneuii Hall m Boston.
On this date
In 1794 Eli Whitney recet vcd a patent for h1s cotton gm, an
mvent1on th,lt revolutmmzed Amenca's cotton industry
In 1900. Congress ratified the Gold Standard Act.
In 1923.· President Hardtng became the tirst ch1ef ex.ecuttve to
tile an mcome tax report
In 1939. the republic of Czechoslovakia was dissolved, openmg the way !01 NaZI occupation
In 1943. Aaron Copland ·s 01 chestral work ''Fanfare for the
Common M,m" premiered in New York. w1lh George Szell cQnductmg
In 1951. during the Korean Wa1. Umted NatiOns forces recaptured Seoul
In 1964, a Jury 111 Dallas tound J,!Ck Ruby gu11ty of IJlUrdering
Lee Harvey Oswald. the accused assassin of Prestdem Kennedy
Thought for Today "There are only two kmds of people m the
world that reall y count One kmd·s wheat and the other kind's
emeralds " - Eclna Ferber. Amencan author ( 1887 -1968).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
L!ttets to th e edttor are 11elwme The\ ~hould be less than
300 words All leuen are wbjeu ro edlllng, must be 5tgned,
and me/rule addrn1 and telephone number. No wmgned letters wtll be publt~hed Le11e1 1 1/w uld be m good taste,
· addressmg l\Wes not pen01wiWt'1. Lette rs of thank; to orgam zatwtl! and mdnl(/ua/1 111/lnot be ac cepted for publica/loll

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Policy

(UsPs 213-s&amp;o&gt;
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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Editor: Charlene Hoeflich Ext 12
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Tuesday, March 14,2006

The House GOP's 'no' to Dubai deal shows how weak Bush is
Prestdent Bush recovered somewhat from the
political doldrums late last
fall w•th a series of
speeches on Iraq But now,
only favorable events can
save him - and favorable
news 1s m short supply.
In fact, he's just been
utterly repudmted by his
p&lt;~t:ty' s leadership m the
House on the Dubai ports
1ssue, despite hts deeming
tl serious enough to mount
a veto threat.
What's more, the bad
news on Dubat follows
gruesome news about civil
' stnfe m Iraq, continuing
criticism of Hurricane
Katrina preparallons, bad
handling of Vice Prestdent
Cheney's hunting accident
111 Texas and smkmg Bush
approval numbers.
The White House calculated that it had bought
lime w1th a 45-day security rev1ew of the Dubai
ports deal to convmce the
public and Republicans
that it was in the natton 's
best mterests to keep good
relations w1th the Umted
Arab Emuates , an Arab
country that's an ally tn
the war on terror.
But pure political fearand an astoundmg lack of
fallh in Bush's judgment
- caused GOP leaders to
mount an effort to sink the
deal Without waiting for
the Whtte House IQ come
up with an alternative
plan.
Wtth polls showing that
nearly 70 percent of
Americans oppose lettmg
an Arab-owned company
operate American ports,
the House leadershtp concluded that the Dubm deal
was unsalvageable and
that Bush and the GOP
should take a quick loss
and move on.
Or, as one House
Republican told me. " the
PR on th1s has been handled so badly that you
want
to
say,
'Mr
Prestdent, you wm some
and
lose
some
in
Washmgton Just take the
dtve Thts is so bad, espectally with the (GOP)
base, and public opinion ts
so locked in, you should

Morton
Kondrack

e

JUSt let it go."'
It remam s to I:Je seen
whether Bush v.l.i II take
that kind of adv1ce or f1ght
for the deal and whether
Senate leaders wtll support
h1m or go the way of the
House
The White House must
be torn over whether to
pursue a veto strateg} to
convtnce
moderate
Muslims that the United
States is a reliable ally, or
cut tts losses and recoup
tis political position on
other fronts
So tar, Senate MaJority
Leader Btll Fnst, R- Tenn ,
IS st1cking with Bush on
the 45-day plan, and the
White Hou se says that
Bush 's position supporti ng
!he deal is unchanged
This
s ugge sts
thm
there 's sti ll time for a
solution to be fashiOned say, a wall of separattbn
between Arabs 111 the
Duba1 government ownmg
the port-management company and Europeans and
Americans who actually
operate the pons.
S~nate Democrats wtll
try to nde the wave of
publtc opposition to the
port deal to attach mjers to
must-pass legislal!on ~u c h
as the lniq supplemental
appropnat1on lf they succeed
and
some
Republicans will ltkely go
alon g the le gtslatlon
would still go to a HouseSenate conference , gtvm g
the admimstratton one
more chance to hatch an
agreement.
In fact , some Hou se
GOP leaders say thJ s was
their i'ntent m attachmg the
"no" on Dubai to a slowermovmg
approp••atwn s
measure rather than pa5'111g a free-standing btll
that m1 ght pass the Senate
and .Coree an 1mmed1ate

Bush ve to and a likely
override, whtch would be
an eve n stiller repudtat1on
of the president .
Wh atever the outcome,
the Dubn1 deal. Bu sh's
handling of 11, and the
Hou se GOP 's repudiation
of it - and hun - has
done senous public damage to Bu sh' s political
standtng.
Bu sh has helped the
GOP expand its hold on
Congress 111 three straight
elections, but Republicans
clearly lear he's a liability
now.
The latest Gallup Poll
shows that Bush retam s
the support of 82 percent
of
rank -and,fiie
Republicans a large
number. but down from 93
percent 111 the 2004 election . Indeed, hi s missteps
have produced contmumg
nfts with Republicans 111
Cong1ess
A numbe1 ot the errors
have fl\I~Cd 4ue st10nS
about the admmtstratwn 's
bas ic competence. These
Include the nomination· of
Wh1te Hou se counsel
Harnet Mter ~ to the U S
Supreme Court, mi sJudgment s about difficulties in
lra4 , failures during and
after Katnna and ear ly difficultie s 111 the Med1care
prescnption drug rollout
Some other Intra-GOP
diiticullies are Ideolog ical
nmm grat 10n pq II cy
bein g the chtef one, along
with old-line conservative
dls'tttiStaction with the
growth of government
power and spendmg under
Bush
Another category of dt ssal!sfacuon IS IOStllUIIOna] ,
with
Congre ss iOnal
Republicans di sturbed that
the Bush White House has
treated them as Id! -lessthan-equal partners 111 run ning the government
Republicans
genera ll y
defended Bush 's National
Secunty Agency terrunst
survetllance program , but
not
his
bypas sin g
Congress to In&gt;litute 11
And some ot Bush ·, Ini tiatives ha ve proved poll!! ·
cally
unpalatabl e
to
Repubiic.ms - notably.

from PageA1

the Soc tal Secunty over, ,
haul that Bush spe nt muclt ;
of hi s post-re-election cap-,
1tal promol!ng
,,
The Dubai port deal ,
stnkes lots of R ep ubli ca n ~ ,
as a failure on all fronts -~
Indicative of tncom pe, .
tence, •m s'placed mternationaii st Ideology. ImtitU· '
tw nal arrog,mce and utter
''
political tone-deafness
Bush h-ts had succc"es ''
He's put two conscrvauve$
on the Sup1eme Court and'.'
aft er so me d1ckenng,
g.1ined re.tuthollz,nion of
the USA PATRIOT Act:,
And statistiC S sho w that
the econOI11} '' strong. ,
even tl the pub li c does n't ·
believe it.
But Republi cans clearly·'
are worned about Bush ·~ ..
fortune s and thetr ow n. To
bounce back, one GOP·:
leader told me . "we· ve got
to. stop m.1k1ng miStake(
The Wh1te Hou se. mllle
Importantl y. has gut to,
stop makin g miStdkes
,
"They've taken a really,
difficult
prohl em ,m9 ,
made It almost unm &lt;tn.tge-.
able by not thou ghtfull y ,
engagin g the n ght people ,,
And the p1 es •de nt \ ve to
threat was fU St •n ce nd t,
dry"
Thts leade r sa1d he fears
that Bu sh and h" top ,11de'
a1e ttred · Tu ed peop le
make miStdkes If th e pres'
tdent is fo cused on some '
th1ng else. eve1ybody cb e
who's !Ired Jus t t,1ke' a
bre,lk. They don 't asK'.
enough que,t •nns The y.
don't g1ve enough advic e ,
The) don ' t rush in the way
they used to "
,,
So, has Bush bccu,
teduced ln lame duck stu;,
tu s or, worse. to ltmmy
Carter-style ureln .1n ce 1
. I don 't think s(l - )C t.
th1s leade r s,ud .. A.nv thlll ~
c~n ha ppe11 &lt;~ n y dd)- 111 'a
dangerous world and the '
p1 es •dent 's n ght back on '
top aga1n · But 11 om he11i '
It 's hard to see what c1 ell!
that could be

]1 ,,,.

-

(Mo rt Oil Kondrodc 11
ne&lt;utne n l1tot u( /?oil
Co il. t/1~ 11 e 11 I!'Of''' ' uf:
Cal'tto l Ht/1 J
''

The genocide minuet at the United Nations
While The New York
Ttmes insists 11 remams the
standard for Amencan datly
se lfJournalism , that
absorbed mstltution often
misses pivotally tllummating stories. A case tn point
IS a multilayered Feb. 28
report by the New York
Sun's United Nations correspondent, Benny Avni , on
the cynical realpohttk of
U.N. principals - in contrast tO the refreshing, InSIStent torthnghtness of our
U.N. ambassador, John
Bolton
W1th the number of
corpses m Darfur steadtly
mountmg, and George W.
Bush
agam
senously
111 volved m contronttng
what he has accurately
called the genocide there,
Bolton has been pressing
hard to get the United
Nations movmg agamst the
resistance of the government of Sudan, the perpetrator of the genoctde.
Among Bolton 's goals IS
sendmg a U N force, w1th
possible NATO components, into Darfur to bolster
the present small , beleaguered Afncan Union continge!!!. He IS also proposIng targeted U.N. sancl!ons
against some of the ch1ef
orgamzers ot the genocide
m the Sudanese government (Bntam 1s al so workmg on a resolutwn that
could lead to warrants from
the InternatiOnal Criminal
Court agamst the architects
of the genocide.)
The three members of the
tJ N
Secunty Council
blocktng Bolton 's proposed
measures are Ru ss ia, Chtna
and Qatar Qatar - home
ot the AI-J azee ra TV network but also wtth ;tron g
military t1es to the Un1ted

.

Tuesday, March 14, 2006.

Services

Nat
Hentoff

States repres~nts the
Arab states m the dectsion makmg
UN
Security
Council.
As A~nt reports , although
U N Secretary General
Koft Annan recently spent a
weekend In Qatar, he d1d
not even di scuss Sudan durmg h•s vi sit. Nor did he di scuss the need for targeted
sancttons agamst Sudanese
officials
and
th e1r
JanJaweed militia Involved
in the atrocities that have
slaughtered so many thousands and deva stated the
vt llage s of black Afncan s
in Darfur, and who are now
also killing and rapm g
refugees 111 net ghbonn g
Chad
Qatar, res•stmg these
sanctions, was supported by
the United State s in becom mg part of the powerfu I
U.N. Secunty Counc •l But
like the other Arab states at
the United Nations. Qatar
appears indtlfe rent to the
genocide 1n Darfur, even
though both the killers and
the vkums are Mu shm s
Annan. remembenng hiS
deadly s1lence dunn g the
genoctde 1n Rwanda, IS nut
indtfferent to the new genocide Last year, as the New
York Sun report s. he
appomted a U N pan ~! of
experts who wrote "a coni• ·
dential report that Idenlllt c&lt;.l
17 Sudane se off1 ctals a&gt;
hav •ng Impeded pead' and

comm itted cnmes agamst
humanity m Darlur ··
Bolton. the Sun adds, has
been urgmg the Secunty
Council to 1mpose sanctions on "the ctght most
obvious names" in th at
report cnmm• " •on ed by
Annan
The F1nan~wl
Tune s, mu ch concerned
w1th these cnmes against
humanit) . has published
some ·o f the names allegedly Included 111 the report by
the UN panel of experts
Among them IS Sud,m's
dneUor of Intelli ge nce ,
Salah Abdalla Gosh . v.ho
has been workmg with the
CIA to co 11 a! ten onsts in
Sudan and other countnes.
tntenor
m•m stcr
the
(Elzub•er Bash1r Taha ). ,md
the defense num ster. (Abele!
Rah11n
Mohammed
Husse m).
Accord111g to Amencan
Prospect magazme, a pos" ble future li st may include.
as 1t ce rtainl y should ,
Sudan's ruthless preSi dent ,
Omar Hassa n A·h mad aiBash• r. But what about the
leadeiS of Bdsh11 's auxil Iary murderers and gangrapers. the JanJ aweed !
Meanwhile. the govern ment ot Sudan IS takmg "
very h,trd lm e agUi nst dny
posSi hd•t y of a U.N peacckeep mg
Ioree
hc11l g
deployed 1n Darfu r, 'ay mg
It will withdraw from the
Afncan Un1on 1f 11 happe ns
Acco rd ing to Jan Pronk , the
U N 's specm l representati ve
lor Sudan. tile
KhdrtoLim

gn~c rntn e nt "ht~...,

se nt de legatio ns to man y
cou ntnes 111 the world 111
nrde1 to plead It \ c,"c Let
the Arl!can U IIID!l ""v .md
let the U N not c~ '" '
1New York f1m e~. W,'" ""
Hogc. M,uch II

"
"

Pronk " hm~&gt; e l f "arn •ng
tJMt .1 !OO'h.Isty 111 \'0 JI C·
ment of U N Ioree' lO!I Id
kad to "retaltat!on" l&gt; y AI
Qaedd elements that he s a)~ '
are alre.;dy e111heclded 111 :
Kh&lt;~rt ou m . Real ly' But the
Sudanese
gove1nment '
clallll S th,tt lb llll Cillgc nu:1 ,

operative' a1e expert 111 ,
findm g these AI Qacdu tel· ,
ron~·ils

\\ hy

So

du~ . . n

L,,

Sudan arrest t ho ~c tc1 rons ts
pu rportedl y under '" 1 er 0

Health Department were in
full gear dunng the year
They mcluded cardiovascular projects, cancer detection
programs, women's health
services, prenatal care and
assistance programs to
women wtth infants, school
screening programs, Inimumzation, speech, vision and
heanng climes, spectal services for the medically handIcapped, and awareness programs on the health dangers
of using tobacco.
Whtle the Appalachtan
Dental Clinic 111 Middleport,
sponsored by the Health
Defartment for the past severa years, is not currently
operating due to the restgnauon of Dr. Dale Wh1te, a
search is contmuing for a
dentist to f1ll the vacancy
and reopen the clime. The
agency IS optimistic t,hat wtll
happen 1n the next few
months and last month hired
Dawn Tatum' as cltmc
adm1mstrator.
The number of Meigs
Counuans served last year,
as reflected 111 the 2005
annual report, tells a story of
the Health Department's
success in its vital role of
providing easy access to
affordable health servtces.
Those services and the
number of residents parUctpaiing are as follows:
Cardiovascular education
The Cardiovascular Health
Grant cont111ues to be coordinated
by
Andrew
Brumfteld, sports phystalogtst. Throughout the 2005
year 15 presentations were
made to 664 attendees, I 0
traimng sessions were conducted for 973 people .
Med1a efforts were achieved
through newspaper articles,
posters and de,.elopment of
the Mctgs County General
Health Dt stnct newsletter
funded
by
the
Cardiovascular Grant. Stx
thou sand newsletters were
matled to Meigs County residents.
Six.
Cardiovascular/Tobacco
CoalitiOn meetings were
held, w1th 13 agencies participatmg 111 the coaiiUon
endeavors
Dental care
The Metgs County Health
Department Appalachtan
Dental Cltmc. with Dale
Whtte, DDS. Beth Cremeans
CMA. CDA, Clime Manager
and Tammy Taylor. Clencal
Assistant, treated 2.473
clients 111 2005. Of the total
clients seen, 940 had
Medicaid dental coverage,
161 were Insurance and
1,372 pa1d for serv1ces based
on thetr 111come on the siidtng fee scale
School screemngs
Metgs County General
Health Distnct, m collaboration wtth Metgs County
Department of Jobs and
Family Services and the
School Dtstrict Nurses continued to screen Metgs
County students 111 2005 for
head lice 111festation wHhm
the elementary schools
A total ot 5, 131 students

nose')

In th is country . .tmong
groups deeply co nc e1ned:.
w1th thiS geno ~1 d e IS a•
Penn sy lva nia codlll ion o~
the Commumty Rei,llions
Council ol th e J e~&lt; ISh
Federati on .of
Lch1gh
Y.tlley. th e ln,tltute fo 1
Jew1 sh
Ch ii slhi!l '
Understanding
,tt
Muhlenbc•g College. and
represent.ll! Ves of Am nest) .
Internationa l and
the:
All entown Romdn CatbOhl
Dtocese., ,tlong v. tth a sillde nt org...tntzdtton
Th e 11
messdgc
· l•t
Da!lur' s ,u lf en ng. we see '
the same kind of genoCidal
de,.gn that terron'Zcd Jews
a nd no n-Jews 111 Na11
German y
Bu t .11 the Un ned N.nmns
.t n11nuet nl reso luti ons .1re
proposed dnd o!&gt;structed
dnJ prop"'ed ,tg.tin II tile
Umted N.Itions c.tnnot end'
tht s hon If)'lllg m,t" sutl er'
1ng. v. hdt '' 1ts re,tson lor ·
bc1ng '1
I Nat H,•,.tofll' a nan nn-· ·
olh lt'llo\t fit!(/ au th nllf\ on
fl /{'

the

f11 \I

4mewlment

H1/l of

Rt~ftt,

cllflhnl
o f fHUII \
/1/( / udt lfl!, " ] flf' \~W

Ht/1

and

Il l/

flit

o/

RI UIII\ wld tlw
Gorlu' llll'-:
l?t '"fciiU (' r ,
(\t' \' l ' ll

200i))

)tollf ' ~

were screened in the schools
and 177 presented to the
Health Department for
screening Eastern had a
.06% decrease 1n positive
results , Southern
1.7%
decrease and Me1gs had a
0 5% mcrease in positives
This continued effort has
achteved the outcomes of
improved
attendance,
enhanced
self esteem,
Improved grades, increased
mvolvement In school acttvlties and heightened aspirations for pursuing goals after
graduation.
Flu vaccinations
Anticipating a flu vaccination cltmc without any problems in 2005, turned out to
be even more dtfficult than
2004. Due to delay in shipment of vaccine from the
manufacturer
to
Ohio
Department of Health in turn
to each county Health
Department, the agency had
to delay scheduling the flu
clinic unttl mid-November.
As a result, only 520 flu vaccinations were gtven m
November of 2005 com. pared to 900 in 2004
In December of 2005, 382
more vaccines were gtven.
The decrease in numbers of
flu vaccmation was due to
Meigs Countians obtaining
the vaccine from other
providers whom had already
recetved their flu vaccine
shipment earlier than the
health department supplied
by the State.
In an effort to tmmumze
more Citizens of Me1gs
County and use the flu vaccme. the Me1gs Co)Jnty
Health Department nurs111g
staff offered outreach tlu
clinics to various township
areas of the county 111
December. A total of 902 flu
shots were admimstered in
2005.
Speech and heanng help
Speech
and
Hearing
Clinic, coordinated by
Carolyn Suste He111es,
speech and heanng pathologist, 111 COnJUnCtiOn With
Ohw Umvemty made a total
of 1.329 contacts and performed 143 heanng tests .
142 attended parent educatton classes, 51 received
beneftts from therapy and
176 were referred
Immunization clinics
ImmunizatiOn climes conI! nue to be offered every
Tuesday, With the first
Tuesday of each month till 6
p m Leanne Cunmngham
managed the immumzat10n
program through August,
with Ltsa Russell assummg
tmmumzatton nurse duties
from August to December at
which time Sherry Hayman
was htred an now manages
the program.
A total of 1937 immunizations was administered in
2005 In March of 2005 the
Pomeroy-Middleport Rotary
awarded grant funds for an
outreach 1mmumzatHm clinIC to vanous township areas
111 the county. It started last
Apnl and will conunue
through March . An outreach
clinic has been held each
month with the immumzation nurse and a representative from Rotary offenng
1mmunization,s and li~ht
refreshments A total of nme

Pun,\

clinics have been held .
Medical hand1 caps program
The Bureau for Children
With Med1cal Handi caps
(BCMH) program ass1 st area
fam1bes w1th the application
process for program servtces
to ensure that children wtth
chrome health concerns and
those In need of diagnostic
assessment recetve necessary medical care
Leanne Cunmngham managed over 45 cases dunng
2005. Eleven home VISits
were completed along with
numerous contacts being
made, phone calls, setting up
doctor appointments and
asSISting with completing
varwus forms, etc . She continued
those
services
through August when she
resigned and Ltsa Russell
was hired to assume these
dut1es for the remainder of
the year Sherry Hayman IS
currently bemg tra111ed by an
Oh10 Department of Health,
Consultant
to
BCMH
assume the BCMH nursmg
dulles.
Tobacco nsk education
TREAP (tobacco nsk educatton awareness and prevention) Program, coordinated by Brenda Curfman
with the assistance of Kyle
Ord, did educallonal presentations for 601 students;
STAMP presentations were
given to 118 students at
Eastern and Southern 6th
grade classes and 21 STAMP
mentors were trained 111
Southern and Eastern. A
total of I ,333 students
attended educatiOnal presentallons at schools and other
locattons.
Eleven TAP
(Youth Cessation Program)
and TEG (Alternative to suspensiOn program), presentatiOns were give and 92 prenatal and postpartum clients
received services
Environmental health
Environmental
Health,
directed by Ke1th Little, RS,
assisted by Don Hodge, RS
and Kyle Ord, SIT, responded to 76 public health nUIsance calls with most calls
bemg related to· waste and
sewage, mcludmg mosquaq
larvtc•dmg and several
mdoor air quality concerns.
Six.th-four of those calls
were abated. Sixty-three animal bites were reported wah
49 requiring med1cal care
Six animal specimens sent to
ODH for lab testmg all of
wh1ch were negative for
rab1es
InspectiOns
to all county schools, mobtle
home parks, landftll areas,
public pools, camps/parks
and home loan tnspections
totaled 66. Envtronmental
staff tssued 184 water and
sewage permits and 77 of
those systems were completed by year end. Food protection services Issued 130
licenses and completed 308
mspect1ons.
Cancer screenmgs
Southeastern Oh1o Breast
and
Cerv1cal
Cancer
Program (SEOBCCP), continues to be coordmated by
Courtney Sim
A total of 1.41 screemng
mammograms was performed, 13 diagnostic mammogram s and eight breast
ultrasounds
Six
were

referred for brea&gt;t biopstes.
15 were referred for surgical
consult s for breast related
co nce1 ns One client was
diag nosed with breast cancer
and was enrolled by reg tonal
SEOBCCP oft1ce for Ohm
Medicaid services tor treatment ; 61 cltents received
screemng tor gy n servtces
mcludmg pap smear. chmcal
brea st cx.am and pelv1c
exam, 22 of the se through
the Met gs County Health
Department Women 's Health
Services and/or Family
Planning Program.
Referrals for pelvtc ultrasounds totaled two. six
repeat pap smears, four
rererred for gyn consults.
one colposcopy and two colposcopy referrals
One client recei ved gyn
laser procedure services
Three clients rece1ved separate climcal breast exam s
Due to ODH adm m1 strat1ve
concern s, the SEOBCCP
program was mact1 ve from
July through m1d September
Famtly planmng services
Women's Health Servi ces
Chmc, coordm ated by
Barbara VuJakliJa, conunued
through June of 2005 .
Startmg July I, WHS fundtng di scontinued but a new
grant funded by Ohw
Department of Health and
Title X Funding m March
2005 contmued those services through the end of the
year
The Fam1ly Plannmg
Program focuses on needs of
women through ch1ld bearmg years w1th the need for
famtly planmng optiOns and
also Sexually Transmitted
Dt*ease testmg for women
an~ men are funded through
thi s program. Two cltmcs are
held monthly wtth phy sician
services being offered by
River
Rose
OB/GYN
Services and Holzer Clime
Meigs Branch.
Fees for services including
a comprehensive gyn exam
mcluding pap smears, ciini·
cal breast exams and pelvic
exams and b1rth control
opttons are offered to chents
based on thetr mcome on a
shdmg tee scale. Clients
receive tn-depth educauon
regardmg sexual risk history.
tobacco/alcohol use, dtetary
and lifestyle change needs .
etc. Clients recetving contraceptiVe product~ rece1ve
weight and BP monitonng
and education follow up on
any l:tealth concerns A total
of 184 clients rece1ved serVIces dunng 2005
HIV /HCV testing program
An HIV /HCV testing program was started m Jul y
wtth tund111g for tesung provtded by Ohto Department
of Health. Chents recetve
pre and post counseling serVIces along With Jab spectmen serv1ces. Sherry Weese
and
Barbara
VUJdkliJa
attended a three day trammg
by
Oh1o
provided
Departmenl of Health to
offer these services free of
charge to chents of Metgs
County
Infrastructure grant programs
The
Pubh c
Health
Infrastructure Grant. coordtnated by Frank Gorscak.
completed se~e ral accom-

plishments m 2005
MARCS Radto&gt; were purchased and used, mam te nance of the department's
Network
'erver
and
achieved successful usc of
Mass
the
MCHD
Vaccmauon Plan dunn g the
November
2005
Flu
Vaccmauon cltmcs.
, Gorscak al so coordmated
the dt splay of the Meigs
County EMA Resc ue Van at
the Metgs County Fatr A
Memorandum
of
Understandmg was establi shed with Met gs Sentor
Center for the use of the1r
refri ge rator/freezer during
emergencies
PHIG grant objectives for
trammgs and exercises was
achieved through the designing of the Me1gs County
Joint Tabletop Chemical for
the Me1gs EMA and on the
Regional Med1cal Response
(RMRS) Design Team and
parllc1pated 1n the SubRegion I RMRS Bwlog1c
Exerc1 se 111 August
WIC program
Women,
Infant
and
Children (WIC) program .
under the d•rectton of
Debbte Howell. R N , wnh
the assistance of Pam Sharp.
BS, Health Educator and
Dortha Riffle. LPN. ADP
Coordmator, had 200 Initial
certificatiOns 111 2005 and
692 re-certifications
Various other services
offered by the Wl C program
Included Breast Feedmg
Education , offered by Lee
Newberry,
LactatiOn
Consultant, attended to 96
clients, 144 received mfant
feedtng education, 521
recetved mdtvtdual services,
371 attended group counselmg. 605 hemoglobin checks
were completed. 175 clients
had return vtsits for follow
up checks on health concerns During 2005, 25 outreach
endeavors
were
achieved and one WIC advisory meeting was held
Along w1th the services
offered by the WIC staff,
numerous referrals were
made to other County
Agencies such as, Immumzauons, food pantry, Early
Intervenuon/Early
Start.
Head Start, Vision Clime.
Dental Clmtc, Speech and
Heanng Clinic,
Home
Vtsiting Program and to pnvate physicians.
~renatal Clime services
child and Famtly Health
Services (CFHS) Prenatal
Clime, directed by Conme
Little, RN, BSN and assisted
by Beck1 Ball completed 361
prenatal check up vtsits .
Dr W1lma Mansfteld conunues to see pregnant
women through their 26th
-week of gestauon. At 26
week s, staff coordmates
transfer arrangements to a
deltvering hosp nal of the
client 's chOice. 46 of the
prenatal clients also rece1ve
WIC serv1ces 47 cltent s
were enrolled 111 Health
Check/Healthy
Start/MediCaid Pregnancy
tests performed 111 2005
totaled 336 All clients
receive lab testmg , ultrasounds. nutnttonal counselmg. soc1al assess ments.
weight and blood pressure
measurements 262 were

referred

to

•

..

oth•f

·'
··"·
c1ans . CFHS word in11ted • '·'
and/or att~nded \ ~nous .• ·
tramtng,, mectmg• and
health fa1r' and/or public
orgamzattons
• •
'
Heanng and vtston cltaics. ': · ~
Met gs County Healtll · -:
Depart ment and the Oh!Q ;. '
Department of Hea lth ooor.: • "
dtnated and held six heanog
·
and VISIOn cliniCS for Children Wi th heannglvtswn
•
problems or screentnl!' for
problems. These cltnics
l ',
offered tO Ch ildren UtH~ f):,
b1rth through age 18, · ' •''-·
Head Start physicals •
·:' '
Head Start phy;icals were . ,:
held at the Me1gs County : , 1•
He alth Department ag.ain
thi s year, with E1leen Dll:'llli,
RN , CNP from Holzer ,_
Cltn1c
performin g the 1 ,
' •. ·
exams
The MCHD nurs•ng ~taff : •
offered then se r vic e~ fot . • 'I'
hetght/we •ght/blood pres~ ,.
sure meas urements and ','
tmmumzattons
• : . . ,.. .
Newt)brn vts tllng program ~ - 1
The Help Me ·Orow .' • '
New born Home Vt s ttin~ .,.
program continued througn, ~·~
May
2005
Leanne ·~.;:,.
Cunnmgham.
RN · and ·.,.
Barbara VuJakliJa. RN com i : ~-~~
pleted th e home vi sits , ' ·r,
Effective June I. MCHU ' ,;
discontmued offenng the ' t;•
nursmg se rvi ces &lt;\t tha1 ~I~
t1me, the Help Me Grow -tifj.
Nursmg staff assumed . tllo ,&lt; •
home VISiting duties
~ ·~'~I
Mi scellaneous 1n-officq ·.' ,.Jl
serv1ces
•
1 "' ...,.,
The
Me1gs
County ;!,.,.'
General Health Dtstncl ~~~·:.
nursmg staff and card!OVas-1 ·
cular staff has asststed ~
numerou s communtty ind• ~ , .'..,'. i
vtduals with blood pretstmi .~~~
measurements, blood glu- \.l 1
cose checb. adult iJ9111U• f ' ·;
nizauons, lice check~ a11d '~•.;
vanous other questiOns or ~~.;
services The , nursi ng anq · ; :,...-•
cardiovascular staff in coor- ' 'fo":' ~
d•nat1on
w1th
HolzeJ '
Med1cal Center. offer~ .').,~~
three health fa1rs throughout '[.t',
d1flerent areas of the co\lnty .r./.
111 2005
.
: :!1·'1V!tal statistics
'if-f
A total of 176 records · · ,l;...
were put on hie and sent ~ · :~
state b) Vnal Statin~ ,:l"t~
Registrar, Edwma B~ll ' ;
assisted by Courtney Stm~ .•) '
Deputy' Registrar. lncludea ''
tn those 176 record' were 2
'
btrths. 161 death s and 13 ,.
certtltcates of sen 1ce. A • ·
total
of
1. 1(15 '',
cerllficateslpermlts
werll ),.;
t~sued mclud1ng 2R5 eertW .-Nx.lj,,
fied birth certtflcates, 623 '~·,
co:erttfted death cert1ficat.ts, ·4 •'!\&lt; "
veterans· cop1es and " 2&amp;) ~ ·
bun al/trans ll permits. , • .•··;;,.:j.
$2.724 00 wa s se~!n.4~. ~
Treasurer of State fop'ChiJII ~$1·
Abuse and Neglect ($3-.00 •
from each certl fied -eopy;-' '
excludmg ve teran' copies):
$630 00 was &gt;e nt to ' th~ '!~.
Dtv!Sion of Real Estate fcil ' i..,-1¥
the Oh1o Cemetery Dispule ~'-. :
Committee ($2.50 ~111 \..i::'~:!
each Bunalrrrans•t
ISSued l $4.540 00 was sent 1.:ll~
to Treasurer of State fol
Fam!l\ Vwlence Protection. • ··'
(Established as of October · ·';
2005 to help ltn.mce Fam1ly ;~ '.
Ytolence Shelters. $1 50
trom eac h cerl!tied copy
ISSUC' )
~'
agenc1e\/cltmc~ or pl\ysi;

-are '

.

.).»

,;1,

'i:/:.-

permic:'ff'

r·

. .. f , '

'.

Daniels

Local Briefs
Blood drive

plan~ed

MASON , WVa - · The Mason County VocatmnaiTechmcal Center IS havmg a blood drive, 9 am to 2
p.m Thursday, March 23, at Oh10 R1ver Road, Pomt
Pleasant, W Va It 1s sponsored by Sk1lls USA

Modern Woodmen to host dinner
POMEROY - Modern Woodmen of America, Camp
6335, will host a dinner, 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Tuesday,
March 21, at Captain D's Seafood 111 Gallipolis The
Camp will pay $2 50 toward the cost of each person 's
meal A family door prize w1ll be awarded

Meigs youth baseball camp
POMEROY - Metgs baseball wtll be holdmg a youth
camp for baseball players from grades 3-8 Saturday from
10 am to 2 p.m
Work wtll on basic sktlls and termmology used hy
TVC champion Metgs Marauders Free t- shlrts will be
g1ven to the f1rst 50 campers Cost is $35 dollars a person or. $25 for individuals on a team that partiCipates.
Camper' are to take clothes and equipment to participate
outSide and ms1de dnd a sack lunch RegistratiOn beg111s
at930am

(//ld

hnuA 1

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

Benefit auction to be held
EAST LETART. W Va - A bhnd man 's auction will be
held dl 5 p m. Saturday at the L1st Letart Umted
Methodi st Church All Items are to be gift wrapped
Proceeds w11l go to the E,1st Letart Umted Methodi St
Church buiidmg lund Refreshments will be a1 at Iable
Everyone IS welcome

from PageA1
8858)
Tickets can be purchased
on the day of the show for
$30 at the dnve m. Children.
age 5 and under, will be
admitted free 1f accompamed
by an adult . All uckets are
general admission with fe stival seatmg and 11 ts suggested
that you bnng your lawn
chairs tor seatmg. The show
Will be held ram or shme
Gates w1ll open at 5 p m
w1th local enterta111ment ,md
food and ref1eshment s will be
available
The Kanauga Dnve In ts
located on Oh1o 7. about one
m1le north of U.S. 35 It IS
easily accessible from Oh10.
West Ytrgmta and Kentut ky.
Parkmg w1ll be avatlable m

Keeping Meigs
County
informed
17ze Daily Sentinel
Subscnbe today

992-2155

the dnve m tor $5 per car
Overflow parkmg will he
available on Georges Creek
Road for ~ 5 per car With
access to concert s1te
For more tnformat1on.
phone (740) 446- 1088.
The show " bemg brought
to you m part by WRYV
101 5 The Rtver. WLWF
"The Wolt. " WBYG B1g
Country 99 5. John Sang
Ford - Lin co ln - Mel c ury .
Super g and Pepsi

Prepare NOW /JlL
ORDER NOW!
Payment Plans Available

Present this ad for "10% Discount'
"Serving Ohio &amp; WV"

CJJeautiJuf £,1{emories .!,..'1( onuments
241t Jackson Ave.

45065

Point Pleasanl, 't\ \
(304) 675-2015

Ea~le

R1dge Rd.

Pomerov, OH
t741li99i-7441l

.

•'&gt;

-~·

,_ '

....

..... '

~\

(,

-~ •';} ~

,,
- ,.
..••.'.
~­

In wving Memory

Rita}. Fields
Feb. 10; 1943- Marc/1 14, 2005

•"'

The t_.,d rs "'·' '""rherd. l•ha!lllnt bl'
m 11 mil Ht&gt;matr,_me fl p dmtn m '?rn n fld\lU.I'i''i .
he lead, me he ,1de qwel "Hlfl' l " he u•,ron&gt;l'; mr
W lli . He gu~eJe1 nh' mpath'fi olug flteo u'lne~\for

hn naml' \ wkt' Even thnuc:h ! v.aU rhJtmgh I be
\'aile\ of the t:Jwdo u of deurh ! 11 ill /Nl! no et iJ
j01 \tJU

are

111th m~~

\0/11

m&lt;l and

'&lt;'W \lt~lf

tfft•v

( omjorr me You prepare a wblc hl'/ol£' me m the
prt' \ef/c e &lt;~fm\ em' "lle\ \ou anomt ''"head

,,ufr

Sure{\ ~oo&lt;b1e~~ arui loH'
\\t il (o/lrH\ me all {he da \" of"" ltfe and I "Ill
d11 I'll 111 rh~ · hr mH' of the l nrd fo rn n
ml

111\

r "fl me111m~"

H11 d&gt;d11d fmc ph f u. !d\
&lt; luld1U1 Jowph /1 , (oeguf'\ RuhriT &amp; I anu11es

�..
. The Daily Sentinel

LOCAL

• STATE

Harold C. Oxley, Jr., K. Hunt, deed, Olive.
deceased,
to
Charles
Jerry L Jennings, Sonia M.
Butterwonh, deed, Columbia. Jennings, to Columbia Gas
Harold C. Odey, Jr., Transmission, right of way,
deceased,
to
Charles Bedford.
Butterworth, deed, Columbia.
Roy Holter, Patricia Holter,
Carol J. Adams to Todd A. to Columbus Southern Power,
Adams, deed, I.:etart.
easement, Chester.
Sherry L:- Barnes to
Charles E. Payne, Carol S.
Autumn A. Beatty, deed, Payne, to Columbus Southern
Scipio.
Power, easement, Letart.
James F. Carter, deceased,
Judy Ellis, Rick Ellis,. to
to Virginia M. Carter, affi- ·Columbus Southern Power,
davit, Olive.
.
easement, Bedford.
Mark Broderick Williams,
Bay Financial Savings
Deana
Williams,
to Bank, Maria Romine, Arlene
Constance· R. Enslen, deed. · Heavner, to Bryan Holman,
· Diana M. Brush, Charles R. sheriff's deed, Village of
Brush , Roger E. Eblin, Karen Pomeroy.
L. Eblin, to Diana M. Brush,
James C. Birchfield to Tony
Charles R. Brush, deed, M. Hutton, deed, Rutland.
Village of Syracuse. .
Sandra
R.
Carnahan,
RandY. L. Williams, Denise Oakwood Acceptance Corp.,
L. Wtlliams, · to Charles to Vi}nderbilt Mortgage, sherBuckley, Kathy Buckley, iff's deed, Sutton.
deed, Salem.
Lyle J. Swain to Matt Sebo,
Randy L Williams, Denise Michelle M. Sebo, deed,
L. Williams, to ·· James Olive. ,
Snodgrass, Rebecca L.
Ronald L McPherson,
Snodgrass, deed, Salem.
Carolyn S. McPherson, to
Gene Warner to Jerry David A. George, Melanie M.
Warner, Jr. , deed, Scipio.
George, deed, Lebanon.
Edna Nance to Jim D.
Michael J. Hensler, Judie A.
Allman, deed, Sutton.
Hensler, Shannah L. Hensler,
Countrytyme ALC, Ltd., Jenifer L. Betts, James Betts,
· Anthony Land Co., Ltd., to Markeus L. Hensler, Mark
David Howard, deed, Chester Hensler, Clair E. Hensler, to
and Olive. .
Markeus L Hensler, Clair E.
Bruner Land Co., Inc., to Hensler, deed, &lt;Oolumbia.
.
Bob F. Peterson, deed; Olive. · Janet L. Swigger to Lester
· Shawn L. Bush to Maranda L. · Parker II, Charity · R.
I. Bush, affidavit, Sutton.
Parker, deed, Chester.
Shawn L. Bush, Maranda
Michael A. Welsh, Johnni
L. Bush, to Special Property Welsh, to Countrytyme Home
VI, LLC, deed, Sutton.
Loans, Inc., affidavit.
Larry W. Parsons, Teresa
Bruner Land Co. to Lynda
Parsons, to Joshua L Wilson, J. Fraley, deed, Bedford.
Amy M. Hysell , deed,
Carl B. Siewart, Pamela J.
Rutland.
Stewart, to Trustees ·of
Reva
Palmer
Egyud, Enterprise United Methodist
deceased, James Egyud, Church, Enterprise U.M,C.,
deceased, to Ralph Egyud, deed, Salisbury. .
Sr., affi.davit, Lebanon.
Mary J. Murray to Pamela
James Egyud, deceased, . to Lynn West, deed, Rutland.
Ralph D. · Egyud, Sr., deed,
Associated Fabricators, Inc.
Lebanon.
·
to GeraJd R. Thompson, Alice
Ralph D. Egyud, Sr., Doris Thompson, deed, Village of
Egyud, to Deborah Palmer Pomeroy.
Murray, deed, Lebanon.
·. Howard D. Larkins, Donna
Pamela Bentz, Timothy V. Larkins, to Jamison
Bentz, to J.P. Morgan Chase Proffitt, Sandra Proffitt, deed,
Bank, ..Equity One, sheriff's Lebanon.
deed, Village of Pomeroy.
Pamela · J.
Mathews,
Herbert Wellman to Roben Tommy K. Mathews, to
Wellman, deed, Salem.
Family Homes, Inc., deed,
Doris -~·. Deeter to Glenda ·. Village of Pomeroy.

Meeting set to discuss joint marketing initiative
SYRACUSE Meigs
County Tourism, in conjunction with the Athensbased Appalachian Center
for Economic . Networks
(ACEnet), announces an
open meeting to discuss a
proposed Meigs · County
JOint marketing brochure.
· The brochure's objective
will be to highlight agricul. lure-based retail businesses

. such as farm stands, greenhouses, and Christmas tree
growers
exclusively
in
Meigs County.
· Partially . subsidized by a
Rural Business Enterprise
Gram and Meigs County
Tourism, involvement in
this piece will be low to
no cost to qualified, partieipating businesses.
Although ·agriculture-based

. businesses will be ihe primary focus of this particu·
Jar marketing initiative, all
retail and tourism-based
businesses based in Meigs
County are invited to participate in the discussion.
The meeting is scheduled
for Monday, March 20 at 6
p.m: at the Syracuse
Comm11nity Centet.

Local stocks
ACI-73.60
AEP-35.37
Akzo- 52
Alhland Inc. - 65.81
BU-13
Bob Evans - :,Z9.10
Bori\Yarner - 55.85
CENX-35.64
Champion - 6.22
Charming ShOJII - 13.13
City Holding- 35.90
·
Col- 52.73
DG -17.41
DuPont -· 41.51

Faderal Mogul - .36
USB-30.46
Gannett - 61.37
General Electric - 33.67
GKII!LY- 5.45
Harley Davidson - 50.4 7
JPM -41.06
Kroger- 20.55
Ltd.- 23.79 .
NSc- 51.21
Oak Hill Financial - 31.U
ova- 25.20
BBT- 39.71
Peoples - 28.22

· Pepsico - 60.49
Premier - 14.73
Rockwell - 71.02
Rocky Boots- 24.99
Sears - 118.03
Wai-Mart - 45.27
Wandy's - 62.06
Worthington - 19.08
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m; closing quotes of the
previous day'a tranaactlons,
provldad by Smith Financial
Advlaors of Hilliard Lyons In
. Gallipolis.

Local weather
. 'fuesday ... Mostly cloudy
with a slight chance of showers in the morning ... Then
partly cloudy in the afternoon.
Breezy and much. cooler with
· highs in the upper 40s. West
· winds 15 to 20 mph with
gusts up to 30 mph. Chance of
. rain 20 percent
'fuesday · night...Partly
cloudy. Cold with lows
around 30. West winds I0 to
15 mph.
Wednesday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 50s. West

winds 5 to 10 mph.
.
Wednesday night...Partly
cloudy. Cold with lows
around 30. West winds 5 to 10
mph.
.
.
Thursday ... Mostly cloucly
with a chance of rain showers.
Highs in the lower 50s.
Chance of rain 50 percent .
. Thursday night...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of rain
and snow showers. Lows in
the lower 30s. Chance of precipitation 50 percent
Friday ... Mostly
cloudy

, COLUMBUS (AP) - A
federal judge ordered a mental
health
evaluation
Monday for a man accused
of assaulting and threatening
to kill an off-duty crew
member aboard a commuter
.
airplane.
Joseph Pervis Hebert, 48,
of Spring Creek. Nev.. is
charged wi_th a·ssault on an
aircraft and interference
with and attempted interfere~ce with flight crew mem-

bers by assault or intimida- .
. tion, according to a complaint filed by the FBI.
U.S. Magistrate Judge
Norah
McCann
King
ordered Heben held at the
Twin Valley Psychiatric
Center for no more than 30
days. She also ordered that
Hebert undergo a p~ychiatric
evaluation before a hearing
to determine . whether he is
competent to stand trial.
· Authorities said Hebert

was one of six passengers on
Commuter-Air/Continental
Connection Flight 8820 that
left Cleveland at 12:50 p.m.
Friday for Cincinnati. ·
About 40 minutes into the
flight, Hebert began speaking loudly and sat behind a
uniformed, off-duty airline
employee whom he ac~used
of being a federal air marshal, then choked him and
threatened to kill him, the
FBI complaint says.

2006

Women's NCAA bracket, B2
Chaney retires from Temple. B2

POMEROY - The fol- J.
Nelson,
Middleport; Corliss, Pomeroy; Paul a A.
lowing have been selected as Dennis R. Bryant,' Pomeroy; Rife, Middleport; Peggy S.
potential jurors for Meigs Liberty A. King, Middleport; Grueser, Pomeroy; Lucas B.
County Court in 2006.
Jesse A. Basham, Pomeroy ; Grueser, Racine; Alice M.
· Michelle L. Buckley, Leeann C. Dill, Middleport; Dillon, Reedsville; Rose D.
Reedsville;
Warren
B. Nancy L Holsinger, Racine; Fife, Reedsville; D. Mildred
S.
Romines, Lee, Albany; Sandra L.
Taylor, Pomeroy ; William H. Dawn
Nelson, Pomeroy, Sheila C. Middleport; Mildred E. Almond, Long Bottom; Rae
Hysell, Pomeroy; Cheryl A. Shuler, Racine; Josh C. Ray, L. Kimes, Reedsville; Aaron
,
·
Goble, Syracuse; Conme A .. Langsville; Joshua H. Harri s, M. Gaston, Albany.
Steinmetz, Albany; Thomas Syracuse; Robin C. Eblin,
Angela
Y.
Rtgsb~
E. Roell, Middleport; Kevin Pomeroy; Earthel E: Perdue, ·Reedsville;
Sandra
1'.
E. Venoy, Long Bottom; Pomeroy; Connie A. Priddy, Philson ; Syracuse: Sherri L.
John L. Barton, Racine; Vinton; Sheila J. Erlewine, Hendrix, Coolville; Douglas
Teresa A. Davis, Middleport; Langsville; Jonathan W. Lee, M. Mansfield, Albany; Traci
Carter,
Reedsville;
Michelle ·R. Pratt, Shade;· Albany: Larry J. Wiles , M.
William
R.
Neutzling, Racine; Charles S. Casto, Matthew S. Mi)hoan, Long
·Racine; Kathryn J. Greene, Middleport; . Danny
L. Bottom: Mickey Poole,
Pomeroy;
Maegan
E. Hoffman, Pomeroy; Joanie Middleport ; Pauline Parker,
Dodson, ·Pomeroy; Anna M ·L. Caruthers, Mtddli:port; Racine ; Bruce H. Gheen,
Ryther, Syracuse; Billie J. Pamala
K.
Basham, Racine ; Jane L. Graham,
Sellers, Portland; Jewell A. Coolville; Carrie D. Harmon , Racine;
Terrance
W.
Withrow, Pomeroy; Charles Langsville ;
Zona
K. Matthews,
Middleport:
R.
Kinnan,
Pomeroy; Sheridan, Reedsville ; Ronald · Ronnie D. Arms, Pomeroy; ·
Rachelle E. Writesel, Racine; C. Cozart, Pomeroy;· Frank Christopher D. Krawsczyn,
. James K. Stanely, Pomeroy; Herald,
Jr., Middleport: Pomeroy; Sard M. Williams,
Cheryl
A.
Facemyer, Terri L. Bowling, Racine ; Long . Bottom; Lydia V.
Pomeroy ;
Roger
D. Harley
E:
McDonald , Haning. Pomeroy; Ricky A. ·
Floyd . L. Findley. Racine ; Brian S.
McClelland, II, Rutland; Middleport;
Patricia
F.
Marcinko, Burney,
Jr..
Pomeroy; Sharp, Reedsville; Kenneth
W
Doerfer, M. Currence, . Middleport ;
Middleport; Vicki J. Haley, Anthony
Pomeroy; John P. Follrod, Pomeroy; Arthur A. Tobin, Charles K. . Hall , Pomeroy ;
Pomeroy; · Terry L. Powell, Jr. , Rutland; Sandra F. Roger D . Cotterill, Rutland;
Jr., Middlerport ; Jarrod C. Brown, Middleport.
Dougl as W. Jude , Vinton;
Virgin] Stanley, Albany ; Adam Basch, Albany; Nicole
Holman, Rutland: Alberta K.
Hysell, Pomeroy; Robert E. Leslee
Diehl·,
Racine; M. Phillips, Rutland ; Sheila
Ball, Pomerpy; . Joann N. 'Beverly J. Hayes, Pomeroy; M.
Zeigler,
Pomeroy ;
Ball, Middleport; Rodney R. Andrea
N.
Wines, Randall J. Gibbs, Pomeroy;
Ebersbach, Middlepon; Nora Middleport; Debra. Edwards, John. R. Hamilton, Pomeroy;
E. Rice, Middleport; Michael Pomeroy; Martha E. Grueser, Paul L. Thomas, Long.
A. Evans, Reedsville; Karin Rutland; James W. Warner, Bottorn ; Brill E. King .
Johnson, Pomeroy; Danny Middleport;
Dana
J. Pomeroy: Timothy J. Ziegler,
McManis, Pomemy; Marie Aldridge, Reedsville; Diana Pomeroy;
William
0.
E. Johnson, Pomeroy; Marie L McQuirt, Albany; Leafy Garnes, Pomeroy: Marilyn s.
L. Gilbert, Middleport; M. Chasteen, Middleport; Meier, Middleport; Lei sha L.
Christopher S. Newell, Long Robert C. Avis, Coolville; Buck. Racine; Jeffrey A.
Bottom; George R. Muth, Kenneth
R. · Riddle, Hawk, Long Bottom ; Vivian,
Pomeroy ;
Sharon
A. Coolville; Debbie K. Brown, M. Boston. Reedsville ; Tanja
Thomas, Langsville; Thomas Rutland;
Regina
D. S.
Auxier,
Reedsville ;
S. Fitch , Long Bottom; Erlewine, Langsville; Amy J. Cynthia D. King, Pomeroy;
Cristy A. Riggs, Long McDonald,
Langsville; Corey
L.
Longstreth,
Bottom; Jessica S. Matson, James
J.
Hawley, Rutland ;
Allison
M.
Middleport; Nora R. Eason, Middleport; Mary Findley, Williams, Rutland; Gerald P.
PqmeroY.; Debbie G. Smith, Racine; Mary Catherine Shaulis , Albany; Andrea .I.
Reedsville;
James
A. Rathb!lrn,
· Pomeroy;
K
Bushong, Long . Bottom; Margaret A. Eynon, Racine; Doerfer, Pomeroy ; andi M.
Melissa
. D.
Wingett; Ernest
L.
Hawkins, Bachtel. Long . Bottom;
Syracuse ·,
Amanda
G. Pomeroy · Jane A E ,. h Shawn A. Durst. Pomeroy;
•
· ng ts • Ryan P. Nelson, Reedsville;
Yeager, Pomeroy; Clarence Pomeroy; Charles S. Allman,
J. Newlun, Rutland; Lee T. 11, Vinton; Mandi
N. Patricia A. Smith. Syracuse;
Swain, Reedsville; John P. Knowlton , Albany; Robert Reynold L. Lagore , Racine;
Pickens, Portland; Patricia J. M. Curry. Racine; Carolyn s. Tony J. Pierce, Syracuse;
Vaughan, Pomeroy.
Gilmore, Langsville; Irene Tom R. Lawson, Portland;
Gladr,s
J.
Cross, M. Dill, Racine; Walter s. Daniel H. Littlefield, Racine;
Langsvtlle;
Jimmie
L. Beeker, Langsville ; Joe C: Daho R. Kin g, Pomeroy ;
P.utnam, Sr., Coolville; Ritchie,
Long
Bottom; Jack
Jett. . Reed svtlle;
Bryan A.- Gibbs, ReeQ.sville; George
M.
Shuler, . N1cholas W. F1tch, Portland:
Suzanne
M.
Johnson, Middleport; Ty M. Swartz, Ama.nda S. Ju stice, Rutland;
Ruthind;
Greg
L. Coolville; Kelley R. Lawso~. Maz1e C. Hannah, Pomeroy;
Weinfunner, Al~any; Lora L · Racine; Robert L. Ritchie, Paula E. Brewer, Long
Ward, Racine; . Karen S. Racine; Karen L. Haines, Bottom;
Mtchael
C.
Hagaman, Albany; Emma J .&gt; Racine; Kimberly J. Seth, Brumfteld, Pomeroy: Lynn J.
Killam, 'Middleport; Cora A. Rutland· Autumn A. Goode Ramage, Pomeroy: Kenda L.
Loftis, Pomeroy; Dixie A. Langsvi'lle;
Shelba , J: ·Smith. Racine; Anne M. Iles,
Arbuckle,
Middleport; Wickline · Racine· Don B Pomeroy ; Grace C. Etch ,
Matthew W. Hill, Racine; Tillis R~tland· F;edrick W .Pomeroy ;
Willi am
w..
Richard D. Stanley, Racine; · Hetd.:Cth, Pom~roy ; Don M. Oliphant , Shade; Cheryl A.
Richard L. Bearhs, Jr., Rose, Racine; Diana L. Smtth, M1ddleport ; Jeremy
Pomeroy; Lariy E. Griffin , Windon, Pomeroy; David L. D.. Johnson.. Middleport ;
.Racine;· Clive E. Wolfe , Deem, Pomeroy; Nikki N. Soma M. Jennmgs, Pomeroy;
Pomeroy; Jacqueline Avis, Riffle, Racine; · Robert J . Bubby
B.
Herdman ,
-Coolville; Scott L. Chistmas, Lemley, Pomeroy; Jerry L. Middleport; . Timothy C.
Pomeror.; John D. Causey, VanKirk, Langsville: Adrian Gtlbnde, Rac.me; R~chael E.
Reedsvtlle ;
Willard
P. Lathey, Pomeroy; Sheila K. Lees, Reedsvtlle; Wtlham E.
Adkins, Bidwell; Edna F. Dickinson, Albany; James X War?, Racine; Debra M. Hill ,
McCoy, Middleport; Lola F. Haning, Ill. , Rutland; Mary Racme;_ Wtlha_m F. Hams .
Sanders, Reedsville; Stacy R. D. King, Pomeroy ; Phillip J. Jr.. Racme; Ken_h Z. Colhns,
Wilson, Racine; Beverlee L. Weaver, Syracuse; Robert E. Reedsvtlle; Dav1d A. Beatuc.
Wickline, Racine; Amanda F. Eblin, Middleport; J. Bette Racine; Amy R. Cremeans,
Molden, Middleport; Anna Biggs, Pomeroy ; Scott B. Pomeroy ; Walter W. Strike,
M. Hatfield,
Pomeroy; Anderson, Reedsv.ille ; Eileen Racine : Lajean Armstrong,
Donny R. Tillis, Rutland; Buck, Racine; Margaret Middleport ; Marvin G. Burt ,
Rae L Braley, Pomeroy; Russell, . Racine; Samuel Pomeroy : Betty L Holter;
A.
Johnson, Thompson, Pomeroy: Natalie pomeroy; Rusty D. Gilliand,
Mark
Middleport;
Paul
M. A. Morehead, Pomeroy; Jack Racine ; Robert E. Smith,
. Michael, Pomeroy; Jeremy L Lyons, Jr., Racine; Jacob Pomeroy ; Bryan K. Green ,
R. Gatrell , Pomeroy; David M.. Morrow, Syracuse; Mary Albany; Donnie J . Fry,
E. Myers, Jr., Racine; E. Bentz, Pomeroy ; James Middleport; Sarah A. Quall s,
Stephen
D.
Richards, Denner, Racine; Johnnie G. Middleport; Charles R.
Albany; Calvin G. Holley, Johnson, Ponland; Dustin P. Smart, Jr. , Pomeroy.
Barbara
A. Kebler, Reedsville: J;ohn L.
Thi s is a partial li sting of .
Pomeroy;
Hudson, Middleport; Andre'!" Bass, Langsville; Nicole D. potential jurors. The comJ. Cra1g, Racine ; Donald 0 . Smith, Pomeroy ;· Paul E. plete listing will following
Barnett; Langsville; Tamara Harris, Racine; · Gilbert W. soon in The Daily SentineL

. with a chance of snow showers. Cooler wiih highs iri the
lower 40s. Chance of snow 30
percent:
Friday
night ... Partly
· cloudy. Cold with lows in the
upper 20s .. ·
Saturday
through
Sunday ... Mostly clear. Highs
in the mid 40s . Lows in the
upper 20s.
Sunday
night
and ·
Monday ... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the lower 30s. Highs
in the upper·40s.

Judge orders cumpetency test for man accused of threat on plane

Tuesday, March 14,

RIO GRANDE BASEBAI.L

I

f..l-' C.1nn• r
~ SOCIPt y

.

~·

·"'' ,&gt;;_

'"'-'

!

..~
Ul-ll

'~HOLZER c ...
-~ CANCER CARE
rt u

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO JHE SENTINEL

teams from Gallla. Meigs and Mason co~nties.

iut~day's aamea

College Baseball
Rio Grande vs. West Virginia Tech, (in

Ormond Beach, Fla .) 10 a.m.
College Soffball
Rio Grande vs, Dawson (in Tucson ,
Ari z.). 2 p.m.
Rio Grande vs. Dickinson State (in
Tucson, Ariz.), 4 p.m. ,.

Wedneaday's gam11
College Baseball
Rio Grande at Embry Riddle 5 p.m.
College Soffbell
Rio Grande vs . Minot State (in Tucson,
Ariz .), 10 a.m.

'

~

Rio Grande vs. Dordt (in TuCson, Ariz .).

·

_ RIO Grar;tde vs. Fintandia (in Tucson.

Ar\2.). noon

BY DONNA

Frldav'a gamea

• Lewis remains w~h
Ravens. See Page 86
• Browns ink nose tackle.
See Page 86 ,

BRIEFS

Post 128 tryout
dates announced

100 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis

ROCK SPRINGS.-Tryout
dates for Post 128 American
Legion baseball team all players are set for May 24. 25 and
26 (everyone must come to all
three, only exception is if your
high school team is still playIng in the state tournament) at
Meigs fligh School.
Post 128 plays its home
games in Meigs County. but
receive s players from both
Mei gs and Gallia Counties
from these re$pective schools:
· Gallia Academy, River Valley.
Mei gs Local , Eastern and
Southern.
·
From these tryouts, the Post
128 team for 2006 ( 19 years
old and under) as well as a
Junior Leg ion team (15·16
year olds) will be selected .
There will be an organizational meeti ng at the old
American Legion building in
Middleport on Sunday. April 2
at 2 p.m. Everyone who wish·
es to try QUt for the team or the
junior team is strongly recommended to attend this meeting
on April 2.
Questions should
be
directed to coach Chris
Stewart (740) 591-4605 or email diamondDJ @colwn- ·
bus.rr.com.

CONTACfS .

"Suppor,t for the Caregiver"

Phone -:-1 ·740·446-2342 ext 33
Fax - ,1· 740- 446-3008
E-mail - sports @mydaitysentinet.com

Presented by: Mona Sprague, LPC ·

Spor\~

Refreshments will be served . All cancer survivors, caregivers,
their family and friends are invited and encouraged to attend .

Staff

Brad Sherman, Spans Editor

(740) 446-2 342. ed 33
bshe1 man @ myctallytnbune .co m

Brya n Wa tters 1 Sports Writer

For more information, please call

(740) 446· 2342. eKt 23
•
bw allers@ rhyda1tytnbu ne com

(740) , 446~5679 .

Larry Crum, Spona Writer
(- 740) 446-2342 , ext 33
. Ierum@ mydaliyreg1ster com

·-----·- ---

....,...__.~·-

_____

ORMOND BEACH. Fla.
- The spring trip began in .
the exciting fashion for the
University nf Rio Grande
baseball ' team as they rallied
for a 9-8 win pver West
Virginia
Wesl eyan
on
Saturday morning in the 85degree tem peratu res of
Ormond Beach.
Rio Grande ( II -5 J scored
three times in the ninth
inning to get the win after the
first two outs were recorded.

I NCAA \VOJVIEN'S T O URN ,\MENT

TOMELLEO

Junior Bobby Jones came to
the plate with Rio down to
it's final out. Jones began the
rally with a triple and later
scored on a hit by junior
Michael Warren. After a
Nate Chau walk and a double
steal. junior transfer Kyle
Wells ended the game with a
two-run si ngle.
·warren went 2-for~ 5 on the
day with an RBI, Wells was
2-for-4 with two RBI 's and
senior Jorge Morales went 2for-3 with three RBI, includ-

Piease see Baseball, 81

Rio softball·
wins two on
second day
Bv

MARK WtWAMS ·

SPEC IAL TO THE SENTINEL

FOOTBAIJ.

• '

W.Va. Wesleyan 8

· ASSOCIATED PRESS

Soffball
Huntington St. Joe at Point Pleasant, .-5
p.m.
.
College Baseball
Rio Grande vs . "Missouri Baptist, (in
Ormond Beach, Fla.) 10 a.m ·

MEDICAL CENTER

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

•

Rio Grande 9,

Ohio State uets o.1 seed

Rio Grande vs . St. Francis College, {in

Ormond Beach, F1a) 3 p m.
College Softbell

10 a.m.

games. In game one, the lone inability
of
senior
offensive highlight was righthander Dustin Gibbs to
'junior Matt Smith collecting throw strikes that cost ' the
half of the Rio Grande hit Redmen. Gibbs ( 1-1) gave up
total. He was 2-for-2 with a only two hits, but walked
double.
nine. hit three batters and
Junior lefthander Nate fanned nine i.n his stint on the
Chau pitched well despite mound .
Sophomore Keota Sato and
getting the loss. Chau (2-2)
~ave up two runs in the first junior Kyle Wells both went
mning atid that would prove 1-for-3 at the plate and
to be all St. Francis (6-9) knocked in a run.
The
would need . . He lasted five Redmen ·gai ned a brief lead
inning s, giving up only two · in -the 5th inning when Senior
hits, walking three, striking Michael Branon came off the
out seven and hitting a batter. bench to drive in a run with a
In game two, · it was the single, giving Rio a 3·2.lead.

COLLEGE BASKETB.I\LL

Ib.ursday's qamaa
College Baaeball

HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
I

ORMOND BEACH, Fla.
- D'ay two of the 2006
spring trip for the University
of Rio Grande Redmen baseball team did not prove profitable as the Redmen dropped
both games of doubleheader
with St. Fr;mcis (Ill.), 3-0 and
6-3. despite out-hitting the
· l)pposition in both games th~
Redmen came up on the losing end.
Rio Grande (11-7) has now
lost three of its' last four

GALLIPOLIS - A schtldule ol upcoming college
and high SChoOl varsity· spor1ing even1s involving

Thursday, March 16
6:00pm
..

SPRING TRIP

Rio drops two to St. Francis, rallies past W.Va. Wesleyan

..

f ,..

I

'

Sponsored by:

.

•

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

Cancer Support Group
Ame n Gm l

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

Potential Meigs County Court jurors

Tr8nsfers posted
POMEROY
- Mei~s
County Recorder Kay Htll
reponed the following transfers of real estate:
Home National Bank to
Bruce Edward Cottrill, deed,
Village of Syracuse.
Laurie L. Norman, Mark F.
Norman, to Brian K.
Buffington,
Arnie
D.
Buffington, deed, Village of
Pomeroy.
·
Mary beth Mitchell, Vaughn
Mitchell, Judith Lynn Cowan,
Ronald K. Cowan, to Judith
Lynn Cowan, Ronald K.
· Cowan, deed, Salisbury. ·
Henry E. Eblin. · Jr.,
Kathleen M. Cleland, to
David W. Hudson, Opal Carol
Conger, deed, Village of
Pomeroy.
·
Susanna Raub to Rocky R.
Hupp, Carol J. Hupp, deed,
Village of Pomeroy.
·
Frank A. Vaughan to Robert
A. Murphy, Pamela J.
Murphy, ·deed, Village of
Pomeroy.
·
Karen E. Secoy to Terry L.
Jewell, deed. Columbia.
Everett M. McDaniel, Anna
Phyllis McDaniel, to Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District,
right of way, Scipio.
James J. Presutti, Barbara
A. Presutti, to TP-CWD, right
of way. Chester.
Kenneth H. Rizer, Paula S.
Rizer, to TP-CWD, right l)f
way, Lebanon.
Debbie · Barringer, Ricky
Barringer, to TP-CWD, right
of way, Olive.
Jeffrey J. Winkenwerder,
Mary Jo Winkenwerder, to J.
Anthony
Sharp, . deed,
Columbia.
Ginger L Stake, Ginger L.
Gagne, to Fur Peace Ranch,
· Inc., deed, Bedford.
Rl)bert T. Sheppard to Anita
K. Sheppard, deed; Village of
Syracuse.
..
.
Ohio Power Co. to Gatling,
LLC, deed, S11tton.
Franklin Real Estate Co. to
Gatling LLC, deed.
Central Coal Co. to Gatling
LLC, deed.
Charlyo Oxley to Charles
. Butterworth, deed, Columbia.
Harold Oxley III to Char)es
Butterworth, deed, Columbia.
Charlyo Oxley to Charles
Butterwonh, deed, Columbia,

PageA6

North Carolina, Ohio · State,
LSU and Duke were selected
Monday as the No . I seeds for
the ·women's NCAA tournament. ·
All four teams have started
atop the NCAA brackets before,
but ·the overall top seed Tar
Heels the only ones already with
a national title . It's the third No.
I for'North Carolina, which is
seeking it s second championship since 1994.
Duke has been a No. I seed
five times and LSU has been
selected atop the bracket three
times. Ohio State received its
second top seeding and the first
for the Buckeyes since 1993.
The
Atlantic
\ Coas t
Confernece and Big East had the
most teams in the lield with
seven,
followed
by the
Southeastern and Pacific- I 0
conferences with six each.
North Carolina. ranked atop
the final AP Poll, and No; 2
Ohio Suite each won their regular season and conference championships in their reopecti ve
Atlantic Coast and Big Ten conferences .
North Caro.lina (29- 1) was
placed in the Cleveland. regional
and will open the tournament
Saturday in · Nashvifle against
Bi g West champion UC
Riverside.
Six-time national champion
Tennessee is seeded second in
the Cleveland bracket, and Big
East regular season champion
Rutgers is third.
"It's like the. Final Four!" Tar
Heels coach Sylvia Hatchell
said of the tciligh Cleveland
Regional. " I don't know how
any bracket can get tougher than
our bracket. ... But hey, that 's
just the way it is . We have to go
play those garnes."
Others in the Nashville subregional
are
eigth-seeded

please see.Tourney, Bl .

TUSCON, Ariz. - The second
day of the 2006 spring trip proved
to be very successful for the
University of Rio Grande
Redwomen softball team as they
collectea a· pair of wins on
Monday, defeating Minot State, 6- ·
4; and NCAA Division III school
Finlandia, 13-4, in. live innings.
Game one was a come-frombehind victory for the Redwomen.
Sophomore,p1tcher Miranda Laws
went the distance to get the win
for the Redwomen. Laws (2- 1)
posted a line of seven innings,
scattering six hits and our runs
with one base on balls and three
strikeouts.
Offensively. Rio Grande (5-2)
churned ·out 10 hits with senior
Jenny Olding and sophomore
Jenny Phillips led the way with 2for-2 efforts. Phillips delivered a
two-run double. "She had the big
hit in the flfSt game,'' said Rio
Grande head coach David Pyles.
Sophomore ftrSt baseman )enna
Gauthier and freshman Shannon
·Abbott also collected two hits
each.
.
Rio is 1-1 against Minot State
on the spring tnp. avenging the 54loss·on Sunday.
111 game two. it was all Rio as
the Red women scored nine runs in
then openi.ng frame en route to the
13-4 rout. ·
Senior Andrea Lotycz went the

Please see softball, 81

Rio Grande
sends two to
NAIAmeet
Bv

AP pholo

MARK WILLtAr.'IS

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

Ohio State {)layers Tip Battle (12) and Debbie Merrill celebrate after defeati.ng Purdue
63-60 to win the championship basketball game of the Women's Big Ten Conference
tournameni 'in Indianapolis, Monday.. March 6.
·

JOHNSON CITY. Tenn , The Uni1ersity of Rio Grande
men's and women's indoor. track
and f1eld learn s' were represented at the !'\AlA Indoor National
Meet. Senior Niesha Fuller represented
the
women 's squad
'and junior Josh
Perry. coming
otT one of the
most dominant
Repclla. a 5- 10 junior.
,easons
in .
.averaged 27 .5 points , g
recent
memory.
rebounds. 6. &lt;hsists . -1 steals
parti cipated in
and 3 blocked shots a ~ame
the
men ·s .
and beeame the Bi g Red's ·

Mason-Cox, Daugherty, Repella top
big school honorees on all~state teams
Wamsley named
. special mention
COLUMBUS (AP) Ci ncinn ati
Princeton's
Lesslcc
Mason ·Cox,
Warsaw
River
Vi ew's
Kri stin Daugherty and Liz
Repe lla of Steubenv ille are
the top award winners on
th e 2005-2006 Associated
Press Di vision l and II All ·
Ohio girl s high school basketball teams announced
Monday.
Mason-Cox . a 6-foot
senior.
averaged
7.4
rebounds and 4 a~sists se ldom playing in the fourth
quarter - fo r the stale's No.
l· rankeu team 111 · the fina l
regular-season AP poll. She
was selected as the Division
I player of the year based on
the recommendati on s of a
.state panel of sports writers
and broadcasters. · .
Joinir1g the Ohio State
signee as a big· school hon·

_;_--:-_;_

_

orec were two coac h of the (5 -9. JL.
l5.5): and
year candidates: · Le·onard Stephanie
Stevens of
Patte rson. · the 17th· year Pickerington Central (5-8.
coach at Cleveland JFK , sr.. 16 2) .
Pickerington Central IB.- - - - ' - - who led
his
team
3)
meets Cincinnati Mmmt
Division II
a 19- 1 Notre Dame CD -3 l on
list, Page 86 tom;irk.
and Friday in a Division I state
Dub I i n semit'jnal m · Value City
Scioto's Todd Hardes ty. Arena. with Solon (22 · 3)
whose team had an 18-2 . taking on Wad swmth ( ~3 - 3 )
mark for only its fourth .win- in the ni ghtcap. The cham.ning season since the school pions!lip will be decided
was created in 1996.
Saturdav ni~ht.
'
Also on the Division I
Daugherty and Repell a
first te&lt;~m wi th Mason Cox shareJ playe F of the year
were: Ka.tie Mastrndonatn IHJllllrs in Divisi&lt;'ll II. .
of North Royalton (6- 1. sr. .
Daugherty\_ a 6; 1 juninr
14 .5 pni nt.- per gamel: who a1 cragcJ ·IH .9 pnint'.
·Brittany Or han of North 8.6 rchoumb ;nid -1 a'si"s a
Canton Hoover Cl - H .'soph .. game. will lead River View
22 .7): Fi'ndlay\ Cartee (2-1- 1) inw the Divi,ion II
Roethlisberger · (6 -0 . jr .. ,tate 'emi fi1\ah un FriJa)
19.1 ); Sharce sc Uli ' of ahernoon a ~ ai1ht Cople y
Toledo Waite 15· 7. jr. . I'I . I l: (22..l ) In th e earlier 'cmifi.
Columbus Brookha1·cn's nal. ~1entnr Lake Cathnlk
Ashle1gh Brnwn 15-6. sr.. · ( In· Ill ) tak e' &lt;lll t&lt;lp·ranked
I R.7 ): ~C assie Schrod of Hamilton Lillie Miami 126·
WaJ,wort.h (5· H. j r. . 19:.\ ); 0! . w1 th th e " inner' meetin g
LyJia ML·Cully of Bedf&lt;lrd Saturda! ;~ ft c rnou n .

-

evenL

career ~coring Iemler.

Fuller.
a
The mach of lhe war in
native of Maple
Division II . was ' Little
Heights. ran in
Miami· , Mark Sll&lt;Jrt.
the 60-meter
Dau gherty and Repella
dash and failed
were joined on the first allto qualify for
state teani h1 : Bcl lhwok·,
the semifinals.
Lj nzcc John~on (.'i -10. sr..
She was tied for
20 .'1! :· Bexkv ·, Bree Hinkle ·
19th in the pre1 ~ - 8. 'r.. tb 9): Sam;mtha
liminaries with
Leach of Wa,hin gton Court
a time of 7.97.
Hou ' e Miam i Trace 15"&lt;J . jr.,
Perrv. a Rio
I..I . 71 : Hale! Kapfern of
Grande nati,·e.
Je ffeNln Area 16· :1 . jr..·
Perry
ju&gt;t
missed
2::' .21. Warren lhm lanJ·,
ad,·anculg out
Ellie Shi eiJ, (6·.\. ir . IX Ol: of the prelim s in the 60·meter
Van Wert\ Allie (I ift nn l.'i · da,h ..finishing 13th with a time
I I. , r.. JQ .9l : and Cierra of. 7.0.1 . He 'al,o sustained an
Bra,:arJ
of
Sa~i,J u,ky
injury. which ended hi' chances
P~r\.111' (6·2, " ' ph .. - - 2L 1 to compete 10 the 200 and the
Gall1a .-\c.IJ&lt;'Ill \ &gt;L' Illor -100. ·
Jad,l&lt;: \Vam, ln . ,; IH&gt; :1\ Cr- I It wa, 26th A~nual women 's
a ~ cJ nh&gt;rL' tluin 17 P"l nh
indnor meet .Hld the ·41st edition
pe r game. \\ as named '1'~ - of the men ·, meet held at the
.:i al mc nl~&lt; l n .
t-kmonal Ce nter.
1

_;__~ ; -----'-'----'-------- ------'----------'-~

--- - -·- _,

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_..,

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March 14. 2006

www .mydailysentinel.com

\After 24 seasons, Chaney retires from T~mple
Bv DAN GELSTON
ASSOCIATW PRESS

PHILADELPHIA - John
:Chaney's scowl was gone, the
;dark, deep-set eyes concealed
'behind sunglasses.
·
: The raspy voice, which has
:boomed to the upper deck of
;many arenas, was hushed. It
·was perhaps one final. sub:dued look at a Hall of Fame
;basketball coach who realized
1t was time to leave Temple.
: This was indeed a different
:Chaney.
· "Excuse me while I disap·.pear," Chaney said, his shirt
:Unbuttoned and his unraveled
'tie draped over his shoulders.
: With those words, Chaney
Jeft the podium Monday and
;retired after 24 seasons at
·Temple. ending a 34-year
:Coaching career of fatherly offlhe-court mentoring that was
sometimes overshadowed by a
.temper that got the better of
him.
"It's always a very traumatic
time, but it IS time." Chaney
said. "Temple gave me a
chance to make my own decision and that's the great thing
about it. Right now I'm faced
with another problem with my
wife, so it's the right time to

go."

· Chaney will not coach the
'Owls' opening NIT game
.&lt;~gainst Akron on Tuesday
'mght because his w1fe was
.scheduled to undergo a procedure for an undisclosed health
Dan
problem.
Assistant
Leibovitz will take his place,
and it was not clear if ChaneY.
would return to the bench If
Temple won.
. The 74-year-old Chaney
guided Temple to 17 NCAA
tournament
appearances,
including five NCAA regional
finals -. where· .he wenI 0-5
and never made the Final Four.
He was twice named national
coach of the year and entered

the Hall of Fame in 2001.·
This season, Temple (17-14)
made the NTT for the fifth
,straight season, a dramatic
decline for a team that was
once an NCAA tournament
regular.
In typical Chaney fashion,
Monday was no ordinary
goodbye. Flanked by former
and current players and coaches. Chaney wove his life story
around amusmg anecdotes
about his friend Bill Cosby, a
playful threat. to slap the
mayor, and several pokes at
school admims(ration.
Chaney also wiped away
tears from behind his sunglasses and talked at length about a
favorite subject- education's
role in helping the poor and
disadvantaged.
"I'm going to be mean and
ornery when I see something
that's wrong and rm going to
try and right it," Chaney said.
Chaney has 741 wins as a
college coach, including a
516-252 record at Temple,
where he won seven Atlantic
I0 conference titles. His teams
did remarkably well considering Chaney couldn't recruit
the high school All-Americans
who filled the rosters of the
power conferences.
Only Bob Knight, Eddie
Sutton, Lute Olson. and Mike
Krzyzewski are the active
coaches with more career victories.
Chaney was a commanding
figure on the court - restless,
cranky, his otherwise natty
clothes in shambles by the end
of the game. Often, as he
exhorted his team, he put himself in situations he later
regretted.
Last season, Chaney seemed
on his way out. He inserted a
player he calleo a "goon" into
a game against Saint Joseph's
for the sole purpose of committing hard fouls because he
thought the Hawks were using

illegal screens. A Saint
Joseph's player, John Bryant,
ended up with a broken arm
after being knocked out of the
air. Chaney later apologizeo
and was suspended for five
games.
In .1984, Chaney grabbed
George Washington coach
Gerry Gimelstob by the shoulders at halftime ot a game. In
1994, he had a heated
exchange follqwing a game
against UMass· 111 which he
threatened to kill coach John
Calipari. Chaney apologized
and was suspended for a game.
The two later became friends .
While Temple president
David Adamany joked Chaney
"gave me heartburn every
three or four months," Owls
guard Mardy Collins said it
was a mistake to focus on
Chaney 's outra~eous actions.
"Those little mcidents don't
measure up to the things he's
done here at Temple," Collins
said.
Collins has one last chance
to give Chaney a championship, even if it is the NIT
and Leibovitz is coaching.
Leibovitz , who's spent I 0
years as a Temple assistant and
coached the Owls· last season
during Chancy's suspension.
wished Chaney could have had
a !Jetter send-off.
"It's just regretful we couldn't get to the tournament one
last time," he S3ld. "We put
everythmg we had into it. I
may never .forgive myself for
not getting hilT! back in "
Leibovitz expects to be a
candidate for the vacancy, and
Chaney said he would submit
names to athletic director Bill
Bradshaw for consideration.
While Chaney said the next
coach needed to be a "Temple
person," Bradshaw said he
would take his time and not
rule out any candidate, especially with the NCAA tournament stm:ting this week.

RBI doubles.
Senior Andrea Lotycz suffered the loss for the
Redwomen. Lotycz ( 1-1)
pitched seven innings, giving
up 10 hits and five runs (four
earned), striking out and not
surrendering a walk.
In
game
two,
the
Redwomen were able to end
the game in six innings. Rio
racked up 20 hits en route to
the eight-run wm. Sophomore
Jenny Phillips paced the offensive attack for Rio Grande,
going 3-for-4 at the plate with
a double, three RBI and two
runs scored. She also turned
the defensive play of the night,
recording a double play from
left field. Phillips made an outstanding catch and fired to
first base to peg out a
Blackburn runner who had
stranded too far off the bag.
Erin Ratliff added three hits,
two RBI and a run scored and
sophomore Whitney Harless
also tallied three hits with an
RBI and a run scored.
Chevalier and sophomores
Miranda Laws and Jenna
Gauthier all had two hits each.
Gauthier had an RBI. Ross
was 1-for-5 with four RBI and
a run scored.
Laws (1-1) went the distance
to get the win, tiring · six
innings, giving up nine hits and
five earned runs. She also
fanned eig,ht and walked only
one.

Softbaii
from PageBl

Whoever is hired should
expect to stick around for a
while - the Owls have only
had four coaches since 1942
and two are in the Hall of
Fame.
Chaney, who took Cheyney
State in suburban· Philadelphia
to the 1978 Division II national championship, arrived at
Temple before the 1982-83
season.
. He was a father figure for
players who often came to
Temple from broken homes,
violent neighborhoods and bad
schools. With notoriously
early morning practices,
Chaney talked about life nearly as much as he taught the
intricacies of his matchup zone
defense. He frequently said his
biggest goal simply was to
give poor kids a chance to get
an education.
"They just want to bounce
the ball and dribble the ball,
but I talk about things that ar~
going to stay with them for the
rest of their lives," Chaney
said. "Somewhere along the
line. It wi II reverberate and
they ' II remember it."
Chaney was 50 when
Temple hired him on a
promise to make the program
and the university nationally
recognized. He refused to load
his schedules with easy teams,
and mstead traveled to hostile
courts to pll!y teams supposedly brimming with talent.
He showed flashes this season that his ·Owls could still
play with the nation's elite,
knocking off three Tqp 25
teams, including an upset over
top-seeded
George
Washington · last week in the
Atlantic l 0 tournament.
· Now all Chaney warits to do
is eat peanuts, drink beer and
tell some embellished stories.
And maybe sleep in.

full five innings to pick up the
victory. Lotycz (2- I) scattered
six hits and yielded four runs
(three earned) with four strikeouts.
Sophomore Jessica Ross led
the Rio offense with a 2-for-3
game at the plate. Ross also
scored three of the team's 13
runs.

Rio Grande splits
pair on ~rst day
TUSCON. Ariz. - It was
the first day of competition for
the University of Rio Grande
Redwomen softball team on
the 2006 spring trip. Rio lost
the first game, 5-4 to Minot
State &lt;md rebounded to win
game two, 13-5 versus
Blackburn (IL).
Rio (3-2) lost the first game
in the bottom of the seventh.
Rio collected eight hits, led by
senior rightfielder Jenny
Olding. Olding went 2-for-3
with a double. Senior shortstop
Kristen Chevalier went 1-for-4
and belted a solo home run.
Sophomore Jessica Ross was
1-for-4 with an RBI and senior
Brandi Jones and junior
· Michele Detwiller also tallied

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

, 'Qr:ribune - Sentinel
CLASS I F .l ED

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
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Baseball
fromPageBl
ing a two-run home run in the
fourth inning. Senior shortstop Matt Martin also collected two hits.
Senior third baseman
Kevin Dolan was 1-for-4
with three RBI.
Freshman Ryan Dwyer
picked up the win ·in relief.
Dwyer (1-0) had an out·

Second round

Regionals

National
semifinals

NOIIh Carolina 29-1
Vanderbilt, playiflg at home.
""'
Sat, 7 p m
The Commodores will take
on Big East newcomer
UCAivel$ide 16-14 )
[
- - --- -- - 1
March 20
Louisville, the No. 9 seeded
team. Tennessee gets No. 15
21J-10 ) ,........-....:.....-.J,..---f--~
seeded Army, a NCAA tourSal , 30 min foil
nament
newcomer and '. t lOUISVlile
19-9
.I... . _.. .. .....
i
·Patriot League champion on
·Sunday in Norfolk, Va.
21)-10
&amp; UCLA
..... --)
' Rutgers will open close to
Sun., 3J m1n. foil
_j _I __ _
home when the Scarlet
2' Bowling Green 2~·2
Knights take on 14th-seeded
March 21
I--J--------..-, I
Dartmouth in Trenton on 1 . Purdue
24-li
~---_-_-)J
Sunday. . . Fourth-seeded jSun , Noon
Purdue rounds out the brack1]1~ ~I ___ 27:1_4
Cleveland
et with a n opening round
March
26 &amp;28
game Sunday against 13thseeded Missouri State, wint TexasA&amp;M
ners of the Missouri Valley
Conference.
Duke's road to the Final
Four
runs
through
Connecticut and that
means a possible matchup
with homestate favorite and
7 Geo 1'/ashinglon 22-8
No. 2 seed UConn The Blue
Sun , 30 m1n. foil
Devils (26-3) were assigned
--- .
[_
the Bridgeport Regional, as ~' alii'"------·-·--I:'!J. Old Do".'~~"!'_22_:!l
were the five-time national
March 21
champion Huskies, who are
2' Tennessee
28-4
making their 18th tournaSun , Noon
ment appearance.
@"_~rrnx=:=::___ ~~1~ _
The Blue Devils open
Boston
Sunday in Norfolk against
April2
Southwestern ConferenGe
·champ
Southern.
The
Huskies take on 15th-seeded
.Coppin State at University
:Park, Pa. on Sunday.
Georgia earned the third
seed in the Bndgeport brack·. et and is matched up against
14th-seeded
Marist on
Sunday m Trenton. That subregional also features the batr_L_
tle of a couple of point guard
coaches. Dawn Staley's 6thseeded Temple will play
America
East
champ
Hartford, the lith seeded
Albuquerque, N.M.
team, coached by former
March 25 &amp; 27
UConn star Jenmfer Rizzotti.
(e F~n;;;- - 21.il-h ____ ___ ..
No . 4 seeded Michigan
'
Sat,30 -mln loll -· H
I1
~-j
State,
also placed m
Bridgeport, opens with 13th~ ~ New-Mex•o__ 21-9 _r March 20 · [~ , -~ __ _
. - - .I
seeded Wis -Mi lwaukee on
F l 3 Baylor
24-6 h ________
!
Saturday in a Chicago subresa:t 6pm
gional.
·
(14 No~-~~'2..~!_21 :!2fJ
' '
LSU (27-3), aiming for its
third straight trip to the Final
(Ts~~j.;i;n·;-(Nvl2i~7}: __________ . _
Four, was placed in the San
Antonio Regional. The Lady
;@
18-11
Tigers open Saturday against
March 21
Atlantic
Sun
champion
['i " Ma~~nd -- 28-4} ----- --~ .. r
Florida Atlantic m Norfol~.
30m01 foil
The bracket sets up a potenc: Sun
- ,----- .. f:{ _ ......
115 Sacred Heart 26-4 ftial meeting of two of the top
centers in the game in the
Lady Tigers' Sylvia Fowles
SOU~CE NCAA
and Oklahoma· ~ freshman star
become the first player in San Anton1n br&lt;Ocket &lt;Ond also
Courtney Paris.
The Sooners, seeded No 2, NCAA history to log 700 open in Denver on Saturday
fimshed u~beaten in the B1g points, 500 rebounds and, I00 against Soulhe ~Ist , Ml\souri
12 and Pans wao; a big reason blocked shots in 'a season. The State B1g East newcomer
why. She had 24 points and 26 ~ooners open against I Sth- DePaul earned the No .J seed
Pepperd1ne
on in the regHm and play Liberty
rebounds · against defending leeded
Saturday
m
Denver.
national champion Baylor in
. on Saturda} in Chica~o.
The Cardinal of Stanford are
the tournament title game. She
The Buckeyes r2H--1 landed
needs three rebounds to the third seeded team m the in the AlbuqucrqiJe Reg 1.on;d,

Reglonals

National
semifinals

,.. _.

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tocal route Compet1111.1e
pay Good hours, good
benefits None Hazmat &amp;
ta nker endorsemen ts Will
be
considered
Mail
resume and copy at dnv
1ng recO{d to CLA Box 555,
c/o Gallipolis Tnbune , PO
B o ~ 469 , Galhpolis OH

45631

sa me day pay and to make '
your own schedule? Call
Taylor 's
Staffing
0
{740)446· 3305 for an
appomtment , ' Monday Thursday, 10am·2pm. We
are now h1ring
State
Tested ' Nurslng Assistants
LPN's &amp; AN 's EOE
P1zza
Now
Dom•no's
Hmng Sere DriYIHS Po1nt
Pleasant Gallipolis &amp;
Pomeroy locations Apply
In Person
Now h ~r~ng EMTs &amp;
Paramec11cs
can
(7 40)354·5433 or 1·866·
971·5433

HoMP.&gt;

WANI'IlD
To Do

www.comlcs . ~orn

2006 NCAA Division I women's basketball chamo.ioahiP
First round

(740) 992-2156

\\\01 \( I \ II \ I '

ppllll.

from Page Bl

~egister

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.~n. to 5:00 p.IT1.

Current rate car

Tourney

Sentinel
Oet:u:t'~~e..s"

O,fpee #u~..f"

nd

standing day of pitching,
fir ing 2 1/3 innings and
striking out four. Senior
southpaw Brent Watterson
started for the Redmen and
lasted seven inmngs, giving
up four run s in the no-decisiOn.
Rio Grande head coach
Bra!i Warnimont reported
that the temperature played
a role in Watterson running
out of gas.
West Virginia Wesleyan is
now 1-3 on th e season. ·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 93

www.mydallysentlnel.com

BabySIItlng,
Care
of
Elderly,
Housekeeping
References
{304)895·

Orlvera Needed:
COL Drivers wtlhng to
dnve for local ready·m•x·
concrete company
Experience tS preferred
but not necessary Med
msurance &amp; other benefits
avotlaqte otter waiting
penOd. Onver must be
willing to do pre·mainte·
nance on trucks &amp; equip·
ment. yard work &amp; other
miscellaneous chores.
~xperience operating
equ1pment &amp; e11tra sk1l1s
such as
weldmg a plus.
Ca ll Robertsburg

• 009 t740)446·3820

•

View photos/info online
3BR, 2 bath, den, 8 miles
from Holzer Hospital on
160
North
Owner
Finance FHA approved

1304)882-3880
Complete yard work antl
small home repair. 20

Foster Parents Needed .
Have an extra bedroom
and w1sh to help a child
Becom~;~ a tharapeuttc foster care g1ver tor youth 0·
, 6 OaSIS provided tra1n·
mg, reimbursement $33·
$48 a day, paid resp•te,
and support fo r the youth
in your home
Training
begins March 25 at
Altiany. Call Oasis Foster
Care for more Information
Toll Free 1·877~325~1558

Full t1 me Medtcal C ta•m
biller No e~~:penence nee·
essary. Must be detailed,
orgamzed, good computer
and typmg skills. Please
apply 1n ' person at Famtly
Oxygen , 70 P1ne Street.
Ga!ltpohs No phone calls.
please
Full T•me Temporary Off1ce
Clerk
Pos1t1on tnvolves
greetmg · public, phone,
corilputer &amp; map sk1tfs and
all
ollice
activities
Application are available at
Mason County FSA Off1ce
224A F1rst Street Pomt
Pleasant, WV 25550 No
calls Last date to hie •s
COB March 24th, FSA IS
an EOE
Home Health A•des· S•gn
On
Bonus
Home
Healthcar~ of SE Oh1o IS
curren11y h ~r~ng
home
health a1des. competft1ve

wages.

Call

(740)662·

1222
Home Healthcare of SEQ
1s Currently Accepting
ApplicatiOns For Full &amp;
Part-t1me
AN's
Compet•hve
Wages,
Bonuses &amp; .Benef•ts. Call
Toll free 1-866·388·1 00
tocar Dental Off1ce seek•
1ng an enthus1ast•c and .
mature ind•vidual to tra 1n
as a PT/FT dental ass1s·
tanl. must have computer
sk1Us Send resume and a
hand written note of your
Interest to Dental Asststant
PO Box 704, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769
Me1gs Cour\ty Chamber of
Com merce IS seekmg
coordinator ol Operat1ons
w1lh fund ra1s1ng a plus
Salary based on expen·
ence. Send resume to 238
West
Ma m
Street .
45769
Pomeroy, Oh
Deadlme March 31 , 2006
Meigs Industries. Inc Is
H1ung Crawteaders for
Ja n.tot1al
and
Lawn
Ma1ntenance
PoSitions
Expenence
m
Jarlitonai/Custod•al Work
Preferred
Must Have a
Val1d Oh•o Or1vers L1cense
and H1gh School D1ptoma
or GED Send Resume To
Me1gs lndUS!rleS. Inc , Pd
Box 307, Syracuse Ohio
45779 . \
OhiO Valley Home Health,
Inc hlrmg Full T1me RN
and Per 01em MSW
Accepting apphcat1ons tor
LPN CNA STNA CHHA,
PCA CompetitiVe Wages ,
benet1ts
Mileage and
1ncludmg
Health
Insurance Apply at 1480
Jackson P1ke. GallipOlis or
241 S. Ja ckson Avenue
Pomt Pleasant WV or
phone toll tree 1 866 -441 ·
1393

edroom
3 bath,
cres. 3 ca r 2 stor
~nattached garage ga
~ell/free gas Rutland

pH

years exp Cell (740)446·
3682

OOJerbrook Rehabilitation
Center IS cu rrently accept·
1ng apphcatlo['IS for LPN'S.
Ava1lable shifts are 7A-7P
and 7P· 7A All Interested
applicants shQuld pick up
an application at 333 Page
Street. Middleport OH
For lurthor information.
please contact Hott•e at

740-992·6472 EOE
Overbrook Rehab•litatton
Center 1s currently accept·
1ng apphcations tor a AN
Supervisor. The available
shift IS 7P·7A. AU interest·
ed applicants should pick
up an application at 333
Page Street Middleport,
OH For further 1nforma·
t1on, please contact Holhe

at 74Q-992·6472 EOE
Part·t•me bartender needed for Good T1mes ,
Pomeroy, must be 21 to
apply

POSTAL JOBS
$15 67·$21 .98/hr ,
now
h~ring. For applicatlOn and
free governement job 1nfo
call Amencan Assoc of
Labor
1-9t3·599·8042.
24/hrs emp serv

AN 's needed to prov1de
f1rst·a1d at constructiOn
sl1es betwe.en Cheshire
and New Haven. FT·PT
F
1
r
s
t
A•d!ERIOccupatiOnaVSafet
y expenence he!ptur Call
(888)269.£344
AN's needed to prov•de
l~rst·a!d at construction
s1tes between Chesh1re
and New Haven . FT·PT.

F

i

r

s

I

A•d'EAJOccupat•onaiiSalet
y experience helpful Call

688·269.£344
Rockspnngs Rehabilitation
Center provides residems
With outstandtng nursing
care and rehabil1tatton
serv•ces helpmg them
return to a life ot 1ndepend·
ence at home We current·
ly have opportun111es for
AN 's and LPN's at our
factlity located m Porh9roy,
OhiO
We offer aCOMPETIVITE
SALARY SCALE . an
excellent benefit packa~
and a supportive work
enwonment
Interested
candidates should apply to
Rocksprings Rehab1htat•on
36759
Center.
Rocksprmgs
Road.
Pomeroy Oh1o 45769
Extend1care Health servic·
es Inc 1s an equal opportun•ty
employer
that
encourages
workplace
d1vers1ty MJF ON
Rut land Village Counc!l
accepting resumes for
temporary pa rt·t• me off1ce
managerlwater
sewer
clerk, resu mes accepted
by ma1l only PO Box 420,
Rutland, Oh10 45775
Super 8 Motel Gallipolis IS
seek1ng an energetiC out·
go1ng personable p$rson
to work PT for p:osttlen lor
Breakfast Bar Anendant
Th1s 15 an early morn1ng
pos1t1on Please aPply 1n
person , No phone calls
please Only senous appli·
cants need apply

HELP WANJliD

The
Gellla
County
Veterans Sei'\IICS OffiCe 1s
seek1ng a full t1me benefits
counselor/ secretary. The
job w1ll be to ass1st elig•ble
persons m lil1ng claims
with
the
Veterans
Administration, performing
general secretarial duties,
off1ce adm1n1strat•on and
other dulles as needed.
The applicant must be a
Veteran with en honorable
discharge w1th at least a
h1gh school diploma/col·
lege is preferred . Other
qualifications include a
OJalid driVers license, m ini·
., mum of one year secretar·
lal work to Include the use
of - computer/word processors Musl be -able to communiCate ettectively both
tn verbal and wrinen form
The des1red applicant
must be dependable and
personable Salary based
on quahr•cat•ons

4

year old Colon•al on 3
acres. approx. 1,900 sq h
3 bdr, 2 baths 2 car
garage. master bdr. IS
28x24 with a jacuzzi tub

Applicants are to subm•t
resumes to the Gat11a
County Veterans Service
Off1ce at 1102 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis No later
than Marctl 21, 2006.
Tired of Not Havmg
Enough Money to Make
Ends Meet or Going to
Work For Someone Else?
cnnsMn owned Company
of nearty 2 decades offer·
mg a home Bus•ness
Opportunity
{304)576·

2056 or (304)593-0466 II
no answer please reave
message

WANTED.
Full-ttme
employment 1n your own
home as a Home Serv1ces
Worker w1th
Buckeye
Community Serv.ces We
prov1de ,salary plus bene·
fits and a da•ly room and
board rate You prov1de a
home. gutdance
and
fnendsh•P m a family
atmospnere
Requ1red
abtllty to te ach personal
livmg Skills and a commitment to the growth and
developmen~ of two 1nd1·
viduals with mental retar·
dat1on Home must be m
Gallla County If mterested
con tllct Cecilia at 1·800531·2302 or

(740)286·

5039
Pre·ei'J'lployment
Drug
Testtng
Equal
Opportun•ty Employer

I'§)

~ON·I

Concealed P•stot Class
Oh io. WV. April 8 , 2006,

$75 00

9·00am VFW

Mason WV Ph (7 40)8435555, Gallipolis C.irwer

Calll740)446·6861
Top
Notch
Building
Contractors:
New
Addtt•ons , Pole Barns.
Hardwood
Floor
and
Ceral'nlc T1te InstallatiOn ,
Custom
Decks,
new
Roofs, new ConstructiOn.
Ltcensed and Insured.

WV# 036667 (304)675·
3042 or (304)593·1 115

www gallrpolosc;ar.ercol~ com
Accredneo Member Aecnxl rllrlg

CouAttl kK

l~ndenl

Colleges

and Schools T21•B

909 Mossman C1rcle Pt
Pleasant. WI/ 38R. 1 bath .
lull basement

saa:ooo

Cell (304)695·3217

"NO

tor

11 \ \ \ 11\1

t'o· ~
•NOTICE.
PUB

(740)367-0000

ISHING CO recom
t'nends that you dO bus1
~ess with people yo
~now. and NOT to sene:
~oney lhrough the mai
~nt11 you have ihvest1gat

Beautiful 4 br , 3 full baths,
2 car garage completely
remodeled House for Sale

304-882·2391

led 1he otferlna.

MONEY

r any large advanc
aymants of fees o
nsurance Call th
ff1ce of Consume
ffa1rs tort free at 1
66·278-QOOJ to rear
1 the mortgage broke
r lender IS proper!
•censed. (Th1s is a pub
IC service announc;e
ent from the Oh1
alley
Publlshm

dl•~rlmlnathom ."

This newspaper wttt not
knowingly accept
advertlsementa tor reel
nt.te whlch i• In
vlotatlon of the law Our
reader• are hereb&gt;t
Informed lhlt all
dwelllngsachtertiHd In
this newspaper are
anll•ble on art equal
opportunity bases

~~~ · ~~~
J2lO
L

~.
Snl.\rlCE'i

I

LOW-MOISture
Carpet-Cleaning
Brand New Method
Ory In 1 Hour
No Steam-or-Shampoo
Free-Estimates
~ .. clearly Clean *"* .

1304)675.0022
TURNED DOWN ON

SOCIAL SECURITY

,

/SSI?

,

·No Fee Unless We W1n •

1 888-682·3345
I~ I

\ I I 'I \ I I

HOMP.&gt;
FOR SA!£

Country home tn Jackson
Co. Seven rooms 1 5 bath
' hardwood floors, full basement 2 5 car garage,
11 27 acres. two ' barns
mature p1ne trees Pnce
$149 000 {937 )515-8670
or (740)286·7212

Sales and
Appl •ance

(304)675·

7999

0 SELLI Code 6505 o
all l304)882·3368

r

Local company offenng

"NO DOWN

MOBD.E HQI'.m;
FOR SALE

1

ahannmgCcharter net
Sorry No land Contracts

PAYMENr

programs tor you to buy
your home Instead ot rent-

rng
' 15 Now S!ng!twldOI
In Stock &amp; Ready
For Dellveryl

16x80 mob1le home 3 baa room, 2 batn , heat pump.
Sx8 deck
Ve ry n1ce1

(740)368·9170
1994 t4~70 Oakwood 3
Bdrm 1 bath
$10,500
Must be t:noved from cur·
rent locahon (304)576·

2101
2002
t6x80
Clayton
Mobile Home . 3 bed·
rooms. 2 bath h1dden
Laundry Room . Front and
Back Decks go with Home

$25,000 (304)675·

(740)367·0000
Stop rent1ng Buy 4 bed·
room foreclosure $15,000
For hstmgs 8(){)..391 ·5228
ell:t 1709

•

tM~~~
2 Bedroom Mob1le Home
For Rent $350 00 Per Mo
$350 00 Depos•t. No PetsOn One Acre Lot, 740992·9052. Total ElectnC.

2 bedroom mobile home in

2000 16' Wide
VinyliStnngla'
Only $181 QO.Imo'
Call (740)385·7671

Aacme . $350 mo plus
S350 depoSit , years lease.
no pets no calls after 9pm.

(740)992·5039

99 16x80 Schultz New
Generation V1nyr Siding,
sh1ngled 2:1c6 outside walls
3 bedroom , 2 bath, mb
garden
tub.
stand-up ,
shower. kitchen app h·
ances. central AJC. heat
pump, gas furnace 8x12
covered front porch shm gled roof m1n1 barn
or
(740)256·6427 ,

(740)256·1 064

2
bedroom
tra• ler.
'stove/ rell'lgerator
fur·
nished
WI D
hookup,
Renter pays utilil•es No
1nS1de pets
$350/mo.
$150/aepostt
(740)446 31!70
2BR 5 minutes frqm town
$400Jmonth , depoSit &amp; ref·
erence 1eQu1red No pets
(740)446-9342 after 6pm
Anention Conatructlon
Workera Fully turn1shed
·2 bedroom 2 baths very
ntce Located 1n QUiet res·
iden11al area 1n Pomeroy,
Oh•o
740·992·1517 or
740·992·0031

..
! t~ ...-....

'

100"/o flnancmg
• Less than pertect cred1t
accepted
* Payment could be the
same as rent.
Mor!gage
Locators
0

Call(740)385·9948

Doubl8w1de Repo 3BR 2
bathS on Ohio St Pomt
Pleasant Land &amp; nome
$59 500 Owner F1nance

MoO•le hOme saes tor up to
16x80 1n Country Homes
(740)385-4019
APAKI~IFXfS

~ 740 ) 446 -3570

HlR RI:\T

MliS.Ulli
2002 Crayton 14M52
Pmts Of $169/mo
Call (7 40,385·9948

1 and ~ bedroom apart·
ments
turn•shed and
unturn1sned .
secunty
deposit requ1red no pets
740-992·22 , 8
tST MoN FREE RENT
WI TH PAI D DEP NEW
ELLM VI EW

TOWNHOUSE,APTS
NOW LEASING'
SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES

1 6 acres on Oak H•U A d .
Chester Oh1o wamr gas
electnc
on
property
$15 000 304-483-7550

AVAILABLE
'ALL ELECTRIC'
'CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
'STOVE . REF

acres wonde rlu! v1ev.
ndgetop property. close to
ma1n hiQhway perfect lor 4wl'leeler tra•ls (740)707·

' OiSHV&lt;ASHER
'GARAGE OISPOSAL
'WINO BLINDS
'CE lUNG FANS
'WATER 'SEWAGE &amp;
TR ASH INCLUDED

2109
9 acres w1tn 28x32 barn 5
acres 2 tra1ter hooKups
Carr (740)256 1922

I

PETS CONDITIONAL
\304\882·301 7

Lana tor Sale 30 ac res
New Haven area S95 000

j:l04)682· 2890

RFAI. I'.'ITAn:

$36 000 ,(740)992·3057

W.&gt;..'l!H&gt;

6 steel beams. approx 20
tee t each. ea'sv access.
cal! 740·992·2704 , leave
message

3 Bedroom Muse 1n
Pomeroy Qt1 ma1n roaCI
R1ver V•ew S27 (X)() 1·
740·992-2593

FIND A JOB OR A NEW CAREER
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

3 bedropm 2 11'2. bath 1
to 2 acres w1th barn

Serndtl1lt over 1 acre 3BA
28TH , Move 1n Ready

$120000 (304)882·8227

$78 000 OBO 130'1593·
0852

or t304) 882·2B90

Attention I

"

2~

'

$81 .500 call (304)675·
3123 1304)675·0032

(740)643·0516

3BA
bath
porch
$500/month.
Bidwell
$500/depos•t 3 ret~rances
reqwed Very clean no
pets !7 40)388-951 5

13041675-4680

Newly remoctalea 3 or 4
bedrooms central a1r lull
basement
nardwood
floors detached garage.
large
cove red
patio,
. fenced back yard close to
schools Pomt Pleasant
$6 9 500 t740l709-1382

Takm\j ApplicatiOns lor
Machm1 s1 &amp; Welder
5
yef'lrS expere1nce
apply
7 30-4 OOpm
Ambros1a
Mach1ne JnC Rou te 2 Bo~
254 Po1nt ~feasant WV
25550 (304 )675· 1722

araga. Outbu ildin gs
lose to town PAICE:C

N1ce 1987 14x70 3 l)eCI:
room home Only S8 995
W1ll help w•th delivery Cal!
Ela1n~ (7 40 )385·0698

1001 Kenny Ct (Behmd Jr
HIQh School) 3 Bedrooms. I House for safe by owner
Best Offer 900 Th ird Ave
full dry Basement , ~It
Gallipolis
OhiO
Cal!
Hardwood
Floors
(937)581-8
1
1
I
Cond1t1on
Excellent

20 acre fa rm w•th barn and
4 bedroom 3 bath home
Located 1n Lawrence Co
Call
tor
mlorrilatlon

1740)256·8152

Crab
Creek
A~d
P1cturesque
Old Cape
Cod home Oak construe·
t1on 3·4 bedroom 1 bath
b1g country kitchen . lots ol
cao1nets plus d1n1ng room
SpaCIOUS I,IVIOQ room &amp;
study on 3.\2
acres
Beautiful rollmg lawn
w/mature shade trees &amp;
new Pond &amp; dock niCe
workshop ptus 2·outbwld·
ings &amp; carport S68 500

2 bedroom 1 bath llvmg
room dinn1ng room basement ,
Middleport
R'on's TV
Repu
Warehouse

j

5569
In tnf• newspaper 11
IUbject to the Fed1ral
F1lr Hou.!Ofjl Act of 1188
which makes It Illegal to
•dvertlse "•n&gt;t
pretersnc1, limitation or
dlscrtmlnltlon based on
raw, ~olOJ, r.llglon, HX
f•mlll•l statu• or nation•!
ongin, Qr any Intention to
mike any auch
preference, llmlt•tlon or

EWARE of req uesl

AU

~ew Haven , WV,
~room 2 Bath, 2 Ca

AU reel nt.te actvertitlng

tf1ce of Consume
fta1rs BEFORE yo
efinance your home
blain
a
16an.

380, 1ba 17 acres. Green
schools. $650/ month plus
Utlh!IBS , piUS
depOSit

V1ew photos/info on11ne

A~kmg

I

roLoAN

•

DOWN PAYMENT"

programs for you to buy
your home 1nstead of rent·
1ng.
• 100% financ 1 ~
o Less than perfect credit
accepted
* Payment could be the
same as rent
'
Locators
Mortgage

InformatiOn

in Middleport All electriC
$425 00 Plus Deposit No
inside pets 740-416· t354
or 992·3194

F254

Home. Have References

r

3 Bedroom house lor rent

Home Listings.
L1st your home by call1ng 17•0}446-3620

7BR, SBA, Foreclosure
only $18,000 For llstmgs
call 800·391·5228 ext

AHenHonl
Local company offenng

College
(Careers Close To Home)
Carr Todayt 740·446·4367,
1-800.2 14·0452

$125,000 (740)&lt;'46·7029

(304)675·6804

Will care tor Elderly in th81r

pHlO VALLEY

Hov..B
FORRINT

.

www.orvD.com

Lawn Care. miscellaneous
odd jobs, free esllmates

110

Call 1 7~0)742·3230

~306.

I'm mterested 1n Painting
and .Paper1ng your lntenor
Walls call me (304}e75·

.
1

Ut ' I \I...,

~ppointments only Cod

Computer Trouble Shooter
Expert
and Repa1r
Sei'\IIC8 740·992·2395

Dr1vers: Excellent pay, free
health 1nsurance, benefits
&amp; home t1met 1 year trac·
tor
trailer expet~ence
requtred. Mart•n Transport.

2653

~ome of D•st1nctlon

1740)446-3570

6867 or (304)593-2387

Cosmetologist with man·
agar license wanted tor
salon m Galhpolts. Booth
rental Serious mqu1nes
on ly please (740)645~

Retmng from m 1htary. com·
1ng hOme after 20 years
LOOking tor 38A+ hOme or
5.... acre builchng s•te m
Eastern school district
close to Tuppers Plams or
RT 7 w1th utllit1eS on oite
Contact Jeff 301-638~
0664
E-mail
etcshd!eJOyahoo pam

Home listings
L1st your home by call-

Certified
Care
Home
Asststed &amp; Non-Assisted
Persons, meals &amp; snacks
proVIded. Excellent Care

or Lakm(304)n3·5234
Located 1n Mason County
near Butlalo WV.

Exper • ~;~nced

R&amp;\L
....... .. ll:_ .J

www.orvb.com

3723

1304)937·3410

866·293·7435

lr~.,__ ~ ~I'El-~..

HOMB
IURSAU:

FUR S.t.J.J;

Need to sell your horne ?
Late on payments, divorce
Job tra nsfer or a death? I
can buy your home
411
cash and qu•cil clos1ng
?40·416·31 30
Starling new JOb Loo k1ng
lor apr "o ~ 20 30 acres 1n
centra Me1g5 cou nty tc
bt.~~ ld a nome Con1act R IC~
937·376 -4 127
E·m811
eloc r19960wmconnec1 co
m

- -..

2 apa rtments for rem
Racme Ohto (short dn ve
trom power plant) Oepostt
·eqwred
no
pets
(7401 992- 5174
or
!740)441 -0 110

2 Bed room Apa rtment
available
m Syrr-cuse
$200 00 depos1t S350 00
per month '"enl
Rent
1ncludes water sewer .
trash No pets. SuffiC•e'nt
•ncome needeo to qualify
740-378-6111

.. ......

~-,--

-

--- ·---

....,.

�Tuesday, March 14, 2006
ALLEY OOP

Help Wanted

HelpWented

Card of Thanks

Card of ')"hanks

In Memory

Tuesday, March 14, 2006_

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel.

The Daily Sentinel • Page. 85,

wwW.mydallyseritinel.coni

BRIDGE
In Memory of

Thatik you so much for all
the Beautiful cards, nice
notes and gifts you sent me
in observance of
my 95th Birthday.

Ellsworth
(Wimp)
Dill
Sept. 16, 1915
March 14, 1976
We'll ·
Remember You
Alwa,·s!
Wife, Alta,
Daughters- .
Connie &amp;

Gladys Morgan Riggs

r

HUIJ.irnow·

Gwos .

I

AKC Boston Terrier pupptes. 2 brindle, 2 black and
white ,
$400.
Ready

Freda and
fa milies

Appliance

t'OR

WANTED: Positions available to assist an
indi vidual with mental retardation in
Meigs County (Racine Area):
I ) 17 hrs: 10am-6pm Sat; 4-Bpm
Sun/Mon;
2) 17 hrs: 4-Spm Tues-Fri;
Must have high. school diploma or GED,
valid driver's license, three y~ars good
driving experience and adequate
au10mobile insurance. $7.25/hr. Send
resume to: Buckeye Community Services
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640 or email to : beyecserv@yahoo.com. Deadline
for applications: 3117/06.
Pre-employment drug testing.
· Equal Opponunity Employer.

starting at .99c

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
Walk ·to shop &amp; mov•es

Call 740-446-2568 Equal

Housing Opportun•ty
.•
Brand new 2BR ~pts : on
Bob McCorm ick Ad . Call
for details (740)441-0194 '
184

CONVENIENTLY . LOCATED &amp; AFFORDABLE !

TowntJouse

apartment s.

. and/or small house's FOR

RENT. Call (740)44 H 111
for application &amp; Informa-

sell for $13,000. (304.)523·
1t79

r

Miniaturt: Long Haired
Dachshund puppi'es for
sale. Females $350, male

up

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675· 7388. For sale,
re-conditiOned ' automatic
washers &amp; dryers. ref~iger­
. a tors. gas and electric
ranges. a1r condi tioners ,
and wrrnger washe rs. Will
do repairs on major brands
.
rn shop or at your home.
Used Furniture store. 130
Bulaville Pike . Wash~rs,
dryers.
gas/
electriC
ranges. .
mattresses,
couche's, dinettes. chests.
much
more.
Grave
{740 ) 446~
Monuments

r

Gracious living 1 and 2
bedroom apartments at
Village
Manor
and
Aivers1de Apartments. 1n
Middleport. From $295·
$444. Call 74.0·992·5064
Equal
Housmg
Opportunrlies.

ANTIQUFS .

I

Buy or sell River ine
Antiques . 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy,
740-992-2526.
Russ
Moore owner

$300 ..(740)367-&lt;1590 after
6pm.

F""l

Lg 3-Bedroom
Pt.
Pl·easant, Kitchen furnished. AC and all E'loctriC
Deposit
requr red .
!1300/rent (304)675-7783leave mess~ge

MISCEI.IA~H)US
MERL11ANIJISE

Alyce 6387 prom dress,
yellow. size· 2. $ 150. Call

(7 40)388·9556.
Ap"ptiance
Warehouse
101 . New and Gently
' Used
Appliances
Washers,
w/Warrantly.
Dryers.
Retrigeratqrs. .
Located next to the
Downtown Ripley Post
Office. Open M-F. 304-

New 2BR apts Watson
Rd.• near St. Rt '' 35,
Rodney Pike/850 area
Ref _ Dep. required . no
pets_ Call (740)446-t271

(740)709·1657
Pleasant Valley Ap'artment
-Are
now
taking
Applications for 28R. 3BA
&amp; 48R .. Applications are
taken MOnday thru Friday,
from 9:00 A.M.-4 P.M .
OHice is located at 1151
EVergreen Drrve Pomt
Pleasant , WV Phone No. 1S

Fender
and
Gibson
Eplphone acoustiC' guitars,
new in box. your choice
$ I 50 cas h. (740)379-

r

:mmercial Property &amp;
Building for Sale.
9.9
acres. Ambrosia Machine
Inc. Route 2 Box 254 Point
Pleasant. WV
25550
4:00pm
Fire 'WOod · Seasoned
HarQwood
Split
and
Delivered. Ca ll 740-949-.

2038
Orlando/Disney area. 7/6
nightS stay. Paid $600 sell
lor $1 99 good for 1 yr.

(304.)362.0014
I \I(\ I ...,l 1'1 '1 II ...,

NEW ANO USED STEEL
Steel Beams . Pipe Rebar
For Concrete,
Angle .
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Gratrng
For
Drains,
Dm•eways &amp; Wa lkr--ays :
L&amp;L Scrap Metals Open
Monday.
Tuesday,
Wednesday &amp; Friday, 8am4:30pni. Closed Thursday,
&amp;
Sunday.
Saturday

(·740)367-7086.

Angus Bulls, two X-breos ,
4 heifers. EMcellent breeding. Slate Run Farm. See
www. sla te run farm . com ,
Beef Bull Black and While
about 2yr Old. For Sale
$650.00 or Trade lor
Horse.
John Eynon ,
Apple
Grove
27357
Dorcas Road . Racine ,
Ohio, 740.949-2324
For sale: Boer Goate .
Born in Jar\uary, very limited number. Champion
bloodlines on both sides,
also several' purebred
breeding
age males .
Professional
breeder.
(740)245-0485 after 6pm.
Full Bo"'r Bluy 14 . month
$175.
Feb.
Billy
&amp;
Weathers. Full, 3/4, 1/2,
$75 each. Steve Stapleton

(740)446·4172, (740)2561619.
Shelled Corn $3.50 per 50,
12.% All Stock $5.40 per
50. Other l ive~slock feed
available. 740-698-()911 .

r

I

For sale 5lC5 round bales
o f · hay, SH.50. Call

(740)446-9777.
Round

bales

(304)675·1743

of

'h&amp;y.

Delano

Jackson Farm.

(740)245-924.5, (740)367·
0624:

Load Tra il/Load
Ma11
Trai lers. Goosenec ks!Oumps /
Utilities _.
CarmichMI
Equipment
(!40)4462412.

4 WHEELERS

550

call 675·6679 EHO
WEEKLY AVAILABLE
Includes
Ret ri ge ra tor 1M'i crow ave
From $175 To· $250 ·
College H1ll .Motel Call
(740)245·5326

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

•

Trea ted Pine Fence Posts

$4.00 each. Call (740)446·
4734 .
Troy Built .PTO 8 horse
model
hiUerfforrower.

(740)446·094.5.

miles with cover and tank
· bag.
Great condition.
Asking
54,500
Call

1997 Toyota Camry LE.
White &amp; beige int. cloth ,
well equipped, good oondi·
lion , 4 cyl. ' auto, 25-33

mpg, $4.,995. (740)446·
0014.
2001
· Grand
Jeep
Cherokee Limited, white,
new tires, excellent condi-

tion . $12,500. (740)446·
4060 or (740)367-7762 .
95 Camaro. black, Hop .

auto, $1 ,800 . .(740)256·
1618 or (740)256·62,00.
96 Buick LeSabre 97,000
mi. , needs body work ·and
radiator, new tires. battery,
brakes and rotors, $1 ,500

OBO. /740)446;9632.
99 Ford Mustang V6 , 5
speed , 90,000 miles ,
black, great condition,
many options $5,000 .

(740)446·1327.
Cavaliers,
Sunflres,
Saturns, Ford, Chevy and
Dodge truck. Blazers and
vans In stock: Priced lrom
$750 to $5.495. 3 months·
3.000 miles Warranty.
Quality Vehic les for 11
years. All prices listed on
the · vehicle, No pressure
sales . Cook
Motors

(740)446·0103 ..

·$5001 Police Impounds!
Cars from $500,- For list·
ings 800·391 -5227 e11t.

3901
~ 994 Ford Escort LX 5
spd. about 140,000 miles.
Needs engine. $800 obo.

(740)339-2356

HUILIMNf:
. SuPtUFS

(740)446-4096
1999 Harley Davidson
Ultra Classic. Loaded,
Excellent
condi tion ,
29,000 total miles. Price.
$13,;&gt;oo. Call ·74D-949·
2217 until 7 pm.
· 2000 Yamaha Road Star
loaded. 6.567 miles. exc.
cond . $6,000 (304)675 2793 or (304)593·5157
2002 Harley Davidson, ·
Ultra Classic, 6400 ·mil es,

(304)895·3825
89
Honda
Goldwing
w/tra iler, 6cyl., 45,000
miles, very good shape,
well maintained, cover,
e,.;tra lights an d chrome,

t999 GMC wlextended
cab, loaded, 305 engine.
automatic. 67,000 miles.
good clean, .solid truck.
excellent condition, $8,500

2001 Dodge Ram truck
25 00 SLT Heavy Duty,
springS, camper special,
10-ply tires. $7.500. Call

Ed (740)361-0624.
98 Dodge Dakota Sport. 2
WD, Red, Auto, VG mag.,
, nice. $5,800.00. 388·9693
or 740-742·2662.

Insured

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE

99·'Harl9y Fat Boy, 9,400
miles, lots of Chrome and
extras. (740)446-9954 .

i .

24 X

Sheriff Salas
Case
Number
04CV085
ABN AMRO Molgage
Group Inc,
Plaintiff
VS
Michael Lester el at

t

BULLETIN.

Entire Stock of

3 Stone Jewelry

Acquisitions Fine
Jewelry

· • SEAL COATING
•PATCHING
Parking Lots •
: Free Estimates

Ball

I!

• J
·Q ·765 4
• Q8 6 2

Courts • Private

•

• Streets··

South

4AKI 094 '
J 3 2

•

+ K 10

2DYIS
EXP.

Ce ll 304 ·t•7 4 3311
r. \o ~ ' ,,, -1(1 1 t ' " 1511'1

,.

r:AlS

Muru~~
FOR SALE

rA~~~
BUDGET

TRANSMIS·

For sale- P8rts ve hicles.
1991 F250 3f4 ton pickup.
full size Bronco, 87 &amp; 86
Bronco II. (740}379·9887 .

CAMPERS&amp;

MoroR Ho~n:s
2003 Jayco Eagle 34 ' 5th
whe€11 w/slide out New
condition, $22,000 OBO.

Hall Road, passing an
Iron pin set at 697.68

lYpesot
'
- . , . •.

"Ct~nerejll Work .
26 Years Exper_i~nce

David Lewis
740-992-6971
lm urcd

f~t; Thence, follow~

BARNEY

Hardwood Cablnetry And Furnn!.ll'e
www.-thr:iberCret~kc::ab~rtftrY.cOhl

JUGHAID, WHAT

FAMSLY FURST
SETTLED
HOOT IN'
HOLLE!'&lt; ?

Free Esl imatt:~

WIFOUT

I RECKON IT' S
HARD TO SAY,
MIZ

PRUNELLY"

~
tc

• Heat!itg~
• Cooling.
• Refrigeration
SN\'icl!
()l-'CT

&amp; Insured

JO

~~~a n;

t'xpcrli.~un•

,..
l
andSons

All types of rQoflng ·
New oi- Repa rr
Seamless Gutter

~~

24hr Enwq~cnc~·
Lic ~ nscd

H.l. WrltBSBI

·

Downspout

m

F..d l)ll l/uwncr

FREE

~

(74UI992-41fHI

Chuck Woll'e/l\.lgr.
(740)992 -0496
59 1-4348

ESTIMATES

THE BORN LOSER

~·

0Wfl.'l DOt OIZ.D6.~"-LLOF /'1\'i-:'1
C.LO\Il.E.:) ONLINE:. fl..t4.'(1A0f!f.? §

~:

I·

.

~~~!2L~:~:~~~~;"

i

I

SJinlliS

810

Ho~n:
lMPROVt~ lt:N'IS

BASEMENT . ·
WATERPROOFING

Rocky "RJ"
.•Hupp

Unconditional
life1irne
guarantee. · Local refer·
ences
furnished .
Established 1975. Call 24

Hrs.

(7 40)

BIG NATE
WE ' ~E

NOT
A!IOUT TO
H.'.VE ANOTHER
ONE OF
THOSE - TALKS'"
ARE WE .
'

IMPORTS
Athens

446·0870,

Rogers
Basement
Waterproof1ng.

requirements

con-

payable to_
. The
lull amount will be
returned within thirty
{30) days after receipt
of bids.
Each bid musl be
accompanied
by
either a bid bond In
an amount of 100% of
the bid 0mounl with a
surety salislaclory to
the aforesaid Meigs
County
Commissioners or by
certified
check,

Pass

Pass

Hill's Self
Storage

ROBERT
BISSEll

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ol1io
45771
740-949·2217

CONSTRUCTION

·

work

• Affordable

Rates

• References

Available

1

I CAN T PLAY TOPI\'1. MANAGER.
I

740-992-1671

COULDN 'T

FIND MY 6LOVE ..

Stop &amp; Compare

WOULDN'T IT BE FUNN'( IF IT
TURNED OUT Tf!AT YOUR GLOVE

WAS ON YOUR !-lEAD AND YOUR
CAP ON TOP OF "t'OUR GLOVE?

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Add itions &amp;
Remodelin g
New Garage~&gt;
Electrical S. Plumbing
Roofing &amp; GuHers
Vinyl Siding I!&gt; Painting
Pallo and Porch Deck~&gt;

V.C. YOUNG Ill

' 740·742·2293

Pomeroy, Ohto
25 Years local E)Cpcriencc

• Leave a message

SUNSHINE CLUB

wv 036725

• Free Eslimates
"Insured"
Call Gary Stanley

992·6215
H

~~

-Economy Beef $8.25
·Shade R1ver Beef $8.75
·Whole/Shell Corn $7 .25/Bag
·Cracked Corn $8.25/Bag
·Soybean Meal $13.25/Bag
·Shade River Hog Feed $8.85

,

Why Drive Anywhere Else?

GARFIELD
AND 11" WON'1"
GO AWAY

l HAitE A 1"HINC:.
FOR YOU, E:l.L.EN

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N • Pontci"O). Ohio ~5769
740-985-3831

FOil RENT- MEIGS COUNTY
1·4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
. I Luxury- Also HUD
Also Commercial Space
740-416-5547

BAUM LUMBER
Scorpion Tractors
"Tuki"li 1"/rt· Sting Out
/lard 1\ork .'"

,

GRIZZWELLS

Now Availuhlc AI

tH

P,._D~

PEANUTS

1114/1 mo. pd

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING&amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality

NOT.

~~~=s!

• Complete
Remodeling

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

I
HOPE

l

• Ga rage s

Hours

LORt&gt;,

•'

• New Homes

Slift 5'x10'
' to ·1o'x30' ·

I

I'M ~~~\%\?
1\l.EY
iAAT .__.,..
A.~

:ru\-11&lt;.

~

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't!\.\olE \&lt;I(W
~\.'il bUi

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1

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44 Cirru1, e.g.
1 Nenny's
charge
4 Swimming
hole
8 Needle hole
11 Thou, todly
12 Medicinal
plant '
13 ·stydy hard
15 ER '**"'Ill
16 Monallr's
loch
17 Longnecked bird
18 Seta price
20 Eleclrlcal
unlto
21 Felt boot
23 Trippel
24 Carry off
21 Joilde\IM't
29 Maple klo
32 Actreas
- Adams
33 Wrinkle
34 SouthMst
Asian
35 Trim
the grass
38 Plus
37 Jult touch
38 Frat lener
39 Ember
40 Invited
41 Montgomsry
of juz

occurred during a ' match between
England and Ireland last January.
look at the South hand. You open one
spade. (Yo ur one-no-trUmp open ing
promises only 12· 14 points.) Partner
respor1ds two clubs; you rebid a gamefo~clng two no-trump, showing 15-plus
points; and partner rebids three spades.
What would you do now?
The Irish pair at the other table had a
smooth auction. Soultr opened one c;lub,
showing 16-plus points. 'North reSponded
two clubs. promis i ~g 10-plus points and
live-pius dubs. Soul~ rebid two sp ades,
and North made a four-heart splinter bid . ·
announcing spade support with at most .
one heart South used Roman Key Card
Bl ackwood and signed off in six spades.
confident he wo uld collect five spades ,
two diamonds and five clubs .
The English South raised to four spades
and a wonderful slam was missed. The
writer rnade no comment about this
dreadful tou r-spade biQ. 11 is clear-cut 10
continue with tour clubs. showing Your
secondary.Support There seems 1o be a
double fit, when a slam could be available
with a low COmbined point-count.
Over fo ur dubs, North would contro l-bid
(cue-bid ) lour diamonds , showing that
ace and a hand sui table for a slam. Now .
maybe South jumps to five spades, asking North to bid slam with a first- or sec·
and-round heart control. But even tf
South settles for four spades, l think
North shou ld co ntinue with five clubs ,
showing that ace.and p ro misi~g . by inference, a heart control.

G

.,'· see --"

(740)339·0218.

Anentlon of bidders
Is called to all of the

A FIST FIGHT

BREAKIN' OUT !!

H!'=l£1£l!:l!:!L!:::l!:!t!::L!::l!:l!:t!:"IE:

~4~1~1~----------~

'

Department will be
received by the Meigs
County

PLOT?

&lt;o'\nn n

'"~U'

2 NT

42 Pub pint

1LL GO !-lOME AND LOOK
AIWLIND AGAIN ..IF l CAN'T FIND
IT, JUST START WIT140LIT ME ..

AstroGraph

---

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lru~

52 Agonll
55 Beluge
deHcecy
56 ChMra
57 Movie rental
needs
58 Tiny marl&lt;
511 Filbert
60 Juat OK
jhyph.)
61 Mlnl11ultar

'

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DOWN

22 String
quartet
1 Actreas
.
membera
- Sedgwick 23 Cooking oil
2 Atom
·choice
fragmento
24 Worl&lt;
3 Evening
pert-lime
4 lllock ond
25 Turmoilo
- - 26 -·~
5 FIHtaahout
bird
6 Thumbl28 Elvll'
down votes
daughter
7 Some, to
29 Corolca
. Pierre
neighbor
8 Kind of
30 Extol
11ns
31 Ouot
. 9 Cat.,.,.aul
~:e&amp;
10 Latini verb, 38
lop
14 USN officer
honors
11 sword
37 Sllll •
20 Bam t~pper 41 Sauuge

43 Roundup

need

.. ::

44 EMT ·
. .r~
techniqUe . ,
•
45 RlrltllJ
I .... •.; ~
46 Welilll
•· • '• ·

aattlrig . i · 1 •' ·
46 P•ldoiM,. i _. - ._
. llngu~ t ' .,: l'
49 ~tf 0011 ~ • . ·
!50 Yveo!'N efo : :.•
52 Campen
... · • ~
53 Wrtt.r
'1.- .1

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54 Sox . .

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CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

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'Celetlf~ c~ crypt&gt;Qtaim are (78afell from qvotallOOs· ~famous P!K)ple, paS! arw:l ~ •,r ~~
Eac11 ~~~me Cf.lher MlCis ICf nnr
• { " ....- ::-&gt;"

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Pleasure is nol happiness It has no more

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• -~ .!W
'.Jr

importance than a shadow lollow1ng a man ." - Muhammad Ali'

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Wedntldly, March 15, 2006
By Bernice Bette Oaol '
There's ·a strong possibility you might
make some kind of major revis1on in your
basic philosophy, something you never
thought You would do. The ch~nges will
prove to be to your ultimate benefit.
PISCES (feb. 20-March 20) -:- A chance
socia l encounter you hadn't ·planned will '
turn out to be far more fu n and monumental than any eve:nt you might have
painstakingly planned wen in advance .
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - Do ndt
1gno_re any flast"res of inspiration or hunches you get today regarding family interests
or things of a d o mes~ic nature. Your antenna ts tuned into positive signals of much
worth.
,
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)- Get out and
mingle today because you could l;le luckier
than usual through a special friend or contact you run rnto by chance. Thr s person
will have helpful information that can
advance your interests.
GEM IN I ( M~ 21-J une 20) - Whether you
succeed Or lail to achieve financial growth
today will largely be pred1cated on your
ability to make quick, on-the-spot judgment .
ca lls to developments as they anse. Don't
hesitate
CANCER (June 21-July ·22) -'- A oener
way~ o_
l hanqling a critical situation th a.t's
been weighing on your mind may occur to
you today. Even if it means making a radical change. it. should still be ·serlously conSidered."
LEQ ,(July 23-Aug. 22)- Unbek11ownst to
you , a situation in which you are presently
involved has been undergorng a positive
alleratton_You could get ·the lirst inkling of
thiS tocJay and what it could mean to you.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - A· key relal
tlonship c~n be strengthened substantially
by something you spo,ntan~usiY do lor
this person today from the· goodness ot
your heart . .lt w111 mean m~re to h1mlher
than you realize
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Conditions
that have a critical elfect upon your work or
career look like they will be vastly improved
today. What transpires may be completely
unexpected bui greatly welcomed. '
·SCORPIQ (Oct 24-Nov_22) - A calculated nsK m'ight be tn order tOday perta1ntng
to somethrng you have thorougt'lly analyzed ~nd thought throuon corr]pletely
Don·! be tr mid m areas where bold measures are requ1red .
SAGITTARIU S (Nov 23-Dec 2t ) Someth1ng proprtious and profitable could
develop tram out of the blue through some
type of shared venture. It m1ght not look
hk.e much at first. but this Will qu1Ckly
change _
CAPRICORN tOec 22·Jan 19 ) - Some
une,.;pooted but very pleasant news could
have a most pcs1!1ve eHecl upon an •mportant decis1qn you 've been In the m1dst of
mak1ng .' The ttmlng IS propitiOUS
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. t9) - You could
be extremely fortunate rn a commerc1 d.l
· Involvement that IS 01nylhtng but ru n-ol-themrll Plus, 11 wtll work out la1 Qetter than
anyOOdy, indud1ng you. had ant1c1pated

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Yesterday's double-fit column w~s
"insPired" by a write-up of this deal in The
Guardian newspaper in Britain. It

ttAC~Nf(~l&gt;

1.1-\\ IS

Concrete Remov\11
and Replacement

Pass

the double fit

A ,Oili.NG SOilT

OF P~llSON -·WttAT tMV~ YOU
60T wiTt( A

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WV#039714

(740) 992-0472

SlONS, Double bolted. All

types. (740)245·5677 or
(740)645·7400

(740) 99~-0496

LAWN WORK ·

4

24ft. .Pontoon boat. 48HP
enQine. Nearly .new trailer. ·

~·,.,

TRIM TREt:S &amp;

( 'll'\S 'I I! I ( ' I Ill'\

We!J.t
Pass

He should
have
seen
.
.

Licensed H.ome Builder
.

F..ast

SOuth

.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• New Homes • Additions
• Rem~deling ·

Willl'UI &amp; remo\i'trt't's nr
will cut into lirt'o!ood.

(304) 895·3840

(740)441·8299 .

Owner

only
Self-Storage'

1997 Yamaha Jetski with
trailer- yellow &amp; white- asking $2,700 080 • call

'Dealer: Soulh
Vulnerable: Easl-Wesl

Opening lead: • 5

"Mid~leport's

&amp;

.2 man Bass Boat New
with electric anchOr, 4.5
gasoline Mercury engine .
new battery $2,300 OBO

.'

Middleport, OH
10x10x10x20
992-:S194
or 992-66:S5

SERVICE

... K Q 9

"
Chu ck Wolfe

· • 8 652
• A K 10 8
• J 9 3
• 6 3

I0 7 4

Playgrounds

304·675·2457
IIUIIEII1lll

East

West

Roads • Driveways

97 Beech Street

ROCKY'S TREE

9

• A754
• AJ852

Free Est.

lng said road, South Commissioners
at tained In this bid
lhelr
office
at
the
packet, particularly to
63
degrees
49
min·.
32'X9'4" Pol e Barn Pa1nted
utes
30
seconds
east,
Courthouse
,
the
Federal Labor
Steel Sides and Roof. 3'
a dlslance of 325.01
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Standards Provisions
Entry. 2-1a·xa· OVerheads,
feel to a point.
until
·1:00
P.M.,
and
Oavls-Bacon
SPAO:
Insulated f.oof Overhang.
defendpnts,
Thence,
leaving·
said
Thursday;
.March
30,
Wages,
various
lnsur·
Seamless Gutter . Erected
~
RlRRFNr
Court of . Common
road, South 0 degrees 2006 and then al 1:15
enca requirements,
Sl 0.450.00
740-742·
Pleas
07 minutes 14 sec· P.M. at said office
various equal oppor..
4011 or 1-800-396 -3026.
Downtown Office Space- 5
Meigs County, Ohio.
lunlty provisions, and
onds East, passing opened and read
room · suite $650/mo : 1
In pursuance of an through an Iron .pin aloud for the follow·
the requirement for a
Block. brick, sewer p1pes,
room off1ce - $225/mo.: 2
payment
windows
,
lintels,
etc
.
order
of
sale
10
me
set
at
20.00
feet,
for
a
ing:
Provide
and
bond and
room ·suite
$250/mo.
dlrec1ed froni said
Winters,
Rio
distance ol 918.24 Install new electrical
Glaude
perform once
bond
Security deposit ·reouired
cashiers check, or lei~
Grande, ciH Can 740-245·
Court In the above
feet to the point of upgrade . for . the
t 00% of the contracl
You pay utilit1es. All spaces
5121 .
.
entitled
·action,
I
will
ter of credit upon a
beginning;
said
Orange
Twp
Fire
pl;lce.
No
bidder
may
very nice Elevator_ Call
described tract con· Department.
whhdraw his bid with· solvent bank in the
expose to sale at
(740)446 -3644 for appotntPole Barn 30x50x1 2 feet
tainlng 9.381 acres. Specifications pro·
Public Auction on the
amount of not less
In thirty {30) days
ment.
pa1nte.d metal. Slider, tree
Front Steps of The . Subject to all ease· vided In bid packet.
than 10% of the bid
after the actual date
delivery. Only $7 ,595.
Meigs County Court
amount in favor of the
ments and . right of Specifications, and
of lhe 0 penlng there~
Retail and office space
( 9 3 7 )' 7 1 8 - 1 4 7 1 '
House
on
Friday,
·
aforesaid
Me(gs
way
of
record.
All
·
bid
forms
may
be
of.
:rhe
Meigs
Counly
available 1r1 downtowl'1
www . nat1onwrd epole March 31, 2006 at 1D Iron Pin set are 5/8 secured at the office
Commissioners
C
o u n .t y .
Potnt
Pleasant ,
barns.com
Inch by 30 Inch long of Meigs County
reserves, the right to
Commissioners. Bid
A.M. of said Day, tho
$500/month ,
r1ext
to
following
~ascribed
rebar.
The
above
Bonds
shall
be
Commissioners,
reJect.
any
or
all
bids.
Pl:rs
Courthouse . Contact Julie
description Is based C o u r t h o u s e ·.
Real Estate:
by
Mlck
Davenport, accomp·anled
HlR SALE
a
Prior
Instrument
Prestdenl ,
on a field $Urvey Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Meigs
Proof of Aulhprlty of
pointpleasant:.,comm_rent
Reference
:
Volume
completed
April
t
997
c
·
o
u
n
t
y·
lhe
official or agent
•
Phnne
t
740·992·
al@yahoo.com
or
7 Pure Breed Pit Bull
102, Page 433 Mobile
by John M. Branner 2895 . A deposit of o
signing lhe bond .
Commissioners.
(703)528-0617
Pups. Brrndle. Black. Tan.
Home:
Vint
P.S. 6805
dollars
will
be
{3)8,10.14.
8ids shall be sealed
Chocol at e.
Beautiful
Current
owner:
required for each sol
and marked as Bid for
maJkings Must see!! $200 . HOTN12C12267AB
called
Richfield
Michael !,ester et al of plans and speclfl·
HVAC projecl for
(304)675·1105 after 5P,m
H ULSF.HOUl
Homes, successor to
Property at 28475 cations, check made
Public Notice
Orange Twp Fire
Goor~
Oakwood
AKC Bassett hound pups,
Star
Hall
Road, payable to~ . The
Department
and
Legal
Oeacrlpllon :
Langavllle, Oh 45741 .full amoun~ will be
6 weeks old. S-?50 male.
NOTICE TO CON·
mailed or delivered
New Berber carpet $6 95,
$300
female .
Call
Situate In the County
PPt
13.00856.000 relurned within lhlrty
TRACTORS
to : Meigs· County
yard. Aemane nts sfart1 ng
(740)256·6877
ol Me)gs In lhe Shtle
Pr!Qr
Deed {30) days after receipt
Sealed proposals for
Commissioners ,
at $25. Mollohan Carpel.
ot Ohio and In the
Refer•neea: Volume of bids.
the Heating replace·
Courthouse, .
f=ox Terr ier puppieS. 1st
76 Vi ne St ., Gall1polrs
Township of Salem:
102, Page 433 ' Land
Each bid must be
mont for the Orange
PoiJleroy, Ohio 45769.
shots. 1st worming . $150
(7 40)446-7 444
situated In section 23,
and
Trailer
Appraised
accompanied
by
.
Township
·
Fire
Anentlon
of bidders
(740)446·4446
T.8, R 15, Salem
at $80,000.00 terms ol either a bid bond ·in
Department will be
is called to all the
Township,
Meigs
1a1e: Cannot be sold
an amount Of 100% of
received.by lhe Meigs requirements
con County, Ohio and
for leas than 213 of the bid amount with a
C o u n l y tained in this bid
being part of Tract 3,
tho appraised value.
surety satisfactory to
Get Your Message Across
Commissioners
at
packet , particularly to
Volume 4, Page 291,
10%
down
dn
Day
of
their
the
aforesaid
Meigs
office
at
the
lhe
Federal Labor
. ,
Whh ADaily SeOtinel
Official Records of
Sale, cash or certified ·C o u ·n t y Courthouse,
Standards Provisions
Meigs County and
check, balance due
Commlsslonsrs 9r by
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
and
Davis-Bacon
being more partlcu·
on confirmation of certified
check,
until
1 :DO
P.M.,
Wages, various insurlarly described as fol·
sale.
cashiers check, or let·
Thursday, March 30, ance requirements,
lows: Commencing at
The .appraloal did ter of credit upon a
2006 and then al1:15 various equal oppor·
an Iron pin let bear·
Include an Interior solvent bank In 'the
P.M. at said office tunity provisioris, and
lng west 2637.32 feet
examination of lhe amount of I)Ot less
opened and read
the requirement for a
and North 1321 .49
house.
than 1D% ol the bid
aloud for lhe follow· payment bond and
feet from the aouth·
Robert E. Beegle, amount In favor of the
lng:
Provide and performan ce
bond
east corner of section
Meigs County Shariff
aforesaid
Meigs
Install new HVAC sys·
100% of the contract
23r said polnl being
Anorney
for
the C o u n t , y
tem for the Orange price. No bidder may
the point of begin·
Plaintiff
Lerner Commissioners. Bid
Twp Fire Department. wllhdrew his bid with·
nlng; Thence North 89 · Sampson • Rothfuss,
Specifications pro,
Bondi
shall
be
In thirty (30) days
Degrees 32 minutes
P.O.
Box
5480, accompanied
vlded In bid packet after the actual date
by
33 'seconds weat, a
Cincinnati, Oh 45201 ·
Proof of Aulhorlty ol • Specifications , and
of lhe opening lhere·
5408 513-241 ·3100.
the official or egenl
bid forms may be of. The Meigs County
distance ol 708.49
feet to an Iron pin set;
{2) 28, (3) 7, 14
a0cured at lhe office C9mmlssioners
signing the bond.
Thence 43 Degrees
reserves , the right to
of Meigs Counly
Bide lhell be sealed
11
Minutes
26
rejecl any or oil bids.
and marked as Bid for
Commissioner s,
Public Notice
Seconds East, a dis·
Mick
Cou r lhouse ,
Oavenpnrl,
Electrical
Upgrade
President,
tance of 4n.63 feet to
Meigs
Project for Orange
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
an Iron pin set;
NOTICE TO CON· Twp Fire Deparlmenl
• .Phone # 740·992· · C o u n t y
Thence · l'jorlh
7
Commissioners.
TRACTORS
and mailed or dellv·
~895 . A deposit of o
degrees
05
Minutes
Sealed
proposals
for
dollars
Will
·
be
(3) 8 , 10.14.
ared
to:
Meigs
County
Ave .
tho
03 Seconds Easl a
Electrlca'l Commissioners ~
required for each set
distance of 713.16
Upgrade
for
the Courthouse , ol plans and specifl ·
feel lo a polnlln Shtr
Orange Township Fire Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
c ations , check made
$10.750.00

•

Rick Johnson , Jr.
Owner

,
1:.ul:•lic N••th_·c .. in No.•"-'N pupc r .. .
Your Right to Knu"\4', ()clh.oc ro.•.d Hl~&lt;eht to o, "'(uur 11 .... .-.

30" X 48' X g· Pole Barn
Pa1nted Steel Sides and
·Roof. 3' Entry. 14'X9'
Sliding door. lnsui .Aool,
Gu tt er. Erecled Price

• Ql 3

Complete Tree Cora
ACE TREE SERVICE
179 Rand St.
Gallipolis, OH

$7,150. (740)44·1,5540.

(740)448·1543 .'

OBO. (74.0)441-1014 .

(740)44&amp;-7300

Tw in A1vers Tower rs
accepting applications · for
waiting list for Hua-sub·
siz9d . 1- br, apartment.

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair

oa H ·Qtl

Nor!

ROGER HYSELL
GARAGE

~-40 MOTORCV!U~ I
992-5682
L

1
Cabbage · plants
and
Pepper plants $9.00 a flat.

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt
In StOck. Call Ron Evans,
1-800-537-9528.'

FoR SALE

2001 Blazer LT 4x4,
91 ,OOOmi, loaded, New
Onstar,
Goodyears,
Leather, All Power. $7,900.

1995 Crown Vic., Runs
G6od, Looks GoOd, 740992~1493
or 740-4161472.

,\I I\ I "' II H h..

JET

Ta ra
Townhcus~
Apartments.
Very
Spacious , 2 Bedrooms,
CIA , 1 1/2 Bath. Adult
Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Patio.
Start $425/Mo No Pets,
Lease
Plus
Security
Deposit
Required,

"

7 30·

372·8186.

(304)675·5806. E.H.O

1, year old Pinto miniature

(740)286·,5395 . .

Registered Border Collie
pups. Wormed &amp; 1st shOts.
Imported blood lines, know
for hearing in st1 nct and
classic colors .. (740)379-·
9110,

(304)675·1722.

4x4

1998 Jeep Wrangler 4X4,
4 cld., auto , air, soft top,
84,000 mi. , $8,500.00.
740·742·2357.

AtJJO&gt;
FOR SALE

stud. $350 OBO. Call
(74.0)256·1233.

4782 Gallrpolrs, OH Hrs
;;,
260
~10..~--~---,
11·3 (M·S) .
...
'
FoR SALE

ti on

.

&amp;

Call (740)286·9808.

(304)675-7999

ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive tram $344 to 5442

or ~740)441- 1

AKC Golden Retrievers.
First shots and wormed,
light gold in color. $250.

rn Henderson, WV. Pre·
owned Applicanes starting
at $75 &amp; up all under
also
have
Warra nty.
Household Misc . Items

2br Apartment. 600 sq ft
Newly remodeled . refer~mce requrred . 1n Pomt
Pleasant . (304 )675-8635

Phillip
Alder

"02" Honda 919, 2,200

Warehouse

.

• -Ill .,.·

ACROSS

'OS. Auto, 2WO, wJb&amp;dllner,
excellent condition. Kelly
Blue Book $14,600, will

3115106. Call (740)44 1·

!ili"W

....- .
.· .
.....' ..

------------~----------------------------~. ·· ~ ~#

Chevy Colorado Ext. Cab

1047.
AI'ARl'!IIFNI~

. .....'...' .

NEA Cro .. word Puzzle

t

- - -.- -

'

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a o

~it * Zf

•

·,,'

. .:.···

'

�..
Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

Lewis re-signs with
Ravens, Browns add
two possible starters
. BY THE AssOCIATED PRESS

Jamal Lewis is staying
with Jamal Lewis is back
with the Baltimore Ravens.
The free-agent running
back, who has had troubles
on and ·off the field since
rushing for 2,066 yards in
2003, re-signed Monday
with the team that drafted
him in 2000.
Carolina's
Will
Witherspoon signed with St.
Louis after the ·Rams lost
· Adam .
strong
safety
Archuleta to Washington,
which as usual was one of
the busies! teams during the
opening of the free-agent
period.
Philadelphia signed passrushing
defensive
end
Darren Howard, who was
bothered by injuries with
New Orleans last season.
And Tennessee signed linebacker David Thornton from
Indianapolis, the third Colt
in three days to leave.
But Baltimore's decision
to re-sign its one-time star
· was the highlight of the day.
Lewis rushed for a 'careerlow 906 yards in 2005 after
serving a four-month federal
prison sentence on a drug
charge and undergoing offseason ankle surgery. His
average of 3.4 yards a carry
. was a full yard below his
career average.
The Ravens had considered putting the franchise tag ·
bn their leading career rusher, who has 6,669 yards
rushing in his six seasons in
Baltimore. Lewis then
rejected an offer for a twoyear incentive-laden deal
that include.d a signing
bonus.
.
"We are so ·excited ·tO have
Jamal back," Ravens general
manager Ozzie Newsome
said. ·~If you look at his history, he always rebounds in a
big way from adversity."
Witherspoon, an · outside
linebacker with Carolina,
was one of the top free
agents at his position available . . He signed with St.
Louis to. play in the middle
for a deal that includes a $9
· million signing bonus.
Archuleta, a better run
stopper than pass defender,
.left the Rams after five seasons · and got a $10 million
signing . bonus from the
Redskins, who have added
four players .since free
agency st.arted Saturday.
That's generally been the
way the Skins have operated
since Daniel Snyder bought
them in 1999, getting things
done as quickly as possible,
often for prices considered
over market value.
Howard, who had 11 sacks
in 2004·, had just 3 l/2 . last
season in an injury plagued
year. He had been protected
by the Saints as their fran-

-

Tuesday, March 14. 2006

www.mydallysentinel.com

Buckey~

slide past perennial powers·

Bv RUSTY MIUER

fourth-seeded Purdue (twice) No. 2 seeds it became apparIJ&gt; SPORTS WRITER
and eighth-seeded Boston ent that Ohio State would get
College (on the road).
its first No. I seed since 1993.
COLUMBUS- Ohio State
Critics will point out that
The 'Buckeyes made the,
has pulled off the first major Ohio State is only No.7 in the most of that chance, going all
upset of the 2006 NCAA tour- RPI index, and that the Big the way to thfil national chamTen is ranked as the nation's pionsh1p game before falling
nament.
Surprising · many,
the seventh-best conference. In to All-American Cheryl
Buckeyes grabbed a No. I addition, the Buckeyes ' 'Swoopes and Texas Tech, 84seed on Monday night and strength of schedule - 82.
will play Oakland in the frrst because of a perceived down
''I'm pretty excited about
round of the NCAA women's year in the conference - is the No. 1 seed," said Ohio
tournament on Sunday night only 19th-best in the country. · State leading scorer and twoin West Lafayette, Ind.
Foster said it wasn't a cer- time Big Ten player of the
Ohio State coach Jim Foster tain trophy or a particular year Jessica Davenport.
fully anticipates that there game that got the selection "People may have a different
will be complaints- particu- committee's attention.
opinion about what they think
larly from perennial power"It's the body of work," he is right, but we worked hard
houses such as Tennessee and said, standing in his living and we deserve it."
Connecticut that the room where he ·and his team
Should it beat Oakland (ISBuckeyes .(28-2)
don't . watched . the
bracket 15), the only team in. the 64.deserve a top seed.
announcement. "It's 19 games team field without a winning
"Robert Kennedy said that in a row. it's winning the Big record, Ohio State would play
if you give a million dollars Ten regular season, winning the winner of ninth-seeded
away, 20 percent of the people the conference tournament.
·
·
1
Notre c
Dame
((19
18-11)
and
are
gomg
o come uo WI'th a . How many teams d!'d that?. B
11
II) Th
·reason not to take. it,'~ he said It's a pretty simple formula oston . 0 ege
· ·. e
with a laugh. '·'So we ' ll just when you really, really sit Buckeyes beat BC 66-61 in
·
overtime Dec. 3 in Chestnut
keep ch uggmg
a1ong an d 1e1 down and look at 1't."
those 20 percent suffer as they · With players lying on the Hill, Mass.
will."
floor or slouched on chairs
The Buckeyes have had a
The Buckeyes are ranked and couches, the tension built week off since capturing the
No. 2 in both the media and as the brackets from the . Big Ten tournament title last
coaches polls, have won their Cleveland, Bridgeport, Conn., Monday with a 63-60 victory
last 19 games, captured both and San Antonio regionals over Purdue, They will be
the Big Ten regular-season were announced with no men- making their 15th appearance
and tournament titles and tion· of the Buckeyes. But in the NCAA tournament.
have quality wins against sec- after Tennessee, Oklahoma
Foster has taken all four of
ond-seeded
Oklahoma, and Connecticut were given his Ohio State .teams to the

NCAA tournament, and is
making his 20th trip to the
tournament in his last 23
years of coaching. The
Buckeyes lost in the second
round in both 2003 and 2004.
A year ago, they fell 64-58 in
the regional · semifinals to
Rutgers. a team they had beaten earlier in the season at
Value City Arena.
"It's hard .to argue with a
team that is 28-2 and No. 2 i!l
the country,'' guard Brandie
Hoskins said. ''Our record
said a lot for us."
·
:
Np. 23 Bowling Green (282), the regular-season arid
tournament champions of the
Mid-American Conference:,
also will play in We&amp;)
Lafayette, meeting UCLA
(20-10) on Sunday afternoon.
The Falcons are making theit
eighth · NCAA tournament
appearance.
:
Just like Ohio State, th~
Falcons and their fans don't
have to travel far to play. '
· "I was excited. especially ·
about the location ," coach
Curt Miller said. "Our fans
have been tremendous, and
what a following we had i'n
Cleveland (for the MAC
Tournament). Now, we get a
bus trip to West Lafayette ....
We couldn't 'be happier.':

Gilts Division II All-Ohio Ust

hlilh 1~ae SeNice Specials!

.

MOST
4
$170.00 + TAX

CaSsie Mogan, ClrcMMIIe; Marissa Groves, Lane. Fairfield Union; Katie McMahon, Wash.

CH; Kristin Cozzens. Vincent Wanen; .!Kido Womoley, Clltlllpolla Clltllla Acorl.; Vlclor1a
l,.eali, Jackson; Kealy McNaly, Rocky River; Ainnie Mayer. Fairview Par1&lt;; Kelcie Helln'lef,
Jefferson " rea; Ali Stack. Oberlin Flrelands; Katie Stover, Chagrin Fals l&lt;enston; Kara
Murphy. Akroo SVSM; Bnanna Sogoroon, Cuy. Falls Walsh Jesuit; Meghan Sirrons,
Minerva; Teniahie Bensoo, Akron Hoban; Sereena Farage, Medina Buckeye; Natalie
Aidenbaugn , Canton S.: Kim Young. Pembe!Ville Eastwood: Lindsay Kantner,
Wapakooela.
ltonor.aM Mention
.
O'Mya Clay, COis. E.; · Cian Cumberlander, Cols. Hartley; Shaina Kaiser, Delaware
Bucl&lt;eye VBI.; Amber Sloi&lt;es. Cols. DeSaleo; Lashawna Thomas. C&lt;;s Eastmoor Acad.;
Klrstiri Wright Now P11H-ph~ ; Sarah Hammond, Millersburg W. Holmes; Kalirt Lee,
Byesville Meadowt&gt;rool&lt;; Kristyn Haagon. Now Corolrd John Glenn; MeliOry Yajko,
l.i&amp;l):)n Bea\o'er local; She.lane Moore, Phik&gt;; Kari Daugherty, Warsaw At...er View; Kelty
Uoofe, Richmond Edison;
Erica Richardson. Wilminglon; Emily Tllompeon, N. Ben&lt;l TaylOr; Lauren Sharpe, TlflP
City Twecanoe; Louise VandenBoech. Kettering Alter; Michele Oerr, Urbana; Shlmnon
PinMey,.Cin. McNicholas;
. Andrea Anderson, Circ~lle Logan Etm; Lauren Justice. Lane. Fairfiek:l Union; Lauren
Johnson, WCH Miami Trace; Stacy Hilt, Hill&amp;boro; Chelsea Clifton, VIncent Warren;
Kayla O'Brien, Chardon NO.Cl.; Tnsha Dre~insld , Ashtabula Edgewood; KayiOn
Eppinger, Warrens\o'llle Hta.; Sarah Kazan as. Bay Village Bay; All Haldl, Avon;
Hannah Hamar, Aaven;na SE: Sam Fouser, Richfield Revere; Lynctsey .Jot:lnson, Canal
Fulton NW: Oenlele Haas, Louisville: Chandra ~fWiJIO, Allanoe Martington: MiChelle
Dykes, Youngs. Uberty; Sara Pratt, Norton; AleiCI Williams, Warren Howland; Caitlin
Sured&lt;. Cuy. Falls Walsh Jesuit; Mlsti Anderson, M!neNI;
Valerie Wort, Lo•inglon, Kaylen Auston, Sil&lt;&gt;by; Mandy WMo, Oltowa.(Jiardorl; Betriy
Hone, 'Celina; UMsay Diegel, Maumee; Jessica Vorst Uma Betti; StephMie Meyer,
Clyde.

doriation,A3

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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-·--~------------~r----~--~--------------------------~--------~----------------~--------

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT The
need for · increased code
enforceme nt in Middleport
neighborhoods was brought
home to Village Council
Monday evening with a list
of 22 unsightly, unsafe properties and anoiher li st of 16
vehiCles without proper registration found on a random
Sunday drive through town.
Council Members Sandra
Brown and Jean Craig presented the li sts. which includ-

ed street addresses, of code
violations. The two compiled
the li st on a two-hour tour of
the village last Sunday. Brown
said the two council members
only visited a portion of the
vi llage, and did so after a resident complained about one
property in particular.
The list of homes Brown
read to other council members included the burned-out
remains of two buildings.
trash piled in yards and on
porches, and one with a
"dead rat in plain view of
anyone walking by."

One business and village
hall arc also on the li st.
Brown and Craig included
village hall because of the
condition of the exterior stairs
leadi ng to the second floor.
Craig said if vi ll age police
offieers are 'too busy to visil
property and vehicle owners
abo ut the code violations,
council should consider hiring an officer who does nothin~ else. At a meeting earlier
this month, Police Chief
Bruce Swift said understaffing and a heavy case load
makes it difficult for officers

to enforce code violations
such as those listed.
Craig said she holds Mayor
Sandy lannarelli responsible
for enforcemem in the
absence of police enforce. ment, becaus·e she oversees
ihe police chief and, indirectly, all village employees.
"With committees working
so hard to make Middleport an
inviting place to live, shop and
visit, we are doing a great disservice to the village if we do
not see that these ordinances
are enforced." Craig said.
Council also:

• Approved the 2006 permanent appropriations, totaling $1.982.000 for all departments. .
·
• Approved the · mayor's
report of fee&gt; a·nd tines collected in February. in the
amount of $3.685.
• Approved re-codification
of village ordinances for
2007.

Present were Council members Stephen Houchins,
Robert
Robinson, . Jeff
Peckham. Sandra Brown, Jean
Craig and Ferman Moore, and
Fiscal Officer Susa'n Baker.

Solich gives keynote speech at Chamber luncheon · Beautification
.

' ·
·

BY

·

·

BETH SERGENT

ssERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

effort planned
for General
Hartinger Park ··

POMEROY - Visitors to
yesterday's Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce lunBY BRIAN J. REED
cheon had plenty to chew &lt;in
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .
with side dishes of the Meigs
County Relay for Life, the
MIDDLEPORT -"Let's
unveiling of the Meigs
make
the park beautiful, and
County Visitor's Guide, the
let it start there."
. ·
announcement . of Willy
At Monday evening's reguWonka coming to Meigs lar meeting of Middleport
Elementary, and a main Village
Council,
Park
course of Ohio Univer'sity Manager Dale Riftle unveiled
Bobcat Football.
plans for a dogwood tree
Frank Solich, OU's Head 'beautification 'program at
Football Coach gave ,the General Harting~r Park as a
keynote speech that focused means to improve the busy
on two key elements of being park's appearance while cona successful coach.
tributing 1.0 the vi llage's ongoSolich said those two ele- ing re-development project.
. ments Were "believing in
Council authorized · Riffle
yourself' and "surrounding to continue plans to plant I 00
yourself with good people ."
dogwood trees, hut commitSolich explained.those two ted no village funds to the
elements to success came io proposed $5.000 planting
handy during his initial stints project. Council will consider
.
Beth Sergonl/phot&lt;i
at coaching high school foot- contributing to the cost from
Ohio University's Head Football Coach Frank Solich addresses members of the Meigs County
Page AS
a special tree fund.
Please see Sollch, AS
• Herbert Olen Hoover, 77 Chamber of Commerce at yesterday's luncheon at the Wild Horse Cafe.
·'Middleport needs downtown revitizatiori, we . have
homes in need of . improvement," Riffle said. "Why not
slart in the park and let it
spread from there .''
By CHARLENE HOEFliCH
Riffle said he will ask
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTIN6L.C OM
• Company blames
churches and organizations to
'
· lightning for deadly Sago
purchase a tree, ~and individuPOMEROY
Meigs
Mine blast. See Page A2 Middle School student s of
als in honor or memory of
someone.
· Denise Arnold showed their
• Pennington to speak
Riffle hopes to ut.e part of
. creative s~ills in writing and
at Boy Scout fundraiser.
an
inactive tree . fund to
presenting information to
See Page A3
defray lhe e'tirnated $5 ,000
members of the Meigs Local
10 $6.000 neeqed Io plant the
.• Fun horse sh.ow
Bourd of Education in power1rees
&lt;tlong the park's boundpoint.tri-folds, and· b;:ochures
slated at Portland.
aries.
The fund represents the
at Tuesday's meeting.
See Page A3
halance of a grant the village
. The presentations were
receive'd from the Ohio
• Family Medicine.
done as a part of recognition
Department
of Na1 ural
of student achievement in the
See Page AS
'-Re,ource&gt; several years ago
school system being carried
• Dam iri Hawaii bmsts,
for 1ree planling.
out by the administration.
'
Mary Wi&gt;e . a member of a
killing one person and
Describing the II presenters
tree
· committee appointed
and their projects as the "best·
washing out key road.
when the ~rant was first
of 145 students' ' Arnold said
See Page A6
awarded.
asked that the comthe a~signment was to research .
mittee
be
given input into
some aspect of Meigs County
how much of the tree fund is
and then deternune a way to
Charlene Hoolllch/ photo
'
present it effectively to others. .Outstanding achieve.ment pins were presented to ~$igs Middle School students of Denise u'ed for the project.
C
ounci
I
\'Oted
unanimously
The students gave a prescnta- Arnold. center front , following historical presentations before the Meigs Local Board of
tion after which they were · 'Education. Students receiving the awards. leff ·to right, front were Brittany Parsons. Erin to authorize the project. but
given outstanding achieve- Patterson, (Arnold) Tyler Brothers, and Justin Cotterill, and back, Jacob Dunn , Dawn Bissel l. Councilman Ferman Moore
cautioned council to carefully
ment pinsBuckley
by Superintendent
· t y Lew;·s .
William
on behalf of Tyler Andrews. Darby Gi\more. samue 1 Mcca11 . cay 1a Tay1or. an d, Ch ns
cnn,ider spending fun(ls from
the board.
tion. Kayla·Taylor gave a his- the history of Pomeroy, its achievements and contribu- the $~. 659 tree fund. because
Darby Gilmore's presenta- tory of the founding of public early settlers and . industrial tions back to his home .:om- the fund will hkel\ be needed
to meet Tier l -downtown
lion dealt wilh history of the
.b ranes
. .111 Me1gs
. County, th e hi' story 01· s·alt and ,:
11
·
, 0 .,11. aiid munily. '
Rock Spring' Fairgrounds, 1ts
·Jacob Dunn showed a tri- re,·itali zation grant match
.
d 1
locations and the role of the its development over the
umqueness. · eve opment
fold on the· e"randstand and requ iremcnts.
..
,.
Carneg;·e
Foundation
years:
while
Tyler
Fry
pre(
Riftle plans a dogw()()d festh
lh
over e years. e ac l VI ;es
·
horse. track at the fairwhich take place there and
Erin Patterson's topic was sented a powerpoint on Mike
tival at the park on April 22 in
conjunction with Eanh Day.
his fami ly's longtime connec- "Life in a River Town'" using Bartrum 's · NFL &lt;.:areer. his
Plene see Board, AS

0BIWARIES

School board recognizes students for excellence

.INSIDE

.WEATIIER

. Details on Page

A8

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\VEUNESDAY, MARCH 15, 2006

Council presented list of building,·vehicle code violations

SPORTS

Everybody in the pool! It's time for March Madness

Every year about this time,
the 65 teams. And across the wagers and prizes. too.
Eddie Gontram's architeccountry in Florida, St. Louis Arnie Wexler. a certified
ture firm becomes one of the
Cardinals infielder Scott compulsive gari)bling counmost popular in the country.
Spiezio joked that· someone selor who runs a national hot
Hundreds of people he
·had copied his bracket.
line, worries that something
"I've got Duke winning it that seems as harmless as an
doesn't know - · and probably will never meet- check
all," Spiezio said. "I've got a NCAA pool could trigger
couple of surprises in there, gambling problems.
out his Web site, eagerly
but I can't say what.they are.
"For most people, it' s no
chise piayer the last two sea- awaitin' the latest news.
And
were
not
talking
about
Then
I'd
I
.have
to
split
my
danger,"
Wexler said, "But
sons and fills Philadelphia's
blueprints
for
that
new
day
·
money."
.
for
those
that have the perneed for an outside pass
spa.
ing,
where
the
start
of
the
Ah,
money.
sona'lity
or
the gene. they
rushers , some!hing they
"It's March Madness," season is less than a month
An estimated $2.5 billion could be off ancl running.
lacked during a 6-10 season
Gontram
said
Monday.
away,
the
real
ag·
o
nizing
is
reportedly bet on the This could be' the start."
in 2005. ·
Sure .is, baby!
isn't over who will win · the NCAA iotirnament, with
And the ·chicago-based
"I can't think of a player
next
three
weeks,
job
at
third
base,
but
who
only
$80
million
bet
legally
job-search
· firm
of
For
the
we tried harder to ·get over
and
the last several years," · you'll . find sports nuts, will come out of the grueling in Nevada sports books. C~allenger, , Gray
alums
·
and
people
Minneapolis
regional.
Bets
placed
with
bookies
Christmas
estimates
the
devoted
Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie
who
don't
know
a
·
layup
Back
in
1988,
when
the
account
for
some
of
the
rest,
three
weeks
of
the
tournasaid. •
from a loose-ball foul break- Dodgers were paid their and there are plenty of big- ment could cost employers
Thornton, who signed a ing down their picks, annual visit by FBI agents ticket pools.
as much as $3.8 billion in
$22 million, five-ye;u: deal obsessing over little-known for a talk on the evils of
But much comes from lost productivity.
with the Titans, is the third schools like Monmouth arid gambling, th,e feds were small pools, the $5. $10 and
That doesn't mean pools
starting linebacker in four Pacific, and talking trash made to wait While the Los $20 wagered by average are all · bad. ·- Challenger, .
years to leave the Colts. about that 8-9 matchup.
Angeles ·players finished up Joes who don't otherwise Gray and Christmas said
Mike · Peterson
joined · The World . Series and some important business. gamble.
they often are good bonding
Jacksonville in 2003 and NBA finals have their devo- Seems they had to finish up
"It's a crapshoot," said activities, bringing together
Marcus Washington signed tees, and clever ads and their tournament picks.
Mariners pitch~~ Jamie employees who wouldn't
with
the
Washington .queso dip make the Super
Things have lightened up · Moyer, who' gets some normally interact.
Redskins in 2004.
Bowl an all-inclusive party. since then, but the brackets inside info from his father- · At Hodes, Ulman, Pess in
He is also the third When it comes· to the NCAA in almost every clubhouse in-law, ESPN analyst Digger and Katz, the Maryland law
Indianapolis player to go in tournament, though. there's are still serious business.
Phelps. "You're dealing with firm, about !!0 percent of the .
three days. Defensive tackle something in those brackets
San Francisco Giants kids, 17to 21 years old. 120 employees participate,
Larry Tripplett got ,a five- that converts even the least pitching
coach
Dave That's a ·lot of pressure . said Kevin Bress. a partner
year, $18 million · deal with sportsminded folk into rabid Righetti hasn't decided if Think of all the pressure -·. · who heads the elder law
the Buffalo Bills on fans.
he's going to enter a pool and the money that is bet on department and run s the
Saturday. Two-time NFL
"Part of it is it's so easy to yet, hut he still spent part oJ it, legally and illegally. It 's pool.
rushing champion Edgerrin become involved," said his morning Monday debat- amazing."
No other company activity
James ·signed a four-year, Scott Sepich, who has. run a ing whether Cal , the seventh
Many offices have stopp(!d comes close to that.
$30 million deal with the pool for about 70 friends for seed in the Atlanta Regional, charging any fees to avoid
"Not even the Christmas
Arizona
Cardinals
on the last 10 years.
can make a serious run.
legal issues. Gontram 's pool party," Bress s~id.
Sunday.
Indeed, brackets
are
The Seattle Mariners were is free, with prizes donated
Miami, another team that everywhere these days. hard at work on their picks by local businesses. The law
AP Baseball Writer Ben
has been active early, signed Printed in virtually every soon after they arrived" at firm of Hodes, U)man , Walk er and AP Sports
left tackle L.J. Shelton from newspaper. Online. Passed · camp Monday. The Mariners Pessin and Katz in Towson, Writers Gregg · Bell, Howard .
Cleveland · and added two out in neighborhoods, hospi- have two pools, one ·of the Md., foots the bill for its Fend rich
and
Jani e
potential starters in line- tals and church groups.
players' own brackets and office pool prizes.·
McCauley comributed ro
backer Sedrick Hodge from
Even the most li'uttoned- the other a random draw of
The costs go beyo\]d this report.
New Orleans and cornerback down of offices get · the
Andre
Goodman
from fever. Instead of talk about
DetrOit.
mergers and acquisitions or .
tax season, watl!rcooler
chatter centers on the · latest
games, who 's winning the
pool and what the prospects
COLUMBUS (AP) - The 2()05.2006 Associated Press OMsion II girls AJt.&lt;lhiO high
are for the next round.
school baskatball team, based on the recomrTleodations of a state media panel:
.
DMSIONII
And the true beauty? No
FIRST TEAM: Kristin Daugherty, W11$tw River View, 6·1001·1, junk&gt;r, 18.9 points per
expertise
is needed. You
game; Liz AepeiiB., Steubenville, 5-10, jr., 27.5; Lynzoe Johnson, Bellbt00k, .5-10, sr., .
20.9; Bree Hinkle, Cols. Bexley, !HI. sr , 16.9; Samantha Leach, WCH Miami Trac&amp;, 5-9,
could render Dick Vitale
Did you know that a properly tuned engine gets better fuel mileage.
jr., 14.7; Haley Kapferer, Jefferson Areli, &amp;.3. jr.• 22.2; Ellie Shields, Warren Howland, 6knowlspeechless
with
your
Over time heat and stress wears the electoral system and dirt and grim
3, jr., 18.0; Alit&amp; Clifton, Van Wert, 5-11 . sr. , 19.9; Cierra Brevard, Sandusky Perkins, 6-2,
IOI)h .. 22.2.
.
edge of college hoops, sweat ·
plug's your fuel system. Proper maintenance equal's better fuel
PlayM'I of the yeer: Kristin Daugherty, Warsaw River VteW; Liz Aepella, Steub6nvllle.
for days over RPls and
Coachee of the yM-: Mark Shqrt. Hamilton Littie Miami.
""'". ...:::::;~s:e~tt~e~r;:fuel
equals money saved.
power conferences, and still
SE~O TEAM: Miasy Ramsey, Hamitton Little Miami, 5-S, jr., 11 .3; Ganie Oyer,
Copley, 5-9, ar., 14.0; Melissa Goodall, Lexington, 6-2, jr.. 14.3; Ango&gt;a Groves. Sltai&lt;er
lose to people who make .
Hts. H81haway Brown. 6-1, soph., 15.4; Ayanna Dunning, Cola. Eastmoot' Acad., 6-3,
their picks based on nick-.
IOI)h .. 19.0; Macio Blinn, Groefllli.,, 6-0, soph., 19.4; Deseroe Bynl, Cin. TaH, S.B, jr.,
18.0.
.
.
.
names and uniform colors.
THIRD TEAM: Maxine Oha~m . Cols. DeS&amp;Has, 6-1 , SOjlh., 14.7; B!111any Mathie,
"My 4-year-old daughter
Mil-.rsburg W. Holmes, 5-11, sr., 11 .3; Kelly Polen. Cadiz 'ti&amp;nlson Cenl .. 5'10, sr.. 18.3;
Marquita Byrd, Warrensville Hts.. S.S, sr., 14.5; Sandra Busser, Parma Padua
beat
me last year," qontrani
FfW_'dJCan, S.5, sr., 12.5; P~.ris ~ie6e. Bay Village. Bay, 5-10, sr., 17.0; L.eah Seaman,
admitted.
"She was within a
Looisvtlle, 5-8, sr.. 13.2: Jarne Beckett, Wooster triway, 5-8, sr., 15.8; Megan Sellera,
Nofwalk, 5-8, sr., 19.6; Amy Simindinger, Uma Bath, 5-8, sr., 14.1.
whisker of winning the
Special6 CYl.
8 CYL.
CYl. ·
whole thing."
Sierra Fletcher, Utica; Tanni Scott, Col&amp;. Centennial; Hayley O'Hara, UhrichsVille
Claymon1; Sakara Hoose, Spring. Kemon Aldg&amp;; Kristen A ~hardson , O&gt;t1ord TaJawanda;
At baseball's spring train-

Meigs students win gold
in Regional SkillsUSA
competition, AS

Walk America

2 SECflONS -

16 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Chissifieds

Bs-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section
A8

© :.;r;oob Ohio \'alley Puhlishintt Co.
(•

· · Prenatal program continues to
bring healthy babies into the .world

Tami Boyd and ·
her husband ·
Dennis Boyd, Jr.
consult with
physician Wilma'
Mansfield, MD ,
(sitting) and
Connie Little. RN
about the .upcom·
ing birth of their.
son. The Boyds
are participating
111 the Meigs
County Health
Department' s
Prenatal Clinic
that provides
prenatal care. for
clients close to
horne .

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILY SENTINEL. GpM

POMEROY ~ Despite hann E! no major ho,pital co m ~
plex to give birth, to lheir children. lhe wonu;n of Meigs
Countv do not have to tra,·e\ nut"de I he countv 10 recetve
prenat:tl care.
·
·
For 1he past 22 )Car' Meig' Count\ wom&amp;n and their
familie' have had an all) in 1he Meig' Cmlnty Health
Department 's Prenatal·Clinil' that prmidc' prenatal care for
the fip.;t 26 weeb of pregnane! .
The clinic i&gt; fnr all women re ~ardk·,, of age. tinancial
l· irc um 'it~uKe or po..,~e!«o . . ion of he;~ lth insuran~.:e .

· ·

Client' withnul itNirance ma! qualil! for Medicaid to
pay fnr the program·, 'en·ice'" hile other' may qualify for
,en·ice' by p'lying at" reduted ratl' 1111 a ,11d1ng-fee "ale.
Please.see Prenatal, AS

Both Sergent; photo

'•

)r

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