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'

Pqe 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydaiJyset~tit~el.com

Wedlle!iday, Aprilt2,

2006

-

Devils survive Panthers Red Devils rally past Point Pl~t, 7-6
BY I.ARRY CRIJM

LCRUMOM'IDAILYREGISTER.COM

GALLIPOLIS - With the
game locked up 13-13, Gallia
Academy slugger Luke Haislop
smashed a two-out, two-run
homerun to push the Blue
Devils to their fifth straight win ·
15·13
over Chesapeake
1\Jesday evening in Gallipolis.
Haislop's homer, his lhird of
the season, came with two outs
and two strikes and broke up a
deadlock to give Gallia
Academy the victory. It was the
founh home run of the game, as
Shaphen Robinson, Austin
• .King and Brad Caudill each
went yard during the contest. ·
Gallia Academy posted 15
· hits in the game, led by a pair of
hits including the game win. ning homerun by Haislop, Man
Mooney who went 2-for-5 with
two RBis, Justin Saunders who
had a single and double, King
who went 2-for-3 with three
RBls and Robinson v. ho
accounted for three RBis, while
going 2-for-2 at the plate. .
Caudill hammered two hits
with a double and a homer,
Shawn Thompson had a hit,
David Rumley had · two RBis
with a single and Chris Miller
smashed a double.
· Pitcher Greg Russell posted
the victory on the mound, while
Caudill got the start followed
by Haislop who had one strikeout in two innings of relief.
The Blue Devils also had five
errors in the two run win, a seasOn high.
·
Chesapeake came up a nickel
short of the Blue and White on
hits with 10, led by Kyle.Rase
who went 2-for-3· with two

Eastern
fromPageBl
· third on a passed ball Wilfong's sac bunt plated her
to make it 3-1.
·.
The Lady Eagle's. scored
another in the third to pull to
-within a run thanks to a successful squeeze play bunt by
Snyder.
. •
The back-and-forth battle
continued in the fourth. Fulks
hit into a fielder's choice that
'plated a run, then Eastern
answered with two runs in
:the home half to knot the
score at four apiece.
Both teams also scored a
single run in the si~th inning.
For South Gallia, Justina
Taylor walked and worked
her way around the bases
until Fulks ' infield single
knocked in a score to make it
5-4 in the Rebels' advantage.
Two South Gallia errors

RBls and Kersten Harris who
had a hit and three RB Is. Harris
also grabbed the loss, pitching

Bv

POINT PLEASANT, W.
Va. - Ravenswood's baseball team did not come to
Point Pleasant in tuxedos
Tuesday, but by the time the
evening was finished, the
Red Dl\vils were putting on
the Ritz.
As in Brandon Ritz.
Ritz went 3-for-4, drove in
four RBls, scored three times
and -hit two homers including a game-winning
three-run shot in the seventh
- to help guide Ravenswood
to a 7-6 comeback victory
over the Big Blacks.
RHS was down to its final
out and trailed 6-4, but a
walk and a single bro.ught
Ritz to the plate as the goahead run.
The clean-up hitter drove a
1-0 · fastball from Point
reliever Ashton Jones over
Bryan wafteralphoto
the left field wall, securing Point Pleasant pitcher Ashton Jones,• right, delivers a pitch during the seventh inning of
the guests fourth victory of Tuesday's contest against Ravenswood.
the season.
·
PPHS, which trailed 3-0 runs. Casto went three allowed Rit.z to score for a 1- test at three.
.
' After a passed ball allowed
through three-plus innings, innings and surrendered four o lead.
scored two runs in each of the hits and two earned runs ip
Brown led off · the RHS Wroten to get to third, Jones
third with a single, then hit a sacrifice fly to left for
fourth .and . fifth frames to the no-decision.
take a 4-3 lead.
The Big Blacks managed advanced to second base on a Point's first lead of the game
The Red Devils responded to outhit the guests 10-9 passed ball. Chris Johnson at 4-3.
· overall, but stranded five run- singled in Brown and the Red · Mullins tied
by tying the contest at •lOUr tn
d ·the &amp;arne ' torh
on
base.
RHS
left
only
Devils
led
2-0
.
.
·
.
·
Ravenswoo
the top of the sixt h , but ners
· m · t 1e d s1xtd
Point's Justin Cullen hit a four runners on base.
The first batter Jones faced when Mulltns smg e an
two-out, two-run homer ·in
Dewey Wroten, Chris in relief during the fourth later scored on an error.
the bottom half of that iiming Casey and Brando n Warner frame was Ritz, and. he blast- · With two outs inc· the bot•
with
two
.
ed
a
sol~
shot
off
of
the
tom
of
the
sixth,
ast9
sm.
nt
Pleasant
led
Pol
to set-up the dramatic con"
d
th
ah d
elusion.
hits apiece, while Jones, scoreboard in right field for a gle to put e ·go- ea run
.
Cullen, Casto and John 3-0 lead.
on at first with
RHS starter Dusty Mu11 tns
C Cullen
11 • headed
·
worked seven innings in Wamsley provided the other . Point finally got on the to the plate. u en s ensumg
Picking up the winning deci- safeties for the home team. scoreboard in its half of the home run went over the left
sion, allowing 10 hits, four Cullen and Wroten each fourth when Wroten and tield fence.
earned runs and a walk. scored twice in the loss.
Jones had back-to-hack hits
Point Pleasant returns to
Mullins also had six strike- Mullins was the only other 'to lead off the inning.
action today when it travels
Wroten scored on a passed to Huntington to take on St.
outs in the complete game Red Devil with a ·multi-hit
effort.
effort, going 2-for-4 and ball to cut the lead to 3-1. Joe's. Game time· is schedJones, who was credited scoring once. Four others had then Warner delivered a dou: uled for 4;30 p.m.
with the loss, car(le in during one hit apiece.
.
ble that scored Jones and RAVENSWOOD 7, POINT P~EASANT 6
the fourth in relief of Point After a scoreless first trimmed the deficit to one. . Ravenswood 011 101 s -7 g 2
starter James Casto: .
.
inning, Ravenswood struck
Cullen reached safely on, Point Pleasant · ooo 222 o ~ s 101
Jones fanned four and in the second when Ritz led an error to lead off the fifth, g:::~. ~~~\~~ ~~~.~~~) ;~~~~~-i~':':;
walked two in his four off with a single. Mpllins sin- then scored when an error WP - Mullins. LP - Jones. HA: A ~
. OVer tO th'Ifd one a11OWed "'
Ritz, sovonth
fourth innklg,
in'nings Of WOrk, allowing gled RliZ
•~roten t0 reac h' SeC- Brandon
Brandon Al1z,
Inning, nobody
1wo on. on.
pp
five hits and · four earned · batter later, then a passed ball ond safely and tied the con- -Justin Cullen. slldh 1nn1 1111• one on.

GALLIA 15, CHESAPEAKE 13

·Chesapeake 213 033 1 - 13 10 1
G.'ACSdemy 031 072 2 - 15 .15 5
Cory Metllax, P.J. Rase (4th) , Kersten
Harris (6th) and Brian Huff. Brad Caudill, · •
Luke Haislop (5th), Greg Russell (7th) and
Haistop, David Rumely (5th) and Halslop
{7th). WP - Russell. LP - Harris. HR: GA
- Shciphen Robinson (2), seoond Inning,
nobody on. Austin King (2), third inning, ,
nobody on. Brad CaudiU (2), fifth inning,
nobody on. Luke Halstop, sevenlh Inning,

one on . ·

helped Eastern pull even in
the bottom half of the frame,
as White led off the· inning
with a walk and scored the
tying run to send the game
into the seventh all square.
Eastern starting and winning pitcher Danielle Carroll
worked out of a jam in the
iop of the seventh· -· giving
her Lady Eagles the opportunity to win it in their final atbat.
Carroll went all seven
· innings, allowing five hits
striking out six. Her counterpart, Fulks, also·went the distance and took the loss. She
fanned four batters and also
walked four.
Eastern plays host to '
Waterford today. South
Gallia is at Vinton County on
Thursday.
q -

CHJCAGO (AP) - Here's Edwin Encarnacion hit his an outing made easier by all four solo homers in the first ·
what Bronson Arroyo has tirst career . grand slam and the run support. HI: shut down four innings," Cubs manager
shown the Cincinnati Reds Austin Keams followed with the Cubs and ended their Dusty Baker said.
since joining them less than a another homer, both off Will three-game winning streak,
Rusch (0-2) also yielded
month ago: He can beat the Ohman in the sixth.
allowing six hits.
two homers last week to the
Chicago Cubs and he can hit "He's got more homers than
"Luckily for us we just got "' Reds in an 8-6 loss. He gave
home runs off Glendon Rusch. Wily Mo already," punn said more balls in the air than they up five hits, four of them
Arroyo, with no homers in of Arroyo, who was traded did," Arroyo said. "These homers, and four runs in five
!lis tirst six major league sea- from the Red Sox on March guys can do enough damage innings.
.
·
sons, hit his second off Rusch 20 for Wily Mo Pena.
.·on their own but 1 guess if I
"If the elements play \hat
in six days Tuesday, one of six "He's got a good swing.. can help out the cauS(l, I'll much into effect as today, look
long balls by the Reds as they That's impressive. He's shown k~ll doing it. lf the ~ill.d is~ !)le way Arroyo threw the
routed the Cubs 9-2 on a me two tools so far."
blowing out, we have a team bail. He threw seven ·shutout
windy day at Wrigley Field.
Arroyo who hit his first th~t can put up some runs. innings on the 'same mound
"I ~ot lucky again. Just keep homer si~e high ~hool off That gives c?n~?ence to the and sam~ fi~ld !iS ,I did,"
Rusch swd. I dtdn t make
hacking," Arroyo said after Rusch on April 5 at Great . starttng p1tchmg.
throwing seven shutout American Ball Park, connectDerrek Lee, who just signed good pitches."
innings and hitting a ball over ed for the Reds' third of the a $65 million, five-year conOhman didn't either He
the left-tield bleachers that . game leading off the third. tract ~ doubled in Chicago's couldn't get a batter out in the
landed on Waveland Avenue. Arroyo's homer last week was first run in the eighth .off sixth.
''I · really just couldn't his first hit since 2001.
reliever Chris Hammond.
Leading 4-0, the Reds
believe where the pitch was · "I don't have anything for . Mich_ael Barrett homered m loaded the bases .when Cubs
because it was almost identi- you," Rusch said, unable to the mnth.
thud
baseman
Ararms
cal to last time .... I was a little explain how he could give Jl)l
With the wi':ld blowing out Ramirez and sh~top Ronny
surprised," he added. "I knew two homers to the same prev1- at I 7 .mph, Gnffey connected Cedeno had a rmx up and let
the wind was going out, l got ously light-hitting pitcher in on a long solo shot off Rusch Griffey's wind-blown pop fall
it good like I did last time. I less than a week. "He took two in the fust, his secoll:d of th~ for a ~ingl~ in short left, Rich
figured, that it wasn't going to pitches and hit them good. season and 538th ofh1s career. Aunha smgled and Dunn
land.anywhere in the park." . Other than .that there is il.oth· Dunn hit an even.longer one in w~lked ..Encarnacion followed
Adam Dunn hit a pair of ing l can say."
the second, a drive. to ~enter. w1th h1~ grand ~lam and
solo shots and Ken Griffey Jr.
Arroyo (2-0) alsb pitched He connected agam m the Keams hit .the Reds fifth solo
and Arroyo had one each off well iri beating Chicago for fourth.
. shot of the day as the. boos
RuSch in the first four iimings. the secOnd time in two starts,
"It's the first time I've seen poured down.
·

55 5

Eastern 011 201 1 - 6 57
NBd Fulks and Laura Gwinn. Oanielle
carroll an~ Hannah Pratt. W -Carroll. L
- Fulks.'

Teaford.
Wahama is scheduled to
return to action this evening
from Page 81
when the White Falcons host
Buffalo in a 5 p.m. contest
with Southern putting its
the quick 2-0 advantage.
sparkling
9-1 record on the
The visitors made it 4-0 in ·
line
against
a tough Federal
:the third with another two run
jnning on a base on balls to Hocking nine in a 5 p.m. start
Pat Johnson, a stolen base, a at the Stewart, Ohio diasingle by Riffle and another mond. ·
safety by Crouch.
·SOUTHER14 6, WAHAMA '2
WHS btoke up the shutout Sou1hern
202 02P 0 - 6 10 1
with a ~ingle tally in the Wahama 000
101 D - 2 9 1
fourth after Kamerqn Sayre Chapman and Marnhout. Sayre and -'
singled and scored .on a t\I(O Stafford. WP- Chapman LP • Sayre
out base hit by Veazy.
Southern made it 6-1 with
its third two run uprising of
the night in the tifth.Johnson
singled and scored on Riffle's
three base blast with Cntuch
lofting a sacritice fly to center to give the Tornadoes a 6l edge.
·Wahama closed to within
four with a single run in its
half of the sixth after Cody
Herdman smacked a two out
single and scored. on Veazy's
double to make it a 6-2 affair. .
Chapman gave up two hits
in the Falcons fmal plate
appearance in the seventh,
but escaped unscathed after
inducing a fielders' choice
and a fly out to conclude the
contest and preserve the
Tornadoes. ninth win of the
. season.
Pick one up today at a senior .
White Falcon hitters on the
· day included Nathan Damm
center, library, or PAR MAR Store
with three singles in three
'
in the
water
9n!y.
tries with Veazy stroking a
single and a double to chase
home both WHS runs.
Brandon Fowler, Kameron
'_Sayre, Cody Herdman apd
Keith Pearson added a single
.apiece for Wahama.
•
Southern received a single
and a triple from Riffle, two·
COnducted by. BROOKMAR,INC.
.
singles by Crouch, ·a three
.......
417 Grand Par1&lt; Drive, Vienna, WV 25105
base hit · from Mamhout, a
double off the bat of
For more information, please visit
Chapman an~ a single each
www.c8healthprojact.org_
1-304-865-4205
from Josh Pape, Pat Johnson,
Nick Buck and Darin

Shines

re
.ca HEALTH
•
•

•

•

•

App01111111enl••• ·

TH·IS
RE!

affected

districts

CS HEALTH
l»llC)JI:CT

~ ~f\oollcl ~ ~

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

ol~hllltl~llldtolo(JCI!1111"41

1-800-551-7658 .

CBH~
PROJE8H

'llll :H.siJ .\Y , .\I'RIL r ;~ . :! onb

;;o &lt;'I- :'II I S • \ 'ol. :;.;. '\ o . lh&lt;J

• ladY Marauders blast
Belpre.

BY BETH

see Page 81

SERGENT

BSERGENT(IJlMYOAILYSENTiNEL.COM

POMEROY
Test
results on the drinking.water
in Pomeroy taken after a
,new Dupont-financed C8
water filtration system went
online in february show
traces of C8 are now below
detectable levels.
"Below detectable levels"
means if any trace of C8 is
now in the drinking water the
amounts are so small there is

Demolition
of block.set
forApril27
BY

BRIAN

no number to quantify it, this the water system before ihe
Village new filtration · system went
according
to
Administrator John Anderson · online, those levels were
who relayed the test results "barely detectable."
.
"The ne"i filters have
reported to him by Exygen
Research this week. .
taken what very small lev~l
Exygen Research of State of C8 there was and made it.
College, ·Pa. is an indepen- • even smaller, to the point
dent research ~acility located where the best equipment on
near Penn State University.
earth cap' t detect it,"
The village of Pomeroy Anderson said.
does not have the equipment · Up until recently the
to test for C8. · .
United· States Environmental
Anderson said. although Protection Agency (EPA) had
levels of C8 were detected in not required local water sys-

.

..,

'

'

INSIDE

.,

·· • Acting. speaker says
he will convene Iraqi
· parliament to pressure .
talks on n~w government.
See Page A2
• .New director named
for Holzer Assisted LMng.
See Page A3
• Best losers honored.
See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Holy Week service
calendar. See Page A5
·• 'Freedom From
Smoking' classes for
, pregnant women set.
· See Page A&amp;
• • States wamed
: about failing to Cf,&gt;mply
with election law.
See Page A&amp;
• Seminar offered on
businesS development.
flee Page_A~ !.
r·

I

~

!t

:u.

I,

I It

~r

·i : ~ . •.

WEATHER

B~anl. Reed/~ot

Block, "'

Pomeroy
mayor clarifies
proposed.
.mcreases salary
.

.

BY Bmt SERGENT

•'

BSERGENT~MYDAiLYSENTiNEL.COM

l'OMEROY - Proposed
salary increases. for village
supervi,sors have become a'
sticking point between some
council members and Mayor
·John . MusSer, the · latter of
which wished to clarify the
amounts proposed for the
chief
of police and village
Details on P.,. A8
administrator positions as
reported in Monday's edition
of The Daily Senti~tel. ·
At Monday's regular session of Pomeroy Village
Council, Councilman Shawn
2 SECrtONS ·- 16 PAGEB
Ainott passed out a spread
A3
sheet
listing expenditures and
Calendars
increases to the village's
B4-6 ' 2005-06 budgets.
Classifi.\!ds
The spf\llld sheet also de notComics
B7 · ed a $6,000 salary incrrase for
A.., , the chief of police position
Dear Abby
~
and a $10,000 salary mcrease
for the village, administrator.
EditoriaJs
A4 · These fi~ures were reported·in
Monday s story in The Daily
Places to go
BB Sentinel in regards to the proposed pay raises.
Sports
Yesterday Arnott clarified
B Section
the $10,000 figure that was
Weather
A6 listed on the spread sheet as

.INDEX

@ aoo6 Ohio Volley Pu&amp;Uahlnl Ce.

I

, ---·---

PIHH ' " Slle,Y. "'
1

MHS
.inducts
11
.
'·

BY CHARLENE

stud~nts

Please see ce filters, AS

announces

many filled with valu. able and fun prizes,
will be up for grabs at
the annual Middleport
Easter Egg Hunt, set
for 1 p.m. Sunday at
General Hartinger
Parll. The Middleport
Fire Department sponsors the annual event,
collects the priz!)s and
fills the eggs. The
Easter Bunny, pictured
here with two prize
bicycles to be given
away, will visit personally with children under
2. Those 3-12 will hunt
by age groups.
Firefighters Tyler .
French, Adam Sparks,
.Jacob Davis and Clay
Stone are pictured
placing gold dollars In
some of the eggs.
Food prizes, soft
drinkS, candy, CaSh, .
. savings bonds, and.
other treats await.

J. REED

Once the water is inside ihe
first tank, 99 _ percerit of
organic materials, including
· C8 are trapped by the filter,
then the water is pumped into
the second or "polishing
tank" where any reammg
organic material · is filtered.
After the water is filtered
through both tanks i.t is
pumped back into the . plan)
for final processing and ready
for 3,000 customers.

Byer-Hill

2,300 Easter eggs,

MIDDLEPORT The
demolition of thtee con-.
demned buildings on the
upper block of North Sec.ond
Avenue is set for April 27,
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli said
Wednesday.
Ianarelli owns the center
building in a block of three
condemned in December.
Another, damaged by · ftre in
September, is owned by R~x
and Brenda Darst. The buili.ling on the comer of North
Second Avenue and Mill
Street is owned b)l Lenny
Tennant.
lannarelli said Jeffers
Excavating has agreed to
down the buildings on April
27, the day after the 90-day ·
deadline for repair or demoli. tion issued on a fourth building oh the block, owned by
Jack Carsey. The owners of
the three buildings will sliare
the cost of deinolitiol1,
Iannarelli said, and the lots
are to be cleared and seeded
·once demolition is complete.
The buildings were due to
be demolished in March,
but property owners and
Building Inspector Randall
Mullins determined they
could not be torn down
until Carsey's building
could be condemned and
the 90-day period for its
repair had passed.

PIHH -

terns to test for C8 though
Anderson said the EPA now
requires the water be tested
for it quarterly.
.
When the C8 filtration system initially · went online
Anderson explained how the
new filters functioned.
The drinking water is tirst
. treated in the water treatment
· plant with the . normal
processes then pumped outside into not one but two of
the tanks thai house the C8
filters.
·

Easter Egg ·Hunt

BREED@MYDAiLYSENTiNEL.COM

•

" " " ·""d"ih"· nln w i " " "

.L.atest tests prove C8 filters working in Pomeroy

SPORTS

Cubs' pitching hibernates against Reds, 9-2

EASTERN &amp;, S GALL1A 5

210 101

BRYAN WALTERS

At the Movies:
'Take the Lead,' BS

B\YALTERS.MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

1.2 innings with one strikeout,
while Cory Methax got the start
with two strikeouts in three
innings and P.J. Rase who
fanned one in two innings of
wolt:.
The Panthers grabbed the
early lead in the contest, going
up 3-0 before Gallia Academy
tied things up in the bottom half
of the second inning including a
solo homer by Robinson.
Chesapeake then added three
more runs in the third, with the
Devils posting one more on a ·
solo shot by King to give the
visitors a narrow 64 lead.
After lull in the fourth with
little ·action, Gallia Academy
finally pulled ahead, trumping
Chesapeake's· three run fifth
imling with seven runs of its
own including a solo smash by
Miller, giving the home squad a
narrow 11-9 win.
The Panthers then added
three inore runs in the sixth and
one more in the seventh, while
Gallia Academy put up two in
the bottom half 9f the sixth to
knot the game up at 13.
Gallia Academy will now
travel til face Logan 5 p.m.
today with hopes of extending
the Blue Devil winning streak
to six.

S.Gallia

Immigration march and
rally draws hundreds, A6

candidacy
STAFF

REPORT

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY .- Mary T.
Byer-Hill has announced her
candidacy for the Republican
nomination for Meigs County
Auditor.. ·
Byer-Hill · is a 13-year
employee of the auditor's
office.
Her
duties include
handling
receipts, issuing .purchase
and
orders
issuing checks
for all county
offices. She
also has the
Mary
responsibility
.Byer-HIII
of
tracking
various county offices' budgets
and appropriations to insure all
departments stay within their
allocations, Byer-Hill said.
She is a graduate of Southern
High · School and the
University of . Rio Grande
where she received her business degree in office management and procedures. Her
other studies included 'accounting, business law and governmental c'omputer accounting.
. A lifelong resident of Meigs '·
County, she is a member of
Heath United Methodist
Church and is church treasurer. She is an active member of
the Racine Chapter, Order of
Eastern Star # 134 and Racine
Fire Department Auxiliary.
"With the possibility of
new construction, coal mines
and power plants coming to
Meigs County, experience in
the auditor's office will be an
asset to the county in this
time of potential growth,"
Byer-Hill said.
·
"Making the right decisions
.will be critical for Meigs
County if the county is to car.italize on this development.'
Byer-Hill is the daughter of
Robert and Donna Byer of
Syracuse,
formerly
of
Middleport. She is married to ,
Racine Mayor Soctt Hill. They
have a daughter, Molly Ann.

into ·National Honor.Society

HOEFUCH

HOEFliCHIII&gt;MYDAiLYSENTiNEL.COM

POMEROY - In an impressive ceremony at a
Meigs High School assembly Wednesday morning,
II Mei~s High School juniors were · inducted into
the NatiOnal Honor Society.
.
Included in the group were Dan Bookman, Valerie
Carpenter, Cory Dill, Dane Eichinger, Sarah Ingle,
Kayla Grover, Keilah Jacks, Sarah Lantz, David
Pooler, Dru Reed, 'and Krysta Stitt.
The tapping of the inductees took place following .
the ceremony which opened with a processional of .
the current meml)ers including Miranda Beha, president; Josh Kennedy, vice president; Taryn Lentes.
secretary; and Chris VanReeth, treasurer, and Travis
Butcher, Samantha Cole, Car\ta Gardnef, Brittney
Jacks, Nathan Jeffers, Jake Kennedy, Meghan
Leslie, Kayla McCarthy, Autumn McLaughlin,
Whitney Thoene, Jake Venoy arid ]osh Venoy.
The offic~rs presented the principles of the
.
Cha--h/~0
National Honot Society - scholarship, service. Inducted into the National Honor Society Wednesday ,at Meigs High
character and leadership -· lighting candles for ·
School were left to right. seated, Dan Bookman, Valerie Carpenter, Cory
each one. As each of the students .was tapped for
Dill, Dane Eichinger, Sarah Ingle, and standing, Kayla Grover, Keilah
Jacks,
Sarah Lantz, David Pooler, Dru Reed, and Krys.ta Stitt.
Plun - MH~. AS

'

�.. .

'

'

NATION • .WORLD

.The Daily S!mtinel

BY VANESSA ARRINGTON
'-SSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Key
Shiite politicians cast doubt
Wednesday on a· plan to convene parliament next week,
saying they still have not
decided whether to replace
theil: candidate for prime minister to break a deadlock over
· forming a new government.
Four more American soldiers were killed in Iraq, the
U.S. military said as the U.S.
death toll for the month surpaSsed the total for all of
March. More than 40 Iraqis
also died, including at least 22
in a car bo!Dbing near a Shiite ·
mosque nonheast of Baghdad.
Parliament Speaker Adnan
Pachachi, a Sunni Arab, said
ai a nationally televised press
conference that he would call
parliament into session
Monday to push forward
efforts to form a new govern·ment, which have been
snarled for weeks over who
will serve as prime minister.
"It is my duty to the Iraqi
people in order to preserve the
credibility of the democra\ic
process," Pachachi said.
Iraqi v01ers chose the 275member assembly Dec. 15,
but the legislature met briefly
· only once last month because
the country's ethnically and
religiously based parties have
not agreed on a new government of national unity.
Thlks stalled after Sunnis
.and Kurds refused to accept

AP Photo

Iraqi police guard a road as U.S. soldiers in an Abrams tank drive past Wednesdey in Tal Afar
420 kilometers (260 miles) northwest of Baghdad, · l,raq. Roadside bbmbs killed three
American soldiers in Iraq Wednesday, and the U.S. military repor ted the death of a fourth soldier from a "non-battle injury" at an army base north of Baghdad.
the Shiite nominee, Prirne discussing what to do for
Pachachi said Shiite politi·Minister Ibrahim a:I-Jaafari, to weeks but cannot' decide.
cians -told him ~hey hoped to
head the new government,
lil!l'!'l"'!.......ll!llll!'!l'l~llll!llll!'l'~
which must be approved by
parliament. .
The Shiite alliance of seven
parties has th~ biggest bloc of
members in the assembly, but
needs support from other factions to install a government.
Shiite officials have been

PageA2 .

Thursday, April13,

have the break the deadlock in
time for Monday's session.
'There are indications that
cause us to be optimistic that
· an agreement will be reached
on all the stiCking points
regarding forming a national
unity government," the former foreign minister said.
But key Shiite leaders said a
session was unlikely until
they decjded who gets top
posts, including prime minister.
"Things don't look good
right now," said Ridha Jawad
Taqi, a leading figure in the
biggest Shiite party. "We cannot go to parliament if there's
no agreement" on key posts,
including the presidency.
Shiites get to nominate the
prime minister because they
are the largest bloc, but the
·presidency, parliament speaker and some Cabinet posts are ·
to go to different, religious and
ethnic groups.
.
"If we haven't reached · an
agreement, what will we do in
this session?" asked Haidar
al-Obaidi, a senior official in
al-Jaafari's Dawa party.
Another Shiite lawmaker,
Khaled al-Attiyah, said that

2006

OHIO

(french City

VALLEY

kUque &amp;: Cra.ft .Mall

•
•
•
•

DEAR ABBY: "Andrew"
and I have been dating for
· about five years. We met just
out of high school, when we
were both young and still finding ourselves. But I have
noticed that over the years, as
we have ~wn and established
our identities, we have become
complete opposites.
!first, our religious beliefs:
Andrew and I were both raised
Catholic. He hasn't practiced
in years. When we met, I was
going through a stage where I
· wasn 't really practicing my
religion either. But as I continued through college, I realized
l needed religion back in my
life and began going to church.
I am now active in the church,
and my religious and spiritual
beliefs 3f!! important to me.
Andrew, on the other hand, has
no desire to go back and even
says h,e has become an atheist.
Then there's our families:
Andrew's family is very freespirited. Not only .are they
opinionated and outspoken,
they curse and . talk about
everything and anything. In
contrast, my family is very
reserved, well-mannered and
gentle. We even pray before
meals. Needless to say, our
farnilies do not mesh well and
have had little contact
·I like chocolate; Andrew
likes vanilla. I like rnerry'gorounds; he likes roller-coasters.
l like winter; he likes summer.
I'm a worrier; he's carefree.
I'm early; he's late. You name
it - we're opJ\(Jsites. It maY.
have made for an exciting rela-

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Dear

Abby

,
tionsh.ip when we were
younger, but now that we're
talking marriage and children, I
don't see how this will work.
Our core values are too different. 1 really do care for
Andrew, and we have fun
together, but is there any hope
for the future? - POLAR
OPPOSITES,
CHADDS
· FORD, PA
DEAR POLAR OPPOSITES: Not with the negative
mind-set you have displayed in
your letter. Not once did you
indicate that you are willing to
fight for a future 'with this man.
Unless you can figure out what
you still have in common, I see
little hope for a future with
Andrew. The last thing either
of you needs is to march down
the aisle to the strains of "Let's
Callllie Whole Thing Off."
· DEAR ABBY: I am at my
wit's end with my husband,
and I don't know what to do. It
seems like lately he is finding
fault with my kids over stupid
stuff - especially my soonto-be 13-yei!C-old son.
Mind you, my husband is not
abusive - but lately, every
time my son forgets to do

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something, he threatens that he
is going to kill him, yells that
he's no.longer my son's father
until he straightens up, and on ·
one occa,ion, he. slammed my
son into a walL
I'm scared to death. I don't
want my kids hurt (I have a 9year-dd 'son and a 6-year-old
daughter as well), and I love
my husband dearly, but I can't
take ·this much longer. He has
never acted this way before. So
what could be the problem?TRYING TO UNDERSTAND
IN MICHIGAN
DEAR
TRYING
TO
UNDERSTAND: Your husband may be depressed, using
drugs, stressed out at work or
mentally ilL I don't blame you
for being seriously concerned, ·
because whatever the cause, he
· is losing control·. You say· he·
"isn't abusive," and yet the
· incident' you have described
concerning your 13 ~year-old
are examples of verbal and
physical abuse.
The best advice I can offer
·you is to get your husband to a
doctor for a thorough examination - and a referral to a psychotherapist for evaluation.
Because his change in behavior
is recent, he could be in trou· ble.
·
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write
Dear
Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.

COOLVILLE
tom
Scyoc was named weekly
best weight-loss winner at
Tuesday's meeting of TOPS
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly)
Chapter · #OH
2013,
Coolville. · There were 24
members present.
March perfect attendance
winner
was
LaChresia
Bogardus. Certificates were
presented to Myrtle · Alkire,
Patty Gabriel and Charlotte
Norton for reaching half-way
to their weight-loss goals.
Joan Cole was recognized for
her upcoming birthday.
Area Recognition Days will

be held June 16-'17 at Kings
Island Resort near CinCinnati.
During that weekend Sandee
Wright will be participating
in the KOPS (Keep Off
Pounds Sensibly) graduation
ceremony and Connie Rankin
will be celebrating her third
year in the Century Club,
whose members have lost at
least 100 pounds.
.The group meets every
Tuesday at Torch Baptist
Church, Weigh-in is from
5:15 to 6: 15 p.m. with a meeting at 6:30. For information,
call Pat Snedden at 662-2633
or attend a free meeting.

GALLIPOLIS - 'Diane
Camden, RN,CHPN has been
named director of nursing at
the Holzer Assisted Living
facility in Gallipolis. .
Camden has 15 years of
nursing experience in longtetm care and nine years
experience in hospice. Prior
to her arrival at Holzer
Assisted Living, she was the
director of nursing at
Heartland
Hospice
in
Portsmouth for four years.
Camden graduated from
the
Practical
Nursing
Program at Buckeye Hills
Career Center in 1987, ·and
received her RN diploma in
1996 at Hocking College in
Nelsonville.
Her job duties at Holzer
Assisted Living will consist
of monthly assessments on
residents, determining care
levels for residents, and
supervising and scheduling

PageA3
Thursday, Aprilt3,

"I truly love workinr, for
Holzer Assisted Living, ' she
commented. "I ·have a passkin for working in long term
care and the geriatric population. The staff at Holzer
Assisted Living is phenomenal and I .am excited to be a
part of the Holzer team."
Camden is from Rio
Grande, and currently resides
in Cadmus. She has two
daughters, Kate Haney, the
head pharmacy tech at Holzer ·
Family
Pharinacy
in
Gallipolis,
and
Leslie
McGuire, a homemaker. She
also·has two granddaughters.
· Holzer Assisted Living
focuses on providing a homelike environment with nursing care as needed. The facil ity offers services anp support that assist their q:sidents
tn living as ipde~ndent as
possible, s~~ocli as bathing,
dressing ~ medication
adminis!ration.

~ ProwHo be apart~~
: · ·. youtUfe... .
Sllbicrl'&amp;
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.
'

2006

Community Calendar
Publi~

meetings

Thursday, April13
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Village Council, rescheduled
regular session, 7 p.m., village
halL

Saturday, April IS
CHESHIRE
Ninth
District meeting of the
Disabled American Veterans,
at 28051 S.R. 7, Cheshire,
halL lunch at noon, meeting at
I p.m.

Choir of Hobe Sound, Fla. at
the Danville Holiness Church, ·
•
S.R. 325, Danville, 7 p.m.
Choir is directed by Mark
· Going.
·
RUTLAND - Revival ser- ·
vices at the Emmanuel ·
Apostolic Tabernacle, Loop ·
' Road, Rurland , Thursday ·
through Saturday. Speakers, ·
7:30 p.m. Thursday and :
Friday, and 2 p.m. Saturday,
Robert
E.
Davis, .· .
Wheelersburg; II a.m. Friday,
Bud Tingle, Madisonville, ·
. Ky.; and II .a.m. Saturday, : f.
Charles Birchfield, Point ·
Pleasant, W. Va.

'
Monday, April17
Tuesday, April 18
ATHENS
Southeast
RACINE - , Syracuse
Ohio
•
Woodland
·
Interest
Racine Regional Sewer
Distri9t Board of Trustees, . group, 5:30 p.m. at ihe Tim
regular meeting, 6 p.m., Worga residence near Athens,
For directirons call 593-8555.
Racine Municipal Building.
Woinga is a retired ODNR
wildlife biologist Everyone
Wednesday, April 19
CHESHIRE - Board of wel&lt;;ome . .
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Directors .of Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency, · chapte · 186, order of Eastern
Star, at the hall in Chseter.
noon, Cheshire office.
. Friday, April 14
Mick initiation to be held.
POMEROY -' Stations of
Refreshments.
the,Cross, noon;·Sacred Heart ·
Church, with participation by"
members of the Meigs County :
Ministerial Association.
·
Wednesday, April 12
Saturday, April IS
RUTLAND -Paul E.
POMEROY
Meigs
POMEROY - Easter egg Taylor Memorial Good Friday :
County Board of Health meet- hunt, 12 noon, Laurel Cliff Hymn Sing, 7 p.m., Rutland :
ing, 5 p.m., conference room, Free Methodist Church. Rain FreewiU Baptist Church, with .
Meigs
County
Health or shine.
The Gracemen, Forgiven Four,
Department
PORTLAND ·- Easter egg Rief Herman, White Oak
TUPPERS PLAINS hunt at I p.m. at the Portand Quartet: Refreshments follow. :
Eastern Athletic Boosters, 6 Community Center for chilp.m. Election of 2006-07 offi- dren I to 12 years of age.
Sunday, Apri116
cers ..Parents urged to attend.
HARRISONVILLE
MIDDLEPORT - Brenda
Easter egg hunt, 2 p.m. , Phalin and Amanda Musser :
Thursday, April 13
Harrisonville· Fire Station, will sing at 6:30 p.m. at.
CHESTER - Shade River sponsored by Scipio Fire
Lodge 453, 7:30 p.m. at the Department Open to 12 and Middleport Church of the .
Nazarene. Refreshments fol- .
hall. Refreshments.
under.
low.
,
, POMEROY' - Alpha Iota
Masters will meet at II :30
Sunday, Aprill6
a.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
MIDDLEPORT - Annual
Church. Carolyn Grueser and Easter egg hunt sponsored by
Jean Powell will be hostesses. Middleport Volunteer Fire
· Monday, April 17
TUPPERS PLAINS - · Department, I p.m., General
SYRACUSE , - · Meigs
VFW f.ost 9052, 7 p.m. at the Hartinger Park. 2,300 Easter County TB clinic staff at
hall. Nomination of officers eggs to be included. Prizes. Syracuse Volunteer Fire
will take place: Meal ·at 6:30 Open to the public.
Department, . 5-6 p.m., and
p.m.
returning on Wednesday to
read tests.
Saturday, April IS
SALEM CENTER - Star
. Thursday, April 13
Grange #77~ fun night and
NELSONVILLE - Gospel
potluck supper, 6:30 p.m.
Sunday, Aprill6
April 16 is the final day to pur- sing, 7 p.m. at the Nelsonville
POMEROY Pauline ":
chase Grange Banquet tickets High School featuring Kevin
for April 21. Tickets are avail- Spencer and Friends an&lt;j the Mayer will celebrate her 85th .
able from local grange Greens.
birthday on April 16. Card&gt; :
Masters or Opal Dyer at 742- · DANVILLE
Hobe may be sent to,. her at 7 Oak
2805.
Sound Bible College's Chapel Street, PomerQy, Ohio 45769. .

Clubs and
organizations

Youth events

Other events

Church events ·

Birthdays

•

38t/i.5tnniversafy
oftlie ·!Fair Jfousing Jlct 2006

staff.

Flundadon

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740.992-5252
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IPfll

Diane Camden

·.
Home' Osypn
Portable Oxygen
Nebulizers
Electric Beds
Wheelcbairs

.

Best losers honored

Mothu's Day Gift Items
· Available

·BANK. ·

~

.BY THE BEND .

The Daily Sentinel

BY MARTIN CRUTSINGER
- AP ECONOMICS WRITER

. . . ..

Opposites attracted as teens
are losing their connection

US. trade &amp;foit improves in
February as gap with China declines
Gault predicted that trade
would ' subtracl about three. fourths rif a percentage point
WASHINGTON
froin overall growth in the
America's trade
deficit January-March period. But he
showed a bigger-than-expect- said he was looking for the ·
ed improvement in February · economy to be growing at a ,
as the politically sensitive solid pace of about 4.5 percent
imbalance
with
China in the frrst quarter.
·
dropped to the low~t level in
On Wall Street, the Dow
nearfy a year.
Jones industrial average rose
The Commerce Department 40.34 points to close at
reported Wednesday that the flJ29.97 on Wednesday.
deficit fell to $65.7 billion, a '
Critics of President Bush's
4.2 . percent decline from trade policies ·contend that.the
January's record of $68.7 bil- administration has failed to
lion.
aggressively pursue unfair
Even With the improvement, trade practices in other counthe February trade gap was the tries that contributed to the
third highest ever. The deficit loss of nearly 3 million manufor the first two months of this facturing jobs since Bush took
year is running 13.5 percent • office in January 2001.
above the pace it! early 2005;
Seeking to counteract tllese
last year the U.S. deficit hit an ·attacks,. the administration has
all-llllle high of $723.6 billion. taken a get-tough approach
Many analysts said the with China, the country with
deficit probably would resume the biggest trade gap with the
rising 111 the coming months, United States.
perhaps, headed to another
U.S. trade negotiators struck
annual record. .
a number . agreements on
. 'The trade deficit may have Thesday with China designed
narrowed in February but it is to boost U.S. exports. Bush
hardly clear that this is the has said he will raise one of
start of a long downward the thorniest trade issues;
trend," said Joel Naroff, chief China's undervalued currency,
at
Naroff when he meets next week at
economist
Economic Advisors, a private the White House with Chinese
consulting finn.
President Hu Jintao,
'The trend still points to a . The overall improvement in .
larger deficit · in coming February's trade deficit
months, especially given the retlected a 2.3 percent drop in
-recent rises in oil prices," said imports which fell tq $178.7
Nigel Gault, ·.an economist billion, the second highest
with Global Insight, an eco- level on record but below the
nomic forecasting firm.
all-time high in January.

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•
•

'
•

OPINION

-The Daily Sentinel
BY

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

. (740) m-2156 • FAX (740J 992-2157
www.mydlllyHntlnel.com

Ohio Valley P'-'blishing Co.
'

Jlm Freeland
Publisher

..

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
. .I

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people.peaceably to assemble, and to petition
· the Government for a·redress ofgrievances.
·-

The First Amendment tQ the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HIST,O RY
. Today is Thurs~ay, April 13, the 103rd day of 2006. There
are 262 days left m the year:
Today's Highlight in History:
·
·
On April 13, 1970, Apollo 13, four-fifths of the wayto the
moon, was crippled when a tank containing liquid oxygen ·
burst (The astronauts managed to return safely.)
. On this date:
In 1598, King Henry IV of France endorsed the Edict of
Nantes, which granted rights to the Protestant Huguenots.
(The edict was abrogated in 1685 by King Louis XIV, who
declared France entirely Catholic again.)
In 1742, Handel's "Messiah" was first performed publicly,
in Dublin, Ireland.
In 1870, the Metropolitan Museum of Art was founded in
New York.
In 1906, I 00 years ago, playwright, novelist and poet
·
Samuel Beckett was born in Dublin, Ireland.
In 1943,· President Roosevelt. dedicated the Jefferson
Memorial.
. In 1958, Van Cliburn became the first American to win the
Tchaikovsky International Piano Contest in Moscow.
In 1986, Pope John Paul II visited a Rome synagogue in the
first recorded papal visit of its kind'.
In 1992, the Great Chicago Flood took place as the city's
century-old tunnel system and adjacent basements filled with
.
.
water from the Chicago River.
. Ten years ago: President Clinton used his . weekly radio
address to call on Congress to pass an anti-terrorism bill that
had languished for a year despite a promise of quick action
·
after the Oklahoma City bombing.
One year ago: Eric Rudolph pleaded guilty to carrying out
the deadly bombing at the I 996 Atlanta Olympics and three
other attacks · in back-to-hack court appearances in
, Birmingham; Ala., and Atlanta. Contract worker Jeffrey Ake
was shown at gunpoint on a videotape aired by Al-Jazeera
television, two days after he was kidnapped near Baghdad.
Gymnast Paul Hamm received the 75th Sullivan Award as the
,
nation's top amateur athlete.
Today's Birthdays: Movie director Stanley Donen is 82.
Former Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell, R-Colo., is 73. Actor
Lyle Waggoner is 71. Actor Edward Fox is .69. Playwright
Lanford Wilson is 69. Actor Paul Sorvino is 67. Movie and
TV composer Bill Conti is 64. Rock musician Jack Casady is
62. Actor Tony Dow is 61. Singer A! Green is 60. Actor Ron
Perlman is 56. Ac.tor William Sadler is 56. Singer Peabo
Bryson is 55. Rock musician Max Weinberg is 55. Bluegrass
singer-musiCian Sain Bush is 54. Rock musician Jimmy
Destri (Biondie) is 52. Singer-musician Louis Johnson (The
Brothers Johnson) is 51. Comedian Gary Kroeger is 49.
. Actress Saundra Santiago is 49. Rock musician Joey Mazzola
(Sponge) is 45. Chess grandmasfer Garry Kasparov is 43 . .
Actress Page Hannah is 42. Actress-comedian Caroline Rhea
is 42 . Rock musician Lisa Umbarger is 41. Reggae singer
Capleton is 39. Actor Rick Schroder is 36. Singer Lou Bega is
31. Actress Courtney Peldon is 25. Pop singer Nellie McKay
is 24.
. · Thought for Today: "Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try
again. Fail again. Fail better." - Samuel Beckett, Irish-born
, playwright and author ( 1906-1 989).

LETTE-RS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject to editing, m{Jst be signed,
. and i~clude address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published.- Letters should be in good taste,
addressing iss'Ues, ·not persoiUllities. Letters of than/is to orga·, n,izations
individuals will not be accepted for publication.

and

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services ·

(UsPs 213-96o)

Correction Polley

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,,

Thursday, April13, 20~6

As political
deadlock
persists,
Rice
draw§
a
·line.
in
the
sand
.

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April13, 2oo6

PageA4

ly military training and allies want to see this get in his place.
"When the two (Rice and
resource backup in weapon- done because you can't conWASHINGTON - The ry, logistics and tlnanci.al tinue tO leave a political vac- Straw) met with Jaafari in
Bush administration is step~ aid.
uum."
front of reporters, the tenClearly, Jaafari has lost sion was noticeable," the
ping up the pressure on Iraqi
President Blish followed
political leaders to reach an up more recently by telling whatever support he .)lad. · It Washington Post's Glenn .
agreement on a new govern- the Iraqis he wanted to see is reported that Vice Kessler reported. "Rice· sat
ment after four l)IOnths of . some progress on forming a President
Adel
Abdul with a frozen smile as she
stalemate and bickering.
new government. It has been Mahdi's Supreme Council and Jaafari made awkward
With U.S. polls showing four months since the Iast for the Islamic Revolution, conversation about the
·eroding public support for elections there, and its lead- which won more than 30 ~tormy weather outside."
, the war in Iraq, and voters ers have been unable to seats in the parliament in
After a meeting described
preparing to take out their unite behind Prime Minister December; has withdrawn as "frosty" by Kessler, at
• frustrations and fears in the Ibrahim al-Jaafari.
its support for the prime which Rice bluntly criticized
But the strongest signal of minister.
Jaafari's inability to pull the .
fall elections, President
Bush is getting tougher with U.S. displeasure and impaBoth Rice and Straw made warring factions together,
the Iraqis. The word has tience came this week when it clear they had every right Rice said the Iraqis had "to
gone out to Baghdad to get Secretary
of
,State to press the Iraqis for some get a prime minister who
its act together, form a unity Condolee:i:za Rice
and movement toward a new can form ·a government"
government and put faction- British Foreign Secretary government. The U.S. and
The dark clouds hanging
al ·differences in the rear- Jack Straw flew to Baghdad Great Britain have paid for over that meeting were in
view mirror for now. Sunday to urge political that right with the blood of sharp contrast to the sunny
America's patience is finite, leaders t!J stop their feuding · their soldiers, Straw told atmosphere at a later meet:
and the time is coming when . and get on with the job of them . Rice spoke frankly of · ing with. Vice Presiden.t
Iraq must either pull togeth- · forming a government that the "human treasure" the · Mahdi, who came close to
two .nations, among others, . upsetting Jaafari as prime
er or- well, the U.S. isn't will unite the country.
saying what comes next, not
In an exhaustive day long had sacrificed over the past minister in February. ."It's
yet, but the administration's meeting that continued into three years in behalf of the wonderful to see. you," Rice
warnings are clear and chill- the night, Rice and Straw Iraqis.
gushed several times.
·
used their bluntest language
Now it was up to them to
Jaafari 's replacement may
ing.
First came .admonitions yet to convince · tlie Iraqi show that the sacrifice had · happen sooner rather than
it.
"The later, and, if it does, Rice
from Defense Secretary politicians that they .had to been worth
Donald Rumsfeld that, in the ·come together or risk losing American people want to see and Straw will get much of
.. end, the Iraqis were going to the support of the Iraqi peo- Iraq succeed, but they want the credit for the change 1n
win this · fight ·for their pie at a time when the very to see Iraq progress toward direction. If their mission to
national survival and free- survival of their country success," she said.
Baghdad could be summed
dom · or they would lose it. hung in the balance.
. Until itow, the U.S. has up in a few words, it would
·Yes, the U.S. would be there
Rice said later, according not taken sides in the jock- be "no mqre Mr. Nice Guy."
when needed, but Iraqis to press dispatches, that ' she ey!ng .and trade-offs for
The time for diplomatic
would have to fight the bulk was "very direct" with the leadership in the .new gov- schmoozing
was
over.
of the battles on their own. · Iraqi leaders, particularly ernment, but that posture · America's best and bravest
Rumsfeld didn't mince Jaafari, telling them "the underwent a noticeable have given their lives so the
words: He said he sees a day Iraqi' people · are losing change Sunday. The body Iraqis would have the f(eewhen U.S. military support patil!nce." In the sharpest language (if not the diplo- dom to choose their own
' levels will be gradually face-to-face lecturing yet by malic signs) was · clear: government. They had better
reduced to the point where a top U.S. official, she told Jaafari had to go, and a act soon, for our patience is
the U.S. nile would be large- them "your international stronger leader had to be put coming to an end.
DoNALD LAMBRO

.~~~.
C?fAH't:P.
..

· IT

?&lt;""""&gt;.

DEPENDS
ON WHAT
YOUR

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

. www.my4allysen1inel.com
,'

Holy.~ek Sfrvice ca:lendar.

Local Briefs
Easter bunny pictures

POMEROY- The public is invited to
attend the following Holy Wel'k ser,
vices:

'
Easter Vigil Mass, 9 p.m. Saturday.
Easter Sunday Mass, 9:30a.m.
Rev. Walter Heinz is pastor.

Fairground storage

Middleport First
Baptist

Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist

POMEROY- Residents who have stored items, like boats
and campers, on .the .Rock Springs Fairgrounds over the _winter are to remove them from 9 to II a.m on April 29.

Sunrise service, 6:30p.m. followed by
breakfast. Easter mbmmg worship service, 10: 15 a.m.

Sunrise service, 6:30a.m., with breakfast followirtg. Sunday school, 9:30
a.m., morning worship, . I 0:30. No
evening 'service.

MIDDLEPORT - Easter bunny pictures will be taken in
the Peoples Bank lobby SattJrda~ from 9 a.m to 12 noon.
Children will be photographed wtth the Easter bunny. Every
child will receive an Easter goody bag.

C8 filters
from PageA1
The filters inside the tanks
are designed to remove all
traces of C8 as well as other
organic· materials such as tri.. halometha!les, a byproduct of
chlorinated water that containsnatural organics. ·
., '., · ,. As promised, those filters
· seem to be doing just that.
"I hope this eases everyone's mind," Anderson said
of the test results. "The filters
. are working as designed and
the amount of C8, while even
'

' small going in, is even smaller going out. They ,are work- ·
ing perfectly"
As part of a $107.6 million
lawsuit settlement .DuPont
agreed to pay for C8 treatmc;nt/filtration systems and
the associated operating costs
of the systems at six drinking
water utilities.
Besides
Pomeroy, those six utilities
include Tuppers Plains, Little
f{ockin_g, Lubeck, W.Va.,
Belpre, Mason County PSD.
. Despite DuPont paying an
undisclosed · amount for the
water filtra,ion system at
~omeroy, the system belongs
to the vill'age.

Racine United ·
Methodist

Salary
from PageA1
. solely the village administra-

Mt. Union Baptist
Good Friday C~ndlelight service, 6:30
p.m.; Easter Sunnse, ·6:30 a.m.; Sunday
scho.ol, '9:45 a.m.; Worship, 6:30 p.m.
Church located near Carpenter.

Ash Street Church ·

Community Good Friday service, 7
p.m. Easter Sunrise service; 6:30 a.m.,
with breakfast following . Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m., morning worship,
Sunrise Easter service, 6:30a.m., with " 10:30 a.m. No evening service.
breakfast to follow. Regular worship
service at 9:30 a.m., and Sunday school
following.
·
Larry Brown is pastor.

Hemlock Grove
Christian

Maundy Thursday service, 7p.m. in
the fellowship halL Good Fdday service
7 p.m. with Pastor Kerry Wood and John
Gilmore of the Southern Charge officiating. Easter sunrise service at 8 a.m. iri
the picnic pavillion, weather rermitting.
Breakfast and Sunday Schoo to follow. ,
Easter service: with celebration of Holy
··
Communion, 11 a.m.

Gallipolis First
Church of Nazarene
"Day 3: A triumphant Easter
Celebration", 10:40 a.m. Sunday.

.

ing at least $40,000 in annual
salaries.
·
"John (Anderson) is on
duty seven days a week, 365
!)ays a year, ,he takes care of
three plants, the water treatment, water filtration and
water sewage ·p!ants and

followed by breakfast, and worship service, 10:30 a.m.
'
· ·

Zion Church of Christ

Athens Church
of Christ

Good Friday service, 7 ,p.m., with
Associate Minister. Chris· MacNeaL
Children's luncheon and· Easter egg
hunt. noon Saturday. Easter ·sunrise serSilent Communion, 7 to 8 p.m., vice, 6:30 a.m., breakfast following at
'7:15 a.m. Morning worship, 8:10 and
Thursday at Church of Ghrist
10:35 a.m., with adult choir and drama
·ministry presenting musical, "You
· Thought of Us." Church is· located at
785 W. Union St.

Pomeroy .Church of
Chr,st/Enterprise UMC
Reedsville
United Method.ist ·

Middleport Wesleyan ..
Bible Holiness

Good Friday service with Long
Play "The Resurrection" 7 a.m. during , Bottom United Methodist Church, 7
sunrise :;ervice. Cantata "One Sacrifice" p.m. at Reedsville.
at 10:30 a.m. service. Breakfast served
between services.

•

Good Friday service, 7:30 p.m. Rev.
Rick Bourne is pastor.

Long Bottom United
, Methodist

tor's salary increase. He said
he should have noted o'n the ·
nowhere can we find anyone .
sp read sheet that the figure to
Easter Sunrise service, 6:30 a.m.
do the work he does for
included not only the village · ·
. Maundy Thursday . service, 7 ·p.m.
administrator's
proposed $37 •000 a year."
Celebration of Holy Community. Good
salary increase, but also the
Musser. was equally as Friday services, 7 p.m. A Tenebrae serHoly Thursday worship service, 7:30
·
·11 be ed
.
complimentary of Pomeroy
p.m.
at Minersville United Methodist
d
f
· propose
tve percent pay Police Chief Mark E. Proffitt. vtce wt
us .
Church.
· mcreases for the water
"There is not a finer officer
· Good Friday worship service,."7:30
department employees.
Maundy Thursday service, 6 p.m. din- p.m, at Asbury United Methoilist
. The actual salary increase in the area than Mark
ner. followed by program. Bob Crow. Church in Syracuse.
recommended for the village Proffitt," Musser added. "He
.
Maundy
Thursday,
6:30
p.m.
Seder
pastor.
administrator's position ·is handles his department very
· .Easter Sunday sunrise worship serwell and is a tremendous · meal; Good Friday, 7 p.m.; Easter
vice, 6:30 a.m., Forest Run United
$5,6 17.
h
. "'
The raise for the chief of · asset to t e commumty. ne Sunday, 7 a.m. Sunrise service, S. a.m.
Methodist Church, with l)reakfast fol•
police position was$5,500, not want to 'keep him here. breakfast, 9 a.m. worship service.
. lowing. Sunday worship at Forest Run,
$6,000 as previously reported · Paying him $27,000 a year is
· Good Friday service, 3 p.m. at Faith 9 a.m., Minersville, 10 a.m .• and Asbury,
from figures on the spread not smart on our part."
II a.m.
·
.
Baptist Church in Mason, W.Va.
sheet, and was described as
However, not all members ·
Rev. Robert Robinson is pastor.
"rough" not exact numbers. · of council agreed with the
Mass of the Lord's Supper, with Holy ·
The chief of police position amount of the salary increas- Communion and Procession, 7:30 p.m.
currently pays $27,540 while es at the supervisory level Thursday, with visit~ to the Blessed
.Sunrise service 7 a.m.; worship 'serthe village administrator posi- though all · agreed on a tlve Sacrament until 11 p.m.
. vice . 11 a.m. with cantata at Victory
tion currently pays $37,383.
percent increase for all .
Stations of the Cross Community Baptist Church in Middleport.
Although the suggested · hourly village workers.
Good Friday service at noon, with memI ,
amounts for the supervisors'
Councilwoman .
Mary bers of the Meigs County Ministerial
Cantata, "Amazing Grace," at Sunrise
pay raises was a contentious McAngus said she voted Association farticipating. Confessions
service
6 a.m. followed by breakfast,
one at this week's meeting of against the amounts proposed Jollow from to 2 p.m.
•
Table communion service, 8 . p.m. Sunday school at 9:30a.m., and worship
council, Musser maintains. for the salaried supervisors
Liturgy of the .Passion and· Death of
the village has an obligation because she ·felt it was Our Lord and Holy Communion, 7:30 Thursday; Tenabrae .service, · 8 p.m. service atJ0:30 a.m. with Arland King,
to make sure the supervisors iriequiiaple to the hourly p.m. Friday.
Friday; sunrise service, 7 a.m. Sunday pastor.
are paid 'fairly .to keep them workers.
within the community.
"The way the situation is
"They (the supervisors) are right now, we can't afford it,"
extremely
important," McAngus sajd, referring to her
Musser said. ''T.hey know concerns over an ·upcoming
about the community. better bureau of worker's compeQSa. than anybocjy else because of lion payment, and if the prothe work they put into it."
.· jected revenue ' from an
agr~ement Wednesday to tum works be used to pay off state . entity to lease ari· exisiing toll
Bv MIKE SMITH
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Musser believes that if the increase in court costs will
the 157-mile Indiana Toll debt. The Daniels ·administra- road to private, investors,
villa¥e
lost
Village ·~pan out" at the end of the year.
Road over. to a foreign con- tion said the arrangement is turning over the 7.8-mile
Admmistrator John Anderson
The pay increases must have
Chicago Skyway to the same
INDIANAPOLIS - In the sortium that will operate it for not a sale but a lease.
it would take two employees two more readings and final biggest highway privatization a profit for the next 75 years .
The state hopes to close the Spanish-Australian consor:
to replace · him with each of approval by majority vote to deal in U.S. history, ~tate offi- .. Under the lease, Spanish- deal and transfer the highway tium for 99 years in exchange
those new employees expect- 'become effective on July J. .
consortium to the consortium by June 30. for $1.83 billion.
ctals Wednesday stgned an Australian ·
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:____~-'--------;-------- Cintra-Macquarie woul~ pay
The Indiana Toll Road
The . lease authorization
the state $3.8 billion up front passed in the Republican-co~- begins at the Skyway's eastand be responsible for operat- trolled General Assembly by em end and is, Interstate 80/90
ing and maintaining the high- the bare minimum of votes. All for most of its length. It cuts
way. It would get to keep the but two Democrats opposed it, across the northern part of the
saying the state should not tum state and is a major route
toll revenue it collects.
over
a major asset tO a private, between Chicago and cities
Republican Gov. Mitch
Daniels said the upfront pay- foreign entity, and noting the · such aS Detroit and Cleveland.
ment would help pay for consortium would reap billions . The tolls vary by size of vehi·
other transportation projects of dollars through toll revenue cle and distance traveled. A
and rate increases.
typical car traveling the entire
and create jobs.
now pays $4.65.
A
truckers'
organization
has
length
Opponents argued it violates
The lease allows the conthe state constitution and have already contributed $10,000
sortium ttl raise rates beginsued. They said the constitu- toward the legal challenge.
Last year, Chicago became ning in 2010, but it limits the
tion requires that the proceeds
from the sale of any public the first U.S. government size of the incn::ases.

St. Paul Lutheran

Minersville/Asbury/ .
Forest Run UMC

Harrisonville
Presbyterian

St. John Lutheran

Sacred Heart

·MEANING OF
'lEAK'

Victory Baptist

IS.

.Enterprise
UMC/Pomeroy
Church of Christ ·

Trinity

·au·
Nuking Iran: Wild speculation or election~year scare?
.

Here we go again.
Before the frrst Gulf War, depending
on
whether
With a congressional dec.the president's father post- you're talking about populalion looming in November,
poned asking Congress to tion or land area - and has
President Bush's . support
support military action far more difficult terrain as ·
continues to t!rode. Fully 47
against Iraq until afJer the well as a more unified,
percent . in
a
recent
Gene
1990 elections to avoid nationalistic population, and
Washington Post/ABC poll
politicizing the debate . . American enthusiasm for
Lyons
George W. Bush did exactly fighting an unnecessary
"Strongly disapprove'' of his
leadership. Even the White
the opposite · in 2002, lead- "pre-emptive" war there
House'swarmest supporters
ing a shrill propaganda would likely diminish fast. ·
concede that Democrats
campaign. that falsely perIt's for all these reasons
stand. an excellent chance of the name they ' re using. suadeo
millions
. of and more . that · Hersh's
regaining the majority in the They say, " Will Iran get a Americans of Iraq's com- sources appear to have
House and/or Senate. With strategic weapon .and threat- plicity in Sept. 11 and begun a pre-emptive leaking
the majority comes subpoe- en· another world war?"'
Saddam Hu~sdn's nonexis- "campaign of their own
.
.
Hersh's sources say Bush tent ;rrsenal • of ,nuclear against · the neoconservana power.
So it must be time for a , "believes that be. must do weapons, and forcing a vote tives. Threatening Iran with
'what no Democrat or on .a de facto war' resolution nuclear weapons isn't a sign
nuclellf war scare: ·
Sure enough, the April 17 Republi~an, if elected in the weeks before the election.
of strength, but a confession
issue of The New Yorker future, · would have the
So why . wouldn 't . the of weakness. Actually using
contains a jaw-dropping courage to do,' and that sav- White House conjure an them would constitute an
article by f11med investiga- ing Iran is going to be his Iranian bogeyman in 2006? unspeakable crime against
tive reporter Seymour Hersh legacy." .
' Taking over Iran has long humanity.
.
claiming· that the White
In a CNN interview, been an obsession of the · As the single greatest
House is conducting "inteq- Hersh sai~ the Joint 'Chiefs neoconservative visionaries strategic beneficiary of the
sified plaiming for a ,possi- of Staff have fought to whose "Project for a New U.S. occupation of Iraq, the
ble major ·air attack," remove the nuclear option American Century" provid- Persians have indulged in
including tactical ouclear from the administration's ed the ideological justifica- foolhardy bluster of their
strikes against Iran. Hersh's contingency plans, only to tion for invading Iraq. Two~ own. The recently elected
sources, mostly anonymous be ~houted down by White thirds of Americans polled Ahmadinejad,
however,
high-ranking Pentagon offi- House staffers. He added last February believe a holds office at the ·suffercers and U.S. and European that senior officers are pre- nuclear-armed Iran would alice of the Ayatollahs, who
diplomats, claim the presi- pared to resign . over the attack Israel; 82 percent wield the real power.
dent ~as conceived a "mes- issue . . "(O)ne thing about think the Iranians would Although . dogmatic and
sianic vision" that he alone our military," Hersh said, give nuclear Weapons to ter- authoritarian, they also tend ·
can save the world from · " they,'re very loyal to the rorists.
to qe cautious. Persians
Iranian aggression.
president, but . they're getBut how many could actu- want nuclear weapons
"There is a growing con- ting to the edge. They're ally locate Iran on a world because Israel and Pakistan
viction among members of getting to the edge with not map? To most, Iran and Iraq already have them; . also
the United States military, only . Rums(eld, but with sound like Tweedledee and because they've noticed that
and in . the internation'al Clieney and the president."
Tweedledum. But call it nuclear-armed
countdes
community/' Hersh writes,
Presumably caught .off "Persia," as Iran used to be don ' t get ,invaded. Above
"that Presie\ent Bush 's ulti- guard by what appear to be known, and those percent- all, they want assurances
mate ·goal in the nuclear tactical leaks by opponents ' ages would likely drop that won't happen.
confrontation with Iran is of this insane ~cheme, Bush sharply. Persians arell't
For now, we must all pray
regime change. Iran's presi- characterized them as "wild . Arabs; as Farsi-speaking that crackpots ift both coundent, .
Mahmoud speculation."
Shiites, they l;!ave little tries can be resuhlnl)d.
Ahmadinejad, has chalMaybe so. On the other more sympathy for AI
(Arkansas
D~mocrat lenged the reality of the hand, underestimating this Qaeda than Americans do.
Gazette · columnist Gene •
Holocaust and said that administration's ruthlessRemind voters that the Lyons is a national . maga- ·
Israel must be 'wiped off ness and dishonesty is two nations fought a bloody zi ne award winner and cothe map.' Bush and others always a mistake. Every war in the 1980s, prompted author of "The Hunting of
' in the White House view time the Bush White House · by Iraqi aggres~ion, add that the President" (St. Martin's
is - somewhere Press, 2000). You can ehim as· a poten~ial Adolf has found its~If in a bind . Persia
· Hitler, a former senior intel- · since Sept, II , it has evoked · between three and five mail Lyons at genelig~mce official iaid. 'That's .fear of Islamic terrodsm.
times larger than, Iraq -· lyons2 @sbcglobal.net.)

.,

••

---

Indiana signs 75-year lease fuming toll
.road over to private operator; lawsuit filed

Block
from PageA1
'•

Clla~ono

llooftlch/phOto

· Principles of the· National Honor Society, scholarship, service, chara&lt;;ter and leadership, were
· explained 'by Meigs NHS officers, left to ·right, Miranda Beha, president, Josh Kennedy, vice
· president; Taryn Lentz, se·cretary, af)d Chris VanReet[l, treasurer.
·
.

.

Monday · . night, Village
Council said "no" · to a
request from a Pomeroy man
who expressed interest in
renovation of the Carsey
building. He asked council to
grant a two-week "reprieve"
in hopes the ·building could
be salvaged, but 'the · village
has said the building will not
be stable once those next to it
come down.
The demolition will · be a
double loss. The buildings
are among Middleport's

involved in several projects American Red Cross, and
during the school year. this month will be participatFrom Sept. .I 9-2&amp; the group ing with athletes from
raised and donated $698.71 Carleton School in the
from PageA1
~o the Red Cross to be des- Special Olympics Track and
.
membership and received tgnated to the Katr~na Rehef Field ·events to be held at
in L~~isiana using a Alexander High SchooL •
their collar, they moved to Effort
&gt;
" penny war: .
.
·
the ceremony table to sign.
I n tales
November
they read
the membership' book and fairy
to elementary
1.':~~Q!~k~M~~~~~~~:.l~
/JIL
receive a yellow rose.
school children and prepared
E NOW'
The pledge to the new a corresponding acuvity. At
ORD R .
•
ii1ductees was administered · Carleton School they read 'to _
Payment Plans Available
· by Judy Crooks~ whu also the students and then partici- ll\'l:ailor present this ad .for 10% discount
extended a welcome to them pated in yarious activities
and register for a free monument
from the staff: Parents Of the with the workshop clients. in
,
"Servlnr Meigs Co,{or oyer3 vetJrs!
induc.tees were introduced recognition of Children's
and invited to a reception fol- Book Week.
Also
in
qJeautfFu{ ~einorles g(onuments
November, a food drive was
'1'
lowing the ceremony.
4 S06S E~anig,te,yR,~f:
held
for
the
local
food
pantry.
2411
Jackson
Ave.
Toll Free
n
Rd.
To carry out tlie principles
00
On March 27, the Society
Point Pleasant, WV "77•299-1600
''
of service and leadership,
675·2015
v
hosted
.
a
blood
drive
ror
the
Society members have been

~ - - , _ ,....,_~"" -·-

MHS.

,,

the sent for development. . None
most historic
.Riverboat Inn building, in of the property owners have .
particular. The d,e molition outlined plans for their propalso results in the loss of erties, but their demolition
storefront retail space which will accomplish one thin g:
could have been rehabilitated Opening the Ohio River view
had revitalization efforts to downtown Mie\dleport.
" It is a Joss, but the comtaken hold before' they have.
munity
and the property own'· ,But
the . Middleport
Developmen! Group has ers need to see this as an
well ,"
encourageq their demolition, opportunity, · as
.
Development
Group
because of tl1e opportunities
·
· the vacant lots might repre- President Paul Reed said.

OXYGEN

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Home Oxygen
Portable Oxygen
Nebulizers
Electric

Beds

Wheelchairs
• Diapers
•Chux
• Medicare/Medicaid
We do the billing locally
'

740·446-0007
Toll Free 877-669·0007
70 Pi,ne Street • Gallipolis
owried. We cart

�The Daily·Sentinel

PageA6

LoCAL,• STATE' ·

Thursday,April13,2006

'Freedom From Smoking' cl~ses
for pregnant women set

lmmfgration demonstrators walk during an imm!gration rally in Toledo, We~nesday. ·

A,P Photo

Immigration march and rally draws hundreds
· gathered Monday at dozens of schoo.l understand · why he
rallies held across the nation cares so much about immigra'from New York to San tion rights and that it was
TOLEDO - . Carrying a Francisco.
inspiring to "see more people
Nicaraguan flag, Crosby . Many are angry that a bill who are. proud of their race." ,
Pavon skipped class on passed by the U.S . House
Many of the students came
Wednesday to march with would crack down on illegal from Toledo's hig~ schools· as
students from other high immigrants and strengthen · long as they had permission
schools in suppon of immi- Jhe U.S. border with Mexico. fr.om their parents. They also
grant rights.
A broader overhaul of immi- had to be members of a
Other students allowed to gration . law stalled in the Latino dub or in a social
miss classes showed up by the Senate last week and lawmak- studies class, said schools
school bus load, joining farm ers are now on a two-week spokeswoman Jane Bruss.
workers and ot hers for a break.
·
Some students came from
march by about 300 people.
The legislation passed. late Bo~ling Green and Fremont
The annual event organized last year would make illegal to march about five blocks
by a Toledo-based union that immigrants subject to felony through a neighborhood that
represents migrant workers prosecution. But this week is home to many Hispanic
took on a new meaning this Republican leaders said they families.
year because of the increasing now intend to pass immigraThey carried American
pressure for federal lawmak- tion legislation that does not flags and signs with messages
ers to ·o verhaul America's subject illegal aliens to prose- such as: "Immigration built
immigration policie·s.
cuiion as felons.
this Nation" and "We are
"I have family trying to get
An estimated II million opponunists nat criminals.'~
here," said Pavon, who · rrien, women 3J1d children are
For a while now, the Farm
attends high school in the in the United States illegally. Labor Organizing Committee
Zach Vargas, a high school has reached out to high school
Toledo suburb of Sylvania.
"They're not criminals. They student in suburban Toledo, · students to get involved in its
just want to work."
said his grandmother came to march, which also tries to
The march was far smaller the U.S. from Mexico. He · draw attention to the mistreatthan tens of thousands' who said only a few students at his ment of field workers.
BY JOHN SEEWER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITE:R

Local stocks
~

ACI- 77.59
AEP -33.06
Akzo- 52.38
Ashland Inc. - 70.81
BU -13.40
Bob Evans - 29.45
BorgWarner- 59.52
CENX- 47.01
Champion - 6.~5
Charming Shops - 14.19
City Holding - 35.46
Col- 55.35
DG -17.78 ·
DuPont - 43.11 ·

Federal Mogul - .28
USB-30.33
Gannett - 57.76
General Electric - 34.46
GKNLY- 5.80
Harley Davidson - 49.83
JPM -41.90
Kroger - 19.60
Ltd. - 24.40 '
NSC-54.61
· Oak Hill Financial - 29.20
OVB-25.20
BBT-39.25
Peoples - 29.36 '

Pepsico- 57.88
· Premier - 16
.. Rockwell - 71.08 ·
Rocky Boots - 24.19
Sears - 139.30
· Wai-Mart - 45.90
Wendy's - 60.88
,
,
Worthington - 19.89
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions,
provided by Smith Financial
Advisors of Hilliard Lyons In
Gallipolis.
·

Local weather
Thursday ... Partly cloudy
in the rnoming .. .Then clearing. Highs in the uppe.r 70s.
West winds 5 to JO mph.
Thursday mght...Partly
cloudy with a slight chance
of showers and thunderstorms in the evening ... Then
mostly Cloudy with a chance
of showers and thunderstorms after midnight. Lows
in , the mid 50s. South"{est
wmd~ 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of ram 50 percent.
· Friday ... Showers
likely
with a chance of thunder"
storms. Breezy with highs in
the upper 70s . Southwest

· winds, 15 to 20 mph with
gusts up to 30 mph. Chance ·
of rain 70 percent. '
Friday
night...Sh~wers
and thunderstorms hkely.
Lows in the . upper 50s.
Southwest winds I 0 to 15
mph with gusts up to 25
mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Saturday through Sunday
night...Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. H1gh s m the 1md
70s. Lows in the mid 50s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Monday ... Mostly cloudy
with a 50 p~rcent chance of

showers. Highs in the upper
60s.
Monday
night
and
Thesday ... Partly
cloudy.
Lo · th ·d 40s H'ghs
. ws m. e ml
· 1
10 tpe mld 60s.
Thesday
nlght ... Partly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the mid 40s. Chance
of rain 30 percent.
Wednesday ... Partly cloudy
.
w1th a chance of s.howe~s and
thunderstorms. H1ghs tn the
lower 60s. Chance of ram 40
percent.

GALLIPOLIS - Pregnant
and want to quit smoking?
The Tobacco Prevention
Center of Holzer Medical
Center is here to help with the
Freedom From Smoking cessation clinic specifically
geared toward pregnant
women that will soon · begin
in Pomeroy and Gallipolis.
Freedom From Smoking,
developed by the American
Lung Associ~tion, is an eight
session stop-smoking clinic .
sponsored by the HMC
Tobacco Prevention Center. ·
A professionally trained
instruc!or will create a supportive environment to help
break the smoking addiction.
Each participant who joins
the clinic will develop an
. individual plan for quitting.
In the clinic, long-term freedom from smoking will be
the emphasis.
The clinic also includes the
latest improved skllls for
studying the habit, building
motivation, coping with
urges, making a plan, recovery and support, stress management, weight control,
exercise, assertive communication and relapse prevention.
According
to
Lora
Rawson, pre-natal coordinator at the HMC Tobacco
Prevention Center, smoking
during pregnancy places the
baby and mother at risk for
serious health problems,

·

Lora Rawson
including some that are lifethreatening . Cigarette smoke
contains at least 60 known
cancer-causing agents and
thousands of other chemicals,
including nicotine and carbon
monoxide that passes on to an
unborn child through the placenta.
Nicotine
and
carbon
monoxide are particularly
dangerous as they prevent an
unborn baby from receiving
enough blood and oxygen.
Pregnant smokers also have a
greater chance of miscarriage,
stillbirth, preterm labor and
low birth weight. · "
Secondhand smoke also
causes ~ problem for newborns and young children.
Health problems such as asthma, bronchitis, pneumonia,
ear infections and Sudden

States warned about fail.ing
to comply with election law
BY JULIE CARR SMYTH

Ohio has signed the agreement
but doesn' t have the system up
,
and running. Ohio's Bureau of
COLUMBUS - Ohio offi- Motor Vehicles is already
cials are scrambling to matching voter records against
respond to a federal warning a different Social Security
that the state hasn't complied database,
Blackwell
with part of the Help America spokesman James Lee said.
Vote Act, a ineasure packed
Lassiter said agreements
with election mandates states between the SSA and state
must have in place this year.
mptor vehicle· agencies are
Secretary of State Kenneth being signed at a steady pace.
Blackwell said he is confident Ohio was supposed to have its
his office can satisfy the con- in place Jim. I.
.
cerns ·that
the Justice · "ln :October, we were at
Department expressed in its about l5 state~. now we're up
March 31 letter. His office to 38 states. So, clearly, we've
must respond to the Justice made a lot of progress 'since
then," Lassiter said.
Department by Friday.
"We don't have any indicaOther states got the same
lion that we sho1,1ld be worried warning letter.
Al.abama Secretary of State
about their throwing us into
noncompliance," ·
said · Nancy Worley says she has a
Blackwell, a Republican conference call scheduled with
.
Justice Departmen! off;icials
gubernatorial hopeful.
John · Tanner, chief of the · later this month to explain that
Justice Department's voting the state is still working to link
rights division, indicated in the driver's license records to fedletter that Ohio and 29 other era! records. Maine expects to
states had yet to sign the have computerized voter regrequired agreements with the istration system operational
Social Security Administration later this year, Deputy
to match the last four digits of Secretary of State Doug
voters' Social Security num- Dunbar said. Missouri expects
bers against federal records. to have its driver's license sys~
Under HAVA, . the numbers tern fully compatible with
will be used to verify the iden- SSA records by the end of the
,
month, said Stacie Temple, a
tity of voters. .
. SSA . spokesman · Mark spokeswoman for the secreLassiter in Washington said tary of state's office.
M' STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

Infant Death ' Syndrome
(SIDS) are some of the risks
associated with inhaling secondhand smoke.
Freedom From Smoking
for pregnant women will offer
a more systematic approach
to cessation 'efforts, allowing
participants to work on the ·
process of quitting not only
inUividually, but as a group.
Rawson will serve the role as
il1structor for the group.
During the clinic, Rawson
will teach step-by-step methods for changing behavior
and quitting smoking. The
group approach uses positive
thinking, one-on-one help,
rewards, and group Sl!pport to
help participants stop smoking.T
The
first
session,
"Thinking At&gt;out Quitting,"
will take place in Meigs
County on Monday, April 17,
at .11 a.m. at the Pomeroy
Public Library, and in Gallia
County on Tuesday, April 18
at 6 p.m . at the HMC Tobacco
Prevention Center, located at
28'81 State Route 't60 in
Gallipolis.
.
·
Additional sessions will be
held over the remaining seven
weeks. Pregnant women and
a sponsor are welcome to
attend and there is no charge
to attend the sessions. For
more information or to regisfer for the clinic, call (740)
446-5940.

..

HOLIDAY COWRlNG CONTEST
FIRST·PRIZE •....•• s1s.00
SECOND PRIZE ..)10.00
THIRD PRIZE ••••.••• ss.OO

_

..
•'

·'

CONTEST 'RULE'S

..
'•

..
1. Just color one or more of the drawings on the'se pages, fill in the blanks and take
your entry to the sponsoring store before 5 p.m. April 19.
2. Entries will be 'judged in two different categories; ages 4-8 and 9-12.
3. Children may enter as many pictures as they like but can win only one prize. ·
4. Crayons only may be used to color pict!Jres.

Seminar offered
on business
development
JACKSON
The
Jackson County Chamber of
Commerce and Jackson
County
Economic
in
Development office,
cooperation with The · OSU
South Centers Business ,
Development Network is
offering two "Building Your
Own Business" seminars.
The three-hour seminars
will discuss the basics of
business ownership includ·
ing management, marketing,
and money. Topics covered
will include: Is Business
Ownership for You? Where
do Start-ups get financing?
Is my idea feasible? How
do I develop my business
pl:m?
The seminars ~II be held
9 a. rri. to noon on April 20
at the OSU Extension
Office, The .osU Extension
Office, 17 Standpipe Road,
Jackson, and 9 a.m. to noon,
April 24: at the OSU South
Centers · Endeavor Center,
Shyville
Road,
1862
Piketon.
Information about the
seminars is available by
calling Kelly O'Bryant at
(740) 289-3727 .ext Ill or 1-800-860-7232 (Ohio only).
There is a $20 registration
fee. Registration· is required
as space is limited.

Name
Address
Phone

Age

Name
Address
Phone

Age

Name
Address
Phone

THE DAILY SENTINEL

VALLEY LUMBER

ANDERSON'S FURNITURE

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Name'--~----------------- Age'----~~
Address; ____________________________

Phone•--------------------------------

Age

POMEROY, OHIO

Name'------~------------- A~e, ________
Addres~;----------~------~~,~·~
· _________

Name:______________________ Age'-.~--~Address; ______________________________

PhoneL
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.DOWNING CHILDS MULLEN SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY Phone•---------------------------------BROGAN WARNER INSURANCE
MUSSER INSURANCE
. POMEROY, OHIO
POMEROY, OHIO • 992-6687
POMERO~

OHIO

April 15th
Lazy T Royal Chaparral Resort
Easter Egg Hunt· · ·
1:00 PM to 4:00 PM
Age Groups 2 to 4-5 to 8-9 to 12
Cost $2.00 Per Child
*Ticket drawing held for 1st place prizes
in each boy &amp; girl age group
*Bring Bag or Basket To Collect Eggs
Name~
· --

'

.

Address_____________________________

,Karaoke With.Party Time

Phone'--------------~~----------~

6:00 PM to 10:00 PM
Covet Charge Per Person $3.00

Bank
MEMBER FDIC
POMEROY • TUPPERS PLAINS
v , v We're Your Bank for Hji., . GALLIPOLIS, 01:110
~Farmers

~ --------:-;-;::~

..

44700 Township Road 697 • Racine,. OH 45771' ·
'

__________________ Ag,________
Name____~--------------- Age________
Address------------------~------~

Phone'--------~------------~------

SHOE PLACE/LOCKER 219
\

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Name,______________________ Age, ________
Address;~------------------------~---­

Phone----------~--------------------

· THE DAILY SENTINEL
POMEROY, OHIO

•

740-992-6488

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Page A8 • The Daily
Sentinel

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www. m~ailysentinel .com

Bl

The·Daily Sentinel

Inside

Thursday, April13, 2006

Belpre flies past Marauders, B2
Tornadoes fall to Fed Hock, B2
Buffalo rallies to beat Wahama, B3
'

Pistons roar past Cavs, B4

Thursday, AprilJ3, 2oo6

.

Prep Softball- Tri-Va/leg Conference Ohio

'

.

LocAL SCHEDULE
GAU..IPOUS - A scfN!.dule of upcanW\g colleQe
and high sChool Y811ky sporting IIWfltl: involving
team8 from Gallia, Malgl and Muon OOUntlell. .
Today'a QlfDII

BaMball
Eastern at South Gallla,-5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Herbert Hoover, 7 p.m.
Alvt1r Valley at VInton County, 4:30p.m. .
Miller at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Trimble at Southern, 5 p.m.

Softball

Gallla Academy at Point Pleasant, 5 p.m.
Wellston at Eastern, 5 p.m,
.
Wahama at Best ot Best Tour, TBA
South Gallia ar 1Ji11ton County, 5 p.m.
Trimble at Southam, 5 p.m.
Miller at Meigs, 5 p.m.
·
Track and Flatd
SQ\Jih Gallla at Coal Grove Invite, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Vinton County Invite, 2:30p.m.
Southern at Logan, TSA
·
Tennla
~
Jackson at Gallia Academy (DH), 11 a.m.
Wahama at Winfield, 4:30p.m.
Ravenswood at PoJpt Pleasant, 4 p.m. ,

Easter Egg

Frtday'• umu
Baleball
RavensWood at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Logan at Point Pleasant, TBA

Softball
Marlena at Gallla Academy, 5 p.m.
Ha.nnan at Southern {OH), 4 p.m. ·
Track and Field
·
Gallipolis Rota~elliys , 4:30 p.m.

Col

•B•Mball

Rio Grande at Tl In {DH), 1 ·p.m.

Eastern at Parkersburg South, 1 p.m.
Wahama at Mat&amp;+"an-Man, noon
South Gallla at Southeastem!Waverty, 11

a.m.

Warren at Meigs (DH) ._ noon

· Softball

..

'Point Pleasant at Best of Tournament,

TBA

Eastern at warren, noon
Wahama at Best of Best Tour, TBA

~-~-11

Rio Grande at Tiffin (DH), 1 p.m.
Collogo Soltboll

Urbana at.Rib Grande, 1 p.m.

... r

!J{f.w Cfiurcfi Campus
· Coming Soon

.'

at Sienna

'

fJJib{e Scnoo(

Communitylnvokment .

.,

POMEROY ·_ The 13th
Annual Meigs Football Golf
Tournament will be held on
Saturday, May 13th at the
Pine Hills Golf Course, with
a shotgun start beginning at 9
a.m..
The tournament will be a
four man, bring your won
team scramble. Team handicaps mus be at least 40 with
only one member under lO.
Cost of the tournament
includes golf, cart, lunch and
beverages.
.. For more information,
including cost to enter. the
tvenl, contact Meigs head
football coach Mike Chancey
ot work 74()..992-2158 or at
home 740-992-0064.

Baseball
TVCOhio
Alexander
5-0
Belpre

3-1

Wellston
3-1
Meigs
2-3
Nels-York
0-4
Vinton Co
0-4
TVCHocking
Fed Hock
4-0

'Bus Ministry

Miller

2-1
2-2
2-2
2-2
0-5

Eastern
Southern
Trimble

Waterford

Softball
TVCOhio
Vinton Co
Afexander
. Wellston ·
Meigs
Belpre

3-0
3-1
3-1
2-3
1•2

Nels-York
0-4
TVC Hocking

Trimble

;··

. . on tlie river

,

POtn£roy, O:H • 740-992-3919

4-0
4- i
2-2
1-3
1-3
1' 4

Waterford
· Miller
Fed Hock
Southern

Easlem·

Weavimg Stitc!US

Pfea.se patronize tfiese

· Pomuoq, O:;{

fine 6usinesses

740-99Z-1702

CoNTACI'US
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: OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-I o.m.J
1-740-446-2342 ext..33
.'

_!Rutfani 'Bottfe Gas ·

'lJ&amp;(j Mot()Ts # 1 .

1?.uitand; OJi • 740-742-2511

'Tripfe YJ3
tJJanviffe,.O!J{

MWakport, OJi

tifle Pfains, o:H • 740-797-4675

740-992-2788

or 992·5287 (Meigs

fix -

Co.)

1-740·4-46·3008

E-mail - sportsOmydllllysontinol.com

Gpo;,, Start '
Brad StMrman, Sport• Editor

!740) 446-2342, ext. 33

'
bsherman 0 mydallytribune.c:om

!l(utfantfService Center

••

.tJJ&amp;(j Motors #2

0/ijo ContraCtor Supply &amp; Wliofesak

!l{utfani, O:J{

Mitftffeport, o:H

qa{{ipo{is, OJ{

740-742-1000

740-992-2788 '

,,

•

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.

'

740-441-8251

======
•.'

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWAI..TERSOMYOAILVTRIBUNE.COM ,

· ROCK SPRINGS -. Talk about the perfect
way. to end a losing streak.
.
Meigs softball halted a three-game skid ·
within Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division
play Wednesday with a 10-0
victory over B-elpre in five
innings.
The Lady Marauders (4-4,
3-3 TVC Ohio) received a
pitching gem from senior
starter Joey - Haning, who
{aced 15 batters and recorded
seven strikeouts in the perfect game winning decision.
The Maroon and Gold
HinlnJ
returned to .500 this season
with the .·triumph, and the
hosts also found their offensive sticks by
pounding ~ut hine hits and 10 runs in 28 atbats agamst BHS starter Courtney
Meriwether.
MHS had s.eored just seven runs during the
previous three TVC Ohio contests.
Obviously, Meigs coach Nathen Hansen
was pleased for Haning and her outstanding
.. accomplishment, but we was more happy to
see the offense show up and help get the Lady
Marauders back in the win column.
· "We just haven't been putting it together
lately. Joey has pitched well all year, but over
the last three games we just haven't hit the
ball," said Hansen. "Sometimes you go
through s~eaks like that, but we definitely

Please see Perfect. Bl

Bryan WoHoqlplloto-.

Meigs senior Sama~tha Cole drives in a run
contest versus Belpre at Rock Springs.

.Meigs footbaJI
golf tournament

TVC Standings

Ma(in' Memori£s

Meigs perfect
against Belpre

Bryan Walters, Sporta Writer
(740) 4-46-2342, ext. 23
VHaltersf!Dmydailytrlbt,lne.com

.~rry Crum,.Sporta Writer
(740) 4-46-2342. ext. 33
~rumO_!Il)'dallyreg~ter. oom

..,

wit~

this single during the third inning of Wednesday's TVC Ohio
·

Prep Baseball- Tri:..Valley ConferencE Hocking

Eastern tames Wildcats, 11 ~3 .
STAFF. REPORT
SPORTS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

.TUPPERS ~ PLAIN~ With a poweiful day af the
plate, Eastern (6-2, 2-2 TVC
Hocking) rolled to a convincing 11-3 victory over visiting
Waterford
Wednesday
evening in Tuppers Pll\iris.
The Eagles rolled off 14
hits, led by Cody Gerlach
··who went 3-for-4 with a dou. ble and three runs balled in,
while Mark Guess added a
pair of hits and three RBls;
' Justin Browning and Cory
Shaffer had two hits apiece
and Terry Dur'st, Thomas
Bishop, Kyle Gordon, Joel
· Lynch arid Griffin added a hit
each.
·
Gordon was also credited
with the win on the mound,
fanning two and walking four.
Eastern grabbed the early
lead in the first inning when
Brad Shermllllphoto Gerlach reached on a double
Eastern's Cody Gerlach (3) rounds third base and looks to and was driven home two batscore during the first inning of Wednesday's TVC Hocking ters later by Bishop on an RBI
contest against Waterford at Tuppers Plains.
single.
·

OSU fans upset over
gray-less new jerseys
COLUMBUS (AP) When it comes to their
favorite team's football jerseys, there is .no gray area
for Ohio State fans.
The Buckeyes will wear a
new design of Nike jersey
this fall thai features a
shinier fabric that wicks
away moisture.
When the new jersey was
unveiled, fans of the scarletand-gray clad . Buckeyes
immediately lit up· the lines
to ~ports call-in shows the new tops have no gray
on them.
School officials said a
slimmer, formfitting design
didrl't leave room for any
gray. The two white stripes
on each sleeve·are set off by
black stripes - but no gray.
· In letters to the ~ditor and
an Internet poll on its Web
site,
The • Columbus
Dispatch has been besie~ed
by fans upset by the new Jerseys.
"Exclude Buckeyes gray:
ridiculous. Now we look
like
the
(Wisconsin)
Bad~ers," wrote a fan from
· Flonda.
·
Another accused . Ohio
State President Karen
Holbrook and athletic direc-

. drive to score to S-3, however
Eastern finally put the game
away on its next at ·bat.
Browning led off with a single, followed by a hit from
Griffin and a two RBI smash
by Guess. Shaffer was next
with . a single when Gerlach
unloaded, kno.cking in two
runners with a single, giving
the
green and white a 9"-3
Quen
Gordon
cushion.
Following a quick score by
The Eagles wept on to add
Waterford to notch things up two more runs in the fifth
1-1, the Eagles to!Jk flight inning with a pair of errors
with a four run second inning. and a single by Lynch to help
Following a quick first out, drive in the final two runs,
Gerlach reached on a double, giving the Eagles an 11-3 lead
followed by ariother . double and the eventual win.
by Guess two baiters later as
Waterford · could only
Guess drove in a run.
~. account for five hits, with
Shaffer was next up as he Huck- leading the way going'
drilled . an RBI single, fol- 2-for-3 at tlie plate.
lowed by another RBI knock
Eastern will now gear up
by Gerlach for his second hit for a 5 p.m. matchup later
of the game.
. today at South Gallia.
The Wildcats responded
EASTERN .II, WATERFORD 3
with two runs of their own in WBtertord
012 OQO 0 3 52
the top half of the third to Eastern 144 020 x - 1114 1

,....•................. ...............•....
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~~uth~rn ~p~sur~

•••
••
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•

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•

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-

•••
•
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~~::; ~~~~;~h~a~!sn~~~
head coaches - Woody
Hayes, Earle Bruce, John
Cooper and Jim TreSsel.

••

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llt!tot~ie- e~tetto~ . !oath tfii'Qit~o.
'

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September 29, 2006 to October 2, 2006

:
:

tor Gene Smith of selling : .
out the university.
•
Ohio Stale has a six-year, •
$11.4-million contract with :
Nike, which provides uni- •
forms and eqmpment for the •
school's athletic teams.
•
The players say they lijc.e :
the new .material and seem •
bewildered that fans are •
angry" over the color contro- ' •
versy. After all, the team_'s : ·
pants and helmets remam •
•
predominantly gray.
The football team has •
changed uniform styles and •
designs frequently over the :

•
•

$320/ person (l)oubk )
S310/ person (fripM
.',

5300/ person (Quad)

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1.~ L ....JiL ..1.. ·. r11

•w:r, -iJ'' _a;: IB' .cj-.hm J Cllll t»t__.
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Sponsored iJy the PktJJanl ValleyHospital Foundation.
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For more informati(m or to moire ~etllations, please contact the ·
PVH Community Relatio1J8 Department_, (304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326.
Cash, checks &amp; credi(cards gladly accepted.

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The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.corn

Thursday, Aprilta, 2006

Thursday, i\pril13. 2006

•

.

Lady Lancers blast Southern, 18-8

Belp.re flies past Marauders, 9-2 .
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWAlTERSOMVDAfLYTRIBUNE.COM

Bryan Walltenllph&gt;oto
Meigs catcher Tyler Wayland applies a tag to Belpre base runner Josh Sizemore during the seventh
Inning of Wednesday~s lVC ·Ohio contest at Rock Springs. Sizemore was called out on the play.

ROCK SPRINGS- Meigs
managed only three hits duriolg a 9-2 loss to visiting
Belpre. during Tri- Valley
Conference Ohio Division
play Wednesday.
The Marauders (2-6, 2-3
TVC Ohio) dropped their
third straight overall decision
of the season · against the
Golden Eagles (5-5, 3-1 ),
who knocked out II hits in
the triumph .
That, along wi th a complete
game performance from
starter Nate Watson , allowed
BHS to get back to .500 on
the year. Watson allowed two
earned runs, walked five and
struck out five in the winning
decision.
•
Only
Eric
VanMeter,
Clayton Blackston and Josh
Kimes managed hits for the
~aroon and Gold, and two of
those came during the opening inning of the contest.
After-falling behind 1-0 in
the first, VanMeter started the

bottom half of lhe first with a
double. Two outs later,
Blackston soubled to plate
VanMeter and tie the game at
one.
BHS exploded for three
runs in its followin~ at-bal, as
four hits and. a hit-batsman
aUowed the guests to take a 41 lead.
A walk and two hits led to
two more Belpre runs in lhe
fifth, knocking MHS starter
Dave Poole out of the contest
after that frame. The Black
and Orange led 6-1 .
Meigs produc~d its fi(lal run
in the · bottom of the fifth
when Kimes started things off
with a single. A walk to Ty
Wayland added another runner, then VanMeter hit a sacrifice fly to center to score
Kimes for a 6-2 contest.
MHS had only two base
runners over the · final tw,o
innings.
Reliever Steve Hudson took
'over for Poole in the sixth and
retired the side, then ran into
trouble in 'the seventh when
two errors, two ·hits and a

\

Bv Scon WOLFE

walk led to three more run s in
the final inning.
•
Justin Thornhill paced
Belpre wilh three hits, while.
Watson ' also had a multi-hit ·
effort with lwo safeties.'
Dustin Adams, Zack Alkire,·
Josh Sizemore, Sean Haverty,
Mike Wadeker and J.R .
Walker also had a ·hit in the
·
·
triumph.
Poole was credited with the·
loss for the Marauders. The :
junior southpaw surrendered ·
six earned runs, nine hits, two ·
walks and hit a bauer in his
five. innings of work. Poole ·
did slrike out two.
·
Hudson, in his two innings ·
of work, gave up an earned
run, two hits and. a · walk.
Hudson also struck out four.
Meigs returns 10 action ·
today when il hosts Miller in a '
TVC non -division contest. .
Game time is slated for 5 p.m. _

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT •

STEWART Alihough
Federal Hocking only had six
hits, they made them count.
Nine · errors and seven
Southern walks led to an 18-8
Federal Hocking mercy-rule.
victory over the Southern
Lady Tornadoes Wednesday
night · during
Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division
softball play at Federal
Hocking High School.
Southern falls to 2-6 on the
se;1son,
while
federal
Hocking claimed its ftrst victory of the year and stands 15 overall, 1-3 in the league.
Southern went ahead 2-0 in
the first inning when Lindsey
Buzzard reached on an error,
Linda Eddy singled · and
Whitney Rime had a sacrifice

130 020 3 100 010 0 -

Nate Watson and Justin Thornhill. Dave

frame with
a pair ·o f
bases on
MASON , W. Va.
balls sandVisiting Buffalo scored six
wic hed
runs over the final two
around a
innings to secure a 6-3 comesingle by
from-behind baseball win
B i n g ham
over the Wahama White
to
score
Falcons Wednesday evening
two · more
on the Bend Area team's
times
to
home tuif.
increase its
Junior right-hander Brenton 1 d 6 2 d
· 11
ea to - an essenha y put
Clark took a three-hit shutout the game away Wahama got a
· and a 2-0 lead into the B.ison one· out· home
·
run · by
sixth inning·, when Buffalo Kameron Sayre in the
fina:lly got to hitp to the tune Falcons: final turn at the plate
of four runs in the frame. but a potential winning rally
The Putnam County oppo- never materialized as Buffalo '
nents tacked on a couple of exited the WHS c~mpus wilh
insurance runs in the seventh the 6-3 diainond t umph .
to hand the White Falcons its
Wahama gaine , a 2-0
second consecutive setback in advantage m the foUt;th when
. as many days..
.
Sayre led off the inninli'with a
Wahama saw its 2006 single. After Clark hit into a
spring record dip to 3-4 on the fielders' choice, Derek Veazy
season with a 1 p.m . · and Cody Herdman delivered
encounter with Ravenswood back-to-back base hits 10
on tap for Friday afternoon as drive home ·one run with
the White Falcons attempt to Garrett Cullen lofting a sacriinterrupt its current two-game ftce fly to left to bring home
skid.
another Falcon tally.
Clark appeared to be well
WHS appeared to be well
on his way to leading WHS to~ on its way to the 2-0 win fola victory over its closest lowing the two run fourth but
rivals before Buffalo staged a Buffalo nillied in the final two
two-out, four-run rally, high- frames to escape with the 6-3
lighted by a Martin pinch hit, triumph.
.
two-run . homer that knotted
Veazy continued to carry a
the score at 2-2. The Bison - hot bat for the White Falcons
went on to receive successive with his third straight two-hit
base hits from 'Legg, S~ith game while Kameron Sayre
and a double by Meadows also collected a pair of
following the game tying safeties including a home run.
home run to plate two more Nathan Stafford added a doutallies and give Buffalo a 4-2 · ble with Cody Herdman and
edge.
Chris Long coming up with a
Buffalo opened the seventh single apiece.
BY GARY CLARK
SPOOlS CORRESPONDENT

.

Tornadoes
fall to Fed Hock, 10-0 Eastern track and field finishes
.
.
eighth at Shrine Relays in Belpre ·.

.

Bv ScoTT WoLFE

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

. . STEWART - Asserting
itself once again as a contender. in the Tri- Valley
Conference.Hocking division
baseball· race, the Federal
Hocking Lancers blanked the
previously red-hot Southern
Tomaodes I 0-0 Wednesday
night in Stewart.
Southern falls to 9-2 aild 2-

2.
Southern had just two hits,
a fJISt inning single by Butch
Mamhout and a second
inning .. single by Brad
Crouch:
Southern's Pat Johnson
pitched relatively well, but
the Lancer bats pounded solid
drives and the SHS defense

made a few
miscues.
Johnson
walked five
and gave up
nine hits · in
suffering the

Springer knocked home a run
with a 6-3 ground out. the
score 2-0. Southern never
really threatened.
STAFF REPORT
Federal .scored two runs in
SPORTS@MYOAI LYSENTINEL.COM
the second, two in lhe third,
two in the fourth, and two in
BELPRE
During
I o s s . the fifth to mercy 'the
Saturday's Belpre Shrine
J o h n .s on Tornadoes, I0"0.
· Relays, the ·Eastern boys and
fanned one.
Federal
hitters
were
girls track team brought home
T y I e r McCune wilh a double and
a pair of eighth place finishes,
Crouch
C h ad w e II si ngle, 'Cory McCune lwo
including a pair of individual
J?icked up the singles, Smith a single, Tyler
fir st place finishes for the
Lancer victory ln pitching a Jarvis a single, ·and Greg ., boys team .
two-hiner and walking jusl Vinson a single.
Michael Owen placed first
Owen
Weber
two, while striking out five.
Southern hosts Trimble
. in the 3200-meter run with a
Federal Hocking took a 2-0 Thursda}• al Star Mill Park.
time of I 0:08.02 and Bryce
lead in the . first withoul the
Honaker placed first in the and the 4x I 00 relay team
FED HOCK 10, SOUTHERN 0
benefit of a hit. Two lead-off
long jump wilh a distilnce of placed fifth with a time of 59
Slnnings
walks to A.J. Smith and Ryan Southern 000 00 - , 0 2 3
18-07, helping push the boys seconds.
Other individual finishers
McCune set up a fielder's Fed Hock 222 22 - 10 9 0
team to an eighth place finish.
Patrick
Johnson
and
Butch
Marnhout.
choice and error on a hit ball Tyler Chadwell and A. J . Smith . W ·Warren took ·first place as a
by Chadwell, then Nick Chadwell.
team with a score of 109, followed by Meadowbrook (93),. ·
St. Mary's (92), Morgan (61)
. and Federal Hocking (50).
Rounding out the top 10 wer,e
Belpre, Nelsonville York,
Eastern, Waterford and Fort .
Frye.
In the team events, the
Eagles · placed !bird iii the .
4x800 relay with a time of
9:26.50, while the 4x400
relay team placed sixth with a
4:02.70 time. ·
·
In till: girls events, Warren
took first with 137 points,
· with
Morgan
(79),
Meadowbrook
(68),
Nelsonville York (36) and
Waterford .(29) rounding out ·
.
~
the top five. The rest of the
top .10 included Fort Frye,
Belpre, Eastern, Alexander
Brad Sherman/photo
and St. Mary's. .
.
Eastern's Hannah Cozart, left, applies a tag to a Waterford
The top finisher for the
baserunner during Wednesday's lVC Hocking' game at Don
Lady Eagles was Erin
Jackson ~eld in Tuppers Plains. The runner was safe,
Weber, who took home a
inning,
while
Hannah back:
third place finish in the 400Cunningham,
Kaitlyn ·Waterford also had a bit ,of
m~ter dash with a time of
Stewan, Kendra r.andaker, the miscue bug, as tl1e guests
1:03. Weber was also a mem. Hill and Robinson all had two committed five errors in the
ber of the fourth place finhits apiece.
win.
ishing 4x200 ~elay team,
Sidney Lawlor also added a
Eastern returns 10 action
along , with Alyssa Newland,
two-RBI double and scored today when it hosts Wellston
Katie . Hayman and Morgan
.
Burt as . the leam scored a
in a TVC non-divisional
run f~r the victors.
Bnttany Btssell, Hannah matchup. Game time is schedtime of 2:02.70.
in the other team events,
Cozart, K~lsey Holter and uled f&lt;:Jr 5 p.m.
the 4x800 relay learn of
Amber Whtte each _had a htt
for EHS. Cozart, B1ssell and
W4TERFORD 16, EASTERN •
Sarah ·Martindale , Megan
Broderick, Beth Hysdl and
Holtereach had an RBI, while wate"ord 8~lnnl;;::_ 16 16 5
Kaylee Milam placed fifth
Shana Snyder led Eastern · Eastern 101 200- 4 4 9
wtth rwo runs scored.
Ashley 4rnold and Hannah Cunningham.
with a time of 12:46.80, the .
Alyssa Baker and Hannah Danielle Canol! and Hannah Pratt WP 4x400
relay team placed
Arnpld. LP - Carroll, HR: W - Ashley
third
with
a time of 4:32.80
Pratt alSo scored in the set- Arnold. lirs&lt; inning. one on.

.

included Milam, who placed ·
fourth in the 3200-meter run :
with a time of 13:01.40 and
Newland, who finished fifth ' ·
in the 400-meter.·dash with a ·
1:1)7.10 time.
· Eastern will now gear up ·
for the Gal-lipolis Rotary :
Relays 4:30 p.m. Friday at :
Rio Grande.
•

'. MORE.tOCAL
. i~WS_. ~

MORE LOOAL FOtKS.
r! '

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-~

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. ~uosaribe today:
' ... ?92-2.155 "

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·waterford drops Lady Eagles, 16..4
. BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWAl.TERS@MYOAilYTRIBUNE .COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Nine errors, including five in
the first inning, ultimately led
to
Eastern's
demise
Wednesday during a 16-4, six
inning loss to Waterford in
Tri-Valley .
Conferen~
Hocking Division softball
action.
. The Lady Eagles (2-6, 1-4
TVC Hocking) surrendered
eight runs dunng that pivotal
opening frame, then battled
back to cut that lead in half (84) after four innings of play.
A pair of four-run inrungs in
the fifth and sixth allowed the
visiting. Lady Wildcats (7-2,
4-1} to secure the mercy-rule
triumph.
.
.. The Green 311d \Yhtt;, ln_anaged only four htts agamst
.WHS starter Ashle~ Arnold,
~ho :;e~x ::;rm~aldd
ow
.
w s. . 0
al~ had SIX ~trikeouts 10 the
wmrung dec1s10n.
Conversely;
Danielle
Carroll took the · loss for
Eastem by surrendering 16
hits and four walks. Carroll
also fanned three.
Nine Lady Wildcats had
hits in the victory, led by
Angela Martin with three hits
and three RBis. Arnold added
a 2 RBI homer in the first

,.

CLU.E fOg THURSDAY.
.
·. ··{ APRU:· 13. 2006
· -~"$.250 fot an f!gg

I

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WHEELING, W.Va. (AP)
A Secondary School
Activities Commission task
force will explore P.?ssible
solutions to a classtfication
dispute among the .state's private and small public high
schools.
The SSAC's . Board of
Control approved a plan last
week to form a separate class
for its. 12 private. member
schools.
The board, comprised of
principals, athletic directors
and Qther representatives from
. the state's .junior high, middle
and high schools, then
appointed SSAC Executive
Director Mike Hayden to look
into the matter. .
·
The proposal was geared
toward.
powerhouses
Wheeling Central, Charleston
Catholic - and Parkersburg

f

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- Egg Is not at a place of business
' ·- Egg Is riot at a private residence
~ Egg Is not Inside a man-made object

11JSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP)
- Logan Young had gone
from watching Alabama foot'
ball games from his 24-seat
luxury box to often buying a
ticket like regular fans.
Yo~g. found dea~. Tuesday
in his Memphis, Tenn., mansion, once prized his ties to the
Alabama program. But he fell
from favor when .the Tide was
placed on probation in 2002
partly because of his payments
to steer a recruit to ~scaloosa.
Hoping to avoid any uncomfortable scenes with angry fans
for his role in NCAA viola·lions, he had' kept a low profile
when attenCiing Crimson Tide
home !lames in recent seasons,
said Kirk McNair, publisher of
Barna Magazine.
"There were a lot of people
- Alabama people - that
blamed him for ~fabama's

.

. · - You will not need digging tools
-You wtu ·not need to dlmb.or the u5e of a ladder

:The Daily·SentinetJ
Brought to you by:

.

.

l!il* Fai
was B•ak
'!-'NYiklrlllkforiJ\.·.,.
• +•

~

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Bryan Walterllpholo
Meigs' Amy Barr (12) safely beats out a throw to first base during Wednesday's.contest with Belpre at Rock Springs.

,

Brait Sherman/photo ~
South Galli a third baseman Stephen Craig fields a foul ball during Wednesday's contest with :
Ironton St. Joseph in Mercerville.

'

RADIO SHACK
&amp;. Picture Gallery

Middleport • 992-2825
f

.

Legg, Smith and May adding
a singie each.
Clark was lagged with the
pitching loss after going six
and a third innings allowing
six runs oil eight hits with
four stnkeouts and s1x walks.
Garrett Underwood fimshed
up on the mound for the
While_ Falcons an~ gave up
one h1t m two thtr\ls of an .
inning.
Grant, the sesgnd of thre.e
Bison hurlerS: came away
with the win with Meadows
recording
the
save.
Whittington got the start for
Buffalo and went four innings
giving up two runs on five
hits with two strikeouts and a
walk. Grant walked two in
an inning and two thirds with
Meadows allowing one run
on two hits over the final
inning and a lhird. ·
Wahama returns to action
on Friday afternoon when the
White Falcons host visiting
Ravenswood in a I p:m. outing against the Red Devils.
BUFFALo 8, WAHAMA 3

6~4
Wahama
37 1
Clark, Underwood (7) and Stafford.
Whtnlngton, Grant (5). MeadOwS (6) and
Btngham. WP-Granl LP-Ciark. HR -

BtJIIalo

000 004 2 000 200 1 · -

Marttn, Sayre

.

Catholic. Private schools,
"I want this to be very, very
which have dominated Class professional," Hayden said.
A football and basketball in "I'm going to insist everyone
the past decade; Claim the keeps an open mind · and
move amounls lo. bias and comes to the task force presegregalion.
pared to accept and underClass A public schools, stand opposing points of view.
nearly. all of them from rural I want us to take a look at the
areas, want .to compete for whole situation and discuss it
championships
against · from the standpoint of trying
schools with the same make- to come to some meeting of
up.
the minds."
Hayden hopes a recommen"We have to come out of
this with somelhing .l!etler dation . can be submitted durthan what we hav~ now," ing a 30-day public comment
Hayden said. "What we- have period later this spring, after
now in the SSAC is obviously which the state Board o(
a division between our public Education would either accept
and private schools and that or reject the proposal passed
should nol be. They're all " by the Board of Control.
,
member schools."
.
'"The main !bing is to try to
Officials from the rublic come up with a common
and private schools wil meet grl?und that everybody can
on April 27 at the SSAC's unaerstand and support,"
office in Parkersburg. · ·
Hayden said.

seven miscues for the game
The Flyers went on to tack .
compared to six. for South on two more runs in the sixth :
Gallia.
and six more in the· top of the
MERCERVILLE
The Rebels pulled to with- . seventh en roule to the victoWednesday's high school in striking distance· at 17-14, ry.
baseball contesl between when a controversial call
Ryan Schwab paced the St.
Ironton St. Joseph and South caused a brief stoppage in Joe bats with a triple and pair
Gallia seemed to have a little the game and zapped the . of si ngles and was one of
of everything - a ·controver- momentum South Gallia had three Flyers with three hits
on the afternoon. Jeremy
sial call, flaring tempers and built. ,
even an ejected fan.
Josh Wright hit a fly ball Addis had lhree base knocks
But mos't of all, it had a lot over the left fielder's head _ including a double.
of offense as St. Joe out- knoc k.mg m
· a run - · and
Wright and Ben1ie Fulks :
slugged the Rebels for a 25- Wrighl cruised into second led South Gallia wilh a dou- .
14 victory.
·
ble and sintled each while
. of .·
It Was the Flyers ' second base with what appeared to John ,.,
ne 11 s ogge d a patr
b
d
bl
H
· 1es. B .J . stan 1ey d ou bl ed .·
win over South Gallt·a tht·s·. he a ou
1 t e. owever,
·
1 · the
·d sm~
Micah
Cardwell :
se.ason. St. .Joe improved lo orne P a e umpire c at me wh1le
.
. 1
5 -3 wht'le South Ga11 1·a that
. the ball was caught arid ch.1pped masmge.
remained winless in eight Signaled Wright out.
Wright started and took the ·
tries this year.
Wright saw the signal and foss on the mound whUe .
St. Joseph erased a 5-3 started heading for the Caleb Blackburn earned the ·
deticit by scoring 10 runs in dugout, but the other umpire win for St. Joe.
the top of the fourth inning confirmed that ·the ball was
A St. Joe fan was thrown
- and never trailed again. not caught. As Wright ran out in th~ · sixth inning for
·:
The Flyers went up by as back toward second base, St. arguing with an umpire.
many as 17-6 entering the Joe tagged him and he was
South Gallia plays host to
bottom of the fifth , ·but the called out.
Eastern today.
Rebels made a fierce comeSouth Gallia coach Jimmy
..
,"1 Bra~e appealed, but to no
STJOSEPIUS, S GAUIA 14
back.
South Galli a scored eighl avall. The next halter struck -~~il~'11r. g.:~ \~ 42
~~ ~9/ "
runs on just three . hits, bul out and St. Joe escaped Caleb Blackburn, Ryan Schwab 151 and
took advantage of walks and without any more damage ~~r:~u ~~~~~r~~s~ulk~r:g~~~dM~~~~
errors. St. Joe committed being done.
Wells. w -Blackburn. L- Wrigt&gt;t.
BY BRAo SHERMAN

BSHERMAN&lt;ii&gt;t.(YDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

g

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problems," McNair .said. "S.o year bowl min and the loss of ·
. he dido 't want t~ be anybody 2 1 scholarships over three
who surred anythmg up.
years in 2002.
"He'd occasionally sit in
James Neal, one of Young's
somebody's box. But more attorneys, called his clienl "one
often than not, he had a ticket God-awful fan of Alabama."
and sat down in the end zone
"It hurt him badly when they
with. some other fans and d1d- · disassociated him," Neal said.
,n 't say anything." .
"But·Alabama had to do what
The former Alabama booster they had to do."
had .been free, pending appeal
McNair said Young had
of his 2005 conviction on called him Monday morning,
money laundering an4 racke- asking about football and basteering conspiracy charges ketball recruiL• and wondering
involving the- recruitment of when he could take a look at
defensive lineman Albert the recent athletic faCility renoMeans to Alabama .. , ·' ,,... ·· '· · val ions.
·
A Vanderbilt · " graduate,
"It was like nothing over the
Young
never
attended lasl few years had ever. hapAlabatna but his father was a pened;' McNair said.
close friend of legendary Tide
Mike DuBose, who was
coach Bear Bryant. He was one Alabama's coach during the
of three boosters Alabama cut recruitment of .Means, said
ties with as part of the NCAA Young did some good things
investigation that led to a two- . for the universily.

=

De\'i.ls avoid letdown versus Logan
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

LOGAN - It had been
quite · a while since Gallia
Academy won a baseball
game in Logan ·_ but then
ajlain, its been quite some time
smce the Blue Devils have
been in a position like this.
GaUia Academy completed
a perfect first go-round
through the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League·schedule following a 7-4 victory over the
Chieftains on Wednesday.
It could have easily been a
"trap-game" for the leagueleading Blue Devils, who
were coming off emotionally. charged wins over Warren and
Chesapeake, and face Marietta
on Friday.
But Gallia Academy (6-2)
didn'( falter. and won for the
sixth straight time overall meanwhile improving to 5-0
against the SEOAL. Logan;
on the other liand, is still winless in four league opportunities.
Austin King hit a grand
slam, his third home run of the
season, during a five-run secon~ inning that erased an early
deficit and put Gallia
Academy out in front to stay.
Gallia's Chris Miller singled

to start the inning, then Brad
Caudill reached. on an error
before Man Mooney singled
to plate the first run of the
frame. Luke Haislop walked
to load the ])as~;s for King,
who cleared them to give the
Devils a 6-3 lead. ·
King, who went 2-for-3
with ftve runs batted in on the
day, singled in one final insurance run in the top of the seventh. Mooney and Haislop
also had a pair of hits. in three
trips to the plate.
Alex Hubbard went -3-for-4
to pace the' Logan bats and
also drove in a pair of runs.
Tony Ellis also had three hits
and an RBI while · Jake
McGuire had a pair of singles.
The win sets up a huge
game on Friday between the
Blue Devils and second-place
Marietta (5-3. 3-1 SEOAL).
Shaphen Robinson pitched a
three-hit gem in their first
meeting,
which.
Gallia
Academy won 1-0 on April 4.
Robinson is slated to gel the
start OJt Friday.
On Wednesday, however, 'it
was
sophomore
Shawn
Thompson getting the complete game victory on l_he
mound. He allowed three
earned runs on 10 hits, struck
out two and walked four.

Nick Barrell al'so went the ··
distance for Logan. He only .
surrendered seven hits, fanned
seven and issued four free

passes.

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.GALLI A ACADEMY 7, LOGAN 4
150 000 1
- 7 7 1
Logan ·
300 010 0
410 1
Nidi. Barrel.! and Jake McGuire. Shawn
Thompson and Luke Haislop. W Thompson . l - · Barrell. rlR - Gallia

Galllpoll•

Academy 1, Austin King 1 (3).

,.

Shade ·River Ag• Service
ftM4eiiU
SHOWMASTI;R REGIONAL MANAGER AND NATIONAL LIVESTOCK jUDGE

•

.

The Devils jumped · on ..
Barrell early in the tirst inning. ·
scoring one ·run and were .
threatening · lo add more .
Mooney drew a lead-off walk,
stole his first of two bases on .
the day, then scored on an RB.I .
single off.the bat of Haislop. ·
Logan answered, · though, ,
and scored three times in the
bottom of the frrst. to claim a ·
brief lead. Lucas Wright and
Jake Bowling each had RBI
sin~les in lhe frame for !he ·
Chtefs. •
Bur Gallipolis came righl .
back with the five-run second;
capped by King's slam.
Logan ·s only other run .
came in the fifth , which pulled
Team Purple to within 6-4.
Gallia Academy's key
SEOAL clash at Marietta is set ·
for 5 p.m. ·Friday. Nexl week, ·
Galli a Academy faces Athens ·
and ·Jackson al home before '
heading 10 Warren.

.
}.
llfll_ftOI .
rt.&amp;'---!i :. FFA' U. M

Ex~booster k~pt quiet at Tide games

PLEASE REMEMBER:

'

Buffalo, despite being ,limited to just three hits over the
first five innings, collected
five base knocks during their
final six outs. Scott had two
singles on the day with
Meadows adding a double
and 3 single. Martin drove in
three runs with a homer and a
sacrifice fly with Bingham,

Taskforce to probe·rift between
private, small public schools in WV

Perfect

·

FED HOCK 18, SOUlMERN 8
stnnlngo
soulhorn 210 23 8 s9
Fod Hock 045 63 - 186 3
Salyers and Rood. RIHie, s. Eddy and
Brlckles. w,... Sa~e&lt;s: L - RIHie.

.

· ·. What a df!al!
, , - I~ if in thf! va 11-f!y
. iot.-in th ill~?"

ou1s and scored one batter
later when Whitney Smith
reached on an error to give
Meigs
a three-run advantage
fromPageBl
after one inning.
Barr singled to lead off the
second, then scored on a
showed up today."
Only four MHS players two-out triple by Melia
had hits in ·the contest, but Whan. Whan later scored by
three errors and three walks stealing home for a 5-0
also contributed to the. advantag"'
.
.
mercy-rule win.
Burton led off the third by
Amy B;rrr paced the Lady reachin g safely on an error,
Marauders with three runs then Cole singled her in for a
and three hits, including a six-run edge. Barr slepped
two-run blast in the third up one batter later and belted
inning, and also drove in two. a shot that cleared the centerLian Hoffman and Melia ·field fence, giving the Lady
Whan also had two hits · Marauders an 8-0 edge.
apiece. Sam Cole and Amber
Smith drove in Cassi Whan
~urto~ rounded om the hit-. with a sacritice in the fourih,
ung w1th a safety ap1ece.
and Hoffman doubled to
Wban and Burton each score Barr for the ftnal run
scored tw1ce, while Hoffman, with no outs in the fifth.
Cole and CaSSI Whan each · Meigs returns to action
plated _once m the VICtory.
today when it hosts Miller in
. Menwether struck out one a TVC non-division contest.
tn the loss for Belpre, wht~h Game time is slated for 5
fell to 3-7 overall and 1-3m p m
· ·
the TVC Ohio this season. .
Back-to-back lead-off sinMEIGS 10. BELPRE 0
51nnlnga
gles by Hoffman and Melia Belpre
000
00 o0 3
Whan gave the hosts a I -0 Meigs
323
11 1090
lead, then ' Cassi Whan hit a CourtneY Meriwether and Victoria Moody,
Lauren Slattery (4)-. Joey Haning and
sacrifice fly to center to plate Amber
Burton. WP - Haning. LP .._
Melia Whan for a 2-'0 edge.
Meriwether. HR: M - Amy Barr, third
Burton doubled with two inning, one on.

Whitney Riffle suffered the
loss in three innings of wor~.
She fanned four, walked
twelve, hit one and gave up
four hits and twelve runs.
Sarah Eddy came on in relief.
Eddy fanned one, walked
three, gave up two hits and six
runs in two innings of work.
Coach Alan Crisp of
Southern said, "This was
probably our best offensive
effort of the . year. We just
gave up too many walks and
made too many errors, but I
was proud of the effort at the
plate,"
Southern hosts 'rrimble
Thursda at St M'll
p k
Y
ar 1 ar ·

Buffalo scores late to silik Falcons St. Joe wins .wild one over Rebels j

'
9 11 o
2 3 2

Poole, Steve Hlldson (6) and Aaron Story,
Tyler Wayland (5). WP - Watson. LP Poole.
·

.

fly. Linda Eddy then came
·home on a Sarah Eddy ground
out. SHS wenl up 3-0 in the
second on a Chelsea Pape
walk and 1-3 ground out by
Kaylyn Spradling.
Federal then took ·~ 4-3 lead
and never looked back, breezing to .the 18-8 win with a
five-run third inning and six·
run fourth. .
.
.
Southern httters were Lm~a
Eddy,_ Sarah Edd~, Steph~me
C~ndtff, . and Whnney .Rt_ffie
wtth smgles. whtle V1rgm1a
BnckJes had a tnple.
.
Federal Hock!ng •hillers
w~re T. Russ~ll With a double,
Gibson a ~mgle, Castle a
tnple and, smgle, and Bat! a
single.
Salyers posled the first
Federal Hocking win of the
.h
'k
year· Wit twp stn eouts, one
walk; five hits and eight runs.

'

BELPRE 9, MEIGS 2
Belpre
Meigs

The D.iily Sentinel • Page B3

www.myd_a ilysentinel.com ·

WHO WILL BE CONDUCTING A LIVESTO~K SEMINAR
ON SATURDAY, APRiL 15, 2006 .

4:00 P.M. - 6:00 P:M.
•
•
AT THE MEIGS COUNTY ExTENSION OffiCE
•
• 5.4eh udt k U'Uid. ~~ 16 fAII.tt, 4 .tltwr, fPU1el
•
•
•
•
Athens
Chester
•
• (740)985-3831 ''Ahead In Service"· (740)589-6000
•
• •• • • • • •• • ••• •• • • • •• • •• • • • • •• ••

" Shade River .Service

�.. ··.. -

-.

Page B4 • The Daily Sentiriel

'

Thursday, Aprilta,

www.mydailysentinel.com .

&lt;Pistons roar paSt Cavaliers, 96-73
. AUBURN HlLLS, Mich.
. (AP)
LeBron James
hopped on his right foot, sparing his sprained left ankle,
and the Cleveland Cavaliers
gasped a week before their
first playoff appearance since
1998.
The Detroit Pistons were
routing .the Cavs when their
: star was hurt and they went
-:· on fmish them off with a 9673 victory Wednesday night,
moving within a game of
earning home-court advantage throughout the playoffs. ·
"It was just another game
for us to work toward our
goal," point guard Chauncey
Billups said.
James land~d awkwar~ly
: while bein~ guarded by
: Tayshaun Prince and made a
.. shot despite \X:ing fouled. The
:: MYP candidate knew he was
:: injured right away.
.. "I just wanted to lie down
AP photo
. and see how bad it was," he Detroit Pistons forward Antonio McDyess . (24) drives to the basket against Cleveland
· "d
Cavaliers center Zydrunas llgauskas in the first half of an NBA basketball game Wednesday
- ~James was checked out on in Auburn Hills, Mich. Mebyess scored 10 points and pulled down six rebounds in the Pistons
: the court by a trainer during a 96-73 win.
.
·· timeout, then made a free
"As I said in the locker Henderson dislocated·a finger
Other than James and
:: throw to complete the three- room, J?,fOple die to get to 50 on his right hand on a missed llgau,-;kas, the Cavs combined
:· point play. He was taken out a (wins),'. Pistons coach . Flip dunk and did not return. .
to score four points on 2-of:· second later, left the ccart Saunders said. "To get to 60
Cleveland had won II of 20 shooting in the first half
.. moments afterward and had is really something. Every 12, a streak that secured while the Pistons had eight
win beyond that shows that home-court advantage in the players with at least four
: X-rays taken. •
· : "'It's sprained pretty good, you've been able to play at a first round and a second- points.
· but nothing serious," said pretty high level for a long round matchup with the
"Flip outcoached me and
James, who had 22 points on ti~e."
Pistons · , if both teams their players outplayed ·us on
8-of-18 shooting. "You never
Detroit is 36-3 a( home, one advance.
both ends of the floor," .
really know until the next victory away from the team
"They showed us what Brown said.
day, but I've had them before, record with games remaining play0ff basketball is all
Notes:
Cavs
center
and this is nothing that bad." at The Palace against the about," Cavs coach Mike Anderson Varejao was eject·
The Cavs said his status is Knicks and Washington.
Brown said. "It will be good ed i0 the second quarter·after
.· day to day.
The Pistons took control for us to have gone through taking
down
Rasheed
Cleveland hosts the New against Cleveland with a 14-0 this if we learn from it."
Wallace.
Varejao
hit
York Knicks on Thursday, run midway through the secBefore the game, Ilgauskas Wallace's shoulder on a dri·
h
d
and the Cavs might decide to ond quarter.
said it was important to get ·
pla.:y it-safe by resting James · Rasheed Wallace had 16 back on the court because',~he vmg 1ayup, 1 en appeare to
because they can't improve or points and nine rebounds, doesn't want to be rusty when push him down. '/It was just
hurt their position as the while Prince and Richard the playoffs start next week. another · soft four," Wallace
foutth-seeded team in the Hamilton each scored 14 for He looked sharp early, then said. "I don't know what he
Eastern Conference playoffs. the Pistons, who have won was lackluster. .
was trying to do, but it didn't
· "lf'l don't feel 100 oercent eight of nine Three reserves
Ilgauskas had eight points work." ... Brown said Larry ·
·
· · tomorrow, I won't go,'l;James - Maurice Evans
(13),· Tony and three rebounds when he Hughes is ."still tinding his
. said.
·
Delk (12) and- Antonio came out of the game with way," and could not say
The Pistons will secure McDyess (10) - added to 3:10 left in the first quarter- when, -ali!~, he would return
- home court with one more Detroit's balanced attack, twice as many points as to lhest!lWlng lineup ahead of
victory or a Sari Antonio loss. which. Billups directed with James had at the time.
shooting guard Flip Murray.
Detroit has the tiebreaker eight assists.
'
James latet scored five Hughes returned earlier this
because it beat the Spurs in
Meanwhile, ·only center points to put the Cavs ahead month missing three months
both meetings.
Zydrunas Ilgauskas helped - · for the first time- 19-16, with a broken right middle
If Detroit (63-15) wins one James carry the scoring load. then the Pistons responded by finger.... Detroit won the sea·
of its last four ~ames, it will Il~auskas, back from !l1l ankle scoring ihe last 11 points. of son series 3-1. ... Faces in the
break the franchtse record set mjury, scored 10 pomts and the quarter and went ahead crowd included
Robert
during ' the 1988-89 season, the Cavs didn't have another 27-19.' ·'
Traylor, a former Cavalier
when the Bad Boys went on scorer with more than eight.
.The Pistons then had their and Michigan Wolverine, and
to win the first of two straight
Early in the fourth quarter, decisive run, which helped some Detroit Tigers and
titles.
Cavs
forward
Alan them lead 56-29 at halftime. Chicago White Sox.

Thursday, April13, 2006

2006

{!tribune _- Sentinel - ~e

CHiCAGO (AP) - Greg the inning. Maddux finished
Maddux's final performance as with twd walks and seven
a 30-something pitcher was like strikeouts .
so many others during his long
"Vintage Maddux," said
career. Efflcient, quick and Cubs catcher Michael Barrett,
well-conceived.
who had three RBis from the
Now it's time to move on. To cleanup spot where be replaced
his next start in five days and to the injured Aramis Ramirez.
another decade of life. He tUrns
"He hit his spots well today.
40 in two days. And what's he When he struck out Tony
expecting from that milestone? Womack it was as good of ·
"Hopefully the same as the movement and as hard a fast30s," he said Wednesday after ball as I've seen him throw in
beating the Cincinnati Reds 4-1 my time here. He just look$ like
for his 320tb career win. "I he's in great shape. We . need
don't know. We' ll see. I've him to be that way."
.
never been 40 before."
Maddux's offseason condtUsing an assortment of pitch- tioning program l)as helped him .
es and .speeds, Maddux (2-0) to the quick start, but inststs
allowed three hits and a run in that's not why he's 2-0.
six innings against a Cincinnati
"Like I said all along, it's not
team that hit six homers the day how you work out, it's how you
before when, like Wednesday, pitch," he said.
the wind was blowing out at
Reds
starter
Brandon
Wrigley Field.
Claussen (0-1) gave up five hi.ts ·
"It's a factor, don't lcid your- and four runs, three earned, m
self. You feel fortunate to only five innin~s, but didn't get
give up one run on a day like much help m the field.
this. Any fly ball is going to go
"Mistakes happen and there
out." Maddux said. "Luckily is nothing you can do about it,"
today they dido 't hit too many · Claussen said. "Sometimes
too high in the air.... Sometimes they happen at the beginning of
you get lucky and they don't the year, somellmes ~the end
pop it up .as high off you."
of the year."
.
Not only could the Reds not
Cincinnati's fielding woes
repeat their homer surge of started immediately. . '
Tuesday, they had trouble makJuan Pierre bunted for a hit
ing· plays in the field leading off and after Derrek Lee
Wednesday. They had five walked with one out, they
errors, all by the third inni n~ , pulled off a double steal · that
and third baseman Edwm prompted a wild throw into left
Encarnacion committed three. field from Reds catcher Javier
. "We played about as bad as · Valentin for the first error. That
we could in the first three allowed Pierre to score.and Lee
innings," said Reds manager to reach third where he came
Jerry Narron, whose team fin- across ori Michael Barrett's sac- .
ished with four hits.
rifice fly.
"You make more errors than
First
baseman
Scott.,
you ~et hits and you sti~ feel Hatteberg dropped a throw to
like you got a chance to wm the .· allow Pierre to reach leading off
game. ... But the tirst three the third. One out later,
mnings made me sick."
Encarnacion made his second
Cincinnati has another con- error of the" game with a poor
cem. Center fielder Ke.n Griffey throw to frrst on Lee's grounder.
After Pierre and Lee worked
Jr. left the game in the fourth
inning after two plate appear- their second double steal of the
ances because of stiffness in the game, Barrett hit a hard
back of his right knee, an injury grounder to third that
he said is not serious. It Encarnacion fumbled for his
occurred in batting practice third error and the Reds' third of
when he was chasing fly balls. the inning as Pierre scored for a
"It didn't really bother me. It 3-0 lead.
just tightened up a little bit.
Encarnacion ·had hit his first
That was it,'' Griffey said, career ~rand
slam
in
adding he didn't know if he Cincinnati s 9-2 win over the
could play Thursday. .
Cubs on Thesday.
Maddux dido 'I surrender a hit
Barrett ~ot his third RBI with
until Encarnacion hit an RBI a run-sconng single in the fifth.
double after a two-out walk to
Scott Eyre pitched two scoreAdam Dunn in the fourth: The less innings, getting Dunn on a ·
Reds threatened · in the sixth grounder with two on in the
after two singles, but Maddux eighth, and . Ryan J?empster
fanned
Dunn and got worked the mnth for hts secopd
Encarnacion on a fly ball to end save.

CLASSIFIED

C:allb Cou11ry, OH

··~,

In One· Week With Us
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Thanks

.

·:

to everyone who
sent all ihe cards &amp;
·phone calls &amp;
visited us in the
past few months ·
and most of all the
one's that took us
back &amp; forth to the
Hospital everyday.
For there is to many
to list all of them &amp;
everyone that was
praying for us &amp; all
the churches may
God Bless all of
you'
Clarence &amp; Virginia
Hayman

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Address-----------··-~-

City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __
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Mondays &amp; Wednesdays
5 p.m.
12 sessions
$60/person

Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center
(304) 675·7222
Free sport watE!r bottle wHh sign-up

EAGLES
ENTERTAINMENT
Friday
' April14 • 7:30 to 11 :30 pm

Saturday ,

Public Notice
Notice: Ia hereby
glvan
that
~n .
Saturday, April 15,
2006 at 10:00 a.m., a
public sale will be
held at 1056 Ash St,
.. Tuppers Plaine, Ohio.
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company Ia eelllng
lor caah In hand or
certified check the fol· ·
lowing
collateral:
1986 Skyline Oak
Cove 14 x 70 Mobile
Hol!le 39311-0556-V
The Farmers Bonk
and
Sovlngo

r

ANNoo;mtmrs

rI .G~WAY r

reject or cancel any
1d at 1ny time.
~Erroro Muol
B
~~ported on the flra
oy of publlcaHon one
he Trtbuna~Santlnal
Register
will
b
a1pon1ibla for nc
mor. than the coat o
he apace occuple
y the error and onl
ttie flrot lnurllon. W
hall not be liable to
ny loss or expanat
hat rt11ulte from th
ubllc•Hon or amls
lan of an lldvertlu
ment. Correction• wll
be. made In lh8 flrs

ovallablo edition.
~Box

number ode an

lwayl .confidential.

caN

)-Current rate

ppll18.
~All

Real

Eatal

dvertl11ment1

ar

ubjtcl to the Fodera

•

:
·- ----------,--------·
--·
-

he!~

I

"•• le·where I•", wtth

no expre1111d or
Implied· warranty
given. Fo.r further
Information, or for an
appointment
to
. Inspect collateral,
prior to sale data con·
tact Cyndle, Stacy, or

Randy at992·2136.
(4) 12, 13, 14

Company, Pom~roy, , .
Ohio, reserves the

right to bid at thlo
sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to sale. Further,

.

BINGO
Special Session
Friday, April 14

RECORD
JACKPOT
$5000
.

'
------

Sundays Paper

'

_, _.

Publl~atlon

Sunday Dlaplay: l:OO

ThuriMiay for Sundaya

riGht to eel II. reject, or cancel any lid at·any tim•. Error• mu•t be reported on th• flr•t dlly
Trlbune-Sentinei-Reg"'tlt' wUI be f'ftPQn•lbt. for no mor. ,._.. tM co.t of th• •PIIce occupled by tM error and only thlllr•t lnMrtlon. W•
not
•ny lou or UJ*!Hihlt ruultl from ti'MI pubiiCMion or omiMion of ll"'ad\1-.rt:lum•nt. •Cort.ctlon will be mad• k'l th• flr•t av!Niable edition. • Box
are atwaw• confidential. .• Curr.nt rate c.rd appliM. • }II rMI
advltrtl..menta .,. aubjtd to the Federal Fair Houalng Act of 1968. • Thla ,...,.,,,.rl
ablndlrdt. We will
In vlol8tlon at the law.

POuctES : Ohio V•I'-Y Publlahlng ........,.. the

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
www.comlc..com

lito

Cll"f DWNIOI&gt;-5 CAN S"AVE

A £MJ1&gt;t.f' llF tYI•tJEY

(304)675·8901

ON ~A~ "7tl~[)t:.R$,

Multi- family sale, Inside.
~ousehoiQ Items, some.,.fur8 mo. old temci.le Siberian nlture,.toys, clothes, eto. Too
Husky/Heeler mix to good much to mention. SR160 to
home. (740)367·7577.
554 toward Cheshire, right .
on White Oak Road, first 1eft.
Follow signs. Friday 12-5,
Cocker Spaniel/Black Lab 1Salurday 9·?
mix. Very friendly &amp; playful.
(740)446-1199.
.
Yard Sale- Corner 3rd and
Grape St. Refreshment.
lorrAND
Easter Items, Easte r dressFOUND .
es, dress clothes (adult and
child), big toys, stove, bikes.
FOUND: Tan Lab pup, car seats: Frld~y/S~turday,
Female. (304)675·1339
aam-4pm.

"'r
~

r

· YMID SALE

I,3202 At. 124. (formerly Jo's

YARD SALEG ...............~

"----~----,J
830 First Ave. April 13- t 4,
8:00am-5 :00pm. Boys· Jr.
clothes, books, misc. '

Clift

Shop), Syracuse. Oh

Absolute Top pollar : U.S.
Sliver and Gold Coins,
Prootsets, GOld Rings. Pre1935
U.S .
Currency,
Solitaire Diamonds- M.T.S.
Jackson Pike beside Vanoo Coin Shop, 151 Sec&lt;lnd
Floor Cov.
Avenue, Gallipolis, 7,40-446-

2842.
I buy · Junk Cars (304)773·

5004

$15.67-$21 .98/hr.. now hir· t.ng. For application and free
governement job Info, call
American Assoc. of Labor 1·
913-599-8042, 24/hrs. emp.

SomeOne to get 6yrs-ord on
&amp; off bus and do housewortc.
Fa( details call ·(304)593·

:b:••;'•:d:th:e;off;•:rl:na:··=~

i

County
Agency.
AP~ucatlons
may
be
obtained by contacting the

office at (740)446·8667. All

ll"!lr""------,
1110
~~~~~~~~

,.

" NO EXPfRIENC.E NECESSARY
"FULL-HUE CLASSES
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lNYTHEVlllE, VA

1·800-334·1203
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100 WORKERS NEEDED
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;::~~~

URG. Custom-built in 2002.
Interior open and .airy. .
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Large kitchen with dining.
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I

TRACTOR-TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYn-(EVIl l E. VA.

1-800·334·1203

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Gallipolis. OH 45631.
Appllcallons will be accept-

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EDUCATIONAL
over 70 ..employers
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601-&lt;126·4649 ' Opportunity,
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licensed In Ohio or West
VIrginia preferred. We off~r a
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second Avenue, Gallipolis,
OH 45631 . Attn: Judie
Rease
or
email:
JraeseOrr'lsa;-eorp.com
Middleton Estates Ia now
.hrrlng Direct sUpport Steff.
Applications will be taken at
8204 Carla Drive (next to
golf course) Monday thru
Friday 8:30am-4:00pm. No
phone calls pleUI.

Nationally known direct
An E;xceuent way to earn and Sell Starter. Clill Ken Laborers &amp; Roofers needed. sala jewelry company lookCall (740)446-4514 or apply Ing for 3 kay managers lor
moneY. The New Avon.
(740)992·7440
surrounding areas. Weekly
at·1403 Eastern ~venue .
Call Marilyn 30+882-2645
bonuses-car bOnus and top
•nentlon Dr!Yers:
R&amp;J Experienced
Hcte/Dozer Lagal Secretary Wanted tor Income available. 1-740·
Trucking Is looking tor Operator needed. Pay nego- busy Athens Law Office . 334-1533. Ask for Nancy
Drivers w/ 1 yr OTA, tlabla, No benefits. Patti Benefits and free parking
1 Experience
for Regional (740)388-9515. Fax resume avallible. Must have axcep - Overbrook Rehabilitation
Hauls. Average pay 40's 10 to (740)386·9530.
·'
tionally fast word-processing Center Is C!Jrrenlly Bcceptlng
mid 50's Home every - - - - - - - - skills, be able to deal effec· applications for State Tested
Wee«end
call
. Kent For a liml1ed lime make 50'Yo tlvety w/cllents, be detailed· Nursing Assistants. Full
(B00) 462 _9365
selling Awn . Csll (740 }446- oriented. punctual and reli- Time positions available . All
3358.
able. Prior Jegal experience Interested applicants sho.U!d
AVON! AU Areas! To Buy or - - - - - - -- ' Preferred. Apply in confl· j}ick up an ap"pllcatlon at 333
Sell. Shirley Spears . 304- House keeper needed, dence to Legal secretary. Page Streer." Middleport,
please apply at Budget Inn, C/o Dailey SenUnel. P.O. Box Oh!o. For further informa675· 1429.
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis. No 729-24, Pomeroy. OH. tion, please contact Hollie at
Ove'rbrook Rehabilitation p"hone calls please.
45789
740·992·6472. EOE
Center is currently accepting .
- - - - -- - applications for a dietary Housekeeping and laundD' Meigs Memory Gardens. Part time Dental Assistant &amp;
cook. Part time positions positions &amp;'w'ailable at Arbors Asat. Office Mgr. needed Pai't time Receptionist .
available.
All interested of Gallipolis, Apply in person Part· Time to start Must be Please send resume to CLA
applicants should pick up en at 170 Pinecrest Drive, skilled In Basic
and Box ill, c/o Gallipolis
application at 333 Page Gallipolis. Absolutely No Office.Skills. Contact Kathy Tribune , PO Box 469 ,
Clalllpolls. OH 45631.
Lehwe. 740·992·7440.
Street,
Phone Calls Please.
. Middleport.
. OH .

"-cct.

·•

included.

$179.900.(740)379·2615. .

Colonial b·rick Ranch , Owner
Selling. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2
car garage. Price reduced.

(740)367·7006.

~r==~=~~~~

WANTED: Full-time employment In your own home as a
Home Services Worker with
Buckeye
Community
Services. We pmvlde salary
plus benefits and a daily
room and board rare . You
provide a home, gu[dance
and friendship In a family
atmosphere. Requires ability
l&lt;l teach personal living skills
and a commitment to tne
grD'IIrl1h and develOpment ot
two individuals with mental
retardation. Home must be
In Gallla County. If interested
contact Cecilia at 1-80053~-2302 or (740)286-5039.
Pre-"amployment
Drug
Testing. Equal Opportunity
Emp.loyer. '

r

ib

Homs
1
~--FOIIIiRiiSAi..Eiiliiiiilooi'.,J
·

""'
1OQ1 Kenny Ct. (Behind Jr.
·.High SChool) 3 Bedrooms,
full . dry Basement, all
HardWOOd Floors. Excellent
Condition $81 ,500 call
(304)675: 3123 {304)675·
0032
·
-------380, 2Ba, fireplace. 40x60
barn, 8 flat acres. Pleasant
Vall~ Ad ., Rio Grande.
$120,000. (740}709-1166.

3BR, ·2ba; LA; FR wlwood
burner; gas furnace ; new
CA; attached 2-car garage
w/possible upstairs apart·
ment; plus another attaclled
1-car · garage/workshop;
large ou tb uildi ng; _ aboveground pool; 3 acres m/l.
As king $110,000. Near Rio
Grande 1740)24 5.0372

.com

Accredited Membllr Accrediting
C&lt;u!cll br ~~"t

Col._

;!'""!liii"'i:::,_=.::
""::'~"·---.,

1180

'd lacrlmlnatlon baaed on

race, color, religion , aex
familial ahltua or national

ortgln, or any Intention to
make any auch
preference, tlmita11on or
dlscrlmln.Uon."
Thla newspaper will not
knowingly accept
actvertlaemtinta for real
estate which ltln ·
violation of the law. Our
.readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwelllnga advertised In
this newspaper are
• available on an equal
opportunity basal.

~:"'::l:~==:::::::~

Great Location! 3.5 miles
out Sandhill. 3 BR . 2 Bath.
garden tub, skylight, LA. FA.
landscaping, outbuilding,
15P9 +sq. tt. Only $74,000
080!
Must Sell ASP!
(304)593-0852
-------House for Sale 112 Pleas ant
Street, Po1nt Plea sant. WV

0418 :
3 beQroom. 1
1/2bath, family room . dining
room. new windows. hew
AC, new water tank, fenced
yard.

1-800-214-()452
www.gallipolllc.lreen:o119

All real estate advertising
In thla newspaper 11
subJect to the Federal
Fair Houalng Act ot 1968
which make• It Illegal ta
advertise "'any
pr.,.rence, limitation Of

(304(675'4034 o• 1304)675·

Inc. seeking PAN Speech Call Todayl 74(}-446·4367,

Huntingto n Ad , Gallipolis
2301
Ferry. WV 2551!?. Ph, 800or
669-1809 or fax to 304-675·
1..a77-463-6247 ext.
4662.
M/F/ON/
EOE
2301
www.gor.lc.com or www.rlr- . . . . , . - - - - - - llc.com
Ke8fe Commissary Netwofk,
a natlpnal leader In the corCost Tochn~lan- Good Math rectlonal supply Industry,
and MS Excel skills, general has excellent opportunities!
computer knowledge. will -· We oHer competitive pay,
lngness to travel and work FT/PT positions .1·&amp; compre·
·edl 1
overtime. Must have good hens Ive bene11s-m ca .
work ethics and willingneSs profit sharing. 401K, &amp; vacato learn, training provided. lion .
We are hiring :
starting rate $16.00/hour. A1glon11
Comml111ry
Fax resumes to (614) 716· Manager,
Commle11ry
Aepr..entltlvn
l
2272.

Appliances

Greatroom design with
vauhed cei ling and gas fire·
place with · oak mantle.
Master suite with his/her
balh 1 incl. whirlpool tub,
shower, 2 walk-In closets. ·
skylight. 2ooear garage , landscaping . Low-cost heating/cooling.
Lyntronics
Security System . 1700 sq. ft .

ed until 4:30PM FridaY April

-·SEIM--a;:&lt;;--.,.1

Job Fair.
Athens
·CommUnity Center, 701 E.
State Street. Athens, OH ,
' 2pm.
from
resumes and dress lo interview.
Contact:
Meigs
'County Job qnd Family

78·0003 to learn If lh
ortgage broker o
ender
is
properl
lcensed. (This Is a publi

~&lt;&gt;F1!$10NAL
'PROGRESSIVE COM· Dept. taking applications for
full-time labor position. L,~·
PENSATION SYSTEM aApplications
may be picked·
up and returned at Public
TURNED DOWN ON
•cREDIT FOR RELE· Worl&lt;s Dept.. 237 Ray St.. . SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
VANT EXPERIENCE Middleport,
Ohio.
No Fee Unless We Win!
Application deadline' April ~1
·1·688·562·3345 '
at 4:00 PM. E.O.E.
•EXCELLENT
I~ I \I I " l \1 I
BENEFITS

to: 1-614·577.0125 •·

ALLIANCE

applications must be mailed
or hand delivered to tile
Gallia-Lawrenca
Farm
Service
Agency,
111

TO

ALLIANCE

Charming bri ck ranc h. Rio
Granda. Quaint. ' friendly
ne'•wnhborhood • 3 bloc~
f•om
rw

rrow Smart. Contac
he Ohio Division o
lnancial
Institution'
11ice of · Consume
ffalrs BEFORE you refi
ance your home o
btaln a loan. BEWAR
f requests to·r any larg
dvance payments o
ees or insurance. Cal
e Office of Consume

Gallia-Lawrenca
Farm Service

r------...,

"JOB PLACEMENT
• El'tROLLING NOW

l..o

**NOTICE**

TEMPORARY HELP
NEEDED
Office help needed at the

Wanted to buy ~ 865 Charles na1ion's
largest family
Dickens Books (304)675· owned LTL rhotorfreight car·
JOB$ NOWIII
PLEASE CALL:
6499
.
rlers, has lmmodiate openUp t() $81h0Ur fulltlme
(304)ol24·2180t
for
Part-Time
,
Mak~
calls
on
behalf of the
lng
I \ll'l tl \\1 1 \ I
ClertcaVData Entry/Billing
NRA, 2nd Amendment - OR SEND RESUME TO :
HUMAN RESOURCES
" I 1.:\ It I "'
position ., 2nd shift (MRights and cOnservative
CAllo'DEN·CI.ARK
n1'1l
f/4pm-10pm).
Must
type
Political
orgahizations
.
10
Ho..P WANTED
min. 30 wpm . with accuracy
•Convenient Schedules
MEMORIAL
and posses excellent data
•Weekly PIIY with Bonus
HOSPITAL
entry/general alflce skills. •Paid vacations EVERY 8
f'O. BOX 718
We offer.a starting wage of
monthe
PARKERSBURG.
WV
$8.50/hr and a comprehen- •Paid holidays/PAID TRAIN~
26102
.
lNG
'
slve ben~fir packago that
(304)424·2668 FAX
1,.,
LEARN
Includes a 401 K retirement
. •Outstanding work
....~UCilON
or apply online to:
plan and free vacation lodgenvironment
•
11"0tK
1
\NWW.ccmh.org
lng at our employee resorts
E.O.E
DRIVE
in Ft. Myers Beach FL and Start making 1 difference
Galllpoll• Career College
Pigeon Forge TN. Come for
today!
Medi Home Health Agency, (Careers Close To Home)

• FINANCING AVAIL.ABlli

MONEY

~~;:::;~TO=::AN=:;;

1343 or (304)675·0783 ask

-. a~~aocmrac:lonrallilr.com

• 00 EXPERIENCE NECESSAR';r'
I,
• FULL- TI~I!CU.SSES .
"COL TRAINING

•NOTICE•

t;:JHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO. recommends tlla
ou do business with peo
le you kn&lt;lw, and NOT 1
end money through th
~..,..ail until you have investi
r '••

for Randy or leave message

I will buy Jlmk ldci. Call CLERICAL;
(740)368·9303.
A+' CAAAIEAS,'one of the Services . 740·992·2117. ·

l

L,=:Ot'ro;:K11.1NITV:=~

1

serv. ·

son.

15--9-3
at the c\,urch,
Middleport, 0 . Lots of items.

April. 14·15, e:30 to 4:00.
Tools, refrigerators church
pews, desk, shelving, folding
tables, lots of misc. 1402

riO

Hor.rn;
• iiifiiiio;;;;;;;~B~USlNFSS;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I 1.,~--FOR-S,_ALE-._..

--------c--

Hobson Christian Fellowship
Church Yard Sale--April 14,

t

I

Rio Grande McDonalds hiring aU shifts. Apply in per·

r

Missing since April 9th from
Leon Baden/ Bug Run
Road. Large blue plastic Garage · sale· rain or shine.
dog bowl and SIJ'I&amp;II black Weds., ThurS., Fri., lawn
Shepherd dog using it mower, anliques. baby
"(304;.r),;;45;;;8,;;·1.;,699;.;.,___, clothes, antique table, crochat scarves. · lots more.

IIELPWANmJ

•

POSTAL JOBS ·

misc. 520 Ball Run Ad.,

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4'o fer Sale .............................................. 725
Announcemant .•••:•.••...•.••.•••...••...•..•. .-.... •.•... 030
Anllqueo .......................................... ,............530
Apartmenlo for Rant.. ................................. 440
AucUon and Flea Morkel.............................080
AUto Parte &amp; Acceaoorleo .......................... 780
Auto Repair ..................................................770
Autoo lor Sole..............................................710
Boeta &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building SuppllM.....................:..................550
Buol,..a and Bulldlnga ............................. 340
Buolnaea Opportunily .................................210
• · Buolnaoa Tralnlng ...................................... 140
• Campara &amp; Motor Homee ..•••..•••••.•••.•.•.• ..... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cardo of Thanka ............................:............. 010
ChildiEldarly Care ....................................... 190
El&lt;tetrlcal/Retrlgaratlon ..............................:B40
Equipment for Rent ..................................... 480
Excavating .............,.......................... ,.......... ~0
.- Farm Equlpmenl.........................................610
Farme lor Rent.............................................430
Farmri for Sale ............................................. 330 ,
,. For Lllaoe .............................................. :.... :.490
ForSala ........................................................565
For Sale or Trade.........................................sso
· · Fruita &amp; Vegetablea....:........:.......................sao
. Fumlohed Aoomo ........................... ,............450
- a l Hauling...........................................850
Glveaway................................. :..................,.040 ·
, Happy Ado ..................................................,.o&amp;o
Har, &amp; Qraln..................................................840
He p Wontlld ................................................. 110
HOtne lmprovement•......................•.••.••••••••810
Homao for Sale............................................310
HouoahOid Gooda ....................................... 510
HOUIII for Rant .....................;................... :.410
., Memoriam ................................................020
.,,uranca ..................................................... 130
Lllwn &amp; Garden Equlpmonl ........................ 680
Llveatock......................................................630
· • Loat end FoUnd ........................................... oeo
Loto &amp; Acreage............................................ 350
Mlocailoneoua..................... :........................ 170
Mlecailanaoue Marchandloe .......................S40
Mobile Home Repalr ....................................880
Mobile Homeo for Rant ............................... 420
Mobllt Homeo for Sala ................................320
Money to Loan .....................
220 ·
Motorcycleo &amp; 4 Whnlora ...........................740
Mualca lnatrumente ...................... : .... ,....... !570
Poraonoto ..................................................... OO&amp;
Pete lor Sale ................................................ seo
Plumbing &amp; Heotlng ............,........................820
Protaoolonel Sorvlceo .................................230
Rldlo, TV &amp; CB Rep~.lr ...............................160
Rtal Eotata Wontod .....................................380
Schoplolnolrucllon ..................................... 11$0
Saad , Plant &amp; Fortlllaor .............................. eso
Sltuatlono Wanted ....................................... 120
Space lor Rent ............................................. 480
Sporting Ooods ........., ................................ 520
SUV'o lor Sate ..............................................720
Truckalor Sate .........................:: ................. 715
Upholaltry ................................................... 810
Vane For Sale ...............................................730
Wonted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wonted to Buy· Farm Suppllea .................. 820
Wonted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanltd to Ront ............................................ 470
Yard Sole· Golllpolla ....................................072
• Yard Salt·Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
Ylrd Sale-Pl. Pieaaanl ................................ 078

I''

Bu•lneas Daya Prior To

• All ads must ba prepaid'

8 male. puppies to good Bidwell, 9am·5:30pm, no
home . Call
for
info. early birds.

&gt; .......................

.

:~:~~~~~~~~:~n-Colum 'n: 1:oo·p.m.

All Dlapt•v: 12 Noon 2

Take one or bOth. To good 'All kinds of goodies.
home call (304}675-2208
Elec trical &amp; tools. bottles,
clothes &amp; dishes. lots of

meeting

="'~ll~he;,;:towiiii;;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~

Disc Jockey

j

•

nowapapo
only

l&gt;Wa will not knowing
~ ICCipt any adv11
~~ment In vlolatlor

The Farmer• Bank
and Savings company
re...-es the right to
reject any or all bids
submitted.
The above described
collateral will be eold

See our ad on Page A2

----·---------------------------

.

~~nlod oda

April 15 8:00 to 12:00 mid

Karaoke

Jn Next Day•a Paper

~~

1

·

fOE etandarda.

Kand D
· M•ll or drop off thl• coupon along
with a copy of your photo ID to
Ohio V•ll•y Publishing P.O. Box 489, Gallipolis, OH 45631

1:00 p.m.

2 neutered adult malo cats.. Big yard aale Saturday only.

*POLICIES*
Ohio Volley
Publlohlngrnerves
the right to odll,

Publlc Notice

WVJOBS
FOUNDATION

ln~Calumn.:

Monday-Friday for Ineertlon

DeKrlplkln • Include A Prtce ·• Avoid Abbrevl•tlon•
• lnc:lude Phone Number And Addre" When Needed

_:

Now you con hove borders ond gi'ophlcs
~
added to your classified ads
(. ~
,m
Borders$3.00/perod
~
· Graphics SO¢ for small
$1.00 for Iorge

Display Ads

AD • Shirt Your Ad• With A keyword· • Jncludll Compl11te

ccepta

SAVINGS

Dally

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

~Thlo

Publlc Notice

Word ·Ads

•

988.

Card of Thanks

992·2157

/}etullfirM'

11r Houalng Act o

Get AJump
on.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydallysentlnel.com ·

Reds·struggle with_Cubs

•

SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

·• ...

·.

\

HAS .·

,.

RADio, TV
&amp; CB lb.7AIR

L..,------..,.1

4 year old Colonial on 3
Ron's TV Sales and Repair. acres. approx. 1,900 sq. ft. 3
Appliance
warehouse bdr, 2 baths, 2 car garage,
master bdr. Is 28)C24 with a
99
1304)675·79
•
jacuizl
tub. $125,000 .
W.ToANIEDDo
(740)446-7029.
.
7BA, 5BA, Foreclosure; only
Ali Types Masonry, Brick, $18,000. For listings call Newly remodeled. 3 or 4
bedrooms. central air, full
Block, Stone, Free Estimate, 801).3~1·5226 ext F254.
basement . hardwood floors ,
4)773·9550.
304-593·
130
detached garage, large covAttention!
642 1
Local company offering ·No ered patio , fen ced back
DOWN PAYMENr pro· yard. close to schools, Point
$69,500.
Computer Troubleshoot &amp; grams for you to buy Your Pleasant.
Aapalr. Call (740)992·2395 home insfead of ranting . · 1740)709·1382.
• 100% financing
- - - - - - - - • Less than perfect credit No Dpwn Payment required
on two diHerent hOmes In
Georges Portable Sawmill. accepted
don't haul your Logs to the • Payment could be the Gallipolis fo r sale by owner.
Easy qualifying . This is your
Mill juat call 304·675·1957. same as re nt.
-chance
to own and not rent
_ _;__ _ _ _~- Mortgage
Lo&lt;:atorS.
Monthly payment low ·as
.0000 .
(740)367
Handyma.n ... Small Hauling
$400. Won 't last long. Call
M'"'Uca&lt;l
Jobs. Lawn Work. Call Tim
now (740)446-2422.
~rab
Creek
Road
Kern. 74(}.992-2741 .•
!Picturesque Old Cape Co
VIllage of Rio Grande, 1 1/2
C· n~ y
~ome .Oak construction 3: ' story brick, 4 bedrooms, full
I'UU!.
~edroom 1 bath, big coun
basement. in-gr&lt;lund pool .
ry kitchen., lots of cabinets (740)441·0031.
Ius dinlnQ" room , spsciou
Gingerbread House Day
Care currently has openings iving room &amp; study on 3. fJ2IJ MOBU.E UOMES
for Infants (6 weeks to 1a !acres Beautiful rolling law
FOR SALE
months) preschoolers (3 t.vtmature shade trees
ew pond &amp; d&lt;lck , nicE 14~~;55-'97 Fleetwood MH years to 5 years) . Part-ttme
and full time available . workshop plus 4-outbuild 2BA, t bath. alec. heaVAC·
Private pay, State pay and ngs &amp; carport. $62,500. good condition $10,500. Call
WV Link ~ccepted . Call irm (304 )675-4680
1740)446·3644 fo• appt.
Sorr'J No Land Contracts.
740-992-3142 for rates.

Lw------·
1110

1111

C
. HnlVELDFJu;

I

I •

�.,

Thursday, Aprll13, 2006

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www.mydailysentinel.com

NEA Cronword Puzzle

BRIDGE
141t70 mobile hOme. needs
work. Aprox. 1/3 acre. Pncoo
to' self ta,., $8.500 080.
(NQ)&amp;45-0742.
18x80 2003 NQJTis (tap of
the floe) mobile home with
al) upgraded appliances,
windows &amp; carpet, shingle
roof, vinyl.alding, gutters, 2·
parches. 8x10 Amish bUildlng . On prtvate lot wflandsoaping and paved sidle·
walks
and
driveway.
Excellent
Condition .
(304)675·5053 (304)593·
09-98

28Ft trailer, fumilhed, watm Tara
Townhouse
pd .. roterence naedad, no Apanmonts. Very Spoclooa,
pets . $375 mo., $300 2 Bedrooms. CIA. 1 1/2
deposit (7~)441-0829 .
Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Beby
Pool, Patio, Slart $425/Ma.
3 Br. tA.H. in Middleport, all
eleotric. central air, $425
Mo .. J&gt;us deposit. 74Q-4161354 or 740-992·3194.

Poodle Pupploo, Tiny Tays, 1996 Tahoe, QJeat condition,
AKC, Ver C"*"&lt;ed. 74Q- loaded, new rear tires. Runs

'· Aefridg &amp; Stove,Washer
&amp; Dryer included (~)5762934

Conotructlon
WOJQrw. Fully furnished -2
bedroom, 2 baths, very n~.
Located in quiet residential
area in Pomeroy, OhiO. 740- Refrigerator/ Microwave
1996 and Up, 14 and 16 ~-1517 or 7'"992 ~31. From $ 175 To $250 College
'"
~
~
Hill . Motel Call (740)245Wi(te MobMe Homes for Sale
5326
"'excellent Condition Day: Mobile home silos far up to ~i'--~.-----, ·
740·388-0000 or .740-388- f6x80 in Country Homes.
SPACE
8513. Evenings: 740-388· ~(7_~...;)c..385-40
_ _1_9_
. --,~roR RENr
.
6017 ·
Taking applications for 2BR
.l
h
2002 SOx14 Clayton Mobile mobJe
ome , no pe\S. 2 miles out Nelchbarhaod
Home. Custom ordered wi1h $29.5/mo. Includes water &amp; Rd. Private trailer lot for rent:
plumbing, shingles, siding sewer, $200/dep. (?40)44S- ~
~nd windows upgrade. _3_61_7_· - - - - - - - energy- efficient .
Great Very clean 14x64 2 bed
HOUiDIOW
ConditiOn . $ 18,000 . call room. Only $7.995.
4
(740)385-0698.
17 Ql446-4096
..__ _tiiGoooiiilliiiii--"

Attontlon

••

'84 Skyline tront kitchen
Cash Price $3,995 .
Will Deliver

911 ;·~1 (::~:~:.:~e

c.; rio

i

an

143 . 2 mobile homes. 74Q992-5658
Must Sell
19$8 t4x70 2BR/2 bath
$800 On! $150/Mo.
Call (740)38~·9948
Nice t.4x70 3 bedroom only
$10,995. Witl help with delive&lt;y. Call (740)385·9621 .
Used mobile homes far sale.
14' &amp; 16'· wide. 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms 6 to choose from
1996 model &amp; up. (740)388·
8513 (daytime), J740)388I
8017 (evenings), (740)2940460 (weekends)
LOTs &amp;
ACREAGE

r

12 acres moslly wooded,
ideal for hunting cabin,
access to good road. has
producing gas &amp; oil well, call
74o-985 ·3805
-----~--22 acres, wonderful view,
ridgetop property, close to
main highway perfect for 4·
wheeler trails. (740)707·
2109

r

n-- I

r

I

M

•·UiiCAL

FoR"··-

Appliance

~

2 bedroom, 2 bath on Greer
Rd. Deposit &amp; Aelerences
required. (304)675·4243 .

4br
in
· Syracuse.
$600/month &amp; Deposit
Water/Sewer induded, No
Pets (304)675-5332 or
!740)591·0265

2
0yrs. axp.
Gallipolis, OH
Rick Johnson , Jr.

FOR SALE

Auto &amp; Truck'

Repa1r
•

Pomeroy, OH
on State Rt. 124

Buy

each .•Call (740)388·8358.

2003 Honda XA·70 Dirt
bike, like new. $900 firm
Tobacco Plants tor sale. Call (304)675-3824
(740)446-7843 or (740)645·
89 Honda Goldw!ng wltraM-1660.

ai

sell.

Riverine

Antiques. 1,124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pameray, 740992 ·2526. Russ Moore,

::::~~~~;;u;l

Opportunities.
New 2BR apts. Watson Rd.
Rodney Pikef850 area.
Reference/
Deposit
required, no pets. J740)4461271, (740)709·1657.
--'-'--'---'---NEW ELLMVIEW
TOWNHOUSEIAPTS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
aoTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES
' ALL ELECTRIC
"CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
"STOVE REF
'
.
·oiSHWASHER
··GARBAGE DISPOSAL
·w1N6 BLINDS
"WATER, SEWAGE &amp;
TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)882·30 '7

Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scra'p Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday- &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300
Prom dresses, some new,
some used. Sizes 5,6, 718, &amp;
9. Prices $30·$50. Aefrig.
$100
gao~ ' condition.
(740)446-7029.

I

i

1eo,

One bedroom apt. Vine St.,
Gallipolis, Ohio. (740)446·
7100.
i..
- -'--------

Pleasant. V~\ley Apartment
Are now taking Applications
for • 2BA, 3BA &amp; 4BA.,
Applications a~e taken
Monday thru Friday, from
Stop renting BUy 4 bedroom 9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office Is
toredosure $15,000. For list- LoCated at 1151 Evergrepn
Ings aoo-391·5228 ext. Oriv~ Point Pleasant, WV
Pho~e No. is (304)6751709.
5006. E.H.O
".

r

:iir~·.;$2900;;;;;~·~!""-...,
o
2 12 1

h J
18,3• Stra1os 1,.
'-IV
p. usl
rebuilt
$12 , ~00.
Call

(740)256·19~2
_1_99_5-16-1-12_ft___H_y-dr-a-sp_o_rt
Bass boat with 90 horse.
·

Fe:' ;~~~so~r~:.torir~~~~n~

1993 Cadillac Deville 64,000
miles, good shape, $4,000. motor, 2 batteries, 2 d_epth
(740 )645-0826 ·
finders, In excellent conditlon and garage kept for
2000 ' ·Buick Regal, very $6,000, (740~992-2268
good condition, 98,000
miles, $4,800 . (74,0)441 - 2001 Pontoon Crestllner
0643 after 5pm.
boat, 24' very nice.
2001 Kawasaki Jetski Ultra,
2000 ~ontiac Grand Prix, used very little. (740)446·
91,000 miles, $,8.000. Cali 4228.
(740)367-505~ . .

.

I

21YIS
EIP.

';I1

Mowing- Tree

r f .r I)' II• ·, 1 •II
(740) 992·2804

1

Homes- Decks •
Driveways - Equipment
Degreasing- Boats·
Campcis- Trucks • De&lt;:k

stain ing or painting
Special rates for

1'

,I

T

k.i .

q,

11 ,_.

·s
1

1

"' I

I ~\

'•

(740 ) 517-6883

www.tlm.,....,. _e ekeablnotrY.-

All Jype• at rooting:
New or Repair
Seamless Gutter
Downspout

Chuck Wolfe ,,
Owner

THE BORN LOSER

• New Homes • Additions
~ Remodeling ·

TRIMMING &amp;

Mt) OO'l'OJI
K.IW.IWAAT

11-\(WO~T

Licensed Home Builder

GENERAL

CONTRAOING

work

• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
"lnsu(ed"
Call Gary Stanley

\S

Lw-iiMI'Riiiiliii01t¥EMt:NTSiiliiiiiilili.-l
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references fur·
nished . Established 1975.
Calf 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

(740) 446-2342

The D~ly Sentinel

.
,t)oint
.

--

(740) 992-2155
.

~lea~!lnt ~egisster

(304) 675- 1333

DOWN

letters

t Caiifornta"a

-Woods

Pass

· Try to find .
a reverse procedure

41

t 7 Cycle '
starler
26102, 1oa
20 Spoiled Iaine
centurion
21 Foreatad
27 Caterwaul
22 Palnlad
30 Tapped,
· nickname
Unware
In goH ·
5 Burrow
23 P.S. sequel
· 32 In league
6 MI.
24 Anima
w~h
Thurman
lhet&gt;rlat
34 Garden
7 Pigeon
• 25 Ovennlghl
molluaks
.
· visit
·
coop
35 Made level
8 Elbow
28 Prevails
36 Plta treat
opposite
29 Sadlmenl
37 Tijuana
9 Just OK .
3t Fatigue
"Mrs."
(hyph.)
'32 Old TV
38 Former JFK 10 C:On1umor
receptors
arrlval
org.
33 Banned
39 WrHing
11 Water and
bug spray
onglau
oil
' 37 Pipe down!
42 Bracket
12 BaHard or
40 Soup
Danny
type
containers

2

lbl8r1'1
home
3 Movies
4 Cowboy'a

Mlch•l
Jackson

· acceoaory
42 MeiQoroble
t fmea 43 Mardi Groo
follower
44 Theater box
47 Two flvea
for - 46 Crawford'il
ex
49 12111Ziho19t11'1111do1MI
51 Tender pod
52 Wapiti
54 BoathouH ·
Implement

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

SusanSotrtagwrote,'Boredomlsjusttha
reverse siae of fascination: both depend
on being ootside rather than inside a sil·
uation, and one leads to lhe other."
Lucl&lt;ily bridge Is not baring; rt provides
seemingly endless faic!nation and .vari ·
ely. Bullor mosl ol us, we need lo be on
111e Inside at the table playing, not on 1he
oulsido kibilzing.
F~rst, lpok at the Sooth hand, Would you
open one club or one diamond?.
How would you try lo make six spades
after West leads the club two?
When you have 4-4 in the minors, il is
sometimes prelerable ·to open one diamond. This is particularly true when you
do not nave a stopper in a major su1t.
Then, If an opponent overcalls in that suit,
you can rebid in cluh s Here , though,
South has no rabid problems, so begin·
· nlng with one club incre.ases the chance
ol linding lhe correct suit lit (assuming
three no-trump is wrong, of course). After
South rebids one spade, North launches
into' Roman Key Card Blackwood. South's
Jive-heart reply denies the trump queen
and shows either one ace and the trum p
king or two aces.
You should see these t 2 tr icks: fo ur
spades, lwo hearts, Jour clubs and two
heart ruffs in your nand. So, win .tlie first
trick, play a heart lo lhe king on Ilia
board, aod ruff a heart high . (Although
the risk of_ an o~Jerruff is negligible, it canno! cost to use a tap trump.) Over to
dummy with' a spade, you ruff the heart
jack high, draw tru mps, and cl3im.
II is a lascinating variety of dummy rever-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebl'ity Cipher CI\'PIOOrams are Cfea1od trom QIJJtaliOn&amp;l)y taroous people. _past anc1 present.
Each letter In the c1tt1e1 stal'lds for anotl\!lr.

Todats clue: Wequals M
" W0 T Y VH R I

K B R. N Y I
UKT

I K WR E 0 WR I

K V V P T ,

J P E.

E K F K J A E R.. T T 0 J H X N Y T S

ENRW."-

VNYOW

FRDMWYBB

PREVIOUS SOLUTION ..:. ' He was the Charlie Chaplin of our li.mes.'- Tim
Conway, on the death ol Don Knons
•

WOlD

AstroGraph

••••

O

Roarrangt, ltHers of
lovr xrombltd wdrd1
low to fo"" lour simp!" wo•ds

....... 'lllrthiii!Y:

LE

Friday, Aprll14, 2006

.

. JONES'

I

Tree Service
Top • Remcival • Trim
• Stump Grinding

•

PEANUTS

• Bucket .Truck

1

'IOU RE: A
'(OU'RE A6L01::K~IEI\DI
NOODLENI:CK
!
AND AN AIRI-1EAD!

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

YOU'Re: A
PUZZLEWIT

MDA
DIMI3UL6!

Room Addition• &amp;
Remodeling
New Garage•
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutter•

Vlnr.l Siding &amp; Painting .
Pet o end Porch O.Cke
WV036726

V.C . YOUNG Ill
9lJ2 -bL'1 s
f'nfll('!Oy 0111
~·~ lo d ~~~ 'fh' '"

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR S54 PER
MONTH.

'

.

SUNSHINE CLUB

I'

ROIERT
IISSELL
CIISTRICTIOI
·New Homes
· • Garages

• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Cornerstone
Construction

There's a strong posSibility you could get a
chance to make a caree r change in the
yea r ahead, which would be a complete
qepartu re from y-our present line of work. It
rtray come about through a dear friend.
ARIES (MarCh 21-Aprll 19) -Don't hOld
back today- from doing something nice for
another just because your e)(plolt seems
diffe rent. Your good deed will gladden bOth
your heart and the -recipient's.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) - II you can
pull togethe r and do something with a
friend" th'at neither .could do alone,, don't
hesitate 19 step forward and put the pact
together. Everything wllllallln line.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) - Don't hesitate to experiment with new methods or
procedures todBy", especially where your
work or caree r is concerned. They will
make things better, and be appreciated by
the powers that be.
CANCER (June 21-Juiy• 22) - Although
your competitive instinctS may be a trifle
sluggish today, once you lind yourself trailing others. you'll start putting the pedal to
the meral to even the score.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - A distasteful sit·
uation can be altered to your satisfaction
~ today It you don't take what occurs lying
down . Be Imaginative, creative ary:t have
· fun correcting what Is highly correctable.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - If you're
negotiating a matter of 1mpor1ance today, '
and things ar~ · golng a bit slow, approach
the situation from a new, friendly angle and
watch every1hing fall into place.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-oct. 23) - A situati on
that may ha'Ve been unprofitabl e until now
can be reversed today. All it will reQuire is
little ingenui ty and creative thinking. Don 't
settle for the status quo.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -It you he~e
to make a choice' today between ]eopardiz·
ing a friendship or gratifying a wor ldly inter·
est, choose th e former. You can always go
for the latter another ti me.
. .
··
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) '- Your
domestic responsibilities may get far m~?re
tha n a lick and a promise today, t1ecause
yo ur actions will be accomplished with love
for those who mean the most to yOu: you·r
.
family.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 191- Spend
your, time wlt h friends or associates who
irisplre you to explore new vistas and hori·
zons. It'll do more for your emotional well·
~eing than wast ing time wtth pals who do
little different.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -Your per·
captions In flnanci;ll and career matters will
be more astute today than those of your
. associ ates. Set Iotty goals th8.1 will encour·
age you to do more than usual. ·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - You won't
have any tro uble keeping your priorities In
proper sequence because. chances are,
whal you're likely to get Into today will be
enjoyable. It'll seem more IlkS furi and
gary\es than 'NQrk ,

T US U
~

l

"Have you ever noticed," my

C ABS I

I

I

6.

S CRU C I

'

a

7
I

8

neigh_bor asked, "lhat the things
YOI\'.want to know most'about
II$Ually are none of your
.. .............?"

0

Complete •he .chuckle quOtod
bv lilli11g in the I'Piiuln; ward•
you devofop /rom uop No. 3 below.

1
PRINt NUM8£RfD
lfTltRS IN SOUARES

E) UNSCRAMSlf

fOR

..NSWER

-

4113106

I

~l

•

s

~

,.

..

IIIIi i II

IC.RAML!TS ANIWIRI

411~

Jailor - Nobly- Unfit - Mender - BE FOUND

I work at .a day care tenter. I've concluded that

you can't disturb ptate i rthe~ is no peace to
BE FOUND.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

a

..

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

t-\0 '" \'-1.0
IH o\4~ 'tJQRI;11!

BAl ll\ I I.l ll\ I BE I{
Scorpion Tractors

/

"Taki11g The Sting Out Of
'· Hard Work!"
Mid~Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

-

fi-lA1'5 WH'I' l 00~1
OORM.I.L.I."( /!J()'f
" fi-lE: J&lt;EAL. &amp;IU: QLIVE.fl."

SOUP TO NUTZ

II I

'/e

~ ... MeaLS lob.JI.D
lle lP1 ~ IH~NG
alllOH~ Ht.tt 1F we Hao a
CIO:&gt;ice ..

a

'1bo oo Have a CHoice
S\M\'1'! ...

~Bd-l.. EClT OR

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301
.,

f
.. ·.-

Magrftte

By Bernice Bede Osol

J40-992-1m

ready to go, vet checked. 4WD, loaded, '$6,850 nagoMales $275, Females $325, lleble . (740)446-1905 or
(740)256·1084
(3p4)412·4845.

~·

Jlatlp m:rtbune

All pass

BIG NATE

Advertise
in this
space
for
554 per
month
~aUipohss

Pass
Pas a

~

GARFIELD

FORSALE

15 Forehead
16 Ami.
18 Want-ad

sal.

29670 Bashan Road
Racine; Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

TRucKs

Easl
Pass ·

0

Hill's Self
Storage

G~d Retriever AKC pups. 98 Dodge 1500 Quad cob.

--. --

~
~

• leave a messa e

..

--------2003 Mazda Tribute 4x4,
.leather Interior, 26.000
miles,
$10,900
OBO.
(740)256-6200 ar. (7~)2$8·
7 week old full O"looded 1618.
Norwegian
Elkhound,
female puppy. 1st shots by 96 Oids Ck)ra, very clean,
vet, $75. (740)446·8192, 01 Metro, less than 100k call
(304)674,-oo98 after Spm
(740)545·2026.

Pasa

740·742·229J

7 'Y•

2 Full blooded' Rat Terriers.
Beautiful. shots &amp; wormed.
Ready for Easter. Inside
·
only. (7~)256·1997.

For Sale. Chihuahua PuppY, 4 wheel drive. loaded,
$12,000
10 Weeka old Female. Call 67,000 miles.
(304)675-6487
740·992·7335.

'?

~

r

1995 Chevy Silverado Z71
AKC Lab pup"p!es wormed,
pickup, 112,000 miles. Must
1st shots, papers, Get
see to appreciate. (740)446someone. you love a puppy
4228 tea,ve message.
far Easter. $100 (304). 675·
7652
1995 Chevy Sjlveradc, Z71,
AKC Reg. Lab pups, shots &amp; ext. cab. 1~. PVV, PL, n&amp;w
papers, Born 2/8106. $200. trans, new brakes, tonneau
cover, bed liner, tow pkg.
(740)441-0931
RUns great. $6,500 call Jeff
CKC Jack Russell Terrier (304)634·0513
Call
puppies • $125.
(740)258-1652.
2001 Ranger Edge. 4 door,

HI

f&gt;f&gt;..RJ OF ~LL
TAA\WORK

(740) 992-0496

• Prompt &amp; quality

• 2003 Buick Century, 45,000
Block, brte&gt;k, , sewer pipes, miles wilt satG at blue bOOk
windows, lintels, etc. Claude loan value. $7550.00, Call
Winters, Rio Grande, OH 740"949 .0032 ·
Caii74Q-245·5121.
2003 Jeep Liberty, Umlted,
22.000 miles, $10,200 080.
I'E1S
(7~)256-6200 or (740)2$8·
roRSALE
1616.

~

nrv;;;;---,:~o~vz;:::;v;r....---,:::f~I:::T~'S:-=r=~u:-:f:;:-:_r=t'I;-;;A~t:-:w:-:;t'IA-;T;:-;;Y::o:-:u:-.1
I&gt;ON'T ~NOI/tl CAN'T ~U~T
YOlJ, EIfNI~ IS
.1 y
P#l AC. TIC. A""L

BARNEY

Hardwood Clblnea, Alld FurnHure

•r'"•or--~H~o-ME---.;,

1

i

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

INVI/'IC.IB~f.

Ed DJIVowner .
(740)992-4100
Chuck Wolle/Mgr.
(740)992-0496

I t I ..,

t= .

ACK Boxer Puppy. · Fawn
W/Biack Mask, 8 weeks old,
$250.00. 7~-416-8021 .

.a1111ln
53 Plunderer
un~
55 Anaheim
12 Teahouse
team
apparel
56 Pack rats
13 Mlaaloalppl 57 Vegan 'a
City '
laboo
14
58 Painter-

23 SILattleiUUIII

Opening lead: • 2

Over30yean
experience

For rent ·camping trailer
sites, full hook - up 740-992·
5955
.

'
Sofa and Chair-$75.00,
SinQle Trundle Bed-$50.00, 20m
Blazer LT . 4x4,
mattress and sheets. 740 _ 91,000mi , loaded, New
99?·3244. Leave MessaQe. Goodyears, Onstar, leather,
All PoW!Ir, $7,500. (740)245·
_9245. (740)367:0624 .

•5

50 Start up

19 Tarleat·

... 8 !H 3

West

Service
Licensed &amp; lnsurW

STANLEY TREE

a6

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West

24hr EmerKency

591-4348

Q tO

+ A 9 8· 2

. K J. 54
• B
• QJ 7 4
... A Q 10 9

2000 Goachmen Prospera
36'. 5th wheel, fhree slide·
outs, tully loaded ,. garaged,
excellent Condition, Mason
304·773-9112.

(740)446-4096

r

46

Flock.-

Soutb

.
MOJUR HOMEii
~~--iitiiiiitOiiiiiiliiili.-1

I
•

I

•

... 2

Jeff Stet hem - Owne r

BoATSfUR&amp;S~~ -=---'---.,--!ULo

+

~riiiii'-~C~A-M_I'E_:RS~-~&amp;="'"-,

2000
VW
Beetle,
Slate top pooI ra bl e, .con
I 78,000/miles. TurbO, Auto,
converted, $400. 24x4 swim- Air, Sun Root, CD Changer.
(~~~~~~~5a. S450 · Call Good Condition. $7,500,

-NE\'1 EL.LM VIEW
TOWNHOUSEIAPTS
2 .&amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES
"ALL ELECTRIC
"C.ENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
"STOVE. REF.
"DISHWASHER
'GARBAGE DISPOSAL
"WIND BLINDS
~WATER, SEWAGE &amp;,
TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)882·30 1'

l:l;~;~~:;£~

,\ I , ' 1 I 1 \ I • 1 II'

LAWN CARE

1

992-5682

·-------,.r·

r

l

Mulching

David Lewis

er,
6cylshape,
.. 45,000well
miles;main·
very
good
Cub Cadet, 14hp, garden tained, cover, extra lights
tractor. Vinyl bed cover for and
chrome,
$7,150.
pick up truck call (304)675· (740)441·5540.
7947
Far sale; Yamaha 20Q1
TIR225. Prfoe $1,600. Call
0, . . - - - - - - - . ; , far info (740)387-n46, serf·
to
Auros
L---t'ORiiiiiiSiiALEiiiil_ _.l
. ous calls anlyl
Motorcycle 2003 XR 400 low
$SOOI Police Impounds! miles, runs· great, 740--949-

I)

Trimm i Qg,- Aeration~
Fenilization- planting-

::...::::.:.::..::...:..:.:=...___

I , '

1 Better than .

Gleeful
exclamltlon
Hangs back

5 Walerfowl

04-l:l-4111

Eaol
• 8

7 6 3 2
9 7 4 2
K 10 6 3

POWER WASWNG

3 miles west of

I

•
•

TRI-STflTf nlOBILf POWER WASH
AnD LAWn CARE

Owner
Insured
Free Est.

•-----":--......J

Attention!
Local company offering ~No
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
grams tor- you to buy your ,
' home instead of renting . ·
• 1CIO'ro financing
• Less than perfect credit
accepted
• 'Payment could . be the
same as rent
Locators. Nice ·2br Apartment located
Mortgage
(740)367-0000
in
Point
Pleasant.
AefridgeiKitchen Range fur·
Nice 3BD house, located on
nished. Forced Air Gas
Rt~
'2 mUes from Holzer
Heat &amp; AC. W/0 Hook up
Hoepltal, big yard. (7~)367·
$300/month , $200/deposlt.
7195.
(304)675-7628
SA 75- 4BR, 1 bath homegEi.rage, basement. riVer
access. Propane heat, window NC. $650/manth renF
$650 sec. dep., yo~ pay utilIlles. Available 1st week in
April. Call (740)446-3644 far
an appliCation.

81

I OXI Ox1 OX20

2 or 3 bedroom ·house for
rent in Racine-area, no pets,
(740)992·5858
2 To 3 ·Bedroom House in
SyracuSe. $425.00 a M.
$200.00 Deposit. 74Q-949·
2025.

( ' Ii

416-1436

Middleport,

Wor1c:ing red GE cooksteve,
$75; working Kenmore dryer
$75; 2 whirlpool washer (to
use for parhts) $50 each.
(740)441·8959.

MONTY

304-675-2457

740-992-7953

MANLEY'S
SElf STORAGE

·r

45

ha~

A Q 10 9
A K J 3
5
K J 7 6

West

Parking Lots • ·Ball Courts • Private
Roads • Driveways • Streets •
Estimates Playgrounds ·.

War11house

p

2 bedroom. 1' bathroom,
Green
School
district.
Available May 1sl. Call
(740)44 1·1124.

• SEAL COATING
• PATCHING

A~~~E~ S~v:;~

1999 Harley Davidson Ultra

Furnished upstairs, 3 rooms
&amp; bath , newly- decorated,
new cS.rpet. Reference &amp;
Cars from $500. For listings
JET
deposit required. (740)446·
~EAATION
MOTORS
800-391-5227 .... 3901
Need to sell your home?
Repaired. New &amp;. Rebuilt In - - - - - - ' - - Late on payme;nts. divorce, '519.
Corvette. 350 Engine,
job transfer or a death? I GraCious living. 1 end 2 bed- Stock. Call Ron · Evans, 1•. 1985
...
·
·
1ransm 1ss1on
· au1oma 1IC
can buy- your home. All cash room apartments at Village 800 _537 9528 _
(304)675 _5813
and quick closing. 740-416· Manor
and
Riverside
3130.
Apartments in Middleport. NEW AND USED STEEL ~ 1992 Ford Lumina, 9,000
IU \ I \I -.,
From $295-$444. Call 740- Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar actual mKes. Very good con·
992 •5064 · Equal Housing · For
Concrete.
Angle , ditlon. (304)675·5~

2 BeP,room MobileHome
$375/month, References &amp;
Deposit reQuired No Pets
(304)675-5578

1.. St~tu S,IU...I , .
At j/(ec,..,.lfe ~
Nf!W ConstructlOn
and Rernodeling .
Rat RoofS A Specialty.

LlVESrocK ' · Classic. Loaded, Excellent ::;;;:;;;;;;;:;;~
L - - - - - - - _ . 1 condition, 29,000 total miles.
in Henderson, WV. PrePrice $13,500. Call 740·
1
owned Appticanes star1ing 34th Annual Bentley Pig 949-2217 untll7 pm.
p.l-~~~~~~1.10~
at $75 &amp; up all under Sale. Friday, April 21st, ----~---~
.
Warranty-,
. also
have 7:30pm • Fay-ette County 1999 Honda 300 EX, many
Household · Misc. Items Fairgrounds, Washington new parts $1,500 flrm.,2000
1BA, stove &amp; refridg. turn .. starting at .... 99e &amp; up Court House, OH. Selling Suzuki AM 125, aftermarket
util. pd . $350 mo., dep. (304)675-7999
175 head of barrows and parts $1 ,350 firm. Bath look
97. Beech Street
Suitable tor 1 person. ' - - ' - - - - - - - - gilts . Consignees: Roger and run great (740)388·
OH
(740)446-3667.
Thompsons Appliance &amp; Bentley &amp; family, leroy 9021.
' - - ' - - - - - - - Aepalr-675·7388. For .sale, Larrick &amp; family. (937)584- - - - - - - - 1br. WID. Frig, Stove. par· re· condltloned autOmatic 398
2000 Honda Goldw!ng SE,
2
tially
furnished
Point washers &amp; dryers, relrigera·
·
25th Anniversary Edition.
992-J 194
Pleasant area. $350 month, tors, gas and electric
Loaded,
17,000/miles.
&amp;
• new t~res,
·
Or 992-6635
depos1t.
re Jerences ranges, air conditioners, and Angus Bulls, two )(-breds, 4 Bl ack , extras,
. d
N
o....
·
heifers. Excellent breeding. b ok
(3041 675 ••95
reqUire .
o
rll;1ts . wringer washers. Will do Slate Run Farin. See r es.
-oo .
•Middleport's onty,
(304) 593" 354~
repairs 011 major brands in 'www.slaterunfarm .com, 2000 Honda Shadow VLX,
Self-Storage"
sMop or at your home.
2 be droom apartment In ::....:::...:...:~::...:..:::..:::__
(740 1286-5 395.
600' oc. Like gew. (740)446·
Centenary, all utiUties paid Used Furniture store, 130 - - - - - - - - - 91n.
except electric $325. Call Bulavllla Pike. EJectric/ gas Doughty's
Club
Pigs - - - - - - - - (740)256-1135.
range, bunkbeds, chests, Meigs County Born Pigs. 2002 'f8llow HarleyDavidson
Call Kevin, Ike, or Ben at 1. ClasSic.
Chromed
up!
Apartment building with 2 dinettes. couches, used (740 )698-623 1.
13,000ml Detachable wind·
apartments and office for mattresses. Grave monushield/rear seat backrest.
740 446 82
sale. Will land contract with 'ments.
(
)
-4? • For Sale- Four young reg. Garage t&lt;ept. $15,900. 304$5,000 down, loCated down· Gallipolis, OH. Hrs. 11 -3 (M·
'7'7'1 .5379.
Angus bulls and two heifers. , ,..,
F) Sat · C8II II rst.
town on 2nd Ave. Call _:_::.:::..:..:.:.:::.:::....
•.
_ _ _ . Call (740)256-1352.
(740)710-0007.
Used washer; sofa bed- - - -·- - , - - - - - 2003
GUBOO
Honda
good condition only slept on Showplgs fOr sale; Approx. Goldwing. 9,017 miles. CB &amp;
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
26 Years Experience
a few times. $100. Please . 50 head of Feb. Showpigs. custom pin stripping, lots of
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
leave msg if no answer Oeel's Club Pigs (740)·388- extras,
$t5,500.
Call
PRtC~S AT JACKSON
(740)208·8365.
7447 (740)·44 1·5460
(740)245·9053.
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
740-992-6971
Drive from $344 to $442. Vinyl $5.95/yrd. Drive a little·
~~ ~
2003 Honda Shadow Spirit
Walk to shop &amp; movi.es. can Save alot. Mollohan Carpet,
UKI\.II"&lt;j
750. . Cherry Red Aame.
Free Esti·I1UI·tes·
740·446·2568.
Equal
5,000 miiSs, Extras. $4,000 ~~;;:::;~;;:::;;;:::;;:::::=~
1q
Vine
St.,
Gallipolis,
-,
Housing Opportunity.
Firm
(304)875-8089
(740)446.·74.u. •
4x5 round bales of hay $15 _
__.:._;__
_ __.:..__ .,
•
1 and · 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unturnished , security deposit
required, no pets, 740•992.
221 B.

r

2 Bedroom house, HUD
Approved , Rutland, Out of
Flood , $400 per month,
$400 dep. No Pets. 740·
992 •7546 after S:OOpm.

S~f4(1fbt9

591-4641

I

1

•
¥
•
...

::::::::~::-;;~~~~~~~

Bright blue 1998 Dodge ext.
For Sale or Trade 1 112 cab 360 VB, 4x4, 95,000
acres of land (Level) on miles. Looks &amp; runs greatl
Pleasant
Ridge
Road. $9,500 tirm. (740)441·8959.
$5,000
(304)675·4893
VANS

4 ldtchen Windsor chairs,
2002 Dodge Grand Caravan
white &amp; natural finish, excel- r,~;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_;; 71 ,000 miles. Great condl·
0
lent condition, (740)985- r10
FARM
lion. Asking $8,500 080.
28 acres ot flat bottom term •••s
-.&gt;UV
F.QuiPI\.1ENT
•
· ground located in West
• Please leave
Shade ·Meigs Co. Ohio.
Ideal tor say bean, corn,
762
wh=:

North

U U

and Excavation

·

OR 'IiwlE

FOR n.r.l"i
1

f

ft8f• . .

HOME CREEK ENTERPRISES

FAIIM'i

22 acres. wonder1ul viewJ
ridgetop prOperty, close to
main highway perfect for 4·
wheeler trails. (740)707·
2109
Brand new 2BR apts. on
Bob McCormick Rd. Call for
Need to Rent a Trailer Lot
details (740)441-0194 or
· soon, ~6x80 Trailer, single
(740)441-1184
no children (304)773-5728
or (304)773-5930
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
• Thirteen 5 to 12 acre lots in TownhouSe
apartments,
Morgan Twp. Gatlia County. and/or small houses FOR
96 acre~ in Cheshire Twp. RENT. Call (740)44 1·11 11
Gama County. Six 5 acre lots fo_rappl_ication &amp; information.
in Salem Twp. Meigs County.
Possible land contact on all Efficiency apartment for
except 96 acre piece. Phone rent , $:250 per month plus
Middleport ,
(740)669·0143, No calls utilities, In
(740)992-6849
after 9:00pm.

HOL\Stli
FOR IbM

..

· 1999 Jeep Grand Charokse
Umited. qood condition, tow
~
mHeage, $9,800. (7~)245G'b
c-1
h
t'· 5757 or (740)339-0885 No
I son .., p one acous ~
.
guitars; aolld mahogafly anSWDr, leave message,
bodies and necks, new In
box. Your choice $ 150 cash 2003 Jeep Grand Cherokee
each. 740 379-2601.
Laradc, 59,000 mDes, 4x4,
$ 11 ,900 OBO. &lt;74Pl256·
""'-"'
6200 or (740)258-1618.

i

ca...
---·elian

r'""'::---:--:--::--....---..---.

I

.

ACROSS

10 Orchard

Lw-oi"""'iiiii'"IJMENJSiiiiiiiliio,.l.

I

j

2006 16' wide
_""'o'ngle
Vl.,,,~
~•
Only s181 /Mo
(740)385-767 1

'great
180,000+
miles.
- - - - - - - - - Asking $5,500. (740)245·
lleedy nowl Fox Terrier pup- 0372.
pies, $150. Coming aoon. - - - - - - - - DashOhund puppies $350. $8 GMC Jimmy, 2.8 TB I, 4
1st 811011/Warmlng, AKC. apeed, PIS, AM Radio, Tilt,
(7~)446-..-.
63559 miles. Calf 740-992·
7770, M-F, 9-5 tor Appl to
Reg.Great Dane puppiea, 8. I!Ubmlf seal«&lt; bid to Eslate.
weeks old, Harlequin and
Merle. $400.oo-600.00, 740.
4x4
$85-2408. •
~
FOR SALE
.

No Pets. Lesse Plus
Security 0epoe1t R""'lrecl.
(740)367·7086.
;__..:.._______
Twin Rivera Tower is accepting applications fer waiting
list lor Hud-sub&amp;i.zed, 1- br,
apartment, calf 875-$879EHO
WEEKLY. AVAILABLE
1 n c 1 u d e 5

38

Phillip
Alder

~HXl27 .

I

.

---

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-------------. -·-

�'

.

..

.

•

Senior Quarterly
.i nside today's Sentinel
Pqe B8 • The Daily Sentinel

---

Thursday, Aprilt3,

www.mydailysentinel.com

At the Movies: 'Take the Lead'
AP MOVIE CRITIC

to

Entertainment- Briefs
GALLIPOLIS .- This year, the French Art Colony's annual international exhibit fea(ures the Caribbean Islands from .
April 5-30.
Stop and learn about the islands' shared ancestry, colonial
past, tourism,' culture and music. Call (740) 446-3834 to
schedule a ~chool tour (scheduled groups will make an island
craft and get a taste of island food) .
The exhibit is sponsored by the Ohio Arts Council
lnfoCision Man;tgement and the Gallipolis Kiwanis Club.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;;o ( ' I·. N·I S • \ 'ol. ;;:;, '\Jo. t-o

• Rebels shock Eagles.
.:$ee Page 81

BARBOURSVILLE, W.Va. - Need to make a few
·changes to your home or garden? The Huntington Mall can_
help by Jetting its customers find what they may be look·
,
·
ing for.
The mall will host a Creative Promotions Home and Garden
School April 21-23 during mall hours.
The show ill feature various vendors from the Tri-State
area.
Mall hours are I0 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday through Saturday and
noon-6 p.m. Sunday.
·
For more information, call the mall office at (304) 733-0492.
AP Photo

In this photo provided by New Line Cinema, Antonio Bander!IS as "Pierre" and Anna Dimitrie
Melamed as Pierre's dance partner in 'Take the Lead.'
Rock (Rob Brown from
"Finding Forrester") and
LaRhette ( Yay a DaCosta),
each of whom blames the
other for their older brothers '
violeRI, untimely deaths .
(Dianne Houston's script has
Pierre making a Tybalt-andMercutio comparison, in case
we couldn't· figure out the
subplot's Shakespearean, origins for ourselves.)
There's ·also the- astonishingly hot · Sasha (Jenna
Dewan), who's the target of
both Ramos (Dante Basco)
and Danjou (Elijah Kelley)
on and off the dance floor. (A
sexy three-way tango ·they
perform at the climactic ~itywide dance competition nearly gets them di.squalified ; it 's
vampy but fun .)

Then there are a couple of . end of this advice, which
cases of forbidden interracial helps a great deal.
• love, including · the tentative
Among the other potentialromance between the very ly cringeworthy lines from
· Jarge, very black Monster Pierre as he tries to inspire
(gentle giant 8randon T. his students: "f ·Jook around
Andrews) and the very petite, · this room and all I see is
· very white Caitlin (Lauren choices - choices waiting
Collins). who practices for · to be made."
her upcoming cotillion with
You have a choice, too. You
Pierre's low-income misfits could go out and see this feelbecause she feels more com- good facsimile and be moderfortable with them than she ately entertained, or rent
poes on the Upper East Side. "Mad Hot Ballroom" and feel
"You' need to dance for you.rself becoming genuinely
yoursel~. not for anybody moved by the real thing.
"Take the Lead," a New
else," Pierre tells Caitlin. A
shamelessly saccharine .line, Line Cinema release, · is
but Banderas doesn't oversell rated PG-1 j for thematic
it, which surprisingly makes ·material, language and some
it work. Collins is 'S·weet and violence. Running time: 119
sort of lovely in her awk- minutes. Two and a half
wardness ,on the receiving stars out of four.

and ·most traditional. The
Easter Bunny will be there to
greet all the children. Ages
are from 0-2, 3-4, 5-6, 7-8, 910 and 11 -12 years. A bag of
candy will be given to each
child at the end of the hunt.
Additionally, the 0.0.
MCintyre Park District's
annual Easter egg hunt is this
Saturday at 9 a.m. at Raccoon
Creek County Park on
County Road 28 (Dan Jones).
The hunt is open to chi 1dren age 12 and under.
Participants should meet at
the Wild Turkey (No. I) shelter to be separated into age
groups for the hunt.
All participants will receive
a treat from the Easter bunny.
For more information, con-

tact Mark Danner at 446For more information, contact the farm at 245-5305.
4612, extension 255.
Also, an Easter egg hunt
And you can plan. on
attending Bob Evans Farm's . will be held at Scenic Hills
ninth annual "Lunch with the Nursing and Rehabiltation
Easter Bunny" this Saturday Center at I p.m. Friday.
from noon until 2 p.m.
Refreshments will be pro)oin the Easter Bunny for a vided by Life Ambulance.
cookout lunch that includes The Easter Bunny will visit.
grilled sausage sandwiches, For more information, call
hot dogs, chips, cotton candy 446c7J50.
and a soft drink.
An Easter egg fiunt sponFor minimal fees, children sored by Ewington Church of
can take a horse-drawn car- Christ in Christian Union for
riage ride and a lead ride on chiidren up to age I0 is set
horseback.
for II :30 a.m. Saturd&lt;1~ in the
The complimentary Easter Vinton Community Park.
There will be free hot dogs,
egg hunt' begins at I p.m.
Children will hunt for candy chips and drinks. Everyone is
and special prizes in three age invited to attend. For inforgroups- infant to 3 years, 4- mation, contact Missy Justice
at 38·8-0 151.
·
6 years and 7-10 years.

· Current, upcoming Ohio ey~nts, festivals
Zoo, Vine St., Cincinnati.
Festi v~l : Chardon · Square, Sale, •Fairfield .County
Exhibit- Young Masters, state Route 44· and Route 6, Fairgrounds, Building 16 and
50, Lancaster.
Troy Hayner Cultural Center, Chardon.
' National
Robotics
Through April 21
W. Main St., Troy.
April 21
Doolittle Raiders Reunion,
April 19-22
Meet · Your Congressman- Challenge, Marion County
National Museum of the
Show, .·. Breakfast with Ralph Regula, Fairgrounds, Marion . .
Spinone . Dog
.United States ·Air Force , Delaware County Fairgrounds, , Barrett Conference Center,
April21-23
Spaatz St., Wright-Patterson Pennsylvania Ave., Delaware. ' Walsh University, North . Spring Book Sale, Red Cross
Building, Barnhart Rd.,' Troy.
Air Force Base, Dayton.
Canton.
.
April19-28
Through April 23
Ohio Arabian Horse Assn.
Capital Unrversity's Student
Extreme
Fighting
OH+5:
Ohio
Border Art Exhibition, Schumacher Challenge XIII, Lifestyle Show, Roberts Arena, · state
Biennial, Dairy Bam Cultura.l Gallery, Capital University, Communities Pavilion, Neil Route 730, Wilmington.
Mohican
Wildlife
Arts Center, Dairy Ln., Athens. College and Main, Bexley.
·Ave., Columbus.
Through April 28
April 20
Wildflowers and Waterfalls Weekend, Mohican Outdool'
Kiwanis Hike: Hocking Hills State Park, . School, Bunker Hill North
Exbibit by Todd Reynolds · Portsmoutll
&amp;
Chad
Eiche nlaub, ' PaQcake Festival; Elks City state Route 664 South, Logan. Rd., Butler.
Appleton Gallery, Vern Riffe Club, 4th &amp; Court Sts.,
April 21-22
Jn~ian Arts and Crafts
Center for the Arts, 2nd St., Portsmouth .
Earth Day Celebration, Show and Sale, Boo9shoft
April 20-22
Nature's. Food Market, down- Museum of Discover.y,
Portsmouth.
DeWeese Pkwy., Dayton:
Something Blue Art Show.
Art iQ Bloom, Columbus town Berlin·.
Shoot the Hills-Nature
John Mcintire Library, N. 5th Museum of Art, E. Broad St.,
Tim McGraw and Faith
St., Zanesville.
Columbus.
Hill , Nationwide Arena, ·W. Photo Weekend, Hocking
Hills State Park, state Route
Through April 30
April 20-23
Nationwid~ Blvd., Columbus.
Geauga County ,Maple
Used Clothing and Toy 664 South, Logan. ·
Zoo Blooms, Cincinnati
COLUMBUS (API - Here
is a list of current and upcoming Ohio festivals and evems:

FRill.\ Y, AI'RII. q ,

Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY Meigs
Commissioners
County
authorized a one-mill levy
renewal .for the Meigs
County Board of Health at
Thursday's regular meeting.
Health
Commissioner
Larry Marshall presented a
proposed resolution, which
commissioners approved,
authorizing the placement of

Burning
.ban causing
problems
between
neighbors

· Brown.Bag concerts set
IRONTON - Ohio University Southern announced the
spring Brown Bag concerts at 12: 15 p.m. each Wednesday
during spring quarter in the Mains Rotunda at the Riffe
Center.
The concerts are free and open to the public. For additional·
information, call Nina Queen, concert coordinator, at (740)
533-4602 or (800) 626-0513.
.
Performers for this quarter are Gretchen Davis, April 19;
lfonton High School varsity singers, April 26; Hub Rose, May
3; Crosby Clyse, May 10; Shad Melvin and Jason Banks, May
17; and the OU Southe_rn A~tivity Band, May 24.

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTCII&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'Mountain Stage' presents
show at Clay Center

OBITUARIES

CHARLESTON, W.Va.- Jennings. She also had a
Country music artists Martina number one hit, "I'm Not
McBride and Jessi Colter will Lisa" in 1976.
McCoury was the guitarist
be just two performers during
performance of "Mountain and lead singer in one of Bill
Monroe's lineups.
Stage." .
· The show will begin at 7 · McCoury and his band has
p.m. Sunday, April 23 at the received numerous awards
Clay Center. 'oining McBride and eight "Entertainer of the
and Colter are the Del Year" honors.
Thorn has toured and colMcCoury Band, Paul Thorn
and Diana Jones.
·
laborated with Sting, Paul
All seats are reserved for Carrack, Joe Diffie, Tanya
$10, $30 and $45. Tickets are Thcker, Ronnie Milsap and
available at the Clay Center Carole King.
Jones' roots go back to the·
box office only.
McBride has made a career Tennessee mountains .. Her
out of singing songs that grandfather had performed
blend tradition with a pop with Chet Atkins and Dolly
sensibility. She debuted in Parton. Jones has her own
1992. McBride has had sever- sound with a: blend -of counal
hits,
including try, . blues and mountain
muSjC.
"Independence Day."
For more information, call
Colter is the widow of leg(304)
561-3570.
.
endary "outlaw'.' Waylon

. Page AS
,
• Dassie Mae Kuhn, 77
• Naomi Neville, 89
• Margaret F. Nunn, 89

INSIDE
• PVH laboratory .
receives Commission
· accreditation.
See Page A2
• Week of the Young
Child. See Page A2
• 4-H Ohio Valley
Bank Scholarship
Winners Announced.
See Page A2
• .Holy Week service
calendar. See Page A3
• And what do we now
. -say? A Lenten devotional.
See Page A6
: • AHunger For More.
:~Page A&amp; .
•. Local stocks.
See Page AS

.

Jamaica 'Culture' coming
to Stuart's Opera House
NELSONVILLE - Roots hands touring today.
Reggae
Legends
from
While Culture has now
Jamaic&amp;. "Culture·," featuring been around for 29 years,
Joseph Hill with special Joseph Hill and friends are
guests, Level Vibes Sound showing no signs of slowing
System, will be featured at 8 down. Hill has lost none of
p.m. on Thursday, April20, at his strikin&amp; stage presence
the historic Stuart's Opera and fiery energy over the
House in Nelsonville.
years. The group has susFormed in the rich tradition tained their lengthy career
of harmony trios in 1976, by being both true to their
Culture quickly became a part cultural roots, and at the
of the vibrant, politically same tim'e able to incorpocharged Jamaican reggae rate new sounds and ideas
scene of the day.
into their mix.
Working with renowned
·culture has proved to be
producer Joe Gibbs, Culture one of the few acts in reggae
recorded their famous debut that can always be relied on
album "Two Sevens Clash." · - both on record, and on
This release demonstrated stage. ,As reggae ml!sic goes,
Joseph Hill 's keen 'aware- a Culture concert ts both a
ness of the connection tribute to the past · and a
between jamaica's history glimpse of the future.
and its current social and
Tickets .are $l7 'in advance
political · climate. This con- . and $20 at the door. For more
ne~tion remains today, sepa: · information, call (740) 753rating Culture from the 1924 or on the Web at
countless party Reggae www.stuartsoperahouse.org.

SYRACUSE
This
week an overwhelming
majority of Syracuse residents who attended an informational meeting about the
village's compliance with
the st~te . burning ban
showed disdain for it.
· If there were any residents
at the meeting who supported
the ban they did not speak up
ihough restdents' complaints
on the practice of open ·b,yrning in the village were ' whill
brought representatives of the
O.hio
Environmental
Protection Agency ·(EPA) to
investigate alleged violators.
Their presence in the vii!age suggests there are people
that fall on both sides of the
issue. within SJ(racuse.
Lisa-· Duvall and Susan
Clay of the Ohio EPA's
Southeast District Office
attended the informational
meeting at the Syracuse
Volunteer Fire Department.
Both women were in the
hot seat, fielding questions
from residents who have
burned their trash and debris
within the village corporation
limits for years. ·
PluH see 11..: AS

Settlement order
is entered in·
·nr..Morgan case
Bv .TIM MALONEY 1
TMALONEY&lt;Il&gt;MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

WEA1HER

the five-year renewal on the
· November bal.lot. Marshall
satd the one-mtlllevy. would
generate . an
estimated
$230,000 per ~ear for the
general operation of the
department. .
Marshall srud the levy pro·
1 bo
ceeds represent on y a uta
third of the departm~~t's
entire ~udget. The remamm,g·
two-thtrds come.s from vartous grant fundmg sources,
but funds from.those sources,

Middleport Pool for up to
1,200 program particiP.ants.
The allocation wtll be
divided among the .two pools
. equally - up to $44,000 to
the Midd.leport pool and
$44,000 to the Syracuse Pool,
according
to
Michael
.
.
Sw1sher, D1rector of the
Department of . Job and
Family Services.
Unlike most Temporary
Assistance to Needy Families
programs, the abstinence pro-

MIDDLEPORT - · An
Basler Sunday bike run will
raise funds to help lowincome children with swimming lessons, meals an,d other
expenses at the Middleport
Pool this summer.
Vicky Dent, owner of Free
Spirits Tavern in Middleport,
·has organized the tavern's
first "Peter Cottontail" Poker
Run. It will begin at noon,
l~aving from Free Spirits, and
travel to several local taverns
before
returning
to
Middleport for a free dinner
and fulldraising event.
"There are many children
in our community who can't
. take full advantage of the
pool because their famllies
don't have the necessary
resource~;" D•nt said. "In
other cases, kids can pay
.admission, btit don't have
enough money for food,
swimming gear or lessons." ·

,.
· . ·' ::, ·.' ·
.
· Brl111 J. RMCI/plloto
Vicky Dent, owner of Free -Spirits Tavern, and Middleport Pool Manager Dale Riffle look over
some of the gift bas.kets, filled with donated items, to be auctioned at Sunday's First Peter
PIHH ... Bike run, A5
Cottontail Poker Run, which will assist low-income children who attend the pool this summer.
_ _ _ _ _ __:__ _ _ _ _ _ ___:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

.ABLE scholar achievement gets Congressional recognition
BY CHARI.ENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
MIDDLEPORT - A Certificate of ·
Special Congressional Recognition
· was presented to .the Middleport Adult
Basic and Literacy Education Program
Thursday.
The certificate cited the dedication
and leadership of the teachers and commended the scholars for their dedication to learning resulting in high numbers passing the state testing requirement for GED certificates this year.
Said Congressman Ted Stricldand in
the certificate "I would like to commend the Middleport ABLE GED
scholars who understal)d the importance of furthering their education and
for recognizing the desire to reach
their fullest potential." He also com. mended the staff for continued commitment to education.
According to Richard Nease and
Lisa King, instructors at the
Chorllne Hoeftlch/ pllolo
Middleport Center - one of three in
Christi
Mash,
on
behalf
of
Congressman
Ted
Strickland,
presents
a Certificate of
the county, ·the others being at
Special Congressional Recognition to Lisa King and Richard Nease, Instructors, and
PluH ... ABLE.AI
one of the GED graduates,. Bessie Fisher of Middleport, right. ·

Middleport's revitaliza~on
subject of Chamber luncheon

.j
lo ' - ··-·-

'

··--·-

--···-

-· .

-~

'

-.--

gram is open to any Meigs
County chilq in grades six
through 12 . 11 is administered
through a contract with the
Athens-Meigs Educational
Service Center.
Swi sher said the ro ram
·11 1
'd
p g·
WI a so provt e men1onng
·· .. d
· ed d -1~ervlces an . orgamz
a! Y
a~llvlll.es at ~th pools pnor
to their ope~m~ each ~ay.
Those
acllvlltes
mtght
~lease see Levy. AS

' Bv BRIAN J. REED
BR.EEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Pl•se ... Ch1mber, AI

Pl•se IH MOIJin, AS

•

Marshall said, are set aside
forvery specific uses .
~n. other business, . com:
mt~s10ners approved a resolu!ton amendmg the county s pregnancy_ preventi'on
and teen abs.tlnenct: program, extendmg the proh
h
gram t roug the summer
mo~ths, and a11ocating an
addlttonal $88,000 to the
program for the purchase of
pool !?asses at the London
Pool m Syracuse and the

to

POINT
PLEASANT,
W;Va. - An order settling
the case against Point
Pleasant physician Dr. Breton ·
Lee Morgan has been entered
at the West Virginia Board of
Medicine in Charleston.
Morgan surrendered his
license on April 4, and in
eKchange, Hearing Examiner
Anne B. Charnock will recommend to the board of med.
icine that all of the charges
Bv BETH SERGENT
against him be' dismissed. A
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
vote on her recommendation
is to take place May 8. .
POMEROY
Currently, Morgan is
Middleport's
revitalization
receiving treatment for his
was
front
and
center
at this
dependence on painkilling
Meigs
County
nari:otics at a treatment facil- week's
Chamber
of
Commerce
·busiity in Georgia. His former .
ness
mi.
n
ded
luncheon
at
the
wife, Sherri Adams~ who is ·
vice president of his corpora- Wild Horse Cafe.
President of the Middleport
tion, is attempting to reorganize and reopen his office Development Group Paul
under the name Generations Reed spoke to chamber members about the efforts to reviHealthcare Center.
talize
downtown and the supAdams said this week that
Morgan intends to complete port ·and patience that is
the rehabilitation program needed to bring that vision
and then reapply to get his into a reality.
"MiddlepOrt is not dead,"
license back. The program
.
Reed
firmly teld the audience.
lasts through June .and he
would file for reinstatement ' Reed then went on to talk
about recenl success sto~ies
then, she said.
"It is his intent to return to such as 44 new jobs created

I

•

""w.mydail)"'ntint•l.,·u 111

:! Oil(•

Commissioners·autho~e November health ~epartinent levy

SPORTS

Home, Garden Show slat~

Easter egg hunts abound in Gallia this weekend
GALLIPOLIS - Weekend
Easter egg hunts will abound
·in· Gallia County, including
the traditional egg hunt lield
in the Gallipolis City Park ..
Gallipolis
Parks
and
Recreation
Department
announced that the annual
"Easter in the f:'ark" will be
held in the City Park this
Saturday at II a.m.
There will be 2,000 Easter
eggs filled with candy hidden
in the -park . This year also
features games at the park,
beginning at I0 a.m., sponsored by the Gallipolis Junior
Women's League.
A bonnet contest will
immediately follow the egg
hunt with categories as fol lows: prettiest, most original

2006

Caribbean .on display at FAC

BY CHRISTY LEMIRE
Like "Lords 'of Dogtown,"
the skateboarding ·film based
on
the
documentary
"Dogtown and Z-Boys,"
''Take the Lead" was a far
more effective story in its
original nonfiction form.
. It's inspired by the work of
Pierre Dulaine, whose dance
classes in New York C1•.y
public schools also provided
the basis for the charming
7005 documentary "Mad Hot .
Ballr_oom."
· · But the moves have ·been
moved from elementary
school to high school, and the ·
feel-good factor has been
. cranked up. ("Mad Hot
8allroom" put ~ smile on your
face without trying so hard.)
Here, Antonio Banderas
serves up tough .love to atrisk kids as the old-world
Dulaine, teaching them the
tango and the fox-trot with
the 'hope that they' ll simulfaneously learn di sc ipline
and dignity.
But Banderas is so low-key
in his gentleman)y, romantic
manner, he . makes a predictable movie mqre tolerable than it should be .
: The feature debut from Liz
Friedlander is shot and edited
in fluid, vibrani fashion, as 1
you would expect from a veteran · music video director.
·But the speed with which
these k.ids combine traditioniii ballroom-dance steps with
modern hip-hop music is
Jjdiculous. It's like something
out of "Fame" - you fully
expect· them to run out into
the street and start dancing on
!fie tops of taxi cab_s.
Among the motley group in
detention, who will be forced
partner up and boogie
down, are the star-crossed

t6o attend Easter
egghunt,A2

..

I

.

'

Rockwell sells
Gallipolis
,ElectroCraft
operation
Bv PAUL D"RST
PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Beth Serpntj photo

Paul Reed , Pres ident of Farmers Bank and the Middleport
Development Groop discusses plans to revitalize down.town Middleport with Meigs County Chamber of Commerce
members .

GALLIPOUS - In a deal
that was rnade final on March
3 1, Dover, N.H.-based DMI
Technology has purchased
ElectroCraft
Engineered
Solutions from Rockwell
Automation, which includes
the Gallipolis plant located
on McCormick Road.
OM l plans no , staffing
changes in Gallipolis, said
James A. Elsner, president and
. chief executive officer of DMI .
"The ElectroCraft business
didn · t fit anymore' with
(Rockwell's) strategic plans,"
he said during a telephone
Please see Rockwell, AS

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