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Holzer donates
toRelay,A:J

Senior Center
Donates to HMC, AS .

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio .
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Commissioners to accept new Pomeroy·squad for use

SPORTS

' BY BRIAN

• Cavs one win away
from Finals.
Page 81

see

J.

REED

BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY Meigs
County Commissioners will
accept a new emergency
squad to be purchased and
used by the Pomeroy volun.
teer squad unit.
At Thursday's regular
meeting, Bill Lambert of
Pomeroy Squad I and
Emergency Medical Services
Director Doug Lavender,

asked commissioners to
accept the squad, allowing it
to be used by the Pomeroy
emergency squad. The
department will purchase the
squad · using a $56,900
bequest from the Howard
and Geneva Nolan estate,
and a $30,000 grant from the
Community Development
Block Grant Community
Distress program, which the
Village of Pomeroy received.
It will then be given to the

county EMS system.
another
Community
Lambert said the squad is Distress ·project. Grants
expected to cost $86,000, Administrator Jean Trussell
and could be delivered by said no bids were received
the end of summer. It will after a public notice was
be used exclusively by the advertised. It is the second
Pomeroy volunteer squad time the county has sought
unit, unless needed in an contractors for the project.
emergency by the EMS cenCommissioners also:
tral dispatch unit.
o Approved payment of
Other business
bills in the amount of
Commissioners will again $175,866.63.
re-advertise for bids for new
• Accepted a bid from
sidewalks in · Pomeroy, Asphalt Materials, Inc., for

Personnel issues
dominate
Meigs Local
Board meeting

Left: This young

red fox is one of
five which have
taken up residence in Beech
Grove Cemetery
and have become
a sort of attrac·
tion to visitors.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCHil&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

POMEROY - Numerous
personnel matters including
a coaching position resulting in a resignation, and th~
probable retirement of the
superintendent and its
impact on the Meigs Local
School District were discussed at a three-hour
Board of Ed.ucation meeting
Wednesday night.
Nearly two hours were
taken up by an executive
Page A5
session where ·apparently
• Carol Sue Ayers, 33
there was disagreement
among board members on
the rehiring of Travis
Abboti as boy's varsity basketball coach for the 200708 school year. When the
board returned to open Ises• UMW hears report.
sion, Abbott who had been
See Page A3
involved in part of the exec• On Ashland dean's
utive session, submitted his
from the posiresignation
list. See Page A3
iion for the balance of the
• HoH.er makes dean's
school year. Superintendent
list. See Page A3
William Buckley . said
Thursday morning the posi• Ala. high school
tion has now been posted.
graduation with empty
As for the probably retirechairs for tornado
ment of Buckley, it was
victims. See Page A5 . explained during the meeting that a "retire-rehire"
• A Hunger For More.
procedure is being considSee Page A&amp;
ered. While rumors of
Buckley's retirement have
• Bible school gets
circulated, the confirmation
underway Sunday.
of his plans were never conSee Page A&amp;
firmed, until the meeting .
As a part of any action on
• Differences in Guard
the probable retiring-rehirweapons raise concern. ing matter, Buckley said the
See Page AS .
announcement is necessary
• Forme.r Gov. Taft takes and then at some point hearing must be held to allow
job. See Page AS
the public to· have input.
Buckley has taught ;md

Below: Three
baby foxes and
their parents are
bringing life to the
stone·monuments
and artificial flow·
ers of Beech
Grove Cemetery.
Here, one of the
foxes rests next
to a veteran's
monument.

OBITUARIES

• ••
Thursday, May 31; 2007

Page 16 •

Meigs Events
from Page a·

•I

J

June, the Blues Bash will feature
Lucky Peterson. Shannon
Curfman, Johnny Rawls, Li'l
Dave Thompson and Big Love,
Dave Childers and. the Modem
Don J uahs, and the Patrick
Sweany Band, among others.
More acts will be announced
by the Pomeroy Blues and Jazz
Society, which sponsors the
annual concert series.

Meigs County Fair
Alii. :1.3-18
II wouldn't be summer without
a county fair, and . Meigs
County's annual Junior/Senior
Fair offers entertainment, contests and attractions for the entire·
family.
The fair is the highlight of the
year for young and old alike who
exhibit their agricultural products, livestock, domestic arts
entries,paintings and other work.
· Midway rides and concessions
delight everyone,and grandstand
and Hill Stage entertainers offer a
variety of talent from the local
·community and beyond.

Tourism
from Page 11

more than l 0,000 fans and more than 500 print, televi· Ademolitionderby,tmctorand sion and radio media also are expected. The Draft is
truck pulls, horse pulls and other expected to attract approximately 3,000 visitors to the
exciting contests draw the city.
For more information visit www.nationwidearebiggest crowds of the year to the
county's historic grandstand, na.com.
where two days of exciting har• A Slave ~hip Speaks: The Wreck of the Henrietta
ness racing also offers exciting Mane, National Underground Rrulroad Freedom
family entertainment.
Center,Cmcmnat1
.
. ,
In September, the Nauonal Underground Ra1lri&gt;ad
· Freedom Center will unveil the first major traveling
exhibit deyoted to the transatlantic slave tra~e. This
harrowing exhibition focuses on the 300-year-old
Henrietta Marie, the most complete slave ship ever
5arr;u.1.5
-discovered in the Western Hetrusphere.
The exhibition runs through December 31 ,2007.
The final warm-weather festiFor more information visit www.freedomcenval in Meigs County brings stem- ter.org.
wheelers from around the region
• Coco K.ey Water Resort at Sheraton Cincinnati
to the Pomeroy docks. The pic- North, Cincinnati - This 45 ,000-square foot indoor
turesque boats;each with its own water resort is set to open in the fall of 2007, promispersonality, so to speak, make a ing to evoke the atmosphere of historic Key West.
beautiful picture along,the Ohio
Coco Key will delight children and adults alike
in the early days of autumn.
with thrilling water slides, private cabanas, an interLive entertainment, stem- active wave play island, outdoor splash pad and a
wheeler rides, a duck derby ,line- live parrot mascot. Swaying palms, fragrant hibisthrowing contest and a popular cus,n&lt;J,tiveartwork and tJ:tatchedroofs will welcome
chili cookoff are just some of the visitors to the region's newest water resort.
attractions at this always-popular
For more information visit www.starwoodhoweekend event. A firetruck tels.comlsheratonlproperty/overview/index.html?p
parade and a regular walking ropertyiD=l542
parade are also included in the
o Lake Erie Monsters, Cleveland A new
festival events.
American Hockey League franchise will soon

Stemwheel
Riverfest

begin play in Cleveland. ·
The Lake Erie Monsters will debut this fall at
. Quicken Loans Arena (The Q), as the top affiliate
of the NHL's Colorado Avalanche.
For more information visit www.lakeeriemoijsters .com.
o Kalahari Waterpark Resort, Major Expansion,
Sandusky - Bring your whole tribe to experience what will soon be the largest indoor water
park in the world with more than 173,000 square
feet of African-inspired excitt;ment!
A huge expansion of Kalahari is slated· to be
completed in December, 2007. In the meantime,
stand up and surf or boogie board on the five-foot
· ocean waves of Flow Rider®, ride the Zip Coaster
uphill roller coaster slide, or just rc.lax on the lazy
river or at the indulgent Kalahari Spa.
For more information visit www.kalahariresort.com/hub.
• Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Library and
Archives, Cleveland - To commemorate its
lOth anniversary, the Rock ;md Roll Hall of Fame
and Museum is opening a new Library and
Archives in December 2007 at the Cuyalloga
Community College campus in downtown
Cleveland.
The 18;000 square-foot facility will be housed
within the college's new Center for American
Music and Recording Arts. ·
For more information visit www.rockhall.com.
Looking for other new attractions in the
Buckeye State?
Visit www.DiscoverOhio.com. Free Ohio
Travel Planners and Ohio Calendars of Events
can be ordered anytime.night or day.
Travel counselors are available at 1-800BUCKEYE to assist callers weekdays from 8
a.m. to 9 p.m. and weekends 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Beth Sergent;photoe

INsiDE

Please see Board, AS

Crazy like afox
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - An old
wives tale says seeing severa) foxes together is a had
omen, but what about foxes
taking u~· residence in a
cemetery ·
Instead of bad luck, Beech
Grove Cemetery Trustee
Jim Kitchen says the family
of red foxes that have taken
up residence there are more
of an attraction, especially
when the young pups chase
each other.
· Kitchen said the cemetery
has become a destiMtion
for walkers wanting .more of
a cardiovascular workout on
· the hilly paths and those
walkers often stop to watch
the three baby foxes and
their parents set up housekeeping in the cemetery.

Hansen preliminary
hearing continued ·again
BY BRIAN

..
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• Price:

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2 SECTIONS

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Calen~rs

• Info:

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_B4-6
Comics
B7
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
A6-7
Movies
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NASCAR
B8
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Sports
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Weather
AS
. © 2007 Ohio V.Uey Publishing Co.

.. ..

The family of red foxes are
maintaining a healthy distance from spectators and if
people get too .close the
foxes disappear at lightening ·speed. Similar to bird
· watching, fox watching
requires some patience.
The red fox is one of two
fox species in O~io and one
of four in North America.
The state~s other fox is the
gray fox. According to the
Ohio Division of Wildlife,
the red fox arrived in Ohio
in the mid-I 700's and
prefers a mixture of forest
and open country. Farmland
with woodlots and brushy
areas n·ear marshes and
· swamps are ideal for this
species. However, the red
fox isn't limited to residence
and activity in such areas.
The species is adaptable and

can be found in many other
habitat types, including the
suburbs and now, Beech
Grove Cemetery. '
Red foxes eat mice, rats,
rabbits, groundhogs and
other small mammals; also
birds, fruits and grasses. ·
Adults weigh eight to 15
pounds with a life span of
around six to eight years.
Although there's no
telling how long the fox
family will stay in Beec.h
Grove, it's likely they'll go
their separate ways by fall.
For now the family can rest
a little easier with fox, opos-

sum, weasel and. skunk trapping season not opening
until Nov. I0 through Jan.
31 in Ohio.
Coming back to the old
wives tales, there is one that
also says seeing one fox is
good luck. In Japanese folklore, the fox-like "kitsune"
is a power animal spirit
known for its mischievous
nature while in Chinese
mythology, "huli jing," or
fox spirits, lure men away
from their wives.
Jn
Beech
Grove
Cemetery, the foxes are
simply entertainment.

WEAmER

J.

Bill to increase poaching penalties
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

t ,_

bituminous paving materials
for June, and referred the bid
to Engineer Eugene Triplett.
o Recessed the meeting
until I 0 a.m. on Friday, for
consideration of appropriations requests from county
departments.
Present
were
Commissioners
Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheets
and Clerk Gloria Kloes, who
opened the meeting by leading the Pledge of Allegiance.

COLUMBUS
Yesterday's introduction of
· POMEROY -A fourth continuance has been House Bill 238 by Rep. Jimmy
granted in the case of a Meigs High School teacher Stewart (R-Albany) and Bob
accused of providing marijuana to a minor.
Latta (R-Bowling Green) is an
Meigs County Court Judge Steven L. Story granted attempt to in'Crease the penalthe continuance just before a preliminary hearing was ties for poaching white-tailed
to be held Thursday in the case against Nathan Hansen deer and other wildlife in Ohio.
of Pomeroy. The hearing is now set for June 14.
House · Bill 238 will
Hansen is charged with corrupting another with increase the fines for poa,chmarijuana, a fourth-degree felony. He is a nine-year ing any wildlife in Ohio and
social studies teacher at Meigs High School and was specifically increase the
placed on admi nistrative leave when he was first
penalty for poaching an
charged.
.
antlered
white-tailed deer
The preliminary hearing is a "probable cause" hearthrough
the
use of a gross
ing to determine if enough evidence exists for consid,
scoring
system
based on varieration by the Grand Jury in Common Pleas Court. By
ous
antler
measurements.
In
law, Story cannot accept pleas in felony cases. He can
addition, any person convictonly set pond.
ed
of taking, buying, selling
Hansen, 32, was arrested Feb. 9, and was released
or
possessing
any wild animal
from sheriff's custody after posting a $10,000 personunlawfully
will
have their
al recognizance bond. He is represented by Pomeroy
Ohio
hunting
license
revoked
Attorney Charles Knight.
until
the
fines
are
paid.
Story first continued the hearing ·set for Feb. 28
"The one percent that's out
until March 22, then to April26, and then May W.
doing
ttiis illegal poaching is
The entry filed yesterday said the hearing was conti~­
not
fair
to other 99 percent of .
ued because "additional time is required for prepara- .
honest
hunters
who follow the ·
tion and negotiation .".
'
Stewart
said.
At his initial appearance on the charge, Story rules,"
restrained Hansen from any contact with Meigs Local "Funhermore a lot of people
School District students and facilities and ordered come to Appalachia •to deer
him to abstain from drugs and alcohol as a term of his hunt to try and bag these
types of deer."..
recognizance release.

Stewart said under the cur- Enough" and is described as
rent bill, these "once in a life- the result of local sportsmen
time" trophy bucks, if illegal- and landowners who .had all
ly poached, can carry a fine of "had enough" of the alleged
several thousand dollars. criminal activity. Involved in
Stewart added one of the these the operation were Meigs
trophy bucks which were County Wildlife Officer Keith
seized during an alleged ille- Wood and the Ohio Division
Wildlife's
Covert
gal poaching ring early this of
year near the Rutland area . Enforcement Unit which conwould warranta fine of nearly ducted the investigation.
$16,000. The fine will be Wildlife officers and investibased on a point rating system gators were also assisted by
the Ohio State Highway
of restitution on big bucks.
Meigs
County
"This legislation is in Patrol,
Sheriff's
Office
and
Pomeroy
response to the large bust in
Meigs County and other coun- · Police Department.
Under current law, individutier5, but poaching has been an
als
who are caught poaching
ongoing problem · in this
face
misdemeanor criminal
region and ii's not fair to the
charges
and also may be
large majority of law abiding
ordered
to
pay a fine based on
hunters who follow the rules,"
the
type
of
animal killed. The
Stewart said. "Considering
fines,
which
range from $25 to
what the trophy-sized bucks
sell for on the black market, I $1,000, go to the Ohio
of
Natural
think it's appropriate that the Department
Resources.
By
increasing
the
fine be commensurate with
fines,
Latta
and
Stewart
hope
their market value."
to maintain the quality and
In the Meigs County bust quantity
of wildlife for the
officials seized dozens of hunters, trappers, fishermen
white-tailed deer mouius and and .wildlife watchers who
antler racks as well as contribute billions 6f dollars to
ftrearms and all-terrain vehi- the state's economy each year.
cles. · The undercover operaPlu5e see Poachlnc. AS
tion was called "Operation

�..... " ... .

The Daily Sentinel

,,

•

-.'

r• ·'

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Friday,Junet,~oo7

The Daily Sentinel

BYTHEBEND

Community Calendar
BY GREG BLUESTEIN "AND
DEVUN BARRETT
~SSOCIATEO

for seve'ral weeks," hospital moved from an upscale conspokesman
William dominium complex in anticipation of his wedding, forAilstener said.
. Speaker's father-in-law mer neighbors said. He also
has worked at the CDC for wrote in an application to
32 years and is in t~e become a board member of
Division of Tuberculosis his condo association that
Elimination , where he he was going to Vietnam for
works with TB and other five weeks as part of the
organisms. He has co- Rotary Club to act as an'
authored papers on diabetes, ambassador.
TB and other infectious disHis wife, Sarah, is a thirdeases. .
· year law student at Atlanta's'
"As pan of my job, I am Emory University.
regularly tested for.TB. I do
·'He's a greai ' guy.'
not have TB, nor have I ever Gregarious," said Pam
had TB," he said in a state- Hood, a former neighbor,
ment. "My son-in-law's TB "He's a· wonderful guy. Just.
did not originate from a very, very pleasant man."
myself or the CDC's labs,
Health officials in North'
which operate under the America and Europe . are
highest levels of biosecuri- . now trying to 'track down
ty." ·
.
about 80 passengers who sat
In a brief telephone inter- near him on his two transview with the AP, Cooksey Atlantic flights, and they
said that he gave Speaker want passenger lists from
"fatherly advice" wheri he four shorter flights he took
learned 'the young man had while in. Europe.
contracted the disease.
However, other passen·
"I'm hoping and praying gers are not considered al'
that he's getting the proper hi gh ·risk of infection
· treatment, that my daughter because tests indicated the
is holding up mentally and amount of TB bacteria in
physically," Cooksey said. Speaker was low, said DT._
"Had I known that · my Martin Cetron, director of
daughter was in any risk. I the CDC's division of glob-:
would not allow her to trav- al migration and quarantine.'
el."
Health Jaw experts said
According to a biography · Speaker could be sue&lt;l if.
posted on a Web site con- others contract TB.
•·nected with Speaker's law
'There are a number of
firm, the young lawyer· cases that say a person who
·attended the U.S. Naval negligently transmits an
Academy, graduated from infectious disease could be
the University of Georgia held liable," said Lawrence .
with a degree in. finance, Gostin, a public health Ia~.
and
then
attended expert at Georgetow~:
University of Georgia's law University. "So long as lt&amp;school. He is in private knew it was infectious, and
practice with his father, Ted knew about the appropri.ai&lt;
Speaker, an · unsuccessful behavior but failed to coni'
candidate for a judgeship in ply, he coul.d be he!~ liable.'~
2004.
. . Speaker told The Atlanta
Speaker's father told Journal-Constitution that he:
WSB-TV: :'The way he's wasn't coughing and that
been shown and spoken doctors initially did nM
about on TV, it's like a ter- order him not to fly and:
rorist traveling around the only suggested he put off:
world escaping ·authorities. his long-planned wedding.
It's blown out of proportion "We headed off to Greece
immensely."
thinking everything's fine,';
Andrew Speaker recently he told the newspaper.

PRESS WRITERS

ATLANTA - A. globetrotting Atlanta lawyer with
a dangerous strain of tuberculosis was allowed back
into ttie U.S. by a border
inspector who disregarded a
computer warning to stop
him and don protective
gear,
official£
said
Thursday.
The inspector has been
removed from border 'duty.
The unidentified inspector explained that he was no
doctor but that the infected
man seemed perfectly
healthy and that he thought
the warning was merely
"discretionary," officials
briefed on the case told The
As'sociated Press. They
spoke on condition of
anonymity because the matter is still under investigation.
The patient was identifie'd
as Andrew Speaker, a 31year-old personal injury
lawyer who returned last
week from his wedding and
honeymoon trip through
Italy, the Greek isles and
other spots in Europe. His ·
new father-in-law, Robert
C. Cooksey, is a CDC
. microbiologist whose spec.ialty is TB and other bactena.
Cooksey would not comment on whether he reported his son-in-law to federal
health authorities. Not did
the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention
explain how the case came
to their attention. However,
Cooksey said that neither he
nor his CDC laboratory was
the source of his son-inlaw's TB.
.
Speaker is · now under
quarantine at ·a hospital in
.Denver. He is the first
infected person to be quarantined by the U.S. government since I 963.
The disclosure that the
patient is a lawyer -· and
specifically a personal
injury lawyer ~ outraged
many people on the Internet
and elsewhere. Some travelers who flew on the same
planes with Speaker angrily
accused him of selfishly
putting hundreds. of people's lives in danger.
·"It's still very sc~," 21year~old ·Laney Wiggins,
one of more than two dozen
Univetsity
of
South
Carolina-Aiken students
who are gettin~ skin tests
for TB. ''That IS an outrageous number of people that
he was .very rec}dess with
their health. It's not fair. It's

AP photo

This 2005 photo made available Thursday bY. the Centers for · Disease Control and
Prevention shows Dr. Robert Cooksey, a CDC microbiologist- specializing in the spread of
tuberculosis and other bacteria. Cooksey is the father-in-law of Andrew Speaker, the honeymooner quarantined May 25 with a dangerous strain of. tuberculosis. In a statement
issued through the CDC, Cooksey said that neither he nor his CDC laboratory was the
source of his son-in-law's TB .
selfish."
Speaker said in a newspaper interview that he knew
he had TB when he flew
from Atlanta to Europe in
mid-May for his wedding
and honeymoon, but that he
did.not find out until he was
already in Rome that it was
an extensively . drug-resistant strain considered especially dangerous.
Despite warnings from
federal health officials not
to board another long flight,
he flew home for treatment,
fearing he wouldn't survive
if he didn't reach the u.s~.
he said. He said he tried to
sneak home by way of
Canada instead of flying
directly into the U.S.
He was quarantined May
25, a day after he was
allowed to pass through the
border · . crossing
at
Champlain, N.Y., along the
Canadian border.
The
inspector
ran
Speaker's passport through
a computer, and a warning
- including instructions to
hold the traveler, don a protective mask in dealing with
him, and telephone health
authorities - popped up,
officials said. About a
minute later, Speaker was
instead cleared to continue
on his journey, according to
officials familiar with the
records.
The Homeland Security
Department is investigating.
The border officer "who
questioned that person is at
present performing admin.

istrative duties." said
Security
Homeland
spokesman Russ Knocke,
adding that the officer is not
checking people at the land
border crossing.
Colleen Kelley, president
of the union that represents
customs and border agents,
declined to comment on the
specifics of the case, but
said "public health issues
were not receiving adequate
attention and training" within the agency.
On Thursday, a tan and
healthy-looking Speaker
was flown from Atlanta to
Denver, accompanied by his
wife and federal marshals,
to Denver's National Jewish
Medical and Research
Center, where doctors
planned to isolate him and
treat him with oral and
intravenous antibiotics.
Dr. Charles Daley, chief
of the hospital's infectiousdisease division, said he is
optimistic Speaker can be
cured because he is believed
.to be in the early stages of
the disease.
Dr. Gwen · Huitt of
National Jewish . described
Speaker as "a young,
healthy individual" who is
"doing extremely well."
"By conventional methods that we traditionally use
in tlte public health arena ...
he would be considered low
infectivity at this point in
time," she said. "He is not
coughing, he is healthy, he
· does not have a fever. "
Doctors hope also to

'

Amid little sign of progress, EU-Iranian
nuclear negotiators ·agree to meet again
BY GEORGE JAHN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

--------MADRID, Spain - Top
envoys for Iran and the
European Union ended talks
Thursday with little indication they were closer to
resolving a deadlock over
Tehran's refusal to suspend
uranium enrichment.
Still, the two agreed to
meet briefly · again Friday
and for a longer follow-up
session within two weeks.
"Sometimes we are not
able to move the process as
we like, but in any case, the
atmosphere continues to be
very positive," said EU foreign policy chief Javier
Solana after meeting with
Ali Larijani, Iran 's ranking
nuclear negotiator. Solana's
comment
appeared to be tacit
acknowledgment that Iran
refused to give way on international demands it suspend
enrichment or face further
U.N. Security Council sanelions.
'
Both Solana and Larijani
said the main focus of their 4
1/2 hour talks were "outstanding issues" with the
International Atomic Energy
Agency. The IAEA has
called on Tehran to clear up
long-tenn questions it has
about the Islamic republic's
nuclear program.
. An official familiar with
the talks who refused to be
identified because of their
confipentiality suggested
that meant Solana and
Larijani decided to shift to
Jess controversial ground
because of lack of agreement
on how to iaclde the issue of

...

enrichment suspension.
· · Larijani spoke of "some
useful ideas that both sides
introduced," and "common
ground" without going into
detail. Solana said he and
Larijani had "an exchange of
ideas on how to move the
process" forward, and spoke
of a "good atmosphere."
Both men said their aides
would meet in about a week
to prepare for another
Solana-Larijani meeting in
about two 'weeks' time. They ·
also planned a brief session
Friday.
With both Iran and the
United States voicing hardline position s ahead of
Thursday's session, expectalions were already muted
. before the two men began
their discussions at a former
hunting estate on the outskirts of Madrid.
Diplomats told The
Associated
Press
that
although Tehran recently
suggested it was ready to
discuss a partial suspension
of enrichment, the West did
not resp~md, and Iran has
since Withdrawn its offer.
Secretary
of
State
Condoleezza Rice, speaking
in Vienna, Austria, ahead of ·
the Madrid talks, said the
onus was on Iran.
"I think it's time for Iran to
change its tactics," Rice ·
said. If Iran does so, she
said, "then we are prepared
to ... sit with Iran a'nd talk
about whatever Iran would
like to talk about.
"But that can't be done
when Iran continues to pur· sue, to try to perfect technologies that are going to
lead to a nuclear weapon,"

Rice said, alluding to the
U.S. assertion that Tehran is
seeking the cover of a peaceful nuclear program to rriake
such arms.
Larijani, in comments to
the Iranian state news
agency before leaving for
Spain, said: "Suspension is
not the right solution · for
solving Iran's nuclear issue."
But Rice said Iran had no
option but to "suspend, to
demonstrate that it is in fact
not seeking a nuclear
weapon under cover of (a)
civil nuclear power" program.
"The question isn't why
won't we talk to Tehran; the
question is why doesn 't
Tehran want to talk to us,"
she said.
A year ago, she reached
out to Washington's longtime adversary with an offer
to talk "any time, any place."
Iran did not accept Rice's
offer for the first Cabinetlevel direct talks in nearly
three decades, because of the
condition to halt enrichment.
There is ·a growing perception among some European
nations that the five perma~
nent U.N. Security Council
nations plus Germany
should drop their full suspension . precondition for
starting talks on a package of
incentives. The powers are
in the forefront of attempts
to engage Iran.
At talks 'last month in
Turkey, Larijani and Solana
agreed to meet again to try to
bridge the divide between
Iran's insistence on its right
to enrich i!nd Security
Council demands for a
freeze.

determine where he contracted the disease, which
has been found around the
world and exists in pockets
in Russia and Asia.
Speaker's tuberculosis
was discovered when he
had a chest X-ray in January
for a rib injury, Huitt said.
His care - which could
also include surgery could
cost
between
$250,000 to $350,000, she
said.. The air ambulance
flight and other costs of
transporting him from
Atlanta Jo Denver on
Thursday morning totaled
another $12,000, said · a
spokeswoman for Kaiser
Permanente, · · Speaker's
health ·insurer, whtch paid
the bill.
He will be kept in a special unit with a ventilation
syste·m to prevent the
escape of genns. "He may
not reave that room much

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111 Court Street
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740-992-2155
'

Church events

Public meetings

Birthdays

Holzer donates to Relay

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I recently
went out of town, and my
husband of 36 years stayed
home to work . When I
returned, I found that most.
of the house had been
cleimed and the entire contents of the top of my dresser had been dumped into a.
cardboard box.
He claimed he wanted the
house to be clean for guests.
However, · our bedroom is
upstairs, and no one sees it. I
found out later that someone
from his office was brought
in to perform this service.
Annie, I feel disrespected
and betrayed . It's like I've
been declared dead or something. There is not a co m~.
pin or book of mine on di~­
play in th at room . I am so
angry. If he didn't like the
mess, he should have given
me a time frame in which lo
straighten it up on my own.
It's not like I sit around eating bonbons. When I'm not
working, I volunteer three
days a week for a nonprofit
organization that pro vides
therdpy services for handicapped children.
I am also embarrassed
that everyone in his· office
could be gossi ping abo ut
the inner wqrkings of my
· Imine. I don't want anything
to do with any of them ever
again, but that is impossible. I work there part time.
I have. tried talking this
over with my husband, but
he only responds, "Sorry."
He feels he had good intentions, so I should just get
over it. He is so clueless.
Annie, what do you think?
in
Boxed
Out
Harrisburg, Pa.
Dear Boxed Out: We
know some readers will
think your husband cleaned
the house to disguise evidence of a tryst, but we're
going to assume he was .
simply tired of the clutter
and thought your absence
was a good opportunity to
remove it. We don't blame
you for being upset. This

Beth Sergenf/photo ·

HOlzer Clinic Meigs Branch. the Holzer Center for Cancer Care and Holzer Medical Center
each made a $500 donation to the upcoming Meigs County Relay for Life. Here, (from left)
HOlzer Clinic Meigs Branch Manager Diana Jeffers and Ken Moore from the Holzer Center
Fer Cancer Care present the donation to Steve Beha and Terri Fife of the Meigs County
· Ainerican Cancer Society Taskforce. Beha said this is the third year in a row that the \askforce has received a donation from the three "Holzer" agencies. Relay begins next Friday
at the Meigs County Fairgrounds. Holzer Clinic Meigs Branch will also be passing out door
ilrizes and have an informational booth at the event.
'

'

. members who traveled to
. MoscO\v for the summer to
find employment.
Along wi1h economic
growth, the church has also
grown.
. Cary Frith had the program,
"Lent and Easter, Rise and
Shine for Christ has Risen!"
She read a spiritual message,
"Easter Revisited." The focus
statement was read by all
members. Luke 24: 1-12 was
read by Mary Jo Buckley.
Cary, Mary Jo Barringer and
Mary Jo Buckley participated
in the readings. The group
read ':Easter Vigil" to end the
program.
Nine members and one
guest attended. Henderson
had prayer before the meal
served by Janice Weber.
Mary Jo Barringer conducted the meeting, wh ich
opened with the reading of
The·UMW Purpose:
. Members reported 70
friendship calls. Weber read

'·

Pn Ashland dean's list
::POMEROY - Andrea Burdette, Pomeroy, was named to
aie dean 's Jist for the spring term at Ashland University.
~e is an art education major.
,
·:Students on the dean 's list are enrolled full-time and earn
a:gradt; point a,vera~e o.f 3.5 0~ better or a 4.0 gradin~ sc~Je.
:-Ashland Umversity I S a pnvate, comprehenstve mslltu(lon located between Cleveland and Columbus. On-campus
~ilrollment is nearly 2,150 undergraduate students while
'Jl(al enrollment, including graduate and off-campus cenfers, is more than 6,500.
.
·

,·r-

..

Holter
makes dean's list
·•

::ADA - pen A. Holter, son of Roy and Valerie Holter,
3ll421 Dairy Lane, Pomeroy. has been named to the Ohio
~orthern University deans' list ~or the spring quarter 2~l06Q9. He is a fifth year pharmacy maJor. The deans hst
lJicludes students who attain a grade point average of 3.5 or
better on a 4.0 grading system.

the ·minutes and Treasurer
Osie Mae Foll rod gave her ·
report.
Members signed the
prayer calendar birthday
card for Vickie Sigman of
Winston/Salem, N.C., who
is involved with speciali zed
ministries, church and community workers.
Foll rod shared correspondence from Tom and Sharon
Crowe, retired missionaries
to the Democratic Republic
of Congo.
Barringer, B1.1ckley, Sarah
Caldwell and Weber will
attend the spring retreat at
The
Plains
United
Methodist Church.

was an intrusion into your
private space, and to have it
handled by someone from
the ortice was insensitive.
We suggest putting a smile
on your face and pretendi ng
your' mess was amusing and
you're grateful it's been
taken ~Jff your shoulders.
You' ll · fee l less embarrassed. and so will the staff.
Dear Annie: I was recently in my favorite coffee
shop, sitting next to a
Polynesian family that
included a daughter of per. haps 8 years of age who was
sporting a cultural bicep !attoo, identi cal to one on her
father's arm. The gi rl
seemed very well adjusted,
energetic and engaged with
her family.
.
After they left the restaurant, two women at an adjacent table talked about
reporting the parents for
child abuse because they
allowed the girl to be tattooed. What is your take on
the tattooing or piercings of
young children? - Don in
Redondo Beach, Calif,
Dear Don: People are
entitled to express their cultural heritage. And surely
you must know people
whose toddler daughters
have pierced ears (and dia"
mond studs to go in them).
This is not intended to
inflict harm, and in the case
of an 8-year-old, the child
often makes the request.
Naturally, when it's simply
fashion and not heritage, .we
hope parents will wait until
the child is old enough to
make his or her wishes
known - and respected.

Dear Annie: I read the
letter abo ut the daughter
whose mother used her identity to get credit. My father
died three years ago. My
unemployed sister offered to
help Mom with her finances.
Well, Sis helped herself to
$250.000. She transferred
money to her own account,
had checks written up with
her name on them, cashed
Dad's IRA s and opened
credit cards with payments
coming
from
Mom's
account.
Of course, now we will
have to file charges against
my sister, and I worry what
will happen to Mom down
the road. She will need that
money. Warn your readers
that this can happen . Too Trusting
Dear
Trusting:
Situations like this are terribly sad because they
involve a loss of trust
between family members.
It's usually best when more
than one person is keeping
an eye on the financial
arrangements. Thanks for
the red alert.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime .editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e--mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Atmie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, JL
606/J_ To find out more
about An11ie 's Mailbox,
a11d read features by other
Creators . Syndicate writers
and cartoo11ists, visit the
Creators Sy11dicale Web
page at www.creators.com.

~nnua\ Kids Fishin9
June 9th, 8am- 12pm

1

Derby

At
Meigs County Fish &amp; Game
Free to Kid.l' '
0 -15 Years

Door Priz.es
Free Food &amp; Drink
Info Call 740-992-0026

JF~-... ..:-21'r~

· · · Good
Welcomes

NIV

·PMw hears report from Russia

·~ HELPFUL VA]qD .SALE KIT

'·

room. Fair booth discussion. Township Trustees, 6:30
Friday, June 8
p.m., Pageville Town ijall.
POMEROY
-Meigs
CHESTER - CHester
County Chapter 74; PERI, Township Trustees regular
meets at I p.m. at Meigs monthly meeting, 7 p.m.,
Saturday, June 2
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. Couniy Multipurpose Senior Chester Town Hall.
-Ravenswood
Midget Center. Paula Eichinge·r to
Fpotball League signups will speak on "Home Health:
be held from 2 to 4 p.m . at What to Do, Who is Eligible
l:lenry J. Kaiser Elementary and How it Works."
Saturday, June 2
Cafeteria. C-Team weight.
REEDSVILLE- Family
130 pounds; B-Team, 165;
Fun Day, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.,
A-Team, 190-200.
Reedsville Church of the
. SALEM . CENTER Nazarene. Games. door
Moqday, June 4
~tar Grange #778 and Star
food.
Clowns
RUTLAND - Rutland prizes,
Junior Grange #878 meet in lbwnship Trustees meet in Serving Christ Ministry perregular session with potluck regular session, 5 p.m., forms at I p.m. Contact
supper at 6:30 p.m., fol- Rutland Fire Station.
Tami Putman , 378-6422.
lowed by a meeting at 7:30
Monday, June 4
LETART FALLS
p.m. Bring food bank items. Letart Township Trustees,
MIDDLEPORT - Revival
Monday, June 3
at Old Bethel Freewill Baptist
12 noon, office building.
POMEROY
The
Church,
Route 7 and Story's
RACINE - American
Run
Road,
through June 8, 7
Meigs County Cancer Municipal
Power,Ohio,
Initiative (MCCii will 111eet public meeting on landfill p.m. each evening. Evangelist
ai noon in the conference permits, 7 p.m., Southern Norman Taylor; pastor Ralph
Butcher.
room of the Meigs County Elementary School.
Senior Citizens Center, new
SYRACUSE - Sutton
ll)embers welcome.
Township Trustees, 9 a.m.,
.
Tuesday, June 5
Syracuse Village Hall.
MIDDLEPORT
Tuesday, June 5
Friday, .June 8
Monthly
meeting
of
REEDSVILLE -Olive
REEDSVILLE - Lillian
· Middleport Masonic Lodge, Township Trustees meet in Pickens of Reedsville will
7:30 p.m., with work in the regular session, 7:30 ·p.m., celebrate her 90th birthday
Entered Appn1ntice degree. Olive Township Garage.
on June 8. Cards may be
Refreshments.
· POMEROY
- Meigs sent to her at Arcadia
.TUPPERS PLAINS County Board of Elections Nursing and Rehabilitation
()astern· High School Music regular meeting, 8:30 a.m.
Center, East Second Street,
Boosters meet at 7 p.m., band
PAGEVILLE - Scipio . Coolville, Ohio 45723.

;;ALFRED Thelma
f1:enderson gave the mission
report on Russia at the
(8cent meeting of the Alfred
United Methodist Women,
lleld recently at.the church.
:\: The mission report was
(i'om "Response" magazine,
''Economic Development in
Rural Russia." The Rural
Qhaplains Association, which
iJ&gt; related to the Office of
Town and Country Ministries
di the United Methodist
General Board of Global
~inistries, is a voluntary
association of laity and clergy
@!led to rural ministry.
:-· During· visits to rural
~ssia, they saw the need for
~oilomic development and
~gan providing small grants
~r this. One example was
~oviding $2,000 for tools to
~lp the Holy Trinity United
~ethodist
Church
in
~holsky to make needed
(ipairs to homes in the area.
lhe church loaned tools to

'

2007

What to do with clueless spouse?

Clubs and
.organizations

_

'

Friday, June t,

ANNIE'·s MAILBO·X

....

FOB. 11117' .IBIS YDII

''

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Wide

1:81111

PageA3

·Saturdav, June 2nd
********************

.POO BAH
Saturdav, June 8th

Check out our weekly lineup!
Monday· 50C Draft
Tuesday- Karaoke w/Ron Campbell
$1.00 Cover 9pm-1am
Wednesday- Mens Night -Pool tournament
$5.00 enlry 8pm - SOy off all drinks 10pm- 2a;n

Thursday- Ladies Night w/DJ
$1.00 cover 9pm- 2am
509 off all drinks- 1Opm- 2am
ErlliBY · OJ 9pm - 2am
Saturday • Live Bands
Sunday - $1.00 Beer- $1.25 Coronas

CR 7A • Pomeroy, OH • 7.40-992.;5787

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�..... " ... .

The Daily Sentinel

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•

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PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Friday,Junet,~oo7

The Daily Sentinel

BYTHEBEND

Community Calendar
BY GREG BLUESTEIN "AND
DEVUN BARRETT
~SSOCIATEO

for seve'ral weeks," hospital moved from an upscale conspokesman
William dominium complex in anticipation of his wedding, forAilstener said.
. Speaker's father-in-law mer neighbors said. He also
has worked at the CDC for wrote in an application to
32 years and is in t~e become a board member of
Division of Tuberculosis his condo association that
Elimination , where he he was going to Vietnam for
works with TB and other five weeks as part of the
organisms. He has co- Rotary Club to act as an'
authored papers on diabetes, ambassador.
TB and other infectious disHis wife, Sarah, is a thirdeases. .
· year law student at Atlanta's'
"As pan of my job, I am Emory University.
regularly tested for.TB. I do
·'He's a greai ' guy.'
not have TB, nor have I ever Gregarious," said Pam
had TB," he said in a state- Hood, a former neighbor,
ment. "My son-in-law's TB "He's a· wonderful guy. Just.
did not originate from a very, very pleasant man."
myself or the CDC's labs,
Health officials in North'
which operate under the America and Europe . are
highest levels of biosecuri- . now trying to 'track down
ty." ·
.
about 80 passengers who sat
In a brief telephone inter- near him on his two transview with the AP, Cooksey Atlantic flights, and they
said that he gave Speaker want passenger lists from
"fatherly advice" wheri he four shorter flights he took
learned 'the young man had while in. Europe.
contracted the disease.
However, other passen·
"I'm hoping and praying gers are not considered al'
that he's getting the proper hi gh ·risk of infection
· treatment, that my daughter because tests indicated the
is holding up mentally and amount of TB bacteria in
physically," Cooksey said. Speaker was low, said DT._
"Had I known that · my Martin Cetron, director of
daughter was in any risk. I the CDC's division of glob-:
would not allow her to trav- al migration and quarantine.'
el."
Health Jaw experts said
According to a biography · Speaker could be sue&lt;l if.
posted on a Web site con- others contract TB.
•·nected with Speaker's law
'There are a number of
firm, the young lawyer· cases that say a person who
·attended the U.S. Naval negligently transmits an
Academy, graduated from infectious disease could be
the University of Georgia held liable," said Lawrence .
with a degree in. finance, Gostin, a public health Ia~.
and
then
attended expert at Georgetow~:
University of Georgia's law University. "So long as lt&amp;school. He is in private knew it was infectious, and
practice with his father, Ted knew about the appropri.ai&lt;
Speaker, an · unsuccessful behavior but failed to coni'
candidate for a judgeship in ply, he coul.d be he!~ liable.'~
2004.
. . Speaker told The Atlanta
Speaker's father told Journal-Constitution that he:
WSB-TV: :'The way he's wasn't coughing and that
been shown and spoken doctors initially did nM
about on TV, it's like a ter- order him not to fly and:
rorist traveling around the only suggested he put off:
world escaping ·authorities. his long-planned wedding.
It's blown out of proportion "We headed off to Greece
immensely."
thinking everything's fine,';
Andrew Speaker recently he told the newspaper.

PRESS WRITERS

ATLANTA - A. globetrotting Atlanta lawyer with
a dangerous strain of tuberculosis was allowed back
into ttie U.S. by a border
inspector who disregarded a
computer warning to stop
him and don protective
gear,
official£
said
Thursday.
The inspector has been
removed from border 'duty.
The unidentified inspector explained that he was no
doctor but that the infected
man seemed perfectly
healthy and that he thought
the warning was merely
"discretionary," officials
briefed on the case told The
As'sociated Press. They
spoke on condition of
anonymity because the matter is still under investigation.
The patient was identifie'd
as Andrew Speaker, a 31year-old personal injury
lawyer who returned last
week from his wedding and
honeymoon trip through
Italy, the Greek isles and
other spots in Europe. His ·
new father-in-law, Robert
C. Cooksey, is a CDC
. microbiologist whose spec.ialty is TB and other bactena.
Cooksey would not comment on whether he reported his son-in-law to federal
health authorities. Not did
the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention
explain how the case came
to their attention. However,
Cooksey said that neither he
nor his CDC laboratory was
the source of his son-inlaw's TB.
.
Speaker is · now under
quarantine at ·a hospital in
.Denver. He is the first
infected person to be quarantined by the U.S. government since I 963.
The disclosure that the
patient is a lawyer -· and
specifically a personal
injury lawyer ~ outraged
many people on the Internet
and elsewhere. Some travelers who flew on the same
planes with Speaker angrily
accused him of selfishly
putting hundreds. of people's lives in danger.
·"It's still very sc~," 21year~old ·Laney Wiggins,
one of more than two dozen
Univetsity
of
South
Carolina-Aiken students
who are gettin~ skin tests
for TB. ''That IS an outrageous number of people that
he was .very rec}dess with
their health. It's not fair. It's

AP photo

This 2005 photo made available Thursday bY. the Centers for · Disease Control and
Prevention shows Dr. Robert Cooksey, a CDC microbiologist- specializing in the spread of
tuberculosis and other bacteria. Cooksey is the father-in-law of Andrew Speaker, the honeymooner quarantined May 25 with a dangerous strain of. tuberculosis. In a statement
issued through the CDC, Cooksey said that neither he nor his CDC laboratory was the
source of his son-in-law's TB .
selfish."
Speaker said in a newspaper interview that he knew
he had TB when he flew
from Atlanta to Europe in
mid-May for his wedding
and honeymoon, but that he
did.not find out until he was
already in Rome that it was
an extensively . drug-resistant strain considered especially dangerous.
Despite warnings from
federal health officials not
to board another long flight,
he flew home for treatment,
fearing he wouldn't survive
if he didn't reach the u.s~.
he said. He said he tried to
sneak home by way of
Canada instead of flying
directly into the U.S.
He was quarantined May
25, a day after he was
allowed to pass through the
border · . crossing
at
Champlain, N.Y., along the
Canadian border.
The
inspector
ran
Speaker's passport through
a computer, and a warning
- including instructions to
hold the traveler, don a protective mask in dealing with
him, and telephone health
authorities - popped up,
officials said. About a
minute later, Speaker was
instead cleared to continue
on his journey, according to
officials familiar with the
records.
The Homeland Security
Department is investigating.
The border officer "who
questioned that person is at
present performing admin.

istrative duties." said
Security
Homeland
spokesman Russ Knocke,
adding that the officer is not
checking people at the land
border crossing.
Colleen Kelley, president
of the union that represents
customs and border agents,
declined to comment on the
specifics of the case, but
said "public health issues
were not receiving adequate
attention and training" within the agency.
On Thursday, a tan and
healthy-looking Speaker
was flown from Atlanta to
Denver, accompanied by his
wife and federal marshals,
to Denver's National Jewish
Medical and Research
Center, where doctors
planned to isolate him and
treat him with oral and
intravenous antibiotics.
Dr. Charles Daley, chief
of the hospital's infectiousdisease division, said he is
optimistic Speaker can be
cured because he is believed
.to be in the early stages of
the disease.
Dr. Gwen · Huitt of
National Jewish . described
Speaker as "a young,
healthy individual" who is
"doing extremely well."
"By conventional methods that we traditionally use
in tlte public health arena ...
he would be considered low
infectivity at this point in
time," she said. "He is not
coughing, he is healthy, he
· does not have a fever. "
Doctors hope also to

'

Amid little sign of progress, EU-Iranian
nuclear negotiators ·agree to meet again
BY GEORGE JAHN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

--------MADRID, Spain - Top
envoys for Iran and the
European Union ended talks
Thursday with little indication they were closer to
resolving a deadlock over
Tehran's refusal to suspend
uranium enrichment.
Still, the two agreed to
meet briefly · again Friday
and for a longer follow-up
session within two weeks.
"Sometimes we are not
able to move the process as
we like, but in any case, the
atmosphere continues to be
very positive," said EU foreign policy chief Javier
Solana after meeting with
Ali Larijani, Iran 's ranking
nuclear negotiator. Solana's
comment
appeared to be tacit
acknowledgment that Iran
refused to give way on international demands it suspend
enrichment or face further
U.N. Security Council sanelions.
'
Both Solana and Larijani
said the main focus of their 4
1/2 hour talks were "outstanding issues" with the
International Atomic Energy
Agency. The IAEA has
called on Tehran to clear up
long-tenn questions it has
about the Islamic republic's
nuclear program.
. An official familiar with
the talks who refused to be
identified because of their
confipentiality suggested
that meant Solana and
Larijani decided to shift to
Jess controversial ground
because of lack of agreement
on how to iaclde the issue of

...

enrichment suspension.
· · Larijani spoke of "some
useful ideas that both sides
introduced," and "common
ground" without going into
detail. Solana said he and
Larijani had "an exchange of
ideas on how to move the
process" forward, and spoke
of a "good atmosphere."
Both men said their aides
would meet in about a week
to prepare for another
Solana-Larijani meeting in
about two 'weeks' time. They ·
also planned a brief session
Friday.
With both Iran and the
United States voicing hardline position s ahead of
Thursday's session, expectalions were already muted
. before the two men began
their discussions at a former
hunting estate on the outskirts of Madrid.
Diplomats told The
Associated
Press
that
although Tehran recently
suggested it was ready to
discuss a partial suspension
of enrichment, the West did
not resp~md, and Iran has
since Withdrawn its offer.
Secretary
of
State
Condoleezza Rice, speaking
in Vienna, Austria, ahead of ·
the Madrid talks, said the
onus was on Iran.
"I think it's time for Iran to
change its tactics," Rice ·
said. If Iran does so, she
said, "then we are prepared
to ... sit with Iran a'nd talk
about whatever Iran would
like to talk about.
"But that can't be done
when Iran continues to pur· sue, to try to perfect technologies that are going to
lead to a nuclear weapon,"

Rice said, alluding to the
U.S. assertion that Tehran is
seeking the cover of a peaceful nuclear program to rriake
such arms.
Larijani, in comments to
the Iranian state news
agency before leaving for
Spain, said: "Suspension is
not the right solution · for
solving Iran's nuclear issue."
But Rice said Iran had no
option but to "suspend, to
demonstrate that it is in fact
not seeking a nuclear
weapon under cover of (a)
civil nuclear power" program.
"The question isn't why
won't we talk to Tehran; the
question is why doesn 't
Tehran want to talk to us,"
she said.
A year ago, she reached
out to Washington's longtime adversary with an offer
to talk "any time, any place."
Iran did not accept Rice's
offer for the first Cabinetlevel direct talks in nearly
three decades, because of the
condition to halt enrichment.
There is ·a growing perception among some European
nations that the five perma~
nent U.N. Security Council
nations plus Germany
should drop their full suspension . precondition for
starting talks on a package of
incentives. The powers are
in the forefront of attempts
to engage Iran.
At talks 'last month in
Turkey, Larijani and Solana
agreed to meet again to try to
bridge the divide between
Iran's insistence on its right
to enrich i!nd Security
Council demands for a
freeze.

determine where he contracted the disease, which
has been found around the
world and exists in pockets
in Russia and Asia.
Speaker's tuberculosis
was discovered when he
had a chest X-ray in January
for a rib injury, Huitt said.
His care - which could
also include surgery could
cost
between
$250,000 to $350,000, she
said.. The air ambulance
flight and other costs of
transporting him from
Atlanta Jo Denver on
Thursday morning totaled
another $12,000, said · a
spokeswoman for Kaiser
Permanente, · · Speaker's
health ·insurer, whtch paid
the bill.
He will be kept in a special unit with a ventilation
syste·m to prevent the
escape of genns. "He may
not reave that room much

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45631
740-992-2155
'

Church events

Public meetings

Birthdays

Holzer donates to Relay

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I recently
went out of town, and my
husband of 36 years stayed
home to work . When I
returned, I found that most.
of the house had been
cleimed and the entire contents of the top of my dresser had been dumped into a.
cardboard box.
He claimed he wanted the
house to be clean for guests.
However, · our bedroom is
upstairs, and no one sees it. I
found out later that someone
from his office was brought
in to perform this service.
Annie, I feel disrespected
and betrayed . It's like I've
been declared dead or something. There is not a co m~.
pin or book of mine on di~­
play in th at room . I am so
angry. If he didn't like the
mess, he should have given
me a time frame in which lo
straighten it up on my own.
It's not like I sit around eating bonbons. When I'm not
working, I volunteer three
days a week for a nonprofit
organization that pro vides
therdpy services for handicapped children.
I am also embarrassed
that everyone in his· office
could be gossi ping abo ut
the inner wqrkings of my
· Imine. I don't want anything
to do with any of them ever
again, but that is impossible. I work there part time.
I have. tried talking this
over with my husband, but
he only responds, "Sorry."
He feels he had good intentions, so I should just get
over it. He is so clueless.
Annie, what do you think?
in
Boxed
Out
Harrisburg, Pa.
Dear Boxed Out: We
know some readers will
think your husband cleaned
the house to disguise evidence of a tryst, but we're
going to assume he was .
simply tired of the clutter
and thought your absence
was a good opportunity to
remove it. We don't blame
you for being upset. This

Beth Sergenf/photo ·

HOlzer Clinic Meigs Branch. the Holzer Center for Cancer Care and Holzer Medical Center
each made a $500 donation to the upcoming Meigs County Relay for Life. Here, (from left)
HOlzer Clinic Meigs Branch Manager Diana Jeffers and Ken Moore from the Holzer Center
Fer Cancer Care present the donation to Steve Beha and Terri Fife of the Meigs County
· Ainerican Cancer Society Taskforce. Beha said this is the third year in a row that the \askforce has received a donation from the three "Holzer" agencies. Relay begins next Friday
at the Meigs County Fairgrounds. Holzer Clinic Meigs Branch will also be passing out door
ilrizes and have an informational booth at the event.
'

'

. members who traveled to
. MoscO\v for the summer to
find employment.
Along wi1h economic
growth, the church has also
grown.
. Cary Frith had the program,
"Lent and Easter, Rise and
Shine for Christ has Risen!"
She read a spiritual message,
"Easter Revisited." The focus
statement was read by all
members. Luke 24: 1-12 was
read by Mary Jo Buckley.
Cary, Mary Jo Barringer and
Mary Jo Buckley participated
in the readings. The group
read ':Easter Vigil" to end the
program.
Nine members and one
guest attended. Henderson
had prayer before the meal
served by Janice Weber.
Mary Jo Barringer conducted the meeting, wh ich
opened with the reading of
The·UMW Purpose:
. Members reported 70
friendship calls. Weber read

'·

Pn Ashland dean's list
::POMEROY - Andrea Burdette, Pomeroy, was named to
aie dean 's Jist for the spring term at Ashland University.
~e is an art education major.
,
·:Students on the dean 's list are enrolled full-time and earn
a:gradt; point a,vera~e o.f 3.5 0~ better or a 4.0 gradin~ sc~Je.
:-Ashland Umversity I S a pnvate, comprehenstve mslltu(lon located between Cleveland and Columbus. On-campus
~ilrollment is nearly 2,150 undergraduate students while
'Jl(al enrollment, including graduate and off-campus cenfers, is more than 6,500.
.
·

,·r-

..

Holter
makes dean's list
·•

::ADA - pen A. Holter, son of Roy and Valerie Holter,
3ll421 Dairy Lane, Pomeroy. has been named to the Ohio
~orthern University deans' list ~or the spring quarter 2~l06Q9. He is a fifth year pharmacy maJor. The deans hst
lJicludes students who attain a grade point average of 3.5 or
better on a 4.0 grading system.

the ·minutes and Treasurer
Osie Mae Foll rod gave her ·
report.
Members signed the
prayer calendar birthday
card for Vickie Sigman of
Winston/Salem, N.C., who
is involved with speciali zed
ministries, church and community workers.
Foll rod shared correspondence from Tom and Sharon
Crowe, retired missionaries
to the Democratic Republic
of Congo.
Barringer, B1.1ckley, Sarah
Caldwell and Weber will
attend the spring retreat at
The
Plains
United
Methodist Church.

was an intrusion into your
private space, and to have it
handled by someone from
the ortice was insensitive.
We suggest putting a smile
on your face and pretendi ng
your' mess was amusing and
you're grateful it's been
taken ~Jff your shoulders.
You' ll · fee l less embarrassed. and so will the staff.
Dear Annie: I was recently in my favorite coffee
shop, sitting next to a
Polynesian family that
included a daughter of per. haps 8 years of age who was
sporting a cultural bicep !attoo, identi cal to one on her
father's arm. The gi rl
seemed very well adjusted,
energetic and engaged with
her family.
.
After they left the restaurant, two women at an adjacent table talked about
reporting the parents for
child abuse because they
allowed the girl to be tattooed. What is your take on
the tattooing or piercings of
young children? - Don in
Redondo Beach, Calif,
Dear Don: People are
entitled to express their cultural heritage. And surely
you must know people
whose toddler daughters
have pierced ears (and dia"
mond studs to go in them).
This is not intended to
inflict harm, and in the case
of an 8-year-old, the child
often makes the request.
Naturally, when it's simply
fashion and not heritage, .we
hope parents will wait until
the child is old enough to
make his or her wishes
known - and respected.

Dear Annie: I read the
letter abo ut the daughter
whose mother used her identity to get credit. My father
died three years ago. My
unemployed sister offered to
help Mom with her finances.
Well, Sis helped herself to
$250.000. She transferred
money to her own account,
had checks written up with
her name on them, cashed
Dad's IRA s and opened
credit cards with payments
coming
from
Mom's
account.
Of course, now we will
have to file charges against
my sister, and I worry what
will happen to Mom down
the road. She will need that
money. Warn your readers
that this can happen . Too Trusting
Dear
Trusting:
Situations like this are terribly sad because they
involve a loss of trust
between family members.
It's usually best when more
than one person is keeping
an eye on the financial
arrangements. Thanks for
the red alert.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime .editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e--mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Atmie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, JL
606/J_ To find out more
about An11ie 's Mailbox,
a11d read features by other
Creators . Syndicate writers
and cartoo11ists, visit the
Creators Sy11dicale Web
page at www.creators.com.

~nnua\ Kids Fishin9
June 9th, 8am- 12pm

1

Derby

At
Meigs County Fish &amp; Game
Free to Kid.l' '
0 -15 Years

Door Priz.es
Free Food &amp; Drink
Info Call 740-992-0026

JF~-... ..:-21'r~

· · · Good
Welcomes

NIV

·PMw hears report from Russia

·~ HELPFUL VA]qD .SALE KIT

'·

room. Fair booth discussion. Township Trustees, 6:30
Friday, June 8
p.m., Pageville Town ijall.
POMEROY
-Meigs
CHESTER - CHester
County Chapter 74; PERI, Township Trustees regular
meets at I p.m. at Meigs monthly meeting, 7 p.m.,
Saturday, June 2
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. Couniy Multipurpose Senior Chester Town Hall.
-Ravenswood
Midget Center. Paula Eichinge·r to
Fpotball League signups will speak on "Home Health:
be held from 2 to 4 p.m . at What to Do, Who is Eligible
l:lenry J. Kaiser Elementary and How it Works."
Saturday, June 2
Cafeteria. C-Team weight.
REEDSVILLE- Family
130 pounds; B-Team, 165;
Fun Day, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.,
A-Team, 190-200.
Reedsville Church of the
. SALEM . CENTER Nazarene. Games. door
Moqday, June 4
~tar Grange #778 and Star
food.
Clowns
RUTLAND - Rutland prizes,
Junior Grange #878 meet in lbwnship Trustees meet in Serving Christ Ministry perregular session with potluck regular session, 5 p.m., forms at I p.m. Contact
supper at 6:30 p.m., fol- Rutland Fire Station.
Tami Putman , 378-6422.
lowed by a meeting at 7:30
Monday, June 4
LETART FALLS
p.m. Bring food bank items. Letart Township Trustees,
MIDDLEPORT - Revival
Monday, June 3
at Old Bethel Freewill Baptist
12 noon, office building.
POMEROY
The
Church,
Route 7 and Story's
RACINE - American
Run
Road,
through June 8, 7
Meigs County Cancer Municipal
Power,Ohio,
Initiative (MCCii will 111eet public meeting on landfill p.m. each evening. Evangelist
ai noon in the conference permits, 7 p.m., Southern Norman Taylor; pastor Ralph
Butcher.
room of the Meigs County Elementary School.
Senior Citizens Center, new
SYRACUSE - Sutton
ll)embers welcome.
Township Trustees, 9 a.m.,
.
Tuesday, June 5
Syracuse Village Hall.
MIDDLEPORT
Tuesday, June 5
Friday, .June 8
Monthly
meeting
of
REEDSVILLE -Olive
REEDSVILLE - Lillian
· Middleport Masonic Lodge, Township Trustees meet in Pickens of Reedsville will
7:30 p.m., with work in the regular session, 7:30 ·p.m., celebrate her 90th birthday
Entered Appn1ntice degree. Olive Township Garage.
on June 8. Cards may be
Refreshments.
· POMEROY
- Meigs sent to her at Arcadia
.TUPPERS PLAINS County Board of Elections Nursing and Rehabilitation
()astern· High School Music regular meeting, 8:30 a.m.
Center, East Second Street,
Boosters meet at 7 p.m., band
PAGEVILLE - Scipio . Coolville, Ohio 45723.

;;ALFRED Thelma
f1:enderson gave the mission
report on Russia at the
(8cent meeting of the Alfred
United Methodist Women,
lleld recently at.the church.
:\: The mission report was
(i'om "Response" magazine,
''Economic Development in
Rural Russia." The Rural
Qhaplains Association, which
iJ&gt; related to the Office of
Town and Country Ministries
di the United Methodist
General Board of Global
~inistries, is a voluntary
association of laity and clergy
@!led to rural ministry.
:-· During· visits to rural
~ssia, they saw the need for
~oilomic development and
~gan providing small grants
~r this. One example was
~oviding $2,000 for tools to
~lp the Holy Trinity United
~ethodist
Church
in
~holsky to make needed
(ipairs to homes in the area.
lhe church loaned tools to

'

2007

What to do with clueless spouse?

Clubs and
.organizations

_

'

Friday, June t,

ANNIE'·s MAILBO·X

....

FOB. 11117' .IBIS YDII

''

'

Wide

1:81111

PageA3

·Saturdav, June 2nd
********************

.POO BAH
Saturdav, June 8th

Check out our weekly lineup!
Monday· 50C Draft
Tuesday- Karaoke w/Ron Campbell
$1.00 Cover 9pm-1am
Wednesday- Mens Night -Pool tournament
$5.00 enlry 8pm - SOy off all drinks 10pm- 2a;n

Thursday- Ladies Night w/DJ
$1.00 cover 9pm- 2am
509 off all drinks- 1Opm- 2am
ErlliBY · OJ 9pm - 2am
Saturday • Live Bands
Sunday - $1.00 Beer- $1.25 Coronas

CR 7A • Pomeroy, OH • 7.40-992.;5787

..

'W il

�,.,

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

'

Today is Friday, June I, the 152nd day of 2007. There are
213 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June I, 1813, the mortally wounded commander of
the U.S. frigate Chesapeake, Captain James Lawrence,
said, "Don't give up the ship" during a losing battle with a
British frigate.
·
On this date:
In 1533, Anne Boleyn, .the second wife of King Henry
VOl, was Frowned as Queen Consort of England.
In 1796, Tennessee became the 16th state.
In 1801, Mormon leader Brigham Young was born in
Whitingham, Vt.
·
In 1868, James Buchanan, the 15th president of the
United States, died near Lancaster, Pa.
In 1926, actress Marilyn Monroe was born in Los
Angeles.
In 1943, a civilian flight from Lisbon to London was shot
down by . the Germans during World War ll, killing all
aboard, including actor Leslie Howard.
In 1967, the Beatles released their album, "Sergeant
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band."
In 1980, CNN made its broadcast debut.
Ten years ago: Betty Shabazz, the widow of Malcolm X,
was fatally burned in a frre set by her 12-year-old.grandson
in her New York apartment. The Broadway show "Titanic;·
won five Tony Awards, including best musical. The
Chicago Tribune published a column by Mary Schmich
which urged the graduating class of 1997, among other
things, to "wear sunscreen" (the tongue-in-cheek essay
ended up being wrongly attributed to author Kurt Vonnegut
on the Internet).
One year ago: Six world powers, including the U.S.,
agreed on a package of incentives to persuade Iran to halt
its uranium enrichment program. The Iraqi government
announced its own investigation into reports that U.S.
Marines had killed unarmed civilians in Haditha. A contrite
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers took responsibility for the
flooding of New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina. Seven fam·
ily members were shot to death in an Indianapolis house.
(Two suspects were later charged.)
.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Richard Erdman is 82. Actor
Andy Griffith is 81 . Actor Edward Woodward is 77. Singer
Pat Boone is 73. Actor-writer-director Peter Masterson is
73. Actor Morgan Freeman is 70. Actor Rene Auberjonois
is 67. Opera singer Frederica von Stade is 62. Actor Brian
Cox is 61. Rock musician Ron Wood is 60. Actor Jonathan
Pryce is 60. Actor Powers Boothe is 58. Actress Gemma
Craven is 57. Singer Graham Russell (Air Supply) is 57.
Country singer Ronnie Dunn (Brooks and Dunn) is 54.
Actress Lisa Hartman Black is 51. Singer-musician Alan
Wilder is 48. Rock musician Simon Gallup (The Cure) is
47. Country musician Richard Comeaux (River Road) is
46. Actor-singer Jason Donovan is 39. Actress Teri Polo is
38. Model-actress Heidi Klum is 34. Singer Alanis
Morissette is 33. TV host Damien Fahey is 27. Actor Taylor
Handley is 23.
·
. Thought for Today: "Peace without justice is tyranny."William Allen White, American writer and newspaper edi·
tor (1868-1944).
·

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
utters to the · editor ari welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All, letters are ·subjectto editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept·
ed for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
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Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.

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'2(;107·

.WHO's CAMPAIGNING ON THE

FIRST ... WHAT'S ONTHE SECOND
&amp; I DON'T KNOW ~s
ON THE THIRD ...

•

Ala. high school graduation with
empty chairs for tornado vicl i•ns

Board

r~r

JAI

7

PIK[

A~~I~

The (crimeless' victim
In recent years, we have
Gonzales was . hazy about
all been introduced to the
the details, explaining that
concept of the "victimless
he personally had not parcrime." 'Fhis is a situation in
ticipated actively in the
which a crime seems to
process.
have been committed, but
That was enough for
William
there is no apparent victim.
Schumer. If Gonlales could
Rusher
That raises interesting quesbe shown to have been per·
tions for law school classes
sonally to blame, a ·major
to chew on - e.g., ought
campaign·to force his resigthe perpetrator of the crime
nation could be mounted,
to be punished?
United States.
and his downfall would cerNow another sort of
Now, U.S. attorneys serve tainly · damage President
anoma! y is appearing, "at the pleasure of the pres- Bush (who is, after all, the
which might be caUed the ident," and he (and his Democrats" real target).
"crimeless victim." This is authorized agents) have the Newly invested with the
someone whom the govern- power to fire orie or more of subpoena power, thanks to
ment, or some branch of it, them for just about any rea- the Democrats" takeover of
is determined to regard as a son, including the way he or Congress last November,
criminal, and punish as . she cuts their hair. It would, . they demanded that he testi·
such, even th·ough he or she however, be inappropriate, fy before the commi.ttee
has not in fact committed if not illegal, ,to fire one of under oath (to which he
any crime. The first notable them simply because he was agreed, though as a member
example of a "crimeless suspected of being too eager of the executive branch he
victim" is Attorney General to prosecute Republicans, cannot be compelled to do
Alberto Gonzales.
or too forgiving of culpable so). There followed the
Gonzales has been sub- Democrats. That is what above-mentioned grilling,
~ected to a merciless grilling
Schumer and his colleagues · in which once again
by the Democrats in the believe, or · profess to Gonzales" ·answers were
U.S. Senate; most notably believe, was the motive deemed unsatisfactory. His
Sen. Charles . Schumer, D· .behind the dismissal of one recollections were vague,
N.Y., and hi s fellow or ' more of the aforemen- and his memory poor. The
Democratic members of the tioned six.
Democrats were furious.
Senate
Judiciary
Logically, the¥ (and the
But the simple fact is that
Committee. They have liberal media who serve Gonzales has not been
zeroed in on the dismissal · their interests) decided that proven to have done 'lOY·
by the Bush administration the chief villain must have thing wrong - anything at
of ·six (or, depending on been · Gonzales, since the all. The dismissals were, as
how you count, seven) of dismissals occurred in his he testified, decided on by
the 93 U.S. attorneys scat· department and on hi s subordinates, and for reatered around the country watch. In his first comments sons that were by no means
who are charged with prose- to the media, when they . necessarily inappropriate.
cuting offenses against the inquired about the firings ~ (One US. attorney, for

example, seemed unwilling,
for reasons of her own, to
prosecute people who
smuggle illegal aliens in
from Mexico.) Last week,
Congress finally found a
single subordinate Justice
official, Monica Goodling,
who - after first threaten·
ing to plead the Fifth and
receiving immunity for her
testimony - told the members that she had indeed, ·in
a few cases, asked "inappro·
priate" political questions
about the U.S. attorneys"
political views, and now
regretted it.
But she .also flatly denied
ever having discussed the
dismissals with either
Bush"s top political advi· ·
sor, Karl Rove, or White
House Counsel Harriet
Miers (whom the senators
would also deru:ly love to
skewer), let alone Gonzales.
Nonetheless, the hullabaloo .
is mounting, and the
demand is for Gonzales"
head.
'
So poor Alberto Gonzales
has become Exhibit A fur
that latest legal anomaly, tjle
crimeless victim. Do not
send to know for whom the
bell tolls - next time, ·it
may toll for thee.
. :
(Willidm Rusher is ·a
Distinguished Fellow ~f *e
Claremont Institute -for *e
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)
:

WANT TO FEEL YOIING AGAIN?

tions in Franklin, Hamilton
and Mijrlon Counties. These
cases have resulted in the sus· from Page A1
pects being charged with more
than 200 wildlife violations.
House Bill 238 will now
In addition to the alleged
, .· poaching ring in Meigs, the be assigned to a committee,
·1egislation is also a response to where hearings will begin in
,. similar
poaching
investiga- the coming weeks.
.
.

lET US HELP

.;.Poaching
'.

n&amp;R
1\tlarkel
2nd Street • Syracuse, Ohio
740-992-4242
(/JtUI!J ~6

IJ1Itllll- .i OW/
. ~ q/1. 9ot 1/ouJ- Od .i 'OtJ.&amp;. ~
~ IJ1/ut ~ CAu4t. .:s)uaa'6
I '(//uJir. fJo04D
IPNW. qn. 'Otd.w UJIIDmul ·

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

Middleport .
/f4/e.o.we.f' 8aoL
Strange Kandy
Saturday, June 2nd· 9 pm- lam
Dollar Beer Sunday!
50 Cent Draft Every Tuesday Night!
Live Music By Troll
Every Wednesday Night!

_

TODAY IN HISTORY

,

- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

,

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

Brunner said she is notifying the employees who
received the bonuses and as!&lt;·
ing them to voluntarily return
the money. At Brunner's
request, Taylor already is
conducting a financial review
of the office for Blackwell 's
last four months in office.
Blackwell gave parting
payments totaling $80, 186
to 19 top staffers. The bonuses were "in essence a gift Or
gratuity to employees, who
were planning to leave the
office, for the past performance of their duties for
AP photo
which they already had been Enterprise High School seniors walk past the diplomas and gowns of the two seniors killed in the March 1 tornado that
compensated," Dann said.
hit the school. The graduation ceremonies were held at Enterprise High School Thursday in Enterprise, Ala.
"The employees, provided
nothing in return for the payments, and thus, it cannot be
said that the bonuses were
for the primary benefit'of the
.public or to further the efficient operation and management of the office," he said.
me of it. But what happened Rainer said. "I loved them less," she said.
Bv BOB JOHNSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Her most vivid memories
was for a reason and every· before March I. That day
junior varsity; Chris Shank,
one came out stronger," changed our. lives forever. I of March I come from the
boys Middle School, 7th
ENTERPRISE, Ala.
told them we've got to keep moments after the storm .
Miller said.
grade; and Charles Knopp, The senior class that valewl1en she and others ran
Earlier, senior Kayla living off love and hugs."
boys Middle School ,
from PageA1
dictorian Juli.e Boyd said Boroff said she was glad
Enterprise High students outside and started helping
Hired on supplemental would always be defined by there were empty chairs for finished the semester at a pull rubbl e off of other stucontracts
were
Mike the deadly tornado three Tompkins and Vidensek .
nearby community college, dents. She said the toughest
.. been in school administraChancey,
head
football
,
mo~ths
ago
graduated
and
an effort was made to part was when parents start·
"They definitely should be
.. tion a total ·of 36 years, II of
Rich
Blaettnar,
Ron
Hill
,
Thursday
night
amid
flashfix
the,
stadium for the grad- ed arriving, frantically look.part of it. They are part of our
which were in . West Rick Chancey, ·Tyson Lee,
ing
cameras.
balloons
and
uation
and
the Wildcats' fall ing for their children.
class," said Bowff. There
· Virginia, and in order to
Derek
Miller,
assistant
var"A mother asked if I knew
shouts
of
encu.uragement,
were about 340 diplomas football . season. Residents
retire in Ohio and get a full
sity
fpotball
;
Bryan
Zirkle
where
her son was. Luckily
but there were also two awarded Thursday night.
from · Enterprise and surretirement, he must 'lbuy"
and
Carson
Crow,
7th
and
I
knew
I had seen him .
empty
seats
in
memory
of
.communities
"We know they aren't rounding
time to qualify, "about three
8th
grade
football;
Mike
two seniors who died in the . here with us physically, but cleared the field of debris There was such a look of
years," he sai&lt;j. The proposmentally they are here and · - remains of the upper relief on her face. It \vas
al is that he would retire, and Kennedy, cross country and storm.
high
school
track;
Ron
Hill
Michael
D.
Tompkins,
I?,
they are in our hearts," said deck, roofing shingles, insu- something I hadn't seen
then immediately be rehired ·
and
Shannon
Souls
by,
assist
·
and
Jamie
Ann
Vidensek,
lation, tree limbs, car parts, before," Boroff said.
senior
Doug Brown.
to continue in the job.
hi
gh
.
school
track
;
Tim
Juniors James Foster and
17,
were
among
eight
stuschcol
supplies - to pre·
Principal
Rick
Rainer
said
Board members seemed
Dunn,
Middle
School
track,
Keefe
Gonzalez stood outdents
killed
March
I
when
.a
pare
it
for
the
ceremony.
his
life
was
changed
that
to express agreement to the
Jo
Dunn,
assistant;
Jeremy
side
the
stadium Thursday
hallway
collapsed
as
stuThe
stadium
got
a
coat
of
afternoon
when
he
helped
·
proposal and Norman
Grimm,
head
baseball;
Greg
and
watched
as final prepa·
dents
huddled
together
in
fresh
paint
and
the
freshly
pull
rubble
off
of
students
in
Humphreys, immediate past
Browning,
junior
varsity
rations
were
being
made for
the
corridor
as
the
tornado
mowed
football
field
was
the
collapsed
hallway.
But
president, described it as
baseball;
Mike
Kloes,
Vince
the
ceremony.
Gonzalez
had
struck.
On
the
two
empty
green
despite
the
pumhe
said
school
officials
tried
bein~ a. "good deal" for the
Rieber,
volunteer
assistant
a
car
totaled
by
the
storm
in
seat~
were
the
cap
and
gown
meling
it
received
from
the
to
keep
the
graduation
ceredistnct and a way of keep·
varsity
baseball;
Greg
the
high
school
parking
lot
storm
and
the
drought
that
that
Tompkins
and
Vidensek
mony
as
much
like
the
tra·
ing a good superintendent.
It was noted that this will Smith, Dakota Smith, vol- would have worn, along ditional ones that graduates has left most yards and and Foster remembered
. huddling in one of the ·
with their diplomas.
and their families have fields a dusty brown.
save the district money unteer junior varsity.
school's corridors and then
Tony
Dugan,
high
school
Boyd,
one
of
21
valedic·
Boroff
said
the
graduation
dreamed of for years.
since it avoids the process
scrambling outside to try to
golf;
Rick
Ash,
head
girls
·
ceremony
is
different.
from
torians, all with perfect 4.0
Unlike the school's prom,
of going through the adverhelp others.
volleyball,
Dale
Harrison,
the
one
she
.always
dreamed
grade-point averages, told where the food was pretising aRd interviewing
Fosrer said he's nor surMaria
Drenner.
about,
part
I
y
because
the
assistant;
her classmates the storm not pared by celebrity chef
process, and in all probabilprised
that the graduation is
ity setting a higher salary to Middle School girls volley· only destroyed the high Rachel Ray and pop singer seats reserved for Tompkins
gomg
on.
building,
but Mandy Moore made an and Vidensek were be empty.
attract someone qualified ball; Carl Wolfe, girls varsi- school
"It shows that everybody
But Boroff said the death
ty
basketball,
Della
Wolfe,
·
changed
their
lives
forever.
appearance, there were no
for the job. It was also
"None of the students celebrity guests at the grad- toll from the tornado could in Enterprise is nor going to
pointed out that Buckley assistant varsity, and Dennis
who
sat in the hallway that uation. Rainer, however, did have been worse and she is quit 1)0 matter what hapFlaherty,
assistant
girls
works without an assistant
day
envisioned
the tornado, read a letter from President thankful that she and the pens," he said. ,
junior
varsity
basketball;
superintendent, a position
or
Bryan
Drummnd,
.
girls
that
in
30
seconds
our Bush,
who
visited other graduates made it to
which most districts the size·
this day.
Middle
School
basketball;
11recious
Enterprise
High
Enterprise
after
the
storm.
of Meigs have. That posiSPRING VALLEY
"I' m excited about there
School
would
lay
in
ruin,"
David
Fife,
girls
softball,
"You
have
shown
lhe
01 u rH ul' J' ••
.:tion was eliminated as a
4..)b 4524 t~Sl ~ SOl
being
more
people
to
gradu·
Melanie
.
Blevins,
girls
Boyd
said.
.
world
that
adversity
can
:,money-saver for the district
FRI 6/1/07 · SUN 6/3107
Most of the speakers bring out the best in the ate, lhere could have been
-several years ago when junior varsity basketball:
WWW.SPRINGVALLEYCINEMA.COM
Thursday
night
promised
to
. American people," Bush
8oK Office Opens 0
:Wendy Halar resigned, and and Jan Haddox, Middle
6:00 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS
keep
their
lost
classmates
said
in
the
letter.
School
golf.
12:00 PM FOR DAILY MATINEES
those duties were assumed
Suianne Bent:i:, high always in their hearts.
Rainer met with many of
OPEN EVERYDAY FOR
by Buckley.
"To
Jamie
and
Mikey,
we
MATINEES
the
seniors
Wednesday,
durschool
newspaper
advi-sor;
More personnel matters
wish
you
were.
here.
We
will
ing
a
rehearsal
for
the
gradLinda
Lear,
Middle
School
Resignations accepted
during the meeting were newspaper advisor;· Ralph carry your memory with us uation .ceremony.
"I said 'I love you guys,"'
those of Tim Simpson as Werry, high school cheer- forever," said a farewell
Tri-County Gospel Sing
message
read
by
valedicto·
leader
advisor;
Lauren
Vo-Ag teacher; Kathy Reed
June 2 at 7:00 ~m
as senior class advisor, Hardgrove, middle school rians Jessica Bullinger and
Auditions:
Mary Stewart as junior · cheerleader advisor; Celia Melinda Gooch.
"The
Unsinkable
Molly
AT WORLDS END (PG13)
Parents cheered and
class advisor, and Joe McCoy, drama advisor;
12:30,
3:30, 6:30, 7:00, 9:30,
Brown"
Bailey as National Honor Denise Arnold , volunteer shouted when their chil1:00, 4:00, 7:00 &amp; 10:00
drens'
names
were
June 3 21!mz June 4-5 6 ~m
freshman class advisor.
.. Society advisor.
SHREK THE THIRD (PG)
announced
and
balloon
s
Judy McCarthy, National
Y!!lla Class Begins June 4
Hired
were
Sharon
. ·warner, Tammy Lavender, Honor Society advisor, were released into the air,
Wishful! Realities June 9
.:Mary Knopp, Angela senior class advisor; Donna but the graduates said the
Camp Melodrams:
. l:loalcraft, Karen Mullins, Wolf, student council advi- storm was never. far from
Theatre Camp
. and Kolleta Fridley as per- sor; Gloria VanReeth, junior their mind as they sat on the
June 11 ·July 7
618/07
. sonal assistants · to health class advisor; Jim Oliphant, football field surrounded by
The
Ariel-Dater
Hall
the
ruins
of
the
high
school.
,
SURF'S
UP
(PG)
quiz
team
advisor;
Carl
. handicapped students at the
428 Sec. Ave. Gallip ~~~ ~H
"I kept thinking that we ·
&amp; OCEAN'S THIRTEEN
rate of $9.19 per hour. Wolfe, athletic director/trea740·""-"-A RT&lt;; 1
7
·'Abigail Cauthorn and Kathy surer; Toney Dingess, band all survived - that it was
' Hudson were hired as sum- director; David Deem, amazing," said senior .Josh
., mer school teachers · in Nicole Mount, assistant Beene.
Emily Miller said she was
·English and Science with band directors, ·parttime;
"really
excited" to graduate,
·'funding to come from grant SulamJe Bentz, web design
but
kept
looking over at the
advisor; Mike Chancey
·~ources.
Neck pain
Low back pain
remains
of
the hi gh school.
· . Basketball coaching posi- summer field care; and Cliff
Pain associated
Leg pain
"The scenery reminded www.mydailysentinel.com
tions filled were Michael Kennedy, Kathryn Hill·
Headaches
·. Barnett, boys varsity assis· White and Mike Wilfong,
.
Numbnessffingling
tant; David Deem, boys guidance directors.
in 1he Arms &amp;

;

General Manager-News Editor

'· COLUMBUS (AP) 'Former Secretary of State
· Ken Blackwell , the unsuc. cessful Republican candi. d~te for ~overnor lasl year,
·d1d not have the authority to
· award $80,000 in bonuses
to employees before he left
office, Democ'ratic Attorney
: General Marc Dann says.
. Jennifer
Brunner,
.Blackwell's successor, has
. asked Auditor Mary Taylor ·
. .to declare that the bonuses
· · were an illegal expenditure
of public money so Dann's
· office can seek recovery.
· Brunner is . a Democrat.
: .Taylor is a Republican .
· "In our stewardship of
· public funds, we were con.terned that we had an oblig. ation to learn if these payments were legal, and if not,
. .if we should ·try to recover
Jhese taxpayer fund.s,"
. .Brunner said in a .statement.

.

Charlene Hoeflich

.

Dail Goodrich
Publisher

AG says Blackwell had no
authority to give staff bonuses

.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.COOLVILLE -Carol Sue Ayers, 33, of Colliers, W.Va.
· d1ed Tuesday, May 29, 2007 . . Arrangements will be
· announced by WhJte-Schwar£el Funeral Home in Coolville.

.

www.mydallyuntlnel.com

what is going on in their
lives and their faith, then
we will have accomplished
our main goal," said Steve
Chavis, who served as
media coordinator for the
1997 rally and is playing
the same role again.
The first rally foc!lsed
most of its energy on family issues and racial reconciliation ·and these subjects
will
surface
again.
· Kingham said Stand in 'the
Gap 2007 will also emphasize themes of loneliness,
complacency and disillusionment. But after looking
inward, men must find
ways to reach beyond their
own needs and help others.
Take, for example, all of
those Baby Boomers who
will soon face retirement.
"We · have to tell these
· men, 'Don't quit your jobs.
... Use your jobs and skills
in missions, relief and
development
projects
around the world. You can
help the widows. and chil·
dren,' " said Kingham.
"There are an kinds of ways
that men can offer a credible witness to what Jesus
Christ is doing in their
lives."
(Terry Mattingly is direc·
tor of the Washington
Journalism Center at the
Council for Christian ·
Colleges and Universities
and
leads
the
GetReligion.org project ·to
study religion and the
news.)

.

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740J 992-2157

coalition behind "Stand in
For generations, preachthe Gap 2007 ."
ers have been asking the
Truth is, religious groups
same sobering qllestion to
that want to reach men face
provoke people into thinkmany of the same cultural
mg about ultimate issues: If
challenges as they did a
you died tonight, do . you
. Terry ·
decade ago, and some Of the
know where you would
Mattingly problems have even gotten
spend eternity?
worse. In the case Of online
The Rev. Rick. Kingham
pornography, 1997 was the
has started asking men· a
"good
old days," said
different question, knowing
1hat too many of them are aloofness in their mar- Kingham.
"If anything," he said,
living lives defined by solo riages. The event was called
commutes, office cubicles, "Stand in the Gap" and, "there are ·powerful forces
fast food, Internet niches, with the Promise Keepers · at work in our society that
TV remotes, 8-foot fences, movement leading the way, have driven men even fur·
garage-door openers and, it drew · a million or more. ther into isolation than they
gated communities. Here is men to the National Mall- were I0 years ago and even
the question: Do you have one of the largest. gather- further from the kinds of
any idea who will carry ings of any kind in the community that they need
in their lives."
your casket out of the nation's history.
While the 2007 event will
church after your funeral?
The goal of the 1997
Many men struggle to rally, said Kingham, was to be smaller in size, its leadanswer.
dare men to stand up at ers hope to reach out to a
"It's a sad day when most church, home and work and wider audience .in terms of
men can 't name six men say, 'T m a man . I'm a lhe ages of the men who
that they know are their Christian. I' m not ashamed take part.
close
friends,"
said of that." The event's origiFor better or for worse,
Kingham, president of the nal slogan was, "Where are the original rally turned into
National Coalition of Men's the men?"
a kind of born-again
Ministries, a nondenomina·
Thai remains a valid Woodstock for men in the
tiona! network of I W question, which is why 77-million-member Baby
· generation.
regional and national some of leaders of the first Boom
groups. "There are men "Stand in the Gap" event Organizers hope that the
who - if they really get have decided to mark its program at Stand in the Gap
honest - will tell you that I 0-year anniversary with · 2007 will also include
they only have one or two · another rally. They hope to speakers and theines for the
real friends."
draw about 250,000 men to World War II generation
That's a· huge gap in mil- the Oct. 6 event, which will that many
call
the
lions of lives.
be held at the Washington "Builders," as well as the
A decade ago, waves of Monument and on .the post· Boomer · generation
men
gathered
in · Ellipse, just south of the known as the "Busters" and
Washington, D.C., to kneel White House. The Promise the "Millennials," born
and repent of their sins, Keepers network, which is after 1982.
from . spiritual apathy to much smaller than at its
"If we can find a way to
workaholism, from absen· peak in the late 1990s, is let these four groups of men
tee fatherhood to emotional one member of the larger talk to each other about

Carol Sue Ayers

.

.

Men plan to (Stand in the Gap' again

-

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

·Deaths

~

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June·t, 2007

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Office hours M·W·F 9·6

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�,.,

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

'

Today is Friday, June I, the 152nd day of 2007. There are
213 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June I, 1813, the mortally wounded commander of
the U.S. frigate Chesapeake, Captain James Lawrence,
said, "Don't give up the ship" during a losing battle with a
British frigate.
·
On this date:
In 1533, Anne Boleyn, .the second wife of King Henry
VOl, was Frowned as Queen Consort of England.
In 1796, Tennessee became the 16th state.
In 1801, Mormon leader Brigham Young was born in
Whitingham, Vt.
·
In 1868, James Buchanan, the 15th president of the
United States, died near Lancaster, Pa.
In 1926, actress Marilyn Monroe was born in Los
Angeles.
In 1943, a civilian flight from Lisbon to London was shot
down by . the Germans during World War ll, killing all
aboard, including actor Leslie Howard.
In 1967, the Beatles released their album, "Sergeant
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band."
In 1980, CNN made its broadcast debut.
Ten years ago: Betty Shabazz, the widow of Malcolm X,
was fatally burned in a frre set by her 12-year-old.grandson
in her New York apartment. The Broadway show "Titanic;·
won five Tony Awards, including best musical. The
Chicago Tribune published a column by Mary Schmich
which urged the graduating class of 1997, among other
things, to "wear sunscreen" (the tongue-in-cheek essay
ended up being wrongly attributed to author Kurt Vonnegut
on the Internet).
One year ago: Six world powers, including the U.S.,
agreed on a package of incentives to persuade Iran to halt
its uranium enrichment program. The Iraqi government
announced its own investigation into reports that U.S.
Marines had killed unarmed civilians in Haditha. A contrite
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers took responsibility for the
flooding of New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina. Seven fam·
ily members were shot to death in an Indianapolis house.
(Two suspects were later charged.)
.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Richard Erdman is 82. Actor
Andy Griffith is 81 . Actor Edward Woodward is 77. Singer
Pat Boone is 73. Actor-writer-director Peter Masterson is
73. Actor Morgan Freeman is 70. Actor Rene Auberjonois
is 67. Opera singer Frederica von Stade is 62. Actor Brian
Cox is 61. Rock musician Ron Wood is 60. Actor Jonathan
Pryce is 60. Actor Powers Boothe is 58. Actress Gemma
Craven is 57. Singer Graham Russell (Air Supply) is 57.
Country singer Ronnie Dunn (Brooks and Dunn) is 54.
Actress Lisa Hartman Black is 51. Singer-musician Alan
Wilder is 48. Rock musician Simon Gallup (The Cure) is
47. Country musician Richard Comeaux (River Road) is
46. Actor-singer Jason Donovan is 39. Actress Teri Polo is
38. Model-actress Heidi Klum is 34. Singer Alanis
Morissette is 33. TV host Damien Fahey is 27. Actor Taylor
Handley is 23.
·
. Thought for Today: "Peace without justice is tyranny."William Allen White, American writer and newspaper edi·
tor (1868-1944).
·

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
utters to the · editor ari welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All, letters are ·subjectto editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept·
ed for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
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Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.

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.WHO's CAMPAIGNING ON THE

FIRST ... WHAT'S ONTHE SECOND
&amp; I DON'T KNOW ~s
ON THE THIRD ...

•

Ala. high school graduation with
empty chairs for tornado vicl i•ns

Board

r~r

JAI

7

PIK[

A~~I~

The (crimeless' victim
In recent years, we have
Gonzales was . hazy about
all been introduced to the
the details, explaining that
concept of the "victimless
he personally had not parcrime." 'Fhis is a situation in
ticipated actively in the
which a crime seems to
process.
have been committed, but
That was enough for
William
there is no apparent victim.
Schumer. If Gonlales could
Rusher
That raises interesting quesbe shown to have been per·
tions for law school classes
sonally to blame, a ·major
to chew on - e.g., ought
campaign·to force his resigthe perpetrator of the crime
nation could be mounted,
to be punished?
United States.
and his downfall would cerNow another sort of
Now, U.S. attorneys serve tainly · damage President
anoma! y is appearing, "at the pleasure of the pres- Bush (who is, after all, the
which might be caUed the ident," and he (and his Democrats" real target).
"crimeless victim." This is authorized agents) have the Newly invested with the
someone whom the govern- power to fire orie or more of subpoena power, thanks to
ment, or some branch of it, them for just about any rea- the Democrats" takeover of
is determined to regard as a son, including the way he or Congress last November,
criminal, and punish as . she cuts their hair. It would, . they demanded that he testi·
such, even th·ough he or she however, be inappropriate, fy before the commi.ttee
has not in fact committed if not illegal, ,to fire one of under oath (to which he
any crime. The first notable them simply because he was agreed, though as a member
example of a "crimeless suspected of being too eager of the executive branch he
victim" is Attorney General to prosecute Republicans, cannot be compelled to do
Alberto Gonzales.
or too forgiving of culpable so). There followed the
Gonzales has been sub- Democrats. That is what above-mentioned grilling,
~ected to a merciless grilling
Schumer and his colleagues · in which once again
by the Democrats in the believe, or · profess to Gonzales" ·answers were
U.S. Senate; most notably believe, was the motive deemed unsatisfactory. His
Sen. Charles . Schumer, D· .behind the dismissal of one recollections were vague,
N.Y., and hi s fellow or ' more of the aforemen- and his memory poor. The
Democratic members of the tioned six.
Democrats were furious.
Senate
Judiciary
Logically, the¥ (and the
But the simple fact is that
Committee. They have liberal media who serve Gonzales has not been
zeroed in on the dismissal · their interests) decided that proven to have done 'lOY·
by the Bush administration the chief villain must have thing wrong - anything at
of ·six (or, depending on been · Gonzales, since the all. The dismissals were, as
how you count, seven) of dismissals occurred in his he testified, decided on by
the 93 U.S. attorneys scat· department and on hi s subordinates, and for reatered around the country watch. In his first comments sons that were by no means
who are charged with prose- to the media, when they . necessarily inappropriate.
cuting offenses against the inquired about the firings ~ (One US. attorney, for

example, seemed unwilling,
for reasons of her own, to
prosecute people who
smuggle illegal aliens in
from Mexico.) Last week,
Congress finally found a
single subordinate Justice
official, Monica Goodling,
who - after first threaten·
ing to plead the Fifth and
receiving immunity for her
testimony - told the members that she had indeed, ·in
a few cases, asked "inappro·
priate" political questions
about the U.S. attorneys"
political views, and now
regretted it.
But she .also flatly denied
ever having discussed the
dismissals with either
Bush"s top political advi· ·
sor, Karl Rove, or White
House Counsel Harriet
Miers (whom the senators
would also deru:ly love to
skewer), let alone Gonzales.
Nonetheless, the hullabaloo .
is mounting, and the
demand is for Gonzales"
head.
'
So poor Alberto Gonzales
has become Exhibit A fur
that latest legal anomaly, tjle
crimeless victim. Do not
send to know for whom the
bell tolls - next time, ·it
may toll for thee.
. :
(Willidm Rusher is ·a
Distinguished Fellow ~f *e
Claremont Institute -for *e
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)
:

WANT TO FEEL YOIING AGAIN?

tions in Franklin, Hamilton
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cases have resulted in the sus· from Page A1
pects being charged with more
than 200 wildlife violations.
House Bill 238 will now
In addition to the alleged
, .· poaching ring in Meigs, the be assigned to a committee,
·1egislation is also a response to where hearings will begin in
,. similar
poaching
investiga- the coming weeks.
.
.

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_

TODAY IN HISTORY

,

- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

,

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

Brunner said she is notifying the employees who
received the bonuses and as!&lt;·
ing them to voluntarily return
the money. At Brunner's
request, Taylor already is
conducting a financial review
of the office for Blackwell 's
last four months in office.
Blackwell gave parting
payments totaling $80, 186
to 19 top staffers. The bonuses were "in essence a gift Or
gratuity to employees, who
were planning to leave the
office, for the past performance of their duties for
AP photo
which they already had been Enterprise High School seniors walk past the diplomas and gowns of the two seniors killed in the March 1 tornado that
compensated," Dann said.
hit the school. The graduation ceremonies were held at Enterprise High School Thursday in Enterprise, Ala.
"The employees, provided
nothing in return for the payments, and thus, it cannot be
said that the bonuses were
for the primary benefit'of the
.public or to further the efficient operation and management of the office," he said.
me of it. But what happened Rainer said. "I loved them less," she said.
Bv BOB JOHNSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Her most vivid memories
was for a reason and every· before March I. That day
junior varsity; Chris Shank,
one came out stronger," changed our. lives forever. I of March I come from the
boys Middle School, 7th
ENTERPRISE, Ala.
told them we've got to keep moments after the storm .
Miller said.
grade; and Charles Knopp, The senior class that valewl1en she and others ran
Earlier, senior Kayla living off love and hugs."
boys Middle School ,
from PageA1
dictorian Juli.e Boyd said Boroff said she was glad
Enterprise High students outside and started helping
Hired on supplemental would always be defined by there were empty chairs for finished the semester at a pull rubbl e off of other stucontracts
were
Mike the deadly tornado three Tompkins and Vidensek .
nearby community college, dents. She said the toughest
.. been in school administraChancey,
head
football
,
mo~ths
ago
graduated
and
an effort was made to part was when parents start·
"They definitely should be
.. tion a total ·of 36 years, II of
Rich
Blaettnar,
Ron
Hill
,
Thursday
night
amid
flashfix
the,
stadium for the grad- ed arriving, frantically look.part of it. They are part of our
which were in . West Rick Chancey, ·Tyson Lee,
ing
cameras.
balloons
and
uation
and
the Wildcats' fall ing for their children.
class," said Bowff. There
· Virginia, and in order to
Derek
Miller,
assistant
var"A mother asked if I knew
shouts
of
encu.uragement,
were about 340 diplomas football . season. Residents
retire in Ohio and get a full
sity
fpotball
;
Bryan
Zirkle
where
her son was. Luckily
but there were also two awarded Thursday night.
from · Enterprise and surretirement, he must 'lbuy"
and
Carson
Crow,
7th
and
I
knew
I had seen him .
empty
seats
in
memory
of
.communities
"We know they aren't rounding
time to qualify, "about three
8th
grade
football;
Mike
two seniors who died in the . here with us physically, but cleared the field of debris There was such a look of
years," he sai&lt;j. The proposmentally they are here and · - remains of the upper relief on her face. It \vas
al is that he would retire, and Kennedy, cross country and storm.
high
school
track;
Ron
Hill
Michael
D.
Tompkins,
I?,
they are in our hearts," said deck, roofing shingles, insu- something I hadn't seen
then immediately be rehired ·
and
Shannon
Souls
by,
assist
·
and
Jamie
Ann
Vidensek,
lation, tree limbs, car parts, before," Boroff said.
senior
Doug Brown.
to continue in the job.
hi
gh
.
school
track
;
Tim
Juniors James Foster and
17,
were
among
eight
stuschcol
supplies - to pre·
Principal
Rick
Rainer
said
Board members seemed
Dunn,
Middle
School
track,
Keefe
Gonzalez stood outdents
killed
March
I
when
.a
pare
it
for
the
ceremony.
his
life
was
changed
that
to express agreement to the
Jo
Dunn,
assistant;
Jeremy
side
the
stadium Thursday
hallway
collapsed
as
stuThe
stadium
got
a
coat
of
afternoon
when
he
helped
·
proposal and Norman
Grimm,
head
baseball;
Greg
and
watched
as final prepa·
dents
huddled
together
in
fresh
paint
and
the
freshly
pull
rubble
off
of
students
in
Humphreys, immediate past
Browning,
junior
varsity
rations
were
being
made for
the
corridor
as
the
tornado
mowed
football
field
was
the
collapsed
hallway.
But
president, described it as
baseball;
Mike
Kloes,
Vince
the
ceremony.
Gonzalez
had
struck.
On
the
two
empty
green
despite
the
pumhe
said
school
officials
tried
bein~ a. "good deal" for the
Rieber,
volunteer
assistant
a
car
totaled
by
the
storm
in
seat~
were
the
cap
and
gown
meling
it
received
from
the
to
keep
the
graduation
ceredistnct and a way of keep·
varsity
baseball;
Greg
the
high
school
parking
lot
storm
and
the
drought
that
that
Tompkins
and
Vidensek
mony
as
much
like
the
tra·
ing a good superintendent.
It was noted that this will Smith, Dakota Smith, vol- would have worn, along ditional ones that graduates has left most yards and and Foster remembered
. huddling in one of the ·
with their diplomas.
and their families have fields a dusty brown.
save the district money unteer junior varsity.
school's corridors and then
Tony
Dugan,
high
school
Boyd,
one
of
21
valedic·
Boroff
said
the
graduation
dreamed of for years.
since it avoids the process
scrambling outside to try to
golf;
Rick
Ash,
head
girls
·
ceremony
is
different.
from
torians, all with perfect 4.0
Unlike the school's prom,
of going through the adverhelp others.
volleyball,
Dale
Harrison,
the
one
she
.always
dreamed
grade-point averages, told where the food was pretising aRd interviewing
Fosrer said he's nor surMaria
Drenner.
about,
part
I
y
because
the
assistant;
her classmates the storm not pared by celebrity chef
process, and in all probabilprised
that the graduation is
ity setting a higher salary to Middle School girls volley· only destroyed the high Rachel Ray and pop singer seats reserved for Tompkins
gomg
on.
building,
but Mandy Moore made an and Vidensek were be empty.
attract someone qualified ball; Carl Wolfe, girls varsi- school
"It shows that everybody
But Boroff said the death
ty
basketball,
Della
Wolfe,
·
changed
their
lives
forever.
appearance, there were no
for the job. It was also
"None of the students celebrity guests at the grad- toll from the tornado could in Enterprise is nor going to
pointed out that Buckley assistant varsity, and Dennis
who
sat in the hallway that uation. Rainer, however, did have been worse and she is quit 1)0 matter what hapFlaherty,
assistant
girls
works without an assistant
day
envisioned
the tornado, read a letter from President thankful that she and the pens," he said. ,
junior
varsity
basketball;
superintendent, a position
or
Bryan
Drummnd,
.
girls
that
in
30
seconds
our Bush,
who
visited other graduates made it to
which most districts the size·
this day.
Middle
School
basketball;
11recious
Enterprise
High
Enterprise
after
the
storm.
of Meigs have. That posiSPRING VALLEY
"I' m excited about there
School
would
lay
in
ruin,"
David
Fife,
girls
softball,
"You
have
shown
lhe
01 u rH ul' J' ••
.:tion was eliminated as a
4..)b 4524 t~Sl ~ SOl
being
more
people
to
gradu·
Melanie
.
Blevins,
girls
Boyd
said.
.
world
that
adversity
can
:,money-saver for the district
FRI 6/1/07 · SUN 6/3107
Most of the speakers bring out the best in the ate, lhere could have been
-several years ago when junior varsity basketball:
WWW.SPRINGVALLEYCINEMA.COM
Thursday
night
promised
to
. American people," Bush
8oK Office Opens 0
:Wendy Halar resigned, and and Jan Haddox, Middle
6:00 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS
keep
their
lost
classmates
said
in
the
letter.
School
golf.
12:00 PM FOR DAILY MATINEES
those duties were assumed
Suianne Bent:i:, high always in their hearts.
Rainer met with many of
OPEN EVERYDAY FOR
by Buckley.
"To
Jamie
and
Mikey,
we
MATINEES
the
seniors
Wednesday,
durschool
newspaper
advi-sor;
More personnel matters
wish
you
were.
here.
We
will
ing
a
rehearsal
for
the
gradLinda
Lear,
Middle
School
Resignations accepted
during the meeting were newspaper advisor;· Ralph carry your memory with us uation .ceremony.
"I said 'I love you guys,"'
those of Tim Simpson as Werry, high school cheer- forever," said a farewell
Tri-County Gospel Sing
message
read
by
valedicto·
leader
advisor;
Lauren
Vo-Ag teacher; Kathy Reed
June 2 at 7:00 ~m
as senior class advisor, Hardgrove, middle school rians Jessica Bullinger and
Auditions:
Mary Stewart as junior · cheerleader advisor; Celia Melinda Gooch.
"The
Unsinkable
Molly
AT WORLDS END (PG13)
Parents cheered and
class advisor, and Joe McCoy, drama advisor;
12:30,
3:30, 6:30, 7:00, 9:30,
Brown"
Bailey as National Honor Denise Arnold , volunteer shouted when their chil1:00, 4:00, 7:00 &amp; 10:00
drens'
names
were
June 3 21!mz June 4-5 6 ~m
freshman class advisor.
.. Society advisor.
SHREK THE THIRD (PG)
announced
and
balloon
s
Judy McCarthy, National
Y!!lla Class Begins June 4
Hired
were
Sharon
. ·warner, Tammy Lavender, Honor Society advisor, were released into the air,
Wishful! Realities June 9
.:Mary Knopp, Angela senior class advisor; Donna but the graduates said the
Camp Melodrams:
. l:loalcraft, Karen Mullins, Wolf, student council advi- storm was never. far from
Theatre Camp
. and Kolleta Fridley as per- sor; Gloria VanReeth, junior their mind as they sat on the
June 11 ·July 7
618/07
. sonal assistants · to health class advisor; Jim Oliphant, football field surrounded by
The
Ariel-Dater
Hall
the
ruins
of
the
high
school.
,
SURF'S
UP
(PG)
quiz
team
advisor;
Carl
. handicapped students at the
428 Sec. Ave. Gallip ~~~ ~H
"I kept thinking that we ·
&amp; OCEAN'S THIRTEEN
rate of $9.19 per hour. Wolfe, athletic director/trea740·""-"-A RT&lt;; 1
7
·'Abigail Cauthorn and Kathy surer; Toney Dingess, band all survived - that it was
' Hudson were hired as sum- director; David Deem, amazing," said senior .Josh
., mer school teachers · in Nicole Mount, assistant Beene.
Emily Miller said she was
·English and Science with band directors, ·parttime;
"really
excited" to graduate,
·'funding to come from grant SulamJe Bentz, web design
but
kept
looking over at the
advisor; Mike Chancey
·~ources.
Neck pain
Low back pain
remains
of
the hi gh school.
· . Basketball coaching posi- summer field care; and Cliff
Pain associated
Leg pain
"The scenery reminded www.mydailysentinel.com
tions filled were Michael Kennedy, Kathryn Hill·
Headaches
·. Barnett, boys varsity assis· White and Mike Wilfong,
.
Numbnessffingling
tant; David Deem, boys guidance directors.
in 1he Arms &amp;

;

General Manager-News Editor

'· COLUMBUS (AP) 'Former Secretary of State
· Ken Blackwell , the unsuc. cessful Republican candi. d~te for ~overnor lasl year,
·d1d not have the authority to
· award $80,000 in bonuses
to employees before he left
office, Democ'ratic Attorney
: General Marc Dann says.
. Jennifer
Brunner,
.Blackwell's successor, has
. asked Auditor Mary Taylor ·
. .to declare that the bonuses
· · were an illegal expenditure
of public money so Dann's
· office can seek recovery.
· Brunner is . a Democrat.
: .Taylor is a Republican .
· "In our stewardship of
· public funds, we were con.terned that we had an oblig. ation to learn if these payments were legal, and if not,
. .if we should ·try to recover
Jhese taxpayer fund.s,"
. .Brunner said in a .statement.

.

Charlene Hoeflich

.

Dail Goodrich
Publisher

AG says Blackwell had no
authority to give staff bonuses

.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.COOLVILLE -Carol Sue Ayers, 33, of Colliers, W.Va.
· d1ed Tuesday, May 29, 2007 . . Arrangements will be
· announced by WhJte-Schwar£el Funeral Home in Coolville.

.

www.mydallyuntlnel.com

what is going on in their
lives and their faith, then
we will have accomplished
our main goal," said Steve
Chavis, who served as
media coordinator for the
1997 rally and is playing
the same role again.
The first rally foc!lsed
most of its energy on family issues and racial reconciliation ·and these subjects
will
surface
again.
· Kingham said Stand in 'the
Gap 2007 will also emphasize themes of loneliness,
complacency and disillusionment. But after looking
inward, men must find
ways to reach beyond their
own needs and help others.
Take, for example, all of
those Baby Boomers who
will soon face retirement.
"We · have to tell these
· men, 'Don't quit your jobs.
... Use your jobs and skills
in missions, relief and
development
projects
around the world. You can
help the widows. and chil·
dren,' " said Kingham.
"There are an kinds of ways
that men can offer a credible witness to what Jesus
Christ is doing in their
lives."
(Terry Mattingly is direc·
tor of the Washington
Journalism Center at the
Council for Christian ·
Colleges and Universities
and
leads
the
GetReligion.org project ·to
study religion and the
news.)

.

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740J 992-2157

coalition behind "Stand in
For generations, preachthe Gap 2007 ."
ers have been asking the
Truth is, religious groups
same sobering qllestion to
that want to reach men face
provoke people into thinkmany of the same cultural
mg about ultimate issues: If
challenges as they did a
you died tonight, do . you
. Terry ·
decade ago, and some Of the
know where you would
Mattingly problems have even gotten
spend eternity?
worse. In the case Of online
The Rev. Rick. Kingham
pornography, 1997 was the
has started asking men· a
"good
old days," said
different question, knowing
1hat too many of them are aloofness in their mar- Kingham.
"If anything," he said,
living lives defined by solo riages. The event was called
commutes, office cubicles, "Stand in the Gap" and, "there are ·powerful forces
fast food, Internet niches, with the Promise Keepers · at work in our society that
TV remotes, 8-foot fences, movement leading the way, have driven men even fur·
garage-door openers and, it drew · a million or more. ther into isolation than they
gated communities. Here is men to the National Mall- were I0 years ago and even
the question: Do you have one of the largest. gather- further from the kinds of
any idea who will carry ings of any kind in the community that they need
in their lives."
your casket out of the nation's history.
While the 2007 event will
church after your funeral?
The goal of the 1997
Many men struggle to rally, said Kingham, was to be smaller in size, its leadanswer.
dare men to stand up at ers hope to reach out to a
"It's a sad day when most church, home and work and wider audience .in terms of
men can 't name six men say, 'T m a man . I'm a lhe ages of the men who
that they know are their Christian. I' m not ashamed take part.
close
friends,"
said of that." The event's origiFor better or for worse,
Kingham, president of the nal slogan was, "Where are the original rally turned into
National Coalition of Men's the men?"
a kind of born-again
Ministries, a nondenomina·
Thai remains a valid Woodstock for men in the
tiona! network of I W question, which is why 77-million-member Baby
· generation.
regional and national some of leaders of the first Boom
groups. "There are men "Stand in the Gap" event Organizers hope that the
who - if they really get have decided to mark its program at Stand in the Gap
honest - will tell you that I 0-year anniversary with · 2007 will also include
they only have one or two · another rally. They hope to speakers and theines for the
real friends."
draw about 250,000 men to World War II generation
That's a· huge gap in mil- the Oct. 6 event, which will that many
call
the
lions of lives.
be held at the Washington "Builders," as well as the
A decade ago, waves of Monument and on .the post· Boomer · generation
men
gathered
in · Ellipse, just south of the known as the "Busters" and
Washington, D.C., to kneel White House. The Promise the "Millennials," born
and repent of their sins, Keepers network, which is after 1982.
from . spiritual apathy to much smaller than at its
"If we can find a way to
workaholism, from absen· peak in the late 1990s, is let these four groups of men
tee fatherhood to emotional one member of the larger talk to each other about

Carol Sue Ayers

.

.

Men plan to (Stand in the Gap' again

-

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

·Deaths

~

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June·t, 2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page&amp;J.

...

__

i!5. ' .

: .,, •

tciiet·lii,-YOI
···IIl'·. ~~t '
,

1-304- 273-5321
316 Washington St.

Ravenswood, WV

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

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�. . ..

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

-

- A H~nger For More - -

Once upon a .time, there
lived a young woman
named Rose Red, who was
forced to be a slave in the
very palace to which she
had been summoned. So
many months before. the
king had in vited her to join
his court that she mi ght be
made a true lady. Some said
that she might even be the
one to whom the prince
would be wed. Now. even as
she stooped to sco ur the
floor or cleared the ashes
from the cooking grills. she
remembered wel l how she
had betrayed them .
Her mind and hea rt were
fi lled with memories of the
day that she had received
the mysterious gift from a
person that she had never
met. t was a beautiful gold
app le. he note that accompanied it said that it was
from a wel l-w isher and
that anyone who ate of it
would be destined to
become king or quee n. The
king's so n. Prince Joshua.
had once warned her about
such gifts. say ing that gift s
from strange rs were perilous and that they often
held hidden snares. Ami it
proved to be so. For in the
very day that she ate of th e
apple. she became co nvinced th at royal garb was
not onl y fitting for her. but
that nothing ·less than the
king 's own . mantle itself
was her dtle. Event uall y.
desiring eve n to wear the
beautiful crown that had
belon ged to the kindly
king, she betrayed him to
enemies in orde r to make it
her own.B ut even as she
had committed her treac hery and closed her fin ge rs
about the crow n. it was
yanked from her grasp and
placed upon the hrnw of a
wicked and selfish woman
named Adiken1a , who
called herself "Queen of
All." And onl y after Rose
Red was reduced to forced
labor could she see clearly
that Adikema had been the
sender of. the gift and the
weaver-of the deceit which
had lured her into bondage.
And so she spent her days
in bitter toil wi th nothing
but ac hes and blisters as
her reward and garbed in
nothing but castoff rags for
. her cl oth ing.
Adikema was, of cour·se.
very va in and de li ghted
eac h morning in speaking to
her magic mirror. "Mirror,
mirror, in my hand, who is
the fairest in the land?"she
wou ld call to it. The mirror's face would ripple and
swirl, and then it tell lies to
·the false queen with all sorts

Pagel\6

Pastor
Thom
Mollohan

of flatterie s. "My queen. do
not worry and do not fret
Thy beauty is the greatest
yet. There is no one so fu ll
of grace, sweet of ·sound,
nor fair of face." Adikema
would laugh with self-satisfaction and then go about
the business of cruelly
oppressing the people.
But being vety vain, she
was also very afraid of the
retur11 of the king and his
son. So. having heard that
she was to be the beloved
·bride of the king 's son.
Adikema heaped exceptional iib use upon Rose
Red, hoping to tw ist her
with bitterness and crush
her with despair. Little
imps were sent to torment
her, bringing with thetp .
their bags of temptations
and fi ery whips with which
they coul d inflic t pain and
grief. The names of the
imps
were
Impurit y,
Idolatry. Hatred , Selfish
Ambition. Jealol!sy, Rage,
Discord,
Persecution,
Hardship,
Trouble,
~ait in g, Sorrow, .Trials,
and Sacrifice. They see med
to delight in causing
anguish and hopelessness.
The temptation that they
brought with them to totally despair. along with the
gui lt and shame th at she
already carried, were so
utt erly crushi ng that Ros.e
Reel did not believe that she
co uld go on. And so
between weariness and the
cru el poison that co ursed
through her ve ins. ever
since she had eaten of the
vil e app le. the day came
when her strength completely failed and she found
herself slipping to the
ground as the pallor of
death crept over her . once
. fair countenance.
But th en from the shadows stepped the king 's
on ly son, Prince Joshua.
Rose Red's eyes caught
sight of him ere darkness
totall y co nsum ed them.
More. than pain, she felt
shame and her heart
craved pardon. And as she
looked upon the face of the
prince, seeing his purity
and noble character shining throu gh his kind eyes,
she found that she also no

Friday, June 1, 2007

WORSJllP GOD THIS WEEK

Friday, Julie 1, 2007

Bible school gets
undenvay Sunday

longer cared for rank or of my treachery. I'm the one
special adornment; nor who deserved to die," she
POMEROY - The comeven healing for herself. whispered as she hung her
munity Bible School in
She longed only to see him head and began to weep.
enthroned, exalted, and
The prince simply replied, Pomeroy will kick off
honored.
"But I took your place. And Sunday night and continue
The prince knelt beside now I'm alive agai n. If through June . 8 at the St.
her and lifted her feverish you ' ll trust me and will now Pau l Lutheran Church.
Theme of the school wi II
head. He softly placed hi s consent to walk all the days
be
"Avalanche Ranch" and
lips to hers and ki ssed her, of the rest of your life with
will
·take youngsters on
taking into himself, as he me, your name wi ll . no
what
is described as "a wild
did so, all of the poison longer be Rose Red, but will
ride
through
God's Word :·
that filled her dying body. instead be Snow White for
There
will
he
"stampeding
Suddenly she felt new life all your guilt will be washed
cattle.
yappi
ng
cattle dogs.
again . She knew that he away.". She gazed up at him .
soaring
eagles,
~nd
a whole
had taken the sting of "Yes. Yes, I do consent. 1.
herd
of
fnei1ds,
'
accordmg
death from her and was will walk with you now and
bearing it now himself. He forever," Snow White
touched her face tenderly answered.
and then he was overcome · Adikema
had
been
by death, his body slump- watching all these things
ing to the floor.
wi\h contempt, and knew
Then seven of her tor- that she had been defeated.
mentors came to her pri- "Mirror, mirror, in my
Bv JENNIFER DOBNER
vately and pulled off their hand, who is the fairest in
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
hoods, revealing their true the land?'' she uttered to
selves to Rose Red. the mirror as she gritted her
SALT LAKE CITY
Suddenly she knew them teeth. The mirror yawned· When he was · a teenager,
for who they really were, and loudl y sighed. "Your Conne ll
o·oonovan
seve n small servants\ that beauty is painted on. your opened up to his Mormon
she had assumed were of lit- skin; your heart is foul and seminary teacher and said
tie consequence. Yet these black within. But aren' t that he was gay.
seven dwarfs had faithfull y you tired of thi s game?
0' Donovan was greeted
served their master for years ·only the Prince can make wi th kindness - and a prebeyond count. Under the this claim. If we speak of sctiption to. chart the frehood of Persecution was heart or hand, the prince is quency of his sexual
"Goodness";
under fairest in the land . And as
·Hardship was "Gentleness"; you See, he 's not alone. thoughts; fasting and praybeneath
Trouble
was Snow White nnw sits ing when the urges came
were suggested as a means
"Peace"; from Waitin g beside his throne."
of
wi lling them away.
came "Patience"; Sorrow
That very day Adikema ·
''He
didn't know what to
brought "Joy" ; beneath was banished from the land.
do
,"'
0'
Donovan said of his
Trial was "Hope"; and but the Seven Dwarfs
teacher,
who is now a church
under Sacrifice was "Love." remained faithful servants
elder.
"He
was a super-nice
As they stood before her, to Snow White ever after
guy,
but
ju
st misinformed
they bowed. "We' ve been that.
sent by the king to come to
So it is for God's church, and al l he had was the
you so that you might be we who have placed ·our church handbook to go by."
Raised a member of The
made ready." After they faith truly in the risen Son
Church
of Jes us Christ of
took the body of the prince of God. In trustin g Him as
Latter-day
Saints.
and laid him by in a glass our Lord and Savior, we no
·
0
'
Donovan.
a
writer
and
coffin, tbey then began to longer carry our sins. but
histo
rian
.
served
a
ch.
u
rch
care for her as she wept. have been washed clean and
mission
and
married
in
the
And any time the true ser- are now invited to walk
church'
s
Salt
Lake
City
vants of Adikema came to with · Him through life,
accost Rose Red, the seven experiencing Him and Temple. He came out in
dwarfs surrounded her and knowing thilt all our days 1985 and eve ntually left the
gave her strength and are watched. over by the ·faith , unable to reconcile hi s
courage to stand against Ancient of Days (Daniel 7). gay identity with the teachthem, though all seemed And what of Persecuti on, ings of the church.
"I had to thmw the baby out
lost to her and the victory of Hardship, Trouble, Waiting,
with
the bath water. I slatted
Adikema see med complete. Sorrow,
Trials,
and
from
scratch and rebuilt
But then, in the early Sacrifice? We, as God's
myself."
he said in an intermorning of the third day, children, also will find that
view
with
The Associated
Rose Red's eyes opened and they are sent to us that we
gazed upon a glass coffin in might reap a harvest of Press last week. "I decided
which nothing lay. She Goodness,
Gentleness, that I can use the word grace,
looked up and saw the Peace, Patience, Joy, Hope but in a different way.''
Last Sunday, the 43-yearPrince standing by, gazing and Love.
old
0' Donovan gave .the
down at her with tender(Thorn Mollohan and his
ness. He reached down and, · family have ministered in keynote address at the 30th
taking her hand, lifted her southern Ohio the past 12 ·anni versary of Affirmation,
up. "Come and · be my years. He is the pastor of a support group for gay, lesbride," he said to her as she Pathway
Community hi an, bisex ual and transgenlooked into hi s eyes.
Church which meets on dered Mormons in Salt
"How can I? I am a trai- Sunday .mornings at 455 Lak~ City.
Founded in Provo by a
tor. I tried to lift myself up Third Ave. He may be
above you and the king. I'm reached for comments or handful of students from th e
Brigham
not worthy ·for I am not red questions by e-mail at pas- church-ow ned
like the rose, but red like torthom@pathwayga/lipo- Young
University,
blood ... blood shed because lis.com).
Affirmation grew out of

to one of the workers.
Crafts. games, Bible stories. music and snacks will
be included in the classes to
be held 6 to 8:30 p.m. each
Participatin g
evenin g.
churches are the Pomeroy
Bapti", Tr~nity Ch urch.
Lutheran , United Methodist
churches in both Pomeroy a
Middleport.
and
the
Pomeroy Church of Christ.
More Ill/ormation on the
,,·/i ·Jr•l coi1 he obtained by
Cllliing 'i92 -20/0.

Support group for gay and
lesbian Mormons marks 30 years
concern over the increasing
number of suicides among
gay Mormons and from the
frustration of living a closeted life. Today, the group,.
which is not recognized by
or connected to the church,
has chapters across the
Unitcd States, in Australi a,
Canada, England, Italy and
South Korea.
FD( many, Affirmation is
the first place they co nnect
wi th other gay Mormons.
'They helped me through
in the beginning," said
Buckley Jeppson, 48, a gay
Mormon who lives· in
Washin gton, D.C. "That
was useful. It was the first
time I actuall y knew I wasn't the only person out
there . It's co mforting."
Offic iall y, the Mormon
church has taught that
homosex uality is a sin and
that trad itional marriage is
an institution ordained by
God. In the 1990s, church
elders modified that position to differentiate between
homosexual orientation same- gender attraction as
they call it - and having an
active gay sex life.
"The sin is in yielding to
temptation," Elder Dallin H.
Oaks said in an. interview
co nducted by a public relations officer posted on the
chu rch Web site earlier this
year. ·
Church officials declined to .
be interviewed for thi s story,
instead referring the AP to the
interview with Oaks and
"Eider Lance B. Wickman.
"What we· know is that
feelings can be controlled
and behavior ca n be controlled," Oaks.said.
Church President Gordon
B. Hinckley has said gays
who remain celibate can con. tinue to enjoy full membership in the church, a standard
seen in other faith tra9itions.

·Ridlullrn.Wat ......
:saJem St., Pastor: , SuOO..y School . tO
1.m., Eveniaa - 7 p.m., Wedoesday
ScoK:a - 7 pm.

c•udaotJ-C-Apclllotk
VanZandt and Wud Rd ., Pastor: James
Miller, Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.,
Evellin1 - 7:30 p.m .

_...,...Qoodt

RJnrValky
River Valley Apostolic Wonhip Center,
813 S . 3rd · Ave .. ~idd lepon, Re'o'.

Michael Bradford, Pastor. Sunday. 10:30
a.m. Tues . 6:30 pnyer. Wrd. 7 pm Bible
Study
[mJIWiutl Aposlollc 'li.btmade Inc::.
· Loop Rd off New lima Rd . Rutland.
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m .•
Thurs. 7:00p.m., Pistor Many R. Hutton·

Assembly of God
Uberty .._,bly ol God
P,O. Bo1 467 . Dudding Lane, Mason,
W.Va., Paltpr: Neil Tennant, Sunday
Serv ices- !O:OOa.m. and 1 p.m.

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l'qo•ille- Baplbl Cbun:h
Pastor: Mike Hannon, Sunday School
9:30 to 10:30 am , Woohip stnice 10:30
to 11:00 am. Wed . preaching 6 pm
Carpenter Baptist Cbun:h
Sunday Schoo l - 9:30am, Preaching
Service !0:30am, Evening SerY ice
1:00pm. Wednesday Bible Study 7:00 pm,
Interim Preacher - Aoyd Ross
Chabln Bopllsl Churdl

Pastor: Steve Liulc, Sunday School: 9:30
am, MDrn ing Worship : 10:30 am ,
Wednesd'ay Bible Study 6:30pm: choir
practice 7:30: youth and Bible Buddies
6:30 p.m. Thu rs. I pm book study
llope Baptist Cbun:b (Southern)
510 Grant St., Middleport , Sunday school
-9:30a.m., WDrship - II a.m. and 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Service: - 7 p.m. Pastor: Gary
Elli s
RuiiiDd f1nl Bapdsl Cburth
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:45 am .
Pomtroy Flnt Baptist ·
Pastor Jon Brockert. East Main St.,
Sunday Sch. 9:30am, Worship IO:JOam
Fin! Sootbcrn 8aptbl
41872 Pomeroy Pike , Pastor: E. l.amiJ'I
O'Bryant, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wonhip . 8:15 a.m ., 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.

.Flnt Baptilt Clumb
Pastor: Billy Zl!span 6th and Palmer St.,
Middleport , Sunday School - 9:15a.m.,
Worship - 10: 1! a.m.. 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Senice- 7:00 p.m.

Jtactne Flnt Baptlol
Pastor: Ryan Eaton , pastor , Sunday
School -9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:40 a.m.,
7:00 p.m., Wednesdar SerYice: s · 7: 00
p.m.
SUver Run ·Baptbt
Pastor: JOhn Swanson, Sunday School IOa.m., Wors hip - lla.m., 7:00 p.m.
,Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.
Mt. Union Baptld

Pastor: Dennis Wea,.er Sunday School9:45 a.m .. E'&gt;'en in g - . 6:30 p.rii .,
Wednes~ay Service§- 6:30p.m.
Btt•lthtm Bapllst Chun:h
Grear Bend. Rpute 124. Rac ine. OH.
Pastor: Ed Carter, Sunday School - 9 :3~
a.m., Su nd ay Worship - 10:30 a.m.,
Wednesday Bible Study-7:00p. m.
Old Bethel Fne Will Baplist Cburth
28601 St . Rt . .7, Midd leport , Sunday
Ser,.ice - 10 a.m., 6:00 p.m., Tpesday
Se~ices -6:00

St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7, Pustor: Rev.
James R. Acree. Sr., Sunday Unified
Service, Worship - 10 :30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

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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

6/te liJw ofKiJrmiJ
The law of Kanna might be called the
edm principle, i.e., whatever we send () U\

Vktory Baptist lndepe•denl
525 N. 2nd St. MiddlepDrt, Pastor: James
E. Kee see, Worship - toa.m., 7 p.m..
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Mi~helle

Dircc.tor of Marketing and Admiss ions
333 Page Street
(740) 992-6472
Middleoort OH Fax 1740) 992-7406

com ~

back to us. in one fOnn or another.
If we are gi,•ing off friendly "vibes".
people are likely to respond to us in a
· friend ly way. but on the other hand, if we
arc giving off hos~le or aggressive Vibes.
people arc prone to respond in kind. The
law orkarma is a special case of the law
of atlnlction, which says that we will
anract the things that we think about. lf we
tend to he cynical in our thinking, we will
usually find the selfishness and i~ s i ncerity
tl1a1we are looki ng for..People who
suspect thai everyone is trying to cheat
them tend 10 treat others suspiciously. arxt
wi ll usually not ex1end 1rust to those
whum tlx:y do nm know very well. As a
cun:..l·qurricc of this kind of treatment (i.e ..

Bt IUJt.dtceivtd: Gr~d i.~ not ·
IIWtbd, for wltattver a man
..tnw.~, that fu

tt•malsO reap.

R.S.V. Gllatians 6,7

not being lru ~ ted in situations where you
\\ould nonnally expect it), !hose people
. . . ho arc not ex: tended trust and good faith
then fc&lt;lf they arc goi ng to be cheated by
· thi ~ untru~ting person, since, after all, "it
tak6 one to know one.'' The person who
has thus not extended trust may be
inclined to beat the other person to the
punch. If you fear you arc going to get hit,
why not hit first? However. since people
tend to live up to or down to our ·
e:&lt;peclations of them, we oughl to ~xpect
the best of others. In the long run, we

really do get what we give.

Kennedy

mum FrinuiJ.r
AmuHpllt' H'

Hours
6am·Spm

Mi[[ie's 1(estaurant
740-949-221 0
"A Home Bank for
Home People"

We Sell Homes at

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email: kktbler@charter.net
618 E. Main Street

Pomeroy, OH 45.769
740-'192-7270

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Flnt Baptlol

CHid!"'-· wv

On .. pcidnt Bapist)
SR 652 and Alldcrioo St. Putor. Robert
Grady, Sunday school 10 am, MorninJ
church II am, Sunday evenins6 pm, Wed.
Bible Study 7 pm

Catholic
t61 Mulberry A.ve., Pomeroy. W.M898,
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz, Sal. Con.
4:45-5:15p.m.; Mass- 5:30p.m., Sun.
Coo . -8: 45-9: 15 a.m., Sua. Mass -·9:30
a.m .,DaityMass· 8:30a.m.

w-

Church of Christ

Faith B1ptist Cburc:h
Railroad St., Mason, Sunday School - 10 ~
a.m., Worship - I I a.m:, 6 p.m,
Wednesday Services.- 7 p.m
Foresl Run Bapllst· Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods, Sunday SchoOl - tO
a.m., Worship - ll :30a.m.
Mt. Moriah Bapth_t
Fourih &amp;. Main St .. Middleport , Sunday
School - 'L M&gt; a.nl.. Worship - 10:45 a. m.

Andqulty Bapdst
Sunday Schoo! · 9:30 a.m.. Worship IQ:45 n.m., Sunday Evening- 6:00 p.m.,
Pastor: Don Walker

HemSodl GnYe Clrtldu Cbut.ll
Minister: Larry BroWn. Wonhip • 9:30
a.m. Sunday School · 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study· 7 p.m.

........yChurdo olc.rtol
212 W. Main St., Sunday School- 9:30
a.m., Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,_
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.
P.......yW-CIIudaoiCbrilt
33226 Children 's Home Rd ., Sunday
School - !1 a.m., Wonhip- IOI..m.,6 p.m ,
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m:

MiddlepOrt Chartb ol Cllriot .
5ih and Main, Pastor: AI Haruon ,
Chitdrens Director; Stwoa Sayre, 'Jten,
Dirt.etoc Dodger VIU&amp;han, Sunday School
- 9:30a.m .. Wonhip- 8:1S, 10:30 1.m., 1
p.m., wodnesday Services- 1 p.m.

C.....,

Kooo
oiQrlot
Worship - 9:30 a.m ., Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Pastor~Jeffrey Wallace. 1st aod
JroSunday
Barwllllow llldae Cllvcb ol CU!Il
Pastor:Bruce: Teny,.Sunday School -9:30

a.m.

Mile Hill Rd., Racine. Putor: Jimes
Sanerfi_ela, SuDIIIy School - 9:45 a.m.•
Evc:aiDJ - 6 p.m.• Wednead.ly Suvioes - 7
p.m.
Putoc Roo Healh, Sunday Wonbip · 10
a.m., 6 p.m ., Wedlesdly Services - 7

p.m.

s,....l'lrol CJnudl otGod
Appk 11X1 Serood Su., Pastor: Rev. David

R11uell , Sunday School and Worship- 10
a .m. Evening Services- 6:30 p.m..
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m .

c-

otGod o1 Propllecy
OJ. White Rd . off St. Rt . 160, Pulpr: PJ .
Chapman, Sundly School - 10 a.m ..
Worship - II a.m ., Wednesday Services- 7

pm.

Congregational
Trlally Citanh
SecOnd "' Lynn, I'&lt;Kneroy, l'ulor. Re•.
Jonathan Noble, Wonhip 10:25 am ..
Sunday Schooi 9:1S a.m.

Episcopal
G.- Eploalpt Cllordo
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy. Sunday School
and HDly Eochari51 11:00 a.m. Rev.
Edward Pa~

Holiness
~Cburcb

Pastor: Steve Tomek, Main Sbftl,
Rutland , Sunday Wonhi~iooo a~ .•
Sunday Senri~7 p.m.
DIDflllt Hollaal Cburcll
llM7 Stale Route 325, Lang.svlle."Pastor:
Jknjamin Crawford, Sunday school - 9:30
a.m., Sunday wonhip - 10:30 am. &amp;: 7
p.m.: Wednesday prayer §ei'Vice • 7 p.m.
Cllfory l'lllrtlll Cblpd
· HurisoovUie' Road, Pastor: Charles
McKenzie, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 1_1 a.m., 7i00 p.m ., Wedoesday
Senice . 7:00 p.m.

RoooorSIIona H...._Cbm:b
Leading Creek Rd.; R11tland, Pastor: Rev.
Dewey King, S11aday &amp;ehool- 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday worship -7 p.m .• \YC!dnesday
prayer meetin&amp;- 7 p.m.
Pile GloYi Bible HotlaeD Cllwdl
112 mile off Rt. 325, Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednudty Servi« . 7,30 pm.

Worship - tp :30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.

Wc:dnesdly Services-6:30p.m.
ZlooCbvcboiCI&lt;rlot
Pomeroy, Hnri1onville Rd . (Rt.l43),
Pasior: Roaer Watson, Sunday School •
. 9;.30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m .. Wcdnesclay SUvices -7 p.m.

Thppen l'lala Chartb ol Cbdot .
ln slnimental, Wonhip Servic:e - 9 a.m.,
Communion - 10 a.m.• Sunday School IO:t5 a.m., Youth- S:30 pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm
Bradbury Cburc• ol Clutlt
Minister: Tom Runyon, 39558 Bradbury
Road, Middleport, Sunday School - 9!30
a.m .
Won hip - 10:30 a.m.
Rutlaud ~bvcb ol C Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship and
Communion .- 10:30 a.m .• Bob J. Weny,
Minister

W....,.. Bible B...._ (:hllldl

7S Pcort S&lt;., MiddleJ1011. Puto&lt; Riek
Booroe, Suodoy SehOot . tO a.m. Wonbip
-10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m.,
Wedaesday Service-7:30 p.m.
HJJOII Rua C""""""'t7 Cbun:ll
Putor. Re•. Larry Lemley; Sunday Seboot
-9:30a.m., Wonhip - 10: 4~ a.m., 7 p.m.,

Thunday Bible Sn&amp;dy and Youth · 7 p.m.

Lowtt CutrFree M - Cbun:b
Putor: Glenn Rowe, Sunday Sc_hool •
9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a. m. and 6
p.m.,Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
The Cbun:b o!Jesus
Cbrlst of Latter·DI.y Saints
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday Sc:~ool 10:20-11 a.m.~ Relief
Society/Priesthood II :05-12:00 noon .
Sacrament Suvice 9- 10:15 a.m..
Homemakin&amp; meeting , 1st Thurs.- 7 ~m .

Lutheran

Bradford Cbur&lt;b oiCbn.t
Corner of St. Rt. .124. &amp; Bradbury Rd.,
Minister. Doug Shamblin, Youth Minister:
Bill Amberger, Sunday School -..9:30 a. m.
Worship ~ 8:00 a.m.• 10:30 a.m. , 7:00
p.m.,Wtdneiday Services -7:00 p.m.
Hkkory HIU. c•urdl ol Cbrbi
Tuppeil Plains, Pastor Mike ~oore . Bible
class, 9 a.m . Sunday; worship_10 a.m.
Sunday: worship 6:30 pm Sunday; Bible
class 7 pm Wed.

St. John L11tben_n Cbwd
Pine Grove, Worship- 9:00 a.m., Sunday
School-10:00 a.m. Pastor:

OUr Sa•lour Lulbena Cbun:h
Wulnut and Henry Sts~. R~vC nswood,
W.Va., Pastor: David Ru ssell, Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m., Wors hip - II a.m .
St.l'lul Lutberao Cburtb
Oxner Sycamore&amp;. Second Si ., Pomeroy,
.Sun. ~hool- 9:45a.m., Worship · t I a.m .

Uni.ed Methodist

R-•Uie Chartb ol Cbrillt
Pastor: Phillp Stunn, Sunday School: 9:30
a.m ., Worship Service: 10:30 a.m., Bibie
Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Grolwn United Mothodbt
II a.m. Pastor: Richard Nease
Bt&lt;btet United Methodlot
New Haven, Richart! Nease, Pastor,
Sunday worship 9:30 a.m. Tues. 6:30
prayer and Bible Study.

,_

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

c.rteto. t.lf:nli:n n 'eedoeel a.rdl
K.in&amp;sbury load , Pastor: Roben Vllce.
Sunday School - 9:)0 a.m ., Wonbip
Senice 10:30 a.m., Evening Service 6
pm.

I.Goa .......

, _ , Cbortb , ... N....,..
Putor: Jan Lavender, Sunday School 9:30 a.m ., Wonhip - 10:30 1.m . and 6
p.m., WedDesday Savitts- 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.. Worship IO: ~a.m .

CbatirOuda ol ... N.....,.

Putor: Denzil Null. Worship - 9:30 a.m.
$Wlday School- 10:30 a.m.

-

Paslor. Rev. Hcrbat Grate, Suoday School
- 9:30 a.m ., Worihip - II a.m., 6 p.m.•
WedDesdly 5mkes- 7 p.m.
Ratbad Clludaoltbt N...,_
Pastor: IJUC Sh111Je, Sunday School- 9:30
am., WorJhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m .,
~y Services -1 p.m.

Wonhip - 9 :30 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Fmt Sunday of Month - 7:00
p.m. ~ervice

...._...,.,.St. hut
Pastor: Jim Corbitt. Sunday School - 9
a.m ., Worship · 10 a.m., Tudday Services
. . '-7:30p.m.

Other Churches

entntautor

Sy....,. Commualty Cbartb
241k&gt;·Sccood St., Syracu~~e, OH

AsburY (Syracuse) , Pastor. Bob Robinsoti,
Sunday School - 9:45 am., Worship - II
a.m., Wednesday Servic:ca - 7:30p.m.

Sun. School 10 am, Sundy nighf 6:30pm
Pastor: Joe Quinn

AN&lt;wBeal••lnl

f.ole&lt;Jrite .

(I'd Golptl CIMira) Harrisooville,
Pwon: Bob and Kay Marshall ,
Sunday ServK:e, 2 p.m.

Pastor: Arland King . Sunday School 10:30 1.m .• Worship - 9:30 a.m.. Bible
Study Wed. 7:30

"""'-

The .C burdl ol Cbrlit ol P....-y

Inte rsection 7 and 124 W, Evangelist:
Dennis Sargent , Sunda)' Bible Stuliy ·
9:30 a.m., Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m..

Christian Union
Hartford Cb11rcll of Christ In
ChristiMUuloo

Hartford . W.Va .. Pastor:DaYid _Greer,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship_10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Services- 7:00pm.

foratRIID

Pastor: Bob Robinson,Sunday School - 10
a.m., Wof-ship - 9 a.m.

u..th (MWdleport)
Pastor: Brian Dunham. Sunday School 9:30a.m., Worship - 11 :00 a.m.

Commualty ol CbrW
Portland-Racine Rd .• Pastor: Jim Proffill.
Sunilay School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a.m.. WedneW~ty Servic~s - 1:00
p.m.
Bethel Worship Ctater
39782 S.R. 7. Reed sv ille. OH 45772. t /2
mile nonh CJf Eastern Schools on SR 7. A
Full Gospel Church. Pastor Rob Barber.
Associate Pastor Karyn Davis, Youlh
Pastor Suzie franc_is, Sund ay serv ices
10:00 am worship. 6:00 pm Family Life
Classes, Wed. Home Cell Groups 7:00
p.m., Outer Limits Cell Group at the
church 6:30 pm to 8;30 pm

Mlnetnttle
Pasior: Bob Robinson , Sunday School - 9
a.m., Wonhip - 10 a.m.

, PartChapd
Sunday School - 9 a.m., Worship - 10 a.m.

Pomeroy
Passor: Brian Dunham , Worship - 9:30
a.m., Sunday School- 10:3.5 am.
Rod&lt;Sprlnp

Pastor: Keith Rader, SWt&lt;lay School - 9:15
a.m., Worship - 10 a.m .. Youth
Fellowship, Su~y • 6 p.m.

A!b-Cbun:b
398 As~ St., Middltpon-Pastor Jeff Smith
· Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Morning
Worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp;. 7:00 pm .
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p.m., Youtll
Service-7:00p.m.
Appt Ufe Cellltr
"Fuli·Oospel Cbllrth", Pastors John &amp;
Patty Wade. 603 S«ood Ave . Mason , 173·
.5017, Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.,
Wednetday7pm

RaiiiDd
Pastor: Rick Bourne , Sunday School 9:30a.m., Worship - 10:30 am., Thunday
Services - 7 p.m.
Salem Center

Pastor: William K. M111hall, Sunday
Sehoot. t0:\5 a.m., WOBbip . g,ts om.,
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm
Sao.mtle
Swulay School- 10 a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

II&lt;IUDy

AbaDdllltGncoR.F. I.
923 s;Thfrd St., MiddltpJrt, PutorTertsa
Dav is, Sunday service, 10 a.m.,
.Wedncldly service, 7 p.m.

Putor: JGhn OilmoR, Sun_day School· 10
a.m., Wors hip - 9 a.m. , WcciDeadaf
Services - 10 a.m.

Filth Fill GGopol Cbun:ll
lonl Bottom, Pastor: Steve Reed, Sunday
School • 9:30 a.m. Wonhip • 9:30 a.m.
and 7 p.m., Wednesday - 7 p.m., Friday fellowaq, service 7 P·ITI:··

C81'1Hl.SuttDD

Cannel &amp;. Bashan Rds. Rac:lne , Ohio,
Pastor: John Oilmorc, Sunday School :
9:4.5 a.m., Wonh i~ - 11 :00 a.m. , Bible
Study Wed. 7,30 pm.

Mornlna Sllr

Hlrrllon•UitC-l7 Cbartb
Pastor: Theron Durham, Sunday - 9:30
a.m. and 7 pm., Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Pastor: John Gilmo~ . Sunday School · II
a.m., Worship- 10 a.q~ .

Middleport COIIUilunlty Cbur&lt;h
.57.5 Pearl St., Middleport , Pa!tor: Sam
Anderson. Sunday School 10 a.m.,
Eveaing- 7:30p.m., Wednesday Service 7JOp.m.

-~

Pastor: Bil l Manhall S11nday School 9a.m.. Worship - 10 a.m .. l!t Sunday
e"ery month evening service 7:00 p.m.;
Wedneld.ay - 7 p.m.

Raetne

Filth Volley Tabtnacto Cbun:b
Biiley Run Road, Pss1or: Rev. Emmett
Rawson. Sunday Eve ning 7 p.m.,
Thursday Service · 7 p.m.

Pastor: Kerry Wood , Sunday School · 10
a.m.. Worship - II a.~ .Wednesday
Servic:e16 pm; Ttmr Bible Study 7 pm
CooMie Uolled Methodlol Putah
Pastor: HeieR Kline, Coolville Church ,
Main &amp; Fifth St., Sun. School - 10 a.m..
Worship . 9 a.m.. TUes. Services- 7 p.m . .

Syracuac Mlslloa
1411 Bridgeman S t., Syracuse , Sunday
School - 10 a.m, Eveni ng - 6 p.m..
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Bctbel Ch11rc:h
Towriship Rd,, 468C, Sunday School - 9
a.m, Worship - tO a.11_1., Wednesday
Services- 10 a.m~
·

Haul Commualty Cbwd.
Off Rt . 124, Pastor: Edsel Hatt , Sunday
School · 9:30a.m., Worship - 10:30 s.m..
7:30p.m.

Hoclklaport Ctiartb

Dy...ttte Community Chur&lt;h
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m ., Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

·Grand Street, Sunday ~hool - 9:30 a.m., .
Worship · 10:30 a.m., Pastor Phillip Bell

Cburch of God

Mone Chapel Cbun:•
Sunday school - 10 a.m., Worship - II
a.m.. Wednesday Service - '7 p.m.

Tottb Cbun:h
Co. Rd. 63, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .,
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Middleport Cbu.rth or the Naurtne
Pastor: Allen Midcap, Sunday School 9:30 a.m ..W()rship - 10:30 a.m.. 6:Jl p.m.,
Wednesday SerY i~es - 1 p.m.. Pastor:
Allen Midcap

Melp Couperalh&lt;l'll'!'h
Northeast CIJJster, Alfred , Pastor: Jim
Corbin, Sund11.y School - 9:30 a.m .,
Worship - II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Reedsvlllt Fellowsldp
· Church of the Nazarene. Pastor: Rus§ttl
Carso n . Sunday School • 9:30 a.m .,
Worship- 10:45 a.m ., 7 p.m., Wednesday
Services - 7 p.m.

W.Va . Rt.

Cll•ory Bible Cburdo
PomerOy Pike. Co. Rd .• Pastor: Rev.
I
.
B1ack_wood. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship 10:30 a.n\ .. 7:30 p.m.,
Wednewlay Service -7: 30p.m.
Stln"'Uit Coounuall}' Cburdr
Sunday School iO:OO am , Sunday W&lt;nhip
ll:OO am. Wednesday 7:00 pm Pastor:
Bryan &amp;. .Missy Daiky

ReJukin&amp; ur. Cburth
S . 2nd Ave .. Middleport. Pastor:
Mike Foreman. Pa~tor Emerit11s lawrencc
Foreman. Wonhip- 10:00 am
Wednesday Strvkes- 1 p.m.

.~00

ClifiDil T11bt-mitdt Cbun:b
Ctif!ol\. W.Va ...Sunday School - 10 a.m.,
W~rship · 7 p.m., Wednesday Service - 7
p.m
New Llrt Victory Ctater
3773 Georges Creek R~. Ga!lipolis. OH
PD ~ior: Bill Slaten. Sunday Senice1 - 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. WedneSday - 1 p.m. &amp;.
Youth ?p.m.

l"ult Gospel Chun:b
ollbe UriD« SoTior

Rt .338, Antiquity. Pastor: Jme Morris ,
Services: Saturday .2:00p.m.

Salem Com.M•nhy Churdl
SICk or West Columbia." W.Va.orn LieviDJ
Road , Pastor: Charles Roush (3().4) 67S2288, Sunday School 9:30 am, Sunday
eveninJ service 7:00 pm , Bibly Study
Wcdne5day service 1:00pm
lloMon Cltrlltlu Fdlo-pCIIIIdl
Panor: Hern:bel White, Sunday School·
10 un, Sundly Church service - 6:30pm
~edneoday

7 pm

' RtttoraUon CbriiUID FelltWUI)I
936S HDoper Road, Athens, Pallor:
Lonnie Coat~. Sunday Worship 10:00 am,
W-sday,7 pm
HOUI&lt;oiH..... M . -

St. Rt. 1:14 LanplU!t, OH
Full Gospel, Cl Paston Robert &amp; R.obeN
Musser, Sunday School 9:30 am. ,
Worship 10:30 am- 7:00 pm, 1Wcd._.
Service 7:00pm
Team Jesw Mlalltrtes
Meeting in the Mulberry ~ommunity
Center Gymmuium. Pastor Eddie Bltf.
Service every TIICSday 6:30pm

Pentecostal
Penlecostal Assembly
Pastor: St. Rt. 124, Racine . Tornado Rd .
Sunday School - 10 a.m., Evening· · 7
p.m., Wednesday Senices -7 p.m.

Presbyterian
HarrisonvOlt Presbyterian Cblll'tb
Pastor: Robert Crow, W()rship · 9 a.m .
Mlddlepocl

Pmbytntm

Pastor: lnmes Snyder, Sunday School 10
a.m .. worship service l l am .

Seventh-Day Adventist
Sevmlh·OaY Adventist
Mulberry Hts. Rd .. P.4)meroy. Saturday
Services: Sabbath St hool - 2 p.m.,
Worship - 3 p.m.

United Brethren
MI. Hermon U1lled Brelhrea
In Christ Cburth
Texas Community 36411 Wic~am Rd ,
Pastor: Peter Manindale, Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship ~ 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m .. Wedne~tday Sen ices - 7:00 p.m.
Youth group meeting 2nd &amp;. ·411t Sundays
7 p.m.
Eden UnlleG Brethrea In Cbrlst
State Route 124, beiween Reedsville &amp;
Hockingport . Sunday School - 10 a.m .•
Sunday Worship - 11 :00 a.m. Wednesday
Services - 7:00 p.m.. Pastm- M. Adam

Filth Gospd O.urcb
L.ong Bonom, Sunday School - 9:30a.m..
Worship - 10:45 a.m .. 7:30 p.m..
Wednesday 7:30p.m.
Mt. Olhe ~omm1nlty Chun:h
Pastor: Lawrtnce Bush,- Sunday School 9:30a.m., Evening -6:30p.m., Wedneday
Service- 7 p.m..
FuU Goapel URhlhou,.
33045 Hiland Road; Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy ' Witt
Hunter, Sunday School - 10 a.m., Evening
7:30 p.m., TUesday &amp; Thurs .- 7:30p.m.

· Nazarene

Syrt~~:USt Cburda

Fflrri&lt;w Bible Chon:b
I, Pastor: Brian May,
Sunday Schoot•- 9:30a.m .• Wonhip- 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00p.m.
Flllb F.U.Miolp C..... for c.rtol
Pastor: Re v. Franklin Dickens. Senice:
Friday, 7 p.m.

Letart.

OoaloChn.tluf-p
{Non-deoominatiODII fellowship)
Mcetin8 in ihe Meia• Middle School
Cafeteria Pastor: Ouis. Stewart
10:00 am- Nooo 5Widay: lnfonml
Worship, Children's ministr)·

Mt. Olve Ualled Metbodlst
Off 124 behind Wilkesville, Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires, Sunday Schoo l -9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m., Thursday
Services · 7 p.m:

Cbfittr
Putor: Jim Corbin, Worship · 9 a.m.•
Sunday School - 10 a.m . , Thursday
Services · 7 p.m.

Whitt-'• Chapel WC!dtyaa
Coohille Road . PIStor: Rev. Chailel
Martinliale. Sunday School · 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m., Wednesday Service
- 1 p.m .

A....... Gnt0 C....,lllllly Churdo
Putor. Wayne Dunlap , Siate Rt. 681.
Tuppers Plains,Sun. Wonhip: 10 am &amp;
6:30 pm .. Wc:d . Bible .Study 7:00 p.m .

Pastor. Keith Rader, Sunday School - tO
a.m., Wmhip - It am.

Wo~hip -

· Deller Cburtb ol c•rtat
Sunday school 9:30a.m., Sunday worship
- 10:30 am.

Hald Knob , oo Co. Rd. 31, Pauor: Rev.
Ro1er Willford. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m. Worship- 7 p.m . '

South •thel Coaun•nlty Church

Silv~r ' R idge- Pastor l.intla Damev10od ,

of the N~JaJtH

Pastor Mike Adkins , Sunday School · 9:30
a.m .• Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.,

Sunday School ~ 9 a.m.. Worship Service
to a.m. 2nd and 4tll Sunday

,-......__ ~././ ..... _ ,1 li) l.. ... -

..... I.. ·
~)ff irltf:trll6/l:IIIU/'K/I#

740·992-7713

Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

The Appliance man ·

Ra.veuwood, WV, SUDday Scbool 10 am• Momina wonhip II am Evenina- 7 pm ,
Wednesday 1 p.m.

Ooldtotc.rtoo
33226 Children's Homf Rd. Pomero)', OH
C()ntact 740-44t-1296 Sunday momioJ
10:00 , Sun morning Bible study;
foli()wing wonbip. Sua. eve 6:00 pm.
Wed bible study 7 pm

Baptist

llitblde Baptist CbUid

i'

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

www.mydlillyeentlnel.com

your light so shine bef&lt;lrel
that they may see
works and g!Qrify
IFath•~r in heaven.': ·
Matthew 5:

1isbrr 1untral Jlomt

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Davls.Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-w,rner
Full tine of
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Insurance words abide in you, ye ·shall
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Financial
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Jqhn15:7
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Pomeroy

992-ll&amp;n

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

-

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

111111

,\NDl.R'iON
RAl ftOMl

tl'N~

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

' .

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...

..
I

Let your light so shine before
men, that they may see your
care you dtse,e; close to home good works and glorify your
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Father in heaven."
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Matthew 5:16
740-992-6606

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy
"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before

God and man."

Acts 24:

God so loved the world
he gave his only
lbe~g01rten

son ...
Joh/13:16

~
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CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens,:Pomeroy or Parkersburg
1-740-667-3156
"Still small
M~ arace

sufficient
for thee: for m~
strenath is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

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proucr '1'" f...Uy•
Suppression • Extinguishers • Sprinklers

.. .-

�. . ..

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

-

- A H~nger For More - -

Once upon a .time, there
lived a young woman
named Rose Red, who was
forced to be a slave in the
very palace to which she
had been summoned. So
many months before. the
king had in vited her to join
his court that she mi ght be
made a true lady. Some said
that she might even be the
one to whom the prince
would be wed. Now. even as
she stooped to sco ur the
floor or cleared the ashes
from the cooking grills. she
remembered wel l how she
had betrayed them .
Her mind and hea rt were
fi lled with memories of the
day that she had received
the mysterious gift from a
person that she had never
met. t was a beautiful gold
app le. he note that accompanied it said that it was
from a wel l-w isher and
that anyone who ate of it
would be destined to
become king or quee n. The
king's so n. Prince Joshua.
had once warned her about
such gifts. say ing that gift s
from strange rs were perilous and that they often
held hidden snares. Ami it
proved to be so. For in the
very day that she ate of th e
apple. she became co nvinced th at royal garb was
not onl y fitting for her. but
that nothing ·less than the
king 's own . mantle itself
was her dtle. Event uall y.
desiring eve n to wear the
beautiful crown that had
belon ged to the kindly
king, she betrayed him to
enemies in orde r to make it
her own.B ut even as she
had committed her treac hery and closed her fin ge rs
about the crow n. it was
yanked from her grasp and
placed upon the hrnw of a
wicked and selfish woman
named Adiken1a , who
called herself "Queen of
All." And onl y after Rose
Red was reduced to forced
labor could she see clearly
that Adikema had been the
sender of. the gift and the
weaver-of the deceit which
had lured her into bondage.
And so she spent her days
in bitter toil wi th nothing
but ac hes and blisters as
her reward and garbed in
nothing but castoff rags for
. her cl oth ing.
Adikema was, of cour·se.
very va in and de li ghted
eac h morning in speaking to
her magic mirror. "Mirror,
mirror, in my hand, who is
the fairest in the land?"she
wou ld call to it. The mirror's face would ripple and
swirl, and then it tell lies to
·the false queen with all sorts

Pagel\6

Pastor
Thom
Mollohan

of flatterie s. "My queen. do
not worry and do not fret
Thy beauty is the greatest
yet. There is no one so fu ll
of grace, sweet of ·sound,
nor fair of face." Adikema
would laugh with self-satisfaction and then go about
the business of cruelly
oppressing the people.
But being vety vain, she
was also very afraid of the
retur11 of the king and his
son. So. having heard that
she was to be the beloved
·bride of the king 's son.
Adikema heaped exceptional iib use upon Rose
Red, hoping to tw ist her
with bitterness and crush
her with despair. Little
imps were sent to torment
her, bringing with thetp .
their bags of temptations
and fi ery whips with which
they coul d inflic t pain and
grief. The names of the
imps
were
Impurit y,
Idolatry. Hatred , Selfish
Ambition. Jealol!sy, Rage,
Discord,
Persecution,
Hardship,
Trouble,
~ait in g, Sorrow, .Trials,
and Sacrifice. They see med
to delight in causing
anguish and hopelessness.
The temptation that they
brought with them to totally despair. along with the
gui lt and shame th at she
already carried, were so
utt erly crushi ng that Ros.e
Reel did not believe that she
co uld go on. And so
between weariness and the
cru el poison that co ursed
through her ve ins. ever
since she had eaten of the
vil e app le. the day came
when her strength completely failed and she found
herself slipping to the
ground as the pallor of
death crept over her . once
. fair countenance.
But th en from the shadows stepped the king 's
on ly son, Prince Joshua.
Rose Red's eyes caught
sight of him ere darkness
totall y co nsum ed them.
More. than pain, she felt
shame and her heart
craved pardon. And as she
looked upon the face of the
prince, seeing his purity
and noble character shining throu gh his kind eyes,
she found that she also no

Friday, June 1, 2007

WORSJllP GOD THIS WEEK

Friday, Julie 1, 2007

Bible school gets
undenvay Sunday

longer cared for rank or of my treachery. I'm the one
special adornment; nor who deserved to die," she
POMEROY - The comeven healing for herself. whispered as she hung her
munity Bible School in
She longed only to see him head and began to weep.
enthroned, exalted, and
The prince simply replied, Pomeroy will kick off
honored.
"But I took your place. And Sunday night and continue
The prince knelt beside now I'm alive agai n. If through June . 8 at the St.
her and lifted her feverish you ' ll trust me and will now Pau l Lutheran Church.
Theme of the school wi II
head. He softly placed hi s consent to walk all the days
be
"Avalanche Ranch" and
lips to hers and ki ssed her, of the rest of your life with
will
·take youngsters on
taking into himself, as he me, your name wi ll . no
what
is described as "a wild
did so, all of the poison longer be Rose Red, but will
ride
through
God's Word :·
that filled her dying body. instead be Snow White for
There
will
he
"stampeding
Suddenly she felt new life all your guilt will be washed
cattle.
yappi
ng
cattle dogs.
again . She knew that he away.". She gazed up at him .
soaring
eagles,
~nd
a whole
had taken the sting of "Yes. Yes, I do consent. 1.
herd
of
fnei1ds,
'
accordmg
death from her and was will walk with you now and
bearing it now himself. He forever," Snow White
touched her face tenderly answered.
and then he was overcome · Adikema
had
been
by death, his body slump- watching all these things
ing to the floor.
wi\h contempt, and knew
Then seven of her tor- that she had been defeated.
mentors came to her pri- "Mirror, mirror, in my
Bv JENNIFER DOBNER
vately and pulled off their hand, who is the fairest in
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
hoods, revealing their true the land?'' she uttered to
selves to Rose Red. the mirror as she gritted her
SALT LAKE CITY
Suddenly she knew them teeth. The mirror yawned· When he was · a teenager,
for who they really were, and loudl y sighed. "Your Conne ll
o·oonovan
seve n small servants\ that beauty is painted on. your opened up to his Mormon
she had assumed were of lit- skin; your heart is foul and seminary teacher and said
tie consequence. Yet these black within. But aren' t that he was gay.
seven dwarfs had faithfull y you tired of thi s game?
0' Donovan was greeted
served their master for years ·only the Prince can make wi th kindness - and a prebeyond count. Under the this claim. If we speak of sctiption to. chart the frehood of Persecution was heart or hand, the prince is quency of his sexual
"Goodness";
under fairest in the land . And as
·Hardship was "Gentleness"; you See, he 's not alone. thoughts; fasting and praybeneath
Trouble
was Snow White nnw sits ing when the urges came
were suggested as a means
"Peace"; from Waitin g beside his throne."
of
wi lling them away.
came "Patience"; Sorrow
That very day Adikema ·
''He
didn't know what to
brought "Joy" ; beneath was banished from the land.
do
,"'
0'
Donovan said of his
Trial was "Hope"; and but the Seven Dwarfs
teacher,
who is now a church
under Sacrifice was "Love." remained faithful servants
elder.
"He
was a super-nice
As they stood before her, to Snow White ever after
guy,
but
ju
st misinformed
they bowed. "We' ve been that.
sent by the king to come to
So it is for God's church, and al l he had was the
you so that you might be we who have placed ·our church handbook to go by."
Raised a member of The
made ready." After they faith truly in the risen Son
Church
of Jes us Christ of
took the body of the prince of God. In trustin g Him as
Latter-day
Saints.
and laid him by in a glass our Lord and Savior, we no
·
0
'
Donovan.
a
writer
and
coffin, tbey then began to longer carry our sins. but
histo
rian
.
served
a
ch.
u
rch
care for her as she wept. have been washed clean and
mission
and
married
in
the
And any time the true ser- are now invited to walk
church'
s
Salt
Lake
City
vants of Adikema came to with · Him through life,
accost Rose Red, the seven experiencing Him and Temple. He came out in
dwarfs surrounded her and knowing thilt all our days 1985 and eve ntually left the
gave her strength and are watched. over by the ·faith , unable to reconcile hi s
courage to stand against Ancient of Days (Daniel 7). gay identity with the teachthem, though all seemed And what of Persecuti on, ings of the church.
"I had to thmw the baby out
lost to her and the victory of Hardship, Trouble, Waiting,
with
the bath water. I slatted
Adikema see med complete. Sorrow,
Trials,
and
from
scratch and rebuilt
But then, in the early Sacrifice? We, as God's
myself."
he said in an intermorning of the third day, children, also will find that
view
with
The Associated
Rose Red's eyes opened and they are sent to us that we
gazed upon a glass coffin in might reap a harvest of Press last week. "I decided
which nothing lay. She Goodness,
Gentleness, that I can use the word grace,
looked up and saw the Peace, Patience, Joy, Hope but in a different way.''
Last Sunday, the 43-yearPrince standing by, gazing and Love.
old
0' Donovan gave .the
down at her with tender(Thorn Mollohan and his
ness. He reached down and, · family have ministered in keynote address at the 30th
taking her hand, lifted her southern Ohio the past 12 ·anni versary of Affirmation,
up. "Come and · be my years. He is the pastor of a support group for gay, lesbride," he said to her as she Pathway
Community hi an, bisex ual and transgenlooked into hi s eyes.
Church which meets on dered Mormons in Salt
"How can I? I am a trai- Sunday .mornings at 455 Lak~ City.
Founded in Provo by a
tor. I tried to lift myself up Third Ave. He may be
above you and the king. I'm reached for comments or handful of students from th e
Brigham
not worthy ·for I am not red questions by e-mail at pas- church-ow ned
like the rose, but red like torthom@pathwayga/lipo- Young
University,
blood ... blood shed because lis.com).
Affirmation grew out of

to one of the workers.
Crafts. games, Bible stories. music and snacks will
be included in the classes to
be held 6 to 8:30 p.m. each
Participatin g
evenin g.
churches are the Pomeroy
Bapti", Tr~nity Ch urch.
Lutheran , United Methodist
churches in both Pomeroy a
Middleport.
and
the
Pomeroy Church of Christ.
More Ill/ormation on the
,,·/i ·Jr•l coi1 he obtained by
Cllliing 'i92 -20/0.

Support group for gay and
lesbian Mormons marks 30 years
concern over the increasing
number of suicides among
gay Mormons and from the
frustration of living a closeted life. Today, the group,.
which is not recognized by
or connected to the church,
has chapters across the
Unitcd States, in Australi a,
Canada, England, Italy and
South Korea.
FD( many, Affirmation is
the first place they co nnect
wi th other gay Mormons.
'They helped me through
in the beginning," said
Buckley Jeppson, 48, a gay
Mormon who lives· in
Washin gton, D.C. "That
was useful. It was the first
time I actuall y knew I wasn't the only person out
there . It's co mforting."
Offic iall y, the Mormon
church has taught that
homosex uality is a sin and
that trad itional marriage is
an institution ordained by
God. In the 1990s, church
elders modified that position to differentiate between
homosexual orientation same- gender attraction as
they call it - and having an
active gay sex life.
"The sin is in yielding to
temptation," Elder Dallin H.
Oaks said in an. interview
co nducted by a public relations officer posted on the
chu rch Web site earlier this
year. ·
Church officials declined to .
be interviewed for thi s story,
instead referring the AP to the
interview with Oaks and
"Eider Lance B. Wickman.
"What we· know is that
feelings can be controlled
and behavior ca n be controlled," Oaks.said.
Church President Gordon
B. Hinckley has said gays
who remain celibate can con. tinue to enjoy full membership in the church, a standard
seen in other faith tra9itions.

·Ridlullrn.Wat ......
:saJem St., Pastor: , SuOO..y School . tO
1.m., Eveniaa - 7 p.m., Wedoesday
ScoK:a - 7 pm.

c•udaotJ-C-Apclllotk
VanZandt and Wud Rd ., Pastor: James
Miller, Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.,
Evellin1 - 7:30 p.m .

_...,...Qoodt

RJnrValky
River Valley Apostolic Wonhip Center,
813 S . 3rd · Ave .. ~idd lepon, Re'o'.

Michael Bradford, Pastor. Sunday. 10:30
a.m. Tues . 6:30 pnyer. Wrd. 7 pm Bible
Study
[mJIWiutl Aposlollc 'li.btmade Inc::.
· Loop Rd off New lima Rd . Rutland.
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m .•
Thurs. 7:00p.m., Pistor Many R. Hutton·

Assembly of God
Uberty .._,bly ol God
P,O. Bo1 467 . Dudding Lane, Mason,
W.Va., Paltpr: Neil Tennant, Sunday
Serv ices- !O:OOa.m. and 1 p.m.

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l'qo•ille- Baplbl Cbun:h
Pastor: Mike Hannon, Sunday School
9:30 to 10:30 am , Woohip stnice 10:30
to 11:00 am. Wed . preaching 6 pm
Carpenter Baptist Cbun:h
Sunday Schoo l - 9:30am, Preaching
Service !0:30am, Evening SerY ice
1:00pm. Wednesday Bible Study 7:00 pm,
Interim Preacher - Aoyd Ross
Chabln Bopllsl Churdl

Pastor: Steve Liulc, Sunday School: 9:30
am, MDrn ing Worship : 10:30 am ,
Wednesd'ay Bible Study 6:30pm: choir
practice 7:30: youth and Bible Buddies
6:30 p.m. Thu rs. I pm book study
llope Baptist Cbun:b (Southern)
510 Grant St., Middleport , Sunday school
-9:30a.m., WDrship - II a.m. and 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Service: - 7 p.m. Pastor: Gary
Elli s
RuiiiDd f1nl Bapdsl Cburth
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:45 am .
Pomtroy Flnt Baptist ·
Pastor Jon Brockert. East Main St.,
Sunday Sch. 9:30am, Worship IO:JOam
Fin! Sootbcrn 8aptbl
41872 Pomeroy Pike , Pastor: E. l.amiJ'I
O'Bryant, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wonhip . 8:15 a.m ., 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.

.Flnt Baptilt Clumb
Pastor: Billy Zl!span 6th and Palmer St.,
Middleport , Sunday School - 9:15a.m.,
Worship - 10: 1! a.m.. 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Senice- 7:00 p.m.

Jtactne Flnt Baptlol
Pastor: Ryan Eaton , pastor , Sunday
School -9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:40 a.m.,
7:00 p.m., Wednesdar SerYice: s · 7: 00
p.m.
SUver Run ·Baptbt
Pastor: JOhn Swanson, Sunday School IOa.m., Wors hip - lla.m., 7:00 p.m.
,Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.
Mt. Union Baptld

Pastor: Dennis Wea,.er Sunday School9:45 a.m .. E'&gt;'en in g - . 6:30 p.rii .,
Wednes~ay Service§- 6:30p.m.
Btt•lthtm Bapllst Chun:h
Grear Bend. Rpute 124. Rac ine. OH.
Pastor: Ed Carter, Sunday School - 9 :3~
a.m., Su nd ay Worship - 10:30 a.m.,
Wednesday Bible Study-7:00p. m.
Old Bethel Fne Will Baplist Cburth
28601 St . Rt . .7, Midd leport , Sunday
Ser,.ice - 10 a.m., 6:00 p.m., Tpesday
Se~ices -6:00

St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7, Pustor: Rev.
James R. Acree. Sr., Sunday Unified
Service, Worship - 10 :30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

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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

6/te liJw ofKiJrmiJ
The law of Kanna might be called the
edm principle, i.e., whatever we send () U\

Vktory Baptist lndepe•denl
525 N. 2nd St. MiddlepDrt, Pastor: James
E. Kee see, Worship - toa.m., 7 p.m..
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Mi~helle

Dircc.tor of Marketing and Admiss ions
333 Page Street
(740) 992-6472
Middleoort OH Fax 1740) 992-7406

com ~

back to us. in one fOnn or another.
If we are gi,•ing off friendly "vibes".
people are likely to respond to us in a
· friend ly way. but on the other hand, if we
arc giving off hos~le or aggressive Vibes.
people arc prone to respond in kind. The
law orkarma is a special case of the law
of atlnlction, which says that we will
anract the things that we think about. lf we
tend to he cynical in our thinking, we will
usually find the selfishness and i~ s i ncerity
tl1a1we are looki ng for..People who
suspect thai everyone is trying to cheat
them tend 10 treat others suspiciously. arxt
wi ll usually not ex1end 1rust to those
whum tlx:y do nm know very well. As a
cun:..l·qurricc of this kind of treatment (i.e ..

Bt IUJt.dtceivtd: Gr~d i.~ not ·
IIWtbd, for wltattver a man
..tnw.~, that fu

tt•malsO reap.

R.S.V. Gllatians 6,7

not being lru ~ ted in situations where you
\\ould nonnally expect it), !hose people
. . . ho arc not ex: tended trust and good faith
then fc&lt;lf they arc goi ng to be cheated by
· thi ~ untru~ting person, since, after all, "it
tak6 one to know one.'' The person who
has thus not extended trust may be
inclined to beat the other person to the
punch. If you fear you arc going to get hit,
why not hit first? However. since people
tend to live up to or down to our ·
e:&lt;peclations of them, we oughl to ~xpect
the best of others. In the long run, we

really do get what we give.

Kennedy

mum FrinuiJ.r
AmuHpllt' H'

Hours
6am·Spm

Mi[[ie's 1(estaurant
740-949-221 0
"A Home Bank for
Home People"

We Sell Homes at

TEAFORD REAL ESTATE
Members ot the MLS and REALTOR•
Pick up a color Brochure!
2t6 East Second St. • Pomeroy
740·992·3325
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Karl Kehler III
Certified Public Accountant
email: kktbler@charter.net
618 E. Main Street

Pomeroy, OH 45.769
740-'192-7270

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Securities offcrcid through H. D. Vest

Investment Services)&gt;&lt;. McmOcr SIPC Advisory
services offe red through H.D. Vest Advisory
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Open 7 duys a week

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992·1550
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If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide i11 you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be do11e unto you.
Jolin 15:7

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
St. Middleport, OH
-740-992-6128
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507 Mulberry Heights ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ~
(740) 992-3279
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Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

Flnt Baptlol

CHid!"'-· wv

On .. pcidnt Bapist)
SR 652 and Alldcrioo St. Putor. Robert
Grady, Sunday school 10 am, MorninJ
church II am, Sunday evenins6 pm, Wed.
Bible Study 7 pm

Catholic
t61 Mulberry A.ve., Pomeroy. W.M898,
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz, Sal. Con.
4:45-5:15p.m.; Mass- 5:30p.m., Sun.
Coo . -8: 45-9: 15 a.m., Sua. Mass -·9:30
a.m .,DaityMass· 8:30a.m.

w-

Church of Christ

Faith B1ptist Cburc:h
Railroad St., Mason, Sunday School - 10 ~
a.m., Worship - I I a.m:, 6 p.m,
Wednesday Services.- 7 p.m
Foresl Run Bapllst· Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods, Sunday SchoOl - tO
a.m., Worship - ll :30a.m.
Mt. Moriah Bapth_t
Fourih &amp;. Main St .. Middleport , Sunday
School - 'L M&gt; a.nl.. Worship - 10:45 a. m.

Andqulty Bapdst
Sunday Schoo! · 9:30 a.m.. Worship IQ:45 n.m., Sunday Evening- 6:00 p.m.,
Pastor: Don Walker

HemSodl GnYe Clrtldu Cbut.ll
Minister: Larry BroWn. Wonhip • 9:30
a.m. Sunday School · 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study· 7 p.m.

........yChurdo olc.rtol
212 W. Main St., Sunday School- 9:30
a.m., Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,_
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.
P.......yW-CIIudaoiCbrilt
33226 Children 's Home Rd ., Sunday
School - !1 a.m., Wonhip- IOI..m.,6 p.m ,
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m:

MiddlepOrt Chartb ol Cllriot .
5ih and Main, Pastor: AI Haruon ,
Chitdrens Director; Stwoa Sayre, 'Jten,
Dirt.etoc Dodger VIU&amp;han, Sunday School
- 9:30a.m .. Wonhip- 8:1S, 10:30 1.m., 1
p.m., wodnesday Services- 1 p.m.

C.....,

Kooo
oiQrlot
Worship - 9:30 a.m ., Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Pastor~Jeffrey Wallace. 1st aod
JroSunday
Barwllllow llldae Cllvcb ol CU!Il
Pastor:Bruce: Teny,.Sunday School -9:30

a.m.

Mile Hill Rd., Racine. Putor: Jimes
Sanerfi_ela, SuDIIIy School - 9:45 a.m.•
Evc:aiDJ - 6 p.m.• Wednead.ly Suvioes - 7
p.m.
Putoc Roo Healh, Sunday Wonbip · 10
a.m., 6 p.m ., Wedlesdly Services - 7

p.m.

s,....l'lrol CJnudl otGod
Appk 11X1 Serood Su., Pastor: Rev. David

R11uell , Sunday School and Worship- 10
a .m. Evening Services- 6:30 p.m..
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m .

c-

otGod o1 Propllecy
OJ. White Rd . off St. Rt . 160, Pulpr: PJ .
Chapman, Sundly School - 10 a.m ..
Worship - II a.m ., Wednesday Services- 7

pm.

Congregational
Trlally Citanh
SecOnd "' Lynn, I'&lt;Kneroy, l'ulor. Re•.
Jonathan Noble, Wonhip 10:25 am ..
Sunday Schooi 9:1S a.m.

Episcopal
G.- Eploalpt Cllordo
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy. Sunday School
and HDly Eochari51 11:00 a.m. Rev.
Edward Pa~

Holiness
~Cburcb

Pastor: Steve Tomek, Main Sbftl,
Rutland , Sunday Wonhi~iooo a~ .•
Sunday Senri~7 p.m.
DIDflllt Hollaal Cburcll
llM7 Stale Route 325, Lang.svlle."Pastor:
Jknjamin Crawford, Sunday school - 9:30
a.m., Sunday wonhip - 10:30 am. &amp;: 7
p.m.: Wednesday prayer §ei'Vice • 7 p.m.
Cllfory l'lllrtlll Cblpd
· HurisoovUie' Road, Pastor: Charles
McKenzie, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 1_1 a.m., 7i00 p.m ., Wedoesday
Senice . 7:00 p.m.

RoooorSIIona H...._Cbm:b
Leading Creek Rd.; R11tland, Pastor: Rev.
Dewey King, S11aday &amp;ehool- 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday worship -7 p.m .• \YC!dnesday
prayer meetin&amp;- 7 p.m.
Pile GloYi Bible HotlaeD Cllwdl
112 mile off Rt. 325, Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednudty Servi« . 7,30 pm.

Worship - tp :30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.

Wc:dnesdly Services-6:30p.m.
ZlooCbvcboiCI&lt;rlot
Pomeroy, Hnri1onville Rd . (Rt.l43),
Pasior: Roaer Watson, Sunday School •
. 9;.30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m .. Wcdnesclay SUvices -7 p.m.

Thppen l'lala Chartb ol Cbdot .
ln slnimental, Wonhip Servic:e - 9 a.m.,
Communion - 10 a.m.• Sunday School IO:t5 a.m., Youth- S:30 pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm
Bradbury Cburc• ol Clutlt
Minister: Tom Runyon, 39558 Bradbury
Road, Middleport, Sunday School - 9!30
a.m .
Won hip - 10:30 a.m.
Rutlaud ~bvcb ol C Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship and
Communion .- 10:30 a.m .• Bob J. Weny,
Minister

W....,.. Bible B...._ (:hllldl

7S Pcort S&lt;., MiddleJ1011. Puto&lt; Riek
Booroe, Suodoy SehOot . tO a.m. Wonbip
-10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m.,
Wedaesday Service-7:30 p.m.
HJJOII Rua C""""""'t7 Cbun:ll
Putor. Re•. Larry Lemley; Sunday Seboot
-9:30a.m., Wonhip - 10: 4~ a.m., 7 p.m.,

Thunday Bible Sn&amp;dy and Youth · 7 p.m.

Lowtt CutrFree M - Cbun:b
Putor: Glenn Rowe, Sunday Sc_hool •
9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a. m. and 6
p.m.,Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
The Cbun:b o!Jesus
Cbrlst of Latter·DI.y Saints
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday Sc:~ool 10:20-11 a.m.~ Relief
Society/Priesthood II :05-12:00 noon .
Sacrament Suvice 9- 10:15 a.m..
Homemakin&amp; meeting , 1st Thurs.- 7 ~m .

Lutheran

Bradford Cbur&lt;b oiCbn.t
Corner of St. Rt. .124. &amp; Bradbury Rd.,
Minister. Doug Shamblin, Youth Minister:
Bill Amberger, Sunday School -..9:30 a. m.
Worship ~ 8:00 a.m.• 10:30 a.m. , 7:00
p.m.,Wtdneiday Services -7:00 p.m.
Hkkory HIU. c•urdl ol Cbrbi
Tuppeil Plains, Pastor Mike ~oore . Bible
class, 9 a.m . Sunday; worship_10 a.m.
Sunday: worship 6:30 pm Sunday; Bible
class 7 pm Wed.

St. John L11tben_n Cbwd
Pine Grove, Worship- 9:00 a.m., Sunday
School-10:00 a.m. Pastor:

OUr Sa•lour Lulbena Cbun:h
Wulnut and Henry Sts~. R~vC nswood,
W.Va., Pastor: David Ru ssell, Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m., Wors hip - II a.m .
St.l'lul Lutberao Cburtb
Oxner Sycamore&amp;. Second Si ., Pomeroy,
.Sun. ~hool- 9:45a.m., Worship · t I a.m .

Uni.ed Methodist

R-•Uie Chartb ol Cbrillt
Pastor: Phillp Stunn, Sunday School: 9:30
a.m ., Worship Service: 10:30 a.m., Bibie
Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Grolwn United Mothodbt
II a.m. Pastor: Richard Nease
Bt&lt;btet United Methodlot
New Haven, Richart! Nease, Pastor,
Sunday worship 9:30 a.m. Tues. 6:30
prayer and Bible Study.

,_

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

c.rteto. t.lf:nli:n n 'eedoeel a.rdl
K.in&amp;sbury load , Pastor: Roben Vllce.
Sunday School - 9:)0 a.m ., Wonbip
Senice 10:30 a.m., Evening Service 6
pm.

I.Goa .......

, _ , Cbortb , ... N....,..
Putor: Jan Lavender, Sunday School 9:30 a.m ., Wonhip - 10:30 1.m . and 6
p.m., WedDesday Savitts- 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.. Worship IO: ~a.m .

CbatirOuda ol ... N.....,.

Putor: Denzil Null. Worship - 9:30 a.m.
$Wlday School- 10:30 a.m.

-

Paslor. Rev. Hcrbat Grate, Suoday School
- 9:30 a.m ., Worihip - II a.m., 6 p.m.•
WedDesdly 5mkes- 7 p.m.
Ratbad Clludaoltbt N...,_
Pastor: IJUC Sh111Je, Sunday School- 9:30
am., WorJhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m .,
~y Services -1 p.m.

Wonhip - 9 :30 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Fmt Sunday of Month - 7:00
p.m. ~ervice

...._...,.,.St. hut
Pastor: Jim Corbitt. Sunday School - 9
a.m ., Worship · 10 a.m., Tudday Services
. . '-7:30p.m.

Other Churches

entntautor

Sy....,. Commualty Cbartb
241k&gt;·Sccood St., Syracu~~e, OH

AsburY (Syracuse) , Pastor. Bob Robinsoti,
Sunday School - 9:45 am., Worship - II
a.m., Wednesday Servic:ca - 7:30p.m.

Sun. School 10 am, Sundy nighf 6:30pm
Pastor: Joe Quinn

AN&lt;wBeal••lnl

f.ole&lt;Jrite .

(I'd Golptl CIMira) Harrisooville,
Pwon: Bob and Kay Marshall ,
Sunday ServK:e, 2 p.m.

Pastor: Arland King . Sunday School 10:30 1.m .• Worship - 9:30 a.m.. Bible
Study Wed. 7:30

"""'-

The .C burdl ol Cbrlit ol P....-y

Inte rsection 7 and 124 W, Evangelist:
Dennis Sargent , Sunda)' Bible Stuliy ·
9:30 a.m., Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m..

Christian Union
Hartford Cb11rcll of Christ In
ChristiMUuloo

Hartford . W.Va .. Pastor:DaYid _Greer,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship_10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Services- 7:00pm.

foratRIID

Pastor: Bob Robinson,Sunday School - 10
a.m., Wof-ship - 9 a.m.

u..th (MWdleport)
Pastor: Brian Dunham. Sunday School 9:30a.m., Worship - 11 :00 a.m.

Commualty ol CbrW
Portland-Racine Rd .• Pastor: Jim Proffill.
Sunilay School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a.m.. WedneW~ty Servic~s - 1:00
p.m.
Bethel Worship Ctater
39782 S.R. 7. Reed sv ille. OH 45772. t /2
mile nonh CJf Eastern Schools on SR 7. A
Full Gospel Church. Pastor Rob Barber.
Associate Pastor Karyn Davis, Youlh
Pastor Suzie franc_is, Sund ay serv ices
10:00 am worship. 6:00 pm Family Life
Classes, Wed. Home Cell Groups 7:00
p.m., Outer Limits Cell Group at the
church 6:30 pm to 8;30 pm

Mlnetnttle
Pasior: Bob Robinson , Sunday School - 9
a.m., Wonhip - 10 a.m.

, PartChapd
Sunday School - 9 a.m., Worship - 10 a.m.

Pomeroy
Passor: Brian Dunham , Worship - 9:30
a.m., Sunday School- 10:3.5 am.
Rod&lt;Sprlnp

Pastor: Keith Rader, SWt&lt;lay School - 9:15
a.m., Worship - 10 a.m .. Youth
Fellowship, Su~y • 6 p.m.

A!b-Cbun:b
398 As~ St., Middltpon-Pastor Jeff Smith
· Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Morning
Worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp;. 7:00 pm .
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p.m., Youtll
Service-7:00p.m.
Appt Ufe Cellltr
"Fuli·Oospel Cbllrth", Pastors John &amp;
Patty Wade. 603 S«ood Ave . Mason , 173·
.5017, Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.,
Wednetday7pm

RaiiiDd
Pastor: Rick Bourne , Sunday School 9:30a.m., Worship - 10:30 am., Thunday
Services - 7 p.m.
Salem Center

Pastor: William K. M111hall, Sunday
Sehoot. t0:\5 a.m., WOBbip . g,ts om.,
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm
Sao.mtle
Swulay School- 10 a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

II&lt;IUDy

AbaDdllltGncoR.F. I.
923 s;Thfrd St., MiddltpJrt, PutorTertsa
Dav is, Sunday service, 10 a.m.,
.Wedncldly service, 7 p.m.

Putor: JGhn OilmoR, Sun_day School· 10
a.m., Wors hip - 9 a.m. , WcciDeadaf
Services - 10 a.m.

Filth Fill GGopol Cbun:ll
lonl Bottom, Pastor: Steve Reed, Sunday
School • 9:30 a.m. Wonhip • 9:30 a.m.
and 7 p.m., Wednesday - 7 p.m., Friday fellowaq, service 7 P·ITI:··

C81'1Hl.SuttDD

Cannel &amp;. Bashan Rds. Rac:lne , Ohio,
Pastor: John Oilmorc, Sunday School :
9:4.5 a.m., Wonh i~ - 11 :00 a.m. , Bible
Study Wed. 7,30 pm.

Mornlna Sllr

Hlrrllon•UitC-l7 Cbartb
Pastor: Theron Durham, Sunday - 9:30
a.m. and 7 pm., Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Pastor: John Gilmo~ . Sunday School · II
a.m., Worship- 10 a.q~ .

Middleport COIIUilunlty Cbur&lt;h
.57.5 Pearl St., Middleport , Pa!tor: Sam
Anderson. Sunday School 10 a.m.,
Eveaing- 7:30p.m., Wednesday Service 7JOp.m.

-~

Pastor: Bil l Manhall S11nday School 9a.m.. Worship - 10 a.m .. l!t Sunday
e"ery month evening service 7:00 p.m.;
Wedneld.ay - 7 p.m.

Raetne

Filth Volley Tabtnacto Cbun:b
Biiley Run Road, Pss1or: Rev. Emmett
Rawson. Sunday Eve ning 7 p.m.,
Thursday Service · 7 p.m.

Pastor: Kerry Wood , Sunday School · 10
a.m.. Worship - II a.~ .Wednesday
Servic:e16 pm; Ttmr Bible Study 7 pm
CooMie Uolled Methodlol Putah
Pastor: HeieR Kline, Coolville Church ,
Main &amp; Fifth St., Sun. School - 10 a.m..
Worship . 9 a.m.. TUes. Services- 7 p.m . .

Syracuac Mlslloa
1411 Bridgeman S t., Syracuse , Sunday
School - 10 a.m, Eveni ng - 6 p.m..
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Bctbel Ch11rc:h
Towriship Rd,, 468C, Sunday School - 9
a.m, Worship - tO a.11_1., Wednesday
Services- 10 a.m~
·

Haul Commualty Cbwd.
Off Rt . 124, Pastor: Edsel Hatt , Sunday
School · 9:30a.m., Worship - 10:30 s.m..
7:30p.m.

Hoclklaport Ctiartb

Dy...ttte Community Chur&lt;h
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m ., Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

·Grand Street, Sunday ~hool - 9:30 a.m., .
Worship · 10:30 a.m., Pastor Phillip Bell

Cburch of God

Mone Chapel Cbun:•
Sunday school - 10 a.m., Worship - II
a.m.. Wednesday Service - '7 p.m.

Tottb Cbun:h
Co. Rd. 63, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .,
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Middleport Cbu.rth or the Naurtne
Pastor: Allen Midcap, Sunday School 9:30 a.m ..W()rship - 10:30 a.m.. 6:Jl p.m.,
Wednesday SerY i~es - 1 p.m.. Pastor:
Allen Midcap

Melp Couperalh&lt;l'll'!'h
Northeast CIJJster, Alfred , Pastor: Jim
Corbin, Sund11.y School - 9:30 a.m .,
Worship - II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Reedsvlllt Fellowsldp
· Church of the Nazarene. Pastor: Rus§ttl
Carso n . Sunday School • 9:30 a.m .,
Worship- 10:45 a.m ., 7 p.m., Wednesday
Services - 7 p.m.

W.Va . Rt.

Cll•ory Bible Cburdo
PomerOy Pike. Co. Rd .• Pastor: Rev.
I
.
B1ack_wood. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship 10:30 a.n\ .. 7:30 p.m.,
Wednewlay Service -7: 30p.m.
Stln"'Uit Coounuall}' Cburdr
Sunday School iO:OO am , Sunday W&lt;nhip
ll:OO am. Wednesday 7:00 pm Pastor:
Bryan &amp;. .Missy Daiky

ReJukin&amp; ur. Cburth
S . 2nd Ave .. Middleport. Pastor:
Mike Foreman. Pa~tor Emerit11s lawrencc
Foreman. Wonhip- 10:00 am
Wednesday Strvkes- 1 p.m.

.~00

ClifiDil T11bt-mitdt Cbun:b
Ctif!ol\. W.Va ...Sunday School - 10 a.m.,
W~rship · 7 p.m., Wednesday Service - 7
p.m
New Llrt Victory Ctater
3773 Georges Creek R~. Ga!lipolis. OH
PD ~ior: Bill Slaten. Sunday Senice1 - 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. WedneSday - 1 p.m. &amp;.
Youth ?p.m.

l"ult Gospel Chun:b
ollbe UriD« SoTior

Rt .338, Antiquity. Pastor: Jme Morris ,
Services: Saturday .2:00p.m.

Salem Com.M•nhy Churdl
SICk or West Columbia." W.Va.orn LieviDJ
Road , Pastor: Charles Roush (3().4) 67S2288, Sunday School 9:30 am, Sunday
eveninJ service 7:00 pm , Bibly Study
Wcdne5day service 1:00pm
lloMon Cltrlltlu Fdlo-pCIIIIdl
Panor: Hern:bel White, Sunday School·
10 un, Sundly Church service - 6:30pm
~edneoday

7 pm

' RtttoraUon CbriiUID FelltWUI)I
936S HDoper Road, Athens, Pallor:
Lonnie Coat~. Sunday Worship 10:00 am,
W-sday,7 pm
HOUI&lt;oiH..... M . -

St. Rt. 1:14 LanplU!t, OH
Full Gospel, Cl Paston Robert &amp; R.obeN
Musser, Sunday School 9:30 am. ,
Worship 10:30 am- 7:00 pm, 1Wcd._.
Service 7:00pm
Team Jesw Mlalltrtes
Meeting in the Mulberry ~ommunity
Center Gymmuium. Pastor Eddie Bltf.
Service every TIICSday 6:30pm

Pentecostal
Penlecostal Assembly
Pastor: St. Rt. 124, Racine . Tornado Rd .
Sunday School - 10 a.m., Evening· · 7
p.m., Wednesday Senices -7 p.m.

Presbyterian
HarrisonvOlt Presbyterian Cblll'tb
Pastor: Robert Crow, W()rship · 9 a.m .
Mlddlepocl

Pmbytntm

Pastor: lnmes Snyder, Sunday School 10
a.m .. worship service l l am .

Seventh-Day Adventist
Sevmlh·OaY Adventist
Mulberry Hts. Rd .. P.4)meroy. Saturday
Services: Sabbath St hool - 2 p.m.,
Worship - 3 p.m.

United Brethren
MI. Hermon U1lled Brelhrea
In Christ Cburth
Texas Community 36411 Wic~am Rd ,
Pastor: Peter Manindale, Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship ~ 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m .. Wedne~tday Sen ices - 7:00 p.m.
Youth group meeting 2nd &amp;. ·411t Sundays
7 p.m.
Eden UnlleG Brethrea In Cbrlst
State Route 124, beiween Reedsville &amp;
Hockingport . Sunday School - 10 a.m .•
Sunday Worship - 11 :00 a.m. Wednesday
Services - 7:00 p.m.. Pastm- M. Adam

Filth Gospd O.urcb
L.ong Bonom, Sunday School - 9:30a.m..
Worship - 10:45 a.m .. 7:30 p.m..
Wednesday 7:30p.m.
Mt. Olhe ~omm1nlty Chun:h
Pastor: Lawrtnce Bush,- Sunday School 9:30a.m., Evening -6:30p.m., Wedneday
Service- 7 p.m..
FuU Goapel URhlhou,.
33045 Hiland Road; Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy ' Witt
Hunter, Sunday School - 10 a.m., Evening
7:30 p.m., TUesday &amp; Thurs .- 7:30p.m.

· Nazarene

Syrt~~:USt Cburda

Fflrri&lt;w Bible Chon:b
I, Pastor: Brian May,
Sunday Schoot•- 9:30a.m .• Wonhip- 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00p.m.
Flllb F.U.Miolp C..... for c.rtol
Pastor: Re v. Franklin Dickens. Senice:
Friday, 7 p.m.

Letart.

OoaloChn.tluf-p
{Non-deoominatiODII fellowship)
Mcetin8 in ihe Meia• Middle School
Cafeteria Pastor: Ouis. Stewart
10:00 am- Nooo 5Widay: lnfonml
Worship, Children's ministr)·

Mt. Olve Ualled Metbodlst
Off 124 behind Wilkesville, Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires, Sunday Schoo l -9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m., Thursday
Services · 7 p.m:

Cbfittr
Putor: Jim Corbin, Worship · 9 a.m.•
Sunday School - 10 a.m . , Thursday
Services · 7 p.m.

Whitt-'• Chapel WC!dtyaa
Coohille Road . PIStor: Rev. Chailel
Martinliale. Sunday School · 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m., Wednesday Service
- 1 p.m .

A....... Gnt0 C....,lllllly Churdo
Putor. Wayne Dunlap , Siate Rt. 681.
Tuppers Plains,Sun. Wonhip: 10 am &amp;
6:30 pm .. Wc:d . Bible .Study 7:00 p.m .

Pastor. Keith Rader, Sunday School - tO
a.m., Wmhip - It am.

Wo~hip -

· Deller Cburtb ol c•rtat
Sunday school 9:30a.m., Sunday worship
- 10:30 am.

Hald Knob , oo Co. Rd. 31, Pauor: Rev.
Ro1er Willford. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m. Worship- 7 p.m . '

South •thel Coaun•nlty Church

Silv~r ' R idge- Pastor l.intla Damev10od ,

of the N~JaJtH

Pastor Mike Adkins , Sunday School · 9:30
a.m .• Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.,

Sunday School ~ 9 a.m.. Worship Service
to a.m. 2nd and 4tll Sunday

,-......__ ~././ ..... _ ,1 li) l.. ... -

..... I.. ·
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Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

The Appliance man ·

Ra.veuwood, WV, SUDday Scbool 10 am• Momina wonhip II am Evenina- 7 pm ,
Wednesday 1 p.m.

Ooldtotc.rtoo
33226 Children's Homf Rd. Pomero)', OH
C()ntact 740-44t-1296 Sunday momioJ
10:00 , Sun morning Bible study;
foli()wing wonbip. Sua. eve 6:00 pm.
Wed bible study 7 pm

Baptist

llitblde Baptist CbUid

i'

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

www.mydlillyeentlnel.com

your light so shine bef&lt;lrel
that they may see
works and g!Qrify
IFath•~r in heaven.': ·
Matthew 5:

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Pomeroy

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Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740·667-3110

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in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

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men, that they may see your
care you dtse,e; close to home good works and glorify your
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Father in heaven."
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Matthew 5:16
740-992-6606

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992-2955
Pomeroy
"So I strive always to keep
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he gave his only
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son ...
Joh/13:16

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Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
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,Page AS

LOCAL STATE
Differences in Gtrnrd Senior Center Donates to HMC
•
weapons·rmse.concern

The Daily Sentinel

BY JAMES HANNAH
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Ohio National Guard Equipment

DAYTON National
Guardsmen in Ohio and
other states are not being
trained with the same rifles,
Humvees, night-vision goggles and other equipment
they will use in Iraq and
Afghanistan · until just
before they are deployed,
raising concerns about the
soldiers' confidence to deal
with the dangers.
Mark Wayda, spokesman
for the Ohio Guard, said
Thursda~ that while in Ohio
the sol&lt;hers must train with
M-16 rifles instead of the
lighter, shorter-barreled M4s they would use in Iraq.
M-4s are often used in urban
settings because they make it
easier for soldiers ,to get into.
and out of vehicles quickly.
"It's about soldiers feeling as confident as they can
when they go on these very
dangerous
missions,"
Wayda said.
He said the soldiers are
also forced to train with less
powerful night-vision goggles and machine guns with
different optics, which are
crucial in learning how to
pick out targets and shoot
the guns.
In addition, the Ohio
Guard does not have
armored Humvees like the
ones used in Iraq. So the
soldiers must train in
Humvees with different
centerS of gravity and different braking and handling
characteristics, he said.
'The biggest problem is
you learn a set of skills that
are .not exactly tran~­
ferrable," he said.
The Ohio Guard also has
a shortage of ceramic plates

Training equipment used by the Ohio National
Guard:
• M-16 rifles: Troops in Iraq and Afghanistan use M4s, which are lighter with shorter barrels, enabling soldiers to more quickly enter and exit vehicles.
• Standard Humvees: Many troops in combat zones
use up-armor Humvees, which are heavier, have a dif-ferent center of gra-vity and different handling and
braking characteristics.
• Machine-gun optics: Soldiers in Iraq and
Afghanistan use upgraded optics, which are used to
pick.out tar¥ets and shoot
• Night-VISion goggles: Deployed troops use a more
powerful, higher-resolution version.

that fit into body armor, they are deployed and they
Wayda said. That requires are trained on up-armor
soldiers to share them dur- Humvees before going into
ing training, which length- combat areas. He said any
ens training time. The plates Guard commanders who feel
are important because it their units don't have the
changes the way soldiers right equipment or training
fire their weapons, he said. are required to inform their
The Oklahoma Guard has superiors'before deployment.
· a shortage of body 'armor,
"The Army doesn't take
M-4s and night-vision gog- . shortcuts on soldier protecgles, and no up-armored tion and safety," Ey said.
Humvees, according to
Before they are deployed,
spokesman Lt. Col. John the Guardsmen train on the
Altebaumer. He said regular new equipment at pre-mobiHumvees have canvas doors lizations stations in rhe
or none at all, while the oth- United States. It is there,
ers have heavy metal doors. · Wayda and Altebaumer say,
"You have all this equip- that the soldiers must learn
ment on you, and you have how to shoot the new
to figure out how to get out weapons and master the
of the door quickly," he said. new equipment. ,
The New Mexico Guard · "We call that just-in-time
has M-4s to train with, but equipping and training,"
no up-armor Humvees.
Wayda said. "The situation
"But I have not heard it doesn't give them die best
voiced as a concern by any opportunity for success."
commanders," said Maj .
Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland
Kenneth Nava, Guard twice has · asked President
spokesman.
Bush for his assurances that
Army spokesman Lt. Col. Guard troops are receiving
Carl Ey said all Guardsinen adequate training and equiphave the proper, mission- ment before being deployed
appropriate equipment when to Iraq and Afghanistan.

' which will encourage students to study science, tech. IWIOgy...,. ellgtlleering,, ~i
math. He also will consult
with the.Miami Valley P- f6
Education
Consortium,
which works to improve the
region's math and science
education from preschool
through college.
"Taft had mixed results as
governor, but he's very well
respected nationally as a
leader of education reform,"
said Mickey McCabe, vice
president for research and
executive director of UD's
research i11stitute. McCabe
will supervise Taft.
Before he left office, Taft
said his Third Frontier

Project for high-tech investment, tax reform and his
. efforts to make Ohio
schools more effective and
accountable were among his
most significant accomplishments. But his eight
years as governor also were
marred by his no contest
plea to ethics violations in
2005 and a scandal over
investment losses at the
Ohio Bureau of Workers'
Compensation.
Taft said he was excited
about his new opportunity.
"We've got to figure out
how to get more students in
college, and that 's a challenge that I really look forward to," he said.

Commission: Noe illegally
funneled campaign money
BY

JOHN McCARTHY

AS SOC IATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS
Imprisoned coin dealer Tom
Noe illegally funneled money
through an assistant to state
political campaigns, the Ohio
Elections Commission ruled
on Thursday.
The commission ruled 6-1
that Noe, now serving a 27month federal sentence for
illegally contributing to
President Bush's 2004 campaign, used others to make
illegal contributions to .state
candidates.
The commission referred
the case •.to prosecutors in
Toledo aod Columbus, commission
director
Phil
Richter said. If convicted,
Noe faces a $10,000 fine.
' Messages were left for
Franklin County Prosecutor

Ron O'Brien in Columbus.
Calls to the office of Lucas
County Prosecutor Julia Bates
in Toledo weren't answered.
The commtsston also
decided to further investigate
the allegations against Sue
Metzger, his former assistant.
The commission dismissed a
complaint against former
attorney general and auditor
Betty Montgomery stemming from the same case,
Richter said.
Attorney General Marc
Dann filed the complaints
against Noe and Montgomery
·in October, when he was a
state senator, said his lawyer,
Rick Brunner. Dann pursued
the case after his election as
the state's top lawyer because
he felt he had a duty to do so,
Brunher said.
Once Montgomery and
.other GOP candidates learned

they had tainted money, the
· either returned it or donated it
to charity. Brunner said Dann
had decided not to pursue the
complaint
against
Montgomery, .who last year
briefly campaigned for the
Republican nomination for
governor, because there was
no evidence that Montgomery
knew the Noe contributions
might have been illegal.
Prosecutors calculated that
Noe had stolen more than
$13 million from the rarecoin funds he managed for
the Ohio Bureau of Workers'
Compensation. He was sentenced last year to 18 years
on state theft. charges.
During the state investigation; then-Gov. Bob Taft
pleaded 110 contest to failing
to report free golf outings
and other gifts from Noe and
others and was tined $4,000.

Local Weather
Friday: •• Mostly sunny.
Highs in the ~pper 80s.
South winds around 5 mpn.
Friday
night ••• Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
s. Southwest winds
. ound 5 mph in · the
· ening ... aecoming light
·and variable. .
·Saturday... Mostly sunny
with a chance of showers
· and thunderstorms. Highs in
the mid 80s. South winds

!

1, 2007 ·

around 5 mph. Charice of
rain 40 percent. .
Saturday night ••• Mostly
cloudy with a chan.ce of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the lower 60s.
Southwest winds around 5
mph. Chance of rain 40 percent:
· Sunday and Sunday
night •.•Mostly · cloudy with
a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the

upper 70s . . Lows in the
lower 60s. Chance of rain
50 percent.
Monday••• Mostly cloudy ·
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in.
the upper 70s. Chance of
ram 40 percent.
Monday night and
Thesday... Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the upper
50s. Highs in the upper 70s.

Inside

'

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Houston bluts Reds, Page B2

Pacen, Memphi! hire new coaches, Page B3
Ducks look to fmish Ottawa, Page B4 .

Friday, June I, 2007

l..ocAL ScHEDULE
POMEAO't' - A. 9CheClJe Of~ COllege'
end hi(jl schoof 'i81Siy ~ fMI"'Is irMJivng
teams from Galia and Meigs oounlies.

Today'a HrDft
OKSAA TI'IICt&lt; and Field
Division
Division
Division
Division
Division

Championships
I field events, 9 a.m.
!I qualifying,• 9:30 a.m.
II ~ events, 1 p.m.
I qualityinQ, 1:30 p.m.
Ill qualifying. 4:30 p.m.

W.VA. BASEBAlL -

ClASS AA STATE SEMIFINALS

Bearcats claw past Point Pleasant
BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
- Everything went just as
· planned for Point Pleasant
except one thing - the
Saturday'• •mn
score - as the clock finally
OHSAA Trecll and Field
struck
midl)ight for the
ChamJ)Ionohlpt
Division II finals, 9:30 a.m.
"Cinderella" Btg Blacks and
Division Ill field events, noon
their magical run through
Division I finals. 1 p.m
the postseason. .
Division Ill finals, . 4:30 p.m.
Poi11t Pleasant (15-16) had
more
hits and half the errors
START TIMES AT STATE
as Grafton, but left a dozen
runners stranded on base,
MEIGS COUNTY
including leaving the bases
loaded twice, as the Bearcats
friday. June 1
Division Ill qualifying
took advantage of the few
Point mistakes to claim a 3~m U..h Becca ·owen (EHS),
2 victory in the Class AA
6:15 p.m.. (Heat 1, Lane 7)
4x400m reilly - Erin Weber, Becca
se mifinals Thursday in
Owen, Katie Hayman and Lauren
Charleston.
CurrminQs (EHS), 7:15 p.m. (Heat 2,
Lane 1)
·
Grafton (20-5) advances

Source: Ohio National Guard

Former Gov•.Taft. takes job.
DAYTON
(AP)
Former Gov. Bob Taft said
he has accepl.ed a position at
the University of Dayton to
help the ·school attract
research funding and steer
its students toward science,
niath and related fields.
A Republican who left
office in January because of
term limits, Taft will join
UD on Aug. 15 as a "distingllished research associate
for educational excellence,''
a two-year appointment, he
told the Dayton Daily News
for a story Thursday.
Taft, 65, will help the private Catholic university
launch the Center for
·Educational Excellence,

Friday, June

.

to Saturday's title game to played hard - we came up
play Herbert Hoover (22- here and showed we
II),
which
beat belong," said Point Pleasant
Independence 9-3 in the head
coach
James
other semifinal to also reach Higginbotham. "No matter
its first title contest.
about our record we played
Thursday's loss ended one hard and we just came up
of the most improbable runs p ne run short."
through the tournament in
Despite ·how well Point
history as Point Pleasant, Pleasant played in the conriding a · 35-year drought test, that one' run deficit
between state appearances, carne as a result of the Big
turned a late season cold Black's only errors.
streak into a sectional and
Grafton scored one run in
regional championship to. the first when a Jordan
advance to the state play- May Ie hit went between the
offs.
legs of Phillip Allen to
Once there, the Big Blacks knock in a run and another
showed its doubters that Bearcat run was scored in
they deserved to be there as the sixth when Point
much as anyone else.
Pleasant pitcher Ashton
· "I am disappointed, but Jones tried to pick off Nick '
·also pretty happy ·because
·
we are here and the kids
Please see Point. B2

Saturday Jyne 2
Division

tt flnals

NBA EAsrnRN CoNFERENCE FiNALS

BOOm run - Devan Soulsby (Meigs),
10:55 a.m. (Lane Bb)

Larry Crum/photo

Grafton players and fans celebrate as Bearcat senior Nick
Bolyard scores the. winning run while Point Pleasant's
James Casto watches during the sixth inning of Thursday's
Class AA baseball semifihal game in Charleston, W.Va.
'
.
.

GAMES

Division lllllnall

Girt' 400m dash - 5:35 )&gt;.m.
320Dm run - Michael Owen (EHS),
6:2S p.m. (Lane 6b)
Girt• 4x400m ,.u.y- 6 :40p.m.

Sign-ups for Eagle
Volleyball Camp
Submitted photoo ,

Ladies at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center presented handma.de stuffed animals
to the Holzer Medical Center Pediatric Unit, Emergency Department and Inpatient Rehab
Unit. Stuffed bunnies, bears, ducks, turtles, gingerbread men, and "prayer" bears for
Rehab patients were donated. Caregivers at the hospital were encouraged to sign the
stuffed donations in order to personalize for patients .· During their visit; the seniors were
treated to lunch by the· Hospital's Service Recovery Customer Satisfaction Team before
they delivered the donations to the des ignated departments . Pictured are representatives
from the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center including, Director Diana Coates, Barbara
Gheen, Betty Johnson, Mack Leighton , Marilyn Powell, Frances Reed and Minnie Rizer,
donating to staff members from the HMC Pediatric Unit and Emergency Department.

' .'~ ··~~. o ,

.1.·

..

···~ ·

possagew
Say Goodbye To C.ellulite!
Heather A. Edwards, Lic.ensed Massage
Therapist at Bend Area Chiropractic Center
i~ one of the first Lypossage Practitioners in
North America. Lypossage is an anti-aging,
body contouring, and cellulite reducing
treatment. Lypossage is a healthy
non...,invasive alternative to liposuction or
other body contouring machines. Lypossage
smoothes areas affected by cellulite and
reduce inches off the targeted area. The
results are significant. On average, women
lose 11 inches in total after just six weeks. As
. aLypossage Practitioner, Heather will help
you lose inches and get the body you deserve.
Lypossage is the natural way to a·beautiful
body. Make an appointment for a FREE
consultation. Sigl) up now and receive a
~ypo~sage Home Care Kit FREE!
•f
! .• ·{

Heather A. Edwards
Licensed Massage Therapist
Certified Weight Trainer
·Certified Lypossage
Practitioner

740-416-1827
or 304-733-5773
1065 South Second Street • Mason, WV 25260

Donovan
leaving
Gators
to coach
Orlando

TUPPERS PLAINS - .
The third annual Eastern
Eagle Volleyball Camp will
be held for all girls in
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP)grades . six through nine
Rich history wasn 't enough
from June I I through June
.to .lure Billy Donovan away
13 at the EHS Gymnasium
from Florida. In the end, tt
The camp will feature
was just riches.
fundamentals essential to
Donovan will have plenty
produce winning volleyball
of
them after agreeing to a
and will be taught by curfive-year
rent coaches and players, as
deal paying
well as former players. The
$5.5 milcamp will run between the
lion annutimes of 10 a.m. to noon.
ally
to
All participants .will
coach the
receive a camp t-shirt and a
Orlando
camp volleyball.
Magic, an
Early sign-ups are being
official in
excepted and there will be a
the NBA
$30 registration fee. The
ll.li......w told
The
cost of the camp is $40 for
Associated
those who sign-up on the
Press on
first day.
,AP photo
All· checks should be Cleveland Cavaliers center Zydrunas Ilgauskas of Lithuania and Detroit Pistons forward Rasheed Wallace battle for a loose bali Thursday. The source spoke
made payable to Eastern during the first quarter of an NBA Eastern Conference final basketball game at the Palace of Auburn Hills, Mich., on Thursday. on condition of anonymity
because the contract was
Athletic Boosters and
agreed
to but not signed.
returned
to
Howie
Donovan
has been the
Caldwell, 40878 Old Seven
subject
of
speculation
since
Road, Reedsville, OH
the
Gators'
second
straight
45772.
The San Antonio Spurs, in a performance that might NCAA championship in
Registrations may also be
who eliminated Utah on end up be a defining game of April. He turned down an
sent to Debbie Weber,
Wednesday, have a week off his career.
offer to coach Kentucky,
49620 Hickory Hills Road,
BY lARRY lAGE
Pistons on Thur~day night.
before
hosting
Game
I
of
The
22-year-old
star
whose storied program
Reedsville, OH 45772.
AP SPORTS WRITER
James made a go-ahead the NBA finals. ·
showed
he's
human, · launched his career as an
layup with 2.2 seconds left
Detroit can only hope the though, airballiilg a shot .assistant in 1990, and was
ELKS golf outing
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. and Detroit's Chauncey series ends like its last post- just before the shot clock more recently linked to the
LeBron James used one Billups missed a shot in the season matchup with the expired with 6.6 seconds Memphis Grizzlies' vacant
slated for Saturday -of the
most spectacular per- I~ne on the ensuing posses- Cavs.
left in the first overtime that coaching job.
formances in playoff history ston.
The Pistons won ' the first gave Detroit a chance to
He seemed to squash
GALLIPOLIS The to lift the · Cleveland
The Pistons blew a seven-. two games of the conference force another period.
those
rumors after turning
Gallipolis ELKS Lodge has Cavaliers to the verge of point lead with 3:15 left in semifinals last year; then lost
put
Billups
on
the
James
down
.
the Kentucky posijoined forces with local car their greatest season.
. regulation and lost the third three straight and needed to line with 3.1 seconds left tion, proclaiming; "I love
dealerships for the annual . James' career playoff-high straight game in the series win ori the road and then at and he made two free throws
the University of Florida."
ELKS Golf Tournament to 48 points - including 29 of after winning the first two at home in Game 7.
to make it I00-all.
But Orlando, about 115
. begin at 8:30 a.m. on his team's final 30- carried home .
James was 18-of-33 from
The Cavs have prided miles south of Gainesville,
Saturday, June 2, at ihe the Cavaliers to within a win
Game 6 is Saturday night the field, making both of his themselves on not being a proved too strong to resist. .
Cliffside Golf Course.
of the NBA finals for the in Cleveland and if neces- 3-pointers, and 10-of-14 one-man show, but James The Magic job pays more
The contest is open to all first time in franchise history sary, Game 7 will be from the free throw line. He just about did it alone . than twice Donovan's $1.7
golfers. men and women, with a I09-107 double-over- Monday night back at The also had nine rebounds,
Please see Cllvs, B2
ELKS and non-ELKS, and time victory over the Detroi! Palace of Auburn Hills.
Please see Maglt. Bl
seven ~ssists and two steals
all proceeds will be given to .
charity. Currently all of the.
slots are filled.
PGA GoLF- THE MEMORIAL
The format will be a
scramble with handicap and
prize money will be awarded for the four lowest scores.
. Individual awards will be ·
given for closest to the pin,
longest drive and longest
BY DouG fERGUSON
severe he turned down his
putt. Awards and prize
~ GOLF WRITER
first interview.
money will be presented in
"Sorry guys, I can't talk,"
the ELKS basement at the
DUBLIN - Tiger Woods · he hoarsely whispered.
completion of the tournawas waiting on the edge of • The scoring at Muirfield
ment where refreshments
the lOth green Thursday . Village couldn't have been
will be available.
· when an approach shot fr,om better with pure greens, stiCharley Hoffman whizzed fling heat and calm condiby his head and missed him tions. Leading the way was
by about a yard. Woods was Sean O'Hair, who played
CoNTACfUS
about the only one who great golf for the second
dodged illness or injury at straight tournament' except
&gt;ovP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
the Memorial.
for a blemish on the 17th, of
1-740-446-2342 ext 33
. Phil Mickelson withdrew all holes. He still managed· a
Fax- 1-740·44&amp;3008
after II holes because of an 7-under 65 and was tied
·injury
to his left wrist, with the Australian duo of
E-mail - sports C mydallysentinel.com
which
he
suspects happened Rod Pampling and Nick
SP&lt;:!di..S.taff
at Oakmont earlier th1s week O' Hem.
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
as he practiced chipping out
Ernie Els was among
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
of
the
deep
rough
while
those
at 66, a guy who felt
bsherman@mydallytribune.com
prefaring for the U.S. Open. so sick abou1 his putting that
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
. " couldn't grab the club he went to the cross-handed
j740) 446·2342, ext 23
and I I couldn't swing,'' style and had few com)crum@mydailyregister.com
.
AP photo
Mickelson said.
plaints, other than it felt
Phil Mickelson, center, and his caddie Jim Mackay, are. escorted off the course on a
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
Masters champion Zach weird to ditch the conven(740) 446·2342, ext 33
golf cart along the 13th fairway during the first round of the Memorial golf tournament Johnson had to stop after 15
bwalters@mydallytribune.Com
holes with strep throat so Please see Memorial, IS
on Thursday at the Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin.

Cavs need 2 overtimes to beat Pistons

Cleveland takes 3-2lead in series

O'Hair in the lead,
Mickelson says goodbye

,I

-·----.-

�I

•

,Page AS

LOCAL STATE
Differences in Gtrnrd Senior Center Donates to HMC
•
weapons·rmse.concern

The Daily Sentinel

BY JAMES HANNAH
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Ohio National Guard Equipment

DAYTON National
Guardsmen in Ohio and
other states are not being
trained with the same rifles,
Humvees, night-vision goggles and other equipment
they will use in Iraq and
Afghanistan · until just
before they are deployed,
raising concerns about the
soldiers' confidence to deal
with the dangers.
Mark Wayda, spokesman
for the Ohio Guard, said
Thursda~ that while in Ohio
the sol&lt;hers must train with
M-16 rifles instead of the
lighter, shorter-barreled M4s they would use in Iraq.
M-4s are often used in urban
settings because they make it
easier for soldiers ,to get into.
and out of vehicles quickly.
"It's about soldiers feeling as confident as they can
when they go on these very
dangerous
missions,"
Wayda said.
He said the soldiers are
also forced to train with less
powerful night-vision goggles and machine guns with
different optics, which are
crucial in learning how to
pick out targets and shoot
the guns.
In addition, the Ohio
Guard does not have
armored Humvees like the
ones used in Iraq. So the
soldiers must train in
Humvees with different
centerS of gravity and different braking and handling
characteristics, he said.
'The biggest problem is
you learn a set of skills that
are .not exactly tran~­
ferrable," he said.
The Ohio Guard also has
a shortage of ceramic plates

Training equipment used by the Ohio National
Guard:
• M-16 rifles: Troops in Iraq and Afghanistan use M4s, which are lighter with shorter barrels, enabling soldiers to more quickly enter and exit vehicles.
• Standard Humvees: Many troops in combat zones
use up-armor Humvees, which are heavier, have a dif-ferent center of gra-vity and different handling and
braking characteristics.
• Machine-gun optics: Soldiers in Iraq and
Afghanistan use upgraded optics, which are used to
pick.out tar¥ets and shoot
• Night-VISion goggles: Deployed troops use a more
powerful, higher-resolution version.

that fit into body armor, they are deployed and they
Wayda said. That requires are trained on up-armor
soldiers to share them dur- Humvees before going into
ing training, which length- combat areas. He said any
ens training time. The plates Guard commanders who feel
are important because it their units don't have the
changes the way soldiers right equipment or training
fire their weapons, he said. are required to inform their
The Oklahoma Guard has superiors'before deployment.
· a shortage of body 'armor,
"The Army doesn't take
M-4s and night-vision gog- . shortcuts on soldier protecgles, and no up-armored tion and safety," Ey said.
Humvees, according to
Before they are deployed,
spokesman Lt. Col. John the Guardsmen train on the
Altebaumer. He said regular new equipment at pre-mobiHumvees have canvas doors lizations stations in rhe
or none at all, while the oth- United States. It is there,
ers have heavy metal doors. · Wayda and Altebaumer say,
"You have all this equip- that the soldiers must learn
ment on you, and you have how to shoot the new
to figure out how to get out weapons and master the
of the door quickly," he said. new equipment. ,
The New Mexico Guard · "We call that just-in-time
has M-4s to train with, but equipping and training,"
no up-armor Humvees.
Wayda said. "The situation
"But I have not heard it doesn't give them die best
voiced as a concern by any opportunity for success."
commanders," said Maj .
Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland
Kenneth Nava, Guard twice has · asked President
spokesman.
Bush for his assurances that
Army spokesman Lt. Col. Guard troops are receiving
Carl Ey said all Guardsinen adequate training and equiphave the proper, mission- ment before being deployed
appropriate equipment when to Iraq and Afghanistan.

' which will encourage students to study science, tech. IWIOgy...,. ellgtlleering,, ~i
math. He also will consult
with the.Miami Valley P- f6
Education
Consortium,
which works to improve the
region's math and science
education from preschool
through college.
"Taft had mixed results as
governor, but he's very well
respected nationally as a
leader of education reform,"
said Mickey McCabe, vice
president for research and
executive director of UD's
research i11stitute. McCabe
will supervise Taft.
Before he left office, Taft
said his Third Frontier

Project for high-tech investment, tax reform and his
. efforts to make Ohio
schools more effective and
accountable were among his
most significant accomplishments. But his eight
years as governor also were
marred by his no contest
plea to ethics violations in
2005 and a scandal over
investment losses at the
Ohio Bureau of Workers'
Compensation.
Taft said he was excited
about his new opportunity.
"We've got to figure out
how to get more students in
college, and that 's a challenge that I really look forward to," he said.

Commission: Noe illegally
funneled campaign money
BY

JOHN McCARTHY

AS SOC IATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS
Imprisoned coin dealer Tom
Noe illegally funneled money
through an assistant to state
political campaigns, the Ohio
Elections Commission ruled
on Thursday.
The commission ruled 6-1
that Noe, now serving a 27month federal sentence for
illegally contributing to
President Bush's 2004 campaign, used others to make
illegal contributions to .state
candidates.
The commission referred
the case •.to prosecutors in
Toledo aod Columbus, commission
director
Phil
Richter said. If convicted,
Noe faces a $10,000 fine.
' Messages were left for
Franklin County Prosecutor

Ron O'Brien in Columbus.
Calls to the office of Lucas
County Prosecutor Julia Bates
in Toledo weren't answered.
The commtsston also
decided to further investigate
the allegations against Sue
Metzger, his former assistant.
The commission dismissed a
complaint against former
attorney general and auditor
Betty Montgomery stemming from the same case,
Richter said.
Attorney General Marc
Dann filed the complaints
against Noe and Montgomery
·in October, when he was a
state senator, said his lawyer,
Rick Brunner. Dann pursued
the case after his election as
the state's top lawyer because
he felt he had a duty to do so,
Brunher said.
Once Montgomery and
.other GOP candidates learned

they had tainted money, the
· either returned it or donated it
to charity. Brunner said Dann
had decided not to pursue the
complaint
against
Montgomery, .who last year
briefly campaigned for the
Republican nomination for
governor, because there was
no evidence that Montgomery
knew the Noe contributions
might have been illegal.
Prosecutors calculated that
Noe had stolen more than
$13 million from the rarecoin funds he managed for
the Ohio Bureau of Workers'
Compensation. He was sentenced last year to 18 years
on state theft. charges.
During the state investigation; then-Gov. Bob Taft
pleaded 110 contest to failing
to report free golf outings
and other gifts from Noe and
others and was tined $4,000.

Local Weather
Friday: •• Mostly sunny.
Highs in the ~pper 80s.
South winds around 5 mpn.
Friday
night ••• Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
s. Southwest winds
. ound 5 mph in · the
· ening ... aecoming light
·and variable. .
·Saturday... Mostly sunny
with a chance of showers
· and thunderstorms. Highs in
the mid 80s. South winds

!

1, 2007 ·

around 5 mph. Charice of
rain 40 percent. .
Saturday night ••• Mostly
cloudy with a chan.ce of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the lower 60s.
Southwest winds around 5
mph. Chance of rain 40 percent:
· Sunday and Sunday
night •.•Mostly · cloudy with
a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the

upper 70s . . Lows in the
lower 60s. Chance of rain
50 percent.
Monday••• Mostly cloudy ·
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in.
the upper 70s. Chance of
ram 40 percent.
Monday night and
Thesday... Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in the upper
50s. Highs in the upper 70s.

Inside

'

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Houston bluts Reds, Page B2

Pacen, Memphi! hire new coaches, Page B3
Ducks look to fmish Ottawa, Page B4 .

Friday, June I, 2007

l..ocAL ScHEDULE
POMEAO't' - A. 9CheClJe Of~ COllege'
end hi(jl schoof 'i81Siy ~ fMI"'Is irMJivng
teams from Galia and Meigs oounlies.

Today'a HrDft
OKSAA TI'IICt&lt; and Field
Division
Division
Division
Division
Division

Championships
I field events, 9 a.m.
!I qualifying,• 9:30 a.m.
II ~ events, 1 p.m.
I qualityinQ, 1:30 p.m.
Ill qualifying. 4:30 p.m.

W.VA. BASEBAlL -

ClASS AA STATE SEMIFINALS

Bearcats claw past Point Pleasant
BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
- Everything went just as
· planned for Point Pleasant
except one thing - the
Saturday'• •mn
score - as the clock finally
OHSAA Trecll and Field
struck
midl)ight for the
ChamJ)Ionohlpt
Division II finals, 9:30 a.m.
"Cinderella" Btg Blacks and
Division Ill field events, noon
their magical run through
Division I finals. 1 p.m
the postseason. .
Division Ill finals, . 4:30 p.m.
Poi11t Pleasant (15-16) had
more
hits and half the errors
START TIMES AT STATE
as Grafton, but left a dozen
runners stranded on base,
MEIGS COUNTY
including leaving the bases
loaded twice, as the Bearcats
friday. June 1
Division Ill qualifying
took advantage of the few
Point mistakes to claim a 3~m U..h Becca ·owen (EHS),
2 victory in the Class AA
6:15 p.m.. (Heat 1, Lane 7)
4x400m reilly - Erin Weber, Becca
se mifinals Thursday in
Owen, Katie Hayman and Lauren
Charleston.
CurrminQs (EHS), 7:15 p.m. (Heat 2,
Lane 1)
·
Grafton (20-5) advances

Source: Ohio National Guard

Former Gov•.Taft. takes job.
DAYTON
(AP)
Former Gov. Bob Taft said
he has accepl.ed a position at
the University of Dayton to
help the ·school attract
research funding and steer
its students toward science,
niath and related fields.
A Republican who left
office in January because of
term limits, Taft will join
UD on Aug. 15 as a "distingllished research associate
for educational excellence,''
a two-year appointment, he
told the Dayton Daily News
for a story Thursday.
Taft, 65, will help the private Catholic university
launch the Center for
·Educational Excellence,

Friday, June

.

to Saturday's title game to played hard - we came up
play Herbert Hoover (22- here and showed we
II),
which
beat belong," said Point Pleasant
Independence 9-3 in the head
coach
James
other semifinal to also reach Higginbotham. "No matter
its first title contest.
about our record we played
Thursday's loss ended one hard and we just came up
of the most improbable runs p ne run short."
through the tournament in
Despite ·how well Point
history as Point Pleasant, Pleasant played in the conriding a · 35-year drought test, that one' run deficit
between state appearances, carne as a result of the Big
turned a late season cold Black's only errors.
streak into a sectional and
Grafton scored one run in
regional championship to. the first when a Jordan
advance to the state play- May Ie hit went between the
offs.
legs of Phillip Allen to
Once there, the Big Blacks knock in a run and another
showed its doubters that Bearcat run was scored in
they deserved to be there as the sixth when Point
much as anyone else.
Pleasant pitcher Ashton
· "I am disappointed, but Jones tried to pick off Nick '
·also pretty happy ·because
·
we are here and the kids
Please see Point. B2

Saturday Jyne 2
Division

tt flnals

NBA EAsrnRN CoNFERENCE FiNALS

BOOm run - Devan Soulsby (Meigs),
10:55 a.m. (Lane Bb)

Larry Crum/photo

Grafton players and fans celebrate as Bearcat senior Nick
Bolyard scores the. winning run while Point Pleasant's
James Casto watches during the sixth inning of Thursday's
Class AA baseball semifihal game in Charleston, W.Va.
'
.
.

GAMES

Division lllllnall

Girt' 400m dash - 5:35 )&gt;.m.
320Dm run - Michael Owen (EHS),
6:2S p.m. (Lane 6b)
Girt• 4x400m ,.u.y- 6 :40p.m.

Sign-ups for Eagle
Volleyball Camp
Submitted photoo ,

Ladies at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center presented handma.de stuffed animals
to the Holzer Medical Center Pediatric Unit, Emergency Department and Inpatient Rehab
Unit. Stuffed bunnies, bears, ducks, turtles, gingerbread men, and "prayer" bears for
Rehab patients were donated. Caregivers at the hospital were encouraged to sign the
stuffed donations in order to personalize for patients .· During their visit; the seniors were
treated to lunch by the· Hospital's Service Recovery Customer Satisfaction Team before
they delivered the donations to the des ignated departments . Pictured are representatives
from the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center including, Director Diana Coates, Barbara
Gheen, Betty Johnson, Mack Leighton , Marilyn Powell, Frances Reed and Minnie Rizer,
donating to staff members from the HMC Pediatric Unit and Emergency Department.

' .'~ ··~~. o ,

.1.·

..

···~ ·

possagew
Say Goodbye To C.ellulite!
Heather A. Edwards, Lic.ensed Massage
Therapist at Bend Area Chiropractic Center
i~ one of the first Lypossage Practitioners in
North America. Lypossage is an anti-aging,
body contouring, and cellulite reducing
treatment. Lypossage is a healthy
non...,invasive alternative to liposuction or
other body contouring machines. Lypossage
smoothes areas affected by cellulite and
reduce inches off the targeted area. The
results are significant. On average, women
lose 11 inches in total after just six weeks. As
. aLypossage Practitioner, Heather will help
you lose inches and get the body you deserve.
Lypossage is the natural way to a·beautiful
body. Make an appointment for a FREE
consultation. Sigl) up now and receive a
~ypo~sage Home Care Kit FREE!
•f
! .• ·{

Heather A. Edwards
Licensed Massage Therapist
Certified Weight Trainer
·Certified Lypossage
Practitioner

740-416-1827
or 304-733-5773
1065 South Second Street • Mason, WV 25260

Donovan
leaving
Gators
to coach
Orlando

TUPPERS PLAINS - .
The third annual Eastern
Eagle Volleyball Camp will
be held for all girls in
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP)grades . six through nine
Rich history wasn 't enough
from June I I through June
.to .lure Billy Donovan away
13 at the EHS Gymnasium
from Florida. In the end, tt
The camp will feature
was just riches.
fundamentals essential to
Donovan will have plenty
produce winning volleyball
of
them after agreeing to a
and will be taught by curfive-year
rent coaches and players, as
deal paying
well as former players. The
$5.5 milcamp will run between the
lion annutimes of 10 a.m. to noon.
ally
to
All participants .will
coach the
receive a camp t-shirt and a
Orlando
camp volleyball.
Magic, an
Early sign-ups are being
official in
excepted and there will be a
the NBA
$30 registration fee. The
ll.li......w told
The
cost of the camp is $40 for
Associated
those who sign-up on the
Press on
first day.
,AP photo
All· checks should be Cleveland Cavaliers center Zydrunas Ilgauskas of Lithuania and Detroit Pistons forward Rasheed Wallace battle for a loose bali Thursday. The source spoke
made payable to Eastern during the first quarter of an NBA Eastern Conference final basketball game at the Palace of Auburn Hills, Mich., on Thursday. on condition of anonymity
because the contract was
Athletic Boosters and
agreed
to but not signed.
returned
to
Howie
Donovan
has been the
Caldwell, 40878 Old Seven
subject
of
speculation
since
Road, Reedsville, OH
the
Gators'
second
straight
45772.
The San Antonio Spurs, in a performance that might NCAA championship in
Registrations may also be
who eliminated Utah on end up be a defining game of April. He turned down an
sent to Debbie Weber,
Wednesday, have a week off his career.
offer to coach Kentucky,
49620 Hickory Hills Road,
BY lARRY lAGE
Pistons on Thur~day night.
before
hosting
Game
I
of
The
22-year-old
star
whose storied program
Reedsville, OH 45772.
AP SPORTS WRITER
James made a go-ahead the NBA finals. ·
showed
he's
human, · launched his career as an
layup with 2.2 seconds left
Detroit can only hope the though, airballiilg a shot .assistant in 1990, and was
ELKS golf outing
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. and Detroit's Chauncey series ends like its last post- just before the shot clock more recently linked to the
LeBron James used one Billups missed a shot in the season matchup with the expired with 6.6 seconds Memphis Grizzlies' vacant
slated for Saturday -of the
most spectacular per- I~ne on the ensuing posses- Cavs.
left in the first overtime that coaching job.
formances in playoff history ston.
The Pistons won ' the first gave Detroit a chance to
He seemed to squash
GALLIPOLIS The to lift the · Cleveland
The Pistons blew a seven-. two games of the conference force another period.
those
rumors after turning
Gallipolis ELKS Lodge has Cavaliers to the verge of point lead with 3:15 left in semifinals last year; then lost
put
Billups
on
the
James
down
.
the Kentucky posijoined forces with local car their greatest season.
. regulation and lost the third three straight and needed to line with 3.1 seconds left tion, proclaiming; "I love
dealerships for the annual . James' career playoff-high straight game in the series win ori the road and then at and he made two free throws
the University of Florida."
ELKS Golf Tournament to 48 points - including 29 of after winning the first two at home in Game 7.
to make it I00-all.
But Orlando, about 115
. begin at 8:30 a.m. on his team's final 30- carried home .
James was 18-of-33 from
The Cavs have prided miles south of Gainesville,
Saturday, June 2, at ihe the Cavaliers to within a win
Game 6 is Saturday night the field, making both of his themselves on not being a proved too strong to resist. .
Cliffside Golf Course.
of the NBA finals for the in Cleveland and if neces- 3-pointers, and 10-of-14 one-man show, but James The Magic job pays more
The contest is open to all first time in franchise history sary, Game 7 will be from the free throw line. He just about did it alone . than twice Donovan's $1.7
golfers. men and women, with a I09-107 double-over- Monday night back at The also had nine rebounds,
Please see Cllvs, B2
ELKS and non-ELKS, and time victory over the Detroi! Palace of Auburn Hills.
Please see Maglt. Bl
seven ~ssists and two steals
all proceeds will be given to .
charity. Currently all of the.
slots are filled.
PGA GoLF- THE MEMORIAL
The format will be a
scramble with handicap and
prize money will be awarded for the four lowest scores.
. Individual awards will be ·
given for closest to the pin,
longest drive and longest
BY DouG fERGUSON
severe he turned down his
putt. Awards and prize
~ GOLF WRITER
first interview.
money will be presented in
"Sorry guys, I can't talk,"
the ELKS basement at the
DUBLIN - Tiger Woods · he hoarsely whispered.
completion of the tournawas waiting on the edge of • The scoring at Muirfield
ment where refreshments
the lOth green Thursday . Village couldn't have been
will be available.
· when an approach shot fr,om better with pure greens, stiCharley Hoffman whizzed fling heat and calm condiby his head and missed him tions. Leading the way was
by about a yard. Woods was Sean O'Hair, who played
CoNTACfUS
about the only one who great golf for the second
dodged illness or injury at straight tournament' except
&gt;ovP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
the Memorial.
for a blemish on the 17th, of
1-740-446-2342 ext 33
. Phil Mickelson withdrew all holes. He still managed· a
Fax- 1-740·44&amp;3008
after II holes because of an 7-under 65 and was tied
·injury
to his left wrist, with the Australian duo of
E-mail - sports C mydallysentinel.com
which
he
suspects happened Rod Pampling and Nick
SP&lt;:!di..S.taff
at Oakmont earlier th1s week O' Hem.
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
as he practiced chipping out
Ernie Els was among
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
of
the
deep
rough
while
those
at 66, a guy who felt
bsherman@mydallytribune.com
prefaring for the U.S. Open. so sick abou1 his putting that
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
. " couldn't grab the club he went to the cross-handed
j740) 446·2342, ext 23
and I I couldn't swing,'' style and had few com)crum@mydailyregister.com
.
AP photo
Mickelson said.
plaints, other than it felt
Phil Mickelson, center, and his caddie Jim Mackay, are. escorted off the course on a
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
Masters champion Zach weird to ditch the conven(740) 446·2342, ext 33
golf cart along the 13th fairway during the first round of the Memorial golf tournament Johnson had to stop after 15
bwalters@mydallytribune.Com
holes with strep throat so Please see Memorial, IS
on Thursday at the Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin.

Cavs need 2 overtimes to beat Pistons

Cleveland takes 3-2lead in series

O'Hair in the lead,
Mickelson says goodbye

,I

-·----.-

�y
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www. my~iJysentinel.eom

Friday, June 1, 2007' ·

San Digo doubles up Pirates in 11 innings, 4-2 Tribe trounces Tiger~

Cavs ·

in regulation and in both
overtimes, choosing to
attack the basket with drifromPageBl
ving layups and dunks
instead of deferring to teamagainst a team in the confer- mates.
ence finals for the fifth . · James scored 31 more
points thari Cleveland's secstraight year.
scorer,
He simply took over late .ond-leading

.Point

with a scoreless lOth and only two singles until
Trevor Hoffman pitched the Cameron doubled with one
II th for his 16th save in 18 out in the seventh.
opportuniti~s and the 498th
Maddux couldn't get his
of his career.
338th career victory despite
Torres had been scored limiting the Pirates to two
upon only once in his previ- runs over 6 2-3 innings,
ous 12 appearances, only to mostly because Chacon - ·
have a performance remi- who has ~98 fewer career
niscent of his early season wim than Maddux problems, when he ,was in pitched better. That was a
Jeopardy of losing his clos- rarity during May for a
er's job after losing once starter opposing the Padres
and blowing three saves in a~ their starters went 14-5
span of six appearances.
with a 2.20 ERA for the
Torres' ineffectiveness month.
cost Chacon a victory in
The Pirates, taking two of
only his second start since three in the series, were
after replacing Tony Armas aided by third baseman
in the Pirates' rotation. Kevin Kouzmanoff's error
Chacon struck out the first while scoring in the first
four batters and six of the following Jose Bautista's
first eight in what' would leadoff single. Freddy
have been his first victory Sanchez reached when
.as a starter since Sept. 20- , Kouzmanoff couldn't make
when ·he beat Maddux, wbo the play on his slowly hit
was then with the Dodgers. , grounder, allowing Bautista
Chacon dodged the wild- to score on Jason Bay's sacness that bothered him rifice fly.
Saturday against the Reds,
Maddux, 25-18 in his
when he allowed only one career · against Pittsburgh,
run in 3 2-3 innings but didn't allow any more
walked five - forcing him scoring until pinch-hitter
to leave before he could get Nate McLouth · doubled
the decision in Pittsburgh's leading off the seventh
9-5 victory. Against the and scored on Sanchez's
Padres, Chacon walked two-out single. McLouth
only one and was in control ended an 0-for-20 streak
f~om the start, giving up as a pinch. hitter.
Zydrunas Ilgauskas, who each of their starters scored
fouled out with 16 points. at least I0.
Rookie Daniel Gibson, who
Richard Hamiltdn scored
also fouled out, was the 26, Chauncey Billups had
only other double-digit 21 and Ch'ris Webber scored
scorer, with II.
20. Rasheed Wallace had 17
The Pistons, meanwhile, points and Tayshaun Prince
seemed to finally put a com- added 10.
plete game together and
It wasn 't enough.

hits for the Bearcats. most impressive plays of Allen to bring the score to
Cameron Gallaher, Jarod the tournament, diving face 3-2.
Shaw and Vincent had the first to malce a catch and
After a scoreless .seventh
.other hits for the visitors.
fromPageBl
preventing what could have for Grafton, Point Pleasant
Grafton got rolling in the been a very costly .shot by went into the bottom half of
the inning trying to keep the
Bolyard on third, but the first inning when Stemple Bonecutter.
"We thought we had it incredible season alive as
throw went high and reached on a . single, later
open
when the Point Pleasant crowd
Bolyard crossed home for stealing second with two broke
outs. Shaw was then walked Bonecutter hit the line drive came to life.
what would be the winning setting up a line drive by in .the fourth and he came
"The atmosphere, we
up,
dove
and
caught
the
haven't
played in front of
ru~dd in a pair of circus Mayle which went between
ball.
He
had
two
catches
in
more than I00 fans all year,
catches by Grafton center- the legs of Allen to bring
that game that were incredi- and we come up here and
·fielder Damon Waters, who home Stemple. .
have good communitr suprobbed the Big Blacks of a
Despite the hot start, that ble," said Higginbotham.
one run would be all the
With the catch, Waters port , this is great,' sa1d
handful of runs, and it action the Bearcats would also left Point Pleasan.t with Higginbotham.
seemed every time Point see over the next four the bases loaded for the secSandwiched between two
took a step forward, Grafton
ond consecutive inning quick outs, Fieldt;r managed
would knock them two innings .
steps back.
During that same span, stranding eight runners over to reach after being hit by a
,
pitch to give the Big Blacks
"We did what we had to the Big Blacks had opportu- _three innings.
Grafton responded on the a baserunner. Krebs then hit
do, they just took advantage nities to get on the board,
of our mistalces and that is leaving two runners mand- play of Waters in the top of · what looked like the final
ed in the third and ·three the fifth when Gallaher dou- out, bul the slow rolling ball
just the way it happens ' more on base in the third to . bled, Waters was walked was overthrown to allow
sometimes,"
said
Higginbotham.
leave the score 1-0 in favor. and Stemple knocked in Krebs to reach safely .and
'
of
the visitors.
·Gallaher to give . the allowing Fielder to reach
Point Pleasant had eight
third with two outs.
hits in the contest, including . . But Point Pleasant finally Bearcats a 2-l lead.
·
They
then
padded
their
But while it seemed this
a pair ·of safeties by fresh- got something going in the
lead
in
the
sixth,
using
a
.team of destiny might conman Clay Krebs, but it was bottom of the fourth inning.
the incredible pitching .per- . Krebs reached on a single, . Point Pleasant error to talce tinue its season, Vincent
followed on base by Lloyd a two-run . lead. Mayle struck out Lloyd for the
formance of junior Ashton who bunted down the fir.st reached after being hit by a . third out, eruptmg Grafton
Jones that really stood out. , base line and reached when pitch and Bolyard got on as it made its flfSt trip to the
Jones (4-4) had nine the pitcher mishandled the base ·when Curt Grimm state final in school history.
strikeouts in seven innings ball. On the ·next at bat, bobbled the ball, giving
And while Thursday's
of work, but came up short Allen reached base on a Grafton runners on second loss may not have been the
in the loss.
fielders choice as Grafton and third with two outs.
ending Point Pleasant was
"Jones pitched one hell of chose to pick Off the lead
Brett Stemple, pinch run- looking for, especially for
a
game,"
said runner.
ning for Mayle, then tried to seniors Casto, Bonecutter,
Hi!!Binbotham.
With runners on first and reach_ home on a squeeze Fielder. and Jacob Miller,
Joining Krebs with a hit second and two outs, fresh- bunt, but was called out at Higginbotham hopes that'
apiece was D.W. Herdman, man D.W. Herdman stepped home. That play put runners this year may spark someT~esawn Bonecutter, Za~h to the ~late and smashed an at first and thtrd with two thing in coming seasons for
Ftelder, B.J. Lloyd, Phtlltp RBI smgle . to give Point outs.
Point Pleasant baseball.
Allen and Jones.
Pleasant its first run of the
Jones, who had two ·suc"I told the kids, I am not
. Kenny Vincen_t (9-l) got game. Grafton then inten- cessful pick coff attempts
going
to be around for 35
the mound vtctory for . tionally walked senior earlier in the game, then
Grafton, also pitching a James Casto, who came into tried to pick off Bolyard at· y~:ars so we are going to
complete game with six the touma111ent with a .517 third, but this· time the have to get back here a little
strikeouts. On offense, the batting average, to load the throw went high, allowing. bi! earlier tban 35 years,"
Bearcats had five hits with bases with two outs.
him to safely reach home said Higginbotham.
four errors.
Point Pleasant fans got on for .a 3- I Bearcat lead.
BEARCATS 3, BIG BLACKS 2
Zach Stemple, who their feet as Bonecutter
Point Pleasant answered GraHon 100 01 1 o - 354
000 101 0 - 282
returned from a nearly stepped to the·plate, but the in the sixth wpen a deep hit Point
Kenny Vincent and John Reid. Ashlon ·
month-long layoff from· a moment was short lived as by Casto to centerfield was t Jones
and James Casto. WP
broken arm, had a pair of Waters made one of ·the dropped, bringing home Vincent t9-t). LP- Jones tH).
'

f "

. www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3'

Pacers hire O'Brien as head coach Iavaroni faces tough climb with Grizzlies

the third with just his third blooped a hit to shallow centriple in four seasons.
ter to score Phillips and malce
Williams wounded out, but it 4-2. Williams struck out
Craig Bigg1o came through Alex Gonzalez to end the
with an RBI single to left. inning and his night.
Biggio went 3-for-5, his first
In the Astros' fifth, Biggio
three-hit game since April 25. and Loretta had consecutive
Mark Loretta singled and one-out singles off Arroyo (2one out later, Lee lined a dou- 6) before Berkman hit a 3-2
ble into the left-field comer, pitch into the right-field seats,
scoring Biggio and Lore,tta. his first homer in ·19 gatnes.
Rookie Hunter Pence fol- The four-time All-Star had
lowed with a double off the only three hits in his previous
left,field wall to put Houston 34 at-bats.
up 4-0, only the fifth time in
Lee singled and Luke Scott
14 games the Astros had tripled to score him later in
scored that many runs.
the inning to malce it 8-2.
Williams struck out six
Chad Moeller pinch-hit for .
Reds in the first three innings. Arroyo in the stxth. Arroyo
but also gave up three hits and gave up II hits with two
a walk. The Reds loaded the . strikeouts, losing for the
bases with two outs in the fourth time in fi ve starts. "
·fourth . and Williams fanned
Rick
White · relievea
Arroyo to end the threat.
Williams and the Reds loaded
AP photo
Scott Hatteberg doubled the bases again with. two outs
and scored on Brandon in the sixth. White got Ken Cincinnati Reds third baseman Edwin Encarnacion, left. tags Housto'n Astros' Hunter Pence
Phillips' two-out single in the Griffey, Jr. t&lt;J fly out to deep out at third as Pence tried to stretch an RBI double. to left field during the third inning &lt;Jf a
baseball game Thursday in Houston.
·
fifth. Adam Dunn then cenier on a 3-2 pitch.

PITISBURGH (AP) Bard took his home run
Mike · Cameron hit a go- · trot and put his catching
ahead homer in the II th gear back on, only to have
inning after tying it with a Joe West's umpiring crew
run-scoring double in the reverse the call after Pirates
ninth, and the San Diego manager Jim Tracy successPadres overcame a disputed fully argued the drive struck
call 'taking away a home run a thin metal railing above
in a 4-2 win over the the right-field wall and did
Pittsburgh
Pirates
on not leave the park.
Thursday night.
The reversal changing it
The Padres rallied from a to a doUble caused Bard to
two-run deficit and won race. off the bench and start
despite a dominating outing yelling at the ·umP.ires- a
by Pirates starter Shawn burst of anger simtlar to that
Chacon, who shut them out by Kansas City's George
on three hits over seven Brett when he lost a 1983
innings.
homer against the ·Yan~ees
Chacon outpitched Greg when too much pine ta~. was
Maddux before San Oiego detected on his bat. Bard
came back to tie in the ninth chased the umpires from
against Salomon Torres on second base to first, getting
RBI doubles by Adrian ejected along . the way by
Gonzalez and Cameron. plate umpire Ed Rapuano,
Cameron had extra-base and Padres manager Bud
hits in each of his final three Black also was ejected for
at•bats.
arguing.
·
Cameron led off the II th
Bard and Rapuano could
with his fifth homer, a be seen screaming obscenidrive into the right-field ties at each other, with
seats off reliever Josh Rapua11o warning, Bard not
Sharpless (0-1), making his to pusli him any further.
third appearance · since
As it turned out, the rulbeing called up from the ing didn't matter - R.ob
minors. Josh Bard followed Bowen, running for Bard,
two pitches later with scored .on Khalil Greene's
another drive that appeared sacrifice fly to get the run
to reach the right-field · back and make it 4-2.
seats for his ·second homer.
Cia Meredith (2-2) won it

. ·Friday, June t, 2007

..

.Astros blast Cincinnati, 10-~
HOUSlDN (AP) -Lance
Berkman ended a slump with
a three-run homer and Woody
Williams had a sea5on-high
nine strikeouts as the Houston
Astros snapped a 10-game
losing strealc with a 10-2 win
over the Cincinnati Reds on
Thursday night.
Carlos Lee had a .two-RBI
double during a four-run third
inning off Bronson Arroyo as
the Astros won for just the
second time in 14 games. One
more loss would've matched
the longest skid . in franchise
history, set in August 1995.
Williams (2-7) allowed
seven hits and two walks in
five innings. He threw 117
pitches,' also a season high, to
earn his·first win in four starts.
Houston scored four runs or
fewer in 10 consecutive losses. Brad Ausmus gave the flfSt
hint that the Astros were
going to finally shalce out of
their tailspin when he led off

'
.

CLEVELAND (AP) Travis Hafner homered and
drove in four runs, Victor
Martinez finished with
three RB Is and the
Cleveland Indians beat the
Detroit
Tigers
I 1-5
Thursday night.
Cleveland
improved
baseball's best home mark
to I 8-&lt;1 · despite a rough
outi'ng by ace C.C . trees beyond the center,
Sabathia
(8- I),
who field wall. for his lOth
allowed five runs and 10 homer and 2-0 lead. Hafner
hits in 7 1-3 innings. came in with only 17 hits
Sabathia, 5·0 at Jacobs in his last 74 at-bats (.230)
Field, moved into a tie for but went 2-for-3 with two
the major league · lead in · walks against the Tigers. · .
wins.
·
Craig Monroe's I OOtli
Hafner hit a two-run career homer and eighth of
·&lt;!rive in tJte first inning and the season got Detroit·
Martinez's .two-r11n ·homer wiihin 2-1 in the second. ,
capped a fouHun fifth off
The Tigers went ahead
Justin Verlander (!l-2) · as with a three-run third .
Cleveland improved to 4-0 Sheffield had an RBI douc
against the defending AL ble, Magglio Ordonez a:
champion Tigers.
run-scoring groundout and
Verlander gave up seven Marcus Thames an RBI
runs and ei!lht hits over . 1
mnings
for smg e.
.
five-plus
Detroit, which losi for the
Grady Sizemore and.
· h ·
·
Blake singled to start the
stxt tune m·. seven games Indians ' fifth. Hafner tied
and dropped 3 1/2 games
·
behind Clevelimd in the AL it with a two-run single to
Central. The right-hander center and Martinez hit a'
hit thre,e ~atters' with pitch- 2- 1 ·pitch over the wall in
es·1 walkeij three, uncorked right-center for his ninth
two wild pitches and struck homer to make· it 6-4.
out six.
Martinez added a sacri~.
Tigers designated hitter fice tly in the sixth, giving.
Gary Sheffield was ejected him 10 RB!s in his last
in the top of the fifth by seven
games,
and
·plate umpire Greg Gibson Size)llore's two-run triple
after . arguing a called cu'pped Cleveland's fourstrike, then breaking hi s · run eighth off Jose Mesa.
bat on a groundout an,d
Notes: The Tigers, with
angrily throwing the piece seven players on the disof wood still in his hands. abled list, also were withAfter rumiing halfway to out • startin g infielders
first, Sheffield whirl ed and Brandon lngc (chip fraccame back at Gibson. ture in toe) and Carlos
Tigers
manager
Jim Guillen ' (s trained left
Leyland and catcher ·Ivan groin) . ... Ordonez has 43
Rodriguez ran out of the RBl s in his last 39 games
dugout
to
restrain . and anAL -leading 49 overSheffield, who repeatedly all. ... Hafner lead the AL
poked his finger toward with 47 walks . .. : Sizemore .
Gibson's face .
got a standing ovation after
Casey .Blake singled with making a leaping catch
one out in the fir st inning near the warning track of ·a.
and Hafner fo.llowed with a drive hit by Nelfi Pere:t in
430-foot drive into the the seco nd.

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SOON!

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,Joint ,Jlea~ant 1\egi~ter

. INDI~NAPOLIS (AP)Jtm 0 Brien was hired
Thursday as coach of the
lpdiana Pacers, who·turned
(o an NBA veteran in hopes
of reviving a team that
mtssed the playoffs for the
first time in a decade and
. has been beset by turmoil.
·'The announcement ends a
five-week search that be~an
with the firing of Rtck
C;irltsle after four seasons.
::O'Brien
previously
coached 10 Boston and
l&gt;hiladelphia, compiling a
I 82-158 record in five sea~gns. He has been out · of
eoaching since he was fired
by the 76ers after the 2005
$eason.
:Pacers president Larry
i!ird said he had talked with
0' Brien during the past I0
days about the job.
·"It came down to we
needed a guy with experience in here . A guy who I
think I'm gojng to be on the
sa~e page with to do the
tbmgs necessary to take us
to the next level," Bird said.
"I've got the right man for
the right job. ~' ·
O' Brien had been writing
for ESPN.com the past two
years, but he expected to
return to coaching.
"I knew shortly after I left
Philadelphia that I wasn't
going to be out of coaching
long if I had anything to do
with it," Ire said. "I was
hoping to get an opportuni-

ty
like
thi s." ,
Indiana
finished
out
the
playoffs
with a 3547 record
this year.
The team
has been in
O'Brien
d i sa rr a y
si nce the
November 2004 brawl
between Pacers players and
Pistons fans - months after
the Pacers had finished with
the NBA's best record and
reached
the
Eastern
Conference finals.
Bird has said he is willing
to trade anyone on the team,
including All-Star forward
Jermaine O'Neal.
The Pacers don't have a
pick in the upcoming draft,
though chief executive
Donnie Walsh has said the
team will maneuver to gel
one. Bird said 0' Brien will
have input on upcoming
personnel decisions.
O' Brien had a 43-39
record in his single season
at Philadelphia, a I0-win
improvement from the year
before, leading the team
back · to the playOffs.
O'Brien, though, wasn't
popular with ' his pll!yers,
who often complained
about their roles.
O' Brien also coached the
Celtics from 2001-04 after

the departure , of Rick
Pitino. Before that;·he was
an assistant with Boston
and New York Knicks.
Carlisle had a 181-147
record with the Pacers, but
his time was overshadowed
with player troubles. The
Pacers dealt with long suspenstons of Ron Artest and
Stephen Jackson, the two
most prominent players in
the 2004 brawl, and ended
up trading both players.
Jackson and point guard
Jamaal Tinsley both face
fe lony charges in separate
nightclub fights during the
past year- behavior which
Bird has called an embarrassment to the team .
O'Brien said his team
wilj piay the brand of basketball Pacers fans expect.
"We will practice hard ,"
he· said. "Di sc ipline and
organization is a cornerstone of any basketball
team at any level, and certainly, our guys will know
what we want of them."
During th eir lengthy
coac hing search, the Pacers
brass interviewed former
Miami coach Stan Van
Gundy twice and later interviewed Chicagd' assistant
Jim Boylan twice. They
also interviewed current
assistant coaches Johnny
Oavis and Chuck Person.
Indiana was the only team
0' Brien SP&lt;Jke with about a
head co&amp;ching P&lt;JSition.

Magic

said Thursday the ·deal was
basically done, j ust not
signed.
At the NBA predraft
camp, Donovan's former
players said they hadn't
heard anything about him
switching jobs.
"''ve talked to him, just
.not about that," AI Hurford
said.
Donovan replaces Brian
Hill, who was fired after
two consecutive losing seasons. Hill's ouster followed
the Magic's first playoff
appearance in . four years,
which ended in the first
round against Detroit.
If he 's going to go, now
could be the best time for
Donovan. Florida lost its
top seven scorers after the
season, including potential
top-10 NBA picks Noah,
Horford and Corey Brewer.
In Orlando, Donovan
inherits a team. without a
single first-round draft pick
-or much veteran experience. Orlando is rebuilding
around . third-year player
Dwight Howard, who made
his first ·All-Star team this
season,' and counting on
bigger contributions from
Trevor Ari za and J .J .
Redick .
The Magic have vowed to
re-~ign free agent Darko

Milicic, who flourished
despite an injury in the
playoffs, but the 7-footer
still has to prove his NBA
value.
Besides the coach, the big
question mark for Orlando
is whether Grant Hill will
return. The often-injured
star's contract expired this
· season, and he could opt to
re~ire or chase a title elsewhere. If Hill leaves, it
would open up a big load of
salary cap room for a skilled.
offensive player.
Donovan has shown he
· can improve even mediocre
programs. At Florida, a Iraditionally football-oriented
school, he made it to the
NCAA title game three
times in his II years. He led
the Gators to nine straight
20-win seasons, nearly doubling the amount it had
before his arrival. Florida
won three SEC championships under . Dmiovan
after getting just one ·in 77
years
previously.
He
became the winningest
coach in Florida history on
Dec. 20 and now has 261
victories.
With the Magic, he ' ll face
a similar challenge. Orlando
hasn 't been out of the first
round of the playoffs in a
decade.

from PageBl
million annual deal with the
Gat()rs.
. "There's going to be a lot
of hamburgers, a lot of
filet," departing Florida star
Jmlkim Noah joked.
. Donovan, his agent and
Florida athletic director
Jeremy Foley didn't return
phone messages left by The

AP.

.

School president Bernie
Machen said he didn ' t
believe Donovan had yet
l)CCejJted the Orlando job,
but there were no hard feel ings if he had.
·. "There's always a next,"
Machen said · at the
Southeastern Conference's
annual spring meeting in
Destin, Fla. "Billy Donovan ·
bas been here for II years,
won two national championships. He's been a great
ambassador
for
the
University of Florida, We'll
~lways love Billy Donovan,
whether he's here II years
or 21 years."
Both Donovan and the
school had said all along
they were negotiating a con'
tract extension. Machen

hit a tee shot on No. I0 hit a
cart path and bounced outof-bounds .. He went back to
the tee as Woods and Bart
from PageBl
Bryant . played on, and
Woods
was seemingly out
u'onal style that carried him of the way
on the front right
to three majors.
corner
of
the
green when a
· Even so, the theme of the ·
small
Titleist
missile
missed
. first round seemed to be
him
by
3
feet.
~bout survival -especially
"If you can't beat him,
those who didn't.
him out," Hoffman
take
: For those who anticipated
joked
a remarkable
4 duel between Mickelson round. after
He
made
double
~nd Woods, that ended
bogey
at
No.
I
0
to
go
to 6
Defore the ·world's No. l
over
par,
then
ran
off
five
player even got to the pracstraight
birdies
and
closed
tice range. Mickelson felt
ihe first sting after a wedge with a six to finish at 72.
0' Hair had a great birdie
on the second hole, and he
))ad a message therapist streak of his own, with four
holding · and rubbing his straight on the front nine.
!land on the back nine until The difference was he didbe hit another wedge out of n't have any hiccups along
the way until a good bogey·
divot on the II th.
: "I'll talce a couple days on the 17th.
He played with Charles
6ff, see if I can ice it and get
Howell
Ill (69) and Ted
tt ready for the Open," he ·
Purdy
(68),
and there was
said. 'T II go have someonly
one
bogey
from that
body take a look at it."
group
all
day.
.
: Woods' biggest rival
"I ap&lt;llogized to ·those
OJmed out to be par on a day
guys
for making that bogey,
tJt which nearly half the because
that · w.ould have
field broke par. He was
been
pretfy
cool - no
headed in · that direction .bogeys," O'Hair
said. "I've
after a beautiful shot from a never heard of that in my
fairway bunker and over the life.
·
pond to I0 feet for birdie on
, That is lone bogey canie
the sixth hole, his third in on the 17th was only fitting.
{our holes, to reach 3 under.
This is the tirst tourna· But he made bogey with a ment for O'Hair since The
wedge in his hand on the Players
Championship,
ilext hole, added a few other when he was two shots
sloppy mistakes and needed behind Micke'lson and was .
· his only challenger at
a late birdie for 70.
· "Today was the day to Sawgrass until putting two
ieally shoot some good balls into the water on the
numbers," Woods said. island-gree n 17th and tak':Look at the field .:... they ing a quadruple-bogey 7.
pretty much did. If you did'They ex pect. the. 17th to
ft shoot under par; y&lt;Ju' re be a negative." he said,
going to get run over out spealcing of Sawgrass. ''It
Otere today."
·
was two weeks ago. I' m
' He also got knocked playing today. I' m playing
down by Hoffman, whose 1h the Memorial this week.
,..
,,. .

Memorial

So I'm going to try and win
the Memorial."
His immediate competi- ·
tion was Pampling, who
birdied his half his holes,
and O'Hern. who had five
birdies in a six-hole stretch
on the back nine and could
have taken the outright lead
until miss ing a 12-foot
birdie on \he tinal hole.
That put a lefty among the
leaders, even if it wasn't the
guy anyone was expecting.
''I heard Phil had to pull
out," O'Hem said. "It's a
big loss for the tournament.
Hopefully, he' ll be fit for
Oakmont."
Els ran off live straight
birdies for his 66, a score he
shared with Tim Herron ,
Ryan Moore, Bubba Watson
and Aaron Baddeley. It was
another small step for Els,
who has not won on U.S.
soil since the Memorial in
2004. · He injured his left
knee a year later, and has
quite been the same since
then, first physically, and
then with his confidence.
"I'd like to get back to
where I'm playing consistently, and I haven't quite
done that," Els said.
It wasn't a· perfect round
of golf. and Els did hole a
bunker shot on the 13th and
chip in for par on the 17th,
The toughest part of his day
was deciding to go crosshanded with the putter.
He used that style the
final
nine
holes
at
Wentworth last week on the
European tour, tinkered
with it again in .the pro-am
but called it a "big challenge .. to go 18 holes of the
first round with it.
"I've been conventional
my whole life," Els said.
"But I made some big ones
today:·,.
'

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (APJ
- Marc lavaroni faces a
tough task in his first head
coaching job- turning the
worst team in the NBA back
into a winner.
The former Phoenix
assistant
was
hired
Thursday as coac h of the
Memphis Grizzlies, who
went 22-60 last season after
three straight trips to the
NBA playoffs.
He said he knows how to
reverse that slide.
"I've always been noted
for my enthusiasm, my passion for the game," he said.
"We're going to instill in
them a conti nuing passion
AP photo
for winning, a passion for Memphis Griulies new head coach Marc lavaroni talks with
preparation ·and a passion the media during a news conference Thursday at the Fed Ex
for honest competition."
Forum in Memphis, Tenn.
lavaroni has . spe nt 17
yea'rs in the NBA as a play- with younger players like want to make sure we're
er and assistant coach and is Rudy Gay, Kyle Lowry and attacking before the defense
is set and at the· same time
regarded as one of the Hakim Warrick.
league 's top assistants. He
"With his background, we want to make sure we go
spent the past five seasons with his personality ... he ' ll a great job of setting our
with the Suns.
be the ri ght guy for a young defense as quickly as possiHe vowed to return the upcoming Grizzlies team," ble."
With the Suns, lavaroni
se nse 6f competition th e Heisley sa'id.
Grizzlies seem to have misThe franchise is also was a lead assistant under
placed .
looking for a general man- coach Mike D' Antoni . He
"You compete in a drill. ager to replace team presi- was an assistant under Pat
You compete in a scrim- · dent Jerry West, who is Riley at Miami from 1999mage. You compete in a retiring after next month's 02 and an assistant under
preseason game. You com- draft. The Grizzlies have Fratello at Cleveland from
1997-99. lavaroni played in
pete in one minute or you the fourth pick.
compete in 41 · minutes.
West was in . Florida for the NBA from 1982 to 1989
That's going to be a trade- the league's predraft camp with Philadelphia, San
mark of our team," lavaroni and
did
not
attend Antonio and Utah.
Sl!id at a news conference to Thursday 's announcement.
The Grizzlies began last
announce his hirii)g.
Heisley acknowledged he season with All-Star Pau
Tony Barone, the team's has talked with David Gasol on the sidelines for
former director of player Griffin, the Suns' vice pres- the first ·22 games because
personnel, was appointed ident of basketball opera- of a broken lefi foot. Lowry
interim coach last season tions, about the general broke his left wrist and
when · Memphis fired Mike manager job. But he said he missed 71 games.
Fratello with the team at 6- has also talked with "some
Before
moving
to
24.
other people" and does not Memphis from Vancouver
lavaroni said he was expect to make a decision in 200 I, the Grizzlies were
impressed with owner until mid-June. lavaroni regular dwellers near the
Mjchael Heisley's pledge to said he will be consulted bottom of the standings.
run the Grizzlies as a part- about that choice.
But West , one of the
nership between the coach"lt.' ll be important what I league's top executives,
ing and management staffs. think," he said. "But at the joined the franchise in 2002
"They're obviously com- same time, that's not going and by 2004 the Grizzlies
to
winning," to be my decisi&lt;Jn."
mitted
were in the playoffs.
lavaroni said .
lavaroni said he wHI pick
The Grizzlies were swept.
Heisley said lavaroni 's up the pace of the Grizzlies' in all three playoff appearcoaching style with an rlay.
ances, however, and have
emphasis on "positive rein"We want to attack the the league 's longest postforcement" will work w.ell · opponent," he said. "We. season losing streak.
-

~ ~-

--

---

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Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www. my~iJysentinel.eom

Friday, June 1, 2007' ·

San Digo doubles up Pirates in 11 innings, 4-2 Tribe trounces Tiger~

Cavs ·

in regulation and in both
overtimes, choosing to
attack the basket with drifromPageBl
ving layups and dunks
instead of deferring to teamagainst a team in the confer- mates.
ence finals for the fifth . · James scored 31 more
points thari Cleveland's secstraight year.
scorer,
He simply took over late .ond-leading

.Point

with a scoreless lOth and only two singles until
Trevor Hoffman pitched the Cameron doubled with one
II th for his 16th save in 18 out in the seventh.
opportuniti~s and the 498th
Maddux couldn't get his
of his career.
338th career victory despite
Torres had been scored limiting the Pirates to two
upon only once in his previ- runs over 6 2-3 innings,
ous 12 appearances, only to mostly because Chacon - ·
have a performance remi- who has ~98 fewer career
niscent of his early season wim than Maddux problems, when he ,was in pitched better. That was a
Jeopardy of losing his clos- rarity during May for a
er's job after losing once starter opposing the Padres
and blowing three saves in a~ their starters went 14-5
span of six appearances.
with a 2.20 ERA for the
Torres' ineffectiveness month.
cost Chacon a victory in
The Pirates, taking two of
only his second start since three in the series, were
after replacing Tony Armas aided by third baseman
in the Pirates' rotation. Kevin Kouzmanoff's error
Chacon struck out the first while scoring in the first
four batters and six of the following Jose Bautista's
first eight in what' would leadoff single. Freddy
have been his first victory Sanchez reached when
.as a starter since Sept. 20- , Kouzmanoff couldn't make
when ·he beat Maddux, wbo the play on his slowly hit
was then with the Dodgers. , grounder, allowing Bautista
Chacon dodged the wild- to score on Jason Bay's sacness that bothered him rifice fly.
Saturday against the Reds,
Maddux, 25-18 in his
when he allowed only one career · against Pittsburgh,
run in 3 2-3 innings but didn't allow any more
walked five - forcing him scoring until pinch-hitter
to leave before he could get Nate McLouth · doubled
the decision in Pittsburgh's leading off the seventh
9-5 victory. Against the and scored on Sanchez's
Padres, Chacon walked two-out single. McLouth
only one and was in control ended an 0-for-20 streak
f~om the start, giving up as a pinch. hitter.
Zydrunas Ilgauskas, who each of their starters scored
fouled out with 16 points. at least I0.
Rookie Daniel Gibson, who
Richard Hamiltdn scored
also fouled out, was the 26, Chauncey Billups had
only other double-digit 21 and Ch'ris Webber scored
scorer, with II.
20. Rasheed Wallace had 17
The Pistons, meanwhile, points and Tayshaun Prince
seemed to finally put a com- added 10.
plete game together and
It wasn 't enough.

hits for the Bearcats. most impressive plays of Allen to bring the score to
Cameron Gallaher, Jarod the tournament, diving face 3-2.
Shaw and Vincent had the first to malce a catch and
After a scoreless .seventh
.other hits for the visitors.
fromPageBl
preventing what could have for Grafton, Point Pleasant
Grafton got rolling in the been a very costly .shot by went into the bottom half of
the inning trying to keep the
Bolyard on third, but the first inning when Stemple Bonecutter.
"We thought we had it incredible season alive as
throw went high and reached on a . single, later
open
when the Point Pleasant crowd
Bolyard crossed home for stealing second with two broke
outs. Shaw was then walked Bonecutter hit the line drive came to life.
what would be the winning setting up a line drive by in .the fourth and he came
"The atmosphere, we
up,
dove
and
caught
the
haven't
played in front of
ru~dd in a pair of circus Mayle which went between
ball.
He
had
two
catches
in
more than I00 fans all year,
catches by Grafton center- the legs of Allen to bring
that game that were incredi- and we come up here and
·fielder Damon Waters, who home Stemple. .
have good communitr suprobbed the Big Blacks of a
Despite the hot start, that ble," said Higginbotham.
one run would be all the
With the catch, Waters port , this is great,' sa1d
handful of runs, and it action the Bearcats would also left Point Pleasan.t with Higginbotham.
seemed every time Point see over the next four the bases loaded for the secSandwiched between two
took a step forward, Grafton
ond consecutive inning quick outs, Fieldt;r managed
would knock them two innings .
steps back.
During that same span, stranding eight runners over to reach after being hit by a
,
pitch to give the Big Blacks
"We did what we had to the Big Blacks had opportu- _three innings.
Grafton responded on the a baserunner. Krebs then hit
do, they just took advantage nities to get on the board,
of our mistalces and that is leaving two runners mand- play of Waters in the top of · what looked like the final
ed in the third and ·three the fifth when Gallaher dou- out, bul the slow rolling ball
just the way it happens ' more on base in the third to . bled, Waters was walked was overthrown to allow
sometimes,"
said
Higginbotham.
leave the score 1-0 in favor. and Stemple knocked in Krebs to reach safely .and
'
of
the visitors.
·Gallaher to give . the allowing Fielder to reach
Point Pleasant had eight
third with two outs.
hits in the contest, including . . But Point Pleasant finally Bearcats a 2-l lead.
·
They
then
padded
their
But while it seemed this
a pair ·of safeties by fresh- got something going in the
lead
in
the
sixth,
using
a
.team of destiny might conman Clay Krebs, but it was bottom of the fourth inning.
the incredible pitching .per- . Krebs reached on a single, . Point Pleasant error to talce tinue its season, Vincent
followed on base by Lloyd a two-run . lead. Mayle struck out Lloyd for the
formance of junior Ashton who bunted down the fir.st reached after being hit by a . third out, eruptmg Grafton
Jones that really stood out. , base line and reached when pitch and Bolyard got on as it made its flfSt trip to the
Jones (4-4) had nine the pitcher mishandled the base ·when Curt Grimm state final in school history.
strikeouts in seven innings ball. On the ·next at bat, bobbled the ball, giving
And while Thursday's
of work, but came up short Allen reached base on a Grafton runners on second loss may not have been the
in the loss.
fielders choice as Grafton and third with two outs.
ending Point Pleasant was
"Jones pitched one hell of chose to pick Off the lead
Brett Stemple, pinch run- looking for, especially for
a
game,"
said runner.
ning for Mayle, then tried to seniors Casto, Bonecutter,
Hi!!Binbotham.
With runners on first and reach_ home on a squeeze Fielder. and Jacob Miller,
Joining Krebs with a hit second and two outs, fresh- bunt, but was called out at Higginbotham hopes that'
apiece was D.W. Herdman, man D.W. Herdman stepped home. That play put runners this year may spark someT~esawn Bonecutter, Za~h to the ~late and smashed an at first and thtrd with two thing in coming seasons for
Ftelder, B.J. Lloyd, Phtlltp RBI smgle . to give Point outs.
Point Pleasant baseball.
Allen and Jones.
Pleasant its first run of the
Jones, who had two ·suc"I told the kids, I am not
. Kenny Vincen_t (9-l) got game. Grafton then inten- cessful pick coff attempts
going
to be around for 35
the mound vtctory for . tionally walked senior earlier in the game, then
Grafton, also pitching a James Casto, who came into tried to pick off Bolyard at· y~:ars so we are going to
complete game with six the touma111ent with a .517 third, but this· time the have to get back here a little
strikeouts. On offense, the batting average, to load the throw went high, allowing. bi! earlier tban 35 years,"
Bearcats had five hits with bases with two outs.
him to safely reach home said Higginbotham.
four errors.
Point Pleasant fans got on for .a 3- I Bearcat lead.
BEARCATS 3, BIG BLACKS 2
Zach Stemple, who their feet as Bonecutter
Point Pleasant answered GraHon 100 01 1 o - 354
000 101 0 - 282
returned from a nearly stepped to the·plate, but the in the sixth wpen a deep hit Point
Kenny Vincent and John Reid. Ashlon ·
month-long layoff from· a moment was short lived as by Casto to centerfield was t Jones
and James Casto. WP
broken arm, had a pair of Waters made one of ·the dropped, bringing home Vincent t9-t). LP- Jones tH).
'

f "

. www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3'

Pacers hire O'Brien as head coach Iavaroni faces tough climb with Grizzlies

the third with just his third blooped a hit to shallow centriple in four seasons.
ter to score Phillips and malce
Williams wounded out, but it 4-2. Williams struck out
Craig Bigg1o came through Alex Gonzalez to end the
with an RBI single to left. inning and his night.
Biggio went 3-for-5, his first
In the Astros' fifth, Biggio
three-hit game since April 25. and Loretta had consecutive
Mark Loretta singled and one-out singles off Arroyo (2one out later, Lee lined a dou- 6) before Berkman hit a 3-2
ble into the left-field comer, pitch into the right-field seats,
scoring Biggio and Lore,tta. his first homer in ·19 gatnes.
Rookie Hunter Pence fol- The four-time All-Star had
lowed with a double off the only three hits in his previous
left,field wall to put Houston 34 at-bats.
up 4-0, only the fifth time in
Lee singled and Luke Scott
14 games the Astros had tripled to score him later in
scored that many runs.
the inning to malce it 8-2.
Williams struck out six
Chad Moeller pinch-hit for .
Reds in the first three innings. Arroyo in the stxth. Arroyo
but also gave up three hits and gave up II hits with two
a walk. The Reds loaded the . strikeouts, losing for the
bases with two outs in the fourth time in fi ve starts. "
·fourth . and Williams fanned
Rick
White · relievea
Arroyo to end the threat.
Williams and the Reds loaded
AP photo
Scott Hatteberg doubled the bases again with. two outs
and scored on Brandon in the sixth. White got Ken Cincinnati Reds third baseman Edwin Encarnacion, left. tags Housto'n Astros' Hunter Pence
Phillips' two-out single in the Griffey, Jr. t&lt;J fly out to deep out at third as Pence tried to stretch an RBI double. to left field during the third inning &lt;Jf a
baseball game Thursday in Houston.
·
fifth. Adam Dunn then cenier on a 3-2 pitch.

PITISBURGH (AP) Bard took his home run
Mike · Cameron hit a go- · trot and put his catching
ahead homer in the II th gear back on, only to have
inning after tying it with a Joe West's umpiring crew
run-scoring double in the reverse the call after Pirates
ninth, and the San Diego manager Jim Tracy successPadres overcame a disputed fully argued the drive struck
call 'taking away a home run a thin metal railing above
in a 4-2 win over the the right-field wall and did
Pittsburgh
Pirates
on not leave the park.
Thursday night.
The reversal changing it
The Padres rallied from a to a doUble caused Bard to
two-run deficit and won race. off the bench and start
despite a dominating outing yelling at the ·umP.ires- a
by Pirates starter Shawn burst of anger simtlar to that
Chacon, who shut them out by Kansas City's George
on three hits over seven Brett when he lost a 1983
innings.
homer against the ·Yan~ees
Chacon outpitched Greg when too much pine ta~. was
Maddux before San Oiego detected on his bat. Bard
came back to tie in the ninth chased the umpires from
against Salomon Torres on second base to first, getting
RBI doubles by Adrian ejected along . the way by
Gonzalez and Cameron. plate umpire Ed Rapuano,
Cameron had extra-base and Padres manager Bud
hits in each of his final three Black also was ejected for
at•bats.
arguing.
·
Cameron led off the II th
Bard and Rapuano could
with his fifth homer, a be seen screaming obscenidrive into the right-field ties at each other, with
seats off reliever Josh Rapua11o warning, Bard not
Sharpless (0-1), making his to pusli him any further.
third appearance · since
As it turned out, the rulbeing called up from the ing didn't matter - R.ob
minors. Josh Bard followed Bowen, running for Bard,
two pitches later with scored .on Khalil Greene's
another drive that appeared sacrifice fly to get the run
to reach the right-field · back and make it 4-2.
seats for his ·second homer.
Cia Meredith (2-2) won it

. ·Friday, June t, 2007

..

.Astros blast Cincinnati, 10-~
HOUSlDN (AP) -Lance
Berkman ended a slump with
a three-run homer and Woody
Williams had a sea5on-high
nine strikeouts as the Houston
Astros snapped a 10-game
losing strealc with a 10-2 win
over the Cincinnati Reds on
Thursday night.
Carlos Lee had a .two-RBI
double during a four-run third
inning off Bronson Arroyo as
the Astros won for just the
second time in 14 games. One
more loss would've matched
the longest skid . in franchise
history, set in August 1995.
Williams (2-7) allowed
seven hits and two walks in
five innings. He threw 117
pitches,' also a season high, to
earn his·first win in four starts.
Houston scored four runs or
fewer in 10 consecutive losses. Brad Ausmus gave the flfSt
hint that the Astros were
going to finally shalce out of
their tailspin when he led off

'
.

CLEVELAND (AP) Travis Hafner homered and
drove in four runs, Victor
Martinez finished with
three RB Is and the
Cleveland Indians beat the
Detroit
Tigers
I 1-5
Thursday night.
Cleveland
improved
baseball's best home mark
to I 8-&lt;1 · despite a rough
outi'ng by ace C.C . trees beyond the center,
Sabathia
(8- I),
who field wall. for his lOth
allowed five runs and 10 homer and 2-0 lead. Hafner
hits in 7 1-3 innings. came in with only 17 hits
Sabathia, 5·0 at Jacobs in his last 74 at-bats (.230)
Field, moved into a tie for but went 2-for-3 with two
the major league · lead in · walks against the Tigers. · .
wins.
·
Craig Monroe's I OOtli
Hafner hit a two-run career homer and eighth of
·&lt;!rive in tJte first inning and the season got Detroit·
Martinez's .two-r11n ·homer wiihin 2-1 in the second. ,
capped a fouHun fifth off
The Tigers went ahead
Justin Verlander (!l-2) · as with a three-run third .
Cleveland improved to 4-0 Sheffield had an RBI douc
against the defending AL ble, Magglio Ordonez a:
champion Tigers.
run-scoring groundout and
Verlander gave up seven Marcus Thames an RBI
runs and ei!lht hits over . 1
mnings
for smg e.
.
five-plus
Detroit, which losi for the
Grady Sizemore and.
· h ·
·
Blake singled to start the
stxt tune m·. seven games Indians ' fifth. Hafner tied
and dropped 3 1/2 games
·
behind Clevelimd in the AL it with a two-run single to
Central. The right-hander center and Martinez hit a'
hit thre,e ~atters' with pitch- 2- 1 ·pitch over the wall in
es·1 walkeij three, uncorked right-center for his ninth
two wild pitches and struck homer to make· it 6-4.
out six.
Martinez added a sacri~.
Tigers designated hitter fice tly in the sixth, giving.
Gary Sheffield was ejected him 10 RB!s in his last
in the top of the fifth by seven
games,
and
·plate umpire Greg Gibson Size)llore's two-run triple
after . arguing a called cu'pped Cleveland's fourstrike, then breaking hi s · run eighth off Jose Mesa.
bat on a groundout an,d
Notes: The Tigers, with
angrily throwing the piece seven players on the disof wood still in his hands. abled list, also were withAfter rumiing halfway to out • startin g infielders
first, Sheffield whirl ed and Brandon lngc (chip fraccame back at Gibson. ture in toe) and Carlos
Tigers
manager
Jim Guillen ' (s trained left
Leyland and catcher ·Ivan groin) . ... Ordonez has 43
Rodriguez ran out of the RBl s in his last 39 games
dugout
to
restrain . and anAL -leading 49 overSheffield, who repeatedly all. ... Hafner lead the AL
poked his finger toward with 47 walks . .. : Sizemore .
Gibson's face .
got a standing ovation after
Casey .Blake singled with making a leaping catch
one out in the fir st inning near the warning track of ·a.
and Hafner fo.llowed with a drive hit by Nelfi Pere:t in
430-foot drive into the the seco nd.

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,Joint ,Jlea~ant 1\egi~ter

. INDI~NAPOLIS (AP)Jtm 0 Brien was hired
Thursday as coach of the
lpdiana Pacers, who·turned
(o an NBA veteran in hopes
of reviving a team that
mtssed the playoffs for the
first time in a decade and
. has been beset by turmoil.
·'The announcement ends a
five-week search that be~an
with the firing of Rtck
C;irltsle after four seasons.
::O'Brien
previously
coached 10 Boston and
l&gt;hiladelphia, compiling a
I 82-158 record in five sea~gns. He has been out · of
eoaching since he was fired
by the 76ers after the 2005
$eason.
:Pacers president Larry
i!ird said he had talked with
0' Brien during the past I0
days about the job.
·"It came down to we
needed a guy with experience in here . A guy who I
think I'm gojng to be on the
sa~e page with to do the
tbmgs necessary to take us
to the next level," Bird said.
"I've got the right man for
the right job. ~' ·
O' Brien had been writing
for ESPN.com the past two
years, but he expected to
return to coaching.
"I knew shortly after I left
Philadelphia that I wasn't
going to be out of coaching
long if I had anything to do
with it," Ire said. "I was
hoping to get an opportuni-

ty
like
thi s." ,
Indiana
finished
out
the
playoffs
with a 3547 record
this year.
The team
has been in
O'Brien
d i sa rr a y
si nce the
November 2004 brawl
between Pacers players and
Pistons fans - months after
the Pacers had finished with
the NBA's best record and
reached
the
Eastern
Conference finals.
Bird has said he is willing
to trade anyone on the team,
including All-Star forward
Jermaine O'Neal.
The Pacers don't have a
pick in the upcoming draft,
though chief executive
Donnie Walsh has said the
team will maneuver to gel
one. Bird said 0' Brien will
have input on upcoming
personnel decisions.
O' Brien had a 43-39
record in his single season
at Philadelphia, a I0-win
improvement from the year
before, leading the team
back · to the playOffs.
O'Brien, though, wasn't
popular with ' his pll!yers,
who often complained
about their roles.
O' Brien also coached the
Celtics from 2001-04 after

the departure , of Rick
Pitino. Before that;·he was
an assistant with Boston
and New York Knicks.
Carlisle had a 181-147
record with the Pacers, but
his time was overshadowed
with player troubles. The
Pacers dealt with long suspenstons of Ron Artest and
Stephen Jackson, the two
most prominent players in
the 2004 brawl, and ended
up trading both players.
Jackson and point guard
Jamaal Tinsley both face
fe lony charges in separate
nightclub fights during the
past year- behavior which
Bird has called an embarrassment to the team .
O'Brien said his team
wilj piay the brand of basketball Pacers fans expect.
"We will practice hard ,"
he· said. "Di sc ipline and
organization is a cornerstone of any basketball
team at any level, and certainly, our guys will know
what we want of them."
During th eir lengthy
coac hing search, the Pacers
brass interviewed former
Miami coach Stan Van
Gundy twice and later interviewed Chicagd' assistant
Jim Boylan twice. They
also interviewed current
assistant coaches Johnny
Oavis and Chuck Person.
Indiana was the only team
0' Brien SP&lt;Jke with about a
head co&amp;ching P&lt;JSition.

Magic

said Thursday the ·deal was
basically done, j ust not
signed.
At the NBA predraft
camp, Donovan's former
players said they hadn't
heard anything about him
switching jobs.
"''ve talked to him, just
.not about that," AI Hurford
said.
Donovan replaces Brian
Hill, who was fired after
two consecutive losing seasons. Hill's ouster followed
the Magic's first playoff
appearance in . four years,
which ended in the first
round against Detroit.
If he 's going to go, now
could be the best time for
Donovan. Florida lost its
top seven scorers after the
season, including potential
top-10 NBA picks Noah,
Horford and Corey Brewer.
In Orlando, Donovan
inherits a team. without a
single first-round draft pick
-or much veteran experience. Orlando is rebuilding
around . third-year player
Dwight Howard, who made
his first ·All-Star team this
season,' and counting on
bigger contributions from
Trevor Ari za and J .J .
Redick .
The Magic have vowed to
re-~ign free agent Darko

Milicic, who flourished
despite an injury in the
playoffs, but the 7-footer
still has to prove his NBA
value.
Besides the coach, the big
question mark for Orlando
is whether Grant Hill will
return. The often-injured
star's contract expired this
· season, and he could opt to
re~ire or chase a title elsewhere. If Hill leaves, it
would open up a big load of
salary cap room for a skilled.
offensive player.
Donovan has shown he
· can improve even mediocre
programs. At Florida, a Iraditionally football-oriented
school, he made it to the
NCAA title game three
times in his II years. He led
the Gators to nine straight
20-win seasons, nearly doubling the amount it had
before his arrival. Florida
won three SEC championships under . Dmiovan
after getting just one ·in 77
years
previously.
He
became the winningest
coach in Florida history on
Dec. 20 and now has 261
victories.
With the Magic, he ' ll face
a similar challenge. Orlando
hasn 't been out of the first
round of the playoffs in a
decade.

from PageBl
million annual deal with the
Gat()rs.
. "There's going to be a lot
of hamburgers, a lot of
filet," departing Florida star
Jmlkim Noah joked.
. Donovan, his agent and
Florida athletic director
Jeremy Foley didn't return
phone messages left by The

AP.

.

School president Bernie
Machen said he didn ' t
believe Donovan had yet
l)CCejJted the Orlando job,
but there were no hard feel ings if he had.
·. "There's always a next,"
Machen said · at the
Southeastern Conference's
annual spring meeting in
Destin, Fla. "Billy Donovan ·
bas been here for II years,
won two national championships. He's been a great
ambassador
for
the
University of Florida, We'll
~lways love Billy Donovan,
whether he's here II years
or 21 years."
Both Donovan and the
school had said all along
they were negotiating a con'
tract extension. Machen

hit a tee shot on No. I0 hit a
cart path and bounced outof-bounds .. He went back to
the tee as Woods and Bart
from PageBl
Bryant . played on, and
Woods
was seemingly out
u'onal style that carried him of the way
on the front right
to three majors.
corner
of
the
green when a
· Even so, the theme of the ·
small
Titleist
missile
missed
. first round seemed to be
him
by
3
feet.
~bout survival -especially
"If you can't beat him,
those who didn't.
him out," Hoffman
take
: For those who anticipated
joked
a remarkable
4 duel between Mickelson round. after
He
made
double
~nd Woods, that ended
bogey
at
No.
I
0
to
go
to 6
Defore the ·world's No. l
over
par,
then
ran
off
five
player even got to the pracstraight
birdies
and
closed
tice range. Mickelson felt
ihe first sting after a wedge with a six to finish at 72.
0' Hair had a great birdie
on the second hole, and he
))ad a message therapist streak of his own, with four
holding · and rubbing his straight on the front nine.
!land on the back nine until The difference was he didbe hit another wedge out of n't have any hiccups along
the way until a good bogey·
divot on the II th.
: "I'll talce a couple days on the 17th.
He played with Charles
6ff, see if I can ice it and get
Howell
Ill (69) and Ted
tt ready for the Open," he ·
Purdy
(68),
and there was
said. 'T II go have someonly
one
bogey
from that
body take a look at it."
group
all
day.
.
: Woods' biggest rival
"I ap&lt;llogized to ·those
OJmed out to be par on a day
guys
for making that bogey,
tJt which nearly half the because
that · w.ould have
field broke par. He was
been
pretfy
cool - no
headed in · that direction .bogeys," O'Hair
said. "I've
after a beautiful shot from a never heard of that in my
fairway bunker and over the life.
·
pond to I0 feet for birdie on
, That is lone bogey canie
the sixth hole, his third in on the 17th was only fitting.
{our holes, to reach 3 under.
This is the tirst tourna· But he made bogey with a ment for O'Hair since The
wedge in his hand on the Players
Championship,
ilext hole, added a few other when he was two shots
sloppy mistakes and needed behind Micke'lson and was .
· his only challenger at
a late birdie for 70.
· "Today was the day to Sawgrass until putting two
ieally shoot some good balls into the water on the
numbers," Woods said. island-gree n 17th and tak':Look at the field .:... they ing a quadruple-bogey 7.
pretty much did. If you did'They ex pect. the. 17th to
ft shoot under par; y&lt;Ju' re be a negative." he said,
going to get run over out spealcing of Sawgrass. ''It
Otere today."
·
was two weeks ago. I' m
' He also got knocked playing today. I' m playing
down by Hoffman, whose 1h the Memorial this week.
,..
,,. .

Memorial

So I'm going to try and win
the Memorial."
His immediate competi- ·
tion was Pampling, who
birdied his half his holes,
and O'Hern. who had five
birdies in a six-hole stretch
on the back nine and could
have taken the outright lead
until miss ing a 12-foot
birdie on \he tinal hole.
That put a lefty among the
leaders, even if it wasn't the
guy anyone was expecting.
''I heard Phil had to pull
out," O'Hem said. "It's a
big loss for the tournament.
Hopefully, he' ll be fit for
Oakmont."
Els ran off live straight
birdies for his 66, a score he
shared with Tim Herron ,
Ryan Moore, Bubba Watson
and Aaron Baddeley. It was
another small step for Els,
who has not won on U.S.
soil since the Memorial in
2004. · He injured his left
knee a year later, and has
quite been the same since
then, first physically, and
then with his confidence.
"I'd like to get back to
where I'm playing consistently, and I haven't quite
done that," Els said.
It wasn't a· perfect round
of golf. and Els did hole a
bunker shot on the 13th and
chip in for par on the 17th,
The toughest part of his day
was deciding to go crosshanded with the putter.
He used that style the
final
nine
holes
at
Wentworth last week on the
European tour, tinkered
with it again in .the pro-am
but called it a "big challenge .. to go 18 holes of the
first round with it.
"I've been conventional
my whole life," Els said.
"But I made some big ones
today:·,.
'

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (APJ
- Marc lavaroni faces a
tough task in his first head
coaching job- turning the
worst team in the NBA back
into a winner.
The former Phoenix
assistant
was
hired
Thursday as coac h of the
Memphis Grizzlies, who
went 22-60 last season after
three straight trips to the
NBA playoffs.
He said he knows how to
reverse that slide.
"I've always been noted
for my enthusiasm, my passion for the game," he said.
"We're going to instill in
them a conti nuing passion
AP photo
for winning, a passion for Memphis Griulies new head coach Marc lavaroni talks with
preparation ·and a passion the media during a news conference Thursday at the Fed Ex
for honest competition."
Forum in Memphis, Tenn.
lavaroni has . spe nt 17
yea'rs in the NBA as a play- with younger players like want to make sure we're
er and assistant coach and is Rudy Gay, Kyle Lowry and attacking before the defense
is set and at the· same time
regarded as one of the Hakim Warrick.
league 's top assistants. He
"With his background, we want to make sure we go
spent the past five seasons with his personality ... he ' ll a great job of setting our
with the Suns.
be the ri ght guy for a young defense as quickly as possiHe vowed to return the upcoming Grizzlies team," ble."
With the Suns, lavaroni
se nse 6f competition th e Heisley sa'id.
Grizzlies seem to have misThe franchise is also was a lead assistant under
placed .
looking for a general man- coach Mike D' Antoni . He
"You compete in a drill. ager to replace team presi- was an assistant under Pat
You compete in a scrim- · dent Jerry West, who is Riley at Miami from 1999mage. You compete in a retiring after next month's 02 and an assistant under
preseason game. You com- draft. The Grizzlies have Fratello at Cleveland from
1997-99. lavaroni played in
pete in one minute or you the fourth pick.
compete in 41 · minutes.
West was in . Florida for the NBA from 1982 to 1989
That's going to be a trade- the league's predraft camp with Philadelphia, San
mark of our team," lavaroni and
did
not
attend Antonio and Utah.
Sl!id at a news conference to Thursday 's announcement.
The Grizzlies began last
announce his hirii)g.
Heisley acknowledged he season with All-Star Pau
Tony Barone, the team's has talked with David Gasol on the sidelines for
former director of player Griffin, the Suns' vice pres- the first ·22 games because
personnel, was appointed ident of basketball opera- of a broken lefi foot. Lowry
interim coach last season tions, about the general broke his left wrist and
when · Memphis fired Mike manager job. But he said he missed 71 games.
Fratello with the team at 6- has also talked with "some
Before
moving
to
24.
other people" and does not Memphis from Vancouver
lavaroni said he was expect to make a decision in 200 I, the Grizzlies were
impressed with owner until mid-June. lavaroni regular dwellers near the
Mjchael Heisley's pledge to said he will be consulted bottom of the standings.
run the Grizzlies as a part- about that choice.
But West , one of the
nership between the coach"lt.' ll be important what I league's top executives,
ing and management staffs. think," he said. "But at the joined the franchise in 2002
"They're obviously com- same time, that's not going and by 2004 the Grizzlies
to
winning," to be my decisi&lt;Jn."
mitted
were in the playoffs.
lavaroni said .
lavaroni said he wHI pick
The Grizzlies were swept.
Heisley said lavaroni 's up the pace of the Grizzlies' in all three playoff appearcoaching style with an rlay.
ances, however, and have
emphasis on "positive rein"We want to attack the the league 's longest postforcement" will work w.ell · opponent," he said. "We. season losing streak.
-

~ ~-

--

---

I"

.et Everyone Know Your Dad Is Someone
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�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June l, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

· Friday, June 1, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ducks look to finish off Senators in Ottawa Ex-prep football star
~eleased f~om J·an
onAwA (AP) _The
Stanley Cup crossed the
continent fro m Anaheim to
Ottawa on Thursday. If the
Ducks have their way, the
prized trophy won't make
that journey east again.
The
mos t
succe ssful
hockey team in Southern
California history carried a
2-0 lead in the Stanley Cup
final s to Canada's capital
city, full of confidence and
holding a tinge of hope that
when they re turn home
after Game 4 they will be in
pos session of the cherished
chalice that w as unveiled in
Ottawa in 1892 .
On the s trength of winning goals b y checking-line
forwards Travis Moen and
Samuel
Pahl sson ,
the
Ducks swept their first two
home games and improved
to 5-0 in Cup final s games
in Anaheim. They won all
three during the 2003
champion ship
series
against New Jersey but
dropped four on the road .
They can earn their first
finals win away from home
in Game 3 on Saturday
after the series takes a twoday break. Game 4 is
Monday.
" I believe we're very
comfortable playing on the
road as well as at home,"
goalie
Jean-Sebastien
Giguere said Thursday
night after the Ducks
arrived at their hotel in
Gatineau, Quebec . " We're
a team that has size. We can
skate with any team in this
league. So it doesn't really
matter if we play at home
or on the road, we ' ll be the
same type of team. "
The · Senators '!Vent from
the airport to their home
arena Thursday night to get
in a little workout. Some
laced up their skates and
took the ice , while others
did different kinds of exercise for 15-30 minutes.
"Nothing too strenuous...
get the kinks out," Senators
coach Bryan Murray said.
Saturday night will be
their first home game in 17
days, dating to a May 16
loss to Buffalo in Game 4
of the Eastern Conference
finals.
"lt'll be nice to .have a
game here and feed off the
crowd," top-line forward

· AP photo
Anaheim Ducks goalie Jean-Sebastlen Giguere celebrates
his team's l.Q victory over the Ottawa Senators in Game 2
of the NHL Stanley Cup final hockey game Weclnesclay 1n
Anaheim, Calif.
Jason Spezza said .
Giguere needed to make
only 16 saves Wednesday
night to earn a 1-0 victory
and post his sixth career
playoff shutou·t - the first
this year. His biggest test
came when the Ducks
killed off their second 5-on3 disadvantage of the
series, this one lasting I :07
of the first period and producing the bulk of the
Senators ' offensive chances
during their seven-shot
frame.
The rest of the work was
done
in
front
where
Pahlsson, Moen and Rob
Niedermayer again shut
down the potent top line of
the Senators that has generated no goals and two
assists in two games .

Not only aren't Danie l
Alfredsson , Spezza , and
Dany Heatley scoring, the
trio has al so become a
defen s ive liability. They
committed II turnovers a s
a group Wednesday, and for
the second straig ht game
they were on the ice for the
winning goal in the closmg
minutes of the third period .
" It all started with a
turnover ... so , yeah , I'm
conc erned about that ,"
Murray said. " That 's the
whole message to the line ."
After resisting temptation
in the se ries opene r on
Monday, Murray split up
the line for parts of all three
periods in Game 2 with the
hope th a t s preadmg the
player s o ut would create
match up problems fo r the

Ducks.
·
No suc h luck.
" Our line, we have to
lead the way," Spezza said.
" We 've done it up to thi s
point and it's tough for our
team to have success if the
t hree of u s aren't going
well. "
It 's not just the lack of
scoring that is trouble some
for the Senators, it's their
inabil ity to s ustain a ny kind
of offensive attack when
skating a t even · strength .
Anaheim held a 32-20 shots
ad vantage in the opener a nd
stretched that to 63 -36
through two games.
Ottawa enjoyed only one
power play after the 5-on-3
and managed a total of nine
shots over the final 40 min ute s. The Ducks dominated
throug ho ut, registering 3 I
shots, and just had to figure
a way to get a puck past
goalie Ray Emery.
When Heatley turned the
puck over, it gave Pahlsson
a c hance to get Senators
d efen sem a n Joe Corvo
spinning around. That provided a screen that prevented 'Emery . from seeing the
precise wrist shot.
It was the Ducks' lith
o ne-goal victory in 13 such
games - one win shy of
the playoff record shared
by Anaheim (2003) and
Montreal ( 1993) and
second of this series. The
w ay Ott aw a scored in winning each of its first three
series in five games, even
the
defen s ive-minded
Ducks couldn't have fig ured to capture two straight
victories on the strength of
four goals.
" We' re going to have to
matc h their intensity and
desperation to have a
chance," Giguere said. "We
knew it's not going to be
easy ... . We know if we play
the way we can play, we
can be successful."
The Senators will be met
by an excited city that will
host the Stanley Cup final s
for the first time since 1927
when the original version
of the tea m won its fourth
title . The welcome celebration in Ottawa could be
tempered due to the daunting task the hometown
team faces of having to win
four of the final five games.

.1. '

CLASSIFIED

.1. '

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
judge released a former high
school football star from jait
nine days after she ruled that
he failed a drug test and violated his - probation on an
involuntary manslaughter
conviction involving the
death of teammate.
Cuyahoga
County
Common
Pleas
Judge
Shirley Strickland Saffold
reversed her" earlier orde r
Wednesday after Raymond
Williams' lawyers gave her
the results of a defense-commissioned independent test
on May 23 . It showed
Williams had no trace of
marijuana in his system.
Two days before that test,
a drug screen at the county
Probation Department found
marijuana components in
Williams' urine, and Saffold
ordered him to spend three
years in prison.
Williams, who won The
A ssoc iated
Press
Mr.
Football award in 2003
while leading Benedictine
High Sc hool to a state cham-

pionship, was scheduled lo
graduate and go to Wt&lt;st
Virg inia on a football scholarship, when in April 2004
he was involved in a robbery
in which a teammate w as
killed.
Williams pleaded guilty :to
involuntary manslaughter
and Saffold gave him a second chance, putting him on
five
years'
probation.
Williams was ordered to stay
drug-free and keep a "C"
average in college.
Saffold
refused
in
February to find
that
Williams violated his probation when he stopped ¥Ding
to class at the Umvers1ty of
To ledo.
Williams appeared in a jail
uniform
Wednesday
at ·
Cleveland Municipal Court,
where a judge set July 21 ;~s
his trial date on a charge
accusing him of drunken driving resulting from a traffic
stop last month. Police
'reported finding a marijuana
cigarette in the ashtray of the
car Williams was driving. ·

E-mail
classifiecl@mydailytribune.com

He originally was diagnosed with a bdne spur and
switched to shoes with
orthotics that he said
relieved the pain. Giambi
traveled to New York on
Thursday 's day off, inteniiing to get a cortisone shQt,
but Hamilton said Giambi
had
plantar
fasciitls ,
inflamed tissue near the
heel , and a partial! y torn
plantar fascia .
.
The 36-year-old Giaml)i ,
the 2000 AL MVP with the
Oakland Athletics, is in the
sixth season of a $120 million, seven-year contract
with the Yankees and has
been in the news this season for his role in baseball's steroids controversy.
Giambi has been among
the struggling hitters in
New York' s lineup. The ,
Yankees are just 22-29,
tied for last in the AL East
and 13 l/2 games behind
first-place Boston heading
into a weekend series at
Fenway Park.

8:00

85263; Audrey Palmer,
328
N,
Rollins,
Centralia, 1110 65240;
lllra. R. (Betty) Levings,
400 N. West St.,
llladlaon, MO 65263;
Lolo
Barnadyne
Ill-hem, 416 Jeflrlea,
Monrovia, CA 91016;
Melvin Laforce, 3301
S. Dallaa, Ft. Smith,
Arkanus 72903; Mrs.
Ethel Roberto, Rio. 14,
Contrails, 1110 65240;
Warren
Spencer
Roberta,
1916
Cleveland St., San
Laandro, CA 945n;
Spencer Roberts, 1916
Cleveland St., San
Leandro, CA 94577;
lllro. Sue Ryon, 160
Well Ave., Sedalia, MO
65301 ; Carolyn Jane
Salta, 4441 Colby Way,
Carmk:hHI, CA 95628;
Oneida Stika, Ate. t4,
Centrella, MO 65240;
Glady• Opal Wade,
RFD 12, Hellavllle, MO
65255; Mra. S.L. (Ora)
Watoon, 2406 Madrid
Ave., Stjlety Harbor, FL
33572; Allan Zaring,
320 South Booth St.,
Cantrallll, MO 65240;
Allan Zaring, Rt. 14,
Box 30, Warrenton, 1110
63383; John 0 . Zaring,
548 E. Clearvlew Dr.,
Columbia, 110 85201;
Mre. JamM (Lavern)
Lea, 8323 Scarsdale
Dr.; lndlanapolla, IN
46256; Bruce Laforce,
_, Well Nag. Home,
South Cowan Rd.,
Columbia, 1110 65201;
Rill Eloise llolal, 2010
Enune St., Concord,
CA 94519; WMIIIIm L.
BotH, 2012 Downing,
Garden City, KS 67846;
Mrs. WIHIIIm Henry, Ate
13, C - . AR 71635;
Mrs. William Henry,
Rta. t3, Box 124A,
tamcltn, SC 2t020;
Elolu Wyllt, 1371
Slntl Clara, Concord,
CA
94518;
Jerry
l.lforce, Ate. 12, Box
148, Hallavllle, 1110
1$255; Kay Alaxandor,
Ate. 11, llarahlll, 1110
85340; Bobby Bolla,
Box , 1811A, LeMar,
Colorado 81052; Jan
weiMnhom,
13136
Eeat Idaho Place,
Aurora,
Colorado

80014,
or
their daring of the Ohio
assignees, II living, II River I rod and 3 feet
deceased to
the to the southeast cor·
unknown heirs, next ot· ner ot Lot No. 135;
kin, administrators, thence North 400 rodo
executors, legatees, to the place ot begin·
devisees, succeaaora ntng, containing Three
and assigns of said Acres, more or tess.
Individuals, names and Reference
Oeods:
addresses unknown. Volume 262, page 303,
Please take notice, Meigs County Deed
Ronnie W. Cowdery, Records.
the owner of the lol· Auditor's parcel No.:
lowing described real 09-00310.000
allele:
has declared the lotTRACT ONE:
lowing mlnerallntoreal
The following Real as being abandoned
Estate, situate In the pursuant to Ohio
County or Meigs, In the Ravllllld Code Section
Stale of Ohio, and In 6301 .56.
the Township or Olive, The mineral Interest
Town 13, Range 111, abandoned was an
and bounded and undivided 1116th InterCleecrlbed aa lollowa: est of all minerals oil
Being all of one hun· and gas underlying the
dred acre Lott1 35, and above described real
more fully described estate.
aa follows: Baglnnlng This mineral Interest
at the north-weal cor- was reserved and
ner of said Lot 1135; excepted In a deed pr•
thence eaat (43) forty· sented lor record on
three rods; thence February 28, 1900,
aouth to the Ohio which was recorded In
River; thence westerly VOlume 85, page 527,
following the meander· of the Meigs County
Ing of the Ohto River deed Recoras, ancl the
(43) forty three rods; current record owners
thence north to the of uld mlnerallntereat
place of beginning, wore determined by
containing 100 acres, Judgment Entry of the
more or leoa. See Deed Meigs
County
14326, VOl. 121. Page Common Pleas Court
534; alao Deed 11991, In ClseNumber 14481.
Vol. 125, Page 252, Ronnie W. Cowdery
Deed Recoras llelga attests that the owners
County, Ohio.
of uld mineral interest
Rerorence
Deed: have done nothing
Volume 262, Page 301 , required by Ohio
lllelgs County Deed Revised Coda Section
Recorda.
5301.26(BK3) within
Auditor's parcel No.: the 1wanty years rmmeot-00309.000
dlately preceding the
TRACT TWO:
date of the oorvlce of
The
following this notice, namely:
Cleecrlbed Real esllte The mineral Interest
altuated
In
the has not been the subTownship of Olive, the ject of a title ll'lln8llcCounty of llelga ancl liOn thll has bean filed
the State of Ohio, or recorded with the
bounded
, and Meigs
County
Cleecribeclulollowa: Reconlor.
Being a part of Lot No. There haa been no
134, beginning at the actual production or
northweat , comer of wtlhd,_l of ml-.la
Lot No. 134; thence by lhoo hoklora nor has
Ell! I rod and 3 IHt to anything elsa occunlld
a • - In Mid line of a specified In (BK3Kb)
Lot No. 134; thence ofuld Section.
South 4011 roda to the Thera Is no UN of the
Ohio River; thence mineral lntereal lor
W.St with the mean· underground g.oo otor-

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•POLICIES*

,,

Ohio Valley

Publishing reoervH
the ~~Ito edit, •
reject or cancel any
ad II any time. ·
Error• Mull B
eportad on the fl
ol publication a
t Trlbune-Semlnel
eglller will
eaponalble ror n
ore than the cost o

;

Bid lor Bus
Heart of the Valley
Head Start, 320 112
East Main Street, P.O.
Box 684 Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 Ia accepting
bids lor two (2) 21123
paounger
school
buses. SpecHicatlona
lor the bu- can be
obtained by calling the
A t h e n a - II e I g a
Educational Service
Center at 740-9924286. Quotea will be
opened In the tnllsuror's oftlce at noon on
Tuesday, June 19,
2007. The
boanl
M881VM the right to
reject oil or any part of
the bid. Bldo lhould be
labeled "Bid lor School
Bua" and mailed to:
Heart of the Valley
Head Start
Tnlaurer's Office
320 1/2 Eaat Main
Street, P.O. Box 684
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(6)1 , 8

\\\()1 \( I \ II ' ' "

r

Ir

GIVFAWAY
.,_ _
_ _ _,..

MIKbreed puppies to a good
home bOrn April 10 740992-4454
-.,.P
- E_R_E-NN- 1-Al_C_A
_r__
SHELTER
The kittens has amvedl
Please save themand gtve
them a good home
Call 740-645·7275
All Real Eslal
dvertlsements ar
ub)ect to the Fodera
air Housing Act o
968.

the law.

l:iii;iiii;iiiiii;;iiiiiiii;;;;:,l

r
FOUND set of Keys @
&amp;merest Cemetery Sunday
27th call to 1dent1fy 304-675·
_58_5_3_
lea_v_e_me_s_sa_ge___
Found· White Male Pit Bull
pup on Hollybrook Ad, I
mile east of Rt 35 roadside
rest stop 740-245-9514

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; For Lease .....................,.............................. 490
For 5118 ........................................................ 585

For Sale or Tracre ......................................... 590
• Frullll &amp; ~lllbles ..................................... 580
Fumlahed Rooma .......................... .............. 450
General Haullng ........................................... 850
Glveaway ...................................................... 040
Heppy Ada....................................................oso
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
' Help Wanted ................................................. 11 0
HOme lmprovements ................................... 810
. - f o r Sale ............................................ 310
Houaehold Goods ....................................... 510
Hou-lor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlam ...... ... .................................... ... 020
tnauMnce ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 660

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-----------------------········

Oeacltit~

' Loatancl Founcl ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ........................................... 350
MIIC8llaneous .............................................. 170
lllacetlaneoua Merchandlse ....................... 540
Mobile Home Repalr.................................... 860
.• Moblte Homaalor Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homaalor Sale................................ 320
... Money to Loan ............................................. 220
llotorcyclal &amp; 4 Wheel8ra .......................... 740
Mualcattnllnlments ................................... 570
Pareonats ........................................ _........... oos
Pelllor Sal8 ................................................ 560
Plumbing a Heatlng .................................... 820
-.ronat Sarvlc88 ................................ 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ......................... ,..... 160
RIII~Wontad ..................................... 360
Sch c oil lnatrucllol1 .....................................150
s-d • Plant &amp; Fettlll-.............................. 650
Situation• Wanted ....................................... 120
SpK~Ior Rent .............................................460
Sporting Goodl ........................................... 520
SUV'alor Sale............................................. 720
TNcka lor Sale .. ,......................................... 715
~ ................................................... 870
,.,. For Sate ............................................... 730
w.ntad to Buy ............................................. 090
w.ntadto Buy- Fann SUppllal .................. 620
WIMICITo Do .............................................. lBO
WlnWd to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard s.ta- Glllllpolla....................................072
Yard Slla Pomoroyllllddii ......................... 074
• Yard Sale-Pl. - . ................................ 076

I

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IIIMtina EOE

In
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.tanclarda, We will not knowingly ecc.pt any adnrtislng in vk)lation of the law

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KIT &amp; CARLYLE
kltncarlyle~comcast.net

POST OFFICE NOW
cosmetologist,
part or full t1me. Na•l Tech,
HIRING
A11g Pay $20/hr 01
both rental or commiSSIOn,
$57K annually
New Salon, New Equ1pment.
Attitudes
1n Pomeroy Including Federal BenefitS
and OT,Pa1d Tram1ng,
hour
(740)992·2200
({I~YI!~ IF I HAt&gt;
On Hand Shop Foreman
Vacauoos·FT/PT
-A
7!1~ ~ ~6M~II\?JE.g
Machtne Shop &amp; Fabncabon Middleton Estates ts accePt· 1-800·584·1775 Exl H8923
~::::::Y;ARD:~S;ALE=·=~
knowledge 10 years or more mg applicatiOns for a
USWA
1o \"~ N\~ A ~U Nell
expenence $12-$15 per PAN/LPN lor GalliPOliS and - - - - - - - hpur
Chesapeake areas You w11! Professional Fundra1sers
io 1'Mi.~ WO'f!-¥..
- - - - - - -- be part of a team tl1at pro· needed ParUFull t1 me 3
GAilJI'OLI'i
Care Gtver for male 10 P1 v1des servtces to •ndMduals shttts da1ly 7 days a week,
Pleasant area (740)446· wtth mental retardatton and $9 hr after patd tra1n1ng +
1/2 mtle out BulaVIIIe P1~e
4597
deJJelopmental dtsabllll•es Benefrls, Contact us today•
230 Ltnwood Dr Chlldrens
- - - - - - - - We prov•de on the JOb tratn- 1-888-974-JOBS or
,0
clothmg, furniture, new
College Student seeks mg If mterested please www 1688974JObs com
t&gt;
Study Coach for Test 5hrs a apply at 8204 Carla Dr1ve,
stuffed ammals 6/1.~.3 9week 304-458-2623
GallipoliS 01110 (adJacent 10 Scemc Htlls Nursmg Center
530
Cliffside Golf Course) IS currently accept1ng appiicat1ons for a Un11 Manager
Desk Clerk needed at
1970 Georges Creek Ad,
-'son Monday thru Fr1day Bam·
Budget Inn 260 Ja""'
Applicants must possess a
top of hill ram or sh1ne Lots
4
30pm
N
o
phone
calls
w111
Pike Look'ng lor a Person
current AN hcense m the
of ktds clothes Comer reSI·
who IS mohJJated, great be accepted An Equal state of Ohm Long-term
den1 9'5 611 '2 &amp; 3
communtcahon S~lll s and a Opportumty
Employer cale exper18nce IS required
pos1!1Ve a«•tude Please _FI_M_ID_N ______ Applicants must possess
2 Famtly Yard Sale, lots of
new tlems, call 446-3656 or
apply Within
New Salon openmg 514 ex:cellent communtcat1on
stop at 128 4th Ave
D
1
rect
Oare
Staff
M
a1n Sl Pt Pleasant July sk1ll and the abtl1ty to lunc·
~ -1
Middleton Estates 1s now
2nd, Ha1r Stylist &amp; Na1l Tech t1on as an effective health·
3 famly yard sale 6/2-6/3 1
h1nng d1rect care staff You needed 304·675-6144 or care team member Fqr
M1le from Korner Store 1n
Will
be part of a team that
304-593-6570
more mformat10n or to
www.comics.com
NEA, Inc .
© 2007
B1dwell on At 554
prov1des serJJtces to ll'ldtVId· - - - - - - - - schedule an tnlerv1ew.
uals w1th mental retardation Now Hmng part·tlme posl- please contact D1anna F1tch,
3 Fam1ly Yard Sate. 178
~!"""....- .....- - . , and developmental d•sabtli· \tons for floral destgner at Human Resources a1 740 er
Greenbner off 160 South pz
YARD SALEYARJISALEYARD SAL&amp;
hes Must have valid dnvers Pomeroy Flower Stlop 446-7150 EOE
Friday &amp; Saturday June 1·2
'"4 i'oMEKOYiMtooLE
Pr. Pl..EAsANT
d hgh hool
ex:ponence
preferred, - - -- -- - GALLIPOLIS
1tcense an I sc
please bnng resume &amp; reter- The
Athens·Metgs
4 Family sale Fn &amp;Sat 9am
diploma or GED We proences to 106 Butternut Ave Educahonal Serv~ce Center
· Spm 755 Shoestnng A1dge Yard Sale Sat JlJne 2 83 Huge Yard Sale. June 1st &amp; 3 Family Yard Sale 251o v1de on the Job trammg If
Pomeroy. OhiO between has an available pos1t1on for
Myrtle Ave located between 2nd, 293 Race Street, lincoln Ave June 1·-8·5, you would like to take
Sam 4pm, Man -Fn
a Mutt 1ple Dtsabllttles
F
F
I
&amp;S
I
5 amtly, n 6 1
at 6 2 bowling alley and drtve tnn Mtddlepori across from the June 2-· B-12 Brand name a9vantage of th•s opportunt- - - ' - - - - - - - Teacher at Meigs H1gh
0
Intervention
:~~s~
~e~:ll A~~:~ Womens, Juntors, Mens, hrehouse, baby clothes, fur· clothmg,dtshes, lots of M1sc ty, you may apply at 8204 Ohio Valley Home Health. School
Mtll
baby gt rls (newborn-2T), mture. ttns, many items
Carla Dnve, Monday thrlJ
INC hmng Per D1em or Specialist certifiCation IS
household Items, toys and - - - - - - - - Garage Sale Fr. &amp; Sat g.1 Fnday 8 00·4 00 An Equal Contracted Med1cal Soc1al reqwed Salary based on
Worker Apply at 14SO cert 1f1cat1on and expenence
6 Fam1ly Yard Sale 1012 _m_uc_h_m_o_re...,..·...,--,.,..-- lns1de yard sale. Meigs 501 Westery Ct Gallipolis Opportumty Employer
Watson Ad June 2 9amM1
Ch
Sen1or Center, June 1st, 9·3, Ferry, lurn off At 2 between FI"'M'I/ID!:NI:r.!l"!''=f.lf,:F=;t Jackson P1ke. Gallipolis OH Th1s poSit1on has Board
or phorie 740·4~1-1393
appro11ed oeneflts Letter of
5pm Somethmg for every- ~a~d sal~~ ~e outG e~ry
June 2nd, 9·1 , Sat clothing Fla1r Furn1ture and Little ll'
' ge
· '0 ran 9 $1 a bag (740)992·2161
Store No Sale before 9am
Salas Manager
OTR
Onve
rs
needed
Must
Interest. resume and referone
Watch for s1gns June 1-2
Big variety Some I1Sh·pond
-Chi-ldl-ln-la_n_ti_M_en_s_IW_o_m_en
- s 6am-4pm Household •terns, June 1 only· 1216 Carleton supplies sm appliances, ResponSibllittes 1ncllJde be at least 24 yrs old and ences must be rece111ed Dy
12 00 p m June 6 Subm•t
clothes, lots of baby 1tems great select1on name brand St , Syracuse,
pool baskets, ceram1c 1st Sale m recru1tmg and tra1n1 ng of have 3 yrs expenence Apply to
John D Costanzo
1n
person
at
2204
Jackson
341 c1rcle Dr off Bulavtlle clothmg, mens, womens, Longaberger, Home lnt nearly 20yrs
earners, customer serv1ce Ptke
Supenntendent
AthensPike 6/1 &amp; 612
Jr's &amp; chtldren vanety of k1ds &amp; adult clothes. camand meetmg sales goals - - -- - - - - Me1gs Educational Servtce
- - - - - - - - s1zes
era. to much to ltst. aamIf you have a pos•t•ve atti- Overbrook RehabilitatiOn Center, P:O BoK 684, 320Fn &amp; Sal 9am - Spm. 102 Yard Sales Park Lane Trl4_cPc_m__ _ _ _ _ _ Huge 4 Fam1ly Yard Sale, Fr1 tude are a self starter and center IS currently accept1ng 112 E Mam Pomeroy. OH
White Rd. Gall1po1ts Ra1n
&amp; Sat. Lots of baby Items furcanCels
Park, 57 Jay Dr, Cnme June 1.2 8,9 Ftrst ttme,4 ntture
&amp;
clothes, a team playe r we would apphcaiiOns for dtetar~ a1de 45769 Equal Opportunity
hke to talkto you
Ar_1yone mterested please Employer/Provider
--.,...-...,-...,----, Watch Sponsored, Fn &amp; lam1ly, BAM-5PM, spnng Longaberger baskets, purs,110_n_ _ __
Fn 611/Sat 612 8-3 2973 Sat, 9-5, Lqt27-28 &amp; others cleanmg. Brand names, plus es, Vom Bradl~y. household Must be dependable and pick up an appltcat1on at 333 -Tr-ao"ne.:.r-Po-,have
reliable
transportaPage
Str(jlet,
Mtddleport,
Are
you
mterested
In a
St At 141 Centenary r74 YARUSAU:·
Sizes Loop Ad Rutland
Items, men &amp; women
tion Pos1t1 on offers all
OH E 0 E &amp; a Participant
Electronics, toys, bathroom
Po•tERO~/Mtlll" 4"· J
F
&amp;
Sat
pm
clothes,
shoes,
toys
lots
of
of the Drug-Free Workplace rewardtng poSition? PAIS IS
1·2' rt.
84
company
fixtures , holiday decor, mosc L,...i-"iilliiil'liiliiiii"li Bune
currently seektng a part
res 806' p·1cken' every1hmg
Must see benehts tnclud1ng health,
111 Cross's
_Pr_ og_ra_m______ hme staff lor Mason and
Huge Yard Sale, Wed-Sat, 33821 New L1ma Road, St , Rac1ne. Oh men/women Approx 5 miles out At 2
dental. Vlston and life
PAIS IS seek1ng
Pomt Plesant, WV providtng
&amp; teen clothing, crafts
North 1/2 m1les past
Insurance, 401 K. pa1d
406 Johnson Ad (between Rutland. 1 mtle out on left,
RooseJJelt School
LPN PT adm1mster/mo011or restdenhallcernmumty sk•ll
vacatiOns
and
personal
L1ttle Bullskin &amp; Lincoln 31st &amp;1st, 9 5pm
June 2nd only! Bam·? 106 - - - - - - - patten! medication prepara- lraintng w1th •ndividuals With
Pike)
- - - - - - - - Pleasant Ridge, Pomeroy MOVIng SBie June 1 &amp; ~ d~ys Please send resume liOn for IndiVIdUalS with MRIDD H1gt1 school dtplo41am•lyyardsale June 1-2. Th1rd road to the nght on of 1146 Su nse1 Lane PI
10
developmental dtsabthttes 1n rna or GED reqwed No
June 1 &amp;2, 2 Fam1ly Garage 9am-?, 613 Elm St , Aac•ne, Spnng Avenue, follow the Pieasanl on Sandhill
Pau1Ba1ker
Jackson County and sur- experience
necessary
Sale '9am- ? t134 2nd Ave Oh
F
1
th
t
&amp;
C1rculat1on
Manager
- - - - - - - - - s1gns Clothmg, Home urntlure co 1ng, oys
1oundmg areas Please call Cnmmal background check
Gallipolis
m1sc
OhiO Valley PubliShing
- - - - - - - - 473
Sycamore
St, lntenor, Longaberger, k1ds _ - - - - - - (304) 373·1"011 or toll free at reqUired Must ha11e reliable
825 Thtrd Ave
June t &amp; 2. Sam . 4pm, Middleport Appl tances, Harley boots SIZe 4 youth, Yard Sale 502 2nd St June
transportal!on and 11al•d
GallipoliS, OhiO 45631 t-677-373-1 011
Lawn mower. old 10 speed tools, household •terns books , sohd wooden 1st &amp; 2nd If Aalntng w111
auto tnsurance Paid tra1n
or ema1l to
Personable.
Fnendly
btke, mise 11 06 Teodora Frt&amp;Sat.June t&amp;2,9 00-4 00 swmgset. $100 loys and Cancel
barker@m da11 rtbune Customer Serv1ce Rep to rng Hourly rate startmg at
Ave, Galltpolls, Oh
other miscellaneous 1tems, - - - - - -- $7-SB DO/hour Please ca11 1
8 fam1ly yard sale Saturday, (740 )992-6975
Yard sate OShel Rd. Thur- Floodplain Administrator handle Member Servtces @ 304-373-1011 or loll free at
ddl
M
M
1
J
May 31, June 1 &amp;2 15 Ann une 2,
eport asomc '--'----- -- - Frt-Sat9-? Fur01lure. Crafts,
Ttle new PI Pleasant Offtce 1·877·373·1011
for Gallla County
Karr St · S~racuse, Sat 8·4· Household Items
Dnve W1ll have Home Temple
of Tw1n Oaks Feder:ll Cred1t
d
h
1
hl
W
tll
enforce
the
proviSIOns
,
CDs. IS es. oys. we1g
lntenor, baby clothes, m1sc
Truck Dnvers COL Class A
Btg yard sate- Sat &amp; Sun bench, bedspreads, Avon va 1d Sale Saturday 2915 ollocal floodplam regula- Umon Req01red skills m Requ1red mmtmum ol 5
Accounting,
Computer
PfT
June
2nd
&amp;
3rd
1st
t1me
bottles,
$PPh&amp;.nces.
mise
Jackson
Ave
baby
g
rt
t1ons,
coord1nate
map
ma•n·
1
Mon, Tues, Wed 4409
positiOn please serld years dnvmg e11p 2 yrs
clothes, baby 1tems Mutt1ple
tenance aCIIJJt11es and
Bulav111e P1ke Dryer, front sale. At 7 past Facemyer
E)(penence Must
FEMA follow-up hold publiC Resumes to PO Box: 70 Flatbed
door, brown stoneware, lumber on left, ratn cancels Sat June 2nd, corner of Fam1ty Bam-?
Apple Grove, WV or call have good drrvtng record
t1ll
Sat
Jun8
91h
&amp;
Sun
June
Sumner
Ad
&amp;
S1lver
A1dge
-...:..--,----:
meetmgs
to
educate
pubhc
seed/beam cleaner mfr by
Earn up to $2 000 weekly
304·576·4056
Ad, Cole res1dence, some· YS June 1st &amp; June 2nd Part-nme 20 hours a week, AT Ferrell, creamer separa- tOttl, 9am-?
- - -- - - - '- For apphcat10n
Call
thong
lor
all,
ra1n
or
shme
8am·1
pm
1453
Redmon
no
benel
1s
N
··•
H1gh
S
1
The Un1vers1ty of R10 (304)722·2184 304·34 2·
tor, toots, lots of m1sc
Bone HoIIowr~.ay1ors Dr1ve
Rtdge Tack, Housewares, 5 hOOI D"'l
7 Moddleport s at on1y, June 2nd , 1ots o1 Furniture. Eel 675-4560
c h ""oma or equlva·
Grande ts taktng appltca· 5742 M-F 6 30am·4pm
Stale "oule
n
Muf11·fam1l y sale COME Off
lent, ave map read1ng r1ons for part ttme faculty
by-pass
across Irom stuff &amp; fresh baked goods,
SEE US FIRST" Household L eadtn~ Cree~ Road, 4fam- great pnces, Benefit for
member lor the Academ 1c Wanted, D1rect Supervtston
,u ' expenence and knowledge
d
AUCI10N AJ~
Items, lntek Pool, Clothes, 11~ garage/yard sale, Fnday grandson's European tnp.
(;\ .. ~ llM .... ..,...,..,
of computers an vanous v.ear 2007·08 10 the employees to oversee mate
I' LZA !U-'JU\.1!..1
''
DISheS and MUCH MOREl 6am-5pm Saturday Sam- Radford's, 1 mt N of fau·
computer programs, able to tnformaloon
Technology youth 10 a staff secwe restCorner of Gallia &amp; Heather 1pm, men· &amp; women's cloth- grounds Rockspnngs Ad
use
GIS,
must
hold
a
vahd
field
Classes
to
t&gt;e laughl den!lal envtronment Must
Cross Creek Auction Buffalo d
Ph
1
nvers 1K:ense ystca tnclude lntroduclton to pass physical tra1nmg
St Crown Oty June 2. 9·3 mg, DVD player. VCRplayer,
Scrubs, kids &amp; adult clothes, AucJIOn Saturday 6pm work may be needed Must Computer SCience and li requtrement Pay based on
Multl-famtlysale Baby/ch•ld. OVD's, v•deos, crafts, books, bicycles, glassware an much PreVIew 4-6 Bt.nk11ng 1s full be rBQ~stered With SCOTt Spectallst. 3o Otgital expenence Call (740)379clothes, toys, ~ousehold tools, many mise Items
more, 1275 Bridgeman St, of used Merchandise
(www.scotl ohio gov) sys- Landscape. 30 Digital 9083 between 9-3 Mon-Fn
goods and more! 612 Qam·? Estate Sale· June 1st &amp; 2nd. Syracuse, Thurs . Fn , &amp; Building has AC VISa and tem Submit resume wtlh Antmahon Oracle Based
822 Netghborhood Rd
9am-3pm, 677 S 4th, Street, Sat., 9am to 5pm
Master Card (~4) 550COlJer letter to
Data Base Course and 3D Wanted Optometric Ass!
preferred must
16 Hi.Steppen Aaedy 1639
Middleport,
Ohto
OhiO
Dept
of
Jobs
and
D•g•tal, Arts Busmess eKpenence
Rt7to Georges Creek Rd. t
have
computer
tra1mng be
- - ' -- - - - - TPI Garage Sa,le June
W.roANilllBuv
Family Servtces, B48 Third Procedures All classes are
M~e to Hatty Cemetery Ad Fo , Sun ., SA 7 forrper 1&amp;2,9·?. At. 7 above
detailed onented and able t
Ave. Gal~polls. OH 45631
Guns. generator, power Garden Spot. strollers. toys Eastern
High
Sch .
scheduled to be taught '" work 1n a last paced environWe are an Equal
the day mornmg and after- ment Send resumes to CLA
lools 611 &amp;612
Crib' Car Seals' h•• l. r'' camp equtp.,
m0 111 es
Opportumty Employer
mower, baby/matermty
dvd&amp;vhs patio set, enter- Absolute Top Dollar US
noon
570, C/0 Galltpolts Dally
Rummage Hotdogs &amp; Bake
tamment center,furntture, So'lver and Gold Coins, Help wanted at Darst Adult A Bachelor'S Degree IS Tnbune, 825 Thtrd Ave ,
Sale June 1 &amp;2, 10am·2pm Ga1age&amp;Bake
Sale, home mtenor ttems,house- Prootsets, Gold R1ngs, Pre- Group Home, some httmg, reqLnred Master's preferred Galhpolis, OH 45631
Tr1n1ty Un1 ted Methodist Proceeds to Hemlock w 8 r 9 s , d e s 1g n 8 r 1935 u.s. Currency, 7_5 shift, 740 _992_5023
Prev1ous teachmg ts helpful
Church, At 160, Porter, OH Grange, Fry Aes1dence handbags,lad1es,men,&amp;k1ds Sol•a
re Diamonds· M.T.S
All candtdates should subm1t 1150
Scuocn~
n 1
beSide Porn Am Leg Bldg dolhes, 20 mchTV
Com Shop, 151 Second \ Kennel
Tech-honest, a leHer of Interest current
L~UCfiON
1
Sat 6/1 4673 St.Rt. 60, Fn &amp;Sal June1&amp;2, 900 . - - - - - - - - AVBrlue. GallipoliS. 74()...446- dependable, must low ani resume and the names and ..__ _iiiiiiiiiiiiii_,.
Girts dothes•·-31 mon-7, Boys
mats, have transportation addresses of three refer- Gallipolis Career College
- ' 4 00
_ _ _ __ _ _ _ Yard sale, June 1st-2nd, 2842
181mon-3T'"""'"ens1 men~
-G 1
9am-4pm, 811 VIne St,
Open tnterv1ews Sunday ences Resumes w1ll be (Careers Close To Home)
~
1
1g
hOusehold Iterns/mu..... more lgBn
sa e- Ra,cone, western bootls, lawn
June 5, 1-!5 Mason County
rev1ewed as receiV€td Call Today• 740-446·4367
t lCt movn
Lrvv.
be
''
an
ques,
oys.
~·~a rger, mower, tools, weedeater
Ammal
Shener
304-675lnformatmn
must be subm•tSat 612 Upper St R1 7 N fumlture, crafts. books, 35+
,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ .
p
SPHA
1-800-214.()452
v,ARD..:tJ'U...I'..·
~ •• "
'"1116 I.J.- ... t.ar .....l'n:'n
6458
ted
to
hyll1s
Mason Human ~ galllj)OIIscareercdlege com
9am-? Near roadside rest years of goodtes, Ba shan
- - - - -- - Dlfector
of
IU'..LI" l"fl'll"' r..u
Awed1led Uembel Accrediting
' AMtr ol life U M W Also Rd. Aac1ne. June tst &amp; 2nd
Pr. Pt..f.:wNT
Local Conven1ence Store Resources, UntVijrs•ty ot R•o Covnol
1o1 Independent Colleges
bake sale and Rada Kmves
Iw-iiiioioiiiiiiiiii-rl
Cham accept1ng apphca- Grande, PO BOX 500 Rio ~lld smoo~s 12746
Proceeds go to m1sst011s
Huge Donat1oo Yard Sale.
Sunsel Lane 4 miles An Excellent way to earn ttons. for store manager, con- Grande, OH 45674, e-mail .-:
June 2nd. Star11ng at Bam at 1"'1
~
vemence store ex:penence pmason!no edu EEO/AA
Yard Sal&amp; · Roush lane the Rutland Ftre Dept . aU out sandhill Ad on Sunset money The New Avon
1 lll Lane 611 ,&amp; 612 8-4. Kids Call Marilyn .304-882·2645 pralerred Salary and bene- Employer
Satunlay On~.
Proceeds go to Ae ay 4 e toys, clothes, etc
f1ts at mte,rvtew Send - - ' - " - - - - - Yard sale June 1st &amp; 2tid She1terhouse on Wtllow - - - - - - -- AVONI All Areas! To Buy or resumes to Manager 105 Roofers: Metal roofrng Sld·
9am ·5pm 2310 Graham Creek Ad , near Alligator Yard Sale Sat June 2nd 9am Sell Shirley Spears. 304- Alta Street, Manetta, OH ing al'ld EPOM Top pay and 1:~~;;:;~r_j
Jacks. Ffl 1st &amp; Sat 2nd
to ? 2726 Uncoln Ave
675-1 ~29
45750
benefitS 724·229-8020
L
School ~d

r

AmbroSia Machme Inc
Pomt Pleasant: WV (304)·
675· 1722 (304)675· 1723
fax Machtnist 5 years or
more expenence SB·$12 per

Manag•ng

Jci&gt;

10

YARD SALE-

0

~

r

4x4'a For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................ OJO
Antiques ...................................................... 530
Apartmenta1or Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market .... ......................... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Aulo Repair ........................... ..................... 770
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 710
Boots &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................550
Bualnaas and Buildings ........................... .. 340
Buslnaas Opportunlty ................................ .210
Bualnaas Trolnlng ....................................... 140
Clmpero &amp; Motor Homes ........ ..................:790
camping Equipment ................................... 780
" Clrda of Thanko .................... ...................... 010
Child/Elderly care ....................................... 190
Electrlcai/RefrlgeraUon............................... 840
Equipment lor Rent .....................................480
Excavallng ................................................... 830
• Farm Equlpment. ......................................... eto
Farmalor Rent...... ....................................... 430
Farms tor 5118 ....................... ...................... 330

Senior Discount*

losT Al'I'D

l!li="_____...,

_ho_m_e_30_4-_6_7s_-s_7_2o__
Free kittens to good home
Call for more mfo 740-4464177

992·2157

• All ads must be prepaid'

Losl Ladles Silver framed
•
,glasses Left on park bench
7 month old female black at Gallipolis River Front Park
lab/Retr1ever m1x to good on 5/27/07 Reward, call
home 304-743-5753
304-675·3034
Cats to Gtvoaway to a good

Free to good home. black
lab/shepherd pupp1es For
1nfo please call 740-446·
4177

accept any adver

If so, you qualify

Or Fax To

• Start Your Ada Wlttl A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Jndude A Price • Avoid Ab&amp;revlations
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Free male PLJPP¥- 112 Border
Coll1e 740·256·1233

laement In vlolotlo

age.
No drilling or mining
permit
has
been
lnued to the holder
and flied with the
Meigs
County
Reconler.
There Ilea been no
claim to preserve tho
mineral Interest filed
with tho Meigs County
Recorder In accordance with
Ohio
Revised Code Section
5301.56(C).
There lo no uparetely
listed 111 parcel numbar tor the mineral
Interest reserved end
excepted on the Meigs
Couniy auditor's tax
list or Ihe Meigs
County
Traaaurer'a
duplicate tax list.
The surface owner,
Ronnie W. Cowdery,
Intends to file In the
Office of the Meigs .
County Reconlor, an
Affidavit
of
Abandonment at least
thirty (30) days but no
later than sixty (60)
days alter the data on
which this notlca Is
served or published
(6) 1
-------Public Notice

446-3008

Dally In- Column: 1 :00 p.m.
Monday- Friday for Insertion
In Next" Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1 : 00 p . nt.
For Sundays Paper

a.m. to 5:00

HQW IQ

1:.ubllc Not.lces In Ne_.-spapers.

llolnl of Mlnlona of
the United Mtlhodlll
Church, a New York
Corporation
alao
known aa Boanl of
Foreign llll88lona of
the
Methodlet
EpiiCOflll Church, IIIII
known addre..: 475
Rlvarelele Drive, Naw
York, NY 10027.
7. To: The National
Dlvlalon, Boanl of
Mlutona of the United
Methodlat Church lormerty known aa llolrd
of Home lltulona and
Church Extanalon of
tho
llathodlot
Eplacopal Church, a
P 1 n n 1 y Iv1 n Ia
Corpot'llllon,
laat
known addre.. : 475
Riverside Drive, Ntw
York, NY 10027.
8. To: The s..c-re
and Aaalgna of the
above nemlld organlzatlona
llated
In
Plragrapha 4, 5, 8 and
7 above, namea and
addrwHI unknown.
9. To: The following
lncllvldlllll at their IIIII
known
addreiHI:
Douglll Ill. Belnl, IU,
12735 Elllaon Wllaon
Roed, June fall, FL
33408; Phillip Bryan
Belnl, 3524 Oat Lego
Clr. 1131, Tlmpa, FL
33614; Leon 111M, RFD
11, Clntralla, 1110
65240; Rlchenl K111t
Bolal, 2794 Hamtnon
Ct., Pinole, CA 94514;
lire. Dan Callahln,
3515 Orteana Ave.,
Sioux City, lA 511116;
0111 Maurine Devil,
4050 New Yortc Ave.,
Fair Olka, CA 15821;
Sally Devil, clo Loroy
H. Devil, 825 N. 12th,
Llvlngllon, Montana
58047; Wlllillm WIYM
day, RFD 17, Box 45,
Sprlnglllld, IL 82707;
lire. Tom E. EmbrM,
512 Juprtor Way,
Cuulbln'y, FL 32707;
Jane Zaring Halbert,
5538 N. lleple Ct.,
Columbia, 110 15201;
Donald Roy Hertlly,
Rtl. t1, Aoachport, 1110
15271; Vemo Herman
1004 Conkling, Garden
City, KS 07146; lira.
Gorald JolloiiOft, Ate.
11, llldlaon, 110

Or Fax To

Monday th ru Friday

We will not knowing

NOTICE OF INTENT TO
DECLARE MINERAL
INTEREST ABANDONMENT
1.
To:
Henry
Ferguoon,or
hla
aaolgMH H living, H
to
the
deceased
unknown heirs, next of
kin, admlnlltratora,
axecutora, legaiHI,
Clevlnea, aucce11ora
and aaolgna of Henry
Ferguaon, Cleceaaad,
nemet and add,....
unknown.
2. To: Ethel F. Forguoon
llao known aa Ethel E.
Ferguaon, or her
-lgMH, H living, H
deceosed
to
the
unknown heirs, next of
kin, administrators,
axecutora, legatse1,
Clevlnea, aucc•aora
anct aulgna of Ethel F.
Forguaon aka Ethel E.
Farguaon, deceased,
nameo and addreued
unknown.
3. To: Roger Conklin,
Executor of the Eatate
of Ethel E. Ferguaon,
Ate f8. Columbia, MO
15201, or to the
unknown auccauora
of Roger Conklin,
Encutor ol the Eallte
of Ethel E. Ferguaon,
and a d d untmown.
4. To: Commlaalon on
Eucumenlcal Million
and Relatione of the
United Preabyterlan
Churi:h In the United
S1IWI of America, A
, _ Yortc ~lion
not lor profit alao
lcnown aa Foreign
lllulonary Boanl of
the
Preabyterlan
Church United SI8NI
of Amorlca, '-1 known
acldiMI: 475 Alvlrekll
Drive, New York, NY
10027.
5. To: Boenl Of Nlllonll
Mtulo.'ll of the United
Pl'lllbyWIIn Chun:h In
the Unltad • - • of
Amortca 1110 •
Netlonel llllllonlry
Boenl
of
the
l'reabfterlan church
United
S t - of
America, 1aat kMwn
1 llw; 471 Rlvlrellla
Drive, NIW York, NY
10027.
I. To: World Dlvlllon

l\egt~ter

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To Place

Giambi out three weeks
NEW YORK (AP) Jason Giambi will be sidelined at least three weeks
because of torn tissue in the
arch of his left foot, the latest setback in a tumultuous
season for the New York
Yankees designated hitter.
Giambi was examined in
New York on Thursday by
Dr. William Hamilton .
Giambi will be placed on
the disabled list before
friday's game at Boston,
and his foot will be put in a
walking boot.
" He will be re-evaluated
in
three
weeks,"
Yankees spokesman Jason
Zillo said.
Giambi was shifted from
first base to designated hitter this year and hit .322
with four homers and 17
RBi s in ApriL His foot
began bothering him soon
after he played the field
for the first time on April
28, and he batted .117 in
May with three homers
and s ix RBis .

1

srr:,

0
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C1:n.l

r

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i

I

r

I

I

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-======-.,

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June l, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

· Friday, June 1, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ducks look to finish off Senators in Ottawa Ex-prep football star
~eleased f~om J·an
onAwA (AP) _The
Stanley Cup crossed the
continent fro m Anaheim to
Ottawa on Thursday. If the
Ducks have their way, the
prized trophy won't make
that journey east again.
The
mos t
succe ssful
hockey team in Southern
California history carried a
2-0 lead in the Stanley Cup
final s to Canada's capital
city, full of confidence and
holding a tinge of hope that
when they re turn home
after Game 4 they will be in
pos session of the cherished
chalice that w as unveiled in
Ottawa in 1892 .
On the s trength of winning goals b y checking-line
forwards Travis Moen and
Samuel
Pahl sson ,
the
Ducks swept their first two
home games and improved
to 5-0 in Cup final s games
in Anaheim. They won all
three during the 2003
champion ship
series
against New Jersey but
dropped four on the road .
They can earn their first
finals win away from home
in Game 3 on Saturday
after the series takes a twoday break. Game 4 is
Monday.
" I believe we're very
comfortable playing on the
road as well as at home,"
goalie
Jean-Sebastien
Giguere said Thursday
night after the Ducks
arrived at their hotel in
Gatineau, Quebec . " We're
a team that has size. We can
skate with any team in this
league. So it doesn't really
matter if we play at home
or on the road, we ' ll be the
same type of team. "
The · Senators '!Vent from
the airport to their home
arena Thursday night to get
in a little workout. Some
laced up their skates and
took the ice , while others
did different kinds of exercise for 15-30 minutes.
"Nothing too strenuous...
get the kinks out," Senators
coach Bryan Murray said.
Saturday night will be
their first home game in 17
days, dating to a May 16
loss to Buffalo in Game 4
of the Eastern Conference
finals.
"lt'll be nice to .have a
game here and feed off the
crowd," top-line forward

· AP photo
Anaheim Ducks goalie Jean-Sebastlen Giguere celebrates
his team's l.Q victory over the Ottawa Senators in Game 2
of the NHL Stanley Cup final hockey game Weclnesclay 1n
Anaheim, Calif.
Jason Spezza said .
Giguere needed to make
only 16 saves Wednesday
night to earn a 1-0 victory
and post his sixth career
playoff shutou·t - the first
this year. His biggest test
came when the Ducks
killed off their second 5-on3 disadvantage of the
series, this one lasting I :07
of the first period and producing the bulk of the
Senators ' offensive chances
during their seven-shot
frame.
The rest of the work was
done
in
front
where
Pahlsson, Moen and Rob
Niedermayer again shut
down the potent top line of
the Senators that has generated no goals and two
assists in two games .

Not only aren't Danie l
Alfredsson , Spezza , and
Dany Heatley scoring, the
trio has al so become a
defen s ive liability. They
committed II turnovers a s
a group Wednesday, and for
the second straig ht game
they were on the ice for the
winning goal in the closmg
minutes of the third period .
" It all started with a
turnover ... so , yeah , I'm
conc erned about that ,"
Murray said. " That 's the
whole message to the line ."
After resisting temptation
in the se ries opene r on
Monday, Murray split up
the line for parts of all three
periods in Game 2 with the
hope th a t s preadmg the
player s o ut would create
match up problems fo r the

Ducks.
·
No suc h luck.
" Our line, we have to
lead the way," Spezza said.
" We 've done it up to thi s
point and it's tough for our
team to have success if the
t hree of u s aren't going
well. "
It 's not just the lack of
scoring that is trouble some
for the Senators, it's their
inabil ity to s ustain a ny kind
of offensive attack when
skating a t even · strength .
Anaheim held a 32-20 shots
ad vantage in the opener a nd
stretched that to 63 -36
through two games.
Ottawa enjoyed only one
power play after the 5-on-3
and managed a total of nine
shots over the final 40 min ute s. The Ducks dominated
throug ho ut, registering 3 I
shots, and just had to figure
a way to get a puck past
goalie Ray Emery.
When Heatley turned the
puck over, it gave Pahlsson
a c hance to get Senators
d efen sem a n Joe Corvo
spinning around. That provided a screen that prevented 'Emery . from seeing the
precise wrist shot.
It was the Ducks' lith
o ne-goal victory in 13 such
games - one win shy of
the playoff record shared
by Anaheim (2003) and
Montreal ( 1993) and
second of this series. The
w ay Ott aw a scored in winning each of its first three
series in five games, even
the
defen s ive-minded
Ducks couldn't have fig ured to capture two straight
victories on the strength of
four goals.
" We' re going to have to
matc h their intensity and
desperation to have a
chance," Giguere said. "We
knew it's not going to be
easy ... . We know if we play
the way we can play, we
can be successful."
The Senators will be met
by an excited city that will
host the Stanley Cup final s
for the first time since 1927
when the original version
of the tea m won its fourth
title . The welcome celebration in Ottawa could be
tempered due to the daunting task the hometown
team faces of having to win
four of the final five games.

.1. '

CLASSIFIED

.1. '

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
judge released a former high
school football star from jait
nine days after she ruled that
he failed a drug test and violated his - probation on an
involuntary manslaughter
conviction involving the
death of teammate.
Cuyahoga
County
Common
Pleas
Judge
Shirley Strickland Saffold
reversed her" earlier orde r
Wednesday after Raymond
Williams' lawyers gave her
the results of a defense-commissioned independent test
on May 23 . It showed
Williams had no trace of
marijuana in his system.
Two days before that test,
a drug screen at the county
Probation Department found
marijuana components in
Williams' urine, and Saffold
ordered him to spend three
years in prison.
Williams, who won The
A ssoc iated
Press
Mr.
Football award in 2003
while leading Benedictine
High Sc hool to a state cham-

pionship, was scheduled lo
graduate and go to Wt&lt;st
Virg inia on a football scholarship, when in April 2004
he was involved in a robbery
in which a teammate w as
killed.
Williams pleaded guilty :to
involuntary manslaughter
and Saffold gave him a second chance, putting him on
five
years'
probation.
Williams was ordered to stay
drug-free and keep a "C"
average in college.
Saffold
refused
in
February to find
that
Williams violated his probation when he stopped ¥Ding
to class at the Umvers1ty of
To ledo.
Williams appeared in a jail
uniform
Wednesday
at ·
Cleveland Municipal Court,
where a judge set July 21 ;~s
his trial date on a charge
accusing him of drunken driving resulting from a traffic
stop last month. Police
'reported finding a marijuana
cigarette in the ashtray of the
car Williams was driving. ·

E-mail
classifiecl@mydailytribune.com

He originally was diagnosed with a bdne spur and
switched to shoes with
orthotics that he said
relieved the pain. Giambi
traveled to New York on
Thursday 's day off, inteniiing to get a cortisone shQt,
but Hamilton said Giambi
had
plantar
fasciitls ,
inflamed tissue near the
heel , and a partial! y torn
plantar fascia .
.
The 36-year-old Giaml)i ,
the 2000 AL MVP with the
Oakland Athletics, is in the
sixth season of a $120 million, seven-year contract
with the Yankees and has
been in the news this season for his role in baseball's steroids controversy.
Giambi has been among
the struggling hitters in
New York' s lineup. The ,
Yankees are just 22-29,
tied for last in the AL East
and 13 l/2 games behind
first-place Boston heading
into a weekend series at
Fenway Park.

8:00

85263; Audrey Palmer,
328
N,
Rollins,
Centralia, 1110 65240;
lllra. R. (Betty) Levings,
400 N. West St.,
llladlaon, MO 65263;
Lolo
Barnadyne
Ill-hem, 416 Jeflrlea,
Monrovia, CA 91016;
Melvin Laforce, 3301
S. Dallaa, Ft. Smith,
Arkanus 72903; Mrs.
Ethel Roberto, Rio. 14,
Contrails, 1110 65240;
Warren
Spencer
Roberta,
1916
Cleveland St., San
Laandro, CA 945n;
Spencer Roberts, 1916
Cleveland St., San
Leandro, CA 94577;
lllro. Sue Ryon, 160
Well Ave., Sedalia, MO
65301 ; Carolyn Jane
Salta, 4441 Colby Way,
Carmk:hHI, CA 95628;
Oneida Stika, Ate. t4,
Centrella, MO 65240;
Glady• Opal Wade,
RFD 12, Hellavllle, MO
65255; Mra. S.L. (Ora)
Watoon, 2406 Madrid
Ave., Stjlety Harbor, FL
33572; Allan Zaring,
320 South Booth St.,
Cantrallll, MO 65240;
Allan Zaring, Rt. 14,
Box 30, Warrenton, 1110
63383; John 0 . Zaring,
548 E. Clearvlew Dr.,
Columbia, 110 85201;
Mre. JamM (Lavern)
Lea, 8323 Scarsdale
Dr.; lndlanapolla, IN
46256; Bruce Laforce,
_, Well Nag. Home,
South Cowan Rd.,
Columbia, 1110 65201;
Rill Eloise llolal, 2010
Enune St., Concord,
CA 94519; WMIIIIm L.
BotH, 2012 Downing,
Garden City, KS 67846;
Mrs. WIHIIIm Henry, Ate
13, C - . AR 71635;
Mrs. William Henry,
Rta. t3, Box 124A,
tamcltn, SC 2t020;
Elolu Wyllt, 1371
Slntl Clara, Concord,
CA
94518;
Jerry
l.lforce, Ate. 12, Box
148, Hallavllle, 1110
1$255; Kay Alaxandor,
Ate. 11, llarahlll, 1110
85340; Bobby Bolla,
Box , 1811A, LeMar,
Colorado 81052; Jan
weiMnhom,
13136
Eeat Idaho Place,
Aurora,
Colorado

80014,
or
their daring of the Ohio
assignees, II living, II River I rod and 3 feet
deceased to
the to the southeast cor·
unknown heirs, next ot· ner ot Lot No. 135;
kin, administrators, thence North 400 rodo
executors, legatees, to the place ot begin·
devisees, succeaaora ntng, containing Three
and assigns of said Acres, more or tess.
Individuals, names and Reference
Oeods:
addresses unknown. Volume 262, page 303,
Please take notice, Meigs County Deed
Ronnie W. Cowdery, Records.
the owner of the lol· Auditor's parcel No.:
lowing described real 09-00310.000
allele:
has declared the lotTRACT ONE:
lowing mlnerallntoreal
The following Real as being abandoned
Estate, situate In the pursuant to Ohio
County or Meigs, In the Ravllllld Code Section
Stale of Ohio, and In 6301 .56.
the Township or Olive, The mineral Interest
Town 13, Range 111, abandoned was an
and bounded and undivided 1116th InterCleecrlbed aa lollowa: est of all minerals oil
Being all of one hun· and gas underlying the
dred acre Lott1 35, and above described real
more fully described estate.
aa follows: Baglnnlng This mineral Interest
at the north-weal cor- was reserved and
ner of said Lot 1135; excepted In a deed pr•
thence eaat (43) forty· sented lor record on
three rods; thence February 28, 1900,
aouth to the Ohio which was recorded In
River; thence westerly VOlume 85, page 527,
following the meander· of the Meigs County
Ing of the Ohto River deed Recoras, ancl the
(43) forty three rods; current record owners
thence north to the of uld mlnerallntereat
place of beginning, wore determined by
containing 100 acres, Judgment Entry of the
more or leoa. See Deed Meigs
County
14326, VOl. 121. Page Common Pleas Court
534; alao Deed 11991, In ClseNumber 14481.
Vol. 125, Page 252, Ronnie W. Cowdery
Deed Recoras llelga attests that the owners
County, Ohio.
of uld mineral interest
Rerorence
Deed: have done nothing
Volume 262, Page 301 , required by Ohio
lllelgs County Deed Revised Coda Section
Recorda.
5301.26(BK3) within
Auditor's parcel No.: the 1wanty years rmmeot-00309.000
dlately preceding the
TRACT TWO:
date of the oorvlce of
The
following this notice, namely:
Cleecrlbed Real esllte The mineral Interest
altuated
In
the has not been the subTownship of Olive, the ject of a title ll'lln8llcCounty of llelga ancl liOn thll has bean filed
the State of Ohio, or recorded with the
bounded
, and Meigs
County
Cleecribeclulollowa: Reconlor.
Being a part of Lot No. There haa been no
134, beginning at the actual production or
northweat , comer of wtlhd,_l of ml-.la
Lot No. 134; thence by lhoo hoklora nor has
Ell! I rod and 3 IHt to anything elsa occunlld
a • - In Mid line of a specified In (BK3Kb)
Lot No. 134; thence ofuld Section.
South 4011 roda to the Thera Is no UN of the
Ohio River; thence mineral lntereal lor
W.St with the mean· underground g.oo otor-

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•POLICIES*

,,

Ohio Valley

Publishing reoervH
the ~~Ito edit, •
reject or cancel any
ad II any time. ·
Error• Mull B
eportad on the fl
ol publication a
t Trlbune-Semlnel
eglller will
eaponalble ror n
ore than the cost o

;

Bid lor Bus
Heart of the Valley
Head Start, 320 112
East Main Street, P.O.
Box 684 Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 Ia accepting
bids lor two (2) 21123
paounger
school
buses. SpecHicatlona
lor the bu- can be
obtained by calling the
A t h e n a - II e I g a
Educational Service
Center at 740-9924286. Quotea will be
opened In the tnllsuror's oftlce at noon on
Tuesday, June 19,
2007. The
boanl
M881VM the right to
reject oil or any part of
the bid. Bldo lhould be
labeled "Bid lor School
Bua" and mailed to:
Heart of the Valley
Head Start
Tnlaurer's Office
320 1/2 Eaat Main
Street, P.O. Box 684
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(6)1 , 8

\\\()1 \( I \ II ' ' "

r

Ir

GIVFAWAY
.,_ _
_ _ _,..

MIKbreed puppies to a good
home bOrn April 10 740992-4454
-.,.P
- E_R_E-NN- 1-Al_C_A
_r__
SHELTER
The kittens has amvedl
Please save themand gtve
them a good home
Call 740-645·7275
All Real Eslal
dvertlsements ar
ub)ect to the Fodera
air Housing Act o
968.

the law.

l:iii;iiii;iiiiii;;iiiiiiii;;;;:,l

r
FOUND set of Keys @
&amp;merest Cemetery Sunday
27th call to 1dent1fy 304-675·
_58_5_3_
lea_v_e_me_s_sa_ge___
Found· White Male Pit Bull
pup on Hollybrook Ad, I
mile east of Rt 35 roadside
rest stop 740-245-9514

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; For Lease .....................,.............................. 490
For 5118 ........................................................ 585

For Sale or Tracre ......................................... 590
• Frullll &amp; ~lllbles ..................................... 580
Fumlahed Rooma .......................... .............. 450
General Haullng ........................................... 850
Glveaway ...................................................... 040
Heppy Ada....................................................oso
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
' Help Wanted ................................................. 11 0
HOme lmprovements ................................... 810
. - f o r Sale ............................................ 310
Houaehold Goods ....................................... 510
Hou-lor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlam ...... ... .................................... ... 020
tnauMnce ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 660

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Uvaatock.................... ............................ ..... 630

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-----------------------········

Oeacltit~

' Loatancl Founcl ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ........................................... 350
MIIC8llaneous .............................................. 170
lllacetlaneoua Merchandlse ....................... 540
Mobile Home Repalr.................................... 860
.• Moblte Homaalor Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homaalor Sale................................ 320
... Money to Loan ............................................. 220
llotorcyclal &amp; 4 Wheel8ra .......................... 740
Mualcattnllnlments ................................... 570
Pareonats ........................................ _........... oos
Pelllor Sal8 ................................................ 560
Plumbing a Heatlng .................................... 820
-.ronat Sarvlc88 ................................ 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ......................... ,..... 160
RIII~Wontad ..................................... 360
Sch c oil lnatrucllol1 .....................................150
s-d • Plant &amp; Fettlll-.............................. 650
Situation• Wanted ....................................... 120
SpK~Ior Rent .............................................460
Sporting Goodl ........................................... 520
SUV'alor Sale............................................. 720
TNcka lor Sale .. ,......................................... 715
~ ................................................... 870
,.,. For Sate ............................................... 730
w.ntad to Buy ............................................. 090
w.ntadto Buy- Fann SUppllal .................. 620
WIMICITo Do .............................................. lBO
WlnWd to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard s.ta- Glllllpolla....................................072
Yard Slla Pomoroyllllddii ......................... 074
• Yard Sale-Pl. - . ................................ 076

I

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IIIMtina EOE

In
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.tanclarda, We will not knowingly ecc.pt any adnrtislng in vk)lation of the law

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• This ,_.,. ,~rl

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
kltncarlyle~comcast.net

POST OFFICE NOW
cosmetologist,
part or full t1me. Na•l Tech,
HIRING
A11g Pay $20/hr 01
both rental or commiSSIOn,
$57K annually
New Salon, New Equ1pment.
Attitudes
1n Pomeroy Including Federal BenefitS
and OT,Pa1d Tram1ng,
hour
(740)992·2200
({I~YI!~ IF I HAt&gt;
On Hand Shop Foreman
Vacauoos·FT/PT
-A
7!1~ ~ ~6M~II\?JE.g
Machtne Shop &amp; Fabncabon Middleton Estates ts accePt· 1-800·584·1775 Exl H8923
~::::::Y;ARD:~S;ALE=·=~
knowledge 10 years or more mg applicatiOns for a
USWA
1o \"~ N\~ A ~U Nell
expenence $12-$15 per PAN/LPN lor GalliPOliS and - - - - - - - hpur
Chesapeake areas You w11! Professional Fundra1sers
io 1'Mi.~ WO'f!-¥..
- - - - - - -- be part of a team tl1at pro· needed ParUFull t1 me 3
GAilJI'OLI'i
Care Gtver for male 10 P1 v1des servtces to •ndMduals shttts da1ly 7 days a week,
Pleasant area (740)446· wtth mental retardatton and $9 hr after patd tra1n1ng +
1/2 mtle out BulaVIIIe P1~e
4597
deJJelopmental dtsabllll•es Benefrls, Contact us today•
230 Ltnwood Dr Chlldrens
- - - - - - - - We prov•de on the JOb tratn- 1-888-974-JOBS or
,0
clothmg, furniture, new
College Student seeks mg If mterested please www 1688974JObs com
t&gt;
Study Coach for Test 5hrs a apply at 8204 Carla Dr1ve,
stuffed ammals 6/1.~.3 9week 304-458-2623
GallipoliS 01110 (adJacent 10 Scemc Htlls Nursmg Center
530
Cliffside Golf Course) IS currently accept1ng appiicat1ons for a Un11 Manager
Desk Clerk needed at
1970 Georges Creek Ad,
-'son Monday thru Fr1day Bam·
Budget Inn 260 Ja""'
Applicants must possess a
top of hill ram or sh1ne Lots
4
30pm
N
o
phone
calls
w111
Pike Look'ng lor a Person
current AN hcense m the
of ktds clothes Comer reSI·
who IS mohJJated, great be accepted An Equal state of Ohm Long-term
den1 9'5 611 '2 &amp; 3
communtcahon S~lll s and a Opportumty
Employer cale exper18nce IS required
pos1!1Ve a«•tude Please _FI_M_ID_N ______ Applicants must possess
2 Famtly Yard Sale, lots of
new tlems, call 446-3656 or
apply Within
New Salon openmg 514 ex:cellent communtcat1on
stop at 128 4th Ave
D
1
rect
Oare
Staff
M
a1n Sl Pt Pleasant July sk1ll and the abtl1ty to lunc·
~ -1
Middleton Estates 1s now
2nd, Ha1r Stylist &amp; Na1l Tech t1on as an effective health·
3 famly yard sale 6/2-6/3 1
h1nng d1rect care staff You needed 304·675-6144 or care team member Fqr
M1le from Korner Store 1n
Will
be part of a team that
304-593-6570
more mformat10n or to
www.comics.com
NEA, Inc .
© 2007
B1dwell on At 554
prov1des serJJtces to ll'ldtVId· - - - - - - - - schedule an tnlerv1ew.
uals w1th mental retardation Now Hmng part·tlme posl- please contact D1anna F1tch,
3 Fam1ly Yard Sate. 178
~!"""....- .....- - . , and developmental d•sabtli· \tons for floral destgner at Human Resources a1 740 er
Greenbner off 160 South pz
YARD SALEYARJISALEYARD SAL&amp;
hes Must have valid dnvers Pomeroy Flower Stlop 446-7150 EOE
Friday &amp; Saturday June 1·2
'"4 i'oMEKOYiMtooLE
Pr. Pl..EAsANT
d hgh hool
ex:ponence
preferred, - - -- -- - GALLIPOLIS
1tcense an I sc
please bnng resume &amp; reter- The
Athens·Metgs
4 Family sale Fn &amp;Sat 9am
diploma or GED We proences to 106 Butternut Ave Educahonal Serv~ce Center
· Spm 755 Shoestnng A1dge Yard Sale Sat JlJne 2 83 Huge Yard Sale. June 1st &amp; 3 Family Yard Sale 251o v1de on the Job trammg If
Pomeroy. OhiO between has an available pos1t1on for
Myrtle Ave located between 2nd, 293 Race Street, lincoln Ave June 1·-8·5, you would like to take
Sam 4pm, Man -Fn
a Mutt 1ple Dtsabllttles
F
F
I
&amp;S
I
5 amtly, n 6 1
at 6 2 bowling alley and drtve tnn Mtddlepori across from the June 2-· B-12 Brand name a9vantage of th•s opportunt- - - ' - - - - - - - Teacher at Meigs H1gh
0
Intervention
:~~s~
~e~:ll A~~:~ Womens, Juntors, Mens, hrehouse, baby clothes, fur· clothmg,dtshes, lots of M1sc ty, you may apply at 8204 Ohio Valley Home Health. School
Mtll
baby gt rls (newborn-2T), mture. ttns, many items
Carla Dnve, Monday thrlJ
INC hmng Per D1em or Specialist certifiCation IS
household Items, toys and - - - - - - - - Garage Sale Fr. &amp; Sat g.1 Fnday 8 00·4 00 An Equal Contracted Med1cal Soc1al reqwed Salary based on
Worker Apply at 14SO cert 1f1cat1on and expenence
6 Fam1ly Yard Sale 1012 _m_uc_h_m_o_re...,..·...,--,.,..-- lns1de yard sale. Meigs 501 Westery Ct Gallipolis Opportumty Employer
Watson Ad June 2 9amM1
Ch
Sen1or Center, June 1st, 9·3, Ferry, lurn off At 2 between FI"'M'I/ID!:NI:r.!l"!''=f.lf,:F=;t Jackson P1ke. Gallipolis OH Th1s poSit1on has Board
or phorie 740·4~1-1393
appro11ed oeneflts Letter of
5pm Somethmg for every- ~a~d sal~~ ~e outG e~ry
June 2nd, 9·1 , Sat clothing Fla1r Furn1ture and Little ll'
' ge
· '0 ran 9 $1 a bag (740)992·2161
Store No Sale before 9am
Salas Manager
OTR
Onve
rs
needed
Must
Interest. resume and referone
Watch for s1gns June 1-2
Big variety Some I1Sh·pond
-Chi-ldl-ln-la_n_ti_M_en_s_IW_o_m_en
- s 6am-4pm Household •terns, June 1 only· 1216 Carleton supplies sm appliances, ResponSibllittes 1ncllJde be at least 24 yrs old and ences must be rece111ed Dy
12 00 p m June 6 Subm•t
clothes, lots of baby 1tems great select1on name brand St , Syracuse,
pool baskets, ceram1c 1st Sale m recru1tmg and tra1n1 ng of have 3 yrs expenence Apply to
John D Costanzo
1n
person
at
2204
Jackson
341 c1rcle Dr off Bulavtlle clothmg, mens, womens, Longaberger, Home lnt nearly 20yrs
earners, customer serv1ce Ptke
Supenntendent
AthensPike 6/1 &amp; 612
Jr's &amp; chtldren vanety of k1ds &amp; adult clothes. camand meetmg sales goals - - -- - - - - Me1gs Educational Servtce
- - - - - - - - s1zes
era. to much to ltst. aamIf you have a pos•t•ve atti- Overbrook RehabilitatiOn Center, P:O BoK 684, 320Fn &amp; Sal 9am - Spm. 102 Yard Sales Park Lane Trl4_cPc_m__ _ _ _ _ _ Huge 4 Fam1ly Yard Sale, Fr1 tude are a self starter and center IS currently accept1ng 112 E Mam Pomeroy. OH
White Rd. Gall1po1ts Ra1n
&amp; Sat. Lots of baby Items furcanCels
Park, 57 Jay Dr, Cnme June 1.2 8,9 Ftrst ttme,4 ntture
&amp;
clothes, a team playe r we would apphcaiiOns for dtetar~ a1de 45769 Equal Opportunity
hke to talkto you
Ar_1yone mterested please Employer/Provider
--.,...-...,-...,----, Watch Sponsored, Fn &amp; lam1ly, BAM-5PM, spnng Longaberger baskets, purs,110_n_ _ __
Fn 611/Sat 612 8-3 2973 Sat, 9-5, Lqt27-28 &amp; others cleanmg. Brand names, plus es, Vom Bradl~y. household Must be dependable and pick up an appltcat1on at 333 -Tr-ao"ne.:.r-Po-,have
reliable
transportaPage
Str(jlet,
Mtddleport,
Are
you
mterested
In a
St At 141 Centenary r74 YARUSAU:·
Sizes Loop Ad Rutland
Items, men &amp; women
tion Pos1t1 on offers all
OH E 0 E &amp; a Participant
Electronics, toys, bathroom
Po•tERO~/Mtlll" 4"· J
F
&amp;
Sat
pm
clothes,
shoes,
toys
lots
of
of the Drug-Free Workplace rewardtng poSition? PAIS IS
1·2' rt.
84
company
fixtures , holiday decor, mosc L,...i-"iilliiil'liiliiiii"li Bune
currently seektng a part
res 806' p·1cken' every1hmg
Must see benehts tnclud1ng health,
111 Cross's
_Pr_ og_ra_m______ hme staff lor Mason and
Huge Yard Sale, Wed-Sat, 33821 New L1ma Road, St , Rac1ne. Oh men/women Approx 5 miles out At 2
dental. Vlston and life
PAIS IS seek1ng
Pomt Plesant, WV providtng
&amp; teen clothing, crafts
North 1/2 m1les past
Insurance, 401 K. pa1d
406 Johnson Ad (between Rutland. 1 mtle out on left,
RooseJJelt School
LPN PT adm1mster/mo011or restdenhallcernmumty sk•ll
vacatiOns
and
personal
L1ttle Bullskin &amp; Lincoln 31st &amp;1st, 9 5pm
June 2nd only! Bam·? 106 - - - - - - - patten! medication prepara- lraintng w1th •ndividuals With
Pike)
- - - - - - - - Pleasant Ridge, Pomeroy MOVIng SBie June 1 &amp; ~ d~ys Please send resume liOn for IndiVIdUalS with MRIDD H1gt1 school dtplo41am•lyyardsale June 1-2. Th1rd road to the nght on of 1146 Su nse1 Lane PI
10
developmental dtsabthttes 1n rna or GED reqwed No
June 1 &amp;2, 2 Fam1ly Garage 9am-?, 613 Elm St , Aac•ne, Spnng Avenue, follow the Pieasanl on Sandhill
Pau1Ba1ker
Jackson County and sur- experience
necessary
Sale '9am- ? t134 2nd Ave Oh
F
1
th
t
&amp;
C1rculat1on
Manager
- - - - - - - - - s1gns Clothmg, Home urntlure co 1ng, oys
1oundmg areas Please call Cnmmal background check
Gallipolis
m1sc
OhiO Valley PubliShing
- - - - - - - - 473
Sycamore
St, lntenor, Longaberger, k1ds _ - - - - - - (304) 373·1"011 or toll free at reqUired Must ha11e reliable
825 Thtrd Ave
June t &amp; 2. Sam . 4pm, Middleport Appl tances, Harley boots SIZe 4 youth, Yard Sale 502 2nd St June
transportal!on and 11al•d
GallipoliS, OhiO 45631 t-677-373-1 011
Lawn mower. old 10 speed tools, household •terns books , sohd wooden 1st &amp; 2nd If Aalntng w111
auto tnsurance Paid tra1n
or ema1l to
Personable.
Fnendly
btke, mise 11 06 Teodora Frt&amp;Sat.June t&amp;2,9 00-4 00 swmgset. $100 loys and Cancel
barker@m da11 rtbune Customer Serv1ce Rep to rng Hourly rate startmg at
Ave, Galltpolls, Oh
other miscellaneous 1tems, - - - - - -- $7-SB DO/hour Please ca11 1
8 fam1ly yard sale Saturday, (740 )992-6975
Yard sate OShel Rd. Thur- Floodplain Administrator handle Member Servtces @ 304-373-1011 or loll free at
ddl
M
M
1
J
May 31, June 1 &amp;2 15 Ann une 2,
eport asomc '--'----- -- - Frt-Sat9-? Fur01lure. Crafts,
Ttle new PI Pleasant Offtce 1·877·373·1011
for Gallla County
Karr St · S~racuse, Sat 8·4· Household Items
Dnve W1ll have Home Temple
of Tw1n Oaks Feder:ll Cred1t
d
h
1
hl
W
tll
enforce
the
proviSIOns
,
CDs. IS es. oys. we1g
lntenor, baby clothes, m1sc
Truck Dnvers COL Class A
Btg yard sate- Sat &amp; Sun bench, bedspreads, Avon va 1d Sale Saturday 2915 ollocal floodplam regula- Umon Req01red skills m Requ1red mmtmum ol 5
Accounting,
Computer
PfT
June
2nd
&amp;
3rd
1st
t1me
bottles,
$PPh&amp;.nces.
mise
Jackson
Ave
baby
g
rt
t1ons,
coord1nate
map
ma•n·
1
Mon, Tues, Wed 4409
positiOn please serld years dnvmg e11p 2 yrs
clothes, baby 1tems Mutt1ple
tenance aCIIJJt11es and
Bulav111e P1ke Dryer, front sale. At 7 past Facemyer
E)(penence Must
FEMA follow-up hold publiC Resumes to PO Box: 70 Flatbed
door, brown stoneware, lumber on left, ratn cancels Sat June 2nd, corner of Fam1ty Bam-?
Apple Grove, WV or call have good drrvtng record
t1ll
Sat
Jun8
91h
&amp;
Sun
June
Sumner
Ad
&amp;
S1lver
A1dge
-...:..--,----:
meetmgs
to
educate
pubhc
seed/beam cleaner mfr by
Earn up to $2 000 weekly
304·576·4056
Ad, Cole res1dence, some· YS June 1st &amp; June 2nd Part-nme 20 hours a week, AT Ferrell, creamer separa- tOttl, 9am-?
- - -- - - - '- For apphcat10n
Call
thong
lor
all,
ra1n
or
shme
8am·1
pm
1453
Redmon
no
benel
1s
N
··•
H1gh
S
1
The Un1vers1ty of R10 (304)722·2184 304·34 2·
tor, toots, lots of m1sc
Bone HoIIowr~.ay1ors Dr1ve
Rtdge Tack, Housewares, 5 hOOI D"'l
7 Moddleport s at on1y, June 2nd , 1ots o1 Furniture. Eel 675-4560
c h ""oma or equlva·
Grande ts taktng appltca· 5742 M-F 6 30am·4pm
Stale "oule
n
Muf11·fam1l y sale COME Off
lent, ave map read1ng r1ons for part ttme faculty
by-pass
across Irom stuff &amp; fresh baked goods,
SEE US FIRST" Household L eadtn~ Cree~ Road, 4fam- great pnces, Benefit for
member lor the Academ 1c Wanted, D1rect Supervtston
,u ' expenence and knowledge
d
AUCI10N AJ~
Items, lntek Pool, Clothes, 11~ garage/yard sale, Fnday grandson's European tnp.
(;\ .. ~ llM .... ..,...,..,
of computers an vanous v.ear 2007·08 10 the employees to oversee mate
I' LZA !U-'JU\.1!..1
''
DISheS and MUCH MOREl 6am-5pm Saturday Sam- Radford's, 1 mt N of fau·
computer programs, able to tnformaloon
Technology youth 10 a staff secwe restCorner of Gallia &amp; Heather 1pm, men· &amp; women's cloth- grounds Rockspnngs Ad
use
GIS,
must
hold
a
vahd
field
Classes
to
t&gt;e laughl den!lal envtronment Must
Cross Creek Auction Buffalo d
Ph
1
nvers 1K:ense ystca tnclude lntroduclton to pass physical tra1nmg
St Crown Oty June 2. 9·3 mg, DVD player. VCRplayer,
Scrubs, kids &amp; adult clothes, AucJIOn Saturday 6pm work may be needed Must Computer SCience and li requtrement Pay based on
Multl-famtlysale Baby/ch•ld. OVD's, v•deos, crafts, books, bicycles, glassware an much PreVIew 4-6 Bt.nk11ng 1s full be rBQ~stered With SCOTt Spectallst. 3o Otgital expenence Call (740)379clothes, toys, ~ousehold tools, many mise Items
more, 1275 Bridgeman St, of used Merchandise
(www.scotl ohio gov) sys- Landscape. 30 Digital 9083 between 9-3 Mon-Fn
goods and more! 612 Qam·? Estate Sale· June 1st &amp; 2nd. Syracuse, Thurs . Fn , &amp; Building has AC VISa and tem Submit resume wtlh Antmahon Oracle Based
822 Netghborhood Rd
9am-3pm, 677 S 4th, Street, Sat., 9am to 5pm
Master Card (~4) 550COlJer letter to
Data Base Course and 3D Wanted Optometric Ass!
preferred must
16 Hi.Steppen Aaedy 1639
Middleport,
Ohto
OhiO
Dept
of
Jobs
and
D•g•tal, Arts Busmess eKpenence
Rt7to Georges Creek Rd. t
have
computer
tra1mng be
- - ' -- - - - - TPI Garage Sa,le June
W.roANilllBuv
Family Servtces, B48 Third Procedures All classes are
M~e to Hatty Cemetery Ad Fo , Sun ., SA 7 forrper 1&amp;2,9·?. At. 7 above
detailed onented and able t
Ave. Gal~polls. OH 45631
Guns. generator, power Garden Spot. strollers. toys Eastern
High
Sch .
scheduled to be taught '" work 1n a last paced environWe are an Equal
the day mornmg and after- ment Send resumes to CLA
lools 611 &amp;612
Crib' Car Seals' h•• l. r'' camp equtp.,
m0 111 es
Opportumty Employer
mower, baby/matermty
dvd&amp;vhs patio set, enter- Absolute Top Dollar US
noon
570, C/0 Galltpolts Dally
Rummage Hotdogs &amp; Bake
tamment center,furntture, So'lver and Gold Coins, Help wanted at Darst Adult A Bachelor'S Degree IS Tnbune, 825 Thtrd Ave ,
Sale June 1 &amp;2, 10am·2pm Ga1age&amp;Bake
Sale, home mtenor ttems,house- Prootsets, Gold R1ngs, Pre- Group Home, some httmg, reqLnred Master's preferred Galhpolis, OH 45631
Tr1n1ty Un1 ted Methodist Proceeds to Hemlock w 8 r 9 s , d e s 1g n 8 r 1935 u.s. Currency, 7_5 shift, 740 _992_5023
Prev1ous teachmg ts helpful
Church, At 160, Porter, OH Grange, Fry Aes1dence handbags,lad1es,men,&amp;k1ds Sol•a
re Diamonds· M.T.S
All candtdates should subm1t 1150
Scuocn~
n 1
beSide Porn Am Leg Bldg dolhes, 20 mchTV
Com Shop, 151 Second \ Kennel
Tech-honest, a leHer of Interest current
L~UCfiON
1
Sat 6/1 4673 St.Rt. 60, Fn &amp;Sal June1&amp;2, 900 . - - - - - - - - AVBrlue. GallipoliS. 74()...446- dependable, must low ani resume and the names and ..__ _iiiiiiiiiiiiii_,.
Girts dothes•·-31 mon-7, Boys
mats, have transportation addresses of three refer- Gallipolis Career College
- ' 4 00
_ _ _ __ _ _ _ Yard sale, June 1st-2nd, 2842
181mon-3T'"""'"ens1 men~
-G 1
9am-4pm, 811 VIne St,
Open tnterv1ews Sunday ences Resumes w1ll be (Careers Close To Home)
~
1
1g
hOusehold Iterns/mu..... more lgBn
sa e- Ra,cone, western bootls, lawn
June 5, 1-!5 Mason County
rev1ewed as receiV€td Call Today• 740-446·4367
t lCt movn
Lrvv.
be
''
an
ques,
oys.
~·~a rger, mower, tools, weedeater
Ammal
Shener
304-675lnformatmn
must be subm•tSat 612 Upper St R1 7 N fumlture, crafts. books, 35+
,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ .
p
SPHA
1-800-214.()452
v,ARD..:tJ'U...I'..·
~ •• "
'"1116 I.J.- ... t.ar .....l'n:'n
6458
ted
to
hyll1s
Mason Human ~ galllj)OIIscareercdlege com
9am-? Near roadside rest years of goodtes, Ba shan
- - - - -- - Dlfector
of
IU'..LI" l"fl'll"' r..u
Awed1led Uembel Accrediting
' AMtr ol life U M W Also Rd. Aac1ne. June tst &amp; 2nd
Pr. Pt..f.:wNT
Local Conven1ence Store Resources, UntVijrs•ty ot R•o Covnol
1o1 Independent Colleges
bake sale and Rada Kmves
Iw-iiiioioiiiiiiiiii-rl
Cham accept1ng apphca- Grande, PO BOX 500 Rio ~lld smoo~s 12746
Proceeds go to m1sst011s
Huge Donat1oo Yard Sale.
Sunsel Lane 4 miles An Excellent way to earn ttons. for store manager, con- Grande, OH 45674, e-mail .-:
June 2nd. Star11ng at Bam at 1"'1
~
vemence store ex:penence pmason!no edu EEO/AA
Yard Sal&amp; · Roush lane the Rutland Ftre Dept . aU out sandhill Ad on Sunset money The New Avon
1 lll Lane 611 ,&amp; 612 8-4. Kids Call Marilyn .304-882·2645 pralerred Salary and bene- Employer
Satunlay On~.
Proceeds go to Ae ay 4 e toys, clothes, etc
f1ts at mte,rvtew Send - - ' - " - - - - - Yard sale June 1st &amp; 2tid She1terhouse on Wtllow - - - - - - -- AVONI All Areas! To Buy or resumes to Manager 105 Roofers: Metal roofrng Sld·
9am ·5pm 2310 Graham Creek Ad , near Alligator Yard Sale Sat June 2nd 9am Sell Shirley Spears. 304- Alta Street, Manetta, OH ing al'ld EPOM Top pay and 1:~~;;:;~r_j
Jacks. Ffl 1st &amp; Sat 2nd
to ? 2726 Uncoln Ave
675-1 ~29
45750
benefitS 724·229-8020
L
School ~d

r

AmbroSia Machme Inc
Pomt Pleasant: WV (304)·
675· 1722 (304)675· 1723
fax Machtnist 5 years or
more expenence SB·$12 per

Manag•ng

Jci&gt;

10

YARD SALE-

0

~

r

4x4'a For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................ OJO
Antiques ...................................................... 530
Apartmenta1or Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market .... ......................... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Aulo Repair ........................... ..................... 770
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 710
Boots &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................550
Bualnaas and Buildings ........................... .. 340
Buslnaas Opportunlty ................................ .210
Bualnaas Trolnlng ....................................... 140
Clmpero &amp; Motor Homes ........ ..................:790
camping Equipment ................................... 780
" Clrda of Thanko .................... ...................... 010
Child/Elderly care ....................................... 190
Electrlcai/RefrlgeraUon............................... 840
Equipment lor Rent .....................................480
Excavallng ................................................... 830
• Farm Equlpment. ......................................... eto
Farmalor Rent...... ....................................... 430
Farms tor 5118 ....................... ...................... 330

Senior Discount*

losT Al'I'D

l!li="_____...,

_ho_m_e_30_4-_6_7s_-s_7_2o__
Free kittens to good home
Call for more mfo 740-4464177

992·2157

• All ads must be prepaid'

Losl Ladles Silver framed
•
,glasses Left on park bench
7 month old female black at Gallipolis River Front Park
lab/Retr1ever m1x to good on 5/27/07 Reward, call
home 304-743-5753
304-675·3034
Cats to Gtvoaway to a good

Free to good home. black
lab/shepherd pupp1es For
1nfo please call 740-446·
4177

accept any adver

If so, you qualify

Or Fax To

• Start Your Ada Wlttl A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Jndude A Price • Avoid Ab&amp;revlations
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Free male PLJPP¥- 112 Border
Coll1e 740·256·1233

laement In vlolotlo

age.
No drilling or mining
permit
has
been
lnued to the holder
and flied with the
Meigs
County
Reconler.
There Ilea been no
claim to preserve tho
mineral Interest filed
with tho Meigs County
Recorder In accordance with
Ohio
Revised Code Section
5301.56(C).
There lo no uparetely
listed 111 parcel numbar tor the mineral
Interest reserved end
excepted on the Meigs
Couniy auditor's tax
list or Ihe Meigs
County
Traaaurer'a
duplicate tax list.
The surface owner,
Ronnie W. Cowdery,
Intends to file In the
Office of the Meigs .
County Reconlor, an
Affidavit
of
Abandonment at least
thirty (30) days but no
later than sixty (60)
days alter the data on
which this notlca Is
served or published
(6) 1
-------Public Notice

446-3008

Dally In- Column: 1 :00 p.m.
Monday- Friday for Insertion
In Next" Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1 : 00 p . nt.
For Sundays Paper

a.m. to 5:00

HQW IQ

1:.ubllc Not.lces In Ne_.-spapers.

llolnl of Mlnlona of
the United Mtlhodlll
Church, a New York
Corporation
alao
known aa Boanl of
Foreign llll88lona of
the
Methodlet
EpiiCOflll Church, IIIII
known addre..: 475
Rlvarelele Drive, Naw
York, NY 10027.
7. To: The National
Dlvlalon, Boanl of
Mlutona of the United
Methodlat Church lormerty known aa llolrd
of Home lltulona and
Church Extanalon of
tho
llathodlot
Eplacopal Church, a
P 1 n n 1 y Iv1 n Ia
Corpot'llllon,
laat
known addre.. : 475
Riverside Drive, Ntw
York, NY 10027.
8. To: The s..c-re
and Aaalgna of the
above nemlld organlzatlona
llated
In
Plragrapha 4, 5, 8 and
7 above, namea and
addrwHI unknown.
9. To: The following
lncllvldlllll at their IIIII
known
addreiHI:
Douglll Ill. Belnl, IU,
12735 Elllaon Wllaon
Roed, June fall, FL
33408; Phillip Bryan
Belnl, 3524 Oat Lego
Clr. 1131, Tlmpa, FL
33614; Leon 111M, RFD
11, Clntralla, 1110
65240; Rlchenl K111t
Bolal, 2794 Hamtnon
Ct., Pinole, CA 94514;
lire. Dan Callahln,
3515 Orteana Ave.,
Sioux City, lA 511116;
0111 Maurine Devil,
4050 New Yortc Ave.,
Fair Olka, CA 15821;
Sally Devil, clo Loroy
H. Devil, 825 N. 12th,
Llvlngllon, Montana
58047; Wlllillm WIYM
day, RFD 17, Box 45,
Sprlnglllld, IL 82707;
lire. Tom E. EmbrM,
512 Juprtor Way,
Cuulbln'y, FL 32707;
Jane Zaring Halbert,
5538 N. lleple Ct.,
Columbia, 110 15201;
Donald Roy Hertlly,
Rtl. t1, Aoachport, 1110
15271; Vemo Herman
1004 Conkling, Garden
City, KS 07146; lira.
Gorald JolloiiOft, Ate.
11, llldlaon, 110

Or Fax To

Monday th ru Friday

We will not knowing

NOTICE OF INTENT TO
DECLARE MINERAL
INTEREST ABANDONMENT
1.
To:
Henry
Ferguoon,or
hla
aaolgMH H living, H
to
the
deceased
unknown heirs, next of
kin, admlnlltratora,
axecutora, legaiHI,
Clevlnea, aucce11ora
and aaolgna of Henry
Ferguaon, Cleceaaad,
nemet and add,....
unknown.
2. To: Ethel F. Forguoon
llao known aa Ethel E.
Ferguaon, or her
-lgMH, H living, H
deceosed
to
the
unknown heirs, next of
kin, administrators,
axecutora, legatse1,
Clevlnea, aucc•aora
anct aulgna of Ethel F.
Forguaon aka Ethel E.
Farguaon, deceased,
nameo and addreued
unknown.
3. To: Roger Conklin,
Executor of the Eatate
of Ethel E. Ferguaon,
Ate f8. Columbia, MO
15201, or to the
unknown auccauora
of Roger Conklin,
Encutor ol the Eallte
of Ethel E. Ferguaon,
and a d d untmown.
4. To: Commlaalon on
Eucumenlcal Million
and Relatione of the
United Preabyterlan
Churi:h In the United
S1IWI of America, A
, _ Yortc ~lion
not lor profit alao
lcnown aa Foreign
lllulonary Boanl of
the
Preabyterlan
Church United SI8NI
of Amorlca, '-1 known
acldiMI: 475 Alvlrekll
Drive, New York, NY
10027.
5. To: Boenl Of Nlllonll
Mtulo.'ll of the United
Pl'lllbyWIIn Chun:h In
the Unltad • - • of
Amortca 1110 •
Netlonel llllllonlry
Boenl
of
the
l'reabfterlan church
United
S t - of
America, 1aat kMwn
1 llw; 471 Rlvlrellla
Drive, NIW York, NY
10027.
I. To: World Dlvlllon

l\egt~ter

Sentinel

Word Ads

This
nrwepape
cceplo only hel
anted ads meelln
OE standards.

Right: to Vour Door.

...

I

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
D~llvered

~rtbune

Websites:
www.mydaiiylnbune.com
www.myclailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

c~T~::; (740) 446-2342 (740)' 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

•,

Vour Rl8ht. to Knu""•

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

To Place

Giambi out three weeks
NEW YORK (AP) Jason Giambi will be sidelined at least three weeks
because of torn tissue in the
arch of his left foot, the latest setback in a tumultuous
season for the New York
Yankees designated hitter.
Giambi was examined in
New York on Thursday by
Dr. William Hamilton .
Giambi will be placed on
the disabled list before
friday's game at Boston,
and his foot will be put in a
walking boot.
" He will be re-evaluated
in
three
weeks,"
Yankees spokesman Jason
Zillo said.
Giambi was shifted from
first base to designated hitter this year and hit .322
with four homers and 17
RBi s in ApriL His foot
began bothering him soon
after he played the field
for the first time on April
28, and he batted .117 in
May with three homers
and s ix RBis .

1

srr:,

0
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C1:n.l

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i

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-======-.,

�•

Friday,June1,2007
ALLEYOOP

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel
1\lf;cw..v,mu;

I t-..=~_.J

Sundance mobility scooter
like new condition. Red
2923

W,\.,.llD

To Do

George's Portable Sawmill.

now selling'Tomatoe Stakes
call304-£75-1957
Lawn-Ca1e Service, Mowing
&amp; Trimming_ Call (740)441 ·
1333 or (740)645·0546
I " \ \ t l\1

All real estate advertlalng
in this newspaper Ia

subjec:l to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which maket i1 illegelto

race, color, religion, sex
famili81 statua or nation.l

Ofigin, 01 any intention to
make any such

B LSINESS
0PP01ITii'lfJ1"

preference, limrtation or
discrimination."

This newspaper will not

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLE Y PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
that you do·business with
people you know. and
NOT to send money
through the mail unt1l you
have in'llestlgated the
offering.

r

MONEl'
mlo~~

Country $20.000. Minl coo- $650/mo, 1622 Chatham Bath, AduU'ool &amp; Baby
dition Air Stream 30FT ' Ave, Gallipolis. (740)446· f'ool, Patio, Start $4251Mo.
$4,000 304-882-2196
4234 Of (740)208-7861
No Pets, Lease Plus
mr-~-~---, Security Deposit Aequi'ed,
N~e used 3 bedroom home
A~lliME'mi ' (740)367-7086.
'
~ nyVsllingle. Will help with
dl&gt;iwry. 740-385-43e7
FOR
TWin RM&gt;T5 Towor is accept·

r

advertise "any
. prelerence, limitation or
discrimination based on

knowingly accept
advertisements for real
est.ale which is in

violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
informed that all

dwellings advertisecl in

OWNER ANANCING
Nice 312 slngewides
From $1 ,800 down
payment
ScoH (740) 828·2750

RENT

I

(740)441.0110.
1 · and 2 bedroom apart-

SPECIAL FHA FINANCE
Program SO Down. If yoo
own land or use Family
Lar.O We own the Bank yoor
AppTOIIed 606-474.£380

"r;.,.------..
FARMS
I'OR SAJ.E

Opportunity

i

.

AI'J'II

nished, . and houses in ..__,..;iiiilliiiiii;,..,J
Pomeroy and Middleport.
seCurity deposit required, no Commercial building 'For
pets. 7 40- 992 •2218 .
Renr 1600 square feet, off
street parking. Great loca·
t Bedroom Apt very private tiont 749 Third Avenue in
all utitities included, plus Gallipolis. Rent $375fmo.
satellite TV &amp; IJVD recorder Call Joe (740)441-111 I
304-£74-0042

Enjoy this spacious 5 BR. 2

LoTs&amp;
L---AiiiCREAiiii
"iiiGII"E;",;,- •

:;:;:::::::::=~
P'Ro~NAL

i

___

SERVI&lt;Ei

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
HIBB-582·3345
I{! \I I "' I \ I I

r

10

HouL'I.;: t
Jni:..J

FOR SALE

0 Down 8\len with less than
perlect credit is available on
this 3 , liedroom , 1 bath
home. Corner tot, fireplace,
modern kitchen, jacuzzi tub,
Payment around $550 per
month. 740-367-7129.

213 BR. I Bath, pool on 8.5
acres. Close to town . Asking
$145.000.740-645-3333
2001 Skyline 29x64, 1600
sq. ft. Must be moved.
Great shape only $45.000
304·593·0582
3 bedroom home in
Pomeroy. River view. Off
main road. S2Q.OOO. 1-740·
992·2593.
.
3 BR ranch · In Green
Township on .26 acre. Nice
. subdivision. $90000. calf
740·441 -1459
3 BA, IBA, Large Family
Room , tridge, WID, Large
lot Close to Holzer. Call
441-5826 or 446-9664

AKC Reg. Boston Terrier
pups. 7 wks old. Shots and
wormed. $250. Call 740- .....,...,..._...,....,._ _
388-8743
Johnson's Tree

ServiCe
G•lllpolls, OHC5831
c:c..np.te 1,. c..

Tap•Trirn•Hiou~W~s~•s-.

your choice till ready to
leBve ~tter. Pareirts present
Call anytime, (740)339·
2935. leave message if no ·
answer.

...c:=~----­

~·BoeUtTrudo:
"'--;'~'-;-!.-,...._
Rick Joh~~

1-!P;.;.,;;;.;;;;;;,;.;;;;;__.,
~

740-367-02661
1-800-950-3359
30 Yr.. Exp. lns.

,\ I I \ I ..., It It "

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

. · Di.\Luunt

0325
I \ II\ I ..., , 1'1'1 II . .,

• AI

• Trim • Stump
Grinding • Bucket
Full insured
Scniur Citi7cn

lNsJRUMENTS

N-

(]amibj l•&gt;!t@MI

Truck

MUSICAL

Old Player Piano with 50
exira rolls, $300. ~7-40)446-

Owner Ronnie Jones

free Estimates
Financing· 36 Mos ..
available now on John
Deere Z Trak Zero Turns &amp;
5.99% FiJied Rate on John
Deere Gators Carmichael
Equipment (74o)446·24 12.
0%

\ 111{( 11 \\ 111 " 1

. • K IS
tAKQIB
• K7 I
West
l!ul
.K10853
• QJ 7 2
9 AI
• Q 10 8 4
• 78 2
• J 54
• Q 10 2
• 83
Saulb
• 9 4

• J 7 IZ
• 10 3

70 Pille S treet • Gallipolis
740·446-0007 Toll Free 1177-669-0007

East End
Storage
NyeAve
Pomeroy,OH
5xl0, 6xl0, IOxiO;
10x24
The only storage
units within the
jurisdiction or the
Pomeroy P.D.
(740) 742-2690

FOr salenand contract. 3 ~A·
house in Gallipolis, WID
connection $1500 down
S400/mo. Also 1 BR in
Gallipolis
$750
down. 6 acres. Water &amp; Electric.
S200/mo. Call Wayne 404· Write to: M&amp;M Fa1ms, 960
456·3802 for information.
MCCully Rd . Galipolis. OH
House for sale! Close to 45631 .
church , school, &amp; stores. All
sufficient kitchen, one bath,
2 Br.. living room. family
room.
laundry
room .
Electric. gas, air cond. , &amp; full
up-stairs, full basement.
Ready logo' 740-949-2253.
·$72,000.
-------House for sale 126 Bastiani
Dr. For more Info. call" 740446-2886 or 740·446·1451

A HIDDEN TREASURE!
Laurel
Comm
' ons
Apartments. Largest in the
area! Beautifully renovated
throughout inclucing brand
new kitchen and bath.
Starting at $405. Call today!
(304)273·3344
Apartment for rent, 1·2
Bdrm., remodeled, new car·
pet, stove &amp; frig., water,
sewer, trash pd. Middleport.
$425.00. No pets. Ref.
"red
, •
requl · 740 ·84 ~. 264 ·

Pw

View of City and River from
Mason City, 7·17 ac, see
pies on LandAndfarm.com
304 •638•7048
.,...;.......;...;.._ _ _..,
RFAL EsTATE
_
WANilD
Beautlfuf Apts. at Jackson
Estates. 52 Westwood
5 to 30 acres bordering Drive, from $365 to $560.
Equal
Wayne National Forest in 740-446·2566.
Gallia, Ja~son or lawrence Housing OpportlJnity. This
institution is an Equal
Co. 419-288-3937
Opportunity Provider and
Miniature farm . Unibuilt
HI '\ I \I ...,
Employer.
home on 4 acres. on SR
160. 3BR.' 18A. Peaches,
berries. grapes. Swimming "r"1o._--H-ou-~----. Clean quiet spacious 1BR,
pool. New appliances. Wood
RENT
burner. $88,000. 740·388· L,_.,:FO:;;;::R:,;~:,..,J rno.dep $350 992-3543
0815
- - - - - - - - $158/mol Buy 4bd home CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
New Haven, 4+ aCres, 3 br., HUD ! 5% dn, 20yrs @ 8'1, ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
apartments,
2 ba., total elect. . gas log For Uslings 800·559·4109 ' Townhouse
and"or small houses FOR
fireplace. !rig., stove, dish- x1709
RENT. Call (7401441-lll I
washer, hot tub outside,
great . view·,
$55 ,000, 3br House in Letart $500 for application &amp; information.
(304)882-3021
· month, $300 deposit 304·
882·2858
MOHII.E l·lmu'!&gt;
------Attenttont ·
IUR SAI.E
·--iiiiiiiiliiiii-.,J Local c,ompany offering •No
DOWN PAYMENr pro· · •2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
1994 Oakwood. 14x70, new
grams for you to buy your • Central heat &amp; AJC
condition. 740·446-4782
home instead of renting.
•Washer/dryer hookup
- - - - - - - - • 100%, financing
• Tenant pays electric
2007 Clayton
• Less lhan perteel crOdn
(304)882-3017
5BAI3BA 2000 Sq.FI.
accepted
Starting at $33.00/sp.ft!
• Payment could be the
NO DOWN PAYMENT same as rent.
to qualified buyers.
Mortgage
locators.
Th~ Home Show
(740)367·0000

r
Lw------_.J

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Hill 's Self
Storage

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

IT

•

/

..

Free Estimates

wAS IAI&gt; eNOlJtitl

- - - - - - - - New 72~ Finishing Mowers
6x12 enclosed black trailer.
$1500; 5x10 utility trailer,
$400; 5x10 Ulifity trailer,
$500. (614)595-7773 or
1·800·798·4686
-------For sale/Best oilers: over·
stuffed chair 2 lamps and
iables,
~a~
doors,

NOW TtlfY'~f

5TAttTINti TO
APPLY ,Tttf
. SPtJtt5!

~~'~~~:;~~~me~~~~; ~~:~~~t. ~=~:~~si~k~chi~~-· 6~~~n:;~ ~~~~P~!:t~;4o~!~~~~9J7~m

=,.;.;...;.;;.;..___..,

Ellm View

Apartments

3 or 4 BR, 1 bath, garage,
basement, covered porch.
back deck, new central heat
and AC unit. nice landscap·
Ashland, KV
ing, lanced in back yard, ___8_8_8_
·9_2_8~
· 3_4_2_
&amp; __
new appliances. recently
2007 Doublewide
remodeled
bathroom.
3BA, 2BA,
Asking $75000. New Haven Delivered &amp; Set $39.999.
wv: 304-882-3773
.
The Home ShoW, ~
Ashland, Ky.
Attention!
Local company offering ' NO · Toll-tree 888-928·3426 .DOWN PAYMENT" programs tor you to buy your
home instead of renting.
• 100% finanting
• Less than perfect credit
NEW Zl!Q!I4 Bed
accepted
~ Payment could be the
same as rent .
....... MI.mllH
Mortgage
Loc ators .
mymldwesthome.com
(740)367-0000

·BEST BUY
$49,989

Beautiful-Middleport home!
G
3.BR, 2BA, full basement. reat used 2005 3 bedroom
Many NEW features!! Must 16x80 with vinyl/shingle.
seethtsone! 740·416·1548 Must sell, Only $25,995 with
delivery. Call (740)385·4367
New 3 Bedroom 2112 bath
by builder. 2 car garage, New 3 Bedroom homes from
basement. Good location $214.36 per month, Includes
and schools: Green TwP. many upgrades, delivery &amp;
446-9966
set-up. (740)385-2434

Large 4 bedroom house in
Pomeroy, v· ery clean, newly
remodeled, new .cabinets,
new carpet, (740)949·2303
Taklng applicatiOns for 3BA
remodeled house. No pels.
$400/mo. $300/dep. 4463617
Very nice home for rent in
Middleport. Newly remod·
efed. New appliances. car·
pet, flooring. 7 Rooms, 2
Bedrooms. 1 adjoining bath.
You will have to see to
appreciate. (740)992·5094

14211 MOHIUl HOMI!i
FOR

RENT

-:-------1 and 2
Gracious Living
·
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor and RiveJSide Apts. in
Middleport, from $ 327 to
$592. 740·992-5064. Equal
HoiJslng OpportiJnib•.
This
" 1
institution is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
Employer.
Gracious fiving. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.
From $0·$592. Call 740992·5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities.
Equal
Opportunity Employer

Modern 1 BA Apt. Call 446·
3736
3· bedroom mobile home in - - - - - - - - country. (740)256·6574.
New 2BA apartmeniS.
Washerfdryar
hookup,
Trailer lot for rent in country sto\'elrefrigerator included.
1/4 mile from Rio Grande. Also, units on SA 160. Pets
$200/month. 740-388-"8803 We~ome! (740)44t·OI94.

4521

!a:::J""''i~~~l!""!=~
0

r

HAv &amp;

June 12, 2007

Wise Concrete
All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

740-992-5929
740-416-1698
15 yr~. Exp. Free

E ~ timatc s

"------.,J

.(730
1

VANS

FOR SALE

New · 38x15.50 R16LT, ~10
Super
Swampers
AtrfOii
w/Amerlcen · Racing Baja ·--FOiiiiR.SiiAJ.Eiiiiiii..,J
Rima $1,000 304-614-6777 ·
1997 Saturn SL 1·4 door,
NEW AND USED STEEL one owner, fair cond.,no ale,
Ste.ef Bearns, Pipe Rebar h'19h mileage.
.
$1200.0Q
For
Concrete,
Angle, 080 (740)992·2947
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel - - - - ' - - - - 2004 Ch
M l"bu Cl ·
Grating
.For .
Drains,
eVf al
asslc.
Burg
nd
4
Dri'lleways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L
u y,
cy 1· Loaded ·
Scrap Metals Open Monday, 42000 m1'les • new Goo"'
... ,ear
Tuesday, Wednesday . &amp; tires, 245-0611 or 446·9840/
Friday, 8am-4:JOpm. Closed _A_sk_f_or_V_iCkv-'--- - - -

ROBERT
BISSEll
OOIS1RUC110N
• New Homes
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

J40-992-1m

YOUNG 'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Additions &amp;

Remodeling
New Garages
Electrleal &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutt.r.
Vinyl Siding &amp; Peintlng

V'i PUi UP

~ 00~1-'Jo..IJt

Patio and Porch Oec:kw

Wit~

•1\ GOOt&gt; SE.~
OF J.\UJI\OR!

WV036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

t:&gt;ON'i t r

992-6215
Pomc&gt;roy Jh1o
2~ fnill~ lfJ~oll [~pc •&gt;"' rH&lt;

Mushroom
$3SAScoop
T-Post 6ft. $3.29
Wide Variety of
Lawn Seed,

Ot Dyna Superglide. $9000.
446-1414 or 709-1202
For Sale 2003 'qlmaha 660
Grizzly 4 Wheeler $4 ,500
exc cond . 304·675·6531 01
304·674·5708

!11!:1"~-~~.....- -

WHEN DRAWII'IC. A
£01'11&lt;. STRIP, CHAP,
YOU DON'T ALWAVS
HAVE TO WAIT. UNTIL

THE

Bo•rs &amp; MO'IORS
~
·L'W)R

SALE

St. 1{1. 7
t hc-. lt·r

L---"liiiiiilliil-•

FINAL PANEL

AND I COLOR

THIS IS VOliR ~EPORT CARD?

BETWEEN THE LINES~

I{Oll 60T ALL •A'S"! WOW !

j.jOW DID I{OU DO IT?

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
. 446-0007
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _....,,..._ _ _ _ _ _ _...

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local relerences furSlJVs
nished. Established 1975.
I"ORSALE
Gall 24 Hrs. (740) 446.1999 lsuzu Rodeo, 4WD, 0870, Rogers ,Basement
94000 miles. Call 740-446- Waterproofing.
8657

a vast ditfarence from what

r-LOOking For
ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!·

MWN WOO NYWPYLC dF W JTZNL ....
• MWOY CXNHL· F
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'GI8allllists are people who find tile way 1o bt
themselveS .in llteir art.· • Margo! Fonteyn

r::;::.' S©'\\4llA-~£~· :::

hltt411y CLAY t POUAN _,;,·~---

0 lovr mlllblld
lolltn o1 1M
Wllldl beRearronge

low to form IO&lt;Jr ~111PII

you could

WOI~I-

E MUMI N'

Ir I I I
E V0 D I

"
I
i.

NE T F I

0

"lt;s good to laugh," lhe girl
told her ailing mend, "it's

"'

, - . - - - - - - , cheap---."

I

ECLEFE
1---rl..:;...r,l7;-;,~,.:-;,--1 ~ Compllt. Jhe chuc~o qucttd
•

.

•

•

•

.

by fillitg in 1fte mlllilli ~~

J......I..--1"-.1-..1..-L....I_ you dovJiap lrom 11ep No. 3 bolow.

8 m~:~r~~~RES I'
6)

.

UNSCRAM8lE lE.TTERS
FOi ANSWER

r I' 1 I' I' I' ,. I
4

I IIIIIIII

SCIAMUTS AHSWUS

GARFIELD

PIYIIIITIPPIICE$ rt1

GRIZZWELLS

ARLO&amp;JANIS

SOUPTONUTZ

Hf.'I!)W6~

!Iii ~E ~ P\Z2A

UIOf_....._,_:llfiiiA-..
_ _....,__.,I •.

mJSTl&gt;SEt tli
GET AU. UP8Ei
AW\'fi!A1~

WOODYAADS MINI MALL

Large Auction Sat.
6:30 sharp
Name brahd tools and .
something for ladies
I

'

l

(,

I•

,,

,_, 1-07

bland - Quire - Tipsy - Import • PERSON
ODe -"bish woman I'D 8110ther, "KIIowlcd&amp;c ia powa',
flti*Wtlly if¥OU know it ~the ri!litt PBRSON."

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -You
may have, a gr&amp;atf!r edge than you know
In an Important businesa situation. You
need to realize It because tnoee with
whom you're invotved will try to convince
you otherwise .
AQUAAIU~ (Jan. 20-Fab. 19) - Try 10
base your judgment calls solely on the
facts reklvanl to the situation. If you
don't. your hopes will be a pOor eul;lstl·
lute tor the logic you refuse lo apply.
PISCES (Fob. 20-March 201 - Tho
WOfll thing yoU can be is a clock·watc::tt.
er ~se your producttvlty will greatly
suffer. Impatience could Induce you to
attempt shortcuta tMt could fall .mlurebly.
·
ARIES (March 21·April 19) -It won't be
'Nhom you know but what you'know that
counts the mott. Helpful contacta may
open doors for you, bU1 if you're not
capablo of dollvoring, lhoy'll bo to no
ovoll,
.
TAURUS (April 20-M~ 20) - No one
ohould hovo 10 toll you lhlt tomly dlo·
agrHmentl lhould not be aired In public. Thou klndo o1 111- hovl grootor
choOOM o1 being TMOivod within tho
conttnooolyourh6mo.

.

I:IIIIIIIIC
Clllllltln
•- 'dl.
.sllllln
ICII rer c.r.tl'rlclll

N XV K Y T S T H L Y K X H Y • Y K W Y ·X Y

corners.

.. . .,~~. . . . .~~~~. 045111
. 740-1112-aM

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

"X THOF KTEL YKWY ML HLALP OTNL

haw gotten with a better design.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc. 21) - 11
you want any kind of SUCCHS, rely more
upon your loglo and leu upon your good
looks and hope. Guessing len't any kind
of tool you can use to try to see around

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

· CANCER (June 21-Ju~ 22)- An agree·
ment" abOut wNch you've been con·
cemed Jookt Bke It can be worlled · out
talrty reuonobly, but negotlvo thnklng
may; CIUH you to make an unwise move.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - All lndlvlduola
who ha..,. no direct lnvoMtment ahould
be kept out of your private affairs. Their
.,I,WI80ticHed ac:Mce or Input could foul up
. mlln.rl much great• tum need be.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapt. 22) - Friende or
acquaintances that do nOt share your
arnbltioUB objectives muet not be allowed
to eat up too much of yqur 111luable time.
Find a way to politely show them the
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) - Be aure to
take care of people who help you
adlM your goals. Otherwiss, tf you are
too Hlfieh to acknow*ige their Input
with some type of gratuity, your victories
will be short·lilled.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Poor
planning on your part will severely
Impede your progress. Even if you
should realize some success, it could be

Manlay's

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

-lor--

E&amp;tl .... "'.,...
Todly's duo: Zequa~ U

lo three.

squeezed by dummy'a dla·
mcnt11. nhe keeps his duiJS, dlacaroing
a hesrl and a spade, cloclarer playa a
Club to he! jiC8 and leads ahesrltowlrd
tile dummy, winning when Weet has tile
aco or has coma down to a singleton
queen. As Hactually Wont, South need. ed to guess tile club position. That's
whit real·llfa bridge cfin be all &amp;bout one playor having to gueea what to do.
. The '8f881Z" actor was Will Rogers.

door.

SUNSHINE CLUB

.

ColobiyCiilhW-otcrwtodlnlm-IIIIITIIOUO_,,... .. , _

0118rchorge.

Whitley's Liquor Agency

~U'ROVEMENTS

I

....

PEANUTS

27 llt8s
Irwin of the 47 -lllllnlmlnl
PGA
41 Dldn' ll8y
30 Luigi'•
4t Fonn
farewell
enciOMn
32 Mlybel
52 Milt
10 Wah
34 Clrc..
bbenv•orra
.....
I I Colli hddlr
llruc:lure
18 Nome In
· 36 v--enc~
elevators
tune

by Lula Campos

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Do not
to1&lt;e flnonclal oelbacl&lt;e lying down. If you
bellow you've been the victim o1 a bum
deaf or wron1»fully accused, do what you
can to dear yourwtf of the problem or

-,

expre.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

a,a.mtce-o.ot

r

r

40 C..V111
1111111
42 Uvy'• yur
43 llovJe.lot

Who said this? 'I'm not a real movie star.
I've still 1J01 tile same wife 1started out
with 28 yeal8 ago.' .
Sady, we know what he means. But he
would make a good bridge partner- we
would always know what his bids and
signals meant. This deal was played by
real people; Hwas not deYiud. Asaess
tile bidding and play.
Against three no-lruTIII', West led tile
8PI!de five: Bix, lack. four. East iaiUrned
tile 8j)l!de two: nine, three, ace. South
ran dummy's five diamond bides. discarding a hesrl and two c;tubo from her
hand. East pHcMd two heltls, and West
U1row lho heart nine and c;tw two Now
cloclere( cashed dummy's Club king,
11ten played a dub to her )acl&lt;. This loll
to West's queen, anc1 tile defonae tool&lt;
tile reel fer down two what ll1lnk8Bt
lhou?
FfTII, tile bidding. North miglt open two
ncHTUTIII'. Thai oxcelltfllllve&lt;an!IMIH 18 ·
worll1 on extra point, and tile hand has
loll al aces llncl klnga. But after North
optnld one diamond, South ohould
._ iilpot tded one heart -' gal In
lhoN llll)ore, Then North .would have
retid lwo no-trump, and South woold .

~ -

44

33 ,_
Coup d'- 7 -Landed
35 Olleuppller
paperty
:J1 Pixie
8 Okllhoma
38 Popt.4w
tribe.
watchtl
9 JUII touch

"Valuable contacts who are not necesaar·
lly In your particular hid of endeavor
coukl be eatabllahed.Yet !hey could have
·a powerful influence over your lncentlve
to molol the moot o1 who and who! you

"';" ~ll - 1 i ."i~-.\X_\ I

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Pw
All pus

...urd8y, June 2, 2007

TO I)ELIVE~ THE
PUNCH LINE!

('jami1.q_ . . ~.")!"'t"'i"ij"""3"':""'•
.

l!ul

The first day
for a real deal

-llilod

24 A lew-

4 ElepiiMI

Junction
gone 1111011
ltMif
boredom
28 'rlllmllttlt· 5 Skudl'l
25 With
45 Tilling I
lng clinger
cltflnoo
conviction
cruiM
31 Sl_..,
6 Give-- 26 Heppy hour 44i ~

W~!r!=

BIG NATE

Shade River
Ag Servic e

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System .

1•
3NT

""""'"¥•""' . ...,

28 Klel con-

~Astro-

Fer1ilizer ond
Showmaster Show
Feeds

77
Searay
22 fl . Cuddy
Cabin.
355 Mercruiser
oul
&amp; 85
Celebrity
Station drive. $1900 make offer.
Wagon.V6 70,000 miles, 740·446-2923 1
MIKE MARCUM
Good Shape, Asking $900.
HOOIIN!
, &amp; lhNtilli.IIN!, ( 0 .
PETS
(740)441-0646
CAMI'IlKS &amp;
Rubber
Aoolu1
g.
Room
A cld it1 0r 1 ~- DN:b ShrllCJIP'i
FOR SALE
MO'IOR HOMJ'll
S1drnq. Windows. Pole Oams G;11·,;yt:~
•--ioiiiiioiiiiiiiii..,J 87 Mercury Sable. New ·-liOIIiliiiioiillllil...
Insurance Work. Resrdentral &amp; Cor'Hl1('ru.rt
Adorable 7' week old AKC power steering pump and 2002 Springdale 5th wheel
740 245 0~37
Yor_kie Puppies. 1 female. 2 radiator High miles,runs Camper 26H. has 1 slide oul.
Lrrr&gt;ns!'d 8. Bo•1ded
JU Yc.u~
I
1 II'
d $900 good. $490
, 080. 446·2923 ·sleeps 6·8 asking $10,000' if'
Fr•:c E str•lltl lc~
ExDet rrnc r·
ma e on Y - poun
each. Shots &amp; vet checked 304· 89 Ford Aerostar, 5 speed, in1erested call 304·675·
895-3926
C 11 (7401446 4435
6338 after 7pm
- - - - - - - - ="::.c..::::.:..:.:.:·=:____
AKC Aeg. puppies, yellow 94·95 Pontiac Grand Ams,
labs
parenlsO.P.
1st $600 for both, (740)446· 92 Fleetwood Wilderness,
B us in ess -Buildi ng· lnve,, tory
shots,wormed,born April13, c0~166~-~-----, fully cOntained. All ·working .
condition. AC/ heat! sto\le/
FOR SALE
$300-M,350-F,Brin985-4138 "115
TRUCKS
fridge/ microwave. New
Meigs County Only Liquor Agency
~
FORS.I.LE
queen size matt. Sleeps 6.
Contact: Cliff Whitl ey
Asking $6500. 740-286·
1973 F250 $600 or 080 . 8729 or 740-418-0832
740-992- 0008- St o re
call 304-675·5906
740-416-8734- Cc l:
Pri'llate Camp Site with Boat
1998 Dodge Dakota. ·'"to. Dock on Kanawha Ai\ler
740-985-3879- Home
4WD. $2800 080. 740·256· between 8 Mile &amp; 10 Mile.
Serious qualified inqu1r1es onl y
1652.
'
304·675·5724
Molivated seller. extremelv mol 1vat ed
99 GMC Sonoma 4x4,
pregnan t wif e.
""I It\ ll I ...,
142000
miles, asking
$5200. 740·256-1498 or
740·339·0969
J810
HOME
Thursday, Saturday
Sunday. (740)446-7300

iOU,

We Deliver To You I

All dues must be paid.

June 1st &amp; 2nd
9 am· 3 pm
S. 4tl'\ Street

Call Gary Stanley @
740-742-2293
Please leave messa e

99 Plymouth Voyager. Ice
Stop &amp; Compare
~
. _ _ _;;:G;:;RA~IN;.
' - - ' cold air, new tires, runs
:-'
great, $2900 080. Must . . . . . . . . .. .
For Sale Hay Square Bales ;;s;:;ee....:7,;:40~44:,;1:;:·0~0:;::58;:..._.., •
call304-576·2626
411 MUWRCYCLESI
4 WHEtl.ERS
I R \\ ..., 1'01~ I \I1Cl'\

Eye catcher! 2002 5·10
extreme. 90000 miles.
Yellow, 4 cyl. 5 spd. $7500.
740-709-6190

WV State Farm Museum
Annual Bd meeting

2A59 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis

:::======~

p30 LlvmocK - ~
LL-·-------"·

u
u•
ran
enlng. Milton Wv Fie
arket, Sat&amp;Sun. 5 Sta Aeg. Angus Bulls for sale.
c:::rr:::an,::lt;,.:::606~-3~26~·~07:,:7.:,7....1 Hollybrook Farm. 740·245·
5984
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Registered
Purebred
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Quarter Horse black Mt;~re
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
3/yrs $850 304·895-3866
800-537-9.529.
June 4 at the Super 8 Motet,
8:30am·?. Many different
items including: coffee makors, bedspreads, shower
curtains, etc.

1/1 4/l rnol pd

WRONG

740.446.9200

References Availahle!

Hours
7:00AM. 8:00PM

SIGHi\ l CAN'T WAIT TO
OIANGE HIM !!

EVER'THIN'
'BOUT THAI
MANIS

............timbercreekeablnetrJ'.com

*Insured
*Experienced

$999. Limited amount avail·
able at thiS price. Also, 4', 5',
&amp; 6' tiller-\ 4' starting at
$750.
:Jim's
Farm
Equipment. 740-446·9777
New Taylor Way 15' Heavy
Duty Bat wing WI bual
Wheel, chain guard~. hyd

B~IN6

6AI&gt;PL.EP Wlitl l&gt;f'i--- ' ;

740-367·0536

Hardwood CJbln"ry And Flll'lialre

*Prompt and Quality
Wurk
*Reasonable Rates

111:::'
DOWN
19 SI8CUn oil ·
zo w..
:It Nlbblod
21 Dined on
1 Titled 1111n
22 SOlar dlak 2 Hl!llllln or 22 Mme. Gluck 41 Finllly
23 SMmlng
Bonll
of opera
(2wds.)
26 Laundry
3 PICI&lt;
23 Canadien 43 Men
llddltlve
.mmots
prov.
......

Opening lead: • 5

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor
740-367·0544

..

Stanley Tree. Trimming
&amp; Removal

Pw
Pw

1NT

Insured

I_,,

ws· N-

Saulb

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

740·992-6971

Mollohan Furniture. Great Kiefer Built· Valley·Bison· L._ _.:.;.::.:::::::==
FrH Eatim1tes
selection for a Great price. Horse
and
Livestock
Drive a little, save a lot! 202 TrellereLoadmax·
Clark Chapel Ad, Bidwell,
OH. (740)388.0113
Gooseneck, Dumps, .&amp;
-:::~~--....-..., Utility· Aluma Aluminum
t:.:=::::=:MER&lt;liANDN
'
.1\'J..aL"tJ..lA.Nt.:.Ul.JS
na era· B&amp;W Goosenec«.
Hitches· Trailer Parts.
Carmichael
Trailers.
740 44 2412
$For Old Auto Batteries 1- ( ) 699 $2.50ea, 100+ $3.00ea, large selection of Rotary
250+ $4.00ea. THE BAT· · Rutters 4' thru 15'. Jim's
TERY TERMINAL 1·800· 's Farm Equipment. 740·
79&amp;6797
c446.::..:·9:..:m.:.:__ _ _ __
- - - - - - -N H H b"
7'
b
4)118 ft above grnd pool w/ . .
ay 1ne
, stu
aII access .. wringer washer. guards, crnn
...,. dividers, slored
inside, never rained on _
db! alum. tubs on tegs·good
*472 $7,000 304v"75·2902
shape. 245·5181

c

Dealer: South
VUlnenble: Neitller

David Lewis

John Deer 310C 4x4 for safe
or trade. $16500. Call 740·
388-8228
Private country setting. Call
740·441 ·8257

:t:.=

1111111
51 1b1n 53 Encourage
11 ~
54 Hllr goop
12 l.yllc polllll 56 IIMidM
13 TMita- 56 Toehlboloe
111ft
. 5114 Bit Dlppor
iiNr
58 mill, e.g.
15 Aunllnont · 59 AIIM New
16 Soggy
Year

•AJ965

Financing on New Massey
Ferguson &amp; New Holland
Concrete Work ,
Tractors
as
low
as , . : - - - - - . , - - - - ,
O%.W.A.C. ~im's Farm Z6 Years Experience
Equipment, 740·445-9m ·

5 acre lots for sale in Gallia
Co. Morgan Twp. Morgan
lane. Septic permits for last
years specs. Possible land
contract, some restrictions.
Calf between 7pm and 9pm
or lea\le message 74Q-66g.
0143

"'*

vehlcte

• Top • Removal

lorw.., lnt· St·ntl l'

CKC Female Westies , 1st
shots, wormed. wt cllecked,
$400. 740·388·9453

r

Ht!'*.:

-lo--

loclle
44-FoTNI

I Y_.lllow

------~-

1..-:"":.::-::.·:::-::"":-:....J

FORSP~l!....

this newspaper are

Brand !leW log home With 60
acres MIL $180,000. Call
740 56-9247

chkd, shots, wormed. 740. 388·9325

apartment,for
the (M $400 F $450
town. No Pets, Deposit elderty/d.isabjed call 675·
)
.( )
· Deposit of
Required, (740)992·5174 or 6679
Equal
Housing $100 wi~ hold the pup of

••-~OTI(;E**
Borrow Smart. Contact
the OhiO DIVISion Of
Financial
Institution's
Ottice of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you ref1·
nance your home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Calllhe
Office of Consumer
Affa1rs toll free at 1·866·
278·0003 to learn ~ the
mortgage broke"r or
lender
IS
properly
licensed. (This is a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments ing applications for waiting AKC Reg. Weimaraners:
tor Rent, Meigs County, In list for Hud-subslzed, 1· br, Solid silver, 008 04126/07,

ments. furnished and unfur·

available on an equal
opportunity bases.

Ba home located in Gallia
Co. on the banks of

REA Cro11word Punle

BRIOGE
Must Sell Beautiful older 4 Extra nice 2$x48 dou· Tara
Townhouse AKC Boston Terrier Pups. 7
bedroom Home on 1/2 acre bleWide. 3 bed, 2 .bath, gar- Apartments, Very Spacious, wk$ okt, both male. Parents
of land with add on · ~ In den tub, gas &amp; electric, Cia , 2 Bedrooms, CIA, t 112 on prem. wtth pedig1ee, vet

$800Jmake offer. 740·446·

10

The Daily ~entinel • Page 87

www.!nYdallyaentlnel.com

I

�•

Friday,June1,2007
ALLEYOOP

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel
1\lf;cw..v,mu;

I t-..=~_.J

Sundance mobility scooter
like new condition. Red
2923

W,\.,.llD

To Do

George's Portable Sawmill.

now selling'Tomatoe Stakes
call304-£75-1957
Lawn-Ca1e Service, Mowing
&amp; Trimming_ Call (740)441 ·
1333 or (740)645·0546
I " \ \ t l\1

All real estate advertlalng
in this newspaper Ia

subjec:l to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which maket i1 illegelto

race, color, religion, sex
famili81 statua or nation.l

Ofigin, 01 any intention to
make any such

B LSINESS
0PP01ITii'lfJ1"

preference, limrtation or
discrimination."

This newspaper will not

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLE Y PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
that you do·business with
people you know. and
NOT to send money
through the mail unt1l you
have in'llestlgated the
offering.

r

MONEl'
mlo~~

Country $20.000. Minl coo- $650/mo, 1622 Chatham Bath, AduU'ool &amp; Baby
dition Air Stream 30FT ' Ave, Gallipolis. (740)446· f'ool, Patio, Start $4251Mo.
$4,000 304-882-2196
4234 Of (740)208-7861
No Pets, Lease Plus
mr-~-~---, Security Deposit Aequi'ed,
N~e used 3 bedroom home
A~lliME'mi ' (740)367-7086.
'
~ nyVsllingle. Will help with
dl&gt;iwry. 740-385-43e7
FOR
TWin RM&gt;T5 Towor is accept·

r

advertise "any
. prelerence, limitation or
discrimination based on

knowingly accept
advertisements for real
est.ale which is in

violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
informed that all

dwellings advertisecl in

OWNER ANANCING
Nice 312 slngewides
From $1 ,800 down
payment
ScoH (740) 828·2750

RENT

I

(740)441.0110.
1 · and 2 bedroom apart-

SPECIAL FHA FINANCE
Program SO Down. If yoo
own land or use Family
Lar.O We own the Bank yoor
AppTOIIed 606-474.£380

"r;.,.------..
FARMS
I'OR SAJ.E

Opportunity

i

.

AI'J'II

nished, . and houses in ..__,..;iiiilliiiiii;,..,J
Pomeroy and Middleport.
seCurity deposit required, no Commercial building 'For
pets. 7 40- 992 •2218 .
Renr 1600 square feet, off
street parking. Great loca·
t Bedroom Apt very private tiont 749 Third Avenue in
all utitities included, plus Gallipolis. Rent $375fmo.
satellite TV &amp; IJVD recorder Call Joe (740)441-111 I
304-£74-0042

Enjoy this spacious 5 BR. 2

LoTs&amp;
L---AiiiCREAiiii
"iiiGII"E;",;,- •

:;:;:::::::::=~
P'Ro~NAL

i

___

SERVI&lt;Ei

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
HIBB-582·3345
I{! \I I "' I \ I I

r

10

HouL'I.;: t
Jni:..J

FOR SALE

0 Down 8\len with less than
perlect credit is available on
this 3 , liedroom , 1 bath
home. Corner tot, fireplace,
modern kitchen, jacuzzi tub,
Payment around $550 per
month. 740-367-7129.

213 BR. I Bath, pool on 8.5
acres. Close to town . Asking
$145.000.740-645-3333
2001 Skyline 29x64, 1600
sq. ft. Must be moved.
Great shape only $45.000
304·593·0582
3 bedroom home in
Pomeroy. River view. Off
main road. S2Q.OOO. 1-740·
992·2593.
.
3 BR ranch · In Green
Township on .26 acre. Nice
. subdivision. $90000. calf
740·441 -1459
3 BA, IBA, Large Family
Room , tridge, WID, Large
lot Close to Holzer. Call
441-5826 or 446-9664

AKC Reg. Boston Terrier
pups. 7 wks old. Shots and
wormed. $250. Call 740- .....,...,..._...,....,._ _
388-8743
Johnson's Tree

ServiCe
G•lllpolls, OHC5831
c:c..np.te 1,. c..

Tap•Trirn•Hiou~W~s~•s-.

your choice till ready to
leBve ~tter. Pareirts present
Call anytime, (740)339·
2935. leave message if no ·
answer.

...c:=~----­

~·BoeUtTrudo:
"'--;'~'-;-!.-,...._
Rick Joh~~

1-!P;.;.,;;;.;;;;;;,;.;;;;;__.,
~

740-367-02661
1-800-950-3359
30 Yr.. Exp. lns.

,\ I I \ I ..., It It "

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

. · Di.\Luunt

0325
I \ II\ I ..., , 1'1'1 II . .,

• AI

• Trim • Stump
Grinding • Bucket
Full insured
Scniur Citi7cn

lNsJRUMENTS

N-

(]amibj l•&gt;!t@MI

Truck

MUSICAL

Old Player Piano with 50
exira rolls, $300. ~7-40)446-

Owner Ronnie Jones

free Estimates
Financing· 36 Mos ..
available now on John
Deere Z Trak Zero Turns &amp;
5.99% FiJied Rate on John
Deere Gators Carmichael
Equipment (74o)446·24 12.
0%

\ 111{( 11 \\ 111 " 1

. • K IS
tAKQIB
• K7 I
West
l!ul
.K10853
• QJ 7 2
9 AI
• Q 10 8 4
• 78 2
• J 54
• Q 10 2
• 83
Saulb
• 9 4

• J 7 IZ
• 10 3

70 Pille S treet • Gallipolis
740·446-0007 Toll Free 1177-669-0007

East End
Storage
NyeAve
Pomeroy,OH
5xl0, 6xl0, IOxiO;
10x24
The only storage
units within the
jurisdiction or the
Pomeroy P.D.
(740) 742-2690

FOr salenand contract. 3 ~A·
house in Gallipolis, WID
connection $1500 down
S400/mo. Also 1 BR in
Gallipolis
$750
down. 6 acres. Water &amp; Electric.
S200/mo. Call Wayne 404· Write to: M&amp;M Fa1ms, 960
456·3802 for information.
MCCully Rd . Galipolis. OH
House for sale! Close to 45631 .
church , school, &amp; stores. All
sufficient kitchen, one bath,
2 Br.. living room. family
room.
laundry
room .
Electric. gas, air cond. , &amp; full
up-stairs, full basement.
Ready logo' 740-949-2253.
·$72,000.
-------House for sale 126 Bastiani
Dr. For more Info. call" 740446-2886 or 740·446·1451

A HIDDEN TREASURE!
Laurel
Comm
' ons
Apartments. Largest in the
area! Beautifully renovated
throughout inclucing brand
new kitchen and bath.
Starting at $405. Call today!
(304)273·3344
Apartment for rent, 1·2
Bdrm., remodeled, new car·
pet, stove &amp; frig., water,
sewer, trash pd. Middleport.
$425.00. No pets. Ref.
"red
, •
requl · 740 ·84 ~. 264 ·

Pw

View of City and River from
Mason City, 7·17 ac, see
pies on LandAndfarm.com
304 •638•7048
.,...;.......;...;.._ _ _..,
RFAL EsTATE
_
WANilD
Beautlfuf Apts. at Jackson
Estates. 52 Westwood
5 to 30 acres bordering Drive, from $365 to $560.
Equal
Wayne National Forest in 740-446·2566.
Gallia, Ja~son or lawrence Housing OpportlJnity. This
institution is an Equal
Co. 419-288-3937
Opportunity Provider and
Miniature farm . Unibuilt
HI '\ I \I ...,
Employer.
home on 4 acres. on SR
160. 3BR.' 18A. Peaches,
berries. grapes. Swimming "r"1o._--H-ou-~----. Clean quiet spacious 1BR,
pool. New appliances. Wood
RENT
burner. $88,000. 740·388· L,_.,:FO:;;;::R:,;~:,..,J rno.dep $350 992-3543
0815
- - - - - - - - $158/mol Buy 4bd home CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
New Haven, 4+ aCres, 3 br., HUD ! 5% dn, 20yrs @ 8'1, ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
apartments,
2 ba., total elect. . gas log For Uslings 800·559·4109 ' Townhouse
and"or small houses FOR
fireplace. !rig., stove, dish- x1709
RENT. Call (7401441-lll I
washer, hot tub outside,
great . view·,
$55 ,000, 3br House in Letart $500 for application &amp; information.
(304)882-3021
· month, $300 deposit 304·
882·2858
MOHII.E l·lmu'!&gt;
------Attenttont ·
IUR SAI.E
·--iiiiiiiiliiiii-.,J Local c,ompany offering •No
DOWN PAYMENr pro· · •2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
1994 Oakwood. 14x70, new
grams for you to buy your • Central heat &amp; AJC
condition. 740·446-4782
home instead of renting.
•Washer/dryer hookup
- - - - - - - - • 100%, financing
• Tenant pays electric
2007 Clayton
• Less lhan perteel crOdn
(304)882-3017
5BAI3BA 2000 Sq.FI.
accepted
Starting at $33.00/sp.ft!
• Payment could be the
NO DOWN PAYMENT same as rent.
to qualified buyers.
Mortgage
locators.
Th~ Home Show
(740)367·0000

r
Lw------_.J

r

Hill 's Self
Storage

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

IT

•

/

..

Free Estimates

wAS IAI&gt; eNOlJtitl

- - - - - - - - New 72~ Finishing Mowers
6x12 enclosed black trailer.
$1500; 5x10 utility trailer,
$400; 5x10 Ulifity trailer,
$500. (614)595-7773 or
1·800·798·4686
-------For sale/Best oilers: over·
stuffed chair 2 lamps and
iables,
~a~
doors,

NOW TtlfY'~f

5TAttTINti TO
APPLY ,Tttf
. SPtJtt5!

~~'~~~:;~~~me~~~~; ~~:~~~t. ~=~:~~si~k~chi~~-· 6~~~n:;~ ~~~~P~!:t~;4o~!~~~~9J7~m

=,.;.;...;.;;.;..___..,

Ellm View

Apartments

3 or 4 BR, 1 bath, garage,
basement, covered porch.
back deck, new central heat
and AC unit. nice landscap·
Ashland, KV
ing, lanced in back yard, ___8_8_8_
·9_2_8~
· 3_4_2_
&amp; __
new appliances. recently
2007 Doublewide
remodeled
bathroom.
3BA, 2BA,
Asking $75000. New Haven Delivered &amp; Set $39.999.
wv: 304-882-3773
.
The Home ShoW, ~
Ashland, Ky.
Attention!
Local company offering ' NO · Toll-tree 888-928·3426 .DOWN PAYMENT" programs tor you to buy your
home instead of renting.
• 100% finanting
• Less than perfect credit
NEW Zl!Q!I4 Bed
accepted
~ Payment could be the
same as rent .
....... MI.mllH
Mortgage
Loc ators .
mymldwesthome.com
(740)367-0000

·BEST BUY
$49,989

Beautiful-Middleport home!
G
3.BR, 2BA, full basement. reat used 2005 3 bedroom
Many NEW features!! Must 16x80 with vinyl/shingle.
seethtsone! 740·416·1548 Must sell, Only $25,995 with
delivery. Call (740)385·4367
New 3 Bedroom 2112 bath
by builder. 2 car garage, New 3 Bedroom homes from
basement. Good location $214.36 per month, Includes
and schools: Green TwP. many upgrades, delivery &amp;
446-9966
set-up. (740)385-2434

Large 4 bedroom house in
Pomeroy, v· ery clean, newly
remodeled, new .cabinets,
new carpet, (740)949·2303
Taklng applicatiOns for 3BA
remodeled house. No pels.
$400/mo. $300/dep. 4463617
Very nice home for rent in
Middleport. Newly remod·
efed. New appliances. car·
pet, flooring. 7 Rooms, 2
Bedrooms. 1 adjoining bath.
You will have to see to
appreciate. (740)992·5094

14211 MOHIUl HOMI!i
FOR

RENT

-:-------1 and 2
Gracious Living
·
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor and RiveJSide Apts. in
Middleport, from $ 327 to
$592. 740·992-5064. Equal
HoiJslng OpportiJnib•.
This
" 1
institution is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
Employer.
Gracious fiving. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.
From $0·$592. Call 740992·5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities.
Equal
Opportunity Employer

Modern 1 BA Apt. Call 446·
3736
3· bedroom mobile home in - - - - - - - - country. (740)256·6574.
New 2BA apartmeniS.
Washerfdryar
hookup,
Trailer lot for rent in country sto\'elrefrigerator included.
1/4 mile from Rio Grande. Also, units on SA 160. Pets
$200/month. 740-388-"8803 We~ome! (740)44t·OI94.

4521

!a:::J""''i~~~l!""!=~
0

r

HAv &amp;

June 12, 2007

Wise Concrete
All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

740-992-5929
740-416-1698
15 yr~. Exp. Free

E ~ timatc s

"------.,J

.(730
1

VANS

FOR SALE

New · 38x15.50 R16LT, ~10
Super
Swampers
AtrfOii
w/Amerlcen · Racing Baja ·--FOiiiiR.SiiAJ.Eiiiiiii..,J
Rima $1,000 304-614-6777 ·
1997 Saturn SL 1·4 door,
NEW AND USED STEEL one owner, fair cond.,no ale,
Ste.ef Bearns, Pipe Rebar h'19h mileage.
.
$1200.0Q
For
Concrete,
Angle, 080 (740)992·2947
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel - - - - ' - - - - 2004 Ch
M l"bu Cl ·
Grating
.For .
Drains,
eVf al
asslc.
Burg
nd
4
Dri'lleways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L
u y,
cy 1· Loaded ·
Scrap Metals Open Monday, 42000 m1'les • new Goo"'
... ,ear
Tuesday, Wednesday . &amp; tires, 245-0611 or 446·9840/
Friday, 8am-4:JOpm. Closed _A_sk_f_or_V_iCkv-'--- - - -

ROBERT
BISSEll
OOIS1RUC110N
• New Homes
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

J40-992-1m

YOUNG 'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Additions &amp;

Remodeling
New Garages
Electrleal &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutt.r.
Vinyl Siding &amp; Peintlng

V'i PUi UP

~ 00~1-'Jo..IJt

Patio and Porch Oec:kw

Wit~

•1\ GOOt&gt; SE.~
OF J.\UJI\OR!

WV036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

t:&gt;ON'i t r

992-6215
Pomc&gt;roy Jh1o
2~ fnill~ lfJ~oll [~pc •&gt;"' rH&lt;

Mushroom
$3SAScoop
T-Post 6ft. $3.29
Wide Variety of
Lawn Seed,

Ot Dyna Superglide. $9000.
446-1414 or 709-1202
For Sale 2003 'qlmaha 660
Grizzly 4 Wheeler $4 ,500
exc cond . 304·675·6531 01
304·674·5708

!11!:1"~-~~.....- -

WHEN DRAWII'IC. A
£01'11&lt;. STRIP, CHAP,
YOU DON'T ALWAVS
HAVE TO WAIT. UNTIL

THE

Bo•rs &amp; MO'IORS
~
·L'W)R

SALE

St. 1{1. 7
t hc-. lt·r

L---"liiiiiilliil-•

FINAL PANEL

AND I COLOR

THIS IS VOliR ~EPORT CARD?

BETWEEN THE LINES~

I{Oll 60T ALL •A'S"! WOW !

j.jOW DID I{OU DO IT?

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
. 446-0007
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _....,,..._ _ _ _ _ _ _...

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local relerences furSlJVs
nished. Established 1975.
I"ORSALE
Gall 24 Hrs. (740) 446.1999 lsuzu Rodeo, 4WD, 0870, Rogers ,Basement
94000 miles. Call 740-446- Waterproofing.
8657

a vast ditfarence from what

r-LOOking For
ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!·

MWN WOO NYWPYLC dF W JTZNL ....
• MWOY CXNHL· F
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'GI8allllists are people who find tile way 1o bt
themselveS .in llteir art.· • Margo! Fonteyn

r::;::.' S©'\\4llA-~£~· :::

hltt411y CLAY t POUAN _,;,·~---

0 lovr mlllblld
lolltn o1 1M
Wllldl beRearronge

low to form IO&lt;Jr ~111PII

you could

WOI~I-

E MUMI N'

Ir I I I
E V0 D I

"
I
i.

NE T F I

0

"lt;s good to laugh," lhe girl
told her ailing mend, "it's

"'

, - . - - - - - - , cheap---."

I

ECLEFE
1---rl..:;...r,l7;-;,~,.:-;,--1 ~ Compllt. Jhe chuc~o qucttd
•

.

•

•

•

.

by fillitg in 1fte mlllilli ~~

J......I..--1"-.1-..1..-L....I_ you dovJiap lrom 11ep No. 3 bolow.

8 m~:~r~~~RES I'
6)

.

UNSCRAM8lE lE.TTERS
FOi ANSWER

r I' 1 I' I' I' ,. I
4

I IIIIIIII

SCIAMUTS AHSWUS

GARFIELD

PIYIIIITIPPIICE$ rt1

GRIZZWELLS

ARLO&amp;JANIS

SOUPTONUTZ

Hf.'I!)W6~

!Iii ~E ~ P\Z2A

UIOf_....._,_:llfiiiA-..
_ _....,__.,I •.

mJSTl&gt;SEt tli
GET AU. UP8Ei
AW\'fi!A1~

WOODYAADS MINI MALL

Large Auction Sat.
6:30 sharp
Name brahd tools and .
something for ladies
I

'

l

(,

I•

,,

,_, 1-07

bland - Quire - Tipsy - Import • PERSON
ODe -"bish woman I'D 8110ther, "KIIowlcd&amp;c ia powa',
flti*Wtlly if¥OU know it ~the ri!litt PBRSON."

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -You
may have, a gr&amp;atf!r edge than you know
In an Important businesa situation. You
need to realize It because tnoee with
whom you're invotved will try to convince
you otherwise .
AQUAAIU~ (Jan. 20-Fab. 19) - Try 10
base your judgment calls solely on the
facts reklvanl to the situation. If you
don't. your hopes will be a pOor eul;lstl·
lute tor the logic you refuse lo apply.
PISCES (Fob. 20-March 201 - Tho
WOfll thing yoU can be is a clock·watc::tt.
er ~se your producttvlty will greatly
suffer. Impatience could Induce you to
attempt shortcuta tMt could fall .mlurebly.
·
ARIES (March 21·April 19) -It won't be
'Nhom you know but what you'know that
counts the mott. Helpful contacta may
open doors for you, bU1 if you're not
capablo of dollvoring, lhoy'll bo to no
ovoll,
.
TAURUS (April 20-M~ 20) - No one
ohould hovo 10 toll you lhlt tomly dlo·
agrHmentl lhould not be aired In public. Thou klndo o1 111- hovl grootor
choOOM o1 being TMOivod within tho
conttnooolyourh6mo.

.

I:IIIIIIIIC
Clllllltln
•- 'dl.
.sllllln
ICII rer c.r.tl'rlclll

N XV K Y T S T H L Y K X H Y • Y K W Y ·X Y

corners.

.. . .,~~. . . . .~~~~. 045111
. 740-1112-aM

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

"X THOF KTEL YKWY ML HLALP OTNL

haw gotten with a better design.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc. 21) - 11
you want any kind of SUCCHS, rely more
upon your loglo and leu upon your good
looks and hope. Guessing len't any kind
of tool you can use to try to see around

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

· CANCER (June 21-Ju~ 22)- An agree·
ment" abOut wNch you've been con·
cemed Jookt Bke It can be worlled · out
talrty reuonobly, but negotlvo thnklng
may; CIUH you to make an unwise move.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - All lndlvlduola
who ha..,. no direct lnvoMtment ahould
be kept out of your private affairs. Their
.,I,WI80ticHed ac:Mce or Input could foul up
. mlln.rl much great• tum need be.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapt. 22) - Friende or
acquaintances that do nOt share your
arnbltioUB objectives muet not be allowed
to eat up too much of yqur 111luable time.
Find a way to politely show them the
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) - Be aure to
take care of people who help you
adlM your goals. Otherwiss, tf you are
too Hlfieh to acknow*ige their Input
with some type of gratuity, your victories
will be short·lilled.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Poor
planning on your part will severely
Impede your progress. Even if you
should realize some success, it could be

Manlay's

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

-lor--

E&amp;tl .... "'.,...
Todly's duo: Zequa~ U

lo three.

squeezed by dummy'a dla·
mcnt11. nhe keeps his duiJS, dlacaroing
a hesrl and a spade, cloclarer playa a
Club to he! jiC8 and leads ahesrltowlrd
tile dummy, winning when Weet has tile
aco or has coma down to a singleton
queen. As Hactually Wont, South need. ed to guess tile club position. That's
whit real·llfa bridge cfin be all &amp;bout one playor having to gueea what to do.
. The '8f881Z" actor was Will Rogers.

door.

SUNSHINE CLUB

.

ColobiyCiilhW-otcrwtodlnlm-IIIIITIIOUO_,,... .. , _

0118rchorge.

Whitley's Liquor Agency

~U'ROVEMENTS

I

....

PEANUTS

27 llt8s
Irwin of the 47 -lllllnlmlnl
PGA
41 Dldn' ll8y
30 Luigi'•
4t Fonn
farewell
enciOMn
32 Mlybel
52 Milt
10 Wah
34 Clrc..
bbenv•orra
.....
I I Colli hddlr
llruc:lure
18 Nome In
· 36 v--enc~
elevators
tune

by Lula Campos

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Do not
to1&lt;e flnonclal oelbacl&lt;e lying down. If you
bellow you've been the victim o1 a bum
deaf or wron1»fully accused, do what you
can to dear yourwtf of the problem or

-,

expre.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

a,a.mtce-o.ot

r

r

40 C..V111
1111111
42 Uvy'• yur
43 llovJe.lot

Who said this? 'I'm not a real movie star.
I've still 1J01 tile same wife 1started out
with 28 yeal8 ago.' .
Sady, we know what he means. But he
would make a good bridge partner- we
would always know what his bids and
signals meant. This deal was played by
real people; Hwas not deYiud. Asaess
tile bidding and play.
Against three no-lruTIII', West led tile
8PI!de five: Bix, lack. four. East iaiUrned
tile 8j)l!de two: nine, three, ace. South
ran dummy's five diamond bides. discarding a hesrl and two c;tubo from her
hand. East pHcMd two heltls, and West
U1row lho heart nine and c;tw two Now
cloclere( cashed dummy's Club king,
11ten played a dub to her )acl&lt;. This loll
to West's queen, anc1 tile defonae tool&lt;
tile reel fer down two what ll1lnk8Bt
lhou?
FfTII, tile bidding. North miglt open two
ncHTUTIII'. Thai oxcelltfllllve&lt;an!IMIH 18 ·
worll1 on extra point, and tile hand has
loll al aces llncl klnga. But after North
optnld one diamond, South ohould
._ iilpot tded one heart -' gal In
lhoN llll)ore, Then North .would have
retid lwo no-trump, and South woold .

~ -

44

33 ,_
Coup d'- 7 -Landed
35 Olleuppller
paperty
:J1 Pixie
8 Okllhoma
38 Popt.4w
tribe.
watchtl
9 JUII touch

"Valuable contacts who are not necesaar·
lly In your particular hid of endeavor
coukl be eatabllahed.Yet !hey could have
·a powerful influence over your lncentlve
to molol the moot o1 who and who! you

"';" ~ll - 1 i ."i~-.\X_\ I

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Pw
All pus

...urd8y, June 2, 2007

TO I)ELIVE~ THE
PUNCH LINE!

('jami1.q_ . . ~.")!"'t"'i"ij"""3"':""'•
.

l!ul

The first day
for a real deal

-llilod

24 A lew-

4 ElepiiMI

Junction
gone 1111011
ltMif
boredom
28 'rlllmllttlt· 5 Skudl'l
25 With
45 Tilling I
lng clinger
cltflnoo
conviction
cruiM
31 Sl_..,
6 Give-- 26 Heppy hour 44i ~

W~!r!=

BIG NATE

Shade River
Ag Servic e

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System .

1•
3NT

""""'"¥•""' . ...,

28 Klel con-

~Astro-

Fer1ilizer ond
Showmaster Show
Feeds

77
Searay
22 fl . Cuddy
Cabin.
355 Mercruiser
oul
&amp; 85
Celebrity
Station drive. $1900 make offer.
Wagon.V6 70,000 miles, 740·446-2923 1
MIKE MARCUM
Good Shape, Asking $900.
HOOIIN!
, &amp; lhNtilli.IIN!, ( 0 .
PETS
(740)441-0646
CAMI'IlKS &amp;
Rubber
Aoolu1
g.
Room
A cld it1 0r 1 ~- DN:b ShrllCJIP'i
FOR SALE
MO'IOR HOMJ'll
S1drnq. Windows. Pole Oams G;11·,;yt:~
•--ioiiiiioiiiiiiiii..,J 87 Mercury Sable. New ·-liOIIiliiiioiillllil...
Insurance Work. Resrdentral &amp; Cor'Hl1('ru.rt
Adorable 7' week old AKC power steering pump and 2002 Springdale 5th wheel
740 245 0~37
Yor_kie Puppies. 1 female. 2 radiator High miles,runs Camper 26H. has 1 slide oul.
Lrrr&gt;ns!'d 8. Bo•1ded
JU Yc.u~
I
1 II'
d $900 good. $490
, 080. 446·2923 ·sleeps 6·8 asking $10,000' if'
Fr•:c E str•lltl lc~
ExDet rrnc r·
ma e on Y - poun
each. Shots &amp; vet checked 304· 89 Ford Aerostar, 5 speed, in1erested call 304·675·
895-3926
C 11 (7401446 4435
6338 after 7pm
- - - - - - - - ="::.c..::::.:..:.:.:·=:____
AKC Aeg. puppies, yellow 94·95 Pontiac Grand Ams,
labs
parenlsO.P.
1st $600 for both, (740)446· 92 Fleetwood Wilderness,
B us in ess -Buildi ng· lnve,, tory
shots,wormed,born April13, c0~166~-~-----, fully cOntained. All ·working .
condition. AC/ heat! sto\le/
FOR SALE
$300-M,350-F,Brin985-4138 "115
TRUCKS
fridge/ microwave. New
Meigs County Only Liquor Agency
~
FORS.I.LE
queen size matt. Sleeps 6.
Contact: Cliff Whitl ey
Asking $6500. 740-286·
1973 F250 $600 or 080 . 8729 or 740-418-0832
740-992- 0008- St o re
call 304-675·5906
740-416-8734- Cc l:
Pri'llate Camp Site with Boat
1998 Dodge Dakota. ·'"to. Dock on Kanawha Ai\ler
740-985-3879- Home
4WD. $2800 080. 740·256· between 8 Mile &amp; 10 Mile.
Serious qualified inqu1r1es onl y
1652.
'
304·675·5724
Molivated seller. extremelv mol 1vat ed
99 GMC Sonoma 4x4,
pregnan t wif e.
""I It\ ll I ...,
142000
miles, asking
$5200. 740·256-1498 or
740·339·0969
J810
HOME
Thursday, Saturday
Sunday. (740)446-7300

iOU,

We Deliver To You I

All dues must be paid.

June 1st &amp; 2nd
9 am· 3 pm
S. 4tl'\ Street

Call Gary Stanley @
740-742-2293
Please leave messa e

99 Plymouth Voyager. Ice
Stop &amp; Compare
~
. _ _ _;;:G;:;RA~IN;.
' - - ' cold air, new tires, runs
:-'
great, $2900 080. Must . . . . . . . . .. .
For Sale Hay Square Bales ;;s;:;ee....:7,;:40~44:,;1:;:·0~0:;::58;:..._.., •
call304-576·2626
411 MUWRCYCLESI
4 WHEtl.ERS
I R \\ ..., 1'01~ I \I1Cl'\

Eye catcher! 2002 5·10
extreme. 90000 miles.
Yellow, 4 cyl. 5 spd. $7500.
740-709-6190

WV State Farm Museum
Annual Bd meeting

2A59 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis

:::======~

p30 LlvmocK - ~
LL-·-------"·

u
u•
ran
enlng. Milton Wv Fie
arket, Sat&amp;Sun. 5 Sta Aeg. Angus Bulls for sale.
c:::rr:::an,::lt;,.:::606~-3~26~·~07:,:7.:,7....1 Hollybrook Farm. 740·245·
5984
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Registered
Purebred
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Quarter Horse black Mt;~re
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
3/yrs $850 304·895-3866
800-537-9.529.
June 4 at the Super 8 Motet,
8:30am·?. Many different
items including: coffee makors, bedspreads, shower
curtains, etc.

1/1 4/l rnol pd

WRONG

740.446.9200

References Availahle!

Hours
7:00AM. 8:00PM

SIGHi\ l CAN'T WAIT TO
OIANGE HIM !!

EVER'THIN'
'BOUT THAI
MANIS

............timbercreekeablnetrJ'.com

*Insured
*Experienced

$999. Limited amount avail·
able at thiS price. Also, 4', 5',
&amp; 6' tiller-\ 4' starting at
$750.
:Jim's
Farm
Equipment. 740-446·9777
New Taylor Way 15' Heavy
Duty Bat wing WI bual
Wheel, chain guard~. hyd

B~IN6

6AI&gt;PL.EP Wlitl l&gt;f'i--- ' ;

740-367·0536

Hardwood CJbln"ry And Flll'lialre

*Prompt and Quality
Wurk
*Reasonable Rates

111:::'
DOWN
19 SI8CUn oil ·
zo w..
:It Nlbblod
21 Dined on
1 Titled 1111n
22 SOlar dlak 2 Hl!llllln or 22 Mme. Gluck 41 Finllly
23 SMmlng
Bonll
of opera
(2wds.)
26 Laundry
3 PICI&lt;
23 Canadien 43 Men
llddltlve
.mmots
prov.
......

Opening lead: • 5

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor
740-367·0544

..

Stanley Tree. Trimming
&amp; Removal

Pw
Pw

1NT

Insured

I_,,

ws· N-

Saulb

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

740·992-6971

Mollohan Furniture. Great Kiefer Built· Valley·Bison· L._ _.:.;.::.:::::::==
FrH Eatim1tes
selection for a Great price. Horse
and
Livestock
Drive a little, save a lot! 202 TrellereLoadmax·
Clark Chapel Ad, Bidwell,
OH. (740)388.0113
Gooseneck, Dumps, .&amp;
-:::~~--....-..., Utility· Aluma Aluminum
t:.:=::::=:MER&lt;liANDN
'
.1\'J..aL"tJ..lA.Nt.:.Ul.JS
na era· B&amp;W Goosenec«.
Hitches· Trailer Parts.
Carmichael
Trailers.
740 44 2412
$For Old Auto Batteries 1- ( ) 699 $2.50ea, 100+ $3.00ea, large selection of Rotary
250+ $4.00ea. THE BAT· · Rutters 4' thru 15'. Jim's
TERY TERMINAL 1·800· 's Farm Equipment. 740·
79&amp;6797
c446.::..:·9:..:m.:.:__ _ _ __
- - - - - - -N H H b"
7'
b
4)118 ft above grnd pool w/ . .
ay 1ne
, stu
aII access .. wringer washer. guards, crnn
...,. dividers, slored
inside, never rained on _
db! alum. tubs on tegs·good
*472 $7,000 304v"75·2902
shape. 245·5181

c

Dealer: South
VUlnenble: Neitller

David Lewis

John Deer 310C 4x4 for safe
or trade. $16500. Call 740·
388-8228
Private country setting. Call
740·441 ·8257

:t:.=

1111111
51 1b1n 53 Encourage
11 ~
54 Hllr goop
12 l.yllc polllll 56 IIMidM
13 TMita- 56 Toehlboloe
111ft
. 5114 Bit Dlppor
iiNr
58 mill, e.g.
15 Aunllnont · 59 AIIM New
16 Soggy
Year

•AJ965

Financing on New Massey
Ferguson &amp; New Holland
Concrete Work ,
Tractors
as
low
as , . : - - - - - . , - - - - ,
O%.W.A.C. ~im's Farm Z6 Years Experience
Equipment, 740·445-9m ·

5 acre lots for sale in Gallia
Co. Morgan Twp. Morgan
lane. Septic permits for last
years specs. Possible land
contract, some restrictions.
Calf between 7pm and 9pm
or lea\le message 74Q-66g.
0143

"'*

vehlcte

• Top • Removal

lorw.., lnt· St·ntl l'

CKC Female Westies , 1st
shots, wormed. wt cllecked,
$400. 740·388·9453

r

Ht!'*.:

-lo--

loclle
44-FoTNI

I Y_.lllow

------~-

1..-:"":.::-::.·:::-::"":-:....J

FORSP~l!....

this newspaper are

Brand !leW log home With 60
acres MIL $180,000. Call
740 56-9247

chkd, shots, wormed. 740. 388·9325

apartment,for
the (M $400 F $450
town. No Pets, Deposit elderty/d.isabjed call 675·
)
.( )
· Deposit of
Required, (740)992·5174 or 6679
Equal
Housing $100 wi~ hold the pup of

••-~OTI(;E**
Borrow Smart. Contact
the OhiO DIVISion Of
Financial
Institution's
Ottice of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you ref1·
nance your home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Calllhe
Office of Consumer
Affa1rs toll free at 1·866·
278·0003 to learn ~ the
mortgage broke"r or
lender
IS
properly
licensed. (This is a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments ing applications for waiting AKC Reg. Weimaraners:
tor Rent, Meigs County, In list for Hud-subslzed, 1· br, Solid silver, 008 04126/07,

ments. furnished and unfur·

available on an equal
opportunity bases.

Ba home located in Gallia
Co. on the banks of

REA Cro11word Punle

BRIOGE
Must Sell Beautiful older 4 Extra nice 2$x48 dou· Tara
Townhouse AKC Boston Terrier Pups. 7
bedroom Home on 1/2 acre bleWide. 3 bed, 2 .bath, gar- Apartments, Very Spacious, wk$ okt, both male. Parents
of land with add on · ~ In den tub, gas &amp; electric, Cia , 2 Bedrooms, CIA, t 112 on prem. wtth pedig1ee, vet

$800Jmake offer. 740·446·

10

The Daily ~entinel • Page 87

www.!nYdallyaentlnel.com

I

�.,

Page BB • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

. . -·

Friday, June I, 2007

ALONG THE RivER
We Are ... Bartrum Brown':

Ufe lessons' learned in football camp, C1

fm~-

"' If you have a question or a c:onwnent, write: NASCAR This Week, c;o The Gaston Gazette. P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia. NC 28053
NF X I I L

C tJP S£ f'ti£' S

• Race: Autism Speaks 400J
• Where: DOver {Del.) lntern,Btional Speedway, Dover. Del. (1.0
mites). 400 laps/ miles.
• Wilen: Sunday, June 3
• Laot y-'1 : Man
~ Kenseth
1
• QuaiiiYinC noconl: Jeremy May·
field, Dodge, 161.522 mph, June
4. 2004.
• Race record: Mark Martin, Ford,
132.719 mph, Sept. 21, 1997.
• Last week: For all the down-andout drivers who ever whispered to
themselves. "All 1 need is one
break ... one little break!" Casey
Mears' experience .was a ra; of
:"\ hope and and a symbol of deliver·
ance. The Coc..Cola 600 evolved

Mears bet all his marbles on fuel
efficiency, and the result was the
first Nertel Cup victory of his career. WhOever heard·of a stock-car
race decided by standards that
would've met with the approval of
the Green Party? Mears drove a
Chevrolet Monte Carlo. but it
might as well have been a Prius
hYbrid. Had Mears not won it by
confounding the gas guulers, Tony
Stewart would've won it with clean
air. Stewart, still winless, had to
settle for sixth place. Amorig
tnose wno crossed the line ahead
of him were Mears, who gave Hendrick Motorsports its ninth victory
·in 12 races; Stewart's own teammate, lightly&lt;egarded J.J. Veley;

into one of those rare races that
did not go to the swift but rather

and in perhaps the biggest surprise of the season, Kyle Petty in

the brazen. With nothing to lose.

third place.

• RKe: Dover 200
• Race: AAA Insurance
• WIHife: Dover (Del.)ln- 200
ternational Speedway
• Where: Dover (Del.)ln(1.0 miles), 200
ternattonal Speedway
laps/miles.
(1.0 miles), 200
• Wilen: Saturday, June
laps/ mile,_
2
• When: Friday, June 1.
• Laot , . ... wtnner
• Last year's wlniler:
Jeff Burton
Mark Martin
• QualifYing record:
• Qualifying reconl:
Oavid Green, Chevrolet,
David Starr, Chevrolet.
157.916 mph, June 6,
157.577'mph, June 2.
2004.
2005.
• llaca NICord: Dale
• Race record : Mark
Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,
Martin, Ford, 120.200
130.152 mph, May 30,
mph, June 2, 2006 .
1998.
• Last week: Dennts
• Laot week: Kasey
Setzer. in a Chevrolet,
Kanne. in a Dodge.'won
won at Mansfield (Ohio)
the Carquest Auto Parts · Motorsports Park.
300 at lowe's Motor
Speedway.

I
RICKY RUDD

J
NEXTEL CUP SERIES

No.

88

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs·counties
~ llrro \ ,rlln l'uhli,h trr;.,! " ·

SPORTS

the CIC here
in
Gallia
County, and
GALLIPOLIS - Lynne
we
are
Crow has been named the
extremely
new executive director of
fortunate to
the
Gallia
County
have Lynne
Community Improvement
enthusiastiCorporation.
Lynne Crow cally move
CIC President David
back to her
Wiseman, in making the home
area
from
announcement, s11id that the Washington D.C., to accept
CIC has "been looking for this important role in ecojust the right person to lead · nomic development.
· STAFF REPORT

Owens. See Page 81

t ftE!D.u !:.Jft:f}JE! ~YE.EE t

v
E

NEWSrarMYDAJLYTRIBUNE.COM

R
'·

~

• One consequence of 1he llictoii,;~lng up to 29tn In the

J'

Gordon

,

~ ,tAears solldifieC:l ~Is
· • ~lty fOr a guaranteed spot
In ~rti!Ji. fields.
·
·• The CocaCola 600 was nea~y
sold out, with the ·bv!&lt;d est~
mated at 160,000 or so. Given
,!Ill Increase i~ emply seats at
~ 1 other tracl&lt;s, results,of
lUSCAR's lOngest race were en-

couraging.
1&gt; T~ S!IM!Irt's season of frustretlon continues. He didn't win
because he didn't have enough
ps to finish. Tills time the tor·
toise def~ed the here.
1&gt; When hlis·a stock-carrace
been more applicable to the
frustrations of consumers? Gas
decided the outcome. For rae·
ers, though, pain at the pump Is
related to supply, not cost.

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
CONCORD, N.C. -Ricky Rudd's
grand comeback has, so far, failed to
live up to expectations, but a seventhplace finish in the Coca-Cola 600 did·
n't hurt.
Rudd came aliout as close as a person can come to retiring without actually using the word emphatically. With
one brief exception -:- he served as a
relief driver for the injured Tony
Stewart at Dover - he sat out the
2006 season.
This year Rudd returned. He didn't
know how much racing meant to him
until he walked away. At age SO, Rudd
returned this year to drive the No. 88
Snickers Ford for ·
Robert Yates, an
. owner with whom
he had worked before.
Sure, there have
IS In
been promising
moments. Rudd
·star'ted on the
front row at the
Daytona 500, for
instance, but liy
and large, he has
been unable to return his once·
prominent team to
its former level of
prestige. Robert
Yates Racing fell
on hard times. in
Rudd's absence,
and it's still playing catch-up.' ·
Before the Coca-Cola 600, Rudd said
he finally thought tangible progress
was being made.
"The other night in the all-star race
(Nextel Open), we had one car that
was really good and one that was OK,
and this was the better car," said
Rudd. "Juijtlike everybody else, we
brouglit our best car' for the 600, but
the team has been steadily working.
"They've been to the wind tunnel
and have been putting bodies on, and
working on the chassis, and this is the
first time that we've seen some really
positive results that aren't going to be
a flash in the pan. I feel like it's got a
lot of staying power. I really like the
way the car feels so it should run good

AS one contender after another
had to take an abrupt detour
down pit road, the focus of
NASCAR's longest race instantly
tu~ from haves to have-nots.

111-

• Mears , J.J. Veley and Reed
Sorenson all had career-best
finishes . Kyle Petty had his
:'test since September 1997.
Brian Vickers gave Toyota its
best finish.
1&gt; Next up? Dover, where rt's
back to the Car of Tomorrow at
il hiCI&gt;banked,lightnlng.fast

~rae«.

I

'

_.,..

..

~

~ C-J{)P, :hD.Jl9
,-j"-"}

.. ....... CuP '

...
' a.

'

Matt Kenseth .
i:ienrtt Hilmlln
1. Jeff Burton
I. '!'ony Siewert

.. Car1 ·Edwards
· 1. • Kurt.Bu~ • .
" . ~· clint @0\\Yer
&lt;'; .

I

.

......

NASCAR This Week's Motrte
Dutt.on gives his take: "Gordon,
whose worst finish all season had
been 12th, emerged from his battered car both uninjured and calm.
'Honestly, I'm fine,· he said. 'It
looked a Jot worse than it was.' Gordon's picture-perfect season took its
first wrong turn .~ :

•

1,921
·132
·207
·239

· 344
· 391

·506
·50?
. 519
. 543

"!'

j!'..,:.._j!J

-jJJ!...&amp; •

Looks like Junior Johnson
Is moonshining apln
, legal moonshine? Why, it's en·
dorsed by Junior Johnson, the stockcar racing legend, and is on sale now
in North Carolina.
Eventually, Junior
Johnson's Midnight
Moon will be aVail·
able in eight
states: North and
South Carolina.
Georgia, Wiscon·
sin, Illinois, Tennessee, Virginia
and West Virginia.
JOHNSON
It's a product of
Piedmont Distillers. "Back in the old
daYs. we learned to drive ca rs fast
because we'd go to jail if we didh't,•
said Johnson. "Now you can buy part
of a moonshine business, tell every·
bqdy where they can buy your prod·
uct. and it's all legal ."

jjRacing
. .
my
blood.
It has
been
.
smce
I was
a kid:'

JJOU11 :;J

1. Jeff Gordon
2. Jlmmte Johnson

Early rn the coca-cola 600,
Chevrolet driver Tony Ra ines skidded
hard left. knocking out the Nextel Cup
points leader, Jeff Gordon, and set·
ting off a chain reaction. In the mayhem that followed, Gordon's disabled
Chevy slid back acrqss the track,
where it took a vicious impact from
A.J. Allmendinger's Toyota. Gordon
lost 99 points - the edge declined
from 231 to 132 ,... of his season
advantage over Jimmie Johnson.

Rudd's comeback
hasn't been very .
successful so far

Ricky Rudd, a Chesapeake, Va., natlve, has' competed ln. 887 races In his career and
has won 23 of them.
·
the entire night, and then they'll just the year off, what it did was give me a
take this car and clone it. We need ·chance to really focus on what I really
more of them."
wanted to do," said Rudd. "Racin g is
Rudd's has been a distinguished ca- in my blood. It has been since I was a
reer. The Chesapeake, Va., native kid.
competed in the gg7th race of his ca"Until I'm dead and in the grave,
reer. He's won 23 of them. His debut I'm sure that desire will stil!'be there.
was in Rockingham, N.C., on March 2, ... I needed a little bit of regrouping
1975, and his most recent victory was time .... I feel like I'm more focused
in Sonoma, Calif., on June 23, 2002.
than ever by having the time off."
It's time to win again, for both Rudd
and his owner.
Contact Monte Dutton
"As far as coming back after taking
at hmduttonSO@aol.com

At the Subway 500 race from
Phoenix, Ariz., that was Tony Stewart's race, not a Jeff Gordon win. He
should have lost a lap ... like the
other ones who went in on the green
flag for a pit stop. What was he?
Better than th"e others? ...
·
Betsy Sweet
Coopersvi lle, Ind.
Gordon was .very fortunate in that
race, but he did ·not quite lose a lap. ·
We were there and saw what happened by watching the whole track,
not just the 1V screen. Here's how it
happened. Since Gordon did not lose
a full lap, he was behind all the drivers who had not pitted but still on the
lead lap. Once the yellow flag came
out and the other drivers did, in fact,
pit, Gordon assumed the lead oy staying out. That's what really happened.

Honest.

Toyota rests flagging hopes on improved engine
By Monte Dutton

NASCAR This Week

~ •• Wlie'e Mt- Jeff Gordon fi.
. · njlily r.aueht a bad b(eak .and ·
'

Wound up 41st In the Coke

t

-eoo.... Greg Biffle was the
first driver out and Is now

·

19th in the point standings.

., A
~. ·'

CONCORD, N.C. -Toyota is
resting its flagging hopes on
the introduction of an improved engine.
NASCAR officials have approved no engine change. But
Toyota Racing Development
has recently retooled an engine
by working within the established specifications.
No one had more hope .than
Michael Waltrip, . who had
failed to qualify for 10 consecutive races. Waltrip figures he
would have qualified for five
more races, six overall, had the

I --- ..

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BY

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•

latest configuration been under
the hood of his Camrys. .
"Making six out of II races
wouldn't have been great," said
Waltrip, "but it certainly would
have helped us and escalated
our learning curve to allow us
to gather more information."
Perhaps, once again, Waltrip
didn't figure right. He crashed
during qualifying for the CocaCola 600 and failed to make the
field for the nth straight week.
But Brian Vickers did give
Toyota the. best finish· of the
seasoJ! by finishing fifth in
NASCAR's longest race.

J

•

still make things happen and
have a good run. It ·reminds me
Happy about It - In five of the way the cars drove six or
races in NASCAR's next·gener- . seven years ago."
ation car, Jeff Green's average
finish is 18.8. In the other six
I
races enteri~ this one, using
the conventipnal design, the
Into and out of TV - Chad
average was 27.5.
McCumbee, a 22-year-old
Needless to say, Green is Craftsman Truck Series driver,
happy about the decision to im- will replace Kyle Petty in the
plement the new design for No, 45 Dodge on June 10 at
every race in 2008.
Pocono when Petty begins a
"As far as the racing, to me sabbatical to serve as ·a TNT
the COT. (Car of Tomorrow) analyst on lliextel Cup telecasts.
puts things back into the driFunny that McCumbee has
ver's hands more," said Green. some TV experience, ·too .. He
"With the COT, even if the set- has never finished higher than
up's not perfect, a driver can seventh· in a Truck Series race,

but he portrayed D.ale Earn·
hardt Jr. in the ESPN television
movie "3" in 2004.

Administration, working for Commissioners Association
the chairman with members and
the
National
of Congress from both par- Emerge ncy Management
ties. Her contacts built Association, to name a few.
broad coalitions and partPrevious to her work with
nerships to best serve the the House Committee, for
needs of the committee.
8-1/2 years, from 1994 to
She was a spokesperson 2002, she was regional
and keynote speaker for director for U.S. Sen. Mike
many groups, including DeWine, and from 1991 to
chambers of commerce, 1994, she served as field
Rotary, community leadership busi ness meetings, representati ve/admi nistraOhto
County
Piease see Crow, A7 .

Meigs starts
work on911
database
BY BRIAN

OBITUARIES
Page A7
• Mildred Arnold
• Carol Ayers
· .. • Roger Wesley Barrett
•• Ethel Louise Myers
• Lawrence E. Wears
• Henry Byron Whealdon

INSIDE
• Toddler's death ruled
. homicide. See Page A7
· • Meigs Local ·
moves toward
energy efficiency.
; See Page AS .

WEATIIER

REED

our minds to , we will do it,"
co-valedictorian Jonathan
Crews said during Friday's
graduation ceremonies on
the Raiders' athletic field.
Prior to the .116 seniors.
receiving their diplomas,
members of the class' top 10
percent thanked them for
their support, as well as backing from farnily, friends and
churches for their success.

POMEROY - Telephone
records are now being organized and a database developed as the committee
responsible for implementing Meigs County's 911
emergency service continues its work.
There is no projected date
for launching the new sys. tern, but it must be implemented in the next year.
Verizon has provided the
county's 911 committee
with lhe "white sheets" containing names, addresses
and telephone numbers for
all residences in the county.
Local fire departments are
reviewing . those reco~ds to
determine the boundaries of
emergency response zones,
while others are preparing
to review. line by line, the
data of thousands · of
addresses to be served by
the 911 system .
That data will be used to
develop a database for use
by 911 dispatchers once the
system is operational.
Staff from the · county
highway
department's
house numbering office will
tackle the task of creating
the database, using information· provided by Verizon.
The process will also
include determining boundaries for the law enforcement, fire and emergency

Please see RVHS, Al

Please see 911., A7

MICHELLE MILLER

GALLIPOLIS
Renewable energy, education,
illegal immigration and gas
prices were among the issues
discussed at the II th annual
Gallia County Chamber of
Commerce "Meet Your
Legislators" event Friday
morning at the Ariel-Dater
Pefonning Arts Center.
The panel of local and
state officials answered
questions from the audience
regarding issu~s that affect
Gallia County.
!
Over the past month, gas
prices have soared causing
legislators lo take a closer
look at the business practices of mitional and international providers.
According to a statement
by U.S. Rep. Charlie Wilson,
who was unable to attend the
event, steps are being taken
in the form of two bills the Federal Price Gouging
Prevention Act and the No
Oil Producing and Ellporting
Cartels Act.
"These bills would punish
price gougers and go alier foreign countries that fix prices
and limit supply,," · wrote
Wilson. "I will continue to do
my part to try to bring gas .
prices under control." .

Please see En•'IY· A7

J,

BREED@MYOAILYSENTINEl.COM

MMILLERrarMYDAILYTRIBUNE:COM

Shouldn't Gordon haVe
lo._ a lap In Phoenix?
John Clark/ NASCAR.This Week

"She brings with her both
el\perience and expertise,
along with an understanding
of strategic planning and
fund-raising knowledge, so
vital to
successfully
achieve
our
goals,"
Wiseman added:
Her career in the ·governmental and political arena
covers ~5 years. For the past·
four . years, she was chief
advisor to the chairman for
the Committee on House

Energy
concerns
-top forum
discussion

Ral-

Jaff Gordon VI.
Tony Raines .

7

t

s
u
s

K1.:;o • \ ol. ..p. :\o. I 'I

Gallia CIC names Crow neW executive director

• Day one at Jesse

SNICKERS FORD

l'tolllt' l'o \ • \lirlrllt ptorl • I .allrpoli' • .ltllH' J. :wo-

Kevin Kelly/photo

'FromJeft, ,Ri~er

Valley High _School £9:.valedistotians La4ra Kline,, Elaint;J Householder _and
Lauren Farley reviewed their notes before addressing the class of 2007 at graduation ceremonies Friday. RVHS awarded diplomas to 116 seniors.

IllS

to·pursue their
the Ohio Graduate Test,
which it passed "with flying
colors,"
Principal
J.
CHESHIRE - Against a Michael Jacobs noted.
setting sun, River . Valley
And it also dealt with
High School's class of 2007 adversity in the passing of
closed out its high school veteran teacher Ardith
career armed with knowl- Maynard earlier this year,
edge and a confidence and of State Highway Patrol
forged by its members' own Sgt. Dale R. Holcomb, a parexperiences in and out of en( and supporter of RVHS,
the classroom.
as the school year began.
The class was the first in
Through it all, "I have no
the school's history to take doubt that whatever we put .·
. BY KEVIN KEu.Y

KKELLYrarMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Celebration oflife

told

Gold Wings and Ribs Festival underway
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MY OAILYSENTINEl.COM

Details on Page AS

INDEX
4 SEcriONS- 28 PAGES

Around Town
A3
Celebrations
C4
Classifieds
D3-5
insert
Comics
Editorials
A6
Movies ·
cs
Obituaries
A7
Regional
A2.
B SeCtion
Sports
Weather
AS
;

® aoo7 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.

Michelle Miller/photo

Relay for Life kicked off Friday evening when cancer survivors gathered on First Avenue under the white and purple
arch for the cancer survivor Jap. The event continued through
Saturday morning with a Luminary Ceremony, "Messages to
Heaven" balloon release, Ride for Life and musical appearances by Jenny Dyer. Paul 'Bub" Williams and Erin James.

POMEROY - Among
the hundreds of motorcyclists from across the nation
in Pomeroy for the Gold
Wings and Ribs Festival
was Bill Keeton and his
wife Mary of Sandwich, Ill.
"We've been here every
year since it started," said
Keeton as he posed by his
Gold Wing Trik in the parking lot for a picture.
Attached to the bike was a
trailer of things needed for
the next week or so because
he and his wife will be stay·
ing over to visit the AI
.Graham family in Syracuse.
"We really like it here and
we always have a good

Please -

Festlv.l, A1

ChaMne Hoeftlchjplloto

Bill Keeton of Sandwich, Ill. poses by his Gold Wing trik. He
has come every year since the Gold Wings and Ribs
Festival started.

I

Yet another familiar face :_
The ESPN2 television boo.th.
had two Jarretts in it on the·
night of May 26.
Ned Jarrett, mostly retired.
nowadays, joined his son Dalefor the telecast of the Carquest·
300-. The Jarretts, both former
Cup champions, shared commentary with Jerry Punch and ·
Andy Petree. Ned Jarrett, 74,
was an analyst on ESPN from
1986 through 2000.

'·

..

.

.•

. . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .illrlliilli¥lli0rliliiiajjWtilili;;~lo.li~.:O:..:::!::a...:::i;.:;i: .::1!~ . ·:__:.! _! .

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