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                  <text>Page B8

www .mydailysentinel.com

June 7, 2007

National headache
awareness week
being served, A3 ·

Youth honored
atparty,A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.10 ( I :\ I S • \ ' ol. .)II, '\u .

SPORTS

Reg~~r.To Win_

Feeney Bennett
wins home opener.
SeePageB1

o

~·Free Vacation Of
Your Choke··
The-Best Resorl Areas
In Norlh America ··
oPurchase Mo,.o,.,.,.r,,
rJJ(IJO,

Commissioners award CDBG money
BV BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY Meigs
County
Commissioners
awarded
$102,000 . in
Community Development
Block Grant (CDBG) funds
to five projects tht;nughout
the county.
Out of 10 applications the
commissioners approved the
following projects: Tuppers

Plains ball field, $19,750 to
install lighting at the ball
field; Tuppers Plains Sewer
District, $20,000 for construction of a block building
with heating and lighting to
assist in irrigation through
the winter; Village of
Racine, $20,000 for installations of lighting at the ball
field at . Star Mill Park;
Bedford Township, $24,050
for street improvements to

Gilkey Ridge Road; Portland
Community Center. $18,200
for building upgrades.
The decreased CDBG ·
money allows the average
award to be near $20,000
with the Bedford Township
award being the only to
exceed $20,000. This was
also the first CDBG to ,be
awarded
to
Bedford
Township.
"These projects were cho-

Sales tax
collections
up$31K
for year

By July J, .

"'"' ·'""l.lih "'"'""'!.'·""'

I· R II I.\ ' , .Jl r:\ 1·. X, :!oo-

:! , -

Bv BRIAN

J.

seri bec-ause they would
impact a greater number of
people," Commissioner Jim
Sheets said, adding all I0
were "good" projects.
Commissioner
Mick
Davenport said it would
likely be November before
the money is awarded.
Commissioners
also
approved a memorandum of
understanding with the
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire

receiVes

·Page AS
o Marcella Sue Mitchell
o Steven J. Strtes

.. '

.INSIDE
River Sweep sites
for Meigs County.
See Page A3
"o O'Bieness offering
diabetes education
class. See .·Page A3 ·
o

o Summerd~

classes at Ariel.
See Page A3
o Students receive
scholarships.
See Page A3
o Alcoa seeks
.federal OK ori
Alcan takeover.
See Page AS
o A Hunger For More.
See Page AS

.·· .. ~.'

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It OlhttiiJ W~,

$12,11111

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STAFF REPORT

REED

POMEROY -If the col·lection of the county's onepercent sales tax so far this
year is is any indication,
the local economy continues to improve.
According to a monthly
sales tax comparison compiled by Meigs County
Auditor Mary Byer-Hill,
the collection of the co\)nty's one-percent sales tax is
up by $31,545 over the col- .
lection of the taJ~, a year
ago. In 2006, the county
collected nearly · $50,000
more for the year than in
2005, and the trend is continuing. Last year's collections were $1 ,B7 ,806.
In
May,
Byer-Hill
received a payment of sales
tax proceeds of $101,664,
representing collections iii
· March, an increase of just
$150 over last year's
·March collections. In May,
2003, the county received
$7~,437 and in May, 2004,
$80,668. Last May, the
county
received
$10 I ,522.91 in sales tax
proceeds.
The loss of sales tax revenue since 200 I has been
seriO!IS concern to county
commissioners and the·
county's budget commission, because it is considered an important pa.rt of
the county's monthly cash
flow, making funds availphoto
able for payroll and other Rio Grande students AMA members pose in front of Saint Louis Cathedral inSubmitted
New Orleans
general fund operating
expenses. A freeze on local during the 2007 International Collegiate Conference. In the group were left to right. front,
government
assistance Meghann Clary, Brittny Henry, Shannon Criswell, Chelsea Young, Chelsey Wood, Stefanie

a

.'

.

Please see Sales tax. AS

honors
NEWS@MYDAJLYSENTINEl.COM

BREEO.MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

0BTIUARIFS

Department to accept the
donation of the new
Pomeroy Emergency Squad
One. The squad will remain
.housed at the Pomeroy
Volunteer Fire . Department
but the commissioners
would provide the insurance. Meigs EMS will also
be permitted short -tenn use
of Squad One when other
Please see CDBG, A5

Scltes; and back, Rich Reffitt. Wesley Thoene. Nick Dressel. Not pictured, Tessa Haggerty,
Michelle Thomas, Jim Locke, Valerie Smart, Nick Dayton, and Michael McVeigh.

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
Collegiate Chapter of the
American
Marketing
Association successfully
completed its first year of
existence by being recognized nationally as the
"Best New Chapter" at the
2007
· · International
Collegiate Conference.
Nine students and faculty
advisor, Wesley Thoene of
Pomeroy, made the trip to
New Orleans, La. to attend
the conference. Besides
being recognized as the
nation's best new chapter,
the Rio Grande AMA also
.received awards for Ol!tstanding fundraising activities and outstanding professional
development
activities.
Chartered . in October
2006, the group currently
has 14 members. To attemj
the trip, they had to raise
over $7,000 for airfare,
hotel expenses, and conference fees.
During the conference,
the students met with marketing professionals to learn
more about employment
opportunities in the field of
marketing. In addition, several New Orleans representatives discussed the efforts
made to re-brand the city's ·
image
following
the
destruction of Hurricane
· Katrina. While there . the
college seniors who attended the conference. met with
potential employers, and
were able to participate in
resume ·reviews and mock
interviews.
Keynote addresses were
given by Jeffrey Terry,
Corporate Commitment and
Strategic
Relationships,
Whirlpool
Corporation;
Stephen Perry, CEO, New
Please see Marketing. AS

.

05

~lontr

Carlo

Summer program offers
free lunches, games, prizes

SHm wl1il Oily 25l

$1Z.,S

The program is sponsored
by the Abstinence Builds
Character (ABC) program
Details on Pace AB
POMEROY
The which is operated in all,
"Healthy Choices Rock" three
school
di s trict~
sumlner youth program throughout the year by the
l)egins on Monday and has · Athens-Meigs Educational
expanded from last ye~'s Service Center.
locations in Middleport and
Staff, which have already
. • 2 SECI'IONS - 16 PAGES
Syracuse
to
include worked with· some of the
Pomeroy, Racine, Rutland children throughout the
Annie's Mailbox
A3· and Tuppers 'Plains.
school year, will provide
The program is free and constant superv'ision as well
Calendars ·
A3 the Appalachian Nutrition
as positive activities such as
Classifieds
BS"6 Network provides free volleyball, three on three
lunches to young people basketball', wiffleball, comComics
B7
who are kept busy with fun hole, etc.
'
.
activities, door prizes,.
that participate
Editorials
A4 music and games until the inChildren
the program will be
ends on Aug. 10.
given the chance to win
Faith • Values
A6-7 ·program
Registration for the pro- door prizes including an X
begins at II a.m., Box 360, iPOD, $100 gift
MoVies
As gram
Monday ' at
General card from Wal- Mart and
NASCAR
B8 Hartinger
Park
in other items. Drawings will
Middleport;
Syrac!lse take place every Friday.
Obituaries
As Municipal Park, God's Also on Fridays, local area
NET, Southern Elementary
Sports
bands will perfonn to celeB Section and
the Rutland Civic brate the "Healthy Choices
Weather
AS Cenier. Parents are required Rock" theme.
to register their child for
the free program.
&lt;Q .&amp;007 Oblo Velley Publishlrtt! Co.
Please see Sum•er, A5
Bv BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@I&gt;!YOAILYSENTINELCOM

INDEX

flit Us
Odaelt

nw.lllapllllara.c•
'

.

.. .

~

f. ' ,.", :&lt;~

,.

*all rebates to dealer
l ~ lJI(

1900 Eastern Ave. • Gallipolis, OH

I ...._

*New Car Photos Are
For Illustration Only

CCA has limited openings
in commodity food program
Bv

earn up to $1,484 per month . For each additional family member, add $377.
Applicants must provide proof of age, proof
POMEROY - Senior Centers and other of income and proof of residence.
organizations providing congregate and
Proof of income is established by recent
home-delivered meals, or food baskets to pay stubs, W-2 forms, copies of Social
low income senior citizens, can benefit Security award letters, checks, or bank statefrom federal USDA commodity food pro- ments in the case of direct deposit. Proof of
grams provided through area Community residence is established by recent utility bills,
Action Agencies.
driver's license, state I. D. card or other proof
In Meigs and Gallia Counties, along with that shows the applicant's current address.
eight other Southeastern .Ohio counties,
Applicants must reside in one of the
such ~ prograll) is being carried out by the counties 'the agency currently serves. In
Hockmg-Athens-Perry Commumty Act10n addition to Meigs and Gal.lia counties the
Agency. Thursday that agency announced others · are Athens, Hocking, Jackson,
that · it has limited openings in its Lawrence, MorgaA , ·Perry, Vinton, .and
Commodity Food. Program for nutritionally Washington . Carla Saum at 1-800-385·
at-risk, income-eligible seniors.
6813 Ext. 241 can be contacted for more
. 'fl!e announcement noted ~hat p~icip3!JtS infonnation or an application.
rece1ve food at a local 'd1stnbut10n s1te.
The commodity food program carried ·
Things which may be provided are cereal, out by the agency greatly benefits the
pasta, rice, evaporated/nonfat dry milk, Meigs Senior Center in Pomeroy which ·
cheese, canned meat or poultry, peanut but- daily has congregate and home delivered
ter, canned fruit, canned vegetables, fruit meal programs in operation, as well as disjuice and dry beans.
tributing food items to seniors as needed
· Applicants must be 60 years of age or from the CCA agency.
,
older with an income at or below 130 perSome
of
the
fOod
comes
through
that
CCA
cent of the federal income guidelines. A agency and has for several years, according
household of one can earn up to $1, I 07 per
month, while a two-person· household can
PleaH see Food, AS,
CHARLENE HOER.ICH

HOEFUCH®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

I

'.

�PageA2

NATION •WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June 8, 2007

HARTFORD, Conn. -A
girl who vanished a year
ago and was found hidden
in a room in a man's home
assumed a new identity that
made her part of his family,
· authorities said Thursday, as
they investigated whether
the man had inappropriate
relationships with her and
other girls.
The man, Adam Gault, 41,
was . arrested and charged
Wednesday in her . disappearance after police served
a search warrant and found
the missing 15-year-old girl
locked in a hidden closetlike room in his house. The
girl, who had a history of
running, away from home,
vanished a year ago.
. Gault, a dog trainer, was
arrested with two women
· who lived in the house, 40year-old Ann Murphy and
Kimberly Cray, 26. The
three
were
arraigned
Thursday, charged with conspiracy to commit unlawful
restraint, conspiracy to commit risk of injury to a minor
and interfering with police.
Gault's bond was set at $1
million. Murphy, whom
police described as Gault's
common-law wife, was held
on $750,000 bond. Cray's
bond was set at $500,000.
Gault's attorney, Frank
Canace, could not be reached
for comment; a number for
his office was disconnected.
Police said the girl later ran
away from home and moved
in with Gault, who lives in
nearby West Hartford and
worked.with the girl's stepfather years ago.
Since Gault's arrest, the
department has received
multiple calls from people
inside and outside the state
who claim · Gault abused
them, Blatter said.
"We are looking into all
of those now," he said.
Cray's . attorney, Michael
Georgeni, told reporters that
before the girl disappeared,
· she reported to police she had
been sexually abused, though ·
he said no arrests were made.
Bloomfield police · said
Gault filed a sexual· abuse
complaint on her behalf that
said she had been abused by
a family friend before she
· vanished in 2006. There ·
was insufficient evidence
and the complaint was
closed, Bloomfield police
Capt. Jeffrey Blatter said . .
Georgetti said Cray and
the others were offering the
girl a safe haven. She lived
in Gault's house for a year,
attended school and owned
a ·cell phone, Georgetti
said. He said that she was
hiding
from
police
Wednesday but was otherwise free to come and go.
"If you were taking
actions to prevent someone
from being abused, that is·
not a crime," Georgetti said.
"We can protect animals
from abuse. I think we
should be able to protect
children from abuse."
West Hartford police Capt.
Lori Coppinger, however,
said the grrl was not attending
school
and
disputed
Georgetti's claim that the teen
had been offered safe haven.

BY KAnrt MITCHELL
AND MARcY 5uuR

"Information that we
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
have would lead us in
another direction as to what
MUSCAT, Oman
her welfare was at this
People
dragged soaked bedtime," she said.
and
carpets from
ding
Investigators believe the
homes
Thursday
after
girl sometimes traveled out
Cyclone
Gonu
's
winds
blew
of state and assumed a new
identity while living with down trees and power lines
Gault, of nearby West and its rains sent torrents of
Hartford, Blatter said. The water and mud surging
FBI is investigating the out- through Oman's seaside
capital, a city often called
of-state travels.
"She was compelled to the Arab world's tidiest.
After pummeling noimaluse a new name, to assume
ly
hot and dry , Oman and
a new identity," Blatter told
Iran's
southeastern coast,
The Associated Press. "She ,
Gonu
weakened
to a tropical
did assume a name that
storm
and
was
expected
to
would suggest she was part
dissip,
a
te
into
a
rainstorm
by
of that family."
The Associated Press is . Thursday night as it moved
not identifying her because over the sea towar~ Iran. At
police are investigating if. least 28 people w.ere dead,
she was sexually abused. most of them in Oman, and
Authorities did not say how 26 were missing.
The storm spared the
she altered her name.
region's
oil installations,
Other girls may have
and
oil
prices
dipped on
experienced "something
very similar to what's going world markets.
Cleanup crews fanned out
on right now with this young
across
Muscat. Bulldozers
girl" found Wednesday,
scrape(;I
away layers of mud
Coppinger said.
and
rocks
that washed down
The girl's stepfather told
from
·
the
mountains when
WCBS-TV in an interView
heavy
rllin
flooded canyons
Thwsday that her mother had
and
dry
riverbeds
Wednesday
been allowed to spend a few
night.
Soldiers
pumped
water
hours with her Wednesday.
from
low-lying
roads.
"She's having some
While many people began
issues," he said of the girl.
cleaning
out soggy houses,
"She didn't even know who
others
searched
for cars and
she Was."
The girl's stepfather said other vehicles . that floated
family members, who own a away in the roiling waters.
kennel and dog day care in Grassy fields lay under sevBloomfield, had limited eral feet of water, and lush
information about what had palm and eucalyptus groves
happened to the girl in the were flattened.
Strong waves still battered
year she was gone.
a
beachfront normally
"Every parent's ni~ht­
thronged
with European
mare was mine," the gtrl's
tourists,
and
the usually
mother told reporters
sparkling
blue
sea
resembled
Thursday. "I can · never
a
foamy
chocolate
milk.
describe the horror of losing
People
told
of
spending
a
a child and having to maintain a family at the same night m fear as turgid water
time and having to·go on." flooded their homes, carryThe teen had no obvious ing away refrigerators. and
external
injuries. furniture and leaving streets
Investigators would not gouged ·by sinkholes and
speculate on what she might caked in mud.
"The water broke through
have experienced during the
past year or if she was held the walls. It came inside the
house. It swept everything
against her will.
Blatter said the girl out," said Nidhal airemained in protective cus- Masharafi, 31, who spent .
tody Thursday so investi~a­ the night on his rooftop with
tors could continue talking his wife and six children.
He said he found his 2006
with her.
Subaru
Outback a half mile
Police said they had
away
sitting
atop a taxi.
already established that Gault
"The
capital,
Muscat,
knew. the missing girl, and
said he and the girl's parents became a lake," said a
had some sort of undisclosed spokesman for the Oman·
business transaction in the · Royill Police, Abdullall ai_year before she disappeared. Harthi.
Gonu was downgmded to a
Cell phone records
showed that Gault and the tropical depression Thursday
teen talked often before she and ir was rapidly losing enervanished, Blatter told CNN. gy as it moved across the Gulf
''There was an inordinate of Oman toward han.
amount of contact via' cellu- Forecasters said it should
lar phone and then, during weaken into a tropical depresfollow ups, there were a lot sion before reaching land.
The storm was expected ·
of other circumstances that
led ·us to believe there was to spare Iran's offshore oil
an inappropriate relatione installations, which lie more
.ship," he satd.
than 120 miles to the west,
Officers had questioned oil officials and the U.S.
Gault several times, but he military's Joint Typhoon
always denied any involve- Warning Center said.
ment in her disappearance.
Despite earlier predictions
They served .a search war- the storm could disrupt the
rant on his home Wednesday oil market, an\(lysts said
morning, seeking a DNA Thursday that its impact on
sample and other evidence. prices was minimal, with
The girl was held in a most of the upward movelocked tiny room, about 3 ment occurring when the
feet high and 4 to. 5 feet news broke that Gonu was
deep. The doorway was hid- · headed toward Oman.
den by '!bureau.
. "By now the whole thing

.

. AP plloto

An Omani wades through floodwater in Muscat, Oman, where residents were recovering
from the destruction following Cyclone Gonu, which battered Oman's coast on its path
toward the world's most important crude oil tanker route.
must have calmed down,
because the storm passed
through .... The impact was
when the nt;ws (frrst) came
out. Now the people have
forgotten about that," said
Manouchehr Takin, an analyst at the London-based
Center for Global Energy
Studies.
The price for Brent crude
fell after confrrmation that
Oman's main oil port didn't
sustain major damage. In
London, July Brent crude ,
futures dropped 17 cents to
$70.85 a barrel on the ICE
Futures exchange.
The hanian state-owned
Shana oil and energy news
Web site said Iran would
stop operations at two offshore platforms as a precaution, but there were no
reports of difficulties at
Iranian oil installations.
"Everything is running as
usual," Bahram Narimanian,
spokesman
of ' Iran's

Offshore Oil Company, told
The Associated Press.
The storm's sustained
winds had declined to 41
mph, less than half the 95
mph . recorded Wednesday,
the Joint Typhoon Warning ·
Center said.
Even with the weaker
wind, Gonu was believed to
be the strongest cyclone to
hit Oman since record. keeping started in 1945.
At least 25 Gonu-related
death were reported ·in
Oman, including members
of police rescue squads, and
26 others were reported
missing, said al-Harthi, the
police spokesman. Rescue
teams were searching for
victims using helicopters
and boats, he said.
Iranian state TV's Web
site said two government
workers taking emergency ,
supplies to a flooded area
were killed Wednesday
when a river overfl~wed and

flipped their truck in Jask. A
third Iranian died in the port
city of Bandar Abbas from a
car accident blamed on low
visibility from the. bad
weather, state TV said.
More than 20,000 people
were evacuated Wednesda)l
from their homes in Oman
and were provided with government dwellings .stocked
with food, water, medicine
and other supplies.
.
. Royal Oman Police sent
text messages to mobile
phones urging people to
stay inside, said Brind~
Toprani, an architect from
India who was visiting her
parents in Muscat.
In Iran, authorities evacu~
ated hundreds in the port of
Chabahr · on Wednesday
because of the heavy rains.
Although the storm subsided
into light rain and breezes
Thursday, authorities warned
people to 'stay away from the
sho~ overnight to be safe.

Ifida

1:11811
ill•i
PLAN NOW TO
BE A PART OF IT
WITH .OUR
COUNTY ·WIDE
YARD'SALE
PACKAGE

; Dear Annie: Three years
ago, I married the woman
of ;my dreams. However,
bel' children have been anything but.
· We each had a home so
we moved into her h~use
and rented mine. That
worked fine for a while,
then the renters moved and
her son needed a place to
stay with his young child.
We rented the home to him
for well below market
value, since he didn't have a
decent job. That was two
years ago. Eight months
ago, he accepted a position
that affords him more luxuries, so now this young man
has remarried, bought two
new cars and has another
baby on the way.
.
My
wife
and
I
agreed
it
1
was
time to raise the rent,
but her son became upset.
He said he couldn't believe
we would do this, since he
just got married and his new
wife will soon be quitting
her job to care for the new
baby. My wife then
promised him we wouldn't
raise the rent, but she dido 't
bother talking to me about it
first. Now I'm upset,
because I think we '·ve done
enough and it's time her son

Friday, June 8,

stands on his own. My wife
and I have not spoken for
the last three days. I think
she is letting her son 'take
advantage of us. I want my
rental back and my wife ,
and I'm open to suggestions. Could Live
Anywhere in the USA
Dear
Could
Live
Anywhere: Of course you
shouldn't be subsidizing a
gainfully employed man .
who is married with children. And your wife should
not be making unilateral
decisions, but this is her son,
and it is not wise to force her
to choose bet ween you. Do
you need the money? What
about a smaller increase'!
Discuss the possibilities
with your wife. without rancor or blame. Explain how it
complicates matters when
she makes separate arrangements. Decide, together.
what is fair, and approach
your stepson as a united
front.
·
Dear Annie: I have been
involved in church activities
for over 30 years. Every
minister I have ever worked
with has said · he does not
want to know who tithes
what, because it might lead
to preferential treatment for
bigger donors.
My church's minister has
· now decided that because

attendance is down, he
needs to know who is giving what. I think this will
lead to favoritism and foster
ill will. This will result in
people leaving our church
(which I am considering).
Al so. some people give
cash, anonymously, and
some give of their time,
which we also desperately
need. How can we value
one over the other~
Can you ask the ministers
in your reading audience if
they need to know the
amount of each congregant 's tithing? And to
churchgoers. I'd ask, "Do
you want your minister
knowing the amount you
give?" - The Cash Giver
Dear Cash Giver: We can
think of no good reason for a
minister to demand this
information, but if we hear
differently from our readers,
we will let you know.
Dear Annie: I'm writing
in response tq "Mi sled and
Untrusting," whose husband
is a packmt. That could have
been my husband.
"Jim" saved used soda
cups and napkins, and the
ticket stubs to every movie
he· d eve r seen. After many
years, I started throwing his
trash out on my own, and he
never missed it. It took several years of sorting through

. GALLIPOLIS - !Jack to .
Health Chiropractic joins
Tb•: Not·•·i""' 1
The National Headache
Foundation in observing
National ,
Headache
Awareness Week. .
This year's theme is
"Seven Healthy Habits of ·
Headache Sufferers," in an
effort to provide practical
advice to headache sufferers
to reduce headache risk and
live life more fully when
affected by headaches.
. Back
to
Health
Chiropractic physicians Dr.
Nick Robinson and Dr.
,
Submitted plloto
thris Good recognize the
importance of treating Dr. Chris Good, left, and Dr. Nick Robinson of Back to Health
headache sufferers. "Our Chiropractic observe National Headache Awareness Week.
goal is to find the problem,
Foundation. He said it is
alleviate as much of the pain Iy feel pain relief."
as possible, and set you on a
The tips offered by the also critical for frequent
load to enjoy life more National
Headache headache sufferers to talk
their healthcare
f)Jily," said Robinson. Good Foundation can provide with
added, "We offer an individ- important stepping stones to provider about how to best
ualized treallilent plan for all reduce headache frequency ·manage their headaches.
The Seven Healthy Habits
our patients, headache suf- and severity," according
MD,
of
Headache Sufferers
Seymour
Diamond,
ferers included. Nothing
l)lakes us feel better thai) to Executive Chairman of the include ihe following tips
Headache that ca~ be easily incorposee one of our patients final- .National

hundreds of boxes, but I've
gotten rid of most of the
junk, and have talked him
into containing the rest in
his office.
Now he goes through the
trash to make sure I'm not
tossing out anything he can
"use," but instead of bringing the empty milk jugs and
cottage cheese containers
into the house, he throws
them in a pile in the backyard. Other than this, he's a
great guy. - Can't Win
the Junk War
Dear Can't Win: It
sounded good until we
thought about how much
the neighbors must love living next door to a pile of
empty milk jugs and cottage
cheese containers. But if
they aren't complaining,
neither are we.
A11nie 's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the An11 lAnders
column. Please e-mail your
questioiiS to anniesmailbox@comcast.llet, or write
to: Annie~~ Mailbox, P.O.
Box Jl8190, C?hicago, JL
606JJ. To find out more
about An11ie's Mailbox,
and read feaJures by other
Creators Syndicat11 writers
and cartoonists, Pisit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

rated' in sufferers'lives:
I . Diet: Eat regular meals,
. avoiding foods and drinks
that are known to trigger
headache attacks.
. 2. Sleep: Maintain a regular sleeping schedule, including weekends and vacations.
3. Stress: Implement
stress reduction techniques
· into your daily life.
4. Headache Diary: Keep
a headache diary of when
your headaches occur, along
with ·any triggers, and share
the information with your
chiropractic physician.
5. See Your Chiropractor:
Make an appointment with
your chiropractic physician
to specifically discuss your
headache.
6. Be a Partner in Your
Headache
Ca.re:
Be
informed, be a participant in
your treatment and an advocate for your headache care.
7.
Education: . Stay
appraised of the latest
headache news and treatment options .

I

'f

Wednesday, July II , from have fuJI ,. healthy and pro1:30 to
4:30
p.m. ductive lives. The goal is to
Participants should attend offer informa~ion that will
both sessions of the classes. help people ·With diabetes
The class sessions will be make positive choices about
held in the hospital's lower their lifestyle and diabetes
level room 008.
management. Nakanishi
The program, which is · wi II be joined by Susan
recognized by the American Wakefield, RN, BSN, and
Diabetes
Association, Rachael Adeyanju, RN,
assures hlgh-quality educa- BSN, from O'Bleness' edution for patient self-care. cation department, to lead
Sessions are ·designed to the
class
sessions.
provide education and man- Resources and educational
agement skills to individu- . literature .will be available
als with tliabetes so they can at the classes. ·

\&lt; l

l

es

And Enjoy The Sounds Of... .

POOBAH .

.
Triple Threat

Saturday, June 9111

Frldav. June151h

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SouthBound
Sablnlll. June 23nl

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Monclay- 5~ Drafl
Wednesday- Mens Night -Pool tournament
$5.00 entry 8 pm- ~off all drinks 10pm- 2am
Tbul'lday- Ladies Night w/D~
$1 .00 cover 9pm- ·2am
5~ off all drinks - 10pm- 2am

CR 7 A • Po1me1•ov.

Et:ldll! - Karaoke every other Friday
June 8th &amp; June 22nd
Saturday - Live Bands
Sunday- $1 .00 Beer • $1 .25 Coronas

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~;,"'."" ....t:OCATO'Ff M~P
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1

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...~Y .;~en~1n~I
Your Ads Will Run

Wednesday, June 20
Thursday, June 21
Friday, June 22

1\Jesday, June 12
POMEROY -· Bedford .
Township Trustees regular
meeting, 7 p.m ., town hall.
Wednesday, June 13
POMEROY Meigs
County Board of Health, 5
p.m., conference room.
Meigs County Health
Department.
·

Clubs and
organizations .
Saturday, June 9
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville
Masonic
Lodge 411 , 8 a.m. 1at the hall
for work in the Master
Mason degree.
Sunday, June 10
PORTLAND - Sunshine
Circle Family Picnic at I
p.m., McKelvey Ri ver
Camp, ham, drinks, paper
products provided by host.
thgse attending bring covered dish, lawn chair.
1\Jesday, June 12
. POMEROY - Meig s
County
Chamber
of
Commerce, business-minded
luncheon;
noon,
Pomeroy Library, speaker
Shawn
Mallett
from
Voinovich Center for Small
Business
Development,
Bun's Party Bani catering,
call 992-5005 to RSVP.
WedneSdl!y, June 13
MIDDLEPORT
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, will
have a picnic an meeting at

•

; ..... , '

•I

DEADLINE
Monday
.June 18

on a Special Pullout Page.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street .
Pomeroy, ~hio 45631
740-992-2155

JACKSON- With a minor rehabilitation project of U.S. 35 in Jackson
County under way, contractors for the
Ohio Department of Transportation
be imparting additional lane
restrictions in the coming week.
Crews from Shelly and Sands Inc. ·
will .be reducing westbound 35 to
one lane between the 1.69 and 8.35mile markers, from just east of

will

Township Road 216 (Springer) to
just east of County Road 71 (Llbyds
Bridge), for milling and paving
operations. Currently, the contractors are working along the shoulder
of the route in the westbound· direction, and eastbound U.S . 35 is
already reduced to one lane.
Although a date to do so has yet to
be established. the additional lane

I p.m . at the Waterworks.
Park
in
Pomeroy.
Members are to take a covered dish and their own
drink. For more information call Lee Young, 304882 -2 373
or
Debra
Krautter, 992-5781 .
Thursday, June 14
CHESTER
- Shade
River Lodge #453 will hold
its monthly stated meeting
at 7:30 p.m. All Master
Masons
in vited.
Refreshments follow.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 to meet at 7
p.m. Dinner at 6:30p.m.

Church events
Friday, June 8
LONG BOTIOM
Gospel. sing at Faith Full
Gospel Church. 7 p.m:
Saturday, June 9
DEXTER
- Wiener
roast, 7 p.m. , Old Dexter
Church. Bring lawn chair.
Sunday, June 10
POMEROY - The Rev.
Allen Midcap will be
preaching at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodi st Church.
10:30 a.m . and 6 p.m. services.
·
Monday, June II
POINT
ROCK
Vacation Bible School will
be held at the Point Rock
Church of the Nazarene
located on route 689 near
Wilkesville, 6 to 8:30 p.m .
June 11-15. Theme will be
"Tumbleweed
Gulch.
Where God's Love Changes
Everything."

River Sweep sites
for Meigs County

POMEROY - Plans are
moving forward for Mei~s
County's participation m
the 2007 Ohio River
Sweep to be held on
Saturday June 16.
Raina · Fulks, Leading
Creek
Watershed
Coordinator, said the
Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District is
organizing three locations
in Meigs County this year.
Volunteers are to meet at .9
a.m. at all three locadtions
~ in Pomeroy in the
amphitheater area in . the
riverside parking lot; in
Racine at Star Mill Park on
St. Rt. 124; and in a new
location, Portland where
volunteers are to meet at the
Portland Community Center
on St. Rt. 124:
Fulks said volunteers will
be served food at noon and
receive a new River Sweep
T-shirt for takipg part in the
River Sweep. She encourA physician's written aged participation by indireferral using 0' Bleness'
Diabetes Self- Management
Therapy referral form is
required to attend the program.
GALLIPOLIS - Sarah
For more i11[ormarion or
Roush
will offer a summer
for assistance with tire
installment
of classes in balreferral process, call Barb
let,
modem,
and jazz, beginNaka11ishi at (740) 566ning
Monday,
June II , and
4870. The diabetes . educaaccepting
students
as. young
tioll classes are held quarterly. Nakanishi call also as three.
Participants may register
provide i11[ormation about
the dates a11d times offuture 4 to 6 p.m on Friday in The
Ariel-Dater Hall front halL
clas.,·es.
Those 'llnable to attend the
registration · session, may

vidual or groups, noting
thadt trash bags and .other
supplies will be provided.
Since release forms need ·ro
be filled out they can be
secured in advance at the
Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation Dj.strict in
Pomeroy. or filled out at the
sites on the day of th event.
This will be the 19th
Annual Ohio River Sweep,
a riverbank cleanup that
extends the. entire length of
the Ohio River and
beyond. All counties along
the Ohio River participate
in this .extensive day of
cleaning up litter: :
Other partners of the 2007
Ohio River Sweep include
the Ohio River Valley Water
Sanitation
Commission
(ORSANCO), the Village of
Pomeroy, Village of Racine,
Village
of
Portland,
Portland'
Community
Center, Lebanon Townsh.ip
Trustees, and the Meigs
Transfer Station.

Summer dance classes at Ariel

Restrictions in place on U.S. 35

eOutToGood

Public meetings

O'Bleness offering diabetes education class
: ATIIENS - For individuals newly diagnosed with
diabetes, or those who are
struggling with the disease,
O'Bieness
Memorial
ijospital offers diabetes selfmanagement training classes.
~ An individual assessment
prior to the classes is
required and is done by
Barb Nakanishi, RD, LD,
CDE, 0' Bleness' registered
dietitian/certified diabetes
educator. The two class sessions are scheduled . for
~uesday, July 10, and

2007.

Community Calendar

National headache awareness week being served

l

'

.BY THE BEND

PageA3

Time for this sort to starid on his own
BY JIM KRANE

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•

ANNIE'S MAILBOX.

Police say man charged in girl's
disappearance may have had
relationships with other girls
BY STEPHANIE REITZ

The Daily Sentinel

call the Ariel -Dater Hall
box office at 740-446-2787,
. and leave a message with
·student contact information
and age.
Summer dance classes
, will be held on Monday and
Tuesday evenings at The
Ariel-Dater
Hall.
Additional summer class
offerings include yoga, ballroom dancing, and acting.

WANT TO FEEL YOUNG AGAIN?

restrictions will be impartt;d during the
week of June II . Throughout construction traffic will be maintained in .
at least one lane in each direction, and
a reduced speed limit will be in effect.
.Shelly and Sands of Zanesville was
awarded a contract in the amount for
$4.03 million to resurface 35, and the
completion date for the entire project
is Oct, 31 , 2007.

Students receive
: scholarships

OPEN HOUSE

: POMEROY - Five area
Students were among the 28
first and second year students at Hocking College
awarded $1,000 from the
JOMc Scholarship fund.
: Receiving scholarship
l~Ward~
were Matthew
Ashcraft, Albany, . nursing;
Sandra ,Forester, Racine,
office management; Dustin
Jackson, Albany, e-commerce and design; Meghan
Raines, Albany, nursing;
tammy Richards, Racine,
Qfftce management.

2pm 7 4pm

June 10, 2007

Low back pain
Leg pain
Headaches

Neck pain
Pain associated
with Anhritis

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

24959 Apple Grove Dorcas
Racine, Ohio ·

Come Take A lJook!!!
Hosted by:
Wendi Miller, Sales Agent
· Teaford ·Real Estate
Broker: G. Bruce Teaford
Office Number: 740-992-3325 · Agent Number: 740-416-4015
to schedule a
tour of this home.
*Contact

316 Washington St.

Ravenswood, WV

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

•

•

�PageA2

NATION •WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June 8, 2007

HARTFORD, Conn. -A
girl who vanished a year
ago and was found hidden
in a room in a man's home
assumed a new identity that
made her part of his family,
· authorities said Thursday, as
they investigated whether
the man had inappropriate
relationships with her and
other girls.
The man, Adam Gault, 41,
was . arrested and charged
Wednesday in her . disappearance after police served
a search warrant and found
the missing 15-year-old girl
locked in a hidden closetlike room in his house. The
girl, who had a history of
running, away from home,
vanished a year ago.
. Gault, a dog trainer, was
arrested with two women
· who lived in the house, 40year-old Ann Murphy and
Kimberly Cray, 26. The
three
were
arraigned
Thursday, charged with conspiracy to commit unlawful
restraint, conspiracy to commit risk of injury to a minor
and interfering with police.
Gault's bond was set at $1
million. Murphy, whom
police described as Gault's
common-law wife, was held
on $750,000 bond. Cray's
bond was set at $500,000.
Gault's attorney, Frank
Canace, could not be reached
for comment; a number for
his office was disconnected.
Police said the girl later ran
away from home and moved
in with Gault, who lives in
nearby West Hartford and
worked.with the girl's stepfather years ago.
Since Gault's arrest, the
department has received
multiple calls from people
inside and outside the state
who claim · Gault abused
them, Blatter said.
"We are looking into all
of those now," he said.
Cray's . attorney, Michael
Georgeni, told reporters that
before the girl disappeared,
· she reported to police she had
been sexually abused, though ·
he said no arrests were made.
Bloomfield police · said
Gault filed a sexual· abuse
complaint on her behalf that
said she had been abused by
a family friend before she
· vanished in 2006. There ·
was insufficient evidence
and the complaint was
closed, Bloomfield police
Capt. Jeffrey Blatter said . .
Georgetti said Cray and
the others were offering the
girl a safe haven. She lived
in Gault's house for a year,
attended school and owned
a ·cell phone, Georgetti
said. He said that she was
hiding
from
police
Wednesday but was otherwise free to come and go.
"If you were taking
actions to prevent someone
from being abused, that is·
not a crime," Georgetti said.
"We can protect animals
from abuse. I think we
should be able to protect
children from abuse."
West Hartford police Capt.
Lori Coppinger, however,
said the grrl was not attending
school
and
disputed
Georgetti's claim that the teen
had been offered safe haven.

BY KAnrt MITCHELL
AND MARcY 5uuR

"Information that we
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
have would lead us in
another direction as to what
MUSCAT, Oman
her welfare was at this
People
dragged soaked bedtime," she said.
and
carpets from
ding
Investigators believe the
homes
Thursday
after
girl sometimes traveled out
Cyclone
Gonu
's
winds
blew
of state and assumed a new
identity while living with down trees and power lines
Gault, of nearby West and its rains sent torrents of
Hartford, Blatter said. The water and mud surging
FBI is investigating the out- through Oman's seaside
capital, a city often called
of-state travels.
"She was compelled to the Arab world's tidiest.
After pummeling noimaluse a new name, to assume
ly
hot and dry , Oman and
a new identity," Blatter told
Iran's
southeastern coast,
The Associated Press. "She ,
Gonu
weakened
to a tropical
did assume a name that
storm
and
was
expected
to
would suggest she was part
dissip,
a
te
into
a
rainstorm
by
of that family."
The Associated Press is . Thursday night as it moved
not identifying her because over the sea towar~ Iran. At
police are investigating if. least 28 people w.ere dead,
she was sexually abused. most of them in Oman, and
Authorities did not say how 26 were missing.
The storm spared the
she altered her name.
region's
oil installations,
Other girls may have
and
oil
prices
dipped on
experienced "something
very similar to what's going world markets.
Cleanup crews fanned out
on right now with this young
across
Muscat. Bulldozers
girl" found Wednesday,
scrape(;I
away layers of mud
Coppinger said.
and
rocks
that washed down
The girl's stepfather told
from
·
the
mountains when
WCBS-TV in an interView
heavy
rllin
flooded canyons
Thwsday that her mother had
and
dry
riverbeds
Wednesday
been allowed to spend a few
night.
Soldiers
pumped
water
hours with her Wednesday.
from
low-lying
roads.
"She's having some
While many people began
issues," he said of the girl.
cleaning
out soggy houses,
"She didn't even know who
others
searched
for cars and
she Was."
The girl's stepfather said other vehicles . that floated
family members, who own a away in the roiling waters.
kennel and dog day care in Grassy fields lay under sevBloomfield, had limited eral feet of water, and lush
information about what had palm and eucalyptus groves
happened to the girl in the were flattened.
Strong waves still battered
year she was gone.
a
beachfront normally
"Every parent's ni~ht­
thronged
with European
mare was mine," the gtrl's
tourists,
and
the usually
mother told reporters
sparkling
blue
sea
resembled
Thursday. "I can · never
a
foamy
chocolate
milk.
describe the horror of losing
People
told
of
spending
a
a child and having to maintain a family at the same night m fear as turgid water
time and having to·go on." flooded their homes, carryThe teen had no obvious ing away refrigerators. and
external
injuries. furniture and leaving streets
Investigators would not gouged ·by sinkholes and
speculate on what she might caked in mud.
"The water broke through
have experienced during the
past year or if she was held the walls. It came inside the
house. It swept everything
against her will.
Blatter said the girl out," said Nidhal airemained in protective cus- Masharafi, 31, who spent .
tody Thursday so investi~a­ the night on his rooftop with
tors could continue talking his wife and six children.
He said he found his 2006
with her.
Subaru
Outback a half mile
Police said they had
away
sitting
atop a taxi.
already established that Gault
"The
capital,
Muscat,
knew. the missing girl, and
said he and the girl's parents became a lake," said a
had some sort of undisclosed spokesman for the Oman·
business transaction in the · Royill Police, Abdullall ai_year before she disappeared. Harthi.
Gonu was downgmded to a
Cell phone records
showed that Gault and the tropical depression Thursday
teen talked often before she and ir was rapidly losing enervanished, Blatter told CNN. gy as it moved across the Gulf
''There was an inordinate of Oman toward han.
amount of contact via' cellu- Forecasters said it should
lar phone and then, during weaken into a tropical depresfollow ups, there were a lot sion before reaching land.
The storm was expected ·
of other circumstances that
led ·us to believe there was to spare Iran's offshore oil
an inappropriate relatione installations, which lie more
.ship," he satd.
than 120 miles to the west,
Officers had questioned oil officials and the U.S.
Gault several times, but he military's Joint Typhoon
always denied any involve- Warning Center said.
ment in her disappearance.
Despite earlier predictions
They served .a search war- the storm could disrupt the
rant on his home Wednesday oil market, an\(lysts said
morning, seeking a DNA Thursday that its impact on
sample and other evidence. prices was minimal, with
The girl was held in a most of the upward movelocked tiny room, about 3 ment occurring when the
feet high and 4 to. 5 feet news broke that Gonu was
deep. The doorway was hid- · headed toward Oman.
den by '!bureau.
. "By now the whole thing

.

. AP plloto

An Omani wades through floodwater in Muscat, Oman, where residents were recovering
from the destruction following Cyclone Gonu, which battered Oman's coast on its path
toward the world's most important crude oil tanker route.
must have calmed down,
because the storm passed
through .... The impact was
when the nt;ws (frrst) came
out. Now the people have
forgotten about that," said
Manouchehr Takin, an analyst at the London-based
Center for Global Energy
Studies.
The price for Brent crude
fell after confrrmation that
Oman's main oil port didn't
sustain major damage. In
London, July Brent crude ,
futures dropped 17 cents to
$70.85 a barrel on the ICE
Futures exchange.
The hanian state-owned
Shana oil and energy news
Web site said Iran would
stop operations at two offshore platforms as a precaution, but there were no
reports of difficulties at
Iranian oil installations.
"Everything is running as
usual," Bahram Narimanian,
spokesman
of ' Iran's

Offshore Oil Company, told
The Associated Press.
The storm's sustained
winds had declined to 41
mph, less than half the 95
mph . recorded Wednesday,
the Joint Typhoon Warning ·
Center said.
Even with the weaker
wind, Gonu was believed to
be the strongest cyclone to
hit Oman since record. keeping started in 1945.
At least 25 Gonu-related
death were reported ·in
Oman, including members
of police rescue squads, and
26 others were reported
missing, said al-Harthi, the
police spokesman. Rescue
teams were searching for
victims using helicopters
and boats, he said.
Iranian state TV's Web
site said two government
workers taking emergency ,
supplies to a flooded area
were killed Wednesday
when a river overfl~wed and

flipped their truck in Jask. A
third Iranian died in the port
city of Bandar Abbas from a
car accident blamed on low
visibility from the. bad
weather, state TV said.
More than 20,000 people
were evacuated Wednesda)l
from their homes in Oman
and were provided with government dwellings .stocked
with food, water, medicine
and other supplies.
.
. Royal Oman Police sent
text messages to mobile
phones urging people to
stay inside, said Brind~
Toprani, an architect from
India who was visiting her
parents in Muscat.
In Iran, authorities evacu~
ated hundreds in the port of
Chabahr · on Wednesday
because of the heavy rains.
Although the storm subsided
into light rain and breezes
Thursday, authorities warned
people to 'stay away from the
sho~ overnight to be safe.

Ifida

1:11811
ill•i
PLAN NOW TO
BE A PART OF IT
WITH .OUR
COUNTY ·WIDE
YARD'SALE
PACKAGE

; Dear Annie: Three years
ago, I married the woman
of ;my dreams. However,
bel' children have been anything but.
· We each had a home so
we moved into her h~use
and rented mine. That
worked fine for a while,
then the renters moved and
her son needed a place to
stay with his young child.
We rented the home to him
for well below market
value, since he didn't have a
decent job. That was two
years ago. Eight months
ago, he accepted a position
that affords him more luxuries, so now this young man
has remarried, bought two
new cars and has another
baby on the way.
.
My
wife
and
I
agreed
it
1
was
time to raise the rent,
but her son became upset.
He said he couldn't believe
we would do this, since he
just got married and his new
wife will soon be quitting
her job to care for the new
baby. My wife then
promised him we wouldn't
raise the rent, but she dido 't
bother talking to me about it
first. Now I'm upset,
because I think we '·ve done
enough and it's time her son

Friday, June 8,

stands on his own. My wife
and I have not spoken for
the last three days. I think
she is letting her son 'take
advantage of us. I want my
rental back and my wife ,
and I'm open to suggestions. Could Live
Anywhere in the USA
Dear
Could
Live
Anywhere: Of course you
shouldn't be subsidizing a
gainfully employed man .
who is married with children. And your wife should
not be making unilateral
decisions, but this is her son,
and it is not wise to force her
to choose bet ween you. Do
you need the money? What
about a smaller increase'!
Discuss the possibilities
with your wife. without rancor or blame. Explain how it
complicates matters when
she makes separate arrangements. Decide, together.
what is fair, and approach
your stepson as a united
front.
·
Dear Annie: I have been
involved in church activities
for over 30 years. Every
minister I have ever worked
with has said · he does not
want to know who tithes
what, because it might lead
to preferential treatment for
bigger donors.
My church's minister has
· now decided that because

attendance is down, he
needs to know who is giving what. I think this will
lead to favoritism and foster
ill will. This will result in
people leaving our church
(which I am considering).
Al so. some people give
cash, anonymously, and
some give of their time,
which we also desperately
need. How can we value
one over the other~
Can you ask the ministers
in your reading audience if
they need to know the
amount of each congregant 's tithing? And to
churchgoers. I'd ask, "Do
you want your minister
knowing the amount you
give?" - The Cash Giver
Dear Cash Giver: We can
think of no good reason for a
minister to demand this
information, but if we hear
differently from our readers,
we will let you know.
Dear Annie: I'm writing
in response tq "Mi sled and
Untrusting," whose husband
is a packmt. That could have
been my husband.
"Jim" saved used soda
cups and napkins, and the
ticket stubs to every movie
he· d eve r seen. After many
years, I started throwing his
trash out on my own, and he
never missed it. It took several years of sorting through

. GALLIPOLIS - !Jack to .
Health Chiropractic joins
Tb•: Not·•·i""' 1
The National Headache
Foundation in observing
National ,
Headache
Awareness Week. .
This year's theme is
"Seven Healthy Habits of ·
Headache Sufferers," in an
effort to provide practical
advice to headache sufferers
to reduce headache risk and
live life more fully when
affected by headaches.
. Back
to
Health
Chiropractic physicians Dr.
Nick Robinson and Dr.
,
Submitted plloto
thris Good recognize the
importance of treating Dr. Chris Good, left, and Dr. Nick Robinson of Back to Health
headache sufferers. "Our Chiropractic observe National Headache Awareness Week.
goal is to find the problem,
Foundation. He said it is
alleviate as much of the pain Iy feel pain relief."
as possible, and set you on a
The tips offered by the also critical for frequent
load to enjoy life more National
Headache headache sufferers to talk
their healthcare
f)Jily," said Robinson. Good Foundation can provide with
added, "We offer an individ- important stepping stones to provider about how to best
ualized treallilent plan for all reduce headache frequency ·manage their headaches.
The Seven Healthy Habits
our patients, headache suf- and severity," according
MD,
of
Headache Sufferers
Seymour
Diamond,
ferers included. Nothing
l)lakes us feel better thai) to Executive Chairman of the include ihe following tips
Headache that ca~ be easily incorposee one of our patients final- .National

hundreds of boxes, but I've
gotten rid of most of the
junk, and have talked him
into containing the rest in
his office.
Now he goes through the
trash to make sure I'm not
tossing out anything he can
"use," but instead of bringing the empty milk jugs and
cottage cheese containers
into the house, he throws
them in a pile in the backyard. Other than this, he's a
great guy. - Can't Win
the Junk War
Dear Can't Win: It
sounded good until we
thought about how much
the neighbors must love living next door to a pile of
empty milk jugs and cottage
cheese containers. But if
they aren't complaining,
neither are we.
A11nie 's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the An11 lAnders
column. Please e-mail your
questioiiS to anniesmailbox@comcast.llet, or write
to: Annie~~ Mailbox, P.O.
Box Jl8190, C?hicago, JL
606JJ. To find out more
about An11ie's Mailbox,
and read feaJures by other
Creators Syndicat11 writers
and cartoonists, Pisit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

rated' in sufferers'lives:
I . Diet: Eat regular meals,
. avoiding foods and drinks
that are known to trigger
headache attacks.
. 2. Sleep: Maintain a regular sleeping schedule, including weekends and vacations.
3. Stress: Implement
stress reduction techniques
· into your daily life.
4. Headache Diary: Keep
a headache diary of when
your headaches occur, along
with ·any triggers, and share
the information with your
chiropractic physician.
5. See Your Chiropractor:
Make an appointment with
your chiropractic physician
to specifically discuss your
headache.
6. Be a Partner in Your
Headache
Ca.re:
Be
informed, be a participant in
your treatment and an advocate for your headache care.
7.
Education: . Stay
appraised of the latest
headache news and treatment options .

I

'f

Wednesday, July II , from have fuJI ,. healthy and pro1:30 to
4:30
p.m. ductive lives. The goal is to
Participants should attend offer informa~ion that will
both sessions of the classes. help people ·With diabetes
The class sessions will be make positive choices about
held in the hospital's lower their lifestyle and diabetes
level room 008.
management. Nakanishi
The program, which is · wi II be joined by Susan
recognized by the American Wakefield, RN, BSN, and
Diabetes
Association, Rachael Adeyanju, RN,
assures hlgh-quality educa- BSN, from O'Bleness' edution for patient self-care. cation department, to lead
Sessions are ·designed to the
class
sessions.
provide education and man- Resources and educational
agement skills to individu- . literature .will be available
als with tliabetes so they can at the classes. ·

\&lt; l

l

es

And Enjoy The Sounds Of... .

POOBAH .

.
Triple Threat

Saturday, June 9111

Frldav. June151h

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Sablnlll. June 23nl

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Monclay- 5~ Drafl
Wednesday- Mens Night -Pool tournament
$5.00 entry 8 pm- ~off all drinks 10pm- 2am
Tbul'lday- Ladies Night w/D~
$1 .00 cover 9pm- ·2am
5~ off all drinks - 10pm- 2am

CR 7 A • Po1me1•ov.

Et:ldll! - Karaoke every other Friday
June 8th &amp; June 22nd
Saturday - Live Bands
Sunday- $1 .00 Beer • $1 .25 Coronas

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Wednesday, June 20
Thursday, June 21
Friday, June 22

1\Jesday, June 12
POMEROY -· Bedford .
Township Trustees regular
meeting, 7 p.m ., town hall.
Wednesday, June 13
POMEROY Meigs
County Board of Health, 5
p.m., conference room.
Meigs County Health
Department.
·

Clubs and
organizations .
Saturday, June 9
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville
Masonic
Lodge 411 , 8 a.m. 1at the hall
for work in the Master
Mason degree.
Sunday, June 10
PORTLAND - Sunshine
Circle Family Picnic at I
p.m., McKelvey Ri ver
Camp, ham, drinks, paper
products provided by host.
thgse attending bring covered dish, lawn chair.
1\Jesday, June 12
. POMEROY - Meig s
County
Chamber
of
Commerce, business-minded
luncheon;
noon,
Pomeroy Library, speaker
Shawn
Mallett
from
Voinovich Center for Small
Business
Development,
Bun's Party Bani catering,
call 992-5005 to RSVP.
WedneSdl!y, June 13
MIDDLEPORT
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, will
have a picnic an meeting at

•

; ..... , '

•I

DEADLINE
Monday
.June 18

on a Special Pullout Page.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street .
Pomeroy, ~hio 45631
740-992-2155

JACKSON- With a minor rehabilitation project of U.S. 35 in Jackson
County under way, contractors for the
Ohio Department of Transportation
be imparting additional lane
restrictions in the coming week.
Crews from Shelly and Sands Inc. ·
will .be reducing westbound 35 to
one lane between the 1.69 and 8.35mile markers, from just east of

will

Township Road 216 (Springer) to
just east of County Road 71 (Llbyds
Bridge), for milling and paving
operations. Currently, the contractors are working along the shoulder
of the route in the westbound· direction, and eastbound U.S . 35 is
already reduced to one lane.
Although a date to do so has yet to
be established. the additional lane

I p.m . at the Waterworks.
Park
in
Pomeroy.
Members are to take a covered dish and their own
drink. For more information call Lee Young, 304882 -2 373
or
Debra
Krautter, 992-5781 .
Thursday, June 14
CHESTER
- Shade
River Lodge #453 will hold
its monthly stated meeting
at 7:30 p.m. All Master
Masons
in vited.
Refreshments follow.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 to meet at 7
p.m. Dinner at 6:30p.m.

Church events
Friday, June 8
LONG BOTIOM
Gospel. sing at Faith Full
Gospel Church. 7 p.m:
Saturday, June 9
DEXTER
- Wiener
roast, 7 p.m. , Old Dexter
Church. Bring lawn chair.
Sunday, June 10
POMEROY - The Rev.
Allen Midcap will be
preaching at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodi st Church.
10:30 a.m . and 6 p.m. services.
·
Monday, June II
POINT
ROCK
Vacation Bible School will
be held at the Point Rock
Church of the Nazarene
located on route 689 near
Wilkesville, 6 to 8:30 p.m .
June 11-15. Theme will be
"Tumbleweed
Gulch.
Where God's Love Changes
Everything."

River Sweep sites
for Meigs County

POMEROY - Plans are
moving forward for Mei~s
County's participation m
the 2007 Ohio River
Sweep to be held on
Saturday June 16.
Raina · Fulks, Leading
Creek
Watershed
Coordinator, said the
Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District is
organizing three locations
in Meigs County this year.
Volunteers are to meet at .9
a.m. at all three locadtions
~ in Pomeroy in the
amphitheater area in . the
riverside parking lot; in
Racine at Star Mill Park on
St. Rt. 124; and in a new
location, Portland where
volunteers are to meet at the
Portland Community Center
on St. Rt. 124:
Fulks said volunteers will
be served food at noon and
receive a new River Sweep
T-shirt for takipg part in the
River Sweep. She encourA physician's written aged participation by indireferral using 0' Bleness'
Diabetes Self- Management
Therapy referral form is
required to attend the program.
GALLIPOLIS - Sarah
For more i11[ormarion or
Roush
will offer a summer
for assistance with tire
installment
of classes in balreferral process, call Barb
let,
modem,
and jazz, beginNaka11ishi at (740) 566ning
Monday,
June II , and
4870. The diabetes . educaaccepting
students
as. young
tioll classes are held quarterly. Nakanishi call also as three.
Participants may register
provide i11[ormation about
the dates a11d times offuture 4 to 6 p.m on Friday in The
Ariel-Dater Hall front halL
clas.,·es.
Those 'llnable to attend the
registration · session, may

vidual or groups, noting
thadt trash bags and .other
supplies will be provided.
Since release forms need ·ro
be filled out they can be
secured in advance at the
Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation Dj.strict in
Pomeroy. or filled out at the
sites on the day of th event.
This will be the 19th
Annual Ohio River Sweep,
a riverbank cleanup that
extends the. entire length of
the Ohio River and
beyond. All counties along
the Ohio River participate
in this .extensive day of
cleaning up litter: :
Other partners of the 2007
Ohio River Sweep include
the Ohio River Valley Water
Sanitation
Commission
(ORSANCO), the Village of
Pomeroy, Village of Racine,
Village
of
Portland,
Portland'
Community
Center, Lebanon Townsh.ip
Trustees, and the Meigs
Transfer Station.

Summer dance classes at Ariel

Restrictions in place on U.S. 35

eOutToGood

Public meetings

O'Bleness offering diabetes education class
: ATIIENS - For individuals newly diagnosed with
diabetes, or those who are
struggling with the disease,
O'Bieness
Memorial
ijospital offers diabetes selfmanagement training classes.
~ An individual assessment
prior to the classes is
required and is done by
Barb Nakanishi, RD, LD,
CDE, 0' Bleness' registered
dietitian/certified diabetes
educator. The two class sessions are scheduled . for
~uesday, July 10, and

2007.

Community Calendar

National headache awareness week being served

l

'

.BY THE BEND

PageA3

Time for this sort to starid on his own
BY JIM KRANE

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•

ANNIE'S MAILBOX.

Police say man charged in girl's
disappearance may have had
relationships with other girls
BY STEPHANIE REITZ

The Daily Sentinel

call the Ariel -Dater Hall
box office at 740-446-2787,
. and leave a message with
·student contact information
and age.
Summer dance classes
, will be held on Monday and
Tuesday evenings at The
Ariel-Dater
Hall.
Additional summer class
offerings include yoga, ballroom dancing, and acting.

WANT TO FEEL YOUNG AGAIN?

restrictions will be impartt;d during the
week of June II . Throughout construction traffic will be maintained in .
at least one lane in each direction, and
a reduced speed limit will be in effect.
.Shelly and Sands of Zanesville was
awarded a contract in the amount for
$4.03 million to resurface 35, and the
completion date for the entire project
is Oct, 31 , 2007.

Students receive
: scholarships

OPEN HOUSE

: POMEROY - Five area
Students were among the 28
first and second year students at Hocking College
awarded $1,000 from the
JOMc Scholarship fund.
: Receiving scholarship
l~Ward~
were Matthew
Ashcraft, Albany, . nursing;
Sandra ,Forester, Racine,
office management; Dustin
Jackson, Albany, e-commerce and design; Meghan
Raines, Albany, nursing;
tammy Richards, Racine,
Qfftce management.

2pm 7 4pm

June 10, 2007

Low back pain
Leg pain
Headaches

Neck pain
Pain associated
with Anhritis

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

24959 Apple Grove Dorcas
Racine, Ohio ·

Come Take A lJook!!!
Hosted by:
Wendi Miller, Sales Agent
· Teaford ·Real Estate
Broker: G. Bruce Teaford
Office Number: 740-992-3325 · Agent Number: 740-416-4015
to schedule a
tour of this home.
*Contact

316 Washington St.

Ravenswood, WV

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

•

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�.'

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2166 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentlnel.com

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

Congress shall make 110 laav respecting an
establislrme11t of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of tire press; or the right of the
people peaceably to a$scmble, and to petition
tire Government for a redrrss of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. June 8. the !59th day of 2007. There are
.206 days left in the year.
Today\ Highl ight in History:
.
On June X, A.D. 632. the prophet Mohammed d1ed.
On this date:
(n IS45, Andrew Jackson. seventh president of the
United States, died in Nashville, Tenn.
.
In 1861 , Tennessee seceded from the Union.
In 1864. Abrahani Lincoln was nominated for another
term as president during the National Union (Republican)
Party's convention in Baltimore.
In 1905. President Theodore Roosevelt offered to act as a
med iator in the, Russo-Japanese War.
'
In 1915, Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan
resigned in a disagreement with President Wilson over U.S.
hamlling of the sinkingof the Lusitania.
In 1953, the Supreme Conn, in District of Columbia v.
Thompson Co., ruled that .restaurants in the District of
Columbia could not refuse to se rve blacks.
In 1966, a merger was announced between the National
Football League and the American Football League, to take
effect in 1970.
In 1967, 34 U.S. servicemen were killed when Israeli
forces raided the Liberty,' a Navy ship stationed in t·he
Mediterranean. (Israel called the attack a tragic mistake. )
lri 1978, a jury in Clark County. Nev., ruled the so-called
"Mormon will," purportedly written by the late billionaire.
Howard Hughes, was a forgery.
One year ago: The Food and Drug Administration
approved a vaccine against HPV, the virus that causes cervical cancer. Sheikha Haya Rashed AI Khalifa, a lawyer
from Bahrain, was elected UN General Assembly president, the first woman from the Middle East to take the post.
Today's Birthdays: Former President Suharto of
Indonesia is 86. Former First Lady Barbara Bush is 82.
Actor-comedian Jerry Stiller is 80. Comedian -Joan Rivers
is 74. Actress Millicent Martin is 73. Actor James Darren is
71. Actor Bernie Casey is 68. Singer Nancy Sinatra is 67.
Singer Chuck Negron (Three Dog Night) is 65. Musician
Boz Scaggs is 63. Actor Don Grady is 63. Rock musician
Mick Box (Uriah Heep) is 60. Author Sara Paretsky is 60.
Actress Sonia Braga is 57. Actress Kathy Baker i's 57.
Country musician Tony Rice is 56. Singer Bonnie Tyler is
54. Actor Griffin Dunne is 52. "Dilben" creator Scott
Adams is 50. Actor-director Keenen Ivory Wayans is 49.
Singer Mick Hucknall (Si mply Red) is 47. Musician Nick
Rhodes (Duran Duran) is 45. Rhythm-and-blues singer
Doris Pearson (Five Star) is 41. Actress Julianna Margulies
is 40. Actor Dan Futterman is 40. Actor David Sutcliffe is
38. Rhythm-and-blues singer Nicci Gilbert is 37. Actress
Kelli Williams is 37. Actor Mark Feuerstein is 36.
Contemporary Christian musician Mike Scheuchzer
(Mercy Me) is 32. Rapper Kanye West is 29. Folk-bluegrass
singer-musician Safll Watkins (Nickel Creek) is 26.
Thought for Today : 'The most valuable of all talents is
that of never using two words _when one will do." Thomas J efferson, third President of the United States
( 1743-1826).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

OPINION

I

Friday, June 8,

Fathers and church
When it comes to who
fills the · pews, every
Sunday is Mother's Day in
most mainstream American
churches.
And what about Father's
Terry
. Day? That can be a touchy
Mattingly
subject for pastors in an era
in which men who religiously avoid church out. number active churchmen
rou ghly three to one. the National Mall - . one of
Worship just doesn't work the largest gatherings of
for millions of ordinary any kind in American history.
guys.
No one involved in
"What churches are doing
isn't getting the job done. national men's ministries
Mom is having to take the believes that those stats
kids to church because Dad have improved. That's one
doesn 't want to go," said reason why a nondenomiMarc~·rrier. co-author, national coalition wants to
with his wife, Cynthia, of hold a "Stand in the Gap
"The
Values-Driven 2007" rally on .Oct. 6, hpping to gather 250,000 men
Family."
the
Washington
"That leaves Mom in at
charge · of . the . spiritual Monument and on the
upbringing of the children, Ellipse, just south of the
wbich means faith is a White House.
Mom thing and not a Dad · The American numbers
thing. ... So why is little · are sobering, nofed Carrier,
Johnny - who is 25 and but they are nowhere near
has his first child on the as stunning as another set of
way, whether he's married statistics in an essay entior not - n~ver in church? tled "The Demographic
The odds are that his father Characteristics of the
Linguistic and Religious,
was never in church."
attendance Groups in Switzerland,"
Church
among men had already published in 2000 in a volfallen to 43 percent in 1992, ume covering trends in sevaccording to the Barna. eral European nations. The
. Group, which specializes in numbers that trouble tradiresearching trends among tionalists came from a 1994
Evangelicals. Then that survey in which the Swiss
number crashed to 28 per- government tried to detercent in 1996, the year mine how religious pracbefore the Promise Keepers tices are carried down from
movement held its ·~stand generation to generation.
Apparently, if a father
in the Gap" rally that drew
a million or more men to . and mother were both faith'

.

ful churchgoers, 33 percent
of their 'children followed
their example, with another
· 41 percent attending on an
irregular basis and only a
quarter shunning church
altogether.
But what happened if the
father had little or no faith?
If the father was ·semiactive and the mother was a
faithful worshipper, only 3
percent of their children
became active church members and 59 percent were
irr~gular in their worship
attendance - with the rest
· lost to the church aliogether.
If the father never went to
church, while the mother
was faithful, only 2 percent
of !he children became regular churchgoers and 37
percent were semi-active.
Thus, more than 60 percent
were lost.
This trend continued in
other survey results, noted
Carrier. The bottom line
was clear. If a father didn't
go to church. only one child
in 50 became a faithful
churchgoer - no matter
how strong the mother's
faith.
"These numbers are old
and
they · are
from
Switzerland, ·but they ' re the
only numbers that anyone
has,"
said
Carrier.
"Someone needs to find a
way to do similar research
in America to see if the
same thing is· happening
here.
This is shocking stuff."
At the height of the
Promise Keepers move-

2007

The Daily Sentinel• Page~

www.mydailysentinel.com

·. Obituaries

·Alcoa-seeks federal OK on Alcan: takeover

PITISBURGH . (A P) in a statement. 'Today's fil- would consider a sweet- The offer expires on July
Alcoa Inc. has asked regula- ing demonstrates our com- ened buyout offer from 10, but is su bject to extentors to approve its proposed mitment to prompt satisfacc Aicoa, or that it may even sion, Alcoa said .
. BONNYMAN, Ky.
Mrs.
hosti le
takeover
of tion of regulatory require- try to turn the tables and
Alcan's
operations
Marcella Sue Harris Mitchell, 64.
Canadian aluminum rival ments and timely resolution acquire Alcoa instead.
include
a
plant
in
d1ed Thursday, June 7, 2007 of panAlcan Inc. for $27 billion.
of any regulatory issues."
Beida reiterated Alcoa's Ravenswood, W.Va., that it
creatic cancer with courage and grace
The
Pittsburgh-based
Alcan officials i:lid not position Wednesday: "We acquired when it bought
while. her family, with the suppon of
company said Wednesday immediately return a call are clearly the optimal pan- French aluminum producer
HoSQICe, was there by her side.
that it had tiled forms for for comment Wednesday.
ner for Alcan, bringing a Pechiney in 2003. Alcan
Su~ was the daughter of the late
antitrust clearance with the
Alcan last month rejected strong strategic rational and Rol!ed Products employs
Henry and Alafair Harris and was
Federal Trade Commission Alcoa's takeover offer as a significant synergy foot- about 1,100 people, making
born, March 23, 1943 in West
and the Department of inadequate, saying in a fil- print to this combination."
it the largest employer in
Virginia. Once married to Pat, her husJustice.
ing with the Securities and
Alcoa launched its cash- I Jackson County, W.Va.
band of 45 years who also survives
.Marcella Sue
"We remain fully commit- Exchange Commis.sion that and-stock bid for Alcan on
Alcoa share s fell 74 cents
. her, she lived in many different locaHarris Mitchell
ted to completing this trans- it was exploring other May 7, after almost two to $39.85 Wednesday.
iions iri Ohio and other states. Sue traveled to even more ac tion,"
Alcoa
Chief options.
years of pri vate talks failed Alcan shares droppe\1 87
places during her life and was always the schol;tr. Meigs Executive Alain Beida said
The company later said it to produce an agreement. cents to $83.45.
County 1s where Sue and Pat settled to raise their four children. They most recently resided in Bonnyman, Ky.
Sue will be missed by her large family and friends. She
was able to see a lot of these individuals before she passed
and was very surprised at her impact to the lives of many.
Sue was a true wife and a loving mother. We bid her a tear- BvTHOMASJ.SHEERAN
swollen. Doctors also noted
ful farewell, with the hope of greeting her with a happy
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER .
that her blood pressure was
"good morning" somewhere, sometime.
lower than usual.
Sue will be cremated in North Carolina, and her
CLEVELAND
(AP)- A look at the first surgery to begin sepa''They felt that it would
urn/remains will travel to Ohio with her immediate family. A Swelling in the brain of the
rating conjoined twins:
· not be safe to cut into the
memorial service will be held at 2 p.m., Sunday, June 10, larger, stronger girl halted
.brain ti ss ue or the surroundWHAT'HAPPENED: The surgery was halted after
2007 at Rutland Freewill Baptist Church. Sue requested lifesaving surgery to begin
ing blood vessels in any
II hours.
. instead of flowers, a contribution be made to a Duke Hospice separating 3-year-old conway. without first under·
WHY? Brain swelling and low blood pressure with
4321 Medical Park Dr, Ste 101 Durham, NC 27704. lfyou joined twins, but doc~ors
standing
the cause of the
one girl.
do choose to bring flowers, Sue wants her favorite, daisies.
and. the parents said
swelling
as well as the
WHAT NEXT? An MRI and angiogram to deterPlease note this is a celebration of Sue's spirit and life; Thursday they were detersl
ightly
low
blood presmine what caused the problems.
the black clothes of mourning are optional - Sue's favorite mined to keep tcying.
sure," Levitan said.
colors are blue and green. A plaque will be placed on a
"We remain hopeful that
SOURCE: Unlversltv Hospitals Rainbow Bablea &amp; Children's Hospital
The top of Tatiana's head
gravesite in Rutland, at Miles Cemetery, to mark Sue's we can help the twins but
is
attached to the back of
passing (the plaque will be adjacent to her son' s, John Mar
Anastasia's.
and they have
every
procedure
leads
to
cause
of
the
swelling,
then
The swelling wouldn ' t
Mitchell). A reception will follow the memorial service at
never
been
able to look
new deci sions and . that 's decide whether they could necessarily
change
Rutla11d Freewill Baptist Church.
true for this one as well,'' attempt the procedure again, prospects for future success, directly at each other.
said. Nathan Levitan, chief Levitan said.
The girls have already
he said. However. "if you
medical
officer
at
"Before the swelling can go back and the same prob- beaten the odds by living
University Hospitals Case be treated it's important to lems occur again, then you. th is long . Most twins
McARTHUR- Steven J. Stites, 57, McArthur, passed Medical Center and the understand what the cause have to reassess whether or joined at the head die at
leader of the Surgery team. is," Levitan said.
away Wednesday, June 6, 2007 at his residence.
how far you want.to pro- birth and just I0 percent
survive to age I0, accordBorn Feb. 10, 1950 in Mesa, Ariz., he was the son of Ida
When medications to
Asked if he still had the ceed,'' he said.
Mallett Stites of Salem, Ore. and the late Paul Stites.
reduce the swelling were cautious optimism he had
Because the girls are ing to the hospital.
Alin Dogaru, a Byzantine
He was a mechanic, a Vietnam Navy Veteran, life mem- ineffective Wednesday, doc-. expressed before the proce- linked, there may be a physber of the Amvets and member of the VFW and the Eagles. tors closed an· opening to dure, Levitan emphasized iological reason for the Catholic priest, and his
In addition to his mother, Steven is survived by five Tatiana and Anastasia that doctors understood all swelling, Goodrich said. wife, both 31, have said
daughters, April McGrath of Salem Ore., Angela Stites of Dogaru 's brains without along the twins were facing "There's a lot of physiolog- they view the separation
McArthur, Katie (Tony) Barnett of McArthur, Jarnie and starting to separate them.
a long, difficult ordeal.
ical dynamic going between 'surgeries as the girls' best
Stephanie Stites both of Grove City; nine grandchildren;
Parents Alin and Claudia
The surgery, one of four the two kids. In a sense, hope. They arrived in
five sisters, Patty (Jess) Ridgley of Bend, Ore., Brenda Dogaru said in a statement procedures planned over each of them is supporting Cleveland in April after 2
Stite~ of Bend, Ore., Regina Stites of Stewart, Cheryl Stites
released by the hospital that several months, lasted I I the other in one way or 1/2 years in Dallas.
of Salem, Ore. and Becky Stites of McArthur.
the. girls were doing fine.
hours.
"Even though no actual
another," he said.
In addition to his father, he was preceded in death by · "We know the doctors are
Dr. James Tait Goodrich
Anastasia~ who' has · no cutting into the brain tissue
two brothers, . Doug and Paul Stites and one sister, being cautious to keep the of New York's Montefiore kidney function , relies on was done yesterday some
Geraldine Stites.
girls safe. We want to thank Medical Center, who sepa- Tatiana's kidneys and very important information
A funeral service will be held at I I a.m., Monday, June you for your continued rated conjoined twins in would need a kidney trans- was gained and I think our
II, 2007 at the· Garrett-Cardaras Funeral 11ome, 20 I W. prayers," they said.
2004, said the halt showed plant after a separation.
physicians were gratified to
High Street, McArthur, with Father Don Maroon officiatknow
that information,"'
The blond twins, born in . the advantage of doing
After the plastic surgery
ing. Burial will be in Restla~n Cemetery in Salem, Ore. Italy to Romanian parents, . surgery in stages instead of · team
Levitan
said.
at
University
Friends may call from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. were awake and alert a marathon.
.
Twins born joined at the
Hospitals Rainbow Babies
on Sunday at the funeral home, with ~ VFW service being Thursday.
.
"You go as far as you can &amp; Children's Hospital head -.known as craniopa· conducted at 7:30p.m.
·
.
The medical team will go and you stop," said removed a section of bone, gus twins- are rare, occur. Please sign his online guestbook at www.cardaras.com.
conduct studies including Goodrich, who has consul.t- . doctors c\iscovered the prain ring in about .one in 2.5 milan MRI to determine the ed on the Dogaru case . .
tissue of Anastasia was lion births.

Marcella Sue Harris Mitchell

ment, researchers did study
one related trend in churches that began emphasizing
ministry to men, said the
Rev. Rick Kingham, president of the National
Coalition
of
Men's
Ministries, a network of
110 regional and national
groups.
Surveys found that if a
father made a decision to
becomea Christian, the rest
of the family followed his
example 93 percent of the
time. If a mother made a
similar decision, the rest of
the family embraced the
faith !?percent of the time,
he said.
" It seems that when a
man takes that kind of spiritua.l stand it usually affects
everyone else in the whole
constellation around him,
including his family and
even other men that he
knows," said Kingham,
· who is helping organize
Stand in the Gap 2007.
No one wants to minimize the importance of
faithful mothers, he said,
but it's clear that "fathers
play a unique and special
role in helping their children develop a living faith
- especially their sons ....
There's no way to deny
that."
(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Journalism Center at the
Council for Christian
Colleges arui Universities
and
leads
the
. GetReligion.org project to
study religion and the
news.)

... AND THE FREEZER HOLDS
UP TO $90,000 CASH.

Brain swelling stops surgery for conjoined twins
Swollen brain halts surgery

Steven J. Stites

Local Briefs

County Sheriff's Office and
Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney.
Sheets told
Stevens the ·commissioners
only_ approved the budgets
for these agencies.
"Any legal issues will
have to be handled through
the sheriff or prosecuting
attorney," Sheets said.
Jane Banks with the
Meigs County Department
of Job and Family Services
(-MCDJFS) presented con- ·
tracts for use of state certified day care centers. Banks
added t.he agency may not
use · the centers and this is
just an agreement should

services be required.
Commissioners approved
contracts with the following
state certified day care centers: Athens Church of
Christ Preschool, Athens;
Cara Hall Daycare Inc .,
Middleport;, French City
Child Care, Gallipolis;
Good Shepherd Family
Daycare,
Ravenswood,
W.Va., Hocking College
ELC, Nelsonville; Nova
Learning Center, Athens ;
Sycamore Run, The Plains;
T.J.'s
Child ·
Care,
Gallipolis; William and
Mary Kiddie Academy,
Wellston. The .rates vary at

Middleport,
Syracuse
Municipal Park, God's NET
and Southern Elementary
School. From II a.m. to 6
p.m., Mondays and Thesdays,
at the Rutland Civic Center;
from II a.m. to 6 p.m.,
Wednesdays and Thursdays,
Eastern Elementary School.

ABC and the "Healthy
Choice Rocks" summer
program is funded by the
Meigs County Department
of Job and Family Services
and is open to children of all
incomes.
Call 992-9121 for questions on the program.

available and then orders
from that list according to the
planned menus for the month
or other needs for senior citifrom PageA1
zens. "When what food they
to Beth Shaver, director of have fits into what we're
scheduled to serve and we
the Meigs County Council can order from there, it really
on Aging, commenting "it saves us a lot on the approxireally saves money for us mately $5,500 a month spent
because of the large number on food," she said. Over 200
of seniors we serve."
meals are home-c;lelivered
Shaver explained that once daily through the Meigs
a month the Center receives a· nutrition program.
list from the Community
She said once the order is
Action Agency on what is . placed, the Agency brings it

down to the Center where
t~e food is shelved, refrigerated or frozen in a large
walk-in freezer pun;hased
fqr the Center by the
Catholic Sisters who for
several years have made
grants for senior programs.

CDBG
from Page A1 .

Report available ,
MIDDLEPORT -Middleport Public Works has mailed
its consumer confidence reports. Those who did not receive
one but would like one may stop in the office tci pick it up.

Class reunion
POMEROY - The Meigs High School Class of 1977
will hold a class reunion on June 23 at the Pomeroy Gun
'club. Dinner will be served .at 7:30p.m. Class members
and teachers are invited, and are asked to call Paula
. Eichinger, at 992-1772, to register.

Immunization clinic

Can we afford more low-skilled immigrants?

The cynical coalition of
partisan
Democrats and
Letters In the editor are welcome. They should be less
greedy
businessmen
(the
:T/J(m 300 words. Allletrers are subjecT 10 . ediTing, musT be
latter bringing along a sigsi~ned, and include address and Teleplzone number. No
nificant
number
of
· w~sif?t!ed leTters will be published. LetTers 'should be in
Republicans,
including
·_ good rasTe. addressing issues, noT fJersonaliTies. Le/lers of
·Thanks 10 organizarions and individuals will nor be accepT- President -Bush) who are
backing the immigration
:ed j i&gt;r f'LihlicaTion.
"reform" bill have run into
a lot more serious opposition than they counted on.
As a result, the bill con·
tains some . tough proviReader Services
(UsPs 213-960) ·
sions that will be quietly
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
repealed within a· year or
Our main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
two after it has passed;
through Friday. 111 Court Street
be accurate. H you know of an error
and the American people
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
have gone back to .sleep.
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.
Member: The Associated Press and
Meanwhile, the coali- .
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tion
(which really jilsi
Postmaster: Send address correcOur .main number Is
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tens ·of millions
tions to The Dally SentineL 111 COurt
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more of cheap immigrant
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Department extensions are:
laborers to work for the
Subscription Rates
bu'sinessmen and vote for
By carrier or motor route
News
Democrats) is treating us
One month . , ...... .. .'1 0.27
Edl1or: Ch&lt;?r1ene Hoeflich, Ed. 12
to
a lot of soft music about
One year . ••. ... ,. . ...'1 15.84
Repor1er: Brian Reed . E)(t. 14
Dally ..................50'
how America was posiReporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. t 3
Senior Citizen rates
tively founded on hardOne month . ...• •.••• .'1 0.27
·working immigrants who
One year ............'1 03.90
Advertising .
were eager to do the jobs ·
Sttlscr'llefs should remit n aovance
Outside Silles: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 cireclt:lthe Daly Sentllel. No subscripthat· "Americans won't ·
Outside Sales: Brenda Davis. Ex116 tion by mail" permitted ·in areas Yotlere
do." It 's a heart-rending
home carrier SEif'\liCe is available.
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clarll, Ext. tO .
story, but exactly how
much benefit does this
Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
country derive · from the
General Manager
13 Weeks .............'32.26
Chanene Hoeflich. Ext . .12
millions upon millions of
26 Weeks .
. .. '64.20
immigrants,
legal and ille52 weeks ............ '127.11
E-mail:
gal, who have tlooded thi s
news@ mydailysentinel.com
Outside Meigs County
country si nce Sen . Ted
13 Weeks ......... 'I' ..' 53.55
Kennedy first opened the
26 Weeks .........•. ' 107.10
W!'b:
gates
back in I 965 (having
52 Weeks . .... . . ..... '214.21
www.rnydailysentinel.com
spearheaded "reform" that

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

, Friday, June 8, 20Q7

household
received). American tends to be a
Subtract their taxes from "net taxpayer" during his
their bene'fits, and it turns or her working year~ ·out that the 4.5 million that is to say, · pays the
low-skill
immigrant government more in taxes
in an than the cost of the serhouseholds
hauled
William
average $19,587 more in . vices he or she consumes . .
Rusher
benefits and services than Then, in retirement, we
they paid out in taxes.
become "net tax takers"
to
the - receiving more in beneAccording
Heritage study, that means fits than the taxes we pay.
eliminated national origin · that, to American taxpayNot so in the lucky
quotas)? .
ers, the net cost (benefits households of low-skilled
A recent study by the minus taxes) of low-skill immigrants! Whatever the
conservative think tank immigrant
households
Heritage Foundation sheds over the next I 0 years age · of the head of housesome astounding light on "will approach $1 tril- hold, the benefits received
this important question.
lion." (That's "trillion" by low-skilled immigrants
Today, there are approx· with a "t" ~ I ,000· bil- (i.e., those without high
imately 4.5 million house- lions.) That's a lot of school diplomas) "far
holds in the United States money for the American exceed" the taxes they
consisting of low-skilled people to shell out to swell pay. In fiscal 2004 alone,
immigrants, both legal and the ranks of Democratic their net haul was $89.1
i lie gal. According to voters ' and . provide busi- billion. And Rector and
Robert
Rector
and ness men with a huge Kim calculate that, assumChristine
Kim,
the intlux of cheap, largely ing an average adult life
·span of 60 years for each
Heritage analysts, these Mexican labor.
households paid an averJust how "low-skillec)" head of household, ·ihe
age of $10,573 in taxes in are these people? In the average lifetime cost to
fiscal 2004. Now, multi- adult U.S. population as a the taxpayers will be nearplied by 4.5 million, that's whole, the number lacking !y $1.2 million for every
a lot of money. But these . a high sc hool diploma is 9 low-skill household.
sa me low-skilled immi- percent. But according to
So taxpayers, · get ready
grants also received, in the Pew Hispanic Center, to show your compassion
government benefits and the figure · among legal if the current immigration
services. an average of immigrants is 25 percent. "reform" bill gets through
$30, 160 per household And among the more than Congress.
(w hich, incidentally, is . I 0 million illegal immi(William Rusher· is a
abo ut $10,000 more in grants already in the coun- Distinguished Fellow· of
services and benefits, try it is at least 50 percent. The ClaremonT Institute for
mostly welfare payments,
As .the Heritage study the Study of Statesmanship
than the 'average U.S. points out, the average . and Political Philosophy.)

emergency vehicles are out
of service. The Pomeroy
Volunteer Fire Department
purchased the squad with a
donation . and . separate
CDBG ''distress grant"
money obtained by· the
Village of Pomeroy. .
· Floyd Stevens of Chase
Road in Albany complained
to the commissioners about
the legal system in Meigs
County, including the Meigs

POMEROY -. The Meigs County Health Department will
hold a childhood immunization clinic from 9-ll a.m. and l3 p.m. on Tuesday at the health department. Bring child's
shot records. A $7 donation appreciated but not required.

Benefit auction planned
CHESTER -A pancake breakfast will be held from 8 to
II a.m. Saturday at the Chester Firehouse to benefit .the
Chester Academy .renovation program. This is a "matching
fund" project with the Modern Woodmen 37308 of Tuppers
Plains which will match all donations up to $2,500. The
money raised will go toward the heating, air conditioning,
plumbing and electricity in the building. ·

Marketing
from Page A1·
:Orleans Convention ad
Visito,s' Bureau; and Alben
Gaylor, VP of Industry
Relations and Diversity,
SYSCO
Corporation.
·students were also able to
meet and network with rep·
resentatives from companies like Nestle, the
Louisiana
Superdome,
Smuckers,
Vector
Marketing, Wal~reens, and
Harrah's Entenamment.
· During their stay. students
toured many of the New
Orleans attractions, including the French Quarter, vis-

:Sales tax
from PageA1
revenue from the state.
which is in its third year,
has also made the col!ec-

ited the Aquarium of the
Americas, and saw Saint
Louis Cathedral.
Money for traveling
expenses came from a vari,
ety of fund raisers and
donations from the Medical
Mutual of Ohio;~, the Ohio
Casualty Gro11p, the Evans
School of Business, and the
Rio Grande Teaching and
Learning Fund.
"This trip was an excellent oppo~unity for the students to learn more about
the field of marketing, while
professionally representing
the university and southeastern Ohio," said Thoene.
"It is my hope that we can
return to the conference
again next year." ·

Summer ·
from PageA1
The program's summer
schedule is as follows: II a.m.
to 6 p.m., Monday - Friday at
General Hartinger Park in

Food

ING~LS CARPET

SUMMER
CLEARANCE SALE

·Arut:L
ESTABLISHlD

t895

Ballet, Modern &amp; Jazz
Summer Dance Class
Classes Begin 6/11
Registration Fri. 6/8
4-6pm

"Steel Magnolias"

tion of sales tax a more
important source of local
revenue.
In 2005, the county's sales
tax
collections
were
$1,088, 139, the lowest point
in collections since the auditor began comparing them.

June 15-17

Vegas Legends Concert
with Dwight Icenhower 6/30
The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Galtip ~t;~ ~H
.ARTS

1 7

'

each establishment but are
said to be below the market
rate. The new contracts
begin on July I and end
June 30.
lenni
Dunham
was
approved as a parent representative ·to the Family and
Children First Council.
Commissioners approved
the transfer of $18,000 to
MCDJS account.
Commissioners approved
an animal claim of $250 for
Bryan L}'nch, Shade, where
a calf was killed by dogs.,

Little Boys Pet- Someone has
taken a 10 week old Black Lab
puppy from McCumber R~. on
the Dexter side. She answers to Rosie and
has been missing since Monday, June 4th
between 6 &amp; 6-:30 a.m.
If you have any information please call
1-740-742-2841 Reward Offered!

~nnua\ Kids Fishin9 .Derby
June 9th, Sam - l2pm .
At
Meigs County Fish &amp; Game--.......,
· .Free to Kids
0-15 Years
Door Prizes
Free Fopd &amp; Dri11k
Info Call

�.'

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2166 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentlnel.com

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

Congress shall make 110 laav respecting an
establislrme11t of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of tire press; or the right of the
people peaceably to a$scmble, and to petition
tire Government for a redrrss of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. June 8. the !59th day of 2007. There are
.206 days left in the year.
Today\ Highl ight in History:
.
On June X, A.D. 632. the prophet Mohammed d1ed.
On this date:
(n IS45, Andrew Jackson. seventh president of the
United States, died in Nashville, Tenn.
.
In 1861 , Tennessee seceded from the Union.
In 1864. Abrahani Lincoln was nominated for another
term as president during the National Union (Republican)
Party's convention in Baltimore.
In 1905. President Theodore Roosevelt offered to act as a
med iator in the, Russo-Japanese War.
'
In 1915, Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan
resigned in a disagreement with President Wilson over U.S.
hamlling of the sinkingof the Lusitania.
In 1953, the Supreme Conn, in District of Columbia v.
Thompson Co., ruled that .restaurants in the District of
Columbia could not refuse to se rve blacks.
In 1966, a merger was announced between the National
Football League and the American Football League, to take
effect in 1970.
In 1967, 34 U.S. servicemen were killed when Israeli
forces raided the Liberty,' a Navy ship stationed in t·he
Mediterranean. (Israel called the attack a tragic mistake. )
lri 1978, a jury in Clark County. Nev., ruled the so-called
"Mormon will," purportedly written by the late billionaire.
Howard Hughes, was a forgery.
One year ago: The Food and Drug Administration
approved a vaccine against HPV, the virus that causes cervical cancer. Sheikha Haya Rashed AI Khalifa, a lawyer
from Bahrain, was elected UN General Assembly president, the first woman from the Middle East to take the post.
Today's Birthdays: Former President Suharto of
Indonesia is 86. Former First Lady Barbara Bush is 82.
Actor-comedian Jerry Stiller is 80. Comedian -Joan Rivers
is 74. Actress Millicent Martin is 73. Actor James Darren is
71. Actor Bernie Casey is 68. Singer Nancy Sinatra is 67.
Singer Chuck Negron (Three Dog Night) is 65. Musician
Boz Scaggs is 63. Actor Don Grady is 63. Rock musician
Mick Box (Uriah Heep) is 60. Author Sara Paretsky is 60.
Actress Sonia Braga is 57. Actress Kathy Baker i's 57.
Country musician Tony Rice is 56. Singer Bonnie Tyler is
54. Actor Griffin Dunne is 52. "Dilben" creator Scott
Adams is 50. Actor-director Keenen Ivory Wayans is 49.
Singer Mick Hucknall (Si mply Red) is 47. Musician Nick
Rhodes (Duran Duran) is 45. Rhythm-and-blues singer
Doris Pearson (Five Star) is 41. Actress Julianna Margulies
is 40. Actor Dan Futterman is 40. Actor David Sutcliffe is
38. Rhythm-and-blues singer Nicci Gilbert is 37. Actress
Kelli Williams is 37. Actor Mark Feuerstein is 36.
Contemporary Christian musician Mike Scheuchzer
(Mercy Me) is 32. Rapper Kanye West is 29. Folk-bluegrass
singer-musician Safll Watkins (Nickel Creek) is 26.
Thought for Today : 'The most valuable of all talents is
that of never using two words _when one will do." Thomas J efferson, third President of the United States
( 1743-1826).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

OPINION

I

Friday, June 8,

Fathers and church
When it comes to who
fills the · pews, every
Sunday is Mother's Day in
most mainstream American
churches.
And what about Father's
Terry
. Day? That can be a touchy
Mattingly
subject for pastors in an era
in which men who religiously avoid church out. number active churchmen
rou ghly three to one. the National Mall - . one of
Worship just doesn't work the largest gatherings of
for millions of ordinary any kind in American history.
guys.
No one involved in
"What churches are doing
isn't getting the job done. national men's ministries
Mom is having to take the believes that those stats
kids to church because Dad have improved. That's one
doesn 't want to go," said reason why a nondenomiMarc~·rrier. co-author, national coalition wants to
with his wife, Cynthia, of hold a "Stand in the Gap
"The
Values-Driven 2007" rally on .Oct. 6, hpping to gather 250,000 men
Family."
the
Washington
"That leaves Mom in at
charge · of . the . spiritual Monument and on the
upbringing of the children, Ellipse, just south of the
wbich means faith is a White House.
Mom thing and not a Dad · The American numbers
thing. ... So why is little · are sobering, nofed Carrier,
Johnny - who is 25 and but they are nowhere near
has his first child on the as stunning as another set of
way, whether he's married statistics in an essay entior not - n~ver in church? tled "The Demographic
The odds are that his father Characteristics of the
Linguistic and Religious,
was never in church."
attendance Groups in Switzerland,"
Church
among men had already published in 2000 in a volfallen to 43 percent in 1992, ume covering trends in sevaccording to the Barna. eral European nations. The
. Group, which specializes in numbers that trouble tradiresearching trends among tionalists came from a 1994
Evangelicals. Then that survey in which the Swiss
number crashed to 28 per- government tried to detercent in 1996, the year mine how religious pracbefore the Promise Keepers tices are carried down from
movement held its ·~stand generation to generation.
Apparently, if a father
in the Gap" rally that drew
a million or more men to . and mother were both faith'

.

ful churchgoers, 33 percent
of their 'children followed
their example, with another
· 41 percent attending on an
irregular basis and only a
quarter shunning church
altogether.
But what happened if the
father had little or no faith?
If the father was ·semiactive and the mother was a
faithful worshipper, only 3
percent of their children
became active church members and 59 percent were
irr~gular in their worship
attendance - with the rest
· lost to the church aliogether.
If the father never went to
church, while the mother
was faithful, only 2 percent
of !he children became regular churchgoers and 37
percent were semi-active.
Thus, more than 60 percent
were lost.
This trend continued in
other survey results, noted
Carrier. The bottom line
was clear. If a father didn't
go to church. only one child
in 50 became a faithful
churchgoer - no matter
how strong the mother's
faith.
"These numbers are old
and
they · are
from
Switzerland, ·but they ' re the
only numbers that anyone
has,"
said
Carrier.
"Someone needs to find a
way to do similar research
in America to see if the
same thing is· happening
here.
This is shocking stuff."
At the height of the
Promise Keepers move-

2007

The Daily Sentinel• Page~

www.mydailysentinel.com

·. Obituaries

·Alcoa-seeks federal OK on Alcan: takeover

PITISBURGH . (A P) in a statement. 'Today's fil- would consider a sweet- The offer expires on July
Alcoa Inc. has asked regula- ing demonstrates our com- ened buyout offer from 10, but is su bject to extentors to approve its proposed mitment to prompt satisfacc Aicoa, or that it may even sion, Alcoa said .
. BONNYMAN, Ky.
Mrs.
hosti le
takeover
of tion of regulatory require- try to turn the tables and
Alcan's
operations
Marcella Sue Harris Mitchell, 64.
Canadian aluminum rival ments and timely resolution acquire Alcoa instead.
include
a
plant
in
d1ed Thursday, June 7, 2007 of panAlcan Inc. for $27 billion.
of any regulatory issues."
Beida reiterated Alcoa's Ravenswood, W.Va., that it
creatic cancer with courage and grace
The
Pittsburgh-based
Alcan officials i:lid not position Wednesday: "We acquired when it bought
while. her family, with the suppon of
company said Wednesday immediately return a call are clearly the optimal pan- French aluminum producer
HoSQICe, was there by her side.
that it had tiled forms for for comment Wednesday.
ner for Alcan, bringing a Pechiney in 2003. Alcan
Su~ was the daughter of the late
antitrust clearance with the
Alcan last month rejected strong strategic rational and Rol!ed Products employs
Henry and Alafair Harris and was
Federal Trade Commission Alcoa's takeover offer as a significant synergy foot- about 1,100 people, making
born, March 23, 1943 in West
and the Department of inadequate, saying in a fil- print to this combination."
it the largest employer in
Virginia. Once married to Pat, her husJustice.
ing with the Securities and
Alcoa launched its cash- I Jackson County, W.Va.
band of 45 years who also survives
.Marcella Sue
"We remain fully commit- Exchange Commis.sion that and-stock bid for Alcan on
Alcoa share s fell 74 cents
. her, she lived in many different locaHarris Mitchell
ted to completing this trans- it was exploring other May 7, after almost two to $39.85 Wednesday.
iions iri Ohio and other states. Sue traveled to even more ac tion,"
Alcoa
Chief options.
years of pri vate talks failed Alcan shares droppe\1 87
places during her life and was always the schol;tr. Meigs Executive Alain Beida said
The company later said it to produce an agreement. cents to $83.45.
County 1s where Sue and Pat settled to raise their four children. They most recently resided in Bonnyman, Ky.
Sue will be missed by her large family and friends. She
was able to see a lot of these individuals before she passed
and was very surprised at her impact to the lives of many.
Sue was a true wife and a loving mother. We bid her a tear- BvTHOMASJ.SHEERAN
swollen. Doctors also noted
ful farewell, with the hope of greeting her with a happy
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER .
that her blood pressure was
"good morning" somewhere, sometime.
lower than usual.
Sue will be cremated in North Carolina, and her
CLEVELAND
(AP)- A look at the first surgery to begin sepa''They felt that it would
urn/remains will travel to Ohio with her immediate family. A Swelling in the brain of the
rating conjoined twins:
· not be safe to cut into the
memorial service will be held at 2 p.m., Sunday, June 10, larger, stronger girl halted
.brain ti ss ue or the surroundWHAT'HAPPENED: The surgery was halted after
2007 at Rutland Freewill Baptist Church. Sue requested lifesaving surgery to begin
ing blood vessels in any
II hours.
. instead of flowers, a contribution be made to a Duke Hospice separating 3-year-old conway. without first under·
WHY? Brain swelling and low blood pressure with
4321 Medical Park Dr, Ste 101 Durham, NC 27704. lfyou joined twins, but doc~ors
standing
the cause of the
one girl.
do choose to bring flowers, Sue wants her favorite, daisies.
and. the parents said
swelling
as well as the
WHAT NEXT? An MRI and angiogram to deterPlease note this is a celebration of Sue's spirit and life; Thursday they were detersl
ightly
low
blood presmine what caused the problems.
the black clothes of mourning are optional - Sue's favorite mined to keep tcying.
sure," Levitan said.
colors are blue and green. A plaque will be placed on a
"We remain hopeful that
SOURCE: Unlversltv Hospitals Rainbow Bablea &amp; Children's Hospital
The top of Tatiana's head
gravesite in Rutland, at Miles Cemetery, to mark Sue's we can help the twins but
is
attached to the back of
passing (the plaque will be adjacent to her son' s, John Mar
Anastasia's.
and they have
every
procedure
leads
to
cause
of
the
swelling,
then
The swelling wouldn ' t
Mitchell). A reception will follow the memorial service at
never
been
able to look
new deci sions and . that 's decide whether they could necessarily
change
Rutla11d Freewill Baptist Church.
true for this one as well,'' attempt the procedure again, prospects for future success, directly at each other.
said. Nathan Levitan, chief Levitan said.
The girls have already
he said. However. "if you
medical
officer
at
"Before the swelling can go back and the same prob- beaten the odds by living
University Hospitals Case be treated it's important to lems occur again, then you. th is long . Most twins
McARTHUR- Steven J. Stites, 57, McArthur, passed Medical Center and the understand what the cause have to reassess whether or joined at the head die at
leader of the Surgery team. is," Levitan said.
away Wednesday, June 6, 2007 at his residence.
how far you want.to pro- birth and just I0 percent
survive to age I0, accordBorn Feb. 10, 1950 in Mesa, Ariz., he was the son of Ida
When medications to
Asked if he still had the ceed,'' he said.
Mallett Stites of Salem, Ore. and the late Paul Stites.
reduce the swelling were cautious optimism he had
Because the girls are ing to the hospital.
Alin Dogaru, a Byzantine
He was a mechanic, a Vietnam Navy Veteran, life mem- ineffective Wednesday, doc-. expressed before the proce- linked, there may be a physber of the Amvets and member of the VFW and the Eagles. tors closed an· opening to dure, Levitan emphasized iological reason for the Catholic priest, and his
In addition to his mother, Steven is survived by five Tatiana and Anastasia that doctors understood all swelling, Goodrich said. wife, both 31, have said
daughters, April McGrath of Salem Ore., Angela Stites of Dogaru 's brains without along the twins were facing "There's a lot of physiolog- they view the separation
McArthur, Katie (Tony) Barnett of McArthur, Jarnie and starting to separate them.
a long, difficult ordeal.
ical dynamic going between 'surgeries as the girls' best
Stephanie Stites both of Grove City; nine grandchildren;
Parents Alin and Claudia
The surgery, one of four the two kids. In a sense, hope. They arrived in
five sisters, Patty (Jess) Ridgley of Bend, Ore., Brenda Dogaru said in a statement procedures planned over each of them is supporting Cleveland in April after 2
Stite~ of Bend, Ore., Regina Stites of Stewart, Cheryl Stites
released by the hospital that several months, lasted I I the other in one way or 1/2 years in Dallas.
of Salem, Ore. and Becky Stites of McArthur.
the. girls were doing fine.
hours.
"Even though no actual
another," he said.
In addition to his father, he was preceded in death by · "We know the doctors are
Dr. James Tait Goodrich
Anastasia~ who' has · no cutting into the brain tissue
two brothers, . Doug and Paul Stites and one sister, being cautious to keep the of New York's Montefiore kidney function , relies on was done yesterday some
Geraldine Stites.
girls safe. We want to thank Medical Center, who sepa- Tatiana's kidneys and very important information
A funeral service will be held at I I a.m., Monday, June you for your continued rated conjoined twins in would need a kidney trans- was gained and I think our
II, 2007 at the· Garrett-Cardaras Funeral 11ome, 20 I W. prayers," they said.
2004, said the halt showed plant after a separation.
physicians were gratified to
High Street, McArthur, with Father Don Maroon officiatknow
that information,"'
The blond twins, born in . the advantage of doing
After the plastic surgery
ing. Burial will be in Restla~n Cemetery in Salem, Ore. Italy to Romanian parents, . surgery in stages instead of · team
Levitan
said.
at
University
Friends may call from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. were awake and alert a marathon.
.
Twins born joined at the
Hospitals Rainbow Babies
on Sunday at the funeral home, with ~ VFW service being Thursday.
.
"You go as far as you can &amp; Children's Hospital head -.known as craniopa· conducted at 7:30p.m.
·
.
The medical team will go and you stop," said removed a section of bone, gus twins- are rare, occur. Please sign his online guestbook at www.cardaras.com.
conduct studies including Goodrich, who has consul.t- . doctors c\iscovered the prain ring in about .one in 2.5 milan MRI to determine the ed on the Dogaru case . .
tissue of Anastasia was lion births.

Marcella Sue Harris Mitchell

ment, researchers did study
one related trend in churches that began emphasizing
ministry to men, said the
Rev. Rick Kingham, president of the National
Coalition
of
Men's
Ministries, a network of
110 regional and national
groups.
Surveys found that if a
father made a decision to
becomea Christian, the rest
of the family followed his
example 93 percent of the
time. If a mother made a
similar decision, the rest of
the family embraced the
faith !?percent of the time,
he said.
" It seems that when a
man takes that kind of spiritua.l stand it usually affects
everyone else in the whole
constellation around him,
including his family and
even other men that he
knows," said Kingham,
· who is helping organize
Stand in the Gap 2007.
No one wants to minimize the importance of
faithful mothers, he said,
but it's clear that "fathers
play a unique and special
role in helping their children develop a living faith
- especially their sons ....
There's no way to deny
that."
(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Journalism Center at the
Council for Christian
Colleges arui Universities
and
leads
the
. GetReligion.org project to
study religion and the
news.)

... AND THE FREEZER HOLDS
UP TO $90,000 CASH.

Brain swelling stops surgery for conjoined twins
Swollen brain halts surgery

Steven J. Stites

Local Briefs

County Sheriff's Office and
Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney.
Sheets told
Stevens the ·commissioners
only_ approved the budgets
for these agencies.
"Any legal issues will
have to be handled through
the sheriff or prosecuting
attorney," Sheets said.
Jane Banks with the
Meigs County Department
of Job and Family Services
(-MCDJFS) presented con- ·
tracts for use of state certified day care centers. Banks
added t.he agency may not
use · the centers and this is
just an agreement should

services be required.
Commissioners approved
contracts with the following
state certified day care centers: Athens Church of
Christ Preschool, Athens;
Cara Hall Daycare Inc .,
Middleport;, French City
Child Care, Gallipolis;
Good Shepherd Family
Daycare,
Ravenswood,
W.Va., Hocking College
ELC, Nelsonville; Nova
Learning Center, Athens ;
Sycamore Run, The Plains;
T.J.'s
Child ·
Care,
Gallipolis; William and
Mary Kiddie Academy,
Wellston. The .rates vary at

Middleport,
Syracuse
Municipal Park, God's NET
and Southern Elementary
School. From II a.m. to 6
p.m., Mondays and Thesdays,
at the Rutland Civic Center;
from II a.m. to 6 p.m.,
Wednesdays and Thursdays,
Eastern Elementary School.

ABC and the "Healthy
Choice Rocks" summer
program is funded by the
Meigs County Department
of Job and Family Services
and is open to children of all
incomes.
Call 992-9121 for questions on the program.

available and then orders
from that list according to the
planned menus for the month
or other needs for senior citifrom PageA1
zens. "When what food they
to Beth Shaver, director of have fits into what we're
scheduled to serve and we
the Meigs County Council can order from there, it really
on Aging, commenting "it saves us a lot on the approxireally saves money for us mately $5,500 a month spent
because of the large number on food," she said. Over 200
of seniors we serve."
meals are home-c;lelivered
Shaver explained that once daily through the Meigs
a month the Center receives a· nutrition program.
list from the Community
She said once the order is
Action Agency on what is . placed, the Agency brings it

down to the Center where
t~e food is shelved, refrigerated or frozen in a large
walk-in freezer pun;hased
fqr the Center by the
Catholic Sisters who for
several years have made
grants for senior programs.

CDBG
from Page A1 .

Report available ,
MIDDLEPORT -Middleport Public Works has mailed
its consumer confidence reports. Those who did not receive
one but would like one may stop in the office tci pick it up.

Class reunion
POMEROY - The Meigs High School Class of 1977
will hold a class reunion on June 23 at the Pomeroy Gun
'club. Dinner will be served .at 7:30p.m. Class members
and teachers are invited, and are asked to call Paula
. Eichinger, at 992-1772, to register.

Immunization clinic

Can we afford more low-skilled immigrants?

The cynical coalition of
partisan
Democrats and
Letters In the editor are welcome. They should be less
greedy
businessmen
(the
:T/J(m 300 words. Allletrers are subjecT 10 . ediTing, musT be
latter bringing along a sigsi~ned, and include address and Teleplzone number. No
nificant
number
of
· w~sif?t!ed leTters will be published. LetTers 'should be in
Republicans,
including
·_ good rasTe. addressing issues, noT fJersonaliTies. Le/lers of
·Thanks 10 organizarions and individuals will nor be accepT- President -Bush) who are
backing the immigration
:ed j i&gt;r f'LihlicaTion.
"reform" bill have run into
a lot more serious opposition than they counted on.
As a result, the bill con·
tains some . tough proviReader Services
(UsPs 213-960) ·
sions that will be quietly
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
repealed within a· year or
Our main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
two after it has passed;
through Friday. 111 Court Street
be accurate. H you know of an error
and the American people
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
have gone back to .sleep.
992·2156.
.
Member: The Associated Press and
Meanwhile, the coali- .
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
tion
(which really jilsi
Postmaster: Send address correcOur .main number Is
wants
tens ·of millions
tions to The Dally SentineL 111 COurt
(740) 992-2156.
more of cheap immigrant
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Department extensions are:
laborers to work for the
Subscription Rates
bu'sinessmen and vote for
By carrier or motor route
News
Democrats) is treating us
One month . , ...... .. .'1 0.27
Edl1or: Ch&lt;?r1ene Hoeflich, Ed. 12
to
a lot of soft music about
One year . ••. ... ,. . ...'1 15.84
Repor1er: Brian Reed . E)(t. 14
Dally ..................50'
how America was posiReporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. t 3
Senior Citizen rates
tively founded on hardOne month . ...• •.••• .'1 0.27
·working immigrants who
One year ............'1 03.90
Advertising .
were eager to do the jobs ·
Sttlscr'llefs should remit n aovance
Outside Silles: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 cireclt:lthe Daly Sentllel. No subscripthat· "Americans won't ·
Outside Sales: Brenda Davis. Ex116 tion by mail" permitted ·in areas Yotlere
do." It 's a heart-rending
home carrier SEif'\liCe is available.
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clarll, Ext. tO .
story, but exactly how
much benefit does this
Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
country derive · from the
General Manager
13 Weeks .............'32.26
Chanene Hoeflich. Ext . .12
millions upon millions of
26 Weeks .
. .. '64.20
immigrants,
legal and ille52 weeks ............ '127.11
E-mail:
gal, who have tlooded thi s
news@ mydailysentinel.com
Outside Meigs County
country si nce Sen . Ted
13 Weeks ......... 'I' ..' 53.55
Kennedy first opened the
26 Weeks .........•. ' 107.10
W!'b:
gates
back in I 965 (having
52 Weeks . .... . . ..... '214.21
www.rnydailysentinel.com
spearheaded "reform" that

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

, Friday, June 8, 20Q7

household
received). American tends to be a
Subtract their taxes from "net taxpayer" during his
their bene'fits, and it turns or her working year~ ·out that the 4.5 million that is to say, · pays the
low-skill
immigrant government more in taxes
in an than the cost of the serhouseholds
hauled
William
average $19,587 more in . vices he or she consumes . .
Rusher
benefits and services than Then, in retirement, we
they paid out in taxes.
become "net tax takers"
to
the - receiving more in beneAccording
Heritage study, that means fits than the taxes we pay.
eliminated national origin · that, to American taxpayNot so in the lucky
quotas)? .
ers, the net cost (benefits households of low-skilled
A recent study by the minus taxes) of low-skill immigrants! Whatever the
conservative think tank immigrant
households
Heritage Foundation sheds over the next I 0 years age · of the head of housesome astounding light on "will approach $1 tril- hold, the benefits received
this important question.
lion." (That's "trillion" by low-skilled immigrants
Today, there are approx· with a "t" ~ I ,000· bil- (i.e., those without high
imately 4.5 million house- lions.) That's a lot of school diplomas) "far
holds in the United States money for the American exceed" the taxes they
consisting of low-skilled people to shell out to swell pay. In fiscal 2004 alone,
immigrants, both legal and the ranks of Democratic their net haul was $89.1
i lie gal. According to voters ' and . provide busi- billion. And Rector and
Robert
Rector
and ness men with a huge Kim calculate that, assumChristine
Kim,
the intlux of cheap, largely ing an average adult life
·span of 60 years for each
Heritage analysts, these Mexican labor.
households paid an averJust how "low-skillec)" head of household, ·ihe
age of $10,573 in taxes in are these people? In the average lifetime cost to
fiscal 2004. Now, multi- adult U.S. population as a the taxpayers will be nearplied by 4.5 million, that's whole, the number lacking !y $1.2 million for every
a lot of money. But these . a high sc hool diploma is 9 low-skill household.
sa me low-skilled immi- percent. But according to
So taxpayers, · get ready
grants also received, in the Pew Hispanic Center, to show your compassion
government benefits and the figure · among legal if the current immigration
services. an average of immigrants is 25 percent. "reform" bill gets through
$30, 160 per household And among the more than Congress.
(w hich, incidentally, is . I 0 million illegal immi(William Rusher· is a
abo ut $10,000 more in grants already in the coun- Distinguished Fellow· of
services and benefits, try it is at least 50 percent. The ClaremonT Institute for
mostly welfare payments,
As .the Heritage study the Study of Statesmanship
than the 'average U.S. points out, the average . and Political Philosophy.)

emergency vehicles are out
of service. The Pomeroy
Volunteer Fire Department
purchased the squad with a
donation . and . separate
CDBG ''distress grant"
money obtained by· the
Village of Pomeroy. .
· Floyd Stevens of Chase
Road in Albany complained
to the commissioners about
the legal system in Meigs
County, including the Meigs

POMEROY -. The Meigs County Health Department will
hold a childhood immunization clinic from 9-ll a.m. and l3 p.m. on Tuesday at the health department. Bring child's
shot records. A $7 donation appreciated but not required.

Benefit auction planned
CHESTER -A pancake breakfast will be held from 8 to
II a.m. Saturday at the Chester Firehouse to benefit .the
Chester Academy .renovation program. This is a "matching
fund" project with the Modern Woodmen 37308 of Tuppers
Plains which will match all donations up to $2,500. The
money raised will go toward the heating, air conditioning,
plumbing and electricity in the building. ·

Marketing
from Page A1·
:Orleans Convention ad
Visito,s' Bureau; and Alben
Gaylor, VP of Industry
Relations and Diversity,
SYSCO
Corporation.
·students were also able to
meet and network with rep·
resentatives from companies like Nestle, the
Louisiana
Superdome,
Smuckers,
Vector
Marketing, Wal~reens, and
Harrah's Entenamment.
· During their stay. students
toured many of the New
Orleans attractions, including the French Quarter, vis-

:Sales tax
from PageA1
revenue from the state.
which is in its third year,
has also made the col!ec-

ited the Aquarium of the
Americas, and saw Saint
Louis Cathedral.
Money for traveling
expenses came from a vari,
ety of fund raisers and
donations from the Medical
Mutual of Ohio;~, the Ohio
Casualty Gro11p, the Evans
School of Business, and the
Rio Grande Teaching and
Learning Fund.
"This trip was an excellent oppo~unity for the students to learn more about
the field of marketing, while
professionally representing
the university and southeastern Ohio," said Thoene.
"It is my hope that we can
return to the conference
again next year." ·

Summer ·
from PageA1
The program's summer
schedule is as follows: II a.m.
to 6 p.m., Monday - Friday at
General Hartinger Park in

Food

ING~LS CARPET

SUMMER
CLEARANCE SALE

·Arut:L
ESTABLISHlD

t895

Ballet, Modern &amp; Jazz
Summer Dance Class
Classes Begin 6/11
Registration Fri. 6/8
4-6pm

"Steel Magnolias"

tion of sales tax a more
important source of local
revenue.
In 2005, the county's sales
tax
collections
were
$1,088, 139, the lowest point
in collections since the auditor began comparing them.

June 15-17

Vegas Legends Concert
with Dwight Icenhower 6/30
The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Galtip ~t;~ ~H
.ARTS

1 7

'

each establishment but are
said to be below the market
rate. The new contracts
begin on July I and end
June 30.
lenni
Dunham
was
approved as a parent representative ·to the Family and
Children First Council.
Commissioners approved
the transfer of $18,000 to
MCDJS account.
Commissioners approved
an animal claim of $250 for
Bryan L}'nch, Shade, where
a calf was killed by dogs.,

Little Boys Pet- Someone has
taken a 10 week old Black Lab
puppy from McCumber R~. on
the Dexter side. She answers to Rosie and
has been missing since Monday, June 4th
between 6 &amp; 6-:30 a.m.
If you have any information please call
1-740-742-2841 Reward Offered!

~nnua\ Kids Fishin9 .Derby
June 9th, Sam - l2pm .
At
Meigs County Fish &amp; Game--.......,
· .Free to Kids
0-15 Years
Door Prizes
Free Fopd &amp; Dri11k
Info Call

�'

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel
;,

PageA6

Friday, June 8, 2007

Frida~June8,2007

- - - -.A Hunge~ For·More
Sunday mornings are
always a whirlwind at our
house. While we prepare, of
course, all that we can on
Saturday e·vening before we
Pastor
finally go to sleep, it is no
Thorn
small job for us the next
!IJ!ollohan
morning to "rail y the
troops'' (a.k.a. our four children) and get everyone out
the door. Getting everyone
dressed. _giving then! a way) and then ran off to
quick bite to eat, and load- show her brothers as well
ing up our van full of para- who all complimented her
phernalia needed .for wor- (in part. simply due to the
ship and Bible study may fact that they were happy .to
be our routine, but every have a morning in which
week the race to get to there was far less stress on
· · church with everything and their eardrums).
everyone intact gets our
We were all delighted
blood pumping.
when it seemed that things
Last Sunday was typical were going smoothly for a
in most respects, including change. But then the other
our 2-year-old daughter 's shoe dropped ... or should I
very strict opinion of fash- say "sandal. " My wife proion and her tendency to duced the sandals that
want to decide her own matched the dress and diswardrobe for herself. My playe.d them for our daughwife and I thought that we ter, who frowned and
had a turned a major corner shook her Iie(\d vigorously.
when she chose to no.t wage She then ran off on her two
war against us for trying to little toddler legs. down the
get her .out of her hall and into her bedroom
Strawberry
Shortcake where she disappeared
nightgown into her Sunday from our view for a
dress. But she was appar- · moment. We could hear her
ently so excited about wear- puttering about and then
ing her new white dress she reappeared, running
with a rainbow of butter- back towards us, carrying
flies on it that she decided in her pretty little hands
to forgo her typical protests her two brown sandals,
and even eagerly ·assisted creased and very worn
her mother in changing her from active playing.
clothes. Once dressed, she
"No, honey," my wife
shyly showed us how she gently said, taking the sanlooked in the new dress (a dals from our daughter 's
gift from a friend, by the grasp and again holding out

the white sandals with little
white butterflies upon them.
"These go with your dress,
sweetie. Don't you want to
wear these?"
No response. "Let's wear
these sandal s just today,
okay?" Our . little angel's
face suddenly scrunched up
in disbelief and then she
loudly wailed, "No-o-o-o-oo'" She rai sed her tiny
hands to her face clutched at
her cheeks as if utterly
heartbroken and distraught
(and I think she really felt
that she was, too).
She calmed down after fl
moment, and allowed her
mother to put the white sandals on her feet. Our daughter sighed and then moseyed
off to another part of the
house while we turned our
attention back to getting
ready and leaving in time for
our church's worship service. J.ust ·when we had gotten everything loaded, with
the help of our three sons
who also were ready and
waiting in the van, my wife
reached down and lifted up
our last passenger into her
arms, and sighed. When I
looked to see what the matter was, she just nodded at
our daughter's feet. Instead
of the · little white sandals
with the ·little·butterflies, she
was shod again in the plain
brown leather sandals.
"Urn ... she's got her old
sandals on again," I cleverly
observed (nothing escapes
me on Sunday mornings).
My wife chuckled. "Yeah,

I noticed," she replied.
"So what do you want to
do about it?" I asked. "Make
her change them or let her
wear the brown ones?''
"Well, we'll compromise
for now," she answered.
"She won't wear any sandals
unti 1 we get there. But then
I' ll put her white ones on
her." My wife carefully
coaxed the old brown sandals off the little girl's feet
again, with immediate violent repercussions. "No-o-oo-o!" our daughter cried,
sounding for all the world
like she'd lost her best
friends . My wife irresistibly
drew her away from the sandals, out the door, and into
the van where I joined them
shortly thereafter. As we
drove away, and the shrieking of our 2-year-old
Calamity Jane tapered off a
bit. I began to wax philosophically and shared with
my sons (who may or may
not have heard a single thing
that[ said), that even though 1
we were on our way to worship with our church family,
we wanted to be very, very
sure that we were "dressed"
for worship. "It's great to
dress in nicer clothes when
we go to church, and it's neat
that we don't treat worship .
as a trivial thing by trying to
· have a nice appearance. But
. a whole lot more important
than dressing . in our nice
clothes, is being sure that our
hearts are ready, too." And
·so we 1a!J_ prayed together,
while we drove along, that

FeUowship ·
Apostolic

God would help us to be
"dressed .in our hearts" for
coming to worship.
"Who may ascend the hill
of the LORD? Who may
stand in His holy place? He
who has clean hands and a
pure heart, who does not lift
up his soul to an idol or
swear by what is false"
(Psalm 25:3-4 NIV).
This means that we must
never treat lightly the idea
of entering a concentrated
time of worship or even a
time of prayer in our own
private prayer closets. If we
truly want an "audience"
with God as we sing our
praises or offer Him. ·our
suppliqnions, we must
understand that our "hearts
must be dressed." As it says
in Psalm 25:3-4, the one
who can come close to God
is a man or woman of character who does what is
right, for the right motives,
in order to please the one,
true God. God does not give
audience to pretenders, but
He does grant it to those
who truly and humbly seek
l:lis face through the forgiveness offered them
through Jesus Christ.
Sometimes though, even
as adults, we can act like my
toddler daughter, oblivious
to the fact that anchoring
ourselves onto our own
agendas and plans can
derail us from the glories
prepared for us by the
Father. We want to hold on
to our "old brown sandals"
and we resent any opposi-

tion, even from God Who
truly knpws what's best for
us. We too often kick and
yell and scream as He
unsnaps us from our §mall _
agendas, bad attitudel, and
se lfish desires, His only
desire being to "get us
dressed" for real relationship with Himself. He might
even tolerate our complaining for a season, but in the
end, for us to enjoy the
delights of full and free fellowship with Him, we're
going to have to submit to
His authority and surrender
to His love.
The one who can do that
" .. . will receive blessing from
the LORD and vindication
from God his Savior. Such is
the generation of those who
seek Him .. . Lift up your
heads, 0 you gates; be lifted
up, you ancient doors, that
the King of glory may come
in. Who is this King of
glory? The LORD strong and
mighty, the LORD mighty In
battle ... Who is He, this King
of glory? The LORD
Almighty - He is the King
of glory" (Psalm 24:5-6a, 78, 10 NIV).

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

Pennsylvania Presbyterian church
leaves denomination over sexuality

Youth honored at party
Abreak-out party
for the children of
Hysell Run
Community Church
pose for a picture
during the festivities sponsored by
the church. The
party was given to
celebrate the hard
work and effort
put forth by all of
the children during
the school year,
and as a kick off
to summer vacation. The children
were served piua
and shacks,
played games,
and enjoyed a fellowship time following the 10:30
· a.m. church .service.
Subnllttecl photo

PITTSBURGH (AP) - In a inove emblematic of mainline Protestant divisions over sexuality, members of the
largest church in the Pittsburgh Presbytery voted to leave
the Presbyterian Church (USA) and join a smaller, more
conservative denomination.
At a congregational meeting, 951 members of Memorial
Park Presbyterian Church in McCandless Township voted
to be affiliated with the Evangelical Presbyterian Church.
Fifty-two percent, or 761 members, of the 1,450-member
congregation needed to approve the plan.
"We are saddened that Memorial Park members and leaders have elected to separate from the Presbyterian Church,"
James Mead, pastor to Pittsburgh Presbytery, said in a &gt;llltement. "However, we believe that wrestling with such painful
issues is part of God's redemptive plan for the world."
Memorial Park church officials said last month they were
concerned about the national denomination's move away
from traditional doctrines concerning the Holy Trinity and
the authority of the Bible, and its increasingly liberal views
on gay ordination.
Memorial Park church officials have said their issue isn' t
with the presbytery, a regional body of churches, but the
national church.
The Presbyterian Church (USA) is among several
Protestant denominations embroiled in a bitter debate
between conservatives and liberals over what role gays
should have in. their church.es.

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,,

Episcopal
G.... Eploaopol Clovdo
326 E. Mom So .. Pomeroy. Swlday Sd&gt;ool
and Holy Eudwist 11:00 t.m. Rev.
Edward Payn&lt;

Holiness
~Cioordl

Pastor: Steve Tomek , Main Shed.
Rutland, Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m ..
Surday Serv~7 p.m .

........, Cbwdo of Oriol
212 W. Main St., Sunday Scbool - 9:30
a .m .. Worship• 10:30 a ~ m ., 6 p.m.,

Baptist Cblll'&lt;h
Paslor: Ste\·e Linle. Sunday School: 9:30
am, Morning Worship: 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study 6:30pm: choir
prac1icto 7:30: you1h and Bible Buddies
6:30p.m. Thurs. I pm book stody

0..6-Chardo
31057 Start Roo!t 325, Lanasvl&amp;e, Pastor:
Benjamin Cnwrml. Sunday school - 9:30
a.m., Sunday wlnh.ip · 10:30 a.m. &amp;: 7
p.in., Wecinesday prayer service: • 7 p.m.

·Wednesday Scn·ices - 7 p.m.
........, Welbide Chardo·flfCiuiot
33226 Children's Home Rd .; Sunday
School- tl ·a.m .• Worship. 10a.m ., 6 p.m ,
Wednesday Services- 7 pm.

Hop&lt; Baptist Cbonh tSoolhm&gt;)
570 Gr1Jit St .. Middleport , Sunday school
- 9:30 a.rn __ Worship - II a.m. and 6 p.m.,
Wednesday ~rvi~ - 1 p.m. Pastor: Gary
Ellis
Rutland flnllloptl5t Clmtlo
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.: Worship 10:45 a.m.
Pomtroy flnllloptl5t
Pas1or Jon Broclcm, f.asl Main St:,
Sunday Sch. 9:30am, Worship 10:30 am

- . . . . . Cllvdo of Orisl
5th and Main . Pauor: AI Hart~n .
Childrens Direclor, Sharon Say~. Tc:en
lliomor: ~ledger Vaugban. Sunday School
• 9:30 un., Wonllip- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7
p.m., Wcdnc:sday Servica • 7,p.m.
~ChoudotiCiuht

Worship · 9:30 a.m.. Sunday School I0:30a.m., Paslor-Jdlrey Wallace , 1st and
lod Soonday

Fht Soutlwm Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike. Pastor: E. Lamar
O"Bryam. Sunday Sc,hool - 9:30 a.m.,
Wonhip · 8: 15 a.m., 9:45 am &amp;.7:00p.m. ,
Wedllesday Stf\'ic_es . 7:00p.m.

llearwlllow lldp Clotudo of Clorlol

Worship • 10 :30 a.m.. 6:30 p.m ,
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

11nl Bapllst Cboutb
Pas1or: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St.,
MiddleJXln, Sunday Sthool · 9:15a.m.,
10 :15 a .m., 7:00 p.m.,
Worship
Wednesdiy Stnioe- 7:00pm.

Zlol Cburdl of Cbrlol
Harriaonvi.lte Rd . (Rt.l43),
Pastor: RoJer Wltlon, S~anday School 9:30 a.m., Worsblp - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m., Wednetday Services- 7 p.m.

flnl Bapllll
Put or: Rytn Eaton, pallor , Sunday
School : 9:l0 a.m ., Worthip- 10:40 a.m.,
7:00 p.m.. Wednesday Senice1 - 7:00

R,.a a.. Cammuoolly !Jioudl
Putor: Rev. Larry Lemley: Suiwloy Scbool
- 9:30 rm., Wontlip - 10:45 a.m .. 7 p.m.,
Tbanday Bible Study and Y~th - 7 p.m.

1\qlpcn l'lola Cbur&lt;b ol Cbrlol

JnstnJmcnW, Worship Service - 9 a.m.,
Communion - 10 a.m., Sundly School 10:" am .. Yooitll·l:JO pm Sundly. Bible
Study W-sdJy 7 pm

p.m.

SUver ttu.. Ba~
P11tor: John Swanson, Sunday ~chool IOa .m.. Worship · lla.m .. 7:00 p.m.
,Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

.LaantCIIII'--Cit-

Putor: Olein Rowe, Sunday School •
9:30 a.m., Worsbip - 10:30 a.m. And 6
p.m.,Wednelday Service - 7:00p.m.

BndhoorJ: ChurdlorCiorlol
Mini5ter: Tom Runyon. 39558 Bradbury
Road, Middleport, Sunday School - 9:30
11.m.
Worahlp-IO :lOa.m.

MI. Valoo Baptist
Pasto~: Dennis Weaver Sunday School9:45 a.m .. Evening - 6:30 p.m..
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
TboC!a&lt;bo!J"""

Rullud Chordl ol Clorlol
Sundiy School - 9:30 a.m., Wonbip Uld "
Communi~ · 10:30 a.m., Bob J. Wmy,
Mini.$tc:r

Btthltbem Baptist Churtb ·
Great Bend. Route 124 , Racine , OH.
Pastor: Ed Carter. Sunday School · 9:30
a.m. , .Sunday Worship - 10:30 i.m.,
Wcdnc:iday Bible Study-7:00p.m.

Bndf..... Chanit GICilrlol
Comer of St. Rt. 124 61. Bndbury Rd ..

MiniSicl: Dous Sh~tt~blin. Vouch Miniatcr:
Bill AmbclJer, Sunday..School-9:30a.m.
Worship ~ 8:00 a.m ., 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m._.Wednesday Setvices - 7:00p.m.

OW tlelheiFnoe WW Boplltt Cboutb · ·
286(ll St. Rt . 7. Middleport, Sun4ay
ServiCe · 10 a.m ., 6:00 p.m ., Tllesday
Services -6:00

lltdory IIIIIs Churdl ol Cbrlol

Thppen Plains, Pa5tor Mike MOCIIe, Bible
class, 9 a.m. Surtday; worship 10 a.m .
Sunday; 'wonhip 6:30 pm Sundi.y; Bible
c~s7pm'Wcd.

ClludlflfCiorlot
P"""" Pllmp Sowm. Soonday School: 9:30
a.m., Worship Service: 10:10 a.m .• Bible
Study. w-sdJy. 6:30 pm.

Dmcr Chutb of Cluilt
· Sunday school 9:30a.m., Sunday wonh!p
-10:30a'.m
The Cboudl &lt;!1 Chis! of Pomoroy
Intersection 1 and l24 W, EvaDJe~st:
Dennis Sarsent, SUnday Bible Study 9:30 a.m. , Wonhip: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study · 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Cbureb of Cbrllt Ia
CloriJtlaD Ualoo
Hart ford, W.Va ., Pastor : D~vid Greer.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a.m., 7;00 p.m., WedneMiay
Services-7:00p.m,

ChJJI'Ch of God

Su~y

9:30 1.11 .• Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wcxloesday Sen-ic-n - 7 p.m.

-

CluW " ............1 Solall
St. Rt. )MI. «6-6247 or 446·7486.
Sunday Sehool 10:20-\1 a.m., Relief
SocietyfPrie1thood · 11 :0.5-12:00 noon.
Sacrameal Servh:e 9-10:15 a.m.,
llomctnakiQa
ht Thun. · 7 p.m.

....uni.

Lutheran
Pine Grove, Wonhip - 9:00 a.m .. Sunday
School- 10:00 a.m. Pl.t:or:

Oar Sto.tour Lto....... Cliurdo
Walnl\t !!Jid Henry Sts .. Ravenswood,
W.Va., ~astor: David Russell, Suaday
Scbool-10:00 a.m., Wonhip- 11•-!0·

Sl. Psul .......... Clooudl
Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy,
Sun. ScOOol · 9:45 a.m., Wonhip- 11 am.
C~r

United Methodist
Gnloutt Uotlletl MetMdltt

10:30 a.m.

CloalerCltvelo t l d t e -

ac....vodied-

Worship • ~: 30 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m ., Fint Sunday of Mood:! - 7:00
p,m . service

w..,..

WltiO.'s Cbapd
Coolville Road . Pastor: Rev. Charles
Manindale . Sunday ScOOol - 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. Wednesday Service
- 7pm.

Cloordl tldte , . , _
Putoc llaao: Sloupe. Suoday So:hool • 9:30

...._.,_St. ....

a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 6:30 p.m..
t.'cdnnday Scrtic:u . 7 p.m.

Pastor: Jim Corbin, Sunday School • 9
a.m .. Worship - tO a.m., Tuesday Suvica

Other Churches

-7:30 pJD.
Catnol~

s,... c

AJbury (Syncou&lt;). Pasoor. Bob Rol&gt;in&gt;oo.
Sunday School - 9:45 un., Worship - I I
. a.m .• Walor:sday Service~ . 7:30p.m.

falntew Bible Cltvelo
Letart. W.Va. Rt . I. Pastor. Briao May ,
Sunday School - 9:30a.m .. Worship~ 1:00
p.m .. WedneW.y Bible Study · 7:00p.m.
Foidt r-...p c . - r... ClritO
Pas1or: Rev. Franklin Dickens. Service:
. Friday, 7 p.m.

ooiiJ' c..rn.

2480 Sec:oad St., Sync:llSC, OH
Sun. School &lt;tO llll. Sundy nigbt6:J() pm
Putor:Jo&lt;Qw.;.
ANnrl«t I 1
(hiGOipd Cllurdl) Harrisonville ,
Puton: Deb~ Kty Man.hall .
Sunday Servict. 2 p.m.

-

,....

Pastor: Ailand KioJ, Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Worship . 9:30 a.m .. Bib&amp;e
Study Wed. 7:30

flotw-

Calury Biblr Oudt
Pomeroy Pih , Co. Rd ., Pas10r: Rev .
Blackwood. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ..
Worship 10:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m. ,
Wcdne5dlly Service . 7:l0 p.m.

Aatuioc G,...C.......tly Ch....to

PaStoc Keith Rader, Suoday School • 10
a.m ., Wcnbip - II a.m.

r--

Pastor: Wayne Dunlap, Swe R1 . 681 ,
Tuppcn Plains. Sun. Worship: 10 am 8t.
6:)() pm .. Wed. Bibk Study 7:00p.m.

-

Pastoc Bob RobiOUOIO. Soonday ~ - I0
a.m., Worship · 9 a.m.

Fellowship
. (Non-denominahonal rellowmip)
Mming in dx- Meip Middle School
Cafeteria ~oms Stewan
10:00 am - Noon Sunday; Informal
Wusb.ip.O.ildren'!i ministry

(Wdollqooot)
Pastor: Brian Dunham. S\lndaY School ·
9:30am.,Wonhip-1 1:00un.

Rejoicing Ult Chllfrll
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middl~port . Pastor:
Mib: forenun, Putor EmerituJ lAwrence
Foreman. Worship- 10:00 am
Wtdnesday Servicu- 7 p.m.

c.......uor

GlOria
Portland-Racine Rd .. Pastor: Jim Proffitt .
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Wonhip 10:30 a.m .. Wcdl't:sday Sero-ices - 7;(1)
p.m.
Btthel Worship C.nter
39782 S.R. 7, R~vilk, OH 45772 . 112
mile Dorm or Eastern Schools on SR 7. A
Full Golptl Olurch. Pulor Rob Barber.
As&amp;Oeialt Putor Karyn Da,is. Youth
Pastor Suzie Francis. Sunday ·services
10:00 am worship, 6:00 pm Family Life
Oassts, Wed. Home Cell Groups 7:00
p.m.. Outer lirniu Cell Group at t~
churth 6:30pm to 8:30 prn

Mloenville
Pastor: Bob RobiMm . Sunday School - 9
a.m.. Wonhip • 10 am

-1

ParlCioapd
S~y Scbool-9a .m.• WORhip- lOam.

-Spitop

Commouoity Cllvdo

Sunday Scbool 10:00 am . Surlfay Wonflip
II :00 am , Wcdnesda)' 7:00 pm Pastor:
Bry111 &amp; Mi~y Dailey

~ CloriotJu

CUftoa Tabtraack Oudl
Clirton. W.\ 'a .. Sunday Scbool • 10 a.m .,
Worship · 7 p.m.• Wednesday Scl"\'ice - 7
p.m
:\lew Ufe Victory Cntcr
3773 GeufKes Crrek. Road.GaJiipolis . OH
Pntor: Bill Slalc:n. Sunday Services- 10
a.m. &amp;. 7 p.m. Wednesday - 7 p.m. A
Youth 7 p.m .
full Goopd Cboutlo
Stovlor
Rt.33&amp; . Anliquity. Pastor: Jesse Morris,
Sm·ices: Saturday 2:00p.m.

or,,.

Rou.d
Putor: Rick Bourne, Sunday School 9:30a.m.. Worship- 10:30 a.m., Thursday
Services - 7 p.m.
Saint Cmte:r
Paslor: William K. Mmhall, Sunday
Sthool · 10: I.S a.m .. WQnhip - 9:1.1 a.m.:
Bib~ Study: Monday HJO pm
Soo..W.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.. Worship- 9 1.m .

Asb Strtet Chu.rch
398 Ash St ., Middleport-Paslor Jeff Smi1b
Sunday School • 9;30 J.:m.,. Morning
Worship - 10:30 a.m . &amp;. 7:00 pm.
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p.m.. Youth
Service-7:00p.m.
Appt Ult Ct1111«
"'Full-Gospel Church'', Pasion John &amp;:
Pauy Wade:. 603 'sa.ond Ave. Muon. 7733:{117, Servi« lime: Sunday 10:30 a.m.,
Wedoeso!Jy 7 pm

llolhan1

Ahtmdul Gflft 1.1.1.

Putor: John Gil...,., Sundly So:hool- 10
Savices··IO a.m.

923 S. Third St. Midcileport, Pu10r Terc11
Davis, Sunday aervice, 10 a .m.,
Wednuday ttrvice, 7 p.m.

DonotoloSalloa
Cannel A ~uhan Rds. Racine , Ohio;
Putor: John Gilmon!_, Sunday School 9:4l 1.11,. Wonloip- 11 :00 a.m., Bible
Study Wed. 7:30p.m.

Feldt l'ull G&lt;Jopol Cboudl
-Lon&amp; Bottom, Pastor: Steve Reed, s~nday
School- 9:30 a.m, Worship-9 :30a.m.
and 7 p.m., Wednelday • 7 p.m., Friday •
lellowaltlp tcrvict 7 p.m.

MantittaStar
Puoor: John Gilmon:. Sundly So:hool · II

a.m., WoMip-10 a.m.

Huriaoa.W. Commuait)' Chun:~
Pastor:· Theron Durham. Sunda)' . 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.. Wednesday · 7 PJl,l ·

Eooll.elan
Putor: Bill Manhall Sunday School 9a.m.. Worship · 10 a.m., lst Sunday
every mornh evening service 7:00p.m.;
Wedncsday-7p.m.

Mtdollcpon
ClotaRb
Pearl St., Middlepmt , Pastor: Sam
Anderson , Sunday School 10 a.m.,
EveniDJ - 7:30pm . . Wemesday Service7:30pm.

a .m.. Won hip - 9 a.m., Wednaday

-

Putot: Kmy Wood. Soondly Sc:ltool - 10
am., Wonhip - 11 a.m.Wednesday
Servica6 pm; ~Bible Study 7 pm

I

Hob!lon Chriltlan Frlloftlllp C.urdl
Pastor: Hemh-el White . Sunda)' School·
10 am. Sunday Church sen· i~:e- 6:30pm
Wcdnuday 7 pm
Rnlonllon Cltriallaa FelloWIItlp
9JM Hooper Road . Athens, Pastor:
Lonnie Coals~ Sundty·Worship 10;00 1111,
· Wedne..,.y: 7 pm

M-

.H - orHeollq
SI. RI. IU L..pvllle, OH
Full Cospc:l. Cl Pastors Robert 4: Robcni
Musser. Sunday School 9 :30 am, ,
Worship 10 : ~0 am -· 7:00 pm. Wed.
Servite 7:00 pm
Ttam Jesus Mlnlstriai
Meeting in the Mulberry Communily
Center Gymnasium . PaslorEddie Baer.
Service·every Tuelday 6:30pm

c.........,

37~

Pentecostal
.....-.1"-mthly
Putor: St. Rt. 124, Radne, Tornado Rd.
Sunday SChool - 10 a.m., Evening - 1
p.m., Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Bailey Run ROid, Pastor: Rev. Emmell
Rawsoo, Sunday Evening 7 p.m ..

s--

CoolwllleUullaiM--

14J I ~ridgemsn St.. SyracuJe, Sunch)'
School - 10 a.m. Evenina · 6 p.m.,
Wednclda)' Service- 7 p.m.

tleiMICin.U

Jluel Cornm"1 Claerda
01'1 Rt. 124, Pastor: Edoel Hart , Sunday
School - 9:30a.m .. Wonhip · 10:30 am ..
7:30pm.

Thwnship ltd .. 468C. SUnday School - 9
a.m, Worship • 10 a.m., Wednesday
Servica- 10 a.m.

Jlodr' a t Oa.rdt
Gnnd Slle&lt;l. Sunday School· 9:30am ..
Wonhip - 10:30 am.,Putor Phillip BeU

nr.ltCltvelo
Co. Rd. 63, s.inday So:hool • 9:30 am.,
Wllllblp • 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene
Middleport Church tlllle N...,...
Pastor: Allen Mid.cap, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,Worship- IO:JO·am., 6:30p.m.,
WedneMiay Services · 7· p.m., Pastor:
Allen Midcap

Meip Coopendve Parbb
Northeast Cluster, Alfred. Pastor: Jim
Corbitt, Sunday Scbool - 9:JO a.m.,
Worship- II a.m., 6:30 p.m.

Retdavllle FeltGwlltlp
Church of 1he Nazarene, Pas1or: Russell
Cuson 1 Sunday Sthool • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:4-.S a.m., 7 p.m., Wednesday .
Services-7 p.m.

Cltaler
s , _ Cboudlflfllte N...,...

Putor M~ i4ffis, Sunday School- 9:30
a.m., Worship -

Presbyterian

Thundooy - - 7 p.m.

Putor: Helen Kline, Coolville Churcb.
Main &amp; F.ifd! St., Sun. Sch~ - 10 a.m.,
Worship -9 a.m., Tues. Services· 7 p.nl. ·

u.t"'

Salem Commurlity Chu.rtb
Back nrWe ~t Columbia. W.Va .om UevinJ
Road . Pa,l"or Charles Roush (304) 615228~ . Suntb~ Sclll)(ll 9:30 3m . Sunday
evening swil·c 7: 00pm. 8 ibly S1udy
Wednesday -ervi~c H ll pm

Flllllt Vlllloy TabonKie Church

' MI. OIIveVotllodMclbodltt
Off 124' behind Wilkesville, Paslor: Rev,
Ralph Sp~s. Sunday School - 9:30 a.~ .•
Worship - 10 :30 a.m., 7 p.m ., Thursday
Services - 7 p.m.

Putor. Jim Corbin, Wonhip - 9 un .•
Sunday School - 10 a.m. , Thursday
~icica-7p.ni. '
'

Roger Willford , Sunday Scbonl - 9:30
a.m . Worship- 7 pJJ'I .

Pastor: Rev. Gntt. Suo:tay School
- 9:30 a.m ., Won!Up • I I a.m.. 6 p.m.,
Wednaciay Services - 7 p.m.

Wonloip : llam.l'ulo(:. Richaro N""
N'ew Haven, Richud Nease , Pas1or,
Sunday worship 9:30 a.m. Tues. 6:30
prayer and Bible Srudy.

Fmdooao..,etMIIIIooo
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31. Pastor. Rev.

School • 9:30 a.m .. Wonhie •

-flf--Oordl

Wllleyullble H - Qudo
7S Pearl St.. Middleport . Pastor: Rick
Bolime. Sunday School- 10 1.m. Wonhip
-10:43 pm., Sunday Eve . 7:00 p.m .,
WccDelday Setviu- 7:30pm .

Pot00uy,

.__

Pastor: Keitll Rater. Soonday ~ - ~ tl
a.m.. Worship • 10 a.m., Youlh
Fellowship. Sunday - 6 p.m.

l'boo: Gru,. Bible H - Chun:b
112 mile off Rt J:ZS, Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Mutley, Sundty School - 9:30 a.m ..
Wonhip - IO:lO a.m.. 7:30 p.m..
Wcdnelday Service-7:30p.m.

Pastor:Bruce Terry, Sunday School -9:30
am.

POoooc Ju Lavm&lt;ler. Sunday School .

Soatday Sdlool · )0:30a.m.

Pucor: Brian Dunham . Worship - 9:30
a~ ., Sunday Sdtool- 10:3~ a.m.

Dtwe;y King. Sunday school- 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday worship -7 p.m .. Wed.neldly
Jli'IYU meeting- 1 p.m.

-.orOiotrdo t l d t e -

Putor: Deuil NuU . Worship - 9:30 un.

Colnry l'ltpUa Cllapol
Hanisooville Road, Pastor: Charles
McKeorie, Sunday SdJool 9:30 a.m.,
Worship · II a.m., 1:00 p.m ., Wcd~y
Service-7:00p.m.

Lading Crc:ck Rd .• Rutland. Pas1or. Rev:

Carttu.J*"t
h lhwe' a...a
Kin&amp;sbury Road . Pastor: Robert Vance,
Sunday Sthool - 9:30 a.m.. Worship
Service 10:30 a.m.. Evenin! Service 6
pm.

'Ncdaaday Savicea . 7 p.m .

J.-

llanloonvUie Presh,Oerian Cbwdo
Pastor: Roben Crow. Worship- 9 a~.
Mloldkport Presb1ta1a
Pastor: James Snyder. Sunday School 10
a.n1., wonhip service II am.

Seventh"Day Adventist
~vmtb·O.y Adnotllt
Mulberry Hts . .Rd ., Pomeroy, Saturday .
Services : Sabbath School - 2 p.m., ·
Worship - 3 p.m. ·

..,...... CGauotottlly Qwch
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .• Worship ·
10:30 un., 1 pm.
M... Cbopel Cloureb
Suodaoy tcltool ~ 10 a.m., Wonbip - II
a.m., Wed:nelday Service- 7 p.m.

United Brethren
MI. Hermoa Vulled B -

Feldt G&lt;oopd CboDdo
Loni Bottom, Sunday 'school-9:30a.m.,
Wouhip ~ 10:4.S a.m., 7:30 p.m ..
WedDelday 7:30p.m.

MI. OUve CommDDIIy Cbun:h
Pastor: Lawrence Bush. Sunday School ·
9:30a.m.. Eveaing - 6:30p.m .• Wedneda)'
Service - 7 prn.
Full Golpol L!plb33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy, Pastor: Roy
Hunter, Sunday School · 10 a.m., Eveoina
7:30p.m., Tuesday &amp; Thurs.- 7:30p.m. ·

In Cbrkt Cburrh
Te11as Community 36411 Wickham Rd,
Puor: Peter Martindale, SulKily 'Sthool9:30 a.m ., Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m ., Wednesday SerVices - HIO p.m.
Youth group mu:ting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7p.m.
Edtu Uullt'd Brtthrea In Christ
. Stale Route 124, betwen 'Reedsville &amp;.
Hockingpo.i . Sunday Stbool - 10 a.m.,
Sunday Worship - II :00 a.m. Wednesday
Senoices - 7:00 p.m .• Pastor- M. Adam
Will

Soollt t1e11te1 Communlly CltaJ:&lt;b
Silver Ridge- Pastor Linda Damewood, ·
Swxlay Scbool - 9 a.m., Wonbip Service
10 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sunday

If ye abide in Me, and My

www.lealordrealeslale.net

KEBLER BUSINESS
SERVICES

Sunday Schooi9:JS a.m.

llemkd Gron Clwildu CHrdl
Minister: Latry Brown, Wonhip - 9:30
a.m. Sunday School - 10:30 un .• Bible
Study - 7 p.m.

Cbos~,.

Aldll(ully Baptist
Sunday School •· 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:45 a.m.• Sunday Evening· 6:00p.m.,
Pastor; Don 'Yalker

'Milly Cloordl
Secood &amp;. Lynn, POmeroy. Paslor: Rev.
Jorwban Noble, Wonhip 10:25 am.,

Contact 740-441 -1296 Sunday mominJ
10:00. Sun morning Bible sludy;
roJ ioWing worsh ip , Sun. eve 6:00 pm,
Wed bible study 7 pm

Baptist Ch....to
Sunday School - 9:30am. Preaching
Service IO:JOam. E\·ening Sm·ict
7:00pm. Wroncloda y Bible Stud~ 7:00pm,
lnrerim Preacher - Floyd Ross

MI . Moriah Baptist
Fou'!h &amp; Main St.. Middlepon. Sunday
School-9:30a.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m .

Congregational

Wnblole Clovdo of Oriol
ll2Z6Childn:n's Home Rd. Pomeroy. OH

Baptist

Hours

6am·Spm

p.m.

Church of Christ

Pagt\'Uir Frerwill Baptist Churdl
Pas!or. Mike Harmon . Sunday School
9:30 to 10:30 am . Worship iCT\'k't JOJO
to II :00 am. Wed . prc:aching6pm

Forest Run Baptist- Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods, Sunday Sc hool - 10
a.m., Worship- I I :JO a.m.

"'God

Chardo
of....,....,
OJ . White Rd. off St. Rt. UiO, Pastor: PJ.
Qupman. Soonday Sdoool · 10 am .•
Worship· II a.m., Wednesday Senices- 7

--c..-

Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . Rutland.
Services: Slln !0 :00 a.m. &amp;t 7:30 pro .,
Thun . 7:00p.m.. Pastor MartyR. Hunon

Failh Baptist C,laln:ll
Railroad St., Mason, Sunday School : 10
a.m., Worsh ip - 11 a.m. , 6 p.m .
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

s,...

flnl Cloordl of Gool
Appk and Secord Sts.; Paswr: Rev. David
RIU.ell, Sunday School and Worship- 10
a.m. Evening Services- 6:30 p.m.•
Wednesday Services - 6:]() p.m.

Catholic

VIctory Boplllllndepeadent•
525 N. 2nd St. Mi~leport', - Pastor : James ·
E. Keesee, Wonhi_p - IOa.m., 7 p.m.,
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

Cloordl tiCool
Pastor: Roa Hoado . Soopday Wonloip. 10
a.m., 6 p .m., Wednetday Services - 7
p.m.

Flnt ....... Chardo " - · wv
(l..t.pendmo Bopbsl)
SR 652 and ADdmon St. Pastor: Robert
Grady, Sunday school 10 am, Mornilll
chun:h II am. Sunday e~g 6 pm, Wed.
Bible Study 7 pm

St. Rt. 143 just o~ Rt. 7. Pastor: Rev.
Ja~es R. Acree, Sr.• Sunday Unifie~
Service, Wors~ip • 10:30 a.m ., 6 p.m.,
Wednc:sdayScrviccs-7 p.m.
·

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride·in our community

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....... Chardo
Ravenswood. WV. Sunday School 10 am·
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Hillside Raptkt Ch....to

r

Mile Hill Rd ., Racine. Putor: James
Sanerfteld, SuDdly School - 9:4S a.m ..
Emoioi - 6 p.m.,
Se1Yica. 7
p.m.

Ratlud ""WIRIIopdol
Salem St. Pastor: • Sunday Scbool • 10
a.m.., Even ing - 7 p .m., Wedoesday
Services- 7 p.m .

Cllllrdl of J...., Chrkt ApoaD1i&lt;
Vanl.mjr and Ward Rd .. Pu!:oc James
Miller, Sunday School - 10:30 am ..
Evening - 7:30p.m.

813 S . lrd

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

(7411) 992·6451

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Matthew 5:

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FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel
;,

PageA6

Friday, June 8, 2007

Frida~June8,2007

- - - -.A Hunge~ For·More
Sunday mornings are
always a whirlwind at our
house. While we prepare, of
course, all that we can on
Saturday e·vening before we
Pastor
finally go to sleep, it is no
Thorn
small job for us the next
!IJ!ollohan
morning to "rail y the
troops'' (a.k.a. our four children) and get everyone out
the door. Getting everyone
dressed. _giving then! a way) and then ran off to
quick bite to eat, and load- show her brothers as well
ing up our van full of para- who all complimented her
phernalia needed .for wor- (in part. simply due to the
ship and Bible study may fact that they were happy .to
be our routine, but every have a morning in which
week the race to get to there was far less stress on
· · church with everything and their eardrums).
everyone intact gets our
We were all delighted
blood pumping.
when it seemed that things
Last Sunday was typical were going smoothly for a
in most respects, including change. But then the other
our 2-year-old daughter 's shoe dropped ... or should I
very strict opinion of fash- say "sandal. " My wife proion and her tendency to duced the sandals that
want to decide her own matched the dress and diswardrobe for herself. My playe.d them for our daughwife and I thought that we ter, who frowned and
had a turned a major corner shook her Iie(\d vigorously.
when she chose to no.t wage She then ran off on her two
war against us for trying to little toddler legs. down the
get her .out of her hall and into her bedroom
Strawberry
Shortcake where she disappeared
nightgown into her Sunday from our view for a
dress. But she was appar- · moment. We could hear her
ently so excited about wear- puttering about and then
ing her new white dress she reappeared, running
with a rainbow of butter- back towards us, carrying
flies on it that she decided in her pretty little hands
to forgo her typical protests her two brown sandals,
and even eagerly ·assisted creased and very worn
her mother in changing her from active playing.
clothes. Once dressed, she
"No, honey," my wife
shyly showed us how she gently said, taking the sanlooked in the new dress (a dals from our daughter 's
gift from a friend, by the grasp and again holding out

the white sandals with little
white butterflies upon them.
"These go with your dress,
sweetie. Don't you want to
wear these?"
No response. "Let's wear
these sandal s just today,
okay?" Our . little angel's
face suddenly scrunched up
in disbelief and then she
loudly wailed, "No-o-o-o-oo'" She rai sed her tiny
hands to her face clutched at
her cheeks as if utterly
heartbroken and distraught
(and I think she really felt
that she was, too).
She calmed down after fl
moment, and allowed her
mother to put the white sandals on her feet. Our daughter sighed and then moseyed
off to another part of the
house while we turned our
attention back to getting
ready and leaving in time for
our church's worship service. J.ust ·when we had gotten everything loaded, with
the help of our three sons
who also were ready and
waiting in the van, my wife
reached down and lifted up
our last passenger into her
arms, and sighed. When I
looked to see what the matter was, she just nodded at
our daughter's feet. Instead
of the · little white sandals
with the ·little·butterflies, she
was shod again in the plain
brown leather sandals.
"Urn ... she's got her old
sandals on again," I cleverly
observed (nothing escapes
me on Sunday mornings).
My wife chuckled. "Yeah,

I noticed," she replied.
"So what do you want to
do about it?" I asked. "Make
her change them or let her
wear the brown ones?''
"Well, we'll compromise
for now," she answered.
"She won't wear any sandals
unti 1 we get there. But then
I' ll put her white ones on
her." My wife carefully
coaxed the old brown sandals off the little girl's feet
again, with immediate violent repercussions. "No-o-oo-o!" our daughter cried,
sounding for all the world
like she'd lost her best
friends . My wife irresistibly
drew her away from the sandals, out the door, and into
the van where I joined them
shortly thereafter. As we
drove away, and the shrieking of our 2-year-old
Calamity Jane tapered off a
bit. I began to wax philosophically and shared with
my sons (who may or may
not have heard a single thing
that[ said), that even though 1
we were on our way to worship with our church family,
we wanted to be very, very
sure that we were "dressed"
for worship. "It's great to
dress in nicer clothes when
we go to church, and it's neat
that we don't treat worship .
as a trivial thing by trying to
· have a nice appearance. But
. a whole lot more important
than dressing . in our nice
clothes, is being sure that our
hearts are ready, too." And
·so we 1a!J_ prayed together,
while we drove along, that

FeUowship ·
Apostolic

God would help us to be
"dressed .in our hearts" for
coming to worship.
"Who may ascend the hill
of the LORD? Who may
stand in His holy place? He
who has clean hands and a
pure heart, who does not lift
up his soul to an idol or
swear by what is false"
(Psalm 25:3-4 NIV).
This means that we must
never treat lightly the idea
of entering a concentrated
time of worship or even a
time of prayer in our own
private prayer closets. If we
truly want an "audience"
with God as we sing our
praises or offer Him. ·our
suppliqnions, we must
understand that our "hearts
must be dressed." As it says
in Psalm 25:3-4, the one
who can come close to God
is a man or woman of character who does what is
right, for the right motives,
in order to please the one,
true God. God does not give
audience to pretenders, but
He does grant it to those
who truly and humbly seek
l:lis face through the forgiveness offered them
through Jesus Christ.
Sometimes though, even
as adults, we can act like my
toddler daughter, oblivious
to the fact that anchoring
ourselves onto our own
agendas and plans can
derail us from the glories
prepared for us by the
Father. We want to hold on
to our "old brown sandals"
and we resent any opposi-

tion, even from God Who
truly knpws what's best for
us. We too often kick and
yell and scream as He
unsnaps us from our §mall _
agendas, bad attitudel, and
se lfish desires, His only
desire being to "get us
dressed" for real relationship with Himself. He might
even tolerate our complaining for a season, but in the
end, for us to enjoy the
delights of full and free fellowship with Him, we're
going to have to submit to
His authority and surrender
to His love.
The one who can do that
" .. . will receive blessing from
the LORD and vindication
from God his Savior. Such is
the generation of those who
seek Him .. . Lift up your
heads, 0 you gates; be lifted
up, you ancient doors, that
the King of glory may come
in. Who is this King of
glory? The LORD strong and
mighty, the LORD mighty In
battle ... Who is He, this King
of glory? The LORD
Almighty - He is the King
of glory" (Psalm 24:5-6a, 78, 10 NIV).

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

Pennsylvania Presbyterian church
leaves denomination over sexuality

Youth honored at party
Abreak-out party
for the children of
Hysell Run
Community Church
pose for a picture
during the festivities sponsored by
the church. The
party was given to
celebrate the hard
work and effort
put forth by all of
the children during
the school year,
and as a kick off
to summer vacation. The children
were served piua
and shacks,
played games,
and enjoyed a fellowship time following the 10:30
· a.m. church .service.
Subnllttecl photo

PITTSBURGH (AP) - In a inove emblematic of mainline Protestant divisions over sexuality, members of the
largest church in the Pittsburgh Presbytery voted to leave
the Presbyterian Church (USA) and join a smaller, more
conservative denomination.
At a congregational meeting, 951 members of Memorial
Park Presbyterian Church in McCandless Township voted
to be affiliated with the Evangelical Presbyterian Church.
Fifty-two percent, or 761 members, of the 1,450-member
congregation needed to approve the plan.
"We are saddened that Memorial Park members and leaders have elected to separate from the Presbyterian Church,"
James Mead, pastor to Pittsburgh Presbytery, said in a &gt;llltement. "However, we believe that wrestling with such painful
issues is part of God's redemptive plan for the world."
Memorial Park church officials said last month they were
concerned about the national denomination's move away
from traditional doctrines concerning the Holy Trinity and
the authority of the Bible, and its increasingly liberal views
on gay ordination.
Memorial Park church officials have said their issue isn' t
with the presbytery, a regional body of churches, but the
national church.
The Presbyterian Church (USA) is among several
Protestant denominations embroiled in a bitter debate
between conservatives and liberals over what role gays
should have in. their church.es.

www.mydallyeentlnel.com

WORSIHP GOD THIS WEEK

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Rh'n' \ 'alley
River YaUey Apostolic Woohip Center.
Ave ., Middltp.)n, Re\·.

Michael Bradford. Pastor. Surxia)·, iO:JO
a.m. l'ur~ - 6:30 pnyer, Wed . 7 pm Bible

Study
Emmanud A.postolk T•bmalde Inc.

Cloordo
161 Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy, 992-5898.
Paslor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz, Sal. Con.
4:45-5:15p .m.: Mus- 5:30 p.rn ., Sun.
Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m ... Sun. Mass - 9:30
t.m .• Daily Mus - 8:30a.m.

.Assembly of God
Ubmy .U....bly or God
P.O . Box 467. Dudding Lane. Mason,
W.Va.. Paslor: Neil Tennant, Sunday
'- Service~- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p:m.

Warm Friendly
AtmoSphere

Wlat great ffiwin:$ carES fran koo.+.rin;J that v.e
lovej. 1lrrl v.hat p;rin and sorro.o.o cUres frCill
that scir.:rre•s love has OOen witlrlraw'l fran us.
Io.e is t1-e am;rt th3t bird; liS tl:g2t:)'Er, as
as fri.erds, em e.m as s::cieties. 'llHefa:e too, ·
it is irrpJrtant to tell ot.t-ers h:::w l'lll±l tley
rpean to us, and ho.ol rruch we l ove them,
~ially ...tel Uti.s rray te in dl.tt.
'"""' drildfen aie balrg jlloisha:l cy
their parE!'lts, goa:l pm:nts 00 rrt. w:i.t:h::lraw

Members of IM MLS and REALTOR"

"""""" tte:ir ~ip. lao:: tD Jo&lt;c otl"er koni thlt tteir la.oe irarm:ros t1"e
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Episcopal
G.... Eploaopol Clovdo
326 E. Mom So .. Pomeroy. Swlday Sd&gt;ool
and Holy Eudwist 11:00 t.m. Rev.
Edward Payn&lt;

Holiness
~Cioordl

Pastor: Steve Tomek , Main Shed.
Rutland, Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m ..
Surday Serv~7 p.m .

........, Cbwdo of Oriol
212 W. Main St., Sunday Scbool - 9:30
a .m .. Worship• 10:30 a ~ m ., 6 p.m.,

Baptist Cblll'&lt;h
Paslor: Ste\·e Linle. Sunday School: 9:30
am, Morning Worship: 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study 6:30pm: choir
prac1icto 7:30: you1h and Bible Buddies
6:30p.m. Thurs. I pm book stody

0..6-Chardo
31057 Start Roo!t 325, Lanasvl&amp;e, Pastor:
Benjamin Cnwrml. Sunday school - 9:30
a.m., Sunday wlnh.ip · 10:30 a.m. &amp;: 7
p.in., Wecinesday prayer service: • 7 p.m.

·Wednesday Scn·ices - 7 p.m.
........, Welbide Chardo·flfCiuiot
33226 Children's Home Rd .; Sunday
School- tl ·a.m .• Worship. 10a.m ., 6 p.m ,
Wednesday Services- 7 pm.

Hop&lt; Baptist Cbonh tSoolhm&gt;)
570 Gr1Jit St .. Middleport , Sunday school
- 9:30 a.rn __ Worship - II a.m. and 6 p.m.,
Wednesday ~rvi~ - 1 p.m. Pastor: Gary
Ellis
Rutland flnllloptl5t Clmtlo
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.: Worship 10:45 a.m.
Pomtroy flnllloptl5t
Pas1or Jon Broclcm, f.asl Main St:,
Sunday Sch. 9:30am, Worship 10:30 am

- . . . . . Cllvdo of Orisl
5th and Main . Pauor: AI Hart~n .
Childrens Direclor, Sharon Say~. Tc:en
lliomor: ~ledger Vaugban. Sunday School
• 9:30 un., Wonllip- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7
p.m., Wcdnc:sday Servica • 7,p.m.
~ChoudotiCiuht

Worship · 9:30 a.m.. Sunday School I0:30a.m., Paslor-Jdlrey Wallace , 1st and
lod Soonday

Fht Soutlwm Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike. Pastor: E. Lamar
O"Bryam. Sunday Sc,hool - 9:30 a.m.,
Wonhip · 8: 15 a.m., 9:45 am &amp;.7:00p.m. ,
Wedllesday Stf\'ic_es . 7:00p.m.

llearwlllow lldp Clotudo of Clorlol

Worship • 10 :30 a.m.. 6:30 p.m ,
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

11nl Bapllst Cboutb
Pas1or: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St.,
MiddleJXln, Sunday Sthool · 9:15a.m.,
10 :15 a .m., 7:00 p.m.,
Worship
Wednesdiy Stnioe- 7:00pm.

Zlol Cburdl of Cbrlol
Harriaonvi.lte Rd . (Rt.l43),
Pastor: RoJer Wltlon, S~anday School 9:30 a.m., Worsblp - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m., Wednetday Services- 7 p.m.

flnl Bapllll
Put or: Rytn Eaton, pallor , Sunday
School : 9:l0 a.m ., Worthip- 10:40 a.m.,
7:00 p.m.. Wednesday Senice1 - 7:00

R,.a a.. Cammuoolly !Jioudl
Putor: Rev. Larry Lemley: Suiwloy Scbool
- 9:30 rm., Wontlip - 10:45 a.m .. 7 p.m.,
Tbanday Bible Study and Y~th - 7 p.m.

1\qlpcn l'lola Cbur&lt;b ol Cbrlol

JnstnJmcnW, Worship Service - 9 a.m.,
Communion - 10 a.m., Sundly School 10:" am .. Yooitll·l:JO pm Sundly. Bible
Study W-sdJy 7 pm

p.m.

SUver ttu.. Ba~
P11tor: John Swanson, Sunday ~chool IOa .m.. Worship · lla.m .. 7:00 p.m.
,Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

.LaantCIIII'--Cit-

Putor: Olein Rowe, Sunday School •
9:30 a.m., Worsbip - 10:30 a.m. And 6
p.m.,Wednelday Service - 7:00p.m.

BndhoorJ: ChurdlorCiorlol
Mini5ter: Tom Runyon. 39558 Bradbury
Road, Middleport, Sunday School - 9:30
11.m.
Worahlp-IO :lOa.m.

MI. Valoo Baptist
Pasto~: Dennis Weaver Sunday School9:45 a.m .. Evening - 6:30 p.m..
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
TboC!a&lt;bo!J"""

Rullud Chordl ol Clorlol
Sundiy School - 9:30 a.m., Wonbip Uld "
Communi~ · 10:30 a.m., Bob J. Wmy,
Mini.$tc:r

Btthltbem Baptist Churtb ·
Great Bend. Route 124 , Racine , OH.
Pastor: Ed Carter. Sunday School · 9:30
a.m. , .Sunday Worship - 10:30 i.m.,
Wcdnc:iday Bible Study-7:00p.m.

Bndf..... Chanit GICilrlol
Comer of St. Rt. 124 61. Bndbury Rd ..

MiniSicl: Dous Sh~tt~blin. Vouch Miniatcr:
Bill AmbclJer, Sunday..School-9:30a.m.
Worship ~ 8:00 a.m ., 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m._.Wednesday Setvices - 7:00p.m.

OW tlelheiFnoe WW Boplltt Cboutb · ·
286(ll St. Rt . 7. Middleport, Sun4ay
ServiCe · 10 a.m ., 6:00 p.m ., Tllesday
Services -6:00

lltdory IIIIIs Churdl ol Cbrlol

Thppen Plains, Pa5tor Mike MOCIIe, Bible
class, 9 a.m. Surtday; worship 10 a.m .
Sunday; 'wonhip 6:30 pm Sundi.y; Bible
c~s7pm'Wcd.

ClludlflfCiorlot
P"""" Pllmp Sowm. Soonday School: 9:30
a.m., Worship Service: 10:10 a.m .• Bible
Study. w-sdJy. 6:30 pm.

Dmcr Chutb of Cluilt
· Sunday school 9:30a.m., Sunday wonh!p
-10:30a'.m
The Cboudl &lt;!1 Chis! of Pomoroy
Intersection 1 and l24 W, EvaDJe~st:
Dennis Sarsent, SUnday Bible Study 9:30 a.m. , Wonhip: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m., Wednesday Bible Study · 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Cbureb of Cbrllt Ia
CloriJtlaD Ualoo
Hart ford, W.Va ., Pastor : D~vid Greer.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a.m., 7;00 p.m., WedneMiay
Services-7:00p.m,

ChJJI'Ch of God

Su~y

9:30 1.11 .• Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wcxloesday Sen-ic-n - 7 p.m.

-

CluW " ............1 Solall
St. Rt. )MI. «6-6247 or 446·7486.
Sunday Sehool 10:20-\1 a.m., Relief
SocietyfPrie1thood · 11 :0.5-12:00 noon.
Sacrameal Servh:e 9-10:15 a.m.,
llomctnakiQa
ht Thun. · 7 p.m.

....uni.

Lutheran
Pine Grove, Wonhip - 9:00 a.m .. Sunday
School- 10:00 a.m. Pl.t:or:

Oar Sto.tour Lto....... Cliurdo
Walnl\t !!Jid Henry Sts .. Ravenswood,
W.Va., ~astor: David Russell, Suaday
Scbool-10:00 a.m., Wonhip- 11•-!0·

Sl. Psul .......... Clooudl
Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy,
Sun. ScOOol · 9:45 a.m., Wonhip- 11 am.
C~r

United Methodist
Gnloutt Uotlletl MetMdltt

10:30 a.m.

CloalerCltvelo t l d t e -

ac....vodied-

Worship • ~: 30 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m ., Fint Sunday of Mood:! - 7:00
p,m . service

w..,..

WltiO.'s Cbapd
Coolville Road . Pastor: Rev. Charles
Manindale . Sunday ScOOol - 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. Wednesday Service
- 7pm.

Cloordl tldte , . , _
Putoc llaao: Sloupe. Suoday So:hool • 9:30

...._.,_St. ....

a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 6:30 p.m..
t.'cdnnday Scrtic:u . 7 p.m.

Pastor: Jim Corbin, Sunday School • 9
a.m .. Worship - tO a.m., Tuesday Suvica

Other Churches

-7:30 pJD.
Catnol~

s,... c

AJbury (Syncou&lt;). Pasoor. Bob Rol&gt;in&gt;oo.
Sunday School - 9:45 un., Worship - I I
. a.m .• Walor:sday Service~ . 7:30p.m.

falntew Bible Cltvelo
Letart. W.Va. Rt . I. Pastor. Briao May ,
Sunday School - 9:30a.m .. Worship~ 1:00
p.m .. WedneW.y Bible Study · 7:00p.m.
Foidt r-...p c . - r... ClritO
Pas1or: Rev. Franklin Dickens. Service:
. Friday, 7 p.m.

ooiiJ' c..rn.

2480 Sec:oad St., Sync:llSC, OH
Sun. School &lt;tO llll. Sundy nigbt6:J() pm
Putor:Jo&lt;Qw.;.
ANnrl«t I 1
(hiGOipd Cllurdl) Harrisonville ,
Puton: Deb~ Kty Man.hall .
Sunday Servict. 2 p.m.

-

,....

Pastor: Ailand KioJ, Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Worship . 9:30 a.m .. Bib&amp;e
Study Wed. 7:30

flotw-

Calury Biblr Oudt
Pomeroy Pih , Co. Rd ., Pas10r: Rev .
Blackwood. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ..
Worship 10:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m. ,
Wcdne5dlly Service . 7:l0 p.m.

Aatuioc G,...C.......tly Ch....to

PaStoc Keith Rader, Suoday School • 10
a.m ., Wcnbip - II a.m.

r--

Pastor: Wayne Dunlap, Swe R1 . 681 ,
Tuppcn Plains. Sun. Worship: 10 am 8t.
6:)() pm .. Wed. Bibk Study 7:00p.m.

-

Pastoc Bob RobiOUOIO. Soonday ~ - I0
a.m., Worship · 9 a.m.

Fellowship
. (Non-denominahonal rellowmip)
Mming in dx- Meip Middle School
Cafeteria ~oms Stewan
10:00 am - Noon Sunday; Informal
Wusb.ip.O.ildren'!i ministry

(Wdollqooot)
Pastor: Brian Dunham. S\lndaY School ·
9:30am.,Wonhip-1 1:00un.

Rejoicing Ult Chllfrll
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middl~port . Pastor:
Mib: forenun, Putor EmerituJ lAwrence
Foreman. Worship- 10:00 am
Wtdnesday Servicu- 7 p.m.

c.......uor

GlOria
Portland-Racine Rd .. Pastor: Jim Proffitt .
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Wonhip 10:30 a.m .. Wcdl't:sday Sero-ices - 7;(1)
p.m.
Btthel Worship C.nter
39782 S.R. 7, R~vilk, OH 45772 . 112
mile Dorm or Eastern Schools on SR 7. A
Full Golptl Olurch. Pulor Rob Barber.
As&amp;Oeialt Putor Karyn Da,is. Youth
Pastor Suzie Francis. Sunday ·services
10:00 am worship, 6:00 pm Family Life
Oassts, Wed. Home Cell Groups 7:00
p.m.. Outer lirniu Cell Group at t~
churth 6:30pm to 8:30 prn

Mloenville
Pastor: Bob RobiMm . Sunday School - 9
a.m.. Wonhip • 10 am

-1

ParlCioapd
S~y Scbool-9a .m.• WORhip- lOam.

-Spitop

Commouoity Cllvdo

Sunday Scbool 10:00 am . Surlfay Wonflip
II :00 am , Wcdnesda)' 7:00 pm Pastor:
Bry111 &amp; Mi~y Dailey

~ CloriotJu

CUftoa Tabtraack Oudl
Clirton. W.\ 'a .. Sunday Scbool • 10 a.m .,
Worship · 7 p.m.• Wednesday Scl"\'ice - 7
p.m
:\lew Ufe Victory Cntcr
3773 GeufKes Crrek. Road.GaJiipolis . OH
Pntor: Bill Slalc:n. Sunday Services- 10
a.m. &amp;. 7 p.m. Wednesday - 7 p.m. A
Youth 7 p.m .
full Goopd Cboutlo
Stovlor
Rt.33&amp; . Anliquity. Pastor: Jesse Morris,
Sm·ices: Saturday 2:00p.m.

or,,.

Rou.d
Putor: Rick Bourne, Sunday School 9:30a.m.. Worship- 10:30 a.m., Thursday
Services - 7 p.m.
Saint Cmte:r
Paslor: William K. Mmhall, Sunday
Sthool · 10: I.S a.m .. WQnhip - 9:1.1 a.m.:
Bib~ Study: Monday HJO pm
Soo..W.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.. Worship- 9 1.m .

Asb Strtet Chu.rch
398 Ash St ., Middleport-Paslor Jeff Smi1b
Sunday School • 9;30 J.:m.,. Morning
Worship - 10:30 a.m . &amp;. 7:00 pm.
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p.m.. Youth
Service-7:00p.m.
Appt Ult Ct1111«
"'Full-Gospel Church'', Pasion John &amp;:
Pauy Wade:. 603 'sa.ond Ave. Muon. 7733:{117, Servi« lime: Sunday 10:30 a.m.,
Wedoeso!Jy 7 pm

llolhan1

Ahtmdul Gflft 1.1.1.

Putor: John Gil...,., Sundly So:hool- 10
Savices··IO a.m.

923 S. Third St. Midcileport, Pu10r Terc11
Davis, Sunday aervice, 10 a .m.,
Wednuday ttrvice, 7 p.m.

DonotoloSalloa
Cannel A ~uhan Rds. Racine , Ohio;
Putor: John Gilmon!_, Sunday School 9:4l 1.11,. Wonloip- 11 :00 a.m., Bible
Study Wed. 7:30p.m.

Feldt l'ull G&lt;Jopol Cboudl
-Lon&amp; Bottom, Pastor: Steve Reed, s~nday
School- 9:30 a.m, Worship-9 :30a.m.
and 7 p.m., Wednelday • 7 p.m., Friday •
lellowaltlp tcrvict 7 p.m.

MantittaStar
Puoor: John Gilmon:. Sundly So:hool · II

a.m., WoMip-10 a.m.

Huriaoa.W. Commuait)' Chun:~
Pastor:· Theron Durham. Sunda)' . 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.. Wednesday · 7 PJl,l ·

Eooll.elan
Putor: Bill Manhall Sunday School 9a.m.. Worship · 10 a.m., lst Sunday
every mornh evening service 7:00p.m.;
Wedncsday-7p.m.

Mtdollcpon
ClotaRb
Pearl St., Middlepmt , Pastor: Sam
Anderson , Sunday School 10 a.m.,
EveniDJ - 7:30pm . . Wemesday Service7:30pm.

a .m.. Won hip - 9 a.m., Wednaday

-

Putot: Kmy Wood. Soondly Sc:ltool - 10
am., Wonhip - 11 a.m.Wednesday
Servica6 pm; ~Bible Study 7 pm

I

Hob!lon Chriltlan Frlloftlllp C.urdl
Pastor: Hemh-el White . Sunda)' School·
10 am. Sunday Church sen· i~:e- 6:30pm
Wcdnuday 7 pm
Rnlonllon Cltriallaa FelloWIItlp
9JM Hooper Road . Athens, Pastor:
Lonnie Coals~ Sundty·Worship 10;00 1111,
· Wedne..,.y: 7 pm

M-

.H - orHeollq
SI. RI. IU L..pvllle, OH
Full Cospc:l. Cl Pastors Robert 4: Robcni
Musser. Sunday School 9 :30 am, ,
Worship 10 : ~0 am -· 7:00 pm. Wed.
Servite 7:00 pm
Ttam Jesus Mlnlstriai
Meeting in the Mulberry Communily
Center Gymnasium . PaslorEddie Baer.
Service·every Tuelday 6:30pm

c.........,

37~

Pentecostal
.....-.1"-mthly
Putor: St. Rt. 124, Radne, Tornado Rd.
Sunday SChool - 10 a.m., Evening - 1
p.m., Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Bailey Run ROid, Pastor: Rev. Emmell
Rawsoo, Sunday Evening 7 p.m ..

s--

CoolwllleUullaiM--

14J I ~ridgemsn St.. SyracuJe, Sunch)'
School - 10 a.m. Evenina · 6 p.m.,
Wednclda)' Service- 7 p.m.

tleiMICin.U

Jluel Cornm"1 Claerda
01'1 Rt. 124, Pastor: Edoel Hart , Sunday
School - 9:30a.m .. Wonhip · 10:30 am ..
7:30pm.

Thwnship ltd .. 468C. SUnday School - 9
a.m, Worship • 10 a.m., Wednesday
Servica- 10 a.m.

Jlodr' a t Oa.rdt
Gnnd Slle&lt;l. Sunday School· 9:30am ..
Wonhip - 10:30 am.,Putor Phillip BeU

nr.ltCltvelo
Co. Rd. 63, s.inday So:hool • 9:30 am.,
Wllllblp • 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene
Middleport Church tlllle N...,...
Pastor: Allen Mid.cap, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,Worship- IO:JO·am., 6:30p.m.,
WedneMiay Services · 7· p.m., Pastor:
Allen Midcap

Meip Coopendve Parbb
Northeast Cluster, Alfred. Pastor: Jim
Corbitt, Sunday Scbool - 9:JO a.m.,
Worship- II a.m., 6:30 p.m.

Retdavllle FeltGwlltlp
Church of 1he Nazarene, Pas1or: Russell
Cuson 1 Sunday Sthool • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:4-.S a.m., 7 p.m., Wednesday .
Services-7 p.m.

Cltaler
s , _ Cboudlflfllte N...,...

Putor M~ i4ffis, Sunday School- 9:30
a.m., Worship -

Presbyterian

Thundooy - - 7 p.m.

Putor: Helen Kline, Coolville Churcb.
Main &amp; F.ifd! St., Sun. Sch~ - 10 a.m.,
Worship -9 a.m., Tues. Services· 7 p.nl. ·

u.t"'

Salem Commurlity Chu.rtb
Back nrWe ~t Columbia. W.Va .om UevinJ
Road . Pa,l"or Charles Roush (304) 615228~ . Suntb~ Sclll)(ll 9:30 3m . Sunday
evening swil·c 7: 00pm. 8 ibly S1udy
Wednesday -ervi~c H ll pm

Flllllt Vlllloy TabonKie Church

' MI. OIIveVotllodMclbodltt
Off 124' behind Wilkesville, Paslor: Rev,
Ralph Sp~s. Sunday School - 9:30 a.~ .•
Worship - 10 :30 a.m., 7 p.m ., Thursday
Services - 7 p.m.

Putor. Jim Corbin, Wonhip - 9 un .•
Sunday School - 10 a.m. , Thursday
~icica-7p.ni. '
'

Roger Willford , Sunday Scbonl - 9:30
a.m . Worship- 7 pJJ'I .

Pastor: Rev. Gntt. Suo:tay School
- 9:30 a.m ., Won!Up • I I a.m.. 6 p.m.,
Wednaciay Services - 7 p.m.

Wonloip : llam.l'ulo(:. Richaro N""
N'ew Haven, Richud Nease , Pas1or,
Sunday worship 9:30 a.m. Tues. 6:30
prayer and Bible Srudy.

Fmdooao..,etMIIIIooo
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31. Pastor. Rev.

School • 9:30 a.m .. Wonhie •

-flf--Oordl

Wllleyullble H - Qudo
7S Pearl St.. Middleport . Pastor: Rick
Bolime. Sunday School- 10 1.m. Wonhip
-10:43 pm., Sunday Eve . 7:00 p.m .,
WccDelday Setviu- 7:30pm .

Pot00uy,

.__

Pastor: Keitll Rater. Soonday ~ - ~ tl
a.m.. Worship • 10 a.m., Youlh
Fellowship. Sunday - 6 p.m.

l'boo: Gru,. Bible H - Chun:b
112 mile off Rt J:ZS, Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Mutley, Sundty School - 9:30 a.m ..
Wonhip - IO:lO a.m.. 7:30 p.m..
Wcdnelday Service-7:30p.m.

Pastor:Bruce Terry, Sunday School -9:30
am.

POoooc Ju Lavm&lt;ler. Sunday School .

Soatday Sdlool · )0:30a.m.

Pucor: Brian Dunham . Worship - 9:30
a~ ., Sunday Sdtool- 10:3~ a.m.

Dtwe;y King. Sunday school- 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday worship -7 p.m .. Wed.neldly
Jli'IYU meeting- 1 p.m.

-.orOiotrdo t l d t e -

Putor: Deuil NuU . Worship - 9:30 un.

Colnry l'ltpUa Cllapol
Hanisooville Road, Pastor: Charles
McKeorie, Sunday SdJool 9:30 a.m.,
Worship · II a.m., 1:00 p.m ., Wcd~y
Service-7:00p.m.

Lading Crc:ck Rd .• Rutland. Pas1or. Rev:

Carttu.J*"t
h lhwe' a...a
Kin&amp;sbury Road . Pastor: Robert Vance,
Sunday Sthool - 9:30 a.m.. Worship
Service 10:30 a.m.. Evenin! Service 6
pm.

'Ncdaaday Savicea . 7 p.m .

J.-

llanloonvUie Presh,Oerian Cbwdo
Pastor: Roben Crow. Worship- 9 a~.
Mloldkport Presb1ta1a
Pastor: James Snyder. Sunday School 10
a.n1., wonhip service II am.

Seventh"Day Adventist
~vmtb·O.y Adnotllt
Mulberry Hts . .Rd ., Pomeroy, Saturday .
Services : Sabbath School - 2 p.m., ·
Worship - 3 p.m. ·

..,...... CGauotottlly Qwch
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .• Worship ·
10:30 un., 1 pm.
M... Cbopel Cloureb
Suodaoy tcltool ~ 10 a.m., Wonbip - II
a.m., Wed:nelday Service- 7 p.m.

United Brethren
MI. Hermoa Vulled B -

Feldt G&lt;oopd CboDdo
Loni Bottom, Sunday 'school-9:30a.m.,
Wouhip ~ 10:4.S a.m., 7:30 p.m ..
WedDelday 7:30p.m.

MI. OUve CommDDIIy Cbun:h
Pastor: Lawrence Bush. Sunday School ·
9:30a.m.. Eveaing - 6:30p.m .• Wedneda)'
Service - 7 prn.
Full Golpol L!plb33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy, Pastor: Roy
Hunter, Sunday School · 10 a.m., Eveoina
7:30p.m., Tuesday &amp; Thurs.- 7:30p.m. ·

In Cbrkt Cburrh
Te11as Community 36411 Wickham Rd,
Puor: Peter Martindale, SulKily 'Sthool9:30 a.m ., Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m ., Wednesday SerVices - HIO p.m.
Youth group mu:ting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7p.m.
Edtu Uullt'd Brtthrea In Christ
. Stale Route 124, betwen 'Reedsville &amp;.
Hockingpo.i . Sunday Stbool - 10 a.m.,
Sunday Worship - II :00 a.m. Wednesday
Senoices - 7:00 p.m .• Pastor- M. Adam
Will

Soollt t1e11te1 Communlly CltaJ:&lt;b
Silver Ridge- Pastor Linda Damewood, ·
Swxlay Scbool - 9 a.m., Wonbip Service
10 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sunday

If ye abide in Me, and My

www.lealordrealeslale.net

KEBLER BUSINESS
SERVICES

Sunday Schooi9:JS a.m.

llemkd Gron Clwildu CHrdl
Minister: Latry Brown, Wonhip - 9:30
a.m. Sunday School - 10:30 un .• Bible
Study - 7 p.m.

Cbos~,.

Aldll(ully Baptist
Sunday School •· 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:45 a.m.• Sunday Evening· 6:00p.m.,
Pastor; Don 'Yalker

'Milly Cloordl
Secood &amp;. Lynn, POmeroy. Paslor: Rev.
Jorwban Noble, Wonhip 10:25 am.,

Contact 740-441 -1296 Sunday mominJ
10:00. Sun morning Bible sludy;
roJ ioWing worsh ip , Sun. eve 6:00 pm,
Wed bible study 7 pm

Baptist Ch....to
Sunday School - 9:30am. Preaching
Service IO:JOam. E\·ening Sm·ict
7:00pm. Wroncloda y Bible Stud~ 7:00pm,
lnrerim Preacher - Floyd Ross

MI . Moriah Baptist
Fou'!h &amp; Main St.. Middlepon. Sunday
School-9:30a.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m .

Congregational

Wnblole Clovdo of Oriol
ll2Z6Childn:n's Home Rd. Pomeroy. OH

Baptist

Hours

6am·Spm

p.m.

Church of Christ

Pagt\'Uir Frerwill Baptist Churdl
Pas!or. Mike Harmon . Sunday School
9:30 to 10:30 am . Worship iCT\'k't JOJO
to II :00 am. Wed . prc:aching6pm

Forest Run Baptist- Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods, Sunday Sc hool - 10
a.m., Worship- I I :JO a.m.

"'God

Chardo
of....,....,
OJ . White Rd. off St. Rt. UiO, Pastor: PJ.
Qupman. Soonday Sdoool · 10 am .•
Worship· II a.m., Wednesday Senices- 7

--c..-

Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . Rutland.
Services: Slln !0 :00 a.m. &amp;t 7:30 pro .,
Thun . 7:00p.m.. Pastor MartyR. Hunon

Failh Baptist C,laln:ll
Railroad St., Mason, Sunday School : 10
a.m., Worsh ip - 11 a.m. , 6 p.m .
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

s,...

flnl Cloordl of Gool
Appk and Secord Sts.; Paswr: Rev. David
RIU.ell, Sunday School and Worship- 10
a.m. Evening Services- 6:30 p.m.•
Wednesday Services - 6:]() p.m.

Catholic

VIctory Boplllllndepeadent•
525 N. 2nd St. Mi~leport', - Pastor : James ·
E. Keesee, Wonhi_p - IOa.m., 7 p.m.,
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

Cloordl tiCool
Pastor: Roa Hoado . Soopday Wonloip. 10
a.m., 6 p .m., Wednetday Services - 7
p.m.

Flnt ....... Chardo " - · wv
(l..t.pendmo Bopbsl)
SR 652 and ADdmon St. Pastor: Robert
Grady, Sunday school 10 am, Mornilll
chun:h II am. Sunday e~g 6 pm, Wed.
Bible Study 7 pm

St. Rt. 143 just o~ Rt. 7. Pastor: Rev.
Ja~es R. Acree, Sr.• Sunday Unifie~
Service, Wors~ip • 10:30 a.m ., 6 p.m.,
Wednc:sdayScrviccs-7 p.m.
·

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride·in our community

-.y

....... Chardo
Ravenswood. WV. Sunday School 10 am·
. Morning worship II am Evenin&amp; - 7 pm.,
Woclnesday'7p.m.

Hillside Raptkt Ch....to

r

Mile Hill Rd ., Racine. Putor: James
Sanerfteld, SuDdly School - 9:4S a.m ..
Emoioi - 6 p.m.,
Se1Yica. 7
p.m.

Ratlud ""WIRIIopdol
Salem St. Pastor: • Sunday Scbool • 10
a.m.., Even ing - 7 p .m., Wedoesday
Services- 7 p.m .

Cllllrdl of J...., Chrkt ApoaD1i&lt;
Vanl.mjr and Ward Rd .. Pu!:oc James
Miller, Sunday School - 10:30 am ..
Evening - 7:30p.m.

813 S . lrd

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

(7411) 992·6451

·P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

your light so shine
thai they may see
works and glorify
IF'ather in heaven ."
Matthew 5:

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.Matthew 5:8

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The care you desem, close to ho"" good works and glorify your

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Located less than 30 minutes.from
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Perfect in weakness.
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Office Service &amp;Supply
137·C N. 2nd Ave.
. Middleport, OH
992;.&amp;376

�Page AS

.The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June 8;

Vitamin D lowers cancer risk in older
women in most rigorous study so far
BY TIMBERLY ROSS
AND JEFF DONN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

Sun, milk and ftsh easy ways to get VItamin D

New research suggests Vrtamln 0 may be. a powerful cancer
OMAHA. Neb. - Building
pravantative and most people should ·get more of II.
hope for one pill to prevent many
Getting your dally dote of VItamin D
cancers, vitamin D cut the risk of
several types of cancer by 60 percent overall for older women in
the most rigorous study yet.
The new research strengthens
the case made by some specialists that vitamin D may be a
powerful cancer preventive and
SUN EXPOSURE
SUPPLEMENTS
FOODS
most people should get more of
Ten
to
15
minutes
~
contain
D-2,
but
Oily
fish such as
it. Experts remain split, though,
twice a week on face, D-3 is far more
salmon and tuna;
on how much to take.
hands and back
potent; many labels vitamin D-fortlfied
"The findings ... are a breakwithout sunscreen.
through of great medical and pubdon't reveal the form. foods and drinks.
lic health importance," declared
Fortified
Fortified
Cedric Garland, a prominent vita. Cod liver Dll Salmon
·milk
margarine
min D researcher · at the
Serving size
One
31/2 ounces
One
One
University of California-San
cooked
cup
tablespoon
Diego. "No other method to prevent cancer has been identified
lntemalional
that has such a powerful impact."
1,360
360
98
60
units (IU)
While the most reliable yet, the
study does have drawbacks. It was
P81oentage of
designed mainly to monitor how
340%
90%
dally Vlilue of
25%
15%
calcium and vitamin D improve.
4001U
bone health, and the number of
AP
cancer · cases overall was small, SOURCES: Notionallnetllulo of Hollfl; ~of Modci•
showing up in just 50 patients.
"It's a very small study," said vitamin D helps regulate cell amin D3 supplements, a similar
Dr. Edward Giovannucci, who growth, a fundamental biological number got calcium alone, and
researches nutrition and cancer process that goes haywire in can- 288 took dummy pills.
The research team gave I,000
at the Harvard School of Public cer. Most other supplements have
Health. "I don't think it's the last tended to target specific types of daily international units of vitadisease in early testing, like seleni- min D, more than current guideword."
In either case, the study takes um or vitamin E for prostate cancer. lines calling for 200 to 600 units
This study, published Friday in depending on a person's age.
an important step in extending
the
American Journal of Clinical
The researchers intended to
several decades of research that
Nutrition,
is the first time that check mainly for the effects of calbegan with observations that
cancer rates among similar researchers significan.tly boosted . cium on bone health. Their interest
groups of peopie were lower in - and measured - blood levels in cancer risk was secondary.
southern latitudes than in north- of vitamin D and then followed
But the lower cancer risk stood
em ones. Scientists reasoned that identical groups of patients from out. Only 13 women, or 3 per:
had to do with more direct sun- start to finish .
cent, developed cancer over four
That's why, despite its modest years of calcium and vitamin D
light in southern regions.
The skin makes vitamin D size, the research was generating supplements. With calcium
when exposed to sunlight's ultra- · excitement. Nearly all other alone, 17 .women, or 4 percent,
violet rays. This study used that work has compared disparate got cancer. With dummy pills,
same form of the vitamin, groups of patients.
cancer appeared in 20 women, or
known as D3 or cholecalciferol.
The researchers at Creighton 7 percent.
Multivitamins usually carry · a University in Omaha focused on
That shows a 60 percent lower
much weaker variant known as I, 179 seemingly healthy women cancer risk over four years in the
D2, but D3 is available in stand- · with an average age of 67. The · group taking both supplements,
alone dietary supplements.
women were divided into three compared to patients taking
Earlier resean:h has shown that groups: 446 got calcium and vit- placebos. And when the first-year

••

,I

l

2007

Local Weather

Inside

Bl

The-Daily Sentinel

..

MLB Draft, Page 82
Magic hires Van Gundy, Page 83
NBA Notebook, Page B4

Friday... Jncreasing cloudiness. A
slight chance of showers and thundercancers were excluded - the storms in the morning ...Then .a chance
ones mostly likely present before of showers and gusty thunderstorms in
the study began - the findings the afternoon. Breezy with highs in the
were stronger still: a 77 percent upper 80s. Southwest winds I0 to 20
mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.
lower risk for the combo group.
Friday night ... Mostly cloudy.
While the calcium-only group
Showers
and thunderstorms likely in
lowered its four-year cancer risk
the
evening
... Then a chance of showers
by 47 percent compared to the
and
thunderstorms
after midnight.
untreated group, it did no better
with
lows
in
the upper 50s.
Cooler
when early cancers were excludWest
winds
I
0
to
15
mph
with gusts up
ed. That suggests calcium alone
to
25
mph
...
Becoming
north
5 to 10
may have done little in this
mph
after
midnight.
Chance
of
rain 60
ellperiment, the researchers said.
percent.
Experts reviewing the study
Saturday... Mos.tly sunny. Highs in
focused on vitamin. D as the
the
upper 70s. North winds 5 to I0 mph.
powerful allent in the combo
Saturday
night... Mostly clear. Cold
group, but It can't be ruled out
with
lows
around
50. Northeast winds
that . calcium might somehow
around
5
mph:
amplify the effect of vitamin D.
Sunday
through
Monday
While numbers were limited,
night
...
Mostly
clear.
Highs
in
the mid
these women developed a broad
80s.
Lows
in
the
mid
50s.
range of cancers, including disease of the breast, colon, lungs
and blood. Dr. Michael Holick,
of Boston University Medical
Center, who sat on the professional panel that issued the 1997
guidelines for vitamin D, said AEP (NYSE) - 44.!50
thls study shows that enough vit- Akzo (NASDAQ)- 78.80
amin D "marke~ly reduces the Aahlond lne. (NYSE) - 80.65
(NYSE)- 30.00
risk of developing the most seri- IIIII.Aitl
Bob Ev.,. (NASDAQ) - 37.14
ous deadly cancers."
Bo,.Wamer ( NYSE) - 82.00 ·
He supports raising the recom- Century Al11111lnum (NASDAQ) - 53.07
mended amount of the vitamin Chlmplon (NASDAQ)- 7.08
Channllll Shops (NASDAQ) -11.75
and said I ,000 daily units of vit- City
HoldlnC (NASDAQ) - 38.00
amin D3 would now be reason- Collins (NYSE) - 68.28
Dollar General (NYSE) - 21.71
able for most peQple.
. Oil the other hand, Dr. Michael DuPont (NYSE) - &amp;0.37
Bank (NYSE) - 34.03
Thun of the American Cancer Ill
C l - (NYSE) -57.711
·
Society favors k'i:eping the cur- . Cl-ral Electric (NYSE) - 38.78
rent recommemh(tion of 200 to Herle,.OIIVIdoon (NYSE) - 119.73
Mor... (NYSE) - 49.82
600 JUs for now.• And he cau- JP
Kropr (NYIE) - .2 9.12
tioned that more tfllm 2,000 units Limited lrorKit (NYSE) - 28.03
is viewed in the~. guidelines as • Norfolk louthem (NYSE) - 14.12
Ou Hill Ft.....,lol (NASDAQ) - 21.97
potentially dangefuus.
Dhlo
Valley Ilona Corp". (NASDAQ) - 211.28
Joan Lappe, the study's lead BIT (NYIE)
- 41.04
researcher, said it "just adds to Peoptea (NASDAQ)- 28.84
the great bunch of evidence that ~epolco. (NYSE)- 88.31
we need to have better vitamin D P....,ler (NASDAQ) - 111.81
(NYIE)- 88.03
nutrition." Some foods carry the Rookw.tl
Rooky Boola (NASDAQ) - 11.92
vitamin, like salmon, tuna and Ro)'ll Dutch Shell- 71.711
fortified milk, but diet accounts han Holdl"' (NASDAQ) -174.94
for little of the vitamin circulat- W1Hi11rt (NYIE) - 49.78
(NYIEI - 38.911
ing in the body. O~erexposure to W.ntly'o
Worthlncton (NYSE)- 20.12
the sun can cause Skin cancer.
Dallj otock IIPOrt11 ore the 4 p.m. ET CIOII"'
Still, people should consult quotoo of tronoaollona for June 7, 2007, provkltheir doctors before boosting tcl by Edward Joneo llnanclallldvloon lo..e
In ClaiiPOIIo at (740) 441·9441 and Looloy
their vitamin dosage, several Nllla
Marrero In Point Ploaoant at (304) 874-0174.
experts also warned.
~borSIPC.

Local Stocks

Friday, June 8, 2007
LOCAL SCHEDULE

:Post 128 wins home
opener against McArthur

POMEROY - A SChedule of upcomifl;J college
and hi(;~ Ad1ool varsity 5pOI1ing eveflts invdving
teams from Galia and Meigs O'JUl~.

Satyrdoy'e aamu
Legion Baseball
Pickerington at Gallipoli s, 1 p.m.
Lancaster at Meigs, 1 p.m.

BY BRYAN WALTERS
. BWALTERS&lt;i!MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

Suodav'a gogo
Legion Baoeball
Gallipolis at Parkersburg, 1 p.m.
Meigs at PickeringtOn, 1 p.m.

Tutldly'a game
Legion BaHblll
McA_
rthur at Meigs, 6 p.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

Meigs Flag
Football League

ROCK SPRINGS- After
starting the 2007 American
Legion baseball season with
three consecutive road
games and a 1-2 overall
record, Feeney Bennett
found the confines of home
to be friendly Thursday during a non-league I 0-0
shutout of McArthur Post
303 in seven innings.
Post 128 blasted out II
· hits and eight RBis in the
mercy-rule victory, never
trailing while improving to
Bryan WaHeraiDt•otc 2-2 overall this young seaPost 128's Luke Haislop, right, slides safely into third base during the sixth inning of son. It also marked the secThursday's American Legion basebl!ll game against McArthur Post 303 at Rock Springs.
ond consecutive triumph for

POMEROY
The
sign-up date has been
e!ltended for the Meigs
Flag Football League that
will be held this fall . The
league is being organized
by former NFL star Mike
Bartrum, along
with
.cooperation from the
National Football League.
The new date is June
15, and has been extended
because of a busy month
qf May for most people.
"May has been a busy
month", Dave Harris said,
who is helping with the
league. "With ba seball,
school graduations and
the Bartrum and Brown
Football Camp."
The league will start on
September I and the season will be for 8 weeks.
All practices and games
will . be held ·the Meigs
·High School practic.e
field .
"We will have a large
practice sometime the
second half of July, with a
draft coming the end of
July,"
Bartrum said.
"Practices will start the
middle part - of August,
with the first game start -·-~ ·~ -" ;:$
ing on August -lst."
The league is open to
boys and · girls ages
kindergarten
through
sixth grade, and the cost
is $30 for each player and
APpholo
$20 for each addi.tion
Cleveland
Cavaliers
James
(23)
drives
past
San
Antonio
Spurs
forward
Tim
Duncan
(21)
and
San
Antonio
family member.
Spurs
fqrward
Robert
Harry,
left,
in
the
second
half
of
Game
1
of
the
NBA
Finals
basketball
game
in.
San
Antonio
on
For more information
Thursday.
The
Spurs
won,
8f.76.
bn the league contact ·
Bartrum or Harris at 740$41-1222.

TUPPERS PLAINS The third aniJUal Eastern
Eagle Volleyball Camp
will be held for all girls in
grades six through nine
from June II through
June 13 at the EHS
Gymnasium
The camp will feature
fundamentals esseniial to
prQduce winning volleyball and will be taught by
current coaches and players, as we II as former
players. The camp . will
run between the times of
10 a.m. to noon.
All participants will
receive a camp t-shirt and
a camp volleyball.
All checks· should be
made payable to Eastern
Athletic Boosters and
returned
to
Howie
Caldwell, 40878 Old
Seven Road, · Reedsville,
OH 45772.
.
Registrations may also ·
be sent to Debbie Weber,
49620 Hickory Hills
Road, Reedsville , OH
45772.

ComAcrUs

-

. OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 o.m.)
1-740·446-2342 ext. 33

Call 372-2844 • Toll Free 1-800-822-0417
Visit us online at www.tompeden.com

FIX -1·740-446-3008

E·mell- sportsOmydallysentinel.com
Soorts Staff

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342. eJ&lt;t. 33
bsharman@mydailytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342. eJ&lt;t. 23
- lcrumOmydailyreglster.cOm

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342. ext 33
bwaltersOmydailytribune.com

I'

Pierce

FB in as many days after
on
beating Gallipohs
Wednesday.
Following such a dominant home start and another
Please see Opener, Bl

Ohio wins
state battle
versus WV
BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

RIO GRANDE - With
eight girls already signed to
play softball at Division I
schools, Ohio's High
School Softball All-Star
team is one tough team to
beat
just
ask
W e s t
Virginia. ·
The Ohio
All-Star
team shut
out West
· Virginia's
squad in
t h r e e
Wyant
games
Thursday at
the Subway State Soft~_all
Showdown in Rio Grande
as the Ohio team won the
battle of the states for the
second straight · year with
victories of 1-0, 7-0 and 140.
Thursday's game is
always a welcome treat for
the two states, according to
Rio Grande softball coach
David Pyles who puts on the
event, as the girls, which are
comprised of outstanding
seniors from each .state as
selected by high school
coaches, get a chance to
hoped for. James' first foray play a few more games of
into the finals was hyped in high school ball before movthe days leading up to the ing on to the college level. ·
game as many wondered if
"It gives them a chance to
he could deliver the way see how they stack up
Michael Jordan once did.
against the best in another
But James wasn't close to state. These kids were chobeing Jordanesque, and he sen by high school coaches
came nowhere near match- who see these players day in
ing His Aimess' first game and day out and it is a big
in the finals when be honor fm them to be chosen
scorched the Los Angeles for this," Pyles said.
Lakers for 36 points oil June · "We love doing this fun
2, 1991.
event for these young ladies
Game 2 of the best-of- to showcase their talent in
seven series is Sunday night som,rwhat of a relaxed
""

Sign-ups for Eagle
Volleyball Camp

Bolin

N ••

San Ant()nio shuts down James, Cavs

d;:
. ._., night. ·
AP SPORTS WRITER
·' Tim Duncan had 24
----~-----'----'·: points, 13 rebounds and five
SAN ANTONIO --:. blocks, and Tony Parker
LeBron James finally scaled;,, added 27 points and seven
the big stage, and like ai assists for the Spurs, who
bunch of burly bouncers, the,, ·began their quest for a fourth
San Antonio Spurs tossed •\ championship since 1999
him off it.
, with a defensive clinic on ·
Welcome to the NBA James and the Cavs, making
finals, young fella.
,their ftrst appearance in the
James couldn't solve San ' finals.
·
Antonio's stifling defense ,~: · With· the eyes of Texas, a
and the pick-and-rolling '-''Curious hoops nation and the
Spurs, as fundamental and .~orld upon him, the 22selfless as ever, outclassed '\lear-old James, who has
Cleveland in an 85-76 viclo- rarely failed to rise to any
ry in Game l on Thursday occasion, flopped like never
BY TOM WITHERS

before.
James shot just 4-of-16
from the field and finished
with 14 points and six
turnovers in 44 exhausting .
minutes. . Led by Bruce
Bowen, their top defensive
agitator, !he Spurs grounded
Clevelan~'s soaring superstar.
"If I went by one guy,
anQther guy stepped up,"
James said. "For us to have a
chance to win, I have to play
better."
This was hardly the series
opener' James, the NBA or
ABC-TV executives, had

Please see Spurs, 14

Please see Ohio, 81

Reds -blast Cards, 5-1
ST. LOUIS (AP) - After
a miserable stretch, Kyle
Lohse is dominating hitters.
Lohse came within two
outs of his second shutout in
three starts · and · the
Cincinnati Reds . got home
runs from Ken Griffey Jr.,
Edwin Encarnacion and
Adam Dunn in a 5-1 victory
over the St. Louis Cardinals
on Thursday night.
"It's in there," manager
Jerry Narron said of Lohse.
"Stuff-wise, he's as good as
anybody. We really feel like
the worst is behind him."
Encarnacion had four hits
and three RBls for the Reds,
who ended a four-game losing streak and avoided a
three-game sweep . . The
Reds completed a 4-5 trip
with . 2004 first-round pick
Homer Bailey set to make
his major league debut on
Friday in Cincinnati.
All the homers came off
Adam Wainwright (4-5),
who allowed only four in his
first II career starts.
Wainwright lasted six
innings and .gave up four
runs and eight hits.

-·- -

·. "It's not Ilke I was gettin*
cr.11shed all night long,
~\lin wright said. "I let a few
liittlrs get away from me,
that:s all it is. That's all I'm
gqmg to think about."
'me Cardinals lost for
onl)\ the second time in eight
games. They're 4-2 against
the Reds, wtth all the·games
played in St. Louis.
Griffey led off the fourth
with his 576th career homer
and 13th of the season, all
coming in .th~ l~st 39 games.
Brandon Phtlhps followed
with a single and scored on
Encarnacion's fourth homer
with one out for a 3-0 lead.
Dunn added his 15th homer
with two outs in the sixth.
· Encarnacion is 16-for,27
(.593) during a sevengame hitting streak wfth a
homer, five double s and
five RBis. He's started .all
16 games at third base
since being recalled from
Triple-A Louisville on
May 22, batting .410 (25for-62) in that stretch.
"See the ball, hit the ball,"
Encarnacion said. "That's

Please see Reds; B1

APphoto

Cincinnati Reds' Ken Griffey Jr., right, is congratulated l&gt;y teammate Brandon Phillips after
hitting a solo Home run during the fourth inning of a baseball game Thursday in St. Louis.
--~----~.......;.----· --·-- -·---

�Page AS

.The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June 8;

Vitamin D lowers cancer risk in older
women in most rigorous study so far
BY TIMBERLY ROSS
AND JEFF DONN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

Sun, milk and ftsh easy ways to get VItamin D

New research suggests Vrtamln 0 may be. a powerful cancer
OMAHA. Neb. - Building
pravantative and most people should ·get more of II.
hope for one pill to prevent many
Getting your dally dote of VItamin D
cancers, vitamin D cut the risk of
several types of cancer by 60 percent overall for older women in
the most rigorous study yet.
The new research strengthens
the case made by some specialists that vitamin D may be a
powerful cancer preventive and
SUN EXPOSURE
SUPPLEMENTS
FOODS
most people should get more of
Ten
to
15
minutes
~
contain
D-2,
but
Oily
fish such as
it. Experts remain split, though,
twice a week on face, D-3 is far more
salmon and tuna;
on how much to take.
hands and back
potent; many labels vitamin D-fortlfied
"The findings ... are a breakwithout sunscreen.
through of great medical and pubdon't reveal the form. foods and drinks.
lic health importance," declared
Fortified
Fortified
Cedric Garland, a prominent vita. Cod liver Dll Salmon
·milk
margarine
min D researcher · at the
Serving size
One
31/2 ounces
One
One
University of California-San
cooked
cup
tablespoon
Diego. "No other method to prevent cancer has been identified
lntemalional
that has such a powerful impact."
1,360
360
98
60
units (IU)
While the most reliable yet, the
study does have drawbacks. It was
P81oentage of
designed mainly to monitor how
340%
90%
dally Vlilue of
25%
15%
calcium and vitamin D improve.
4001U
bone health, and the number of
AP
cancer · cases overall was small, SOURCES: Notionallnetllulo of Hollfl; ~of Modci•
showing up in just 50 patients.
"It's a very small study," said vitamin D helps regulate cell amin D3 supplements, a similar
Dr. Edward Giovannucci, who growth, a fundamental biological number got calcium alone, and
researches nutrition and cancer process that goes haywire in can- 288 took dummy pills.
The research team gave I,000
at the Harvard School of Public cer. Most other supplements have
Health. "I don't think it's the last tended to target specific types of daily international units of vitadisease in early testing, like seleni- min D, more than current guideword."
In either case, the study takes um or vitamin E for prostate cancer. lines calling for 200 to 600 units
This study, published Friday in depending on a person's age.
an important step in extending
the
American Journal of Clinical
The researchers intended to
several decades of research that
Nutrition,
is the first time that check mainly for the effects of calbegan with observations that
cancer rates among similar researchers significan.tly boosted . cium on bone health. Their interest
groups of peopie were lower in - and measured - blood levels in cancer risk was secondary.
southern latitudes than in north- of vitamin D and then followed
But the lower cancer risk stood
em ones. Scientists reasoned that identical groups of patients from out. Only 13 women, or 3 per:
had to do with more direct sun- start to finish .
cent, developed cancer over four
That's why, despite its modest years of calcium and vitamin D
light in southern regions.
The skin makes vitamin D size, the research was generating supplements. With calcium
when exposed to sunlight's ultra- · excitement. Nearly all other alone, 17 .women, or 4 percent,
violet rays. This study used that work has compared disparate got cancer. With dummy pills,
same form of the vitamin, groups of patients.
cancer appeared in 20 women, or
known as D3 or cholecalciferol.
The researchers at Creighton 7 percent.
Multivitamins usually carry · a University in Omaha focused on
That shows a 60 percent lower
much weaker variant known as I, 179 seemingly healthy women cancer risk over four years in the
D2, but D3 is available in stand- · with an average age of 67. The · group taking both supplements,
alone dietary supplements.
women were divided into three compared to patients taking
Earlier resean:h has shown that groups: 446 got calcium and vit- placebos. And when the first-year

••

,I

l

2007

Local Weather

Inside

Bl

The-Daily Sentinel

..

MLB Draft, Page 82
Magic hires Van Gundy, Page 83
NBA Notebook, Page B4

Friday... Jncreasing cloudiness. A
slight chance of showers and thundercancers were excluded - the storms in the morning ...Then .a chance
ones mostly likely present before of showers and gusty thunderstorms in
the study began - the findings the afternoon. Breezy with highs in the
were stronger still: a 77 percent upper 80s. Southwest winds I0 to 20
mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.
lower risk for the combo group.
Friday night ... Mostly cloudy.
While the calcium-only group
Showers
and thunderstorms likely in
lowered its four-year cancer risk
the
evening
... Then a chance of showers
by 47 percent compared to the
and
thunderstorms
after midnight.
untreated group, it did no better
with
lows
in
the upper 50s.
Cooler
when early cancers were excludWest
winds
I
0
to
15
mph
with gusts up
ed. That suggests calcium alone
to
25
mph
...
Becoming
north
5 to 10
may have done little in this
mph
after
midnight.
Chance
of
rain 60
ellperiment, the researchers said.
percent.
Experts reviewing the study
Saturday... Mos.tly sunny. Highs in
focused on vitamin. D as the
the
upper 70s. North winds 5 to I0 mph.
powerful allent in the combo
Saturday
night... Mostly clear. Cold
group, but It can't be ruled out
with
lows
around
50. Northeast winds
that . calcium might somehow
around
5
mph:
amplify the effect of vitamin D.
Sunday
through
Monday
While numbers were limited,
night
...
Mostly
clear.
Highs
in
the mid
these women developed a broad
80s.
Lows
in
the
mid
50s.
range of cancers, including disease of the breast, colon, lungs
and blood. Dr. Michael Holick,
of Boston University Medical
Center, who sat on the professional panel that issued the 1997
guidelines for vitamin D, said AEP (NYSE) - 44.!50
thls study shows that enough vit- Akzo (NASDAQ)- 78.80
amin D "marke~ly reduces the Aahlond lne. (NYSE) - 80.65
(NYSE)- 30.00
risk of developing the most seri- IIIII.Aitl
Bob Ev.,. (NASDAQ) - 37.14
ous deadly cancers."
Bo,.Wamer ( NYSE) - 82.00 ·
He supports raising the recom- Century Al11111lnum (NASDAQ) - 53.07
mended amount of the vitamin Chlmplon (NASDAQ)- 7.08
Channllll Shops (NASDAQ) -11.75
and said I ,000 daily units of vit- City
HoldlnC (NASDAQ) - 38.00
amin D3 would now be reason- Collins (NYSE) - 68.28
Dollar General (NYSE) - 21.71
able for most peQple.
. Oil the other hand, Dr. Michael DuPont (NYSE) - &amp;0.37
Bank (NYSE) - 34.03
Thun of the American Cancer Ill
C l - (NYSE) -57.711
·
Society favors k'i:eping the cur- . Cl-ral Electric (NYSE) - 38.78
rent recommemh(tion of 200 to Herle,.OIIVIdoon (NYSE) - 119.73
Mor... (NYSE) - 49.82
600 JUs for now.• And he cau- JP
Kropr (NYIE) - .2 9.12
tioned that more tfllm 2,000 units Limited lrorKit (NYSE) - 28.03
is viewed in the~. guidelines as • Norfolk louthem (NYSE) - 14.12
Ou Hill Ft.....,lol (NASDAQ) - 21.97
potentially dangefuus.
Dhlo
Valley Ilona Corp". (NASDAQ) - 211.28
Joan Lappe, the study's lead BIT (NYIE)
- 41.04
researcher, said it "just adds to Peoptea (NASDAQ)- 28.84
the great bunch of evidence that ~epolco. (NYSE)- 88.31
we need to have better vitamin D P....,ler (NASDAQ) - 111.81
(NYIE)- 88.03
nutrition." Some foods carry the Rookw.tl
Rooky Boola (NASDAQ) - 11.92
vitamin, like salmon, tuna and Ro)'ll Dutch Shell- 71.711
fortified milk, but diet accounts han Holdl"' (NASDAQ) -174.94
for little of the vitamin circulat- W1Hi11rt (NYIE) - 49.78
(NYIEI - 38.911
ing in the body. O~erexposure to W.ntly'o
Worthlncton (NYSE)- 20.12
the sun can cause Skin cancer.
Dallj otock IIPOrt11 ore the 4 p.m. ET CIOII"'
Still, people should consult quotoo of tronoaollona for June 7, 2007, provkltheir doctors before boosting tcl by Edward Joneo llnanclallldvloon lo..e
In ClaiiPOIIo at (740) 441·9441 and Looloy
their vitamin dosage, several Nllla
Marrero In Point Ploaoant at (304) 874-0174.
experts also warned.
~borSIPC.

Local Stocks

Friday, June 8, 2007
LOCAL SCHEDULE

:Post 128 wins home
opener against McArthur

POMEROY - A SChedule of upcomifl;J college
and hi(;~ Ad1ool varsity 5pOI1ing eveflts invdving
teams from Galia and Meigs O'JUl~.

Satyrdoy'e aamu
Legion Baseball
Pickerington at Gallipoli s, 1 p.m.
Lancaster at Meigs, 1 p.m.

BY BRYAN WALTERS
. BWALTERS&lt;i!MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

Suodav'a gogo
Legion Baoeball
Gallipolis at Parkersburg, 1 p.m.
Meigs at PickeringtOn, 1 p.m.

Tutldly'a game
Legion BaHblll
McA_
rthur at Meigs, 6 p.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

Meigs Flag
Football League

ROCK SPRINGS- After
starting the 2007 American
Legion baseball season with
three consecutive road
games and a 1-2 overall
record, Feeney Bennett
found the confines of home
to be friendly Thursday during a non-league I 0-0
shutout of McArthur Post
303 in seven innings.
Post 128 blasted out II
· hits and eight RBis in the
mercy-rule victory, never
trailing while improving to
Bryan WaHeraiDt•otc 2-2 overall this young seaPost 128's Luke Haislop, right, slides safely into third base during the sixth inning of son. It also marked the secThursday's American Legion basebl!ll game against McArthur Post 303 at Rock Springs.
ond consecutive triumph for

POMEROY
The
sign-up date has been
e!ltended for the Meigs
Flag Football League that
will be held this fall . The
league is being organized
by former NFL star Mike
Bartrum, along
with
.cooperation from the
National Football League.
The new date is June
15, and has been extended
because of a busy month
qf May for most people.
"May has been a busy
month", Dave Harris said,
who is helping with the
league. "With ba seball,
school graduations and
the Bartrum and Brown
Football Camp."
The league will start on
September I and the season will be for 8 weeks.
All practices and games
will . be held ·the Meigs
·High School practic.e
field .
"We will have a large
practice sometime the
second half of July, with a
draft coming the end of
July,"
Bartrum said.
"Practices will start the
middle part - of August,
with the first game start -·-~ ·~ -" ;:$
ing on August -lst."
The league is open to
boys and · girls ages
kindergarten
through
sixth grade, and the cost
is $30 for each player and
APpholo
$20 for each addi.tion
Cleveland
Cavaliers
James
(23)
drives
past
San
Antonio
Spurs
forward
Tim
Duncan
(21)
and
San
Antonio
family member.
Spurs
fqrward
Robert
Harry,
left,
in
the
second
half
of
Game
1
of
the
NBA
Finals
basketball
game
in.
San
Antonio
on
For more information
Thursday.
The
Spurs
won,
8f.76.
bn the league contact ·
Bartrum or Harris at 740$41-1222.

TUPPERS PLAINS The third aniJUal Eastern
Eagle Volleyball Camp
will be held for all girls in
grades six through nine
from June II through
June 13 at the EHS
Gymnasium
The camp will feature
fundamentals esseniial to
prQduce winning volleyball and will be taught by
current coaches and players, as we II as former
players. The camp . will
run between the times of
10 a.m. to noon.
All participants will
receive a camp t-shirt and
a camp volleyball.
All checks· should be
made payable to Eastern
Athletic Boosters and
returned
to
Howie
Caldwell, 40878 Old
Seven Road, · Reedsville,
OH 45772.
.
Registrations may also ·
be sent to Debbie Weber,
49620 Hickory Hills
Road, Reedsville , OH
45772.

ComAcrUs

-

. OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 o.m.)
1-740·446-2342 ext. 33

Call 372-2844 • Toll Free 1-800-822-0417
Visit us online at www.tompeden.com

FIX -1·740-446-3008

E·mell- sportsOmydallysentinel.com
Soorts Staff

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342. eJ&lt;t. 33
bsharman@mydailytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342. eJ&lt;t. 23
- lcrumOmydailyreglster.cOm

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342. ext 33
bwaltersOmydailytribune.com

I'

Pierce

FB in as many days after
on
beating Gallipohs
Wednesday.
Following such a dominant home start and another
Please see Opener, Bl

Ohio wins
state battle
versus WV
BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

RIO GRANDE - With
eight girls already signed to
play softball at Division I
schools, Ohio's High
School Softball All-Star
team is one tough team to
beat
just
ask
W e s t
Virginia. ·
The Ohio
All-Star
team shut
out West
· Virginia's
squad in
t h r e e
Wyant
games
Thursday at
the Subway State Soft~_all
Showdown in Rio Grande
as the Ohio team won the
battle of the states for the
second straight · year with
victories of 1-0, 7-0 and 140.
Thursday's game is
always a welcome treat for
the two states, according to
Rio Grande softball coach
David Pyles who puts on the
event, as the girls, which are
comprised of outstanding
seniors from each .state as
selected by high school
coaches, get a chance to
hoped for. James' first foray play a few more games of
into the finals was hyped in high school ball before movthe days leading up to the ing on to the college level. ·
game as many wondered if
"It gives them a chance to
he could deliver the way see how they stack up
Michael Jordan once did.
against the best in another
But James wasn't close to state. These kids were chobeing Jordanesque, and he sen by high school coaches
came nowhere near match- who see these players day in
ing His Aimess' first game and day out and it is a big
in the finals when be honor fm them to be chosen
scorched the Los Angeles for this," Pyles said.
Lakers for 36 points oil June · "We love doing this fun
2, 1991.
event for these young ladies
Game 2 of the best-of- to showcase their talent in
seven series is Sunday night som,rwhat of a relaxed
""

Sign-ups for Eagle
Volleyball Camp

Bolin

N ••

San Ant()nio shuts down James, Cavs

d;:
. ._., night. ·
AP SPORTS WRITER
·' Tim Duncan had 24
----~-----'----'·: points, 13 rebounds and five
SAN ANTONIO --:. blocks, and Tony Parker
LeBron James finally scaled;,, added 27 points and seven
the big stage, and like ai assists for the Spurs, who
bunch of burly bouncers, the,, ·began their quest for a fourth
San Antonio Spurs tossed •\ championship since 1999
him off it.
, with a defensive clinic on ·
Welcome to the NBA James and the Cavs, making
finals, young fella.
,their ftrst appearance in the
James couldn't solve San ' finals.
·
Antonio's stifling defense ,~: · With· the eyes of Texas, a
and the pick-and-rolling '-''Curious hoops nation and the
Spurs, as fundamental and .~orld upon him, the 22selfless as ever, outclassed '\lear-old James, who has
Cleveland in an 85-76 viclo- rarely failed to rise to any
ry in Game l on Thursday occasion, flopped like never
BY TOM WITHERS

before.
James shot just 4-of-16
from the field and finished
with 14 points and six
turnovers in 44 exhausting .
minutes. . Led by Bruce
Bowen, their top defensive
agitator, !he Spurs grounded
Clevelan~'s soaring superstar.
"If I went by one guy,
anQther guy stepped up,"
James said. "For us to have a
chance to win, I have to play
better."
This was hardly the series
opener' James, the NBA or
ABC-TV executives, had

Please see Spurs, 14

Please see Ohio, 81

Reds -blast Cards, 5-1
ST. LOUIS (AP) - After
a miserable stretch, Kyle
Lohse is dominating hitters.
Lohse came within two
outs of his second shutout in
three starts · and · the
Cincinnati Reds . got home
runs from Ken Griffey Jr.,
Edwin Encarnacion and
Adam Dunn in a 5-1 victory
over the St. Louis Cardinals
on Thursday night.
"It's in there," manager
Jerry Narron said of Lohse.
"Stuff-wise, he's as good as
anybody. We really feel like
the worst is behind him."
Encarnacion had four hits
and three RBls for the Reds,
who ended a four-game losing streak and avoided a
three-game sweep . . The
Reds completed a 4-5 trip
with . 2004 first-round pick
Homer Bailey set to make
his major league debut on
Friday in Cincinnati.
All the homers came off
Adam Wainwright (4-5),
who allowed only four in his
first II career starts.
Wainwright lasted six
innings and .gave up four
runs and eight hits.

-·- -

·. "It's not Ilke I was gettin*
cr.11shed all night long,
~\lin wright said. "I let a few
liittlrs get away from me,
that:s all it is. That's all I'm
gqmg to think about."
'me Cardinals lost for
onl)\ the second time in eight
games. They're 4-2 against
the Reds, wtth all the·games
played in St. Louis.
Griffey led off the fourth
with his 576th career homer
and 13th of the season, all
coming in .th~ l~st 39 games.
Brandon Phtlhps followed
with a single and scored on
Encarnacion's fourth homer
with one out for a 3-0 lead.
Dunn added his 15th homer
with two outs in the sixth.
· Encarnacion is 16-for,27
(.593) during a sevengame hitting streak wfth a
homer, five double s and
five RBis. He's started .all
16 games at third base
since being recalled from
Triple-A Louisville on
May 22, batting .410 (25for-62) in that stretch.
"See the ball, hit the ball,"
Encarnacion said. "That's

Please see Reds; B1

APphoto

Cincinnati Reds' Ken Griffey Jr., right, is congratulated l&gt;y teammate Brandon Phillips after
hitting a solo Home run during the fourth inning of a baseball game Thursday in St. Louis.
--~----~.......;.----· --·-- -·---

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinei

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, June 8, .2007

Reds pick Pen.nsylvania catcher No. 1 ~-~ays thinks P~ce:
CINCINNATI (AP) .
Devin Mesoraco's idol is
Hall of Fame catcher
Johnny Bench. but he play s
more like former Pittsburgh
backstop Jason KendalL
Mesoraco can merge both
worlds after Bench's team,
the Cincinnati Reds, made for the Pirates, who made
him their No. I pick and the him thei r No. 1 pick in
15th overall selec tion in the 1992 before he moved on to
first round of the First-Year Oakland, Me soraco usually
Player Draft on Thursday. bats leadoff for hi s Chucks
The team later chose Todd team that has reached the
Frazier, a power-hitting semifinal s of the state tourAll-American junior short- nament.
stop from Rut gers, with a
supplemental first-round . Mesoraco. who bats and
.
. over- throws right-handed, has
pick.
the 34th chmce
all.
come back from Aug. 31,
2004, ligament replacement
"I've always followed
Johnny
Bench,"
the surgery on his right elbow,
. Punxsutawney (Pa.) High which relegated him to desSchool catcher said during ignated-hitter duties as a
a conference call 1 w1th junior. He resumed fullreporters . "He 's what time duty behind the plate
everybody else tries to be. this season and is hitting
It's a great honor coming to .467 with four home runs
an organization that has had and 21 runs batted in.
great catchers like that."
"It's not even an iss.ue at
Like Kendall often did this point," Mesoraco said.

Price Is right lor Ravs

"I was 100 percent three
months ago, and now it's
just getting better and better."
The 6-foot-2, 200-pound
Me soraco, who !,urn s 19 on
June 19 and has a commitment to the University of
Virginia that he said is "in
the background ," was
ranked
by
Baseball
America .as the 24th-best
overall prospect and the
ninth-best position available in this year's draft. He
has been descnbed by .the
Pltlsburgh Tnbune-Rev1ew
as Pennsylvania's best high
sc hoo 1 p1ayer.
He is the third catcher
k b h R d
·h h ·
ta en y t e e s wtt t .elr
No. 1 p1ck, and the ftrst
since Dan Wilson in 199?.
Bench was Cmcmnau s
second ptck behmd Bernte
Crab during baseball's first
draft m 1965.
.
Fraz1er, meanwh1Ie, had a
spectacular season m wh1~h
he was m the top SIX m
every offens1ve. category

for Rutgers except triples.
He set the school smgleseason records this season
for home runs (22), home
runs by a leadoff hmer
(22), runs scored (87),
walks (62 ), doubles (24)
and total bases (187)
In
the
Big
East
Conference tourqament, he
hit a mammoth, 400-plus
foot home . run that went
over the score board at
Brooklyn's KeySpan Park,
the home of the .New York
M.ets CI~ss A affiliate.
'Thts IS a great moment
for myself and my friends
an d'f am1·1 y. It' s some th'mg 1
will never forget," said
F ·
h
f
razler, w o .comes rom a
baseball fam1ly. Two older
broth~rs also were drafted;
Charhe was ~aken by the
Flonda Marhns m 1999,
while . Jeff was picked by
Detroll tn 2004. · Jeff
Fraz1er was tr.aded to
Seattle before th1s seaso_n
and now pl~~s wtth . theu
Class AA affiliate.

The Tampa Bay Devil Rays selected left-handed pitcher David Price
· with the first overall selection in the baseball draft Thursday.

· 18 St.
Peter Kozma • SS
OwassoHS

280akland
Donald Simmons
RHP • UC Riverside

~ 14 Atlanta

6 Washington

Ross Detwtler
LHP • Missouri St.

· · Jason Heyward • OF
Henry County HS

... Andrew Brackman
RHP • N.C. State

. 1 5 Clf\~l!lllltl. .
Q!MJ'l.)fii!Sara.co • C
LF ' Florida
·I .' , PUJ1lC'sUta:i¥fi!y HS ·
a Colorado
~ 16 Toronto
~ 24 Texas
Casey Weathers
Keven Ahrens • SS-3B · •..-.. Michael Main • RHP
First round
.
...,......
____R_H_P_·_v_a_nde
_ rb_il_t _ ____M_e_m_or_ia_I_Hs
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _o_.er_an_d_H_s____._ _ _ _ _-,--_ _ _ _A_P

@

1 Milwaukee

Malth~w LaPorta · · . 'l 1'1' •

W

Athens edges Gallia in shortened Legion contest
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYfRIBUNE .COM

RIO GRANDE - Ryan
Thomas' sacrifice tly drove
in what proved to be the
game-winning run as Athens
Post 21 won 5-4 over Gallia
Post 27 during a shortened
American Legion baseball
contest on Thursday.
Thomas lifted a long tly
ball to right field in the top
of the seventh inning, allowing Cory McCune to tag and
score the go-ahead run from
third. Gallia was unable to
answer in the bottom of that
same inning - and then the
game was stopped.
Umpires ruled that it was
too dark to start a new
inning, as it could not be
completed in the small window of daylight remaining.
It was the second game, as

Reds

•

fromPageBl
what I've been doing, being
aggressive."
Lohse (3-7) breezed
through the first four
innings, allowing only
Adam Kennedy's infield h.it
in
the
third . · Juan
Encarnacion doubled with
one out in the fifth but
stayed there when Kennedy
and Gary Bennett flied out.
Pinch hitter Aaron Miles
and Albert Pujols singled to
· star1 the sixth and seventh,
but both were erased in double plays.
His last three starts have
been a marked improvement for Lohse, who lost
six straight stans and had an
8.59 ERA over his last April
start and first five May
star1s. The surge, including
a loss at Colorado in his last
star1 in which he allowed
three runs in six innings,
has come after a split·s.creen
video session with pitching
coach Dick Pole.
Lohse said the changes
are subtle, including being a
little more aggressive and
not guiding the .balL
"Everybody wants to be
perfect," he said. "It's just
the nature of the game.
We're not robots."

well as tne second Eighth
District contest, of the season for both ~lobs -and it
was Post 21 that picked up
its first win of the new year.
Athens fell to league power
Lancaster on Wednesday,
meanwhile Gallia fell victim
to .Meigs in its opener.
Ryan McCune paced the
winners offensively with a
pair of hits, including a solo
home run in the fifth frame.
Cory Bean, Greg Brozak,
Malesick and Sheets also hit
safely for Post 21.
Austin Roush singled and
had the lone Gallia run batted in. John Paul Finnicum, ·
Shawn Thompson, 1\'licah
Cardwell ·
and
Ryan
Eggleton all singled in the
ftve-hit attack.
Athens had just one hit in
the opening frame , but ·it
was a big one, as Bean hit a
The Cardinals finally
broke through against
Lohse in the ninth. With one
out, Pujols doubled off the
wall in right and scored on
Jim Edmonds' single. .
Lohse went 8 1-3 innings,
giving up seven hits and one
run with a walk and two
strikeouts. Before the ninth,
the Cardinals' 3-4-5 hitters
were 1-for-9.
"You don't run across
guys that throw the ball
· that well and their stuff .is
on all the time," Edmonds
said. "He knew what he
wanted to do and he made
pitches all night."
Notes: Scott Rolen has an
error-free streak of 51
games at 3B dating to last
Sept. 27. ... David Ross
doubled in the ninth off
Andy Cavazos, making his
major league debut, to end
.an 0-for-19 slump .... The
Reds won for the first time
in ftve games with Scott
Hatteberg batting leadoff,
although Hatteberg was 0for-5. ... Phillips batted
third, second and fourth in
the three-game series. ...
Griffey has homered off 367
different pitchers, adding
Wa.inwright to h.is list. ...
Pujols is 18-for-40 (.450)
during a I 0-game home hitting sireak. ... Miles had
been 0-for-16 ~ before his
pinch hit in the sixth.

two-run single to give his
club the early edge. Post 2 I
batters also walked three
times in ihe frat;ne.
After falling behind early,
Gallia scored all of its runs
in the second inning thanks in large part to a big
Athens error. Thompson and
Cardwell star1ed the · rally
with back-to-back one-out
singles. Then Kyle Dingess
walked tp load the bases for
Roush.
Roush's infield s ingle
plated one run, then an
Athens . error was responsible for three more·runs on a
single play. Wells hit a slow
roller to second, but the
throw to first was off the
mark and · sailed part its
intended target- leading io
the trio of scores.
When the dust had settled,
Gallia held a 4-2 lead.

Ohio
from Page Bl
atmosphere."
Players from all over the
two states were on hand for
the game, with Ohio having
. players already signed to
play at colleges such as the
Umversity of Kentucky,
Oh.io Un.iversity, Kent State
and BowlinJ; Green and
West Virgmia players
to
already . committed
schools such as Marshall
University · and
West
.
Virginia State.
And for one player in particular, Thursday's game
meant that much more as
she got the chance to play
another game in a Point
Pleasant uniform before fulfilling her childhood dream
of playing ball at the next
level.
"It is a great opportunity
to play aga.inst people that
are this good from all over
the state," sa.id recent Point
Pleasant graduate Tasha
Wyant.
Wyant, who started in the
outfield for the West
Vrrgin.ia All-Stars, will soon
be making her decision final
as to where she will attend
college, but is currently
leaning toward signing with
West Virginia State.

Ryan McCune's solo
homer pulled the road team
to within one, then Brozack
scored on a wild pitch in the
sixth to tie it at 4-4. In all,
Athens scored single runs
over the tinal three innings
to come from behind and
WID.

Doug Chapman, who
came on in relief of star1er
Tyler Thompson in the sixth
inning, picked up the win.
Nick Stevens went the
entire way for Gallia in the
losing cause,
Gallia plays host to
Pickerington in doubleheader action on Saturday.
ATHENS 5, GALLIA 4
Post21 200 011 1 - 533
Po~t 27
040 000. 0 ~ 4 5 1
Tyler Thompson, Doug Cl'lapman (6)
and Cory Bean. Nick Slavens and John
Wells. WP- Chapman . LP- Slavens.
HA - Ryan McCune, fifth inning, none
on.

"When the coach called
me and told me h~ wanted
to offer me a scholarship I
cried l was so excited,"
Wyant said. "It is a dream
come true. My first goal
was to make varsity as a
freshman and my other goal
was to play ·college ball·and
both of them came true."
But even though Wyant's
goals came true, her newly
formed team's goals did
not.
Ohio's squad had 26 hits
in the three contests compared to just eight for West
Virginia. The Buckeye state
also used four pitchers Sarah Phillips,
Shana
Szypka, Emily Grady and
Anna Sm.ith -· throughout
with no run~ given up on the
afternoon.
Ohio won a narrow game
one in the fourth inning
when Kentucky signee
Annie Rowlands, who went
4-for-7 with two RBis and
three runs in the three contests, reached base on a single and was brought home
on a double by Aimee
Bassett to give Ohio a 1-0
lead it would hold until the
end ..
Maybe it was the heat, but
as the triple header wore on
from its noon start time, the
West Virginia All-Star team
just seemed to get more and
more tired as et:rors and hits·
given up increased each

IS

nght as N0 1 pick

•
·
Bv DENNIS WASZAK JR.
took all of their allotted
AP SPORTS wRITER
time. even though they've
known for a while that they
David Price is bringing his would select Price.
blazing fastball and sizable
"'Obviousl y you have an
~hoe collection to Tampa open mind. as R.J . and his
Bay.
staff did in go ing through
The hard-throwing left - the process:· said Andrew
handeroutofVanderbilt was Friedman , . Tampa Bay's
selected by the Devil Rays execuuve vtce pres1dent of
with the No. I pick in the baseball operations. "'fo
baseball draft Thursday.
mamtam that ran,~ IS a great
"I knew that I had the tal- accom~hshmenL
.
.
ent to be that type of play- . It was the thtrdhttmDe m
er," Price said. "So, I just tranchtse htstory t e evtl
had to put the talent and the ~ays had theh top ptckk and
mental game together."
llrst
too outd f'
· d stnce
D t ey Yi
.
He certainly did · that, an ,t e 1,e rT· e 1moBn otunkg ,m
then some. Price went Il-l 1. 00 , .tmpa "Y oo an
with a 2.63 ERA and outfi~lder with its first No. I
p' ' k ·n
Divi sion !-leading
194
strikeouts in his junior sea- '~ri~e ·s1999
d~minant season
son for the Commodores. came to a surprising end in
He accumulated several the re gional s when hi s topawards and about 50 pairs of ranked Commodores lost to
shoes- size 13- during Michigan on Monday. In
his three years at Vanderbilt. that game. he came on in
"I like shoes," he said relief and took hi s first loss
sheepishly.
of the year after stnkmg out
And the Devil Rays like 17 against Austin Peay three
Price - a lot.
days earlier. Projected as a
"We think this guy has all future staff ace in the
the ability to be a front of majors. Price has a fastball
the rotatton-type pitcher," in the mid-90s and mixes it
scouting
director
R.J. well with an outstanding
Harrison sa.id. "Now it's just slider and changeup.
Moustakas was at home
a matter of getting him
signed, gettin~ him in a uni- watching the draft on TV
form and gettmg him hlong with · family and friends
that
. developmental when his name was called.
process."
"Everyone . just .started
Price is the fourth Ieft· jumping up and screaming.
bander taken with the top It was unreal," he said. "A
pick, and first since Brien lot of phone calls came in, a
Taylor went to the New York lot of text · messages.
Yankees in 1991.
Everybody was giving m~
The fust round of the draft hugs. It was unreal. It couldwas televised live from an n't have worked out any betactual site for the firsi time ter."
.
after being held strictly by
Moustakas , California's
conference call in previous career high school home run
years. About 400-500 fans leader with 52, hit a statewere at Disney's ·Wide record 24 this season while
World of Sports Complex leading Chatsworth High to
outside of Orlando, Fla. the clly title&gt; at Dodger
·
Commissioner Bud Selig Stadiu!Jl.
was in attendance, along
.Villers hit .360 with nine
with some big names such HRs and 29 RBis for
as Dave Winfield, Darryl Cypress High
School,
Strawberry, Tom Lasorda, ·despite missing two .weeks
Don Zimmer and Frank with pneumonia. He was at
Howard.
'the draft site and became the
"You look at this draft first in the event's history to
today, and look at the cover- shake hands with Selig and
age today, it 's really remark- pose with his new team's
able," Selig said. "Think cap and jersey.
how the draft used to be
"This was really important .
conducted when I first got - a once in a lifetime
into baseball in 1970. We've opportunity," Vitters said.
come a long way. This is the "I'm glad to be part. of it.
way it's supposed to be."
There's definitely some
With the second pick, electricity, especially before
Kansas City took power-hit- I got picked. My heart was
ting California high school racing."
infielder Mike Moustakas.
Moskos, who moved from
The Chicago Cubs went his role as.. closer to starter
with California high school midway through the season.
third baseman Josh Villers at He was just 3-5 with a 2.91
No. 3; Clemson lefty Daniel ERA heading into the super
Moskos went to Pittsburgh; regionals, bu.t has thre.e
and Baltimore selected potentially dominant pitchGeorgia Tech catcher Matt es.
Wieters with the fifth pick.
Wieters, a 6-foot-5 catchAbout two dozen Devil er, is outstanding defensive-·
Rays fans chanted "Let's do ly and hit .358 with I 0
Rays!" and "We Want · homers ·and 59 RBJs this
Price!" during the commer- season.
cia! break after Selig made a
"I would say he was the
few opening remarks and best college hitter in the
Tampa. Bay went on the draft,"
said
Mike
clock. Each team had 5 min- Flanagan, the Orioles'
utes to make its first-round executive vice president of
pick - and the Devil .Rays baseball operations.
·
game after holding Ohio to
just one. run in the first
game.
In the second game of the
afternoon, things went pretty much the same way for
. Ohio. The Buckeyes scored
four runs in the second
inning, two runs in the sixth
with another run squeezed
in the third to take the 7-0
victory.
Ohio had eight hits in the
game led by Kent State
signee Bassett with a pair of
safeties. Marshall signee
Brittany Sloan belted out
two of her teams three hits
in the second game.
Finally, in game three the
heat really began to take its
toll on an already tired West
Virginia squad. Lazy play
allowed Ohio to score 14
runs on 15 hits, with the
Buckeye state scoring two
in the first, one in the second and third innings, three
in the fifth, two in the sixth
and ftve in the seventh.
West Virginia had three
errors and only managed
two hits, giving players
from the Mountain State little chance to hang with the
girls from Ohio. ·
Over the course of the
three games, Rowlands and
Holly Firichum topP.!d !he
hit hst for Ohio With four
hits and a pair of RBis
apiece. Barrett and Rachel
Delp had three hits apiece

while Erica Evans had three
RBis on two hits.
Sloan led West Virginia as
the only player with multiple hits thanks to her two
safeties in the second game.
Now players from both
states will prepare for more
games similar to Thursday's
contest ·before beginning
training with their respective colleges as they
adval)ce to the next level. ·
And for some, Thursday 's
game marked the last time
they will wear their high
school teams uniform.
"It was a great season. I
wouldn't have changed anything but the ending, but
there was nothing we could
do," Wyant said. "We
played our hearts out. It was
probably the best season out
of all four years, it was def"
initely the best team we
have had in a long time ."
Wyant and a number of
the other players from
Thursday 's game will .be
back in action Thursday,
June 21 at the North-South
game in Buffalo.
Ohio
W.Va .

Game1
000 100 0
000 000 o.
•

14 2

- 030

Game2

W.Va.
Or..io

000 000 0
041 002· X

031
78 1

Ohio
W.Va.

Olmt3
211 032 5
000 000 0

14·15 3
0 2 3

~

.

..

.'
•

-.

l

1

. Friday, June 8, 2007

www.inydailysentinel.com

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

No love: Spurs lost in LeBron hyp;e Magic hire Van Gundy, replace Donovan
. SAN ANTONIO (AP)- the tloor adorned with "And LeBron is that thing
.
LeBron James will attract finals lo~os, a few of right now. "
the spotlight. The San Cleveland s players docu The Spurs are st ill , well,
Antomo Spurs have earnel:l' mented their vi~it with the Spurs.
it.
videocameras as an internaThey have always won
While most of the hype tiona! media , descended with defense, and still do.
surrounding these NBA upon them.
The
league 's stmg1est
finals is centered on James,
It was only four years ago Idefensive sq uad during the
Cleveland's crowned king when the Cavs won 17 regular season must figure
of roundball, the Spurs are games while playing in out how to slow James, who
again being overshadowed front of as many empty s liced up the Pistons for
despite winning three titles seats as filled ones at home. 25.7 points , 9.2 rebounds
"It was like we weren ' t and 8.5 assists in six games.
since 1999.
· There's nothing seductive even in the NBA ," said cenDetroit tried to doubleabout them. They don't run ter Zydrunas ll gauskas , and triple-team the 6-footand gun like the Phoenix drafted by the club in 1991i. 8, 245-pounder. whose abiiSuns. Tim Duncan, their "We were in a deep depres - ity to pass over the top of
resident superstar, doesn't sion as an organization."
defenders al·lowed him to
aspire to be a global icon or
Those gloomy days were find wide-open teammates
featured in any sneaker B.LB. - Before LeBron.
for easy shots.
Spurs forward Bruce
commercials. TV viewers
The 22-year-old has been
channel surf right past their a household name in the Bowen will be assigned to
U.S. since he was an Akron. guard James, but he'll need
games.
when
The Spurs get no respect. Ohio, high sc hool phenom - help. especially
"We are kind of the vanil- enon, and his growing pop- James decides to post him
Ia of the NBA," guard ularity has made him just as up ncar the basket.
well known on the play "A ny way I can gain 40
Manu Ginobli said.
And every few years grounds of Beijing.
pounds overnight?" Bowen
they're the favorite flavor.
In these playoffs , his sec- joked.
On Thursday, the Spurs ond trip to the postseaso n,
On hi s la st visit deep in
will begin their quest for a James has elevated his mul - the heart of Texas, James
fo4rth championship as tidimensional game to a scored 35 pomts with II
they host the Cleveland higher level , pushing the rebounds and four assists
Cavaliers in Game I of the Cavaliers within four victo- on the Spurs. He also posNBA finals, a series being ries of Cleveland's first lerized
a
defenseless
billed as King James' com- major sports title since. Duncan with a vicious dunk
ing-out party but one that 1964.
- a photo he has on the
just as easily could turn into · His appearance in the wall near hts locker in
another Spurs coronation.
best-of-seven series should Cleveland.
James won ' t have it easy
"This definitely is a do wonders for the NBA's
model franchise," said Cavs globalization
plan. as the Spur., likely will blitz
coach Mike Brown, a San Undoubtedly, he ' ll al so him wherever and whenevAntonio assistant when the boost TV ratings, perhaps er he touches the baiL
club won its last title in tempting casual viewers· "They work well together
2005 . "We can't be the interested · in seeing if he on the defensive end," he
Spurs. We don't have the can match his jaw-drop- said. "You know if you beat
same makeup as them or ping, 48-point performance one guy, another guy steps
anything like that."
m Game 5 of the Eastern up. "
The Cavaliers do have Conference finals against
Not lopg ago, the thought
'
was that James needed a
James and that could be Detroit.
· enough.
· ·
it's as if Michael Jordan, superstar sidekick, a player
Tagged as the new face of the more famous tongue- like Jordan had in Scottie
the league and saddled with wagging No. 23, has resur- Pippen . Turns out, James
might have all he needs.
immense expectations since faced. Not quite. Not yet.
With most of the attention
"We've had different
entering the league . four
years ago, James arrived at focused on James, the other guys step up m dtfferent
basketball's ultimate stage team in this LeBronian games." llgauskas said. "So
on Wednesday full of conft- lovefest isn't getting its LeBron hasn ' t had to count
dence.
proper due . But hasn't that on just one guy. There's
The climactic setting is a always been the case for the always somebody else scornew one for the Ca":aliers, Spurs, stan~ing at the edge ing.
somebody.
else
.
reboundmg. We m1ght not
who are making theu first of another tltle.
"The league is about new. have other superstars, but
appearance in the finals
smce joining the league in exciting things," Spurs for- we got other guys who play
1970. After walking onto ward Michael Finley said. good basketball."

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) second-round pick in this
Stan Van Gundy was hired month 's NBA 1.lmft. Orlando
Thursday as coach of the had three picks, all secondOrlando Magic, who acted rounders, in the June 28 draft
quickly after their days-old while Miami had no secondagreement
with
Billy round selections.
Donovan collapsed.
Van Gundy did not immeThe hiring ends a chaotic diately return a message left
two weeks in which Orlando at his home Thursday.
fired Brian Hill, hired
Donovan stunned the
Donovan and then had to Magic within a day of his
find another replacement· introduction June 1,, deciding
because he changed his mind he couldn't leave the Gators
and returned to the Florida after two straight national
Gators.
. championships. Donovan
On Thursday, Donovan contacted the Magic on
apologized to the Magic, hi s Saturday to say he wanted
family and Florida.
.
out of his 5-year, $27.5 mil"I feel terrible about it. ' lion deal. The Ma~ic tried all
(The Magic are) a great orga- weekend to get h1m to stay,
· nization. They have great but finally announced late
ownership, and they're great Wednesday he was let out of
people. I feel sorry and have the contract.
"When I made the deciapologized," he said at a
news
conference
in sion, the next morning it just
Gainesville. "It was my deci- did not feel right for me,"
sion, it was my mistake. I Donovan said. "I've got too
have to take responsibility much respect for the Magic,
for that, which I'm trying to for the organization, for their
do.
team, for their fans, to con"Really. it was my deci- tinue on."
sion. There were no lures,
The Magic said they had a
there was no pressure by "legal right to hold Billy to
anybody to come back. It the contract he signed," but
was what was in my heart." let him go because of his
. Orlando was expected to change of heart.
Neither the team nor
introduce Van Gundy as its
new coach later in the day at Donovan would discuss
. specifics of the breakup. but
a news conference.
Van Gundy coached the Donovan
acknowledged
Miami Heat for more than Thursday he was prevented
two seasons, resigning last from coaching in the NBA.
year but remaining with the He didn't specify for how
team as an adviser to coach long, but reports have circuPat Riley. He also was being lated it was five years.
. courted by the Sacramento
"I think it 's been out there
Kings.
·
pretty much about the whole
"Stan enjoyed tremendous NBA thing down the road,"
success during his tenure Donovan said. "That was
· with the Heat," general man~ something · we both talked
ager Otis Smith said in a about, and that was somestatement on the Magic's .thing I was glad to accept
Web site. "He has a great because I knew in my hean
basketball m.ind , tremendous that's not where I wanted to
respect around the league be. I wanted to be at Florida."
and will get the most out of
From the begmmng, Van
our players. Stan was sought Gundy was Orlando's No. 2
after by many teams this choice. He also was considsummer and we feel very ered by the .Charlotte
proud to wel.come him to the Bobcats and lndiaJ_~a Pacers,
Magic family."
but those teams h1red other
Van Gundy was under con- coaches.
tract with the Heat for anothVan Gundy was Riley's
er year, and the Magic had to longtime protege before takgive Miami undi sclosed ing over as Heat coach shortcompensation, possibly a ly before the start of the

2003-04 season, Dwyane
Wade's first with the Heat.
That team got otf to an 0-7
star1, but wound up 42-40
and with a No. 4 seed in the
Eastem Conference playoffs.
Wade, the MVP of last season's NBA finab, still credits
Van Gundy for turning that
season around.
Now, they will be going
against each other four times
a season. with Miami and
Orlando
both
in
the
Southeast Division.
"It' ll be exciting to go
against a coach that I feel
really helped me develop to
thi s point and. as a) ways,
there s that mutual respect,"
Wade said this week as speculation loomed that Van
Gundy was Orlando-bound.
"So best of luck to Stan and .
his family and hopefully he
gets what. he wants and what
he deserves."
Van Gundy 's brother Jeff
has spent parts of II seasons
as coach of the New York
Knicks and Hou ston . Last
month , Jeff was fired as
coach of the Rockets. Their
father, Bill . was a successful
college coach in upstate New
York.
.
"Stan's a guy who knows
the game. You can see that
from his whole family line,
from his father to his brother
to himself." Wade said. "I
know it's something he loves
to do. So for him to be back
... it's. great. ..
Donovan and Jeff Van
·Gundy are close friends
because the Florida coach
played under him in college
at Providence . The two even
conferred as Donovan wrestied over the Magic decision.
Van Gundy resigned as the
Heat's coach 21 games into
the 2005-06 season, citing
personal and family reasons.
Riley said he tried several
times to get' Van Gundy to
stay but took over. leading
the Heat to their first championship. Van Gundy was 11273 at Miami, and in 2004-05
won the Southeast Division
and made the Eastern
Conference finals. The team
won 59 games that year, second best in franchise history.

Opener
fromPageBl
impressive victory, Post 128
coach Chris Stewart is
pleased with the way things
have gone since the seasonopening doubleheader at
Beavers Field.
"Every game we've
plar,ed, we've gotten better, ' Stewart commented.
"We had a r9ugh star1 at ·
Lancaster, but we picked up
·a pair of good wins both
tonight and at GalliJX?lis."
But it did take a httle time
to get settled in at home, or
at ·least at the plate anyways.
Both teams went scoreless through . three-and-ahalf frames, but the hosts
found their groove in the
. bottom of the fourth by
sending II batters to the
plate. Three hits, three
walks, an error and a hit
batsman later, Feeney
Beimett led comfortably by
a 6-0 margin through four
complete.
Post 128 tacked on anoth·
er run in the fifth for a
seven-run advantage, then
plated three in the sixth on
back-to-back-to-back hits
for a double-digit edge.
A trio of FB hurlers Ryan · Chapman, Zach
Haislo{l and Bryan DeLong
- limited Post 303 lo just
three hits and seven
baserunners in the setback.
Chapman worked three
solid innings in h.is star1,
allowing just one hit and
one walk while fanning two
in the no-decision.
Haislop, who took over in
the fourth, . pitched two
innings and surrendered
two nits while picking up
the winning decision.
Haislop also struck out one.
· DeLong did not surrender
a safety m his two innings
of work on the mound,
allowing only two walks in
his effort.
Eight different players
' had a hit in the victory, not
to mention six others contributed at least one RBI to
the cause. The hosts also
stranded only six on base.
"There are 18 players on
this roster that can really
play. We have a lot of versatility at all positions and a
lot of pitching, not to mention as much depth as I can
ever remember here,"
Stewart said. "I'm really
excited about w.hat this

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!

Bryan Walters/photo
Wes Riffle rounds third and heads home during Thursday's
American Legion baseball game against McArthur.
entire team is capable of,
and I thought tonight was a
indication of some of that." .
Anthony Malone, the losing pitcher of recordL surrendered one hit in each of
the first three frames, but
managed to work his way
out of trouble.
But in the fourth, Malone
started the inning with a
walk, · then a hit batsmen,
giving FB two on with
nobody out. Malone settled ·
down over the next two at·
bats, inducing back -to-back
outs.
Butch Marnhout walked
to load the bases, then a·
passed ball allowed Joel
Lynch .to score from third
for a 1-0 advantage. Titus
Pierce delivered a two-RBI
double one batter later, plating Luke Haislop · and
Mamhout for aJ-0 cushton.
Clay Bolin followed with
a single, allowing Pierce to
come home for a four-run
edge. Patrick Johnson singled home Bolin . then
Johnson came arol)nd to the
plate on an error that
allowed DeLong to reach
safely -giving Post l28 a
6-0 lead after four complete.
Zach Hendrix walked to.
lead off the fifth, then We s .
Riffle singled to give the ·
hosts two runners with
nobody out. Pierce drove in
his th1rd run of the ga me
with a one-out sacrifice fly,
making it 7-0 through five.
DeLong led off the six th
with a single and later
scored on a double by Joel
Lynch. Lynch came armmd

one batter later on Luke
Haislop's double , giving the
hosts a 9-0 advantage.
Haislop stole th1rd successfully, but was injured
on the play. Eric VanMeter
scored a few r.itches later on
a passed bal , giving FB a
10-0 lead.
Malone allowed six runs,
five earned, six hits; two
walks and hit a batter in his
3.2 innings of work. Malone
al so farined three in the losing decision.
Ryan Darnell allowed
four earned runs, five hits
and two walks in his twoplus innings of relief.
Bolin, Luke Haislop and
Johnson all led the victors
with two hits apiece.
DeLong, Lynch, Riffle,
Pierce and Zach . Haislop
also added a safety. Bolin,
Johnson , DeLong, Lynch
and Luke Haislop also
added a run batted in.
Jarod Hale had two hits ·
for McArthur, and Chris
Comer added the other safety.
.
PO'St 128 returns to acuon
this Saturday afternoon in a
rematch
doubl eheader
against visiting Lancaster.
Game one, which is a
league contest . . starts at I
p.m.
Feeney Bennett also hosts
Pickerington this Sunday at
I p.m.
Feeney Bennett 10, McArthur 0.
Posl 303 000 000 0 0 31
Post 1.28 000 613 x - 10 11 0
McArthur (n/a): Anlhony Maione, Ryan
Darnell (4) and Jarod Hale
Meig s (2-2 ): Ryan Chapman . Zach
Haistop (4). Bryan Delong (6) and Luke
Haislop, But ch Marnhout (6)
·
WP - Z. Haislop; LP - Malone

Happy
Father's Day
(Your Father'
Name)

Love
(Your Name)
Circle One: A. 1X3 Greeting ... $12.00

Happy
Father's Day
(Your Father's
Narve)

Love
(Your Name)

B. 1X5 Greeting with Picture... $15.00

Father's Name'------~--'-------------­
Your Name(s) - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - -

Clty/StateJZlp
Phone·_ _ _ _ _ __
Send Coupon and Payment to: The Dally Sentinel "Father's Day"
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.. A!~d!~~~!~::~!!!:_.:~!.~l&amp;9El!.e!~~~~--~-------·-..1111
Deadline For This Special Father's Day Tr ibute Is
Wednesay. June 13, 12:00 Noon.

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinei

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, June 8, .2007

Reds pick Pen.nsylvania catcher No. 1 ~-~ays thinks P~ce:
CINCINNATI (AP) .
Devin Mesoraco's idol is
Hall of Fame catcher
Johnny Bench. but he play s
more like former Pittsburgh
backstop Jason KendalL
Mesoraco can merge both
worlds after Bench's team,
the Cincinnati Reds, made for the Pirates, who made
him their No. I pick and the him thei r No. 1 pick in
15th overall selec tion in the 1992 before he moved on to
first round of the First-Year Oakland, Me soraco usually
Player Draft on Thursday. bats leadoff for hi s Chucks
The team later chose Todd team that has reached the
Frazier, a power-hitting semifinal s of the state tourAll-American junior short- nament.
stop from Rut gers, with a
supplemental first-round . Mesoraco. who bats and
.
. over- throws right-handed, has
pick.
the 34th chmce
all.
come back from Aug. 31,
2004, ligament replacement
"I've always followed
Johnny
Bench,"
the surgery on his right elbow,
. Punxsutawney (Pa.) High which relegated him to desSchool catcher said during ignated-hitter duties as a
a conference call 1 w1th junior. He resumed fullreporters . "He 's what time duty behind the plate
everybody else tries to be. this season and is hitting
It's a great honor coming to .467 with four home runs
an organization that has had and 21 runs batted in.
great catchers like that."
"It's not even an iss.ue at
Like Kendall often did this point," Mesoraco said.

Price Is right lor Ravs

"I was 100 percent three
months ago, and now it's
just getting better and better."
The 6-foot-2, 200-pound
Me soraco, who !,urn s 19 on
June 19 and has a commitment to the University of
Virginia that he said is "in
the background ," was
ranked
by
Baseball
America .as the 24th-best
overall prospect and the
ninth-best position available in this year's draft. He
has been descnbed by .the
Pltlsburgh Tnbune-Rev1ew
as Pennsylvania's best high
sc hoo 1 p1ayer.
He is the third catcher
k b h R d
·h h ·
ta en y t e e s wtt t .elr
No. 1 p1ck, and the ftrst
since Dan Wilson in 199?.
Bench was Cmcmnau s
second ptck behmd Bernte
Crab during baseball's first
draft m 1965.
.
Fraz1er, meanwh1Ie, had a
spectacular season m wh1~h
he was m the top SIX m
every offens1ve. category

for Rutgers except triples.
He set the school smgleseason records this season
for home runs (22), home
runs by a leadoff hmer
(22), runs scored (87),
walks (62 ), doubles (24)
and total bases (187)
In
the
Big
East
Conference tourqament, he
hit a mammoth, 400-plus
foot home . run that went
over the score board at
Brooklyn's KeySpan Park,
the home of the .New York
M.ets CI~ss A affiliate.
'Thts IS a great moment
for myself and my friends
an d'f am1·1 y. It' s some th'mg 1
will never forget," said
F ·
h
f
razler, w o .comes rom a
baseball fam1ly. Two older
broth~rs also were drafted;
Charhe was ~aken by the
Flonda Marhns m 1999,
while . Jeff was picked by
Detroll tn 2004. · Jeff
Fraz1er was tr.aded to
Seattle before th1s seaso_n
and now pl~~s wtth . theu
Class AA affiliate.

The Tampa Bay Devil Rays selected left-handed pitcher David Price
· with the first overall selection in the baseball draft Thursday.

· 18 St.
Peter Kozma • SS
OwassoHS

280akland
Donald Simmons
RHP • UC Riverside

~ 14 Atlanta

6 Washington

Ross Detwtler
LHP • Missouri St.

· · Jason Heyward • OF
Henry County HS

... Andrew Brackman
RHP • N.C. State

. 1 5 Clf\~l!lllltl. .
Q!MJ'l.)fii!Sara.co • C
LF ' Florida
·I .' , PUJ1lC'sUta:i¥fi!y HS ·
a Colorado
~ 16 Toronto
~ 24 Texas
Casey Weathers
Keven Ahrens • SS-3B · •..-.. Michael Main • RHP
First round
.
...,......
____R_H_P_·_v_a_nde
_ rb_il_t _ ____M_e_m_or_ia_I_Hs
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _o_.er_an_d_H_s____._ _ _ _ _-,--_ _ _ _A_P

@

1 Milwaukee

Malth~w LaPorta · · . 'l 1'1' •

W

Athens edges Gallia in shortened Legion contest
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYfRIBUNE .COM

RIO GRANDE - Ryan
Thomas' sacrifice tly drove
in what proved to be the
game-winning run as Athens
Post 21 won 5-4 over Gallia
Post 27 during a shortened
American Legion baseball
contest on Thursday.
Thomas lifted a long tly
ball to right field in the top
of the seventh inning, allowing Cory McCune to tag and
score the go-ahead run from
third. Gallia was unable to
answer in the bottom of that
same inning - and then the
game was stopped.
Umpires ruled that it was
too dark to start a new
inning, as it could not be
completed in the small window of daylight remaining.
It was the second game, as

Reds

•

fromPageBl
what I've been doing, being
aggressive."
Lohse (3-7) breezed
through the first four
innings, allowing only
Adam Kennedy's infield h.it
in
the
third . · Juan
Encarnacion doubled with
one out in the fifth but
stayed there when Kennedy
and Gary Bennett flied out.
Pinch hitter Aaron Miles
and Albert Pujols singled to
· star1 the sixth and seventh,
but both were erased in double plays.
His last three starts have
been a marked improvement for Lohse, who lost
six straight stans and had an
8.59 ERA over his last April
start and first five May
star1s. The surge, including
a loss at Colorado in his last
star1 in which he allowed
three runs in six innings,
has come after a split·s.creen
video session with pitching
coach Dick Pole.
Lohse said the changes
are subtle, including being a
little more aggressive and
not guiding the .balL
"Everybody wants to be
perfect," he said. "It's just
the nature of the game.
We're not robots."

well as tne second Eighth
District contest, of the season for both ~lobs -and it
was Post 21 that picked up
its first win of the new year.
Athens fell to league power
Lancaster on Wednesday,
meanwhile Gallia fell victim
to .Meigs in its opener.
Ryan McCune paced the
winners offensively with a
pair of hits, including a solo
home run in the fifth frame.
Cory Bean, Greg Brozak,
Malesick and Sheets also hit
safely for Post 21.
Austin Roush singled and
had the lone Gallia run batted in. John Paul Finnicum, ·
Shawn Thompson, 1\'licah
Cardwell ·
and
Ryan
Eggleton all singled in the
ftve-hit attack.
Athens had just one hit in
the opening frame , but ·it
was a big one, as Bean hit a
The Cardinals finally
broke through against
Lohse in the ninth. With one
out, Pujols doubled off the
wall in right and scored on
Jim Edmonds' single. .
Lohse went 8 1-3 innings,
giving up seven hits and one
run with a walk and two
strikeouts. Before the ninth,
the Cardinals' 3-4-5 hitters
were 1-for-9.
"You don't run across
guys that throw the ball
· that well and their stuff .is
on all the time," Edmonds
said. "He knew what he
wanted to do and he made
pitches all night."
Notes: Scott Rolen has an
error-free streak of 51
games at 3B dating to last
Sept. 27. ... David Ross
doubled in the ninth off
Andy Cavazos, making his
major league debut, to end
.an 0-for-19 slump .... The
Reds won for the first time
in ftve games with Scott
Hatteberg batting leadoff,
although Hatteberg was 0for-5. ... Phillips batted
third, second and fourth in
the three-game series. ...
Griffey has homered off 367
different pitchers, adding
Wa.inwright to h.is list. ...
Pujols is 18-for-40 (.450)
during a I 0-game home hitting sireak. ... Miles had
been 0-for-16 ~ before his
pinch hit in the sixth.

two-run single to give his
club the early edge. Post 2 I
batters also walked three
times in ihe frat;ne.
After falling behind early,
Gallia scored all of its runs
in the second inning thanks in large part to a big
Athens error. Thompson and
Cardwell star1ed the · rally
with back-to-back one-out
singles. Then Kyle Dingess
walked tp load the bases for
Roush.
Roush's infield s ingle
plated one run, then an
Athens . error was responsible for three more·runs on a
single play. Wells hit a slow
roller to second, but the
throw to first was off the
mark and · sailed part its
intended target- leading io
the trio of scores.
When the dust had settled,
Gallia held a 4-2 lead.

Ohio
from Page Bl
atmosphere."
Players from all over the
two states were on hand for
the game, with Ohio having
. players already signed to
play at colleges such as the
Umversity of Kentucky,
Oh.io Un.iversity, Kent State
and BowlinJ; Green and
West Virgmia players
to
already . committed
schools such as Marshall
University · and
West
.
Virginia State.
And for one player in particular, Thursday's game
meant that much more as
she got the chance to play
another game in a Point
Pleasant uniform before fulfilling her childhood dream
of playing ball at the next
level.
"It is a great opportunity
to play aga.inst people that
are this good from all over
the state," sa.id recent Point
Pleasant graduate Tasha
Wyant.
Wyant, who started in the
outfield for the West
Vrrgin.ia All-Stars, will soon
be making her decision final
as to where she will attend
college, but is currently
leaning toward signing with
West Virginia State.

Ryan McCune's solo
homer pulled the road team
to within one, then Brozack
scored on a wild pitch in the
sixth to tie it at 4-4. In all,
Athens scored single runs
over the tinal three innings
to come from behind and
WID.

Doug Chapman, who
came on in relief of star1er
Tyler Thompson in the sixth
inning, picked up the win.
Nick Stevens went the
entire way for Gallia in the
losing cause,
Gallia plays host to
Pickerington in doubleheader action on Saturday.
ATHENS 5, GALLIA 4
Post21 200 011 1 - 533
Po~t 27
040 000. 0 ~ 4 5 1
Tyler Thompson, Doug Cl'lapman (6)
and Cory Bean. Nick Slavens and John
Wells. WP- Chapman . LP- Slavens.
HA - Ryan McCune, fifth inning, none
on.

"When the coach called
me and told me h~ wanted
to offer me a scholarship I
cried l was so excited,"
Wyant said. "It is a dream
come true. My first goal
was to make varsity as a
freshman and my other goal
was to play ·college ball·and
both of them came true."
But even though Wyant's
goals came true, her newly
formed team's goals did
not.
Ohio's squad had 26 hits
in the three contests compared to just eight for West
Virginia. The Buckeye state
also used four pitchers Sarah Phillips,
Shana
Szypka, Emily Grady and
Anna Sm.ith -· throughout
with no run~ given up on the
afternoon.
Ohio won a narrow game
one in the fourth inning
when Kentucky signee
Annie Rowlands, who went
4-for-7 with two RBis and
three runs in the three contests, reached base on a single and was brought home
on a double by Aimee
Bassett to give Ohio a 1-0
lead it would hold until the
end ..
Maybe it was the heat, but
as the triple header wore on
from its noon start time, the
West Virginia All-Star team
just seemed to get more and
more tired as et:rors and hits·
given up increased each

IS

nght as N0 1 pick

•
·
Bv DENNIS WASZAK JR.
took all of their allotted
AP SPORTS wRITER
time. even though they've
known for a while that they
David Price is bringing his would select Price.
blazing fastball and sizable
"'Obviousl y you have an
~hoe collection to Tampa open mind. as R.J . and his
Bay.
staff did in go ing through
The hard-throwing left - the process:· said Andrew
handeroutofVanderbilt was Friedman , . Tampa Bay's
selected by the Devil Rays execuuve vtce pres1dent of
with the No. I pick in the baseball operations. "'fo
baseball draft Thursday.
mamtam that ran,~ IS a great
"I knew that I had the tal- accom~hshmenL
.
.
ent to be that type of play- . It was the thtrdhttmDe m
er," Price said. "So, I just tranchtse htstory t e evtl
had to put the talent and the ~ays had theh top ptckk and
mental game together."
llrst
too outd f'
· d stnce
D t ey Yi
.
He certainly did · that, an ,t e 1,e rT· e 1moBn otunkg ,m
then some. Price went Il-l 1. 00 , .tmpa "Y oo an
with a 2.63 ERA and outfi~lder with its first No. I
p' ' k ·n
Divi sion !-leading
194
strikeouts in his junior sea- '~ri~e ·s1999
d~minant season
son for the Commodores. came to a surprising end in
He accumulated several the re gional s when hi s topawards and about 50 pairs of ranked Commodores lost to
shoes- size 13- during Michigan on Monday. In
his three years at Vanderbilt. that game. he came on in
"I like shoes," he said relief and took hi s first loss
sheepishly.
of the year after stnkmg out
And the Devil Rays like 17 against Austin Peay three
Price - a lot.
days earlier. Projected as a
"We think this guy has all future staff ace in the
the ability to be a front of majors. Price has a fastball
the rotatton-type pitcher," in the mid-90s and mixes it
scouting
director
R.J. well with an outstanding
Harrison sa.id. "Now it's just slider and changeup.
Moustakas was at home
a matter of getting him
signed, gettin~ him in a uni- watching the draft on TV
form and gettmg him hlong with · family and friends
that
. developmental when his name was called.
process."
"Everyone . just .started
Price is the fourth Ieft· jumping up and screaming.
bander taken with the top It was unreal," he said. "A
pick, and first since Brien lot of phone calls came in, a
Taylor went to the New York lot of text · messages.
Yankees in 1991.
Everybody was giving m~
The fust round of the draft hugs. It was unreal. It couldwas televised live from an n't have worked out any betactual site for the firsi time ter."
.
after being held strictly by
Moustakas , California's
conference call in previous career high school home run
years. About 400-500 fans leader with 52, hit a statewere at Disney's ·Wide record 24 this season while
World of Sports Complex leading Chatsworth High to
outside of Orlando, Fla. the clly title&gt; at Dodger
·
Commissioner Bud Selig Stadiu!Jl.
was in attendance, along
.Villers hit .360 with nine
with some big names such HRs and 29 RBis for
as Dave Winfield, Darryl Cypress High
School,
Strawberry, Tom Lasorda, ·despite missing two .weeks
Don Zimmer and Frank with pneumonia. He was at
Howard.
'the draft site and became the
"You look at this draft first in the event's history to
today, and look at the cover- shake hands with Selig and
age today, it 's really remark- pose with his new team's
able," Selig said. "Think cap and jersey.
how the draft used to be
"This was really important .
conducted when I first got - a once in a lifetime
into baseball in 1970. We've opportunity," Vitters said.
come a long way. This is the "I'm glad to be part. of it.
way it's supposed to be."
There's definitely some
With the second pick, electricity, especially before
Kansas City took power-hit- I got picked. My heart was
ting California high school racing."
infielder Mike Moustakas.
Moskos, who moved from
The Chicago Cubs went his role as.. closer to starter
with California high school midway through the season.
third baseman Josh Villers at He was just 3-5 with a 2.91
No. 3; Clemson lefty Daniel ERA heading into the super
Moskos went to Pittsburgh; regionals, bu.t has thre.e
and Baltimore selected potentially dominant pitchGeorgia Tech catcher Matt es.
Wieters with the fifth pick.
Wieters, a 6-foot-5 catchAbout two dozen Devil er, is outstanding defensive-·
Rays fans chanted "Let's do ly and hit .358 with I 0
Rays!" and "We Want · homers ·and 59 RBJs this
Price!" during the commer- season.
cia! break after Selig made a
"I would say he was the
few opening remarks and best college hitter in the
Tampa. Bay went on the draft,"
said
Mike
clock. Each team had 5 min- Flanagan, the Orioles'
utes to make its first-round executive vice president of
pick - and the Devil .Rays baseball operations.
·
game after holding Ohio to
just one. run in the first
game.
In the second game of the
afternoon, things went pretty much the same way for
. Ohio. The Buckeyes scored
four runs in the second
inning, two runs in the sixth
with another run squeezed
in the third to take the 7-0
victory.
Ohio had eight hits in the
game led by Kent State
signee Bassett with a pair of
safeties. Marshall signee
Brittany Sloan belted out
two of her teams three hits
in the second game.
Finally, in game three the
heat really began to take its
toll on an already tired West
Virginia squad. Lazy play
allowed Ohio to score 14
runs on 15 hits, with the
Buckeye state scoring two
in the first, one in the second and third innings, three
in the fifth, two in the sixth
and ftve in the seventh.
West Virginia had three
errors and only managed
two hits, giving players
from the Mountain State little chance to hang with the
girls from Ohio. ·
Over the course of the
three games, Rowlands and
Holly Firichum topP.!d !he
hit hst for Ohio With four
hits and a pair of RBis
apiece. Barrett and Rachel
Delp had three hits apiece

while Erica Evans had three
RBis on two hits.
Sloan led West Virginia as
the only player with multiple hits thanks to her two
safeties in the second game.
Now players from both
states will prepare for more
games similar to Thursday's
contest ·before beginning
training with their respective colleges as they
adval)ce to the next level. ·
And for some, Thursday 's
game marked the last time
they will wear their high
school teams uniform.
"It was a great season. I
wouldn't have changed anything but the ending, but
there was nothing we could
do," Wyant said. "We
played our hearts out. It was
probably the best season out
of all four years, it was def"
initely the best team we
have had in a long time ."
Wyant and a number of
the other players from
Thursday 's game will .be
back in action Thursday,
June 21 at the North-South
game in Buffalo.
Ohio
W.Va .

Game1
000 100 0
000 000 o.
•

14 2

- 030

Game2

W.Va.
Or..io

000 000 0
041 002· X

031
78 1

Ohio
W.Va.

Olmt3
211 032 5
000 000 0

14·15 3
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~

.

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1

. Friday, June 8, 2007

www.inydailysentinel.com

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

No love: Spurs lost in LeBron hyp;e Magic hire Van Gundy, replace Donovan
. SAN ANTONIO (AP)- the tloor adorned with "And LeBron is that thing
.
LeBron James will attract finals lo~os, a few of right now. "
the spotlight. The San Cleveland s players docu The Spurs are st ill , well,
Antomo Spurs have earnel:l' mented their vi~it with the Spurs.
it.
videocameras as an internaThey have always won
While most of the hype tiona! media , descended with defense, and still do.
surrounding these NBA upon them.
The
league 's stmg1est
finals is centered on James,
It was only four years ago Idefensive sq uad during the
Cleveland's crowned king when the Cavs won 17 regular season must figure
of roundball, the Spurs are games while playing in out how to slow James, who
again being overshadowed front of as many empty s liced up the Pistons for
despite winning three titles seats as filled ones at home. 25.7 points , 9.2 rebounds
"It was like we weren ' t and 8.5 assists in six games.
since 1999.
· There's nothing seductive even in the NBA ," said cenDetroit tried to doubleabout them. They don't run ter Zydrunas ll gauskas , and triple-team the 6-footand gun like the Phoenix drafted by the club in 1991i. 8, 245-pounder. whose abiiSuns. Tim Duncan, their "We were in a deep depres - ity to pass over the top of
resident superstar, doesn't sion as an organization."
defenders al·lowed him to
aspire to be a global icon or
Those gloomy days were find wide-open teammates
featured in any sneaker B.LB. - Before LeBron.
for easy shots.
Spurs forward Bruce
commercials. TV viewers
The 22-year-old has been
channel surf right past their a household name in the Bowen will be assigned to
U.S. since he was an Akron. guard James, but he'll need
games.
when
The Spurs get no respect. Ohio, high sc hool phenom - help. especially
"We are kind of the vanil- enon, and his growing pop- James decides to post him
Ia of the NBA," guard ularity has made him just as up ncar the basket.
well known on the play "A ny way I can gain 40
Manu Ginobli said.
And every few years grounds of Beijing.
pounds overnight?" Bowen
they're the favorite flavor.
In these playoffs , his sec- joked.
On Thursday, the Spurs ond trip to the postseaso n,
On hi s la st visit deep in
will begin their quest for a James has elevated his mul - the heart of Texas, James
fo4rth championship as tidimensional game to a scored 35 pomts with II
they host the Cleveland higher level , pushing the rebounds and four assists
Cavaliers in Game I of the Cavaliers within four victo- on the Spurs. He also posNBA finals, a series being ries of Cleveland's first lerized
a
defenseless
billed as King James' com- major sports title since. Duncan with a vicious dunk
ing-out party but one that 1964.
- a photo he has on the
just as easily could turn into · His appearance in the wall near hts locker in
another Spurs coronation.
best-of-seven series should Cleveland.
James won ' t have it easy
"This definitely is a do wonders for the NBA's
model franchise," said Cavs globalization
plan. as the Spur., likely will blitz
coach Mike Brown, a San Undoubtedly, he ' ll al so him wherever and whenevAntonio assistant when the boost TV ratings, perhaps er he touches the baiL
club won its last title in tempting casual viewers· "They work well together
2005 . "We can't be the interested · in seeing if he on the defensive end," he
Spurs. We don't have the can match his jaw-drop- said. "You know if you beat
same makeup as them or ping, 48-point performance one guy, another guy steps
anything like that."
m Game 5 of the Eastern up. "
The Cavaliers do have Conference finals against
Not lopg ago, the thought
'
was that James needed a
James and that could be Detroit.
· enough.
· ·
it's as if Michael Jordan, superstar sidekick, a player
Tagged as the new face of the more famous tongue- like Jordan had in Scottie
the league and saddled with wagging No. 23, has resur- Pippen . Turns out, James
might have all he needs.
immense expectations since faced. Not quite. Not yet.
With most of the attention
"We've had different
entering the league . four
years ago, James arrived at focused on James, the other guys step up m dtfferent
basketball's ultimate stage team in this LeBronian games." llgauskas said. "So
on Wednesday full of conft- lovefest isn't getting its LeBron hasn ' t had to count
dence.
proper due . But hasn't that on just one guy. There's
The climactic setting is a always been the case for the always somebody else scornew one for the Ca":aliers, Spurs, stan~ing at the edge ing.
somebody.
else
.
reboundmg. We m1ght not
who are making theu first of another tltle.
"The league is about new. have other superstars, but
appearance in the finals
smce joining the league in exciting things," Spurs for- we got other guys who play
1970. After walking onto ward Michael Finley said. good basketball."

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) second-round pick in this
Stan Van Gundy was hired month 's NBA 1.lmft. Orlando
Thursday as coach of the had three picks, all secondOrlando Magic, who acted rounders, in the June 28 draft
quickly after their days-old while Miami had no secondagreement
with
Billy round selections.
Donovan collapsed.
Van Gundy did not immeThe hiring ends a chaotic diately return a message left
two weeks in which Orlando at his home Thursday.
fired Brian Hill, hired
Donovan stunned the
Donovan and then had to Magic within a day of his
find another replacement· introduction June 1,, deciding
because he changed his mind he couldn't leave the Gators
and returned to the Florida after two straight national
Gators.
. championships. Donovan
On Thursday, Donovan contacted the Magic on
apologized to the Magic, hi s Saturday to say he wanted
family and Florida.
.
out of his 5-year, $27.5 mil"I feel terrible about it. ' lion deal. The Ma~ic tried all
(The Magic are) a great orga- weekend to get h1m to stay,
· nization. They have great but finally announced late
ownership, and they're great Wednesday he was let out of
people. I feel sorry and have the contract.
"When I made the deciapologized," he said at a
news
conference
in sion, the next morning it just
Gainesville. "It was my deci- did not feel right for me,"
sion, it was my mistake. I Donovan said. "I've got too
have to take responsibility much respect for the Magic,
for that, which I'm trying to for the organization, for their
do.
team, for their fans, to con"Really. it was my deci- tinue on."
sion. There were no lures,
The Magic said they had a
there was no pressure by "legal right to hold Billy to
anybody to come back. It the contract he signed," but
was what was in my heart." let him go because of his
. Orlando was expected to change of heart.
Neither the team nor
introduce Van Gundy as its
new coach later in the day at Donovan would discuss
. specifics of the breakup. but
a news conference.
Van Gundy coached the Donovan
acknowledged
Miami Heat for more than Thursday he was prevented
two seasons, resigning last from coaching in the NBA.
year but remaining with the He didn't specify for how
team as an adviser to coach long, but reports have circuPat Riley. He also was being lated it was five years.
. courted by the Sacramento
"I think it 's been out there
Kings.
·
pretty much about the whole
"Stan enjoyed tremendous NBA thing down the road,"
success during his tenure Donovan said. "That was
· with the Heat," general man~ something · we both talked
ager Otis Smith said in a about, and that was somestatement on the Magic's .thing I was glad to accept
Web site. "He has a great because I knew in my hean
basketball m.ind , tremendous that's not where I wanted to
respect around the league be. I wanted to be at Florida."
and will get the most out of
From the begmmng, Van
our players. Stan was sought Gundy was Orlando's No. 2
after by many teams this choice. He also was considsummer and we feel very ered by the .Charlotte
proud to wel.come him to the Bobcats and lndiaJ_~a Pacers,
Magic family."
but those teams h1red other
Van Gundy was under con- coaches.
tract with the Heat for anothVan Gundy was Riley's
er year, and the Magic had to longtime protege before takgive Miami undi sclosed ing over as Heat coach shortcompensation, possibly a ly before the start of the

2003-04 season, Dwyane
Wade's first with the Heat.
That team got otf to an 0-7
star1, but wound up 42-40
and with a No. 4 seed in the
Eastem Conference playoffs.
Wade, the MVP of last season's NBA finab, still credits
Van Gundy for turning that
season around.
Now, they will be going
against each other four times
a season. with Miami and
Orlando
both
in
the
Southeast Division.
"It' ll be exciting to go
against a coach that I feel
really helped me develop to
thi s point and. as a) ways,
there s that mutual respect,"
Wade said this week as speculation loomed that Van
Gundy was Orlando-bound.
"So best of luck to Stan and .
his family and hopefully he
gets what. he wants and what
he deserves."
Van Gundy 's brother Jeff
has spent parts of II seasons
as coach of the New York
Knicks and Hou ston . Last
month , Jeff was fired as
coach of the Rockets. Their
father, Bill . was a successful
college coach in upstate New
York.
.
"Stan's a guy who knows
the game. You can see that
from his whole family line,
from his father to his brother
to himself." Wade said. "I
know it's something he loves
to do. So for him to be back
... it's. great. ..
Donovan and Jeff Van
·Gundy are close friends
because the Florida coach
played under him in college
at Providence . The two even
conferred as Donovan wrestied over the Magic decision.
Van Gundy resigned as the
Heat's coach 21 games into
the 2005-06 season, citing
personal and family reasons.
Riley said he tried several
times to get' Van Gundy to
stay but took over. leading
the Heat to their first championship. Van Gundy was 11273 at Miami, and in 2004-05
won the Southeast Division
and made the Eastern
Conference finals. The team
won 59 games that year, second best in franchise history.

Opener
fromPageBl
impressive victory, Post 128
coach Chris Stewart is
pleased with the way things
have gone since the seasonopening doubleheader at
Beavers Field.
"Every game we've
plar,ed, we've gotten better, ' Stewart commented.
"We had a r9ugh star1 at ·
Lancaster, but we picked up
·a pair of good wins both
tonight and at GalliJX?lis."
But it did take a httle time
to get settled in at home, or
at ·least at the plate anyways.
Both teams went scoreless through . three-and-ahalf frames, but the hosts
found their groove in the
. bottom of the fourth by
sending II batters to the
plate. Three hits, three
walks, an error and a hit
batsman later, Feeney
Beimett led comfortably by
a 6-0 margin through four
complete.
Post 128 tacked on anoth·
er run in the fifth for a
seven-run advantage, then
plated three in the sixth on
back-to-back-to-back hits
for a double-digit edge.
A trio of FB hurlers Ryan · Chapman, Zach
Haislo{l and Bryan DeLong
- limited Post 303 lo just
three hits and seven
baserunners in the setback.
Chapman worked three
solid innings in h.is star1,
allowing just one hit and
one walk while fanning two
in the no-decision.
Haislop, who took over in
the fourth, . pitched two
innings and surrendered
two nits while picking up
the winning decision.
Haislop also struck out one.
· DeLong did not surrender
a safety m his two innings
of work on the mound,
allowing only two walks in
his effort.
Eight different players
' had a hit in the victory, not
to mention six others contributed at least one RBI to
the cause. The hosts also
stranded only six on base.
"There are 18 players on
this roster that can really
play. We have a lot of versatility at all positions and a
lot of pitching, not to mention as much depth as I can
ever remember here,"
Stewart said. "I'm really
excited about w.hat this

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!

Bryan Walters/photo
Wes Riffle rounds third and heads home during Thursday's
American Legion baseball game against McArthur.
entire team is capable of,
and I thought tonight was a
indication of some of that." .
Anthony Malone, the losing pitcher of recordL surrendered one hit in each of
the first three frames, but
managed to work his way
out of trouble.
But in the fourth, Malone
started the inning with a
walk, · then a hit batsmen,
giving FB two on with
nobody out. Malone settled ·
down over the next two at·
bats, inducing back -to-back
outs.
Butch Marnhout walked
to load the bases, then a·
passed ball allowed Joel
Lynch .to score from third
for a 1-0 advantage. Titus
Pierce delivered a two-RBI
double one batter later, plating Luke Haislop · and
Mamhout for aJ-0 cushton.
Clay Bolin followed with
a single, allowing Pierce to
come home for a four-run
edge. Patrick Johnson singled home Bolin . then
Johnson came arol)nd to the
plate on an error that
allowed DeLong to reach
safely -giving Post l28 a
6-0 lead after four complete.
Zach Hendrix walked to.
lead off the fifth, then We s .
Riffle singled to give the ·
hosts two runners with
nobody out. Pierce drove in
his th1rd run of the ga me
with a one-out sacrifice fly,
making it 7-0 through five.
DeLong led off the six th
with a single and later
scored on a double by Joel
Lynch. Lynch came armmd

one batter later on Luke
Haislop's double , giving the
hosts a 9-0 advantage.
Haislop stole th1rd successfully, but was injured
on the play. Eric VanMeter
scored a few r.itches later on
a passed bal , giving FB a
10-0 lead.
Malone allowed six runs,
five earned, six hits; two
walks and hit a batter in his
3.2 innings of work. Malone
al so farined three in the losing decision.
Ryan Darnell allowed
four earned runs, five hits
and two walks in his twoplus innings of relief.
Bolin, Luke Haislop and
Johnson all led the victors
with two hits apiece.
DeLong, Lynch, Riffle,
Pierce and Zach . Haislop
also added a safety. Bolin,
Johnson , DeLong, Lynch
and Luke Haislop also
added a run batted in.
Jarod Hale had two hits ·
for McArthur, and Chris
Comer added the other safety.
.
PO'St 128 returns to acuon
this Saturday afternoon in a
rematch
doubl eheader
against visiting Lancaster.
Game one, which is a
league contest . . starts at I
p.m.
Feeney Bennett also hosts
Pickerington this Sunday at
I p.m.
Feeney Bennett 10, McArthur 0.
Posl 303 000 000 0 0 31
Post 1.28 000 613 x - 10 11 0
McArthur (n/a): Anlhony Maione, Ryan
Darnell (4) and Jarod Hale
Meig s (2-2 ): Ryan Chapman . Zach
Haistop (4). Bryan Delong (6) and Luke
Haislop, But ch Marnhout (6)
·
WP - Z. Haislop; LP - Malone

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Deadline For This Special Father's Day Tr ibute Is
Wednesay. June 13, 12:00 Noon.

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

NBA FINALS

-

NorEBOOK

Brown: No lineup change for Cavs
SAN ANTON IO (AP) D.mtel Gtbson has been
Clc,cland \ leadmg scorer
1n the last two games
Th.tt s not good enough to
get htm a spot 10 the stan10g
hneup
Ca1alters coach Mtke
Brol\ n -atd after the
C l\ alters 85-76 loss to San
Alllomo m Game I of the
NBA tmal s on Thursday
mght that he won't make a
hneup ch&lt;~nge before Game
~

· It ' one game.' Brown
satd "We re gomg to go
h.tck and take ,1 look at the
tape and we'll make some
.tdjusllnents and I'm sure
they' II make some adJUStments but one of them
won't be a lmeup change ..
Gtbsnn has emerged as
one of the Cavs - most
unport,mt player' because of
hts outstde shnotmg The
rnokte scored a career-htgh
I I pomts 10 the Game 6
dmcher ag,unst Detrott 10
the E.tstern Conference
I 111als and lim shed with I6
pomts on 7•ot-9 shootmg
Thursday ·mght
Hts qutckness mtght be
even more tmponant smce
startmg pomt gu.trd Larry
Hu ghes has been slowed by
platH~r lasclltts Hughes was
only 1-of-5 Thursday and
'ttUggled to defend speedy
Spurs guard Tony Parker,
who scored 27 pomts
Stil l Bro\\n appears lo
vtew Gtbson as only a
teserve
"He'll get some playmg
ltme. Brown satd "He
played well for us on both
ends of the floor tomght, and
he dtd shoot the ball well
He 'II be out on the floor for
us
G1bson doesn't seem to
care what hts slats are or
role ts
.. , JUSt want to wm and
gtve ourselves the best
ch&lt;Ince to wm,'' he satd

ADMIRATION FROM
ADMIRAL: Former Spurs
center D&lt;Ivtd Robmson, who
was wtth the team for Its
first two ttlles, satd a San
Antomo vtctory could elevate the franchtse 's place 111
htstory because of the presence of a htgh-vtstbtltty
pl.1yer hke LeBron James
' It s a mce change of
pace · Robmson satd before
G,une I · LeBron ts about as
m,trketable a person as you
wtll tlnd m the league at thts
tunc He b11ngs a lot of energy ,md excitement to thts,
"htch I thmk has been needed the past couple of years
'I love the energy that's
been generated the last week
about thts fina ls "
Robmson satd he doesn't
expect James to overshadow
Spurs forward Ttm Duncan
Robmson satd Duncan 's
complete game dunng the
pl.1yotfs ts as good as he has
see n 11
"Ttm has been able to do
whatever he's wanted to
do,'' Robmson satd "It's
tnctedtble HIS numbers
.tten' t what they have been
tnt he past, but overall thts ts
probably some of the best
b.ISketball I ve seen htm
play ·
NO

WINE

GUY:

Spurs
from Page 81
111 S,m Antomo Games 3, 4
and 'i (tf necessary) wtll be
m Cleveland •
The Spurs' game plan was
ln make tl tough for James
to score They made n nearly unposstble as Bowen
forced htm toward the stdehne and away from the lane
- hts personal runway to
dunks
"We dtd a very good JOb
on LeBron not giVIng hun
the lanes th.tt he's used to,"
Duncan s.ttd "It takes ftve
guys undeNandmg what
we' re do mg. understandmg
a game plan and sllcktng
Wtth ll "
The Spurs, who lost twt ce
to the Cav.tlters dunng the
tegul ar se;1son. seemed to
be one step ahead of James
all mght When he cut left,
they cut htm ott When he
tned gomg nght, they were
ltght there By the ttme
James made hts first outstde
Jumper - a 3-pomter wnh
6 54 left - the Spurs had
butlt a 74-59 lead

'

Friday, June 8, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

"Silllng
theJe durmg the servtce,
I
t ho ug ht
about all
those peopie who get
to
(race
NASCAR),
and
It's
France
beca~se of
htm, s~ td
Edwards, who was passmg
out busmess cards and p_lacmg ads tn trade magazmes
JUSt five years ago 10 hts btd
to break mto the sport
France devoted hts hfe to
the famtly busmess, workmg at every level 0~ hhe
mdustry as he move
ts
way up from sellmg concesstons and parkmg cars to
runmng aII 0 f NASCAR ·
He replaced ht s father
NASCAR founder Wtllta~
H
G
F
19e7n2ry d ettyh d rNanAcSeC, AtRn
an pus e
beyond Its small-ttme
Southern roots mto a
nattonwtde btllton-dollar
conglomerate.
He was constdered a
benevolent dtctator dunng
hts ret gn, and he ruled
wnh an tron ftst and a
sharp tongue
Hendnck opened hts
remarks by mtroducmg
htmself as a a "ftshmg
buddy of Btll France." He
recalled when he and dnver
Geoff Bodtne were summooed to Daytona Beach
headquarters to meet wtth
Rtchard Chtldress and dnver Dale Earnhardt because
of run-ms Bodtne and
Earnhardt had on the track
France made It clear that
day that the drivers would
learn to get along to a meet-

tng that was immort.~hzed
on the btg screen m Days
of
Thunder"
Fred
Thompson, the actor-politictan, played a _characterization of France 10 the movte
"He told us ' NASCAR's
been here a long ume
you're not go10g to mess up
the sbow,' " Hendrtck satd
A vtdeo montage shown
twtce dunng the ceremony
-at the opemng and a second ttme as s10ger Edw10
McCam performed hts song
"I'll Be" - captured both
France's softer stde and the
rewards of hts work
There were sce nes of
France as a young man
helpmg wtth the construeuon
of
Daytona
t
S
1ntderna tod~a 1 l tphee dfiwayh,
an stan mg a
e tnts
1
ld b h
H
me at an o eac race e
was shown entertammg at
the track w1th Prestdents
Reagan and George H W
Bush,
and
toastmg
Earnhardt after one of hts
champtOnshtps.
And there were photos of
htm as a fratl, older mana heart attack tn 1997 and a
battle with cancer 10 1999
had ravaged hts body and
often made tt dtfficult for
htm to breathe- smthng as
he, stepped astde and handed control of the company
to hts son, Bnan, to 2003
Team
owner
Feltx
Sabates, a close fnend and
an honorary pallbearer, satd
France's true legacy was to
supporttog hts son through
Bnan's wtld early years.
"When Bnan was a young
man, Bnan was Bnan and a
lot of people would have
gtven up on htm," Sabates
satd. "Btll never did"

Indians select LCSU infielder Mills

through a pack of Spurs to
htt a scoop shot that brought
the Cavs wtthm 46-41
But Bowen responded
wtth a 3-pomter, Manu
Gmobth htt another from
long range and Duncan
dtshed to Parker for a layup
to make it 56-47. On the
Spurs' next tnp. Parker
weaved hts way mside and
dropped 10 a layup, the ball
sittmg on the rim for several seconds before finally
falhng
The Spurs eventually
pushed thetr lead to 64-49
after three, and then opened
the final penod wtth 3pomters by Horry and
Gmobtlt to open thetr
btggest lead, 70-52 wtth
8 50 left.
Two 3-pmnters by James
and a few JUmpers by rookte Dame) Gtbson, who led
the Cavaliers wtth 16
•pomts, cleaned up the score
but 1l wasn't nearly that
clo~e as Cleveland shot
under 40 percent unul a late
barrage.
"They started to do a
good JOb towards the end of
the game," Duncan satd
"They got a couple of
layups and a couple of easy

www.mydailysentinel.com

NASCAR says goodbye to France

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla
(AP) - NASCAR stars
paid respects to former
cha1rman Btll France Jr on
Thursilay 10 a short, simple
funeral servtce that was far
more fuss than he would
have wanted
About 2,000 people filled
the Performmg Arts Center
at
Bethune-Cookman
Umverstty to say goodbye
to France 10 a send-off for a
man who loved hot dogs,
fishmg and, more than any thtng else, NASCAR.
"That's enough - let's
go. You' re burnmg dayhght," Daytona Mayor
Glenn Rttchey satd as he
wrapped up hts remarks 10 a
service that ran less than an
hour "That's what he
would probably say to us"
France who spent 11
'
c R
years runmng NAS A ,
dted Monday at hts home
AP photo after nearly a decade of
health
Cleveland Cavaliers head coach Mtke. Brown yell to offictals dechnmg
"H
t "
tn the first half of Game 1 of the NBA Finals basketball game NAS~A~a~a~~w~:; ~~k
agamst the San Anton1o Spurs 10 San Antonto on Thursday
Hendnck s3ld "He was our
leader
He was a great
Ca1alters coach Mtke 23.347,135
fnend
and
we're all gomg
Brown can break down " 2The current postseason
to
mtss
hun
He was a bear
3 zone defense or destgn " attendance average of
of
a
man
but
he really had a
full -coun trap wnh the best 20.016 would be the second
of them
largest ever The NBA aver- teddy be~r of a heart."
Rtchard Petly, Darrell
But he can hardly tell the aged 20.565 fans m 200 I,
dtfterence between a full- when seven games were Waltnp. Ned Jarrell, and
bodtcd Cahfornta cabernet played at the much larger Bobby and Donme Alltson
were among the rellred dnand a navort ul chardonnay Alamodome.
When he was a San
The numbers made Davtd vers on hand, whtle acuve
stars Dale Earnhardt Jr.,
Antomo asslstant, Brown Stern smtle
tned to learri all he could
"You're lookmg at a pretty Jtmmte Johns6n, Dale
about wmes from Spurs happy commtsstoner," he Jarrett Mtchael Waltrip anll
Kurt Busch JOtned the gathcoach Gregg Popovtch, an satd before Game I
ertog
avtd wme collector wtth a
There were to be 128 teteJeff
Gordon,
Carl
cellar contatmng thousands vtston broadcasters, breakof bottles
tog the finals record of 112 Edwards and Btll Elhott,
Brown wasn't much of a The senes was drawlllg who all raced late toto
student
plenty of overseas mterest Wednesday mght m a chan"Even though I was here wuh both teams having a ty event 111 Ohto, tnckled 111
wtth htm three years, I sttll strong tnternattonal pres- nght before the start.
don 't know anythmg about ence.
wtne,"
Brown
satd
The Spurs have Tony
Thursday "I know there's a Parker (France)
Manu
red wme and a while wme. Gtnobth
and Fabncto
but beyond that I couldn't Oberto
(Argentina),
CLEVELAND (AP) tell you what else"
Franctsco
Elson
Popovtch, the connms- (Netherlands). and Beno Infielder Beau Mtlls was 10 a
seur, couldn 't coach Brown Udrth (Siovema) Zydrunas predtctable place when the
on the finer potnts of sniff- llgauskas
(L tthuama), Cleveland lndtans selected
tog, tastmg or dnnkmg
Anderson VareJaO (Braztl) htm Thursday wnh the 13th
"He tned hts behmd off, to and
Sasha
Pavlovic overall ptck m the baseball
leach me how to be one of (Montenegro) play for the draft
He was at a maJOr-league
those proper young men that Cavaliers
ballpark
w1th hts dad.
can slt at the dmner table
There is TV coverage in
Mtlls, a left-handed httter
and dectde whtch wme I all those players' home from Lewis-Clark State, was
need wtth thts food or that countnes In all, the tlnals mvlled to attend the draft
food and what year and all were betng shown m 205 telecast m Flonda, but he
that." Brown satd "I JUSt countnes and tern tones and chose 10stead to watch on
say, 'Whatever you're dnnk- 46 languages
TV from a luxury sUite 10
mg, Pop, I' ll dnnk tt wtth
Oakland,
where
the
you.,.
GET YOUR GLASSES: ;\thletlcs were playmg
Although he left the Spurs For Sunday's Game 2, Boston Hts father, former
after the 2003 season for Cavaliers fans wtll see maJor leaguer Brad Mtlls, ts
lndtana. Brown has mam- LeBron James ltke never the Red Sox bench coach
tamed a house to San before
''Twenty-two famtly memAntomo Hts parents ltve
The NBA ts stagmg a hve bers or be on TV~" Beau
there now
3-D HD vtewtng of the Mtlls satd 10 an intervtew
"Thts ts a mce ctty, a mce game at Qutcken Loans dunng the Red Sox broadtown," he satd "People are Arena 10 Cleveland, whtch cast 'T d rather be here wtth
fnendly here My ktds have wtll be open for !=avahers my famtly and celebrate thts
great fnends here As soon tans to see tor tree It's the here wtth my dad "
as my son got off the plane, ftrst ttme the new technoloWhen Miils was drafted,
the only ttme I'm gomg to gy has been used m the hts father Signaled down to
see htm t.S at the game finals
the Boston fteld, where
because he 's going to stay
The NBA first used the 3- manager Terry Francona
with hts buddy the whole D tmagmg 10 Las Vegas at pumped hts fist 10 the atr
week
the All-Star game
Other Red Sox players m the
"So tt's a mce town, we
"We' re taking another step dugout waved and applaudreally enJOY It "
now," commtsswner Davtd ed
Stern satd, "and that's a very
"That means a lot," Mtlls
BIG BUSINESS: The excttmg terhnology that we satd. "They embraced me a
NBA set two records tn thmk wtll ultimately have a lot 10 the clubhouse today
place m the NBA "
Game I of the NBA finals
and out here on the field It
For the fourth strmght
The league plans to erect was great to see that stgnal
year, the league set a total four
40-foot-by-23-foot and see thetr support beh10d
attendance record, wtth screens m the arena to show me (It) put a btg smtle on
23.362,721 fans attendmg the enhanced ptcture and my face ·•
regular season and playoff fans wtll be requtred to wear
Mtlls, 20, played two
games Last year, tt was special vtewmg glasses
years at Fresno State before
By then, the Spurs had
squeezed the ltfe oul of
Cleveland and lis young
star
"LeBron ts the head of the
snake," Spurs forward
Roben Horry satd, "and we
need to cut that head off."
The 31-year-old Duncan,
labeled bor10g because of
hts lack of flash, dtd what
he always does dommate.
The Btg Fundamental
knocked
down
open
JUmpers, freed up teammates wnh crunch10g p1cks
and generally had hts way
agamst Cleveland's fronthoe tor San Antonw, whtch
was hfted by tts crowd's
tncessanl chants of "Go,
Spurs, Go"
Parker, too, was on top of
hts game The speedy pmnt
guard slashed and shced
past Larry Hughes and
James tor easy layups
"We have to make the
ga me harder for htm,"
Hughes satd
It couldn 't have been any
tougher for James.
After mtssmg hts ftrst
etght shots, he finally got
hts first field goal with 7 15
left to the thtrd quarter,
blasting down the lane

-Friday, June 8, 2007

transfernng to Lewts-Ciark
State, an NAJA school 10
Idaho
He JUSt completed hts
Jumor season, batt10g 458
( 110-for-240) wtth 100 runs
scored, 22 doubles, 38 home
runs and 123 RBis m 62
games, and was named the
NAJA Player of the Year.
The Warnors (58-5) just
won thetr 15th national title,
beating
Sprmg
Arbor
(Mtch.) Umversity 9-1 m a
game in whtch Mtlls htt
three home runs and drove
m etght runs
"We thmk we were lucky
to get htm at 13," satd John
Mtrabelh, the lndtans' asststant , general manager of
scoutmg operatwns. 'We
held our breath for a couple
ptcks He ;was on our short
list of players, actually one
of the last guys we added to
the short hst because we dtdn't get a chance to see him
enough unttl recently "
Mtrabelh satd Mtlls has
played only at thtrd base, but
the Indtans plan to switch
htm to first
·
"That's where he's best
sutted," he satd "He had a
shoulder InJury two years
ago and that's affected hts
throwmg"
Mtrabelh doesn't th10k the
lndtans wtll have a problem
stgmng Mtlls
"I dtdn ' t really expect
Cleveland,'' Mtlls sa1d. "We
heard they were gomg to
ptck a htgh school pttcher

When I got that phone calln
really was a shock Usually
the unexpected ts the best
th10g that can happen II was
10 thts case "
The 6-foot-3, 205-pound
Mtlls was a high school
standout 10 Vtsaha, Cahf. He
was also chosen 10 the 44th
round of the 2004 draft by
Boston, but opted to attend
Fresno State after also be10g
recrUited by Anzona, UNLV,
N01;th Carohna, UC Irvme
and Anzona State
As a freshman, he led
Fresno State and th.e
Westt;rn Athletic Conference
wtth 22 home runs As a
sophomore, he hn 355 wtth
58 RBI, 20 doubles and 14
home runs
But m late May 2006,
poor grades and conduct
tssues that Mtlls declined to
discuss Thursday prompted
Fresno State to suspend htm
for the final two games of
the season plus the postseason games
He looked at Lewts-Ciark
State at the suggestion of
Ketth Foulke, then a rehef
pitcher wtth the Red Sox.
Foulke. who p1tched m the
maJors for I0 years, ts the
most noteworthy player to
attend Lewts-Ciark. He
pttched for Boston f(om
2004 through 2006 before
stgmng wlth the lndtans m
January but reured before
spnng trammg because of
arm problems.

shots We' ll have to clean 7-of-9 from the fteld as
that up a little btt."
Parker and Duncan comJames left wnh 45 sec- bmed for 14 of San
onds to go, dejectedly Antonto's first 16 pomts as
slumping mto hts seat after San Antomo opened a 20-15
a mght he'd probably hke to lead after one
forget
Every ttme James took
"He struggled mtghttly," off for the basket, the
Cavs coach Mtke Brown Spurs seemed to multiply
satd "They closed down the m hts face. On one dnve,
patnt, and we tned to ptck- he had hts headband
and-roll wnh htm. When he yanked off by Duncan,
dtd get 10 the pamt, he was- who, got posterized on a
n't able to fimsh because dunk by James 111 the ftrst
they were bnngmg bodtes, meetmg between the teams
not JUSt one, but two. three 10 November.
bodtes"
Seven months later,
Before takmg the floor for Duncan got even
On the occaswn of hts
thetr first finals game m
Cleveland's 37-year htstory, 1 fourth finals, the threethe Cavaliers huddled near lime fmals MVP, arnved at
the tunnel for a prayer the arena with a freshly
Then, James and hts team- shaved head - typtcally a
mates repeated something stgn that he's ready to
they've done smce the first rumble He has been relucday of tram111g camp
tant to talk about hts place
"One, two, three, champt- m htstory or the Spurs'
onshtp,'' they shouted 10 ascenswn to a dynasty
umson
level
But tt became clear very
But tf thts game was any
early on that any chmb to a mdtc atlon , San Antomo
title would be steep
may soon be recogmzed as
The Spurs, who had n 1 one of the league's great
played 111 a week smce beat- powers Unless, of course,
mg Utah 111 the Western James ftgures out a way to
Conference finals, showed get to the basket or get hts
no early rust They started JUmper to fall

"A lot of shots I took, I
usually make," he satd.
"Thmgs hke that happen
You have one off mght, but
tt's not like the NCAA
tournament where you
have one game and you're
out. We've got to regroup."
Notes: Game l wmners
have gone on to wm the
senes 17 of 23 times smce
1984 . . American Idol
winner Jordm Sparks sang
the national anthem. ...
The fmals always bnng
out celebntles of all
shapes'and stzes as well as
!lreat former
players
mcludtng Juhus Ervtng,
Patrick Ewmg, Clyde
Drexler. Bob Lamer,
Davtd Robmson and Grant
Htll. Erving spent time
before the game chattmg
wuh actress Eva Longoria,
Parker's ftancee. Later,
when Erving was totroduced to the crowd, Ewing
bowed several ttmes to
salute "Dr J." .. Horry ts
trymg to wm hts seventh
NBA tttle ·'Btg Shot Rob"
won two Wtlh Houston
(1994, 1995), three wtth
the Los Angeles Lakers
(2000-02) and one wtth
San Antonto (2005)

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

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Meigs County, OH

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r

\ \ \ ttl \ t I \ II \ I"

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dvertlsements

ar

ub)ect to the Fedora
air Housing Act o
968.

This newspspe
ccapts only hal
ntad ada meettn
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Sunday Dlsp.y • 1:00 p m
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• All ads must be prepatd'

r~-----·
r

POLICIES Ohio Ylllty Pubbhlng re1ervH the right to edit reject or cancel any 1d 1t any time Error• mu1t IN! reported on the flrtt day of
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anylo11 or ••penn that rnulta from the publlcttlon or oml11lon ol en advltf11Hment Correction will be made In thellrtt available ellltlon • Box
are alwaya c:onlktenUal • Cur11n1 r~te c1rd appu.. o All rul estate advef11umentl are aub)eet to the Feeltrat Fair Houalng Act of 19M • Thl1

accepts onty help wanted ads meeting EOE st.ndards We will not knowingly accept any advertising In violation ol the law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

ANNOUNCEMI-Nl'S

1

k•tncarlyleacomcaat net

ru ~~.- D'lt;~'!
YoJ'~ ONI&gt;~
A~JZ..t;;SI!

Small Thomas playmate
90B Roush ln Fro Only B 4
0 1gan double Keyboard &amp;
G1rls name brand clothes
ltghted
buttons
needs
newborn siZe 5 recliner
repatred 304 675 2529
dresser computer cabmet
Smoky gray male knten home mtenor glider rocker
too much to ment1on
nstde only 740-446 3897

.

,,,,

•

Found Beauttful small cop
per colored female muced
dog on Ltncoln Ave m
M1ddleport Call 740 416
1548

--------

4th

(.. !i
{,..It~

Ave

Frl 618 8 5 Rt 7 Addtson
~~
bes1de G&amp;G Market Men
www comtcs com
© 2007 by NEA, Inc
womens Childrens clothes
wardrobe ltnens household ~:::;:--:~-:~--, ,._ _ _...;..._ _....,

r

YARDSALF~

Ir ~?;~ l .r.'. -·ro·"-~.~--.

11 110

HELPWANTFJl
Found medtum s1ze female Garage Sale 2 112 mHes
Pr. PI EASA.Nf
East ot Porter on 554 June 1.,.-,;,;;·;,;,;iiiiiiiiiiiiiioo.-l
black dog very friendly 71h Bth &amp; 91 h
Woodsmtll Ad 38B-Ot67or - - - - -- - - 2814BtrchAveYardSaleFn
Dorecl Care Slaft
645 4461
S•_•_am-'--~~8
Garage Sale 4 tamlly &amp;
__
Mtddleton Estates 16 now
Found Small Black Dog on Th urS Sal Jun. 71h alh &amp; Fnday June s &amp; Saturday hirmg d rect care staff You
Bob McCormick Ad Call 9th 9 5 Ra1n or Sh1ne 841 June
Bam , 2113 Moun I wtll be part of 8 team that
9
Ad
d
AI
5
256 1336
hoestrlng t ge own
Vernon Ave Baby clothes 0 provtdes services to 1nd1vid

1':':':"------,

11110 H••n"'•~n
.,.~,·~
c.LI£

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg Pay $ 20/hr Or
$S 7K annually
Including Federal Benehts ,.
andOTPatdTratntng
Vacations FTIPT
1 800 584-1775 Ext #8923
USWA

~======~
r--1}--:~---,
••NOTICE**

(Careers Close To Home)
Cell Today• 740 446·4367,
1 BOO 21 4 0452
www ga lipQhSCU•etircoHege com
Accredited Member Accred ling
Courld 101' Independent Colleges
a"'i Schools 1274B

1

Borrow Smart Contact
the

Ohto

Financial

Dtvtston of

lnsUtutlon s

Offtce of Consu mer
Affatrs BEFORE you ref1
perm Monday Fnday occa nance your home or
stonal weekend
work
obta n a loan BEWARE
$10/hour plus benefits If of requests for any large
htred perm For dptatls on advance payments of
1t11s and many other JObs rn fees or rnsurance Call the
Southeastern Ohto go to
Olftce of Consumer
www careerconnect•ons tnfo Affatrs toll free at 1 866
To apply a-matt resume to
278 0003 to learn 11 the
JObs@careerconneocllons 1 mortgage broker or
nfo or call (740)594 4941
lender
IS
properly
No fees EOE
hcensed (Th s ts a pubhc
serVICe announcement
from the Ollto Valley
Publ1shmg Company)

Gallipolis career College

Ftrst Jtme sale June 8 9am
6pm 521
Gallrpo1ts

ro llflJ'WANIYJ)

SoCial servrce spectaltst
needed
on
Alheos
Educatton or background rn
women s studies famtfy
studtes or some type of
social service required prevenhonlinlerventlon exper1ence preferred FfT temp to-

YARDSALE·

Haner Reumon Will be held L,_...,;GiiAUiiiiiiiJPOiiiiiiLiiiiSO..,.J
Sll'lday 6110 at the home of
Jerry &amp; Clara Haner Lower $1 00 on au you can bag
'-i~::;.;,~:.;.:--., dishes
clothes
crafts
Iii:
shoes candle holders bed
dmg and more $1 00 &amp;
"-------,.J $2 00 mrsc 1tems 9OOam
1914 St At 141 Gallipolis
Free Blue Heeter mtK to - - - - - - , - gOOd rome Can 256 6002 2 tamtly garage sale Sat 9 3
3541 Sl Al141
Puppres 1 Blonde&amp; While - - - - - - : - : - : ben]
type
temale 1 618 &amp; 619 9am ? Crafts
Brown/Black/White tamale hnens ladtes cloth1n9 John
3 mon old 304 675 3795 Deere GX335 Lawn Tractor
leave message
934 Jackson P ke

l..a;r AND

nowopot&gt;erl

0

Y,\(IIJ SALE

~

----..

ppttes

All Display 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

Publication

For Sundays Paper

Oescription • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address Wtten Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

'--..,;FiiOUNDiiiiiiiioo-or' ·

Current

In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column : 1 00 p.m.

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

Now you can have borders and graphics
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1m
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SERVI&lt;Ei

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wrnt
1 B8B 582 3345

All real estate advertising
In this newspaper 11
subject to the Feder•!
Fair Housing Act of 1968

which makes tt Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation

or

dlacrlmlnatlon baaed on
race color religion 11:1:
famlllel status or netlonal
origin or any Intention to
make any auch
preference, limitation or
discrimination

This newspaper will not

knowingly accept
advertisement• for rul
111111 which Is in
\llolatlon of the law Our

are hereby
Informed thai all

reader~

dwellings adverUaed In

lhls newspaper are
avaMable on an equal
opportunity bans

Over Cenler localed @ 333
House &amp; 5 acres Broad Run
1&lt;1 \11'1\11
1 12 1 1
Ne H
Page 51 Middleport Ohio IS 1!1':':"-~~---,
1 mt es rom w aven
1'.u:.-:J
lfou•~
l
pleased to announce we wtll rto
b h0ld10
STNA 1
FOR SALE
e
9 an
c ass
scheduled tor June 11 22
Hours wtll be 8am430pm (4) 3 Bedroom Homes 1n
and lrll oul a"n appllcallon
II $5 900
Rodney VIllage
7
Full t me pOSitiOns available Land Contract a posstbiltly

eskong $65000 304BB2
2925
-------HUD HOMES I 4bd only
$155/mo 3bd $18t /mo
More 1-4bd homes ava11able 5% dn 20 yrs @ ewo

to those quahfted tndtviduals payments wtll be about the For listrngs 1 BOO 559 4109
completmg
the
class same as rent t740)446 x F144
A
tb d
d
---::-.,.----:.,..--:1 1
4543
7 to Clipper mill follow 1Bmbnths womensclothes ualswtthmentalretardatron
pptcansmus e epen
- - - - - - - - New 3 Bedroom 21/2 bath
We will not know1n
Stolen or lost (6) diamond srgns Assorted tnfant &amp; dltl and lots of mlsc Items
and developmental dtsabtlt
able (Anendance IS a must) 0 Down even wnh less than by builder 2 car garage
accep1 any adver
Wtll tdentify wnen drens cloth es toys turnt - - - - - - - - hes Must have valid dnvers
team players wrth posttve per1ect credi1ts ava1lable on basement Good locat1on
tument I~ vtolsllo nhgs
called tor reward 446 4379 lure excellent condition Vard Sale Sat 105 Htghtand hcense and high school
anitudes to JOin us tn provtd
3 b d
1 b h
d
h I G
'
I the law
ong outstandmg qualtly care thts
e room
at an sc oo s reen ·1wp
or 339 IB84
prtced cheap nousellold tur Ave B 3 Household ttems dtploma or GED we pro
Co
1 1 1
446 9966
to our residents If you have home
rner ot 1rep ace
nture whole house a1r con m1crowave VCR and much vtde on tne JOb tramrng If
Professronal Fundratsers
modern kttchen tacuzzttub - - - - - - . , . - any questions contact Halite
New Haven 4+ acres 3 br
d lion., new Scrapbook ong more
you would l1ke to take
needed ParVFull lime 3
P~ment around $550 per
Bumgarner LPN
Staff ...,
2 ba Ictal elect gas log
75., oft 10 gal fosh lank - -- - - ' - - - of this opportunt- shrfts dally 7 days a week
month 740 367 7129
4x4's For Sale . . . . .. . . ......... . . .. 725 wttl1flO ftsh everytlltng you cal'l!&gt; Yard Sale Sal June 9th tyadvantage
you may apply at 8204
Development Coordinator @
hreplace trtg stove dtsh
Announcement. .. ... . . ..
030 tlltnk of but the kttchen s nk behtnd Mtddte School '1003 Carla Onve Monday thru ~:n:,,:ft~o~~~ :~~:ay~ 740-992 6472 Overbrook 213 BR 1 Bath pool on 8 5 washer hot tub outside
Antiques...... .. ..
.............. 530 Kevtn Denms (740)446- Kenny Court Thomas Friday 8 00 400 An Equal 1 888 974 JOBS or
Center ts an E 0 E and a acres Close to town Askmg great
VIew
S55 000
Apartments tor Rent
... 440 2847
Aestdents l ots of stuff!l8 4 Opportumty Emplnver
participant of the drug free $145 000 740 645-3333
(3041882 3021
"'
www 1888974jobs com
workplace program
Auction and Flea Market .. .. . .. . . .. .... 080
AucnoN AND
F/M/DN
--.,..------:- ~
3 bedroom home m Sale by Owner 3BA 2BA
Auto Parts l1o Accessories. .. .. ...... .... . . 760 Huge annual yard sale June
FLFA Mt\100.1
- - - - - - - - Roofers Metal rooltng s1d
Wt\NIED
Pomeroy Rtver vrew Off newly remodeled house
Auto Repair........ .
'
glh 16B6 l onc0 1n P k. t..-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiooor'
Doctors off1ce needmg part ong and EPOM Top pay and
To Do
marn road $20 000 1 740 wlbasement 4 mtles out
Autos lor Sale ... .. .. .. .. . . .. .. . 710 Mens womens loddl er gtrIs •
t1me X ray tech call 304
Boals 11o Motors tor Sale . ..... .. . ..... . . 750 clothes high cha•r toys Cross Creek Auctron Buffalo 675
_1637 or come by tn per· benefitS 724 229 8020
'
_992_2_59_3_ _ _ _ _ 216 $96000 256 1336
Buttdtng Supplies... ..... .. .. .. .. . .......... 550 games movtes crafts lots Auct1on Saturday 6ptl) D&amp;N son 10 3009 Jackson Ave Pt
Dozer &amp; EKcavatlng Work 3 BR 1 BA on about 11
MOBILE HOMFS
Business and Buildings. . .. ... . .. . ...... 340 more m 1ke new cond1t1on from Vlrg1ma Bu1ldmg IS full Pleasant between 1 3pm Scemc Hills Nurs1ng Center Top Soil for sale 10 001 acres tn Green Twp Jackson
FOR SALE
Bustneso Opportunity.
210 Pnced to sell Ratn cancels of used Me1CI1and1se M F
ts currently accephng applt ton+dehvery
General , Pike
Galhpolts School
Bualne11 Training .. ............. ....... 140 unt1l followmg Saturday
Bulldng IS Atr Cond1tlooed - , . - - - - - : : - : - - cattons for a Unn Manager Hauling 379 25 13/352 0015 Dtstnct Gas heat 446 7S25
Campers l1o Motor Homes.. .. . .. .......... 790
Vtsa and Master Card (3o4) Echotng
Meadows Apphcanls must possess a Jay
- - - - - - - - 1994 OaKwood 14x70 new
Camping Equipment. .. .. .. .. . . . . . .... 780 June a 13 No sale Sunday 550-16 16 Stephlln Reedy Restdent1al Center ts now current AN ltcense tn the - - - - - - - - 3 BR 1BA Large Femtly condltton 740 446-4782
Cards oiThanks...... ........ . .. .... 010 Knner Rd Clothes $0 50 1639
accepting appiiCBitons for a state of Ohto Long term Georges Portable Sawmll Room lndge WID Large
2001 Skyltne 28K64 1600
Chttd/Etderly Cars....
190 Tools mtsc (740)446 0987
WANTED
part ltme LPN for weekends care expenence rs requ red now selling Tomatoe Stakes lot Close to Holzer Call
sq h Must be moved
4
7
Ela&lt;:trlcat/Relrlgeratlon .. .. .. . .. . .. .. .. . 840
B
and evenrng shiMS apply 1n Applicants must possess _ca_ll_30__6_7_5_t9_5__ _ _ 441 5826 or 446-9664
Greet
shape only $45 000
June
8
9
1st
house
on
Equlpmentlor Rent . .
. .480
TO UY 1
person at 319 West Umon excellent commun1cat•on Lawn mow1ng Rates by tne 3 or 4 BR 1 bath garage 304 593.()852
Excavating .................................... 830 Georges Creek Ad off At 7
Street,
Athens
Ohio skm and the ab1llty to func JOb not the hour Call Paul basement covered porch
Farm Equipment ............................ ......... 610 Couch Playstat1on 2 m1sc
~eferences
required tton as an effective health @ (304)675 2940
bacK ded&lt;. new central heat
2007 Clayton
Farma tor Rent......... . . .
430 MOVING SALE! 6930 SA 7
Applicants must pass pre care team member For
5BR/3BA
2000 Sq Fl
and AC uOJI mce landscap
Farms lor Sate , ... . .. .. . .. . . .. .. .. . .. ... 330
employment
screenmg more mformatton or to l awn Care Se rvtce Mowtng
Starttng at $33 00/sp It t
South
Gallrpohs
Bam-?
'
mm
ng
Call
{740)441
ng
fenced
tn
back
yard
For Laesa . .. .. ,.. .... .. .... . .. .. . ....... 490
tncludtng but not hmtled to sclledule an mtervtew &amp; •rt
1
1333 or (740)645 0546
new appliances recently NO DOWN PAYMENT
For Sate................... . . ...... .. .. . ... ... . 585 Saturday June 9th Sofas
drug
screen
and
criminal
please
contact
Dianna
Fitch
remodeled
bathroom
to qualified buyers
loveseat
coffee
table
end
For Sate or Trade... . .... . ... .. ..... ... .. .....590
background
checks
Human
Resources
at
740
Profess
onally
Clean
A
k
$
sooo
N
H
1
7
bookshelves
The Home Show
_ _c__ _- , - , - . , - - 446 7150 EOE
s rng
ew aven
FruRs &amp; Vegetables
..... 580 tables
Floodplain Administrator
Ofllce / Houseclean rng Wv 304 Ba2 3773
Ashland, KY
Furnished Rooms. ..... ..... . ... . . . . . . .450 woman s clothes lots of
References (304)675 2208
General Hauling. .. . .... ....... . .... ... . . . . .850 miSC
868·928-3426
for Gallia County
Scemc Htlls Nursmg Center
3bd
GALL.IPOLIS
Wanted Record Album col
Giveaway. .. .......... .. ... . .. . . . . . .
040
Wtll enforce the prov1stons IS cumntly accepttng apph
Foreclosure!
Buy for - -- -Do-,-b-lew-od_e_ _
Wtllts
Russell
McDade
tectton
looktng
tor
rock
pop
200 7
Happy Ads.. .. .. . .... . . .... .. .. . ......
of lOCal floodplain regula
cattons for 2 part hme
$50 900! Only $404/mo 5%
3BA 2BA
Cornet
of
3rd
and
Grape
Hay &amp; Grain . . .
.. .. .. 840 Sl Fro 6/B &amp; Sal 6/9 9 5 Rarn and maybe some others no !tons coordtnate map matn Acttv1t1es Aides Applicants 10
RUSIN~
Un 20yrs @ 8% For ltsttngs Deltvered &amp; Set $39 999
country
or
classtcal
please
Help Wanted.. .. .. ....... . ...... . .. .. . .. . .110
tenance aclvlhes and
must be a state tested ours
0WoKn.JNII1'
call800 559 4109 xF254
olhe Home Show
{740)645 0299
Home Improvements... .. . ... . .... . .......810 or Shtne
FEMA follow up hold publ1c
-.
Hornealor Sate..... . .... .. . ....
31
meettngs to educate public tongh asAststalnt lnt th~ s~te dt Kennys Hot Dogs 8x10
Attentton1
Ashland Ky
I \ ll'ltl\ \ 11 \I
Yard Sale 520 Jackson Ptke
Part-tJme 20 hOurs a week
to pp •can s s au con
Local company offenng "NO
Toll free 888 928 3426
Household Goods ................................. 510 June
'I I&lt;\ I! I '
6 &amp; 9 Sam ? Wood
tact Penny Delong, Adtvicy Concessron Tratler 304 675
House• lor Rent
.. .. ........ 41
nobenef1ts NeedHtghS Dtrector at 740446- 7150 7237
DOWN PAYMENr pro
work1ng equtpment also for
In Memoriam. .. .. .. .. ........ .. . ... .... . .020
School Diploma or equva EOE
grams for you to buy your
Insurance ......................................... ........ .130 tll'sa;:;le-4-46':'7:-8-99-;:---.,
IIEJ.p WANIYJ)
lent have map readtng
r--""!'!~~---. home Instead of renting
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment . .
.660
•NOTICE•
o 100% financmg
4 YARD SALE•
• eKpenence and knowledge - - - - - - - of computers and vanous Scemc Htlls Nursing Cente1 OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
• Less than perfect credn
Lhlellock...................... ......... ..........630
NEW 2l!!!ll 4 Bed
Po~tEROY/MliJIJLE
An Excellent w~ to earn computer programs, able to IS currently accepting appll
lNG CO recommends accepted
Loll and Found . . . ........... ...... .. .. 060
money The New Avon
Lots &amp; Acreage ................................. 350
use GIS mus1 hold a valtd cat10ns fof a fill rn LPN tor that you do busrness With • Payment could be the
Famtly
6-9th 9am Call Marffyn 304-882·2645
dnvers hcense Phystcal
2p lOp and a FT ftll tn LPN people you know and same as rent
Mtscettaneous.. .. .. .. . .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. . .. 170 33pm 410
...... MU2Ul51
Wrtght
Mtscettaneoua Merchandise .
540 St Pomeroy Baby ladtes hke
work rnay be needed Must for 10p 6a Apphcants must ~OT to send money Mortgage
Locators
mymtdwesthoq&gt;e com
AVON'
All
Areast
To
Buy
or
Mobile Horne Repair. .. .. .. .. .. . ...........860 new ktd
be regJstered With SCOTI possess a current LPN through the rna~ unhl you (740, 367 0000
clothes Sell Shirley Spears 304
Mobile Horneo lor Rent.. .. . .. ..... .. .. .. . 420
(www scott ohtogov) sys
license 1n the state of OhiO If have 1nvest1gated the Beautiful Mtddleport home' . ._ _ _ _ _ _,.
675 1429
Mobile Homes lor Sate .. . . .. .. .. .. . .. . 320 turn1ture new Avon
te(l'l Submit resume Wllh Interested please contact ro~ff~e·~·n~g~~;.;~~ 3BR 2BA full basement Great used 2005 3 bedroom
Money to Loan. .. ..... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. 220
cover tetter to
Otana Harless Director of
Bar and Gnll now
Many NEW featurestt Must 16x80 wrtt1 vmyttshingle
Motorcyctu &amp; 4 Wheelers
.. 740 5 Fam11y Yard Sale June 8th Courtstde
Ohto Dept of Jobs and
Nursmg at 740.446 7150
seekmg
full
ttme
gnll
and
fry
seethisone1740-416 1548 Must sell Only $25 995 wtth
Musical Instruments .......................... 570 &amp; 9th Rutland past Elem cooks Great pay m a great Family Sen&lt;ces 848 Thord EOE
delivery Call (740)385-4367
Personals . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 005 Stzes 14 gtriS
~ For sale/land cQntract 3 BA
envtronment Must be hard Ave Galt1pohs OH 45631
Pets tor Sale. .. .. ..... .. .. .. ........ . . .
560 Btg 2 famtty sale 8 Q 10 worktng and reliable Apply
Scemc Hills Nurs1ng Center
We are an Equal
house rn Galhpohs W/0 New 3 Bedroom homes from
Plumbing &amp; Heating. .. .. .. . .. . .. .. .. . . 820 Lots
rs currently accepting apph
Opportuni1y Employer
connectiOn $1500 down $214 36 per month Includes
of sluff 9 to 5 At 143 tn person at 306 2nd Ave or
Proleaatonel Services . '· . . .. . .. ........ 230
cattons lor AN positlorls on
call 441 9371 to set up an
$400/mo AlSO I BA In many l.ll!Jrades delivery &amp;
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160 FreedomCenterMtmstrres 1nlerv1ew
Help wanted at Darst AduH eventng and mtdn1ght shtft.
Galhpolts
$750
down sel up 1740)385 2434
Real Eahtte W.nted ............... ................... 360
Group
Home
some
l1ftmg
Applicants muS1 possess a
rl88r McClure's June 14 16
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�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

NBA FINALS

-

NorEBOOK

Brown: No lineup change for Cavs
SAN ANTON IO (AP) D.mtel Gtbson has been
Clc,cland \ leadmg scorer
1n the last two games
Th.tt s not good enough to
get htm a spot 10 the stan10g
hneup
Ca1alters coach Mtke
Brol\ n -atd after the
C l\ alters 85-76 loss to San
Alllomo m Game I of the
NBA tmal s on Thursday
mght that he won't make a
hneup ch&lt;~nge before Game
~

· It ' one game.' Brown
satd "We re gomg to go
h.tck and take ,1 look at the
tape and we'll make some
.tdjusllnents and I'm sure
they' II make some adJUStments but one of them
won't be a lmeup change ..
Gtbsnn has emerged as
one of the Cavs - most
unport,mt player' because of
hts outstde shnotmg The
rnokte scored a career-htgh
I I pomts 10 the Game 6
dmcher ag,unst Detrott 10
the E.tstern Conference
I 111als and lim shed with I6
pomts on 7•ot-9 shootmg
Thursday ·mght
Hts qutckness mtght be
even more tmponant smce
startmg pomt gu.trd Larry
Hu ghes has been slowed by
platH~r lasclltts Hughes was
only 1-of-5 Thursday and
'ttUggled to defend speedy
Spurs guard Tony Parker,
who scored 27 pomts
Stil l Bro\\n appears lo
vtew Gtbson as only a
teserve
"He'll get some playmg
ltme. Brown satd "He
played well for us on both
ends of the floor tomght, and
he dtd shoot the ball well
He 'II be out on the floor for
us
G1bson doesn't seem to
care what hts slats are or
role ts
.. , JUSt want to wm and
gtve ourselves the best
ch&lt;Ince to wm,'' he satd

ADMIRATION FROM
ADMIRAL: Former Spurs
center D&lt;Ivtd Robmson, who
was wtth the team for Its
first two ttlles, satd a San
Antomo vtctory could elevate the franchtse 's place 111
htstory because of the presence of a htgh-vtstbtltty
pl.1yer hke LeBron James
' It s a mce change of
pace · Robmson satd before
G,une I · LeBron ts about as
m,trketable a person as you
wtll tlnd m the league at thts
tunc He b11ngs a lot of energy ,md excitement to thts,
"htch I thmk has been needed the past couple of years
'I love the energy that's
been generated the last week
about thts fina ls "
Robmson satd he doesn't
expect James to overshadow
Spurs forward Ttm Duncan
Robmson satd Duncan 's
complete game dunng the
pl.1yotfs ts as good as he has
see n 11
"Ttm has been able to do
whatever he's wanted to
do,'' Robmson satd "It's
tnctedtble HIS numbers
.tten' t what they have been
tnt he past, but overall thts ts
probably some of the best
b.ISketball I ve seen htm
play ·
NO

WINE

GUY:

Spurs
from Page 81
111 S,m Antomo Games 3, 4
and 'i (tf necessary) wtll be
m Cleveland •
The Spurs' game plan was
ln make tl tough for James
to score They made n nearly unposstble as Bowen
forced htm toward the stdehne and away from the lane
- hts personal runway to
dunks
"We dtd a very good JOb
on LeBron not giVIng hun
the lanes th.tt he's used to,"
Duncan s.ttd "It takes ftve
guys undeNandmg what
we' re do mg. understandmg
a game plan and sllcktng
Wtth ll "
The Spurs, who lost twt ce
to the Cav.tlters dunng the
tegul ar se;1son. seemed to
be one step ahead of James
all mght When he cut left,
they cut htm ott When he
tned gomg nght, they were
ltght there By the ttme
James made hts first outstde
Jumper - a 3-pomter wnh
6 54 left - the Spurs had
butlt a 74-59 lead

'

Friday, June 8, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

"Silllng
theJe durmg the servtce,
I
t ho ug ht
about all
those peopie who get
to
(race
NASCAR),
and
It's
France
beca~se of
htm, s~ td
Edwards, who was passmg
out busmess cards and p_lacmg ads tn trade magazmes
JUSt five years ago 10 hts btd
to break mto the sport
France devoted hts hfe to
the famtly busmess, workmg at every level 0~ hhe
mdustry as he move
ts
way up from sellmg concesstons and parkmg cars to
runmng aII 0 f NASCAR ·
He replaced ht s father
NASCAR founder Wtllta~
H
G
F
19e7n2ry d ettyh d rNanAcSeC, AtRn
an pus e
beyond Its small-ttme
Southern roots mto a
nattonwtde btllton-dollar
conglomerate.
He was constdered a
benevolent dtctator dunng
hts ret gn, and he ruled
wnh an tron ftst and a
sharp tongue
Hendnck opened hts
remarks by mtroducmg
htmself as a a "ftshmg
buddy of Btll France." He
recalled when he and dnver
Geoff Bodtne were summooed to Daytona Beach
headquarters to meet wtth
Rtchard Chtldress and dnver Dale Earnhardt because
of run-ms Bodtne and
Earnhardt had on the track
France made It clear that
day that the drivers would
learn to get along to a meet-

tng that was immort.~hzed
on the btg screen m Days
of
Thunder"
Fred
Thompson, the actor-politictan, played a _characterization of France 10 the movte
"He told us ' NASCAR's
been here a long ume
you're not go10g to mess up
the sbow,' " Hendrtck satd
A vtdeo montage shown
twtce dunng the ceremony
-at the opemng and a second ttme as s10ger Edw10
McCam performed hts song
"I'll Be" - captured both
France's softer stde and the
rewards of hts work
There were sce nes of
France as a young man
helpmg wtth the construeuon
of
Daytona
t
S
1ntderna tod~a 1 l tphee dfiwayh,
an stan mg a
e tnts
1
ld b h
H
me at an o eac race e
was shown entertammg at
the track w1th Prestdents
Reagan and George H W
Bush,
and
toastmg
Earnhardt after one of hts
champtOnshtps.
And there were photos of
htm as a fratl, older mana heart attack tn 1997 and a
battle with cancer 10 1999
had ravaged hts body and
often made tt dtfficult for
htm to breathe- smthng as
he, stepped astde and handed control of the company
to hts son, Bnan, to 2003
Team
owner
Feltx
Sabates, a close fnend and
an honorary pallbearer, satd
France's true legacy was to
supporttog hts son through
Bnan's wtld early years.
"When Bnan was a young
man, Bnan was Bnan and a
lot of people would have
gtven up on htm," Sabates
satd. "Btll never did"

Indians select LCSU infielder Mills

through a pack of Spurs to
htt a scoop shot that brought
the Cavs wtthm 46-41
But Bowen responded
wtth a 3-pomter, Manu
Gmobth htt another from
long range and Duncan
dtshed to Parker for a layup
to make it 56-47. On the
Spurs' next tnp. Parker
weaved hts way mside and
dropped 10 a layup, the ball
sittmg on the rim for several seconds before finally
falhng
The Spurs eventually
pushed thetr lead to 64-49
after three, and then opened
the final penod wtth 3pomters by Horry and
Gmobtlt to open thetr
btggest lead, 70-52 wtth
8 50 left.
Two 3-pmnters by James
and a few JUmpers by rookte Dame) Gtbson, who led
the Cavaliers wtth 16
•pomts, cleaned up the score
but 1l wasn't nearly that
clo~e as Cleveland shot
under 40 percent unul a late
barrage.
"They started to do a
good JOb towards the end of
the game," Duncan satd
"They got a couple of
layups and a couple of easy

www.mydailysentinel.com

NASCAR says goodbye to France

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla
(AP) - NASCAR stars
paid respects to former
cha1rman Btll France Jr on
Thursilay 10 a short, simple
funeral servtce that was far
more fuss than he would
have wanted
About 2,000 people filled
the Performmg Arts Center
at
Bethune-Cookman
Umverstty to say goodbye
to France 10 a send-off for a
man who loved hot dogs,
fishmg and, more than any thtng else, NASCAR.
"That's enough - let's
go. You' re burnmg dayhght," Daytona Mayor
Glenn Rttchey satd as he
wrapped up hts remarks 10 a
service that ran less than an
hour "That's what he
would probably say to us"
France who spent 11
'
c R
years runmng NAS A ,
dted Monday at hts home
AP photo after nearly a decade of
health
Cleveland Cavaliers head coach Mtke. Brown yell to offictals dechnmg
"H
t "
tn the first half of Game 1 of the NBA Finals basketball game NAS~A~a~a~~w~:; ~~k
agamst the San Anton1o Spurs 10 San Antonto on Thursday
Hendnck s3ld "He was our
leader
He was a great
Ca1alters coach Mtke 23.347,135
fnend
and
we're all gomg
Brown can break down " 2The current postseason
to
mtss
hun
He was a bear
3 zone defense or destgn " attendance average of
of
a
man
but
he really had a
full -coun trap wnh the best 20.016 would be the second
of them
largest ever The NBA aver- teddy be~r of a heart."
Rtchard Petly, Darrell
But he can hardly tell the aged 20.565 fans m 200 I,
dtfterence between a full- when seven games were Waltnp. Ned Jarrell, and
bodtcd Cahfornta cabernet played at the much larger Bobby and Donme Alltson
were among the rellred dnand a navort ul chardonnay Alamodome.
When he was a San
The numbers made Davtd vers on hand, whtle acuve
stars Dale Earnhardt Jr.,
Antomo asslstant, Brown Stern smtle
tned to learri all he could
"You're lookmg at a pretty Jtmmte Johns6n, Dale
about wmes from Spurs happy commtsstoner," he Jarrett Mtchael Waltrip anll
Kurt Busch JOtned the gathcoach Gregg Popovtch, an satd before Game I
ertog
avtd wme collector wtth a
There were to be 128 teteJeff
Gordon,
Carl
cellar contatmng thousands vtston broadcasters, breakof bottles
tog the finals record of 112 Edwards and Btll Elhott,
Brown wasn't much of a The senes was drawlllg who all raced late toto
student
plenty of overseas mterest Wednesday mght m a chan"Even though I was here wuh both teams having a ty event 111 Ohto, tnckled 111
wtth htm three years, I sttll strong tnternattonal pres- nght before the start.
don 't know anythmg about ence.
wtne,"
Brown
satd
The Spurs have Tony
Thursday "I know there's a Parker (France)
Manu
red wme and a while wme. Gtnobth
and Fabncto
but beyond that I couldn't Oberto
(Argentina),
CLEVELAND (AP) tell you what else"
Franctsco
Elson
Popovtch, the connms- (Netherlands). and Beno Infielder Beau Mtlls was 10 a
seur, couldn 't coach Brown Udrth (Siovema) Zydrunas predtctable place when the
on the finer potnts of sniff- llgauskas
(L tthuama), Cleveland lndtans selected
tog, tastmg or dnnkmg
Anderson VareJaO (Braztl) htm Thursday wnh the 13th
"He tned hts behmd off, to and
Sasha
Pavlovic overall ptck m the baseball
leach me how to be one of (Montenegro) play for the draft
He was at a maJOr-league
those proper young men that Cavaliers
ballpark
w1th hts dad.
can slt at the dmner table
There is TV coverage in
Mtlls, a left-handed httter
and dectde whtch wme I all those players' home from Lewis-Clark State, was
need wtth thts food or that countnes In all, the tlnals mvlled to attend the draft
food and what year and all were betng shown m 205 telecast m Flonda, but he
that." Brown satd "I JUSt countnes and tern tones and chose 10stead to watch on
say, 'Whatever you're dnnk- 46 languages
TV from a luxury sUite 10
mg, Pop, I' ll dnnk tt wtth
Oakland,
where
the
you.,.
GET YOUR GLASSES: ;\thletlcs were playmg
Although he left the Spurs For Sunday's Game 2, Boston Hts father, former
after the 2003 season for Cavaliers fans wtll see maJor leaguer Brad Mtlls, ts
lndtana. Brown has mam- LeBron James ltke never the Red Sox bench coach
tamed a house to San before
''Twenty-two famtly memAntomo Hts parents ltve
The NBA ts stagmg a hve bers or be on TV~" Beau
there now
3-D HD vtewtng of the Mtlls satd 10 an intervtew
"Thts ts a mce ctty, a mce game at Qutcken Loans dunng the Red Sox broadtown," he satd "People are Arena 10 Cleveland, whtch cast 'T d rather be here wtth
fnendly here My ktds have wtll be open for !=avahers my famtly and celebrate thts
great fnends here As soon tans to see tor tree It's the here wtth my dad "
as my son got off the plane, ftrst ttme the new technoloWhen Miils was drafted,
the only ttme I'm gomg to gy has been used m the hts father Signaled down to
see htm t.S at the game finals
the Boston fteld, where
because he 's going to stay
The NBA first used the 3- manager Terry Francona
with hts buddy the whole D tmagmg 10 Las Vegas at pumped hts fist 10 the atr
week
the All-Star game
Other Red Sox players m the
"So tt's a mce town, we
"We' re taking another step dugout waved and applaudreally enJOY It "
now," commtsswner Davtd ed
Stern satd, "and that's a very
"That means a lot," Mtlls
BIG BUSINESS: The excttmg terhnology that we satd. "They embraced me a
NBA set two records tn thmk wtll ultimately have a lot 10 the clubhouse today
place m the NBA "
Game I of the NBA finals
and out here on the field It
For the fourth strmght
The league plans to erect was great to see that stgnal
year, the league set a total four
40-foot-by-23-foot and see thetr support beh10d
attendance record, wtth screens m the arena to show me (It) put a btg smtle on
23.362,721 fans attendmg the enhanced ptcture and my face ·•
regular season and playoff fans wtll be requtred to wear
Mtlls, 20, played two
games Last year, tt was special vtewmg glasses
years at Fresno State before
By then, the Spurs had
squeezed the ltfe oul of
Cleveland and lis young
star
"LeBron ts the head of the
snake," Spurs forward
Roben Horry satd, "and we
need to cut that head off."
The 31-year-old Duncan,
labeled bor10g because of
hts lack of flash, dtd what
he always does dommate.
The Btg Fundamental
knocked
down
open
JUmpers, freed up teammates wnh crunch10g p1cks
and generally had hts way
agamst Cleveland's fronthoe tor San Antonw, whtch
was hfted by tts crowd's
tncessanl chants of "Go,
Spurs, Go"
Parker, too, was on top of
hts game The speedy pmnt
guard slashed and shced
past Larry Hughes and
James tor easy layups
"We have to make the
ga me harder for htm,"
Hughes satd
It couldn 't have been any
tougher for James.
After mtssmg hts ftrst
etght shots, he finally got
hts first field goal with 7 15
left to the thtrd quarter,
blasting down the lane

-Friday, June 8, 2007

transfernng to Lewts-Ciark
State, an NAJA school 10
Idaho
He JUSt completed hts
Jumor season, batt10g 458
( 110-for-240) wtth 100 runs
scored, 22 doubles, 38 home
runs and 123 RBis m 62
games, and was named the
NAJA Player of the Year.
The Warnors (58-5) just
won thetr 15th national title,
beating
Sprmg
Arbor
(Mtch.) Umversity 9-1 m a
game in whtch Mtlls htt
three home runs and drove
m etght runs
"We thmk we were lucky
to get htm at 13," satd John
Mtrabelh, the lndtans' asststant , general manager of
scoutmg operatwns. 'We
held our breath for a couple
ptcks He ;was on our short
list of players, actually one
of the last guys we added to
the short hst because we dtdn't get a chance to see him
enough unttl recently "
Mtrabelh satd Mtlls has
played only at thtrd base, but
the Indtans plan to switch
htm to first
·
"That's where he's best
sutted," he satd "He had a
shoulder InJury two years
ago and that's affected hts
throwmg"
Mtrabelh doesn't th10k the
lndtans wtll have a problem
stgmng Mtlls
"I dtdn ' t really expect
Cleveland,'' Mtlls sa1d. "We
heard they were gomg to
ptck a htgh school pttcher

When I got that phone calln
really was a shock Usually
the unexpected ts the best
th10g that can happen II was
10 thts case "
The 6-foot-3, 205-pound
Mtlls was a high school
standout 10 Vtsaha, Cahf. He
was also chosen 10 the 44th
round of the 2004 draft by
Boston, but opted to attend
Fresno State after also be10g
recrUited by Anzona, UNLV,
N01;th Carohna, UC Irvme
and Anzona State
As a freshman, he led
Fresno State and th.e
Westt;rn Athletic Conference
wtth 22 home runs As a
sophomore, he hn 355 wtth
58 RBI, 20 doubles and 14
home runs
But m late May 2006,
poor grades and conduct
tssues that Mtlls declined to
discuss Thursday prompted
Fresno State to suspend htm
for the final two games of
the season plus the postseason games
He looked at Lewts-Ciark
State at the suggestion of
Ketth Foulke, then a rehef
pitcher wtth the Red Sox.
Foulke. who p1tched m the
maJors for I0 years, ts the
most noteworthy player to
attend Lewts-Ciark. He
pttched for Boston f(om
2004 through 2006 before
stgmng wlth the lndtans m
January but reured before
spnng trammg because of
arm problems.

shots We' ll have to clean 7-of-9 from the fteld as
that up a little btt."
Parker and Duncan comJames left wnh 45 sec- bmed for 14 of San
onds to go, dejectedly Antonto's first 16 pomts as
slumping mto hts seat after San Antomo opened a 20-15
a mght he'd probably hke to lead after one
forget
Every ttme James took
"He struggled mtghttly," off for the basket, the
Cavs coach Mtke Brown Spurs seemed to multiply
satd "They closed down the m hts face. On one dnve,
patnt, and we tned to ptck- he had hts headband
and-roll wnh htm. When he yanked off by Duncan,
dtd get 10 the pamt, he was- who, got posterized on a
n't able to fimsh because dunk by James 111 the ftrst
they were bnngmg bodtes, meetmg between the teams
not JUSt one, but two. three 10 November.
bodtes"
Seven months later,
Before takmg the floor for Duncan got even
On the occaswn of hts
thetr first finals game m
Cleveland's 37-year htstory, 1 fourth finals, the threethe Cavaliers huddled near lime fmals MVP, arnved at
the tunnel for a prayer the arena with a freshly
Then, James and hts team- shaved head - typtcally a
mates repeated something stgn that he's ready to
they've done smce the first rumble He has been relucday of tram111g camp
tant to talk about hts place
"One, two, three, champt- m htstory or the Spurs'
onshtp,'' they shouted 10 ascenswn to a dynasty
umson
level
But tt became clear very
But tf thts game was any
early on that any chmb to a mdtc atlon , San Antomo
title would be steep
may soon be recogmzed as
The Spurs, who had n 1 one of the league's great
played 111 a week smce beat- powers Unless, of course,
mg Utah 111 the Western James ftgures out a way to
Conference finals, showed get to the basket or get hts
no early rust They started JUmper to fall

"A lot of shots I took, I
usually make," he satd.
"Thmgs hke that happen
You have one off mght, but
tt's not like the NCAA
tournament where you
have one game and you're
out. We've got to regroup."
Notes: Game l wmners
have gone on to wm the
senes 17 of 23 times smce
1984 . . American Idol
winner Jordm Sparks sang
the national anthem. ...
The fmals always bnng
out celebntles of all
shapes'and stzes as well as
!lreat former
players
mcludtng Juhus Ervtng,
Patrick Ewmg, Clyde
Drexler. Bob Lamer,
Davtd Robmson and Grant
Htll. Erving spent time
before the game chattmg
wuh actress Eva Longoria,
Parker's ftancee. Later,
when Erving was totroduced to the crowd, Ewing
bowed several ttmes to
salute "Dr J." .. Horry ts
trymg to wm hts seventh
NBA tttle ·'Btg Shot Rob"
won two Wtlh Houston
(1994, 1995), three wtth
the Los Angeles Lakers
(2000-02) and one wtth
San Antonto (2005)

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

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8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
.!iQW I2 WRITE AN AD

*POLICIES*

Ohio Valley
Publlohlng r...rves
the right to edll,
re}tct or cancel any

ad al any lime
Errors lluat B
ed on !he lira
of pubtloallon an
a Tribune-Sentinel
ogtater wilt
esponslble for n
ore than the cost o
he space occuple

the enor and on
fi!WI ln11rtlon W
han not be liable fo

Box number ads a
!ways confidential

r

\ \ \ ttl \ t I \ II \ I"

All Reat Eetat
dvertlsements

ar

ub)ect to the Fedora
air Housing Act o
968.

This newspspe
ccapts only hal
ntad ada meettn
OE atandards

Sunday Dlsp.y • 1:00 p m
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepatd'

r~-----·
r

POLICIES Ohio Ylllty Pubbhlng re1ervH the right to edit reject or cancel any 1d 1t any time Error• mu1t IN! reported on the flrtt day of
Trlbun•Sentlnel Regl.ter will bt r"ponalblll tor no more than the c:ott of Ihe eptc:e occupied by the error and only the first lnaertkiR We at\all not
anylo11 or ••penn that rnulta from the publlcttlon or oml11lon ol en advltf11Hment Correction will be made In thellrtt available ellltlon • Box
are alwaya c:onlktenUal • Cur11n1 r~te c1rd appu.. o All rul estate advef11umentl are aub)eet to the Feeltrat Fair Houalng Act of 19M • Thl1

accepts onty help wanted ads meeting EOE st.ndards We will not knowingly accept any advertising In violation ol the law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

ANNOUNCEMI-Nl'S

1

k•tncarlyleacomcaat net

ru ~~.- D'lt;~'!
YoJ'~ ONI&gt;~
A~JZ..t;;SI!

Small Thomas playmate
90B Roush ln Fro Only B 4
0 1gan double Keyboard &amp;
G1rls name brand clothes
ltghted
buttons
needs
newborn siZe 5 recliner
repatred 304 675 2529
dresser computer cabmet
Smoky gray male knten home mtenor glider rocker
too much to ment1on
nstde only 740-446 3897

.

,,,,

•

Found Beauttful small cop
per colored female muced
dog on Ltncoln Ave m
M1ddleport Call 740 416
1548

--------

4th

(.. !i
{,..It~

Ave

Frl 618 8 5 Rt 7 Addtson
~~
bes1de G&amp;G Market Men
www comtcs com
© 2007 by NEA, Inc
womens Childrens clothes
wardrobe ltnens household ~:::;:--:~-:~--, ,._ _ _...;..._ _....,

r

YARDSALF~

Ir ~?;~ l .r.'. -·ro·"-~.~--.

11 110

HELPWANTFJl
Found medtum s1ze female Garage Sale 2 112 mHes
Pr. PI EASA.Nf
East ot Porter on 554 June 1.,.-,;,;;·;,;,;iiiiiiiiiiiiiioo.-l
black dog very friendly 71h Bth &amp; 91 h
Woodsmtll Ad 38B-Ot67or - - - - -- - - 2814BtrchAveYardSaleFn
Dorecl Care Slaft
645 4461
S•_•_am-'--~~8
Garage Sale 4 tamlly &amp;
__
Mtddleton Estates 16 now
Found Small Black Dog on Th urS Sal Jun. 71h alh &amp; Fnday June s &amp; Saturday hirmg d rect care staff You
Bob McCormick Ad Call 9th 9 5 Ra1n or Sh1ne 841 June
Bam , 2113 Moun I wtll be part of 8 team that
9
Ad
d
AI
5
256 1336
hoestrlng t ge own
Vernon Ave Baby clothes 0 provtdes services to 1nd1vid

1':':':"------,

11110 H••n"'•~n
.,.~,·~
c.LI£

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
Avg Pay $ 20/hr Or
$S 7K annually
Including Federal Benehts ,.
andOTPatdTratntng
Vacations FTIPT
1 800 584-1775 Ext #8923
USWA

~======~
r--1}--:~---,
••NOTICE**

(Careers Close To Home)
Cell Today• 740 446·4367,
1 BOO 21 4 0452
www ga lipQhSCU•etircoHege com
Accredited Member Accred ling
Courld 101' Independent Colleges
a"'i Schools 1274B

1

Borrow Smart Contact
the

Ohto

Financial

Dtvtston of

lnsUtutlon s

Offtce of Consu mer
Affatrs BEFORE you ref1
perm Monday Fnday occa nance your home or
stonal weekend
work
obta n a loan BEWARE
$10/hour plus benefits If of requests for any large
htred perm For dptatls on advance payments of
1t11s and many other JObs rn fees or rnsurance Call the
Southeastern Ohto go to
Olftce of Consumer
www careerconnect•ons tnfo Affatrs toll free at 1 866
To apply a-matt resume to
278 0003 to learn 11 the
JObs@careerconneocllons 1 mortgage broker or
nfo or call (740)594 4941
lender
IS
properly
No fees EOE
hcensed (Th s ts a pubhc
serVICe announcement
from the Ollto Valley
Publ1shmg Company)

Gallipolis career College

Ftrst Jtme sale June 8 9am
6pm 521
Gallrpo1ts

ro llflJ'WANIYJ)

SoCial servrce spectaltst
needed
on
Alheos
Educatton or background rn
women s studies famtfy
studtes or some type of
social service required prevenhonlinlerventlon exper1ence preferred FfT temp to-

YARDSALE·

Haner Reumon Will be held L,_...,;GiiAUiiiiiiiJPOiiiiiiLiiiiSO..,.J
Sll'lday 6110 at the home of
Jerry &amp; Clara Haner Lower $1 00 on au you can bag
'-i~::;.;,~:.;.:--., dishes
clothes
crafts
Iii:
shoes candle holders bed
dmg and more $1 00 &amp;
"-------,.J $2 00 mrsc 1tems 9OOam
1914 St At 141 Gallipolis
Free Blue Heeter mtK to - - - - - - , - gOOd rome Can 256 6002 2 tamtly garage sale Sat 9 3
3541 Sl Al141
Puppres 1 Blonde&amp; While - - - - - - : - : - : ben]
type
temale 1 618 &amp; 619 9am ? Crafts
Brown/Black/White tamale hnens ladtes cloth1n9 John
3 mon old 304 675 3795 Deere GX335 Lawn Tractor
leave message
934 Jackson P ke

l..a;r AND

nowopot&gt;erl

0

Y,\(IIJ SALE

~

----..

ppttes

All Display 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

Publication

For Sundays Paper

Oescription • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address Wtten Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

'--..,;FiiOUNDiiiiiiiioo-or' ·

Current

In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column : 1 00 p.m.

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

Now you can have borders and graphics
-..,.
added to your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
1!it1
Graphics 504 for small
$1.00 for large

Display Ads

I'RO~'&gt;lONAL

SERVI&lt;Ei

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wrnt
1 B8B 582 3345

All real estate advertising
In this newspaper 11
subject to the Feder•!
Fair Housing Act of 1968

which makes tt Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation

or

dlacrlmlnatlon baaed on
race color religion 11:1:
famlllel status or netlonal
origin or any Intention to
make any auch
preference, limitation or
discrimination

This newspaper will not

knowingly accept
advertisement• for rul
111111 which Is in
\llolatlon of the law Our

are hereby
Informed thai all

reader~

dwellings adverUaed In

lhls newspaper are
avaMable on an equal
opportunity bans

Over Cenler localed @ 333
House &amp; 5 acres Broad Run
1&lt;1 \11'1\11
1 12 1 1
Ne H
Page 51 Middleport Ohio IS 1!1':':"-~~---,
1 mt es rom w aven
1'.u:.-:J
lfou•~
l
pleased to announce we wtll rto
b h0ld10
STNA 1
FOR SALE
e
9 an
c ass
scheduled tor June 11 22
Hours wtll be 8am430pm (4) 3 Bedroom Homes 1n
and lrll oul a"n appllcallon
II $5 900
Rodney VIllage
7
Full t me pOSitiOns available Land Contract a posstbiltly

eskong $65000 304BB2
2925
-------HUD HOMES I 4bd only
$155/mo 3bd $18t /mo
More 1-4bd homes ava11able 5% dn 20 yrs @ ewo

to those quahfted tndtviduals payments wtll be about the For listrngs 1 BOO 559 4109
completmg
the
class same as rent t740)446 x F144
A
tb d
d
---::-.,.----:.,..--:1 1
4543
7 to Clipper mill follow 1Bmbnths womensclothes ualswtthmentalretardatron
pptcansmus e epen
- - - - - - - - New 3 Bedroom 21/2 bath
We will not know1n
Stolen or lost (6) diamond srgns Assorted tnfant &amp; dltl and lots of mlsc Items
and developmental dtsabtlt
able (Anendance IS a must) 0 Down even wnh less than by builder 2 car garage
accep1 any adver
Wtll tdentify wnen drens cloth es toys turnt - - - - - - - - hes Must have valid dnvers
team players wrth posttve per1ect credi1ts ava1lable on basement Good locat1on
tument I~ vtolsllo nhgs
called tor reward 446 4379 lure excellent condition Vard Sale Sat 105 Htghtand hcense and high school
anitudes to JOin us tn provtd
3 b d
1 b h
d
h I G
'
I the law
ong outstandmg qualtly care thts
e room
at an sc oo s reen ·1wp
or 339 IB84
prtced cheap nousellold tur Ave B 3 Household ttems dtploma or GED we pro
Co
1 1 1
446 9966
to our residents If you have home
rner ot 1rep ace
nture whole house a1r con m1crowave VCR and much vtde on tne JOb tramrng If
Professronal Fundratsers
modern kttchen tacuzzttub - - - - - - . , . - any questions contact Halite
New Haven 4+ acres 3 br
d lion., new Scrapbook ong more
you would l1ke to take
needed ParVFull lime 3
P~ment around $550 per
Bumgarner LPN
Staff ...,
2 ba Ictal elect gas log
75., oft 10 gal fosh lank - -- - - ' - - - of this opportunt- shrfts dally 7 days a week
month 740 367 7129
4x4's For Sale . . . . .. . . ......... . . .. 725 wttl1flO ftsh everytlltng you cal'l!&gt; Yard Sale Sal June 9th tyadvantage
you may apply at 8204
Development Coordinator @
hreplace trtg stove dtsh
Announcement. .. ... . . ..
030 tlltnk of but the kttchen s nk behtnd Mtddte School '1003 Carla Onve Monday thru ~:n:,,:ft~o~~~ :~~:ay~ 740-992 6472 Overbrook 213 BR 1 Bath pool on 8 5 washer hot tub outside
Antiques...... .. ..
.............. 530 Kevtn Denms (740)446- Kenny Court Thomas Friday 8 00 400 An Equal 1 888 974 JOBS or
Center ts an E 0 E and a acres Close to town Askmg great
VIew
S55 000
Apartments tor Rent
... 440 2847
Aestdents l ots of stuff!l8 4 Opportumty Emplnver
participant of the drug free $145 000 740 645-3333
(3041882 3021
"'
www 1888974jobs com
workplace program
Auction and Flea Market .. .. . .. . . .. .... 080
AucnoN AND
F/M/DN
--.,..------:- ~
3 bedroom home m Sale by Owner 3BA 2BA
Auto Parts l1o Accessories. .. .. ...... .... . . 760 Huge annual yard sale June
FLFA Mt\100.1
- - - - - - - - Roofers Metal rooltng s1d
Wt\NIED
Pomeroy Rtver vrew Off newly remodeled house
Auto Repair........ .
'
glh 16B6 l onc0 1n P k. t..-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiooor'
Doctors off1ce needmg part ong and EPOM Top pay and
To Do
marn road $20 000 1 740 wlbasement 4 mtles out
Autos lor Sale ... .. .. .. .. . . .. .. . 710 Mens womens loddl er gtrIs •
t1me X ray tech call 304
Boals 11o Motors tor Sale . ..... .. . ..... . . 750 clothes high cha•r toys Cross Creek Auctron Buffalo 675
_1637 or come by tn per· benefitS 724 229 8020
'
_992_2_59_3_ _ _ _ _ 216 $96000 256 1336
Buttdtng Supplies... ..... .. .. .. .. . .......... 550 games movtes crafts lots Auct1on Saturday 6ptl) D&amp;N son 10 3009 Jackson Ave Pt
Dozer &amp; EKcavatlng Work 3 BR 1 BA on about 11
MOBILE HOMFS
Business and Buildings. . .. ... . .. . ...... 340 more m 1ke new cond1t1on from Vlrg1ma Bu1ldmg IS full Pleasant between 1 3pm Scemc Hills Nurs1ng Center Top Soil for sale 10 001 acres tn Green Twp Jackson
FOR SALE
Bustneso Opportunity.
210 Pnced to sell Ratn cancels of used Me1CI1and1se M F
ts currently accephng applt ton+dehvery
General , Pike
Galhpolts School
Bualne11 Training .. ............. ....... 140 unt1l followmg Saturday
Bulldng IS Atr Cond1tlooed - , . - - - - - : : - : - - cattons for a Unn Manager Hauling 379 25 13/352 0015 Dtstnct Gas heat 446 7S25
Campers l1o Motor Homes.. .. . .. .......... 790
Vtsa and Master Card (3o4) Echotng
Meadows Apphcanls must possess a Jay
- - - - - - - - 1994 OaKwood 14x70 new
Camping Equipment. .. .. .. .. . . . . . .... 780 June a 13 No sale Sunday 550-16 16 Stephlln Reedy Restdent1al Center ts now current AN ltcense tn the - - - - - - - - 3 BR 1BA Large Femtly condltton 740 446-4782
Cards oiThanks...... ........ . .. .... 010 Knner Rd Clothes $0 50 1639
accepting appiiCBitons for a state of Ohto Long term Georges Portable Sawmll Room lndge WID Large
2001 Skyltne 28K64 1600
Chttd/Etderly Cars....
190 Tools mtsc (740)446 0987
WANTED
part ltme LPN for weekends care expenence rs requ red now selling Tomatoe Stakes lot Close to Holzer Call
sq h Must be moved
4
7
Ela&lt;:trlcat/Relrlgeratlon .. .. .. . .. . .. .. .. . 840
B
and evenrng shiMS apply 1n Applicants must possess _ca_ll_30__6_7_5_t9_5__ _ _ 441 5826 or 446-9664
Greet
shape only $45 000
June
8
9
1st
house
on
Equlpmentlor Rent . .
. .480
TO UY 1
person at 319 West Umon excellent commun1cat•on Lawn mow1ng Rates by tne 3 or 4 BR 1 bath garage 304 593.()852
Excavating .................................... 830 Georges Creek Ad off At 7
Street,
Athens
Ohio skm and the ab1llty to func JOb not the hour Call Paul basement covered porch
Farm Equipment ............................ ......... 610 Couch Playstat1on 2 m1sc
~eferences
required tton as an effective health @ (304)675 2940
bacK ded&lt;. new central heat
2007 Clayton
Farma tor Rent......... . . .
430 MOVING SALE! 6930 SA 7
Applicants must pass pre care team member For
5BR/3BA
2000 Sq Fl
and AC uOJI mce landscap
Farms lor Sate , ... . .. .. . .. . . .. .. .. . .. ... 330
employment
screenmg more mformatton or to l awn Care Se rvtce Mowtng
Starttng at $33 00/sp It t
South
Gallrpohs
Bam-?
'
mm
ng
Call
{740)441
ng
fenced
tn
back
yard
For Laesa . .. .. ,.. .... .. .... . .. .. . ....... 490
tncludtng but not hmtled to sclledule an mtervtew &amp; •rt
1
1333 or (740)645 0546
new appliances recently NO DOWN PAYMENT
For Sate................... . . ...... .. .. . ... ... . 585 Saturday June 9th Sofas
drug
screen
and
criminal
please
contact
Dianna
Fitch
remodeled
bathroom
to qualified buyers
loveseat
coffee
table
end
For Sate or Trade... . .... . ... .. ..... ... .. .....590
background
checks
Human
Resources
at
740
Profess
onally
Clean
A
k
$
sooo
N
H
1
7
bookshelves
The Home Show
_ _c__ _- , - , - . , - - 446 7150 EOE
s rng
ew aven
FruRs &amp; Vegetables
..... 580 tables
Floodplain Administrator
Ofllce / Houseclean rng Wv 304 Ba2 3773
Ashland, KY
Furnished Rooms. ..... ..... . ... . . . . . . .450 woman s clothes lots of
References (304)675 2208
General Hauling. .. . .... ....... . .... ... . . . . .850 miSC
868·928-3426
for Gallia County
Scemc Htlls Nursmg Center
3bd
GALL.IPOLIS
Wanted Record Album col
Giveaway. .. .......... .. ... . .. . . . . . .
040
Wtll enforce the prov1stons IS cumntly accepttng apph
Foreclosure!
Buy for - -- -Do-,-b-lew-od_e_ _
Wtllts
Russell
McDade
tectton
looktng
tor
rock
pop
200 7
Happy Ads.. .. .. . .... . . .... .. .. . ......
of lOCal floodplain regula
cattons for 2 part hme
$50 900! Only $404/mo 5%
3BA 2BA
Cornet
of
3rd
and
Grape
Hay &amp; Grain . . .
.. .. .. 840 Sl Fro 6/B &amp; Sal 6/9 9 5 Rarn and maybe some others no !tons coordtnate map matn Acttv1t1es Aides Applicants 10
RUSIN~
Un 20yrs @ 8% For ltsttngs Deltvered &amp; Set $39 999
country
or
classtcal
please
Help Wanted.. .. .. ....... . ...... . .. .. . .. . .110
tenance aclvlhes and
must be a state tested ours
0WoKn.JNII1'
call800 559 4109 xF254
olhe Home Show
{740)645 0299
Home Improvements... .. . ... . .... . .......810 or Shtne
FEMA follow up hold publ1c
-.
Hornealor Sate..... . .... .. . ....
31
meettngs to educate public tongh asAststalnt lnt th~ s~te dt Kennys Hot Dogs 8x10
Attentton1
Ashland Ky
I \ ll'ltl\ \ 11 \I
Yard Sale 520 Jackson Ptke
Part-tJme 20 hOurs a week
to pp •can s s au con
Local company offenng "NO
Toll free 888 928 3426
Household Goods ................................. 510 June
'I I&lt;\ I! I '
6 &amp; 9 Sam ? Wood
tact Penny Delong, Adtvicy Concessron Tratler 304 675
House• lor Rent
.. .. ........ 41
nobenef1ts NeedHtghS Dtrector at 740446- 7150 7237
DOWN PAYMENr pro
work1ng equtpment also for
In Memoriam. .. .. .. .. ........ .. . ... .... . .020
School Diploma or equva EOE
grams for you to buy your
Insurance ......................................... ........ .130 tll'sa;:;le-4-46':'7:-8-99-;:---.,
IIEJ.p WANIYJ)
lent have map readtng
r--""!'!~~---. home Instead of renting
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment . .
.660
•NOTICE•
o 100% financmg
4 YARD SALE•
• eKpenence and knowledge - - - - - - - of computers and vanous Scemc Htlls Nursing Cente1 OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
• Less than perfect credn
Lhlellock...................... ......... ..........630
NEW 2l!!!ll 4 Bed
Po~tEROY/MliJIJLE
An Excellent w~ to earn computer programs, able to IS currently accepting appll
lNG CO recommends accepted
Loll and Found . . . ........... ...... .. .. 060
money The New Avon
Lots &amp; Acreage ................................. 350
use GIS mus1 hold a valtd cat10ns fof a fill rn LPN tor that you do busrness With • Payment could be the
Famtly
6-9th 9am Call Marffyn 304-882·2645
dnvers hcense Phystcal
2p lOp and a FT ftll tn LPN people you know and same as rent
Mtscettaneous.. .. .. .. . .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. . .. 170 33pm 410
...... MU2Ul51
Wrtght
Mtscettaneoua Merchandise .
540 St Pomeroy Baby ladtes hke
work rnay be needed Must for 10p 6a Apphcants must ~OT to send money Mortgage
Locators
mymtdwesthoq&gt;e com
AVON'
All
Areast
To
Buy
or
Mobile Horne Repair. .. .. .. .. .. . ...........860 new ktd
be regJstered With SCOTI possess a current LPN through the rna~ unhl you (740, 367 0000
clothes Sell Shirley Spears 304
Mobile Horneo lor Rent.. .. . .. ..... .. .. .. . 420
(www scott ohtogov) sys
license 1n the state of OhiO If have 1nvest1gated the Beautiful Mtddleport home' . ._ _ _ _ _ _,.
675 1429
Mobile Homes lor Sate .. . . .. .. .. .. . .. . 320 turn1ture new Avon
te(l'l Submit resume Wllh Interested please contact ro~ff~e·~·n~g~~;.;~~ 3BR 2BA full basement Great used 2005 3 bedroom
Money to Loan. .. ..... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. 220
cover tetter to
Otana Harless Director of
Bar and Gnll now
Many NEW featurestt Must 16x80 wrtt1 vmyttshingle
Motorcyctu &amp; 4 Wheelers
.. 740 5 Fam11y Yard Sale June 8th Courtstde
Ohto Dept of Jobs and
Nursmg at 740.446 7150
seekmg
full
ttme
gnll
and
fry
seethisone1740-416 1548 Must sell Only $25 995 wtth
Musical Instruments .......................... 570 &amp; 9th Rutland past Elem cooks Great pay m a great Family Sen&lt;ces 848 Thord EOE
delivery Call (740)385-4367
Personals . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 005 Stzes 14 gtriS
~ For sale/land cQntract 3 BA
envtronment Must be hard Ave Galt1pohs OH 45631
Pets tor Sale. .. .. ..... .. .. .. ........ . . .
560 Btg 2 famtty sale 8 Q 10 worktng and reliable Apply
Scemc Hills Nurs1ng Center
We are an Equal
house rn Galhpohs W/0 New 3 Bedroom homes from
Plumbing &amp; Heating. .. .. .. . .. . .. .. .. . . 820 Lots
rs currently accepting apph
Opportuni1y Employer
connectiOn $1500 down $214 36 per month Includes
of sluff 9 to 5 At 143 tn person at 306 2nd Ave or
Proleaatonel Services . '· . . .. . .. ........ 230
cattons lor AN positlorls on
call 441 9371 to set up an
$400/mo AlSO I BA In many l.ll!Jrades delivery &amp;
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160 FreedomCenterMtmstrres 1nlerv1ew
Help wanted at Darst AduH eventng and mtdn1ght shtft.
Galhpolts
$750
down sel up 1740)385 2434
Real Eahtte W.nted ............... ................... 360
Group
Home
some
l1ftmg
Applicants muS1 possess a
rl88r McClure's June 14 16
$200/mo Call Wrryne 4()4
SchoOtalnatructton.............. ................ .. .150 8· ?Desk fllrng cablnels COlli Desk Clerk needed at 7-5 shift 740 992 5023.
N1ce used 3 bedroom home
current RN ltcense tn the
456-3802 for mtormatiOn
. 5etd , Plant Ferttttzer ... ....................GSO
vrnyVshtngle Wtll help with
Budget Inn 260 Jackson
state of Ohto If mterested
er fax machme m1sc
Ptke Looktng for a person Needed One Hanclyman please
Sttuallona Wanted . .
. ............ 120
Newly bt.ntt home tn Green dehvery 740 385 4367
contact
Dtana
Spadt lor Rent....... ... ...... .. .................... 460 Gar!)&amp; sale June 9 36545 who ts motrvated, great that has expenence wtth Harless O~rector of Nurs~ng
Twp on Ktng Ad off
Sporting Goodo .................................... 520 Flatwoods Rlt computer communtcahon sktlls and a eledncal plumbing, cablel at 740·446-7150 EOE
Ndoghborhood Ad Approx Olde1 Tratlel 3br 1ba
SUV'a lOr Sate.......... .................... . . .. 720 games COs CD player cas postttve attitude Please phone wrres and all basic
1200 sq ft 3 acres mil 2 BA $3 000 w/addriK&gt;n $2 500
constructron Also must have - - - - - - - Truckalor Sate ................................ 715 settes Jewelry mtsc
2
full baths w/whtrlpool tubs wtthout appliances tncluded
apply wtthin
..:..:...:...._ _ _ _--:_ expenence With waterproof Truck Onvers COL Class A
Uphotatery .. .
. ...... ......... 870
large LR Asktng 87 500 740 446·7983 aner 6pm
Vans For Sale...........................................730 Multt Fam yard sale barn Wanted Dtrect SupeNt&amp;lon tng basements Must be Requtred mtntmum of 5
740-446·7029
Wanted to Buy ............................................ 090 across from valley employees to oversee male nonsmokef must like pets years dnvtng eKp 2 yrs
OWNER FINANCING
COUNTRY Sl:TllNG
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supptlea . . ... 620 BrookConcrete Larktn Wolfe youth tn a staff secure rest and must be neat clean and Flatbed Experience Must
Nice 312 stnglewides
3br
2ba
with
24
K
24
t1
Wanted To Do ..................................... 180 Tan Bd 6 8&amp;9 Fn &amp;Sat g 41 dentral enwonment Must clean up after themselves have good dnvmg record
From $1 BOO down
garage 9/10 of an acre
Wanted to Rent. ...................................... 470 - - - - -- - - pass phys1cal trarn1ng when done wtth work tor the Earn up to $2 000 weekly
paymenl
approx
8
m1
les
from
PI
For
apphce.tron
Call
Yard Sate- Galltpolle...... .............. .. ., . 072 Yard Sale 41190 Laurel Chff requirement Pay based on day Ref8fences requtredll
Scon (7401 828-2750
Pleasant oo Rt 2 call for
Yard Slte-Porneroy/Mtddte ........................ 074 Road Pomeroy OhiO June expenence can !7 40)379- Please can 304 895 3175 {304)722 2184 304 342
Apt&gt;&lt;&gt;ntment 304 675 5995
5742 M F B 30am 4pm
Yard Sate-Pl. Pleasant.
. ....... 076 7 8 &amp; 9 Mildred Hudson 9083 between 9-3 Mon Fn for more dete.tls

CLASSIFIED INDEX

·------,..1
180

no

r

oso

j

o
o

1110

I

BEST BUY
$49,989

on

SAVINGS

a

Shop

Classifieds!

\

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-----~·---·-~-~-~~----·--~~-----·--·

�.. .

.-

'

•

~~

••

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-

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... .

Friday, June 8, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com'

SPECIAL FHA FINANCE
Program SO Down, II you
own Land or use Family
Land We own the Bank your
Approved 606-474-6380

r

LOTs&amp;
ACREAGE

10.66 acres. 1594 Northup
Rd in Green Twp, Gallia Co.,
24x4Brestrictions,
bam, recentbeautiful
survey,
no
house location, all utilities on
site. $79.900. (937)362·
4n5. (937)605·3581
- - - - - - -4 Acres located oH Kempel
Hollow Ad. Already has
water/elec. Secluded area
740-388-8228

Clean 2 Bd., 1 ba .,$350 .
2Bd., 1 ba .•$350, new carpet, new counter top$
Newer 2 beL 1 ba., central
air, 8X8 out ~dg ., $395.
Very ni~ 3 bd., 2 ba., cen·
tral air, $435. In New Haven,
References. &amp; Deposits
required. 740-416-6622.

r::rr-:AI'ARTh-.._.II!NTS
_____,

FOR.IbNr
""~-------'
'

lllK

RENr

$1 55/mol Buy 4bd HUD
home! 5% dn, 20yrs @ 8% .1
For Listings 800-559·4109
x1709

3 br. In Rullend, $400 per
month
plus
deposit .
(740)992-0064
Attention!
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" programs for you to buy your
home instead ol renting .
• 100% financing
• Le56 than perfect credit
acoepled
• Paymenl could be lhe
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators.
(740)367-0000
--'-----,-For rent or for sale· 2 BA
Nice Aemodeied Home in
town, No Pets, Renovated,
All new carpal, Call
(740)446-7425

Phillip
Alder ·

Clean quiet spacious 1BR,
stove/trig, country setting,
no pets/smoking, lirstllast

Johnson's Tree
Service

mo+dep $3ffi 992-3543

CompeN
109. TnM . . . . . •lt.lmp
Orlndin&amp; ..... Trucll

r,. en

NW'MI•P'rw~

·--

........._.,_
7. . . .1...,

large 4 bedroom house in (304)273-3344
Pomeroy, very clean, newly Apartment for rent, 1-2
remodeled, new cabinets, Bdrm., remodeled , new car·
Pet 'love &amp; frl·g waler
,
.,
'
sewer. trash pd. Middleport.
425 00
$ · · No pets. Re[
required. 740 •843 -5264 ·
2 Br , A/C, Very nice, Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
Johnson Mobile Home Park. ing applications for waiting
740-446-2003 or 446-1409 l~t for Hud-subsized, 1- br,
apartment.for
th '
located In Point Pleasant elderly/disabled call 675E 1 H ·
and Gallipolis Ferry. Call 6679
qua
ousmg
675-3423
Opportunity

--pi

'~

30 Yrs. Exp. Ins.

•

Paul Dollinger will appear at the
Eagles Club on
Saturday, June

9, 2007

8:30pm
Come and jofn your friends in our
Smoke Free Environment

units within the
jurisdiction of the
Pomeroy P.D.
(740) 742-2690

BINGO
Middleport American
Legion
Every Tuesday &amp;
Saturday
6.:30 pm
Doors open at 4:00 pm
Come out &amp; support your

veterans!
The Gallipolis Elks Lodge No. 107 will
hold their annual Soccer Shoot
SatuJday June 16, 2007. II will be held
at the Elks Fann on SA
Sign up
will slart at 10:30 am with the
compemion starting at 11 :00 am.
Compe)~ion is open to all boys and
girts born on 813111993 or after. There
will be four age groups with boys and
girts divisions. Trophies will be
awarded for first . second, and ltlird
place in each division; This event is
free of charge, so come on out and
bring a friend .

sea.

Sunday, June 10
2:00 pm - 4:00 pm
HMC French 500 Room
Call 446-5971 for more
information.

s

'

'

South
2•

Wea&amp;
Pass

2•

Pass

3•

4 NT
5 NT
6•

0 0

740-367-0544
Ftee Estimates

22

27

30

Eut

2•

Pass

34

3 t
6•
Pass

Pass

Pus

Pass
Paaa
Paaa

Which finesse
would you take?

Ttte IN6f&lt;ff)ltNTS A~e LISTel&gt; IN
/
O~l&gt;t~ OF IMPO~TANGe.

holder
20 Cook'•
24

Opening lead: • 2

. .FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Local Contractor

Paaa
Pass
Pass

12 - Kong
13 Senotffil'o
aunt
14 Low voice
15 Plttlburgh
river
16 Televise
17 Cattail
18 POI)Sicle

Nortb

t•

47 Concrete

5 McCartney's
foundation
title
48 Paclno and
8 Tusked
Unser
animal
50 Attack

31
32

3t

Pass

1 Clmo lo

23

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Eaat-West

35
36

52 Tube trophy

53 Mtedow
·54 Nautical
greeting

55 Billowing

gannont
56 Orchealra
leedor-

Ba...r
57 Relative

of a lither

garment
Go to court
Slain flller
Dilapidated
car
Mutate
Floata along
Legal order
Earlier
Family
mom.
Moves to
and fro
Big family

37 DHignlles
39 Uatllta to

40Gab

.10 Two lives

lor- DOWN

1 Ouettlon
atarter

2 They

accompany

aahe

3 Woven
4 "Me"lypea

5 Tollllto
prop
6

Jr~·•

aon,

maybe
7 UnuaUII
tiling

(2 wda.)

41 Chillcarne
42 Ward off

8 Cyllndncll

container
9 Dlttapreld

36 MlclclletiiOII
38 "So longl"
(ltyph.)

11 Curtain
hanger
39
19 Pool hall
llem
41
21 Lay out a
couree
42
24 Truckera'
43
45
redioa
25 Disturb
26 Mr. Eben • 46
27 Worl&lt; unha
28 Forum
47
famrlll
29 Mild 01111 49
31 Show pride .
(2 wds.)
51
. 33 Switch
poahlont
35 Fray

Ad commlttM

S)NIIIIah
houses
-llllter
Siren
leland ....,

Kllual
Wardtn'a

!eM
Illy, •
wine
"Crodclyn"
director

Colorins

Philosopher John Dewey, who died in
1952, claimed: "TIMI saW Is no1 aornethng ready-made, lxrt something In continuous formation through choice of

740-367-0536

0 0
&lt;o-e

740·992·5929
740-416·1698
15 yrs. Exp. Free Es1imates

BARNEY

HardWOOd Ca!Hnecry And Flll'll,.,

BAH !! 'DA'DBUAN

www.tbnbererHkeablntrtry.-

TELLYMARI&lt;ETEAS
!!

2000 Harley Davidson Wide

MlscEuANEXJIJS

I'E'IS

3736
New 2BA apartments.
Washer/dryer
hook1up,
stovelrelrigerator induded.
Also, units on SR 160. Pets
Welcome! (740)441·0194 .

MERcHANDISE

FORSALE

$ For Old Auto Baneries 1-

99 $2.50ea, lOOt $3.00ea,
250+ $4.00ea. THE BAT·
TEAY TERMINAL 1-BOO·
796-6797
New Haven, 2 br. furnished - - - - - - - apartment, rel~rences &amp; 28' ~cargomateM endosed
1 (740)992· tra1·1er 1or sale, has ,.IVJng
·
de POSI"t. no pes.
0165
quarters with Air Cond.f

I

2

I I~\'"!'() ! {

rto

I \1 H)\

AUf(l;

2000 Honda XR 100, Great
Cond, New lires, runs great,
AKC Reg. Weimaraners; , _ _.;FOoiiijRoiiiiAiiiLE-_.1 $900. 304-675-3824
Solid slver, OOB 04126107,
(M)$400.(F)$450. Deposit of 00 Suzuki Esteem. 4DR, 2005 H.D.Soft Tail custom
$100 will hold the pup of 4Cyl, Auto, AJC, good econ- maroon
wlembossed
your choice till ready to omy. car! $3500/ tax/title/30" Hames,1 of 200 made,800
leave Utte1. Parents present. day tag. 645-2421/245·5428 miles
since
new,price
Call anytime, (740)339$21,500, call for details-7402935, leave message if no 10 to 15 small cars· for sate. 949·2217.
answer.
Cavaliers. Escorts. Neons.
G s
I 740 44
- - - - - - - - _•t_c._a_s_•_v•_r•__ _·__6AA~,!
Applehead
Chihuahua 7278
'-'-"~
Puppies, 6 to 7 wks old.
1965 Chevelle Malibu, 20,
Paper 1ra1"ned. $100. 379hard top, VB, Duel exhaust, 91-92 Geo Metro Parts. all,
2422
power steering, crager ss AC,starter,doors,hood,frn·

i

r
r

---"'1I

r

chrome rims, all original. ders,engine.740-992·4259·
Drives and runs greal, "iF:;;:::;:;;:;:;:;;
cell740-963-0584 ___,
needs restored . 740-441~
A
4?04
~--~---, _ _lliiiiiiiii-_.1
1999 Corvette Coupe, both '
1
1 59 000 · 11
ops, auo,
'
ml, a 98 Saturn Coupe, Cherry
options, very nice, $19,000, Red, 123K Power ever,
(740)949-2732
' - - - ' - - - ' - - - - - titVc_
ruise, keyless .entry Ex.
99 Buick RegaiGS. 1 owner.
garage kept, 142,000 mWes,
new tires, Good Condition,
$5,500 304 _882 _1102

.Cook Motorw
328 Jactc:son Pike
Quality cars, trucks and .
vans w~h warranty. P.riced
to sell. This is our 12tt1
Anniversary. Stop by or call
740-446-0103

"r-::ts~,..TR~UCKS---..,
FORSALE
"'~--oiliiiiiiiiiiii-_.1
1980 Dodge 1/2 Ton Truck.
Slimt 6 engine, runs good,
good tires, make good Wtr
Asking $900 (740)441·064li

i

RIPU:

06 Dutchman Lite Travel
Trailer, sleeps 6. 4 bunk

8ft Truck CarTlper, air condi·
lion, TV ant. cable hook up &amp;
~elhroom S4.5oo 304-6753353
.
·
92 Fleetwood Wilderness,
fully contained. All working
condition. AC/ heat/ stove/
'fridge/ microwave. New
queen size matt. Sleeps 6.
Asking $6500. 740-2868729 or 740-418-Dfl32

~
V
Phlebotomist
Pleasant Valley Hospital
is currently accepting resumes
Postilions are needed for
early a.m. blood draws in·
Long Tenn Care faci'liti es.

Coverage area includes Jackson
and Galli a counties in Ohio.
Excellent hourly pay. on call
pay and mileage reimbursement.

Send n:sumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
cloHuman Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant , WV 25550
Fax to: 304-675-6975 or apply
online at www.pvalley.org
AA/EOE

*Experienced

Room Addltlona &amp;
flamodellng
NawGaragn
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Gunara
VInyl Siding I Ptlntlng
Patio and Porch Dtcka
WV036725

References Available!

V.C .

*Prompt and Qualily
Work
·
*Reasonable Rates

*Insured·

Call Gary S1anley @

740-742-2293
Please leave messa e

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIISliiGnOI
• New Homes
• Garages

YOUNG Ill

5~!

992 621 rl
PunH roy 0111"
, r Y

JI O., LIJI Jl

f

~07.S; ffi? USE.b TI-lE ~OLI&gt;-TII~ . ~ W~ I~ T~ Flfll.l. ~OC
lllf.~lE.R-\Jl'I~TII.E·I-\Of·

$35ASeoop

T-Post 6ft. $3.29
Wide Variety

ONC.E.

(1\'{~tLF, '{OU

Kill OW!

'1'001

•

or

. W~!'?!,

BIG NATE

Feeds

Stop &amp; Compare

We Deliver To You!
PEANUTS

-~ •"''!'e)~:"i•1P.3!'1'!!4P:"•.._

D+3 .. T~E WORLD I=AMOUS G.I."
t..VI'\1~;, ACROSS AN ABANDONED JEEP

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

$4,000 L--------------....1

"I I&lt;\ II t ...,

{ { ),._,

L~

l-IE'(, CJ.ILICI&lt;, WJ.I'( 15
YOUR DOG SITTING
OUT I-IERE IN A
GROCER'( CART ?

Full bloo:l registered Boer
Goats for breeding stock
Does &amp; Bucks $300 " &amp; up

304:675·4~ 16

{ li t

I'

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1

740-949-2217

Manley's
Recycling

1

For sale 3 yr. old stud miniature horse 304-576-2174

~~~~

•N•OT•I•CE.s_ __
Bid lor Bus
Heart of the Valley
Head Start, 320 112
East Main Street, P.O.
Box 684 Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 Ia accepting
bids to purchase two
(2) 21123 passenger

school
buaes.
Reg. Angus Bulls for sale. SpocHicatlona
lor the
Hollybro&lt;jl&lt; Farm. 740-245bu888 can be obtained
5984
by calling the Athena·
HAY&amp;
Meigs
Educational
Service Center at 740GRAIN
992-4286. Quotn will
Liveslock Feed, shelled com be opened In the tree$5.20/50 lti. &amp; horse cniOCh aurar's office at noon
$7.22150 lb., &amp; more. on Tuelday, June 19,
2007.
Tho
board
PageviNe--740-698.0911 .
reserves the right to
reject an or any part of
the bld.·Bids should .b e
labelld "'Bid for School
Bua" and mailed to:
Heart of the Valley

Head Start
Treaaurer'a Office
320 112 East Main
Street, P.O. Box 684

GARFIELD
L-1 Z ANI7 l HAI7 A FUN

17ATE LA51' NI&amp;HT

't'AU&lt;EP ON ANt7
ON ABOU'f YOU

!SHE

....
:;n•..••••
. . . . . . . . .11:11.
PI_TIP,_ES . .

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Public Notice

_ _ _ _ _,;,___
Tho Ceileton Memorial
S~hOIIrthlp appllce·
tiona are avalilbte lor

ANI7 HOW 'o'OO Nefti
1'0 OOON A 011!1'

Stlvrday, June t 2007
By Bemlco- 0.01
A aubetantlal 1e88enlng of negative factora that have been hsmperlng your
progreaa could be replaced with positive
occurrences. Objectives previOusly
denied you could now be attained.
GEMINI (May 2hJune 20) -l'ou ueuall'f do quite well In situations that requl,.. a
bit of team effort. However, vou might be
better off doing your own, because the
teammates at hand could be liabilities.
CANCER (June 2hJuly 22) - Should
you have to contend wnh some uneXpected, negative de.velopmenta, don't
blow them out of proportion and make
them seem worse than they are. It'll harm
your ~~.dation .
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - l'ou're far 100
Intelligent to believe the wortd Ia. pre·
pared to give you something tor nothing,
yet you may bank your hope on thai erroneous assumption and and Llp wtth egg
on your face.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22)- F&gt;u1 oxperlencea have taught you that being too
dictatorial evokes an unpleasant
response that produces negative resutts.
You might choose to Ignore this valuab&amp;e
lesson and repeat lt.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) -Your fallh In
yourSelf and in your phllotophy ol life
might be put to the test. What you believe
In must be accepted without any reaervatk&gt;ns.
SCORPIO (OCt. 24-Nov. 22) - Be prepared for the unexpected in vour commercial affairs, especial¥ tf thara are
close friends lnvolvod. They mlgllt be lhe
very ones who stir up tiMI walere and
make things rod&lt;y.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -l'ou'U
be tar more succeaaful and aff8ctive il
you stick to traditkmal procedures ·you
know how IO app~. Use what worbd for
you previously, mstaad of expflrimenting
with the unteated.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19) Regardless of how Ingenious you are &amp;1
·disguising neglected responsibilities, lhe
tNth will win out. lnckjentalty, It'll take far
less effort to do the 8881gnments rather
than c:ovari"lg them up.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 19) -l'ou may
discover that a ralatk&gt;nshlp you have with
someone you like b under more strain
than you realized. If the root cause goes
untreated, the association could be
abruplly severed.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch 20) - Per10&lt;11
wfttl whom you're invotved sl'ioukt not be
alta.ved to make critical decWons for you.
What looks good lor them c:oold be disastrous where your tntereate are con·

(6) 1, 8 2tc
__......__ _ _ _ _

~ you fake the diamond finesse

~Astro-

1411-882-lm

I I II I~
l'( 1,1 II

,

11neeae.

Remodeling

1. (

gle1on. .

netd tile spade kilg to drop singleton·
neaily a Six percent cf1anca.
It should be clear - lake the diamond

Lawn Seed,
Fertilizer and

• Home Oxygen
· • Portable Oxygen
• Hometill System
• Helios System

""'

In fhls deal, you are In sl• spades. Weal
leads the heart tv.&lt;&gt;, perhaps a singleton.
You have the choice of a apa&lt;le finesse
or a diamond finesse, bu1 you cannof
lake both, because you are on the board
for the first and lasllime. Would you play
a spa&lt;le to your quean or a diamond fo
your queen? wt&gt;{l
North's two-heart response ohowed five'
plus hearts and ~f-plue polnla. The
rest ol the aucflon was nstulal. (II you
use Roman Key Card Blad&lt;wood, North
would show one l&lt;ay card, permitting
South to jump Immediately fo six epades
- bu1 there are no bonus pofnls for
shorter auctions.)
Analyze ail four posslbllilfee. Suppose
you lake lhe spa&lt;le finesse and Hwins.
That is fine II East slarted with klng-doublston, which has an a priori probability
of 13.6 percanl. But If East has three or
more spades, you win need fo find lhe
diamond king singlston - less than a
one percent chance. Suppose you take
the spade finesse and n falls. Again, you
wil need lhet diamond ~ng to drop ain-

and H·wins. You attack trumps· and are
affectlvtly home. Suppose you lake lhe
diamond finesse and H loses. You will

W"''I'EIHt&gt;.IJCE.T i~IC.K, t&gt;lbt4'f

l!JI Ill Ill I

Showmlllller Show

• Complete

""'to\01&lt;\, 1 CAN'T C.O TO :'£~tJI
I'to\ ~lc.K! I''IE C,OT I\ FEIJU:.-

SUNSHINE CLUB

Bore Goats. 100% fullblood
Reg. Billy; also percentage
Billy, (740)367-7755

r

CARPENTER
SERVICE

fully self conlained
firm 304-882-2196 cell 304674-3920

New Taylor W~y 15' Heavy
Duty Bel wing wl Dual
Wheel, chain gua1ds, hyd
;----~~-- -~------ c~s. $8495. JkTl's Farm
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Equipment. 740-446-9777

____ r

YOUNG'S

beds, queen bed. Used very IJI•••••-~
lillle. $14500. 441 -0564
•

large selection Of Rotary
Rutters 4' thru 15'. Jim"s
's Farm Equipment. 740446-9777
-------New 72" Finishing Mowers
$999. Limited amount avail·
able at thi s price. Also, ·4', 5',
&amp; 6' tillers. 4' starting at
$750.
Jim's
Farm
Equipment, 740-446-9777

~---------_-'-_-_-

Stanley TreeTrimming
. &amp; Removal

Musl Sell Air Slream
Camper mint cond. 31FT,

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams,· Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains, TrailersDriveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
FMday, Bam-4:30pm. Close&lt;l
Thursday, Saturday &amp;
Sunday. (740)446--7300

=----=----

I

-r-:---:--::"""'1

c

Queen size mattress set &amp;
!rame,good condition. $1~ . ----~--Call 7~0-245·0480 or 740· Pole Barns 30x40M10'
339-9414
Delivered &amp; Erected $8,5S5
plus Sales Tax. Call
Remodeling? Complele sal (937)718-1471 www.naiK&gt;nof kitchen cabinets. sink, widepolebarns.com
~itchen range (!ike new), -=:---::~--.,
wall oven, counte1top, $750;
Pins
Sliding glass door with new
FOR SALE
~inds. $100: Gun cabinet.
like new, $175 ; 2 maple bar
chairs, $40, 1 full size oak Chocolate. Lab puppies. 1st
bed With springs &amp; manress, shot &amp; WOJmed. Ready to
$150. Call (740)441-8299
go. $150 Call740·992-6227

Glide, 22,000 miles, excellent condition, $10,000.
(740)992-1909 or (740)5910993.

S

Heating, $4,300 OBO
Tara
Townhouse (l40)3BS-8803
Apartments, Very Spacious,
2 Bed rooms. CIA • 1 112 - - - - - . , . - - - 3DR headache rack $1,000.
~~=.' P~~~lts:'s!- :~ 24x24 machine tarps $150
No Pets, Lease Plus each, chains, $20 each, -CK_C_L-ha_s_o_l&gt;j)_s_o_p_u_p-piesSecurily Deposit Required, screw binders $40 each, $300. Will be ready 6119107,
(740)367-7086.
other flatbed equip. 304· 8 Wks, shots &amp; wormed.
i.:r--:~---, 675-~51
Parents on premises. CKC
SPA&lt;;E
- - - - - - - - Chihuahua pups $250 !'ill
FOR n.......
6x12 enclosed black trailer,
be ready 6/28107. 6 wks.
.,
$1500; 5x10 utility trailer. Shots&amp;wormed.Parentson
$400; 5x1, 0 utility trailer,
Commercial building "For
premises. Call 446·2432
Aenr 1800 square leet. off $500. (614)595-7773 or
streel parking. Great loca- t-1100-798-4686
FOR SALE
lion! 749 Third Avenue in - - - - - - - - ,_
_ _ _ _ _ _ ___,
Gallipolis. Rent $375/mo. Above ground pool. 18ft Cal Wayne
.()
_
around. call740-245-0339
White solid vinyl soffit 39
140 456 3802
----~--- pieces 12K 12, 1 roll roof fell ,
Center 1 roll ridge vent $300 675·
Prime commercial space lor Entertainment
rent at Springvalley Plaza. W/gtassware doors. nice. '4197 after 6:00pm.
~ghts up $120: Full siia bed
Call645·2192.
w/rrianress &amp; box springs,
Private M.H. lot for rent. good cond. $150 304·675·
775/141 area. 4 miles from 2208
ll'lll"'"-.....
New GAHS. 446-4053
10
FARM
- For Sale: Crownvetch plants.
EQuiPMENT
WAN'Jliil
(740)245-9322
roRFNr
1
.
,__ _ _ _ _ _.. Honda XR 50; Brush Guard, 0% Flnanc1ng36 Mos.
available now on John
LANDOWNERS -NEED Stainless Steel; Fils 02·05 Deere z Trak Zero Tuma &amp;
_
EXTRA FARM INCOME? F250 or F350. (740)446· 5.99% Fixed Rate . on John
We have responsible spoilS- 6741.(740)339-0004.
Deere Getore Carmichael
o
ue , ra
men looking to lease hunting
Equipment 17401446_2412 _
paning. Milton Wv Fie
property in this area.
arket. Sai&amp;Sun. 5 Sla
Midwest Trophy Leases Inc.
arrant . 606-326-0777
(304)532-60 15 or 1-800698-1073
JET
\ II U&lt; II I \1&gt;1'1
AERATION MOTORS
l!r~
101"'"~H~OLmtOUJ----."" Repaired. New &amp; Rebuill In
r-~~
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1,..___oiUUUI.&lt;'Iiiiiii--' 800-537-9528.

for per diem phlebotomists. '

DIABETES
SUPPORT
GROUP

t K

IAQ
•AKQJ

All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

Modern 1 BR Apt. Call 446·

Name brand Sofa and Wing
chair. Pd$2000, will sell for
$375. Pertect Cond. Vary
Large Enter. Cntr. 446-3252

K 7 2

C.al

member

action.•

Milld.,porl, Norlh 4th Ave , 2
br. lurnished apa rtment,
deposit &amp; references, no
pals, (740)992-0165

------~-

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

5x10, 6x10, 10x10,
10x24
The only storage

Middleport, Beech St., 2 br.
furnished apartment, utilities
paid, deposit &amp; references,
no pels, (740)992-0165

Mollohan Furniture. Great
selection tor a Great price.
Drive a little, save a toll 202
Clark Chapel Rd, Bidwell,
OH. (740)300-0173

NyeAve

Pomeroy, OH

Owner Ronnie Jones

r

Rt. 62 N Pt. Pleasant, WV
(Practice 3:30 pm) 675-5463

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

..
.
•

•KB7653

..

70 Pine St reet • Gallipolis

East End
Storage

Bast

.108651
Boulh
.AQJ1098

740•446·111HI7 Toll Free 877-669-0007

748-367-0266/
1-800-950-3359

" ._,._,.;liii,;,"""""iiiii-.'-'

Motocross Ra&lt;;e
Sat. 6/9/07 6:00 pm
Mason Co. Fairgrounds

4

• 2
+96432

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

"Discount

Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts . at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
Middleport, from 5327 to
$592. 740-992 -5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
Institution is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
Employer.
2 BR Apt near Rodney area.
WID, fridg~ . stove· Included. Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
No pets! Call 446-1 271 or
room apartments at Village
709-1657. Oep/1st mon req. Manor
and
RiVerside
2 BR, Newly Carpeted. Apartments in Middleport.
Freshly painted, Walking From $0-$592. Call 740·
distance to UAG. Private 992-5064. Equal Housing
Equal
entrance
and
deck. Opportunities.
Opportunity
Employer
$400/mo, (614)595-7773 or

HUD HOMESI 4bd only
$155/mo., 3bd $181/mo.,
More 1·4bd hQmes available. 5% dn. 20 yrs @ B"k.
For listings 1-800-559-4109 A HIDDEN TREASURE!
Laurel
Commons
ll F144.
Apartments. Largest .in the
In Pomeroy House tor rent! 3 areal Beautifully renovaled
Bd.,2 bath, newly remod· lhroughout including brand
eted, total electric. 740·843· new kitchen and bath.
5264.
Starting at $405. Call today!

• s

Senior Citizen

(304)882-3017

•n

West

r]amibJ •·1fld4:1

• Top • Removal
• Trim • Stunfp
Grinding • Bucket
Truck
Full insured

•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; AJC
•washer/dryer hookup
•Tenant pays electric

.

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

Nwch
116-08-&lt;17
•• 3
•AQJI09
• J 10 8 7

I

01111-. OH 054131

Ellm View
Apartments

~~

NEA Crossword Puzz_le
ACROSS . 44

1600 Square leeh beautWul,
unlurnished, two bedroom
apl. 2nd floor, LA. DR. 1 112
baths. downtown Gallipolis,
ideal lor professional couple
References required, no
pets, security deposh, $600
per month . Call '446·4425 or
446-3936

1-600-796·4686.
-------2BR, trash/ water, stove/
lridge, $350 + deposit,
(740)446-7620, (740)709·
9519, (740)441 ·9872
--'-'-'-----

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87
BRIDGE

CONVENIENTLY LOCAl·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE I
Townhouse
apartments,
antUor small housss FOR
RENT. Call (740)441 -1111
tor appliCation &amp; information.

1 or 2 bedroom Apt in pt _·
Pleasant. Ulili1ies paid, No
Pels 304-675-8872

Hou&lt;l!S

www.mydailysentinel.com

BMutllul Apta. 11 Jodlson
Eltltta. 52 WestwoOd
Drive, !rom $365 1o $560.
740-446-2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
Employer.

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
lor Rerl. Meigs County, In
town, No. Pets, Deposit
Required. (740)992·5174 or
(740)441-01 10.
-------1 aocl 2 bedroom apart ments. furnished and unfurnished, and houses in
5 acre lots for sate in Galtia Pomeroy and Middleport,
Co Morgan Twp. Morgan security deposit required , no
Lane. Septic permits for last pelS, 740-992-2218.
years specs. Possible land
contract some restrictions 1 and 2 Bedroom Apts, W/0
Call between 7pm and 9pm hookups, Call (740)441 or leave message 740-669- 0194 or (740)3:!9-0362 .
www. spnng - ~alloy -proper11es.com
0143
Il l \ I \I "

Friday, June 8, 2007
ALLEYOOP

•----;;;;;,o;;;;.;;;;;;,o;;;;;;;;.;;;;o;;;;;_ _ _..

GRIZZWELLS
-..J\U. )ttl -~p 1\IAT Al-\1'\oYI~C::.

~Al\1\K~ ~ )bUR. t.'ptJ1\.I ?

earned.
ARIES (Maron 21·Aprll19)- Someone
who Is skllted at promoting h~ or her
Interests may get you to help with·a com·
pllcated )ob. Your entire doy oould be tied
up with none of your lnlei'Ht. being 1110.tled.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - If you got
lnwiYed In a collect:lvl tndHvor that le In
a ltliiJO ""'"' funding 11 now being
required, be eur1 thl txpenHI are
shared equally by I\/Oryone and not jutt
borne by you.

SOUPTONUTZ

any legal resident of
tho
VIllage . of
Syracuse. Realdonta
can pick up IIi appllcelion
from
Joyce
Sl110n, College Ro,d
or from Gordon Asher
al 1402 Dusky Street.
Applications are dli8
beck by June 24, 2007.
(6) 6, 8

•l i

i

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CMbn!y Ciphef ~ams we cr~ed trom qootatiOrls by lamous people, past 6'ld prtllft.
Eacl'lletler n the opher Slar.ds tOf anolllet

Today's clue: K equals H

"W T T R X G E A P Z Y M G F U M w·x G E

BRYXUXZU
LTZYBLT

M JMY BN

HXNT SMG

YBP .L NMXY .K XG

VBPLZTHN."

• HPSXHHT

AMHH

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -'I invenl nothing. I rediscover."- Auguste
"Simplicity is the uHimate sophisticalion." -leonardo da Vinci

'::~::' SCCtt41~-~~~s·

Rodin

Will
Ulll

----------WN~~raAY~··~PO~~~N;:~:;;;:-

o::-.c:mi=-~~ ::
low to 1«m four ~rolplo -dt

LU. RBAT

\.l 0 RE M

~

I received a refusal lt()licc
~ , from a publishing C&lt;Jmpanr
! Gramps consoled me by Jelling

me tltat, "Every artisl was ftnt

t- ,.,l_rcr-ul,. .J.,.,. .,~I T' v.,.l-tl; ~ ~h:!o~

........_.._.._.._"'--~ rou d..,.!opm ~~op No. sbtto..
·A PRINT NUM8£Rf0 lEITERS
VI IN lHESE SQUARES

6 ~:'!~~~ lETTERS TO I
Vellum -

III

I I

I I

SCIAM-UTS ANSWIRS 6 • , - o,
Proof- ldiof - Hectic - OF the TIME

The peiformer .we had gone to Ste was known for his high strung
penonalify. My friend surmised that was why be was ou1 of1une .
most OF til&lt; TIME.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

,:;~~~'~
.~
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Friday, June 8, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com'

SPECIAL FHA FINANCE
Program SO Down, II you
own Land or use Family
Land We own the Bank your
Approved 606-474-6380

r

LOTs&amp;
ACREAGE

10.66 acres. 1594 Northup
Rd in Green Twp, Gallia Co.,
24x4Brestrictions,
bam, recentbeautiful
survey,
no
house location, all utilities on
site. $79.900. (937)362·
4n5. (937)605·3581
- - - - - - -4 Acres located oH Kempel
Hollow Ad. Already has
water/elec. Secluded area
740-388-8228

Clean 2 Bd., 1 ba .,$350 .
2Bd., 1 ba .•$350, new carpet, new counter top$
Newer 2 beL 1 ba., central
air, 8X8 out ~dg ., $395.
Very ni~ 3 bd., 2 ba., cen·
tral air, $435. In New Haven,
References. &amp; Deposits
required. 740-416-6622.

r::rr-:AI'ARTh-.._.II!NTS
_____,

FOR.IbNr
""~-------'
'

lllK

RENr

$1 55/mol Buy 4bd HUD
home! 5% dn, 20yrs @ 8% .1
For Listings 800-559·4109
x1709

3 br. In Rullend, $400 per
month
plus
deposit .
(740)992-0064
Attention!
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" programs for you to buy your
home instead ol renting .
• 100% financing
• Le56 than perfect credit
acoepled
• Paymenl could be lhe
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators.
(740)367-0000
--'-----,-For rent or for sale· 2 BA
Nice Aemodeied Home in
town, No Pets, Renovated,
All new carpal, Call
(740)446-7425

Phillip
Alder ·

Clean quiet spacious 1BR,
stove/trig, country setting,
no pets/smoking, lirstllast

Johnson's Tree
Service

mo+dep $3ffi 992-3543

CompeN
109. TnM . . . . . •lt.lmp
Orlndin&amp; ..... Trucll

r,. en

NW'MI•P'rw~

·--

........._.,_
7. . . .1...,

large 4 bedroom house in (304)273-3344
Pomeroy, very clean, newly Apartment for rent, 1-2
remodeled, new cabinets, Bdrm., remodeled , new car·
Pet 'love &amp; frl·g waler
,
.,
'
sewer. trash pd. Middleport.
425 00
$ · · No pets. Re[
required. 740 •843 -5264 ·
2 Br , A/C, Very nice, Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
Johnson Mobile Home Park. ing applications for waiting
740-446-2003 or 446-1409 l~t for Hud-subsized, 1- br,
apartment.for
th '
located In Point Pleasant elderly/disabled call 675E 1 H ·
and Gallipolis Ferry. Call 6679
qua
ousmg
675-3423
Opportunity

--pi

'~

30 Yrs. Exp. Ins.

•

Paul Dollinger will appear at the
Eagles Club on
Saturday, June

9, 2007

8:30pm
Come and jofn your friends in our
Smoke Free Environment

units within the
jurisdiction of the
Pomeroy P.D.
(740) 742-2690

BINGO
Middleport American
Legion
Every Tuesday &amp;
Saturday
6.:30 pm
Doors open at 4:00 pm
Come out &amp; support your

veterans!
The Gallipolis Elks Lodge No. 107 will
hold their annual Soccer Shoot
SatuJday June 16, 2007. II will be held
at the Elks Fann on SA
Sign up
will slart at 10:30 am with the
compemion starting at 11 :00 am.
Compe)~ion is open to all boys and
girts born on 813111993 or after. There
will be four age groups with boys and
girts divisions. Trophies will be
awarded for first . second, and ltlird
place in each division; This event is
free of charge, so come on out and
bring a friend .

sea.

Sunday, June 10
2:00 pm - 4:00 pm
HMC French 500 Room
Call 446-5971 for more
information.

s

'

'

South
2•

Wea&amp;
Pass

2•

Pass

3•

4 NT
5 NT
6•

0 0

740-367-0544
Ftee Estimates

22

27

30

Eut

2•

Pass

34

3 t
6•
Pass

Pass

Pus

Pass
Paaa
Paaa

Which finesse
would you take?

Ttte IN6f&lt;ff)ltNTS A~e LISTel&gt; IN
/
O~l&gt;t~ OF IMPO~TANGe.

holder
20 Cook'•
24

Opening lead: • 2

. .FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Local Contractor

Paaa
Pass
Pass

12 - Kong
13 Senotffil'o
aunt
14 Low voice
15 Plttlburgh
river
16 Televise
17 Cattail
18 POI)Sicle

Nortb

t•

47 Concrete

5 McCartney's
foundation
title
48 Paclno and
8 Tusked
Unser
animal
50 Attack

31
32

3t

Pass

1 Clmo lo

23

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Eaat-West

35
36

52 Tube trophy

53 Mtedow
·54 Nautical
greeting

55 Billowing

gannont
56 Orchealra
leedor-

Ba...r
57 Relative

of a lither

garment
Go to court
Slain flller
Dilapidated
car
Mutate
Floata along
Legal order
Earlier
Family
mom.
Moves to
and fro
Big family

37 DHignlles
39 Uatllta to

40Gab

.10 Two lives

lor- DOWN

1 Ouettlon
atarter

2 They

accompany

aahe

3 Woven
4 "Me"lypea

5 Tollllto
prop
6

Jr~·•

aon,

maybe
7 UnuaUII
tiling

(2 wda.)

41 Chillcarne
42 Ward off

8 Cyllndncll

container
9 Dlttapreld

36 MlclclletiiOII
38 "So longl"
(ltyph.)

11 Curtain
hanger
39
19 Pool hall
llem
41
21 Lay out a
couree
42
24 Truckera'
43
45
redioa
25 Disturb
26 Mr. Eben • 46
27 Worl&lt; unha
28 Forum
47
famrlll
29 Mild 01111 49
31 Show pride .
(2 wds.)
51
. 33 Switch
poahlont
35 Fray

Ad commlttM

S)NIIIIah
houses
-llllter
Siren
leland ....,

Kllual
Wardtn'a

!eM
Illy, •
wine
"Crodclyn"
director

Colorins

Philosopher John Dewey, who died in
1952, claimed: "TIMI saW Is no1 aornethng ready-made, lxrt something In continuous formation through choice of

740-367-0536

0 0
&lt;o-e

740·992·5929
740-416·1698
15 yrs. Exp. Free Es1imates

BARNEY

HardWOOd Ca!Hnecry And Flll'll,.,

BAH !! 'DA'DBUAN

www.tbnbererHkeablntrtry.-

TELLYMARI&lt;ETEAS
!!

2000 Harley Davidson Wide

MlscEuANEXJIJS

I'E'IS

3736
New 2BA apartments.
Washer/dryer
hook1up,
stovelrelrigerator induded.
Also, units on SR 160. Pets
Welcome! (740)441·0194 .

MERcHANDISE

FORSALE

$ For Old Auto Baneries 1-

99 $2.50ea, lOOt $3.00ea,
250+ $4.00ea. THE BAT·
TEAY TERMINAL 1-BOO·
796-6797
New Haven, 2 br. furnished - - - - - - - apartment, rel~rences &amp; 28' ~cargomateM endosed
1 (740)992· tra1·1er 1or sale, has ,.IVJng
·
de POSI"t. no pes.
0165
quarters with Air Cond.f

I

2

I I~\'"!'() ! {

rto

I \1 H)\

AUf(l;

2000 Honda XR 100, Great
Cond, New lires, runs great,
AKC Reg. Weimaraners; , _ _.;FOoiiijRoiiiiAiiiLE-_.1 $900. 304-675-3824
Solid slver, OOB 04126107,
(M)$400.(F)$450. Deposit of 00 Suzuki Esteem. 4DR, 2005 H.D.Soft Tail custom
$100 will hold the pup of 4Cyl, Auto, AJC, good econ- maroon
wlembossed
your choice till ready to omy. car! $3500/ tax/title/30" Hames,1 of 200 made,800
leave Utte1. Parents present. day tag. 645-2421/245·5428 miles
since
new,price
Call anytime, (740)339$21,500, call for details-7402935, leave message if no 10 to 15 small cars· for sate. 949·2217.
answer.
Cavaliers. Escorts. Neons.
G s
I 740 44
- - - - - - - - _•t_c._a_s_•_v•_r•__ _·__6AA~,!
Applehead
Chihuahua 7278
'-'-"~
Puppies, 6 to 7 wks old.
1965 Chevelle Malibu, 20,
Paper 1ra1"ned. $100. 379hard top, VB, Duel exhaust, 91-92 Geo Metro Parts. all,
2422
power steering, crager ss AC,starter,doors,hood,frn·

i

r
r

---"'1I

r

chrome rims, all original. ders,engine.740-992·4259·
Drives and runs greal, "iF:;;:::;:;;:;:;:;;
cell740-963-0584 ___,
needs restored . 740-441~
A
4?04
~--~---, _ _lliiiiiiiii-_.1
1999 Corvette Coupe, both '
1
1 59 000 · 11
ops, auo,
'
ml, a 98 Saturn Coupe, Cherry
options, very nice, $19,000, Red, 123K Power ever,
(740)949-2732
' - - - ' - - - ' - - - - - titVc_
ruise, keyless .entry Ex.
99 Buick RegaiGS. 1 owner.
garage kept, 142,000 mWes,
new tires, Good Condition,
$5,500 304 _882 _1102

.Cook Motorw
328 Jactc:son Pike
Quality cars, trucks and .
vans w~h warranty. P.riced
to sell. This is our 12tt1
Anniversary. Stop by or call
740-446-0103

"r-::ts~,..TR~UCKS---..,
FORSALE
"'~--oiliiiiiiiiiiii-_.1
1980 Dodge 1/2 Ton Truck.
Slimt 6 engine, runs good,
good tires, make good Wtr
Asking $900 (740)441·064li

i

RIPU:

06 Dutchman Lite Travel
Trailer, sleeps 6. 4 bunk

8ft Truck CarTlper, air condi·
lion, TV ant. cable hook up &amp;
~elhroom S4.5oo 304-6753353
.
·
92 Fleetwood Wilderness,
fully contained. All working
condition. AC/ heat/ stove/
'fridge/ microwave. New
queen size matt. Sleeps 6.
Asking $6500. 740-2868729 or 740-418-Dfl32

~
V
Phlebotomist
Pleasant Valley Hospital
is currently accepting resumes
Postilions are needed for
early a.m. blood draws in·
Long Tenn Care faci'liti es.

Coverage area includes Jackson
and Galli a counties in Ohio.
Excellent hourly pay. on call
pay and mileage reimbursement.

Send n:sumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
cloHuman Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant , WV 25550
Fax to: 304-675-6975 or apply
online at www.pvalley.org
AA/EOE

*Experienced

Room Addltlona &amp;
flamodellng
NawGaragn
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Gunara
VInyl Siding I Ptlntlng
Patio and Porch Dtcka
WV036725

References Available!

V.C .

*Prompt and Qualily
Work
·
*Reasonable Rates

*Insured·

Call Gary S1anley @

740-742-2293
Please leave messa e

ROBERT
BISSEll
CIISliiGnOI
• New Homes
• Garages

YOUNG Ill

5~!

992 621 rl
PunH roy 0111"
, r Y

JI O., LIJI Jl

f

~07.S; ffi? USE.b TI-lE ~OLI&gt;-TII~ . ~ W~ I~ T~ Flfll.l. ~OC
lllf.~lE.R-\Jl'I~TII.E·I-\Of·

$35ASeoop

T-Post 6ft. $3.29
Wide Variety

ONC.E.

(1\'{~tLF, '{OU

Kill OW!

'1'001

•

or

. W~!'?!,

BIG NATE

Feeds

Stop &amp; Compare

We Deliver To You!
PEANUTS

-~ •"''!'e)~:"i•1P.3!'1'!!4P:"•.._

D+3 .. T~E WORLD I=AMOUS G.I."
t..VI'\1~;, ACROSS AN ABANDONED JEEP

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

$4,000 L--------------....1

"I I&lt;\ II t ...,

{ { ),._,

L~

l-IE'(, CJ.ILICI&lt;, WJ.I'( 15
YOUR DOG SITTING
OUT I-IERE IN A
GROCER'( CART ?

Full bloo:l registered Boer
Goats for breeding stock
Does &amp; Bucks $300 " &amp; up

304:675·4~ 16

{ li t

I'

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1

740-949-2217

Manley's
Recycling

1

For sale 3 yr. old stud miniature horse 304-576-2174

~~~~

•N•OT•I•CE.s_ __
Bid lor Bus
Heart of the Valley
Head Start, 320 112
East Main Street, P.O.
Box 684 Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 Ia accepting
bids to purchase two
(2) 21123 passenger

school
buaes.
Reg. Angus Bulls for sale. SpocHicatlona
lor the
Hollybro&lt;jl&lt; Farm. 740-245bu888 can be obtained
5984
by calling the Athena·
HAY&amp;
Meigs
Educational
Service Center at 740GRAIN
992-4286. Quotn will
Liveslock Feed, shelled com be opened In the tree$5.20/50 lti. &amp; horse cniOCh aurar's office at noon
$7.22150 lb., &amp; more. on Tuelday, June 19,
2007.
Tho
board
PageviNe--740-698.0911 .
reserves the right to
reject an or any part of
the bld.·Bids should .b e
labelld "'Bid for School
Bua" and mailed to:
Heart of the Valley

Head Start
Treaaurer'a Office
320 112 East Main
Street, P.O. Box 684

GARFIELD
L-1 Z ANI7 l HAI7 A FUN

17ATE LA51' NI&amp;HT

't'AU&lt;EP ON ANt7
ON ABOU'f YOU

!SHE

....
:;n•..••••
. . . . . . . . .11:11.
PI_TIP,_ES . .

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Public Notice

_ _ _ _ _,;,___
Tho Ceileton Memorial
S~hOIIrthlp appllce·
tiona are avalilbte lor

ANI7 HOW 'o'OO Nefti
1'0 OOON A 011!1'

Stlvrday, June t 2007
By Bemlco- 0.01
A aubetantlal 1e88enlng of negative factora that have been hsmperlng your
progreaa could be replaced with positive
occurrences. Objectives previOusly
denied you could now be attained.
GEMINI (May 2hJune 20) -l'ou ueuall'f do quite well In situations that requl,.. a
bit of team effort. However, vou might be
better off doing your own, because the
teammates at hand could be liabilities.
CANCER (June 2hJuly 22) - Should
you have to contend wnh some uneXpected, negative de.velopmenta, don't
blow them out of proportion and make
them seem worse than they are. It'll harm
your ~~.dation .
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - l'ou're far 100
Intelligent to believe the wortd Ia. pre·
pared to give you something tor nothing,
yet you may bank your hope on thai erroneous assumption and and Llp wtth egg
on your face.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22)- F&gt;u1 oxperlencea have taught you that being too
dictatorial evokes an unpleasant
response that produces negative resutts.
You might choose to Ignore this valuab&amp;e
lesson and repeat lt.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) -Your fallh In
yourSelf and in your phllotophy ol life
might be put to the test. What you believe
In must be accepted without any reaervatk&gt;ns.
SCORPIO (OCt. 24-Nov. 22) - Be prepared for the unexpected in vour commercial affairs, especial¥ tf thara are
close friends lnvolvod. They mlgllt be lhe
very ones who stir up tiMI walere and
make things rod&lt;y.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -l'ou'U
be tar more succeaaful and aff8ctive il
you stick to traditkmal procedures ·you
know how IO app~. Use what worbd for
you previously, mstaad of expflrimenting
with the unteated.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19) Regardless of how Ingenious you are &amp;1
·disguising neglected responsibilities, lhe
tNth will win out. lnckjentalty, It'll take far
less effort to do the 8881gnments rather
than c:ovari"lg them up.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 19) -l'ou may
discover that a ralatk&gt;nshlp you have with
someone you like b under more strain
than you realized. If the root cause goes
untreated, the association could be
abruplly severed.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch 20) - Per10&lt;11
wfttl whom you're invotved sl'ioukt not be
alta.ved to make critical decWons for you.
What looks good lor them c:oold be disastrous where your tntereate are con·

(6) 1, 8 2tc
__......__ _ _ _ _

~ you fake the diamond finesse

~Astro-

1411-882-lm

I I II I~
l'( 1,1 II

,

11neeae.

Remodeling

1. (

gle1on. .

netd tile spade kilg to drop singleton·
neaily a Six percent cf1anca.
It should be clear - lake the diamond

Lawn Seed,
Fertilizer and

• Home Oxygen
· • Portable Oxygen
• Hometill System
• Helios System

""'

In fhls deal, you are In sl• spades. Weal
leads the heart tv.&lt;&gt;, perhaps a singleton.
You have the choice of a apa&lt;le finesse
or a diamond finesse, bu1 you cannof
lake both, because you are on the board
for the first and lasllime. Would you play
a spa&lt;le to your quean or a diamond fo
your queen? wt&gt;{l
North's two-heart response ohowed five'
plus hearts and ~f-plue polnla. The
rest ol the aucflon was nstulal. (II you
use Roman Key Card Blad&lt;wood, North
would show one l&lt;ay card, permitting
South to jump Immediately fo six epades
- bu1 there are no bonus pofnls for
shorter auctions.)
Analyze ail four posslbllilfee. Suppose
you lake lhe spa&lt;le finesse and Hwins.
That is fine II East slarted with klng-doublston, which has an a priori probability
of 13.6 percanl. But If East has three or
more spades, you win need fo find lhe
diamond king singlston - less than a
one percent chance. Suppose you take
the spade finesse and n falls. Again, you
wil need lhet diamond ~ng to drop ain-

and H·wins. You attack trumps· and are
affectlvtly home. Suppose you lake lhe
diamond finesse and H loses. You will

W"''I'EIHt&gt;.IJCE.T i~IC.K, t&gt;lbt4'f

l!JI Ill Ill I

Showmlllller Show

• Complete

""'to\01&lt;\, 1 CAN'T C.O TO :'£~tJI
I'to\ ~lc.K! I''IE C,OT I\ FEIJU:.-

SUNSHINE CLUB

Bore Goats. 100% fullblood
Reg. Billy; also percentage
Billy, (740)367-7755

r

CARPENTER
SERVICE

fully self conlained
firm 304-882-2196 cell 304674-3920

New Taylor W~y 15' Heavy
Duty Bel wing wl Dual
Wheel, chain gua1ds, hyd
;----~~-- -~------ c~s. $8495. JkTl's Farm
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Equipment. 740-446-9777

____ r

YOUNG'S

beds, queen bed. Used very IJI•••••-~
lillle. $14500. 441 -0564
•

large selection Of Rotary
Rutters 4' thru 15'. Jim"s
's Farm Equipment. 740446-9777
-------New 72" Finishing Mowers
$999. Limited amount avail·
able at thi s price. Also, ·4', 5',
&amp; 6' tillers. 4' starting at
$750.
Jim's
Farm
Equipment, 740-446-9777

~---------_-'-_-_-

Stanley TreeTrimming
. &amp; Removal

Musl Sell Air Slream
Camper mint cond. 31FT,

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams,· Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains, TrailersDriveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
FMday, Bam-4:30pm. Close&lt;l
Thursday, Saturday &amp;
Sunday. (740)446--7300

=----=----

I

-r-:---:--::"""'1

c

Queen size mattress set &amp;
!rame,good condition. $1~ . ----~--Call 7~0-245·0480 or 740· Pole Barns 30x40M10'
339-9414
Delivered &amp; Erected $8,5S5
plus Sales Tax. Call
Remodeling? Complele sal (937)718-1471 www.naiK&gt;nof kitchen cabinets. sink, widepolebarns.com
~itchen range (!ike new), -=:---::~--.,
wall oven, counte1top, $750;
Pins
Sliding glass door with new
FOR SALE
~inds. $100: Gun cabinet.
like new, $175 ; 2 maple bar
chairs, $40, 1 full size oak Chocolate. Lab puppies. 1st
bed With springs &amp; manress, shot &amp; WOJmed. Ready to
$150. Call (740)441-8299
go. $150 Call740·992-6227

Glide, 22,000 miles, excellent condition, $10,000.
(740)992-1909 or (740)5910993.

S

Heating, $4,300 OBO
Tara
Townhouse (l40)3BS-8803
Apartments, Very Spacious,
2 Bed rooms. CIA • 1 112 - - - - - . , . - - - 3DR headache rack $1,000.
~~=.' P~~~lts:'s!- :~ 24x24 machine tarps $150
No Pets, Lease Plus each, chains, $20 each, -CK_C_L-ha_s_o_l&gt;j)_s_o_p_u_p-piesSecurily Deposit Required, screw binders $40 each, $300. Will be ready 6119107,
(740)367-7086.
other flatbed equip. 304· 8 Wks, shots &amp; wormed.
i.:r--:~---, 675-~51
Parents on premises. CKC
SPA&lt;;E
- - - - - - - - Chihuahua pups $250 !'ill
FOR n.......
6x12 enclosed black trailer,
be ready 6/28107. 6 wks.
.,
$1500; 5x10 utility trailer. Shots&amp;wormed.Parentson
$400; 5x1, 0 utility trailer,
Commercial building "For
premises. Call 446·2432
Aenr 1800 square leet. off $500. (614)595-7773 or
streel parking. Great loca- t-1100-798-4686
FOR SALE
lion! 749 Third Avenue in - - - - - - - - ,_
_ _ _ _ _ _ ___,
Gallipolis. Rent $375/mo. Above ground pool. 18ft Cal Wayne
.()
_
around. call740-245-0339
White solid vinyl soffit 39
140 456 3802
----~--- pieces 12K 12, 1 roll roof fell ,
Center 1 roll ridge vent $300 675·
Prime commercial space lor Entertainment
rent at Springvalley Plaza. W/gtassware doors. nice. '4197 after 6:00pm.
~ghts up $120: Full siia bed
Call645·2192.
w/rrianress &amp; box springs,
Private M.H. lot for rent. good cond. $150 304·675·
775/141 area. 4 miles from 2208
ll'lll"'"-.....
New GAHS. 446-4053
10
FARM
- For Sale: Crownvetch plants.
EQuiPMENT
WAN'Jliil
(740)245-9322
roRFNr
1
.
,__ _ _ _ _ _.. Honda XR 50; Brush Guard, 0% Flnanc1ng36 Mos.
available now on John
LANDOWNERS -NEED Stainless Steel; Fils 02·05 Deere z Trak Zero Tuma &amp;
_
EXTRA FARM INCOME? F250 or F350. (740)446· 5.99% Fixed Rate . on John
We have responsible spoilS- 6741.(740)339-0004.
Deere Getore Carmichael
o
ue , ra
men looking to lease hunting
Equipment 17401446_2412 _
paning. Milton Wv Fie
property in this area.
arket. Sai&amp;Sun. 5 Sla
Midwest Trophy Leases Inc.
arrant . 606-326-0777
(304)532-60 15 or 1-800698-1073
JET
\ II U&lt; II I \1&gt;1'1
AERATION MOTORS
l!r~
101"'"~H~OLmtOUJ----."" Repaired. New &amp; Rebuill In
r-~~
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1,..___oiUUUI.&lt;'Iiiiiii--' 800-537-9528.

for per diem phlebotomists. '

DIABETES
SUPPORT
GROUP

t K

IAQ
•AKQJ

All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

Modern 1 BR Apt. Call 446·

Name brand Sofa and Wing
chair. Pd$2000, will sell for
$375. Pertect Cond. Vary
Large Enter. Cntr. 446-3252

K 7 2

C.al

member

action.•

Milld.,porl, Norlh 4th Ave , 2
br. lurnished apa rtment,
deposit &amp; references, no
pals, (740)992-0165

------~-

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

5x10, 6x10, 10x10,
10x24
The only storage

Middleport, Beech St., 2 br.
furnished apartment, utilities
paid, deposit &amp; references,
no pels, (740)992-0165

Mollohan Furniture. Great
selection tor a Great price.
Drive a little, save a toll 202
Clark Chapel Rd, Bidwell,
OH. (740)300-0173

NyeAve

Pomeroy, OH

Owner Ronnie Jones

r

Rt. 62 N Pt. Pleasant, WV
(Practice 3:30 pm) 675-5463

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

..
.
•

•KB7653

..

70 Pine St reet • Gallipolis

East End
Storage

Bast

.108651
Boulh
.AQJ1098

740•446·111HI7 Toll Free 877-669-0007

748-367-0266/
1-800-950-3359

" ._,._,.;liii,;,"""""iiiii-.'-'

Motocross Ra&lt;;e
Sat. 6/9/07 6:00 pm
Mason Co. Fairgrounds

4

• 2
+96432

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

"Discount

Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts . at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
Middleport, from 5327 to
$592. 740-992 -5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
Institution is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
Employer.
2 BR Apt near Rodney area.
WID, fridg~ . stove· Included. Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
No pets! Call 446-1 271 or
room apartments at Village
709-1657. Oep/1st mon req. Manor
and
RiVerside
2 BR, Newly Carpeted. Apartments in Middleport.
Freshly painted, Walking From $0-$592. Call 740·
distance to UAG. Private 992-5064. Equal Housing
Equal
entrance
and
deck. Opportunities.
Opportunity
Employer
$400/mo, (614)595-7773 or

HUD HOMESI 4bd only
$155/mo., 3bd $181/mo.,
More 1·4bd hQmes available. 5% dn. 20 yrs @ B"k.
For listings 1-800-559-4109 A HIDDEN TREASURE!
Laurel
Commons
ll F144.
Apartments. Largest .in the
In Pomeroy House tor rent! 3 areal Beautifully renovaled
Bd.,2 bath, newly remod· lhroughout including brand
eted, total electric. 740·843· new kitchen and bath.
5264.
Starting at $405. Call today!

• s

Senior Citizen

(304)882-3017

•n

West

r]amibJ •·1fld4:1

• Top • Removal
• Trim • Stunfp
Grinding • Bucket
Truck
Full insured

•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; AJC
•washer/dryer hookup
•Tenant pays electric

.

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

Nwch
116-08-&lt;17
•• 3
•AQJI09
• J 10 8 7

I

01111-. OH 054131

Ellm View
Apartments

~~

NEA Crossword Puzz_le
ACROSS . 44

1600 Square leeh beautWul,
unlurnished, two bedroom
apl. 2nd floor, LA. DR. 1 112
baths. downtown Gallipolis,
ideal lor professional couple
References required, no
pets, security deposh, $600
per month . Call '446·4425 or
446-3936

1-600-796·4686.
-------2BR, trash/ water, stove/
lridge, $350 + deposit,
(740)446-7620, (740)709·
9519, (740)441 ·9872
--'-'-'-----

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87
BRIDGE

CONVENIENTLY LOCAl·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE I
Townhouse
apartments,
antUor small housss FOR
RENT. Call (740)441 -1111
tor appliCation &amp; information.

1 or 2 bedroom Apt in pt _·
Pleasant. Ulili1ies paid, No
Pels 304-675-8872

Hou&lt;l!S

www.mydailysentinel.com

BMutllul Apta. 11 Jodlson
Eltltta. 52 WestwoOd
Drive, !rom $365 1o $560.
740-446-2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
Employer.

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
lor Rerl. Meigs County, In
town, No. Pets, Deposit
Required. (740)992·5174 or
(740)441-01 10.
-------1 aocl 2 bedroom apart ments. furnished and unfurnished, and houses in
5 acre lots for sate in Galtia Pomeroy and Middleport,
Co Morgan Twp. Morgan security deposit required , no
Lane. Septic permits for last pelS, 740-992-2218.
years specs. Possible land
contract some restrictions 1 and 2 Bedroom Apts, W/0
Call between 7pm and 9pm hookups, Call (740)441 or leave message 740-669- 0194 or (740)3:!9-0362 .
www. spnng - ~alloy -proper11es.com
0143
Il l \ I \I "

Friday, June 8, 2007
ALLEYOOP

•----;;;;;,o;;;;.;;;;;;,o;;;;;;;;.;;;;o;;;;;_ _ _..

GRIZZWELLS
-..J\U. )ttl -~p 1\IAT Al-\1'\oYI~C::.

~Al\1\K~ ~ )bUR. t.'ptJ1\.I ?

earned.
ARIES (Maron 21·Aprll19)- Someone
who Is skllted at promoting h~ or her
Interests may get you to help with·a com·
pllcated )ob. Your entire doy oould be tied
up with none of your lnlei'Ht. being 1110.tled.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - If you got
lnwiYed In a collect:lvl tndHvor that le In
a ltliiJO ""'"' funding 11 now being
required, be eur1 thl txpenHI are
shared equally by I\/Oryone and not jutt
borne by you.

SOUPTONUTZ

any legal resident of
tho
VIllage . of
Syracuse. Realdonta
can pick up IIi appllcelion
from
Joyce
Sl110n, College Ro,d
or from Gordon Asher
al 1402 Dusky Street.
Applications are dli8
beck by June 24, 2007.
(6) 6, 8

•l i

i

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CMbn!y Ciphef ~ams we cr~ed trom qootatiOrls by lamous people, past 6'ld prtllft.
Eacl'lletler n the opher Slar.ds tOf anolllet

Today's clue: K equals H

"W T T R X G E A P Z Y M G F U M w·x G E

BRYXUXZU
LTZYBLT

M JMY BN

HXNT SMG

YBP .L NMXY .K XG

VBPLZTHN."

• HPSXHHT

AMHH

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -'I invenl nothing. I rediscover."- Auguste
"Simplicity is the uHimate sophisticalion." -leonardo da Vinci

'::~::' SCCtt41~-~~~s·

Rodin

Will
Ulll

----------WN~~raAY~··~PO~~~N;:~:;;;:-

o::-.c:mi=-~~ ::
low to 1«m four ~rolplo -dt

LU. RBAT

\.l 0 RE M

~

I received a refusal lt()licc
~ , from a publishing C&lt;Jmpanr
! Gramps consoled me by Jelling

me tltat, "Every artisl was ftnt

t- ,.,l_rcr-ul,. .J.,.,. .,~I T' v.,.l-tl; ~ ~h:!o~

........_.._.._.._"'--~ rou d..,.!opm ~~op No. sbtto..
·A PRINT NUM8£Rf0 lEITERS
VI IN lHESE SQUARES

6 ~:'!~~~ lETTERS TO I
Vellum -

III

I I

I I

SCIAM-UTS ANSWIRS 6 • , - o,
Proof- ldiof - Hectic - OF the TIME

The peiformer .we had gone to Ste was known for his high strung
penonalify. My friend surmised that was why be was ou1 of1une .
most OF til&lt; TIME.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

,:;~~~'~
.~
·.,,... ,... ''
·'

�Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

.12 oa.'/s.llA
·
·
Blo
ti menca fn om

Friday, iune 8, 2007

·www.mydailysentinel.com

ALONG THE RivER

Spousored

School's out ...·forever:
·~yger Creek Middle School closes its doors, Cl

by

liM'S FARM EQUIPMENT, INC.
1110 Entalna• (II. lt. 7) • &amp;llllpalll,

-.lbuf...ca.

e

J

, "'fil9t !Do l q ago, Dale Earn·• hlfllllnc. a-nd Robert Yates
•· ~ - e lalkin&amp; about a
" bualness relationship. Then
;; DEI .r Ncned a-n agreement with
• Richard Chl)dress Racing in' 1,WI!rln&amp; engine research. Pre' !lldlbiY. Y~s has now rei!Md his agreement to con, tliliie prov!Ging engine re- ·
-rch for Ford's Nextel Cup

c ,;.' -·· t.
• Race: Pocono 500
• Where: Pocono Raceway, Long
Pond, Pa. (2.5 miles), 200
laps/500 m11es.
• WI!.. : Sunday, June 10
• last year's winner: Denny Ham.
... lin
• QuallfyiiC record : Ka sey Kahne.
Dodge. 172.533 mph, June 11.
2004.
• Roce reoord: Rusty Wallace.
Ford. 144.892 mph , July 21,
1996.
• Llllt : Earnhardt won the
Autism Speaks 400 at DoVer International Speedway. No, not the
driver. The team . Martin TrueKJr.,
who will assume the top spot at
Dale Earnhardt Inc. next year
. when Dale Earnhardt Jr. departs
for another, as yet, unnamed
team, assumed it informally by
claiming ihe first victory of his

Nextel Cup career. Dover ts the
closest track to Truex's hometown,
Mayetta, which is nearby, near the
New Jersey shore. During the
ra ce's finallOO laps, he drove.
with the intensity of a kid playing ·
for the town's high-school football
team. A two-~ m e Busch Series
champion, Truex dominated the
late stages, and the only driver
who might conceivably have given
him a run, Jimmie Johnson, suffered a flat tire with 19 laps to go,
forcing him to take an emergency
detour to Dit road. At long last.
Truex's victory gave comfort to the
sport's victory-starved majority,
though he did have a Chevrolet in
common with 12 of the season's
13 winners. It was the first Car of
Tomorrow ra ce not won tJ; a driver ·
from Hendrick Motorsports.

,..~,,.,:. ...

'

• Race: Federated Auto
Parts 300
• : Nas!MIIe Superspeedway, Gladeville,
Tenn . (1.333 miles), 225
laps/299 .925 miles.
• Wilen: Saturday, June 9
1M! ,_r'o : Carl
Edwards
• QuallfylnC record:
Oavkl Stremme, Dodge,
166.5E1 mph, April 6,
2007.
• Race ,..ord: Jack
Sprague, Chevrolet,
125.244 mph, June 8.
2002.
• l.alt : l'&lt;llnt
leader Ca~ Edwards
drove a Ford tD victory in
the Dover 200. ~ was his
third win of the season.

BILL FRANCE JR.

~

Dale Earnhardt Inc. elected not
to appeal the suspension of
crew chief Tony Eu,Y Jr..According to Earnhardt Jr., the team
feared an appeal m1ght result in
an increased penalty for Eury.

• Three of the past five Nextel
Cup races have been rained out
and run a day late. All were
races where the next.:generation
car was in use. Said owner
Robert Yates: "I'm not the only
one who doesn't like the COl
God hates it. too."

• Previous generations of
NASCAR drivers began their c&lt;&gt;
reers on dirt tracks. Thanks to
Tony Stewart and his Prelude
to a Dream at Eldora Speed·
way, some of today's top .driv·
ers are racing on dirt for the
first time.
• Kyle Petty Is sitting out thi s
week's race at Pocono to work
as a television analyst on TNT's
coverage.
~ ~now

appears likely that Martin Truex Jr. will remain as driver
of Dale Earnhardt fnc:s No . 1
CheVrolet next year.

~Ryan

Newman's back on track,

at least· in qualifying. He won
his second consecutive pole at
DoVer. It was career pole No.

40.

~-'allot

- · Martin
Ttuex Jr. won
for the first
In 'the
Nextal Cup

.

time

Series . .:.
ea~

Edwards

, won the
Busch Series
race and fin.
lshed third in Cup.

· .; "'-'a

nat,- The Tony Ste...
·.' arl'-llurt Busch ootrllck tiff
,.,.. mutually destructive. They
• were 40th and 42nd, respec.

: tlvely.

&lt; lhin

miles.
• : Friday, June 8.
•Last ,..•• winner:
Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet.
184.464 mpll, Nov. 2,
• Race record: Dennis
Setzer, Chevrolet.
148.959 mph, June 11,
2004.
• LMt : Ron Home
day Jr., in a Chevrolet.
won the AAA Insurance
200 in Dover, Del.

u
Busch

•"'"':)

~ •.

.: ... -

·~. 1

·'. -.xmeu..

1,: uo c. ~ r.JJ
'

~

.•

' ' iL '.let'f Gordon

~~ ~ Oen~ Hamlin
.. Jeff Btl1on

' I. CM Edwards

l t.

'

·f

'

.

:: a. ·- Jlmmte Johnsim
. a. Matt Kenseth
Tony Stewart

· I. Clint Bowyer

2,059,

: 162:
· 190
· 217
· 355
- 475
- 486
- 534
· 541

.......

2,:170

i. . o,.e Blaney

· 472
·672

· I , Kevin Harvlck

:.t'•fl.-. Kyle Busch
1

· 588 .

•

· ~ :L ·~Ca~ Edwards
•I.,,J&lt;evin
'
HIH'Vlck

'

I

14. .'·.Matt Kenselh

.. ~ -Diwld Reutlmann
\ I: . R. . Smlth
· .7: '• ()nay Mears
' I. .1!11!= Ambrose•

. 1. ·lli!!1lrf HamlnDII Jr.

,._SII. Jell Burton

· 679

- ?59
• 792

· 808
·817

· 820
· 824

Clw'niWt lliiJCI( SrAIU

1. Mike Skinner

a.

I.

s

Stewart

Kurt BuiCII VL .

Tonr Stewart
Busch blamed Stewart for a
crash that appeared to be Busch's
fault. Attempting to block Stewart,
whom he had not cleared, Busch's
Dodge took the brunt of damage
from the crash between the two.
Busch then drove his smoldering car
alongside Stewart's. which was undergoirig minor repa ir, on pit road ,
sending several of Stewart's crewmen scattertng. No contact wa s
made between the two cars, and after a few futile gestures, and probably a few harsh words, Busch drove
away.
NASCAR This Weell'o Monte
Dutton Jllvos his taka: "The scene
on pit road seemed eerily similar to
that day in Michigan when Busch
taunted Jimmy Spencer after the
race and got a knuckle sandWich as
a result."

New boek provldn plde
for fans who·hH the road
Rand McNally has r~leased the
UIUmate NASCAR Road Trip Guide
($14.95), which blends 160 pages
of maps with 200 pages of In-depth
travel information fOf' NASCAR-sanctioned tracks in the U.S., Canada
and Mexico . The book is available
at Barnes &amp; Noble, Borders and
Wai-Mart. The guide highlights a
scenic "Don't Miss Drive ~ near
each tra ck and includes a wide variety of general information abOut
stock-car racing.
·
John Clari&lt;(NASCAR This -~

Blli France Jr., rt&amp;ht. shown here with Teren Earnhardt durtng the dedication of the
Dale Earnhardt statue at Daytona International Speedway In 2003. France, son of the
sport's founder, transformed NASCAR Into a billion-doll• con&amp;Jomerate.

the art of oUtrunning the cops is now a
pastime into which heads of state,
movie stars and dignitaries of every
conceivable.i!k come to bask in there·
fleeted glory.
Dale Earnhardt, a man a great deal
like.him, was one of Bill France Jr.'s
c!Qse friends. Now both are gone, and
a great void will continue to be left in
their wake.

Contact Monte Dutton at
hmduttonSO@aol.com

·TlleM TV guys -JUst
drlvi~~C me crazy
... I've noticed a lot lately on ·
NASCAR iaces that the broadcasters
on Fox, TNT or ESPN/ ABC, after they
get a report from pit road, they will
say "thanks" ... after a while. it gets
very, very annoying, and I wi sh they
would stop .. . You '"' like a broken
record that just won't quit.
wtlt Garcia
Manistee, Mich.
Broadcas ters annoying? Really?
It's not just connned to racing,
though, or even sports. Rem ember
the •Jeopardy" game shows when Art
Fleming was host? ' Thank you, Don
Pardo!"·

Ron Hornaday Jr.
TOdd Bodine

4. Ted Musanwe
I. Rick Crawfonl
1. Ttavls KvapH
f, Johnny Benson
&amp; Jack Spracue

1. Jwron .flke'
14. Matt Crafton

1,368
• 77
• 196
• 241
• 259
• 270
• 318
• 324
- 378
• 391

Truck Series driver ~uspended for substance al)use
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

DOVER, Del. - NASCAR
has suspended indefinitely
Craftsman Truck Series driver
Tyler Walker for violating its
substance-abuse policy.
Walker, 28, had been compel·
ing in a Toyota fielded by Bill
Davis Racing. He is most
known for his success in World
of Outlaw sprint cars.
"We agree with the vigilance
that NASCAR is taking in this
instance," said Davis in a statement. "We also have a zero-tol·
erance substance-abuse policy
at Bill Davis Racing and will
take the appropriate action
concerning Tyler's future sta·
tus with our company." ·

•
On deck ...,... Wha.t happens to
Dale Earnhardt Inc. once Dale
Earnhardt Jr. leaves? In many
quarters, it's a topic of great
pessimism. Martin Truex Jr.
said he looks forward to becoming the team's top driver.
"As we get to running better,

I think before the year is out
we could maybe win a few
races, make the Chase, do a lot
of things that are good for the
company," said Truex. "Dale Jr.
leaves, but it's not over. People
keep saying it's over ... but we
can go on , we can thrive and
we can win races."

•

What? Me worry? Kasey
Kahne, still struggling 13 races
into the season, continued to
accentuate the positive.
"The cool thing about it is
things can change so quickly,"
said Kahne, who won six races
last year. "You just keep work·
ing. (Friday) we qualified
fourth. I felt like we were back
to old times. Everything was
good: practice, qualifying, the
Busch car. Things can change
so fast, and you can feel confi.
dent and good whether you're
30th (32nd, actually) in poirits or
fifth. You can feel good and
your team can be really fast.
"You want to win for Ray

(Evernham, his par owner). I
want to win for Ray. I want to
win for the fans. I want to win
for myself and for my team.
It's a big deal. When you get
down, it's nice to make all those
people feel good again and.get
excited and pumped up."

•
What a relief - Casey
Mears' long-awaited victory at
Lowe's Motor Speedway put an
end to a lot of nagging ques·
tions.
"I'm very, very happy; obvi·
ously, that we won the race, but
p~obably m~re relieved than
happy," he said. "It's just been
so long, and it.was just nice to
be able sit back and take a deep
breath this week and relax a
little bit, just think about what
we )lave to do.
"It's just been a good week. I
think everybody's in a good
mood. I'm very happy with
what happened (last) weekend,
and I'm just ready to get going
again."
Q

•

would req uire about 140,000 bee n subject to multiple
signatures. The group has compl ain ts, Marshall said,
collected only I ,417 _
including one private club.
Mars hall said his depan - Marshall said si nce th e
ment has in vesti gated 10 enforcement began and he
compl ai nt s about alleged has communicated with bar
violati ons of th e ban since owners about the comit fi rst we nt into enforce- plaints, th e bar ow ners
ment last month. They have appear to be mak ing effons
"primaril y"' been about vio- to come into compliance
lati ons iil local bars, with the law.
·
Mashall said.
" It ap pears that the probSome local bars have lem now is with customers

, \

ol , .p.

:\o, :!0

who wi ll not comply with
the law," Marshall said.
Marshall said he has
adv ised bar owners that
customers who refu se to
co mply should be asked to
leave the premises. In addi tion to fines of $100, $500,
$1,000 and $2,500 against
ow ners of public places
who. do not compl y, the law
Please see Smoking. A2

The bottom line - Mark races, plus a partiaf schedule in
Martin, displaying his usual both the Busch Series and
common sense and .no-non- trucks. The same formula will
sense approach, gave an analy· be used next year.
sis of the COT that seemed, as
"I guess I'm going to do
usual, on the money.
roughly the same schedule
"The guys who are beating with the same group. That's our
everybody up real bad are lov- . plan," he said: "I'm just going
ing the car," he said. "The rest to learn from 2007 and look at
are not. The guys whose cars 2008, and we'll either do the
aren't working are hating it. · same nwnber of races or
It's hard to say.
·
maybe a little bit more like
"Without question, it's a step what I had planned originally,
backward in technology and which was more like 20 points."
performance, so that doesn't
seem to bother somebody when
he's in the fastest car and he
sits on the pole and he leads all
Playing the cards - Kurt
the laps. He dQesn't care. For Busch used a poker analogy to
the guy who's struggling in the describe a season in which he
middle of the pack or whatev· has been winless to date.
er, he's not loving it. It's all rel"We've had a lot of good pok·
ative, to some degree."
er hands, but we haven't been
able to capitalize on either
bluffing or getting the pots to
come our way,," he said. "We've
More of tbe· same - Mark had a few wins that slipped
Martin figures he'll do roughly away, and we had a few races
the same thing next that he's that we led quite a few laps and
doing this year.
·
we're top 10 in points."
Martin's 2007 schedule calls
for.him to compete in' 27 out of
Contact Monte Dutton at
the seasoo's 36 N\lxtel Cup
hmduttonSO@aol.com

•

Government
relaxes
passport
restriction
BY MICHEllE MIWR
MMILLERIIIMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

STAFF REPORT .
NEWSIIIMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

0BITUARIFS

MARIETTA Larry
Woodford of Caldwell has
-Page AS
been named deputy director
of
Dtstnct 10, Ohto
: ~Stephen Matthew Butts
of
: ~Linda Thomas Crabtree Department
Transportation,
ODOT
: ~ Robert Eugene Eblin
Director James G. Beaslj!y
announced.
: ~ Ruth E. Higginbotham
"I am honored to JOtn
.• :Charles A. Lyons
ODOT District I0 in thi s
: ~:.James Middleton
capacity,"
leadership
Woodford said. 'The employ· •Anna Louise Shato
ees of District I0 have dedicated their careers to improv.
- ing southeast Archeologists Lainie Meyer, left, and Mitzy Schaney work at
Ohio's high· the future site of the Racine Boat Ramp.
way sy~tem,
and I am priv·
• Annie's Mailbox.
ileged to have
the opponuSeePageA3
nity to assist
• W.Va. medical leader
in this effort."
addresses Mason
Woodford
Larry
said
hi s
BY BET" SERGENT
Columbus said about the
County physicians.
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM
Woodford most chal ·
dichotomy of his job.
: See Page AS
lenging goal
For over a month now, a
RACINE - Every day, team of archeologists from
is to continually look for
• Dark skies.
ways to ' improve highway archeologists deal with the EMH&amp;T and con sulting
SeePage AS
safety and take action to irony of destroying some- firm Burgess and Niple
• Local Briefs.
thing in order lo study and have been uncovering more
make it happen.
preserve it, which is what' s th an typi cal arrowhead s
''I
look
forward
to
doing
SeePage AS
happening
on the site of found along the Ohio
my pan to tum Ohio around
what
will
be the Racine River. The group is findin g
by fostering a strong panboat
ramp.
artifacts from not only the
nership between ODOT and
·
"We
destroy
and
record
at
Late . Woodl and period
the Ohio State Highway
WEATHER
the
·
same
time,"
Joel
(5001,000 AD) but the
Patrol in order to reduce
Brown, principal in vestiga- Late
Archaic
Period
Please see ODOT, A2 - tor with EMH&amp;T of (3,000-300 BC).

iNsmE

'·

\:~c. 'J ftj ,.,ts t ~·

s t.;)O

:!oo-

Woodford
takes helm
atODOT's
District 10

s

1:\ '
'

10.

E

, .....\

•I

J. REED

tion the state for an exception to the smoking ban
because they are losing·cusPOM EROY - All but two tomers. The Buckeye Liquor
of the complaints registered Permit Holders Association
in Meigs County about viola- has proposed a constitution·
tions of Ohio's smoking ban al amendment which would
have re lated to bars, accord- make exception5 for those
ing to Health Commissioner bars where less than I0 perLarry Marshall.
cent Of sales are food , and
Earlier this week, the for pri vate clubs.
Associated Press reported
Consideration of an
that bar owners plan to peti· amendment by the legislature
Bv BRIAN

v

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

roughshod over innumerable obsta·
cles erected in his and NASCAR's
path. It was the same path because,
as long as France ran it, he was
NASCAR.
. .
It was Bill France Jr., not his son,
who put NASCAR into the mainstream
of American sporting life, and time
will tell if the third generation has the
work ethic necessary to complete the
making of stock-car racing into the ultimate rags-to-riches story. A sport
that began with renegades practicing

\liddleport • (,allipoli' • .hiiH'

BREEOOMYOAILVSENTINEL.COM

t P!!J1 tlft 'f}J! ~91!1!.,: '

1933-2007

•

Local taverns target of smoking complaints

• Former Blue Devil
King drafted by Whtte
Sox. See Page B1

2006.

l'olllt' l'll~

\ .dll'.\ l'uhJi,hing ( " ·

SPORTS

Todd Bodine

• QNIIIYine NConl:

France drove a
hard bargain, right
to the very end
DOVER, Del. - William C. France
once said: "Basically, we are the gov·
emment in the little country of motOT·
sports," and the country he ran wasn't
democratic.
Technically, the second-geperation
patriarch of stock-car racing wasn't
really "Bill Jr.," though that's what
everyone called him. His father, the
founder of NASCAR, was William
Henry Getty France, and the son, one
of two , was William
Clifton France. The fa.
ther, "Big Bill," lifted
· the sport up by its boot·
straps, and whim his
faculties faded, the son,
"Bill Jr.," took the busi·
ness and made it an em·
pire.
In 2000, Bill Jr.,
health failing, turned
the empire over first to Mike Helton,
somewhat the family's consigliere,
and eventually to a third generation,
Brian Zachary France. For now, all
bets are off.
Like his father, Bill France Jr. was a
rugged individualist. He was less the
visionary and more the hard bargain·
er, but both men were tyrannical and
uncompromising.
The second generation of racing's
France Dynasty died on Monday at
age 74, and the strain of conquering
his own world probably wore on him
as much as Alexander the Great or
Julius Caesar in theirs.
What Bill France wanted, Bill
France got, and impending death
was probably no tougher pill for
him to.swallow than all the wear and
tear that came with running

•

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs countieS

400
• WINn: Texas Motor
Speedway, Justin (1.5
miles), 167 lapS/250.5

Ul

month.
day after Dave Blaney failed
tD make the field at Dover, owner Bill Davis fire&lt;l his crew chief.

~A

imt'

• R.ce: Sam's Town

I

· inav

will take over for now.

IJIIJ¥V •

R

· chief adviser, sister llelley Earn, hardt Elledge, now believe they
be ready to announce just
·Whete Earnttan:tt will be racing
neXt year tJt the end of the

ltevin Hamlin. Tommy Bal&lt;!win,

IJICU:f~W\11

•

.~----------~]~J~]~·f~}~j~Jt~~
?!i~J'~tl~·,f~JC
~
j?.tJ~~~jiPj
~--------~.

. , PI'OII'Im.
: ~ Dale Earnhardt Jr. and his

the team's competition director,

u·n a

111- If yo)l have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, r/o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538 , Gaston ia, NC 28053

...

Brown said pieces of the
Late Archaic Peri od are
deemed the most signi ficant
and are the primary focus of
the excavations.
The crew is finding projectile · points similar to
arrowheads that were most
likely used for the atlatl, a
tool used in huntin g. In
addition, eanh oven type
features have been found,
whi ch Brown says ·is equiv-

GALLIPOLIS - To placate angry travelers, the
U.S. Depanments of State
and Homeland Security
announced Friday their plan
to temporarily allow U.S.
citizens traveling to Canada,
Mexico, the Caribbean and
Bermuda to do so with government issued photo identification and Department of
State official proof of appli·
cation for a passport
through Sept. 30, 2007.
Since
The
Western
Hemi sphere
Travel
Initiative (WHTI ) passport
requirements for air travel
.took effect on Jan. 23, 2007, .
passport. centers have ·been
inundated with applications,
which has extended the wait
for pass ports by almost
three months.
Before
th e
policy
announcement, some travd·
ers were faced with either
changing travel plans or
canceling them altogether.
"I' m pleased the administration agreed that immediate relief was greatly needed," said U.S. Sen. George
Yoinovich. "While too many
people fa ced an undue burden during the process, it

Piease see Dig. A2

Please see Passport. Al.

Beth Sergent/ photo

uncovering artifacts found on

latina arch~logical dig
anaarths rare historical cluas

For a cleaner Ohio

·Gallia Red Cross observes
90th year of disaster relief
BY MICHELLE MILLER
MMI LLER@MYDAI LYTR IBUNE.COM

Detallo on PaJt A6

INDEX
4 SECI10NS -

Around Town
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics

24 PAGES

A.3
C4
D3-5

insert

~ditorials

A4

Movies
Obituaries

cs
As

~egional

A2

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

!© a007 Ohio Valley Pu!Jtlshin&amp; Co.

Michelle Mlller; plloto

Ann Adams of Gallipolis picks up trash along with riverbank during the
annual River Sweep event on Saturday, in which commun ity volunteers
gather to clean up the river l:lanks. In the background , memoers of the
Gallipolis Bass Busters walt to transport volunteers by boat to areas
along the river for clean-up.

GALLIPOLIS - In the spring of
191 7, Gallia County resident Miss
Francis Dunbar started the process of
establi shing a local chapter of the
·American Red Cross to aid the war
relief effort .
Ninety years later, th e chapter is
still operational, aiding victims of
fl oods, fire and other di saster situa·
ti ons .
The ori ginal petition , signed by several leaders in the communit y incl ud·
ing Charles E. Holzer, was dated May
I , 19 17.
On June 13, 1917. the Gallia County
Ameri can Red Ooss was officiall y
recogni zed and a dri ve for members
was held.
With help from Ohi o Valley Bank,
which donated space for office and
working quarters, and local telephone
and electric companies who donated

equipment and service, the chapter
was up and running.
By April 22, 1919, the chapter had
made and shipped over 3,704 knitted
garments, 5,057 hospital and refugee
garments and 2,830 pounds of. used
clothing to Di vision Headquarters fqr
refugee relief.
At the Chri stmas roll call in
December 19 18, the chapter had 3,500
members.
In 194 1, the Gallia County Red
Cross stepped up again to suppon the
·war effort, both home and abroad. ·
At least two of the chapter's
younger members traveled to England
and the South Pac ific to serve as staff
ass istants.
In the dining room uf the Masonic
Lodge, 305 workers made 562,265 .
surgical dressings to be sent abroad
and the chapter began taking classes in
first aid, water safety arid knitting.
Please see Relief, A2

•

· - - - ---..........1·- ·-- --

v .

'•

..

\

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