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..

··Health deJ?arbnent
. administers
meningitis vaccine, A6

Community
outreach, As

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;;o CENTS • Vul. !)b, :'\:o.

SPORTS
Eagles advance
to third straight district
final. See Page 81
1

I· RJD .n , 1\1.\Y 1H.

:!O:!

\\ww.mydailr~cnti':'cl.com

:!007

$1 million awarded to extend water line
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MVOAILVSENTINEL .COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Meigs Coun ty 's water
infrastructure is about to get
a $1 million shot in the arm
thanks to its inclusion in the
.Water
Resources
Development Act (WRDA)
passed yesterday by the
United States Senate.
The $1 million was allocated to elltend the Tuppers
Plains Regio nal Water
District water line to

Lebanon Township to prepare the county for
American Electric Power's
proposed IGCC power plant.
Meigs
&lt;:;ounty
Commissioners Jim Sheets
and Mick Davenport learned
of the award at yesterday's
commissioners meeting .
"This is great news for
us," . Davenport
said,
explaining improving infrastructure is vital to moving
forward with economic
development in the Eastern
end of the county. "We're

very appreciative of Sen.
Voinovich's efforts to help
secure this."
Sen . George Voinovich
(R-Ohi o) was the co-sponsor of 'the bill which now
goes to a Joint House-Senate
Conference
Com mittee
where
the differences
bet ween the Senate and
House bills will be reconciled before being sent to the
president for his signature.
The WRDA also includes
fu nding for flood control
which authorizes the Army

Corps of Engineers to study
flood control measures for
Meigs·, Gallia, Athens .
Mahoning. Columbiana.
Jefferson. Belmont. Noble,
Monroe.
Wa shington.
Lawrence. Scioto Counties.
"This is a big step forward
to help address the challenges we face as a nation
and in many of Ohio's communities with. water quali ty," Voinovich said. "I have
long ,been an advocate of
better water infrastructure. ,
Cleanin g up our lakes and

stream' i' critical to improving our nation·s· water quality. I urge my colleag ues in
both houses to quickly finalize this leg islation and get
these vital projects funded."
Also included in the
WRDA, the Ohio River Basis
Comprehensive Plan which
authorizes the Army Corps of
Engi neers to draft a comprehensive. basin-wide plan of
the Ohio River Basin that will
determine what investment;,

Please see Water line, AS

Commissioners
consider
refinancing
Maples' lease
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILVSENTINE LCOM -

OBITUARIES

Page 32•

Thursday, May 17,2007

Page AS
• Grace Crow Eich, 94
• Karen Sue Hart, 50
• John William Leath, 84
• Ma~ori'e V. Luman, 86

INSIDE

Charlene Hoeflich/ photos

Seminar offered
on dealing with grief.
See Page A2
1 AHunger For More.
See Page A2
1 Literacy tutor
training for volunteers.·
See Page A6
• Southern career
fair. See Page A7
1 Holzer celebrates
·May as Skin Cancer
Awareness Month.
See Page A7
1 Meigs County Court
News. See Page AB
1

WEATHER

You're on your way
future looks very bri!Rlit
Today is you day
tommorrow is your day to follQ,_w
your dreams. Stay on ~he right'.
track, and stay focused on yo,.r:·
goals because you have what it takes
to achieve great thiQgs.

Details on Page AB

INDEX
ll SEcnONS -

16 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
A7
Calendars
A7
Classifieds
Bs-6
Comics
B7,
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
A2-3
. Movies
AB
NASCAR
B4
Obituaries
As
Sports
B Section
Weather
AB
"1.

. © aoo7 Ohio Vlilley Publishing Co.

These Meigs High School graduating seniors were presented over $148,000 in scholarships at Thursday's awards assembly. They are from the left, front, Kayla Grover, Ashley Zielinski, Krysta Stitt, Rachel Mower y, Jenn1fe r Sm1th, Meghan
Clelland; second row, Daniel Bookman, Clayton Blackston, Cecilia Core, Sara Lantz, Dane E1chmger, Whitney Sm1th , Keliah
Jacks; third row, Cody Davidson, Chatsie Manley, Bradley Ramsburg, Casey Richardson, Dustin Knapp, Robert Dru Reed;
back row, Shawn Ogaz, Michael. Blaettnar, Braoley Soulsby, Michelle Weaver, David Poole.

achievers receive recog"ition
Seniors awarded
·scholarships
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - Thursday at Meigs
High School was a day of recognitio,n
for scholastic exce llence and the
awarding of thousands of doll ars in
scholarships. Seniors received nearly
$148.000 in scholarship funds during
the awards asse mbly.
Students recognized and presented
sc holarships were as foll ows:
Keilah Jacks, valedictorian: Maude
Sellers Scholarship, $400; Ohio
Academic Scholarship, $2,205 a year.
renewable for four years; Washington
State Community College, truste,e
Scholarship, $4,500 a year for two years.
Shawn Ogaz. salutatorian : Ohio The Danfor th Foundation "I Dare You " awards went to four outstanding juniors ,
from the left. Bradley Jones , Shane Milhoan. Amy Barr, and Telisha Beha, picPlease see Achievers, AS
. tur!'!d here with Michael Wilfong, gu idance counselor.
·

No injuries in head-on accident
No one was hurt in a
head-on acc ident yesterday near the intersection of Lynn and
East Main ·Streets in
Pomeroy. A 1991
Pontiac driven by Don
Mullen, Pomeroy, and a
1999 Chevrolet truck
driven by David B..
Knight, Galloway, collided head-on. The accident remains under
investigation according
to Patrolman Adam
Holcomb of the
Pomeroy Police •
•
Department. Emergency
personnel from the
pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department and Meigs
EMS were also on the
scene.
Beth

Sorgont/ p~oto

POMEROY Meigs
Commissioners
Count y
Mick Davenport and Jim
Sheets discussed refinanc;
ing the lease on The Maples
to save money on interest
payments.
Chris Tenoglia, attorney
and vice-president of The
Maples Board, said the 50year lease is currently
financed at nine percent
interest through the United
States. Department of
Housing
and
Urban
Development. The original
lease was for $3 million and
included remodeling the old
children's home· into th e
current apartment comple ll.
Tenoglia said due to a
change in gove rnment regulations, the compleK ca n
now shop around for a differe nt interest rate and he
believes that has been found
in Graystone Finhncial out
of Wisconsin . Graystone is
offering an interest rate of
seve n percent Oil another 50
year lease with 40 years of
that lease being retin;mced.
Tcnoglia told Sheets and
Davenport The Maples had
been running a "little in the
red" for the last three years
and by refinanc ing the
lease. the hoard cou ld save
around $4.000 a month.
Tenoglia prese nted· th e
com mi ss ioners with the
new lease and interest rate
which will now be reviewed
by th e Meigs County
Prosec utin g
Attorney's
Office. A decision may be
made at the commissioners
nex t regular meetin g at I0
a.m ., May 25.
Sheets and Davenport also
unsealed bids on the plumbing, heating and cooling and
electrical work for Chester
Academy. Commiss i oner~
received a bid from Mark\
Plumbing and Heating, Inc ..
Reedsville, for $52,432.66 .
and from Hendri x Heating
and Cooling. Tuppers
Plains. for $42,000. Ne ither.
bid was approved upon further review by th e Meigs
County
Pro'sec uting
Attorney's Office to determine specificatio ns and
other qua lifications . The bid
will be awarded at the next
meeting. ·
Comm issioners were also
made aware that a C I and
C2 liquor lict: nse for
Abonas,
Inc .,
DBA
Pomeroy . Food Shop. 402
East Mai n Street. has been
applied for with the Ohi o
Division of Liquor Control.
Commissioners approve~
$3. 150 for renewi ng a soft•
ware support contract witll
MAX!MUS for financial
tracking systems used by·
the
Meigs
County
Department of Job and
Family Services.
There were 142 bills
approved at a cost of
$408,246.4 1.

\

.

�PageA2_

FAITH • VALUES
!
Seminar offered on - - -A Hunger For More- - -

The Daily·Sentinel

Friday, May 18,. 2007

dealing with grief

RODNEY - The Rodney
Pike Church of God will
host Spirit Care Ministries
at 7 p.m. on May 22 and 29
for a "Dealing With
Memories
and
Grief
Seminar·· under the direction of Connie Halley LSW.
The mission is promotin,g
healing of health to the
whole person through
Biblical perspectives.
Topics that will be
addressed at the &lt;&gt;eminar
are getting through sadness; feelings of loneliness;
emotional strains that can
be physical, mental and
·social : accepting help and

Friday, May 18, 2007

wwW.myctallysentlnel.com

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

'

getting on with life. Learn
to work your way through
painful' memories; remember to keep your loved
one·s finest qualities alive;
survive the holidays and
party times. The world
goes on but learn to cele ,
bratc life again.
Thi s two session se minar
is free of charge. All materials and hand outs are free of
charge as well.
Refreshments will be
served at each session. The
church is located on the corner of Ohio 850 and Ohio
588 in Rodney. To register
call 245-95 18.

Famed Harlem church in ·
New York celebrates 200 years
begins thi s month and ends
NEW YORK (i\P) When 'the
Abyssinian i11 November 2008, the
Baptist Church was found- actual 200.th anniversary of
ed. Thomas Jefferson was the church's origin.
" It
wa'
the
first
president. Abraham Lincoln
was not born yet. Afri can- · megachurch' of 2,000
Americans
were
still members in the country,"
enslaved, and would be for Butis said. "We want to celebrate what that experience
decades more.
A group of Ethiopian sea mean s. we want to talk
traders in lower Manhattan about comm unity developrefused to participate in scg· ment, spiritual renewal, and
regated church services a'nd of course th~;: history of
f&lt;mned their own congrega· Abyssinian Baptist as. the
lion, namin g it for their primary and premier relihomeland and taking many gious Institution in Harlem."
Presidents
free blacks from other
John
F.
churches with them.
Kennedy and Lyndon B.
·Two hundred years later, Johnson visited the church,
the church is going back to as did Jimmy Carter as a
candidate. The Rev. Manin
its roots.
Come September, the Luther King Jr. also made
Rev. Calvin 0. Butts Ill will one appearance there in the
lead a pilgrimage of about late 1950s or early 1960s,
200 church members and Butts said. The Rev. Ad~m
dignitaries on a pilgrimage Clayton Powell, pastor at
to Ethiopia to mark the the time, "was known then
church ·s bicentennial.
as 'Mr. Civil Rights,' but he
The trip, he says, will acknowledged Dr. King,"
highlight an observance that he said.

My oldest .son and I were
recently reflecting together
on one's relationship with
God and the question arose;
"How is our relationship
with God similar to that of
someone else?"
So together we began to
compile a list of similarities
and differences. We actually
didn ·t get very far for the
fact of our discussing each
point, but I thought I'd
share with you this week
what we discovered.
First, reminded as we are
of how the Lord instructed
us to pray in Matthew 6:913 (see also Luke II :24 ),
we see that the relationship
that you and I can have with
God is a real one with a real
Person ("Our Father..:').
The God of the Bible,
revealed as He is through
His Word, is not an imaginary friend, nor is He a
merely an idea or concept
that we use ·to explain the
unexplainable. He is real.
He feels. He thinks. He acts.
Not only that, but He also
loves. He giieves. And He
even hates.
Hates? Yes. He hates. It
isn't people that He hates
though (see Zechariah
8: 17). It's what sin has done
that He hates.
He hates its effect, the
devastation of lives and
hopes and dreams; and He
hates its source which is
pride and selfishness. Its
marring effect upon the
countenance of humanity is
a slur on God Himself
because we have been created
m .His · Image.
Furthermore, as we· have
become estranged from
Him because of it, how
'
could He not hate it?
He grieves over its presence in His creation and
the aching sorrows that it
produces in the human

receive Him. "...Call upon
Me and come and pray to
Me, and I will listen to you
.... You will seek Me and
find Me when you seek Me
with all your heart" (from
Jeremiah
29:12, 13).
Through prayer, He has
enabled the human spirit to
fly to the throne of heaven
and enter His presence. "Let
us then approach the throne
of grace with confidence, so
that we may receive mercy
and find grace to help us in
our time of need" (Hebrews
4:16 NIY).
And there is to be fruit to
be had from our relationship
with God. In human relationships, we desire many
things,
of
course.
Companionship,
some
degree of emotional intimacy (or closeness) as we seek
to "connect" with others,
and perhaps other things
like the accomplishments
that two or more may
achieve when they bring
together their talents and
resources together.ln a
much larger and more perfect way this is also true of
our relationship with God
when we approach Him
through faith in Jesus
Christ: "You yourselves
have seen .. . how I carried
you on eagles' wings and
brought you to Myself'
(from Exodus 19:4). · And
one of the amazing things
about our relationship with
God is that it both achieves
the most profound and eternal of intimacies as it brings
us near to the heart of the
Father, but also accomplishes the wor.k of the Father in
His mission to bring His
errant creation under His
'dominion of grace.
So when we pray as Jesus
taught us, " ... Your kingdom
come, Your will be done on
earth as it is in heaven,.. "

Pastor
Thorn
Mollohan

sphere. But again, He also
loves. And unlike us, He
loves perfectly, demonstrati ng once and for all the
immensity of that love in
spending Himself on the
cross on our be hal f.
Yes, God is real. More
real, in fact, then anyone or
anything else that we' 11 ever
meet. Flesh and bone and
blood, wind and· rock and
wave/ even sun and moon
and s ar, will all be gone one
day, but God Himself
always was and always will
be (Revelation I :8).
It is also similar to other
relationships we have in
that it relies upon communication for growth and fulfillment. No relationship
can be said to be meaningful if there is no connection
consistently and frequently
maintained between those
in the relationship (parent
with child, husband with
wife, friend with friend). If
there is no "relating" to
each other, how can there be
a "relationship?" Therefore,
our heavenly Father has
given us His Word and the
venue of prayer to hear
from Him and to reach out
to Him.
In His Word, He speaks to
you individually (as well as
corporately). Through His
Word, He speaks to your life,
your needs, your dreams,
and your future . In His
· Word, He reveals Himself to
eyes that desire to see Him
and hearts that yearn to

we can know that we are
simply asking, as God gives
"us this day our daily
bread" (Matthew 6: II ), that
the overflow of His activity
in our li ves will also effect
His purposes around us and
accomplish for others what
it has accomplished for us.
As my son and I discovered, our relationship with
God is just like that of anyone else .. . except it is bigger and more beautiful, for
the Person with Whom we
have this relationship is
infinitely beautiful and wise
and loving.· In our discussing it, we had to admit
that it is the one relationship
that' we wish above all others to nurture and enjoy.
And as we do so, we will
find that all other relationships 'will be enriched and
blessed because of it."
Ask and it will be given t&lt;i
you; seek and you will find;
knock and the door will be
opened to you. Por everyone who asks receives; he
who seeks finds; and to him
who knocks, the door will
. be opened. Which of you, if .
his son asks for bread, will
give him a stone? Or if he
asks for a fish, will give him
a snake? If you, then,
though you are evil, know
how to give good gifts to
your children, how much
more will your Father in
heaven give good gifts to
those who ask Him!"
(Matthew 7:7-11 NIV).

(Thom Mollohan and his
.family have ministered in
southern Ohio th_e past 12
years. He is the pastor of
Pathway
Community
Church, which· meets on
Sunday mornings at 455
Third Ave. He may be
reached for comments or
questions by e-mail at pastorthom@pathwaygallipolis.com).

Malaysian .leader says interfaith Presbyterian court says ban on gay clergy
conference postponed, not canceled applies to gay candidates for ministry
KUALA
LUMPUR, Christian and Muslim schoiMalaysia (AP) - Facing · ars since the Sept. II , 2001,
criticism from an opposi tion attacks in the United States.
leader and a clergyman,
"We will find another
Malaysia's prime minister suitable date," Abdullah
insisted th at a Muslim· told the .national news
Christian conference sched- agency Bernama.
uled to be held in Malaysia
Malaysia is currently
in early May has been P.OSt- chair of the Organization of
poned, not canceled.
the Islamic Conference, the
Prime Minister Abdullah world 's largest Islamic
Ajunad Badawi said he had groupmg.
asked for itto be delayed so he
Opposition leader Lim
can attend. The Building· Kit Siang had warned that
Bridges seminar has been held canceling the conference
annually for international ' would be a blow to the mul-

·r ·r ·r

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tiethnic country 's reputation
for religious tolerance.
The Rev. Hermen Shastri,
general secretary of the
Council of Churches of
Malaysia, expressed dismay
over the move and. appealed
to the government to review
its decision.
Nearly 60 percent of
Malaysia's 26 million people
are Muslim, but there are
large Buddhist, Christian and
Hindu minorities·whose right
of worship is generally
respected by the government.

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)
The moderator of the Presbytery had misread the
The ban in the Texas governing body had denomination's · governing
Presbyterian
Church said at the time that the Book of Order and therefore
(U.S.A.) on ordaining gay's requirement of chastity for "misled" those who voted
who aren't celibate also unmarried clergy did not on the woman's candidacy.
extends . to candidates for apply to those entering the
Like many Protestant
mini stry, ihe denomina- candidacy proce ss. The groups, the Presbyterian.
presbytery then voted to , Church has been debating
tion 's high-court said.
The Permanent Judicial support the woman's can- for years how it should
Commission took up the didacy.
interpret Scripture on gay
The following year, she relationships and other
issue in the case of a lesbian
who was allowed to become withdrew her name from the issues. Congregants who
a candidate for ministry in roll of candidates. The support full inclusion of
the Mission Presbytery in Judicial Commission said in gays and lesbians in the
Texas even though she said a May 7 statement that it church have tried repeatedly
she was in a same-sex rela- was still concerned that and unsuccessfully to chaltionship. ·
leaders of the Mission lenge the ban.

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The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

Forfjjveness antltlte
Hei1VIj Burden oflirud9es
The old adage to "forgive and forget" is ·
often much easier said than done. It seems
th&lt;tl a pan of us just won't let us forget ;
and. if we can't forget the wrong that was
done to us, it may be nearly impossible to
forgt ve. And although $Ometimes it just
feels so good to hold onto that "righteous"
anger; we should ask ourselves, who we
actuall y hanning b} holding onto all of th is
negative energy. The person who slighted
us, wheth er in reality or JUSt in our
imagination. may be blissfully unaware of
ihe grl'at wrong y,.htch they have ·
mmmittcd. Meanwhile. we are stewing' m
anger. re~entmcnt. and all kinds of
negatiVIty. So. we s ~ould get O\'Cf it. II ma
lx: wise to remember who lied to us or

We Sell Homes at
TEAFORD REAL ESTATE
Members ol the MLS and REALTOR"
Pick up a color Brochure!
216 East Second St. • Pomeroy

~.:hcatt.:d lis. 1f on ly to avoid repeating past

740-992-3325

)111:-.takc~. but th 1 ~

doesn't require holding
onto ull of the mtl:ndant negative emotioih.
If we can' tlet go of our anger. pcrhap!i we
~houkltalk to the pclMJil we arc angry wit h

after

we have had

il

chance

to

www.teafordrealestate.net
Karl Kobler Ill
Certified Public Accountant
email: kkebler@charter.net
618 E. Main St,...t
. Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992· 7270 .

calm down.

But. we should do so with an eye towards
resolvi ng uur differences rdthcr than

Thertfore, pulling a••ay falsehood, ter
tvtry Ollt speak the truth with /Jis
neighbor, for "'' are membtrJ one of
tmOiher. Be an,:ry but do 1101 ~in ; do not
·let the sun go do,•n 011 yottr anger, and
gi.,e no ~pporttmity to tilt de,•il.

winning the figln or shaming our enemy.
The Sooner we let our anger go. the sooner
we can move o n to more

Michelle Kennedy
Director of

Markettng

and Adm1ssio ns

333 Page

Street
(740) 992-6472
Middleoort OH Fax (740) 992·7406
Hours
6am-8pm

IJvfi[[ie's f}{estaurant
"A Home Bank for
Home People"

productive

KEBLI';R BUSINESS
SERVtCES

purwns.

IRA S". Ru/lovtrs•. Stocks' Bonds•. 'Mutual
Funds". Amwitie~ U»!g Tenn Cart&gt;

R. .V E hesians4.2'l-27'

Karl Kcbler. 111, CPA. Rei!iSICrcd
Reprcscntat1 VC of H.D Vest lm·estment
SCI"'I'ice!i'., Securities offered through I-I .D. Vest
lnvestmenl Scrv1ces~. Member SIPC Advisory
semccs offered through H D. Veliil Adw;ory
Scn· i~:es\ ... Non·llank sulbidiarirs uf Wells
Fargo &amp; Cflmpany, 6133 Nor1h State HWY 161
4th floor, 11"\·ing TX , 7503g (972) 870·600)

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949-2217

Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Home Cooked Meals &amp; Daily Specials

Open 7 days a week
740-992· 7713

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done u/llo you.
John 15:7

Sizes avai)able 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

The Appliance man
\ 740·985·3561
992·1550
Sales • Service • Parts
. All Makes

Ken and Adam Voun
MEIGS F~MILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 'I ii&gt;.
(740) 992-3279
. '-!!Y
Tol Free l-877-583-Z433

VanZandt and WanJ Rd:, Pastor: James
Miller, Sllnday School • 10:30 a.m.,
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Rl•erVallty
River Valley Apostolic worhip Ce.nter .
87) S. 3n1
A\'t.. Mid?leport , Rev.
Miciu£1 Bndford. Pastor. Sunday, 10 30
a.m . Tues. 6.30 prayer, Wed 7 p01 Bible
Study
Emmanufl ApostolkTabernadt Inc: .

Loop Rd off New Lm\8 Rd. Rud~ .
St:rv1ces: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m.
llum. 7:00p.m .. Pastor Many R. Hutton

Assembly of God
LlborlyAssemblyolc.d
P.O. Box 467 , Dudding lane, Masor. .
WVa . Pa!tor: Neil Tennant. Sunday
Serv1ce1- !O:OOa.m. and 1 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES
&amp;TEES
.
'

t90 N. Second St. Middleport, OH
740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues !-shirts and more
(740) 992-6451

P.O. Box 683
Pomero , Ohio 45769-0683

Rutla!Mt Free Wil Rlptkt
Sal~m St.. Pa.~;tor · . .'\unday School - 10
a.m.. Evening - 7 p.m . Wtdnesday
Scn'kes . 7 p.m .
Serond Baptist Chunh
Ravenswood, WV. Su.iday School 10 am·
, ~oming worship II am E\'ening · 7 pm.
Wednesday 1 pm.
First Baptkt Churr:h of !\.Won, WV
flndependent Baptist)
SR 652 and Anderson Sl. Pastor: Robert
Grady, Sunday school 10 am. Mommg
church I I am , SuOOay e\emng 6 pm . Wed
B1ble Srudy 7 pm

Catholic
Sacrtd Heart Cathollr Churr:•
lbl Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy, 992 -5HIJ8 .
PasTOr: Re\'. Walter E Hcmz. Sal. Con .
4:45 -5: 15p.m.; Mass- S:JO p.m , Sun .
Con . ·8:45-9. 15 a.m... Sun . Mass - 9:30
a.m.. Daily Ma~s- 8:30am.

Church of Christ
Wntside Churth of Christ

Baptist
P~~~tvilk

Fl"ftwW hpt1st Chun:h
Pastor: Mike Harmon . Sunday School
9:30to 10:30 am, Woriliip service 10:30
to II :00 am . Wtd. pnaching 6 pm
Carpmtn- Baptist Cllul'l'h
Sunday Sctiool · 9:30am . Preachmg
Service !0:30am. Evening Scn·ice
7:00pm . Wednesday Bible Swdy 7:00 prn ,
Interim Preacher · Aoyd R~
,

Chtsbl~ Baplist Churth

'

Pastor: Stev~ Little. Sunday School: 9:;30
am , . Morning Worship: 10:30 am .
Wednesday Bible Sl:udy 6:30pm: chmr
pracuce 7;30; youlh and Hible Huddies
6:30p.m. Thurs . l prn book stud)'
llope llaptbt Cburch (Southern)
570 Gram St .. Middleport. Sunday school
- 9:30a.m.• Worship - II a:m. and 6 p m., .
\\'ednemay Service - 7 p.m. PiSI:or: Gary
Elli§
Rutlalid First Baptist Cllul'l'h
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.. Worship !0:45a.m:
Pomeroy First Baptist
Pastor Jon Broden. East Main St.,
Sunday Sch. 9:30 am. Worship 10:30 am

First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike , Pastor· E. Lamar
O"Hryant. Sunday Sc hool - 9 30 am ..
Worship · 8: 15a.m .. 9:45 am &amp; 7:00p.m ..
Wednesday Services. 7:00p.m.
First Dapti.st Churc:h
PaStor: Btlly Zuspan 6th and Palmer St.,
Middleport, Sunday School - 9: 15a.m ..
Worship . 10: 15 a. m., 7:00 p.m. .
Wednesday Service -7:00 p.m.
Rat:ine First Baptist
Pastor: Ryan Eaton, pastor . Sundlly
School · 9.30 a.m., Worship - 10:40 a.m .•
7 00 p.m ., Wednesday Services • 7.00
. pm .
Sth·er Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swanson. Sunday School •
IOa.m ., Worshtp - l la .m.. 7:00 p.m
,Wednesday Services-7:00pm.

Mt. Union Baptist
Pastor: Dennis Weaver Sunday Sc hool9:45 a.m. , Even mg
6:30 p m ..
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.f1.
l:lethlehem Baptist Church
Grear Bend, Route 124, Racme. OH.
Pastor: Ed Caner. Sunday School J 9:30
a.m., Sunday Worship • 10:30 a.m.,
Wednesday B1ble Study · 7:00p.m.
Old Bethel Fl'ft! Will BapUst Church
28601' St. Rt. 7. Middleport , Sunday
Setvtce - I0 a m . ti :OO p.m , Tuesday
Semces -6:00

Vidory Baptist Independent
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport. Pastor: James
E. Keesee, Worship • IOa .m., 1 p.m .,
Wednesday Serv1ces • 7 p.m.

Warm Friend!)·,
Atmosphen:

740-949-2210

ChurdJ o( J""' Chris1 ApollA&gt;Ik

Hillside B11pllsl Chun:h
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7, Pastor. Rev.
h.me s R. Acree , Sr., Sunday Un ified
Serv1ce, Worship - 10:30 a.m, ,6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m .

·r

·r

·WORS1rnp GOD THIS WEEK

Faith Baptist Church
Ra1lroad St., Mason, Sunday School- 10
a.m.. Worship - 1•1 a.m., 6 p.m,
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m
Forest Run 8ap1fst· Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods. Sunday Sc hool- 10
a.m., Worship · II 30 a.m.
Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St. , Middleport , :Sunday
School· 9:30a.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m
Antiquity Baplist
Sunday SchoOl - 9:30 a.m.. Worship ·
10.45 a.m, Sunday Evening -6:00 p.m ..
Pastor: Don Walker

31226 Ch1ldR'n) Homt Rd. Pomeroy. OH
Con1ac1 740-441 - 1296 Sunday mommg
10:00 , Su n morning B1ble stUd ).
following ~·o rs hip . Sun. eve 6:00 pm .
Wed bible study 1 pm
Hemlock G"'ve Christian Cburth
Mini ster: larry Brown. Worship - 9:30
am Sunday School . 10:30 a.m.. B1ble
Study. 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Cburch or Chris1
212 W. Main St . Sunday School · 9:30
a.m.• Worship- 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m..
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.
Pomeroy Westside Church of C~rist
33226 Children's Home Rd . Sunday
Sch9QI- II a.m .. Worship . IOa.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ces · 7 ~ .m .
Middh!port Chun:h 01 Christ

5th and Ma in, Pa ~ tor : AI Hanson,
Chi ldrens Director; Sharon Sayre. Teen
Director: Dodger Vaughan , Sunday School
- 9:30a.m.. Worship· 8:15. 10:30 am .. 7
p.m., Wednesday Storvices. 7 p.m

Keno Churth of Christ
'
Worship - 9:30 a.m.. Sunday School ·
10.30 a.m., Pa~tu r-Jt:ffrey Walliu.:e. ht and
3rd Sunday
Btarwallow Ridge Church of Christ
Pastor:Bruce Terry , Sunday School -9:30

' ·m
Worship - lU :JO ·a.m .. fdO p.m.
Wednesday Serv11.:es ·6:30p.m.

Zion Church of Ci.rL~t
Pomeroy. Harnso nv11te Rd . {Rt.\4 3).
Pastor: Roger Watson, Sunday School .
9:30 a.m.,• Worship . 10:30 a.m.. 7;00
p.m . Wednesday Services. 7 p m.
Tuppen Plain Church of Christ
Instrumental. Worship Service - 9 a.m ..
Communion - 10 a 111. , Sunday School ·
10.15 a.m, Youth- 5.30 pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm

Bradbury Chureh of Christ
Minisler Tom Runynn. 3955R Bradbury
Road. Middlepon. Sunday School . 9:30 ·
a.m.
Wor~ hip - 10:30 a.m.
Ruthmd Church of Christ
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m .. Worsh1p and
Communion . 10:30 a.m., Bob J. Werry.
Minister
Bradford Churt:h of Christ'
Cornc.;.r of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd ..
Mimster: Doug Shamblin , Youth Minister:
Bill Amberger, Sunday School · 9.30 1un .
Wonh1p - 8:00 a.nl ., 10 :3 0 a.m .. 7:00
p.m.,Wednesday SeiVices · 7:00p.m.
Hickory Hills Church of Christ
TUppers Plains. Pastor M1ke Moore , Bible
elm. 9 a.m. Sunday ; worshtp lU ~.m
Sunday; worship 6:30 pm Sunday: Bible
class 7 pm Wed.
Reedsville Church or Christ
Pastor. Philip Sturm, Sunday School: 9:30
a.m., Worship Ser.,..1ce: 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study. Wednesday. 6:30 p.m
Dexler Church or Chrlsl
Sunday school 9:30am .. Sunday ')Vorship
· 10:30 a.m.
The Church or Christ of Pomeroy
Intersection 7 and 124 W, Evangelist.
Denms Sargent, Sunday Bible Stud}' 9:30a.m .. Worshtp· 10:30 a.m and 6:30
p m , Wedn~day Bible Study · 1 p m

Christian Union
Harltord Cburch or Chri!U In
Christian Union
Ha~tford. WVa., Paslor.David Greer.
Sunday Sch'bol - 9:30 a.m., 'worship
10:30 a.m .. 7 00 p.m.. Wednssday
Sel'\'ices- 7-00 p_m.

Church of God

your light so shine h~r.,~l
men, that they may see
works and glorify
Father m heaven."
Matthew 5: ' 499 Richland Avenue, Athens
740-594·6333

·
+.

Agency Inc.
Full tine of
Insurance
Products +
· Financial
Services
AGENCIES Inc.

1·800-451-9800

Syracusr Firsl Cburc:h of God
Apple and Second S.ts, Pa!itor: Rev. David
Rus'il'll . Sunday School and "wonhip- 10
a.m. Evemng Se n· ic~s - 6:30 p m.,
Wednesday Serv~ees . 6:30p.m:
Church of God of Propl~n"y
OJ While Rd. off St. Rt 160. Pastor· PJ.
Chapman . Sunday School
10 a.m..
Won htp - II a.m.. WedneWay Services. 1
p.m.

Congregational
Trinity Church
Second &amp; Lynn . Pomeroy. Pastor. Re\ .
Jonarhan Noble. Worship 10:25 a.m..
Sunday School 9:15 a 1n .

Episcopal
Grace Episropal Charch
326 E Main St.. Pomeroy, Sunda)' School
and Holy Eucharist II :00 a.m. Rev .
Edward Payne

Holiness
Communlly Church
Steve Tomek. Mam Stree1.
Rutland . Sunday Worsh1p-IO :OJ am ..
Sunday Service-? p.m.
Pa~tor:

Danville Holillts.'i Cllun:-h
3"1057 State Route 325, Lang• vile , Paslor .
Benjamm Crawford, Sunday school - 9:30
a.m.. Sunday worsh•p . 10:30 a.m &amp; ~
p m . Wednesday pra)er service- 7 p.m
Calvary Pilgrim Cha~
Harrisonvtlle Road, Pastor. Charles
M~ Kenzic , Sunday School 9:30 a.m ..
Worship - II a 111.. 100 p.1n., Wedm:Mlay
Scrv1ce- 7:00 p.m.
Rose or Sharon HollMSS Church
Leading Crtek Rd . Rutland . Pastor: Rev.
Dewey King. Sunday school- 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday worsh1p -7 p.m.. Wednesday
praJer meeting- 1 p.m.

~ : JO

6:00pm . Wcdnc :.da~ · 6 ()() p m B1bk
S1ud~

Rl'joicin8 l.ife Chunh
500 N 1nd o\\"e . Mtddlepon . PNor.
Mt~e Foreman. Pastor Ementm. La't\rence
FU1cma11. Wur~hifJ" 10 00 am
Wednesda~ St:,.-. ice.' · 7 p.m
Clifton T.abernadf Church
Clifton . W Va . Sunda} Sch1&gt;&lt;1l . 10 am ..
Wor,ship - 7 p.m.. \\'edne!it.lay Sen.·ice . 7
p.m.
New Life VIClory Cenlrr
3173 Geo11es Creek Road. Gallipolis. OH
Pa~l or. Bill Stal~n. Su nd ~y Senin:s · 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wednesday · 7 p m. &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.

Ash Slrett t.:hurth
398 A~h St .. Middl eport-Paslor Jeff Smith
Sunday School · 9 :30 a.m .. Mornmg
Wo rs hip - 10 JO a.m. &amp; 7.00 pm ,
Wednesday Scr\"ic~· · ·7:00 p.m., You'lh '
Serv1ce - 7:00 r .m
Agape Life Ctnter
""Full -Go spe l Churcl1'". Pastors John &amp;
Pall) Wade . 60~ Second A\'e . Mason. 773~017. Scrvu.:e"t1me: Sunday 10:30 a.m ..
Wednesday 1 pm

Bethany
Pastor· John GilmOfe, Sunday School · 10
am .. Worsh1p - Q am . W~dnr.;day
Sen· ~ees · 10 a.n1

Ab11ndant Gract K.F.I.
92'S . Third St., Midlllcpon. PastorTertsn
D ~vis. Sund:1y se rv1ce. 10 a.m ..
Wednesday serv1cc. 7 p.m

Carmel-Suuon
Carmd &amp; Ba ~ han R U~ Ra ~inc. Ohw.
Pastor J11hn Gdmorc Suntl.1y Sehoul ·
9 45 a.m. Worship - II 00 11m . . Bible
Stud) Wed 7 30 p.m

hith Full Gospel Church
Long Bmtom. Pas1or: Steve Reed. Sunday
School . 9:.l0 11m. Worship - 9 30 a.m.
and 7 p.m .. Wedm:liday · 7 p.m.. Friday ·
fcllow&lt;ihtp sen•1cc 7 p m.

Morning Star
Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday Sehoul · II
a.m.. Worsl1ip · 10 a.m.

llarrisoMille Community Church
P:1s1or · Theron Durham Sunday - 9 ·30
a.m. and 7 p.m .. Wedne!day . 7 p.m.

East Ltlarl
Bill Marshn ll Sundar S~hool ~
9a .[ll , Worshi p · 10 a.m .. lsi Sund:1y
ever) month evening ser,·ic·c 7:00 p m ;
Wednesday - 7 p m

Middll'port Community ChJrcb
575 Pr:nrl St , .\ 1iddkron . Pa stor Sam
Ande rso n, Sunday School 10 a.m ..
Evening· 7:30 p.m. , Wed nesday Se rvice ·
7:30p.m

Racine
Pastor: Ke·Tl), Wood . Sunday School · tO
a.m., Worship · II a.m.WedncM.!ay
Ser\'icc::s 5 pm; Thur Btble Study 7 pm

Faith Valley Tabernacle Church
Haile y Kun Road, Pastor· Rev. Emmelt
Ra wson. Sunda y Evening 7 p.m,
Thursday Scrvkt:- 7 p 111 .

Cool..,llle United Methodist Pllrish
Pastor: Helen Kline , Coolville Church.
·Main &amp; Fifth St , Slln School . 10 am .
Worshtp · 'J a.m .. TUes. Serv1ces- 7 p.m.

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman St ., Syra~:use, Sunday
School · 10 l.m. Evenmg - 6 p m,
Wednesday Service - 7 p m.

Be1hel Church
Town ship Rd , 468C, Sunday School ; 9
. a.m, Worship • 10 a.m .. Wed 11c~day
SerVices· 1'0 a.m.

Hazel Community Church
Off R1. 124. Pa stor: Edsel H.an . Sunday ·
School . 9:.l0 am .. Worship - 10.30 11.1n ••
7:30p .m.

Pa~ t or :

Hockin8porl Church
Grand Strt~et. Sunday School · 9.10 a.m..
Worshtp · 10 3lJ a.m . Pastor Ph1lhp Bell
·Torch Churrll
Co. Rd. 63, Sanda) School · 9 JO a.m.,'
Worshtp · 10:30 a.~ .

Nazarene
Middleport Churrh of the Sazarene
Pastor: Allen Midcap. Sunday School ·
9JO a.m ,WorshiP - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m ..
Wednesday Serv1ces · 7 p m.. Pmwr.
_Alleu Midcap

i\lel2s Cooperative Parish
Cluster, Alfred, Pastor. Jm1
Corbitt, Sunday School · 9:30 am ..
Wor.;h1p II a.m., 6:30p .m. .

Reedsville Fellowship
'Church of Ihe 'Nazarene , Pastor: Russell
Carson . Sunday School · 1} 30 n.m .
Worsh1p • 10.45 a.m.. 7 p.m.. Wednesday
Serv1ces · 7 !"'.Ill.

Nonhea~l

Chi'Sil'r
Pasto r: Jim Corbill. Worship • Q am.
Sunday School · IU am .. lhursday
Services. 1 p.m.

Syrarust' Chun:h of the Naut~~nt
Pas tor Mike o\dkins. Sunday Sch~l · 9:.\U
a.m., Worship · 10 30 a.m., 6 p m..

·~so

I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
God and man."

Acts 24:16

Morri~ .

Salrm Community Church
Back of Wrsl Columb1a. W.Va on1 LICI'ing
Road. Paslor : Ch;~rle s R ou ~ h (304) 67522RH . Sunday Sehoul 9·\0 am. Sunday
ev~ ning semce 7:00 pm . Bibl} Study
Wcdnesda} sen·ice HO pm
Hobson ChriStian Fellow~hip Clmrch
Pastor: Hersc hel White. Sunday SlhooiIU am. Sunday Church service ldO pm
Wedne•da) 7 pm

House of Healing Minl~trirs
St. Rt. 114 Langs,ilte, OH
Full Go~pi'I .CI Pastors Robert &amp; Robena
Musser. Sunday Seh011l 4: 30 am.
Worshtp 10.30 am · 7:00 pm. W1d
Scmce 7:00pm
Team Jesus Ministri1..'S
Metllng in the Mulbcrcy Co mmunlly
Center Gymna51um. Pastor Eddie B ~e r,
Ser.,..a:~ e\'ery Tuesday 6.30 pm

Pentecostal
P41ntecostal A.ssembl~·
Paslor: Gury &amp; Sharon Hughes. St Rt
124. Racine . Tornado Rd . Sund11y Schuol ·
10 a.1n .. E\ening · 7 p.m.. Wednc,dtl)
Scn1cc5 - 7 p m

Presbyterian
Harrisonville Presbylerian Church
Pa ~trw Robert Crow. Wop;hip . t) ~ . m
rt·1iddleport Pmbylerian
Pastor· James Snyder. Sunday School 10
a.m., worship service II am.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Severilh·Day Ad,·e ntlst
, Mulberry H1s. Rd ., PomerO}. Saturday
Semces: Sabbath School · 2 p.m..
Worshtp · 3 p m.

United Brethren

Faith Gospel Church
Logg Bouom, S und a ~' School ·9:30a.m.,
Wor§hip • 10·45 am . 7·30 p.m.
Wcdne~day 7:]0 p.m
!\11. Oli\·e Communltr Church
Pa slor: Lawrence Bush. Sunday School ·
9:30 a.rn , EHning · 6:30p.m.. Wednedar
Servi~c · 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Lighthouse
]JOJ5 Hiland Road, Pomero). Pastor Rn1
Hun1er. Sunday Schoo! - 10 a .lll Evemng
7-30 p m Tuesday &amp; Thur; · 7"30 p.m.

Mt. Uermon United Brethren
in Christ Church
Texas Co01mun ity ::\6-H I \V1ckham Rd.
Pa~10r: Peler Marhndale. Sunda} School ·
.9 :30 a.m .. Worship · HUll a. m.. 7· 00
p m , Wednesday Ser\ iies · 7:00 p.m.
Yomh grollp meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7 p m.
Eden l"nlled Brethren in Chri s1
Slate Route 124 , bet.,.,een Reeds\ille &amp;
Hockingpon. Sunday School . 10 a.m..
Sunday Wnrshtp . 11 ·00 am Wednesday
Semces · 7:00 p 111 . Pastor- M. AdJm
W1tl

South Bethel Community Church
S1her Ridge· Pa~IOr LmUa Damewood.
Sunday School· 9 :un .. Worship s. :r,t.:c
10 a.m. 2nd und 4th Sunda)

The care yo11 deserve, close lo home good works and glorify your

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

Full f.osptl Church
ofllle l.h·ing Sa\lor
Rt .338. Antiquity, Pastor: J e~se
Servtce!i: Saturday 2.00 p n1 .

Restoration Chrisli.an Fll"llmnhip
9365 Hooper Road. Athem. P~ stor :
Lonnie Co~1 s . Sundlly Worship IO·(X) am.
WedneM.!a) : 7 pm

Dyesvllle Community Church
Sunday School · cuo a.m . Worship .
l0 ·30 am .. 7p.m
Morse Chapel Church
Sund3y school • 10 am .. Worship · II
am. Wcdm:sday Sen-ict: · 7 p.m

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your lighr so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men, thar th ey may see yo11r
36159 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992·6606

Chun:-h

Pa,lor : Wa)llt' R. Jc"ell. Sunda~ \\ur~luf)

Communi!:'"of Christ
Port land R a~.· 1ne Rd . Pastor. Jm1 Pioffill .
Sunda y School - II:JO am . Worsh1p ·
10 30 am . Wedne•tla) Si&gt;nit:t' ~ . 7:00
p.m.
Bethel \\orshlp Crnter
J97H2 SR. 7, Rt:t:d~\·illt:. OH ~5772 , II~
mile nonh Of Ea§tem Sc hool s on SR 7. A
Full Gospel Church. Pa stor Rob Harber.
A~soc i ale Pa)tor Kar)' n Davis, Youth
Pastor Suzie Franci s, Sunday ser\'iCe!i
10 00 am worship. 6:00 pm Family Life
Cla~&gt;e~. Wed . Home Cel l Groups 7:00
p.m .. Ou1er Limit s Ce ll Group at the
church 6.30 pm lo 8:30 r m

Mt. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behmd WilkeSville, Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10·30 ~.m, 1 p m., Thnrsclay
Services· 7 p.m.

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
174 Lavnt Strttt• PO Box 27D
shall see God.
Nc~ H1ven, WV 25265
H. Andersoo, Licensed Funeral DirKtor
Matthew 5:8
Fuotr~l "'""""'"
Jffil

BiDie Church
P1le . Co Rd . Pa~ ltJr : Re1 .
Blackwood. Sund ;l} Scht\01 . 9 30 ~ m .
Wor shtp 10 ~0 a m . 7 30 p n1
Wedne~ay Sen tee · 7 30 p.m

RUtland
Pastor: Rick Bourne. Su nd:1y Scho0l ·
t):30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 am .. Thursday
Services - 1 p.m .
S.alt&gt;nt Cenler
Pastor: William K. Marshall. Sunday
School · 10:15 a.m .. Worsh1r · Y:l5 a.m.
Bible Study: Mor.day 7:00 pm
Snow,·illl!
Sunday Schoo l · 10 am .. Wur~ htp - Yam .

Graham United Methodist
Worship · II a.m . Pastor: Richard Nease
Bethtel United Metbod!.'ll
New Have n. Richard Neas~. Pastor.
S_unday worship 9:30 a.m. TUes. 6:30
prayer and Btble Study.

J41J.992-5-U4

Cah·ar~·

Stin~rs\illr"Communit~

Rotk Springs
Pastor Keith Rader, Sunday School . 9· 15
a .m.. Wor sh1p · IU a.m . Youth
Fellowship. Sunday . 6 p.m.

United Methodist

I . Pa ~ t or Oman .\1a ~.

Pomer~ ~

Oa.'iis Christian •' tJJo.,.shlp
t:o.;on -denomma110nal fellov. shlJJ)
Mce11ng in the M e l ~) M1ddle School
Cafetena Pa~lor : Oms Ste~~o·an
IU:OO am · Noon Sunda~ : lnlunnal
Worsh1p . Ch1k1ren ·s mmt ~ l l)'

Pearl Chapel
Sunday School · 9 a.m.. Wnrshtp · 10 a.m.

Lutheran

W \a R1

Sunda) Sch110l ." 9:.\0 am . \\nl'hip . 7 OJ
p.m . Wedne..day Rthle S111d~ - H XJ p m
Faith hllowship Crusade forChri~t
Pa ~tor Rt'\'. Franl-.lm D~ekem . Serv1ce:
Frt~) - 7 p m .

Amati11g Gratt Communil}' Claurch
Pa~ttlr Wa)llt: Dunlap . Stale Rt.6SI.
Tupper~ Pla1n ~ .Su n Worsh1p. lOam&amp;
t. · .~ 0 pm .. Wed. Bible Stud~ 7:00p.m

Miners,·ilte
Pastor: Bob Robmson. Sunday School . 9
a.m .• Wonh1p- 10 a.m

St. John Lutheran Chun:h
Pine Grove. WorShip · 9:00 a.m.. Sunday
School - 10.00 ii.m. Pastur.

IIIIICil fllltll· . . . . .

hiniev. SiDle Church
L~un .

Churth
2480 Second St . S~racu!.e . OH
Sun SchuuiiOam . Sund) mght630pm
r a)IOr }()( Qumn
A Ne"· BeginninG
Ifuti Gospel Chun-h) HamsonqiJe.
Pa,lors Bob and Kay Marshall
Sunda) Sei"\"ICC". 2 p m

Hll"alh (:\Jiddkport)
Pastor. Brian Dunham . Sunday ${hoot
9:3() a.m . Worsh1p · tJ ·OO u.m.

The Church or Jesus
Christ ol L8Uer·Day Saints
S1. Rt 160. 446 -6247 or 446 ~ 7486,
Sunday Sc hool 10.20- 11 a.m .. R"tlief
Socict)/Pricsthood II :05· 12:00 noon,
Sacrament Sen·ice 9-10 . 15 a.m .,
Homemabng meeltng , 1st Thurs.- 7 p.m.

5111111 ... 111.-• .........111

Whitf"s Chapi!'l \\"Kif} an
Cfl0 h1lle Road . Pa,lur Re' Charlc ~
Martindale Sunda ~ Schnol . Q J{J a m .
Worship · lU 30 a.m·. Vicd ne&lt;tda~ ~ f\ K(
. 7 p.m.

S~·racuse Community

fortSt Run
Pastor: Bob Robin'&gt;tm. Sunday Sehoul · 10
a.m.. Worship . 9 a.m

Latter-Day Saints

l48-912-5M1

t'rmlom Gospll"' \tiWo{!
Bald Knob . on Co kd ll. P a~ tor Re'
Roger W111furd. S u nda~ 5.:hu, ,l 9 JO
a.m. Wor~tu p· 7 p 111

Other Churches

Flahmods

Laurel QiR' Free Methodist Chun:-h
Pastor. Gle nn Rowe, Sunday School IJ 30 a.m.. WorShip · 10:30 a.m . und 6
p m .,Wedne~da y Sen ice· 7:00pm .

fili~rr funeral ~ome
284111111 SICI!Itllll.. 111111111.11
Ulll

pm

Chtsler Chun:b of tlk ~lltartoc
Pastor· Re' HcrbeJ1 Grate . Sul"ld.)" School
· 9·30 ~ . m . \\'orsh1p . II a.m . 6 p.m..
Wedne'lda ~ Serv 1 ce~ . 7 p.m
Rutland Churd of lhll" N•umw
Pastor: Isaac Shupe . Sunday School . 1;1 · 30
a.m.. Wor~h1p · 103 0 a.m.. 6·30 p m .
Wednc..dil~ Seni l e~· 7 p.m.

Pastor· Keith Rader. Sunday School · 10
a.m.. Worship · II a.m.

R11n Community Church
Pas1or· Rev Larry Lemley : Sunday School
- 9.30 a.m .. Wnrshtp- 10:45 am .. 7 p.m ..
Thuhday B1ble StUd)' and Youth . 7 p.m .

S1. Paul Lulberan C~~rch
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St.. Pomeroy,
Sun. School · 9:45a.m., Worship - II a.m.

C11rktun lnln-dmonUnatloolll Churrb
Kmgibur) Road. Pa5tor Ruben Vance.
Sunda~ School • 9.30 am . Wor~h1p
Sen1cc:: 1030 a.m . [Hn l n ~ Sl'f\ rc e 6

Church of !he Nazarene
hn l a\ender. Sunda) School .
YJ() a.m.. Worsh1p . 10·.\0 am and h
p m . Wednesda} Strnce ~ . 7 p m

Enterpri.&lt;;e
Pastor. Arland K1ng . Sunday School
10·30 am .. Wor,hip · 9.JO anl. Bible
Study Wed UO

Hy~ll

Our Siniour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry St s., Ravenswood,
W.Va .. Pasw: Oa\id Ru Ss~ll. Sunday
School - 10.00 a.m., Worship . II a.m.

-7 p.m.

Pomero~·

Tuppen P1airu St. Paul
l'a&gt;tor J1m Corb11t . Sunda) School . 9
a.m.. Worsh1p 10 a.m . Tue'ida;· Scnt c,;~
- 7:30p.m.
(ll"nlral Clusttf"
A ~bury fS yrncuse l. Pastor. Bob Robinson
Sunday School · 'l : ~5 a.m.. Wor&lt;Jup . II
a.m.. Wedne!oday Ser.•tces. 7:30p.m

Pomero)
Pa slor: Onan Dunham, Worship ·
a.m.• Sunday School- 10:.\5 am.

Scnic~

Pa~ tor ·

i.Alng Bouom
Sunday School - 9 30 a.m.. Wonh1p .
!0:30a .m.
Rftds,iiJe
Wonh1p · 9· 30 a.m . Sunday Schuol .
10 30 a.m.. First Sunda~ of Month . 7 00
p.m. sen·K"e

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Churt:h
15 Pearl St.. Middlepon . Pastor: RICk
Bourne , Sunday School - 10 un Wor~hip
- 10:45 p.m, Sunday Eve. 7.00 pm ..
Wednesday Service· 7 J() p.m.

Pomeroy

ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME

Wednnday
Joppa
Paswr· Den1il NulL Wursh1p . 9:30 a rn
Sunda) Sc~ooi - IO : lOam

Pine Gro,·e Dible llollness Church
112 mile off Rt . 325, Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley. Sunday Sc hool . 9:30 am ..
Worshir - 10:30 . a.m .. 7:30 p.m ..
Wedne~JIY Service . 7·30 p.m.

lf ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
words abide in you, ye shall INSURANCE
SERVICES
ask what ye will; and it shall
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be done unto you.
992-5130
John 15:7

992-6677

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

Mile Hill Rd .. RaCine. Pastor: James
Sa uerfi ~ld . Sunday School . 9:45 a.m ..
Evening · 6 pm .. Wednesday Services. 1
p.m.
RuUand Cllurcb 0;1 God
Pastor: Ron Heath , Sunday Worship . 10
am . 6 p m .. Wed~~ay Services - 7
p.m .

Father in heaven."
Marrhe~v :5: 16

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located le ss than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

1-740-667-3156

"Still small
God so loved the world
son .. .
John3:16

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prottct yDur /Dmify "

til

Suppres.;1on • Ellmgut ;;hers • Spnnklen;
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353-0837 Fa.:

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to care"

Mlll!race is sufficient
for thee: for m!l
strenl!th is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Office Service &amp;Supply
137·C N..2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992·6376
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�PageA2_

FAITH • VALUES
!
Seminar offered on - - -A Hunger For More- - -

The Daily·Sentinel

Friday, May 18,. 2007

dealing with grief

RODNEY - The Rodney
Pike Church of God will
host Spirit Care Ministries
at 7 p.m. on May 22 and 29
for a "Dealing With
Memories
and
Grief
Seminar·· under the direction of Connie Halley LSW.
The mission is promotin,g
healing of health to the
whole person through
Biblical perspectives.
Topics that will be
addressed at the &lt;&gt;eminar
are getting through sadness; feelings of loneliness;
emotional strains that can
be physical, mental and
·social : accepting help and

Friday, May 18, 2007

wwW.myctallysentlnel.com

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

'

getting on with life. Learn
to work your way through
painful' memories; remember to keep your loved
one·s finest qualities alive;
survive the holidays and
party times. The world
goes on but learn to cele ,
bratc life again.
Thi s two session se minar
is free of charge. All materials and hand outs are free of
charge as well.
Refreshments will be
served at each session. The
church is located on the corner of Ohio 850 and Ohio
588 in Rodney. To register
call 245-95 18.

Famed Harlem church in ·
New York celebrates 200 years
begins thi s month and ends
NEW YORK (i\P) When 'the
Abyssinian i11 November 2008, the
Baptist Church was found- actual 200.th anniversary of
ed. Thomas Jefferson was the church's origin.
" It
wa'
the
first
president. Abraham Lincoln
was not born yet. Afri can- · megachurch' of 2,000
Americans
were
still members in the country,"
enslaved, and would be for Butis said. "We want to celebrate what that experience
decades more.
A group of Ethiopian sea mean s. we want to talk
traders in lower Manhattan about comm unity developrefused to participate in scg· ment, spiritual renewal, and
regated church services a'nd of course th~;: history of
f&lt;mned their own congrega· Abyssinian Baptist as. the
lion, namin g it for their primary and premier relihomeland and taking many gious Institution in Harlem."
Presidents
free blacks from other
John
F.
churches with them.
Kennedy and Lyndon B.
·Two hundred years later, Johnson visited the church,
the church is going back to as did Jimmy Carter as a
candidate. The Rev. Manin
its roots.
Come September, the Luther King Jr. also made
Rev. Calvin 0. Butts Ill will one appearance there in the
lead a pilgrimage of about late 1950s or early 1960s,
200 church members and Butts said. The Rev. Ad~m
dignitaries on a pilgrimage Clayton Powell, pastor at
to Ethiopia to mark the the time, "was known then
church ·s bicentennial.
as 'Mr. Civil Rights,' but he
The trip, he says, will acknowledged Dr. King,"
highlight an observance that he said.

My oldest .son and I were
recently reflecting together
on one's relationship with
God and the question arose;
"How is our relationship
with God similar to that of
someone else?"
So together we began to
compile a list of similarities
and differences. We actually
didn ·t get very far for the
fact of our discussing each
point, but I thought I'd
share with you this week
what we discovered.
First, reminded as we are
of how the Lord instructed
us to pray in Matthew 6:913 (see also Luke II :24 ),
we see that the relationship
that you and I can have with
God is a real one with a real
Person ("Our Father..:').
The God of the Bible,
revealed as He is through
His Word, is not an imaginary friend, nor is He a
merely an idea or concept
that we use ·to explain the
unexplainable. He is real.
He feels. He thinks. He acts.
Not only that, but He also
loves. He giieves. And He
even hates.
Hates? Yes. He hates. It
isn't people that He hates
though (see Zechariah
8: 17). It's what sin has done
that He hates.
He hates its effect, the
devastation of lives and
hopes and dreams; and He
hates its source which is
pride and selfishness. Its
marring effect upon the
countenance of humanity is
a slur on God Himself
because we have been created
m .His · Image.
Furthermore, as we· have
become estranged from
Him because of it, how
'
could He not hate it?
He grieves over its presence in His creation and
the aching sorrows that it
produces in the human

receive Him. "...Call upon
Me and come and pray to
Me, and I will listen to you
.... You will seek Me and
find Me when you seek Me
with all your heart" (from
Jeremiah
29:12, 13).
Through prayer, He has
enabled the human spirit to
fly to the throne of heaven
and enter His presence. "Let
us then approach the throne
of grace with confidence, so
that we may receive mercy
and find grace to help us in
our time of need" (Hebrews
4:16 NIY).
And there is to be fruit to
be had from our relationship
with God. In human relationships, we desire many
things,
of
course.
Companionship,
some
degree of emotional intimacy (or closeness) as we seek
to "connect" with others,
and perhaps other things
like the accomplishments
that two or more may
achieve when they bring
together their talents and
resources together.ln a
much larger and more perfect way this is also true of
our relationship with God
when we approach Him
through faith in Jesus
Christ: "You yourselves
have seen .. . how I carried
you on eagles' wings and
brought you to Myself'
(from Exodus 19:4). · And
one of the amazing things
about our relationship with
God is that it both achieves
the most profound and eternal of intimacies as it brings
us near to the heart of the
Father, but also accomplishes the wor.k of the Father in
His mission to bring His
errant creation under His
'dominion of grace.
So when we pray as Jesus
taught us, " ... Your kingdom
come, Your will be done on
earth as it is in heaven,.. "

Pastor
Thorn
Mollohan

sphere. But again, He also
loves. And unlike us, He
loves perfectly, demonstrati ng once and for all the
immensity of that love in
spending Himself on the
cross on our be hal f.
Yes, God is real. More
real, in fact, then anyone or
anything else that we' 11 ever
meet. Flesh and bone and
blood, wind and· rock and
wave/ even sun and moon
and s ar, will all be gone one
day, but God Himself
always was and always will
be (Revelation I :8).
It is also similar to other
relationships we have in
that it relies upon communication for growth and fulfillment. No relationship
can be said to be meaningful if there is no connection
consistently and frequently
maintained between those
in the relationship (parent
with child, husband with
wife, friend with friend). If
there is no "relating" to
each other, how can there be
a "relationship?" Therefore,
our heavenly Father has
given us His Word and the
venue of prayer to hear
from Him and to reach out
to Him.
In His Word, He speaks to
you individually (as well as
corporately). Through His
Word, He speaks to your life,
your needs, your dreams,
and your future . In His
· Word, He reveals Himself to
eyes that desire to see Him
and hearts that yearn to

we can know that we are
simply asking, as God gives
"us this day our daily
bread" (Matthew 6: II ), that
the overflow of His activity
in our li ves will also effect
His purposes around us and
accomplish for others what
it has accomplished for us.
As my son and I discovered, our relationship with
God is just like that of anyone else .. . except it is bigger and more beautiful, for
the Person with Whom we
have this relationship is
infinitely beautiful and wise
and loving.· In our discussing it, we had to admit
that it is the one relationship
that' we wish above all others to nurture and enjoy.
And as we do so, we will
find that all other relationships 'will be enriched and
blessed because of it."
Ask and it will be given t&lt;i
you; seek and you will find;
knock and the door will be
opened to you. Por everyone who asks receives; he
who seeks finds; and to him
who knocks, the door will
. be opened. Which of you, if .
his son asks for bread, will
give him a stone? Or if he
asks for a fish, will give him
a snake? If you, then,
though you are evil, know
how to give good gifts to
your children, how much
more will your Father in
heaven give good gifts to
those who ask Him!"
(Matthew 7:7-11 NIV).

(Thom Mollohan and his
.family have ministered in
southern Ohio th_e past 12
years. He is the pastor of
Pathway
Community
Church, which· meets on
Sunday mornings at 455
Third Ave. He may be
reached for comments or
questions by e-mail at pastorthom@pathwaygallipolis.com).

Malaysian .leader says interfaith Presbyterian court says ban on gay clergy
conference postponed, not canceled applies to gay candidates for ministry
KUALA
LUMPUR, Christian and Muslim schoiMalaysia (AP) - Facing · ars since the Sept. II , 2001,
criticism from an opposi tion attacks in the United States.
leader and a clergyman,
"We will find another
Malaysia's prime minister suitable date," Abdullah
insisted th at a Muslim· told the .national news
Christian conference sched- agency Bernama.
uled to be held in Malaysia
Malaysia is currently
in early May has been P.OSt- chair of the Organization of
poned, not canceled.
the Islamic Conference, the
Prime Minister Abdullah world 's largest Islamic
Ajunad Badawi said he had groupmg.
asked for itto be delayed so he
Opposition leader Lim
can attend. The Building· Kit Siang had warned that
Bridges seminar has been held canceling the conference
annually for international ' would be a blow to the mul-

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tiethnic country 's reputation
for religious tolerance.
The Rev. Hermen Shastri,
general secretary of the
Council of Churches of
Malaysia, expressed dismay
over the move and. appealed
to the government to review
its decision.
Nearly 60 percent of
Malaysia's 26 million people
are Muslim, but there are
large Buddhist, Christian and
Hindu minorities·whose right
of worship is generally
respected by the government.

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)
The moderator of the Presbytery had misread the
The ban in the Texas governing body had denomination's · governing
Presbyterian
Church said at the time that the Book of Order and therefore
(U.S.A.) on ordaining gay's requirement of chastity for "misled" those who voted
who aren't celibate also unmarried clergy did not on the woman's candidacy.
extends . to candidates for apply to those entering the
Like many Protestant
mini stry, ihe denomina- candidacy proce ss. The groups, the Presbyterian.
presbytery then voted to , Church has been debating
tion 's high-court said.
The Permanent Judicial support the woman's can- for years how it should
Commission took up the didacy.
interpret Scripture on gay
The following year, she relationships and other
issue in the case of a lesbian
who was allowed to become withdrew her name from the issues. Congregants who
a candidate for ministry in roll of candidates. The support full inclusion of
the Mission Presbytery in Judicial Commission said in gays and lesbians in the
Texas even though she said a May 7 statement that it church have tried repeatedly
she was in a same-sex rela- was still concerned that and unsuccessfully to chaltionship. ·
leaders of the Mission lenge the ban.

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The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

Forfjjveness antltlte
Hei1VIj Burden oflirud9es
The old adage to "forgive and forget" is ·
often much easier said than done. It seems
th&lt;tl a pan of us just won't let us forget ;
and. if we can't forget the wrong that was
done to us, it may be nearly impossible to
forgt ve. And although $Ometimes it just
feels so good to hold onto that "righteous"
anger; we should ask ourselves, who we
actuall y hanning b} holding onto all of th is
negative energy. The person who slighted
us, wheth er in reality or JUSt in our
imagination. may be blissfully unaware of
ihe grl'at wrong y,.htch they have ·
mmmittcd. Meanwhile. we are stewing' m
anger. re~entmcnt. and all kinds of
negatiVIty. So. we s ~ould get O\'Cf it. II ma
lx: wise to remember who lied to us or

We Sell Homes at
TEAFORD REAL ESTATE
Members ol the MLS and REALTOR"
Pick up a color Brochure!
216 East Second St. • Pomeroy

~.:hcatt.:d lis. 1f on ly to avoid repeating past

740-992-3325

)111:-.takc~. but th 1 ~

doesn't require holding
onto ull of the mtl:ndant negative emotioih.
If we can' tlet go of our anger. pcrhap!i we
~houkltalk to the pclMJil we arc angry wit h

after

we have had

il

chance

to

www.teafordrealestate.net
Karl Kobler Ill
Certified Public Accountant
email: kkebler@charter.net
618 E. Main St,...t
. Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992· 7270 .

calm down.

But. we should do so with an eye towards
resolvi ng uur differences rdthcr than

Thertfore, pulling a••ay falsehood, ter
tvtry Ollt speak the truth with /Jis
neighbor, for "'' are membtrJ one of
tmOiher. Be an,:ry but do 1101 ~in ; do not
·let the sun go do,•n 011 yottr anger, and
gi.,e no ~pporttmity to tilt de,•il.

winning the figln or shaming our enemy.
The Sooner we let our anger go. the sooner
we can move o n to more

Michelle Kennedy
Director of

Markettng

and Adm1ssio ns

333 Page

Street
(740) 992-6472
Middleoort OH Fax (740) 992·7406
Hours
6am-8pm

IJvfi[[ie's f}{estaurant
"A Home Bank for
Home People"

productive

KEBLI';R BUSINESS
SERVtCES

purwns.

IRA S". Ru/lovtrs•. Stocks' Bonds•. 'Mutual
Funds". Amwitie~ U»!g Tenn Cart&gt;

R. .V E hesians4.2'l-27'

Karl Kcbler. 111, CPA. Rei!iSICrcd
Reprcscntat1 VC of H.D Vest lm·estment
SCI"'I'ice!i'., Securities offered through I-I .D. Vest
lnvestmenl Scrv1ces~. Member SIPC Advisory
semccs offered through H D. Veliil Adw;ory
Scn· i~:es\ ... Non·llank sulbidiarirs uf Wells
Fargo &amp; Cflmpany, 6133 Nor1h State HWY 161
4th floor, 11"\·ing TX , 7503g (972) 870·600)

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949-2217

Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Home Cooked Meals &amp; Daily Specials

Open 7 days a week
740-992· 7713

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done u/llo you.
John 15:7

Sizes avai)able 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

The Appliance man
\ 740·985·3561
992·1550
Sales • Service • Parts
. All Makes

Ken and Adam Voun
MEIGS F~MILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 'I ii&gt;.
(740) 992-3279
. '-!!Y
Tol Free l-877-583-Z433

VanZandt and WanJ Rd:, Pastor: James
Miller, Sllnday School • 10:30 a.m.,
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Rl•erVallty
River Valley Apostolic worhip Ce.nter .
87) S. 3n1
A\'t.. Mid?leport , Rev.
Miciu£1 Bndford. Pastor. Sunday, 10 30
a.m . Tues. 6.30 prayer, Wed 7 p01 Bible
Study
Emmanufl ApostolkTabernadt Inc: .

Loop Rd off New Lm\8 Rd. Rud~ .
St:rv1ces: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m.
llum. 7:00p.m .. Pastor Many R. Hutton

Assembly of God
LlborlyAssemblyolc.d
P.O. Box 467 , Dudding lane, Masor. .
WVa . Pa!tor: Neil Tennant. Sunday
Serv1ce1- !O:OOa.m. and 1 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES
&amp;TEES
.
'

t90 N. Second St. Middleport, OH
740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues !-shirts and more
(740) 992-6451

P.O. Box 683
Pomero , Ohio 45769-0683

Rutla!Mt Free Wil Rlptkt
Sal~m St.. Pa.~;tor · . .'\unday School - 10
a.m.. Evening - 7 p.m . Wtdnesday
Scn'kes . 7 p.m .
Serond Baptist Chunh
Ravenswood, WV. Su.iday School 10 am·
, ~oming worship II am E\'ening · 7 pm.
Wednesday 1 pm.
First Baptkt Churr:h of !\.Won, WV
flndependent Baptist)
SR 652 and Anderson Sl. Pastor: Robert
Grady, Sunday school 10 am. Mommg
church I I am , SuOOay e\emng 6 pm . Wed
B1ble Srudy 7 pm

Catholic
Sacrtd Heart Cathollr Churr:•
lbl Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy, 992 -5HIJ8 .
PasTOr: Re\'. Walter E Hcmz. Sal. Con .
4:45 -5: 15p.m.; Mass- S:JO p.m , Sun .
Con . ·8:45-9. 15 a.m... Sun . Mass - 9:30
a.m.. Daily Ma~s- 8:30am.

Church of Christ
Wntside Churth of Christ

Baptist
P~~~tvilk

Fl"ftwW hpt1st Chun:h
Pastor: Mike Harmon . Sunday School
9:30to 10:30 am, Woriliip service 10:30
to II :00 am . Wtd. pnaching 6 pm
Carpmtn- Baptist Cllul'l'h
Sunday Sctiool · 9:30am . Preachmg
Service !0:30am. Evening Scn·ice
7:00pm . Wednesday Bible Swdy 7:00 prn ,
Interim Preacher · Aoyd R~
,

Chtsbl~ Baplist Churth

'

Pastor: Stev~ Little. Sunday School: 9:;30
am , . Morning Worship: 10:30 am .
Wednesday Bible Sl:udy 6:30pm: chmr
pracuce 7;30; youlh and Hible Huddies
6:30p.m. Thurs . l prn book stud)'
llope llaptbt Cburch (Southern)
570 Gram St .. Middleport. Sunday school
- 9:30a.m.• Worship - II a:m. and 6 p m., .
\\'ednemay Service - 7 p.m. PiSI:or: Gary
Elli§
Rutlalid First Baptist Cllul'l'h
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.. Worship !0:45a.m:
Pomeroy First Baptist
Pastor Jon Broden. East Main St.,
Sunday Sch. 9:30 am. Worship 10:30 am

First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike , Pastor· E. Lamar
O"Hryant. Sunday Sc hool - 9 30 am ..
Worship · 8: 15a.m .. 9:45 am &amp; 7:00p.m ..
Wednesday Services. 7:00p.m.
First Dapti.st Churc:h
PaStor: Btlly Zuspan 6th and Palmer St.,
Middleport, Sunday School - 9: 15a.m ..
Worship . 10: 15 a. m., 7:00 p.m. .
Wednesday Service -7:00 p.m.
Rat:ine First Baptist
Pastor: Ryan Eaton, pastor . Sundlly
School · 9.30 a.m., Worship - 10:40 a.m .•
7 00 p.m ., Wednesday Services • 7.00
. pm .
Sth·er Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swanson. Sunday School •
IOa.m ., Worshtp - l la .m.. 7:00 p.m
,Wednesday Services-7:00pm.

Mt. Union Baptist
Pastor: Dennis Weaver Sunday Sc hool9:45 a.m. , Even mg
6:30 p m ..
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.f1.
l:lethlehem Baptist Church
Grear Bend, Route 124, Racme. OH.
Pastor: Ed Caner. Sunday School J 9:30
a.m., Sunday Worship • 10:30 a.m.,
Wednesday B1ble Study · 7:00p.m.
Old Bethel Fl'ft! Will BapUst Church
28601' St. Rt. 7. Middleport , Sunday
Setvtce - I0 a m . ti :OO p.m , Tuesday
Semces -6:00

Vidory Baptist Independent
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport. Pastor: James
E. Keesee, Worship • IOa .m., 1 p.m .,
Wednesday Serv1ces • 7 p.m.

Warm Friend!)·,
Atmosphen:

740-949-2210

ChurdJ o( J""' Chris1 ApollA&gt;Ik

Hillside B11pllsl Chun:h
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7, Pastor. Rev.
h.me s R. Acree , Sr., Sunday Un ified
Serv1ce, Worship - 10:30 a.m, ,6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m .

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·WORS1rnp GOD THIS WEEK

Faith Baptist Church
Ra1lroad St., Mason, Sunday School- 10
a.m.. Worship - 1•1 a.m., 6 p.m,
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m
Forest Run 8ap1fst· Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods. Sunday Sc hool- 10
a.m., Worship · II 30 a.m.
Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St. , Middleport , :Sunday
School· 9:30a.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m
Antiquity Baplist
Sunday SchoOl - 9:30 a.m.. Worship ·
10.45 a.m, Sunday Evening -6:00 p.m ..
Pastor: Don Walker

31226 Ch1ldR'n) Homt Rd. Pomeroy. OH
Con1ac1 740-441 - 1296 Sunday mommg
10:00 , Su n morning B1ble stUd ).
following ~·o rs hip . Sun. eve 6:00 pm .
Wed bible study 1 pm
Hemlock G"'ve Christian Cburth
Mini ster: larry Brown. Worship - 9:30
am Sunday School . 10:30 a.m.. B1ble
Study. 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Cburch or Chris1
212 W. Main St . Sunday School · 9:30
a.m.• Worship- 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m..
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.
Pomeroy Westside Church of C~rist
33226 Children's Home Rd . Sunday
Sch9QI- II a.m .. Worship . IOa.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ces · 7 ~ .m .
Middh!port Chun:h 01 Christ

5th and Ma in, Pa ~ tor : AI Hanson,
Chi ldrens Director; Sharon Sayre. Teen
Director: Dodger Vaughan , Sunday School
- 9:30a.m.. Worship· 8:15. 10:30 am .. 7
p.m., Wednesday Storvices. 7 p.m

Keno Churth of Christ
'
Worship - 9:30 a.m.. Sunday School ·
10.30 a.m., Pa~tu r-Jt:ffrey Walliu.:e. ht and
3rd Sunday
Btarwallow Ridge Church of Christ
Pastor:Bruce Terry , Sunday School -9:30

' ·m
Worship - lU :JO ·a.m .. fdO p.m.
Wednesday Serv11.:es ·6:30p.m.

Zion Church of Ci.rL~t
Pomeroy. Harnso nv11te Rd . {Rt.\4 3).
Pastor: Roger Watson, Sunday School .
9:30 a.m.,• Worship . 10:30 a.m.. 7;00
p.m . Wednesday Services. 7 p m.
Tuppen Plain Church of Christ
Instrumental. Worship Service - 9 a.m ..
Communion - 10 a 111. , Sunday School ·
10.15 a.m, Youth- 5.30 pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm

Bradbury Chureh of Christ
Minisler Tom Runynn. 3955R Bradbury
Road. Middlepon. Sunday School . 9:30 ·
a.m.
Wor~ hip - 10:30 a.m.
Ruthmd Church of Christ
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m .. Worsh1p and
Communion . 10:30 a.m., Bob J. Werry.
Minister
Bradford Churt:h of Christ'
Cornc.;.r of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd ..
Mimster: Doug Shamblin , Youth Minister:
Bill Amberger, Sunday School · 9.30 1un .
Wonh1p - 8:00 a.nl ., 10 :3 0 a.m .. 7:00
p.m.,Wednesday SeiVices · 7:00p.m.
Hickory Hills Church of Christ
TUppers Plains. Pastor M1ke Moore , Bible
elm. 9 a.m. Sunday ; worshtp lU ~.m
Sunday; worship 6:30 pm Sunday: Bible
class 7 pm Wed.
Reedsville Church or Christ
Pastor. Philip Sturm, Sunday School: 9:30
a.m., Worship Ser.,..1ce: 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study. Wednesday. 6:30 p.m
Dexler Church or Chrlsl
Sunday school 9:30am .. Sunday ')Vorship
· 10:30 a.m.
The Church or Christ of Pomeroy
Intersection 7 and 124 W, Evangelist.
Denms Sargent, Sunday Bible Stud}' 9:30a.m .. Worshtp· 10:30 a.m and 6:30
p m , Wedn~day Bible Study · 1 p m

Christian Union
Harltord Cburch or Chri!U In
Christian Union
Ha~tford. WVa., Paslor.David Greer.
Sunday Sch'bol - 9:30 a.m., 'worship
10:30 a.m .. 7 00 p.m.. Wednssday
Sel'\'ices- 7-00 p_m.

Church of God

your light so shine h~r.,~l
men, that they may see
works and glorify
Father m heaven."
Matthew 5: ' 499 Richland Avenue, Athens
740-594·6333

·
+.

Agency Inc.
Full tine of
Insurance
Products +
· Financial
Services
AGENCIES Inc.

1·800-451-9800

Syracusr Firsl Cburc:h of God
Apple and Second S.ts, Pa!itor: Rev. David
Rus'il'll . Sunday School and "wonhip- 10
a.m. Evemng Se n· ic~s - 6:30 p m.,
Wednesday Serv~ees . 6:30p.m:
Church of God of Propl~n"y
OJ While Rd. off St. Rt 160. Pastor· PJ.
Chapman . Sunday School
10 a.m..
Won htp - II a.m.. WedneWay Services. 1
p.m.

Congregational
Trinity Church
Second &amp; Lynn . Pomeroy. Pastor. Re\ .
Jonarhan Noble. Worship 10:25 a.m..
Sunday School 9:15 a 1n .

Episcopal
Grace Episropal Charch
326 E Main St.. Pomeroy, Sunda)' School
and Holy Eucharist II :00 a.m. Rev .
Edward Payne

Holiness
Communlly Church
Steve Tomek. Mam Stree1.
Rutland . Sunday Worsh1p-IO :OJ am ..
Sunday Service-? p.m.
Pa~tor:

Danville Holillts.'i Cllun:-h
3"1057 State Route 325, Lang• vile , Paslor .
Benjamm Crawford, Sunday school - 9:30
a.m.. Sunday worsh•p . 10:30 a.m &amp; ~
p m . Wednesday pra)er service- 7 p.m
Calvary Pilgrim Cha~
Harrisonvtlle Road, Pastor. Charles
M~ Kenzic , Sunday School 9:30 a.m ..
Worship - II a 111.. 100 p.1n., Wedm:Mlay
Scrv1ce- 7:00 p.m.
Rose or Sharon HollMSS Church
Leading Crtek Rd . Rutland . Pastor: Rev.
Dewey King. Sunday school- 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday worsh1p -7 p.m.. Wednesday
praJer meeting- 1 p.m.

~ : JO

6:00pm . Wcdnc :.da~ · 6 ()() p m B1bk
S1ud~

Rl'joicin8 l.ife Chunh
500 N 1nd o\\"e . Mtddlepon . PNor.
Mt~e Foreman. Pastor Ementm. La't\rence
FU1cma11. Wur~hifJ" 10 00 am
Wednesda~ St:,.-. ice.' · 7 p.m
Clifton T.abernadf Church
Clifton . W Va . Sunda} Sch1&gt;&lt;1l . 10 am ..
Wor,ship - 7 p.m.. \\'edne!it.lay Sen.·ice . 7
p.m.
New Life VIClory Cenlrr
3173 Geo11es Creek Road. Gallipolis. OH
Pa~l or. Bill Stal~n. Su nd ~y Senin:s · 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wednesday · 7 p m. &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.

Ash Slrett t.:hurth
398 A~h St .. Middl eport-Paslor Jeff Smith
Sunday School · 9 :30 a.m .. Mornmg
Wo rs hip - 10 JO a.m. &amp; 7.00 pm ,
Wednesday Scr\"ic~· · ·7:00 p.m., You'lh '
Serv1ce - 7:00 r .m
Agape Life Ctnter
""Full -Go spe l Churcl1'". Pastors John &amp;
Pall) Wade . 60~ Second A\'e . Mason. 773~017. Scrvu.:e"t1me: Sunday 10:30 a.m ..
Wednesday 1 pm

Bethany
Pastor· John GilmOfe, Sunday School · 10
am .. Worsh1p - Q am . W~dnr.;day
Sen· ~ees · 10 a.n1

Ab11ndant Gract K.F.I.
92'S . Third St., Midlllcpon. PastorTertsn
D ~vis. Sund:1y se rv1ce. 10 a.m ..
Wednesday serv1cc. 7 p.m

Carmel-Suuon
Carmd &amp; Ba ~ han R U~ Ra ~inc. Ohw.
Pastor J11hn Gdmorc Suntl.1y Sehoul ·
9 45 a.m. Worship - II 00 11m . . Bible
Stud) Wed 7 30 p.m

hith Full Gospel Church
Long Bmtom. Pas1or: Steve Reed. Sunday
School . 9:.l0 11m. Worship - 9 30 a.m.
and 7 p.m .. Wedm:liday · 7 p.m.. Friday ·
fcllow&lt;ihtp sen•1cc 7 p m.

Morning Star
Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday Sehoul · II
a.m.. Worsl1ip · 10 a.m.

llarrisoMille Community Church
P:1s1or · Theron Durham Sunday - 9 ·30
a.m. and 7 p.m .. Wedne!day . 7 p.m.

East Ltlarl
Bill Marshn ll Sundar S~hool ~
9a .[ll , Worshi p · 10 a.m .. lsi Sund:1y
ever) month evening ser,·ic·c 7:00 p m ;
Wednesday - 7 p m

Middll'port Community ChJrcb
575 Pr:nrl St , .\ 1iddkron . Pa stor Sam
Ande rso n, Sunday School 10 a.m ..
Evening· 7:30 p.m. , Wed nesday Se rvice ·
7:30p.m

Racine
Pastor: Ke·Tl), Wood . Sunday School · tO
a.m., Worship · II a.m.WedncM.!ay
Ser\'icc::s 5 pm; Thur Btble Study 7 pm

Faith Valley Tabernacle Church
Haile y Kun Road, Pastor· Rev. Emmelt
Ra wson. Sunda y Evening 7 p.m,
Thursday Scrvkt:- 7 p 111 .

Cool..,llle United Methodist Pllrish
Pastor: Helen Kline , Coolville Church.
·Main &amp; Fifth St , Slln School . 10 am .
Worshtp · 'J a.m .. TUes. Serv1ces- 7 p.m.

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman St ., Syra~:use, Sunday
School · 10 l.m. Evenmg - 6 p m,
Wednesday Service - 7 p m.

Be1hel Church
Town ship Rd , 468C, Sunday School ; 9
. a.m, Worship • 10 a.m .. Wed 11c~day
SerVices· 1'0 a.m.

Hazel Community Church
Off R1. 124. Pa stor: Edsel H.an . Sunday ·
School . 9:.l0 am .. Worship - 10.30 11.1n ••
7:30p .m.

Pa~ t or :

Hockin8porl Church
Grand Strt~et. Sunday School · 9.10 a.m..
Worshtp · 10 3lJ a.m . Pastor Ph1lhp Bell
·Torch Churrll
Co. Rd. 63, Sanda) School · 9 JO a.m.,'
Worshtp · 10:30 a.~ .

Nazarene
Middleport Churrh of the Sazarene
Pastor: Allen Midcap. Sunday School ·
9JO a.m ,WorshiP - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m ..
Wednesday Serv1ces · 7 p m.. Pmwr.
_Alleu Midcap

i\lel2s Cooperative Parish
Cluster, Alfred, Pastor. Jm1
Corbitt, Sunday School · 9:30 am ..
Wor.;h1p II a.m., 6:30p .m. .

Reedsville Fellowship
'Church of Ihe 'Nazarene , Pastor: Russell
Carson . Sunday School · 1} 30 n.m .
Worsh1p • 10.45 a.m.. 7 p.m.. Wednesday
Serv1ces · 7 !"'.Ill.

Nonhea~l

Chi'Sil'r
Pasto r: Jim Corbill. Worship • Q am.
Sunday School · IU am .. lhursday
Services. 1 p.m.

Syrarust' Chun:h of the Naut~~nt
Pas tor Mike o\dkins. Sunday Sch~l · 9:.\U
a.m., Worship · 10 30 a.m., 6 p m..

·~so

I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
God and man."

Acts 24:16

Morri~ .

Salrm Community Church
Back of Wrsl Columb1a. W.Va on1 LICI'ing
Road. Paslor : Ch;~rle s R ou ~ h (304) 67522RH . Sunday Sehoul 9·\0 am. Sunday
ev~ ning semce 7:00 pm . Bibl} Study
Wcdnesda} sen·ice HO pm
Hobson ChriStian Fellow~hip Clmrch
Pastor: Hersc hel White. Sunday SlhooiIU am. Sunday Church service ldO pm
Wedne•da) 7 pm

House of Healing Minl~trirs
St. Rt. 114 Langs,ilte, OH
Full Go~pi'I .CI Pastors Robert &amp; Robena
Musser. Sunday Seh011l 4: 30 am.
Worshtp 10.30 am · 7:00 pm. W1d
Scmce 7:00pm
Team Jesus Ministri1..'S
Metllng in the Mulbcrcy Co mmunlly
Center Gymna51um. Pastor Eddie B ~e r,
Ser.,..a:~ e\'ery Tuesday 6.30 pm

Pentecostal
P41ntecostal A.ssembl~·
Paslor: Gury &amp; Sharon Hughes. St Rt
124. Racine . Tornado Rd . Sund11y Schuol ·
10 a.1n .. E\ening · 7 p.m.. Wednc,dtl)
Scn1cc5 - 7 p m

Presbyterian
Harrisonville Presbylerian Church
Pa ~trw Robert Crow. Wop;hip . t) ~ . m
rt·1iddleport Pmbylerian
Pastor· James Snyder. Sunday School 10
a.m., worship service II am.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Severilh·Day Ad,·e ntlst
, Mulberry H1s. Rd ., PomerO}. Saturday
Semces: Sabbath School · 2 p.m..
Worshtp · 3 p m.

United Brethren

Faith Gospel Church
Logg Bouom, S und a ~' School ·9:30a.m.,
Wor§hip • 10·45 am . 7·30 p.m.
Wcdne~day 7:]0 p.m
!\11. Oli\·e Communltr Church
Pa slor: Lawrence Bush. Sunday School ·
9:30 a.rn , EHning · 6:30p.m.. Wednedar
Servi~c · 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Lighthouse
]JOJ5 Hiland Road, Pomero). Pastor Rn1
Hun1er. Sunday Schoo! - 10 a .lll Evemng
7-30 p m Tuesday &amp; Thur; · 7"30 p.m.

Mt. Uermon United Brethren
in Christ Church
Texas Co01mun ity ::\6-H I \V1ckham Rd.
Pa~10r: Peler Marhndale. Sunda} School ·
.9 :30 a.m .. Worship · HUll a. m.. 7· 00
p m , Wednesday Ser\ iies · 7:00 p.m.
Yomh grollp meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7 p m.
Eden l"nlled Brethren in Chri s1
Slate Route 124 , bet.,.,een Reeds\ille &amp;
Hockingpon. Sunday School . 10 a.m..
Sunday Wnrshtp . 11 ·00 am Wednesday
Semces · 7:00 p 111 . Pastor- M. AdJm
W1tl

South Bethel Community Church
S1her Ridge· Pa~IOr LmUa Damewood.
Sunday School· 9 :un .. Worship s. :r,t.:c
10 a.m. 2nd und 4th Sunda)

The care yo11 deserve, close lo home good works and glorify your

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

Full f.osptl Church
ofllle l.h·ing Sa\lor
Rt .338. Antiquity, Pastor: J e~se
Servtce!i: Saturday 2.00 p n1 .

Restoration Chrisli.an Fll"llmnhip
9365 Hooper Road. Athem. P~ stor :
Lonnie Co~1 s . Sundlly Worship IO·(X) am.
WedneM.!a) : 7 pm

Dyesvllle Community Church
Sunday School · cuo a.m . Worship .
l0 ·30 am .. 7p.m
Morse Chapel Church
Sund3y school • 10 am .. Worship · II
am. Wcdm:sday Sen-ict: · 7 p.m

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your lighr so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men, thar th ey may see yo11r
36159 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992·6606

Chun:-h

Pa,lor : Wa)llt' R. Jc"ell. Sunda~ \\ur~luf)

Communi!:'"of Christ
Port land R a~.· 1ne Rd . Pastor. Jm1 Pioffill .
Sunda y School - II:JO am . Worsh1p ·
10 30 am . Wedne•tla) Si&gt;nit:t' ~ . 7:00
p.m.
Bethel \\orshlp Crnter
J97H2 SR. 7, Rt:t:d~\·illt:. OH ~5772 , II~
mile nonh Of Ea§tem Sc hool s on SR 7. A
Full Gospel Church. Pa stor Rob Harber.
A~soc i ale Pa)tor Kar)' n Davis, Youth
Pastor Suzie Franci s, Sunday ser\'iCe!i
10 00 am worship. 6:00 pm Family Life
Cla~&gt;e~. Wed . Home Cel l Groups 7:00
p.m .. Ou1er Limit s Ce ll Group at the
church 6.30 pm lo 8:30 r m

Mt. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behmd WilkeSville, Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires. Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10·30 ~.m, 1 p m., Thnrsclay
Services· 7 p.m.

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
174 Lavnt Strttt• PO Box 27D
shall see God.
Nc~ H1ven, WV 25265
H. Andersoo, Licensed Funeral DirKtor
Matthew 5:8
Fuotr~l "'""""'"
Jffil

BiDie Church
P1le . Co Rd . Pa~ ltJr : Re1 .
Blackwood. Sund ;l} Scht\01 . 9 30 ~ m .
Wor shtp 10 ~0 a m . 7 30 p n1
Wedne~ay Sen tee · 7 30 p.m

RUtland
Pastor: Rick Bourne. Su nd:1y Scho0l ·
t):30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 am .. Thursday
Services - 1 p.m .
S.alt&gt;nt Cenler
Pastor: William K. Marshall. Sunday
School · 10:15 a.m .. Worsh1r · Y:l5 a.m.
Bible Study: Mor.day 7:00 pm
Snow,·illl!
Sunday Schoo l · 10 am .. Wur~ htp - Yam .

Graham United Methodist
Worship · II a.m . Pastor: Richard Nease
Bethtel United Metbod!.'ll
New Have n. Richard Neas~. Pastor.
S_unday worship 9:30 a.m. TUes. 6:30
prayer and Btble Study.

J41J.992-5-U4

Cah·ar~·

Stin~rs\illr"Communit~

Rotk Springs
Pastor Keith Rader, Sunday School . 9· 15
a .m.. Wor sh1p · IU a.m . Youth
Fellowship. Sunday . 6 p.m.

United Methodist

I . Pa ~ t or Oman .\1a ~.

Pomer~ ~

Oa.'iis Christian •' tJJo.,.shlp
t:o.;on -denomma110nal fellov. shlJJ)
Mce11ng in the M e l ~) M1ddle School
Cafetena Pa~lor : Oms Ste~~o·an
IU:OO am · Noon Sunda~ : lnlunnal
Worsh1p . Ch1k1ren ·s mmt ~ l l)'

Pearl Chapel
Sunday School · 9 a.m.. Wnrshtp · 10 a.m.

Lutheran

W \a R1

Sunda) Sch110l ." 9:.\0 am . \\nl'hip . 7 OJ
p.m . Wedne..day Rthle S111d~ - H XJ p m
Faith hllowship Crusade forChri~t
Pa ~tor Rt'\'. Franl-.lm D~ekem . Serv1ce:
Frt~) - 7 p m .

Amati11g Gratt Communil}' Claurch
Pa~ttlr Wa)llt: Dunlap . Stale Rt.6SI.
Tupper~ Pla1n ~ .Su n Worsh1p. lOam&amp;
t. · .~ 0 pm .. Wed. Bible Stud~ 7:00p.m

Miners,·ilte
Pastor: Bob Robmson. Sunday School . 9
a.m .• Wonh1p- 10 a.m

St. John Lutheran Chun:h
Pine Grove. WorShip · 9:00 a.m.. Sunday
School - 10.00 ii.m. Pastur.

IIIIICil fllltll· . . . . .

hiniev. SiDle Church
L~un .

Churth
2480 Second St . S~racu!.e . OH
Sun SchuuiiOam . Sund) mght630pm
r a)IOr }()( Qumn
A Ne"· BeginninG
Ifuti Gospel Chun-h) HamsonqiJe.
Pa,lors Bob and Kay Marshall
Sunda) Sei"\"ICC". 2 p m

Hll"alh (:\Jiddkport)
Pastor. Brian Dunham . Sunday ${hoot
9:3() a.m . Worsh1p · tJ ·OO u.m.

The Church or Jesus
Christ ol L8Uer·Day Saints
S1. Rt 160. 446 -6247 or 446 ~ 7486,
Sunday Sc hool 10.20- 11 a.m .. R"tlief
Socict)/Pricsthood II :05· 12:00 noon,
Sacrament Sen·ice 9-10 . 15 a.m .,
Homemabng meeltng , 1st Thurs.- 7 p.m.

5111111 ... 111.-• .........111

Whitf"s Chapi!'l \\"Kif} an
Cfl0 h1lle Road . Pa,lur Re' Charlc ~
Martindale Sunda ~ Schnol . Q J{J a m .
Worship · lU 30 a.m·. Vicd ne&lt;tda~ ~ f\ K(
. 7 p.m.

S~·racuse Community

fortSt Run
Pastor: Bob Robin'&gt;tm. Sunday Sehoul · 10
a.m.. Worship . 9 a.m

Latter-Day Saints

l48-912-5M1

t'rmlom Gospll"' \tiWo{!
Bald Knob . on Co kd ll. P a~ tor Re'
Roger W111furd. S u nda~ 5.:hu, ,l 9 JO
a.m. Wor~tu p· 7 p 111

Other Churches

Flahmods

Laurel QiR' Free Methodist Chun:-h
Pastor. Gle nn Rowe, Sunday School IJ 30 a.m.. WorShip · 10:30 a.m . und 6
p m .,Wedne~da y Sen ice· 7:00pm .

fili~rr funeral ~ome
284111111 SICI!Itllll.. 111111111.11
Ulll

pm

Chtsler Chun:b of tlk ~lltartoc
Pastor· Re' HcrbeJ1 Grate . Sul"ld.)" School
· 9·30 ~ . m . \\'orsh1p . II a.m . 6 p.m..
Wedne'lda ~ Serv 1 ce~ . 7 p.m
Rutland Churd of lhll" N•umw
Pastor: Isaac Shupe . Sunday School . 1;1 · 30
a.m.. Wor~h1p · 103 0 a.m.. 6·30 p m .
Wednc..dil~ Seni l e~· 7 p.m.

Pastor· Keith Rader. Sunday School · 10
a.m.. Worship · II a.m.

R11n Community Church
Pas1or· Rev Larry Lemley : Sunday School
- 9.30 a.m .. Wnrshtp- 10:45 am .. 7 p.m ..
Thuhday B1ble StUd)' and Youth . 7 p.m .

S1. Paul Lulberan C~~rch
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St.. Pomeroy,
Sun. School · 9:45a.m., Worship - II a.m.

C11rktun lnln-dmonUnatloolll Churrb
Kmgibur) Road. Pa5tor Ruben Vance.
Sunda~ School • 9.30 am . Wor~h1p
Sen1cc:: 1030 a.m . [Hn l n ~ Sl'f\ rc e 6

Church of !he Nazarene
hn l a\ender. Sunda) School .
YJ() a.m.. Worsh1p . 10·.\0 am and h
p m . Wednesda} Strnce ~ . 7 p m

Enterpri.&lt;;e
Pastor. Arland K1ng . Sunday School
10·30 am .. Wor,hip · 9.JO anl. Bible
Study Wed UO

Hy~ll

Our Siniour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry St s., Ravenswood,
W.Va .. Pasw: Oa\id Ru Ss~ll. Sunday
School - 10.00 a.m., Worship . II a.m.

-7 p.m.

Pomero~·

Tuppen P1airu St. Paul
l'a&gt;tor J1m Corb11t . Sunda) School . 9
a.m.. Worsh1p 10 a.m . Tue'ida;· Scnt c,;~
- 7:30p.m.
(ll"nlral Clusttf"
A ~bury fS yrncuse l. Pastor. Bob Robinson
Sunday School · 'l : ~5 a.m.. Wor&lt;Jup . II
a.m.. Wedne!oday Ser.•tces. 7:30p.m

Pomero)
Pa slor: Onan Dunham, Worship ·
a.m.• Sunday School- 10:.\5 am.

Scnic~

Pa~ tor ·

i.Alng Bouom
Sunday School - 9 30 a.m.. Wonh1p .
!0:30a .m.
Rftds,iiJe
Wonh1p · 9· 30 a.m . Sunday Schuol .
10 30 a.m.. First Sunda~ of Month . 7 00
p.m. sen·K"e

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Churt:h
15 Pearl St.. Middlepon . Pastor: RICk
Bourne , Sunday School - 10 un Wor~hip
- 10:45 p.m, Sunday Eve. 7.00 pm ..
Wednesday Service· 7 J() p.m.

Pomeroy

ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME

Wednnday
Joppa
Paswr· Den1il NulL Wursh1p . 9:30 a rn
Sunda) Sc~ooi - IO : lOam

Pine Gro,·e Dible llollness Church
112 mile off Rt . 325, Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley. Sunday Sc hool . 9:30 am ..
Worshir - 10:30 . a.m .. 7:30 p.m ..
Wedne~JIY Service . 7·30 p.m.

lf ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
words abide in you, ye shall INSURANCE
SERVICES
ask what ye will; and it shall
214 E. Main
be done unto you.
992-5130
John 15:7

992-6677

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

Mile Hill Rd .. RaCine. Pastor: James
Sa uerfi ~ld . Sunday School . 9:45 a.m ..
Evening · 6 pm .. Wednesday Services. 1
p.m.
RuUand Cllurcb 0;1 God
Pastor: Ron Heath , Sunday Worship . 10
am . 6 p m .. Wed~~ay Services - 7
p.m .

Father in heaven."
Marrhe~v :5: 16

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located le ss than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

1-740-667-3156

"Still small
God so loved the world
son .. .
John3:16

~

'L" '"' fomify Mp
prottct yDur /Dmify "

til

Suppres.;1on • Ellmgut ;;hers • Spnnklen;
• Secunty

172 N. 2nd Ave. Middlepon , OH
353-0837 Fa.:

'

to care"

Mlll!race is sufficient
for thee: for m!l
strenl!th is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Office Service &amp;Supply
137·C N..2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992·6376
•

•

"I .

•

i

�0 •

OPINION

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

Cor1gress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
o.f speech, or o.f the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. May 18, the I38th day of 2007. There are
days left in the year.
Toilay's Highlight in History:
On May 18. 1896, the U.S. Supreme Court endorsed "separate but equal" racial segregation with its Plessy v.
Ferguson de~:isiun, a ruling that was overturned 58 years
later by Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka.
On this date:
In 1642. the Canadian city of Montreal was foundeq.
In 1804. the French Senate proclaimed Napoleon
Bonapane emperor.
In 1920, Pope John Paul II was born Karol Wojtyla in
· Wadowice, Poland.
In 1926, evangelist Aimee Semple McPherson vanished
while visiting a beach in Venice, Calif.; she reappeared
more than a month later, claiming to have been kidnapped.
In 1927, a schoolhouse in Bath, Mich., was blown up with
explosives planted by local farmer Andrew Kehoe, who
then set off a dynamite-laden automobile; the attacks killed
38 children and six adu lts, including Kehoe, who had earli·
er killed his wife.
.In 1933. the Tennessee Valley Authority was created.
In 1953. Jacqueline Cochran became the first woman to
break the &gt;ound barrier as she piloted a North American F86 Canadair over Rogers Dry Lake, Calif.
In 1967. Tennessee Gov. Buford Ellington signed a measure repealing the law against teaching evolution that was
used to prosecute John T. Scopes in 1925.
In · J980. the Mount St. Helens volcano in Washington
state exploded, leaving 57 people dead or missing.
In 1982. a jury in New York City convicted the Rev. Sun
Myung Moon , founder and leader of the Unification
Church, of tax evasion and conspiracy. (Moun served 13
months in prison.)
·
One year ago: Visiting one of the busiest crossing sectors
between the U.S. and Mexico, President Bush said in Yuma,
Ariz .. that it made sense to put up fen,cing along parts ·of the
border but not to block off the entire 2,000 mile length to
keep out illegal immigrants.
·
, Today's Birthdays: Actor Bill Macy is 85. Sportscaster
Jack Whitaker is 83. Actor Robert Morse is 76. Actor and
television executive Dwayne Hickman is 73. Baseball Hallof-Famer Brooks Robinson is 70. Bluegrass singer-musician Rodney Dillard (The Dillards) is 65. Baseball Hall-ofFarner Reggi.e Jackson is 61. Actress Candice Azzara is 60.
Country singer Joe Bonsall (The Oak Ridge Boys) is 59.
Rock musician Rick Wakeman (Yes) is 58. Actor James
Stephen~ is 56. Country singer George Strait is 55. Rhythmand-blues sin ger Butch Tavares (Tavares) is 54. Actor Chow
Yun-Fat is 52. Rock si nger-musician Page Hamilton is 47.
Contemporary Christian musician Barry Graul (MercyMe)
is 46. Singer-actress Martika is 38. Comedian-writer Tina
Fey is 37. Rapper Special Ed is 33. Rock singer Jack
Jollnson is 32. Rhythm-and-blues singer Darryl Allen
(Mista) is 27. Actor Matt Long is 27. Actor Spencer Breslin
·
is 15.
· Thought for Today: "Committee - · a group of men who
indi viduall y can do notning;but as a group decide that nothing can be done."- Fred Allen, comedian ( 1894-1956).
2~7

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Friday, May 18, 2007

Episcopalians and tradition
Connoisseurs of ecclesiastical humor can answer
this question: "How many
Episcopalians does it take to
change a light bulb''' The
most popular answers sound
somet hing like this: ·Ten.
One lO chan~e the bulb and
nine to start a newsletter
about the irreplaceability of
the original bulb."
Episcopalians do love
their traditions. a trait that
they share . with everyone
else 111 the Anglican
Communion. Nevenheless.
the reason the world's 77
million Angli&lt;.:ans light so
much is that many cherish .
some traditions more than
others or sincerely believe
that. in changing times.
some traditions trump others.
Consider. for example.
the recent letter from
Presiding Bishop Katharine
Jeffens Schuri to Nigerjan
Archbishop ' Peter
J.
Akinola. urging him not to
visit the United States to
lead rites instal ling a bishop
here to minister to those
who believe the Episcopal
Church · has veered into
heresy.
"First. such action would
violate the anciern &lt;.:ustums
of the church which limits
the episcopal activity of a
bishop to only the jurisdiction to which the bishop has
been entrusted. unle ss
canonical permission has
been given," wrote Jefferis
Schori, in an epistle that
Akinola didn't rece ive
because he was already in
the United States.
"Second. such action

Terry
Mattingly

would not help tile efforts of
reconciliation that are taking place in the Episcopal
Church an~ in the Anglican
Communion as a whole.
Third. such action would
display to . the world divisio n and disunity that are
not part of the mind of
Christ. which we must
strive to display to all."
This "ancient customs"
defense is Jrtore than ironic.
Siressed a key conservative
strategist. After all , the issue
driving this Anglkan conflict is the Episcopal
Church's insistence that it
lias a right to modernize traditions about sexuality, salvation. biblical authority
and so me other hot-button
doctrines.
Early church teachings
that marriage is between a
man and a WO!llan or that
sex outside of marriage is
sin didn 't prevent the
Episcopal Church from
ordaining a . non-celibate
gay prie st, V. Gene
Robinson
of
New
Hampshire, as the bishop of
New Hampshire in 2003.
'The hypocrisy is rather
obvious," said the Rev.
Kendall S. Harmon. canon
theologian of the Diocese of
South Carol ina. "When

church traditions serve their
purposes, these people love
to quote them. But when a
church tradition gets in the
way. they feel free to toss it
out."
Thus. in his response to
Jefferts Schori, Akinola
argued that the 18.5 millionmember Church of Nigeria
- Anglicanism's largest
province created its
Convocation of Anglicans
in North America (CANAl
to provide shelter for those
defending the "faith once
for all delivered to the
saints ."

The Nigerian archbishop
wrote: "You speak in your
letter of centuries old custom regarding diocesan
boundaries. You are, of
course, aware that the particular historical situation to
which you make reference
was intended to protect the
church from false teaching.
not to prevent those who
hold to the traditional teaching of the churc h from
receiving faithful Episcopal
care .... I also find it curious
that you are appealing to the
. anCient customs of the
church when it is your own
Province's deliberate rejection of the biblical and historic teaching of the Church
that has prompted our current crisis."

This argument makes
sense for traditionalists. But
for
mainstream
Episcopalians, it sounds .
like. a mere rationalization ,
to allow a foreigner to
invade - setting up a nontraditional throne for the
newly installed Bishop

GrAHl
ER.
1007 ·

The problem ofjunk science
William
Rusher

mation contrad icting what a
seemingly impartial scientist has declared to be the
case.

Unfortunately however,
scientists. are human like
the rest of us , with their full
complement of opinions
and ·biases on all sorts of
subjects not squarely in
their field of expertise. And
not surprisingly, a lot of
them are happy to rely on
their reputations as unbiased experts to promote
political causes of one sort
or another. In many cases,
they don 't even recognize
what they are doing; they
. simply confuse what they
know with what they want.
So Bethell has written an
entire book to expose some
of the liberal myths that are
forever being foisted on us
with the important help of
scientists, who are torever
laying down the law without ever being effectively
challenged by the mediae
The current spectacular
. example, of course, is
"g lobal warming," and
· Bethell addresses it m

..

-

•

-

,

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A.5

Obituaries
B'etty (D.C.) Phelps and Annis Dillon, both of Ohio.
A memorial graveside service will be held on Saturday
June 2, 2007 at 2 p.m. at Bradford Cemetery with Doug
MIDDLEPORT - John William Leath 84, of Shamblin officiating. Arrangements are under the direction
Middleport passed away on May I0. 2007 .
'
of Acree Funeral Home.
He was a W?rid War II Veteran serving in the US Air
Fon:e. 8th D•v1sJon, 34th Bomber Group "H" and was a
.hfeume member ot the Veterans of Foreign Wars. He was
born Oct. 7. 1922 in Wetumka, Okla. the son or the late
Albert H. Leath and Fannie E. (Troop) Leath.
POMEROY- A memorial service will be held at II a.m.
Bes1des h1 s parents he was preceded in death by his wife on Sunday, May 20, 2007. at the Grace Episcopal Church in
Ethel Leath, twu 6rothers, Earl Leath and Everett Leath, Pomeroy for Grace Crow Eich, 94, of Pomeroy. She passed
and a daughter Deanna Gauld.
away on January 25, 2007, at Wyngatc in Gallipolis.
He is survi ved by three brothers, Leroy (Eulema) Leath,
She was born on Nov. 27, 1912, in Letart Falls, daughter of
Cahforma: Darrel. (Bonnie) Leath, Arizona;, Bill (Harriet) the late W. 0 . and Gladys Alexander Crow. She has a B.S. in
Leath, California: six sister~. Marie Redding , Oklahoma; Education from Ohio University and a Master in Education
LaDean Cook , Betty Williams. both of California; Carolyn from Kent State University. She was a member of the Alpha
Creech, lnd1ana ; Catherine (Harold) Isley, California; Delta Pi Sorority, P.O.E. Sisterhood of Athens, Daughters of
Wanda Bradley, Wisconsin.
American Colonist, Past Regent of Daughters of American
Also surviving are one son, Ted Albert (Melanie) Leath, Revolution, and the Ohio Retired Teachers Association. She
California: three grandsons, John Leath, Michael Leath, and received the Alumni Merit Award from Ohio University in
David Gould, all of California; twu granddaughters: Kristin 1968. She was a member of the Grace Episcopal Church.
and Laura Leath, California; two step-daughters, Jean (Earl)
Memorial contributions may be made in Grace's name to
Leath, Cleland, Indiana; Dottie (Paul) Will, Pomeroy, two Grace Episcopal Church, 326 East Main Street, Pomeroy,
step-§ons, WL (Debra) Phelps and Earl (Sharon) Phelps, Ohio 45769; or to the Meigs County Humane Society, P. 0 .
both of Ohio; eight step-grandchildren, 17 step great-grand- Box 682, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
chtldren, one step great-great-grandson; two sisters-in-law,
Arrangements were completed by the Pomeroy Chapel of

Grace Eich

ly sound, and that critics of
it are just wacky creation- ·
ists? The truth seems to be
that the origins of species
are far more complex than
simplistic Darwinists will
admit (Chapter 14).
And so it goes. In a chapter of "Final Thoughts,"
B"ethell calls attention to
what is easily the biggest
single incentive for the scientific exaggeration of
many alleged dangers: federal funding. In 2005 the
budget of the National
lnstit.utes of Health was
$28.8 billion. Enormous
sums are spent every year
on what some scientist has
decided is a new danger to
public health. But how
much do you suppose
Uncle Sam wou ld squander
on a scienti st who demonstrated that in fact it wasn't
a danger?
As Michael Cric hton
declared two years ago in a·
lecture at Caltech, "Rather
than serving as a cleansing
force, science has in some
instances been seduced by
the more ancient lures of
politics and publicity." In
this book, Tom Bethell is
calling it back to its true
responsibility.
.
(William Rushe r is a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Phil.osophy.)

,·

Fisher Funeral Home and on-line condolences may be sent
to the family at www.fishcrfuneralhomes .com.

Karen Sue Hart
RUTLAND - Kare n Sue Han. 50. of Rutland died May
15, 2007 at her residence after an extended illness.
She was born Oct. 7. 1956 in Mason. W Va. to the late
Eugene Franklin and Clara Mae (Abbott) Hart. Karen had
worked in nursing at Veteran's Mernorial Hospital. She wa~
a member of Emmanuel Apostolic Tabernacle. where she
will be sadly missed.
She is survived by her husband. Charle s McGrath.
Rutland, one son Levi Aaron McGrath of Rutland. one
daughter Angela Mozingo of Rutland. three grandchi ldren.
two brothers Roben (Gail) Han of Middleport. Randy
(Sherri) Hart of Vinton. two sisters Linda (E~l Stewan of
New Haven and Sharon (Virgil) Jacks of Pomeroy. her
mother and fath er-in-law Rachel and Mickey Hutton of
Rutland and a brother-in-law Rev. Marly (Lora ina 1 Hutton
of Rutland. as well as several nieces and nephews.
Funeral serv i~:e s will be held at Ip.m. on Saturday May
19, 2007 at Emmanuel Apostolic Tabernacle with the Rn .
Many Hutton ofli~:iating . Burial will follow at Beech
Grove Cemetery. Vi,itation will be held on Friday May I~.
2007 from 6-9 p.m . at Acree Funeral Home in Middleport .

Community outreach Deaths
Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicine (OU-COM) students representing the graduating class of 2010 comfort Nathan Hyatt in the Emergency
Department at O'Bieness Mernorial
Hospital recently. The class of 2010
developed a monthly community outreach project. In April the classmates
bought and assemb led a number of toys,
books and games to give to children who
visit O'Bieness. From left is Kathryn
Ruda, Michelle Walter and Jennifer
Lykens. vice president of the OU£0M
class of 2010. Nathan is the son of
Zyda Hyatt.
Submitted photo

Water line
from Page A1
and reinvestments in system
components would be necessary and advisable to assure
protection of lives and property and sustain tlood dam-

from PageA1

Chapter I. All serious proposed remedies for this supposed peril involve cutting
down on economic activity.
In the case of the United
States, Bethell states, ·the
Kyoto protocol (w hich this
country refused to sign)
would have required U.S.
emissions of so-called
"greenhouse gases" to be
cut so much that "economic
depression .would have
been the one sure result."
That wouldn 'I bother the
world's liberals and socialists much, of course, since
they enjoy inconveniencing
Uncle Sam. And many scientists (though by no means
all ) went along.
But Bethell's book has 13
other
chapters.
each
exploding the phony "science" behind some other
liberal shibboleth. Think
nuclear power is dangerous? By artfully playing on
the confusion between
nuclear power and nuclear
weapons, activists have
crippled the use of "the
safest of all energy
sources,"
and
vastly
increased the use of heavily
polluting coal-fired power
plams (Chapter 2). Worried
about DDT thinning the
shells
of endangered
eagles? It doesn 't - but a
mi II ion people a year are
dying nf malaria in Africa
alone for lack of it (Chapter
5). Convinced that the theory of evolution is essential-

'

•

2007

Achievers

IMPROVED.

As regular readers know,
I seldom review books in
these col umn s, preferring to
leave that important job to
professional reviewers. But
every once in a whi le u
book comes along that illuminates a maJor political
problem so effectively thai
I cannot resist calling it to
the attention of thoughtfu l
readers. That is the case
with Tom Bethell's "The
Politically Incorrect Guide
to Science," rece ntly published by Regnery.
As Bethell points out in
an ·introduction , science is
. forever being used, like
everything else, to reinforce
political
viewpoints.
Normally, . ~n aovocate
using something to support
his point of view is promptly countered, more or less
effectively, by an opponent
citing something else that
contradicts it. The rest of us
can listen, with the help of
the media, and decide for
ourse lves which viewpoint
is better supported and
therefore deserves to be
believed.
But.
Bethell
notes,
"Scienti sts seem to enjoy a
measure of immunity." If a
statement is made by a scientist in hi s professio nal
capacity. non -scientists are
afraid to contradict him .
Even the media. whom we
can usually co unt on tO
report uppuslng points of
view, seldom look for infor-

•

John William Leath

Martyn Minns of Truro
Church in Fairfax, Va. At
this point, one-third of
CANA's 34 parishes are
ethnically Nigerian, onethird are in · northern
Virginia and the rest are
elsewhere in the United
States.
In
other
words,
Archbishop Akinola is
"staking a claim on the soil
of The Episcopal Church,
putting his chair there and
welcoming
someone
(Bishop Minns) to sit
there," said the Rev. Mark
Harris of Delaware, a member of the executive council
of the Episcopal Church.
But the archbishop's new
throne isn' t real, wrote
Harris, at his "Preludium"
Web site. Akinola's new
"diocese-like thing" is not
an Anglican province.
Instead, it's a kind of eccle·
siastical joke.
"There is no remedy
except to get rid of the chair.
And since it is a mostly a
symbolic chair the way to
rid ourselves of it is to laugh
it out of its power," he said.
Thus, the best strategy for
Episcopal leaders is to
"hold the chair in derision.
.. . The chair, like the cigar,
is sometimes only a chair."
(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Journalism . Center at the
Christian
Council for
Colleges and Universities
and
· leads
the
GetReligion.org project to
study religion and the
news.)

IT ONLY 0£T5 20MP6
BUT; mA HUNDRED YEARS,
THATZ.L BE VASTLY

Friday, May t8;

T

University
Appalachian
Scholarship. $1 0,000 a year,
renewable for four years;
Gateway Scholarship. $500;
Ohio University AlphaTau of
Theta Chi Sesquice nten nial
Scholarship. $300.
Kayla Grover: The Ohio
State Univers ity Land Grant
Scholarship, $ 17,000 per
yea r renewable for four
years.
.
Dru Reed: American Red
Cross Scholarship, $750;
Friday
Businessmen 's
. Scholarship, $500; Milestone
Benefits Scholarship. $500;
MLTA Schol arship, $300;
Ohio Un iversity Men's
Independent
Association
Scholarship, $750.
Daniel Bookman: Bachtel
Scholarship for Academic
Excellence. $2,500; Holzer
Clinic Science Award; $300;
Ohio University AtkinsonAtticott Sesquicentennial
Scholarship, $525;
David Poole: Bachtel
Scholarship, $2,500; Ohio
University Blanche R.
Powdl Scholarship, $575 .
Whitney Smith: Bachtel
Scholarship $2,500; Bedford
Township
Scholarship,
$500; Dennis Boggs/ Adam
Grim Scholarship.
Casey Richardson: Brandi
· Thomas Scholarship, $1,000.
Samantha Shontz: De Vry
Un iversity
Scho larship,
$1,000 a semester for 9
OASBO
semesters;
Scholarship, $500.
Clayton Blackston : Eva
Robson Scholarship, $3,000.
Ashley Zielinski: Mei gs
High Faculty Scholarship.
$350.
Sarah Lantz: Milestone

age reduction and ecosystem
restoration.
Burr Oak Regional Water
District will receive $4 million for a water treatment
plant; $1 million will go
towards the construction of
water lines in Vinton and
Brown Townships; $5 million will go towards- the

Ballroom Dance Classes
Begin S/18
Ariel Dancers Recital at
URG 5/19
AUDITIONS:
"Captain Fantastic"
Roles For Teens/pre-teens
MAY 22 &amp; 23 6-8 PM
The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Gattip ~t;~ ?H
~•n

'"·ARTS.

1 7.

Local Briefs

Free vision clinic

Job's Daughters bike run
MIDDLEPQRT --:- Bethel fi2 of Job's Daughters will
host a bike run leaving at I p.m. on · Saturday from the
Middleport Masonic Temple with a picnic to fo llow. The
event wi ll rai se fund s fonhe local Bethel to attend Grand
Session at Kent State University. Call 4 16-1261 for mure
information . The run will g'o through Meigs County.

Mammography clinic
TUPPERS PLAINS -On June 5 a nwbile mammogr.tphy clinic from The James Cancer Center will be parked ut
the Cool Spot in Tuppers Plains to .provide mammogram,.
Some of the mammograms will be free through the Think
Pink Progmm as well as ot her available programs for quali fying Meigs County residents. At this time the clinic is only
half fulL Call Program Coordinator Norma Torres or Carolyn
Grueser at 992-2 161. ext. 236 to make an appointment ur see
if you qualify for the free screening. Manim 0grams will also
be available to women who have insu rance.

Immunization clinic
POMEROY- The Meigs County Health Department will
hold a childhood immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3
p.m. on Tuesday at the health depa11ment. Bring shot records.
A $5 donation .appreciated but not required tor serv i .c~s.

· Correction
SYRACUSE - There is currently no p•irking allowed in
tile front of the Syracuse Post Office near the trees becmi se
of reconfiguratfon of the parking Jut and to help prevent
traffic accidents.

Meeting rescheduled
POMEROY - Next week's meeting of the Meigs
County Com missioners has been rescheduled for 10 ·a.m ..
Friday, at the Meigs County Courthouse.

00000000000000
'The Junior Class of Meigs High
School would like to thank tile
following for their assistance with
tile 2007 Junior/Senior prom:

£STABLISH[D 1695

"Lil' Abner"

HOCKI NGPO RT - Marjorie V. Luman. 86. of
Hockingport passed away Thursday, May 17 , 2007 at her
residence.
She was preceded in death by her husband. Kenneth
Luman Sr.
Services will be held II a.m .. Monday, May 21. 2007 at
Whit'e-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolvi lle. with Bill Duty
and David Dye officiating . Burial will be in .the Evergreen
Cemetery, Belpre, Ohio.
.
Friends may call at the funerA l hom e Sunday. from 6-8
p.m.-An on-line guestbook at www.white-schwarzelfuneralhome.com can be signed.

The study is to. evaluate the
applicability and feasibility
of various restoration solution to the overall degradation of the ecosystem.
Options include limited
POMEROY - The Meigs County Health Department
stream restoration, wetland will offer a free vision clinic for children ages birth to 2 1
creation and wildlife habi.tat on Wednesday at the health department. The clinic is for
restoration in Perry, Athens children with current or possible vision problems. Call
Sherry Wilcox, RN. at 992-6626 for an appointmenL
and Hocking Coun ties.

News Channel 3 Best of the
Benefits Schol arship. $500. tuition, $6.000.
Michael
Blaettnar:
Rachel Mowery: Wendy's Class; and Andy Garnes and
Milestone
Benefits Scholarship, $250.
Ashley received American
Scholarship, $500.
Cody
Davidson: Legion Americanism and
Dustin Knapp: Milestone . Washington State Connect to . Government Awards.
Benefits Scholarship, $500. · Success Scholarship, $500.
Others recognized were
Bradley
Suulsby:
·Certificates of
Ashley DeMoss, DECA
Milestone
Benefits
Recognition
Member of the Year; Joshua
Scholarship. $500.
Students given special Taylor, marketing education
Bradley
Ramsburg: recognition for achievement student of the year; Steven
Milestone
Benefits and/or academic excellence Hudson, the Sons of Union
Scholarship, $500.
were awarded certificates Veterans essay contest
Cecil ia Core: Milestone during the awards day pro- award; Michael Wheeler,
Benefits Scholarship, $500. gram. They incl uded:
the outstanding work study
• Nikki
Stitt:
Ohio
The 2007 Award of Merit student; Daniel Bookman,
Uni.versity Gateway schol- reclptents
were
Dane the top science senior;
arship, $500.
Eichi nger, Shawn Ogaz, . Talishia Beha and Amy
MicheJie
Weaver: Krysta Stitt, and Ashley Barr, overall academ ic in
Milestone
Benefits Zielinski, college prep; and · chemistry awards.
Amy Barr, the outstundScholarship, $500.
Ahley DeMoss, Sarah
Dane Eichi nger: National Lantz,
and
Amanda ing junior science student
Council Daughters of Schartiger, career-technical. from Bausch &amp; Lomb
America, $500; Washington
U.S.
Army
Reserve Honorary Science Award:
State Community Col lege National
Scholar/Athlete Daniel Bookman and Kayla
Tech Prep ,Scholarship, Awards were presented to Grover, top physics stu- .
$2,500.
Daniel
Bookman
and dents; Son ny Palmer, the
Dustin Knapp: . Parker Whitney Smith. David Poole medical office management
Long Scholarship, $500; received the U.S. Marine · award; Joshua Taylor and
Milestone
Benefits Corps Distinguished Athlete Ashley DeMoss, marketing
Scholarship, $500.
Award. Keilah Jacks the U.S. awards; Keilah Jacks, top
Bradley Ramsburg: Tri- Marine Corps Scholastic English student; Dru Reed,
County Vending Scholarship, Achievement Award, and dmma award.
Recipients of Danforth
$500; Milestone Benefits Ashley Taylor, the U.S.
Scholarship, $500.
.
Marine Corps Semper Fidelis Foundation "I Dare · You"
Jennifer Smith: Student Award. The awards. were pre- awards, outstanding juniors
Council Scholarship, $300; sented by representatives of recognized for their efforts to
achieve their personal best,
Bachtel
Scholarship, the military branches.
$2,500; Bedford Township
David Poole and Whitney lead a balanced life, and
Scholarship, $500.
Smith received the Wendy's make a positi ve difference in
Ch·a Jsie
Man ley: High School Heisman their comm.unity, were Amy
University of Rio Grande Awards, Keilah Jacks was Barr. Talisha Beha, Bradley
Scholarship, 2 years fu ll recognized as the WSAZ Jone~ and Shane Milhoan.

j\R&lt;JEl
River Valley H.S. Drama
.
Dept
May 18 &amp; 19at 8 pm

Union Rome Sewer DistriCt
wastewater treatment plant
in Lawrence County.
A study was also funded
for extensive portions of the
Hocking River Basin and
Monday
Creek.
The
Monday Creek · watershed
has been subjected to underground and surface mining.

Marjorie Luman

0
0
0
0
0
0
0

Q

0
0

!~

Bob's Market
Dettwiller Lumber
Domino's Pizza
Fruth Pharmacy
Holzer Clinic
Hometown M·arket
KFC/Long John's .
Anderson's
Mark Porter
Movie Gallery
Pizza Hut
Swisher &amp; Lohse
Video Touch
Weaving Stitches
Makin' Memories
Gloria Van Reeth
Meigs High Staff
Rutland Dept. Store
Mr. Chad Dodson
Clark's Jewelry Store
·Dan's
Francis Florist

Hartwell
AEP
Jeff Warner I
Johnson's Video
Locker 219
McDonald 's
Ohio River Bear
Subway
. .
Shelly's Hair Shacki 0
Walmart
~0
Danielle's ·
Junior Class Parents .
Greg Browning

0000000000000

SATURDAY, MAY 19TH

c tHtltfr.·.. . ,. . .,
SATURDAY, M.o\ Y 26TH

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$5 .00 entry Bpm _ 50c ott $11 drink!'J

1Opnl· 2 am

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�0 •

OPINION

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

Cor1gress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
o.f speech, or o.f the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. May 18, the I38th day of 2007. There are
days left in the year.
Toilay's Highlight in History:
On May 18. 1896, the U.S. Supreme Court endorsed "separate but equal" racial segregation with its Plessy v.
Ferguson de~:isiun, a ruling that was overturned 58 years
later by Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka.
On this date:
In 1642. the Canadian city of Montreal was foundeq.
In 1804. the French Senate proclaimed Napoleon
Bonapane emperor.
In 1920, Pope John Paul II was born Karol Wojtyla in
· Wadowice, Poland.
In 1926, evangelist Aimee Semple McPherson vanished
while visiting a beach in Venice, Calif.; she reappeared
more than a month later, claiming to have been kidnapped.
In 1927, a schoolhouse in Bath, Mich., was blown up with
explosives planted by local farmer Andrew Kehoe, who
then set off a dynamite-laden automobile; the attacks killed
38 children and six adu lts, including Kehoe, who had earli·
er killed his wife.
.In 1933. the Tennessee Valley Authority was created.
In 1953. Jacqueline Cochran became the first woman to
break the &gt;ound barrier as she piloted a North American F86 Canadair over Rogers Dry Lake, Calif.
In 1967. Tennessee Gov. Buford Ellington signed a measure repealing the law against teaching evolution that was
used to prosecute John T. Scopes in 1925.
In · J980. the Mount St. Helens volcano in Washington
state exploded, leaving 57 people dead or missing.
In 1982. a jury in New York City convicted the Rev. Sun
Myung Moon , founder and leader of the Unification
Church, of tax evasion and conspiracy. (Moun served 13
months in prison.)
·
One year ago: Visiting one of the busiest crossing sectors
between the U.S. and Mexico, President Bush said in Yuma,
Ariz .. that it made sense to put up fen,cing along parts ·of the
border but not to block off the entire 2,000 mile length to
keep out illegal immigrants.
·
, Today's Birthdays: Actor Bill Macy is 85. Sportscaster
Jack Whitaker is 83. Actor Robert Morse is 76. Actor and
television executive Dwayne Hickman is 73. Baseball Hallof-Famer Brooks Robinson is 70. Bluegrass singer-musician Rodney Dillard (The Dillards) is 65. Baseball Hall-ofFarner Reggi.e Jackson is 61. Actress Candice Azzara is 60.
Country singer Joe Bonsall (The Oak Ridge Boys) is 59.
Rock musician Rick Wakeman (Yes) is 58. Actor James
Stephen~ is 56. Country singer George Strait is 55. Rhythmand-blues sin ger Butch Tavares (Tavares) is 54. Actor Chow
Yun-Fat is 52. Rock si nger-musician Page Hamilton is 47.
Contemporary Christian musician Barry Graul (MercyMe)
is 46. Singer-actress Martika is 38. Comedian-writer Tina
Fey is 37. Rapper Special Ed is 33. Rock singer Jack
Jollnson is 32. Rhythm-and-blues singer Darryl Allen
(Mista) is 27. Actor Matt Long is 27. Actor Spencer Breslin
·
is 15.
· Thought for Today: "Committee - · a group of men who
indi viduall y can do notning;but as a group decide that nothing can be done."- Fred Allen, comedian ( 1894-1956).
2~7

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Friday, May 18, 2007

Episcopalians and tradition
Connoisseurs of ecclesiastical humor can answer
this question: "How many
Episcopalians does it take to
change a light bulb''' The
most popular answers sound
somet hing like this: ·Ten.
One lO chan~e the bulb and
nine to start a newsletter
about the irreplaceability of
the original bulb."
Episcopalians do love
their traditions. a trait that
they share . with everyone
else 111 the Anglican
Communion. Nevenheless.
the reason the world's 77
million Angli&lt;.:ans light so
much is that many cherish .
some traditions more than
others or sincerely believe
that. in changing times.
some traditions trump others.
Consider. for example.
the recent letter from
Presiding Bishop Katharine
Jeffens Schuri to Nigerjan
Archbishop ' Peter
J.
Akinola. urging him not to
visit the United States to
lead rites instal ling a bishop
here to minister to those
who believe the Episcopal
Church · has veered into
heresy.
"First. such action would
violate the anciern &lt;.:ustums
of the church which limits
the episcopal activity of a
bishop to only the jurisdiction to which the bishop has
been entrusted. unle ss
canonical permission has
been given," wrote Jefferis
Schori, in an epistle that
Akinola didn't rece ive
because he was already in
the United States.
"Second. such action

Terry
Mattingly

would not help tile efforts of
reconciliation that are taking place in the Episcopal
Church an~ in the Anglican
Communion as a whole.
Third. such action would
display to . the world divisio n and disunity that are
not part of the mind of
Christ. which we must
strive to display to all."
This "ancient customs"
defense is Jrtore than ironic.
Siressed a key conservative
strategist. After all , the issue
driving this Anglkan conflict is the Episcopal
Church's insistence that it
lias a right to modernize traditions about sexuality, salvation. biblical authority
and so me other hot-button
doctrines.
Early church teachings
that marriage is between a
man and a WO!llan or that
sex outside of marriage is
sin didn 't prevent the
Episcopal Church from
ordaining a . non-celibate
gay prie st, V. Gene
Robinson
of
New
Hampshire, as the bishop of
New Hampshire in 2003.
'The hypocrisy is rather
obvious," said the Rev.
Kendall S. Harmon. canon
theologian of the Diocese of
South Carol ina. "When

church traditions serve their
purposes, these people love
to quote them. But when a
church tradition gets in the
way. they feel free to toss it
out."
Thus. in his response to
Jefferts Schori, Akinola
argued that the 18.5 millionmember Church of Nigeria
- Anglicanism's largest
province created its
Convocation of Anglicans
in North America (CANAl
to provide shelter for those
defending the "faith once
for all delivered to the
saints ."

The Nigerian archbishop
wrote: "You speak in your
letter of centuries old custom regarding diocesan
boundaries. You are, of
course, aware that the particular historical situation to
which you make reference
was intended to protect the
church from false teaching.
not to prevent those who
hold to the traditional teaching of the churc h from
receiving faithful Episcopal
care .... I also find it curious
that you are appealing to the
. anCient customs of the
church when it is your own
Province's deliberate rejection of the biblical and historic teaching of the Church
that has prompted our current crisis."

This argument makes
sense for traditionalists. But
for
mainstream
Episcopalians, it sounds .
like. a mere rationalization ,
to allow a foreigner to
invade - setting up a nontraditional throne for the
newly installed Bishop

GrAHl
ER.
1007 ·

The problem ofjunk science
William
Rusher

mation contrad icting what a
seemingly impartial scientist has declared to be the
case.

Unfortunately however,
scientists. are human like
the rest of us , with their full
complement of opinions
and ·biases on all sorts of
subjects not squarely in
their field of expertise. And
not surprisingly, a lot of
them are happy to rely on
their reputations as unbiased experts to promote
political causes of one sort
or another. In many cases,
they don 't even recognize
what they are doing; they
. simply confuse what they
know with what they want.
So Bethell has written an
entire book to expose some
of the liberal myths that are
forever being foisted on us
with the important help of
scientists, who are torever
laying down the law without ever being effectively
challenged by the mediae
The current spectacular
. example, of course, is
"g lobal warming," and
· Bethell addresses it m

..

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•

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,

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A.5

Obituaries
B'etty (D.C.) Phelps and Annis Dillon, both of Ohio.
A memorial graveside service will be held on Saturday
June 2, 2007 at 2 p.m. at Bradford Cemetery with Doug
MIDDLEPORT - John William Leath 84, of Shamblin officiating. Arrangements are under the direction
Middleport passed away on May I0. 2007 .
'
of Acree Funeral Home.
He was a W?rid War II Veteran serving in the US Air
Fon:e. 8th D•v1sJon, 34th Bomber Group "H" and was a
.hfeume member ot the Veterans of Foreign Wars. He was
born Oct. 7. 1922 in Wetumka, Okla. the son or the late
Albert H. Leath and Fannie E. (Troop) Leath.
POMEROY- A memorial service will be held at II a.m.
Bes1des h1 s parents he was preceded in death by his wife on Sunday, May 20, 2007. at the Grace Episcopal Church in
Ethel Leath, twu 6rothers, Earl Leath and Everett Leath, Pomeroy for Grace Crow Eich, 94, of Pomeroy. She passed
and a daughter Deanna Gauld.
away on January 25, 2007, at Wyngatc in Gallipolis.
He is survi ved by three brothers, Leroy (Eulema) Leath,
She was born on Nov. 27, 1912, in Letart Falls, daughter of
Cahforma: Darrel. (Bonnie) Leath, Arizona;, Bill (Harriet) the late W. 0 . and Gladys Alexander Crow. She has a B.S. in
Leath, California: six sister~. Marie Redding , Oklahoma; Education from Ohio University and a Master in Education
LaDean Cook , Betty Williams. both of California; Carolyn from Kent State University. She was a member of the Alpha
Creech, lnd1ana ; Catherine (Harold) Isley, California; Delta Pi Sorority, P.O.E. Sisterhood of Athens, Daughters of
Wanda Bradley, Wisconsin.
American Colonist, Past Regent of Daughters of American
Also surviving are one son, Ted Albert (Melanie) Leath, Revolution, and the Ohio Retired Teachers Association. She
California: three grandsons, John Leath, Michael Leath, and received the Alumni Merit Award from Ohio University in
David Gould, all of California; twu granddaughters: Kristin 1968. She was a member of the Grace Episcopal Church.
and Laura Leath, California; two step-daughters, Jean (Earl)
Memorial contributions may be made in Grace's name to
Leath, Cleland, Indiana; Dottie (Paul) Will, Pomeroy, two Grace Episcopal Church, 326 East Main Street, Pomeroy,
step-§ons, WL (Debra) Phelps and Earl (Sharon) Phelps, Ohio 45769; or to the Meigs County Humane Society, P. 0 .
both of Ohio; eight step-grandchildren, 17 step great-grand- Box 682, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
chtldren, one step great-great-grandson; two sisters-in-law,
Arrangements were completed by the Pomeroy Chapel of

Grace Eich

ly sound, and that critics of
it are just wacky creation- ·
ists? The truth seems to be
that the origins of species
are far more complex than
simplistic Darwinists will
admit (Chapter 14).
And so it goes. In a chapter of "Final Thoughts,"
B"ethell calls attention to
what is easily the biggest
single incentive for the scientific exaggeration of
many alleged dangers: federal funding. In 2005 the
budget of the National
lnstit.utes of Health was
$28.8 billion. Enormous
sums are spent every year
on what some scientist has
decided is a new danger to
public health. But how
much do you suppose
Uncle Sam wou ld squander
on a scienti st who demonstrated that in fact it wasn't
a danger?
As Michael Cric hton
declared two years ago in a·
lecture at Caltech, "Rather
than serving as a cleansing
force, science has in some
instances been seduced by
the more ancient lures of
politics and publicity." In
this book, Tom Bethell is
calling it back to its true
responsibility.
.
(William Rushe r is a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Phil.osophy.)

,·

Fisher Funeral Home and on-line condolences may be sent
to the family at www.fishcrfuneralhomes .com.

Karen Sue Hart
RUTLAND - Kare n Sue Han. 50. of Rutland died May
15, 2007 at her residence after an extended illness.
She was born Oct. 7. 1956 in Mason. W Va. to the late
Eugene Franklin and Clara Mae (Abbott) Hart. Karen had
worked in nursing at Veteran's Mernorial Hospital. She wa~
a member of Emmanuel Apostolic Tabernacle. where she
will be sadly missed.
She is survived by her husband. Charle s McGrath.
Rutland, one son Levi Aaron McGrath of Rutland. one
daughter Angela Mozingo of Rutland. three grandchi ldren.
two brothers Roben (Gail) Han of Middleport. Randy
(Sherri) Hart of Vinton. two sisters Linda (E~l Stewan of
New Haven and Sharon (Virgil) Jacks of Pomeroy. her
mother and fath er-in-law Rachel and Mickey Hutton of
Rutland and a brother-in-law Rev. Marly (Lora ina 1 Hutton
of Rutland. as well as several nieces and nephews.
Funeral serv i~:e s will be held at Ip.m. on Saturday May
19, 2007 at Emmanuel Apostolic Tabernacle with the Rn .
Many Hutton ofli~:iating . Burial will follow at Beech
Grove Cemetery. Vi,itation will be held on Friday May I~.
2007 from 6-9 p.m . at Acree Funeral Home in Middleport .

Community outreach Deaths
Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicine (OU-COM) students representing the graduating class of 2010 comfort Nathan Hyatt in the Emergency
Department at O'Bieness Mernorial
Hospital recently. The class of 2010
developed a monthly community outreach project. In April the classmates
bought and assemb led a number of toys,
books and games to give to children who
visit O'Bieness. From left is Kathryn
Ruda, Michelle Walter and Jennifer
Lykens. vice president of the OU£0M
class of 2010. Nathan is the son of
Zyda Hyatt.
Submitted photo

Water line
from Page A1
and reinvestments in system
components would be necessary and advisable to assure
protection of lives and property and sustain tlood dam-

from PageA1

Chapter I. All serious proposed remedies for this supposed peril involve cutting
down on economic activity.
In the case of the United
States, Bethell states, ·the
Kyoto protocol (w hich this
country refused to sign)
would have required U.S.
emissions of so-called
"greenhouse gases" to be
cut so much that "economic
depression .would have
been the one sure result."
That wouldn 'I bother the
world's liberals and socialists much, of course, since
they enjoy inconveniencing
Uncle Sam. And many scientists (though by no means
all ) went along.
But Bethell's book has 13
other
chapters.
each
exploding the phony "science" behind some other
liberal shibboleth. Think
nuclear power is dangerous? By artfully playing on
the confusion between
nuclear power and nuclear
weapons, activists have
crippled the use of "the
safest of all energy
sources,"
and
vastly
increased the use of heavily
polluting coal-fired power
plams (Chapter 2). Worried
about DDT thinning the
shells
of endangered
eagles? It doesn 't - but a
mi II ion people a year are
dying nf malaria in Africa
alone for lack of it (Chapter
5). Convinced that the theory of evolution is essential-

'

•

2007

Achievers

IMPROVED.

As regular readers know,
I seldom review books in
these col umn s, preferring to
leave that important job to
professional reviewers. But
every once in a whi le u
book comes along that illuminates a maJor political
problem so effectively thai
I cannot resist calling it to
the attention of thoughtfu l
readers. That is the case
with Tom Bethell's "The
Politically Incorrect Guide
to Science," rece ntly published by Regnery.
As Bethell points out in
an ·introduction , science is
. forever being used, like
everything else, to reinforce
political
viewpoints.
Normally, . ~n aovocate
using something to support
his point of view is promptly countered, more or less
effectively, by an opponent
citing something else that
contradicts it. The rest of us
can listen, with the help of
the media, and decide for
ourse lves which viewpoint
is better supported and
therefore deserves to be
believed.
But.
Bethell
notes,
"Scienti sts seem to enjoy a
measure of immunity." If a
statement is made by a scientist in hi s professio nal
capacity. non -scientists are
afraid to contradict him .
Even the media. whom we
can usually co unt on tO
report uppuslng points of
view, seldom look for infor-

•

John William Leath

Martyn Minns of Truro
Church in Fairfax, Va. At
this point, one-third of
CANA's 34 parishes are
ethnically Nigerian, onethird are in · northern
Virginia and the rest are
elsewhere in the United
States.
In
other
words,
Archbishop Akinola is
"staking a claim on the soil
of The Episcopal Church,
putting his chair there and
welcoming
someone
(Bishop Minns) to sit
there," said the Rev. Mark
Harris of Delaware, a member of the executive council
of the Episcopal Church.
But the archbishop's new
throne isn' t real, wrote
Harris, at his "Preludium"
Web site. Akinola's new
"diocese-like thing" is not
an Anglican province.
Instead, it's a kind of eccle·
siastical joke.
"There is no remedy
except to get rid of the chair.
And since it is a mostly a
symbolic chair the way to
rid ourselves of it is to laugh
it out of its power," he said.
Thus, the best strategy for
Episcopal leaders is to
"hold the chair in derision.
.. . The chair, like the cigar,
is sometimes only a chair."
(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Journalism . Center at the
Christian
Council for
Colleges and Universities
and
· leads
the
GetReligion.org project to
study religion and the
news.)

IT ONLY 0£T5 20MP6
BUT; mA HUNDRED YEARS,
THATZ.L BE VASTLY

Friday, May t8;

T

University
Appalachian
Scholarship. $1 0,000 a year,
renewable for four years;
Gateway Scholarship. $500;
Ohio University AlphaTau of
Theta Chi Sesquice nten nial
Scholarship. $300.
Kayla Grover: The Ohio
State Univers ity Land Grant
Scholarship, $ 17,000 per
yea r renewable for four
years.
.
Dru Reed: American Red
Cross Scholarship, $750;
Friday
Businessmen 's
. Scholarship, $500; Milestone
Benefits Scholarship. $500;
MLTA Schol arship, $300;
Ohio Un iversity Men's
Independent
Association
Scholarship, $750.
Daniel Bookman: Bachtel
Scholarship for Academic
Excellence. $2,500; Holzer
Clinic Science Award; $300;
Ohio University AtkinsonAtticott Sesquicentennial
Scholarship, $525;
David Poole: Bachtel
Scholarship, $2,500; Ohio
University Blanche R.
Powdl Scholarship, $575 .
Whitney Smith: Bachtel
Scholarship $2,500; Bedford
Township
Scholarship,
$500; Dennis Boggs/ Adam
Grim Scholarship.
Casey Richardson: Brandi
· Thomas Scholarship, $1,000.
Samantha Shontz: De Vry
Un iversity
Scho larship,
$1,000 a semester for 9
OASBO
semesters;
Scholarship, $500.
Clayton Blackston : Eva
Robson Scholarship, $3,000.
Ashley Zielinski: Mei gs
High Faculty Scholarship.
$350.
Sarah Lantz: Milestone

age reduction and ecosystem
restoration.
Burr Oak Regional Water
District will receive $4 million for a water treatment
plant; $1 million will go
towards the construction of
water lines in Vinton and
Brown Townships; $5 million will go towards- the

Ballroom Dance Classes
Begin S/18
Ariel Dancers Recital at
URG 5/19
AUDITIONS:
"Captain Fantastic"
Roles For Teens/pre-teens
MAY 22 &amp; 23 6-8 PM
The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Gattip ~t;~ ?H
~•n

'"·ARTS.

1 7.

Local Briefs

Free vision clinic

Job's Daughters bike run
MIDDLEPQRT --:- Bethel fi2 of Job's Daughters will
host a bike run leaving at I p.m. on · Saturday from the
Middleport Masonic Temple with a picnic to fo llow. The
event wi ll rai se fund s fonhe local Bethel to attend Grand
Session at Kent State University. Call 4 16-1261 for mure
information . The run will g'o through Meigs County.

Mammography clinic
TUPPERS PLAINS -On June 5 a nwbile mammogr.tphy clinic from The James Cancer Center will be parked ut
the Cool Spot in Tuppers Plains to .provide mammogram,.
Some of the mammograms will be free through the Think
Pink Progmm as well as ot her available programs for quali fying Meigs County residents. At this time the clinic is only
half fulL Call Program Coordinator Norma Torres or Carolyn
Grueser at 992-2 161. ext. 236 to make an appointment ur see
if you qualify for the free screening. Manim 0grams will also
be available to women who have insu rance.

Immunization clinic
POMEROY- The Meigs County Health Department will
hold a childhood immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3
p.m. on Tuesday at the health depa11ment. Bring shot records.
A $5 donation .appreciated but not required tor serv i .c~s.

· Correction
SYRACUSE - There is currently no p•irking allowed in
tile front of the Syracuse Post Office near the trees becmi se
of reconfiguratfon of the parking Jut and to help prevent
traffic accidents.

Meeting rescheduled
POMEROY - Next week's meeting of the Meigs
County Com missioners has been rescheduled for 10 ·a.m ..
Friday, at the Meigs County Courthouse.

00000000000000
'The Junior Class of Meigs High
School would like to thank tile
following for their assistance with
tile 2007 Junior/Senior prom:

£STABLISH[D 1695

"Lil' Abner"

HOCKI NGPO RT - Marjorie V. Luman. 86. of
Hockingport passed away Thursday, May 17 , 2007 at her
residence.
She was preceded in death by her husband. Kenneth
Luman Sr.
Services will be held II a.m .. Monday, May 21. 2007 at
Whit'e-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolvi lle. with Bill Duty
and David Dye officiating . Burial will be in .the Evergreen
Cemetery, Belpre, Ohio.
.
Friends may call at the funerA l hom e Sunday. from 6-8
p.m.-An on-line guestbook at www.white-schwarzelfuneralhome.com can be signed.

The study is to. evaluate the
applicability and feasibility
of various restoration solution to the overall degradation of the ecosystem.
Options include limited
POMEROY - The Meigs County Health Department
stream restoration, wetland will offer a free vision clinic for children ages birth to 2 1
creation and wildlife habi.tat on Wednesday at the health department. The clinic is for
restoration in Perry, Athens children with current or possible vision problems. Call
Sherry Wilcox, RN. at 992-6626 for an appointmenL
and Hocking Coun ties.

News Channel 3 Best of the
Benefits Schol arship. $500. tuition, $6.000.
Michael
Blaettnar:
Rachel Mowery: Wendy's Class; and Andy Garnes and
Milestone
Benefits Scholarship, $250.
Ashley received American
Scholarship, $500.
Cody
Davidson: Legion Americanism and
Dustin Knapp: Milestone . Washington State Connect to . Government Awards.
Benefits Scholarship, $500. · Success Scholarship, $500.
Others recognized were
Bradley
Suulsby:
·Certificates of
Ashley DeMoss, DECA
Milestone
Benefits
Recognition
Member of the Year; Joshua
Scholarship. $500.
Students given special Taylor, marketing education
Bradley
Ramsburg: recognition for achievement student of the year; Steven
Milestone
Benefits and/or academic excellence Hudson, the Sons of Union
Scholarship, $500.
were awarded certificates Veterans essay contest
Cecil ia Core: Milestone during the awards day pro- award; Michael Wheeler,
Benefits Scholarship, $500. gram. They incl uded:
the outstanding work study
• Nikki
Stitt:
Ohio
The 2007 Award of Merit student; Daniel Bookman,
Uni.versity Gateway schol- reclptents
were
Dane the top science senior;
arship, $500.
Eichi nger, Shawn Ogaz, . Talishia Beha and Amy
MicheJie
Weaver: Krysta Stitt, and Ashley Barr, overall academ ic in
Milestone
Benefits Zielinski, college prep; and · chemistry awards.
Amy Barr, the outstundScholarship, $500.
Ahley DeMoss, Sarah
Dane Eichi nger: National Lantz,
and
Amanda ing junior science student
Council Daughters of Schartiger, career-technical. from Bausch &amp; Lomb
America, $500; Washington
U.S.
Army
Reserve Honorary Science Award:
State Community Col lege National
Scholar/Athlete Daniel Bookman and Kayla
Tech Prep ,Scholarship, Awards were presented to Grover, top physics stu- .
$2,500.
Daniel
Bookman
and dents; Son ny Palmer, the
Dustin Knapp: . Parker Whitney Smith. David Poole medical office management
Long Scholarship, $500; received the U.S. Marine · award; Joshua Taylor and
Milestone
Benefits Corps Distinguished Athlete Ashley DeMoss, marketing
Scholarship, $500.
Award. Keilah Jacks the U.S. awards; Keilah Jacks, top
Bradley Ramsburg: Tri- Marine Corps Scholastic English student; Dru Reed,
County Vending Scholarship, Achievement Award, and dmma award.
Recipients of Danforth
$500; Milestone Benefits Ashley Taylor, the U.S.
Scholarship, $500.
.
Marine Corps Semper Fidelis Foundation "I Dare · You"
Jennifer Smith: Student Award. The awards. were pre- awards, outstanding juniors
Council Scholarship, $300; sented by representatives of recognized for their efforts to
achieve their personal best,
Bachtel
Scholarship, the military branches.
$2,500; Bedford Township
David Poole and Whitney lead a balanced life, and
Scholarship, $500.
Smith received the Wendy's make a positi ve difference in
Ch·a Jsie
Man ley: High School Heisman their comm.unity, were Amy
University of Rio Grande Awards, Keilah Jacks was Barr. Talisha Beha, Bradley
Scholarship, 2 years fu ll recognized as the WSAZ Jone~ and Shane Milhoan.

j\R&lt;JEl
River Valley H.S. Drama
.
Dept
May 18 &amp; 19at 8 pm

Union Rome Sewer DistriCt
wastewater treatment plant
in Lawrence County.
A study was also funded
for extensive portions of the
Hocking River Basin and
Monday
Creek.
The
Monday Creek · watershed
has been subjected to underground and surface mining.

Marjorie Luman

0
0
0
0
0
0
0

Q

0
0

!~

Bob's Market
Dettwiller Lumber
Domino's Pizza
Fruth Pharmacy
Holzer Clinic
Hometown M·arket
KFC/Long John's .
Anderson's
Mark Porter
Movie Gallery
Pizza Hut
Swisher &amp; Lohse
Video Touch
Weaving Stitches
Makin' Memories
Gloria Van Reeth
Meigs High Staff
Rutland Dept. Store
Mr. Chad Dodson
Clark's Jewelry Store
·Dan's
Francis Florist

Hartwell
AEP
Jeff Warner I
Johnson's Video
Locker 219
McDonald 's
Ohio River Bear
Subway
. .
Shelly's Hair Shacki 0
Walmart
~0
Danielle's ·
Junior Class Parents .
Greg Browning

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PageA6_

LOCAL • STATE
Health.department administers meningitis vaccine

The Daily Sentinel

Literacy tutor
training for
volunteers
ATHENS - Appalac hia
Reads , in collaboration with
·the
Ohio
University
Literacy Center and the
Verizon Literacy Network.
are hosting a literacy tutor
training session for volunteers on June 15.
The session runs from 9
a.m . to~ p.m. and is offered
at the fo ll owi ng Ohio
Uni versity regional campus
sites: At hens. Chillicothe,
Easter n. Sou thern and
Zanesville.
The free tutor training is
geared specificall y toward
volunteers. Volunteers who
complete this 12-hour trai ning will receive tutor certification
throu gh
ProLiteracy Ame rica, our
national affi liate and the
largest volunteer Iiteracy.
orga ni zatinn in the U.S.
The tutor training session
is being held in response to a
number of requests that both
the Literacy Ce nter and ·
Appalachia Reads receive
throughout the year for tutor
training from various programs around southeastern
Ohio that use literacy volunteers. Literacy tutor training
promotes a meaningful tutoring session between the tutor
and the student. Specialized
training helps tutors grasp. a
better understanding for the
reading process.
Interes ted participants
~ hould register for tutor
training at the following
Web
site:
http ://ti nyurl .co m/28b pff.
Add itionall y, participants
need to complete the fol lowing 3 online Verizon
courses:
I)
Graphic
Organizers: · Tools · for
Instructors and ,Students, 2)
Orientation to Volunteering
in Literacy and 3) Principles
of Adult Learning. Students
can register for the Vetizon
onl ine courses at http://
Iit era cy network . verizon.
org/Frec-Onl i neCourses.25.0.html?&amp;no_ca
che= I (online courses must
be completed prior to June
15).
Particpants will attend an
ali-day video-conference in
Athens or at one of the
regional campuses. After the
June 15 training session attendees must complete one ildditional online speciali zation
module: Adults, ESOL,
Child, Computer, Family, or
Math. For more infonnation
please contact .our office at
(740) 593-0160 or email us
at: i ~fo@appalachiareads.o rg .

· 'The Prize Winner
of Defiance,
Ohio' author dies
DEFIANCE (AP) Terry Ryan, who wrote the
book "The Prize Winner of
Defian ce, Ohio" that later
became a movie about how
her mother kept the family
financially afloat by winning
jingle contests, has died.
Ryan , · 60, died on
Wednesday at her home in
San Francisco, her family
said. The.cause of death was
cancer, said Pat Holt, her
longtime partner.
Ryan was diagnosed with
brain cancer in 2004 just
after filming of the movie
was
completed.
The
DreamWorks filni starring
julianne Moore -and Woody
Harrel son was released in ·
2005.
. Ryan, th e sixth of the
family' s 10 childre n, told
the story of how her mother,
Evelyn, won cars, refri gerators, televi sions and money
rn commercial jingle contests during the 1950s and
'60s in this town about . 50
miles southwest of Toledo.
: Evelyn Ryan, who died in
'!998 at age 85, used .the
winnings to feed the family
and her alcoholic husband.
the money also stopped
th em from being evicted
f;om their home.
: Terry Ryan decided after
ber mother died that she
needed to write the story of
tjleir life. Her book was a
loving tribute to her mother.
· Ryan left her hometown
in northwest Ohio in 1969,
moving to San Francisco.
She worked there as a wri ter
and cartoonist. She also
reviewed books imd wrote
two poetry books.

Friday, May 18, 2007

POMEROY - When the Ohio
Department of Health (ODH) recently found itself with too much
Menactra (meningitis vaccine), the
Me igs County Healt h Department
(MCHD ) was able to hel p out with
local children benell ting.
Sherry Wilcox, RN.. director of
nursing and Sherry Hayman. RN
traveled to the county 's three school
districts to give meningitis shots to
Vacc ine for Children Eligib le (VFCl
students aged 11 -19 years old. VFC
is a .federal program that provides
immunizations to children who ha ve
Medicaid, are unin sured or are
Alaskan/Native American. The number of meningitis shots given to local
students was 11 7 Eastern: 11 5 Meigs:
11 4 Southern.
Assistant Admini strator Courtney
Sim explai ned, "These school-based
clinics further demonstrate the
MCHD's commitment · to providing
services which maintain health while
being convenient for the public. We
enabled parents to protect the health of ·

their childrCfl without having to make
a special trip or an !lPpointment with
the assistance of the school nurses."
Meningitis is a serious illness
caused by bacteria, especially affecti've children two to 18 years old in
the United States. Anyone can get
meningitis. College freshmen who
li ve in dormitories have an increased
risk of getting meningitis. Meningitis
can be treated with drugs such .. as
penicillin. Approx imately one out of
every I0 people who get the disease
dies from it and many others are
affected for life. For example, some
lose their arms or legs; become deaf;
have problems with their nervous
systems; become mentally retarded
or suffer seizures or strokes. This is
why preventing the disease through
use of the vacc ine is important for
people at highest risk. Meningitis
vacc ine is recommended for all children at 11 -12 years of age. For those
who have never gotten the meningitis
vaccine previously, a do,se is recommended at l)igh school entry.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

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

2400 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446-17 11

r..-u /m ·utiflll .'·

Dear Annie: Our 23year-old son has lots of
emotional problems and
has been diagnosed with
obsessive-compulsive disorder. For five years, he
saw a psychiatrist for a
chemical imbalance . He
became frustrated and
refused to continue his
therapy. Within a few
months, he dropped out of
college and later quit a
good job. We
nex t
employed the services of a
clinical psychologist and
another psychiatrist.
For over a month, the
counseling seemed to help.
Then his psychiatrist prescribed Prozac, which made
hi111 overactive, and he
became a danger to himself
and to us. He was hospitalized and taken off that medication. He returned home
with a better outlook and
seeme&lt;j,-.to-.be improving.
Now he has decided not to
continue counseling · and
refuses to take other medicine. He is lonely and tends
to blame all his shortcommgs on us.
We are hoping you can
suggest alternatives to deal
with this disorder and what
additional aid we can get.
- Struggling Parents in
Virginia
Dear Parents: First,

PageA7

understand that your son is
an adult and there is only so ·
much you can do. Your goal
should be for him to be able
to hold down a job and live
independently.
Studies
show that regular· exercise
can have a posi tive effect
on the brain, so consider
getting him a gym membership or a bike for his next
birthday. It 's something
your son may be willing to
do for his general health.
Also contact the ObsessiveCompulsive Foundation
(ocfoundation.org) , 676
State St. , New Haven, CT
06511 , and the National
Alliance on Mental Illness
(nami.org) at 1-800-950NAMI (1-800-950-6264).
Dear Annie: My wife
recently discovered that her
father has taken up smoking
again after having quit several years ago.
My father-in-law denies
that he smokes, eve n
though we ' ve seen him do
it at work, and the minute
the subject is brought up, he
becomes defensive and
refuses to discuss it. My
mother-in-law wants him to ·
quit, and the whole situation is causing a lot of
stress. My. in-laws are avid
readers of your column, and
I'm hoping if you print this
letter, it might help.· What
else can I do?
Concerned in Atlanta
Dear Atlanta: Smokers

have to want to quit on their
own. Nothing you say or do
is likely to persuade your
father-in-law to give up cigarettes until he is ready. It's
an addiction, and apparently, one he never quite got
over when he originally
quit. We ' re sure Dad
already knows about the
risks of lung cancer and
emphysema, and it won 't
hurt for your mother-in-law
to point out the hazards of
secondhand smoke, since
she is the primary victim.
He should know that hi s
family loves him and wants
him to be healthy, but
beyond that, there's really
not much you can do.
Dear Annie: Please
reconsider your answer to
"Really Annoyed," the seventh-grade boy who is being
pestered by his classmate,
"George." While the advice
is .appropriate if George is
merely socially awkward or
possi bly suffering from
Asperger's sy ndrome, my
experience with middle
school students is that the
behavior more closely
matches the typical "grooming" behavior of a sexual
predator. ·
The in-class back massages, the controlling
behavior
(including
George's praise of the
writer), his .con~Jant conversations
about
the
Internet, books, TV and

. Friday, May 18, 2007

Southern career fair

Prescribing help for troubled son.
AND MARCY SUGAR

Submitted photo

.

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

BY KATHY MtTCHEU

Sherry Hayman, RN , gives a Menactra (meningitis) shot to a Southern
Local student during a recent school-based immunization cli nic conducted by the Meigs County Health Department.

'

movies, his persistent "following" behavior, and
George's
intimidating
phys ical size are all very
well-documented danger
signs of a possible impending sex ual assault.
George's behaviors may
be benign, but "Really
Annoyed" should speak to
a counselor, therapist, parent, teacher or other trusted adult immediately,
rather than trying to
resolve the problem on his
ow n. -. R.C.
Dear R.C.: We shudder to
think: a boy of II or 12
would be so adept at sexual
grooming, and if you are
correct, it would indicate
that George has been a victim ·of abuse himself. We
hope this is not the case. We
suggested .
"Really
Annoyed" discuss this with
his school counselor, and
we trust he will.
,
Annie's Mailbox is wri(·
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann ·fAnders
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmail·
box@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page al www.creators.com.

RACINE - A career fair
was held recently at
Southern Elementary School
with nearly 30 guest speakers representing an equal
number of professions.
Many of the participants
brought props to promote
their profession to help
explain about their careers.
Doctors, lawyers, firemen,
law enforcement, computer
programmers, nurses, and
many other professions
from both the uniformed
community and other trades
were represented.
Areas represented ranged
from different aspects of the
blue collar career field to a
wide range of white-collar
jobs. Sgt. .Rick Baker, who
. served a tour of duty in Iraq,
brought an Army Humvee
for the students to get an upclos~ look.
Another· popular speaker
was NFL star Mi chae l
Bartrum. Bartrum not only
spoke about his job as a
player, but encouraged students to do their best in
whatever career that they
choose. He also spoke of the
importance of . having a
good work ethic, not only
on the job, but in life.
District · Administrator
Scott Wolfe said, "I feel the
Career Fair is an important
starting place for our students
· to begin a career plan for their
futures. The district wants to
expose the students to experiences they otherwise may not
have had," said Scott Wolfe,
district administrator.
"Our students are going to

have to compete with not
only students from other
di stri cts, but also other
countries. Not everyone can
be a doctor or a lawyer.
Every job out there is
important and we tried to
expose them to a variety of
resources," Wolfe added.
Students in grades K-8th
attended the presentations by
Rick Baker, Ed. Baker,
Michael Bartrum , Sheriff
Bob Beegle, State Trooper
Shawn
Cunningham,
Michelle Evans, Ms. Raina
Fulks, Gary Freeman, Jan
Hill, Kay Hill, Jenn Holt,
Bruce Johnson,
Doug
Lavender, Teresa Lavender,
· Connie Little, Steve Musser,
Judge Scott Powell, Carolee
Richards, Abbie Harris, Gina
.Diddle and Charlie Wolfe.
Additionally, as part of a
character educati on pro·
gram, whiCh teaches manners and moral. values necessary to promote basic professionalism and good will
in the pu blic sec tor, the
eighth grade class was treated to a sit-down style meal
at the Wild Horse Cafe . The
··southern Elementary PTO
paid fo r the meal, which was
discounted substantially by
the Wild Horse management
to make the trip possible.
Students were graded on
their table manners as part
of a follow-up to the course.
The training was made pos- ·
sible by several grant programs through the office of
administrative
assistant
Wolfe, and coordinator
Vicki Northup.

1/4 mile north at Pomeroy, Mason
Bridge. Ma son , WV

(304) 773·5721

Community Calendar
Public -meetings

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(304)675-7036
21.5 Sixth St. Pt. Pteusant, WV
(304) 675· 7036
riverdtiesins@suddenllnkmail.com
Auto/Home/Business/Life/
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POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - New
l'lope Bible Baptist Church Gospel
recording artist Greg Bentley in conMonday, May 21
cert
at 6:30 PM.
·
POMEROY - Veterans Service
MIDDLEPORT
Jeff
Kassel!
will
Commission, 9 a.m., 117· Memorial be singing at the Ash Street Church, 398
Dr., Pomeroy.
Ash St., Mi~dleport, 10:30 a.m. service.
LETART Letart Township Public invited by Pastor Jeff Smith. ·
Trustees, 5 p.m. at the office building.
Monday, May 21
1\Jesday, May 22 ·
FLATROCK,
W.Va. Mason
RUTLAND - Rutland . Village County Area Choir
rehearsal, 7 p.m.,'
Council, rescheduled regular session, Good Shepherd United Methodist .
7 p.m., council's chambers.
Church. Individuals of all churches
Wednesday, May 23
are welcome to participate.
POMEROY - Board of Directors
LONG BOITOM - Revival serof Galli a-Meigs Community Action vices will be held at the faithful Gospel
Agency, Inc. meets at II :30 a.m., Church, May 21-25, 7 p.m. each
Wild Horse Cafe.
evening with Dave Dailey preaching.
Saturday, May 26
LONG BOITOM - Hymn sing, 7
p:m, at the Mt. Olive Church featuring
"Dayspring." Everyone welcome.

·

Saturday, May 19
RACINE - Meigs CAN will meet
4w to 6 p.m. at the Racine Public
Library. Residents impacted by mining
and power plant are urged to attend. For
more information, call Elisa Young,
949-2175 or Albert Proffitt, 949-0901.
Wednesday,.May 23 ·
POMEROY - OH-KAN . Coin
Club meets at 7 p.m. on Wednesday at
Pomeroy Library. Dues are payable.
·,
Thursday, May 24
POMEROY - The Meigs County
Humane Society will meet at 6 p.m. at
the· Pomeroy Library to discuss
fundraisers. The public is invited.

Church events
Sunday, May 20
TUPPERS
PLAINS
-The
Amazing Grace Community Church
in Tuppers Plains will host the Day
Spring Singers at I0 a.m. A free will
offering will be taken. The church is
located at 42190 Main St., Route 681 .

TO DAY'S
NUMBER IS:

Other·events
Friday, May 18
POMEROY - A free communiiy
dinner will be held with serving from
4:30 to 6 p.m. at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church Second St. A hamloaf dinner and dessert will be served.

Youth events
Wednesday, May 23
POMEROY Mei~ s County
Health Department, free v1sion clinic;
children ages birth to 21, call 9926626 for appointment

Birthdays
Friday, May 25
RACINE - Margaret Yost, formerly
of Racine, now residing in North
Carolina, will celebrate her 92nd birthday on May 25: Cards may be sent to
her at P.O. Box 245, Davis, N.C. 28524.

Holzer celebrates May as
Skin Cancer Awareness Month ·
GALLIPOLIS- The importance of practicing sun safety
for the prevention of skin cancer is being promoted by The
Holzer Center for Cancer Care
in observance of May as Skin
Cancer Awareness Month.
As a special service to area
residents, free skin screenings
will be provided by the Holzer
Center on Cancer Care on
Thursday, May 31 , from 5 to 7
p.m. Those who are interested
must call for an appointment to
the Holzer Med1cal Center
Marketing and Community .
Relations Department at (740)
446-5055. Space is limited so ·
those who are interested are
encouraged to call as soon as
possible.
According to the Skin Cancer
Foundation, more than half of
the estimated 60,000 new cases
of melanoma projected this year
will occur in just ten states. Ohio
is one of them. Since the elimates in states when~ melanoma
is diagnosed most frequently California, Florida, and Texas are hot and sunny tluoughout the
year, the projections from the ·
American Cancer Society are
consistent · with research showing that about 65 to 90 percent of
melanoma cases are linked to
UV exposure.
According , to the American
Cancer Society's 2007 Cancer
Facts and Figures, the following
states were ranked in the Top
Ten for Estimated New Cases of
Melanoma: California - 6,680;
Florida - 4,380; Texas 3,860; Penusylvania - 3,120;
New York - 3,070; Ohio - ·

2,390; New Jersey - 2,210;
Michigan - 2,080; Illinois 2,050; Massachusetts - I ,820.
As expected, states at higher
latitudes, )Nhich have less sun
exposure and cooler temperalures, have the lowest projected
incidence of melanoma. These
states
include:
Alaska,
Wyoming, . North Dakota,
Vermont,
South
Dakota,.
Delaware and Montan.a. The
only surprise on these lists
would be Hawaii, which surprisingly has a low incidence of
melanoma.
"While it's a hot tropical climate, it's likely that Hawaii's
melanoma incidence is low
because the state has a large
percentage (58%) of Asian
Americans, who have a relatively high amount of the sunprotective pigment melanin in
their skin," said Steven Wang,
MD, member of The Skin
Cancer
·
Foundation's
Photobiology Committee and
Director of Dermatologic
Surgery at Memorial Sloan
Kettering in New Jersey.
Melanoma
risk
factors
include: light skin color, family
andlor personal history of skin
cancer, presence of atypical
moles and freckles and history
of severe sunburn occurring
earlv in life. No matter where
yoti" live, it's important to be
aware of these risk factors and
take the necessary measures to
preveht skin cancer. The Skin
Cancer Foundation's Skin
Cancer Prevention Tips:
• Seek the shade, especially
between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.

• Do not burn.
• Avoid tanning and UV tan·
ning booths.
• Use a sunscreen with an
SPF of 15 or higher every day.
• Apply I ounce (2 tablespoons) total of sunscreen to all
exposed areas, 30 minutes
before going outside. Reapply
every two hours or immediately
after swimming or excessive
sweating.
• Cover up with clothing,
including a broad-brimmed hat
and UV-blocking sunglasses.
• Keep newborns out of the
sun. Sunscreens should be used
on babies over the age of six
months.
• Examine your skin from
head-to-toe every month.
• See your physician every
year for a professional skin
exam.
The Skin Cancer Foundation
is the only global organization
solely devoted to the prevention. detection and treatment of
skin cancer. The mission of the
Foundatio'n is to decrease the
incidence of skin cancer
through public and professional
education and research: For
more
information,
VISit
www:skincancer.org, or call 1800-SKlN-490.
For more information about
the Holzer Center for Cancer
Care, call (740 ) 446-5474 or
toll-free at 1-800-82 1-3860.
The Center:s American Cancer
Society Ca nce r Re source
Center a!q1 pro vides helpful
informati on on skin cancer ;md
sun safety. For more information, call (740) 441-3909.

WANT TO FEEL YOUNG AGAIN?
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DILES HEAHIN&lt;;
CENTER
GALLIPOLIS
435'/, Second Ave nue

675-4340

For a limited time we are offering New Patients
1st visit to our office for only $25.00
This New Patient special gives you the
opportunity to have your spine checked.by
Dr.·Kelly Jones for a very low price.

( Ac·~~ frnr n Po,l Offic·c• f

Open Mon.- Thu r~ .

~ . .30-Spm

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839 Kerr Roai:l
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(740) 446-9043
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PageA6_

LOCAL • STATE
Health.department administers meningitis vaccine

The Daily Sentinel

Literacy tutor
training for
volunteers
ATHENS - Appalac hia
Reads , in collaboration with
·the
Ohio
University
Literacy Center and the
Verizon Literacy Network.
are hosting a literacy tutor
training session for volunteers on June 15.
The session runs from 9
a.m . to~ p.m. and is offered
at the fo ll owi ng Ohio
Uni versity regional campus
sites: At hens. Chillicothe,
Easter n. Sou thern and
Zanesville.
The free tutor training is
geared specificall y toward
volunteers. Volunteers who
complete this 12-hour trai ning will receive tutor certification
throu gh
ProLiteracy Ame rica, our
national affi liate and the
largest volunteer Iiteracy.
orga ni zatinn in the U.S.
The tutor training session
is being held in response to a
number of requests that both
the Literacy Ce nter and ·
Appalachia Reads receive
throughout the year for tutor
training from various programs around southeastern
Ohio that use literacy volunteers. Literacy tutor training
promotes a meaningful tutoring session between the tutor
and the student. Specialized
training helps tutors grasp. a
better understanding for the
reading process.
Interes ted participants
~ hould register for tutor
training at the following
Web
site:
http ://ti nyurl .co m/28b pff.
Add itionall y, participants
need to complete the fol lowing 3 online Verizon
courses:
I)
Graphic
Organizers: · Tools · for
Instructors and ,Students, 2)
Orientation to Volunteering
in Literacy and 3) Principles
of Adult Learning. Students
can register for the Vetizon
onl ine courses at http://
Iit era cy network . verizon.
org/Frec-Onl i neCourses.25.0.html?&amp;no_ca
che= I (online courses must
be completed prior to June
15).
Particpants will attend an
ali-day video-conference in
Athens or at one of the
regional campuses. After the
June 15 training session attendees must complete one ildditional online speciali zation
module: Adults, ESOL,
Child, Computer, Family, or
Math. For more infonnation
please contact .our office at
(740) 593-0160 or email us
at: i ~fo@appalachiareads.o rg .

· 'The Prize Winner
of Defiance,
Ohio' author dies
DEFIANCE (AP) Terry Ryan, who wrote the
book "The Prize Winner of
Defian ce, Ohio" that later
became a movie about how
her mother kept the family
financially afloat by winning
jingle contests, has died.
Ryan , · 60, died on
Wednesday at her home in
San Francisco, her family
said. The.cause of death was
cancer, said Pat Holt, her
longtime partner.
Ryan was diagnosed with
brain cancer in 2004 just
after filming of the movie
was
completed.
The
DreamWorks filni starring
julianne Moore -and Woody
Harrel son was released in ·
2005.
. Ryan, th e sixth of the
family' s 10 childre n, told
the story of how her mother,
Evelyn, won cars, refri gerators, televi sions and money
rn commercial jingle contests during the 1950s and
'60s in this town about . 50
miles southwest of Toledo.
: Evelyn Ryan, who died in
'!998 at age 85, used .the
winnings to feed the family
and her alcoholic husband.
the money also stopped
th em from being evicted
f;om their home.
: Terry Ryan decided after
ber mother died that she
needed to write the story of
tjleir life. Her book was a
loving tribute to her mother.
· Ryan left her hometown
in northwest Ohio in 1969,
moving to San Francisco.
She worked there as a wri ter
and cartoonist. She also
reviewed books imd wrote
two poetry books.

Friday, May 18, 2007

POMEROY - When the Ohio
Department of Health (ODH) recently found itself with too much
Menactra (meningitis vaccine), the
Me igs County Healt h Department
(MCHD ) was able to hel p out with
local children benell ting.
Sherry Wilcox, RN.. director of
nursing and Sherry Hayman. RN
traveled to the county 's three school
districts to give meningitis shots to
Vacc ine for Children Eligib le (VFCl
students aged 11 -19 years old. VFC
is a .federal program that provides
immunizations to children who ha ve
Medicaid, are unin sured or are
Alaskan/Native American. The number of meningitis shots given to local
students was 11 7 Eastern: 11 5 Meigs:
11 4 Southern.
Assistant Admini strator Courtney
Sim explai ned, "These school-based
clinics further demonstrate the
MCHD's commitment · to providing
services which maintain health while
being convenient for the public. We
enabled parents to protect the health of ·

their childrCfl without having to make
a special trip or an !lPpointment with
the assistance of the school nurses."
Meningitis is a serious illness
caused by bacteria, especially affecti've children two to 18 years old in
the United States. Anyone can get
meningitis. College freshmen who
li ve in dormitories have an increased
risk of getting meningitis. Meningitis
can be treated with drugs such .. as
penicillin. Approx imately one out of
every I0 people who get the disease
dies from it and many others are
affected for life. For example, some
lose their arms or legs; become deaf;
have problems with their nervous
systems; become mentally retarded
or suffer seizures or strokes. This is
why preventing the disease through
use of the vacc ine is important for
people at highest risk. Meningitis
vacc ine is recommended for all children at 11 -12 years of age. For those
who have never gotten the meningitis
vaccine previously, a do,se is recommended at l)igh school entry.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

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(740) 446-17 11

r..-u /m ·utiflll .'·

Dear Annie: Our 23year-old son has lots of
emotional problems and
has been diagnosed with
obsessive-compulsive disorder. For five years, he
saw a psychiatrist for a
chemical imbalance . He
became frustrated and
refused to continue his
therapy. Within a few
months, he dropped out of
college and later quit a
good job. We
nex t
employed the services of a
clinical psychologist and
another psychiatrist.
For over a month, the
counseling seemed to help.
Then his psychiatrist prescribed Prozac, which made
hi111 overactive, and he
became a danger to himself
and to us. He was hospitalized and taken off that medication. He returned home
with a better outlook and
seeme&lt;j,-.to-.be improving.
Now he has decided not to
continue counseling · and
refuses to take other medicine. He is lonely and tends
to blame all his shortcommgs on us.
We are hoping you can
suggest alternatives to deal
with this disorder and what
additional aid we can get.
- Struggling Parents in
Virginia
Dear Parents: First,

PageA7

understand that your son is
an adult and there is only so ·
much you can do. Your goal
should be for him to be able
to hold down a job and live
independently.
Studies
show that regular· exercise
can have a posi tive effect
on the brain, so consider
getting him a gym membership or a bike for his next
birthday. It 's something
your son may be willing to
do for his general health.
Also contact the ObsessiveCompulsive Foundation
(ocfoundation.org) , 676
State St. , New Haven, CT
06511 , and the National
Alliance on Mental Illness
(nami.org) at 1-800-950NAMI (1-800-950-6264).
Dear Annie: My wife
recently discovered that her
father has taken up smoking
again after having quit several years ago.
My father-in-law denies
that he smokes, eve n
though we ' ve seen him do
it at work, and the minute
the subject is brought up, he
becomes defensive and
refuses to discuss it. My
mother-in-law wants him to ·
quit, and the whole situation is causing a lot of
stress. My. in-laws are avid
readers of your column, and
I'm hoping if you print this
letter, it might help.· What
else can I do?
Concerned in Atlanta
Dear Atlanta: Smokers

have to want to quit on their
own. Nothing you say or do
is likely to persuade your
father-in-law to give up cigarettes until he is ready. It's
an addiction, and apparently, one he never quite got
over when he originally
quit. We ' re sure Dad
already knows about the
risks of lung cancer and
emphysema, and it won 't
hurt for your mother-in-law
to point out the hazards of
secondhand smoke, since
she is the primary victim.
He should know that hi s
family loves him and wants
him to be healthy, but
beyond that, there's really
not much you can do.
Dear Annie: Please
reconsider your answer to
"Really Annoyed," the seventh-grade boy who is being
pestered by his classmate,
"George." While the advice
is .appropriate if George is
merely socially awkward or
possi bly suffering from
Asperger's sy ndrome, my
experience with middle
school students is that the
behavior more closely
matches the typical "grooming" behavior of a sexual
predator. ·
The in-class back massages, the controlling
behavior
(including
George's praise of the
writer), his .con~Jant conversations
about
the
Internet, books, TV and

. Friday, May 18, 2007

Southern career fair

Prescribing help for troubled son.
AND MARCY SUGAR

Submitted photo

.

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

BY KATHY MtTCHEU

Sherry Hayman, RN , gives a Menactra (meningitis) shot to a Southern
Local student during a recent school-based immunization cli nic conducted by the Meigs County Health Department.

'

movies, his persistent "following" behavior, and
George's
intimidating
phys ical size are all very
well-documented danger
signs of a possible impending sex ual assault.
George's behaviors may
be benign, but "Really
Annoyed" should speak to
a counselor, therapist, parent, teacher or other trusted adult immediately,
rather than trying to
resolve the problem on his
ow n. -. R.C.
Dear R.C.: We shudder to
think: a boy of II or 12
would be so adept at sexual
grooming, and if you are
correct, it would indicate
that George has been a victim ·of abuse himself. We
hope this is not the case. We
suggested .
"Really
Annoyed" discuss this with
his school counselor, and
we trust he will.
,
Annie's Mailbox is wri(·
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann ·fAnders
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmail·
box@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page al www.creators.com.

RACINE - A career fair
was held recently at
Southern Elementary School
with nearly 30 guest speakers representing an equal
number of professions.
Many of the participants
brought props to promote
their profession to help
explain about their careers.
Doctors, lawyers, firemen,
law enforcement, computer
programmers, nurses, and
many other professions
from both the uniformed
community and other trades
were represented.
Areas represented ranged
from different aspects of the
blue collar career field to a
wide range of white-collar
jobs. Sgt. .Rick Baker, who
. served a tour of duty in Iraq,
brought an Army Humvee
for the students to get an upclos~ look.
Another· popular speaker
was NFL star Mi chae l
Bartrum. Bartrum not only
spoke about his job as a
player, but encouraged students to do their best in
whatever career that they
choose. He also spoke of the
importance of . having a
good work ethic, not only
on the job, but in life.
District · Administrator
Scott Wolfe said, "I feel the
Career Fair is an important
starting place for our students
· to begin a career plan for their
futures. The district wants to
expose the students to experiences they otherwise may not
have had," said Scott Wolfe,
district administrator.
"Our students are going to

have to compete with not
only students from other
di stri cts, but also other
countries. Not everyone can
be a doctor or a lawyer.
Every job out there is
important and we tried to
expose them to a variety of
resources," Wolfe added.
Students in grades K-8th
attended the presentations by
Rick Baker, Ed. Baker,
Michael Bartrum , Sheriff
Bob Beegle, State Trooper
Shawn
Cunningham,
Michelle Evans, Ms. Raina
Fulks, Gary Freeman, Jan
Hill, Kay Hill, Jenn Holt,
Bruce Johnson,
Doug
Lavender, Teresa Lavender,
· Connie Little, Steve Musser,
Judge Scott Powell, Carolee
Richards, Abbie Harris, Gina
.Diddle and Charlie Wolfe.
Additionally, as part of a
character educati on pro·
gram, whiCh teaches manners and moral. values necessary to promote basic professionalism and good will
in the pu blic sec tor, the
eighth grade class was treated to a sit-down style meal
at the Wild Horse Cafe . The
··southern Elementary PTO
paid fo r the meal, which was
discounted substantially by
the Wild Horse management
to make the trip possible.
Students were graded on
their table manners as part
of a follow-up to the course.
The training was made pos- ·
sible by several grant programs through the office of
administrative
assistant
Wolfe, and coordinator
Vicki Northup.

1/4 mile north at Pomeroy, Mason
Bridge. Ma son , WV

(304) 773·5721

Community Calendar
Public -meetings

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740·446·9020
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·Clubs and
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David Mink· Owner

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(304)675-7036
21.5 Sixth St. Pt. Pteusant, WV
(304) 675· 7036
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POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - New
l'lope Bible Baptist Church Gospel
recording artist Greg Bentley in conMonday, May 21
cert
at 6:30 PM.
·
POMEROY - Veterans Service
MIDDLEPORT
Jeff
Kassel!
will
Commission, 9 a.m., 117· Memorial be singing at the Ash Street Church, 398
Dr., Pomeroy.
Ash St., Mi~dleport, 10:30 a.m. service.
LETART Letart Township Public invited by Pastor Jeff Smith. ·
Trustees, 5 p.m. at the office building.
Monday, May 21
1\Jesday, May 22 ·
FLATROCK,
W.Va. Mason
RUTLAND - Rutland . Village County Area Choir
rehearsal, 7 p.m.,'
Council, rescheduled regular session, Good Shepherd United Methodist .
7 p.m., council's chambers.
Church. Individuals of all churches
Wednesday, May 23
are welcome to participate.
POMEROY - Board of Directors
LONG BOITOM - Revival serof Galli a-Meigs Community Action vices will be held at the faithful Gospel
Agency, Inc. meets at II :30 a.m., Church, May 21-25, 7 p.m. each
Wild Horse Cafe.
evening with Dave Dailey preaching.
Saturday, May 26
LONG BOITOM - Hymn sing, 7
p:m, at the Mt. Olive Church featuring
"Dayspring." Everyone welcome.

·

Saturday, May 19
RACINE - Meigs CAN will meet
4w to 6 p.m. at the Racine Public
Library. Residents impacted by mining
and power plant are urged to attend. For
more information, call Elisa Young,
949-2175 or Albert Proffitt, 949-0901.
Wednesday,.May 23 ·
POMEROY - OH-KAN . Coin
Club meets at 7 p.m. on Wednesday at
Pomeroy Library. Dues are payable.
·,
Thursday, May 24
POMEROY - The Meigs County
Humane Society will meet at 6 p.m. at
the· Pomeroy Library to discuss
fundraisers. The public is invited.

Church events
Sunday, May 20
TUPPERS
PLAINS
-The
Amazing Grace Community Church
in Tuppers Plains will host the Day
Spring Singers at I0 a.m. A free will
offering will be taken. The church is
located at 42190 Main St., Route 681 .

TO DAY'S
NUMBER IS:

Other·events
Friday, May 18
POMEROY - A free communiiy
dinner will be held with serving from
4:30 to 6 p.m. at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church Second St. A hamloaf dinner and dessert will be served.

Youth events
Wednesday, May 23
POMEROY Mei~ s County
Health Department, free v1sion clinic;
children ages birth to 21, call 9926626 for appointment

Birthdays
Friday, May 25
RACINE - Margaret Yost, formerly
of Racine, now residing in North
Carolina, will celebrate her 92nd birthday on May 25: Cards may be sent to
her at P.O. Box 245, Davis, N.C. 28524.

Holzer celebrates May as
Skin Cancer Awareness Month ·
GALLIPOLIS- The importance of practicing sun safety
for the prevention of skin cancer is being promoted by The
Holzer Center for Cancer Care
in observance of May as Skin
Cancer Awareness Month.
As a special service to area
residents, free skin screenings
will be provided by the Holzer
Center on Cancer Care on
Thursday, May 31 , from 5 to 7
p.m. Those who are interested
must call for an appointment to
the Holzer Med1cal Center
Marketing and Community .
Relations Department at (740)
446-5055. Space is limited so ·
those who are interested are
encouraged to call as soon as
possible.
According to the Skin Cancer
Foundation, more than half of
the estimated 60,000 new cases
of melanoma projected this year
will occur in just ten states. Ohio
is one of them. Since the elimates in states when~ melanoma
is diagnosed most frequently California, Florida, and Texas are hot and sunny tluoughout the
year, the projections from the ·
American Cancer Society are
consistent · with research showing that about 65 to 90 percent of
melanoma cases are linked to
UV exposure.
According , to the American
Cancer Society's 2007 Cancer
Facts and Figures, the following
states were ranked in the Top
Ten for Estimated New Cases of
Melanoma: California - 6,680;
Florida - 4,380; Texas 3,860; Penusylvania - 3,120;
New York - 3,070; Ohio - ·

2,390; New Jersey - 2,210;
Michigan - 2,080; Illinois 2,050; Massachusetts - I ,820.
As expected, states at higher
latitudes, )Nhich have less sun
exposure and cooler temperalures, have the lowest projected
incidence of melanoma. These
states
include:
Alaska,
Wyoming, . North Dakota,
Vermont,
South
Dakota,.
Delaware and Montan.a. The
only surprise on these lists
would be Hawaii, which surprisingly has a low incidence of
melanoma.
"While it's a hot tropical climate, it's likely that Hawaii's
melanoma incidence is low
because the state has a large
percentage (58%) of Asian
Americans, who have a relatively high amount of the sunprotective pigment melanin in
their skin," said Steven Wang,
MD, member of The Skin
Cancer
·
Foundation's
Photobiology Committee and
Director of Dermatologic
Surgery at Memorial Sloan
Kettering in New Jersey.
Melanoma
risk
factors
include: light skin color, family
andlor personal history of skin
cancer, presence of atypical
moles and freckles and history
of severe sunburn occurring
earlv in life. No matter where
yoti" live, it's important to be
aware of these risk factors and
take the necessary measures to
preveht skin cancer. The Skin
Cancer Foundation's Skin
Cancer Prevention Tips:
• Seek the shade, especially
between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.

• Do not burn.
• Avoid tanning and UV tan·
ning booths.
• Use a sunscreen with an
SPF of 15 or higher every day.
• Apply I ounce (2 tablespoons) total of sunscreen to all
exposed areas, 30 minutes
before going outside. Reapply
every two hours or immediately
after swimming or excessive
sweating.
• Cover up with clothing,
including a broad-brimmed hat
and UV-blocking sunglasses.
• Keep newborns out of the
sun. Sunscreens should be used
on babies over the age of six
months.
• Examine your skin from
head-to-toe every month.
• See your physician every
year for a professional skin
exam.
The Skin Cancer Foundation
is the only global organization
solely devoted to the prevention. detection and treatment of
skin cancer. The mission of the
Foundatio'n is to decrease the
incidence of skin cancer
through public and professional
education and research: For
more
information,
VISit
www:skincancer.org, or call 1800-SKlN-490.
For more information about
the Holzer Center for Cancer
Care, call (740 ) 446-5474 or
toll-free at 1-800-82 1-3860.
The Center:s American Cancer
Society Ca nce r Re source
Center a!q1 pro vides helpful
informati on on skin cancer ;md
sun safety. For more information, call (740) 441-3909.

WANT TO FEEL YOUNG AGAIN?
Low back pain
Leg pain
Headaches
Numbnessffingling
in the Arms &amp; Legs

Neck pain
Pain assoc iated .

with Arthritis
\r

&lt;.'I'

II

r,,

\, 'tl
Ill,

ill\

till\\ ..,, llll'i•'llh

LET US HELP
IDi:ane McVey

LWC
Storage

M.A., CCC-A .

Ownl!r &amp; Audiolol,!:iSI

.Pleasant
Valley
Hospital

·'

icon·· Delta

Hear what others are saying about
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DILES HEAHIN&lt;;
CENTER
GALLIPOLIS
435'/, Second Ave nue

675-4340

For a limited time we are offering New Patients
1st visit to our office for only $25.00
This New Patient special gives you the
opportunity to have your spine checked.by
Dr.·Kelly Jones for a very low price.

( Ac·~~ frnr n Po,l Offic·c• f

Open Mon.- Thu r~ .

~ . .30-Spm

(740) 446-7619

LWC StQrag~
839 Kerr Roai:l
Bidwell, OH
(740) 446-9043
(740) 388·8320'
.Sign a 1 year.·Lease
Reeelve 2 months FREEt

316 Washington Sl.

Ravenswood, WV

(Across from BB&amp;T in Ravenswood)
Office hours M-W-F 9-6

•

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COMMUNI1~Y

MEIGS (OUN1Y COURT NEWS .
POMEROY M e i~ s and co&gt;ts. seal belt vio laCounty Court Judge S1e1 en · lion : Christopher L. Brake,
L. Story recently processed Ashland City. Tenn .. $30
the followin~ case"
and costs. sea1 belt violaNicholas " G. Adam, . li(\n: Trevor D. Brewer.
Racine. S.\0 and co"'· Kin gs pnn. Tenn .. $30 and
speed in g:
Sleven
E. costs. speeding: Daniel R.
Adkins. Shade . $30 and Brison. Lancaster. $30 and
costs. speeding: Ola!unde costs, speed ing : Beth A.
Ajetunmobi.
Inkster. Brown. R&lt;tcine . $30 and
Mich .. $30 and wsts. seal costs. speedi ng : Malthew
belt violation: Fontaine K. L. Brumfield. Pomeroy.
Allen. Dunbar. W.Va .. $50 . $30 and costs. speedi ng:
and
cosh.
spcedin !!: Cnlby J. Bryne . Columbus.
Jeremy
M.
Allen . $30 and costs, speed in g;
Huntersville. N.C.. S50 anu Robert Burdette. Pomerov.
costs. speeding : John M. $50 and costs. five days In
Amos. Raci ne. $350 and jail. suspended. probation.
costs. 30 days in jaiL n a llow i n~ animal to run
suspended. probat io n. red; - loose: Ronald J. Burke ,
le" operation ; Steven M. Pmaskala. $30 and costs.
Anderson . .Rut l;md. $20 sreecling.
and costs. failure to conJam es A. Burt. New
trot ; Victor P. Anderson. Have n. W.Va .. $ 150 and
Columbus. $30 and costs. costs. 30 days in jail , 29
speeding ; Richard
L. suspe nded. probation, posAn tilL Marietta. $50 and scss dru~ ab use inslrucosts, speeding: Robert B. ments; Lowell R. Burton.
Ashcroft , Guysville. $30 Mi ll ford. $30 and cos ts.
and costs. seat bell viola- speedin g: David . Butcher,
tio n: Elij ah L. Auger. Pomeroy. $75 and costs,
Jacksonvi lle, Fla .. $30 and disorderl y conduct : John C.
costs. speeding : Gary H. Bu zzard. New Haven ,
Avedik ian. Worthin gton. W.Va .. $20 and cos ts,
$30 and costs, speedi ng : improper passing : Becky
Larry R. Bailey, Chester. K. Caldwe ll. Reed sv il-l e,
· $20 and costs. unreason - $ I 00 and costs, selli ng cigab le speed for co nd .: Do n arettet&gt; to minors : Kenneth
K. Ball , New Haven , E. Caldwell , Reedsville,
W.Va., $30 and costs. sea t $30 and costs, seat belt viobelt violation; An nette M. lati on:
Phillip
W.
Bare, Pomeroy. $20 and Cangelosi, Baton Rouge,
costs, failure to register: La .. $30 and costs, speedHerbert
W.
Bare . ing; Shawn W. Carmichae l,
Langsville, $70, use/poses- Racine, $220, 30 days in
sion of drug paraphrenalia. jail , suspended, probati on.
.$70,
driving
under disorderl y conduct; Jessica
susp./re voc.; Randall L. L. Carson, Charles ton,
Bare, Cottagevi lle, W.Va., W.Va., $30 and costs,
$30 and costs, speed ing. speeding; Carol S. Carter,
$30 and costs, seat belt vio- Ravenswood , W.Va ., $30
lation; Caralyn S. Barton , and costs. speedin g; John
Reedsville. $30 and costs, M. Casto, Akron, $30 and
speedin g;
Melanie
F. costs, speeding ; Robert T.
Basco ni , Beckley, W.Va.. Castor, Columbus, $30 and
$30 and cos ts, speedi ng: costs. speeding: Clifton T.
Ryan A. Bates, Pomeroy, Chandler, Chesh ire, $50
$20 and costs, display and costs, I0 days in j ail,
plates/vali d sti cker; Levy suspe nded,
probation ,
W. Berry, Westervi lie, $30 u se/ pos~ession drug paraand cosls, speeding; Joseph phernalia, $50 and costs,
E. Beye r, Heath, $30 and probati on, possession ; Sara
costs, speeding: James A. R. Chapman, Carroll , $50
Bias, Middleport. $30 and and
costs
speeding;
costs, seat belt violation, Richard
J.
Chobey,
$20 and costs, use of unau- Ponage, Mich., $30 and .
thorized plateS: James R. costs, speeding; George K:
Bibler, Columbus, $50 and Church, Reedsv ille, $30
costs. speeding; Suzanne L. and costs, speeding: Lukas
. Bishop, Mt. Clare, W.Va. , S. · Chu rc h, Belpre, $ 100
$30 and costs, speedi ng; and cost&gt;, headli ght s;
Danny Blanding, Sumter. Joshua M. Clark . Pomeroy,
S.C., $30 and costs, speed- · $20 and costs, failure to
ing; Patsy L. Bluger, control ; Keisha N. Clark,
Ripley, W.Va , $20 and BlaGklick, $30 and costs,
· costs, fa ilure to contro l; speed ing; Rickie L. Clark,
Erin N. Bolin. Racine. $20 Racine. $30 and costs, seal
and costs, ex pi red opera- belt violation; Terre nce L.
tors license; Duane K. Clark, Racine, $30 and
Borgelt, Kin gsport , Tenn. , costs, speeding, $30 and
$30 and costs, speeding; costs, seat belt violati on;
Randall F. Bowlby, Ripley, Floyd
H.
Clela nd ,
W.Va., $30 and cos ts. Pomeroy, $30 and cos ts,
speeding; · Andrew
T. speedi ng; Hailee D. Cline,
Bowman , Lancaster. $30 Reedsville. $200 and costs,

Page A~
Friday, May 18, 200'7

Join honors society -~

MIDDLEPORT - Martial Arts students Bradley Jones',
Steven
Stewart and Kirk Legar of Meigs High School have
I0 days in jail, seven sus- belt violation, $20 and
earned
a
place in the top I0 nationwide for their·scholastiC
pended . probation, no oper, cosls, seat belt-passenger,
achievements,
recognizing their optimum test scores in the
a1ors lice nse: Rodney J. $200 and costs, 10 days in
I
OOth
percentile
of Martial Arts students.
:
Clonch. Pomeroy, $30 and jail, seven suspended, pro,
They
are
enrolled
at
Bitanga's
Martial
Arts
Center
.
it~
costs. seat belt violation: bation, driving under fra .
Theodore D. Connol ly. susp .; Pau l J. Gibbs, Middleport. where they now participate in an advaneea
Reedsville, $350 and costs, Middleport, $70, 30 days in training regime consisting of free sparring and close quarter
90 days in jail, 87 suspend- jail, two suspended. proba- combat. They are members of the Karate Black Belt Ctub
ed, probation . driving tion, menacing, $70, 180 and have established the rank of Black Belt as their goal::.
under infl uence; Cory N. days in jail, suspended, proCook. Carro ll. $30 and bation. violating protection
costs, speeding ; 'John A. order; Dana L. Gi llispie,
Cowden, Millboro, Va. , New Haven, W.Va., $30 and
$30 and cos ts, speeding; costs, speeding; Rochelle L.
Jason R. Cozad, Okean, Gloeckner, Gallipolis, $30
$ 100 and cos ts, headli ghts; and \:osts, seat belt violaJohn W. Crum, Belpre, $30 ti on; Arthur C. Gravely,
city/Region : :
and costs. speeding; Sherri Roanoke, Va. ; $30 and
Forecast for Friday, May 18
High I Low temps .;·
L. Cummi ns. Rac ine, $ 100 costs. speeding.
.
and costs. selling cigarettes
Joseph W. Gray, Racine,
to minors; Joe A. Darby, $30 and costs, speeding;
Comfort. W Va., $30 and Thomas P. Green, Athens,
costs, speeding: Anth ony $30 and, costs, speeding,
Toledo•
er 137"
G. Davis, Langsville, $ 11 5, $20 and costs, display
•
30 days in jail , 20 suspe nd- plates/valid sticker; Kent E.
Youngstown • l.
ed, probation, unauthorized Greer, Athens, $50 and
62" 136"
use of property.
cosls,speeding; Kimberly P.
Chri stopher R. Davis, Grigg, Morresvile, N.C. , ,.
Reedsville, $50 and costs, $30 and costs, speeding;
speeding; Jeffrey t. Davis, Dustin J. Hager, Lancaster,
Syracuse, $20 and costs, $50 and costs, speeding;
.\ · Deyton • ~
*Columbus
failure 'to control; Rebecca John A. Hager, Crown City,
. 64" 139'
' 64" 139"
L. Davis, Reedsville, $200 $30 and cost, seat belt violaand costs, probation, no ti on; Bradford K. Halley,
operators license, $20 and Columbus, $30 and costs.
Cincinnati
costs, seat belt violation; speeding; Rebecca L.
•
65' 139"
Kei th M. Dean, Portland, Haning, Rutland, $20 and
Ore., $30 and costs, speed- costs, vio-when being
Portsmouth •
ing; Hasani Debrossard , passed;
Benjamin
D.
65'-136'
Syracuse, $96, di sorde rly Hannigan, Walton Beach.
"
conduct; David M. Decarlo, Fla., $50 and costs, speedReynoldsburg , · $30 and ing; Adam L. Hardwick,
costs, seat belt vio lation; Dublin, $50 and costs,
Ck&gt;udy ~
·
Thunder·~ Flurries ~ ~ ·.
Brian
C.
Delmonico, speeding; Elizabeth M. . ~
. .
·W
S!Otm6
,
~ , •'
··-·""
,..,~
~
'
~
Columbus, $30 and costs, 1-Jarper, Reisterstown, Md.,
Partly · ""(____) 1',.1//
'''
• • •• • ~
Cloudy
Showers , · 1 /
Rain
• *
Snow
::::.
speeding; Linda A. Dickens, $20 and costs improper
Pomeroy, $20 and costs, passing; Georgia G, Hart,
Weather Underground • AP
unreasonab le speed for Pickerington, $50 and costs,
Friday... Partly
sunny. thunderstorms in the evening.
cond.; Mary J. Diller, speeding;
Brian · E.
Isolated
showers
in
the Cold with lows around 4&lt;J.
Fremont, Mich. ,· $50 and Hartman, Indianapolis, Ind.,
morning
...
Then
isolated
North winds around 5 mph.
costs, speeding; Michael J. · $50 -and costs, speeding;
showers
and
thunderstorms
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Dingus, Wellburn, Fla., $30 Robc;rt
B.
J-larvery,
Saturday... Sunny. Highs
and costs, seat belt viola- Brilliant, .$30 and costs, in the afternoon. Some
tion; Stephen J. Dixon , speeding;
Julie ·
A. thunderstorms may produce around 70. Northwest winds
Davisburg, Mich., $30 and Haverman, Yorktown, Va., gusty winds and small hail 5 to 10 mph.
costs, speeding; Richard B. $20 and costs, assured clear in the afternoon, Highs in
Sunday... Partly sunnY.
Durhamm Weatherly, Pa., distance; Virginia M. Helm, the lower 60s. North winds Highs in the lower 70s:
$30 and coSIS, speeding; Marietta, · $30 and costs, 5 to I0 mph. Chance of rain
Sunday night through
Ryan m. Eaton, Racine, $30 · speeding; Ralston
D. 20 percent. ·
Monday
night ... Partly
and
costs,
speeding; Hemsley, Racine, $30 and
Friday
night ... Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower
Samantha J. Edwards. costs, speeding.
cloudy. Isolated showers and 50s. Highs in the mid 70s. ·
Portland, $20 and costs,
assured clear di stance;
Kathy J. Elias, Rutland, $30
and costs, fai l to confine
ylcious dog; Christina L.
Ellis, Rutland, $30 and
costs, seat bell violation;
Asliley
N.
Engle.
Middleport, $20 and costs,
improper passing; Charles
E. Fink, Long Boltom, $30
and costs, speedlng; Frances
F. Foster, Racine. $30 and
costs, speeding; Jeffrey H.
George, St. Albans, W.Va.;
$30 and costs, speeding;
Matthew
S.
Gerard,
Davison, Mich., $50 and
costs, speeding, $20 and
costs, improper passing;
Bruce H. Gheen, Racine,
$30 and costs, seat belt viclation; Bryan C. Gheen,
Racine, $30 and costs, seat ·

Local Weather

Today's Forecast

v

.

Inside
Pistons eliminate Bulls; Page 82
The Sroreboard, Page B3
NASCAR, Page B4

Friday, May 18, 2007 ·
locAL SCHEDULE
"POMEROY - A SChedUle ol ~iog COllege
and hir,11 school varsity sporting 6Yefl1S involving
teams from Gallia and Meigs counties.

Today'a games
Tournament Baseball
(4) Leesburg Fairfield vs. (1) Southern
at Univ. of Rio Grande. 5 p.m.
Track end Field
Division Ill District at Oak Hill

W. Va. State Championships at Laidley
F1eld, 2 p.m.
Saturday's games
Tournament Baseball

Fairfield-Southern winner vs. (2)
Ironton St. Joseph at Univ. of Rio
Grande, 1 P·!T'·
(2) Eastern vs . \1) Portsmouth Notre
Dame at Lucasvil e Valley HS, 1 p.m.
Track and Field
Division II District at Oak Hill
1
W.Va. State Champlonships at Laidley

Field, 11 a.m.

Nets don't mind if it's ugly
fine with the Nets. as longas
the result is also the sa me.
"It's all about hi ding on ,"
Vince Carter said. "It doesn't matter if it's pretty. Ri ght
now, it's just get a win."
The
Nets cut
the
Cavaliers' lead in the series
to 3-2 with an 83-72 victory
in Cleve land. New Jersey
dominated the first three
quarters, then held on with
12 minutes better suited for
a team in the lottery than the
second round: 1-for- 15
shooting from the field. 4·of-10 from the foul line, and
six points.

BY BRIAN MAHONEY
AP BASKETBALL WRITER

EAST RUTHERFORD,
N.J. ~ After the fourth
quarter they played in Game
5, the New Jersey Nets were
lucky they didn 't spend
Thursday cleaning out thei r
lockers for the summer.
Instead, 1hey were back on
the practice court, gearing
up for Friday night 's Game 6
of their Eastern ,Conference
semifinal series agai nst the
Cleveland Cavaliers.
And if that one is as ugly
as Wednesday? That's just

59.14

General Electric ( NYSE) -

.36.53

Sign-ups for Eagle
Basketball Camp
start May 22
TUPPERS PLAINS
The ninth annual Eastem
Eagle Basketball Camp will
be held for all boys and girls
in grades four through six .
from May 29 through June
I at the EHS Gymnasium
The camp will feature
fundamentals essential to
produce
winning
basketball
and will
be taught
by current
coaches
and players, as well as former players. The camp will run
between the times of 9 a.m.
to noon.
Ali participants will
receive a camp t-shirt and a
camp basketball, as well as
other individual awards
being handed out throughout the four-day camp.
Early sign-ups are scheduled for Thes(jay, May 22,
..and there will be a $30 registration fee . The cost of the
camp is $40 for those who
sign-up on the first day of
.camp.
All checks should be
made payable to Eastern
Athletic Boosters and
returned to Eastern High
School , Coach Howie
Caldwell, 38900 State
Route 7, Reed sville, OH
45772,
Registrations may also be
sent to Howie Caldwell,
40878 Old Seven Road,
Reedsville, OH 45772.

Prep Baseball -

Harley-Davidson (NYSE) JP Morgan (NYSE) - 52.56
Kroger ( NYSE) - 29.40
Limited Brands (NYSE) -

------,---LUCASVILLE - One
word best described Eastern
baseball
following
Thursday 's 9-0 Division IV
district semifinal victory
over Sciotoville Community
East School at Valley High
SchooL
That one simple word consistent.
The
Eagles
(14-1 0)
received a fine pitching performance, great defense and
plenty of offensive support
m advancing themselves to
their third consecutive district championship game and they did all of those collective things on a very consistent basis.
The second-seeded Green
and White pounded out nine
hits in the triumph and
scored at least one run in
every inning except the
fifth, jumping out to an 8-0
lead through four complete.
- Eastern's defen se didn ' t
commit an error as well, and
starter' Joel Lynch took care
of the rest by throwing just
86 pitches and recording I0
strikeouts in his completegame decision. Lynch
allowed just two hits and a
walk over seven scoreless
innings of work.
A half-dozen Eagles
added at least one hit to the
winning cause, and all but
one in th~ host line-up

-

Young

Norfolk Southern (NYSE) -

22.17

58.32

Dally stock reports .are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of ·
transactions for May 17,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member
SIPC.

.

City Holding (NASDAQ) -

37.76

'

Collins (NYSE) - 67.79
Dollar General ( NYSE) -

21.58

reached base safely throughout the contest. The sixthseeded Tartans (8-15) had
only three baserunners total,
none of which made it past.
first base.
Eastern, which is 1-1 in its
previous two district championships, now advances to
Saturday's final where it
will take on top-seeded
Portsmouth Notre Dame.
The
Titans
defeated
Southeastern
8-2
on
Thursdayln a D4 district
semifinal at Rio Grande.
Afterwards EHS coach
Brian Bowen was pleased
with the overall performance his club showed in
getting back to another
chance at a regional berth.
The offense was very much
to his liking, but it was the
defense that he was most
proud of - particularly his
starting hurler.
Bryan Walters/photo
"l am very proud of Joel,
he pitched such a great game Eastern senior Derek Young (26) is congratulated by teammates Kyle Gordon, middle, and Cory
Shaffer, right, after scoring in the fifth inning of Thursday's 9-0 victory over Sciotoville Community
Ple•se see Third. 82
East in a Division IV district semifinall:laseball game at Valley High School in Lucasville.

Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)

-21.80
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. ( NAS.
DAQ)- 25.25
BBT (NYSE) - 42.65
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 25.98
Pepsico (NYSE) - 68.49
Premier (NASDAQ) -15.50
Rockwell (NYSE) - 63.79

• •Wednesday, May 23, 2007
• •PVH Main Entrance
• •Noon
• •Special gift to all who attend
• •Public is cordially invited
Brad Sherman/photo

Point Pleasant's James Casto throws a pitch during the
sixth inning of a 5-4 loss to South Charleston on Thursday
in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

DuPont (NYSE) - 51.91
US 8;~nk (NYSE) - 34.54
Gannett (NYSE) - 59.20

Point Pleasant falls to
S. Charleston in nine

FRIS/18/07 ·SUN 5120/07
WWW.SPRINGVALLEYCINEMA.COM
Box Office Opens @
6 : 3~PM FOR EVENING SHOWS
12:30 PM FOR SAT · SUN MATINEES

· SHREK THE THIRD (PG)
1:20, 3:20, 7:20 &amp; 9:20
DELTA FARCE (PG13)
1:15, 3:15, 7:15 &amp; 9:15
GEORGIA RULE (R)
1:00. 3:20. 7:00 &amp; 9:20
28 WEEKS LATER (R) .
1:10,3:10, 7:10 &amp; 9:10
SPIDERMAN 3 (PG13)
1:00, 3:30, 7:00 &amp; 9:30
SPIDERMAN 3 (PG13)
1:30, 4:00, 7:30 &amp; 10:00
OISTURBIA (PG13) ,
1:20, 3:30, 7:20 &amp; 9:30

Morris

Butterfly Release &amp;-c:e/ebration

178.68

25.57

-12.35

Division IV district semifinals

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAIL\'TRIBUNE.COM

Royal Dutch Shell __: 72.71 ·
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) -

83.26

Century Aluminum ( NAS·
DAQ)- 54.43
Champion (NASDAQ) - 7.30
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)

Please see Ugly. 83

Eastern pounds Tartans, 9-0

Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) .,--

Borgwarner ( NYSE) -

.

"I thought it was a masterpiece,"
Ne ts
coach
Lawrence Frank said.
Easy for him to say. The
Cavs saw things differently
after shootin g 33 perce nt
and blowing their first
chance to secu re a spol in
the conference fin als.
"Games like that can make
it hard to sleep." Cleveland

expect an offensive beauty
Fnday, either.
" You see it from both
teams." he said . "I think
when you compete so hard
on the defensive end and
guys are playing big minutes, it is a mental battle of
overcoming fatigue and not
settl ing on the offensive
end. Because when g u y~
pick and choose in the playoffs in terms of maximum
effort, they're go in g to give
maximum effort on th e
defensive end.

Eagles headed to third consecutive district final

14.80

Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 47.11
Wendy's (NYSE)- 39.11
Worthington ( NYSE) -

36.41

·

coach Mike Brown said.
Though this one didn 't
cost them, it was the second
straight horrendous fo urth
quarter for the Nets. They
were only 3-for- 16 in the
, final period of their 87-85
home loss in Game 4, when
they didn't make a field goa l
in the final 6:58. '
Cleveland hasrr't been
much better. The Cavs were
4-of-14 in the fourth quarter
of Game 4, then failed to
lake advantage of the Nets'
woes Wednesday by missing
14 of their 17 attempts.
And if Frank is ri ght, don't

Annual PVH Hospice Tribute
62.03

Big Lots (NYSE)- 32.44
. Bob Evans (NASDAQ) -

and it~ just might be

SPORTS BRIEFS

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 49.30
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 79.95
Ashland Inc. ( NYSE) -

Bl

·The Daily Sentinel

Bv BRAD 5HERMAN
BSHERMAN®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

play next
week with
S o u· t h
Char le ston
taking ori
Ri ver-side
Monday.
P o i n t
Pleasant, on
Tuesday,
will travel

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - With nearly two
weeks between tournament
contests, the Point Pleasant ·
High School baseball team
. was badly in need of a game
to stay sharp.
Enter the defending Class
AAA champion South
Krebs
t
o
Charleston Eagles. The two
Parkersburg
clubs needed nine innings.to to face Roane County.
settle the score, and South
The two teams were tied at
Charleston won 5-4 in what 2-2 after seven innings of
served as a tune-up game for play. Both scolid twice in
both teams on Thursday.
Ple•se see Point. BJ
Both' will start regional

1
Monday-friday &amp;-8, Saturday 9-6
www.adv.rtagetoyota.com
,.

For more information about this special event
or to learn more about Hospice or the "Wings"
Grief Support Group, please ~all, (304) 675-7400.

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

l . Jion~r .·A l.;ove.. ,ne A Reserve A Butterfly
·::_ Fo~: ihe ~.." ..~ PVH H~iee Tribute
.
1;' ·

.I
:
1

With a donatlQn of $5 to Pleasant Valley Hosp1ce, you can reserve a butterfly for
this very special event. AU,of the butterfies will be released together in memory of
loved ones. Please fiU-out form, detach and send with payrr.ent to:

1

I PLEASANT'VALLEY HOSPICE 6UTTERFLY RELEASE, I011 Viand Street,

I

.I ·Poirit Plea:ilant, WV 25550. AU checks should be made-out to Pleasant Valley Hospice.
.
. .
.
I .

II

t
I

I

'

o

I . &lt;NAME:
I·
·. . '
I

I .

I

.

•ADI)~SS:

• •rELEPHONE:

1
I
I
I

I • olN ~MORY OF:·
l
I
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~~-~-~-~-~~-~~--~~~~--~----~-~-~-------~
.

-- -t-- -...~------.,-· ~---------------~-------,,.-------------'---------~--.,-

�The Daily Sentinel ·

COMMUNI1~Y

MEIGS (OUN1Y COURT NEWS .
POMEROY M e i~ s and co&gt;ts. seal belt vio laCounty Court Judge S1e1 en · lion : Christopher L. Brake,
L. Story recently processed Ashland City. Tenn .. $30
the followin~ case"
and costs. sea1 belt violaNicholas " G. Adam, . li(\n: Trevor D. Brewer.
Racine. S.\0 and co"'· Kin gs pnn. Tenn .. $30 and
speed in g:
Sleven
E. costs. speeding: Daniel R.
Adkins. Shade . $30 and Brison. Lancaster. $30 and
costs. speeding: Ola!unde costs, speed ing : Beth A.
Ajetunmobi.
Inkster. Brown. R&lt;tcine . $30 and
Mich .. $30 and wsts. seal costs. speedi ng : Malthew
belt violation: Fontaine K. L. Brumfield. Pomeroy.
Allen. Dunbar. W.Va .. $50 . $30 and costs. speedi ng:
and
cosh.
spcedin !!: Cnlby J. Bryne . Columbus.
Jeremy
M.
Allen . $30 and costs, speed in g;
Huntersville. N.C.. S50 anu Robert Burdette. Pomerov.
costs. speeding : John M. $50 and costs. five days In
Amos. Raci ne. $350 and jail. suspended. probation.
costs. 30 days in jaiL n a llow i n~ animal to run
suspended. probat io n. red; - loose: Ronald J. Burke ,
le" operation ; Steven M. Pmaskala. $30 and costs.
Anderson . .Rut l;md. $20 sreecling.
and costs. failure to conJam es A. Burt. New
trot ; Victor P. Anderson. Have n. W.Va .. $ 150 and
Columbus. $30 and costs. costs. 30 days in jail , 29
speeding ; Richard
L. suspe nded. probation, posAn tilL Marietta. $50 and scss dru~ ab use inslrucosts, speeding: Robert B. ments; Lowell R. Burton.
Ashcroft , Guysville. $30 Mi ll ford. $30 and cos ts.
and costs. seat bell viola- speedin g: David . Butcher,
tio n: Elij ah L. Auger. Pomeroy. $75 and costs,
Jacksonvi lle, Fla .. $30 and disorderl y conduct : John C.
costs. speeding : Gary H. Bu zzard. New Haven ,
Avedik ian. Worthin gton. W.Va .. $20 and cos ts,
$30 and costs, speedi ng : improper passing : Becky
Larry R. Bailey, Chester. K. Caldwe ll. Reed sv il-l e,
· $20 and costs. unreason - $ I 00 and costs, selli ng cigab le speed for co nd .: Do n arettet&gt; to minors : Kenneth
K. Ball , New Haven , E. Caldwell , Reedsville,
W.Va., $30 and costs. sea t $30 and costs, seat belt viobelt violation; An nette M. lati on:
Phillip
W.
Bare, Pomeroy. $20 and Cangelosi, Baton Rouge,
costs, failure to register: La .. $30 and costs, speedHerbert
W.
Bare . ing; Shawn W. Carmichae l,
Langsville, $70, use/poses- Racine, $220, 30 days in
sion of drug paraphrenalia. jail , suspended, probati on.
.$70,
driving
under disorderl y conduct; Jessica
susp./re voc.; Randall L. L. Carson, Charles ton,
Bare, Cottagevi lle, W.Va., W.Va., $30 and costs,
$30 and costs, speed ing. speeding; Carol S. Carter,
$30 and costs, seat belt vio- Ravenswood , W.Va ., $30
lation; Caralyn S. Barton , and costs. speedin g; John
Reedsville. $30 and costs, M. Casto, Akron, $30 and
speedin g;
Melanie
F. costs, speeding ; Robert T.
Basco ni , Beckley, W.Va.. Castor, Columbus, $30 and
$30 and cos ts, speedi ng: costs. speeding: Clifton T.
Ryan A. Bates, Pomeroy, Chandler, Chesh ire, $50
$20 and costs, display and costs, I0 days in j ail,
plates/vali d sti cker; Levy suspe nded,
probation ,
W. Berry, Westervi lie, $30 u se/ pos~ession drug paraand cosls, speeding; Joseph phernalia, $50 and costs,
E. Beye r, Heath, $30 and probati on, possession ; Sara
costs, speeding: James A. R. Chapman, Carroll , $50
Bias, Middleport. $30 and and
costs
speeding;
costs, seat belt violation, Richard
J.
Chobey,
$20 and costs, use of unau- Ponage, Mich., $30 and .
thorized plateS: James R. costs, speeding; George K:
Bibler, Columbus, $50 and Church, Reedsv ille, $30
costs. speeding; Suzanne L. and costs, speeding: Lukas
. Bishop, Mt. Clare, W.Va. , S. · Chu rc h, Belpre, $ 100
$30 and costs, speedi ng; and cost&gt;, headli ght s;
Danny Blanding, Sumter. Joshua M. Clark . Pomeroy,
S.C., $30 and costs, speed- · $20 and costs, failure to
ing; Patsy L. Bluger, control ; Keisha N. Clark,
Ripley, W.Va , $20 and BlaGklick, $30 and costs,
· costs, fa ilure to contro l; speed ing; Rickie L. Clark,
Erin N. Bolin. Racine. $20 Racine. $30 and costs, seal
and costs, ex pi red opera- belt violation; Terre nce L.
tors license; Duane K. Clark, Racine, $30 and
Borgelt, Kin gsport , Tenn. , costs, speeding, $30 and
$30 and costs, speeding; costs, seat belt violati on;
Randall F. Bowlby, Ripley, Floyd
H.
Clela nd ,
W.Va., $30 and cos ts. Pomeroy, $30 and cos ts,
speeding; · Andrew
T. speedi ng; Hailee D. Cline,
Bowman , Lancaster. $30 Reedsville. $200 and costs,

Page A~
Friday, May 18, 200'7

Join honors society -~

MIDDLEPORT - Martial Arts students Bradley Jones',
Steven
Stewart and Kirk Legar of Meigs High School have
I0 days in jail, seven sus- belt violation, $20 and
earned
a
place in the top I0 nationwide for their·scholastiC
pended . probation, no oper, cosls, seat belt-passenger,
achievements,
recognizing their optimum test scores in the
a1ors lice nse: Rodney J. $200 and costs, 10 days in
I
OOth
percentile
of Martial Arts students.
:
Clonch. Pomeroy, $30 and jail, seven suspended, pro,
They
are
enrolled
at
Bitanga's
Martial
Arts
Center
.
it~
costs. seat belt violation: bation, driving under fra .
Theodore D. Connol ly. susp .; Pau l J. Gibbs, Middleport. where they now participate in an advaneea
Reedsville, $350 and costs, Middleport, $70, 30 days in training regime consisting of free sparring and close quarter
90 days in jail, 87 suspend- jail, two suspended. proba- combat. They are members of the Karate Black Belt Ctub
ed, probation . driving tion, menacing, $70, 180 and have established the rank of Black Belt as their goal::.
under infl uence; Cory N. days in jail, suspended, proCook. Carro ll. $30 and bation. violating protection
costs, speeding ; 'John A. order; Dana L. Gi llispie,
Cowden, Millboro, Va. , New Haven, W.Va., $30 and
$30 and cos ts, speeding; costs, speeding; Rochelle L.
Jason R. Cozad, Okean, Gloeckner, Gallipolis, $30
$ 100 and cos ts, headli ghts; and \:osts, seat belt violaJohn W. Crum, Belpre, $30 ti on; Arthur C. Gravely,
city/Region : :
and costs. speeding; Sherri Roanoke, Va. ; $30 and
Forecast for Friday, May 18
High I Low temps .;·
L. Cummi ns. Rac ine, $ 100 costs. speeding.
.
and costs. selling cigarettes
Joseph W. Gray, Racine,
to minors; Joe A. Darby, $30 and costs, speeding;
Comfort. W Va., $30 and Thomas P. Green, Athens,
costs, speeding: Anth ony $30 and, costs, speeding,
Toledo•
er 137"
G. Davis, Langsville, $ 11 5, $20 and costs, display
•
30 days in jail , 20 suspe nd- plates/valid sticker; Kent E.
Youngstown • l.
ed, probation, unauthorized Greer, Athens, $50 and
62" 136"
use of property.
cosls,speeding; Kimberly P.
Chri stopher R. Davis, Grigg, Morresvile, N.C. , ,.
Reedsville, $50 and costs, $30 and costs, speeding;
speeding; Jeffrey t. Davis, Dustin J. Hager, Lancaster,
Syracuse, $20 and costs, $50 and costs, speeding;
.\ · Deyton • ~
*Columbus
failure 'to control; Rebecca John A. Hager, Crown City,
. 64" 139'
' 64" 139"
L. Davis, Reedsville, $200 $30 and cost, seat belt violaand costs, probation, no ti on; Bradford K. Halley,
operators license, $20 and Columbus, $30 and costs.
Cincinnati
costs, seat belt violation; speeding; Rebecca L.
•
65' 139"
Kei th M. Dean, Portland, Haning, Rutland, $20 and
Ore., $30 and costs, speed- costs, vio-when being
Portsmouth •
ing; Hasani Debrossard , passed;
Benjamin
D.
65'-136'
Syracuse, $96, di sorde rly Hannigan, Walton Beach.
"
conduct; David M. Decarlo, Fla., $50 and costs, speedReynoldsburg , · $30 and ing; Adam L. Hardwick,
costs, seat belt vio lation; Dublin, $50 and costs,
Ck&gt;udy ~
·
Thunder·~ Flurries ~ ~ ·.
Brian
C.
Delmonico, speeding; Elizabeth M. . ~
. .
·W
S!Otm6
,
~ , •'
··-·""
,..,~
~
'
~
Columbus, $30 and costs, 1-Jarper, Reisterstown, Md.,
Partly · ""(____) 1',.1//
'''
• • •• • ~
Cloudy
Showers , · 1 /
Rain
• *
Snow
::::.
speeding; Linda A. Dickens, $20 and costs improper
Pomeroy, $20 and costs, passing; Georgia G, Hart,
Weather Underground • AP
unreasonab le speed for Pickerington, $50 and costs,
Friday... Partly
sunny. thunderstorms in the evening.
cond.; Mary J. Diller, speeding;
Brian · E.
Isolated
showers
in
the Cold with lows around 4&lt;J.
Fremont, Mich. ,· $50 and Hartman, Indianapolis, Ind.,
morning
...
Then
isolated
North winds around 5 mph.
costs, speeding; Michael J. · $50 -and costs, speeding;
showers
and
thunderstorms
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Dingus, Wellburn, Fla., $30 Robc;rt
B.
J-larvery,
Saturday... Sunny. Highs
and costs, seat belt viola- Brilliant, .$30 and costs, in the afternoon. Some
tion; Stephen J. Dixon , speeding;
Julie ·
A. thunderstorms may produce around 70. Northwest winds
Davisburg, Mich., $30 and Haverman, Yorktown, Va., gusty winds and small hail 5 to 10 mph.
costs, speeding; Richard B. $20 and costs, assured clear in the afternoon, Highs in
Sunday... Partly sunnY.
Durhamm Weatherly, Pa., distance; Virginia M. Helm, the lower 60s. North winds Highs in the lower 70s:
$30 and coSIS, speeding; Marietta, · $30 and costs, 5 to I0 mph. Chance of rain
Sunday night through
Ryan m. Eaton, Racine, $30 · speeding; Ralston
D. 20 percent. ·
Monday
night ... Partly
and
costs,
speeding; Hemsley, Racine, $30 and
Friday
night ... Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower
Samantha J. Edwards. costs, speeding.
cloudy. Isolated showers and 50s. Highs in the mid 70s. ·
Portland, $20 and costs,
assured clear di stance;
Kathy J. Elias, Rutland, $30
and costs, fai l to confine
ylcious dog; Christina L.
Ellis, Rutland, $30 and
costs, seat bell violation;
Asliley
N.
Engle.
Middleport, $20 and costs,
improper passing; Charles
E. Fink, Long Boltom, $30
and costs, speedlng; Frances
F. Foster, Racine. $30 and
costs, speeding; Jeffrey H.
George, St. Albans, W.Va.;
$30 and costs, speeding;
Matthew
S.
Gerard,
Davison, Mich., $50 and
costs, speeding, $20 and
costs, improper passing;
Bruce H. Gheen, Racine,
$30 and costs, seat belt viclation; Bryan C. Gheen,
Racine, $30 and costs, seat ·

Local Weather

Today's Forecast

v

.

Inside
Pistons eliminate Bulls; Page 82
The Sroreboard, Page B3
NASCAR, Page B4

Friday, May 18, 2007 ·
locAL SCHEDULE
"POMEROY - A SChedUle ol ~iog COllege
and hir,11 school varsity sporting 6Yefl1S involving
teams from Gallia and Meigs counties.

Today'a games
Tournament Baseball
(4) Leesburg Fairfield vs. (1) Southern
at Univ. of Rio Grande. 5 p.m.
Track end Field
Division Ill District at Oak Hill

W. Va. State Championships at Laidley
F1eld, 2 p.m.
Saturday's games
Tournament Baseball

Fairfield-Southern winner vs. (2)
Ironton St. Joseph at Univ. of Rio
Grande, 1 P·!T'·
(2) Eastern vs . \1) Portsmouth Notre
Dame at Lucasvil e Valley HS, 1 p.m.
Track and Field
Division II District at Oak Hill
1
W.Va. State Champlonships at Laidley

Field, 11 a.m.

Nets don't mind if it's ugly
fine with the Nets. as longas
the result is also the sa me.
"It's all about hi ding on ,"
Vince Carter said. "It doesn't matter if it's pretty. Ri ght
now, it's just get a win."
The
Nets cut
the
Cavaliers' lead in the series
to 3-2 with an 83-72 victory
in Cleve land. New Jersey
dominated the first three
quarters, then held on with
12 minutes better suited for
a team in the lottery than the
second round: 1-for- 15
shooting from the field. 4·of-10 from the foul line, and
six points.

BY BRIAN MAHONEY
AP BASKETBALL WRITER

EAST RUTHERFORD,
N.J. ~ After the fourth
quarter they played in Game
5, the New Jersey Nets were
lucky they didn 't spend
Thursday cleaning out thei r
lockers for the summer.
Instead, 1hey were back on
the practice court, gearing
up for Friday night 's Game 6
of their Eastern ,Conference
semifinal series agai nst the
Cleveland Cavaliers.
And if that one is as ugly
as Wednesday? That's just

59.14

General Electric ( NYSE) -

.36.53

Sign-ups for Eagle
Basketball Camp
start May 22
TUPPERS PLAINS
The ninth annual Eastem
Eagle Basketball Camp will
be held for all boys and girls
in grades four through six .
from May 29 through June
I at the EHS Gymnasium
The camp will feature
fundamentals essential to
produce
winning
basketball
and will
be taught
by current
coaches
and players, as well as former players. The camp will run
between the times of 9 a.m.
to noon.
Ali participants will
receive a camp t-shirt and a
camp basketball, as well as
other individual awards
being handed out throughout the four-day camp.
Early sign-ups are scheduled for Thes(jay, May 22,
..and there will be a $30 registration fee . The cost of the
camp is $40 for those who
sign-up on the first day of
.camp.
All checks should be
made payable to Eastern
Athletic Boosters and
returned to Eastern High
School , Coach Howie
Caldwell, 38900 State
Route 7, Reed sville, OH
45772,
Registrations may also be
sent to Howie Caldwell,
40878 Old Seven Road,
Reedsville, OH 45772.

Prep Baseball -

Harley-Davidson (NYSE) JP Morgan (NYSE) - 52.56
Kroger ( NYSE) - 29.40
Limited Brands (NYSE) -

------,---LUCASVILLE - One
word best described Eastern
baseball
following
Thursday 's 9-0 Division IV
district semifinal victory
over Sciotoville Community
East School at Valley High
SchooL
That one simple word consistent.
The
Eagles
(14-1 0)
received a fine pitching performance, great defense and
plenty of offensive support
m advancing themselves to
their third consecutive district championship game and they did all of those collective things on a very consistent basis.
The second-seeded Green
and White pounded out nine
hits in the triumph and
scored at least one run in
every inning except the
fifth, jumping out to an 8-0
lead through four complete.
- Eastern's defen se didn ' t
commit an error as well, and
starter' Joel Lynch took care
of the rest by throwing just
86 pitches and recording I0
strikeouts in his completegame decision. Lynch
allowed just two hits and a
walk over seven scoreless
innings of work.
A half-dozen Eagles
added at least one hit to the
winning cause, and all but
one in th~ host line-up

-

Young

Norfolk Southern (NYSE) -

22.17

58.32

Dally stock reports .are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of ·
transactions for May 17,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member
SIPC.

.

City Holding (NASDAQ) -

37.76

'

Collins (NYSE) - 67.79
Dollar General ( NYSE) -

21.58

reached base safely throughout the contest. The sixthseeded Tartans (8-15) had
only three baserunners total,
none of which made it past.
first base.
Eastern, which is 1-1 in its
previous two district championships, now advances to
Saturday's final where it
will take on top-seeded
Portsmouth Notre Dame.
The
Titans
defeated
Southeastern
8-2
on
Thursdayln a D4 district
semifinal at Rio Grande.
Afterwards EHS coach
Brian Bowen was pleased
with the overall performance his club showed in
getting back to another
chance at a regional berth.
The offense was very much
to his liking, but it was the
defense that he was most
proud of - particularly his
starting hurler.
Bryan Walters/photo
"l am very proud of Joel,
he pitched such a great game Eastern senior Derek Young (26) is congratulated by teammates Kyle Gordon, middle, and Cory
Shaffer, right, after scoring in the fifth inning of Thursday's 9-0 victory over Sciotoville Community
Ple•se see Third. 82
East in a Division IV district semifinall:laseball game at Valley High School in Lucasville.

Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)

-21.80
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. ( NAS.
DAQ)- 25.25
BBT (NYSE) - 42.65
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 25.98
Pepsico (NYSE) - 68.49
Premier (NASDAQ) -15.50
Rockwell (NYSE) - 63.79

• •Wednesday, May 23, 2007
• •PVH Main Entrance
• •Noon
• •Special gift to all who attend
• •Public is cordially invited
Brad Sherman/photo

Point Pleasant's James Casto throws a pitch during the
sixth inning of a 5-4 loss to South Charleston on Thursday
in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

DuPont (NYSE) - 51.91
US 8;~nk (NYSE) - 34.54
Gannett (NYSE) - 59.20

Point Pleasant falls to
S. Charleston in nine

FRIS/18/07 ·SUN 5120/07
WWW.SPRINGVALLEYCINEMA.COM
Box Office Opens @
6 : 3~PM FOR EVENING SHOWS
12:30 PM FOR SAT · SUN MATINEES

· SHREK THE THIRD (PG)
1:20, 3:20, 7:20 &amp; 9:20
DELTA FARCE (PG13)
1:15, 3:15, 7:15 &amp; 9:15
GEORGIA RULE (R)
1:00. 3:20. 7:00 &amp; 9:20
28 WEEKS LATER (R) .
1:10,3:10, 7:10 &amp; 9:10
SPIDERMAN 3 (PG13)
1:00, 3:30, 7:00 &amp; 9:30
SPIDERMAN 3 (PG13)
1:30, 4:00, 7:30 &amp; 10:00
OISTURBIA (PG13) ,
1:20, 3:30, 7:20 &amp; 9:30

Morris

Butterfly Release &amp;-c:e/ebration

178.68

25.57

-12.35

Division IV district semifinals

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAIL\'TRIBUNE.COM

Royal Dutch Shell __: 72.71 ·
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) -

83.26

Century Aluminum ( NAS·
DAQ)- 54.43
Champion (NASDAQ) - 7.30
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)

Please see Ugly. 83

Eastern pounds Tartans, 9-0

Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) .,--

Borgwarner ( NYSE) -

.

"I thought it was a masterpiece,"
Ne ts
coach
Lawrence Frank said.
Easy for him to say. The
Cavs saw things differently
after shootin g 33 perce nt
and blowing their first
chance to secu re a spol in
the conference fin als.
"Games like that can make
it hard to sleep." Cleveland

expect an offensive beauty
Fnday, either.
" You see it from both
teams." he said . "I think
when you compete so hard
on the defensive end and
guys are playing big minutes, it is a mental battle of
overcoming fatigue and not
settl ing on the offensive
end. Because when g u y~
pick and choose in the playoffs in terms of maximum
effort, they're go in g to give
maximum effort on th e
defensive end.

Eagles headed to third consecutive district final

14.80

Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 47.11
Wendy's (NYSE)- 39.11
Worthington ( NYSE) -

36.41

·

coach Mike Brown said.
Though this one didn 't
cost them, it was the second
straight horrendous fo urth
quarter for the Nets. They
were only 3-for- 16 in the
, final period of their 87-85
home loss in Game 4, when
they didn't make a field goa l
in the final 6:58. '
Cleveland hasrr't been
much better. The Cavs were
4-of-14 in the fourth quarter
of Game 4, then failed to
lake advantage of the Nets'
woes Wednesday by missing
14 of their 17 attempts.
And if Frank is ri ght, don't

Annual PVH Hospice Tribute
62.03

Big Lots (NYSE)- 32.44
. Bob Evans (NASDAQ) -

and it~ just might be

SPORTS BRIEFS

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 49.30
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 79.95
Ashland Inc. ( NYSE) -

Bl

·The Daily Sentinel

Bv BRAD 5HERMAN
BSHERMAN®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

play next
week with
S o u· t h
Char le ston
taking ori
Ri ver-side
Monday.
P o i n t
Pleasant, on
Tuesday,
will travel

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - With nearly two
weeks between tournament
contests, the Point Pleasant ·
High School baseball team
. was badly in need of a game
to stay sharp.
Enter the defending Class
AAA champion South
Krebs
t
o
Charleston Eagles. The two
Parkersburg
clubs needed nine innings.to to face Roane County.
settle the score, and South
The two teams were tied at
Charleston won 5-4 in what 2-2 after seven innings of
served as a tune-up game for play. Both scolid twice in
both teams on Thursday.
Ple•se see Point. BJ
Both' will start regional

1
Monday-friday &amp;-8, Saturday 9-6
www.adv.rtagetoyota.com
,.

For more information about this special event
or to learn more about Hospice or the "Wings"
Grief Support Group, please ~all, (304) 675-7400.

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

l . Jion~r .·A l.;ove.. ,ne A Reserve A Butterfly
·::_ Fo~: ihe ~.." ..~ PVH H~iee Tribute
.
1;' ·

.I
:
1

With a donatlQn of $5 to Pleasant Valley Hosp1ce, you can reserve a butterfly for
this very special event. AU,of the butterfies will be released together in memory of
loved ones. Please fiU-out form, detach and send with payrr.ent to:

1

I PLEASANT'VALLEY HOSPICE 6UTTERFLY RELEASE, I011 Viand Street,

I

.I ·Poirit Plea:ilant, WV 25550. AU checks should be made-out to Pleasant Valley Hospice.
.
. .
.
I .

II

t
I

I

'

o

I . &lt;NAME:
I·
·. . '
I

I .

I

.

•ADI)~SS:

• •rELEPHONE:

1
I
I
I

I • olN ~MORY OF:·
l
I
··
I
'
~~-~-~-~-~~-~~--~~~~--~----~-~-~-------~
.

-- -t-- -...~------.,-· ~---------------~-------,,.-------------'---------~--.,-

�I

Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 18,

www.mydailysentinel.com
'
.

,

2007

Friday, May 18,.2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Pistons advance·to ·Eastern Conference finals

AP

photo

Chicago Bulls' Luol Deng, front, of Sudan, takes a hard foul from
the Detroit Pistons' Chauncey Billups during the second quarter
of an NBA basketball playoff game Thursday in Chicago.'

CHICAGO (AP) - Th~l
Detroit Pistons can breathe
a little easier. There won't
be a Game 7, after alL
Richard Hamilton scored
23 point s and the Pistons
beat the Chicago Bulls 9585 in Game 6 of the -Eastern
Conference semifinals on
Thursday night, clinching a
series that turned tense after
Detroit won the first three
games.
No NBA team has lost a
best-of-seven series after
taking a 3-0 lead, and the
Pistons rejectec;l the Bulls'
shot at history. Now, Detroit
can focus on its fifth
straight conference finaL
Down 48-43 at halftime,
the Pistons outscored the
Bulls 31-2 1 in the third
quarter to take a 74-691ead,
and Chicago could not sustain any momentum in the
fourth .
Rasheed Wallace had 16
points and 13 rebounds for
Detroit , while Tayshaun
Prince added 17 points and
nine rebounds. Chauncey
Billups was just 3-for-12
from the field bu,t he scored

II of his 21 points m the
third quarter.
A jumper by Wallace,
who had received a technical foul just over a minute
earlier, and hook shot by
Prince made it 85-73 with
2:20 left, and Detroit hung
on from there.
"We were moving the
ball," Wallace said of the
difference in Detroit's
offense in the second half.
"In the first half we were
stagnant and didn't move
the baiL That's what we
talked about at halftime."
· Chicago's P.J . · Brown
attempted just three shots in
the second half after scoring
all of his 20 points in the
first two quarters, eclipsing
his previous playoff careerhigh of 19. Luol Deng
added 17 points, . but the
Bulls were off target after
shooting 57.3 percent in
Game 5.
This time, they were 28of-75 (37.3 percent), with
Bel\ Gordon (19 points)
going 7-for-18 and Kirk
Hinrich (II points) 3-of-13.
Walla~e said the Pistons

didn't do anything special of the key to make it 55-52 ·
against Brown in the second with 8: 17 left in the third
half.
quarter, but the Pistons kept
"He was.getting the same coming. Billups hit a .3 to
shots. We were still contest- make it 67"59 with 3:29
in g. he just didn' t hit them," remaining, and then came a:
Wallace said .."He was on stra nge sequence.
.
fire in the first half."
Andres Nocioni of the
The Bulls were trying to · Bull s was fouled by
become the fourth NBA Antonio McDyess on a 3tearn to force a Game 7 point attempt and got called·
after fallii1g behind 3-0, and for a technical foul. A cone
keep alive their hopes of fu sed Nocioni held his arms
joining another exclusive out, wondering why, and
club. Only the 1942 Toronto Billups hit the technical fre.e
Maple Leafs, 1975 New throw. Nocioni then hit his.
York Islanders and 2004 free throws , making it 68"
Boston Red Sox have raJ- 62.
lied from 3-0 deficits to win
The lead reached 73-64
a besi-of-seven series.
when Billups hit three free
The Piston s put the Bulls throws after Hinrich come
in that hole by blowing mitted his fourth foul of the
them out in Games I and 2 game and third of the quarat home and rallying from ter with 2:27 left. But a put19 down to take Game 3 at back by Deng and a 3 by
the United Center, but Gordon cut it to four before
instead of a second straight Detroit's Jason Maxie II hit &lt;1
sweep, Detroit got a fight.
free throw.
The Pistons took control
Wallace hit a 3-pointer 30
seconds into the second half of the boards in the second
to start a 12-1 run that put half,
outrebounding
Detroit ahead 55-49.
· Chicago 14-7 in the third
After a timeout, Gordon quarter and fin.ishing . with
hit a 3-pointer from the top 48-35 ~dge.

GO VALLEY
..... -·---~·

SAVE A LOT
259-:4.300

THE SCOREBOARD
PRo BASEBALL
Eaot Dlvtolon
-~
WL
28 12
18 21
18 22
18 22
18 23

Boston

NewYor1&lt;
Tampa Bay

Toronto
llaltiroore

PctGB
.700 .462 g),
.450 10
.450 10
.439 10),

Eoot Dlvtolon
-·~

'I'

I

FloriOa
Waslling1on

WLPctGB
24 14 .632
24 16 .600 1 .
20 17 .&amp;11 3),
' 18 22 .450 7
15 27 .357 11

Los Angeles

Wost Dtvloton
W L
Pet

Seanle
Oakland

Taxas

23
18

18
17

GB
.561
.514 2

20

20
26

.500 2 ~
.366 8

15

Wlldneoday'o Gomea
Chicago White Sox 5. N.Y. Yankees 3.
1st game
N.Y. Yankees 8. Chicago Wh~e Sox 1,
2nd game
Detroit at Boston, ppd., rain
Cleveland 7 , Minnesota 1
Toronto 2, Baltimore 1
Tampa Say 11 , Texas B
LA. Angels 5, Seatlle 0
Kansas City 4. Oaklard 3

WLPctGB
26 15 .634

Hooston

20

20

(Beot·OH)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Buffalo 4 , N.Y. Islanders 1
N.Y. Islanders 3. Buflalo 2
Buffalo 3 , N.V. Islanders 2
Buffalo 4 , N.Y Islanders 2
Buffalo 4, N.V. Islanders 3

.500 5),
.462 7

II
I

I

I

a·, .

N.Y. Aanae£14. Atlanta 0
N.Y. Rangers 4. Atlanta 3
N.Y. Rangers 2, Atlanta 1
NY Rangers 7 , AtleJnta 0
NY Rangers 4 , Atlanta 2

Detroit 4. Ca!qarv 2
1

.

Anaheim 4 Mlnnejoto 1·
Anaheim 2, Minnesota 1
, Anaheim 3, Minnesota 2
j Anaheim 2, Minnesota 1
Minnesota 4, Anaheim 1
Anaheim 4, Minnesota 1
1

,
Yancouvar4. Dallaa 3
· Vancouver 5 , Dallas 4 , 40T
Dallas 2, VancouverO
va"ncouver2 , Dallas 1, OT
Vancouver 2, Dallas1
1 Dallas 1, Vancouver O, OT
Dallas 2, Vancouver 0
vancouver 4 Dallas 1
'
1
Sen Jose 4 Naahvllle 1

l

I San Jose---5, --· ----Nastlvllle 4, 20T
Nashvrlle 5, San Jose
San Jose 3, Nashville
San Jose 3. Nashvrlle
San Jose 3, Nashvill~

2
1
2
2

1

CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
(Beat-of-7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
:
. Buffalo 4. Now York Bongm 2
j Buffalo 5, N.Y. Rangers 2
B ff 1 3 N y R
2
1 u a 0 • · · angers
N.Y. Aange.rs 2 , Buffalo 1, 20T
N.Y. Rangers 2 , Buffalo 1
Buffalo 2, N.Y. Rangers 1, OT
Buffalo 5, N.Y. Rangers 4

San Diego at Seattle, 10:05 p.m.
Sunday's Game•
Sunday's G•met
St. Louis at Detroit, 1:05 p.m.
St.louis at Detroit, 1 :05 ·p.m.
Cincinnati at Cleveland, 1:05 p.m.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Cincinnati at Cl~eland, 1 :05 p.m.
Arizona at Pittsburgh , 1:35 p.m.
Detroit 4. San JoJB 2
Toronto at Philadelphia, 1 :35 p.m. ·
Toronto at Philadelphia, 1:35 p.m.
San Jose 2, Detroit o
~tlmore at Washington, 1:35 p.m.
· Baltimore at Washington , 1 :35 p.m.
Detroit 3, San Jose 2
Florida at Tampa Bay. 1 :40 p.m.
Flo rida at Tampa Bay, 1:40 p.m.
San Jose 2, Detroit 1
Atlanta at Boston, 2:05 p.in.
Atlanta at Boston, 2:05p.m.
Detroit 3. San Jose 2. OT
Texas at Houston, 2:05p.m.
Texas at Houston, ~ : 05 p.m.
Detroit 4, San Jose 1
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 2:05 p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 2:05p .m.
Detroit 2. San Jose 0
Ct1icago Wl'lite Sox at Chicago Cubs,
Chicago White Sox at Chicago Cubs, 1
2:20p.m.
·
2:20p.m.
Anaheim 4. Yancouyar 1
Kansas City at Colorado, 3:05 p.m.
Kansas City at Colorado, 3:05p.m.
I
Anaheim 5, Vancouver 1
L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 3:35p.m .
L.A. Dodgers at L.A . Angels, 3:35 p.m.
Vancouver 2, Anaheim 1, 20T
San Diego at Seattle, 4:05p.m.
San Diego at Seanla, 4:05p.m.
Anaheim 3, Vancouver 2
San Francisco at Oakland, 4:05p.m.
San FranciSco at. Oakland , 4:05 p.m .
N.Y. Yankees at N .Y. Mats, 8;05 p.m.
Anaheim 3, Vancouver 2, Or
N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mets, 8:05p.m..

CAROLINA HURRICANES-Signed D
Casey Borer t_
o a two-year cont~act.
f"HILADELPHIA FLYERS-Sogned 0
Lasse Kukkonen to a two-year contract.
COLLEGE
CABRINI-Named Greg.Herenda men's
: basketball coach. Announced the resig·
j nation ofTrish Ar~old. women's volleyball
1 coach.
CENTRAL WYOMING COLLEGENamed Jamce Stevens men's basketball

I
I, coach.
GENESEO

I
I

I

I

Third

a three-run cushion.

from PageBl
tonight. He's gotten better
every time out in the last
four or five games, and'
tonight was probably his
best game of the yeart
Bowen said. ''He's the ty'pe
.of kid you want out there in
·this kind of si tuation, and he
definitely rose to the occaston.
"The defense was also
solid behind Joel. Several
people made a lot of great
plays and I was pleased
with the way we played
defense tonight."
Lynch has now worked a
dozen innings in the postseason, allowing only five
hits and an earned run over
that span on the mound. The
junior has also recorded 17
strikeouts in those two victories.
Lynch surrendered a oneout walk in . the top of the
first , then induced Brent
Ehrhart to hit into an
inning-ending double play
to get out of trouble.
The Eagles . then countered with a run in their half
of the first. Senior Derek
Young led off the frame
with a triple. then Matt
Morris plated him two batters later with a fielder 's
choice for a 1-0 ad vantage.
The Blue and White never
came closer.
EHS extended its lead to
two in the second when lt
single, an error and two sac. rifices led to another score.
Joel Lynch led off things
with a single, then Lynch
·advanced to second on an
error.
· Ti'tus Pierce laid down u
sacrifice bunt to advance
Lynch to third with one out,
then Jake Lynch hi I a sac tly
to left that allowed his older
brother to score for a 2-0
edge.
Back-to-back two-out hits
in the third produced the
hosts' third run. Derek
Griffin drove a two-out
double to the lc:ft-centerfield gap, then Morris followed with an RBI triple to
. right that plated Griffin for
{.

Lynch
retired
nine
straight hitters at one point
during the fourth, including
six strai ght by strikeout.
East managed their first hit
of the contest when a twoout single by Ehrhart ended
that streak, but Ehrhart was
picked off at second shortly
afterward to end the inning.
Eastern rode that ~motion
and momentum to fruition
in the bottom half of the
frame, knocking out five
runs and three hits for an 80 lead.
Joel Lynch led off the
inning with a si ngle, then a
one-out walk to Jak e Lynch
gave the Green and White
runners at the corners. An
error allowed Jake Lynch to
advam.: e to second and
Justin Browning to reach
first safely, as well as letting
Joel. Lynch score for a 4-0
edge.
Kyle Gordon singled to
load the bases, and Young
delivered a bases-clearing
double for a 7-0 advantage.
A throwin g error also
.allowed Young to score on
that same play for the eightrun lead.
Cory Shaffer drove in
YOl.I.Qg for the final run of
the game in the sixth , providing a bases-loaded tWO·
out single.
Young paced the Green
and White with three hits
and three runs scored, while
Joel Lynch followed · with
two hits two runs scored.
Griffin,. Morris, Shaffer and
Gordon provided the other
safeties, while Young led
the way with two RBis.
Gary Truman joined
Ehrhart with the. Tartans'
only otl).er hit, a single with
one out in the sixth.
Naihan Williams went the
distance for East in the losi~g decision! surrendering
mne runs , seven earned,
nine hits and three · walks.
Williams also fanned three
over six innings on the
mound.
Certainly this is nothing
new for Bowen and the
Eagles, who have already
set school records this year
with wins over a four-year
span and with three straight

sectional titles. Obviously a
'third straight district championship game is also a new
school mark.
Bowen didn't know if the
familiarity of this time of
year would be beneficial to
his ball club. Following
Thursday's outcome, he · is
definitely beconiing a
believer.
"I wasn't exactly sure
what the experience would
do for these guys until we
carne out to play today.
There was a totally different look on their faces and
they were absolutely.
focused on baseball,"
Bowen sa id. "They knew
what this was all about
and I definitely think the
experience helped." .
·
Eastern, winners of
three strai ght decision s,
goes for its second district
title in three years this
Saturday at Lucasville
Valley High School. The
championship
game
against Portsmouth Notre
Dame begins at I p.m.
-

025

E~slern

-

990

111

501

x

WP- Lynch; LP-

Willl~ms

Ugly
from PageBl

Eastern second baseman Derek Griffin, left, applies a successful tag to Sciotoville East.
baserunner Brent Ehrhart (25) during a steal attempt in the fourth inning of Thursday's'
Division IV district semifinal baseball game at Valley High School in Lucasville.

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TO THE SENTI NEt

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
·volleyball and trl!ck and field
program teamed for a third
time . to bring another twosport standout to the univeriity for the 2007-08 academlc year.
Ironton High
School's Rachel Walker is
the latest to sign a national
ietter of intent to compete in
both sp.orts for Rio Grande.
~ Walker, a 6-foot middle
t&gt;locker in volleyball, gives
head coach Patsy Fields
another athlete to choose

6) SCES (8-15) : Nathan Williams and
John Luther
2) EHS (14· 10): Joel Lynch and Jake
Lynch

MARK WILLIAMS

SPECIAL

EASTERN 9, SCIOTOVILLE EAST 0

'Ports East 000 · 000 0

STATE- Named
Scott
Herner women's basketball coach .
WESTM INSTER COLLEGE , Mo. Named Tracey K. Braden women's basketball coach. .

Rio Grande signs Ironton's Rachel Walker
BY

Stones and More

112 nt:T All.

, Jo'UU. ()f;T All. $149

WE HAVE EXPANDEDII!III!

lllf"Jtl£iJIY1PRO AUDIO .
COM•: CH.:CK OUT Ot!R SELf:&lt;. TION ut'
riui AUiliO &lt;a:AR I'JI.ATUIItNI.;

•• FUSION, MA AUDIO, INFINITY, PIONEER
AND MANY MOREll

. "So the bottom line is, if
you don' t score, they don't
score. It's that simple."
The Cavaliers didn't practice Thursday, giving them a
chance · to rest a couple of
injuries. LeBron James left
Wednesday's game in the
final minute · with, a right
knee bruise and laceration,
but has been cleared to play
Friday.
· Sasha Pavlovic, who has
tl!ken and given hard hits in
the series, brujsed his right
wrist in the second quarter
and will be re-evaluated
Friday.
James scored only 20
paints Wednesday, the second time in the last three
~ames the Nets did a decent
JOb on Cleveland's super-

304~815·1890

star. But the game still
could have been different if
Larry Hughes had made
New Jersey pay for helping
off him.
Hughes was only 3-of-17
from the field - three more
shot attempts than James and scored seven points. He
is shooting 33 percent in the
series - but that's still better than reserves Donyell
Marshall
and· Daniel
Gibson.
"He had some open
looks," Brown said. "It 's
going tp be tough for us to
win 1f they 're shrinking the
floor that way, and not only
Larry but some of our other
guys have some decent
looks and we don't knock
them down.
"You can't tell anybody to
quit shooting. Their confidence probably is shaken a
little bit &lt;!lready. If I tell
them to quit shooting, then
that's not good.''

After winning the first
two game~. Cleveland is
now in the same spot it was
this time last year. The
Cavs ·couldn't finish off
Detroit m the second
round, losing Games 6 and
7 and remaining without a
conference finals appearance since 1992.
The Nets, lower-seeded
but far more experienced
in the postseason, believe
they're capable of a similar
comeback. Carter, Jason

_

• I

o

Utah 4 Houston 3
Houston 84, Utah 75
Hou ston 98, Utah 90
Utah 81, Houston 67
Utah 96, Houston 85
Houston 96, Utah 92
Utah 94, Houston 82
Utah 103, Houston 99
QUARTERFINALS
(Beat of7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
·1
!!otrolt yo, ChiCIQO
Saturday, May 5: Detroit 95, Chicago 69 j
Monday, May 7: Detroit 108, Chicago 87 1
Thursday, May 10: Detroit 81 , Chicago !
74 ·
1
Sunday. May 13: Chicago 102, OetroitB7 1
Tuesday, May 15: Chicago 108, Detroit

Friday's Games
.
Anzona at Tampa Bay, 7 :30p.m.
Co~umbus at Colore~o. 9 p.m .
LasVegasatUtah,9p.m.
Saturday's Games
Nashville at Chicago, 8 p.m.
Georgia at Los Angeles. 10:30 p.m.
Grand Rapids at San Jose . 10:30 p.m.
Thursday, May 17: Detroit 95, Chicago '
Sunday's Gomes
85 Detroit wins series 4·2
Kansas Cit..• at New. York. 1 p.m.
'
•r
Orlando at AuStin, 4 p.m.
Clavatand va. Naw Jaruv
Sunday, May 6: Cleveland 81, New
Monday's Game
Jersey 17
NeW Orleans at Philad elphia, 7:30p. m.
Tuesday May 8 , Cleveland 102 New
Friday, May 25
Je 59 9
Utah at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
,
r y
Saturday, May 12: New Jersey 96 , San Jose at Nashville, 8 p.m.
Cleveland 85
Saturday, Ma~ 26
, Monday, May 14: Clevel!=lnd 87, New . Los Angeles at Kansas Ccty, 6 p.m.
Jersey 85
Tampa Bay at Georgca 7 p m
• Wednesday, May 16 New Jersey 83 , Colo.rado at Grand Rapcds , 7 p.m.
Cleveland 72, Cleveland leads senes 3·
Dallas at Columbus, 7 p.m
2·
Chicago at .Arizona 10 pm
Friday,May18:CtevelandatNewJersey, 1
Sunda· Ma · :,
7 p.m.
.
.
.
y,_ Y 2
! Sunday, May 20: New Jersey at Ph~adelph•a at Austen. 4 p.fll.
· Cleveland , 8 p.m. , if necessary
Monday, May 28
1
WESTERN CONFERENCE
New York at New Orleans, 8 p.m.

2

'

Point

&amp; ClAniques

in Historic 1downtown Ravenswood, WV

l Ipeoming
Labo1· Day 1\'lusieal

·w.

Sat m ·day, Ma}
.~

I :OUl'\1-i:IHH'\1

l . nc~.nlinu 1\i' t••• Ci l \'
lluilciing ·

t:•l;tv«~I"S

·

''"'• Miclclt••Jmo·l,
,\urlition lnl'o ~I!Y.:!-7.'mli
\\

.,

San Antonio 4. Dtnytr 1
Denver 95, San Antonio 89
San Antonio 97, Denver 88
San Antonio 96 , Denver 91
San Antonio 96, Denver 89
San Antonio 93, Denver 78

.G'tntiques

I :IICU'\t-4:1HJI'\I

Info Call

Phoenix 4. L.A. Lakers 1
Phoenix 95 , L.A. Lakers 87
Phoenix 126. L.A. Lakers 98
L.A. Lakers 95, Phoenix 89
Phoenix 113. L.A . Lakers 100
Phoenix 1t9, L.A. lak.ers 110

fflr

Sunda_y May 20,

Door.. Prizes
Free Food .&amp; Drink

o

Are Anneuncing Upcerning AuditifJns

At
0-15 Years

Arena Football League
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eastern Division
WLTPctPFPA
Dallas
10 1
.909 677 553
Columbus
6 4 0 .600 521 479
Philadelphia 4 6 0 .400 512 505
New York
3 7 0 .300 492 550
SOuthern Division
WLTPctPFPA
Georgia
9 t 0 900 646 558
Orlando
6 4 0 .600 486 425
New Orleans 4 6 0 .400 494 611
Tampa Bay 4 6 0 .400 458 5t8
Austin
.
3 7 0 .300 510 572
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W L T Pel PF PA
Chicago
8 2 0 .BOO 573 468·
Colorado
7 4 0 .636 550 566
Kansas City 6 4
.600 522 460
4 7 0 .364 590 633
Nashville
Grand Rapids 3 7 0 .300 554 642
Western Division
W L T Pc1 PF PA
San Jose
7 3 0 .700 627 510
Los Angeles 5 5 0 .500 528 547
5 6 0 .455 690 696
Utah
Arizona
3 8 0 .273 630 662
Las Vegas
1 10 0 .09t 491 696

James Higginbotham's club
on top 2-1.
The Eagles evened the
score
with a tally in the
from
Page
Bl
however, if she comes in and
fifth,
and
the score stood
works'· hard she could be a
that way after seven
·great asset to our team.
the ei~hth frame, but the innings. SC went on ·top
"Rachel is a good student Eagles Trey King scored . with a pair of runs in the
and has all the tools to be a what proved to be tho win- eight, and then two wild
good player," Fields added. ning run in the top of the pitches allowed two Big
"Therefore, everything is ninth after being balked Blacks to score in the botgoing to depend upon her horne from third base.
torn half of that inning and
It is unclear whether the send it to a ninth and final
determination to be what she
game, which was not on the . frame .
wants to become."
original schedule, will
Between the two clubs, I 0
Walker is undecided at this count toward both .teams '
different
pitchers took to the
time on a major.
records.
mound,
as
both managers
She joins Rock Hill 'sAnna
Jim Petry went 3-for-3 for were wanting to get their
Bridges · and
Unioto's the · winners whi le Nick ·
hurlers some · innings of
Jacquie Whittle as the other Canterbury also had multi- work.
SC's Jack Hudson
competitors who will suit up ple hits, including a double. and Point's Tyson Jones,
for both.teams.
Clay Krebs led Point both of which entered in the.
Pleasant
with a pair of sin- eighth frame, were the
Rachel is the daughter of
gles
while
B.J. Lloyd and pitchers of record.
Jim and Treva Walker.
Ashton Jones also hit safely.
James Casto and Tra:sawn
EAGLES 5, BIG BLACKS 4
Kidd
and
Richard Bonecutter had runs batted S.Charleston 001 010 021 - 59 0
Jefferson all bounced back in for the Big Blacks.
Point Pleasant 002 000 020 - 44 4
Casto drew a bases loaded Frank Mullins, Nick Canterbury (3), Pat
from terrible outings to
play well in Game 5, and if walk in the third inning to Live~ (5), Jack Hudson (8) and Jay Slllold.
Ashton Jones, Cur1is Grimm (3), Justin
they do so again New force in a run, then Veith
(5). James Casto (6) , BrOck
Jersey wi II have a good Bonecutter hit into an RBI M&lt;:Ciung 17), Tyson Jones (B) ard James
chance to force a deciding fielder's .choice later that Casto, D.W. Herdman (6): WP- Hudson.
game back in Cleveland on sa me inning to put coach LP-Jones.
Sunday night.
.
The Cavs want no part of
Hours: 10am-6pm M-Sat.
that'.
1-5 Sunday
"We've got to win our
next game," Brown said.
'Thai sense of urgency has
to be there."

!I:IHI;\ \t- 12:1Htl'\t

Free to Kids

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Golden State 4. Dal!aa 2
Golden Slate 97 , Dallas 85
Dallas 11 2. Golden Stale 99
Golden Stafe t09. Dallas 91
Golden State t 03. Dallas 99
Dallas 118, Golden Stale 11 2
Golden State 111 . Dallas 86

River City Pll!!lyers

Meigs County Fish &amp; Game

YOUR CAR AUiliOSYSTUl\1 .t'llllllf START TO ••INISHII

CAll

Walker added. "Rio Grande
is a nice school and many
people I know have graduated from there."
Rio's proximity to Ironton
and being able to play both
sports were key factors in
Walker's decision to sign
with the Redwomen. "It is
not far from home and I am
able to participate in both
sports," Walker said.
Fields
really
likes
Walker's
athleticism.
"Rachel has a great deal of
athletic ability and could
become a very good player,"
she said. "The set back for
Rachel . is her experience;

June 9th, Sam- 12pm

w•: Wll.l. CUSTOM n•:smN ANIIINSTAI. L

IEIIERI81.WI
IPEI TIE·IIT 11·1

from to put in the middle.
She run sprints and throws
the discus for Ironton and
will likely. 4o both for the
Redwomen as well.
Walker is also an outstanding
student
earning
Southeast Ohio Athletic
League. All-Academic honors.
.She is excited and honored
for the opportunity to compete in both sports at Rio
Grande .. "I am very excited,"
Walker said. "This is a great
opportunity and I am very
honored. ,
"I just hope to be able to
contribute to both teams,"

~nnua\ Kids Fishin9 .Derby

PRO FooTkALL

192

Ottawa 4 New Jersey 1
Ottawa 5, New Jersey 4
New Jersey 3, Ottawa 2, 20T
Ottawa 2, New Jersey 0
Ottawa 3, New Jersey 2
Ottawa 3, New Jersey 2

·! E~~ b~~!~0a~L~~~~~~is~::~·~~.

1

Utah ys. Golden State
Monday, ~ay 7: Utah 1 16, Golden State
112
Wednesday. May 9: Utah 127. Golden
State 117, OT
Friday, May 1 t : Golden State 125, Utah
t05
Sunday, May 13: Utah 11 5. Golden State
101
Tuesday, May 15: Utah 100. Golderi
State 87, Utah wins series 4·1 .

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Oetmlt ya Anaheim
New Jertey 4 Toronto 2
Friday, May 11 : Detroit 2 . Anaheim 1
New Jersey 96, Toronto 91
Sunday, May 13: Anaheim 4 , Detroit 3,
Toroqto 89, New Jersey 83
OT
New Jersey 102, Toronto 89
Tuesday, May 15: DetroitS , Anaheim 0
. New Jersey 102, Toronto 81
Thursday, May 17: Anaheim ~. Detroit 3,
Toronto 98, New Jersey 96
series tied 2·2
New Jersey 98, Toronto 97
Sunday, May 20: Anaheim at Detroit, 3
p.m.
Chicago 4 Miami 0
Tuesday, May 22: Detroit at Anaheim . 9
Chicago 96 , Miami 91
p.m.
Chicago 107, Miami 89
Thursday, May 24: Anaheim at Detroit. ,
Chicago 104, Miami 96
7:30 p.m., if necessary
Chicago 92 , Miami 79

I

Phoenix 106
Tuesday, May 8 : Phoenix 101 , San
Antonio 81
Saturday, May 12: San Antonio 108,
Phoenbt 101
Monday, May 14: Phoenix 104, SaO
Antonio 98
, We&lt;tlesday, May 16: San Antonio 68,
1
PhOenix 85, San Antonio leads series 3Friday, May 18: Phoe nilc at San Antonco.
9:30p.m.
Sunday. May 20 : San Antonio at
Phoenix. 3:30p.m., if necessary

Cleveland 97 , Washington 82
CleVeland 109 . Washington 102
Cleveland 98. Washington 92
Cleveland 97 .,Washington 90

Thursday's Sports Transactions
BASEBALL
American League •
, CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Activated C
1
Toby Halt from th~ 15·day DL. Optioned
C Gustavo Molina to Charlotte (IL).
CLEVELAND INDIANS-Sold !he con·
tract of RHP Brian Sikorski to Yakult
(Japan) . Acquirect AHP Gregorio Rosario
from the Seattle to complete an earlier
trade .
DETROIT TIGERS-Recalled RHP
Zach Miner from Toledo (1L).
OAKLAND ATHLETICS-Released INF
Todl1 Walker. Optioned LHP Dallas
Braden lo Sacramento (PCL).
i
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS-Placed DH ·
' Rocco Baldelli on the 15·day DL.
1 ~ctivated OF Greg Norton from l he· 15·
day DL
TEXAS RANGERS-Purchased the
contract of INF Ramon Vazquez from
Oklahoma (PCL) . Optioned LHP A.J. ,
Murray to Oklahoma. Transferred INF.!
Joaquin Arias trom the 15·to the 60·day
DL.
National League
A~IZONA
DIAMONDBACKSDesignated INF Donnie Sadler for
assignment.
ATLANTA·BRAVEs-:Released 18 Craig
Wilson. Activated C Brayan Pena and
LHP Mark Redman from the 15-day DL
Optioned Pens to Richmond (IL).
CINC INNATI
REDS-,.Pia ced
RHP
Aaron Harang on the bereavement list.
FLORIDA MARLINS-Activated RHP
Byung· Hyun Kim for the 15·day Dl.
Pl~ced INF Mike Jacobs on the 15-day
DL.
FOOTBALL
· 1
National Football League
MIAMI DOLPH IN S-Signed S David
Lofton and WA Mcchaet Malone.
I,
HOCKEY
National Hockey League

Phoenix v• San Antonio
Sunday. May 6: San Antonio 111 .

2

..Cleveland 4 Washington 0

Monday, May 21 : Buffalo at Ottawa, 7
p.m., if necessary
Wednesday, May 23: Ottawa at Buffalo, 7
p.m .. it necessary

1

WESTERN CONFERENCE

I

Eastern starter Joel Lynch, right, delivers a pitch during the second inning of Tbursday's Eastern freshman Jake Lynch, middle, looks back at first base after sliding safely into sed;
Division IV district semifinal baseball game at Valley High School in Lucasville. Lynch struck ond during a force-out attempt in the fifth inning of Thursday's Division IV district semifinal
out 10 in a 9·0 complete-game victory. First baseman Kyle Gordon is pictured at the left. · baseball game at Valley High School in Lucasville.

FIRST ROUND
(Beat ol7)
. EASTERN CONFERENCE
patro!t 4 Or1ando 0
Detroit 100, Orlalldo 92
Detroit 98. Orlando 90
Detroit 93, Orlando n
Detroit 97, Orlando 93

TRANSACTIONS

Detroil 4, Calgary 1
Detroit 3. Calgary 1
Calgary 3. Detroit 2
Calgary 3, Detroit 2
Detroit 5, Calgary 1
Detroit 2, Calgary 1, 20T

PleyoH Glance

p.m.

1

Ottawa 4. ptnaburgh 1
Ottawa 6, Pittsburgh 3
Pittsburgh 4, Ottawa 3
Ottawa 4, Pittsburgh 2
Ottawa. 2, Pittsburgh 1
onawa 3, Pittsburgh o

I

Monday, May 14: Ottawa 1, Buffalo 0
Wednesday, May 16: Buffalo 3, Ottawa
2, OUawa leads series 3-1
Saturday, May 19: Ottawa at Buffalo, 2

I
·

National Bnketblll Aaaocietlon

20T

I

New Jersey 4.Tamoa Bay 2
New Jersey 5. Tampa Bay 3
Tampa Bay 3 , New Jersey 2
Tampa Bay 3, New Jersey 2
New Jersey 4, Tampa Bay 3, OT
New Jersey 3, Tampa Bay o
New Jersey 3, Tampa Bay 2

Wednesday'• Games
Florida 4 . Pittsburgh 3
Washington 6, Atlanta 4
Philadelphia 6, Milwaukee 2
N .Y. Mets 8 , Chicago Cubs 1
Houston 2, San Francisco 1
Colorado 5, Arizona 3
San Diego 3, Cincinnati 2
L.A. Dodgers 5, St. Louis 4
Thur,day'a Gemea
Washi~on 4 , 'Atlanta 3
N.Y. Mets 6 , Chicago Cubs 5
Arizona 3, Colorado 1
Milwaukee 3, Philal1elphia 2
Pittsburgh 7, Florida 2
San Francisco 2 , Houston 1, 12 innings
Friday's Games
Chicago White Sox (Buehrle 2· 1) at
Chicago Cubs (UIIy 3·2). 2:20p.m .
Florida (Kim 1·2) a! Tampa Bay {Jackson
o-5), 6 :40p.m.
Arizona (Davis 2-4) at Pittsburgh (Snell
3-2) , 7 :05p.m .
Cronnali (Lohse 1-4) at Cleveland (Lee
1-IJ), 7 :05p.m .
Aflanta (Lerew G-1 or Redman 0-4) at
Boston (Gabbard ()-0). 7:05 p.m.
St. Lor.is (Looper 5·2) a! Detroit (Miller 0·
D). 7:05 p.m.
.
f'?ronto (McG?wan 0-0) at Philadelphia
(l~eber 1·2). 7.05 p.m.
Baltimore {TrachSel 1·3) at Washington
(Simontacchi 1-1). 7:05p.m .
N.Y. Yankees (PettiUe 2·2) at N.Y. Mats
(O.Perez 4-3), 7:10p.m.
Texas {Tejeda 3·3) at Houston (Albers 12), 8:05 p.m.
Minnesota (Bonser 1- 1) at Milwaukee
(Capuano 5·1) . 8:05p.m.
Kansas City (De La Rosa 4-3) at
Colorado (FranciS 24}, 9 05 p m
San Diego (Young 4-3) at Seattle
(Batosta 3-3) . 10 05 p m
San FranciSCO (Z1to 3-4) at Oakland
(Gaudin 2·1), t0:05 p.m.
L.A.·Dodgers (Penny 5..0) at L.A . Angel s
(E.Santana 2·5). 10:05 p.m.
Sltulday'o Gomeo
Atlanta at Boston, 1:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at NY Mots, 3:55 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Chicago Cubs,
3 :55p.m.
Texas at Houston, 7:05p.m.
Arizona at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 7:05p.m.
St. Louis at Detroit, 7:05p.m.
C incinnati at Cleveland, 7:05p.m.
Toronto at Philadelphia. 7:05p.m.
Baltimore at Washington, 7:05p.m.
Florida atTa,mpa Bay, 7:10p.m.
Kansas City at Colorado, 8:05p.m .

PRo BASKETBALL

CONFERENCE FINALS
tBeot-ot-7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Buffalo VI Otlewa
l Thursday. May 10: Ottawa 5, Buffalo 2
1 Saturday, May 12: OUawa 4, Buffalo 3 ,

N1tlonal Hoci&lt;ey L.eogue
P1eyoll Glance
FIRST ROUND

18 21
18 22 .450 7':.,
16 22 .421
16 25 .390 10
West Division
I
WLPctGB
, Los Angeles . 2S 16 .. 610
San Diego
22 19 .537 3
Arizona
22 20 .524 3't,
San Fr~ncisco 20 20
500 4 ~~
Colorado
t7 24
415 8
Cl'icago
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
Cincinnati

Anaheim 2, Vancouver 1 , 201

Buffalg 4. N.y llllndm 1

Mihvaukee

Thuraday'a Games
Cleveland 2, Minnesota 0
Boston 2, Detroit 1, 1st game
Boston 4, Detroit 2, 2nd game
Chicago Wh~e Sox 4 , N.Y. Yankees 1
Kansas C ity 7, Oakland 4
Tampa Bay 8, Texas 6, 10 innings
Frldey'a Gomes
Chicago White Sox (Buehrle 2·1) at
Chicago Cubs (UIIy 3-2). 2 :20 p.m.
Flonda(Kim 1·2) a1Tampa Bay (Jacl&lt;son
o-5), 6:40p.m.
Cincinnati (Lohse 1-4) at Cleveland (Lee
HJ), 7:05 p.m.
Anania (Lerew o-1 or ROdman 0-4) at
Boston (Gabbard().()). 7:05p.m.
St. Louis (Looper 5-2) at Detroll (Miller o0). 7 :05 p.m.
Toronto (McGowan Q-0) at Philadelphia
(Ueber t·2) , 7 :05p.m.
Baltlmore (Trachsel 1-;J) at Washington
(Simontacchl l-1), 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Pertitle 2·2) at N.Y. Met&amp;
(O.Perez 4-3), 7: 10p.m.
'rexas (Tejeda 3-3) at Houston (Aibers1 ·
2), 8 :05p.m.
Minnesota (Bonser 1·1) at Milwaukee
(Capuano 5-1), 8 :05 p.m.
Kansas City (De · La Rosa 4·3) at
Colorado (Francis 2-4), 9:05p.m.
San Diego (Young 4-3) at Seattle
(Batista 3-3), 10:05 p.m.
San ~rancisco (lito 3:4) at Oakland
(Gau&lt;lrn 2·1), 10:05 p.m.
·
L.A. Dodgers (Penny 5.0) at l.A. Angels
(E.Santana 2·5), 10:05 p.m.
Sltuldey'o Gomoa
Atlanta at Boston, 1:05 p.m:
N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mats, 3:55 p:m.
Chicago White So• at Chicago Cubs.
3:55p.m.
Texas at Houston. 7:05 p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee. 7:05p.m.
StLouis at Detroit 7:05 p.m .
Cincinnati at Cleveland, 7:05p.m.
Toronto at Philacjelphia . 7:05p.m.
Baltimore at Washington. 7:05 p.m.
Florida at Tampa Bay, 7 :10p.m.
Kansas City at Co lorado. 8:05 p.m.
San Francisco at Oakland, 9:05 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 9:05p.m .
San Diego at Seattle, 10:05 p.m.

WLPctGB
26 14 .650
25 16 .610 t ),
20 21 .488 6';,
18 23 .439 8~
15 26 .366 11'&gt;

C.nlnll Dtvtalon

centnlt DIY!alon
Cleveland
De1r0i1
Chicago
Mlmesota
Kljflsas City

New Yort&lt;
Manta
,
Plllladelpl\la

PRo HOCKEY

I

Bryan Walters/photos

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

....

I )II

Great selection of antiques,fumiture,
,jewelry and collectibles.
Also featuring hand-crafted gifts by-the
best of West Virginia artisans.
For more antiqJ~es and collectibles,
our sister shop, Riverbend Antique Mall
is just across the stree(.
224 Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164
Easy to find: From f. 77 use Exit 146
and .from Ohio follow US Rt. 33
For more information call:
304-868-2217

..

•

�I

Page 82 •

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 18,

www.mydailysentinel.com
'
.

,

2007

Friday, May 18,.2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Pistons advance·to ·Eastern Conference finals

AP

photo

Chicago Bulls' Luol Deng, front, of Sudan, takes a hard foul from
the Detroit Pistons' Chauncey Billups during the second quarter
of an NBA basketball playoff game Thursday in Chicago.'

CHICAGO (AP) - Th~l
Detroit Pistons can breathe
a little easier. There won't
be a Game 7, after alL
Richard Hamilton scored
23 point s and the Pistons
beat the Chicago Bulls 9585 in Game 6 of the -Eastern
Conference semifinals on
Thursday night, clinching a
series that turned tense after
Detroit won the first three
games.
No NBA team has lost a
best-of-seven series after
taking a 3-0 lead, and the
Pistons rejectec;l the Bulls'
shot at history. Now, Detroit
can focus on its fifth
straight conference finaL
Down 48-43 at halftime,
the Pistons outscored the
Bulls 31-2 1 in the third
quarter to take a 74-691ead,
and Chicago could not sustain any momentum in the
fourth .
Rasheed Wallace had 16
points and 13 rebounds for
Detroit , while Tayshaun
Prince added 17 points and
nine rebounds. Chauncey
Billups was just 3-for-12
from the field bu,t he scored

II of his 21 points m the
third quarter.
A jumper by Wallace,
who had received a technical foul just over a minute
earlier, and hook shot by
Prince made it 85-73 with
2:20 left, and Detroit hung
on from there.
"We were moving the
ball," Wallace said of the
difference in Detroit's
offense in the second half.
"In the first half we were
stagnant and didn't move
the baiL That's what we
talked about at halftime."
· Chicago's P.J . · Brown
attempted just three shots in
the second half after scoring
all of his 20 points in the
first two quarters, eclipsing
his previous playoff careerhigh of 19. Luol Deng
added 17 points, . but the
Bulls were off target after
shooting 57.3 percent in
Game 5.
This time, they were 28of-75 (37.3 percent), with
Bel\ Gordon (19 points)
going 7-for-18 and Kirk
Hinrich (II points) 3-of-13.
Walla~e said the Pistons

didn't do anything special of the key to make it 55-52 ·
against Brown in the second with 8: 17 left in the third
half.
quarter, but the Pistons kept
"He was.getting the same coming. Billups hit a .3 to
shots. We were still contest- make it 67"59 with 3:29
in g. he just didn' t hit them," remaining, and then came a:
Wallace said .."He was on stra nge sequence.
.
fire in the first half."
Andres Nocioni of the
The Bulls were trying to · Bull s was fouled by
become the fourth NBA Antonio McDyess on a 3tearn to force a Game 7 point attempt and got called·
after fallii1g behind 3-0, and for a technical foul. A cone
keep alive their hopes of fu sed Nocioni held his arms
joining another exclusive out, wondering why, and
club. Only the 1942 Toronto Billups hit the technical fre.e
Maple Leafs, 1975 New throw. Nocioni then hit his.
York Islanders and 2004 free throws , making it 68"
Boston Red Sox have raJ- 62.
lied from 3-0 deficits to win
The lead reached 73-64
a besi-of-seven series.
when Billups hit three free
The Piston s put the Bulls throws after Hinrich come
in that hole by blowing mitted his fourth foul of the
them out in Games I and 2 game and third of the quarat home and rallying from ter with 2:27 left. But a put19 down to take Game 3 at back by Deng and a 3 by
the United Center, but Gordon cut it to four before
instead of a second straight Detroit's Jason Maxie II hit &lt;1
sweep, Detroit got a fight.
free throw.
The Pistons took control
Wallace hit a 3-pointer 30
seconds into the second half of the boards in the second
to start a 12-1 run that put half,
outrebounding
Detroit ahead 55-49.
· Chicago 14-7 in the third
After a timeout, Gordon quarter and fin.ishing . with
hit a 3-pointer from the top 48-35 ~dge.

GO VALLEY
..... -·---~·

SAVE A LOT
259-:4.300

THE SCOREBOARD
PRo BASEBALL
Eaot Dlvtolon
-~
WL
28 12
18 21
18 22
18 22
18 23

Boston

NewYor1&lt;
Tampa Bay

Toronto
llaltiroore

PctGB
.700 .462 g),
.450 10
.450 10
.439 10),

Eoot Dlvtolon
-·~

'I'

I

FloriOa
Waslling1on

WLPctGB
24 14 .632
24 16 .600 1 .
20 17 .&amp;11 3),
' 18 22 .450 7
15 27 .357 11

Los Angeles

Wost Dtvloton
W L
Pet

Seanle
Oakland

Taxas

23
18

18
17

GB
.561
.514 2

20

20
26

.500 2 ~
.366 8

15

Wlldneoday'o Gomea
Chicago White Sox 5. N.Y. Yankees 3.
1st game
N.Y. Yankees 8. Chicago Wh~e Sox 1,
2nd game
Detroit at Boston, ppd., rain
Cleveland 7 , Minnesota 1
Toronto 2, Baltimore 1
Tampa Say 11 , Texas B
LA. Angels 5, Seatlle 0
Kansas City 4. Oaklard 3

WLPctGB
26 15 .634

Hooston

20

20

(Beot·OH)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Buffalo 4 , N.Y. Islanders 1
N.Y. Islanders 3. Buflalo 2
Buffalo 3 , N.V. Islanders 2
Buffalo 4 , N.Y Islanders 2
Buffalo 4, N.V. Islanders 3

.500 5),
.462 7

II
I

I

I

a·, .

N.Y. Aanae£14. Atlanta 0
N.Y. Rangers 4. Atlanta 3
N.Y. Rangers 2, Atlanta 1
NY Rangers 7 , AtleJnta 0
NY Rangers 4 , Atlanta 2

Detroit 4. Ca!qarv 2
1

.

Anaheim 4 Mlnnejoto 1·
Anaheim 2, Minnesota 1
, Anaheim 3, Minnesota 2
j Anaheim 2, Minnesota 1
Minnesota 4, Anaheim 1
Anaheim 4, Minnesota 1
1

,
Yancouvar4. Dallaa 3
· Vancouver 5 , Dallas 4 , 40T
Dallas 2, VancouverO
va"ncouver2 , Dallas 1, OT
Vancouver 2, Dallas1
1 Dallas 1, Vancouver O, OT
Dallas 2, Vancouver 0
vancouver 4 Dallas 1
'
1
Sen Jose 4 Naahvllle 1

l

I San Jose---5, --· ----Nastlvllle 4, 20T
Nashvrlle 5, San Jose
San Jose 3, Nashville
San Jose 3. Nashvrlle
San Jose 3, Nashvill~

2
1
2
2

1

CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
(Beat-of-7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
:
. Buffalo 4. Now York Bongm 2
j Buffalo 5, N.Y. Rangers 2
B ff 1 3 N y R
2
1 u a 0 • · · angers
N.Y. Aange.rs 2 , Buffalo 1, 20T
N.Y. Rangers 2 , Buffalo 1
Buffalo 2, N.Y. Rangers 1, OT
Buffalo 5, N.Y. Rangers 4

San Diego at Seattle, 10:05 p.m.
Sunday's Game•
Sunday's G•met
St. Louis at Detroit, 1:05 p.m.
St.louis at Detroit, 1 :05 ·p.m.
Cincinnati at Cleveland, 1:05 p.m.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Cincinnati at Cl~eland, 1 :05 p.m.
Arizona at Pittsburgh , 1:35 p.m.
Detroit 4. San JoJB 2
Toronto at Philadelphia, 1 :35 p.m. ·
Toronto at Philadelphia, 1:35 p.m.
San Jose 2, Detroit o
~tlmore at Washington, 1:35 p.m.
· Baltimore at Washington , 1 :35 p.m.
Detroit 3, San Jose 2
Florida at Tampa Bay. 1 :40 p.m.
Flo rida at Tampa Bay, 1:40 p.m.
San Jose 2, Detroit 1
Atlanta at Boston, 2:05 p.in.
Atlanta at Boston, 2:05p.m.
Detroit 3. San Jose 2. OT
Texas at Houston, 2:05p.m.
Texas at Houston, ~ : 05 p.m.
Detroit 4, San Jose 1
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 2:05 p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 2:05p .m.
Detroit 2. San Jose 0
Ct1icago Wl'lite Sox at Chicago Cubs,
Chicago White Sox at Chicago Cubs, 1
2:20p.m.
·
2:20p.m.
Anaheim 4. Yancouyar 1
Kansas City at Colorado, 3:05 p.m.
Kansas City at Colorado, 3:05p.m.
I
Anaheim 5, Vancouver 1
L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 3:35p.m .
L.A. Dodgers at L.A . Angels, 3:35 p.m.
Vancouver 2, Anaheim 1, 20T
San Diego at Seattle, 4:05p.m.
San Diego at Seanla, 4:05p.m.
Anaheim 3, Vancouver 2
San Francisco at Oakland, 4:05p.m.
San FranciSco at. Oakland , 4:05 p.m .
N.Y. Yankees at N .Y. Mats, 8;05 p.m.
Anaheim 3, Vancouver 2, Or
N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mets, 8:05p.m..

CAROLINA HURRICANES-Signed D
Casey Borer t_
o a two-year cont~act.
f"HILADELPHIA FLYERS-Sogned 0
Lasse Kukkonen to a two-year contract.
COLLEGE
CABRINI-Named Greg.Herenda men's
: basketball coach. Announced the resig·
j nation ofTrish Ar~old. women's volleyball
1 coach.
CENTRAL WYOMING COLLEGENamed Jamce Stevens men's basketball

I
I, coach.
GENESEO

I
I

I

I

Third

a three-run cushion.

from PageBl
tonight. He's gotten better
every time out in the last
four or five games, and'
tonight was probably his
best game of the yeart
Bowen said. ''He's the ty'pe
.of kid you want out there in
·this kind of si tuation, and he
definitely rose to the occaston.
"The defense was also
solid behind Joel. Several
people made a lot of great
plays and I was pleased
with the way we played
defense tonight."
Lynch has now worked a
dozen innings in the postseason, allowing only five
hits and an earned run over
that span on the mound. The
junior has also recorded 17
strikeouts in those two victories.
Lynch surrendered a oneout walk in . the top of the
first , then induced Brent
Ehrhart to hit into an
inning-ending double play
to get out of trouble.
The Eagles . then countered with a run in their half
of the first. Senior Derek
Young led off the frame
with a triple. then Matt
Morris plated him two batters later with a fielder 's
choice for a 1-0 ad vantage.
The Blue and White never
came closer.
EHS extended its lead to
two in the second when lt
single, an error and two sac. rifices led to another score.
Joel Lynch led off things
with a single, then Lynch
·advanced to second on an
error.
· Ti'tus Pierce laid down u
sacrifice bunt to advance
Lynch to third with one out,
then Jake Lynch hi I a sac tly
to left that allowed his older
brother to score for a 2-0
edge.
Back-to-back two-out hits
in the third produced the
hosts' third run. Derek
Griffin drove a two-out
double to the lc:ft-centerfield gap, then Morris followed with an RBI triple to
. right that plated Griffin for
{.

Lynch
retired
nine
straight hitters at one point
during the fourth, including
six strai ght by strikeout.
East managed their first hit
of the contest when a twoout single by Ehrhart ended
that streak, but Ehrhart was
picked off at second shortly
afterward to end the inning.
Eastern rode that ~motion
and momentum to fruition
in the bottom half of the
frame, knocking out five
runs and three hits for an 80 lead.
Joel Lynch led off the
inning with a si ngle, then a
one-out walk to Jak e Lynch
gave the Green and White
runners at the corners. An
error allowed Jake Lynch to
advam.: e to second and
Justin Browning to reach
first safely, as well as letting
Joel. Lynch score for a 4-0
edge.
Kyle Gordon singled to
load the bases, and Young
delivered a bases-clearing
double for a 7-0 advantage.
A throwin g error also
.allowed Young to score on
that same play for the eightrun lead.
Cory Shaffer drove in
YOl.I.Qg for the final run of
the game in the sixth , providing a bases-loaded tWO·
out single.
Young paced the Green
and White with three hits
and three runs scored, while
Joel Lynch followed · with
two hits two runs scored.
Griffin,. Morris, Shaffer and
Gordon provided the other
safeties, while Young led
the way with two RBis.
Gary Truman joined
Ehrhart with the. Tartans'
only otl).er hit, a single with
one out in the sixth.
Naihan Williams went the
distance for East in the losi~g decision! surrendering
mne runs , seven earned,
nine hits and three · walks.
Williams also fanned three
over six innings on the
mound.
Certainly this is nothing
new for Bowen and the
Eagles, who have already
set school records this year
with wins over a four-year
span and with three straight

sectional titles. Obviously a
'third straight district championship game is also a new
school mark.
Bowen didn't know if the
familiarity of this time of
year would be beneficial to
his ball club. Following
Thursday's outcome, he · is
definitely beconiing a
believer.
"I wasn't exactly sure
what the experience would
do for these guys until we
carne out to play today.
There was a totally different look on their faces and
they were absolutely.
focused on baseball,"
Bowen sa id. "They knew
what this was all about
and I definitely think the
experience helped." .
·
Eastern, winners of
three strai ght decision s,
goes for its second district
title in three years this
Saturday at Lucasville
Valley High School. The
championship
game
against Portsmouth Notre
Dame begins at I p.m.
-

025

E~slern

-

990

111

501

x

WP- Lynch; LP-

Willl~ms

Ugly
from PageBl

Eastern second baseman Derek Griffin, left, applies a successful tag to Sciotoville East.
baserunner Brent Ehrhart (25) during a steal attempt in the fourth inning of Thursday's'
Division IV district semifinal baseball game at Valley High School in Lucasville.

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TO THE SENTI NEt

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
·volleyball and trl!ck and field
program teamed for a third
time . to bring another twosport standout to the univeriity for the 2007-08 academlc year.
Ironton High
School's Rachel Walker is
the latest to sign a national
ietter of intent to compete in
both sp.orts for Rio Grande.
~ Walker, a 6-foot middle
t&gt;locker in volleyball, gives
head coach Patsy Fields
another athlete to choose

6) SCES (8-15) : Nathan Williams and
John Luther
2) EHS (14· 10): Joel Lynch and Jake
Lynch

MARK WILLIAMS

SPECIAL

EASTERN 9, SCIOTOVILLE EAST 0

'Ports East 000 · 000 0

STATE- Named
Scott
Herner women's basketball coach .
WESTM INSTER COLLEGE , Mo. Named Tracey K. Braden women's basketball coach. .

Rio Grande signs Ironton's Rachel Walker
BY

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. "So the bottom line is, if
you don' t score, they don't
score. It's that simple."
The Cavaliers didn't practice Thursday, giving them a
chance · to rest a couple of
injuries. LeBron James left
Wednesday's game in the
final minute · with, a right
knee bruise and laceration,
but has been cleared to play
Friday.
· Sasha Pavlovic, who has
tl!ken and given hard hits in
the series, brujsed his right
wrist in the second quarter
and will be re-evaluated
Friday.
James scored only 20
paints Wednesday, the second time in the last three
~ames the Nets did a decent
JOb on Cleveland's super-

304~815·1890

star. But the game still
could have been different if
Larry Hughes had made
New Jersey pay for helping
off him.
Hughes was only 3-of-17
from the field - three more
shot attempts than James and scored seven points. He
is shooting 33 percent in the
series - but that's still better than reserves Donyell
Marshall
and· Daniel
Gibson.
"He had some open
looks," Brown said. "It 's
going tp be tough for us to
win 1f they 're shrinking the
floor that way, and not only
Larry but some of our other
guys have some decent
looks and we don't knock
them down.
"You can't tell anybody to
quit shooting. Their confidence probably is shaken a
little bit &lt;!lready. If I tell
them to quit shooting, then
that's not good.''

After winning the first
two game~. Cleveland is
now in the same spot it was
this time last year. The
Cavs ·couldn't finish off
Detroit m the second
round, losing Games 6 and
7 and remaining without a
conference finals appearance since 1992.
The Nets, lower-seeded
but far more experienced
in the postseason, believe
they're capable of a similar
comeback. Carter, Jason

_

• I

o

Utah 4 Houston 3
Houston 84, Utah 75
Hou ston 98, Utah 90
Utah 81, Houston 67
Utah 96, Houston 85
Houston 96, Utah 92
Utah 94, Houston 82
Utah 103, Houston 99
QUARTERFINALS
(Beat of7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
·1
!!otrolt yo, ChiCIQO
Saturday, May 5: Detroit 95, Chicago 69 j
Monday, May 7: Detroit 108, Chicago 87 1
Thursday, May 10: Detroit 81 , Chicago !
74 ·
1
Sunday. May 13: Chicago 102, OetroitB7 1
Tuesday, May 15: Chicago 108, Detroit

Friday's Games
.
Anzona at Tampa Bay, 7 :30p.m.
Co~umbus at Colore~o. 9 p.m .
LasVegasatUtah,9p.m.
Saturday's Games
Nashville at Chicago, 8 p.m.
Georgia at Los Angeles. 10:30 p.m.
Grand Rapids at San Jose . 10:30 p.m.
Thursday, May 17: Detroit 95, Chicago '
Sunday's Gomes
85 Detroit wins series 4·2
Kansas Cit..• at New. York. 1 p.m.
'
•r
Orlando at AuStin, 4 p.m.
Clavatand va. Naw Jaruv
Sunday, May 6: Cleveland 81, New
Monday's Game
Jersey 17
NeW Orleans at Philad elphia, 7:30p. m.
Tuesday May 8 , Cleveland 102 New
Friday, May 25
Je 59 9
Utah at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
,
r y
Saturday, May 12: New Jersey 96 , San Jose at Nashville, 8 p.m.
Cleveland 85
Saturday, Ma~ 26
, Monday, May 14: Clevel!=lnd 87, New . Los Angeles at Kansas Ccty, 6 p.m.
Jersey 85
Tampa Bay at Georgca 7 p m
• Wednesday, May 16 New Jersey 83 , Colo.rado at Grand Rapcds , 7 p.m.
Cleveland 72, Cleveland leads senes 3·
Dallas at Columbus, 7 p.m
2·
Chicago at .Arizona 10 pm
Friday,May18:CtevelandatNewJersey, 1
Sunda· Ma · :,
7 p.m.
.
.
.
y,_ Y 2
! Sunday, May 20: New Jersey at Ph~adelph•a at Austen. 4 p.fll.
· Cleveland , 8 p.m. , if necessary
Monday, May 28
1
WESTERN CONFERENCE
New York at New Orleans, 8 p.m.

2

'

Point

&amp; ClAniques

in Historic 1downtown Ravenswood, WV

l Ipeoming
Labo1· Day 1\'lusieal

·w.

Sat m ·day, Ma}
.~

I :OUl'\1-i:IHH'\1

l . nc~.nlinu 1\i' t••• Ci l \'
lluilciing ·

t:•l;tv«~I"S

·

''"'• Miclclt••Jmo·l,
,\urlition lnl'o ~I!Y.:!-7.'mli
\\

.,

San Antonio 4. Dtnytr 1
Denver 95, San Antonio 89
San Antonio 97, Denver 88
San Antonio 96 , Denver 91
San Antonio 96, Denver 89
San Antonio 93, Denver 78

.G'tntiques

I :IICU'\t-4:1HJI'\I

Info Call

Phoenix 4. L.A. Lakers 1
Phoenix 95 , L.A. Lakers 87
Phoenix 126. L.A. Lakers 98
L.A. Lakers 95, Phoenix 89
Phoenix 113. L.A . Lakers 100
Phoenix 1t9, L.A. lak.ers 110

fflr

Sunda_y May 20,

Door.. Prizes
Free Food .&amp; Drink

o

Are Anneuncing Upcerning AuditifJns

At
0-15 Years

Arena Football League
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eastern Division
WLTPctPFPA
Dallas
10 1
.909 677 553
Columbus
6 4 0 .600 521 479
Philadelphia 4 6 0 .400 512 505
New York
3 7 0 .300 492 550
SOuthern Division
WLTPctPFPA
Georgia
9 t 0 900 646 558
Orlando
6 4 0 .600 486 425
New Orleans 4 6 0 .400 494 611
Tampa Bay 4 6 0 .400 458 5t8
Austin
.
3 7 0 .300 510 572
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W L T Pel PF PA
Chicago
8 2 0 .BOO 573 468·
Colorado
7 4 0 .636 550 566
Kansas City 6 4
.600 522 460
4 7 0 .364 590 633
Nashville
Grand Rapids 3 7 0 .300 554 642
Western Division
W L T Pc1 PF PA
San Jose
7 3 0 .700 627 510
Los Angeles 5 5 0 .500 528 547
5 6 0 .455 690 696
Utah
Arizona
3 8 0 .273 630 662
Las Vegas
1 10 0 .09t 491 696

James Higginbotham's club
on top 2-1.
The Eagles evened the
score
with a tally in the
from
Page
Bl
however, if she comes in and
fifth,
and
the score stood
works'· hard she could be a
that way after seven
·great asset to our team.
the ei~hth frame, but the innings. SC went on ·top
"Rachel is a good student Eagles Trey King scored . with a pair of runs in the
and has all the tools to be a what proved to be tho win- eight, and then two wild
good player," Fields added. ning run in the top of the pitches allowed two Big
"Therefore, everything is ninth after being balked Blacks to score in the botgoing to depend upon her horne from third base.
torn half of that inning and
It is unclear whether the send it to a ninth and final
determination to be what she
game, which was not on the . frame .
wants to become."
original schedule, will
Between the two clubs, I 0
Walker is undecided at this count toward both .teams '
different
pitchers took to the
time on a major.
records.
mound,
as
both managers
She joins Rock Hill 'sAnna
Jim Petry went 3-for-3 for were wanting to get their
Bridges · and
Unioto's the · winners whi le Nick ·
hurlers some · innings of
Jacquie Whittle as the other Canterbury also had multi- work.
SC's Jack Hudson
competitors who will suit up ple hits, including a double. and Point's Tyson Jones,
for both.teams.
Clay Krebs led Point both of which entered in the.
Pleasant
with a pair of sin- eighth frame, were the
Rachel is the daughter of
gles
while
B.J. Lloyd and pitchers of record.
Jim and Treva Walker.
Ashton Jones also hit safely.
James Casto and Tra:sawn
EAGLES 5, BIG BLACKS 4
Kidd
and
Richard Bonecutter had runs batted S.Charleston 001 010 021 - 59 0
Jefferson all bounced back in for the Big Blacks.
Point Pleasant 002 000 020 - 44 4
Casto drew a bases loaded Frank Mullins, Nick Canterbury (3), Pat
from terrible outings to
play well in Game 5, and if walk in the third inning to Live~ (5), Jack Hudson (8) and Jay Slllold.
Ashton Jones, Cur1is Grimm (3), Justin
they do so again New force in a run, then Veith
(5). James Casto (6) , BrOck
Jersey wi II have a good Bonecutter hit into an RBI M&lt;:Ciung 17), Tyson Jones (B) ard James
chance to force a deciding fielder's .choice later that Casto, D.W. Herdman (6): WP- Hudson.
game back in Cleveland on sa me inning to put coach LP-Jones.
Sunday night.
.
The Cavs want no part of
Hours: 10am-6pm M-Sat.
that'.
1-5 Sunday
"We've got to win our
next game," Brown said.
'Thai sense of urgency has
to be there."

!I:IHI;\ \t- 12:1Htl'\t

Free to Kids

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Golden State 4. Dal!aa 2
Golden Slate 97 , Dallas 85
Dallas 11 2. Golden Stale 99
Golden Stafe t09. Dallas 91
Golden State t 03. Dallas 99
Dallas 118, Golden Stale 11 2
Golden State 111 . Dallas 86

River City Pll!!lyers

Meigs County Fish &amp; Game

YOUR CAR AUiliOSYSTUl\1 .t'llllllf START TO ••INISHII

CAll

Walker added. "Rio Grande
is a nice school and many
people I know have graduated from there."
Rio's proximity to Ironton
and being able to play both
sports were key factors in
Walker's decision to sign
with the Redwomen. "It is
not far from home and I am
able to participate in both
sports," Walker said.
Fields
really
likes
Walker's
athleticism.
"Rachel has a great deal of
athletic ability and could
become a very good player,"
she said. "The set back for
Rachel . is her experience;

June 9th, Sam- 12pm

w•: Wll.l. CUSTOM n•:smN ANIIINSTAI. L

IEIIERI81.WI
IPEI TIE·IIT 11·1

from to put in the middle.
She run sprints and throws
the discus for Ironton and
will likely. 4o both for the
Redwomen as well.
Walker is also an outstanding
student
earning
Southeast Ohio Athletic
League. All-Academic honors.
.She is excited and honored
for the opportunity to compete in both sports at Rio
Grande .. "I am very excited,"
Walker said. "This is a great
opportunity and I am very
honored. ,
"I just hope to be able to
contribute to both teams,"

~nnua\ Kids Fishin9 .Derby

PRO FooTkALL

192

Ottawa 4 New Jersey 1
Ottawa 5, New Jersey 4
New Jersey 3, Ottawa 2, 20T
Ottawa 2, New Jersey 0
Ottawa 3, New Jersey 2
Ottawa 3, New Jersey 2

·! E~~ b~~!~0a~L~~~~~~is~::~·~~.

1

Utah ys. Golden State
Monday, ~ay 7: Utah 1 16, Golden State
112
Wednesday. May 9: Utah 127. Golden
State 117, OT
Friday, May 1 t : Golden State 125, Utah
t05
Sunday, May 13: Utah 11 5. Golden State
101
Tuesday, May 15: Utah 100. Golderi
State 87, Utah wins series 4·1 .

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Oetmlt ya Anaheim
New Jertey 4 Toronto 2
Friday, May 11 : Detroit 2 . Anaheim 1
New Jersey 96, Toronto 91
Sunday, May 13: Anaheim 4 , Detroit 3,
Toroqto 89, New Jersey 83
OT
New Jersey 102, Toronto 89
Tuesday, May 15: DetroitS , Anaheim 0
. New Jersey 102, Toronto 81
Thursday, May 17: Anaheim ~. Detroit 3,
Toronto 98, New Jersey 96
series tied 2·2
New Jersey 98, Toronto 97
Sunday, May 20: Anaheim at Detroit, 3
p.m.
Chicago 4 Miami 0
Tuesday, May 22: Detroit at Anaheim . 9
Chicago 96 , Miami 91
p.m.
Chicago 107, Miami 89
Thursday, May 24: Anaheim at Detroit. ,
Chicago 104, Miami 96
7:30 p.m., if necessary
Chicago 92 , Miami 79

I

Phoenix 106
Tuesday, May 8 : Phoenix 101 , San
Antonio 81
Saturday, May 12: San Antonio 108,
Phoenbt 101
Monday, May 14: Phoenix 104, SaO
Antonio 98
, We&lt;tlesday, May 16: San Antonio 68,
1
PhOenix 85, San Antonio leads series 3Friday, May 18: Phoe nilc at San Antonco.
9:30p.m.
Sunday. May 20 : San Antonio at
Phoenix. 3:30p.m., if necessary

Cleveland 97 , Washington 82
CleVeland 109 . Washington 102
Cleveland 98. Washington 92
Cleveland 97 .,Washington 90

Thursday's Sports Transactions
BASEBALL
American League •
, CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Activated C
1
Toby Halt from th~ 15·day DL. Optioned
C Gustavo Molina to Charlotte (IL).
CLEVELAND INDIANS-Sold !he con·
tract of RHP Brian Sikorski to Yakult
(Japan) . Acquirect AHP Gregorio Rosario
from the Seattle to complete an earlier
trade .
DETROIT TIGERS-Recalled RHP
Zach Miner from Toledo (1L).
OAKLAND ATHLETICS-Released INF
Todl1 Walker. Optioned LHP Dallas
Braden lo Sacramento (PCL).
i
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS-Placed DH ·
' Rocco Baldelli on the 15·day DL.
1 ~ctivated OF Greg Norton from l he· 15·
day DL
TEXAS RANGERS-Purchased the
contract of INF Ramon Vazquez from
Oklahoma (PCL) . Optioned LHP A.J. ,
Murray to Oklahoma. Transferred INF.!
Joaquin Arias trom the 15·to the 60·day
DL.
National League
A~IZONA
DIAMONDBACKSDesignated INF Donnie Sadler for
assignment.
ATLANTA·BRAVEs-:Released 18 Craig
Wilson. Activated C Brayan Pena and
LHP Mark Redman from the 15-day DL
Optioned Pens to Richmond (IL).
CINC INNATI
REDS-,.Pia ced
RHP
Aaron Harang on the bereavement list.
FLORIDA MARLINS-Activated RHP
Byung· Hyun Kim for the 15·day Dl.
Pl~ced INF Mike Jacobs on the 15-day
DL.
FOOTBALL
· 1
National Football League
MIAMI DOLPH IN S-Signed S David
Lofton and WA Mcchaet Malone.
I,
HOCKEY
National Hockey League

Phoenix v• San Antonio
Sunday. May 6: San Antonio 111 .

2

..Cleveland 4 Washington 0

Monday, May 21 : Buffalo at Ottawa, 7
p.m., if necessary
Wednesday, May 23: Ottawa at Buffalo, 7
p.m .. it necessary

1

WESTERN CONFERENCE

I

Eastern starter Joel Lynch, right, delivers a pitch during the second inning of Tbursday's Eastern freshman Jake Lynch, middle, looks back at first base after sliding safely into sed;
Division IV district semifinal baseball game at Valley High School in Lucasville. Lynch struck ond during a force-out attempt in the fifth inning of Thursday's Division IV district semifinal
out 10 in a 9·0 complete-game victory. First baseman Kyle Gordon is pictured at the left. · baseball game at Valley High School in Lucasville.

FIRST ROUND
(Beat ol7)
. EASTERN CONFERENCE
patro!t 4 Or1ando 0
Detroit 100, Orlalldo 92
Detroit 98. Orlando 90
Detroit 93, Orlando n
Detroit 97, Orlando 93

TRANSACTIONS

Detroil 4, Calgary 1
Detroit 3. Calgary 1
Calgary 3. Detroit 2
Calgary 3, Detroit 2
Detroit 5, Calgary 1
Detroit 2, Calgary 1, 20T

PleyoH Glance

p.m.

1

Ottawa 4. ptnaburgh 1
Ottawa 6, Pittsburgh 3
Pittsburgh 4, Ottawa 3
Ottawa 4, Pittsburgh 2
Ottawa. 2, Pittsburgh 1
onawa 3, Pittsburgh o

I

Monday, May 14: Ottawa 1, Buffalo 0
Wednesday, May 16: Buffalo 3, Ottawa
2, OUawa leads series 3-1
Saturday, May 19: Ottawa at Buffalo, 2

I
·

National Bnketblll Aaaocietlon

20T

I

New Jersey 4.Tamoa Bay 2
New Jersey 5. Tampa Bay 3
Tampa Bay 3 , New Jersey 2
Tampa Bay 3, New Jersey 2
New Jersey 4, Tampa Bay 3, OT
New Jersey 3, Tampa Bay o
New Jersey 3, Tampa Bay 2

Wednesday'• Games
Florida 4 . Pittsburgh 3
Washington 6, Atlanta 4
Philadelphia 6, Milwaukee 2
N .Y. Mets 8 , Chicago Cubs 1
Houston 2, San Francisco 1
Colorado 5, Arizona 3
San Diego 3, Cincinnati 2
L.A. Dodgers 5, St. Louis 4
Thur,day'a Gemea
Washi~on 4 , 'Atlanta 3
N.Y. Mets 6 , Chicago Cubs 5
Arizona 3, Colorado 1
Milwaukee 3, Philal1elphia 2
Pittsburgh 7, Florida 2
San Francisco 2 , Houston 1, 12 innings
Friday's Games
Chicago White Sox (Buehrle 2· 1) at
Chicago Cubs (UIIy 3·2). 2:20p.m .
Florida (Kim 1·2) a! Tampa Bay {Jackson
o-5), 6 :40p.m.
Arizona (Davis 2-4) at Pittsburgh (Snell
3-2) , 7 :05p.m .
Cronnali (Lohse 1-4) at Cleveland (Lee
1-IJ), 7 :05p.m .
Aflanta (Lerew G-1 or Redman 0-4) at
Boston (Gabbard ()-0). 7:05 p.m.
St. Lor.is (Looper 5·2) a! Detroit (Miller 0·
D). 7:05 p.m.
.
f'?ronto (McG?wan 0-0) at Philadelphia
(l~eber 1·2). 7.05 p.m.
Baltimore {TrachSel 1·3) at Washington
(Simontacchi 1-1). 7:05p.m .
N.Y. Yankees (PettiUe 2·2) at N.Y. Mats
(O.Perez 4-3), 7:10p.m.
Texas {Tejeda 3·3) at Houston (Albers 12), 8:05 p.m.
Minnesota (Bonser 1- 1) at Milwaukee
(Capuano 5·1) . 8:05p.m.
Kansas City (De La Rosa 4-3) at
Colorado (FranciS 24}, 9 05 p m
San Diego (Young 4-3) at Seattle
(Batosta 3-3) . 10 05 p m
San FranciSCO (Z1to 3-4) at Oakland
(Gaudin 2·1), t0:05 p.m.
L.A.·Dodgers (Penny 5..0) at L.A . Angel s
(E.Santana 2·5). 10:05 p.m.
Sltulday'o Gomeo
Atlanta at Boston, 1:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at NY Mots, 3:55 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Chicago Cubs,
3 :55p.m.
Texas at Houston, 7:05p.m.
Arizona at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 7:05p.m.
St. Louis at Detroit, 7:05p.m.
C incinnati at Cleveland, 7:05p.m.
Toronto at Philadelphia. 7:05p.m.
Baltimore at Washington, 7:05p.m.
Florida atTa,mpa Bay, 7:10p.m.
Kansas City at Colorado, 8:05p.m .

PRo BASKETBALL

CONFERENCE FINALS
tBeot-ot-7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Buffalo VI Otlewa
l Thursday. May 10: Ottawa 5, Buffalo 2
1 Saturday, May 12: OUawa 4, Buffalo 3 ,

N1tlonal Hoci&lt;ey L.eogue
P1eyoll Glance
FIRST ROUND

18 21
18 22 .450 7':.,
16 22 .421
16 25 .390 10
West Division
I
WLPctGB
, Los Angeles . 2S 16 .. 610
San Diego
22 19 .537 3
Arizona
22 20 .524 3't,
San Fr~ncisco 20 20
500 4 ~~
Colorado
t7 24
415 8
Cl'icago
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
Cincinnati

Anaheim 2, Vancouver 1 , 201

Buffalg 4. N.y llllndm 1

Mihvaukee

Thuraday'a Games
Cleveland 2, Minnesota 0
Boston 2, Detroit 1, 1st game
Boston 4, Detroit 2, 2nd game
Chicago Wh~e Sox 4 , N.Y. Yankees 1
Kansas C ity 7, Oakland 4
Tampa Bay 8, Texas 6, 10 innings
Frldey'a Gomes
Chicago White Sox (Buehrle 2·1) at
Chicago Cubs (UIIy 3-2). 2 :20 p.m.
Flonda(Kim 1·2) a1Tampa Bay (Jacl&lt;son
o-5), 6:40p.m.
Cincinnati (Lohse 1-4) at Cleveland (Lee
HJ), 7:05 p.m.
Anania (Lerew o-1 or ROdman 0-4) at
Boston (Gabbard().()). 7:05p.m.
St. Louis (Looper 5-2) at Detroll (Miller o0). 7 :05 p.m.
Toronto (McGowan Q-0) at Philadelphia
(Ueber t·2) , 7 :05p.m.
Baltlmore (Trachsel 1-;J) at Washington
(Simontacchl l-1), 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Pertitle 2·2) at N.Y. Met&amp;
(O.Perez 4-3), 7: 10p.m.
'rexas (Tejeda 3-3) at Houston (Aibers1 ·
2), 8 :05p.m.
Minnesota (Bonser 1·1) at Milwaukee
(Capuano 5-1), 8 :05 p.m.
Kansas City (De · La Rosa 4·3) at
Colorado (Francis 2-4), 9:05p.m.
San Diego (Young 4-3) at Seattle
(Batista 3-3), 10:05 p.m.
San ~rancisco (lito 3:4) at Oakland
(Gau&lt;lrn 2·1), 10:05 p.m.
·
L.A. Dodgers (Penny 5.0) at l.A. Angels
(E.Santana 2·5), 10:05 p.m.
Sltuldey'o Gomoa
Atlanta at Boston, 1:05 p.m:
N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mats, 3:55 p:m.
Chicago White So• at Chicago Cubs.
3:55p.m.
Texas at Houston. 7:05 p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee. 7:05p.m.
StLouis at Detroit 7:05 p.m .
Cincinnati at Cleveland, 7:05p.m.
Toronto at Philacjelphia . 7:05p.m.
Baltimore at Washington. 7:05 p.m.
Florida at Tampa Bay, 7 :10p.m.
Kansas City at Co lorado. 8:05 p.m.
San Francisco at Oakland, 9:05 p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 9:05p.m .
San Diego at Seattle, 10:05 p.m.

WLPctGB
26 14 .650
25 16 .610 t ),
20 21 .488 6';,
18 23 .439 8~
15 26 .366 11'&gt;

C.nlnll Dtvtalon

centnlt DIY!alon
Cleveland
De1r0i1
Chicago
Mlmesota
Kljflsas City

New Yort&lt;
Manta
,
Plllladelpl\la

PRo HOCKEY

I

Bryan Walters/photos

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

....

I )II

Great selection of antiques,fumiture,
,jewelry and collectibles.
Also featuring hand-crafted gifts by-the
best of West Virginia artisans.
For more antiqJ~es and collectibles,
our sister shop, Riverbend Antique Mall
is just across the stree(.
224 Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164
Easy to find: From f. 77 use Exit 146
and .from Ohio follow US Rt. 33
For more information call:
304-868-2217

..

•

�Page B4 • The Daily Sel!linel

www.mydailysentinel.com

-

..

Friday, May 18, 2007

Friday , ~ay - 1 8,2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

~rtbune -

The Daily Sentinei • Page 85

Sentinel -

t~ter

CLASSIFIED

... If you hav e a question or a comment , writ e : NASCAR Th1s Week,

qo

The Gaston Gazette ,

RO.

Box 1538, Gast onia,

NC

Meigs County, OH

Galli a
County,
OH

28053

All Urnes Eastern
- - -~-~-- NE K TEL
- GC:::f'P-5-Eftt£6-

Nextel Cup
Nextel All-Star Challenge.
7 p.m .• Saturday

Busch S.rles
Carquest 300.
7:30p.m., May 26

Truck Series
Quaker Steak &amp; Lube
200, 8:30 p.m., May 18

~ If ever there were a war of attri. tion, tt 15 a 500-mile Nextel Cup
race at Darlmgton Raceway.

• Richard Chtldress announced
he would answer questions out·

• Race· Carquest Auto

• Race: Quaker Steak
Parts 300
&amp; Lube 200
·
• Where : Lowe's Motor
• Where . Lowe's Motor
Speedway, Concord.
SpeedWay, Concord,
N.C. (1.5 m11es ), 200
N.C. (1.5 m11es). 134
laps/ 300 m1les
laps/ 201 m1les.
• When: Saturday, May
• When: Friday. May 18
26
• Last year's winner:
• Last year's winner:
Kyle Busch
Carl Edwards
• Qualifying record :
Mrke Skrnner, Toyota .
• Qualifying record :
Jrmmre Johnson,
183.051 mph, May 19,
Chevrolet, 187.735
2005
mph , Oct 14. 2005.
' • Race record Kyle
• Race record· Mark
Buscll, Chevrolet.
Martrn , Ford, 155.799
124 .845 mph, May 19,
mph. May 25. 1996.
2006
• Last week: Denny ,
• Last race: Ford dnver
Hamlin, 1n a Chevrolet,
Erik Darnell won at
won the Oramond Hill
Kansas Speedw~y for
Plywood 200 at Darling- hrs first career vrctory.
ton Ra ceway.

IS dominatrng NASCAR. ~we're not
domrnatrng the "races. ~ rnsrsted
Gordon·s crew chtef. Steve
Letarte. MWe're dommatrng the frntshes" Well . grven a lrst of opt rons, that's the one to take Not
smce Carl Krekhaefer. crrca 195556, has one owner so domrnated
stock-car rac1ng's h1ghest level.
Hendnck's fleet of Chevrolets has
won erght races. and there have
only been 11. Gordon managed to
take the lead because, on the
next-to-last cautron period - yes.
rt was for debns - he chose to
remarn on the tra ck when Jrmmie
Johnson pitted. As a result , Gordon won, not because he was
faster but because Denny Hamlm
and Johnson, most notably. but
also otllers. couldn 't catch hrm
fast enough.

• Race: Nextel All-Star Challenge
• Where: Lowe 's Motor Speedway,
Concord, N.C. '(1.5 mrles), 80
laps/ 120 mrl es.
• When: Saturday, May 19
• 2006 wlnne(i J1mm1e J o hr~ son
~ • Quallfylnc record: Darrell W.ltnp, Chevrolet, 174.154 mpn,
1986 (without p1t stop): Bill Ell1ott.
Ford, 152.928 mph , 2000 (I ncludes prt stop). Format has been
changed frequently.
• Race record : Jeff Gordon,
Chevrolet. 185.022 mph.'May 20.
2001 .
• Last week: After yet another Car
of Tomorrow VICtory, and h1s seventh triumph at arduous old Dar·
lrngton Raceway, Jeff Gordon and
pretty much al l those around him
labored to wrggle out of the per·
cept 1on that HendriCk Motorsports

E-mail
classified@mydailytribune.com

conference had been called to

announce Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s
hmng. Truly, 'fttlen Earnhardt Jr.

JI

c:
DALE EARNHARDT JR.

Oe,ar/ffitM
·Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

)

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

No.

8

v

BUDWEISER CHEVROLET -

E
R

sneezes, the entire sport catctJ.
es a co ld.

s

• Some spequlated that Earnhardt would JOin Joe.G1bbs RacNewman

think that would make a crucia l

s

er d rive~s to make outlandish.
controverstal remarks. If any
did, no one noticed.
• For most NASC AR fans, the
last trme t here ·was a quest ion
more compell ing t han "Where's
Junior go1ng?" 1! was "Who Shot
J.R ?'
..,. Despite predrctrons to the contrary. the appearance of the Car
of Tomorrow at Darlington wasn't notably differen t from other
races at the t rack. Perhaps
everyone was on hrs best behavror for Mother's Day
• The last time consecutive Cup
races were rarned out and ru n
the followr ng day was rn the fall
of 1992, when ramo uts occurred at Martinsvi lle, Va .• and
North Wrlkesboro, N.C. Geoffrey
Bodrne won botll races
Iii" Michael Wa ltrrp vaguely re-

members how to race. Obvrous·
ly. he 's forgotten how to qualify.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. set off a storm of speculation on May 10 when he announced he will be leaving the family team at season's end.

"' Who's hot - Jeff Gordon
and Jimmre Johnson. At this
pornt, rt's not even "hot ~ for
the~ anymore. It's normal. · ·

1&gt; Who's nqt
- Here
there's some
competition.
Toyota's Brian
Vickers. dead
last at Dar·
lmgton 1n only
the fifth race
rn whrch he's
competed.
... Casey Mears, who drives
for Hendrick Motorsports, yet .
is 35th 1n the standings.

I

ere
-After severing ties
with DEl, popular
star has options
By Monte Dutton

·v

NASCAR This Week

Dale Earnhardt Jr. set off a storm of
speculation on May Hi when he an·
nounced he will be leaving the family
team, Dale Earnhardt Inc., at the end
of the current season. Some of it, naturally, was over just exactly where he
will be racing in 2008.
That's actually a fairly si mple
proposition. Earnhardt Jr. will race
wherever he wants.
The 32-year-old said he'd like to remain in a Chevrolet, which is no sur·
prise given his family's longtime affil·
iation and that make's current domi·

I

o?

nation of the Nextel Cup Series.
Richard Childress Racing is where
the late Dale Earnhardt won six of his
seyen championship s driving the fa ·
mous No. 3. Hendr1ck Motors ports is
the st rongest current team in the
sport. Joe Gibbs Rac ing is home to
two of Earnhardt Jr.'s friends, twotime champion Tony Stewart and
emerging star Denny Hamlin.
Earnhardt, ,,Jr. said his de cision
wouldn't be base d on money, but
rather on findin g a place wher e he
thinks he can win.
"At 32 years of age, til e same age
my father was when he made his final
and _most important career decision,
it's time for me to compete on a con·
sistent basis and contend for championships now," Earnhardt Jr. said at a
hastil y organized Mooresville, N.C.,
press conference. "I believe I'd have
my father's bless in g."
Earnhardt's decision ended a fiv e·
month battle of wits and will between
Earnhardt Jr. and his sister, on one

side, and his stepmother, Teresa Earn·
hard!, on the other. The opening salvo
was Mrs. Earnhardt's assertion that
her stepson needeq to decide whether
he wanted to be a racer or a celebrity.
The whole house of card s collapsed
in a breathtaking whirlwind of activity, during which time the prevailing
wisdom went from "they'll probably
work things out" to Earnhardt Jr.'s fi·
nal description of the negotiations:
"We never even got close."
Earnhardt Jr. is, of course, obligat·
ed to continue as driver of DEI's No. 8
Chevrolet until season's end. How this
decision - and his alleged lame-duck
status- affects the team's perform·
ance remains to be seen
The pre vious two seasons were the
least successful of Earnhardt Jr.'s ca·
reer. At the time of his announcement,
he had won just two of 84 races. This
is his chance to remedy that.

Contact Monte Dutton at
hmduttonSO@aol.com

that, nor roo long ago, drivers were
usually sining in their cars during the
national anthem Th at has been
changed, and most now stand for the
playing.

NEXTEL

So much for Mother's Day: Rainout pushes back race

CUP

1. Jeff Gordon2.
3.

Jimmie Johnson
Matt Kenseth
4. Denny Hamlin
5. Jeff Burton
6. Tony Stewart
7, Kurt Busch
8. Kevm Harvick
9. Clint Bowyer
10. Carl EdWards

_1,881
. - 231
·299
-342

· 395
- 506
- 556
- 566
· 579
- 590

BuSCH SERIES
1.

Carl EdWards
Kevin HaNick
Dav1d Reutimann
Dave Blaney
Matt Kenseth
David Ragan •
7. Bobby Hamilton Jr.
8. Regan Smith
9. Juan Montoya•
10. Greg Biffle

2.
3.
4.
5.
6.

1,958
- 433
-599

·6D5
-678

-688
. 706
- 720

- 731
- 743

CRAfTSMAN TRUCK SERIES
1. Mike Skinner
905
2.
3.

Todd Bodine
Rick crawford
4. Ron Hornaday Jr.
5. Jack Sprague
6. Ted Musgrave
7. Johnny Benson
8. Mrke Crafton
9. Travis Kvapil
10. Erik Darnell
• rookte

- 108
- 128
· 154
· 171
· 178
- 202
· 222
· 252
- 254

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR ThiS Week

DARLINGTON, S.C. - On
May 12-at Darlington Raceway,
it rained on NASCAR fans and,
by extension, their mot hers.
A drizzle began falling· on
the old track's grounds shortly
after 4 p.m. By 5:50, heavy_
rain began. Though the precipitation tailed off occasionally,
it neve r stopped, at least not
until about 8:50, when
NASCAR offic ials announced
the Dodge Avenger 500 would
be postponed until the foirow·
ing aft ernoon, Mother's Day,
at 1 p.m.
As a re sutt. a major
NASC AR race was run on
Mother's Day itself- this race
had. been scheduled on th e
weekend of the holiday for
three years - for the first
time since The Winston all-star
race made its lone visit to At·
lanta Motor Speedway on May
11, 1986.

c , JDI:~ -"-l J.r.., ,;:; 0l: r::; '
drick? It was in the Busch Series race, not Cup, but Mark
Martin was, for the fi rst time,
driving a Chev rolet owned by
Rick Hendrick.
In the Busch Ser ies, of
course, Martin is the all-time
leader in victories with 47 over
25 years. He ndrick Motor·
sports has won 22 times in 24
years. ·The numbers alone
should've made Martin the favorite, though he wound up fin·
ishing second in the D1amond
Hill' Plywood 200.
"When I look back ... at the
wins we have and the people
who ha ve been pa rt of it, I
think it's going to be really neat
to have Mark 's name on that
list," said Hendrick_ ·

old veteran. "It reall y wasn't
that long ago when they
repaved this place. It was a dif·
ferent Darlin gton when they
repaved it. A set of tires lasted
a fuel run and were just as fast
at the end as they we re at the
beginning·. The asphalt they
use in th is area just deterio·
rates rea ll y fast, and it won't
be long after they repave it
again, we wi ll be back to the
same old Darlington."
The key issue actuall y isn't
th e asphal t used but, rathe r,
the geograp ~ Darlington is lo·
cated in the ~-called sandhills
r egion, so named because the
ocean rose to this level during
prehistqric times. The sand
t hat inevitably blows across
th e track tends to grind down
the asphalt over time.
·

•

•

•

He's seen all th is before Martin's take on the impending
paving of Darlin gton was that,
for the long run, it wouldn't do
much good.
"It changes every time we
Guess who drove for Hen· come here," sajd the 48-year-

•

---- - - 1- --:----------- --

I

-··

Oops, I did it again -Ryan
Newman, usually m.asterful in
qualifying, _hit the wall twice
during his qualifying, whic h
was unusual since he said he·
.had bumped the tight Darlington-walls previously only two or

three times in his entire career.
"The COT is not a ton differ·
ent," he insisted_"You're just
trying to go faster, and there's
no room for error.:•

"I'm here to race, man. I'm
not going to get in the middle of
the politics of anything like
that," said Harvick. "I'm just going to do my job and, however it
plays out, it was meant to be and
that's the way it will be. It's just
something that we'll have to
In a nutshell - Darlington, wait and see how it plays."
out of place amid the spacious
speed palaces built in recent
yea rs, is to stock-car racing
what the Grand Prix of Monaco Man in full - Felix Sabates,
is to Formula One.
long active in NASCAR, re"It's a throwback to the way ceived an honorary degree,
things used to be," said J eff Doctor of Public Service, at the
Burton, "and th en We bring a University of North Carolina at
car that we're still lea rning a Charlotte's commencement
great deal about -and have a ceremonies May 12.
whole lot to learn about - to a
Sabates, still part owner of a
trac k that's the slickest, .major NASCAR team, served
toughest track that we go to." UNCC on the board of direc·
tors of its foundation from 1994
through 2005.
"I have seen this institution
Not my job - Kevin Harvick grow from Charlotte College to
said it wasn 't his place to tell The University of North Carhis owner what to do.
olina at Charlotte," said
Asked if he would lobby Sabates. "I'm gratefu l to reRic hard Childress to hire Dale ceive such an honor from such
Earnhardt Jr. and presumably a great university, and it is
expand his operation, Harvick something I will cherish for the
waved off the question.
rest of my life."

•

•

••

--- - ··------·-- -- . - -- •-- ---..,-- -----------'.L

• All ads must

ANNOUNCEMENTS
·

~~D

Publishing reserve. the right to edit, reject, or cancel any ed at any t 1me Errors muat be reported on the llrst day of
Trlbune-Sentlntti-Regleter will be responsible for no more lhlln the cost of the space occupied by I he error and only the fn t Insertion We shall oot
any loll or expe n.. that re1u Ne !rom the publication or oml1elon of an advertlaeme nl Correction will be ma de In the lirst available edit1on • Bo~e
are always conlidantlel. • Current rate card eppllee. • All real estate edYertlu mants lfl subjecl to lhe F.deral Fll r Housing Act of 1968. • This
accepts only help wanted ada mMUng EOE lhnd arde. We will not knowingly aee.pt anv advertising In violation ot ths law.

POLICIES: Oh io VaUe y

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
1'10

Cat. 'M'Irte &amp; dark gray. On
ALL KCHS ALUMN I SEC- 41h St. New Have 304·882·
ONO ANNUAL REUNION , 8259
MOOSE LODGE, MAY 26,
2007, 8·1 :00 ENTERTAIN- Small Male dog with blue
collar found on Pme Street
MENT (304)675-4831 OR
mGa l hpol i~ 446· 7685
(740)446-3488

I

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement. ...........................................030
Antlques ..: ........ .................. .......................... 530
Apartments for Rent .-................ .................. 440
Auction and Flea Market.. .... .................. ..... OBO
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .............. ............ 760
Auto Repair .. .................................... ............ 770
Autos lor Sale......... ..._............................. ..... 710
Boats &amp; Motors tor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ... .............. ............:..........550
Business ilnd Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunlty ................................. 210
Bualnaaa Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .... .................. ..... 790
Camping Equipment .............................. ..... 780
Carda ot Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ................................... , .. 190
Electrlcai/Refrlgeratlon ............................... 840
Equipment for Rent ......., .............................480
Excavatlng ................................................. ._. 830
Farm Equlpment ................. .-........ :............... 610
Farma for Rent. ................. ...........................430
Forma for Ssle ...................... ....................... 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sale ............................................... ......... 585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... SBO
Fumlahed Rooms ............. ..................... ...... 450
General Haullng ........................................... 850
Glveaway .................................. .................... 040
Happy Ads ............................................... ,....050
Hay &amp; Graln ..... .................. ..................... ......640
Help wanted ................................................. tto
Home lmprovements ............... .................... 810
Homes lor Sale ............................................ 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses for Rent ............... ........................... 410
In Memorlam ............................................ .-.. 020
lnaurance ....................... .............................. 130
lawn &amp; Garden Equipment.. ...................... 660
L lvestock.. ....................................................630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Mlscellaneous .............................................. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise .......................540
Mobile Home Repalr .................................... 860
Mobile Homes for Rent... ............................ 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ................................320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .. ................ : .......740
Musical Instruments ................................... 570
Personals .................................... ................. oos
Pets for Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating .................................... 820
Professional Servlces ................................. 230
Radio, nl &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
Real Estate wanted ..................................... 360
Schools lnstructlon ..... .-............................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertlllzer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted ....................................... 120
Spec:e 1or Rent .............................................460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV's for Sale ....................................... , ...... 720
Trucks for Sele ............................................ 715
Upholstery ................................................... 870
Vans For Sele ...............................................730
Wanted to Buy .:........................................... 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies .................. 620
Wanied To Do .............................................. 180
Wantad to Rant............................................ 470
Yard Sale- Glllllpolla....................................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroyrltlddle ......................... 074
Yard Sale-Pl. Pleasant ................................ 076

HarWAM'ED

I

M o Nt:Y

10

nowop••,.•l

Bum:-;
I'ORSAU:

1tl I .OAN

kltncarlyl e@comcast net

I G~r;;;,;, 1-r't, N61' 1'1
c oiKGil&gt; G'I\IC.E. 'ftiAT W*l'lt&gt;v' I&lt;ll
1\'1~ 1'\UtMt--1''&gt; 1..-1\'P P,~COM~

r

SoFI MD CoM~"fA~L.-..- Wfi
C:\o 0"-l 1\ !&gt;I'Gf.
YARD SALE·
GAU~II'OLIS

0
0

5 ·I~
NEA, Inc.

r.rn-------,
r.rn-------, r.r.------.,
H!.LP WA~TE!l r'o HaP
riO

I
. .

•

Y~ SALE·

PoMEROY!MJDDLE
4 famrly! Frl..Sat., 94pm clothing for all,baby
rtems.glassware,bookks,mis
c ,4 mi.out A1. 143 ~mercy

CARPORT sale. 918 S 3rd
Ave., Middleport. Frr.·Sat., 9·
4. Reasonable prices
Multtple familY yard salel a
trttla bit of everythmg. May
18th &amp; 191h, eam-? on Hrgh
Street m Middleport.

r

ru
Bea Ie El ementary Sch o..,
Yard Sale Sat May 19th, 8·2

Sat May 19th 2920 Maple
Ave Meadowbrook Addn
Ba~m~R_a_in_o
_,_s_h_
in_
e _ ___~

"

~

www .comic s.com

=~~~~~-"'"'I
074

I

be prepaid'

1,

Free to good home Male Toy Comm Yard Sale, French
Poodle, Apricot, a loving pet Town Apts 727 4th Ave Sat,
May 19 . 8-4 ·Little ol every·
2 yrs-old 614·890·8606
th1ng park on street
Free to good home
Garage
Sale. May 18&amp;19at
Male/neutered
Border
656St.Rt
850 9am-? l otsof
Co l!•e/Husky mrx. 3 vrs old
boys and womens clothes.
HousebroKen. 446-3742
Lots of mise Some tools,
Free to good home Small Several guns for sale call
male, brown and white dog. 740-245·5229
Very frrendly. Call 740-794·
MOVING Solei Everything
0425
must gol Mulli-lamrly yard
House lo be moved, All sale. Appliances, electron·
Paris Must Goll (740)992- ics, furniture, etC. For more
6849
info call446-3656

I

Sunday Di s play: 1: 00
Thursday for Sundays

1 Rewar&lt;llost male Munchkln

CLASSIFIED INDEX

1

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
S, ~
Jm
Borders $3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

Publication

Sunday Jn· Column : 1 : 00p.m.
t ,~r101ay •For Sundays P a per

3 Beagle mrxes. 6 mo. old, 130 Bastranr Dr. Sat Only 8·
very fnendly, (740)142-1162 5 Small maternity clolhes,
baby clothes/gear. other
3 gorge ous krtttes 1 BW. 2 mise ilems
Pers1an like 304-576-41 56
-------2 family yard sale Sat. May
Ashley·Wood Stove to give.
19 11350 St Rl. 588, pas!
away 304-937-2355
B E Farms. Som'ethtng lor
Free Kindling already bun- everyone
died 304-812-4059
--'------B•g family yard sale 11 9
Free Kittens·1.5--·7 weeks Maybohno Ortve Saturday
May 19. 9am - ? ·
olo. call949-24:l:l.

Treat the natlilniii anthem
with the proper relp8Ct

Thanks for letting us know how
you feel. We feel it should ~e noted

r

r

r

All but one of NASCAR 's a ll-star
events now known as the Nextel All St ar Challenge have taken place at
what is now know n as Lowe's Motor
Speedway. The anginal name of the
event was The Wi nston.

"The Star Spangled Banner" is
the natrona! anthe m, and the U.S.
fl ag rs the Stars and Stripes.
The proper co nduct for Amencan
citizens wheQ "The St ar-Spangled
Banner" is prbyed is t o sta nd erect ,
face the music or the flag, place th e·
right hand over the left breast, with
hat in hand if wearing one, and shut
upl To show proper respect, forergners should stand.
The national a ntlle m has music
and words, as approved by Congress
many years ago. Anyone si nging or
playing 11 should follow the mu sic. If
they cannot, they shouldn't even try.
It's our national s rgnat ure; 1t's not up
lorrevision or alteranon .
I see the drivers and crews total·
ly ignore the national anthem during
the opening ceremony. They should
be taught bette r. After all, they are
on the very front of NASCAR and a
role model for all Ame ncans.
Joule Cheater
Holden, Mo.
•'

ln Nex t Day's Paper

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

Paul Taylor Famrly Reunron.
June 3rd at Krodel Park,
Shelter House 2

NASCAR's All-St. I'IIC8
John Clark/ NASCAR This Week

• Brran Vrckers left Hend rr ck Mo·
tors ports willingly last yea r to
JOin Toyota and Team Red Bull.
So far. not so good.
• What happens to Dale Earnhardt Inc. wrthout the current
generatron of Da le Earnhardt?
Early 1n the season, Tony Stewart said: "Without Dale Jr . all
Teresa's got 1s a m u se u m.~

ofrft~~~:~~~;,~~~::;~~
T1

NASCAR This Week 's Monte
Dutton g1•e• his take : " Stewart reported ly pa1d Newman a VISit on Sa turday n1ght as rai n postponed t he
race, and the two ironed out therr diffe rences. Of course, they've done
that before, too, but the crisis has
passed for now."

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Busines s Days Prior To

• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or ca ncel any
ad at any time.
II&gt;·Errors Musf
Rep•o~•KI ·on the

Tile two riva ls, whose battles go
back to the USAC open-wheel days,
participated 1n a humd ~n ger dunng
the Diamond Hill Plywood 200, Darlington's Busch Senes race All eyes
were on tl1em dunng the Dodge
Avenger 500. Maybe t he rain helped,
but t he two raced clean ly.

Dally In- Column : 1 :00 p.m.
Monday- Friday f or Ins ertion

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get
1\\111 \(I Ill\ IS

Ryan New1111111 •
vs. Tony Stewart

was a great weekend for oth·

Display Ads

• Start Y'our Ads W itt! A Keyword • Include Complete

Stewart

dtfference?

Word Ads

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

u

ing because he's a· Washington
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Ill' It

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To Place
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C~~s:G~A~!
Your Ad, (7 40) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675•1333 .•
VISA
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446-3008 .
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
.
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

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In One Week With Us
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AUcriON ANI&gt;

1

E

.

d
~pe n ance

0

I

Pay based on expene nce.
Call 740·388 -9515
-------Help wanted at Darst Adult
Group Home. some hft1ng,
·
7-5 shrft , 740·992-5023.

1~9

r

WA~\7~-])

TO DRIVE

10 BU\'

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER

Absolute Top Dollar. U.S ,
Srlver and Gold Corns.
Proofsets Gold Rrngs, Pre·
1935
u s. Currency.
Soll-1,,-, 0 Drarnonds- M.TS
Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. Galhpolis. 740·4462842

TRAINING CENTERS
• Fuu TIME ClASSES'
• coL TRAINING'
• FINAtlCING AVAILABlE'
"J06PLACE~ ENT"

Celebrating 21 yeert tn Butlnns
Wytheville. Vlrg1ma
1_800 _334. 1203

I \11'1 0\ \II ' I
"'il I{\ f( I '\

·lito
.

HFll' W~D

$7 50 an hour tor farm work
rn Letart, Ohio. call
(304)273·2999
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts, wood
items To $480/wk Materials
provided Free information
pkg. 24Hr_801·428-4649
·2 eKperienced body and
pa1n1 men, call 446·3481 .
Earn up to $1240 par month.
per child Become a Foster
Parent Call Shelly at 740794-0248.

..

HELP WANTED

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Affarrs toll tree at 1-866origrn. or any ln1entlon to
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Res•denllal or Comm ercial, House on Land Conlract
_
Po,meroy 740·992-5858
17401645 2178

Truck Drivers needed Must
TURNED DOWN ON
have good driving record . SOCIAL SEC URITY /SSI?
Please send resume to. Twm
No Fee Unless We Wm!
Rrver Hardwood, 2612 US
1-888-582·3345
HWV 35 Southsrde. wv
IU
II I.'- 1111
' 25187
Wanted. Cook Supervrsor at
Lakrn Correcl1onal Center.
Starting al 7 50 an hour. with
optronal benefrts For more
mformahOn, call 304·6742440 ext 2045
~::-------....,
150
Sc.l !OOI.S
INsl'RUCOON

ment. Pre-employment drug
testmg required
Send
resume and salary requrre·
ments to OaK Hill Banks.
AHn Human Resources, PO
BOX 688. Jackson, OH
45640 or to hr@oaktulls·
banks com Must respond to
Job Code #613E to be con·
~ sidered. EOE, M/F/DN

Trudl Driver needed, must
have a good drtvrng record.
Send Resumes to: Twin
River Hardwoods Inc 2612
US Route 3S, Southside,
wv 25167

Mrn•alure farm. Un1bU1II
home on 4 acres on SR
160 3BR. 1BA Peaches
$269/mo! Buy GALLIPO· bemes, grapes Sw1mmrng
LIS Foreclosure! 1·4 bed pool New appliances Wood
homes from 199/mo. So/o burner. $88.000. 740·388-

·--iiiriliiiiiiririiiii_.l
Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Cell Today! 740-446-4367,
1·800·214·0452_
www galllpollscareeroollege com .
Accredited Montier Accred11lng
Co~mc11 tor Independent Colleges
anti Sohools 12746

0 Down even wtlh less ~nan
perfect credit rs avaJiable on
this 3 bedroom 1 balh
home Corner tot. fireplace ,
modern kitchen, Jacuzzr tub.
Payment around $550 per
month 740·367-7129

2007 Clayton

1989 Clayton Mobrle Home,
14x60, 2 Bedroom. 1 Bath
w1th a 12K 18 addrlronal bed- ·
room. 12x6 muddroortl on
112 acre lol w1th cha1n link
tence &amp; 1Ox 10 bUJidrng.
Asking $40.000 17.40)379·
2668

The Home Snow,
Ashlam.t. Ky
Toll - lree 888·928·3426

STUDENTS FOR THE NA
PROGRAM . Rocksprings
Nursrng and Rehabrlllalloo
Center rs located 5 miles

~

WANI'F.D

To Do

MOBil £ HO\ IF~"i

S

FOH Al.E

SBRI3BA 2000 Sq Fl
Slarllng at $33 00/sp f1!
NO DOWN PAYMENT
to quat•lied buvers
The Home Show
Ashland , KY
104 Tatum
Dr
New ·
888·928-3426
Haven WV 3bdl2ba Ranch .
lg sunroom, 2 car gar. great
2007 Doublewrde
area D. 304·675·3637 E.
3BR, 2BA.
304-882-2334
Delivered &amp; Set $39.999

2 bedroom &amp; bath for sate.
1665 Lincoln Herghts
Pomeroy

BEST BUY
NEW ~4 B e d

$49,989
MltiWISI140.128.2r.iO
mymldwesthome.com

3 BR, 1BA. Large Fam1ly
Room. fndge, W/0 , Large .__ _ _ _ _ __.
lot can 441 ·582? or 446· Great used 2005 3 bedroom
9664
16x80 w1th v•nylJshtngle ,
Must sell. Only 525.995 w1th
3bd r. Home w/2 car garage
on 2 06 acres on Broad Run delivery Call (740)385-4367

Rd . New v1nyt sidmg and
new vinyl w1Pdows askmg New 3 Bedroom homes from
Lawn·Care Serv1ce. Mowrng $45.000 call 304·882·2870 $214.36 per month . Includes
many upgrades det•very &amp;
&amp; Tnmming Call 17 40)441·
JBR house on 1 acre srls on sel-up {740)385-2434
1333 or (740)645·0546
Rrver Front. New srdrng and
new wmdows $155 000 Nice used 3 bedroom home
Protessronally
Clean, 709 0531
www orvb com v•nytlsh•ngle W11l help wrth
Ofhce / Ho us eclel:l n 1ng Code 90303
delrvery 740:385-4367
References (304)675·2208
7 Room House w•th large Jot
- - - - - - - - loca1ecl al 10 Railroad St . OWNER FINANCING
Wanted. Brg weed eatmg Middleport. Ohro. Phone
Nrce 3/2 srnglewrctes
tobs. Htlsrdes, no problem
_ _
740 992 3764
From S1,800 down
Reasonable
rates.
paymen1
References avarlable 740·
' Attention!
Soon
1
740) 828 ·27~
256-1289
Local company offenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" proII\ I\! I II
grams tor you to buy your SPECIAL FHA FINANCE
home •nstead ol rentrng
Program SO Down. ll you
10
8t5L~E-.-.;
• 100°o linancrng
,own Land or use Family
OPI'ORThNn l
• Less than perfect cred1! Land We own the Bank your
accepted
Approved 606·474-6380
• Payment could t&gt;e the
• NOTI Ch
same as rent
OHIO VAlLEY PUBLI SH·
FARMS
Mortgage
Locato rs
lNG CO. recommends
I'OR
SALE
(740)367 0000
that you do business with
people you know and Beaullful-M•ddleport home!
Brano new log home wrth 60
NOT IO send money 3BR. 2BA, full basement. acres MIL S180.000 Call
through the mail until you Many NEW teaturesl1 Must
(7401256·9247
nave tnvestrgated ohe see this onet 740·'4 16-1 548
otfenng.
COUNTRY SETltNG
&amp;
3br. 2ba. wHh 24 x 24 ft L--AiiiCREA
iiiii'iioG
i iE
i -o_ ...
garage. 9110 Qf _an acre .,
approx. a mrles from Pt. 1o acres located bn Broad
Pleasant on At 2 call fo1 Aun Road. in New Haven
Appontment 304-675·5995 $38,500 (304)773-5881

f

FIND AJOB OR ANEW CAREER
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS
-. -·

Ho~n':S

mR SAtt:

~08i:1~5~~-"'!"!-...;.,

51180

skilled facrllty located
miles from Pomeroy Thrs •s
a 20 mrnute commute from
Athens and Albany We are
currenlly seekrng a Licensed
Practical Nurse for a staffmg
coordrnator
posthon .
Requrrements are 3 years
mrnrmum in long term care
I:"
Experrence rn staff develofim8f1t and or management a
plus Thrs positiOn consists
of rntervrewing. hrnng. and
scheduling nursing statf.
Th1s also mcludes lhe determinallon of or1~!ation and
preceptors, Trainrng and
educauon of staff as well as
mo~llorrng staff health and
welfare If lflterested send a
resume to Rocksprings
36759 Rocksprings Road.
Pomeroy, Ohto 45769 or fax
to 740-992·2678 aHantron
Candy ·
Simpson
Aockspnngs rs · an equal
opponunity employer.

IO

HUD HOMESI 4 bedroom
only S199/mo 3 bedroom.
$203/mo More 1·4bed
homes avarlable 5% dn. 20
yrs @ 8% For hstmgs S00559-4109 ext. F144

down, 20 years at 8%.
More homes available. For
toea listings c all 800·559·
41 09 xF254

from Pomeroy and 20 mrnutes from ....,.
At hens and
Albany. We currently are
seekmg mdrviduals rnterest ·
ed in attendmg our 75 hour
Nursrng Assistant Program
w"lch wrll slarl J'une 4.
"
2007 Thrs class rs lree of
supenor customer serVIce, •n a long lerm care settmg IS
charge and begins wrth 2
process customer tranbsack- preferred. II rntereste&lt;l , volunteer days that wilt allow
Iron, and promote an please contact Dianna Fitch
.
Sh ld h
you to see what lhe JOb con serviCes
ou
ave cus· at 740·44 6· 71 5° EOE
s1sts of frrst hand. We allow
tamer servrce or cashier
e~perience, preferably 10 a STAFFING COORDI NA· 12 students per class so
bank ~or credrt unron We TOR. Rocksprrngs Nursmg lhe Y f111 up qur'ckly Please
offer
opportunrty
for and RehabJiitauon Center is come rn and comple1e an
·
•
d
advancement,
excellent lookrng for a few dedrcated application 11 mtereste ·
compensatron and benefrts. people to become a part of Aockspnngs rs an equa 1
and a greal work environ- our learn We are a 100 bed ~opiip~ort;.un-'ly~em~p-lo.;y_r
e _ _,

Ohio Valley Home Health.
INC. hiring Per Drem or
Need someone to stay wrlh Contracted Medrcal Social
elderly women in Mason Worker. Apply at 1480
area 2 mghls a week 10pm Jackson Ptke, Gatlipo~s . OH
to 6am Call 304·773-9108h or phone 740·441 :1393
--------,----,-----Office Clerk needed for fast Part Time vending aHendanl
paced off1ce IndiVidual must in Gallipolis area. $7 .25/hr
be seH·staJ1er, dependable Paid holidays and vacatrons.
and energetiC. GOOd atten· Gall 740-698.0008
dance, skilled in Microsoft - - - - - - - : Word
and
E):cel Pleasant Valley Apts Part
Requirements client confi· lime dean1ng poSition With
denttalrty, superior oral and flex rble and scheduled hours
wntten commun~calron skins req . call 304-675-5806.
and knowledge ol general Applications ava ilable at
offtcelbusrness procedures. 1151 Evergreen Dr. Pomt
htgh school drploma and two Pleasant, WV
25550
(2) years experience in Between the hours of Sam·
ofhce and computer sk11ls 4pm
Bookkeeping procedwe a
Medi Home Private Care
plus.
Send resume by May 23, now accepting applications
2007 10: FACTS, 45 Olive for dependable STNA, Ct,IA,
Street, Gallipolis, Ohto CHHA. PCA for more infor·
45631 or FAX 10 740-446- mation p1ease contact Laura
at 740-446-4148
'
8014. EOE. M/FIH

------'------- L-======'--'
Wanl items to resale lo sup·
plement income 740-446·
0987

IIIlO
. .

Acceptmg applications for
NURSING
ASSISTANT
POST OFFICE NOW
cashiers and sub shop workADD: Rockspnngs Nursrng
HIRI NG
ers. Must be available to
and Rehabilitation Center rs
Avg Pay $20/hr or
war~ all shifts No Phone
$57K annually
calls please Apply al Par . looking for a few dedrcated
Mar 42 15054 Sl. Rt. 160 people to become a part of Including Federal Benefrts
.
'
' our team . We are a 100 bed
and OT,Paid Training,
Vmton or Par Mar 43 • 56 skilled facility located ~
Vacatlons-FT/PT
Vrne Street, Galhpolrs.
mrles from Pome roy. Th• s rs 1-800·584-1775 Ext. #8923
20 mrnute comm ute from
USWA
Amb ro~a Machine Inc. aAthens
and Albany. We just
Pornl Pleasant, WV 1304)·
recently installed a state of Professional Furidraisers
675·1722 (304)675-1723
lhe art on line documenla· needed Part/Fu ll trme 3
lax Machtnrst 5 · years or
lion system for lhe nursrng shifts dar ~ 7 days a week,
more expenence $8-$ 12 per
assistants which red uce $9 hr after paid tralmng +
hour
paper work lime cons1der· Benelrts, Conlact us today!
On H ~nd . Shop Forema n
ably. We offer competrllve 1·888-974-JOBS or
Machrne Shop &amp; Fabrrcatron
rates, health, dental and www 1888974JObs com
knowledge 1 oyears or more
vision msurartca as well as Salesperson Needed.
expertence $12·$15 per
hour
· a 401K plan We are a low Experrence in hardware/
11ft faclrty whtch has reduced bu ilding materials Apply
An Excellent way to earn our bac~ rnjuries to almosf 0, in
person
Mon·Fri
We have 2 posrtrons on 2 to Thomas Do 11 Ce nter
money. The New Avon.
10 PM shrft and 1 on 10 to Galtrpohs, OH.
Call Manlyn 304·882·2645
6AM shrft Stop by and ftll
AVO NI All Areas! To Buy or
I
a PI-cal on and
ou an
p I 1
Scenic Hrlls Nursmg Center
1
Sell Shrrley Spears. 304- receive an rnterview Monday
th
rough
Friday
between
is
currently acceptmg app r675·1429
cations for a Human
9AM and 4PM. Rocksprings ReSources
Manager.
Certified Pharm Tech with 1s an equal opportumly
large smrles and coinputer employer.
App
licants
must
posses
knowledge ol Worker
's
skills. no nrghts, no weekends S10Jhour. Email·
CompensatiOn, OSHA and
.
Oak Hill Bank has a tempo- wage and hOur regul ations,
cass e degracra _@ pscmed't
rary opportunr Y rn our ·computer
skHis,
etc.
supply.com or fax resume to G II 1 ff 1 1 dl
"1.
a rpo rs o rce or a nen y, Excellent communrt:alion
_8oo
__
-~
__
7·_58_2_o________ energetic person to provide skills are a must. Experience

pera ors
-•Fuiiiiiii
CAiiMAKiiiiiiiKii
t:iil.-1 needed for commercial con·
..
,
struction company. ,rave 1
Cross Creek Auction Buffalo wrthin 60 m•les ol Brdwell.
Saturday May 19th 6pm.
•ral'ler
load ol used mer·
''
chandise 1st ltme dealers
1
K nl cky B ildrn 9 is
rom e u · u
f n MCN 1sa accepted 304
·
u
550-1616 Stephen Aeedy

WANTED

STAFFING
COORDINATOR Aockspnngs NtJrsing
and Rehabrlitatron Center IS
looKrng for a lew ded1caled
people to become a part of
our team We are a t 00 bed
ski lled lactllty located 5
miles !rom Pomeroy Tins is
a 20 minute commute '!rom
Athens and Albany We are
currently seeKing a Licensed
Practrcal Nurse for a staffrng
coordrnator
position
Requrremenls are 3 years
mrmmum rn long lerm care
Expenence m staff Oevetop·
ment and or management a
plus Th1s position consiSts
of 1nterviewmg, hrring. and
schedu lmg nursing stall
This also rncludes the determinallon of orientation and
preceptors, Trarnrng and
education of st8ff as well as
monilonng staff health and
welfare If Interested send a
resume to Rockspnngs
36759 Rocksprrngs Road,
Pomeroy. Ohro 45769 or fall
10 740-992·2678 attentron
Candy
Srmpson
Rocksprings is an eQual
opportunrty employer.

i

Lars

�Page B4 • The Daily Sel!linel

www.mydailysentinel.com

-

..

Friday, May 18, 2007

Friday , ~ay - 1 8,2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

~rtbune -

The Daily Sentinei • Page 85

Sentinel -

t~ter

CLASSIFIED

... If you hav e a question or a comment , writ e : NASCAR Th1s Week,

qo

The Gaston Gazette ,

RO.

Box 1538, Gast onia,

NC

Meigs County, OH

Galli a
County,
OH

28053

All Urnes Eastern
- - -~-~-- NE K TEL
- GC:::f'P-5-Eftt£6-

Nextel Cup
Nextel All-Star Challenge.
7 p.m .• Saturday

Busch S.rles
Carquest 300.
7:30p.m., May 26

Truck Series
Quaker Steak &amp; Lube
200, 8:30 p.m., May 18

~ If ever there were a war of attri. tion, tt 15 a 500-mile Nextel Cup
race at Darlmgton Raceway.

• Richard Chtldress announced
he would answer questions out·

• Race· Carquest Auto

• Race: Quaker Steak
Parts 300
&amp; Lube 200
·
• Where : Lowe's Motor
• Where . Lowe's Motor
Speedway, Concord.
SpeedWay, Concord,
N.C. (1.5 m11es ), 200
N.C. (1.5 m11es). 134
laps/ 300 m1les
laps/ 201 m1les.
• When: Saturday, May
• When: Friday. May 18
26
• Last year's winner:
• Last year's winner:
Kyle Busch
Carl Edwards
• Qualifying record :
Mrke Skrnner, Toyota .
• Qualifying record :
Jrmmre Johnson,
183.051 mph, May 19,
Chevrolet, 187.735
2005
mph , Oct 14. 2005.
' • Race record Kyle
• Race record· Mark
Buscll, Chevrolet.
Martrn , Ford, 155.799
124 .845 mph, May 19,
mph. May 25. 1996.
2006
• Last week: Denny ,
• Last race: Ford dnver
Hamlin, 1n a Chevrolet,
Erik Darnell won at
won the Oramond Hill
Kansas Speedw~y for
Plywood 200 at Darling- hrs first career vrctory.
ton Ra ceway.

IS dominatrng NASCAR. ~we're not
domrnatrng the "races. ~ rnsrsted
Gordon·s crew chtef. Steve
Letarte. MWe're dommatrng the frntshes" Well . grven a lrst of opt rons, that's the one to take Not
smce Carl Krekhaefer. crrca 195556, has one owner so domrnated
stock-car rac1ng's h1ghest level.
Hendnck's fleet of Chevrolets has
won erght races. and there have
only been 11. Gordon managed to
take the lead because, on the
next-to-last cautron period - yes.
rt was for debns - he chose to
remarn on the tra ck when Jrmmie
Johnson pitted. As a result , Gordon won, not because he was
faster but because Denny Hamlm
and Johnson, most notably. but
also otllers. couldn 't catch hrm
fast enough.

• Race: Nextel All-Star Challenge
• Where: Lowe 's Motor Speedway,
Concord, N.C. '(1.5 mrles), 80
laps/ 120 mrl es.
• When: Saturday, May 19
• 2006 wlnne(i J1mm1e J o hr~ son
~ • Quallfylnc record: Darrell W.ltnp, Chevrolet, 174.154 mpn,
1986 (without p1t stop): Bill Ell1ott.
Ford, 152.928 mph , 2000 (I ncludes prt stop). Format has been
changed frequently.
• Race record : Jeff Gordon,
Chevrolet. 185.022 mph.'May 20.
2001 .
• Last week: After yet another Car
of Tomorrow VICtory, and h1s seventh triumph at arduous old Dar·
lrngton Raceway, Jeff Gordon and
pretty much al l those around him
labored to wrggle out of the per·
cept 1on that HendriCk Motorsports

E-mail
classified@mydailytribune.com

conference had been called to

announce Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s
hmng. Truly, 'fttlen Earnhardt Jr.

JI

c:
DALE EARNHARDT JR.

Oe,ar/ffitM
·Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

)

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

No.

8

v

BUDWEISER CHEVROLET -

E
R

sneezes, the entire sport catctJ.
es a co ld.

s

• Some spequlated that Earnhardt would JOin Joe.G1bbs RacNewman

think that would make a crucia l

s

er d rive~s to make outlandish.
controverstal remarks. If any
did, no one noticed.
• For most NASC AR fans, the
last trme t here ·was a quest ion
more compell ing t han "Where's
Junior go1ng?" 1! was "Who Shot
J.R ?'
..,. Despite predrctrons to the contrary. the appearance of the Car
of Tomorrow at Darlington wasn't notably differen t from other
races at the t rack. Perhaps
everyone was on hrs best behavror for Mother's Day
• The last time consecutive Cup
races were rarned out and ru n
the followr ng day was rn the fall
of 1992, when ramo uts occurred at Martinsvi lle, Va .• and
North Wrlkesboro, N.C. Geoffrey
Bodrne won botll races
Iii" Michael Wa ltrrp vaguely re-

members how to race. Obvrous·
ly. he 's forgotten how to qualify.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. set off a storm of speculation on May 10 when he announced he will be leaving the family team at season's end.

"' Who's hot - Jeff Gordon
and Jimmre Johnson. At this
pornt, rt's not even "hot ~ for
the~ anymore. It's normal. · ·

1&gt; Who's nqt
- Here
there's some
competition.
Toyota's Brian
Vickers. dead
last at Dar·
lmgton 1n only
the fifth race
rn whrch he's
competed.
... Casey Mears, who drives
for Hendrick Motorsports, yet .
is 35th 1n the standings.

I

ere
-After severing ties
with DEl, popular
star has options
By Monte Dutton

·v

NASCAR This Week

Dale Earnhardt Jr. set off a storm of
speculation on May Hi when he an·
nounced he will be leaving the family
team, Dale Earnhardt Inc., at the end
of the current season. Some of it, naturally, was over just exactly where he
will be racing in 2008.
That's actually a fairly si mple
proposition. Earnhardt Jr. will race
wherever he wants.
The 32-year-old said he'd like to remain in a Chevrolet, which is no sur·
prise given his family's longtime affil·
iation and that make's current domi·

I

o?

nation of the Nextel Cup Series.
Richard Childress Racing is where
the late Dale Earnhardt won six of his
seyen championship s driving the fa ·
mous No. 3. Hendr1ck Motors ports is
the st rongest current team in the
sport. Joe Gibbs Rac ing is home to
two of Earnhardt Jr.'s friends, twotime champion Tony Stewart and
emerging star Denny Hamlin.
Earnhardt, ,,Jr. said his de cision
wouldn't be base d on money, but
rather on findin g a place wher e he
thinks he can win.
"At 32 years of age, til e same age
my father was when he made his final
and _most important career decision,
it's time for me to compete on a con·
sistent basis and contend for championships now," Earnhardt Jr. said at a
hastil y organized Mooresville, N.C.,
press conference. "I believe I'd have
my father's bless in g."
Earnhardt's decision ended a fiv e·
month battle of wits and will between
Earnhardt Jr. and his sister, on one

side, and his stepmother, Teresa Earn·
hard!, on the other. The opening salvo
was Mrs. Earnhardt's assertion that
her stepson needeq to decide whether
he wanted to be a racer or a celebrity.
The whole house of card s collapsed
in a breathtaking whirlwind of activity, during which time the prevailing
wisdom went from "they'll probably
work things out" to Earnhardt Jr.'s fi·
nal description of the negotiations:
"We never even got close."
Earnhardt Jr. is, of course, obligat·
ed to continue as driver of DEI's No. 8
Chevrolet until season's end. How this
decision - and his alleged lame-duck
status- affects the team's perform·
ance remains to be seen
The pre vious two seasons were the
least successful of Earnhardt Jr.'s ca·
reer. At the time of his announcement,
he had won just two of 84 races. This
is his chance to remedy that.

Contact Monte Dutton at
hmduttonSO@aol.com

that, nor roo long ago, drivers were
usually sining in their cars during the
national anthem Th at has been
changed, and most now stand for the
playing.

NEXTEL

So much for Mother's Day: Rainout pushes back race

CUP

1. Jeff Gordon2.
3.

Jimmie Johnson
Matt Kenseth
4. Denny Hamlin
5. Jeff Burton
6. Tony Stewart
7, Kurt Busch
8. Kevm Harvick
9. Clint Bowyer
10. Carl EdWards

_1,881
. - 231
·299
-342

· 395
- 506
- 556
- 566
· 579
- 590

BuSCH SERIES
1.

Carl EdWards
Kevin HaNick
Dav1d Reutimann
Dave Blaney
Matt Kenseth
David Ragan •
7. Bobby Hamilton Jr.
8. Regan Smith
9. Juan Montoya•
10. Greg Biffle

2.
3.
4.
5.
6.

1,958
- 433
-599

·6D5
-678

-688
. 706
- 720

- 731
- 743

CRAfTSMAN TRUCK SERIES
1. Mike Skinner
905
2.
3.

Todd Bodine
Rick crawford
4. Ron Hornaday Jr.
5. Jack Sprague
6. Ted Musgrave
7. Johnny Benson
8. Mrke Crafton
9. Travis Kvapil
10. Erik Darnell
• rookte

- 108
- 128
· 154
· 171
· 178
- 202
· 222
· 252
- 254

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR ThiS Week

DARLINGTON, S.C. - On
May 12-at Darlington Raceway,
it rained on NASCAR fans and,
by extension, their mot hers.
A drizzle began falling· on
the old track's grounds shortly
after 4 p.m. By 5:50, heavy_
rain began. Though the precipitation tailed off occasionally,
it neve r stopped, at least not
until about 8:50, when
NASCAR offic ials announced
the Dodge Avenger 500 would
be postponed until the foirow·
ing aft ernoon, Mother's Day,
at 1 p.m.
As a re sutt. a major
NASC AR race was run on
Mother's Day itself- this race
had. been scheduled on th e
weekend of the holiday for
three years - for the first
time since The Winston all-star
race made its lone visit to At·
lanta Motor Speedway on May
11, 1986.

c , JDI:~ -"-l J.r.., ,;:; 0l: r::; '
drick? It was in the Busch Series race, not Cup, but Mark
Martin was, for the fi rst time,
driving a Chev rolet owned by
Rick Hendrick.
In the Busch Ser ies, of
course, Martin is the all-time
leader in victories with 47 over
25 years. He ndrick Motor·
sports has won 22 times in 24
years. ·The numbers alone
should've made Martin the favorite, though he wound up fin·
ishing second in the D1amond
Hill' Plywood 200.
"When I look back ... at the
wins we have and the people
who ha ve been pa rt of it, I
think it's going to be really neat
to have Mark 's name on that
list," said Hendrick_ ·

old veteran. "It reall y wasn't
that long ago when they
repaved this place. It was a dif·
ferent Darlin gton when they
repaved it. A set of tires lasted
a fuel run and were just as fast
at the end as they we re at the
beginning·. The asphalt they
use in th is area just deterio·
rates rea ll y fast, and it won't
be long after they repave it
again, we wi ll be back to the
same old Darlington."
The key issue actuall y isn't
th e asphal t used but, rathe r,
the geograp ~ Darlington is lo·
cated in the ~-called sandhills
r egion, so named because the
ocean rose to this level during
prehistqric times. The sand
t hat inevitably blows across
th e track tends to grind down
the asphalt over time.
·

•

•

•

He's seen all th is before Martin's take on the impending
paving of Darlin gton was that,
for the long run, it wouldn't do
much good.
"It changes every time we
Guess who drove for Hen· come here," sajd the 48-year-

•

---- - - 1- --:----------- --

I

-··

Oops, I did it again -Ryan
Newman, usually m.asterful in
qualifying, _hit the wall twice
during his qualifying, whic h
was unusual since he said he·
.had bumped the tight Darlington-walls previously only two or

three times in his entire career.
"The COT is not a ton differ·
ent," he insisted_"You're just
trying to go faster, and there's
no room for error.:•

"I'm here to race, man. I'm
not going to get in the middle of
the politics of anything like
that," said Harvick. "I'm just going to do my job and, however it
plays out, it was meant to be and
that's the way it will be. It's just
something that we'll have to
In a nutshell - Darlington, wait and see how it plays."
out of place amid the spacious
speed palaces built in recent
yea rs, is to stock-car racing
what the Grand Prix of Monaco Man in full - Felix Sabates,
is to Formula One.
long active in NASCAR, re"It's a throwback to the way ceived an honorary degree,
things used to be," said J eff Doctor of Public Service, at the
Burton, "and th en We bring a University of North Carolina at
car that we're still lea rning a Charlotte's commencement
great deal about -and have a ceremonies May 12.
whole lot to learn about - to a
Sabates, still part owner of a
trac k that's the slickest, .major NASCAR team, served
toughest track that we go to." UNCC on the board of direc·
tors of its foundation from 1994
through 2005.
"I have seen this institution
Not my job - Kevin Harvick grow from Charlotte College to
said it wasn 't his place to tell The University of North Carhis owner what to do.
olina at Charlotte," said
Asked if he would lobby Sabates. "I'm gratefu l to reRic hard Childress to hire Dale ceive such an honor from such
Earnhardt Jr. and presumably a great university, and it is
expand his operation, Harvick something I will cherish for the
waved off the question.
rest of my life."

•

•

••

--- - ··------·-- -- . - -- •-- ---..,-- -----------'.L

• All ads must

ANNOUNCEMENTS
·

~~D

Publishing reserve. the right to edit, reject, or cancel any ed at any t 1me Errors muat be reported on the llrst day of
Trlbune-Sentlntti-Regleter will be responsible for no more lhlln the cost of the space occupied by I he error and only the fn t Insertion We shall oot
any loll or expe n.. that re1u Ne !rom the publication or oml1elon of an advertlaeme nl Correction will be ma de In the lirst available edit1on • Bo~e
are always conlidantlel. • Current rate card eppllee. • All real estate edYertlu mants lfl subjecl to lhe F.deral Fll r Housing Act of 1968. • This
accepts only help wanted ada mMUng EOE lhnd arde. We will not knowingly aee.pt anv advertising In violation ot ths law.

POLICIES: Oh io VaUe y

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
1'10

Cat. 'M'Irte &amp; dark gray. On
ALL KCHS ALUMN I SEC- 41h St. New Have 304·882·
ONO ANNUAL REUNION , 8259
MOOSE LODGE, MAY 26,
2007, 8·1 :00 ENTERTAIN- Small Male dog with blue
collar found on Pme Street
MENT (304)675-4831 OR
mGa l hpol i~ 446· 7685
(740)446-3488

I

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement. ...........................................030
Antlques ..: ........ .................. .......................... 530
Apartments for Rent .-................ .................. 440
Auction and Flea Market.. .... .................. ..... OBO
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .............. ............ 760
Auto Repair .. .................................... ............ 770
Autos lor Sale......... ..._............................. ..... 710
Boats &amp; Motors tor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ... .............. ............:..........550
Business ilnd Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunlty ................................. 210
Bualnaaa Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .... .................. ..... 790
Camping Equipment .............................. ..... 780
Carda ot Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ................................... , .. 190
Electrlcai/Refrlgeratlon ............................... 840
Equipment for Rent ......., .............................480
Excavatlng ................................................. ._. 830
Farm Equlpment ................. .-........ :............... 610
Farma for Rent. ................. ...........................430
Forma for Ssle ...................... ....................... 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sale ............................................... ......... 585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... SBO
Fumlahed Rooms ............. ..................... ...... 450
General Haullng ........................................... 850
Glveaway .................................. .................... 040
Happy Ads ............................................... ,....050
Hay &amp; Graln ..... .................. ..................... ......640
Help wanted ................................................. tto
Home lmprovements ............... .................... 810
Homes lor Sale ............................................ 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses for Rent ............... ........................... 410
In Memorlam ............................................ .-.. 020
lnaurance ....................... .............................. 130
lawn &amp; Garden Equipment.. ...................... 660
L lvestock.. ....................................................630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Mlscellaneous .............................................. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise .......................540
Mobile Home Repalr .................................... 860
Mobile Homes for Rent... ............................ 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ................................320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .. ................ : .......740
Musical Instruments ................................... 570
Personals .................................... ................. oos
Pets for Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating .................................... 820
Professional Servlces ................................. 230
Radio, nl &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
Real Estate wanted ..................................... 360
Schools lnstructlon ..... .-............................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertlllzer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted ....................................... 120
Spec:e 1or Rent .............................................460
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV's for Sale ....................................... , ...... 720
Trucks for Sele ............................................ 715
Upholstery ................................................... 870
Vans For Sele ...............................................730
Wanted to Buy .:........................................... 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies .................. 620
Wanied To Do .............................................. 180
Wantad to Rant............................................ 470
Yard Sale- Glllllpolla....................................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroyrltlddle ......................... 074
Yard Sale-Pl. Pleasant ................................ 076

HarWAM'ED

I

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10

nowop••,.•l

Bum:-;
I'ORSAU:

1tl I .OAN

kltncarlyl e@comcast net

I G~r;;;,;, 1-r't, N61' 1'1
c oiKGil&gt; G'I\IC.E. 'ftiAT W*l'lt&gt;v' I&lt;ll
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SoFI MD CoM~"fA~L.-..- Wfi
C:\o 0"-l 1\ !&gt;I'Gf.
YARD SALE·
GAU~II'OLIS

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NEA, Inc.

r.rn-------,
r.rn-------, r.r.------.,
H!.LP WA~TE!l r'o HaP
riO

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Y~ SALE·

PoMEROY!MJDDLE
4 famrly! Frl..Sat., 94pm clothing for all,baby
rtems.glassware,bookks,mis
c ,4 mi.out A1. 143 ~mercy

CARPORT sale. 918 S 3rd
Ave., Middleport. Frr.·Sat., 9·
4. Reasonable prices
Multtple familY yard salel a
trttla bit of everythmg. May
18th &amp; 191h, eam-? on Hrgh
Street m Middleport.

r

ru
Bea Ie El ementary Sch o..,
Yard Sale Sat May 19th, 8·2

Sat May 19th 2920 Maple
Ave Meadowbrook Addn
Ba~m~R_a_in_o
_,_s_h_
in_
e _ ___~

"

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www .comic s.com

=~~~~~-"'"'I
074

I

be prepaid'

1,

Free to good home Male Toy Comm Yard Sale, French
Poodle, Apricot, a loving pet Town Apts 727 4th Ave Sat,
May 19 . 8-4 ·Little ol every·
2 yrs-old 614·890·8606
th1ng park on street
Free to good home
Garage
Sale. May 18&amp;19at
Male/neutered
Border
656St.Rt
850 9am-? l otsof
Co l!•e/Husky mrx. 3 vrs old
boys and womens clothes.
HousebroKen. 446-3742
Lots of mise Some tools,
Free to good home Small Several guns for sale call
male, brown and white dog. 740-245·5229
Very frrendly. Call 740-794·
MOVING Solei Everything
0425
must gol Mulli-lamrly yard
House lo be moved, All sale. Appliances, electron·
Paris Must Goll (740)992- ics, furniture, etC. For more
6849
info call446-3656

I

Sunday Di s play: 1: 00
Thursday for Sundays

1 Rewar&lt;llost male Munchkln

CLASSIFIED INDEX

1

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
S, ~
Jm
Borders $3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

Publication

Sunday Jn· Column : 1 : 00p.m.
t ,~r101ay •For Sundays P a per

3 Beagle mrxes. 6 mo. old, 130 Bastranr Dr. Sat Only 8·
very fnendly, (740)142-1162 5 Small maternity clolhes,
baby clothes/gear. other
3 gorge ous krtttes 1 BW. 2 mise ilems
Pers1an like 304-576-41 56
-------2 family yard sale Sat. May
Ashley·Wood Stove to give.
19 11350 St Rl. 588, pas!
away 304-937-2355
B E Farms. Som'ethtng lor
Free Kindling already bun- everyone
died 304-812-4059
--'------B•g family yard sale 11 9
Free Kittens·1.5--·7 weeks Maybohno Ortve Saturday
May 19. 9am - ? ·
olo. call949-24:l:l.

Treat the natlilniii anthem
with the proper relp8Ct

Thanks for letting us know how
you feel. We feel it should ~e noted

r

r

r

All but one of NASCAR 's a ll-star
events now known as the Nextel All St ar Challenge have taken place at
what is now know n as Lowe's Motor
Speedway. The anginal name of the
event was The Wi nston.

"The Star Spangled Banner" is
the natrona! anthe m, and the U.S.
fl ag rs the Stars and Stripes.
The proper co nduct for Amencan
citizens wheQ "The St ar-Spangled
Banner" is prbyed is t o sta nd erect ,
face the music or the flag, place th e·
right hand over the left breast, with
hat in hand if wearing one, and shut
upl To show proper respect, forergners should stand.
The national a ntlle m has music
and words, as approved by Congress
many years ago. Anyone si nging or
playing 11 should follow the mu sic. If
they cannot, they shouldn't even try.
It's our national s rgnat ure; 1t's not up
lorrevision or alteranon .
I see the drivers and crews total·
ly ignore the national anthem during
the opening ceremony. They should
be taught bette r. After all, they are
on the very front of NASCAR and a
role model for all Ame ncans.
Joule Cheater
Holden, Mo.
•'

ln Nex t Day's Paper

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

Paul Taylor Famrly Reunron.
June 3rd at Krodel Park,
Shelter House 2

NASCAR's All-St. I'IIC8
John Clark/ NASCAR This Week

• Brran Vrckers left Hend rr ck Mo·
tors ports willingly last yea r to
JOin Toyota and Team Red Bull.
So far. not so good.
• What happens to Dale Earnhardt Inc. wrthout the current
generatron of Da le Earnhardt?
Early 1n the season, Tony Stewart said: "Without Dale Jr . all
Teresa's got 1s a m u se u m.~

ofrft~~~:~~~;,~~~::;~~
T1

NASCAR This Week 's Monte
Dutton g1•e• his take : " Stewart reported ly pa1d Newman a VISit on Sa turday n1ght as rai n postponed t he
race, and the two ironed out therr diffe rences. Of course, they've done
that before, too, but the crisis has
passed for now."

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Busines s Days Prior To

• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or ca ncel any
ad at any time.
II&gt;·Errors Musf
Rep•o~•KI ·on the

Tile two riva ls, whose battles go
back to the USAC open-wheel days,
participated 1n a humd ~n ger dunng
the Diamond Hill Plywood 200, Darlington's Busch Senes race All eyes
were on tl1em dunng the Dodge
Avenger 500. Maybe t he rain helped,
but t he two raced clean ly.

Dally In- Column : 1 :00 p.m.
Monday- Friday f or Ins ertion

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get
1\\111 \(I Ill\ IS

Ryan New1111111 •
vs. Tony Stewart

was a great weekend for oth·

Display Ads

• Start Y'our Ads W itt! A Keyword • Include Complete

Stewart

dtfference?

Word Ads

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

u

ing because he's a· Washington
Redskins fa n. Do they really

Ill' It

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

To Place
~ribune
Sentinel
l\egi~ter
C~~s:G~A~!
Your Ad, (7 40) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675•1333 .•
VISA
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446-3008 .
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
.
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

stde one of his teams· transporters at Darlmgton. Within
minutes, there were Internet reports to the effect that a press

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

AUcriON ANI&gt;

1

E

.

d
~pe n ance

0

I

Pay based on expene nce.
Call 740·388 -9515
-------Help wanted at Darst Adult
Group Home. some hft1ng,
·
7-5 shrft , 740·992-5023.

1~9

r

WA~\7~-])

TO DRIVE

10 BU\'

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER

Absolute Top Dollar. U.S ,
Srlver and Gold Corns.
Proofsets Gold Rrngs, Pre·
1935
u s. Currency.
Soll-1,,-, 0 Drarnonds- M.TS
Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. Galhpolis. 740·4462842

TRAINING CENTERS
• Fuu TIME ClASSES'
• coL TRAINING'
• FINAtlCING AVAILABlE'
"J06PLACE~ ENT"

Celebrating 21 yeert tn Butlnns
Wytheville. Vlrg1ma
1_800 _334. 1203

I \11'1 0\ \II ' I
"'il I{\ f( I '\

·lito
.

HFll' W~D

$7 50 an hour tor farm work
rn Letart, Ohio. call
(304)273·2999
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts, wood
items To $480/wk Materials
provided Free information
pkg. 24Hr_801·428-4649
·2 eKperienced body and
pa1n1 men, call 446·3481 .
Earn up to $1240 par month.
per child Become a Foster
Parent Call Shelly at 740794-0248.

..

HELP WANTED

- aUiancetradorl11119' com

Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Oivis1on · of
Frnancral
lnstrtu!lon 's
All rea l estate advertising
Offrce of Consumer
In this newspaper Is
Affatrs BEFORE you rellsubject to the Federal
nan ce your home or
Fair Housing Act of 1968
obtarn a loan BE)VAAE
which makes It Illegal to
of reQuests for any large
advertise "any
advance pavments ot
preference, limitation or
lees or msurance Call the
discrimination baeed on
Off•ce ol Consumer
race, eolor, religion, sex
familial status or national
Affarrs toll tree at 1-866origrn. or any ln1entlon to
278-0003 to learn rf the
make any such
mortgag e broker or
lender
IS
p1operly · preference, tlm1 tation or·
discriminatron."
licensed. (Th1s rs a pubNc
serv1ce announcement
This neWspaper will not
from the Ohro Valley
knowingly accept
Pubhshmg Company)
advertisements for reel
estate wh1ch is in
vtolatlon of the law. Our
PRml'l&gt;.-.;IO~AI .
readers are hereby
SI:RVIU:.&gt;
informed that aft
dwettl ngs advertised in
this newspaper are
CHUCKS
PRES SURE
available on an equal
WASHING. decks, srding.
opportunity bases.
driveways farm equrpmenl,
sidewalks. boats and more
NO JOB TO SMALL,
Res•denllal or Comm ercial, House on Land Conlract
_
Po,meroy 740·992-5858
17401645 2178

Truck Drivers needed Must
TURNED DOWN ON
have good driving record . SOCIAL SEC URITY /SSI?
Please send resume to. Twm
No Fee Unless We Wm!
Rrver Hardwood, 2612 US
1-888-582·3345
HWV 35 Southsrde. wv
IU
II I.'- 1111
' 25187
Wanted. Cook Supervrsor at
Lakrn Correcl1onal Center.
Starting al 7 50 an hour. with
optronal benefrts For more
mformahOn, call 304·6742440 ext 2045
~::-------....,
150
Sc.l !OOI.S
INsl'RUCOON

ment. Pre-employment drug
testmg required
Send
resume and salary requrre·
ments to OaK Hill Banks.
AHn Human Resources, PO
BOX 688. Jackson, OH
45640 or to hr@oaktulls·
banks com Must respond to
Job Code #613E to be con·
~ sidered. EOE, M/F/DN

Trudl Driver needed, must
have a good drtvrng record.
Send Resumes to: Twin
River Hardwoods Inc 2612
US Route 3S, Southside,
wv 25167

Mrn•alure farm. Un1bU1II
home on 4 acres on SR
160 3BR. 1BA Peaches
$269/mo! Buy GALLIPO· bemes, grapes Sw1mmrng
LIS Foreclosure! 1·4 bed pool New appliances Wood
homes from 199/mo. So/o burner. $88.000. 740·388-

·--iiiriliiiiiiririiiii_.l
Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Cell Today! 740-446-4367,
1·800·214·0452_
www galllpollscareeroollege com .
Accredited Montier Accred11lng
Co~mc11 tor Independent Colleges
anti Sohools 12746

0 Down even wtlh less ~nan
perfect credit rs avaJiable on
this 3 bedroom 1 balh
home Corner tot. fireplace ,
modern kitchen, Jacuzzr tub.
Payment around $550 per
month 740·367-7129

2007 Clayton

1989 Clayton Mobrle Home,
14x60, 2 Bedroom. 1 Bath
w1th a 12K 18 addrlronal bed- ·
room. 12x6 muddroortl on
112 acre lol w1th cha1n link
tence &amp; 1Ox 10 bUJidrng.
Asking $40.000 17.40)379·
2668

The Home Snow,
Ashlam.t. Ky
Toll - lree 888·928·3426

STUDENTS FOR THE NA
PROGRAM . Rocksprings
Nursrng and Rehabrlllalloo
Center rs located 5 miles

~

WANI'F.D

To Do

MOBil £ HO\ IF~"i

S

FOH Al.E

SBRI3BA 2000 Sq Fl
Slarllng at $33 00/sp f1!
NO DOWN PAYMENT
to quat•lied buvers
The Home Show
Ashland , KY
104 Tatum
Dr
New ·
888·928-3426
Haven WV 3bdl2ba Ranch .
lg sunroom, 2 car gar. great
2007 Doublewrde
area D. 304·675·3637 E.
3BR, 2BA.
304-882-2334
Delivered &amp; Set $39.999

2 bedroom &amp; bath for sate.
1665 Lincoln Herghts
Pomeroy

BEST BUY
NEW ~4 B e d

$49,989
MltiWISI140.128.2r.iO
mymldwesthome.com

3 BR, 1BA. Large Fam1ly
Room. fndge, W/0 , Large .__ _ _ _ _ __.
lot can 441 ·582? or 446· Great used 2005 3 bedroom
9664
16x80 w1th v•nylJshtngle ,
Must sell. Only 525.995 w1th
3bd r. Home w/2 car garage
on 2 06 acres on Broad Run delivery Call (740)385-4367

Rd . New v1nyt sidmg and
new vinyl w1Pdows askmg New 3 Bedroom homes from
Lawn·Care Serv1ce. Mowrng $45.000 call 304·882·2870 $214.36 per month . Includes
many upgrades det•very &amp;
&amp; Tnmming Call 17 40)441·
JBR house on 1 acre srls on sel-up {740)385-2434
1333 or (740)645·0546
Rrver Front. New srdrng and
new wmdows $155 000 Nice used 3 bedroom home
Protessronally
Clean, 709 0531
www orvb com v•nytlsh•ngle W11l help wrth
Ofhce / Ho us eclel:l n 1ng Code 90303
delrvery 740:385-4367
References (304)675·2208
7 Room House w•th large Jot
- - - - - - - - loca1ecl al 10 Railroad St . OWNER FINANCING
Wanted. Brg weed eatmg Middleport. Ohro. Phone
Nrce 3/2 srnglewrctes
tobs. Htlsrdes, no problem
_ _
740 992 3764
From S1,800 down
Reasonable
rates.
paymen1
References avarlable 740·
' Attention!
Soon
1
740) 828 ·27~
256-1289
Local company offenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" proII\ I\! I II
grams tor you to buy your SPECIAL FHA FINANCE
home •nstead ol rentrng
Program SO Down. ll you
10
8t5L~E-.-.;
• 100°o linancrng
,own Land or use Family
OPI'ORThNn l
• Less than perfect cred1! Land We own the Bank your
accepted
Approved 606·474-6380
• Payment could t&gt;e the
• NOTI Ch
same as rent
OHIO VAlLEY PUBLI SH·
FARMS
Mortgage
Locato rs
lNG CO. recommends
I'OR
SALE
(740)367 0000
that you do business with
people you know and Beaullful-M•ddleport home!
Brano new log home wrth 60
NOT IO send money 3BR. 2BA, full basement. acres MIL S180.000 Call
through the mail until you Many NEW teaturesl1 Must
(7401256·9247
nave tnvestrgated ohe see this onet 740·'4 16-1 548
otfenng.
COUNTRY SETltNG
&amp;
3br. 2ba. wHh 24 x 24 ft L--AiiiCREA
iiiii'iioG
i iE
i -o_ ...
garage. 9110 Qf _an acre .,
approx. a mrles from Pt. 1o acres located bn Broad
Pleasant on At 2 call fo1 Aun Road. in New Haven
Appontment 304-675·5995 $38,500 (304)773-5881

f

FIND AJOB OR ANEW CAREER
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS
-. -·

Ho~n':S

mR SAtt:

~08i:1~5~~-"'!"!-...;.,

51180

skilled facrllty located
miles from Pomeroy Thrs •s
a 20 mrnute commute from
Athens and Albany We are
currenlly seekrng a Licensed
Practical Nurse for a staffmg
coordrnator
posthon .
Requrrements are 3 years
mrnrmum in long term care
I:"
Experrence rn staff develofim8f1t and or management a
plus Thrs positiOn consists
of rntervrewing. hrnng. and
scheduling nursing statf.
Th1s also mcludes lhe determinallon of or1~!ation and
preceptors, Trainrng and
educauon of staff as well as
mo~llorrng staff health and
welfare If lflterested send a
resume to Rocksprings
36759 Rocksprings Road.
Pomeroy, Ohto 45769 or fax
to 740-992·2678 aHantron
Candy ·
Simpson
Aockspnngs rs · an equal
opponunity employer.

IO

HUD HOMESI 4 bedroom
only S199/mo 3 bedroom.
$203/mo More 1·4bed
homes avarlable 5% dn. 20
yrs @ 8% For hstmgs S00559-4109 ext. F144

down, 20 years at 8%.
More homes available. For
toea listings c all 800·559·
41 09 xF254

from Pomeroy and 20 mrnutes from ....,.
At hens and
Albany. We currently are
seekmg mdrviduals rnterest ·
ed in attendmg our 75 hour
Nursrng Assistant Program
w"lch wrll slarl J'une 4.
"
2007 Thrs class rs lree of
supenor customer serVIce, •n a long lerm care settmg IS
charge and begins wrth 2
process customer tranbsack- preferred. II rntereste&lt;l , volunteer days that wilt allow
Iron, and promote an please contact Dianna Fitch
.
Sh ld h
you to see what lhe JOb con serviCes
ou
ave cus· at 740·44 6· 71 5° EOE
s1sts of frrst hand. We allow
tamer servrce or cashier
e~perience, preferably 10 a STAFFING COORDI NA· 12 students per class so
bank ~or credrt unron We TOR. Rocksprrngs Nursmg lhe Y f111 up qur'ckly Please
offer
opportunrty
for and RehabJiitauon Center is come rn and comple1e an
·
•
d
advancement,
excellent lookrng for a few dedrcated application 11 mtereste ·
compensatron and benefrts. people to become a part of Aockspnngs rs an equa 1
and a greal work environ- our learn We are a 100 bed ~opiip~ort;.un-'ly~em~p-lo.;y_r
e _ _,

Ohio Valley Home Health.
INC. hiring Per Drem or
Need someone to stay wrlh Contracted Medrcal Social
elderly women in Mason Worker. Apply at 1480
area 2 mghls a week 10pm Jackson Ptke, Gatlipo~s . OH
to 6am Call 304·773-9108h or phone 740·441 :1393
--------,----,-----Office Clerk needed for fast Part Time vending aHendanl
paced off1ce IndiVidual must in Gallipolis area. $7 .25/hr
be seH·staJ1er, dependable Paid holidays and vacatrons.
and energetiC. GOOd atten· Gall 740-698.0008
dance, skilled in Microsoft - - - - - - - : Word
and
E):cel Pleasant Valley Apts Part
Requirements client confi· lime dean1ng poSition With
denttalrty, superior oral and flex rble and scheduled hours
wntten commun~calron skins req . call 304-675-5806.
and knowledge ol general Applications ava ilable at
offtcelbusrness procedures. 1151 Evergreen Dr. Pomt
htgh school drploma and two Pleasant, WV
25550
(2) years experience in Between the hours of Sam·
ofhce and computer sk11ls 4pm
Bookkeeping procedwe a
Medi Home Private Care
plus.
Send resume by May 23, now accepting applications
2007 10: FACTS, 45 Olive for dependable STNA, Ct,IA,
Street, Gallipolis, Ohto CHHA. PCA for more infor·
45631 or FAX 10 740-446- mation p1ease contact Laura
at 740-446-4148
'
8014. EOE. M/FIH

------'------- L-======'--'
Wanl items to resale lo sup·
plement income 740-446·
0987

IIIlO
. .

Acceptmg applications for
NURSING
ASSISTANT
POST OFFICE NOW
cashiers and sub shop workADD: Rockspnngs Nursrng
HIRI NG
ers. Must be available to
and Rehabilitation Center rs
Avg Pay $20/hr or
war~ all shifts No Phone
$57K annually
calls please Apply al Par . looking for a few dedrcated
Mar 42 15054 Sl. Rt. 160 people to become a part of Including Federal Benefrts
.
'
' our team . We are a 100 bed
and OT,Paid Training,
Vmton or Par Mar 43 • 56 skilled facility located ~
Vacatlons-FT/PT
Vrne Street, Galhpolrs.
mrles from Pome roy. Th• s rs 1-800·584-1775 Ext. #8923
20 mrnute comm ute from
USWA
Amb ro~a Machine Inc. aAthens
and Albany. We just
Pornl Pleasant, WV 1304)·
recently installed a state of Professional Furidraisers
675·1722 (304)675-1723
lhe art on line documenla· needed Part/Fu ll trme 3
lax Machtnrst 5 · years or
lion system for lhe nursrng shifts dar ~ 7 days a week,
more expenence $8-$ 12 per
assistants which red uce $9 hr after paid tralmng +
hour
paper work lime cons1der· Benelrts, Conlact us today!
On H ~nd . Shop Forema n
ably. We offer competrllve 1·888-974-JOBS or
Machrne Shop &amp; Fabrrcatron
rates, health, dental and www 1888974JObs com
knowledge 1 oyears or more
vision msurartca as well as Salesperson Needed.
expertence $12·$15 per
hour
· a 401K plan We are a low Experrence in hardware/
11ft faclrty whtch has reduced bu ilding materials Apply
An Excellent way to earn our bac~ rnjuries to almosf 0, in
person
Mon·Fri
We have 2 posrtrons on 2 to Thomas Do 11 Ce nter
money. The New Avon.
10 PM shrft and 1 on 10 to Galtrpohs, OH.
Call Manlyn 304·882·2645
6AM shrft Stop by and ftll
AVO NI All Areas! To Buy or
I
a PI-cal on and
ou an
p I 1
Scenic Hrlls Nursmg Center
1
Sell Shrrley Spears. 304- receive an rnterview Monday
th
rough
Friday
between
is
currently acceptmg app r675·1429
cations for a Human
9AM and 4PM. Rocksprings ReSources
Manager.
Certified Pharm Tech with 1s an equal opportumly
large smrles and coinputer employer.
App
licants
must
posses
knowledge ol Worker
's
skills. no nrghts, no weekends S10Jhour. Email·
CompensatiOn, OSHA and
.
Oak Hill Bank has a tempo- wage and hOur regul ations,
cass e degracra _@ pscmed't
rary opportunr Y rn our ·computer
skHis,
etc.
supply.com or fax resume to G II 1 ff 1 1 dl
"1.
a rpo rs o rce or a nen y, Excellent communrt:alion
_8oo
__
-~
__
7·_58_2_o________ energetic person to provide skills are a must. Experience

pera ors
-•Fuiiiiiii
CAiiMAKiiiiiiiKii
t:iil.-1 needed for commercial con·
..
,
struction company. ,rave 1
Cross Creek Auction Buffalo wrthin 60 m•les ol Brdwell.
Saturday May 19th 6pm.
•ral'ler
load ol used mer·
''
chandise 1st ltme dealers
1
K nl cky B ildrn 9 is
rom e u · u
f n MCN 1sa accepted 304
·
u
550-1616 Stephen Aeedy

WANTED

STAFFING
COORDINATOR Aockspnngs NtJrsing
and Rehabrlitatron Center IS
looKrng for a lew ded1caled
people to become a part of
our team We are a t 00 bed
ski lled lactllty located 5
miles !rom Pomeroy Tins is
a 20 minute commute '!rom
Athens and Albany We are
currently seeKing a Licensed
Practrcal Nurse for a staffrng
coordrnator
position
Requrremenls are 3 years
mrmmum rn long lerm care
Expenence m staff Oevetop·
ment and or management a
plus Th1s position consiSts
of 1nterviewmg, hrring. and
schedu lmg nursing stall
This also rncludes the determinallon of orientation and
preceptors, Trarnrng and
education of st8ff as well as
monilonng staff health and
welfare If Interested send a
resume to Rockspnngs
36759 Rocksprrngs Road,
Pomeroy. Ohro 45769 or fall
10 740-992·2678 attentron
Candy
Srmpson
Rocksprings is an eQual
opportunrty employer.

i

Lars

�Friday, May 18, 2007

. www.mydailysentinel.com ·

Friday, May 18,2007
ALLEY OOP

'

www.mydailysentinel.com

The. Daily Sentinel • Page 87

,2 Mobile Home Lot for rent Nice 2BR. 2BA, mobile New · 2BR

apartments.
JET
1 near Vinton, and 1 on home. CIA, private lot in Washer/dryer
hookup,
AERATION MOTORS
Georges Creek Ad. Call Gallipolis. $450/mo. Call stove/refrigerator included. Repai red, New &amp; Ret:u1H In
(740)441·1111.
645-7765 after 6pm please. Also. units on SA 160. Pets StOCk. Call Ron Evans, 1-

r

r A::m=

.....- -... ,.,.._ _ _ _ _,_, Welcome! (740)44HII94 .

~~---

~Ali~TE

I

ACROSS

event
42 Hid Cflnner
1 Dec:ldo, as a 44 Plllnt firmly
jury
46 Mombltt'l .
5 llniwnlsh
country

Phillip
Alder

800·537·9528.

Nice 2br Apt for rent quiet NEW AND USED STEEL
L,---~~~_.1. 1.,~--oiiiiiioitiillii._.l neighborhood, family onen· Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
tated $450, security deposit For Concrete. · Angle,
Need to s·eu your home? 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments no pets 740-446-7425
late on payments, divorce, lor Rent. Meigs County, In
Townhouse
job transfer or a death? I town . No Pets, Deposit Tara
can buy your home. All cash Required, (740)992-5174 or Apartments , Very SpactoUs,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
and quick closing. 740-416- (740)441.0110
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
3130.
1 and 2 bJ;ldroom apart- Pool, Patio. Start $425/Mo.
I{ I \ I \I "'
ments, furnished and Uflfur- No Pets. · Lease Plus
nished . and houses in Security Deposit ReQuired.
Pomeroy and Middleport, (740)367-7086.
HOUSFJ;
security deposit required , no
FOR Jtu..T
pets. 740-992-2218.

Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp; L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;

Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,

Saturday

Sunday. {740)446-7300

&amp;

Woodyards Mini Mall .
Sat., Sale 9 to.5
Rugs, furniture, lawn mowers,
weedeaters, Name brand

~T...

c.e

Top•Trtm •Hauling •StlllfiP
Gf"*'SS • 8utket Trucll.
lnM.Ifld • Free EettrM.e.
7~1.f317

Alek JohniJOn.ow-r

tools , etc.

' 0$-18-07

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

West

East

4 K 94

.• Q 8 6 3

• Q 96 .
• 10.
•Q .J 10 8

(/amlLIJ 1•13133:1

$158/mo! Buy 4bd home 2br. Apt. in Pt. Pleasant
HUD I 5% dn. 20yrs @ 8°/o. Newly remodeled, $475/mo.
paid,
depsoit
For listings 800-559·41 09 utilit•es

Dealer : South
Vulnerable: Both

1 br, Cia, w/d, stove, refriger-

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

$400 per mo. $200 dep.
negotiable, located on 143

Pomeroy.

(740)992-4163

Soulb

z•
2NT

West Nonb
Pass
Pass

2t ·
3NT

East
Pass
All pass

leave message.

Opening lead; • Q

2br House for Rent quiet
neigtl borhood.
deposit
required, no pets, plus utililies 740-446-6939

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

_I L

3 Bedroom House in
Syracuse. $500/month +

deposit No Pets. (304)6755332 weekends 740-591 ·

0265
3 Dedmom. 2 full bath house
in Pomeroy, newly re modeled, nice hardwood fl oors.
ale, full basement, plenty of
kitchen cabinets, nice half
ac r~;~ yard. S685 pe r month.

T,.t MANAGt~
/
TOLl&gt; Mt
TO PLAY
fi~ST

SAS.S!

You need to use
all of the doors

p...,_

13 FruH cooler
14 Catalus
Clay
15 a - r ' l
Wid
16 Shiny finish
18 Type of

colora
56 lDcllc ~

20~=

60~
Ume

57 Bllll.fwnace

ir4Jul

58 Take charge
. (2 wda.)
59 Wood ash

I 2 More

43 Lake

spooky
61 Wind
17 Hero's
45
inltrument
journey
19 Uncaptured 46
DOWN
(2 wde.)
21 lrOIHich
47
1 Betrayer
meat
48
crosoer
2 Grout
22 Portra~
49
3f Future fish 3 Philosopher 23 WIWited
32 Fan noise
- -tzu
badly
51
33Siory
4 - Downs
24 Battery
53
34 Toy-block
(racetrack)
word
bnlnd
5 Collapse
26 Oxford, e.g. ·54
36 Make mudcly 6 Boise toe.
28 River trans38 Cambodia's 7 Smaltliz8rd
port
55
Lon 8 Commend 29 NQI in a
39 Safari
9 Bogus
whisper
40 Actor
butter
30 Safety Rlchard- 10 Round
35 Approves
41 Softball
Tobit tides 37 Citrus fruits

near

Reno
More
gloomy
NBA great
- Malone
Auction sill
Specify
Sudden
thought
Be off base
"Gidget"
actress
When Paris
sizzlee
Greasy
surface

Alfred H~chcocf&lt; said. 'This paperbadc is
vary interesting, but I lind ~ will never
replace a hardcoYer book - ~ makes a
very poor doorstop.'
In this deal, you need to find two unlocf&lt;·
atie dOOrs - two entries to u-e dummy.
Can J10U see how to open fhem? Against
your contract of lhree no-trump, West
leads lhe club queen.

a

South's sequence showed balanced
hand wi1h 23 or 24 high-card points.
North wasn't wildy enthusiastic about

(740)949-2303, 740·59 t 3920

BARNEY

Hardwood Cabinetry And FurnHure

TWO SWIGS OF

www.timbercreekeablnetry.c•ub

WAl'ER FER A

740.446.9200

01\l.YA
DURN

2A59 St. Rt. 160 ·Gallipolis

1998 Chevy Astro Van,

AMIFM Cassette., TVNCR,
PW, Dl, Air, wheelctlai r lift,

72,900 miles, $5900.
(740)388-0281' (304)7735079
1999 Chevrolet Conversion

Astro Van, A/C. P/S, PNo/,
AM/FM Radio w/Cassette
TV wNCR, towing package,
125,100 miles. $6200.
(74_0)367-0622

r~4~=ws'

1

2003 V-Star Classic 1100
Cruiser, like New, 6, 000

mites, Windshield, Begs &amp;
extras. $6,000. {740)446·
9278
2007 Honda Foreman 4x4
144 miles, ramps included
and cargo bag, call for price

304-675-2086

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio·
45771
740.949-2217

INE CALL 'EM

"'FLATLAND

?!

TOURISTERS "'!!

FOOL

. U.F RFREE

WOULD

Hubbard's Greenhouse
Syracuse, Ohio

PAY FER

THAT
!!

OPEN FOR SEASON!
Flats $7.50 .

THE BORN LOSER

1O"Haoging Baskets SS.S0·$6.50

4" Pots $1 .25-$1.49
Shrubs-$2.95-$6.95
Open M·Saturday 10-5
Closed Sunday "That's Gods Day"

"i~E BWI WOitKIN&amp;
ON r-\'{ ~1'1&lt;- Pf&gt;..C.td

'

'Wru.., WAAT 00
'(OU T~\NK. "?

t\WUT ~Nt u.t-1~

740·992-5776

!:M~u:s;hr~oo;,m~:;;:~ :;;R;;O;B;;E;R;T;;;;-;;;;;;;:
11
$35 A Scoop
T· Post 6ft. $3.29
Wide Variety of
Lawn Seed,
Fertilizer and
Showmaster Show
Feeds

.

"i·l) ~'( '(OlfR(.

BISSEll

raising to game, but 25 or 26 points are
25 or 26 points, enouJ11 to bid game in
no-trump or in a major. Kwould not surprise North to watch his partner go
doWn, but lhe game boous, aspaclally
when vulnerable, is ao hUge !hal ~
to gamble.
'lllu haw fop tricf&lt;s: one spade,
one heart, three diamonde and two
clube. Assuming the missing diamonds
are 3-2, which lhe probability table says
will happen 67.6 percent of the lime, you
are up 1o eight. The ninth should be
obtainable ~om spades, but you rrtJSI
take two finesses in the sun, which
require two dummy entnes.One of lhese
is lhe diamond queen, but what is the
second door- entry7
It must be the diamond six. Aller ta~ng
lhe fifllt trick with your..cfub ~ng . cash
the ace and king of diamonds. When
they do divide favorably, lead your diamond nine to dummy's queen. Next play
a spade to your jack. Presumably West
will win wi1h hla king and continue wllh
the club 10. Take lhet wllh your ace,
overtake your carelully conserved dla·
mond lOur wllh dummy's six, and play a
spade to your 10. When that finesse
works, you can claim nine tricks.

pays

G

CONSTIIUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

BIG NATE

AstroGraph

Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
Ne_W Garage•
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutters
Vinyl Siding 6 Pelntln~

we Deliver To You!
• Hoinetill System ·
' • Helios System

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Pomeroy Oh•o

CANCER (June 2hfuly 22) -

NOTICE TO CONTRAC· panled by Pr091 • of The Home National
TORS.
Authority of the official Bank reserves the 01' 2Sfl Kingston Hornet.
Seated proposals for or agent signing the right to reject any and New con dition, stored inside
the Pomeroy Distress bond.
all bids. All vehicles garage. Sleeps 6, includes 2
Sidewalk Replacement Bids shall be sealed are sold, as Ia where tv's. $8500.388-981 5.
Project, Meigs County, and marked as Bid for Is, with no warranties
Ohio, will be received Pomeroy
Distress expressed or Implied. 1998 5th Wheel travel trail er
by the Meigs County Sidewalk Replacement For an appointment to 32', double slide, lots of
Commissioners at the Project and matted or see, call 949·2210, ask options, $10,500. 740-698·
9319.
Meigs
Courthouse, delivered to:
for Sheila.
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769 Meigs
County (5) 16, 17, 18
2004 Rockwood, 30' with 7'
· until
t :00
p.m., Commissioners
s l ldeou ~ we ight 8,000 lbs .•
Thursday, May 31 •.2007 Courthouse
queen bed in front, 2
and then at 1:15 p.m. at Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Public Notice.
bunkbeds in rear, $14,500:
said office opened and Attention of bidders Is - - - - . . , - - - 1993 Chevy dually ext . cab.
read aloud tor the fol- · called to all of the SHERIFF'S SALE
diesel, 6.5, runs good. lots
towing:
requirements
con· FARMERS BANK &amp; of new parts, 161,000. mi,
This Is a Prevailing talned In this bid peck· SAVINGS co., Plaintiff $4,500; ( 740) ~92·3675
' Wage project. See et, particularly to the vs
Labor BREWCE W. MARTIN New 2006 23 ft. Rockwood
specifications In bid Federal
Trailer, Fu lly · eQuipped.
packet.
Standards Provisions AKA
Specifications, and bid and
Davis-Bacon 8REWCE
MARTIN , Includes warranty &amp; equaliz·
er hitch. (740)44 1-1475 .
forms may be secured Wages, various lnsur· Defendant
at the office of Meigs ance
requirements, l;ommon Pleas Court Wife tet me back in house,
Help Wanted
C o u n I Y various equal opportu· Case No. 06 cv 146
must sell 2000 Skamper
Help Wanted
Com m iss Ion e r s , nlty . provt,tons, and Atlas
Writ
of camper, $7500 25' comes
Courthouse; Pomeroy, the requlrem'ent lor a Attachment
with TV, buy beforeshe kicks
Ohio 45769- Phone peyment bond and per· Pursuant to an ALIAS . .me out call (7401949-4601
740-992·2895,
lormance bond for WRIT OF ATIACH- or 740·416·4379
A deposit of 0 dollars 100% ol the contract MENT Issued In the
'11!1111,
will be required for price.
above styled case, 1
each
set
of
plans
and
No
bidder
may
with·
will
offer
at
Public
Sale
10
LPN-PH or M edical Assistant
specifications. The full draw his bid within to the highest and best
HoME
A nd M edical Rec~ptiunist
amount
will
be thirty (30) days attar ~ldder on May 31,2007 L.w...;;L'iiiii'Riiiliorii
vtiii
lliiiEiioii
Nrs;..t
returned within thirty the actual date of the at 10:00 o'clock AM at . ~
BASEMENT
(30) days atter receipt opening thereof. Tlie 43519 State Route 124
Dr. Lieving's Office is currently
WATERPROqFING
of bids.
.
Meigs
County Minersville the followaccepting resumes for a Full time Each bid must be C o m m I s ·a I o n e rs ing personal property UnconditiOnal lifetime guarLPN· PH or Medical Assistant and a
antee. l ocal references furaccompanied by either reserve the right to . to-wit:
a bid bond in an reject any or all bids. JOHNDEERE 755 A nished. Established 1975.
full-time Medical Receptionist. LPN
i DavenP-ort, TRACK LOADER serial Call 24 Hr.s. (7 40) 446amount of 100% of the Mlck
applicants must have a current West
0870 •• Rogers Basement
bid
·
amount
with
a
Preslden
,
373919
Virginia license. All applicants should
surety sattsfilctory to Meigs
County taken as the property Waterproofipg.
have at least one year experience in a
of Brewce W. Martin.
the aforesaid Meigs Commissioners
physician office or hl&gt;spital related area,
The personal property Top soil $1 .0.00 "per ton.
C o u n t y (5) 11, I 5, 18
working with direct patient care.
Commissioners or by
appraised at $6,000.00 Doze r &amp; Excavating work.
certified .
check,
and canno)t be sold for Caii7~0·352-0o 1 5
let·
Public
Notice
less than 213rds of the
cashiers
check,
or
Send r esumes to:
sol·
.
appraised
price.
tar
of
credit
upon
a
Pleasant Valley Hospital
vent bank In the The Home National Terms: Cash in hand
c/o Human Resources
amount of not leas Bank witt auction the oil !lay of sale.
2520 Valley Drive,
than 10% ol the bid following Item on ROBERT E. BEEGLE
amount In favor of the Saturday, May 19, 2007, SHERIFF
Point Pleasant, W V 25550
aforesaid
Meigs at 10:00 a.m. at the MEIGS COUNTY
304-674-2417
C o u n I y Bank's Parldng Lot.
(5) 18
or fax to 304·675-6975
Commissioners. Bid 2001 Jeep Laredo
AAIEOE
Bond sh.all be accom- 1J4GW48S41C602212

YGW

YKFYOE

SAW EYIW

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

LEO (July 23-AtJg. 22) · Sometlfl)eS, n Is
far too easy 10 tre.at material matters 100
frivolously and today might . be one of
those days. The major reasorl could be
indifference that can create avoidable
regrets.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) ____:Your spon·
taneous judgment calls are_n't apt to be
up to par, So wt1en It come:s to anything
important. take ample time to consider
all th8 ramifications that could have neg·
ative results.
LIBRA (Sept. 2.3-0ct. 23)- Before pass·
ing on some ju ~ Information about a
mutual friend, verify the facts to make
certain wt'lat's been told to you isn't'
merQiy idle gossip full of half·truths.
Don't be a contributor_

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal
*Prompt and Quality

Work
*Reasonable Rates
*Insured
*Ex_pcrienccd
References Avai l ab l e~

SUNSHINE CLUB

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·ws all a miracle. I have adopted the lachnique ol

~y

CU.Y a, POLLAN....,;·;,__ __

""'"~~of 1M
0 ...,...
f011r ICIG!IIblad
b.
lorit to form ll!llf •

words..

SL YECA
l 0 YJ L
~~--------~ ~

."f
..

LSKAF

t·

GH 0 RN T

"Life is partly what we make
·i~" reasoned Gramps, "and
partly what is made by the

Ieinends we --···."

1-..,1,.;5_;,;,1..,;
· :.,;,1,;..;;.·1..;.,'"1~

Complete the d.uckle qvoted
_ . by fi!lino ift til• missing watds
L....L....JI......t.....L....IL......J you dev1lop from step No. 3 btlow.

.

.

PRINI NUMIEIEO lEIIEIS IN

• ·..fH!SE SQUAIES

.

SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS

.

.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

' ful about your financial prospects and
their potential, bUt don't wear any rose·
colored glasses In cases where only
realistic lenses are required _See things
for what they really are.

740-742-2293
Please leave messa e

SAGITTARIUS (N011. 23-Dec. 21) - Now

.,..;

may be one of those times when onlook·
ers wlll be judging you by the company
you keep. If !here is someon8,4tou'd like
to Impress, being with the wrong person
'Will be a .mistake.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Even
if you are quite good with do-lt-yourself
projects, you could be all thumbs. Thus ,
·If there is an important job to be tended ,
you might want to call In the experts to
tackle the task.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - Ju1t
because a deal or an Investment was
lucky tor a friend, doesn't necessarily
mean It will ~ 10 for you. The conditions
ch1nge dlilly, and timing le everything.
Voure may be oft.

GARFIELD

Manley's
Recycling
503 Mill SL •Mlddlepon, 0145180

740-992·3894

...'THE .
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMfTH/NC
FOR YOU!!

... llondiV-frillav 9:00 1111-5:08 ••
Saturday 9:00 1111-12:00 1m

PISCES (Fob. 2D-Morcll ZO) - Forgo
moklng on lmportont dtr:lolon If Y.u IHI

'PlYING TOP PRICES FIR

oil tho focla, Tlllo to a dl)' whtn Lady

Illmin1m Cltns •l11mln1m Wllllla

tdgo.
ARIES (Mtroh 21-Apnll8) - II -n'l

10mtthlng 11 wrong or you atlll dOn't hiVI
Luck won't bill

·c... ·

CIIIIVtlc Cllverters
11111•n 1111111'11
111111 Jtr

..,..l'rlclsl

.....

~ou out for

''
..

J

lack of know!·

matter 1110meon111 dalng you a flvor or
to do l job. Be ,

you'w hlrod a peroon

eura to give expllolt lnatructlonl of what

you want. Mlollkloo"' llkoly 1101)1 fuuy
dlrocttwo.

SOUPTONUTZ

'

'

•

s-'t7 -o 7

Captor - Index - Nudge - Beheld • ENDURANCE
"A
lie"
scolded the mom
.
. to ber youngster, "has the speed
buttbetrulb bu BNPURANCE."

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Be hope.

Call Gary Stanley @

NO MATTER
WHAT YOlll&lt;'l
STYLE. ..

YNW

AXEACW . " • NWGSGMCW ESWAX

Kaep

pace with your wor1&lt; ·and obligations
because that which yoll leave until .the
last minute Is likely to be done In a slip·
shod manner, causing unnecessary
problems you don't need.

Help Wanted

Wanted: Full-time position available
lo assist an individual with' mental
retardation in the Pomeroy Area: 7am·
3pm M-F. Must have high school
diploma or GED, valid driver's license,
three years good driving experience
and adequate automobile insurance.
Excellent benefit package. $7.25/hr.
Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640
or email to beyecserv@yahoo.com.
Deadline for applicants: 5/22107.
Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

"FW

Risky

part not to permit any disagreement to
arise between you and your mate, or
anYone important to you. Even small
Issues could be blown out of proportion
and are not worth it.

Pj:ANUTS

V.C. YOUNG Ill
2:, Years Local Expcr1enc~

RYOWE

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Do .your

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen

wv 036725
992-6210

OTII'GW Y VRWWEW. " • RWKWX

financial speculations are more apt to
misfire, costing you far more than you
bargained for. You'd better be prudent
and cautious In morl'ey matters.
·

ri=amiht . . . .~&gt;:"i·•z·a-AA":""'•

Pallo and Porch Deck•

"YNW AE XT.S AILTGSYXS MXKWEE

':mt: e~it4\l~-"£~s· ::

...... 'llrtlldlr:

TAlJRUS (April 20-May 20) -

CARPENTER
SERVICE

by Luis Campos
Celetriy ~CIY!i0!1M~IItt cren:lll'om QLIOiatlons tr,rfamous people. IWI n 1QSe1C
e.:h IIIII• 1n tht cipher ttn:ls tor iii:ICher
Todrly's clue: l equals P

....;.,;,;;,;....;.....;.;,..,;; ltlfo4

S1turdlly, May 19, 2007
By Bernice 8ede Oeol
Someone you meet who ls well received
by VJeryone but very selective of his or
her friends may accept you as a special
friend . This relationship will offer many
be,peftta not afforded to just anybody.

Stop &amp; Compare

YOUNG'S

CELEBRITY CIPHER

li~ng l~e fforn mitada to miracle.· - Artur Rubinstein

740-992-1671

Help Wanted

lrult
49 An:heolo8 - Lobot of
altt'l lind
pop music 50 Flllllered
If Wide open 52

21 flel1rlct
23 Female
en!Mope
24 Energy
25 "Sowhat ltMW?"
27 Plcket~lne

• 6 53

t A K 94
4 AK!

70 Pine St reet • Gall ipoli s
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

ator, water &amp; gas incll.ided,

., K 10 2
• J 87

Soutb
4 A J 10
• AJ 7

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

required (304)675-8635

x1709

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

I

�Friday, May 18, 2007

. www.mydailysentinel.com ·

Friday, May 18,2007
ALLEY OOP

'

www.mydailysentinel.com

The. Daily Sentinel • Page 87

,2 Mobile Home Lot for rent Nice 2BR. 2BA, mobile New · 2BR

apartments.
JET
1 near Vinton, and 1 on home. CIA, private lot in Washer/dryer
hookup,
AERATION MOTORS
Georges Creek Ad. Call Gallipolis. $450/mo. Call stove/refrigerator included. Repai red, New &amp; Ret:u1H In
(740)441·1111.
645-7765 after 6pm please. Also. units on SA 160. Pets StOCk. Call Ron Evans, 1-

r

r A::m=

.....- -... ,.,.._ _ _ _ _,_, Welcome! (740)44HII94 .

~~---

~Ali~TE

I

ACROSS

event
42 Hid Cflnner
1 Dec:ldo, as a 44 Plllnt firmly
jury
46 Mombltt'l .
5 llniwnlsh
country

Phillip
Alder

800·537·9528.

Nice 2br Apt for rent quiet NEW AND USED STEEL
L,---~~~_.1. 1.,~--oiiiiiioitiillii._.l neighborhood, family onen· Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
tated $450, security deposit For Concrete. · Angle,
Need to s·eu your home? 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments no pets 740-446-7425
late on payments, divorce, lor Rent. Meigs County, In
Townhouse
job transfer or a death? I town . No Pets, Deposit Tara
can buy your home. All cash Required, (740)992-5174 or Apartments , Very SpactoUs,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
and quick closing. 740-416- (740)441.0110
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
3130.
1 and 2 bJ;ldroom apart- Pool, Patio. Start $425/Mo.
I{ I \ I \I "'
ments, furnished and Uflfur- No Pets. · Lease Plus
nished . and houses in Security Deposit ReQuired.
Pomeroy and Middleport, (740)367-7086.
HOUSFJ;
security deposit required , no
FOR Jtu..T
pets. 740-992-2218.

Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp; L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;

Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,

Saturday

Sunday. {740)446-7300

&amp;

Woodyards Mini Mall .
Sat., Sale 9 to.5
Rugs, furniture, lawn mowers,
weedeaters, Name brand

~T...

c.e

Top•Trtm •Hauling •StlllfiP
Gf"*'SS • 8utket Trucll.
lnM.Ifld • Free EettrM.e.
7~1.f317

Alek JohniJOn.ow-r

tools , etc.

' 0$-18-07

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

West

East

4 K 94

.• Q 8 6 3

• Q 96 .
• 10.
•Q .J 10 8

(/amlLIJ 1•13133:1

$158/mo! Buy 4bd home 2br. Apt. in Pt. Pleasant
HUD I 5% dn. 20yrs @ 8°/o. Newly remodeled, $475/mo.
paid,
depsoit
For listings 800-559·41 09 utilit•es

Dealer : South
Vulnerable: Both

1 br, Cia, w/d, stove, refriger-

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

$400 per mo. $200 dep.
negotiable, located on 143

Pomeroy.

(740)992-4163

Soulb

z•
2NT

West Nonb
Pass
Pass

2t ·
3NT

East
Pass
All pass

leave message.

Opening lead; • Q

2br House for Rent quiet
neigtl borhood.
deposit
required, no pets, plus utililies 740-446-6939

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

_I L

3 Bedroom House in
Syracuse. $500/month +

deposit No Pets. (304)6755332 weekends 740-591 ·

0265
3 Dedmom. 2 full bath house
in Pomeroy, newly re modeled, nice hardwood fl oors.
ale, full basement, plenty of
kitchen cabinets, nice half
ac r~;~ yard. S685 pe r month.

T,.t MANAGt~
/
TOLl&gt; Mt
TO PLAY
fi~ST

SAS.S!

You need to use
all of the doors

p...,_

13 FruH cooler
14 Catalus
Clay
15 a - r ' l
Wid
16 Shiny finish
18 Type of

colora
56 lDcllc ~

20~=

60~
Ume

57 Bllll.fwnace

ir4Jul

58 Take charge
. (2 wda.)
59 Wood ash

I 2 More

43 Lake

spooky
61 Wind
17 Hero's
45
inltrument
journey
19 Uncaptured 46
DOWN
(2 wde.)
21 lrOIHich
47
1 Betrayer
meat
48
crosoer
2 Grout
22 Portra~
49
3f Future fish 3 Philosopher 23 WIWited
32 Fan noise
- -tzu
badly
51
33Siory
4 - Downs
24 Battery
53
34 Toy-block
(racetrack)
word
bnlnd
5 Collapse
26 Oxford, e.g. ·54
36 Make mudcly 6 Boise toe.
28 River trans38 Cambodia's 7 Smaltliz8rd
port
55
Lon 8 Commend 29 NQI in a
39 Safari
9 Bogus
whisper
40 Actor
butter
30 Safety Rlchard- 10 Round
35 Approves
41 Softball
Tobit tides 37 Citrus fruits

near

Reno
More
gloomy
NBA great
- Malone
Auction sill
Specify
Sudden
thought
Be off base
"Gidget"
actress
When Paris
sizzlee
Greasy
surface

Alfred H~chcocf&lt; said. 'This paperbadc is
vary interesting, but I lind ~ will never
replace a hardcoYer book - ~ makes a
very poor doorstop.'
In this deal, you need to find two unlocf&lt;·
atie dOOrs - two entries to u-e dummy.
Can J10U see how to open fhem? Against
your contract of lhree no-trump, West
leads lhe club queen.

a

South's sequence showed balanced
hand wi1h 23 or 24 high-card points.
North wasn't wildy enthusiastic about

(740)949-2303, 740·59 t 3920

BARNEY

Hardwood Cabinetry And FurnHure

TWO SWIGS OF

www.timbercreekeablnetry.c•ub

WAl'ER FER A

740.446.9200

01\l.YA
DURN

2A59 St. Rt. 160 ·Gallipolis

1998 Chevy Astro Van,

AMIFM Cassette., TVNCR,
PW, Dl, Air, wheelctlai r lift,

72,900 miles, $5900.
(740)388-0281' (304)7735079
1999 Chevrolet Conversion

Astro Van, A/C. P/S, PNo/,
AM/FM Radio w/Cassette
TV wNCR, towing package,
125,100 miles. $6200.
(74_0)367-0622

r~4~=ws'

1

2003 V-Star Classic 1100
Cruiser, like New, 6, 000

mites, Windshield, Begs &amp;
extras. $6,000. {740)446·
9278
2007 Honda Foreman 4x4
144 miles, ramps included
and cargo bag, call for price

304-675-2086

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio·
45771
740.949-2217

INE CALL 'EM

"'FLATLAND

?!

TOURISTERS "'!!

FOOL

. U.F RFREE

WOULD

Hubbard's Greenhouse
Syracuse, Ohio

PAY FER

THAT
!!

OPEN FOR SEASON!
Flats $7.50 .

THE BORN LOSER

1O"Haoging Baskets SS.S0·$6.50

4" Pots $1 .25-$1.49
Shrubs-$2.95-$6.95
Open M·Saturday 10-5
Closed Sunday "That's Gods Day"

"i~E BWI WOitKIN&amp;
ON r-\'{ ~1'1&lt;- Pf&gt;..C.td

'

'Wru.., WAAT 00
'(OU T~\NK. "?

t\WUT ~Nt u.t-1~

740·992-5776

!:M~u:s;hr~oo;,m~:;;:~ :;;R;;O;B;;E;R;T;;;;-;;;;;;;:
11
$35 A Scoop
T· Post 6ft. $3.29
Wide Variety of
Lawn Seed,
Fertilizer and
Showmaster Show
Feeds

.

"i·l) ~'( '(OlfR(.

BISSEll

raising to game, but 25 or 26 points are
25 or 26 points, enouJ11 to bid game in
no-trump or in a major. Kwould not surprise North to watch his partner go
doWn, but lhe game boous, aspaclally
when vulnerable, is ao hUge !hal ~
to gamble.
'lllu haw fop tricf&lt;s: one spade,
one heart, three diamonde and two
clube. Assuming the missing diamonds
are 3-2, which lhe probability table says
will happen 67.6 percent of the lime, you
are up 1o eight. The ninth should be
obtainable ~om spades, but you rrtJSI
take two finesses in the sun, which
require two dummy entnes.One of lhese
is lhe diamond queen, but what is the
second door- entry7
It must be the diamond six. Aller ta~ng
lhe fifllt trick with your..cfub ~ng . cash
the ace and king of diamonds. When
they do divide favorably, lead your diamond nine to dummy's queen. Next play
a spade to your jack. Presumably West
will win wi1h hla king and continue wllh
the club 10. Take lhet wllh your ace,
overtake your carelully conserved dla·
mond lOur wllh dummy's six, and play a
spade to your 10. When that finesse
works, you can claim nine tricks.

pays

G

CONSTIIUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

BIG NATE

AstroGraph

Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
Ne_W Garage•
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutters
Vinyl Siding 6 Pelntln~

we Deliver To You!
• Hoinetill System ·
' • Helios System

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Pomeroy Oh•o

CANCER (June 2hfuly 22) -

NOTICE TO CONTRAC· panled by Pr091 • of The Home National
TORS.
Authority of the official Bank reserves the 01' 2Sfl Kingston Hornet.
Seated proposals for or agent signing the right to reject any and New con dition, stored inside
the Pomeroy Distress bond.
all bids. All vehicles garage. Sleeps 6, includes 2
Sidewalk Replacement Bids shall be sealed are sold, as Ia where tv's. $8500.388-981 5.
Project, Meigs County, and marked as Bid for Is, with no warranties
Ohio, will be received Pomeroy
Distress expressed or Implied. 1998 5th Wheel travel trail er
by the Meigs County Sidewalk Replacement For an appointment to 32', double slide, lots of
Commissioners at the Project and matted or see, call 949·2210, ask options, $10,500. 740-698·
9319.
Meigs
Courthouse, delivered to:
for Sheila.
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769 Meigs
County (5) 16, 17, 18
2004 Rockwood, 30' with 7'
· until
t :00
p.m., Commissioners
s l ldeou ~ we ight 8,000 lbs .•
Thursday, May 31 •.2007 Courthouse
queen bed in front, 2
and then at 1:15 p.m. at Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Public Notice.
bunkbeds in rear, $14,500:
said office opened and Attention of bidders Is - - - - . . , - - - 1993 Chevy dually ext . cab.
read aloud tor the fol- · called to all of the SHERIFF'S SALE
diesel, 6.5, runs good. lots
towing:
requirements
con· FARMERS BANK &amp; of new parts, 161,000. mi,
This Is a Prevailing talned In this bid peck· SAVINGS co., Plaintiff $4,500; ( 740) ~92·3675
' Wage project. See et, particularly to the vs
Labor BREWCE W. MARTIN New 2006 23 ft. Rockwood
specifications In bid Federal
Trailer, Fu lly · eQuipped.
packet.
Standards Provisions AKA
Specifications, and bid and
Davis-Bacon 8REWCE
MARTIN , Includes warranty &amp; equaliz·
er hitch. (740)44 1-1475 .
forms may be secured Wages, various lnsur· Defendant
at the office of Meigs ance
requirements, l;ommon Pleas Court Wife tet me back in house,
Help Wanted
C o u n I Y various equal opportu· Case No. 06 cv 146
must sell 2000 Skamper
Help Wanted
Com m iss Ion e r s , nlty . provt,tons, and Atlas
Writ
of camper, $7500 25' comes
Courthouse; Pomeroy, the requlrem'ent lor a Attachment
with TV, buy beforeshe kicks
Ohio 45769- Phone peyment bond and per· Pursuant to an ALIAS . .me out call (7401949-4601
740-992·2895,
lormance bond for WRIT OF ATIACH- or 740·416·4379
A deposit of 0 dollars 100% ol the contract MENT Issued In the
'11!1111,
will be required for price.
above styled case, 1
each
set
of
plans
and
No
bidder
may
with·
will
offer
at
Public
Sale
10
LPN-PH or M edical Assistant
specifications. The full draw his bid within to the highest and best
HoME
A nd M edical Rec~ptiunist
amount
will
be thirty (30) days attar ~ldder on May 31,2007 L.w...;;L'iiiii'Riiiliorii
vtiii
lliiiEiioii
Nrs;..t
returned within thirty the actual date of the at 10:00 o'clock AM at . ~
BASEMENT
(30) days atter receipt opening thereof. Tlie 43519 State Route 124
Dr. Lieving's Office is currently
WATERPROqFING
of bids.
.
Meigs
County Minersville the followaccepting resumes for a Full time Each bid must be C o m m I s ·a I o n e rs ing personal property UnconditiOnal lifetime guarLPN· PH or Medical Assistant and a
antee. l ocal references furaccompanied by either reserve the right to . to-wit:
a bid bond in an reject any or all bids. JOHNDEERE 755 A nished. Established 1975.
full-time Medical Receptionist. LPN
i DavenP-ort, TRACK LOADER serial Call 24 Hr.s. (7 40) 446amount of 100% of the Mlck
applicants must have a current West
0870 •• Rogers Basement
bid
·
amount
with
a
Preslden
,
373919
Virginia license. All applicants should
surety sattsfilctory to Meigs
County taken as the property Waterproofipg.
have at least one year experience in a
of Brewce W. Martin.
the aforesaid Meigs Commissioners
physician office or hl&gt;spital related area,
The personal property Top soil $1 .0.00 "per ton.
C o u n t y (5) 11, I 5, 18
working with direct patient care.
Commissioners or by
appraised at $6,000.00 Doze r &amp; Excavating work.
certified .
check,
and canno)t be sold for Caii7~0·352-0o 1 5
let·
Public
Notice
less than 213rds of the
cashiers
check,
or
Send r esumes to:
sol·
.
appraised
price.
tar
of
credit
upon
a
Pleasant Valley Hospital
vent bank In the The Home National Terms: Cash in hand
c/o Human Resources
amount of not leas Bank witt auction the oil !lay of sale.
2520 Valley Drive,
than 10% ol the bid following Item on ROBERT E. BEEGLE
amount In favor of the Saturday, May 19, 2007, SHERIFF
Point Pleasant, W V 25550
aforesaid
Meigs at 10:00 a.m. at the MEIGS COUNTY
304-674-2417
C o u n I y Bank's Parldng Lot.
(5) 18
or fax to 304·675-6975
Commissioners. Bid 2001 Jeep Laredo
AAIEOE
Bond sh.all be accom- 1J4GW48S41C602212

YGW

YKFYOE

SAW EYIW

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

LEO (July 23-AtJg. 22) · Sometlfl)eS, n Is
far too easy 10 tre.at material matters 100
frivolously and today might . be one of
those days. The major reasorl could be
indifference that can create avoidable
regrets.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) ____:Your spon·
taneous judgment calls are_n't apt to be
up to par, So wt1en It come:s to anything
important. take ample time to consider
all th8 ramifications that could have neg·
ative results.
LIBRA (Sept. 2.3-0ct. 23)- Before pass·
ing on some ju ~ Information about a
mutual friend, verify the facts to make
certain wt'lat's been told to you isn't'
merQiy idle gossip full of half·truths.
Don't be a contributor_

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal
*Prompt and Quality

Work
*Reasonable Rates
*Insured
*Ex_pcrienccd
References Avai l ab l e~

SUNSHINE CLUB

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·ws all a miracle. I have adopted the lachnique ol

~y

CU.Y a, POLLAN....,;·;,__ __

""'"~~of 1M
0 ...,...
f011r ICIG!IIblad
b.
lorit to form ll!llf •

words..

SL YECA
l 0 YJ L
~~--------~ ~

."f
..

LSKAF

t·

GH 0 RN T

"Life is partly what we make
·i~" reasoned Gramps, "and
partly what is made by the

Ieinends we --···."

1-..,1,.;5_;,;,1..,;
· :.,;,1,;..;;.·1..;.,'"1~

Complete the d.uckle qvoted
_ . by fi!lino ift til• missing watds
L....L....JI......t.....L....IL......J you dev1lop from step No. 3 btlow.

.

.

PRINI NUMIEIEO lEIIEIS IN

• ·..fH!SE SQUAIES

.

SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS

.

.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

' ful about your financial prospects and
their potential, bUt don't wear any rose·
colored glasses In cases where only
realistic lenses are required _See things
for what they really are.

740-742-2293
Please leave messa e

SAGITTARIUS (N011. 23-Dec. 21) - Now

.,..;

may be one of those times when onlook·
ers wlll be judging you by the company
you keep. If !here is someon8,4tou'd like
to Impress, being with the wrong person
'Will be a .mistake.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Even
if you are quite good with do-lt-yourself
projects, you could be all thumbs. Thus ,
·If there is an important job to be tended ,
you might want to call In the experts to
tackle the task.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - Ju1t
because a deal or an Investment was
lucky tor a friend, doesn't necessarily
mean It will ~ 10 for you. The conditions
ch1nge dlilly, and timing le everything.
Voure may be oft.

GARFIELD

Manley's
Recycling
503 Mill SL •Mlddlepon, 0145180

740-992·3894

...'THE .
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMfTH/NC
FOR YOU!!

... llondiV-frillav 9:00 1111-5:08 ••
Saturday 9:00 1111-12:00 1m

PISCES (Fob. 2D-Morcll ZO) - Forgo
moklng on lmportont dtr:lolon If Y.u IHI

'PlYING TOP PRICES FIR

oil tho focla, Tlllo to a dl)' whtn Lady

Illmin1m Cltns •l11mln1m Wllllla

tdgo.
ARIES (Mtroh 21-Apnll8) - II -n'l

10mtthlng 11 wrong or you atlll dOn't hiVI
Luck won't bill

·c... ·

CIIIIVtlc Cllverters
11111•n 1111111'11
111111 Jtr

..,..l'rlclsl

.....

~ou out for

''
..

J

lack of know!·

matter 1110meon111 dalng you a flvor or
to do l job. Be ,

you'w hlrod a peroon

eura to give expllolt lnatructlonl of what

you want. Mlollkloo"' llkoly 1101)1 fuuy
dlrocttwo.

SOUPTONUTZ

'

'

•

s-'t7 -o 7

Captor - Index - Nudge - Beheld • ENDURANCE
"A
lie"
scolded the mom
.
. to ber youngster, "has the speed
buttbetrulb bu BNPURANCE."

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Be hope.

Call Gary Stanley @

NO MATTER
WHAT YOlll&lt;'l
STYLE. ..

YNW

AXEACW . " • NWGSGMCW ESWAX

Kaep

pace with your wor1&lt; ·and obligations
because that which yoll leave until .the
last minute Is likely to be done In a slip·
shod manner, causing unnecessary
problems you don't need.

Help Wanted

Wanted: Full-time position available
lo assist an individual with' mental
retardation in the Pomeroy Area: 7am·
3pm M-F. Must have high school
diploma or GED, valid driver's license,
three years good driving experience
and adequate automobile insurance.
Excellent benefit package. $7.25/hr.
Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640
or email to beyecserv@yahoo.com.
Deadline for applicants: 5/22107.
Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

"FW

Risky

part not to permit any disagreement to
arise between you and your mate, or
anYone important to you. Even small
Issues could be blown out of proportion
and are not worth it.

Pj:ANUTS

V.C. YOUNG Ill
2:, Years Local Expcr1enc~

RYOWE

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Do .your

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen

wv 036725
992-6210

OTII'GW Y VRWWEW. " • RWKWX

financial speculations are more apt to
misfire, costing you far more than you
bargained for. You'd better be prudent
and cautious In morl'ey matters.
·

ri=amiht . . . .~&gt;:"i·•z·a-AA":""'•

Pallo and Porch Deck•

"YNW AE XT.S AILTGSYXS MXKWEE

':mt: e~it4\l~-"£~s· ::

...... 'llrtlldlr:

TAlJRUS (April 20-May 20) -

CARPENTER
SERVICE

by Luis Campos
Celetriy ~CIY!i0!1M~IItt cren:lll'om QLIOiatlons tr,rfamous people. IWI n 1QSe1C
e.:h IIIII• 1n tht cipher ttn:ls tor iii:ICher
Todrly's clue: l equals P

....;.,;,;;,;....;.....;.;,..,;; ltlfo4

S1turdlly, May 19, 2007
By Bernice 8ede Oeol
Someone you meet who ls well received
by VJeryone but very selective of his or
her friends may accept you as a special
friend . This relationship will offer many
be,peftta not afforded to just anybody.

Stop &amp; Compare

YOUNG'S

CELEBRITY CIPHER

li~ng l~e fforn mitada to miracle.· - Artur Rubinstein

740-992-1671

Help Wanted

lrult
49 An:heolo8 - Lobot of
altt'l lind
pop music 50 Flllllered
If Wide open 52

21 flel1rlct
23 Female
en!Mope
24 Energy
25 "Sowhat ltMW?"
27 Plcket~lne

• 6 53

t A K 94
4 AK!

70 Pine St reet • Gall ipoli s
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

ator, water &amp; gas incll.ided,

., K 10 2
• J 87

Soutb
4 A J 10
• AJ 7

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

required (304)675-8635

x1709

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

I

�Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.oom

Friday, May 18, 2007

Carmona, Indians shut down Twins, 2-0 Bucs blast Marljns, 7;.2
CLEVELAND (API Fausto Carmona outpitched
Johan Santana again. and
Vic tor Martinez and Ryan
Garko homered in a threepitch span off Minnesota's
ace in the seventh inning.
leadi ng · the Cleveland
Indians to a 1-0 win over
the Twins on Thursday
Carmona (5-I) allowed
four hits for his first career
shutout and complet e
game. a 121 -pitch performance that beat Santana (~ , 4) for the &gt;econd. time in
Jess than a month .
The Indians swept th e
three-game series and
improved to 5-0 this season
agai nst one of their AL
Ce ntral rivab.
Carmona. bumped from
Cle ve land's rotation ea rlier
th is season. is 5-0 in his
last five stam and hasn ' t

given up a run in IS
strai ght innings, a remarkab le turnaround for the
right-hander who was
optioned to the minors but
brought back when Jake
Westbrook went on the dis abl ed li&gt;t . ·
Th e Twins have los t
se,·en of eight.
Santana · blanked th e
fndians for the first six
innings before Martinez
touched him for hi s fifth
homer. Cleveland 's c-atcher
turn ed on a 2-0 pitc h, driving it ove r the left-field
wall for his third canter
homer off Santana.
Two pitches later. Gark o
also connected for hi s fifth
homer. giving Cleve land
back- to-hack homers for
the fir,t time this seaso n
and handing Carmona all
the runs he would need.

On April. 24. · Carmona
snapped a personal Itgame losing streak by
defeating Santana, the twotime Cy Young Award winner.
The
23-yea(-old
Carmona won hi s next start
five days later, but he
became the odd-man out in
Cleveland's rotation when
Cliff Lee came off the disab led li st.
Only Westbrook's injury
rescued him from pitching
at Triple-A Buffalo, and his
ascension as a depe ndable
starter cou ld eventu all y
lead to the Indians making
a move with struggling
left-hander Jeremy Sowers,
who' ll take an 0-3 record
into a start Saturday
against Cim:innati.
Santana allowed two runs
and just foor hits in seve n
innings, the IOOth straight

.
.
start in which he has
pitched at least five
innings. He walked one
and struck out a seasonhigh II.
Notes: Santana's I 00start streak of going at least
five innings is the fourth
longest such run in the past
50 years. Only Curt
Schilling (147), David
Cone ( 145) . und Bob
Gibson ( 11 2) have been
more . COnS·I S1en 1. ... The
Indians begin interleague
play on Friday when they
open a three-game series
with the Reds. Cleveland
was 8-10 vs. NL teams last
season. --· Indians 3B
Casey Blake has hit safely
in nine straight ga mes .. :.
The Indians are a 14-3 at
home, with three of those
wins comin g at Miller Park
in Milwaukee.

PriTSBURGH (AP) -

The Pittsburgh Pirates used

four sacrifice flies and took
advantage of five Florida
Marlins errors in a sloppilyplayed 7-2 win Thursday
night
Ronny Paulino had three
RBls and Shawn Chacon
pitched five shutolll innings
out of the bullpen for the
Pirates, who earned a split of
the four-game series.
The Pirates, who committed two errors, tied a, club
record set Sept 9, 1988,
against Philadelphia with four
sacrifice bflies. The Marlins
tied a c1u record for errors.
Hanley Ramirez and
Jeremy Hermida each had
two hits for Ronda. which
had a two-game winning
streak. snapped and had not
commttted five errors in a
game since July 25. 2000: It
was the third time the
Marlins had commilled five

,,........ 3 3 °~U America in Bloom

ALONG THE RivER .
'A man of genius and substance~

errors .in a game.
Paulino, Chris Duffy, Jose
Castillo and Jason Bay had
sacrifice fl.ies for the Pirates.:
Four of Florida's errors
occurred in the first four
innings - leading to three
unearned runs for Pittsburgh.
Chacon ( 1-0) took over for
Pittsburgh, and the Pirate~
scored four runs in the bottom
ofthe fourth. Two of those
were unearned as a result of
three Rorida errors - two of
which were charged to shortJ
stop Ramirez dunng one pay.
Nolasco ( 1-2) allowed four
hits and three walks· while
fi
striking out one m 1ve
innings,
Chacoh allowed only two
hits and no walks in working
the third through eighth
innings. He needed 70 pitches
- seven less than Armas
threw in his three mmngs.
Chacon is a ~andidate to
_replaceArmasjn the rotation.

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT, INC.

Pioneer Meigs industrialist left link to past, Cl

. 2150 EASTERN AVENUE • GALLIPOLIS, OHIO.

(740) 446~9777. (740) 446-2484

•

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
l'om&lt;' l'o~ • \liddlq&gt;or·t·l~allipoJi,. "'" :w. :wo-

()IJio\,t!Jt- , l'uhli,hlll).\l o.

SPORTS

St..')ll• \'nl. 41 . :'1/o. 17

Short season forecast for Middleport Pool

• Eastern sending
11 to regional track
meet See Page 81

J.

Middleport ·
Village
Riffle said last monih the
Counci l. Pool Manager pool will remain open as
Dale Riffle said $12,000 long as funding remains to
MIDDLEPORT - The remains in fhe pool fund operate it. He added that the ·
Village of Middleport hopes from last year's season.
pool will not remain open
to raise between $10,000 and
Riffle said he and Mayor until Labor Day, as it did
$15,000 in private donations Sandy Jannarelli have last year, but will close no
for the operation of its public raised $5.000 from private later than the beginning of
pool, but some members of donors toward this ye ar's the Meigs County Fair.
village council qu~stion pool operation. and said th e
No seaso n passes will be
whether using village fund s pool wi ll need another sold; only month Iy passes
for the operation is wise.
$10,000 .to operate through wi ll be made available. The
Meeting last week with mid-A ugust.
village will rely on any
BY BRIAN

REED

BREEOOMYDAJLYSENTINELCOM

donat ions, admission fees Departm ent of Job and
and concess ion sales to Family
Services '
generate funds for opera- Abstinence
Bui lds
tion. and concessions may . Character Prog ram . · The
take a hit because council CO U!Ji y also provided lifehas
all owed
the guard&gt; to both pools
Appalachian Food Network · through the Summer Youth
to provide meal s each day Employment Program , and
to 100 children.
will do so again thi s year.
Last summer, Meigs ' The t"unding for passes will
County
Commissioners
gave $40,000 in the form of not be available.
free passes through the
Please see Pool, A5

CROW'S
KFC &amp;Long John Silvers

.. Bill offers

details on
indictment
BY MICHELLE MILLER

Taste Mom's Gooood Cook'in!

MMILLER@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

• Doily Lunch and Dilltt~r SptcUils.

-wukly I'IWI SpHIJJls

•S1111dwichu,Hot Suln,Saladr, Dinnus,
PiZ111 &amp; CalZDnr
• Now Strring Hand Dipptd let Cream! .

OPEN
7 Days,A Week
10:30 am -·9:00pm

~ •New Ownership

, .• New Deeor, Friencly Atmosphere

.Mo.ndn,)ls; Kids wrder /0 EAT PR
~-,.rrc nn•sr of Adult E ntrtle!

0BITUARIFS

FUN FOR EVERYONE
IN THE FAMILY

Page AS

Stone Creanu?ry Ice Cream
Honrs and Halos Boutique
Salon POSH n11d
Game Room

Cha~ene

• Clarence Clifford Day
• Fred 'Muggs' Holcomb
• Faye Grace Johnson
• Chhotubhai Patel
• Esther L. Bays Stewart
• David J. Wooldridge

Hours: Sunday ll-9pm
Mon-Thurs li·IOpm
· t'ri·S•t ll · ll pin

· WE DELIVER!

To see parents sharing proud moments with
their graduating sons and daughters was a
common sight just befor£1 commencement
started at Meigs High School Friday night.
Here Cindy Shull shares a special time with
her. son, Casey Richardson, JUSt minutes
before the processional begins.

awards
10133

INSIDE
• • • • • • • • • • t • • • •

• There is such athing as a •
• FREE LUNCH! •
•
(i ro&lt;•(\IJ &amp; ( cttf•ring •
•
HPrvieP
•
Big m· Snmll • I lom(lSty)(• Jl(•als •
·Enter here for a •
('n11 N&gt;l'
• $30 Gift Certificate •
Middleport, OH
•
•
740-992·3471
Fax: 740-992·5976
for
GREAT·FOOD! •
•
www. onu
mll&lt;t.c·om
•
•
• Drawing every week •
•
•
•
BACK THIS \NEEKENDUl •
•Name----•
RY rc\rurLAR
Df.:\tiA
~\;n
.J .
•
•
,Phone ____
"Pf\l1V1E R~B~~
•

• Southern seniors
collect over $115,000
in scholarships.
See PageA2
• Eastern recognizes
top 10, scholarship
awards. See Page A3
• Car catches fire.
See Page AS .

1

~IPnn

h

IJ '

•

tp;e ~

I

.

.~l

l) \

1 . L&lt;

JOS SECOND AVENUE

GALLIPOLIS, OM 45611
'740•441•9171.

•

~a

'Wi.IA

•
•

•

• • • • • • • • • • t • • • •

Court·uses arraignment via video
BY MICHELLE MILLER

~ltllude

MMILLER@MYDAILYTR IBUNE.COM

INDEX
4

SECTIONS -

. Celebrations
Classifieds

24 PAGFS

C4

Comics
Editorials

~ ·~
COME SEE
.

ATTHE

Movies

~
NEW

Obituaries
Regional
Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co. -

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Municipal Court is
now using video technology to help strengthen
security measures during the arraignment process.
For several weeks, Judge Margaret Evans has
· been arrai gning defendants via a video computer
system connected to the Gallia Count y JaiL '
The· new system greatly reduces the chance for
priso ners to escape by cutt ing back the number of
times prisoners have to be transported fro m the
Gallia Co unty Courthouse to the Ga llipolis
Municipal Building.
·
At least three prisoners escaped custody in the
past year while awaiting a hearing in the
Gallipoli s Municipal Court.
"It's a hl)ge benefit to the community because
we don 't have the risk of people runnin g:· said
Evans. ''It keeps the jail population away fro1\1
the public."
The system was funded through the court 's
Michelle Miller/ photo ·technology fund, with some ass istance from the
Gallipolis Municipal Judge Margaret Evans arraigns a defendant Gallia County Sheriff's Oftlce.
.
·
housed in the Gallia County Jail via a new video arraignment system
In the future, the system could be used for other
that has been in use for several weeks . .
heari ngs, including preliminary hearings.

Please see Bill, A5

Paving
restricts
Ohio 7 to
one lane :
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - Traffic on
Oh io 7 wi ll be restricted to
. one
lane
near
the
Roc ksprings Interchange
constru ctio n due to paving
which wi ll begi n tomorrow.
The project incl udes
improvements to approx imately two miles of pa vement from the junctions of
Tow nship
Road
637
(Coll ins Road) and US 33 .
The paving is ih preparation
for the opening of the new
Rocksprings Interc hange
now under COihlructi on and
due for completion in July.
The pavi ng portion of the
project will resu lt in a onelane restriction for north- ·
bound and so uthbound tmffic with a 12-foot width
res,triction i11 place for ' the
duration or · work . The

Please see Paving. A5

Serond Avenue; Across from Gallipolis City Park'

446-1251

Injured at work? ·
J'Oin nnd ~tifti ze-.; _-.; tflotiu::,t zpon't l]llif?
Dr. Good can help!

Ht7"l 1L'

1WO FOR TLISDAY IS

HOLZER (,;',!;,,'&gt;!1.,:::,·. 1, ,

C! FOOTERS OR CIIESEINRI FOR Ill PRICE OF D

--~----------~----------------------------7·--------

..

POMEROY - ·. The 133 Meigs High
School seniors in the Class of 2007 were '
. awarded diplomas in commencement ceremonies Friday night in the Larry R. Monison
Gymnasium overflowing with family members and friends of the graduates. ·
Keilah Jacks, va ledictorian, and Shawn
Ogaz, salutatorian led the ·procession of
graduates as they entered the gy mnasium
lo Pomp and Circum stan ce played by the
It's time for the processional and Meigs High School valedictorian Keilah Meigs Marauder Band directed by Toney
Jacks and salutatorian Shawn Ogaz lead the lines of 133 graduates toward Dingess. The National Anthem , invocation
the Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium for the commencement program .
Please see Meigs. A5

9NGde

••

t

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

WEATHER

2208 ·Ja~kson Avep
Point Pleasant,WV
304·675·5427

•tmn

FRIDAY NIGHT MAY 18TH
ENTERTAINMENT
"BIG WIGGLE"
.(

Try the QBanana Cream
· Pie Blizzard® Treat,
it's the
Blizzard of the Month

Hoelllch/photoo

GALLIPOLIS- A bill of
particulars detailing the .
events that led to the indictment of a Guyan Township
trustee for theft in office
was filed recently in the
Gallia County Common
Pleas Court by the prosecuting attorney 's office.
According to the docu ment, Roger Watson, 9542
Ohio 218, Crown City, is
alleged to have, while a duly
elec ted township trustee.
utili zed the serv ices of
James . Rain es, Anthony
An gelo
and
Jackie
Glass burn who were on
work release from the Gall ia
County Sheriff s Office to
bale hay or do other personal task for pe rsonal gain
when said inmates had been
released from jail to perform
community . service for
Guyan Township .

-------: -~-m"---- - - ~-

- - ... - '

--

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

...

740.446.7460

•

-

---------------------------------.-~-~ .... ~-... .. ...
_

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