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GA1t11ENING

iunba~ lime~ -ientintl

r.
Warm Iraq enters

Sunday, March 19, 2006 , ·

·fourth year with ·
security and political
futtu-e uncertain, A2

Searchiilg for the perfect tomato? Try one of the many heirloom varieties

Timber marketing
meeting set April3

BY DEAN FOSDICK
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

NEW MARKET, Va.
In addition to increasing Many of the gardeners
financial . returns, they will among us are looking for the
fO&lt;;us on ways to minimize the perfect tomato, which in the
impact of the' timber harvest end may be worth more than
given that a properly planned a precious metal.
and administered harvest can
"Taste is subjective," said
actually improve the health Gary Ibsen. who grows 520
and productivity of a forest.
varieties of heirloom tomaThe · meeting will be held toes on three organic certified
from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday, April farms in Central California.
3 at the Ohio State University "I've had people tell me 'The
Extension Office, 202 Davis best tasting tomato I ever bad
Ave., Mari,tta. The meeting is was from Uncle Henry 's jarin
open to the public and there is 1946. I've never had anything
no fee or registration required. · that good since.' And. then
A program flyer is avail- they ask me what I can offer.
able on tire Web at I can't match it," Ibsen said.
http://washington.osu.edu/nr
"It's a taste etched in some;
/profitingfromyourwoods.pdf one's emotional memory that
For additional information, will never be replaced. But
contact Teresa Stone or Eric we can find varieties that are
Barrett. OSU Extension. at .similar.·'
(740) 376-7431 or · e-mail
lbsen is an author, grower
barrett. 90@osu.edu.
and seller of heirloom .tomatoes and organic tomato seed.
He also also is founder and
director of TomatoFest, a
fundraiser
held
each
Pre-registration is required . September in Carmel, Calif
. · MARIETIA - A landsCaping pruning seminar will be hcld The $15 registration fee The event includes tomato,
from 6to 8 p.m. on AprilS arthe includes a set of hand pruners. wine and olive oil 'tasting, a
Washington State Community· The registration form is at salsa showcase, many hardCollege by the Ohio State http://washington.osu.edu/hor . to-find heirloom tomato seed
t/landscapepruningflyer.pdf, varieties, some culinary and
University Extension Oftice.
.
In announcing the work- or can be. picked up at. the gardening displays.
"People · have different
shop. Eric Barrett. Extension Exten~ion oftice at 202 Davis
Educator at the OSU Ave.. Marietta, or can be tastes,' Ibsen said. "Some
Extension Washington County requested by mail b~ calling people like a big complex
office. said that anyone with (740) 376-7431. Registrations fruit that stands up and shouts
' tomato.' (It has) enough acid
an interest in how to prune will are requested by March 31.
to
push the flavors forward,
For
more
i11[ormatio11
con· benefit from attending.
He said it wil l include a tact Barrett at the Extension with just the right amount of
sweet for balance and a clean
review of proper tool 0. tech- office, (740) 376-7431.
niques and information need-.
· ed to do the best job for specific needs.
The class presented· will be
-held rain or shi!le, and those
Tresspassers on Southern Ohio
attending are advised to dress
for outdoor activities. He said
Coal Company property will be
there will be gardening publications for sale. Those attendprosecuted to the fullest extent of
ing are to meet at the fqmt
steps of the Arts &amp; Sciences
the law.
Building. Presenters wiU be
Barrett, and Faye Treadway.
CONSOL ENERGY, INC.
WSCC grounds manager.
MARIETIA - Selling timber is a once or twice in a lifetime opportunity for most of us,
thus our knowledge of how to
receive full value for our timber
might. be lacking or not up to
date with present tax laws.
The Washington County
offices of Ohio Stare
University Extension and
Farm Bureau are sponsoring
"Profiting From Your Woods,"
a timber marketing meeting to
provide infol11)ation on how to
make the most of a timber sale.
David Apsley. Extension
Natural·Resources Specialist.
and Terence Hanley, Ohio
Division of Forestry, Service
· Forester, will speak on the
timber marketing process
including harvesting options,
·timber contracts and the role
of a profession al forester.

Landscape pruning seminar slated

finish. Others may prefer
something less robust and
more fruity."
Consumers often complain
that the tomatoes they buy in
supermarkets are attractive
but bland - grown in indiscriminate soil, picked green
and then shipped across colintry in large lots never being
allowed It&gt; develop pwperly.
That's where the heirlooms come in. Each comes
with a pedigree . An heirloom
tomato is generally defined
.as any variety grown . for
generations by a family or a
group like the Amish. A variety also may qualify ~6 an
heirloom if cultivated' at
. least 50 years.
Heirloom tomatoes grow in .
colors' ranging from deep red
to a soft yellow; purple,
chocolate, pink, yellow; black
and a variegated green,
among others. Most have thin
skins. Many appear wrinkled
aild misshapen. .
They can be as small as
grapes or as large as twopound · sandwich tomatoes,
meaning platforms with flesh
sliced thick enough to support super-sized hamburgers.
Heirlooms · have pleasing
personalities. They might not
win ma11y beauty contests but
they're hard to beat for taste,

..

Middleport ~ Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 55, No. t51

AMP-Ohio squelches rumors on reopening ·coal mine·

• Hoyas hammer
Buckeyes. See Page 81

BY BETH. SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE American
Municipal
Power-Ohio·
(AM P-Ohio) representatives
denied ·that their company
was involved in reopening
any coal mines in the county
last week during a meeting
with Racine village officials.
"We're not involved but if
it's (the rumor) real we may
be interested," AMP-Ohio
Vice
President
of
Government and Member

...

40¢ Wings
12" Round Pepperoni Pizza
$5.99
2nd Pepperoni Pizza $2.00

'; ·.:l .00
Announces New Spring Hours

Lunch Meat Sale

· Monday-Fri!lay 7am-9prn
Saturday 8arn-9~
Sunday Closed .

Honey Ham $4.251b.

Grumpy Hour 7~8am

636 East Main Street
Pomeroy, OH
740-992-6121

16oz-35¢ coffee
(Don't forget we also have cappuccino,
cocoa &amp; delicious bakery II ems.)

OUEAlSIGIIING INClUDES: $1340 0(1tlll PAYMENT +SO SWJRITY DEPOSIT t S2 59 IST
M!XIlll ~YMENT +$400 ACQUI~TION FEE. TAX.IMS AND INSURANCE 4RE EXIRA

H

APR '
FI~ING ·.

CASH BACK FROM TOYOTA"

FOR UPTO 5 YEARS'

•

TOYOTA" ,
ONLY

SEE YOUR TOYOTA DEALER BY MARCH 31ST!
CASH BACK FROM TOYOTA"

r1J OJ buyatoyota.com

lPA ESTIMATED HIGHWAY MPGfOR 2006 MODElS CAMRY 1514 5SPEED AUIO. COROllA ISCI, SIENNA 13161WO. 4RUNfiER &amp;664 SR5. OTY ~fiJi HIGlllAHDER HYII20 MOO!l6960. ACnJAL MilEAGE l\1ll VAAY. "PURCHASERSCAN~fCEIVE CASI1 BACH fR O ~ TOYOTA OR CAN APPLY CASI1 BPCK 10
DOWN PAYMENT 0'&lt;\ APR fiNANCINGUP TO 16 MON1HS. 19'~ APR fiNANCING UP 10 60 MmHS. AND 1.9~ APR fiNANCING UP 10 60 MONIHS AVAILABLE 10 OUAUFI£0 BUYERS IHRUIOYOTA fiNAHCIAlSERVJCES.lOTAL FINMCED CANNOTEXCH~MSRP PlUSOPllONS.'TAA AND liC[NS[ F[[S,
0%=36 MONIHlY PAYMENTS Of 11718 FOR EACH ~1000 BORROWED. 3. 9'1.=60 MONTHLY PAYMENTS Of $18.31 fOR EACH $1000 BORROWED: 1.9~=60 MONIHlY PAYMENTS Qf $11.91 FOR EACH $1000 BORROWED. NOT lll BUYERS WILL QUALIFY MILEAGE PER TANKfULCALCULATEDBY
MULTIPlYINGEPA HIGHWAY ESTIMATED MPG BY fUEL lANK CAPACilY. ACIUAl MILEAGE Vllll VARY AND Dff'fNOSUPON MANY fACIORS NOTCONSIDERED IN EPA JESTS.'W. !.US£ OfFERS: CUSIOMER IS RESPONSIBLE fOR EXCESSIVE 'NEAR BASED ONTO YOTA STANDARDS fOR NORMAl USEAND
IS CENTS PER MILE OVER 16.000 MILES YOUR PAYMENTMAY VARY BASED ON fiNAl NEGOTIAT£D PRICE. NOI All CUSIOMERSWIU QUAlln. CAMRY HYl AUTOMATICMSRP $19,815. IUNORA DCAB SR5 MSRP $3!,!15. fOR DEIIILS. CALll-800·411 ·TOYO!A. All OFfERS END J/J J/06.

-' -- --·------- ·-

._;_.....:.._

_____

-.,..-----·~

----

is essentially under option.
AMP-Ohio has described -the
complex as being on 1400
acres at the Letart Falls site
with 4700 feet of · river
.
footage .
The plant which will be
called.
The
American
Municipal Power Generating
Facility. is expected to ·temporarily emp loy 600-800
construction workers and
provide 150 permanent jobs.
AMP-Ohio
provides
muni cipal power to 360.000
customer' in four state,.

Page AS
• Shirley Mae Jeffers

INSIDE
• Afghan man prosecuted
· for converting from Islam to
Christianity. See Page A2
• Men accused in child
{)I~~ describes
teens as partners.
See Page A3
• Civil rights pioneer
delivers last sermon as
pastor of church he
. founded. See Page A3
• OVCS kindergarten
registration announced.
See PageA3
• State mental hospital .
often has no room for
felony defendants.
See PageA3
• Retums from
deployment. See Page A3
• Alabama's case of mad
cow highlights need for
livestock tracking system.
See Page AS
• Open records bill contrasts with bills to shield
documents. See Page A6
• Report: Blackwell took
$294,000 from brokers.
bankers. See Page A6

WEATHER

Details on Page 48

Chortene ·Hoelllchfphoto

Among the regulars at the Senior Citizens Wellness Center are .
from the lef\, Esther Harden and Gerri Pllllen , on e~erci~e
bikes, and Juanita Roush w~o travels three miles every day
the Center is open on the treadmill.

Wellness program
expands at Senior Center
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH .
HOEFLICH®MYDAI LYS ENTINEL.COM

· ·
POMEROY - _E;xpanding
the space and addmg a body
strengthemng area to the
Well ness Center at the Senior
Clttzens Center has resulted
in attracting more exercisers.
according to Bryan Hoffman.
director.
The exercise physiologist
said that since adding the new
features. he has seen a pickup
in the number of new people
enrolling. along with the
number of visits by those who
regularly come in to exerci se.
Approximately 255 square
feet has been added to the
Center which now has an ''L"
formation. The extra spuce
came from taking a part of the
dining room.
A · small section of the
Center has now been set aside
as a stre ngthening area v. ith
several pieces of equip,ment
being added including a

"American Idle: Murdering the
-Music," a satire of America's
most popular television talent
contest, will be performed by
the senior class at Eastern High
School in a Saturday night dinner theater. The doors will open
at 5:30 p.m. dinner will be
served at 6:30, and the play
will begin at 7:30.. Dinner theater tickets must be purchasild
at the school in advance, at a
cost of $10. Play tickets will be
aVailable at the door for $5. As
viewers tune in, the top eleven
finalists perforrn live for a lively
studio audience ahd three infighting judges: Randy
Jackalacka, played by David
Maxson, Paula Abominaole.
played by Can Steger and
Simon Callous, played by Lance
Griffin, pictured here. The contestants hope to sing their way
into becoming the next pop sensation. A Texas sweetie, a bighaired ballad boy, and a slightlyderanged contestant who thinks
he's a dog are among those
who vie for the trtle. Other cast
members pictured are -Brittni
Hensley, Amanda Windon. Ryan
seasunk, Nick Kuhn and
Whitley Smith.

weight bench. "A Jot of peopJe are now taking advantage .
of that because of a speciai
· interest among exercisers in
increa sing body strength ,"
said Hoffman .
Since. the changes at . the
Center, Huffman said he has
seen a Llecided increase in the
40 to 55 year. olds who are
coming in. Those qualifying
to use the Center must be 40
or over. About 25 percent of
the exercisers are in the 40 to
50 age range who pay manda.tory fees. according to the
director. while .the rest are
senior citizen~. who are on a
suggested donation basi s.
"Right now we have two 87year-olds who come on a
pretty regular basi s." he commented.
He noted that there is an
m·erage of about 30 cxercisers a day averaging 1.5 hours
per session. Last year over
Please see Wellness. AS

Herald OU and Gas
donates to London Pool

Sdomlttedphotoo

INDEX

·Bachtel scholarship applications .
A3 ·
available at Meigs

2 SEL'TIONS - 12 PAGfli

Calendars
Classifieds ··

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3
A4
As

Editorials

3101 EAST SEVENTH STREET • PARKERSBURG, WV • 304·424·5122

County
Economic
Development Director Perry
Varnadoe said.
,
Varnadoe added there are
companies drilling and looking at land for coal in ihe
county but as of the end of
last week nobody had filed
for a mining permit.
Thompson said AMPOhio would be using three
million tons of coal at the
plant annuaily.
At this time all the property on which AMP-Ohio
will need to build their plant

OBITUARIES

Aei

APR
. .FINANCING
FOR UP TO 5 YEARS'
HYBRIDS AND GAS MODELS

R,elations Jolene Thompson . through . 2008 after which
said about possibly purchas- . time dirt mt~y begin moving
on the site. The plant is
ing some coal locally.
Thompson said AMP- scheduled to go online in
Ohio was dedicated to burn- mid-2012 .
ing as much Ohio coal as
A coal mine reopening in
their permits will allow but conjunction with the coununtil the permit process is ty 's current economic -growth
completed it was unclear is not such a far fetched
what that plant's coal blend id~a .
would consist of in regards
,;With all the activity
to high or low sulfur coal.
that's happening it's hard to
AMP-Ohio · is currently imagine a scenario where
preparing to begin . the there's not at least one coal
lengthy permit process that mine reopening somewhere
is estimated to continue in the county," · Meigs

EHS SENIOR PLAY

CASH BACK
FROM TOYOTA'.

w

"'"' · m~d:oil~"·ntiowl.&lt;''""

MONDAY, MARCii 20,2006

SPORTS

IIIJBCB
IIIJDIIBSS

NOTICE

CASH BACK FROM TOYOTA

Place dry seed in a rightly
aroma and texture.
"Home gardeners, grocers . closed glass jar and leave it in
- especially small, indepen- a cool, dry location .
o Good genes are one thing;
dently owned- and fanner's
markets are all getting used to good .ground is another. "(It
different looking vegetables is) very important to have the
sou11ding soil with sufficient minerals
with different
names. The public is becom- via compost or whatever soi l
ing more at home with trying amendment." Ibsen said.
o Tomatoes are ripe when
things they've never seen or
heard of before," said Barbara fully, richly colore(!. Pi.ck
Melera. president of the D. them by hand, but gently, to
Landreth Seed Co., in avoid bruising and tearing
Baltimore, Md . 'Though w~ich opens. the way to disthere is a growing interest in ease and spot!age.
o Most heirloom tomato
heirlooms, the real movement
is becoming more comfort- varieties continue to ripen
able with eating new and dif- after they're picked, meaning
they have . a short shelf life.
ferent things," Melera.said . .
Not all that many people Place them in a window sill
know how to select and store or some other .visible spot ·
tomato seeds, how to grow and cat them qui&lt;;kly - no
heirloom tomatoes, when niore than two or three days
they should be picked and after harVest.
• Never refrigerate a tomahow quickly the-y must be
eaten. Here is how you might to to keep it from spoiling.
duplicate those farmer's mar- "That kills the . flavor,"
ket favorites in your own Mel era said.
garden:
Ret;ommended reading:
o Choose the healthiest,
most productive and flavorful "The Great Tomato Book," a
plal)tS to save for .seed. Allow gardening-cookbook written
seeds to fully npen before by Gary lbse11 with Joan
Nielsen. Published by Ten
har:vesting.
• Most vegetable seeds Speed Press. List price:
remain viable three to five $15.95.
years when stored properly, a
Clemson
University
You can co/1/act Dean Fosdick
at
demifosdick@Jietscape.ner.
Extension fact sheet . says.

War opponents
demonstrate in U oS. and
elsewhere on third anniversary
of Iraq invasion, As

Obituaries
Sports
Weather
© 2006

'

B Section
A6

Ohi~' Vall~)· Publishi1~g

Co.

lished by the late Dr. Harry
Kei g.
Scholarships are awarded on
POMEROY
The the basis of a competitive
Foundation for .Appalachian process that considers acaueOhio is now a"epting appli- mic achievement. extra-curcations for the Bm:htel ricular activities. educational
Schola(ship Awards Program . · goals and personal aspiraThe scholarships are given tions. The candidates for the
annually to graduates of scholarship are nomii1ated by
Meigs High_School and are an admini strative/teaching
the result of an endowed fund stall mcmhcr or a member of
at the Foundati on for
Appalachian Ohio. e'tabPIHse su Bachtel, AS
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

'

Beth Sargent/ photo

Herald

Forrest Bachtel

...

and Gas Company of Middlepo rt recently gave a
$1200 donation to the London Pool Fund v1a representative
Dinph Stewart (th ird from left). Acceptmg the .donation from
the London Pool Steenng Committee were (from left ) Larry aM
Sally Ebe rsbach. Stewart and Ora Bass.
Oil

�'

.

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION .• WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 20,2006

Bv DANIEL COONEY

while working as a medical
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
aid worker for an international Christian group helping
KABUL, Afghanistan Afghan refugees in the
An Afghan man is being pros- Pakistani city of Peshawar,
ecuted in a Kabul court and Mawlavezada said.
could be .sentenced · to death
"We are not against any
on a charge of converting particular religion in the
. from Islam to Christianity, a world . But in Afghanistan,
crime , under · this country's this sort of thing is against the
Islamic laws, a judge said law," the judge said. "It is an
Sunday.
attack on Islam ."
The trial is believ.ed to be
Mawlavezada ·said he
the first of its kind in would rule on the case within
Afghanistan and highlights a two months:
struggle between religious
Afghanistan's constitution
conservatives and reformists is based on Shariah Jaw.
over what shape Islam should ; which is interpreted by many
take here four years after the Muslims to require that any
ouster of the Islamic funda- Muslim who rejects Islam be
mentalist Tali ban regime.
sentenced . to death, said
The defendant, 41-yer-old Ahmad Fahim Hakim, deputy
Abdul Rahman, was arrested chairman of the state-sponlast month atier his family sored
· Afghanistan
accused him of ·becoming a Independent Human Rights
Cl;lristian, Judge Ansarullah Commission.
The
Mawlavezada told
Repeated attempts to interAssociated Press in an inter- view Rahman in detention
view. Rahman was charged were barred .
.
The prosecutor, Abdul
wit\1 rejecting Islam and his
trial started Thursday.
· Wasi. said he had offered to
During the one-day hearing, drop the charges if Rahman
the defendant confessed that converted back to Islam, but
he converted from Islam to he refused.
Christianity 16 years ago
"He would have been for-

given if he changed back. But
he said he wlts a Christian and
would always remain one,"
Wasi told AP. "We are
Muslims and becoming a
Christian is against our laws.
He must get the death penalty."
·
After. being an aid worker
for four years in ·Pakistan,
Rahman moved to Germany
for nine years, his father,
Abdul Manan, said outside
his Kabul home.
Rahman
returned
to
Afghanis.tan in. 2002 and tried
to gain custody of his t'Yo
daughters, now aged 13 and
14. who had been living with
their grandparents their whole
lives, the father said. A custody ·battle ensued and the
matter was taken to the
police.
During questioning,. it
emerged that Rahman was a
Christian and was carrying a
Bible. He was . immediately
arrested and charged, the
father said.
Afghanistan is a conservative islamic country. Some 99
percent of its 28 million peopie are Muslim, and the
rem&lt;)inder are mainly Hindu.

A Christian aid worker in
Kabul, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of
the sensitivity of the matter,'
said there was no reliable figure for the number of
· christians, though it was
believed to be only in the
dozens or low hundreds. He
said few admit their faith
because of fear of retribution
· and there · are no known
-Afghan churches.
An old house in a warwrecked suburb of Kabul
serves as a Christian place of
worship for expatriates. From
the muddy street, the building
looks like any other. Its guard,
Abdul Wahid , said no
Afghans go there.
The only other churches are
believed to be inside foreign
embassies or on bases belonging to the U.S.-led coalition or
a NATO peacekeeping force.
Ha!cim, the human rights
advocate, said the case would
attract widespread attention in
Afghanistan and could be
exploited by Muslim conserv&amp;lives to rally opposition to
reformists who are trying to
moderate how the religion is
practiced here.

AP Photo

Residents try to extinguish a fire in house' of a civilian after an
attack by unidentified gunmeh in Ramadi. 115 kilometers (70
miles) west of Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday. Two civilian bystanders
were killed Sunday and ten others injured. as U.S. troops, sta
tioned at the gover~or's office of Ramadi, clashed with Uliident~
fied gunmen attacked the building .with light weapons, police said.

,_,,

War in Iraq enters fourth
year with security and ·.
political future uncertain
and reported they had estabJished an advisory, 19-member Security Council.
BAGHDAD. Iraq - As
The council, tb be headed
the Iraq war entered its fourth by President Jalal Talabani,
year, nearly 1,500 U.S. and was established as an interim
Iraqi soldiers o11 Sunday measure as politicians strugsought to root out insurgents gle to agree on the makeup of
from farming villages an a new government following
hour'.s drive north of the cap- the Dec: 15 parliamentary
ita!, and at least . 35 people elections.
died in insurgent and sectari" It was a successful meet, ·
an violence nationwide.
ing, and we have agreed on
Iraqi politicians still had forming a National Security
not formed a government Council whose powers will
more than three months after not. contradict , the constitu- .
hmdmark elections for the tion," Adn;in al-Dulaimi, a
country's first permanent Sunni Arab political leader,
post-invasion parliament, but . told The Associated Press.
they announced an agreeAl-Dulaimi said nine counment on naming a Security cil seats would go to Iraq's
Council to deal with key mat- Shiite Muslim majority,
ters while negotiations pro- while Kurds and Sunni Arabs
ceed.
.
each would control four 'seats
The 133,000 American .and the secular bloc two.
troops on the ground inside Talabani. a Kurd, would head
Iraq was nearly a third more the group.
than took part in the · camThe exact powers of the
paign to oust Saddam coun~il, if any, were not
Hussein that began in the explained. But it appeared to
e'arly hours of March 20, have been formed to ensure .
2003.
that politicians from minority
At least 2,314 U.S. military blocs would at least be conpersonnel have died in the suited in advance on imporwar, which is estimated to tam government and security
have cost · $200 billion to decisions.
The political discussions
$250 billion so far. President
Bush says about · 30,000 on forming a government
Iraqi s have been killed, while · began last week under presothers put the toll far higher. sure from .U.S . Ambassador
Retur~ing to . the White ·zalmay
· Khalilzad . AI'
Hous.e after a weekend at the Dulaimi said the talks would
presidential retreat in Camp not resume until Saturday
David, Md .. Bush offered an because of Shiite and
upbeat assessment.
• Kurdish holidays this week.
"We . are implementing a · Khalilzad
has
urged
strategy that will lead to vic- patience for the prolonged
tory in Iraq . And a victory in poli tical negotiations. "I
Iraq will make this country 'think i(will take a few mote
more secure and will help Jay weeks," he said Friday. ·
the foundation of peace for
The speedy formation -of a
generations to come," he . government has become a
said.
top U.S. priority on the theaMany politicians .both ry that a unifted leadership
inside and outside Iraq said · with representatives from all
the continuing violence could major factions would quell
· only be described as a civil violence an&lt;.\ open the way
'war.
·
for Ameri1.0an hopes· to begin
" It is unfortunate that we withdrawing troops this sumare in civi l war. We are losi ng mer.
each day as an .average 50 to
As politicians met · in
60 people. throughout the , Baghdad. Iraqi police said
country, if not more." former eight civilians. including . a
interim Prime .Minister Ayad child. were killed during
Allawi
told
British .clashes between U.S. troops
Broadcas ting Corp. "If this is and gunmen in Duluiyah. 45
not civil war, then 'God miles north of Baghdad. Tile
knows what civil war is."
U.S. military . said it was ·
The Bu sh adm inistration· checki ng the report.
The town is in Iraq's Sunni
and U.S. military leaders disagreed.
. Arab heartland where the
. · "Personally don 't believe. Iraqi army and U.S. forces
one. that we're there now ; . opened a major airborne
two. that civil war is immi-. campaign last week to hunt
nent; and. three. that it is in surgents. The American
inevitable that it will hap- military called it the largest
pen ,'' Gen. George Casey, the "air assault" operat.ion since
U.S . commander in Iraq, said the invasion.
in an interview with Fox tele- · 'Casey, the U.S. com manVIS ion.
der. saia the signi fican ce of
In a sign of political . the operat ion may hav.e been
progress. Iraq \ top politi- overblown. " I think it might
cians emerged from the have got a little bit more
fourth in a series of U.S.-hrn- hype than it truly ueserved."
kered all -party meetin~s on he said on C 'l/1\i\ ·· Late ·
form ing a new governmenl Edition with Wolf Blitt.er."

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20, 2006

Teen working for neighbor rriay
have done more than odd jobs

personal property. Call 593- a.m. at the home of Eleanor
8555.
Thomas for St. Patrick's pay
MIDDLEPORT - Class luncheon.
Monday, March 20
of 1956 of Middleport High
DEAR ABBY: I think my
going crazy. It' ll keep you halPOMEROY
Meigs
LETART
Letart School , 7:15p.m. meeting at County
anced.
American Cancer grandson lives next door to
Township Trustees, 6:30p.m. Heath United Methodist
me,
but
I'm
not
sure.
I
can't
DEAR ABBY: I am a proSociety
Taskforce,
regular
at the office building .
Church.
fessional man in my early 40s.
meeting, noon, basement sleep at night_wondering and
'1\Jesday, March 21
'fuesday, March 21
room of Pomeroy Library, worrying.
When I was in my late teens. I
POMEROY
- M~igs
POMEROY - Meeting of RSVP 992-6626, lunch pro-'
About
two
years
ago,
my
Dear
started
losing my hair. By the
County Emergency Planning garden clubs, 7 p.m ., vided . ·
neighbor kept inviting my
time I was '22, I was almost
Committee, luncheon meet- Pomeroy Library, to finalize
then-! &amp;-year-old son over to .
Abby
completely bald.
ing, II ;30 a.m. Tom Hunter plans for April 22 regional
help her do odd jobs while her
Someone suggested that 1
of West Virginia governor's meeting at Senior Citizens
husband
was
at
work.
He
get
a wig. so 1 did. I have been
office to discuss lessons Center. Call Marge Fetty,
seeme(l
happy
to
~~lp out, and
wearing
it for years. Now,
learned from West Virginia regional director, 992-6862
Thursday, March 23
she '!~ways gave him some
however, I' m uncomfortable
mining accidents.
POMEROY- Rev.
after 6 p.m.
·money tor the jobs. A few details of the party, she told with the wig. I think it's obviMIDDLEPORT- Brooks Robert Robinson leads com- months later. she and her hus- me it was a slumber · party. ous that it's not my own hair,
Grant Camp Sons of Union munity Lenten service, 7:30 band announced they were Here's the .kicker: The class- and I'm self-conscious about
Veterans of the Ci vii War and p.m., at Pomeroy, United·
expecting. 'th th' .
,. ·
mate in question is a boy!
it.
1 work WI . IS mans exMajor Daniel McCook Circle Methodist Church.
As my shock di ssipates, I'm
I'd like to stop wearing the
Friday, March 24
Ladies of the Grand Army ·of
wife, and she confided to me suddenly reminded that the wig, but I wonder what my eoPOMEROY - Stations of once that she never had chi!- times sure area-changin', and workers will think. Also, my
Monday, March 20
the Republic, 7:15 p.m. at
ATHENS Southeast the Middleport Masorii c the Cross, 7 p.m.: Sacred
dren because he couldn't give that even younger parents like mother tells me that my head
Heart Church. ·
Ohio Woodland Interest Temple. Public invited.
. her any. To me, this could me need to brace themselves. is shaped a little "funny." But I
Group, 7 p.m. at the Athens
Saturday, March 25
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
mean that the husband knows (I am 32.) I don't consider feel like a fraud when rm
County Extension office, Community Center Board of
BIDWELL- Gospel sing he's not the father, or maybe myself oblivious, but boy, do I wearing the darn thing. What
West Union Street. Speaker, · Directors, 7 p.m . at the home · at the Poplar Ridge Free
that they used my son as an suddenly feel that way. I don't do you suggest''_ BALD IN
Jonathan Sowash of Sowash, of Bob Wingett.
Will Baptist Church, 7 p.m.
unintentional sperm donor. feel it is at all appropriate for BALTIMORE
Carson and Ferrier on liabili -·
Thursday, March 23
featuring Gloryland
The little boy looks a lot like my child, but I'm interested in
DEAR BALD: If ever there
ty issues for woodland ownPOMEROY - Alpha Iota Believers and the Christian
my son did at that age. Should wh&lt;Jt you and your readers was a time when bald wa~
ers, including ATV riders on Masters will meet at II :30 Echos.
I confront him about the affair have ·to say about this
·' - "in;· it is now. And that's to
and possible parenthood? He PERPLEXED IN PENNSYLmay be unaware that he VANIA
your advantage. My advice to
fathered the child. - SUSPIDEAR PERPLEXED: The you is to have a "coming out
CIOUS IN ILLINOIS ·
times may be a-chan?in' , but party," invite your friends and
'
DEAR SUSPICIOUS : 1 they ain't a-changin THAT cp-workers, and attend the
GALLIPOLIS
-.Ohio ized, personal screening by (MMR); and 3 Hepatitis ·B.
Valley Christian School Mu~ray and a review by Dr. Each child must also have a don't know if "confronting'' much. It's the duty ofaconsci- way God made. you. I'm bet(OVCS) · is now accepting Fred Williams, the school TB skin test after Jan.' l, your son on the subject would entious parent to do whai is ling the only reaction you'.ll
kindergarten registrations .
administrator.
2006. These immunizations be warmly received, ,but you right for his or her child, even get is the comment. "What
Interested parents should · The cost of the application may be obtained from family are certainly entitled to discuss if it isll't a popular decision. took you so long?"
call the school at 740-446- and screening is $85, and is doctors or the Gallia County your concerns with your son By that, I mean that every · Dear Abby is written by
3960 for registration informa- refundable if the school Health . Department at 499 and find out if they are well- family has different standards. Abigail Van Buren, also
tion
and
applications. judges the child is not ready Jackson Pike (take your founded. Whatever happens and it's up to the parents to k11own as Jeanne Phillips,
Appointments are currently for kindergarten. Sometimes child's immunization record - or doesn'1 happen - atier enforce them. The excuse, and was founded by her
· "But everyone else is doing mother, Pauline Phillips.
being made. Kindergarten a child may be chronological- . with ~ou for updating). that is up to your son.
DEAR ABBY: My 12-year- it," does not mean that your ltrite
Dear
Abby
at
screenings can be arranged ly old enough to start kinder- Screentng for hearing and
even if a child is alrelldy re~- garten, but they may not be vision will be conducted by old daughter was invited to a child must. Remember that www.DearAbby.com or ·P.O.
istered at a public school tn developmentally ready. Thi s the school nurse when school classmate's birthday_ party when the pressure is on, and it Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
today. When I asked for the seems the whole world is 9()()69.
'
·
any district in Ohio or West screening will help the school starts.
·Virginia.
discuss the needs of each
Ohio Valley Christian
· This will mark the 30th year chilq and make appropriate Elementary School is located
of kindergarten at the school recommendations. This is an in First Baptist Church at
where an emphasis by Sue invaluable resource for par- 1100 Pourth Avenue ·in
Murray, teacher, is on:reading ents who want to make the Gallipolis. · On school days,
skill.s . Murray has been teach- best deci sion for their child, the office is open from 8:30
ing at the school since it said Williams.
a.m. to 3:30'p.m.
opened.
Children must be five years
Parents with children in
TOLJ:iDO
(AP)
"You should have seen how
nights out there it looked
The kindergarten, program old before Sept. 30 for enroll- other elementary grades than Troopers and a judge in ridiculous," said trooper some of them were dressed."
is a full day, every ·day pro- ment in kindergarten and six kindergarten should call 446- Pennsylvania found them- David Olweiler, a state police
Bridges told the newspaper.
gram, which is known for its years old by the same date to 3960 for information. High selves repeatedly processing
"Sometimes
troopers would·
intelligence
officer.
Biblical emphasis and· for enroll in tirst grade. Parents school students should call the ~arne young prostitutes,
As arrests piled up, wrap them up in one of those
teaching kindergarten stu- must provide a copy of the the high school campus at who paid fines with alreadyOlweiler
starteo keeping the yellow blankets used to cover
dents to read. Students typi- child's official birth certificate 446-0374.
Ohio Valley prepared money orders and
girls'
booking
photos in a dead bodies ."
cally score above the 95th . (not a hospital certificate), Christi~n School . is a non- went back to the truck stops
three-ring binder, trying . to
Eventually, state police
percentile on nationally stan- immunization record, Soc·ial denominational, evangelical where they worked.
· show a pattern of repeat · called for federal help.
da.rdized tests.
Security card, and · custody educational ministry of First
Slowly, through talks with
The FBI assigned 16 new
Upon receiving the applica- papers (if divorced) with the Baptist C~urch seeking to the girls, authorities built up arrests. He also had long contion. parents may mail it in or application forms at the time educate children in the tradi- evidence that led to federal versations, trying to under- agents to the investigation,
and . the agency is hiring six
bring it with them when they of screening.
.·
tion of the Judea-Christian charges against men accused stand them .
"A lot . of these girls, you . more this year. 1he FBI says
have their screening appointImmunizations required are belief system for the kingdom forcing teenage girls from
wouldn't know they' re vic- the interstate ring is orgament. The school office will 4 qiptheria, whooping cough, of God.
northwest Ohio to work in a .
schedule an appointment in and tetanus (OPT's, or 5 if the
The school has a tradition prostitution ring, a riewspa-· tims," he said. "They love to . nized crime, equating it to
order to interview the parents 4th dose is before the age Of of excellence in the Gallia per reported.
brag . You wouldn't know drug trafficking.
and screen the students for 4 );· 3 polio (or 4if the 4th dose County area and expects to be
they
were in ,it against their
Many of the girls came
The work was painstaking.
kindergarten readiness. Each is before the age of 4); 2 chartered .as a noilpublic And 1he jailed men accused will."
,
from backgrounds of abuse
child receives an individual - measles, mumps and rubella school next year.
or incest, and the pimps cqnThe
prostitutes
came
to
of being pimps are unrepencourt
with
money
orders
tlitioned
them through abuse
tant, Tlie Blade reported in
' .
already made out for the and threats against fami ly
Sunday's editions.
"Pimps do things like ... exact fine and costs of members to accept their fate.
lock the girls up in closets. $418.50, · West Hanover said C!lip Burrus, the FBI's
COOLVILLE
-Navy to Spain,, Italy and the
I'm 'finesseful,' you know Township Magistrate Roy · acting assistant director for
criminal investigations.
Seaman Matthew E, Boyd, United
Arab
Emirates.
what I'm saying?" Derek Bridges said. ·
son of Barbara· E. Gilchrist Boyd's unit launched l 0 ,
Maes told the newspaper in a
..i'
.'!""
,~:
;;of Coolville. and his fellow 000 combat flights totaling
telephone interview from a
· shipmate s returned from a 30, 750 flight hours and
Pennsylvania jail.
· scheduled deployment while provided surveillance. reconHe and 12 other men were
CINCINNATI (AP)- In his named in a l 02-page federal ·
assigned to the guided-mis- naissance' and close air supsile destroyer USS Donald port to ground forces m fmal sermon Sunday as pastor indictment in December that
.Cook,
homeported
in Iraq . Donald Cook partici- of the church he founded 40 accused • them of taking
.Norfolk, Va., and deployed · pated in Operation Steel years ago, the Rev. Fred teenagers, including at least
with the Theodore Roosevelt Curtain
and
Maritime Shunlesworth flashed the pas- nine from the Tolec;lo area,
Security Operations (MSO) . sion that made him a civil rights across state lines for prostituCarrier Strike Group.
During the deployment.
Boyd joined the Navy in pioneer in the segregated South. tion. The. indictment said the
· "They were going to blow girls were beaten if they
Boyd's unit made port visits August 2002.
me to heaven that night. It had failed to follow orde(s or
my name on it," Shuttlesworth make enough money. ·
said, recalling the night SO years
Maes, 41, and another man
ago when someone detonated char?ed, Robert Scott. 44,
. dynamite outside his bedroom deny they ilfe pimps, arguing
window in Birmingham, Ala
that they didn't force the girls
CINCINNATI (AP)
replied that all defendants who
"But I heard him say, 'Be - including a 12-year-old -·
When judges in. the Cincinnati qn be restored to mental still! God 'is here. Wherever you to do anything . They say if
area order felony defendants competency should receive· are I will be with you,'" the girls were .selling them- .
to a state mental hospital for treatment, regardless of the ShunJesworth said, his voice selves against their will, 'they
competency evaluations, the ch,arge. His office also · must . rising as some in the crowd would have asked law
defendants often must wait in follow laws restricting med- came to their feet.
enforcement for help when
county · jails until a bed ication and how long the state , About 300 people attended arrested.
·
becomes available . .
can hold a person accused of a Sunday's service at the Greater
Scott said the prostitutes
The Summit · Behavioral minor crime, he said.
New Light Baptist Church, were more like busmess partHealthcare center, ·which
Those who must wait for a including Birmingham Mayor ners. free to work with differ- .
holds up to 91 criminal defen- space for competency evalua- Bemard Kincaid.
ent em~loyers. '
dants. serves six of Ohio's 88 tion or treatment at the
Shuttlesworth, who celebrat"She s choosing the best
• Actual Size l x3
counties. But last year it han- Summit center usually wait ed his 84th birthday this week- investment for her money,"
dled nearly half of the 629 . one to two weeks. Some days end. withstood threats, beatings he said . "The prosecutors are
• Run date Fri.,
cases of misdemeanor ahd there is no wait to get a crimi ' ;md attempts on his ·life as he · trying to make it like a bunch
felony defendants sent by nal defendant bed but, on most worked alongside Martin of us running around with
Aprill4, 2006
judges across Ohio to stat~ days since December, the Luther King Jr. in Birmingham candy in our pocket, going to
• Deadline Mon.
Evan &amp;. Adam Rodgers
hospitals because they were · waiting li st has ranged · and Selma. Ala. In his sermon parks and picking up little
· deemed unable to understand between six and 12 people.
Sunday, he recalled founding kids. It wasn 't like that at all
Happy Easter
April 10,2006
the court system. said Summit
Jails are not equipped to his lirst church in Selma in - period .''
Love, Mom &amp; Dad
provide adequate treatment tor 1948.
CEO Liz Bank s.
The federal C&lt;ise centered
H·ami Iton
County the mentally · ill. said Dr.
"This man single:handedly on truck stops ·outside
Mail to P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, OH 45769
Prosecutor Joe Deters said Walter Smitson. director of changed the world," Kincaid Harrisburg, Pa., where state
Hamilton
County"s
Central
often there' s no room for
said. "This man is anointed by police had started cracking
or drop off at The Daily Sentinel
those .:harged. witb serious Cl·inic, a mental health agency. ·God . He ·s the Moses of African down on the problem through
111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769
"People with mental illness Anieri'cans, especially us it undercover artests.
crimes because city prosecu·········································~······················
tors use the center to hold need to he in a sett ing capable relates to Birmingham."
Fines collected for offenses
minor offenders. He says they of providing some counseling,
Shuttlesworth. who will cede such as prostitution and yan- ·
'
Child's Name ~-often are released without ade- specific medications and the pulpit to his son-in-Jaw. the dalism m a township with
From _ _
ob,servation 24 hours a day:· Rev. Harold Bester. down- one' of. the truck stops
quate treatment .
Your Nam.e
"The violent felons need to said Smitson. who abo heads played such praise.
increased ienfold to $32.400
Address _
·he re stored as soon as possible up the Court Clinic Foren,ic
"We are too quick to look tor in 2004 from ah&lt;mt $3.300 a ·
and sent to prison ,'' he said. Services that give' mental exultations." he said during his year earlier.
---------Phone# _
"If there are only so many evalu ations for defend&lt;~nts sennon. "The best thing we can
··You co uld sit and watch
beds. felons tlr&gt;t."
ordered to Lmdergo them in do is be a servant of God. It girls run down the. rows, run
Ads Must Be Prepaid
.'
Cim:innati
Deputy Hamilton and Clennont coun- does good to stand up and serve under the trucks, in all direc *
others ...
tion s. There were some
Prosecutor Charlie Rubenstein ty courts.

Church events

Clubs and
organizations

OVCS kindergarlen registration announced

Civil rights pioneer
,delivers last
sermon as pastor cf
church he foun1ed

Make Someone Feel
.~'EGGS'-TRA ·SPECIAL...
.--,...- a Daily Sentinel

State mental hospital often has
no room for felony defendants

"

..

PageA3
.

Public meetings

Returns from deployment .

RaVING OALLIA fl
IUUOUNDINC COUNTIII

'

Men accused in child prostitution
ring describe teens as partners

·'

. Bv STEVEN R. HURST
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

·By THE .BEND

Community Calendar

Afghan man prosecuted for converting from Islam to Christianity

'

• Hair Care&amp;. Makeup
• Nail Care • Helix Cuts
· Facials &amp;. WaJ&lt;tng
• Mas,;age • Body Wraps
• Spa Packages • Chemical Peels
• MicrOOerm Abrasions
·
326 Second Avenue

Callipolis. OH 45631

(740) 446·2933
Hours:
M-F lOam -Close 131:1•

GREETING!!

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• • o • ' • • • • • • • o o • • o o o o 0 o o o o o • • • • I

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
·

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland .
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
. Today is Monday. March 20, the 79th day of 2006. There are.
286 days left in the year. Spring arrives at I :26 p.m. Eastern
time.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 20, 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte entered Paris,
beginning his " IOQ Days" rule.
On this date:
In 1413. England' s King Henry IV died; he was succeeded by
Henry the V
·
In 1727, physicist. mathematician and astronomer Sir Isaac
Newton died in London.
.
In 1852. Harriet Beecher Stowe's innuential novel about
slavery, "Uncle Tom 's Cabin," was tirst published.
In 1896. U.S. Marines landed in Nicaragua to protect U.S.
citizens in the wake of a revolution.
In 1956, union workers ended a 156-day strike at
Westinghouse Electric Corp.
.
.
In 1969. John Lennon married Yoko Ono in Gibraltar.
In 1976, kidnapped newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst was
convicted of armed robbery for her part in a San Francisco bank
holdup. ·
·In 1981. former girls' school headmistress .Jean Harris was
sentenced in White Plains, N.Y. to 15 years to life in prison for
slaying ·'Scarsdale Diet" author Dr. Herman Tarnower. (Harris
.
ended up serving almost 12 years.)
In 1985, Libby Riddles of Teller, Alaska, became the first
woman to win the Idltarod Trail Dog Sled Race.
· Ten years ago: A jury in Los Angeles convicted Erik and Lyle
Menendez of first-degree murder in the shotgun slayings of
their millionaire parents. The British government said a rare
brain disease that had killed 10 people was probably linked to
so-called "mad cow disease."
One year ago: A visibly frustrated Pope John Paul made a
brief but silent appearance at his Vatican apartment window
after missing his first Palm Sunday Mass in 26 years as pontiff.
Ltz Johnson became the first woman to advance to the championship match of a Professional Bowlers Association tour event,
but lost by 27 pins to Tommy Jones in the final of the PBA
Banquet Open in Wyoming, Mich.
'
Today's Birthdays: Producer-director-comedian Carl Reiner
is 84. Actor Hal Linden is 75 . S·inger Jerry' Reed is 69. Former
Canadian prime mmister Brian Mulroney is 67. Country singer
Don Edwards ts 67. TV producer Paul Junger Witt is 63 .
Country singer-musician Ranger Doug (Riders in the Sky) is
60. Hockey Hall-of-Farner Bobby Orr is 58. Blues singer-musician Marcia Ball is 57. Actor William Hurt is 56. Rock musician. Carl l'almer (Emerson, Lake and Palmer) is 56. Rock
musician Jimmie Vaughan is 55. Country musician Jimmy
Seales (Shenandoah) is 52: Movie director Spike Lee is 49.
f&gt;ctress Theresa Russell is 49. Actress Vanessa Bell Calloway
ts 49. Actress Holly Hunter is· 48. Rock musician Slim Jim
Phantom (The Stray Cats) is 45. Actress-model Kathy Ireland is
43. Rock musician Adrian Oxxal (James) is 41. Actress Liza
Snyder is 38. Actor Michael Rapaport is 36. Actor Alexander
Chaplin is 35. Rock singer Chester Bennington (Linkin Park) is
30. Actor Michael Genadry is 28. Actress Bianca Lawson is 27.
Thought for Today: "Spring makes everything young again
except man." - Jean Paul Rtchter, German author (17631825).

LETTERS TO THE
EDI'TOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 worth . .All /ellen are subject to editing, must be signed,
and include address ·and telephone number No Ulliigned letters will he puhl1shed. Letter&lt; should be i11 good taste,
addressing issues, not persmwlitin. Letters of thanks to orgar~:izatiom am,l individuals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
·. Reader Services ·
Correction Polley
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(USPS 213-9601
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Pub)rshed every ahernoon. Mo,nday
through Friday, 111 Court Street,

·accurate If you know of an error 1n a
Pomeroy Ohro Second -class postage
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992- pard at Pomeroy
2156.
Member: The Assoorated Press and the

Our main nUmber is
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Monday, March 20,

·

Last morith, 12 mainly
Eurol?ea·n-based, mainly
Musltm or ex-Muslim
intellectuals, alarmed by
the spell on free speech
cast by Cartoon Rage
Diana
2006, signed onto an antiWest
totalitarian manifesto for
freedom of expression
published by Denmark's
Jylland-Posten.
"After having overcome Monde or the Times of
fascism,
Nazism
and London, but of all plac·es,
Stalinism, the world now in a provincial Dan·ish
faces a new totalitarian newspaper of no particular
global threat: lslamism," fame ."
the manifesto began . "We,
All of which should
writers, journalists, intel- shove a big, fat question
lectuals, call for resistance mark onto the "world"
to religious totalitarianism stage to ask where these
and .for the promotion of brave signatories' writerly,
freedom , equal opportunity journalistic and intellectual
and secular values for all." brethren are on this one
Among the dozen .signa- · not to mention Big Medi~
tones · were Somalt-b?rn coverage. After all, tlie
parltamentanan world didn't overcome fasDutch
Ayaan Hirsi Ali; Ugandan- cism Nazism and commaborn Canadian writer nism' with the · silent treatlrshad Manji; Indian-born men! restrained rhetoric or
British . writer Salm11n exquisite editorial · discreRushdte; and Paktstant- tion. But beyond the bloborn -:vriter Ibn Warraq. gosphere, coverage of the
Roundmg out the hst were manifesto - not the last
a few French . writers, a word on the subject, but
. Bangledesht, a . Lebanese certainly a start - has
~nd s~veral Iramans. What
been sparse, just as though
ts stnktng ts that none of fr.eedom of speech weren't
them come from that· in peril. And just as though
"world" they hailed, the the signatories, for affirmone that overcame fascism, ·' iitg freedom of speech,
Naztsm and communism weren't either.
But they are. A crude
- not merely "Stalinism."
(One signatory is billed as death threat has been postan !raman communist, ed at the British Muslim
which may account for .the Web site, ummah.com jarring distinction.)
the ki~d of Web site where,
J':lot only t.hat, but, as the as Time magazine reported
blogger Belmont Club after· the London underpointed out, the manifesto . ground bombings last year,
was printed, "not in The a poem said to have been
New York Times, Le posted by Abu Mousab a!-

Zarqawi glorified terrorbombings in Iraq, and
anothe'r user wrote that
"killing Americans is not
murder, it is retaliation. "
This time, under a thread
entitled "Writers . Slam
Islamic 'Totalitarianism,'"
the names of the Free
EJ~pres s ion 12 appeared
and someone wrote :
"Now we have drawn out
a hit list of a 'Who's Who'
guide to slam into. Take
your time but make sure
their (sic) gone soon- oh,
and don't hold out for a
fatwa it isn ' t re ally
required here." And then :
"Has anyone goi that
Christian
kaffir
'Ibn
Warraq's' real name yet?"
. Scrolling through such
illiterate spewings is a little like reading an interactive bathroom w~tll; but
since the Internet has
linked -and even activated
jihadi terrorists, it's not
something to ignore . The
poster continued: "We ll
them (sic) disbelievers (the
signatories) have in effect
signed a death wish via this
statement so to hell with
them , we'll just ·provide
the help that they so dearly
crave."
I asked Ibn Warraq ,
at~ thor· of the superb "Why
I Ath Not a Muslim"
(Prometheus, 2003) written
after the Rushdie affair,
about the threat. "We must
take it seriously in one
sense, but we mustn ' t let it
stop us in our tracks." he
said. He's right, of course;
although most of . the
" world" - writers, journalists, intellectuals -

have already been stopped
in their tracks , intimidated,
paralyzed, almost dysfunctionally so. How to jumpstart them again?
As far as I can tell , the
manifesto has inspired just
one outlet, an Irish Web
site called The Blanket, to
publish the Danish cartoons "in protest against
totalitarianism,"
editor
Anthony Mcintyre said last
week. This makes The
Blanket, which will also be
profiling the manifesto
signers, the sole journal in
the British Isles , online or
on paper, to do so. "We
wanted to show solidarity
with thos.e writers who
were prepared to stick their
nec.ks out in defense of free
speech." Mcintyre said.
So here we are , living in
a world where a manife.sto
for free speech constitutes
"(sticking) their necks
out," draws death threats
on the one hand , and
silence on the other. Why
did they sign it, then ? Ibn
Warraq offered the words
of John Stuart Mill: "A
man .who ha s nothing for
which he is willing to
fight; nothing he cares
about more than his own
personal sa.fety is a miserable creature who has no
chance of being free,
unless made and kept so by
exertions of better men
than h'l'mself."

I Diana West is a columnist for The Washington
Times: She can he contacted via dianawest@veri zon.ner.)

The city is still at least provocative
A columnist looking to
·fill her e-mail in box can
rely on two topics: abor,
tion and gun control. On
the
mornings
such
columns appear, I sett le in
at my computer with
strong coffee, a brown-bag
lunch and a single-minded
focus: click, read, reply,
repeat.
Now I've discovered a
third topic that gets people's fingers lunging for
their keyboards:
San
Francisco. More precisely,
how to
define
San ·
Francisco. I took a stab at
it a couple weeks ago,
describing San Francisco
as if it were a high-school
student.
The e-mails are ·still
arriving.
'
Reading the letters ,
you'd think San Fr~ncisco
was a hundred cities in
one. And maybe it is.
Maybe every city is.
But this city seems to tap
something visceral and
emotional in people, as if
it .were an intimate friend
who either betrayed or
saved them. The letters in
response to the column
were so passionate, entertaining and, for the most
part, thoughtful that .f
couldn't keep . them to
myself. They ·provide a
glimpse of San Francisco's
multiple personalities - .
and at the amazing differences in how each of us
perceives them. I turn over
the rest of the column to a
sampling of your e-mails:
• ·"In the short run, this
17-year-old may appear to
have some legitimate
ideas. In the long run when the I Oth-year highschool reunion comes
around -. this individual
will be the saddest story in
the room . It 's not the
. image of a punked-out
artist I see in the city now,
but the · image of Mi ss
Haversham from "Great
Expectations"; an old lady
holding on to a memory of
what may never have actually been, destroying innocent lives in the process."
• "S.F. politically is a
juvenile, untrustworthy,
untested , hot-tempered ,
emotional. very low IQ,
q m ' t read the traffic sig ns,
anarchistic , not logical by
even a little bit. I wou ld
' not tru st S.F. with my
parking-meter change ."
• "Upon reading your

tier/ERA supporter in my . beca~se they' re· good look.spare time) that S.F. is ing, the rest of us tolerate
also: us conventional- thetr tantrums. "
looking folks, who agree
• "I always hat ed th~ kid
with the k(d in the back that
S.F.
represe nts
row and have the ability to
Joan
look beyond the tattered becau se inevitably he
Ryan
jeans, fuchsia scarf and (usually a he) would be the
scion of one of the wealth - - - - . orange hair.''
'·. ':The only problem is iest citizen' in town and
that (San Francisco) is so alway s telling · us poor,
out of tune with reality pathetic non-white folk
imagined composite of the that after high school he's what we should think and
'odd' S.F. high-school stu- · not ready to be an ad ult so do. Kind of like the moddent, I felt like throwing he has to be taken care of ern Democratic party. And
up. You remind me- with by mom (the rest of soc i- I 'till hate it/them just as·
crystal clarity - why I ety). Still, he is entertain- much now and for the
moved from my native ing . Just be glad he ·s not
town , which now is · so responsible for anything same reasons ."
• "S.F. is ending up like
firmly in the hands of important."
• "The line about being River Phoenix , very hip
twisted minds."
the
child of a wealthy and very dead.''
·
• "You say that we nev er
leave high school. Well, I mother and raconteur
• "The weird kid in the ·
think we could go gather a father .. . priceless, as they .back ·of the clas s may be
group of bright hi gh- say. I envy you sttll hvtng on to something. but he
school kids that would and w,orkmg tn the bnght- · (she irJ J . .
.
.' .. •s. tnc r~a s tng 1y
have more common sense est city of all ... maybe not
and do a better job of run- the biggest, etc., but every . g~tttng less and less done
ot any practtcal benefn to
ning our city than ·our cur- : bit the brightest.''
• "L~t me complete your the student body or sc h&lt;fol
rent board of supervisors."
• "If your article were a thought by saying Seattle dtstn ct. The student who
personals ad, I'd be in would be the kid who fo l- used to be amusing is now
love! ·(with San Francisco lows S.F. around like a the village idiol."
... all over again)."
ne~dy puppy, and t~inks
• "What· you wrote is one
• "Your S.F. kid sounds he s r eally cool Ill sptte of of the most pathetic things
like a Hitler youth. I am the tact that he embarrass- I've ever see n in my life .
sure many of them were es htmself on a regular W· h
k ·
ate your wrec ot a rag
seen as 'likable radicals .' basis trying to emulate
conunue to see 16 percent
You forge.t that Hitler did- S.F."
n't smoke, was a vegetari• "You're so right - San drculation dec lines. You
an and lived with a part- Francisco is that cool kid are hy sterical. It is DISner.'~
in the back corner with the GUSTING that you are
• "To use your analogy, I fuchsia scarf, and that is employed by what some
see Sart Francisco· now as why I will a]w·ays love it call it newspaper. "·
the high- school vice prin- the best. But Los Angele s
• "The sooner California
cipal in charge of disci - is the kid of indeterminate drops off the mainland, the
phne, enforcing a narrow . ethnicity. seated front and better the rest of us ·wili
view of diversity and com - center with a pierced bell y be. "
pletely out of touch with button ·and a couple of tat -:
• "I ' ve alway' been the
the hope.s and dreams of toos, who smells faintly of
the student body."
the beach, . r.eeli11g an ' weird kid in the back of
• "Indeed, S.F. is a bit of orange and smtling to him - the room with the fuch sia
an outsider, but I think self whi le he rocks out to scarf. ' Your odd-kid -out
your specific description an iPod. He' s not such a description cap ture s th e
(though it was more bad kid. "
soul of the ci ty and all of
metaphorical) was repre• " I was right there with the reasons I love tt here
sentative of just how out you until the last se ntence. an ti feel like I fi t in.''
of touch The Chronicle The weird· kid in the back
Now what if we imagstaff is with the city. You hasn ' t been onto anything
cherish the progressive , · lately and look s more and ined San Fran c isco as. a
fringe element of our city more like a doped -o ut movte character instead of
so much that you have lost stoner who has gone fro m a student '' Maybe so meone
would suggest McMurphy
your perspective com- msightful to irrelevant."
pletely. I suggest you head
• " By and large , S.F. is in "One Flew Over the
down to the docks, ship- the se lf-righteou s, smarty - Cuckoo's Nest " or Jimmy
yards or construction sites pants rich kid who. jLtst Stewart's "Mr. Smith" or
and see just how. much the beca use he wears relro Annie Hall·. But after readfolk s there identify with Adidas and has messy hatr, in g all yo ur e-matl s, I' m
the effeminate, volati le is ' alternative.' "
going with ·sybil
• " I think if yo u want lo
and sexually ~ mbiguous
Uowr f~ Yt/11 i~· ll rolumnisr
radical liberal that you ·compare the city to hi g h
described tn your arttcle ... 'chou!. the more appwptl - j iH· the San F11mciw o ·
• "Mi ght I add (in my ate description would be ot CIn wu L Ir&gt; .\'t' 11d &lt;'UIIWU! IUs
capacity as a bank attorney a spoiled traq sfcr stude lll lo l1er in care r~( l/11 .\ nt; ~npa ­
by
day
and
a who doe sn:t have a clue a' per or send her . e-mail or
Unitarian/ACLU
merp - to what is go1n g on. Bl11 }f H 111 n ·w 1 ({!) sfC ·h ron icl t'. c·om,J '

'

Monday, March

www .mydailysentinel.com

20, 2006

2006

Twelve voices difend freedom as Big ·Media cowers

The Daily Sentinel
www.mydallysentlnel.com

·PageA4

Obituaries
Shlrtey Mae Jeffers
¢ooLVILLE- Shirle~ Mae Jeffers, 69, of Coolville, di~d
Fnday~ March 17, 2006 at Arcadia Nursing Center, Coolville.
She ts survtved by her husband, Homer Vernon Jeffers.
Servtces wtll be held II a.m. Mondar. March 20, at WhiteSchv-:ar~l Funeral Home, Coolville,wllh Rev. Phil Ridenour
offtct~llng. Bunal wtll be in the Weatherby Cemetery
Coolvtlle
'
Friends called at the funeral home Sunday evening.

Local Briefs
Ohio Hunter Education Class
POMEROY- An Ohio H.unter Ed~cation Class will be held
March 27-29, 6-9 p.m. and April I, 9 a.m. to noon, at the
Pomeroy Gun Club. Class is free and all materials are provided. Students must.attend all sesstons. Class size is limited and
pre:regtstratio~ is re9uired. For more information or to re.gister call the Metgs Sml and Water Conservation District weekdays 7 a.m. to 4:30p.m. at 992-4282.

Kil"ldergarten registration
NEW HAYEN, W.Va. - Kindergarten registration will be
held from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m . on March 23 at the New
Haven Elementary School.
Parent~ are to take. their child to the registration period for
s~reer!ln~ .. an~ provide shot records, birth certificate from
vttal ~tatlsttcs an.d social security card.
,
Chtldren entenng k·indergarten must be five years old on or
before Sept. I.
·

Scholarship application·s
· MASON, W.Va.- The Siewart Johnson Post 99.26 is now
accepting scholarship applications/resumes from Be~d area
students. The deadline for submitting an application for a
scholarship is April 30.
The first priority in selection of scholarship recipients goes
to Post and Auxiliary family members.
Resumes can be mailed to the Stewart Johnson Post 9926. P.
0. Box 586, Mason, W. Va. 25260, or dropped off at the Post
home pnor to the deadline . For more information call 304773-9191.

Homemade Easter candy
SYR~CUSE- The youth group of the Syracuse Nazarene
Church ts selhng homemade Easter candy including eggs and
suckers. Proceeds wiU benefit the youth summer camp . and
other youth church actiVItieS. Contact JoAnn Ritchie at 9927362.

Immunization clinic
POMEROY -A childhood immunization clinic will take
place from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. tomorrow at the Meigs
County Health Department Bnng child's shot records . All
chJldren must be accompanted by a parent or legal guardian.
Bnng medtcal cards. A $5 donation appreciated but not
required for services.

Top U.S commander in
·Iraq sees Uttle of value in
upcoming talks with Iran
BY· HOPE YEN

War opponents demonstrate in U.S. and elsewhere
on third anniversary .of Iraq invasion
Bv JOS£PH B. FRAZIER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

PORTLAND, Ore. - The
third anniversary of the' U.S.Ied war in Iraq drew tens of
thousands of protesters
around the globe, from
Portland to hurricane-rav aged Louisiana to Australia,
with chants of "Stop the
War" and calls for the with- ·
drawal of troops.
A protest march in downtown Portland, with demonstrators carrying signs that,
said "Impeach the Evildoer,"
took nearly an hour to pass
through the streets. Police
estimated.the turnout at about
I 0,000 and reported no
arrests,
"It is time now for you to·
take back your country," said
Steven DeFord at a premarch rally. His son, Oregon
National Guard Sgt. David
Johnson, 37, was killed in
Iraq by a roadside bomb in
September 2004.
Many of the weekend
demonstrations across the
United States, Asia and
Europe drew smaller-thananticipate&lt;~ c·rowds far
short of the millions worldwide who protested the initial
invasion in March 2003 and
the first anniversary in 2004.
Ih. Louisiana, 200 war veterans, hurricane survivors
and others gathered Sunday
at the Chalmette National
Cemetery to protest how the
military conflict overseas had
hurt the country's abi lity to
help the Gulf Coast recover
from last year:s hurricanes.
"We attacked a country
who never did anything to
us," said Philadelphia resident AI Zappala, whose 30year-o.ld son was killed in
Iraq in April 2004.
·
He said his son joined the
National Guard to he! p his·
community. "He was sent to
Iraq based on lies," Zappala
said.
About 200 joined a march
Sunday down New York's
Fifth Avenue, with signs
including : "We the People
Need to do More to End the
War." Seventeen people were
arrested for disorderly con-

BY UBBY QUAID
AP FOOD AND FARM WRITER

WASHINGTON
Investigators may never figure
out where the Alabama ,cow
with mad cow disease was
born and raised, in part because
the U.S.lacks a livestock tracking system the Bush ·adntinistration prontised two years ago.
After the ftrst case of mad
cow disease in December
2003, the government pledged
to get a nationwide program
into place quickly so officials
could track cows, pigs and
chickens from their birth to the
dinner table. TOday. however,
the system is a long way off.
Alabama officials saw the
need firsthand last . week as
they tried to discover where the
mfected cow came from.
The animal had no ear tags,
tattoos or brands, and spent less
than a year on the fan11 where
she di.ed. The trail seems to
have gone cold at an auction
where she was sold last year.
"We need an animal ID program in this country so it wiU

Bachtel

Well ness

~

.

.

4P Photo/Columbus Dll!llllch, 4dam Colrno

Stephante Bone, 32, of Athens , holds a peace flag outs;de the Ohio Statehouse dunng a peace
rally Saturday, tn Colombus, on the thtrd anmversary of the start of the Iraq War.
duct, police said. Saturday 's·
rally drew more than 1.000
people .
Anti-war rallies in Japan
drew about 800. prote sters
chanting "No war! Stop the
war~' ' and · banging drums as
they marched peacefully
through downtown Tokyo
toward the U.S. Embassy. A
day earlier, aboui 2,000 raJlied in the city.
"The
Iraq wa r was
President Bush's big mistake
and the whole world is
against him ," said organizer
Ayako Nishimura. "Iraq must decide .its own affairs."
Protesters also gathered
outside the U.S. Embassy in
Malaysia, and at least I ,000
people turned out in Seoul;
South Korea, which has the
third-largest contingent of
foreign troops in Iraq after
the U.S . .and Britain.
Venezuel an leader Hugo .
Chavez, a strident Bush critic, said world opinion is turning against the war as he
offered some of hi s.harshest
criticisms of the U.S. president 'in months.
"The world is opposed to

your 'war, Mr. · Danger:"
Chavez said Sunday on hi s
weekly television and radio
program. He also called j3ush ·
a "coward," a "donkey" and
a "drunkard.''
Joining the marc ~ers in
Chalmette , was
former
Florida National Guard Staff
Sgt. Cami)o Mejia, a conscientious .objector from Miami
Beach, Fla., who was courtmartialed and jailed for
de sertion.
"I joined the military
because it seemed to offer
stabi lity and ca,maraderie,''
he said. "No soldier signs up
for a war for oil."
His fellow demonstrators
had set out Tuesday on a
140-mile
march
from
Mobtle, Ala .. to· New Orleans
to draw attention both to the
war and 10 the federal
response
to
Hurricane
Katrina. ·
David Cline, president of
Veterans For Peace, said the
nation can't have ~oth "guns
and butter," a reference to
President Lyndon Johnson 's
statement that the country
CQu ld fight the war in

Vietnam and enj\)y the good
ltfe at home.
"The reality is you get
either A orB, you don't get A
and B:' he satd'
.
President Bu sh marked the
anniversary Sunday by touting the efforts to build
democracy in Iraq . He avoided any mention of the continuing daily violence there and
didn't utter the word "war."
"We are implementing a
strategy that 'Ntll lead to victory in Iraq,'' Bush said in a
brief statement to reporters
outside the White House .
Activist Cindy Sheehan,
who energized ,the anti-war
movement last summer with
her monthlong protest outstde Bu sh's Texas ranch,
JOmed the Gulf Coast
marchers in Mississippi on
Friday, but .Jeft early Sunday
for events in Washington. ,
· ''Katrina only happened
because of the incompetence
and callousness of the (Bush)
administration, just as we've
seen in Iraq," Sheehan said
Sunday.
'

Alabama's case of mad cow highlights need for livestock tracking system

negotiations should involve the
Iraqis' use against coalition
forces of '·improvised exploWASHINGTON -The top sive device technology" that he
commander of U.S. forces in says are conting from Iran. ·
Iraq expressed doubt Sunday
'That needs to stop," Casey
that negotiations between the said on "Fox News Sunday."
United States and Iran over
For the talks, U.S. officials
Iraq would help bring peace have ruled out discussion of
· and stability in the Middle East. any attempt by Iran ,to gain a
"I don't have a lot of confi- political foothold in Iraq, as
. dence that these will tum out to well as international concern
be productive. but I could be that Iran is seeking to build a
wrong," said Gen. George W. nuclear bomb, an allegation
Casey, the top commander in that Tehran denies.
Iraq.
Last week, Bush 's top for'They're playing, I think. a eign policy adviser, Stephen
very delicate balancing act." he Hadley, expressed concern that
said of Iran. "On the one hand, Iran's willingness to talk might
they want a stable neighbor. On tie a ploi designed to divert
the other hand, I don't believe attention from the nuclear disthey want to see us succeed ·pute. The ' U.N . Security
here."
Council is expected to discuss
, The Bush administration the nuclear issue this month,
agreed last week to talk to with .Washington pressing for
·
Iranian officials about Iraq after penalties.
a nearly three-decade break in
Still. lawmakers from both .
qiplomatic ties between the parties said Sunday they weltwo countries. U.S. intelligence comed the discussions, saying
st:rQngly sospects Iran has been it was critical for the Bush
from Page A1
arrnin~ Iraqi Shiite militia ~nd administration to engage the
Middle East region - even
some msurgent groups.
Casey said he didn't have countries it might disagree with
much faith in the talks but that - ·as the U.S. cpntemplates an a school ·booste·r organization
in recognition of athletic
it was a "political calL" Any exit strategy in Iraq.
excellence or academic
,
hours at 1.09 hours per exer- achievement.
Dr. Keig establi shed this
ciser.
For those over 50 the dona- fund through a bequest in
tion with a membership card memory of Foresl Bachte I.
from Page A1
is $10 for a sing le or $15 for his teacher and coach while
a couple per month. or $1 per he was a student at
8,000 hours were spent exer- visil, while for those tn the 40 Middleport Htgh School
cising in the 243 days the to 49 age group wtth a mcm- (now consolidated into Mei gs
Center was open . He said bership card. the cost is $30 a Hi gh School). Dr. Keig grew
most come in two or three month for a single, $35 for a up to·be ·a successful surgeo n
days a week. although there couple, or $1.50 foF a single Ill Nebraska. but he never
are some who come in on a visit. There is a slightly high - forgot Bachtel's dedtcation as
daily basis .
er fee for those who are not a teacher. the tremendou s
Colleen McCambridge , a members of the Meigs impact he had on the studenh , and hi s strenglh 111 ltvcertified personal !raining. ' County Council on Aging.
assists Hoffman Ill the operaThe Center ts a pari of ihe tng wtth Lmt Gherig\ distion of the Center.
Meig s Couitty Council's pro- ease for more than 20 vear,.
Records for January show gram and is funded through· Thts fund rcpre scms the
that in the 24 open days, there donations, fundrai smg. and largest private scholarship
were ~70 exercisers doing local levy funds. along 'Nith gtft estahlisheJ to henetit
889.76 hours of exercising · assistance from the Ohio graduate s of Mci~' Htg h
averaging just over an hour · Deparlm ent
of
Aging. Sehoul.
Leshe Lilly. President and .
per exerciser. ·fn February Hockin g Valley Regional
CEO
of the Foundation for
with the same number of Development Di stri.:t Area
Appalachian
Ohio not ed 'the
open days, there were 846 on Aging and the Sister of
Foundation works wtth
exercisers doing 917 .95 Saint Joseph.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

help our industry and help our
farmers when we have these
kind of situations," the state's
· agriculture commissioner, Ron
Sparks, said Friday in
Momgomery, Ala.
Ideally, a cow such as the
one in this case would get the
same number throughout its
life. Farms. sale barns and
feedlots would have unique
numbers, too. Dift'erent technologies, including radio-frequency tags, retinal scans or
even DNA of a cow's eye
could help with the tracking.
The goal is to pinpoint a single animal's movements wtthin
48 hours after mad cow or a
different disease is discovered. .
. It ts not an easy task in a
country with 9 billion chickens.
pigs 'and cows. ·
"We .have a lot of protein ·
being raised in this country."
Agriculture Secretary Mike
Johanns said la't week. "It's
something that we want. to give
the .indu stry some time to
adjust to and prepare for."
Johanns promised last May
that the tracking system would
donors to help make these
scholarships pos,ible . for
local students. "Increasing
access to higher educatton is
a key . issue tn our region. "
she said. "Dr. Keig 's generosity is making college a more
attainable realit y for ,tudents
at Meigs High School, both
now and into the future. The
Foundation i&gt; pleased to
honor Dr. Keig and Forrest
Ba chte l by supportin g the
iJcadem ic endeavors
of
promtsing
Meig'
High
s,·hool students.''
Scholarship nomillation
and applic.ttion fornb are ,
avat!able 111 til~ ~uiJance
office of Meig' Htgh School. .'
or
by
calling
the
Foundauon's otTtcc at t7-101
75J- llll . CompleieJ applica tion -.. mu-..t he rel.:eivcd hv
lhL· gLnLla nce office ~tt Me1g~..,

Htgh School on or hefore
May I.
Th~
Foundation
for
App,t!.tchi an Ohio" ith otTtcc
loco~ ted in
l'O ill1111ltl'd

~c J ..,nn\
ln

illc

be in place, run by the govemment and with mandatory participation, by 2009.
The goal of 2009 has not
changed, though some details
have.
Johanns says industry groups
will be allowed to run the systern - his department would
have access to the data - and
enrolling will be voluntary for
producers. The agency's Web
site says, "Learn more about
the voluntary
program,"
although Johanns says it will
be required fqr everyone someday.
While many ranchers and
other producers are resist;mt to
the idea, industry groups are
movmg forward with their own
programs. For examp1e. the
Na1ional Cattlemet)'s Beef
Assoctatton helped develop a
system using Microsoft technology thatts now being run by
an independent group. the U.S.
Animal 1D Organizatimr
In Congress. some lawmakers are frustrated. Rep. Rosa
DeLauro of Connecticut. the
top Democrat on an 1111portw1t
farm spending subcommittee.
said the departmem seems to
be making up the program on
the go.
. "When· arc we gomg to get
real and put a system 111 place
that will make a difference to

the public health of this
nation?" DeLauro asked a
department official last week.
She and other critics question
why producers would sign up ·
if participation is not required.
Other lawmakers do not
ntind if the process takes even
longer. The chairman of the
Senate Agriculture Comminee,
Republican Saxby Chambliss
of Georgia. said he would just
as soon address. the system
when ·Congress writes a new
farm btl! next year.
•
Chambliss mentioned. the
privacy concerns of those who
mise and feed cattle: they tend
to guard their business information closelY: ·
"We want to make sure we
do ll right." Chambliss told
reporters last week. "That's the
important thing. Later is better
than
doing it early and not
·
doing it right."
Still. he pointed out that foreign customers are paying a
premtum for beef that can be
traced.
.S,o f:u·. the department IJas
assigned mdJvidual numbers to
213.376 farms , and other
"premises." This month. officials m~ved closer to issuing
number&gt; to ammals when they · ·
relea'&lt;ed gutdelines for manufaciurers of ear tags and other
devices.

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OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March

20, 2006

Open records bill contrasts with
bills to shield documents

Report: Blackwell took $294,000
. from brokers, bankers

delayed the opep records bill .
one making it harder.
"Philosophically, we '-re
At issue are recommendations to shield economic just qn different wavelengths
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT
development deals that local on this," Oelslager said.
Ohio law currently shields
COLUMBUS - A disap- governments offer compapointing conclu sion to a nies, documents used in economic deals the state
sessions
and offers companies. and townyear 's worth of work on an executive
open records bill could fore- resumes of candidates for. ships want the . san1e protection for local pJtches.
shadow a continuing legisla• public office jobs.
Michael Cochran, a lobbytive fi ght over access to pubIn addition, lawmakers are
debating
ways
to
remove
ist
for Ohio townships, cited
lic documents in Ohio.
Passage of Rep. Scott Social Security numbers a northeast Ohio case in
Oelslager's records' bill last from all public documents which publicity about a
week ended on a sour note . and hand over control over township' s offer led to a
after
Republicans
and all judicial records to the . neighboring city tr\)mping
Democrats teamed Up to add Ohio Supreme Court.
the deal with a better offer.
R~p.
Bill
Seitz,
a
a last-minute change restrict"This is a clear example of
Republican, the need to have the same
ing reporters' access to the Cincinnati
names of people allowe,d · to vowed to take up these issues type of exception to the
soon, "on another battlefield, Open Records law for loql
carry hidd~n guns.
Oelslager,
a
Canton on another day, in another government economic develRepublican , said he had-five bill'"
opment proposals," . Cochran
"There's very narrow told lawmakers.
minutes ' notice that the
change was coming . Gov. exemptions that need to be
Townships and counties
Bob Taft says he would veto recognized and we will rec- also , want to prohibit the
the bill : which goes now to ognize them if I have any- release of documents· prethe Senate, if it reached him thing to say about it.'' Seit7. pared for executive sessions
said. ·
with that restriction.
by elected councils.
·
Oelslagcr, a longtime open
. The change on Wednesday
Making these documents
came the same day that records advocate, said he public "can ' be especiaily
House Republicans signaled hopes to remove the gun sensitive during. labor negotithey are preparing new .legis- restrictions in the Senate and ations or when price comparlation that could close sever- deal with Seitz' restrictions isons or the condition of. land
as they come. Seitz also or structures are prepared for
al records.
.
That sets up the possibility fought Oelslager over the the consideration of purchase
of joint bills movi~g through issue of awarding attorneys . or sale," according to docu- '
the Legislature - · one mak- · fees in open records cases, ments submitted to lawmaking it. easier to get records, one of the issues that has ers by the Ohio Municipal
League.
Open records advocates
. fear the effect of such proposals even as lawmakers
consider
making more docucipitation
80
percent.
. Monday ... Partly cloudy.
Thesday
nighLMostly ments public.
Highs in the upper . 40s.
"It was like vultures hangNortheast winds around 5 cloudy with S!)OW showers
ing
around an open records
mph.
likely.
Additional
light
Monday
nighL.Mostly snow accumulation possible. bill trying to find ways to
cloudy \.\lith snow likely... A Colder with .lows in the . close everything up," said
chance of rain and sleet. lower 20s. Chance of snow Fred Gittes, a lawyer representing a· coalition of advoLows in the lower JOs. 60 percent
cacy groups, environmental
Northeast · winds 5 to l 0
Wednesday
and
urganizations and unions. ·
mph. Chance of precipita ~
Wednesday night...Partly
Oelslager's bill, introduced
tion 60 percent
cloudy.'
Highs in the lower as a top House priority in
Thesday .. .Snow with rain
and sleet likely. Light snow 40s. Lows in the mid 20s. Jariuary2005, would create a
Thursday
through state office to handle comaccumulation. Highs in the
c loudy. plaints from peopl!! who say
upper 30s. Northeast winds Saturday .. ..Partly
5 to 10 mph with gusts up Highs · in the upper · 40s. they were denied records or
to 20 (llph. Chance of pre- Lows in the upper 20s.
kept out &lt;if public meetings.

and $170,000 from county should be easily traceable and
CLEVELAND (AP) Republican
Kenneth party accounts, The Plain candidates should avmd
Blackwell, in a short-lived Dealer reported in Sunday's efforts to circumvent donation
limits.
campaign for state treasurer, editions.
"It' s di sappointing w.hen
Candidates used the county
received $294,175 in campaign contributions from funds to circumvent contribu- someone who is a champion
bankers, brokers and others tion limits. Once donors gave of di sclosure arid of following
who do business with that the maximum al lowed to can- the campaign- finance. ~ulcs ·
office, a newspaper reported didates, they still could give violates at least the spmt of
Sunday. More than half was at even higher levels to the them," said Catherine Turcer,
funneled through county GOP county account s, which then legislative director for O~io
shipped the money to the can- Citizen Action, a campmgn·
parties.
. . .
reform group . ..Of all people,
·
Blackwell, Ohio's secretary didates.
the secretary of state had a
The
county
party
finance
of state and now a candidate
responsibility
to stop thi ~. not
for governor, announced in reports · made no direct con200 I that he would run for nection b~tween a specific benefit from it."
Blackwell defended the
·treasurer after the incumbent, donor to the county fund and
practice
as legal at the time,
fellow Republican Joe Deters, what it giv.es a candidate.
However, on one December .adding the county acc()unts
said he would seek anot11.er
in 2001, the Cuyahoga were intended to help all state
day
office . .
Secretaries of state award County GOP sta.te candidate candidates. Although his camfew state contracts to · private fund received $65,000 from paign helped the county parcompanies, compared with banks. brokers. investment ties raise the money, the dCCJthose issued by the treasurer's advisers and their families. sion on how it was distributed
office.
·
. Eleven days later, the county was the theirs, he said .
"'Did my campaign go to
Blackwell
eventually sent $65,000 to Blackwetl's
bowed to the state party's campaign, the newspaper the county parties apd say,
'We would like to be the
wishes and ran for re-election said.
Blackwell's critics say his recipient of county party state
as Ohio's chief elections qfficer instead, but not before fundraising history is in con- · candidate funds?' Well, of
raking in $124,175 iii direct trast to his position as secre- course we did," Blackwell
contributions to his campaign tary of stale that contributions said.

Bv ANDREW .
WELSH-HUGGINS

Local weather

Monday, March 20, 2006

Trash crews worried about hazardous meth waste
groups are participating in
Ohio' s
Adopt-a-Highway
program , thi s year. down
I 00 from last year.
Ohio's
ln
northeast
Summit
County, where
police have found the state's
highe st number of meth
labs, 4-H Club leaders are
steering children away fr01h
the cleanup project. Only'
one of more than 60 4-H
Clubs in Med111a County,
south of Cleveland, is consi.dering the task this spring.
"We want kids to do community service, but if it 's
going to be a. health hazard.
we just can't," said Lisa
of
Wittenauer, director
Medina County's 4-H program .
Meth-related accidents are

sprea.d across Ohio. Two
teenagers were treated for
burns on their arms and
legs after picking up a box
of chemicals from a meth
lab dumped near a roadside
in Scioto County in ~outh­
ern Ohio, and a farm pond
near Columbus was coniaminaied last year when someone dumped meth litter into
it.
In
2004.
the
state
Department
ot' Natural
Resources estimated that an
average 11.772 tons of trash
ends up on Ohio roadways
and interchanges each year.
About a fifth of it consists
of containers that meth
makers someti'mes use · to
store their chem.icals.

____________

NCAA M HN's

,....,,_.,.,._.

LocAL SCHEDULE
, GALLIPOliS- A schedu~ of upcoming college
and high school varsity sporting ev811ls ln11olving
learns from GaiMa, Meigs and Mason counties .

Tulldoy't """"

Ba1eball

Huntington St.

p.m.

Joe at Point Pleasant, 5
.

Softball
Wllllams1own at Wahama. 5 p.m.

Wednuday'• gomaa
• Banball
Parkersburg Catholic at Wahama, 5 p.m.
·
Softball
Point PleBsant at Poca, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Huntington S1. Joe , 5 p.m.
ThurfKIIr'• ggmaa

Ban ball
Roane County at Point Pleasant, 4:30
p.m.
College Baaebatl
Rio Grande at Cedarville (DH), 1 p.m.
Fr!doy'a gamaa

Beseball

CLE·V ELAND (AP) Some volunteers are refusing· to pick up litter along
Ohio's roads becau se of
hazardous
waste
from
methamphetamine labs.
. The residue from making
the illegal drug - found on
discarded containers such as
paint thinner cans, milk jugs
and antifreeze bottles can bum skin and ·dainage ·
lungs. The drug itself can
be absorbed through the
skin by simple contact.
Authorities found more
than 100 collections of meth
lab refuse in ditches and
woods across the · state last
year. Few ·people have been
hurt, but roadside cleanup
crews are concerned.
About 1,400 vofunteer

'

Indians fall to Yankees, B2
Pampling wins at Bay Hill, B2

.

'

Wahama at Huntington St. Joe, 5 p.m
Softball
·
. Wayne at Point Pleasant. 5:30p.m.
Poca at Wahama, ~p . m .
. College SOftbell

·Geneva at Rio Grande, 2 p.m.
Saturday'• gomaa

BaHball
Point Pleasant at Logan, 3 p.m:
Poca at Wahama, 5 p.m
SOftball
Point Pleasant at Winfield , noon
Wahama at Buffalo·Guyan Valley, noon
Track and Field
Gattia Academy, River Valley, South Gallia
at Warren Fairweather Relays, 9:30 a.m.
Point Pleasant at Capital. TBA
College Bueball
Cedarville at Rio Grande (DH). 1 p.m.
College SOftball
Malone at Rio Grande, 1 p.m .•

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out of
tourney
By RusTY

MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DAYTON
John
Thompson took over a losing Georgetown program
and needed four years to
win two games in an
NCAA tournament
His son is way ahead of
him.
·
Seven-foot-.7
Roy
Hibbe.rt scored 20 points,
Jeff Green 19. Ashanti
Cook 17 and Darrel
Owens 14 - accounting
for all the Hoyas' pointsto beat second-seeded
Ohio State 70-52 on
Sunday in the second
round of the Minneapolis
RegionaL
.
· Hibbert also had 14
rebounds
and
three
blocked shots.
seventh-seeded
The
Ho~as (23-9Y did it with a
pauent and disciplined
offense and a dose of that
tenacious defense that

Please see OSU. Bl

.

Cincinnati nips Phillies, 5-4
SARASOTA , Fla. (AP)
Aaron Harang threw four
scoreless innings and Edwin
Encarnacion continued hi s torrid spring with a two-run double in the Cincinnati Reds' 5-4
win
Sunday
over
the
Philadelphia Phillies.
Harang 41lowed three hits,
no walks and struck out four.
He has said he wants the· top
spot in the Reds' rotation. but
manager Jerry Narron said he
would wait
until
after
Harang's next start to decide

Kohl.,.-

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Georgetown forward Brandon Bowman , right, look to pass against Ohio State guard Ron Lewis (12) in th.e second half of th.e
NCAA second-round men!s basketball game Sunday in 0()yton.

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The Daily Sentinel

Inside

whether Harang will get the
opening day nod.
Encllll1acion, who is hitting
.488 with 18 RBI thi~ spring,
doubled in the bottom of the
fifth off losing pitcher Julio
Santana.
Philadelphia's
Shane
Victorino hit a two-run homer
in .the fifth off winning pitcher
Tommy Phelps.
Chase Utley doubled and hit
a solo · home run for the
Phillies in his third game since

playing for Team USA in the
World Baseball Classic. The
homer came off left -handed
reliever Kent Mercker.
Jon Lieber started for
Philadelphia, allowing four
hits and a walk with five
strikeouts in four innings.
Austin Kearns tripled off
Lieber in the second and
scored on Tony Womack's
second hit of the game .
Quinton· McCracken later
added a pinch-hit, RBI single
for the Reds.

Cavs mount comeback over Lakers
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• Sunday's NCAA mens
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· See Page 86
. AP photo

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BY JoE MILICtA
ASSOC IATED PRESS

Golden Corral
500 delayed until
11 a.m. today ·

Former Philadelphia Eagles wide receiver Terrell · Owens
speaks during a news conference in Irving,. Texas Saturday.
Owens signed a three-year contract with the NFL team.

Owens newest
star in Dallas
'

.11. MONTHS* ·
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HAMPTON Ga. ·. -·
The
Golden Corral 500 at Atlanta
Motor Speedway will now be
run at II a.m. today. The race
will be broadcast on FX and.
some FOX stations. ·
. NASCAR impc;Junded 'he
cars until today's race to pre-.
i.-ent teams from making any
adjustments.
The weather forcast docs
not look prom1smg for
Monday 's r(\_ce, which may
force NASCAR to move the
race to Tuesday.
When the race does get
underway, Kasey Kahne will
lead the field to the llag, fol lowed by Ryan Newman , JdT
Bunop, Bobby Labonte and.
JJ . Yeley:

CoNTAcrs
Phone- 1·740·446·2342 ext 33
FIX- 1-740-446-3008
E-mail- spons @mydailys·entinol .com
$port~ .S!Aff

Brod Sherman, Sports Editor .
(740) 446·2342. ext 33
bsherman@mydail ytnbune.com

""·-~!•, :&gt;.,.- ~ ; .&gt;~r_..11r., !&gt;~· ·· .,

~-_,., ...... 1., 1 ', .JI:l ~~ ....

Bryan Waltera, Sporta Writer
'740) 446·2342. ext. 23
bw$1ters 0 mydallylribune .com
Larry Crum, Sport1 Writer
· !740) 446· 2342, ext. 33
Ieru m@ m yda ityra gisler co m

CLEVELAND - Forget .
the Kobe vs. LeBron ·hype.
This one belonged to Flip. .
In a match up of two of the
league's top three scorers .
Flip Murray took over. The
way LeBron James sees it,
Murray set the tone ~·or
Cleveland's playoff run as
welL
Murray hit a free throw
with · 3.4 seconds left an\}
scored 14 of his 21 points in
the fourth quarter Sunday,
·leading the Cavaliers to a 96-

95 victory over the Los
Angeles Lakers.
The Lakers had one last
chance to win, but Kobe
Bryanfs 3-pointer clanked off
the back of the rim as time
expired. Bryant, under double
coverage and struggling to get
off the shot, complained to
officials that he was fouled .

With streamers falling from ·
the rafters and the arena
erupting. James gathered his
teammates in a huddle on the
court.
.. It w as a big win for us." ·
James said . .. Mentally. I
want ed to get the guy s .
focused and let them know
thai thi s was a big win for us
getting ready for the playotrs:·
Murray ' s.
free
throw
marked his second game-winner for the Cavaliers since he
was acquired from Seattle at

Please see ComeNck. Bl

Bv JAIME ARON
ASSOCIATW PRESS
IRVING,
Texas
Terrell Owens has gone.
from stomping on the
Dallas Cowboys' star logo ·
to wearing it on his helmet.
The reviled rece1ver
joined the Cowbqys on
Saturday, signing a three year, $25 million contract
to play for Jerry Jones and
Bill · Parcells in what
promises to be an interesting combination ()f strong
personalities . The deal
mcludes a. $5 million signing bonus, with salaries of
$5 . million this . year, · $11
million in 2007 and $7
million in 2008.
''l' m a star among stars
noW,'' a sn1iling Owetls
said .
There's no questioning
his talent - Owen s has
consistently put ur num bers the Cowboys have
Jacked since Michael Irvin
was in the prime of hi s

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Jackson
Athens
Meigs

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I • •
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�•
•

Monday, March 20, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Carmona shines
in Indians' loss
TAMPA. Fla (AP)
F.tUsto Cumon,t's stock nses
evel)' ttme he takes those shot1
steps up the mound
Cleveland\
22-year-old
n ght-hander pttched three
scoreless mmngs Sunday.
keepmg the lndtans close m a
2-0 loss to the New York
Yankees
Although he dtdn ' t face any
of the Yankees' stars. he overpowered some ol New York's
reserves and top mmor leaguers.
"I thmk you can see the confidence gmwmg m that young
man," lndtans manager Enc
Wedge srud of Carmona, who
pttched m Double-A and
Triple-A last season "He has
had an outstanding caiilp and
1\e most detin!lely has everybody's attentiOn"
Cannona is slated to report
to Buffalo to begm the season,
but the Indtans have enough
confidence in the Donumcan
that they won' t waste any time
bnngmg htm up tf any of thetr
starters struggle
With only four regulars in
thetr lineup. the Indtans were
blanked tor stx 111nmgs _by
New York starter Randy
Johnson, who allowed four hils
and stntck out nine.
"That's as good as I've seen
Johnson 111 a long time,"
Wedge satd
lndtans
starter
Jason
Johnson wasn' t as sharp.
allow111g two runs and seven
hits m live mnings The nghthander walked two and stntck
out two.
Cleveland's best sconng
chance came tn the first Jason
M:chaels reached on Dere~
Jeter's throwmg error and stole
second Casey Blake followed
with a smgle. and the lndtans
had runners at the comers wtth
none out
But as was then p10blem so
oflen tn 2005 the lndtans
couldn't come up wlth a clutch
hit Johnson stntck out Jhonny
Peralta and Ytctor Manmez
betore gettmg Eduardo Perez
on a tly to center
Blake
went
2-for-4
Mtchaels, battmg leadoff v. Ith
Grady S1zemore back 111

Monday, March 20,

~ribune

- Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

Bv DOUG FERGUSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

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

Indians' Perez
relishes WBC
expenence

u.s.

have

the

:

•

osu

It was a bttter loss for Ohto
State (26-6), making liS first
tournament appearance smce
an
NCAA mvesttgauoh mto
from Page Bl
the program whtle Jtm
0 ' Bnen was the head coach
Thompson made famous.
After the final seconds led to four tnps from 1999ticked away. the happy 2002 bemg e ras~d from th~
Hoyas pomted to the eldest books.
Whtle the Hoyas were
Thompson at courtstde. who putting it away wnh a late 9stood and ratsed a ftst and 0 run , "Po ps" Thompson
flashed a smtle as wtde as clapped hts hands whtle
any he
wore dunng
Georgetown's run to the workmg as a radto analyst
By that tune, many Ohto
NCAA. tttle m 1984
State fans were floodmg the
The tnp to the regiOnal exits
wtth the Buckeyes trailsemtlt nals came m John ing by double dtgits
Thompson Ill's second seaThe Hoyas wasted no t1me
son after takmg over a team m gett111g the attention of the
that was down and al most B1g Ten's regular-season
forgotten H1 s father. who champtons. Cook dnlled a 3bUilt the teared and teroc10us pomter thetr first ttme down
teams of the 1980s. went fou r the floor On the second tnp,
seasons be! ore wmnmg twice Ohto State's Terence Dialstn the 1976 NCAA tourna- the Btg Ten 's player of the
ment
year- was called for a touch
Georgeto"'n
(23-9) foul betore the ball was over
advances to meet Flonda (29- tmdcourt
6) on Fnday Th1s marks the
H1bbert htt fo ur ol h1 s first
first t1me s1nce 1996 that a five shots from the fie ld and
Btg Ten team hasn't made it had mne pomts as the Hoyas
through the tournament 's streaked to a 20- I 0 lead m
first weekend
the openmg 10 112 mmutes.

Georgetown shot 57 percent from the fteld 111 the tirst
half whtle grabbmg a 38-25
lead.
Perhaps the only good stgn
for the Buckeyes was that
thetr top outstde shooter,
Je' Kel Foster, ca,me out of a
lengthy shooting funk to htt
three consecutive long 3pomters that cut the Hoy as·
lead to 22- 19
Unfazed, Georgetown contmued to pass and cut on
offense and play sttcky
defense. The Hoyas ran off
II of the half's fmal 13
pomts, most on layups or
shots m the pa111t
The Buckeyes never got
closer than stx pomts because
guards Cook, Jonathan
Wall ace and Jesste Sapp
never let them get a clean
pen meter shot.
Dtal s fm tshed w1th 19
pomts, Jamar Butler had 12
and Foster I I fo r the
Buckeyes
At least the qUiet nde home
dtdn't take long for Ohto
State, wh tch only came an
hour down the road from
Columbus

Owens

'

m::rtbune

To Place

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l\egi~ter

Sentinel

Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 {304) 675-1333
AP photo
Rod PampiiAg of,Australia, left, IS presented the trophy by Ar ~old Palmer after wmmng the Bay
Hill Jnvttattonal golf tournament tn Orlando, Fla. on Sunday. Pampl1ng shot a 14-under-par wtth
a total score of 27 4 for the tournament.
lead slip away when he htt his played wtth poi se on the Palmer's tournament Woods
tee shot on the 13th hole into a weekend. and put pressure on closed wtth a 72 to fim sh 10
backyard well right of the fatr- Pamphng wtth enough btrdtes shots behmd, hts II th straight
way, out of bounds He made that he had the best score of round at Bay Hillm the 70s.
The last stx wmners of Bay
double bogey to fall mto a tte the final round - unttl he got
Htll all broke par m the final
for the lead, then couldn't to No. 17
keep up with Owen.
Asked how he would deal round, and Pampling was
Pamplmg missed a 12-foot wtth the loss, Owen said. "I' ll headed that dtrecuon He
btrdie putt on the 16th to fall find out tomght. But 11 won't opened wa h two btrdtes and
seven pars to take a three-shot
one behmd, and thought tt was be easy.
when he mtssed hts 10-foot
"You don't get many lead mto the back mne . Owen
par putt on the 17th
chances to win on the PGA wa' keepmg pace, but
Gtve htm credtt for setzing Tour, and on a great course Pam piing was makmg it diffithe new ltfe. Pampling split hke tht s I had II m my pocket. cult bv not making any mi sthe middle of the fairw ay on It was there - and I threw tt takes ·
the 18th. and hit a scary away"
Then, 11 all changed with
approach over the water to
He might have thrown away one swmg
wtthm 30 feet for a two-putt a lot more than that. Owen
Pamplmg lost ht s tee shot so
par.
was No. 95 m the world rank- far to the nght on the par-4
Darren Clarke never got mg, and a vtctory Sunday 13th that It smled mto the
closer than two shots of the against a world-cl ass fteld netghborhood, out of bounds.
lead throughout the fmal would have put htm well He had to reload on the tee, hll
round. closed wtth a 70 and mstde the top 50 and make wedge mto 12 feet and missed
wound up alone 111 thud. htm ehg1ble for. the Masters the putt to take double bogey
Ju st like that. he was tied for
Robert Allenby ftmshed He sti ll has a chance to get Ill
fourth w1th a 69, and experi- ne xt week at The Players the lead
And alltt took was one hole
enced an Owen moment of hts Championship.
for
Owen to take advantage.
own, although much earlier m
"I don't eve n want to bnng
the round He mtssed a 3-foot that 11110 it," Owen srud as he Hts tee shot on the par- 3 14th
par putt on the second hole, walked out the door. · It wtll rolled JUSt through the green,
and he holed that 30-footer for
quickly went to tap 111 and only make tl harder"
mtssed that.
Lucas Clover pulled withm btrdie and a one-shot lead.
That was nothmg like what two shots ot the lead early m Pamplmg battled back, mak.Owen felt
the fmal round, on I~ to shoot mg a 12-foot btrdie putt on the
The 34-year-old from 42 on the back mne. Ttger next hole to ue for the lead.
England won the Bnti sh Woods was never a factor for
It came down to the final
Masters before getting hts the thtrd straight year, after three holes, but ulumately was
PGA Tour card through Q- endmg hts streak of four deCided by three putts from 3
school two years ago He stratght vtctory at Arnold feet

Comeback
from PageBJ
the trade deadltne for seldom-used Mtke Wilks and
cash Murray h1t a 3-pomter
wnh second's rema111mg to
wm at Chtcago on March 2
'Today, I had the chance to
drive to the hoop and spark
the team," satd Murray, who
added a career-htgh etght
rebounds " I JUSt tri ed to
come out and be aggressive
m the second half "
Bryant, who shot 66 percent m the ftrst half, fmtshed
wtth 38 pOints, stx rebounds
and ftve asst sts James led
Cleveland wtth 29 pmnts ,
etght re bounds and seven
asststs
"Thts game had playoff
mtenstty and It was good io
see us respond," James satd
Zydrunas ll gauskas scored
25 pomts and had seven
rebounds for the Cavaliers
(38-29), who have won two
stra tghr after a three-game
sktd Lamar Odom sco red 25

points and added etght
rebounds and mne assists for
Los Angeles, which has lost
four of five Smush Parker
scored 14.
The Lakers (34-34) fe ll to
.500 fo r the ftrst ttme smce
March I and lead New
Orleans by one game for the
etghth playoff spot m the
We,tern Conference.
"The game was m our
hands," Lakers coach Phtl
Jackson satd. "We led for 46
mmutes It was a baste coll.tpse by our te&lt;lm In the
fourth quarter "
Murray
sparked
the
Cavaliers' 15-0 run m the
fmal penod Hts step-back
3-pointer started the burst
and he repeatedly drove to
the bas ke t, sconng I 0
fourth -quarter pomts on
layups
The Cavali ers took thetr
ftrst lead.
92-91, on
llgaus kas' ttp-m with 3 19
left James hit a 3-pomter on
the next possessiOn to cap
the 15-0 run and put
Cleveland ttp 95 -91
The Lakers weren' t fmIShed, though Odom htt two

Offee llo~~

takmg advantage of gettmg future TD celebration s Wtth
an outstandmg player
Btll an arm on Jones' back, he
has coached a lot of players smtled w1de and sa1d, "I wtll
that, quote-uhquote, have the embrace the star."
perception that a they mtght
Until hts behavior hmtted
not fit 111 with team chem- him to mne games last seaJstry "
son, Owens had at least 75
Jones, who bmlt a btlhon - receptiOns and 1,100 yards
dollar fortune by talong btg rece1v111g m five stratght searisks, IS wtlhng to take this sons The last time a
one because the Cowboys Cowboys recetver hit both
have gone nme years without figures in one season was
wmmng a playoff game
lrvm m 1997
Pm of the gamble ts that
But Owens also has ahentfans will warm up to Owens, ed teammates, coaches and
who launched his flamboyant the front offtce with the
persona tn September 2000 things he says and does.
when as a member of the
In Dallas, Owens jams a
49ers he celebrated each of team coming off a 9-7 season
two touchdown catches at that mcluded a 2-4 finish,
Texas Stadtum by runrling to keepmg them from makmg
the team's still' logo at mid- the playoffs fo r a second
field. Safety George Teague stratght year. The Cowboys
&gt;ecured a spot m team lore by seem to need more than a star
deckmg Owens after the sec- re.ceiver to get over the
ond one.
hump. but do need a mam
On a Monday mght game threat
after
releasmg
in 2004 best remembered for Keyshawn
Johnson
on
hi s pregame skit wtth a Tuesday
"Desperate
Housewtves"
The team lacks · veteran
actress, Owens celebrated leaders, wtth captam s Dan
another score by tappt ng on a Campbell and Oat Nguyen
logo 111 the end zone ,
already gone, as ts La'Rot
Owens satd he and Jones Glover, another calm1ng
already have dtscussed h1s mfluence. Dallas also 1s m a

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Wanted To Buy
Meigs
County Store Scnp1 Store
Tokens and currency from
Racme
Pomeroy
and
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MACHINIST

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4 's For Sale .. . .. ............................... 725
Announcement
.030
Antiques
530
Apartments for Rent.............. . .. ........... 440
Auction and Flea Market
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .
760
Auto Repair . . . . ..
. . . no
Autos for Sale ..
.
.
710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale •.
• . 750
Building Supplies . .
. ..... 550
Business and Buildings ......... . .. •.......... 340
Business Opportunity
. 210
Business Training
. ..
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes.. .
• • 790
Camp1ng Equipment
780
Cards of Thanks
010
Child/Elderly Care ....
.. . 190
Electrlcal/Relrlgerallon .
840
Equipment for Rent
480
Excavating . .
.. .. . 830
Far111 Equipment.... ......
610
Farms for Rent.. ........
.. ., .... . 430
Fanns for Sale .

. • 330
490
585
• .. 590

For Lease...... . .... ..
For Sale . ...
For Sale or Trade ... • .

FruHs &amp; Vegetables ... .......................... 580
.

. .. 450

General Hauling.............. .. ........ -............... 850
Giveaway................................................. 040
Happy Ads . . . .
.
.. .., ... 050
Hay &amp; Grain.................................................640
Help Wanled ................................ . ............. 11 0
. ••• ... • ...... 81 0
. ..................... 310

Household Goods
510
Houses for Rent
,
... 410
In Memoriam ....................................... 020
••

..

130
660
Livestock .....................................................630
Lost and Found . •
060
Lots &amp; Acreage.......... . .. ...................... 350
Mlecellaneoua..........................................170
Miscellaneous Merchandise .. ... . ..•.. 540

Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment

• . ..

.

Mobile Home Repair ...................................860
Mobile Homea for Rent.. ............... . • 420
Mobile Homes ror Sale .. . ...... . .... . .. •.. 320
Money to Loan ......................................... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers........ • .......740
Mualcallnatrumanta
.
•
•. 570

Persorata ........................... ,........................ 005
Pets lor Sale .. •
.
560
Plumbing &amp; Healing ....... .. ................... .820
Profeaalonal Services ................................230

Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
..... 160
Real Eatate Wanted ..................................... 360
Schools lnotructlon................................ 150
• .... .....

.. 850

Situations Wanted.-..................................... 120
Space for Rent. .... •. . .. . • .. ... ... . .• .460
Sporting Gooda. . . . . ........................ 520
SUV'a lor Sale .............................................720
Trucks for Sale

7 15

Upholetory . . . .

870

Vans For Sale ......... .....
Wanted
Buy

lo

.

..

.

. 730
090

Wanted o Buy- Farm Supplies ............... 620
Wanted To Do .. .
180
Wanted to Rent
. .
.... 470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis.. ...............................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ••• • •

Yard Sai•Pt. Pleasant

.

.. • 074
076

FLJH·t1me POSSible
shttt rotat1on
Exper1ence With manual
lathes m1lllng machm es
saws rad1a! drills Must be

10

IIELPWANJlD

I

Drlvera Needed:
COL Dnvers Willing to drive
lor local ready m1x concrete
company Expenence ts
preferred but not necessary
Med msurance &amp; other
benel1ts available aher watt·
1ng penod Dnver must be
w11h ng to do pre·mamtenance on trucks &amp; eqwp·
men t yard work &amp; other
mtscellaneous chores
Expenence operating equtp-ment &amp; extra sk1IIS such as
weldmg a plus
Call Robertsburg
(304)937-3410
or Lakon(304)773-5234
Located trl Mason County
near Buffalo WV
-------Dr1vers
Free
Health
Insurance Excellent pay
bonuses &amp; home t1mel 1
year traclor tra1ler expenence
reqUired
Mart1n
Transport 866-293-7435

Attent 1on Or1vers
R&amp; J
Truck1ng IS looking lor
Ortvers
w/1
yr
OTA
Expe nence lor Regtona l
Hauls Average pay 40 s to
mtd 50s Home every
Weekend
call
Kent
(800)462·9365

Full t1me Med1cal Cla1m
b1ile r No eJ;penence neces·
sary Must be delatled
orgamzed good computer
and typmg sk1ils Please
apply 1n person at Famlly
O:ocygen 70 P1ne Street
Gallipolis No phone ca lls,
please

Expenenced Gnll Cook &amp;
Food Prep Apply tn perso n
Parklront Dmer 314 Second
Ave Galhpolts
For a ltmlted t1me make 50%
se lling Avon Call (740)446
3358
Fuel truck driVer pos1t1 on
available Stra ght truck
local route Competitive pay
Good hours good benehts
None Hazmat &amp; tan~er
endorsements wtll be conSidered Ma1l resume and
copy ol dr1vmg record to
CLA Box 555 c/o Gaii1PQIIS
Tnbune
PO Box 469
Galhpohs OH 45631

AVON I All Areasl To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears 304· Help
wanted
Cooks
675·1429
Cash1ers &amp; Orl\lers Apply
w1thm P1zza Plus 1044
COORDI NATOR· The Metgs
Jackson P1ke Gall1polls
County
Cl'lamber
of
Commerce , Is accepltng H r1ng pa rt-time Se r11er
resumes for the position of Dtshwasher &amp; l&lt;ttchen Prep
Chamber Coord1nator Th1s Apply In perso n Jimanettls
pos1t1on requ1res excellent Pizza Buckeye Hills Ad
wntten and verbal communi· Rio Grande
cat1on sktll s organtzattonaJ
Home Health A1des· S1gn
s~llls and self mottvation
The candloate must pos· On Bonus Home Healthcare
se~s
tHrong leadershtp of SE OhiO IS currently hiring
s~ 1lls Send resumes to 238 hOme health aides compellWest Ma1n Street Pomeroy ll\le wages Call {740)662·
1222
Oh10 45769

Home Healthcare ol SEQ IS
Current ly
Acceptmg
Appltcat10ns For Full &amp; Part·
time AN s
Compet1t111e
Wages Bonuses &amp; Beneftts
Call Tol l free 1 866 368
1100
Now h 1nng
EMTs
&amp;
ParamediC S Call (740)354
5433 01 I 866·911 5433

Local are business looking
lor
a
Sales
Person
Agncullural expenence nee·
essary Salary based on
expenence health 1nsur·
ance Send resumes to CLA
Bo• 568 cto Gallipolis
Tr1bune
PO Box 469
Gallipolis OhiO 45631
_..:___ _ _- : : - - Maintenance
Dtrector
Overb rook RehabilitatiO n
Center IS now accepting

Ohio Valley Home Health,
Inc hmng Full T1m e RN and
Per D1em MSW Accep1mg
applicattons for LPN, CNA,
STNA
C HHA
PCA
CompetJttve Wages Mileage
and
benefits
mc ludmg
Health Insurance App1y at
14BO
Jackson
P1ke
Galltpohs or 24 15 Jackson
Avenue Po1nt Pl easant WV
or phone tolllree 1 866·441 ·
1393

resumes for the pos1t1on ol
Maintenance Otrector The
quahl1ed cand1dale must
possess strong verbal and
wntten commumcatiOn sk1lls
mclud1ng techmcal report
wntmg and record keep1ng
M ust ha\le expertence 1n
general matntenance tnclud
mg carpentry
plumbmg
e1ectt1cal telephone and
cable InstallatiOn pa1nt1ng
ground work evaluat1on and
mspechon of emergency
eqUipment 1tem assembly
and botler system operation
Must have knowledge
of
OSHA Life Salety Code
Long Term care exper1ence
preferred but not reqwred
Qualified candid ates may
send resume to
Charl a
Brown McGwe RN LNHA
Admm1strator 333 Page
Street Middleport Ohto
45769 EOE

--------Overbroo~

Re habi1 1tat1on
Center ts currently accepting
AN
appllcattons lor a
SupervisOr
The ava1lable
Shift IS 7P·7A All Interested
appliCants should p1ck up an
apphcat1on at 333 Page
Street Mtddleport OH For
further mtormation please
contact Hollie at 7 40 992
6472 EOE

~~~

1fr

I
The Gallla County Ve terans
Serv1ce Othce IS seekmg a
lull 11me beneftts counselor!
secretary The JOb w111 be 10 U~ orrc'"
ass1st elrg1ble persons 1n f1l·
tng clatms w1th the Veterans
11 0 ,,

Deparlm enl IS accepllng
appltcat ons
for
the
Intersystem Coordinator
of the Meigs County
Family and Children First
Council Du t1es tnclude but
are not hm1ted to develop·
ment tmplementat1on and
evatuat10n of counlyw1de
se rv1ce coord1nat1on and
other plans program mon1
tonng workmg wtth commu·
ntty grou ps representmg
Family and Ch tld ren F1rst
CDunc1l at reqwred meet

AdministratiOn perlormmg lllon oce a:~()R~o;:~~~ ~
general secretar al dul1es
ott1ce adm1n1stratton and lll.,,mco
other dut1es as needed
The apphcant must be a
Veteran w1th an honorable
dtscharge w1th at least a
h1gh school diploma/college
lS preferred Qther quahl1ca
t1ons mclude a valid dnvers
license m1n1mum of one
year secretanal work lo
Include the use of comput
ertword processors Must be
able to commumcate effec

1ngs and tratmngs and occastonal travel
Quallftcetlons
The successful cand tdate
wtll possess the follow1ng
• Mm1mum of Bachelors
Degree Masters preferrea
1n related held combmed
with expe rience working
1saues 1nvolv1ng cMdren and
theu fam1hes
• Strong commun tcatton

liVely both 1n verbal and wnt
ten lorm The des1red appl·
canl must be dependable
and personable
Salary
based on quahflcat1ons

li1Fona

Applicants are to submtt
resumes to the Gallla
County Veterans Service
Off1ce at 1102 Jackson P1ke
Gall1pohs No later than
March 2 1 2006

• Competent computer SkillS
1nc lud1ng use of M1c rosott
OffiCe applications
Benefltt.
The Me1gs County Health
Department offers employ·
ees a competthve benefits
package PoSitiOnS 1s full·
11me w1!h starling salary
dependent on education and
expenence
Interested
candidates
should send a letter of mter·
est resume completed crv1l
serv1ce application and
three letters of reference to
Larry D Marshall Health
CommiSSIOner Meigs Count
Health Department
1 12
East Memorial Dr SUite A

Concealed Ptstol Class
OhiO WV Apnl 8 2006
$75 00
9 OOam VFW
Mason
Ph (740)8435555
_ _ _ _ _ _ __

Pomeroy Oh 45769 C1vt1
serviCe applications rnay be
picked up at the Health

·------_.!

Department or on the web at
the
follow ng
address
http IIWWW das oh1o goylbrdl
- - - - - - - - pdffiobapp2 pdf The pos1
Overbrook
Rehabthta!lon t1on w1ll rema1n open un111
Center IS currently accept1ng filled
applicatiOns lor a AN
SuperviSOr Compet1t1ve pay PoslMn available for Farm
scale and beneftt package and ~awn Parts assoc1ate
a\l&amp;llable The ava1lable shift Health and retirement bene
IS 3P· 11P
All Interested fits Must have computer
applicatiOns should p1ck up sktlls Prefer farm back
an applicatiOn at 333 Page ground Send resume to
Street Middleport OH For CLA Box 566 c/o Ga!ltpOIIS
further mformat1on, please Dally Tnbune PO Box 469
contact Halle at 740·992· Gollrpolos OH 4563 1
6472 EOE
Med• Home Health Agency ----~-'--­ AN s needed to prov1de f1rst
Inc seek1ng PAN Speech OverbrQo~
Aehabl hlatton a1d at construction sttes
Theraprstlor Gallipolis Oh10 Center 1s currently accepttng between Chesh1re ano New
FT PT
F1 rst
and
surrounding
area .apphcattons for a RN Haven
L1censed both tn OhiO and Supervisor Compet1t1ve pay Atd!ER!Occupahona VSafety
Ca ll
West V1rg1rua preferred We scale and bene11t package expenence helpful
offer a competttl\18 salary 8..,a 11able The ava1lable shift (888)269 6344
E 0 E Please send resume IS 7P 7A
All Interested
10 352 Second Avenue appl1cants should p1ck up an Substnute $6 20/h r 18 yrs
Gallipolis OH 456 31 Att n applicatiOn at 333 Page of age &amp; H1gh Schoo l
Send
Judte Reese or ema1l Stre et Middleport OH F(lr 01ploma requtred
Res ume to Early Educat1on
JreeseCmsa-corp com
further 1nlormat1on please
Statton 2122 Jefferson Ave
contact Hollie at 740-992·
NOW HIRINGI II
Pl Pleasant WV 25550
lnfoCtslon 1n Gallipolis has 6472 EOE
Takmg Applications for
posttlons a\l&amp;llable start1ng
at S81hour We make calls Painte rs wanted watt1 expe· Mac~mst &amp; Welder 5 years
app ly 7 30
on behalf of non proftt and nence or Wi lling to learn expere nee
political organizations
Leave message (740)367 4 OOpm Ambros1a Machme
Inc Route 2 Box 254 Potnt
NO EXPERIENCE
7680
Pleasant WV
25!;50
necessary 1
oHealth Benefits
Part-time bartender needed (304)675 1722
oPatd Trammg
for Good T1mes Pomeroy Trred ol Not Hav1ng Enough
oRetirement plan
must be 21 to apply
Money to Make Ends Meet
oWeekly pay
or Go1ng ro Work For
o Weekly bo(lus plan
Wantlld-L.IcenHCI
Someone Else? Chnst1an
oFI•ed schedu les
HNhh Profea•lonale
owned Company of nearly 2
oComoelltlve wages
Portamedlc IS seeking expe· decades ot1er1ng a home
oProf&amp;ss1onal atmosphtre
nenced Med Tech/LPN?ANa Bua lness
Opportunely
Call to achedule an
to complete mobile paramed (304 )576·2056 or (304)593
lntlt'VIIW todayt
e•ams coll ect spec1mens &amp; 0466 If no answe r please
ECG a In the Galhpohs area leave mnsage
(740)446-7442
We schedule the appotnt
oxt. 2456
ments lor you You Process
medical 1nformat1on and
1-Bn-4113-11247
commumcete cate status
d81ly to the branch ofhce
oxt. 2458
Must hallfl owa trMspo rta·
POSTAL JOBS
tlonlva(ld dr1vers hcense 1
$1 5 67 $21 96/hr now htr year biOOCJ draw e~epenence
1ng For appli Cation and tree reou~red Send resume v1a
governement JOb mto call ematl lo
American Assoc ol Labor 1 ph le,2 0mg r0par·
913 599 8042 24/hrs emp temedlc: nel Back.grou l'ld
check 15 required
serv

FIND
AJOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

•

r~:;~~~~

POSITION
ANNOUNCEMENT
MEIGS COUNTY
FCFC INTERSYSTEM
COORDINATOR
The Me1gs County Health

1130

able 10 hold tolerances to
.0005 '(mches) on fine work
Ab1hty to accurately cut var1·
ous ma le and female
threads (1nclud1ng buttress
threads) Bad&lt;ground must
mctude mach1n ng of materials of \ISrtous hardness and
mach1nmg cheractenSIICS
Musr be able to read draw
mgs and make the par ts to
the appropnate spec111ca
tlons Must be fam1har With
shop scHety routines and
CNC
procedures
Programmmg
&amp;
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L1tl truck operation a plus
rotate
Schedule
may
Wo r~Site 1s located w1th1n
close
prox1m1ty
to
Huntington WV and Pt
Pleasant WV Apphcat1on
requtred
US C1hzensh1p
reqwred lnqutre w1th n Te l
1·866-23 1-2476
E-ma1l UJObs@utrontnc com

$16 78/Hr PT Contract
pos1t1on to r local Federal
Otf1ce through FY06 I Yr
Operator e:ocp requtred
Apply online at
wyrw conc:ordps cam
CPS Inc or fax resume to
(865)675·0423
ATIN GeoH Haas
CPS Inc EOE

11'

management and organtza· . , . , , . . . . - - . . . , - - - ;
t10na1 Skills
SrnoO!B
• Abl e to fT1ultttask
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100WORKERS NEEDED
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Avenue GallipOliS 74o-446- Call Manlyn 304·882·2645
2842
Ashton, WV workSIIe seeks

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Male Lab/Boxer mi x dog ..--...--...--...--,
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POLICIES Ohio V1lley Publlehlng rtHn'M ihe right 10 edh, rt)ect, or CtnCII eny ad 11 1ny time Errors muat be reponed on the tlrat day ot
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t rtO! be
eny toea or expenM thlt , .. ultl from thot publlc.llon or omlaaion of •n lldvtrtiMI"''MJnl Corr.ction Will be made In the first available tdlllon • Box
are etweys confkttnllll • Curren1 r8tt cerd 1ppltN • All rul "lite
t
ere tubject to thfl Federal Fair Houtii'IO Acl or 1968 • This
accepta only ~P Wln11d
rntellng EOE 1tlndlrd1 WI will
edvertlelng I"' VIOlation ot the lew

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free throws and Bryant sank
a 15-footer to tte it with I :33
left.
The teams mtssed on thetr
next two possessiOns each,
then Brya nt fouled Murray
wnh 3 4 seconds left
Murray mtssed the ftrst free
throw and htt the second.
Bryant , who beat the
Cavaliers m January wah a
go-ahead Jumper wllh 8 6
seconds remai ning, couldn 't
do 11 agam.
"I had a look," Bryant
satd " It was a tough shot "
Jackson and Bryant were
disappomted th at Luke
Walton dtdn't call ttmeout
mstead of forcmg the
mbound pass.
"I thmk he got drawn mto
the play and dtdn 't make the
ngh t dect ston," Jackson
sa td
Walton satd tt wasn't JUSt
hi S pass that lost them the
game
· We blew another one," he
said. noung Friday's lo ss to
New Jersey "We've got to
ftnd a way to wtn these
games or we' re gomg to be
done Apnl 19"

tough dtvtston that mcludes Sanders a $13 million stgnmg
T 0 -less Phtladelphta, the bonus.
New York Gtants hopmg to
Jones felt pretty good about
1mprove as qumerback Elt ht s chotces when the
Mannmg develops and the Cowboys v. on thetr thtrd
Was hington Redskm s, who Super Bowl m a four-year
have been big spenders m span. But that was 1995 ,
free agency
Dalla s has won only one
The Eagles gave up on playoff game smce.
Owens onl y months after he
He' s lost othe r big' gambles
helped them reach the Super along the way, from sticking
Bowl. He demanded a new with S~ttzer to hmng Chan
contract one year mto a Gatley, then Dave Caiilpo as
seven-year, $48.97 mtllton head coaches He 's also
deal , then squabbled with nsked publtc scorn by releasquarterback
Donovan mg franchtse tcons Troy
McNabb
Atkman and Emmttt Smtth.
Before that, Owens forced
lrvtn 's otf-fteld woes are
hts ·way out of San Francisco
with repeated hijinks on the the local precedent for taking
field and through disparaging on Owens However, whtle
· comments about teammates, lrvm may have tarni shed the
Including quarterback Jeff team's Image. he was a
de&gt; oted teammate and fan
Garcta
Jones is no stranger to tavome
When lrv111 was returning
unpopular moves
from
a five-game suspension
After wmmng btg gamble s
m real estate and dtgging for 111 1996, he was asked how he
ml well s, he put It all on the expected fans to treat htm
hne to buy the Cowboys 111 lrvtn satd he onl y had to
1989. Smce then, he's fired score a touchdown to wm
Tom Landry. forced out them back - and he was
Jtmmy Johnson, entrusted a nght
champtonshtp club to Barry
Could It be that easy for
Switzer and gtven Deton Owens 0

0

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

Furnished Rooms . . .

reveal any contract details,
but tl was hkely to mclude
behaviOr-related provisions.
Owens '
blowup
with
fromPageBl
Phtladelphta last season even
led to new rules regardmg
career m the mtd-1990s
It 's hts att1tude that pumshment bemg wntten
the NFL's latest collecprompted the San Franc1sco mto
me
batgammg
agreement.
49ers and Phtladelphta
"We
can
both
dtsappoint
Eagles to get nd of Owens each other m this
agreeH1 s re lattonshtp with the ment,' Jones satd "But
tht s
Eagles soured only months ts no free lunch to the Dallas
after he led them to the Super Cowboys. We made a comBowl, finally endmg wllh h1s
mitment to him That means
release Tuesday
somethmg."
.
Owens referred to hts past
Agent Drew Rosenhaus
problems as "life-learmng said seven teams pursued
expenences "
Owens , "but thts was the
"I'm gomg to put those only team for Terrell "
thmgs behmd me," Owens
Jones repeatedly mensatd "They can only make a tioned that Parcells was in
man stronger wtser For me, favor of adding Owens. The
that's what It's done I' ll be a coach and his new star
better teammate, a better per- receiver already have spoken
son, a better man m hfe I'm by telephone, although
lookmg forward to tht s Parcells didn't attend the
opportumty I cou ldn 't be news conference That's typimore exctled to be here "
cal, though, because he hasFollow1 ng up a question to n't attended any for freeJones about Owens' past , the agent stgnmgs smce JOimng
recetver mterJected "Jerry, I the club three-plus years a~o.
know what's expected of me
'Thts was not me se llmg
Btll, thts was not Btll sellmg
I won't let you down "
Jones didn't tmmedtately me ," Jones sa1d. "Tht~ was us

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

2006

Pampling wins with late collapse by Owen

ORLANDO, Fla (AP) Rod Pamplmg thought he had
Wtnter Haven, tnpled in the thrown away the Bay Htll
lnvttat10nal. Greg Owen gave
etghth but was stranded
Notes The lndtans wtll have 1t nght back Sunday b~ missa d.ty oft on Monday. "It's mg two putts instde 3 teet that
commg at a real good tune," could haunt htm for some
Wedge smd Hts players will t1me
Pamplmg closed with an
rest, but not Wedge , who will
come in to see C.C. Sabathia even-par T1 tor a one-shot VICand Jake Westbrook throw tory over Owen, but thts tournament wtll be remembered
bullpen sesstons
more for Owen needing three
putts from 40 mches on the
17th hole
"It was one of those st lly
nustak.es I'll be remembered
•
tor.." Owen said somber!}'
1 rymg to wm his first PGA
Tour event, Owen took the
WJNTER HAVEN, Fla. lead by getttng up-and-down
(AP) -The most frequently from the bunker on the par-5
used ex:cuses fot the U.S. 16th for a one-shot lead And
team's early exit from ,the when Pampiing failed to make
World Basebilll Classic par on the 17th, the toumawere: The Americans didn't menl appeared to be over.
have their best pla&gt;:ers and
Owen was two shots clear,
they weren't m rrud-season with only 40 inches of grass
shape.
between his ball and cup.
Even then, winning the
He pushed the par putt so
tournament would have been bad! y that 1t never touched the
rough.
hole. QutckJy and angrily, he
Indians .first baseman stepped to the other stde of the
Eduardq Perez, who played hope and rapped hts bogey
for :I&gt;uerto Rico, swd the putt. It dipped in-and-out of
baSeball globe is much more. the cup, and the gallery
b~ than pe6p1e realiZe.
•' l'lt'~ areality ~;heck,'t Perez gasped
If that wasn't cruel enough,
said ,of .the
team's sud- Owen h1t a remarkable shot
d_en .ql~oh" !~es,t;, from the bunker with hts feet
o~ oountnes tOOJI''.lt 'serii&gt;
the ball, leaving htmself
ously. You·
·, o fealit.e aabove
12-foot par putt straight up
that other coUntrieS P.~Y the the hill He htt what he called
game and that anytl;rin8 can his best putt of the week, fully
ha~pen ' in a three-game
expecting it to go in and force
senes. It's do, or-die."
a playoff.
Perez returned Friday after
Not on this day. The ball
Puerto Rico ~~':as kilocked out caught the back of the lip and
the tOurnament with a 4-3 spun away, and Owen was
loss to Cuba
shocked He dropped hts put:'It was a ~teat 'experi- ter, turned hts back on the hole
enCe:,'' he sai9. •ifiyeryQ!le and covered hts face with his
was £lilyinS .({ff thei}' CQUntcy. hands.
The rans were 'lmllii\lievafl~
"I can't believe it m1ssed,"
It was deff!l,i~ abllve anq he satd numbly "I cannot
beyo~d a; nla,yoff , atri)os~
believe-it mtssed."
phere...
,!;.·.r,. • ':j;~ ~
Pamphng fimshed at 14"
• During ·
tournament, under 274 and captured his
Perez kept a close eye on the second PGA Tour vtc!Ol)', the
Cubans, who advanced to the other
commg
at
the
semifinals.
InternatiOnal two years ago
Perez feels the Cubans also But It was difficult to celehad an advantage since the brate thts one
WBC took ~lace midway
' Pampling. who had a fourthro4gh Cuba s pfllleague.
shot lead at the stan of the
"!'hey were in mid-season final round and was sttll three
fonn," he said.
shots clear at the turn, let the
f ·-

www.mydallysentlnel.com

wv

Gallipolis Career College
(Caree rs Close To Home)
Call Today 1 740 446 4367
1 BOO 214 0452
YNM geWapollseareercoHege com
Accred1led Member Acc reod1 t1ng
Coonol tor lnd&amp;pendenl Colleges

:=~~~~~~~

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We Wtnl
l-888-582-3345
U I \ I I " I \ II

r,Q

HO\tEil

t..--FOR-iiSIIALEiiii..._.l
1001 Kenny Ct (Behmd Jr
High School) 3 Bedrooms

full dry Basement
all
Hardwood Floors Excellent
Condt110 n $81 500 call
(304)675 3123 13041675
0032
2 bedroom 1 bath lrv1ng
room d1nmng room base·
ment,
Midd lepo rt
$36 000 1740)992·3057
--------

ij"zr;
""';;;
""'
;;;'~
·~
' ';;;;
";;;
' ~~-., :20 acre farm w1th barn and 4
160
R-\1)10, 1V
bedroom 3 bath home

&amp; CD REPAJR

·---ioiiiii.iiiii._.l

Located In Lawrence Co
1ntormat1on
Call
lor
(740)643-0518

·
Ron s TV Sales and Repa1r
Appilanc13
Wa rehouse - - - - - - -3041675 7999
1M&gt;

\-VASfl&lt;"lJ

To Do

Cert1f1ed
Care
Home
Assrsted &amp; Non Ass1sted
Persons meals &amp; snacks
prov1ded
Excellent Care 4 year old Colon1a l on 3
(304)882·3880
acres appro11 1 900 sq tt 3
bdr 2 baths 2 car garage
Computer Trouble Shooter
master bdr 1S 281(:24 w1th a
and Repa~r El(pert Serv1ce
j8CU2ZI tub
$1:25 000
740·992·2395
- - - - - - - - (740)446 7029

Lawn Care miscellaneous ------~­
odd JObs tree est imates 78R 5BA Foreclosu re only
;C::•I::.:I1:;_74-;0:.c
l4:.;4,::,6.;68;:;6;1=-.., S 18 000 For l1stmgs call
800 391 5228 ext F254
ow- OISt ure

Carpet-Cieanmg
Brand New Method
Dry In 1 Hour
No Steam or Shampoo
Free Es timates
Clearly Clean
L~I:!3~04!E7~5.00~2!!2'--'
Top
Notch
Bw ta1ng
Contractors New Add lttons
Pole Barns Hardwood Floor
and
Ceram1 c
Tile
Installation Custom Dec~s
new
Roofs
new
Construct1on l censed and
Insured
WVtf 036667
13o4)675 3042 or (304)593

, 15

909 MossM an C~rcl e Pt
Pleasant WV 3BR 1 bath
lull basel'l"en t S88 000
(304)675 6804
AHent1on 1
Loca l company of1e r ng "NO
DOWN PAYMEN r
pro
grams tor you to buy your
hOme 1nstead ot rent1ng
100Q1a hnanctng
Less than perfect credtt
acceptett
• Paymenl could be the
same as rent
Locators
Mortgage
(740 )367·0000

W1ll care to' Elderly m th811
Beautlut 4 br 3 full baths
Home
Have Refe rences
car garage
complelely
Call
1304)695·321 7 for
remoaeted House tor Sale
Info rmation
304 882 2391
W1U do b &lt;1bys!t11ng lr'l my ............~!"'1!.....'!'!!'!"'11
home 6 OOAM to 5 OOPM
WWW ON
COm
Monday tnru Fnaay
Five
Home llatlngs
Po1nts Area 740 992 1821
L1st ~ou r home by calltng

2

Will do BabySitting In my
Mme State Certlhed Non
Smoker~ Have Refe renc es
Ca ll 740·949 1135

17401-'46-3620
V1ew

photoSJ~nfo

online

WV
ew HaYen
edroom 2 Bath 2 Ca
a rage;
Outbuildings
lose TO tow n PRICE
0 SEl..l 1 Code 6505 o
all 13041882-3368

•~OTI CFo

,., 0 . A. L.._E t PUBLISH
INt, . ._ 0 f'LOI""lmeno~ tha
ou do bus1ness w1th pea
Ia you kn ow ano NOT t
end money through lh
a11 unt1 l yo u ha\le 1nvest1
Bled the otfenn

Hames tor 6a,... - '00'TlS
fr ame ~apt ma1nta. nPd ou t
side garage large lot natu
raJ gas $50 000 Gattlpolts
Ferrv WV Masot1 County
Come see make after
1.104)675-294~

�Monday, March 20, 2006

The Daily· Senti nel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEY OOP

All re111 . .llteldvel1it lng

In thl1 new1peper Is
IUbfect to the Federel
Ftlr Housing Act of 1911
which meke1 It ill ~ ! to
edYertiH '" any
pr...111nn , llmitltlon or
dt.crlrolnation b• Md on
race, color, religion, n:~~&gt;
hlmlllal ltalul or netlonel
origin, or any Intention tb
m~~ke eny such
,
preference, llmHat\on or
dlecrlmlnatlon."·

16x80 mobile home 3 bed· Need to sell your home?
room, 2 bath . heat pump, Late on payments. divorce,
S-.8 deck. Very nlcet job transfer or a death? I
can buy your home. All cash
(740)388·9170
andquick closlng. 74&lt;r4 16·
2001 doublewide on 1 6 3130.
acres on Prospect Church
Ad. 3BR, 2BA w/lireplace.
$80,000 (740)709·1166.

Thl1 naw1peper will f?Ot
knowingly accept
advertl •ments tor real
u tate which is in
violation of tne 'iaw. Our
rndere 11 111 hereby

Informed that all
dwellings advertised in .
thl• newsp1per are
avalllible on an equal
opponunlty basea.
Crab

Creek

Road.

Picturesque Old Cape Cod
home.Oak constructiO!l .3 ·4
bedroom 1 bath, big country
kitchen, lots ·of cabinet s,
plus dining room, spacious
living room &amp; study on 3.2
acres. Beautiful ro lling tawn
wlmature shade trees &amp; new'
pond &amp; dock. nice workshop
plus 4-outbuildings &amp; . carport. $68,500. (304167 5·

~=~~===~
16

:

r

2006 18' Wide
Vinyl/Shingle
Onfy $181.00/mo.
Call (740)385-7671

H~

FOR

Twin Rive rs To'fir Is acceptIng applications fo r waiting
list 1or Hud-subalzed, 1· br,
apartment, call 575·6679
EHO

Attention Conatructlon
wOrkers. Fully turn lshed ·2
bedroom, 2 baths, very nice.
Located In quiet re~l dential
area In Pomeroy, Ohio. 740992-1517 or 7&lt;10-992-0031 .

lbNr

WEEKLY AVAILABLE
ncludas
Re f r 1ge ra tor/ Mic rowave
From $175 To $250 College
Hill Molal Call (740)245·

Bidwell
area. clean
2BD,
$375/month,
Includes
sewer/water.
Aeferencea
and depoalt required , no
pe1S. (304)576-"037.
6326

3 Bedroom house. tor rent in
Middleport. . All electric ,
Nice 1987 14K70 3 bedroom $425.00 Plus Deposit. No
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
home. Only $S.995.,Witl help inside pets. 740-416- ~ 354
ments, furnished and unrur·
or
992-3194.
w1lh delivery. Call Elaine
nished, security deposit
(740)385-0698.
3BD. 1ba, 17 acres, Green required, no pets, 740-992Used mobile homes tor Sale. schools, $650/month plus 221 8.
14' &amp; 16' wide. 2 &amp; 3 bed· utiliti es ,
ptus
deposit. - - -- - - - - rooms 6 to choose from (740)256-8152.
1 Bedroom apt StO\Ie, refriQ.
water, trash. sewer pd. $325.
1996 model &amp; up. (74 0}368·
in
Syracuse, (740)446·4734.
38B 4b r
85 t 3 {daytime) , ( 740)
- $600/month &amp; Deposit.
8017 (e11enings), (740)294- Water/Sewer incl u~ed . No
1ST MON. FREE RENT
0460 (weekends)
Pets (304)675-5332
WITH PAl[;) DEP. NEW

r.

BUSINOO

AAU BUll~

I

10 miles up At 62, towards
Buffalo,
Toyota
Plant'
'c urrently being us,ed as a 2
Bay Auto Center. with' or
without all Equipment. 1
acre lot. Business at same
location for 50 years
304 586-4666
LmS &amp;

4680
ah an n i ng@ c har t er. ne t.
Sorry No Land Contracts.
Sandhill 3br, 2ba, skylight.
painted interiors. LR.FR .OR.
garden tub. applainces,
washer, dryer. 1+ acre, walk
in closet; landscaping &amp; out·
buildings. MuSt SeH $78 .000
0 80 (304)593-0852

MORU.E HOI\IES
tU R SAl.E
$ 1,000 OBO Call 13041675 •

, SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE
"ALL ELECTRIC
*CENTRAL ·AC &amp; t-iEAT
' STOVE. REF.
' DISHWASHER
"GARAG E DISPCSAL
•wiNO BLINDS
"CEILING FAN S

, A CREAGE

34::._:2_3----~-- Re~tal property w/1.5 acres. 7195.
w/mobile nome. annual Stop rentirig Buy 4 bedroom
15 New Slng!QW!des
income $4,200. Chesapeake
In·Slock &amp; Ready
foreclosure $15,000. For list•
area. $1,7.000 lor all
For O eli~~ery !
ing s 800-391-5228 eKf.
(740)256·6522.
Call (740)385-9948
1709.

304-675-2457

in H e nd e ~:,son, WV. Preowned Apptjcanes starting
at $75 &amp; up ali uncler
warranty,
also
have
Househ old
Misc. Items
starti ng a t .99¢ &amp; up
(304 )675·7999
- - -- - - - - New Berber carpet $6.95/
yard. Remanents starting at
$25 Mollohan Carpet, 76
Vine
S t. ,
Gallipolis,
1740)446-7444 .

r

Mlsall.ANrous
M

Legal Notice:
John F. Barns, whose
last place of real·
dence is known as

Meigs county, . Ohio,

No. 16-01299, and 16-

227 Union Avenue,

also the '1ollowlng
descrlbed Real
Estate
.
Situated
In
Said
County
of Meigs,
State of Ohio, and In

01300 and 16-01301
currently .set forth In :
Volume 169, page.
187, recorded 05·2G03 commonly known

the

as :

Pomeroy, OH 45769·
1049 but whose pres·
ant place of residents
Ia unknown, Kimberly ·
Y. Barns, whose 1st
place ol residence Is
known as 227 Union
Avenue, Pomeroy, OH
45769·1 049
but
whose preaant place
of
residence · is
unknown, w i ll take
notice
that
on
November 1
2005,
Mortgage Electronic

o,

R a g I s t r a t i. o n
Systems, Inc., acting
solely as a nominee
for United Financial
Mortgage Corp., filed
Its
Complaint
In
Foreclosure in Case
No. 05-CV-118 in the
Court of Common
Pless, Meigs County,
Ohio alleging that the
Defendants, John F.
Barnes, Ki mberly Y.
Barnes, have or claim
to have an interest In
the . real
estate
described below:
The following· rea l
.estate situated in the
Couniy of t,lelgs and
State of Ohio and in
the
· Village
of
Pomeroy and being
two Iota on Uni on
Avenue, described as
follows, to wit :' One lot
being 85-1 12 feet on
Uni on , Avenue and
r unning bac k at this
width 100 feet and the
other lot being on the
eaatarly side of the
first descr ibed lot
herein and being 40
feet on Union Avenue
and running back at
that width ·1 DO teet
and
for
further
descr iption referen c e
Is hereby had to the
plata of the City of
Pomeroy
In
the
Recorder's Office of
s ai d Meigs Counly,
Ohio , being the same
property
forme rly
owned by Jacks on
Hysell .
Now
deceased, and sold
and conveyed
by
Mary Ann Hys ell , et al.
the widow and h eirs
at law of said Jac ks on
Hyaell to B .F. B iggs
by
Deed
d ate d
N o vembe r 2 9, 1899 ,
an d
recorded
In

village

of

Pomeroy, to Wit:

A piece of Parcel of

227

. Avenue,

Union
Pomeroy,

Ohio 45769

land 29-112 feet wide
The Patltloner further
and running at the
alleges that by reaeon
II
th
f
d e f au It Of the
ldth
th
I
d
0
W
e U
ep
· ·0 f
the lot, or 101 feet and
Defendants( a) In the
being off the · west payMent of a promla..

rio .

Load
TraiVLoad
Go ose
n ecksMax
/ DuTrailersmp s /
UtiliTies.
Carmichael
Equipment (740)446-2412.

FOIANDISE .·

LIVISfOCK

1

Angus Bulls, two X·br8ds. 4
heifers. Exce llent breeding.
Slate· Run Farm. See
www.slal er unla rm .co m ,
(740)266-5395.

and
ch
rome,
(740)441
·5540.

on
for
or
• ·

:__:__~·'-----

j

Electric PowE:r Companys

Haven,

WV

in

New

is seeking personnel in the

Operations

Department.

qualifications

are

an

Minimum
Associate

/Technical and/or equivalent. Regular
full- time
rotating

positions.

Overti me

shift schedule

Entry level wage rate of pay is
per ho·u r.

and

as required .

S15.48

Benefits include · medi c al,

dental, vision,

401 k

and retirement.

lnter!!sted . candidates should submit
their .resumes to :

AEP·PHILIP SPORN PLANT
Attn: Human Resources
P.O. Box 389
New Haven, WV 25265
Re s umes should be receive d no · late r
than : Ma rch

31, 2006

A n Equ a l Opponunity Employe r

MIFIDN

H.l. wrniSII
and Sons

• Heatiing
• Cooling
• Refrigeration
24hr Emerge ncY
SerVice
Ll c~nsed &amp; ln su ~Yd

·Over 30 ye~trs

.,....
All types of roof~ng: .
NeW or Repair
Seamless Gutter
Downspout

t&gt;Xp el-'icn ce

Ed Dilllo" 'ner

(740 i992-4too
Chuck Wolfe!M !lr.
{740)992~14%
59 1-4348

FREE

ESTIMATES

(740) 949·1405

~rF~~~~~~~~~~~!!l!!l!!~"~t~~:~~,.E'~"!!l!!l!!;;;

New 2002 Rockwood pop·
up camper. Airlfurnace. 2
queen w/Mated manress, 1
twin, $5_000.
Lance tqJCk ca mper 10.6 ft ..
mint condition. air. refrigera·
tor, full bath. qtJeen bed,
awning , $4 ,900. 1740)2.56·
6522 .
..,I 1{\ H I ..,

r1o

How:
IMPROVFMfNIS

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references furnished. Established t 975.
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870. Roge rs Basemen t
1996 Grand Am. V-6, 4 dr., Waterproofing.
good condition , $2200,
(740)992· 3138
1998 Lumina. 43,000 miles,
exo. cond . $3,995.
99
Dodge Dakota, 4 wheel dr,
auto, loaded., 'e1(e . cond .
92,000
miles
$7:,999
(304)862-2655
2()0 1 Grand Jeep CherokefJ
Limited, wh ite, new tires.
excellent condition. $12.500.
(740)446·4060 or (740)3677762. .
.
2004 Dodge Neon 37,000
miles, runs great, good on
·gas, $3,600 OBO (740)256·
9031 or (740)256·1233.
93 Toyota 4 Runner 4x4
$2.800 .
93' Thunderbird SC Super
Charged '$2 ,700 . (7401388·
0208 or (740)645· 7302
95 ·c amaro, black, T-top .
au10, $1 .800 . (740)256· 1618
or (740)256·6200 .
96 BuiCk LeSabre 91.000
mi. , needs body worl\ and
radiator. new ti res. batter y,
br aKes and rotors. $1.500
OBO (740)446-9632

_SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS
--·-----.-·

North
Db I.

West

P.a,ss

Opening lead: •

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

.lUSt PASS

Tt'l~

wAND

ov~~ Tt'I~M. rllNI~.
/
K~tP YOIJfl

"A,FlA&lt;.AI&gt;AiflAS"
TO YOIJflS~LF .

BARNEY.
B'FORe I START -MY

THIS USELESS

STUFF I
BOUGHT!!

THE BORN LOSER

p-GLP\t&gt;'&lt;~ :'&gt;1\11&gt; l f-llt:.e&gt;U&gt; !&gt;... "&lt;&lt;
WflDLE.
&lt;Sj;:::y----M'I'ROI&gt;.C~ +.;

P"SI-\E. \OU) li\E. TO
FOR li I•
'

JUsI' "GO

. P':

.

.t'li\ N.OT SJR~ W1-\ P-.\ 1'1&lt;\

GO \NG

.

·
l ).&lt;.. (,() ~~~ !
1' ~, eor

::&gt;IGf-\ .. :

TOU I'L

.

East
Pass
AJI pass

Q

If they bid,
y9u fight back
.

1 Door f rame
5 Comic-book
lhud
8 - Quixote
11 Referee's
guklellne
12 Software
buyer
14. Logging
tool
15 Personal
. Identity
16 Word to a
pest
17 Lil y , to
. Pierre
18 Sponger
20 Planets
22 Set
23 Comed ian
Danny 24 Recently
27 Subpoena,
for on e
29 Fish eggs
30 Deep well
34 Feelers
37 Delhi ed·
dress ··
38 Spri ng up
39 Ant's
morsel
4 t Like half of
us
43 Average
guy

740.949·2217·

"bur 'Birthday :

ROBERT
BISSELL

COISTRUCDOII
• New Ho m es
• Garages
Remodeling

740-992-lm

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Stop &amp; Compare

PEANUTS
I HEARD THE
CO't'OTES J.IOWLI NG
AGAIN LAST
N161lT, CHARLIE

I WONDER u:: IT'S AN
OMEN TI-IAT WE'RE GOIN6
TO LOSE THE FIRST GAME
OF THE SEASON ..

THAT':; RIDICULOU5!
WE'RE 601N610 WIN !
I DON'T BELIEVE
tN 0MEN5 ..

BUT TI-lE\"
SOUNDED
50 EERIE ..

~ROWN ..
STANLEY

CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
·Affordable Rates
• Refere n ces
Availab le
'• Free Estimates

"Insured''

MAYBE IT WAS
AN OMEN TI-IAT
WE'RE GOING TO
LOSE TJ.IE SECON D

&amp;AMEOI=TI-IE
SEASON .

YOUNG'S

TREE

J~~:~A~&amp;

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Add itions &amp;
Remodeling
New G&amp;ra gea
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Guner•

VInyl Siding &amp; PainUng
Patio and Porch Decka
wv 036725

SUNSHINE CLUB

V.C.

Call Gary Stanley

740· 742· 2291 .
• Leave a m e ssage

YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy Oh1o
25 YElars Local Expelll!ncu
!I· .

-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?

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N • l'omeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985-3831
.

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

i

L - -- - - - --'

I

GARFIELD

I

I THIN~ I'L.L ORPIER

-me

FISH OF

'11-IE PIW

I

IJ
~~~s
~"-'

~c.__~~~~

\ 1r:&gt;~luil I1 L~tl:Jl:...:
1

__~...:.J.:fi;j~~lJ

Now Ava ilable At

BAUM LUI\1BER
Scorpion Tractors
" Taking Til e Sting Out Of
liard I ~ IJrk !"
Mid -S it&lt; .JWh e e l Drin : Trac tor
w ith

1

2
3
4
5
6

7
8
9
10
13
19

24
·
PSAT takers 25
Ayla'a
c reator
26
Mme.'s
'Z7
daughter
~ IOd iD 28
Th1ck and
shaggy
30
Blonde
shade
31
Feline sound 32
Flirt
33
Chemical
35
compound
Monster" s
36
loch
. 39
Beginner

Corallaland

B rady Bi ll
crown
oppoaar
41 On·ramp
Long, long ·
'olgn
,
time
42 Big apreed
Squishy
.43 Yelle
Outer
lnoulte
garment
44 Have confl.
Motorist's
dance In
no.
45 Nov. event
Wh eel buy 47 Small blind
(2 wds.)
48 Wine nwda
Ames inot.
1rom rica
Jac ket part 51 Kangaroo
Tip Oil pen
pouch
'High-faohion 53 PC key

mag
Lacked
Courtenay
of
" Fr 141nda"

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebi'IIY C~ cr(PtO!;P'ams are created from quolii~IJI\5 Oy,IWTOJS PfOple, pat an:l prestnt
Each lt!tter 1
n lhe ~er stands for another.

.

Toda y's clue: W eauals V

" I J D R I D C P Z A' 0 0 X E E H V E P H

N D I L X A H . I U D H A J 0 D H V E ·x I V ,

G I ITA
XV

H , G J E XV

Z R I V

ANDX V KEXLH ."

-

VI E

X V.

H W H DB R HZ U
L ZDEXV

RJEPHD

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Put an Irishman on the spit. and you can always
get another Irishman to turn him .· - lrish~ born George Bernard Shaw

T~~::~' S©lt~~-~E!f~·
.l&lt;iltd hy C\AT I . POll.lN -

0 horronQc

WOit
UMI

-----

letters of the
l ovr K rcmbled words be·
low 10 l orm f011r simple words.

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

• Complete

Hours

21 Scoundrels 40 Weare 11M
DOWN

,

Hill's Self
Storage

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771

·~- Graph

BIG NATE

49 Miscalculate
50 H not
52 Mortarboard
wearer
54 Size above
med.
55 Diary
opener
56 Winged
goddess
57 Affinnatlve
&lt;esponse
58 Vaccine
amts. ·
59 Dirt

'

it th e opponents are going to come into
your auction, you need som e weapons
with which to fight back. One of the most
va luable is the negative double. This 15
made by the responder·alter the opener
has bid one of a suit and the next player
has overcalled in a different su it. The primary job of a negalive dou ble iS tOfind a
lit in an unbid major.
Look at tt1~ North hand in the diagram.
After .South opens one diamond and
West overcalls one sPad E! . what would
North do if a double were for pen81ties'?
Presumably ~e wou ld jump · to three notrump. That would end the auGtion. but on
a spade lead, the co ntract would have no
chance. West wo uld get th ree ' spades .
two he'arts and one club tor down two.
But if North makes a negati11e double,
showing four hearts, the right conlract
can be reached . Sou th rebids two hearts
to st1Qw a minimum opening with four card support. and North jumps to game in
that suit
Afte r West leads the sj;lade queen, how
should Soulh plan lhe play?·
Declarer should see that he has four pos·
sible losers: one spade ·(on the third
ro u ~d ) , ~two hearts and one club. He can
afford1to play one round of trumps, leading low.to h'is jack, bul when West takes
the Irick. wi th his queen and re tu~ ns
anolher spade , Sou th must win on the
board. cash the diamond ace, overtake
the diamond queen with his king . and dis·,
card the spade three .from the dummy on
the diamond jack. Now declarer play s
another trump. Soon he. wi\1 claim, having
lost only two hearts and one club.
.

OAStro-

I

2003 Jeyco Eagle il'l. 5th
wheel w/slide out. New con·
dilion .
$22 .000
OBO
(740)339-0218.

8 4
6 3 2
8 6 3 2
10 8 54

44 Draw bac k

46 Oates ·

.

MOTOR HOMES

r,o .

Philip. Sporn Plant, locate d

~~

,. 4.

2.

YARD SALE AN'
GIT RID OF ALL

C AMPERS&amp;

•
•
•
...

Soutb

SPRING CLEANIN',

BUDGET
TR ANSMIS·
SIONS, Double bolted. All
types. (740)245-5677 or .
740 645·7400

A Q

I •

I'M GONNA HAVE A

tA~~~

2

American

_.....-IH!t•• eek.cabtnru-y.oom

---1984 Sea Ray Cud~y
140hp, 19ft . Interior. in good
shape ,
runs
great.
$3,300(neg.J Call (740)992·
Breed ing age registe red 7478 or (740)416·1903
Holstein ·Bulls (304)674 :02:;:0:.:9_ __ _ _~- 1997 Yamaha Jetski with
tr'ailer· yellow &amp; white- ask·
Full Boer Billy 14 month
ing $2,700 QBO ·call 1304) . 'lliii-----~~
$175. Feb. Billy &amp; Weathers. 695·3840
Full , 314, 112, $75 each.
Steve Stapleton (740)446c
4172. (740)256-1619.

r.

Help Wanted

BoATS &amp; M~
FOR SAlE

•

Vulnerable: East-West

99 Harley Fat Boy, 9.400 ·
miles, tots of Chrome and
e-.tras. (740)446·9954.

s

AEP - PHitiP SPORN

$7 ,150.

QJ169 6

· Dealer :' South

"'
"''

20 ton wood splitter, like new 2005 CRF250R barely ridden. never race d, $3,900
$650 (304)882·2655
OBO. (740)245·5815,
Farmall
CUb
with
Cut~ivators, $1.400 Ford 3 8~ Honda Goldwing wltrail~
bottom
plows
$500 er, Scyl., 45,000 miles. ve ry
(304)576-2389
good shape. well · main·
· tai ned. cover, extra lights

East

.

20YU
DP.

Hardwood C3blneiry And FurnUure

7 6 3 2

South
• 7 52
• K J 10 9
t · K J 10 9
:., K Q

0

I

Bed lor sale Good Condition
$1,500 (304)675·1 7~2
- - -- - - -- Hot Tub 3 person, 28 jets. 2
pumps with extras $950
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· (304)882-3369
ED I AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartme nts,
JET
and/or' smaN houses FOR
AERATION MOTORS
RE.NT. Call (740)441 -11 11 , Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Reg. Ang~.:~~ Bulls and
for application &amp; information. Stock. C all Ron Evans, 1· Heifers
with '
EPO's.
800-537·9528.
(740)
446-9856
or
(740)446·
For Lea se: Attractive, unfurnlshed, one bedroom api.; - ----:--:-:c--'-- 7421.
2nd floor, corner ocond ·Lill chair $600 . Call S he!~ Corn $3.50 per 50.
p ·me.
No
and
pe1s. (740)388-9361.
12'%, All Stock $5.40 per 50.
Reference required . Security
k 1e d 811 1
·1
0 h r
deposit, $300 per . month, · NEW AND USED. -STEEL
t er lv&amp;stoc
e
a ·
water
included .
can· Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar able:. 740-698-09 11 ·
(740)446-4425 or (740)446- For . Concrete,
Angle,.
fuy &amp;
.
Channel.
Flat
Bar,
Steel
•
GRAIN
3936
Grating
For
Orains, ~
Gracious,living. 1 '-nd 2 bed· Driveway s &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
room apartments at Village Sera M8181 0
M
Round Bales Of Hay For
P
s pen onday, Sale. 740.985-3829.
Manor
and
Riverside Tuesday, Wed ne~day &amp; - -- - - - -- Ap,artments in Middleport . Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed Square Bales Alfalfa Hay,
~~ ~~s-~q
u~l C~~u::g Thursday(, · sa6lurday
&amp; lop quality (304) 674-0209
Sunday. 740 144 7300
.:
O::ppo
::::rt.:un
:::i:::lie:::•;_
· ---,Mod ern 1 bedroom apt. Prom Dresses· 1 TiHany pink
A un::)s
(7401446 0390
size- 8$150: 1 Alyce pin&lt;
• · ·
size-6 $150: 1 redlsilver L.,--~miiRii.ISiiALE::;;;;~,.J
Tara
Townhouse size-2 : 1 Afort1or1 navy slze- ...,
$500! Pol iCe Impo unds!
.Apanments, Very Spacious, 3/4 $25. (7401441 -07 12
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112 ·- - - - -- - - - Cars from $500 . For listi ngs
Bath , Adult Pool &amp; Baby To ddler bed $30; Doubl e 800·391 -5227 ext. 390 t
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo stroller- Graco $45; Pack-N·
No Pets , Lease Plus Play with , sun tent and 199~ Cadillac 0 9\lille 64.000
m11es, good shape. $4,000.
Securi1y Depos~ AeqUIJed, ch anging bed $55: Solid oa&lt;
(740)645·0626.
(740)367-7086.
crib $150. (740)578- 1076.
1994 Ford Escort LX 5 spd.
abou t 140,000 miles. Needs
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
engine. $800 obo. (740)339·
2356

sdlde. o beftdhe follow lng
tsory
t tnote, taheccordlndgl
escr 1
prem 1ses,
o 1 s enor.
con ..
to Wit:
·
tions of a Concurrent
Beginning
at
the
mortgage deed given
NorthwestCorner ofa
to secure the pay·
lot which formerly
ment of sai d note and
belonged to George
conveylf1g lhe pramStone on the street
ises described, have
known
as
Union been broken, and the
Avenue: then~e north.
same has become
78 3/4 Degrees WeSt
absolute.
79 1/2 t&amp;et or the
The Petitioner praya
Northeast Corner of a
that the Defendahl(o)
lot formerly owned by
named
above
be
Frederick Elberfeld;
required to anowor
' Thence
South
16
and oel up lhelr l~ter·
Degrees, West 85 feet
est in sold real eatoto
to Tyler 's Lot; thence
or be forever bored
in a Southeasterly
from aasertlng tho
direction along the
same, lor foreelooura
line · of Tyler's Lot, 91
ot said mortgage, the
feet to the lot formerly
marshalling of any
owned by George
liens, and the sale of
Stone; Thence along
real estate , and the ,
said Stone's lot 101
proceeds of uld sale
· .feet to the· place of
applied to the pay·
beginning, being · the
ment of Pelltloner'o
aame real estate sold
claim· In the property ·
. and· conveyed
to
order of Ito priority,
· Benjamin 'F. Biggs by
and lor such other
Burke Hysell by deed . and lurther relief ao lo
dated November 30,
just and equitable.
· 1900, and recorded In
Tho
delendant(o)
Volume 87 Pages 71
named above are
and 72 of t he Records
requlned to answer on
of Deeds of Meigs
or before the 24th
C o unty, Ohio .
The
day of April , 2006. By:
parts of lots h ereby
The law · offices of
described bei ng 118 . John D. Clunk Co.,
feet fronting o~ Union
LPA John d . Clunk
Avenue and · running
CQ., LPA By: John D.
· bac k lha depth 100 .clunk 10005376, Ted
feat , and ' bei ng tho
A . Humbert 110022307,
same promises con·
Timothy R . Billick
veyed to AHa Tracy by
10010390, Robart . R .
Hoose
10074544,
· Benja m i n F. Biggs
and Annie E Biggs,
Michael
L. Wlary
his wife, by deed
't 0068898, Charlao V.
dated August 13, 1904
Gasior
10075946,
and
recorded
In
Jamea C. Wrenlmore
Volume 92 , page 30 ot ·t 0046779 Attorneyo
the Deed Recorda of . · for
the
Plaintiff·
Meigs co unty, Ohio,
Petitioner,
5601
and thereafter c on- Hudson Dr., Suite 400
veyed by Alta Tra cy
Hudson , OH 44236 ,
and J .E. Tracy, her
(330)342· 8203
hu s band ,
lo
Ell a
(2 120, 27, (3) 6, 13, 20,
Parfitt (or Ella Parlin )
27
by
Deed ' daled
Oc tober 2, 1916 and

ilJIII.I1t /1
Dt'IOR&lt;£ .

' '

1999 Harley Davidson Ultra ·
Classic. Loaded, Excellent
condition. 29,000 total miles ..
Price $13,500. Call 740·
949-2217 ,until 7 pm.

8 7 5 4

• 75 4
• \ J 9

r

ift;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

I

Drive from $344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740-446· 2568.
Equal
, Housing Opportunity.'
20 bulb Beau Solei! Tanning

recorded lo Book 113,
at Page 609 ol said
Deed Recorda. Parcel

~N81/S '

DAALEI&amp;

or 992-6635

2000 Yamaha Road Star
loaded, 6,567 miles. exc.
Orlando/Di sney area. 7/6 cond. $6 .000 (304)675-2793
nights stay. Paid $600 sell or (304)593·5157
fo r $199 good tor 1 yr.
(S04) 362-oo 14
2001 Polaris 4 wheele r
Sportsman 90 au to, elec.
start exc. cond. $1 ,200 neg.
1998 Honda XR} O eKc.
FARM
cond. $800. (740)446·2558,
..,
ESUJPMENT
· (740)446 -1635.

L--------' i

Volume 85, Pages 334
and
335
of
the
Records· ot Deed of

MONTY

'--------"'
Commercia! Prop91rty &amp;
Building ,lor Sale. 9. 9 acres
Ambrosia Machine Inc.
ROute ·2 Box 254 Point
Pl easant . wv
25550
7:30·
(304)675-1722.
4:00pm

•
•

~~~~~~~~~=:::::;;:=====~

with cover and tank bag.
Great con dition. Asking
Fender ' and
Gibson $4,500 calt (740)446-4096
Eplphone acouStic guitars, q
.
new in box, your choice 1 ~8 Yamaha 350 Warrior
$150 cash. 740 379·2601. great condttion K&amp;N air fil le(
..,
"' . .
$2300. 740·245·5770 or
rOll ~..E
245·92 14

Warehouse

AK3

West

97 Beech Street

I

03-20·06

•

t A Q

MANlEY'S
SElfSTOUGE

t':~:~n

r4Q4 WM~~aEY'

r

j

Your Right to Koow,lltUvered Right to Your

I

j

L__

2 Bedroom Apartment avai lable in Syracuse. $200.00 -T-ho_m_p_s-o n
_ s_ A
_p_p-1ia_n_c_e_
&amp;
deposit $350.00 per month Repair-s 75 _7;J88. For sale,
rent Rent includes water. re-conditioned automatic
sewer, trash.
No pets, washers &amp; dryers, refrigera~
Sufficient income needed to tors. gas an d e 1e c1nc
·
qualify. 740·378-6111 .
ranges, air conditioners, and
Card of Thanks
Card of Thanks
2br Apartment. 600 sq. ft. wringer washerS. Will do
New1y remodeled•. reference repairs on major brands In
required, in Point Pleasant. _sho
_P_0_'_•1_Y_o_
ur_h~o_
m_e_
. __
&lt;;:ard of T hanks
2 bedroom in country. CIA, 304 675 8635
.
(
)
Used Furniture store, 130
The famil y o f Ei l ee n C l ark wi sh es 10 thank
absolutely No Pets Inside.
663 Third , Gallipolis. 2BR, Bulaville Pike. Washers, dry $350/month, $350 deposit.
rel ati ves, frien d s ami ne i gh bor s for th e
(740)245-9491
before wlappliances, pay oWn utili· ers , gas/ electr ic· ranges,
c ards. tl ower s and food , the mini sters fo r .
tieS,
$350/mon1t1
ptus mattresses,
couches,
9iC)qpm.
$350/deposit. · (740) 245: dinettes,
chests,
much
th ei r consol i ng w ord s. th e si n gers for the
more. G rave Monuments
2 bedroom mobile horrie in 95951eave message.
beau ti ful s ongs, t he pallbearers. Ew i ng
(740)446-4782, ·Gallipolis.
Racine, $350 mo. plus $350
2 bedroom apart· OH. Hrs. 11 -3 (M·S).
F u neral H ome and all who he lped w i th
deposit, years lease. no Beautiful
menl in country, beautiful 1!'11!"_ _ _;,.....;._ _,
thei r p rayer s, suppo rt and k ind ness during · pets , no calls a ft er 9pm, setti.ng, laundry room &amp;
Al\'nQUE';
(740)992·5039
the. illness and death of our " Loved O n e"
appliances included, very .
2BR 5 .minutes from town . clean. $400/mo. (614)595· M ay G od Ble ss Each Of You
$400/month, deposit &amp; refer· 7773 or 1·800-798·4686.
Buy or
sell. Ri\terlne
M ary D o nna. Ji mmy Joe
ence required. No pets.
Antiques, 11 24 East Main
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
(740) 446·9342 aner 8pm.
R o llie Dee
MENTS
AT
BUOGET on SA 1:2 4 E. Pomeroy, 740·
PRICES AT JACKSON 992-2526. Russ Moore,
ESTATES, · 52 Westwood owner.

. Publk Notk!! in Ntrwspa'pm.l

North

l0x10x10x2.0

House for Rent in Point
I )675 6224
. Pleasant
304
•
1.6 acres on OaK Hilt Rd., .leave message
"WATER , SEWAGE &amp;
Chester. Ohio. water. gas, Immaculate 2 bed room
TRASH INCLUDED
electric • on
properly,
PETS CONDITIONAL
house in country, sits Ofl 1 .
l ' n')862 301 7
$15.000, 304·483-7550
~
•
- - - -- - - - .acre lot, newly rem,odeled
~
22 acres. wonderfUl 'lliew, inside &amp; out, new ca rpet,
,
•
ridgetop property, close to freshly painted, ' laundry. &amp;
main highway pertec1 for 4-. storage rooms, $450/mo.. _ _ _.::;::.=:___ __
wheeler tra ils. (74 o) 707 • (6 1 ~) 595-7773 or · 1·800- 2 apartments lof re nt.
798~686.
·
Racine, .Ohio (short drive
2109
from power plant) DepOsit
Mason County Acreage lor Nice 3eo house, located on required, no pets. (740)992At. 160, 2 miles from Holzer 5174 or (740)441 -0110.
Sale (9 18)455-3301
Hospital, big yard . (740)367·

Brand new 2BR apts.
Bob McCqrmick Rd. Call
details (740)441 -01 94
17401441 •1184

,'/

r_____

T0,:'6~ ~~;~~:s

Local co mpany oHering "NO
DO WN PAYMENr
pro·
grams for you to buy your
home instead 'of renting.
• 100% linand ng
* Less 'than pe rtect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Mortgage
'Locators.
(740 1367 ·0000

Alder

r

ELLMVIEW

Attention !

Phillip

3026.
4x4
Block, briCk, sewer pipes,
.,:;F,:;OR
~SALE
;:,;,._,J
• SEAL COATING
~
windows, lintels, etc. Claude
• PATCHING
Downtown Office Space- 5 Winters, Rio Grande, OH 1998 Chov. TAK 3500 ex.
cab 4x4 Dually 350 auto
room suite $650/mo; 1 room Call 74Q-245·5.V1.
Parki ng Lot~ • Ball Courts • Private
Office· $225/mo., 2 room -P-ol_e_B
_a_r_n_30
-=x-50-~-1-2-f-ee-t l ran s. $1 0,000. (740)256611 1.
Roads • DriveW&lt;!ys • Stre ets • ·
suite $250/ mo. Security painted metal, _slider, free
deposit required . You pay deli 11ery. Only
$7,595 . 1999 Jeep Grand Cherokee - Free Estimates Playgrounds
utilities. All spaces 11ery nice. (937)718-1471 . www.nation· limited. Good condition, tow
Elevator_Call (740)446-3644 widepolebarns .com
mileage, $9,800. (740)245· Clll Mlal
for appointment.
5757 or (740)339·0885, No
Cr II l01 ,,:,1 'l:l11
I'EJs
answer,
leave
message
.
'
'
--------. FURSALE
Retail and office space avail·
2001
Blazer LT 4•4,
Complete Tnee Care
ab.te in downtown Point
PI easan1, $5001mo nih, ne...~, AKC Reg. Lab pups, shots &amp; 91·000mi, loaded, New
ACE TREE SERVICE
5200 Goodyears, Onstar, Leather,
to Courthouse. COntact Julie papers. Elo rn "'8106
u
.
.
20yro. exp.
a
t (740)441-0931
All Power, $7 ,900. (740)245Gallipolis, OH
9245,
(740)387-&lt;)624.
pointpleasant~com m_rent al
Full Blooded Adorable Collie
VANS
. . Rick
' Jr.
O yehoo.com or (703)528·
17
pupj)les-2 inal&amp;s. Main c6lor
::;;;;_,.J1 Insured Free Est.
06 .
is black with whi1e and tan ____
F OR SALE
'II IH II\ \lli"'l
Middleport. OH
(rare color). $50.00 Cell
740-645-4 155
1997 Dodge Caravan Van
102,000 miles, ru ns great.
Advertise in
Labrado r Retr ie11ers AKC . $2,800. 304·882-2440.
99~-3194
registered. Different c91or,
this space for
ages &amp; price. (740)256-6463
or (740)645-6527.
~
~
•
$27 per
" Middleport's only·
"02" Honda 919, 2.200 miles
Self-Storage•
Appliance

mlir~~~RENr-....,1

2002 Clayton 14x52
Pmts. Of $169/mo
Call (740)385·994$

ACROSS

Che\1)' Colorado Ext Cab
'05. AutO. 2WD. wlbedliner,
excellent conditi on. Kelly
Blue Book $14 ,600, will sell
lor $13,000. (304)523-1179

f&amp;
L

Mobile home sites for up to
1BR Cabin, all utilities ·paid.
16x80 in Country Homes.
Betwe9n Rio Grande &amp;
(740)385·401 9.
Jack~~ (740)441-011 7.

MU ST SE LL

1999 GMC w/extended cab.
loaded, 305 engine, automatic, 67,000 miles, good
clean , solid tru~. excellent
condition, $8,500 OBO.
(740)441·1014

30• X 48' X 9' Pole Barn
Pain ted Steel Sides and
Roof, 3' En try, 14'X9' Sliding
door, inaui. Roof, Gutter,
Erected Pnce 510,750.00 ..
24'X 32'X9'4" Polo Barn
Painted Steel Sides and
Roof. 3' Enlry, 2· 10'X8'
Overheads, ln·sulated Roof,
Overtlang, seamless Gutter
Erected $10,450.00. 740742-"011 or 1·800·396·

N EA Cr os.swo r d Puzzl e

BRIDGE

301'1' &amp; -IOh p K uhn l a Elig in es

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 12:1 C hester 91!S-33(11

By Bernice Bede Oaol
It Is of19n unwise to attempt too many
enterprises at one ti.me. But in the year
ahead, the more 1rons you have 1n the fire
the better it'll serve . you . One or more ·
cou ld turn out to be quite successful.
ARIES {March 21 -April 19) - Do not dis·
cuss yo ur futu re plans at this lime with a
know-11-all assoc1ate who has an annoying
habit of demeaning your ideas. This per·
son coU ld once again n'egatively affect
your hopes. Know whe re to look for
ro mance. and you'll lind it.
TAURUS (Apr il 2Q-May 20)- Yo u are li ke·
ly 1o be better at handli ng commerc1 at
Interests later in the afternoon. G1ve you r.self time to wait to .see how things go, and
you 'll be more effective.
GEMINI (May 21-Ju ne 20) - A matter 61
Importance to you can be better accomplished wi th as few peopl e as poss1ble two IS feasible, three is a crowd and four or
more is tot ally ou• o f the quest1on.
CANc'ER (June 21-July 22) - In a career
or work- related si tuation today, you must
make certa1n to protect any gains you
make. If you becom e lackadaisical or indifferen.t, wha t you achieved could slip tram
your ,grasp.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Actively pursue
your hopes and des1res today. but don't
allow your ego to conf hct with the egos of
others. Team action wil l get you a lot further in the long run Don't be a loner. ~
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Se pt: 22) - Thib ca·n be
an e~cep110nally rewarding day 11you don't
do things in such haste that you tr·ip over
yo ur own sh~ l aces . Ta'ke time to be
methodical. even with the smallest deta il.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0 ct. 23) - ; o your credit. you 'll try to be coope rat ive and yielding
- but only up to a point today. Should yo u
start to teet there IS little rec1p rocity tor
your et1orts, you wtlt have a change of attitude.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - This could
be a day of multiple ups and downs for
you. While you are busy plugg1ng up some
1eaks With one Mnd . you nlight have to
start pulling out the corks with the oth er
hand.
SAGI TTARIU S (Nov_~3·Dec 21) - There
1s a se rious ma tter that may require some
very spec1al handling today. Yo ur best bet
is to tre at tl with a light.touch, always care ·
fully regarding the gravity of the situation
C~PRI Cb RN (Dec . 22-Jan 19) - Should
something annoy1ng o~cur betw een you
and your mate today. try to tind th1ngs to
praise about him/her, 1n5tead of lookm·g
solely at tho failings_The latter' could spo11
a good day.
AQUARI US {Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - If you
don't ge t ahead early in competitive activities today. you could easily bff come undu'tY discouraged and line! as many ways a~
possible to help your opponent beat you.
PI SCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Should

e

PRIN T NUM8£R(D l ETTER$ IN
I HfSf SQUARES
UN SnAMm lElTU$ 10

GET ANSW! ~

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 3117106 .
Gusher - P inky - C ling - Sn itch- TIIJNKING
" My husb:md is al ways h urt ing ptople' s feelings," my
si ster conlided. " H~ usually say$ what he thinks withoul
THINKING .':

you find yo urult lailinQ tn career SlluatiOna
· today, utili ze tMU high marks you get lf'l
humaM retatlon ah1ps, wnere you score
we ll. They'll ba ll you out m th e end

SOUP TO NUTZ
c:cu ._lc, Si'V"''IOI

rD~E TCJ

(;,() IN ITI-l

· sr-rn~:

j

:)",1(

lr! 't ~ "' -

.»"'Q(;O'\

ltOtlllol~"el

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