<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4429" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/4429?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T01:03:38+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14356">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/e48a8847ffcc779a7657cd217f7ec4a5.pdf</src>
      <authentication>40e6782fb2a8153c30e622ba8ccca2a6</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="15389">
                  <text>Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

BOYS

Ferguson. MI. Vernon 166'11•; 7, Evan tOepec, Youngs.
BOardman 164' 10-; 6, Adam Aliabllaa. Amhers1 S1eele
162'03".
High J~- 1, Mike Foley, Clay1on Nonhmonl 6'09.00'; 2.
Erik Kynard, Tot Rogers 6'09.00'; 3, Josh Wilks. Geneva
6'08.ocr: 4, David· Serrano. Pickertngton Cent. 6'08.00": 5.
Ben Pardue, Willoughby S. 6'07.00'; 6, Cody Westbrook.
Marietta 6'06.00'; 7. Jordan McPherson, Huber H1s. Wayne
6'06.00" : 8, Andrew Moss, Copley 6'05.0Y:
·
110 Moler Huod"'- 1. Tyshaun Peoples, Cle. Glenville
14.30; 2 , Otis Merrill, Cle. Glenville 14.37; 3, Rob Jones,
Cuyahoga Falls 14.53; 4·. Michael Willey, Miamisburg 14.53:
5, Chedrick Cherry. Cin. Moeller 14.66; 6, DaJon Boolh , Tot
St. John's 15.07: 7, Austin Curbow. Gahanna Lincoln 15.17.
1_00 Ueter Dash- 1, Stuart Smith, WesterviiSe Cent 10.75:
2, Srott Jotn50fl. Middletown 10.78; 3. Gartin lskts, Massilton
Jackson 10.79: 4, Aerk Clay, Tol . Bowsher 10.93; s, Ryan
Jones. Day. Cols. Wh~e 11 .04 ; 6. Jordan Mcl'llerson, H.H1s. Wayne 11.07; 7, Blake Callahan, Cols. Whetstone 11 .08;
B•.JaiU Carter. Tal. Sl. John's 11 .11 .
4x200 Meter Relay - 1, Cle. Glenville (Ernest Downing,
Xavier Clements , Cardale Scott, Ky1e Jeff~rson) 1:25.59; 2,
Trotwcod-Madisoo 1:26.83; 3, MiddleiOWn 1:26.86; 4, Cle.
His. 1:26.99; 5. Cin. Princelon 1:28.20; 6, Beavercreel&lt;
1:28.59; 7, Cols . Independence 1:29.22; B. Warsaw River
V- 1:29.80.
1600 Meter Run - 1, Jake Edwards , Delaware Hayes
4:09.B9; 2, Christopher Lemon. Tal. Sl. John's 4:13.B7; 3 .
Matt Stra1man, Cha- 4:14.44; 4, Mike Perry. Cin. Wmton
Wood6 4:15.12; 5, Joseph Miller, Tol. StJohn's 4:17. 15; 6,
Nathan Tavenor, Hilliard Davidson 4:17.49; 7, Austin Hendrix.
Sylvania Nor1hview 4: 17.50; 8, Josh Toonasi. Massilloo Perry
4:17.76.
4x100 Meter Relay- 1, Cle. Glenville (Tyshaun Peoples,
Branden Goodall, Otis Merrill, Xavier Clements) 41.88 ; 2,
Huber Hti. Wayne 4222; 3. Middletown 42.31 ; 4, Qe. Hts.
42.37; 5 , Cia. St. Ignatius 42.47; 6, Gahama Lilcotn 42.67;
7, Cle. JFK 42.82; B. Can. GlenOak 43.37.
400 Meter Dash- 1. Kyle Jeffeoson. Cle. Glenville 46.93; 2.
Kendall Gregory, Strongs~!lle 47 .01 ; 3, Ryan Barber,
WestEHVille S. 47.69: 4, Matthew Love, Cle . Hts. 47.72 : 5,
Thomas Murdaugh, Dublin Scioto 48.36: 6, Wes Hendrlctcs,
Beavercreek 48.56; 7, Dane Sanzenbacher, Tot Cent. Cath.
48.96; 8 , Larry Carter, MKkletown 50.99.
300 Metei Hurtles- 1, Michael Willey, Miamisburg 37.51; 2,
Ernest Downing, Cle . Glenville 38.29; 3, Man Jones.
Ashtabula Lakeside 38.-49: 4, Austin Curbow, Gah3nna
lincoln 38.75; 5, CheOOctl; Cherry, ·Cin . Moeller 36.93: 6.
Derek Halladay, Strongsville 39.54 : 7. Samuel Hogue 111. Tot .
Cent. C8th. 48.19.
•
800 Meter AlMl - 1, Jared HaY. Cle. Hts. 1:53.10; 2, Gianni
CatalanO, Amherst Steele 1:53.86: 3, Danny Neff. Vandalia
Butler 1:53.99; 4, Dontave CowseHe, Cle. HIS. 1:54.35; s,
Hea1h Gibson. W. Chester Lakota w. 1:54.46; 6, Daniel
Whle, Brunswick 1:54 .54; 7, Rick Lape , Youngs. Boardman
1:54.91 : a. Destin Heasley, Massman Washington 1:55 _07 _
200 Meter Dash - 1, Stuart Smith, Westerville Cent. 2 1.39;
2. COI1in Isles. Massillon Jad&lt;son 21 .50; 3, Kyle Jefferson.
Cle. Glenville 21 .72; 4, Blake Heriot, Gahama Uncoln 2 1.75;
5 De · p
Ci LaSalle2179 6 81 ko~-'ah
Col
· : · a '-'- an,
s.
• vlflr osey, n.
=st~~~~~~~- H il~ , Cin. Princeton 21 .94; 8.
• ~'
· ·
3200 Met..- Run- 1• Emil Heineking, Chardon S;05.50; 2 •
Bo Waggoner. Maumee 9:11 .38; 3, Luke Gmu, Chanlon .
9:1 4.11 ; 4, Chrislopher Lemon, Tol. St. John's 9: 15.82; 5,
Jake Nueska.bel, Cin. LaSalle 9:16.84; e. Mike Perry, Cin.
Winton Woods 922.69; 7, Taylor Williams, Cin. Sycan10fe

22

9:23.82; 8, Matthew lemon, Tol . St. John's 9:2-4.88.
4x400 Meter Relay - 1. Trutwood-Maclison (Derrlcus PuoOy,
William Henry, Donie Lyons. Michael Shaw)J;l 4 .62 , 2 • Cle.
.
Hts. 3 :15.09; 3, Cin. Wintoo.WOO&lt;Ss 3:15.42:4. Beavercreek
318n-r 5 Cl Glen ''-318"' 6 Tr" Ce t C ~ 32033
VI- :
-~; • ~- n · •••· : · ;
: ·"' ' • e.
7, Cols. lndef)ender&lt;:o 321.32; 8 . Middletown 3;27.6'7.
Team scores- 1, Cle. Glenville 66; 2. Cle . Hts. 48; 3, Huber
Hts. Wayne 27; 4, Vahdalia Butler 24; 5, Gahanna lincoln,
Middletown 23; 7, Chardon, Tot St. John's 22; 9, Wes18MIIe
Cent. 20: 10, Trotwood-Madison 18; 11 , Miamisburg 15; 12,
Massilon Jackson, Cin. Winton Woods 14; 14, Medina 13;
15. Strongsville 12; 16, Massillon Peny, Beavercreek 11; 18,
Logan, Clayton Northmont, Cin. LaSalle, Delaware Hayes,
Powell Olenlangy Uberty Ha ·son tO 24 Amh 1 St le 9
m
: ·
ers
ee
:
·
25, Tol. Rogers, Akr. Firestone, Westerville 5 ., Maumee, Cin .
Moelier 8 ; 30. Hilliard Davktson. ToL..Cent. Cath ., W. Chester
Lakota W. 7; 33, Ashtabula lakeside, Kings Mills Kings,
centerville. Grafton Midview, N. Olmsted, G~neva, Cuyahoga
Falls , Cin. Princeton 6; 41 , Tol. Whitmer 5 _5 ; 42 , Marysville,
Worth"
K
mgton ilboome, N. Can. Hoover, Pickerington Cent,
Tol. Bowsh%r, Cots. Whetstone 5; 48• Hilliard Dalby 4 ·5; 49,
Cin. Glen Este, Willoughby S., Youngs. Boaodrnan, Cle. St.
Ignatius, Dublin SciOto, Day. Cot White, Cots. Independence
4; 66, Marion Haoding. Mt. vernon,
BaiiMa
Amelia, Marietta, Middleburg Hts. ~ark 3 : 62 , Chestertand
w. Geauga. Cle. JFK, Sytvania Northview, Cin. Sycamore 2 ;
66, Can. GlenOak, Warsaw River View, lyndhurst Brus~.
.Massilon Washington, Uma Sr., Copley 1.

Btun.-.

GIRLS.

Long Jump - 1, Audra Frimpong, Canfield 19'06.50"; 2,
Mikeat Roberts, -Cin. Princeton 19'04.50"; 3, Kristi Sturges.
Parma Normandy 18'04.00"; 4, Shanee' Jackson, Hilliard

Darby W'03.75~; 5, KelCey McKinney, Day. ChaminadeJulletine 18'03.75"; 6, Julie Snyder, Celina 18'02.75"; 7,

Armer Kasmer, Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesun 16'02.25'; 6,
Shanay Porus. Spring. S. 1B'OU JO' .
Shot Put - 1, Johnna Zaccari. Cuyol'oga Falls Walsh Jesuit
43'00.00'; 2. Melissa Dodaro, Reynoldsburg 42'08.50'; 3,
Calllerino Eo~ . Mason 42'04.00'; 4, Tyollouno Toney, Can.
McKinley 41 '06.75•; 5, Jessica Cobb, Cin. Coktrain 40'11 .00'";
6 , Shamoo Morrison, Cols. Walr&gt;.rt Ridge J40' 11 .00"; 7,
Maxine Oha!OOl , Cols. DeSales 40'07.W ; 6, Bri11any Wilsoo.
Cin. ColerU140'00.50".
Pole Vautt - 1. Kolsie Ahbe. Green 12'0UXJ%"; 2, Hannah
Tabler, Wapakoneta 11'04 .00"; 3. Meggie Hanzlik,
Pickerington N. 11'00.00"; 3. Mallory Uolls, Brunswick
11'0(1.00'; 5. Beth Biara&gt;, Wadswof1h 11 '00.00'; 6, Katie
Nageone. Ofmsted FaHs 11 '00.01; 6, Courtney SiebenaJier,
Tot Whi1mer 11'00.00' ; B. Beth t.loot!J't""fY, Troy 11 '00.00'.
100 Meter Hurdkts - 1, Kayton Eppinger, Warrensville Hts.
14.25; 2. Brittany Cheese. Hilliard Davidson 14.44; 3.
Whitney Miler. Cle. Col101wood 14.59; 4. Paris Campbell,
Euclid 14.91 ; 5, AleJOs Warren. SOlon 15.04; 6, Sharise
Calhoun, Tot Cent. Cath. 15.34; 7, Hauna Dawkins. Cols.
Franklin Hts. 17.33: 8, Gassandra Uoyd. Spring. South 17.40.
100MeterDasti-1 , MeshawnGr~Jham , Tof. Bowsher12 .08:
2. Aareon Payne, Cle. H1s. Beaumont 12.10: 3 , Chris1y Hom.
Cle. CoiN.- 12.34; 4. Christine Pendelton. Cle. E. TBch
12.35; 5, Eriko Schmid!, White. Anthony Wayne 12.36; 6 ,
Christie Pendelton . Cle. E. Tech 12.38: 7. Mikeal Roberts,
Cin. Princeton 12.39; 8, Hauna Dawkins, Cols. Franklin Hts.
12.56.
·
4x200 Meier Relay - t . Cia. Collinwood (Shannon WUiis,
Enn Busl&gt;ee. Whitney Miller. Christy Hom) 1;38.70; 2. Cin.
Withrow 1:38.90; 3, Shaker H1s. 1:39.22; 4, Reynoldsburg
1:39.68: 5. Cin. Walnut HiBs 1:40.97: 6. WarrensviHe Hts.
1:41 .43; 7, Wh~ehouse Anthony Wayne 1:41 .53; 8 , Kings
Mills KilOS 1;41 .55.
1600 Meter Run - 1, EfTiily lnfeld, Cle. Hts. Beaumont
4:41 .37: 2. Claire 0Ur10n. Worthington Kilbourne 4:52.88; 3.
Emily Pritt, Massilloo Jackson 4:56.00; 4, Liz Coorey. Cin . St.
Ursula 5 ;00.43; 5, Ashley Foseher. Fremont Ross 5:00.63; 6.
Madeline Chambers, Rocky River Magnilical 5:01 .43; 7,
Enka Alpeter. Hilliard Darby 5:01.64; B. Erin Ragouzos, Cin.
Colerain 5:02.86.
4x100 Meter Relay - 1. Cin. Wittlrow (Genesis Calhoun.
Brittany Smith, Porscha ':Johnson. Jade Clingman) 47.37; 2,
Cte. Collinwood 47.45; 3. Wadswor111 47.88; 4. Cle. E. Tech
47.93; 5, Reynoklsburg 48.08; e. Massillon Perry -46.47; 7,
Cil . Wilton Woods48.56: 8, Cle. Hts. Beaumont 48 .88.
400 Meter Dash - 1, Jessica Beard, Euclid 51 .63; 2,
Meshawn Graham. Tol. Bowsher 52.51 ; 3, Shaniqua
McG~nis , Shaker Hts. 53.61 : 4, Dayeesha Hollins, Cin.
Wmton WOOdS 53.90: 5, Amber StOkes. Gahanna Unooln
54.73; 6 , Jazmunn Ritchie, Sandusky 55.06; 7, Angelique
lykes, Warrensville Hts. 55.83; B. Arl:ka Rhodes. Thomas
Worthington 56.76.
300 Meter Hurdles- 1. Hauna Oavdl:ins. COts. Franklin Hts.
-42.44; 2, Keylon Eppinger, Warrensville Hts. 43.17; 3,
Whitney Miller. Cle. Collinwood 43.27 ; 4, Jerae Byrd, ,
Trotwood-Madison 44.20; 5, Abbie Dalton , Kettering Fairmont
44.37; 6. Ashley Kaltwasser. Akr. Coventry 44.41 : 7. Jackie
NeCamp, Loveland 45.52 ; 8, Cooo1ney Weiss, Perrysburg
45 .92.
800 Meter Run - 1, Emily Solnlloeld. 1e. Hts. Becaumont
2:08.63; 2, CSit:lin Hartnen.
n 2 :09 .73; 3. hanelle
Tal. Rogers 2:11 .33; 4, Katie Lenahan, Cin . Mercy
2:12.16; 5, Christine Barren. Thomas Worthington 2:12.54; 6.
Emily Mazzaferri. Csn. GlenOak 2:14.28; 7, Jenny Harsh,
Wadsworth 2:14.61 ; 8 , Kelty Johnston, Cin . St. Ursula
2 :14 .n .
200 Meter Dash - 1, Aareon Payne, Cle. Hts. Beaumont
23.65; 2, Eriko Schm&lt;ft, Whitehouse Anlhony Wayne 23.94;
3, Monicjue Dowell, Lyndhurst Brush 24.71 ; 4, Mahagorry
Jones, Cle. Rhodes 24 .86; 5, Meshawn Graham, Tol.
Ch · ti p ndett
Cle E Tr-'- 25 08 7
~~r 24 ·97; 6 • ns ne •
on.
· · ~· · ; •
Mikeal Robefls, Cin. Princeton 25.75.
3200 Ma1er Run- 1. Claire Durkin 1 Worthington Kilbourne

c

c.-r.

o---a.-

10:33.1B; .2, Brooldyne Ridder, Cin. Oak HUis 10;42.71; 3,
Amanda Burger, W. Chester lakota W. 10:56.87; 4, AJanah
SonIa c· 5ycamo
105608 5 Ella Bi · h
n g, tn.
re
: · ; •
n
rmJng am,
Thomas Worthington 11 :02.81; 6, Chns1y Trtus. Bowling
Groen 11 ;03.07; 7, Kaitlyn Peale, Upper A~ington 11 :06.71 ;
8, Christina Schneider, Cin. McAutey 11 :08.74.
4x400 Meter Relay- 1, Shaker Hts. (Kiara Fritz, Gabrielle
Hughley, Patrice Page, Shaniqua McGi~nis) 3:411.35; 2. Cin.
Walnut Hills 3:51 .73; 3, Can. GlenOak 3:53 .09; 4,
Warrensville Hts. 3:55.05; 5, Whitehouse Anthony Wayne
3:56.07; 6, Wadsworth 3:56.10; 7, Thomas Worthington
.
.
.
3:56.53; B. Tol. Cont. Cath. 3:56.9jj
Team scores -1, Cle . H1s. Beaumont 44; 2. Cle. COllinwood
36; 3, Warrensville Hts. 28; 4, Reynoldsburg 25; 5, Eudid 23;
6• Tot Bowsher. Shaker Hts. Z2; B. Whitehouse A.nthony
Wayne 19; 9, Worthington Kilbourne, Cin. Withrow. 18; 11,
Cuyahoga Falls Wal,sh Jesuit, Thomas Worthington 17; 13,
Cle. E. Tech 16; 14, Wadsworth 15; 15, Cols. Franklin Hts.,
Wilmington 13; 17, ~. Can. GlenOak, Cin. Walnut Hills,
Cin . Princeton 12; 21 , Canfield, Twinsburg, Cin . St. Ursula,
Cl Gl
'II G
O 26 C
McK' 1e C
e.
env• e. reen 1 ;
' an.
., y, in. Winton
Woods 9 ; 28, Cols. OaSa.,., Mason. Powell Olentangy
Uberty, Hilliard Davidson , Wapakoneta, Cln. Oak Hills 8; 34,"
Hi~ard Darby, Gin. Colerain 7; 36, Tot. Rogers , W. Chester
Lakota W., N. Royalton, Gahanna lincoln, Parma Normandy,
Lyndhurst Brush, Massillon JackSon 6: 43. Pickerington N.,
Brunswick 5.5; 45, Cin. Mercy, Cle. Rhodes, Cin. Sycamore,
Chardon. Trotwood-Madison 5; 50, Day. Chaminade ·
Julienne, Beavercreek, Kettering Fainnont, Fremont Ross,
Tot. Cent. Cath . 4; 55 , Bowling GiHn. Cols. Walnut Ridge,
Massillon Perry, Akr. Cov"ntry, Richfield Revere, Sandusky,
Rocky River Magnificat, Celina 3; 63, Olmsted Falls, Tol.
Wllitmer 2.5; 65, Spring. S., loveland, Uppef Artlngton 2; 68.
Troy, Hudson. Cin. McAuley, Kings Mills Kings,_Perrysburg 1.

Cavs

seemed to toy with the
Pistons. They sent one, two
and three defenders to try
fromPageBl
and stop him, and James
made them pay by feeding
rookie
Daniel Gibson, who
say that," he said. "I'm still
made
5-of-5
3-pointers and ·
the Slll)1e player. If I get douscored a season-high 31
ble-teamed and the game is
points - 22 of them in a 27close, I'm going· to pass it 10 spurt.
again. If we mal&gt;e the shot,
"I told Daniel before the
I'm on top of the world. If game, 'Detroit is going to
not, then I'm under a lot 'of double-team me, triple-team
trees and leaves. It's fine me before I cross halfcourt,
with me. I' ll take the criti- so get that gun and . get it
cism that comes with it.
locked and loaded and just
"I'm the leader of this shoot it," said James, who
team."
had 20 points, 14 rebounds .
Unlike in Game 5 when he and eight assists. "Don't sectook over 'lfld carved up the ondcguess yourself. Just
by
scoring shoot it.' And when· they
Pistons
Cleveland's final 25 points, closed out on him, he drove
James was patient in the the ball to the rim and made
series clincher. He attempted free throws."
just two shots in the first half,
Gibson finished 12-of-15
but had five assists, seven from the line, and his emerrebounds . and made 9-of-ll gence as a dependable scorer
will give the heavily favored
free throws.
After halftime, James Spurs rnore to consider as

Owen

.!

and district championships
in cross country as a senior,
and was also a district
champion in the 3200m run
from PageBl
as a junior.
From a distance runner's
college to see what I can
perspective, those are
accomplish."
mcredible feats for anyone
Owen leaves Eastern as
to accomplish at any one
the record-holder in both time - more-or-less over a
the mile and two-mile in
,
career.
track , as wtll as in cross
Fourth-year EHS track
·copntry, not to mention · coach Josh Fogle, who also ,
being a three-time All- manages the Eagles' cross
TVC Hocking golfer. He country program, says
was also a thfee-time state watching Mic.hael's proqualifier in prep athletics gression over the past three
and was All-Ohio after years was probably the
placing 14th in cross coun- biggest joy he received as
try thi s past fall .
his mentor.
·
Owen leaves behind an
"He's made a lot of sacriincredible track legacy fices and·put in a lot of hard
that includes being the work to get where he is, and
top-point scorer from t~e it's been a privilege to
Hocking Divi sion .the last coach him," Fogl~ said. "l
two springs, winning six think it will be a while ·
individual TVC titles -as before we see another
well as . the recently Michael Owen at Eastern
beco111ing the 1600m run High School: He gave it all
record-owner from the Tri- he had."
Valley Conference.
.
Owen somewhat realizes
Owen also won t~e TVC what all he has done as a

DUBLIN (AP) - K.J. day:·
soften the course and lead
Rod Pampling, who had a to a wild chase to the finish:
Choi figured the best way to
learn to play golf was to three-shot lead to start the· Even so, Pampling had
study · books by Jack final round, gave himself a chance to set the pace. He
Nicklaus and spend hours chance with a 30-foot eagle led by three shots and had
watching video of golf's putt on the 15th hole to get said if he kept making
greatest champion. It ~a s within one shot of Choi. birdies. everyone would
only fitting Choi celebrate But. on the 17th, Pampling have to work hard 19 catch
the biggest victory of his went long and into the him.
He didn't make his first
career at the Memorial on gallery. stubbed a chip and
Sunday with a I• •ndshake was lucky to ,escape with birdie until the par-5 sevfrom Nicklaus that. was as bogey. He closed with a 72 enth.
meaningful as the trophy.
and tied for third w.ith
The tournament was wide
Choi ran off four straight Kenny Perry. who shot 63 open by then, with Perry
birdies on the front nine to despite finishing with three firing the opening salvo.
iake the lead, then finished straight pars.
There was a murmur in the
with three clutch par saves
Adam Scott also left gallery behind the third
from the bunkers and Muirfield Village with a bit- green when the scoreboard
gallery to close with a 7- ter taste.
showed Perry at 5 under for
under 65, giving him a oneDespite a bogey on the the round through six holes,
s ho~ victory over Ryan par-5 lith that stalled his the key to that start holing
Moore. .
momentum, he birdied the out from the sixth fairway
pounded 15th and 16th to get within for eagle. Then came a 10Rain · that
Muirfield Village · in the one shot, but three-putted foot birdie at the seventh
morning set up a shootout from the fringe on the 17th, and a 30 on the front nine.
among a half-dozen play- badly missing a 6-footer for
Scott recovered from a
ers, all of them with a good par.
three-putt bogey from 20
chance to win until they . That meant Scoll and feet on the opening hole
either ran out of time, ran Pampling had to hole out with four birdies over the
out of birdies or took them - from the 18th fairway. to next six holes to pull within
selves out of the tournament force a playoff, and ne1ther one shot. O'Hair made
with untimely blunders.
had a chance. Choi watched eagle on the . seve nth hole
Choi could have been on with Nicklaus from behind for the second· straight day
that list.
the green and hardly looked to stay in the mix.
Choi didn't have the most
After a two-putt birdie on worried.
the !'5th to reach 17 under,
It was the fifth victory of sensational
stretch
of
he saved par from the hi s career, and he earned birdies. but perhaps the
bunker on the 16th with a 7· $1.08 million.
most timely. Oddly enough,
Scott closed with back-to- hi s big run began with a par.
foot putt, chipped out of the
gallery to 15 feet and made back bogeys for a 7(}, He hit into the water trying
that for par on the 17th, putting him at 14-under 274 to reach the par-S fifth hole
then blasted out ofthe sand with Sean 0 ' Hair (70), in two, but saved par with a
on the final hole to 5 feet Stewart Cink (69) and 6-foot putt.
and made that one.
Fredrik Jacobson (68).
Then came a 10-foot
Nicklaus, the tournament
Tiger
Woods
made birdie on the sixth, a twofounder, stood .behind the progress in his final tourna- putt birdie from 30 feet on
18th green and waited with ment before the U.S. Open. the seventh, aitd he took the
open arms when Choi fin- He finally holed hi s share of lead for the first time with a
ished at 11-under 271.
putts and closed with a 67 12-foot birdie on the par-3
Moore ran off. five to tie for I 5th, then headed eighth. And .with trees .
straight birdies until he had for Oakmont for one final .slightly blocking his angle
to settle for par on the 18th practice round.
from the right side of the
"It was progressing all fairway at · No. 9, his
for a 66. All he could do
then was wait for Choi to week, which was nice." · approacll spun back 8 feet
below ·the cup for his fourth
make ·a mistake, but the Woods Siiid.
South Korean was strong to
Wood s walked to the straight birdie to go out in
the end.
practice range in the morn- 30.
"I left it in his hands," ing studying a weather map
He two-putted from the
· Moore said .. "He had con- on hi s cell phone, and it fringe behind the II th green
trol of the tournament. It looked as though storms for another birdie to reach
was up to him. and he would threaten most of the 17' under, and no one could
played well all week and all afternoon. All it did was catch him.

a

et Everyone Know Your Dad Is Someone
Very Special With A Father's Day
Thank You Tribute ...
To Be Published In The Sunday Times- Sentinel

On Sunday, June 17th!

they plan for James.
"LeBron told me to step
into my shot and shoot ti
with confidence," Gibson
said.
When the King orders, yoll
obey.
In James' second trip to the
playoffs, he came of age.
In the biggest games of his
life, he dominated.
ln a city without .a major
sports .championship since
1964, he has given hope.
If he had been like any
other teenager and enrolled
at Ohio State · or North
Carolina after getting his
diploma from St. Vincent-St.
Mary High S~hool , James
would be winding down his
final semester of college.
It's a time for 21- and 22year-olds to let loose, a final
blowout before beginning
careers and the· rest of their
lives.
James seems to have his
mapped out nicely.
prep athlete at Eastern, as
far as setting the standard,
but he wants to be remembered as a distance runner
ambassador. After all, it's
not a glamour sport.
"I just hope l' ve been a
good example. Everybody,
like in the newspaper and
stuff; sees what l have
accomplished," Owen said.
"Hopefully it motivates
them to go out there and try
to get to this point."
Fogle, on the other hand,
is perfectly aware of what
Michael has accomplished
during his tenure as an
Eagle - figuring all pf
those things are now ~eaded
to Portsmouth to become a
Bear.
·"He 's set a very high bar
for a lot of kids at Eastern.
That will be the expectations and goal for many runners to come," Fogle commented. "Like I said, it may
be a while before we see
someone of hi s caliber at
Eastern . · I hope someone
proves me wrong. "

Summit efforts on global
w8rming, African aid
could be overshadowed:
by rift with Russia, A2

lessons aav on tor

2007 OHSAA State Track and Field Results- Div. I
Discus .Throw ~ 1, Chris Li111eton, Harriscn 183'09'; 2.
Jirrmie Padfioo. Vondalla Bu11er 179'04'; 3. Drew Ebersole.
Gratton Mi&lt;Mew 17700'; 4, James Hilbert, Wor1hington
Kilbourne 175'08"; 5. Nathan Hoell, LOgan 166'08"; 6. Lucas

Monday, June 4. 2007.:

Happy
Father's Day

Happy .
Father's Day

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.)oti\'IS•\ol..)h . ~o.:!t--J

SPORTS
• Favored Spurs won't
underestimate Cavs.
SeePage81

Love
(Your Name)

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• James G. Circle
• Calvin L. Mitchell
• John Gregory Hayes

INSIDE
• Post land transfers.
See Page A3
• Rural ~ction kicking
off transition at retreat.
See Page A3
• Cleveland Clinic
signs another deal.for
health care in Abu Dhabi.
See Page AS
• Ppmeroy Mayor's
Court. See Page A6
• Law school student
.recognized for
accomplishments.
See Page A6

WEATHER .

Circle One: A. 1X3 Greeting ...$12.00 · B. 1X5 Greeting with Plcture... $15.00

Father's Name•- - - -- - , - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - ' - - Your Name(s). ----:-----~-------------

City/State/Zip
Phone•------Send Coupon and Payment to: The Dally Sentinel "Father's Day"
P.O. Box 729; Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
.

'

" All Ads Must Be Pre-Paid ..

'One subject per picture

·

------------------------~-----------Deadline For This Special Father"s Day Tribute Is
Wednesay, June 13, 12:00 Noon.

AMP·Ohio commits to use ·of Powerspan
BY BETH SEROENT
BSERGENT&lt;il&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

LETART FALLS
American Mu.nicipal PowerOhio (AMP-Ohio) has committed to the use of
Powers pan
emissions control technology · on the proposed
American Municipal Power
Generating
Station
(AMPGS) Project which
will result in around 16 additional, permanent jobs.
AMP-Ohio has also executed a memorandum of
understanding with The
Andersons, Inc . to process

and market the ammonium
sulfate fertilizer by-product
of the Powerspan process.
Kent Carson, director of
communications at AMPOhio, said Which entity will
employ the 16 employees,.
AMP-Ohio
or
The
Andersons, Inc., has yet to
be decided.
According to its website,
The Andersons, Inc., is a
diversified company with
interests in the grain, ethanol
and plant nutrient sectors of
US agriculture as well as in
railcar leasing and repair,
turf products production and
general merchandise retail-

ing. Founded in Maumee,
the company operates in
seven states.
Developed and patented
by Powerspan Corp. the pollutant control. technology
achieves outlet emissions
levels at or below those of
best available control technologies and produces a fertilizer co-product instead of
synthetic gypsum produced
from traditional limestone
scrubbing technologies. The
AMPGS facility will use the
ECO-S02 technology to
control sulfur dioxide (S02)
emissions with co-benefits
for control of mercury and

particulate matter.
According to AMP-Ohio,
the use of Powerspan technology is believed to greatly
reduce the annual voh,1me of
material from the power
plant that needs to be placed
m a landfill. In addition, the
Powerspan system will be
designed with features that
allow for future expansion to
make the plant "C02 capture ready," preparing the
plant for the ~ossi bility of
future C02 emtssion limits. ·
"AMP-Ohio originally
announced our intent to pursue Powerspan technology
at AMPGS last November,"

sa id
AMP-Ohio
Pre sidenUCEO
Marc
Gerken. "At that time, we
made the final decis'ion contingent upon a technology
study and contractual discussions. Since then , we
have conducted: due diligence, completing the study
that determined that the
Powerspan technology is a
good tit for the AMPGS project. We're pleased to be
working with Powerspan
and The Andersons and look
forward to moving forward
wit~ the permitting on the
Please see AMP, AS

Rutl1lnd hires
persomzel,
reinstates billing

lunches
begin at

BY BETti

SER~ENT

BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINB..COM

l~calp901s

RUTLAND - At it's
recent . meeting, Rutland
Village Council hit'ed a new
BY BRIAN J. REED
employee
for the water and
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
sewer department on as "as
needed" basis and reinstatMIDDLEPORT -Thee
ed
water and sewer
Appalachian Food Network
accounts that has inadveris providing 200 free lunches
tently
been left out of the
a day , at Middleport and
billing
cycle.
Syracuse Lonilon Pools. It is
Clerk
Joyce Frye found
pan of a summer food prothe
accounts
while searchgram that will provide
through
·
old records .
ing
140,000 free hm~hes and
Council
then
instructed
her
35 ,000 free breakfasts to
accounts
for
to
bill
these
children
throughout
arrears' as well as current
Appalachian Ohio.
amounts due.
Any child under 18 ,
David Staats· was hired
regardless of income, is eligiretroactive to May I on an
ble to receive one of ·the
"as needed" basis at $6.85
meals, which will be providper hour for the water and
ed each day throughout the
sewer department. Mayor
summer.
April Burke and counci l
The meals are part of the
members have the authority
network's summer food proan adverse effect on conces- ·
to assign Staats work
gram, which takes over in
sion sales. which contribute
around the village:
feeding children when significantly to the pool's
Bills totaling $8,957.28
school breakfasts and lunch- operating funds . Couts said
were
paid and the mayor's
es end with the close of the other pools have had similar
report
was accepted, showschool year. It is the first year concerns, but sai d the free
ing
revenue
of $340. ·
for the local pools to serve as meals have, in no instance ,
A motion to allow sewer
access points for the pro- hurt sales of snacks.
adjustments to accounts
gram, which also provides · The meals are designed to
064. 116.5, 135.5, 174, 228,
daily lunches to children at be both nutritious . and
230, 304 was passed while
other pools in Appalachian appealing to children, Couts
Councilmen Dean Harris
Ohio, at Belpre, Nelsonville, said. Monday was the first
and Jake Thomas abstained
aridWellston. ·
.
. ·day the lunches were served.
from voting or approving
AFN Director Jim Couts They included a beef stick,
. adjustments on accounts
said the program provides sunflower seeds, applesauce,
040 and II 5 because these
. breakfasts and lunches to juice and milk. Yogurt, string
belonged to relatives.
children "wherever they go" cheese and other nutritious
Councilman
David
in the summer, including foods will be included in
Robinson gave approval for
vacation Bible school s, other meals.
those accounts.
churches and school events.
Like public sc hools. the
A motion to go into exec"When children have no AFN is reimbursed for its
utive session to discuss pertransportation to get where food purchases by the U.S .
sonnel matters and employthe meals are, we get ere- Depanment of Agriculture.
ee discipline was made.
alive," Couts said. "We feel The meals are assembled at a
our efforts will help the Nelsonville warehouse aild
Once returning to regular
pools, but our primary lnter- delivered daily to the serving
session a motion was made
est is seeing that children sites.
to send a written warning to
who need them receive nutrithe employee.
Hometown Market ha s
tious meal s."
agreed to refrigerate the ·
Harri s, Thomas and
In allowing the AFN to meals served in Middlepon. Children 18 and under qualify for the AFN 's free lunch pro- Robinson were present for
provide the meals, village While I00 meals are to be gram, regardless of income. Yesterday's picnic lunch includ- the meeting as was Burk~.
officials expressed some
ed a beef stiCk, sunflower seeds, animal cookies, and Frye and Fiscal Officer
concern that they might have Please see Lainches, AS
Susan Baker.
applesauce, with juice and milk.

Middleport alumni celebrate, award scholarships

Love
(Your Name)

\\\'"-IIJ\d.~ih ... •· n!J IW II,IIII

IIISI)\, .. Jl 'I .) . !.!oo -

Free
·summer

(Your .Father's
(Your father's
Name)
Name)
1

Fans buying up
Cavs g~ar for first
NBA Finals, Bt

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

Detatta on Page A&amp;

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MIDDLEPORT
Recog nition of the 1957
championship baseball team
and the awarding of six
2 S EC)'IONS- 12 PAGFS
'scholarships highlighted the
annual . banquet · o( the
Calendars
Middleport Hi gh School
Alumni Association held on
Classifieds
B3-4 Memorial Day weekend at '
Riverbend Arts Council.
Comics
BS' theBefore
more than ·250
returning
alumni
and g·uests,
Annie's Mailbox
A3 Bob Byer recounted
the·
·
team's
accomplishments
and
Editorials
A4
presented baseball caps, perso
nali zed bats, and baseballs
Obituaries
A.5
along with the original troSports
B Section phy presented after the game
capturing the championship.
Members of that team preWeather
A6
sent were Ed McComas, J .R.
© 2007 Ohio VaHey Publishing Co. Kennedy, Jan Hauck, James

INDEX

A3

Joshua Allen. Murphy

Cyrus Joseph Moore

Dylan Robert Dalley

Bowles, Yogi Wayland,
Sonny Knapp, Bo,b Hennesy,
Ed Crooks; and Johnny
Allensworth . .
Manning
Baumgar?ner accepted for
Bob Nelson, Rick Hovatter
for Dave Hindv, and Richard
Bailey for Steve Bai ley .

Charlotte VanMeter attended
to represent her brother,
Roger Lightfoot.
The first Middleport High
School Alumni Association
of $1,000 was awarded to
Cyrus J. Moore, son of Tim
and Chris Moore and grandson of Betty Ashley Snow

Rosser, class of 1951 , and a
graduate of Alexander High
School. He will attend Ohio
· University the fall majoring
in education with hopes of
earning a Ph.D. in history
later.
The Susan J. Parks awards
of $500 each. went ·to Dylan

Robert Dailey of Point
Pleasant, and Joshua Murphy
of Pontiac, Mich. Dailey is
the son of Juli Mourning
Dailey and grandson of
James Mourning, class of
1956. He will be attending
Marshall University, majoring in busine ss ·administration. Murphy is the son of
Christopher and Angela
Murphy and the grandson of
Beverly Perrin Kosiba, class
of 1962. He will attend
Oakland University School
of Engineering in Auburn
Hills, Mich. ·
The Park awards were presented by Judy Sauer Crooks
on behalf of the committee at
the banquet. It was noted that
so far 184 students have been
Please see Alumni, AS

•

•

�'

.

The Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD

-

BY MARTIN
CRUTSINGER
M' ECONOMICS WRITER

WASHINGTON
Germany's Angela Merkel
wants to tackle ·global
warming. Britain'.s Tony
Blair seeks help for Africa.
President Bush wants to
change the subject from Iraq
to areas where allied coopemtion is possible.
All these hopes for the
Group of Eight summit
could fall victim to rising
tensions with the Russians,
who are unhappy over U.S.
plans to put an anti-missile
system in Moscow's backyard.
A look. at the stmtegies the
G-8 leaders will be pursuing
at the June 6-8 summit in
the Baltic Sea resort of
Heiligendamm, Germany.

lidCOIMbl

PageA2
Tuesctay, June 5, 2007

'fhe Daily Sentinel

blrllillh
· Bush will meet with Prodi in
Rome as part of a .stop to
visit Pope Benedict after the
summit.
Stefano Sannirro, Prodi's
top diplomatic aide, told
reporters Monday that on
climate . change Italy does
not expect the G-8 to agree
to binding targets for emissions reduction but rather a
general negotiating framework that he said would be a
"a step forward from the
past."

.Canada
Prime Minister Stephen
Harper, who ended nearly
13 years of Liberal Party
rule in January 2006, has not
fared well during his initial
time in office. Polls show
his approval rating at 33 percent, down seven i&gt;oints in
two months. His governUnited States
ment is facing allegations. of
President Bush is hoping
to use his seventh G-8 sumalleged torture of Afghan
mit to heal relations frayed
detainees handed Qver by
by the lmq war by emphaCanadians · to
Afghan
sizing areas where. his
authorities.
,
administration . and U.S.
Harper initial!y . insisted
allies can agree. He spent
there was no evidence of
the days before the summit
torture
only to have his govrolling
out
initiatives
ernment
embarrassed when
designed to appeal to forreports emerged that the
eign critics.
government
had rec~ived
AP photo
Under international pressure to take action against A fe'male deomonstrator dressed as a clown walks by German police officers during a demonstration in the Rostock sub- and then tried to hide warnglobal warming, the presi- urb of Lichtenhagen, nonheastern Germany, Monday. In 1992 people set a house on fire with asylum seeker living there. ings that torture was ramdent proposed that · the The three-day G-8 summit begins Wednesday in the nearby coastal resort Heiligendamm, where German Chancellor Angela pant in Afghan prisonS. To
United States and 14 . other Merkel will lead discussions .with leaders of Britain, France, Japan, Italy, Russia, Canada and the U.S. on global warming, deal with the issue, Canada
big polluters spend the next · aid to Africa arld the world economy.
·
·
reached an agreement with
18 months deciding on a ' in other G-8 countries.
. Blair is expected to sup- polls have shown a decline poll~ have shown should an the Afghan government that
long-term goal for cutting
He and Bush, .who are port any G-8 moves to . in his approval ratings, election be held now, will allow monitoring·of the
greenhouse gas emissions. scheduled to meet one-on- toughen sanctions against mainly due to bickering Berlusconi's conservatives treatment of prisoners that ·
While representing a signif- one in Heiligendamm, will Sudan and is likely to press . inside his coalition and would win.
Canadian soldiers hand
for have more extensive
·
· .or
• more he1p m
· curb. tough economiC
· measures
icant
change of course
Relations between the over.
the administration,
the Bush
talks puun
during a Putin visit to ing Iran's nuclear program he has put in place to revive United States and Italy have
Last month, Harper 's govplan does not go as far as Bush'·s . family vacation and providing suppon for Italy's economy.
been strained since Prodi ernment
announced that
Germany
· Kenne b un kport, the M'ddl
·
Add.mg to Pr.od'1•s trou- whose coalition government .
one supponed
and
othc!r G- 8 by
nations
that horne In
1
e East peace
Canada will not meet its
process. Relations between bles, center-left candidates includes Communists· and
Maine, on July 1-2.
would set stringent new
Britain and Russia have fared poorly in two rounds other radiCal leftists - took commitments under the
Germany
been strained by the poison- of
local
, elections. over from Berlusconi, a Kyoto climate change
emissions limits.
Bush also announced new
Chancellor Merkel, who ing death in London of for- Conservative
opposition staunch Bush supporter. agreement, but it plans to
economic sanctions against at her first ·G-8 summit last mer KGB agent.
.leader Silvio Berlusconi, the Prodi made good on an elec· side with European governSudan in response to the cri- year got an unexpected
former premier, said the tion promise and in ments at the summit ·in
France
local vote represented "a December completed the endorsing a call for targets
sis in Darfur that has killed shoulder rub from Bush, has
200,000 people and called put global warming high on
President Nicolas Sarkozy clear sign of no-confidence" pullout of the Italian troops for reducing greenhouse
on Congress to double the the agenda for this ye!lf. S~ will be attending his first G- in the government. Opinion Berlusconi had sent to Iraq. gases.
U.S. funding commitment to offered muted praise for 8 summit, after having won
help fight the AIDS crisis in Bush's new plan, calling it election .to succeed Jacques
Africa and other poor "common ground on which Chirac. He pledged to pull
nations.
to act." Her proposal, the sluggish French econoWhile Bush is likely to backed by other G-8 my out of the doldrums, in
hear less criticism about the nations, goes much further. part by engendering a work
Iraq war; he will face a It calls for limiting the ethic and' making the coungrowing rift with Russia worldwide temperature rise tr~ more ~lobalization­
·over the president's plans to this century to 3.6 degrees fnendly. Whtle polls put
build a missile defense sys- Fahrenheit and cutting glob- Sai'kozy's approval rating at
tern to guard Europe against a! greenhouse emissions to 65 percent, the rival
attack from nations such as 50 percent of 1990 levels by Socialist Party wains that
his pro-market policies will
Iran.
2050.
Merkel has moved to be an assault on cherished.
Bush goes to the summit
• 26.5 PrO HP. :~-Cylinder
.with some of the lowest improve relations with the social protections such as
Indirect lnjoction Uquidapproval ratings of his pres- United States . that were the 35-hour workweek.
Cooled Dieoel Engine
idency. A recent AP-Ipsos severely strained by the
Sarkozy has called the
• Choice of Transmi...wion
poll showed that 35 percent anti-Iraq war stance of her Iraq war a "historic eqor"
• Optional Grand Cab with
ofAmericans ap~rove of the predecessor,
Gerhard but has moved to improve
Deluxe Featun!S
way he is handhng his job, Schroeder. But she has stuck relations with the Bush
near his all~time low of 32 to Germany's refusal to send· administration that had been
(!'oops to Irag.
frayed by the war.
.
percent.
She is rid10g a crest . of
On climate · change,
Russia
voter popularity, helped by a Sarkozy, after his election,
President .Vladimir Putin, rebound in the German said in a phone call -with
who was last year's host for economy, Europe's largest, Bush that the United States
the G-8 summit in St. after a long period of stagna- has the duty to take the lead
Petersburg, is making no tion. Her popularity has not on the issue because "the
secret of his unhappiness transferred to her conserva- fate of humanity is at stake."
over the missile defense tive Christian Democrats,
Sarkozy .is expected to
• 23 HP, 3-Cylinder, Liquid·
plans. In pre-summit inter- who are in a left-right push for deel?fr cooperation
Cooled D!eoel &amp;glne
views, he warned that "grand coalition" govern- with Africa 10 part to curb
• Hydwsta.tic Power Steerutg
Moscow could take retalia- ment with Schroeder's the flow of illegal immi·
•
HSt Transmissfoo.
tory steps if Washington Social Democrats.
~ -. grants. intQ· France. He has.
• Quick Attach/Detach
proceeded with a proposal
Following past ,Ptaciices, promised to be a tough barIntegrated Loader
to place a radar system . in Merkel has invited key gainer in global trade talks,
the Czech Republic and developin8 countiies - · saying Europe should open
and Backhoe Standard
interceptor missiles in China, lndta, Brazil,' Mexico its markets only to those
• Reversible Suspension Seat
neighboring Poland. He sug- and South Africa to who open theirs.
gested the retaliation could attend a portion of the meet·
take the form of retargeting ings and also has opened
Japan
·Russian missiles at Europe.
part o( the discussions to
Prime Minister Shinzo
National Security Adviser several
other
African Abe, also a newcomer at this
Stephen Hadley, speaking to nations, hoping to build on year's summit, goes into the
reporters on Air Force One the commitments the G-8 meeting politically wounded
as Bush flew to Europe on made on African aid in by money scandals that cuiMonday, said the adminis- 2005.
ruinated May 28 with the
• 44 HP, 4-Cylinder
·!ration wanted to have a
suicide of his agriculture
Indirect ln;_&gt;etion Liquid·
·"constructive
dialogue"
Britain
minister. Support for Abe
Cooled Diesel Engine
:with Russia and did not
Prime Minister Blair, who has plummeted to .its lowest
• Cltoice pf Transmission
·believe the "escalation in will leave office after a level since he succeeded ·
• Optional Grand Cab with
the rhetoric" was helpful in decade iii power on June 27, highly popular Junichiro
Deluxe Features
that goal.
·
is hoping to use. his final G- Koizumi last fall.
· Putin arrives at the sum- 8 to bolster one of his signaHis troubles are coming
.mit with sky-high approval ture international achieve- less than two months before
-ratings. In a recent poll of · ment's: gaining pledges crucial eleetions in July for
Russian voters, 63 percent ' from wealthy nations to the upper house of parlia·
~~aid they would vote for him double support for Africa.
ment. EmbiJ1Tassing losses
again even though he is
Derided by critics. as in those elections could
barred by the Russian ·con- "Bush's ·poodle," Blair's prompt Abe's ruling party to
stitution from another term. image wasn't helped at last seek his ouster as prime
.No other Russian politi'cian year's summit when an open minister.
,
-got more than 4 percent.
microphone picked· up
Abe has made climate
· Putin's popularity has Bush's greeting of " Yo, change a summit priority.
ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON ROUTE 50/32
been aided by an economic Blair," in an eKchange seen Japan will also push for a
rebound fueled · by soaring .as underscoring the British conclusion to the Doha
ATHENS, OH • 740-593-3279/800-710-1917
global oil prices. Russia is leader's ju~ior-p~ner status Round of global trade talks
the world's second largest 10 the relauonsh1p.
. .
and greater efforts to deal
")Our Friendly 01.1~door. Power.Equipment aud Tmctor Superstore"
energy producer after Saudi
While the .G-8 countries with the nuclear programs
Arabia. In interviews with have lagged m meeung the of Iran and North Korea.
reporters, Putin responded goal they set at the summit
Italy
to reporters' questions about in Gleneagles, Scotland,_ t,o
Premier Rol)lano Prodi,
the Kremlin's-crackdown on double a1d to Afnca, Blatr s
domestic critics by detailing aides expressed hope that leadi'ng a center-lefl govern·
what he said were wide· the pace of pledges wtll ment, marked his ·firs! year
in office in May. Opinion
spread human-rights abuses quicken.

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

•

BY THE BEND

POST LAND 1RANSFERS
POMEROY - Mei gs
Charle s T. Chapman ,
County Recorder Kay Hill Tammy K. Chapman, 'to
reported the following TP-CWD, right of way,
transfers of real estate:
Sutton .
Mei gs County Board of
John Spencer, Lcirri
County Commissioners to Spencer, to TP-CWD,
E u~ene _ , Phillips, Nancy right of way, Sutton.
Ph11l1ps , deed , Scipio.
Adam W. Rou sp, Amy
George Charles Foster, J. Roush, to TP-CWD,
deceased, to Virg inia Mae righ.t of way, Letart.
Foster, certifi cale
of
Su san
Turley,
Ed
tran sfer, Letart.
Turley, to Kenneth A.
Pauline Pa yne, Pauline Turley, deed, Chester.
Eynon , Pauline Collins, to
Timothy L. Ball , Brenda
David W Collins , Betty J. Ball, Brenda Meldau, to
Collins, deed , Sutton .
Home National Bank,
Scott A. Lallier, Jill L. sheriff's deed, Lebanon.
Lallier,
to
Ohio
Bruner Land Co., Inc .,
Department
of David
W.
Bowsher,
Transportation, Stale of Kathleen A. Bowsher, to
Ohio, easement, Scipio. ·
Lula Leota Grant,. easeScott A. Lallier, Jill L. mem.
Lallier. to ODOT, State of
Audrey Cremean s Jo
Ohio, eas9ment, Scipio.
Cesco Harvey, Jr. , Joy L.
Warren
B.
Taylor, Harvey, deed , Orange.
Victoria Taylor, , to ODOT,
Cesco Harvey, Jr. , Joy
State of Ohio, easement, L. Harvey, to Jame s R.
Scipio.
Boston, Janice L. Boston,
B.
Taylor, deed, Orange..
Warren
Victoria Taylor, to ODOT,
Owen s
J.
Smith,
to
Luretta
State of Ohio, easement , deceased ,
Scipio.
.
Smith, Ruth Dunfee, Ruth
Jan Michael Kostival to Ann Dunfee, Howard
ODOT, State of Ohio, Lockhart, Jr., certificate,
Bedford.
easement, Scipio.
Grange Bank to Shawn
Jan Michael Kostival to
ODOT; State of Ohio , D. Cremeans, Bonita F.
Cremeans, deed , Village
easemeilt, Scipio.
Township of Lebanon to of Syracuse.
Pamela Bentz to John
Shelly
Co.,
Shelly
Materials, Inc., easement , Blake, Janet Blake·, deed,
Village of Pomeroy.
Lebanon.
Kenneth W. . Walker,
Francisco
Althouse ,
Timothy W. Althouse, to Cylinda . A. Walker, to
Oxford Oil Co., right of Matthew T. Gilmore,
deed ,
Village
of
way.
Cheadle .to Middleport.
Donald
Connie
M. Manley
Oxford Oil Co ., right of
Trust, Roger L. Manley,
way, Columbia.
Cymhia L. Scott, James • Sr., Connie M . Manley, to
Scott,
to
Columbus Leroy P. . Hendrix , Lois
Southern Power, ease- Shane, deed , Village of
Middleport.
ment , Chester.
'
Harry
Pickens,
Jason Morris, Susan R.
Morri s,
to Columbu~ deceased, Erla Pickens,
Southerpl Power. ease- deceased, Harry Warner
. Pickens, deceased, to
ment , Salisbury.
Timothy Moore , Jan Harry ~mer Pickens,
· Moore, to Tuppers Plains- . deceased,
affidavit,
C hester Water Di strict, Sutton.
Dana . Kessinger
to
easement, Olive.
Timothy R. Henthorne, Kathryn Evans, Glenn E.
Martina M. Henthorne, to Evans, deed, Village of
TP-CWD, right of way, Middleport.
Freda Durham, Daisy
Olive.

Tuesday, June 5,

2007

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Township Tru stees regular
Hanson . to Joyce A.
meeting, 7 p.m., town haiL
Atkinson , affidavit.
Joyce Ann Atkinson to
Tuesday, June 5
James W. Gibbs, Karen·
REEDSVILLE - Olive
Gibbs, deed , Rutland.
Township Trustees meet in
or~anizations
Wilma Anderson , Judy regular session, 7:30 p.m. ,
Free, Roger D. Free, to Olive Township Garage.
' Tuesday, june 5
Four Brothers Properties,
ALFRED
- Orange
MIDDLEPORT
deed, Sutton.
.Township Tru stees regular
Monthly
meeting
of
Martha
McPhail, meeting,. 7:30 p.m., at the
Middle
port
Masonic
Lodge,
deceased, to Hugh Murray home of the clerk, Osie
7:30p.m., with work in the·
McPhail,
affidavit , Follrod.
Entered Apprentice degree.
Sutton/Vi I! age
of
ATHENS
- Special · Refreshments.
Syracuse . ·
meeting of Athens-Meigs
TUPPERS PLAINS Dan'te
N.
Oliveri, Educational Service Center
Eastern
Hi gh School Music
Cynthia S. Oliveri, to Governing Board, 7 p.m.,
Boosters
meet at 7 p.m.,
Bruce E. Sabel, Pnina I. 507 Richland Ave., Athens.
band.
room
. Fair booth disSabel, deed, Salisbury.
Board will meet in execu· cussion.
James
B.
Wright , tive session to discuss per·
Phoebe B. Wright , to . sonnel issues with the
Thursday, June 7
Jerry Derenberger, deed, board-appointed legal counTUPPERS PLAINS Lebanon.
sel, with possible personnel Regular
meeting
of
Albert C. Criddle, Jr., action to follow.
Tuppers
Plains
V FW
Viola G. Criddle, to .Cathy
POMEROY - Meigs Auxiliary, '7 p.m.
0. Stephens, Edwin A. County Board of Elections
CHESTER
The
Stephens. deed, Lebanon. regular meeting, 8:30 a.m.
Chester Shade Hi storical
Franklin Real Estate
PAGEVlLLE - Scipio Society will meet at 7 at the
Co . to Tuppers Plains- Township Trustees, 6:30 Chester Courthouse. Plans
Chester Water District, p.m., Pageville Town Hall.
will be discussed for the
easement Sutton .
CHESTER Chester Chester-Shade Days in July.
Shawn David Gilmore, Township Trustees regular
Vikki Lynn Hayes, to TP- monthly meeting, 7 p.m.,
Friday, June 8
CWD, right of way, Chester Town Hall.
POMEROY
- Meigs
Letart.
County Chapter 74; PERl ,
David J. Warner Family
meets at I p.m. at Meigs
Tuesday, June 12
, Trust, David J. Warner, to
Multipurpose
POMEROY - Bedford Count y
Warner Road Properties,
deed, Scipio.
Leonard D. Stotts, Hilda
M. . Stotts, to Matthew A.
Heather
Matheney,
TRIMBLE - An upcom· At the retreat, community
Matheney, deed, Rutland . ·
ing retreat will kick off com- members will work in groups
Gary .
G.
Basham, muliity involvement in a Jo develop preliminary
Pam'ela
K.
Basham,
major redesign of Rural action plans about issues that
Raelynn Braley, Sean · Action's programs which is concern them. "We know
Braley, to Gary G. involved in addressing con- the're are plenty of people in
Basham,
Pamela
K. cerns of the Appalachian !his region who care about
Basham, deed, Salisbury.
counties in Southeastern . youth education, community
Lula Leota Gr,a nt to Ohio.
revitalization, energy conserMildred Hagerty, Rbnald
The organization invites vation and other issues," said
Hagerty, easement.
community members to Steinmaus. "This retreat is an
Janet Krider to Earl E. begin brainstorming and opportunity for like-minded
Smith, Allison R. Smith, planning for the neKt decade people to come together and
deed, Lebanon.
of Rural Action's work at the think about what we can do
John W. Barcus, ·John free Retreat . on Rural about these issues 111 our
W. Barcus, Jr., Christie Renewal, which will be held communities."
Barcus, to Federal Home June 16, from 9 a.m. to 5
Rural Action will not be
Loan Mortgage, sheriff's · p.m. at Trimble High School altering its core mission ,
Village
of in Glouster. Lunch will be which is to promote economdeed,
Middleport.
provided.
ic, social, and environmental
Lavere
Corbett
"This retreat is a communi- justice in Appalachian Ohio.
Patterson to Daisy M. ty conversation about the Rather, the Retreat on Rural
Patterson,
affidi\vit , future of Appalachian Ohio Renewal is an opportunity
Sutton.
and Rural Action's role in for community members to
that . future ," said Mary examine and to work on new
Steinmaus, Rural Action's projects under that frame:
Interim EKecutive Director. work.

Clubs and

Sen io r , Cent er.
Paul a
Eichinger to speak on
"Home Health : What to Dn.
Who is Elig ible and How it
Works ."

Church events
Frida y, june 8
LO NG BOTTOM
Gospel sing a i Fa itli Fu ll
Gospel Church, 7 p.m.
Monday, june 11
POI NT
ROCK
Vacation Bible School will
be held at the Point Roc k
Churcti· of th e Na zarene
located on route 689 near
Wilkesville. 6 to 8:30 p. m.
June ll - 15. Theme will be
"Tumbleweek
Gulch.
Where god's Love changes
EverythiQg."

Birthdays
Friday, June 8 ·
REEDSVILLE - L,illian
Pickens of Reedsvill e will
celebrate her 90th birthday
on June 8. Cards may be
se nt to her at Arcadi a
Nursing and Reh ahilitation
Cente r, East Second Street,
Coolvill e. Ohio 45723 .

Rural action kicking off transition at retreat

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Rural Act ion's program s
originall y grew. put of a sim- .
ilar community effort in th e
early 1990s, when the orga·
nization's founding director,
Carol Kuhre . fac ili.tated a
planning process in volving
hundreds of Appalachian
Ohio residents. The concepts
nurtured by those people
developed
into
Rural
Action's current projects in
sustainable forestry and agri·
culture. watershed restoration , arts and cultural heritage and other areas.
'
The Retreat on Rural
Renewal is free but registration is limited to I00 people .
Community membe rs may
register at www.ruralrenew_al.blogspot.com or by calling
Sara Peach at 740-767-4938.
The Rural Action annual
meeting will al so take place
that day, durin g a short business lunch..

Set boundaries with new sister-in-law Give Dad A Gift Fit For A King!
these incidents, but they
keep happening. Am I too ·
sensitive , or is Bill too
Dear Annie: I am 66 and attached to Jane?
hav e been married to a Senior Bride with Young
wonderful man for a little Emotions
over a year. 1 was a widow
Dear Senior Bride:
·for 10 year~. and "Bill" Jane sounds a bit jealous
was divorced a long time of you - she 'interferes
ago . We ha ve a· great rela- with your plans and doestionship with one excep· n't like Bill to be romantic.
tion ; I am jealous of his Discussing proposals and
widowed sister.
.wedding details is not
Before Bill and I met, unusual - it's, what his
he and "Jane" spent a lot mother might have done,
of time together on golf and we suspect this is how
outings and other trips. I Bill relates to Jane. A lot
don't have a proble m with of this is minor (the jack·
Bill being close to his sis- et) and w.i.U resolve itself
ter, except for the ways in over time , but set boundwhich it affect s our rela- aries when it comes to givtionship. 1 think Jane ing Jane advance notice of
knows more about our per- your plans.
s.onal plans than she needs . Dear Annie: In the past
to. . .
year, I have attended sevFor example, Bill was eral bridal showers. I try
very reluctant .- almost to select a gift from the
afraid --" to tell her about couple's
registr y and
our engagement. He dis- always bring something
cussed proposal plans with nice.
her and showed her the
After one of the se
ring. She made sharp com- showers, the bride and
ments about the wedding groom neglected to invite
location we chose and was my husband and me to the
nosy about the derail s. Bill reception. My husband and
kept leaving me at a pre- I are both friends of the
wedding party and even at engaged couple. I assumed
the weddin g to check on if one was invited to a
her. The morning after our bridal shower, jt meant
wedding , he commented one should get an invitathat he .ought to call Jane. lion to the wedding recepLast Christmas, Jane lion.
insisted on having a jacket
It is insulting to. be told
just like one Bill gave me. I am good enough to buy a
She interfered with our gift, but not good• enough
' plans to aJtend a family to share in the special day.
gathering to the edent that Am I stuck .in the Dark
we ended up not going. He Ages? - Used for a Gift
told her about his surprise
Dear Used: Unless the
for our anniversary, and reception is fa mily only.
she "innocently" .Jet the being on the invitation lis.t
information slip in a con· for a shower means YOll
. versation with me and did· should be on the . list for
n'J apologize . Bill had to the wedding, too, recep·c hange his plans.
lion and all. Brides should
Bill feels 1 am overre· not turn friends into peracting. 1 am trying to be sonal banks by giving
}ess hurt and offended by them the "honor" of buyBY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY . SUGAR

ing presents without the
accompanying privilege of
sharing in the occasion.
Dear Annie: I read the
letter from "Worried Mom
in Derby, Kan.,". and know
exactly how she feels. My
daughter, "Lizzie," is also
10 years old and thought
she was a little heavy at 88
pounds. Finally, Lizzie went to
our. family doctor · for an .
exam. (. took the nurse
aside and asked her to
make a positive comment
abou1 Lizzie's weight. Not
only did she do this, but
she alerted the doctor. He
told Lizzie sternly, "You're
still growing, so I'm not
too worried, but at 4 feet
11 inches, you should
weigh closer to 95 or I 00
pounds. Be. sure you're
eating right and gettin g
enough sleep and eKercise."
Hearing this from a
inedical professional made
a big difference. I sent the
doctor a thank-you note
and a loaf of homemade
bread. Relieved in
Eastern Ohio
Dear Relieved: You, the
nurse and the doctor !)an·
died Lizzie beautifully and
cleverly. Thanks for sharing.

Annie's Mailbox is
writtei1 by Kathy Mitchell
and Marcy Sugar, longtime editor.~ of the Ann
La11ders column . . Please
e-mail your questions to ·
anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to:
Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611, To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate wrirers a11d cartoonists, visit
the Creators Syndicate
Web page at www.creators.com.

Proud}Q be, apa~ of your life.·.

!·

The Dally Sentlnel • SubsCribe today • 992-2155 •
www.rpY.tlai ly!;!~ntinel.com
..,

•

.PageA3

Father's

•
i

Is June 17th

�'

.

The Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD

-

BY MARTIN
CRUTSINGER
M' ECONOMICS WRITER

WASHINGTON
Germany's Angela Merkel
wants to tackle ·global
warming. Britain'.s Tony
Blair seeks help for Africa.
President Bush wants to
change the subject from Iraq
to areas where allied coopemtion is possible.
All these hopes for the
Group of Eight summit
could fall victim to rising
tensions with the Russians,
who are unhappy over U.S.
plans to put an anti-missile
system in Moscow's backyard.
A look. at the stmtegies the
G-8 leaders will be pursuing
at the June 6-8 summit in
the Baltic Sea resort of
Heiligendamm, Germany.

lidCOIMbl

PageA2
Tuesctay, June 5, 2007

'fhe Daily Sentinel

blrllillh
· Bush will meet with Prodi in
Rome as part of a .stop to
visit Pope Benedict after the
summit.
Stefano Sannirro, Prodi's
top diplomatic aide, told
reporters Monday that on
climate . change Italy does
not expect the G-8 to agree
to binding targets for emissions reduction but rather a
general negotiating framework that he said would be a
"a step forward from the
past."

.Canada
Prime Minister Stephen
Harper, who ended nearly
13 years of Liberal Party
rule in January 2006, has not
fared well during his initial
time in office. Polls show
his approval rating at 33 percent, down seven i&gt;oints in
two months. His governUnited States
ment is facing allegations. of
President Bush is hoping
to use his seventh G-8 sumalleged torture of Afghan
mit to heal relations frayed
detainees handed Qver by
by the lmq war by emphaCanadians · to
Afghan
sizing areas where. his
authorities.
,
administration . and U.S.
Harper initial!y . insisted
allies can agree. He spent
there was no evidence of
the days before the summit
torture
only to have his govrolling
out
initiatives
ernment
embarrassed when
designed to appeal to forreports emerged that the
eign critics.
government
had rec~ived
AP photo
Under international pressure to take action against A fe'male deomonstrator dressed as a clown walks by German police officers during a demonstration in the Rostock sub- and then tried to hide warnglobal warming, the presi- urb of Lichtenhagen, nonheastern Germany, Monday. In 1992 people set a house on fire with asylum seeker living there. ings that torture was ramdent proposed that · the The three-day G-8 summit begins Wednesday in the nearby coastal resort Heiligendamm, where German Chancellor Angela pant in Afghan prisonS. To
United States and 14 . other Merkel will lead discussions .with leaders of Britain, France, Japan, Italy, Russia, Canada and the U.S. on global warming, deal with the issue, Canada
big polluters spend the next · aid to Africa arld the world economy.
·
·
reached an agreement with
18 months deciding on a ' in other G-8 countries.
. Blair is expected to sup- polls have shown a decline poll~ have shown should an the Afghan government that
long-term goal for cutting
He and Bush, .who are port any G-8 moves to . in his approval ratings, election be held now, will allow monitoring·of the
greenhouse gas emissions. scheduled to meet one-on- toughen sanctions against mainly due to bickering Berlusconi's conservatives treatment of prisoners that ·
While representing a signif- one in Heiligendamm, will Sudan and is likely to press . inside his coalition and would win.
Canadian soldiers hand
for have more extensive
·
· .or
• more he1p m
· curb. tough economiC
· measures
icant
change of course
Relations between the over.
the administration,
the Bush
talks puun
during a Putin visit to ing Iran's nuclear program he has put in place to revive United States and Italy have
Last month, Harper 's govplan does not go as far as Bush'·s . family vacation and providing suppon for Italy's economy.
been strained since Prodi ernment
announced that
Germany
· Kenne b un kport, the M'ddl
·
Add.mg to Pr.od'1•s trou- whose coalition government .
one supponed
and
othc!r G- 8 by
nations
that horne In
1
e East peace
Canada will not meet its
process. Relations between bles, center-left candidates includes Communists· and
Maine, on July 1-2.
would set stringent new
Britain and Russia have fared poorly in two rounds other radiCal leftists - took commitments under the
Germany
been strained by the poison- of
local
, elections. over from Berlusconi, a Kyoto climate change
emissions limits.
Bush also announced new
Chancellor Merkel, who ing death in London of for- Conservative
opposition staunch Bush supporter. agreement, but it plans to
economic sanctions against at her first ·G-8 summit last mer KGB agent.
.leader Silvio Berlusconi, the Prodi made good on an elec· side with European governSudan in response to the cri- year got an unexpected
former premier, said the tion promise and in ments at the summit ·in
France
local vote represented "a December completed the endorsing a call for targets
sis in Darfur that has killed shoulder rub from Bush, has
200,000 people and called put global warming high on
President Nicolas Sarkozy clear sign of no-confidence" pullout of the Italian troops for reducing greenhouse
on Congress to double the the agenda for this ye!lf. S~ will be attending his first G- in the government. Opinion Berlusconi had sent to Iraq. gases.
U.S. funding commitment to offered muted praise for 8 summit, after having won
help fight the AIDS crisis in Bush's new plan, calling it election .to succeed Jacques
Africa and other poor "common ground on which Chirac. He pledged to pull
nations.
to act." Her proposal, the sluggish French econoWhile Bush is likely to backed by other G-8 my out of the doldrums, in
hear less criticism about the nations, goes much further. part by engendering a work
Iraq war; he will face a It calls for limiting the ethic and' making the coungrowing rift with Russia worldwide temperature rise tr~ more ~lobalization­
·over the president's plans to this century to 3.6 degrees fnendly. Whtle polls put
build a missile defense sys- Fahrenheit and cutting glob- Sai'kozy's approval rating at
tern to guard Europe against a! greenhouse emissions to 65 percent, the rival
attack from nations such as 50 percent of 1990 levels by Socialist Party wains that
his pro-market policies will
Iran.
2050.
Merkel has moved to be an assault on cherished.
Bush goes to the summit
• 26.5 PrO HP. :~-Cylinder
.with some of the lowest improve relations with the social protections such as
Indirect lnjoction Uquidapproval ratings of his pres- United States . that were the 35-hour workweek.
Cooled Dieoel Engine
idency. A recent AP-Ipsos severely strained by the
Sarkozy has called the
• Choice of Transmi...wion
poll showed that 35 percent anti-Iraq war stance of her Iraq war a "historic eqor"
• Optional Grand Cab with
ofAmericans ap~rove of the predecessor,
Gerhard but has moved to improve
Deluxe Featun!S
way he is handhng his job, Schroeder. But she has stuck relations with the Bush
near his all~time low of 32 to Germany's refusal to send· administration that had been
(!'oops to Irag.
frayed by the war.
.
percent.
She is rid10g a crest . of
On climate · change,
Russia
voter popularity, helped by a Sarkozy, after his election,
President .Vladimir Putin, rebound in the German said in a phone call -with
who was last year's host for economy, Europe's largest, Bush that the United States
the G-8 summit in St. after a long period of stagna- has the duty to take the lead
Petersburg, is making no tion. Her popularity has not on the issue because "the
secret of his unhappiness transferred to her conserva- fate of humanity is at stake."
over the missile defense tive Christian Democrats,
Sarkozy .is expected to
• 23 HP, 3-Cylinder, Liquid·
plans. In pre-summit inter- who are in a left-right push for deel?fr cooperation
Cooled D!eoel &amp;glne
views, he warned that "grand coalition" govern- with Africa 10 part to curb
• Hydwsta.tic Power Steerutg
Moscow could take retalia- ment with Schroeder's the flow of illegal immi·
•
HSt Transmissfoo.
tory steps if Washington Social Democrats.
~ -. grants. intQ· France. He has.
• Quick Attach/Detach
proceeded with a proposal
Following past ,Ptaciices, promised to be a tough barIntegrated Loader
to place a radar system . in Merkel has invited key gainer in global trade talks,
the Czech Republic and developin8 countiies - · saying Europe should open
and Backhoe Standard
interceptor missiles in China, lndta, Brazil,' Mexico its markets only to those
• Reversible Suspension Seat
neighboring Poland. He sug- and South Africa to who open theirs.
gested the retaliation could attend a portion of the meet·
take the form of retargeting ings and also has opened
Japan
·Russian missiles at Europe.
part o( the discussions to
Prime Minister Shinzo
National Security Adviser several
other
African Abe, also a newcomer at this
Stephen Hadley, speaking to nations, hoping to build on year's summit, goes into the
reporters on Air Force One the commitments the G-8 meeting politically wounded
as Bush flew to Europe on made on African aid in by money scandals that cuiMonday, said the adminis- 2005.
ruinated May 28 with the
• 44 HP, 4-Cylinder
·!ration wanted to have a
suicide of his agriculture
Indirect ln;_&gt;etion Liquid·
·"constructive
dialogue"
Britain
minister. Support for Abe
Cooled Diesel Engine
:with Russia and did not
Prime Minister Blair, who has plummeted to .its lowest
• Cltoice pf Transmission
·believe the "escalation in will leave office after a level since he succeeded ·
• Optional Grand Cab with
the rhetoric" was helpful in decade iii power on June 27, highly popular Junichiro
Deluxe Features
that goal.
·
is hoping to use. his final G- Koizumi last fall.
· Putin arrives at the sum- 8 to bolster one of his signaHis troubles are coming
.mit with sky-high approval ture international achieve- less than two months before
-ratings. In a recent poll of · ment's: gaining pledges crucial eleetions in July for
Russian voters, 63 percent ' from wealthy nations to the upper house of parlia·
~~aid they would vote for him double support for Africa.
ment. EmbiJ1Tassing losses
again even though he is
Derided by critics. as in those elections could
barred by the Russian ·con- "Bush's ·poodle," Blair's prompt Abe's ruling party to
stitution from another term. image wasn't helped at last seek his ouster as prime
.No other Russian politi'cian year's summit when an open minister.
,
-got more than 4 percent.
microphone picked· up
Abe has made climate
· Putin's popularity has Bush's greeting of " Yo, change a summit priority.
ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON ROUTE 50/32
been aided by an economic Blair," in an eKchange seen Japan will also push for a
rebound fueled · by soaring .as underscoring the British conclusion to the Doha
ATHENS, OH • 740-593-3279/800-710-1917
global oil prices. Russia is leader's ju~ior-p~ner status Round of global trade talks
the world's second largest 10 the relauonsh1p.
. .
and greater efforts to deal
")Our Friendly 01.1~door. Power.Equipment aud Tmctor Superstore"
energy producer after Saudi
While the .G-8 countries with the nuclear programs
Arabia. In interviews with have lagged m meeung the of Iran and North Korea.
reporters, Putin responded goal they set at the summit
Italy
to reporters' questions about in Gleneagles, Scotland,_ t,o
Premier Rol)lano Prodi,
the Kremlin's-crackdown on double a1d to Afnca, Blatr s
domestic critics by detailing aides expressed hope that leadi'ng a center-lefl govern·
what he said were wide· the pace of pledges wtll ment, marked his ·firs! year
in office in May. Opinion
spread human-rights abuses quicken.

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

•

BY THE BEND

POST LAND 1RANSFERS
POMEROY - Mei gs
Charle s T. Chapman ,
County Recorder Kay Hill Tammy K. Chapman, 'to
reported the following TP-CWD, right of way,
transfers of real estate:
Sutton .
Mei gs County Board of
John Spencer, Lcirri
County Commissioners to Spencer, to TP-CWD,
E u~ene _ , Phillips, Nancy right of way, Sutton.
Ph11l1ps , deed , Scipio.
Adam W. Rou sp, Amy
George Charles Foster, J. Roush, to TP-CWD,
deceased, to Virg inia Mae righ.t of way, Letart.
Foster, certifi cale
of
Su san
Turley,
Ed
tran sfer, Letart.
Turley, to Kenneth A.
Pauline Pa yne, Pauline Turley, deed, Chester.
Eynon , Pauline Collins, to
Timothy L. Ball , Brenda
David W Collins , Betty J. Ball, Brenda Meldau, to
Collins, deed , Sutton .
Home National Bank,
Scott A. Lallier, Jill L. sheriff's deed, Lebanon.
Lallier,
to
Ohio
Bruner Land Co., Inc .,
Department
of David
W.
Bowsher,
Transportation, Stale of Kathleen A. Bowsher, to
Ohio, easement, Scipio. ·
Lula Leota Grant,. easeScott A. Lallier, Jill L. mem.
Lallier. to ODOT, State of
Audrey Cremean s Jo
Ohio, eas9ment, Scipio.
Cesco Harvey, Jr. , Joy L.
Warren
B.
Taylor, Harvey, deed , Orange.
Victoria Taylor, , to ODOT,
Cesco Harvey, Jr. , Joy
State of Ohio, easement, L. Harvey, to Jame s R.
Scipio.
Boston, Janice L. Boston,
B.
Taylor, deed, Orange..
Warren
Victoria Taylor, to ODOT,
Owen s
J.
Smith,
to
Luretta
State of Ohio, easement , deceased ,
Scipio.
.
Smith, Ruth Dunfee, Ruth
Jan Michael Kostival to Ann Dunfee, Howard
ODOT, State of Ohio, Lockhart, Jr., certificate,
Bedford.
easement, Scipio.
Grange Bank to Shawn
Jan Michael Kostival to
ODOT; State of Ohio , D. Cremeans, Bonita F.
Cremeans, deed , Village
easemeilt, Scipio.
Township of Lebanon to of Syracuse.
Pamela Bentz to John
Shelly
Co.,
Shelly
Materials, Inc., easement , Blake, Janet Blake·, deed,
Village of Pomeroy.
Lebanon.
Kenneth W. . Walker,
Francisco
Althouse ,
Timothy W. Althouse, to Cylinda . A. Walker, to
Oxford Oil Co., right of Matthew T. Gilmore,
deed ,
Village
of
way.
Cheadle .to Middleport.
Donald
Connie
M. Manley
Oxford Oil Co ., right of
Trust, Roger L. Manley,
way, Columbia.
Cymhia L. Scott, James • Sr., Connie M . Manley, to
Scott,
to
Columbus Leroy P. . Hendrix , Lois
Southern Power, ease- Shane, deed , Village of
Middleport.
ment , Chester.
'
Harry
Pickens,
Jason Morris, Susan R.
Morri s,
to Columbu~ deceased, Erla Pickens,
Southerpl Power. ease- deceased, Harry Warner
. Pickens, deceased, to
ment , Salisbury.
Timothy Moore , Jan Harry ~mer Pickens,
· Moore, to Tuppers Plains- . deceased,
affidavit,
C hester Water Di strict, Sutton.
Dana . Kessinger
to
easement, Olive.
Timothy R. Henthorne, Kathryn Evans, Glenn E.
Martina M. Henthorne, to Evans, deed, Village of
TP-CWD, right of way, Middleport.
Freda Durham, Daisy
Olive.

Tuesday, June 5,

2007

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Township Tru stees regular
Hanson . to Joyce A.
meeting, 7 p.m., town haiL
Atkinson , affidavit.
Joyce Ann Atkinson to
Tuesday, June 5
James W. Gibbs, Karen·
REEDSVILLE - Olive
Gibbs, deed , Rutland.
Township Trustees meet in
or~anizations
Wilma Anderson , Judy regular session, 7:30 p.m. ,
Free, Roger D. Free, to Olive Township Garage.
' Tuesday, june 5
Four Brothers Properties,
ALFRED
- Orange
MIDDLEPORT
deed, Sutton.
.Township Tru stees regular
Monthly
meeting
of
Martha
McPhail, meeting,. 7:30 p.m., at the
Middle
port
Masonic
Lodge,
deceased, to Hugh Murray home of the clerk, Osie
7:30p.m., with work in the·
McPhail,
affidavit , Follrod.
Entered Apprentice degree.
Sutton/Vi I! age
of
ATHENS
- Special · Refreshments.
Syracuse . ·
meeting of Athens-Meigs
TUPPERS PLAINS Dan'te
N.
Oliveri, Educational Service Center
Eastern
Hi gh School Music
Cynthia S. Oliveri, to Governing Board, 7 p.m.,
Boosters
meet at 7 p.m.,
Bruce E. Sabel, Pnina I. 507 Richland Ave., Athens.
band.
room
. Fair booth disSabel, deed, Salisbury.
Board will meet in execu· cussion.
James
B.
Wright , tive session to discuss per·
Phoebe B. Wright , to . sonnel issues with the
Thursday, June 7
Jerry Derenberger, deed, board-appointed legal counTUPPERS PLAINS Lebanon.
sel, with possible personnel Regular
meeting
of
Albert C. Criddle, Jr., action to follow.
Tuppers
Plains
V FW
Viola G. Criddle, to .Cathy
POMEROY - Meigs Auxiliary, '7 p.m.
0. Stephens, Edwin A. County Board of Elections
CHESTER
The
Stephens. deed, Lebanon. regular meeting, 8:30 a.m.
Chester Shade Hi storical
Franklin Real Estate
PAGEVlLLE - Scipio Society will meet at 7 at the
Co . to Tuppers Plains- Township Trustees, 6:30 Chester Courthouse. Plans
Chester Water District, p.m., Pageville Town Hall.
will be discussed for the
easement Sutton .
CHESTER Chester Chester-Shade Days in July.
Shawn David Gilmore, Township Trustees regular
Vikki Lynn Hayes, to TP- monthly meeting, 7 p.m.,
Friday, June 8
CWD, right of way, Chester Town Hall.
POMEROY
- Meigs
Letart.
County Chapter 74; PERl ,
David J. Warner Family
meets at I p.m. at Meigs
Tuesday, June 12
, Trust, David J. Warner, to
Multipurpose
POMEROY - Bedford Count y
Warner Road Properties,
deed, Scipio.
Leonard D. Stotts, Hilda
M. . Stotts, to Matthew A.
Heather
Matheney,
TRIMBLE - An upcom· At the retreat, community
Matheney, deed, Rutland . ·
ing retreat will kick off com- members will work in groups
Gary .
G.
Basham, muliity involvement in a Jo develop preliminary
Pam'ela
K.
Basham,
major redesign of Rural action plans about issues that
Raelynn Braley, Sean · Action's programs which is concern them. "We know
Braley, to Gary G. involved in addressing con- the're are plenty of people in
Basham,
Pamela
K. cerns of the Appalachian !his region who care about
Basham, deed, Salisbury.
counties in Southeastern . youth education, community
Lula Leota Gr,a nt to Ohio.
revitalization, energy conserMildred Hagerty, Rbnald
The organization invites vation and other issues," said
Hagerty, easement.
community members to Steinmaus. "This retreat is an
Janet Krider to Earl E. begin brainstorming and opportunity for like-minded
Smith, Allison R. Smith, planning for the neKt decade people to come together and
deed, Lebanon.
of Rural Action's work at the think about what we can do
John W. Barcus, ·John free Retreat . on Rural about these issues 111 our
W. Barcus, Jr., Christie Renewal, which will be held communities."
Barcus, to Federal Home June 16, from 9 a.m. to 5
Rural Action will not be
Loan Mortgage, sheriff's · p.m. at Trimble High School altering its core mission ,
Village
of in Glouster. Lunch will be which is to promote economdeed,
Middleport.
provided.
ic, social, and environmental
Lavere
Corbett
"This retreat is a communi- justice in Appalachian Ohio.
Patterson to Daisy M. ty conversation about the Rather, the Retreat on Rural
Patterson,
affidi\vit , future of Appalachian Ohio Renewal is an opportunity
Sutton.
and Rural Action's role in for community members to
that . future ," said Mary examine and to work on new
Steinmaus, Rural Action's projects under that frame:
Interim EKecutive Director. work.

Clubs and

Sen io r , Cent er.
Paul a
Eichinger to speak on
"Home Health : What to Dn.
Who is Elig ible and How it
Works ."

Church events
Frida y, june 8
LO NG BOTTOM
Gospel sing a i Fa itli Fu ll
Gospel Church, 7 p.m.
Monday, june 11
POI NT
ROCK
Vacation Bible School will
be held at the Point Roc k
Churcti· of th e Na zarene
located on route 689 near
Wilkesville. 6 to 8:30 p. m.
June ll - 15. Theme will be
"Tumbleweek
Gulch.
Where god's Love changes
EverythiQg."

Birthdays
Friday, June 8 ·
REEDSVILLE - L,illian
Pickens of Reedsvill e will
celebrate her 90th birthday
on June 8. Cards may be
se nt to her at Arcadi a
Nursing and Reh ahilitation
Cente r, East Second Street,
Coolvill e. Ohio 45723 .

Rural action kicking off transition at retreat

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Rural Act ion's program s
originall y grew. put of a sim- .
ilar community effort in th e
early 1990s, when the orga·
nization's founding director,
Carol Kuhre . fac ili.tated a
planning process in volving
hundreds of Appalachian
Ohio residents. The concepts
nurtured by those people
developed
into
Rural
Action's current projects in
sustainable forestry and agri·
culture. watershed restoration , arts and cultural heritage and other areas.
'
The Retreat on Rural
Renewal is free but registration is limited to I00 people .
Community membe rs may
register at www.ruralrenew_al.blogspot.com or by calling
Sara Peach at 740-767-4938.
The Rural Action annual
meeting will al so take place
that day, durin g a short business lunch..

Set boundaries with new sister-in-law Give Dad A Gift Fit For A King!
these incidents, but they
keep happening. Am I too ·
sensitive , or is Bill too
Dear Annie: I am 66 and attached to Jane?
hav e been married to a Senior Bride with Young
wonderful man for a little Emotions
over a year. 1 was a widow
Dear Senior Bride:
·for 10 year~. and "Bill" Jane sounds a bit jealous
was divorced a long time of you - she 'interferes
ago . We ha ve a· great rela- with your plans and doestionship with one excep· n't like Bill to be romantic.
tion ; I am jealous of his Discussing proposals and
widowed sister.
.wedding details is not
Before Bill and I met, unusual - it's, what his
he and "Jane" spent a lot mother might have done,
of time together on golf and we suspect this is how
outings and other trips. I Bill relates to Jane. A lot
don't have a proble m with of this is minor (the jack·
Bill being close to his sis- et) and w.i.U resolve itself
ter, except for the ways in over time , but set boundwhich it affect s our rela- aries when it comes to givtionship. 1 think Jane ing Jane advance notice of
knows more about our per- your plans.
s.onal plans than she needs . Dear Annie: In the past
to. . .
year, I have attended sevFor example, Bill was eral bridal showers. I try
very reluctant .- almost to select a gift from the
afraid --" to tell her about couple's
registr y and
our engagement. He dis- always bring something
cussed proposal plans with nice.
her and showed her the
After one of the se
ring. She made sharp com- showers, the bride and
ments about the wedding groom neglected to invite
location we chose and was my husband and me to the
nosy about the derail s. Bill reception. My husband and
kept leaving me at a pre- I are both friends of the
wedding party and even at engaged couple. I assumed
the weddin g to check on if one was invited to a
her. The morning after our bridal shower, jt meant
wedding , he commented one should get an invitathat he .ought to call Jane. lion to the wedding recepLast Christmas, Jane lion.
insisted on having a jacket
It is insulting to. be told
just like one Bill gave me. I am good enough to buy a
She interfered with our gift, but not good• enough
' plans to aJtend a family to share in the special day.
gathering to the edent that Am I stuck .in the Dark
we ended up not going. He Ages? - Used for a Gift
told her about his surprise
Dear Used: Unless the
for our anniversary, and reception is fa mily only.
she "innocently" .Jet the being on the invitation lis.t
information slip in a con· for a shower means YOll
. versation with me and did· should be on the . list for
n'J apologize . Bill had to the wedding, too, recep·c hange his plans.
lion and all. Brides should
Bill feels 1 am overre· not turn friends into peracting. 1 am trying to be sonal banks by giving
}ess hurt and offended by them the "honor" of buyBY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY . SUGAR

ing presents without the
accompanying privilege of
sharing in the occasion.
Dear Annie: I read the
letter from "Worried Mom
in Derby, Kan.,". and know
exactly how she feels. My
daughter, "Lizzie," is also
10 years old and thought
she was a little heavy at 88
pounds. Finally, Lizzie went to
our. family doctor · for an .
exam. (. took the nurse
aside and asked her to
make a positive comment
abou1 Lizzie's weight. Not
only did she do this, but
she alerted the doctor. He
told Lizzie sternly, "You're
still growing, so I'm not
too worried, but at 4 feet
11 inches, you should
weigh closer to 95 or I 00
pounds. Be. sure you're
eating right and gettin g
enough sleep and eKercise."
Hearing this from a
inedical professional made
a big difference. I sent the
doctor a thank-you note
and a loaf of homemade
bread. Relieved in
Eastern Ohio
Dear Relieved: You, the
nurse and the doctor !)an·
died Lizzie beautifully and
cleverly. Thanks for sharing.

Annie's Mailbox is
writtei1 by Kathy Mitchell
and Marcy Sugar, longtime editor.~ of the Ann
La11ders column . . Please
e-mail your questions to ·
anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to:
Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611, To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate wrirers a11d cartoonists, visit
the Creators Syndicate
Web page at www.creators.com.

Proud}Q be, apa~ of your life.·.

!·

The Dally Sentlnel • SubsCribe today • 992-2155 •
www.rpY.tlai ly!;!~ntinel.com
..,

•

.PageA3

Father's

•
i

Is June 17th

�PageA4

0 PINI0 N

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, Junes,

2007

...:.:::.:...::...=:~~==:.::._-----=~:...==-=-=...::::..=.~-----___::.:..::.;;;;::.:..;;.;,:,;,;.;.~__;.

The Daily Sentinel
· 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio ·

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

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

Congre~s

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, anil to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

Tuesday,Junes,2oo7

,.

'

Bush nears ·debacle in Iraq, but Democrats·can't be trusted, either ·
.
Barri ng a miracle, the
United States faces a catastrophic defeat in Iraq, with
President Bush and both .
Republicans
and
Democrats in Congress
Morton
sharing in the blame.
Kondlactce
Bush's new counterinsurgency strategy has yet to be
fully implemented, and yet
the White House . and
Congress both are talking business in Iraq and into
up a return to the recom- . the support, equipping and
mendations of .the biparti- training business in a
prompt and honorable way.
sim Iraq Study Group which is to say, the same It will reduce the number of
strategy Bush abandoned "troops in Iraq. Those that
earlier this year as a failure. stay will be less in harm's
Instead of stationing U.S. way," he said.
troops in urban neighbor- . Alexander is co-sponsorhoods to prevent sectarian ing, along with Sens. Mark
mayhem - as the U.S. Pryor, D-Ark., Bob Casey,
commander, Gen . David D-Pa., Ken Salazar, DColo:, Bob Bennett, RPetraeus, is trying to do the ISG policy calls for a Utah, and Judd Gregg, Rreturn to secure bases, N.H., a resolution designed
away f.rom involvement in to dechire the ISG recomwhat surely will be a . mendations official U.S.
policy.
renewed civil war.
The presence of conservFailure to bring order and
stability to Baghdad . will atives Gregg and Bennett
discredit both the u .S. and among the co-sponsors
the Iraqi government. Amid · indicates it may have the
·
h
· 'Ill d unspoken
backing of
sectanan c aos, 11 Wt ea
Senate
Minority
Leader
to new calls for a total
withdrawal of U.S. troops Mitch McConnell (Ky.) and
and abandonment of the Minority Whip Trent Lou
country to become a haven (Mi ss.).
Alexander contends that
for AI Qaeda and prothe ISG policy is not inconIranian Shiite militias.
The miracle that's needed sistent with Petnieus' counts dramatic evidence this terinsurgency surge ·summer that the Petraeus there is a one-sentence
"surge" is · working and mention · of a · temporary
swift movement toward troop surge in the ISG 's
Iraqi political reconcilia- December 2006 report tion . But miracles rarely · but advocacy of it now cerhappen and ' patience in tainly undercuts Petraeus'
Anierica is running out. efforts and signals that a
Democrats are beating the U.S. pullback is in the offdrum for withdrawal . and ing.
R
bi'
·
The House and Senate
epu tcans are growmg
shaky in their support for voted by lopsided margins
Bush's policies.
last week to continue fundThose advocating "d\ISl- ing the war - 80-14 in the
ing off' the ISG report Senate and 280-142 in the
don ' t argue for it as a House - but it's signifistrategic retreat, but rather cant that a majority of
as a politically sustainable House Democrats voted
means of keeping U.S. "no," as did Democratic
candidates
troops in Iraq for the fore- .presidential
Sens. Hillary · Rodham
seeable future.
.As
Sen.
Lamar Glinton (N.Y.), Barack
Alexander, R-Tenn., stated Obama (Ill.) and Chris
on the Senate floor on May Dodd (Conn.)
24, "the current surge of
If Petraeus and the Iraqi
troops in Baghdad, which government can't produce
we ail hope is successful, is . miracles by September,
not by itself a strategy for demands for withdrawal
tomorrow. The Iraq Study are likely to become irreGroup report is a strategy sistible, particularly as the
for tomorrow.
2008 elections draw near.
"It would get the United · If the United State s
States out of the combat leaves iraq in chaos, the

blame will fail primarily on
President
Bush, who
already is being branded as
one of the worst presidents
in American history for the
Iraq mi~adventure. ·
lndeetl, he went into the .
war on mistaken pretenses
- that Saddam Hussein
possessed weapons of mass
destruction - and a iluwed
Vice President Cheney, former Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeid and their
"neoconservative" allies to
convince him that taking
over Iraq would be easy.
Far too few troops were
committed to the struggle,
the Pentagon and White
House ignoted advice from
Middle East experts and .
Bush overestimated the
willingness · of
the
American people to stay
with a difficult ta'S k. Bush
bet his presidency on Iraq
and it looks as though he
has lost.
Bush believed that a victory in Iraq would undercut
Islamic extremism in the
world. In stead, his policy
has fueled it - providing a
rallying cry and a training
ground for jihadists much
as the Soviet .Union once
did in Afghanistan .
· As retired CIA official
Bruce Riedel wrote in · the
May/June iss ue of Foreign
Affairs, ai- Qaida is resurgent in the world, battlehardened and encouraged
by experience in Iraq · and
now piolling terrorism in
Europe, North Africa, India
and the Middle East.
On the other hand, the
Iraq experience does not
inspire confidence in
Democrats' ability to carry
out foreign policy in a time
· of grave danger, either.
Most of them agreed With
Bush on the presence
weapons of mass destruction and voted to authorize
the war - then quickly
backed off when the going
got tough.
/
Hardly any Democrats
joined Sen. John McCain,
R-Ariz. , in arguing th at
more troops were needed to
· ac hi eve
victory.
Democratic policy almost
from the beginning was:
"get out," regardless of the
co nsequences.
Now, despite the fact that
AI Qaeda leaders have.
declared Iraq to be the central front in thejihadi st war

Today is Tuesday, June 5, the !56th day of2007. There are
209 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
On June 5, 1968, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated in Los Angeles' Ambassador Hotel after claiming victory
in California's Democratic presidential primary. Gunman
Sirhan Bishara Sirhan was immediately arrested.
On this date:
In 1884, Civil War hero Gen. William T. Sherman refused
the Republican presidential nomination, saying, "I will not
accept if nominated and will not serve if elected."
in 1917, about 10 million American men beganregistering
for the draft in World Wart
In 1933, the United States went 9ff the gold standard.
In 1940, during the . World War II Battle of France,
Germany attacked French forces along the Somme line.
ln 1947, Secretary of State George C. Marshall gave a
speech at Harvard University in which he outlined an aid
program for Europe that came to be known as 'The Marshall
Plan."
In 1976, 14 people were killed when the Teton Dam in
Idaho burst.
In I981, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
reported that five homosexuals in Los Angeles had come
down with a rare kind of pneumonia; they were the first recognized cases of what later became known as AIDS.
·
In 1986, a federal jury in Baltimore convicted Ronald W.
Pelton of selling secrets to the Soviet Union. (Pelton was
sentenced to three life prison cerms plus 10 years.)
In 2004, Ronald Wilson Reagan, the 40th president of the
United States, died in Los Angeles at age 93 after a long
struggle with Alzheimer's disease.
Ten years ago: Harold J. Nicholson, the highest ranking
CIA officer ever caught spying against his own country, was
sentenced to more than 23 years in prison for selling defense
secrets to Russia after the Cold War.
Five years ago: 14-year-old Elizabeth Smart disappeared
from her Salt Lake City home. (Smart was found alive in a.
Salt Lake suburb in March 2003; two people accused df
abducting her have been found mentally unfit to stand trial.)
A suicide bomber killed 17 Israelis on a bus. Magic Johnson
was introduced as a· member of the 2002 class elected to the
Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. Dee Dee
Ramone, bass player for the pioneer punk band the
Ramones, died in Los Angeles at age 50~
'
One year ago: More than 50 National Guardsmen from
Utah became the first unit to work along the U.S.-Mexico
bOrder as parr of President Bush's crackdown on illegal
immigration. An Islamic militia with alleged links to aiQaida seized Somalia's capital, Mogadishu, after weeks of
fighting with U.S.-backed secular warlords. Serbian law, makers proclaimed 'their Balkan republic a sovereign state
after Montenegro decided to split from a union and dissolve
The United Nations ts
the·remnants of what was once Yugoslavia.
increasingly
becoming a
Thought for Today: "Dare to be naive." - R. Buckminster
&lt;if
itself
while
parody
Fuller, American inventor and philosopher (1895-1983).
•
American taxpay~rs last
year provided $439 million
LETTERS TO THE
to the regular U.N. budget
Nat
- plus a. headquarters in
EDITOR
Hentoff
New York that the U.N.
Letters 10 the editor are welcome. They should be less management wants to
than 300 words. A/I letters are subject to editing, must be expand. Not only has this
signed, and include address and telephone number. No dysfunctional and occasionunsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in ally corrupt organization highest on the planet
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities .. Letters of failed to stop the genocide more than 2,200 percent.
thanks to organizations alid individuals will not be accept- in Darfur, but on May II ,
The African nations voted for publication.
the insatiably brutal Robert ing to bestow "legitimacy"
Mugabe's government of on Mugabe's terrorism
Zimbabwe was elevated by against his own people
the United Nations to chair closed their eyes and conits
Commission
on sciences to the fact - as
. (USPS 213-960)
Sustainable Development reported by The Economist
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
- dealing with land, rural -that "every day desperate
Co.
and economic development, Zimbabweans· cross the
C~rrectlon Polley
Publi shed every afternoon, Monday
and the environment.
Limpopo river, braving
Our main concern .in all stories is tc
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
Astonished,
The crocodiles and occasionally
be accurate. If yoU know of an error
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second&lt;&gt;Ciass
Economist magazine (May drowning, to try their luck
in a story, call the newsroom at {740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
19) noted that Zimbabwe, in
neighboring South
992-2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
as
"the
breadAfrica.
Trapped into illegalonce
known
the Ohio N ewspa~er Association.
has
had
basket
of
Africa,"
Postmaster: Send address correcity there, many are exploit"
Our main number Is .
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
its
agriculture
"largely
ed
and abused."
(740) 992-2156.
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
destroyed by its govern-.
Meanwhile, the liber.ator
Department extensions are:
ment's catastrophic poli- · of Zimbabwe from white
Subscription Rates
cies."
rule into its present wasteBy carrier or motor route
This
year,
it
was
Africa's
News
land is planning a 2008
One month
'1 0.27
turn to lead the Commission campaign for an additional ·
Editor: Ch~rlene HoeiiK:h, Ext. 12 One year
'115.84
on .
. Dally
50'
Sustainable six-year term and a $4 milReporter: Brian Reed, EKt. 14
Senior
Citizen
rates
Development,
·and the lion museum (a "shrine") of
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
One month
'1 0.27
U.N. 's African members · his lifetime achievements
One year
'1 03.90
shamefully and inexcusably (Washington Times, May
Advertising
SUbscliiJels ShOul&lt;l remit n adVance
support Mugabe's govern- 2). Mugabe will surely win
Outalde Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 dirvcl 10 lhe Daly Sentinel. No sub·
- if not by acclamation
ment for that post.
scription by man permitted in area&amp;
Outalde SaiM: Brenda Davis, Ext16 where home .carrier service is avail·
Zimbabwe is a disaster then certainly through icing· CIUaJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
able.
area. The country's own practiced intimidation. In
Social
Welfare May, for example, he forMall Subscription
Commission,
as
reported
'by . bade Zimbabwe journalists
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
The
New
York
Times
on -those who still risk beatCharlene Hoeflich, EKt. 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
ings and prison for reportDec.
19,
found
that
63
per26 w eeks
'64.20
cent of the rural population ing the truth- from march52 Weeks
' 127.11
E-mail:
and 53 percent of the urban . ing in commemoration · of
news@mydailysentinel.com
Outside Meigs County
population · cannot meet World Press Freedom Day
13 Weeks
'53.55
(New York Times, May 7).
b;~sic food requirements.
Web:
26 Weeks
'107.10
Under
Mug
abe's
tule,
While the United Nations
52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydailysentin,el.com
elevates
Mugabe to alert the
Zimbabwe's inflation is the

on America, Democrats
want to abandon that struggle. They say they want to .
confront AI . Qaeda in
Afghanistan instead, but ·
who 's to believe they
would stay the course there ·
if it became difficult?
Ri edel, in. his Foreign'
Affairs article, argues that
Iraq has become "more of a
trap than an opportunity for ·
the Un iled States" and that .'
"A I Qaeda and Iran both
want Washington to remain
bogped down in the quag- .
mire" th ere. He recom -.
mends a ··.complete, orderly .
and phased troop with·
drawai that allows 1he Iraqi
governmen{ to take the
credit" for the pullout and so
enhance its legitimacy."
After that, he said, "the ·
objective should be to let
the Iraqis settle their confiicts themselves," while
the United States. co ncentrates on combating AI
-Qaeda,
primarily
in
Afghanistan and Pakistan.
The problem with thi s
argument is that AI Qaeda
will. interpret U.S . withdrawai from Iraq as another
retreat, more evidence that
the United States lacks the
stomach for a long-term
struggle. it was lhat conviclion that led to the Sept. I I,
2001, terrorist auacks.
Riedel concluded thal "a
failure to adj.ust U.S. strategy would increase the risk,
that AI Qaeda will launch ·
another ' raid' on the United
States, thi s time perhaps
with weapons of mass
destruction .
"For th e last several .
years. AI Qaeda's priority
has been to bleed the :
United
States ·
in · ·
Afghani stan and Iraq . .Striking on U.S .. soil has
been a lesser gnal. If AI
Qaeda survives, however,··
sooner or later it will attack ··
the U.S . homeland again."
Is AI Qaeda more likely :
to hit America again if lht&lt; :·
U.S. stays the . co!trse in
Iraq and defeat s . the ··
jihadists - which it mi ght ·.
do under the Petraeus st rat-.
egy' Or, if the U.S. turns
tail and retreatsry With Bush
di scredit ed , it looks
though the United States'·
will take the defeatist ri sk. .. •
(Morton Kondra cke is.·
executive editor of Roll ·
Call. th e neWJ{JafJer ofCatJilnl Hill.)

as'.

Why are we still in the· United Nations?

The Daily Sentinel

'.

world on vital issues of sustainable
· development;
Christopher Dell , who is
ending a three-year assignment as U.S. ambassador to
Zimbabwe, gave National
Public Radio (May 15) his
assessment of the living hell
Mugabe has created:
"The metaphor I have is
that it is like a lake. And as
the waters of the lake
·recede, more and more of
the fish are being left to die
in th&lt;: mud. At the center,
the big fish are swimming
around nicely and making
huge fortunes, huge fortunes."
Metaphor turns into reality in this Dec. 17 dispatch
by Erik German of
Newsday from Victoria
Falls, Zimbabwe:
"A few miles south from
empty luxury hotels in this
once daz,ziing tourist spot,
dozens of gaunt young men
survive by scavenging food
from the town dump. Alan
Sibanda, 23, has been coming here .:. for the past fiv e
years,
scuffling
with
baboons and vulture.s for the
least-rotten scrap s. Since
midsummer,. garbage has
been his main source of
food."
I guess the U.N. members
who\ voted to honor Mugabe
by making Zimbabwe the
head of the Commission on
Sus tainable Development
didn 't bother to interview
Sibanda before the final. ballot.
To cap the current (and
chronic) disgrace of the
United Nations, guess who
the'new officers of the U.N .
Disarmament Commission
are? The chair is Syria,

home of abundantly armed ·
warring factions - and the. .
vice chair, believe it or not,
is Iran, ihe leading prospect .
to blow up its region of the ·:
world. Having this proud·
stoker of nuclear destnic:
lion become second-incommand of the U.N. ·
. Disarmament Commission
is like springing Jack"
Abramoff from prisoitto fill
the new vacancy at the
, World Bank.
·
in one of its series of editorials, "Your U.N. at
Work," the May 19-20 Wail
Street Journal said : " it 's a
shame the U.S. didn ' t
re spond to the outcome of
the~ two 'leadership' elections (including Zimbabwe
heading the Development
Commission) and walk
away from both . of these
useless U.N. omfits."
it makes much more
sense for us to walk away
from the United Nations
itself, period. There are
other organizations that with more help from us and
other concerned nations can feed the hungry and .
provide medical aid for \
those in need around the
world.
But
Eleanor
Roosevelt's dr~am of ' the
United Nations serving as
an international beacon of
·human rights has become a
nightmare of millions of .
people's betrayed hopes.
(Nat Hentoff is a rwrion-.
ally renawneq authority on .
rile First Amendment and .
the Bill of Rights (/lid author
of many books, including
" TI~e War on the. Bill of
Rights and the Gathering· ·.
Resistance" (Seven Stories··
Press, 2004). )

Obituaries
/

·James G. Circle
NEW HAVEN- James G. Circle, 78, of New Haven,
W. V. pa~~ away peacefully at the Four Winds Nursing
Commumty m Jackson, Ohio on June 3, 2007.
. He was born on August 8, 1928, son of the late Howard
Ctrcle and Mary McElroy Circle of Racine, Ohio. He was
a Umted States Army veteran of the Korean War owner of
the West Virginia Sausage Company, and co-ow'ner of the
New Haven Super Market.
He is survived by his loving wife of forty-three years
Phxllis Gibson Circle of New Haven; one son and daugh:
ter-m-law, Ronald K. "Rick" and Marianne Circle of
Mason, W.Va.; a grandson, James Christopher Circle of
Mason; a stster, Clara Pierce of Jackson OH: a
brother, George Circle of Pomeroy (&gt;H· 'one sister-inlaw, Patricia Circle of Overland Park Kans~s· one brotheri~-law, William Perry of Hillsdale, Michigan;'and a host of
meces, nephews and friends.
·
In .addition .to his parents, he was preceded·in death by
one stster and three brothers.
.
Funeral services will be at I I a.m. on Wednesday, June
6, 2007 at the Anderson Funeral Home in New Haven with
Kenneth Gibson officiating. Burial will follow at the
Carmel Cemetery in Racine, Ohio. Visiting hours will be
on Tuesday from 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made
to the Fours Winris Nursing Community, 215 Seth Avenue
J~ckson, Ohto 45640. A registry is available on-line by vistUng www.andersonfu.com. ·
·

Calvin L Mitchell
Calvin L. Mitchell,. 81, passed on to be with his beloved
wife Louise . on June 3, 2007, at Riverside Methodist
Hospital in Columbus, Ohio.
He was born July 18, 1925, to John Calvin and Flora
Glenn Mitchell, who preceded him in death.
Beside his parents, he was preceded in death by brotherS\
John, Lawrence, Bobby, Sherman and Otho Mitchell; a sister, Mary; and a grandsot,~, Casby Mitchell IV, "Kip."
He is survived by a daugh(l!r, Linda Ann Meadows of.
Pomeroy; a grandson, Casby Mitchell (fiance Megan)
Meadows of Point Pleasant, W.Va.; a brother, Larry Gene
Mitchell of Gallipolis; two brothen-in-Iaw, John P. Young
of Lancaster, and William A. Young of Pomeroy; two sisters-in-law, Beulah Belle Mitchell of Gallipolis, and
Elizabeth Mitchell of Bidwell; and several nieces and
nephews.
.
.
.
.,
After serving in the 90th Division of the Army, he came
home to and mamed his high School sweetheart, B. Louise
Shaw, on Feb, 13, ·t947.
He receved a mechanic.'s education in the Army and when
he came home; be worked as a mecbanic for Agee's Tractor
Supply and Bob Saunders Gas Station at the corner of Pine
Street and Seeond Avenue' in Gallipolis. ·
He then went to work for.the Evans Packing Co. for 27
years, which then became Landmark. Mter leaving there,
he worked for PPC in Point Pleasant fot five years before
retiring and moving to Port Charlotte, Fla., in 1987.
He was a member of the Point Pleasant Moose Lodge No.
731 for years and also a member of the Gallipolis Boat
Club. He loved his boats and the last one he owned was a
40-foot houseboat, where he enjoyed inviting friends for
weekend outings. He always enjoyed his many boats and
cars. He was really a "jack of ali trades" and anyone with
something broken always knew, "Calvin can fix it!" He was
always there to help.
.
·
·
·
He was a very carint~ and compassionate person who will
be sorely missed by hts family and many good friends and
neighbors.
Services will be I I a.m. Wednesday, June 6, 2007, at the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wetherholt Chapel, 420 First
Ave., Gallipolis, with Bob Hood officiating. Burial will follow in Ridgelawn Cemc;tery at Mercerville. Friends ,may
call at the funeral. home from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday, June 5,
2007.
10
Condolences
can
be
e-mailed
www.timeformemory.com/mm.

John GregOry Hayes
John Gregol'y Hayes, 51, of Middleport, died Tuesday,
May 29, 2007, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis. ·
Arrangements were handled by the Fisher Funeral Home
in Pomeroy.
·

Local Briefs
No meeting
POMEROY -Meigs County Commissioners will not
meet on June 14, due to a scheduling conflict. . ·

Trip canceled
POMEROY- The meeting and trip for June 9 has been
canceled by Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Da11ghters of
the American Revolution, and re-scheduled for June 16.
-Cali Karen Werry for reservations ..
reduced school lunches.
In addition to the summer
food program at the two
pools, the AFN also profrom PageA1
vides meals to other Meigs
served daily at each of the County locations. It has
with
Sister
two local pool s, more will be worked
provided if there is a need, Francisca Aguillon to proCouts said. At the pool in vide meals to migrant workNelsonville, the program ers in the Racine community. It also provides evening
provides 190 meals a day.
While children receiving meals to children participatmeals need not meet any ing in after-school enrichincome guidelines, the com- ment programs in the counmunity must have a 50-per- ty's three local school di scent eli gibility for free and tricts.

Lunches

AMP

from PageA1
new facility."
AMP-Ohio maintains
once the AMPGS goes
online, it will be one of the
cleanest faci lities of its type
in the nati on .
Denny Addis, president
of The Andersons , Inc .
plant nutrient group added :
"Powerspan's state of the
art mulu-pollution control
technology promises to

produce high quality
ammonium sulfate plant
nutrient for our Midwest
customer base. Serving
AMP-Ohio's plant nutrient
· operational and distribution · l)eeds is a natural
· extension to our core production and distribution
business."
Mike Anderson, president and CEO of The
Andersons, Inc. said, "We
are pleased to partner with
AMP-Ohio on thi~ important and environmentally
pro-active project. We are

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel•. Page As

Cleveland
lAW You CAN USE
Clinic signs
Ohio rnles ofprofessiolllll conduct govern attorneys' actions another deal
Q.: Are attorneys subject to or judicial officer in conduct the interests of other clients
any ethical standards?
that is a violation of the Ohio conflict with such representa- for health care.
A.: Yes. Attomeys must be Rules ofP r o f e s s i o n a ·I tion. Sometimes, attorneys
licensed {o practice law in Conduct, the applicable rules may ·continue to represent in Abu Dhabi
Ohio by the Supreme Court of of judicial conduct, or other more than one client at a time
Ohio. When admitted to prac- law; engage, in a professional if the clients agree after ali the
lice, attorneys sweartp uphold capacity, in conduct involving conflicts are made known.
the Constitution and the law, discrimination prohibited by
Competent representation.
and to be faithful to their law because of 'race, color, Attorneys are expected to repclients. They are expected to religion, age, gender, sexual resent tl)eir clients competenthonor this oath and the Rules orientation, national origin, ly. Competent representation
of Professional Conduct, a set marital status, or
dis- requires the legal knowledge,
of ethical rules adopted by the ability.
skill, thoroughness, . and
Supreme Court. The Rules
Specifically, attorneys must preparation reasonably necescontain minimum standards obey cenain rules concerning: sary for the representation.
for attorneys' ethical conduct
Fees and employment.
Client funds . Attorneys
Attorneys must obey the' Attorneys are not allowed to must keep clients' funds in
Rules. If they do not, they will receive illegal payment (such separate accounts and may not
be subject to. disciplinary as stolen goods) or charge mix them with their own
action.
. clearly excessive fees. To funds. Also, they must keep
decide whether or not a fee is
Q.: What are attorneys' eth- "clearly excessive," factors complete records for seven
such as time involvement; dif- ·years after the end of the repical duties?
A.: In general, attorneys ficuity of legal issues, custom- resentation. The attorney must
must meet. their responsibili- ary fees in the area, amount of · notify clients promptly when
ties as set forth in the Rules. money involved and results they receive client funds or
They must not engage in any obtained, experience and rep- property. Aclient's funds must
misconduct described in these utation of the attorney, and be paid to the client when the
Rules, including commit an contingency based services client is entitled to receive
them.
illegal act that reflects are taken into account.
adversely 811 the lawyer's honConfidentiality and conflict
Law You Can Use is a
esty or trustworthiness;
of interest. Except in a very
conduct involving fraud, dis- few instances, attorneys may weekly consumer legal inforhonesty, deceit, or misrepre- not reveal confidential client mation column provided by
Bar
sentation; couduct prejudicial information, including infor- the · Ohio State
to the administration of jus- mation that is protected by the Association. Articles appeartice; state or imply an ability attOrney-client
privilege. ing in this column are intendto influence improperly a gov- Also, they generally may not ed to provide broad, general
emment agency or official, or ·reveal information relating to information about ·the law.
to achieve results by means the representation. In addition, Before applying this inforthat violate the Ohio Rules of attorneys generally are not matiorr to a specifiC legal
Professional Conduct or other allowed to represent a client problem, readers are urged to
law; knowingly assist a judge when iheir own interests or seek advice from a11 attomey.

Alumni

1946: Richard B. Bailey.
Middleport; Martin Carson,
Richmond, Ind.; Roy Evans,
Canal Winchester;. Alfred
from PageA1
Scarberry, Thurman. ·
1947: James Arnold,
awarded scholarships from Johnson
City,
Tenn. ;
the fund which was Started in Madeline Johnson Derring,
1961 with a total of$71,500 Grove City; John Fultz,
being given to graduates Middleport;
Clara
B.
who were the sons or daugh- Gilmore Riley, Middleport..
ters, or the grandsons or
1948: Helen Gilkey Byer,
granddaughters
of Baltimore; Marilyn Knopp
Middleport High School Fultz, Middleport; James
graduates.
Haggerty, Milton, W.Va.;
Other scholarships pre- . Lorraine Riggs Neff,
sented were to the Ravenswood,
W.Va.;
McComas-Mt;~ore
to Dorothy Miller Roach,
Elizabeth Joy Casci, daugh- Middleport.
ter of Arthur and Joyce
1949: Char~s Byer,
Casci, and Lynette Nicole Baltimore; Kitty Bachtel
Stengel, daughter of Dennis Dallas, A~oura Hills, Calif.;
and Doris Walb'urn. The Dave Diles, Athens; John
Crawford-Gray -Lewis Dudding, Racine; Hazel
scholarship went to Whitney Hawkins
Guinter,
N. Smith, daughterofHomer Columbus; Virginia Grogan
and Rita Smith.
Holman, Middleport; Robert
Following the diriner (Joyce) Mills, Pomeroy;
reunion classes were recog- Rosemary Fisher Moore,
nized with Edison Baker of Columbus.
the class of I935 celebrating
1950: Grace Montgomery
his 70th anniversary of-grad-· A.bbott, Pomeroy; Mary
uation. Other classes recog- Gilmore
Brewer,
nized were 1942, 1947, Middleport; Don Payne,
1952, 1957, the 50th, 1962, Dayton; Robert Richards,
and 1967, the 40th and last Columbus;
Raymond
year before the Meigs Local Walburn, · Middleport; Jean
consolidation. Music for Searles Craig, Middleport.
dancing following the banJames Buell,
l 95 I:
quet was provided by Gary Knightdale, N.C.; Clifford
Ginther. Presiding officers and
.frances
Chase
for the annual reunion we!'ll Coleman, Jackson; Roger
Myron Duffield, president; Dillard. Pomeroy; Betty
June Kloes, vice president; Ashley
Snow-Rosser;
Nancy Beaver, secretary; James
Sanborn.
and Carolyn Litchfield, trea- Proctorville; Dana Walburn,
surer.
Salem, Oregon; Roscoe
Graduates attending the Wise, Middleport.
~anquet and their years of
1952: Nancy Miller
graduation are as follows:
Beaver, Middleport,; Walter
1935: Edison Baker, Clark, Point Pleasant, W.Va.;
Middleport,
Gene Dudding, Elyria; Julie
1937: Willa Hill Bowers, Mitch Houck, Marion; Patsy
Howard
Russell, Saunders Hoy, Columbus, ;
Middleport.
Ruth
Chase
Jenkins,
I 938: Virginia Pierce Middleport; June Smart
Nelson, Swanton.
Kloes, Middleport; Carolyn
Betty
Roush Pierce Litchfield, Point
I 940:
Allensworth, Gallipolis; Pleasant, W.Va .; . Nola
Charles Entsminger, South Knopp Swisher, Middleport;
Charleston, W.Va.; Dorothy Carol Bachtel Tannehill,
Stewart White, Fort Gratiot, Middleport; Larry Rice,
Mich.
Nicholasville, Ky.; Jean
1941: Jean Roush Russell, Smart Siddall, Lebanon; Bill
Worthington.
·
Taylor, Columbus; Peggy
1942: Henry Clatworthy, Herrmann Thomas,
Middleport;
Barbara Cheshire; Mary M. Williams
Hackett
Mullen, Walburg, Dublin.
Ravenswood, W.Va.
1953:
Robert Byer,
1943: Ann Kelly (Gary) Syracu~c .
Bailey. M iddlepurt; Lois
1954:
Rae
Mi l l ~
Roush
Cunnin gham, Gwiadowsky, Middlepo rt;
Syracuse. ·
1944: Jeanne You ng
Bradbury, Syracuse.
pleased and excited to be a
part of this project and a
meniber of tl:te AMP-Ohio
and. Powers~an team."
' AMP-Oh10 filed the air
permit-to-install application with the Ohio EPA in
May 2006. Additional
major path P.ermit applications were ftled last month,
including Ohio Powe r
Siting Board ge nerati on
application, Army Corps of
Engineers Section l 0/404
permit, OEPA 40 I ~ertlfi­
cation, solid waste permitto-install, NPDES permit.

CLEVELAND (AP) -The

Oeveland Oinic on Monday
said it signed art agreement
with the Health Authority of
Abu Dhabi, the capital city of
the United Arab Fmirates, to
manage a liealth care complex
there.
"As a global health care institution, Cleveland Clinic has
sought to cultivate opportunities to further exparxl our presence abroad, sharing state-ofthe-art medical practices, liD'
cedures and · administrative
capabilities and raising !J!alth
care standards worldwide,"
said Delos "Toby" Cosgrove,
Oeveland Clinic's CEO and
president.
The clinic will manage the
Sheikh Khalifu Medical City,
which consists of 700-bed
Sheikh Khalifa Hospital, a !50bed Behavior Sciences
Pavilion and the I00-bed Abu
Dhabi Rehabilitation Center.
There are also numerous affili.
ated doctors.· offices and outpatient clinics.
The deal marks the second
foray into the United Arab
· Emirates for the Cleveland
Clinic, which reached a deal in
September to help design and
build a new hospital in the
counlry 's capital to be known
as Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi.

Carl Taylor,
Columbus; Betty Gilmore Wolfe,
Charlene Walburn Thomas Chester: Daniel Malik,
and Charles Walburn,
Ashland. Ky.; Bill McCool,
City; Mary Walburn Taylor; Dublin ; Doris Rice Walburn ·
.Barbara Bowles Setzer, and Edna Rice, Beverly.
·columbus.
I 962: Cindy . Morris
1955: Ronald Fultz, Abbott ,
Middleport;
Westerville, ; Sheila Stover Charlene Davis Batey,
Hubbard, Lancaster; Brady MiddlcRort ; Helen Taylor
Huffman, Middleport; Jim Fox, Milford Center; Jeanie
Puckett, Columbus;
Pat ·Manley Halley ; Alice
Baker Russell, Hot Springs Jacobs, Racine; Beverly
Village, Ariz.; Yvonne Perrin Kosiba, Clarkston,
Hackett
S c a I I y , Mich.; Coleen Wilson
Middleport.
Ohlinger,
Zanesville;
1956: Jerome Beach, Dennis Saelens, Middleport;
Columbus; Nancy Roller NiCk Walburn, Lebanon;
Cale, Middleport,
Pete Walburn, Jacobsburg.
I963: John Allensworth,
Larry Lewis, Bellefontaine;
Patty Lloyd Bastiani, Reynoldsburg; Janet Bake~
Gallipolis; James Mourning, Downie, Pomeroy; Jeanne
Middleport; Marlene Knapp · Bowles Gross, Gahanna;
Yeager, Canal Winchester.
Rich Hayes, London.
1957: Keith Anderson,
1964:Judy Wildermuth
Louisville, · Ky.; James Allensworth, Reynoldsburg;
Bowles, Point Pleasant, Marilyn Swan Anderson,
W.Va.; Arthur Clark, Idaho Middleport; Cinda Sauer
Falls, Idaho; Stephen Coats, Harris, Middleport.
West Plains, Md.; Bessie • 1965: David Casci,
Pettit Darst, Middleport ; Middleport;
Diane
Charles Delay, Sugar.Grove; VanCooney
Lynch,
Gordon Guthrie Cleveland; Middleport;
Marty
Richard
Hovatter, Nicholson, Nashville, Tenn.;
Middleport; Jane Harris Suzanne Bradbury Sayre,
Huffman, Middleport; Leo Racine: Alan Wallace, Canal
Kennedy,Tuppers
Winchester; Christine Bahr
Plains;
Ed
Kitchen, Williams, Gallipolis.
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. ;
1966: Dave Ashley,
Hershel! Knapp, Sabina ; Middleport; John Blake,
Eudell
Konkright, Middleport.
Springfield; Kenneth Lewis,
1967: James Butcher,
Norwood; Ed McComas, Middleport; Rose Marie
Ky. ; Hackett,
Lexington,
Bowling Green,
Bill
Hysell~
. Marilyn Meier, Middleport, Ky.,
Barbara Capteina Mora, Frankfort, N.Y.; Kay Ault
Pomeroy.
Logan, Middleport; Kathy
1958: Judy Arnold, · McElhinny
Mullins,
Middleport,; Phyllis Stanley Middleport; Janis Schmoll,
Baker, Middleport; Jan Gallipolis; Mary Wolfe
Houck, Lexint~ton, N.C. ; Slawter, Middleport.
Donald Karr; Mtddleport;
Ronnie (Janice) Miller,
Middleport; Jeanette Crooks
(Daniel)
Thomas,
Middleport;
Charlotte
ESTABLISHED 1895
Lightfoot
VanMeter,
Pomeroy; Ira Wayland. Big
Tri-County Gospel Sing
Prairie.
June 2 at 7:00 l!m
· 1959: Gene Abbott.
Auditions:
Millersport; Carla Wilson
"The
Unsinkable
Molly
Lohrer, Troy; D i c k
Brown"
Roller, Belpre.
Ju.
n
e
3
2[!m
. 1960:
Ernest
Hall ,
1 June 4·5 6 l!m
Pomeroy; Olivia Bowles
Yoga Class Be&amp;!ns June 4
Lockett, Shaker Heights:
Wishful! kealities June 9
Loretta Hanning Roller,
Camp Melodrams:
Belpre; Dennis Walburn ,
· Theatre Camp
Beverly; Diane Stumbo
June II ·July 7
Williams, Lehigh, Fla.
The
Ariel-Dater Hall ·
1961 : Tom Ande rso n,
Midd leport ; Judy Sauer
42~~~~;.:,"_',i ~~~i~~~;~,?H
Crooks, Middleport;

J\RJEL

OPEN 'HOUSE
June 10, 2007
2pm- 4pm
24959 Apple Grove Dorcas
Racine, Ohio

Come Take A Look!!!
Hosted by:
Wendi Miller, Sales Agent

Teaford R,fal Esta,te
Broker: G. Bruce Teaford
Office Number: 740-992-3325 Agent Number: 740-416-4015
*Contact
to schedule a
tour of this home.

�PageA4

0 PINI0 N

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, Junes,

2007

...:.:::.:...::...=:~~==:.::._-----=~:...==-=-=...::::..=.~-----___::.:..::.;;;;::.:..;;.;,:,;,;.;.~__;.

The Daily Sentinel
· 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio ·

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

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

Congre~s

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, anil to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

Tuesday,Junes,2oo7

,.

'

Bush nears ·debacle in Iraq, but Democrats·can't be trusted, either ·
.
Barri ng a miracle, the
United States faces a catastrophic defeat in Iraq, with
President Bush and both .
Republicans
and
Democrats in Congress
Morton
sharing in the blame.
Kondlactce
Bush's new counterinsurgency strategy has yet to be
fully implemented, and yet
the White House . and
Congress both are talking business in Iraq and into
up a return to the recom- . the support, equipping and
mendations of .the biparti- training business in a
prompt and honorable way.
sim Iraq Study Group which is to say, the same It will reduce the number of
strategy Bush abandoned "troops in Iraq. Those that
earlier this year as a failure. stay will be less in harm's
Instead of stationing U.S. way," he said.
troops in urban neighbor- . Alexander is co-sponsorhoods to prevent sectarian ing, along with Sens. Mark
mayhem - as the U.S. Pryor, D-Ark., Bob Casey,
commander, Gen . David D-Pa., Ken Salazar, DColo:, Bob Bennett, RPetraeus, is trying to do the ISG policy calls for a Utah, and Judd Gregg, Rreturn to secure bases, N.H., a resolution designed
away f.rom involvement in to dechire the ISG recomwhat surely will be a . mendations official U.S.
policy.
renewed civil war.
The presence of conservFailure to bring order and
stability to Baghdad . will atives Gregg and Bennett
discredit both the u .S. and among the co-sponsors
the Iraqi government. Amid · indicates it may have the
·
h
· 'Ill d unspoken
backing of
sectanan c aos, 11 Wt ea
Senate
Minority
Leader
to new calls for a total
withdrawal of U.S. troops Mitch McConnell (Ky.) and
and abandonment of the Minority Whip Trent Lou
country to become a haven (Mi ss.).
Alexander contends that
for AI Qaeda and prothe ISG policy is not inconIranian Shiite militias.
The miracle that's needed sistent with Petnieus' counts dramatic evidence this terinsurgency surge ·summer that the Petraeus there is a one-sentence
"surge" is · working and mention · of a · temporary
swift movement toward troop surge in the ISG 's
Iraqi political reconcilia- December 2006 report tion . But miracles rarely · but advocacy of it now cerhappen and ' patience in tainly undercuts Petraeus'
Anierica is running out. efforts and signals that a
Democrats are beating the U.S. pullback is in the offdrum for withdrawal . and ing.
R
bi'
·
The House and Senate
epu tcans are growmg
shaky in their support for voted by lopsided margins
Bush's policies.
last week to continue fundThose advocating "d\ISl- ing the war - 80-14 in the
ing off' the ISG report Senate and 280-142 in the
don ' t argue for it as a House - but it's signifistrategic retreat, but rather cant that a majority of
as a politically sustainable House Democrats voted
means of keeping U.S. "no," as did Democratic
candidates
troops in Iraq for the fore- .presidential
Sens. Hillary · Rodham
seeable future.
.As
Sen.
Lamar Glinton (N.Y.), Barack
Alexander, R-Tenn., stated Obama (Ill.) and Chris
on the Senate floor on May Dodd (Conn.)
24, "the current surge of
If Petraeus and the Iraqi
troops in Baghdad, which government can't produce
we ail hope is successful, is . miracles by September,
not by itself a strategy for demands for withdrawal
tomorrow. The Iraq Study are likely to become irreGroup report is a strategy sistible, particularly as the
for tomorrow.
2008 elections draw near.
"It would get the United · If the United State s
States out of the combat leaves iraq in chaos, the

blame will fail primarily on
President
Bush, who
already is being branded as
one of the worst presidents
in American history for the
Iraq mi~adventure. ·
lndeetl, he went into the .
war on mistaken pretenses
- that Saddam Hussein
possessed weapons of mass
destruction - and a iluwed
Vice President Cheney, former Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeid and their
"neoconservative" allies to
convince him that taking
over Iraq would be easy.
Far too few troops were
committed to the struggle,
the Pentagon and White
House ignoted advice from
Middle East experts and .
Bush overestimated the
willingness · of
the
American people to stay
with a difficult ta'S k. Bush
bet his presidency on Iraq
and it looks as though he
has lost.
Bush believed that a victory in Iraq would undercut
Islamic extremism in the
world. In stead, his policy
has fueled it - providing a
rallying cry and a training
ground for jihadists much
as the Soviet .Union once
did in Afghanistan .
· As retired CIA official
Bruce Riedel wrote in · the
May/June iss ue of Foreign
Affairs, ai- Qaida is resurgent in the world, battlehardened and encouraged
by experience in Iraq · and
now piolling terrorism in
Europe, North Africa, India
and the Middle East.
On the other hand, the
Iraq experience does not
inspire confidence in
Democrats' ability to carry
out foreign policy in a time
· of grave danger, either.
Most of them agreed With
Bush on the presence
weapons of mass destruction and voted to authorize
the war - then quickly
backed off when the going
got tough.
/
Hardly any Democrats
joined Sen. John McCain,
R-Ariz. , in arguing th at
more troops were needed to
· ac hi eve
victory.
Democratic policy almost
from the beginning was:
"get out," regardless of the
co nsequences.
Now, despite the fact that
AI Qaeda leaders have.
declared Iraq to be the central front in thejihadi st war

Today is Tuesday, June 5, the !56th day of2007. There are
209 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
On June 5, 1968, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated in Los Angeles' Ambassador Hotel after claiming victory
in California's Democratic presidential primary. Gunman
Sirhan Bishara Sirhan was immediately arrested.
On this date:
In 1884, Civil War hero Gen. William T. Sherman refused
the Republican presidential nomination, saying, "I will not
accept if nominated and will not serve if elected."
in 1917, about 10 million American men beganregistering
for the draft in World Wart
In 1933, the United States went 9ff the gold standard.
In 1940, during the . World War II Battle of France,
Germany attacked French forces along the Somme line.
ln 1947, Secretary of State George C. Marshall gave a
speech at Harvard University in which he outlined an aid
program for Europe that came to be known as 'The Marshall
Plan."
In 1976, 14 people were killed when the Teton Dam in
Idaho burst.
In I981, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
reported that five homosexuals in Los Angeles had come
down with a rare kind of pneumonia; they were the first recognized cases of what later became known as AIDS.
·
In 1986, a federal jury in Baltimore convicted Ronald W.
Pelton of selling secrets to the Soviet Union. (Pelton was
sentenced to three life prison cerms plus 10 years.)
In 2004, Ronald Wilson Reagan, the 40th president of the
United States, died in Los Angeles at age 93 after a long
struggle with Alzheimer's disease.
Ten years ago: Harold J. Nicholson, the highest ranking
CIA officer ever caught spying against his own country, was
sentenced to more than 23 years in prison for selling defense
secrets to Russia after the Cold War.
Five years ago: 14-year-old Elizabeth Smart disappeared
from her Salt Lake City home. (Smart was found alive in a.
Salt Lake suburb in March 2003; two people accused df
abducting her have been found mentally unfit to stand trial.)
A suicide bomber killed 17 Israelis on a bus. Magic Johnson
was introduced as a· member of the 2002 class elected to the
Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. Dee Dee
Ramone, bass player for the pioneer punk band the
Ramones, died in Los Angeles at age 50~
'
One year ago: More than 50 National Guardsmen from
Utah became the first unit to work along the U.S.-Mexico
bOrder as parr of President Bush's crackdown on illegal
immigration. An Islamic militia with alleged links to aiQaida seized Somalia's capital, Mogadishu, after weeks of
fighting with U.S.-backed secular warlords. Serbian law, makers proclaimed 'their Balkan republic a sovereign state
after Montenegro decided to split from a union and dissolve
The United Nations ts
the·remnants of what was once Yugoslavia.
increasingly
becoming a
Thought for Today: "Dare to be naive." - R. Buckminster
&lt;if
itself
while
parody
Fuller, American inventor and philosopher (1895-1983).
•
American taxpay~rs last
year provided $439 million
LETTERS TO THE
to the regular U.N. budget
Nat
- plus a. headquarters in
EDITOR
Hentoff
New York that the U.N.
Letters 10 the editor are welcome. They should be less management wants to
than 300 words. A/I letters are subject to editing, must be expand. Not only has this
signed, and include address and telephone number. No dysfunctional and occasionunsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in ally corrupt organization highest on the planet
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities .. Letters of failed to stop the genocide more than 2,200 percent.
thanks to organizations alid individuals will not be accept- in Darfur, but on May II ,
The African nations voted for publication.
the insatiably brutal Robert ing to bestow "legitimacy"
Mugabe's government of on Mugabe's terrorism
Zimbabwe was elevated by against his own people
the United Nations to chair closed their eyes and conits
Commission
on sciences to the fact - as
. (USPS 213-960)
Sustainable Development reported by The Economist
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
- dealing with land, rural -that "every day desperate
Co.
and economic development, Zimbabweans· cross the
C~rrectlon Polley
Publi shed every afternoon, Monday
and the environment.
Limpopo river, braving
Our main concern .in all stories is tc
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
Astonished,
The crocodiles and occasionally
be accurate. If yoU know of an error
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second&lt;&gt;Ciass
Economist magazine (May drowning, to try their luck
in a story, call the newsroom at {740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
19) noted that Zimbabwe, in
neighboring South
992-2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
as
"the
breadAfrica.
Trapped into illegalonce
known
the Ohio N ewspa~er Association.
has
had
basket
of
Africa,"
Postmaster: Send address correcity there, many are exploit"
Our main number Is .
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
its
agriculture
"largely
ed
and abused."
(740) 992-2156.
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
destroyed by its govern-.
Meanwhile, the liber.ator
Department extensions are:
ment's catastrophic poli- · of Zimbabwe from white
Subscription Rates
cies."
rule into its present wasteBy carrier or motor route
This
year,
it
was
Africa's
News
land is planning a 2008
One month
'1 0.27
turn to lead the Commission campaign for an additional ·
Editor: Ch~rlene HoeiiK:h, Ext. 12 One year
'115.84
on .
. Dally
50'
Sustainable six-year term and a $4 milReporter: Brian Reed, EKt. 14
Senior
Citizen
rates
Development,
·and the lion museum (a "shrine") of
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
One month
'1 0.27
U.N. 's African members · his lifetime achievements
One year
'1 03.90
shamefully and inexcusably (Washington Times, May
Advertising
SUbscliiJels ShOul&lt;l remit n adVance
support Mugabe's govern- 2). Mugabe will surely win
Outalde Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 dirvcl 10 lhe Daly Sentinel. No sub·
- if not by acclamation
ment for that post.
scription by man permitted in area&amp;
Outalde SaiM: Brenda Davis, Ext16 where home .carrier service is avail·
Zimbabwe is a disaster then certainly through icing· CIUaJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
able.
area. The country's own practiced intimidation. In
Social
Welfare May, for example, he forMall Subscription
Commission,
as
reported
'by . bade Zimbabwe journalists
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
The
New
York
Times
on -those who still risk beatCharlene Hoeflich, EKt. 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
ings and prison for reportDec.
19,
found
that
63
per26 w eeks
'64.20
cent of the rural population ing the truth- from march52 Weeks
' 127.11
E-mail:
and 53 percent of the urban . ing in commemoration · of
news@mydailysentinel.com
Outside Meigs County
population · cannot meet World Press Freedom Day
13 Weeks
'53.55
(New York Times, May 7).
b;~sic food requirements.
Web:
26 Weeks
'107.10
Under
Mug
abe's
tule,
While the United Nations
52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydailysentin,el.com
elevates
Mugabe to alert the
Zimbabwe's inflation is the

on America, Democrats
want to abandon that struggle. They say they want to .
confront AI . Qaeda in
Afghanistan instead, but ·
who 's to believe they
would stay the course there ·
if it became difficult?
Ri edel, in. his Foreign'
Affairs article, argues that
Iraq has become "more of a
trap than an opportunity for ·
the Un iled States" and that .'
"A I Qaeda and Iran both
want Washington to remain
bogped down in the quag- .
mire" th ere. He recom -.
mends a ··.complete, orderly .
and phased troop with·
drawai that allows 1he Iraqi
governmen{ to take the
credit" for the pullout and so
enhance its legitimacy."
After that, he said, "the ·
objective should be to let
the Iraqis settle their confiicts themselves," while
the United States. co ncentrates on combating AI
-Qaeda,
primarily
in
Afghanistan and Pakistan.
The problem with thi s
argument is that AI Qaeda
will. interpret U.S . withdrawai from Iraq as another
retreat, more evidence that
the United States lacks the
stomach for a long-term
struggle. it was lhat conviclion that led to the Sept. I I,
2001, terrorist auacks.
Riedel concluded thal "a
failure to adj.ust U.S. strategy would increase the risk,
that AI Qaeda will launch ·
another ' raid' on the United
States, thi s time perhaps
with weapons of mass
destruction .
"For th e last several .
years. AI Qaeda's priority
has been to bleed the :
United
States ·
in · ·
Afghani stan and Iraq . .Striking on U.S .. soil has
been a lesser gnal. If AI
Qaeda survives, however,··
sooner or later it will attack ··
the U.S . homeland again."
Is AI Qaeda more likely :
to hit America again if lht&lt; :·
U.S. stays the . co!trse in
Iraq and defeat s . the ··
jihadists - which it mi ght ·.
do under the Petraeus st rat-.
egy' Or, if the U.S. turns
tail and retreatsry With Bush
di scredit ed , it looks
though the United States'·
will take the defeatist ri sk. .. •
(Morton Kondra cke is.·
executive editor of Roll ·
Call. th e neWJ{JafJer ofCatJilnl Hill.)

as'.

Why are we still in the· United Nations?

The Daily Sentinel

'.

world on vital issues of sustainable
· development;
Christopher Dell , who is
ending a three-year assignment as U.S. ambassador to
Zimbabwe, gave National
Public Radio (May 15) his
assessment of the living hell
Mugabe has created:
"The metaphor I have is
that it is like a lake. And as
the waters of the lake
·recede, more and more of
the fish are being left to die
in th&lt;: mud. At the center,
the big fish are swimming
around nicely and making
huge fortunes, huge fortunes."
Metaphor turns into reality in this Dec. 17 dispatch
by Erik German of
Newsday from Victoria
Falls, Zimbabwe:
"A few miles south from
empty luxury hotels in this
once daz,ziing tourist spot,
dozens of gaunt young men
survive by scavenging food
from the town dump. Alan
Sibanda, 23, has been coming here .:. for the past fiv e
years,
scuffling
with
baboons and vulture.s for the
least-rotten scrap s. Since
midsummer,. garbage has
been his main source of
food."
I guess the U.N. members
who\ voted to honor Mugabe
by making Zimbabwe the
head of the Commission on
Sus tainable Development
didn 't bother to interview
Sibanda before the final. ballot.
To cap the current (and
chronic) disgrace of the
United Nations, guess who
the'new officers of the U.N .
Disarmament Commission
are? The chair is Syria,

home of abundantly armed ·
warring factions - and the. .
vice chair, believe it or not,
is Iran, ihe leading prospect .
to blow up its region of the ·:
world. Having this proud·
stoker of nuclear destnic:
lion become second-incommand of the U.N. ·
. Disarmament Commission
is like springing Jack"
Abramoff from prisoitto fill
the new vacancy at the
, World Bank.
·
in one of its series of editorials, "Your U.N. at
Work," the May 19-20 Wail
Street Journal said : " it 's a
shame the U.S. didn ' t
re spond to the outcome of
the~ two 'leadership' elections (including Zimbabwe
heading the Development
Commission) and walk
away from both . of these
useless U.N. omfits."
it makes much more
sense for us to walk away
from the United Nations
itself, period. There are
other organizations that with more help from us and
other concerned nations can feed the hungry and .
provide medical aid for \
those in need around the
world.
But
Eleanor
Roosevelt's dr~am of ' the
United Nations serving as
an international beacon of
·human rights has become a
nightmare of millions of .
people's betrayed hopes.
(Nat Hentoff is a rwrion-.
ally renawneq authority on .
rile First Amendment and .
the Bill of Rights (/lid author
of many books, including
" TI~e War on the. Bill of
Rights and the Gathering· ·.
Resistance" (Seven Stories··
Press, 2004). )

Obituaries
/

·James G. Circle
NEW HAVEN- James G. Circle, 78, of New Haven,
W. V. pa~~ away peacefully at the Four Winds Nursing
Commumty m Jackson, Ohio on June 3, 2007.
. He was born on August 8, 1928, son of the late Howard
Ctrcle and Mary McElroy Circle of Racine, Ohio. He was
a Umted States Army veteran of the Korean War owner of
the West Virginia Sausage Company, and co-ow'ner of the
New Haven Super Market.
He is survived by his loving wife of forty-three years
Phxllis Gibson Circle of New Haven; one son and daugh:
ter-m-law, Ronald K. "Rick" and Marianne Circle of
Mason, W.Va.; a grandson, James Christopher Circle of
Mason; a stster, Clara Pierce of Jackson OH: a
brother, George Circle of Pomeroy (&gt;H· 'one sister-inlaw, Patricia Circle of Overland Park Kans~s· one brotheri~-law, William Perry of Hillsdale, Michigan;'and a host of
meces, nephews and friends.
·
In .addition .to his parents, he was preceded·in death by
one stster and three brothers.
.
Funeral services will be at I I a.m. on Wednesday, June
6, 2007 at the Anderson Funeral Home in New Haven with
Kenneth Gibson officiating. Burial will follow at the
Carmel Cemetery in Racine, Ohio. Visiting hours will be
on Tuesday from 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made
to the Fours Winris Nursing Community, 215 Seth Avenue
J~ckson, Ohto 45640. A registry is available on-line by vistUng www.andersonfu.com. ·
·

Calvin L Mitchell
Calvin L. Mitchell,. 81, passed on to be with his beloved
wife Louise . on June 3, 2007, at Riverside Methodist
Hospital in Columbus, Ohio.
He was born July 18, 1925, to John Calvin and Flora
Glenn Mitchell, who preceded him in death.
Beside his parents, he was preceded in death by brotherS\
John, Lawrence, Bobby, Sherman and Otho Mitchell; a sister, Mary; and a grandsot,~, Casby Mitchell IV, "Kip."
He is survived by a daugh(l!r, Linda Ann Meadows of.
Pomeroy; a grandson, Casby Mitchell (fiance Megan)
Meadows of Point Pleasant, W.Va.; a brother, Larry Gene
Mitchell of Gallipolis; two brothen-in-Iaw, John P. Young
of Lancaster, and William A. Young of Pomeroy; two sisters-in-law, Beulah Belle Mitchell of Gallipolis, and
Elizabeth Mitchell of Bidwell; and several nieces and
nephews.
.
.
.
.,
After serving in the 90th Division of the Army, he came
home to and mamed his high School sweetheart, B. Louise
Shaw, on Feb, 13, ·t947.
He receved a mechanic.'s education in the Army and when
he came home; be worked as a mecbanic for Agee's Tractor
Supply and Bob Saunders Gas Station at the corner of Pine
Street and Seeond Avenue' in Gallipolis. ·
He then went to work for.the Evans Packing Co. for 27
years, which then became Landmark. Mter leaving there,
he worked for PPC in Point Pleasant fot five years before
retiring and moving to Port Charlotte, Fla., in 1987.
He was a member of the Point Pleasant Moose Lodge No.
731 for years and also a member of the Gallipolis Boat
Club. He loved his boats and the last one he owned was a
40-foot houseboat, where he enjoyed inviting friends for
weekend outings. He always enjoyed his many boats and
cars. He was really a "jack of ali trades" and anyone with
something broken always knew, "Calvin can fix it!" He was
always there to help.
.
·
·
·
He was a very carint~ and compassionate person who will
be sorely missed by hts family and many good friends and
neighbors.
Services will be I I a.m. Wednesday, June 6, 2007, at the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wetherholt Chapel, 420 First
Ave., Gallipolis, with Bob Hood officiating. Burial will follow in Ridgelawn Cemc;tery at Mercerville. Friends ,may
call at the funeral. home from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday, June 5,
2007.
10
Condolences
can
be
e-mailed
www.timeformemory.com/mm.

John GregOry Hayes
John Gregol'y Hayes, 51, of Middleport, died Tuesday,
May 29, 2007, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis. ·
Arrangements were handled by the Fisher Funeral Home
in Pomeroy.
·

Local Briefs
No meeting
POMEROY -Meigs County Commissioners will not
meet on June 14, due to a scheduling conflict. . ·

Trip canceled
POMEROY- The meeting and trip for June 9 has been
canceled by Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Da11ghters of
the American Revolution, and re-scheduled for June 16.
-Cali Karen Werry for reservations ..
reduced school lunches.
In addition to the summer
food program at the two
pools, the AFN also profrom PageA1
vides meals to other Meigs
served daily at each of the County locations. It has
with
Sister
two local pool s, more will be worked
provided if there is a need, Francisca Aguillon to proCouts said. At the pool in vide meals to migrant workNelsonville, the program ers in the Racine community. It also provides evening
provides 190 meals a day.
While children receiving meals to children participatmeals need not meet any ing in after-school enrichincome guidelines, the com- ment programs in the counmunity must have a 50-per- ty's three local school di scent eli gibility for free and tricts.

Lunches

AMP

from PageA1
new facility."
AMP-Ohio maintains
once the AMPGS goes
online, it will be one of the
cleanest faci lities of its type
in the nati on .
Denny Addis, president
of The Andersons , Inc .
plant nutrient group added :
"Powerspan's state of the
art mulu-pollution control
technology promises to

produce high quality
ammonium sulfate plant
nutrient for our Midwest
customer base. Serving
AMP-Ohio's plant nutrient
· operational and distribution · l)eeds is a natural
· extension to our core production and distribution
business."
Mike Anderson, president and CEO of The
Andersons, Inc. said, "We
are pleased to partner with
AMP-Ohio on thi~ important and environmentally
pro-active project. We are

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel•. Page As

Cleveland
lAW You CAN USE
Clinic signs
Ohio rnles ofprofessiolllll conduct govern attorneys' actions another deal
Q.: Are attorneys subject to or judicial officer in conduct the interests of other clients
any ethical standards?
that is a violation of the Ohio conflict with such representa- for health care.
A.: Yes. Attomeys must be Rules ofP r o f e s s i o n a ·I tion. Sometimes, attorneys
licensed {o practice law in Conduct, the applicable rules may ·continue to represent in Abu Dhabi
Ohio by the Supreme Court of of judicial conduct, or other more than one client at a time
Ohio. When admitted to prac- law; engage, in a professional if the clients agree after ali the
lice, attorneys sweartp uphold capacity, in conduct involving conflicts are made known.
the Constitution and the law, discrimination prohibited by
Competent representation.
and to be faithful to their law because of 'race, color, Attorneys are expected to repclients. They are expected to religion, age, gender, sexual resent tl)eir clients competenthonor this oath and the Rules orientation, national origin, ly. Competent representation
of Professional Conduct, a set marital status, or
dis- requires the legal knowledge,
of ethical rules adopted by the ability.
skill, thoroughness, . and
Supreme Court. The Rules
Specifically, attorneys must preparation reasonably necescontain minimum standards obey cenain rules concerning: sary for the representation.
for attorneys' ethical conduct
Fees and employment.
Client funds . Attorneys
Attorneys must obey the' Attorneys are not allowed to must keep clients' funds in
Rules. If they do not, they will receive illegal payment (such separate accounts and may not
be subject to. disciplinary as stolen goods) or charge mix them with their own
action.
. clearly excessive fees. To funds. Also, they must keep
decide whether or not a fee is
Q.: What are attorneys' eth- "clearly excessive," factors complete records for seven
such as time involvement; dif- ·years after the end of the repical duties?
A.: In general, attorneys ficuity of legal issues, custom- resentation. The attorney must
must meet. their responsibili- ary fees in the area, amount of · notify clients promptly when
ties as set forth in the Rules. money involved and results they receive client funds or
They must not engage in any obtained, experience and rep- property. Aclient's funds must
misconduct described in these utation of the attorney, and be paid to the client when the
Rules, including commit an contingency based services client is entitled to receive
them.
illegal act that reflects are taken into account.
adversely 811 the lawyer's honConfidentiality and conflict
Law You Can Use is a
esty or trustworthiness;
of interest. Except in a very
conduct involving fraud, dis- few instances, attorneys may weekly consumer legal inforhonesty, deceit, or misrepre- not reveal confidential client mation column provided by
Bar
sentation; couduct prejudicial information, including infor- the · Ohio State
to the administration of jus- mation that is protected by the Association. Articles appeartice; state or imply an ability attOrney-client
privilege. ing in this column are intendto influence improperly a gov- Also, they generally may not ed to provide broad, general
emment agency or official, or ·reveal information relating to information about ·the law.
to achieve results by means the representation. In addition, Before applying this inforthat violate the Ohio Rules of attorneys generally are not matiorr to a specifiC legal
Professional Conduct or other allowed to represent a client problem, readers are urged to
law; knowingly assist a judge when iheir own interests or seek advice from a11 attomey.

Alumni

1946: Richard B. Bailey.
Middleport; Martin Carson,
Richmond, Ind.; Roy Evans,
Canal Winchester;. Alfred
from PageA1
Scarberry, Thurman. ·
1947: James Arnold,
awarded scholarships from Johnson
City,
Tenn. ;
the fund which was Started in Madeline Johnson Derring,
1961 with a total of$71,500 Grove City; John Fultz,
being given to graduates Middleport;
Clara
B.
who were the sons or daugh- Gilmore Riley, Middleport..
ters, or the grandsons or
1948: Helen Gilkey Byer,
granddaughters
of Baltimore; Marilyn Knopp
Middleport High School Fultz, Middleport; James
graduates.
Haggerty, Milton, W.Va.;
Other scholarships pre- . Lorraine Riggs Neff,
sented were to the Ravenswood,
W.Va.;
McComas-Mt;~ore
to Dorothy Miller Roach,
Elizabeth Joy Casci, daugh- Middleport.
ter of Arthur and Joyce
1949: Char~s Byer,
Casci, and Lynette Nicole Baltimore; Kitty Bachtel
Stengel, daughter of Dennis Dallas, A~oura Hills, Calif.;
and Doris Walb'urn. The Dave Diles, Athens; John
Crawford-Gray -Lewis Dudding, Racine; Hazel
scholarship went to Whitney Hawkins
Guinter,
N. Smith, daughterofHomer Columbus; Virginia Grogan
and Rita Smith.
Holman, Middleport; Robert
Following the diriner (Joyce) Mills, Pomeroy;
reunion classes were recog- Rosemary Fisher Moore,
nized with Edison Baker of Columbus.
the class of I935 celebrating
1950: Grace Montgomery
his 70th anniversary of-grad-· A.bbott, Pomeroy; Mary
uation. Other classes recog- Gilmore
Brewer,
nized were 1942, 1947, Middleport; Don Payne,
1952, 1957, the 50th, 1962, Dayton; Robert Richards,
and 1967, the 40th and last Columbus;
Raymond
year before the Meigs Local Walburn, · Middleport; Jean
consolidation. Music for Searles Craig, Middleport.
dancing following the banJames Buell,
l 95 I:
quet was provided by Gary Knightdale, N.C.; Clifford
Ginther. Presiding officers and
.frances
Chase
for the annual reunion we!'ll Coleman, Jackson; Roger
Myron Duffield, president; Dillard. Pomeroy; Betty
June Kloes, vice president; Ashley
Snow-Rosser;
Nancy Beaver, secretary; James
Sanborn.
and Carolyn Litchfield, trea- Proctorville; Dana Walburn,
surer.
Salem, Oregon; Roscoe
Graduates attending the Wise, Middleport.
~anquet and their years of
1952: Nancy Miller
graduation are as follows:
Beaver, Middleport,; Walter
1935: Edison Baker, Clark, Point Pleasant, W.Va.;
Middleport,
Gene Dudding, Elyria; Julie
1937: Willa Hill Bowers, Mitch Houck, Marion; Patsy
Howard
Russell, Saunders Hoy, Columbus, ;
Middleport.
Ruth
Chase
Jenkins,
I 938: Virginia Pierce Middleport; June Smart
Nelson, Swanton.
Kloes, Middleport; Carolyn
Betty
Roush Pierce Litchfield, Point
I 940:
Allensworth, Gallipolis; Pleasant, W.Va .; . Nola
Charles Entsminger, South Knopp Swisher, Middleport;
Charleston, W.Va.; Dorothy Carol Bachtel Tannehill,
Stewart White, Fort Gratiot, Middleport; Larry Rice,
Mich.
Nicholasville, Ky.; Jean
1941: Jean Roush Russell, Smart Siddall, Lebanon; Bill
Worthington.
·
Taylor, Columbus; Peggy
1942: Henry Clatworthy, Herrmann Thomas,
Middleport;
Barbara Cheshire; Mary M. Williams
Hackett
Mullen, Walburg, Dublin.
Ravenswood, W.Va.
1953:
Robert Byer,
1943: Ann Kelly (Gary) Syracu~c .
Bailey. M iddlepurt; Lois
1954:
Rae
Mi l l ~
Roush
Cunnin gham, Gwiadowsky, Middlepo rt;
Syracuse. ·
1944: Jeanne You ng
Bradbury, Syracuse.
pleased and excited to be a
part of this project and a
meniber of tl:te AMP-Ohio
and. Powers~an team."
' AMP-Oh10 filed the air
permit-to-install application with the Ohio EPA in
May 2006. Additional
major path P.ermit applications were ftled last month,
including Ohio Powe r
Siting Board ge nerati on
application, Army Corps of
Engineers Section l 0/404
permit, OEPA 40 I ~ertlfi­
cation, solid waste permitto-install, NPDES permit.

CLEVELAND (AP) -The

Oeveland Oinic on Monday
said it signed art agreement
with the Health Authority of
Abu Dhabi, the capital city of
the United Arab Fmirates, to
manage a liealth care complex
there.
"As a global health care institution, Cleveland Clinic has
sought to cultivate opportunities to further exparxl our presence abroad, sharing state-ofthe-art medical practices, liD'
cedures and · administrative
capabilities and raising !J!alth
care standards worldwide,"
said Delos "Toby" Cosgrove,
Oeveland Clinic's CEO and
president.
The clinic will manage the
Sheikh Khalifu Medical City,
which consists of 700-bed
Sheikh Khalifa Hospital, a !50bed Behavior Sciences
Pavilion and the I00-bed Abu
Dhabi Rehabilitation Center.
There are also numerous affili.
ated doctors.· offices and outpatient clinics.
The deal marks the second
foray into the United Arab
· Emirates for the Cleveland
Clinic, which reached a deal in
September to help design and
build a new hospital in the
counlry 's capital to be known
as Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi.

Carl Taylor,
Columbus; Betty Gilmore Wolfe,
Charlene Walburn Thomas Chester: Daniel Malik,
and Charles Walburn,
Ashland. Ky.; Bill McCool,
City; Mary Walburn Taylor; Dublin ; Doris Rice Walburn ·
.Barbara Bowles Setzer, and Edna Rice, Beverly.
·columbus.
I 962: Cindy . Morris
1955: Ronald Fultz, Abbott ,
Middleport;
Westerville, ; Sheila Stover Charlene Davis Batey,
Hubbard, Lancaster; Brady MiddlcRort ; Helen Taylor
Huffman, Middleport; Jim Fox, Milford Center; Jeanie
Puckett, Columbus;
Pat ·Manley Halley ; Alice
Baker Russell, Hot Springs Jacobs, Racine; Beverly
Village, Ariz.; Yvonne Perrin Kosiba, Clarkston,
Hackett
S c a I I y , Mich.; Coleen Wilson
Middleport.
Ohlinger,
Zanesville;
1956: Jerome Beach, Dennis Saelens, Middleport;
Columbus; Nancy Roller NiCk Walburn, Lebanon;
Cale, Middleport,
Pete Walburn, Jacobsburg.
I963: John Allensworth,
Larry Lewis, Bellefontaine;
Patty Lloyd Bastiani, Reynoldsburg; Janet Bake~
Gallipolis; James Mourning, Downie, Pomeroy; Jeanne
Middleport; Marlene Knapp · Bowles Gross, Gahanna;
Yeager, Canal Winchester.
Rich Hayes, London.
1957: Keith Anderson,
1964:Judy Wildermuth
Louisville, · Ky.; James Allensworth, Reynoldsburg;
Bowles, Point Pleasant, Marilyn Swan Anderson,
W.Va.; Arthur Clark, Idaho Middleport; Cinda Sauer
Falls, Idaho; Stephen Coats, Harris, Middleport.
West Plains, Md.; Bessie • 1965: David Casci,
Pettit Darst, Middleport ; Middleport;
Diane
Charles Delay, Sugar.Grove; VanCooney
Lynch,
Gordon Guthrie Cleveland; Middleport;
Marty
Richard
Hovatter, Nicholson, Nashville, Tenn.;
Middleport; Jane Harris Suzanne Bradbury Sayre,
Huffman, Middleport; Leo Racine: Alan Wallace, Canal
Kennedy,Tuppers
Winchester; Christine Bahr
Plains;
Ed
Kitchen, Williams, Gallipolis.
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. ;
1966: Dave Ashley,
Hershel! Knapp, Sabina ; Middleport; John Blake,
Eudell
Konkright, Middleport.
Springfield; Kenneth Lewis,
1967: James Butcher,
Norwood; Ed McComas, Middleport; Rose Marie
Ky. ; Hackett,
Lexington,
Bowling Green,
Bill
Hysell~
. Marilyn Meier, Middleport, Ky.,
Barbara Capteina Mora, Frankfort, N.Y.; Kay Ault
Pomeroy.
Logan, Middleport; Kathy
1958: Judy Arnold, · McElhinny
Mullins,
Middleport,; Phyllis Stanley Middleport; Janis Schmoll,
Baker, Middleport; Jan Gallipolis; Mary Wolfe
Houck, Lexint~ton, N.C. ; Slawter, Middleport.
Donald Karr; Mtddleport;
Ronnie (Janice) Miller,
Middleport; Jeanette Crooks
(Daniel)
Thomas,
Middleport;
Charlotte
ESTABLISHED 1895
Lightfoot
VanMeter,
Pomeroy; Ira Wayland. Big
Tri-County Gospel Sing
Prairie.
June 2 at 7:00 l!m
· 1959: Gene Abbott.
Auditions:
Millersport; Carla Wilson
"The
Unsinkable
Molly
Lohrer, Troy; D i c k
Brown"
Roller, Belpre.
Ju.
n
e
3
2[!m
. 1960:
Ernest
Hall ,
1 June 4·5 6 l!m
Pomeroy; Olivia Bowles
Yoga Class Be&amp;!ns June 4
Lockett, Shaker Heights:
Wishful! kealities June 9
Loretta Hanning Roller,
Camp Melodrams:
Belpre; Dennis Walburn ,
· Theatre Camp
Beverly; Diane Stumbo
June II ·July 7
Williams, Lehigh, Fla.
The
Ariel-Dater Hall ·
1961 : Tom Ande rso n,
Midd leport ; Judy Sauer
42~~~~;.:,"_',i ~~~i~~~;~,?H
Crooks, Middleport;

J\RJEL

OPEN 'HOUSE
June 10, 2007
2pm- 4pm
24959 Apple Grove Dorcas
Racine, Ohio

Come Take A Look!!!
Hosted by:
Wendi Miller, Sales Agent

Teaford R,fal Esta,te
Broker: G. Bruce Teaford
Office Number: 740-992-3325 Agent Number: 740-416-4015
*Contact
to schedule a
tour of this home.

�-·..- ---

. ~

.

•

(

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 5,

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 46.89
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 81.61
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) 60.01
Big lots ( NYSE)- 31.95
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 38.59
BorgWarner ( NYSE) 83.98
Century Aluminum ( NASDAQ)- 57.98
Champion (NASDAQ) 7.15
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) -12.32
City Holding (NASDAQ) 38.57
c'olllns (NYSE) - 70.49
Dollar General ( NYSE) 21.63
.
DuPont (NYSE) - . 53.19
US Bank (NYSE) -·34.51
Gannett (NYSE)- 59.79
General Electric: ( NYSE)
-37.81
Harley-Davidson ( NYSE) 61.97
JP Morgan (NYSE) 51.57
Kroger (NYSE)- 30.29
Limited Brands (NYSE) 28.93
Norfolk Southern ( NYSE)

2007

POMEROY - Magistrate
Linda R. Warner recently
processed the following cases
in Pomeroy Mayor's! Coun:
Terri L. Brewer. Pomeroy,
trash ordnance, $100 and
costs. persistent disorderly
conduct, $150 and costs;
Dustin L. Lyons, Pomeroy,
defective exhaust, $75 and
costs, driving with no opera- .
tors license, $1 00 and costs:
Kim D. Meadows, Pomeroy,
trash ordnance, $100 and
costs; Lacey D. Childress.
Racine, failure to appear,
$150 and costs; Woodrow J.
Richards, Jr., LOng Bottom,
unsafe vehicle, $75 lllld costs;
Jaunita S. Jones, Bidwell,
· speed, 38/25, $38 and costs:
Casey
R.
Manley,
Middlepon, assured clear distance, $75 and costs; Sharon
F. Johnson,
Pomeroy,
violation of tntsh ordinance,
two counts, $1 00 and costs
and $100 and costs; Eldon
Baker, Syracuse, Ohio traffic
light violation, $75 and costs;
Leanna Dill, Pomeroy, possession of drug pantphernalia, $100 and costs; Jason R.
Kimes, Pomeroy, driving
under suspension, $200 and
costs, failure to display, $75
and costs;
Mary
L.
Johnson,
Pomeroy, speed 34/25, $37
and costs; Christopher C.
Anthony, Dexter, left of center,. $75 and ~osts, driving
under suspension, $200 and
costs; Timothy E. · 'Shane,
Pomt;roy, receiving stolen
propeny, two counts, $250
and costs, and $300 restitution, $250 and costs and $200
restitution; Kevin Blackburn,
Pomeroy, Ohio discharging
ftreworks in · village of
Pomeroy, $1 00 and costs;
Jonathan E.
Pomeroy,
possession of controUed substance, $100 and cost~. disorderly conduct $150 costs, and
possession of drug paraphernalia, $100 and costs,
Angelina
M.
Casci,
Middleport, no ope~rs
license, $200 and ~ts,
defective exhaust, $75 and
cosls;
..• ___....
Curtis
P.
Arnold,
Middleport, f;lllure to apperu:,
$150' llftd costs; '(")wef! M.
Davis, Syracuse, driving

Local weather
Tuesday ... Partly sunny. cloudy.
Hot.
Highs
Isolated showers in the around 90. Lows in the
afternoon . Highs in the upper 60s.
mid 70s. West winds 5 Friday and - Friday
to 10 mph : Chance of· nighLMostly cloudy. A
rain 20 percent
chance of showers and
Tuesday night...Partly thunderstorms. Highs in
cloudy
in
the the upper 80s. Lows in
evening ... Then
mostly the mid 60s. Chance of
cloudy with a slight rain 30 percent
chance of showers and
Saturday ... Partly sunny
thunderstorms after mid- with a chance of shownight. Lows in the lower
50s. West winds around ers and thunderstorms.
5 -mph ... Becoming north- Hot with . highs around
east
after
midnight. 90. Chance of rain 40
Chance of rain 20 per- percent.
cent.
Saturday
. night
Wednesday ... Mostly through
Sunday
sunny. Highs in the night ... Mostly
cloudy
lower 80s. South winds with a chance of showaround ~ mph.
ers and . thunderstorms.
W e d n e s d a y Lpws in the mid · 60s.
· night...Partly
cloudy. Highs in the mid 80s.
Lows in the upper 50s. Cba.nce of rain . 30 perSouth winds around 5 cent.
mph.
Monday ... Pi\rtly sunny.
Thursday
_
and .. cH&lt;Jt • witlr· 'high!!'' aro'und
Thursday night ... Partly 90.

green,

under suspension, $200 ;md
costs, defective exhaust. $75
and costs.
Bonds forfe_ited: Nancy G.
Phalen, New Have... W.Va ..
speed 37/25, $37 and cosl~ :
Lornina A. Hutton, Rutland,
speed 41/25, $41 and costs;
Ricky A. Freeman, Racine,
expired tags, $75 and cost;
Donna D. Bentley, Pomeroy.
Speed 39/25. $39 and COSL~;
Joseph V. Ferguson, Ill.
Chesapeake, speed 42/25,
$42 and costs; Thomas R.
Gooch, Gallipolis, speed
45/25, $45 and costs; Richard
D. Daily, Jr..
Wellston ,
speed 44/25, $44 and cost~;
Conard C. Belcher, Pomeroy,
speed 40/25, $40 and costs:
Roben J. Spaun, Cheshire,
speed 42/25, $42 and cosls;
Richard E. Cooksey, Albany,
speed 42/25, $42 and costs;
Harold Wilson, Sandyville,
W.Va., assured clear distance,
$75 and costs; Roben J.
Henry, New Brighnon, Pa.,
speed 46/25, $46 and costs;
Robe11 J. Panersen, Dayton,
failure to comply, $140 and
costs; Duane C. Darst,
Brownsville, Pa., failure 10

comply. $140 and costs: speed 40/25, $40 and costs:
Charlie G. Fr.uier. Jr.. Grand Erica L. Dennis. Ponland,
Cane, Calif., speed 47/35, possession of drug parapher$37 and costs; Christine M. nalia. $100 and costs; Dexter
Gulley. Liule Hocking, speed T. Zerkle. Letan. W.Va .. left
44125, $44 and costs; Tommy of center, $75 and costs;
L. Basin, Long · Bouom, Victor
L.
Chevalier, ·
unsafe vehicle. $75 and costs: Reedsville. speed 44/25, $44
Iva K. Roush, New Haven. and costs: Donna Fenton,
W.Va .. assured clear distance. Willi;unstown, W.Va., speed
$75 and costs; Sandra L. 51135. $41 and costs; Dwight
Laudern1ilt, Pomeroy. traffic E. Mitchell, Athens, speed
control device, $75 and costs; 44/25. $44 and costs; Alison
Bmndy L. Shea., Gallipolis. Woods, Pomeroy, possession
driving under suspension. of drug pamphernalia~ $100
$200 and costs; Brenna R. and costs: Carrie E. Flowers.
Call, Pomeroy, speed 47/35. Point Pleasant, W.Va., speed
$31 and costs; Crystal G. · 40/25, $40 and costs; Debra
Roush. Letan, W.Va. , speed K. Burke, RaCine. speed
,48135, $38 and costs; April J. 45/25. $45 and costs;
Lloyd, New Haven, W.Va .. Andrew J. Haning, Pomeroy,
speed 42/25, $42 and costs; squealing tires, $75 and costs,
Steven D. Smith, Marietta., driving with an obstructed
failure to comply, $140 and view, $50 and costs; Bruce E.
cost; Amy D. Wright, Allen, Albany, speed 45/25,
Pomeroy, unsafe vehicle, $75 $45 and costs; Racquel J.
and costs; Cory Van Reeth, Smith, Middlepdn, speed
Pomeroy. stop sign violation. 40/25, $40 and costs; Travis
$75 and costs; Sarah ,Ramsey, J. Fordham, Delaware, speed
Pomeroy, speed 36125, $36 37/25, $37 and costs; Tiffany
and costs; Mary A. Shoults, . Hamilton, Gallipolis, expired
Racine, fai,lure to yield turn- lags, $75 and costs; Dennis
ing left, $75 and . costs; Little, Middlepon, failure to
Timothy Kuhn, Reedsville, appear, $145 and costs.

MIDDLEPORT- Zackary Thomas Pullin
graduated May 13 from Quinnipiac
University receiving a Juris Doctor degree in
law with a concentmtion cenificate in tax and
a Master of Business Administmtion degree.
He received recognition during the ceremonies for his outstanding academic performance, graduating in the top I0 percent of his
law class and received an award for superior
classroom performance. Pullin was recognized as the top student in his MBA class and
received a special award and listing in the
commencement program. Only 26 students
from a field of 850 graduate stude11ts received
this honor.
He plans to sit for the bar exam in July and
ha5 been accepted into the LLM tax program
a.t the University of Florida with classes to
begin in August. He is the son of Don and
Connie Cooke Pullin of Ormond Beach,
Zachary Thomas Pullin
Florida and Point Pleasant. His grandparents
were the late Gilben and June Pullin of Point Middlepon, and Jean Cooke of Ormond
Pleasant and the late Kenneth Cooke of Beach, Florida.
(

'

.,

~

,..

~~f'~{1) 1_:('jd} ' r 1 ·r·:'I,N:t

_

... ~~

..

...

'·.

one,
·Hearing Aid Center
Gallipolis, Ohio Area

Fans buying up Cavs gear, Page B2

Tank Johnson suspendt.'ll 8 games, Page B6

I.nw schoo~ student recognizedfor accomplishments

;.".l.ib~·

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Anaheim beats Ottawa, Page B6

POMEROY MAYOR'S COURT

- 58.59
Oak Hill Financial ( NASDAQ)- 21.92
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ) - 25.25
BBT (NYSE) - 42.35
Peoples (NASDAQ)27.94
Pepsico (NYSE)- 88.31
Premier (NASDAQ) 15.71
Rockwell (NYSE)- 68.58
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) -"
15.60
Royal Dutc:h Shell _f
75.40
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
-179.85
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 51.21
Wendy's (NYSE)- 40.49
Worthington (NYSE)21.34
Dally stoc:k reports are
the 4 p.m. ET closing
quotes of transactions for
June 4, 2007, provided by
Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 4419441 and Lesley Marrero.
In Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

Inside

_

1312 Eastern Ave. Rt. 7 (Next to OLD Pizza Hut)

Thesday, Jun.e 5, 2007

Fonner
NASCAR
chainnan
Bill France

Favored Spurs WOI;t't underestimate .Cavs
BY EUzABETH

WHITE

eight points.
have been together for the
"We lost to them twice Spurs' last two champithis season. They' ve been onship runs. in 2003 and
SAN ·ANTONIO
playin(l great," Duncan said. 2005. Duncan is healthy and
LeBron James may be )he "They re on a high right .said he's playing better basstar of the Cleveland now, playing with a lot of ketball.this year than in the
Cavaliers, . but the San confidence . And they're last three. And the team
Antonio Spurs know better going to be a tough oppo- turned midseason struggles
. than to ignore the other four nent. We· re going to have to around to take off on a 13players on the coun.
really come out and shake game winning streak and
"They wouldn't be in the this rust off quick this firsl compile a 23-6 record after
finals without LeBron, we game and really try to jump the All-Star break.
• BY JENN" FRYER
wouldn 't be in the finals on them."
AP AUTO RACING WRITER
Still, the turnaround James
without Tim Duncan," Spurs
After beating the Utah has led in Cleveland over his
coach Gregg Popovich said Jazz in five games for the four seasons there is what's ·
Bill France Jr., who transSunday. 'That goes without Western Conference cham- grabbed the attention·.
formed NASCAR from a
sayi ng. But they sti II would pionship, the Spurs will
small Southern spon into a
"I'm just hoping every
not be in the finals, nor have had a full week off by once in a while they throw .
billion-dollar conglomerate
would we, if we didn 't each Thursday's stan to the NBA the Spurs in there, in
during his 31 years as chairhave our . supponing casts. finals in San Antonio.
man, died Monday. He was
between LeBron highlights,
Everybody
else has to fit. "
74.
Cleveland wrapped up the that'd be nice," Duncan said ·
San Antonio was 0-2 Eastern Conference champi- Sunday.
He died at his Daytona
against
Cleveland during the onship on Saturday in Game · The experienced Spurs are
Beach,
Fla.,
home,
regular
season. The Spurs 6 . against the Detroit going for their fourth chamNASCAR
. lost their home opener to the Pistons. James scored 20 pionship in nine seasons.
spokes man
Cavs, plus their January points in that game, bul it Duncan has been around for
Ramsey
matchup in Cleveland, was rookie Daniel Gibson's all three.
Po ston
where the NBA finals will 31-point performance that
s a i d .
"I' m not sure how ntre
arrive for the first .time later stole the show.
France had
they think it is since they've
this monlh.
been
in
"Teams get to finals and been there quite often conThe Spurs held James to team win championships, .sidering their young ages
poor health
·AP photo 19 points 'in the second and their team 'fits," and time in the league,"
for much of
·the
·· Jast San Antonio Spurs forward Tim Duncan (21) takes a shot meeting, but · the Cavs put Popovich said.
Popovich said. "But they
decade .. _
over Utah Jazz forward Carlos Boozer (5) in the third quar- three other players in double
So do the Spurs. Their top know it's the finals and that
France Jr. . he''
was ter of Game 5 of the NBA Western Conference Rnal bas- figures in their 82-78 victo- three scorers, Duncan, Tony
Please see Spurs, 12
dia gnosed _ k~tball game in San Antonio last Wednesday.
ry. Two other players scored -Parker and Manu Ginobili.
with cancer in 1999:· · -----------'--~------------------------------------­
Although he was in remission, the extensive treatments took a toll. He never
regai1led his full strength,
often had difficulty .breathBY ToM WtTHERS
ing and had taken to Using a
N' SPORTS WRITER
motorized sc:eoter ,t~ ,g~:&lt;L '' CLE.VE
around.
, ·.
LAND. - Above
France was hospitalized the Cavaliers' training room
al least twice .!his yeru: but door on the w~ll adJacent to
spent his final fj1;1ys restil)g LeBron James locker han1;s
at home: Officials at Dover · a photograph of one of hts
International ·. Spelidw'ay, .st.gnature. dunks - one of
where the Nextel Cup 'series ·his '·nastrest, wake-up-thewas racing Monday after- ktds slams.
noon, lowered the ilag to
The one . over Tim
CHICAGO (AP) - His
half-staff in his memory.
Duncan.
.
Airness
is paying tribute to
His lasl public appearance
Someone placed t1 there a
the
kid
called
King James.
was Feb. 12 in Daytona few· days after Cleveland's
Michael
Jordan
praised
Beach, where NASCAR's 88-81 win in San Antonio
22-yearcold
LeBron
James
top names gathered to &lt;!." Nov. 3, the Cavaliers'
for
leading
"Roast and Toast" him at hrst vrctory m the Alamo
t
h
e
the Bill France Hot Dog City since 1988 and one that
Cleveland
Dinner during the Daytona set ·the tone for a special
Cavaliers
500 build-up.
season.
to . victory
Even there. especially
So far, the most special.
over
the.
there, France Jr., who ruled
Seven months after James
Detroit
'NASCAR with an iron fist, posterized Duncan, the
Pistons in
called the shots.
Cavaliers were at home
the Eastern
His toasters thai evening Monday getting ready to go
Conference
were ge ntly reminded to to . an unfamiliar place: the
finals. The
avoid any harsh roasting. NBA finals.
Cavaliers
Jordan
The finals can be a scary
advanced
Please see France. Bl
place for first-timers who
to
the
finals
for
the
first time
might be intimidated by the
in
their
37
-year
history.
global spotlight. Not James.
"WI"tat just transpired was
Although he's a finals roo~ ­
something
I felt was needed .
SPORTS BRIEFS
ie, the 22-year-old star isn't
for the league, was needed
nervous about taking his
for Cleveland, was needed
Sign-ups for Eagle show onto the .grandest
for
LeBron," Jordan said in
stage yet.
Monday
editions of the
Volleyball
"I'm very excited to be a
Chicago Tribune.
..
pan of it," said James,
Game
5
James
dominated
TUPPERS PLAINS -- wearing a New York
against
Detroit,
scoring
~~
The third annual Eastern . Yankees cap and " King of
'
,,
Cleveland's final 25 points
Eagle Volleyball Camp wt ll . Akron" T-shirt. "As far as
in the win. The Cavaliers
be held for all girls in me being in awe, I don't
became
just the third team
gr&lt;)des six throu gh nine know. I' m not that type of
to
overcome
an 0-2 deficit
from June I I throu gh June guy.
to
win
the
conference
final s.
13 at the EHS Gymnasium
"There's not too many
Jordan, who won ·six
The camp will feature things that awe me."
NBA championships during
fundament als essential to
James and the newly
13 seasons with the
his
produce winning volleyball crowned
Eastern
Chicago
Bulls. said the next
and will be taught by cur- Conference.
champions
challenge
for James is to
rent coaches and players, as began
preparing
for
AP photo achieve consistency.
well as former players. The Thursday's series opener Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James shoots over David Wesley during practice Mondayin
"Making ' The Leap' is
camp will run between the
Cleveland. Four years after a bouncing ping pong ball gave. the team the right to draft
Please see Cavs. 12
times of I0 a.m. io noon.
Please see Jordan, 12 .
James, the Cavaliers will play in the NBA Finals against the San Antonio Spurs.
All . participants will·
receive a camp t-shirt and a
camp volleyball.
· All checks . should be
made payable to Easte rn
BY DAN GELSTON
about his win instead of the 12th.
Athletic Boosters and
AP SPORTS WRITER
latest Earnhardt rumors.
The blowers were still out
to
Howie
returned
"In
times
of
change,
and
while
the cars "were out on
Caldwell, 40878 Old Seven
Martin
DOVER,
Del.
Manin
times
when
people
don
'
t
the
grid
waiting for the_ir
Road , Reedsvill e, OH
True~ Jr.
Truex Jr. earned his first · really know what's going on pace laps . But the sun
45772.
celecareer victory for Dale and they need some direc- peeked out right as the
Registrations niay also be Earnhardt Inc., winning at tion. I am ju st happy to be
brates
gree n nag dropped. which
sent to Debbie Weber, Dover
winning
International the one in Victory Lane."
49620 Hickory Hills Road, Speedway on Monday hours Truex s.aid. "Couldn't have led to a· clear and clean day
the
of racin~ . .
Reedsville, OH 45772.
Autism
alter the death of' longtime come at a better race tracL . Pole sitter Ryan Newman,
Speaks
NASCAR chairman Bill Just unbelievable, man ."
who led most of the . first
400 auto
France Jr.
But new s of France 's half of the race. was denied
race in
Truex
won
for
the
first
death
overshadowed
the
his
first
win
since
2005
and
ComAcrUs
seco nd.
Carl
time 111 58 career points race. The nag at Victory fin ished
victory
races on what the New Lane was ·lowered to half Edwards, who won the
lane at
OVP .Scoreline (5 p_.m.-1 a.m.)
Jersey native has long con- staff short·ly after the Busch Series race here on
the Dover
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
sidered his hometown track. announcement, and drivers Saturday was third.
lnternatio
"He detinitely likes this
He ended a dominant five- paid tribute to the man who
Fax- 1-740·446· 3008
nal .
race w1nnmg streak for transformed . NASCAR. racetrack, and that 's unfonuE-mail - spor1s@mydailysentinel.com
Speedway
Hendrick Motorsports, lead- Truex even was reminded nate for me," Newman said.
in Dover,
~u
ing 216 of the 400· laps on over the radio by his crew to "Just to be up front all day
Del., on
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor the Monster Mile in remember and honor France and lead a lot of laps is a
Monday.
(740) 446-2342. ext. 33
great feeling , even on a NASCAR 's
Car
of afrer the race.
bsherman@ myda_ilytribune .com
Tomorrow.
Certainly the day 's 'wa it Monday."
AP photo
· Larry' Crum, Sports Writer
Truex · showed DEl jusl for the Autism 400 was
Denny Hamlin and Man
· t740) 446-2342. ext. 23
might be in good hands once worlh it for Truex , now Kenseth rounded out the top
lcrum@mydailyregister.com
coveted free-agent Dale closing in on being one of five .
Hendrick Motorsports had
Bryan Walters,-Sports Writer Earnhardt Jr. leaves at sea- the top 12 dri vers for the
son's end. Now, .for a few 'Chase. He's eicllt points
(740) 446-2342 . ext. 33
·
Please see Truex. l l ·
bwallors@ mydailytribune .com
days at least. Truex can talk behind Mark rvra'i·tin. who's
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Jr. dies

Finals rookies, Cavs primed for shot at Sp~rs Jordan
•

praises

James
ahead of
NBAfmals

Camp

i1046

RZT 50 .

LT1045

ZERO-TURN LAWN TRACTOR

%ERO·TURN RIDER

• .E:celmlw Syi'IChro'" technolort.
pun-idtt zer.o-turn rnenewertbillly 10
you un finish up to 50% fnttr
• Uniqut tlterable '""'' axle with
slttrilll whtel and loot pedll conlrol

•.50' flottilll triplt·bllldl3·iP·1
mowlnJ doCk
• 22 Hpt Kawutkr' V-Twin OHV qint
• Pivotint and VIIMbW front ull
with lwp e•ltr whttlt
• Er101101111c lop biro ,.,h toft-much
Jr1ptlfld dlmpm ,

ere IUY to llM lnd lit ~mow
ttrtiehltinet on hilts

• 46~ triptt·bll0t 3- ln-1mowint diCk
• 20 Hpt KohiH' tour11•'"

LAWN TRACTOR
. • %" holvy~ trlpil-llle&lt;lt

mowilll dick
• 20 HPI Kohler'

eo..,..·.....

• P•- Srnwt.Jto• N...........
. . . '"""'
• &lt;ltd
).. and-S.yw
limittd Wll'r~•"

V·Twin OHV tnllnt

.. . . . . _

....ltMio" ... .

r-; UOJI&amp;" VIlA' JiWMt(MII"

ZERO

INTEREST
PAYioiENl'S
lltOinMI'
~Oil,.

'94tiiOMTH

FREE

'260
PREPAID

ZERO

FREE EARING TEST

ZERO!~!~

SALE '2,999"

·- ll'~J 0- lJl~\' ~L ul~t\' .

SALE '1,699"

TUES., JUNE 5

VIlA CAitO''

WED., JUNE 6

CALL 740-446-2345 OR 800-634-5265

NOW for an appointment
• People seem lo ITKlmble rrore lrequently.
• You hear, bul have trouble understanding
all the words in a eonversallon.
• You often ask people to repeat themselves.

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
8880 UNITED LANE • ATHENS, OH 45701
740-593-3279 OR 1-800-710·1917

MON • FRI 9:00AM • 6:00PM I SAT 9:00AM - 5:00PM
• !1l w.l ~'M:I£'5 &amp; 110 HlBlST !Ffllll ih' WY lOll Ill fl'l£11 ltl)ft)U ~S Rlll6 0TMS t.lll trTU~DTFCJI:.tGm!S.
!!! HOPWiif.'i &amp;'('l t(!tJIESTJ~IJvllA.~ .all. '*l;lll~&lt;J t999ct",.._rn.ll~t/MIOIIt"-trC!WC4A-1 . 011 Pf"""'.N, m-"ftJr .. ,.nn ,.. ,.
&amp; r.o &gt; -~~«t dollffi~ 'l l1! f11m1:
. p..rd~(llo:!.t~hjtllf prornl!GI"filt\Wt n ...,~Q).,~IIIIII'IJ'p-r-Oill:tM j81dllllllltll'lil J ~ tllfltl
.
.., Jllll«t"" t:JKi ~ ~-. ~""""'ff ~ -~·I"*'K:t chlrJII IIMMI'- ~ tMt tllfJQ JQI'Ttt.Y MWf3 FQII-1(1 114:BRW 36
~MS. Villltnp"'c~""'d . ."'r:'1c.J!Ciilelpo Oil.IC~WIIIGliCadii~ TNMJ~UaRNit.,.6tl)VrcuPw r Cr ~tll.1....,.. IIUN t,llll fl'l'du
htiiii'!Q1t,tfpry&lt;!'f!h~lllt1 lbl!llirlUI~~~~nlli$t¥:0111'111'1~\1114IIPflla'Jotllr!Miioolol~- 1111 lll,_tlhrpt-.il l llt . . . ilti ' " ' f"'UII Pl'f
nYilfll6IICtiltii.W_,,_.,, ~ ~ llllac&lt;:Oitl p~&gt;l! .._u. nOl~liiAira-.Nt••CNdii"'*-Oiwwi~ JINIIIt1ll•ltriMIIC. 611 1 ' " ''" '
:lfln. '&gt;t~"""""WJ~IIQf&gt;-p'OIIO~.,._, ..,,_WJ~!toW'illllll'll,.~ IIJIIIVl'/JI,wiltlltltlfltl4. ....1r11il . . . I &gt; ~*UJ . ZJ99 .. 1111J"-ll"-Cfp
J1 S...,.llfJCIP'••dyGUIIW,~
·
••llrlldrlP..&lt;f!* t.bl!lt,f!l"'*' dilrd~arpklblllu~a-.ilwri,.....,.,.~IIJIIrtlll,.knnlllirdllliffdlllp" &gt;¥f 1&gt;-. ftlf', MIUIIIiltlttloi ·IJdf • ...,bttiiJt.N
lndr'l'•~rll) ~U.t ll!~lldm:llb~

.

·

'

v raltld ~ ~

I

.

..----·

-··--. . .-.
--4-.
....

s.. JW ~·;~"*"' b' -~

$1000 OFF

8

ftF-•1200~::1i'SriCtrd.nj!wS6()F~ foU ~(MdCII' III tltldlori;Jlllif1.1!!lO!L ~I'Mi ...te¥1t.;.. .:.ef 'NU, il tr-' !r Q ,~,t lolA p.nMII
101 hc.lfJ$e~(llfi'.1oJ tl~~...t '1'1( ~r.O.fi!JaCf·(~ WIOF.1!1V:S.l~ CM1.-•~'ff'II61Xl11

SAVE

'Z,

"*"'
mftlari\M'

1200 P..epH ,.;~ C..-1 -~ •t&lt;lliY,),f'- 9!Clo'0'7

II ro• experlen" any of these 1ymptoms you neefla FREE hearing test.
lfAIIIG lOSS 01 JUST fAIWAl?
NEIVf DEAFNESS tAll If llfLPEDI
$EEllS IS BEUEVINGI
HEARING IS BEUEVINGI

.

''" &amp;.! yw kQI ~10!1!! lltr•e b i~ ..,..., ~15.C#1u• la'll!.,-.uncl.._a.,.tlfil'.
Sptcli(•O'lf ;. Ul!t'l 1:1
"'~ n)l(1. r!'"ftl ~ rd ,. . . IJrMrJ""' ri -~
t

• Your family complains lhat you play the TV
too k&gt;udly.
• You have been told that you speak too loudly.
• You experience ringing in your ears.

'

FREE

HEARING
TEST
Flt*lly lllti'lild
'-'Ill
~ llfl

YOU CAN'T CEr 4NY BETTER~

COUPON $125 YllUE

FREE

EAR INSPECnON
or
1$ 11 nur~ blill.

jl.l&amp;l 11111 .,,. ?

COUPON $50 YALUl

Any Bellone Syatem.
Cannot Be Combined
With Other Dlcount• Or
-Previous Ordere. ·

Truex takes first career ·win at Dover

__...____________

.,...

_ ______________ ---------- ·

.......___

-

., _ - --- -- -

�-·..- ---

. ~

.

•

(

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 5,

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 46.89
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 81.61
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) 60.01
Big lots ( NYSE)- 31.95
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 38.59
BorgWarner ( NYSE) 83.98
Century Aluminum ( NASDAQ)- 57.98
Champion (NASDAQ) 7.15
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) -12.32
City Holding (NASDAQ) 38.57
c'olllns (NYSE) - 70.49
Dollar General ( NYSE) 21.63
.
DuPont (NYSE) - . 53.19
US Bank (NYSE) -·34.51
Gannett (NYSE)- 59.79
General Electric: ( NYSE)
-37.81
Harley-Davidson ( NYSE) 61.97
JP Morgan (NYSE) 51.57
Kroger (NYSE)- 30.29
Limited Brands (NYSE) 28.93
Norfolk Southern ( NYSE)

2007

POMEROY - Magistrate
Linda R. Warner recently
processed the following cases
in Pomeroy Mayor's! Coun:
Terri L. Brewer. Pomeroy,
trash ordnance, $100 and
costs. persistent disorderly
conduct, $150 and costs;
Dustin L. Lyons, Pomeroy,
defective exhaust, $75 and
costs, driving with no opera- .
tors license, $1 00 and costs:
Kim D. Meadows, Pomeroy,
trash ordnance, $100 and
costs; Lacey D. Childress.
Racine, failure to appear,
$150 and costs; Woodrow J.
Richards, Jr., LOng Bottom,
unsafe vehicle, $75 lllld costs;
Jaunita S. Jones, Bidwell,
· speed, 38/25, $38 and costs:
Casey
R.
Manley,
Middlepon, assured clear distance, $75 and costs; Sharon
F. Johnson,
Pomeroy,
violation of tntsh ordinance,
two counts, $1 00 and costs
and $100 and costs; Eldon
Baker, Syracuse, Ohio traffic
light violation, $75 and costs;
Leanna Dill, Pomeroy, possession of drug pantphernalia, $100 and costs; Jason R.
Kimes, Pomeroy, driving
under suspension, $200 and
costs, failure to display, $75
and costs;
Mary
L.
Johnson,
Pomeroy, speed 34/25, $37
and costs; Christopher C.
Anthony, Dexter, left of center,. $75 and ~osts, driving
under suspension, $200 and
costs; Timothy E. · 'Shane,
Pomt;roy, receiving stolen
propeny, two counts, $250
and costs, and $300 restitution, $250 and costs and $200
restitution; Kevin Blackburn,
Pomeroy, Ohio discharging
ftreworks in · village of
Pomeroy, $1 00 and costs;
Jonathan E.
Pomeroy,
possession of controUed substance, $100 and cost~. disorderly conduct $150 costs, and
possession of drug paraphernalia, $100 and costs,
Angelina
M.
Casci,
Middleport, no ope~rs
license, $200 and ~ts,
defective exhaust, $75 and
cosls;
..• ___....
Curtis
P.
Arnold,
Middleport, f;lllure to apperu:,
$150' llftd costs; '(")wef! M.
Davis, Syracuse, driving

Local weather
Tuesday ... Partly sunny. cloudy.
Hot.
Highs
Isolated showers in the around 90. Lows in the
afternoon . Highs in the upper 60s.
mid 70s. West winds 5 Friday and - Friday
to 10 mph : Chance of· nighLMostly cloudy. A
rain 20 percent
chance of showers and
Tuesday night...Partly thunderstorms. Highs in
cloudy
in
the the upper 80s. Lows in
evening ... Then
mostly the mid 60s. Chance of
cloudy with a slight rain 30 percent
chance of showers and
Saturday ... Partly sunny
thunderstorms after mid- with a chance of shownight. Lows in the lower
50s. West winds around ers and thunderstorms.
5 -mph ... Becoming north- Hot with . highs around
east
after
midnight. 90. Chance of rain 40
Chance of rain 20 per- percent.
cent.
Saturday
. night
Wednesday ... Mostly through
Sunday
sunny. Highs in the night ... Mostly
cloudy
lower 80s. South winds with a chance of showaround ~ mph.
ers and . thunderstorms.
W e d n e s d a y Lpws in the mid · 60s.
· night...Partly
cloudy. Highs in the mid 80s.
Lows in the upper 50s. Cba.nce of rain . 30 perSouth winds around 5 cent.
mph.
Monday ... Pi\rtly sunny.
Thursday
_
and .. cH&lt;Jt • witlr· 'high!!'' aro'und
Thursday night ... Partly 90.

green,

under suspension, $200 ;md
costs, defective exhaust. $75
and costs.
Bonds forfe_ited: Nancy G.
Phalen, New Have... W.Va ..
speed 37/25, $37 and cosl~ :
Lornina A. Hutton, Rutland,
speed 41/25, $41 and costs;
Ricky A. Freeman, Racine,
expired tags, $75 and cost;
Donna D. Bentley, Pomeroy.
Speed 39/25. $39 and COSL~;
Joseph V. Ferguson, Ill.
Chesapeake, speed 42/25,
$42 and costs; Thomas R.
Gooch, Gallipolis, speed
45/25, $45 and costs; Richard
D. Daily, Jr..
Wellston ,
speed 44/25, $44 and cost~;
Conard C. Belcher, Pomeroy,
speed 40/25, $40 and costs:
Roben J. Spaun, Cheshire,
speed 42/25, $42 and cosls;
Richard E. Cooksey, Albany,
speed 42/25, $42 and costs;
Harold Wilson, Sandyville,
W.Va., assured clear distance,
$75 and costs; Roben J.
Henry, New Brighnon, Pa.,
speed 46/25, $46 and costs;
Robe11 J. Panersen, Dayton,
failure to comply, $140 and
costs; Duane C. Darst,
Brownsville, Pa., failure 10

comply. $140 and costs: speed 40/25, $40 and costs:
Charlie G. Fr.uier. Jr.. Grand Erica L. Dennis. Ponland,
Cane, Calif., speed 47/35, possession of drug parapher$37 and costs; Christine M. nalia. $100 and costs; Dexter
Gulley. Liule Hocking, speed T. Zerkle. Letan. W.Va .. left
44125, $44 and costs; Tommy of center, $75 and costs;
L. Basin, Long · Bouom, Victor
L.
Chevalier, ·
unsafe vehicle. $75 and costs: Reedsville. speed 44/25, $44
Iva K. Roush, New Haven. and costs: Donna Fenton,
W.Va .. assured clear distance. Willi;unstown, W.Va., speed
$75 and costs; Sandra L. 51135. $41 and costs; Dwight
Laudern1ilt, Pomeroy. traffic E. Mitchell, Athens, speed
control device, $75 and costs; 44/25. $44 and costs; Alison
Bmndy L. Shea., Gallipolis. Woods, Pomeroy, possession
driving under suspension. of drug pamphernalia~ $100
$200 and costs; Brenna R. and costs: Carrie E. Flowers.
Call, Pomeroy, speed 47/35. Point Pleasant, W.Va., speed
$31 and costs; Crystal G. · 40/25, $40 and costs; Debra
Roush. Letan, W.Va. , speed K. Burke, RaCine. speed
,48135, $38 and costs; April J. 45/25. $45 and costs;
Lloyd, New Haven, W.Va .. Andrew J. Haning, Pomeroy,
speed 42/25, $42 and costs; squealing tires, $75 and costs,
Steven D. Smith, Marietta., driving with an obstructed
failure to comply, $140 and view, $50 and costs; Bruce E.
cost; Amy D. Wright, Allen, Albany, speed 45/25,
Pomeroy, unsafe vehicle, $75 $45 and costs; Racquel J.
and costs; Cory Van Reeth, Smith, Middlepdn, speed
Pomeroy. stop sign violation. 40/25, $40 and costs; Travis
$75 and costs; Sarah ,Ramsey, J. Fordham, Delaware, speed
Pomeroy, speed 36125, $36 37/25, $37 and costs; Tiffany
and costs; Mary A. Shoults, . Hamilton, Gallipolis, expired
Racine, fai,lure to yield turn- lags, $75 and costs; Dennis
ing left, $75 and . costs; Little, Middlepon, failure to
Timothy Kuhn, Reedsville, appear, $145 and costs.

MIDDLEPORT- Zackary Thomas Pullin
graduated May 13 from Quinnipiac
University receiving a Juris Doctor degree in
law with a concentmtion cenificate in tax and
a Master of Business Administmtion degree.
He received recognition during the ceremonies for his outstanding academic performance, graduating in the top I0 percent of his
law class and received an award for superior
classroom performance. Pullin was recognized as the top student in his MBA class and
received a special award and listing in the
commencement program. Only 26 students
from a field of 850 graduate stude11ts received
this honor.
He plans to sit for the bar exam in July and
ha5 been accepted into the LLM tax program
a.t the University of Florida with classes to
begin in August. He is the son of Don and
Connie Cooke Pullin of Ormond Beach,
Zachary Thomas Pullin
Florida and Point Pleasant. His grandparents
were the late Gilben and June Pullin of Point Middlepon, and Jean Cooke of Ormond
Pleasant and the late Kenneth Cooke of Beach, Florida.
(

'

.,

~

,..

~~f'~{1) 1_:('jd} ' r 1 ·r·:'I,N:t

_

... ~~

..

...

'·.

one,
·Hearing Aid Center
Gallipolis, Ohio Area

Fans buying up Cavs gear, Page B2

Tank Johnson suspendt.'ll 8 games, Page B6

I.nw schoo~ student recognizedfor accomplishments

;.".l.ib~·

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Anaheim beats Ottawa, Page B6

POMEROY MAYOR'S COURT

- 58.59
Oak Hill Financial ( NASDAQ)- 21.92
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ) - 25.25
BBT (NYSE) - 42.35
Peoples (NASDAQ)27.94
Pepsico (NYSE)- 88.31
Premier (NASDAQ) 15.71
Rockwell (NYSE)- 68.58
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) -"
15.60
Royal Dutc:h Shell _f
75.40
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
-179.85
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 51.21
Wendy's (NYSE)- 40.49
Worthington (NYSE)21.34
Dally stoc:k reports are
the 4 p.m. ET closing
quotes of transactions for
June 4, 2007, provided by
Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 4419441 and Lesley Marrero.
In Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

Inside

_

1312 Eastern Ave. Rt. 7 (Next to OLD Pizza Hut)

Thesday, Jun.e 5, 2007

Fonner
NASCAR
chainnan
Bill France

Favored Spurs WOI;t't underestimate .Cavs
BY EUzABETH

WHITE

eight points.
have been together for the
"We lost to them twice Spurs' last two champithis season. They' ve been onship runs. in 2003 and
SAN ·ANTONIO
playin(l great," Duncan said. 2005. Duncan is healthy and
LeBron James may be )he "They re on a high right .said he's playing better basstar of the Cleveland now, playing with a lot of ketball.this year than in the
Cavaliers, . but the San confidence . And they're last three. And the team
Antonio Spurs know better going to be a tough oppo- turned midseason struggles
. than to ignore the other four nent. We· re going to have to around to take off on a 13players on the coun.
really come out and shake game winning streak and
"They wouldn't be in the this rust off quick this firsl compile a 23-6 record after
finals without LeBron, we game and really try to jump the All-Star break.
• BY JENN" FRYER
wouldn 't be in the finals on them."
AP AUTO RACING WRITER
Still, the turnaround James
without Tim Duncan," Spurs
After beating the Utah has led in Cleveland over his
coach Gregg Popovich said Jazz in five games for the four seasons there is what's ·
Bill France Jr., who transSunday. 'That goes without Western Conference cham- grabbed the attention·.
formed NASCAR from a
sayi ng. But they sti II would pionship, the Spurs will
small Southern spon into a
"I'm just hoping every
not be in the finals, nor have had a full week off by once in a while they throw .
billion-dollar conglomerate
would we, if we didn 't each Thursday's stan to the NBA the Spurs in there, in
during his 31 years as chairhave our . supponing casts. finals in San Antonio.
man, died Monday. He was
between LeBron highlights,
Everybody
else has to fit. "
74.
Cleveland wrapped up the that'd be nice," Duncan said ·
San Antonio was 0-2 Eastern Conference champi- Sunday.
He died at his Daytona
against
Cleveland during the onship on Saturday in Game · The experienced Spurs are
Beach,
Fla.,
home,
regular
season. The Spurs 6 . against the Detroit going for their fourth chamNASCAR
. lost their home opener to the Pistons. James scored 20 pionship in nine seasons.
spokes man
Cavs, plus their January points in that game, bul it Duncan has been around for
Ramsey
matchup in Cleveland, was rookie Daniel Gibson's all three.
Po ston
where the NBA finals will 31-point performance that
s a i d .
"I' m not sure how ntre
arrive for the first .time later stole the show.
France had
they think it is since they've
this monlh.
been
in
"Teams get to finals and been there quite often conThe Spurs held James to team win championships, .sidering their young ages
poor health
·AP photo 19 points 'in the second and their team 'fits," and time in the league,"
for much of
·the
·· Jast San Antonio Spurs forward Tim Duncan (21) takes a shot meeting, but · the Cavs put Popovich said.
Popovich said. "But they
decade .. _
over Utah Jazz forward Carlos Boozer (5) in the third quar- three other players in double
So do the Spurs. Their top know it's the finals and that
France Jr. . he''
was ter of Game 5 of the NBA Western Conference Rnal bas- figures in their 82-78 victo- three scorers, Duncan, Tony
Please see Spurs, 12
dia gnosed _ k~tball game in San Antonio last Wednesday.
ry. Two other players scored -Parker and Manu Ginobili.
with cancer in 1999:· · -----------'--~------------------------------------­
Although he was in remission, the extensive treatments took a toll. He never
regai1led his full strength,
often had difficulty .breathBY ToM WtTHERS
ing and had taken to Using a
N' SPORTS WRITER
motorized sc:eoter ,t~ ,g~:&lt;L '' CLE.VE
around.
, ·.
LAND. - Above
France was hospitalized the Cavaliers' training room
al least twice .!his yeru: but door on the w~ll adJacent to
spent his final fj1;1ys restil)g LeBron James locker han1;s
at home: Officials at Dover · a photograph of one of hts
International ·. Spelidw'ay, .st.gnature. dunks - one of
where the Nextel Cup 'series ·his '·nastrest, wake-up-thewas racing Monday after- ktds slams.
noon, lowered the ilag to
The one . over Tim
CHICAGO (AP) - His
half-staff in his memory.
Duncan.
.
Airness
is paying tribute to
His lasl public appearance
Someone placed t1 there a
the
kid
called
King James.
was Feb. 12 in Daytona few· days after Cleveland's
Michael
Jordan
praised
Beach, where NASCAR's 88-81 win in San Antonio
22-yearcold
LeBron
James
top names gathered to &lt;!." Nov. 3, the Cavaliers'
for
leading
"Roast and Toast" him at hrst vrctory m the Alamo
t
h
e
the Bill France Hot Dog City since 1988 and one that
Cleveland
Dinner during the Daytona set ·the tone for a special
Cavaliers
500 build-up.
season.
to . victory
Even there. especially
So far, the most special.
over
the.
there, France Jr., who ruled
Seven months after James
Detroit
'NASCAR with an iron fist, posterized Duncan, the
Pistons in
called the shots.
Cavaliers were at home
the Eastern
His toasters thai evening Monday getting ready to go
Conference
were ge ntly reminded to to . an unfamiliar place: the
finals. The
avoid any harsh roasting. NBA finals.
Cavaliers
Jordan
The finals can be a scary
advanced
Please see France. Bl
place for first-timers who
to
the
finals
for
the
first time
might be intimidated by the
in
their
37
-year
history.
global spotlight. Not James.
"WI"tat just transpired was
Although he's a finals roo~ ­
something
I felt was needed .
SPORTS BRIEFS
ie, the 22-year-old star isn't
for the league, was needed
nervous about taking his
for Cleveland, was needed
Sign-ups for Eagle show onto the .grandest
for
LeBron," Jordan said in
stage yet.
Monday
editions of the
Volleyball
"I'm very excited to be a
Chicago Tribune.
..
pan of it," said James,
Game
5
James
dominated
TUPPERS PLAINS -- wearing a New York
against
Detroit,
scoring
~~
The third annual Eastern . Yankees cap and " King of
'
,,
Cleveland's final 25 points
Eagle Volleyball Camp wt ll . Akron" T-shirt. "As far as
in the win. The Cavaliers
be held for all girls in me being in awe, I don't
became
just the third team
gr&lt;)des six throu gh nine know. I' m not that type of
to
overcome
an 0-2 deficit
from June I I throu gh June guy.
to
win
the
conference
final s.
13 at the EHS Gymnasium
"There's not too many
Jordan, who won ·six
The camp will feature things that awe me."
NBA championships during
fundament als essential to
James and the newly
13 seasons with the
his
produce winning volleyball crowned
Eastern
Chicago
Bulls. said the next
and will be taught by cur- Conference.
champions
challenge
for James is to
rent coaches and players, as began
preparing
for
AP photo achieve consistency.
well as former players. The Thursday's series opener Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James shoots over David Wesley during practice Mondayin
"Making ' The Leap' is
camp will run between the
Cleveland. Four years after a bouncing ping pong ball gave. the team the right to draft
Please see Cavs. 12
times of I0 a.m. io noon.
Please see Jordan, 12 .
James, the Cavaliers will play in the NBA Finals against the San Antonio Spurs.
All . participants will·
receive a camp t-shirt and a
camp volleyball.
· All checks . should be
made payable to Easte rn
BY DAN GELSTON
about his win instead of the 12th.
Athletic Boosters and
AP SPORTS WRITER
latest Earnhardt rumors.
The blowers were still out
to
Howie
returned
"In
times
of
change,
and
while
the cars "were out on
Caldwell, 40878 Old Seven
Martin
DOVER,
Del.
Manin
times
when
people
don
'
t
the
grid
waiting for the_ir
Road , Reedsvill e, OH
True~ Jr.
Truex Jr. earned his first · really know what's going on pace laps . But the sun
45772.
celecareer victory for Dale and they need some direc- peeked out right as the
Registrations niay also be Earnhardt Inc., winning at tion. I am ju st happy to be
brates
gree n nag dropped. which
sent to Debbie Weber, Dover
winning
International the one in Victory Lane."
49620 Hickory Hills Road, Speedway on Monday hours Truex s.aid. "Couldn't have led to a· clear and clean day
the
of racin~ . .
Reedsville, OH 45772.
Autism
alter the death of' longtime come at a better race tracL . Pole sitter Ryan Newman,
Speaks
NASCAR chairman Bill Just unbelievable, man ."
who led most of the . first
400 auto
France Jr.
But new s of France 's half of the race. was denied
race in
Truex
won
for
the
first
death
overshadowed
the
his
first
win
since
2005
and
ComAcrUs
seco nd.
Carl
time 111 58 career points race. The nag at Victory fin ished
victory
races on what the New Lane was ·lowered to half Edwards, who won the
lane at
OVP .Scoreline (5 p_.m.-1 a.m.)
Jersey native has long con- staff short·ly after the Busch Series race here on
the Dover
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
sidered his hometown track. announcement, and drivers Saturday was third.
lnternatio
"He detinitely likes this
He ended a dominant five- paid tribute to the man who
Fax- 1-740·446· 3008
nal .
race w1nnmg streak for transformed . NASCAR. racetrack, and that 's unfonuE-mail - spor1s@mydailysentinel.com
Speedway
Hendrick Motorsports, lead- Truex even was reminded nate for me," Newman said.
in Dover,
~u
ing 216 of the 400· laps on over the radio by his crew to "Just to be up front all day
Del., on
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor the Monster Mile in remember and honor France and lead a lot of laps is a
Monday.
(740) 446-2342. ext. 33
great feeling , even on a NASCAR 's
Car
of afrer the race.
bsherman@ myda_ilytribune .com
Tomorrow.
Certainly the day 's 'wa it Monday."
AP photo
· Larry' Crum, Sports Writer
Truex · showed DEl jusl for the Autism 400 was
Denny Hamlin and Man
· t740) 446-2342. ext. 23
might be in good hands once worlh it for Truex , now Kenseth rounded out the top
lcrum@mydailyregister.com
coveted free-agent Dale closing in on being one of five .
Hendrick Motorsports had
Bryan Walters,-Sports Writer Earnhardt Jr. leaves at sea- the top 12 dri vers for the
son's end. Now, .for a few 'Chase. He's eicllt points
(740) 446-2342 . ext. 33
·
Please see Truex. l l ·
bwallors@ mydailytribune .com
days at least. Truex can talk behind Mark rvra'i·tin. who's
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Jr. dies

Finals rookies, Cavs primed for shot at Sp~rs Jordan
•

praises

James
ahead of
NBAfmals

Camp

i1046

RZT 50 .

LT1045

ZERO-TURN LAWN TRACTOR

%ERO·TURN RIDER

• .E:celmlw Syi'IChro'" technolort.
pun-idtt zer.o-turn rnenewertbillly 10
you un finish up to 50% fnttr
• Uniqut tlterable '""'' axle with
slttrilll whtel and loot pedll conlrol

•.50' flottilll triplt·bllldl3·iP·1
mowlnJ doCk
• 22 Hpt Kawutkr' V-Twin OHV qint
• Pivotint and VIIMbW front ull
with lwp e•ltr whttlt
• Er101101111c lop biro ,.,h toft-much
Jr1ptlfld dlmpm ,

ere IUY to llM lnd lit ~mow
ttrtiehltinet on hilts

• 46~ triptt·bll0t 3- ln-1mowint diCk
• 20 Hpt KohiH' tour11•'"

LAWN TRACTOR
. • %" holvy~ trlpil-llle&lt;lt

mowilll dick
• 20 HPI Kohler'

eo..,..·.....

• P•- Srnwt.Jto• N...........
. . . '"""'
• &lt;ltd
).. and-S.yw
limittd Wll'r~•"

V·Twin OHV tnllnt

.. . . . . _

....ltMio" ... .

r-; UOJI&amp;" VIlA' JiWMt(MII"

ZERO

INTEREST
PAYioiENl'S
lltOinMI'
~Oil,.

'94tiiOMTH

FREE

'260
PREPAID

ZERO

FREE EARING TEST

ZERO!~!~

SALE '2,999"

·- ll'~J 0- lJl~\' ~L ul~t\' .

SALE '1,699"

TUES., JUNE 5

VIlA CAitO''

WED., JUNE 6

CALL 740-446-2345 OR 800-634-5265

NOW for an appointment
• People seem lo ITKlmble rrore lrequently.
• You hear, bul have trouble understanding
all the words in a eonversallon.
• You often ask people to repeat themselves.

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
8880 UNITED LANE • ATHENS, OH 45701
740-593-3279 OR 1-800-710·1917

MON • FRI 9:00AM • 6:00PM I SAT 9:00AM - 5:00PM
• !1l w.l ~'M:I£'5 &amp; 110 HlBlST !Ffllll ih' WY lOll Ill fl'l£11 ltl)ft)U ~S Rlll6 0TMS t.lll trTU~DTFCJI:.tGm!S.
!!! HOPWiif.'i &amp;'('l t(!tJIESTJ~IJvllA.~ .all. '*l;lll~&lt;J t999ct",.._rn.ll~t/MIOIIt"-trC!WC4A-1 . 011 Pf"""'.N, m-"ftJr .. ,.nn ,.. ,.
&amp; r.o &gt; -~~«t dollffi~ 'l l1! f11m1:
. p..rd~(llo:!.t~hjtllf prornl!GI"filt\Wt n ...,~Q).,~IIIIII'IJ'p-r-Oill:tM j81dllllllltll'lil J ~ tllfltl
.
.., Jllll«t"" t:JKi ~ ~-. ~""""'ff ~ -~·I"*'K:t chlrJII IIMMI'- ~ tMt tllfJQ JQI'Ttt.Y MWf3 FQII-1(1 114:BRW 36
~MS. Villltnp"'c~""'d . ."'r:'1c.J!Ciilelpo Oil.IC~WIIIGliCadii~ TNMJ~UaRNit.,.6tl)VrcuPw r Cr ~tll.1....,.. IIUN t,llll fl'l'du
htiiii'!Q1t,tfpry&lt;!'f!h~lllt1 lbl!llirlUI~~~~nlli$t¥:0111'111'1~\1114IIPflla'Jotllr!Miioolol~- 1111 lll,_tlhrpt-.il l llt . . . ilti ' " ' f"'UII Pl'f
nYilfll6IICtiltii.W_,,_.,, ~ ~ llllac&lt;:Oitl p~&gt;l! .._u. nOl~liiAira-.Nt••CNdii"'*-Oiwwi~ JINIIIt1ll•ltriMIIC. 611 1 ' " ''" '
:lfln. '&gt;t~"""""WJ~IIQf&gt;-p'OIIO~.,._, ..,,_WJ~!toW'illllll'll,.~ IIJIIIVl'/JI,wiltlltltlfltl4. ....1r11il . . . I &gt; ~*UJ . ZJ99 .. 1111J"-ll"-Cfp
J1 S...,.llfJCIP'••dyGUIIW,~
·
••llrlldrlP..&lt;f!* t.bl!lt,f!l"'*' dilrd~arpklblllu~a-.ilwri,.....,.,.~IIJIIrtlll,.knnlllirdllliffdlllp" &gt;¥f 1&gt;-. ftlf', MIUIIIiltlttloi ·IJdf • ...,bttiiJt.N
lndr'l'•~rll) ~U.t ll!~lldm:llb~

.

·

'

v raltld ~ ~

I

.

..----·

-··--. . .-.
--4-.
....

s.. JW ~·;~"*"' b' -~

$1000 OFF

8

ftF-•1200~::1i'SriCtrd.nj!wS6()F~ foU ~(MdCII' III tltldlori;Jlllif1.1!!lO!L ~I'Mi ...te¥1t.;.. .:.ef 'NU, il tr-' !r Q ,~,t lolA p.nMII
101 hc.lfJ$e~(llfi'.1oJ tl~~...t '1'1( ~r.O.fi!JaCf·(~ WIOF.1!1V:S.l~ CM1.-•~'ff'II61Xl11

SAVE

'Z,

"*"'
mftlari\M'

1200 P..epH ,.;~ C..-1 -~ •t&lt;lliY,),f'- 9!Clo'0'7

II ro• experlen" any of these 1ymptoms you neefla FREE hearing test.
lfAIIIG lOSS 01 JUST fAIWAl?
NEIVf DEAFNESS tAll If llfLPEDI
$EEllS IS BEUEVINGI
HEARING IS BEUEVINGI

.

''" &amp;.! yw kQI ~10!1!! lltr•e b i~ ..,..., ~15.C#1u• la'll!.,-.uncl.._a.,.tlfil'.
Sptcli(•O'lf ;. Ul!t'l 1:1
"'~ n)l(1. r!'"ftl ~ rd ,. . . IJrMrJ""' ri -~
t

• Your family complains lhat you play the TV
too k&gt;udly.
• You have been told that you speak too loudly.
• You experience ringing in your ears.

'

FREE

HEARING
TEST
Flt*lly lllti'lild
'-'Ill
~ llfl

YOU CAN'T CEr 4NY BETTER~

COUPON $125 YllUE

FREE

EAR INSPECnON
or
1$ 11 nur~ blill.

jl.l&amp;l 11111 .,,. ?

COUPON $50 YALUl

Any Bellone Syatem.
Cannot Be Combined
With Other Dlcount• Or
-Previous Ordere. ·

Truex takes first career ·win at Dover

__...____________

.,...

_ ______________ ---------- ·

.......___

-

., _ - --- -- -

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, Jnne 5, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June s, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

\!tribune - Sentinel - l\egister

,Cavs fans snap up gear for first ~A finals A coronation for certain BY

JOE MIUCIA

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CLEVELAND
Bill
Baumann walked out of
Qutcken Loans Arena with
two shopping plastic bags
loaded with Cavaliers merchandise.
,
"I bought $600 worth of
T-shirts," he silld. "We're in '
the finals . Wow, you know"
It still hadn't completely
sunk in for Cavaliers fans
Monday. two days after
LeB ron James brought
home the fra nchise's first
Eastern Conference championship.
Fans sptlled out into the
streets in
celebrati on
Saturday mght after the
Cavaliers beat the Detroit
Ptstons in Game 6 and the
good feelings contmued
through the start of the
work week
People on the streets chattered about the Cavaliers
and a "Beat Detroit!" shirt
hung in a dry cleaning shop
window with a "We" added
to 11.

Tony Farinacci of North
Royalton se nsed the vibe
downtown.
"Everyone is just really
happy
and
positive.
Everything seems to be OK
today," he said.
Farinacci came to the
Cavaliers' team shop at The
Q to buy Eastern Conference
champions T-shirts for his
wife and two sons, ages 5
and 9.
The victory over Detroit
gave him a chance to offer
some fatherly wisdom.

Cavs
from PageBl
against the Spurs wtth a
workout at Quicken Loans
Arena. It was quiet in the
bmldmg, a stark contrast
from 48 hours earlier, when
the one of the biggest parties in Cleveland history
cranked into the wee hours
of Sunday following the
Cavs' Game 6 win over
DetrOit m the confe~ence
semts.
Other than a massive
media presence and having
to get their ptctures taken in
warmups now bearing the
official finals patch for TV,
there were no other signs
around the Q to indicate the
finals had arrived.
The first two games are in
San Antonio. T, and the
Cavaliers, who aren't being
given much of a sjlot to wm
the senes by oddsmakers,
won't get their first true
taste of the finals ' camtvallike atmosphere until they
get to Texas, where everything is bigger anyway,
Cavs guard Eric Snow
remembers being overwhelmed by his first trip to
the finals as a Seattle rookie

France
from PageBl
,.

France did not speak during
the dinner but received
guests from his seat on the
banquet floor
A shrewd busmessman
who was fiercely protective
of his family-owned company, France always acted in
NASCAR's best interests
Hts decisions often riled car
owners , drivers, sponsors
and fans, but France never
backed down. He was in
charge - like it or not and he qu1ckly reminded
dissenters.
"Part of leadership is having the guts to make a decision and then having the
jlUis to stand by it and makmg it work," said four-lime
Cup champion Jeff Gordon.
"That's what he did on a lot
of occasions. He did it in a
way that let you know who
the boss was and also did it
in a way that you respected
him. And I've said it all

Truex
fromPageBl
· won fi ve straight races and
nine of the past I0 Nextel
Cup races, but only points
lead Jeff Gordon (9th) finished m the top 10 at Dover.
Casey Mears was 13th;
' J1mmte Johnson was 15th
and Kyle Busch 17th.

AP photo
Cleveland basketball fans look through merchandise at the
Cavaliers Team Shop on Monday in Cleveland , Fans bought
up T-sh 1rts, caps and anythmg else that proclaimed the
Cavaliers as Eastern Conference Champ1ons as the city
gets ready for the NBA finals for the first time.

"I keep telling them this
has never happened in your
father's life, and I'm 40
years old," Farinacci said.
The city hasn' t won a
championship smce the
Browns m 1964 and haven't
competed for one since the
Indians lost the World Series
in 1997.
Inside the crowded team
shop, men in business suits
stood holding up T-shirts
and talking on cell phones,
discussing sizes and colors,
in 1996.
"I was in awe. I didn't
know what to expect," said
Snow.
He was devoured by all of
it. The international media.
The ticket requests. The
family issues. What was
supposed to be fun became
a distractton, and Snow
expects some of his teammates to be stunn!ld by their
first exposure to the extraordinary setting.
"They all will (be awed)
because they haven·~ experienced it," he said "The
best teacher in this league is
experience. The only way
you're going to understand
it is to go through tt. I've
tried to msttll in them that
we still have to realize why
we're there."
On h1s second trip to the
finals, with Philadelphia in
2001 , Snow was better prepared to handle the offcourt matters. ,
"The second time I kind
of knew the magnitude," he
said. "There's a lot of different things and they' re good
things. People are excited
for you, but at the same time
you still have to play the
game so you still have to
find a way to focus, stay in
tune to the game plan."
For Cavaliers coach Mike
along, I think that is the cornerstone m our spprt."
France became chairman
in 1972 when he repl aced
his
father,
NASCAR
founder William Henry
Getty France, who fetired
25 years after formmg the
National Association for
Stock Car Racing
He had prepped for the
JOb by domg a ltttle btl of
everythmg dunng hts nse
through the grass roots
ranks of rac ing.
Bill France Sr. put Bill Jr.
m charge of crowd control
at one of the early 1950s
beach races at Daytona
Beach It was a difficult situation - there seemed to
be no way to fence in the
beach area and keep people
· from walking in without
,buymg tickets. But young
France had learned some
lessons from his dad about
mgenuity.
"We put up signs in the
scrub areas along the road
that said 'Beware of
snakes' and funneled people through out gates. It
Gordon has a !52-point
lead ovet Johnson in the
points standings.
Mears won the Coca·
Cola 600 last week, giving
N~xtel Cup two first·ti~e
wmners tn consecutive
races. It was the first time
the series had consecutive
first-time winners since
Tony Stewart and Joe
Nemechek m1999.
Truex had not seen his
success on the Bu sch

Few outspent the 54-yearold Baumann, who said two
T-shirts were for him and the
rest were for hts daughters,
ages 19 and 22.
Baumann
has lived
through a lot of tough times
in Cleveland sports. He was
part of the demolition crew
that in the late '90s tore
down
old
Cleveland
Stadium, former home of the
Browns and Indians. He was
smiling on Monday.
"It's absolutely amazing,
Brown, this trip to San
Antonio IS about more than
business. It's a return to his
favorite coaching stop, a
city where he stil.l keeps a
home and where he won an
NBA title as an as,sistant on
Gregg Popovich's staff in
2003.
"I've had a lot of great
memories with him," said
Brown, who speaks regularly to Popovich, one of his
mentors, on the phone.
"There are a lot of things
that I've learned from him
that really make this a special time for me. I've looked
up to him as a coach, and as
a man."
Now m h1s second season
with Cleveland, the 37year-old Brown, along w1th
general manager Danny
Ferry (San Antonio's former
director of basketball operations), have changed the
culture of the Cavaliers,
using the Spurs' model to
do it.
Their mission smce Day I
has been to bring a championship to Cleveland, and
that goal is four wins from
reality. And although , the
Cavaliers are neophytes in
the finals, Brown isn't warned about them either being
scared or satisfied With just
making them.
worked out pretty good,"
France satd.
He also was a flagman,
sold concessions, parked
cars, scored races, promoted events and even helped
m the construction of
Daytona
International
Speedway.
France worked 12 hours a
day, seven days a week as
he drove a compactor, bulldozer and gra4er in the 13
months tl took to butld the
track. He once even tned to
use a mule to pull trees out
of the swamps, because the
motonzed eqmpment kept
getting stuck.
When he fmally took
over NASCAR, he mherited a sport that was nch tn
Southern tradllion but
mostly unknown everywhere else tn the United
States.
"Other than the founding
of NASCAR itself, Bill Jr 's
appointment to leadership
is probably the most sigmficant event m the history of
the sanctioning body," the
International Motorsports
Series circuit - consecutive championships in
2004 and 2005 before joining DEI's Cup team carry over into Cup. But he
gained momentum two
weeks ago when he won
the Nextel Open at
Charlotte and earned a spot
in the in NASCAR's AllStar race.
Earnhardt hoped to turn a
second-place qualtfying
effort into his first wm of
I

I'm so proud of them," he
said of James
, and hts teammates.
The team shop sold out of
NBA finals gear by
lunchtime Monday. Michael
Thorn, the Cavaliers' director of merchandising, said
more was on the way.
The shop still had $20 and
$24 shirts proclaiming the
Cavs as Eastern Conference
champions, which were
bring printed well before
Daniel "Boobie" Gibson
started sinking 3-pointers in
the fourth quarter Saturday
night
"We were extremely
aggressive on our buys with
mventory tf we won, and it's
paid off," Thorn srud.
The Cavaliers are sellmg
shirts and caps as quickly as
their licensees can produce
them, he said. They're planning new designs leading up
to Game I of the finals at
San Antonio on Thursday,
includmg one commemorating James' 48-point performance in Game 5 and another for Gibson, who has
quickly become a fan
favorite.
Steve Silber, 55, of
Mentor, will send . an
"Eastern Conference champions" shirt to his 20-yearold nephew, a student at the
University of Nebraska,
who's been a fan ever since
hi s uncle took him to a game
as a k1d.
"If they wm the final s, I' II
get htm that one too," Silber
said.
"This team has been
focused the entire year and
they' ve really taken to heart
the one-day-one-game-at-atime theory," he said. "And
I believe if they understand
that each game is its own
separate entity, it doesn 't
matter .what people are saying or doing, we've got a
chance to win.
"We're in it to w.in a'
championship, and everybody understands that."
James took some lumps
early in the Detroit series,
and then delivered late. He
scored 48 points in Game 5
and finished the six-game
series averaging 25.7
pomts, 9.2 rebounds and 8.5
assists - numbers only
matched in a conference
finals by Oscar Robertson
( 1963), John Havlicek
(1968) and Larry Bird
(1986),
Beating Detroit was monumental. Beating San
Antonio would surpass it.
"That's a very great team,
they're very experienced,
they've been to the finals
before and they know how
to handle adversity~' James
&gt;aid. "We have to just
attack, attack, attack. That
has to be our mind-set and
we give ourselves a chance
to win."
Hall of Fame said about the
transition.
"His role in the impact of
the sport has been huge,"
Gordon said. "His personality came at a time when it
was what our sport needed.
I think he did an incredible
job of basing his opinion op
what he believed the facts
to be and then having the
courage to make that dectston and see it through.
"He am't a waffler. ...
He's JUSt gomg to go do it."
Over the span of three
remarkable decades, France
oversaw the expansiOn of
the sport, parlaying the
loyal fan base of the Deep
South mto sold-out tracks
in
New
England,
California, Texas and the
Midwest. He also moved
the season-ending awards
banquet to New York City
in an effort to court the
Madison Ave. money,
It all translated into more
money from sponsors, bigger paydays for drivers and
robust TV audiences,

the season but instead was
plague_d by tire ·woes,
dropped four laps back at
one point and finished
22nd.
Earnhardt congratulated
Truex in Victory Lane,
telling his teammate that
he knew he could win .
"He 's been a great
friend, and I' II see him at
the house toni~ht ," Truex
said . "We' re gmng to have
some fun"

but will it be for Kiry,g James?
Br

JtM

LITKE

AR SPORTS COLUMNIST,

Four days later. people are
still debatmg where LeBron
James' 25 straight points to
end Game 5 ranks on the
NBA's list of all-time best fmishes. The only point worth
addin&amp; is this: Whoever has
James ear between now and
Thursday can serve the King
best by reminding him that
better be just the ileginrung.
James better have a few
more games like that in him,
and we're not talking dunng
the course of his career, but
over the next two weeks
Otherwise, thts will be
remembered as the NBA
finals that he got close enough
to see his reflection in the
Larry O'Brien Trophy -and
not much else.
It's easy to forget how
tricky it can be for even the
brightest young stitr to trace a
learning curve that reaches
the top without a sing\e &lt;!\~·
maybe because Mumu s
Dwyane Wade did it only last
year,
James, to his credit, didn't
need renunding.
He recently described
climbing over the Pistons and
out of the Eastern Conference
in just his second try as
"another chapter in my book,
I guess." But James also
understands he won' t write
that happy ending without
help. The tough part will be
deciding how much to accept.
"If I get double-teamed and
the game is close, I'm going
to pass it again," James said,
despite catching flak for
domg just that at the start of
the Detroit senes. "If we
make the shot, I'm on top of
the world. If 110t, then I'm
under a lot of trees and leaves.
It's fine with me. I'll take the
critictsm that comes with it.
"I'm the leader of this
team."

There's a mce bit of symmetry m havmg the Spurs
stand between James and that
shiny piece of hardware he
wants so much. The Cavalters
have modeled themselves as
the Spurs of the East, and two
of therr chief decision-makers, coach Mike Brown and
GM Danny Ferry. actually did
their manallement training in
San Antomo. But the sharing
arrangement, not to menllon a
real resemblance, pretty much
ends there.
The only coronation the
Spurs plan on attending anytime soon is their own. They
can llrab their fourth championship since 1999, a run of
titles that might finally gamer
San Antonio and reluctant
superstar Tim Duncan the
respect and recognition that
has so far consistently lagged
behind thetr accomplishments.
The Spurs last appearance
in the finals, against Detroit in
2005, was almost the opposite

Spurs
from Page 81
would take care of any possible complacency I would
thmk."
San Antomo held opponents to just over 90 points
a game during the re ~: ular
season, leading the league.
Cleveland was fifth, holding opponents to abom 93
points.
"Cleveland's an excellent
defensive team, they k!nd of
snuck up on everybody.
When you talk about
defense people mention the
Pistons and the Bulls thts
year, and Houston and San
Antomo and that kmd of
thing. Dallas became a good
defens1 ve team under Avery
(Johnson)," Popov1ch sa1d.

Jordan
from PageBl
where you do 11 every single
night,' Jordan said. "It's
expected of you, and you do
it .. , Not one game, not two
games, It's consistent.
Every defense comes in and
they focus on you and you
still impact the game, I
think he's shown signs of
that."
James took a "big step"
forward in the series against
Detroit, but the NBA finals
against the San Antonio
Spurs will provide another
huge test, Jordan said
'This next series is going

situation from what James
and the Cavs wtll be facmg
this time around. It was
framed as a referendum on
whether Duncan was truly a
great player. or JUSt a very
good one lucky enough to
land in San Antonio when the
Spurs boasted a deep and better-than-average supportmg
cast.
As that senes stretched out
toward Game 7, the NBA's
promottonal taghne for the
series, "Where Legends Are
Born," began to sound like a
dare.
Duncan responded wtth 25
pomts, II rebounds, two
blocks and three asststs.
Nearly all the numbers
flowed eastly from the Spurs
game plan, except for a
stretch late m the thtrd quarter
when Duncan scored nearly
half his total and grabbed the
game by the throat. In a hallway afterward, former teammate
David
Robinson
savored the win and that
third-quarter as much as any
of Duncan's then-teammates.
"Some people talked about
Tim like a dog. The way that
man has performed over the
years, I don't understand
that," sa1d Robinson, who
partnered Duncan for two of
San Antonio's tttles. "For him
to dig down tonight and show
everybody what be's made of
is just awesome, unbelievable. He settled it the best
way."
Unfortunately, James doesn't have Robinson, Manu
,Gmobih, Tony Parker or even
Robert Harry to take over the
show long enough to catch his
breath. And unlike Wade,
Shaquille , O' Neal won't be
there to cover his back.
If James is gomg to. wm a
championship this year, he's
going to have to do it the
same way he JUSt sent Detrott
packmg: large)y on his own.
The 25 points in a row that
closed out Game 5 was part of
a 48-point night that got most
of the attenuon. But James'
performances on either side
of that game were almost as
good. He averaged 33 pomts,
II rebounds and etght assists.
James can't afford much slippage if Cleveland ts going to
have a chance.
So Spurs coach Gregg
Popovich wasn't exaggerating when he satd, "P1ck a
problem, we have it, with
LeBron. He's fantastiC in
every way so, pick any aspect
of the game, he's a problem,"
But more telling was somethmg that Duncan said a little
later. "You have to respect
someone like that and focus a
little more of the attention
toward him.
"But they're going to need
a team to beat us," he added,
"LeBron's not going to do jt
by h1mself."
Not yet, anyway,
Spurs in five.
"But Cleveland is right in
that category wtth everybody else, it just hasn't been
noticed yet."
Popovich has reason to
compliment the Cavs'
defense It's largely the
same as San Antonio's
Cleveland .,::oach Mtke
Brown is ' one ' of several
members of the Cavaliers
organizatiOn, mcluding general manager Danny Ferry
and assistant coach Hank
Egan, who used to be with
the Spurs. Brown worked
under Popovich as an assistant for three years earlier
this decade.
"This ts going to pretty
much a situation where
everybody knows what
everybody's gomg to do,"
Popovtch satd. "There
aren't go mg to be any
secrets here, that's for sure."
say, ' How far do you
want to take it?'" satd
Jordan, speaking from
Elkhart Lake, Wis., where
his motorcycle team was
participating in a racmg
event.
'
James was thrilled to
learn of Jordan's approvaL
"It's great," the Cavaliers
star satd after practice on
Mo.nday. "Anyttme you get
pra1se from the guy who
bastcally laid down all the
stones for you to get here. I
grew up idolizmg his game
and how he played the game
of basketball. It was definitely great to hear."
to

AP Sports Writer Tom
Wrtl1ers m Cleveland contributed to tim report.

The Daiiy'Sentinel• Page 83

CLASSIFIED ·

Meigs County, OH

Galli a

County,
OH

E-mail
classified@ myda1lytribune com

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

WebSIIes.
www.myclaJiytnbune.com
www.myclaJiysentJnel.com
www mydallyreg1ster com

To Place
\!tribune
l\egister
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 446-3008
Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

Oetul/1ir~

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HQW IQ WRITE AN AD

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right lo edh,
retect or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors Must 8
eported on the fl
of publication
he

Tr lbune~Sentlnel

egilller

will
sponalble for n
ore than the cost o
he space occuple
the error and on
e first insertion W
hall no1 be liable f
ny loss or expens
hat results from th
ubllcatlon or omis
!On of an advert!

enl Correcllons wil
malte In the fin

Real
dvertlaements ar
ubject to the Federa
air Housing Act o

t968.
newspape
only hel
anted ads meetln

r

~MAWAV

rI

cot.ntry (740)446·7685

kltncarfyle@come~st

Dott'"f I)IS1iJ~ Kl ~
'T\-IIS IS

washer while

992 7537

Call 740·

YAKD SALE

I,:~;:~;:=~

r

yARD SALEGAlliPOLIS

1ly Yard Sale, 554 Jay Dr.
Sprmg Valley
AU Stoles
clolhtng Infant adult Large
va nely of tlems 9 5

c;;:r-"':':'-"::"--.,
4
YARIJ S.\L~-

"-5

~~
© 2007 by NEA, Inc.

Lt------·
Ht:t ..,

J' nAN'IID

off 33 Court Street Road
Watch for S1gns•

MF

Echomg

Restdan1tal Cenler ts now

Garage sale Bradley Ad
across from Aad10 slaliOn
Wed after 1 PM Thurs &amp;
Fn start1ng at 9 AM

9C~m·3pm

""~------·

3 bedroom home 1n
Pomeroy A1ver vtew Off
Very dependable female(s) mam road $20 ,000 t -740
to care lor two d1sabled 992 2593
females 1n New Haven, WV 3 BR 1 BA Large Fam1ty
Valid
dnver s
license
Room fndge WI D Large
requtred Home health care lot, Close to Holzer Call
expenence a plus 5 days a 44 1·5826 or 446 9664
week. 12 haUl shtftslflextbtlty
to change sclledule as 3 or 4 BR, 1 balh garage
needed
Ltve 1n arrange· basemen! covered porch
ments posstble as part of back deck, new central heat
compensahOn Must start and AC unit n1ce landscap·
on ..Une 11 Please call 304- 1ng, lenced m back yard,
new appliances recenlly
Bil2·2711
- - - - - . . , . . - - - remodeled
bath room
Wanted D1rect Supervrs1on Asking $75000 New Haven
employees to oversee male wv 304-882-3773
youth m a staff secure res1 - - - - - -- GALLIPOLIS
denllal envtronment Must Jbd
pass phys1cal
trammg Foreclosure!
Buy
lor
reqwement Pay based on $50 900 1Only $404/mo 5%
expenence Can (740)379· dn, 20yrs @ 8% For ilst1ngs
9083 between 9·3 Mon·Fn
call 800·559·4109 I(F254

New 3 Bedroom 21 2 bath
by builder 2 car garage
basemen t Good locatiOn
and schools Green Twp
446 9966

(304)722·2 184

Plus much morel
+Up to $8.50/hour
t Weekly bonuses
t Weekly pay
t Paid Hol1days, vacattons
and tra1n1ng
t Full benet1ts
t Prolessronal work
almosphere

CaiiToday!
1-877·463·6247 ext
230t

MasSive tncrease of

800-248-7735
www pnmemc com

AppI!cants must pass pre·
employment
screenmg
1nclud1ng but not 11m1ted to
drug screen and cnmlnal
background checks

$300 HIRING BONUS!

PRIME inc.

oi iQCallloodplatn regula

Ohto
reqwred

Fabr~ea110n

'17_40-'-)9_9_2·_22_00_ _ __

Desk Clerk needed at
Wanled Record Album col Budget Inn 260 Jackson
lect!on-lookmg for Jock pop P1ke Look1ng for a person
and maybe some others no who IS motivated, great
country or classiCal, please commumcahon SkillS and a
(740)645·0299
pos1t1ve athtude Please
apply W!lh!n
I \ 11'1 Cl\ \II\ I
- -- - - -- " II{\ H I"
Dtrect Care Staff
Mtddleton Estates ts now
HEl.Y WANOD
hlnng d1rect care staff You
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,., w11l be par t of a team thai
.,
prov1des servtces to 1nciv1d·
An Excellent way to earn uals With men1a1 retardation
and developmental d1sab•h
money The New Avon
t1es Must have valid dr1vers
Ca ll Manlyn 304 882-2645
license and htgh school
- - - - - - - - diploma or GED We pro·
Now Hlnng part-t1me pos1 vtde on the JOb trammg If
t100s for floral des1gner at you would hke to take
Pomeroy Flower Shop advantage of lhts opportunieKperlence
preferred, ty you may apply a1 8204
please bnng resume &amp; refer Carla Dnve, Monday lhru '
ences Ia 106 Butternut Ave , Fnday 8 00·4 00 An Equal
Pomeroy, Oh1o betwee n Opporlumty Employer
FIMIDN
Bam 4pm, Mon Frl •

New Salon opemng 514
Ma1n St Pt Pleasant July
2nd, Ha1r Stylist &amp; Nail Tech
needed 304 675·6144 or
304·593·6570
- - - - -- - The
Athens·Me1gs
Educa)1onal Servtce Center
has an avatlable pos111on for
a
MultipleDlsabtlittes
Teacher a\ Metgs H1gh
School
lnte~eni!Dn
Spectahst cert1hcat10n 1s
reqUired Salary based on
centhcation and eKpenence
ThiS pOSitiOn has Board
approved benefitS Letter of
mterest, resume and references must be rece1ved by
12 00 p m June 8 Subm!t
to
John D Costanzo,
Supennlendent.
Atllens·
Me 1gs Educational Servtce
Cenler, PO Box 684 320112 E Mam, Pomeroy OH
45769 Equal Opportumly
Employer/PrOVIder

081 5

304 342·

5742 M·F 8 30am-4pm

J- - - - - - - ·1

ttons, coordmale map mam·
tenan ce act1Vn1es and
FEMA follow·up, hold public
meet1ngs to educate publiC
Part·t!me 20 hours a weeK,
no benef1ts Need H1gh S
SChool Diploma or equrva·
lent, have map readmg
9)( penence and knowledge
of computers and vanous
computer programs, able to
use GIS musl hold a valid
dnvers hcense Phystcal
work may be needec,i Must
be registered w1th SCOTt
(www scott ohto gov) sys·
tern StJbm~ resume wtlh
cover lener to
Oh1o Depl of Jobs and
Fam1ly ServiceS" 848 Thud
Ave Gallipolis, OH 45631
We are an Equal
QPportuntty Employer

Alhens,

2842

r.lt'lllor------.,

M1malure farm UnibUIII
home on 4 acres on SA
160 3BR, t BA. Peaches,
bernes grapes Sw1mmmg
pool New appliances Wood
burner $88 000 740 388-

OTR, Regional,
Flatbed, Reefer &amp;
Tanker Drivers

Floodplain Administrator
for Gallla County
W1ll enforce !he prov1s1ons

Slreel,

Huge Yard Sale Power
Washer, Comforters some
Ambrosia Mach1na Inc
Furn t1re lots of mce stuff
Pomt
Pleasan t, wv (304)·
June 6 7&amp;81h at D1ck
675·1722 {304)675·1723
Lanier's Box 71 J•m H1ll Ad
lax Mach1mst 5 years or
~=--~~---, more expenence $8·$12 psr
WANllD
hour
TO Buv
On Hand Shop Foreman Help wanted at Darst Adu~
Group Home so me hftmg
Machine Shop &amp;
Absolute Top Dollar U S knowledge 10 yea rs or more 7·5 sh1ft, 740 992·5023
Stive r and Gold Cams, expenence $~ 2·$ 15 per
Manag1ng cosmetologist,
Proofsels Gold Alflgs Pre· hour
1935
US
Currency, _ _.:...:_ _ _ _ __ pan or lull 11me Na1l Tech,
Sohta1re Diamonds· M T S AVONI All Areas! To Buy or both rental or cqmm1sston,
Com snap 151 seco nd Sell
Shtrtey Spears, 301· New Salon New EqUipment,
Altitudes
In
Pomeroy
Avenue, Gal11polls, 740 446 675-1429

r

0 Down even w1th less than
perfect credit IS ava1lable on
lh1s 3 bedroom 1 balh
home Corner lot hreplace
modern kitchen, )CICUUI tub,
Paym9f1t around $550 per
month 740·367·7129

t50

busmess from local
customers' Looking for
expenenced and
non-expenonced dnvers.
Driver Job Interviews
Tues., 615 ~Dam-5:30pm
at Red Roof Inn
1000 Acy Ave.
Jackson, OH 45640
Apply &amp; get qualified
on the spot!
Suong Fret~! Network
Blue Cross Insurance

References

Huge basement sale at
Rutland Church of God
June 8th &amp; 9th 9 QQ.
3 00 Corne r of 124 &amp; Happy
Holl ow Ad

G1ant Flummage Sale lots of
Everything Sacred Heart
Calhohc Church Hall 2222
Jackson Ave Pt Pleasant
Thursday, Fr 1da~ Saturday

Meadows

accephng apphcahOns for a
part ttme LPN lor weekends
and evening shtfts apply m
person at 319 West Umon

8 Tyree Blvd
of stuft

Ra1ner Garage Tackerv1lle
Ad , Thurs ,Fn ,Sat , lawnmower,anllqu es coll ec ta bles furmture glassw lmens

Doctors off1ce needing part
11me X1"ay tech call 304·
675·1637 or come by 1n per·
son to 3009 JaCkson Ave PI
Pleasant between 1 3pm

________

l:~~;~~r.J CARPORT Sale

4x4's For Sale . . ................................. 725
Aimouncement .......................................... 030
Antiques ................................................... 530
Apartments for Rent .................................. 440
Auction and Flea Market.. ..........................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .. ... ........... 760
Auto Repair ..... ................. ....... :................ 770
Autos for Sale .......................................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ......................... 750
Building Supplies ....................................... 550
Business and Buildings ............................ 3411
Business Opportunlty .............. ,.. ,..,............ 210
Business Training .. ............... ............... "' ... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ................. .... 790
Camping Equipment ..................... ,............ 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care .... .......................... 190
Electrlcsi/Refrlgerallon.............. ,., .. ........... 840
Equipment for Rent. .................................. 480
Excavating ............................................. 830
Farm Equipment .......................................610
Farms for Rent.. ........................ ............. 430
Farms for Sale ........................................ ,.. 330
For Lease .......................... .........,................. 490
For Sale . ............................ ...... ......... .. 585
For Sale or Trade ............ ..........................590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ............. ..................... 580
Furnished Rooms ............... ......................450
General Hauling .................... ,.....................850
Giveaway...................... .... .. .. . ............ ..040
Happy Ads ...... ................,... ,.. ..• ,............. ,....050
Hay &amp; Grain .......... ............ ....... ..................640
Help Wanted.............. . ................ .........tt o
Home Improvements ........ .........................8t0
Homes for Sale ........................................ .. 310
Household Goods ....... ................ .... ...,.. 510
Houses for Rent ...................................... 410
In Memoriam ................ ......... .. . .. ....... 020
lnsuranee ....... ......... ... ................ ............. t 30
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ....................... 660
Livestock .......... .. .......................... 630
Lost and Found .........:................................. 060
Lola &amp; Acreage ......................................... 350
Miscellaneous ............ J .. .... . . . . . . . .. . . . .. . ... ... . 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise......................540
Mobile Home Repair. ............ .. .. .. . . . .. 860
Mobile Homes for Renl. ............. .................420
Mobile Homes for Sale..............................320
Money Jo Loan ........ ...... .... .................... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ......................... 740
Musical Instruments ..................... .. .... ... 570
Personals ...... ............................................ 005
Pets for Sale .,.,........................ .,.... ........... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating ...... .... ..... ...... .... 820
Professional Services ................, .. ., ........ 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ..................... ., ....... 160
Real Eatata wanted .. .... ............ ............... 360
Schoolslnslrucllon ...... .................... ,., ........ 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer............. .. .... . . ...650
Slluallons Wanted ............. .,....................... 120
Space for Rent. ...................,....................... 460
Sporting Goods .... ....... ......................... 520
suv·s for Sale ............................................720
Trucks for Sale .......................................... 715
Upholstery ..... ............................. ,•........... ,, .. 870
Vans For Sale ......,.......................................730
Wanted to Buy •... ... ...... .... ..................090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppllas .................. 620
Wanted To Do ,............................................. 180
Wanted lo Rent. ........................ ., ............... 470
Yard Sale- Galllpolla ....... .,.,.. ...................... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ................. 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasent .............................. 076

www.comics.com

Truck Dnvers COL Class A
ReqUired mm1mum of 5
years dnvmg exp 2 yrs
Flatbed Expenence Must
have good dr1V1ng record
Earn up to $2 000 weekly
For
apphcauon
Call

0
1111 liELP WANIID

2 lam1ly Garage sale, June
7th &amp; Blh Morn1~tar Ex1t

CLASSIFIED INDEX

•

"'r=-------,

I'oMEKOYIMmtli.E

y accept any adver

MY

frTI'li&gt;,S RJ&gt;u7j Nt;.

Commun•ty Yard Sale, June
Free to good home, black
8 &amp; 9 Starts al JUnctiOn of
lab/shepherd pupp1es For
SA 325 &amp; SA 141 on SA
mfo please call 740-446
141, watch lor s1gns several
4t77
mu~1 fam1ly sales ch~unsaw
Gtveaway 5 adOfable kll carv1ngs glassware, dothlens 3 orange, 1 black, 1 mg muct\' more, 8-?
black &amp; caliCO Very playful 7
weeks old 740 742 ' 2954
Fn Sun June e-10 Mulli·lam·
House m M1ddlepor11o lear
down Of move must take all
(740)992 6849
'--'------Kenmore portable d1sh·

net

PERENNIAL CAT
SHELTER

111

Free kittens to good home
Call lor more tnfo 740446·
4177

)We will not knowing

1,

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

740·
645·
3 Black kmens to g1veaway 7275
Calll740)256 1070

preferably to someone m

Thu.-.day for Sundays

POLJCIES• Ohio V•lley Publilhlng rtUMll tht rtgh1 to edit, reject. or cancel any ad at 1ny lime Errors must be reported on the first d&amp;'f of
TrtbuM-s.nt.......,..._ wMI be~ for no marl! than the ~lit of tM space occupied by tt.- MOf 1nd onty the flfst 1n..r11on Wll! shall not be
any lou or erpense tn.l NMtlb lfom the put:Jiic;rion or om1Nion ot an .W.niMmOOt Correc:tlon will be made in the hrlt evallatHe edii!CIO • Box
1rt always confktel•tlal • CUnent rile c:Md applies • All rnl ntate ldvertitemenls are subtecl to the Federal Fair Housmg Acl ot 1968 • This newap&amp;J&gt;t•l
IICCeptt only http wantH W mMtlng EOE s..nderd1 We will not knowingtw' ec:e.pt sny e&lt;tveftl1lng In v!olet1on of the law

very lOVIng, (740)441-1 100

Female dog 2yrs old m1xed
breed, good With ktds,

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
Bualne- Day• Prior To
Publication
Sunday DI•Piiily : 1 :00

• All ads must be prepaid'

(4) 8wk old kittens avatlable
The kittens has amvedl
lor adoption to lovmg Please save them and gtve
homes, 3F, 1M. varonated
11\em a good home
&amp; wormed All litter tratned, Call

Cats to Giveaway to a good
home 304-675-6720

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
S,~
1m
Borders $3.00/perad
f!
Graphics SOC for small
$1 .00 for large

A~s

GMAWAV

_ _ _ _ _ _ _.,
'

OE sJandards

llhaiaw

J'r,Jdaoy For Sunday• Paper

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

ccepts

lsement In vlolatlo

Dally In-Column : 1 : 00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Dilly' s Paper
sunday In- column: 1:00 p.m.

• Start Your AdS With A Keyword e InclUde c:omplete
DeKrlptiot1 • Include a Price • Avoid l.biJrevialloM

· Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get

•POLICIES*

Display

Saloot.5

·------pl
1811

1

USWA
Professional Fundra1sers
needed PartiFult time 3
sh1ffs datly 7 days a wee k
$9 hr alter pa1d lrammg +
Benet1ts. Contact us todayl

1·888·974-JOBS or

WWN1888974)0bscom
Roofers Metal roof1ng, s1d
mg and EPDM Top pay and
benefits 724 229 8020
Scen1c Hills Nurstng Cenler
IS currently accepung appll
cat1ons lor a Umt Manager
Applicants mtJsl possess a
current AN license 1n lhe
s.tate of Oh1o Long·te rm
care expenence IS reqUtred
Applicants must possess
excellent commumcahon
Sktll and the ab!l!ly to tunc·
bon as an effecttve health
care team member For
more mlormalton or to
sched ule an m1erv1ew,
please contact Dtanna F~ch,
Human Resources at 740
446-7150 EOE
-------Soctal servtce spec1ailst
needed
m
Athens
Education (l( bacKground 1n
women's studtes , fam!ly
stud1es or some type of
soctal servtce reqUired pre·
vent1on/Interventlon expenence preferred F/f, lamp to·
perm Monday· Friday occas1onal
weekend
work
510/hour, plus benef its 1f
h1red perm For deta1ls on
!hiS and many other jobS In
Soulheastern Ohio, g;~to
wwwcareerconnecl!ons 1nlo
To apply, e-ma1l resume to
JObs@ careerconneoctlons t
nfo or call (740)594·4941
No lees EOE

I (740)367 0000

w

AJ~flll&gt;

To Do

002001 Skyhne 28~64 1600
sq It
Musl be moved
Greal shape only $45 000.
304 593 0582
1994 Oakwood 14x70 new
COrdlhOn 740·446-4782
- - - -- -- Grea1 used 2005 3 bedroom
16x80 w11h vmyllsh1ngle
Must sell Only S25 995 witll
delivery Call (740)385 4367
New 3 Bochoom homes from
S214 36 per month lnctlldes
many upgrades del1very &amp;
set up [740)385-2434

,

Beaultl ul Mlddleporl home'

Scoll(740) 828·2750

L..-------'

3BR 28A full basement SPECI AL FHA FINANCE
Georges Portable Sawmill Many NEW features!! Must Program $0 Down If you
now selling Tomatoe Slakes see this one' 740·416 1546 own Land or use Family
ca11304·675·1957
Land We own the Bank your

6)

Lawn mow1ng Aales by the
lob. nol the hour Call Pau l

Approved 606 474 6380

f 11RI\l'i
FOR S\LF.

@ (304)675 2940

Lawn·Care Servi,Ce Mow 1ng
&amp; Tnmm,ng Call (740)441
1333 or (7 40)645 0546 ·
Professionally

All real estate adverti sing

rn this newspaper Ia
subje ct to tha Federal
Fatr Housing Act of 1968
wh1ch makes It tllegal to
advert1se any
preferen ce, liinltatlon or
d1scnmmahon based on

Clean,

Pff •ce / Ho u sec tea n1ng
References (304)675·2208

race, color, religion , sex

10

HIRING

1-800-584 1775 Ex1 18923

;,._ _fOIIRiiiii""iii1ii
' 1·;..~

AtlenUon l
Local company offer1ng "NO
INSTKUCTH)N
DOWN PAYMENT" pro N1ce used 3 bedroom home
grams lor you to buy your v1nyVshmgle W11l help W1lh
Gallipolis Career College home 1nstead of renting
delivery 740 385·4367
(Careers Close To Home) • 100% fmancmg
Call Todayt 740-446·4367 • Less than perlect cred1t
I 800 214 0452
OWNER FINANCING
accepted
www gatllpo!ISCareercollege com
N1ce 3/2 smglewtdes
• Paym enl could be lhe
illtc r~diled Membe1 Accredlllrlg same as renl
From $1 ,800 dowfl
Council lor !IICiepenOO nr Colleges
paymenl
aoo Schools 12746
Mortgage
Locators

POST OFFICE NOW
Avg Pay $20/hr or
$57K annually
lnclud1ng Federal Benefrts
and OT Pa1d Trammg,
Vacatrons-FT/PT

MOBil [ H0\1~
c.

familial status or national

8 USINFS'i

origin, or any mtent1on to

OtroKt11NrrY

make any suc h

Brand new log home wtth 60
acres MIL $180 000 Call
740 256-9247

LOTS&amp;
ACIU~\CE

4 Acres located off Kemper
Holl ow Ad Already ha s
waler/elec Secluded area

740·388 8228

preference, Umlta!Jon or

dtscrl mmatlon ·

oNOTICh
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHlN G CO recommends
thai you do b..Js1ness w1th
people you know. and
NOT 10 send money
through the mall until you
have mves1 1gated the
offermg

:

Thts newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real
estate wh1ch 1s m
vtolatlon cf the law Our
readers are hereby
mtormed !hat all
dweutngs advertised m

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

th•s newspaper are
ava1labte on an equal
opportunity bases

"-------,J
MON'I".\'

EnJoy th1s spac10us 5 BA 2
Ba home locat ed 1n Gallla
Co on lhe ba nks of
Raccoon Cr9ek Well land·
scaped 1 33 acre yard w1th
paved u shaped dnvoway
Detached pole garage large
enough lor car and boat
storage Many extras 1nclud·
1ng hot tub, monitored secu·
nty system and covered p1c
mc areas by creek D1rect
access to Ohto A1ver and
boat

**I'U ITIC•:**
Borrow Smart Contact
I he OhiO DIVISIOn ol
Fmanc1at
lns111Uh01'1 's
Off1ce ol Consumer
AffairS BEFORE you reh·
nance you• home or
oblam a loan BEWARE
ol requests lor any large
advance paymenls ol
fees or Insurance Gall lhe
Off 1ce ol Consumer
Atfa1rs loll !rae al 1·866·
278·0003 to learn 11 the
1
mortgag e broker or
tS
properly
lender
licensed (Th1s 1s a publ1c
serv1ce a'nnouncemenl
from the OhiO Valley
Pubil sh1ng Company)·

5 10 30 acres bordeung
Wayne Nat10nal Forest 1n
Gatha Jackson or lawrence
Co 419 288·3937
HI~

10

1"\I.S

~,--~---,

Bot 1S..~"i

'---..OroiiKiioiiRiit~.-~.._.
...,

3 br 111 Rutland $400 per
depOSit
monlh
plus

i740)992 0064

Pnvate country sentng Call

740 441·8257
For sale/land contract 3 BR
house m Gathpol1s WID
connection $1500 down
$400/mo Al so 1 BA 1n
Gathpolis
$750
down
$200/mo Call Wayne 404
456·3802 lor tnlormat1on

J'ROF'ES'iiONAL
SER\100

HoMJ:..";

IJif!W of Crly and R1ver ffom
Mason Counly 7 17 ac see
p1cs on LandAndFa •m com

$155/mo' Buy 4bd HUO
home' S"o On 20yrs @ 8"o
"For l1sl1ngs 800 559 4t 09
x1709

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY !SSt?
No Fee Unless We Wm 1
1..s88 582·3345

r10

0143

"':~~~::::~~ 304 638 7048

ro lOAN

r'
I

5 acre lots lor sale tn Gallta
Co Morgan Twp Morgan
lane Sept1c perm1ts for last
years specs Poss1bte land
co ntracl some reslnC!Ions
Calt belween 7pm and 9pm
or leave message 740·669

I

House lor sale 128 Bas1!a n1
Dr For rnore mfo call 740
i740)367·0Q00
446 2886 or 74 o 446-145t

HUD HOMES! 4bd only
$155/mo 3bd $181/mo,
-.
More 1·4bd hom es avail·
213 BR 1 Bath pool on a 5 able 5% dn, 20 yrs @ 8%
acres Close \o~own Askmg For hshngs 1 800·559-4109
$145,000 7~0·645·333'3
)( F144

..__...,niiiliiRiiiSii,\liii.~io
' _,.,

Attent1on1
Local company offenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro
grams for you to buy your
home 1nstead ol ren11ng
• 100°~ financing
Less than perfect credit
acceptc!)
• Paymenl could be the
same as rent
Locators
Moll gage
HUO HOMES! &lt;UJd only
$155/mo 3bd $181 /mo
More 1·4bd homes ava1t
able 5% Qn 20 yrs @ 8% ·
For hst1ngs 1·800·559·41 09
x F144

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, Jnne 5, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, June s, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

\!tribune - Sentinel - l\egister

,Cavs fans snap up gear for first ~A finals A coronation for certain BY

JOE MIUCIA

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CLEVELAND
Bill
Baumann walked out of
Qutcken Loans Arena with
two shopping plastic bags
loaded with Cavaliers merchandise.
,
"I bought $600 worth of
T-shirts," he silld. "We're in '
the finals . Wow, you know"
It still hadn't completely
sunk in for Cavaliers fans
Monday. two days after
LeB ron James brought
home the fra nchise's first
Eastern Conference championship.
Fans sptlled out into the
streets in
celebrati on
Saturday mght after the
Cavaliers beat the Detroit
Ptstons in Game 6 and the
good feelings contmued
through the start of the
work week
People on the streets chattered about the Cavaliers
and a "Beat Detroit!" shirt
hung in a dry cleaning shop
window with a "We" added
to 11.

Tony Farinacci of North
Royalton se nsed the vibe
downtown.
"Everyone is just really
happy
and
positive.
Everything seems to be OK
today," he said.
Farinacci came to the
Cavaliers' team shop at The
Q to buy Eastern Conference
champions T-shirts for his
wife and two sons, ages 5
and 9.
The victory over Detroit
gave him a chance to offer
some fatherly wisdom.

Cavs
from PageBl
against the Spurs wtth a
workout at Quicken Loans
Arena. It was quiet in the
bmldmg, a stark contrast
from 48 hours earlier, when
the one of the biggest parties in Cleveland history
cranked into the wee hours
of Sunday following the
Cavs' Game 6 win over
DetrOit m the confe~ence
semts.
Other than a massive
media presence and having
to get their ptctures taken in
warmups now bearing the
official finals patch for TV,
there were no other signs
around the Q to indicate the
finals had arrived.
The first two games are in
San Antonio. T, and the
Cavaliers, who aren't being
given much of a sjlot to wm
the senes by oddsmakers,
won't get their first true
taste of the finals ' camtvallike atmosphere until they
get to Texas, where everything is bigger anyway,
Cavs guard Eric Snow
remembers being overwhelmed by his first trip to
the finals as a Seattle rookie

France
from PageBl
,.

France did not speak during
the dinner but received
guests from his seat on the
banquet floor
A shrewd busmessman
who was fiercely protective
of his family-owned company, France always acted in
NASCAR's best interests
Hts decisions often riled car
owners , drivers, sponsors
and fans, but France never
backed down. He was in
charge - like it or not and he qu1ckly reminded
dissenters.
"Part of leadership is having the guts to make a decision and then having the
jlUis to stand by it and makmg it work," said four-lime
Cup champion Jeff Gordon.
"That's what he did on a lot
of occasions. He did it in a
way that let you know who
the boss was and also did it
in a way that you respected
him. And I've said it all

Truex
fromPageBl
· won fi ve straight races and
nine of the past I0 Nextel
Cup races, but only points
lead Jeff Gordon (9th) finished m the top 10 at Dover.
Casey Mears was 13th;
' J1mmte Johnson was 15th
and Kyle Busch 17th.

AP photo
Cleveland basketball fans look through merchandise at the
Cavaliers Team Shop on Monday in Cleveland , Fans bought
up T-sh 1rts, caps and anythmg else that proclaimed the
Cavaliers as Eastern Conference Champ1ons as the city
gets ready for the NBA finals for the first time.

"I keep telling them this
has never happened in your
father's life, and I'm 40
years old," Farinacci said.
The city hasn' t won a
championship smce the
Browns m 1964 and haven't
competed for one since the
Indians lost the World Series
in 1997.
Inside the crowded team
shop, men in business suits
stood holding up T-shirts
and talking on cell phones,
discussing sizes and colors,
in 1996.
"I was in awe. I didn't
know what to expect," said
Snow.
He was devoured by all of
it. The international media.
The ticket requests. The
family issues. What was
supposed to be fun became
a distractton, and Snow
expects some of his teammates to be stunn!ld by their
first exposure to the extraordinary setting.
"They all will (be awed)
because they haven·~ experienced it," he said "The
best teacher in this league is
experience. The only way
you're going to understand
it is to go through tt. I've
tried to msttll in them that
we still have to realize why
we're there."
On h1s second trip to the
finals, with Philadelphia in
2001 , Snow was better prepared to handle the offcourt matters. ,
"The second time I kind
of knew the magnitude," he
said. "There's a lot of different things and they' re good
things. People are excited
for you, but at the same time
you still have to play the
game so you still have to
find a way to focus, stay in
tune to the game plan."
For Cavaliers coach Mike
along, I think that is the cornerstone m our spprt."
France became chairman
in 1972 when he repl aced
his
father,
NASCAR
founder William Henry
Getty France, who fetired
25 years after formmg the
National Association for
Stock Car Racing
He had prepped for the
JOb by domg a ltttle btl of
everythmg dunng hts nse
through the grass roots
ranks of rac ing.
Bill France Sr. put Bill Jr.
m charge of crowd control
at one of the early 1950s
beach races at Daytona
Beach It was a difficult situation - there seemed to
be no way to fence in the
beach area and keep people
· from walking in without
,buymg tickets. But young
France had learned some
lessons from his dad about
mgenuity.
"We put up signs in the
scrub areas along the road
that said 'Beware of
snakes' and funneled people through out gates. It
Gordon has a !52-point
lead ovet Johnson in the
points standings.
Mears won the Coca·
Cola 600 last week, giving
N~xtel Cup two first·ti~e
wmners tn consecutive
races. It was the first time
the series had consecutive
first-time winners since
Tony Stewart and Joe
Nemechek m1999.
Truex had not seen his
success on the Bu sch

Few outspent the 54-yearold Baumann, who said two
T-shirts were for him and the
rest were for hts daughters,
ages 19 and 22.
Baumann
has lived
through a lot of tough times
in Cleveland sports. He was
part of the demolition crew
that in the late '90s tore
down
old
Cleveland
Stadium, former home of the
Browns and Indians. He was
smiling on Monday.
"It's absolutely amazing,
Brown, this trip to San
Antonio IS about more than
business. It's a return to his
favorite coaching stop, a
city where he stil.l keeps a
home and where he won an
NBA title as an as,sistant on
Gregg Popovich's staff in
2003.
"I've had a lot of great
memories with him," said
Brown, who speaks regularly to Popovich, one of his
mentors, on the phone.
"There are a lot of things
that I've learned from him
that really make this a special time for me. I've looked
up to him as a coach, and as
a man."
Now m h1s second season
with Cleveland, the 37year-old Brown, along w1th
general manager Danny
Ferry (San Antonio's former
director of basketball operations), have changed the
culture of the Cavaliers,
using the Spurs' model to
do it.
Their mission smce Day I
has been to bring a championship to Cleveland, and
that goal is four wins from
reality. And although , the
Cavaliers are neophytes in
the finals, Brown isn't warned about them either being
scared or satisfied With just
making them.
worked out pretty good,"
France satd.
He also was a flagman,
sold concessions, parked
cars, scored races, promoted events and even helped
m the construction of
Daytona
International
Speedway.
France worked 12 hours a
day, seven days a week as
he drove a compactor, bulldozer and gra4er in the 13
months tl took to butld the
track. He once even tned to
use a mule to pull trees out
of the swamps, because the
motonzed eqmpment kept
getting stuck.
When he fmally took
over NASCAR, he mherited a sport that was nch tn
Southern tradllion but
mostly unknown everywhere else tn the United
States.
"Other than the founding
of NASCAR itself, Bill Jr 's
appointment to leadership
is probably the most sigmficant event m the history of
the sanctioning body," the
International Motorsports
Series circuit - consecutive championships in
2004 and 2005 before joining DEI's Cup team carry over into Cup. But he
gained momentum two
weeks ago when he won
the Nextel Open at
Charlotte and earned a spot
in the in NASCAR's AllStar race.
Earnhardt hoped to turn a
second-place qualtfying
effort into his first wm of
I

I'm so proud of them," he
said of James
, and hts teammates.
The team shop sold out of
NBA finals gear by
lunchtime Monday. Michael
Thorn, the Cavaliers' director of merchandising, said
more was on the way.
The shop still had $20 and
$24 shirts proclaiming the
Cavs as Eastern Conference
champions, which were
bring printed well before
Daniel "Boobie" Gibson
started sinking 3-pointers in
the fourth quarter Saturday
night
"We were extremely
aggressive on our buys with
mventory tf we won, and it's
paid off," Thorn srud.
The Cavaliers are sellmg
shirts and caps as quickly as
their licensees can produce
them, he said. They're planning new designs leading up
to Game I of the finals at
San Antonio on Thursday,
includmg one commemorating James' 48-point performance in Game 5 and another for Gibson, who has
quickly become a fan
favorite.
Steve Silber, 55, of
Mentor, will send . an
"Eastern Conference champions" shirt to his 20-yearold nephew, a student at the
University of Nebraska,
who's been a fan ever since
hi s uncle took him to a game
as a k1d.
"If they wm the final s, I' II
get htm that one too," Silber
said.
"This team has been
focused the entire year and
they' ve really taken to heart
the one-day-one-game-at-atime theory," he said. "And
I believe if they understand
that each game is its own
separate entity, it doesn 't
matter .what people are saying or doing, we've got a
chance to win.
"We're in it to w.in a'
championship, and everybody understands that."
James took some lumps
early in the Detroit series,
and then delivered late. He
scored 48 points in Game 5
and finished the six-game
series averaging 25.7
pomts, 9.2 rebounds and 8.5
assists - numbers only
matched in a conference
finals by Oscar Robertson
( 1963), John Havlicek
(1968) and Larry Bird
(1986),
Beating Detroit was monumental. Beating San
Antonio would surpass it.
"That's a very great team,
they're very experienced,
they've been to the finals
before and they know how
to handle adversity~' James
&gt;aid. "We have to just
attack, attack, attack. That
has to be our mind-set and
we give ourselves a chance
to win."
Hall of Fame said about the
transition.
"His role in the impact of
the sport has been huge,"
Gordon said. "His personality came at a time when it
was what our sport needed.
I think he did an incredible
job of basing his opinion op
what he believed the facts
to be and then having the
courage to make that dectston and see it through.
"He am't a waffler. ...
He's JUSt gomg to go do it."
Over the span of three
remarkable decades, France
oversaw the expansiOn of
the sport, parlaying the
loyal fan base of the Deep
South mto sold-out tracks
in
New
England,
California, Texas and the
Midwest. He also moved
the season-ending awards
banquet to New York City
in an effort to court the
Madison Ave. money,
It all translated into more
money from sponsors, bigger paydays for drivers and
robust TV audiences,

the season but instead was
plague_d by tire ·woes,
dropped four laps back at
one point and finished
22nd.
Earnhardt congratulated
Truex in Victory Lane,
telling his teammate that
he knew he could win .
"He 's been a great
friend, and I' II see him at
the house toni~ht ," Truex
said . "We' re gmng to have
some fun"

but will it be for Kiry,g James?
Br

JtM

LITKE

AR SPORTS COLUMNIST,

Four days later. people are
still debatmg where LeBron
James' 25 straight points to
end Game 5 ranks on the
NBA's list of all-time best fmishes. The only point worth
addin&amp; is this: Whoever has
James ear between now and
Thursday can serve the King
best by reminding him that
better be just the ileginrung.
James better have a few
more games like that in him,
and we're not talking dunng
the course of his career, but
over the next two weeks
Otherwise, thts will be
remembered as the NBA
finals that he got close enough
to see his reflection in the
Larry O'Brien Trophy -and
not much else.
It's easy to forget how
tricky it can be for even the
brightest young stitr to trace a
learning curve that reaches
the top without a sing\e &lt;!\~·
maybe because Mumu s
Dwyane Wade did it only last
year,
James, to his credit, didn't
need renunding.
He recently described
climbing over the Pistons and
out of the Eastern Conference
in just his second try as
"another chapter in my book,
I guess." But James also
understands he won' t write
that happy ending without
help. The tough part will be
deciding how much to accept.
"If I get double-teamed and
the game is close, I'm going
to pass it again," James said,
despite catching flak for
domg just that at the start of
the Detroit senes. "If we
make the shot, I'm on top of
the world. If 110t, then I'm
under a lot of trees and leaves.
It's fine with me. I'll take the
critictsm that comes with it.
"I'm the leader of this
team."

There's a mce bit of symmetry m havmg the Spurs
stand between James and that
shiny piece of hardware he
wants so much. The Cavalters
have modeled themselves as
the Spurs of the East, and two
of therr chief decision-makers, coach Mike Brown and
GM Danny Ferry. actually did
their manallement training in
San Antomo. But the sharing
arrangement, not to menllon a
real resemblance, pretty much
ends there.
The only coronation the
Spurs plan on attending anytime soon is their own. They
can llrab their fourth championship since 1999, a run of
titles that might finally gamer
San Antonio and reluctant
superstar Tim Duncan the
respect and recognition that
has so far consistently lagged
behind thetr accomplishments.
The Spurs last appearance
in the finals, against Detroit in
2005, was almost the opposite

Spurs
from Page 81
would take care of any possible complacency I would
thmk."
San Antomo held opponents to just over 90 points
a game during the re ~: ular
season, leading the league.
Cleveland was fifth, holding opponents to abom 93
points.
"Cleveland's an excellent
defensive team, they k!nd of
snuck up on everybody.
When you talk about
defense people mention the
Pistons and the Bulls thts
year, and Houston and San
Antomo and that kmd of
thing. Dallas became a good
defens1 ve team under Avery
(Johnson)," Popov1ch sa1d.

Jordan
from PageBl
where you do 11 every single
night,' Jordan said. "It's
expected of you, and you do
it .. , Not one game, not two
games, It's consistent.
Every defense comes in and
they focus on you and you
still impact the game, I
think he's shown signs of
that."
James took a "big step"
forward in the series against
Detroit, but the NBA finals
against the San Antonio
Spurs will provide another
huge test, Jordan said
'This next series is going

situation from what James
and the Cavs wtll be facmg
this time around. It was
framed as a referendum on
whether Duncan was truly a
great player. or JUSt a very
good one lucky enough to
land in San Antonio when the
Spurs boasted a deep and better-than-average supportmg
cast.
As that senes stretched out
toward Game 7, the NBA's
promottonal taghne for the
series, "Where Legends Are
Born," began to sound like a
dare.
Duncan responded wtth 25
pomts, II rebounds, two
blocks and three asststs.
Nearly all the numbers
flowed eastly from the Spurs
game plan, except for a
stretch late m the thtrd quarter
when Duncan scored nearly
half his total and grabbed the
game by the throat. In a hallway afterward, former teammate
David
Robinson
savored the win and that
third-quarter as much as any
of Duncan's then-teammates.
"Some people talked about
Tim like a dog. The way that
man has performed over the
years, I don't understand
that," sa1d Robinson, who
partnered Duncan for two of
San Antonio's tttles. "For him
to dig down tonight and show
everybody what be's made of
is just awesome, unbelievable. He settled it the best
way."
Unfortunately, James doesn't have Robinson, Manu
,Gmobih, Tony Parker or even
Robert Harry to take over the
show long enough to catch his
breath. And unlike Wade,
Shaquille , O' Neal won't be
there to cover his back.
If James is gomg to. wm a
championship this year, he's
going to have to do it the
same way he JUSt sent Detrott
packmg: large)y on his own.
The 25 points in a row that
closed out Game 5 was part of
a 48-point night that got most
of the attenuon. But James'
performances on either side
of that game were almost as
good. He averaged 33 pomts,
II rebounds and etght assists.
James can't afford much slippage if Cleveland ts going to
have a chance.
So Spurs coach Gregg
Popovich wasn't exaggerating when he satd, "P1ck a
problem, we have it, with
LeBron. He's fantastiC in
every way so, pick any aspect
of the game, he's a problem,"
But more telling was somethmg that Duncan said a little
later. "You have to respect
someone like that and focus a
little more of the attention
toward him.
"But they're going to need
a team to beat us," he added,
"LeBron's not going to do jt
by h1mself."
Not yet, anyway,
Spurs in five.
"But Cleveland is right in
that category wtth everybody else, it just hasn't been
noticed yet."
Popovich has reason to
compliment the Cavs'
defense It's largely the
same as San Antonio's
Cleveland .,::oach Mtke
Brown is ' one ' of several
members of the Cavaliers
organizatiOn, mcluding general manager Danny Ferry
and assistant coach Hank
Egan, who used to be with
the Spurs. Brown worked
under Popovich as an assistant for three years earlier
this decade.
"This ts going to pretty
much a situation where
everybody knows what
everybody's gomg to do,"
Popovtch satd. "There
aren't go mg to be any
secrets here, that's for sure."
say, ' How far do you
want to take it?'" satd
Jordan, speaking from
Elkhart Lake, Wis., where
his motorcycle team was
participating in a racmg
event.
'
James was thrilled to
learn of Jordan's approvaL
"It's great," the Cavaliers
star satd after practice on
Mo.nday. "Anyttme you get
pra1se from the guy who
bastcally laid down all the
stones for you to get here. I
grew up idolizmg his game
and how he played the game
of basketball. It was definitely great to hear."
to

AP Sports Writer Tom
Wrtl1ers m Cleveland contributed to tim report.

The Daiiy'Sentinel• Page 83

CLASSIFIED ·

Meigs County, OH

Galli a

County,
OH

E-mail
classified@ myda1lytribune com

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

WebSIIes.
www.myclaJiytnbune.com
www.myclaJiysentJnel.com
www mydallyreg1ster com

To Place
\!tribune
l\egister
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 446-3008
Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

Oetul/1ir~

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HQW IQ WRITE AN AD

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right lo edh,
retect or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors Must 8
eported on the fl
of publication
he

Tr lbune~Sentlnel

egilller

will
sponalble for n
ore than the cost o
he space occuple
the error and on
e first insertion W
hall no1 be liable f
ny loss or expens
hat results from th
ubllcatlon or omis
!On of an advert!

enl Correcllons wil
malte In the fin

Real
dvertlaements ar
ubject to the Federa
air Housing Act o

t968.
newspape
only hel
anted ads meetln

r

~MAWAV

rI

cot.ntry (740)446·7685

kltncarfyle@come~st

Dott'"f I)IS1iJ~ Kl ~
'T\-IIS IS

washer while

992 7537

Call 740·

YAKD SALE

I,:~;:~;:=~

r

yARD SALEGAlliPOLIS

1ly Yard Sale, 554 Jay Dr.
Sprmg Valley
AU Stoles
clolhtng Infant adult Large
va nely of tlems 9 5

c;;:r-"':':'-"::"--.,
4
YARIJ S.\L~-

"-5

~~
© 2007 by NEA, Inc.

Lt------·
Ht:t ..,

J' nAN'IID

off 33 Court Street Road
Watch for S1gns•

MF

Echomg

Restdan1tal Cenler ts now

Garage sale Bradley Ad
across from Aad10 slaliOn
Wed after 1 PM Thurs &amp;
Fn start1ng at 9 AM

9C~m·3pm

""~------·

3 bedroom home 1n
Pomeroy A1ver vtew Off
Very dependable female(s) mam road $20 ,000 t -740
to care lor two d1sabled 992 2593
females 1n New Haven, WV 3 BR 1 BA Large Fam1ty
Valid
dnver s
license
Room fndge WI D Large
requtred Home health care lot, Close to Holzer Call
expenence a plus 5 days a 44 1·5826 or 446 9664
week. 12 haUl shtftslflextbtlty
to change sclledule as 3 or 4 BR, 1 balh garage
needed
Ltve 1n arrange· basemen! covered porch
ments posstble as part of back deck, new central heat
compensahOn Must start and AC unit n1ce landscap·
on ..Une 11 Please call 304- 1ng, lenced m back yard,
new appliances recenlly
Bil2·2711
- - - - - . . , . . - - - remodeled
bath room
Wanted D1rect Supervrs1on Asking $75000 New Haven
employees to oversee male wv 304-882-3773
youth m a staff secure res1 - - - - - -- GALLIPOLIS
denllal envtronment Must Jbd
pass phys1cal
trammg Foreclosure!
Buy
lor
reqwement Pay based on $50 900 1Only $404/mo 5%
expenence Can (740)379· dn, 20yrs @ 8% For ilst1ngs
9083 between 9·3 Mon·Fn
call 800·559·4109 I(F254

New 3 Bedroom 21 2 bath
by builder 2 car garage
basemen t Good locatiOn
and schools Green Twp
446 9966

(304)722·2 184

Plus much morel
+Up to $8.50/hour
t Weekly bonuses
t Weekly pay
t Paid Hol1days, vacattons
and tra1n1ng
t Full benet1ts
t Prolessronal work
almosphere

CaiiToday!
1-877·463·6247 ext
230t

MasSive tncrease of

800-248-7735
www pnmemc com

AppI!cants must pass pre·
employment
screenmg
1nclud1ng but not 11m1ted to
drug screen and cnmlnal
background checks

$300 HIRING BONUS!

PRIME inc.

oi iQCallloodplatn regula

Ohto
reqwred

Fabr~ea110n

'17_40-'-)9_9_2·_22_00_ _ __

Desk Clerk needed at
Wanled Record Album col Budget Inn 260 Jackson
lect!on-lookmg for Jock pop P1ke Look1ng for a person
and maybe some others no who IS motivated, great
country or classiCal, please commumcahon SkillS and a
(740)645·0299
pos1t1ve athtude Please
apply W!lh!n
I \ 11'1 Cl\ \II\ I
- -- - - -- " II{\ H I"
Dtrect Care Staff
Mtddleton Estates ts now
HEl.Y WANOD
hlnng d1rect care staff You
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,., w11l be par t of a team thai
.,
prov1des servtces to 1nciv1d·
An Excellent way to earn uals With men1a1 retardation
and developmental d1sab•h
money The New Avon
t1es Must have valid dr1vers
Ca ll Manlyn 304 882-2645
license and htgh school
- - - - - - - - diploma or GED We pro·
Now Hlnng part-t1me pos1 vtde on the JOb trammg If
t100s for floral des1gner at you would hke to take
Pomeroy Flower Shop advantage of lhts opportunieKperlence
preferred, ty you may apply a1 8204
please bnng resume &amp; refer Carla Dnve, Monday lhru '
ences Ia 106 Butternut Ave , Fnday 8 00·4 00 An Equal
Pomeroy, Oh1o betwee n Opporlumty Employer
FIMIDN
Bam 4pm, Mon Frl •

New Salon opemng 514
Ma1n St Pt Pleasant July
2nd, Ha1r Stylist &amp; Nail Tech
needed 304 675·6144 or
304·593·6570
- - - - -- - The
Athens·Me1gs
Educa)1onal Servtce Center
has an avatlable pos111on for
a
MultipleDlsabtlittes
Teacher a\ Metgs H1gh
School
lnte~eni!Dn
Spectahst cert1hcat10n 1s
reqUired Salary based on
centhcation and eKpenence
ThiS pOSitiOn has Board
approved benefitS Letter of
mterest, resume and references must be rece1ved by
12 00 p m June 8 Subm!t
to
John D Costanzo,
Supennlendent.
Atllens·
Me 1gs Educational Servtce
Cenler, PO Box 684 320112 E Mam, Pomeroy OH
45769 Equal Opportumly
Employer/PrOVIder

081 5

304 342·

5742 M·F 8 30am-4pm

J- - - - - - - ·1

ttons, coordmale map mam·
tenan ce act1Vn1es and
FEMA follow·up, hold public
meet1ngs to educate publiC
Part·t!me 20 hours a weeK,
no benef1ts Need H1gh S
SChool Diploma or equrva·
lent, have map readmg
9)( penence and knowledge
of computers and vanous
computer programs, able to
use GIS musl hold a valid
dnvers hcense Phystcal
work may be needec,i Must
be registered w1th SCOTt
(www scott ohto gov) sys·
tern StJbm~ resume wtlh
cover lener to
Oh1o Depl of Jobs and
Fam1ly ServiceS" 848 Thud
Ave Gallipolis, OH 45631
We are an Equal
QPportuntty Employer

Alhens,

2842

r.lt'lllor------.,

M1malure farm UnibUIII
home on 4 acres on SA
160 3BR, t BA. Peaches,
bernes grapes Sw1mmmg
pool New appliances Wood
burner $88 000 740 388-

OTR, Regional,
Flatbed, Reefer &amp;
Tanker Drivers

Floodplain Administrator
for Gallla County
W1ll enforce !he prov1s1ons

Slreel,

Huge Yard Sale Power
Washer, Comforters some
Ambrosia Mach1na Inc
Furn t1re lots of mce stuff
Pomt
Pleasan t, wv (304)·
June 6 7&amp;81h at D1ck
675·1722 {304)675·1723
Lanier's Box 71 J•m H1ll Ad
lax Mach1mst 5 years or
~=--~~---, more expenence $8·$12 psr
WANllD
hour
TO Buv
On Hand Shop Foreman Help wanted at Darst Adu~
Group Home so me hftmg
Machine Shop &amp;
Absolute Top Dollar U S knowledge 10 yea rs or more 7·5 sh1ft, 740 992·5023
Stive r and Gold Cams, expenence $~ 2·$ 15 per
Manag1ng cosmetologist,
Proofsels Gold Alflgs Pre· hour
1935
US
Currency, _ _.:...:_ _ _ _ __ pan or lull 11me Na1l Tech,
Sohta1re Diamonds· M T S AVONI All Areas! To Buy or both rental or cqmm1sston,
Com snap 151 seco nd Sell
Shtrtey Spears, 301· New Salon New EqUipment,
Altitudes
In
Pomeroy
Avenue, Gal11polls, 740 446 675-1429

r

0 Down even w1th less than
perfect credit IS ava1lable on
lh1s 3 bedroom 1 balh
home Corner lot hreplace
modern kitchen, )CICUUI tub,
Paym9f1t around $550 per
month 740·367·7129

t50

busmess from local
customers' Looking for
expenenced and
non-expenonced dnvers.
Driver Job Interviews
Tues., 615 ~Dam-5:30pm
at Red Roof Inn
1000 Acy Ave.
Jackson, OH 45640
Apply &amp; get qualified
on the spot!
Suong Fret~! Network
Blue Cross Insurance

References

Huge basement sale at
Rutland Church of God
June 8th &amp; 9th 9 QQ.
3 00 Corne r of 124 &amp; Happy
Holl ow Ad

G1ant Flummage Sale lots of
Everything Sacred Heart
Calhohc Church Hall 2222
Jackson Ave Pt Pleasant
Thursday, Fr 1da~ Saturday

Meadows

accephng apphcahOns for a
part ttme LPN lor weekends
and evening shtfts apply m
person at 319 West Umon

8 Tyree Blvd
of stuft

Ra1ner Garage Tackerv1lle
Ad , Thurs ,Fn ,Sat , lawnmower,anllqu es coll ec ta bles furmture glassw lmens

Doctors off1ce needing part
11me X1"ay tech call 304·
675·1637 or come by 1n per·
son to 3009 JaCkson Ave PI
Pleasant between 1 3pm

________

l:~~;~~r.J CARPORT Sale

4x4's For Sale . . ................................. 725
Aimouncement .......................................... 030
Antiques ................................................... 530
Apartments for Rent .................................. 440
Auction and Flea Market.. ..........................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .. ... ........... 760
Auto Repair ..... ................. ....... :................ 770
Autos for Sale .......................................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ......................... 750
Building Supplies ....................................... 550
Business and Buildings ............................ 3411
Business Opportunlty .............. ,.. ,..,............ 210
Business Training .. ............... ............... "' ... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ................. .... 790
Camping Equipment ..................... ,............ 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care .... .......................... 190
Electrlcsi/Refrlgerallon.............. ,., .. ........... 840
Equipment for Rent. .................................. 480
Excavating ............................................. 830
Farm Equipment .......................................610
Farms for Rent.. ........................ ............. 430
Farms for Sale ........................................ ,.. 330
For Lease .......................... .........,................. 490
For Sale . ............................ ...... ......... .. 585
For Sale or Trade ............ ..........................590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ............. ..................... 580
Furnished Rooms ............... ......................450
General Hauling .................... ,.....................850
Giveaway...................... .... .. .. . ............ ..040
Happy Ads ...... ................,... ,.. ..• ,............. ,....050
Hay &amp; Grain .......... ............ ....... ..................640
Help Wanted.............. . ................ .........tt o
Home Improvements ........ .........................8t0
Homes for Sale ........................................ .. 310
Household Goods ....... ................ .... ...,.. 510
Houses for Rent ...................................... 410
In Memoriam ................ ......... .. . .. ....... 020
lnsuranee ....... ......... ... ................ ............. t 30
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ....................... 660
Livestock .......... .. .......................... 630
Lost and Found .........:................................. 060
Lola &amp; Acreage ......................................... 350
Miscellaneous ............ J .. .... . . . . . . . .. . . . .. . ... ... . 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise......................540
Mobile Home Repair. ............ .. .. .. . . . .. 860
Mobile Homes for Renl. ............. .................420
Mobile Homes for Sale..............................320
Money Jo Loan ........ ...... .... .................... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ......................... 740
Musical Instruments ..................... .. .... ... 570
Personals ...... ............................................ 005
Pets for Sale .,.,........................ .,.... ........... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating ...... .... ..... ...... .... 820
Professional Services ................, .. ., ........ 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ..................... ., ....... 160
Real Eatata wanted .. .... ............ ............... 360
Schoolslnslrucllon ...... .................... ,., ........ 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer............. .. .... . . ...650
Slluallons Wanted ............. .,....................... 120
Space for Rent. ...................,....................... 460
Sporting Goods .... ....... ......................... 520
suv·s for Sale ............................................720
Trucks for Sale .......................................... 715
Upholstery ..... ............................. ,•........... ,, .. 870
Vans For Sale ......,.......................................730
Wanted to Buy •... ... ...... .... ..................090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppllas .................. 620
Wanted To Do ,............................................. 180
Wanted lo Rent. ........................ ., ............... 470
Yard Sale- Galllpolla ....... .,.,.. ...................... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ................. 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasent .............................. 076

www.comics.com

Truck Dnvers COL Class A
ReqUired mm1mum of 5
years dnvmg exp 2 yrs
Flatbed Expenence Must
have good dr1V1ng record
Earn up to $2 000 weekly
For
apphcauon
Call

0
1111 liELP WANIID

2 lam1ly Garage sale, June
7th &amp; Blh Morn1~tar Ex1t

CLASSIFIED INDEX

•

"'r=-------,

I'oMEKOYIMmtli.E

y accept any adver

MY

frTI'li&gt;,S RJ&gt;u7j Nt;.

Commun•ty Yard Sale, June
Free to good home, black
8 &amp; 9 Starts al JUnctiOn of
lab/shepherd pupp1es For
SA 325 &amp; SA 141 on SA
mfo please call 740-446
141, watch lor s1gns several
4t77
mu~1 fam1ly sales ch~unsaw
Gtveaway 5 adOfable kll carv1ngs glassware, dothlens 3 orange, 1 black, 1 mg muct\' more, 8-?
black &amp; caliCO Very playful 7
weeks old 740 742 ' 2954
Fn Sun June e-10 Mulli·lam·
House m M1ddlepor11o lear
down Of move must take all
(740)992 6849
'--'------Kenmore portable d1sh·

net

PERENNIAL CAT
SHELTER

111

Free kittens to good home
Call lor more tnfo 740446·
4177

)We will not knowing

1,

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

740·
645·
3 Black kmens to g1veaway 7275
Calll740)256 1070

preferably to someone m

Thu.-.day for Sundays

POLJCIES• Ohio V•lley Publilhlng rtUMll tht rtgh1 to edit, reject. or cancel any ad at 1ny lime Errors must be reported on the first d&amp;'f of
TrtbuM-s.nt.......,..._ wMI be~ for no marl! than the ~lit of tM space occupied by tt.- MOf 1nd onty the flfst 1n..r11on Wll! shall not be
any lou or erpense tn.l NMtlb lfom the put:Jiic;rion or om1Nion ot an .W.niMmOOt Correc:tlon will be made in the hrlt evallatHe edii!CIO • Box
1rt always confktel•tlal • CUnent rile c:Md applies • All rnl ntate ldvertitemenls are subtecl to the Federal Fair Housmg Acl ot 1968 • This newap&amp;J&gt;t•l
IICCeptt only http wantH W mMtlng EOE s..nderd1 We will not knowingtw' ec:e.pt sny e&lt;tveftl1lng In v!olet1on of the law

very lOVIng, (740)441-1 100

Female dog 2yrs old m1xed
breed, good With ktds,

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
Bualne- Day• Prior To
Publication
Sunday DI•Piiily : 1 :00

• All ads must be prepaid'

(4) 8wk old kittens avatlable
The kittens has amvedl
lor adoption to lovmg Please save them and gtve
homes, 3F, 1M. varonated
11\em a good home
&amp; wormed All litter tratned, Call

Cats to Giveaway to a good
home 304-675-6720

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
S,~
1m
Borders $3.00/perad
f!
Graphics SOC for small
$1 .00 for large

A~s

GMAWAV

_ _ _ _ _ _ _.,
'

OE sJandards

llhaiaw

J'r,Jdaoy For Sunday• Paper

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

ccepts

lsement In vlolatlo

Dally In-Column : 1 : 00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Dilly' s Paper
sunday In- column: 1:00 p.m.

• Start Your AdS With A Keyword e InclUde c:omplete
DeKrlptiot1 • Include a Price • Avoid l.biJrevialloM

· Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get

•POLICIES*

Display

Saloot.5

·------pl
1811

1

USWA
Professional Fundra1sers
needed PartiFult time 3
sh1ffs datly 7 days a wee k
$9 hr alter pa1d lrammg +
Benet1ts. Contact us todayl

1·888·974-JOBS or

WWN1888974)0bscom
Roofers Metal roof1ng, s1d
mg and EPDM Top pay and
benefits 724 229 8020
Scen1c Hills Nurstng Cenler
IS currently accepung appll
cat1ons lor a Umt Manager
Applicants mtJsl possess a
current AN license 1n lhe
s.tate of Oh1o Long·te rm
care expenence IS reqUtred
Applicants must possess
excellent commumcahon
Sktll and the ab!l!ly to tunc·
bon as an effecttve health
care team member For
more mlormalton or to
sched ule an m1erv1ew,
please contact Dtanna F~ch,
Human Resources at 740
446-7150 EOE
-------Soctal servtce spec1ailst
needed
m
Athens
Education (l( bacKground 1n
women's studtes , fam!ly
stud1es or some type of
soctal servtce reqUired pre·
vent1on/Interventlon expenence preferred F/f, lamp to·
perm Monday· Friday occas1onal
weekend
work
510/hour, plus benef its 1f
h1red perm For deta1ls on
!hiS and many other jobS In
Soulheastern Ohio, g;~to
wwwcareerconnecl!ons 1nlo
To apply, e-ma1l resume to
JObs@ careerconneoctlons t
nfo or call (740)594·4941
No lees EOE

I (740)367 0000

w

AJ~flll&gt;

To Do

002001 Skyhne 28~64 1600
sq It
Musl be moved
Greal shape only $45 000.
304 593 0582
1994 Oakwood 14x70 new
COrdlhOn 740·446-4782
- - - -- -- Grea1 used 2005 3 bedroom
16x80 w11h vmyllsh1ngle
Must sell Only S25 995 witll
delivery Call (740)385 4367
New 3 Bochoom homes from
S214 36 per month lnctlldes
many upgrades del1very &amp;
set up [740)385-2434

,

Beaultl ul Mlddleporl home'

Scoll(740) 828·2750

L..-------'

3BR 28A full basement SPECI AL FHA FINANCE
Georges Portable Sawmill Many NEW features!! Must Program $0 Down If you
now selling Tomatoe Slakes see this one' 740·416 1546 own Land or use Family
ca11304·675·1957
Land We own the Bank your

6)

Lawn mow1ng Aales by the
lob. nol the hour Call Pau l

Approved 606 474 6380

f 11RI\l'i
FOR S\LF.

@ (304)675 2940

Lawn·Care Servi,Ce Mow 1ng
&amp; Tnmm,ng Call (740)441
1333 or (7 40)645 0546 ·
Professionally

All real estate adverti sing

rn this newspaper Ia
subje ct to tha Federal
Fatr Housing Act of 1968
wh1ch makes It tllegal to
advert1se any
preferen ce, liinltatlon or
d1scnmmahon based on

Clean,

Pff •ce / Ho u sec tea n1ng
References (304)675·2208

race, color, religion , sex

10

HIRING

1-800-584 1775 Ex1 18923

;,._ _fOIIRiiiii""iii1ii
' 1·;..~

AtlenUon l
Local company offer1ng "NO
INSTKUCTH)N
DOWN PAYMENT" pro N1ce used 3 bedroom home
grams lor you to buy your v1nyVshmgle W11l help W1lh
Gallipolis Career College home 1nstead of renting
delivery 740 385·4367
(Careers Close To Home) • 100% fmancmg
Call Todayt 740-446·4367 • Less than perlect cred1t
I 800 214 0452
OWNER FINANCING
accepted
www gatllpo!ISCareercollege com
N1ce 3/2 smglewtdes
• Paym enl could be lhe
illtc r~diled Membe1 Accredlllrlg same as renl
From $1 ,800 dowfl
Council lor !IICiepenOO nr Colleges
paymenl
aoo Schools 12746
Mortgage
Locators

POST OFFICE NOW
Avg Pay $20/hr or
$57K annually
lnclud1ng Federal Benefrts
and OT Pa1d Trammg,
Vacatrons-FT/PT

MOBil [ H0\1~
c.

familial status or national

8 USINFS'i

origin, or any mtent1on to

OtroKt11NrrY

make any suc h

Brand new log home wtth 60
acres MIL $180 000 Call
740 256-9247

LOTS&amp;
ACIU~\CE

4 Acres located off Kemper
Holl ow Ad Already ha s
waler/elec Secluded area

740·388 8228

preference, Umlta!Jon or

dtscrl mmatlon ·

oNOTICh
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHlN G CO recommends
thai you do b..Js1ness w1th
people you know. and
NOT 10 send money
through the mall until you
have mves1 1gated the
offermg

:

Thts newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real
estate wh1ch 1s m
vtolatlon cf the law Our
readers are hereby
mtormed !hat all
dweutngs advertised m

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

th•s newspaper are
ava1labte on an equal
opportunity bases

"-------,J
MON'I".\'

EnJoy th1s spac10us 5 BA 2
Ba home locat ed 1n Gallla
Co on lhe ba nks of
Raccoon Cr9ek Well land·
scaped 1 33 acre yard w1th
paved u shaped dnvoway
Detached pole garage large
enough lor car and boat
storage Many extras 1nclud·
1ng hot tub, monitored secu·
nty system and covered p1c
mc areas by creek D1rect
access to Ohto A1ver and
boat

**I'U ITIC•:**
Borrow Smart Contact
I he OhiO DIVISIOn ol
Fmanc1at
lns111Uh01'1 's
Off1ce ol Consumer
AffairS BEFORE you reh·
nance you• home or
oblam a loan BEWARE
ol requests lor any large
advance paymenls ol
fees or Insurance Gall lhe
Off 1ce ol Consumer
Atfa1rs loll !rae al 1·866·
278·0003 to learn 11 the
1
mortgag e broker or
tS
properly
lender
licensed (Th1s 1s a publ1c
serv1ce a'nnouncemenl
from the OhiO Valley
Pubil sh1ng Company)·

5 10 30 acres bordeung
Wayne Nat10nal Forest 1n
Gatha Jackson or lawrence
Co 419 288·3937
HI~

10

1"\I.S

~,--~---,

Bot 1S..~"i

'---..OroiiKiioiiRiit~.-~.._.
...,

3 br 111 Rutland $400 per
depOSit
monlh
plus

i740)992 0064

Pnvate country sentng Call

740 441·8257
For sale/land contract 3 BR
house m Gathpol1s WID
connection $1500 down
$400/mo Al so 1 BA 1n
Gathpolis
$750
down
$200/mo Call Wayne 404
456·3802 lor tnlormat1on

J'ROF'ES'iiONAL
SER\100

HoMJ:..";

IJif!W of Crly and R1ver ffom
Mason Counly 7 17 ac see
p1cs on LandAndFa •m com

$155/mo' Buy 4bd HUO
home' S"o On 20yrs @ 8"o
"For l1sl1ngs 800 559 4t 09
x1709

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY !SSt?
No Fee Unless We Wm 1
1..s88 582·3345

r10

0143

"':~~~::::~~ 304 638 7048

ro lOAN

r'
I

5 acre lots lor sale tn Gallta
Co Morgan Twp Morgan
lane Sept1c perm1ts for last
years specs Poss1bte land
co ntracl some reslnC!Ions
Calt belween 7pm and 9pm
or leave message 740·669

I

House lor sale 128 Bas1!a n1
Dr For rnore mfo call 740
i740)367·0Q00
446 2886 or 74 o 446-145t

HUD HOMES! 4bd only
$155/mo 3bd $181/mo,
-.
More 1·4bd hom es avail·
213 BR 1 Bath pool on a 5 able 5% dn, 20 yrs @ 8%
acres Close \o~own Askmg For hshngs 1 800·559-4109
$145,000 7~0·645·333'3
)( F144

..__...,niiiliiRiiiSii,\liii.~io
' _,.,

Attent1on1
Local company offenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro
grams for you to buy your
home 1nstead ol ren11ng
• 100°~ financing
Less than perfect credit
acceptc!)
• Paymenl could be the
same as rent
Locators
Moll gage
HUO HOMES! &lt;UJd only
$155/mo 3bd $181 /mo
More 1·4bd homes ava1t
able 5% Qn 20 yrs @ 8% ·
For hst1ngs 1·800·559·41 09
x F144

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel ·
. l:lot.!lEoi

www.my~ailysentinel.com

APA 1m1ll'o1'S

'--oioiiiiii~
iiiiirr,;,..,.l

FOR

HOMES

HJRRE.vf

3 bedroom mob~e home in

I

country. 740)256·6574 .

'!: 1

ssoo.

• lj1 · 992·5064 . Equal Housing - - - - - - - Center
Opportunities.
Equal Entertainment
1 Opportunity Empla;er
w/glassware doors, nice,
Commons
lights up$120. Full size bed

L.,,:,::::;::L.-.J

Trel-- B&amp;W Goosened&lt;

Hitches· Trailer Parts. .,
·Carmichael
Trailers.

Johnson's Tree
Service

throughout including brand deposit &amp; references, no 2208
Au1ters 4' thru 15'. Jim's
Gtide, 22,000 miles, excel·
new kitchen and bath. pets, (?40) 992 -QI6S
---~~--- 's Farm Equipment 740 " tent condition, $10,000.

O.lllpollt, OH 45&amp;31
Complttt TIW C..

'----'-- - ' - - - : - - - For SaJe: Crownvetch plants, 446-9m
Slarting al S405. Call today! Modern 1 BR Apt. Caft 446- 17401245-!1322
----,----:::----:-:- (740)992· 1909 or (740)591 ·
(304)273·3344
3736
N.H. Haybine 7', s'ub 0993.

To, • Trtnl• ._tint • SMnp
Orlndirlt • EklcMt True:•
!Murlod •

,.,,_._

i

BR
1'"')675
3 or 4
apls, .-.
Beautiful Apta. at Jackson 5806 . AppUcations can be
Estates. 52 WestwoOd received at 1151 Evergreen
Drive. from $365 to $560.
Dr, PI, PI, WV
25550.·
740-446-2568
Equal
1 and 2 bedroom apart- ·Housing Opportunity.
·
EThis1
rnstilution rs an
qua ' - - - - - - : : : - - - ments. furnished and untur- Opportunity Provider and Tara
Townhouse
nished, · and houses in
Employer.
Apartm9nts. Very Spacious,
Pomeroy and Middleport. - - - - - - - - : . , - 2
CIA, 1 1/2
security deposit required. no Clean Quiet
1BA. Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
pets, 740-992-2218 .
stovelfrig; country fse~ng, Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.

e

Bedr~ms.

spaciou~

1 Bedroom Apt. very private no pels/smoking , irs
992 3543
all utilities included, plus mO+dep S350
•

ast

CONVENIENTLY LDCAT· .:.
17_40_;_1_367_
·7_086_
. ---

IV
References

ti'~ICll
required,

Ellm V1"ew
Apa rt ment S
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; AJC
•Washer/dryer hookup

e

• Tenant pays electric

no

pels, security depo~t. $600 •
per month. Call446-4425 or

'(304)882• 3017
·

•

446-3936

fr
I

(.

~

BR , Newly Carpeted ,
Freshly · painted. Walk ing
to UAG. Private Gnlcioue Uvlng 1 and 2
enlrance
and
deck. Bedroom Apts. at Village
$400/mo, (6 14)59S-m3 or ManO&lt; and Riverside Apts. in
1.800.7984686.
Middleport, from $327 to
2BA, trash/ water, stove/ $592. 740-992 -5064. Equal
!ridge, $350 + deposit, Housing Opportunily. This
(740)446-7620, (740)709· Institution is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
9519, (740)441-ll872
Employer.
New
2BR apartments. - - - -- - - Washer/dryer
hookup, Middleport, Beech St., 2 br
stovelrelrigerator included.
furnished apartment, utilities
Also, units on SA 160. Pets paid, deposit &amp;. references,Welcome! (740)44t-o194.
no pets. (740)992-Q1 65

di~ance

Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications lor waiting
list tor Hud·subsized, 1· br,
apartment,lor
the
elderly/disabled call 67566'1 9
Equal
Hous;ng

r

Oppo tunity .....""""-.,
er-r-~

Jillll~&lt;;!-

__

•
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- $750.
Jim's
Farm
Equipment, ()-446-gm
2000 Crest Sport 22Ft. pon·
74
--------,-toon 2000 Mercury motor 40
NEW AND USED STEEL New Hl&gt;land 479 Hayblne- HP. 740·992·4422
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar recently
Field
For
Concrete.
Angle. ready w.u.·d
AAuro~PI\KTS&amp;
' "' . Swing, $2500;
Channel , Flat Bar, Steel Int. 3-16 Plows w/ colters,

recond~ioned,

Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. We&lt;klesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed

-~-'------

-·~Y- - -~
-- - -

Barn~.

r

cyls. $8495. Jim's f;arm
Equipment, 74Q.446-9m

I

Prime commercial ~for

CUIPERi &amp;

M

Ho

OlllR

.

Refrigerated

un~. 8'x14 box,

• Top • Rem oval

• Trim- Stump
Grinding • Bucket .

r

---::----:--:----:--:
Goat~ 100% full blood
Aeg. Billy; also percentage

I•••

·=---~--...,
1'tts

JillR SALE

L,~--toiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitto.-J

Adorabl~ 7 we~k

old AKC
rent at Springvalley Plaza .. Yorkie Puppies, 1 female, 2
Call645·2192.
male on ly 112 pound S900
r
each.Shots&amp;vttchecked304·
895-3926
~
.....,,
·--iioiiiiiiiiot-r' AKC
Registered
LANDOWNERS - NEED puppies,yellow labs
1st
EXTRA FARM INCOME? shots,wormed,born April 13,
We have responsible sports· $300-M,350·F. 985-4138
men looking to lease hunting
property in this area . AKC Bos1on Terrier Pups. 7
Midwest Trophy leases Inc. wks old, both male. Parents
(304)532·6015 or 1·800- on prem. with pedigree, vet
chkd, shots, wormed. 740698· 1073
38B-9325
\ II IH I I \ \ II/ '-I

~---~W=i\NilD---~

·roo.--

Di scounl

740-3ti7-0266/
1-800-950-3359

Free Estimates

1\ID)

s

Does &amp; Buctrs

s·~
~

&amp; up

"16
-~-·675
-~-"_____
Reg Angus Bulls lor sale.

Hollybr~

Farm. 740-2455 9_B4
.,
----'-:---,--:Wanted: Jack Donkey for
breeding purposes. 44 1.
!013.

FlO

AIJIOS

JillR SAI,E

10 to 15 small cars fa sale.

L.~i\ii~;pf;(jf~
..............
., ' Oft'-l"Cl'IC

26 Years

a

wall oven, counter top, $750; answer.

['5

R~ady

r

$400. 740•388•9453

r "~r·.a..a.Ar&lt;U!.Ul..~

1

796-6797

-

29670 Bashan

Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
7411-949-2217

* Prompl and Quality
Work
* Reasonahle Rates
* Insured
* Experienced ·

I IW.....,..,.iW"""

'=:::::=:::::===~

w· coneret

·
JSe
e
A ll type s of concrele

Owner- Rick Wise

740·992·5929
740·416·1698
15 yrs. Exp. Free Estimates

Refe~e nces Avu ilable!

28' "Cergomate" enclosed
trailer lor Sate, has .Jiving
quarters with Air Cond./
Heati ng,
$4,300
OBO
(740)388-8803
---,-----:----:
4 18 11
x
above grnd pool w/
all access., wringer washer,
dbl atum. tubs on- legs~

5.99% Fixed Rate on John 55K, $5400, (7401379-2748

shape. 245·51 81

Financing on New Massey

Deere Gatcn Carmichael
Equipment (740) 446-2412 . 99 GMC Sonoma 4x4,
142000
miles,
as~ng
96 Ford 4630 55HP, 200 hrs, $5200. 740·256-1498 or
2446 QT Loader/ bucket· 740-339-Q969
canopy, new !arm trailer,
$ 1S,900/all (740 )379 _2748
roRS"r

"r,;;.;..;;.~S~UV~~s--.,
tuL.

2004 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Laredo, 2 wd., 25,000 mi,
4/6, auto, all options, nice
$13,500, (740)949·2732

Ttt~~E WOlJLl&gt; ~~ A QlJ~STION
AN5vl~~ 5~!SION-·- W~ NW~Il
P~OMIS~l&gt;

Free Estimates

Ttt~~~

740-367-0536

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

8~
A ON~·TO­

BARNEY
YEP !! IT'S CHOCK
FULL 0' MoNEY·

..

THE BORN LOSER
FE.TCI-\ TI-\E.BN.i,I&lt;E.WI&gt;IE!

•'J 'l"e.rr'&gt; Lu1 .t l ExjPrtnncP

r------., •·
Mushroom C ompost

$.'5 A Scoop
T-Post 6fl, $3.29
Wid' Variety of

..

rv:of
jackal

Today's clue: X equals P
" XOZSIGL

W

MH

AMHSWHS ...

ISCWGMZSCL

PRG

•

PEANUTS
I GU~S5 MMSE
THE't''RE RI6HT.,
60LF IS A
6AME OF
INC~ES ..

RHSCSHHOSHH

HORCH

WCMJS ."

•

JRIG

WOlD
GAM I
ORoorronge lotto" of tho
fotrr scrombled word1 bt·
low to form fo&lt;tr lii!IPlt word!.

I
.

TH J f S E

1--,......,,.[_,,'11"2..,.-r,ooool
1 1
1
-i-..1......1-.1....&amp;.....1

L.

HEGI T

4C\ P!INT NUMSEREO
'C/1 lfllf iS IN SO'JARES

success.

SUNSHINE CLUB

Manley's
Recycling

GARFIELD

···'\::::••45111

•lllltllltfiMnt.ll D5:u ••
111.........1!:11••

......................
.............
PIYIIII TW PIICIS ~

liBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23) - Fun activities that haw elements of aome friendly
competition are the very ones that you
are likely to find the most enjoyable,
especially if they are structured around
teamwork .
.
SCORPIO (Qcl. 24-Nov. 22) Sometimes, no matter what problems
you incur, things have a way of woric.ing
out to your ulti'nate benefit in the long
run. This could be one of those days
where this may happen for you.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21 ) - Thia
could be one of those daya when you
can absorb compt&amp;x information you
would normally find difficult to understand. Use your outstanding mind to
seek out valuable Information.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . 19) - If yoU
have the desire, time and money to go
shopping, it could prove to be an inter~
esting and fun
tor you. 'Vbu may find
hidden bargaine in remote. out-of-theway places.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)-You're In
a brief cycle where you could be much
more forn.tnate than usual In ventures or
endeavors you originate or personalty
control In some mamer. Keep doing your
thing.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - An
important contact is In a position to help
you advance your present ambitious
objectille, and he or she could be available to assist you: but it might be a good
idea to keep his or her involvement pri·
vale.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) -Conditions .
in general look encou,..ging, eapeclally
in involvements where you have a number ol peraona gathering . Thla could
inclu~e wo!'tl.·reiated actlvltiel or social

SCRAM-LETS ANSWEl5 .6- ~ ~ 01
Aweigh - Liner - Rhyme - Nestle- ANSWER
"In my life time," the old gent-told me, "I learned that a true
fiiend will ask how you are and wail for your ANSWER."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

ones.

GRIZZWELLS
ANQ "»&gt;l'l~t
~A'&lt;IN6 liE
\llt6~i A

m:oe ~allipoli~ latlp m:rlbune
'740·446-2342
www.mydailytribune.com·

,tlolnt ,tlle~ant J.eglster The Daily Sentinel

304-675-1333
740-992-2155
www.mydailyregister.com www.mydailysentineLcpm .,."'=--

·-

•

TAU RUS (April 20·May 20) -

llii1IUc Cltlllrln •.....
ICtlll fer Clrnlt Prices!

\.AW&lt;ER.

ZDDOSURG

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "I've been here so lorg thai when I got here the
Dead Sea wasn't even sick.· - Alabama basketball coach Wimp Sanderson

aav

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

YMCA

F M C C J M C C H G J·D 0 U W 0 A F S W J

for

...'

REACH 3 COUNTIES

36

by Luis Campos

By and
Bernice
Bede 0.01
Your·hopes
expectations
have excellent chances
being fulfilled to your
satisfaction. However, your wish list
could change several times before you
find the ones in which to place your
efforts.
. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Much
value can be learned by aaeoclating with
pentane you ritapect and by cloaely
studying thoae whose mental attributes
you think highly ol.
CANCER (JUI)8 2 1-July 22) Something in which you're presently
Involved might be subjected to change,
but in your case, "this could prove to be
beneficial . The shift will come from influences you don't control.
lEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ..:... You could be
luckier than usual in a ·partnership
arrangement that Isn't created for any
material purpoee. lta target is to Seek stgnitictlnt rewards in 80mtllhing intanglWe
but meanlng1ul.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - You can be
an exceptional achiever, especially if you
are motivated to do something that will
benefit another about whom you are concerned. Compassion fuelS the forces of

I

70 Pine Street .• Gallipolis
446-0007

Oddballs
37 Lake
19 Dexterity
dwelltrs
22 Vader's
41 Ledger
side
entry
23 Heir, often 43 Formal,
24 Way up
fiiiYbe
there
44 Cram In
25 Project
45 Eye port
starter
46 Bam toppeo
26 Musher'a
48 You bell
vehicle
49 Tunnel
28 Gel by
maker
ellort
50 Sporta
29 Thin
channel
necktie
52 Mineral
30 John,
aprfng
In Siberia
53 Sine- non
31 Acorn drop- 54 " Yecchl"

Celebrity Ciph« ~rams are creel~ !rom quotalions by la"mous people. !1651 and present.
Each letter 1n the Cipher Slancls lo1 anolht1

&lt;lbur'IIJrthlor:
Wednntt.y, June e, 2007

!&gt;HALL. WE?

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

17

CELEBRITY CIPHER

WGraph
OOoH!
LET's. TI'.KE A
LOOK AT Tl-iE
SACK COVER,

( "IH"" Il"l"

('"JaniibJ_ -~~,)PI:J"'"'II!!ij"ij~:'llt•

4 K

In yesterday's deal, East made a
UQhtner slam double of six spades, as~­
ing fer a diamond lead, the first suit bid
by the dummy. When Wee! did as
requested. 'the slam was defeated. But
South should haw taken heed of East's
warning and run to six no-trump, which
would have been unbeatable.
In this deal, South needs to heed a differe.nt warning - what is it? South is in
lour hearts. West leads lhe club king to
declarer's bare ace . How sllould South
continue?
In the modern game, when the oppo·
nents come into the auction, jum p raises
of opener's suit by responder are preemptive, denying the w1ues for a gameinvitational limh raise. So, some would
bid three haarls wih that North hand .
But at the table North sensibly decided
..:.._ paradoxical as it sou nds - that his
hand was too s1rong lor this bid. Ha
knew that he would jump to IIYee hearts
without the diamond king. North
planned, i given the chance, to bid three
hearts on the next round to show a
decent single raise v.;th four-card SliP·
port. Here, though, South had enough to
jump to game.
South, thinking that We at would have the
·heart king far his overcall, ran· the heart
queen at trick two. Disaster! East won
wilh his king and shined 10 his ~ng lelon
spade. Wesl took two !ricks in lhe suit,
then gave his partner a spade ruff for
down one.
The heart finesse was an unnecessary
risk. After West does not cover the heart
queen, declarer should rise with
dumrrty's ace and pt_
ay another round.
Even il West has all four hearls (whic!l is
very unlikely), lhe contract w~i still suc-

PASSION " !

.,1. ){(. -

Home Oxygen
o Portable Oxygen
• Hometill System
o Helios System .

Pass

a different warning

" PYRAMIDS. OF

Shade River
Ag Servic e

o

Pass

Answer to Pfevioue Puule

~Astro­

BIG NATE

Feeds

We Deliver To You I

East
Pass

ceed:

Lawn Seed,
Fertilizer and
Sltowmaster Show

7.lU . t)X~ -.\ X .I

withdraw the above
collateral prior to sale.
Further; The Farmers
Bank and
Savings
· Company reserves the
rlghtto reject any or all
blda submitted.
The above described
collateral will be sold
"as Is-where Is", with
no
expressed
or
Implied
. warranty
given.
For further Informalion, or for an appointment to ln~t collateral, prior to sale date
contact Cyndlo, Ken,
or Randy at 992·21 36.
(6) 5, 6, 7

~'

V.C YOUNG Ill
9.2 6215

• New Homes
• Garages
·• Complete
Remodeling

'

wv

PiJmeroy Oh10

CONSTRUCTION

.

N•w, G1rages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutter~
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Pallo and POrch Decks
036725

740-742-2293
Please leave messa e

ROBERT
BISSELL

SA,VII\1' TIPS !!

WELL, THEY MUST KNOW WHAT THAR
'BOUT -- IT CAME POSTAGE
. 'DUE !!

Room Additions &amp;
Remodflllng

Call Gary Stanley @

Stop &amp; Compare

0% Financing- 36 Mos. 2001 Chevy S-10 StepSida,
available· now on "John Sspd, AG, Tilt, Cruise, CO,
Deere z Trak Zero TUrns &amp; Alum Wheels, Tonneau

Ferguson &amp; New Holland
Tractors
as tow as
0%. W.A.C. Jim's Farm
Equipment, 740-¥6-0777

Stanley TreeTrimming
lit Removal

decent bOdy &amp; tires, $S50 as
is OBO (740)441-Q217

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE:Ia
hereby
given that on Saturday,
June 9, 2007 at 10:00
a.m., a public asia will
bo held at 211 W.
Second St., Pomeroy,
Ohio. The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company Ia selling for
cash In hand or certlfled check the followlng collateral:
1998 Dodge Dakota
l B7GG22K4WS576056
The Farmers Bank and
Savlnga
Company,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
reserves the right to
bid at this sale, and to

LYE SAil&gt;
·/
ANl&gt;

ONE llATIO.

740-992-1111

(740)992·2217

7 40·367 -0544

200
H1ll s Se lf
Storage

......

Take heed of

.\\I \

Local Contractor

Pass

North

z•

Opening lead:

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

WOlJLl&gt;

19B4 Ford F150, 6 cyl.. 4
spd standard, runs good,

s For Old Al.lto Batteries 1- irrn10;;;;;;;;;;;~;;..;;;;;;;;;;~ 1gg9 GMC Sonoma truck, 4
99 $2.50ea, 100+ $3.00ea,
FARIII
250+ $4.00ea . TH~ BAT·
EQuiPMoo
cylinder, 5 spee&lt;J;t $~700 ,
TERY TERM INAL 1-800·

(740) 742-2690

1•

4•

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

Experience

Dod v.;th springs &amp; mattress, CKC Female Wastes, 1st call 304-675-5906
shots, wormed, vet ched&lt;rkl, ----:::--:::--:--$150. Cell (740)441-8299

uMER~CIIANDISE·.
· · --

SxiO, 6xl0, IOxiO,
10x24
The only storage
units within the
jurisdiction of the

West

1•

..,_,tlmberertebal&gt;illrtr,-.oo"'

IMPRovtMENrs

Sliding glass door ..-th new Chocolete lllb puppies. lsi
roRSAJE
blinds. $100; Gun cabinet, shot &amp; wormed.
to · - - - - - - ·
like new, $175: 2 maple ber
$ 150
0 99
7
'
'-------:--'
4
2 22
chairs, $40, 1 lull size oak go.
all? ·
-6
1973 F250 $600 or 080

c

~~~

TRUCKS

Pomeroy,OH

South

HaNiood CUlnetry And FurnitUre

1JoME

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Aw

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

"L---.:.:.:·-:;.:==::.

:_(7:-:40~)94~9::·2_73_2:-:::--:-- r-;:-;::;;;::;::;;;:;;:;;~ r
::99 Buick Regal GS. 1 owner.
garage kept, 142,000 miles,
new tires, Good Condition,
$5,500 304·682· 1102

Nye

~~le

D ealer: South
Vulnerable: Bot h

·Insured

Cavaliers, Escorts, Neons,
etc. Gas Savers! 740-4467278
. __ _ _ _ _...

options, very nice, $19,000, Waterproofing.

• K 10 5

• Q J tO 6 5
t A Q J 10
4 A

70 Pine Street • Gallipoli s
740-446-0IHI7 Toll Free 877-669-00117

East End
Storage

t 9 6542
4J9 765
South

w.•ork.'

Hot.miOill

Drive liHie, save a lot,! 202 (M)$400.(F)$450. Deposit ol
Clark Chapel Ad, Bidwell, $tOO v.;n hold the pup ol
oH. (740)388-ot73
your choice lill ready to
Remodeling? Complete set leave lill.er. Parents present
of kitchen ·cabinets, sink, Call anytime. (740 )339 ·
kitchen range (l~e new), 2935, leave message if no

• 2
• K4

• 63

F - EatimltH

" I I&lt;\ ' ' I "

BASEMENT
At&lt;C Reg. Boston Terrier 1997 Saturn· Sl1·4 door,
WATERPROOFING
pups 7 wks old. Shots and one owner,lair cond .. no ale.
wormed . $250. Call 740- high mileage. $1200.00 · unconditional hfetime guarGooos
080 (740)992-2947
antee. Local references fur38B-8743
nished. Established 1975.
Mollohan Furniture. Great _A_K_C_R-eg-.-W-e-im_a_r-an-e-rs; 1999 Corvette Coupe, both Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
seleelion for a Great price. Solid silver, 008 04/26/0 7 . tops, auto, 59,000 mi, all 0670, Rogers Basemeni

East

• K Q 10 4

David LewiS
740- 992 - 6971

674-3920
c:-Pr-im_e_R::-iver--lo-tslor-:::-Re
- nt-Beautiful Beach--Plenty of
Shade--For info. ·CaJt 740·
992·5782.
-------Private Camp Site with Boat
Dock on Kanawha Alvar
between 8 Mile &amp; 10 Mile.
304·675-5724

rJd

West
•A Q963
• fi 2

&amp; MEDICA~ EQUIPMENT

Pomeroy P.O.

92 Fl eetwood Wilderness,
fully contained. AU working
condition. ACI heaV at&lt;YYOI
fridge/ microwave. New
queen size matt. ~eeps 6.
~
A ..king
$6500 . 740-2868720 or 740-4 18-0832
:-:--:::--:::---:---::-Must Sell Air Stream
Camper mint cond. 31FT,
fully sell cootajned $4,000
firm 304-61!2-2196 ce11304-

MONTY

r]amiltj •·&gt;:tmM•

30 Yrs. Exp. In s.
Owner R o nni e Jones

Quarter &amp; 112 Morgan 304-

will fit on truck, runs off 882-3750 ,

.

nIH'

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY :
•MONTHLY OXYGENVISITS

Senior Citi zen

I

Pole
30x40x10'
2002
'ngdal 5th wh I
Del"-red
&amp; Erected $8 ,595
l..lvfNrocK
e
ee
.....
Camperpn26ft, has
1 slide
plus
Sales Tax . Call
out . Sleeps 6·8 · asking
(937 )718- 1471 www.na.tton· 4Horses2QuanerMares&amp; $10,000 il interested call
widepolebarns.com
1 Filly &amp; 1 Stud Colt 112 304-675-6338 after 7pm

r
ms- guns.
of. Billy (740)367-nss
.Id1ng
.
Commercial O\J1
• For er, lawn tractor or truckC
'
,
1
1
1
Aenf 1600 SQUare feet. off equa or ass vaue.
a11 Full blood registered Boer
street parking. Great loca- evenings, (740)388·8934
Goats tor breeding stock
GallipoUs. ~ent 5375/mo.
Call Joe (740)«!- 1111

r

"t

Truck

spring trip, good points ,
$400. (740)245-5096
9 1·92 Geo Metro Parls alt.
AC,sta rte r,doors,hood,frnNew Taylor Way 15' Heavy ders.engine.740-992-4259Duty Bat wing w/ Dual ceii740-963-Q584

&amp; Wheel, chain guards, hyd

~~~z.es, $2,000~: ::a~

lionl 749 Third Avenue in

.lotH'" lrt'l'

Fu ll insured

~i:;-=~--~.~~

diesel 01 3ph electric: cools ' eore

tu.nt

I

'

800- 537 _9528 _

No. Pets. Lease Plus Thursday,
Saturday
Security Oeposii Required, su~- (740) ...... ~. 7300

304-674-()()42
ED' AFFORDABLE!
1 BA unfurnished apt. T.ownhouse
apartments,
Range, fridge, garage and ancVor small houses FOR
74 441 11 11
air. 136 151 Ave Rear. 740- AE;NT. Call 1 0)
•
446-2561
for application &amp; information.

ll,n;l

Rlri!John~

-3~
04-fil
::-4--57-08-::"~ ~

C

~E..__

760-4414317

/

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments

41 Klld or Joey
42 Slx-polnte11
1 Mingle
44 Fatt·talked
4 Sponge
47 Ditty
future
51 One~egged
8 Watchdog's ' ballet poH
wemlng
55 Aurora,
t 1 FortHy
to Plato
12 Marsh bird 56 Shon akin
13 Reating
57 Boxers,
DIICt
Informally
15 Skier
58 Zurich peak
Tommy59 Eatabtlah
16 Law
60 Slgho
18 Wing
of relief
20 Mltdeabotdlr 61 Biddy
21 Aeaponae·
ondeck
DOWN
23 Healtant
IOUndl
1 Nursery
24 Sizzle
word
27 Canaata
2 Hair curler
3 Mutant he·
29
roes of
32 On strike
comics
33 Wlterilly
(hyph.)
4 Stend-ln
34 Zoologltt' a 5 Boathouse
eggs
gear
35 -whlzl
6 Elimlnote
36 Your
7 New Haven
highness
ltudent
37 Criticism
8 Spiky
380wned
flowere
39 Coffee
9 Gaveabuu
brewero
10 Pilaf base
40 Atom
14 Rainbow
fragments
band

Phillip
Alder

Laurel
(740)443-2412
Apartments Largest in the Middll!port, Nonh 4th A..,., 2 wlmallress •&amp; box springs, - - - - - : - - - - : - : : - area! Beautifully renovated br. furnished apartinenl, good cond. $150 304-675- large selection of Rotary - --H-arley---8V1.doot-'-n-W_ide_
2000
0

tor Rent, Meigs Couhty, In
town, No Pets. Deposit
Required. (740)992-5174 or
(740)441-Q110.

NEA Cronword Puzzle
ACROSS

Manor
and
Riverside $400; 5x10 utility trailer, Trailer.·
Loadmax·
Apartments in Middleport.
(6t4)595-m3 a&lt;
Gooseneck. Dumps, &amp;
~ From S0-5592. Cal 740· I-B00-7'98-&lt;Ie86
Utility· Aluma Aluminum

- - - - - - - - Honda XA 50; Brush Guard, guards.·crop dMders. S1ored for sale
Yamaha
660
1/4 mile from Rio Grande -A-,
p.'-rl_m_e_
nl-lo-r - r-e-n l-.- 1- 2 New Haven, 2 br. furniShed Stainfess Steel. Fits 02-()5 inside, never raln&amp;d on. Griuly 42003
Wheeler $4,500
$200/month 740·388·8803 ·Bdrm . remodeled. new car· apartment, refer~nces &amp; F250 or F350. (740)446· , 472 S?.OOO 304-6?S·2902
·
deposit, no pets. (740)992· 574 1, (740)339-0004 .
exc cood. 304-675-6531 or
APARThiL"'VfS
pet. stove &amp; fng:, water, 0165
- - - - -- - - New TT' Fin ist1ing MCM'ers
....
FOR REr.'T .
sewer. trash pd. MKl&lt;teport.
JET
5999. um~ed amount availM
·
S425.00
No pels. Ref. Pleasant Valley Apts now
AEA!\TION MOTORS
able at this price. Also, 4', 5',
JloA~SALE~
required. 740-843-5264.
accepting appHcations for 2, Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In &amp; 6' tillers. 4' startinr1 at
.

1 or 2 bedroom • · t in Pl.
Pleasant. Utilities ""
paid. No
30 7 8872
Pets 4-6 5·
1600 Square feet, beautiful,
unfurnished, two bedroom
apl, 2nd fl oor, LA. DR . 1 112
baths, downtown Gallipolis.
~-al ~r prof...... n•-~~~ couple.

The Daily Sentinel• Page B5
BRIDGE

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed- 6x12 endosed black trailer, Kiefer Built- Valley-Bisonroom apa.rtmeQis at Village $1500; SxtO utility trailer, Horse
and
Livestock

Trailer lot fOr ren1 in country

Satell~e TV &amp; DVD reoorder

www.mydailysentinel.com .

Rfxr

remodeled, new cabinets.
new carpet. {7401949-2303

Moon£

Tuesday, June 5, 2007
ALLEYOOP

FARIII

Large 4- bedroom house in
Pomeroy, vt!ry ~an, newty

Taking applications lor 3BA
remOdeled house. No pets.
$400/mo. 5300/dep. 4463617

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

Some ofl
your best" poa&amp;lbi!IV.. for rMlil~~ big
auCCUHI will com• 11'0f!l yourJOllity to
expand upon what 'othefl:_haw started
- be they k»aa, concepti , materlata or

money.

'

SOUP TO NUTZ
WHaT!: iT au MeaN?
Is UR. 'JUST' a IS&gt;T oF
RIJNNI"'G &lt;HD SCf&lt;it.'CtMiNG

atiD wavi!IIG Of aiiMS"'

;., .

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel ·
. l:lot.!lEoi

www.my~ailysentinel.com

APA 1m1ll'o1'S

'--oioiiiiii~
iiiiirr,;,..,.l

FOR

HOMES

HJRRE.vf

3 bedroom mob~e home in

I

country. 740)256·6574 .

'!: 1

ssoo.

• lj1 · 992·5064 . Equal Housing - - - - - - - Center
Opportunities.
Equal Entertainment
1 Opportunity Empla;er
w/glassware doors, nice,
Commons
lights up$120. Full size bed

L.,,:,::::;::L.-.J

Trel-- B&amp;W Goosened&lt;

Hitches· Trailer Parts. .,
·Carmichael
Trailers.

Johnson's Tree
Service

throughout including brand deposit &amp; references, no 2208
Au1ters 4' thru 15'. Jim's
Gtide, 22,000 miles, excel·
new kitchen and bath. pets, (?40) 992 -QI6S
---~~--- 's Farm Equipment 740 " tent condition, $10,000.

O.lllpollt, OH 45&amp;31
Complttt TIW C..

'----'-- - ' - - - : - - - For SaJe: Crownvetch plants, 446-9m
Slarting al S405. Call today! Modern 1 BR Apt. Caft 446- 17401245-!1322
----,----:::----:-:- (740)992· 1909 or (740)591 ·
(304)273·3344
3736
N.H. Haybine 7', s'ub 0993.

To, • Trtnl• ._tint • SMnp
Orlndirlt • EklcMt True:•
!Murlod •

,.,,_._

i

BR
1'"')675
3 or 4
apls, .-.
Beautiful Apta. at Jackson 5806 . AppUcations can be
Estates. 52 WestwoOd received at 1151 Evergreen
Drive. from $365 to $560.
Dr, PI, PI, WV
25550.·
740-446-2568
Equal
1 and 2 bedroom apart- ·Housing Opportunity.
·
EThis1
rnstilution rs an
qua ' - - - - - - : : : - - - ments. furnished and untur- Opportunity Provider and Tara
Townhouse
nished, · and houses in
Employer.
Apartm9nts. Very Spacious,
Pomeroy and Middleport. - - - - - - - - : . , - 2
CIA, 1 1/2
security deposit required. no Clean Quiet
1BA. Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
pets, 740-992-2218 .
stovelfrig; country fse~ng, Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.

e

Bedr~ms.

spaciou~

1 Bedroom Apt. very private no pels/smoking , irs
992 3543
all utilities included, plus mO+dep S350
•

ast

CONVENIENTLY LDCAT· .:.
17_40_;_1_367_
·7_086_
. ---

IV
References

ti'~ICll
required,

Ellm V1"ew
Apa rt ment S
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; AJC
•Washer/dryer hookup

e

• Tenant pays electric

no

pels, security depo~t. $600 •
per month. Call446-4425 or

'(304)882• 3017
·

•

446-3936

fr
I

(.

~

BR , Newly Carpeted ,
Freshly · painted. Walk ing
to UAG. Private Gnlcioue Uvlng 1 and 2
enlrance
and
deck. Bedroom Apts. at Village
$400/mo, (6 14)59S-m3 or ManO&lt; and Riverside Apts. in
1.800.7984686.
Middleport, from $327 to
2BA, trash/ water, stove/ $592. 740-992 -5064. Equal
!ridge, $350 + deposit, Housing Opportunily. This
(740)446-7620, (740)709· Institution is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
9519, (740)441-ll872
Employer.
New
2BR apartments. - - - -- - - Washer/dryer
hookup, Middleport, Beech St., 2 br
stovelrelrigerator included.
furnished apartment, utilities
Also, units on SA 160. Pets paid, deposit &amp;. references,Welcome! (740)44t-o194.
no pets. (740)992-Q1 65

di~ance

Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications lor waiting
list tor Hud·subsized, 1· br,
apartment,lor
the
elderly/disabled call 67566'1 9
Equal
Hous;ng

r

Oppo tunity .....""""-.,
er-r-~

Jillll~&lt;;!-

__

•
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- $750.
Jim's
Farm
Equipment, ()-446-gm
2000 Crest Sport 22Ft. pon·
74
--------,-toon 2000 Mercury motor 40
NEW AND USED STEEL New Hl&gt;land 479 Hayblne- HP. 740·992·4422
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar recently
Field
For
Concrete.
Angle. ready w.u.·d
AAuro~PI\KTS&amp;
' "' . Swing, $2500;
Channel , Flat Bar, Steel Int. 3-16 Plows w/ colters,

recond~ioned,

Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. We&lt;klesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed

-~-'------

-·~Y- - -~
-- - -

Barn~.

r

cyls. $8495. Jim's f;arm
Equipment, 74Q.446-9m

I

Prime commercial ~for

CUIPERi &amp;

M

Ho

OlllR

.

Refrigerated

un~. 8'x14 box,

• Top • Rem oval

• Trim- Stump
Grinding • Bucket .

r

---::----:--:----:--:
Goat~ 100% full blood
Aeg. Billy; also percentage

I•••

·=---~--...,
1'tts

JillR SALE

L,~--toiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitto.-J

Adorabl~ 7 we~k

old AKC
rent at Springvalley Plaza .. Yorkie Puppies, 1 female, 2
Call645·2192.
male on ly 112 pound S900
r
each.Shots&amp;vttchecked304·
895-3926
~
.....,,
·--iioiiiiiiiiot-r' AKC
Registered
LANDOWNERS - NEED puppies,yellow labs
1st
EXTRA FARM INCOME? shots,wormed,born April 13,
We have responsible sports· $300-M,350·F. 985-4138
men looking to lease hunting
property in this area . AKC Bos1on Terrier Pups. 7
Midwest Trophy leases Inc. wks old, both male. Parents
(304)532·6015 or 1·800- on prem. with pedigree, vet
chkd, shots, wormed. 740698· 1073
38B-9325
\ II IH I I \ \ II/ '-I

~---~W=i\NilD---~

·roo.--

Di scounl

740-3ti7-0266/
1-800-950-3359

Free Estimates

1\ID)

s

Does &amp; Buctrs

s·~
~

&amp; up

"16
-~-·675
-~-"_____
Reg Angus Bulls lor sale.

Hollybr~

Farm. 740-2455 9_B4
.,
----'-:---,--:Wanted: Jack Donkey for
breeding purposes. 44 1.
!013.

FlO

AIJIOS

JillR SAI,E

10 to 15 small cars fa sale.

L.~i\ii~;pf;(jf~
..............
., ' Oft'-l"Cl'IC

26 Years

a

wall oven, counter top, $750; answer.

['5

R~ady

r

$400. 740•388•9453

r "~r·.a..a.Ar&lt;U!.Ul..~

1

796-6797

-

29670 Bashan

Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
7411-949-2217

* Prompl and Quality
Work
* Reasonahle Rates
* Insured
* Experienced ·

I IW.....,..,.iW"""

'=:::::=:::::===~

w· coneret

·
JSe
e
A ll type s of concrele

Owner- Rick Wise

740·992·5929
740·416·1698
15 yrs. Exp. Free Estimates

Refe~e nces Avu ilable!

28' "Cergomate" enclosed
trailer lor Sate, has .Jiving
quarters with Air Cond./
Heati ng,
$4,300
OBO
(740)388-8803
---,-----:----:
4 18 11
x
above grnd pool w/
all access., wringer washer,
dbl atum. tubs on- legs~

5.99% Fixed Rate on John 55K, $5400, (7401379-2748

shape. 245·51 81

Financing on New Massey

Deere Gatcn Carmichael
Equipment (740) 446-2412 . 99 GMC Sonoma 4x4,
142000
miles,
as~ng
96 Ford 4630 55HP, 200 hrs, $5200. 740·256-1498 or
2446 QT Loader/ bucket· 740-339-Q969
canopy, new !arm trailer,
$ 1S,900/all (740 )379 _2748
roRS"r

"r,;;.;..;;.~S~UV~~s--.,
tuL.

2004 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Laredo, 2 wd., 25,000 mi,
4/6, auto, all options, nice
$13,500, (740)949·2732

Ttt~~E WOlJLl&gt; ~~ A QlJ~STION
AN5vl~~ 5~!SION-·- W~ NW~Il
P~OMIS~l&gt;

Free Estimates

Ttt~~~

740-367-0536

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

8~
A ON~·TO­

BARNEY
YEP !! IT'S CHOCK
FULL 0' MoNEY·

..

THE BORN LOSER
FE.TCI-\ TI-\E.BN.i,I&lt;E.WI&gt;IE!

•'J 'l"e.rr'&gt; Lu1 .t l ExjPrtnncP

r------., •·
Mushroom C ompost

$.'5 A Scoop
T-Post 6fl, $3.29
Wid' Variety of

..

rv:of
jackal

Today's clue: X equals P
" XOZSIGL

W

MH

AMHSWHS ...

ISCWGMZSCL

PRG

•

PEANUTS
I GU~S5 MMSE
THE't''RE RI6HT.,
60LF IS A
6AME OF
INC~ES ..

RHSCSHHOSHH

HORCH

WCMJS ."

•

JRIG

WOlD
GAM I
ORoorronge lotto" of tho
fotrr scrombled word1 bt·
low to form fo&lt;tr lii!IPlt word!.

I
.

TH J f S E

1--,......,,.[_,,'11"2..,.-r,ooool
1 1
1
-i-..1......1-.1....&amp;.....1

L.

HEGI T

4C\ P!INT NUMSEREO
'C/1 lfllf iS IN SO'JARES

success.

SUNSHINE CLUB

Manley's
Recycling

GARFIELD

···'\::::••45111

•lllltllltfiMnt.ll D5:u ••
111.........1!:11••

......................
.............
PIYIIII TW PIICIS ~

liBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23) - Fun activities that haw elements of aome friendly
competition are the very ones that you
are likely to find the most enjoyable,
especially if they are structured around
teamwork .
.
SCORPIO (Qcl. 24-Nov. 22) Sometimes, no matter what problems
you incur, things have a way of woric.ing
out to your ulti'nate benefit in the long
run. This could be one of those days
where this may happen for you.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21 ) - Thia
could be one of those daya when you
can absorb compt&amp;x information you
would normally find difficult to understand. Use your outstanding mind to
seek out valuable Information.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . 19) - If yoU
have the desire, time and money to go
shopping, it could prove to be an inter~
esting and fun
tor you. 'Vbu may find
hidden bargaine in remote. out-of-theway places.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)-You're In
a brief cycle where you could be much
more forn.tnate than usual In ventures or
endeavors you originate or personalty
control In some mamer. Keep doing your
thing.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - An
important contact is In a position to help
you advance your present ambitious
objectille, and he or she could be available to assist you: but it might be a good
idea to keep his or her involvement pri·
vale.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) -Conditions .
in general look encou,..ging, eapeclally
in involvements where you have a number ol peraona gathering . Thla could
inclu~e wo!'tl.·reiated actlvltiel or social

SCRAM-LETS ANSWEl5 .6- ~ ~ 01
Aweigh - Liner - Rhyme - Nestle- ANSWER
"In my life time," the old gent-told me, "I learned that a true
fiiend will ask how you are and wail for your ANSWER."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

ones.

GRIZZWELLS
ANQ "»&gt;l'l~t
~A'&lt;IN6 liE
\llt6~i A

m:oe ~allipoli~ latlp m:rlbune
'740·446-2342
www.mydailytribune.com·

,tlolnt ,tlle~ant J.eglster The Daily Sentinel

304-675-1333
740-992-2155
www.mydailyregister.com www.mydailysentineLcpm .,."'=--

·-

•

TAU RUS (April 20·May 20) -

llii1IUc Cltlllrln •.....
ICtlll fer Clrnlt Prices!

\.AW&lt;ER.

ZDDOSURG

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "I've been here so lorg thai when I got here the
Dead Sea wasn't even sick.· - Alabama basketball coach Wimp Sanderson

aav

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

YMCA

F M C C J M C C H G J·D 0 U W 0 A F S W J

for

...'

REACH 3 COUNTIES

36

by Luis Campos

By and
Bernice
Bede 0.01
Your·hopes
expectations
have excellent chances
being fulfilled to your
satisfaction. However, your wish list
could change several times before you
find the ones in which to place your
efforts.
. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Much
value can be learned by aaeoclating with
pentane you ritapect and by cloaely
studying thoae whose mental attributes
you think highly ol.
CANCER (JUI)8 2 1-July 22) Something in which you're presently
Involved might be subjected to change,
but in your case, "this could prove to be
beneficial . The shift will come from influences you don't control.
lEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ..:... You could be
luckier than usual in a ·partnership
arrangement that Isn't created for any
material purpoee. lta target is to Seek stgnitictlnt rewards in 80mtllhing intanglWe
but meanlng1ul.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - You can be
an exceptional achiever, especially if you
are motivated to do something that will
benefit another about whom you are concerned. Compassion fuelS the forces of

I

70 Pine Street .• Gallipolis
446-0007

Oddballs
37 Lake
19 Dexterity
dwelltrs
22 Vader's
41 Ledger
side
entry
23 Heir, often 43 Formal,
24 Way up
fiiiYbe
there
44 Cram In
25 Project
45 Eye port
starter
46 Bam toppeo
26 Musher'a
48 You bell
vehicle
49 Tunnel
28 Gel by
maker
ellort
50 Sporta
29 Thin
channel
necktie
52 Mineral
30 John,
aprfng
In Siberia
53 Sine- non
31 Acorn drop- 54 " Yecchl"

Celebrity Ciph« ~rams are creel~ !rom quotalions by la"mous people. !1651 and present.
Each letter 1n the Cipher Slancls lo1 anolht1

&lt;lbur'IIJrthlor:
Wednntt.y, June e, 2007

!&gt;HALL. WE?

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

17

CELEBRITY CIPHER

WGraph
OOoH!
LET's. TI'.KE A
LOOK AT Tl-iE
SACK COVER,

( "IH"" Il"l"

('"JaniibJ_ -~~,)PI:J"'"'II!!ij"ij~:'llt•

4 K

In yesterday's deal, East made a
UQhtner slam double of six spades, as~­
ing fer a diamond lead, the first suit bid
by the dummy. When Wee! did as
requested. 'the slam was defeated. But
South should haw taken heed of East's
warning and run to six no-trump, which
would have been unbeatable.
In this deal, South needs to heed a differe.nt warning - what is it? South is in
lour hearts. West leads lhe club king to
declarer's bare ace . How sllould South
continue?
In the modern game, when the oppo·
nents come into the auction, jum p raises
of opener's suit by responder are preemptive, denying the w1ues for a gameinvitational limh raise. So, some would
bid three haarls wih that North hand .
But at the table North sensibly decided
..:.._ paradoxical as it sou nds - that his
hand was too s1rong lor this bid. Ha
knew that he would jump to IIYee hearts
without the diamond king. North
planned, i given the chance, to bid three
hearts on the next round to show a
decent single raise v.;th four-card SliP·
port. Here, though, South had enough to
jump to game.
South, thinking that We at would have the
·heart king far his overcall, ran· the heart
queen at trick two. Disaster! East won
wilh his king and shined 10 his ~ng lelon
spade. Wesl took two !ricks in lhe suit,
then gave his partner a spade ruff for
down one.
The heart finesse was an unnecessary
risk. After West does not cover the heart
queen, declarer should rise with
dumrrty's ace and pt_
ay another round.
Even il West has all four hearls (whic!l is
very unlikely), lhe contract w~i still suc-

PASSION " !

.,1. ){(. -

Home Oxygen
o Portable Oxygen
• Hometill System
o Helios System .

Pass

a different warning

" PYRAMIDS. OF

Shade River
Ag Servic e

o

Pass

Answer to Pfevioue Puule

~Astro­

BIG NATE

Feeds

We Deliver To You I

East
Pass

ceed:

Lawn Seed,
Fertilizer and
Sltowmaster Show

7.lU . t)X~ -.\ X .I

withdraw the above
collateral prior to sale.
Further; The Farmers
Bank and
Savings
· Company reserves the
rlghtto reject any or all
blda submitted.
The above described
collateral will be sold
"as Is-where Is", with
no
expressed
or
Implied
. warranty
given.
For further Informalion, or for an appointment to ln~t collateral, prior to sale date
contact Cyndlo, Ken,
or Randy at 992·21 36.
(6) 5, 6, 7

~'

V.C YOUNG Ill
9.2 6215

• New Homes
• Garages
·• Complete
Remodeling

'

wv

PiJmeroy Oh10

CONSTRUCTION

.

N•w, G1rages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutter~
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Pallo and POrch Decks
036725

740-742-2293
Please leave messa e

ROBERT
BISSELL

SA,VII\1' TIPS !!

WELL, THEY MUST KNOW WHAT THAR
'BOUT -- IT CAME POSTAGE
. 'DUE !!

Room Additions &amp;
Remodflllng

Call Gary Stanley @

Stop &amp; Compare

0% Financing- 36 Mos. 2001 Chevy S-10 StepSida,
available· now on "John Sspd, AG, Tilt, Cruise, CO,
Deere z Trak Zero TUrns &amp; Alum Wheels, Tonneau

Ferguson &amp; New Holland
Tractors
as tow as
0%. W.A.C. Jim's Farm
Equipment, 740-¥6-0777

Stanley TreeTrimming
lit Removal

decent bOdy &amp; tires, $S50 as
is OBO (740)441-Q217

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE:Ia
hereby
given that on Saturday,
June 9, 2007 at 10:00
a.m., a public asia will
bo held at 211 W.
Second St., Pomeroy,
Ohio. The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company Ia selling for
cash In hand or certlfled check the followlng collateral:
1998 Dodge Dakota
l B7GG22K4WS576056
The Farmers Bank and
Savlnga
Company,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
reserves the right to
bid at this sale, and to

LYE SAil&gt;
·/
ANl&gt;

ONE llATIO.

740-992-1111

(740)992·2217

7 40·367 -0544

200
H1ll s Se lf
Storage

......

Take heed of

.\\I \

Local Contractor

Pass

North

z•

Opening lead:

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

WOlJLl&gt;

19B4 Ford F150, 6 cyl.. 4
spd standard, runs good,

s For Old Al.lto Batteries 1- irrn10;;;;;;;;;;;~;;..;;;;;;;;;;~ 1gg9 GMC Sonoma truck, 4
99 $2.50ea, 100+ $3.00ea,
FARIII
250+ $4.00ea . TH~ BAT·
EQuiPMoo
cylinder, 5 spee&lt;J;t $~700 ,
TERY TERM INAL 1-800·

(740) 742-2690

1•

4•

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

Experience

Dod v.;th springs &amp; mattress, CKC Female Wastes, 1st call 304-675-5906
shots, wormed, vet ched&lt;rkl, ----:::--:::--:--$150. Cell (740)441-8299

uMER~CIIANDISE·.
· · --

SxiO, 6xl0, IOxiO,
10x24
The only storage
units within the
jurisdiction of the

West

1•

..,_,tlmberertebal&gt;illrtr,-.oo"'

IMPRovtMENrs

Sliding glass door ..-th new Chocolete lllb puppies. lsi
roRSAJE
blinds. $100; Gun cabinet, shot &amp; wormed.
to · - - - - - - ·
like new, $175: 2 maple ber
$ 150
0 99
7
'
'-------:--'
4
2 22
chairs, $40, 1 lull size oak go.
all? ·
-6
1973 F250 $600 or 080

c

~~~

TRUCKS

Pomeroy,OH

South

HaNiood CUlnetry And FurnitUre

1JoME

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Aw

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

"L---.:.:.:·-:;.:==::.

:_(7:-:40~)94~9::·2_73_2:-:::--:-- r-;:-;::;;;::;::;;;:;;:;;~ r
::99 Buick Regal GS. 1 owner.
garage kept, 142,000 miles,
new tires, Good Condition,
$5,500 304·682· 1102

Nye

~~le

D ealer: South
Vulnerable: Bot h

·Insured

Cavaliers, Escorts, Neons,
etc. Gas Savers! 740-4467278
. __ _ _ _ _...

options, very nice, $19,000, Waterproofing.

• K 10 5

• Q J tO 6 5
t A Q J 10
4 A

70 Pine Street • Gallipoli s
740-446-0IHI7 Toll Free 877-669-00117

East End
Storage

t 9 6542
4J9 765
South

w.•ork.'

Hot.miOill

Drive liHie, save a lot,! 202 (M)$400.(F)$450. Deposit ol
Clark Chapel Ad, Bidwell, $tOO v.;n hold the pup ol
oH. (740)388-ot73
your choice lill ready to
Remodeling? Complete set leave lill.er. Parents present
of kitchen ·cabinets, sink, Call anytime. (740 )339 ·
kitchen range (l~e new), 2935, leave message if no

• 2
• K4

• 63

F - EatimltH

" I I&lt;\ ' ' I "

BASEMENT
At&lt;C Reg. Boston Terrier 1997 Saturn· Sl1·4 door,
WATERPROOFING
pups 7 wks old. Shots and one owner,lair cond .. no ale.
wormed . $250. Call 740- high mileage. $1200.00 · unconditional hfetime guarGooos
080 (740)992-2947
antee. Local references fur38B-8743
nished. Established 1975.
Mollohan Furniture. Great _A_K_C_R-eg-.-W-e-im_a_r-an-e-rs; 1999 Corvette Coupe, both Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
seleelion for a Great price. Solid silver, 008 04/26/0 7 . tops, auto, 59,000 mi, all 0670, Rogers Basemeni

East

• K Q 10 4

David LewiS
740- 992 - 6971

674-3920
c:-Pr-im_e_R::-iver--lo-tslor-:::-Re
- nt-Beautiful Beach--Plenty of
Shade--For info. ·CaJt 740·
992·5782.
-------Private Camp Site with Boat
Dock on Kanawha Alvar
between 8 Mile &amp; 10 Mile.
304·675-5724

rJd

West
•A Q963
• fi 2

&amp; MEDICA~ EQUIPMENT

Pomeroy P.O.

92 Fl eetwood Wilderness,
fully contained. AU working
condition. ACI heaV at&lt;YYOI
fridge/ microwave. New
queen size matt. ~eeps 6.
~
A ..king
$6500 . 740-2868720 or 740-4 18-0832
:-:--:::--:::---:---::-Must Sell Air Stream
Camper mint cond. 31FT,
fully sell cootajned $4,000
firm 304-61!2-2196 ce11304-

MONTY

r]amiltj •·&gt;:tmM•

30 Yrs. Exp. In s.
Owner R o nni e Jones

Quarter &amp; 112 Morgan 304-

will fit on truck, runs off 882-3750 ,

.

nIH'

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY :
•MONTHLY OXYGENVISITS

Senior Citi zen

I

Pole
30x40x10'
2002
'ngdal 5th wh I
Del"-red
&amp; Erected $8 ,595
l..lvfNrocK
e
ee
.....
Camperpn26ft, has
1 slide
plus
Sales Tax . Call
out . Sleeps 6·8 · asking
(937 )718- 1471 www.na.tton· 4Horses2QuanerMares&amp; $10,000 il interested call
widepolebarns.com
1 Filly &amp; 1 Stud Colt 112 304-675-6338 after 7pm

r
ms- guns.
of. Billy (740)367-nss
.Id1ng
.
Commercial O\J1
• For er, lawn tractor or truckC
'
,
1
1
1
Aenf 1600 SQUare feet. off equa or ass vaue.
a11 Full blood registered Boer
street parking. Great loca- evenings, (740)388·8934
Goats tor breeding stock
GallipoUs. ~ent 5375/mo.
Call Joe (740)«!- 1111

r

"t

Truck

spring trip, good points ,
$400. (740)245-5096
9 1·92 Geo Metro Parls alt.
AC,sta rte r,doors,hood,frnNew Taylor Way 15' Heavy ders.engine.740-992-4259Duty Bat wing w/ Dual ceii740-963-Q584

&amp; Wheel, chain guards, hyd

~~~z.es, $2,000~: ::a~

lionl 749 Third Avenue in

.lotH'" lrt'l'

Fu ll insured

~i:;-=~--~.~~

diesel 01 3ph electric: cools ' eore

tu.nt

I

'

800- 537 _9528 _

No. Pets. Lease Plus Thursday,
Saturday
Security Oeposii Required, su~- (740) ...... ~. 7300

304-674-()()42
ED' AFFORDABLE!
1 BA unfurnished apt. T.ownhouse
apartments,
Range, fridge, garage and ancVor small houses FOR
74 441 11 11
air. 136 151 Ave Rear. 740- AE;NT. Call 1 0)
•
446-2561
for application &amp; information.

ll,n;l

Rlri!John~

-3~
04-fil
::-4--57-08-::"~ ~

C

~E..__

760-4414317

/

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments

41 Klld or Joey
42 Slx-polnte11
1 Mingle
44 Fatt·talked
4 Sponge
47 Ditty
future
51 One~egged
8 Watchdog's ' ballet poH
wemlng
55 Aurora,
t 1 FortHy
to Plato
12 Marsh bird 56 Shon akin
13 Reating
57 Boxers,
DIICt
Informally
15 Skier
58 Zurich peak
Tommy59 Eatabtlah
16 Law
60 Slgho
18 Wing
of relief
20 Mltdeabotdlr 61 Biddy
21 Aeaponae·
ondeck
DOWN
23 Healtant
IOUndl
1 Nursery
24 Sizzle
word
27 Canaata
2 Hair curler
3 Mutant he·
29
roes of
32 On strike
comics
33 Wlterilly
(hyph.)
4 Stend-ln
34 Zoologltt' a 5 Boathouse
eggs
gear
35 -whlzl
6 Elimlnote
36 Your
7 New Haven
highness
ltudent
37 Criticism
8 Spiky
380wned
flowere
39 Coffee
9 Gaveabuu
brewero
10 Pilaf base
40 Atom
14 Rainbow
fragments
band

Phillip
Alder

Laurel
(740)443-2412
Apartments Largest in the Middll!port, Nonh 4th A..,., 2 wlmallress •&amp; box springs, - - - - - : - - - - : - : : - area! Beautifully renovated br. furnished apartinenl, good cond. $150 304-675- large selection of Rotary - --H-arley---8V1.doot-'-n-W_ide_
2000
0

tor Rent, Meigs Couhty, In
town, No Pets. Deposit
Required. (740)992-5174 or
(740)441-Q110.

NEA Cronword Puzzle
ACROSS

Manor
and
Riverside $400; 5x10 utility trailer, Trailer.·
Loadmax·
Apartments in Middleport.
(6t4)595-m3 a&lt;
Gooseneck. Dumps, &amp;
~ From S0-5592. Cal 740· I-B00-7'98-&lt;Ie86
Utility· Aluma Aluminum

- - - - - - - - Honda XA 50; Brush Guard, guards.·crop dMders. S1ored for sale
Yamaha
660
1/4 mile from Rio Grande -A-,
p.'-rl_m_e_
nl-lo-r - r-e-n l-.- 1- 2 New Haven, 2 br. furniShed Stainfess Steel. Fits 02-()5 inside, never raln&amp;d on. Griuly 42003
Wheeler $4,500
$200/month 740·388·8803 ·Bdrm . remodeled. new car· apartment, refer~nces &amp; F250 or F350. (740)446· , 472 S?.OOO 304-6?S·2902
·
deposit, no pets. (740)992· 574 1, (740)339-0004 .
exc cood. 304-675-6531 or
APARThiL"'VfS
pet. stove &amp; fng:, water, 0165
- - - - -- - - New TT' Fin ist1ing MCM'ers
....
FOR REr.'T .
sewer. trash pd. MKl&lt;teport.
JET
5999. um~ed amount availM
·
S425.00
No pels. Ref. Pleasant Valley Apts now
AEA!\TION MOTORS
able at this price. Also, 4', 5',
JloA~SALE~
required. 740-843-5264.
accepting appHcations for 2, Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In &amp; 6' tillers. 4' startinr1 at
.

1 or 2 bedroom • · t in Pl.
Pleasant. Utilities ""
paid. No
30 7 8872
Pets 4-6 5·
1600 Square feet, beautiful,
unfurnished, two bedroom
apl, 2nd fl oor, LA. DR . 1 112
baths, downtown Gallipolis.
~-al ~r prof...... n•-~~~ couple.

The Daily Sentinel• Page B5
BRIDGE

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed- 6x12 endosed black trailer, Kiefer Built- Valley-Bisonroom apa.rtmeQis at Village $1500; SxtO utility trailer, Horse
and
Livestock

Trailer lot fOr ren1 in country

Satell~e TV &amp; DVD reoorder

www.mydailysentinel.com .

Rfxr

remodeled, new cabinets.
new carpet. {7401949-2303

Moon£

Tuesday, June 5, 2007
ALLEYOOP

FARIII

Large 4- bedroom house in
Pomeroy, vt!ry ~an, newty

Taking applications lor 3BA
remOdeled house. No pets.
$400/mo. 5300/dep. 4463617

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

Some ofl
your best" poa&amp;lbi!IV.. for rMlil~~ big
auCCUHI will com• 11'0f!l yourJOllity to
expand upon what 'othefl:_haw started
- be they k»aa, concepti , materlata or

money.

'

SOUP TO NUTZ
WHaT!: iT au MeaN?
Is UR. 'JUST' a IS&gt;T oF
RIJNNI"'G &lt;HD SCf&lt;it.'CtMiNG

atiD wavi!IIG Of aiiMS"'

;., .

�)

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

.

Ducks one win away from Stanley Cup
·

BY IRA PoDELl.
AP

·

SPORTS WRITER

OITAWA
Andy
McDonald bailed out Chris
. Pronger and set up Southern
California for a playoff party
like never before.
The Anaheim Ducks are
within a win of their lirst
Stanley Cup championship.
McDonald scored two
goals in the second period,
then shook free of hard-hitting Chris Neil and assisted
on Dustin Penner\ winner in
the third, giving Anaheim a 32 victory over the Ottawa
Senators on Monday night.
The Ducks will carry a 3-1
series advantage back home
to Anaheim. where they are
7-0 in clinching games.
including 3-0 this year. But
this one ts different, and it all
became possible because of
the Ducks' first road win in
the finals in six .chances over
two series.
Anahei m is 5-0 in the finals
on home ice and can secure
Southern California 's first
Stanley Cup title as early as
Wednesday night.
Anaheim got it done
despite a ·miserable first period 111 which it was outshot 132 without Pronger, a Norris
Trophy finalist who served a
one-game suspension foi an
elbow to the he;~d of Ottawa's
Dean McAmmond in Game 3
on Saturday.
Ducks general manager
Brian Burke was incensed
Sunday that Pronger was suspended while Neil wasn't,
claiming the only difference
was McAmmond was injured
and McDonald wasn 't when
Neil charged and landed a
high, hard hit in Game 3.
This time, Neil missed the
Ducks forward and instead
crashed himself into the
boards. That was enough to
allow McDonald to get the
puck up ice to Teemu
Selanne.
Skating alongside Penner,
with only Senators defenseman Anton Volchenkov back,
Selanne moved .the puck
across to Penner for a shot
that beat Ray Emery 4:07 into
the third to snap a 2-2 tie. .
Dany Heatley had his best

Tuesday, June 5, 2007 ·

www.mydailysentlnel.com

.

game of the finals, scoring his onds left.
first goal of the series to get
Alfredsson,. playing in hi s
Ottawa even 2-2 wtth 2 mm- 98th consecutive playoff conutes left in the second period. test with the Senators, scored
Heatley struggled along with for the second straight game
linemates Daniel Alfredsson · atier being blanked twice in
and. Jason Spezza, who had Anaheim. Unlike Saturday,
been shut down through three when he had to wait out a
games.
video replay to see if his first
Alfredsson netted his sec- final s goal would stand
ond of the series with less because it went in off his
than a second left in the first · skate, there was no doubt
period .to stake Ottawa to a 1- . about this one - his NHL0 lead.
.
leading 12th of the playoffs.
Spezza, who went pomtless
The Ducks.had only themin consecutive games for the selves to blame by taking
first 'time since Octobe~, four penalties in the period
earned an asstst on Heatley s and handing three power
seventh of the playoffs. That plays to the Senators. The
restored excitement to a ner- last a goaltender interference
vous arena ~at might've seen call' against Ryan Getzlaf,
the Senators last home game was questionable as Emery
of the best season m team hts- appeared to embellish his fall
tory. Ottawa managed onl)l to the ice.
four shots in the ~econd penEmery, who made 18
od - to Anahe!m s 13 - and saves, didn't have much else
three were taken by Heatley. to. do in the opening period,
Jean-Sebasl!en Gtguere, facing his first shot nearly 12
the playoffs MVP m 2003 minutes 'in and seeing only
when the Ducks lost Game 7 one more the rest of the way.
of the finals at New Jersey,
It all changed in the second
stopped 21 shots mall. That period.
was enough to gtve Anahetm
Anaheim enjoyed the only
Its 12th one-goal wm of the two power olays of the frame,
postseason, tymg the NHL but couldn't take advantage.
mark.
,
Instead, the Ducks scored
Alfredsson, 0 ttawa s cap- twice at even strength and
tam, was the last-second hero held a 13-4 edge in shots.
m the first penod, but turned
,
. . . .
into the villai'n in the final
McDonald lied tt mtdway
moments of the second. He through the. penod, then
inexplicably fired a shot from notched hts mnt~ of the playcenter ice nght at defenseman offs exactly a mmute later for
Scott Niedermayer, the a 2-llead.
.
Ducks' captain.
The first c~e when he
The usually mild-mannered took a pass m front from
Niedermayer, a· three-time Todd Marchant, who had
Cup champion in his days . curled behmd the net, .and,
with New Jersey, angrily sent a shot that got past
engaged Alfredsson. It defenseman
AndreJ
caused a tension-filled serum Meszaros,
Emery,
and
. that only led to matching Spezza, who came behmd
minor penalties to start the ·Emery to guard the goal Ime
third. Giguere and Emery, as the netminder moved up in
known to · drop his gloves, the crease.
spoke as they crossed paths
~cDonald gav~ the Duc~s '
on their way off the ice.
thetr frrst lead wtth a scml!lQuite a different period latmg effort. He cut n~ht
than the tirst when the between the mcles, fakmg
Senators domin~ted play.
Volchenkov down to .the ice,
Just as it seemed the Ducks ghdlmg across tn front of
would survive the penalty- Emery and backhanding a
filled anp offensively · chal- shot between his pads.
lenged · frame unscathed,
He nearly had a third goal
Alfredsson one-timed a pass earlier in the period, but his
from Peter Schaefer past shot rang right off the post
Giguere with only 0.3 sec- behind Emery.

Hamilton, ·Coffey returning to
Reds f rom. Tr•lp e-A LOUISVI
.• •11e
1
CINCINNATI (AP) Outfielder Josh Hamilton
and reliever Todd Coffey
will be recalled from TripleA Louisvi lle for · the
Cincinnati Reds' game
Tuesday in St.. Louis. the
club said Monday.
To make room for them,
the Reds sent right-hj!nder
Brad Salmon and outfielder

Notebook

handed
down and
that
he
wants to
become
the NFL's
"Man of
the Year,'·
tbe player
honor ed
for being

it s best citizen.
There was no statement
from the league other than
the short announcement 'of
the suspe nsion . It said
Goodell would review
John so n's status before
Oct. I to determine whether
to reduce hi s suspension by
two gam.es.
Last December. police
raided the 300-pound
defensive tackle 's suburban
Chicago home and found
six unregistered firearms
- a violation of hi s probation on an earlier gun
charge.
.
That charge stemmed
fromjohn~on's 2005 arrest
after a Chicago nightclub
valet
reported
seei ng
Johnson with a handgun in
his SUV. He subsequently
pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge.
Two days after the raid,
Willie B. Posey, Johnson 's
bodyguard who had been
arrested after th~ raid, was
shot and killed in an earlymorning fight while he and

Johnson were at a Chicago
.ni ghtclub.
Johnson was suspe nded
by the Bears for one game
for being at ihe club. He
played with the team in the
Super Bowl.
In March, John son began
hi s jail term for violating
hi s probation. Last month,
he pleaded gu ilty to a misdemeanor weapons charge
as part of a deal with prosecutors that kept him from
serving more time in jail.
He was ordered to serve 45
days, which he was able to
serve concurrently with the
sentence for violating his
probation.
met
with
John son
Goodell for 90 minutes in
New York on May 18.
" I fee l like whatever
sanction he imposes, I' m
man enough to take it and ·[
know that once I get back
on the field, that chapter of
my life is closed and I can
move on with a sense of
closure," Johnson said after
the meeting.
He called the commi~­
sioner "a fair man" and
added: "One day I want to
be the face of the league for
guys who have COIJ1e
throu gh adversity, · came
through it and ultiinately
became the Man of the Year
in the NFL. That would be
a tremendous ending to the
story."

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,)II

( ' FN I'S • \'ul. ;;h , C'liu.

SPORTS
• LeBron ready for first
finals. See Page 81

..

'

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Betty Codner
· • Clarence Lawrence

'

WEATHER.
· H11aring
l!mtecllifl;
''
' ":,'
~ '
,,&gt;i '

, .STIHL Hand Tools fS!IrtingJt:J
·' :t

,.

~..;t\!ilnli·c:hain ftling Kit

$15.95
;{

t1US :

Details on Page A6

'

' Alw•rs WHr /I(Dttelirt ,,.,., a

-•-••dtd ;, ,_i~~~tn~aion nw1111l, ~ ~ ~ ( ftJ

INDEX
2 SECfiONS- 12. PAGES

~I

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Chester

Pomeroy

Calendars

A3

Baum Lumber Inc.
46384 State Route 248
740-985-3301
www.baumlumber.com

Dettwiller Lumber
634 East Main Street
740-992-5500
Open 7 Days a we.ek

Classifieds

B2-4

Are you

BY BRIAN

J.

Smith testified that Harkins
was under the influence of
alcohol when he fired I0
rounds at a mobile home
owned by Dean Pullins and
located on Ohio 248.
Smith said Harkins later
told him he did not intend to
injure anyone, but only
wanted to scare the occupants of the trailer. Harkins
is charged with two counts
of felonious assault and a
count of discharge of a
firearm. A misdemeanor

REED

BREEO@MVDAILVSENTINELCOM

harge of using a weapon
while intoxicated was dismissed Thursday.
According to Smith,
Harkins admitted to firing
the rounds at the trailer
because he believed his 'girlfriend and Pullins were having an affair. There were
two women in the mobile
ho1J1e with Pullins at the
time Harkins allegedly fired
upon it - Penny Cochran
and Lisa Robson. Neither
was identified as Harkins'

girlfriend during last week's
preliminary hearing.
Harkins had called the
sheriff's department earlier
in the evemng of May 23,
reporting an altercation . at
the Pullins home. Smith said
Harkins told him he returned
later to the Pullins home and
fired shots from outside until
fire waS returned. Smith continned evidence that shots
had been ftred from inside
the mobile home, too.
One of the shots allegedly

fired by Harkins injured
Cochran, who was treated
and released for a leg wound
and a 'Superficial head injury.
Harkins was released
from the Meigs County Jail
on May May 29, after posting a tO-percent cash paymenr on bond set at $75,000
by County Court Judge
Steven L. Story. Harkins'
bond was reduced to
$25.000, with 10 percent
cash allowed, after the preliminary hearing.

BY BETH SERGENT

STI HL Quickstop«&gt; chllin brake :
'

Shooting case bound over to grand jury

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

~ ...,,"'· '

~

\1'\\\\.lll)!luil)'entind.cum

21111"'

Racine considers
new.sexual
predator law

• Scooter Libby
sentenced to 2 1/2
years in CIA leak case.
See Page A2
• Shade High School
alumni hold reunion.
See Page A3
• Barnhart graduates.
See Page A3
• Pomeroy Mayors
Court. See Page A6
• Family Medicine.
See Page AS

Lightw&amp;ight hDJllllOWIIIIf Sf't,td; ·

\\'1-.J),FSD \\, .Jl ' :-.11·: h,

:.!!;)

POMEROY - The case
of a Long Bottom man
accused of firing shots at a
mobile home and injuring a
woman has been bound
over' to the Meigs County
Grand Jury.
John M. Harkins, 46 •.
Bigley
Ridge
Road,
appeared at a preliminary
hearing Thursday in Meigs
County Court. Deputy Adam

INSIDE

'

Virginia Tech to
reopen building, As

home runs in six rehab
appearances with the Bats.
Coffey began the season
with the Reds .and was 1-1
with a 4.94 ERA in 26 relief
appearances before he was
optioned to Louisville on
May 24. He did not allow a
run in six appearances for
the Bats, strikin g out nine in
5 2-3 innings. ·

Dewayne Wise to Louisville·.
· Hamilton was the National
League's rookie of the
month in April. He has been
on the disabled list since
May 22 after a bout with
gastroenteritis that Oared up
during a series in Cleveland ..
He was hitting .261 with
eight home runs and 18 RBl s
then. and hit .333 with four

Tank Johnson suspended for 8 games
NEW YORK (AP) Tank Johnson of the
Chicago Bears was suspended by the NF:L for the
first eight games of the
2007 regular season for
violating the league''s new
personal conduct policy.
The defensive . tackle
recently served a two:
month jail stint on a proba, fion violation on gun"related charges.
He's the third player suspended by commissioner
Roger Goodell in little
more than a month for offfield behavior. In April ,
Goodell
suspended
Tennessee Titans defensi ve
back Adam "Pacman"
Jones for the entire 2007
season and Cincinnati
Bengals wide receiver
Chris Henry for eight
games. Jones is appealing
his suspension. ·
Goodell said Johnson 's
suspension
could , be
reduced to six games if he
has no further involvement
with law enforcement and
undergoes counseling.
.
Johnson stands to J.ose
$255,000, based on his
salary for next season of
$510,000, if the suspension
lasts the entire eight games.
meeting· with
After
Goodell upon his release
last month, John so n said he
was rt;ady to accept whatever punishment Goodell

R&amp;JFood
Shop opens, A3

Comi~

Bs

Editorials

A4
As

Obituaries

Sports
Weather

B Section

A6

© :ZOO? Ohio Valley Publl!ihlng 0&gt;.

RACINE - Racine Village Council
discussed adopting a new amendment to
it's municipal code to prevent convicted
sexual predators from being within
I ,000 feet of village owned parks or
playgrounds.
Racine Police Marshal Curtis Jones is
researching the amendment which must
then go to the village solicitor for
review. If approved by the solicitor, the .
amendment gdes to council and requires
three readings and a vote before it could
go into law 30 days after the final vote.
Jones informed council there is
already a law in the Ohio Municipal
Code that prevents convicted sexual
predators from being within I ,000 feet .
of a school.
Jones is also researching an amendmen.! to the village's municipal code in
regard to all,terrain vehicles, or fourwheelers and any nuisance · ordinances
· which may pertain to the vehicles being
operated on village streets. Resident
Maryann Shoults asked if there was any
nuisance ordnance concerning ATV's in
town when it comes to the issue of noise
and dust. which there is not.
"The law does'n 't work necessarily like
you think it should," Mayor J. Scott Hill
said to council. ·
·
Shoults said a juvenile in the village
rides an ATV near her property, stirring
up so much dust she can't hang her laundry out to dry and her husband can't wash
cars because of the nuisance it poses.
"For me it's the dust and noise, but it
is a safety issue too when you talk about
them being on the roadway," Shoults
said of the issues she had with the ATV.
Jones said he has given a warning to
· the juvenile involved in Shoults complaint and his parent could also face
fines. However, there is more than one
person riding the ATVs in the village in
what some consider a "careless" manner.
Councilman Gary Willford said he had
witnessed this "careless" operation himself in the village.
Hill reported the contractors at the .
water treatment plant need to finish the
gates as well as some plumbing and
hopes everything will be done i11 another
two months though' the plant is already
online and serving residents. Hill said
the new plant removes manganese
before going t~consumers though the
added pressure· has caused old manganese in the line to be knocked loose
and appear in the water when the consumer uses it. The added pressure has
also caused some old lines to break and
made it difficult to accurately calculate a ·
normal percent loss. Last month the
plant sold 4 million gallons of'Water and
sold two million .
"All the testing is in line with where
we're supposed to be and the percent
loss has come down· from where it was
before," Hill said.
Jones reported he would be on vacation June 17,24 and at National Guard
training Aug. 29-Sept. 16 but during
both absences Kevin Dugan would take
over as interim mars~al.
Jones also reported if there was a vehicle sitting in a yard with expired tags, it's
the same as having no tag and that property owner could face citations.
Currently there is a list of 18 prope.rties
for these types of violations which will
shortly be served in writing about the
citations.
.
Jones is also searching for a dunking
tank for the Fourth of July festivities.
All members of council were present
for the meeting. Council will meet in
recessed session at 7 p.m., on June 18 at
the Racine Municipal Building.
J

~-

'

_,

Charlene Hoelllchfphotos

Recognized for 20, 15 and 10 years of volunteer service through ttie RSVP program were from the left, seat·
ed, Juanita Roush, Betty Sayre, and Polly Curtis, 20 years; Don Young, and Lee Young, 15 years; and stand- ·
ing, Carol Hall, Charles Mclain, Alice Wolfe, B~u~e ~ay, Joan May, and Frankie Hunnel, 10 years.
. _ , ..

RSVP volunteers honored at luncheon
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HDEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - Recognition of
the 164 Retired Senior Volunteers
who over the past year have
donated 26,668 hours of their
time doing· volunteer work in 47
different locatiOI)S highlighted
the . 34th annual volunteer luncheon •at the Senior Citizens
Center Tuesday.
Diana Coates, RSVP ·director,
commended the volunteers for
their work, and recognized those
with 25, 20, 15, and I0 years with
certificates. Special. recognition
went to Polly Eichinger, who will
observe her 93rd birthday on June
22,for25 years.
Twenty year volun\eers recognized were Polly Curtis, Juanita
Roush, Betty Sayre, and lsabelle
Wolfe, and IS year volunteers
honored were Blondena Rai.oer,
Don Young , and Lee Young.
Thirteen volunteers were recognized for 10 years of service and
included Norma Custer, Carol
Hall, Dee Hysell, Bruce May,
Charles McLain, Mary Powell,
Alice Wolfe, Carolyn · Grueser,
Frankie Hunnel , Harold Hysell,
Joan May, Leah Ord and Jean
Wright.
Coates spoke of the impact
which hours worked .by volunteers have on local organizations
and mentioned several including
The Meigs Cooperative Parish ·
where last year 29 volunteers
.gave 6,925 hours to the operation, the Senior Center where
5,440 hours were given by 92
·volunteers, the Chester historical
Society where 2, 765 hours were

Special recognition for her work as a volunteer over the past 25 years
was given to Polly Eichinger of Pomeroy at Tuesday's volunteer luncheon. Here Diana Coates, RSVP director, presents her with a plaque .
worked by 13 volunteers, and the
Syracuse Community Center
where I0 volunteers donate
I ,643 hours.
A fiesta theme was carried out
in the decorations on the walls,
hanging from the ceiflng, and
adorning the tables. Coates noted
that Fred Lugo and the RSVP
members in Austin, Texas provided the decorations.
Several of those attending spoke

in appreciation of volunteers
working in their respective programs. Kathy McDaniel, day care
coordinator, presented gifts to
Jean Thomas, Marilyn Powell ,
Barb Gheen, and Gladys
Cumings, regular volunteers in
the daycare program for those
with memory loss; Courtney Sim
spoke on behalf of those who
Please see RSVP, AS

Association begins fireworks fund driv~
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED&lt;ii&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Efforts to
raise funds for July 4 fireworks
are now underway in Middleport,
and members of the Middleport
Community Association discussed the fund drive at Tuesday's
monthly meeting.
The association has a month to
raise $3,000 in donations for the
fireworks display, Association
President Brenda Phalin said. The
total cost of the display is $5,000.
. Phalin said the association will
concentrate on mailing fundrais.
ing letters to members and area

_______

•

businesses. Members also dis. cussed drawings, concession
sales on July 4 and other possible means for raising the necessary funds.
The .fireworks display will conclude a day-long Independence
Day celebration, beginning with
the unveiling of a downtown
mural series, and including a coin
show, storytelling program,
gospel sing and parade. Ti)e River
City Players have booked Phil
Dirt &amp; the Dozers for a free concert at the Middleport. football
field. The fireworks -will follow
the concert.
Mary Brewer, parade chair-

man, . is seeking entries for the
parade . Those interested are to
report to .the municipal parkin·g
lot next to Family Dollar at 5:30
p_.m. Awards will be presented to
best pet unit, best walking unit, ·
best float and best decorated
bicycle entry.
.
Treasurer Dick Owen reported
an account balance of $6,242,
$1,684.40 of which represents
funds remaining from a grant for
the downtown mural series.
.Phalin reported ' the latest
membership roster includes 61
members.
'
The next meeting will be held
July 3.

..

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="531">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9982">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="15391">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="15390">
              <text>June 5, 2007</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1057">
      <name>circle</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="88">
      <name>hayes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="74">
      <name>mitchell</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
