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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May I, 2008'

www.mydailysentinel.com

Butler's basket helps Wizards wiD
Game 5, exten~ series with Cavs
BY TOll Wmas

quarter tp.()lll:ll.a.59-531ead, Cavaliers to make a defenbut the' V!Uil!s ~regrouped sive swjtch and put James on
.
as Butter . and .: Antawn the fOOifllrd.
Jamison made 3-poiriters in
~ Only eight of 174
a 16-6 run , that put teams · have overcome 3-1
Washington ahead 69"65 .deficits. ·to win .... Cavs F
entering possiblY.its fmal12 Sasha; Pavlovic, sidelined
minu~s of ~season. · ·
since. ·_April 16 · with a
As 1f .on cue, the WIZards sprained left ankle, was
and Cavallers were at .eac;h. ~~ttive but didn't play.
otller's throats c;arly.
·. · ·· Arenas'.sat on the bench in
With 3:20 left in..the first . street clothes, cheering on
quaner;· Illmes was fouled oil every niiss and make by his
a baseline drive by Songaila, teammates. ... Cavs -coach
whose left forearJil. caught Mike Brown was saddened
James on· the chin. James but not surpriSed to learn
threw his head back and that Dallas coach Avery
Songaila was assessed a Johnson was fired, ·two seatechnical foul for the latest sons after being NBA coach
of the year. "The reality of it
rougli foul of the series.
Both teams barked at each is, we get paid a lot of
other, and Stevenson and money to handle pressure,",
Anderson Varejao drew "Ts" Brown said.'"Avery is going
for too much banter.
. to get another job whenever
Butler _scoied 14 points in he wants it. He's just that
the first quaner on 5-of-6 good. There's nothing out
shooting,
forcing
the there that's forever."

ASSOCI,t.TED PRESS

•

CLEVELAND - Caron
Butler saved Washington's
season.
··
Butler made a layup with
3.9 seconds left, and the
-Wizards held their breath as
LeBron' James missed a
potential
series-ending
layup at the hom, to give
WashingtOn an 88-87 victo·
ry Wednesday night and add
at least one more game to
this overheated NBA playoff
series.
After Butler scored on a
drive past James, the Cavs
had one more chance, but
their superstar couldn't get a
banked runner to. drop, and
the WJ.ZIII'ds headed home
for Game 6 on Friday night.
They're down i-2 in the
best-of-seven series.
Butler scored 32 points
and 'DeSbawn Stevenson
had 17 for the Wizards, who
plab:
without
guard
Gil
Arenas. Agent Zero
8IIDOWlCed before the game
that his season was over
because of a bothersome ·
knee. Arenas' absence figured to be the decisive blow
for the WIZards, but they
fought to the fmisb and, at
least for now, prevented the
Cavs from ending their season for the third .straight
year.
James scored 34 points 24 in the second half - but
was unable to make a final
shot in traffic that would
have sent the Wizards, who
began talking trash weeks
ago and haven't stopped,
quietly into the summer. The
Caval1ers led by five with
I :47 left, but Washington
scored the final six points to
end a five-game playoff losing stteak in Cleveland.
The Cavaliers were keen
on closing out the Wizards.
Last year in the playoffs,
Cleveland led Ne:w Jersey 3·
I and failed to put away the
Nets before finally doing it
on the road.
The Cavs seemed to have
learned their lesson and took
an 87-82 lead on Delonte
West's three-point play with
1:47 to go.
Butler scored on a layup
sandwiched between two.
by
missed ' 3-pointers
Cleveland, and . Antonio
Daniets hit two free throws
to pull the Wizards within
87-86 with 43 seconds left.
Joe Smith then missed a
short inside shot and
Zydrunas llgauskas couldn't
steer in a tip.
Following a ti[\leout, the
Wizards cleared the floor for
Butler, who burst past James
and got an arching layup that
danced briefly on the nrn to
fall.
.
.· Washington has been beaten by so many last-second
sholii from Cleveland in the
playoffs. As James drove by
Stevenson to the basket on
the Cavs' last possession, it
looked as if the Wizards
were goinjl to go down in
heartbreaking fashion again.
But James, who was
burn~ by Darius Songaila,
dido t come through and
Stevenson, whose running
feud with James has been
one of the subplots in a
series as juicy as a daytime
TV soap, ran to midcourt
and celebrated the WIZards'
good luck.
This series bas had it all:
trash talk, villains, heroes,
rap star.&gt; and, of course, the
Stevenson vs. James clash
that seems personal and professional . And now it will
.continue.
Arenas made the stunning
• 8IIIIOURcement that his lost
season was over as he casually sat in a chair in
Washinpon's locker room .
diliCUssmg a recent movie he
had seen: The three-time
All-Star, wbo missed 66 reggames following
t.e fiiii'FY, played in the
fint four games in the series
~te a Jllti;nful deep bone

MGM pinewood derby
winners announced, Aa

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l l 'I~ • \td ..)-.

'\1 !.

~1)1

11\lll\' . \J \\

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200H

\\H\\ lll \d.tJI., ,t'lli!T it'l. lnlll

SPORTS
•Indians rally past
Mariners. See . . . 81

BY I3Rw4 J. REED
BREEDOMYDAtLYSENTlNEL.COM ·

APpiiOIO

a

POMEROY Meigs
County
Commissioners
have received a $180,725
grant for equipment·for the
Family Health Care office
in Pomeroy.
The grant was awarded by
the Appalachian Regional
Commission, and will be
used to purchase medic31
and office equipment need-

Washington Wizards' Antawn Jamison, right, reacts as referee Mike Callahan (24) calls
technical foul and referee Joe DeRosa points to DeShawn Stevenson after an altercation
· diJrlng the first quarter of Game 5 In the NBA basketball playoff series against tht1
Cleveland Cavaliers Wednesday in Cleveland.
·

Pomeroy
reports

'
accidents
.

BY BEnt SERGENT

BSERGENTOMY!lf.ILYSEN11NELCOM

Eaulpment and Supgllet
Diane McVey

link
TUbing
Flltert
Resperonlc:s
ReMied

·: ~Aits

It's Just
Around The
· Corner

M.A.- CCC-A
Owner&amp;
Audiologist

sea sgcJ_closes wilh
Sala Evans COIICeft
.See

.Seef'IIFAl

ATHENS

-.-wv

275 West Union Street

70 Plae ~ • &lt;illllipolis

lMt locgtions '·
114 ..... northaf"--'ar~

'"""' 594-3571

740-C46-0007

•

'.

• Dove Btothers to silg
.al Mison fWB May 11.
SeePifjtAS
• God wants to use our
sorrows. See Page AS

• What inspires yoo?
See PageA6

TODAY'S.
NUMBER IS:

·• National Nurses

Powell's

..U·1eel,,'VCIICUI
...............GUUII
.v...
~12. Seel"l&amp;eAB

FOODFAIR
700 Eas1 Main Streol
Pomeroy, OH
740-992-5252
www.foodfairmarkets.com

215-A Siitll Stmt
Pt. l'!eau•(, WV 25551

WHY PAY MORE ;.?
EVERY DAY
LOW PRICES!

I

.

- .. ,

-

DAY OF PRAYER

-'
.

Prayers for ~ nation, state
and local communities,
govemment leaders and
agency heads were ollered
Thursday during the roun·
ty's annual National Day of
Prayer obselvanoe. County
Commissioner Jim Sheets,
piclured, l8lld a proclamalion from GOv. Ted
Strickland. Several oth8rs
offered intercessory
. prayers on behalf of those
in authority. The oelebralion, held on the steps of
the Meigs Coonty
Courthouse, Second Street
and Court Street, atso

WEA111ER ·

31447S.7136
Fu: JM.67S.7387
1ha•if • @· ,. r' ! r -

I

Three Meigs
teams qualify
for national
BY Ctwa.ENE HoeFucH
HOEFLICH OMY!lf.ILYSENTtNa.COM

POMEROY - Of the 14
teams qualifying for competition in the National
. Achery in the Schools
Program Championships in ··
Louisville, Ky: on May 10,
three are from Meigs
County.
Teams from Meigs High
School, Meigs Middle
School.
and
Meigs
Elementary School all quali·
fied in the state contest held
last mooth to move ahead to
~-~onal contest. .
·
Approximately 3,000 stu. dents from across the nation
will compete. making it the
largest youth archery tournament in Nonh America.
Ohio is second only to
Kentucky in the number of
· students participating in the ·
national competition .
"The level of participation
and professionalism that our
~dents bring to this event
says a great' deal . about the
strength of Ohio's National
Archery in tbe Schools
Program, as well as the
sttength and dedication of ·
the schools, coaches; students, administt:ators, par·
ents, aDd vol110teers who
support it,~ said Kevin
Dixon, shooting sports ooor•
dinator for thi: Ohio
Depanment of Natural
Resouroes (ODNR) DivisiOD
ofWJidlife and adminisuator
for the Ohio NASP. "Every
.one of them has earned the
right to represeni a school
and Ohio in this event and
it's a responsibility they can
be pro\!d of.~
SChool teams and individuals earn the right to partici..pate in the national event by
M , _ . . .a,,M

stop conducted by Proffitt. . -:l,.piS.-' . .
comthe following people were miltilll Olganizing the ann~tak.en into custody and
al event planned a weeks
arrested: James H. Moore·
WOith of prayer events,
25,
Bidwell,
Ronald which ended last night with
Holcomb,
48,
Point
. a concert of prayer in .
Pleasant, W.Va., Heather
Pomeroy:
Litchfield, 21, Henderson,
.... J. A
I
W.Va. In Pomeroy Mayor's
Court, Moore was charged
with passing bad checks,
Holcomb was charged with
possession of drugs and
Litcbf~eld was charged with
fugitive from justice, no ·
operators license, unsafe
vehicle and falsificatioo.
According to the report
the three individuals were
allegedly involved in purchasing ''several ilems~
from the Dollar General
Srore on a closed bank
account. A sean:h of the
subjects' vehicle.also turned
up items, also alleged to
have been purchased with
bad checks, from Family
Dollar in Middle~.
Moore was the only su ·
charged with writing a
ched to Dollar General and
was then transported ro the
Middlepon
Police

PI

.•

contest

*""

l"'ge A2

.• Holzei' an: danales
10 bass 1Dumamelt.

435'1&gt; Second Avenue
(740) 446-7619

Request F-ily Oxygen

.

eJtpansion. Commissioners will be needed if the facilireceived a gmnt from the fed- ties expand. The most
eral goVCIIIIDf2lt earlier this immediate needs will be
year to allow them to study considered first."
oombinatioo FQOC facilities
The Family Health Care
lilre Family Heallb Care and · offiCI: is now nearing oper24-hour urgent · care and ating capacity, and patients
emergency room facilities.
are seen by a certified nurse
"Some of tile items on practitioner. A new medical
the list of needed equip- doctor is expected to join
ment wiU be eliminated, the practice and begin seebased on costs," Davenpon
ing patients later this year.
said. "Some of the items
were included because they
Me•n - c;n.t. M

------.---POMEROY -· Arrests
for passing bad checks, ~session of drugs, a fugttive
from justice and citations
for motor vehicle accidents
were all recently reported
by the Pomeroy Police
Department.
Chief Mark E. Proffitt
released the . following
included mt,ISical fM!Iforinformation
concerning
by .... .......... t .....
· 'de
till under mances ........... '"'" a ......~nt ..~ nts s .
·
Valley Chriatian set,oo~ in .
mvcs~ganons by himself
Middlepot1 and Ohio Valley· ·
and hi~ 0~: -- --.. " ... ......... ~.p;£hrilltian Sdlooi.Jn
During a reeent tmffic .
G''li;;,. ..... The local

INSIDE

CPAP Machines

ed at the. clinic, County ranging from exam tables
Commissioner
Mick and furniture, an . EKG
machine, autoclave, . blood
Davenport said.
The clinic, located in the pressure cuffs, computers
coonry 's Medical Arts and other office equipment,
Building across from the and surgical instruments.
Veterans
Memorial Davenpon · said commisHospital, . offers primary sioners will work with
care services to the public, Family Health Care to
regardless ' of income or . determine what items are
medical insunmce coverage. most needed . .
•Davenport said the county
According to Davenpon.,
identified a need for some of the equipment was
'$226,000 in . equipment, requested based on a need.fc'lr
.

arrests .

•-IQ . la,D

.

.

·'G~undh~ Hund~~~ 101' .

....

""'.

.-

....

.

"

.

..

~·.'

_,.

R6Ff"ELT'S
IQU Olri'I.ET., INC.
Yoiii'Arar\'11 FIDoT

a-season

CoHrillf twler!

lxui&amp;e.
.
But he wasn't hirnself,llld

Rnld

Arenas decided to start getting ready for next season a

'lele. Ccin

Wh

!

I

udal•.

....

tittle early.
On Tuesday, the WIZards

were visited by Abe Pollin.
their 114-year-old owner who
talked to them about past
~ successes 111&lt;1 failures. Pollio spoke of times
when Washington has overcome 3-1 deficits, and the
WIZ.Ilds have a chance to do

.'

•·

...

Presentatwn makes tt to Appa/JJ;c~conference
D I " ..........

a SecnONS _: t6 PAGiiS
Aiulie' s Mailbox
A2.

calendars
Oassifieds
Comics
.

A2 '

Editorials

Faith • Values
Movies
NASCAR
Sports

, ...., 2117

BY BETH SERGEMr

BSERGENTOMYDAILYSI~l,mNELCOM

Weather

BSection
A8
==~=
&amp;we t
Justin.Morris, student at Meigs Middle S.Sclct'lool10al-, -lily was
ctlllsan to give a PI a&amp;elllalion on "Grouncclog Hl.llting 101"
111 the annual Appalactlian Sludias Association CoufetetiOe
held this year Ill Marsh8ill UnlYersity.
-

reavaliers
reeleg off
II straight points in

..-:; it

the third

•

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

PLAY-COVERALL BINGO

,

Festival donation, AS

•

'WIN UP TO $1,000 !!!

NOW
INSTAlliNG
. INGROUND &amp;

'

•

•

•

!

a

- lN
.. GS
ROCKSPR
Meigs Middle
School
Student Justin MOrris, 14,
Rutland., was shocked when
a project on groundhogs be
did for school was invited to
the Appalachian Studies
Association Conference
recently held at Marshall
University.
Monis was encoura,ged to
do the project and helped by
teacher Claire Graybeal
who was completing her
student teaching at MMS
Ibis spring before graduating from lhe University of
Rio Grande. Graybeal also
accompanied Moms on the
trip to Huntington, W.Va. as
did his mother.
The
project.
titled,
"Groundhog Hunting 101"
may sound like something
Jdf Foxworthy might romrnent ori' but the truth is it
relates to Appalachian cui·

·

•

ture. Moms took this piece

o[culture and broke it down

~~onlY way his fami-

Jy ~~~

some

vi9Jated

into a uhow ro guilje:"
pu~s; ~ere if .people ·
Morris, with help from wanted 3.\ll;~y shaped one
Graybeal. devel~ a pam- to begin ~ ln addition to
phlel on tbe sub.JCCI which kecpinglhC@.1~ofthec:cqlS.
includes picking lhe right Justin told PWP~ at the_ ~­
time of day to go after those --ference gro~ hunnng 1s
pesky
groundhogs . something ..enjOy&lt;! le'' to do
According to Morris, sunny and: "If you ha~ ~ds you
l!IOrnings are the best time can genhem into dpipg iLlt's
and don't even bolhec h110t- a good way to speo(l:quality
ing on rainy days because time wittrthem...
' ·
like people, groundhogs like
As for what he learned .
· to lay around the house/hole Morris 1 said he learned
· when the weather's bad.
about dealing with crowds
·Moms·' pamphlet; com- and speaking to people in
plete ~th piotures, goes on general about a specific
to talk about finding ground- topic. He also spoke with a
hog boles, feeding areas and lady who told him how to
what to use (a rifle: or trap) if barbecue a groundhog.
you do decide to h110t them.
"It"s a rarity," Morris
He even describes bow to e~lained.
.
dispose of 1he varmints.
,
For that matter. many .
So why all the hostility fur aspects of Appalachian cutlhe groundhog? ln Mcnis' · tute are becomin'-" rarities
~ be lalks about how which is why pre~ntations
lhe animals deslroyod punp- such as Moms • are a valu. kins oo hiS family's farm by able pan of doclnnenting a
eating away at the skin. This way of life: before, it's gone .

'

...

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 2, 2oo8

'

Community Calendar
Public ·meetings
Monday, May 5
.
SYRACUSE -. , Sutton
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
at Syracuse village hall.
Weduuby, May 7
POMf;ROY
- Meigs
County BOanl of Health,
regular meeting, 5 p.m.,
conference room Meigs
County Health Deparunent.
Thursday, May 8 · .
· SYRACUSE .
Syracuse Village Council,
special meeting, rescheduled regular meeting, 7
p.m., viUage hall.

Oubsand

. ti~ns
organaza
'

••

'.

I

'

Friday, May l
MIDDLEPORT - Bob
Graham will display coins,
tokens, and old photos at
Peoples
Bank
in
Middleport, 8:30 a.m. to 3
p.m. Drawings for .old pictures every hour. Free
appraisals of coins.
Monday, May 5
POMEROY
- The
Meigs County Cancer
Jnitiati ve, regular meeting,
I noon, conference room
Meigs County Health
Department, new members
welcome, bring own .IIUICh.
RACINE
Racine
Chapter 134,0ES, initiation, 7:30 p.m. Potluck at
6:30p.m.
.

Thesday; May 6

'r

tion. Members to furnish
potluck.
Thursday, May II
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30p.m.
at the hall. Refreshinents.

Church events

Saturday, May 3
POMEROY - Bluegrass
gospel sing, Mulberry
Community
Center.
Freewill offering.
Sunday, May. 4
• POMEROY -· Bishop
Ntambo 0~ ~e North
K.atang_o D1slrlct of ~e
~blic of !he Congo will
1010 the congregations . of
the Syracuse, Mwersvtlole
and Forest Run . Umted
Methodist Omrches for a
combmed service, II a.m.,
followed by a luncheon.
Monday, May 5
. L~NG BOTTOM
.
Revtval through May 9 at
Fa1tb Full Gospel Church,
7J?.D1- P~makers to smg
Fnday. · w1th refreshments
to follow.
.
POMEROY- Revtv~ at
llhe Mot.. Hermon Umted
Brethren m -Christ ~burch,
\Yick:h~ Road, with · Rev.
· l1m Blwne, May ·5 through
10, 7 P:m . with special
smg~ng nightly.
LONG BOTTOM
Faithful Gospel Chufcb
revival, May 5-9, 7 ·p.m.
Special singers May 9, Day
Spring, with fellowship
following.
lbursday, May II ·.
POMEROY - Rel11y for
Life benefit hymn si,og, 7
p.m. at the First Southern
Baptist Church featuring
Forgiven 4 and local
singers. SponsOred by Reed
and Baur lnsurance of
· P~y. For more infermatio~ all 991-3600 or

BY KAllfY MrrctEu.
AND IIAACY

SuGAR

·

Dear AnDie: My husb3nd
. has a female . friend who
makes me uncomfortable.
Even though he says they
are only friends, 1 don' t like
it. 1 have tried to accept the
friendship because they are
co-workers, but 1 just can'l
We have always had a
good marriag~. Since Ibis
woman entered the picture,
90 percent of our argu1 ments .are about her. 1 trust
my husband, but fm realistic. 1 blow mendships can
turn into something more
after a periOd of time. 1
won't hesitate to say .I am
afraid that could happen in
this iastance.
I'm losing sleep over this
and my dreams are terrifying. Their friendship is like
a cancer ·eating away at me.
What do . 1 do?
~rate in lllillois
Dear
DeSperate:
Something about l!his partieular . woman is setting .off
your alarm beDs. Your intuilion is telling you she is
hazardous to your marriage,
and we are in favor of trusting your ifistincts. Your busband should not ]Jrefer any
co-worker to his wife or any

friendship to his marriage. Can you imagine? Several
TeU him he needs to cool it. of us motioned fm theim to
Even if nothing is going on, be quiet, but obviously they
for.the sake of your peace of needed
glasses,
too,
mind, be should arrange to because they·acted like they
.see as littJe of her as he can . didn't see us.
manage. If, however, be
Don't people' know how
gives you a han! time ·a bout to be civil? Or do theY. get to
not seeing so m11ch of her, it a rertain stage in life and
means he values lhe friend- · think they can do whatever
s,JJip more than be 011ght to tbey w.ant, as if old age
and that is not a good sign. gives them some kind of
The next s~ is oounseling. pdvi}ege to be rode and di_sDear Anme: Hea: I am gustmg'? Cuin&amp; · m
retired, past 60 and ready· Co.m&amp;. Calif.
·
to become a recluse. Why?
Dear CoviDa: Althoogb
Because
people
are we're sure some folks
uncouth slobs lacking in believe ~e entitles dlom •to
social skills.
be exempt from normal
Mydaughter .and I wenlito . rules of behavior: public
the tlleater, front row center. rudeness is not, unfortunate•
We wore fancy clothes. To ly, conf'med to any particumy left was an older gentle- tar age grou.p. And often,
man in shorts, T-shirt and those wbo are the most
sandals. At iotennissiGB, be inappropriate .are ·the same
proceeded to dip his tee- · ones who don't care that
nails -all 10!
you think so. Being seated
Last week, our .senior next to someone who talks
center bus took us to a near- too IGudly in a restaurant is
by casino and we received a ~tften unavoidable, but we'd
coupon for a free buffet. In have .c alled tbe usher about
'!be center of the dining the toenail clipper. Yuck.
room sat four women who,
Dear Amrie: You recently
I'm sUJ!e, all needed bearing printed a letter from a readaids because t!Jey were talk- er who asked about suppqrt
ing loud enough for the gmups .foro~ ~pients.
entire room to bear. The You re$p0!1ded with some
tqpic of conversation was good information, but didn't
irritable bowel syndrome. menliion lRlO. ·

Transplant
Recipien~ .
International Ol;ganizalion i&amp;
an organization foc • the
advanoement of organ dona;tion, bot also actS as a su~
pon group for doo&lt;x:s aDa
recipients. It _is headqua(;tered in Washington, D.C. :
· I had my liver trans~~
in 1990, and at that · llme.,
doctors discouraged yofl
from trying to con!aet ·~
donor famil~- D~ oonUct .
was prohibited. I m glall
that policy bas since been
changed. - C.S. ·
.
Dear C.S.: Thank you
for the additional infollllation for our readers. Foi'
those who are intereste4,
contactl1RIO (trioweb.oJE).
.at l-800-TRI0-386{1,800:814'-6311(\).
Alurie'r Jlriln'r is writRll. )}' KMI&amp;y Mille,. .-1
Mr q ~ .~..J*'.n of tie Alllt 1 mllri'
c rfP•'L Please e-.ml,..r

fllftlio•s to .-iesirlaiJ.
luo@coMCGst ltd, • llrife

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Mlfll; T11 fill4 0111 - - '
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Perfonning Arts season closes with Sara Evans concert

•_____ ,..._IIIII

•CI-.SIOIII'Igo---·-

ESTABLIS.H ED BUSINESS
FOR SALE

5

*'

Holzer Cl:..-:-: d.ona'"~ . ·pl~':~:acoomp'lililunentf;
Will:

Fundraising organization

Is friendship more important thim · mLlrriage?:

C0.nvention .~; Vislf:n.-·

·

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

www.mydailysentinel.com

.:

This pcdnrmaooe is sponATHENS - The Ohio
break when l'egendarY
songwriter Harlan Howard sored by the Ohie Univa'Sity .
University Perfocmin,gAJ1ts
Series brings the 2007..08
beard her amaz1ng voiCe Performing Arts Series,
season to a dose with
and tapped ber to sing his Dining Services, Pepsi, and
oountty music star S·a ra
demos. •
the U oi versity 1\'ogram
Ev.ans.
·
A deal with RCA Records Council. Additional inforThe performance is part
followed
soon
8fter. mation aoout this perforof die Hori.rons CoD0e111
Produced by ·Pete Anderson, mance is available -online ·at
Series. .S ara Evans wi.IJI
her &lt;C!lebut ,disc; . "~hree www.Qh!o:e!Julperfurm.inperform at lbe · Ohio 1
Cherds and ·t he Truth," garts. .
'
versity
TempktDnearned praise &amp;om cril!ics,
J]ni
99245110.
D~acld!um
Alillllliii
but it was :her second disc,
Memorial Auditmium Go,
. "No .Place That Far," that
Monday, May S at 8 p.m.
brought Evans the commerTidkols .IIJle still available
cial success to match the
for the pelfonn.anoe.
critical acclaim. Her next
Streo~ versatility ud a
5an1 Evans
album, "Born ta Fly"
·spunky sense of adventure
spawned four hit singles,
are ·q ualities more often Mo., native. One Gf seven which .are 4lcluded -on
assocrated with literary children, Evans beg.an "Greatest Hits"- "I Could
lheroines than suooessl'cl singing country music with Net ASk for Mm:e," "Saints
. . . . M7 ........ _ _
country singers, hilt then her family's band when she .1111d Angels," "I Keep·
diere'·s nothing . typical · was 5. By the lime sbe was Looking," · and the title
•10...-l.,._.atiWibmi!MI
:abG11t Sara Ev.ans. Whether 16, · she landed .a gig 'track. W.arner Music artist
doxnina1mi oounl!ly t:adio singing regularly at a clU:b Jason Jones w.iiJ open for
C
.airwa\les with one of her in Columbia, Mo. Of Sara Evans. Tickets for this
many ·lhit sitJgles m .alill:act- . course, Nashville is Mecca perronnance are on ~&gt;ale
I
5ing a il1eW lepoo ,of fans · for all aspiring country now at the Memorial ·
with her spirited tum on artists and Evans made :her Auditorium ticket office
I ~Danofug with the Stars," way to Music City deter- . (740-593-1780) or online at
' Evans' drive, talent and mined to r.ea!lize. bcr www.ohiotick:ets.musictoodetermination have placed dreams. She 'g ot her first day.oom.
her in an ·eLite dass IOf
,IIJ'tists whe :transcend musical gem:es m beoome a
lheusehold name.
.,
Ev.ans bas earned llUBlerous #I ,hits, ~o &lt;Of which
-she oo-wrote, imcluding
L(l11e Your Tan and Yr.deos
at :106 3nl Stnet, Rad!MO
~Born tt.o Fl~." "No Place .
.• _...MI,o: I. J1it.e:cu1ar ZO Min- Bed
That Far," ~suds im the
l Medl..... l2 Min.. Bed
Bucket" and "A Real F.ine
/
l
'St•wl Up ll Min.. Bed
Race to Start," whiob spent
I
W
'a
d Tzrniq Window Sign. 1-lghted DVD Wiodow
tiWO weeks .at the tGp 'Of the
S's Ucbted ......_ display cabinet.
001111ky Clwts. Of the fi¥e
Ccwe '
cehlr •t, Cmjb a gis«er, Antique display cabhiet.,
albUms Evans bas released,
I....._, 608+ up to dat.o; Yk1eos,
lbcr &amp;QPbomGre set, "NG ' · '
Video .._... aad 1llhel-. Portable air eonditioner, File
.
.
~'bee 1bat Far," has been ' "
.rabi ·, W: + rr &amp;: Dryer.
Bob :fiood, executive diredor, and Amanda Crotilse, certiihed gGld:; lOBI ''S ' '
~ ....,_ ..-...,. IHuiillen f.., foMT JI«U'S IUUI/uzve e.-'«•«sleetf
administr.ltive assistant of the G 'I .Coulilty Crmwemtiom · "Bom to Flyft iii llloublc- " "
,..,I4!'1P"P'ie•'c rnt le lf,_o~tt WO..Ulikl W stop by we-~ ope,.
and Visitors Bureau, accept .a, dWoK flqm IMar.Jean plaliimnn
;am!l · D3'1&gt;
U ~~~~ +
p #"ri.l.~ l~o• s-nla~. If you wo..W l.ilu!
KenDedy, left, &gt;Holzer Clinic liluei/1 It dtu81Gpll&amp;~t and ••~tcstiless" : .and lOOli''S
••b.,. • z airlfl' r-e.t., 4UC«sr; tlt.te 6•silws~ you ""' COIUGct
· man&lt;'etillg manager.
'
"'&amp;cal Fme.Place- .m: tioth
Sonh Gt 949-1149
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. at the
Middleport
masonic
Temple. Take non-perishable food item for food
bank.. Refreshments.
Wednesday, May 7
HARRISONVILLE . Harrisonville · 255., O.E.S .
7:30 p.m. annual inspec-

,

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

. Friday, May2, 2008

-~

.
to
t
to bass urnamen

~

willk rclosU.g May :t7tlt, 2008

~ f t ccti•x

have been a dream eome
true for !the Booneville,

szs.ooo. ougoliobk ,

SUbm- pllotos

RN

Noah Cox, right, displays his grand champion trophy won
lor the best speed in the MGM pinewooll derby. Taking second was Clay Davis, center, with Cody Bermel! placing third.

I ...,.._

First place winners in speed were in their respective scou!ing level were . from the. lett Clay Davis, Owen Arix, Cody
Bennett and Noah Gox .

9dlw•olllad photo

\:me Greek Association.at-Rio Grande University has cf1o-.
sen Holzer Hospice as their fundraising organization for the
year. Megan Walker, Alpha Mu B9ta ·Sorority, is presenting
~aron ~ull, RN, BSN; Director of Holzer Hospice with a
check totaling $11!0 raised from a recent yard sale. Other
events will take place throughout the year including a 5I&lt;
on October 4. Holzer Hospice serves patients with a
lite-limiting illness reganless ·of ability to pay in Gallia,
~.Meigs and surTOUnding counties. For more information about Hospice or how your community group may
l'te4!. can (740) 446-5074.

lUll

CSX plans Ohio _tenninals to
handle double-stacked trains
•

Second place winners in speed, left to right, in speed were Third place winners in speed were from the left, Levi
The Rorida-based railc
Dal!id Dunfee, tiger; L.J. Spencer, Wolfe; Trent Rossiter, Milctlell, tiger; Isaac Nottingham , wolfe; Daniel Dunfee,
road points to its plan to
bear; and Cody Thomas, webelos.
,
invest in two Ohio freight bear; and Nick Rhodes, webelos.
terminals that would handle
the trains with taller cargo
cars as proof it is serious
about the issue. Those terPOMEROY- More than joined scouts to decorate
Coolest - Clav Davis,' David Dunfee. L. J.
minals would be located in 70 scouts, tigers, wolves, for the event.
Isaac Nouinghan1, Trae Spencer, Trent Rossiter and
Nerth Baltimore in north- bears and webelos, particiThe winners in their Hood, and Bryce Clifton.
Nick Rhodes; and lhird lace,
east Ohio and in south pated in the
annual respective levels listed
Most detailed - Ryan Levi
Mitchell,
Isaac
Columbus.
Pinewood Derby for the respectively, tiger, wolf, ~arbour. Jacob Farley, Nottingham Daniel Dunfee, ·
Tl;le railroad says double- MGM District beld recently bear and webelos, and their Trent Rossiter, and John and Cody Thomas.
stacked trains usc about the ,at the Point Pleasant Middle categories of achievement., Stuart.
·
Noah Cox was the grand
same amount of fuel to School gym.
champion
in
over-all
Most unusual - Colton
were as follows:
carry more freight faster.
Derby patches went to
Best paint job - Trenton Russell , Jacob Rees. Dillon speed . with Clay Davis
coming in seco nd, and
each participant ·and tro- Duvall, Zayne · Wolfe, Mahr and Coll~n Young. ·
In the speed category, Cody Bennett. tbird.
phies were awarded to the ·P arker Haggy and Austin
$1-6,000 for labor. The first race winners at the end .of Welch.
lt~rornwtion on .\·couting
winners taking first place
bid submitted by the fmn the day. Local businesses
Most realistic Evan were Clay Davis, Owen can be oblained by calling
was opened last month but contributed items for the Caldwell, Austin Ashwonh, Arix, .Cody Bennett and 1he MGM Dis1ric1 Office al
Page At
was above the cost estimate event imd the parents Drew Roush, and Jack Leley. Noah Cox; second place, 304-523-3408, Ex1. 103.
,
for the project. the bid
: Davenport said Fred Dee!, opened yesterday was
.lirector of the Governor's referred to the ChesterOflioe of Appalacibia, was Shade Historial Association
instrumental in 8CCUring 1he for review.
GALLIPOLIS
the last full week in April, nated by Joy Staten. director
Guest speakers included
E. the
·
Commissioners
also
Career College Administrative Professionals of administrative studies at Brandice MoConlbs, mas~ ~ =~::m~m- approved an appropriations Gallipolis
hosted is thirteenth annual Week brings together people GCC, included many festiv.- sage therapist, and Joli e .
missioners approved a con- adjustment requested by the
celebration in honor of for community events and ities held throu ghout the Bitner. D.C .. of Relaxation
tract between Family Health oounty treasurer, in the
. National
Administrative seminars, with individual day. 0-.:,er a 150 students. Station. Rio Grande; Julie
Care and the Department of amqunt of $11 ,000, and Professionals Week recently bosses recogniZing their sup- faculty, and guests attended Williams. administrative
Job and Family Services for approved an animal claim carrying out ~the theme . pon staff in various ways. As the day long celebration assistant. Gallia County
medical
.assessments for rabbits filed by Howard "Forward Moving."
a founder of this observance with catering provided by K Chamber of Commerce;
required tin medical disabili- Lawrence, Long Bottom, in
Tbe theme denotes hGw and the sole official sponsor, &amp; L Catering and barbecued Hilda Stotts, exec utive
· ty cases. The cost .will be the amount of $35.
career-minded administra- the International Association food cooked by grill director, Serenity House:
$80 per I!SSCSsmont.
'The meeting "!as recessed live professionals are posi- of
Administrative sergeants Bo Shirey and Paige Cleek. Mary Kay repCommissioners -opened a until 10 a.m. on May 5 for tioning themselves for sue- Professionals (IAAP) set John Danich DJ Mick resentative: Amy McGuire,
sole bid for construction of the approval of bills.
cess in ·today's ever-chang- objectives for .the week to Childs joined the event with branch manager. Holzer
fiteps .at the Chester
Also
present
were ing business environment educate the public about a live remote from WYVK Clinic/S ycamore Branch:
Academy,
from
Karr · Commissioner Jim Sheets by mastering advanced administrative professionals" "The Frog:·
and
Cynthia
Sexton.
Construction of Chester, in and Clerk Gloria Kloes, who office technology, continu- expanding roles and their
Mane
Gallia-Health
Nurses owner/operator.
the amoont of $48,000 - ' opened the meeting with the ally boning their communi- value in lhe business world. from Holzer Hospice were Designers.
$32;000 for material's and Pledge of Allegiance.
Ovet a · hundred door
cation skills, forging col-. enhance the profession's on hand for glucose imd
laborative
relationships image, encourage people to cholesterol testing as well prizes were donated by varadministrative as blood pressure screen- ious 'businesses throu ghout
phemalia, obstructing offi- with managers and co- consider
workers.
and
taking
charge
careers,
and
promote
lifelong ing . Makeup demonstra- the area. All activities were
cial business.
of
their
own
·
c
areer
devellearning,
certification.
and tions were provided by provided free of charge for
Recent accidents reportMary Kay repre,(:ntative Gallipolis Career College
opment.
professional
development.
ed:
Terry
Brewer,
liwaPaJeAl
students. staff. and guests.
Celebrated annually during
The local event, coordi- Paige Cleek.
. Middleport, was cited for
Department for incarcera- improper backing when a
tion and possible charges. truck he was driving
Items were later returned to · allegedly made . contact
the Dollar General Store with a parked vehicle
and the MPD to be returned owned by Michael J. Hupp, · RIO GRANDE - Get available and children ages Joyce Ru ss. (740) 6K!-7060: annual Rockets over Rio.
Pomeroy, in the parking lot ready to catch, because the four and under eat for free.
Michelle Miller, (740) 704- scheduled for Saturday.
· tO Family Dollar.
of
the
Pomeroy
Municipal
Litchfield was allegedly
pancake flipping stylings of . The ladies auxiliary is 9903: Melissa Donley. (741.1) :oc1. II .Everyone is invited
or
·Phyllis to come out and enjoy all
wanted on a warrant out of Building.
Chris Cakes of Ohio will also gearing up for the 418-8639:
William L. Capehart, return for the second annual annual .Rio Grande Village Bmndeberrv. 441 -51\&lt;J 1.
Masim . County, W.Va and
the events scheduled in the
was identified by an officer Point .Pleasant, W.Va., was Rio Grande Volunteer Fire Yard Sale, scheduled for
Two other vi ll ag.e-wide village.
from .Point Pleasant who found at fault for failure to Department
events are on the horizon.
Pancake June 7 beginning at 9 a.m.
advised they would begin control his vehicle that Breakfast on Saturday, May
To rent a space near 'the vii- including the Rio Grande
. '
'
'"''
allegedly
struck
a
Pepsi
extradition.
3 from 8:30 to II :30 a.m. at . lage buildillg or donate items Community Fest. schedu led - GRA"'D- .. •. :
S9.·-B8::.
..
~·
Sgt. Brandy · King was . Cola trailer driven by Jason the Village Municipal to the fire department contact for Sept. 6 and the second
..... ollft&lt;'l'l&lt;t9'ill&gt;(o ,,.. . . . { "
••
L.
Warren,
Logan.
The
trailrecently called to a traffic
Building.
sto{l on East Second 'Street er had no damage but
Hosted- by the RGVFD
::··,c_;:.'
wh1ch was initiated by . Capehart's car had &amp;us- Ladies Auxiliary, the event
..
Deputy Bryan Holman who tained some scratches and a serves as one of the many
was later joined by Deputy bmk.en mirror. The accident fund-raisers the OJ-ganizaAdam Smith both of the occurred on . East Main tion runs to raise money for
Meigs County Sheriff's Street in fron! of Swisher &amp; lifesaving equipment for the '
p~; King· ran a warrant Lohse Pharnlacy. No cita- ·
department.
. . 1 ~iih~,.,.~""~"~'"z
"· '!""~··~·. ,~,·~·";;;;­
· fire
check on the vehicle's'occu- lion was listed.
. Thanks to the suppon .of I Ohio Yatlej Symphony ·
pants and . Christopher . Georgia · L. Gilmore, the community and a grant
"FINALEft
alleged! y t)Jrougb the Gallia County 1
:Jeffers, 25, Pomeroy, was Middleport,
SOO BAE
taken into custody for an backed into a vehicle driven Commissioners. the departCe1o ·
by Sherry P. Ritchie, ment recently purchased a
®tstanding warrant.
Saturday, May 3rd, 2008
. After a search of Jeffers Racine, in tbe parking lot of thermal imaging camera
lie was cbarged in Pomeroy tbe Dollar General Store on and a portable defibri II a· Sub• 11be now for
~or's Coun With posses- East Main StreeL No cita- tor. The cost for the parttake
20118-2009 -iu.
Nt&gt;ed a great Auto
~on of drugs, drug para- tion W'IS listed.
breakfast is $5 per plate,
1111041118, 111011108,
'whicb includes all you can
1211161118, 31211119, 5IO!MI!I
insura TIC\' ratt'?
eat
pancakes.
sausage,
Sta~ local and call an
National Archey ' in the
Boa
Olllce: 421121111 Ave.
drink
and
coffee.
Schools ~gram in 2002.
Aj!ent yoo already
G "1! olo, 011 17*1) -.ARTS
sale items will also be
,
Ohio began participating in
kno,.·.and tnastl
At
2004 and Meigs County
Jessica Dillon
,
entered the program soon
COLUMBUS (AP) CSX Corporation says it
. will spend $300 million on
upllrades that would allow
trams with double-stacked
cars to run from the East
Ceast tO tbe Midwest.
For the effort to go forward, ·the federal . govemmenl would have to provide
I!D additional $400 million
to change 70 overpasses in.
six states that would be too
Short for .the double-stacked
cars to pass under.

·MGM pinewood derby winners announced

Grant

rrom

GCC hosts Administrative Professionals Day

Reports

Pancake breakfast to raise funds slated Saturday

M

~-

7

GALLIPOUS - Holzer Clinic is partnering with The
Ohio Bass Federation .in support of its 2008 Bass Busters ·
Tournament scheduled for Oct. 25-26 in Gallia County.
·
In suppon of the event, llhe Clinic made a $lj000 denalion to~ard tbe new addition to the Ga1lia, County
.O mventJon··anEI Visilofli' ButeaO' s- CaleiJdaT aT events.
1be Ohio·Bass liederation is a grass rootsflshing mganir.ation that was started in 1970. lt is made up of 6 Re.gioos
wi.th. approximately 1,100 members in mCiubs .amund tbe
state involved not only in -fishing but also consei'Vation and
youth ·activities.
.
As an affllate .!Jf ·tbe .Bass Federation, Inc. (TBF) and
FLW Outdoors. each club is permitted two man teams in
the spring regional tOUJ'IIatilent. The regions ~~~ a peroen,tage of teams to -go to one of twG SQTs (State
Qualifying ToUI'IIlllliOOts) who can oompete to qualify fiJI'
the Ohio ~ass federation State Team, which then goes to
the Northern Divisional tournament which then advances '
winners to the $234,000 TBF National championship.
The top boater and non-boatel' from that toumament
adv.ances to the $2,000,0011 FLW furest Wood Cup. ·With
the national champion boater getting the 'Living the
Dream" package. lbis censists -of the use of a wrapped
Ranger boat and Chevy truck for a year with expense
money and entry fc:es pwd fot a year for FLW Tour orR-W
Series. The top bOater and non-boater fium each of the ·6
Federation Divisions advance to the S1.1100,000 BR.. All
American tournament.
The Ohio Bass Federation Championship in 2007 paid
out iu cash and merchandise $981ll. Tbe tOial payout in
2007 in cash and merohandise fium the Regional tournamertrs through the Ohio ·Bass Federation Championship
fOUled over $36j(IOO.
·

· ery
Arch

'

rn.u Paee

. winning their division or by ~ teams from eleachieving a minimum qualifying score in their respec- · menrary schools, five from
11ve state oompetitions. ff an Middle schools, an six fium
individual archer was not high schools will oompete

pan of a qualifying

,,

-'

"

~· ·

'

.....

' "'

... ~.-·''"

~

...

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.-

team,
but finished in the top five in
m..;r division they may par
~;.,._Ohio wiU have~
~idual archers attending
lbe lll1lional tournament. •
Kentucky started the

••

•

for the . championship. In
addition two individuals are
competing, Candace Danby
of Granville Middle SchooL
Licking County, and Kelsey
Taylor,
Morgan
High
School, Morgan County._
" «

I' FOGl.EsoNG-TticKER
.

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1ft J~

ndt.·r pu

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no East MHt 5lreel
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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The headlines and dra111 Court Sb ••• Pornerc~Jr, Ohio
matic photos rush by during
a papal visit, framing lhe
(740) 992-215&amp; • FAX (740) 992-2157
· ._....,.. Uy 11 dlneteom
sound biteS lhat joomalists
unoover in stacks of Vatican
speech texts.
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
So Pope Benedict XVI
visited
the White House and
· Dan Goodrich
proclainwt "God bless
Publisher
America!" 1'ben be DOled
~Pal, in Ibis cullnre of radiChartene Hoeflich
cal
individualism.
General Manager-News Editor
"Freedom is not only a gift,
but also a summons to pee· sooal responsibility."
The fonner lheology professor,
speaking
to
Congress sludl lflll1u JW l4w rup«ting an
Catbolic-(:OHege leaders,
atahlislurunt rdipn, « proldlliting ·tlu
enthusiastically embraced
Unci.u tluml.{j or allrilging tlu .frrolom academic freedom. Then be
stressed that lr.lditional doc- .
sp«eh, or of tlu press; or tlu right of tlu
trine - as "'pbeld by the
puph peawllly to assmtllk, ami tAJ pditio• Chwdt's uQ..;sterillDI"
'"""'6'
tlu Gova'fllflmt
a mltus
grift'tiiiUS.
should shape all a~ of a
truly Cat11o1ic "instirution's
- 1be Arst Amendment to the U.S. Conslitulion 1 !!_~·-~~ and Ol!ltside
""' """'
- - - - - - - - - - - -·- - - - - The former prisoner of
war, spea\i11g at dte United
Nations, hailed the 60th
Today is Friday, May 2, tbe 123rd day of 2008. "lbere are anniversuyoftheUniversal
Declaration of Human
243 days left in tbe year.
· ·
Today's Highlight in History: One hundred years ago, on Rights., Then be dam1 to
claim that tbe document's
May 2, 1908, tbe original version of the song "Take Me Out .
to lhe Ball Game," with music by Albert '\9n Tdzcr and defeuse of universal truths
lyrics by Jack NorwOitb, was oopyrigbted by \bn Tilzer's is built on "ibe natural law
Yort Music Co.
, inscribed on hWilllll bealts
On this date: In 1670, tbe Hudson Bay Company was and present in different coltures and ·civilizations."
chanered by England's King Charles D.
·
· ·
The pope spoke to a wide .
In I .863, Confederate Gen. lbomas "Stonewall" Jackson
variety of audiences' during
was accidentally wounded by hi·s owo meo at
this visit, and be emphaChancellorsville, Va.; be died eight days later.
siz.ed words of praise and
In 1890, the Oklahoma Territory was orgaoiml.
encouragement,
not judgIn 1936, "Peter aDd the Wolf," a sympbooic tale for chilmeot.
After
all,
Benedict
dren tiy Sergei Prokofiev, had its wodd Premiere in Moscow.
In 1945, the Soviet Union announced tbe Iiiii of Berlin, could speak to galberings of
and the Allies announced the siurendec of Nazi troops in U.S. politicians and global '
diplomats, but he knew lhat
Italy and parts of Austria.
In 1957, Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, the oontmversial he had no real aulbority
Republican senator from Wisconsin, died at Bethesda over lhem. Also, .as· stt:ange
Naval Hospital in Maryland.
.
In 1957, crime boss Frank Costello narrowly swvived an
attempt on his life in New York; tbe alleged ;gunman,
Vmcent "The Chin" Gigante, was acquitted at trial after '
Costello refused to identify him as the shooter:
In 1960, Quyl Chessman, wbo became a beSt-selliqg
. author while on death row for kidnapping, robbel y and sexual offenses, was executed .at San Quentin Prison in California.
In 1965, lntelsat 1, also known as the Eady Bini satellite, Was
first used to transmit television pictures across the Atiam:ic.
In 1972, after serving ,. 48 years as head of the FBI, J.
Edgar Hoover died in Was~n at age 77.
·
Five years ago: A federal oowt struck down most of the
new C~mpaign finaore law's ban on tbe use Qfllllge&lt;OOIJIIIGIIe
and union c:ontributions by political parties. {HtrNever, the
Supreme Court later ruled that rooting outoonvpliion, ·o r even
the appearance of it,/.ustified limitaril•s on the :tree speeob
and free s~ o contributors, candidates .aad Political
parties.) Ini:lia aud Pakistan ~ ro hold talks on sett!ling .a
balf~ of disputes lhat had drawn tbem into three wars.
One year ago: In a defeat for anti-war Democrats,
Congress failed to override President Bush's veto of legislation requiring tbe withdrawal of U.S. U&gt;oops from Iraq.
Bush declared ai-Qaida "public enemy No. I in Iraq."
Today's Birthdays: Aotor Theodore Bikel is S4, Sing«
Engelbert HlllllJlCrdinc.k is 72. Actress and political activist
Bianca Jagger is 63. Singer Lesley Go~ is 62. Actor David
Suchet is 62. Singer-songWriter Lany Gatlin is 60. Rock
singer Lou Gramm (Fimreigner) is 58. Aotress Christine
Baranski is 56. Actress Aizabetb 'Berridge is 46. Cowltily
singer Ty Herndon is 46. Wrestler-actor Dwayne Johnson
(aka "The Rock") is 36. Actress Jenna Von Oy is 31. Actor
· Gaius Charles ("Friday Night Lightsfl) is 25. Pqp singer
••
Lily Allen is 23: Olympic gold medal figure skater Sarah
Hughes is 23. Actress Kay Panabaker is 18..
Thought for Today: "What ex.peri.ence and history teach
is this: · tbat people and govermneilts have never learned
anything from history." -Geurg W'tlbelm Friedrich Hegel,
German philosopher ( 1776-1831 ).

of

fru
of

of

for

'TODAY IN HISTORY

i

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•

//

pastors to bind up dte
wounds caused by every
breach of mm, to foster
healing, to promote-ci,liation and to reach out
with loving ooncem ro diose
Teny
so seriously wronged. ...
llllllingiJ
"Now that lhe scale and
gravity of die problem is
· more clearly uodersiood,
you have been able ·t o adopt
focused remedial and
more
as it sounds, lhe pope's oon- ·
disciplinary
measures and
tml over what ~s DD
Catbolic campuses 1s limit- . to promote a safe environ·
ment that gives greater proed, at best.
tection
to young people.
Thus, .the message tbat
While
it
must be rememmattered the most came
bered
tbat
the overwhelmwben Benedict faoed the
350 American 'bishops in ing majority of clergy and
the ctypt undel" die soaring religious in America do
Basilica of .the lmm"""* outstanding worlc .•• it is
Cooceptioli in w.~ vitally impol1lant that lbe
In theory, the b.1 · ops vulnerable · always be
aosw
. cr directly to lbe pope shielded from diose who
when it oomes lime to would cause barm."
A leader of a ·s upport
eq&gt;lain wl;ult luqJpens at
their altars and in lbe pews. group for victims pl'CSsed
The -oo bite lhal dom- on. 'l be pope's statement
inated die news :aftcrwanl that lbe ·scandal was "somefocused on the sexual abuse what inishandled" is inaccuof dilldren l!Dd teens by rate, because 'l:his i$ a curCatholic clergf, with the rent crisis, not .a past one,"
poJ?C
6~~
..Wa;b said Baroara . Dori.s of St.
Chicago
·
FcanCis Louis, speaking for the
George's verdict that the Slll'Wvors Netwm:k of those
scandal was "sometimes Abused by Priests. "The
very badly handled" by the Jlhra5e obscures the unasSailable fact that hundreds
chUFCh hierarchy.
"Many of you have spo- of bisbops witlfully and
ken to me of the emormous repeatedly deceive parishpain that your oommunities ioners, stonewall polioe and
have suiferod wheo clerics leave children .at risk."
But there was lllOfC .t o thii
have betJ:ayed their priestly
obligations and duties by speeob 1ban one big quota.such gravely imn!Dral con.' While the pope's
behavior," satd · Benedict. address challenged the bish"Ridnly, you attach priority ops w kllep wrestling wid!
to showing oompassum &lt;md the seJtual-abuse scandal, he
care to the victims. It is your .also put these evil acts in a
God-giv.en responsibility as wider frameworik - an .eca

'

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LETTERS TO THE
ED'ITOR

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Leners to the editor a"' welcome, l'hey sho11.ld be letrs
than 3()() wo.rds. Allleners are subject to editing, .must be
signed, and incllllie addrr!ss and telephone nrunbe'- No
unsigiU!Ji letters wiU be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing isslll!s, not personalities. Letters .of
thanks to orgll(liz~Uions w:uJ individuals will rwt be accepted for publication.
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dlus seuing an eU!IlP1e ....
sooicty :as a v.41ole. Tl:is ai-:
sis, be said, cans "for a
collective .

determined,

response," a 1esponse led by .
the bishops.
"Children deserve ro
grow · up with a healthy · .
understanding of se!Quality
and . its proFCr · place in ,
human reianooships," be .
said. , "They sb~uld be
spared the degradiDg manifestations .and lhe ;c rude
manipulation of sex.uality so
prev.alent today. .. . What
does it mean to speak of
child protection when
pornography and violence
c:an be viewed in so many ·
hOOJCs thmqgh media wide- '
ly available today?
"We need to reassess
urgently the values underpinniiig society, so lhat a
sound mc:m1l formation can :
be offered ro young people
and adnhs alike."
('ILny Mattingly is dirr!ctor .of the Washington '
Jowmalism Center ·lilt the
ColUIC·i l for Christian
Colleges ond Unil'«sities
and
leads
the
Getlleligion.org project to
stwly ~ligion and the .
news.) .

1 3 - . . . . ........."3226
26 Weeks ... ~~- ... ' . .'84.20
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13 Weeks .. . ... . .. . . ' .'53.55
26Weeks .. . . . . .... .."107.10
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of the :·
Conurvativt! :·

Friday, May 2, 2008

I know all the right
cliches. "No pain. No gain."
. "Experience is l!he best
teacher." "What does not kill
us only makes us stronger."
Yes, I know all the right
cliches. I believe that each .
of these cliches ..contain
important life lessons. I just.
don't like .them. While I find
it very difficult to eXiperience the painful lessons that
life ·throws at us, I also know
that God often uses our sorrows in order to reach out
and help other people. ·
One of the most painful
times in my own life came
wben my mother, suffering ·
fium a deep depression •over
my father's death several

years earlier, chose to take a! for a.\6-year-old boy who talked to them about the
her own life. Her tragic sui- had recently committed sui- painful emotions of guilt,
cide left me with. so many cide. The mourning family anger and sorrow that they
difficult emotions to work had no church affiliation. At · were experiencing. I shared
through; difficult feelings that time, I usually did not my own story and told them ·
like guilt over not being take funerals. outside of my how God had helped me
·able to stop her death, anger own church. Not really through that dark time in
at her for what she had knowing much of anything my own life. I not only
done, and · intense sorrow. about the deceased in these .offered them my services,
and grief at losing her. If my situations, funerals for peo- but I also offered them hope
mother's death had been the pie who · haven't been in in Christ. Neither of them
end of the . story, I might church in several years are had attended any church for '
very weU still be struggling · very hard to perform. almost 20 years. So, I invityears later with these same However., because of my ed them to visit our church.
painful emotions.
own painful experience
Within a few weeks folBut, it didn 't end there. with my mother's suicide, I lowing their. son'~ funeral
Four years after my moth- not only knew something of service, they ' showed up at
er's suicide, l!S I was serv- what the family was going our church. Soon thereafter,
ing as pastor of my first through, but also felt that l they each. committed their
church out of seminary, I might be able to .help. So I lives to Christ and began to
received a call fium a local said yes.
faithfllllY serve Him. They
funeral director asking me if
As 1 met with these griev- got involved in a tape minI would officiate at a funer- ing . and tearful parents, I istry to shut-ins. They began

Help me
let go

working in youth ministry
and to this day, they are still
actively working with teens
in their own church as youth
leaders. Isn't our God a
great God!
We have all gone through
difficult times in our lives.
We have all experienced
deep sorrow and pain. But,
the gOOd news is that God
wants to redeem our sorrows
to help others as they struggle through their own difficulties. We need only look
for the opportunities to allow
God to use our sorrows in
order to reach out and help
other hurting people.
(The Rev. Doug Stockton
is pasror of Grace United
Methodist
Church
in

Help me let go, Lord
One memory at a time,
Help me to grow
Beyond the past,
Beyond all the things
That didn't last,
The pain and denial,
The tears ... Help me let go
Of promises made
And broken,
My faith in the wrong
Thing, placed in hope,
Never knowing
It couldn't be so,
Help me let go
Help me let go, Lord
One regret at a time,
Help me to see
Beyond the past,
Beyond the pain
That lasts,
That one mistake
That haunts me,
Follows me. the fear...
Help me let go
Of sins committed,
Forgiven,
By everyone but me,
Help me to see
Tomorrow,
Help me let go
And when the fear
Comes creeping
In the night,
May you fmd me ·
Seeking, selircbing
To find you
Holding the line
And I'm near you,
Held in an embrace
Of Mercy and Grace
Help me let go
I'll awaken
In peace never knowing
What might have been,
What could have been,
All the things that ever

Gallipolis)

BY lkcKY BoHRER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW ORLEANS
Bishop 1. Douglas Wiley
has just a tent for a church
and a fraction of his congregants, more than 2 1/2 years
after Hurricane Katrina.
But, he says, God's been
good, and his parishioners,
faithful.
He's
praying
the
Almighty will remember ·
the sacrifices of his mostly
black flock and look kindly
if the national economic
dow.ntum gets Worse.
"The old saying goes,
'When the United States
catches a cold, the black
community catches pneumonia,"' said Wiley, whose
Life Center Cathedral
meets in a large tent in the
shadow of his fenced-off,
wind-damaged sanctuary.
"But traditionally, the
chilrcb has found a way,
through God, ... through
difficult times."
Economists say the billions of dollars pouring
into the hunicane recovery
could ease the slowdown
here. With some neighborhoods left in mins !Jy the .
Aug. 29, 2005, storm, coostructian jobs should be
plentiful. Tax collections
from purchases of building
niateriif,IS and furniture
should keep coming. In
Mw:ch, city sales tax collections, which have fluctuated since the storm, hit
$11 .3 million; that compares with the $12.7 million collected the month
before the storm.
Still, the specter of tough
times is very wonisome in
an area with an econo)Ily
that's still recovering from
such massive devastationand churches feel particu"
larly vulnerable.
Some charitable and
faith-based groups fear that
local residents, worried
about their job security and
faced with higher prices for
gas and food , may scale
back their level of giving.
The Roman Catholic
" Archdiocese
of
New
Orleans recently announced
plans to close more than
two dozen churches and
merge the congregations
because of financial c\)ncerns, post-storm popula-

were,
That never were instead,
And with your blessing
I am free ... Dear Lord, I .
pray this very day
You help me let go.

-Barbara J, Hooper
APphclla

Dove Brothers to·
sing at Addison
FWBMay 11 ·

Patricia George, Deatrice Henderson-Locken and Mikyla Teed sing during·church sarvice held In a tent at the Life Center
Cathedral in New Orleans Feb. 17 .
tion shifts and the nation- · would be hit hard if the
wide shortage of priests.
economic situation gets
The Second Harvest Food " ugly," but he's not conBank of Greater New vinced it will.
While tourism is vulner- ,
Orleans and Acadiana is
able
and · di scretionary
struggling with expenses
that have more than doubled spending for things such as
since Katrina as it 'provides clothing, car sales and long
food to the needy in the trips could be cut, Scott
region, including faith - · believes t he addition of
based groups. Chief execu- what he estimates at $19
tive Natalie Jayroe has billion in planned construction over .the coming
asked the state for help.
··"There are so many things years in the New Orleans
we don 't know." she says. "I area should provide a
think people are giving so ''nontrivial amount of insumuch , 1 wonder when lation" against an econom•
they ' re going to reach the ic downturn.
Janet
Speyrer, · a
end of their check book."
For churches that have University of New Orleans
thinks
the
seen flecks scatter, the economist,
economy is one more thing region is less vulnerable
to add to an already long than otbers but that charitable giving could fall if a
prayer list.
Many pastors and pari,sh- recession hits and that
ioners believe their faith, would affect churches.
and careful budgeting, · After all, she points out, the
should carry them through. Katrina recovery hasn't
·
But ·they also might need been even.
On the West Bank, Life
the help of the Federal
Wiley
often
Reserve's interest rate cuts Center's
and the federal tax rebate preaches about the imporchecks· on their way out.
tance of giving, regardless
Louisiana
State of the amount. For one perUniversity
economist son, he says, $10 might be a
Loren Scott said nonprofits huge , sacrifice, while for

another, $100 may be no
big deal.
At one recent service, he .
told the faithful, who had ·
been dancing, clapping and
praying, that God feels
robbed if he doesn't receive
his tithes and offerings.
"God says, TU bless you
.. .' He'll keep your job, he'll
keep your house, he'll keep
your blessing."
" Yes, he will!" a woman
called out.
Emotions aside, the bills
have to be paid.
The Rev. Fred Luter of
Franklin Avenue Baptist
Church, one of the city' s
. larger black congregations,
said Katrina forced the
church to slash its budget.
He's mindful of a possible
recession. Membership is
down to .I ,200 from 7,000
pre-Katrina. He estimates his
annual budget is about 30
percent of its pre-storm size.
\'I think people just have
to be better stewards of their
finances and their funds ,"
Luter said.
Activities at his church,
which ran seven day s a
week before the storm and
just resumed in a rebuilt

sanctuary after long sharing
space with another congregation in another part of
town, will likely be cut back
to help save money, he said.
Costs for water, electricity
and insurance have soared
since Katrina.
But that doesn't necessarily mean the faithful will
turn away.
At a recent service,
Charles Sherman, 51, proclaimed his faith that God
will provide for his family.
He said he' II give back to
the church, whatever tum
the economy may take.
"I do my part," · said
Sherman, who says he juggles jobs as a real estate
agent, contractor and sometime car salesman.
Beverly Meredith, 65 and
a retired clerical worker.
said she lives on a fixedincome in a FEMA trailer.
She doesn't yet have the
money to rebuild ber home.
Still, she faithfully gives
10 percent of her income to
the church. If s how she was
raised, she said.
'"Times may he hard," she
said, "but that amount
belongs to the Lord.''

ADDISON
Nationally-known gospel
artists · The
Dove
Brothers will be in concert at Addison Freewill
Baptist
Church
on
Sunday, May II at 6 p.m.
There is no charge and
all are invited to attend.
Formed m 1998 by
brothers McCray and Eric
Dove, the Dove Brothers
Quartet have become a
household name in southem gospel music.
The group is best
known for such hits as
"Didn't It Rain," "Get
Away Jordan." "Just
Another Hill. ·• the · number one hit "Anything
But Ordinary, Everything
But Typical" and their
. biggest hit to date, "! Can
Pray."
The group was award·
ed Horizon Group of the
Year in
1999 and
Favorite
Traditional
Male Quartet at the 2002
Singing
News
Fan
Awards, and haven't
missed a beat since .
Their current recording,
"Never the Same ,~' is the
group's most critically
acclaimed and groundbreaking album to date.
The .group has at so
appeared for Senior
gious beliefs. As mayor, actCitizens and Religious
ing on behalf of the city, reliNight at the Gallia
gion should not become fart
County Junior Fair.
6f the government itsel . lf
Current memberS are
it's an official government
McCray Dove, Eric
evl;;nt, that's troubling." •
Dove, Jerry Martin, Jerry
Police Chief A.C. Roper,
Kelso and David Hester.
who is also a minister, sup- .
For more infonnation.ports the repentance rally,
conract Pastor Rick
but said law enforcement
Barcus at 367- 7063.
cannot stop there.

Binningham inayor holds Christian rally to fight crime
BIRMINGHAM,
Ala.
(AP) - Struggling to confront a worsening homicide
rate, the mayor invited pastors and citizens to don
burlap sacks and ashes in a
_sign of biblical repentance.
Mayor , Larry Langford
said his "sackcloth and
ashes" rally April 25 was
inspired by the Book of

Since he took office last
Joqah, where residents of
the ancient city of Nineveh year. Langford has held
wore rough fabric and ashes three prayer rallies to fight
as a sign of turning, away . crime and violence. Bibles
from sin. More- than I ,000 were handed ,out a~ ,one of
people attended at a local the events.
auditorium.
"This city needs to hum. So far this year 27 people · ble itself," Langford said.
have
been
kiUea
in
Olivia Turner, direCior of
Birmingham, comparc;d to the American Civil Liberties
19 at the same .time.tast year. Union in Alabama. said the

group has received complaints aboul the events and
has been discussing them.
"The worry J have is that
there's
a
government
endorsement . of religion,"
said lawyer Bill Messer, a
state ACLU board member.
"Cenainly, the mayor has a
right like anyone else to
express his personal reli-

on over to Bob's•••
Two Convenient Locations
2400 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
{740) 446-1711

Nation.al Review andformer :.
AmericWl .
Union.)

FAITH • FAMILY

In slow economy, churches budget carefully

what any decent or even
sensible person would do ·
- he denounced ·t he statement and left Wright to
e~rtricate himself from it as
best he could.
Wright's
perfol'lllance
was both outrageous and
·pathetic. lt was outrageous
because it was a gmss libel
on his oou.ntJy - a .country
· that has been good to him, ·
and bas done i:nuch to
improve the conditiop of his
fellow blacks. The very fact
that one of his bJack parishioners is a serious candidate ·
for the presidency is testimony to how far our blac.k .
fellow citizens have come :
from the sheer inhumanity ·
of slavery.
·
And it was pathetic :
because, ·having made that .
biwlder., Wright had no bet- :
ter Acfense than 10 lie lhat it .
was .softenod by omitted .
snippets of "context" that :
siqlly aren't there. Hasn't .
Wri8bt ever made a mis- · ·
take? Doesn't he even have ::
the guts to admit it?
:
(Willillm R11.sher is an .
accomplished . awtlwr; for- :
mer pllhlisher qj the .

· Wi"*'U rn
· all - ·
Our matn
. ·IS :1o Published awery a11emoon, Monday'
be accura1e. H yOU.,_ of an ·errOr ttuough Friday, 111 COO~ Slfeet,
Pt&gt;moroy, Ohio. Socond&lt;laafJOIIIIQO
in altoly, ·call the llieWMOLMII at (140)' paid at Pomeroy.
9112..;!156.

of R:Volt ~ainst die
church ':s moral teriings.
And wbO is in .cbal!e of
def~ lbe·s e docuines. ·
while fiading ways ro .
sttm~ marriages and .
famil:es'!
·
.
That would be ' the
CbUFCif~ bishops,
said
Benedict. Thus, be wged .
lhc:n w address tlbe 'Sin of.
a'buse within the "'wider·
OIJJ!Iteiit of sexual IDIJI!CS,~ •

Page As

God wants to use our sorrows

'out of context'?

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Friday, May 2, 2008

Friday, May 2, 2008

WORSIHP
GOD THIS
WEEK
_F,__.....,
.__

- A Hunger For More

First, I want to thank all
mom encouraged other peolbose wbo exp1:5sed coocem
pie, I had envisioned _ber
for my cat afta- last week's
embarlring on a nationwide
column. He's doing much
ministry offerin~ hope to
bdkr now, and is expected to
Pastor
other women facmg cancer.
make a COmplete recovery!
I oould see the Holy Spirit
His fight for life got me !
Keny
ftlling her and bringing her
thinking about us when-we
Wood
into such an incredible place
face dire situations. Why do
to reach olbe~ with God's
some eeoP!e get sick and
love. But that plan was shatdie while others get sick and
tered by the reality of death.
Ibm live7 And I don't mean
Much later, I received an
tbal they reoover from ' their up, cry out in despair, and answer to my dilemma.
illness; I' m talking a bout tum
against God and the "-Why God?." I asked.
world afound them. But not
those ~ who truly find
"What happened to the
t-Yher. She took the process of
• inspiration within their sick- dying and used lt to learn plan?
didn't you do
oess so dw they live life to how to J:lVE. People would thatT'
God responded:
the fullest for the · rest of
''That wasn't my pllm, that
their lives -whether that's come 10 visit her in order 10 was YOUR plan. Tmst me;
encourage her only to fmd kno ... _. the •-- 1 ha
a year or 50 years.
themselves encouraged by
w ..p~
ve
My mud,.,., Sharon, was · their.:- together with her. for you are for the good."
me of·lbose ''live-er's" in the
""'""
A few months after ·that
midst of illness. n..,.;n~ the Even the doctors and o~ prayer, l read_ a v= in the
"'"'"
~"'6
the people who are
book f
... of my junior year in high trained to be dispassionate Old Testament
o
IICbool, sbe disrovered a lump
d al00f
drn
le~miah f9r the very fll'Sl
in me of htr breasts. She an
were
wo to time: "For I know the plans
wcu to the doctor to diagnose the magnetism of her love I have for you," declares the
it. The bad news was that the and compassion.
WRD, "plans to prosper
liiiJIP was maligJWll
In the ~ of my junior you and not to harm you,
Mom opted to undergo a year, &amp;be was inttrviewed by plans to g!ve you hope and a
double radical mastectomy, ~:w-=~
future." (Jeremiah 29:11) ·
I am i.ospimJ by that verse
nmtoving breast tissue and could be so qbuisric IJIIdcr.
lymph nodes from both such pessimistic cin::um- eve,~ more today.lt gives me
sides of her body. She then stai!QOJS "In spite of lOsing my the strength to hang on and
.had to go through extensive bmlsts and going through the move ithead - even (esperounds of chemotherapy to chrmothelapy, I've learoed so cially!) when things doo't
try killing any stray cancer much _ people are 50 good tum out tbe way l expect.
llClls that had passed into to me. It's unreal," she said Unfoleseen events and cirhcr blood stream or lym- "I'm t"''lflier than I've ever cumstaoces happen all the
phatic system and found hem in my life."
time. And we have a choice
their way to other organs.
. The article continued: in hoW we respond to them.
I've observed that there Each woman f'llred with losMy kitty rallied from the
are many. many people in ing a blast to CJIJI!'W ~ . point of death and deslrucMeigs County that face can- in a different way. Wood tion and so did my 10010.
llCr. . So most of us have found 10 amazing sense of . Now, I realize that HER mineither faced cancer directly Peace through lxl' faith in istry hl!s not stoPPed - it's
or known a close family Gcid. "The
'Of mind been pa•sed on. 1be message
member or friend that had it. that [had
spcciai ift of hope that my mother lived
The physical havoc of he ..,.ve ..... " &amp;be said. ..f.m and &amp;muhcd until the day
chemotherapy is . nothing swrthere
""is a lot of fear she died did not die with her.
new to us. But back in the when this happens. [ want, to God gave bcr ultimate healearly 1980s, I did not under- rajse my children, be a ing, andgavehcrbope to ;me.
sllmd the. "philosophy" of 1!1l1Ddmother. and live a long And oow. by the grace of
chemolhmlpy. which is til life. But [ can't add another God, [ have given that
ldll AIL the fast-growing moment to my life. I'm tmst- inspiralion to you.
cells in tbe body in order to ing God. lreally believe my
What inspiles you? What
eliminate the fast-growing physician and my p.sycbolo- pushes you to pcrseve«, to
taiKlCI' cells. Translating that gist ire God. 1 cling to a
seek to better yOIII'!Idf aad
philosophy from the cellular kible vmie- Romans 8:28: the world around you. to
world into the human world, 'All things work together for become the fullest' expresits akin to llllkiDg New York good to those who love the sion of the potentials God
City's II million residents I.onJ and are called accord- has ~veo to you? If you are
in orda- to get rid of the · · to his pu!pOSC. '"
.
inspired by your youthfulNew York mafia. Barbaric.
'1.fom's inspiration came ness, you will SOOil grow old.
I watcbed my mother go directly from GOd. And that If you're inspired by ap:othrough the wrenching inspiration fiUed her with lades at wort, they quicldy
changes of chemo
weight anticipation of what great fade away. If you are inspired
loss and gain. hair loss, phys- things God was ~oing to do. by the latest and greatest car.
ical exhaustion, nausea, and However, I dido t see
._,:!!:,f.s biggCr house, fancier clothes.
lllOIC. She had always wanted the same way - es
· y they will all eventually break
to be a "granny;" the relation- • after Mom died just before down or become worn.
sbip &amp;be bad enjoyed with her Thanksgiving during my
There is ooly one enduring
own g~audn•llbcl was espe- senior year in high school. inspiration - the eternal
cially dear 10 her. She wanted Her life from diagnosis tQ . love and faithfulness of God.
10 have the opponunity to death was only 14 months.
(/Uny Mbod ir tile,....
~ that kiDd of relation- And I was left with an
Urtiletl Mrtlre I'
sbip with her'~ gGIDdchil- incredibly bitter taste in my
818 Eltta Strwt ;,
dlm.Butcanceuuge36put mouth. I was mad at Mom. Rariw Slcd"J~·; ire
that futun: into doubt.
mad _at Dad, and' especially IIILIIL ,.,., tun, a111 lie
Many people facing what mad at God!
·tMCbf 411 RJCilatlllllc@nd
my mother did would give
When I saw the ways my 4mlilllutd.)

:!J

'IJ:

war:

same .

g;;;:t

1

'1ir

one

Qoudo

Sellool - 10 a.m., Evening - ., p.m.,
W~y Servica • 7 p.m.

"'_Orhl.._

VaaZmdl .00 Ward R,_d .. Past«: Jaoleli
Miller, $undly School - 10:30, a.m.,
Evcni.a&amp;: -7:30 p.m.

our community
Blessed art the pure
in hetut; for they
sluJJI see God..
Matthew 5:8

The Month of Nay

.t

Tlw Mttlt 11/ l4lty is o .-;at IIIOI!Ih, the ~ tf Sptmg, lllllo ririJ IMiimlor II{
,.. ,_, tf lift, '" ,.. ~ II/ ~l!y.
- 6~ _ ...... .....,. fotlll jrolll Ml)'
.:.aioallll awU. ,;.,.. out on lilt
liiNofiiS II/ llllat Ml)''l llt. lllrilr IN
/Wtlr IIIMII¥.,.. llitll- fiOWIII.
tltot ,_ ..... ~,.­
- .... ,... 1Nifdlfj;,. fll
jot
/r»d. ,_~Mit!* wWfu GUt II{ IN

chun:liii&amp;nl,-yevoniJII~pm.Wed.

Bible Srudy 7 pm

Catholic

dAP"*eHtliN ...... ~

F-

Sootitn.a.tc.oMikC161 Mulberry AYe ., Pomeroy, 992-5898,
Pat~tor : Rev. Walter E. Heinz, Sat. Con.

~ Rd off New Lima Rd . .Rutland,
Service&amp;: Sun 10:00 a.m . &amp; 7:3o p.m.,

nun: . 7:00p.m., Putor MartyR. !'futtou

4:45-S:! Sp.m.; Mau - 5:30 p .m .. Sun .
Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m ... Sun. Man - 9:30

Assembly of God
IAeny •

7

a.m .. Daily Mus - 8:30a.m .

'y fl GM;

P.O. Boll 467, Dudding Lane. MISOII ,
W.Va., Pastor. Neil Tenninf, Sunday
Services- 10:00 i.m. and 1 p.m.

WaDi*~

rllllrilt
33226 Cbildret! 's Hornr: Rd . Pomeroy, OH
Contact 7:40-441- 1296 Sunday morning
10:00, Sun morning Bible study;
following wonhip, Sun. e~e 6:00 ptb,
Wed bible study 1 pm .

Baptist

........ ,.............

~

Pa~IUr. Floyd Ross, SuDClay

School 9:30 to
10:30 am. Worship service 10:30 1o II :00

am. Wed. preaching 6 pro
-c-~Ciwordl
Minister: Larry Brown, worsq, ~ 9:30

.c.rpaurr 1 1 kntBIIplista.rda
Sunday SdiOOI - 9:30am. PJacbiog
Xn-ice 10:30am, Evening Servict
7:00pm, Wedneiday Bibk Study 7:00 pm,

Pas1oc

a.m. Sunday School- 10:30 a.m .• Bible
Srudy - 7 p.m .

r-vr c - .tCioritl

'

212 W. Moin St .. Sunday School - 9,30
a.m .• Wor&amp;bip- IU:3U a.m .. 6 p.m ..
W~y Service.. · 7 p.m.

c-....,...c-....
Pamr. Steve Little. Sunday School: 9:30
am, Morning Worship: 10:30 am,
Wednesday Bible: Study 6:30pm; ~ir
prKtice 7 :30; yooth and Bible Budd.iei
6:30p.m. Thurs . ! pmbouktnudy "

........,._Cioodo

fllekitt
33226 Children 's Home Rd ., Sunday
School- II a.m .. wOrsttip - 10a.rp .. 6p.m.
Wednesday Seniccs • 7 p.nt.

.......... Cioordi(S 7 o)
'10 or.m St .. ·t.liddlepM. s . - y -

. ,., I

Stb and Main, Pastor: AI Hartsoo.
Cbilcfrens Director; Sbaron Sayre, T~
DirectOr: Dodger VauJ:han, Sunday Scltool
- 9:30~.m .. Wonhip- 8:15,10:30 a.m ., 7
p.m., Wed~Wy Services"- 1} p.m.

- 9:30a.m., Wotlhip ~ II a.m. and 6 .p.m.,
Wodnetday Setvice - 7 p.m. Pastor: 0111}'
Ellis

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

~

Sundoy Sdtoo7 • 9,30 a.m .. Wonhip -

10:45 a.m.

........,.Finl .......

Worsbip - 9:30 a.m ., Suoday Scbool 10:30 un., Pastor-J~y Wallaoe, Jst aDd

..... - . ......
Pike,

3rd Sunday

Sllllday School •

............ Cloordl
Pas10r: Billy ZUiplll 6th lmd Palmer St.,

_l'in1....,.

__.....,.

Services - 7:00

.Putor: !Jolul Swanson. SUilday Scbool IOa .m., Wonhip - lla.m., 7:00 p.m.
,Wedladay Service'· 7:00 p.m.

Mt.U......,.
Pu10r: Dennis Weaver Sunday School"
9:4S a.m .. Evening · 6:30 p.m ..
Wedoesday Service~ - 6:10p.m.

..,....c.....u

...,_,Ciooosdlo1Ci1dtl
Sunday School - 9:30am., Wonbip aud
Communion • J0:30 a.m ., Bob J. Wert)' ,
MinisiCr

~

Gre11 Bend, Route 124, Racine , OH,
PuiOI': Ed canei. Suriday School - 9:30
a.m ., Sunday Worship · 10:30 a.m..&amp; 7
pm; Wednesday Bi~lt: StiJCiy · 7:00p.m.

!lnM.... ChotdltiCioritl

OW Fno WPI....,.

w

1

ltlflot

..... 11/,..n,/tttlll--...
- • ...,... if "or ,.,.;,;s us. 1$
Clll, INC lift fi
• l ;'llltl.t; II . . . .-lllf lG. 1H1

216 East Second Sl• POll IBID)'

740-949-2210

740 112·3325

•A lbne a.nt fa
fbneftqle"

...;.,l.&amp;ikwdlszls

,_,., ,.._,..,...eft

7

7

.net

.'

..a.r lfNit lfJttJ•I' .... , . , lijc is

2111'1111rd
Aacl11e,OH

lilenlbels at 11111 II.S and REAL'TOR"
Pick up a color Bludlurel

_... . . . ,.,. ~- fiiiiJt

Hon)emade 0 e&amp;&amp; arts Made Dally
H-c:.o.tM tl..ri.i tw, Sj;o&lt;MII
Opeo 7 days a week

liilllf ,.a"" 111&lt;11
W ,.,.IISIJJil(1i"' OIW rite , _ .
rlltiiM llllt ... . . . , . • tJre rip/It Ill ria
7

If J( tJ1JiM ill Mt, ad MJ
won~$ UiM ill yo-. ,, JluJII
illk wiult Je will, 111M it IIMJil

- · -""*' ]011. /olul15:7

Site&amp; avaHIIMI51C10 to 10 K 20

. . . . . . ,._ willr-. nw
. . . . 11/rlahli;..IIJ
oU'

Tile flllllll.:e . .

,..; ... ,.. c.,.r ttl...,.. Ill
wor WIII/I ~ IICII
QIIIJiilr 4 ....... lof • , . Ni1Np if

"' ,.,.. Ills M/ll:tS /ttt"' t/llt!lt
-111M Ills .... ph ... '" ,.. - . . . , .. ..,., 6r ...... . . . 11/,..

..........
_ _ ...........
..........

,.. , . . , . _. _.....,.,.._.
_ _ . . . . 11/. . . . _
'
_,: ,,,...,
I.S.I'
1:1f

190 N. Seoond Sl

c-

Christian Union

~-AdMI~

~FAIILVEYEcMIE.W:

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

517M lEitH

W'

~-)~=eM®
'lW flftl..,-513-W3

'

1 1

!

'

_J

'

· '-r

Fourth &amp;. Main St.. Middleport. Sunday
School· 9 :30a.m .. Wor!iohip - 10 :4~ a .~ .

Hartford. W.Va .• ~aslor: Da~id Gn,er,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m ., Wedneiday
Services - 7:00p.m.

L Thon~ . Jr.

Aod1poi1y ......

Sw•day ~I - 9:30 a.m .. Worship •u.-.5 a.m .. Sunday Evening · 6~ p.m ..
Pastor: Doo Walker

d ,

your light so shine befioceJ
men, dial they may see
c 6 ·~·~ works and glorify
IF,Iilbc:rin beaven."
Matthew 5:

' ·~·

{

•I

, ,

'· 1

to

1

IDd

c

Doli•

Pk 0tpt11t

.

----~
•,.;piO!IXl

t.m.,

31057 Swe ltou&amp;e 325, laqs\llle, Putor:

Mt.-ChwdooiGod
Milt: Hill Rd ., Rat:ine , Pastor: Jame5

Suoday

, . _ .Dewayac - ·
Sodlaal ·
9:00 a.m.,
JO a.m., YGII6
Fdlow.rup, Suoday- 6 pm. Eady Suodoy
~ 8 ""!emU J&gt;...l1am

WonlliP ·

-c-. -

1 :y

. Ciriol . , . _ , S&lt;K:icty/Priesthood 11:05-12:00 noOn.
Sacrament Service 9· 10:15 a.m.,

IS''

&lt;llllrc*
Pine Grovt:. Worship - 9:00a.m .• Slladay
Scbool • 10:00 .a.m. Putor:
W

ColhtltVIIMIIJ' ¢ S PMIIII,
Putor:· Heleil KliDe, Coolville Cluucb,
Maio 4 Fd'dl St., Sun. Scboo1 - 10 a.m.,
Wottbip- !ila,m..•1\les. Services- 7 p.Dl.

Walnut and Henry St,., Ravenswood,
W.Va .• Pastor: David Ru s~ll. Suoday
School· 10:00 a.m .• W~p - II a.m.

-·

llitl

'

Fl "'I RAl HOII.ff

F--

m...,.._.ro ~o~m

Now·- wv

· . ·,~.. ,.'

I'' '

l5l65

U-'kd Mrt' Cit

~ Wonhif- It a.m. Pastor: Richard Neue
llldMIU.WMdl 71
New Havea, Richard Neue, Pastor,
Suoday worship 9:30 a.m. TUes. 6:30
'
prayer aad Bible Study.

..... c

o,...c

~ -10:30a m .

Nazarene

Mt. Oltw Uahed M
Oft 124 behind Wilkesvilk, PA11tor: Rev.
II

-

-=•

-~Cioodo
Suaday acbool- 10 a.m ., Worship - II
a.m ...Wcdoclday Scrvioe - 7 p.m.

pilllllr, Suaday Sdlool 10 am; wodlsip

Wonltip- 10:.30 a.m.. .7 p.m .. Thtmday
Services- 7 p.m.,

ICfVioe 11 am , ew'IDial iervice 7 pm. Wed.
praycr-.,7pm

~c . 1 oll.. Parilb
Nortbeut Cluster, ·Alfred, Pastor: Jim
Corbin. Sunday S(:bool - 9:30 a .m ..
Wanbip- 11 a.m .. 6:30p.m.

"""' Go1pol Qordo
J..ona Bottom,
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.,

M.,. I· ,'r: a-n::. .r tiN PI
ca
.
Pl!itor: Leonard Powell, Sunday Scbool •
9:30 a.m. ,W~- 10:30 a.m .. 6:30 p.m.,
WedoesQay Scrvioc5 - 7 p.m.,

~

Worship • !0:45 a.m ., 7:30 p.m ..

Wedaoadly7;!0p.m.

__ _ c

Pastor~

-.U..Mdloolol•

Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992..el06

.,,0117•m~

PIUcri~l

992·2955
"So~

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
. shall see God.

strive always to keep
my tonscience clear befoo: I

;,c_

lA yow light so shine before
tlsat lhey ll!aY see your
good WOf:b; anJ glorify your
Father in heaven."
Marthew 5:16

llltn,

;r

· Ads 24:1

·~

'

.. ·-'.'

Seventb-Diy Adventist
-.no,.w.-

Mulberry Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy, Saturday
Services: Sabbath School - 2 p.m.,
Wonhip - 3 p,m .

United Brethren
Mt. - U o i l o d - . . ,
Texas Community 36411 Wickham Rd.
Putor: Peter Martindale, Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m .. Worship - \0:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.
Youth &amp;roup meeting 2nd &amp;: =4th Sundaya
7p.m.

Will

,,1,

·~

~

\ '·'···

ARCADIA NURSING

CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens. Pomeroy or P:utersburg
l-7~7-3156

"Still s..U

John 3:16

~·u.-~~

,.._. '!""fioooily'

God and man."

MatthewS:&amp;

· Pastor: James Snyder, Sunday "Scb.Jol 10

"""' o.w ..........

SWISHER &amp; ~IE
God so loved the world
Plt.YIIACY
he gave his only
We RH Doctors'
IIJe·got'ten son ...

~

Presbyterian
..........~ Plub)IUiw CMrdl
Paator: Robert Crow. Worship · 9 a.m.

Adt.i.ns , Sunday School - 9:30

36759 Rocksprings Rd.

~

Pentecostal

' Psi
.. .u.e.bly
1
Putor: "St. Rt. 124, Racine. Tomado Rd ..
Sunday School - 10 • .m., Eveniag - 1
p.m., Wcdoeiday Servioeti • 1 p.m.

SUver RidJe- Pastor J...iD4a Damewood,
s-tay Sdkx:!l - 9 a.m .. Worship Service
10 l.m. 2nd and 4th SundaY

s,r.... Chotdltl111o-

Sunday School • IO:JO am.

o.er,

5mice every Tuesday 6:30Pm

33045 HiiDd Road , Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy , Hockingpon . Sunday Scbool . 10 a.m .•
Sunday Worship · II :00 a.m. WcdDeaday
Sunday Scbool · 10 a.m ., E~enin.g
Services · 7:00p.m.. Pastor· M. Adam
1:XI p.m., ~y A thun. ·7:3op.m.

Carson . Suoday School • 9:30 a.m.,
Wonbip- 10:45 a.m ., 6 p.m., Wedl:aday
Services · 1 p.m.

~-

·

H.a~Cr,

«;bun:b of the Naweoe.,Putor. R.uuell·

Putor: Denzil Null, Won;bip • 9:30 l.m

Cell fer Gymnasium. Pas1or Eddie

CPritl
State Route 124, between Reedsvilk tl:

,.,.~I'll

R '••F•ec...

Putor: Jim Corbin, Wonbip - 9 a.m.,
Suoday" School - 10 a.m. • lblll'lday
Services - 7 p.m.

· ,,~

Suaday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship •
10:10 a.m., 7 p.m.

-Bordi&lt;I1Zw NoN
Roule 61!9, Albmy, Rev. Lloyd Grimm,

lt.alpb Spires. Sunday School · 9:3(h.m.,

It) a.rdl

. Off Rt . 124, Pas1or: Edlel Hart, Sunday
ScboW ~9:30 a.m ., Wonbip • 10:30 a.m ..
7:)() p.m.

-~
Co. Rd. 63, S-'ay
Sehoul - 9,30 a.m.,

2

-J--

Moeting in the Mulberry Community

t

a .m., worstlip service. II am.

Ha±'
ta...rdl
Grand Street, SWiday Sclaool · 9:30 a.m.,
Worship . 10:30 a.m .• Putor Pllillip Bell

United Methodist

l

-s , r . - 1411 Bridpman St., Syr-.:use, Sunday
School - 10 a.m. Eveniag - 6 p.m.,
Wcdaelday sCnice - 7 p.m.

W~rship

- 10 a.m ., Wednesday
Services • 10 a.m.
a.m.

'a..ra

.... V..,Tl

-Cioonto

SI. Poui~C......
Comer Sycamon: &amp;. Second St., Pomeroy,
Sun. School · 9:4S a.m ., Wor!lhip • \111m .

''

....,.CIIIU'dl

Bailey Ran Rold. Putor. Rev. Emmett
lla.wtoa. SUDday "EveniDI 7 p.m ..
'l'bllnday 5cMcc • 1 p.m.

r ....tbip Rd .. 468C. Suaclay Scbool - 9

.tuntral Jlomt
IREHAEVI~'IJC]!N
we 1 1,011 1•ms1•1 lllre c&gt;on .JIOtl ik~m~t, dole to " -

.\~[)LR~O'

tC

1:30p.a.

o..s....•.-· .o.a.

Pomeror

a

575 Pearl St .. Middleport , Pastor: Sam
Aaderloa , S•nday School 10 a.m ..
~-7:30pm.~ WedncAday Service·

l'u1oc stony Wood, Stmday Sdtoo7 • 10
a.m., Wonhip - 11 a.m.Wtdaelday
S&lt;nicoo 6 pm; Tbur Bib~ Sllldy 7 pm

Lutheran

St.llt..Utt 1
Full Gospel , Cl Pastors Roberti: Roberta
MuS~e~, Sund~ty School 9:30 am. ,
Worship 10:30 am - 7:00 pm, Wed.
Service 7:00 pm

Bllil'lwaftltC
\lj a..n::li
Pailor. 1bcrcm Durham, Sunday - 9:30
a.m. aDd 7 p.m., WednesdMy -7 p.m.

-

HOIDM!)lkin, meetift&amp;, hr ~un . - 7 p.m.

......

--Ziealioi•.ou

ad 1 p.m., Wedaeaday - 7 p.m., Friday fellowabip le!'Vice 7 p.m.

=._.,

. . Clllcll I

NZ Go1pol Cloordo
S....Slood, s....,
Sc:hoo1. • 9:10 a.m. Waniaip - 9:30 un.

Plator: Bill Manhall Sunday Scltool . 9a.m.,. Wonlaip • JO a.m., ht Sundl.y
every. moalh e\'eniq tervioe 7:00 p.m.;
- y - 7p.m.
.

St . .lb. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486,
S11nday Scbool 10:20-11 a.m .• Relief

n

:r-

Eatli.Oiatt

Tile Chorda .. -

R ,'
~,.
9365 Hooper Road . Athen1. Putor:
Loonie Coats, Sunday Wonhip lO:to am,
_ . , . y, 7pm

:..0.,- -.~

Puur. Jobn Giimon:, Sllllday Sdtoo7 • ll
a..Ql., 'Warlll.q,- 10 un.

Latter-Day Saints

~130

...

-~F
otloipCPastor: Hencbel White , Sunday School10 am, SWidly Cburch service·- 6:30pm
Wedoo1day7pm
.

6t 1 tGnce&amp;Ji'.J.
923 s.Thin! s. .. MiddlepOrt. Putor r......
Davia, Sunday service, 10 a.m.,
W :' "yaervioe, 7 p.m.

. . . . Slat:

_p.m ..WedDelday,Servioe - 7:00p.m.

~orri&amp;.

~('JIM
I') a.rdl
Bd of~WestCollbllbia, W.Va.om Lievi:q
Road. hs1or: Char~s Rousb (304) 6752288, Suaday School 9.:30 am, Su.ciay
eveoinc service 7:00 pm. Bibly Study
Wedoe54&amp;Y, sc:~ict 7:00 pm

_ .._!6~-

C.zwiS
Cantoel .t Bu?wt Rdt. Racine, Ollio,
PUU&gt;r. Jo!m Gilmol&lt;. Slloday Scilooi 9:45a.m., Worih.i.p- 11:00 a.m . , Bib1e
Study Wed . 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Glerm Rowe: Sundly §(lhool -

~

"""10-.1 ~
"'"" UolooRt.338, Antiquity, Pastcw: Jeue

· Wte 1ay7pm

9:30 a.m., Worship - l0:30 a.111.. and 6

r

I

s.n-....,Saturday 2W pm.

"FuJl.O 1 I Ollirda.., Paton John ,&amp;
Patty Wade. 60! Sooaod A" -Muoo. 77!·
5017, Servioe "time: Sunday 10:30 a.m..

a.m., Worship - 9 a.m., W 1
Sen1cel. - 10 a.m.

t....!CSIIFno-Cioodo

I

3113 c:;,q.. C - Road, &lt;lallipolis, oH
Putor: Jarqie Wineman, Sunda.y ScrvM:a 10;30 a.m. Wednesday - 7 p.m.lblnd.ay
Prayer ~ Praise at (. pm. Classes for all
aees every su,day a: Wc:dacsdl) .
www.thearkc:ttun:h lid

Ailoc. ~ ~n Davis.

-p ....,:Joboian. ~--10

........

- 9:30 a.m .. Worship - 10:•5 a.m .. 7 pm ..
Tbunday Bible Study and Youth· 1 p.m.

,_.

11ooArtCioordl

... ..

Sunday Scbool-10 a.m., Wonbip- 9 a.m.

'''

CiPitoo ~ I Cloord1
Clif1on, W.Va., Sunday School - 10 a.m.,
Worship - 1 p.m .. Wednelday Service - 1
p.m.

Alloilloooto..t;
398 Ash "St., Mk'; 1 I~ Mut
Mqrrow A Rodney Wa1br . Sun~y
Scbool - 9:30 a.m., Moniq ·Wonbip .
10:30 a.m. a 1:00 Jill, w 1 c yService
-7:00p.m., Ycmtl~ 7!00p.m.

l'uloc William K. MonPtal!; .SuodaY
Scbool - 10:15 am .• Wonlaip- 9:15a.m ..
Bible Study' Mooday 700 pm

~a.iM~n.
116' d Aw..e,A..,_
7a.!9t 6333
I . . ~1·9116

Mik&lt;Fomnan,Pasmi:mcri1wl.a......,.

Foreman. Wcnhip- 10:00 am
Wednesday Senioes - 7 p.m.

YODih Diteetor Betty Fulka. Sunday
tcn'.iccl: 10m Won1rip 4 f! pm Family
Life Cluaea, Wed • 1\ur aic,bt Life
( ; . _ at 1 pm, '1'bon ......., I.W..'
Life Group II 10. Ouler l..imib Youth Life
Gn;uzl oo Wed ........ .._ 6:30 lO 8,)()_
Vllil us Olllioc • www.ldllllwc.org.

Pastor: Rick Bowne. Sunday Scbool 9:30a.m., Wonlrip - 10:30 a.m., 'Jbunday
Service~- 7 p.m.

Cloodo
Pastoc Rev. Lury Lem?ey; Sunday Sdtoo7

m

a.~.

.....

Wcdne!day

-----Cioordl

21tE,1181n

-l, . • • ,,,.

.-lfdllt

112 mile &lt;Of Rl. !2S, Pastor. lle•. O'Dell
Manley, Suoday Scbool - 9,30 un ..
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m..
• Wednelday Service. 7:30p.m.

INSURANCE
SERVICES

''!',~· •. • 1•..... l'.f.

Pastor: Brian Dunham, Wonhip • 9:30
a.m., Suncby Scbool- 10: 3~ am.

lading 0oe1t lld., Rud!ld. i'utoc Pie•.
Dowey KiJJ&amp;, Suodly .,...,,_ ~lO a.m ..

*

ile)ololoc ur.·c-....
SOO N. 2nd Ave ., Middlepon, Pastor:

• oc-•lll!'y.tCI1riol
Ptlnlud-Ric:ine Rd., Pastor: Jim Proffitt.
Saday School · 9:30 a .m., Worship •
10:10 a.rit., WedDesda&gt;: Se~ice5 • 7:00
p.m.
iPoiW Wonillp c..ter
39782 St. Rt . 7, 2 miles sOuth ofTuppcn
Plai.i. ·011. N~-deaom.iaational with
C
(winy,.,._ A Wcan~Up . Pastor

_.,

_,..._.._c....

5t. J.:. I «$'

Bryan &amp; Missy Dailey

.Cafeleria Pastor. Chris Stewan
10:00 -;n- Noon Sunday; Informal
Won.bip, OJildreo', ministry

Sunday Sdlool - 9a.m .. Wcnhi.p- 10 a.m.

p.m.

u,..:;-c ·

~~F.........

Bob Robinsoo. Sunday School • 9

•

·1 pm ..
P"'Y" .......... 7 p.m.

Slhan• Can•'llt.y a.rdl .
Suoday School 10:00 am, Sunday Wlnhip
11 :00 am , Wednesday 7:00pm Putor:

l'llrla..,.z

C.Z.., ...... llltt;oi
Hani&amp;OOville Road, . Pastor: Ow\es
McKenzie. Sunday School 9:30 a.m ..
Wonbip • II a.m., 7:00 p.m .. Wedncaday

s""""y .....o;p

service.

(Noo-denominlli fd1owship)
Mcetinc iD lbe Meigs Middle School

a..m.,_Wonbip- 10 a.m.

BeojlmUI Ctawfonl, Sllllday- - 9,)()
a.m., SUDday wor&amp;hip - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 1
p .m. , Wednesday prayer !lt:I"Vioe • 7 p.m.

SerVice - 7!00

I y Cloodo
Pua: Wayne ilwWip, Swc Rt. 68l,
~l'llills, Son. Wonhip' lOam&amp;
. 6:30 pm,. Wed. Bible Sbxty 7:00 p.m.

, ..... a. .
Pa~

C.Z.., -Oordl
Pomeroy Pike , Co. Rd ., Pasror: Rev.
Blackwood, Suoday Scbool - 9:30 a.m.,
Wor~hip 1.0 :30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
wectneiday
7:30p.m.

-'-'"8 c;,- C

Sebool · lO

,.._., Briu DuolwD, Sllllday Scbool !&gt;.JOU&gt;. -.mp ·1100 am.

sundiy 'Servio&amp;-7 p.m.

I

I

Hani..,,ille,

Suoday Sa-vioe. 2 p.m.

. . . . ()'In 2 t)

·-··...--Cioodo
-Y

I

F""" ,..,•...,c.-

,._.., Boblftd Kay MoniWI ,

9 Lm.

&amp;.Ill. ,

Bropn-W~

.....

- Wonhip
- •-.Suodoy

Edwaoi ""'"' ' ' .
..

F--

10 a.m., Wonbip - II a.m.

I

Holy Euchari&amp;l ll:{ll a.lll . Rev.

Cburch Of God

While Funeral Home
Si~ 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

~IA'ES,OD

1

-Chotdo tiCioritllo

Mldcleport. OH

740-fll2..e121
Local source tor trophies,
'rts and

. Al'lllll

fl( US.

~

5

....... Cioordofll~
PaStor: Philip Sturm, Suod,ay School: 9:30
a.m .• Worship Service: 10:30 im .• Bible
. StOOy. Wedncliday,6:30pm.

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHifS I TEEs

740-985-3511
992·1550
Sllee • S11'"111» • P8ltl

.....,. -

aJ/If

"""""'c-

741H192·7713

740-949-2217

II/ us INC"- adio'iiJ.., ;;matima

- . . / MtJ II, II MI. .,; Wan II/ hi INC it trill~ Ill W

Hldwry
~
Tuppen: Plains, Pa~tor Mike Moore. Bible
clas': 9 a.m. Sunpay; worship 10 a.m .
Sunday: worship 6:30pm Sunday; Bible.
class 7 pm Wed .

ClooRio tiC?ortol
Su!Hby sehoul 9:30 a.in .• Sunday woohip
• 10:30 a.m .
n.
oiC?ortol .,.......,.
lnlersection 7 and 124 W. Evangelist
lknnis Sargent, Sunday Bible Study •
9:30a.m .. Worship: 10:30 a.m . and 6:30
pm., Walnesday Bible Study- 7 p.m.

Fottil R11• Bapdll- Pomeroy

9tliffie's !l{estaurant -

29170 Balhan Ad.
Racite,OH

w.-.111111 il is......., I l l 1

't

R.ailroad St., MbOO, SWlday School • 10
a.m.• Worship • II a.m .. 6 p.m,
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Pulur:~v.Midulel

· Hills Self Storage

'-+IIIII ........, it flwllli not lllirti Ill
til lilt /Ia llwl i t - lllN Ill /riiiiiL A
,.._ dworm .,u IJIIlldl(lhw oi.i t;f
..... 1

6am • 8

ANrw'

II

Suppression • Exti.naui~ • Sprink.len
• Securi~

172 N. 2nd Ave. Mt!ldleport. OH
353-0837 Fax:

•

Letart. W.V,a . Rr . I, Pastor: Brian May.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Wonbip - 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Bi~ Study ·7:00p.m.
lwCioritl
Pastor. bv. Franklin Oictcos , Servioe:
Friday, 7 p.m.

S)aw:w:C
'yC~
2A80 Sectui St .. Syracuse, OH
Suo. ScilooiiO am, Sulldy nigbt 6,)() pm
Pu!oc Joe GwiliJI
~~CMrdo)

Qwlea

MutiDdale, Suoday School - 9:30a.m.,
Wonbip ~ 10:30 a.m., \\Woeiciay 5erYiot
- 7 p.m.

Other Churches .

lld, """'"'Y

w_,._ .

JCoolville Road . Pastor: Rev.

Pamr: laue Shupe, SUDday School • 9:30
a.11., Wonbip - 10:30 a..m:, 6:30 p.m.,
~y Servioes- 7,pm.

i?a!&gt;llo?iiooo.,

pia
l'1ls1or. Arlaod KiJJ&amp;, Suodly Jcbool . 9,30
a.m .. Woi'sbip - 10:30 a.m .. 1~105 Hilmd

Gnct ':
I o.rc.
326 E. Main !t.. Pomrmy. Suadly School

WW&amp;e's~

Sllldlyeveaiq:6prb

'

Episcopal

~

Rev. Joseph Woods, Sunday School - 10
a.m., WO!'ih.ip • II :30 a.m.

Houn

TEAFORD REAL ESTATE

•*'••

.... i1rlilt /tltM tl/p.;. -

-c-..

Worship - 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a~m .. 7:00
p.rn ..Wcdntsday Serviocs -7:00 p.m.

P1110r: Rev. Curtis RanGolpb, Sunday
Sc:bool- 9:30a.m., Worship - 10:10 a.m ..

Suaday School - 9:45 a.m.. . . . . , ~ 11
a.m .• Wedneadly Senoioea . 7:30 , •.

s-od &amp; Y,on. Pompuy, Putoc Rev.
Bob W~. Wonhip 10:25 a.m .,

Mini~ter :

Sltdd
Chotdo
· 21601 St. Rt . 7, Middleport , Sunday
Servlce - 10 a.m .. 6:00p.m., Tue~y
Service&amp; ~:00

Roaer Wlllford., Sunday School · 9:30

am. Woribip- 7 p.m.

c-..~

..-....,a-.z,

-Golpoi-

Bakl Kaub. on Co. R.d. 31, Putor. Rev.

....._.c..dfll.- pg_._

AAbwy (Syracuoe), " - '

Congregational

t:;Omer of S1. Rt. 124 4-. Bradbury Rd .,
Doug Sbamblin, Youth Mldiilcr:
Bill Amberger, Sllllday School-9:30a.m.

WooMip • 9,30 ~-'"-· s-tay 5mool •
10:10 ....... Fint Suaday ci.Malllh. 7:00

- 7:30p.m.

10:45 p.m., Slblday Eve. 7:00 pin.,
'Wei:lnetdlly Service-7:30p.m.

IPndhory ~ .tCioritl
Minister: Tom Runyon , 39558 Bnuibllf)'
· Road, Middleport. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m .
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

- . , . Chotdotl ... NIPI-=
..

" ' - Jim c..l.iu, Suday Scboo? • 9
,..,_, Wonbip • 10 im.• l'uetdly 5&lt;nioeo

Oootdo ........ ..........,.
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160. Pastor: PJ.
Oupman, Sunday School • 10 un. ,
W015hip • I I il.m., Wedftesday Services • 7
p.m.

KiaJsbwy ROid, Putor: Robert VaDCC,
Slltlday School - 9,30 a.m .. Wurllip
Service 10:30 a.m ., Evelliaa Service 6
pm.

I

Putar. Ja l..aveftdcr. Su•day Scbool 9:10 a.m., Wonhip - IO:lO a.m . and 6
p..m.,W 1 4ey~ - 7p.m .

.

,......_&amp;1.....

llJoAdl. Suoday Scboo? aad 'Mlnioip- 10
EveD.ia1 Services- 6:30 p.m.,
""J'z:d dey Services - 6:30 p.m.

a.a.

Woribip - 10:30 a.m .. ·6:30 p.m.

1\oppen P?oia C!uudo of~
Insuume~tal , Worsllip Service • 9 a.m .,
Communion - to a.m., Sunday School l0:1 5 a.m .. Youth- 5:30pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wedacaday 7 pm

,.

Suaday School • 9:30 a.m., Wonbip J0:30a.m.

s.............._lloWd

w..y.---Chudo

Pastor: Ryan Eaton. pastor • Sunday
. School : 9 :l(J a.m .• Worship - 10:40 a.m..

I

...,... .. -

Pearl St., MiddlepOrt._ Putoc Doug
Cox. Swlday Scboo? • 10 am. Worohip -

Z?oa cz,....... Ciriol
Pomeroy, Hanisonville Rd . (R1.J43),
Pastor: Roger Wa1&amp;on, Sunday Scbool 9:30 a.m .. Worship - 10:10 a.m .. 7:00
p.m., Wednesday ServOO · 7 p.m.

W~ySenoicc- 7:00p .m .

"'d;'

s,.-Finto..tooiGod

7~

. Wfldneldly Seryic:;a ~ 6:30 p,m.

Ptlidd1eport. Sunday School - II: 15 a.'tn.,"
Worship - 10 :15 a.m., 1:00 p.m. ,

Wednesd~ty

p.m., Wedaeaday Scrvicei - 7

. . . . . . . . . . . Qurdt flla.rill:
Putor.Bruce Terry, Sunday School -9:30

....

9:30 a a ., 'tlonbip ~9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
Wedoe&amp;dayScniccl- 1:00 p.m.

6:00 p.m..
pm.

aJil .. 6

P-"'·

~----Cioodo

a.Jil., Wonllip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
I y Servk:es ~ 7 p.m.

..,.

Cloonto .tGod
,.._., ~ - · S-y Wonl1ip · 10

st.. ClooRio .tC-

Pa.st(ll" loa ~roclat . East Main St.,
Sunday Scb. 9J0 . .,11/onlrip 10,30 am

41172 Pamaoy

ta.dleladlt

t·y Scrvm- 7

- 6 p.m .• llkd

Church of Christ

Ml.-.....
'

..-.wv

- S f.

Sludy

F""'

We Sel HomeS at

.....,~

(I•'J , I..,._)
SR 652 aad
"-r. l l -Grady, Suadat ldlool 10 am, Moraiq

SlS N. 2nd St. Middleport. Putor: James
E. Keesee. Woribip • IOa.m., '7 p.m., .
Wcd.nc5day Services · 7 p.m.

Director of Marketing and Admissilllis

I

.....

-Valey
River Vallry Apcmolic Worship ~.
873 ·S . 3rd Ave .• MiddkJport, Rev.
Michael 8111dford. Pas!Or, Sunday, lO:JO
a.m . Tues. 6:30 prayer, Wed. 7 pm Bible

Vk:Wy~'lt

Mic:heBe Kmaedy

.._..;
£ 'a •

bvm5wood, WV. ~ Sc:Moi.IO-', Motuioc ...... l l a E - . - 7 pm.
Wcdacoday 1 ,...
-

Baplllt Churdl
St. Rt . 143 just off Rt. 7. Pastor: Rev.
James R. Acree , Sr .. Sunday Unified
Service. Worship · 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Setvioes · 7 pm.

The sponsors of this chorth

....

E~

Sllem St., Pallor. Ed Ramey , SU.Dday

he has the audacity to dis"Ah!" my wife, Diane.
place blame onto the master
cried as she glanced out the
who
had entrusted it to him in
window. "She's , digging
the first place! As you IDhlht
again! Someone needs to go
suppose, his boss is NOT
out there and stop her!" I
Pastor
impressed, confiscates the
dido 't have to look. There ·
Tl1cJn1
talent, and kicks the servant
was only one "she" to
Mollohan
out. esseotially firing him for .
which Diane oould possibly
laziness and insubordination!
have been referring. We sent
I'm afraid to say that far more
out our 10-year-old son to
of
us are lllOIC like the thild
intervene, his 7-year-old.
servant than we realize. Here
brother accompanymg him.
A moment later l heard a We know it by the Spirit He we are, eobUsted with oodles
slwp, "No! No digging!" gave us" (I John 3:23-24 of physical, material, relaand then they returned, with NIV). Or, of CliUI'se, one may tiona and spiritual blessings,
the horse-of-a-puppy in tow. be su,.l&gt;eS!ing that there are and we too often simply sit
After he carefully . cleaned "hole?--ifi· our character. on. them. oblivious to the
her paws, our son set her When we can begin to boo- nrwvv1nnities to invest them
· estly admit dlat it is· so, we · f~~dom of God. And
looSe in the house.
His lxotber, having quietly can then allow God's power while we may realize that the
observed the proceedings. and His nature to begin to ''hole" in J~' stol)' partialfollowed afire fum. 'As theY " sew" up such holes so that . ly 1ep:esents inactivity (simpassed out of sight down the . wemightbemenand women ply not using what we've
hall, I could hear them dis- of integrity whose dealings . been giVen), that hole ALSO
~ssing the number of large in this world demoosttate the 1tiplesents our blessings used
holes that had tumed a sec- goodness of God. "The for any purpose other than the .
tion of our backyard into a WRD abhors dishonest will of God!
WalCh out that you do not
lunar landscape. "We'd better scales, but accurate weights
His
delight"
(Provems
bwy
what God has given you
are
bury the holes," the younger
hoy advised solemnly. His ll: I NIV). And many, many in holes of ambition. selfish.
comment
immediately people are OOIItCodina with ness. greed or lust. If you take
S1)lllted a question for me. yet 8iDbrc kind of boTe-. a the gifts that God has given to
'"When you bwy a hole," I hole into which they pours yon. for instance, and use
wondered, "does it cease to their ~ mergy. and them merely to profit yourbe a hole?" l may or may oot resources but without any self or to impress olbe~.
have voiced my question kind of spiritual dividend you've OOried your talent in a
hole! Or if you take your
.aJoud. but if l did. anyone in returning to them.
In
the
Gospel
of
Manbew,
material.
blessings and use
hearing distanoe wisely
chose to ignce me. People chapter 25. Jesus t.ells a story them just to accommodale
in my house lalow that it about a man who; when Bel· your own comfons and plans,
doesn't take a let of encour- ling out upon a long journey, you've buried your "talent"
ltgemeia for these kinds of places his resouroes to three m a hole of selfishness. The .
ponderings to get out .o f 1lerVllllts. One is given five time is coming when we also hand. Ia this case, a whole units of Dllllley; 1J1e .second is will have to aroount for our
series of jJoindess questions chaiRed with dm:; and the blessings in the same way
ensued. "Does a hole cease thinfiscmusted with one. In thal those three servants did.
to be a hole when you bury the Biblical account. the unit When it's . YOUR tum,
it?" was follmved by, ~·If you of money is Jt'CIICI'ally trans- wouldn't it be a tragedy to see
bury an especially beloved lated as "tafeot" and was His beautiful face tilled with
and' valuable bole, should worth more than a thousand disappoinlmeot and to hear
you draw a treasure map so dollars. While their ·boss is His voice utter words rebukyou can find it againT' And away, the fll'Sl two invest ing your untrustworthiness?
then, "lf you bury a hOle that their talents in cppcxtnniti"'l Let it oot be so for you. "Dig
· you really wanllo bep safe, thatyieldarctumofooebun- up" today whatever you've
what's die best way to guard dmd percent. Does the third been burying in your own
• it llO oo me oomes along, follow their ~ example? willfuloess, and begin to reindigs it
and then makes Nope. He buries his in a hole vest it in God's kingdom.
off with
WeD, however in the ground! When
.
their Invest your time. y~
one chooses to answer such · boss finally RilllrDS, ~ ~s a resourres, your relationships,
"impodant" questions, one staff D!j'l!'hng in ·which .they and even your words and
thing is certain, one must do each must account for therr thoughts in the g1a1 WOit of
something about the spiritual actions. The first two ~ pleasing Him. Invest and
holes that we fmquently find and show the fruits of their anticipate those wonderful
in the lindscape of our lives. investments. ,Their 11IIISirr is words from the Master, "Well
And just what are "spiritual very pleased and oommeods done, good and faithful S«·
them, entrusting them with vant! You have been faithholes?"
Naturally,
might mean inmdibly great.er oppot1uoi, fuL Come and share your
happiness!"
the void in each of our beaits ties than before. "Will done, Master's
•until we find Christ and the good and faithful servant! (Matthew 5:21 and 23 NIV).
(/Jtolll MolkJittur tlllllltil
urgeocy for each .o f us to You have been faithful with a
few
things;
I
will_put
you
in
fllllrily
lwm ~ ill
allOw God to fill that void
with His loving presence chaige of numy things. Come IOIIIL: w OltiD tile Jlllll l:Z..
through our repen1a11ce and and share your master's hap- 112 ,_., 111111 is tile«...,.(
faith in Jesus Olrist ''And . piness!" (Matthew 25:21 "Tile F,;, 1ille Ptrtu6kr.
· . He is tlu p '• of,.,.._,_
this is God~s command: to NIV).
But
when
the
third
servant
c--,;ty Ci:11ft:t, w6iclr
believe in the name of His
Son. Jesus Ouist, and to love repons, he presents to his .ua 1111 Sn' y ...U.,S
one another as He command- boss the one talent thal had 411 455 lJiinlAH, He_, lie
ed us. Those who obey His been entrusted to him · and IWidl«l f• ~ or
commands live in Him, and admits that he took his~ qwstimu "' e....., llt_J!f'6He in them. And this is how and simply put it in a hole m tMtlw•@pdiiJwayt«llipo·
we know that He lives in us: the ground! Not only that, but lil.eo.)..

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

www.mydally..mlnel.com

Ill are"

arace

- for thee: for m~o~
streUth is made
Perfect in weakness.

II Cor. 12:9
Office Service &amp;Supply
137.C N. 2nd Ave.
lliddlepoc1, OH

992-6376

�t

Page AS

COMM '

The Daily Sentinel

National Nurses Week
celebration
. May 6•12

Friday, May 2, 2008

.

.-

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eta

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rt Ill

......
(7..,_'"'
Twq Iocgrjqn1
1..-....... .,~--­

'

--•i,• '

Meigs,_,,,_,
.

..

. - atEutein(_,,

noon

Warren II Moigo, .-&gt;

-e-..
atSoullam ( - .
noon
header),

e-...

Meigs wins
stugfest with

SPOKI'S BIUEFS

Sky6ne~ ­

.

Re-opening
today
.
.
'

STEWART - Skyline
Speedway will host a
''Grand Reopening" toda_y ·
with a full evening of fanuly fun at the 3/8-mile clay
;oval. As part of the continuing kids' activities, an electric scooter valued at $400
be pn!sented to one
tucky child age 12 and

ALBANY - Amy Barr
had four hits, including a
two-RBI double and a gamewinning horne run, helping
the Meigs Lady Marauders
softball . team defeat the
Alexander Lady Spartans 65 in 12 innings Thursday i,n a
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division game.
With · the win, Meigs
improves to 7-9 on the season with a 4-4 record in the
TVC Ohio. Alexander, one
of the conference's top
teams, now has two losses io
the division, both of which
came from the Lady
Marauders.
''We just played a really
good game," said Meigs
head coach Dave Fife.
"We're a young team, and

we've struggled all year, trying to tell them how talented
they are. It takes games like
this to show them."
Hailey Ebersbach earned
the win for Meigs, going all
12 innings and striking out
!W-•eil. The jLIJlior had no
walks ·until the ninth inning
and finished with four for
the game.
Barr's homer was her second in as many days after
sending one -oVer the fence
on
against
Belpre
Wednesday. The senior also
had the winning hit in the
first meeting' between Meigs
and Alexander oo April 14.
Deadlocked at five runs
apiece through II, Barr's
solo shot to left field with
one out and the wind io her
face got the up and down
Lady Marauders back on the
winning lrack.

Barr

S.Smlth

Meri VanMeter, Shellie
Bailey, and Hannah Pratt
also had hits for the Lady
Marauders, who lost a 2-0
lead before knotting . the
score at 5-all with three runs
io the seventh.
Lian Hoffman started the
eleventh-hour rally, reaching
base oo an error after a hard
· hit to shortstop. Tricia Smith
walked and then scored With
Hoffman one batter later

when Barr doubled. Bailey
followed suit with another
double that pushed Barr to
third, and Shanalle Smith
completed . tile comeback
with a sacrifice fly.
"It's weird," said Fife of
his team's roller coaster season. ''There are days where
we can play with anybody.
They just need to bel.ieve in
themselves." ·
Pratt started the scoring
for Meigs in the second with
an RBI double that scored
Chandra Stanley. Ebersbach
then scored Pratt with a shot
to second that went down as
an error.
Alexander tied it in the
third with two hits and a
passed ball,.and they capitalized in the fourth to take a 42 lead. A collision on a fly
ball in the Meigs infield got
one runner on, and a hit bats-

man put on a second. Both
runners then scored on a
fielding error. ·
Two singles in the fifth
bumped the lead to 5-2 and ·
set the stage for the Lady
Mamuder comeback in the
seventh.
An Alexander comeback
briefly seemed like a possibility after a leadoff double
.in the .12th, but three straight
outs, including a shot to the
gap in left field caught by
Bailey, gave Meigs the season sweep.
The Lady Marauders are
on the road Friday against
Miller and return home
Monday for a makeup game
with Nelsonville-York.
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p.m., and rae~ begins at 8 .

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that was way outside. But
Cabrera lined an 0-1 fastball
to center and was promptly

mobbed by teammates.
"I was .calm, looking for a
pitch over the plate,"
Cabrera said throngh ftrstbase coach Luis Rivera, who
served as intetpreter for the
22-year-old switch-hitting
inftelder from Venezuela. "I
got a good faslball to hit."
The Mariners took a 2-1
lead in the 1Oth when Richie
Sexson hit · the ftrst pitch
from Masa Kobayashi (2.())
for his 300th career homer.
Oeveland tied it in the bottom half on a bases-loaded
walk to Grady Sizemore by
Seattle closer JJ. Putz.
"Walks willitill ·you," said
Putz, who had allowed three
of them arid two runs in one
inning in his last outing
Saturday. "My job is to
come io and get ahead. I just
didn't throw strikes."
The horner was Sexson's
sixth of the season and
IOOth since signing with
Sealtle as a free agent after
the 2004 season. The ftrst
baseman
reached · the
Mariners milestone in 463

Plrn

1 . . . llldl••a. 14

APphoto

Cleveland Indians' Asdrubal Cabrera watches his bases-loaded RBI single in the 11th
inning of a '3-2 win over the Seattle Mariners. in a baseball game Thursday in Cleveland:

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CLEVELAND (AP) Met g s
baseball . Asdrubal Cabrera got the
team got 21 pitch he· wanted and gave
hits total on the Cleveland Indians a win
their way to th6~Y threw away.
rera broke an 0-for-14
a21-16Trislump
with a two-out, basesValley
loaded
single in the II th
Conference
inning
to
lift Cleveland over
0 h i 0
the
Seattle
Mariners 3-2 on
Division
victory Thursday night
."It was like pulling teeth,"
over
the
Indians
manager Eric
Alexander
Wedge
said.
"H we had done
Spartans on
a better job earlier, we'd
Thursday.
Meigs have never been in that situimproves to ation."
Cleveland itiade a key
8-1 in the
en'or
to blow a 1.() lead in
TVC Ohio
and 12-7 on · the ninth, fell behind in the
the year. IOth, then rallied to tie it
Alexander again and finally win in their
falls to 1-7 last at;bat for the third time
in the divi- this year.
Jhoony Peralta started the
sion and 1winning
rally with a one-out
11 overall.
walk
off
Mark Lowe (1-2).
Austin Dunfee earned the
Travis Hafner, hitting sixth
win for Meigs.
: Because of ll Wellston to start a game for the first
ll;&gt;ss to Belpre on the same time in more than three
day, head coach Jeremy years, then doubled to left
Grimm's Marauders are and Jamey· Carroll was . bit
oow ensured of at least a by a 1-2 pitch. loading the
share of the TVC crown for bases.
·Sean Green came on and
lhe second season in a row.
out
Franklin
· Bryan DeLong and Ryan struck
Gutierrez on an 0-2 pitch

Wholes8le • ltetail

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Lady Marauders win 12-inoing marathon over Alexander

Al~=r 3-2 extra-inning

Friday••• Mostly cloudy in
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Saturday-Cloudy with a
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Chance of r.rin 50 percent
Sunday and Sullclay
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Eallem at Ma'gon, 10 a.m.

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Holtz, Cooper into Hall, Page 84 .

Fanners Bank's has
contributed $1,000
toward the expenses.
of the Gold Wings
and Ribs Festival to
be held on Pomeroy's
parking lot J\'ne 6
and 7. The bank's
contribution Is in
recognition of the
value festivals play in
promoting tourism in
the county. Sank representatives posing
with the check lac·
sim~i along with Bill
Quickie, left, festival
chainnan, and Cass
Cleland, finance and
publicity chainnan,
are from the left, ·
Kelly Gilland, Linda
Mayer, and Ferri Fife.

fil- ~:~:;:~:,::,'' .:-:;:.::~:~~;;,";:.~. ,

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The Daily Sentinel

lluder w. LeBron, Page 82
~ ollldals ~ playuft,,. 82

Festival,donation

GALLIPOLIS The highlighting the diverse ways
wort of America's 2.9 mil- in which registered nurses,
lion registered nurses to save the largest health care profeslives and to. maintain the sion, are working to improve
health of millions of indi vict- health care. From bedside
uals is the focus of this ye31''s nursing in hospitals and longNational Nurses Week, cele- lenD care facilities to the halls
brated annually May 6-12 of resean:h institutions, state.
throughout the United States. legislatures, and Congress,
This year, the American the depth and breadth of the
Nurses Association (ANA) nursing profession is meeting
haS
selected "Nurses: the expanding health · Care
Making A Difference Every needs of American society.
Day" as the theme.
· ·
In honor of the dedicaTuesday Holzer Medical tion, commitment, and tireCenterwill kick off the week less ·effort of the nearly 2.9
with a proclamation signing million registered nurses
in the main lobby at I 0 a.m. nationwide to promote and
Following the proclamation maintain the health of this
si~ing, a balloon launch riation, the ANA and Holzer
wtll take place. On Friday. Health Systems are proud to
May 9, a candlelight vigil recognize registered nurses
will be held to remember everywhere on this particupast nurses in the Holzer lar day for the quality work
Center for Cancer Care's they provide seven days a
week, 365 days a year.
Healing Garden.
Other events taking place
throughout the week include
a food drive for the Snack
Pack program with our local
schools. Food items that will
be accepted include shelf
stable milk, fruit juices, cereal packs/bars, pop-top meals,
craekers, pudding cups, fruit
cups. single serving macaroni and cheese. and fresh
fruit · when
available.
Nursing staff will also hold a
raffle for a Longaberger
2008 Mother's Day basket
with all proceeds going to
Holzer Hospice and Holzer
Center for Cancer Care. .
Annually, National Nurses
Week begins on May 6,
IIIliiKed as RN Recognition
Day, and ends on May 12,
the birthday of Florence
Nightingale, fouodt!r of
nursing as a modem profession. Poring this wc;ek. registered nurses at Holzer
Medical Center will be hoo·
ored for their dedication and
commitment for promoting
health and wellness for the
communities we serve.
ANA, through its 54 constituent member associations, 'advances the nursinjl
profeilion by fostering high .
standards of nursing practice, promoting economic '&amp;..aii!f"t'lllerlil · Welfare, pro-· ·
moting.a positive and realis·
tic view of nursing, and lobbying Congress and the regulatory age11cies on health
care issues affecting nurses
and the public.
Tradittonally,
National
Nurses Week is devoted to

Inside
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~-4111 Holllr Clioic'• Relay foe

Lil'l Taaa,

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�•
• • 1.com
www.mydailysentine

Page B2 • The Daily'Sentinel

/

Friday, May 2. 2008

. Friday, May 1, a.

'llle Daily'S

r

I•

r.eBJ

With talk toned down, Cavs-Wiz becomes Butler vs. LeBron
~ ltowARo FEJIDRICH

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
Shhhhh!

That. essentially. was
what Washington Wizards
co-captains Caron . Butler
and Antawn Jamison told
teammates. Be quiet off the
cburt, and play better on it
against LeBron James and
the Cleveland Cavaliers.
Tellingly,
neither
DeShawri Stevenson nor
Brendan Haywood met with
the media horde after the
Wizards' brief practice and
video session Thursday.
The Wizards head Friday
to Game 6 of the first-round
playoff series that has been
marked by trash-talking.
"We just said, ' It's time to
stop all the talking.' A lot of
guys were trying to defend
themselves as far as this and
that. But it wasn't working,"
Jamison said Thursday. "We
said:
'The
ultimate
changearound is .for us to
just be quiet and find a way
to come back from 3-1 and
win the series.' I think they
finally got it."

It was Stevenson who
began the public chatter by
calling James overrated.
then helped escalate what
became a back-and-forth
involving rappers, a throatslashing gesture and a flying
headband. It was Haywood
who mimicked a whiny
voice to mock James'
protests of rough play.
Both Stevenson and
Haywood were whistled for .
flagrant fouls on James Washington's center was
ejected from Game 2 - and
Gilbert Arenas pointed to
that as'the biggest reason for
zipping lips.
"We stopped talking
because they've been giving
us technicals and "fouls.
That's why," said Arenas,
who ruled himself out for
the rest of the season before
Wednesday's . Game 5
because of his surgically
repaired knee . .
Washington won 88-87 to
pull within 3-2 in the bestof-seven series, and it was
Butler who produced his
best showing of these playoffs.

.bodies on him. You have to during a series between
No one will say the back." Jamison said.
-Butler is still dealing wilb sometimes
double-team teains that know each odler
out the not-quite-himself various nagging injurieS: him," ·Brown said. "We've so weD. Clevelaild eliminatArenas - "I'm lhe caprain, including to his right tme got to keep trying to mix it ed Washington in the 20115and I'm telling you: He's the and his hip. He missed 20 of up and hopefuUy we don't 06 and 201)6.()7 playo!H.
So leave it to Wwirds
best player on this team. Washington's last 35 regu- have to put LeBron on him
'
.coach Eddie Jordan to delivHow can you be better with- Jar-season games and for long SIR:Iehes.~
Thursday
As this series becomes eilhe line of the day.
out him? That's il." Jamison ac)f;:nowledged
he's
been
trying
to
get
his
more
about basketball, it
The roach was asked
said - but the point guard's
absence allowed Butler to rhythm back. So it must be alsO morphs from being whethe£ be' d bad a cbanee
about James and Stevenson · to 9eC video of the play on
get more touches and be back now, righi?
HNoi
all
the
way
there,"
ttading words to being about which Wu.ards forward
more assertive.
"Caron wants an Opponu- Butler said, "but I' m feeling James and Butler trading Darius Songaila was called
baskets.
for a technical foul :when he
nity tri lead a team," reserve better."
The Cavaliers certainly
"We believe he can wiD clipped James on the chlo in
guard Roger Mason Jr. said.
this series for them - that's Game 5.
"He willed us to that victory noticed.
"He picked up his game a how dangerous he is,~
"I stand my grouod. I
yesterday. His personality
was on the floor, and I think lot with Gilbert ouL He gOl Cavaliers ceote~ Zydrunas thought he got tangled up
more touches,~ Cavaliers Uganskas said about Buda. with LeBron. and LeBron
it's good for us."
Through the first foqr guard Daniel Gibson said. "We're going to have 10 be lried to get untangled. And
games, Butler averaged 15.5 "We give respect to him for more aggressive with him - in his method of IJying to
points, 4.0 rebOunds and 4.3 the way he perfonned, but ·and maybe make him drive get untangled, Darius' arm
assists, while shooting 1- we 'II definite! y look to the ball a little more. He's just flew at his chin,'.' Jordan
for-9 on 3-pointers. In Game change a few things."
shown he can shoot the said.
5, the two-time AU-Star ftoCleveland · coach Mike . ball~
Then, straight-faced as
ished with 32 points, nine Brown will have James
Like Stevenson · and could .be. Jordan rontinued:
rebounds and five assists, guard Butler at limes in Jfaywood, JameS- whou "And LeBron's a terrific
going 4-for-8 on 3s, and Game 6, but not for the averaging 30.4 points, 8.8 actor. We've seen some of
making the go-ahead basket entire game.
rebounds and .6.6 assists in his COIIIIDeR:ials.n
with 3.9 seconds left.
" If I could keep him off of the series - dido 't speak to
"He made some big, big Butler, that's what we would reporters Thursday.
AP Sports Wrikr Tom
plays for us," Wuards pres- prefer to do. But a guy like
Still, it wouldn' t seem Withers in lruhpemlence,
Caron, you' ve got 10 give right if a day passed without Ohio, contributed to this
ident Ernie Grunfeld said.
"Pretty much put us on his him different looks and put some sort of verbal tweak. repon.
Wizards are better off with-

Wille: N~~R Ttl is 1Week, lq/G il1he Gaston Gazette, P.O.

1

"''"'lei'"'

...
~~-··''
· ~

Bowl Championship Series officjals reject playoff proposal
1 team in want to move the 8CS they were opposed to ihe view~ as the major hurdle there's been some dispute
phis-one format to changing the· BCS. Turns leading into the champiNo. 2 vs. No. 3 in the marAny change would've Slive was to present
out it was far from the only onship game 'about wbedtef'
HOLLYWOOD, Fla.
quee:bQwl games. The win· needed approval by univerOn Wednesday, Big East obstacle.
the BCS selected the two
Even a three-game playoff ne~·. would meet about a sity presidents.
commissioner
Mike
College football's leaders most deserving teams.
- was too much for the BCS. week later in the BCS title
In tbe current BCS format, Tranghese and Big 12 com- are concerned a playoff
Undefeated Aubtttn, from
Bow I , Championship game. The plan ,.tso ealled the top .tWo teams in the missioner Dan Beebe, for would turn football into a the SEC, being left out in
Series officials rejected a for .q eating a . sixth BCS BCS :&lt;tandings which use .the frrst time; made it two,.semester sport and 2004 in favor of Southern
plan Wedtiesday 10 turn lhe game.
polls and compuier ratings known publicly that their lessen the importa:noe of a California and Oklahoma
In the end. only the SEC to grade, teains - aCta tbe leagues also were against regular season that now has was what ftrst got Slive
much-criticized system for
deciding a national champ and ACC wanted to even regular season are marched even the smallest possible a do-or-die feel to it from thinking that No. I vs. No. 2
into a playoff involving four continue the discussion of in the Iitle game.
playoff.
week to week.
might not be enough.
leaii!S• starting · in the 2010 the plus~ne.
The idea .behind -the plu"There's a strong sense in
1be Bowl quunpionship
Last year, Geolgia fans
~:· BCS format will
:\I'm not unhappy," ~live · one is to alleviate,some Of that room ·of the slippery Series was implemented in were the loudest to comremain the same until at SB:I&lt;I after those meetmgs 'lhe OOqtro~y by 1iCIIdio8 slope view that there's never 1998 after the Big Ten, Pac- plain when the Bulldogs
least thj: 2014 season.
• w1th ~e ~0 other conference f~ lealns. into the IJ!)SISea- been a collegiate or profes- 10 and Rose Bowl agreed to passed over for the BCS·
"After· a very thorough, commiSSioners and Notre son withachancetowinlf!e sional playoff that's stopped join with the other four tide game in favor of LSU
very goo,d d\scussion amorig Dame athletic · direc.tor national chamJ&gt;ionsbip.
at fou~ teams," Delany said. major conferenoes and three and Ohio State.
the group, we have decided Kevin White 84 ·a resoffi·, , The , BCS blu; two y:ellli
Tranghese said he favored marquee bowls to create an · Of C()Uf'SI!, Slive's plus.
that because we feel at this hotel. "There's . Ill) such_ left·on its curreot fqur-yCar, an unseeded version of a· annual national title game one wouldn't have solved
time the BCS is in an thing as standing 'pat: llhillk $~, million lV':deal With plus~ne. which would set involving the top two teams ~st
year's
problems.
qnp~nted
state ·o f we've done a str:vic;:e.. (by f.ox..l'iegotiatioos will like- . the championship game in the country after lhe regu- Georgia, which fmished
heallh, we feel it'• never presenting the plaa · for
· lybegminthefalloo'a n matchl!pafterthefourmajor Jar season.
second in the nation in the .
been healthier during its plus-poe). We owed the fans , ~ • l!lith Fox-)bat•n bowls are played using the
While lhe BCS has creat- • AP poD bebiod LSU, was
fU'St decade, we have made a """ media an explltnatioo as ·~ty, JJID tbloBgh 1be BCS · standings, ovet seed- ed championship games that ranked ftfth io the BCS
decision to move forward4n to why we're not m.ov'mg 2013' ~and lock: in the ing the top four and playing never would have happened standings at the end of the
the·· next cycle with the cur- 1. ahead.
· .-, - • -~nt format.
. • them off.
under the old bowl system, regular season. and wouldn't
rent ·fO!DJal,",Atlantic Coast
"I can't say I'm ~sed. ·.,. The decision tq, she~ve !he
"The
seeded
model it's been far from perfect. have qualified for a fourConferepce ·commissioner There is a bit of disappoint-. phl~ came as.'Ito sur- looked like a playoff, and For the many college foot- team playoff. . .
ment."
_
.
~ lt was a long shot ID we don 'l think a playoff is in ball fans desperate to see a
So the BCS will stick
Jobn SwoffOrd said.
During five hours of There was no vote ,am, ·swviv~. at best. ;
the best interest of college playoff that would crown a with the imperfect system il
mec.ting'1i,.
Southeastern lhe.commissioners said, bai · ," COming into the meetings, football," he said.
more defmitive champion, has instead of insta1lin8
The Big Ten and Pac-IO's · the BCS lu!s been a target another.
COnference commissioner the leaders of the Bi~ Easl, Big Ten ccilniiJissioDe Jim
Mike Slive presented a plan Big 12. Pac-10 !Uid Big Ten Delany alid ~ 10 commis- relationship with lhe Rose for their angst.
"If it isn't broke," White
for a plus-one format,' made it clear , !hey didn't SiO!lei'Tom Han.sea bad said Bowl bas always been
Almost every season, said, "don't fLX it."

I

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matching the

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• -: North Carolina
iOducation Lottery 200
• -: Lowe's Motor
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teammate Jaoll Sprague lin·
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C .o_::!Jr,
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No. 42 WR,IGUEY•s JuJC'It' fHl!!IT DoDGE

JUAN PABLO MoNTOYA

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wards ' car, pinned
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swer\'ed to avoid

__ .

Lepage's car,
slammed ihto and

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over Lepage's No.
61. Lepage initially
reacted angrily and
said he had done
nothing wrong. Later. after reviewing
tapes, he tool&lt; full blame and said
he had acted lille ·a heel."

~MICIIR iillilln't'-adllll.

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Dutton g?ves·h ls-:"Lepage is a
veteran with loads of experience - and
two career victories ~ but he made a
serious mistake andcaused a fright·

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h1s career cut short by injury. He
crafted a legend for hi mself in what

now NASCAR 's Nat1onw1de series,
winn1ng 22 of the 92 races in which
he competed. In 1983, Ard won consecutive races 1n South Boston (Va. ).
Martinsville (Va.), Rougemont (N.C.)
and Charlotte (N.C. ). establiShing a
record that still stands. Kyle Busch
failed in his bid for a fourth straight
at Talladega. Ard, by the way. won
IS

15th lap of the Komfort Koach 200.

Montoya's out to prove he won't have asophomore Cup slump
TALLADEGA, Ala.- By finishing
second to Kyle Busch in the Aaron's
499, Juan Pablo Muntoya signaled a

reoovery from a slow start in his secODd......, of Sprint Cup oompetition,
Montoya picked up five positions in
the point5 standiugs, rising from 17th
to l2th. '1\relfdl is an important spot because, after 17 more races, the top 12
advance into the Chase for the Sprint
wbicb detennines tile champion.
With a little luck, though, Mon~oya
oould have olaimed his second victory
at stoa&lt;ar racing's bi,gbest level.
When the final lap began, tbe field
bad been winnowed down to three
drivers whose cars were roaring
around 'nolla.tq.a Supecspeedway in a'
tight line, .Busch was first, Montoya
second and Denqy Hamlin third. No

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huge crash. Ed·

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guests gQt on the board in and Dave Rumley had one
the second with three runs.. . hit apiece for the hosts.
Brandon Muzzy reached on Roush, . Finnicum ·and
Big a fielder's choice, followed Rumley aU had doubles.
GALLIPOLIS games call for big plays by a one-out single by Kyle
Starter Nick Stevens was
from big players. Thursday Newsome and a two-out credited with lhe loss, going
night at Memorial Field, walk 10 Eric Landrum. With five-plus innings and allowJackson senior Tyrus Coyan the bases loaded and two ing II runs (aU earned), 13
came up with the biggest down, Bruce Smith came hits and three walks . while
· through with a bases-clear- striking out seven. Whaley
plays of them all.
Coyan - a southpaw who ing double to give Jackson e11t£red in relief of Stevens
signed to play with the an early 3-0 advantag~:.
in the fifth, surrendering
The Ironmen doubled tha three runs (aU earned), one
University of Rio Grande
baseball team on Monday - lead during lhe thinL as five hits and four . walb while
allowed just four hits over hits led to a three ntos and a faoning one.
his seven innings on the 6-0 edge. Coyan and
The Blue Devils slranded
mound and also belted out Anthony Malone. led off the just two baserunnenl, while
three ·home runs and drove · inning with back-to-back: the guests left six on the
in eight RBis, as the visiting · singles, then Mu7.zy doubled bags. Both teams committed
lronmen . clinched . the home Coyan for·a 4-0 le'ad. one error in the matcbup.
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
Mal~ne later scored o~ an
Coyan led JHS with fout
League South Division RBI. smgle by Newsome, hits, followed by Newsome
championship during a J·4-3 making 11 5-0. Muzzy scored with three and both Smith ·
victory
over
Gallia on an. RBI s~g!i£ by and Malone _with two ,
Academy.
Nathan1el Haller,f gtv
jhe safeties apiece. Muur.
The lronmen (13-3, 9-2 guests a oomfort.llble s -run Haller and Stephen Fenis
1
SEOAL South) never trailed cushion.
also added a bit each to lhe
in the contest and •pounded
The Devils responded winning cause. Smith also
out 14 hits during the tri.- with tJtree runs of their own. had.three RBis.
umph, which helped the Red in ~ir half of the~~ as
)ackson will .face host
and White claim a tiJree.. Beau Whaley was .(:ut tiy a ·ZanesYille in lhe SEOAL
game · i't!ason :sweep of the pitch and Cl!leb Warnimont Day of Champions firstBlue Devils - who tell to w~ to givc-lhe hosts t~o place fmal on Wednesday. It
11 -8 overall and 7-4 in the on w1th one out. Ausbn is still undtt.ennined whele
SEOAL South. The Blue Roush rea_ched safely on an GAHS will go for its thirdand White also dropped their error, which allowed both place contest against the
secOnd straight decision, but Whaley and Wamimont ~ runner-up of the SEOAL
did clinch sole ~ssession of score for a 6-2 deficit. North
Division
on
second place wuhin the divi- Roush later· score.d ~n a Wednesday.
sion.
'·
grou~d o~t by J.P. fiDDicum,
Gallia Ac~ returns to
Coyan was 4-for-S at the maltinjl 1t a 6-3 contest the diamond
y when it
plate Thursday and also sur- ,through three complete.
travelt to Portsmouth for its
rendered zero earned runs
That was as clOse as the SEOAL South Division ,
and just two walks while Blue Devils would get,. as finale with the Trojans. The
fanmng five in lhe . com- Coyan went to work taking first pitch is scheduled for S
plete-game decision. His over the contest.
p m.
three-game totals against the
Coyan drilled his first ·
Blue and White this sering home run over lhe right-ceo_ _, ,.,_ AciiiRIW I
were mezmorizinf, striking ter f~eld wall, giving JHS a . - 033 140 a - 14 14 1
. 4 . .
7 2 lead Co
a)
h'
Goltipollo 003 000 0 - 34 1
out 23 batters to
IODIDgs .
yan so 1t a ·- 11 3-3, g.2 sEOAL South): Tyr"'
of work on the mound while two-out grand slam in the 0oyen.,.. Chfll Comer.
also producing four homers fifth for an 11 -2 edge and QAHS (1 HI, 1.. SEOAL South): Nici&lt;
and nine runs batted in.
completed his hat trick in the . s_,., a- Whaley !BJ IJ1d ca...
Rumtey,
JHS won the other two seventh WI'lh a Ihree-run WP-Coyan:LP-SIIMIOS.
JllldChups by counts of I'l-l shot to complete the scoring HR: J - Tyrus Coyon (lour1h mng ,
' in six innings and 7-6. ~ at 14-3
· nobOdy on, one Old), T)'!1Js Coyan (fifth '
'After a scoreless
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grand slam, two
Old), Trruo
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a ey . Coyan
two on, one Old).
~

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Jackson downs DevilS.for SEOA:L
BY BRYAN WAUERS

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the nation against No. 4, and toward a playoff in any way. seeded

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BY RALPH D. Russo
ASSOCIATE[) PRESS

IIIII ai•a
. •lila: o-o Royal Presents seerne&lt;! 1lil&lt;e a still "hot while
• . _,.Lipton ~ea 250
· l!he On '-'1' 400 .
151Ml&lt;JO ilans &lt;
dr&lt;&gt;arned of
• -:Wlichmond (Va.)lln' • - llidhm&lt;md r'lfa) llnter· streaming,video. lhe .whrte
temational Wlaoewaj 1. 75
~ nationoil Raoeoway .(.i/5 mile),
!lag .at W
alladega ·supl,rspeed- mile), 250 1aps/187.5
400 laiP!i/300 miles. .
""Y signaled a'lap :to ~o. but it miles ..
~ • -: ~ M"!' 3.
mjght .as ""'ll 'hBIIe Hleen un• -:friday, May 2.
..... _........, l inwnie
lur1Jdtos)gni1y "wreck at will." •IBI,..,.O-:·Ciim
• .Jcj?msoo, ~Jet
- 13usoh, !Joan l'ablo~onloy.;l
13owyer, Chevrolet.
•1 R;l &amp;-Brian\\iok· andDeruw llilamlinwerellOised •1 R;IIC-: !Wfe
ers., IJhe&gt;!njJet. 129.!1183 ~ to ~lethe •matter amor)g
Buson, '[)heiii"Oiet, 129.348
~ Mar14,2004.
'
themsellles,but the'home!'s
•f111Jh , May 14., 2004 .
· · -: Dale !Jarrett,
nestbellind them wO\Jid have • a - -:'Dale Jarrett;
fon!, W!I.Al47lltllill1. ~- 6,
none :of lit. l&gt;.:ofash ended the
lioi!l, 104 .91!! !Tlllh. sept.
1991.
&lt;acing ll'fematurely, sealing
-~. 1995.
•bill-* lllal!llthere l!&gt;een 13usdh's seoQ!l(l ·victory ofthe •bill-: Tofll' Stewart,
an llfmest~ fml llap at
f6ar. l~ was a good &lt;aoe ~at
in .a ~oyota, o1a1rned his f1rst
lalladeea ~.
sllould'~!leen a .great one
W
alladega victory in .any se=" el'ei}OOe
llean talk· arid featured the highest num- ries by capturing the Aaron's
,;,g ·Classic. l!he.l&gt;.aroin's 499 !Jer of'lead Changes, 51, in the 312 over Dale Earnhardt Jr.
was a camera ..tlGse lllm &lt;an season Ito date.
out. ll't'2e BuSOhli victl!ty
'

Box 1538. Gastonia. NG 28053

one will ever knew what Would bave would normally finish 22n d, 24th
happened because a huge crash in tlle everywhere, except for a second place
second turn, behind the leaders, put ·here and a fifth place there. Nuw we
the race under caution and "froze" the are rWlning 15th, average, every
final order,
week, but we never really had a result
"I really helped Kyle (Busch)," said like today until we got here.
Montoya. "I managed to get on his
"I think it motivates everyone back in
bumper, and when you can get on Charlotte (at Chip Ganassi Racing with
somebody's bumper, you can actually · Felix Sabates, his team), .and it's time
push him all the way around the ·COr· that we headed in the right direction."
ner, 1!b.e lap."
' ·
Montoya's average finish in the first
Obviously, though, Montoya wasn't nine races -of 2007 was 2L33. During
helping Busch out of altruistic mo- the same span this year, it's 16.89. ,
When Montoya, a native of Bogota.
tives. He helped Busch reach the lead,
but he intended on making a last-ditch Colombia, moved from Formula One
to NASCAR, it broke new ground. He
bid to win himself
Montoya disputed the notion that he won a Sprint Cup race at lnfineon
had been struggling during the sea· Raceway on June 24 , 2007; and went
son's first eight races, though he nev· unto be named Raybestos Rookie of
the Year.
er finished better than 13th.
"You know,. it's funny to say 'strugYou can reach Monte Dutton at
gling' because the average finish is a
mdutton@gastongazette.com
lot better," he · said, "Last year we

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,_ca
c•wr-•
Cartu.talls'c.r
Race fans have a
chance to be

Elliotl ,&gt;adler's VJP
Club guest at Bristol
Motor Speedway by
participating inthe
Bristol Bash Tournament Senes

(IWIW VLPCiub.net)

at
V•ctory Lane Players
Club. Through July6,
f;1 free Texas Hold ·em tournament of-

fers fans a ctlance to pJay IJ(JI&lt;er tor a
vanety ol NASCAR-related prizes.
In Office Depot's 'Official Small .
. Bus•ness of NASCAR' promotion. the
wm nmg company will get its name

and logo on Carl Edwards· No. 99
Ford. Also . the winner will receive a

$10.000 small-bus•ness makeover
from OffiCe Depot. Eligible companies
must have 99 employees or less. Entnes are noVv bemg accepted at www.
offlcedepotrac1ng.com.

--

The Daily .Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH .·

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Let's Go Racin!!

I
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AUTO,...., O l i V E
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·HOLZER CLINIC
I

�P R B4 • The Daily Setltinel
,

.

Football Hall of Fame ~

Lou Holtz, John Cooper enter
..... o.•·ASSOCIATED PRESS

· NEW YORK Lou
Holtz's first big break in bis
Hall 0f F.ame career came
v.bm be got dumped by bis

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Wilfu

1110 good reason to
Ohio, he left a job
roacibing higb school foothall and became a graduate
assistant at 1be University of
l e-wa tin 1960.
In ihe.end, the SCJ:IIPPY· 1ittle ooadb with the lisp got
ihe gig and ih.e girl. Beth
1iOQII ~ a change .of bean
and she and Holtz have been
mamied f0r 47 years. ·
1lad it not 1been for my
wife, I'd still been in higb
sdhoal,~
Haltz
said
11bursday after a news conference to .announce ihat be
-was &lt;OOC ef 15 newly elected
OoTiege fiaotball Hall of
IFJI1Jief1&gt;.
•
. All~ .elected was frnmer
Ohio 'State coach John

stay in

I'

www..my&lt;' "lp otilael.com

C oopa:, who had a 111-43-4 Wasbing'!On State nmning
rccooi .at Ohio State from back Ruben Mayes; Arizona
1988 !10 2000 and led the State . guard
!Randall
Buckeyes to a victory over McDaniel; Wyruning tight
Aiiwna State in tbe I 997 end Jay Novacek; Texas
Rose Bewl. He also was the Tecb split end Dave PJII\s;
head ·roach at Tulsa and A orida State nose guard
ArWma ~before .comiug Ron Simmons; Oldaboma
to Ohi0 State and had an Stale !Jllltning 1Jack l1mrman
ovenill record of 192•84-6. Thomas; and Army quarter·
Goining the 71 -year- old back Arnold Tucker.
Holw, wbo woo 249 games
The class will be inducted
wiih iii X schools and a at 1be NfiF banquet in New
national title .itt Notre Dame YOiik in De!;ember and
in 1988, ·.at a news confer- enshrined in the summer of
ence in Manhattan were for- 2009 at the Hall of f'ame in
mer Northwestern line- Solllh Bend, Ind.
backer and current Wildcats
Holtz's fust college bead
coach Pat !Fitzgerald and for- coaching job was at William
mer Syracuse quart.erbaclc &amp;Mary in l969.He .alsohad
'Don MoPhen;on.
successful stints at Norih
The other 11 players cho- Carolina State, Arkansas,
sen by the National Football Minnesota
and
Smltb ,
Foundation's selection com- Carolina, leading all of ihem
mittee were: UCLA quarter- to bowl games. !But his
back Troy Aikman; LSU greatest achievements .came
tailback liilly 'C annon; at Notre Dame, where be
Vrrginia offensi..,e taclde Jim wan I 00 games and 1he stoDombrowski; A orida line- ried progriun '~ lllst national
backer Wilber Marshall; championship.

"When I first .hean:l l was
going to be :inducted into the
Hall of Fame, . l just went
'Wow! Wowl' I'm going t0
join .all the gn:at coaches iin
there,~ Holtt said befGTe
reeling off SoOme historic
11llllleS. "You start thinking
abollt the gn:a1

ODeS .

from

Notre Dame, . Parseghian,
etc. And 81'0y1es and !Royal
and Bear Bryant and Woody
Hay~. You start ihinlcing,
"How' d this bappenT"
ForCannon, who led lSU
·to a national title io 1958 and
woo the .Heisman Trophy in
'59, ibis was the second time
be'5 been elected to the Hall
of !Fame.
In the early l 981!s, he was
voted in, lmt the invitation
was rescinded after he was
wrested on feAmtl counterfeiting charges. Cannon
pleaded guilty and was sen1enced '10 five yean;i n prison
m 1'983. He served 2 112
years.
Cannon's first reaction

Qtrtbunt - Sentinel CLASS ·I FIED

spcllt-:

when told he was de cted to meant so much to 1be
iag :history of om OOidly,:
1he Hall?
~Again,~ be said with a and n means .a kJt 1n me per-:
sooally' ~ Aj!rngn said m a·
laugh.
"I have no problem w.ith statement. "1be qJpOIUlllity ·
it, ~
Cannon · rold The to slwe this moognilioo:
AssooiatM Press by Phone with my fonner Clov.iboys;
from ,the Louisiana State •eamm•e Jay NIMIIJek will:
Penitentiary m Allgola, nuike ibis .e~all dJe.
:
where he's wm'ked as a lilen- 111011: rewarding.~
Fitzgerald was a two-time;
tist for.B years. "I was tickwinner of the Bednarik·
led and happy.~
Cannon i s responsible fm Award as the Datioruil &amp;fen.:
one of ihe most famaus sive player .of the year and;
plays
in Sotiiheastem the leader of Nm1bwestem' s:
Conference bisiO!y. His 89- swprising. ' 95 team, Which;
yard punt return for a touch- earned ·t he sdloo1 its finit·
down on Htiliow.een night Rose Bowl appearance in 47;
•
1•959 helped the Tigers beat years.
will
be
the
highest;
"This
rival Mississippi 7-3.
·Aikman started bis oollege honor I can ever bav.e award-·
career at Oklahoma, then ed to me,n Fitzgenlld said at:
··
transferred to U&lt;I.A After ihe news conferelioe.
McPberson was the:
two stellar seasons (1'98788) wiih the Bruins, he was Heisman Trophy .runncr~up;
drafted first overall by the in 1987 to Notre Dame•
Dallas CoWboys. fie induct- receiver UmiBrown.
"1be game of foocball has:
ed into the Pro Football Hall
given me lll(JTe than I bave;
of Fame in 2006 .
''College football has given n,~ McPherson said. :

.

e-m.H
dassified@mydailytribune.com

~bile~

BY -.lmcf:

as a single.
coaches and umprres tned to fig. ure what ~o .do 1neltl,
It's bani-to praise sports' Holtman waded into ihe
manship witheut ·sounding huddle and askril, IEllcuse
tike a clwm;p.
. .
me, would it. be OK if we
. We celebrate -cunniug, canied ber around and she
guile.andtrasb~talkinginour 1oucbed each bagT'
With ttbe. umpires' blessgames.el'etyday, butsportsmanship.exactly •e nce a year, ing, Holtman and Central
Which in case you missed it, teammate Liz Wlillace ginofliicililly came and went gerly scooped up Tucbolsky
March 4. Yet·el'ery so often, and canied her toward secihose iiatne games •produce a ond. 'lfrymg to figure out
gesture so ·grand it reminds which was the good leg, ihe
you ilhat sportsmanship will trio '?fake into giggles. By
always be · mere .about the tune they reacliod secstrength than wealmess. ond, just .about evecybody in
Maybe 1bat's why it remains the grand~d was _on their
the exception instead af the feet cheenng C!" crymg, ~d
rule.
some were .domg ·both. it s
Central Washington Jiirst wo~h notmg the game,
baseman Mallery Holtman wh1ch . had_ N~AA tournawasn ',t daiug .an)'ihing more ment uqplicattons for both
lofty ihan keepmg track of schools, was ·won by
the · baserunners and pitch Western Oregan 4-2.
count in a game last
"It's one of •thase things
Satwday when Western ihat in the moment of it, lit
Oreg!ID' s Sara Tucbalsky bit didn't feel like a big deal,~
the first home run of her . Holtman said a rew days
career. Never having had later when, the! three were
•t a
practice, reunited during an ESPN
occasion
Thchelsky' s 'trot around the videoconference.
·
bases quidkly turned into a
"lt was kind of a blur ...
disaster - she missed first, we didn't really look up and
turned back to tag it and col- see the reaction of tbe fans
lapsed with abtee injury.
but it's someihing you ' ll
As 1fuch0lsky crawled never fm-get."
It's safe to assume noihing
back 10 the lbag, Western's
first base .coach shouted, like that wou\d have hap"Nabody touch ber," know- pened in a men's collegiate
ing that any assistance from game at ihe same Division n
teammates .or her trainers; or level, let alone the major
replacing 'fucbolsky wiih a leagues. By the time they get
pinch-runner, meant ihe there, at least on the men's
home run would only count side, aihletes have been

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,pushed ~d even
pnnsed for .explrutmg even

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LCRUMOMYDAILYREGISTER.COM ·

BUFFAW, W.Va.
Once aga:in Buffalo bas prematurely e.nded anoiher stellar year for the Wahama
sCJftball1eam.
The Lady Falcons (13-13).
came into Thursday ' s
Region IV, Section 1 tournament game looking to end a
long losing streak against
the Lady Bison (23- 1G), but
Buffalo was again up for ihe
chlillenge as the Blue and
Gold posted a pair of tbree
run innings to claim a 6-0
shutout victory and once
again !like ihe sectional
crown .
And wbile Buffalo moves
on to the regional tournament, tbe Lady .Falcop.s are
once again left at ihe drawiug board looking for a way
to get ihe uppetband on their
down-river rival.
But wbile Wabama was up
for the challenge, according
to head coach Mike Wolfe,
they simply could not put
togeiher a complete game.
Buffalo scored ihree runs
in the frrst inning to quite a
very rambunctious Wahama
dugout and added three
more in the sixth to pot ihe
game out of reach.
·In between, however, tlie
Lady Falcons matched iheir
foe step-for-step.
Junior l!.urler Kylie Riggs
had ihree Sttik.eotits and ihe
Lady Falcon defense limited
Buffalo to just fjve tOial bits
- but almost all of ihose
bits came bunched togeiher
in tbe first and sixth innings.
In the first frame Williams
stilasbed a single and was

•

a

l

~

f .

-·

Oeatll:irec ·

Word Ads

D!splay Ads

.. ,. _. . . ,._ . --rs

: a.lly ln-Ool.....: 1:00 p .m .
.

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

IIID&amp;idaf~Y'IDr

Meigs

•

12. Noon 2

Dap ...._.To

.....

In !Neat O.w'"•.....,.
SUftday In-&lt;:olulllft: 1:DO p.'lft.

Put II
a
S
Cay D ' i '=W': 1:DG

~,.

~

*All ............ Jflr

POUCI!S:Dhkt...., .~._..tt.righttodt,...-,•~-r.tlll.r'!Y 'IIIM.

a

..,__....IIWEn-....tbe
.. .,..... _..........
... .,......._..

••• ·

llllltorno ....., _ , , _ _ , . . .
..,._.Df.,.._.IM'I....a.tn.n. . v'f
••~til- 2 II

-=--_.,.......,_..... ..........

. . .....,.mldsc611. •Curnnlra-..IIIIIIPiia • M . - - a d

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

.,.5' " • '

..

lh T
c.tt, we'll
- .. 7411-742-3478
7_,H150, You mivht

•""

f"------_.1I

1'41~~

"'"-·u.. v1

o . ""

UJ¥~"""

~

Missing: 17 year old ,
Himalayan
cat - female
•
4 mixld breed pups, bom answers to Shasta . light
3/1/08. Tan/white, will be gray, blue ~ves. Last seen .
med size. Call 245-9082 4f2S/OB around Jackson 1

aftir 5pm . Rio Grande area

~ aJII(. A CA1"

•••

~.... ~~

Ultf~ 11\S&lt;~ ·

Pilte area near Carmichael ,

I::: Cha~ A
ve.

~

.
Found: lfodult Baosell Hound
.
.
on Rt 141 near
· Wearing leather collar wl
metal st ~ 44&amp;6S4l
u ·
Found· Golden Retriever
1ype ~ - SR 325 North of

n s.

~

~====~~R=io~G:ra:nde~.:ca:n~2:4!Hl5:5~
2

CLASSIFIED INDEX

WWFars.le ......... - .........................- ......'725

a.~ .....- ·----.... ~ ........................7711

ao.ta&amp;.lk*xsforSIIte ..--............- ....:.750
"ldlll · S

•

'

II

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

550

. . . Bulldtnp.- .......................... 340

,

For ~or .,..a ..-;................,.,....,.,..........5110

fruita &amp; WID I 2 111 .....................................510
flit nlelaed ftMnla.............- .........................UQ
Gen11'81t4MIIIng .............'..............................850
Gin
r...- ........-..,.....,.............................040
H1ppr Ada................., .................................050
w-. A -Grllk1 ..................................................640
'-•
Hllp
W.rdld ................................................. 110

·

3 couches, half bed, queen
bed, roun~ kitchen tables,

'*-'- for Rent ....................................... ~.. 410

refrigerators,
washar,
kitchen sinlcs a·nd many
other i1ems. May 1, 2, 3.
76 Vine St. Gallipolis. 74().

e.ur.nc:. ......................

- - - -- - May 1, 2, 3 at 5890 S1 Rt

, ld~ ........................... .... ........ 510

020
'
• anDDC·~
w nt ..................,.............................
dm-. . . ..... l ; .. \'" ' ......... :

367-7886

'·

325 N.,Vnton, OH from 7-5.

Something for everyone.
_ _ _o__ _:._ _
May 1, 2. 3 on SR 141. Call
740-379-2462
M 1 2 3 5630 sA 7 s ,
~
,of w·lr F
. I
~~
' t&amp; ooera
orne.
May 1, 2, 3. 37i9 St Rt i60.
lst house on left past h.-..u.
tal and E~exon Station.

I.AitiA Aa IIJI .....:...................................... 350
MIICI'1aUIOUI ......- -.............- .............._ ...170 .
MI sneneauallerehandiM................._ ..stO
. . . . Home Rllpek'.................................... 860
llablla "--far flent_,_......................... 420

....,to

s'outh

11011111 -

fOr - · ······- .......................320
l.oln-............- .................- .. 220
,~ l 4 ~
740
c,.._

tables, dishes, draperies..
bed blankets, .shoes, men,
women , children, baby
clothes, toys, many misc.

.....,

1:00pm. and Salurday, May
7 2006 from 2
6
S

lDUIOnw

.. ~ MAIC,Ifd!;t

·

will not bo -

utt.r.,_

on

enr

100 WORKERS IEEDED
Assemble crafts . wood
b:ems.To S480/wk Materia ls
provided. Free information
pkg. 24Hr_801-428--4649

I

,
Garage sale, May 2nd &amp; 3rd, CrOss Creek Auction Buffalo
Longaberger, babv goods, Auction Saturoay 6prtt
2
furniture , toys, &amp; name Trailer LoadS, UMd nwbfand clothes of all sizes, 1 chandiM, Cereal, Cedar
mile on Bashan. Racine
Wllhlng
Weill
great
.
"~·r'• Day nu..... ~'7'7. 50
M
~
1e 3 Fam · muu
""
~·~ ._..
~Ill
arage ~
Startin~ to sal high quality
Fn.,&amp;Sal..
.
5· «nives such as Case. Buct
2&amp;3.Gen .Han!Ag Pk.W~y &amp; Mossy Oak. Building i5

.. _

.. ~~· ·

10

i

~- · ··pi
\JliiU

..--.~lcations tor LPN;~"'~

.~ ........ .

.

.·

· p n our friendly a~ dedicat
ed~ff. Appltcantsmustbe

~· T~am P~

~ posit~. attitudes to tom

u-.

·r ·

WAJtmD

JkN

TO

I

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
• SeM. Shirley Speare. 304 _
67,;.1429 _

•""'onoW.IIId .... - ......,.J......- ........ _ ..... 120

a ntiques. boys and gtrls

'"""''

,_101 1 ;1 _................................................... 005
Pelt for Sate .................................,.............. 560

Plumbtng 1111111ng.................................... 820

I!.-. ' - 230
I
iiPiM WICW ........,....._ .......-......
R.tla, TV
- &amp; C8 Repllir ...............................160

P10I

...._far-...............--·························460

Rlnl- ----.........................470

babyclolha,. Fifthdnve·way
o n
left
past
Vinton
Elem.School
- -- - - - Moving/Garage sale. Sat.
May 3. 9-6. Adult bb, wornens clothes. electronics. Lg
Dining room table, 6 chairs
and matching hutch. blonde
wood
Exer~ ise equip.
ovo·s. VCR tapes. 74~ 1·

ract£10WiWIUie .. ....................... 074
Pl. F
~ ...... ....................... .076

1m. hm, 740·208·9673
cell. 204 ~nn Drive ott
Raccoon Cr.... Road.

lpcw'tll.~- ...............................- ...... 520

..,_

ltJV'a for Slll ....................................... ,......720
Trucka tor Slltt ............................................ 715
Upl •
t ,,C.:............................................. I10
1

V.. For 11111."''"___ ,................................730
Wli 1 tD Bur --•---....................-...-~ .. 010
Wli IS tD luy- F..n SUppU.................... 62o
1

WstldToDo ......-

7

2 I to

._. .... a
..... I

\Wd IIIII

.................. ., .............. 180

Iii a111 ................................... o12

"

O
_
wn

•

3,

= I I ~lecla meMage. Equipment

Yarn Sale, May 1, 2,
_:11190 Laurel O lff, Pomei'C'i
Oh, Mildred Hudson resi· Wanted: 1990 MazdaPJIIata,
dance
Of Kawasaki Concousa 304- - - - - - - 675-0322
Yard Sf1e- 2nd &amp; May
3rd. Ol:ancan's R~s., New Wanting to Buy Jun« Cars.
Haven. 4th ~ Rotlins.
· 304--675-2176

IN THE CLASSIAEDS
FOR GRI:A':T REsu··rs
J;.ft

I.

CAll (740)742· 1056 ASK
FOR 10M OR lE AVE ME&amp;

tra._nnon .-...ry.
lfyoucanaellandyou
want to work full time, I
Wttuld like to hear from
you.
Aease l8nd resume.

SAGE
Lawn-Care Service, Mowing
&amp; Trimming. Froe Estiortalas
Call
(740)«1-1333
(740)645-0646

or

------

or email 10
m-,..0
-.com

~oTJCE•
•"

Allreplieswillbekeplin

OHIOVALLEYPUBLISH

-==-====strict confideqoe.

POST OFACE NOW
HIRING

Avg. Pay $20/tn' or

$57K/yr, includes
Fedifal Benefits, OT.
Placed by adSouroe, not

1-866-403-2582

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
S2

Roduoprings Rehabllilalion
Center provides residents
will] ooistanding nursing

":~ ~~ ~rat se:·
a;:" :m
call :S
·!e urn ~
0
hi

·~~- lor

Repair

F
rod/
l mi!II III.Min
arm 8 Of
Lawn Equipmenl repair &amp;
maintenance. Must have
experience. Must be atMe to
use computer on a limited
baSil. Competitiwe wages.
modem &amp;hOp, eontmuous
company sponSOfed train·
ing, health
insurance,
matching retirement contri·

bution and paid holidays.
Fax 740-446-9104 or Emoi
joltncerntichaeiOcaroq.oom

•

lNG . CO. recommend

lhBI you do business
people you «now, a
NOT to send mo.,a
dlrough the maM until
have inlle&amp;ligated
offering.

i

MoN::\'

·------'1
L,~--.iiroiliiLoANiiiilio"O..,.I

••N.'JI(;£••

-

f

nde
pe ntlyncehaa
curre
ve
913-599-8226. 24/hrs. eonp. opportunities tor AN's (12
Hf'V..
hour' shifts ) at our facility
located in Pomerov, Ohio.
Help wartled al Dam Home We otter a competitiw
GrQupHome. 740-992·5023 salary scale. and: e~;cellenl:
MANP&lt;:&gt;WER
benefit package and a s..,_
TEMPORARY SERVICES portiW!- environment
NOW HIRING
lmerested
candidates
should
apply
to:
Production and Assembly Rocksprings Rehabilitation
workersforthe/Buffato, WI/
area. All interested
Center, 36759 RotAc&amp;ptitiQS

the Ohio Division
Finaf.cial
lnstitutfon's
Office of ConsUme
Affairs IS ORE you refinance your home or
oblain a lOan. SEW:
of requests for any.ilrge
~vance payments of
CM' Nura:noe . Galltne

= · ~ffr:eeC~n~=
278-0003 to learn if the
....-.... "" . broker
o

,_, •.,.. ..
lender
is ·properly
~J::elli~act
lioensed. (This is a public
Y
.
·
service anno~ncement
Job Senlice Office
·
tllo Ohio Valioy
740446-3222
. (lpponiDty E....,., lltal .. ......._ r _
,1
.
E~
Woritpiaoa
:
:
·
:
;
·
·..;
-;
·..-;··:;:~
..
.
Now htrmg e~l7)!8es to set Oiver'sily. 1M=' DN .
up and predeilver lawn and •
.
l'lolili!iDW.
ag _equipment. Fax rosume Seelong help lor oomeone 10
SDlvta'll , •·
to740-446-91 04
ta«:e care o1 parents call ' - - - - - - . . . . ,
304-675-2454
ON
Now 18ldng applications tor - - -- -- TURNED= ISSI?
summer
positions
al The
Athens·Meigs soaAL. SE
No Fee Unless We Win!
Raccoon Creel&lt; Park. Piok Educational Service Center
up and ~rop of1 applications has a positiqo opening as
Mon-Fri at Raccopn Creek Supervisof in Meigs County.
County.Pa!t. 740.379-2711 Applicants should have ;rr
10
Oh. V II-· Home Health 8X1ensiYB experience in
.

Road,· PomertJV, Ohio
45769. &amp;tencicare Heetlh
Services, Inc. is an Equal

__; ·

IS BIUioal.l
announce we are
8 ......-.~.

us In providing outstanding
.
•
lily
to
sident~·
qua care o,ur re
St~ by and fill out an appli·
·catron M-F_ 9AM-5AM.
~rn ~to A~)Lew1s full. Visa andMasterCan:J&amp; Contae1 Hollte Bumgamer
. (~.wide ~- 2. ~-ch Debit
(304) 550~ 16 16 LPN ~taH Oe118lopmen1
2nd house on tU 'H
rag
St~·- Reedy. 1639
Coo rdtnat or07 40· 9 Q2 ·
Circte. Micldlepor11
"'~"" '"'"
6472:· EOE &amp; A. Participant
.
,
Hou
·of The Drug-Free Worlq)lace
sat , 5-3. B:OOAM ,mfantltod- ~~~N:= ular
~ Pfowam.
dler boys&amp;girls, women's. at
·
~ ..-oar •
flome
decor, 2CU. ~e Htlls care;e~ An Excel~ wa:y to earn
maternity.Behind Church of· Center, Rto Grande. Qhl(). money. The New Avon.
ChristinTI,IppBI'i Piains.
7-40-245-5334
Ca11MarHvn304~·2645
Six family commuMy yard
~le , May 2nd and 3n:J, two __

I

our cusiOmers. Sales
acpetiel a -and reliable

FAEE · ~=-~ 34 goveA~""!~~-- of•-~- 1 ...~ .. w'
mencan t'llt&amp;UI.. . L.aUVr - ,..,.,..,_ e

on TbUfOdl¥, lily I, 2IQ
between the -hours of 9:00
am and 5:00pm only. C11N

I

.... ~~

Cd 7~1 ~ 1014

bu"""".,
·nessg
, m,..utua.,,.!~ STAINING, OIL, ETC, NO
..... ........... ...~ .. JOB 10 SAMll OR 10 BIG,

-

.

j

Loolling tor a male Reg . St.
Bernard tor Stud service .

EKPERIENCE PAINTER·
INTERIOR /EXTERIOR ,

==sdailyMC:~:: offeredwf USPSwhohires.

16, 2008. m : : : p~ 10:00 pm .,
v. Y
17, 2008 1r~m 900
: am •

Rill ~&amp;it* W.;'*KI ................,.......,...._......360
lclaota-...:tlon ...... -..............-............. 150
IIIII' .... I fieitllizei .............................. &amp;SO

ft.-...........................

441~9371

ihr
HugeYan:JSaleMay2·3Fon ~tbaokgrounds ~-em:· 17.:~~7 ."
1
Randolph Tenace 9-5
f
etcome 1ia
1 cal~ rng.

Creek ollice, k&gt;l&amp; oflnle'"st·
i no th'mgs. No Ctothest
.
·

~MMmef~

COuncl lot h
ldi!IIM Cadilglll
.,., 9thtloll 12748.

. ootderslands the
Importance of dewlcping

Gallipolis, OH, Friday, May 812 7164

miles ou1 Flal woods Rd ..
lum oo ~ Goeg6em 0. .. ~ute Top Dollar - sl l.
clothes: g~rt 3mol6
_
VJS. boy verlgold
COir)S, . any Be You
_r
Boss 1'"
. ·n my
101!2 bab n
1
K gold ewel
1lto
I
·
V em s. oys. 10KI 14KI 18
ry, team ll direct sales with
Merchandise from
the houset'lDid Items, too much dental gold, pre 1935 US Pltmpentd Chel , home
Treasure Cove Thrift Store. to lis~'l ms; this one. c~rrency, proof/mi~ sets, ba&amp;a business. wlflexible
9-5. Rain Cancels.
Best
9 to
diamonds. MTS Coin Shop, hrs.. SuperiOf Kitchen tools
.
151 2nd Awnue. Gallipolis. fu n &amp; easy work. good
May 2 &amp; 3, 8·5 at beg!nnlng THREE family yard sale!!l!!1 446·2842
income, training &amp; perks no
of Patriot Ad off ns.
9am-4pm.frL4·2·Sat.4·3rd.
inven1ory 01 deli very Call
Klds&amp;adull dOtheS,h.m iture, Wanaad to buy Junk Cars 7 • •
3171 or J-.a2May2 &amp; 3, Mens&amp;W0&gt;1JOOS more28245 ~
H '
1
clothes , furniture crafts. Oorta5 Rd., Racine.
call 40-388-~ ,
no _,-

-MUIIcallnltrumlntl ................................... 570

.

seeking qualified appiio:aflts
for bartender and food runn:er. Apply in person OJ call

groom suit, chairs , desk, cash. Groupswillbehektin

·

Honw llnplou....-nta••; ................................810

.

Courtside Bar and GnH now

Fri&amp;

Large !lllrBge sale bargains,

HciiMe tor ................................................ 310

8014. EOE WFili

Rd . Log House on left. livin- opinions and receive $75 -

,

HI00·214-0452
~ --~.tdiJ

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

Oli't'e Street, Galipotis, Ohio
J 45631 or FAX 10 7 -

1110

6 Fam sale, 103B 2nd Ave.

Sa~ :·9-? Adult ~w L~ ;~~r~. of;~

CaiiTodayt 7~367 .

cover ktttar and 1hr8e
references to:

househOld
'
items, Tupperware items. dothing Fri-Sa1 May 2&amp;3. 8-5 TBin Or discussion groups rugarding
to schedule and
Longabefger
' all sizes, infant, teen adult shine. approK. 3 miles out !i8fious courtroom cases. interview. 308 2nd Ave,
_;:_...;;,.____
and much more.
Sandhill Rd, right on Belle Share your thoughts and Gallipolis.

-Garage Sale, May 2 &amp; 3, 9·
.
5. Antrque
dressers and
other antiques. Table and
chairs, china hutch , dishes,
tools. c1-.; and Childrons
toys Rai n or ahine

............ 'f........ ;. ....................... ................... 585

t...... &amp; GMden £quipfnent·..... ~................,.
UJ ' 1:6 -..............- ....- .. ~··'""~""""'"""""-"630
LOIIt 8lld Found ........~ ................................ 060

•

r

PI I' C... c-,..
(Careers Cluoe To Home)

=~s.: ~;;-;, ~ ::::-:~1 ·

I

ollow s1gns. 9·5 . 8 a Y
bab~ items, t;; lothes new
items, salon equipment, Fri. &amp; Sat , Corn Holklw Ad, books 2205 Lincoln Ave.
A.
9Qiebralion . of
ClotheS and much more.
Rutland behind Leading
Ufe ..Overbroo«
Center,
'·
·
A
Located·a! 333 Pa~ Street

'-m Eqe·'J ••11 ..........................................610
F... far Aant. ............................................430
..,_tor Slla.-.......................................... 330
480
For '~
-····--··--····-··· ···············.. •••••••••

Hne

~~

.

r·

llf'llft:IJI dui1 ....... - ......................uo
Equipment tor ..........................................uo
~-830
~•will ... - ................................_ ..........

.,.__......

• --

218, ttousellold ~ems. babj May 3, 9-5. 181 time a1 loca·
'
items and d othes; crafts, tion-2 family, 1709 Tycoon Yard Sale 3 miles out
dishes, baskets. pictures, Ad, Bidwell - 1.7 miles from Sandhill Rd. on AiQht Fri &amp;
lools. etc
St Rt 554-llltle bn of 0\/llry· Sal 9·2 kids dolhes. washer
.
thing·.
&amp; dryer etc.
Friday 512 &amp; Saturday 513,
Rodney Village II, thif'd
y AID SAu:r
YS Sal 9 to 3 Clothing,
4 h hou
left
nn.....,._._ ,,..__, ...,
sFtreet • .t
se on b ·
ruMUan'JnW~J~..L
household items. fu rniture

I ..

6 _._

Ir

toys, toddier, womens and 4family, mustaeetobelieve!
mens clothing·. cance l it TV!s, clothes, furniture, Wii. May 2-3 9:00 till ? · behind
X-Boo&lt;
Subway in Pt. Pleasant.
360
rain.
Baby Clothes, hous6hold
Pri &amp; Sat. t 07 mi out SR ~rd •
(Garage-rain) sat ilems toys_

• '
Opparb.wlity..................... ~....- •.210
luolt
TN1ning ....... - ................- •..•••..•l40
Cen;aal·llalarHomet ........................... 1'90
Cemplng Eqeetp nwnt.............- ......_ .......... 780
c.nM al Tblnb ..........................................OlD
ChlldiEidliltr C.. ......- ...... ~ ........- .......... 190

a

~~

--=· _,

a ___ ___,_...7111

G

BachBIDI'S degnte a must
LCDC, lSW and ~
in chemical dependency

Mu11i-Farmly Sale, Moy 1, 2, 4 Fllmlly YMI Slile SM
. HtuWANIID
·
Rain illy ·May ·to 2570 3ft!
......
?
Rl 2
3
3 fam . 511·513 9·5 113 ·
'
·
__,.
.•
Mabelene Dr. Clothes- Kerr. Rd, 2nd house on 18ft Apple Grave 1112 mi6e
.
womens. IT's . boys !HI &amp; s- ott roule 850. Housellold pnl
A.....,; 0 ...,. $75 cash pakl lor participal2 mths 2 car seats items, 1006tlf movieS, nautt- ....,....
Iron m a four hour diSCUSSfOO
kerosene ' heater dresser' cal items. furniture, new
grot4J. LFK is conducting

&amp; kids Cl

.._tor'l lle..............................................710

. •-.. *'II"''P

www.comics .com

sets, cur~ s::e;:;ea:~tes. May
tains, chatrs, otheritems.
3 2~ 9am~ Upper
. Big 2 ~ily
-~f'ri
·~"
Ro
, ut"e 7
· N a.cr-~ from
2
111
,.
and Sal May 3 9·5 · 45 Speedway ,and Holiday Inn.
Portemrook Lane ott of Ra"' or Shine
Centenary Ad. Home fur- - , . . - - -·- - -nishings, toots, home decor, Thur - Sat 1 ~ mile OU1 21 8,

AnnOuncement..................- ........................030
Anltqw ._.. _ ,,........... _ .............................$30
•~netllSiorRent
.
. ..............................- .. "*~
.......,.
llucliDn -.cl FlU ll.lt1oii.............................OE
- - l ""'

~'ttf

,

I

Ohio ........
._, Publishi~
... with

Time - An outpatient alcohol
and other drug agoncy is '
oaelcing a counselor 10 provide services in Galia and
Jacla;on Counties. Servioes
inclucle but nat lmited to:
assessments,
tndividual
and/or group counseling.
Caseload will consist of
juveniles and adutt dient5.

5 .')..
~~
.

r

II -

1 tiiipi II lbitri

Counselor. Full and/or Part

May t.
2, 3_ Otshes. children cloth- - ifl1l . beds complete. cl1est.

o.

..._

ollic:86 in f'orroenllo,
olio and Pt.Pieounl
relations. seff motivBied. is ooaep1ing TJIOUittOS lor a
full -time outside sates
Able
to
obtain
pest
control
.......r
lioen&amp;e within the first _year JopmsentatiltB. ......,..ir.ants
of ~oyment Must be ab6e
must be organimd..
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Candidates must be
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Buffalo ends Lady Falcoos' season with 6-0 win

1\.tgiittr

!1112-2157

for

Indians

www.mydailytri&gt;lme.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

(740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

of punching woman ~

ihing about Holtman
be
ibis: Although sbe t s the
the i malles:t · adl'IIJ!1a,ge, can:er ibome il'1ID leader in
Police were called to 1he.
which i s understandable.
iheOR:atNoribwestAthletic
BURUNGTON, Ky. {AP)
Anjbody ,good .enough to Conference, sbe was moved - A IWOlllllll has liOCilsed scene but didn't witness the :
play ,m lihat kv.el is almost 10 piCk up Tucoolliky more rOincinnati Ben,gals 'line- lilleged alt.ercation. Rosich :
far eno~ tin ihe pipeline '10 by a liCDSC of fairness than backer A broad Brooks · of was told She could file a ·
laint.
:
start 1trinlcing about making generosity.
_pnncbingbcrin ihefao.edur~cngals
spokesman
said
;
a livmg playing blill. Mucb
"it's DOl ,1iJre she got a mganalt.ercatiooinamrthharder to underlltand. is double or a triple and we ern Kentucky neighOOrbood the team bad no comment·
because of 1he preliminary:
everyone clse pmtending to helped her get an elltra last monih. .
.
:
be sw;prised tlun the take- base;"
·Holtman
said.
Brooks was ordered to nature of the case.
Brooks missed most of;
.no-ptiscmcrs attitude bas ·"Anyone is ileseMug of a JglJ!Car June 6 in Boone
seeped down to .every level home run if they hit it over District C ourt on a &lt;COm- last season with torn .groin ·
'belew !lbat.
fence.~ .
plaint filed tills .week by muscles. The 'Beqgals took: :
E~ay week brings fresb · Her geSIDre would bal'e Destiny Rosich. Based on him in the 2006 supplemen- :
stOI'Ies about outraged par- generated ~ buu: bad it the complaint, prosecutors tal dmft, shortly before line-;
.,cots .anack:ing umpines and happened in a JJDen's game cluuged Brooks wiih fourth- backer Odell Thurman ·
referees at _yo_uth league no doubt, and .even the~~ degree assault, a misde- began serving an NFL sus- :
g~s, or ·brin,gmg laws_wts impact it made would have meanor ihat carries up to a pension ihat would wt for :
.
two seasons.
.~st amateur_ org~- been greater if someone year in prison.
Brooks played ihree sea- ·
'tiODs ~se therr ~sprmg ihought to capi:Ul'e1balmcmRosicb's complaint said
were denied playmg tune or orable trip .amund tbe hUes · Brooks got into a 1oud dis: sons at VIrginia before being :
:
MW_a'Yards. A •personal on v.i&amp;Otape
wider dis- . .agreement with ooe of her lUcked off the .team.
.
'
L
ast
monih,
the
Bengals:
favente Js a few years old itfibuti
neighbors
in . nearby
now, inv.olving albigh school
on. .
.
florence on ~ 9. When released receiver Chris·
player »i.be w.as cangbt with
The ethics that inform she tried te intervene, Hemy after be was arrested:
the lbtwkles on lhi!i ;belmet how ~sfollowthe rules Brooks punobed her in the for the fifth time. Hemy was:
sluu;pened to .a :ramr' s .e dge baw.:n! .cbangc:cJ ~ce ~ left .eye, ltenlpQmily tnock- one of 10 Bengals players:
wiih bCip from bisfather- ·begmmng . of time. A-sking ing her unconscious, ihe arrested during a 14-monih;
who just happened to have · f~ mercy IS ~ &lt;:Jf the ques- complaint said.
span from 2006-07.
:
ihe proper tools lying around b~n; offenng It IS not w~t
because be was a pediatric wmners do. But ';here s
dentist. ·
someihing to be s111d for
One out later, Hafner's line·
· Western Oregon coach iho_se a~etes ~bo still
double into tbe right-field:
Pam Knox· refused to be believe 11 s not JUSt about
comer broke an 0-for-13:
pinned dowri on the subject whether you win the game,
stretch and made it 1-0.
•
frumPageBl
of whether Holtman's act but :~tow you play ·tt.
Ryan Garko then snapped·
proved there was any differSmce most of us let
his 0-for-25 slump with a:
ence between men' s and National
Sportsmanship games, quickest in team bis- line single to left-center, but:
women's sports, only that it Day slide by withoutlllOlice, toty.
for the second night in a:
demonstrated ''character" we owe a debt of gratilllde(o
"Richie 1had a huge hit, row, ihird-base coach Joel·
and showed •their opponents Holtman for making a tired 'but it was a taugb loss," Skinner decided to chal.play.e d "for a coach who old slogan, "Dare to Play Mariners manager John . lenge Suzuki's throwing
mstills it."
Fair," seem hip, if only for a McLaren said. uJJ. wasn't arm .- and lost. Skinner
sharp. He's still working his waved Hafner around and
Yet the most interesting little wlille, one more time.
WilY back:~
Suzuki's tbrow borne was
McLaren said be may use waiting for the lumbering
·Putz in sOme non-save situ- DH for the final out. On
ations. The ri.ght-bander, Wednesday, Suzuki nailed
who bad 78 saves over the Blake hying to score on a
previous three seasons, similar play.
sixih innings when Riggs caine off the disabled list · Indi.ans staner Paul Byrd
and Ashley Wolfe rounded A~ 22 after bemg out gave up four bits and struck ·
the bases to second, but nei- Wlih a strained muscle in bis out four over 7 2-3 sbuto_ut
iher could make it any far- rib cage.
innings.
ther.
·
Putz blew bis second save · "'t would ·!lave been a lot
·Wolfe, Riggs, Taylor · in four tries, yielding a pair mGTe fiustratin~ if we bad
Hysell and Haley Davis led of one-out singles and a lost," Byrd said. "This is .
ihe W~ama offense with a walk'to load ihe 'bases. After one we can build off. Our
bit apiece to tally four 'tOtal walking Sizemore to make trade~ is playing with a
bits on the evening. Ri$gs it 2-2, Putz came back to lot of beart, 'battling back to
also picked up the pitching strike out •Casey Blake and ·win. That's what we did."
loss.
David Dellucci - Blake's
In seven innings, Batista
Buffalo was paced by fourth strikeout of tbe game·, gave up one run and four
Young wbo went 2-for-3 and Dellucci's third.
bits, walking tbree and
wiih two runs scored. Scott,
Seattle's lcbiro Suzuki sttiking dot six.
Dingess and Williams added had ihree bits, and his speed
Notes: SIIZIIki's 70 outtbe oiher hits while Dingess beiJX:d tie the score 1- 1 in . . fi,e!d assists since 2001 rank
picked up tbe loss in the cir- ihe nmih.
9lil~
behind Vladimir
cle.
Suzuki singled off Indians G~ie~:o (74) and Carlos
But wbile Wahama is once closer Rafael Betancourt, ~1m (73). ... Martinez
again going home earlier took ~nd on a one-out bas, ~.!!1,13 straight games,
ihan expected, frrst year wild p1tch, slole third and going; '\~for-53 (.358)....
head coach Wolfe believes scored when third baseman Mari~~/QM Bill Bavasi
. .___ " . ~ .
.
......,_on..r,tr that his team is not far from Blake dropped the ~w returned ' !p · Seattle on
•Wahama's Kylie Riggs reaches for a ball thrown by catcher consistently challeilgirtg th~ from
catcher
Victor ThW:sd;'t1'; ·il!oming. His
Mary Kebler (not :pictured) as a Buffalo -player slides home two-lime State champions.
Martinez for an error.
father:!~~ baseball
Those seniOrs playing in
safely to score a run in a Hegion iV; Section 1 high school
·" I tried to do too much," executive '· ~,liZZie Bavasi,
. their fmal game in a Lady Blake said. "I have _to catch . passed away ~ ~e 93 in the
softball game Thursday in Buffalo, W.Va.
Falcons jersey include Mary the blill. 1 felt 1elrtble, but afternoon. ~,.•,.
Alex
followed on base by Tucker error ihat led to .a pair of Kebler, Ashley Wolfe, we got a Jtuglc win. That' s !Rodriguez bit i OO homers
who reached on a fielders unearned ruhs, giving the Haley Davis and Kayanna why you call it a team in his flfSt 470 gaines wiih
choice. Young then knocked Lady Bison a 6-0 lead.
Sayre. And, alihough tbe game. They bailed me out." Seattle.... Hafner's RBI tied
Despite facing a ·big season did not end tbe way
in a run witb an RBI double
Martinez duubled to right Andre Thornton for ihe
and she and Tucker man- deficit, Wabanta entered the they had hoped, the lasting with .one put forCieveland's Indi.ans record as DH at
aged to cross home on wild final inning excited and impression left by these four first bit off Miguel Batista. 450.
·'\ ·
pitclies to give ihe home ready for a rillly, but tQr.ee
be felt on lhe program
squad a 3-0 lead. ·
soft bits in the infield led to
years to come.
The two teams then easy outs, eliminating
I told the underclassmen
• had the lone extra base bit
played four scoreless - Wahama from the postsea·
these seniors have set
among the three with a douand very quick - innings son in tbe sectional tourna· the bar higb bere at Wahama
ble.
before the Lady Bison again metit once again.
and they bave a tough path
·
Adam McCarty paced the
fmnPalfBl
found some life in the sixth.
Wahama talliep nearly as to follow. I am going to miss
Spartans
with four bits and
Tucker again got the scor- many hits as the Lady
these girls. But lhe program
4
RBls.
4ng started for Buffalo, BiSon; but could not string is better because of ihem," Jeffers led lill Marauder bitThe Maraudcrli travel to
reaching on an error fol- them togeiher as the stout Wolfe said.
ters wiih four bits each. Miller Ft:iday before returnlowed by a single from BHS defense kept lhe ball i n
DeLong had a triple and a ing home for a doubleheadYoung. Grady tben reached front of them all evening
double,
while Jeffers sin- er with Warren oo Saturday.
8ulflllo •• w..... 0
on a fielders choice as Scott long . In fact, the Lady w 000 000 0
gled in each at-bat.
. 0~2
knocked in a run in ihe fol- Falcons never reached far- B 300 003 X - 651
Justin Cotterill, Clay
..... 21 . •'
*'11
wHa
(13-1
3):
K~io
Riggs
ond
Mary
lowing at bat with a single. ther than second base with
806 240 1
21 218
Bolin, and Joey Unbankes M
Young and Grady then iheir best opportunity to - (23-10): ~ Olnd T -.
finished wiih three bits A "3S8 400 0 - 11117
apiece for Meigs. Cotterill ,;..;;. Auo11n . Dunloo; LP - 1J1or
touched horne on a fielding score coming in the ftfth and Wf' - ~ . LP - Riggi.

~:

Sentinel

Much more than a trip around the bases' Beogals ~B accused l
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HoU.er Clinic is oCcepuiiJ resumes from
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11ae positioo requires 1 bochelcr's degree or

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Friday, May 2

2 p~- 6 Bonanza
6 S1arburst
Lucky Ball for $28.00
$500 Coverall

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Saturday, May 3rd
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)OU'Ie good flbout -.png ~. but

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ALONG THE RIVER

Cocky and competitive: Basketball is Obama's sweaty platfotm
BY .._ Fol•aa:
ASSOt1ATED PRESS

PITISBURGH - He's
oonfident and competitive.
Superstitious and silly.
Admits his mistakes. Shares
ondit. Always in control.
That's BllniCk Oba:na on
the basketball court, the
hlrdwOod hideaway that
belped him adjust to a white
wodd a.~ a racially mixed
teenager- and now stands
as a sweaty platform for his
Democratic'
presidential

campaign.
Hillary may have Bill.
But Barack's got game.
·
For months, the lllinois
senator kept his~~ love"
under wraps, but suddenly
basketball is renter court as
a political strategy. 'I t's no
accident: Obama needs
something - anything - ·
to deflect attention from the
re-emergence
of Rev.
le~miah Wright, his born.b astic former pastor whose
. racially charged opinions
threaten to widen the disconnect between me illinois
senator and white workingclass voters.
·
More than that, Obama
hopes his passion for basketball helps soften his

image as cool and alO(lf.
"[ do dUnk you can tell
something about people by
the way they , play baskethall," he told HBO's "Real
Sports
with
Bryant
Gumbel" this month.
Hours
before losing
Pennsylvania's primary to
Sen.
Hillary
Rodham
Clinton last week, · Obama
played a pickup game at a
well-appointed YMCA in
Pittsburgh wid! severill
aides, friends · and two
reporters, including one
from The Associated Press.·
No cameras were allowed in
that game -pan of :a private voting d:ay ritual- but
Obama hasn't been so shy
sinre the campaign moved
to Indiana and North
Cirolina, basketball-crazed
states that hold Democratic
primaries next week.
Last Friday, he scored
four baskets - including a
:nifty left-handed 3-pointer
-in a Kokomo, Ind .• game
tied to his voter registration
drive. With cameras trained
on his every 46-year-old
move, Obama scrimmaged
Tuesday with the North
Carolina Tar Heels.
.
"These guys," Obama
said, ~are a lot better than

me.n He was absolutely
right.
Still, the politics are
sman..
"We're a very sports-loving country and it would be
unusual if our president in
one way or another WliS not
sports connected,n said
Stephen Hess, a .p residential
scholar who ~ed in the
Eisenhower and Nixon
administrations.
Dwight D. Eisenl)ower
playod golf, a sport as genteel and patrician as the
president who played it.
John KennedY. playod touch
football with the youthful
"viga11 n tbat defined his
1960 campaign. Richard
Nixon bowlod, badly, as he
brought blue-oollar voters
into the GOP fold.
Hillary Clinton played
so~! in high school and
rec.a lls playinll half-court
basketball wbtle growing
up (only me boys could play
full court), but she's not
much of a jock now. Still,
the New Volt: senator who
was born in Dlinois knows
the differenre between a
home run and ' a political
foul. ~en,n sbe said of her
allegiances in a hypothetical World Series between

Cbiclao Cubs and lbe
New Yod: Y:ankees, ~I
would probably have ro
altematesides.':
1be sports stra1egy has its
limits. If not, ~ Sen.
Bill Bradley would have
been elected JRSideot in
2000. 1be H.n of Fame
bask:etbal.l player shot
hoops on tile campaign 1rail.
~PiaY.~ng ball makes yoo
access1ble in a way tban~eidiCr of them are - Obama
and Bradley,~ said Eric
Hauser:,
a
Democratic
strategist wbo WOiked fur
Bradley. "lbey bo1h deal
with the lq!Ullllioa of beio,g
distant and oool, and basketball transoends raoe.n
Growing up in Hawaii,
Obama oonsideRd basketball as a way to find bis
racial identity in a diverse
.ooiDiinlllity.
~Here is a place,~ Obama
told HBO, ~here . black:
.was not a disadvantage.n
Now, it's a place: fur a
break from the campaign.
Dribbling a ball during
warmups- on the court in
Pittsburgh, Obama said be
and his. pals played lhe day
of tbe Iowa caucuses. ~e
won the caucuses dlen came
New Hampshire and we
the

dido't play. We
busy,~

weR: too . playa- ~bblcd

redirection into the net in the
second; when the Red Wings
scored four times to tilke a 7I lead.
The Red Wings advanre to
the Western Conference
-finals against the winner of
the Dallas-San Jose series
which the Stars lead 3-1.

There's a reason people kwe
tO tum lemons into~ Dl ·

Avision of past elegance. Cl

die bill oil

bema 1hat won't his own leg and called a

11..-.
...
;?

in. I mn ~...........,_ .....,..,. fuul, one of Obam;a's
.....-~ ~ said SIIQSiicai-

-c-

OIIIma picked tbe temll;
in Pi.ttsblqh. · vio,g himself five of· tbe
players
and two of tbe wor.;t (lbe
lq)OI'terS l and immodiarcly
took chm-ge . of tile play,
bringio,g tbe ball up oourt
aud dishing soft bounre

C

passes.

He kept score and .called
fouls, including &lt;me on himself.
Obama is extremely ronfident with his .g ame, for
good reason. He glides
more lhan runs, high and
soft oo tbe balls of his feet
and with graceful strides
that put enough spare
between himself and his
opponents to launch a solid
left-handed jwnp , shot.
Obama, who usually plays
with younger men, says he's
a step too fa..~ for most his
age.
1hey're better ofhesting
my jumper,~ he told HBO.
In the first of four games,
Obama lost me ball out of
~nds . ~My bad," he told
teammates. ~rm sony.~
Not everybody is so booest. When an opposing

!¥· ~H~y, mm. oia: mo~

n

1yPlcal lash Ulk.. But it
struck .Obama as funny.
Over--the-tup funny. F.U.ing
to IW; knees, tbe 'SelWOC
giggled
uncontrollably, ·
holding his bead in his
hands and writhing. ' He
wiped tears from his eyes·
Yiiille gelling up.
You don't . realize bow
skinny Obama is unUI
you're banging ag.aiml him
benealh tbe rim, his bony
hips gi'litlg easily . to
brawnier ~- But
despite his ·· siLe, Obama
took every opportunity ro
caretr recldessly through
tile lane With his si~
move:
Fate right and drive bald
to the left.
A ~litical statement1
~Nab, be said with a wan
and sweaty smile, ~I just
love ro ptay this game."

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Me~ counties
'\

1

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'l'

'

'

_0' il e!IIIB.SR,.al

AEP p~sident to discuss·
status ofMeigs pkmt

Hamrock, will visit . with
Meigs County Economic
Oevelepmem
Director
Perry Varnadoe and county
cormruss10ners next month
ro discuss the effect of SB
BY
:lUll J. REa
legislallioo, m;ay very ~.ell 221 on AEP's future plans
·IIR£EIJCtMVOAilYSENTINEL COI/I
keep
al1ve
AmCilcan · for a Me1gs County plant.
Electric Power's plan ro
Varnadoe said Friday the
POMEROY Future locate a cleaJI-ooal IGCC • new law will "clarify" a
electricity rates win be power .plant in Lebanon Supreme Coun ruling of
determined by the Public Town~&gt;hi.p, if the . PUCO earlier this year that nulliUtilities Commi!;sion of approves AEP' s plan ro fied the recovery of costs
Ohio follo\villg the gover- · l'ecover costs associated for front -end engineering
nor's signing Thursday of with oonstructiion. .
and design work on the proI Senate Bill 221.
AEPOhio' s~and
posedplant.
·
Ohio's new e~ policy chief uper.aling offiocr, Joe . "Much of what happens

a

tingers 3, Pmpills t
NEW YORK - Iaromir
Iagr scored two goals and
New York staved off elimination.
The Penguins, who lost
for the first time in eight
playoff games this year, lead
the .b est-of-seven Eastern
Conferenre semifinal 3-1.
They will try again to finish season.

Texas
Road
concerns
are aired

OBITUARIES

Conference

~~~

.. . . AS

semifinal hocl&lt;.·
ey fJIII)9ff
series
ltu.lfsday at
Madison
Square Garden ·
·in New Yortt.

ft 17'MTII IIIIa.

ERIGELeMYDJOII.YmiBUNE!COM

• Hiner 1bf Boice, 85
-~PhilP 0. Goodnite, 60

GAilJI'OLlS - A local

~ yllld opel1ltor, sevmd

.• Kriiiiyn lleucleisou, 83
• Benad Ka•at,. 59

holllllOwners and mwnship,
city and CIOIIII1y otfic:Ws :ill
met dw:inx Thursday's regular
Gallia
County
Commissionen' m rJng to
attempt 10 alkviale problems tUt have CIOIIIC about

INsiDE

CJIIUUig city, oounty,
and ~te autborities ~itbout
Anl...

·

mn,g

results, Texas R&lt;WI
ICSidents
called
upon

'lbwasbip

Gallipolis

1iustces :and n&lt;;IIJbcn of

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•111P'tcaNer.r.n.· OHV . . . .
. - . . . . . . . is , ., ' S ca

:needs volunleels.

•Dullllfdl tfct•=' m•

.See . . . AS
• Ohio judge coosiders
sa dug man to prison
-sharing snadt
.SeeP¥ AS
·• Flnkaiser for Rep.

. . 7'1 . .

;evans set for May a.

3!5~

See . . . A6

.•lJJcal Briefs.

:SeePiileM

LAiillll TIM:nlt

!lbe~and~.••w••»s­

sions to come togCdlcr ro t!Y
and find a solution, whiCh
resulted in this meeting.
During the meeting, residents of Texas Road
eq&gt;ressed their concern for
the recent traffic that has
been backed up due to
patrons who use L&amp;L.
According to the homeowners ·who attended the
meeting, L&amp;L customers
have bloclted their driveways to where they cannot
get to their (lWn homes, it
has made them late for
work, mail has been unable
to ·be delivered, and the
school bus has had to dmp
some of their children off
on Ohio 588.
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ALLPOWER
EQUIPMENT
FAMILY OWNED SINCE 1996
8880 UNITED LAN~
ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON RT. 50/32
ATHENS. OH 45101• !140) 593-3279
STORE HOURS,MONDAY-FRIDAV 9:00-6:00. SATURDAY 9:Cl0-5:00

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RGCCjoins
••
consortium
for region

AlHENS - Ohio Board
of Regents Chancellor Eric
Fingerhut was · on hand to
witness the official creation
of the Higher Education
Gonsonium of Southern
Ohio on Thursday afternoon
in Baker University Center.
Ohio
Umversity"s
Chillicothe and Southern
campuses, along with Rio
Grande
Community
College, Shawnee State
University and Southern c
'S.tai1e &lt;Jommlilmty -C-eUege
joined in the oon~ortium ' s
formal agreement, which
focuse; on making higher
education more accessible
and easing residents' transitions between institutions.
The institutions. which have
worlred together· on projects
in the past, now will work in
a more formalized way to
set and attain specific goals
contributing to educational
attainment. .
The consoni urn
was
formed after FinQerhut asked
the leaders of hi2her education institutions in a 15county region in southern
Ohio to find ways to support·
the University System of
Ohio's goal of expanding
college enrollment. improving graduation rates and
expanding
the · impact of
Ello ' se ._,./ piMIID
Holzer Clinic Pediatric Department Administrative Assistant Cindy Simpson presents 4-year- higher education on ecoold Joshua DObbins with cotton candy during the second annual Children·s Health and nomic development. The 15
counties include Adams.
Education Camival held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m: on Friday in the Holzer Clinic Pediatric
Athens. Brown. Clinton.
Department. The carnival consisted of games. free bailoons, cotton candy, hot dogs. and
F!!yette, Gallia, Highl1111d,
door prizes along with Pediatric Department physicians and staff on hand to discuss
health-related education.
'
PI ne -tKOCC. A1

Lyles ~ins Rio's
S~RENMT

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

NEWSOMYDAILYTR18UN£.COM

RIO GRANDE- A faculty member at the University
of Rio. Grande/Rio ·Grande
Community College has
hec:n honored with a prestigious teaching award recent- ·
ly, while two retiring professors are also being recog'

at the surface mine site are
local, including Pullins
RACINE -Early Frid:ay' Exavation of Pomeroy.
afternoon,
the
Ohio E&amp;R Excavation of New
Oqwlment of Natural Haven, W.Va. and Rose's
R~s issuod a pennil fucav.ating of Racine.
for Ga1liJ1g Ohio to opemtc
On Friday, a Gatling
~room~ coal min- s)l(lkesperson said the co.m- nized. .
lbe faculty member honmg openatton centrally pany plans to he aggress1ve
ored
was Kevin Lyles. who
located · ·on Yellowbush in· starting construction Bf
Road just ·o utside Racine. . the facility and putting peo- was named the winner of
· The mine i.s ·said to be ple in place to begin pro- Ibis year's :Edwin A. Jones
a.tP.Mli!S .
similar ,t o the company's duction late this year or Award for Ellcellence in
.
Teaching. The award is prj:·
Big River Mine in New early next year.
Aioud Town
A3 Haven,
sented
each year to an outW.Va.,
which
Residents
in
th'e
standing
faculty member at
Celebmions
C4 emp~ys around 200 people. Yellowbush area will fJrst
Mel!lS
County see .a mine access ro~d Rio Grande, and the faculty
Oasc;jfieds
D2-5 Commissioner
Mick being constructed, the determines the winner.
Dr. Barbara Hatfield,
insert ~VCQ110!1 said in a iOOUIJty development of an overburCOmics
interim provost/vice .presiwith a hip unemployment
storage area and ~e
dent for academic .affairs at
Editorials
A4 rate, 200 new jobs 'Will have den
development of the nunc
(J(j
shaft areas at the surfare Rio Grafide. said that Lyles
Movies
a
pro- mine site. Adam Leachman is an exceUent teacher who is
Obituaries
.As vides a lot of good jobs for from Letart Falls will seJVe · very deserving of this award.
"'He is-wonderful with his
me COIIIIIlllllily anc1 .in talk,
BSection ing with Gatling, dley've as project engine~r.
Sports
students," Hatfield said.
Though the . mme hasn t
A professor of an. Lyles
A6 expressed they want to use had I 00 percent support
Weather
I~ bUsinesses andcompa- amongst all residents, local teaches courses in sculpture,
~--~· Fit:: a-c.. mes as mucb u possible elected officials and other ceramics, an history. design.
which wiD have an even county leaders have shown drawing and other areas.
"He"s also been instrurnen·
greater affect on our 1fl00no- consistent support.
my," DaveopQrt Slid,
lal in womng with our gmd·
Date program," Hatfield said.
Pit u . - .... ai.AI
'l1mle of .the four oontrac-

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and will probably rise .at a
higher rate as a result of SB
22 I, Varnadoe said. 'but any
dec.ision by AEP to g.o to a
matket-rate system will be
followed by a phase-in of a
new. rate structure.
Any rate increases caused
by a switch to a market -rate
system will be more gradual
for both residential and
customers,
business
Varnadoe said, and bu sinesses will be better able to ·
predict future rates.

h'FF REPoRT

tors dofug excavation work

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

.

li

NEWSf!IMYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM

Gatling mining pennit

LT14MI

'

oow witb mtes and .c ost
ii'COOvery will •be up to the
PUCO, because the legislation gives the PUCO that
autihority," Varnadoe said.
Tile legislation keeps
mtes in file hands of the
state for now, rather than
allowing an immediate
change tB a market rate system, where elecbic utilities
would be permitted to set
rates based on . what .the
mmiket will bear.
Rates in southeastern
Ohio have been lower than
in other parts of the state,

goodfory

()DNR grants

1

..,l...,!\, l

R~'

Jaromir Jagr js
c::ongmvlated
by Martin
Stmka, oemer,
andBlalllk•u
Dubinsky altef
soorir:e againSt
the Pittsburgh
PePCI.Iins dur·111g Game 4 of
anNHL
Eastem

Only two NIB.. teams
have rome back to win .after
trailing 3--Q, and none have
done it since the 1975 New
York Islanders against
Pittsburgh.
.
lagr 's second-period goal
broke a scoreless tie, and
Brandon Dubinsky's powerplay goal early in the third
period made it 2·0. Jagr
scored into. an empty net in
the final minute.
Henrik Lundqvist made
29 saves fo• New YOlk.
The Rangers beat the
Penguins at home fur the
fifth time in six games this

"

... l "; •l e \ ,l]

•Lady Raiders su: eep

New YOlk

l;)ff the Rangers in Game 5 in
PittsiJu(gh on Sunday.

1830 OlD LOGAN RO SE
RTJ3 JUST SOUTH OF LANCASTER
LANCASTER. OH 43130 • !1401 653-2827
STORE HOU,RS MONDAY-FRIDAY 9:00-6:00 SATURDAY 9:00-5:00

• \,', , ,1 , • \l.! .'..j..! l )l~ '

.
SPORTS

EDITOR'S NOTE: Rert
Foumiu covers politics for
~ A.ssociare.d ~ss. He
p~ pidatp wiJh Oba1M
an4 seveml emus on April
22.

.WinWi complete sweep of Avalanche
BY TIE ~ PREss
'
Johan
·DENVER
Franzen 's second hat trick in
three games fueled Detroit's
8-2 rout of Colorado on
Thursday night that completed a sweep of the injuryriddled Avalanche.
·
Franzen's nine goals in the
series matched Colorado's
total, .and his three goals in
Game 4 made him the fJrst
player with two hat tricks in
one series since Jari Kurri
did it for Edmonton in 1985.
Franzen, who had 27 goals
in the regular season, scOred
on a breakaway in the first
period and ltdded a shotthmded backhander and a

The Tllus Mansion:

I

'

Lyles
grew · up
m
Tennessee, Pennsylvania
and TellliS, and earned bis
BFA from Abilene Christian
University in Ul79. He met
his wife, Rollin, while in
college, and after they married Lyles began a graduate
program
at
Bradley
University. where he earned
an MFA in sculpture.
After gradUation, he and
one· of his graduate professors founded Sunderland
Associates, a firm Lltat
restored sculpture and

architectural ornamentation.
With toe company. he
worked on projects such a&gt;
President Lincoln's tomb in
pringfield. 111.. and the mon·
uments on the grounds of
the Virginia State Capitol.
In 1990, he began teaching
·at Rio GrandC. He also has
oontinuod to work as an an.ist,
and his work has been shown
in more than 150 international, !latiooal and regional e~hi­
bitions, in addition to his

n

-...-.u

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