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                  <text>COMM

iao•r lt~m ·6tlltiad
'

. "Wahama alumni

. &amp;....Jay, May u, 2C)08

Celebrating National
Nurses Week, As

Deadline nears to enter baby contest
OAK HD.1.. - · Ttme is
running oot to pre-register
for the Friends Clubs' 12th
annual Festival of Rags
baby contest 'Ibis year the
contest will be held on
Saturday, May 24 on the
stage at AeAna Pa!t at Oak
Hill.
All constestants are · to
· check in at the park,
between 8:45 and 9:30a.m.,
to be assigned categories for
tbeir appearance on stage.
No registrations · will be
accepted after 9:45 on the
day of the oontest The contest will begin at 10 a.m.
Entry is open to any child

.to gather May 24
for annual reunion
MASON, W.Va.
Wabama Alumni are once
again preparing for their
annual banquet to be; held
on Saturday, May 24 at the
Wabama Junior and Senior
High School gymnasium.
Celebrating their I 0year reunions will be the
classes of 1928 through
2008. The class of 1958
will be celebrating their
50th reunion. All graduates of Wabama are welcome to attend and enjoy
the evening and renewed
friendships.
The doors will open at 4
p.m. to allow many who
want to visit Also, there
will be a photographer pre-

PageD6

sent to take individual and

group pictures. Dinner is

being prepared and served
by the Mason Chapter of the
Eastern Star. Dinner will be
served at 6 p.m.
If you have not received
a reservation form; contact Dee Bumgardner at
(304) 773-5488 or you
may pick up one at Health
Aid
Pharmacy,
New
Haven, W.Va., Bob's
Market at Mason, W.Va.,
or Peoples Bank in
Middleport. Reservations
must be returned no later
than May 15.
A dance will follow the ·
banQuet with DJs Bernita
and )uddy Allen.

of
Rags. ·
es or suits or fancy clodting Festival
at
the
Festival
RegistratiOI!S
please). An adult· must
accompany each contestant or on the day of the contest
on stage. Registration prior will be $10 per child.
Kubnerto the start of the Festival of Sponsors are:
Rags is $5 per child. To pre- Lewis Funeral Home or
register, send a 3-by-5 card Oilk Hill, and Mary and
with the child's name, male Vern of McNeal FamtS. A
or female, date of birth and drawing will be held at
parent's name, address and close of the contest to award
phone number along with a savings bonds. All children
non-refundable $5 entry fee wbo appear on stage will be
to: Friends Club, c/o Nova eligible for the drawing.
All money wsed by the
Lovett.
Treasurer,
41
Antioch Road. Oilk Hill, Friends Club is used in
Ohio 45656. (Telephone civic-minded projects and
tD belp in
small. way
74{U}82-7418).
people
in
need
in
the surParents can register at the
.
Friends Club booth at the rounding communities.

under the age of 6. They do
not have to reside in
Oak
Hill area. There; will be an
awarding of first pi~ trophies in I0 separate categories based on age and sex
of child. Second and lhinl
place ribbons ~ill be awan:led in each category.
·
All contestants will be
given a certificate of participation. All oontestants present at the aWllld ceremony
will be eligible to win savings bonds donaled by Oak
Hill Banks, Ohio Valley
B'anks and Milton Banks.
.Children are to wear casual clothes (no pageant dress-

me

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.)t l(l"\l ..... •\ rt l ~- '\ 1~ .!tl -

some

'

·• James, Cavaliecs
shoot down Cellics.

BY Bent SERcan

Administrator Jean Trussell,
who is filing the application, ~ funds wouldn't be

IISmGENTOMVO.U.VSBrnNELQOM

SeePaeeBl

SYRACUSE- Matdting
funding has been .obtained
and projects have been chosen for the $300,000
Syracuse Distress Grant
According to Sytilcuse

•

Local man will
graduate from COM

Hoffman,

'$402,640 has

been committed. as matcbing funds for the $300,000
' granL The matcb on the

grant is $150,000 and the
' application is due at the end
of June. If Syracuse is chose~

~ •.,1'! ootoirio."-t. f.. , ~'W­
t .•• l!· ~! 1'~....~...

~.1;11 'J.A

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COwMy

av;ailable until the fall. The
villilge would have two
years to spend .that money.
Matching funds to be
used with the distress grant
application include nOt only
cash awaros bat the estimaUld cost of improvements made by other community cxgaoiz.arions such
, as wort done at Carleton
School and die SYJ3CU.se
Community Center,
A list of grants and
used as
. improvements

funds
are:
matching
Syracuse Street Fund,
$20,000, Syracuse recreation, $5,000, Symcuse Fire
Depalllldll, '$40,001, Home
National Bank loan for fire
. truck pun:base, $50,000,
Community
Syracuse
Center, $30,000, Syracuse
Warer.Depanment. $10,000,
Meigs
County
Commissioners, $20,000.•
American Electric Power,
$2,500, Syraouse Municipal
Building I Fire House roof
repair, $12,500, J{ome
National Bank, $1,000,

Beautification

·ect 11nder way Residents
sick of
speeders

•• t pill t II

9.11

The Earl Neff Pe&lt;iatric Fund at Holzer Medical Center continues to be supported enthuslasticaly by a111a businesses and
organizations. The Pediatric Fund, in existence for nea11y 30 years, has ~pplied needed toys, equ4xnent and enteltaio·
ment to 1he thousands of pediatric patients who have reoeived care on Holzer Medical Center's Pediatric Unit. May sponsors include The Medical Shoppe Inc. in the photo above at left, from left, Tom Young, Mark Dillon and Nathan Robii1SOIII
with Unda Jelfels-lester; Holzer Foundation Development associate, and farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co. the photo
above at right, from left, Amanda Potts, Rhonda Fortner, Jamie Oelntey and Steve Dunfee, branctl manager, with Jetfersl a let~ The entire staff of Holzer Medical Center joins in expressing tlleir gratitude, along with the young children and their
families, lor these generous contributions to 1he Earl Neff Fund. Anyone Who would like •111019 inlonnation or is interested
in making a donation may contact tbe Holzer founclation at (740) 446-5217.
·

BY Bmt Sear-err
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEUXlM

·ounuARIES

in

.

people they serve. · Services
include social activities, ·
educational programs, trips,
volunteer opportunities, ·
exercise, wholesome meals
and lnore.

VJ::I)t cfi)allipoli" Jaatl~ atribunt

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel
~oint .t)lra5ant 1\.tli-'ftr
will be pubBshing its'

their Inca! senior centers,
find oot what is available
there and ask how they can
become involved or help." ·
The Depaitment of Aging
paltllers with OASC, a
membership-based ,trade
organizatioo lhat represents
and supports the state's
senior center ~twork., to
promote the senior ceDter
netwOit. Visit www.goldenbuckeye.com/about/seniorc e ,n t e r s . h t m 1

&lt;http://www.goldenbuckeye.com/about/seniorcenters.btml&gt; for an interne-

tive list of senior renters
thrnughout the

coincides with the annual
conference of the Ohio
Association of · Senior

State.

Senior Center Week
2008 falls during Older
Americans
Month,
a
national observance held
each May. Most Ohio
senior centers will organize events to celebrate
seniors · throughout the
month. Visit www.goldenbuckeye.comloaml
&lt;http://www.goldenbuckeye.com/oaml&gt; for information about events in
your area.
Ohio Senior Center week

Center (OASC), May 1214, at the Dooble Tree Hotel
Columbus/Wonhlngton.

Dowmown beautifi. .
calion is • piOjeet of
1hePomeloy

• Ka!1!n L Hudson, 54
• Martha J, Shiveler, 81

Men:hanls
Association and
planting flowers ,jn

containers on the
siP acts, In lhe ,.,..
betw • • lhe paltii Ill

INSIDE
I
I

I

lot.SMiinStl ... .

. • GtlosNulting '
. ~enjoy SUige in

PllPt*ulv. See . . . A2
• leldng C19ek
Wllteished Stmner
Day Caq&gt; plata led for

?I!'OIInd lhe - area, and In lhe
mlnl1la* is under·
way. Volunleels
worll under tbe leadetship ol Alice

Wams1ey, tlovter

• RACO plalls amual
~diiiBI'.

Seer.AS
•OVCSstJdeids

'Pan 1he Town Pt.nple.'
SeeharAS
• T~ger maches past
mesh barrier, injures

Toledo Zoo olficial.

a......

:Seer. AS
~ Boat canyilg aid
·for qdow1e vdiu IS
sinks. See ·. . . A6

Butterfly Release &amp; .Celebration

children.

chainnan for the
Merchants
Association, and are
assisted by village
enlployee Dale
Riffle. Baskets .of
flowers are also
being PI'!Pilred and
will be hung on lt1e
period lamp posts in
tile downtown
Pomeroy area. All of
ltle flowers have
been donated by
Bob's Malttet.

·June 4-5. See , . A3

Annual PVH Hospice Tribute

RACINE - Resi&lt;lents of
Vme Street
Racine are
sick of speeding cars and
recently took their concerns
ro Racine Village Council.
Vme Street has a speed
limit of 20 miles-per-hour
but ·the $f&lt;JUP of six residents claim speeds can rop
around 40 miles-per-hour in
the residential neighborhood which is also home ro

in

Pace AS

.

a

., . , .

7

WFATIIER

ONooa
0 Specie' aift to all wbo __,

.

Ftll'

dg£

r • 116 .-tllil IJitrtd «

e.n

at

D I llon . . . . All

'I'MjM4r6t•fig••
Grift nut GG ,. ; · t'IIIM.·{JINJ 61J-7M.

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r--~-~--~--~---~~-~---~---~-------~~--~~
Jlf . . . . . . f.l&amp;UC&amp;........,
.

GALLIA • MASON
&amp; MEIGS COUNTIES
0

equipment projel:t), $10,000,
Farmers Baiak. $2,000,

field, $22.000; frrehouse
roof repair. $18,000; fire
Appalachian
Regional department I fire truck pur- .
Commission gram for water chase, $85,000; Syracuse
project. $189,640.
Community
Center
Via
surveys
passed improvements, $30,000;
around the community, res- . water
improvements,
iden:ts chose which commu- $20,000. There is also a
nity projects would receive required administration fee
fundmg if the village is from the county · for
chosen to reoeive the granL $40,000 which comes out
Those projects include: of the award.
Demolition of condemned
In the last few years both
homes, $25 ,000; sidewalk Pomeroy and Middleport
repairs, $25,000; street have received the highly
repairs
and
paving, competitive grant issued by
$35,000; recreation I lij(ht· the Ohio Department of
Carleton School (playground ing replacement at me baH Development.
·

In June

•

•,,,,,

--~-

Centers also play a cruen communities.
cia! role in Ohio's social
"Senior centers are serviCes system, through
often the point at which home-delivered
meals,
Ohio's network of dedi- transportation and other
cated aging services pro· valuable
services.
fessionals connects to the Working in concert with
community,"
said the Ohio Department of
Strickland. "They are not Aging and other service
only· providers of services providers, senior centers
lhat help residents main- strive to promote the digtain independence and ility, self-determination
dignity, but they also and well-being of older
serve as focal points, Ohioans.
bnnging
generations
"Just as many in the comtogether and providing munity have oome to rely
older Ohioans,
baby on their seniOI' centers for
boomers and many others activities, services and supwith meaningful and pons, centers rely on comvaluable activities."
munity support to thrive and
More than 400 full and grow," said Barbara E.
pan-time senior centers .in Riley, director of the departOhio have locations, staff ment. "We hope that· all
and programs that uniquely Ohioans will take time this
reflect the diven;ity of the week to learn more about

..

,,,I · ~

, ,,,,,1

'"'" f"",.

Governor prockdms May 11-17 Senior Center Week

.
a&gt;LUMBUS -Gov. Ted
Strictl8nd luis proclaimed
May 11-17 as Ohio Senior
Center Week to recognize ,
the wodt that senior centers,
their staff and volunteers do
to enrich lives and strength-

\l\'1 1:2 :! t)C,~

Matching funding obtained, projects chosen

SPORTS

Pediatric Ftlnd donors

'\iC)'\ I l\)

. Grants AdministRiror Fred

GALLIPOLIS
Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Keith
Veith are announcing the
graduation of their son,
Jason Keith Veith (a former
graduate of River Valley
High School), from the
Ohio l!ni versity College of
Osteopathic Medicine.
The commencement cere•
mony is Saturday, June 7 at
10 a.m.
For the conferral of the
degree doctor of osteopathic medicine,. Jason will
then begin his residency in
· emergency medicine at
Frankford Hospital in
Philadelphia, Pa.

Number of disabled
veterans rising, A6

I
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Editorials
Movies
ObituarieS
Sports
Weather

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: ••tamrOF: .

'£.

emmue ·
.

.

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Eastern names ,valedictorians, salutatorians

ClaSsifieds
Comics

I

1

Calendars

I

.11·•1' &gt;'2 . . . .. . . . ... I I 1-.:
IIISn' ii.....,....:aaJh* 2"1 e••-.1011¥ n
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WYUIM..AI I •
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Annie's Mailbox

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.

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I

REm

Bissell · plans to attend
the daughter of RaymoDd
and Ioyce Werry of O!ester. Ohio University in the fall,
Ryan Danna Davis is the to study pre- law and crimiTUPPERS PLAINS -- salutatorian. Davis is the nology. He has been named
BY BtuN J.

BREEDeYtDAILYSENTINEL.COM

B Section

Cl-~V..,.P ?"!!

L--~~~~~~~-~~-~--~-~--~-~~~~-~~---~----~

Reside!lts Wll!lted to know
what they could do to slow
drivers down, saying many .
speeders move so fast get·
tmg a license plate is tough .
In additio~ when the residents have asked the drivers
to slow down they say
they've been harassed by
the drivers who use profanity when speaking to them
and · "just go faster."
Interestingly; the residents
said the younger drivers
aren't the ones speeding, it
is the "adults."
Mayor Scott, Hill and
council advised .the residents to ·take down the
license plate numbers and
give them to Marshal Curtis
Jones. One of the residents
also gave Jones permission
to sit in their driveway to
police the problem.
"Speed bumps aren't the
answer. the main thing is to
police it," Hill said.
Jones said the fee for
speeding is a minimum of
$80 plus court costs.
Also discussed at council:
A reading on the subdivision and burned-out structures ordinances was tabled
until more council members
were present.
' Alben
Proffitt
of
Yellowbush Road asked
why the village was listed
as an interested party concerning six Indian mounds
on his property. Proffitt said
the mounds are lhe subject
of an upcoming meeting.
Proffitt said the letter came
from a consulting ftrm for
Gatling
Ohio.
Clerk
Treasurer Dave Spencer
said the village didn't
express an interest in it
though they were contacted
b:Y the consultant about the
meeting and passed on it.
Spencer said be told the
consultant the oouncil had no
problem with them and were
Rawson is an active alb- in support of the mine.
Proffitt explained he was told
Jete, having played baseball, by the consultant the village
football and basketball for wanted to be an interested
the Eagles. He was the cap- party in the matter. Proffitt
tain of both the football and described what he·d · been
basketball teams,
and told by Gatling consultants
received six varsity letters.
as "shady." H~ also ,said he'd
Rawson has been named complained to locar officials
student of the month, and about any alledged damage
has been recognized as a done to YellowbusH Road by
regional scholar and recipi- large trucks associated with
ent of the Holzer Science the construction phase of the
Award. He has also been mine.
e.AS
7' . . . , 11W.AI

A3
o..

.•

Andrew TOdd Bissell, Kyle
Andrew
Rawson
and
MIJil!an R aeann Weny bave
been named co-valedictorians of the Eastern High
Scboo1Classof2008.
Bissell is the son of TOdd·
and Diana Bissell of Long
Bottom, Rawson the son of
Andy and Connie Rawson Of
Thppm Plains, and Werry

daughter of Dan and
Rhonda Davis of Pomemy.
Bissell attends Bithel
Worship Center in 1'uppen&gt;
Plains, and is an active
member of the Outer Limits
youth ministry and the
CORE drama team. He is
also a member of the River
City Players community

tbeateT group.

1\11 Ohio University Cutler
Scholar and has received
the Ohio Board of Regents
Scholarship. He was reoently selected as the most outstanding 2008 graduating
senior in Meigs County and
was presented the Franklin
B. Walter . Scholarship
Award at a recent county·
wide academic banqueL

"

..

.....

I

�• •

PageA2

OHIO
Ghost-hunting ge-oups enj_oy. ~•lie in lJopula~ity

The Daily Sentinel

Monday,~ 12,

dill moved across !be floor
011 its own were reported at a
rumoer hospital in Kentuclcy.
Thirty-four percent . of
!~ .::!1r.~;...
~ Amcricms say tbey believe
Pa.ranonnal adtillit1 along in ghosts, aoooroiQg to a
a lailroad tJac1c: in U!bana ~urvey oonduoted in
()ctoba by The Associated
on Apri129. On 1he ~
li......_ ........ ·
~"las aDd rpsos.
l·s Bfiz=":=-"·-""""'' '""" ..,..,
Joe · Nickell,
senior
,also wimessed lhe pata~search fellow with dile
nonnal aCtivity one year
• ~ L _..;.t,
N.Y. -based
earlier. Local legend indi- c.:;;;:;~ for Skeptical
cates that a giOSit'!ain
IDquuy
" said be bas investiwlfdl carried the body of gaiOd
of reported
A'lmlham I.JifiiOo1n has
lwlmtiugs since 1969 and
been sighted in this an!ll
lias turnod up no evidence
oni\pril29,1hesame
· ofgbosts.
.
date that liliOCAn's funeral
NickeD said eqwpment
train stopped in Ulf:lana.
~g used to try to detect
. , .,._
ghosts is oot designed ror
that. Ghost hunters often
reported at a restaiJmlt in ann dlemselves will! elecMinnesota and at a fmmca tro~c ·detectors, merrail station in Pennsylvania. ~ !bat can identify
UneKpiaimed fOOMeps, .-. · ·cold spots ' and wireless
·shadowy fi~ .and ... ball miaopbol!es that eliminate

BY JAMES H.tNtwt

Nick Ftelds, oaJs:,
explains his 8llpelience
from lhe pte¥ious year to

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRilEI!

URBANA -

As mid-

oigbt approacbed, a grassy

. field whe~ tbe old uain
depot once stood pulsed
with activity. .
About 90 people Uptoed
around night-vision cameras atop tiny silver lri(XIds
and dodged remote sensors
ooonocted to a computerized surveillance ·system.
They waited for tbe liDooln
Ghost Train, which· !iOOle
people believe passes
tbrough this western Ohio
aty 00 the anniversary of
die 1865 lrip !bat carried
body
to
Lincoln's
SJD~lgfield, m., for burial.
Ghost-hunting
groups
.aroumd ·the country are
swelling with members dleir popularity fueled by
:ghost television, use of the
linemet to find and form
·
and the increasing
~ility of high-tech
equipment. .
"Academics pooh-pooh
all of this usually," said ·
. Julie&lt;~J~De Phillips, an assis. tant professor at Urbana
University who invited the
· gbost hunters and &lt;ll'g8Dizod
the vigil that also included
about 80 students and residents. "I'm hoping for some
vindication that there might
be sOme type of~
activity surrounding Ibis. n
011 this April night, there
wasn't.
"'Ghost reality sbows have
Rally opened the door tor
people to ·get · involved
~hemselves,n ·said James
Willis, founder of lbe
Ghosts of Ohio, the group
watching the tracks fur the
paranormal u:aln.
.
The airwaves .are populated by sbows such as "'Ghost
Wbisperer,n ."Mediw:n.,n
"Paranormal State" and
"Ghost Hunters."
Viewership of "Ghost
Hunte:n;," a reality sbow oo
the SCI FI Channel mat
chronicles investigations by
lbe Atlantic ParJIOOrmal .
Society, or TAPS, has 00.
bled sinoe it debuted in 2004
-growing from l.3 millioo
.
" ·.c· millioo"•
.
VJCwers
to .&lt;.JU
The Rhode Wand-based .
society cwrently bas about
86 affiliates in 44 states,
twice the number of .affiliates it bad ·rwo years ago.
And mere are about 800
individual memberS in diose
llffili res, up_from 300 three
years ago.
·1hauk God for the
'GhQst Hunters' on Sa Fl,n
said Patti Starr, founder of
dle Lexington, Ky.-based
Ghost
Ch8llers
lnlemational. ''Tbrough that
show, I think people see we
.are really serious about
wbat we do, and they'lll'e
rlised the bar."
Elll'en the U.S. Air Force
bas gone ale~, inviting
~st Hunters' to investi- ·
gate rep~~ns of .unusual
OCCUD"ences at WrightPatterson Air FOI'Ce Base .
near Dayton. The episOde
· showed a flashlight h•miug
on by i.tself and uneJqllaincd
knocks and door-closings.
Other groups are feeling
the surge of interest in gbosr
hunting.
A Midwest .Haunting,
based in MaComb, Dl,
·offers October · tours of
buildings, cemeteries and
otber sites it bas investigatechnd believes to be haunted The number of people
lllkiiD¥ the tours has tripled,
jumpmg from about 600 in
2006 to I ,800 last YCIIIfior:ty of the 60 people
Who attended a recent din..a i.n Erie, p,L, that fea. tured die PManoonal Study
and Research Group asked
if dley could join tbe group
« tlig aJong on ghost hunts.
A year earlier, only two or
diRle asked to be involved
after a similar event.
"We' n: .actually grateful
for ("Ghost Huntenn
becanse instead oi be~ a
bwJch of freaks, we' re like
me cool people on TV,"
Founder Pat Jones said.
"Peoppe used .to look • us
like we were .absolutely
insane, and now tbey want
So oome along wilh us. It's
' almost Jib: every day is
lllllowccn."
More than SOO people
bave n:gistered ··to poi! and
-=-1 mess,ages and liRicles
- ·tbe Idaho Spirit SceikC""l'
Web site sinoe tbe message
bom1 went up in November.
"11hal Teally allows tbe
il

_ .,.

dor:cns

interest that people do have
and that it's becoming more
aooePtable to talk abo11t."
said .exec11tive director
Marie Cuff.

_~ -

Some
gbost bunters
believe they have wimessed
paranormal activity durit1g
investigations. For example,
unexplained voioes were

2003

bactground 001se.

N"Jclcell said oibs of light
that sh~w up ~ photos are
often :'Jl!Y panicles of dust
ur 11101stu~ close ~lbe lens
of lhe camera, vo1ces»
picked up _by ~ recorders
can be radio ~1guals or noise
firom the recOrclcl;, and elec
·
tro!llagneuc detectors .can
be set ofif by faulty wmng or
microwave •towers.
"The least ~ikely eXJ:!lanation for any gtven ~g is
it is &lt;q;~st, n he sai~.
W!lhs group, wh10h ha&amp;
grown to 3G members since
it was founded in _1999,
mcludes both t;roe believers
and total skeptics.
"lf yum wamt to be takell
seriously in this fi.eld. you
. have to acknowledge that
some of the stuft" out mere is
not real, lle said.. "They're
looking for anSwers, one
. way or another.~
fl

.WIN UPTO $l,OOO !!!.
PLAY COVERALL BINGO

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, May 12, 2008

. . ANN.IE 'S MAILBOX

.· Whe!l spice of
marnage wanes
BY KAntY MITCHELL

respect. My father was in
the Air Force lind I went to
school on base, and this is '
Dear Annie: I have been . how ·I was ta!J¥bt.
married to a great guy for
I. was listemng to a local
over a year. We have a fan- radio show recently, and a
tasti c marriage, with orie caller said anyone who didpmblem. l'hree months n'·t put his hand over his
· after we wed, our sex life bean during the national
slowed to a trickle. Before. anthem was "an unpatriotic
we married, we were having idiot.» And all this time I
~ex four or five times a thought people who did that
week. Now it's less thai! were just poor souls who
nnce a month, and the hadn't been taught properly.
change happened suddenly. Did they change the rule
We are young and in the and I missed •!be memo?prime of our lives, yet he is Palriutic Idiot
·completely uninterested in
Dear · Patriot: We can
having sex with me.
understand your. confusion.
I have asked him lovingly According to the Emily Post
jf there is anylhing wrong, Institute, it is necessary only
but he says thil\gs are per- to stand' quietly at attention
feet. I have asked him to see dUring the playing of the
a doctor, but he di&gt;esn 't national anlhem. However,
]:hi nk there's any reason. He according to .unifonn guidellet s very defensive when I lines established in 1'942,
~ring up the subject. He the U.S. ~ ·Code states
iells me he realizes I want these in uniferm should
salute and civilians s!lm!ld
fnore , but nothing changes.
Ch8rlene -lcll/phalo
. ·We snuggle, we ~kiss and stand at attention. w.iltt the The 24-merilber Meigs ·Intermediate School archery team competed against 24 other teams to take the national chamure very affectionate;,! feel -' 1'\ght band over the heart. pionship .at Saturday's National/'lrchery in the Schools competition at Louisville, Ky. The team finished with a score of
deeply depressed and unat- Tlbese foderdl guidelines are 3,178. The Meigs Middle School team finished in eleventh place and the Meigs High School team finished twelfth. The
tractive. I know he loves sttictly voluntary, and there
me and is a great husband are no penalties for not archery 1eams .were given a royal semi-of! Friday morning when they left for the competition. With sirens sounding lire
trucks and EMS vehicles led the busload of students in a parade from the high school through the villages. More on the
in every other way. I have complying.
De8r Annie: I read the let- competition will appear in an upcoming .edition of The Daily Sentinel.
lried to live with it and
taunt my blessings, but I ·ter lirom "Disgusted with
am beginning to resent and Dinner," whose husband
snap at him. I don't koow chews with 'bis mouth open,
how to overcome this: -·
slwping and smacking his
Needing More
lips. My suggestion is to
Monday•.•Cloudy. Rain
· Dear Needing: Yeur hus- secretly videotape him while
likely with areas of drizzle in
band needs to understand . he.eats. Maybe if he sees and
the morning ... Then a chance
RUILAND - In a year Rutland and Harrisonville.
should wear clothing suit- of rain in the afternoon. Highs
.how important a healthy sex . bears ._,hat he's doing, he'll
life is to your marriage. He .reaLize how much he's when it seems .the price of
"The camp is geared able for rugged ouiside 11se, in the mid 5Gs. Northwest
thinks you don't care or will -embllmiSsing bimself.
everything is going up, .it is towards youngsteys enterin~ and bring plenty of sun" winds around 10 mph.
f.et used te it. l'he byperacYears ago, my husband refreshing to see some grades five through eigbt,' screen and bug repellent
Chance of rain 70 percent
tivity whe13 you were courl- and I were on Market Street lhings remain the same oost. Fulks said, "however if your.
Instructors and staff memMonday night... Mostly
jng was not, apparently, his in San Francisco. He spit on
. The fourth Leading Creek child would like to attend bers at camp are from the cloudy. Cold with low '
real sexual appetite. This is. the sidewalk and ·I told him Watershed Summer Day Leading Creek Watershed Meigs
SWCD,
Ohio around 40. North winds 5 to
~ell him he must sec his it w.as disgusting. He did it Camp will be held June 4 Camp and is not in this age Environmental Protection 10 mph.
Agency, Hocking College,
· . i:loctor and specifically ask again, so I decided to imitate and 5 at the Meigs SWCD group, please contact us.
Tuesday...Sunny. Not as
for his testosterone to .be him. When be saw me spit Conservation Area near
The entire cost of the . Ohio Department of Natural. cool with highs in thl'
checked. U he refuses or if on the sidewalk, he realized Rutland, and it still costs the camp is provided by funds kesources and many others. lower 70s.
the doctor says he's nne, it's bow revolti!lg it was and same lis in years past .. . from the Meigs Soil and
Wednesday
and
To register, or for more
lime for counseling. [t he's never .done it again. · free.
Water Conservation District information, contact Jenny Wednesday oight. ••Mostly
This year's wai:er~hed and the U.S. Fish and Ridenour or Raina Fulks at cloudy. A chance of showers
~vould be best if he"d go That was 40 y~ j§.~-­
!Nith you, but if not, go I
•
N11pa.
camp,
geared
toward Wildlife Service. . There is 992-4282. Registration is and thunderstorms. Highs in
without him.
IJal: lv
• We woUld- youngsters entering grades no fee for campers, and due by May 23 and will be the lower 7Gs. Lows in the
: Dear Annie: Are you sup- n't nomnally congratulate five tthro.ugh .eight, wi11 take lunch and snacks will be limited to the . first 50 lower 50s. Chance of rain
50 percent. ·
posed to place yo!lr hand · someone far spitting on the . on a different look with provided. However campers campers.
over your heart during the sidewalk, but in your case, many activities focusmg on
imtional anthem? And if so, it was very effective.
the . new 2.2-acre wetland
The Univen;ity of Rio Grande Crossroads program is currently accrpting applications for a
when did this become the
A...W"s ·J fri'M.-: is 'lllllit- constructed last fall.
limited number of openings for the Workforce Investment Act year round youth services
practice?
krt II§ l'8tl!y JlitdNII rut4
"This year's topics will
• I am in my 40s. When I AL cy Sqru; lo,U. Mi- include birds, fish, crafts,
prograill. Sumnier Employment Opportunities is one component of this year round youth
was in school, we said the ton; of die Allll rcrtmo worms and composting,
program.
Pledge of Allegiance every colluM. PlaH Nffllil yow soils, wetlands and aquatic
Eligible youth must be ages 14-21, residents of Meigs County. and meet WlA income
morning. We were to stand q•estiortfil to tzrtrti£slllllil" bugs, snakes, coal mining,
guidelines.
nt attention, place our hand bo.-:@co•rcastllt'f, or tillite flintknapping,
archery,
Applications are available at Southern High School, Eastern High School. and Meigs High
over our heart and recite. 16: AIPiie '1 Mailbo.-:, 1'.0. · forestry and tree identificaSchool and at the University of Rio Grande Crossroads Program office at 150 Mill Street in
M'e then sang "The Star- &amp;,; 118190, Clticqo, IL tion, wildflowers and medi'Spangled Banner," but with ffKill. To jilt4 old . cinal plants\ ' said Leading .
Middleport. Applications should be. submitted by May 30, 2008 .
our hands at our sides. I tzlooJII Aturi£'s Mtzilbox, ·C reek
.Watershed
Funding for the W.I.A. In-School and W.I.A. Out -of-School programs is provided by the
assumed placing the band tuUl r«&lt;4 /etltlu:tl 6y otMr Coordinator Raina Fulks.
U.S. Department of Labor and the Meigs County Department of Job and Family Services.
rver the heart was because Creators Sy•N,._. writes
The camp will be held
For additional information please contact:
you were making a pledge, tzrt4 CIU'tDortim, visit tM from 9:30-5 p.m. With drop
Ages 14-18: Donna Hartson 992-0010
and during the ' national CIWIIors Syrtdicate Web off starting at 9 a.m. and
~nthem, you stood to show ptzgecl ~~~--creaton-.eom.
pick up ending at 5 p.m. The · Ages 19-21: Brenda Phalin 992-0000
Roy Taylor. Director
Meigs SWCD Conservation
Area is located on New
University of Rio Grande Crossroads Prpgram
Lima
Road · between
AND MARCY SuGAR

Leading Creek Watershed SUmmer ·Local Weather
Day Camp planned for June 4-5

TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

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MILL OVTLET, INC.
Yoru Ana's #1 Floor

CoVering Dealer!

R-esidenfial• Oommenilll•
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I

I

Community Calendar

aAP IF

Wednesday, May 14
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Literary Club,
.
Thesday, May 13
; POMEROY - Bedford noon luncheon with instal:rownship Trustees wiU lation of new officers at the
meet 7 p.m. at the town hall. clubhouse of the Riverside
GolfOuh in Mason, W.Va.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
lblll'liday, May IS
Community Center iBaard
·C HESTER -· Meigs
pr Difectors, 7 p.m. at llle County Retired Teacherii at
!=ommuoity Center.
the Chester Counbouse
Meigs noon for luncheon and tour
· POMEROY tounty Board of Elections, of .newly-renovated Chester
regular meeting, 8:30 a.m.
Aca.demy.Call992-3214 hy
Tuesday for n:Srervations.

hlo !1

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FilMS

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p.elanica
R!lti811

Requert Family Oxygen

Twq lpcatiqrq

70 Pine Street •

Gllllipolis

748 t46 1111

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Clubsancl

• organizations

Moft l,,laf~atie
ahout webSite advertising contact:
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Pt. PI tAil,WVlSSst
31U75-7t36
Fu: 31U75-7317

.rin:n ·r

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Ufe/A

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Audiologist

1' , ,u m.

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Diane McVey

M.A. ·'CCC· A
Owner&amp;

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ATHENs·
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(748)'992-2155
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Yooth events

594-3571

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LUTCF,.\tst
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Other events

Monday, May ll
'lUnday, Mlly 13
POMEROY - · Meigs
POMEROY
Jerri
County Republican Pany, Dahler; field representative
9:30 p.m. Meigs County for ·U.S. Rep: Charl!e
.
Wilson, D-Bndgeport, w1ll
Cvwthouse
: POMEROY _Big Bend i hold office how:s from .4-6
Fann Antiques Club, 7:30 1 P·~· .at the ~~g~ Coun!y
-p.m:, Mulberry Community .0Jstnct tDblic L•hrary m
Center.
.
Pomeroy.
POMEROY Meigs
Wed1111 d•y, May ~~
Hi.gh
School
Band
POMEROY . - Me1gs
Boosters, 6 p.m. in the ban- County f?ep~nt o~ Jobs
droom. Events andrf\lndrais- and. Fanuly Sc:rv!ces, mforers to be"discussed.
mahonal mectmg on_ how to
Tuesday, May 13
become
.a
l10ensed
foster/adopuve J?l~Tent, 6-?
HARRISONVILLE Harrisonville 255 OES., p.m., Pomeroy Library.
p.m.
at
hall.
7:3G
Refreshments by men.
POMEROY
-Meigs
MGOday, May 12
County
Chamber
of
TUPPERS PLAINS__,-::_
Commeroe, business-minded luncheon, noon, Pomeroy Eastern High School oonLibrary, speaker Steve cen band, choir, handbell
Swatzel on Meigs County choir an&lt;1 sixth-grade beginSewage Systems, Crows ning band will perform
KFC/Long John Silvers spring concert, 7 p.m., high
school gym. Free admission. ·
catering. ~SVP 992-5005 .

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Holzer Clinic
"The Red Carpet Treatment"
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PageA2

OHIO
Ghost-hunting ge-oups enj_oy. ~•lie in lJopula~ity

The Daily Sentinel

Monday,~ 12,

dill moved across !be floor
011 its own were reported at a
rumoer hospital in Kentuclcy.
Thirty-four percent . of
!~ .::!1r.~;...
~ Amcricms say tbey believe
Pa.ranonnal adtillit1 along in ghosts, aoooroiQg to a
a lailroad tJac1c: in U!bana ~urvey oonduoted in
()ctoba by The Associated
on Apri129. On 1he ~
li......_ ........ ·
~"las aDd rpsos.
l·s Bfiz=":=-"·-""""'' '""" ..,..,
Joe · Nickell,
senior
,also wimessed lhe pata~search fellow with dile
nonnal aCtivity one year
• ~ L _..;.t,
N.Y. -based
earlier. Local legend indi- c.:;;;:;~ for Skeptical
cates that a giOSit'!ain
IDquuy
" said be bas investiwlfdl carried the body of gaiOd
of reported
A'lmlham I.JifiiOo1n has
lwlmtiugs since 1969 and
been sighted in this an!ll
lias turnod up no evidence
oni\pril29,1hesame
· ofgbosts.
.
date that liliOCAn's funeral
NickeD said eqwpment
train stopped in Ulf:lana.
~g used to try to detect
. , .,._
ghosts is oot designed ror
that. Ghost hunters often
reported at a restaiJmlt in ann dlemselves will! elecMinnesota and at a fmmca tro~c ·detectors, merrail station in Pennsylvania. ~ !bat can identify
UneKpiaimed fOOMeps, .-. · ·cold spots ' and wireless
·shadowy fi~ .and ... ball miaopbol!es that eliminate

BY JAMES H.tNtwt

Nick Ftelds, oaJs:,
explains his 8llpelience
from lhe pte¥ious year to

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRilEI!

URBANA -

As mid-

oigbt approacbed, a grassy

. field whe~ tbe old uain
depot once stood pulsed
with activity. .
About 90 people Uptoed
around night-vision cameras atop tiny silver lri(XIds
and dodged remote sensors
ooonocted to a computerized surveillance ·system.
They waited for tbe liDooln
Ghost Train, which· !iOOle
people believe passes
tbrough this western Ohio
aty 00 the anniversary of
die 1865 lrip !bat carried
body
to
Lincoln's
SJD~lgfield, m., for burial.
Ghost-hunting
groups
.aroumd ·the country are
swelling with members dleir popularity fueled by
:ghost television, use of the
linemet to find and form
·
and the increasing
~ility of high-tech
equipment. .
"Academics pooh-pooh
all of this usually," said ·
. Julie&lt;~J~De Phillips, an assis. tant professor at Urbana
University who invited the
· gbost hunters and &lt;ll'g8Dizod
the vigil that also included
about 80 students and residents. "I'm hoping for some
vindication that there might
be sOme type of~
activity surrounding Ibis. n
011 this April night, there
wasn't.
"'Ghost reality sbows have
Rally opened the door tor
people to ·get · involved
~hemselves,n ·said James
Willis, founder of lbe
Ghosts of Ohio, the group
watching the tracks fur the
paranormal u:aln.
.
The airwaves .are populated by sbows such as "'Ghost
Wbisperer,n ."Mediw:n.,n
"Paranormal State" and
"Ghost Hunters."
Viewership of "Ghost
Hunte:n;," a reality sbow oo
the SCI FI Channel mat
chronicles investigations by
lbe Atlantic ParJIOOrmal .
Society, or TAPS, has 00.
bled sinoe it debuted in 2004
-growing from l.3 millioo
.
" ·.c· millioo"•
.
VJCwers
to .&lt;.JU
The Rhode Wand-based .
society cwrently bas about
86 affiliates in 44 states,
twice the number of .affiliates it bad ·rwo years ago.
And mere are about 800
individual memberS in diose
llffili res, up_from 300 three
years ago.
·1hauk God for the
'GhQst Hunters' on Sa Fl,n
said Patti Starr, founder of
dle Lexington, Ky.-based
Ghost
Ch8llers
lnlemational. ''Tbrough that
show, I think people see we
.are really serious about
wbat we do, and they'lll'e
rlised the bar."
Elll'en the U.S. Air Force
bas gone ale~, inviting
~st Hunters' to investi- ·
gate rep~~ns of .unusual
OCCUD"ences at WrightPatterson Air FOI'Ce Base .
near Dayton. The episOde
· showed a flashlight h•miug
on by i.tself and uneJqllaincd
knocks and door-closings.
Other groups are feeling
the surge of interest in gbosr
hunting.
A Midwest .Haunting,
based in MaComb, Dl,
·offers October · tours of
buildings, cemeteries and
otber sites it bas investigatechnd believes to be haunted The number of people
lllkiiD¥ the tours has tripled,
jumpmg from about 600 in
2006 to I ,800 last YCIIIfior:ty of the 60 people
Who attended a recent din..a i.n Erie, p,L, that fea. tured die PManoonal Study
and Research Group asked
if dley could join tbe group
« tlig aJong on ghost hunts.
A year earlier, only two or
diRle asked to be involved
after a similar event.
"We' n: .actually grateful
for ("Ghost Huntenn
becanse instead oi be~ a
bwJch of freaks, we' re like
me cool people on TV,"
Founder Pat Jones said.
"Peoppe used .to look • us
like we were .absolutely
insane, and now tbey want
So oome along wilh us. It's
' almost Jib: every day is
lllllowccn."
More than SOO people
bave n:gistered ··to poi! and
-=-1 mess,ages and liRicles
- ·tbe Idaho Spirit SceikC""l'
Web site sinoe tbe message
bom1 went up in November.
"11hal Teally allows tbe
il

_ .,.

dor:cns

interest that people do have
and that it's becoming more
aooePtable to talk abo11t."
said .exec11tive director
Marie Cuff.

_~ -

Some
gbost bunters
believe they have wimessed
paranormal activity durit1g
investigations. For example,
unexplained voioes were

2003

bactground 001se.

N"Jclcell said oibs of light
that sh~w up ~ photos are
often :'Jl!Y panicles of dust
ur 11101stu~ close ~lbe lens
of lhe camera, vo1ces»
picked up _by ~ recorders
can be radio ~1guals or noise
firom the recOrclcl;, and elec
·
tro!llagneuc detectors .can
be set ofif by faulty wmng or
microwave •towers.
"The least ~ikely eXJ:!lanation for any gtven ~g is
it is &lt;q;~st, n he sai~.
W!lhs group, wh10h ha&amp;
grown to 3G members since
it was founded in _1999,
mcludes both t;roe believers
and total skeptics.
"lf yum wamt to be takell
seriously in this fi.eld. you
. have to acknowledge that
some of the stuft" out mere is
not real, lle said.. "They're
looking for anSwers, one
. way or another.~
fl

.WIN UPTO $l,OOO !!!.
PLAY COVERALL BINGO

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, May 12, 2008

. . ANN.IE 'S MAILBOX

.· Whe!l spice of
marnage wanes
BY KAntY MITCHELL

respect. My father was in
the Air Force lind I went to
school on base, and this is '
Dear Annie: I have been . how ·I was ta!J¥bt.
married to a great guy for
I. was listemng to a local
over a year. We have a fan- radio show recently, and a
tasti c marriage, with orie caller said anyone who didpmblem. l'hree months n'·t put his hand over his
· after we wed, our sex life bean during the national
slowed to a trickle. Before. anthem was "an unpatriotic
we married, we were having idiot.» And all this time I
~ex four or five times a thought people who did that
week. Now it's less thai! were just poor souls who
nnce a month, and the hadn't been taught properly.
change happened suddenly. Did they change the rule
We are young and in the and I missed •!be memo?prime of our lives, yet he is Palriutic Idiot
·completely uninterested in
Dear · Patriot: We can
having sex with me.
understand your. confusion.
I have asked him lovingly According to the Emily Post
jf there is anylhing wrong, Institute, it is necessary only
but he says thil\gs are per- to stand' quietly at attention
feet. I have asked him to see dUring the playing of the
a doctor, but he di&gt;esn 't national anlhem. However,
]:hi nk there's any reason. He according to .unifonn guidellet s very defensive when I lines established in 1'942,
~ring up the subject. He the U.S. ~ ·Code states
iells me he realizes I want these in uniferm should
salute and civilians s!lm!ld
fnore , but nothing changes.
Ch8rlene -lcll/phalo
. ·We snuggle, we ~kiss and stand at attention. w.iltt the The 24-merilber Meigs ·Intermediate School archery team competed against 24 other teams to take the national chamure very affectionate;,! feel -' 1'\ght band over the heart. pionship .at Saturday's National/'lrchery in the Schools competition at Louisville, Ky. The team finished with a score of
deeply depressed and unat- Tlbese foderdl guidelines are 3,178. The Meigs Middle School team finished in eleventh place and the Meigs High School team finished twelfth. The
tractive. I know he loves sttictly voluntary, and there
me and is a great husband are no penalties for not archery 1eams .were given a royal semi-of! Friday morning when they left for the competition. With sirens sounding lire
trucks and EMS vehicles led the busload of students in a parade from the high school through the villages. More on the
in every other way. I have complying.
De8r Annie: I read the let- competition will appear in an upcoming .edition of The Daily Sentinel.
lried to live with it and
taunt my blessings, but I ·ter lirom "Disgusted with
am beginning to resent and Dinner," whose husband
snap at him. I don't koow chews with 'bis mouth open,
how to overcome this: -·
slwping and smacking his
Needing More
lips. My suggestion is to
Monday•.•Cloudy. Rain
· Dear Needing: Yeur hus- secretly videotape him while
likely with areas of drizzle in
band needs to understand . he.eats. Maybe if he sees and
the morning ... Then a chance
RUILAND - In a year Rutland and Harrisonville.
should wear clothing suit- of rain in the afternoon. Highs
.how important a healthy sex . bears ._,hat he's doing, he'll
life is to your marriage. He .reaLize how much he's when it seems .the price of
"The camp is geared able for rugged ouiside 11se, in the mid 5Gs. Northwest
thinks you don't care or will -embllmiSsing bimself.
everything is going up, .it is towards youngsteys enterin~ and bring plenty of sun" winds around 10 mph.
f.et used te it. l'he byperacYears ago, my husband refreshing to see some grades five through eigbt,' screen and bug repellent
Chance of rain 70 percent
tivity whe13 you were courl- and I were on Market Street lhings remain the same oost. Fulks said, "however if your.
Instructors and staff memMonday night... Mostly
jng was not, apparently, his in San Francisco. He spit on
. The fourth Leading Creek child would like to attend bers at camp are from the cloudy. Cold with low '
real sexual appetite. This is. the sidewalk and ·I told him Watershed Summer Day Leading Creek Watershed Meigs
SWCD,
Ohio around 40. North winds 5 to
~ell him he must sec his it w.as disgusting. He did it Camp will be held June 4 Camp and is not in this age Environmental Protection 10 mph.
Agency, Hocking College,
· . i:loctor and specifically ask again, so I decided to imitate and 5 at the Meigs SWCD group, please contact us.
Tuesday...Sunny. Not as
for his testosterone to .be him. When be saw me spit Conservation Area near
The entire cost of the . Ohio Department of Natural. cool with highs in thl'
checked. U he refuses or if on the sidewalk, he realized Rutland, and it still costs the camp is provided by funds kesources and many others. lower 70s.
the doctor says he's nne, it's bow revolti!lg it was and same lis in years past .. . from the Meigs Soil and
Wednesday
and
To register, or for more
lime for counseling. [t he's never .done it again. · free.
Water Conservation District information, contact Jenny Wednesday oight. ••Mostly
This year's wai:er~hed and the U.S. Fish and Ridenour or Raina Fulks at cloudy. A chance of showers
~vould be best if he"d go That was 40 y~ j§.~-­
!Nith you, but if not, go I
•
N11pa.
camp,
geared
toward Wildlife Service. . There is 992-4282. Registration is and thunderstorms. Highs in
without him.
IJal: lv
• We woUld- youngsters entering grades no fee for campers, and due by May 23 and will be the lower 7Gs. Lows in the
: Dear Annie: Are you sup- n't nomnally congratulate five tthro.ugh .eight, wi11 take lunch and snacks will be limited to the . first 50 lower 50s. Chance of rain
50 percent. ·
posed to place yo!lr hand · someone far spitting on the . on a different look with provided. However campers campers.
over your heart during the sidewalk, but in your case, many activities focusmg on
imtional anthem? And if so, it was very effective.
the . new 2.2-acre wetland
The Univen;ity of Rio Grande Crossroads program is currently accrpting applications for a
when did this become the
A...W"s ·J fri'M.-: is 'lllllit- constructed last fall.
limited number of openings for the Workforce Investment Act year round youth services
practice?
krt II§ l'8tl!y JlitdNII rut4
"This year's topics will
• I am in my 40s. When I AL cy Sqru; lo,U. Mi- include birds, fish, crafts,
prograill. Sumnier Employment Opportunities is one component of this year round youth
was in school, we said the ton; of die Allll rcrtmo worms and composting,
program.
Pledge of Allegiance every colluM. PlaH Nffllil yow soils, wetlands and aquatic
Eligible youth must be ages 14-21, residents of Meigs County. and meet WlA income
morning. We were to stand q•estiortfil to tzrtrti£slllllil" bugs, snakes, coal mining,
guidelines.
nt attention, place our hand bo.-:@co•rcastllt'f, or tillite flintknapping,
archery,
Applications are available at Southern High School, Eastern High School. and Meigs High
over our heart and recite. 16: AIPiie '1 Mailbo.-:, 1'.0. · forestry and tree identificaSchool and at the University of Rio Grande Crossroads Program office at 150 Mill Street in
M'e then sang "The Star- &amp;,; 118190, Clticqo, IL tion, wildflowers and medi'Spangled Banner," but with ffKill. To jilt4 old . cinal plants\ ' said Leading .
Middleport. Applications should be. submitted by May 30, 2008 .
our hands at our sides. I tzlooJII Aturi£'s Mtzilbox, ·C reek
.Watershed
Funding for the W.I.A. In-School and W.I.A. Out -of-School programs is provided by the
assumed placing the band tuUl r«&lt;4 /etltlu:tl 6y otMr Coordinator Raina Fulks.
U.S. Department of Labor and the Meigs County Department of Job and Family Services.
rver the heart was because Creators Sy•N,._. writes
The camp will be held
For additional information please contact:
you were making a pledge, tzrt4 CIU'tDortim, visit tM from 9:30-5 p.m. With drop
Ages 14-18: Donna Hartson 992-0010
and during the ' national CIWIIors Syrtdicate Web off starting at 9 a.m. and
~nthem, you stood to show ptzgecl ~~~--creaton-.eom.
pick up ending at 5 p.m. The · Ages 19-21: Brenda Phalin 992-0000
Roy Taylor. Director
Meigs SWCD Conservation
Area is located on New
University of Rio Grande Crossroads Prpgram
Lima
Road · between
AND MARCY SuGAR

Leading Creek Watershed SUmmer ·Local Weather
Day Camp planned for June 4-5

TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

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IIA.FFELT'S

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MILL OVTLET, INC.
Yoru Ana's #1 Floor

CoVering Dealer!

R-esidenfial• Oommenilll•
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I

Community Calendar

aAP IF

Wednesday, May 14
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Literary Club,
.
Thesday, May 13
; POMEROY - Bedford noon luncheon with instal:rownship Trustees wiU lation of new officers at the
meet 7 p.m. at the town hall. clubhouse of the Riverside
GolfOuh in Mason, W.Va.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
lblll'liday, May IS
Community Center iBaard
·C HESTER -· Meigs
pr Difectors, 7 p.m. at llle County Retired Teacherii at
!=ommuoity Center.
the Chester Counbouse
Meigs noon for luncheon and tour
· POMEROY tounty Board of Elections, of .newly-renovated Chester
regular meeting, 8:30 a.m.
Aca.demy.Call992-3214 hy
Tuesday for n:Srervations.

hlo !1

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OS

1

FilMS

R

p.elanica
R!lti811

Requert Family Oxygen

Twq lpcatiqrq

70 Pine Street •

Gllllipolis

748 t46 1111

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Clubsancl

• organizations

Moft l,,laf~atie
ahout webSite advertising contact:
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215-A SW. SVM
Pt. PI tAil,WVlSSst
31U75-7t36
Fu: 31U75-7317

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Ufe/A

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7

Audiologist

1' , ,u m.

~

AI! I

Diane McVey

M.A. ·'CCC· A
Owner&amp;

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n &amp;l!rielu,ur:ace

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.OS'/. 'Sc u 1 AlliU e
(748) 446-7619

ATHENs·
ns Wat u-.. Shed

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(140) 99~1155
-Dafe
• • "Datis
(748)'992-2155
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ar:x ONTHEUNICS
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VllW sroNSORS
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Ab/WE.ISDIS ,
IVWUJOUD&amp;UX'AL
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""• •

aw ID

Yooth events

594-3571

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LUTCF,.\tst
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.
Other events

Monday, May ll
'lUnday, Mlly 13
POMEROY - · Meigs
POMEROY
Jerri
County Republican Pany, Dahler; field representative
9:30 p.m. Meigs County for ·U.S. Rep: Charl!e
.
Wilson, D-Bndgeport, w1ll
Cvwthouse
: POMEROY _Big Bend i hold office how:s from .4-6
Fann Antiques Club, 7:30 1 P·~· .at the ~~g~ Coun!y
-p.m:, Mulberry Community .0Jstnct tDblic L•hrary m
Center.
.
Pomeroy.
POMEROY Meigs
Wed1111 d•y, May ~~
Hi.gh
School
Band
POMEROY . - Me1gs
Boosters, 6 p.m. in the ban- County f?ep~nt o~ Jobs
droom. Events andrf\lndrais- and. Fanuly Sc:rv!ces, mforers to be"discussed.
mahonal mectmg on_ how to
Tuesday, May 13
become
.a
l10ensed
foster/adopuve J?l~Tent, 6-?
HARRISONVILLE Harrisonville 255 OES., p.m., Pomeroy Library.
p.m.
at
hall.
7:3G
Refreshments by men.
POMEROY
-Meigs
MGOday, May 12
County
Chamber
of
TUPPERS PLAINS__,-::_
Commeroe, business-minded luncheon, noon, Pomeroy Eastern High School oonLibrary, speaker Steve cen band, choir, handbell
Swatzel on Meigs County choir an&lt;1 sixth-grade beginSewage Systems, Crows ning band will perform
KFC/Long John Silvers spring concert, 7 p.m., high
school gym. Free admission. ·
catering. ~SVP 992-5005 .

• . .,

,_

tllll

... -..,5l.lftm'
~

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Holzer Clinic
"The Red Carpet Treatment"
.-•••.-.

Yuur f;arpet

"~.,.

alltl Vpllol:nery
Cklllli"'l SOO.timt

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Tall free 1zi17-M3-.2433

.Home

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p_.y, OIUD 4576~
Toll F- J-M8-f92-7f'J6
-I'IHifv: 7«J-Pf2-71Jff1

$Bank

- 507 Mulbeny Heights •

Pomeroy,OH

. Mwty 0 'Bryant

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�. Monday, May 12, 2oo8

•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
' 111 Court Street• Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
-.mydallyuntlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
· Charlene Hoeflich ·
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall malu no law respecting an
. establishment of religipn, or prohibiting tlr.e
fru uncise 'thneof; or abridging tlr.e .frtdom
of spuch, or of the press; or the right of tlr.e
people peaceably to 4Ssemble, arul to petition
· the. Govanment for a redress ofgf'Uvaru:u.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
, Today is Monday, May 12, the 133rd day of 2008. There
··
.
Today's Highlight in History: On May 12, 1958, the Uruted
States and Canada signed an agreement to create the Nonh
American Air Defense Command (later the North Amencan
Aerospace Defense Coinmand, or NORAD for s~rt) . ,
On this date: In 1870, an act creating tbe Cal\adian provmce
of Manitoba was given royal assent, to take effect in Jwy.
In 1907, actress Katharine Hepburn was born in
Hanford, Conn.
In 1932, the body of Charles Lindbergh Jr., the kidnapped
son of Charles and Anne Lindbergh, was found in a wooded area near Hopewell, N.1 .
In 1937, Britain 's King George VJ was crowned at
Westminster Abbey.
In 1949, the Soviet Union lifted the Berlin Blockade.
In 1975, the White House announced the new Cambodian
government had seized an American merchant ship, the
Mayaguez,in international waters.
In 1978, tbe Commerce Department said hurricanes
would no longer be given only· female names.
Five years ago: Suicide bombers· in Riyadh, Saudi
Arabia, killed nine U.S. citizens and 26 people overall. A
suicide truck-bomb attack killed at least 60 at a government
compound in northern Chechnya. L. Paul Bremer, the new
American civilian administrator of Iraq, arrived in
Baghdad; coalition forces announced they had taken custody of Dr. Rihab Rashid Taha, the Iraqi scientist known as
"Dr. Germ." (Taha was later released after rio charges were
brought.) Fifty-nine Democratic lawmakers brought the ·
Texas House to a standstill by going into hiding in a dispute
over a Republican 'congressional redistricting plan.
One year ago: Vrrginia Tech 'held its first commencement
ceremonies since the April 16 shooting rampage that claimed
32 victims and the shooter. Voters in the Dallas subwb of
Farmers Branch became the first in the nation to back an
ordinance prohibiting landlords from renting to most illegal
immigrants. A U.S. patrol was attacked south of Baghdad;
four Americans and an Iraqi interpreter were killed, three
soldiers were captured. (Tbe body of one abducted soldier
was later found in the Euphrates River.) A U.S.-Ied coalition
operation supported by NATO troops killed the Taliban's
most prominent military commander, Mwlah Dadullah.
Today's Birthdays: Baseball Hall-of-Farner Yogi Be11111 is
83. Critic John Simon is 83, Composer Burt Bacharach is
80. Comedian George Carlin is 7 L Country singer Billy
. Swan is. 66. Actress Linda Dano is 65. ·Singer-musician
Steve Winwood is 60. Actor Gabriel Byrne is 58. Sin~er
BiUy Squier is 58. Actor Ving Rhames is 49. Rock musician
Billy Duffy is 4 7. Actor Emilio Estevez is 46. Actress April
Grace is 46. Actress Vanessa A. Williams ("Sow Food") is
45. Actor Stephen Baldwin is 42. Actor Scott Schwartz is
40. Actress Kim Fields is 39. Actress Malin Akerman is 30.
Actor Jason Biggs is 30. Actors Sullivan and Sawyer
Sweeten ("Everybody Loves Raymond") are 13.
Thought for Today: "Act well at the moment, and you
have perfonned a good action to all eternity." - Johann
Kaspar Lavater, Swiss theologian (1741-1801 ).

are 233 days left in the year.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

It~

PageJ\4

Obituaries

Monday, May 12, 2008

Islamic jihad, not extremism, Umle Sam

A few years ago, Harvard
psychiatric
instructor
Kenneth Levin wrorc "1be
Oslo Syndrome: Delusions
of a People Under Siege."
In this illuminating hook,
Levin examines the Israeli
experience of concessiol!lU)'
negotiations with a "peace
partner" openly dedicated 10
Israel's destruction. He also
examines the · historical
Jewish Diasporaexpen'ence
m which Jewish populations
typically identified with
their tormentors and even
echoed their antisemitism.
Such interactions are dri- ·
ven by a permanent condition of siege mentality,
Levl·n explam·s, and clearly
manifest two kinds of delusional thinldng.
- ---·
First, 1here is the fantasy
a\loot the intentions of the
aggressor (Arab Muslim or
European Christian); then,
there is the fantasy about
changing the aggressor' s
mtentions. Such thinking,
Levin says, is common to
victims of chronic abuse,
particularly children. They
fool themselves into thinkmg that they, the victims,
oontrol the abuser by linkmg the abuse they suffer 10
their own behavior.
In other words, they
believe they cause their own
abuse. This mind · game, ·
Levin says, actually gives
victims a sense of control
over situations beyond their
control (an abusive parent,
for instance). This a!Jows
them to avoid feelings of
helplessness and despair.
And so the besieged victim pretends: Daddy doesn't
really want to hurt me; if
I'm a better girl, he'll stop.
Israel pretends: Muslims

www.mydailysentineLcom

The Daily Sentinel. Page As

Celebrating NatiQnal Nurses Week

Karen L Hqdson
CHESHIRE - Karen L. Hudson, 54, of Cheshire, Ohio,
: passed away Sunday, May II, 2008 at her residence following a bnef illness.
· She was born March 14, 1954 in Colorado Springs, Colo.,
the ~~hter of Wendell and Dorothy Mitchell Price of
· Gallipolis. Karen was a registered nurse at the Holzer Senior
· Care Center in charge of quality assurance. She was also a
memtx:r ~f the United Methodist Church of Pomeroy.
S11!"1':mg are her. parents Wendell and Dorothy Price of
Gallipohs, her husband Les R. Hudson of Cheshire; sons:
,KYI~ We_rry of Parket:S~urg W Va., Todd (Missy) Hudson of
Gallipohs, R1ck (He1d1) Hudson of Cincinnati, and. Dane
{Janue) Hudson of Westerville; daughter Leslie K.
(Jeremy) Webb of South Point; grandchildren: Austin
· Webb, Katelyn Gracie Webb and Ava Hudson. Also surviv, ing are a hrotber: Steve (Marsha) Price of Ga!Jipolis, and a
sister Barbara (Dave) Cunningham of Gallipolis, and a spe'Cial fri~od Teresa Ramey.
.
Se~1ces will be I p .m., Wednesday, May 14, 2008 at the
oWillis Funeral Home with Pastor Steve Williams and
.Pastor Robert Fetty officiating. Burial will foUow in tbe
. Addison,Reynolds Cemetery. Friends may call at the funer- ·
al home on Tuesday, May 13Jrom 4until8 p.m.
Pallbearers will be Dane Hudson, Rick Hudson, Todd
Hudson, Jeremy Webb, Victor Van Sickle and Steve Price.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail,
condolences.
·

"jihad." ("Extremism" is the buzzword for American
.
new "jihad.") . And forget hegemony.")
, about the "caliphate." (Try
The basic idea 1s to shut
"global totalitarian state.') the United States up. Or,
.Even such politi.,:ally cor- · more diplomatically: "'The
rect terms as " Islamist" and tenninology ... should avotd
Diana
"lslamofascist," :which take helping the terrorists by
West
the tradition31 teachings of inflating the religious bases
Islam off tbe hook, are now and glamorous appeal of
verboten. And so, more their
·
ideology."
curiously, is the 'term (Glamorous?) For example,
"Muslim moderate.'; Says " When we respond loudly
don't (e8)Jy· want to destroy tbe ·govemment: ''The term (to 0 sama b.m Laden and
" had1sts
' ), we ratse
·
our state, and so we'll give
.
' moderate' has become olher Jl
them land fOI' peace. Jews m
·
· · th M I'
-Nazi Europe pretended: offensive to many Muslims, therr pres!Jge m e us tm
who believe that it refers to world.''
The anti-Semites are neally individuals whom the USG
· ?.
"We" raise the'1r pres!J~e
right; we deserve a
prefers to deal with, and Come on. If a human bemg
Intriguingly, Levm
. • wntes:
· alJ
h' k
·
"But the hook's themes who ·are on1y margm y t m s turmng passenger
have a still broader rele- religious."
jets into WMDs .is an abomSo
"moderates"
don
'
t
·ination,
nothing anyone
~ance.
Even ostensibly
rful d
want to look like patsies say~ can raise the perpetrapowe
an secure pc;lPU- next to "J'ihadists," and the tors' "prestige." Could our
lations, under condillons
·
·
11 think
that entail ongoing threat USG doesn't want to be government rallona y
and vulnerability, can mani- . insensitive to their needs. otherwise?
fest similar trends:"
,
Sounds like a rest cure for
Alas, reason escapes tbe
1 got a · new one for the Uncle Sam is long overdue. Oslo Syndrome sufferer.
Of course, the no-Islam
This may explain why
doctor: a trend of delusion
so enormous as to beg for (no-"mnderate") lexicon Uncle Sam is now act!Jally
immediate hospitalization _ itself -· which reads like assuming responsibility for
and a transfer of power of disinfonnation designed to jihad itself: "Our tenninoloattorney. Problem is, the confuse the American pub- gy must be Pt;a('C!'IY cali·
patient here is the United lie - is just scratching the brated to · dimmish the
States government (USG), delusional
surface. recruitment efforts
of
which now says: If we just Animating the directive, extremists (read: jihadists)
stop talking about jihad, wri&amp;ten with considerable who argue the West is at war
Muslims
will
neither input from unidentified with Islam."
become jihadis nor sympa- Americait
Muslim
News flash for Uncle Sam:
thize with them.
"experts," is the delusional · Islam. in myriad forms, is at
Such is the message of a belief .that what we say (or war with the West. And even
crazy new government don't say) has transforma- if we never say the 'words,
gtiide called "Words that live power over Muslim we can stiU dam well lose.
Work and Words that attitudes and behaviors
(Diana West is a colum•
Doo ' t" ~g federal agen- regarding l~lamic terrorism, nist for The Washington
cies,
mcluding
the the Islamic caliphate, the umes. She is the author of
Department of Homeland advance of Islamic law "Th£ Death of the Grown·
Security, to eliminate all (Sharia) and the so-called up: How Americas Arrested
references to Islam when war on (Islamic) terror Development Is Brir~gillg
·discussing, well, Islamic rebranded here, no kidding, . Down
Western
terrorism.
,
as "A Global Struggle for Civilization," and has a
Not only does that mean Security and PTQgress." blog at dianawest.net. She
no more talk of "Islam," it ("Liberty," Uncle Sam tells can be contacted via
also means no mare talk of us, was "rejected" as ·" a diUlUlwest@verizon.net.)
p
· r. e

powom-

Martha Jayne st.lyeler·
• AUGUS:'A, Ga. - Mrs. M~a Jayne Shiveler, 81,
beloved wife of Mr. George C. Shiveler, Jr., entered into
·rest on Sunday, May I I, 2008 at University Hospital.
Graveside services will be held at II a.m. on Wednesday,
May 14. 2008 at Arlington Memorial Gardens in Mount
,
Healthy, Ohio.
Mrs. Shiveler, a native of Pomeroy, Ohio, was a member
of First Baptist Chutch in Evans.
In addition to her h11sband, she is survived by a dau~ter,
: Jayne Petrak llfld her husband, Thomas, two grandchifdren,
.Andrew Petrak and Carrie Pertak, and a niece, Kaaron
·Austin and her husband, John. She was preceded in deat:l! by
her parents, Jay and Rhea Myers, and a siste~. Iris Kelton.
.. If so desired, memorials may be made to the Golden
lfl!rvest F&lt;xxfBank, 3310 Commerce Drive, Augusta, Ga.,
30909 or to the First Baptist Church of Evans, 515 North ·
· Belair Road, Evans, Ga., 30809.
· The family wiU receive friends at the Platt's Funeral
Home, 337 North Belair Road, Evans, Ga. on Monday
· ·evening, May 12, 2008 from 6:30 to 8:30p.m.

Racine ,
fromPageAl

'

'

When talking about
·annexation plans the village
-may be pursuing, Hill said
'be hinlself was apprehen;sive about the mining oper·ation going in due to the fact
the village will have no say
in it because it's technically
..out of the village limits.
· "HOJlefuU y they'll be good
neighbors but I don't know
that," run told Proffitt.
"We'll have no say about it if
they're out of the village."
The annexation area
includes the surface mining
operation of Gatling.

Submilllld photo

In recognition of National Nurses Week, members of the Pleasant Valley Hospital Patient Care Services team dooned
their classic while uniforms. While sporting their professional attire, the nurses made friends with two small visitors to the
hospital, Dillon Bums and Kaden Thompson , the sons of Heather and T.J. Thompson of Gallipolis. Participating were left
to right, front, Teresa Baird, AN (Intensive Care Coronary Care Unit), Lori Nunn, RN , Assistant Nurse Manager of
Medical/Surgical Services, Stacy Wright, AN, (Infection Control), and Lisa Merry, AN, Nurse Manager of Medicai/SurQical
Services. Also pictured, back row, left to right, Sandy Wood, MSN , RN, Vice-President of Patient Services, Susan Garten,
RN (Infection Control), Melody Hill, RN (Education Department), Sue Hussell, RN (Education Department) , Lit Rodgers,
RN, Director of.Pertormance Improvement, Carol Garrett, RN, Nurse Manager of the Intensive Care Coronary Care Unit
·
·
and Misli Chapman, RN (Staff Nurse- South 1).

OVCS students 'Paint the Town Purple'
The Ohio Valley'
Christian School participated in the annual
"Paint the Town Purple"
on May 1. Allie
Hamilton and Lindsey
Miller along with help
from the student coun·
cil organized a dress .
down day. For $2 students wore purple supporting all past and present cancer patients.
The Ohio Valley
Christian School raiSed
$200 for the cause . .
Shown are some of the
girls who led in the program Laurah Bush,
Allie Hamilton ,
Kathleen Long, Lacey
Leport, Heather Mahan,
Melissa Stump, Lindsey
Miller, Alexis Henry,
Elicia ltWin. Amanda
Jarvis, Hali Burleson,
Rebecca Evans. ·

Council also discussed
renewing their membership
in . the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce and
wtimately declined. Hill and
council declined because
they felt the chamber sboLild
be more involved with businesses in outlying villages.
Tbey also added they felt the
ch3mber was only focused on
-the Pomeroy-Middleport area
and to renew their member·
ship was "a waste of money."
Council also agfeed to
pay $800 of the $1,118.45
bill for new locks on the
Star Mill · Park rest:roQms
with .the park board paying
the remainder of the bill.
Council also approved the
seco~ draft of the 911 piatL

Submlnadpt&gt;oto

Eastern

ALL BUSINESS: Government-backed
housing bailout badly needed

money for projects in your substantial spillover effects
communities, tOO, because on the housing tnatiret, the
of declining tax rolls. At the financial markets and the
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
NEW
'
YORK
A
govsame time, homes in foredo- · broader
economy,"
than 300 words. All lett11rs are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No cmment-backed mortgage sure are more apt .to be. tar- Bemanke said. "1berefore,
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in bailout is needed, and it gets of criJ:ne and vandalism. doing what we can to avoid
"If your neighbor fore- preventable foreclosures is
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of must be done right away.
Before
shouting
about
alJ
closes
on their house and it not just in the interest of
thanks to organiZIJiions and individuals will not be acceptthe reasons why taxpayers silli empty, that depresses lenders and borrowers. It's
ed for publication.
shouldn't rescue the profli- the property · value for in everybody's interest."
gate who took on more debt everyone around it," said
Bemimke and Gther govthan they . could handle, Kii Huh, a project manager . ernment officials gave a
think about this: New at the Pew's Center on the similar spin in March after
re~ estimates one in 33 States who worked oo the the Fed took extraordinary
(USPS
213-960)
subprime
borrowers will . report. "And often houses step of rescuing Bear
Reader Services
foreclose
on
their homes in that foreclose sell for less Stearns from the hrink of
Ohio v~~l8hlng
the next two years.
than what .they would have banbuptcy due to its creditCoi oecllon Policy
Pubtlshed every afternoon, Monday
That
means
the.
mortgage
.
been worth."
market exposure.
Our main concern in all stories is to
thrqugh Friday, 1"11 Court StTMt,
rot
could
be
on
the
.street
~
Cleariy
something
,
.iS'-~
Tbe Fed was sharply critbe accurate. If you know of ~n error Pomeroy; Ohio.
Second-dUI
·where you live. And it COUld needed to stop the cycle: icized for brokering the deal
in a story, call the newsroom ·at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
... ,..... , T h e - "'-s Ofllj
992-2156.
~ eiO your schools, to- Lower· hoi)Je prices lead 10 that a!Jowed ~PMorgan
the Ohio Newspaper Aaloclation.
your hospitals and to the higher foreclosures, which Chase &amp; Co. to buy Bear
roads that you drive on.
then depress prices even Steams usiBg $29 billion in
Our iMin number Is
-tion• to The Dally
SendSentinel,
comiC·
111 Court
This
is
one
of
those
times
more. Many oftho!iC: walk- special fmancing that the
(740) 11112-2156.
Street , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
when
doi.
n
g
the
right
thing
ing away from their debts central bank approved.
Depa; baa;t edensions are:
isn't necessarily fair, but it are borrowers whose houses GQvemment officials Said it
Sub- ipllcM Anle
needs
· to be done for the are worth less than their was done to stabiliz.e the
By carrier
News
One'1027
greatcr good. ·
mortgages so ll)ey see· no nation's ftDancial system.
One.,..,
'115.14
Char1ene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Foreclosures aren' t some- incentive to keep paying
That's the same reason
Dally
'liCP
llopo"" : Brian Reed, EKI. 14
one
else's
problem.
1bey
hit
what
they
owe.
why
mortgage relief is
Senior CMU.iAepootor: Belli Se'l!'lnt. Ext. 13
all
of
us
hard.
Some
40
milFederal
Reserve
nc:eded
now.
One monlh
'10.27
lion
homeowners
could
see
Chairman
Ben
Bemanke
In
his
comments Monday,
Oner-r
'103.10
Advertising
their property values and focused on this issue during . Bemanke appeared to throw
No oub·
their munic1palities' tax a . speech· Monday night ,some sltppott behind a $300
()at 'dl S..: Dave Harris, Ext. 1 ~ dil8cl to lie Dli1l&lt; scription by mill pemlillid in . , . .
Ollild ..._, Bnlnda Davis, Ext 16 where home eMier leMce is .......
bases drop by $356 billion w\len he urged Congress 10 billion housing-aid packa~e
Cleie.ICin:.: Judy Clail&lt;, Ext 10
over the next two years if take additional steps to aile- pushed by House Financ1al
this situation lingers on, viate the problems. He Servil)es Chaimtan Barney
.... Subec11ptlon
to a recent report noted some 1.5 million U.S. Frank, a Democrat from
according
Genetal Manager
lneldeltlelge~
from
the
llonprofit f&gt;ew homes entered into the fore- Massachusetts.
Ol1adene Hoetlicti, Ext. 12
13 Weel&lt;s
'32.26
Charitable Trust.
closure proces s last year, up
Frank's IneiiSure is esti26 Weel&lt;s
'&amp;4.20
The rise in foi'eclosures 53 paoent from 2006, and mated to cost $2.7 billion
52 Weel&lt;s
' i27.11
not only lmocks down what the rate of new foreclosures over the next five years and
OuleiCie ...... c-.ty
your bouse is worth - by looks likely to be even high- help some 500,!XXJ home13 Weeks
'53,55
$8,800 on average, accOrd- er this year.
owners. It woLild relax stan26 Wee!&lt;s
'107.10
ing
to
the
Pew
report
it
"High
rates
of
delinquendards at the Federal Housing
52 Weel&lt;s
'21421
also means there will he less cy and foreclosure can have Administration so it cowd
'
.

BY RM:Ia. 8a:l;
I&gt;P BUSINESS WRtlER

.The Daily Sentinel

or--

&amp;boclbo•-- .........

-·

"

back more affordable, fixedrate )oans for borrowers currently
too
financially ·
strappi:d to qualify. ,
.. Those homeowners coald
refinance into new loans if
their lenders agreed to take
substantial losses on 1:he
original
mortgages .
Borrowers . would have to
show they cowd afford -to
make payments on the new ·
loans. They would have·'to
share with FHA at least half
of their proceeds if they
profited from selling or refinan~ing again.
·
· The . House passed the
housing aid ' plan ·on
· '11lu!pday, but Pres1dent Bll'sh
says he will Veto the bill.
· During an interview with
The Associated .Press ·'on
Wednesday,
Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson
called the measure too
broad. He said the administration would continue
negotiating with Congress
for an acceptable bill, but he
did not offer any details of
what type of mongage relief
the administration would
suppon.
\.
"Housing is an imponant
area and there are certain
things that we need to get
done there fmm Congress,"
Pawson said. "I view my
job as to work to get something that is acceptable and
that tbe president can sign."
But while Washington fiddies, t\me is slipping by, housmg pnces are dropping lJlOfl'
and the crisis intensifies.

.

dents will deliver addresses
at Eastern High School's
51st commencement exercises at 2 p.m. on Sunday.
fromPageAI
1be following students are
named to the National expected to participate in the
commencement ceremony:
Honor R0 11 and th.e Um'ted
b · Andrew Todd Bissell, Justin
States
. Ach~veme t Allen Bissell, . Kathryn
Academy Ul fo~etgn Ian- ' Marie Bland, Megan Beth
guage, -math, sc1ence and
d ,
D . 1
anle . ~en
histocy, and is president of Bro enck,
the National Honor ~iety. Buckley, Alexander Jannson
He plans to attend The Burroughs, Nathan Kyle
Ohio State University to Jonathon . Carroll, . Joshua
study astronautical aero- Paul. Collins: Sasha Joann
space engineering on a Collins. Christopher. James
~Trustees Scholarship. He . Cowdery, Jonathen Scott
Co":dery, Ryan Danna
•hopes to work for NASA.
Werry attends the Chester Dav!s, · Sha~n~ . Matthe~
United Methodist Church. Davis,
Kat~n
Mane
'·She has played hasketba!J, Dewhurst, Juliane Dradm,
· volleyball and run track. ~ Mae Eason, Holly
She is a member of the Jennifer Edwards.
Kyle Wesl~y . Edwards,
.National Hono.r Society,
,Student Council, French Amanda Chris~ Fulks,
· .Club, Varsity '1':" Club and K,Yle Wendell Gordon,
Lindsey ~becca. Grate,
Educational Talent Search.

RACO plans annual
scholarship dinner
RACINE - Plans for the
annual scholarship dinner to
be held 6:30 p.m. on. May
27 at the Racine First
Baptist . Church Outreach
Center were made during lL
recent meeting o( the
Racine Area Community
Organiza.tion held at Star
Mill Park.
The dinner will be to
honor alJ scholarship recipi ents and · their · parents.
Another activity discussed
at the meeting was the May
13, 14 lllid 15 spring yard
sale to be held at Star Mill
Park. There will also be
auction on May 15 at 3 p.m.

following the yard sale.
Delores Cleland donated
a quilt for use in a later fund ·
raiser. The next food drive
was set for June 7 in downtown Racine with all proceeds to be donated to the
Meigs Cooperative Parish,
Kathryn Han presided at
the l;lusiness meeting during
which a thank you note was
read from the Meigs County
Council on Aging for a
recent donation . Officer
reports were given, Tonja
Hunter had prayer for the
potluck dinner, and Dave
Zirkle led in the pledge to
the flag to close the meeting.

Patrol
. •. Mich. cyclis't killed

SnM!Ine MiciJ;elle
ffi,
.
Cass1~
Mati~ Grueser,
Hauber,
· IICli~e in community service. Kathrine Mane Haym~.
. Ht:r academic recognition Hannah Lou Helgesen, Ciaig
. includes National Honor Roll, ~ Carter Hensley, Kelsey
U.S_ Aohievement Academy, Mtchelle Hol!ef. Dalton
COLUMBUS (AP) _
and return to Columbus on
• .Ohio ~ School Alhletic Ale~ J~s. Brandon · Tbe S~ .l:lighw.ay Patl'?l the second day.
, AsSOCJanon
Coulllgeous Scott Jones, S~lh&lt;t ~ · 'says' a b1cyclist taking part m .
Fifty -.s even - year·- o I d'''"
. Sludem. Award, the TVC . Jordan,,SaraLon:aineJotdan, the annual rour of the Sci.oto William , Crowley of
Academic Honor· Roll, and 'JYler Joseph Keams. .~
· · Valley was killed on Route Northville.• .Mich.,
rid- ·
·, was Chosen ·.as the Regional · J3!"ld Ale1&lt;ander ~uhn, · 23 when he wa5 struck from ing his bicycle north in the
•WIII'!i representative.
Christop~er
Michael behind by a motorist and right Jane when he was hit
. She plans to study pre- Laudermilt, Jesse Lee Long, thrown from his bicycle.
near Piketon at 'about 7:50
.med at The Ohio State
Joel An~w Lynch,
Cyclists in the two-day a.m. on Sunday. Troopers
University._
. .
Brandon Michael .Mahon, tour, which takes place each say he died at the scene.
Salutatonan Dav1s IS also Aaro;'!
Christopher year on Mother's Day
The patrol says the driver
.
weekend pedal the I 05 of the car was 35' year-old
.active in Eagles athletics, a Martindale.
four-year volleyball player,
J~natbon Zackana Newell, miles fr~m Columbus to Sara Bender of Lucasville.
three-year basketball player, ~. Jean Perdue, Afi?.ber Portsmouth the first day, She was. not injured.
. two-year track team 'member NJchole Pooler, Saralisha
. and two-year softball pl!lyer. Marie Powell, Trista Nichole
Kyle Andrew
Davis is also active m 4- Putman,
· H, French Club, Student Rawson, Kyle Datiiel Riley.
. Council, and concert band. Tony Ray Roush, k, Jared
. She serves as vice president Tyler Russell, Nicholas
of the National Honor Arthur Schultz, Cortne.Y
PM
1-\'111, Pre-Needs , CreaoOUon. F.. Soniot .t D1nct Boriol
Society and vice president Darlene ~oc. Matt Lewts
rv.. willooo Jerry- ,..,......y to lodp y...... .u )'WI' p d )
of the senior class.
Sebo, Adrian Kayleen Stover,
Davis is a member of St. _Kenneth Waya.: Vogelsong,
· Paul Lutheran Church in Sarah Kristine Wachter,
Pomeroy and plans to study Morgan Raeann Werry,
FemiiJ 0wne11
_secondary education at the Hea:ven ~Ann Westfall,
Jony
F....... Director In CNorgo
Jus!Jn Michael Whaley,
University of Rio ,Grande.
304-773-5561 Moooo, wv~
The four outstanding stu- Nilcita Dawn Young.
Werry
is 4-H
president
·.Wbiz
Kids
Club of
andthe
is

Ohio. during annual bike tour
was

2nc1-

..

·~.

'"!.

·.

\

Tucbri

Tiger reaches past mesh barrier,
injures Toledo Zoo official.
TOLEDO (AP) - The
Toledo Zoo says a tiger
reached through a double
mesh barrier and injured a
zookeeper. sending the
keeper to the hospital with
three lacerations to the
chest.
Zoo officials say the
employee was doing nonnal
rounds at about 8:30a.m. on
Sunday and was in an area
where he had worked before
without any problems.
The zoo says one its two
female tigers was somehow
able to get a paw through

,;!t'o,

the mesh at an odd ;mgle.
The keeper was treated and
released at a local hospital.
The Zoo was not open at
the time of th e incident.
Spokeswoman
· Andi
Nonnan says officials are
reviewing whether the zoo
needs to make changes to
the tiger exhibit.

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.

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,.. '
-

I"EEffOMM~ .-I.RTStTh11J

May 10

"'

.. T~i

County
Gospel
Homecoming
Doors open 7pm
Box 01'fice: 428 2nd Ave.

Gagipoli., OH (7411) 446-ARTS

&amp;YW! Now ~&lt;an OWI1 the PICture cA ttw.t umorvetaa~
~Int. ne
p er Photo&amp; become~
when tr.med or pnnted on a l'nl.lg 01'" mouee !»d.

IMfMnt

.,

.

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.•

..

�. Monday, May 12, 2oo8

•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
' 111 Court Street• Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
-.mydallyuntlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
· Charlene Hoeflich ·
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall malu no law respecting an
. establishment of religipn, or prohibiting tlr.e
fru uncise 'thneof; or abridging tlr.e .frtdom
of spuch, or of the press; or the right of tlr.e
people peaceably to 4Ssemble, arul to petition
· the. Govanment for a redress ofgf'Uvaru:u.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
, Today is Monday, May 12, the 133rd day of 2008. There
··
.
Today's Highlight in History: On May 12, 1958, the Uruted
States and Canada signed an agreement to create the Nonh
American Air Defense Command (later the North Amencan
Aerospace Defense Coinmand, or NORAD for s~rt) . ,
On this date: In 1870, an act creating tbe Cal\adian provmce
of Manitoba was given royal assent, to take effect in Jwy.
In 1907, actress Katharine Hepburn was born in
Hanford, Conn.
In 1932, the body of Charles Lindbergh Jr., the kidnapped
son of Charles and Anne Lindbergh, was found in a wooded area near Hopewell, N.1 .
In 1937, Britain 's King George VJ was crowned at
Westminster Abbey.
In 1949, the Soviet Union lifted the Berlin Blockade.
In 1975, the White House announced the new Cambodian
government had seized an American merchant ship, the
Mayaguez,in international waters.
In 1978, tbe Commerce Department said hurricanes
would no longer be given only· female names.
Five years ago: Suicide bombers· in Riyadh, Saudi
Arabia, killed nine U.S. citizens and 26 people overall. A
suicide truck-bomb attack killed at least 60 at a government
compound in northern Chechnya. L. Paul Bremer, the new
American civilian administrator of Iraq, arrived in
Baghdad; coalition forces announced they had taken custody of Dr. Rihab Rashid Taha, the Iraqi scientist known as
"Dr. Germ." (Taha was later released after rio charges were
brought.) Fifty-nine Democratic lawmakers brought the ·
Texas House to a standstill by going into hiding in a dispute
over a Republican 'congressional redistricting plan.
One year ago: Vrrginia Tech 'held its first commencement
ceremonies since the April 16 shooting rampage that claimed
32 victims and the shooter. Voters in the Dallas subwb of
Farmers Branch became the first in the nation to back an
ordinance prohibiting landlords from renting to most illegal
immigrants. A U.S. patrol was attacked south of Baghdad;
four Americans and an Iraqi interpreter were killed, three
soldiers were captured. (Tbe body of one abducted soldier
was later found in the Euphrates River.) A U.S.-Ied coalition
operation supported by NATO troops killed the Taliban's
most prominent military commander, Mwlah Dadullah.
Today's Birthdays: Baseball Hall-of-Farner Yogi Be11111 is
83. Critic John Simon is 83, Composer Burt Bacharach is
80. Comedian George Carlin is 7 L Country singer Billy
. Swan is. 66. Actress Linda Dano is 65. ·Singer-musician
Steve Winwood is 60. Actor Gabriel Byrne is 58. Sin~er
BiUy Squier is 58. Actor Ving Rhames is 49. Rock musician
Billy Duffy is 4 7. Actor Emilio Estevez is 46. Actress April
Grace is 46. Actress Vanessa A. Williams ("Sow Food") is
45. Actor Stephen Baldwin is 42. Actor Scott Schwartz is
40. Actress Kim Fields is 39. Actress Malin Akerman is 30.
Actor Jason Biggs is 30. Actors Sullivan and Sawyer
Sweeten ("Everybody Loves Raymond") are 13.
Thought for Today: "Act well at the moment, and you
have perfonned a good action to all eternity." - Johann
Kaspar Lavater, Swiss theologian (1741-1801 ).

are 233 days left in the year.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

It~

PageJ\4

Obituaries

Monday, May 12, 2008

Islamic jihad, not extremism, Umle Sam

A few years ago, Harvard
psychiatric
instructor
Kenneth Levin wrorc "1be
Oslo Syndrome: Delusions
of a People Under Siege."
In this illuminating hook,
Levin examines the Israeli
experience of concessiol!lU)'
negotiations with a "peace
partner" openly dedicated 10
Israel's destruction. He also
examines the · historical
Jewish Diasporaexpen'ence
m which Jewish populations
typically identified with
their tormentors and even
echoed their antisemitism.
Such interactions are dri- ·
ven by a permanent condition of siege mentality,
Levl·n explam·s, and clearly
manifest two kinds of delusional thinldng.
- ---·
First, 1here is the fantasy
a\loot the intentions of the
aggressor (Arab Muslim or
European Christian); then,
there is the fantasy about
changing the aggressor' s
mtentions. Such thinking,
Levin says, is common to
victims of chronic abuse,
particularly children. They
fool themselves into thinkmg that they, the victims,
oontrol the abuser by linkmg the abuse they suffer 10
their own behavior.
In other words, they
believe they cause their own
abuse. This mind · game, ·
Levin says, actually gives
victims a sense of control
over situations beyond their
control (an abusive parent,
for instance). This a!Jows
them to avoid feelings of
helplessness and despair.
And so the besieged victim pretends: Daddy doesn't
really want to hurt me; if
I'm a better girl, he'll stop.
Israel pretends: Muslims

www.mydailysentineLcom

The Daily Sentinel. Page As

Celebrating NatiQnal Nurses Week

Karen L Hqdson
CHESHIRE - Karen L. Hudson, 54, of Cheshire, Ohio,
: passed away Sunday, May II, 2008 at her residence following a bnef illness.
· She was born March 14, 1954 in Colorado Springs, Colo.,
the ~~hter of Wendell and Dorothy Mitchell Price of
· Gallipolis. Karen was a registered nurse at the Holzer Senior
· Care Center in charge of quality assurance. She was also a
memtx:r ~f the United Methodist Church of Pomeroy.
S11!"1':mg are her. parents Wendell and Dorothy Price of
Gallipohs, her husband Les R. Hudson of Cheshire; sons:
,KYI~ We_rry of Parket:S~urg W Va., Todd (Missy) Hudson of
Gallipohs, R1ck (He1d1) Hudson of Cincinnati, and. Dane
{Janue) Hudson of Westerville; daughter Leslie K.
(Jeremy) Webb of South Point; grandchildren: Austin
· Webb, Katelyn Gracie Webb and Ava Hudson. Also surviv, ing are a hrotber: Steve (Marsha) Price of Ga!Jipolis, and a
sister Barbara (Dave) Cunningham of Gallipolis, and a spe'Cial fri~od Teresa Ramey.
.
Se~1ces will be I p .m., Wednesday, May 14, 2008 at the
oWillis Funeral Home with Pastor Steve Williams and
.Pastor Robert Fetty officiating. Burial will foUow in tbe
. Addison,Reynolds Cemetery. Friends may call at the funer- ·
al home on Tuesday, May 13Jrom 4until8 p.m.
Pallbearers will be Dane Hudson, Rick Hudson, Todd
Hudson, Jeremy Webb, Victor Van Sickle and Steve Price.
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail,
condolences.
·

"jihad." ("Extremism" is the buzzword for American
.
new "jihad.") . And forget hegemony.")
, about the "caliphate." (Try
The basic idea 1s to shut
"global totalitarian state.') the United States up. Or,
.Even such politi.,:ally cor- · more diplomatically: "'The
rect terms as " Islamist" and tenninology ... should avotd
Diana
"lslamofascist," :which take helping the terrorists by
West
the tradition31 teachings of inflating the religious bases
Islam off tbe hook, are now and glamorous appeal of
verboten. And so, more their
·
ideology."
curiously, is the 'term (Glamorous?) For example,
"Muslim moderate.'; Says " When we respond loudly
don't (e8)Jy· want to destroy tbe ·govemment: ''The term (to 0 sama b.m Laden and
" had1sts
' ), we ratse
·
our state, and so we'll give
.
' moderate' has become olher Jl
them land fOI' peace. Jews m
·
· · th M I'
-Nazi Europe pretended: offensive to many Muslims, therr pres!Jge m e us tm
who believe that it refers to world.''
The anti-Semites are neally individuals whom the USG
· ?.
"We" raise the'1r pres!J~e
right; we deserve a
prefers to deal with, and Come on. If a human bemg
Intriguingly, Levm
. • wntes:
· alJ
h' k
·
"But the hook's themes who ·are on1y margm y t m s turmng passenger
have a still broader rele- religious."
jets into WMDs .is an abomSo
"moderates"
don
'
t
·ination,
nothing anyone
~ance.
Even ostensibly
rful d
want to look like patsies say~ can raise the perpetrapowe
an secure pc;lPU- next to "J'ihadists," and the tors' "prestige." Could our
lations, under condillons
·
·
11 think
that entail ongoing threat USG doesn't want to be government rallona y
and vulnerability, can mani- . insensitive to their needs. otherwise?
fest similar trends:"
,
Sounds like a rest cure for
Alas, reason escapes tbe
1 got a · new one for the Uncle Sam is long overdue. Oslo Syndrome sufferer.
Of course, the no-Islam
This may explain why
doctor: a trend of delusion
so enormous as to beg for (no-"mnderate") lexicon Uncle Sam is now act!Jally
immediate hospitalization _ itself -· which reads like assuming responsibility for
and a transfer of power of disinfonnation designed to jihad itself: "Our tenninoloattorney. Problem is, the confuse the American pub- gy must be Pt;a('C!'IY cali·
patient here is the United lie - is just scratching the brated to · dimmish the
States government (USG), delusional
surface. recruitment efforts
of
which now says: If we just Animating the directive, extremists (read: jihadists)
stop talking about jihad, wri&amp;ten with considerable who argue the West is at war
Muslims
will
neither input from unidentified with Islam."
become jihadis nor sympa- Americait
Muslim
News flash for Uncle Sam:
thize with them.
"experts," is the delusional · Islam. in myriad forms, is at
Such is the message of a belief .that what we say (or war with the West. And even
crazy new government don't say) has transforma- if we never say the 'words,
gtiide called "Words that live power over Muslim we can stiU dam well lose.
Work and Words that attitudes and behaviors
(Diana West is a colum•
Doo ' t" ~g federal agen- regarding l~lamic terrorism, nist for The Washington
cies,
mcluding
the the Islamic caliphate, the umes. She is the author of
Department of Homeland advance of Islamic law "Th£ Death of the Grown·
Security, to eliminate all (Sharia) and the so-called up: How Americas Arrested
references to Islam when war on (Islamic) terror Development Is Brir~gillg
·discussing, well, Islamic rebranded here, no kidding, . Down
Western
terrorism.
,
as "A Global Struggle for Civilization," and has a
Not only does that mean Security and PTQgress." blog at dianawest.net. She
no more talk of "Islam," it ("Liberty," Uncle Sam tells can be contacted via
also means no mare talk of us, was "rejected" as ·" a diUlUlwest@verizon.net.)
p
· r. e

powom-

Martha Jayne st.lyeler·
• AUGUS:'A, Ga. - Mrs. M~a Jayne Shiveler, 81,
beloved wife of Mr. George C. Shiveler, Jr., entered into
·rest on Sunday, May I I, 2008 at University Hospital.
Graveside services will be held at II a.m. on Wednesday,
May 14. 2008 at Arlington Memorial Gardens in Mount
,
Healthy, Ohio.
Mrs. Shiveler, a native of Pomeroy, Ohio, was a member
of First Baptist Chutch in Evans.
In addition to her h11sband, she is survived by a dau~ter,
: Jayne Petrak llfld her husband, Thomas, two grandchifdren,
.Andrew Petrak and Carrie Pertak, and a niece, Kaaron
·Austin and her husband, John. She was preceded in deat:l! by
her parents, Jay and Rhea Myers, and a siste~. Iris Kelton.
.. If so desired, memorials may be made to the Golden
lfl!rvest F&lt;xxfBank, 3310 Commerce Drive, Augusta, Ga.,
30909 or to the First Baptist Church of Evans, 515 North ·
· Belair Road, Evans, Ga., 30809.
· The family wiU receive friends at the Platt's Funeral
Home, 337 North Belair Road, Evans, Ga. on Monday
· ·evening, May 12, 2008 from 6:30 to 8:30p.m.

Racine ,
fromPageAl

'

'

When talking about
·annexation plans the village
-may be pursuing, Hill said
'be hinlself was apprehen;sive about the mining oper·ation going in due to the fact
the village will have no say
in it because it's technically
..out of the village limits.
· "HOJlefuU y they'll be good
neighbors but I don't know
that," run told Proffitt.
"We'll have no say about it if
they're out of the village."
The annexation area
includes the surface mining
operation of Gatling.

Submilllld photo

In recognition of National Nurses Week, members of the Pleasant Valley Hospital Patient Care Services team dooned
their classic while uniforms. While sporting their professional attire, the nurses made friends with two small visitors to the
hospital, Dillon Bums and Kaden Thompson , the sons of Heather and T.J. Thompson of Gallipolis. Participating were left
to right, front, Teresa Baird, AN (Intensive Care Coronary Care Unit), Lori Nunn, RN , Assistant Nurse Manager of
Medical/Surgical Services, Stacy Wright, AN, (Infection Control), and Lisa Merry, AN, Nurse Manager of Medicai/SurQical
Services. Also pictured, back row, left to right, Sandy Wood, MSN , RN, Vice-President of Patient Services, Susan Garten,
RN (Infection Control), Melody Hill, RN (Education Department), Sue Hussell, RN (Education Department) , Lit Rodgers,
RN, Director of.Pertormance Improvement, Carol Garrett, RN, Nurse Manager of the Intensive Care Coronary Care Unit
·
·
and Misli Chapman, RN (Staff Nurse- South 1).

OVCS students 'Paint the Town Purple'
The Ohio Valley'
Christian School participated in the annual
"Paint the Town Purple"
on May 1. Allie
Hamilton and Lindsey
Miller along with help
from the student coun·
cil organized a dress .
down day. For $2 students wore purple supporting all past and present cancer patients.
The Ohio Valley
Christian School raiSed
$200 for the cause . .
Shown are some of the
girls who led in the program Laurah Bush,
Allie Hamilton ,
Kathleen Long, Lacey
Leport, Heather Mahan,
Melissa Stump, Lindsey
Miller, Alexis Henry,
Elicia ltWin. Amanda
Jarvis, Hali Burleson,
Rebecca Evans. ·

Council also discussed
renewing their membership
in . the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce and
wtimately declined. Hill and
council declined because
they felt the chamber sboLild
be more involved with businesses in outlying villages.
Tbey also added they felt the
ch3mber was only focused on
-the Pomeroy-Middleport area
and to renew their member·
ship was "a waste of money."
Council also agfeed to
pay $800 of the $1,118.45
bill for new locks on the
Star Mill · Park rest:roQms
with .the park board paying
the remainder of the bill.
Council also approved the
seco~ draft of the 911 piatL

Submlnadpt&gt;oto

Eastern

ALL BUSINESS: Government-backed
housing bailout badly needed

money for projects in your substantial spillover effects
communities, tOO, because on the housing tnatiret, the
of declining tax rolls. At the financial markets and the
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
NEW
'
YORK
A
govsame time, homes in foredo- · broader
economy,"
than 300 words. All lett11rs are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No cmment-backed mortgage sure are more apt .to be. tar- Bemanke said. "1berefore,
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in bailout is needed, and it gets of criJ:ne and vandalism. doing what we can to avoid
"If your neighbor fore- preventable foreclosures is
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of must be done right away.
Before
shouting
about
alJ
closes
on their house and it not just in the interest of
thanks to organiZIJiions and individuals will not be acceptthe reasons why taxpayers silli empty, that depresses lenders and borrowers. It's
ed for publication.
shouldn't rescue the profli- the property · value for in everybody's interest."
gate who took on more debt everyone around it," said
Bemimke and Gther govthan they . could handle, Kii Huh, a project manager . ernment officials gave a
think about this: New at the Pew's Center on the similar spin in March after
re~ estimates one in 33 States who worked oo the the Fed took extraordinary
(USPS
213-960)
subprime
borrowers will . report. "And often houses step of rescuing Bear
Reader Services
foreclose
on
their homes in that foreclose sell for less Stearns from the hrink of
Ohio v~~l8hlng
the next two years.
than what .they would have banbuptcy due to its creditCoi oecllon Policy
Pubtlshed every afternoon, Monday
That
means
the.
mortgage
.
been worth."
market exposure.
Our main concern in all stories is to
thrqugh Friday, 1"11 Court StTMt,
rot
could
be
on
the
.street
~
Cleariy
something
,
.iS'-~
Tbe Fed was sharply critbe accurate. If you know of ~n error Pomeroy; Ohio.
Second-dUI
·where you live. And it COUld needed to stop the cycle: icized for brokering the deal
in a story, call the newsroom ·at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
... ,..... , T h e - "'-s Ofllj
992-2156.
~ eiO your schools, to- Lower· hoi)Je prices lead 10 that a!Jowed ~PMorgan
the Ohio Newspaper Aaloclation.
your hospitals and to the higher foreclosures, which Chase &amp; Co. to buy Bear
roads that you drive on.
then depress prices even Steams usiBg $29 billion in
Our iMin number Is
-tion• to The Dally
SendSentinel,
comiC·
111 Court
This
is
one
of
those
times
more. Many oftho!iC: walk- special fmancing that the
(740) 11112-2156.
Street , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
when
doi.
n
g
the
right
thing
ing away from their debts central bank approved.
Depa; baa;t edensions are:
isn't necessarily fair, but it are borrowers whose houses GQvemment officials Said it
Sub- ipllcM Anle
needs
· to be done for the are worth less than their was done to stabiliz.e the
By carrier
News
One'1027
greatcr good. ·
mortgages so ll)ey see· no nation's ftDancial system.
One.,..,
'115.14
Char1ene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Foreclosures aren' t some- incentive to keep paying
That's the same reason
Dally
'liCP
llopo"" : Brian Reed, EKI. 14
one
else's
problem.
1bey
hit
what
they
owe.
why
mortgage relief is
Senior CMU.iAepootor: Belli Se'l!'lnt. Ext. 13
all
of
us
hard.
Some
40
milFederal
Reserve
nc:eded
now.
One monlh
'10.27
lion
homeowners
could
see
Chairman
Ben
Bemanke
In
his
comments Monday,
Oner-r
'103.10
Advertising
their property values and focused on this issue during . Bemanke appeared to throw
No oub·
their munic1palities' tax a . speech· Monday night ,some sltppott behind a $300
()at 'dl S..: Dave Harris, Ext. 1 ~ dil8cl to lie Dli1l&lt; scription by mill pemlillid in . , . .
Ollild ..._, Bnlnda Davis, Ext 16 where home eMier leMce is .......
bases drop by $356 billion w\len he urged Congress 10 billion housing-aid packa~e
Cleie.ICin:.: Judy Clail&lt;, Ext 10
over the next two years if take additional steps to aile- pushed by House Financ1al
this situation lingers on, viate the problems. He Servil)es Chaimtan Barney
.... Subec11ptlon
to a recent report noted some 1.5 million U.S. Frank, a Democrat from
according
Genetal Manager
lneldeltlelge~
from
the
llonprofit f&gt;ew homes entered into the fore- Massachusetts.
Ol1adene Hoetlicti, Ext. 12
13 Weel&lt;s
'32.26
Charitable Trust.
closure proces s last year, up
Frank's IneiiSure is esti26 Weel&lt;s
'&amp;4.20
The rise in foi'eclosures 53 paoent from 2006, and mated to cost $2.7 billion
52 Weel&lt;s
' i27.11
not only lmocks down what the rate of new foreclosures over the next five years and
OuleiCie ...... c-.ty
your bouse is worth - by looks likely to be even high- help some 500,!XXJ home13 Weeks
'53,55
$8,800 on average, accOrd- er this year.
owners. It woLild relax stan26 Wee!&lt;s
'107.10
ing
to
the
Pew
report
it
"High
rates
of
delinquendards at the Federal Housing
52 Weel&lt;s
'21421
also means there will he less cy and foreclosure can have Administration so it cowd
'
.

BY RM:Ia. 8a:l;
I&gt;P BUSINESS WRtlER

.The Daily Sentinel

or--

&amp;boclbo•-- .........

-·

"

back more affordable, fixedrate )oans for borrowers currently
too
financially ·
strappi:d to qualify. ,
.. Those homeowners coald
refinance into new loans if
their lenders agreed to take
substantial losses on 1:he
original
mortgages .
Borrowers . would have to
show they cowd afford -to
make payments on the new ·
loans. They would have·'to
share with FHA at least half
of their proceeds if they
profited from selling or refinan~ing again.
·
· The . House passed the
housing aid ' plan ·on
· '11lu!pday, but Pres1dent Bll'sh
says he will Veto the bill.
· During an interview with
The Associated .Press ·'on
Wednesday,
Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson
called the measure too
broad. He said the administration would continue
negotiating with Congress
for an acceptable bill, but he
did not offer any details of
what type of mongage relief
the administration would
suppon.
\.
"Housing is an imponant
area and there are certain
things that we need to get
done there fmm Congress,"
Pawson said. "I view my
job as to work to get something that is acceptable and
that tbe president can sign."
But while Washington fiddies, t\me is slipping by, housmg pnces are dropping lJlOfl'
and the crisis intensifies.

.

dents will deliver addresses
at Eastern High School's
51st commencement exercises at 2 p.m. on Sunday.
fromPageAI
1be following students are
named to the National expected to participate in the
commencement ceremony:
Honor R0 11 and th.e Um'ted
b · Andrew Todd Bissell, Justin
States
. Ach~veme t Allen Bissell, . Kathryn
Academy Ul fo~etgn Ian- ' Marie Bland, Megan Beth
guage, -math, sc1ence and
d ,
D . 1
anle . ~en
histocy, and is president of Bro enck,
the National Honor ~iety. Buckley, Alexander Jannson
He plans to attend The Burroughs, Nathan Kyle
Ohio State University to Jonathon . Carroll, . Joshua
study astronautical aero- Paul. Collins: Sasha Joann
space engineering on a Collins. Christopher. James
~Trustees Scholarship. He . Cowdery, Jonathen Scott
Co":dery, Ryan Danna
•hopes to work for NASA.
Werry attends the Chester Dav!s, · Sha~n~ . Matthe~
United Methodist Church. Davis,
Kat~n
Mane
'·She has played hasketba!J, Dewhurst, Juliane Dradm,
· volleyball and run track. ~ Mae Eason, Holly
She is a member of the Jennifer Edwards.
Kyle Wesl~y . Edwards,
.National Hono.r Society,
,Student Council, French Amanda Chris~ Fulks,
· .Club, Varsity '1':" Club and K,Yle Wendell Gordon,
Lindsey ~becca. Grate,
Educational Talent Search.

RACO plans annual
scholarship dinner
RACINE - Plans for the
annual scholarship dinner to
be held 6:30 p.m. on. May
27 at the Racine First
Baptist . Church Outreach
Center were made during lL
recent meeting o( the
Racine Area Community
Organiza.tion held at Star
Mill Park.
The dinner will be to
honor alJ scholarship recipi ents and · their · parents.
Another activity discussed
at the meeting was the May
13, 14 lllid 15 spring yard
sale to be held at Star Mill
Park. There will also be
auction on May 15 at 3 p.m.

following the yard sale.
Delores Cleland donated
a quilt for use in a later fund ·
raiser. The next food drive
was set for June 7 in downtown Racine with all proceeds to be donated to the
Meigs Cooperative Parish,
Kathryn Han presided at
the l;lusiness meeting during
which a thank you note was
read from the Meigs County
Council on Aging for a
recent donation . Officer
reports were given, Tonja
Hunter had prayer for the
potluck dinner, and Dave
Zirkle led in the pledge to
the flag to close the meeting.

Patrol
. •. Mich. cyclis't killed

SnM!Ine MiciJ;elle
ffi,
.
Cass1~
Mati~ Grueser,
Hauber,
· IICli~e in community service. Kathrine Mane Haym~.
. Ht:r academic recognition Hannah Lou Helgesen, Ciaig
. includes National Honor Roll, ~ Carter Hensley, Kelsey
U.S_ Aohievement Academy, Mtchelle Hol!ef. Dalton
COLUMBUS (AP) _
and return to Columbus on
• .Ohio ~ School Alhletic Ale~ J~s. Brandon · Tbe S~ .l:lighw.ay Patl'?l the second day.
, AsSOCJanon
Coulllgeous Scott Jones, S~lh&lt;t ~ · 'says' a b1cyclist taking part m .
Fifty -.s even - year·- o I d'''"
. Sludem. Award, the TVC . Jordan,,SaraLon:aineJotdan, the annual rour of the Sci.oto William , Crowley of
Academic Honor· Roll, and 'JYler Joseph Keams. .~
· · Valley was killed on Route Northville.• .Mich.,
rid- ·
·, was Chosen ·.as the Regional · J3!"ld Ale1&lt;ander ~uhn, · 23 when he wa5 struck from ing his bicycle north in the
•WIII'!i representative.
Christop~er
Michael behind by a motorist and right Jane when he was hit
. She plans to study pre- Laudermilt, Jesse Lee Long, thrown from his bicycle.
near Piketon at 'about 7:50
.med at The Ohio State
Joel An~w Lynch,
Cyclists in the two-day a.m. on Sunday. Troopers
University._
. .
Brandon Michael .Mahon, tour, which takes place each say he died at the scene.
Salutatonan Dav1s IS also Aaro;'!
Christopher year on Mother's Day
The patrol says the driver
.
weekend pedal the I 05 of the car was 35' year-old
.active in Eagles athletics, a Martindale.
four-year volleyball player,
J~natbon Zackana Newell, miles fr~m Columbus to Sara Bender of Lucasville.
three-year basketball player, ~. Jean Perdue, Afi?.ber Portsmouth the first day, She was. not injured.
. two-year track team 'member NJchole Pooler, Saralisha
. and two-year softball pl!lyer. Marie Powell, Trista Nichole
Kyle Andrew
Davis is also active m 4- Putman,
· H, French Club, Student Rawson, Kyle Datiiel Riley.
. Council, and concert band. Tony Ray Roush, k, Jared
. She serves as vice president Tyler Russell, Nicholas
of the National Honor Arthur Schultz, Cortne.Y
PM
1-\'111, Pre-Needs , CreaoOUon. F.. Soniot .t D1nct Boriol
Society and vice president Darlene ~oc. Matt Lewts
rv.. willooo Jerry- ,..,......y to lodp y...... .u )'WI' p d )
of the senior class.
Sebo, Adrian Kayleen Stover,
Davis is a member of St. _Kenneth Waya.: Vogelsong,
· Paul Lutheran Church in Sarah Kristine Wachter,
Pomeroy and plans to study Morgan Raeann Werry,
FemiiJ 0wne11
_secondary education at the Hea:ven ~Ann Westfall,
Jony
F....... Director In CNorgo
Jus!Jn Michael Whaley,
University of Rio ,Grande.
304-773-5561 Moooo, wv~
The four outstanding stu- Nilcita Dawn Young.
Werry
is 4-H
president
·.Wbiz
Kids
Club of
andthe
is

Ohio. during annual bike tour
was

2nc1-

..

·~.

'"!.

·.

\

Tucbri

Tiger reaches past mesh barrier,
injures Toledo Zoo official.
TOLEDO (AP) - The
Toledo Zoo says a tiger
reached through a double
mesh barrier and injured a
zookeeper. sending the
keeper to the hospital with
three lacerations to the
chest.
Zoo officials say the
employee was doing nonnal
rounds at about 8:30a.m. on
Sunday and was in an area
where he had worked before
without any problems.
The zoo says one its two
female tigers was somehow
able to get a paw through

,;!t'o,

the mesh at an odd ;mgle.
The keeper was treated and
released at a local hospital.
The Zoo was not open at
the time of th e incident.
Spokeswoman
· Andi
Nonnan says officials are
reviewing whether the zoo
needs to make changes to
the tiger exhibit.

~'i&lt; :-; C.!f
.

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-

I"EEffOMM~ .-I.RTStTh11J

May 10

"'

.. T~i

County
Gospel
Homecoming
Doors open 7pm
Box 01'fice: 428 2nd Ave.

Gagipoli., OH (7411) 446-ARTS

&amp;YW! Now ~&lt;an OWI1 the PICture cA ttw.t umorvetaa~
~Int. ne
p er Photo&amp; become~
when tr.med or pnnted on a l'nl.lg 01'" mouee !»d.

IMfMnt

.,

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�PageA6

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
__,_

Monday, May 12, zooS

D'A 1

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

a .........
B2

g 1 ..,;..-... •

..

'flibs!Knjrts jab, Pacell

AP IMPACT

Boat canying
aid for cyclone
victims sinks

Nutttber of disabled veterans rising

Mooday, May 12, 2WI
~ScHEDULE

Marauder boys second, girls third at Vmton County meet

POUERIJ'f- A Ktwduk!l of ~ higtl
school WITSity ~rting tiiii'M'r\S involving
tNms fmm Meigl; County.

.....

-----nor
--·7

7

rounded'

S1IIH' R&amp;w1

12

X

SPORTSOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

(5) Meigs at (4) Wavotly, 5 p.m.

.

· VQID&gt;N COUNTY The boys and girls track and
field teams &amp;om Meigs High
School were at Vmton
County Thursday, corning
away with a second-place
boys finish and .a third-place

.M.igs at Southern, 5 p.m.
1

1

. . . .

.

Eastern, *'as. Southam at

Neloonvllo-'16rit- TVC Meet, 4 p.m.

7'

' ·- H

girl~ finish.

(6) Meigs at (3) Wavotty, 5 ~!m . .

'Dwy

2 -~~

. . , . .

,,

7

Wlnnor afTrintJie.Souii&gt;Golllo gll!IOIII.
(2) Sou111em, 5 p.m.
af-rfom.MIItor- at (1)

· -.sp.m.

-.n. Meigo, Sou1hem a1

\.

-'tbrk-TVC1Aee1, 4p.m.

tOth Annual Eagle
Basketball Camp
TUPPERS PLAINS -

Easti:rn High School will be
!hlillding its I'Oth Annual
~ Bask$all Camp on
May 27 mrough 3(i) from 9
.a.m. to .noon for boys and
girt~ entering grades 4, 5,

Athens won dre boys meet
wit!h : 11&lt;1 points. The
Marauders finished with 91
plilints, one point ahead of
third-place V'mton County.
· WeHston,
Southeastern,
FMmrl Hooking, and Miller
wem fomdr drrougb seventh.
The BulldGgs also won the
gir!.s meet, finishing with
1585
points.
Federal
Hooking was second with
121, followed by the Lady
Marauders with 117 .5.
Vmtorl County, Miller, and

Wellston
out fourth
13.30
seconds,
while
tbrougb sixth.
Soulsby took the girls 800m
Meigs had a total of 12
run with a time of 2:37.40.
first-place finishes, either
Smith won the boys 400m
from .individuals or relay
dash, finishing in ,54 .80 sec~
teams, · with · six from the
onds.
boys and six from the girls.
In second place in the boys
Seniors Brandan Fisher
110m hurdles was sophoand Melissa Grueser led
more Jacob Well with a time
Meigs with dual first-place
of 17.60 seconds. In fifth
was teammate junior teamfinishes.
Fisher won the boys 1OOm
mate Crockett Crow, who
dash with a time of 11.30
finished in 19.10 seconds.
Well also placed fifth in
seconds and the 200m dash . The Meigs boys and girls
with a lime of 23.40 sec- 400m and 800m relay teams · the 300m hurdles, finishing
were also tops.
in 47.70 seconds.
onds.
Willford's
winning
throw
Sophomore Ashley Good
Gtueser won the girls shot
put with~ throw ' of 29' and was 41 '4.5". Along with finished second behind
.the discus with a throw of Wtllford was junior Mason Grueser in the shot put. Her
Metts placing in the. boys throw was 25'6".
78'6".
Other .individuals talcing shot put, where he took third Junior Adrian Bolin took
first place were senior with a throw of 38' 9". He second in the girls I OOm
Cassady Willford. juniors also took third in the discus hurdles, finishing in 16.82
·Catie Walfe and Devan with a throw of 119'2".
seconds. Senior teammate
Saulsby, and sophomore
Wolfe's winning time in Casey Smith placed fow1h
Jeremy Smith.
the girls I OOm dash was with a time of 18.30 sec-

Camp sta1if will ·include
p~ers and coaobes fron:l
·the 2007-08 fHS boys and
¢s baskclball teams. The

.

.

·•

~

BYT-wm
ASSOCIAiED &lt;PRESS

CLEVELAND - While
his famous daddy got
dressed after .the game, 3year-old LeBron lames Jr.
practiced writing bis letters
and numbers oo a dry-erase
board inside the Cavaliers'

Beltran, Chutch
homer as Mets
beat CioCy 8-3

eamp will focus on fundamentals, lll0St of Which are looker room.
used by players of .all levels,
First, he drew an L..Then,
a
2.
.
1bat are essential fur pro"Put up a 2 and 3 for me,"
ducing winning 'basketball.
. Cost per •player will lbe Na. 23 llilh:l his little name.
$35 pre-registration or $45 sake. '
Maybe
a
2
and
1 w0uld
firs.t day
camp.
lncluded in the cost will ~ have been more appr0priate.
The Cavaliers have trimmed
a camp T-shirt.
Cliecks · should be made Bostoo's lead in half.
1be shots didn't drop
payable to Eastern Athletic
. Boosters. Check!; and regis~ again for James, and it hardtration fotms should be sent ly mattered. His teammat.es
to Howie Gddwell at 4087.8 made DlliiSt &lt;Of theirs.
fames soomd 21 pointsoo
Old
'Seven ' Road,
another
.off-Shooting night,
Reedsville, OH 45772 or at
Eastern Hi,gb School, 38900 but Delonte Wem ·scored 21,
SR 7, R:eeds,.,ille, OH l0e Smith had 17 .and the
·Cavaliers raced .tlil a large,
45772 ..
early lead in Game 3 in a
168-84 victory Saturday
15th Annual Meip
· night .o ver :the road-chalFootball Golf tourney lenged· Boston 'C eltics to
pull within 2-1 in their playoffs¢es.
MASON, W.Va. - The
West, who spent three
15th Annual Meig~ Football seasons wearing Celtic
Golf ToiJJ'Ilarnent .will be · green and white, carried the
held Saturday, ·May 31, at scoring load for the
the Riverside Golf Course Cavaliers, who are attempt8:30a.m.
ing to become the 14th team
: For more infmmation, in NBA histary to come
contact Meigs football back. from an 0-2 deficit and
coach Mike Chancey at win a best-of-seven series.
746-992-2158 or 740-992'Ibey've bad practice at it.
00M.
Last year, the Cavaliers
lost the first two games of
1008 Meigs flag
the Eastern Conference
finals to Detroit before beatFootball Regkttation ing the !Pistons four in a row
to advance to the finals for

BY IIACIIEL CoHEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

of

at

ROC~SPRINGS

Registration is now open for
the 2008 flag football seasen, QPeD to boys and girls
in gra~s 1-6 beginning
with ·the 200S.()9 school
year. Re.gistration fee is $40
per player, and $25 for each
..
additional •sibling.
The games will be played
!ltarting in September on the
Meigs High School practice
field. final date fM registration is July 1st, and payment
mum also be received by
.July lm. A workout/combine will be htld on July
. :!6th at 9 a.m. at Meigs High
School. All checks must be .
made
to .. Me{gs &lt;
F lag .
Football League, P.O. Box
75 I , PoJile!Uy, Ohio 4~7fi9.
. To register online or fer
·more information go to
www.meigsffl.com or call

In June

tlbe @allipolifllail!' cttibunt
Pomeroy DaDy Sentinel

tloint tllta~nt ltt~ifttr
wDI be publishing Its'

2111

our·

.

',seau..

?40-141-1222.

GALLIA • MASON
&amp; MEIGS COuNTIES

CoNTACrUS

TA Com•unications
E~ste~ Av~:J:.' .
OH
7

;

1-74().446-2342 8l(l. 33

, .
,__1-7_3008

~~- sports0mydaliyl«l11nel.com

.7~-44~9711

SD0J11 Stiff

Eric Rmldolph, Sport. WrHI?r

..._,.,••ur•n.o.,..,,,_..,.,_,,_,L41..,.,...,.

(740) 446-2342, .... 33
'!fllnaolphOmydaHyoentinel.com

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..._._.sA
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...

aryan Wallin•, Sport. wrtter
(740) 446-2342, .... 33
bwalle!110mydaily1rtbune.oom

Llny Crum, Spol1s Wrtlar

(740) 446-2342, Old.33
ICrumOmydoliytagl-.com

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·James, Cavaliers shoot down Celtics 108-84

aDd6.

dle

onds.
Smith had fourth place
finishes in the 300m hurdles
and the pole vault, as well .
Her time was 58.40 seconds
in the hurdles, and she
cleared 6 ' 0.01 " in the pole
vault.
Two
other
Lady
Marauders placed behind
with Wolfe in the I OOm
dash. Senior Patti Vining
was third with a time of 14
seconds, and junior Whitney
Johnson was ·sixth with a
time of 14.51 seconds.
Junior Kimberly Swisher
was fourth in the 3200m run,
fini'shing in 14:00.50.
Vining was fowth in the
high jump, clearing 4'2.02",
and Junior Jessica Holliday
was siltth, clearing 4' r.
Johnson was fifth in the
200m dash, wbere her time

t1le fu:st time. After ~
ping Games 1 and 2 m
Boston, Cleveland needed
James (8-of-42 in the losses) to shoot his way out of a

PIs·-·

m

AP p5lalo

Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James dunks against the Boston Celtics in the first quarter of
Game 3 ill the NBA basketball Eastern Copference semifinals Saturday in Cleveland.

NEW YORK - Carlos
Beltmn and Ryan Church
hit hack-to-hack. homers in
the fifth inning to support .
Oliver Perez and lead the
New York Mets to an · s-3
victory Sunday ove1' the
bumbling Cincinnati Reds.
The Reds batted out of
order in the ninth after an
earlier double switch, with
backup catcher David Ross
coming tO the plate in the
No. 8 spot instead of Corey
Patterson. Ross flied out to
right. Once Mets manager
Willie Randolph informed
the umpires of the mistake,
the out was charged to
Patterson after a prolonged
discussion by the umpires,
and Ross batted again. This
time, he singled.
Reflecting their inconsistent offense, the Mets hadn't hit back-to-hack home
runs this season before
Saturday. They've now
done it twice in two days.
Perez (3-3) got his first
win since April 19, though
the left-hander still had
trouble with his command
at times .
Jeff·
Reds
shortstop
Keppinger had a hit in
seven straight at-bats before
striking out in the eighth.
He went 5-fo.r-5 in the second game of Saturday's
doubleheader before adding

Plrwe ~et~ a.cy, 82

Busch.overcomes penalty, car
.and Darlington stripe in win
BY .IENNA FlrYER
~

ASSOCIATED

~RESS

DARLINGTON, S.C.
The crowd ~ him. He
called hi&amp; car pathetic. H~
crew mi~d a lug nut, and
be couldn't
sta~
off
Darlington Racewaf s wall.
Despite it all, Kyle Busch
found Victory Lane once
again.
NASCAR's least popular
driver raced tu his third
Sprint Cup Series victory of
the season Saturday ,!light,
winning a battle of attrition
at the track. "Too Tough to
Tame."
. "How many times did 1 hit
the wall? I don't !mow, one,
two, three, four, probably
five or sill," Busch said .
"I've got to thank. my team.
they build them as strong as
they can for me, 'cause I like
to !mock the walls down
with them."
Busch 's victory hardl y
APph040
thrilled the crowd, which
Driver Kyle Busch holds up three fingers for his third win as he celebrates with his team in viciously booed him in previctory lane alter the NASCAR Dodge Challenger 500 Sprint Cup series auto race at the race introductions and badDarlington international Raceway, in Darlington. S.C. Saturday.

n 't softened by the time he
look the checkered flag .
Already loathed by many, he
enraged Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s
massive fan base by wreckin/! him as the~ ~d for the
w1n last week m Richmond.
It created a frenzy of
hatred toward Busch, but the
23-year-old driver tuned it
out and focused on what he
does best: winning mt es.
The win was his .eighth of
the
season . spanning
NASCAR 's top three series,
and he has won most of
them in very convincing
fashion . This one was no
different, as Busch led a
race -hi~h 169 of the 367
laps rn a Toyota he
described early in the race as
the "most pathetic'' he ' d
ever driven.
He also overcame every
speed bump thrown his way
to become the youngest winner on NASCAR ·, oldest
superspeedway.
"Darlington showed again

PI

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•
&lt;

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•

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811Sd1, a1

�PageA6

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
__,_

Monday, May 12, zooS

D'A 1

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

a .........
B2

g 1 ..,;..-... •

..

'flibs!Knjrts jab, Pacell

AP IMPACT

Boat canying
aid for cyclone
victims sinks

Nutttber of disabled veterans rising

Mooday, May 12, 2WI
~ScHEDULE

Marauder boys second, girls third at Vmton County meet

POUERIJ'f- A Ktwduk!l of ~ higtl
school WITSity ~rting tiiii'M'r\S involving
tNms fmm Meigl; County.

.....

-----nor
--·7

7

rounded'

S1IIH' R&amp;w1

12

X

SPORTSOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

(5) Meigs at (4) Wavotly, 5 p.m.

.

· VQID&gt;N COUNTY The boys and girls track and
field teams &amp;om Meigs High
School were at Vmton
County Thursday, corning
away with a second-place
boys finish and .a third-place

.M.igs at Southern, 5 p.m.
1

1

. . . .

.

Eastern, *'as. Southam at

Neloonvllo-'16rit- TVC Meet, 4 p.m.

7'

' ·- H

girl~ finish.

(6) Meigs at (3) Wavotty, 5 ~!m . .

'Dwy

2 -~~

. . , . .

,,

7

Wlnnor afTrintJie.Souii&gt;Golllo gll!IOIII.
(2) Sou111em, 5 p.m.
af-rfom.MIItor- at (1)

· -.sp.m.

-.n. Meigo, Sou1hem a1

\.

-'tbrk-TVC1Aee1, 4p.m.

tOth Annual Eagle
Basketball Camp
TUPPERS PLAINS -

Easti:rn High School will be
!hlillding its I'Oth Annual
~ Bask$all Camp on
May 27 mrough 3(i) from 9
.a.m. to .noon for boys and
girt~ entering grades 4, 5,

Athens won dre boys meet
wit!h : 11&lt;1 points. The
Marauders finished with 91
plilints, one point ahead of
third-place V'mton County.
· WeHston,
Southeastern,
FMmrl Hooking, and Miller
wem fomdr drrougb seventh.
The BulldGgs also won the
gir!.s meet, finishing with
1585
points.
Federal
Hooking was second with
121, followed by the Lady
Marauders with 117 .5.
Vmtorl County, Miller, and

Wellston
out fourth
13.30
seconds,
while
tbrougb sixth.
Soulsby took the girls 800m
Meigs had a total of 12
run with a time of 2:37.40.
first-place finishes, either
Smith won the boys 400m
from .individuals or relay
dash, finishing in ,54 .80 sec~
teams, · with · six from the
onds.
boys and six from the girls.
In second place in the boys
Seniors Brandan Fisher
110m hurdles was sophoand Melissa Grueser led
more Jacob Well with a time
Meigs with dual first-place
of 17.60 seconds. In fifth
was teammate junior teamfinishes.
Fisher won the boys 1OOm
mate Crockett Crow, who
dash with a time of 11.30
finished in 19.10 seconds.
Well also placed fifth in
seconds and the 200m dash . The Meigs boys and girls
with a lime of 23.40 sec- 400m and 800m relay teams · the 300m hurdles, finishing
were also tops.
in 47.70 seconds.
onds.
Willford's
winning
throw
Sophomore Ashley Good
Gtueser won the girls shot
put with~ throw ' of 29' and was 41 '4.5". Along with finished second behind
.the discus with a throw of Wtllford was junior Mason Grueser in the shot put. Her
Metts placing in the. boys throw was 25'6".
78'6".
Other .individuals talcing shot put, where he took third Junior Adrian Bolin took
first place were senior with a throw of 38' 9". He second in the girls I OOm
Cassady Willford. juniors also took third in the discus hurdles, finishing in 16.82
·Catie Walfe and Devan with a throw of 119'2".
seconds. Senior teammate
Saulsby, and sophomore
Wolfe's winning time in Casey Smith placed fow1h
Jeremy Smith.
the girls I OOm dash was with a time of 18.30 sec-

Camp sta1if will ·include
p~ers and coaobes fron:l
·the 2007-08 fHS boys and
¢s baskclball teams. The

.

.

·•

~

BYT-wm
ASSOCIAiED &lt;PRESS

CLEVELAND - While
his famous daddy got
dressed after .the game, 3year-old LeBron lames Jr.
practiced writing bis letters
and numbers oo a dry-erase
board inside the Cavaliers'

Beltran, Chutch
homer as Mets
beat CioCy 8-3

eamp will focus on fundamentals, lll0St of Which are looker room.
used by players of .all levels,
First, he drew an L..Then,
a
2.
.
1bat are essential fur pro"Put up a 2 and 3 for me,"
ducing winning 'basketball.
. Cost per •player will lbe Na. 23 llilh:l his little name.
$35 pre-registration or $45 sake. '
Maybe
a
2
and
1 w0uld
firs.t day
camp.
lncluded in the cost will ~ have been more appr0priate.
The Cavaliers have trimmed
a camp T-shirt.
Cliecks · should be made Bostoo's lead in half.
1be shots didn't drop
payable to Eastern Athletic
. Boosters. Check!; and regis~ again for James, and it hardtration fotms should be sent ly mattered. His teammat.es
to Howie Gddwell at 4087.8 made DlliiSt &lt;Of theirs.
fames soomd 21 pointsoo
Old
'Seven ' Road,
another
.off-Shooting night,
Reedsville, OH 45772 or at
Eastern Hi,gb School, 38900 but Delonte Wem ·scored 21,
SR 7, R:eeds,.,ille, OH l0e Smith had 17 .and the
·Cavaliers raced .tlil a large,
45772 ..
early lead in Game 3 in a
168-84 victory Saturday
15th Annual Meip
· night .o ver :the road-chalFootball Golf tourney lenged· Boston 'C eltics to
pull within 2-1 in their playoffs¢es.
MASON, W.Va. - The
West, who spent three
15th Annual Meig~ Football seasons wearing Celtic
Golf ToiJJ'Ilarnent .will be · green and white, carried the
held Saturday, ·May 31, at scoring load for the
the Riverside Golf Course Cavaliers, who are attempt8:30a.m.
ing to become the 14th team
: For more infmmation, in NBA histary to come
contact Meigs football back. from an 0-2 deficit and
coach Mike Chancey at win a best-of-seven series.
746-992-2158 or 740-992'Ibey've bad practice at it.
00M.
Last year, the Cavaliers
lost the first two games of
1008 Meigs flag
the Eastern Conference
finals to Detroit before beatFootball Regkttation ing the !Pistons four in a row
to advance to the finals for

BY IIACIIEL CoHEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

of

at

ROC~SPRINGS

Registration is now open for
the 2008 flag football seasen, QPeD to boys and girls
in gra~s 1-6 beginning
with ·the 200S.()9 school
year. Re.gistration fee is $40
per player, and $25 for each
..
additional •sibling.
The games will be played
!ltarting in September on the
Meigs High School practice
field. final date fM registration is July 1st, and payment
mum also be received by
.July lm. A workout/combine will be htld on July
. :!6th at 9 a.m. at Meigs High
School. All checks must be .
made
to .. Me{gs &lt;
F lag .
Football League, P.O. Box
75 I , PoJile!Uy, Ohio 4~7fi9.
. To register online or fer
·more information go to
www.meigsffl.com or call

In June

tlbe @allipolifllail!' cttibunt
Pomeroy DaDy Sentinel

tloint tllta~nt ltt~ifttr
wDI be publishing Its'

2111

our·

.

',seau..

?40-141-1222.

GALLIA • MASON
&amp; MEIGS COuNTIES

CoNTACrUS

TA Com•unications
E~ste~ Av~:J:.' .
OH
7

;

1-74().446-2342 8l(l. 33

, .
,__1-7_3008

~~- sports0mydaliyl«l11nel.com

.7~-44~9711

SD0J11 Stiff

Eric Rmldolph, Sport. WrHI?r

..._,.,••ur•n.o.,..,,,_..,.,_,,_,L41..,.,...,.

(740) 446-2342, .... 33
'!fllnaolphOmydaHyoentinel.com

t
'· ._..,
......,...::::•:'*:':•=:-==d~~r~•-•••·llr-Jrar_
..._._.sA
:t ...................
...

aryan Wallin•, Sport. wrtter
(740) 446-2342, .... 33
bwalle!110mydaily1rtbune.oom

Llny Crum, Spol1s Wrtlar

(740) 446-2342, Old.33
ICrumOmydoliytagl-.com

•

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·James, Cavaliers shoot down Celtics 108-84

aDd6.

dle

onds.
Smith had fourth place
finishes in the 300m hurdles
and the pole vault, as well .
Her time was 58.40 seconds
in the hurdles, and she
cleared 6 ' 0.01 " in the pole
vault.
Two
other
Lady
Marauders placed behind
with Wolfe in the I OOm
dash. Senior Patti Vining
was third with a time of 14
seconds, and junior Whitney
Johnson was ·sixth with a
time of 14.51 seconds.
Junior Kimberly Swisher
was fourth in the 3200m run,
fini'shing in 14:00.50.
Vining was fowth in the
high jump, clearing 4'2.02",
and Junior Jessica Holliday
was siltth, clearing 4' r.
Johnson was fifth in the
200m dash, wbere her time

t1le fu:st time. After ~
ping Games 1 and 2 m
Boston, Cleveland needed
James (8-of-42 in the losses) to shoot his way out of a

PIs·-·

m

AP p5lalo

Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James dunks against the Boston Celtics in the first quarter of
Game 3 ill the NBA basketball Eastern Copference semifinals Saturday in Cleveland.

NEW YORK - Carlos
Beltmn and Ryan Church
hit hack-to-hack. homers in
the fifth inning to support .
Oliver Perez and lead the
New York Mets to an · s-3
victory Sunday ove1' the
bumbling Cincinnati Reds.
The Reds batted out of
order in the ninth after an
earlier double switch, with
backup catcher David Ross
coming tO the plate in the
No. 8 spot instead of Corey
Patterson. Ross flied out to
right. Once Mets manager
Willie Randolph informed
the umpires of the mistake,
the out was charged to
Patterson after a prolonged
discussion by the umpires,
and Ross batted again. This
time, he singled.
Reflecting their inconsistent offense, the Mets hadn't hit back-to-hack home
runs this season before
Saturday. They've now
done it twice in two days.
Perez (3-3) got his first
win since April 19, though
the left-hander still had
trouble with his command
at times .
Jeff·
Reds
shortstop
Keppinger had a hit in
seven straight at-bats before
striking out in the eighth.
He went 5-fo.r-5 in the second game of Saturday's
doubleheader before adding

Plrwe ~et~ a.cy, 82

Busch.overcomes penalty, car
.and Darlington stripe in win
BY .IENNA FlrYER
~

ASSOCIATED

~RESS

DARLINGTON, S.C.
The crowd ~ him. He
called hi&amp; car pathetic. H~
crew mi~d a lug nut, and
be couldn't
sta~
off
Darlington Racewaf s wall.
Despite it all, Kyle Busch
found Victory Lane once
again.
NASCAR's least popular
driver raced tu his third
Sprint Cup Series victory of
the season Saturday ,!light,
winning a battle of attrition
at the track. "Too Tough to
Tame."
. "How many times did 1 hit
the wall? I don't !mow, one,
two, three, four, probably
five or sill," Busch said .
"I've got to thank. my team.
they build them as strong as
they can for me, 'cause I like
to !mock the walls down
with them."
Busch 's victory hardl y
APph040
thrilled the crowd, which
Driver Kyle Busch holds up three fingers for his third win as he celebrates with his team in viciously booed him in previctory lane alter the NASCAR Dodge Challenger 500 Sprint Cup series auto race at the race introductions and badDarlington international Raceway, in Darlington. S.C. Saturday.

n 't softened by the time he
look the checkered flag .
Already loathed by many, he
enraged Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s
massive fan base by wreckin/! him as the~ ~d for the
w1n last week m Richmond.
It created a frenzy of
hatred toward Busch, but the
23-year-old driver tuned it
out and focused on what he
does best: winning mt es.
The win was his .eighth of
the
season . spanning
NASCAR 's top three series,
and he has won most of
them in very convincing
fashion . This one was no
different, as Busch led a
race -hi~h 169 of the 367
laps rn a Toyota he
described early in the race as
the "most pathetic'' he ' d
ever driven.
He also overcame every
speed bump thrown his way
to become the youngest winner on NASCAR ·, oldest
superspeedway.
"Darlington showed again

PI

I ,-/

•
&lt;

\

I
•

''\

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).,

•

l .•''

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'. ' -.

" '

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., ...

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. ,, '· ···Joo \

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811Sd1, a1

�Monday, May 12, 2008

-.mydailysentinel.eom
.

.

.

www.mydailyaentinel.com

first impression D'~~~~n~ ~~0~~~:~:!:

c-s

ASSOOioi.TED PR£SS
NBA's highest-paid \JOaOh- and wish h1m ..well 11:1 h!s
"Everybody went through shown tbe quietness and
liT
Du!lt:M
es.
1be Olicago Bulls also nen challenge, Suns prestASSOCI..TED PRESS
college once. Everybody running ability to really get it
NEW
YORK
Mik.e
interviewed
D' Antoni for dent and general manager
was a rookie," Slaton said. done." ·
.
D'
Antoni
bas
agreed
to
their
roaching
job.
Steve Ken: said in a stateHOUSlON
Steve ult's just the learning phase
Slaton left college a y~
Messages were left for ment "We will now be
Slaton fumbled a pitch on and a transition, but I feel early, after coach Rich coach the New York
Knicks.
bringing
his
entel"D'
Antoni and his agent, met!hodical in the process of
one play and got his helmet very comfortable.'"
· Rodriguez left for Michigan .
taining
offensive
style
from
Warren
l..eGarie.
finding our next head ooacb
knocked off on another at the
Slaton made a smooth Slaton and Mountaineers
the
Phoenix
SllllS
10
a
lam
D'i\ntoni
replaces
lsiab
and
we' re excited about lbe
Houston TeXans minicamp. jump from high school to quarterback Pat White
Later, he dodged three oollege, rushing for I, 128 acoollDt.ed for 13.433 total coming off one·of the worst Thomas, who was fiNd in potential candidate~-" .
New Kniicts pres1dent
would-be taclders and sprint- yan:is and 17 touchdowns as .yards and I06 tooobdowns in seasons·in franchise history. April after the Knicb went
The
Knicts
released
a
23-:59,
tying
tbe
franchise
Donnie
Walsh had ~een
ed down the field. ·
a freshman at West VIrginia. their t:bree seasons· together
· 1be fonner West Vtrginia He ran for a school-record and they discussed the draft statement Saturday nigbbreroro for losses in a sea~ looking for a roach s~
saying they had agreed in son. D' Antoru will beoome removing Tho~ on A-pril
star, drafted by the Texans in 1,744 yards as a sophomore early after the Fiesta Bowl.
lbe . tbiid round, is getting and was the nation's fourthWhite, the same age, principle with D' Antoni lbe Knicks' sixth different 18. Walsh previously met
stayed i.o scfrool, but !he two . and that a press oonfereooe coach smoe the start of lhe with fonner Knicks gualll
plenty of snaps to show leading rusher.
and te'levision analyst Mark
coaclt Gary Kubiak what he · He missed spring practice have · kept in touch and would be held once the oon- 2002-03 season.
tract
bad
been
completed.
The
57-y-ear-old
Jackson
and Ktricks assiscan do. Now if he can only in 2007 following wrist Slaton has given White the
had
two
years
D'Antoni
led
lhe
Suns
ro
a
runt
Hero
~ill~ams. But
D'Antoni
memorize the complicated surgery and his numbers lowdown on his first days as
and $8.5 minion left on his :55-27 record las! season Walsh took his time to see
playbook..
dipped in Iris junior season. an NFL rookie.
coaches
would
~I'm just ttying to learn He developed a reputation
ul told him the playbook. Phoenix contract. Suns and was roach of lhe year in what
Robert
Sarver 200:5. He had a 232-96 reg- become available during the
the system, trying to get ~ for fumbling late in Iris col- it's a Jot more," Slaton saill owner
.
plays down so that I can lege
and coughed up "There's a lot more oovered wouldn't oonfirm lhat ular-season record dle past post_&lt;;eason.
He fo11.0d one who w3n at
make an impact right now," two on Saturday.
in one day. In college, you D '.Antoni had taken the four years, but the. Suns
Slaton. lhe 89th overall pick,
Running backs coach get a few days ,to install New York job earlier were eliminated in the first least 54 games each of the
said Saturday. "The pass Chick Harris said Slaton has things and then you keep Saturday, but said. "'Mike round by San Antonio last · last four seaso~.- The
plays and the pass protec- made "typical. rookie mis- working on it Now, there's a called me this morning to mo11.1h. The Suns eben g:ave Knicks, m~aowlnle, :are
lbank me, so I figured lhis D' ~ni pennissi.o n to coming .o ff ~herr seventh
lions, that's where my takes" in the first two days of lot more each day.''
·
'
jliii'SUC other openings.
strai~bt losing season and
biggest trou'ble · is coming minicamp. And be has ways
Slaton said he might as was up."
The oft'er is repOitedly for
"We appreciate all of haven ' t won a playoff game
from."
of helping Slaton hold Oil to well forget the offense that
The 5-foot-9, 197-pound the ball..
t theM
tam
"
g $24 mill.ion over
years, Mike's ·e fforts :and oon!ribu- since 200 I,
Slaton rushed for 3,923
"I can cure that," be said. pu
oun
eers amon
ards
.
fot
the
Mountaineers
"I'
ve
done
it
with
guys
the
nation's
top10 scoring
Y
teams in the last two seasons.
PeiU pitched more than six Carlos Delgado and Brian
and is third-in career rushing before. You. just bang 'em, '"We ran .no-huddle, so all
in the Big East. But that and bang ' ~ and bang ' em
innings for the first time dlis Schneider went back-tomeans nothing to tbe Texans, until they understa,nd the our plays, everything was
season. With !be Mets lead- back in the first game of
who have six running backs imponance of keeping the just done by hand signals,"
ing 6"(1 after lbe back-to- Sai:urday's doubleheader.
from PageBl
ball in your hands."
. Slaton said. "Here, the playNotes:
The
Mets
back homers, · be walked
00 the minicamp·roster.
Abman Green and Chris
Slaton is confident that he calling, there are so many
announced that Jets Night at
Griffey ro open the sixlib.
Brown are the top two on the can physically match up with formations and so many a single and triple S!lllday.
After a double, triple, Shea has been rescheduled
The Mets have llad at wild pitch and three deep for July 8 before their ..game
depth chart Green missed bigger, faster defenders than· plays .and different routes·
most of last season with a the ones be faced in college. you have to run. I~ wasn't least II hils in four of their flybaU outs, the Reds had against ·t!he San Francisco
left knee injury and Brown HaJris said it's hard to gauge overwhelming. I kind ·Of last fi "'e games. 1be one pulled wilhin 6-3.
Giants.. Former Jets players
·signed as :a free agent after how Slaton . bas .performed knew what it was going to be exception was a 7-.1 loss in
~ Mets,gQI two of those including flro Bowlers Joe
Saturday's
ni.ghtc.ap;
in
five seasons in Tennessee. because of bow .mucll the like."
baCk in the bottom of l(i(ecko and Wesley Walkr
whicl1
.
t
hey
m.anaged
just
Chris Taylor missed last sea- ooaching. 5taff has dtrown at
Harris ~&gt;aid Slaton bas
be honored during a
;(bey bad dul a.ty in the inning. Jose Reyes' hard pregame ceremony. The
son with a knee injury, him.
•alreadY shOwn plenty ofl:aw four.
grounder
down
the
thirda three-run fuost tnniQg ba.se liD.e went under Edwin original event was fllinf:d
Darius Walker played in only
Ranis . e.srimate4 that talent
.
Sunday.
four games and Arliss Beach S\llon's pia~ was about
" He's going to be fine,"
Jose Reyes led off ·wilh a Encamacion's glove for a out April 28. The Jets
spent last season on the l()O pages d!iot.
H&lt;Uris said. "He's got good
played at Shea from 1964single, stole second ~ two-'Out donhle. Dami~Jn
Dallas Cowboys' practice j "Sometimes, tihat mini- speed on the outside, be';; got scored on Luis Olstillo's Easley, wbo had replaced 83. ... Perez had a sncoes&amp;squad.
mizes all the things you can lhe explosiveness. He has .triple.
Castillo (left quadriceps dis- ful offensive day. He caught
·
·
They all have more NFL show," Haois said. "You're the skills, no question about
Castillo ripped a line oomfmt). at second, drove 1be Reds nappmg after be
ellperience than Slaton, but ttying to digest all this new iL This guy has been much dri.ve· to
rig~~t-G:Dtcr him in. The Mets added walked in the second
he doesn't think that's a dis- infunnalioo. But J've seen too successful to not he good · between K.on Gtiifey Jr. aod another run on a David inning, stealing second
advantage.
some spotS where. be's really enough."
·
Ryan Freet Griffey pdW Wright single with the help without a throw. lt was his
up at the last jiMIIIld, Mille . of a wild pitch that moved third career steal. He adcbl
a bunt single in lhe fourth
·
!"Feel .dived UDSIIIXESSfuU)' Easley tQ second.
Griffey remained stalled when Cueto tried to balleBplin, Vming, Wolfe, .and 11 :44.10.
for the baU, ~ mtlod aD
junior Emily Fields made
The boys 1600m and the way to the wall.
. at 597 home runs in his bid hand the ball and oouldn 't
up the girls 400m relay . 3200m relay teams both finDoubles by Adtm! ;and .to beoome the sixth )1layer get a grip on it ... Mets
team, and they woo with a isbed fifth. The 1600m teant . Moises Alou dmve in two with 000. He weut 0-for-2 reserve outfielder Angel
fromPageBl
with two walks and hasn't Pagan, wbo bruised the
~ of . 54.2{) .seconds. w.a s made up of junior mon; runs..
.
labrum in his left shoulder
homered
since April 23 .
was 31 seconds.
Bolin, Wolfe, FU?lds, and Brandon Hanning. sophoPerez cruised dlroUgh die
Wednesday, retumed as .a
Reds
rookie
Johnny
Souls~ won _the gids .800m . more Tyler Brothers, senior . first four innio.gs, allowing
Zach Wbitlach . placed relay w~ a tune 1:55.60.
Ma5on Conde, .a nd .onnbo- . ,just one hit. His 10i0ldlol. Cueto fell to 2-4 after pinch hitter. ... The Mets
sixth in the boys BOOm ~The g.uls ~~ relay more Jacob.Riftle., and~it started to 1\\ia\lCC in lbe fiMI, allowing just three . runs in have yet to pick a starter fOF
His time was 2:2{).20.
ttam. linlsbed tbiid Made .
when be wa!Ud Kq!picmu the first two starts of his Wednesdays game against
The boys 400m relay up .of team members time wa~ -4:l?AO. The and bit Fm:t with a p'lrch . career. After the lhree-run . Washington. They will
team, oonsisting of Smith, Soulsby, Wolfe, Bolin, and 320()m te~ was
.that bounced in die dilt.
first, be allowed just one bit probably call up a minor
Fisher, Crow, and senior · junior "Morgan Lentes, lheir Whit:lach, R!fHe, and Juruor
But he struck out Joey over the next ·three innings leaguer, Randolph said. ...
Cornelius English, won time was 4:43.70. Al.so tak- Andrew 0 Bryant. Thel£ , VoW&gt; 1p escape die jam. bel.iore running into trouble This was tbe Reds' last
. scheduled appearance at
with a time of 46.20 sec- ing dJit:d was the girls time was 16:06..50.
Perez fanned left-handed again in the filth.
onds. The boys 800m relay 3l00m•.,elay .team.. Soulsby.
The Meigs track teams hitters.llotto, P.atd Bako and
Beltran went deep with Shea before the Mets move
team, made up of the same Swislier, Holliday, · ·and Will be at the Tn-Vatl!;y A(jam Dunn two times Castillo abol!Jld, his first to a new park next year.
home run since April 24, Their record there is 126four runners, won wilh a freshman Morgan Howalll Conference meet Tuesday .apiece. ·
time of 1:35.
combined to · fi.nisb in in Nelsonville.
This wouldn•t be the day before Church connected. 131.

Qtrthune - Sentinel C LA S·S IF IE D

In One Week With Us
.

E1Mil

To Place
~eglster
tltrtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad. (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Todar•••
OrFuTo

()fftee M,~c

rour

Cincy

runs

wi.ll

HOW

:m
WRITE MAD.
Su
fu1Ads

Busch
fromPageBl

tonight it's one of tbe bani- ''Dadin~n striPe."
est places. Always bas been,
Bpscb was no exception,
always will he," Busch said bouncing hard off of it at
in Victory Lane. "We're least twice in what was an
going to go through a lot of eventful fight to the fmish.
Mac tools trying to fix this He was leading early in tbe
thing, but that's OK. They race but was (ienalized when
gave me such a race car."
his crew left a lug nut off his
An offseason repaving rear wbeel following a pit
project smoothed the aspbalt stop, cirowii\g him to 29th.
on the egg-shaped, 1.366He banJed his way back to
mile superspeedway, and the the front, patiently· picking
new surface gave the entire off
Jimmie
Johnson,
field fits. It inade the traclc E3rnbardt and finally seven· extremely fast and grippy, time Darlington winner Jeff
forcing Goodyear to bring a· Gordon to reclaim the top
very sturdy tire that could position. Froin there., the ·kid
handle the speeds ai)d sur- who chases ,the checkered
flag every time he' s on the
vive long runs.

track pulled away, forcing
spotter Jeff Dickerson to beg
him to slow down a mere 50
laps from tbe"fmisb.
"I know you are digging,
dude, but you've got to take
·car~ of that thing there,"
Dickerson radioed. "You're
scaring the ·fans . There's
not enough security up the
Tum 2 wall. Just nice and
easy."
But Busch isn ' t capable
of going slow, and he
stayed on the gas until tbe
fini sh while stretclring Iris
. Sprint Cup Series lead to 79
points over Jeff Burton.
"I can't tell · you bow
many times he tried to give
the race away by slamming
into the wall, his right side
· was destroyed," Gordon
said.
Carl Edwards finished

They've yet to win out- · all acquired in deals at the
side of Massachusetts dur- Feb. 21 trading deadlineing this postseason, not an who totaled 63 points, 20
encouraging sign for a team rebounds and six 3-pointfromPageBl
with its sights on 'a 17th ers. West -made four 3s,
league title. Tbe Celtics, Smith went 7-of-8 and
slump. ·
wbo
wasn' t
who went a league-6est 31- WaUaoe,
James was only 5-of-16 I 0 in away games during expected to .play because of
from the floor, but his team- the regular season, dropped an inner ear infection, gave
mates stepped it up, going a all three in Atlanta during Cleveland an .inside prescombined 32-'0f-54 (59 per- the first 1ound as the Hawks , ence
wbile
.guarding
cent). Cleveland roared to a averagell 100.7 points and Garnett.
32-13 lead after one quar- shot 47.6 pereent in three
Big Ben added nine
ter, led by l7 at half, 16 borne games .
points and nine rebounds.
after three and easily with"He gave us a big lift
"On the road it's going to
stood a few Boston counter take a little bit more .. . every- second that be was on
punches.
·
· we' ve got to Jearn our les- the.floor,flCavs coach Mike.
"We came out, jumped on son pretty soon," an agitat- Brown said.
them and didn'i give it ed Paul Pierce said. "We
The Cavs played a nearly
back," West said.
lOok our bumps. Hopefully, flawless first quaner. They
lames' 22.4 percent field · the guys are mad at the way shot 6:5 percent (13-of-20),
goal percentage in the first we played because I'm bad 11 assists on those field
three games is the worst of totally upset at the wa;; we goals and-didn't commit a
any. threergame stretch in played, especiaH)" With a , turnover. B.eyonl1 that,
playoff history since the great opportunity m front of Cleveland didn't rely on
1971-78 ABA-NBA merg- us."
.
James to carry bm, -as silt
Kevin
Garnett
scored
17
other
Cavs combined for 27
er. Still, he was only conpoints, Pierce 14 and Ray of the club's 32 points.
cerned about one thing ..
"Can you ask" a team to
''TIIC win is all that mat- · Allen 10 as Boston's Big 3
ters," be said. _ "I can't of superstars combined for play better ·. than that?"
·
James said. "That was
worry about bow I'm shoot- 41 points.
the
trio
was
no
maleh
unbelievable."
But
ing the ball."
AI halftime .. James only
1be Celtics remain lost for Cleveland's Fab Four of
West,
Wally
Szczerbiak,
had
seven points but the
on the road, and Game 4 is
Smith
and
Ben
Wallace
Cavs
were shooting 66 perMonday night in Cleveland ..

James

_...L...._ _ __.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

'.

i

-

--

second and was t~leased

with the OllfOOme .after ini·.fudly loothi'\g die ·new Slllface. ,
"Ky1ehadthebestcar.He
was pFellty uDbeatable,fl
Edwards said.
· . He was folllowed by
.Gordon, 'wbo was happy
with the finish but frustrat- .
ed be's still searching for
his first win of the season.
"We know we have some
work to do," G(lldoo said.
Earnhardt lini&amp;hcd fourth,
David~ w.as fifth and
was followed . lby Matt
Kenselh, Denny Hamlin
Busch's teanunatt at Joe
Gibbs · Racing. Travis
K vapil, Dave Blaney and
Bolton rounded out the top
10.
Almost every dri¥er
struggled in some sense,

cent (19-of-29) and moving .away from Pierce near the
Cleveland maintained its
· the ball on offense, some- free throw line and broke double-digit lead throughthing coach Brown has free for a two-handed, out the second half, and
insisted is · key if his team stare-at-the-rim dunk that closed out a game it had to
plans to advance past the sent Cleveland's hyped have. No team bas ever
league's · best defensive crowd into a . frenzy. overcome ail 0-3 deficit,
squad.
·
Wallace·. scored
twice something the Cavs don't
· While the Cavs got
110deme.ath . .
and .have .to worry about now.
from their bench, Bos.trin s Szczerbiak' s two free
Notes: · Varejao, who
.reserves didn't do . much.- throws put the Cavaliers up would have started if
James Posey .scored 11 but 18-6.
· ·· ·
Wallace couldn' t go, left in
Sam Cassell, who has given
James' next basket was a the -second quaner with a
· the Celtics lift went 0-for-6 3-pofulrf during a 9.() spun bruised right knee. He came
~d scored one point 1D 18 1hat Cleveland a 27-.8 lead back and played 2 112 mintrunutes.
on its way to a 19-point l,ltes in the thi.J;d .... There's
"It' s probably the worst advantage after
no doubt about Garnett's
ame we've played since
The Cavaliers were lead- pass.iqn on the hoop coutt,
've been a part of the ing 39-17 in the second but Cavs 7 -fnot-3 C
Celtics," said Cassell,- who quarter Wben lhis series had Z ydrunas Ilgauskas has his
joined the Celtics in March. its~ IIIOIIICnt Of tension. doubts about the Boston
AS he flu drivina io the superstar's love of soccer.
"Unfortunately, it l;llll1e at
the wrong time. We've got h•+et, 1-.nes wu lf8bbed Ilgauskas is a big fan -lit:
to regroup and get our lfOUIId tic aect by I'Qtey erally of powerful
SW~ back, get (!Olng m · and (ell awkwardly in die Manchester United, which
b
t 9uatter, this is the Jane. .He Uii4 faiJe down on is battling Chelsea for the
11e00nd mght in a row they ·tile. ~ ., bodl ~Cams English Premier League
came out blastin&amp; us in the ."dw!Jet' UJlY word11 and title. The teams will also
first quarter."
. AndereOD Vai:ejao and meet on May 21 in Moscow
Before the game, James Posey canaccl trdioicalil for · in the Cb~ons League
said a few "easy baskets" their~fmal . llgau
s was told
might help him get started.
The officiils huddled and Garnett was a Chelsea supHi s first one was both gave Posey a flagrant-1 for porter. "He's a fake fan,"
simple - and s~::J·
the hard foul, which Ilgauskas laughed. "What,
With the Cavs I ing 10- seemed to deter· the learns did he become a fan when
4, James poked tbe ball from more rough stuff.
he went to London?''

he'£

one.

f

... &lt;"

S

...-

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

·Wii•

Cllll,

F

lhe COli

'

tMI,.....

...

""""''""""'"' .......1

-----..--II Chihuahua, female, sPayed.
3 years old. 740-645-6987

.'r

~~

T

lOST DOG:

I .
•

Oftl~'/ftE

~

"GAWI'OUS·
·~"··aiQiui3AU'J"

I'

..,
NAn

19.

T-

6

Front

5. 11.I

'*~

®2001 b~~

wwu&gt;mics.com

IIFuWANIFD .11

110

Hw&gt;WAN"Illl
.
I

Aopa1r

m;;IS~n ::e•':nt::~us~

·-·······-········-········--·······530

Antlqueo••••.......
Apartment• for Rent •......... ·-··················-·· 440

· AuCtion and Flea ·Mitrldll.............................OIO

A.--··-·······-···-····-··

Auto Parts &amp;
760
Auto Repair ..................................................770
Autos for Sltle .....•............. -··············-······-·7f0
Boats &amp; u-ro for Sale·····-········-········-·· 750

· Bulldi111J Suppllea ••.•.••• _ .............................550

Love to cook?

Buolneoo and Bulldlnge ............................. 340
.. Buolnfta Oppartunlty •••- ......................... ..210
- . - ...........................710

An Exceltent ·wtftJ to earn
money. The New Avon.

. camping Equipment ...................... _ •......••. 760

canto of Thanluo .................... -.................... 01 0

Call Malllyn 304-882·2645

Child/Elderly Cant ....................................... 110

EleclrlcaiiRelrltllhalliM •••• ,..........................MO .
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or
Eciulp.-.llor Aont ...•••••••..••••••. _.................UO
Sell.

Excavating ...................................... - ••••••~...130

Shirley Spears, 9Q4.-

675-,~

Farm Equipment ..........................................flf 0
Farms lor Rent ........................................... -430 ·
Farm• lor Sale ..................... --······-······--·330
For Lease ..........••......•••••••,..........,•• _ .......... 410
For Sale ........................................................515
For Sale or Trade.........•·-·-··············- ..
Frutt. a Yep table a

'···-tiiO
·······-··-··········--····-·.:s.
Fumlahecl Rooma ...........•...."···---··---···..4&amp;0

Boggs PeBI Control, Inc. is
growing and looking for Pesl
Control Technicilns'a , male
Ot' ten'\MI . no 8JCP8rlence
requtrBd. Mull: h8va a dean
driving record
to
P8A drug toot. Good pulllic
relations; aelf mottwtecl.
Able 10 oiJtai1 pool conttul
r
within tile fifot
Muotbo
to work odd hOufa. aome
weekends. Of Interested.
pleMe apply il pei'lon by
brtn~ a resume to: 'Boggs
l'&lt;loii:Ontnii. Inc. 110 Boggs

-"cf ..,

Gentnl Hauii"'I··············-·····-·-·--······.IIICJ.

......040

, ~ Adtt ............................- .....1.••••• -.~
Hay I Gfllln ........ :..........
Help w-·····················- ······-············-··110

--··-··········-···...140 ~-

Hornelmprovementa ..................................l10

HDmHior Salo ............................................110
Houaehold Gooda ·······-·······-·······--,•••• ~.6111

Hou-lor .Rent ....................................:..... 410

In UemQrlam ·······-·········-,···•·--······-·····-~

Jneurance ................ ~.... - ....... -... ······-·····~ ••110
Lawn &amp;

G&lt;rrden EquJ.,.- ..............- .......

-.o

L l - k......................- ................-·-···-Loot IIRd Found ............................................ .

1.011 &amp; Acreage ···············-······-·-··-·-····-•

M-IIM1eoua..........................

J68..1100.toftfree

applications for AN and

40

Announcernent ..........._...........- ..·-·-··········030 •

Gl••w•Y ·· ·······-···~·-········-··~....-......-

.

Local Company looking for
part-time delivery person.
.
.
Applicant must have a valid
driver's license, ha~ good
.
.
customer relat1on skills and
J~rmtctlaeiOcareq.com be able to multi-task well.
Applicants will be subject to
baokground check before
hiring . If you wOuld like to
appl~. please send your
resume to: .P.O. Box 469,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 Cl.A
Box 101 .
-------

4x4'a For Sale ................................. - ..........121

-········-···-·110

Mlacell-• - ····-·········-·-·· · . Mobllo Home Repair ....... ...................,.........-

~-.-for
-··········-·············-·-420
le for Sltle ........................ , ••..•.320
Money to l.olln .................................... - ...... .220
Motoicrclel &amp;. 4 wt:aslars ..........................740

·

Nowttlatyour JO
' bsearch
checklist is compkfte give
lnfoCision a call!

~..-.....c..pavu
Exl2347
jabl..lufudliou.com

pany s n nt:nN an m llfl~r
toc~...J.
uaI whols 1'non·,~
• . _ rvu
"""""Applicant must be able to
organize and m~nage an
industrial kitchen prepare
and inventory
stock. as

trod .

1--YU .

.

.
Individual wiU be responsible
and Auto fo toad
tio
Mechanic needed Must own
r.
prepa~ n, presentools. 74o..J!8..8s4?
tatoo and quality to c:ompany ~andards. If you are
.
FEDERAL
inte rested
in appt~ing,

oo

Growmg Home Health Need someone to work on
AQencyl A &amp; l Home Care rental houses.Send resume
........,., · - CNA &amp; LPN'o t . •~~ p 0 • - ~e

Pomeroy.

w-.......................................

Sale···············-·····················..... 715
·······················-··························170
Van• For Satle ...............................................7211

Trucl&lt;a for

Uphololery

S•••

Wonted to Buy ·····-···········-······················ ... 010

W•nfefta Buy- F~
llsa .................. ll20
w8rlled To Do ········-·········•················-··...... 110
W-to Aent ...........................................c470
Yard Sale- Glllllpolla ....................................072
Yard SOle PVth61vJillkldla ................. : ....... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. ·······················-····· .. 071
I

7011-1869

,...r.n..,.

•

applications tor

at 1480 Life GuardS May 26- August
Gallipolis. work at the Swimming Pool.
............. 441 1393 foJ Sfdlled You
'ok the
ma~ P1
mup 8t City
Office or apply at 1.as6 Hall at 218 Fifth St. orVine.s
Jackson Pike, phone 441 - &amp; Roses at 401 Fifth St. &amp;
9263 for Passport/Privata turned in by May 21st

Jackson' Pike.

Care Office. Competitive
wages and benefits including health insurance and
mileage reimbursement .

the 31st St. bddge · by
Proctorville animal clinic.
lJttie Cae11rs it currently in Come )Din our team! 740.
808rch
of
Alltllatant 886-7623 EOE
~ lor our Gollipoli&amp;
location. We olio&lt; paid train- Holp wanted at Darst Home
7
992 5023
ing. paid ...:ation. Group Home. """
•
- l i n g and a&gt;t!pOtitiw Non COl. d!iver needed lor
wages. Plea8e lax """'""' tow trucl&lt; operator. Wil train.
to; 740-4186-7425
740-31!8-1154~

Compethive Starting Pay,
Paid vacation, PliO MaM&amp;,
Oitcounls,
~aurances
...
Interested
llppliconts May Appy Daily
9-4, Ra~ Care
C.nt8r. t113 Waahington
St.. Ravenswood. . WV
(3(1.1)273·9236
· FAK
RoforenDOI Required E.O.E.

vai-.

~r.m

~
•NOTICE•

NOT · to send money
throUgh the mail until you

investigate~

have
offering.

i

the

ctutte"s and in1eraction wtth

the residents. Applicant

insurance,

.
401 (k). vacatoo. bonu6 pay.

and &amp;a~ awards Qualified
~ms must ~ """ 23
yrs., have a ntin1r1&gt;Jm o1 1
yqr of oommerical drMng
experience &amp; clean MVR.

Cootact Kent at aoo
_ .

462·9365 Of fill out appiieation at W¥NJ rjtrucidng com
EOE

.

. .

accepted

•

Payme.nt could

sameasrent

Mongage
(740)367-QOOO

be the

Loca1ors .

=

~

~===ro=Ln=AN=~1
••~OTif:E••

All reel Htate ldvenlslng
in thia newap~~per ta
subject to the Fecter-.1
F•lr Houlling Act ot 1161
which mllkes it IUeg1l to

Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of
Financial
Office
of

lnstilulion 's

Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or
oblain a Joan. BEWARE
of requests tor any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Call the
Olfice
of
Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1-866278-0003 to learn if the
mort gage
broker or
lender
is
properly
licensed. (This ts a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley

advertiae "1ny
pretenmce, •mtt.tion or
dlecrtmlnatiOn bleed on
r•ce. color, ral'glon, MX
famlila:l statUI or ntttton•l
origin, or any intention lo
make .,y auch
p;lltetliiiCe, llmitaflan or
diKrimlnlltlon."

This newsp~~per wiU not
knowingly •ccept
.dveitiMments for reel
ISUite which ia in
wioWt:ion of the l•w. Our
rNdera are hereby
Informed that all

.; I

dwemrvos advertfaed In
· ·•
thlsnewapaperare

•vall•ble on •n equal

~.:::•:pport:::un::ilY:"":"::"·~

and 1 fireplace. Addi1ion of a
large Flonda room com
.otd Crew Ad ..behind fair- pletety cedar opens ont&lt;•
ground,3 br.,2bath loghome pat10 &amp; poot-area. Heated il .
full
basement:end
of ground pool enclosed by pn
Rd .quiat.3
mi.
from vacy fencing ,and land
Pomeroy.740
scaped . Fmished 2 ca1

L,

992·506711111
garage ·attached to house
. . - . . - - - - - - and finished &amp; heated 3 ca1
o down payment. 4 bed- garage
unatt~ched .
·rooms. Large yard. Covered Excell~n1 condition ready to
d&lt;lcl&lt;. Attached gersge. 7ol0· move in. $255.000.00, Call
(740)949·2217
367·7,29.

COUPOIS
CURRENT EVENTS

TECHNOWGY
n:r-~----, COMICS ......
jl!lll
Srnout.s
I
E ........
ME
JM,~

Poor Awperienoe wtth teml· Gllllpplls Career COllege
Unps and roll-oft~ is~ (Ca~rs CIO&amp;e To Home)

1ul

homeinstaadolrenting.

i--iiFORiiiliSII'ALEiiiil-.,1.

==-===~

. dental

PAYMENr programs 1or you to buy you r

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lNG CO. recommends

------Wanted: Full·Time posttion
availat:Me to assist indiviclu·
als with mental retarda~ion.
at a group home in Bidwell:
~-tme Dental Assistant, 8a-4p
Su:
3:30-11p
9KPE1rien~ helpful, but no1 M!Tu/WfTh. Must have high
required, deliver Resume in school diploma!GED. valid
person to 2922 Jackson Driven&gt; license and three
Ave , Pt. Pleasan1 ask tor years good driving experiConnie
ence. $7 .75/hr. E~tcellent
Position available for an bonefrts package_ Pre- Publishing Company)
Assistant House manager to employmen1 Drug Testing.
Send resUine to: Buckeye
work evenings nightS and
'
Com
munity Services, PO.
weekends at a shatter for
.-~
ft\JI'U!OI\Jl"VU..
woffien
and
children. Box 604, Jackson, OH
~
.annucant must have high 45640 or e-mail to: ~- __
""t't' I d.
serv@yahoo.com. Oeadl•ne
t Dutili)IO~ I ~-· eqlutalvake- tor applicants : 5/1 6/0B
TURNED DOWN ON
n.
es l!lCu.....,. n
Equal
Opportunity SOCIAL SECURrrY ISSI?

semi·d~mps

..........................,.-......

. suv·.ror Sale....................- ....................... 7211

Apply

a~copting

vides services lor ~du~ ~ =w~~~~~ou=. h~:s.
do1181opmontal dl&amp;abllltJes.
Must !lave a valid Ohio driv·
1-666-403·2582
..,. license and High School flollonalllump Dri-.
diploma or GEb.
Sand R&amp;J Trucldng is seeking
re~ume to :
_ Meigs quolified CDL-A drive" to
lnduolrios. lrn: . P.O. Box 307, operate
for
Syracuse, Ohio 45779.
regional routes. We feature

.

-a••·························-··························e.-

LPN's .

~

.............,
,
o. ~···~- . . . gup, r'rr ,
. Coort&amp;ido Bar and Gnll now for '-'""'""" a~d. Gallia
00 45269.
for Sale ................................................ 510
seei&lt;Jng qualified applicantS Counties. Muot _,.,,. . trans..
,
Plumbln1 &amp; -1"11 ....................................8211
fot' bartender and food run- portat1on, motivat•on and Now hlrtng emptoyees10 llit,
· Pe lsaaiorllll S..lricM ......................... _ ..... 230
""'· Apply in peraon or call ·caring attitude. We offer up andpredeliver lawn and
-lo, TV I C1 ~ ............................... 110 -441
·9371 to schedule and waekem:' differential pay, ag eQUipment. Fax reaume
-~
-.-.~
310
Interview. 308 2nd Ave, OJI'T'C)8tltive wages &amp; bene- to 7~ 9104
School• lnslructlan ................... - ••....•..•...... 150
Clalipolis.
~do~
lleodble ~uAieoks. PT LPN
•~~~- •
Seed, P18nt I Fen-.............................. 150
11 •mrnv. BIJ8Jta,1,1111'.
------~. ,...
--. - .......,.....,..... ,. nre
_liltuotlona
1211
Dependable
babvsirter abou1 our Sign on bonu&amp;. Bemg Accepted For A
Space lor Rerrt ................•..••.....•••••...•••••••...• 410
needed.
Ratorences Give us a call Of come in to PT /Posalble FT LPN 2
. Sporting Goodtt ........................................... 5211
nKJ!ired. Pktale call 7~ see us. We are just west at Evenings, 2 Mictnigttts.

lllualcllllntotrumenta .•.••••...••••••;.................. 57D

iiir~
10:;;;~n;;;;.~;;;;--~;;;;;;;;;;;l

------' 1own of Haven now

must be atMe to work independent!~ and have good
people skills. Interested
•. POSTAL JOBS
please send your resume to applicants may apply to;
$17 89 s2B.27/hr now hlr P.O. Box ~9. Gallipolis, Personnel, P.O. Box 4S..,
. · ·
. . .:
• Ohio 45631 ClA 801&lt; 101
Galtipolls. OH 45631 by May
'"11· For application and tree - - - - - - - ' - 28
jot&gt; info, call Meigs lndusttleo.lnc. hlr· ::::.·
American Asaoc:. of Labor t · ing a Janttorial Crew Leader
POST OFFICE NC1'N
913-599-8226. 2 41hrs. emp. and
Substitute
Crew
HIRING
&amp;erv.
Leaders, Experience in janAvg. Pay $20/hr or .
·OitMrat F81'111
itorialfcustodijtl work pre-·
S57K/yr. inctuOes ··
...lniBnllnce
!erred. -Meigo Industries pro· Federol BeMflts, Or.

~

PIII08I to World

reference must

well as manage mcomtng procedures answering crisis
and
outgoing
foods . calls shett~ housekeeping Em~r.

EICp8fieneed Truck

Rpad. Oak Hill, OH 45656. Tractor eJ&lt;perience 8
NO PHONE CALLS.
I
w-~•
E .
- - - - - - - P us, .
attng,
Mowing,
Light
Fence
CAREERS!
Work &amp; Brush Cleaning
]obe304-458-1727 call after
.
.com 8pm
answer leave
learn how to become pan message

.

Always

eKperil'nenting with new
ideas? You may be who we
.are looking for. A. ~- I com
_. d ...~
I I ~~ o1

=__.,

mone mtile TOP TEN Best

Letter of interest ,

Athens-Meigs Educational
Service Center, 320-1!2 E.
Main St., Pomeroy, OH
45769. Equal Opportunity
Employer/Provider.

Equipment

walk~n

closet. FA, LA w/ brick FP.
Fenced yard w/ in QI'O\Jfld
pro. $140,000. Shown by
appt 441-8202

==~ ~:,~:~" ~~;~~" :~ut&gt;J:O'::.• : :':,.:1;:~ci~rtect crl!drt

Technician for farm and/or Home Health Care 9 ?U1h Otuo ~ley Home Health,
lawn Equipment repair &amp; East OhiO" curre~ly hlnng Inc. hlnng STN_A, CNA,
maintenance. Must have Ho~e Health Atdes tor 1-lome Health A•.d es and
experience Must be abte to ~~gs Co .. you must be cer- Personal Care Aides, Full
·
. it·~ t1fied or currently haw one Time and Per Diem posiuse . computer
on a 11m _, year exper·.,nee , call 1·uuu= 11.ons ava1"lobie. Accepttng
·
ba
C
tT

•

Will h&lt;llp with

suh w/ den and lrg

·

Intervention Specialist certi·
tlcatlon Is required . Salary
ba&amp;ed on certification and

resume and

r

OU

bereceill9dby12;00p.m.
~ay 19. Submh to: John D.
Costa,nzq, Superintendent,

• •

446-2842
n
p, so d tra·n
1wanted to buy Junk Cars, compa Y span . ra
haal;th
msurance,
call 740-386-0884. tr no lng,
matching retirement con1ri·
answer, leave a mesaage. buf
nd
'd holtd
can Gall Collect
F~c;' ~~~ or E~

Business TflllnllliJ ····-·-···-.-········-··········140

after 6pm

closing Cost 304•593--Bfm

Disabilities~======~

r '" mviQS

IIFuWANnD I

•i l l .
• •

Absolute Top Doltlllr • sil·
coins,
any'
Inside at 57 Burnett Ad, ~r/gold
Mon·ThL:tr ~7, Sat 9-5, Sun 10K/14Kii8K gold jewelry,
1-5. Antiques. Tony Stewart dental gold, pre 1935 US
currencw, proof/mint sets,
Cars, Glassware, Clothes
'
diamonds. MTS Coin Shop,
151 2nd Avenue, Galltpolis.

Compere &amp; -

Ath&lt;lns-Meigs

fits.

10

968.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

John D.

Submll to

1ea

7404&amp;7-IMlZ

•••ljr...

~

Ed1JC8tional Ser.~~ice Center
has an available pos~ion tor ,
a che
Multiple
T
· u~
c nty

..

-3br. 2ba. approx 1 acre .
Great
Neighborhood
Sunset Lane (Pt. Pleasant )
304-8 12·5021
304·593·

Athens-Meigs EducatiOnal LaWn-Care Service, MowinQ
Service Center, 3201f2 E. &amp; Trimming. Free Estimates 4BR, 3 bath, 2268 sq.ft. at
Main St., Pomeroy, OH Call (7 40)441 · 1333 or 576Jay0r. Spaciousmaster

May 18 9-3

w.TO~~
.ouT

1

Costanzo, Superintendent,

The

Sl~~motions.

l ·r

Ib Do
,

45769. Equal Oppanunlty (740)645-0546
Employer/Provider.

Dally Admission $4.00
- ~~
ti'VENOOATABLES$25

Ygo'Su£ ·I
::::;:::::==~·

i

1i"'

0

6453-=378-&lt;l262.
ltiJ
WANDD

Babysi1 in your home, ARC _:....__ __
_ __
oertlffad, Contact Raven at 4br, 2 AC, Pool, Country
receivedby12:00noonMay
N
H
s 1 ~ 500
992·7930.
ow aven.
~.
ca11

s.~u-.179-5
-r

.r
a

'4CS

.

Sun

with
spaylrabies u ICheduted.
REWARD 1.304-901-D403

,~.1•

'&amp;.-D~
'\OF..

·Comloot Inn

-•
tf you 'fall in kMt
her but let me

~out

.

IIAAIETTA, OH

!OO"D temale dog. Blonde
with datker muzzle.

/..bl'"•t..

·GUN SHOW a SAlE

.c..~&gt; Creel&lt;

~ ~. lhllggy

aru:

Educational
Certification, Salary based
on certification and experienco. This poshion has
Board approved ben&lt;&gt;lits.
letter of intereSt , resume
and references must be

~'''b

follow
It 3pm.Thanks for your sup- ·

·FIIIIIII!IIII
"'•~ . ~

books, old collections of Estates on Santllill Ad. 8 ·
every thing .. 105 Mill ing $160,000 304-674-5999
St,Middlepor1.2 :00· 7: 00 or 304-675·1566
Aide Wed,Fri,Sat. Ph. 740.591·

I

w

n m

Athens-Meigs Schwinn Airdine Exerciser
3br, 2 112 ba, &amp; FR. 2 ca·
100's cit 33,45,78 records garage &amp; in ground pool an
motorcycle &amp; parts, tools, 3.65 acres @ Greenbrier

The

dollar a bag.
Da S llh ill

· ~~

ru~Jrw

__

and

~oo by

~

.,,_ _ _ _ __

Educational service Center
ts seeking an educational
aide for Ueigs County
Schools. MUB1 meet Highly
Qual~ied Standard for Ohio

ur

"'u.,

'r·

:-:-::-:-=-=-----------.., ,1.
IIFuWANm&gt; ' 110 ~
~-----·

Kffr::::=":-:C-::A-::R=L:=YLE---·
kitncorlylfl8&lt;:omcost.net

·1

Call304-675-8164

Of__,..

I

Ractne, kids. women's. jun-

•tree•~-nsto......_......__ day

.,

e:.

Borders$3.00/perad
Graphics SOC for smaU
s1.00 for tai"C)e

any lid • ..,, &amp;.. El'f'On mlllt a.~ on tt. firlt dlr of ~ ....cl tt.
:
1:1• fDr na .... tt.nh com cif'lhl!l ~ DDCUpiMI br herTar Mid ontythatkwt w-t~on. W.ehlfl not De I..._ for
•ny . . . Dr . . . . .
fnMn the P' II 11 • or omiMkwl ol.- Mlw• liw•••L Corr.ctian wtllbe mMie m tt. flm ••IW.«fftton . • au.~
.e ,...,..contidlftti.a. • ~ rMI Clll"dllf'PII-. • All ~I_... .t..m..m.m. ... eubfKI: 10 the .....,., FWr Mousing Act at 1• . • Th611 IWA J J
IICIWplltvniJMip _..... •
.-..ttng IOE alliiidaoda. W. will not knowingly~ . .,. .w.ru.tng tn vtotlllon cr1 the law. Will not ttl tMpOMible fof q
.,..in ........_. over1hl....,..
Publllhlng ~ lhe rigid ao-. ..;.ct.

- i p yanhale2 blaa&lt; i&lt;lttons. 1 male. 1 Star Mill Pari&lt;, May 13 &amp; 14
temate about 8 weeks old. from 9to 4, and'May 15-trom
Call 740- 367 •711 5
9to2.May 15-halfprlce
·

oponolble lor

(.:l

added to your dassified ads

. ..m

Ohio.,...,.s' t : will IIIIo

fi'OUCI:I:
Tl'illlunol &amp;e:otil al 7

,, ••

iora, plus, men's, name7-414:1..-. "'Du lllighl: brand dothing, household,
· ~1111!!
fumittn, VCA's, Chainlaw,
j handmade cloc*s, to much
Gn'Elw.w
to Hoi.

will

~~~o~s:~:FAcl

PuiMicadon
su..._y Df..,.,.y: 1:DD
'Jbu...._y for Sundap

~-., 7. .7~71

Tribune-Son!

dvertlsements

In l'lhPrt: o.y~. Paper
Sunday ln-c::Jolumn: 1:00 p.m.
For SUndays P.aper

~

" ' - - - - - - - ·· 8 'family. Moo, Tues. Wed.,
behind ¥Donie Lodge in

Errur1 RoacJI'lodonlho

O!Olhon

A11 DNplay: 12 Noon 2
e...a._ tMys Prior To

D
\17 •JndutleA 'Price • AIMiid &amp;llbreriat:iolt
• I~tl!hone ............ . . . _ . , . _ , . . . . . .

~'I

ad•tanr--

Iller

How you can have borders and CJraphics

Dlsolay Ads

• All _. IIIU.t be pn!pllld'

r-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; c~t:ul
..

Ohio Volley
Publilhing 16Wiril
the rlgtrt 11&gt; odll,
rejoct or concat Ol1f

/)~tltirec

Dally ln-colun~n: I.::GD op.n1.
Monday Friclaiy for In.ertlon

•-.tYeur ....... A..,r•=••llldlldeDK

Shouklllodude n- !tans
ToHelpGeta :on-...

Hanning,

The oombination of tlie
smOOth smfaoe, bard .tires
111111 natrow racing tine put
passiilg at .a premiUJII, and
fon:ed several ·drivers, into
the wall for ·the infamous .

Word Ads

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

Meet ·

and the problems started nothing compared to what
early, with Blioti Sadler pole-sitter Greg Biffle felt
losing oontrol of his car on after leading 95 laps, only
the second lap of t!he race to end lri s night ewl y wilh a
- squeelling Tooy Stewart broken timing belt. The part
failed after he'd already
into the Twn 1 wall.
two
loose
"I just made a huge mis- overcome
take," . Sadler said. "I just wheels,. and the crew errors
went in too !Jow ·into Tum I. had Biffle seething after his
.
I was actually trying to give early exit.
"I give 11 0 percent as a
Tony more room and I just
got loose under him and driver all the ume and you
spun into him. I know be's just wapt your equipment to
prett)' mad at me, but notb- last and be able .ttl win these
m_g I did intentionally. I've ·races," said Biffle, a highly
never had any problems sought after free agent who
with him, and don't want to has yet 'to reach a contraC!
start it tonight."
extension with Rousli
The incident prevented Fenway Racing.
Stewart, winner of Friday
"You can deal with a flat
night's Nationwide Series · tire or sometjllng like that,
race, from ever running but when it' s se·l f-induced,
wilb the 1e~ and be fin- it makes it even !harder. It
ished a frustrating 21st.
makes it so hard to swalB11t Stewart's angst was low."

www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydai.lysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR
NOW ·ONLINE

.

classijied @mydailytriblme:com

=

Webs~es :

Call Today! 740·446-4367.
1-800·214-0152
_ ""llipOI«..-rcollege eOu
~ Men!Mr Act:~
c.cud

u

11

ENT RTAIN NT

and more

•••

1 4ut Collll&amp;-

======---.

Security Ollioero . - in ,.. ..,_ ""'"
New Haven, WV, S7 .00 •
$7.66 P8f hour, shift W'Of1&lt;..
hauro vary. Muat- a high

ochOO diploma "' GEO,
- . , criminal history, drug . IICfeen ond bact·
ground chod&lt;. Gall 1-800275-83511 M-F 8;30 to :00.
EEO.MFll\1

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Read your
~andleom

sl&gt;mefhing todOy!

The Daily Sentinel
992-2155

�Monday, May 12, 2008

-.mydailysentinel.eom
.

.

.

www.mydailyaentinel.com

first impression D'~~~~n~ ~~0~~~:~:!:

c-s

ASSOOioi.TED PR£SS
NBA's highest-paid \JOaOh- and wish h1m ..well 11:1 h!s
"Everybody went through shown tbe quietness and
liT
Du!lt:M
es.
1be Olicago Bulls also nen challenge, Suns prestASSOCI..TED PRESS
college once. Everybody running ability to really get it
NEW
YORK
Mik.e
interviewed
D' Antoni for dent and general manager
was a rookie," Slaton said. done." ·
.
D'
Antoni
bas
agreed
to
their
roaching
job.
Steve Ken: said in a stateHOUSlON
Steve ult's just the learning phase
Slaton left college a y~
Messages were left for ment "We will now be
Slaton fumbled a pitch on and a transition, but I feel early, after coach Rich coach the New York
Knicks.
bringing
his
entel"D'
Antoni and his agent, met!hodical in the process of
one play and got his helmet very comfortable.'"
· Rodriguez left for Michigan .
taining
offensive
style
from
Warren
l..eGarie.
finding our next head ooacb
knocked off on another at the
Slaton made a smooth Slaton and Mountaineers
the
Phoenix
SllllS
10
a
lam
D'i\ntoni
replaces
lsiab
and
we' re excited about lbe
Houston TeXans minicamp. jump from high school to quarterback Pat White
Later, he dodged three oollege, rushing for I, 128 acoollDt.ed for 13.433 total coming off one·of the worst Thomas, who was fiNd in potential candidate~-" .
New Kniicts pres1dent
would-be taclders and sprint- yan:is and 17 touchdowns as .yards and I06 tooobdowns in seasons·in franchise history. April after the Knicb went
The
Knicts
released
a
23-:59,
tying
tbe
franchise
Donnie
Walsh had ~een
ed down the field. ·
a freshman at West VIrginia. their t:bree seasons· together
· 1be fonner West Vtrginia He ran for a school-record and they discussed the draft statement Saturday nigbbreroro for losses in a sea~ looking for a roach s~
saying they had agreed in son. D' Antoru will beoome removing Tho~ on A-pril
star, drafted by the Texans in 1,744 yards as a sophomore early after the Fiesta Bowl.
lbe . tbiid round, is getting and was the nation's fourthWhite, the same age, principle with D' Antoni lbe Knicks' sixth different 18. Walsh previously met
stayed i.o scfrool, but !he two . and that a press oonfereooe coach smoe the start of lhe with fonner Knicks gualll
plenty of snaps to show leading rusher.
and te'levision analyst Mark
coaclt Gary Kubiak what he · He missed spring practice have · kept in touch and would be held once the oon- 2002-03 season.
tract
bad
been
completed.
The
57-y-ear-old
Jackson
and Ktricks assiscan do. Now if he can only in 2007 following wrist Slaton has given White the
had
two
years
D'Antoni
led
lhe
Suns
ro
a
runt
Hero
~ill~ams. But
D'Antoni
memorize the complicated surgery and his numbers lowdown on his first days as
and $8.5 minion left on his :55-27 record las! season Walsh took his time to see
playbook..
dipped in Iris junior season. an NFL rookie.
coaches
would
~I'm just ttying to learn He developed a reputation
ul told him the playbook. Phoenix contract. Suns and was roach of lhe year in what
Robert
Sarver 200:5. He had a 232-96 reg- become available during the
the system, trying to get ~ for fumbling late in Iris col- it's a Jot more," Slaton saill owner
.
plays down so that I can lege
and coughed up "There's a lot more oovered wouldn't oonfirm lhat ular-season record dle past post_&lt;;eason.
He fo11.0d one who w3n at
make an impact right now," two on Saturday.
in one day. In college, you D '.Antoni had taken the four years, but the. Suns
Slaton. lhe 89th overall pick,
Running backs coach get a few days ,to install New York job earlier were eliminated in the first least 54 games each of the
said Saturday. "The pass Chick Harris said Slaton has things and then you keep Saturday, but said. "'Mike round by San Antonio last · last four seaso~.- The
plays and the pass protec- made "typical. rookie mis- working on it Now, there's a called me this morning to mo11.1h. The Suns eben g:ave Knicks, m~aowlnle, :are
lbank me, so I figured lhis D' ~ni pennissi.o n to coming .o ff ~herr seventh
lions, that's where my takes" in the first two days of lot more each day.''
·
'
jliii'SUC other openings.
strai~bt losing season and
biggest trou'ble · is coming minicamp. And be has ways
Slaton said he might as was up."
The oft'er is repOitedly for
"We appreciate all of haven ' t won a playoff game
from."
of helping Slaton hold Oil to well forget the offense that
The 5-foot-9, 197-pound the ball..
t theM
tam
"
g $24 mill.ion over
years, Mike's ·e fforts :and oon!ribu- since 200 I,
Slaton rushed for 3,923
"I can cure that," be said. pu
oun
eers amon
ards
.
fot
the
Mountaineers
"I'
ve
done
it
with
guys
the
nation's
top10 scoring
Y
teams in the last two seasons.
PeiU pitched more than six Carlos Delgado and Brian
and is third-in career rushing before. You. just bang 'em, '"We ran .no-huddle, so all
in the Big East. But that and bang ' ~ and bang ' em
innings for the first time dlis Schneider went back-tomeans nothing to tbe Texans, until they understa,nd the our plays, everything was
season. With !be Mets lead- back in the first game of
who have six running backs imponance of keeping the just done by hand signals,"
ing 6"(1 after lbe back-to- Sai:urday's doubleheader.
from PageBl
ball in your hands."
. Slaton said. "Here, the playNotes:
The
Mets
back homers, · be walked
00 the minicamp·roster.
Abman Green and Chris
Slaton is confident that he calling, there are so many
announced that Jets Night at
Griffey ro open the sixlib.
Brown are the top two on the can physically match up with formations and so many a single and triple S!lllday.
After a double, triple, Shea has been rescheduled
The Mets have llad at wild pitch and three deep for July 8 before their ..game
depth chart Green missed bigger, faster defenders than· plays .and different routes·
most of last season with a the ones be faced in college. you have to run. I~ wasn't least II hils in four of their flybaU outs, the Reds had against ·t!he San Francisco
left knee injury and Brown HaJris said it's hard to gauge overwhelming. I kind ·Of last fi "'e games. 1be one pulled wilhin 6-3.
Giants.. Former Jets players
·signed as :a free agent after how Slaton . bas .performed knew what it was going to be exception was a 7-.1 loss in
~ Mets,gQI two of those including flro Bowlers Joe
Saturday's
ni.ghtc.ap;
in
five seasons in Tennessee. because of bow .mucll the like."
baCk in the bottom of l(i(ecko and Wesley Walkr
whicl1
.
t
hey
m.anaged
just
Chris Taylor missed last sea- ooaching. 5taff has dtrown at
Harris ~&gt;aid Slaton bas
be honored during a
;(bey bad dul a.ty in the inning. Jose Reyes' hard pregame ceremony. The
son with a knee injury, him.
•alreadY shOwn plenty ofl:aw four.
grounder
down
the
thirda three-run fuost tnniQg ba.se liD.e went under Edwin original event was fllinf:d
Darius Walker played in only
Ranis . e.srimate4 that talent
.
Sunday.
four games and Arliss Beach S\llon's pia~ was about
" He's going to be fine,"
Jose Reyes led off ·wilh a Encamacion's glove for a out April 28. The Jets
spent last season on the l()O pages d!iot.
H&lt;Uris said. "He's got good
played at Shea from 1964single, stole second ~ two-'Out donhle. Dami~Jn
Dallas Cowboys' practice j "Sometimes, tihat mini- speed on the outside, be';; got scored on Luis Olstillo's Easley, wbo had replaced 83. ... Perez had a sncoes&amp;squad.
mizes all the things you can lhe explosiveness. He has .triple.
Castillo (left quadriceps dis- ful offensive day. He caught
·
·
They all have more NFL show," Haois said. "You're the skills, no question about
Castillo ripped a line oomfmt). at second, drove 1be Reds nappmg after be
ellperience than Slaton, but ttying to digest all this new iL This guy has been much dri.ve· to
rig~~t-G:Dtcr him in. The Mets added walked in the second
he doesn't think that's a dis- infunnalioo. But J've seen too successful to not he good · between K.on Gtiifey Jr. aod another run on a David inning, stealing second
advantage.
some spotS where. be's really enough."
·
Ryan Freet Griffey pdW Wright single with the help without a throw. lt was his
up at the last jiMIIIld, Mille . of a wild pitch that moved third career steal. He adcbl
a bunt single in lhe fourth
·
!"Feel .dived UDSIIIXESSfuU)' Easley tQ second.
Griffey remained stalled when Cueto tried to balleBplin, Vming, Wolfe, .and 11 :44.10.
for the baU, ~ mtlod aD
junior Emily Fields made
The boys 1600m and the way to the wall.
. at 597 home runs in his bid hand the ball and oouldn 't
up the girls 400m relay . 3200m relay teams both finDoubles by Adtm! ;and .to beoome the sixth )1layer get a grip on it ... Mets
team, and they woo with a isbed fifth. The 1600m teant . Moises Alou dmve in two with 000. He weut 0-for-2 reserve outfielder Angel
fromPageBl
with two walks and hasn't Pagan, wbo bruised the
~ of . 54.2{) .seconds. w.a s made up of junior mon; runs..
.
labrum in his left shoulder
homered
since April 23 .
was 31 seconds.
Bolin, Wolfe, FU?lds, and Brandon Hanning. sophoPerez cruised dlroUgh die
Wednesday, retumed as .a
Reds
rookie
Johnny
Souls~ won _the gids .800m . more Tyler Brothers, senior . first four innio.gs, allowing
Zach Wbitlach . placed relay w~ a tune 1:55.60.
Ma5on Conde, .a nd .onnbo- . ,just one hit. His 10i0ldlol. Cueto fell to 2-4 after pinch hitter. ... The Mets
sixth in the boys BOOm ~The g.uls ~~ relay more Jacob.Riftle., and~it started to 1\\ia\lCC in lbe fiMI, allowing just three . runs in have yet to pick a starter fOF
His time was 2:2{).20.
ttam. linlsbed tbiid Made .
when be wa!Ud Kq!picmu the first two starts of his Wednesdays game against
The boys 400m relay up .of team members time wa~ -4:l?AO. The and bit Fm:t with a p'lrch . career. After the lhree-run . Washington. They will
team, oonsisting of Smith, Soulsby, Wolfe, Bolin, and 320()m te~ was
.that bounced in die dilt.
first, be allowed just one bit probably call up a minor
Fisher, Crow, and senior · junior "Morgan Lentes, lheir Whit:lach, R!fHe, and Juruor
But he struck out Joey over the next ·three innings leaguer, Randolph said. ...
Cornelius English, won time was 4:43.70. Al.so tak- Andrew 0 Bryant. Thel£ , VoW&gt; 1p escape die jam. bel.iore running into trouble This was tbe Reds' last
. scheduled appearance at
with a time of 46.20 sec- ing dJit:d was the girls time was 16:06..50.
Perez fanned left-handed again in the filth.
onds. The boys 800m relay 3l00m•.,elay .team.. Soulsby.
The Meigs track teams hitters.llotto, P.atd Bako and
Beltran went deep with Shea before the Mets move
team, made up of the same Swislier, Holliday, · ·and Will be at the Tn-Vatl!;y A(jam Dunn two times Castillo abol!Jld, his first to a new park next year.
home run since April 24, Their record there is 126four runners, won wilh a freshman Morgan Howalll Conference meet Tuesday .apiece. ·
time of 1:35.
combined to · fi.nisb in in Nelsonville.
This wouldn•t be the day before Church connected. 131.

Qtrthune - Sentinel C LA S·S IF IE D

In One Week With Us
.

E1Mil

To Place
~eglster
tltrtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad. (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Todar•••
OrFuTo

()fftee M,~c

rour

Cincy

runs

wi.ll

HOW

:m
WRITE MAD.
Su
fu1Ads

Busch
fromPageBl

tonight it's one of tbe bani- ''Dadin~n striPe."
est places. Always bas been,
Bpscb was no exception,
always will he," Busch said bouncing hard off of it at
in Victory Lane. "We're least twice in what was an
going to go through a lot of eventful fight to the fmish.
Mac tools trying to fix this He was leading early in tbe
thing, but that's OK. They race but was (ienalized when
gave me such a race car."
his crew left a lug nut off his
An offseason repaving rear wbeel following a pit
project smoothed the aspbalt stop, cirowii\g him to 29th.
on the egg-shaped, 1.366He banJed his way back to
mile superspeedway, and the the front, patiently· picking
new surface gave the entire off
Jimmie
Johnson,
field fits. It inade the traclc E3rnbardt and finally seven· extremely fast and grippy, time Darlington winner Jeff
forcing Goodyear to bring a· Gordon to reclaim the top
very sturdy tire that could position. Froin there., the ·kid
handle the speeds ai)d sur- who chases ,the checkered
flag every time he' s on the
vive long runs.

track pulled away, forcing
spotter Jeff Dickerson to beg
him to slow down a mere 50
laps from tbe"fmisb.
"I know you are digging,
dude, but you've got to take
·car~ of that thing there,"
Dickerson radioed. "You're
scaring the ·fans . There's
not enough security up the
Tum 2 wall. Just nice and
easy."
But Busch isn ' t capable
of going slow, and he
stayed on the gas until tbe
fini sh while stretclring Iris
. Sprint Cup Series lead to 79
points over Jeff Burton.
"I can't tell · you bow
many times he tried to give
the race away by slamming
into the wall, his right side
· was destroyed," Gordon
said.
Carl Edwards finished

They've yet to win out- · all acquired in deals at the
side of Massachusetts dur- Feb. 21 trading deadlineing this postseason, not an who totaled 63 points, 20
encouraging sign for a team rebounds and six 3-pointfromPageBl
with its sights on 'a 17th ers. West -made four 3s,
league title. Tbe Celtics, Smith went 7-of-8 and
slump. ·
wbo
wasn' t
who went a league-6est 31- WaUaoe,
James was only 5-of-16 I 0 in away games during expected to .play because of
from the floor, but his team- the regular season, dropped an inner ear infection, gave
mates stepped it up, going a all three in Atlanta during Cleveland an .inside prescombined 32-'0f-54 (59 per- the first 1ound as the Hawks , ence
wbile
.guarding
cent). Cleveland roared to a averagell 100.7 points and Garnett.
32-13 lead after one quar- shot 47.6 pereent in three
Big Ben added nine
ter, led by l7 at half, 16 borne games .
points and nine rebounds.
after three and easily with"He gave us a big lift
"On the road it's going to
stood a few Boston counter take a little bit more .. . every- second that be was on
punches.
·
· we' ve got to Jearn our les- the.floor,flCavs coach Mike.
"We came out, jumped on son pretty soon," an agitat- Brown said.
them and didn'i give it ed Paul Pierce said. "We
The Cavs played a nearly
back," West said.
lOok our bumps. Hopefully, flawless first quaner. They
lames' 22.4 percent field · the guys are mad at the way shot 6:5 percent (13-of-20),
goal percentage in the first we played because I'm bad 11 assists on those field
three games is the worst of totally upset at the wa;; we goals and-didn't commit a
any. threergame stretch in played, especiaH)" With a , turnover. B.eyonl1 that,
playoff history since the great opportunity m front of Cleveland didn't rely on
1971-78 ABA-NBA merg- us."
.
James to carry bm, -as silt
Kevin
Garnett
scored
17
other
Cavs combined for 27
er. Still, he was only conpoints, Pierce 14 and Ray of the club's 32 points.
cerned about one thing ..
"Can you ask" a team to
''TIIC win is all that mat- · Allen 10 as Boston's Big 3
ters," be said. _ "I can't of superstars combined for play better ·. than that?"
·
James said. "That was
worry about bow I'm shoot- 41 points.
the
trio
was
no
maleh
unbelievable."
But
ing the ball."
AI halftime .. James only
1be Celtics remain lost for Cleveland's Fab Four of
West,
Wally
Szczerbiak,
had
seven points but the
on the road, and Game 4 is
Smith
and
Ben
Wallace
Cavs
were shooting 66 perMonday night in Cleveland ..

James

_...L...._ _ __.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

'.

i

-

--

second and was t~leased

with the OllfOOme .after ini·.fudly loothi'\g die ·new Slllface. ,
"Ky1ehadthebestcar.He
was pFellty uDbeatable,fl
Edwards said.
· . He was folllowed by
.Gordon, 'wbo was happy
with the finish but frustrat- .
ed be's still searching for
his first win of the season.
"We know we have some
work to do," G(lldoo said.
Earnhardt lini&amp;hcd fourth,
David~ w.as fifth and
was followed . lby Matt
Kenselh, Denny Hamlin
Busch's teanunatt at Joe
Gibbs · Racing. Travis
K vapil, Dave Blaney and
Bolton rounded out the top
10.
Almost every dri¥er
struggled in some sense,

cent (19-of-29) and moving .away from Pierce near the
Cleveland maintained its
· the ball on offense, some- free throw line and broke double-digit lead throughthing coach Brown has free for a two-handed, out the second half, and
insisted is · key if his team stare-at-the-rim dunk that closed out a game it had to
plans to advance past the sent Cleveland's hyped have. No team bas ever
league's · best defensive crowd into a . frenzy. overcome ail 0-3 deficit,
squad.
·
Wallace·. scored
twice something the Cavs don't
· While the Cavs got
110deme.ath . .
and .have .to worry about now.
from their bench, Bos.trin s Szczerbiak' s two free
Notes: · Varejao, who
.reserves didn't do . much.- throws put the Cavaliers up would have started if
James Posey .scored 11 but 18-6.
· ·· ·
Wallace couldn' t go, left in
Sam Cassell, who has given
James' next basket was a the -second quaner with a
· the Celtics lift went 0-for-6 3-pofulrf during a 9.() spun bruised right knee. He came
~d scored one point 1D 18 1hat Cleveland a 27-.8 lead back and played 2 112 mintrunutes.
on its way to a 19-point l,ltes in the thi.J;d .... There's
"It' s probably the worst advantage after
no doubt about Garnett's
ame we've played since
The Cavaliers were lead- pass.iqn on the hoop coutt,
've been a part of the ing 39-17 in the second but Cavs 7 -fnot-3 C
Celtics," said Cassell,- who quarter Wben lhis series had Z ydrunas Ilgauskas has his
joined the Celtics in March. its~ IIIOIIICnt Of tension. doubts about the Boston
AS he flu drivina io the superstar's love of soccer.
"Unfortunately, it l;llll1e at
the wrong time. We've got h•+et, 1-.nes wu lf8bbed Ilgauskas is a big fan -lit:
to regroup and get our lfOUIId tic aect by I'Qtey erally of powerful
SW~ back, get (!Olng m · and (ell awkwardly in die Manchester United, which
b
t 9uatter, this is the Jane. .He Uii4 faiJe down on is battling Chelsea for the
11e00nd mght in a row they ·tile. ~ ., bodl ~Cams English Premier League
came out blastin&amp; us in the ."dw!Jet' UJlY word11 and title. The teams will also
first quarter."
. AndereOD Vai:ejao and meet on May 21 in Moscow
Before the game, James Posey canaccl trdioicalil for · in the Cb~ons League
said a few "easy baskets" their~fmal . llgau
s was told
might help him get started.
The officiils huddled and Garnett was a Chelsea supHi s first one was both gave Posey a flagrant-1 for porter. "He's a fake fan,"
simple - and s~::J·
the hard foul, which Ilgauskas laughed. "What,
With the Cavs I ing 10- seemed to deter· the learns did he become a fan when
4, James poked tbe ball from more rough stuff.
he went to London?''

he'£

one.

f

... &lt;"

S

...-

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

·Wii•

Cllll,

F

lhe COli

'

tMI,.....

...

""""''""""'"' .......1

-----..--II Chihuahua, female, sPayed.
3 years old. 740-645-6987

.'r

~~

T

lOST DOG:

I .
•

Oftl~'/ftE

~

"GAWI'OUS·
·~"··aiQiui3AU'J"

I'

..,
NAn

19.

T-

6

Front

5. 11.I

'*~

®2001 b~~

wwu&gt;mics.com

IIFuWANIFD .11

110

Hw&gt;WAN"Illl
.
I

Aopa1r

m;;IS~n ::e•':nt::~us~

·-·······-········-········--·······530

Antlqueo••••.......
Apartment• for Rent •......... ·-··················-·· 440

· AuCtion and Flea ·Mitrldll.............................OIO

A.--··-·······-···-····-··

Auto Parts &amp;
760
Auto Repair ..................................................770
Autos for Sltle .....•............. -··············-······-·7f0
Boats &amp; u-ro for Sale·····-········-········-·· 750

· Bulldi111J Suppllea ••.•.••• _ .............................550

Love to cook?

Buolneoo and Bulldlnge ............................. 340
.. Buolnfta Oppartunlty •••- ......................... ..210
- . - ...........................710

An Exceltent ·wtftJ to earn
money. The New Avon.

. camping Equipment ...................... _ •......••. 760

canto of Thanluo .................... -.................... 01 0

Call Malllyn 304-882·2645

Child/Elderly Cant ....................................... 110

EleclrlcaiiRelrltllhalliM •••• ,..........................MO .
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or
Eciulp.-.llor Aont ...•••••••..••••••. _.................UO
Sell.

Excavating ...................................... - ••••••~...130

Shirley Spears, 9Q4.-

675-,~

Farm Equipment ..........................................flf 0
Farms lor Rent ........................................... -430 ·
Farm• lor Sale ..................... --······-······--·330
For Lease ..........••......•••••••,..........,•• _ .......... 410
For Sale ........................................................515
For Sale or Trade.........•·-·-··············- ..
Frutt. a Yep table a

'···-tiiO
·······-··-··········--····-·.:s.
Fumlahecl Rooma ...........•...."···---··---···..4&amp;0

Boggs PeBI Control, Inc. is
growing and looking for Pesl
Control Technicilns'a , male
Ot' ten'\MI . no 8JCP8rlence
requtrBd. Mull: h8va a dean
driving record
to
P8A drug toot. Good pulllic
relations; aelf mottwtecl.
Able 10 oiJtai1 pool conttul
r
within tile fifot
Muotbo
to work odd hOufa. aome
weekends. Of Interested.
pleMe apply il pei'lon by
brtn~ a resume to: 'Boggs
l'&lt;loii:Ontnii. Inc. 110 Boggs

-"cf ..,

Gentnl Hauii"'I··············-·····-·-·--······.IIICJ.

......040

, ~ Adtt ............................- .....1.••••• -.~
Hay I Gfllln ........ :..........
Help w-·····················- ······-············-··110

--··-··········-···...140 ~-

Hornelmprovementa ..................................l10

HDmHior Salo ............................................110
Houaehold Gooda ·······-·······-·······--,•••• ~.6111

Hou-lor .Rent ....................................:..... 410

In UemQrlam ·······-·········-,···•·--······-·····-~

Jneurance ................ ~.... - ....... -... ······-·····~ ••110
Lawn &amp;

G&lt;rrden EquJ.,.- ..............- .......

-.o

L l - k......................- ................-·-···-Loot IIRd Found ............................................ .

1.011 &amp; Acreage ···············-······-·-··-·-····-•

M-IIM1eoua..........................

J68..1100.toftfree

applications for AN and

40

Announcernent ..........._...........- ..·-·-··········030 •

Gl••w•Y ·· ·······-···~·-········-··~....-......-

.

Local Company looking for
part-time delivery person.
.
.
Applicant must have a valid
driver's license, ha~ good
.
.
customer relat1on skills and
J~rmtctlaeiOcareq.com be able to multi-task well.
Applicants will be subject to
baokground check before
hiring . If you wOuld like to
appl~. please send your
resume to: .P.O. Box 469,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 Cl.A
Box 101 .
-------

4x4'a For Sale ................................. - ..........121

-········-···-·110

Mlacell-• - ····-·········-·-·· · . Mobllo Home Repair ....... ...................,.........-

~-.-for
-··········-·············-·-420
le for Sltle ........................ , ••..•.320
Money to l.olln .................................... - ...... .220
Motoicrclel &amp;. 4 wt:aslars ..........................740

·

Nowttlatyour JO
' bsearch
checklist is compkfte give
lnfoCision a call!

~..-.....c..pavu
Exl2347
jabl..lufudliou.com

pany s n nt:nN an m llfl~r
toc~...J.
uaI whols 1'non·,~
• . _ rvu
"""""Applicant must be able to
organize and m~nage an
industrial kitchen prepare
and inventory
stock. as

trod .

1--YU .

.

.
Individual wiU be responsible
and Auto fo toad
tio
Mechanic needed Must own
r.
prepa~ n, presentools. 74o..J!8..8s4?
tatoo and quality to c:ompany ~andards. If you are
.
FEDERAL
inte rested
in appt~ing,

oo

Growmg Home Health Need someone to work on
AQencyl A &amp; l Home Care rental houses.Send resume
........,., · - CNA &amp; LPN'o t . •~~ p 0 • - ~e

Pomeroy.

w-.......................................

Sale···············-·····················..... 715
·······················-··························170
Van• For Satle ...............................................7211

Trucl&lt;a for

Uphololery

S•••

Wonted to Buy ·····-···········-······················ ... 010

W•nfefta Buy- F~
llsa .................. ll20
w8rlled To Do ········-·········•················-··...... 110
W-to Aent ...........................................c470
Yard Sale- Glllllpolla ....................................072
Yard SOle PVth61vJillkldla ................. : ....... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. ·······················-····· .. 071
I

7011-1869

,...r.n..,.

•

applications tor

at 1480 Life GuardS May 26- August
Gallipolis. work at the Swimming Pool.
............. 441 1393 foJ Sfdlled You
'ok the
ma~ P1
mup 8t City
Office or apply at 1.as6 Hall at 218 Fifth St. orVine.s
Jackson Pike, phone 441 - &amp; Roses at 401 Fifth St. &amp;
9263 for Passport/Privata turned in by May 21st

Jackson' Pike.

Care Office. Competitive
wages and benefits including health insurance and
mileage reimbursement .

the 31st St. bddge · by
Proctorville animal clinic.
lJttie Cae11rs it currently in Come )Din our team! 740.
808rch
of
Alltllatant 886-7623 EOE
~ lor our Gollipoli&amp;
location. We olio&lt; paid train- Holp wanted at Darst Home
7
992 5023
ing. paid ...:ation. Group Home. """
•
- l i n g and a&gt;t!pOtitiw Non COl. d!iver needed lor
wages. Plea8e lax """'""' tow trucl&lt; operator. Wil train.
to; 740-4186-7425
740-31!8-1154~

Compethive Starting Pay,
Paid vacation, PliO MaM&amp;,
Oitcounls,
~aurances
...
Interested
llppliconts May Appy Daily
9-4, Ra~ Care
C.nt8r. t113 Waahington
St.. Ravenswood. . WV
(3(1.1)273·9236
· FAK
RoforenDOI Required E.O.E.

vai-.

~r.m

~
•NOTICE•

NOT · to send money
throUgh the mail until you

investigate~

have
offering.

i

the

ctutte"s and in1eraction wtth

the residents. Applicant

insurance,

.
401 (k). vacatoo. bonu6 pay.

and &amp;a~ awards Qualified
~ms must ~ """ 23
yrs., have a ntin1r1&gt;Jm o1 1
yqr of oommerical drMng
experience &amp; clean MVR.

Cootact Kent at aoo
_ .

462·9365 Of fill out appiieation at W¥NJ rjtrucidng com
EOE

.

. .

accepted

•

Payme.nt could

sameasrent

Mongage
(740)367-QOOO

be the

Loca1ors .

=

~

~===ro=Ln=AN=~1
••~OTif:E••

All reel Htate ldvenlslng
in thia newap~~per ta
subject to the Fecter-.1
F•lr Houlling Act ot 1161
which mllkes it IUeg1l to

Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of
Financial
Office
of

lnstilulion 's

Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or
oblain a Joan. BEWARE
of requests tor any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Call the
Olfice
of
Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1-866278-0003 to learn if the
mort gage
broker or
lender
is
properly
licensed. (This ts a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley

advertiae "1ny
pretenmce, •mtt.tion or
dlecrtmlnatiOn bleed on
r•ce. color, ral'glon, MX
famlila:l statUI or ntttton•l
origin, or any intention lo
make .,y auch
p;lltetliiiCe, llmitaflan or
diKrimlnlltlon."

This newsp~~per wiU not
knowingly •ccept
.dveitiMments for reel
ISUite which ia in
wioWt:ion of the l•w. Our
rNdera are hereby
Informed that all

.; I

dwemrvos advertfaed In
· ·•
thlsnewapaperare

•vall•ble on •n equal

~.:::•:pport:::un::ilY:"":"::"·~

and 1 fireplace. Addi1ion of a
large Flonda room com
.otd Crew Ad ..behind fair- pletety cedar opens ont&lt;•
ground,3 br.,2bath loghome pat10 &amp; poot-area. Heated il .
full
basement:end
of ground pool enclosed by pn
Rd .quiat.3
mi.
from vacy fencing ,and land
Pomeroy.740
scaped . Fmished 2 ca1

L,

992·506711111
garage ·attached to house
. . - . . - - - - - - and finished &amp; heated 3 ca1
o down payment. 4 bed- garage
unatt~ched .
·rooms. Large yard. Covered Excell~n1 condition ready to
d&lt;lcl&lt;. Attached gersge. 7ol0· move in. $255.000.00, Call
(740)949·2217
367·7,29.

COUPOIS
CURRENT EVENTS

TECHNOWGY
n:r-~----, COMICS ......
jl!lll
Srnout.s
I
E ........
ME
JM,~

Poor Awperienoe wtth teml· Gllllpplls Career COllege
Unps and roll-oft~ is~ (Ca~rs CIO&amp;e To Home)

1ul

homeinstaadolrenting.

i--iiFORiiiliSII'ALEiiiil-.,1.

==-===~

. dental

PAYMENr programs 1or you to buy you r

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l'llll~....;:':""_ _...., mg room. khct:len. large tam
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l ily room , central air. gas heal

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availat:Me to assist indiviclu·
als with mental retarda~ion.
at a group home in Bidwell:
~-tme Dental Assistant, 8a-4p
Su:
3:30-11p
9KPE1rien~ helpful, but no1 M!Tu/WfTh. Must have high
required, deliver Resume in school diploma!GED. valid
person to 2922 Jackson Driven&gt; license and three
Ave , Pt. Pleasan1 ask tor years good driving experiConnie
ence. $7 .75/hr. E~tcellent
Position available for an bonefrts package_ Pre- Publishing Company)
Assistant House manager to employmen1 Drug Testing.
Send resUine to: Buckeye
work evenings nightS and
'
Com
munity Services, PO.
weekends at a shatter for
.-~
ft\JI'U!OI\Jl"VU..
woffien
and
children. Box 604, Jackson, OH
~
.annucant must have high 45640 or e-mail to: ~- __
""t't' I d.
serv@yahoo.com. Oeadl•ne
t Dutili)IO~ I ~-· eqlutalvake- tor applicants : 5/1 6/0B
TURNED DOWN ON
n.
es l!lCu.....,. n
Equal
Opportunity SOCIAL SECURrrY ISSI?

semi·d~mps

..........................,.-......

. suv·.ror Sale....................- ....................... 7211

Apply

a~copting

vides services lor ~du~ ~ =w~~~~~ou=. h~:s.
do1181opmontal dl&amp;abllltJes.
Must !lave a valid Ohio driv·
1-666-403·2582
..,. license and High School flollonalllump Dri-.
diploma or GEb.
Sand R&amp;J Trucldng is seeking
re~ume to :
_ Meigs quolified CDL-A drive" to
lnduolrios. lrn: . P.O. Box 307, operate
for
Syracuse, Ohio 45779.
regional routes. We feature

.

-a••·························-··························e.-

LPN's .

~

.............,
,
o. ~···~- . . . gup, r'rr ,
. Coort&amp;ido Bar and Gnll now for '-'""'""" a~d. Gallia
00 45269.
for Sale ................................................ 510
seei&lt;Jng qualified applicantS Counties. Muot _,.,,. . trans..
,
Plumbln1 &amp; -1"11 ....................................8211
fot' bartender and food run- portat1on, motivat•on and Now hlrtng emptoyees10 llit,
· Pe lsaaiorllll S..lricM ......................... _ ..... 230
""'· Apply in peraon or call ·caring attitude. We offer up andpredeliver lawn and
-lo, TV I C1 ~ ............................... 110 -441
·9371 to schedule and waekem:' differential pay, ag eQUipment. Fax reaume
-~
-.-.~
310
Interview. 308 2nd Ave, OJI'T'C)8tltive wages &amp; bene- to 7~ 9104
School• lnslructlan ................... - ••....•..•...... 150
Clalipolis.
~do~
lleodble ~uAieoks. PT LPN
•~~~- •
Seed, P18nt I Fen-.............................. 150
11 •mrnv. BIJ8Jta,1,1111'.
------~. ,...
--. - .......,.....,..... ,. nre
_liltuotlona
1211
Dependable
babvsirter abou1 our Sign on bonu&amp;. Bemg Accepted For A
Space lor Rerrt ................•..••.....•••••...•••••••...• 410
needed.
Ratorences Give us a call Of come in to PT /Posalble FT LPN 2
. Sporting Goodtt ........................................... 5211
nKJ!ired. Pktale call 7~ see us. We are just west at Evenings, 2 Mictnigttts.

lllualcllllntotrumenta .•.••••...••••••;.................. 57D

iiir~
10:;;;~n;;;;.~;;;;--~;;;;;;;;;;;l

------' 1own of Haven now

must be atMe to work independent!~ and have good
people skills. Interested
•. POSTAL JOBS
please send your resume to applicants may apply to;
$17 89 s2B.27/hr now hlr P.O. Box ~9. Gallipolis, Personnel, P.O. Box 4S..,
. · ·
. . .:
• Ohio 45631 ClA 801&lt; 101
Galtipolls. OH 45631 by May
'"11· For application and tree - - - - - - - ' - 28
jot&gt; info, call Meigs lndusttleo.lnc. hlr· ::::.·
American Asaoc:. of Labor t · ing a Janttorial Crew Leader
POST OFFICE NC1'N
913-599-8226. 2 41hrs. emp. and
Substitute
Crew
HIRING
&amp;erv.
Leaders, Experience in janAvg. Pay $20/hr or .
·OitMrat F81'111
itorialfcustodijtl work pre-·
S57K/yr. inctuOes ··
...lniBnllnce
!erred. -Meigo Industries pro· Federol BeMflts, Or.

~

PIII08I to World

reference must

well as manage mcomtng procedures answering crisis
and
outgoing
foods . calls shett~ housekeeping Em~r.

EICp8fieneed Truck

Rpad. Oak Hill, OH 45656. Tractor eJ&lt;perience 8
NO PHONE CALLS.
I
w-~•
E .
- - - - - - - P us, .
attng,
Mowing,
Light
Fence
CAREERS!
Work &amp; Brush Cleaning
]obe304-458-1727 call after
.
.com 8pm
answer leave
learn how to become pan message

.

Always

eKperil'nenting with new
ideas? You may be who we
.are looking for. A. ~- I com
_. d ...~
I I ~~ o1

=__.,

mone mtile TOP TEN Best

Letter of interest ,

Athens-Meigs Educational
Service Center, 320-1!2 E.
Main St., Pomeroy, OH
45769. Equal Opportunity
Employer/Provider.

Equipment

walk~n

closet. FA, LA w/ brick FP.
Fenced yard w/ in QI'O\Jfld
pro. $140,000. Shown by
appt 441-8202

==~ ~:,~:~" ~~;~~" :~ut&gt;J:O'::.• : :':,.:1;:~ci~rtect crl!drt

Technician for farm and/or Home Health Care 9 ?U1h Otuo ~ley Home Health,
lawn Equipment repair &amp; East OhiO" curre~ly hlnng Inc. hlnng STN_A, CNA,
maintenance. Must have Ho~e Health Atdes tor 1-lome Health A•.d es and
experience Must be abte to ~~gs Co .. you must be cer- Personal Care Aides, Full
·
. it·~ t1fied or currently haw one Time and Per Diem posiuse . computer
on a 11m _, year exper·.,nee , call 1·uuu= 11.ons ava1"lobie. Accepttng
·
ba
C
tT

•

Will h&lt;llp with

suh w/ den and lrg

·

Intervention Specialist certi·
tlcatlon Is required . Salary
ba&amp;ed on certification and

resume and

r

OU

bereceill9dby12;00p.m.
~ay 19. Submh to: John D.
Costa,nzq, Superintendent,

• •

446-2842
n
p, so d tra·n
1wanted to buy Junk Cars, compa Y span . ra
haal;th
msurance,
call 740-386-0884. tr no lng,
matching retirement con1ri·
answer, leave a mesaage. buf
nd
'd holtd
can Gall Collect
F~c;' ~~~ or E~

Business TflllnllliJ ····-·-···-.-········-··········140

after 6pm

closing Cost 304•593--Bfm

Disabilities~======~

r '" mviQS

IIFuWANnD I

•i l l .
• •

Absolute Top Doltlllr • sil·
coins,
any'
Inside at 57 Burnett Ad, ~r/gold
Mon·ThL:tr ~7, Sat 9-5, Sun 10K/14Kii8K gold jewelry,
1-5. Antiques. Tony Stewart dental gold, pre 1935 US
currencw, proof/mint sets,
Cars, Glassware, Clothes
'
diamonds. MTS Coin Shop,
151 2nd Avenue, Galltpolis.

Compere &amp; -

Ath&lt;lns-Meigs

fits.

10

968.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

John D.

Submll to

1ea

7404&amp;7-IMlZ

•••ljr...

~

Ed1JC8tional Ser.~~ice Center
has an available pos~ion tor ,
a che
Multiple
T
· u~
c nty

..

-3br. 2ba. approx 1 acre .
Great
Neighborhood
Sunset Lane (Pt. Pleasant )
304-8 12·5021
304·593·

Athens-Meigs EducatiOnal LaWn-Care Service, MowinQ
Service Center, 3201f2 E. &amp; Trimming. Free Estimates 4BR, 3 bath, 2268 sq.ft. at
Main St., Pomeroy, OH Call (7 40)441 · 1333 or 576Jay0r. Spaciousmaster

May 18 9-3

w.TO~~
.ouT

1

Costanzo, Superintendent,

The

Sl~~motions.

l ·r

Ib Do
,

45769. Equal Oppanunlty (740)645-0546
Employer/Provider.

Dally Admission $4.00
- ~~
ti'VENOOATABLES$25

Ygo'Su£ ·I
::::;:::::==~·

i

1i"'

0

6453-=378-&lt;l262.
ltiJ
WANDD

Babysi1 in your home, ARC _:....__ __
_ __
oertlffad, Contact Raven at 4br, 2 AC, Pool, Country
receivedby12:00noonMay
N
H
s 1 ~ 500
992·7930.
ow aven.
~.
ca11

s.~u-.179-5
-r

.r
a

'4CS

.

Sun

with
spaylrabies u ICheduted.
REWARD 1.304-901-D403

,~.1•

'&amp;.-D~
'\OF..

·Comloot Inn

-•
tf you 'fall in kMt
her but let me

~out

.

IIAAIETTA, OH

!OO"D temale dog. Blonde
with datker muzzle.

/..bl'"•t..

·GUN SHOW a SAlE

.c..~&gt; Creel&lt;

~ ~. lhllggy

aru:

Educational
Certification, Salary based
on certification and experienco. This poshion has
Board approved ben&lt;&gt;lits.
letter of intereSt , resume
and references must be

~'''b

follow
It 3pm.Thanks for your sup- ·

·FIIIIIII!IIII
"'•~ . ~

books, old collections of Estates on Santllill Ad. 8 ·
every thing .. 105 Mill ing $160,000 304-674-5999
St,Middlepor1.2 :00· 7: 00 or 304-675·1566
Aide Wed,Fri,Sat. Ph. 740.591·

I

w

n m

Athens-Meigs Schwinn Airdine Exerciser
3br, 2 112 ba, &amp; FR. 2 ca·
100's cit 33,45,78 records garage &amp; in ground pool an
motorcycle &amp; parts, tools, 3.65 acres @ Greenbrier

The

dollar a bag.
Da S llh ill

· ~~

ru~Jrw

__

and

~oo by

~

.,,_ _ _ _ __

Educational service Center
ts seeking an educational
aide for Ueigs County
Schools. MUB1 meet Highly
Qual~ied Standard for Ohio

ur

"'u.,

'r·

:-:-::-:-=-=-----------.., ,1.
IIFuWANm&gt; ' 110 ~
~-----·

Kffr::::=":-:C-::A-::R=L:=YLE---·
kitncorlylfl8&lt;:omcost.net

·1

Call304-675-8164

Of__,..

I

Ractne, kids. women's. jun-

•tree•~-nsto......_......__ day

.,

e:.

Borders$3.00/perad
Graphics SOC for smaU
s1.00 for tai"C)e

any lid • ..,, &amp;.. El'f'On mlllt a.~ on tt. firlt dlr of ~ ....cl tt.
:
1:1• fDr na .... tt.nh com cif'lhl!l ~ DDCUpiMI br herTar Mid ontythatkwt w-t~on. W.ehlfl not De I..._ for
•ny . . . Dr . . . . .
fnMn the P' II 11 • or omiMkwl ol.- Mlw• liw•••L Corr.ctian wtllbe mMie m tt. flm ••IW.«fftton . • au.~
.e ,...,..contidlftti.a. • ~ rMI Clll"dllf'PII-. • All ~I_... .t..m..m.m. ... eubfKI: 10 the .....,., FWr Mousing Act at 1• . • Th611 IWA J J
IICIWplltvniJMip _..... •
.-..ttng IOE alliiidaoda. W. will not knowingly~ . .,. .w.ru.tng tn vtotlllon cr1 the law. Will not ttl tMpOMible fof q
.,..in ........_. over1hl....,..
Publllhlng ~ lhe rigid ao-. ..;.ct.

- i p yanhale2 blaa&lt; i&lt;lttons. 1 male. 1 Star Mill Pari&lt;, May 13 &amp; 14
temate about 8 weeks old. from 9to 4, and'May 15-trom
Call 740- 367 •711 5
9to2.May 15-halfprlce
·

oponolble lor

(.:l

added to your dassified ads

. ..m

Ohio.,...,.s' t : will IIIIo

fi'OUCI:I:
Tl'illlunol &amp;e:otil al 7

,, ••

iora, plus, men's, name7-414:1..-. "'Du lllighl: brand dothing, household,
· ~1111!!
fumittn, VCA's, Chainlaw,
j handmade cloc*s, to much
Gn'Elw.w
to Hoi.

will

~~~o~s:~:FAcl

PuiMicadon
su..._y Df..,.,.y: 1:DD
'Jbu...._y for Sundap

~-., 7. .7~71

Tribune-Son!

dvertlsements

In l'lhPrt: o.y~. Paper
Sunday ln-c::Jolumn: 1:00 p.m.
For SUndays P.aper

~

" ' - - - - - - - ·· 8 'family. Moo, Tues. Wed.,
behind ¥Donie Lodge in

Errur1 RoacJI'lodonlho

O!Olhon

A11 DNplay: 12 Noon 2
e...a._ tMys Prior To

D
\17 •JndutleA 'Price • AIMiid &amp;llbreriat:iolt
• I~tl!hone ............ . . . _ . , . _ , . . . . . .

~'I

ad•tanr--

Iller

How you can have borders and CJraphics

Dlsolay Ads

• All _. IIIU.t be pn!pllld'

r-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; c~t:ul
..

Ohio Volley
Publilhing 16Wiril
the rlgtrt 11&gt; odll,
rejoct or concat Ol1f

/)~tltirec

Dally ln-colun~n: I.::GD op.n1.
Monday Friclaiy for In.ertlon

•-.tYeur ....... A..,r•=••llldlldeDK

Shouklllodude n- !tans
ToHelpGeta :on-...

Hanning,

The oombination of tlie
smOOth smfaoe, bard .tires
111111 natrow racing tine put
passiilg at .a premiUJII, and
fon:ed several ·drivers, into
the wall for ·the infamous .

Word Ads

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

Meet ·

and the problems started nothing compared to what
early, with Blioti Sadler pole-sitter Greg Biffle felt
losing oontrol of his car on after leading 95 laps, only
the second lap of t!he race to end lri s night ewl y wilh a
- squeelling Tooy Stewart broken timing belt. The part
failed after he'd already
into the Twn 1 wall.
two
loose
"I just made a huge mis- overcome
take," . Sadler said. "I just wheels,. and the crew errors
went in too !Jow ·into Tum I. had Biffle seething after his
.
I was actually trying to give early exit.
"I give 11 0 percent as a
Tony more room and I just
got loose under him and driver all the ume and you
spun into him. I know be's just wapt your equipment to
prett)' mad at me, but notb- last and be able .ttl win these
m_g I did intentionally. I've ·races," said Biffle, a highly
never had any problems sought after free agent who
with him, and don't want to has yet 'to reach a contraC!
start it tonight."
extension with Rousli
The incident prevented Fenway Racing.
Stewart, winner of Friday
"You can deal with a flat
night's Nationwide Series · tire or sometjllng like that,
race, from ever running but when it' s se·l f-induced,
wilb the 1e~ and be fin- it makes it even !harder. It
ished a frustrating 21st.
makes it so hard to swalB11t Stewart's angst was low."

www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydai.lysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR
NOW ·ONLINE

.

classijied @mydailytriblme:com

=

Webs~es :

Call Today! 740·446-4367.
1-800·214-0152
_ ""llipOI«..-rcollege eOu
~ Men!Mr Act:~
c.cud

u

11

ENT RTAIN NT

and more

•••

1 4ut Collll&amp;-

======---.

Security Ollioero . - in ,.. ..,_ ""'"
New Haven, WV, S7 .00 •
$7.66 P8f hour, shift W'Of1&lt;..
hauro vary. Muat- a high

ochOO diploma "' GEO,
- . , criminal history, drug . IICfeen ond bact·
ground chod&lt;. Gall 1-800275-83511 M-F 8;30 to :00.
EEO.MFll\1

To Subscribe Call
Read your
~andleom

sl&gt;mefhing todOy!

The Daily Sentinel
992-2155

�Monday, May 12, 2008
All EYOOP

Monday, May 12, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

HUD _ , .3 bed, on~ FOR SALE: 219 !merest in 1 and 2 bedroom opon- Tlllcing ~: Modem lJtilily paloll, . - goad """' Jim• !'arm EquPnort Inc.
517,000! for listings 800· acreage loco1od in Muon ments, furnished and untur- 1BR, no pels, 5295/rem - . . 25'x55' 2.00-2.50 a 2150
Ellflom
Ave,
821).4906"" R019
Count't', Wes1 V1rginia. 2005 nished. and houses In includes water. $200/dep. toal304-882-1247
Gallipolis, &lt;&gt;mo. 7~
appraisals of land with Pomeroy and 'Widd\eport, .M0-3617
sm. 4, 5, 6' and 7' 3Pr.
New Home tor sale, F1rst irnprOYUmen1s and sepame security~ rQJin&gt;d, no
PElS
Flnloling , _ &amp;llr1lng ol
Time Horne buyent 3br. 2 timber opproosal, together, pots, 740-992-2218.
Ta111
Townhouse ·
IQa SUI!
$899.00 and~- Hu!ry-

bath, 1 112 car ga1., 2 acres totaled, over $400,000. FAX - - - - - - - - Apor1mon15, I'IKy Spociou&amp;, ~
lot, Neighbomood Rd . o rep~ to 912·23&amp;-8782
1BR Apt. in Spring Y*y, 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
·down, 30 veer filled, low - - - - - - - WID
hool&lt;upo.
Visit Bolh, Mutt f'!lol &amp; ~ AKC Gorman Shaphonl
Rate. $86,000.00 . Call I.IOIIILE f!OME LOT FOR www.spring-Vllley-proper- f'!lol , Patio, 51ort l425/Mo. puppies. Avol!oble 5/V/08.
RENT.1031 Georges Cree« 1ies.comorcall399-0362
No Pet&amp;. Leue ftus S400MCh. 7t0-4lB-7787
Steve or John 446-1018
Rd,44 1·11 11.
2 bedroom. apartmont for 5eaJrtly Depool Aequinld,
.
-

log home sitting on

1.66 acres. custom .utchen,
3BR, 2 bll11l. $142,900. Call
740-256-9247 .

rent in Mietlepcw1, m pets,

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

r

u.!l!SI1i

------

Vinyl Siding. Shingle Roof. $230 per month. :740-JBS- 3 Bd. house in Pomeroy.
1 112 bll11l, air, tun base11948 .
mont. 2 car garoige, $650.
1990 14JC55 2br trailer wl 740-949-2303.
appliaOces, great condition. - - - - - -- Ask,;ng $8500. Call 441- 3 BeDroom House 1n
0918
Syracuse . $500/mon11l +
~~~ Hud •~. No 1'els.
....,.,.
"""
2 bed , 2 bath, 299 a month. (304)675-5332 weekends
740-446-3570.
740-591 -D265
- - - - - - - - _ _ __ _ _ _ _
2002 16J&lt;80 Oal&lt;wood 3 B&lt;&gt;d Syracuse 4·5 bedroom
2
Bath, 2000 16X.70 across
street
from
Heetwood 2 Bed 2 Bath. Community Building, refer1999 16J&lt;80 Fonune 3 Bed 2 ences requored.
4 o) 992 ·
Ba!h. 1997 14•70 Oakwood 7511 or 59 1-(li!OO
3 Bed 2llall1. Daytime 3B8-

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

fnstitutlon is e.n Equal
Opportunity Provider and
E
moloyOr.
Cabin in Rio I Thurman
area. Call 740-286-5789 or
441--3702

Ho~,tor7re4~

tional home $279 per month Ve14X80GMoodobilel
740-385·7671
'Y
ocation

v

r

apartments. pc

Townhouse

j

FlaS.W:
.

. .

.

Ma"uf.ANi.Ol5

I

5
$30.00.

dinette

::0~~:as:=:

ea

u.

- - --JET-;---·

r•
.

I

FUM
..,,..___

5000 Ford Diesel

~or,

=-

•

'·

n

NeW.3 Bedroom homes from
$214.36 per month. lndudes
many upgrades. delivary &amp;
set-up. (740)385·2434
USED HOMES Nice 3BR
from 1.900 down. Save
-_
• .0001 Mo'dwest 740•
828
5
&gt;~~
2750
mymidwest.com

s

r

l.m's &amp;

ACREAGil

I
.

'--lllliiiiiiiiiiOiii-.,1

2

=~'-'u.::ired::....c.=N'-o-Pels
_-_446_1_27_1

$150, Twinoakheodboal0·
$10, Changing Table -510,
Sliver
'
TV
stand/Entertainment Center$20 304-674-0080

tr.namt&amp;sion work $1,500

Hmcy Road Mason. WV

.....
......

C.::.:"-------Polioe Impounds! Cora tmm
55001, t!ondu, Cllevys,
Jeeps, Fords, &amp; more! . for_

TRAILERS,

lOAD

MENTICARMICHAEL
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SER·
VICE.
SPECIAL
20FT
GOOS
. ENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW OUA ENTIRE
TRAILER INVENTORY "T
W W W · C A AM I C H A E L •
TRAILERS.COM 740·446·
3825

-------NEW AND USED S1E1.
Steel Beams; Pipe Rebar
For
Concre1e,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains, Have you priced a John

HUBBARDS

r

Bo

• . • ......._

I

.USa,.,,.:....,
S.W:_.__...

18• C

hampion Bass Boat
matching trailer. 150HP
XAS,
~..u:om
cover.

r

5725 · 00· ~ 1759

.CAYUS &amp;

Maroa ftJMI;s

Sprillf

I

Specials
10 in. Boston Fems

.

Now $5.00
While they lasL over
2(KK) to choose-from.

Flowering cl Fol.~e
Baskets, Bedding&amp;.

_

YOL'tJCS

'-.lllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir

1110\ ~ l&gt;IS..\ICE:&gt; '&lt;OU...
IN. f~, f.CI.Sf
('(O!'I.f. u~ 'IOU!

Uncondllional lifetime guar-

antee. Local ~retarenoes furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (T40) 4460870, Rogers Ba""'em

Waterproofing.

~.-~I•IUS'i&amp;.~

WilD t&gt;OC':&gt; !

O~Sunday

G

'

NOT 11ELa&gt;IC E.1110U611

Construction

·--Windows
' •Rooftng
•Decks
•Gamgn

Jobnlon's Tree

S!lrv!ce

n.c..

-··--- ·---

~VINGS
'

HOiiE:REEl\
~

1 . .,.. ...

---~,..._ 1 ,"'

-"~ .... ~:::

• Homes • Septic

\

Syst&lt;m •

0.1 milS IIIII
III'IIIICb
11,001

Shop
Oassifieds!

28 Yean Experience

• Pole Barns
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-1953
'7441416-14Jfi
740-591~1

llatlv t!tribune
~oint J}lta£5ant l\egister
and Daily Sentinel

niiiiii..U

..

II
1&amp;,2008

PEANUTS
IF JESUS AAD OWNED A D06,
WAAT KIND JX&gt; 'f'OU SUI'P05E
IT WO\Il.D HAVE SEEN ?

...

·-···~·- 'J

...........
·
7

a

•••

REGISTERED NURSES
Pleasant Valley Hospital
accepting applications for
experienced Registered Nurses in
Medical/Surgical. _Applicants must have
current West Virginia license, or eligible
obtain.
Send resumes to:
PI M'"' ValleJ llaspbl
cl•
hw!lrlliS
15:10,..., Drift

u-...

'* "-n•t.

111V 15550
(304) 675-4340
Fax to:
(304) 67~975

or apply on-line at

-.pvaHev.org
AA/EOE

THAT SAND..

CfNI and BOY

·--

H&amp;H

Wlee Concre7.e

Guttering

AH~oiCOOICI ...

Rooting, Siding, Gutters

740-1192-5929
740-416-1698

lnsuf8d&amp;Bonded

Free Estimates

740-653-9657

llid&lt; Wloo: 16 Yn ·EJIII.

..

IIU1'-

PO I 1.001&lt;1'

'

H.- Jlu!L!Ie,i

C.U: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

-·47239 Riebel

Rood, Long Bonom, OH

740-985-4141

GRIZZWELLS .

! ft~ , \lAVE 'fctll\\A'+JED

: A~HGqJT~
: 1'1~\-P. '?

HLCMW

PGAA
BR

C

BT

CT

BR

NV

JCTXJCAA

WCI

XDPAXTTAI

MXLCTL."-

NO

JX

RLX

BT

RLCR ,

VBXAP,

YCTH ' DC. RBDS

KBW

•

. . . . . . .,

I

WGMMCI

r:hr:r S@~(l-~-"r.trs·

wor:se -

0

ROOffllnge

J.

a troublemaker.

me

I I I I I'
PSTE \~

" Maniage.~
~

~~~--~~~ ~

granny lcctumd 1be

newlywed, "is when 1wo pctOilie
become one. The trouble Slllt5

I ~ 1bey
4
5
I l I I I e by

l

~HCILC

try to decide -:--

eo,p lete !he dwci&lt; le qllllttid

fl)};ng In 1he oniiSint;
you d_el'fllop from &gt;top No. 3

8

word$

bolooo&lt;

PRINT NUMBE~ED lETTERS IN
THES£ SQUARES

~ UNSCRAM!!LE ABOVE LETTERS

TO GET

ANSwtR

.

,

I I I I I .J

SC1tU4UTS ANSWERS s'9, o8
O)psiia- Fionl- Oldea- Jocose- OONFUSfJ)
Poiicl111p 'I ., to avwd, ""1\oae of as willllit •l*lY
...••• sliould be regislaod. CONRJSED."
· ARLO &amp; JANIS

r1

intentions or grandiose ptans than actually doing ar]Ythfng about them . Be a proOOOOr. not a play actor.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. ,9)- Vou will
be unhappy in a situation Where all !he
control is in the hands of another. so ask
a lot of QUestions before joining up. Vou
won't like standing in the wings.
•
PISCES (~b. 20-March 20) -Be carelui how you handle an argument that
may unlbld between you and your mate..
An impasse could result If a lad!. of con~;ideration is shown instead o1 a destra to ·
resolve the isaue.
ARIES (March 21 ~A,prl l , 9) - In your
eetimatOO , If oo-workel'l aren 't perfonn·
ing to your axpeeteti0nl 1 don't come
dowrl on them in • ~vy-haoo.d manner. The frienclly, aoft touCh will take you

further.

SOUP TO NUTZ

a~

cf

H0 R S UN

migh1 tum out to De more hindrance than
help. tf you have anything important to
. do, opet'8te on your own it you can .
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) - There
is a strong possibility that you could ·
spend mora time talking about your

NoT OML~

latlen

"""""'lerl ""nil bolow 1o form four simple wo~.
!ovr

•o

SAGITTARIUS {Nov. 23-0ec. 21 ) Aslcing for assiS1anoe and receiving rt

Jesus was

...-

- - - - - iolltod ~CLAY I. I ' O L W I - - - - -

made plans will cause needless
headaches. Your beS1 chance tor success- built with strong, solid founda·
tions.
TAURUS (April 20-May 26) - Don 't
behave In a manner that coulD put your
popularity and/or aooeptance by friends
and stranger~; in jeopardy. Your success
comes from those you treat kindly and
courteously.
GEMINI (May 2, -June 201 - Although
OU15idel"5 might find you easygoing and
forgiving, this tsn'1 likely to be 1he case
for your family. If any of them should
anger you in some manner. there will be
heck to pay.
CANCER (June 21-.-,luly 22) - Beware of
a ·tendency to overreact to the beh~~;vior
of others. You may be the one wtlo is
reading far more into things than what is
actually intended.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Financial conditions could be sub;ecteQ lo larger-thanusual tosses through carelessness or
exlravaganoe on your part. Think before
ptunking down harD-earned money on
something you don't need.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Careful
considerations must be given to the task
at hand ; otherwise, you could end up
Doing things the hard wa~ .:_ 'and Jt)ur
ambitDns, hopa~&gt; or expectations might
go completely untulfiUed.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct~ 23) - If you are
overly sensitive. you wMI have a ctifficuh
1ime disttnguishing between when some--thing is truly an affront or When i1 is the
honest fact&amp; at hand. Don'11ake anything
too seriously.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) - Don 't let
your curiosily get out of hand and cause
you to poke your no&amp;e into other people's
business. You could be labektd a busybody or -

CT

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "I loilO going 1o the lead slo,. and drinkong coffee
and 1alking aboUI how much rain we need." · Thomas Haden Church

AstroGraph

Clli&lt;A!M~ &amp;&gt;T

Cell: 740-416-1834
25+ Jfti'S •rfHri••e• f 'rw ErliMGJn

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

t:ft1
...,.-..,y,

I',....

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofmg • Pole- :'
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

INmfiNE52

HOW CAN
YOU NOT?

740-367-G536

-

THE!~

MATTERS.

740-317-osM

For~ IUid New

HOW CAN YOU
..lDGE SOMEONE BY

ON THEIR APPEARANCE.
T~AT IT'S WHAT'S ON
1HE II5IJE THA.T

LoceiConbKioi

r:r.F

r----:::'11 .

I FEEL. Llf&lt;E SOCIETY'S
. I'INALLYREALIZING THAT
YOU SHOUI..DNT ..lM
OTHERS llASEll SOLEI.Y

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Wh ldows,
Electtic, Plumbing,
. DrywaH,
Remodeling, Room
Addilions -

HelpWMdld

e .

TIRED OF IAIALKIH6
AROOND IN AU.
~

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

•

UNLESS liE 60T

-liZ=J=t~fl=--···
'I
sz . .•=••

IIIIIIIIC1re

....

..

Manley's
Recycling

Seamless Gutters

. ..........
23,2118 '

" RLX

rs

• Roam ............
Owner:
"-K
I
" 742-2332

David Lewis
740-992-4i971

FE

~allipohs

r JlON'T REALLY

LIKE C:OUI&gt;ITRY I!U!&gt;tC:. ..

• Pole llulldlngs

~oofing

• Backhoe • Site
Preparation • Dozer
• Garages • Utilities

""P

• VInyl Siding

Formedy Baber's Auto Parts

"'-~

TCK/ays clue. Keouals J

Tuoodor, .... 13, 2001
By Bomloo 8ede Ooot
Carefully eumine all considerations
before launching a new endeavor or
enterprise in ·the year ahead. Hastily

.... liltGtc:Et.$ACK' 1110,

740o378 6414
St.Pt.124
AI I ~Rille. OH
Gary Curtis- Owner

........

.

t«l; T~T!s•Too I:.ORNV.
ttO\-l r'\IIO(JT SOitET~IIi&amp;

cu.- Aula n :'"'

Contpll11

Geletr.ly ~ ~~- Cl1llllsl from aoota!IO!lslly famous peoote past ard prtllifl!'tt
·
Ea:h ICtr 111 tile CIPI'IIf Sl!r'ds tor anomer

plays a trump.

4 in. foliage pol
Shrubs &amp; Azaleas
Open M -S 9_5

on

CELEBRITY CIPHER
br Luis Campos

However, if East ducks his heart ace for
,one round. South will need a hand entry.
Since declarer is estallishing a trick in
hand, he shou!O keep an entry lhere by
winning trld&lt; one with dummy's club ace.

f'EOI"l£, ell\ ~lla"(,w.Eii;E

4125108 1 m
~•nsnr

'-ned

Then South drives OU1 the hea" aoe,
wins lhe nex1 club, discanJs dummy's
last club on his 11lird hea", and a1 last

992-5776

WATLS£ ILOOFING

c:ltiltr

1lla1 Nor1h,
to What
quoteoften
a leading authority,
tl1rse
spades.
was
would bid two spades in ringing tones.
Now, 1ttough, North can jump to three
spades 'aS .a game-invitational raise. It
shows a1 least lour trumps, 1D-12 iota!

each suit. +ie must avoid a club loser.
The ooly way to do that is to take a discard on the third round of hearts.

Vegetable Aats

TraJier Lots on Jericho Road ~o
pets,
$275/mon1h downstairs, utlli1tes pd. Friday, Bam-4:3opm. Clo&amp;ed W W W . CARE 0 . C 0 M RV Service at Carmichael
304-89S-3534 $, 25 onth
~nc!~des water and sewer. Deposit, near Wai·Mart, no Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; Carmichael Equipment. 740m
5200 dep. 446-3611
pots. 245-qaga
Sunday. fT&lt;I0)446-7300
446-2412

Dlnlp-

hands. This week leis m"""' to

Declarer has four potential losers: one in

THE BORN LOSER
';OIJRFENtTI-IJ•H.\J~OOE.., ~00 I'IW&gt;IOTUL. '(OU~.., r-WW., ~NOT t-\O~T...,
: AA~ "1''U \~A ~t&gt;
0Cl..U510i'L

51

39 ltoughl
&amp;lure- hair 20 airport
··
Decide on
toot
40 Nt.1 on • .22 p111t11e 38 Dntws

Moving on. - should South plan 1lle
play in four spades after West leads 1lle
club queen? _

*Prort1p1 and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rates
*Insured
*Experienced
ReferellCel' Available!
Call Gary StJmley @
740-591 -8044

-

so Olww.W

-

16 lloi oielr'o 37 Bell

diate jump-raise wi1ll on~ 1l1ree trumps,
give ~ to your opponents and 1ell lhem
good ff is!)

CARPENTER.
SERVICE

&amp;Removal

Now~•for

•

'

Trimming

Syracuse, Ohio

·.
.,______

•

Stanley Tree-

GREENHOUSE

.-?

points (high-caro p&lt;&gt;n1s plus shortage
poims) and eight losers. (W yoo ha~~e a
book that says you may make this imme--

•

~==:::~~~~~

12........

47

hand. ff was 100 strong lor two ~­
bul no1 strong«&gt;&gt;Ugh lor a game-1oroing

· ~ciPES

~=~~~~!:::!

34 Hiker's
..-.,.
35 Trp~ the

~~

-is

· In 1lle old days, lhere wos no bid for 11lis

BEST

•u

umn-

..
11 • •

spade. After a pass oo your •right, what
would yoo rospond?

YO~

'

02HDUitrltCia55ic,24,000
miles,
blacl&lt;lchrome.
S14,000. 740-339-0031

38 On edge

•

32 Society col-

3511omlur-10 flu I Ia
36 liMe
Clike
........,

mowe onl

46 -

1ili; caused, look a1 lhe Nor1h
!land in lhe diagrBm. Par1ner opens one

MINUS AN'
[~~U~~~~~F~~]
. OR TWO ! !
·

1 HOPE YOU LADIES
WILL CONTRIBUTE

:!: :.~.:...--gua~

UAX 1986 Chevy lSOO, 4WD, 2

tu

-45 --

tiona! auctions epor11rum raising one
no-1rurrq&gt; 1o two oo-nurr.,. To see 1lle

~=:i:o;;:!!!:!::::;=:...--.;..,~~:::;::=!~S:;:·I~2~J

I. Can ·be installed over

EQUIPMENT TRAILERS , tone brtlwn ext, tan int.
C Anu
~o EX'""E
nn SS
&amp; Automatic . trans. Uses
H 0 M E 5 T E ' A 0 E A rAagtru11ar~IJIIS;;;·;~~n
CARGO/CONCESSION .
TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE-

SNAL~1

-

; BARNEY

30

-....
Shake-(hunyl

Qame-inv!ta1ional sequenoes.
In the early days of bridge, under
c.Aber1son. lhere _ , wry few inlll!a·

"""-- _ _ _ • •

and New
Construction

28 Elephant

-s-·
at
8 Deli
"':l..
9--

34 Roqu h:at

u-

... loOked at bidding wi!!1

Lest -

llromaprize
Linchpin
4 --

1oc11o

5 Futuno fioh
31 FedEI: lnlcl&lt; 6 Burrow
33 One, in
7
girl

to invitational

IArrnLS!

~sidential

!istingo Sll0-ll20-4076 • V4S5

~~

ff/'IAT01, wttATS YOtJ1 PLA/'1 TO
Al&gt;1&gt;1fSS
fiOQ-A·IA1~L OIL1

USf

HORSE/LIVESTOCK

Dri-ys &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L Deere iatelfl You'll be sur·
()I' 709-1657
Scrap Matals Open Monday, priled! Ched&lt; out our used
Takilg applitmlons tor 2BR. Taking applica1ions for 1BR Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; inventory
at
quiet.304773-5550/8823418

'

JsrRoodroleftahove
Ma•on GolfD&gt;urse

' VALLEY
K
•---· .,,.
$13,000 {304)882-82-17

ft lrorn $399 mo. Midwest 3br Washer/ Dryer, wi1h a .:.C.:.:all_44..c6-:....:.:9523=---- - - - - - - - - NECK
HITCHES .
740--828-2750 '
Deck, in GlenwooD , big o..cloul 1 ~
Mauve &amp; Blue Sofa &amp; Chair- CARMICHAEl
EQUIP·
1

/

S-Service

3223

29
30

?!

·Pass

·=·- ·

26

From Weak hands

H-Honest

304-882-23n or 304-67._

22 Go fBt

OpeniDg lead: • Q

MID.
Bri,ggs &amp; 'Stratton

10 Years

~-

1•

2340 Dlog d
gruer
-(hnlh.) ·
1 Ohio,
. 24 Heron kin 41 ID Yveo
25 Kudzu, e.g.· 42 ~·a
2 nme unitl 26 lAmed
....
3 .......
27 " T -"

23 Shore

---Eut

...;:.:;:;.::.:::;J:,I

RICK PRICE

windows, new
ongtno wi!h 70,000 miles,
tireS &amp; battery, needs

r

,___
PSI CONSTRUCTION

Craftsman,

exte~ &amp; ta~. clolh lntertor.

· electnc

s2

Dealer: Soidh
Vulnerable: Both

lfle/11 mo. pd

DOWN

19 a n wed
21 Loop-

• K 7 3

Mowen;,
Tillers. MIIIT1ly.

1- lnt&lt;grity

8

51 - - gllnce

18 Cauol ""'
(ltrph.l

tKQ

Tractors,

-:-:-----~1. . Ford Conlour, ~.tan

9 AI086'3
• 10 7 G 4
•

56
55 -ners

dog

9 K Q J

l:CIOAII·I:CIOP.II

cin "ER"

11
tt.h
15 · "hal
'

.A

.986S l

•
••

aiCiion
54Pnlnlo

h+ lieut

Soutlt

Front
ond - · -tireS,
good poin!/Jillpe.
645-51146. ·
• - - - - - -...
or441-D941
·
03 Ford F950; V10 Super

·~'"' Call Ron Ellllns, 1- BuiLT,I
Stoci&lt;.

2Br at Johnsons Mobile
HomePark. Call44&amp;-2003

lawn, 304 -576-32B2or304· ~·"'"
and
593-4496
Bedroom Apts. at VIllage
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
-M-ob_ll_e-ho_m_e-an-d~do-u- Middleport, frorh $327 to
blewide lor rent. 740-446· $592. 740·992·5064. Equal
Housing Oppo"uni1y.
4060 or 367 -n62
-~------ Modern 1 Bedroom Apt.,
One Acre W/4 Br.mobile Call (740)446-0390
home.aU electric.Broad Run
W.Va .,2 mi. hom power NR~
quiet 28A
apt
PJantonapavedroad,nice
'"erences
&amp; deposi1

Accent

709-6339.

.,!.,~,':T,: :~=H In -EB-"~NTE~-G-~-1TY--EF-E-R

800-537-9528.
-------lorigaberger
Twin
bed
·•o·n
3 bedroom ,' 1 bath . $400 ---...,..--~-- Comfor1er
on •
reot. $35D deposh. COII388- Furnished Apt, 2nd Ave , valance l piHow, . _ run- - - - - - - - 9905
•
Upstairs, AU Utili1ie&amp; pd. ner, new while· bathroom
.NEW2011114br-2ba 1,700sq
1BR. No Pats. Gallipolis, vanily675-6937

mymi-ome.com

3M-77J-586l
Jet 11112-3294
Selvicing Lawn

er. A5mg $2200. Cel17.0.

Top Ouali1y. 606-929-5655

(304)882-3017

on private lot 74D645-3592 or 740-367·0654

Hyunda1

·~

·Complete
Remodeling

· HOurs

MASON MOWDt

liORS.W:

01

tobacco-

util~ies,

Avltfi

He!-

7401W2Z17

pit..,.

53 Onli•

14 , . . . . ,

Elst

• 74 3
• 9 li %
t AJ 9
• Q J 10 9

•New Homes

45171

Pomeroy,Ohio
'=======~

52 Feminine

llaoMI pool

7 4

Ws

1'1acina,Ohio

• •11: - -

if\ 1 slllom
·~

13 ~

•a •n

-'

BARNS

,.

4811odng'o

.. A 6 4

::.

296111-· ·fload

r ••••.-

.

22

.

•

•

SHEDSGAJlAG£5-

fit your Deeds

.__ _ _ _ _ _- '

'*""""'

949-2237
. - - - - • = r pays 0f1!!1er, sewer,
new 3 - -. bed, 2 bath, includes land, 2BR $450/dep $450/rent,.:

bulls for

-

-

;_

&lt;USfom built to

1,~------_.1
Potted Hereford

-

~~

AU buiJdiags aR

lr

l..l\1isro(JL

.

ts

•All electric· averaging
$!jl)-$80hnon11l

i

Ir•

Call 379--2461

Ellm View

ApartJ

14'X50' all

:.

411 liar*

05-11--oB

H.G.-

44-

•imlnll

•KQ JIO
o--

........

Mate Boston Terrisr &amp; Pug
.mix puppi8ii 12 we,ks old. I'll"-~~-----, r

and/or small houses FOR Microwaw$2D.OO.
King
~·
RENT. Call fT40)441-11 11 size bed $35.00.
Fro&amp;1of application &amp; informatiDft. standing
clishwuher • row IC no till planter with
$25.00.
c. dry fertilimrfbe9ass bolr8s
Pap machine 5200.00. Sola &amp; monitor, 40ft. grain.....,_
tor little ~m 1 """
lneA
$&lt;10.00. Cots to giw a""l/.
~ '
.
.
Call 446-9632
treNiplanter, IJ'IIvlly bar wi!h
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartmems
nmn1ng gear.
•Centre! heat &amp; A/C
- - : - - - - - - - - 8,000-7,000. (T.W)25&amp;-1352
Hot Tub I Swim Spo Ootlet.
•Washer/dryer hookup
E.onJ:lgs.

lAND AND ~ .

ready 10 move into. Orlly 399
a month
(wac).
866·564·
. MUST
SALE
8679
-------lllodutar8see0hio'siargest
display. Midwe&amp;1 740·8282750
mymidwes1.oom

-----

---

Monahan carpet. .
trud&lt; dri¥er
5 spe&lt;KI trans,
12 Eas1em Aw Gallipolis, Oh . . . . ' ••4 at l\lmost 65,310 miles, good con&lt;iJCD-446-l...:C
giveaway prices 3()4..675~ 1ion. needs catatytk: COilYef1-

MDlcJwoiB;

I

Moon£ lloMI&lt;)i;
lUI RDrJ·

2008 3 bedroom 2 bath SOC·

&amp; '-

TrliiiBm .•lon. New Rims.

1ur._

CKC
R8Q.
Mlnlat&amp;Jre
Pinschers, 7 week&amp; old,
shols, wonmed. 740-31188788

Sale: Berber Carpel $5.95
yd remnants SotO.OO &amp; up.

CONVENIEIITI.V LOCATED &amp; Al'fOIIDAIILE!
'
Computer desk S20.00.

cr

i

e-.: 'Sior1 Hif&gt;

Nertll

r--==-~-::--,

AKC Yorkie pups, m~~tes e~rtc moblk! horne,reaonly, 1st shols l wormed sonably priced. - . - .
5850 304-675-7M;
3418 or ~4-6915.

e

OJ.

I

0000 Evening 388-8017 oo
245-9213

Jo1w1 Door A 1W T -.

oao,

r

I

·

AKC

bath , fumished, no pets. USI tor Hud-sub8idil8d. 1.U
Rent+ Dep. 740-44 1-0245
apaTimolll
1or
lhe
Garage $139,900 or 304·
2BR apt. also, a 40r house eldel1yfdiseh!ed, call 675550-2114 or 304·532-3599 5226/.mo! 3 bOO , 2 ba11l, (740) 441-0194
.
6679
Bank Repo! (5% dOwn . 20
Molllu: J:1oMEs years. 8% APR) for is1ings 2BR garage ap1 in Gallipolis..
•
1i0R S...u;
. 800-620·4946 01&lt;. R027
WID hool&lt;up, no pets,
deposH &amp; relorenoes. 6451470 3b ' ba
2bedroomhouselorrent. 18520&lt;446-2 143
1t ,
1, 1
, 1 owner.
jj;;;ijj;~~;;,;;.;;;;
· mus1 see, too many updates no pets, (74!))992·5858
Be11uttfu1 Apta. • 'M'lt gn
to ltst. Green Terrace, $8000 - - - - - - - - &amp;tetes 52 Westwood l:i:i\0~;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
obo. 446-0091 or 645..a615 2bT House on Redman Drive, ~ $365 to $560
l b J!!RDD ·I
Ridge Rd . $400 depos~. 740--44&amp;-2568. . Equal
~
16X80 3 Bedroom 2 Bath $375 month 304-675-6406 Housing l"'..w-.n.-tunm.. This

r

.

:..fT_&lt;I0'-')992_·_5_858
_ _ _ _ - - - - - - - - orod, $300 ••ch
2305
212 ·~ A•• 3 - and TwinRi..,.T.-rioaOOIIpl- fT&lt;I0)667~
'
~u · - , _ , .
ing oppiicolioiiS fur Willing .,..,-,,....,..----- Wan1 to~ a

j
L,,_ _.•.iOtiilbNriilti;.._.l.
10

Aipley. 3br, 2ba, Rancher
on 2 acres. 24•32 2 Car

1~

1hoy loll

T... &amp;l'linl 2002Hald
regillored Buoett Top for c.i7 Jeep, 2003
hDLRf ~ 1M. H·: tri col· KaMIMid mlM. Cllll 949-

(7&lt;10)361-1)547.

41

Alder

I

j

-...

- •• c-binls

Phillip

a

.e was

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�Monday, May 12, 2008
All EYOOP

Monday, May 12, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

HUD _ , .3 bed, on~ FOR SALE: 219 !merest in 1 and 2 bedroom opon- Tlllcing ~: Modem lJtilily paloll, . - goad """' Jim• !'arm EquPnort Inc.
517,000! for listings 800· acreage loco1od in Muon ments, furnished and untur- 1BR, no pels, 5295/rem - . . 25'x55' 2.00-2.50 a 2150
Ellflom
Ave,
821).4906"" R019
Count't', Wes1 V1rginia. 2005 nished. and houses In includes water. $200/dep. toal304-882-1247
Gallipolis, &lt;&gt;mo. 7~
appraisals of land with Pomeroy and 'Widd\eport, .M0-3617
sm. 4, 5, 6' and 7' 3Pr.
New Home tor sale, F1rst irnprOYUmen1s and sepame security~ rQJin&gt;d, no
PElS
Flnloling , _ &amp;llr1lng ol
Time Horne buyent 3br. 2 timber opproosal, together, pots, 740-992-2218.
Ta111
Townhouse ·
IQa SUI!
$899.00 and~- Hu!ry-

bath, 1 112 car ga1., 2 acres totaled, over $400,000. FAX - - - - - - - - Apor1mon15, I'IKy Spociou&amp;, ~
lot, Neighbomood Rd . o rep~ to 912·23&amp;-8782
1BR Apt. in Spring Y*y, 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
·down, 30 veer filled, low - - - - - - - WID
hool&lt;upo.
Visit Bolh, Mutt f'!lol &amp; ~ AKC Gorman Shaphonl
Rate. $86,000.00 . Call I.IOIIILE f!OME LOT FOR www.spring-Vllley-proper- f'!lol , Patio, 51ort l425/Mo. puppies. Avol!oble 5/V/08.
RENT.1031 Georges Cree« 1ies.comorcall399-0362
No Pet&amp;. Leue ftus S400MCh. 7t0-4lB-7787
Steve or John 446-1018
Rd,44 1·11 11.
2 bedroom. apartmont for 5eaJrtly Depool Aequinld,
.
-

log home sitting on

1.66 acres. custom .utchen,
3BR, 2 bll11l. $142,900. Call
740-256-9247 .

rent in Mietlepcw1, m pets,

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

r

u.!l!SI1i

------

Vinyl Siding. Shingle Roof. $230 per month. :740-JBS- 3 Bd. house in Pomeroy.
1 112 bll11l, air, tun base11948 .
mont. 2 car garoige, $650.
1990 14JC55 2br trailer wl 740-949-2303.
appliaOces, great condition. - - - - - -- Ask,;ng $8500. Call 441- 3 BeDroom House 1n
0918
Syracuse . $500/mon11l +
~~~ Hud •~. No 1'els.
....,.,.
"""
2 bed , 2 bath, 299 a month. (304)675-5332 weekends
740-446-3570.
740-591 -D265
- - - - - - - - _ _ __ _ _ _ _
2002 16J&lt;80 Oal&lt;wood 3 B&lt;&gt;d Syracuse 4·5 bedroom
2
Bath, 2000 16X.70 across
street
from
Heetwood 2 Bed 2 Bath. Community Building, refer1999 16J&lt;80 Fonune 3 Bed 2 ences requored.
4 o) 992 ·
Ba!h. 1997 14•70 Oakwood 7511 or 59 1-(li!OO
3 Bed 2llall1. Daytime 3B8-

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

fnstitutlon is e.n Equal
Opportunity Provider and
E
moloyOr.
Cabin in Rio I Thurman
area. Call 740-286-5789 or
441--3702

Ho~,tor7re4~

tional home $279 per month Ve14X80GMoodobilel
740-385·7671
'Y
ocation

v

r

apartments. pc

Townhouse

j

FlaS.W:
.

. .

.

Ma"uf.ANi.Ol5

I

5
$30.00.

dinette

::0~~:as:=:

ea

u.

- - --JET-;---·

r•
.

I

FUM
..,,..___

5000 Ford Diesel

~or,

=-

•

'·

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NeW.3 Bedroom homes from
$214.36 per month. lndudes
many upgrades. delivary &amp;
set-up. (740)385·2434
USED HOMES Nice 3BR
from 1.900 down. Save
-_
• .0001 Mo'dwest 740•
828
5
&gt;~~
2750
mymidwest.com

s

r

l.m's &amp;

ACREAGil

I
.

'--lllliiiiiiiiiiOiii-.,1

2

=~'-'u.::ired::....c.=N'-o-Pels
_-_446_1_27_1

$150, Twinoakheodboal0·
$10, Changing Table -510,
Sliver
'
TV
stand/Entertainment Center$20 304-674-0080

tr.namt&amp;sion work $1,500

Hmcy Road Mason. WV

.....
......

C.::.:"-------Polioe Impounds! Cora tmm
55001, t!ondu, Cllevys,
Jeeps, Fords, &amp; more! . for_

TRAILERS,

lOAD

MENTICARMICHAEL
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SER·
VICE.
SPECIAL
20FT
GOOS
. ENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW OUA ENTIRE
TRAILER INVENTORY "T
W W W · C A AM I C H A E L •
TRAILERS.COM 740·446·
3825

-------NEW AND USED S1E1.
Steel Beams; Pipe Rebar
For
Concre1e,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains, Have you priced a John

HUBBARDS

r

Bo

• . • ......._

I

.USa,.,,.:....,
S.W:_.__...

18• C

hampion Bass Boat
matching trailer. 150HP
XAS,
~..u:om
cover.

r

5725 · 00· ~ 1759

.CAYUS &amp;

Maroa ftJMI;s

Sprillf

I

Specials
10 in. Boston Fems

.

Now $5.00
While they lasL over
2(KK) to choose-from.

Flowering cl Fol.~e
Baskets, Bedding&amp;.

_

YOL'tJCS

'-.lllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir

1110\ ~ l&gt;IS..\ICE:&gt; '&lt;OU...
IN. f~, f.CI.Sf
('(O!'I.f. u~ 'IOU!

Uncondllional lifetime guar-

antee. Local ~retarenoes furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (T40) 4460870, Rogers Ba""'em

Waterproofing.

~.-~I•IUS'i&amp;.~

WilD t&gt;OC':&gt; !

O~Sunday

G

'

NOT 11ELa&gt;IC E.1110U611

Construction

·--Windows
' •Rooftng
•Decks
•Gamgn

Jobnlon's Tree

S!lrv!ce

n.c..

-··--- ·---

~VINGS
'

HOiiE:REEl\
~

1 . .,.. ...

---~,..._ 1 ,"'

-"~ .... ~:::

• Homes • Septic

\

Syst&lt;m •

0.1 milS IIIII
III'IIIICb
11,001

Shop
Oassifieds!

28 Yean Experience

• Pole Barns
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-1953
'7441416-14Jfi
740-591~1

llatlv t!tribune
~oint J}lta£5ant l\egister
and Daily Sentinel

niiiiii..U

..

II
1&amp;,2008

PEANUTS
IF JESUS AAD OWNED A D06,
WAAT KIND JX&gt; 'f'OU SUI'P05E
IT WO\Il.D HAVE SEEN ?

...

·-···~·- 'J

...........
·
7

a

•••

REGISTERED NURSES
Pleasant Valley Hospital
accepting applications for
experienced Registered Nurses in
Medical/Surgical. _Applicants must have
current West Virginia license, or eligible
obtain.
Send resumes to:
PI M'"' ValleJ llaspbl
cl•
hw!lrlliS
15:10,..., Drift

u-...

'* "-n•t.

111V 15550
(304) 675-4340
Fax to:
(304) 67~975

or apply on-line at

-.pvaHev.org
AA/EOE

THAT SAND..

CfNI and BOY

·--

H&amp;H

Wlee Concre7.e

Guttering

AH~oiCOOICI ...

Rooting, Siding, Gutters

740-1192-5929
740-416-1698

lnsuf8d&amp;Bonded

Free Estimates

740-653-9657

llid&lt; Wloo: 16 Yn ·EJIII.

..

IIU1'-

PO I 1.001&lt;1'

'

H.- Jlu!L!Ie,i

C.U: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

-·47239 Riebel

Rood, Long Bonom, OH

740-985-4141

GRIZZWELLS .

! ft~ , \lAVE 'fctll\\A'+JED

: A~HGqJT~
: 1'1~\-P. '?

HLCMW

PGAA
BR

C

BT

CT

BR

NV

JCTXJCAA

WCI

XDPAXTTAI

MXLCTL."-

NO

JX

RLX

BT

RLCR ,

VBXAP,

YCTH ' DC. RBDS

KBW

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. . . . . . .,

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WGMMCI

r:hr:r S@~(l-~-"r.trs·

wor:se -

0

ROOffllnge

J.

a troublemaker.

me

I I I I I'
PSTE \~

" Maniage.~
~

~~~--~~~ ~

granny lcctumd 1be

newlywed, "is when 1wo pctOilie
become one. The trouble Slllt5

I ~ 1bey
4
5
I l I I I e by

l

~HCILC

try to decide -:--

eo,p lete !he dwci&lt; le qllllttid

fl)};ng In 1he oniiSint;
you d_el'fllop from &gt;top No. 3

8

word$

bolooo&lt;

PRINT NUMBE~ED lETTERS IN
THES£ SQUARES

~ UNSCRAM!!LE ABOVE LETTERS

TO GET

ANSwtR

.

,

I I I I I .J

SC1tU4UTS ANSWERS s'9, o8
O)psiia- Fionl- Oldea- Jocose- OONFUSfJ)
Poiicl111p 'I ., to avwd, ""1\oae of as willllit •l*lY
...••• sliould be regislaod. CONRJSED."
· ARLO &amp; JANIS

r1

intentions or grandiose ptans than actually doing ar]Ythfng about them . Be a proOOOOr. not a play actor.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. ,9)- Vou will
be unhappy in a situation Where all !he
control is in the hands of another. so ask
a lot of QUestions before joining up. Vou
won't like standing in the wings.
•
PISCES (~b. 20-March 20) -Be carelui how you handle an argument that
may unlbld between you and your mate..
An impasse could result If a lad!. of con~;ideration is shown instead o1 a destra to ·
resolve the isaue.
ARIES (March 21 ~A,prl l , 9) - In your
eetimatOO , If oo-workel'l aren 't perfonn·
ing to your axpeeteti0nl 1 don't come
dowrl on them in • ~vy-haoo.d manner. The frienclly, aoft touCh will take you

further.

SOUP TO NUTZ

a~

cf

H0 R S UN

migh1 tum out to De more hindrance than
help. tf you have anything important to
. do, opet'8te on your own it you can .
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) - There
is a strong possibility that you could ·
spend mora time talking about your

NoT OML~

latlen

"""""'lerl ""nil bolow 1o form four simple wo~.
!ovr

•o

SAGITTARIUS {Nov. 23-0ec. 21 ) Aslcing for assiS1anoe and receiving rt

Jesus was

...-

- - - - - iolltod ~CLAY I. I ' O L W I - - - - -

made plans will cause needless
headaches. Your beS1 chance tor success- built with strong, solid founda·
tions.
TAURUS (April 20-May 26) - Don 't
behave In a manner that coulD put your
popularity and/or aooeptance by friends
and stranger~; in jeopardy. Your success
comes from those you treat kindly and
courteously.
GEMINI (May 2, -June 201 - Although
OU15idel"5 might find you easygoing and
forgiving, this tsn'1 likely to be 1he case
for your family. If any of them should
anger you in some manner. there will be
heck to pay.
CANCER (June 21-.-,luly 22) - Beware of
a ·tendency to overreact to the beh~~;vior
of others. You may be the one wtlo is
reading far more into things than what is
actually intended.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Financial conditions could be sub;ecteQ lo larger-thanusual tosses through carelessness or
exlravaganoe on your part. Think before
ptunking down harD-earned money on
something you don't need.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Careful
considerations must be given to the task
at hand ; otherwise, you could end up
Doing things the hard wa~ .:_ 'and Jt)ur
ambitDns, hopa~&gt; or expectations might
go completely untulfiUed.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct~ 23) - If you are
overly sensitive. you wMI have a ctifficuh
1ime disttnguishing between when some--thing is truly an affront or When i1 is the
honest fact&amp; at hand. Don'11ake anything
too seriously.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) - Don 't let
your curiosily get out of hand and cause
you to poke your no&amp;e into other people's
business. You could be labektd a busybody or -

CT

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "I loilO going 1o the lead slo,. and drinkong coffee
and 1alking aboUI how much rain we need." · Thomas Haden Church

AstroGraph

Clli&lt;A!M~ &amp;&gt;T

Cell: 740-416-1834
25+ Jfti'S •rfHri••e• f 'rw ErliMGJn

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

t:ft1
...,.-..,y,

I',....

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofmg • Pole- :'
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

INmfiNE52

HOW CAN
YOU NOT?

740-367-G536

-

THE!~

MATTERS.

740-317-osM

For~ IUid New

HOW CAN YOU
..lDGE SOMEONE BY

ON THEIR APPEARANCE.
T~AT IT'S WHAT'S ON
1HE II5IJE THA.T

LoceiConbKioi

r:r.F

r----:::'11 .

I FEEL. Llf&lt;E SOCIETY'S
. I'INALLYREALIZING THAT
YOU SHOUI..DNT ..lM
OTHERS llASEll SOLEI.Y

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Wh ldows,
Electtic, Plumbing,
. DrywaH,
Remodeling, Room
Addilions -

HelpWMdld

e .

TIRED OF IAIALKIH6
AROOND IN AU.
~

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

•

UNLESS liE 60T

-liZ=J=t~fl=--···
'I
sz . .•=••

IIIIIIIIC1re

....

..

Manley's
Recycling

Seamless Gutters

. ..........
23,2118 '

" RLX

rs

• Roam ............
Owner:
"-K
I
" 742-2332

David Lewis
740-992-4i971

FE

~allipohs

r JlON'T REALLY

LIKE C:OUI&gt;ITRY I!U!&gt;tC:. ..

• Pole llulldlngs

~oofing

• Backhoe • Site
Preparation • Dozer
• Garages • Utilities

""P

• VInyl Siding

Formedy Baber's Auto Parts

"'-~

TCK/ays clue. Keouals J

Tuoodor, .... 13, 2001
By Bomloo 8ede Ooot
Carefully eumine all considerations
before launching a new endeavor or
enterprise in ·the year ahead. Hastily

.... liltGtc:Et.$ACK' 1110,

740o378 6414
St.Pt.124
AI I ~Rille. OH
Gary Curtis- Owner

........

.

t«l; T~T!s•Too I:.ORNV.
ttO\-l r'\IIO(JT SOitET~IIi&amp;

cu.- Aula n :'"'

Contpll11

Geletr.ly ~ ~~- Cl1llllsl from aoota!IO!lslly famous peoote past ard prtllifl!'tt
·
Ea:h ICtr 111 tile CIPI'IIf Sl!r'ds tor anomer

plays a trump.

4 in. foliage pol
Shrubs &amp; Azaleas
Open M -S 9_5

on

CELEBRITY CIPHER
br Luis Campos

However, if East ducks his heart ace for
,one round. South will need a hand entry.
Since declarer is estallishing a trick in
hand, he shou!O keep an entry lhere by
winning trld&lt; one with dummy's club ace.

f'EOI"l£, ell\ ~lla"(,w.Eii;E

4125108 1 m
~•nsnr

'-ned

Then South drives OU1 the hea" aoe,
wins lhe nex1 club, discanJs dummy's
last club on his 11lird hea", and a1 last

992-5776

WATLS£ ILOOFING

c:ltiltr

1lla1 Nor1h,
to What
quoteoften
a leading authority,
tl1rse
spades.
was
would bid two spades in ringing tones.
Now, 1ttough, North can jump to three
spades 'aS .a game-invitational raise. It
shows a1 least lour trumps, 1D-12 iota!

each suit. +ie must avoid a club loser.
The ooly way to do that is to take a discard on the third round of hearts.

Vegetable Aats

TraJier Lots on Jericho Road ~o
pets,
$275/mon1h downstairs, utlli1tes pd. Friday, Bam-4:3opm. Clo&amp;ed W W W . CARE 0 . C 0 M RV Service at Carmichael
304-89S-3534 $, 25 onth
~nc!~des water and sewer. Deposit, near Wai·Mart, no Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; Carmichael Equipment. 740m
5200 dep. 446-3611
pots. 245-qaga
Sunday. fT&lt;I0)446-7300
446-2412

Dlnlp-

hands. This week leis m"""' to

Declarer has four potential losers: one in

THE BORN LOSER
';OIJRFENtTI-IJ•H.\J~OOE.., ~00 I'IW&gt;IOTUL. '(OU~.., r-WW., ~NOT t-\O~T...,
: AA~ "1''U \~A ~t&gt;
0Cl..U510i'L

51

39 ltoughl
&amp;lure- hair 20 airport
··
Decide on
toot
40 Nt.1 on • .22 p111t11e 38 Dntws

Moving on. - should South plan 1lle
play in four spades after West leads 1lle
club queen? _

*Prort1p1 and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rates
*Insured
*Experienced
ReferellCel' Available!
Call Gary StJmley @
740-591 -8044

-

so Olww.W

-

16 lloi oielr'o 37 Bell

diate jump-raise wi1ll on~ 1l1ree trumps,
give ~ to your opponents and 1ell lhem
good ff is!)

CARPENTER.
SERVICE

&amp;Removal

Now~•for

•

'

Trimming

Syracuse, Ohio

·.
.,______

•

Stanley Tree-

GREENHOUSE

.-?

points (high-caro p&lt;&gt;n1s plus shortage
poims) and eight losers. (W yoo ha~~e a
book that says you may make this imme--

•

~==:::~~~~~

12........

47

hand. ff was 100 strong lor two ~­
bul no1 strong«&gt;&gt;Ugh lor a game-1oroing

· ~ciPES

~=~~~~!:::!

34 Hiker's
..-.,.
35 Trp~ the

~~

-is

· In 1lle old days, lhere wos no bid for 11lis

BEST

•u

umn-

..
11 • •

spade. After a pass oo your •right, what
would yoo rospond?

YO~

'

02HDUitrltCia55ic,24,000
miles,
blacl&lt;lchrome.
S14,000. 740-339-0031

38 On edge

•

32 Society col-

3511omlur-10 flu I Ia
36 liMe
Clike
........,

mowe onl

46 -

1ili; caused, look a1 lhe Nor1h
!land in lhe diagrBm. Par1ner opens one

MINUS AN'
[~~U~~~~~F~~]
. OR TWO ! !
·

1 HOPE YOU LADIES
WILL CONTRIBUTE

:!: :.~.:...--gua~

UAX 1986 Chevy lSOO, 4WD, 2

tu

-45 --

tiona! auctions epor11rum raising one
no-1rurrq&gt; 1o two oo-nurr.,. To see 1lle

~=:i:o;;:!!!:!::::;=:...--.;..,~~:::;::=!~S:;:·I~2~J

I. Can ·be installed over

EQUIPMENT TRAILERS , tone brtlwn ext, tan int.
C Anu
~o EX'""E
nn SS
&amp; Automatic . trans. Uses
H 0 M E 5 T E ' A 0 E A rAagtru11ar~IJIIS;;;·;~~n
CARGO/CONCESSION .
TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE-

SNAL~1

-

; BARNEY

30

-....
Shake-(hunyl

Qame-inv!ta1ional sequenoes.
In the early days of bridge, under
c.Aber1son. lhere _ , wry few inlll!a·

"""-- _ _ _ • •

and New
Construction

28 Elephant

-s-·
at
8 Deli
"':l..
9--

34 Roqu h:at

u-

... loOked at bidding wi!!1

Lest -

llromaprize
Linchpin
4 --

1oc11o

5 Futuno fioh
31 FedEI: lnlcl&lt; 6 Burrow
33 One, in
7
girl

to invitational

IArrnLS!

~sidential

!istingo Sll0-ll20-4076 • V4S5

~~

ff/'IAT01, wttATS YOtJ1 PLA/'1 TO
Al&gt;1&gt;1fSS
fiOQ-A·IA1~L OIL1

USf

HORSE/LIVESTOCK

Dri-ys &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L Deere iatelfl You'll be sur·
()I' 709-1657
Scrap Matals Open Monday, priled! Ched&lt; out our used
Takilg applitmlons tor 2BR. Taking applica1ions for 1BR Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; inventory
at
quiet.304773-5550/8823418

'

JsrRoodroleftahove
Ma•on GolfD&gt;urse

' VALLEY
K
•---· .,,.
$13,000 {304)882-82-17

ft lrorn $399 mo. Midwest 3br Washer/ Dryer, wi1h a .:.C.:.:all_44..c6-:....:.:9523=---- - - - - - - - - NECK
HITCHES .
740--828-2750 '
Deck, in GlenwooD , big o..cloul 1 ~
Mauve &amp; Blue Sofa &amp; Chair- CARMICHAEl
EQUIP·
1

/

S-Service

3223

29
30

?!

·Pass

·=·- ·

26

From Weak hands

H-Honest

304-882-23n or 304-67._

22 Go fBt

OpeniDg lead: • Q

MID.
Bri,ggs &amp; 'Stratton

10 Years

~-

1•

2340 Dlog d
gruer
-(hnlh.) ·
1 Ohio,
. 24 Heron kin 41 ID Yveo
25 Kudzu, e.g.· 42 ~·a
2 nme unitl 26 lAmed
....
3 .......
27 " T -"

23 Shore

---Eut

...;:.:;:;.::.:::;J:,I

RICK PRICE

windows, new
ongtno wi!h 70,000 miles,
tireS &amp; battery, needs

r

,___
PSI CONSTRUCTION

Craftsman,

exte~ &amp; ta~. clolh lntertor.

· electnc

s2

Dealer: Soidh
Vulnerable: Both

lfle/11 mo. pd

DOWN

19 a n wed
21 Loop-

• K 7 3

Mowen;,
Tillers. MIIIT1ly.

1- lnt&lt;grity

8

51 - - gllnce

18 Cauol ""'
(ltrph.l

tKQ

Tractors,

-:-:-----~1. . Ford Conlour, ~.tan

9 AI086'3
• 10 7 G 4
•

56
55 -ners

dog

9 K Q J

l:CIOAII·I:CIOP.II

cin "ER"

11
tt.h
15 · "hal
'

.A

.986S l

•
••

aiCiion
54Pnlnlo

h+ lieut

Soutlt

Front
ond - · -tireS,
good poin!/Jillpe.
645-51146. ·
• - - - - - -...
or441-D941
·
03 Ford F950; V10 Super

·~'"' Call Ron Ellllns, 1- BuiLT,I
Stoci&lt;.

2Br at Johnsons Mobile
HomePark. Call44&amp;-2003

lawn, 304 -576-32B2or304· ~·"'"
and
593-4496
Bedroom Apts. at VIllage
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
-M-ob_ll_e-ho_m_e-an-d~do-u- Middleport, frorh $327 to
blewide lor rent. 740-446· $592. 740·992·5064. Equal
Housing Oppo"uni1y.
4060 or 367 -n62
-~------ Modern 1 Bedroom Apt.,
One Acre W/4 Br.mobile Call (740)446-0390
home.aU electric.Broad Run
W.Va .,2 mi. hom power NR~
quiet 28A
apt
PJantonapavedroad,nice
'"erences
&amp; deposi1

Accent

709-6339.

.,!.,~,':T,: :~=H In -EB-"~NTE~-G-~-1TY--EF-E-R

800-537-9528.
-------lorigaberger
Twin
bed
·•o·n
3 bedroom ,' 1 bath . $400 ---...,..--~-- Comfor1er
on •
reot. $35D deposh. COII388- Furnished Apt, 2nd Ave , valance l piHow, . _ run- - - - - - - - 9905
•
Upstairs, AU Utili1ie&amp; pd. ner, new while· bathroom
.NEW2011114br-2ba 1,700sq
1BR. No Pats. Gallipolis, vanily675-6937

mymi-ome.com

3M-77J-586l
Jet 11112-3294
Selvicing Lawn

er. A5mg $2200. Cel17.0.

Top Ouali1y. 606-929-5655

(304)882-3017

on private lot 74D645-3592 or 740-367·0654

Hyunda1

·~

·Complete
Remodeling

· HOurs

MASON MOWDt

liORS.W:

01

tobacco-

util~ies,

Avltfi

He!-

7401W2Z17

pit..,.

53 Onli•

14 , . . . . ,

Elst

• 74 3
• 9 li %
t AJ 9
• Q J 10 9

•New Homes

45171

Pomeroy,Ohio
'=======~

52 Feminine

llaoMI pool

7 4

Ws

1'1acina,Ohio

• •11: - -

if\ 1 slllom
·~

13 ~

•a •n

-'

BARNS

,.

4811odng'o

.. A 6 4

::.

296111-· ·fload

r ••••.-

.

22

.

•

•

SHEDSGAJlAG£5-

fit your Deeds

.__ _ _ _ _ _- '

'*""""'

949-2237
. - - - - • = r pays 0f1!!1er, sewer,
new 3 - -. bed, 2 bath, includes land, 2BR $450/dep $450/rent,.:

bulls for

-

-

;_

&lt;USfom built to

1,~------_.1
Potted Hereford

-

~~

AU buiJdiags aR

lr

l..l\1isro(JL

.

ts

•All electric· averaging
$!jl)-$80hnon11l

i

Ir•

Call 379--2461

Ellm View

ApartJ

14'X50' all

:.

411 liar*

05-11--oB

H.G.-

44-

•imlnll

•KQ JIO
o--

........

Mate Boston Terrisr &amp; Pug
.mix puppi8ii 12 we,ks old. I'll"-~~-----, r

and/or small houses FOR Microwaw$2D.OO.
King
~·
RENT. Call fT40)441-11 11 size bed $35.00.
Fro&amp;1of application &amp; informatiDft. standing
clishwuher • row IC no till planter with
$25.00.
c. dry fertilimrfbe9ass bolr8s
Pap machine 5200.00. Sola &amp; monitor, 40ft. grain.....,_
tor little ~m 1 """
lneA
$&lt;10.00. Cots to giw a""l/.
~ '
.
.
Call 446-9632
treNiplanter, IJ'IIvlly bar wi!h
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartmems
nmn1ng gear.
•Centre! heat &amp; A/C
- - : - - - - - - - - 8,000-7,000. (T.W)25&amp;-1352
Hot Tub I Swim Spo Ootlet.
•Washer/dryer hookup
E.onJ:lgs.

lAND AND ~ .

ready 10 move into. Orlly 399
a month
(wac).
866·564·
. MUST
SALE
8679
-------lllodutar8see0hio'siargest
display. Midwe&amp;1 740·8282750
mymidwes1.oom

-----

---

Monahan carpet. .
trud&lt; dri¥er
5 spe&lt;KI trans,
12 Eas1em Aw Gallipolis, Oh . . . . ' ••4 at l\lmost 65,310 miles, good con&lt;iJCD-446-l...:C
giveaway prices 3()4..675~ 1ion. needs catatytk: COilYef1-

MDlcJwoiB;

I

Moon£ lloMI&lt;)i;
lUI RDrJ·

2008 3 bedroom 2 bath SOC·

&amp; '-

TrliiiBm .•lon. New Rims.

1ur._

CKC
R8Q.
Mlnlat&amp;Jre
Pinschers, 7 week&amp; old,
shols, wonmed. 740-31188788

Sale: Berber Carpel $5.95
yd remnants SotO.OO &amp; up.

CONVENIEIITI.V LOCATED &amp; Al'fOIIDAIILE!
'
Computer desk S20.00.

cr

i

e-.: 'Sior1 Hif&gt;

Nertll

r--==-~-::--,

AKC Yorkie pups, m~~tes e~rtc moblk! horne,reaonly, 1st shols l wormed sonably priced. - . - .
5850 304-675-7M;
3418 or ~4-6915.

e

OJ.

I

0000 Evening 388-8017 oo
245-9213

Jo1w1 Door A 1W T -.

oao,

r

I

·

AKC

bath , fumished, no pets. USI tor Hud-sub8idil8d. 1.U
Rent+ Dep. 740-44 1-0245
apaTimolll
1or
lhe
Garage $139,900 or 304·
2BR apt. also, a 40r house eldel1yfdiseh!ed, call 675550-2114 or 304·532-3599 5226/.mo! 3 bOO , 2 ba11l, (740) 441-0194
.
6679
Bank Repo! (5% dOwn . 20
Molllu: J:1oMEs years. 8% APR) for is1ings 2BR garage ap1 in Gallipolis..
•
1i0R S...u;
. 800-620·4946 01&lt;. R027
WID hool&lt;up, no pets,
deposH &amp; relorenoes. 6451470 3b ' ba
2bedroomhouselorrent. 18520&lt;446-2 143
1t ,
1, 1
, 1 owner.
jj;;;ijj;~~;;,;;.;;;;
· mus1 see, too many updates no pets, (74!))992·5858
Be11uttfu1 Apta. • 'M'lt gn
to ltst. Green Terrace, $8000 - - - - - - - - &amp;tetes 52 Westwood l:i:i\0~;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
obo. 446-0091 or 645..a615 2bT House on Redman Drive, ~ $365 to $560
l b J!!RDD ·I
Ridge Rd . $400 depos~. 740--44&amp;-2568. . Equal
~
16X80 3 Bedroom 2 Bath $375 month 304-675-6406 Housing l"'..w-.n.-tunm.. This

r

.

:..fT_&lt;I0'-')992_·_5_858
_ _ _ _ - - - - - - - - orod, $300 ••ch
2305
212 ·~ A•• 3 - and TwinRi..,.T.-rioaOOIIpl- fT&lt;I0)667~
'
~u · - , _ , .
ing oppiicolioiiS fur Willing .,..,-,,....,..----- Wan1 to~ a

j
L,,_ _.•.iOtiilbNriilti;.._.l.
10

Aipley. 3br, 2ba, Rancher
on 2 acres. 24•32 2 Car

1~

1hoy loll

T... &amp;l'linl 2002Hald
regillored Buoett Top for c.i7 Jeep, 2003
hDLRf ~ 1M. H·: tri col· KaMIMid mlM. Cllll 949-

(7&lt;10)361-1)547.

41

Alder

I

j

-...

- •• c-binls

Phillip

a

.e was

a l'l'loRT·Tt'Me

. '1/e~RII'ISRiaN ..
(
'

.I
..-'

I

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, May

www.mydailysentinel.rom

COLUMBlA GAS OF OHIO, INC.
NOTICE Of1 AI'I'LICATION FOR A(l'('II()IUTY
TO INCUASE llATI!S AND CHARGES FOR n'S GAS DISTRIBUI10N SI!'JlVICE AND
FOR APPROVAL OF AN ALn:RNA11VE FORM OPIIF.GULADON
AND TO REVISE ITS O£nECIADON ACCRUAL llATiiS

._....c--as.. •ict Sales tt.Rs- Ne~

··, :1111
Description
Cuttalt
· Customer-Charge
$0.00
FtrSI
2Sl00 Met Delivered Per Month
$0.4616
AND CHANGE lN ACCOllNTING ME11IODS
.
Next 13.000 McfDelivered Per Month • $0.2ll13
PUCO CASE NOS. __,u;A-AIIl.__.,3-GA-ALT,II-ti74-GA-AAM,AND 18-t175-GA- Neltt 85 ,000 Mcf Delivered Per Month
$0.2513
AAM
Ovcc IOOS)OO Mcf Dclivemd Per Month
$0.1913

Plarsuaot to R.C. Sectioa 4909.19, Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc. ('"Columbia") beleby gives ootioe
tbat oa Man:h 3, 2008, it filed an ~p~~licatioo with
Public Utilities Commission of Obio
("Commission") requesting authority to ammd its filed lmiffs 1o ~
rilles and charges for
natural gas distributioo se~Vices . Columbia has also applied, un&lt;lor R.C. Cbaptcc 4929, for approval of

me

me

an altmulliveform of regulatioo.

roPY

'$(),4720

'$0.2ll78
. '$0.2571
~. 1957

I 2118
1.arf:e GeM~ at 'liw••'I'SI-••rt•a~•lil·• Stnkt: tt.Rs- 1\N'ioo.•-Dcscription
·
Customer Oaarge
FU'St
2Sl00 Mcf Deliveml Per Month
Next 13.000 Mcf Deliv=d Per Month
Next 85S)OO Mcf Delivered Per Month
Over 100,000 McfDelivered Per Month

This notice describes me subsi.ance of the Applicalioo. Any interested pany Seeking de-tailed
informatiOn with leSped to all affected rilleS, ctw:ges, regul.aliOIIs and praclioes may in-sped _a ropy
of me Application, including SUPPQiting schedules and pesenl and proposed rille sbcets, by ettbcc of Full R~ts ~Geaul 'lb
the following methods: by visiting the offioes of the Commis~on at 180 East Broad SII'OCl, 13th ftoor,
Columbus, Ohio, 43215-3793; or by visiting me Commission's web site at bUp:llwwwiJUCO.IDio.gov,
ldecling DIS, inputting 08.0072 in tbe case lookup bolt, and se-lecting the date lhe applica!ioD was
filed. Additionally; a copy of tbe Applicatioo and supporting documents may be viewed at the
business office of Columbia at 200 Civic Oonter Drive, Colum-bus,'Ohio 43215. during normal
business hours. A nolice of intent to file this rille inacasc appli--cation and a
of tbe proposed
rakS wen: mailed to the mayors and legislative autborilies of the ronJDHmitics located within tbe
arus SCI'VCd by Columbia and filed wi1b tbe Coomrissioo on Febnwy I, 2008.

Proposed
$6SOOO

Desaiption

Customer Oaarge
FU'St
2,000 Mcf Delivered Per Moolh
Nen 13.000 Met Delivcmi Per Month
Next 85,000 Mcf Delivered Per Month
Over IOOS)OO Mcf Delivered Pee Month

Current

Proposed

$0.00
5Xl.4616
$0.2813
$0.2513
$0.1913

'$0.4720
$0.2818
$0.2571
$0.1957

$6SO.OO

tl, 2008

'$00104
$00065
'$0.0058
'$00044

•

Owl;ge
$650.00
$0.011W
5Xl.0065
'$00058
$0.0 044

-l&gt;oliM ~RMes-No• 'w l8ll
Current
Proposed
{baoge
$0.00
$650.00
$650.00
$u.4616
$0.4720
5Xl.0104
$0.2813
$0.2ll78
~0065
$0.2513
$0.2571
$0.0051!
. $0.1913
$1).1957
5X)0044

Full 1teq11in •• m &lt;Mop; •he lrM"P•tadta Sa tkt: R*:s- N!No!r
. •. -..htra 2118
Description
Cumin~
Proposed
Olan,ge
The Application, whicb contains proposed ~visions to Columbia's Tariff_for Gas Sccv-ioe, affects Customer(lwoge
$0.00
$150.0 0
'$150.00
rakS aod ctw:ges aod certain tams and conditions fO£ natural gas SCC\Ilce to all cus-tomers of First 25 Mcf Dcliv=d Per Month
$1 .0600
S0.9238
. (0.1362)
Columbia served wilhin all or portions of tbe couilties of Allen, Ast!land, Athens, Belmont, Curoll, Next 75 Mcf Delivered Per Month
$0.9801) '
$0.8504
(~.1296}
Champaign, Clut.. Columbiana, Cosboctoil, Crawford, Cuyaho~a, Delaw~, Erie, Fairfield,
FAnt1in Fulton, Gallia, &lt;m&gt;ene, o-nsey, Hmoock, Hardin, Harrison, Hocting, Holmes, Huroo, 'li'utfrctJICWi•
sFonwrlySa+edbyM......yC. .. O' b!a'1;1lates
Jacbon.'Jdlcnon, Knoll, Lawreac:c, Lickillg. Lopn, l.uain, Lucas, Mailison, Mahoning, Marion, Columbia has proposed the transfer of cust~. cunenlly served under its rate schedules
Mcdiu, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, M'!"""", Muslringum, NOble, Ottawa, Paty, Pi~way, Richland, Murphy Geneta1 Service ("MGS") imd Full Requi=nents Mmpby Genetal TranspOIIItloo
Ro&amp;~ Sandusky, Scioto, Seneca, Stait., Tu.&amp;eaAwas, Union, Vmton, Wamn, Washington, Wayne, Service ("FRMGTS") to its SGS, SGTS and FRSGTS. rate schedules in recognitioo of Abeir
Wood aDd Wyandot, Ohio. The applicatioo SlaleS IMt tbe rutm1t fllle&amp; and cbalges do not provide a se~Vice is now· provided by Columbill and 1be fooner Mmphy Gas ous1:oi!Xfi sbou1c1 be
just and tUSOII8ble rate of JeiUI'D on Columbia's used and ue-ful p10pcrty as of Jlocembcc 31, '1007,. charEcd tbe applicable rille lhat provides fDr n&gt;eovery of Columbia's cost of providing gas
the date =tain in this cue. The Applicalioo stales ~ Columbia R!ql1i!es the proposed reveane ·&amp;elvice to these \'ustomers.
increase to provide an opportunity to eam a fair re111m .o n its assets and to moover its costs of
Fsii;IJIW;_.u tJf l'i•ipJ
Ral5 flir Srh ... !ierwil Uililti' c I . . .
.
opaatillll.
Columbia bas p.roposed tbe establisbmmt of a new rate for scbool.s served d!rooghout its
Any person, firm, corporation, or association may_ file, pUISuant to R .C . Seclioo4909.19, ~ . tenitory. These changes will ensure die oontinuation of seMoc to tdtools at cates 00111Jl8111blc
objection to such proposed ~ rates by allegmg lllat such proposals ~ UDJUst aDd dis- to those in effect today under various contracts.
·
.
'
crimin.atoJy or umeuonable. Recommcodations IMt differ from tbe Applicatioil may he
by tbe
.
.
Staff of the Commission or by intervening paRies and IPliY be adopled by the CommissiOJ!: The CliaiiF ill Late Pa~t CJwo&amp;e ..
exisrin,g base rille for all Columbi,a OOJiliillllliti was ~ in a raiiC filing- tbat bccime effective Columbia bas requested a •c)Jange in its tariffs to provide for the replacement ·of the billing of
· a late p.ayment charge of 1.5% on any unpaid balance on all amounts in eJtccss of $2,000, to
November I, 1994.
any unpaid balance Jtt tbe time of issuat~Ce of a subsequent bill. This provision is nOt
In its Application Columbia is also
' ing aulbority to implement an alternative regula-tion plan applicable w unpaid !Jalanccs eltisting ~or to tbe .effective date of the chan~e in tbi~ ~e · ~
for its gas distributioo &amp;elvice. This altcmalive ~gullllion plan oonsists of two sepuate rille moovery unpaid balances of customers cnrollall m p.ayment plans pursuant to the Ohio Administtatlv.e
mechanisms. The first rate recovery mccbanism will provide Columbia with the ability to track and ~mcover the costs of implementing an l.nfiu1ructiR Rcplacemmt Ptc&gt;giam {"Rider IRP"}. The serond
rate recovery !!Wlb•nism will provide Columbia with the ability to recovcc tbe costs of rmplen.ti!l•ng er-R&amp; rittts 'IU
a Demand Side Management program ("Rider DSM").
.
.
Columbia is proposing a change in its Gross Receipts Tax Rider ("GRT"). Cwrenlly gross
receipts taxes are reoovered through base 131es and the ;application of the GRT to gas cost
Ddhay Cluqe
· .
charges. Columbia :bas proposed the removal of all ~s receipts UIXeS from base rilles with
Columbia is proposing a change in its current rille design for customers sccved under tts Small tbe rider to be applied to all charges billed by Columbia under all rate schedules .with the
General Service ("SGS"), Small General Transportation Service ("SGTS") and Full Re-quirements e ..ception of charges ·billed on behalf of Columbia's Customer OIOICESM Progtam
Small General Transportation Service ("FRS&lt;ITS") rate schedules under which most residential providers that may be subject to sales .tax charges and cbatges to customers exempt from
customer.; are served. lbese changes provide far the JqJlaccmeot, over a two-year period, of ·me p.ayment of gross receipts tues .
current Customer Charge and volUmetric rille with a fiXed Monthly Delivery Charge. This change in
rate sttucture will provide for the recovery of no additional revenues, and it will reduce bills during •....,... 01 I'IGp("'ed
ill Rates
· .
the winter months and will increase bills during tbe SllllllJICI' monlihs, with no change in the annual The table below shows the proposed percent' of change in an customer's bill foc each rate
bill. Following is a comparison of CWTellt and proposed delivecy rilles for lihe aforementioned rate schedule and revenue class based on the average monthly consumption of each revenue class.
schedules:
·
Total bills for customers that purchase gas direc:tly from Columbia ·Dr its CHOICE Progtam
were calculated through the use of tbe average oonsUIDption per customer per month and
Saulll G e• 81 ~ Ral5- I\Nilomt1ftll'.,.e!l'r 2118
Columbia's total expected gas costs in effect at the time .Columbia filed its Notice of Intent.
Change
. Description
Curn:ot
Proposed
· ·Total bills for custoDlCI'S served under Columbia's ttaditional transportation nte scbcdulcs
($6.50)
$0.00
Customer Chazge
$6.50
were calculated hued on tbe assumption the gas cost rate in effect is Columbia's commodity
$13.62
$13.62
Monthly Delivecy Charge
$000
expected gas eost rate in effect at the time of the filing of the Notice of Intent.
$0.9952
{~.3717)
All Gas Consumed Pee Mcf Dclivcced
$1.3669

Finance committee disc••sses fees, tine increases

SPoRTS
.• Reds net wi1 ewer
Mallils. See P-.,e Bl

BY BRIAN J. REED
BI!EEDOUYDAILY5Eloi111!EUJOU

been cited to Middlqlort
Mayor's Court for non-payment of their landlord fees
for 2008.
Village O.moil's finanoe
wmmin... discussed tbC citations during its regular meeting Oil Monday aftanoon.
Mayor Mnaet _Grrladi said

made

cbaoie

.

Class

$20.75
$0.0000

$1.13

Small General Service
52%
SmaliGenctal Transportation Service
N)A
Small General . Schools T,..,sponation Service
N/A
Full Requirements Small Gen . Transportation Service 4.6%
General Setvlce
63%
General Service Schools. Sales
N/A
General Transportation Service
N/ A
General Schools Transportation Service
N/A
Full Requirements General Transportation Service
51%
Large •Gonerdl Service · S.iles ·
N/A
Large General Transportation Service
N/A
Full Requirements Large General Transportation ServiceN/A
Mwphy ·Gas Sales .
14.1%
Full Requirements Mwphy Transportation Service
13.8%
Full Requirements Cooperative Transportation Service N/A

rrallln•~t(llllil'¥111l"ila Sa wict ~ -111\lllom•-b'Zlll' _ ,
Dcscriptioli
Cummt
Proposed
$20.75
$0.0000

Fldlltequlrtnwwts Slllall Gtilti'lll 'liw.... Mtadta ~ R*:s- No'

Description
· .
Custolller Charge
Monthly Delivery Charge
AllGasConsumedPerMcfDcliv=d

C111m1t .
$6.50
$0.00
$1.3669

indusnial (:lass

Change

s..u G e

$13:62
$9.9952

Residential Class

Proposed

S..U Ge~~111 .. Tr-.T IIdadoa Seuict a..tes ·No\ •-"« 2118
Description
Cummt
Pmposed
Customer Charge ·
$6.50
$0.00
Administrative Charge
$6.00
$0110 .
Monthly Delivery ~e . .
$000
$13.62
· All Gas Consumed Per Mcf Deliv=d
$1.3669
$0.9952

Monthly Dclivecy Charge
AU Gas Consumed Per Mcf Delivered

Rate Schedule

Proposed
$0.00
$13.62
. $0.9952

($0.9952)
Change
($6.50)
($6.00)
$13.62
($0.3717)

Change
$7.13
($0.9952)

OJ%
(0 .I%)

0 .4 %
3.9%
}.()%

1.4%
4 .0%
11.6%
12.4%
3(t8%

llid«IRP

.

•

======;::::;;;:== enfooccmcnt oft'icer.

cunmtl~~~=

Ounu.AIUES

patda
with tbe
Rif6e is

l'o1ice Depaw IIIII ·
beliD bis duties as code

PqeAS

enForcement olfiocr on
Friday at a pay rate of .
$10.13 per boar for -40
buun a Week. OUef Mitt
E. Ptotfitt W..mmen:le4
lliftle for tbe job

• Gary lee OleYaller, 59
·~PI'IIIJJlee, 70
· ·Pw~Ua-.as

Mayor Jobn Musra. • , .,., .

Rime rrpiaoes Pall~m
~lonnie Spaw~ wbo
rmdy ~ fifilll...ttme
duliies
an oftica- in tbe

as

~'f!r?:&amp;';!iit.!.
have
llll'eSiing poweis.

.

~offered.

:s.e PIWJeAl

.

Rider IRPwill provide for the recovery of costs incumid in: (I; lhe fut.ure maintenance, repair
and replacement of customer-owned service lines that have been detennined by Columbia to
p.resent an e ..isting or probable llazard to peniOIIS and property; (1) the orderly and systematic
replacement of, over a period of approximately.Jhrec years. certain risers identified by the
Ful Rnpir 111ts Snutll Gat. 'Jl.n-.&amp;~._..,taliwlali'• !liJrrice 11M&amp;- NoH •ell er _ ,
Com-mission's Staff as prone to failure if not popedy assembled and installed; (3)
Description
Current
Proposed
Olange
Columbia's re-placement of all cast iron and bare steel p.ip.o; in its distllibution ~ystem over a
Monthly Delivery Qw-ge
$13.62 .
$20.75
'$7.13
period of twenty-five years; (4) Columbia'srep.lacemcnt of company-owned and(!ustomerAll Gas Consumed Per Mcf Dclivemd
$0.9952
$0.0000
($0.9952)
. owned metallic service lines identified by Columbia during .tbe replacement of all cast iron
and bare steel pip.e; and, (5) the installation of Automatic Meter Reading Devices on all meters
ClllltG •rr Cilar&amp;es
.
located inside residences and s~ commercial facilities , as well as on inaccessible outside
Columbia is proposing .an increase in the Customer Charge for custamers served under General meters, served by Columbia, which wiD provide actual meter readings each month.
Service ("GS''), General Transportation Service ("GTS") and ~ Requ~ments General
Tran~rtation Service ("FRGTS") rille schedules. The p.wpose of this change is to provide for
Within the Rider IRP. Columbia proposes to assume all fmancial responsibility for the future
recovery of a greater p.ortion of Columbia's costs that do not vary with customer usage. This change maintenance, repair and replacement of hazardous customer-owned service lines and .prone TO
will provide for tbe reco"ery of no additional revenues, and it Will reduce bills during the winter failure risers . Columbia also p.mposes to implement the Accelerated Mains Replacement
months and will increase bills during the summer months , with no cbange in the annual bill.
Program ("AMRP"), which consists of the replacement of approximately 3,770 miles of bare
,
steel pip.e, 280 miles of cast iron p.ipe and an estimated 360.000 metallic service lines. The
Columbia's is p.roposing the JqJiacement of its minimum bill provision for customers served under AMRP will produce substantial benefits through tbe enhancement of pipeline safety and
its Large G~neral Service ("LGS"), L:arge G~neral Transportation Service ("LGTS") an~ F_ull reliabil-ity by addressing the rep.laceme~t of an aging distribution inftllsttucture . The AMRP is
Requirements Large ~ Transporuwon Service ("FRLGTS") With a Customer Charge to provtde also in-tended tG foster economic development in Ohio by re-engineering those affected gas
for the recovery of fixed costs IMt do not vary with customer usage.
distribution systemS tG match the current and future needs of tbe environment and the
customers they serve.
.
'
Columbia is p.10p0sing tbe establishment of a Customer Charge for customcn served un-&lt;ler its Full
Requirements Cooperative Transp.ortation Service ("FRCI'S") rate sc~ule to re-cover fiJted costs Effective November 30 of each year, Columbia will file a pre-filing notice containing esthat do vary with customer usage . Following is a.compalison of current and proposed delivery rates timated Rider IRP schedules for the Rider IRP to become effective the following May. The
for the aforementioned ra1e schedules. All ~sed rates have been ad-justed to include gross esti·mated schedules will contain a combination of actual and projected . data through
reocipcs taxes.
·
Decembci- 31 of that year. iBy the following &amp;bluary 28 Columbia will file an ·I!Jidated
application w~th schedules supporting .the proposed Rider IRP , IJascd O!l .ctua1 costs
G
al Seance !Wellltafs'- Nom;•••er ZM
acc,umulated through Pecembcr 31 of tl!e preceding year. This propoSed rider would apply to
Proposeit.
&lt;llange
.' DciCription
Cwmtt
the Small General Service (SGS , SGTS . and FRSGTS), ,General Service .(GS , GTS and
$9.75
ClllfOJDa'Ciwge ·
$16.SO
$26.25
FRGTS)
and Muiphy Gas (MGS and FRMGTS) lllte schedules.
•
$0.6308 .
· First 2S Mcf Dcliv=d .p... Month
S I .3607
$1.9915
$0.1362
$1.4136
Next 75 Met Delivered Per MOillh $I .2784
RiderDSM
(S0.1410)
$1.1374
Over 2S Met Dclivcced Per MoDtb $I .2784
Columbia will file an app.lication , cooperatively developed by Columbia, the Office of the'
Ohio Consumers' Counsel, Commission Staff and other interested stakeh(llciers, by July I.
G r al'li' I lll1adooi Senb 11MB;- Nlnmm 2llll
2008 , for approval of a comprehensive energy efficiency program for all residential and
Change
Description
,
·~
Cummt
Proposed
commercial customers. These p.rograms will enable cGstomers to reduce bills through various
$9.75
CustomerCharge
$16.50
$26.25
conservation programs. Columbia proposes to spend up to an additional $9 .3 million per yeat
($6.00)
Administrative Charge
$600
$0110
on such energy efficiency programs. Columbia would initially increase doUars spent on energy
$0.6308
First 2S Mcf Dcliv=d Per Month
$1.36117
$1.9915
efficiency prograins from the current level of $5.5 million per year to $12.8 million in 2009 .
$0.1362
Next 75 Mcf Deliv=d Per Month $1.2784
$1.4136
Program funding may be increased by up to .an additional $1 mill!.on per yeat in 20 I0 and
($0.1410)
Over 25 McfDcliv=d Per Month $1.2784
$1.1374
20 II if energy efficiency targets are·met.

..

ps,

POMEROY-Tall
dilapidated
propeities,
rental inspections and many
olher oode enforoe~Iit
Chlm:s await Joey Rime.·
• Pomemy''ll new . rode

• Grant writing

.($6.50)
$13.62
($0.3717)

tu~••:e-lzlzllin-.Ult G II all'rll •• ftlldoa Senice llafes- No-ber 211011
De&amp;cription
CUITCIIt
Proposed
Change
Customer Charge
$16.50
$26.25
$9.75
First25 McfDcliv=dPerMonth
$1.3607.
$1.9915
$0.6308
Nelli 75 Mcf Delivered Per Month $1.2784
$1.4136
$0.1362
Over25McfDcliv~PerMonth
$1.2784
$1.1:l74
(S0.1410)

aU.on.uneui
oflicer

INSIDE

'w -

Change

Rider DSM, as adjusted eacb year, will become effective by May I following ~ebru-ary
filing of an app.lication subject to Commission approvaL Issues regarding the allocation of
DSM costs and applicability of the Rider DSM to customer classes and/or rate schedules will
be detennined p.rior to and described, wjlhin tbe July r, 2008 application.
.

Last uight, Pomcaoy

Councif IIJPI'O~

•.Ah.mni tickets on
"sale. See . . . A3
•' uro lraAsfers
_posted. See . . . .u
• ~ p!•Kles !J) ·~
;Chis week. See . . . )a5
• Keams named
Enployee of Year
at Fanners Bank.
SeePageA6
.• Social Security
questions and
'See Page A6.

,.

•
\

die dtird

the police depanment.
In other business, council
approved a proposal from
Musser ti&gt; wod: on a community
project
with
Middleport. The project was
conceived ·by Musser and
Middleport Mayor Mike
(kdach and will require the
two communities to each
invest $2,500 for a shared
ttuck: and watet ll(lliaratus to
water lihe two villages'
flowers. Musser said the villages will split usage of the

answers.

WFAmER

·,. n•-••••••

. .2

AI

Sub iilnwd.phuto

1be Ue1.1JS Bamema.y School Arcbety Team and coaches f1109ive their national championship trophy at last weekend's
t1 f::otillil ~ m .the Schools Program tournament in Louisville, Ky.
'

•

llez'gs .arc·.L.
.r'S take.· natl.Oflal tz"tle
fU:t,
1'1

LYI~

IISERGEloiTOMYDAILYSEI'ffiiiEL.COM

LOUISVILLE, Ky. -

A positive

national spotlight bas landed on Meigs
County thanks to the Meigs Archery
Team. which took home several awards
at last ·weekend's tournament for the
National Archery in the Schools
Pmgnun. including a natiooal .archery
tilk fordlc elementary team. .
· ~students in fourth-sixth grades
won die 'national title by seven points
(less tbaD one arrow) to beat Trigg
County. Elementary of Cadiz, Ky.

shooting skills. Taylor Rowe, a sixth
grader al Meigs Middle School,
eaTJ1ed a spot as the number two, male
Meigs rival Maysville Elementary shooter in the nation in the elementary
School of Zanesville came in third class division. Kassandra Mullins. an
place in the elementary division. There eighth grader at Meigs Middle Sehool,
were 48 teams competing in this divi- earned a spot as the number five,
sion with Meigs coming out on top.
female shooter in the nation in the
The Meigs Middle and High School middle school division.
\
teams also had a strong showing with
The tournament, held in Louisville,
the Middle School coming in eleventh Ky., was billed as the largest archery
in the nation out of 69 other teams. The tournament . in the world with over
high school team, which is completing 3,000 shooters. The ~eigs archers
its first season of com~tition, had a · competed against scliools from 23
respectable twelfth place snowing states, including Ohio, New Jersey,
amongst 8~ams, the largest division. Washington , Arizona , Nebraska,
Two Meigs archers also received
special recognition for their individual
Pln"'!e- ~ A5

Sl!CnoNs -12 PAGES

A3
A3

Annie's Mailbox

Calendars
Classifieds '

83-4
T - lelt!l8tiCIAmy ....

Comics

Meigs High School

Editorials

WSAZ na•nes ·' Best of the Class 2008'

Movies
.

STAFF REPORT

Qbituaries

Sports

B Section
A6

Weather
© ..,.,.Ohio"~..,

:

v.u.

and final ~ of llll
amendment to die cocie
enforcement officer ordinaDoe Wbich allows tbe ~­
tioo to be filled by a civilim.
Proffitt said Rillle will also
be assisli.ng with some .PI4ing meter reading duties in

p,

bJ'

I

1 •

Ce.

4

'•

'

tion of $8,441. According renew an operator's 'license
to Baker, $4.~55 oflhat fig- or vehicle registration.
ure was delinquent fine
Mayor Michael Gerlach
ooH.ecnons.
said !!he village bas used rhe
The mayor's court has warrant block more routinerecentlly increased its use of ·ly in lihe past several weeks,
the w.arrant block, which resulting in an increase in
places a block on vehicle old
fmes
collection.
aDd driver's license records Collecting delinquent fmes
·of defendants who fail to bas been an ongoing strugpay mayor's court fines. gle for tbe village, but an
Untillhe fine is paid and the important issue, since fmes
block is removed, the defendant cannot purchase or
PI RFI tee A IFilL A5

-;,..~.,.

,.;.;

2.9%
15.0%
N/A
(1.9%)
3.3%
N/A
(0.6%j
(02%l
3.1%
12.4%
0 .9%
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A

1.6%
(2.1%)
! 5%
1.9%
3.7%

Those landlol'ds who do
two of lhe landlords are .
..1w~Jded to aprar . in
not pay the fee by the Feb .
Mayor's Court m lbe!day 28 deadline must also pay
~and a chiJd will "~;'~"'• a tate fee, and are subject
ooce sbe is SC2"Ved wi1h a to oourt fines for non.compliance.
Wan:anllO~
The comJilittee also disOwners of iental proper. ties ~R required by village cussed an increase in i!he
omiOJUJ!% to pay a $10 fee ooUection of old fines in
. per rental unit r.acb year. ApriL due primarily to the
Ooly dec of lbe village's use of warrant blocks. The
landlords baye not.done so, montldy mayor's report of
. ~ tD F'lscal Officer fees and fines collected in
Susau Bakft
April mows. a total ooll.ec-

' Pomeroy
hi• a code
·.:
. -. i.:l

•¥' ,...mf's'•aa.58
--.· -- .....

Commercial

~

MIDDLEPORT -

rental ptupo.ty OWDCJI'S have

I

s..ll Ge•r• .. ~Rates- 111\l~Mnove.-·rr!l' _ ,
Description
Current
Monthly Delivery C1wge
$13.62
All Gas Consumed Pee Mcf Delivered
$0.9952

PVHbecomes
festival sponsor, A3

Bikeway provides more
than good exercise, .A2

~

S650.00

~are all valedictorians

of tbe1r classes .and include
Andrew Bissell of Eastern
Meigs High School, (ra!isba Beha

NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POtoffiROY -

County seniors who have
excelled academicaUy in
their
respective
high
schools have been honored
in the WSAZ NewsChannel
3 annual salute to the "Best
of the Class 2008."

and Amy Barr of Meigs
High School, 1and Courtney
Ginther, Sarah EI-Dabaja,
and Lindsey Buzzard of

Southern High School.
The sill. students join over
200 scholars from 32 001111-

••

~·

ties within the West Vlfginia,
Ohio and Kentucky WSAZ
viewing area, who are being
featured in public service
announcements that were
videotaped during a lun·
cheon held at the Huntington
Museum of Art on April 28.
The announcements will air
on WSAZ beginning May 12
through June 8 .

WSAZ Celebrates graduating seniors each year with
this nationally acclaim ed
program: This year marks
the 24th year for the event
and these second year
Chesapeake Energy has
partnered w ith the station.
Honorees can al so be
vie wed at www.wsaz.com by
clicking on the " Best of lhe

.

.

Class" tile on the home page.
All schools· anno unce·
ments will also be available
on WSAZ.C OM. Anyone
with internet capabilities can
access their announceme nt
24 hours a day. 7 days a
week. lluuugh video stream·
ing , the same announceme nts
can be viewed, as seen over
the air on WSAZ.

/

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