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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

·Tuesday, May 8,

Cavs' Pavlovic runs down Nets in opener
BY TOM WmtERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS .•

CLEVELAND - Sasha
Pavlovic has always had it
all: size, speed and strength
along with a sweet outside
shot.
All he needs to work on
now is his comedic timing.
Displeased with Pavlovic's
defense earl y last season.
Cleveland coach Mike
Brown gave him an ultimatum - get better or get used
to sitting next to me on the
bench. The suggestion led to
Pavlovic famously saying.
''My defense is my offense."
On Monday, Pavlovic said
he was just joking.
"I remember saying that,
but I wasn't serious about it."
he said, cracking a smile. "He
probably took it serious.
That's my fault."
There was no mistaking
Pavlovic's defensive impact
in Cleveland's 81 -77 victory
over the New Jersey Nets on
Sunday in Game I of their
Eastern Conference semific
nal. Assigned primarily to
guard Vince Carter, Pavlovic
harassed New Jersey's leading scorer into a 7-for-23
shooting performance.
Pavlovtc also made the
game's biggest defensive
play, chasing down an unsuspecting Jason Kidd from
behind following a steal and
swatting away Mr. TripleDouble's layup attempt at the
rim with I :45 left and the
Cavs protecting 1a four-point
lead.
·
"A great play," Kidd said.
Looking back, would he
have made that same play a

year ago~
"Yeah," said Pavlovic, a
&amp;
native
of Serbia
Montenegro. "I would
always hustle. If I'm on the
floor, I have to do that."
Pavlovic's elltra-effort play
symboli zed
Cleveland 's
Junchpail-like approach to
the opener. The- Cavaliers,
well-rested after a fi rst-round
sweep, were a step quicker
and maybe a little tougher
than the Nets, outrebounding
them 51-37, grabbing 20
offensive boards and holding
them to 19 points under their
playpff average.
Still. New Jersey, which
hopes to even what figures to ·
be a long series in Game 2 on ·
Tuesday night, had a chance
to win.
"We had a couple good
looks that didn 't go in and
they scored on the other
end," Kidd said. "The game
was there for us to have. We
came up short, but it's something we can learn from. We
APpholo
were right there.:·
Cleveland Cavaliers' Sasha Pavlovic (3), from Montenegro,
Other than Pavlovic· s stun- chases New Jersey Nets' Jason Kidd [5) on a break late .in
ning block of Kidd, neither a second round NBA playoff basketball game Sunday, May
team pulled any surprises in 6, 2007 , in Cleveland. Pavlovic who once told coach Mike
the opener_
Brown that "my offense is my defense" , led the defensive
LeBron James was the charge in Cleveland's 81"77, Game 1 win over New Jersey.
focu s of New Jersey's
defense, drawing double ers (2), blocks (3) and min- game's premier scorers. He's
.teams almost every time he utes (36) in Game I. 'T m spent the past three seasons
touched the ball. And Carter just going to try and make it going against James ev'ery
demanded the bulk of tough for him."
day in practice,. perfect onCleveland's interest as the
At .6-foot-7, Pavlovic is the-job training Pavlovic can
Cavs gave Pavlovic help slightly taller than Carter, and apply to any superstar. .
whenever he needed it, although he's not as quick, On Sunday, Carter went !which wasn't often.
he 's no slow poke, either.
for-8 after halftime, includ. "I know Vince is going to The 23-year-old, drafted by irig 0-for-5 in the fourth quarscore because he gets a lot of Utah in the first round in ter. However, he wasn't
touches," said Pavlovic, who 2003, is certainly not intimi- ready to credit Pavlovic for
also recorded postseason dated by his assignment to causing any of the misfires.
highs in points ( 15). 3-point- check Carter, one of the He said 7-3 center Zydrunas

Ilgauskas may have altered a
shot or two, but they were
ones he should have dropped
anyway.
"I was disappointed in
myself because I missed easy
layups," Carter said. "I was
able to get to the basket, I just
didn 't make my shots. We' re
still encouraged by as up and
down as we played it was still
a four-point game."
Pavlovic , was a nonfactor
in Cleveland's postseason
run a year ago, play ing a total
of four minutes. It was down
time he was determined to
make a one-time thing. He ·
spent the offseason tightening his defense, working for
three hours per day with his
personal coach at home in
Europe. ·
"I worked hard on my legs
and quickness so I could play
good defensively," he said. "I
knew coach was going to
give me a chance if! do that."
Brown inserted Pavlovic
into the starting lineup in
March following an injury to
rookie guard Daniel Gibson.
But he didn 't make the move
until he was convinced
Pavlovic was committed to
playing defense.
A year ago, Brown could
not have imagined Pavlovic
guarding a player of Carter's
caliber in the playoffs. He did
a nice job once, the trick is
doing it again.
"Nobody can stop Vince,
he 's so talented," Brown
said. "As long as he makes
him work, and I thought
Sasha did a solid job of making him work last night. But
Vince is liable to go for 40 at
any given time."

LocAL ScHEDULE

. . . --eo..n,.

"""l;g&gt; """"",.,.,.- - -

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8

Prep Sollboll
Prep Ballball
Eastern at Waterford, 5 p.m.
TriCk and Field
TVC
Championsh ips · at Vinton.
County High School. 4 p.m. ,
Wedntlday May 9

Prep Softball

02- (5) Meigs at (4) Waverly, 5 p.m,
Thursday. May 10

Prep Baseball
02 - (3) Gatlia Academy at (2) Meigs,
5 p.m.
04 - (B) Waterford at (1) Southern, 5
p.m.
04 - (7) Trimble at (2) Eastern . 5 p.m.
Track and Fleld
TVC
Championships
at
Vinton
County High School, 4 p.m.

04 -

p.m.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o CI·. YIS • \'ol. ;;l&gt; , l\:o. tc):;

Satunlav. May 12
Prep Softball
(5) Southern at (4) Eastern, t

02- Winner of Meigs-Waverty,game
versus winner of (1) Warren-(8) Vinton
County game at TBA, 5 p.m.
-

Cavaliers up two
games on Nets.
See PageB1
1

SroR1S BRIEFS

14th annual
Meigs Football
Golf Tournament

~~cr_,

ZERO

INTEREST

PAVWENTS
,..,
u....,...

SALE '1,699''

• Exclu1lv. Synchro"t1chnotogy provides
zero·lurn maneuv1t1bility so you can
ftniah up to 50'11 faster
• Unique steentbfe front axle with st-ing
whttl and foot pedal contrlllort easy lo
use and Itt you mow stroiaht lines on hills
• 46" triplt-blede 3-in-1 mowing dock
• 20HP' Kohler' Courogt"V-Twin
OHV 1111ine

• 42' ftoeting twin-bladt, 3-in-1
rnowine deck
·
• 17 HPI Kohler' Coureao• OHV trttine
• Pivoting front axle with larae
easter wheels
• Eraonomic tap ba" with ooft-touch
eript ond dampers

• 3· and 5-ytar limited warranty•u

____

_,

n,O~~~iU
ZE n.'
SALE SJ,199"

liiOitt:l ..........

----c:.uo
ZERO

INTEREST
PAYMENTS

ZERO~lE.

,..u~·

SALESJ I 399"

SALE "2,599" ·

Postal Service to
issue new Jamestown
stamp on Friday.
See Page A2
• Hypnotist offers hope
on quitting smoking,
losing weight
See Page A3
• St. Paul UMW meet.
See Page AS
• 'Hits for Hospice'
plans underway.
See Page AS
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Meigs County
Girl Scout Diary.
·See Page A7
• Family Medicine.
See Page A7
• Observe bus safety
week. See .Page AS

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 16 P,o\GilS

Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

B4-6

Annie's Mailbox
HT'S&amp; t«) lffi:R(ST f PAID 'IIITHIN 12 II'OtfTI-IS
til 11 ~ 11a P¥"ffl11 &amp;Ho Ntml lf Paid~~~ t2 1Acnk. VaJid 011 pxcniJtl ol tm_o, l'!llll't ,.-o t.&gt;t,S/Wfff ~:~~ • Powtr Crtdi ( rd ICCCifll On ~ ~ctiNt. na II"W))I!!IJy ptt~ . , . . &amp;!If f!!'¥« d'WJtl *"*'f1l_ot n~ ;rCI'!O pxcllmf*d ,., tu;. , 12 ~. tl t ~ll"ll'~
.....c:nhiy ~· 01\ twlU'!I: pllll ""'-'· ... ~ (l\ iltto.l'!l btlfte ci:!es ~ ~..:ttd uwcil mi 0!1-ti ft~Se, P'om:l 1'111'1 bo le"I!WIII ~ &amp;f,..ct d'«tn ftleUed ftum ~f d«t StnWd lll"r.'lil 'W'r kl ~ ~lnh wt,
tt."'"' &amp;t iJ$1:1'1 UCLnl. At cf J/231f11.~W IItl'r m i·
ISM l OI'! IIi ltCN'!It .r. ile!tut. l3M Wirit!1.m ~~ D-..-tt $1 ~ lOc WM' ty GE Uwy llloi· .
.
.

.a'.

•• ProU1 Ptu • t.b"liNy paynwti &lt;b 1'01 rtr.rt IAiiitiiJ:t lltiH r7 D!"\ Jll)"~ i An~! r«li pu:H ¥f Nl tJy dl1iw It'd 1"4) ~ Ta.o:es tt~h ~ ~ 1'¥!\tr.s
•• • ~ ~ iOU!I ~eM Rtltil«" !Orlrrift!CI W¥t1nly d!lt!.J,t:e"lllin _irnuiiOOS ¥11:1 rt!Slritli'JM ~Sp«ifu.ions 1Wt IIIAJttd le t,... wi ltwlrditt. llrt~~n 1!11)' I'd rtliKI O.ltr W'IWiit:J) ·~d/W ~~~- 19«if0\10f'l
t

u,rst$ Ny bl ~~.,a t!'4!' tlf)". Mob \llb:«llo inle6 #iltiK•~1i'·

as rated by qile ITWni!IC!urer

H Tl&gt;t fi.III~·P! tplid (Jnl al'! Muvd for
Offct 1lild ~ 9fl tofu

rut: al'limot~.~YIIA ~n ~ •~ art xttplt~ Yo$ c.arU is ~~S~M!l7C~ollt!M! li lo.
Uey llst.l!JIF Set fW t ell to!~ Rela!lel lot del..&lt;l
'

putSUIII!II~ 1 ~~CtrU friX"o V Isl U.SA i'x:.[ cctll"!l " a Cfli ~tn)'-

Comics

B7

Editorials

A4
As ·

,

:

('"'u h ~rfrfp
-

--- --

.• ,

r Till Je SifVer~
t

Obituaries
Sports

B Section

FA.ILY

Weather

A8

© 0007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

•:

..

,

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.

Please see Levy, A5

Pomeroy,
Rutland receive
NatureWorks
·Grant funding

BY BETH SERGENT

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT&lt;II&gt;MVDAILVSENTINEL£0M

RACI NE - Members of
Racine Council refused to
enact an amended contract
with engineering firm
Strand and Associates,
which is overseeing the
·constructi on of the Racine
Water
Improvement
Project, including its new
treatment plant and water
well fields .
Council made the decision '
at its most recent · meeting
and shot down two motions
for amended contracts with
Strand. including one for
$55,000 and the other for
$92,500 with a deduction of
$62,000, leaving an amount
. due of $30,000. The firm
requested Racine consider
the proposed amounts on the
amended contracts. The
Cha~ene Hoeftlch/ pholo
original contract has expired. Pomeroy Mayor John Musse r signs a proclamation designating Saturday as National Food
Although the new water Collection Day for the Pomeroy Post Office. Looking on are George Smith, office r in charge,
plant went online on April and Jim Pu ll ins, carrier.
17, issues remain between
co uncil and Strand. namely, according to council.
Please see Racine, AS

· BY BRIAN

Details on Pace A8

The proposed three- mill
levy wou ld have ge nerated
$52.907, based on a lOO-percent collection rate, but collection' wo uld not have
begun until January, 2008.
The levy was first rejected
as a renewal in November.
2006. It had been on rhe
books since the mid-19:)0's.
Because it was voted down
last year, the vi llage is operating at a $30,000 loss this
fiscal year. The village is
also operating without a
$90,000 estate tax windfall it
rece ived in 2006.
Levy proceeds .would have
benefited the village's general

BSERGENT&lt;II&gt;MVDAILVSENTI NEL.COM

J.

REED

BREEO@MVOAILYSENTINEL.COM

• !ll 12 M(MHS NO I'!I.YI.f

REED

MIDDLEPORT - Voters
in Middleport rejected a proposed three-mill levy fo r
operatin g expenses Tuesday,
133to l03.
The levy would have been
used for general expenses,
incl uding police protection
and operation of other vi llage departments. The levy
was the only matter to be
decided in yesterday's primary election.
.
Less than 15 percent of
the registered voter's in the
village's three
voting
precincts turned out to the
polls yesterday.

November
election lineup
finalized in
Middleport,
"' ==== = ==
Pomeroy
·WEATHER

8880 UNITED LANE
ATHENS, OH 45701
740-593-3279 OR 1-800-710-1917
MON , FRI 9:00AM - 6:00PM I SAT 9:00AM - 5:00PM

J.

BR EED@MYDAILYSE NTINEL.COM

Racine refuses
amended
contract with
engineer

1

• H11vy-duty ohaft drive
• 42" twin-blade mowins deck
• 20 HP' Kohler' Command' V-Twin ·
OHV ensine

'"'" ·""'l.&gt;il"' '"t illl'l .&lt;nllt

Brian J. Reed/photo

INSIDE

RZT4Z
ZERO-TURN RIDER

:!007

William and
Patricia Buck of
Middleport
prepare to cast
ballots in
Tuesday's
primary election
in November,
as Poll Workers
Mary Wise and
Nancy Cale
assist them.
Voters rejected
the county's
only ballot
issue.

POMEROY - The 14th .
annual Meigs Football Golf
Tournament will be held at
Pine Hills Golf Course on
May 12 with a shotgun start
beginning at 9 a.m.
Game setup will be a four
man scramble with each
team bringing their own ·
members. Included with
entry fees will be a round of
golf, cart, lunch and bever·
ages with prizes for eaeh
team.
·
·
There will also be a skins
game during the day.
For more information,
please contact Mike Chancey
at 992-2158 or 992-0064.

11046
ZERO-TURN LAWN TRACTOR

C),

BY BRIAN

'

GT 2542 .
HEAVY-DUTY GARDEN TRACTOR

\VI ·. IINESII,\Y, l\1A\

Middleport voters reject levy proposal

SPORTS.

Page AS
. 1 Harry Gibbs, 97
• Mary Roush, 89

mowina deck
.
• 20 HP' Kohtor' Countae· •rttino
• Patented SmortJet• hilh-pressurt
· deck wnhing syslam
• 3- and 5-year tim~ed warranty"'

of~es,AS

Eastern at Waterford, 5 p.m.

OBITUARIES

LT 1045
LAWN TRACTOR
• 46" htavy-duty lripte· bladt

Area raises nearly
$so,ooo for March

Southern students
win honors, A3

POMEOOV - A~ of~ colege

Indians
scalp
Orioles
BALTIMORE (AP)
Travis Hafner hit a grand .
slam and Fausto Carmona
allowed one unearned run in
seven innings. and the
Cleveland Indians beat the
Baltimore Orioles 10-1
Monday to earn a split of the
four-gameseries.
"
The Indians broke open a
tie game with a four-run seventh inning before Hafner hit
his ninth career grand slam in
the eighth off Jamie Walker.
Jhonny Peralta added a solo
shot in the ninth,
Grady Sizemore doubled·
in the tiebreaking run in the
seventh and Trot Nixon
capped the burst With a tworun single. Nixon's three-hit
game followed a 5-for-5 per.fotrnance on Sunday.
Carmona (3·1) was sent
the minors two days after
beating Baltimore on April ·
29 because there was no
room for the right-hander in
the Cleveland rotation. But
an injury to Jake Westbrook
opened the door for his
recall,
and
Carmona
responded with another fine
effort against the Orioles.
Starting fc;&gt;r the fifth time
this
season, Carmona
allowed seven hits, struck out
two and walked one. Only
one of Baltimore's hits was
for extra bases, a triple .by
Brian Roberts after third
baseman Casey Blake
received an error for dropping his two-out foul pop.
Orioles starter Steve
TrachSel gave up one run and
six hits in six innings. After
his departure, the Indians
ripped through a Baltimore
bullpen that during the offseason received a $42 million makeover.
David Dellucci got it started with a pinch-single off
Chad Bradford (0-1). Josh
Barfield
singled,
and
Sizemore greeted John
Parrish with an RBI double.
After Blake received an
intentional walk ·to load the
bases and Hafner struck out,
Parrish walked Victor
Martinez to force in a run
and Nixon lined a single to
center.
With eight hits in two
games, Nixon lifted his batting average 67 points to
338.
.
Notes: The Indians have
won 12 of 15 .... The Orioles
purchased the contract of
RHP Jon Leicester from
Triple-A
Norfolk
and
' opltoned LHP Brian Burres
to. the same club.

2007 •

MIDDLEPORT
Unless· a write-in ca ndidate
fil es, Middleport's mayoral
election will be uncontested
in November.
Monday was the filing
deadline fo r non -partisan
candidates for village office
in Middleport and Pomeroy.
Mike
Gerlach,
a
Republican, is the only candidate to file for the mayor's
post in Midd_leport. Mayor
John Musser, .also a
Republican, and Victor C.
Young Ill are the candidates
for mayor in Pomeroy.
Kathy Hysell has filed as a
Republican candidate for the
clerk position in Pomeroy.
She is the incumbeht.
Two candidates have filed
for the two village counci I
seats in both Middleport and
Pomeroy. Ruth Spaun and
Shawn Amott have tiled petitions for re-electio" to their
council seats in Pomeroy.
Shawn A. Rice and Julia A.
Proctor are candidates for
council seats in Middleport.
Council President Stephen
Houchins and Councilman
Please see Lineup, AS

---·-- - - - -

Pomeroy Post Office··
collecting food for families

containers, are to be placed near the mailbox
for picku p by the carriers around their
scheduled delivery time on Saturday, or to
take their donations to the post otlice.
Once all of the food has been collected,
then it will be del ivered to the Cooperative
Parish for distribution through its regular
program of assistance to local fa milies.
Last year the Pomeroy Post Office collected I ,009 pounds of food. Nationally postal
workers collected 70.8 million pounds. A
proclamation designating Saturday as
National Food Collection Day was ·signed by
Pomeroy Mayor John Musser.
··

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLI CH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Saturday is National Food
Collection Day and Pomeroy letter carriers,
both in-tow n and on rural ro utes, will be
collecting donations to be given to the
Meigs Cooperative Parish for disadvantaged families.
Residents are asked to contribute non-perishable food items like canned meats and
fi sh, canned soup, juice, pasta, vegeiables,
cereal and rice to the food drive. Donations,
which should not irclude anything in glass

Me~gs students

to present musical

POMEROY - Pomeroy
and Rutland were the only
village~ in Meigs County' to
be
awarded
Ohio
Nature Works Grants during
the latest round of funding
which was announced yesterday afternoon.
.
Ru11and received $28,500
while Pomeroy received
$1,781. Rutland 's grant
funds will be used to develop a gazebo as well as ~as­
ketball and vo lleyball courts
at Vcnnari Park, while
Pomeroy's funds are to go
towards improvements to
Beech Grove Cemetery
Pond, including the development of a walking path with
two footbridges and a deck.
Pomeroy
requested
around $20,000 for the project and after onl y receiving
$1,78 1, it begs th e question
ju st what can be accomplished with the award ?
"I'm disappointed in . the
amount but naturally we' re
not going to turn it down,"
said Joh n Musser, mayor of
Pomeroy. about acce pting
an y help the village
receives . "Still, this does n't
Please see Cirant. AS

Following
officers'·
resignations,
other agencies
lend assistance
BY DIANE PonoRFF
DPOTIORff@MYDAILYREGI S1ER.CO M

· MASON.
W.Va.
Following the resignation of
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
fi ve police ofticers in the
Town of Mason, other law
POMEROY - "The Beat
enforcement officials ·have
Goes· On" is the theme of
said they will assist in protectthe annual Meigs 'High
ing the residents of the town.
School variety show to be
Patrolmen Shawn Ross . . .
staged 7 p.m. on Friday and
Mike Tay lor. Jason Lloyd.
Saturday nights in the gymBryan Morrow and Steven
nasmm.
Gree ne turned in their
Toney Dingess is the .
badges during ·Monday's
·director of the show which
council
meeting after for~
in vo lves about 65 band and
mer
Chief
Denick Taylor
choir students doing music
turned in his resignation.
from the !iOs through the
Also re signing Monday
.90s, anil featuring pop
was.
counCi I member and
tunes, broadway and counpolice
commissiener Jim
try songs: It is the major
Proffitt.
fund raiser for the Metgs
Mayor Mindy Kearns said.
Cha~ene Hoeftlchj pltolo
music program. Admission
Taylor
was asked to resign
is $5 for adu,lts and $3 for Rehearsing for the variety show is a daily activity this week
after
he
refused to do what
as Meigs High students prepare for the variety show. Here
stud'enis.
she
asked
him to do.
In addition to the evening Bradley Jones on drums, Jamie Bailey on keyboard. Dustin
·
She
said
her decision to
performances, the show will Nash on electric guitar, and Sue Legg on pianci ..·ptay fo r.
be presented in Friday from the left, Kerri VanReeth, Jah anna Lydic, Sarah ask Taylor to resign was not
morning at the Meigs Hubbard, Veronica Grimm, Kaylee Kennedy, Carrie Reeves, based on one incident but
Middle School and Friday Datby Gilmore, and Morgan Kennedy as they rehearse ol1- several incidents of
afternoon at the high school. show numbers.
Please see Mason, AS
STAFF REPORT

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�The Daily Sentinel

6
Bv WAYNE, PARRY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

FORT DIX. N.J. - Six
fore ign-born Muslims were
· arrested
and
acc used
Tuesday of plotting to attack
Fort Dix and slaughter
scores of U.S. soldiers ---; a
scheme the FB I says was
foiled when the men asked a
store clerk to copy a video of
them firing assault weapons
and screami ng about jihad.
The defendants, all men
in their 20s from the former
Yugoslavia and the Middle
East, include a pizza deliveryman suspected of using
his job to scout out the military base.
Their goal was "to kill as
many American soldiers as
possible" wi th mortars.
rocket -propelled grenades
and guns, prosecutors said ..
"Today we dodged a bullet. In fact , when you look at
the type of weapons that
this group was trying to purchase. we may have dodged
a lot of bullets." said FBI
agent J.P. Weis.
"We had a group that was ·
formin g a platoon to take on
an army. They identified
their target. they did their
reconnaissance. They had
maps. And they were in the
process of buying weapons.
Luckily, we were able to
stop that."
Authorities said there was
no direct evidence connecting the men to any international terror organizations
such as ai-Qaida. But several of them said they were
ready to ki II and die "in the
name of Allah," according
to court papers.
Investigators said th ey
infiltrated the group with
two informants well ovc;r a
year ago and bided their
time while they secretly
recorded the defendants,
four of whom lived jn
Cherry Hill, a Philadelphia
suburb about 20 miles from
Fort Dix.
"This is what law
enforcement is supfosed to
do in the post-9/1 era stay one step ahead of iliose
who are attempting to cause
harm to innocent American
citizens," U.S . Attorney
Christopher Christie said. .
Weis saluted the unidenti- .
fied Ne"w Jersey store clerk
who noticed the S\ISpicious
video as the "unsung hero"
of the case. "That's why
we ' re here today- because
of the courage and heroism
of that individual," the FBI
agent said.
,
In addition to plotting the
attack on Fort Dix, the
defendants spoke of assaulting l! Navy installation in
Philadelphia . during the
annual Army-Navy football
game and conducted surveillance at other military
installations in the region ,
prosecutors said.
One defendant. Eljvir
Duka, was recorded as saying: "In the end, wheQ it
comes to defending your
religion. when someone ...
attacks your religion, your
way of life. then you go
jihad."
The six were arrested
Monday night trying to buy
AK-47 assault weapons, M16s·and other weapons from
an FBI informant, authori ties said.
They appeared in federal
court Tuesday in Camden
and were ordered held with-

PageA2

CROSS THE NATION
charged
10
u.s. soldiers at Fori DiX

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

out bai I for a hearing Friday.
Five were charged with co n ~
spiracy io kill U.S . military
personnel: the sixth was
charged with aiding and
"abetting illegal immigrants
in obtaining weapons.
Fou r of the men were
born
111
the
former
Yugosla via. one was horn in
Jorda n and one ca me from
Turkey. authoritie' sa id . All
had li ved in the United
States for years. Three were
in the United States illegally: two had green cards
allowi ng them to stay in thi s
count ry permanent!.)': and
the sixth is a U.S. citizen .
One defendant, Mohamad
Ibrahim Shnewer. spoke of
~sing
rocket-propelled
grenades and other weapons
to kill at least I00 soldiers.
acco rding to court documents.
"My intent is to hit a l1eavy
. t:uncentration of soldiers," he

was quoted as saying. "You
hit four, fi ve or six Humvees
and Iight the whole plate
(up) :.md retreat completely
without any losses."
" It doesn't matter to me
whether I get locked up,
arrested or ge t taken away,"
another defendant. Serdar
Tatar. was alleged to have
said . "Or I di e. it doesn't
matter. I" m doing it in the
name of Allah ...
The men trained by playing paintball in the woods in
New Jersey and taking target practice at a firing range
in Pennsylvania's Pocono
Mountains, where they had
rented a .house, authorities
said.
They often .watched terror
t.Taining videos, clips featuring Osaina bin Laden, a tape
containing the last will and
testament of some of the
Sept. II hijackers, and tapes
of armed attacks on U.S.

ing been there delivering
pizzas," Christie said.
· The men also allegedly
conducted surveillance at
other area military installations,
including
Fort
Monmouth in New Jersey,
Dover Air Force Base in
Delaware. and a Philadelphia
Coast Guard station.
Besides Shnewer, Tatar
and Duka, the other three
men were identified in court
papers as Dritan Duka, Shain
Duka and Agron Abdullahu.
Fort Dix is used to train soldiers, panicularly reservists. It
also housed refugees from
Kosovo in 1999.
The arrests renewed worrie s among New Jersey's
Muslim
community.
Hundreds of Muslim men
from New Jersey were
rounded up and detained in
the months after the Sept. II·
attacks, but none were connect~d to that plot.

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Postal Service
to issue new
Jamestown
. stamp on Friday
WASHINGTON (A P) A postage stamp commern- ·
orating the founding of the
first permanent Eng Iish
colony in North America
will be issued Friday.
The 41-cent stamp recalls
the foundin g of the
Jamestown colony 400
years ago
The Postal Service said
the special stamp is only the
third triangular one in its
history. It represe nts the
three-sided fort built in
1607 a~d depicts the three
ships that brought th e
colonists to Virginia,, the
Susan Constant, Godspeed
and Discovery.
First day ceremonies for
the stamp will be held in
Jamestown.

military personnel , erupting when a Mount Laurel, N.J.,
in laughter when one plotter shopkeeper alerted the FBI
noted that a Marine's arm to a "disturbing" video he
was blow n off in an had been asked to copy onto
ambush, authorities said.
aDVD.
Asked if those arrested . The video showed 10
had any links to aJ:Qaida, yo ung men "shooting
White House spokesman · assault weapons at a firin g
Tony Snow said it appears range ... while calling for
"there is no direct evtdence jihad and shoutin g in Arabic
of a foreign terrori st tie."
' Allah ·Akbar' (God is
The FBI's Weis said the great)," the complaint said.
U.S. is seeing a "brand-new The I0 included six of those
form of terrori sm," involv- arrested, authorities said.
ing smaller, more loosely
Within months, the FBI
defi ned groups that may not had managed to infiltrate
be connected to al-Qaida but the group with two inforare inspired by its ideology. mants, according to court
"These hqmegrbwn ter- documents.
rorists d n prove to be ·as
One of the suspects, Tatar.
dangerous as any known worked at his father's pizzegroup, if not more so. They ria and made deliveries to
operate · under the radar," the base, using the opportuWeis said.
nity to scout out Fort Dix
In court documents, pros- for an attack, authorities
ecutors said the suspects said. "Clearly, one of the
came to the attention of guys had an intimate knowlauthorities in January 2006 edge of the base from hav-

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INSUBANCE.uc

Dear Annie: My husband
and I have been married for
four years and together for
six. Each of us has a young
child from a previous relationship, and we have a tod- .
dler daughter together.
At first, his 9-year-old
son, "Dean," stayed with us
almost every weekend and
at least one or two nights
~uring the week. Then it
was every other weekend
and one night a week, then
down to every other weekend, all Dean's choice. Now
il's reached the point where
be doesn't want to come
over at all. ·
Dean claims ·the rules are
too strict and I treat him
"different." Annie, I don 't
think our rules are strict, but
at his mother's house, he has
no rules at all. I've gone out
of my way to be nice to him
'and inClude him in everything. We have always done
a lot of activities together as
a family. I've even backed
off on the parenting and let
my husband be in charge of
Dean's rules. I don't know
what else to do.
: It's nonnal for Dean to be
up until midnight on school
~tghts and 5 a.m. on week. ends. He has no boundaries
on the kind of TV programs
he's allowed to watch, and
you would cringe to hear
l)le adult .programming he
speaks of. He also doesn't
understand why he can't
have unlimited access to
snacks at our house. It doesn't help that Dean's mom
takes his side and trashes us
irr front of him.
My husbl!lld is close to
giving in out of desperation ·
to .see his son. I don't think
he's doing the boy any favors
by eliminating all structure
arid discipline. Not only is it
bad for Dean, it's unfair to
lhe other children. This is
starting to tear our family
apart. What should we do?
- Wicked Stepmother
Dear Stepmother: Dean
is testing you both, but children truly do not want to see
their parents give up their .
authority. It makes them feel
insecure. Can your husband
speak to his ex-wife, calmly,
and explain that a lack of
discipline is harmful to their
son? Would she consider
family counseling? In any
event: Dean and his mother
should abide by the courtordered visitation arrangement (if there isn't one, talk

,
Wednesday, May 9
·. MIDDLEPORT - The
Auxiliary
of FeeneyBennett Post 128, American
tegion, will have a picnic at
the Waterworks Park,
Minersville, I p.m . All
members welcome.
· POMEROY '
Middleport Literary Club, I
p.m. at the Riverside Golf
Club. Installation of officers. Last meeting until fall . ·
'
Thursday, May 10 · .
TUPPERS
PLAINS . I

, Agent

ril'ercltlesins @suddenlinkmail.com

(3041773-5721

BY KATHY MrrcH~Ll
.AND MARCY SUGAR .

. Clubs and
'; organizations

215 Sixlh Sl. Pt. Pleasant, WV
(304) 675-7036

1/4 mile north of Pomeroy, Mason
Bridge, Mason. WV

Despite testing, son
needs boundaries

Wednesday, May 9_ . '
POMEROY Metgs
County Board of Health, 5
p.m., .conference room,
Meigs . County Health
Department.
. . Tuesday, May 14
.' RUTLAND :- Rutland
.Village Counctl, rescheduled regular sesston, 7 p.m.,
council's chambers.

(304)675-7036

Tr.·,, I/Jralimu:

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Pubii'C meetingS

~ Insurance

(740) 446· 1711

POMEROY - The name of Juli Bailey Simpson, daughter of G~eg and Jocelyn Bailey and wife of Matt Simpson,
was o~med from a listing of Meigs County graduates of
the Umverstty of Rio Grande.
She graduated magna cum laude with a bachelor of science in nursing. She recei ved the Emerson and Evelyn
Evans Award for outstanding academic ac hi evement
because she tied with two other girls for the top grade point
average 111 the nursing program, it was reported .

So

Autolllome/Businessll..ite/
llealthJAnuily
An lnd~pendrnt Agency
Re resenlin Erie Insurance

,,

•

PageA3
Wednesday, May 9,

2007

SIDDENTS WIN HONORS

RACINE - Students at
Southern
Elementary
School once apain met the
challenge o
principal
Shawn Bush who worked
with the PTO to fund an
awards program to promote
student
achievement.
Overall st udents answered
nearly 120,000 questions
correctly on the research
based computer program .
competition, dubbed as the
"G reat Race to Study
Island." Nearly 70 percent
of all questions were
answered correc tl y in
grades 3-8 , somethi ng Bush
·says he hopes is an indicator
that school achievement is
on the ri se.
The Study Island · Great
Race winner from April I to
May I and winner of the
first place prize was Bay lee
Hupp with nearl y 3000 correctl y answered questions
for a 93.9 percent. The second place winner was
Timmy Elam and the third
place winner was Darien
Diddle. Earning honorable
mention were Cameron
Yates, Jansen Wolfe, Sarah
Eakins, and Ryan Butcher.
Bac k- ' Devon
Brown ,
Bream1a Shul aw, Bobbi
Harris , Devon Campbell ,
and Abigail Atkins.
Jeremy Dutton and Jansen
Wolfe were recognized as
the only two students to
complete all sections of the
Study Island Program.
Principal
Bush and
Administrative Assistant
Scott Wolfe both said they
were confident that the
recent Ohio Achievement
Tests were successful as a
re sult of the competitive
Study Island program.

Jansen Wolfe, left,
and Jeremy Dutton
were the only two
·southern
Elementary stu·
dents to complete
and pass all sections of the Study
Island Program.
They were honored
by the school and
principal Shawn
Bush.
Submitted photos

to a lawyer). Dean should
know his father loves him
The Champion of
enough to fight for him.
Southern· s Great
Dear Annie: I've finally
Race to Study
found someone I think I
Island for April
might like to marry. He's perwas Baylee Hupp,
fect in every way except one
{ight, pictured with
- he 's carrying about 50
the second and
extra pounds, which literally
get in the way in bed. Not
thi rd place win·
only does it limit what we
ners, Timothy
can do, but I can hear him
Elam, cente r. and
wheezing after a couple of
Darien Diddle.
minutes, and tbis seriously
affects my enjoyment of the
event. I start wonrying about
him and become focu·sed on
his physical mass.
Southern Elementar y
We are both in our 50s. I
School met the challenge
am very health cons'cious
of principal "Shawn Bush
and in good physical shape .
who worked with the PTO ·
for my age. How do I tell a
to fUnd an awa rd ~ program
sensitive, thoughtful, wonto promote student
derful man that he 's just too
achievement. Earning hon·
fat ? Am I being superficial?
arable mention left to right.
- Suffocated by Blubber
front, Cameron Yates ,
Dear Suffocated: Not if
Jansen Wolfe, Sarah
he 's wheezing. Don' t make
Eakins, and Ryan Butcher,
his weight the focus of your
and
back, Devon Brown .
concerns. Tell him, loving"
Breanna Shutaw, Bobbi
ly, that you've noticed he
Harris, Devon Campbell ,
seems to have trouble
and
Abigail Atkins.
breathing and . you are
deeply worried about his
health. Ask him to see his
doctor and offer to start
walking with him. If he 's
unwilling, yo11 have to
deCide if you care for him
enough as he is.
ATHENS ·- Hypnotist been a featured guest on
Dear Annie: People Donald Mannarino, M.A., hundreds of radio and teleshouldn't get too upset will bring the opportunity to vision shows.
when kids won 't say the stop smoking and/or lose
The fee for a one-hour
Pledge of Allegiance. For a weight to individuals strug- session is $60. Each particiwhile, when my so n was in gling to kick a habit on pant receives a CD reinhigh school, he refused to Wednesday May 16, at forcement copy of the hypsay it, to the. alarm and di s- O'Bleness
Memorial
may of school administra- Hospital, ' Lower Level nosis program as well as
instruction on self-hypnosis
tors. I calmly discussed his Room 010.
for
stress relief.
choice with my son, but left
Sponsored by O' Bleness,
The
"Stop Smoking" sesit up to him.
·
Mannarino will hold two sion is at 6 p.m. and the
After high school, he one-hour sess ions using
Smile! Now you can own the picture of that un1orgettable
went to college but didn 't clinical and medical meth- weight loss session i"s at 7
moment captured i~ tha newspaper. Photos become timeless
p.m. Registration is acceptwhen framed or pr~nted on 8'rT1UQ or mouse ~ad.
graduate. He took a job, and ods
of
hypnoti sm. ed at the door or by calling
then, to everyone's surprise, According to Mannarino's
Visit www.mydailysentinel;com and click lhe blue button.
enlisted in the Marines. He Web si te, as the former 1-2 16-831-6251.
has been in Afghanistan, is excl usive clinical ~ypnot ist
now stationed in "Okinawa. for the American Lung
and could not be more loyal Association for ·more than
to the United States and to 2 1 years, hehas hypnotized
the Marine Corps.- Proud thousands of individuals of
Mom
·
all ages .
Annie's Mailbox is writMannarino, who earned a
ten by Kathy Mitchell and master 's degree in human
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi- services from John Carroll
tors .of the Ann Landers University, has conducted
column. Please e-mail your his Well ness Seminars since
questions to anniesmail- . 1978. He has received the
box@comcast.net, or write national certification of the
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. National
Guild
of
Box 118190, Chicago, lL Hypnotists, is a member of
60611. To find out more the
North
American
An ilwitation to an evenr
about Atmie 's Mailbox, Association for the Study of
and read features by olher Obesity, the American
for u•omen who want
Creators Syndicate writers Association of Hypnosis,
and cartoonists, visit the the National Guild of
a healthy lifes tyle1
Creators Syndicate Web Hypnosis and the American
page at www.ueators.com. Psychological Association
· Hypnosis
Division-13. ~
Mannarino is co-author of
"Stop Smoking and Weight
Loss Hypnosis," which was
presented to the annual sci~
entific program of the
Society' of
VFW Post 9053 7 p.m. at .American
the hall.
Clinical Hypnosis. He has
CHESTER
- Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30p.m.
"Cardiovascular Disease
·Heart-healthy Dinner Buffet
at the hall. Refreshments.
RACINE - Ohio River
in Women"
and Cooking Demonstration
Producers, 7 p.m., Southern
by Becky H usron, 0:().
by Chef Yancy Roush
vo-ag room.
Tuesday, May 15
POMEROY Drew
Displays, recipes anJ prizes . '
Webster Post 39., American
Le.gion, will meet at 7 p.m.
TOLEDO (AP) ~ Three
for a dinner followed by the polar bear cubs born in
installation of officers.
N-ovember at the Toledo
Event to be held at The Plains United Methmlist Church
Zoo will make their public
Seating is limited • $5 regi stratwn fee per person
debut on Thursday.
The one male and two
Call (740)592-9300 by May 24 to register
female cubs have been kept
Friday, May 11
behind the scenes while the
LONG BOTTOM
zoo has bee n· monitoring
Gospel Sing, 7 p.m. at the their progress.
Faith Full Gospel Church.
All three have been adaptS.R. 124, Long Bottom. ing well to th eir surroundMemorial Hospital
Special singers "Delivered." ings , said zoo · spokes~~ H~pitall&gt;n ~e. Alhtru, OH ~no t 2302
woman Andi Norman.
Vi sitors will not be able to
An affiliate of the O'Bieness Health System
see the · cubs together
because they will remain in
Wednesday, M11y 9
RACINE - A card show- separate groups with thei r
er is planned for Mattie mothers.
Beegle s 90th birthday May
One of the mothers, Nan,
9. Cards may be se nt to her gave birth to a cub.on Nov.
at 48680 SR 124, Tornado. 22: three days later, Crystal
Road, Racine, Ohio 45771 . ~ave birth to two more.

Hypnotist offers hope on
quitting smoking, losing weight

Tuesday, June 5
5:00 7:00p.m.

Community Calendar

'Home Decor 'Furniture
'Hand Puppets for
Children
•Antiques for the
Antique lover
Our 19,000 square foot
store offers thousands
o! glhs for the entire
family.

Debra K.

BYTHEBEND

Rio Grande graduate

.5\RUttue &amp; era~ .lbll

B Erie

2400 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis. Oh10

The Daily Sentinel

Polar bear cubs
ready for debut
at Toledo Zoo

Church events

O'BLENESS

Birthdays

�The Daily Sentinel

6
Bv WAYNE, PARRY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

FORT DIX. N.J. - Six
fore ign-born Muslims were
· arrested
and
acc used
Tuesday of plotting to attack
Fort Dix and slaughter
scores of U.S. soldiers ---; a
scheme the FB I says was
foiled when the men asked a
store clerk to copy a video of
them firing assault weapons
and screami ng about jihad.
The defendants, all men
in their 20s from the former
Yugoslavia and the Middle
East, include a pizza deliveryman suspected of using
his job to scout out the military base.
Their goal was "to kill as
many American soldiers as
possible" wi th mortars.
rocket -propelled grenades
and guns, prosecutors said ..
"Today we dodged a bullet. In fact , when you look at
the type of weapons that
this group was trying to purchase. we may have dodged
a lot of bullets." said FBI
agent J.P. Weis.
"We had a group that was ·
formin g a platoon to take on
an army. They identified
their target. they did their
reconnaissance. They had
maps. And they were in the
process of buying weapons.
Luckily, we were able to
stop that."
Authorities said there was
no direct evidence connecting the men to any international terror organizations
such as ai-Qaida. But several of them said they were
ready to ki II and die "in the
name of Allah," according
to court papers.
Investigators said th ey
infiltrated the group with
two informants well ovc;r a
year ago and bided their
time while they secretly
recorded the defendants,
four of whom lived jn
Cherry Hill, a Philadelphia
suburb about 20 miles from
Fort Dix.
"This is what law
enforcement is supfosed to
do in the post-9/1 era stay one step ahead of iliose
who are attempting to cause
harm to innocent American
citizens," U.S . Attorney
Christopher Christie said. .
Weis saluted the unidenti- .
fied Ne"w Jersey store clerk
who noticed the S\ISpicious
video as the "unsung hero"
of the case. "That's why
we ' re here today- because
of the courage and heroism
of that individual," the FBI
agent said.
,
In addition to plotting the
attack on Fort Dix, the
defendants spoke of assaulting l! Navy installation in
Philadelphia . during the
annual Army-Navy football
game and conducted surveillance at other military
installations in the region ,
prosecutors said.
One defendant. Eljvir
Duka, was recorded as saying: "In the end, wheQ it
comes to defending your
religion. when someone ...
attacks your religion, your
way of life. then you go
jihad."
The six were arrested
Monday night trying to buy
AK-47 assault weapons, M16s·and other weapons from
an FBI informant, authori ties said.
They appeared in federal
court Tuesday in Camden
and were ordered held with-

PageA2

CROSS THE NATION
charged
10
u.s. soldiers at Fori DiX

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

out bai I for a hearing Friday.
Five were charged with co n ~
spiracy io kill U.S . military
personnel: the sixth was
charged with aiding and
"abetting illegal immigrants
in obtaining weapons.
Fou r of the men were
born
111
the
former
Yugosla via. one was horn in
Jorda n and one ca me from
Turkey. authoritie' sa id . All
had li ved in the United
States for years. Three were
in the United States illegally: two had green cards
allowi ng them to stay in thi s
count ry permanent!.)': and
the sixth is a U.S. citizen .
One defendant, Mohamad
Ibrahim Shnewer. spoke of
~sing
rocket-propelled
grenades and other weapons
to kill at least I00 soldiers.
acco rding to court documents.
"My intent is to hit a l1eavy
. t:uncentration of soldiers," he

was quoted as saying. "You
hit four, fi ve or six Humvees
and Iight the whole plate
(up) :.md retreat completely
without any losses."
" It doesn't matter to me
whether I get locked up,
arrested or ge t taken away,"
another defendant. Serdar
Tatar. was alleged to have
said . "Or I di e. it doesn't
matter. I" m doing it in the
name of Allah ...
The men trained by playing paintball in the woods in
New Jersey and taking target practice at a firing range
in Pennsylvania's Pocono
Mountains, where they had
rented a .house, authorities
said.
They often .watched terror
t.Taining videos, clips featuring Osaina bin Laden, a tape
containing the last will and
testament of some of the
Sept. II hijackers, and tapes
of armed attacks on U.S.

ing been there delivering
pizzas," Christie said.
· The men also allegedly
conducted surveillance at
other area military installations,
including
Fort
Monmouth in New Jersey,
Dover Air Force Base in
Delaware. and a Philadelphia
Coast Guard station.
Besides Shnewer, Tatar
and Duka, the other three
men were identified in court
papers as Dritan Duka, Shain
Duka and Agron Abdullahu.
Fort Dix is used to train soldiers, panicularly reservists. It
also housed refugees from
Kosovo in 1999.
The arrests renewed worrie s among New Jersey's
Muslim
community.
Hundreds of Muslim men
from New Jersey were
rounded up and detained in
the months after the Sept. II·
attacks, but none were connect~d to that plot.

PLAY COVERALL BINGO

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Employees. Independent Contractors. Vendors and their immediate famiily not eligible:

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Open

Postal Service
to issue new
Jamestown
. stamp on Friday
WASHINGTON (A P) A postage stamp commern- ·
orating the founding of the
first permanent Eng Iish
colony in North America
will be issued Friday.
The 41-cent stamp recalls
the foundin g of the
Jamestown colony 400
years ago
The Postal Service said
the special stamp is only the
third triangular one in its
history. It represe nts the
three-sided fort built in
1607 a~d depicts the three
ships that brought th e
colonists to Virginia,, the
Susan Constant, Godspeed
and Discovery.
First day ceremonies for
the stamp will be held in
Jamestown.

military personnel , erupting when a Mount Laurel, N.J.,
in laughter when one plotter shopkeeper alerted the FBI
noted that a Marine's arm to a "disturbing" video he
was blow n off in an had been asked to copy onto
ambush, authorities said.
aDVD.
Asked if those arrested . The video showed 10
had any links to aJ:Qaida, yo ung men "shooting
White House spokesman · assault weapons at a firin g
Tony Snow said it appears range ... while calling for
"there is no direct evtdence jihad and shoutin g in Arabic
of a foreign terrori st tie."
' Allah ·Akbar' (God is
The FBI's Weis said the great)," the complaint said.
U.S. is seeing a "brand-new The I0 included six of those
form of terrori sm," involv- arrested, authorities said.
ing smaller, more loosely
Within months, the FBI
defi ned groups that may not had managed to infiltrate
be connected to al-Qaida but the group with two inforare inspired by its ideology. mants, according to court
"These hqmegrbwn ter- documents.
rorists d n prove to be ·as
One of the suspects, Tatar.
dangerous as any known worked at his father's pizzegroup, if not more so. They ria and made deliveries to
operate · under the radar," the base, using the opportuWeis said.
nity to scout out Fort Dix
In court documents, pros- for an attack, authorities
ecutors said the suspects said. "Clearly, one of the
came to the attention of guys had an intimate knowlauthorities in January 2006 edge of the base from hav-

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675-4340

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INSUBANCE.uc

Dear Annie: My husband
and I have been married for
four years and together for
six. Each of us has a young
child from a previous relationship, and we have a tod- .
dler daughter together.
At first, his 9-year-old
son, "Dean," stayed with us
almost every weekend and
at least one or two nights
~uring the week. Then it
was every other weekend
and one night a week, then
down to every other weekend, all Dean's choice. Now
il's reached the point where
be doesn't want to come
over at all. ·
Dean claims ·the rules are
too strict and I treat him
"different." Annie, I don 't
think our rules are strict, but
at his mother's house, he has
no rules at all. I've gone out
of my way to be nice to him
'and inClude him in everything. We have always done
a lot of activities together as
a family. I've even backed
off on the parenting and let
my husband be in charge of
Dean's rules. I don't know
what else to do.
: It's nonnal for Dean to be
up until midnight on school
~tghts and 5 a.m. on week. ends. He has no boundaries
on the kind of TV programs
he's allowed to watch, and
you would cringe to hear
l)le adult .programming he
speaks of. He also doesn't
understand why he can't
have unlimited access to
snacks at our house. It doesn't help that Dean's mom
takes his side and trashes us
irr front of him.
My husbl!lld is close to
giving in out of desperation ·
to .see his son. I don't think
he's doing the boy any favors
by eliminating all structure
arid discipline. Not only is it
bad for Dean, it's unfair to
lhe other children. This is
starting to tear our family
apart. What should we do?
- Wicked Stepmother
Dear Stepmother: Dean
is testing you both, but children truly do not want to see
their parents give up their .
authority. It makes them feel
insecure. Can your husband
speak to his ex-wife, calmly,
and explain that a lack of
discipline is harmful to their
son? Would she consider
family counseling? In any
event: Dean and his mother
should abide by the courtordered visitation arrangement (if there isn't one, talk

,
Wednesday, May 9
·. MIDDLEPORT - The
Auxiliary
of FeeneyBennett Post 128, American
tegion, will have a picnic at
the Waterworks Park,
Minersville, I p.m . All
members welcome.
· POMEROY '
Middleport Literary Club, I
p.m. at the Riverside Golf
Club. Installation of officers. Last meeting until fall . ·
'
Thursday, May 10 · .
TUPPERS
PLAINS . I

, Agent

ril'ercltlesins @suddenlinkmail.com

(3041773-5721

BY KATHY MrrcH~Ll
.AND MARCY SUGAR .

. Clubs and
'; organizations

215 Sixlh Sl. Pt. Pleasant, WV
(304) 675-7036

1/4 mile north of Pomeroy, Mason
Bridge, Mason. WV

Despite testing, son
needs boundaries

Wednesday, May 9_ . '
POMEROY Metgs
County Board of Health, 5
p.m., .conference room,
Meigs . County Health
Department.
. . Tuesday, May 14
.' RUTLAND :- Rutland
.Village Counctl, rescheduled regular sesston, 7 p.m.,
council's chambers.

(304)675-7036

Tr.·,, I/Jralimu:

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Pubii'C meetingS

~ Insurance

(740) 446· 1711

POMEROY - The name of Juli Bailey Simpson, daughter of G~eg and Jocelyn Bailey and wife of Matt Simpson,
was o~med from a listing of Meigs County graduates of
the Umverstty of Rio Grande.
She graduated magna cum laude with a bachelor of science in nursing. She recei ved the Emerson and Evelyn
Evans Award for outstanding academic ac hi evement
because she tied with two other girls for the top grade point
average 111 the nursing program, it was reported .

So

Autolllome/Businessll..ite/
llealthJAnuily
An lnd~pendrnt Agency
Re resenlin Erie Insurance

,,

•

PageA3
Wednesday, May 9,

2007

SIDDENTS WIN HONORS

RACINE - Students at
Southern
Elementary
School once apain met the
challenge o
principal
Shawn Bush who worked
with the PTO to fund an
awards program to promote
student
achievement.
Overall st udents answered
nearly 120,000 questions
correctly on the research
based computer program .
competition, dubbed as the
"G reat Race to Study
Island." Nearly 70 percent
of all questions were
answered correc tl y in
grades 3-8 , somethi ng Bush
·says he hopes is an indicator
that school achievement is
on the ri se.
The Study Island · Great
Race winner from April I to
May I and winner of the
first place prize was Bay lee
Hupp with nearl y 3000 correctl y answered questions
for a 93.9 percent. The second place winner was
Timmy Elam and the third
place winner was Darien
Diddle. Earning honorable
mention were Cameron
Yates, Jansen Wolfe, Sarah
Eakins, and Ryan Butcher.
Bac k- ' Devon
Brown ,
Bream1a Shul aw, Bobbi
Harris , Devon Campbell ,
and Abigail Atkins.
Jeremy Dutton and Jansen
Wolfe were recognized as
the only two students to
complete all sections of the
Study Island Program.
Principal
Bush and
Administrative Assistant
Scott Wolfe both said they
were confident that the
recent Ohio Achievement
Tests were successful as a
re sult of the competitive
Study Island program.

Jansen Wolfe, left,
and Jeremy Dutton
were the only two
·southern
Elementary stu·
dents to complete
and pass all sections of the Study
Island Program.
They were honored
by the school and
principal Shawn
Bush.
Submitted photos

to a lawyer). Dean should
know his father loves him
The Champion of
enough to fight for him.
Southern· s Great
Dear Annie: I've finally
Race to Study
found someone I think I
Island for April
might like to marry. He's perwas Baylee Hupp,
fect in every way except one
{ight, pictured with
- he 's carrying about 50
the second and
extra pounds, which literally
get in the way in bed. Not
thi rd place win·
only does it limit what we
ners, Timothy
can do, but I can hear him
Elam, cente r. and
wheezing after a couple of
Darien Diddle.
minutes, and tbis seriously
affects my enjoyment of the
event. I start wonrying about
him and become focu·sed on
his physical mass.
Southern Elementar y
We are both in our 50s. I
School met the challenge
am very health cons'cious
of principal "Shawn Bush
and in good physical shape .
who worked with the PTO ·
for my age. How do I tell a
to fUnd an awa rd ~ program
sensitive, thoughtful, wonto promote student
derful man that he 's just too
achievement. Earning hon·
fat ? Am I being superficial?
arable mention left to right.
- Suffocated by Blubber
front, Cameron Yates ,
Dear Suffocated: Not if
Jansen Wolfe, Sarah
he 's wheezing. Don' t make
Eakins, and Ryan Butcher,
his weight the focus of your
and
back, Devon Brown .
concerns. Tell him, loving"
Breanna Shutaw, Bobbi
ly, that you've noticed he
Harris, Devon Campbell ,
seems to have trouble
and
Abigail Atkins.
breathing and . you are
deeply worried about his
health. Ask him to see his
doctor and offer to start
walking with him. If he 's
unwilling, yo11 have to
deCide if you care for him
enough as he is.
ATHENS ·- Hypnotist been a featured guest on
Dear Annie: People Donald Mannarino, M.A., hundreds of radio and teleshouldn't get too upset will bring the opportunity to vision shows.
when kids won 't say the stop smoking and/or lose
The fee for a one-hour
Pledge of Allegiance. For a weight to individuals strug- session is $60. Each particiwhile, when my so n was in gling to kick a habit on pant receives a CD reinhigh school, he refused to Wednesday May 16, at forcement copy of the hypsay it, to the. alarm and di s- O'Bleness
Memorial
may of school administra- Hospital, ' Lower Level nosis program as well as
instruction on self-hypnosis
tors. I calmly discussed his Room 010.
for
stress relief.
choice with my son, but left
Sponsored by O' Bleness,
The
"Stop Smoking" sesit up to him.
·
Mannarino will hold two sion is at 6 p.m. and the
After high school, he one-hour sess ions using
Smile! Now you can own the picture of that un1orgettable
went to college but didn 't clinical and medical meth- weight loss session i"s at 7
moment captured i~ tha newspaper. Photos become timeless
p.m. Registration is acceptwhen framed or pr~nted on 8'rT1UQ or mouse ~ad.
graduate. He took a job, and ods
of
hypnoti sm. ed at the door or by calling
then, to everyone's surprise, According to Mannarino's
Visit www.mydailysentinel;com and click lhe blue button.
enlisted in the Marines. He Web si te, as the former 1-2 16-831-6251.
has been in Afghanistan, is excl usive clinical ~ypnot ist
now stationed in "Okinawa. for the American Lung
and could not be more loyal Association for ·more than
to the United States and to 2 1 years, hehas hypnotized
the Marine Corps.- Proud thousands of individuals of
Mom
·
all ages .
Annie's Mailbox is writMannarino, who earned a
ten by Kathy Mitchell and master 's degree in human
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi- services from John Carroll
tors .of the Ann Landers University, has conducted
column. Please e-mail your his Well ness Seminars since
questions to anniesmail- . 1978. He has received the
box@comcast.net, or write national certification of the
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. National
Guild
of
Box 118190, Chicago, lL Hypnotists, is a member of
60611. To find out more the
North
American
An ilwitation to an evenr
about Atmie 's Mailbox, Association for the Study of
and read features by olher Obesity, the American
for u•omen who want
Creators Syndicate writers Association of Hypnosis,
and cartoonists, visit the the National Guild of
a healthy lifes tyle1
Creators Syndicate Web Hypnosis and the American
page at www.ueators.com. Psychological Association
· Hypnosis
Division-13. ~
Mannarino is co-author of
"Stop Smoking and Weight
Loss Hypnosis," which was
presented to the annual sci~
entific program of the
Society' of
VFW Post 9053 7 p.m. at .American
the hall.
Clinical Hypnosis. He has
CHESTER
- Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30p.m.
"Cardiovascular Disease
·Heart-healthy Dinner Buffet
at the hall. Refreshments.
RACINE - Ohio River
in Women"
and Cooking Demonstration
Producers, 7 p.m., Southern
by Becky H usron, 0:().
by Chef Yancy Roush
vo-ag room.
Tuesday, May 15
POMEROY Drew
Displays, recipes anJ prizes . '
Webster Post 39., American
Le.gion, will meet at 7 p.m.
TOLEDO (AP) ~ Three
for a dinner followed by the polar bear cubs born in
installation of officers.
N-ovember at the Toledo
Event to be held at The Plains United Methmlist Church
Zoo will make their public
Seating is limited • $5 regi stratwn fee per person
debut on Thursday.
The one male and two
Call (740)592-9300 by May 24 to register
female cubs have been kept
Friday, May 11
behind the scenes while the
LONG BOTTOM
zoo has bee n· monitoring
Gospel Sing, 7 p.m. at the their progress.
Faith Full Gospel Church.
All three have been adaptS.R. 124, Long Bottom. ing well to th eir surroundMemorial Hospital
Special singers "Delivered." ings , said zoo · spokes~~ H~pitall&gt;n ~e. Alhtru, OH ~no t 2302
woman Andi Norman.
Vi sitors will not be able to
An affiliate of the O'Bieness Health System
see the · cubs together
because they will remain in
Wednesday, M11y 9
RACINE - A card show- separate groups with thei r
er is planned for Mattie mothers.
Beegle s 90th birthday May
One of the mothers, Nan,
9. Cards may be se nt to her gave birth to a cub.on Nov.
at 48680 SR 124, Tornado. 22: three days later, Crystal
Road, Racine, Ohio 45771 . ~ave birth to two more.

Hypnotist offers hope on
quitting smoking, losing weight

Tuesday, June 5
5:00 7:00p.m.

Community Calendar

'Home Decor 'Furniture
'Hand Puppets for
Children
•Antiques for the
Antique lover
Our 19,000 square foot
store offers thousands
o! glhs for the entire
family.

Debra K.

BYTHEBEND

Rio Grande graduate

.5\RUttue &amp; era~ .lbll

B Erie

2400 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis. Oh10

The Daily Sentinel

Polar bear cubs
ready for debut
at Toledo Zoo

Church events

O'BLENESS

Birthdays

�,.

Qp NION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740} 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

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

Congress sl1all' make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prol1ibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging tl1e freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Govemment for a _redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, May 9, the I29th day of 2007 .
There are 236 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 9. 1961, Federal Communications Commission
chairman Newton N. Minow condemned tele\! ision programming as a "vast wasteland" in a speech to the National
Association of Broadcasters.
On this date:
In 1754, a cartoon in Benjamin Franklin's Pennsylvania
Gazelle srowed a snake cut into sections, each part representing an American colony; the caption read, "Join or die."
In 1926. Americans Richard Byrd and Floyd Bennet!
became the first men to fly over·lhe North Pole .
In 1936, Italy annexed Ethiopia.
In 1945. U.S _officials announced that a midnight entertainment curfew was being lifted immediately.
In 1960. the Food and Drug Administration approved the
pill Enovid as safe· for birth control use.
In 1978, the bullet-riddled body of former Italian prime
mini.ster Aldo Morn, who had been abducted by the Red
Brigades, was found in an automobi le in the center of
Rome.
In 1980, 35 people were killed when a freighter rammed
the Sun shine Skyway Bridge over Tampa Bay in Florida,
causing a I ;400-foot section to collapse.
In 1982, the musical "Nine," inspired by Federico
Fellini 's film "Eight and a-Half," opened on Broadway.
In 1987, 183 people were killed when a New York-bound
Polish jetliner crashed while · atlempting an emergency .
return to Warsaw.
Ten years ago: During a visit to' a rainforest in Costa
Rica. President Bill Clinton urged nations not to sacrifice
their environment in pursuit of economic gain.
Today's Birthdays: CBS News correspondent Mike
Wallace is 89. Actress Geraldine. McEwan is 75 . Actorwriter Alan Bennett is 73. Actor Albert Finney is 71. _
Actress-turned-politician Glenda Jackson is 71. Musician
Sonny Curtis (Buddy Holly and the Crickets) is 70.
Producer-qirector James L. Brooks is 67. Singer Tommy
Roe is 65. Singer-musician Richie Furay (B uffa lo
Spri ngfield and Poco) is 63. Actress Candice Bergen is 61 .
Pop singer Clint Holmes is 61. Actor Anthony Higgins is
60. Singer Billy Joel is 58. Blues singer-musician Bob
Margolin is 58. Rock si nger- musician Tom Petersson
(Cheap Trick) is 57. Actress Alley Mills_is 56. Actress
Wendy Crewson is 51. Actor John Corbell is 46. Singer
Dave Gahan (Depeche Mode) is 45. Rapper Gh.ostface
Killah is 37. Country musician Mike Myerson (Heartland)
is 36. Rhythm-and-blues sihger Tamia is 32. Rock musician
Dan Regan (Reel Big Fish) is 30. Rock singer Pierre
Bouvier (Simple Plan) is 28. Actress Rosario Dawson is 28.
Actress Rachel Boston is 25.
Thought for Today : "Television has changed the
American child from an irresistible force into an immovable object." - Laurence J. Peter, Canadi an-born educator
(1919-1990).

PageA4
Wednesday, May 9,

2007 _

Is Mitt Romney eve r
going to address hi s
Mormon roots' There are
pros and cons to Rom ney
not addressing his rel igious
afli liations before the country. but it is not gening any
easier to fi ght off the nega;
li ve connotations a curiou s
media hope to l:Onjure up
with irrele vant re ligiou s
questions.
Romney has yet to give a
major speech Dn hi s _faith
and its relationship to his
public po litica l life. but I'm
sure he wiII speak a!lotH it
soon enough . And I hope
he wilt do it in such a way
that it empowers religious
leaders -to embrace their
faith in their pub!~ lives.
Media folk conventional ly refer to the " JFK
speech" they think Romney
has to -give. But that 's not
the ri ght speech . Kennedy
- our first Catholic president - divorced his public
politi_cal life from his private religious life, an awful
approach. Romney is likely
to do what he 's always

.' ·~

·'

ever the heck they want."
He
continued,
when
bizarrely pressed by an
oddly earnest Matthews, " I
can 't imagine a government
telling a church who can
Kathryn
have communion in their
Lopez
church. I can't - we have
a separation of church and
state; it's served us well in
this cou ntry."
Romney then added:
done when asked questions
alx)ut his religion. He talks "This is a nation, after all,
about co mmon va lues that wants a leader that's a
despite facing some chal- person of faith, but we
len·ges from the press.
don ' t choose our leader
Chri s Mallhews, MSNBC based on which church
host and moderator of the. they go to. This is a nation
debate at the Reagan that also comes together.
library. asked Romney if We unite over faith and
Catholic bi shops should over the right of people to
deny Communion 10 pro- worship as they choose."
choi ce politicians. Well,
He then skillfully segued
lh~.t' s none of hi s business,
into the heart of why are
Chris - he's a Mormon tolerance of diversity is so
and he's running for presi- important: "The people
dent of· the Unit ed States, we' re fighting, they're the
not pope.
ones who divide over faith
Romney gave an excel- and decide mailers of this
lent answer. He said, pitch- nature in the public forum .
perfect ly: " I don't say any- Thi s is a place where we
thing to Roman Catholic celebrate different religions
bishop s. They can do what- and different faiths."

.

.

'T

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Mail Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks
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26 Weeks
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52 Weeks
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Outside Meigs County
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.I

-Obituaries

St. Paul

UMWmeet

Mary Roush

These concerns show a
worrying and unwarranted
lack of confidence in
American's tolerance of
different
religions.
Everywhere Romney goes
the question is: " Hey, but
you're Mormon." And he
says (I paraphrase), Yes,
yes, I am. I am a normal
American who loves God,
with one wife, children and
grandchildren. I work hard
and want to serve my
country in a secular manner
to the best of my ability. I
am a member of the
Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints and I
have a whole lot in common with a whole lot of
my fellow Americans who
aren't.
That's simple enough.
What is it that these. journalists are so worried
about?
(Kathryn Lopez is the
editor of National Review
Online (www.nationalre·view.com). She can be ·contacted at klopez@nationalreview.com.)

TEXT YOUR VOTE
FOR RUDY;

ing the ent ire family and
caregivers. A team of qualified professional s including
a physician , nurse, social
worker, health aide, pharmacist, chaplain . bereavement counselor and. volun~
leers care for each patient.
For information, call (740)
446-5074 or toll-free at I:
800-500-4850.

This is the third Ohio
Nature Works Grant Rutland
has received in as many
years with funds being used
from PageA1
for
improvements
at
give us the ability to accom- Vennari Park, including a
walking trail.
. plish much."
Rep. Jimmy Stewart (RRutland, on the other
Meigs)
said these funds
hand, plans to accomplish
would
soon
be available · if
much with its award,
they
weren
't
already for
including a gazebo placed
these
village's
to draw
in the area behind the park
down
upon.
sign, a volleyball court on
Stewart said he believes
the park's upper end near
the Hysell property. and a these grants help focus on
basketball court on the flat the natural be!luty in Meigs
land where the log cabin County and encourage more
recreational activities.
used to sit.
"I think these types of
"That's great," Rutland
go a long way to furgrants
Mayor April Burke said
ther
develop
touri sm in our
about the award. "This is
the best news r ve heard all part of t'he state," Stewart
added. "T?e grants also proweek."

vide acttvtlles for young
people to take part in, giving
them something to do in
their free time. I can think of
, worse things they could be
doing than playing a game
of volleyball or basketball
over at Vennari Park."
"These grants are possible
because the voters of Ohio
value quality parks and·
recreational
facilities,
which our communiti es
have
in
abundance,"
Senator Joy Padgett (RCoshocton) said. "I'm
pleased to see so man y
Southeastern Ohio parks
rece1 vmg
Nature Works
funding today."
Other award winners in
Southeastern Ohio include:
Athens County, 519,520 for

the construction of a new
shelter at
Nelsonville
Commons Park; Coshocton
Cou nty, $23,2 18 for renovations of access roads, a parking area and walking path in
Coshocton;
Guernsey
County, $17,783 to develop
a
play ground
in
Cumberland. $25,75 1 to
develop a skate park in
Cambridge; Monroe County,
$6,660 to acq uire 1.2 acres
of land along the Ohio River
and Sunfish Creek to develop a park in Clarington;
Morgan County, $23,632 to
develop an outdoor game
court in McConnelsville;
Muskingum
County,
$27,024 to develop playground, fencing and landscaping in South Zanesville.

Softball Field. The project
is estimated to cost $49,890.
Council approved an estimate of $4,500 from
Harmon
Heating
and
Cooling to install a 90,000
_BTU gas furnace and a
three-ton air condit ioning
unit to existing duct work in
the Racine Municipal
Building which will take
care of the offices housing
the sewer department,
police and mayor 's offices.
Council approved an in vitat ion to take part in the
Ohio Municipal League's
2008 workers compensation ·
group for a rate for $7,900.
Council approved ordering two eight-yard, one sixyard and two four-yard
dumpsters for a total price

of $3,500.
Hill announced work has
started and continues on
constructing the restrooms
at Star Mill Park.
Counc ilman Jim Harman
was ab sent from the meeting. Councilman Gary
Willford attended his second meeting as a counci I
member after Counci lman
Paul Cardone mrned in his
resignation in April, which
council . accepted with
"much regrets."

Hits
For
Hospice

q

Submitted plloto

Cindy Hawley, RN , CHPN, Holzer Hospice, left, poses with Jeremy S. Eisnaugle, owner
Appalachia Realty and the Colonial Restaurant, a gold sponsor of Hits for Hospice.

·eeaths
Harry Gibbs

Grant

Clarification
.. SYRACUSE - There is no charge to rent the shelter
hou se in Syracuse· though reservations are required to be
assured the shelter is available. Call 992-7777 to make
ceservations.

Syracuse water board
. SYRACUSE - The Syracuse Water Board meetings will
now be operating with an agenda. Members of the pubhc.
wishing to speak at the board meetings must get on the
agenda prior to the meetings. Call 992-7777 or contact
board members to reserve a spot on the agenda,

New pastor
SYRACUSE - Joe Gwinn is the new pastor of the
Syracuse Community Church on Second Street. He will
start with a sermon at 6:30p.m. on Sunday.

Racine

Meeting change

_from Page A1

POMEROY- The regular meeti ng of the Athens Meigs
Educational Service Center Governing Board of Athens
and Meigs Counties has been changed to Thursday at 4:45
p.m. at the Athens office so that board members may attend
the Meigs Co unty Academic banquet.

where she flies once a
month , first class. Spending
tens of thousands of dollars
on each trip. On Air France.
And some of that money
she' II spend on short -term
parking at the airport, and
we all know how expensive
that is. She may as well be
stuffi ng
hundred-dollar
bills in our pockets the way
it 's trickling down.
She' d lik~ to bring the
kids
with
her,
but
Stepanie's on safari · in
Kenya. And Brad's mountain climbing in Patagonia
before · he goes off to
OXford.
. I'm not an economist, so
I can't give you the techn ical explanation for it, but a
CEO's money trickles
down, whereas if he took
less and paid his workers
more, it wouldn't. Only
CEO money trickles down.
It's a well-known fad that
workers will just waste any
money they ·make on food
and medicine. Or throw it
away on clothes for their
children. And most of that
is spent right in the towns
where they live. What a
waste. That money 's got no
place to trickle down tq: .It
already is down . It can't
help anyone.

Levy

But there is trouble on the
horizon for our hardworking CEOs. Some people, I
won't say who, communists
probably, think our CEOs
get paid too much and want
to replace them with cheaper, less costly CEOs. From
. Mexico. It turns out
, Mexican CEOs are willing
to work for five, 10, sometimes even 20 times less
than our own CEOs.
While a CEO here may
easily get $250 million a
year for running a big oil
company, in Mexico, that
same job may pay only $5
million or $10 million.
Before you . know it, this
country· will be overrun
with cheap CEO labor.
Soon, ~ou' ll see guys jn
expensive suits standing on
street corners carrying signs
that say, "Will run Exxon
for $2 million a year.
,
We may not make anything in this country . anymore, but at least we Gan
say with pride, "We have
the most expensive CEOs
in the entire world!"
,
(Jim Mullen is the authqr
of "It Takes a Village IdioJ:
Complicating the Simple
Life ': and "Baby's First
Tattoo." You can reach him
·at )im_mullen@ ~Yi1JQy.com)

'

.

•

ment project but that firm
- was later "bought out" by '
Strand.
In other council news,
Clerk-Treasurer
David
Spencer said village funds all
appear to be on point to meet
their estimated goals. In the
general fund, as of April 30,
$39,678.09 of revenue has
been collected, virtually hal f
of projected revenue for the
entire year which. was estimated at $80,572.
"We're in good shape and
this proves that," Spencer
said of the balance sheet.
Council approved a resolution to submit an application for a Community
Development Block Grant
for funds to install lighting'
at the Star · Mill Park

work council considers
un satisfactory.
Mayor J. Scott Hill said
issues such as . the plant
receiving its state occupancy
permit as well as unfinished
electrical and plumbing
: TUPPERS PLAINS - St. Paul lclnited Methodist work remain to be finalized.
"I don't feel we've been
·Church will ha ve a "spud dinner" and bargain table from 4
to 7 p.m. on May 19. The men u '."ill be baked potatoes _and served properly." Hill said.
all the fixings, sa lad, dessert, coffee and punch. Donallons "The mai n thing is the
plant's running and producwill be accepted
ing water but .still things
need to be worked out." ·
The village initially hired
services. General fund
another
enginee ring firm to
money is also used to retire
design
its
water improve.
two bank loans, one for · a
police cruiser and another
from PageA1
taken for ihe demolition of
noon, employees at the town
fund , which pays for the the Mark V building.
hall had received a few teleVillage
Council
can
try
· operation of the police
phone calls from concerned
again
in
November
to
condepartmen\. mayor's office
residents.
Kearn s said the
from
Page
·A
1
and counciI operauons, vince voters of the need for
calls
were
a
mixture of sup· income tax office, and legal the levy.
, port for her and the council
insubordination. She also as well as for the officers.
said . she wanted to all ow
Though many residents
and Syracuse' is August 23. Taylor to resign quietly so might be afraid of what may
That is also the deadline for as not to have the reaction happen in the town, Kearn s
candidates to file for open of the other police officers wanted to assure them that
township posts and seats on that was exhibited at the the town still has police profrom PageA1
local school boards.
council mee ting .
tection. In fact. she said two
··'
"I had to do what was people applied for positions
Randy
Butcher
is
the
only
. Robert Robinson did not file
candidate to have filed for right," Kearns said.
as police officers first thing
.for re-election there.
Taylor could not l;&gt;e Tuesday and that a veteran
·; The filing deadline village township office. He is seekofficer has offered to assist ;;ouncil seats in the smaller ing re-election as a trustee reached for comment.
As of late Tuesday after- the department on a _partvillages of Racine, Rutland in Scipio Township.

Plan dinner

Don't our CEOs deserve more?

of

'

Local Briefs

DIAL.

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer and Colonial Restaurant of
Hospice will host its second Jackson as a gold sponsor of
annual Hits for 'Hospice co- the event.
ed softball tournament on
Holzer Hospice cares for
May 19 and 20, at the 0 .0 . patients with any life-limitMcintyre Park in Gallipolis. ing illness, regardless o(
Games will begin on their ability to pay in Gallia,
Saturday at 9 a.m. and Jackson, Meigs and surSunday at I p.m. Holzer . rounding counties. Hospice
Hospice recentl y recog- care helps the patient live as
nized Appalachia Realty fully as possible by support-

. TUPPERS PLAINS Visits to nursi ng homes
were di sc ussed at the recent
meeting of the Tuppers
Plains St. Pau l United
Methodist Women.
President JoA nna Weaver
opening the meeting with
prayer, and members read
the litany and purpose
before the program titled
"Fear Not. Pray Earnestly
and Take Time for Soul
Searching" prese nted by
Judy Kennedy. Cards were
signed for Pastor Jim
Corbin , Sherry Goodwin ,
James Howard and Shirley
Rockhold .
Barb Roush read a article
from
the
Res ponse
Ma gazine on the Interest of
the UMW She had se nt an
e- mail to a missionary,
Margret Bagwe ll ,' and
received a nice re sponse
which she read to the group.
Teresa Lemons · is working
on the Action Network on
receiving information.
The 5 Star giving was discussed and will be completed. Weaver announced that
the August meeting would
feature Rita Martin, secretary for ·the District office,
as speaker. Weaver closed
the meeting with a prayer to
bless the .refreshments.
Those . auendin g were
Weaver, Sharon Louks,
Rou sh, Connie Rankin ,
Kennedy, Betty Che viler,
Anna Rice, Kathy Corbitl,
and Teresa Lemons.

MIDDLEPORT - Mary E. Roush. 89, of Middleport,
_passed away M onday afternoon. May 7. 2007 at her resi dence followmg a lengthy illness.
She was born April 2, .1918 in Bradbury, the daughter of
"the late George and Jesse .Gilmore Sisson. Mrs. Roush
. :-vorked as a cook and later as a bookkeeper for many years
· 111 Metgs and Galha Counties. She was an avid women's
Ieagu,e bowler for many years and a member of the
Bradbury Church of Christ.
· ·Besides her parents she was preceded in death by a son
.Wtllford (Lee ) Roush; two sisters, Pa~line Hudson and
.Vesta Lambert; and two brothers. Joe and John Sisson.
. Surviving are her daughter and son-in-law, Maryln and
Raymond Wilcox of Middleport; and a daughter, Sharon
_~ou sh of Flonda ; stster. Mabel Michael of Middleport;
· etghl grandchildren and seven great grandchildren and sev. eral nieces and nephew s.
· . Graveside. service will be at II a.m. on Thursday, May 10,
2007, atMetgs Memory Gardens with AI Hanson officiating.
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Wednesday at the
Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home.
Memorial cont,ributions may be made in her memory to
Holzer Hosptd: Metgs Branch, I00 Jackso n Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
On-line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

COOLVILLE - Harry Ashley Gibbs, 97, Cooivjlle, died
Monday, May 7. 2007, at Arcadia Nursing Center in Coolville.
He was preceded in death by his wife of 61 years, Freda
Owens Gibbs.
Funeral will be held at I p.m. on Friday.' May II , 2007 at
White-Schwarzel Fune ral Home in Coolvi lle with Rev. Phil
Ridenour officiating. ·Burial will follow at Stewart
Cemetery in Hockingport.
Friends may call from 4 to 8 p.m. on Thursay at the
funeral home. and_ may sign the online· guestbook at
www.white-schwarzelfuneralhome.com.

AND TO

Almost every day, you
hear another story about
some CEO who just got
paid $300 million for doing
a tiny amount of work. Or
no work at aiL One guy got
Jim
$500 milli on for retiring.
-Mullen
Think about that: He got
$500 million for the work
he 's not going to be ·doing.
Last year, three hedge-fund
managers took home over Lamborghini . And that
$ 1 billion apiece. That 's money trickles down to us
every time an Italian auto
billion with a B.
AI fir st, li ke everyone wo rker vacations over here
el se, I thought, '' That 's and stays in a Swiss-owned
crazy, no one is worth that hote l and tips the maid.
kind of money." But then it And th at maid will spend
was explained to me by a all of her minimum wage
30-year-o ld
billionaire money right here. Good
hedge-fund manager on deal, huh ?
television that it just sounds
And that CEO did buy a
crazy. ll 's really OK, bigger house, and he hired
because that $300 million, people to build that' new
that $1 billion is going to house and paint the new
trickle down to you and me. house and decorate the new
That CEO is going to buy a hou se and make fi xtures for
house anc) clothes and cars that new house. In Tuscany:
for himself and his wife And hi s other house in
and his children, and all London. And a $22 million
that money- wi ll .get spread apartment on the Avenue
around to 'people who make Georges V in Pari s.
the cars ·and the hou ses and . · And because they have a
the clothes. It 's ceally good pad in Paris, that CEO's
for everyone, see?
wife will spend plenty of
And sure enough. that money on clothes. In Paris.
CEO bought not just one P.ulling de sig ners and
car, but severaL A Maserati dress mak ers and • sales
Gransporl.
And
a clerks 10 work . In Franc~

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

wWw.mydailysentinel.com

I

·Whats the deal with Mormons, Mitt?

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Leiters ro tile ·editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be
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,
·

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Mason

_Lineup

}\R&lt;.nEL
V

[STABLISHlD 1895

The Sinatra Show
Featuring

The JoebThomas
time basis .
"We do have help," :;he
said. "And I don't fore see
any problems with police
coverage.''
Additional help co uld
come from other law
enforcement
agenc ies,
including the Maso n County
Sheriff's Department and
West Virginia State Police.

Big and

Friday, May II at 8 pm
Tickels: po &amp; ~25
On Sale Now!
Vegas Legends Concert
Dwight Icenhower, lrv Cass
&amp; \&gt;!ott King
as Eh'is, Tom Jones
&amp; Roy Orbison
June 3018 om
The Ariel-Dater Hall
42~ Sec; A~';;, g~t~ipolis, OH

Meigf? County Walks

R;E-~;f~~~-;;s~:1 ~7k FunW'alk~
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or. A. Jackson Bailes Office
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113 W. 2nd St.
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FRIDAY, May 11• 9:00am·noon •(7~0) 446-1744
Call Toll Free 1·Boo-&amp;34-5265 for an Immediate appointment.
The tests will be given by a Licensed Hearing Aid Specialist
Anyo'ne who has trouble hearing or understanding
conversation Is Invited to have a FREE hearing teat to see II
this problem can be helped! Bring this coupon with you for
your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.

I
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Middleport Farmer's Market

A Great Program to Help Prevent
·
Chronic Diseases, Lose-&amp; Maintain Weight
&amp; Meet New People

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ilil----------------,
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UMWA • UAW • AR'4CO, AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
WALK-INS WELCOME
•
.

.1

Friday-May 11th
4-7pm

Jncenti¥e Gi¥en
Register the day of e¥ent or pre-register
at 740-992-6626
C 11 A d Bnun/,ield
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Qp NION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740} 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

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

Congress sl1all' make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prol1ibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging tl1e freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Govemment for a _redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, May 9, the I29th day of 2007 .
There are 236 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 9. 1961, Federal Communications Commission
chairman Newton N. Minow condemned tele\! ision programming as a "vast wasteland" in a speech to the National
Association of Broadcasters.
On this date:
In 1754, a cartoon in Benjamin Franklin's Pennsylvania
Gazelle srowed a snake cut into sections, each part representing an American colony; the caption read, "Join or die."
In 1926. Americans Richard Byrd and Floyd Bennet!
became the first men to fly over·lhe North Pole .
In 1936, Italy annexed Ethiopia.
In 1945. U.S _officials announced that a midnight entertainment curfew was being lifted immediately.
In 1960. the Food and Drug Administration approved the
pill Enovid as safe· for birth control use.
In 1978, the bullet-riddled body of former Italian prime
mini.ster Aldo Morn, who had been abducted by the Red
Brigades, was found in an automobi le in the center of
Rome.
In 1980, 35 people were killed when a freighter rammed
the Sun shine Skyway Bridge over Tampa Bay in Florida,
causing a I ;400-foot section to collapse.
In 1982, the musical "Nine," inspired by Federico
Fellini 's film "Eight and a-Half," opened on Broadway.
In 1987, 183 people were killed when a New York-bound
Polish jetliner crashed while · atlempting an emergency .
return to Warsaw.
Ten years ago: During a visit to' a rainforest in Costa
Rica. President Bill Clinton urged nations not to sacrifice
their environment in pursuit of economic gain.
Today's Birthdays: CBS News correspondent Mike
Wallace is 89. Actress Geraldine. McEwan is 75 . Actorwriter Alan Bennett is 73. Actor Albert Finney is 71. _
Actress-turned-politician Glenda Jackson is 71. Musician
Sonny Curtis (Buddy Holly and the Crickets) is 70.
Producer-qirector James L. Brooks is 67. Singer Tommy
Roe is 65. Singer-musician Richie Furay (B uffa lo
Spri ngfield and Poco) is 63. Actress Candice Bergen is 61 .
Pop singer Clint Holmes is 61. Actor Anthony Higgins is
60. Singer Billy Joel is 58. Blues singer-musician Bob
Margolin is 58. Rock si nger- musician Tom Petersson
(Cheap Trick) is 57. Actress Alley Mills_is 56. Actress
Wendy Crewson is 51. Actor John Corbell is 46. Singer
Dave Gahan (Depeche Mode) is 45. Rapper Gh.ostface
Killah is 37. Country musician Mike Myerson (Heartland)
is 36. Rhythm-and-blues sihger Tamia is 32. Rock musician
Dan Regan (Reel Big Fish) is 30. Rock singer Pierre
Bouvier (Simple Plan) is 28. Actress Rosario Dawson is 28.
Actress Rachel Boston is 25.
Thought for Today : "Television has changed the
American child from an irresistible force into an immovable object." - Laurence J. Peter, Canadi an-born educator
(1919-1990).

PageA4
Wednesday, May 9,

2007 _

Is Mitt Romney eve r
going to address hi s
Mormon roots' There are
pros and cons to Rom ney
not addressing his rel igious
afli liations before the country. but it is not gening any
easier to fi ght off the nega;
li ve connotations a curiou s
media hope to l:Onjure up
with irrele vant re ligiou s
questions.
Romney has yet to give a
major speech Dn hi s _faith
and its relationship to his
public po litica l life. but I'm
sure he wiII speak a!lotH it
soon enough . And I hope
he wilt do it in such a way
that it empowers religious
leaders -to embrace their
faith in their pub!~ lives.
Media folk conventional ly refer to the " JFK
speech" they think Romney
has to -give. But that 's not
the ri ght speech . Kennedy
- our first Catholic president - divorced his public
politi_cal life from his private religious life, an awful
approach. Romney is likely
to do what he 's always

.' ·~

·'

ever the heck they want."
He
continued,
when
bizarrely pressed by an
oddly earnest Matthews, " I
can 't imagine a government
telling a church who can
Kathryn
have communion in their
Lopez
church. I can't - we have
a separation of church and
state; it's served us well in
this cou ntry."
Romney then added:
done when asked questions
alx)ut his religion. He talks "This is a nation, after all,
about co mmon va lues that wants a leader that's a
despite facing some chal- person of faith, but we
len·ges from the press.
don ' t choose our leader
Chri s Mallhews, MSNBC based on which church
host and moderator of the. they go to. This is a nation
debate at the Reagan that also comes together.
library. asked Romney if We unite over faith and
Catholic bi shops should over the right of people to
deny Communion 10 pro- worship as they choose."
choi ce politicians. Well,
He then skillfully segued
lh~.t' s none of hi s business,
into the heart of why are
Chris - he's a Mormon tolerance of diversity is so
and he's running for presi- important: "The people
dent of· the Unit ed States, we' re fighting, they're the
not pope.
ones who divide over faith
Romney gave an excel- and decide mailers of this
lent answer. He said, pitch- nature in the public forum .
perfect ly: " I don't say any- Thi s is a place where we
thing to Roman Catholic celebrate different religions
bishop s. They can do what- and different faiths."

.

.

'T

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-Obituaries

St. Paul

UMWmeet

Mary Roush

These concerns show a
worrying and unwarranted
lack of confidence in
American's tolerance of
different
religions.
Everywhere Romney goes
the question is: " Hey, but
you're Mormon." And he
says (I paraphrase), Yes,
yes, I am. I am a normal
American who loves God,
with one wife, children and
grandchildren. I work hard
and want to serve my
country in a secular manner
to the best of my ability. I
am a member of the
Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints and I
have a whole lot in common with a whole lot of
my fellow Americans who
aren't.
That's simple enough.
What is it that these. journalists are so worried
about?
(Kathryn Lopez is the
editor of National Review
Online (www.nationalre·view.com). She can be ·contacted at klopez@nationalreview.com.)

TEXT YOUR VOTE
FOR RUDY;

ing the ent ire family and
caregivers. A team of qualified professional s including
a physician , nurse, social
worker, health aide, pharmacist, chaplain . bereavement counselor and. volun~
leers care for each patient.
For information, call (740)
446-5074 or toll-free at I:
800-500-4850.

This is the third Ohio
Nature Works Grant Rutland
has received in as many
years with funds being used
from PageA1
for
improvements
at
give us the ability to accom- Vennari Park, including a
walking trail.
. plish much."
Rep. Jimmy Stewart (RRutland, on the other
Meigs)
said these funds
hand, plans to accomplish
would
soon
be available · if
much with its award,
they
weren
't
already for
including a gazebo placed
these
village's
to draw
in the area behind the park
down
upon.
sign, a volleyball court on
Stewart said he believes
the park's upper end near
the Hysell property. and a these grants help focus on
basketball court on the flat the natural be!luty in Meigs
land where the log cabin County and encourage more
recreational activities.
used to sit.
"I think these types of
"That's great," Rutland
go a long way to furgrants
Mayor April Burke said
ther
develop
touri sm in our
about the award. "This is
the best news r ve heard all part of t'he state," Stewart
added. "T?e grants also proweek."

vide acttvtlles for young
people to take part in, giving
them something to do in
their free time. I can think of
, worse things they could be
doing than playing a game
of volleyball or basketball
over at Vennari Park."
"These grants are possible
because the voters of Ohio
value quality parks and·
recreational
facilities,
which our communiti es
have
in
abundance,"
Senator Joy Padgett (RCoshocton) said. "I'm
pleased to see so man y
Southeastern Ohio parks
rece1 vmg
Nature Works
funding today."
Other award winners in
Southeastern Ohio include:
Athens County, 519,520 for

the construction of a new
shelter at
Nelsonville
Commons Park; Coshocton
Cou nty, $23,2 18 for renovations of access roads, a parking area and walking path in
Coshocton;
Guernsey
County, $17,783 to develop
a
play ground
in
Cumberland. $25,75 1 to
develop a skate park in
Cambridge; Monroe County,
$6,660 to acq uire 1.2 acres
of land along the Ohio River
and Sunfish Creek to develop a park in Clarington;
Morgan County, $23,632 to
develop an outdoor game
court in McConnelsville;
Muskingum
County,
$27,024 to develop playground, fencing and landscaping in South Zanesville.

Softball Field. The project
is estimated to cost $49,890.
Council approved an estimate of $4,500 from
Harmon
Heating
and
Cooling to install a 90,000
_BTU gas furnace and a
three-ton air condit ioning
unit to existing duct work in
the Racine Municipal
Building which will take
care of the offices housing
the sewer department,
police and mayor 's offices.
Council approved an in vitat ion to take part in the
Ohio Municipal League's
2008 workers compensation ·
group for a rate for $7,900.
Council approved ordering two eight-yard, one sixyard and two four-yard
dumpsters for a total price

of $3,500.
Hill announced work has
started and continues on
constructing the restrooms
at Star Mill Park.
Counc ilman Jim Harman
was ab sent from the meeting. Councilman Gary
Willford attended his second meeting as a counci I
member after Counci lman
Paul Cardone mrned in his
resignation in April, which
council . accepted with
"much regrets."

Hits
For
Hospice

q

Submitted plloto

Cindy Hawley, RN , CHPN, Holzer Hospice, left, poses with Jeremy S. Eisnaugle, owner
Appalachia Realty and the Colonial Restaurant, a gold sponsor of Hits for Hospice.

·eeaths
Harry Gibbs

Grant

Clarification
.. SYRACUSE - There is no charge to rent the shelter
hou se in Syracuse· though reservations are required to be
assured the shelter is available. Call 992-7777 to make
ceservations.

Syracuse water board
. SYRACUSE - The Syracuse Water Board meetings will
now be operating with an agenda. Members of the pubhc.
wishing to speak at the board meetings must get on the
agenda prior to the meetings. Call 992-7777 or contact
board members to reserve a spot on the agenda,

New pastor
SYRACUSE - Joe Gwinn is the new pastor of the
Syracuse Community Church on Second Street. He will
start with a sermon at 6:30p.m. on Sunday.

Racine

Meeting change

_from Page A1

POMEROY- The regular meeti ng of the Athens Meigs
Educational Service Center Governing Board of Athens
and Meigs Counties has been changed to Thursday at 4:45
p.m. at the Athens office so that board members may attend
the Meigs Co unty Academic banquet.

where she flies once a
month , first class. Spending
tens of thousands of dollars
on each trip. On Air France.
And some of that money
she' II spend on short -term
parking at the airport, and
we all know how expensive
that is. She may as well be
stuffi ng
hundred-dollar
bills in our pockets the way
it 's trickling down.
She' d lik~ to bring the
kids
with
her,
but
Stepanie's on safari · in
Kenya. And Brad's mountain climbing in Patagonia
before · he goes off to
OXford.
. I'm not an economist, so
I can't give you the techn ical explanation for it, but a
CEO's money trickles
down, whereas if he took
less and paid his workers
more, it wouldn't. Only
CEO money trickles down.
It's a well-known fad that
workers will just waste any
money they ·make on food
and medicine. Or throw it
away on clothes for their
children. And most of that
is spent right in the towns
where they live. What a
waste. That money 's got no
place to trickle down tq: .It
already is down . It can't
help anyone.

Levy

But there is trouble on the
horizon for our hardworking CEOs. Some people, I
won't say who, communists
probably, think our CEOs
get paid too much and want
to replace them with cheaper, less costly CEOs. From
. Mexico. It turns out
, Mexican CEOs are willing
to work for five, 10, sometimes even 20 times less
than our own CEOs.
While a CEO here may
easily get $250 million a
year for running a big oil
company, in Mexico, that
same job may pay only $5
million or $10 million.
Before you . know it, this
country· will be overrun
with cheap CEO labor.
Soon, ~ou' ll see guys jn
expensive suits standing on
street corners carrying signs
that say, "Will run Exxon
for $2 million a year.
,
We may not make anything in this country . anymore, but at least we Gan
say with pride, "We have
the most expensive CEOs
in the entire world!"
,
(Jim Mullen is the authqr
of "It Takes a Village IdioJ:
Complicating the Simple
Life ': and "Baby's First
Tattoo." You can reach him
·at )im_mullen@ ~Yi1JQy.com)

'

.

•

ment project but that firm
- was later "bought out" by '
Strand.
In other council news,
Clerk-Treasurer
David
Spencer said village funds all
appear to be on point to meet
their estimated goals. In the
general fund, as of April 30,
$39,678.09 of revenue has
been collected, virtually hal f
of projected revenue for the
entire year which. was estimated at $80,572.
"We're in good shape and
this proves that," Spencer
said of the balance sheet.
Council approved a resolution to submit an application for a Community
Development Block Grant
for funds to install lighting'
at the Star · Mill Park

work council considers
un satisfactory.
Mayor J. Scott Hill said
issues such as . the plant
receiving its state occupancy
permit as well as unfinished
electrical and plumbing
: TUPPERS PLAINS - St. Paul lclnited Methodist work remain to be finalized.
"I don't feel we've been
·Church will ha ve a "spud dinner" and bargain table from 4
to 7 p.m. on May 19. The men u '."ill be baked potatoes _and served properly." Hill said.
all the fixings, sa lad, dessert, coffee and punch. Donallons "The mai n thing is the
plant's running and producwill be accepted
ing water but .still things
need to be worked out." ·
The village initially hired
services. General fund
another
enginee ring firm to
money is also used to retire
design
its
water improve.
two bank loans, one for · a
police cruiser and another
from PageA1
taken for ihe demolition of
noon, employees at the town
fund , which pays for the the Mark V building.
hall had received a few teleVillage
Council
can
try
· operation of the police
phone calls from concerned
again
in
November
to
condepartmen\. mayor's office
residents.
Kearn s said the
from
Page
·A
1
and counciI operauons, vince voters of the need for
calls
were
a
mixture of sup· income tax office, and legal the levy.
, port for her and the council
insubordination. She also as well as for the officers.
said . she wanted to all ow
Though many residents
and Syracuse' is August 23. Taylor to resign quietly so might be afraid of what may
That is also the deadline for as not to have the reaction happen in the town, Kearn s
candidates to file for open of the other police officers wanted to assure them that
township posts and seats on that was exhibited at the the town still has police profrom PageA1
local school boards.
council mee ting .
tection. In fact. she said two
··'
"I had to do what was people applied for positions
Randy
Butcher
is
the
only
. Robert Robinson did not file
candidate to have filed for right," Kearns said.
as police officers first thing
.for re-election there.
Taylor could not l;&gt;e Tuesday and that a veteran
·; The filing deadline village township office. He is seekofficer has offered to assist ;;ouncil seats in the smaller ing re-election as a trustee reached for comment.
As of late Tuesday after- the department on a _partvillages of Racine, Rutland in Scipio Township.

Plan dinner

Don't our CEOs deserve more?

of

'

Local Briefs

DIAL.

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer and Colonial Restaurant of
Hospice will host its second Jackson as a gold sponsor of
annual Hits for 'Hospice co- the event.
ed softball tournament on
Holzer Hospice cares for
May 19 and 20, at the 0 .0 . patients with any life-limitMcintyre Park in Gallipolis. ing illness, regardless o(
Games will begin on their ability to pay in Gallia,
Saturday at 9 a.m. and Jackson, Meigs and surSunday at I p.m. Holzer . rounding counties. Hospice
Hospice recentl y recog- care helps the patient live as
nized Appalachia Realty fully as possible by support-

. TUPPERS PLAINS Visits to nursi ng homes
were di sc ussed at the recent
meeting of the Tuppers
Plains St. Pau l United
Methodist Women.
President JoA nna Weaver
opening the meeting with
prayer, and members read
the litany and purpose
before the program titled
"Fear Not. Pray Earnestly
and Take Time for Soul
Searching" prese nted by
Judy Kennedy. Cards were
signed for Pastor Jim
Corbin , Sherry Goodwin ,
James Howard and Shirley
Rockhold .
Barb Roush read a article
from
the
Res ponse
Ma gazine on the Interest of
the UMW She had se nt an
e- mail to a missionary,
Margret Bagwe ll ,' and
received a nice re sponse
which she read to the group.
Teresa Lemons · is working
on the Action Network on
receiving information.
The 5 Star giving was discussed and will be completed. Weaver announced that
the August meeting would
feature Rita Martin, secretary for ·the District office,
as speaker. Weaver closed
the meeting with a prayer to
bless the .refreshments.
Those . auendin g were
Weaver, Sharon Louks,
Rou sh, Connie Rankin ,
Kennedy, Betty Che viler,
Anna Rice, Kathy Corbitl,
and Teresa Lemons.

MIDDLEPORT - Mary E. Roush. 89, of Middleport,
_passed away M onday afternoon. May 7. 2007 at her resi dence followmg a lengthy illness.
She was born April 2, .1918 in Bradbury, the daughter of
"the late George and Jesse .Gilmore Sisson. Mrs. Roush
. :-vorked as a cook and later as a bookkeeper for many years
· 111 Metgs and Galha Counties. She was an avid women's
Ieagu,e bowler for many years and a member of the
Bradbury Church of Christ.
· ·Besides her parents she was preceded in death by a son
.Wtllford (Lee ) Roush; two sisters, Pa~line Hudson and
.Vesta Lambert; and two brothers. Joe and John Sisson.
. Surviving are her daughter and son-in-law, Maryln and
Raymond Wilcox of Middleport; and a daughter, Sharon
_~ou sh of Flonda ; stster. Mabel Michael of Middleport;
· etghl grandchildren and seven great grandchildren and sev. eral nieces and nephew s.
· . Graveside. service will be at II a.m. on Thursday, May 10,
2007, atMetgs Memory Gardens with AI Hanson officiating.
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Wednesday at the
Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home.
Memorial cont,ributions may be made in her memory to
Holzer Hosptd: Metgs Branch, I00 Jackso n Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
On-line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

COOLVILLE - Harry Ashley Gibbs, 97, Cooivjlle, died
Monday, May 7. 2007, at Arcadia Nursing Center in Coolville.
He was preceded in death by his wife of 61 years, Freda
Owens Gibbs.
Funeral will be held at I p.m. on Friday.' May II , 2007 at
White-Schwarzel Fune ral Home in Coolvi lle with Rev. Phil
Ridenour officiating. ·Burial will follow at Stewart
Cemetery in Hockingport.
Friends may call from 4 to 8 p.m. on Thursay at the
funeral home. and_ may sign the online· guestbook at
www.white-schwarzelfuneralhome.com.

AND TO

Almost every day, you
hear another story about
some CEO who just got
paid $300 million for doing
a tiny amount of work. Or
no work at aiL One guy got
Jim
$500 milli on for retiring.
-Mullen
Think about that: He got
$500 million for the work
he 's not going to be ·doing.
Last year, three hedge-fund
managers took home over Lamborghini . And that
$ 1 billion apiece. That 's money trickles down to us
every time an Italian auto
billion with a B.
AI fir st, li ke everyone wo rker vacations over here
el se, I thought, '' That 's and stays in a Swiss-owned
crazy, no one is worth that hote l and tips the maid.
kind of money." But then it And th at maid will spend
was explained to me by a all of her minimum wage
30-year-o ld
billionaire money right here. Good
hedge-fund manager on deal, huh ?
television that it just sounds
And that CEO did buy a
crazy. ll 's really OK, bigger house, and he hired
because that $300 million, people to build that' new
that $1 billion is going to house and paint the new
trickle down to you and me. house and decorate the new
That CEO is going to buy a hou se and make fi xtures for
house anc) clothes and cars that new house. In Tuscany:
for himself and his wife And hi s other house in
and his children, and all London. And a $22 million
that money- wi ll .get spread apartment on the Avenue
around to 'people who make Georges V in Pari s.
the cars ·and the hou ses and . · And because they have a
the clothes. It 's ceally good pad in Paris, that CEO's
for everyone, see?
wife will spend plenty of
And sure enough. that money on clothes. In Paris.
CEO bought not just one P.ulling de sig ners and
car, but severaL A Maserati dress mak ers and • sales
Gransporl.
And
a clerks 10 work . In Franc~

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

wWw.mydailysentinel.com

I

·Whats the deal with Mormons, Mitt?

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Leiters ro tile ·editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letter~ should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks To organizaTions and individuals will not be accepted for publication.
,
·

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Mason

_Lineup

}\R&lt;.nEL
V

[STABLISHlD 1895

The Sinatra Show
Featuring

The JoebThomas
time basis .
"We do have help," :;he
said. "And I don't fore see
any problems with police
coverage.''
Additional help co uld
come from other law
enforcement
agenc ies,
including the Maso n County
Sheriff's Department and
West Virginia State Police.

Big and

Friday, May II at 8 pm
Tickels: po &amp; ~25
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Vegas Legends Concert
Dwight Icenhower, lrv Cass
&amp; \&gt;!ott King
as Eh'is, Tom Jones
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June 3018 om
The Ariel-Dater Hall
42~ Sec; A~';;, g~t~ipolis, OH

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The Daily Sentinel

--

,-

_..

. ..

NATION. WdRLD

PageA6
Wednesday, May 9,

Pe•oon tells

35,000
prepare tor Iraq

seemed to be concerned
about their relationship with
ASSOCIATED PRESS \VRtTERS
a number of us, and I think
they should be," said Rep.
WASHINGTON - The Bud Cramer, D-Ala., one of
Pentagon on Tuesday alert- the members who attended.
ed more than 35.000 Army .'·It 's perplexing why we
soldiers th~t they could be couldn't have had a couple
sent to Iraq this fall. In of these meetings earlier."
Congress, .
House
The House bill would proDemocrats defiantly pushed vide $30 billion to fund mili-·
a plan to limit war funding tary operations through July,
to two-month installments. as well as more than $12 biiThe deployment orders lion more 1to pay for equipsigned
by
Defense ment, traimng security forces
Secretary Robert Gates in Iraq and Afghanistan and
would allow commanders to defense health. Some $15
maintain the buildup of billion more would be protroops· through the end of vided for other high-priority
the year if needed. President projects. including $6.8 biiBush has ordered nearly lion for hurricane relief, $3.1
30,000 additional troops to billion for base closings and
Iraq to quell a spike in ~io- $2.2 billi&lt;Jn for homeland
lence, particularly in and security.
around Baghdad. There are
Under the propos&amp;!, Bush
currently about 146.000 would have to update
U.S. troops in Iraq.
Congress by July · 13 on
Pentagon
spokesman whether the Iraqi governBryan Whitman said the ment was· meeting certain
orders do not mean the mil- political
and
security
itary has decided to main- reforms. Congress would
tain the increased force lev- decide 10 days later whether
els through December. The to end the war .and bring
Pentagon "has .been very troops· home or provide
clear that a decision about funding through September.
the duration of the surge
The House would vote
will depend on conditions separately this month on .a
on the ground," he said.
bill providing about $3.5 biiThe announcement comes lion in agricultural assistance
as Bush is under· increasing and about$ r billion for rural
pressure to pull troops out schools. wildfire relief and
of Iraq . Bush last week aid to salmon farmers.
vetoed $124.2 billion legis"We're trying to prepare a
lation that would have fund - second option so that if the
ed the war while requiring administration .wants to controops to start coming home tinue to just hold its breath
this fall. According to a . and turn blue until they get
CNN-Opinion
Research their money, we're going to
Corp. poll released Tuesday, have another alternative,"
just over half of Americans said Rep. David Obey, Ddisapproved of the veto. .
Wis. , who planned to brief
House Democratic lead- White House chief of staff
ers briefed party members Josh Bolten on Tuesday,
·Tuesday on new legislation
White House spokesman
·that would fund the Iraq war Tony Snow called the .
through July, then .give approach "just bad manageCongress the option of cut- ment."
ting off m1mey after that if
"We think it is appropriate
conditions do not improve. to be able to give commanBush requested more than · ders what they are going to
$90 billion to fund the war need, and' also forces in the
through September.
field, so. that you can make
· The proposal is aimed at long-term decisions in tryappeasing Democratic law- ing to build the mission,"
makers who want to end the Snow said.
war immediately , and are
Congressional Republicans
urgmg leaders not to back also dismissed the Democratic
down after Bush's veto last proposal as unlitirly rationing
week. But lacking a firm funds needed in combat and
endorsement by the Senate. said their members would not
the challenge by House suppot1 it.
Democrats seemed more for
Democrats "should not
political show than a pre- treat our men and women in
view of another veto show- uniform. like they are childown with Bush.
dren who are getting a
Senate Majority Leader monthly allowance,'' said
Harry Reid, D-Nev.. told Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio,
reporters before meeting his party's leader.
with House Speaker Nancy
Gates and his military
Pelosi that "nothing's been leaders have said that com. ruled out and nothing's been manders in Iraq will make
ruled in" as he would con- recommendations
in
tinue to try to work with the September on whether the
White House.
,
buildup has been successful
House DemocratiC leaders and whether it should construck a more defiant tone.
tinue or if troops can begin
"I didn't commit to any coming home.
.
compromise" with the While
Snow and other adminisHouse, said Pelosi, D-Calif. tration officials have tried to
Asked whether Democrats tamp down expectations of
were still talking with the the September review,
White House, Rep. Rahm althou gh several senior
Emanuel, D-111., satd, 'They Republicans say it will prove
know what we're doing obvi- critical to whether the GOP
ously. I don't think their sub- continues to support the war.
scriptions to the newspapers
Sen. Olymp1a Snowe, Rended at any time recently."
Maine, introduced legislaDemocratic leadership tion Tuesday that would
aides said Reid and Pelosi require the Iraqi governacknowledged in their meet- ment to meet certain benching Tuesday that the House marks within four months.
plan would be considerably If Baghdad fails, military
more difficult to pass in the com manders would begin
Senate, where 60 votes are planning to bring some
often required and that the troops home and refocusing
two chambers may have to remaining forces on nonpursue different tracks. ·
combat missions, such as
Earlier in the day, Bush training the Iraqi security
met with more thari a dozen forces. Snowe 's bill, .coDemocrats, most of whom sponsored by Sen. Evan
with fairly conservative vot- Bayh, D-ll)d., sets a noning records.
binding goal of ending com"They(the White House) bat six months later.
BY LOLITA C. BALDOR
AND ANNE FLAHERTY

AP photo .

Israeli archaeologists say they discovered
long-sought tomb of biblical King Herod
Bv STEVE WEIZMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

HERODIUM, West Bank
- Under a baking sun,
pieces of limestone carved
with borders of rosettes and
geometrical designs lay iri
three · excavated
pits
Tuesday - a desert site
Israeli archaeologists say i~
the tomb of King Herod,
who ruled the Holy Land
when Christ was born.
The find, · which could
provide ·insights into one of
the Bible) most reviled yet
influential. figures, includes
hundreds of pieces of an
ornate sarcophagus, but no
bones and no inscription
that would seal the identi fi Cation.
Although the tomb was
shattered and empty, leaders
of the Israeli team that
unearthed it said Tuesday
they will dig on in the hope
of finding jewelry, other
artifacts or even the biblical
monarch's remains.
Hebrew
University
archaeologist Ehud Netzer
said he has been leading the
search for Herod's tomb at
the king 's winter palace in
the Judean desert, in an
lsraeli-controlled part of the
West Bank south of
Jerusalem, for 35 year,.
Last month, his team
started unearthing limestone .
fragments , from which
emerged the picture of an
ornately carved sarcophagus with decorative urns of
a type never before found in·
the Holy Land.
"It's a sarcophagus we
don't just see anywhere,"
Netzer told reporters at the
university. "It is something
very special."
The complete sarcophagus would have been about
nine f~et long, the university said.
Herod was the Jewish
proxy ruler of the Holy
Land under imperial Ronian
occupation from 37 B.C.
His most famous construe'
tion project was expanding
·the Jewish Second Temple
in Jerusalem.
Remnants of hisextensive
building work in Jerusalem
are
still
visible
in
Jerusalem's Old City, and
he undertook major construction
projects
in
Caesaria, Jencho, the hilltop fortress of Masada and
elsewhere.
At the. excavation site, on
the steep, rocky slopes of a
cone-shaped hill 2,230 feet
high, Netzer's assistant,
Yaakov Kalmar, said that an
account of Herod's funeral
by the first-century historian Josephus Flavius left little doubt that it took place at
Herodium. The newly discovered tomb was regal in
its opulence.

Homeless man survives garbage truck crushing
WEST PALM BEACH.
Fla. (~) - A homeless
man who had fallen asleep
in a trash bin to escape the
rain was dumped into a
garbage truck and survi ved
being cru shed repeatedly
before a worker saw him.
Robert Ba~well, 44, said he
screamed as the load of trash
was crushed against his body
at least seven times and was
sure he would die. He tried to

cushion one blow from the
truck's compressor with a
dead opossum. he said.
"I screamed one last
b(eath." Baswell told the
Palm Beach -Post. A trash
collector finally saw him as
he wssed in a box and called
for help.
Firefighters spent almost
a half hour pulling pieces of
· trash out by hand to free the
man .

2007

Hebrew University
archaeology professor
Ehud Netzer holds a
piece of the limestone
sarcophagus believed
to belong to King Herod
as he speaks during a
news conference where
he presents the findings of what
researchers say is King
Herod's tomb, at the
Hebrew University of
Jerusalem Tuesday as
an aerial view of Mt
Herodium is projected.
Netzer who has been
working at the site
since 1972 has found
the tomb of King Herod,
the legendary builder of
ancient Je rusalem and
l the Holy Land, at a hill·,\ top compound south of
Jerusalem, the Hebrew
University announced.

"We have here all the
attributes of a royal funeral," Kalmar said. "We didn 't
find inscriptions so far. ..
The work is not finished."
The site sits halfway up
the hill, atop a warren of
tunnels .and water cisterns
built to serve the palace at
the summit.
Stephen
Pfann,
an
American expert in the
Second Temple period at the
University of the . Holy
Land, called the find a
"major discovery by · all
means," but said the lack of
an inscription hindered full
verification.
"We're moving · in the
right direction. It will be
clinched once we have an
inscription that bears his
name," said Pfann, who
did not participate in
Netzer's dig.
·
Eric Meyers of Duke
University, who has excavated in the Holy Land,
said initial descriptions of
the tomb pointed to its
authenticity as belonging
to Herod.
"We know he was buried
at Herodium," he said by
telephone. "It's a significant
find after a long search ."
Meyers said that among
key clues were that the sarcophagus was placed on a
raised platform rather than
in the underground t()mbs
used for those of lesser
rank, and that in accordance
with Jewish religious law, it
was not decorated with any
human image.
"It sounds as if Herod was

respectful of his Jewish tradillOn right up to the end,"
he said.
David Owen, a biblical
historian and archaeologist
at Cornell University who
has done extensive field
work in Israel, was not sur. prised b~ the find.
"That s . where Josephus
says he was buried," said
.Qwen. "He buih that entire
palatial complex and there
are few doubts that his tomb
would be there."
The Herod of the Bible
and of Christian tradition
was a bloodthirsty megalo~
maniac, who flew into a
paranoid frenzy when he
encountered the three wise
men on their way to
Bethlehem \vith gifts for
· the baby Jesus. and telling
of the birth of a new king
of Israel.
"Then Herod, when he
saw that he was mocked of
the wise men, was exceedingly wroth, and sent forth,
and slew all the children
that were in Bethlehem. and
in all the coasts thereof,
from two years old and
under..." (Matthew 2: 16).
The biblical massacre figures in paintings such as
Peter Paul Rubens' 17thcentury "Massacre of ·the
Innocents."
The account, however
does not appear in other
Gospels, and experts are not
convinced of its accuracy,
especially the implications
of mass infanticide. Some
believe the ·decree applied
only to Bethlehem, ,a small

town at the time , where.
there may have been as few
as 15 toddlers.
'·
Hi storians do agree that
toward the end of his reign
Herod slaughtered many.
political ri.vals and per-·
ceived plotters against
him, among them one of
his 10 wives and three of
hi s sons. Josephus says
that as the elderly Herod
lay riddled with disease, he
ordered the cream of the
local Jewish aristocracy to
be executed on his demise,
so that his passing would
bring widespread and genuine mourning.
After Herod 's death,
Herodium became a strong·
hold for Jewish rebels fighting Roman occupation, and
the site suffered significant
battle damage before it was.
conquered and finallydestroyed by Roman forces .
in A.D. 71 , a year after they
destroyed the Jewish temple
in Jerusalem.
Kalmar said the sarcopha.
gus could have been
destroyed during Roman
.attacks or smashed by the
rebels, who reviled the
memory of Herod as a
Roman puppet.
"We know that Herod had
a lot of enemies," he said.
. Roi Po rat, another of
Netze r's assistants on the
digs, said it· was possible·
that the Jews removed
Herod's remains after his
· tomb was reduced to rubble.
AP writer Lily Hindy cont[_ibuted to,Jhis report from
New York.
" "·

In Meigs County

Monday, May 14

El2f:·~w~Mo!tljcomin'si'
an individual ·p)Jh
quitting. Emphasis

"I want to find this gentlebe on long-term freedom
man and have him buy my
lottery tickets because he is ·; ..,nm tobacco, including
one lucky dude," said West ·
Palm Beach Fire Rescue F!'£.''*' ft:iproved skills"for
spokesman Phil Kaplan.
· managemeot,
Baswell, who had bedded
. down in a brush-filled trash
ntrol, assertive
bin Sunday night to get out
of the rain, suffered broken
legs and ribs.
"I'm so happy to be here,
as bad as I'm hurt," he said. ..

Holzer's
Tobacco

MEIGS COUNTY GIRL ScoUr DIARY
POMEROY - On May
19, for their Bronze Award
several girls from Junio;
Troop 1204 will be sponsoring an event at the
Rocksprings Fairgrounds
for the animals at the Meigs
County Dog Pound. Details
of this event can be given by.
calling Shirley Cogar at
992-2668. Good luck. Girl
Scouts!
Troop reports:

Mason County Animal
Shelter in Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
At our meeting on March
26 those present were:
Hannah Adams, Haley
Bissell. Rachael Markworth,
Lindsey Putman, Shawna
Murphy, Kayla Goff, and
Katie hoffman. The girls
turned their cookie money
in . Our top sel_ler was
Lmdsey Putman, who sold
548 boxes, Shawna Murphy.
132 boxes, Kavla Goff, I00
boxes, Haley· Bissell, 97
boxes, Hannah Adams and
1\atie Hoffman,' 32 boxes,
and Rachael Mark worth
with 125 boxes.
On April 2. II girls
Great job girls. We,. are
attended the meeting at also sending a case of cookForest
Run
United ies overseas to our military
Methodist Church for' aspe- people. Also at this meeting
cial Easter project. f&gt;aper the girls earned their
maiche egg baskets were Challenge Award Necklace.
made, decormed and tilled We have some of the girls
with candy. Smalf prese nts who have started working
were included for residents on their Safety Award.
of a group home in The
Lindsey Putman attended
Plains .
·
the Get Your Kicks Event
On April 6, girls deliv- on March 27 in Marietta, at
ered the egg baskets, sang the Washington State
songs, and shared time with Community College. She
residents.
learned how she could have
The "Travel Right'' .Try-it fun without using drugs or
was earned en route to Fort · alcohol and ·.about the
Rapids
Waterpark, effects that they can have on
Columbus. Girls and par- you and your family.
· ents had fun riding multiple
On April 9, the troop met
waterslides, playing water with
Hannah· Adams,
basketball and arcades, and Linsdey Putman, Shawna
waiting under a huge mega Murphy, and Kayla Goff
bucket, for water to periodi- attending. The girls worked
cally tumble down on them. on their Junior Safety
Many girls said they would Award. Afterwards, we had
love to go back someday.
. our Easter Party along with
At the April 30 meeting, the other Reedsville Troops.
the service project "Good
On April23, those presenl
Turn for Good Will" was . at our meeting were:
completed. The girls had Shawna Murphy, Kaylee
"adopted" The Plains group Goff, Haley Bissell. Hannah
home and during the year Adams,
and
Lindsey
had visited with individual Putman. The girls started
. projects and clothing for res- and finished their Le.ad On
1dents. At the meeting, Badge. Lindsey Putman and
. though simulation activities, her mom would like to
girls learned about what it thank everyone· who helped
mi~ht be like to live with sponsor them on their trip to
viston, hearing, learning, Washington D.C in June.
and physical challenges.
Rachel·Markworth att!!nded
G1rls were also reminded the Baby Think It Over
of upcoming fair projects event
with
the
and Da)' Camp approaching Cadette/Senior Troop.
in June.'

Southern
Brownie
Troop 1120

Reedsville
Junior ·
Troop 1042

Southern
Junior
Trool)1204

Wednesday, May 9,

2007

FAMILY MEDICINE

You don't have to touch the plant
to develop a poison ivy rash

their Sign ·of the Rainbow.
At our meeting on March
Lauren
Dunn
served 24 the girls made thank you
refreshments.
cards for Yoshika. We also
Question: My children get your body and touching
Halley Wilson finished · discussed her visit with our poison ivy every spring and another part of your body. For
her requirement on Global troop. Peyton Humphreys, summer. I have never gotten instance, your leg brushes up
Awareness badge . The our Brownie Girl Scout it, so I don 't know much against a poison ivy plant, and
leader told troop that she helper, shared Girl Scout about it. I worry that I will then you touch your leg and
had sent in the registration Cookies with the troop and get it from my kids- or am pick up some oil. When you
forms for the D.C. trip and we talked a little bit about I immune since I have never then scratch your eyelid a rash
ordered t-shirts, patches selling cookies. Daisy Girl gotten it. What do you think? may develop around your eye.
Answer: Only about 15
and songbooks online for Scouts do not sell cookies,
Contrary to popular
but they will get the ·oppor- percent of adults in the United beliefs, however, poison ivy
the event.
The four older girls did tunity to do so when they States do not have an allergy does not spread from person .
the Baby Think it Over with become Brownies next year. to poison ivy or the other to person through the weepAfter the meeting, the members of the Rhus plant ing sores. Some people also
the Cadette/Senior troop.
This is another requirement troop ate lunch together at family. Poison ivy's close kin have severe systemic allergic
for the bridging patch. They McDonalds and then spent in this notorious plant family reactions causing a debilitatsome time playing together are poison oak and poison ing rash and facial swelling,
gave a report to troop.
Girls talked about who m the outdoor playground sumac. Generally if you are usually within a few hours of
allergic to one of these plants, coming iri C&lt;Jntact with the
was bring what for the there.
We
held
our
troop
Easter.
you are allergic to all of them. urushiol oil. This is a medical
camping trip this weekend.
party
on
April
7
at
the
•
Also, just because you've emergency and anyone who
Afterwards they broke
Pomeroy
Library.
Each
girl
never had an allergic reaction experiences such a reaction
down into groups. Younger
girls worked on birthday brought one dozen eggs . to one of these plants doesn't should go to the nearest hos.cards for a boy with filled with treats. Kim mean you're immune for life . pital emergency department.
The best treatment for poileukemia that lives in Betzing; one of our Daisy You can develop an allergy at
son ivy is prevention. As soon
Canada an d a get well card moms, hid· the eggs while any time.
The Rhus plants are deli- as you have been exposed,
· for a sister Brownie that the girls were busy reading
was involved in car wreck. books upstairs in the library. cate and easily damaged by you should wash the exposed
Megan served refreshments. The girls had a great time simply brushing up against area with hot soapy water. If
For the last rneeting of hunting eggs and discover- a leaf or stem. When such you know you catch poison
month the girls welcomed a ing the treasures inside. We an injury to a plant occurs, a 1vy easily, carry some hand
new
scout,
Savanna also decorated chocolate substance called urushiol oil sanitizer with you in the
Capehart. Girls talked about chip and sugar cookies leaks out. It is this oil that woods, and usc it if your skin
how much fun that they had using frosting and different causes the allergic reaction. becomes itchy. There are also
While these plants are deli- products available. for use
camping. Girls enjoyed candies. The troop ate these
for
a
snack
and
made
cate,
the oil is quite the oppo- prior to exposure that offer
fishing, sliding on 50 foot
enough
extra
to
share
with
site
.
It's
very hearty and can some protection to the skin.
slide, putt-putt golf, hiking,
their
families.
We
also
made
survive
away
from the plant
It's also a good idea to
and having relaxing time.
Easter
cards
for
our
families
for
several
years.
The
oil
can
wash
your clothes and clean
On Sunday to end the weekand
friends.
attach
to
your
clothes,
a
ball
.
off
your
shoes evc;ry time
end girls went to movies in
you
have
been
in the yard or
On
April21,
we
met
at
the
that's
rolled
into
a
poison
ivy
Athens and watched "Are
Pomeroy
Library.
We
decoinfested
bush,
or
a
pet
that
woods,
even
if
.YOU don't
We Done Yet?" Everyone
think
you've
come
into conhad a good time and wants rated cupcakes made by roams free outdoors. If you
tact
with
a
member
of the
Kim Betzing. The girls had then touch one of these
to go back again.
Before the meeting, three fun getting to use real . sup- objects or play with your pet, Rhus family. Wearing long·
girls made a commercial plies that cake decorators you can get a poism ivy reac- sleeved ·shirts and long
about their Bronze Award use to decorate their cup- tion even though you did not pants when outside can also
event being held on May 19 cakes. The troop also made come into direct contact with help to minimize skin con·
tact with poison ivy.
at Meigs County Dog frames for pictures of their a damaged plant.
Family ·Medici11e® is a
favorite
pets.
.
Regardless
of
how
the
oil
Shelter. They hope everyweekly
colum11. To submit
Because
most
of
our
troop
gets
on
your
skin.
it
binds
to
one will bring a donation of
is
involved
in
spring
activi·
skin
proteins
in
about
15
,minq!ftStious,
write to Martha A.
dog food and come out to
S1mpso11,
D.O., M.B.A.,
ties,
meeting
times
will
vary.
utcs,
and
the
allergic
process
the pound to see the activiOhio
U11iversity
College of
Right
noJ
there
is
no
schedbegins.
If
you
can
wash
the
oil
ties. Troop broke into
Osteopathic
Medicine,
P.O.
uled
rneeting
for
May.
Troop
off
quickly,
you
can
prevent
groups again to work on
Box
JJO,
Athe11s,
Ohio
members
are
Kassidl
the
allergic
reaction.
Once
the
their awards.
Younger girls worked ()II Betzing, Madison Counci , allergic reaction has started. it 4570 I, or via e·mail to read·
their Junior Aide Bar. Older Morgan Doczi, Billi, Renea can be anywhere from mild to erq.ue.\·tiolls@familymedi·
girls made posters to put Doczi, Madelyn Hill, Drew severe. Itching is the first cillellews.org. Medical illfor·
Shaylynn symptom, followed by a matio11 ill this colum11 is pro·
with boxes in different Humphreys,
Mitchell,
Kori
Robie,
Taylor raised, blistery rash which vided al· a11 educatio11al ser· .
stores. If'anyone would like
Swartz,
Hannah
Tackett,
doctors call a vesicular rash. vice 1111ly. It does 11ot replace
to help out they can drop .
Alexis
Tobin-Doczi,
Rileigh
These blisters can then burst tlte judgme11t of your peritems mto the boxes at these
sonal physicia11, who should
Ward,
and
Sydney
Zirkle.
and turn into weeping sores.
places: · Detwiller Lumber,
be relied 011 to diag11ose and
Please
contact
troop
leader,
The
rash
is
often
in
lines
or
Baum Lumber, Save A Lot,
recommend treatme11t for
Heather
Humphreys
(992streaks
and
can
be
widespread
Hometown
Market,
591-0230, or localized, depending on any medical co11ditiorrs. Past
Carleton School, Southern 910 I,
Elementary School, TNT jhhumphreys@earthlink.net where the oil contacted your columns are available o111i11e
www.familymedicine·
g11s station in Syracuse, · if you have any questions skin. You can also spread it by at
touching the oil on one part of news.org.
Hotspot gas station near regarding the troop.
Ravenswood bridge. Girls
are calling different people
to see -if they will come and
give a presentation. Ashley
Deem served refreshments.

New officers were elected
Scouts held their meeting at the April 2 meeting .
on March 5. Prese nt were President will be Cassie
Katie Hoffman. Kaylee Roush, Vice President,
Goff, Lindsey Putman , Katelynn Ginther, Dues
Hannah Adams, Shawna taker, Ashley
Deem ,
Murphy, and Rachael Attendance keeper, Kimmy
Markworth. The girls dis- Ginther, and se·cretary
cussed what they were Brittany Cogar. These girls
going to do for the Thinking will hold office until May.
Day event.
Cards ·were made for the
On March I0, those .pre- soldiers in Iraq and
sent were Lindsey Putman, . Afghanistan to go along with
Shawna Murphy, Hannah their magazines. Girls turned ·
Adams, Rachael Mark\yorth, · in over 50 magazines. They
Kayla Goff, Katie Hoffman, received a certificate from
and Haley Bissell. The girls the Soldier's Angels Golden
all participated in reading Wing award for their magaabout the country · of zines and ca(ds.
Jamaica, they put a board
Cassie and Ashley went to
together with lots of infor- the Syracuse Community
mation and we learned a lot. Center to see the K9 dog.
Rachael Markworth and They reported that they
Hannah Adams entertained really enjoyed it. Tina made
evef}'one with some Reggae calendars for April and they
musiC from Jamaica. We . were handed out. Brittney
also shared 'some food that Cogar served refreshments.·
the people of Jamaica enjoy.
On April 9, after a short
We enjoyed the great job the meeting, the girls made boo
other Reedsville Troops d1d boo bunnies, had an Easter
with their countries. and the . egg hunt, and had refreshdelicious foods they shared. men.ts.
After the Thinking Day
On April 16, Terrie said
event we held an Awards she is thinking of June 16
Ceremony. . The . girls for our Goodwill event.
received their badges and Date may change for this.
patches that they've worked Girls will be bringing in
very hard on. They all got items to give to Goodwill
. thetr. cookie pi!) and _thetr and learning wha~ is done to
Membership Disc for this get things ready to sell. .
Girl Scout year.
·
Megan McGee fini shed
Hannah Adams, Shawna her Global AWareness badge
Murphy, and Lindsey by giving a report on Queen
Putman received their .five- Elizabeth. Ashley, Brittany,
year pins. Lindsey Putman . Kimmy, &amp; Megan went with
~ot her Bronze .Award, the Cadette/Senior to a
which 'she has worked many Council event in . Ripley,
bours into eaming. She also W.Va., called Skin Care
earned her Junior Girl Scout Basics. This is a requirement
Leadership
Award. for their bridging. They gave
Congratulations Lindsey, a report on what they did.
K:eep up the good work. ·
Phyllis told the trQOp about
On March 12 those pre- their annual camping trip.
sent at our meeting were: We will. be going to Indian
Haley Bissell, Kaylee Goff, Mound Park just outside
and Lindsey Putman. We Athens April 27-29.
tinished
the
Healthy
The Troop decided to go
Relationships Badge. The to the 95th Birthday event
Daisy Girl Scouts s_hared a . in Washington D.C. June 8
i:ute flower craft at the end . and 9. The troop broke into
of our meeting.
.
two groups to work on their
: On March 15, lindsey awards. The four older girls
Putman joined Southern started planning on their
Junior Girl Scouts and they Bronze Award.
all went to the Helping Out
The girls made Family
Animal Friends Event at the Fun jars as an activity for

•

PageA7

COMMUNITY

Tl:le Daily Sentinel

Daisy
Troop 5870
Our Daisy troop has been
busy the last few months.
We held our Thinking Day
activity on March 3 at the
Pomeroy Library. Thi s
activity was held with our
sister Brownie Troop 5878.
Jay Humphreys, one of our
Dai sy dads, organized a
special guest for this meeting. Yoshika Estes joined us
from Japan and she was
able to bring an assortment
of items to share with the
Brownie and Daisy scouts.
Some of the items she
brought were clothing.
books, pictures, and food.
Yoshika made three dishes
of authentic Japanese food
for pll of the girls and their
parents to taste. Everyone
thought it was wonderful,
especially the rice. The girls
also got to make two types
of Origami. Origami is
paper art that magy
Japanese children enjoy
doing. The origami we
made was a hat and a bird.
The hat was made out of
real Japanese newspaper
that Yoshika brought to the
meeting. The bird was made
.out of special origari1i paper.
The origami was tricky
and required help from the
parents attending. This was
a lot of fun for us. Yoshika
sp6ke to the girls about the
Japanese culture and how it
differs from what we are
used to here in the United
States. She showed maps
and books and answered
questions from the group.
· Brownie Troop 5878
shared their Ireland infor. mation with our Daisy
troop. They did a song and
shared Irish tea and cookies
with everyone. This activity ·
earned our Daisies the Be a
Sister to Every Girl Scout
petaL

Mitchell J. Silver, DO. FACC. Medical Director
O'Bieness Catheterization Laboratory

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The incidence,)( cardiovascular disease here in Ohio is almost triple the
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and vascular procedures in the Cornwell Center for Cardi ovaocular and

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'
'

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_.

The Daily Sentinel

--

,-

_..

. ..

NATION. WdRLD

PageA6
Wednesday, May 9,

Pe•oon tells

35,000
prepare tor Iraq

seemed to be concerned
about their relationship with
ASSOCIATED PRESS \VRtTERS
a number of us, and I think
they should be," said Rep.
WASHINGTON - The Bud Cramer, D-Ala., one of
Pentagon on Tuesday alert- the members who attended.
ed more than 35.000 Army .'·It 's perplexing why we
soldiers th~t they could be couldn't have had a couple
sent to Iraq this fall. In of these meetings earlier."
Congress, .
House
The House bill would proDemocrats defiantly pushed vide $30 billion to fund mili-·
a plan to limit war funding tary operations through July,
to two-month installments. as well as more than $12 biiThe deployment orders lion more 1to pay for equipsigned
by
Defense ment, traimng security forces
Secretary Robert Gates in Iraq and Afghanistan and
would allow commanders to defense health. Some $15
maintain the buildup of billion more would be protroops· through the end of vided for other high-priority
the year if needed. President projects. including $6.8 biiBush has ordered nearly lion for hurricane relief, $3.1
30,000 additional troops to billion for base closings and
Iraq to quell a spike in ~io- $2.2 billi&lt;Jn for homeland
lence, particularly in and security.
around Baghdad. There are
Under the propos&amp;!, Bush
currently about 146.000 would have to update
U.S. troops in Iraq.
Congress by July · 13 on
Pentagon
spokesman whether the Iraqi governBryan Whitman said the ment was· meeting certain
orders do not mean the mil- political
and
security
itary has decided to main- reforms. Congress would
tain the increased force lev- decide 10 days later whether
els through December. The to end the war .and bring
Pentagon "has .been very troops· home or provide
clear that a decision about funding through September.
the duration of the surge
The House would vote
will depend on conditions separately this month on .a
on the ground," he said.
bill providing about $3.5 biiThe announcement comes lion in agricultural assistance
as Bush is under· increasing and about$ r billion for rural
pressure to pull troops out schools. wildfire relief and
of Iraq . Bush last week aid to salmon farmers.
vetoed $124.2 billion legis"We're trying to prepare a
lation that would have fund - second option so that if the
ed the war while requiring administration .wants to controops to start coming home tinue to just hold its breath
this fall. According to a . and turn blue until they get
CNN-Opinion
Research their money, we're going to
Corp. poll released Tuesday, have another alternative,"
just over half of Americans said Rep. David Obey, Ddisapproved of the veto. .
Wis. , who planned to brief
House Democratic lead- White House chief of staff
ers briefed party members Josh Bolten on Tuesday,
·Tuesday on new legislation
White House spokesman
·that would fund the Iraq war Tony Snow called the .
through July, then .give approach "just bad manageCongress the option of cut- ment."
ting off m1mey after that if
"We think it is appropriate
conditions do not improve. to be able to give commanBush requested more than · ders what they are going to
$90 billion to fund the war need, and' also forces in the
through September.
field, so. that you can make
· The proposal is aimed at long-term decisions in tryappeasing Democratic law- ing to build the mission,"
makers who want to end the Snow said.
war immediately , and are
Congressional Republicans
urgmg leaders not to back also dismissed the Democratic
down after Bush's veto last proposal as unlitirly rationing
week. But lacking a firm funds needed in combat and
endorsement by the Senate. said their members would not
the challenge by House suppot1 it.
Democrats seemed more for
Democrats "should not
political show than a pre- treat our men and women in
view of another veto show- uniform. like they are childown with Bush.
dren who are getting a
Senate Majority Leader monthly allowance,'' said
Harry Reid, D-Nev.. told Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio,
reporters before meeting his party's leader.
with House Speaker Nancy
Gates and his military
Pelosi that "nothing's been leaders have said that com. ruled out and nothing's been manders in Iraq will make
ruled in" as he would con- recommendations
in
tinue to try to work with the September on whether the
White House.
,
buildup has been successful
House DemocratiC leaders and whether it should construck a more defiant tone.
tinue or if troops can begin
"I didn't commit to any coming home.
.
compromise" with the While
Snow and other adminisHouse, said Pelosi, D-Calif. tration officials have tried to
Asked whether Democrats tamp down expectations of
were still talking with the the September review,
White House, Rep. Rahm althou gh several senior
Emanuel, D-111., satd, 'They Republicans say it will prove
know what we're doing obvi- critical to whether the GOP
ously. I don't think their sub- continues to support the war.
scriptions to the newspapers
Sen. Olymp1a Snowe, Rended at any time recently."
Maine, introduced legislaDemocratic leadership tion Tuesday that would
aides said Reid and Pelosi require the Iraqi governacknowledged in their meet- ment to meet certain benching Tuesday that the House marks within four months.
plan would be considerably If Baghdad fails, military
more difficult to pass in the com manders would begin
Senate, where 60 votes are planning to bring some
often required and that the troops home and refocusing
two chambers may have to remaining forces on nonpursue different tracks. ·
combat missions, such as
Earlier in the day, Bush training the Iraqi security
met with more thari a dozen forces. Snowe 's bill, .coDemocrats, most of whom sponsored by Sen. Evan
with fairly conservative vot- Bayh, D-ll)d., sets a noning records.
binding goal of ending com"They(the White House) bat six months later.
BY LOLITA C. BALDOR
AND ANNE FLAHERTY

AP photo .

Israeli archaeologists say they discovered
long-sought tomb of biblical King Herod
Bv STEVE WEIZMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

HERODIUM, West Bank
- Under a baking sun,
pieces of limestone carved
with borders of rosettes and
geometrical designs lay iri
three · excavated
pits
Tuesday - a desert site
Israeli archaeologists say i~
the tomb of King Herod,
who ruled the Holy Land
when Christ was born.
The find, · which could
provide ·insights into one of
the Bible) most reviled yet
influential. figures, includes
hundreds of pieces of an
ornate sarcophagus, but no
bones and no inscription
that would seal the identi fi Cation.
Although the tomb was
shattered and empty, leaders
of the Israeli team that
unearthed it said Tuesday
they will dig on in the hope
of finding jewelry, other
artifacts or even the biblical
monarch's remains.
Hebrew
University
archaeologist Ehud Netzer
said he has been leading the
search for Herod's tomb at
the king 's winter palace in
the Judean desert, in an
lsraeli-controlled part of the
West Bank south of
Jerusalem, for 35 year,.
Last month, his team
started unearthing limestone .
fragments , from which
emerged the picture of an
ornately carved sarcophagus with decorative urns of
a type never before found in·
the Holy Land.
"It's a sarcophagus we
don't just see anywhere,"
Netzer told reporters at the
university. "It is something
very special."
The complete sarcophagus would have been about
nine f~et long, the university said.
Herod was the Jewish
proxy ruler of the Holy
Land under imperial Ronian
occupation from 37 B.C.
His most famous construe'
tion project was expanding
·the Jewish Second Temple
in Jerusalem.
Remnants of hisextensive
building work in Jerusalem
are
still
visible
in
Jerusalem's Old City, and
he undertook major construction
projects
in
Caesaria, Jencho, the hilltop fortress of Masada and
elsewhere.
At the. excavation site, on
the steep, rocky slopes of a
cone-shaped hill 2,230 feet
high, Netzer's assistant,
Yaakov Kalmar, said that an
account of Herod's funeral
by the first-century historian Josephus Flavius left little doubt that it took place at
Herodium. The newly discovered tomb was regal in
its opulence.

Homeless man survives garbage truck crushing
WEST PALM BEACH.
Fla. (~) - A homeless
man who had fallen asleep
in a trash bin to escape the
rain was dumped into a
garbage truck and survi ved
being cru shed repeatedly
before a worker saw him.
Robert Ba~well, 44, said he
screamed as the load of trash
was crushed against his body
at least seven times and was
sure he would die. He tried to

cushion one blow from the
truck's compressor with a
dead opossum. he said.
"I screamed one last
b(eath." Baswell told the
Palm Beach -Post. A trash
collector finally saw him as
he wssed in a box and called
for help.
Firefighters spent almost
a half hour pulling pieces of
· trash out by hand to free the
man .

2007

Hebrew University
archaeology professor
Ehud Netzer holds a
piece of the limestone
sarcophagus believed
to belong to King Herod
as he speaks during a
news conference where
he presents the findings of what
researchers say is King
Herod's tomb, at the
Hebrew University of
Jerusalem Tuesday as
an aerial view of Mt
Herodium is projected.
Netzer who has been
working at the site
since 1972 has found
the tomb of King Herod,
the legendary builder of
ancient Je rusalem and
l the Holy Land, at a hill·,\ top compound south of
Jerusalem, the Hebrew
University announced.

"We have here all the
attributes of a royal funeral," Kalmar said. "We didn 't
find inscriptions so far. ..
The work is not finished."
The site sits halfway up
the hill, atop a warren of
tunnels .and water cisterns
built to serve the palace at
the summit.
Stephen
Pfann,
an
American expert in the
Second Temple period at the
University of the . Holy
Land, called the find a
"major discovery by · all
means," but said the lack of
an inscription hindered full
verification.
"We're moving · in the
right direction. It will be
clinched once we have an
inscription that bears his
name," said Pfann, who
did not participate in
Netzer's dig.
·
Eric Meyers of Duke
University, who has excavated in the Holy Land,
said initial descriptions of
the tomb pointed to its
authenticity as belonging
to Herod.
"We know he was buried
at Herodium," he said by
telephone. "It's a significant
find after a long search ."
Meyers said that among
key clues were that the sarcophagus was placed on a
raised platform rather than
in the underground t()mbs
used for those of lesser
rank, and that in accordance
with Jewish religious law, it
was not decorated with any
human image.
"It sounds as if Herod was

respectful of his Jewish tradillOn right up to the end,"
he said.
David Owen, a biblical
historian and archaeologist
at Cornell University who
has done extensive field
work in Israel, was not sur. prised b~ the find.
"That s . where Josephus
says he was buried," said
.Qwen. "He buih that entire
palatial complex and there
are few doubts that his tomb
would be there."
The Herod of the Bible
and of Christian tradition
was a bloodthirsty megalo~
maniac, who flew into a
paranoid frenzy when he
encountered the three wise
men on their way to
Bethlehem \vith gifts for
· the baby Jesus. and telling
of the birth of a new king
of Israel.
"Then Herod, when he
saw that he was mocked of
the wise men, was exceedingly wroth, and sent forth,
and slew all the children
that were in Bethlehem. and
in all the coasts thereof,
from two years old and
under..." (Matthew 2: 16).
The biblical massacre figures in paintings such as
Peter Paul Rubens' 17thcentury "Massacre of ·the
Innocents."
The account, however
does not appear in other
Gospels, and experts are not
convinced of its accuracy,
especially the implications
of mass infanticide. Some
believe the ·decree applied
only to Bethlehem, ,a small

town at the time , where.
there may have been as few
as 15 toddlers.
'·
Hi storians do agree that
toward the end of his reign
Herod slaughtered many.
political ri.vals and per-·
ceived plotters against
him, among them one of
his 10 wives and three of
hi s sons. Josephus says
that as the elderly Herod
lay riddled with disease, he
ordered the cream of the
local Jewish aristocracy to
be executed on his demise,
so that his passing would
bring widespread and genuine mourning.
After Herod 's death,
Herodium became a strong·
hold for Jewish rebels fighting Roman occupation, and
the site suffered significant
battle damage before it was.
conquered and finallydestroyed by Roman forces .
in A.D. 71 , a year after they
destroyed the Jewish temple
in Jerusalem.
Kalmar said the sarcopha.
gus could have been
destroyed during Roman
.attacks or smashed by the
rebels, who reviled the
memory of Herod as a
Roman puppet.
"We know that Herod had
a lot of enemies," he said.
. Roi Po rat, another of
Netze r's assistants on the
digs, said it· was possible·
that the Jews removed
Herod's remains after his
· tomb was reduced to rubble.
AP writer Lily Hindy cont[_ibuted to,Jhis report from
New York.
" "·

In Meigs County

Monday, May 14

El2f:·~w~Mo!tljcomin'si'
an individual ·p)Jh
quitting. Emphasis

"I want to find this gentlebe on long-term freedom
man and have him buy my
lottery tickets because he is ·; ..,nm tobacco, including
one lucky dude," said West ·
Palm Beach Fire Rescue F!'£.''*' ft:iproved skills"for
spokesman Phil Kaplan.
· managemeot,
Baswell, who had bedded
. down in a brush-filled trash
ntrol, assertive
bin Sunday night to get out
of the rain, suffered broken
legs and ribs.
"I'm so happy to be here,
as bad as I'm hurt," he said. ..

Holzer's
Tobacco

MEIGS COUNTY GIRL ScoUr DIARY
POMEROY - On May
19, for their Bronze Award
several girls from Junio;
Troop 1204 will be sponsoring an event at the
Rocksprings Fairgrounds
for the animals at the Meigs
County Dog Pound. Details
of this event can be given by.
calling Shirley Cogar at
992-2668. Good luck. Girl
Scouts!
Troop reports:

Mason County Animal
Shelter in Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
At our meeting on March
26 those present were:
Hannah Adams, Haley
Bissell. Rachael Markworth,
Lindsey Putman, Shawna
Murphy, Kayla Goff, and
Katie hoffman. The girls
turned their cookie money
in . Our top sel_ler was
Lmdsey Putman, who sold
548 boxes, Shawna Murphy.
132 boxes, Kavla Goff, I00
boxes, Haley· Bissell, 97
boxes, Hannah Adams and
1\atie Hoffman,' 32 boxes,
and Rachael Mark worth
with 125 boxes.
On April 2. II girls
Great job girls. We,. are
attended the meeting at also sending a case of cookForest
Run
United ies overseas to our military
Methodist Church for' aspe- people. Also at this meeting
cial Easter project. f&gt;aper the girls earned their
maiche egg baskets were Challenge Award Necklace.
made, decormed and tilled We have some of the girls
with candy. Smalf prese nts who have started working
were included for residents on their Safety Award.
of a group home in The
Lindsey Putman attended
Plains .
·
the Get Your Kicks Event
On April 6, girls deliv- on March 27 in Marietta, at
ered the egg baskets, sang the Washington State
songs, and shared time with Community College. She
residents.
learned how she could have
The "Travel Right'' .Try-it fun without using drugs or
was earned en route to Fort · alcohol and ·.about the
Rapids
Waterpark, effects that they can have on
Columbus. Girls and par- you and your family.
· ents had fun riding multiple
On April 9, the troop met
waterslides, playing water with
Hannah· Adams,
basketball and arcades, and Linsdey Putman, Shawna
waiting under a huge mega Murphy, and Kayla Goff
bucket, for water to periodi- attending. The girls worked
cally tumble down on them. on their Junior Safety
Many girls said they would Award. Afterwards, we had
love to go back someday.
. our Easter Party along with
At the April 30 meeting, the other Reedsville Troops.
the service project "Good
On April23, those presenl
Turn for Good Will" was . at our meeting were:
completed. The girls had Shawna Murphy, Kaylee
"adopted" The Plains group Goff, Haley Bissell. Hannah
home and during the year Adams,
and
Lindsey
had visited with individual Putman. The girls started
. projects and clothing for res- and finished their Le.ad On
1dents. At the meeting, Badge. Lindsey Putman and
. though simulation activities, her mom would like to
girls learned about what it thank everyone· who helped
mi~ht be like to live with sponsor them on their trip to
viston, hearing, learning, Washington D.C in June.
and physical challenges.
Rachel·Markworth att!!nded
G1rls were also reminded the Baby Think It Over
of upcoming fair projects event
with
the
and Da)' Camp approaching Cadette/Senior Troop.
in June.'

Southern
Brownie
Troop 1120

Reedsville
Junior ·
Troop 1042

Southern
Junior
Trool)1204

Wednesday, May 9,

2007

FAMILY MEDICINE

You don't have to touch the plant
to develop a poison ivy rash

their Sign ·of the Rainbow.
At our meeting on March
Lauren
Dunn
served 24 the girls made thank you
refreshments.
cards for Yoshika. We also
Question: My children get your body and touching
Halley Wilson finished · discussed her visit with our poison ivy every spring and another part of your body. For
her requirement on Global troop. Peyton Humphreys, summer. I have never gotten instance, your leg brushes up
Awareness badge . The our Brownie Girl Scout it, so I don 't know much against a poison ivy plant, and
leader told troop that she helper, shared Girl Scout about it. I worry that I will then you touch your leg and
had sent in the registration Cookies with the troop and get it from my kids- or am pick up some oil. When you
forms for the D.C. trip and we talked a little bit about I immune since I have never then scratch your eyelid a rash
ordered t-shirts, patches selling cookies. Daisy Girl gotten it. What do you think? may develop around your eye.
Answer: Only about 15
and songbooks online for Scouts do not sell cookies,
Contrary to popular
but they will get the ·oppor- percent of adults in the United beliefs, however, poison ivy
the event.
The four older girls did tunity to do so when they States do not have an allergy does not spread from person .
the Baby Think it Over with become Brownies next year. to poison ivy or the other to person through the weepAfter the meeting, the members of the Rhus plant ing sores. Some people also
the Cadette/Senior troop.
This is another requirement troop ate lunch together at family. Poison ivy's close kin have severe systemic allergic
for the bridging patch. They McDonalds and then spent in this notorious plant family reactions causing a debilitatsome time playing together are poison oak and poison ing rash and facial swelling,
gave a report to troop.
Girls talked about who m the outdoor playground sumac. Generally if you are usually within a few hours of
allergic to one of these plants, coming iri C&lt;Jntact with the
was bring what for the there.
We
held
our
troop
Easter.
you are allergic to all of them. urushiol oil. This is a medical
camping trip this weekend.
party
on
April
7
at
the
•
Also, just because you've emergency and anyone who
Afterwards they broke
Pomeroy
Library.
Each
girl
never had an allergic reaction experiences such a reaction
down into groups. Younger
girls worked on birthday brought one dozen eggs . to one of these plants doesn't should go to the nearest hos.cards for a boy with filled with treats. Kim mean you're immune for life . pital emergency department.
The best treatment for poileukemia that lives in Betzing; one of our Daisy You can develop an allergy at
son ivy is prevention. As soon
Canada an d a get well card moms, hid· the eggs while any time.
The Rhus plants are deli- as you have been exposed,
· for a sister Brownie that the girls were busy reading
was involved in car wreck. books upstairs in the library. cate and easily damaged by you should wash the exposed
Megan served refreshments. The girls had a great time simply brushing up against area with hot soapy water. If
For the last rneeting of hunting eggs and discover- a leaf or stem. When such you know you catch poison
month the girls welcomed a ing the treasures inside. We an injury to a plant occurs, a 1vy easily, carry some hand
new
scout,
Savanna also decorated chocolate substance called urushiol oil sanitizer with you in the
Capehart. Girls talked about chip and sugar cookies leaks out. It is this oil that woods, and usc it if your skin
how much fun that they had using frosting and different causes the allergic reaction. becomes itchy. There are also
While these plants are deli- products available. for use
camping. Girls enjoyed candies. The troop ate these
for
a
snack
and
made
cate,
the oil is quite the oppo- prior to exposure that offer
fishing, sliding on 50 foot
enough
extra
to
share
with
site
.
It's
very hearty and can some protection to the skin.
slide, putt-putt golf, hiking,
their
families.
We
also
made
survive
away
from the plant
It's also a good idea to
and having relaxing time.
Easter
cards
for
our
families
for
several
years.
The
oil
can
wash
your clothes and clean
On Sunday to end the weekand
friends.
attach
to
your
clothes,
a
ball
.
off
your
shoes evc;ry time
end girls went to movies in
you
have
been
in the yard or
On
April21,
we
met
at
the
that's
rolled
into
a
poison
ivy
Athens and watched "Are
Pomeroy
Library.
We
decoinfested
bush,
or
a
pet
that
woods,
even
if
.YOU don't
We Done Yet?" Everyone
think
you've
come
into conhad a good time and wants rated cupcakes made by roams free outdoors. If you
tact
with
a
member
of the
Kim Betzing. The girls had then touch one of these
to go back again.
Before the meeting, three fun getting to use real . sup- objects or play with your pet, Rhus family. Wearing long·
girls made a commercial plies that cake decorators you can get a poism ivy reac- sleeved ·shirts and long
about their Bronze Award use to decorate their cup- tion even though you did not pants when outside can also
event being held on May 19 cakes. The troop also made come into direct contact with help to minimize skin con·
tact with poison ivy.
at Meigs County Dog frames for pictures of their a damaged plant.
Family ·Medici11e® is a
favorite
pets.
.
Regardless
of
how
the
oil
Shelter. They hope everyweekly
colum11. To submit
Because
most
of
our
troop
gets
on
your
skin.
it
binds
to
one will bring a donation of
is
involved
in
spring
activi·
skin
proteins
in
about
15
,minq!ftStious,
write to Martha A.
dog food and come out to
S1mpso11,
D.O., M.B.A.,
ties,
meeting
times
will
vary.
utcs,
and
the
allergic
process
the pound to see the activiOhio
U11iversity
College of
Right
noJ
there
is
no
schedbegins.
If
you
can
wash
the
oil
ties. Troop broke into
Osteopathic
Medicine,
P.O.
uled
rneeting
for
May.
Troop
off
quickly,
you
can
prevent
groups again to work on
Box
JJO,
Athe11s,
Ohio
members
are
Kassidl
the
allergic
reaction.
Once
the
their awards.
Younger girls worked ()II Betzing, Madison Counci , allergic reaction has started. it 4570 I, or via e·mail to read·
their Junior Aide Bar. Older Morgan Doczi, Billi, Renea can be anywhere from mild to erq.ue.\·tiolls@familymedi·
girls made posters to put Doczi, Madelyn Hill, Drew severe. Itching is the first cillellews.org. Medical illfor·
Shaylynn symptom, followed by a matio11 ill this colum11 is pro·
with boxes in different Humphreys,
Mitchell,
Kori
Robie,
Taylor raised, blistery rash which vided al· a11 educatio11al ser· .
stores. If'anyone would like
Swartz,
Hannah
Tackett,
doctors call a vesicular rash. vice 1111ly. It does 11ot replace
to help out they can drop .
Alexis
Tobin-Doczi,
Rileigh
These blisters can then burst tlte judgme11t of your peritems mto the boxes at these
sonal physicia11, who should
Ward,
and
Sydney
Zirkle.
and turn into weeping sores.
places: · Detwiller Lumber,
be relied 011 to diag11ose and
Please
contact
troop
leader,
The
rash
is
often
in
lines
or
Baum Lumber, Save A Lot,
recommend treatme11t for
Heather
Humphreys
(992streaks
and
can
be
widespread
Hometown
Market,
591-0230, or localized, depending on any medical co11ditiorrs. Past
Carleton School, Southern 910 I,
Elementary School, TNT jhhumphreys@earthlink.net where the oil contacted your columns are available o111i11e
www.familymedicine·
g11s station in Syracuse, · if you have any questions skin. You can also spread it by at
touching the oil on one part of news.org.
Hotspot gas station near regarding the troop.
Ravenswood bridge. Girls
are calling different people
to see -if they will come and
give a presentation. Ashley
Deem served refreshments.

New officers were elected
Scouts held their meeting at the April 2 meeting .
on March 5. Prese nt were President will be Cassie
Katie Hoffman. Kaylee Roush, Vice President,
Goff, Lindsey Putman , Katelynn Ginther, Dues
Hannah Adams, Shawna taker, Ashley
Deem ,
Murphy, and Rachael Attendance keeper, Kimmy
Markworth. The girls dis- Ginther, and se·cretary
cussed what they were Brittany Cogar. These girls
going to do for the Thinking will hold office until May.
Day event.
Cards ·were made for the
On March I0, those .pre- soldiers in Iraq and
sent were Lindsey Putman, . Afghanistan to go along with
Shawna Murphy, Hannah their magazines. Girls turned ·
Adams, Rachael Mark\yorth, · in over 50 magazines. They
Kayla Goff, Katie Hoffman, received a certificate from
and Haley Bissell. The girls the Soldier's Angels Golden
all participated in reading Wing award for their magaabout the country · of zines and ca(ds.
Jamaica, they put a board
Cassie and Ashley went to
together with lots of infor- the Syracuse Community
mation and we learned a lot. Center to see the K9 dog.
Rachael Markworth and They reported that they
Hannah Adams entertained really enjoyed it. Tina made
evef}'one with some Reggae calendars for April and they
musiC from Jamaica. We . were handed out. Brittney
also shared 'some food that Cogar served refreshments.·
the people of Jamaica enjoy.
On April 9, after a short
We enjoyed the great job the meeting, the girls made boo
other Reedsville Troops d1d boo bunnies, had an Easter
with their countries. and the . egg hunt, and had refreshdelicious foods they shared. men.ts.
After the Thinking Day
On April 16, Terrie said
event we held an Awards she is thinking of June 16
Ceremony. . The . girls for our Goodwill event.
received their badges and Date may change for this.
patches that they've worked Girls will be bringing in
very hard on. They all got items to give to Goodwill
. thetr. cookie pi!) and _thetr and learning wha~ is done to
Membership Disc for this get things ready to sell. .
Girl Scout year.
·
Megan McGee fini shed
Hannah Adams, Shawna her Global AWareness badge
Murphy, and Lindsey by giving a report on Queen
Putman received their .five- Elizabeth. Ashley, Brittany,
year pins. Lindsey Putman . Kimmy, &amp; Megan went with
~ot her Bronze .Award, the Cadette/Senior to a
which 'she has worked many Council event in . Ripley,
bours into eaming. She also W.Va., called Skin Care
earned her Junior Girl Scout Basics. This is a requirement
Leadership
Award. for their bridging. They gave
Congratulations Lindsey, a report on what they did.
K:eep up the good work. ·
Phyllis told the trQOp about
On March 12 those pre- their annual camping trip.
sent at our meeting were: We will. be going to Indian
Haley Bissell, Kaylee Goff, Mound Park just outside
and Lindsey Putman. We Athens April 27-29.
tinished
the
Healthy
The Troop decided to go
Relationships Badge. The to the 95th Birthday event
Daisy Girl Scouts s_hared a . in Washington D.C. June 8
i:ute flower craft at the end . and 9. The troop broke into
of our meeting.
.
two groups to work on their
: On March 15, lindsey awards. The four older girls
Putman joined Southern started planning on their
Junior Girl Scouts and they Bronze Award.
all went to the Helping Out
The girls made Family
Animal Friends Event at the Fun jars as an activity for

•

PageA7

COMMUNITY

Tl:le Daily Sentinel

Daisy
Troop 5870
Our Daisy troop has been
busy the last few months.
We held our Thinking Day
activity on March 3 at the
Pomeroy Library. Thi s
activity was held with our
sister Brownie Troop 5878.
Jay Humphreys, one of our
Dai sy dads, organized a
special guest for this meeting. Yoshika Estes joined us
from Japan and she was
able to bring an assortment
of items to share with the
Brownie and Daisy scouts.
Some of the items she
brought were clothing.
books, pictures, and food.
Yoshika made three dishes
of authentic Japanese food
for pll of the girls and their
parents to taste. Everyone
thought it was wonderful,
especially the rice. The girls
also got to make two types
of Origami. Origami is
paper art that magy
Japanese children enjoy
doing. The origami we
made was a hat and a bird.
The hat was made out of
real Japanese newspaper
that Yoshika brought to the
meeting. The bird was made
.out of special origari1i paper.
The origami was tricky
and required help from the
parents attending. This was
a lot of fun for us. Yoshika
sp6ke to the girls about the
Japanese culture and how it
differs from what we are
used to here in the United
States. She showed maps
and books and answered
questions from the group.
· Brownie Troop 5878
shared their Ireland infor. mation with our Daisy
troop. They did a song and
shared Irish tea and cookies
with everyone. This activity ·
earned our Daisies the Be a
Sister to Every Girl Scout
petaL

Mitchell J. Silver, DO. FACC. Medical Director
O'Bieness Catheterization Laboratory

"Get·to the·heart of the matter.
The incidence,)( cardiovascular disease here in Ohio is almost triple the
national average. To help diagnose and rreat cardiovascular disca~e
locally, O'Bieness offers a catheterization laboratory for low-risk cardiac
and vascular procedures in the Cornwell Center for Cardi ovaocular and

' heart of.the matter- talk to your ,loctor
Diabetes Care. Get to the
about heart services ami cardiologists at O'Bieness Memorial H(&gt;spital."

Ao'B~ENE~s
'W

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A Heartbeat Away.

rV&gt; affiliate of tl&gt;e O'Bioneu Heilth Syst&lt;m

'
'

.

.

''

�Page AS

REGIONAL

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 9,

2007

·Local Weather

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

OVP baseball roundup, Pag~ 82
Reds lose again, Page B3

.: Suns bum San Antonio, Page B4

Today's Forecast

cltynleglon

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

. High I low temps

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEAO"t' - "' scheO.Jie of~ eo1ege

79'' 156"

Youngstown •
80" 148°

~

Mansfield•
79" 152"

and hi(;l school varsity spormg
team&amp; from Meigs Coun\)'.

ewrns II'I\.'Oivng

Todn'a game
Prop Softball
. 02 -

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

. BY BRYAN WALTERS

Tbul'ltlay May 10

BWALTER S@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Prop Baoeball

(3} ~allia Academy at (2) Meigs,

02 -

$p.m.
04 _: (8) Waterford at (1) Southern , 5

*Columbus

p.m.

so· 1 55•

'

04- (7) Trimble at (2) Eastern, 5 p_m_

Track and Reid

TVC

Championships
al
• County High School , 4 p. m ~

Cincinnati

Vintoh

Snturdev Mav 12

• 82" I 52•

.

Prop Softball

. 04 -

(5) SCluthern at (4) Eastern, 1

p.m.

.

.

02 - Winner ot Meigs-Waverly game
Versus winner of ( 1) Warren·(6) Vinton
County game at TBA. 5 p.m.
•

~

~
Partly

Cloudy

Cloudy

.

'~.

~

Thunder· ~

torMarchot

Area raises neattv

"We've had a wonderful year and a
lot of new teams. The invoivement and
motivation this year has really been
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - The high. And we ' re all. here for the same
line stretched nearly halfway around reason- to save babies," she added.
Krodel Lake Sunday as people walked .
Eller said some teams had started the
with one thing in mind: saving babies. year doubting their imponance. claimAnd residents in Mason, Meigs and . ing that small. donations wouldn't help.
Gallia counties stepped up to the plate But she pointed out that some teams
this year, rai sing nearly $50,000 for the staned wit.h goals of raising $500 and
March of Dimes' WalkAmerica event ended up raising more than $2,500.
and its fight against premature binhs.
Other teams also kicked fund-raising
For Terry Eller, community director into high gear, and Team Kyle Hi II, a
of the Tri-County Walk, the region's new family team named in honor of
commitment to this year's event spoke Mason County's Ambassador, had
volumes.
raised $11,795 as of Monday.
Eller said the region had surpassed
State sponsors included American
its goal of $42,000 early Friday after- Electric Power and BB&amp;T. Local
noon, even before final donations and sponsors were WBYG Big Country
last-minute team money was turned in 99, WVYK The Frog, lnfoCision
Sunday, further proving the area 's Management Corp., M&amp;G Polymers,
devotion to March of Dimes. As of Holzer Medical Center. Holzer Clinic.
·early Monday, the region had rai sed Bob's Market and Greenhouses Inc.,
$49,815 for the cause.
and GKN Sinter Metals.
BY NICOLE FIELDS

NAELOS@MYOAILYREGISTER.COM

I

I

I

I.
I

Teams participating included Gallia
County MR/DD (Guiding Hand);
M&amp;G Polymers; Citi-Financial; Cub
Scout Pack 258; Farmers Bank of West ·
Virginia; Holiday Inn; Mason County
Future Business Leaders of America ;
ElectroCraft; GKN Sinter Metals ;
Stewart-Johnson VFW; French City
Crusaders 4-H Club; Peoples Bank ;
Ohio Valley Bank/Big Country 99:
GFWC Woman 's Club of Point
Pleasant; Gallia County Local Schools
(River Valley High School); Mason ·
Km art ;
County
Courthouse;
lnfoCision ; Jesse 's Girls (Payton
Whitt): Holzer Clinic;. Millennium
Force 4-H Club; Holzer Medical
Center: Cloverbud 4-H Club; Dancers
for Dimes; Team Kyle Hill ; Potter's
Wheel Pentecostal Youth Group ;
Team James Beach ; McDonald's of
Point Pleasant; Johnna 's Team:
Gallipolis Junior Wornan:s Club ; and
Roosevelt Elementary School.

Observe bus safety this ~week .
TUPPERS PLAINS The week of May 7-II is
Ohio National School Bus
Safety Week, according to
Arch Rose, Transportation
Director of Eastern local
School District
"Governor Strickland has
signed a proclamation and
called on the citizens of the
state to exercise constant
courtesy 'and caution when
near school buses," said
Rose.
In America there are over
500,000 school buses. They
transport ~ore than 25 mil-

lion students to and from
school each school day and
travel nearly four billion
miles a year, Rose said.
Eastern Local School
District uses II school
buses to transport 850 students each day. These buses
travel over ·125,000 accident-free miles each year.
"During School Bus
Safety Week," added Rose,
"we want to inform the citizens of our district about
our pupil transportation program .. We are also asking
fo r th eir cooperation in

helping· us to maintain or
even . improve our safety
record. Eastern school bus
drivers are doing a great
job, but they need. the cooperation of other motorists."
On of the most common
driver complaints, according to Rose, is that other
motorists frequently violate
the school bus stop law.
"Motorists are required to
stop for stopped school buses
that arc ·displaying !lashing
red lights and a stop arm,"
said Rose. ''Sometimes the
' drivers are not fully illert and

pass a stopped school bus.··
'This is a very dangerous·
situat ion for the childt·en,
especially the younger ones
who may not be watching
traffic as closely as they
should." ·
·'Ohio school bus drivers
are the best trained drivers on
the road. They are requiredto
have pre-employment traini~. yearly workshops, and a
six year re -certification
process, which includes safety training, criminal . back
ground checks and drug and
alcohol testing."

.Local Stocks
AEP ( NYSE) - 49.82
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 80.64
Aohland Inc. (NYSEI - 59.42
Bill Lots (NYSE)- 33.08
Bob Evans (NASDAQ)- 36.96
BorgWamor (NYSE)- 79.79
Century ~umlnum (NASDAQ) -

54.01
Champion (NASDAQ) - 8 .20
' ChannlniiShopstNASDAQ) -

12.21
City Holding (NASDAQ) -

39.29

. Collins (NYSE) - 66.04
Dollar General (NYSE) - 21.46
DuPont (NYSE) - 51.56
US Bank I NYSE) - 31.64
Gannett ( NYSE) - 56.83
General Electric (NYSE)- 37.08
Harley-Davldso~ ( NYSE) - 63.63
JP Morgan (NYSE)- 62.45
Kroger (NYSE) - 29.31
Umlted Branda (NYSE)- 27.17
Norfolk Southern (NYSE)-

54.61

.

Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ) -

,178.31

22.60

Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 48.10
Wendy' s (NYSE) - 39.35
.
Worthington (NYSE) - 22.81
Dally stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
lor May 8, 2007, provided by
Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at (740)
441·9441 and Lesley Marrero In
Point Pleasant at (304) 6740174. Member SIPC.

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)

-25.25
BBT (NYSE) - 42.60
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 26.69
Pepsico (NYSE)- 67.15
Premier (NASDAQ) -15.64
· Rockwell (NYSE) - 63.46
Rocky Booll (NASDAQ)- 14.10
• Royal Dutch Shell - 71.99
Sea111 Holding (NASDAQ) -

~

storms~~~

....-:'/~
"" '~' ~
·..
\~ ' 1 \
~_)
.
Showers
" ,. 1
Rain
1

Nicole Fields/ photo

Team members wait patiently before the start of. the Tri-County WalkAmerica event Sunday at Krodel Park. More than 20
teams took part in the event. raising nearly $50,0dO for the March of Dimes· campaign to raise awareness of and help
prevent wemature births.

Flurnes
•

•

*

.:.:.

Snow

Ice ...

1VC STANDINGS

~
'W.!.W·
•• • • • •

of showers and thunderstorm s. Lows in the upper
50s. South winds around 5
mph . Chance of rain 20
perce nt.
Friday and Friday
night ... Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers and
. thunderstorms. Highs in the
lower 80s. Lows in the mid
50s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Saturday
through
Monday... Partly cloudy.
High s in the upper 70s:
Lows in the lower 50s.

WATERFORD
Figuring Southern had
already . clinched the 2007
Tri- Valley
tonference
Hocking Division championship
in
baseball.
Tuesday's contest between
visiting
Eastern
and
Waterford was supposed to
be nothing more than a
meaningless make-up contest to end the league season.
But for the Eagles - par-

BASEBALL

Ohio Division

Weather Underground • AP

Wednesday ... Sunny.
Highs in the lower 80s.
South winds 5 to I 0 mph.
Wednesday
night ...
Panly cloudy. Lows in the
upper 50s. Southeast winds
around 5 mph.
Thursday... Partly· sunny
with a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorm s. Hi ghs in the lower
80s. South winds around 5
mph . Chance of rain 20
percent.
.
Thursday night ... Mostly
cloudy with a slight chance

Eagles pound Waterford in siX, 14-1 Lady
Eastern picks up 60th win in 4 years
Wildcats
outlast
Eastern

Alexander*
Meigs*
WeUston~

Vinton Co
Belpre
~els-'(ork

8-2
8-2
8-2
3-7
2-8
1-9

Off and running at the TVC Championships

HockiDg Division
. . Southern*
Fed Hock
Eastern
MUier ·
Trimble
Waterford

9-1
8-2
7-3 .
2-8
2-8
.2-8

SOFJ'BALL

Ohio Division
10-0
W:e)lston*
Belpre
7-3
Alexander 6-4
· 5-S
Meigs .
2-8
Vinton Co
· ~els,'(ork
0-10
Hocking Division

JewelrY

ComPiet~-,

Stock
l/2,Price

»

· Waterford*
Trimble
FedHock
Southern ·
Eastern
Miller .

Womeris
Colosnes. ·....
Perfumes.·
Gift Sets·

·~

'

....-

10-0
6-4
5-5

5-5
4-6
0-10

•- ...,.,. cl\lmplon

OVPScoreLine f5p.m.-1a.m.)
1-740-446-2342ext.33 .

25% Off

Fax-'1- 740·446-3008

Timex Watches
30% Off
·Extra SPecial
.ThursdaY OnlY
SO% Off

E-mall-sponsomydailysentinel .com

Russell Stover
CandY ·
12oz box
Re1-$t99
OnlY '$4.99.;

Col~ PoP
Amiw Billfol~s
Mens &amp;Womens . ~Ooz Boule
OnlY ~8(
II~ Prite

Sll.o.r.t.~.S.t.llf:f.

Brad Sherman,Sporta Editor
(740)446-2342,ext33
bsherman @ mydailytribune .com

Larry Crum,Sports Writer
(740)446·2342,ext:za
lcrum@mydailyregister.com

· Bryan Walters,Sports Writer
(740)446·2342,ext33
bwalters@ mydailytribune.com

.;

'

ticul arly senior.' Justin
Browning, Matt Morris,
Cory Shaffer and Derek
Young there was
'
absolutely nothing meaning,
less about their 14-1, sixinning victory over the host
Wildcats. ·
With the triumph , the
STAFF REPORT
Browning
Morris
Young
Shaffer
Green and White picked up
S PORT~MYDAILYSEN T I NEL. CO M
their 60th win over a fouryear span, the most ever by little time to have things trailed 1-0 after four comWATERFORD - Eastern
any senior class in the histo- · come to fruition.
plete, then erupted for all 14 softball managed to keep
ry of EHS baseball.
The Eagles (12-10, 7-3 runs in their final two .at-bats things interesting, but host
Waterford closed out its
And like that historic TVC Hocking) had just orie
Please see Ell&amp;les. Bl
· 2007 Tri- Valley Conference
accomplishment, it took a hit through four innings and
Hockin g
Division
championship on a
perfect note
Tuesday
following a
6-4 victory
'in a makeup contest.
The Lady
Wildcat s
finished
Meigs
this spring
senior Brad
an
with
Ramsburg,
unblem left, leads
ished I0-0
the way
in the TVC
during a
Hocking
with the tri110-meter
umph, and
hurdles
a
five-run
qualifier
t
h
i r d
held
proved
to
Thursday
Holter
be
the
at the Tribiggest difference in the
Valley
contest.
Conference
The Lady Eagles (9-15, 4'Champions
6 TVC Hocking) jumped
hips at
out to a 1-0 lead in the secVinton
ond, but that big rally in .the
County
bottom of the third gave the
High
hosts a 5-l advantage
School in
through three complete.
McArthur.
EHS scored a run apiece
Southern's in the- fourth and fifth
Bradley ·
frames to pull to witl\in 5-3
Coppick,
after four-and -a-half, but
center, is
WHS tacked on a muchalso comneeded insurance run in its
half of the inning for a 6-3
peting in
lead through five.
the event.
The . Lady Eagles again
· Bryan
rallied for a run in the sixth
Walters
to pull within two, but they
/photo
never .came closer the rest
of the way.
Both te;1ms had eight hits
and three earned runs in the
contest, but Eastern 's fiv e
errors ultimately did more
damage than the hosts' trio

Please see Outlast, Bl

Annual PVH Hospice Tribute

.

~

~.
:...

Butterj(y Release &amp;

't

•
•
•
•
•
AP photo

Cleveland Cavaliers' Anderson Varejao, left, from Brazil, hugs
teammate LeBron James after James' twisting basket in the
fourth quarter of a second round NBA ·playoff basketball
game against the New Jersey Nets Tuesday in Cleveland.

Cavs.take 2-0 lead
BY TOM WITHERS
AP SPORTS WRITER

'

••

'

•

.
'

· CLEVELAND
Wearing a menacing scowl,
LeBron James stomped
1oward Cleveland's jubilant
bench, celebrating another
of his big baskets. He wasn't
llbout to !lash that multimiliion-dollar smile.
: Not now. This wasn't the
lime or the place.
~· "He said he wanted the
ball," coach Mike Brown
said.
· And the' Cavaliers gave it
to him -again and again.
James scored '25 of his 36

points in the second h&lt;1lf and
the Cavaliers, drawing from
tough lessons lekned in'last
year's playoffs. beat the
~ew Jersey Nets 102-92 on
Tuesday night to open a 2-0
lead
in the Eastern
Conference semifinals.
James added 12 assists
and Sasha Pavlovic scored a
career playoff-high 17
points for the Cavaliers,
who will soon head to New
Jersey for Saturdafs Game
3 w.ith a commanding lead
in the best-of-seven series.
"We took ca~e of home," ·

Please see cavs, Bl

C~elebration

•Wednesday, May 23, 2007
•PVH Main Entrance
•Noon
•special gift to all who attend
•Public is cordially invited

For more information about this special event
or to learn more about Hospice or the "Wings "
GriefSupport ·Group, please call, (304) 675-7400.

r----~---------------------------------,
Honor A I.oved,One A 'Beserve A Butterfly
.For the Annual PVB Bospiee Tribute
·I

I
1

With a donati&lt;¥t ofS5 to Pleusant VaUey Hospice, you can reserve abutterfly for ·
this very special event. All of the butterfies will_be released together in memory of .
' loved ones. Pl~ fill-out fonn; detach and send with pay.rr.ent to:
PLEASANTVALLEYHOSPICEBUITERFLYRELEASE,IOII Viand Street, .
Point'Pleasant, WV. 25)50. All checks should be made-out to Pleasant Valley Hospice.

I
I

1
I

.I

• -oNAME:. ··- _ _ _ ; . . - - - ' - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - • •ADDRESS: - - - _ , . . - - - - - . • ofN MEMORY OF;

. __ .......... -....

• •TELEPHONE: ~-----

-~---:---------------"---_.:._-____,
.
.
.

-.-.--..-.---------------~...;..-

...... -. ...

---.--··

I
I
I
II

_~------..1

�Page AS

REGIONAL

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 9,

2007

·Local Weather

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

OVP baseball roundup, Pag~ 82
Reds lose again, Page B3

.: Suns bum San Antonio, Page B4

Today's Forecast

cltynleglon

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

. High I low temps

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEAO"t' - "' scheO.Jie of~ eo1ege

79'' 156"

Youngstown •
80" 148°

~

Mansfield•
79" 152"

and hi(;l school varsity spormg
team&amp; from Meigs Coun\)'.

ewrns II'I\.'Oivng

Todn'a game
Prop Softball
. 02 -

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

. BY BRYAN WALTERS

Tbul'ltlay May 10

BWALTER S@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Prop Baoeball

(3} ~allia Academy at (2) Meigs,

02 -

$p.m.
04 _: (8) Waterford at (1) Southern , 5

*Columbus

p.m.

so· 1 55•

'

04- (7) Trimble at (2) Eastern, 5 p_m_

Track and Reid

TVC

Championships
al
• County High School , 4 p. m ~

Cincinnati

Vintoh

Snturdev Mav 12

• 82" I 52•

.

Prop Softball

. 04 -

(5) SCluthern at (4) Eastern, 1

p.m.

.

.

02 - Winner ot Meigs-Waverly game
Versus winner of ( 1) Warren·(6) Vinton
County game at TBA. 5 p.m.
•

~

~
Partly

Cloudy

Cloudy

.

'~.

~

Thunder· ~

torMarchot

Area raises neattv

"We've had a wonderful year and a
lot of new teams. The invoivement and
motivation this year has really been
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - The high. And we ' re all. here for the same
line stretched nearly halfway around reason- to save babies," she added.
Krodel Lake Sunday as people walked .
Eller said some teams had started the
with one thing in mind: saving babies. year doubting their imponance. claimAnd residents in Mason, Meigs and . ing that small. donations wouldn't help.
Gallia counties stepped up to the plate But she pointed out that some teams
this year, rai sing nearly $50,000 for the staned wit.h goals of raising $500 and
March of Dimes' WalkAmerica event ended up raising more than $2,500.
and its fight against premature binhs.
Other teams also kicked fund-raising
For Terry Eller, community director into high gear, and Team Kyle Hi II, a
of the Tri-County Walk, the region's new family team named in honor of
commitment to this year's event spoke Mason County's Ambassador, had
volumes.
raised $11,795 as of Monday.
Eller said the region had surpassed
State sponsors included American
its goal of $42,000 early Friday after- Electric Power and BB&amp;T. Local
noon, even before final donations and sponsors were WBYG Big Country
last-minute team money was turned in 99, WVYK The Frog, lnfoCision
Sunday, further proving the area 's Management Corp., M&amp;G Polymers,
devotion to March of Dimes. As of Holzer Medical Center. Holzer Clinic.
·early Monday, the region had rai sed Bob's Market and Greenhouses Inc.,
$49,815 for the cause.
and GKN Sinter Metals.
BY NICOLE FIELDS

NAELOS@MYOAILYREGISTER.COM

I

I

I

I.
I

Teams participating included Gallia
County MR/DD (Guiding Hand);
M&amp;G Polymers; Citi-Financial; Cub
Scout Pack 258; Farmers Bank of West ·
Virginia; Holiday Inn; Mason County
Future Business Leaders of America ;
ElectroCraft; GKN Sinter Metals ;
Stewart-Johnson VFW; French City
Crusaders 4-H Club; Peoples Bank ;
Ohio Valley Bank/Big Country 99:
GFWC Woman 's Club of Point
Pleasant; Gallia County Local Schools
(River Valley High School); Mason ·
Km art ;
County
Courthouse;
lnfoCision ; Jesse 's Girls (Payton
Whitt): Holzer Clinic;. Millennium
Force 4-H Club; Holzer Medical
Center: Cloverbud 4-H Club; Dancers
for Dimes; Team Kyle Hill ; Potter's
Wheel Pentecostal Youth Group ;
Team James Beach ; McDonald's of
Point Pleasant; Johnna 's Team:
Gallipolis Junior Wornan:s Club ; and
Roosevelt Elementary School.

Observe bus safety this ~week .
TUPPERS PLAINS The week of May 7-II is
Ohio National School Bus
Safety Week, according to
Arch Rose, Transportation
Director of Eastern local
School District
"Governor Strickland has
signed a proclamation and
called on the citizens of the
state to exercise constant
courtesy 'and caution when
near school buses," said
Rose.
In America there are over
500,000 school buses. They
transport ~ore than 25 mil-

lion students to and from
school each school day and
travel nearly four billion
miles a year, Rose said.
Eastern Local School
District uses II school
buses to transport 850 students each day. These buses
travel over ·125,000 accident-free miles each year.
"During School Bus
Safety Week," added Rose,
"we want to inform the citizens of our district about
our pupil transportation program .. We are also asking
fo r th eir cooperation in

helping· us to maintain or
even . improve our safety
record. Eastern school bus
drivers are doing a great
job, but they need. the cooperation of other motorists."
On of the most common
driver complaints, according to Rose, is that other
motorists frequently violate
the school bus stop law.
"Motorists are required to
stop for stopped school buses
that arc ·displaying !lashing
red lights and a stop arm,"
said Rose. ''Sometimes the
' drivers are not fully illert and

pass a stopped school bus.··
'This is a very dangerous·
situat ion for the childt·en,
especially the younger ones
who may not be watching
traffic as closely as they
should." ·
·'Ohio school bus drivers
are the best trained drivers on
the road. They are requiredto
have pre-employment traini~. yearly workshops, and a
six year re -certification
process, which includes safety training, criminal . back
ground checks and drug and
alcohol testing."

.Local Stocks
AEP ( NYSE) - 49.82
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 80.64
Aohland Inc. (NYSEI - 59.42
Bill Lots (NYSE)- 33.08
Bob Evans (NASDAQ)- 36.96
BorgWamor (NYSE)- 79.79
Century ~umlnum (NASDAQ) -

54.01
Champion (NASDAQ) - 8 .20
' ChannlniiShopstNASDAQ) -

12.21
City Holding (NASDAQ) -

39.29

. Collins (NYSE) - 66.04
Dollar General (NYSE) - 21.46
DuPont (NYSE) - 51.56
US Bank I NYSE) - 31.64
Gannett ( NYSE) - 56.83
General Electric (NYSE)- 37.08
Harley-Davldso~ ( NYSE) - 63.63
JP Morgan (NYSE)- 62.45
Kroger (NYSE) - 29.31
Umlted Branda (NYSE)- 27.17
Norfolk Southern (NYSE)-

54.61

.

Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ) -

,178.31

22.60

Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 48.10
Wendy' s (NYSE) - 39.35
.
Worthington (NYSE) - 22.81
Dally stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
lor May 8, 2007, provided by
Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at (740)
441·9441 and Lesley Marrero In
Point Pleasant at (304) 6740174. Member SIPC.

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)

-25.25
BBT (NYSE) - 42.60
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 26.69
Pepsico (NYSE)- 67.15
Premier (NASDAQ) -15.64
· Rockwell (NYSE) - 63.46
Rocky Booll (NASDAQ)- 14.10
• Royal Dutch Shell - 71.99
Sea111 Holding (NASDAQ) -

~

storms~~~

....-:'/~
"" '~' ~
·..
\~ ' 1 \
~_)
.
Showers
" ,. 1
Rain
1

Nicole Fields/ photo

Team members wait patiently before the start of. the Tri-County WalkAmerica event Sunday at Krodel Park. More than 20
teams took part in the event. raising nearly $50,0dO for the March of Dimes· campaign to raise awareness of and help
prevent wemature births.

Flurnes
•

•

*

.:.:.

Snow

Ice ...

1VC STANDINGS

~
'W.!.W·
•• • • • •

of showers and thunderstorm s. Lows in the upper
50s. South winds around 5
mph . Chance of rain 20
perce nt.
Friday and Friday
night ... Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers and
. thunderstorms. Highs in the
lower 80s. Lows in the mid
50s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Saturday
through
Monday... Partly cloudy.
High s in the upper 70s:
Lows in the lower 50s.

WATERFORD
Figuring Southern had
already . clinched the 2007
Tri- Valley
tonference
Hocking Division championship
in
baseball.
Tuesday's contest between
visiting
Eastern
and
Waterford was supposed to
be nothing more than a
meaningless make-up contest to end the league season.
But for the Eagles - par-

BASEBALL

Ohio Division

Weather Underground • AP

Wednesday ... Sunny.
Highs in the lower 80s.
South winds 5 to I 0 mph.
Wednesday
night ...
Panly cloudy. Lows in the
upper 50s. Southeast winds
around 5 mph.
Thursday... Partly· sunny
with a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorm s. Hi ghs in the lower
80s. South winds around 5
mph . Chance of rain 20
percent.
.
Thursday night ... Mostly
cloudy with a slight chance

Eagles pound Waterford in siX, 14-1 Lady
Eastern picks up 60th win in 4 years
Wildcats
outlast
Eastern

Alexander*
Meigs*
WeUston~

Vinton Co
Belpre
~els-'(ork

8-2
8-2
8-2
3-7
2-8
1-9

Off and running at the TVC Championships

HockiDg Division
. . Southern*
Fed Hock
Eastern
MUier ·
Trimble
Waterford

9-1
8-2
7-3 .
2-8
2-8
.2-8

SOFJ'BALL

Ohio Division
10-0
W:e)lston*
Belpre
7-3
Alexander 6-4
· 5-S
Meigs .
2-8
Vinton Co
· ~els,'(ork
0-10
Hocking Division

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'

ticul arly senior.' Justin
Browning, Matt Morris,
Cory Shaffer and Derek
Young there was
'
absolutely nothing meaning,
less about their 14-1, sixinning victory over the host
Wildcats. ·
With the triumph , the
STAFF REPORT
Browning
Morris
Young
Shaffer
Green and White picked up
S PORT~MYDAILYSEN T I NEL. CO M
their 60th win over a fouryear span, the most ever by little time to have things trailed 1-0 after four comWATERFORD - Eastern
any senior class in the histo- · come to fruition.
plete, then erupted for all 14 softball managed to keep
ry of EHS baseball.
The Eagles (12-10, 7-3 runs in their final two .at-bats things interesting, but host
Waterford closed out its
And like that historic TVC Hocking) had just orie
Please see Ell&amp;les. Bl
· 2007 Tri- Valley Conference
accomplishment, it took a hit through four innings and
Hockin g
Division
championship on a
perfect note
Tuesday
following a
6-4 victory
'in a makeup contest.
The Lady
Wildcat s
finished
Meigs
this spring
senior Brad
an
with
Ramsburg,
unblem left, leads
ished I0-0
the way
in the TVC
during a
Hocking
with the tri110-meter
umph, and
hurdles
a
five-run
qualifier
t
h
i r d
held
proved
to
Thursday
Holter
be
the
at the Tribiggest difference in the
Valley
contest.
Conference
The Lady Eagles (9-15, 4'Champions
6 TVC Hocking) jumped
hips at
out to a 1-0 lead in the secVinton
ond, but that big rally in .the
County
bottom of the third gave the
High
hosts a 5-l advantage
School in
through three complete.
McArthur.
EHS scored a run apiece
Southern's in the- fourth and fifth
Bradley ·
frames to pull to witl\in 5-3
Coppick,
after four-and -a-half, but
center, is
WHS tacked on a muchalso comneeded insurance run in its
half of the inning for a 6-3
peting in
lead through five.
the event.
The . Lady Eagles again
· Bryan
rallied for a run in the sixth
Walters
to pull within two, but they
/photo
never .came closer the rest
of the way.
Both te;1ms had eight hits
and three earned runs in the
contest, but Eastern 's fiv e
errors ultimately did more
damage than the hosts' trio

Please see Outlast, Bl

Annual PVH Hospice Tribute

.

~

~.
:...

Butterj(y Release &amp;

't

•
•
•
•
•
AP photo

Cleveland Cavaliers' Anderson Varejao, left, from Brazil, hugs
teammate LeBron James after James' twisting basket in the
fourth quarter of a second round NBA ·playoff basketball
game against the New Jersey Nets Tuesday in Cleveland.

Cavs.take 2-0 lead
BY TOM WITHERS
AP SPORTS WRITER

'

••

'

•

.
'

· CLEVELAND
Wearing a menacing scowl,
LeBron James stomped
1oward Cleveland's jubilant
bench, celebrating another
of his big baskets. He wasn't
llbout to !lash that multimiliion-dollar smile.
: Not now. This wasn't the
lime or the place.
~· "He said he wanted the
ball," coach Mike Brown
said.
· And the' Cavaliers gave it
to him -again and again.
James scored '25 of his 36

points in the second h&lt;1lf and
the Cavaliers, drawing from
tough lessons lekned in'last
year's playoffs. beat the
~ew Jersey Nets 102-92 on
Tuesday night to open a 2-0
lead
in the Eastern
Conference semifinals.
James added 12 assists
and Sasha Pavlovic scored a
career playoff-high 17
points for the Cavaliers,
who will soon head to New
Jersey for Saturdafs Game
3 w.ith a commanding lead
in the best-of-seven series.
"We took ca~e of home," ·

Please see cavs, Bl

C~elebration

•Wednesday, May 23, 2007
•PVH Main Entrance
•Noon
•special gift to all who attend
•Public is cordially invited

For more information about this special event
or to learn more about Hospice or the "Wings "
GriefSupport ·Group, please call, (304) 675-7400.

r----~---------------------------------,
Honor A I.oved,One A 'Beserve A Butterfly
.For the Annual PVB Bospiee Tribute
·I

I
1

With a donati&lt;¥t ofS5 to Pleusant VaUey Hospice, you can reserve abutterfly for ·
this very special event. All of the butterfies will_be released together in memory of .
' loved ones. Pl~ fill-out fonn; detach and send with pay.rr.ent to:
PLEASANTVALLEYHOSPICEBUITERFLYRELEASE,IOII Viand Street, .
Point'Pleasant, WV. 25)50. All checks should be made-out to Pleasant Valley Hospice.

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• -oNAME:. ··- _ _ _ ; . . - - - ' - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - • •ADDRESS: - - - _ , . . - - - - - . • ofN MEMORY OF;

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�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, May 9. ,2007
.. Wedne!iday, May9. 2007

Bidfalo shuts out Falcons, 9-(f

Point rallies to claim one
game lead over Ravenswood
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN®MYDAJLYTRIBUNE.COM

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Game I didn 't
have a hero - it had several.
Five Point Pleasant batters had key hits during a
big six-run sixth inning ,
which propelled the Big
Blacks to a co me-frombehind I 0-6 victory over
the
Rave nswood Red
Dev ils durin g Class AA
sectional baseball play on
Tuesday.
• ..
Host Point Pleasa nt once
irailed 5-2 - but eight of
the next nine runs belonged
to
coac h
James
Hi gg inbotham 's
club,
which will try to wrap up
the Region I, Section IV
title today when the be stof-three se ries continues.
Game 2 is slated for 7: 30
p.m. toni ght.
Trailing 6-4 to start the
pi votal sixth, Phillip Allen
drew a one-out wa lk and he
came around to score and
cut the deficit in half thanks
to an RBI double off the bat
of D.W. Herdman . After

Cavs
from PageBl
James said. "Now it 's a
challenge to go into the
Meadowlands. We don 't
just want to win one."
This is. unfamiliar territory for Cleveland, which has
never been up by two games
in the semifinals. But wi th
James around, anything
could be possible for these
Cavs, who have never
advanced to the NBAfinals.
"He made the plays to get
us over the hump," Brown
said. "He was the man ."
The Nets had hoped .to
slip out of town with at least
one win. and althou g~ they
shot well enough (53 percent) to get it, they were
outrebounded 49-32 and
took 20 fewer shots than the
Cavs, who also kept several
possessions ali ve by outhustling New Jersey.
'They are j ust kicking our
tails on the boards," Nets
coach Lawrence Frank said.
Vince Carter scored 26
points to lead the Nets, but
for the second straight game
he strugg led shooting.
Carter was just 10-for-26
and missed two key shots in
the final two minutes when
New Jersey was siill close.
Richard
Jefferson
scored 22 and Jason Kidd
had
17
points,
10
rebound s, eight assists
and eight turnovers for the
Nets, who man aged just
ihree offensive rebounds.
· "We were in it, but we
just didn't execute at the
end," Jefferson said. "We
had opportunities down the
stretch and now it's on ou r
home court. We have to fig ~u t a way ... have to."
--· Th'e Cavaliers. improved
to 6-0 in these playoffs and ·
have now won 10 straight
(

James Casto reached on an
error, Trasawn Bonecutter 's
single drove in a run and
evened the count at 6-6.
Ashton Jones then singled in the go-ahead run,
Zach Fielder singled in two
more insurance tallies, then
Clay Krebs drove in the
game's final run to give his
club a JO-fi lead entering
the seve nth inning.
"We ' ve told them all
year, we need someone to
step up and make a play for
us," Hi gg inbotham said. "I
think we had four straight
peop le th ere that c~ me
through for us."
Then Point 's Curti s
Gr imm, who worked the
final two innings in relief
of starter Jones, sat the Red
Devils down in. order to
preserve the big se ri esopenin g vic tory. Grimm
was credi ted with the win.
Now the press ure is all on
Rave nswood. ·
"The first game is a big
ga me in a best-of-three
because it does put the
press me on them," com mented
Hi gg inbotham.

overall since their last loss
on April 8. In last year's
semifinals,
the
Cavs
dropped the first 1wo games
on the road at Detroit. They
were humbling losses,
blowouts by the Pistons that
showed the Cavs the imporlance of home-coun advantage.
This time around, on their
own fl oor, the Cavaliers
were a differen t team.
"We believe in each other
and no matter what type of
ballgame it 's going to be,
we believe we can win ,"James said.
Although he said he was
still battling a head cold.
James didn 't seem to be
_ troubled by anything. With
his scori ng -high for this
postseason, he has now
scored at least 20 points in
all 19 career playoff games,
the second-longest streak to
begin -., career in NBA history. Kareein Abdui-Jabbar
did it in his first 27 postseason games.
''It was a tug-of-war
match for the first three
quarters," Jam·es said. "My
teammates needed me to
make plays and I did."
And when James needed
help scoring, rebounding
and playing defense, his
teammates were there for
him.
James' basket with 5:41
left put the Cavs ahead 89- ·
85, and on Cleveland's next
trip, he whipped a pass in
the lane to a cutting Drew
Gooden, whose two-handed
slam put the Cavaliers up by
six. Gooden finished with
10 points and 14 rebounds.
Caner, begging for the
ball every time the Nets had
it, was able to get the Nets
within 93-89 on a bucket
with 2:40 left. The Nets had
chance 10 CUI it furt her,
but Carter missed a tough
fadeaway on the baseline
and fell to the floor with a

a

"We can relax. We can
relax now and play knowing that if we happen to ·
have a bad game, we can
come back another day.
"They have to beat us
two games in a row."
Point
Pleasant
and
Ravenswood split their two
regular season meetings.
Steve Burdette, the first
of two Red Devil hurlers
employed on the evening,
had to shoulder the loss.
Fielder went 3-for-4 with
three runs batted in for the
winners; Herdman and
Casto had two hits each,
·including a double apiece.
Bo necutter also had a multiple hit game while Jones,
Krebs and Al.len rounded
out the 11-hit attac)&lt;:. ·
Cody Brown led the way
offensively in the setback,
as he went 3-for-4, including a two-run home run.
Jared Richards also had
multiple hits. ·

BISON 9, FALCONS 0
Buffalo
701 0100 -910 0
Wahama
000 000 0 - 0 0 3 '
Zuspan • .Veaz.ey (1) , Grimm (4) atjil
Stafford. Lewis, Tucker (7) and Belchec,.

.

'

STAfF REPORT

Blevins hit safely twice and
SPORTS&lt;IIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
. drove in four run s apiece for
the sixth-ranked team in the
WHEELERSBURG
state,
which improved to 23Four ,Pirates had multiple hit
2
overall.
Aaron Hopper and
games, and Wheelersburg
scored 12 runs in the second Justin Hill were both 2-forinning, en route to a 22-3 2.
Buddy Higginbotham had
victory over River Valley in
Division ill sectional base- a big game in the I.oss for the
ball action on Thesday.
Raiders. He hit a two-run
Bryan White and Kyle home run, part of a ~wo- hit

evening, and he was resporiJ
sible for driving in all three
River Valley runs. nevinGibbs went 2-for-3.
·
Jordan Russell picked up
the victory on the mound .
while Jason Jones suffered
the loss for River Valley.
Wheelersburg advances to
face Ironton for the sectional
championship on Friday. ·

BIG BLACKS 10, RED DEVILS 6
RavenSWOOd
010 041 o - 6 52

Point Pleasant 002 026 x - 10 11 3
Steve Burdette, Cody Brown (6) e.nd O.W.

Mayh"am. Ashton Jones, Curtis Grlmm (6)
and Ja:mes Casto. .WP - Grimm. LP Burdette.

bad cranrp as the Cavs
pushed the ball up the floor.
''I'm go ing to keep shooting and keep playi ng,"
Carter said. ''I' m not going
to hold my head because
I'm not making shots . It can
turn around in a matter of
seconds."
Carter missed again with
I :43 left, and this time
James made the Nets pay'
with a I 5-footer to make it
96-89 with I: 19 left. With
54 seconds left, Pavlov ic
missed a long jumper but
was able to run down his
rebound, yet another missed
chance for the Nets.
"That's what th ey do,"
Jeffe rson said. "They are
No. I in the league in second -c hance. points and we
ha ve to stop it. It's not
li ke they' re goi ng to go
from first 'to 29th . We
ha ve to adj ust. "
Notes: New Jersey has
ne ver overcome an 0-2
deficit' and now has to win
four of five .... In thei r six ·
playoff games, the Cavs
have outrebounded their
opponents by 13.5 per
game. , .. NBA com missioner Dav id Stern addressed a
slew of topics with media
members before the game.
Among
the weightier
issues: . the league's global
expansion and intent to
develop an NBA-Iike
league in China, playoff
reseeding and the lack .of
superstars - except for
James - left in the play- ·
offs. ... R&amp;B star Usher,
whose absence at games has
led to speculation he was no
longer a Cavs ll)inority owner, sat courtside as did
Browns wide receiver
Brayton Edwards and former NBA enforcer Charles
Oakley.... Re(eree Michael
Smith shbok off an accidental elbow to the nose in the
first quarter from Gooden.

CINCINNATI (AP) David Weathers knows as
well as anybody how bad
Cincinnati's bullpen has
been this season.
' The frustration boiled over
· Tuesday night after rookie .
reliever Brad Salmon (0- 1)
gave up. a 6-5 lead and the
veteran Weathers allowed a
ninth-inning run that proved
to be the difference in
Houston's 7,6 win over the
Reds.
"We know we're blowing
games," Weathers said in a
slightl y raised voice whil e
responding to a reporter's
question. "It hurts us personally. It 's more frustrating for
us than for anybody."
Lance Berkman 's second
home run in two nights overshadowed the 568th of Ken
Griffey Jr.'s career and
Morgan Ensberg's double in
the nintb drove in Luke
Scott with the run that sent
the Reds to their sixth loss in
thei r last seven games.
.
The Reds bullpen went
into the game with one save
since April 15 and the worst
combined ERA (4.61) in the
National League. Todd
Coffey allowed a three-run
homer to Scott on Monday
AP photo that snapped a 2-2 tie and
Hou~ton Astros' Lance Berkman flips his gtqve as he walks led to Houston 's 5-4 win.
off the field after a baseball game against the Cincinnati
"Nobody feels worse than
Reds Tuesday in Cincinnati. Berkman hit a two-run home us when (starters) go out and
run to lead the Astros to a 7-6 win .
constantly pitch ball games

We remember those .who have passed away

and are especially dear to us.
On Monday, May 28, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample .below:
wish, selett one of ihe following FREE verses below to

1aa:om.IJai!Y yoor hibole.

hold you in our-thoughts and memories forever.
.2. May God cradle you in His arms, now and forever.
3. Forever missed, never fmgotten. May God hold you in the palm of
His hand.
4. Thank you for the wonderful days we shared together. My pra)&lt;rs
will be with youuntil we meet again. . ,
5. The days we shared were sweet. I longto see you again in God's
heavenly glory.
6. Your courage and bravery still inspire us all, and the memory of your
smi le fills us with joy and laughter.
7. Though out of sight. you'll forever be inmy heart and mind.
8. The days may come and go, but the times we shared will always remain.
9. May God's angels guide you and pro1ec1youthroughout time.
10. You were a light in our life that bums forever in our hearts.
I I. ·May God's graces shine over you forall time.
12. You arc in our thoughts and pray~ from moming to night and from
year to year.

July 10, 1961·May S, 1980

May God's angels
guide you and
. protect you ·
throughout time.
Always in our hearis,
John and Mona Andrews and
family

·

AP photo

Cleveland Indians pitcher Cliff Lee, left, celebrates with first baseman Ryan Garko at the
end of the eighth inning against the Los Angeles i\ngels during -their baseball game in
Anaheim, Calif. on Tuesday.

Indians scalp Los Angeles, 5-1
.

1r--------~------------------------·
. Please publish mytribute in the special Memory Page mi Monday, May 28. . -----.,
I

Outlast

~Name of deceased --------:---------...,.,...---1

!Relationship to me

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Number of selected verse

JDate of birth

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Date of passing·

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rnm
your name here
Phone number------

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ICity

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tate

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fromPageBl
at' miscues: Three EHS
etrors .occurred during that
P.;votal third frame.
• Brittany BtsseH and
Kelsey Holter pac_ed the_visiCPrs with two htts api~ce,
while
Amber
Whtte,
"-athryn Bland, Hannah
Cozart and Hannah Pratt
fpllowed with a hit each.
Bissell, ljlolter; Cozart and
~i Cummins each scored
once in the setback.
'l

'

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)
-· Cliff Lee tossed a threehitter · for his 50th career
victory and the Cleveland
Indians defeated the Los
Angeles Angel&amp; 5-l on
Tuesday · ni ght, their 13th
win in 16 games. .
Victor Martilez homered
and had an RBI- si ngle and
decision, allowing · nine Casey. Blake drove in two
·earned runs, nine hits, three nms for the Indians, 'who
walks and hit a batter over improved to ·17 -4 against
his six innings of work. right-handed starters.
Torned also struck out three.
Lee ( 1-.0 ), who is 50-28
Five different Wildcats (4- in hi s fourth full season,
18, 2-8) had one hit.
st ruck out two and walked ·
· · Eastern now turn s its two in his second career
attention to the Division IV comp/.ete game. His other
postseason and Thursday, ' complete game was against
when it hosts TVC Hocking Tampa Bay on the fin al day
foe Trimble in a sectional of last season.
final. The Eagles won both
five-inning contests this
past sprin g by mercy-rule,
16-1 and I 0-0. Game time is
scheduled for 5 p.m.

The left-bander spent the
first month of the season
on the disabled list because
of a strained .right abdomina.! muscle. Lee made his
fir st stari las t Thursday
Toronto,
and
aga in st
received a no -deci sion
after giv ing up five runs
and nine hits in six innings.
Lee didn't allow a hit
until the . sixth inning
Tuesday,
when
Mike
Napoli doubled to rig ht
field. He scored on Reggie
Will its' single past diving
shortstop Jhonn_y Peralta as
the Angels trai led 3- 1.
Ervin ·Santana (2-5)
allowed three run s and
seven hits in seve n innings.
The right-hander struck 'out

six and walked three in losing hi s third in a row.
The Indi'ans sta ked Lee
to a 3-0 lead. Their first run
ca me .·o n Martinez· RBIs.ingle with two outs in the
fir st: He homered to lead
.off the _fo urth before
Blako's RBI-single in the
fifth .
Cleveland added two
runs in the ninth on an
RBI-single by Blake and a
by
Travi s
ground out
Hafner.
Notes: Cleveland RF
Trot Nixon went 0-·for-3
wit h a walk in his fir st
gam e si nce .getti ng a
career- hi gh five hits and ·
four RB.fs Sunday against
Balli more.

EASTERN 14, WATERFORD 1
Eastern
Waterford

000 068 001 000 -

14 9 1 .
1 57

EHS (12-10, 7-3 TVC Hocking): Joel
Lynch, Matt Morris (3), Titus Pierce (5)

and Jake Lynch
' WHS (4·18, 2-8 TVC Hocking): Tornos ·
and Greene
WP - Morris; LP - Tornes
HR E - Jake Lynch (fifth. inning,

Bart and the Chasers
Saturdav, ••v12th

nobody on , one out); Matt Morris (fifth

inning, two on, one out)

•,

I

Cincinnati starter Eric
Mi lton lasted 5 1-3 innings,
glvi ng up seven hits and four
runs. He remained winless
in hi s last 13 starts dating
back to August. · ·
Rodriguez allowed eight
hits and five runs. walking
two and striking out five in 5
2-3 inni ngs. He ha&gt;n't won
in 12 starts since Houston's
9-5 .win at Texas last July 2.
Houston opened up a 4-0
lead on Carlos Lee ·s two-run
homer in the first. Adam
Everett's RBI groundout in
the second and Jason Lane's
run-scoring doubl e in the
third.
Free l drove in Cincinnati's
first run with a third inning
double, and Milton drove in
two run s with a single up the
middle in the fourth to cut
Houston 's lead to 4-3.
Notes: Milton has allowed
at least one first -inning run
in eac h of his last fi ve starts.
... Lee 's homer was his first
in 77 at-bats dating back to
April 17 in a 6-1 win over
Florid;1. ... Houston's starting lineup against the left:
handed Milton had seven
right-hatided batters and two
switch-hitters, Berkman and ·
Rodri guez.... Berkman has
reached base in 26 consecutive ga mes. ... Harmon
Ki llebrew is eighth on the
home-run list with 573, five
ahead of Griffey.

\

ed the RBis for the Golden Chau also recorded a three-hit
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL .
Tornadoes. Kepiro was 1-for- game, in what turned out to be
2 with a run-scoring double the final of his collegiate
MOUNT VERNON- The and Arata delivered a sacrifice . career. Among the three hits
University of Rio Grande fly.
was a double. Wells went 2Redmen baseball season
Senior southpaw Nate Chau for-4.
came to an end on Tuesday on pitched well in defeat. Chau
Sato was 1-for-5 with an
the ftrst day of the ' NAJA (7-5) went eight innings, scat- RBI atid freshman John
Region IX Tournament as the tering eight hits and allowing Storey was 1-for-5 with two
Redmen dropped two one-run two .earned runs with five RBis. Whewell had another
ballgames, including an extra- strikeouts and one walk.
solid game, . going 1-for-3
inning thriller against the host
Qave Foss (7-2) out-dueled with two runs scored, double
school,
Mount Vemon Ch
· · 8 1/3 · ·
d
1 b
Nazarene in the elimination
au, pttching
mmngs, an a sto en ase.
. round. Rio lost game one ' to allowing nine hits and one run
Freshm an
righth ander
with two strikeouts and two Cody . Lawhorn started and
Geneva, 2-1 and game two 7- walks. Justin Montgomery kept the Redmen in the game,
6 in 10 innings to the came on to get the final two ·lasting seven innings, scatter11
Cougars.
; Rio G.rande (24-27- I) out- outs and earn his seventh save ing eight hits and a owing
'
five runs with two strikeouts
hit Geneva (29-18) in the first of the season.
Game two pitted the and four walks. Red- shin
d £ 1 b t ·t'lgl
~~J:e Gcld~n uTo~ad~~?~ Redmen against the top seed- freshman Brandon . Russell
tlie fourth and fifth innings . ed Cougars, who had lost to took the loss m rehef. _Russell
beldupforthewin. Rio 'sonly ~o.6 seed Walsh, 3- 1 m the.. (5-6) _went 2 2 (3 mmngs
rt}n came in the eighth inning. ftrst_ game.
.
allowmg the dectdmg run. He
:- Senior catcher Kyle Wells
R10 got the J~mp on fanned four and walked two.
. and senior leftfielder Michael ~VNU (34-13) sconng twice
Mm:c Hadl~y (2-1) ptcked
Warren led the Redmen with !n lhe second . and fourth the wm m _rehef for MVNU,
two hits each~ Junior second mmngs and leadmg 4-3 after finng five mmngs of shutout
liitseman and leadoff hitter five. The Redmen ad~ed a baseball.
.
Kenta Sato went 1-for-3 with parr of runs m the SIXth frame
Ross Yoder, Zack Helm,
a stolen base· and freshman to increase the lead to 6-3, but Eddie Smith and Brandon
tbird baseman Andy Whewell would not score ~gain.
Thmer allf had two hits each
went 1-for-3 and scored the
The Cougars tted the game for Mt. Vernon. Yoder scored
kme run for the Redmen. in the eighth with a three-spot two runs and knocked in
Freshman
centerfielder and won it in the IOth.
another, Helm and Turner
Kelton Sines also had a hit in
Both teams had their hitting delivered two RBI's each
·two plate appearances.
shoes laced tightly as Rio pro- while Smith scored two runs
: Dan DeMarco was the top duced 12 hits and Mount and Josh Estep had a two-run
hitter for Geneva, going 3-for- Vernon notched 13.
double.
4: Matt Colella went 2-for-4 Freshman shortstop Brad Mount Vernon Nazarene
and scored a run while Tyler Konrad led the Redmen, went 5-0 against Rio Grande
Kepiro and Rob Arata collect-' going 3-for-5 with three RBI. this season.

Eagles

· The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
Ill Colll'l St., Pomeroy; OH 45769
DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 12 Noon

and then we give it up," homers. and I06 RBis
Weathers said. "(Manager) against Cincinnati, his highJerry (Narron) can' t feel est totals against any team.
like, every time .he goes to
Brad Lidge (2-0) got the
the bullpen, he doesn't know win, striking out Ryan Freel
what he's getting. For the - the only batter he faced
first couple weeks of the - to end the sixth.
season, we were the best
After Ensberg hit an RBI
thing since sliced bread. double in the ninth to give
Now, we're a necessary Houston a two-run lead,
evil."
Brandon Phillips hit his
"We're goi ng tq give them sixth homer of the year with
opportunit ies," Narron said. one out off closer Dan
"We're going to stay with Wheeler to pull the Reds
these guys, They're capable within 7-6 . Wheeler .recovof getting outs, and that's ered to notch his seventh
what we expect."
save in eight opportunities,
Trai ling 5-4 in the top of giving the Astros three wins
the seventh, Berkman lofted · in their last four games . .
an 0-1 pitch from Salmon
"(Coming from behind ) is
(0-1) the opposi te way into a great trait to have,"
the seats in left field with Houston manager Phi I
Craig Biggio on first base. Garner said. "Once you do
"He 's a good hitter," that a few times, you start to
Salmon said. "I came in with believe ." 1
th,e first pitch, and I was tryGriffey followed a Phillips
ing to go down and away, single with his fifth home
but I missed my spot. It was run to give Cincinnati a 5-4
a little up. He's paid to hi t lead in the fifth inning. He
mistakes, and I made a mis- lined a 1-2 pitch from lefttake."
hander Wandy Rodriguez
"I didn 't know what he into the right-field seats. ·
threw," Berkman said.
Griffey's homer left him
"From the guys before me, it one behind Rafael Palmeiro
looked like he had a pretty for ninth place on baseball 's
good fastball. I wasn't trying career homer list. He's hit all
to hit a home run. I was just five of his home runs in his
trying to be quick."
last II games.
Berkman's homer was his
The homer left Griffey hit14th at Great American Ball ting .800 (8-for- 10) with two
Park, the most by any oppo- homers in his career against
nent. Berkman has 37 career Rodri guez.

BY MARK WtWAMS

breaking win . .
Morris, who led EHS with
three hits and four RBis at
the plate, also picked up the
from Page 81
winning decisio n on the
mound.
worked 2.1
to come away with the mon- innings Morris
of relief after the
umental decision.
third inning, allowing one
EHS ·pounded out nine run, zero earned, four hits
earned runs and nine hits and a walk while fanning
in the triumph, i'ncluding a two.
·
pair of fifth inning home
Joel Lynch started and
runs from Morris and Jake went two innings, allowing
L.ynch that turned a 1-0 no runs, rio hits and a walk
deficit into a comfortable while striking out one.
6-1 advantage.
Pierce fanned five, walked
' The guests sent a dozen two and surrendered a ·hit in
more batters to the plate in his outing.
the top of the sixth,
Jake Lynch provided two
[l_Ounding out eight runs hits, two RBis and a pair of
and five hits to expand runs scored, while Young,
Pierce, Derek · Griffin and
that lead to 14-1 .
- Titus Pierce, who entered Zach Hendrix rounded out
il) · relief during the fifth, the hitting with one apiece.
struck out the home half of Young, Griffin and Hendrix
die sixth in order - secur- also scored twice in the win .
'tornes took the losing
iiig the program's record-

TO REMEMBER \'OUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
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.

Redmen eliminated on first day
.

Wheelersburg ousts Raiders, 22-3

I

Reds lose again, fall to Astros 7-6

BY GARY CLARK

Brad Sherman/photo

The Daily Sentinel o Page 83

.

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Point Pleasant's Trasawn Bonecutter drives in the game-tying run during a big sixth inning
for the Big Blacks, which saw them score six times and rally for a 10-6 victory over
Ravenswood on Tuesday.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Starter Sasha Collins took when it hosts Southern in a
.the loss for Eastern , allow- sectiona l semifinal. Both
, ing eight hits and two walks EHS and. the Lady
in her six innings in the cir- Tomadcies split their TVC
cle. Collins did not record a Hoc king contests this season, with the winner being
strikeout.
Kasey Robinson was the the home team in both
winning pitcher, giving up games.
eight hits and four walks
Game time at Don
ovet seven frames while Jackson Field is sc heduled
for I p.m·. ·
fanning four.
Waterford won the previWATERFORD 6, EASTERN 4
ous game in· Tuppers Plains
Eastern 010 111 0 -485
by a 13-2 margin in six Waterford
005 010 x - 6 8 3
innings.
EHS (9·15, 4-6 TIIC Hocking): Sasha
Eastern returns to action Collins and Kath1yn Bland
WHS (1 0-0 TVC Hocking): Kasey
Saturday afternoon in the Robinson
and Mariah Thatchef
Di vision IV tournament WP - Robinson; LP -Collins

•*******************

Thursday- ladies Night w/DJ
$1 .00 cover 9pm- 2am
Tuesday- Karaoke w/Ron Campbell
oft all drin~s _ 1Opm· 2am
509
$1 .00 Cover 9pm- 1am
·
OJ 9
.
· ~pm- 2am
Wednesday- Mens N1ght ·Pool tournament Saturd
l.
.
ay -1veans
8 d _$ .
S da _$
$5.00 entry Spm - SOy oft all dnnks
un y 1.00 8 eer 1.25. oronas
10 pm- 2am

"•'"•u

c

'I

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, May 9. ,2007
.. Wedne!iday, May9. 2007

Bidfalo shuts out Falcons, 9-(f

Point rallies to claim one
game lead over Ravenswood
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN®MYDAJLYTRIBUNE.COM

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Game I didn 't
have a hero - it had several.
Five Point Pleasant batters had key hits during a
big six-run sixth inning ,
which propelled the Big
Blacks to a co me-frombehind I 0-6 victory over
the
Rave nswood Red
Dev ils durin g Class AA
sectional baseball play on
Tuesday.
• ..
Host Point Pleasa nt once
irailed 5-2 - but eight of
the next nine runs belonged
to
coac h
James
Hi gg inbotham 's
club,
which will try to wrap up
the Region I, Section IV
title today when the be stof-three se ries continues.
Game 2 is slated for 7: 30
p.m. toni ght.
Trailing 6-4 to start the
pi votal sixth, Phillip Allen
drew a one-out wa lk and he
came around to score and
cut the deficit in half thanks
to an RBI double off the bat
of D.W. Herdman . After

Cavs
from PageBl
James said. "Now it 's a
challenge to go into the
Meadowlands. We don 't
just want to win one."
This is. unfamiliar territory for Cleveland, which has
never been up by two games
in the semifinals. But wi th
James around, anything
could be possible for these
Cavs, who have never
advanced to the NBAfinals.
"He made the plays to get
us over the hump," Brown
said. "He was the man ."
The Nets had hoped .to
slip out of town with at least
one win. and althou g~ they
shot well enough (53 percent) to get it, they were
outrebounded 49-32 and
took 20 fewer shots than the
Cavs, who also kept several
possessions ali ve by outhustling New Jersey.
'They are j ust kicking our
tails on the boards," Nets
coach Lawrence Frank said.
Vince Carter scored 26
points to lead the Nets, but
for the second straight game
he strugg led shooting.
Carter was just 10-for-26
and missed two key shots in
the final two minutes when
New Jersey was siill close.
Richard
Jefferson
scored 22 and Jason Kidd
had
17
points,
10
rebound s, eight assists
and eight turnovers for the
Nets, who man aged just
ihree offensive rebounds.
· "We were in it, but we
just didn't execute at the
end," Jefferson said. "We
had opportunities down the
stretch and now it's on ou r
home court. We have to fig ~u t a way ... have to."
--· Th'e Cavaliers. improved
to 6-0 in these playoffs and ·
have now won 10 straight
(

James Casto reached on an
error, Trasawn Bonecutter 's
single drove in a run and
evened the count at 6-6.
Ashton Jones then singled in the go-ahead run,
Zach Fielder singled in two
more insurance tallies, then
Clay Krebs drove in the
game's final run to give his
club a JO-fi lead entering
the seve nth inning.
"We ' ve told them all
year, we need someone to
step up and make a play for
us," Hi gg inbotham said. "I
think we had four straight
peop le th ere that c~ me
through for us."
Then Point 's Curti s
Gr imm, who worked the
final two innings in relief
of starter Jones, sat the Red
Devils down in. order to
preserve the big se ri esopenin g vic tory. Grimm
was credi ted with the win.
Now the press ure is all on
Rave nswood. ·
"The first game is a big
ga me in a best-of-three
because it does put the
press me on them," com mented
Hi gg inbotham.

overall since their last loss
on April 8. In last year's
semifinals,
the
Cavs
dropped the first 1wo games
on the road at Detroit. They
were humbling losses,
blowouts by the Pistons that
showed the Cavs the imporlance of home-coun advantage.
This time around, on their
own fl oor, the Cavaliers
were a differen t team.
"We believe in each other
and no matter what type of
ballgame it 's going to be,
we believe we can win ,"James said.
Although he said he was
still battling a head cold.
James didn 't seem to be
_ troubled by anything. With
his scori ng -high for this
postseason, he has now
scored at least 20 points in
all 19 career playoff games,
the second-longest streak to
begin -., career in NBA history. Kareein Abdui-Jabbar
did it in his first 27 postseason games.
''It was a tug-of-war
match for the first three
quarters," Jam·es said. "My
teammates needed me to
make plays and I did."
And when James needed
help scoring, rebounding
and playing defense, his
teammates were there for
him.
James' basket with 5:41
left put the Cavs ahead 89- ·
85, and on Cleveland's next
trip, he whipped a pass in
the lane to a cutting Drew
Gooden, whose two-handed
slam put the Cavaliers up by
six. Gooden finished with
10 points and 14 rebounds.
Caner, begging for the
ball every time the Nets had
it, was able to get the Nets
within 93-89 on a bucket
with 2:40 left. The Nets had
chance 10 CUI it furt her,
but Carter missed a tough
fadeaway on the baseline
and fell to the floor with a

a

"We can relax. We can
relax now and play knowing that if we happen to ·
have a bad game, we can
come back another day.
"They have to beat us
two games in a row."
Point
Pleasant
and
Ravenswood split their two
regular season meetings.
Steve Burdette, the first
of two Red Devil hurlers
employed on the evening,
had to shoulder the loss.
Fielder went 3-for-4 with
three runs batted in for the
winners; Herdman and
Casto had two hits each,
·including a double apiece.
Bo necutter also had a multiple hit game while Jones,
Krebs and Al.len rounded
out the 11-hit attac)&lt;:. ·
Cody Brown led the way
offensively in the setback,
as he went 3-for-4, including a two-run home run.
Jared Richards also had
multiple hits. ·

BISON 9, FALCONS 0
Buffalo
701 0100 -910 0
Wahama
000 000 0 - 0 0 3 '
Zuspan • .Veaz.ey (1) , Grimm (4) atjil
Stafford. Lewis, Tucker (7) and Belchec,.

.

'

STAfF REPORT

Blevins hit safely twice and
SPORTS&lt;IIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
. drove in four run s apiece for
the sixth-ranked team in the
WHEELERSBURG
state,
which improved to 23Four ,Pirates had multiple hit
2
overall.
Aaron Hopper and
games, and Wheelersburg
scored 12 runs in the second Justin Hill were both 2-forinning, en route to a 22-3 2.
Buddy Higginbotham had
victory over River Valley in
Division ill sectional base- a big game in the I.oss for the
ball action on Thesday.
Raiders. He hit a two-run
Bryan White and Kyle home run, part of a ~wo- hit

evening, and he was resporiJ
sible for driving in all three
River Valley runs. nevinGibbs went 2-for-3.
·
Jordan Russell picked up
the victory on the mound .
while Jason Jones suffered
the loss for River Valley.
Wheelersburg advances to
face Ironton for the sectional
championship on Friday. ·

BIG BLACKS 10, RED DEVILS 6
RavenSWOOd
010 041 o - 6 52

Point Pleasant 002 026 x - 10 11 3
Steve Burdette, Cody Brown (6) e.nd O.W.

Mayh"am. Ashton Jones, Curtis Grlmm (6)
and Ja:mes Casto. .WP - Grimm. LP Burdette.

bad cranrp as the Cavs
pushed the ball up the floor.
''I'm go ing to keep shooting and keep playi ng,"
Carter said. ''I' m not going
to hold my head because
I'm not making shots . It can
turn around in a matter of
seconds."
Carter missed again with
I :43 left, and this time
James made the Nets pay'
with a I 5-footer to make it
96-89 with I: 19 left. With
54 seconds left, Pavlov ic
missed a long jumper but
was able to run down his
rebound, yet another missed
chance for the Nets.
"That's what th ey do,"
Jeffe rson said. "They are
No. I in the league in second -c hance. points and we
ha ve to stop it. It's not
li ke they' re goi ng to go
from first 'to 29th . We
ha ve to adj ust. "
Notes: New Jersey has
ne ver overcome an 0-2
deficit' and now has to win
four of five .... In thei r six ·
playoff games, the Cavs
have outrebounded their
opponents by 13.5 per
game. , .. NBA com missioner Dav id Stern addressed a
slew of topics with media
members before the game.
Among
the weightier
issues: . the league's global
expansion and intent to
develop an NBA-Iike
league in China, playoff
reseeding and the lack .of
superstars - except for
James - left in the play- ·
offs. ... R&amp;B star Usher,
whose absence at games has
led to speculation he was no
longer a Cavs ll)inority owner, sat courtside as did
Browns wide receiver
Brayton Edwards and former NBA enforcer Charles
Oakley.... Re(eree Michael
Smith shbok off an accidental elbow to the nose in the
first quarter from Gooden.

CINCINNATI (AP) David Weathers knows as
well as anybody how bad
Cincinnati's bullpen has
been this season.
' The frustration boiled over
· Tuesday night after rookie .
reliever Brad Salmon (0- 1)
gave up. a 6-5 lead and the
veteran Weathers allowed a
ninth-inning run that proved
to be the difference in
Houston's 7,6 win over the
Reds.
"We know we're blowing
games," Weathers said in a
slightl y raised voice whil e
responding to a reporter's
question. "It hurts us personally. It 's more frustrating for
us than for anybody."
Lance Berkman 's second
home run in two nights overshadowed the 568th of Ken
Griffey Jr.'s career and
Morgan Ensberg's double in
the nintb drove in Luke
Scott with the run that sent
the Reds to their sixth loss in
thei r last seven games.
.
The Reds bullpen went
into the game with one save
since April 15 and the worst
combined ERA (4.61) in the
National League. Todd
Coffey allowed a three-run
homer to Scott on Monday
AP photo that snapped a 2-2 tie and
Hou~ton Astros' Lance Berkman flips his gtqve as he walks led to Houston 's 5-4 win.
off the field after a baseball game against the Cincinnati
"Nobody feels worse than
Reds Tuesday in Cincinnati. Berkman hit a two-run home us when (starters) go out and
run to lead the Astros to a 7-6 win .
constantly pitch ball games

We remember those .who have passed away

and are especially dear to us.
On Monday, May 28, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample .below:
wish, selett one of ihe following FREE verses below to

1aa:om.IJai!Y yoor hibole.

hold you in our-thoughts and memories forever.
.2. May God cradle you in His arms, now and forever.
3. Forever missed, never fmgotten. May God hold you in the palm of
His hand.
4. Thank you for the wonderful days we shared together. My pra)&lt;rs
will be with youuntil we meet again. . ,
5. The days we shared were sweet. I longto see you again in God's
heavenly glory.
6. Your courage and bravery still inspire us all, and the memory of your
smi le fills us with joy and laughter.
7. Though out of sight. you'll forever be inmy heart and mind.
8. The days may come and go, but the times we shared will always remain.
9. May God's angels guide you and pro1ec1youthroughout time.
10. You were a light in our life that bums forever in our hearts.
I I. ·May God's graces shine over you forall time.
12. You arc in our thoughts and pray~ from moming to night and from
year to year.

July 10, 1961·May S, 1980

May God's angels
guide you and
. protect you ·
throughout time.
Always in our hearis,
John and Mona Andrews and
family

·

AP photo

Cleveland Indians pitcher Cliff Lee, left, celebrates with first baseman Ryan Garko at the
end of the eighth inning against the Los Angeles i\ngels during -their baseball game in
Anaheim, Calif. on Tuesday.

Indians scalp Los Angeles, 5-1
.

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~Name of deceased --------:---------...,.,...---1

!Relationship to me

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Number of selected verse

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- ... " . - ...

fromPageBl
at' miscues: Three EHS
etrors .occurred during that
P.;votal third frame.
• Brittany BtsseH and
Kelsey Holter pac_ed the_visiCPrs with two htts api~ce,
while
Amber
Whtte,
"-athryn Bland, Hannah
Cozart and Hannah Pratt
fpllowed with a hit each.
Bissell, ljlolter; Cozart and
~i Cummins each scored
once in the setback.
'l

'

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)
-· Cliff Lee tossed a threehitter · for his 50th career
victory and the Cleveland
Indians defeated the Los
Angeles Angel&amp; 5-l on
Tuesday · ni ght, their 13th
win in 16 games. .
Victor Martilez homered
and had an RBI- si ngle and
decision, allowing · nine Casey. Blake drove in two
·earned runs, nine hits, three nms for the Indians, 'who
walks and hit a batter over improved to ·17 -4 against
his six innings of work. right-handed starters.
Torned also struck out three.
Lee ( 1-.0 ), who is 50-28
Five different Wildcats (4- in hi s fourth full season,
18, 2-8) had one hit.
st ruck out two and walked ·
· · Eastern now turn s its two in his second career
attention to the Division IV comp/.ete game. His other
postseason and Thursday, ' complete game was against
when it hosts TVC Hocking Tampa Bay on the fin al day
foe Trimble in a sectional of last season.
final. The Eagles won both
five-inning contests this
past sprin g by mercy-rule,
16-1 and I 0-0. Game time is
scheduled for 5 p.m.

The left-bander spent the
first month of the season
on the disabled list because
of a strained .right abdomina.! muscle. Lee made his
fir st stari las t Thursday
Toronto,
and
aga in st
received a no -deci sion
after giv ing up five runs
and nine hits in six innings.
Lee didn't allow a hit
until the . sixth inning
Tuesday,
when
Mike
Napoli doubled to rig ht
field. He scored on Reggie
Will its' single past diving
shortstop Jhonn_y Peralta as
the Angels trai led 3- 1.
Ervin ·Santana (2-5)
allowed three run s and
seven hits in seve n innings.
The right-hander struck 'out

six and walked three in losing hi s third in a row.
The Indi'ans sta ked Lee
to a 3-0 lead. Their first run
ca me .·o n Martinez· RBIs.ingle with two outs in the
fir st: He homered to lead
.off the _fo urth before
Blako's RBI-single in the
fifth .
Cleveland added two
runs in the ninth on an
RBI-single by Blake and a
by
Travi s
ground out
Hafner.
Notes: Cleveland RF
Trot Nixon went 0-·for-3
wit h a walk in his fir st
gam e si nce .getti ng a
career- hi gh five hits and ·
four RB.fs Sunday against
Balli more.

EASTERN 14, WATERFORD 1
Eastern
Waterford

000 068 001 000 -

14 9 1 .
1 57

EHS (12-10, 7-3 TVC Hocking): Joel
Lynch, Matt Morris (3), Titus Pierce (5)

and Jake Lynch
' WHS (4·18, 2-8 TVC Hocking): Tornos ·
and Greene
WP - Morris; LP - Tornes
HR E - Jake Lynch (fifth. inning,

Bart and the Chasers
Saturdav, ••v12th

nobody on , one out); Matt Morris (fifth

inning, two on, one out)

•,

I

Cincinnati starter Eric
Mi lton lasted 5 1-3 innings,
glvi ng up seven hits and four
runs. He remained winless
in hi s last 13 starts dating
back to August. · ·
Rodriguez allowed eight
hits and five runs. walking
two and striking out five in 5
2-3 inni ngs. He ha&gt;n't won
in 12 starts since Houston's
9-5 .win at Texas last July 2.
Houston opened up a 4-0
lead on Carlos Lee ·s two-run
homer in the first. Adam
Everett's RBI groundout in
the second and Jason Lane's
run-scoring doubl e in the
third.
Free l drove in Cincinnati's
first run with a third inning
double, and Milton drove in
two run s with a single up the
middle in the fourth to cut
Houston 's lead to 4-3.
Notes: Milton has allowed
at least one first -inning run
in eac h of his last fi ve starts.
... Lee 's homer was his first
in 77 at-bats dating back to
April 17 in a 6-1 win over
Florid;1. ... Houston's starting lineup against the left:
handed Milton had seven
right-hatided batters and two
switch-hitters, Berkman and ·
Rodri guez.... Berkman has
reached base in 26 consecutive ga mes. ... Harmon
Ki llebrew is eighth on the
home-run list with 573, five
ahead of Griffey.

\

ed the RBis for the Golden Chau also recorded a three-hit
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL .
Tornadoes. Kepiro was 1-for- game, in what turned out to be
2 with a run-scoring double the final of his collegiate
MOUNT VERNON- The and Arata delivered a sacrifice . career. Among the three hits
University of Rio Grande fly.
was a double. Wells went 2Redmen baseball season
Senior southpaw Nate Chau for-4.
came to an end on Tuesday on pitched well in defeat. Chau
Sato was 1-for-5 with an
the ftrst day of the ' NAJA (7-5) went eight innings, scat- RBI atid freshman John
Region IX Tournament as the tering eight hits and allowing Storey was 1-for-5 with two
Redmen dropped two one-run two .earned runs with five RBis. Whewell had another
ballgames, including an extra- strikeouts and one walk.
solid game, . going 1-for-3
inning thriller against the host
Qave Foss (7-2) out-dueled with two runs scored, double
school,
Mount Vemon Ch
· · 8 1/3 · ·
d
1 b
Nazarene in the elimination
au, pttching
mmngs, an a sto en ase.
. round. Rio lost game one ' to allowing nine hits and one run
Freshm an
righth ander
with two strikeouts and two Cody . Lawhorn started and
Geneva, 2-1 and game two 7- walks. Justin Montgomery kept the Redmen in the game,
6 in 10 innings to the came on to get the final two ·lasting seven innings, scatter11
Cougars.
; Rio G.rande (24-27- I) out- outs and earn his seventh save ing eight hits and a owing
'
five runs with two strikeouts
hit Geneva (29-18) in the first of the season.
Game two pitted the and four walks. Red- shin
d £ 1 b t ·t'lgl
~~J:e Gcld~n uTo~ad~~?~ Redmen against the top seed- freshman Brandon . Russell
tlie fourth and fifth innings . ed Cougars, who had lost to took the loss m rehef. _Russell
beldupforthewin. Rio 'sonly ~o.6 seed Walsh, 3- 1 m the.. (5-6) _went 2 2 (3 mmngs
rt}n came in the eighth inning. ftrst_ game.
.
allowmg the dectdmg run. He
:- Senior catcher Kyle Wells
R10 got the J~mp on fanned four and walked two.
. and senior leftfielder Michael ~VNU (34-13) sconng twice
Mm:c Hadl~y (2-1) ptcked
Warren led the Redmen with !n lhe second . and fourth the wm m _rehef for MVNU,
two hits each~ Junior second mmngs and leadmg 4-3 after finng five mmngs of shutout
liitseman and leadoff hitter five. The Redmen ad~ed a baseball.
.
Kenta Sato went 1-for-3 with parr of runs m the SIXth frame
Ross Yoder, Zack Helm,
a stolen base· and freshman to increase the lead to 6-3, but Eddie Smith and Brandon
tbird baseman Andy Whewell would not score ~gain.
Thmer allf had two hits each
went 1-for-3 and scored the
The Cougars tted the game for Mt. Vernon. Yoder scored
kme run for the Redmen. in the eighth with a three-spot two runs and knocked in
Freshman
centerfielder and won it in the IOth.
another, Helm and Turner
Kelton Sines also had a hit in
Both teams had their hitting delivered two RBI's each
·two plate appearances.
shoes laced tightly as Rio pro- while Smith scored two runs
: Dan DeMarco was the top duced 12 hits and Mount and Josh Estep had a two-run
hitter for Geneva, going 3-for- Vernon notched 13.
double.
4: Matt Colella went 2-for-4 Freshman shortstop Brad Mount Vernon Nazarene
and scored a run while Tyler Konrad led the Redmen, went 5-0 against Rio Grande
Kepiro and Rob Arata collect-' going 3-for-5 with three RBI. this season.

Eagles

· The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
Ill Colll'l St., Pomeroy; OH 45769
DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 12 Noon

and then we give it up," homers. and I06 RBis
Weathers said. "(Manager) against Cincinnati, his highJerry (Narron) can' t feel est totals against any team.
like, every time .he goes to
Brad Lidge (2-0) got the
the bullpen, he doesn't know win, striking out Ryan Freel
what he's getting. For the - the only batter he faced
first couple weeks of the - to end the sixth.
season, we were the best
After Ensberg hit an RBI
thing since sliced bread. double in the ninth to give
Now, we're a necessary Houston a two-run lead,
evil."
Brandon Phillips hit his
"We're goi ng tq give them sixth homer of the year with
opportunit ies," Narron said. one out off closer Dan
"We're going to stay with Wheeler to pull the Reds
these guys, They're capable within 7-6 . Wheeler .recovof getting outs, and that's ered to notch his seventh
what we expect."
save in eight opportunities,
Trai ling 5-4 in the top of giving the Astros three wins
the seventh, Berkman lofted · in their last four games . .
an 0-1 pitch from Salmon
"(Coming from behind ) is
(0-1) the opposi te way into a great trait to have,"
the seats in left field with Houston manager Phi I
Craig Biggio on first base. Garner said. "Once you do
"He 's a good hitter," that a few times, you start to
Salmon said. "I came in with believe ." 1
th,e first pitch, and I was tryGriffey followed a Phillips
ing to go down and away, single with his fifth home
but I missed my spot. It was run to give Cincinnati a 5-4
a little up. He's paid to hi t lead in the fifth inning. He
mistakes, and I made a mis- lined a 1-2 pitch from lefttake."
hander Wandy Rodriguez
"I didn 't know what he into the right-field seats. ·
threw," Berkman said.
Griffey's homer left him
"From the guys before me, it one behind Rafael Palmeiro
looked like he had a pretty for ninth place on baseball 's
good fastball. I wasn't trying career homer list. He's hit all
to hit a home run. I was just five of his home runs in his
trying to be quick."
last II games.
Berkman's homer was his
The homer left Griffey hit14th at Great American Ball ting .800 (8-for- 10) with two
Park, the most by any oppo- homers in his career against
nent. Berkman has 37 career Rodri guez.

BY MARK WtWAMS

breaking win . .
Morris, who led EHS with
three hits and four RBis at
the plate, also picked up the
from Page 81
winning decisio n on the
mound.
worked 2.1
to come away with the mon- innings Morris
of relief after the
umental decision.
third inning, allowing one
EHS ·pounded out nine run, zero earned, four hits
earned runs and nine hits and a walk while fanning
in the triumph, i'ncluding a two.
·
pair of fifth inning home
Joel Lynch started and
runs from Morris and Jake went two innings, allowing
L.ynch that turned a 1-0 no runs, rio hits and a walk
deficit into a comfortable while striking out one.
6-1 advantage.
Pierce fanned five, walked
' The guests sent a dozen two and surrendered a ·hit in
more batters to the plate in his outing.
the top of the sixth,
Jake Lynch provided two
[l_Ounding out eight runs hits, two RBis and a pair of
and five hits to expand runs scored, while Young,
Pierce, Derek · Griffin and
that lead to 14-1 .
- Titus Pierce, who entered Zach Hendrix rounded out
il) · relief during the fifth, the hitting with one apiece.
struck out the home half of Young, Griffin and Hendrix
die sixth in order - secur- also scored twice in the win .
'tornes took the losing
iiig the program's record-

TO REMEMBER \'OUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $8.00 PER LISTING o $l21F PICTURE INCLUDED
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.

Redmen eliminated on first day
.

Wheelersburg ousts Raiders, 22-3

I

Reds lose again, fall to Astros 7-6

BY GARY CLARK

Brad Sherman/photo

The Daily Sentinel o Page 83

.

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Point Pleasant's Trasawn Bonecutter drives in the game-tying run during a big sixth inning
for the Big Blacks, which saw them score six times and rally for a 10-6 victory over
Ravenswood on Tuesday.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Starter Sasha Collins took when it hosts Southern in a
.the loss for Eastern , allow- sectiona l semifinal. Both
, ing eight hits and two walks EHS and. the Lady
in her six innings in the cir- Tomadcies split their TVC
cle. Collins did not record a Hoc king contests this season, with the winner being
strikeout.
Kasey Robinson was the the home team in both
winning pitcher, giving up games.
eight hits and four walks
Game time at Don
ovet seven frames while Jackson Field is sc heduled
for I p.m·. ·
fanning four.
Waterford won the previWATERFORD 6, EASTERN 4
ous game in· Tuppers Plains
Eastern 010 111 0 -485
by a 13-2 margin in six Waterford
005 010 x - 6 8 3
innings.
EHS (9·15, 4-6 TIIC Hocking): Sasha
Eastern returns to action Collins and Kath1yn Bland
WHS (1 0-0 TVC Hocking): Kasey
Saturday afternoon in the Robinson
and Mariah Thatchef
Di vision IV tournament WP - Robinson; LP -Collins

•*******************

Thursday- ladies Night w/DJ
$1 .00 cover 9pm- 2am
Tuesday- Karaoke w/Ron Campbell
oft all drin~s _ 1Opm· 2am
509
$1 .00 Cover 9pm- 1am
·
OJ 9
.
· ~pm- 2am
Wednesday- Mens N1ght ·Pool tournament Saturd
l.
.
ay -1veans
8 d _$ .
S da _$
$5.00 entry Spm - SOy oft all dnnks
un y 1.00 8 eer 1.25. oronas
10 pm- 2am

"•'"•u

c

'I

�'

•·

Page B4 • The Daily Sentiriel

www.mydailysentinel.com

,Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Wednesday, May 9. 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Suns burn San Aritonio, tie seri.es at one apiece
BY Boa BAUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHOENIX - Now the
San Antonio Spurs are complaining about a lack of
energy, and the Phoenix
Suns are confident again.
Funny how quickly attitudes can change in the
NBA playoffs.
With Kurt Thomas moving into the starting lineup to
take on Tim Duncan, Amare
Stoudemire scored 27 points
- 2 I in the second half to lead the Suns to a I01-81
victory over the Spurs on
Tuesday ni ght.
The blowout evened the
best-of-seven
Western
Conference semifinal series
1-1. Game 3 is Saturday
night in San Antonio.
"I thought we played a lot
harder," the Suns' Steve
Nash said. "I said in the
Laker series that we should
j udge ourselves on our energy and our concentration,
and I thought in Game I we
didn ' t do that. I thought
tonight was a lot closer to .
what we need. and in San
Antonio it's going to have to
be even more.''
Nash, with a bandage over
his nose after cutting it late
in Game I, added 20 paints
and 16 assists as the Suns
beat the Spurs in a playoff
AP photo
game in Phoenix· for the first San Antonio Spurs guard Tony Parker (9) tries to put a shot up between the Phoenix Suns' Kurt Thomas, left, Amare
time in tlve games dating to Stoudemire, center, and Shawn Marion in the second quarter during Game 2 of the Western Conference semifinals bas2005.
.
ketball playoff series in Phoenix on Tuesday.
·
Raja Bell added 18 points D' Antoni agreed.
for the winners.
. "Defensively, we were
The Suns, though, praised really good," he said. "It
their defense, specifically started wt'th Shawn and
that of Thomas and Shawn Kurt. Their work on those
Marion.
'two guys was really good.
"That's the way we ' ve got Finally, we started clicking a
to play," Bell said. "We all little bit offensively. It was
need to go back and look at really a good effort. We just
the tape and see we were need to repeat it three more
playing at a feverish pace times."
~efensively. We like to ·play
Duncan scored 29 points
hke that offensively, but , despite foul trouble for San
defensively we were all over Antonio. But the Suns didn't
the place."
double-team him, and unlike.
Suns
coach
Mike Game I, he got little help

from his teammates.
Game I. Parker managed
"They decided to stay out· only 13 points on 5-of-14
of there and let Kurt deal shooting.
·
wtt· h me, " Duncan
said. "So
He was reluctant to credit
that's how it went." .
Phoenix's defense, though.
Meanwhile, Marion stayed
" I had some good looks,"
on Tony Parker the whole Parker said. "They just didgame.
n' t go in."
"Coac h told me, 'Just go
Nash and D' Antoni had
out there and play defense, criticized the Suns' effort in
don't even worry about scor- Game I . Tuesday night,
ing,"' Marion · said. "So ·coach Gregg Popovich did
that's what I did."
the same ·ror his Spurs.
After scoring 32 points in
"The game was all about
the Spurs' 111-106 victory in maintaining a pursuit and

aggressiveness," he said.
"They did that in a variety Of
ways. It's disappointing. You
have to have five guys committed to doing the same
thing. It seemed like we had
three, maybe four at times,
but not five."
D' Antoni's decision to
start Th0mas and have him
defend Duncan freed up
Stoudemire to ·concentrate
on offense.
" I think that helped Amare
a little bit," Duncan said.
" ~hysically it may have

C L A S S I ·F I E D

given him a little more energy toward the end of tlre
game there."
.
Thomas added 12 points
on 6-of-7 shooting 111 28
minutes. The Suns are 8.:0
with the lineup they startll.ll
Tuesday. Normally, though,
Thomas has played a limited
role off the bench.
·
"It's been tough on hiin
not to play as much as he
likes," Nash said. "At the
same time, it's a tribute to
what type of person, player
and teammate he is that he
can suffer a Jack of playing
time and then be able to step
up in the biggest game of the
season and play so welL" ·
Thomas knows what he's
~xpected to do whenever he
is on the court.
.
"For me, I have to play
defense,"
he
said.
"Especially coming into the
league, playing for Pat
Riley, playing for Jeff Van
Gundy. If I wanted to get out
there on the floor, I had ~
really stop some guys on the
defensive end."
The Suns took the lead for
good midway through the
second quarter and were up
by 12 early in the third. The·
decisive blow was an 11-2
surge that began with a nolook, over-the-head pass
from Boris Diaw to
Stoudemire for a layup and
ended with Thomas' tnside
basket on a feed from Nash
that put 'Phoenix ahead 8468 wtth 8:07 left.
· :
Even thouglt Duncan was
back, the Spurs never threatened seriously again.
:
Notes: The loss snapptid
San Antonio's five-game
playoff winning streak. .:..
The Suns improved to 5-1·2
against the Spurs since Nash
came to Phoenix in 2004. :.
A local radio station passeyl
out bandages for fans,
including
Suns . owner
Robert Sarver,. to wear over
their noses in support qf
Nash .... D' Amoni turned 56
on Tuesday.

Galli a

County,
OH

E-mail
classified@ mydailytribune .com

.

..

. ' .

~

.,.,..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __::::O:.,rF:.,:a:.::,x To

•te• •

• ' •

~ -'

~-

'· .. .... ..

446-.3008

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POUCIES : OhiO Valley Publlthlng rHefYft the right to edtt, reject, or cancel 1ny ld •t .•nv tim&amp;. Errors fr!Utl be reported on the tlrtt dav of
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tny loa or expen• that r.autt. from the pubt~ion or omlulon of an advartlumenl Correction will be IHde the tlrst IVIIIable edition. • Box
art elwtya confidential. • Current rlltll card applln. • All rMI eetate adverthMtnem. are aubject to the Federal Fair
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ent. Coneetlona wtl
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11m

Box number ads a
·

lwayt conlldentlal.

rate car

&gt;AU Real Ealat
dvertlsements ar

r

Sue's Green House in now

open. 1740)949·3151

r.
......_

GIVI:AWAY

GAUJPOLIS

0

Car seat btke, aduiJ and

ki ds clothes, m1sc,
&amp; pr~ce's. May 10 &amp; 11 .

3 yr. ,;d male dog. li&lt;ed
shots, food &amp; doghouse. to
gOOd home only, (740)7422937
- - - - - - --

cheap

---,----- MoVIng Sale, May 12, 13.
Furniture, household Items,
clothes- womens, girls,

4·5 week old Calico kitten , mens, infants. Cedarwood

playful . bright patchy colors,
593·1554. daytime, 675·
6867 El\len1ngs.
.
5 Kittens to giveaway. 740 -

Ln. off White Ad

j014

I

9am-7pm

YARD SALE-

I

Male
Border CoNie mix, all shots
includtng rabies. Call 740441 -502 5 between 6-9pm.
Free to good home.

shoeS, scrubs, toys, Jr. girt &amp;

men's clothes, misc.

serviC14X56-- 2 Br., 1 bath,
steps &amp; allt987-electnc. Must move. 740supplies (304)391·5863 698·1815.
$6000.00
located in Nitro
1987.. 14X56.. 2 Br., t balh
TURNED DOWN ON all
electriC. Must move. 740·
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt? 698·1815.
$11000.00 .
No Fee Unless We W1n! ·
1·888·582·3345
Clearance Sale. New Total
drywall homes lrom $299.63
Rl \I I' 1\11
per month. Call (740)385·
2434
Drastically
Reduced
$25,000, must relocate.
older mobile home w/112
acre in country, 4 bd.,
remodeled. semi furnished,
quiet area, close to school.
(304)882·2196
.

www.comics.com

newspape

accept any

but no ID. 446-0639

adver

1Htna1t In vlolallo
I the law.

Found on Garfield Ave, Very

lriendly Poodle with collar

We will rlbt knowtn

FOUND: Sundai 5·6-D7 On
New Haven,
Choc. Lab about 6 months
old 304-882·2327
Midway Dr,

ClASSIFIED INDEX

4x4'a For Sate .............................................. 725
.' Announcament.. .......................................... 030
Antlques ....................................................... 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market........,.................... oeo
'• Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair ................................................... no
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................ sso
Buslneas and Buildings ............................. 340
Buslneas Opportuntty................................. 210
. Buatnesa Training ....................................... 140
· Campers &amp; Motor Homes ...........................790
~mplng Equipment ................................... 780
: Canto o1Thanks .......................................... 010·
· Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
· Etectrtcai/Rslrtgeratton ............................... 840
Equipment for Rent. ... _:..........................,..... 480
Excavatlng ................................................... 830
Farm Equtpment .......................................... 610
Farma for Rent. ............................................ 430
Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
For Loaoe ..................................................... 490
· For Sate ................................. :......................sas
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Fumtohed Rooms ........................................ 450
General Haullng ........................................... BSO
GIVeaway ...................................................... 040
Happy Ads .................................................... oso
Hay &amp; Graln .................................................. 640
Help ~Vanted ............................,.................... t10
Home lmprovements...................................810
· Homes lor Sate............................................ 310
Houaehold Goods ....................................... 510
Houaes tor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
lnauranca ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Gorden Equipment. ....................... 680
Llvoatock ......................................,...............630
Loll and Found ........................................... 060
Lo)e &amp; AcrJ1age ............................................ 350·
Mtscollaneous ....... .-...................................... 170
Mtscollaneous Merehandtse.......................540
· Mobile Home Repalr ....................................860
Mobile Homes lor Rent... ............................ 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale................................ 320
., Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers.......................... 740
Musical Instruments ....................................570
Perl0nala ............................................ ......... 005

Patalor Sale .........................,...................... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Profellotonal Sarvtces ................................. 230
Redlo, TV &amp; CB.Repalr ............................... 160
Rut Eatete wanted ..................................... 360
Schoola lnotructlon ..................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; FertMtzar .............................. 850
·. Sftuatlona Wanted ....................................... t20
SPK"Ior Ront ............... :............................. 460
Sporltng Goocla ........................................... 520
SUV'olor Sate.............................................. 720
' Truckllor Sate ............................................ 7t5
Uphotatery ................................................... 870
vana For Sate............................................... 730
Wltnted to Buy ............................................. 090
wanted to Buy- Fann Supplles .................. 620

wanted To Do .............................................. 180
wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
, Ylrd Sate- Galllpolle ....................................072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy.Wkldle .........................074
Yard Sate-Pt. Plelaant... ............................. 076

,,

~

. ... ·- - ...•·

COUNTRY SETT1NG
3br. 2ba, w~h 24 • 24 ft
garage, 9/10 of · an acre
approx. 8 miles from Pt.
Pleasant on Rt 2 call for
Appointment 304-675-5995
House on Land Contract
Pomeroy. 740-992·5858.
HUD HOMES! 4 bedroom
only $199/mo. 3 bedroom,
$203/mo. More t-4bed
homes available. 5%dn, 20 .
yrs @ 8% For li stings BOO·
559-4109 ext F144.

es. windows, dOOrs,

ccepta only hel

anted ada meetln

**NOTI(;E**

Mob~e Home sel:up,

ublecl to the Fedora
Act o

OE atllnderdo.

~,r.'o -·.!·o·s·~---_.J

I •.

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air Housing
1108.

This

~~~

nn•opa1oorl

I'OM!lROVIMDltlLE .

One -Day Only· Sal. ·May
12th, 8-4pm, 500 Grant St., ·
Middleport. very nice baby
&amp; toddler boy &amp; girlclothes,

4~4::.6·_4:..:56:7
_ _____

Hooting

:::::::::

.675·1523
Substitute RNIL.PN wanted
for
the
Carleton
School/Meigs Industries,
hours 9am·3pm. Must have
current AN license in the
Sale ol Ohio. Prefer experience in pu~k: healthoorsing
and/or working with children
and adults with developmental disat?ilities. Send resume
by FridaY May 181h 2007 to:
Meigs County Board of
Mental Aetardalion and
Developmental Disabilities,
1310 Carleton Street, PO
Box 307,· Syracuse, Oh
45779

YARD SAib

I. Garage
sale beside H,;idaj
Inn.

r
304~

IIFHWANIID

Someone to Mow caM

Excavating, Female Golden
Retriever:740-256-9323

B

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Su~cessful

"It's not because eveeybody is in Jove with the car
but everybody knows the)
hate working on two ol
them," Darby said. "It'~
expensive. It's extreme!)
confusing. It's hard f&lt;&gt;t
IWASCAR, our inspectiOr
group, to switch back anc
forth and try to stay focusec
on which rule book we art
using for what week.
. "I think almost everyom
wains the COT ali-in so Wf
can move on."
There's one major issut
with speeding up tmplanta·I!On, though. The COT isn '1
scheduled to race on 1.5·
mile tracks until 2009, anc
teams will have zero data or
those tracks if its moved ur
to next season.
So even though Hendrid
Motorsports has won all fom
COT races this season, Jell
Gordon isn't positive he sup·
ports moving up the implan·
tation date.
"Without being on a mile·
and-a-half ll'ack, I don't set
how we can just go com,
pletely forward with it,'
Gordon ..said. ''I'm prett)
opllmtsl!c about the wa)
things are going right now
Obviously we're runnin~
good with it. But I still thin~
there are things that need tc
evolve with this car that art
not there yet."
NASCAR could havt
mandated the COT be usee
in next week's Nexie
Challenge, an invitation·
only all-star event that does·
n't count in the season stand·
ings. But drivers were mixec
on its inclusion in the event.
Gordon and teammatt
Jimmie Johnson SUJ?.pOrl
using it in the $1 mtllior
event, but Earnhardt wal
adamantly against it.
.
"That's a terrible idea
actually," he said. "That's &lt;
lot of money and I do(l '1
want the Car ofTomorrow·tc
throw a monkey wrench :ir
there."
·
Toyota officials are callip~
the loudest for the COT ·ir
2008. because focusing or
o~ly one program could aile·
vtate · many of the struggle!
the. manufacturer is experi·
e11:cmg. Its teams are stnig·
ghng to make races this s~a ­
son, Toyota's first in th&lt;
Nextel Cup Series.
l' :

. , •. -·· •

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~o

Nothing black and white about latest Bonds debate . Most teams want Car;
Of Tomorrow in 2008~

rooting him on. Actually,
AP SPORTS COLUMNIST
I've gotten past the point of
even caring about Aaron's
The kid who caught home
CONCORD, N.C. (AP)record · because it doesn 't
run No. 714 off the bat of
Despite
complaints about the
seem
Major
League
Barry Bonds a year ago
Car
of
Tomorrow, most
Baseball cares much about
scurried out of Oakland's
teams
want
NASCAR to use
what the use of steroids has
stadium with his valuable
the
car
exclusively
in 2008.
done to the sport.
souvenir without bothering
The COT is being phased
But I don't believe the reato see what Bonds might
into competition, wllh 16
sons
Bonds
is
disliked
by
so
want to offer for it.
many white fans has much, races scheduled this season.
Before he left, Tyler
if anything at all, to do with Although the original plan
Snyder had just one thing to
race. I'd like to believe that was to use it exclusively in
say:
this is 2007, not 1957, when 2009, NASCAR will move it
"I hate that guy," Snyder
Aaron was already a stat and up a year if teams are on
said.
yet he and other blacks were board.
"I:he kid, 'of course, is not
Based on feedback he's
forced to endure the terrible
alone. When Bonds was on
received
after four COT
indignities of segregation in
the verge of passing Babe
races,
Nexte.
l Cup director
spring training.
Ruth on the all-time home
John
Darby
said teams are
Today, the most revered leaning that way.
run list, he was booed m
and celebrated basketball
Milwaukee, mocked in
has not been
player of hi s time is black. out"NASCAR
Philadelphia and jeered in
in the garage promoting
The best golfer of any time or soliciting the acceleration
Houston.
is black , and when he 's not of 2008, but what we do
And hate might be too
playing,
millions of white have is a large group- and
nice of a word for the reacfans
turn
off
their televisions large is a very fair label- of
tion he gets every time he
because
they
don 't want to organizations and owners
sets foot in left tleld at
watch without him.
Dodger Stadium.
.that have come to us and
Yes, Aaron received death said 'Let's put it all in,' "
So it wa~n 't much of a surthreats and hate mail from Darby
said
Tuesday.
prise· to see a ne.w poll that
bigots when he was chasing "There's a lot of it. And
basically confirms what
Ruth's record. But that was although we ' ve heard from a
other polls have shown in
33
years ago, and a Harris majority of the team owners,
recent years. Acccirdirtg to
poll
at the time found 77 we are not complete in that
the latest survey, baseball
percent
of sports fans root- process."
fans in gene ral belieVe
ing for him to break a record
NASCAR is expected to
Bonds took steroids, think ·
set by a mythical - and decide over the next few
he cheated the game and
very white - figure.
months whether 'to move up
don ' t want to see him break
People
liked
Henry
Aaron.
full
implantation of the car it
Henry Aaron's record.
AP photo They still do.
designed.
A seven-year proWalk into ' any ballpark San Francisco Giants' Barry Bonds reacts to a missed
ject,
the
COT
is a safer car
by
contrast,
wasn't
·
Bonds,
outside the Bay Area and swing against the New York Mets in the eighth inning of a .
that
is
also
supposed
to cut
a popular player even before
you' II hear much the same baseball game in San Francisco on Tuesd~y.
raecosts
and
foster
better
his body grew large, his
thing. Away from AT&amp;T
mg.
Park, Bonds is viewed most- the time he hit so many of the reasons Bonds still has head ballooned to cartoonish
Many drivers have been
ly as a pariah, someone who his home runs.
· cr\XIibility among black fans size and his home rlins starthas tainted the game and
And 52 percent of them while he has little among ed splashing with increasing critical of its handling and
made its most sacred statis- ·say they are rooting· against whites. I do know that a si m- regularity in . McCovey difficulty to drive, and Dale
. tics seem meaningless.
him breaking Aaron's record ilar sort of division existed Cove. From the beginning of Earnhardt Jr. said the car
There's little doubt· now of 755 home runs, while just in polls. taken a little more his career, he treated fans needs many . adjustments
that he 'II· pass Aaron, some- 37 percen\ · say they are than a decade ago about the and the media with con- before he' ll be happy with it.
But in the same breath,
time next month at his cur- pulling for him to 'become guilt or innocence of ,OJ. tempt, and they responded
N
ASCAR:s
biggest star said
with growing contempt for
rent pace, and become the the home run king.
Simpson.
he
wants
to
be in the COT
him.
greatest home run hitter
There's not much new
Don't forget that ·Bonds
full-time
because
flipping
-ever. But that will dq little to there. Only one in three fans · has been· known to use the
The poll iJUmb"rs are
back
and
forth
between
the
endear him to the majority in an Associated · Press poll race card himself, as he did interesting in a number of
old
car
and
the
new
&lt;ine
is
of baseball fans who despise last year said they wanted last year when he blamed ways. and debatable in even ·
taxing.
both his arrogance and the· Bonds to : break the record, some of his problems on the more. People will make
things he might have done to and half said they had an fact he was chasing a white what they want out of them · "I don 't like doing two different cars - it's one or the
help himself along the way. unfavorable opinion of him. legend at the tirrie in Ruth. on both sides of the fence.
other,"
said. "I'd go full According to the ABC
Not open to . debate, time to he
What is new is that the lat"Because Babe Ruth is
the
COT right now.
News/ESPN poll, three out est poll suggests that black . one of the greatest baseball though, is that Bonds will
Why
not
?
We'
re all strugof four b~seball fans believe baseball fans are far more players ever, and Babe Ruth soon pass Aaron and stand . gling with it. We
might as
Bonds knowingly used inclined to root for Bonds ain't black, either,'' Bonds alone ~ith the biggest num- ,
well get all the time we can
steroids, despite his reported than white fans. While just said. "I'm black . Blacks. we ber of all.
with it week in and week
claims to a feder;ll grand 28 percent of whites say go through a little more . .. .
There's nothing black and out, even if it drives us all
jury that he thought the they want Bonds to break I'm not-a raci st though. bur I whire about that.
crazy." ·
"dear" . and the "cream" Aaron's record, three out of live in the real world. I'm
Darby acknowledged that
were flaxseed oil. 'Fans as a four black fans are rooting fine with that. ..
Tim Dahlberg is a nation- teams ~refer the old cars,
whole also believe he 's a for him to do it.
I' m fine with black fans al sports columnist for 1/te and are pushing for the COT
cheater, even if baseball
Now, I'm not a sociolo- supporting Bonds. too, just Associated Press. Write to mainly to si mplify their
wasn 't testing for s1eroids at gist, so I can only guess at as I'm line with white fans him at tdahlbergap.org
operations.
,

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

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advertise "any
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readers are hereby
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informed ttl•t all
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this newspaper 1111
av•ll•ble on an eq~o~el
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(740)446·4782
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•

Gl
=

1 ,---"""'!---.,

1

I

t

I

�'

•·

Page B4 • The Daily Sentiriel

www.mydailysentinel.com

,Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Wednesday, May 9. 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Suns burn San Aritonio, tie seri.es at one apiece
BY Boa BAUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHOENIX - Now the
San Antonio Spurs are complaining about a lack of
energy, and the Phoenix
Suns are confident again.
Funny how quickly attitudes can change in the
NBA playoffs.
With Kurt Thomas moving into the starting lineup to
take on Tim Duncan, Amare
Stoudemire scored 27 points
- 2 I in the second half to lead the Suns to a I01-81
victory over the Spurs on
Tuesday ni ght.
The blowout evened the
best-of-seven
Western
Conference semifinal series
1-1. Game 3 is Saturday
night in San Antonio.
"I thought we played a lot
harder," the Suns' Steve
Nash said. "I said in the
Laker series that we should
j udge ourselves on our energy and our concentration,
and I thought in Game I we
didn ' t do that. I thought
tonight was a lot closer to .
what we need. and in San
Antonio it's going to have to
be even more.''
Nash, with a bandage over
his nose after cutting it late
in Game I, added 20 paints
and 16 assists as the Suns
beat the Spurs in a playoff
AP photo
game in Phoenix· for the first San Antonio Spurs guard Tony Parker (9) tries to put a shot up between the Phoenix Suns' Kurt Thomas, left, Amare
time in tlve games dating to Stoudemire, center, and Shawn Marion in the second quarter during Game 2 of the Western Conference semifinals bas2005.
.
ketball playoff series in Phoenix on Tuesday.
·
Raja Bell added 18 points D' Antoni agreed.
for the winners.
. "Defensively, we were
The Suns, though, praised really good," he said. "It
their defense, specifically started wt'th Shawn and
that of Thomas and Shawn Kurt. Their work on those
Marion.
'two guys was really good.
"That's the way we ' ve got Finally, we started clicking a
to play," Bell said. "We all little bit offensively. It was
need to go back and look at really a good effort. We just
the tape and see we were need to repeat it three more
playing at a feverish pace times."
~efensively. We like to ·play
Duncan scored 29 points
hke that offensively, but , despite foul trouble for San
defensively we were all over Antonio. But the Suns didn't
the place."
double-team him, and unlike.
Suns
coach
Mike Game I, he got little help

from his teammates.
Game I. Parker managed
"They decided to stay out· only 13 points on 5-of-14
of there and let Kurt deal shooting.
·
wtt· h me, " Duncan
said. "So
He was reluctant to credit
that's how it went." .
Phoenix's defense, though.
Meanwhile, Marion stayed
" I had some good looks,"
on Tony Parker the whole Parker said. "They just didgame.
n' t go in."
"Coac h told me, 'Just go
Nash and D' Antoni had
out there and play defense, criticized the Suns' effort in
don't even worry about scor- Game I . Tuesday night,
ing,"' Marion · said. "So ·coach Gregg Popovich did
that's what I did."
the same ·ror his Spurs.
After scoring 32 points in
"The game was all about
the Spurs' 111-106 victory in maintaining a pursuit and

aggressiveness," he said.
"They did that in a variety Of
ways. It's disappointing. You
have to have five guys committed to doing the same
thing. It seemed like we had
three, maybe four at times,
but not five."
D' Antoni's decision to
start Th0mas and have him
defend Duncan freed up
Stoudemire to ·concentrate
on offense.
" I think that helped Amare
a little bit," Duncan said.
" ~hysically it may have

C L A S S I ·F I E D

given him a little more energy toward the end of tlre
game there."
.
Thomas added 12 points
on 6-of-7 shooting 111 28
minutes. The Suns are 8.:0
with the lineup they startll.ll
Tuesday. Normally, though,
Thomas has played a limited
role off the bench.
·
"It's been tough on hiin
not to play as much as he
likes," Nash said. "At the
same time, it's a tribute to
what type of person, player
and teammate he is that he
can suffer a Jack of playing
time and then be able to step
up in the biggest game of the
season and play so welL" ·
Thomas knows what he's
~xpected to do whenever he
is on the court.
.
"For me, I have to play
defense,"
he
said.
"Especially coming into the
league, playing for Pat
Riley, playing for Jeff Van
Gundy. If I wanted to get out
there on the floor, I had ~
really stop some guys on the
defensive end."
The Suns took the lead for
good midway through the
second quarter and were up
by 12 early in the third. The·
decisive blow was an 11-2
surge that began with a nolook, over-the-head pass
from Boris Diaw to
Stoudemire for a layup and
ended with Thomas' tnside
basket on a feed from Nash
that put 'Phoenix ahead 8468 wtth 8:07 left.
· :
Even thouglt Duncan was
back, the Spurs never threatened seriously again.
:
Notes: The loss snapptid
San Antonio's five-game
playoff winning streak. .:..
The Suns improved to 5-1·2
against the Spurs since Nash
came to Phoenix in 2004. :.
A local radio station passeyl
out bandages for fans,
including
Suns . owner
Robert Sarver,. to wear over
their noses in support qf
Nash .... D' Amoni turned 56
on Tuesday.

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County,
OH

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art elwtya confidential. • Current rlltll card applln. • All rMI eetate adverthMtnem. are aubject to the Federal Fair
Act ot 1968. • This
~CX:epta only help want.ct Ids meeting EOE
We will not
any advertising In violation ot the taw.

in

llaftdardl.

ltto

kitncartyle@comcaat.net

lnaortlon. w
hall not be liable lo
ny loss or expen
rttulta from t
ubiiC:atlon or omla
ion of an advertl
ent. Coneetlona wtl
made In tha lin
vallable ednlon.
11m

Box number ads a
·

lwayt conlldentlal.

rate car

&gt;AU Real Ealat
dvertlsements ar

r

Sue's Green House in now

open. 1740)949·3151

r.
......_

GIVI:AWAY

GAUJPOLIS

0

Car seat btke, aduiJ and

ki ds clothes, m1sc,
&amp; pr~ce's. May 10 &amp; 11 .

3 yr. ,;d male dog. li&lt;ed
shots, food &amp; doghouse. to
gOOd home only, (740)7422937
- - - - - - --

cheap

---,----- MoVIng Sale, May 12, 13.
Furniture, household Items,
clothes- womens, girls,

4·5 week old Calico kitten , mens, infants. Cedarwood

playful . bright patchy colors,
593·1554. daytime, 675·
6867 El\len1ngs.
.
5 Kittens to giveaway. 740 -

Ln. off White Ad

j014

I

9am-7pm

YARD SALE-

I

Male
Border CoNie mix, all shots
includtng rabies. Call 740441 -502 5 between 6-9pm.
Free to good home.

shoeS, scrubs, toys, Jr. girt &amp;

men's clothes, misc.

serviC14X56-- 2 Br., 1 bath,
steps &amp; allt987-electnc. Must move. 740supplies (304)391·5863 698·1815.
$6000.00
located in Nitro
1987.. 14X56.. 2 Br., t balh
TURNED DOWN ON all
electriC. Must move. 740·
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt? 698·1815.
$11000.00 .
No Fee Unless We W1n! ·
1·888·582·3345
Clearance Sale. New Total
drywall homes lrom $299.63
Rl \I I' 1\11
per month. Call (740)385·
2434
Drastically
Reduced
$25,000, must relocate.
older mobile home w/112
acre in country, 4 bd.,
remodeled. semi furnished,
quiet area, close to school.
(304)882·2196
.

www.comics.com

newspape

accept any

but no ID. 446-0639

adver

1Htna1t In vlolallo
I the law.

Found on Garfield Ave, Very

lriendly Poodle with collar

We will rlbt knowtn

FOUND: Sundai 5·6-D7 On
New Haven,
Choc. Lab about 6 months
old 304-882·2327
Midway Dr,

ClASSIFIED INDEX

4x4'a For Sate .............................................. 725
.' Announcament.. .......................................... 030
Antlques ....................................................... 530
Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market........,.................... oeo
'• Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair ................................................... no
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................ sso
Buslneas and Buildings ............................. 340
Buslneas Opportuntty................................. 210
. Buatnesa Training ....................................... 140
· Campers &amp; Motor Homes ...........................790
~mplng Equipment ................................... 780
: Canto o1Thanks .......................................... 010·
· Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
· Etectrtcai/Rslrtgeratton ............................... 840
Equipment for Rent. ... _:..........................,..... 480
Excavatlng ................................................... 830
Farm Equtpment .......................................... 610
Farma for Rent. ............................................ 430
Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
For Loaoe ..................................................... 490
· For Sate ................................. :......................sas
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Fumtohed Rooms ........................................ 450
General Haullng ........................................... BSO
GIVeaway ...................................................... 040
Happy Ads .................................................... oso
Hay &amp; Graln .................................................. 640
Help ~Vanted ............................,.................... t10
Home lmprovements...................................810
· Homes lor Sate............................................ 310
Houaehold Goods ....................................... 510
Houaes tor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
lnauranca ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Gorden Equipment. ....................... 680
Llvoatock ......................................,...............630
Loll and Found ........................................... 060
Lo)e &amp; AcrJ1age ............................................ 350·
Mtscollaneous ....... .-...................................... 170
Mtscollaneous Merehandtse.......................540
· Mobile Home Repalr ....................................860
Mobile Homes lor Rent... ............................ 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale................................ 320
., Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers.......................... 740
Musical Instruments ....................................570
Perl0nala ............................................ ......... 005

Patalor Sale .........................,...................... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Profellotonal Sarvtces ................................. 230
Redlo, TV &amp; CB.Repalr ............................... 160
Rut Eatete wanted ..................................... 360
Schoola lnotructlon ..................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; FertMtzar .............................. 850
·. Sftuatlona Wanted ....................................... t20
SPK"Ior Ront ............... :............................. 460
Sporltng Goocla ........................................... 520
SUV'olor Sate.............................................. 720
' Truckllor Sate ............................................ 7t5
Uphotatery ................................................... 870
vana For Sate............................................... 730
Wltnted to Buy ............................................. 090
wanted to Buy- Fann Supplles .................. 620

wanted To Do .............................................. 180
wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
, Ylrd Sate- Galllpolle ....................................072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy.Wkldle .........................074
Yard Sate-Pt. Plelaant... ............................. 076

,,

~

. ... ·- - ...•·

COUNTRY SETT1NG
3br. 2ba, w~h 24 • 24 ft
garage, 9/10 of · an acre
approx. 8 miles from Pt.
Pleasant on Rt 2 call for
Appointment 304-675-5995
House on Land Contract
Pomeroy. 740-992·5858.
HUD HOMES! 4 bedroom
only $199/mo. 3 bedroom,
$203/mo. More t-4bed
homes available. 5%dn, 20 .
yrs @ 8% For li stings BOO·
559-4109 ext F144.

es. windows, dOOrs,

ccepta only hel

anted ada meetln

**NOTI(;E**

Mob~e Home sel:up,

ublecl to the Fedora
Act o

OE atllnderdo.

~,r.'o -·.!·o·s·~---_.J

I •.

I

air Housing
1108.

This

~~~

nn•opa1oorl

I'OM!lROVIMDltlLE .

One -Day Only· Sal. ·May
12th, 8-4pm, 500 Grant St., ·
Middleport. very nice baby
&amp; toddler boy &amp; girlclothes,

4~4::.6·_4:..:56:7
_ _____

Hooting

:::::::::

.675·1523
Substitute RNIL.PN wanted
for
the
Carleton
School/Meigs Industries,
hours 9am·3pm. Must have
current AN license in the
Sale ol Ohio. Prefer experience in pu~k: healthoorsing
and/or working with children
and adults with developmental disat?ilities. Send resume
by FridaY May 181h 2007 to:
Meigs County Board of
Mental Aetardalion and
Developmental Disabilities,
1310 Carleton Street, PO
Box 307,· Syracuse, Oh
45779

YARD SAib

I. Garage
sale beside H,;idaj
Inn.

r
304~

IIFHWANIID

Someone to Mow caM

Excavating, Female Golden
Retriever:740-256-9323

B

the error and onl

Current
ppllet. .·

Monday- Friday for lnaertlon
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Columtl: 1:00 p.m.

• All ads -must be prepaid"

I. "-.,.....iloo..l
Lost in VIcinity of Crown

ad afany ume.

eported on the llrs
of publication an
• Trtbun•sentlnel
agistor will b
ooponalble lor n
ore than the cost o
e apace occuple

Now you ~an have borders and graphics
~
added to your classifted ads
(. ~
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~
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reject or cancel any

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For Sundays Paper

\\\ 01 \ t I \ II \ I '

ANNouNcFo\llMS

Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m .

• Start Your Ads Wltfl A Keyword • Include Complete
Descrtptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevlitions
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 Days

Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response.,
Su~cessful

"It's not because eveeybody is in Jove with the car
but everybody knows the)
hate working on two ol
them," Darby said. "It'~
expensive. It's extreme!)
confusing. It's hard f&lt;&gt;t
IWASCAR, our inspectiOr
group, to switch back anc
forth and try to stay focusec
on which rule book we art
using for what week.
. "I think almost everyom
wains the COT ali-in so Wf
can move on."
There's one major issut
with speeding up tmplanta·I!On, though. The COT isn '1
scheduled to race on 1.5·
mile tracks until 2009, anc
teams will have zero data or
those tracks if its moved ur
to next season.
So even though Hendrid
Motorsports has won all fom
COT races this season, Jell
Gordon isn't positive he sup·
ports moving up the implan·
tation date.
"Without being on a mile·
and-a-half ll'ack, I don't set
how we can just go com,
pletely forward with it,'
Gordon ..said. ''I'm prett)
opllmtsl!c about the wa)
things are going right now
Obviously we're runnin~
good with it. But I still thin~
there are things that need tc
evolve with this car that art
not there yet."
NASCAR could havt
mandated the COT be usee
in next week's Nexie
Challenge, an invitation·
only all-star event that does·
n't count in the season stand·
ings. But drivers were mixec
on its inclusion in the event.
Gordon and teammatt
Jimmie Johnson SUJ?.pOrl
using it in the $1 mtllior
event, but Earnhardt wal
adamantly against it.
.
"That's a terrible idea
actually," he said. "That's &lt;
lot of money and I do(l '1
want the Car ofTomorrow·tc
throw a monkey wrench :ir
there."
·
Toyota officials are callip~
the loudest for the COT ·ir
2008. because focusing or
o~ly one program could aile·
vtate · many of the struggle!
the. manufacturer is experi·
e11:cmg. Its teams are stnig·
ghng to make races this s~a ­
son, Toyota's first in th&lt;
Nextel Cup Series.
l' :

. , •. -·· •

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

Place
~ribune
Sentinel
l\egister
calf~::;... (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) _675-1333

Bv TtM DAHLBERG

I

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PL.US YOUR
NOW ONLINE

~o

Nothing black and white about latest Bonds debate . Most teams want Car;
Of Tomorrow in 2008~

rooting him on. Actually,
AP SPORTS COLUMNIST
I've gotten past the point of
even caring about Aaron's
The kid who caught home
CONCORD, N.C. (AP)record · because it doesn 't
run No. 714 off the bat of
Despite
complaints about the
seem
Major
League
Barry Bonds a year ago
Car
of
Tomorrow, most
Baseball cares much about
scurried out of Oakland's
teams
want
NASCAR to use
what the use of steroids has
stadium with his valuable
the
car
exclusively
in 2008.
done to the sport.
souvenir without bothering
The COT is being phased
But I don't believe the reato see what Bonds might
into competition, wllh 16
sons
Bonds
is
disliked
by
so
want to offer for it.
many white fans has much, races scheduled this season.
Before he left, Tyler
if anything at all, to do with Although the original plan
Snyder had just one thing to
race. I'd like to believe that was to use it exclusively in
say:
this is 2007, not 1957, when 2009, NASCAR will move it
"I hate that guy," Snyder
Aaron was already a stat and up a year if teams are on
said.
yet he and other blacks were board.
"I:he kid, 'of course, is not
Based on feedback he's
forced to endure the terrible
alone. When Bonds was on
received
after four COT
indignities of segregation in
the verge of passing Babe
races,
Nexte.
l Cup director
spring training.
Ruth on the all-time home
John
Darby
said teams are
Today, the most revered leaning that way.
run list, he was booed m
and celebrated basketball
Milwaukee, mocked in
has not been
player of hi s time is black. out"NASCAR
Philadelphia and jeered in
in the garage promoting
The best golfer of any time or soliciting the acceleration
Houston.
is black , and when he 's not of 2008, but what we do
And hate might be too
playing,
millions of white have is a large group- and
nice of a word for the reacfans
turn
off
their televisions large is a very fair label- of
tion he gets every time he
because
they
don 't want to organizations and owners
sets foot in left tleld at
watch without him.
Dodger Stadium.
.that have come to us and
Yes, Aaron received death said 'Let's put it all in,' "
So it wa~n 't much of a surthreats and hate mail from Darby
said
Tuesday.
prise· to see a ne.w poll that
bigots when he was chasing "There's a lot of it. And
basically confirms what
Ruth's record. But that was although we ' ve heard from a
other polls have shown in
33
years ago, and a Harris majority of the team owners,
recent years. Acccirdirtg to
poll
at the time found 77 we are not complete in that
the latest survey, baseball
percent
of sports fans root- process."
fans in gene ral belieVe
ing for him to break a record
NASCAR is expected to
Bonds took steroids, think ·
set by a mythical - and decide over the next few
he cheated the game and
very white - figure.
months whether 'to move up
don ' t want to see him break
People
liked
Henry
Aaron.
full
implantation of the car it
Henry Aaron's record.
AP photo They still do.
designed.
A seven-year proWalk into ' any ballpark San Francisco Giants' Barry Bonds reacts to a missed
ject,
the
COT
is a safer car
by
contrast,
wasn't
·
Bonds,
outside the Bay Area and swing against the New York Mets in the eighth inning of a .
that
is
also
supposed
to cut
a popular player even before
you' II hear much the same baseball game in San Francisco on Tuesd~y.
raecosts
and
foster
better
his body grew large, his
thing. Away from AT&amp;T
mg.
Park, Bonds is viewed most- the time he hit so many of the reasons Bonds still has head ballooned to cartoonish
Many drivers have been
ly as a pariah, someone who his home runs.
· cr\XIibility among black fans size and his home rlins starthas tainted the game and
And 52 percent of them while he has little among ed splashing with increasing critical of its handling and
made its most sacred statis- ·say they are rooting· against whites. I do know that a si m- regularity in . McCovey difficulty to drive, and Dale
. tics seem meaningless.
him breaking Aaron's record ilar sort of division existed Cove. From the beginning of Earnhardt Jr. said the car
There's little doubt· now of 755 home runs, while just in polls. taken a little more his career, he treated fans needs many . adjustments
that he 'II· pass Aaron, some- 37 percen\ · say they are than a decade ago about the and the media with con- before he' ll be happy with it.
But in the same breath,
time next month at his cur- pulling for him to 'become guilt or innocence of ,OJ. tempt, and they responded
N
ASCAR:s
biggest star said
with growing contempt for
rent pace, and become the the home run king.
Simpson.
he
wants
to
be in the COT
him.
greatest home run hitter
There's not much new
Don't forget that ·Bonds
full-time
because
flipping
-ever. But that will dq little to there. Only one in three fans · has been· known to use the
The poll iJUmb"rs are
back
and
forth
between
the
endear him to the majority in an Associated · Press poll race card himself, as he did interesting in a number of
old
car
and
the
new
&lt;ine
is
of baseball fans who despise last year said they wanted last year when he blamed ways. and debatable in even ·
taxing.
both his arrogance and the· Bonds to : break the record, some of his problems on the more. People will make
things he might have done to and half said they had an fact he was chasing a white what they want out of them · "I don 't like doing two different cars - it's one or the
help himself along the way. unfavorable opinion of him. legend at the tirrie in Ruth. on both sides of the fence.
other,"
said. "I'd go full According to the ABC
Not open to . debate, time to he
What is new is that the lat"Because Babe Ruth is
the
COT right now.
News/ESPN poll, three out est poll suggests that black . one of the greatest baseball though, is that Bonds will
Why
not
?
We'
re all strugof four b~seball fans believe baseball fans are far more players ever, and Babe Ruth soon pass Aaron and stand . gling with it. We
might as
Bonds knowingly used inclined to root for Bonds ain't black, either,'' Bonds alone ~ith the biggest num- ,
well get all the time we can
steroids, despite his reported than white fans. While just said. "I'm black . Blacks. we ber of all.
with it week in and week
claims to a feder;ll grand 28 percent of whites say go through a little more . .. .
There's nothing black and out, even if it drives us all
jury that he thought the they want Bonds to break I'm not-a raci st though. bur I whire about that.
crazy." ·
"dear" . and the "cream" Aaron's record, three out of live in the real world. I'm
Darby acknowledged that
were flaxseed oil. 'Fans as a four black fans are rooting fine with that. ..
Tim Dahlberg is a nation- teams ~refer the old cars,
whole also believe he 's a for him to do it.
I' m fine with black fans al sports columnist for 1/te and are pushing for the COT
cheater, even if baseball
Now, I'm not a sociolo- supporting Bonds. too, just Associated Press. Write to mainly to si mplify their
wasn 't testing for s1eroids at gist, so I can only guess at as I'm line with white fans him at tdahlbergap.org
operations.
,

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Buying Junk Cars, Trucks &amp;
Wrecks, Pay Cash J D
Salvage (304)773-5343
(304)874·1374
I \1 1'1 t ~ \ \II \ I
" I 1{\ It I ..,
litO HFHWANiln
100 WORKERS NEEDED

I

800-248-7735

Prime Inc.
WWN.prlmelnc.com
FEDERAL
POSTAL JO.BS

Assemble crafts, wood
items.To $480/wk Materials
provided. Free information
pkg.24Hr.801·428·4649
A
Celebration
of CNA'S &amp; Besjdent - - - - - - - Uie ....Overbrook Center, Assastants Interviews Are Help wanted at Darst Adult
located at 333 Page Street, Now Being Conducted For Group Home, some lift1ng,
Middleport. Ohio is plea'l"d CNA &amp; Residanl Assistanl 7-5 shift. 740-992·5023.
to announcf! we are accept- PoSitions. 11 You Are A ---'----..:..
1ng applications for the fol- Caring,
Enthusiastic, Homemakers needed 1n the
lowing positions to join our Dependable Person, Then Ashton, Mason Co., area to
friendly and dedicated staff: We Want You To Join Our "provide in·home services to
Part Time LPN's 7P-7A &amp; Team. Competitive CNA the Elderly/Disabled. Part
7A· 7P, Full Time STNA's3A.- wages, Pa1d VacatiOns, Paid time 25 hrs, a week.
··
3P &amp; 7A-7P, Part Time Meals,Many Other Benefits. liralntng
aval·1able. PI ease
STNA's 3P·3A ·&amp; 7P-7A. Ravenswood Care Center, Call304-453-4992
Applicant's must be depend· 1113 Washington St , ----'-~--able, teem players with.pos- Ravenswood, "NV. Across
JOBS NOW!!!
ttlve attitudes to join us in The Ritchie Bridge, Turn Up to $8.SOJhour tulltlme
providing outstanding, quali- Right , Last Business On
ty care to our residents. Aight on 66 North. . • Convenient Schedules
Stop by and fill out an appli· References Required.
cation or contact . Hollie ------'--- • Weekly pay with Bonus
Bumgarner. LPN. Staff D.m.1 Assistant. Seeking
potential
D e v e I o P m e n t Full-Timer friendly, outgoing • Paid vacations EV~RY 6
. Coordlfl&amp;tor@740·.992-6472 Chairside Assistant for State
months
and come see tor yourself of The Art Practice.
the difference you can make Experienced reQUired. Fax • Paid holidays/ PAID
at Overbrool&lt;llll EOE &amp; A 740·594·6025.
TRAINING
Participant of The Drug-Free -~-----Workplace Program.
Direct Care Staff
• OutstandinQ work
_...;___:.....,___ Middleton Estates is now
environment
Accepting Applications for hiring dtrect care staff. You
Call Today!
lead man and roofers. Must be part of a team that 1-•n-•63-•247 xt 2301
have experience inaU phas- will
provides sarvlces to 1-nd,·v,·d- -u ...., -u 8 •
1
d
.
I
0
00
5
I
es
roo mg. '
an uals with mental retardation --:---,------,-transportation a must. Top and deVelopmental disablli· LEIRCSENSED SOCIAL wqRKPay.(740)379-9079
,,·es.We.provl'de on tha ,·ob
Ambrosia Machine Inc. training. If you would like to· AITENTION LICENSED
Point Pleasant, wv (304)- take advantage of this
675·1722 (304)675-1723 opportunity. yoo may apply SOCIAL WORKERS- Dua
fax. Machinist 5 years or at8204 Carla Drive,
to ·rapid growth, Family
~more experience $8-$12 per M
onday thl'u Friday 8:00- Options Providers is now
hour.
4:00. An Equal Opportunity seeking
Professional
On Hand Shop Foreman Employer. FIM/ON.
.
Independent Contracting
Machine Shop &amp; Fabrication --~----- SOCial Workers tor Mason,
Domino's Pizza Now Hiring and
Jackson
10$12
years$15or more Safe
Contrador
s shouldCounties.
have a
· know1edge
·ence
Drivers
&amp; Management
P
ex en
per
desire to work wttl1 children
hour
Point Pleasant, Gallipolis &amp; and families. Reliable trans·
Pomeroy
All Excellent way to earn Person locatiOns Apply 1n port'atioo and proof of automoney.The New Avdn.
mobile insurance required.
Galt Marilyn 304·682·2645
POST OFFICE NOW Best contract pay in the
HIRING
area. Interested licensed
AVON!·An.Areas'
To Buy or
Social Workers should.subS
Avg.
Pay
$20/hr
or
SeII · Sh1r1ey pears, 304mit tt1eir resume and ""'""'
$57K annually
....,...
675·1429.
lndurJing Federal Benefits letter identifying coontyts) of
Hair Stylist need for new and OT.Paid Training, interest by fax to 304-254Vacations·FT/PT
9099 or email to
Busine~ Opening Soon in
~in't Pleasant 304-593- 1.8Q0..584-1775EJd.#8923 haroldO!amilyop t lonUSWA
sprovlders.oom
6570
T

OWNER FINANCING
Nice 3/2 singlewidas
From $1,600 down
payment
Scott (740)828·2750

$1.6.53-$27.58/hr.. now hiring. For application and tree
govemement job info, call
American Assoc. of Labor 1·
913-599·8042, 24/hrs, emp.

L.------..1

2 bedroom House $19,500
304·675·191 1
SPECIAL FHA FINANCE
Program $0 Down. If you
34575 Crew Rd.Ranch with own Land or use ~emily
finished basement. 5 Land We own the Bank your
Bedrooms, 3.5 baths Approve? 60~-474-6389
Hardwpod floors. deck, fireplace, garage, 2.5 acres.
FARMS .
I.
5149.500. 740-416-4765
IURSAI.E

TO DRIVE

i

ALLIANCE
TAACTOA-TAAILEA
TRAINING CENTERS

·FUU.·TIME cLASses·
·COL TRANtNG"
•FINANCI
NG AVAILABLE'
. JOe PLACEMENT".

Cttetlnlrtngzt,_..hau~neu
Wythavi~le. Vtrgmia

1-800-334-1203

L!!-~·!!'"!!!''""'!!!.!"ct~..
~·!!!!"'!!;'·~~..J

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446·4367,
1-800-214-01152
www.~tlipoliscarll!lrcoltege.oom
Accrediled Member Accred11mg
Coondl lor tn..tonendant Col...,es
'OU"&lt;&gt;"
and Schools 1274B.
1'1-=
70~----..:..,
. .
.
M.lsc.ID.ANE()(l;

Local Home Health Agency
accepting applications for
STNA, CHHA, PCA, CNA,
willing to
train,
lor call
Meigst·
County
area.
Please
ass-sg
,
.
22444
Now accepting applications
for Grill/Fry Cook. Apply 1n Aeznor Natural gas hanging
person at 308 2nd Ava, heatar 200.000 BTU $400.
Gallipolis.
Call 740-742-2435.
=:!::=----,--,-- ~Iii
W&gt;\NTED
Now accepting applications
for Servers. Apply in person
To Do
at 308 2nd Ave ' Galli.poll·s·
Lawn-Care Service, Mowing
Part Time front desk person &amp; Trimming. Call (740)441·
:~x OeT~~~~j,cec/~ep~i~~ i 333 or (740)645·0546
Pleasant Register, 200 Main Professionally
Cle'an.
St, Pt. Pleasant,WV 25550 Offi ce/Housecl eaning .
Professional Fundraisers AelerenceS (304)675·2208
needed. Part/Full time 3 Will care for elderlYperson
Shifts daily 7 days a week, in their home. 16 yrs exp.
$9 hr. after paid ·training + Many ref available. 740-591 ·
Beneljts, Contact us today! 9034 or 740·388·9783
t-888·974.JOBS or
11 \\\1 1\1
www.1888974jobs.com
·
t
R&amp;J Truddng leading The D BLS~
Way R&amp;J Tr!lcking now
Hiring at our - Haven, L,-~Owotm!N;;.:,;;;;;,:-f11Y~•·rJ
WV Terminal. For Regional .---------•
Hauls-Dump Div. 1 year
. •NO TIC£•
OTA verifiable exp: Calh1· OH IOVALLEY PUBLISH800-462-9365 ask for Kent lNG co. recommends
clubhouse that unu
Seeking
, . . do business with
Manager. Must have golf people you know. end
background and manager NOT to send money
experience. Deliver resume through t~e mail until you
toCiiffsideGolfCiubforoon- have investigated the
stderatiofl.
offering.
"'lt

11

r

evenings Attention!
·------··
102 acre Farm for Sale in
Local company offering ~ No Ashton 304·576-2642
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- - - - - - - - grams for you to buy your Brand new log horne with 60
home instead of rentmg. acres MIL $160.000. Call
• 100%financing
1740)256-9247 ·
' Less than perfect credit ~i~;;.;~,-~~&amp;-accepted
LA.JI::t
A""«('E"- •
Payment could be the Lw-..;i.'Z?iiiii,.;"ii
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators 10 acres located on Broad
(740)367·0000
Run Aead, in New Haven
$38.500 (304)773-5881
106 acres On Leon Baden
Rd stream, pasture &amp;
woods, electnc avail. call
Randall Bradfor0 for directions
304-206-6326.
All reel estate advertising $125,000
Century 21
in lhls newspaper is
Runyan Assocaites Tim
sul:lji!Ct tO the Federal
FairHousing Act of 1968 Runyan Broker
which makes It illegal to
2 Mobile Home lot for rent
advertise "any
preference,limitation or t near V1nton, and 1 on
Georges Creek Rd. Call
dlscrlmlnalion based on
r~e. color, religion, sex
1740)441·1111 '
famillll atatus or na"llonal
4acre lot for sale (304)743origin , or any intention to
make any such
8323
preference, limitation or
discrimination .~
Several 5-tacre lots inGallia
Co.Morgan Twp.Morgan Ln.
This newapaper will not
$3000facre. SOme lots have
knowlngl_y accept
septic permits lor 06 and
•dvertlsements for reel pnor specs.669·0143
ntate which Is In
violation ol the lew. Our
Trailer lot of Rent in Lesage
readers are hereby
304·576·2642
informed ttl•t all
dwellings advertised In
this newspaper 1111
av•ll•ble on an eq~o~el
opportunity basel.
"::::::::::::::~ Need to sell your t)ome?
·Late on payments, divorce,
One acre along At 7 below iob .transfer or a death? 1
t-toliday Innin Kanauga, OH. can buy your home. All cash
Commercial
property. and quick closing. 740-416'
(740)446·4782
3130.
•

Gl
=

1 ,---"""'!---.,

1

I

t

I

�&lt;

..

'
Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

It

1,1 ' I I I"'

Nice 2BR , 2B A. mobile
home. CIA, private lot in
Gallipolis. $450/mo. ¥Call
S158/mol Buy 4bd horne 645· 7765 aher 6pm please.
HUD ! 5% dn, 20yrs @ 6%.
For listings 800·559-41 09 Nice. Clean, 2BR, 4 mi from
Holzers. $375/mo +sec.
x1709
- - - - - - - - deposit &amp; Ref . No _Pets,
2 BR house - Vinton Ave - (740)446-6865, (74013791

$375/mo • sec.dep. No pets. _
29:::2~3. -:---.;..--,

~r

Gal 446-3644

APAK1111L'TS

~ Mi~~t~ tr~1~;_n _ ~8~ 8~~~ ~--oill'OR
iiiiiREiiiii~
--,J
$450/mo. No pets. 446-3292

1 and 2 bedroom apart ·

2br House. large l iving
Room ~&amp; Kitchen. Garage tor
storage. no Yard, no Pets,
S300!deposit S300tmomn
304-882-3652

ments, furnished and unlur nished. and houses · in
PomerOy and Middleport,
security deposit required, no
pets. 740-992·2218.

3

1 BR Apt. WID hookups

Bedroom Hou se m
Syracuse. $500/month +
deposit No Pels. (304 )6755332 weekends 740-59 1·
0265 '

Announcements .

HUD HOMES! 4 bedroom
onty S199/mo. 3 bedroom.
$203/mo. More 1-4bed
homes available. 5% dn, 20
yrs @ 8%. For listings 800A HIDDEN TREASURE!
559-4109 ext. Ft44.
L.aure 1
ommons
Large 4 ~room house at Apartments. Largest in the
86 Garfield, $575/mo plus area! Beautifully renovated
deposit &amp; utilities. (740)446throughout induding brand
_2515
. h
b h
new k1tc en and
at .
Lar ~ 4 •~room house In Starting at $405. Call todayl
•- ~
7 3344
Pomeroy, veiy clean, newly "(304=)c:2"3'-'- = ' - - - - remodeled, new cabinets, Apartment lor rent , 1-2
new carpet, $735 per month:' Bdrm., remodeled, new ca r(740)949-2303
pel , stove &amp; frig., water,
sewer. trash pd. Middleport
Mictjleport,3bdrm,basement
$425
.00. No pets. Ref.
(full),fenced yard,neighbor_1·red 740 843-5264
hood good,$550 plus ut. &amp; requ
·
·
dep. ,ref.req., 740·843•5264· llaautHul A""'
,.-.. at
Eetat•. 52 Westwood
Pomeroy, 2 or 3 BA.,
Naylers Run/Condor, No Drive.- from $365 to $560.
740-446-2568.
Equal
pets, yards. s/r; WID hook·
. Th"
Housing 0 pportunlty.
IS
up. References .. Call 992institution is an . Equal
6886.
Opportunity Provider and

Apts. at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
Middleport, from $327 to
$592. 740-992-5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is ·ao Equal
Opportunity Provider and
Employer.

Joeuon

Bob Gilmore
Passed away
years ago
May 9, 1999

r

r

j

1..,------r

Property

Wilhin walking distance of outlet
stores
$265/pe rson

Trailers.

IVISlOCK

Discount

740-367-0266/

1998 Chevy Astra Van,

l·S00-950-3359

72,500 miles, has electric
wheelChair lift, $6,200, after

30 Yr.;. Exp. Ins.

Owner Ronnie Jon es
Free Estimates
I I \\ I-,

AM/FM Radio w/Cassette
TV wNCA, towing package,
125,100 miles. $6200 . .
(740)367-0622

ll1\ll(lll
l l l \ ' I H l l f l ()\

I

14)4 ~o~·~cr""
~
U£"&gt;

row SALJ:

------740-~92-6971
2001 HO ~eritage Softail
Insured
Classic. Mint condition, low
Free Estimate
mileage. Call after · 5pm , ':======~
740-441-9757
1
Wise Concrete
2003 V-Star Classic 1100
All t
Cruiser, like New, 6,000
ypes Of concre 1e
miles. Windshield , Bags &amp;
Owner- Rick Wise
extras. $6,000. (740)446740-992-5929
9278

R&gt;R ALE

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

1998 18' Stratos, 150HP

s

--------- _
82_0_
4 __ _ _ __

--,-------

~e~eu~;~d~ 78~~ ~~~~~ ~n

25 -

740-94~2217

1962

20'x40'
Boathouse
at
Gallipolis
Boat
Club,
$14,000; 1994 21' Marada
305 Chev, f1l hrs, $6500.

r11

I
I

I

r,

L,--=iiiliiiiiiiENfiiiiiott_.!
0% Financing- 36 Mo s.

1997 ·Ford XL F150 Reg . 1983 30' RV, 45,000 miles,
Cab 6cyl, 5 speed 4x4, Bft Sacrifice due to health,
bed $4,500 304 _.773-6063
$8,000. (740)256-6395 or
(304)544·0101 .
97 Dodge 1500 ext cab, ::_:__:;__:_:__ _ __
auto/ai r, 4wo Short ·Bed , 23ft , 2004 KZ Coyote new
31 8, $5800 Exc. Cond; 1981 condltl,en, refrlg , stove &amp;
Dodge 4wo 318 4spd ,· oven, microwave, furnace,
$2200 Super Swampers . air conditionlrig, water
{740)256 •6543
heater &amp; pump, king foldout
on front, lull foldout on each
Boom
Truck
Pitman side, CO surround · sound,
Uni/Oyne forty foot bo om Six sleeps 10, $12,000 call 304·
ton hydrau lic crane on a 2 675-7934
1/2 ton steel deck Ford Truck _:_:_ _ _ _ _ __
Camping Site for rent on
304 .675. 5096
'-'--:-:c--::--c~=-:- river, lull hook-up. ~92·
Red 1998 Ford F1 M Tr!on 5956
_ l engine
XLT,
·

(304)

675 · 4340 , Ext 1492
No refunds

Gladly accept cash , c heck, c redil
· cards and m o ney orders

Garages

Roofing

Vinyl Siding

New Construction
R esidential

v8
46
129 ,000 miles. Cargo Cover

Automatic, power windows &amp;
locks $6.500 30 4·8B2-3333

i

iftii10;;;;;;;;;~H~o;;;M;;;E;;;~

Commercial

740-985-4141 Office
740-416-1834

BARNEY
'

NOPE !! TMEY

Hardwood calneirJ And Furniture

Hubbard's Oreenhouse
Syracuse, Ohio

OPEN FOR SEASON!
Flats $7.50
1O"Hanglng Baskets $5.50..$6.50
4" Pots $1.25·$1.49
Shrubs·$2.95-$6.95
Open M·Saturday 10..5
Closed Sunday "That's Gods Day"

'Yoo~~:.l-\oroscoP€.:&gt;~'&lt;~ rw.-~
. t&lt;\!SfOII:.Illi-\E:. W!U.., Pl.N.U€.
'(OU P..U. t&gt;l&gt;.'( TOt»-'(,Ut-&lt;T!L

1-866·855-8702.

Motocross Race
Sat. May 12th 2007
6:00PM
Mason County
FairgroundsAt 62 N. Pl. Pleasant, WV
(Practice 3:30 PM)

675-5463
I

P"'(OU MEAA, M'( rOR~WILL"'
Q~NGE. FOii:. me: &amp;.ml:, ~?

P"NQ, mw YOU&lt;At-.!C.010.5LU:~

mE.R !&gt;U~E.I !

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal
* Prompt and Q ualiiy
Work
* Reasonable Rates

r CI'.N'T ENJOY

*Experie'nced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanl ey @
'

740-742-2293

Please leave rnessa e

We Deliver To You!
PEANUTS
019~

1}.?

z . ~~(&amp;~

•
.

---=. .
SUNSHINE CLUB

Fertilizer and

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Additions 1:
Remodeling
New Garages
E~tricel &amp;

Plumbing

Rooting 1: Gutter•
VInyl Siding 1: Painting
Pll:lo and Porch Decks

YOUR
BUSINESS

wv 036725

V C YOUNG Ill
992-6215

IN THE

Pom('fOY Ohru
?1 lc.Jr; ltX&lt;ll Exp~:rrence

CLASSIFIEDS

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
· Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

740-367·0536

'GARFIELD

'IAAAAAAHH!!

................
• •1

. . . . . . . . .12:11..

Savings
Company,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
reserves lhe right to
bid at lhls sale, and to
wlt~draw the above
collaleral prior to sale.
Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings
' Company resarves lhe
rlghl to rejecl any or all
bids.submitted.
The above described
collateral will be sold
" as Is-where Ia", with
no
expressed
or
Implied
warranly
given.
For further lnformalion, or tor an appolnl-.
ment lo lnapecl colla1·
eral , prior to sale dale
contacl Cyndle, Ken,
or Randy at 992-2136.
8, 9 , 10

·ts)

Pass

J)ass

Pass

¥ J

~and

Answer to Previous Puzzle

I

curve •

harsh, as a 40 Fountain In
voice
Rome
6 Almond
42 Menacing
confection
sound
11 Polar show 43 On the 13 Debated
vlve
14 Turned
44 Depot info
down
46· Ski slope
15 Gets on the
bumps
trciin
49 Brand
16 Tolstoy 's
names
name
53 Ova l-nest
17 Che stnut
builder
hull
54 Boom box
. 18 Chinese
sound
zodiac
55 Herd
animal
orphan
21 Bakery pur· 56 Moved
chase
cautiously
23 Faultfinder
26 Make a
DOWN

10 Newspaper
execs
40
12 Makes pretty
13 ··Fernando" 41
band
43
18 End a layoff 45
19 Fight
· 46
locates
47

wrong move
27 Moror lodge
28 Hemp product
29 Fortune
recipient
31 Cable channel
32 Machu
Plcchu
founder
33 Whole

36

2 Weep over
3 Tall vase
wrapping

S Giveaway

6
7

Gaiher leaves

37 PC

22 Guarantee
23 Pushing
ahead
24 Materialize

4 Food

acronym

stint
Unit of
energy
51 Majors or

50

25 Grammar

Boastful
Thickening
agent

28
30

8 Cal~omia 's
Big - ·
9 A Kennedy

34
35

Jlllrrot
Ball-gown
fabric
Hill1op
Je ne saisSacked out
J960s style

lncan
treasure
48 Musician's

20 Practical
jokes

Traipse
about

2-2 or 3-1, so spend plenly of time thinkIng about an unlriendly 4-0 break.
If East has all four spades, you will lose
two frump tr icks. But if We~ has all four;
you can pick 1hem up by keeping
dummy's queen and king to possess capture - Wesrs nine and 10. At trd&lt;
two, lead the spade jack from your hand.
West will win wilh his ace and East will
discard. Lei's suppose Wesl exis with a
heart Ia dummy's queen. Play a diamond

Remick

52

class
Ub. section
-Dawn
Chong
Whodunils
Ape or

·

Put down
turf

Astro-:Graph
...... 'lllrthdar:

/

)

sons from personal ellperiences yot.J've
learned In the past can be expertly
applied in ways to hfi!lp you avoid a num·
ber of big problems you might otherwise
have.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -Take care
not to introduce to pics that are extremely controversial in your convBrsations
with friends. An issue you absentmindedly inject could lead to a healed argument.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- Make cer,tain all objectives are clearly defined.and
understood when it comes to a critical
joint arrang.emenl. Unfortunately, misunderstandings aren't apt to be oorrectabte
at thiS time.
CANCE R (June _
21:July 22) - . Evan·
!hough you might: feel e"xlrem ely lndustri·
ous. chances are an excessive workload
would cause mistakes and errors to
occur. Focus on quality of performance,
· not quantity.
.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Subdue inclinations to be careless about taking g~m ­
bles on people or things about which you
know very liHie. If you, back the wrong
horse, you could lose much more than
mere mon ey.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Try to avoid
all dom estic disagreements, because
even a small squabble could mu shroom
into something uncontrollable. producin ~
a huge chain reaction with the rest of the
clan .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - 11 you're
unst.Jre about how to do something your·
self, be patient and walt until expert help
is available. There·s a strong chance you
coUld create a big complication ditficUt
to correct.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - It's per·
tectly OK to pamper yourself a bit. but
not to the point of being extravagant or
overindulgent. Going over the line could
be injurious to your pocketbook and/or

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Luis

by
campos
Celet:rity Ci~ CfYP10!11a115 eve oeitlld bomqwtifiOns by fatT,ous people. pasl ana Plesent
, Each Idler 111 the "clpller Slands !()! another.
•
Today'¥ cJue: Iequals G

" YNYV

EWC

CRV

HYNAK

RNA

CN

NP

AVDO · EPVL
TNYXVKK

BTHYNAOVLIV

PIYIIIT.. PIICISM
GRIZZWELLS
~·s "rn\S A~E50ME ~ ®'&lt; '"M'(

· .a.A~, eur l'~E i£ACI.IE~ tx&gt;t'i*\'1

VPPNP . " - EVYFBJSY

B XBWOC

XPBYHDSY

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' If matters go badly now, they will not always do
so ." - Horace
:There is nothing permanent except change.' - Heraclitus

UMI
~~=' S~\\cl\lJ-~t,trs·
CUY L i O I U H - - - - -

WOIO

- - . . . . - - - lilto4 ~

tho

0 four

RfOrronQe lone" of
SC111411bltd words be.
I"" to form lovr ~mple words.

' AVOJIL

A s os

...

r

c

.~~-r--,rr'"T"-1 ~
L._ ._

_.__.___.__.

"You should always

~

insti ncts,"

I
III 0

trust your

the college professor
"F.ven

leclured. Tbe".hc added,

REV tl 0 0

1 Ie

iflhm is ···-··--.''

Compl.••• ,lhe diUckl,• Qvote~
by l1 1l!ng tn rhc mrutng woras
1-...L.-'--'--"-""-:,~ y&lt;W do•o lop l rom 11ep No, 3 below,

7

.

_

_

.

f t PiiNT NUMBERED .

'::1 LHTERS IN SQUARES

· Nipper -

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Opaque -

Roncl1 - Yachl -

s- a- o 7
1-lAl'PY

uwhcn someone docs something good." gra~nps
infonned ntc, "applaud, you will make two people
· HAPPY ."

ARLO &amp; JANIS
,t, l.AfWlTIW

MATE iJOitCf.!!

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0 ec. 21) Being focused on only your own sell·
interests could cause you to be egotisti·
cal and selfi sh to the point where others
will totally reject you. This type of behavior is clearly unacceptable.
CAPRI CORN {Dec . 22-Jan. 19) •
Normally, you're p~etty good at keeping
confidential that which has been asked
of you , but you might knowingly. discuss
a matter with .others that you realiz:ect
·shouldn't De revealed.
AQUARIU S {Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- 1t might
· not serve your best interest to request a
lavor tram someone you don't know too
welt. This person could demand a return
that could border on being illegal or Illadvised.
PISC:::ES (Feb. 20-March · 20) Everything you do will be put under a
microscope and viewed by critical eyes,
so be particularly diligent of your behav·
lor when someon_
e you'd Uke to. impress
Ia arotJnd .
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) - Because
you may see It as the only way to go, you
could makft change s that .will give you
problems of your own maklng.:Thlnga are
tough enough without sawing Off your
OW!;\ limb.

SOUPTONUTZ

l\'KE.I\1~ ~AU'i£
~fJA'f5

~~ \lA~ ~
ATIIlU~

•

JBY

RSJKVox · sy

heal1h .

Manley's
Recycling

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is . . hereby
given lhat on Saturday,
May 121 2007 lal 10:00
a.m ., a public sale wlll
be held al 211 W.
Second St, Pomeroy,
Ohio. The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company -is selling lor
cash In hand or certl·
fled check lhe followlng collateral :
2002
GMC
Envoy
1GKDT13S622.1 70936
2000 Pontiac Grand
A
M
1G2NF52T4YMn2070
1999 Ford F350 Diesel
1FTSX31F2XED45701
1999 Ponllac Grand
AM
, SE
1G2NE12TOXMn7828
The Farmers Bank and

6•

Thursday, May 10, 2007
By Bernice Bede Oaol
Meinory will be your best ally. Hard les-

Allf'I'T&gt;l iNG ANYMORE ,
8ECAU$E ALL I CNJ
THIIIII&lt;. ABOUT ts SEIN&amp;
NEAT At.ID TIDY ALL
THE Tt t1 E '

* In su red

~~

Hrs.

4•
5•

G

BIG NATE

Wide Variety of

Cell 24
(740) 4460870, · Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

Pass
Pass

cash the spade king, and claim.

Mushroom Compost
$35 A Scoop
T-Post 6ft. $3.29

FOR SALE

I•
4 NT

Pass
Pass
Pass

ace, linesse dummy's spade seven ,

r--~--~---,

BASEMENT . ·
WATERPROOFING
99 Jeep Wrangler, auto, Unconditional lifetime guar95000 miles. $5900 740- antee. Local references fur·
446·6865
nished. Established 1975.

~

East

1•

fa your king and lead a spade. West will
probably put in his nine, so take the trick
wilh dummy's queen, play a club to your

LIMITED SEATS!

Freedom from Smoking
Classes begin
Monday, M~y 14 in
Gallipolis and Pomeroy
'
to reg1ster,'
call '446-5940
or toll-free at

!!

WW....t~Joal&gt;ermtekaaMAitr)'-

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

~

North

Glasgow no
39 Oongerous

promises lour-card spade support, the
values for game and at most a singleton
club. South, whose hand has suddenly
improved, uses Roman Key Card
Blackwood . North shows 1he trump
queen and two key cards (ooe ace and
\he trump king, or two aces).
There are 12 clear tricks: four spades,
three hearts, toor diamonds and one
club. You only have to draw trumps. That
will not be a problem ij lhey are ·splitting

QUIT

TRUSTIN'

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

IMPROVEMENTS

Wesl

1

38

Chinese philosopher Lao1lu wrote, "To
have lillie is fa possess .To have plenty is
lobe perplexed."
In this deal, North and South possess
plenty of high cards, I&gt;J1 many players
would feel perplexed when they failed to
bring home such an easy looking sixspade confrect.
What would be your line after West leads
lhe heart jad&lt; to your ace?
The auct ion has a· modern texture.
North's lour-club rebid is a splinler. If

Interior Remodeling

&amp;

~ ..
~~e)PI:"f"'l'!!'ijP.4!ftl:•
..

Must be 21 y ears of age
PVH Community R elations,

Additions

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homelill System
• Helios System

::...c=:..:..c==---::c--

K 1

Another puzzling
deal puzzle

V

lfr-1:::0:--"!.,~ARM---.,

. J .B643

Opening -l ead :

St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
Mike W. Marcum, Owner

Stop in at
ROBERT
participating
BISSEll
Pomeroy
Merchants
for our
Mother's
Day Gift
140·992·1671 Basket
Giveaway

B ased on double occupancy
To make rese r~ations please call ,

IUCIIIII CallllruciiDD and
·Gueral Caatractiag

ce•mucn••

ai

1 087 ~3

Soulh

South

ci7_4_0'-)4_41_-9_3-,72
_ _~-

&amp;
black. $3200 _ 367 _02&lt;6 or _E xtpra_s_304_-_67~5~
335
3"""!-,
Vet checked &amp; first shots
Fl
parents on plemises $200. 645-7485
AA~~: .
740 -992-7473 ·
93 Oldsmob~e Cutlass $675
'--'--r...33U'rur..:ot
-------T
runs good, No Sunday Calls
CKC Jack Russell ,errier
_ _
304 593 31 56
Puppies. $125 each. 256· .-- :_::_::__::_::_=---::-- GM truck bumper. Brand
• New Homes
1652
For Sale 92 Eagle Talon new in box. 88·2000 .
• Garages
- - - - - - - - ' - - runs and looRs good with Brackets
&amp;
pads.
Yoric:ie Poo, tiny tea cup; good sticker $1,000 304- part#999863 , dealer price
• Complete
Chihuahuas ,
apple head; 675.-7474
$376, asking $225. 740-245Remodeling
Poodle, ti~ t~. quality lap - - - - - - ' - - "061:1~1-~--"""!-~
"' -,
Olds. 88 good co nd.,good
&amp;
babies. (740)645-6987
CAIIIPilRS
on gas, low milage,o ne
MUSICAL
owner loaded. Call after 5
M01UR HOMES
Stop &amp; Compare
INsrRUMENTS
.
o'clock-740-949-3059 .
..._oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_.l
03 Winnebago!Ad venture '-•••••-~
15
TRUCKS
36' loaded, low (lliles 304- ...
For sale, Wurlltzer Plano
FOR SALE
675-3049
and bench. 740-446-7903 or ..__ _iiiOiiiiiiii;.-" - - - - - - - -

8 5 " 3

.

D ea l~ r: North
Vulnerable: East -West

74()..9~2-5776

CKC Golden Ret.puppies. 99 BMW 5251, black on trolling motor, trailer

740·441 ·7098

.. Q J 6 2

•

. John Boat. Outboard motor, ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; : ;

i:ro

... K 9 7

•

" A

740-416-1698 ·

Hill's Self
Bo•·JS
"' &amp; M01URS I
Storage
S

·

East

HAo.l E Tb SHt.\IT.'

15 yrs. E~t . Fn.-e Es1imates

Honda Trail 70 Rep. New
.Chrr·stmas 04. 185 miles,
red, 4SP, Elec start, titled,
street legal, ~ean. rarely off
road. $750.740-245·0611

Ii

bOth for $450. They are still 1993 Camara. needs wort .
studs, partially broken . 740- $500. 740-367-7312
388 -8845
2006 Hyundai Elantra. 6000;
7,000 nlites, $13 ,_
2007
AKC Boston Terrier Pups.
Uncotn
Navigator, 5,000
1ak.•ng dep ·1o hold . paren1s miles,
55 ,000;
2007
on pram. with pedigree. vet
chkd, shots, wormed. 740 _ Thoroughbred by Palomino
388-9325
camper, $25,000. (740)441-

l:

-

r:T.r--':-"--~-.,
AlJ[(I;

GI1:&amp;.1CHft-J, Pltlo.S~ "TUR"-1 'T\.lE;
'/oLVNlt. BACK IJP' ~o\J KNOV&gt;.l

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

David Lewis .

ro'""'"

R:1/, YOU AT JC PE.VNEV lt1AT I
1\\INK WO\JLV L~OK MUCH BeTift&lt;

All Types Of ,
Concrete Work

26 Years Experience

·

~ESltRD~Y 1 FO\JN\l A SW&amp;AlbR r-:~=~~~~~-,

..

WPsl
• A 10 9 2
Y JI097 .
• 9 6

A A 1 O. ·R !i 4

and Replacement

12 yr. old Missouri Fox after market parts. $4500
Trotter geldi ng, stands 15 OBO (740)446·4162

r

MONTY

\-lOlA/

Concrete Removal

L,..,;oiii~iiiii--r

.04 Hoflda 4SO-R set 4 racing

112 ha nds, $1,000; 6 yr. -'d
VI
Missouri Fox Troner, gelclng,
stands 15 hands, $900; call
Danny after 5pm, (740)949·
9912 ·
------ck-18 month old bla
Reg.
Angus Bull for sale cau
_
740
_
446 9856

.. 3

Truck
Full insured
Senior Citize n

5pm, (740)368-0281 or 3047'73-5079

I

L

" K Q 6 2
• A Q J4

• Top • Remova l
• Trim • Stump

Load maK· Astro Van, AJC, PIS, P~.

I

~~

"'--

2 sets of plastic loaded with

s

lj!'l:loi:""~H:"'OIJSiiliOUJ--~

....... •Frw £dmltlol
140-441...,
RidtJol wi410C Dw:w

Livestock 1999 Chevrolet Conversion

Carmichael
(740)446-2412

Prime commercial space for 2 Male Ponies for saie, 1 1i2
ur old. black with while face
rent at Springvalley Plaza. 7
is
Welsh Pinto, buff colored
Call645-2192.
male is Welsh Shetland.
Paid 1100 for both, win sell

Repos, Sli ght Damages,
No Reasonable Offer
Refused! 3lefl. 25'x36',
35x44. Call Today! Save
Thousands! 866-352-0469

&amp; Resort

and

Trailers·

.

ARCH STEEL

r

Duetz 4WO 6 cyl. diesel
tractor 'Model 10 06 $5800.
Case Tractor Model 530
$3500. 669-Q14&gt;

..__ _iiiittiiiii;._.l Wolfe Tenntng Bed 16 bulb ~::--~:-":"'--,
Commercial . building "For .,ike new" 2yrs old $1,000
HAY &amp;
(304)675-1783or (3041593GRAIN
1600
Rent"
square feet, off 3727 .
street parking. Great toea- •c~--"'='----,
tion! 749 Third Avenue in
fll...-.s
Oats for Feed or Seed $3
Gallipolis.
Rani
$400/mo.
v
bushel , Composite
dirt $10
C W
(404)456
3802
K'"~
I
all ayne
-

NEW COMPANY

&amp; Beachfront

740-59().6()00

F~l
1
••--F.Ql!u&gt;MENritiiiiiittti.....

2 Bedrooms, C/A, 1 112 Stock. Gall Ron Evans, 1Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby 800-537-9528.
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
No Pets, Lease Plus'Security Deposit Required, NEW AND USED STEEL
(740)387-7006.
Steel Beams, Pipe •Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Twin Rivers Tower. is accept· Channel. Flat Bar. Steel
ing applications for waiting Grating
For
Drains,
list for Hud·subsized, 1· br, Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;l
apartJT:Ient,lor
the Scrap Metals Open Monday,
elderly/disabled ca ll 675- Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
6679
Equal
Housing
Friday, sam-4:30pm. Closed
~Opport:Zio-u-nity'"':::---~ Thursday, Satwday &amp;

HUGE SAVINGS ON

Tropicana Casino

740-985-3831
iO

available now on John
Deere Z Trak Zero TUrns &amp;
5.99% FiKed Rate on John
Hanging baskets, bedding o~ere Gators carmicha el
plants, potted plants, wave Equipment (740)446-241 2.
petunias. Also Pomeranian - -- -- - - - P uppies. Closed .May 17 and
Yoders 8N Ford Tractor, excellent
Sundays.
oondition. $2850. 740-379Greenhouse, 10 mites west 2923 or 740 _446_6865
of Gallipolis on S. R.14 t
======,--._,~

Boardwalk

Athens

Hors~

Sunday. (740)44~7:J:l0

~Trw C..

To, • Trim • Hauling •Stump
Orinding • 81.1CU1 Truck

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

K Q 7 5

·•

Grinding • Bucket

Chester

Kiefer Built~ Valley -Bison·

SPACE
FOR RtNr

Service

G1Uipona, OH 45131

"Ahead In Service"

Sadly Missed
By Wife Jean
Kids, a11d
Gramlkids

0 ~·09-&lt;17

North
Johnson's Tree

SHADE RIVER
AG SERVICE

Of

GoOseneck. Dumps. &amp;
JET
Utility- Aluma Aluminum
Tara.
Townhouse
AERATION MOTORS
Trallerl- B&amp;W Gooseneck
Apar1ments, Very Spacious. Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Hitches- Trailer
Parts.

Atlantic CitY
Getaway!

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Athens Store Loc_
a ton
At. Rt. 50 3 miles East of
Athe111s next to LUV Mobile
Homes

In l..o•ing
Memory

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

FREE FOOD

New Haven. 1 Br., furnished,
no pets, dep.&amp;references,
740-992-0165.

r

May 24, 2007 to May 26, 2007

Announcements

5:30pm - 8:00pm

_37_36
_ _ _ _ _ __
New 2BR apartments.
Washer/dryer
hookup,
stove/refrigerator included.
Also. units on SR. 160. Pets
Welcome' (740)44 1-Qt 94.

Taking applications for 3BA · Employer.
...- . ,
remodeled house. No pets. CONVENIENTLY LOCATGoooi
$4 I
$
25 mo. 300/dep. 446- ED 1 AFFORDABLE!
..,
361J
Town house
apartments,
small houses FOR Electric ranQe 25x30. $50 .
Very nice home for rent in and/or
REN T Call (740)441-1111 - 446-4426
Midd. 2 Br., 1 bath, sun room,
7 rooms total , garage &amp; tor appl(catioo &amp; infOfmation. - - - - - - - Used Furniture store, 130
basement. Avai lable, Call For Rent 1 BR $325 month Bulavitte Pike, Gallipolis.
740-992-9784.
Tracy's Apartments 3314 La rge selection of everyFrarlklin
Avenu8
Point
H
B ·
t
thing. ome- us1ness or
Pleasant , WV
304-675- sale. 740-446-4782
1537 Background Check ~:!!'~~~....~~.,
Required
MlscEuANEous
2 bedroom Trailer in ::::::::::_:.:______
MEROIANDISE
Frenchtown
Apartments, __
,
Gallipolis Ferry $350 rent. 727 41 h Ave, Gall~rvt.tts, Is
d~sit
No
Pets
304"""'
$350
.
-•·
575.7995
now accep1·mg appr1caHons 1993 250 XLT truck, king
for waiting list for 1 bedroom, cab; 1993 Buick; (ifle, water
2BR . 1 Bath, CIA, dishwash- USDA . Rural Development, pump, wo"odburner, metal
er, new carpet, 1624 Subsidized apartment lor detector, Mason, 614-226Chatham Ave , Gallipolis, elderly and handicapped. 9966
Ohio (740)208-7861 or 740-446-4652 .
Equal
. , """ 1 .ty
38x24 Oval Pool with deckHou~na
(740)446-4234
v ""or um .
ing. Pool sits · down inside
Gatlia
Manor deck, $1500. (740)446-7425
3 BA, 2 BA, Ooublewide, No
Apartments, 138
Pets.
$475/mo.
$475
Buhl Morton Rd. Above ground swi mming
deposit. Close to AVHS.
Gallipolis, is now pool , 18ft round-52in deep.
(740)367-7025.
accepting applications tor 3yrs old.· Buyer must take
Nice 2 BR mobile home. waiting list for 1 bedroom down. Could use a new liner.
AJC. Located at Johnson HUD, subsidized apartment Comes with all accessories
Mobile Home Park . 446- for elderly and handicapped . and treated 8x10 deck.
2003
740-446-4652.
Asking $475. Call 740-388 8845
- - - - -- - For sale/Best offers: overstuffed chair, 2 lamps, and
tables,
oak
doors,
va nitY/si nk, .ab tounger.
palates machine. Call 9924521

The Daily Sentinel• Page 87

Livestock Show Cliriic
Tuesday May 15th

Gracious li\ling. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments . in Middleport.
From $0-$592. Call 740992-5064 . Equal Housing
Opportunities.
Equal
Opportunity Employer
- - - -- - - Middleport 1 or 2 Br. apts.,
no pels, d~p. &amp; ref., 9920165

r

www.mydailysentinel.com

.........

B~room

Modern 1 BA Apt. Call 446.,

attached garage. no pets. 740· 441 ·0596
partial furnished, $375 mo. 2 bedrooms. 11v1ng roon, k~cnen.
plus deposit. (740)992-7401 1 bath. apartment have central
311 Fum1shed with couch. cham&gt;.
Attention!
washer, dryer, stove, miCrowave,
Local company offering MNO beds, dimiog table and chairs
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- S400 deposit, $450 a month call
304-882-2 523 leave a message
gams for you to buy your and number it oot al home
home instead of renting
3 and 4 room furnished apts.
• t 00% financing
. * Less than perfect credit clean WfO hookup. No pets.
accepted
Ref. and deposit required .
'
• Payment co uld be the 740-446-1519.
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators.
(740)387-0000

Wednesday, May 9, 2007
ALLEYOOP

Altendan 4-B 8 FFA

G.I'ICioUI Living 1 and 2

First Mon rent $175 plus - - - - : : -- - - - , - - :
dep. 740-44 t -9668 or 740- Middleport Beech Straat. 2
339·0362.
Br., furnished apt. , utiNties
paid, no pets. dep. &amp; ref.,
1 AM. effec. apt . Furn. AU
992-0165.
-3 - bed
- roo
_ m_,- D
- --w-id_e_
w-l
th utilitieSpaid. S300Jmo -+ dep

c

Wednesday, May 9_,2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

,·,

�&lt;

..

'
Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

It

1,1 ' I I I"'

Nice 2BR , 2B A. mobile
home. CIA, private lot in
Gallipolis. $450/mo. ¥Call
S158/mol Buy 4bd horne 645· 7765 aher 6pm please.
HUD ! 5% dn, 20yrs @ 6%.
For listings 800·559-41 09 Nice. Clean, 2BR, 4 mi from
Holzers. $375/mo +sec.
x1709
- - - - - - - - deposit &amp; Ref . No _Pets,
2 BR house - Vinton Ave - (740)446-6865, (74013791

$375/mo • sec.dep. No pets. _
29:::2~3. -:---.;..--,

~r

Gal 446-3644

APAK1111L'TS

~ Mi~~t~ tr~1~;_n _ ~8~ 8~~~ ~--oill'OR
iiiiiREiiiii~
--,J
$450/mo. No pets. 446-3292

1 and 2 bedroom apart ·

2br House. large l iving
Room ~&amp; Kitchen. Garage tor
storage. no Yard, no Pets,
S300!deposit S300tmomn
304-882-3652

ments, furnished and unlur nished. and houses · in
PomerOy and Middleport,
security deposit required, no
pets. 740-992·2218.

3

1 BR Apt. WID hookups

Bedroom Hou se m
Syracuse. $500/month +
deposit No Pels. (304 )6755332 weekends 740-59 1·
0265 '

Announcements .

HUD HOMES! 4 bedroom
onty S199/mo. 3 bedroom.
$203/mo. More 1-4bed
homes available. 5% dn, 20
yrs @ 8%. For listings 800A HIDDEN TREASURE!
559-4109 ext. Ft44.
L.aure 1
ommons
Large 4 ~room house at Apartments. Largest in the
86 Garfield, $575/mo plus area! Beautifully renovated
deposit &amp; utilities. (740)446throughout induding brand
_2515
. h
b h
new k1tc en and
at .
Lar ~ 4 •~room house In Starting at $405. Call todayl
•- ~
7 3344
Pomeroy, veiy clean, newly "(304=)c:2"3'-'- = ' - - - - remodeled, new cabinets, Apartment lor rent , 1-2
new carpet, $735 per month:' Bdrm., remodeled, new ca r(740)949-2303
pel , stove &amp; frig., water,
sewer. trash pd. Middleport
Mictjleport,3bdrm,basement
$425
.00. No pets. Ref.
(full),fenced yard,neighbor_1·red 740 843-5264
hood good,$550 plus ut. &amp; requ
·
·
dep. ,ref.req., 740·843•5264· llaautHul A""'
,.-.. at
Eetat•. 52 Westwood
Pomeroy, 2 or 3 BA.,
Naylers Run/Condor, No Drive.- from $365 to $560.
740-446-2568.
Equal
pets, yards. s/r; WID hook·
. Th"
Housing 0 pportunlty.
IS
up. References .. Call 992institution is an . Equal
6886.
Opportunity Provider and

Apts. at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
Middleport, from $327 to
$592. 740-992-5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is ·ao Equal
Opportunity Provider and
Employer.

Joeuon

Bob Gilmore
Passed away
years ago
May 9, 1999

r

r

j

1..,------r

Property

Wilhin walking distance of outlet
stores
$265/pe rson

Trailers.

IVISlOCK

Discount

740-367-0266/

1998 Chevy Astra Van,

l·S00-950-3359

72,500 miles, has electric
wheelChair lift, $6,200, after

30 Yr.;. Exp. Ins.

Owner Ronnie Jon es
Free Estimates
I I \\ I-,

AM/FM Radio w/Cassette
TV wNCA, towing package,
125,100 miles. $6200 . .
(740)367-0622

ll1\ll(lll
l l l \ ' I H l l f l ()\

I

14)4 ~o~·~cr""
~
U£"&gt;

row SALJ:

------740-~92-6971
2001 HO ~eritage Softail
Insured
Classic. Mint condition, low
Free Estimate
mileage. Call after · 5pm , ':======~
740-441-9757
1
Wise Concrete
2003 V-Star Classic 1100
All t
Cruiser, like New, 6,000
ypes Of concre 1e
miles. Windshield , Bags &amp;
Owner- Rick Wise
extras. $6,000. (740)446740-992-5929
9278

R&gt;R ALE

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

1998 18' Stratos, 150HP

s

--------- _
82_0_
4 __ _ _ __

--,-------

~e~eu~;~d~ 78~~ ~~~~~ ~n

25 -

740-94~2217

1962

20'x40'
Boathouse
at
Gallipolis
Boat
Club,
$14,000; 1994 21' Marada
305 Chev, f1l hrs, $6500.

r11

I
I

I

r,

L,--=iiiliiiiiiiENfiiiiiott_.!
0% Financing- 36 Mo s.

1997 ·Ford XL F150 Reg . 1983 30' RV, 45,000 miles,
Cab 6cyl, 5 speed 4x4, Bft Sacrifice due to health,
bed $4,500 304 _.773-6063
$8,000. (740)256-6395 or
(304)544·0101 .
97 Dodge 1500 ext cab, ::_:__:;__:_:__ _ __
auto/ai r, 4wo Short ·Bed , 23ft , 2004 KZ Coyote new
31 8, $5800 Exc. Cond; 1981 condltl,en, refrlg , stove &amp;
Dodge 4wo 318 4spd ,· oven, microwave, furnace,
$2200 Super Swampers . air conditionlrig, water
{740)256 •6543
heater &amp; pump, king foldout
on front, lull foldout on each
Boom
Truck
Pitman side, CO surround · sound,
Uni/Oyne forty foot bo om Six sleeps 10, $12,000 call 304·
ton hydrau lic crane on a 2 675-7934
1/2 ton steel deck Ford Truck _:_:_ _ _ _ _ __
Camping Site for rent on
304 .675. 5096
'-'--:-:c--::--c~=-:- river, lull hook-up. ~92·
Red 1998 Ford F1 M Tr!on 5956
_ l engine
XLT,
·

(304)

675 · 4340 , Ext 1492
No refunds

Gladly accept cash , c heck, c redil
· cards and m o ney orders

Garages

Roofing

Vinyl Siding

New Construction
R esidential

v8
46
129 ,000 miles. Cargo Cover

Automatic, power windows &amp;
locks $6.500 30 4·8B2-3333

i

iftii10;;;;;;;;;~H~o;;;M;;;E;;;~

Commercial

740-985-4141 Office
740-416-1834

BARNEY
'

NOPE !! TMEY

Hardwood calneirJ And Furniture

Hubbard's Oreenhouse
Syracuse, Ohio

OPEN FOR SEASON!
Flats $7.50
1O"Hanglng Baskets $5.50..$6.50
4" Pots $1.25·$1.49
Shrubs·$2.95-$6.95
Open M·Saturday 10..5
Closed Sunday "That's Gods Day"

'Yoo~~:.l-\oroscoP€.:&gt;~'&lt;~ rw.-~
. t&lt;\!SfOII:.Illi-\E:. W!U.., Pl.N.U€.
'(OU P..U. t&gt;l&gt;.'( TOt»-'(,Ut-&lt;T!L

1-866·855-8702.

Motocross Race
Sat. May 12th 2007
6:00PM
Mason County
FairgroundsAt 62 N. Pl. Pleasant, WV
(Practice 3:30 PM)

675-5463
I

P"'(OU MEAA, M'( rOR~WILL"'
Q~NGE. FOii:. me: &amp;.ml:, ~?

P"NQ, mw YOU&lt;At-.!C.010.5LU:~

mE.R !&gt;U~E.I !

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal
* Prompt and Q ualiiy
Work
* Reasonable Rates

r CI'.N'T ENJOY

*Experie'nced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanl ey @
'

740-742-2293

Please leave rnessa e

We Deliver To You!
PEANUTS
019~

1}.?

z . ~~(&amp;~

•
.

---=. .
SUNSHINE CLUB

Fertilizer and

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Additions 1:
Remodeling
New Garages
E~tricel &amp;

Plumbing

Rooting 1: Gutter•
VInyl Siding 1: Painting
Pll:lo and Porch Decks

YOUR
BUSINESS

wv 036725

V C YOUNG Ill
992-6215

IN THE

Pom('fOY Ohru
?1 lc.Jr; ltX&lt;ll Exp~:rrence

CLASSIFIEDS

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
· Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

740-367·0536

'GARFIELD

'IAAAAAAHH!!

................
• •1

. . . . . . . . .12:11..

Savings
Company,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
reserves lhe right to
bid at lhls sale, and to
wlt~draw the above
collaleral prior to sale.
Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings
' Company resarves lhe
rlghl to rejecl any or all
bids.submitted.
The above described
collateral will be sold
" as Is-where Ia", with
no
expressed
or
Implied
warranly
given.
For further lnformalion, or tor an appolnl-.
ment lo lnapecl colla1·
eral , prior to sale dale
contacl Cyndle, Ken,
or Randy at 992-2136.
8, 9 , 10

·ts)

Pass

J)ass

Pass

¥ J

~and

Answer to Previous Puzzle

I

curve •

harsh, as a 40 Fountain In
voice
Rome
6 Almond
42 Menacing
confection
sound
11 Polar show 43 On the 13 Debated
vlve
14 Turned
44 Depot info
down
46· Ski slope
15 Gets on the
bumps
trciin
49 Brand
16 Tolstoy 's
names
name
53 Ova l-nest
17 Che stnut
builder
hull
54 Boom box
. 18 Chinese
sound
zodiac
55 Herd
animal
orphan
21 Bakery pur· 56 Moved
chase
cautiously
23 Faultfinder
26 Make a
DOWN

10 Newspaper
execs
40
12 Makes pretty
13 ··Fernando" 41
band
43
18 End a layoff 45
19 Fight
· 46
locates
47

wrong move
27 Moror lodge
28 Hemp product
29 Fortune
recipient
31 Cable channel
32 Machu
Plcchu
founder
33 Whole

36

2 Weep over
3 Tall vase
wrapping

S Giveaway

6
7

Gaiher leaves

37 PC

22 Guarantee
23 Pushing
ahead
24 Materialize

4 Food

acronym

stint
Unit of
energy
51 Majors or

50

25 Grammar

Boastful
Thickening
agent

28
30

8 Cal~omia 's
Big - ·
9 A Kennedy

34
35

Jlllrrot
Ball-gown
fabric
Hill1op
Je ne saisSacked out
J960s style

lncan
treasure
48 Musician's

20 Practical
jokes

Traipse
about

2-2 or 3-1, so spend plenly of time thinkIng about an unlriendly 4-0 break.
If East has all four spades, you will lose
two frump tr icks. But if We~ has all four;
you can pick 1hem up by keeping
dummy's queen and king to possess capture - Wesrs nine and 10. At trd&lt;
two, lead the spade jack from your hand.
West will win wilh his ace and East will
discard. Lei's suppose Wesl exis with a
heart Ia dummy's queen. Play a diamond

Remick

52

class
Ub. section
-Dawn
Chong
Whodunils
Ape or

·

Put down
turf

Astro-:Graph
...... 'lllrthdar:

/

)

sons from personal ellperiences yot.J've
learned In the past can be expertly
applied in ways to hfi!lp you avoid a num·
ber of big problems you might otherwise
have.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -Take care
not to introduce to pics that are extremely controversial in your convBrsations
with friends. An issue you absentmindedly inject could lead to a healed argument.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- Make cer,tain all objectives are clearly defined.and
understood when it comes to a critical
joint arrang.emenl. Unfortunately, misunderstandings aren't apt to be oorrectabte
at thiS time.
CANCE R (June _
21:July 22) - . Evan·
!hough you might: feel e"xlrem ely lndustri·
ous. chances are an excessive workload
would cause mistakes and errors to
occur. Focus on quality of performance,
· not quantity.
.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Subdue inclinations to be careless about taking g~m ­
bles on people or things about which you
know very liHie. If you, back the wrong
horse, you could lose much more than
mere mon ey.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Try to avoid
all dom estic disagreements, because
even a small squabble could mu shroom
into something uncontrollable. producin ~
a huge chain reaction with the rest of the
clan .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - 11 you're
unst.Jre about how to do something your·
self, be patient and walt until expert help
is available. There·s a strong chance you
coUld create a big complication ditficUt
to correct.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - It's per·
tectly OK to pamper yourself a bit. but
not to the point of being extravagant or
overindulgent. Going over the line could
be injurious to your pocketbook and/or

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Luis

by
campos
Celet:rity Ci~ CfYP10!11a115 eve oeitlld bomqwtifiOns by fatT,ous people. pasl ana Plesent
, Each Idler 111 the "clpller Slands !()! another.
•
Today'¥ cJue: Iequals G

" YNYV

EWC

CRV

HYNAK

RNA

CN

NP

AVDO · EPVL
TNYXVKK

BTHYNAOVLIV

PIYIIIT.. PIICISM
GRIZZWELLS
~·s "rn\S A~E50ME ~ ®'&lt; '"M'(

· .a.A~, eur l'~E i£ACI.IE~ tx&gt;t'i*\'1

VPPNP . " - EVYFBJSY

B XBWOC

XPBYHDSY

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' If matters go badly now, they will not always do
so ." - Horace
:There is nothing permanent except change.' - Heraclitus

UMI
~~=' S~\\cl\lJ-~t,trs·
CUY L i O I U H - - - - -

WOIO

- - . . . . - - - lilto4 ~

tho

0 four

RfOrronQe lone" of
SC111411bltd words be.
I"" to form lovr ~mple words.

' AVOJIL

A s os

...

r

c

.~~-r--,rr'"T"-1 ~
L._ ._

_.__.___.__.

"You should always

~

insti ncts,"

I
III 0

trust your

the college professor
"F.ven

leclured. Tbe".hc added,

REV tl 0 0

1 Ie

iflhm is ···-··--.''

Compl.••• ,lhe diUckl,• Qvote~
by l1 1l!ng tn rhc mrutng woras
1-...L.-'--'--"-""-:,~ y&lt;W do•o lop l rom 11ep No, 3 below,

7

.

_

_

.

f t PiiNT NUMBERED .

'::1 LHTERS IN SQUARES

· Nipper -

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Opaque -

Roncl1 - Yachl -

s- a- o 7
1-lAl'PY

uwhcn someone docs something good." gra~nps
infonned ntc, "applaud, you will make two people
· HAPPY ."

ARLO &amp; JANIS
,t, l.AfWlTIW

MATE iJOitCf.!!

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0 ec. 21) Being focused on only your own sell·
interests could cause you to be egotisti·
cal and selfi sh to the point where others
will totally reject you. This type of behavior is clearly unacceptable.
CAPRI CORN {Dec . 22-Jan. 19) •
Normally, you're p~etty good at keeping
confidential that which has been asked
of you , but you might knowingly. discuss
a matter with .others that you realiz:ect
·shouldn't De revealed.
AQUARIU S {Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- 1t might
· not serve your best interest to request a
lavor tram someone you don't know too
welt. This person could demand a return
that could border on being illegal or Illadvised.
PISC:::ES (Feb. 20-March · 20) Everything you do will be put under a
microscope and viewed by critical eyes,
so be particularly diligent of your behav·
lor when someon_
e you'd Uke to. impress
Ia arotJnd .
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) - Because
you may see It as the only way to go, you
could makft change s that .will give you
problems of your own maklng.:Thlnga are
tough enough without sawing Off your
OW!;\ limb.

SOUPTONUTZ

l\'KE.I\1~ ~AU'i£
~fJA'f5

~~ \lA~ ~
ATIIlU~

•

JBY

RSJKVox · sy

heal1h .

Manley's
Recycling

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is . . hereby
given lhat on Saturday,
May 121 2007 lal 10:00
a.m ., a public sale wlll
be held al 211 W.
Second St, Pomeroy,
Ohio. The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company -is selling lor
cash In hand or certl·
fled check lhe followlng collateral :
2002
GMC
Envoy
1GKDT13S622.1 70936
2000 Pontiac Grand
A
M
1G2NF52T4YMn2070
1999 Ford F350 Diesel
1FTSX31F2XED45701
1999 Ponllac Grand
AM
, SE
1G2NE12TOXMn7828
The Farmers Bank and

6•

Thursday, May 10, 2007
By Bernice Bede Oaol
Meinory will be your best ally. Hard les-

Allf'I'T&gt;l iNG ANYMORE ,
8ECAU$E ALL I CNJ
THIIIII&lt;. ABOUT ts SEIN&amp;
NEAT At.ID TIDY ALL
THE Tt t1 E '

* In su red

~~

Hrs.

4•
5•

G

BIG NATE

Wide Variety of

Cell 24
(740) 4460870, · Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

Pass
Pass

cash the spade king, and claim.

Mushroom Compost
$35 A Scoop
T-Post 6ft. $3.29

FOR SALE

I•
4 NT

Pass
Pass
Pass

ace, linesse dummy's spade seven ,

r--~--~---,

BASEMENT . ·
WATERPROOFING
99 Jeep Wrangler, auto, Unconditional lifetime guar95000 miles. $5900 740- antee. Local references fur·
446·6865
nished. Established 1975.

~

East

1•

fa your king and lead a spade. West will
probably put in his nine, so take the trick
wilh dummy's queen, play a club to your

LIMITED SEATS!

Freedom from Smoking
Classes begin
Monday, M~y 14 in
Gallipolis and Pomeroy
'
to reg1ster,'
call '446-5940
or toll-free at

!!

WW....t~Joal&gt;ermtekaaMAitr)'-

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

~

North

Glasgow no
39 Oongerous

promises lour-card spade support, the
values for game and at most a singleton
club. South, whose hand has suddenly
improved, uses Roman Key Card
Blackwood . North shows 1he trump
queen and two key cards (ooe ace and
\he trump king, or two aces).
There are 12 clear tricks: four spades,
three hearts, toor diamonds and one
club. You only have to draw trumps. That
will not be a problem ij lhey are ·splitting

QUIT

TRUSTIN'

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

IMPROVEMENTS

Wesl

1

38

Chinese philosopher Lao1lu wrote, "To
have lillie is fa possess .To have plenty is
lobe perplexed."
In this deal, North and South possess
plenty of high cards, I&gt;J1 many players
would feel perplexed when they failed to
bring home such an easy looking sixspade confrect.
What would be your line after West leads
lhe heart jad&lt; to your ace?
The auct ion has a· modern texture.
North's lour-club rebid is a splinler. If

Interior Remodeling

&amp;

~ ..
~~e)PI:"f"'l'!!'ijP.4!ftl:•
..

Must be 21 y ears of age
PVH Community R elations,

Additions

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homelill System
• Helios System

::...c=:..:..c==---::c--

K 1

Another puzzling
deal puzzle

V

lfr-1:::0:--"!.,~ARM---.,

. J .B643

Opening -l ead :

St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
Mike W. Marcum, Owner

Stop in at
ROBERT
participating
BISSEll
Pomeroy
Merchants
for our
Mother's
Day Gift
140·992·1671 Basket
Giveaway

B ased on double occupancy
To make rese r~ations please call ,

IUCIIIII CallllruciiDD and
·Gueral Caatractiag

ce•mucn••

ai

1 087 ~3

Soulh

South

ci7_4_0'-)4_41_-9_3-,72
_ _~-

&amp;
black. $3200 _ 367 _02&lt;6 or _E xtpra_s_304_-_67~5~
335
3"""!-,
Vet checked &amp; first shots
Fl
parents on plemises $200. 645-7485
AA~~: .
740 -992-7473 ·
93 Oldsmob~e Cutlass $675
'--'--r...33U'rur..:ot
-------T
runs good, No Sunday Calls
CKC Jack Russell ,errier
_ _
304 593 31 56
Puppies. $125 each. 256· .-- :_::_::__::_::_=---::-- GM truck bumper. Brand
• New Homes
1652
For Sale 92 Eagle Talon new in box. 88·2000 .
• Garages
- - - - - - - - ' - - runs and looRs good with Brackets
&amp;
pads.
Yoric:ie Poo, tiny tea cup; good sticker $1,000 304- part#999863 , dealer price
• Complete
Chihuahuas ,
apple head; 675.-7474
$376, asking $225. 740-245Remodeling
Poodle, ti~ t~. quality lap - - - - - - ' - - "061:1~1-~--"""!-~
"' -,
Olds. 88 good co nd.,good
&amp;
babies. (740)645-6987
CAIIIPilRS
on gas, low milage,o ne
MUSICAL
owner loaded. Call after 5
M01UR HOMES
Stop &amp; Compare
INsrRUMENTS
.
o'clock-740-949-3059 .
..._oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_.l
03 Winnebago!Ad venture '-•••••-~
15
TRUCKS
36' loaded, low (lliles 304- ...
For sale, Wurlltzer Plano
FOR SALE
675-3049
and bench. 740-446-7903 or ..__ _iiiOiiiiiiii;.-" - - - - - - - -

8 5 " 3

.

D ea l~ r: North
Vulnerable: East -West

74()..9~2-5776

CKC Golden Ret.puppies. 99 BMW 5251, black on trolling motor, trailer

740·441 ·7098

.. Q J 6 2

•

. John Boat. Outboard motor, ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; : ;

i:ro

... K 9 7

•

" A

740-416-1698 ·

Hill's Self
Bo•·JS
"' &amp; M01URS I
Storage
S

·

East

HAo.l E Tb SHt.\IT.'

15 yrs. E~t . Fn.-e Es1imates

Honda Trail 70 Rep. New
.Chrr·stmas 04. 185 miles,
red, 4SP, Elec start, titled,
street legal, ~ean. rarely off
road. $750.740-245·0611

Ii

bOth for $450. They are still 1993 Camara. needs wort .
studs, partially broken . 740- $500. 740-367-7312
388 -8845
2006 Hyundai Elantra. 6000;
7,000 nlites, $13 ,_
2007
AKC Boston Terrier Pups.
Uncotn
Navigator, 5,000
1ak.•ng dep ·1o hold . paren1s miles,
55 ,000;
2007
on pram. with pedigree. vet
chkd, shots, wormed. 740 _ Thoroughbred by Palomino
388-9325
camper, $25,000. (740)441-

l:

-

r:T.r--':-"--~-.,
AlJ[(I;

GI1:&amp;.1CHft-J, Pltlo.S~ "TUR"-1 'T\.lE;
'/oLVNlt. BACK IJP' ~o\J KNOV&gt;.l

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

David Lewis .

ro'""'"

R:1/, YOU AT JC PE.VNEV lt1AT I
1\\INK WO\JLV L~OK MUCH BeTift&lt;

All Types Of ,
Concrete Work

26 Years Experience

·

~ESltRD~Y 1 FO\JN\l A SW&amp;AlbR r-:~=~~~~~-,

..

WPsl
• A 10 9 2
Y JI097 .
• 9 6

A A 1 O. ·R !i 4

and Replacement

12 yr. old Missouri Fox after market parts. $4500
Trotter geldi ng, stands 15 OBO (740)446·4162

r

MONTY

\-lOlA/

Concrete Removal

L,..,;oiii~iiiii--r

.04 Hoflda 4SO-R set 4 racing

112 ha nds, $1,000; 6 yr. -'d
VI
Missouri Fox Troner, gelclng,
stands 15 hands, $900; call
Danny after 5pm, (740)949·
9912 ·
------ck-18 month old bla
Reg.
Angus Bull for sale cau
_
740
_
446 9856

.. 3

Truck
Full insured
Senior Citize n

5pm, (740)368-0281 or 3047'73-5079

I

L

" K Q 6 2
• A Q J4

• Top • Remova l
• Trim • Stump

Load maK· Astro Van, AJC, PIS, P~.

I

~~

"'--

2 sets of plastic loaded with

s

lj!'l:loi:""~H:"'OIJSiiliOUJ--~

....... •Frw £dmltlol
140-441...,
RidtJol wi410C Dw:w

Livestock 1999 Chevrolet Conversion

Carmichael
(740)446-2412

Prime commercial space for 2 Male Ponies for saie, 1 1i2
ur old. black with while face
rent at Springvalley Plaza. 7
is
Welsh Pinto, buff colored
Call645-2192.
male is Welsh Shetland.
Paid 1100 for both, win sell

Repos, Sli ght Damages,
No Reasonable Offer
Refused! 3lefl. 25'x36',
35x44. Call Today! Save
Thousands! 866-352-0469

&amp; Resort

and

Trailers·

.

ARCH STEEL

r

Duetz 4WO 6 cyl. diesel
tractor 'Model 10 06 $5800.
Case Tractor Model 530
$3500. 669-Q14&gt;

..__ _iiiittiiiii;._.l Wolfe Tenntng Bed 16 bulb ~::--~:-":"'--,
Commercial . building "For .,ike new" 2yrs old $1,000
HAY &amp;
(304)675-1783or (3041593GRAIN
1600
Rent"
square feet, off 3727 .
street parking. Great toea- •c~--"'='----,
tion! 749 Third Avenue in
fll...-.s
Oats for Feed or Seed $3
Gallipolis.
Rani
$400/mo.
v
bushel , Composite
dirt $10
C W
(404)456
3802
K'"~
I
all ayne
-

NEW COMPANY

&amp; Beachfront

740-59().6()00

F~l
1
••--F.Ql!u&gt;MENritiiiiiittti.....

2 Bedrooms, C/A, 1 112 Stock. Gall Ron Evans, 1Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby 800-537-9528.
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
No Pets, Lease Plus'Security Deposit Required, NEW AND USED STEEL
(740)387-7006.
Steel Beams, Pipe •Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Twin Rivers Tower. is accept· Channel. Flat Bar. Steel
ing applications for waiting Grating
For
Drains,
list for Hud·subsized, 1· br, Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;l
apartJT:Ient,lor
the Scrap Metals Open Monday,
elderly/disabled ca ll 675- Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
6679
Equal
Housing
Friday, sam-4:30pm. Closed
~Opport:Zio-u-nity'"':::---~ Thursday, Satwday &amp;

HUGE SAVINGS ON

Tropicana Casino

740-985-3831
iO

available now on John
Deere Z Trak Zero TUrns &amp;
5.99% FiKed Rate on John
Hanging baskets, bedding o~ere Gators carmicha el
plants, potted plants, wave Equipment (740)446-241 2.
petunias. Also Pomeranian - -- -- - - - P uppies. Closed .May 17 and
Yoders 8N Ford Tractor, excellent
Sundays.
oondition. $2850. 740-379Greenhouse, 10 mites west 2923 or 740 _446_6865
of Gallipolis on S. R.14 t
======,--._,~

Boardwalk

Athens

Hors~

Sunday. (740)44~7:J:l0

~Trw C..

To, • Trim • Hauling •Stump
Orinding • 81.1CU1 Truck

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

K Q 7 5

·•

Grinding • Bucket

Chester

Kiefer Built~ Valley -Bison·

SPACE
FOR RtNr

Service

G1Uipona, OH 45131

"Ahead In Service"

Sadly Missed
By Wife Jean
Kids, a11d
Gramlkids

0 ~·09-&lt;17

North
Johnson's Tree

SHADE RIVER
AG SERVICE

Of

GoOseneck. Dumps. &amp;
JET
Utility- Aluma Aluminum
Tara.
Townhouse
AERATION MOTORS
Trallerl- B&amp;W Gooseneck
Apar1ments, Very Spacious. Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Hitches- Trailer
Parts.

Atlantic CitY
Getaway!

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Athens Store Loc_
a ton
At. Rt. 50 3 miles East of
Athe111s next to LUV Mobile
Homes

In l..o•ing
Memory

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

FREE FOOD

New Haven. 1 Br., furnished,
no pets, dep.&amp;references,
740-992-0165.

r

May 24, 2007 to May 26, 2007

Announcements

5:30pm - 8:00pm

_37_36
_ _ _ _ _ __
New 2BR apartments.
Washer/dryer
hookup,
stove/refrigerator included.
Also. units on SR. 160. Pets
Welcome' (740)44 1-Qt 94.

Taking applications for 3BA · Employer.
...- . ,
remodeled house. No pets. CONVENIENTLY LOCATGoooi
$4 I
$
25 mo. 300/dep. 446- ED 1 AFFORDABLE!
..,
361J
Town house
apartments,
small houses FOR Electric ranQe 25x30. $50 .
Very nice home for rent in and/or
REN T Call (740)441-1111 - 446-4426
Midd. 2 Br., 1 bath, sun room,
7 rooms total , garage &amp; tor appl(catioo &amp; infOfmation. - - - - - - - Used Furniture store, 130
basement. Avai lable, Call For Rent 1 BR $325 month Bulavitte Pike, Gallipolis.
740-992-9784.
Tracy's Apartments 3314 La rge selection of everyFrarlklin
Avenu8
Point
H
B ·
t
thing. ome- us1ness or
Pleasant , WV
304-675- sale. 740-446-4782
1537 Background Check ~:!!'~~~....~~.,
Required
MlscEuANEous
2 bedroom Trailer in ::::::::::_:.:______
MEROIANDISE
Frenchtown
Apartments, __
,
Gallipolis Ferry $350 rent. 727 41 h Ave, Gall~rvt.tts, Is
d~sit
No
Pets
304"""'
$350
.
-•·
575.7995
now accep1·mg appr1caHons 1993 250 XLT truck, king
for waiting list for 1 bedroom, cab; 1993 Buick; (ifle, water
2BR . 1 Bath, CIA, dishwash- USDA . Rural Development, pump, wo"odburner, metal
er, new carpet, 1624 Subsidized apartment lor detector, Mason, 614-226Chatham Ave , Gallipolis, elderly and handicapped. 9966
Ohio (740)208-7861 or 740-446-4652 .
Equal
. , """ 1 .ty
38x24 Oval Pool with deckHou~na
(740)446-4234
v ""or um .
ing. Pool sits · down inside
Gatlia
Manor deck, $1500. (740)446-7425
3 BA, 2 BA, Ooublewide, No
Apartments, 138
Pets.
$475/mo.
$475
Buhl Morton Rd. Above ground swi mming
deposit. Close to AVHS.
Gallipolis, is now pool , 18ft round-52in deep.
(740)367-7025.
accepting applications tor 3yrs old.· Buyer must take
Nice 2 BR mobile home. waiting list for 1 bedroom down. Could use a new liner.
AJC. Located at Johnson HUD, subsidized apartment Comes with all accessories
Mobile Home Park . 446- for elderly and handicapped . and treated 8x10 deck.
2003
740-446-4652.
Asking $475. Call 740-388 8845
- - - - -- - For sale/Best offers: overstuffed chair, 2 lamps, and
tables,
oak
doors,
va nitY/si nk, .ab tounger.
palates machine. Call 9924521

The Daily Sentinel• Page 87

Livestock Show Cliriic
Tuesday May 15th

Gracious li\ling. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments . in Middleport.
From $0-$592. Call 740992-5064 . Equal Housing
Opportunities.
Equal
Opportunity Employer
- - - -- - - Middleport 1 or 2 Br. apts.,
no pels, d~p. &amp; ref., 9920165

r

www.mydailysentinel.com

.........

B~room

Modern 1 BA Apt. Call 446.,

attached garage. no pets. 740· 441 ·0596
partial furnished, $375 mo. 2 bedrooms. 11v1ng roon, k~cnen.
plus deposit. (740)992-7401 1 bath. apartment have central
311 Fum1shed with couch. cham&gt;.
Attention!
washer, dryer, stove, miCrowave,
Local company offering MNO beds, dimiog table and chairs
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- S400 deposit, $450 a month call
304-882-2 523 leave a message
gams for you to buy your and number it oot al home
home instead of renting
3 and 4 room furnished apts.
• t 00% financing
. * Less than perfect credit clean WfO hookup. No pets.
accepted
Ref. and deposit required .
'
• Payment co uld be the 740-446-1519.
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators.
(740)387-0000

Wednesday, May 9, 2007
ALLEYOOP

Altendan 4-B 8 FFA

G.I'ICioUI Living 1 and 2

First Mon rent $175 plus - - - - : : -- - - - , - - :
dep. 740-44 t -9668 or 740- Middleport Beech Straat. 2
339·0362.
Br., furnished apt. , utiNties
paid, no pets. dep. &amp; ref.,
1 AM. effec. apt . Furn. AU
992-0165.
-3 - bed
- roo
_ m_,- D
- --w-id_e_
w-l
th utilitieSpaid. S300Jmo -+ dep

c

Wednesday, May 9_,2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

,·,

�Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

PRo BASKETBALL

www.mydailysentinel.com
TOOAY 'S MAJOR
LEAGUE LEAqERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATIING-Upton. Tampa Bay, .:)66;

PRo BASEBALL

Wednesday, May g, 2007

MajOr league Soccer
Eeslern Conference
W L T Pts GF GA
Kansas C1l)'
4 I 0 12 10 4

retroactive to April 30. Recalled ' INF
Detroit 4. Ca!Mrv 2
Kendry Morales from san Lake (PCL).
Detroit 4, Calgary 1
·
T~MPA BAY DEVIL RAYS-Called up
Detroil 3, Calgary 1
, Na1ional Basketball Association
American League
AHP· Chad Orvella and AHP Tim Calgary 3: D,etroit 2
Playoff Glance
Eaat Division :
da. New York
3 0 2 11 8 3
1 AAodriguez, New York , .358; Posa_
Corcoran from Durham (ll). ..
Calgary 3, Detroil2
FIRSTROUNO
W L Pet
New York, .354: Jeter, New York , .354 : New England 3
2 11 11 5
TEXAS
RANGERS-Activated
RHP
+
Detroit
5, Calgary 1
(Besl ol 7)
Bost&lt;~1
21 10 .sn
3
1 10 6 ·· 5
Mauer, Minnesota , .353; VGuerrero, Chicago
Eric Gagne from the 15-day DL. Detroit2 , Ca lgary 1, 20T
EASTERN CONFERENCE
New York
15 16 .484 6
Los Angeles . .349; Polanco. Detroit. Columbus
3
6
3
3
1 1
Optioned · RHP Wes . Littleton to
Anaheim 4 Minotaota 1
Pttrojt 4. Orlando D
Baltimore
15 18 .455 7
.346.
D.C. United
1 3 1 4 6 9
Oklahoma (PCL).
Anaheim 2 , Minnesota 1
Detroit 100, Orlando 92
RUNS- ARodriguez , New York, 34,
· Tampa :Bay
14 18 .438 7',
DeJesus, Kansas City, 27 : Sizemore . . Toronto FC
0 4 0 0 0 10
National Leag~e
Anaheim 3, Minnesota 2
Detroit 98 . Orlando 90
Toronto
13 19 .406 a'.
Cleveland, 26; Sheffield, Detroit, 26: ,
Western Conference
ATLANTA BRAVES-Des1gnated LHP Anaheim 2, Minnesota 1
Detroit 93. Orlando 77
Central Division
MOrdonez. Detroit, 25: BAbreu. New
·
W l T Pts GF GA
Steve Colyer for assignment to Minnesota 4, Anaheim 1
Detroit 97 , Orlando 93
W L
Pet .GB
York, 23; Youk ili s. Boston , 22; Colorado
2 2. I 7 7 B
Cleveland
20 10 .667
Cleyeland 4 Washington 0
Aichmor;~d (IL).
Anaheim 4. Minnesota 1
Matthews . Los Angeles, 22; Jeter.: New Houston
2 2 I 7 4 3
Detroit
-20 1t .645 ',
WASHING TO~\! 1 ~ATIONALS-Piaced
vancouver 4. poilu 3
Cleveland 97, Washington 82
York, 22.
' FC Dallas
2 3 I 7 7 ·9
Minnesota
t7 15 .531
Cleveland 109, Washington 102
~HP Chad Cordero on the bereavement Vancouver 5, Dallas 4 , 40T
ABI - AAodriguez . New York , 39: CD Chivas USA 2 3 0 6 8 6
. Chicago
t4 15 483
liSt . Called up RHP Wmston Abreu from Dallas 2 Vancouver 0
Cleveland 98, Washington 92
VGuerrero,
l os
Angele s,
30; Los Ailgeles
1 1· 1 4 4 3
Kansas"C1ty
tO 23 .303
Cleveland 97, Washington 90
Co lumbu~ ( ll~
Vancou~er 2 Dallas 1 OT
Detr
oit,
28;
VMar1inez,
Real
Salt
Lake
0
2
3
3
5
MOrdonez,.
West Division
FOOTBALL
'
'
1t
New Jaraay o1. Toronto 2
Cleveland.
26:
DOrfiz,
Bost
on,
25:
National Football League
Vancouver 2. Dallas 1 T
W L Pet GB
New Jersey 96, T01ont o 91
Kinsier.
Texas.
24
;
Hafner.
Cleveland,
Oaklan d
t6 15 5t6
NOTE: Thr ee po1nts for victory, one ATLANTA FALCONS- Signed OT Dallas 1, Vancouver 0, 0
Toronto 89. New Jersey 83
24: Lowen. Boston, 24.
Leander Jordan
Dallas 2. Vancouver 0
Los Angeles
t7 16 .StS
point tor t1e
New Jersey 102. Toronto 89
HITSTejada.
Baltimore,
45;
Jeter.
Seattle
CAROLINA PANTHERS-Signed WR Vancouver 4. Dallas 1
14 14 .500 ',
New Jersey 102. Toronto 81
New York . 45; Polanco, Detroit, 44 :
Texas
t 3 19 .406 3 ~
Steve Smith to a three-year contract
Nashyll!e 1
Toronto 98. New Jersey 96
,
Thursday 's Game
J San5 Jose
N h4_
ARodriguez, New York. 44; DeJesus,
111 e 4• 20T
Real
Sal!
Lake
at
Colorado.
9
p.m.
extension
through
the
201
2
season
an
ose
•
as
"
New Jersey 98 , Toronto 97
Kansas City. 40;· MOrdonez. Detroit. 39,
Monday's Games
Saturday 's Games
CINCINNATI BENGALS- Ae·signed Nashville 5, San J~se 2
Chicago 4. Miaml·o
THunter. Minnesota . 39
Cleveland 10, Ball1more 1
Chicago 96, Miami 91
·
Ch+cago at Toronto FC, 3.30 p.m..
DE Justin Smith.
San Jose 3, ~as~v~l:e ~
OOUBLESMOrdonez.
Detroit,
IB:
Seattle 3. N.Y. Yankees 2
CD Chivas USA at Columbus. 7:30 CLEVELAND BROWNS-Signed RB San Jose 3, as v~l e
Chicago 107 , Miami 69
THunter,
Minnesota.
15:
AHilt
.
Toronto.
Tuesday's Games
Jerome Jackson , OL Clift Louis and LB San Jose 3. Nashville 2
Chicago 104, Miami 96
11 , Monroe. Detroit, 11 : VWells , pm
Detroit 9. Seattle 7
Chicago 92, Miami 79
FC Dallas at Ka nsas City. 8 p.m.
Kevin Sears. Waived OL Rick Drushal,
Toronto, 11, OCabrera. Los Angeles,
N.Y. Yankees 8, Texas 2
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
11 ; Posada, New York . 11 .
WESTERN CONFERENCE
New England at Los Angeles, 10:30 LB Fun taine Hunter· and RB . Tyrone
Baltimore 8, Tampa Bay 3
Moss.
TAI PLES- TPena , Kansa s City, 4;
(Best-ol-7)
Golden State 4 P allas 2
Boston 9. Toronto 2
Sunday's Game
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS- Released LB
Granderson. Detroit. 4: Cora, Boston. 3 p.m
Golden State 97. Dallas 85
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Oakland 6. Kansas City 1
HOME RUNS- ARod riguez , New York, Colorado at New York, 3 p.m.
Dallas 112, Golden State 99
Gilbert Gardner. LB Mike Labinjo, LB
Buffalo ys, New York Rangers
Mi~nesot a 7. Chicago White Sox 4, 10
15: Kinsler. Texa s. 9: VGu errero. Los
Golden State 109. Dallas 9t
Wednesday, M~y 16
Brandon Hoyle and DB Trevis Coley. Wednesday, April 25: Buffalo 5, N.Y.
1nnmgs
•
Angeles,
9;
Morneau,
Minnesota
,
B;
Golden State 103. Dallas 99
Houston at Toronto FC. 7 p.m.
Signed TE Mike Seidman.
, Rangers 2
Cleveland'S, L.A. Angels 1
DOrtiz. Boston. 8; JhPeratta. Cleveland.
Dallas 118, Golden State 11 2
Thur~day, May 17
MINNESOTA VIKINGS--,-Signed DT Friday, April 27: Buffalo 3, N.Y. Rangers
Wednesday's
Games
7:
Hafner,
Cleveland,
7;. Sosa, Texas , 7.
Golden State 111 . Dallas 66
Howard Green. Named Derek Mason 2
Seattle (Baek 0-0) at Detroit (Robertson
STOLEN
BASES- BRoberts, FC Dallas at Chicago. B p.m.
Photn!x 4. L.A. Lakars 1
Saturday, May 19
assistan t secondary coach.
Sunday. April 29: N.Y. Rangers 2,
Baltimore. 12: Sizemore. Cleveland, 11 ;
3-t ), 7:05 p.m.
Phoenix 95, L.A. Lakers 87
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Signed Buffalo 1. 20T
Texas (Tejeda 3·2 ) at N.Y. Yankees Lotion. Texas , ,..1 : JLugo, Bo ston. 9; D.C. United at Toronto FC. 3:30p.m.
Phoenix 126, L.A. Lakers 98 '
Columbus at New York , 7:30p.m.
OB Matt Gutierrez, DB Larry Anam, LB Tuesday, May 1: N.Y. Rangers 2, BuHalo
Crawford. Tampa Bay, 7; Matthews. Los
' (Mussina H), 7:05p.m.
LA. Lakers 95, Phoenix 89
New England at Houston , 8:30 p.m.
· Kyle Bissinger, LB Justin Warren. TE t
Tampa Bay (Shields 3·0) at Baltimore Angeles, 7; THunter, Minnesota, 7.
Phoenix 113, L.A. lakers 100
Jake Nordin, RB Quinton Smith and Dl Friday, May 4: Buffalo 2, N.Y. Rangers
{Bedard 3-2). 7:05p.m
PITCHING (5 Decisions)-Beckell . Kansas City at Colorado, 9 p.m.
· PhOenix 119, L.A. Lakers 110
Sunday, May 20
Zach West.
Boston (Matsuzaka 3·2) at Toronto Boston, 7-0, 1.000, 2.51 ; Sabathia ,
1, OT
Sen Antonio 4 Oanyer 1
(Ohka 2-3), 7:07 p.m.
· 'Cleveland, 5·0, 1.000. 3.45; Halladay, Los Angeles at CD Chivas USA, 5 p.m. NEW YORK GIANTS- Waived DB Sunday, May 6: Buffalo 5, N.Y. Rangers
Denver 95, San Antonio 69
Oakland ~Haren 3·2) at Kansas City Toronto. 4-1 , .800 . 3.59; Schilling, Real Salt Lake at FC Dallas, 7 p.m.
Claudius Osei. C Man Tarullo. TE Jason 4, ·Buffalo wins series 4-2
San Antonio 97, Denver 88
Randall and RB James Sims . Signe d TE
(Meche 3-1), 8:10p.m.
Boston . 4·1. .800, 3.26; JoSan tana,
San Antonio 96, Denver 91
Ch icago While Sox (Dank s 0·4) at Minnesota. 4-2 . .667. 3.40.
Michael Matthews, WR Brandon Myles.
New Jersey yo, Ottawa
PRO FOOTBALL
San Anton io 96, Denver 89
Minnesota (Ortiz 3-2), 8:10p.m
STRIKEOUTS- Sabathia, Cleveland,
WR Brandon London, WA Marco
San Antonio 93. Denver 78
Cleveland (Byrd 2· 1) at L.A. Angels 53; JoSantana. Minnesota. 50: Bedard.
Thomas, OT Gabe Hall. OT Rob Austin . Thursday, April 26• Ottawa 5, New
Jersey 4
,
Utah 4. Houaton 3
(Jer.Weaver 1-3), 10:05 p.m
Baltimore, 46; Shields, Tampa Bay. 45;
Arena Football League
OT Justin Jones. OT Joel Clinger. G
Thurtday's Games
Lackey, Los Angeles. 43: DCabrera.
Houston 84, Utah 75
Af A Glance
Ryan Keenan. DE Marquise Gunn , DE Saturday, April 28 : New Jersey 3,
Seattle at Detroit, 1:05 p.m.
Baltimore. 42; Sonderman, Detroit, 40:
Houston 98, Utah 90
By The Assc;.c latad Press
Charred Taylor. DB Trevonti Johnson, Ottawa 2, 20T
Monday, April 30: Ottawa 2, New Jersey
Texas at N.Y. Yankees, 1.:05 p.m.
Beckett. Boston, 40.
Utah 81, Houston 67
AU Times EDT
DB Craig Dahl.
Chicago White Sox at Minnesota. 1:10 SAVES-TJones.
Detroit.
13:
Utah' 98, Houston 85
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS-Re· 0
p.m.
Borowski, Cleveland, 11 ; Papelbon ,
Houston 96, Utah 132
Eastern Division ·
signed G Jeb Terry_Signed G Anthony Wednesday, May 2: Ottawa 3, New
Oakland at Kansas City, 2:10p.m.
Boston . 10; Jenks. Chicago. 10;
Utah 94 , Houston 82
WLTPct PF PA
Wollschlager and CB Chaz ' Williams. Jersey 2
Cleveland at LA Angels, 3:35 p.m.
FrRodriguez. Los ~ngeles. 10; Reyes. Dallas
Utah 103, Houston 99
9 1 o .900 625 505 Released FB Mike McFadden. C Jed Saturday, May 5: Ottawa 3, New Jersey
Tampa Bay at Baltimore, 7:05p.m.
Tampa Bay, 10; Street, Oakland , ~ 2, Ottawa wins series 4·1
Co lumbus
5 4 0 .556 462 423 Prlsby and WR Levan Thomas .
Boston at Toronto, 7:07p.m. ·
QUARTERFINALS
Philadelphia
4 5 o .444 463 436 WASHINGTON · REDSKINS-Signed
NATIONAL LEAGUE
· New York
2 7 0 .222 423 50t RB Derrick Blaylock, WR Dan Melendez
(Besl of 7)
. WESTERN CONFERENCE
National Laag~e
BATTING-Delee, Chicago, .398:
Southern Division
EASTERN CONFERENCE
and WR Kyle Brown. Plac ed WR Steven
Pttrojt vs San Jose
East
Division
·
Helton.
Colorado,
.393;
Holliday.
Detroit
Chicago
Harris on injured reserve. ·
Thursday, April 26: San Jose 2, Detroit
W L Pet GB
Colorado . .374: Rowand. Philadelphia ,
W L T Pct
PF PA
Saturday, May 5: Detroit 95, Chicago 69 Atlanta
9 1 0 900 646 558
HOCKEY
0
20 12 .625
, .355; MiCabrera , Florida , .35 1; Georgi::~
Monday, May 7: Detroit 108, Chicago New York
20 12 .625
JBReyes, New YorK, .350: ShGreen. Orlando
5 4 0 .556 444 ~92
National Hockey league
Saturday. April 28: Detroil3, San Jqse 2
87, Detroit leads series 2-0
Florida
15 17 .469 5
New YorK, .344
New Orleans 4 5 0 .444 461 469 COLORADO AVALANCHE--'Signed C ' Monday, April30: San Jose 2, Oetroil1
Thursday, May 10: Detroit at Chicago, 9 Philadelphia
14 19 .424 Bit
RUNS-JBReyes, New York , 31 ; Austin
3 6 0 .333 469 519 Codey Burkey to a three-year contract.
Wednesday, May 2; Detroit 3, San Jose
p.m.
washington
9 24 .273 11 \
Rollins, Philadelphia, 31: HaRamirez, Tampa Bay
· 3 6 0 .333 418 481
LOS ANGELES KIN GS- ,Signed C 2, OT
SundaY. May 13: Detroit at Chicago,
Central DIVISion
Florida , 30; Johnson, Atlanta , 26;
AMERICAN C'ONFERENCE
i3rady Murray to a multi-year entry level 1 Saturday, May 5: Detroit 4, San Jose 1
3:30p.m.
w L Pet GB
. Weeks.
Mi lw::~ukee ,
27; Dunn , 1
Central Division
contract.
_
Monday, May 7: Detroit 2, San Jose 0,
Tuesday, May 15: Chicago at DGtroit, Milwaukee
· Cincinnati, 26; Renteria. Atlanta, 26; ,
wL T Pet . PF PA MO~TREAL CANADIENS-S1gned
23 1o _697
0 , Detroit wins series 4·2 .
,
TBD, il necessary
Chicago
15 15 .500 s:,
CJones. Atla~ta , 26.
.
r Chicago
8 1 0 .889 525 416 Math1eu Car le to a three-year contract.
Thursday, May 17: Detroit at Chicago, , Houston
ABI-Ca l ee, Ho.uston. 31; F1elder, Colorado
6 4 o .600 493
15 17 _469 7',
531 , NEW YORK ISLANDERS-Signed .G
'Anaheim ys.Yancouver
TBO, if neCessary
I Pittsburgh
M_ilwaukee, 29; AdGonza lez. San ~ Kansas City
5 4 o .556 462
14 17 _452
~~~
~
~:C~~
Dubielewicz
to
a
on~·year
con·
Wednesday,
April 25: Anaheim 5,
Monday, May 21: Chicago at Detroit, Cincinnati
_
Otego,
29;
Francoe
ur,
Atlanta
,
27
;
NashVIlle
0
.
00
55
14 19 424 9
4 6
4
5
TBD,.if neCessary
St. Louis
13 18 .419 9
H?lhday, Col~rado.
27.
Hardy: Grand Raprds 3 6 o .333 4~ 583
Vancouver 1
·
COLLEGE .
1
West Division
Milwaukee. 27, tJIIey, Philadelphia, 27.
Western Division
MASSACHUSETTS-Agreed to terms 1 Friday, April 27: Vancouver 2, Ana~eim
Cloyelaod vs, New Jersey
w l Pet GB
Beltran, N~w York, 27.
.
WL T Pet PF PA . with · Don Brown, football coach, on a ·I 1· 20T
.
·'
Sunday, May 6! Cl9veland 81, New Los Angeles
19 14 .576
HIT$-Holliday,
Co lorado,
52; I San Jose
· 6 3 o .667 ·566 476 five-year con tract extenSion through Sunday. Apnl 29: Anaheim 3,
1
Jersey 77,
San Diego
1B 15 .545
JBAeyes, New York, 49 ; DeLee, L A
1
5 4 o 556 491 5
Vancouver 2
07 2011.
Tuesday, May 8: Cleveland 102. New Arizona
19 16 .543 . 1
; Chicago. 49;· Hardy, Milwaukee , 46; u~:h nge es
.Q ·
UNIVERSITYTuesday, May 1: Anaheim 3, Vancouver
5 5
Jersey 92, Cleveland leads series 2-0
San Francisco
17 15 .531 1',
OHudson, Arizona , 44 : Rollins,
.
·500 649 636 MID-CONTINENT
2 8
200 577 62 1 Named Winston Bennett lll men's bas- 2, OT
Saturday, May 12: Cleveland at New Colorado
t4 19 .424 5
: Philadelphia, 44; Helton , Colora.do, 44; Anzona
Thursday, May 3: Anaheim 2,
• Renteria , Atlanta , 44.
Las Vegas
1 9 0 .100 457 635 ketball coach .
Jersey, 5 p.m.
.
MISSOURI-ST. LOUIS- Named Usa Vancouver l . 20T, Anaheim wins series
Monday, May 14: Cleveland .at New
Monday's Games
DOUBLES-U ttey, Philadelphi a, 17:
Curtiss-Taylor woman's basketball 4-1
Jersey, 7 p.m.
San Diego 4, Atlanta 2
' Del ceeh, Chhi~awgo, h1_7; Hollida2y, CJBoR
iorado.
Columbus :,riC:,:J~sy~~k~~s
coach .
Wednesday. May 16: New Jersey at L.A. Dodgers 6, Florida 1
13:
urc . as mgton. 1 :
eyes.
·
UCF-Re-signed Kirk Speraw, men's
Cleveland, TBD, if necessary
Houston 5, Cincinnati 4
, New York, 12; ASoriano, Chicago, 12; Georgia 55 , Orlando 34
CDNFERENC'E FINALS
bas~etball coach, to a tour-year conFriday. May 18: Cleveland at New Milwaukee 3, Washington o
Hardy, Milwaukee, 11 ; KGreene, San
Dalla s 66. Utah 59
(Beol-of,7)
tract.
Jersey, TBD. if necessary .
Colorado 3. St. Louis 2
Diego, 11.
&amp;aturday's Games
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Sunday. May 20 : New Jersey at , Arizona 4, Philadelphia 3
TR!PLES- JBReyes, New York , 6: Kansas City 53, Philadelphia 41
'Buffalo ys Ottawa
Cleveland, TBD, if necessary
San Francisco 9, N.Y. Mets 4
Grand Rapids 71 , Na shville 55
1 Rollins, Philadelphia, 5; DAoberts, San
,
Thursday, May 10
PRO
HOCKEY
. Tuesday's Games
Francisco, 4; HaRamirez , Florida. 3: San Jose 56, Arizona 49
·· Ottawa at Buflalo, 7 p.m.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Florida 6, L.A. Dodgers 5
KGreene . San Diego. J ; Weeks.
Sunday's Games
N8tlona! Hockey League
..
Salurday, May 11
Phoenix va San Antonio
Houston 7. Cincinnati 6
Milwaukee, 3; Amezaga, Florida, 3: Tampa Bay 66, Austin 45
' Playoff Glance
Ottawa
at
Buffalo,
8 p.m.
Sunday, May 6: San Antonio 11 1, ~tlanta 3, San Diego 2
· BHigOgMioE, HRoUuNsiSon,B3. d S F
I
los Ang~les 59, Las Vegas 37
FIRST ROUND
Monday, May 14
Phoenix 106
Milwaukee 6. Washington 4
-:- on 5 • an ranc sco,
Monday's Game
(Best-of-7)
Buffalo at Ottawa, 7 p.m.
Tues day, May a· PhoeniX 101 , San Pittsburgh 4, Chicago Cubs 3, 15 I 11 · Fielder, Milwaukee, 10· CJones, Chrcago 59, Colorado 48
EASTERN CONFEREN,CE
Wednesday, May 16
Antonro 81 senes tted 1·1
mmngs
Atlanta , 10, Hardy, Milwaukee, 9,
Friday, May 11
B lfalo 4 NV I I d
1
·
I
I AdGonzalez San D1ego 9· Dunn ,
_ u_____ - - - .s.an _erg _
Buffalo at Ottav.:a, ·7 p.m.
Saturday, May 12. Phoemx at San I Sl Lou1s 4, Colorado 1
· Cmclnnatl, 9: Rollins, Philadelp,hla,
Grand Rapids at Columbus. 7 P m
Buffalo 4, N v Islanders 1
I
9
Saturday, May 19
Antomo. a p.m
Anzona 3, Philadelphia. 2
1 STOLEN BASES-JBReye s, New
New Orleans at Orlando, 7·30 p m
. N y Islanders 3, Buffalo 2
Ottawa at Buffalo, 2 p.m., if necessary
Monday, May 14 Phoe mx at San NY Mets 4, San Franc1sco 1
y k 10 V
Ph d hi
Colorado at Nashville. 8 P m
Buffalo N y Islanders
3·
11a e1P a. 13 ·
2
Antomo 9·30 p m
Wednesday's Games
or · 07 ' IC 1orrno,
Saturday May 12
Monday, May 21
1 Pierre,
' · ·
!
.
Los Angeles , 12, Taveras,
'
Buffalo 4, N.V Islanders 2
Buffalo at Ottawa. 7 p.m., if necessary
WheodennexsdTaBy,
D
May
16
San
Antonio
at
MWiawsah,kngto(nVarg(a
Be3rgOm)
a1
n
n
0
5
P0·3)
at
Colorado,
9,
HaRamlrez,
Flonda
,
8,
I
Utah
at
Kansas
City,
8
P
m
Buffalo
4.
NY
Islanders
3
P
,
Wednesday, May 23
,
I ,
I u ee
s - ,
m
.
Byrnes,
Arrzona ,
8,
Rollms,
Austm at Anzona , 10 p m
New Jersey 4. Tamoa Bay 2
1 Ottawa at Buffalo, 7 p.m., if necessary
Fnday May 18 Phoemx at San Anton1o, 1 Colorado (H~rsh 2·2) at St LOUIS Ph 11 delph 1a 8
Las Vegas at San Jose, 10 30 p.m.
New Jersey Tampa Bay
5
3
·
TBD, 1f n~cessary ·
(Wa1nwnght 2-2), 11 0 p.m.
a
Tampa Bay at los Angeles , 10 30 p m
Sunday, May 20 San Antonio at NV Mets (Maine 5·0) at San Francisco I PITCHING (5 Dectslons)-Malne, New
Monday, May 14
Tampa Bay 3. New Jersey 2 .
I
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Phoenix TBD. if necessary
(Morns 4-1), 3.35 P m.
I Y~rk, 5·0, 1 000, 1 37, Capuano, New York at Philadelphia, 7 30 P m
Tampa Bay 3, New Jersey 2
'
Detroit VB Anaheim
1
C,hlcagoat0allas.8.30p.m
,NewJersev 4 TampaBay3,0T
I Philadelphia (Moyer 3·2) at Anzona Mlh,~aukee, 5' 0 • 000 · 2·31· Willis,
1 New Jersey 3 Tampa Bay 0
Friday, May 11
Utah ys. Golden State
(R Johnson 0-2), 6.40 p.m.
Flonda, 5-1, 833, 5 44
Anaheim at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
Monday, May 7 Utah 116, Golden State I L A Dodgers (Tomko 0·3) at Flonda
STRIKEOUT_S -Peavy, San Diego, 56, I
New Jersey 3. Tampa Bay 2
Sunday, May 13
t t2 Utah leads senes 1-0
(W II 5-1) 7·05
Harnois, Philadelphia , 52, Harang.
RANSACTIONS
N,Y, Ranaers 4, A!!anla o
Anaheim at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
wednesday, May 9· Golden State at
H~~~ton (WWtttia~~ 0·5) at Cmcinnatl 1t Cmcmnatl, 44, Wolf. Los Angeles, 44 ,
! NY Rangers 4, Atlanta 3
1
Tuesday, May 15
Utah, 9 p.m
•
! (Beli sle 3- 1) 7· 1o P m
lilly, Chicago, 42, Webb, Ar1zona , 39,
Tuesday 's Sports Transactions
NV Rangers 2, Atlanta 1
1
1
Detrolt.at Anaheim,-9 p.m.
Fnday, May 11. Utah at Golden State , 9 1 san Diego' (MadduX 2·2) at Atlanta WRodnguez, Hpu~ton , 37 • CYoung: I
BASEBALL
N.Y Rangers 7. Atlanta 0
p m.
(Smaltz 4-1), 7:3 5 .p.m.
San Diego, 37, Mame. New Yor,k, 37, ,
Major League Baseball
NV Rangers 4, Atlanta 2
Thursday, May 17
Sunday, May 13 Utah at Golden State. t Pittsburgh (Gorzelannv 4-1) at Chicago , ~~~r~~· N;~ Y~rk, 37 M
k
MLB-Suspended Jorge Reyes of the ,
Ottawa 4 Pittsburgh 1
Detroit at Anaheim , 9 p.m.
4
1
Cubs (Marqu1s 4-1) 8·05 p m
+
or ero,
llwau ee,
· New York Mets orgamzallon (Savannah· 1 Ottawa 6, Pittsburgh 3
9 pm
Sunday, May 20
Tuesday, May 15• Golden State at Utah, .
ThursdaY'~ Ga..;,es
Valverde, Anzona , 12 · STorres, ! SAL) 100 games for testing pos1t1ve for P11tsburgh 4 Ottawa 3
i Anaheim at Detroit, 3 P-!Tl-. if necessary
TBD, If necessary
: L.A. Dodgers _at _
Fiori?a, 1_2:05 p.m.
rs~:~~~~~~hs'e~~· s~.ai~Ou~s~s 9~n~~~~~a~: j. a performonco -ennancmg substance for I Ottawa 4, P!ttsburgh 2
Tuesday, May 22
Thursday,· May 17; Utah at Golden Houston at C1ncmnah, 12.35 p.m.
San· Diep 9 . Fuentes Colorado B
a second t1 me.
, Ottawa 2, P11tsburgh 1
Detroit at Anaheim, 9 p.m., if necessary
State, TBD, if necessary
San Diego at Atlanta, 1:05 p_m_
I
'R O
'
CER · ·
'
American League
• Ottawa 3, Pitt sburgh o
Thursday, May 24
Sunday, May 20: Golden State at Utah, I Pittsburgh al Chicago Cubs, 2:20p.m. ,
LOS ANGELES ANGELS-Placed
Anaheim at Detroit, 7:30p.m., if neces·
TBD, il necessary
'
San Francisco at ColOrado, 8:35p.m.
+ RHP Justin Speier on the 15·day DL,
WESTERN CONFERENCE
1sary

Creator of co~c book
series at Mothman
Museum Saturday, A7

Grangers ·
donate toys, A6

s

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o (

I '\IS • \

ol. ;;h. :\o. I&lt;Jh

• Waver1y ends Lady
Marauders' season.
SeePageB1

Hears of innovative teaching programs
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

:

I

T

I

I

.f

I

Soc'

yet

that a

co mplete

before t h ey can g rad~ate.

During the

nieeting the

Fatal crash
victim's
family ~

An art show featuring work
dents will

be

sues state

held in con-

junction with the spring

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTI!I&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

music concert Monday

BY MICHELLE MILLER

· evening in the high school

MMILLER@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

gymnasium . Students of

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Alma Cline, 81
: • Goldie Little, 86

-··-··-

RACINE
Mark
Miller, superintende nt of
the Southern Local School
Di strict , has accepted the
superintendent' s
in
hi s
home

Josh Fogel will display

Leader

in

including paintings, clraw-

po sition
district,

J3o~d
of Education
approve~ hiring Miller on
April
23,
a
mee tin g
Miller
sai d
he .was not'

INSIDE'

• DAV Chapter 53
hosts district meeting.
See Page 'A3 ·
• TOPS recognizes
weight-loss members.
See Page AS
• Saturday concert to
benet~ area's needy.
See Page A7

Attorneys for th e est a te of
Lori Smith, the Vinton

here are Senior art stu-

woman kille d last year in a
fiery collision between her

dents Derek Weber and

pi ckup truck and a

ings ancl sculpture. Pictured

cert will ·begln at

7

p.m.,

Gallipolis, have filed suit
against the state.
"On behalf of the falnily,

and will inClude performances by the conce r t
bancl, elementary school
. ·-

we are filing suit because we
h aven ' t been able 10 resolve
this matter," said Paul 0. ·

band, concert choir and
handbell c hoir. The music

program is under the direc-

Scott" of

iiori of Cris Kuhn.
B~an

J. Reed/ photos

in attendance
for,
instead
he was in the Southern Local

estate is Gallipoli s attorney
Je ff Finley of Eachus and
Finley.

School Di strict preparing for
a special school board meeting. Miller added he w as

Smith's
daughter
and
estate administrator, Tiffany
D odd s, m ad e a brief state -

notifie d the following day of
his hiring , April 24, and that
same day notified · boara
m ember s of the Southern

m entconcern ing the suit.

Please see Crash. AS

TP-C receives
grant for
school project
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Miller did not d isclose a
dollar amount but said his
contract
With
Buckeye
Local was more money than
hi s contrac t with Southern.

Our $urgeons are
Detallo on Page· AS

TUPPERS PLAINS . The Ohio Environmental
Protec ti on Agency, throu g h
· the Ohio E n viro nmental
Education

Please see Miller, AS

INDEX
:l S ECTIONS -

16 PAGES

Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

84-6

Annie's Mailbox

cOmics
Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Places to go

A7

'sports

B7 .

B Sectjon

Portland Community Center dinner, auctiQn
BY BETH SERGENT

will b e making the meal
which in addition t o th e
baked steak includes g r een
PORTLAND A baked
beans, mashed potatoes,
steak dinner a nd auc tion
g r avy, salad and drinks.
will be h eld at 6:~0 p.m. thi s
Dessert , including pie s and
. Saturday a t th e Portland
cakes, will" be included in
Communi&lt;y Center to raise
the ticket price.
funds for the facility.
Up for auction are handTickets are $ 10 in advance
crafted
items
including
or $ 12 atth e door with tic k · · spearheads and original an, a
e t s avail able ai Racine Home
handc raf t ed quilt, Fenton
National Bank, P o m eroy
Glassware, scale model of a
C hamber o f Commerce or
Buffington I s l and Civil War
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

AS

from any board member of
. the P ortland Community
Center.
·

@ 2007 Ohio V alley PubU•hlng Co.

Volunteers at the center

Weather

Perdue,

press conference Wednesday.
A l so representing Smith's

Local School District.
Miller confirmed yesterd ay h e has since s i gned a
contract
with
Bucke ye
Local but didn 't say when,
ad ding a lthoug h . he was
approved for the position on
April 23, h e spen t two
weeks d eciding whether or
not to make the move.

operating in llll«

Clark,

Arnold
and
Scott
in ·
Col umbus, during a brief

Mark Millar

WEATHER

State

Highway Patrol c rui ser on
Jac kson
Pike
near

Brittany B issell. The con-

Martins F erry,
the Buckeye

--

COLUMBUS

works in several media,

Bu c keye Local , in the
Martins Ferry area.
According to The Times

'·

Obio&amp;

mus t

of Eastern High School stu-

.is our spettalty.
''
entire famiJy.,

tive list of g radu a t es noting
those with credit deficiences
and/or too m an y absences
requiring
make up
work

Board n oted that ah Ohio
strengthening .
the
link
CORE program gran&lt; of
between high school g radu $48,726 h as been received .
ation an d co llege entry, to
Purpose of CO R E gra nt
reduce remediatio n at the
money i s to assist school s in . college level.
several areas establishIt a l so se t s graduat io n
ing rigorous high sc hool
r equireme nt s ,
effective
graduatio n expect a tio n s for
wit h the cla ss of 20 14 for
a ll
stud ents,
preparing
four u ni t s of Engli sh , 1/2
Ohioans to meet demands
unit of health , fo ur units of
of the kn ow l e d ge-based
mathematics to include at
economy and be su ccess ful
in co llege o r work , and
Please see Board, AS

Miller Concert,
to leave art show
Southern.
Local

'

.

Education has given t enta-

having pictures of gradu a t es r eceiving diplomas
taken &lt;h a t nig ht, individual
shots of eac h o ne will be
taken on th e nig ht b efore
grad uation .

few

°·

I
I

Meeting Tues d ay night
&lt;he Board r eleased a tenta-

g radu ation , noting

1

I

The
of

Board

tive approval to 134 Meigs
Hi g h School se niors for

·

I

Commencement will be
h e ld at 8 p.m. It was
a nno unced th a t instead of

POM EROY
Meigs Local

1

I

requirements to qualify for
pa:rtic ipation in the May 18
comme n cem e nt.

HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

1

i

'"'" ·"'~d.,ih-.·nlind . ,.,.,,

({SIJ \\ . \1 \\ HI , :!oo-

Board approves 2007 MHS graduates

SPORTS

y.

a

I Ill'

b attl e cannon, a homemade
b asket and original art prints .
Mila Raymo nd, pre sident
of the Portland Community

Center Board, said the qui It
m a d e by Delores Cleland of
R aci ne has a "unique patte rn " that is compl etel y
handmade, and the original
art print s ar e done by a
young man from Guysville
who was offered a job with
the Walt Disney Company
in Orlando, Fla. The prints ·
depic t scenes of life from
the 1900's. O ther unique
iiems include a Winc hest e r
knife sei • ~nd a b ottl e of
home made blackberry wine
from local r esident Roy
Grueser, a mong others.
Also on Sa&lt;u rday the r e

will be a cash drawing and
o ther door pri zes including
ci n e m a ticket s, gas cards,
g ift certiticates, etc.

Fund ,

h as

awarded a $3,069 grant to
the Tuppers Plain s-C hester
Water
District
for
its
So urc e Water Protection
Plan projecL
F unding wi ll s upport an
educa t ional program for
stu d ents in kind e~garten
t hroug h g rade 12, a nd provides a ground water flow ·

R aymond said a ll money

m odel and classroom pre -

raised will go back &lt;owards

sentatio n s by the Meigs Soil
and Water Con servati on

the center whiCh is an officia l non-profit organization
with the intended purpose
of benefi ting the comm uni ties in a nd around the
Portland area. Plans for the
com munity ce nter (o nce the

Di st rict. The Ohio Staie
Un i vers i&lt;y Extension and
the EPA"s South east District
Office Division of Drinking
and G r o und Waters are col -

Museum, self-guided audio

l aborat ing in the project.
The local wat er district
was one of 12 throughou&lt;
the state funded for a to t al

Please see Portland, AS

Please see Grant A5

Portland
include

Grade
School)
a
Civi l
War

.

.

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