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Page BS • The D.iily Sentinel -

www .mydailysentinel.com

'

China plans highway
from foot of Mount Everest
•
to base camp to help with Olympic torch relay

The Scoreboard

•

BEIJING (AP) - China
plans to build a highway on
the side of Mount Everest to
ease the Olympic torch's
journey to the peak of the
world's tallest mountain
before the 2008 Beijing
Games, state media reponed
Tuesday.
Construction of the road.
budgeted at $19.7 mi II ion
would turn a 67-mile rough
path from the foot of the
mountain to a base camp at
17,060 feet "into a blacktop
highway fenced by undulating guardrails," the Xinhua
News Agency said.
Xinhua said conmuction.
which would start next
week, would take about four
months. The new hi ghway
would become a major rouie
for tourists and moun~
taineers, it said.
An official from · tl
Secretariat of the Ti be n
government. who dec! ined
to give his name. confirmed
the project was planned, but
refused to give any details.
Tibet and Nepal are the most
commonly used routes up
the mountain.
In April. organizers for the
Beijing Summer Olympics
announced ambitious plans
for the longest torch relay in
Olympic history an
85,000-mile, 130-day route
that would cross five continents and reach the 29,035foot summit of Everest.
Taking the Olympic torch
to the top of the mountain,
seen by some as a way for
Beijing to underscore its
claims to Tibet, is expected

to be one of the relay's high- ping oxygen levels.
lights.
Although he acknow iChina says it has ruled edged that the bumpy. dusty
Tibet for centuries, although ride up to base camp on the
many Tibetans say their north face of the mountain
homeland was essentially an helps to make "you feel like
independent state for most you're in the middle_ of
of that time. Chinese com- nowhere." he was reluctant
munist troops occupied to criticize the plan.
Tibet in 1951. and Beijing
''I can't make a decision to
continues to rule the region say it's good for me to be
with a heavy hand.
alone. That's hypocritical.''
The day before the route Viesturs said. "I know it
of the torch relay was would be nice to have less
announced by th~ Beijing people there. but that's sclforganiierS of the Olympics, ish."
five Americans unfurled
Viesturs
added
that
banners at a base camp call- climbers
who · prefer
ing for an independent Tibet. trekking to base camp
The five, from the already choose to approach
Students for a Free Tibet the mountain from the
group, were briefly held and Nepalese side, where there
then expelled from China.
is no road.
Officials fron:1 the Beijing
Mark Bain. the director of
organizing committee did Cornell University's Center
not immediately return .for the Environment. said
phone calls asking for com- the environmental impact of
ment.
new roads in relatively prisEd Viesturs. one of the tine areas is more severe
most
accomplished than in places where similar
American climbers, said he infrastructure already exists.
thought a paved road, as
Roads, in general. are a
opposed to the current dirt minor source of pollutanls.
one, might make access to he said, like tire dust. oil and
base camp easier for tour ·the pavement itself.
groups, but he did nut think
The most significant conit would affect climbers sig- cerns in such projects. however, is that they create "the
nificantly.
"It's not going to matter to opportunity for further
a climber whether it's paved development," Bain said,
or not," he said. "Big deaL" like the need for a parking
Viesturs, who has summit- lot at the end of the road and
ted Eve(est six times, noted. then perhaps a restaurant.
that no matter how well
Phil Powers. executive
maintained the road is, director of the American
climbers must ascend slowly Alpine Club, said he also
to give them time to accli- was concerned the road
matize to the steadily drop- would be going into an "arid

,

'
'-.
Wedn~sday, June 20, 2007'

Standin~

East Division

w

American League

and fragile environment."
"Any time the margins of .
the wildernesses of the
world get encroached upon.
we get concerned," Powers
said.
Matt Schonwald. the
North America program
director
for
MountainMadness. co m,
said Everest, at least on the
Tibetan side. is no longer the
pristine environment many
1magme.
"The sancti ty left that
mountain a long time ago,"
he said. "The north side is
already being exploited by
poorly equipped people.
That's the tragedy - not the
road."
!r. local climbing ofticial
praised the plan.
. " It is a good thing for the
local development and the
local ·~ople. because more
mountain
touri sts and
climbers will be attracted to
the region." ·said Zhang
Mingxing, general-secretary
of
the
Tibetan
Mountaineering
Association.
"The road now is a very
shabby. People . have to
spend one day to get the
base from the foot of the
mountain .
Mountain
climbers will be able to save
their energy for climbing;"
Zhang said.

Pet
Boston
.643
New YOrk
35 33 .515
Toronto
33 36 .478
Tampa Bay
31 37 .456
Baltimore
29 40 .420
Central Division
L
Pet
Cleveland
41 29 .586
Detroit
41 29 .586
Minnesota
35 34 .507
Chicago
29 38 .433
Kansas City.
29 43 .403
West Division
Pet
L
los Angeles
45 26 .634
Oakland
38 '32 .543
Seattle
35 31 .530
Texas
26 44 .371

w

w

GB
9

11 · ~
13
15 1 1

GB
5 ',

10 .)
13

GB
6 ·,
7 •..
18 ·,

Tuesday's G'ames
Detroit 15. Washington 1
Philadelphia 9, Cleveland 6
L.A. Dodgers 10, Toronto 1
Minnesota 9. N.Y. Mets 0
BOston 4 , Atlanta 0
St. louis S. Kansas City 1

Florida 7. Chicago Wh ite Sox 5'
Chicago Cubs 5. TaKas 4
Colorado 3, N.Y. Yankees 1
Cincinnati 5. Oakland 2
Tampa Bay at Arizolla . tate
Baltimore at San Diego, lat_
e
Pittsburgh at Seattle. late
Houston at LA _Angels , late
Wednesday's Games
Florida (Mitre 2-3) at Chicago White Sox
(Garland 4·4) . 2:05p.m .
Cincinnati (Belisle 5-5) at Oakland

L
31
34
34
38
41

Pet

.551
38
.528
38
.521
37
Phila6elphia
.472
Florida
34
.423
30
Washington
Central Division--.
w t Pet
40 31 .563
M~waukee
Chicago
32 37 .464
31 37 .456
St. lOUIS
Pittsburgh
30 39 .435
Houston
30 40 .429
Cincinnati
28 44 .389
NewYOO

Ea~Divlalon

L
45 25

Drawing for
patriotic afghan, A3

National League

Atlanta

West Division
Pet
L
40 28 .588·
San Diego
Los Angeles
40 30 .571
Arizona
40 31 .563
Colorado
36 34 .514
San Francisco 30 4() .429

w

GB
1 .'
2
5 ·,
9

I

•

GB
7
7 ·,
9
9 ·,
12'7

GB

a1

-.

.

1
1 •'
5
11

1ne

MiddlepQrt • PQmeroy, Ohio

Tuesday's Games
Detroit 15, Washington 1

:; o('l '\IS•\ol.:;r. . '\• • '.!.:!h

Phtladelphia 9. Cleveland 6 .
LA. Dodgers 10. Toronto 1
Minnesota 9, N.Y. Mets 0
Boston 4, Atlanta 0
t-,4ilwaukee 6, San Francisco 2
St. Louis 5, Kansas City 1
Florida 7. Chicago White Sox 5
,Chicago Cubs 5. Te)(8S 4
Colorado 3, N.Y. Yankees 1
Cincinnati S, Oakland 2
Tampa Bay at Arizona , late
, Baltimore at San Dii!(JO, late
I Pittsburgh at Seattle, lale
Houston at L.A. Angels. late

SPORTS
•

"'"' m)d.til) " '"il""t'" "'

I Ill R!--ll\\ '. . Jl ''\I ·.:.! J.:!OO-

Revitalization decision expected by month's end

• Oakland beats Reds.
SeePage 81

Wednelday's Games
San· ·Francisco (lito 6-7) at Milwauk99
(FV!oar_
gdas(Ms-_11), 22:035) apl.mC.htea
. go White Sox
n a 1re -

(Ganand 4-4), 2:05p.m.

.(Haren 8-2). 3:35p.m.
Cincinnati (Belisle 5·5) at Oakland
Tampa Bay (Shields 6-1) at Arizona (Haren 8-2) . 3:35p.m.
(Owings 4-1). 3:40p.m
Tampa Bay (Shields 6·1) at Arizona
Philadelphia (Lieber 3·5) at Cle¥eland (Owings 4-1). 3:40p.m.
(Sabathia 9-2) . 7:05p.m.
Philadelphia (Lieber .3-5) a:t Cle¥eland
Detroit (Sonderman 7..()) at Washington (Sabalhia 9-2), 7:05p.m.
Detroit (Sonderman 7-Q) at Wash ington
(Bacsik 1·4). 7:05p.m.
L.A . Dodgers (Kuo 1-1) at Toronto (Bacsik 1-4), 7:05p.m .
(Halladay 7-2). 7:07 p.m.
L.A . Dodgers (Kuo t -1) at Toronto
Minnesota (Baker 1-2) at N.Y. Mets (Halladay 7-2), 7:07p.m.
(O.Perez 7-5), 7:10p.m..
Minnesota (Baker 1-2) at N.Y. Mets
Boston (Tavarez 4-4) at Atlanta (Car1yle · (O.Perez 7-5), 7:10p.m.
1-1). 7:35p.m .
,
·
Boston (Ta¥arez 4-4) at Atlanta (Carlyle
Kansas City (Mech'e 4-6) at St. Louis 1·1), 7:35p .m.
.
(Weltemeyer 2-1) 8:10pm
Kansas C1ty (Meche 4-6) at St. lou~
·
c~bs (MarquiS
· · · 5-3)
· at l exas (Wellemeyer
2-1). 6:10p.m .
Ch1cago
Chicago Cubs (Marquis 5-3) at Taxa§
(Loe 2-6). 8.35 p.m,
(Loe 2·6). 8:35 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Pethtte 4-4) at Colorado ·N.Y. Yankees (Penitte 4-4) at Colorado
(Fra.nCIS 6-5). 9:0~ p.m.
.
(Francis 6·5}, 9:05 p.m.
·
·
Balt1mor~ (Guthne 3-1) at San D1ego Baltimore {Gulhrie 3-1) at San Diego
(Germano 5-Q), 10:05 p.m.
(Germano 5-Q), 10:05 p.m.
· Pittsburgh {Maholm 3-9) at Seattle Pittsburgh (Maholm 3-9) at Seattle
(Weaver 0-6). 10:05 p.m.
(Weaver D-6), 10:05 p.m.
-.
Houston (Rodriguez 4-6) at LA Angels Houston (Rodriguez 4·6) at L.A. Angels
(E .Santana 5-7). 10:05 p.m.
(E .Santana 5-7). 10:05 p.m.

Associated Press writer
Sarah DiLorenzo tn New
York contributed to · this
report. ·

Icenhower joins Vegas
Legends concert, B3

J.

Director for Buckeye Hill s.
has worked with the
Middleport Deyelopment
MIDDLEPORT
Group to file the second preCommunities planning to application through the
seek downtown revitaliza- Middleport
Community
tion funding through the Association. Zoller said the
Ohio
Department
of state development office
Development should be noti- plans to notify applicants by
fied of eligibility next week. June 29 as to whether they
The Village of Middleport will be invited to file a full
filed a second pre-applica- application in October.
tion for funding last month,
The ~nding pre-applicathrough Buckeye Hills- tion is the village's second.
Hocking Valley Regional A pre-application filed with
Development
District the development departMelissa Zoller, Devc;lopment ment a year ago was denied
BY BRIAN

REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENT1NEL.COM

because the Meigs County
Community Improve ment
Corporation was the applicant and not enough business owners in the downtown shopping district were
CIC members.
If this pre-application is
approved, the village will be
invited to file a full application for $300,000 in Tier II
downtown
revitalization
funds through the Ohio
Department of Development.
That application would be
due in October.
A gram award through the

downtown revitalization
program would be used to
develop a co mprehensive
streetscape, -which might
include benches, lighting
and other decorative elements, and to match funds
for · building owners in
Middleport who wish to
complete cosmetic facade
improvements and code
upgrades to their buildings.
Farmers
Bank
and
Savings Co. has committed
funding through low-interest loan~ to those business
owners who wish to make

building
improvements.
Downtown Revitalization
Coordinator
Michael
Gerlach is now meeting
with business people to
detennine a leve l.of interest ·
in participation .
Paul Reed. president of
the Development Group .
said only two building and
business owners have said
they wi II not participate at
any leve l. All others have
expressed illlerest in completing some degree of
building
improvements
through the program.

Cooling
assistance, air
conditioners
.available
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENT1NEL.COM

OBITUARIES

-

Page AS
• Connie B. Black, 71

INSIDE

11046
ZERO-TURN LAWN TRACTOR

GT 2542
HEAVV-'DUTV GARDEN TRACTOR

THE TANK~ M60 HEAVY-DUTY
PROFESSIONAL ZERO- TURN RIDER

• Exclusive Synchro- technology provides
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• Heavy-dul"y shaft drive
• 42" twin-blade mowing deck

• 60" Co"'mand · Cut System·· triple-blade
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·
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·

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• Foldoble, fully adjustable high-back
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• 3- ant! 5-year limited warranty***

• 3-year limited commercial warranty•••

S89tMONTH*

S228tMONTH*

• Holzer Hospice
to host teen
volunteer orientation.
See Page A3
• Meigs honor
rolls announced.
See Page AS
• aves announces
scholarship winner.
See Page AS

--

WEATHER

~ ~~N£t1;~ PRIU AJDVISft1~
S94tMONTH*

ZERO
ZERO
INTEREST
DOWN PAYMI!NT

POR h

/

BIKER SUNDAYS

UCNTHS•

'Come to Jesus'
on tlvo wheels

Details on Pap A8

INDEX
2 SECfiONS -

rTWHENVOU

'

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

16 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars

A3

Classifieds ·
Comics

B4-6
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Editorials

·A4

Obituaries

As

Places to go

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Sports
Weather

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© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
"&lt;1&gt; FIXED MCNTHLY PMf..IB-~T$ FOR :l6 MCNrHS &amp;NO INTEReST FOR 36 MONTHS.
k'onl:h11 P..ayroonts for 36 MM i hG &amp; No ln.terl!!SI for 36 Month'S. V•bd or\ purc hiL$es -cA qualify ng C~ Cadet prod.x.b and the Cub Cadet Cornrn.•··clal TANK/ENFORCER mad!! by tJ/JO/ID M
C·ed:t Card oonsumer eK;r;:ount. On promo purch«ne, fiMAd montt&gt;iy poaymenl~ equal •o l!J6th o f If\ I al proml purcha:5e- bffiOunt ere r~~d un1 11 E&lt;xpwa trOI'\ or termrna.11on o f prnmof'l()fl, but
M ftna~e c hlt' Sf!!l w ill be asU!ssad il. (1) ~omo purchase paid .n full in 36 ll'onths.. {2) any ,.,.N~:-mum rl"ttO'\1hi'Jo' pcl)'f"f'ents on account paid v.then due . ar.d C3) account balbn.Ce dou oot •:.ceed credil
lrrT&gt;~ t. Olhe· .,.. r:Joe, p: ol"l'Q I"T)!Jy be Wrntna11!Q, On .all promot1100&lt;1l otters. :1-1andiard termt. appt-y to non· promo purc:hat'es. opll.oo al cN!rs.e~ and etcN
.st1ng, .ec:coUI'l t:s. A s of 3/23/(J'l'. varrlble APR'$ : 18991J,
&amp; on all accoun1s in !Mf,.JII. 2J.W*r. Min1mum. F~Mnc-e Charge $'1. Sub,e&lt;:t eo awovat b y GE MtlMy Bewr*.
"""" PT'fXtuq Prlt@ - Mco1hly pa)·ments do not r!!:flecf aw&amp;IC~bh! t8JC.el!- or doM'I p.IJ)'IT'IE!n.1s .-..auat r@~8t l ptices &amp;rP ~e-1" by deale• ind may '118!1'; .
Ta,.;e.s. fre1ght. M1up ~nd N!ndltns &lt;:: h.-ge,: fmiY be i1Kkt!1iona1 ~m" may very ._.,dets. svl&gt;,tect to hfr&gt;cled avatLib•l ty
........ ~yo~ loc:M I !ridependen1 Reta~r for ~lted w.a n a1\ty det;eils. &lt;:erf.am lltn ita,ion s_ and re-slr-K:tio t~ti &amp;pply.
SpMl t!t .U ions are s ubJOCI 10 cMngt: w~thout notice. im~S; ma·,- no( t e-neoct deateot" tnvenrOt'y i!JI'd/or um1 specrh&lt;a! ions.
(1) F u«!d
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t as rated by"engirle manufacturer

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t t r~M $200 Pre.patd Vrw Card f. an be- used 8!\lllrywtll!rll!!! Visa debit caHh tiff! ac ce pled . Your card s tS.S-..~ed by C 1t.ank N ..O., parsuartl to a'11Cilfi-Sil' f rom V1s..rt U .S A . trv~ E~Ctif\4 ,s J Ct1t Catr~pany . S200 Prepa.:d
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------

Ilz'/111
,,., '"t-rJ.r•J
... ~'7• •.·

POMEROY
With
$193,000 in funding for air
conditioners and $36.000 in
funds to pay electric bills, the
Galli a Meigs . Community
Action Agency (GMCAA) is
ready to assist eligible applicants with the Emergency
Summer Cooling Program
which ends on Aug. 31 or
until funds are depleted.
In its third week of op~{a­
tion, the program has · distributed 88 air conditioners
and around $7 ,000 on electric bill s to tho se eligible for
the assistance.
,..
"It's been very busy anct
.,
the demand is great,"
·"
Sandra Edwards, emerge.ncy services director for
Summer officially begins today. Cotton Hamilton ,
GMCAA said.
'·;:-··· ..
6, of Racine, is enjoying his summer vacatio n.
Edwards added the proso far, playing T-ball for the Racine Li'l
gram's funding is slightly
Lowriders, spending time at London Pool, and
less than last year though
ptaying
in the park . He was enjoying the play-_ .
she anticipates it will be
grouna at Dave Diles Park in Middleport yesteradequate to meet tne public's need. The air condiday. Also a part of summer is hanging out by the
tioners 'are 6,000 BTU's and
pool, like these swimmers hanging out in the
are energy efficient with a
shallow
waters of the kiddie pool in Syracuse.
..
'30-day warranty. For those
Children's swimming lessons are being offered
who received air conditionat the London Pool from Ju ly 9-20. The cost for
ers in the past who qualify
the two week sess ion is $35, payable the first
to receive another, it must
day of the class. To register for the·class cal l
be three full years before a
992-5418 or visit th e London Pool.
new air conditioner can be
Brian J. Reed. Beth Sergentjphotos
awarded. For example, if
you received an air conditioner this June, it would be
June ·2011 before you would
be eligible to receive a new
air conditioner.
lnco nie eligible persons
musr make an appointment
with GMCAA by calling
between 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
each Friday at 992-6629 for
Meigs County and 367-7341
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
for Gallia County. Annual
income eligibility for one
REEDSVILL E - Between now and
person in the household is
October. there are at k&lt;tSt three Bike Sunday
$17,867, two persons
events planned throughout Meigs Count y.
$23,957, three persons.
retlecring a nmr-tradiiional approach to the
$30,047 , four persons,
tradition ·of Chri&gt;ti an it y.
$36,137, . five persons,
Biker Sundays are planned on July 21 at
$42,227 and six persons,
The Bethel Wo'rship Center. Oct. 7 at the
$48,317. For households
with. more than six members,
Syracuse Natarene Church and this Sunday,
· the Eighth Annual Biker Sunday at
add $6,090 per member.
There are two types· of
. Reedsville·,, Fellow ship Church of the
house holds that may be
Naz&lt;\rene wi ll take place complete with speassisted: An income eligible
cial sing ing and speaker 13ryan Lawrence .
household with a member
Sunday school starts at 9:30 a.m. \vith the
Bath Sergent;photo
who has a current qualify- Bi.ker Sunday events are becoming more popular in the area like this one worship service beuinnin~ at 10:45 a.m.
ing medical condition I
A potluck clinne~· will&lt;immediatdy fol breathing disorder verified from lpst year's Biker Sunday at the 'Syracuse Nazarene Church. This low. The church i&gt; providing the main
Sunday, the Fl)llowsh.ip Church of the Nazarene in Reedsville will hold it's ·
Please see Cooling, AS
own Biker Sunday followed by the Sixth Annual Josh Adams Memorial Ride.
Please see Sundays. AS

�•

The Daily Sentinel

ACROSS THE NATION

PageA2
Thursday, June 21, 2007

Community Calendar

BUSh
BY DEB RIECHMANN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

· WASHINGTON
Vetoing a stem cell bill for
the second time, President
. Bush on Wednesday sought
to placate those who di sagree. with him by signing
an executive order urging
scientists toward what he
termed "ethically responsible" research in the field .
Bush announced no new
federal dollars for stem cell
research, which supporters
say holds the promise of
disease cures, and his order
would not allow re searchers
to do anything they couldn' t do under existing
restrictions.
Announcing his veto to a
roomful of supporters, Bush
said, "If this legislation
became law, it would compel American taxpayers for
the first time in our history
to support the deliberate
destruction of human
embryos. I made it clear to
Congress and to the
American people that I will
not allow our nation to cross
this moral line."
He vetoed similar embryonic stem cell legislation
last July.
His executive order
encourages scientists to
work with the government
to add other kinds of stem
cell research to the list of
projects eligible for federal
funding ~ so long as it
does not create, harm or
destroy human embryos.
Democrats
dismissed
Bush's veto as a moral.
affront, and his executive
order as a meaningless gesture meant to trick people
into thinking he had
advanced stem cell research.
They said they would hold
votes to try to override the
· veto - or at least si ve the
issue more air time.
"We also intend to contin·
ue bringing this up until we
have a pro-stem cell presi·
dent . and a pro-stem cell
Congress," satd one .of the
House's chief sponsors, Rep.
Diana DeGette, D-Colo.
Senate Democrats were
expected to begin the process
by trying to add embryonic
stem cell legislation this
week to a must-pass appropriations bill for the Labor
and Health and Human
Services departments.
The provision, proposed
by Sen. Tom Harkin, dlowa, would allow taxpayer

expanded order directs. the Health and .:
encouraged
Services ·
embryonic
stem
cell Human
research . His veto was over- Department to promote
turned.
'
research into cells that Most ·of the Democratic I ike human embryonic stem
candidates have urged Bush cells - also hold the potento expand the research.
tial of regenerating into dif- :
The president is "defer- ferent types of cells that ·
ring the·hopes of millions of might be used to battle di sAmericans who do not have ease and make them eligible
the time to keep waiting for for federal funding.
the cure that may save or
The order also renames
lives,"
said . the NIH's Embryonic Stem
extend
Democratic
presidential Cell
Registry
·the
hopeful Sen. Barack Obama Pluripotent Stem Cell ·
of Illinois.
Registry so that it reflects
Sen. Hillary Clinton, D- what the stem cells can do,
N. Y., said if she is elected in stead of their origin.
president, she will lift restric_. Pluripotent stem cells are
lions on stem cell research.
ones that can give ri se to
"This is just one example any kind of cell in the body
of how the president puts e~cept those required to ·
ideology before science, develop a fetus.
politics before the needs of
"Destroying human life in
our families ," she said.
the hopes of saving human
Scientists were first able life is not ethical, and it is not .
to conduct research with the only option before us," ·
embryonic stem cells in said Bush, who appeared on
1998, according to· the stage
with
Kaitlyne
National
Institutes of McNamara of Middletown,
Health. There were no fed- Conn.; who was born with
eral funds available for the spina bifida, and is benefiting
work until Bush announced from what he caller;! "ethical
on Aug. 9, 200 I, that his stem cell research."
administration would spend
Sean Tipton, president of
tax money for research on the Coalition . for . the .
· tines of cells that already Advancement of Medical ·
were in ~xistence .
..
Research, expressed anger
Currently, states and pri- and
.disgust at the veto and .
vate organizations are penmitBush's
order.
ted to fund embryonic stem
cell research, but federal support is limited to cells that
existed as of Aug. 9, 2001.
The latest bill was aimed at
lifting that restriction.
Bush urged support of
legislation · sponsored by
Sen. Norm Coleman, RMinn., which passed the
Senate but has not yet been
• PWIW7!M!Inlool._.
taken up by the House.
•~- kMp ""'lloMf""'
Coleman says his measure
•10""*11ddrwenwlthWIIImlll
supports federal funding for
• CIIIIDM ltlrtPttt • MWI, ~&amp; mort1
c •• .
embryonic
stem
cell
(Surf 1/fJ 10 6)(, _ . ,
_)
research methods that do
not harm embryos, "It pro- ·
lien Up Onllnol www.LOIIINtl.vides for ethically responsi·
blc stem cell research soon·
er rather than later,"
Colelnan suid.
Bush said his executive

AP photo

President Bush speaks about embryonic stem cell research. Wednesday, In the East Room
at the White House. At left Is Kaltlyne McNamara of Middletown, Conn. who was born with
spina blflda, and her father Mike McNamara, left.
·
dollars to be spent on
research on human embry·
onic stem cell lines derived
before June IS. 2007 moving the dute of Bush's
bun on public funding for
such research up by nearly
six years. Research on stem
cell lines derived in the
interim would be eligible
for federal funding. The
new provision also would
add ethical standards to be
used for selecting embryos
to be studied, according to a
draft of the provision.
By the 2008 elections,
Democrats
predicted ,
Bush 's veto of new public
funding for embryonic stem
cell .research would be a top
priority of voters in the con-

as the shuttle tlew 214 miles
above the state.
"Wc're glad to hear the
CAPE CANAVERAL, weather looks good from
. Fla. -Atlantis' heat shield there," Mission Control
is safe to return to Earth, responded. ''We'll continue
mission managers decided to watch ·it over the next 24
Wednesday,
day befo~e hours."
the space shuttle was
Atlantis has seven opp6rtuplanned to land in Florida. nities to land over four days.
A forecast for thunderMi ssion Control said
storms appeared to be the landing opportunities at
main obstacle for its return. Kennedy, th~ primary landThe shuttle's first landing ing site , look slightly better
opportunity at I :55 p.m. on Friday and Saturday. A
EDT on Thursday had thun - backup landing site in
derstorms predicted to be California would be considwithin 34 miles of the land- ered on Friday. That backup
ing strip at Kennedy Space site plus another in New
Center and clouds within Mexico would be activated
8,000 feet. both violations Saturday if necessary.
. . Atlantis has enough
of night rules.
Before signing off on the power for its systems to
landing, mission managers orbit until Sunday, but man·held an unusual , last-minute agers want the shuttle to
meeting to clear up three land by Saturday. The flight
remaining technical issues. would .. onl y be extended to
Material known as gap filler Sunday if there were techniappeared to be sticking out cal problems that needed to
of a wing, a thermal blanket be fixed.
had peeled back during the
During the crew's I ~-day
June 8 launch ami debris mission to the internatwnal
was found floating after space station, the astronauts
Atlantis undocked from the installed a new truss seginternational space station mem, unfurled a new pair of
· on Tuesday.
·
power- generating
solar
Engineers had wanted to arrays and activated a rotatmake sure the gap filler ingjoint that allows the new
could withstand the heat and solar arrays to track the sun.
aerodynamics of re-entry . The mission was extendand recheck data on the ther- ed by two days to gi ve them
mal blanket. Mission man- time to repair the thermal
agers have said the debris blanket on the shuttle that
may have been ice.
· peeled back during lift off.
"We were just trying to be Astronauts Danny Olivas
completely thorough," said stapled down the blanket
mission management team with a medica,! stapler durchairman John Shannon. ing a spacewalk. Sturckow
"The engineering and safety said he was confident the
teams believe there is no repair job would hold' up.
risk at all during re-entry."
"Everything looks great,"
Atlantis commander Rick he said Wednesday in an
Sturckow told Mission interview with reporters on
Control in Houston that the the ground.
.
weather look~d fine to him
During their stay, Russian
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

a

Thursday, June 21
POMEROY Meigs
County Commissioners will
meet at 9 a.m. Thursday
instead of I p.m.
Monday, June 25
POMEROY
-Meigs
County · Veterans Service
Commission, 9 a.m., 117
Mem~rial Dr., Pomeroy.

Reunions
Saturday, June 23
DARWIN - Milhoan
family reunion, II a.m. to 3
p.m., Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly. Meat provided.
Bring salad, vegetable or
dessert and drink. 992-3921
or 446-3296. All descendants of Marion Aldo and
Lucy
Belle
Hoselton
Milhoan invited.
Sunclay, June 24
REEDSVILLE- Biram-

gressionul and presidential
elections.
Public opinion polls show
strong support for the
research.
Republican presidential
hopefuls are split on the
scope of federal involve·
ment in embryonic stem cell
research . Sen. John McCain
of Arizona and former New
York Mayor Rudy Giuliani
have broken with Bush and the GOP's social con- ·
servatives- in backing the
expansion of federal funding for such research. At the
Republican debate on May
3, Giuliani s~id he supported such an expansion with
limits, "as long as we're not
creating life in order' to

destroy it, as long as we're
nor having hum tm cloning."
Rivuls Mitt Romney und
Sen. Sum Brownbuck of
Kunsus oppose the expansion. As governor ot'
Massachusetts, Romney
tried to stop leghlution that

Hayman reunion will be
held at Forked Run . State
Park, I p.m. basket dinner
in shelter #2.
HENDERSON, W.Va. Reunion of descendants of
Sam
and
Melvina
Birchfield, with basket dinner at noon, Henderson,
W.Va.
Community
Building.

Vacation Bible School,
Bradford Church of Christ,
9 a.m. - II :30 a.m. through
June 28 . Classes for
preschool through teens.
POMEROY - Vacation
Bible School, sponsored by
Enterprise U.M.C. and
Pomeroy Church of Christ
will be held from 9-11 a.m.
through June 29. The location has been changed to
Pomeroy Church of Christ,
West Main Street.
MIDDLEPORT
Sunday, June 24
REEDSVILLE - · Biker Vacation Bible School,
Sunday and 6th Annual Middleport Church of
Josh Adams Memorial Run Christ, 9 a.m. to noon,
at Fellowship Church of through June 29.
the Nazarene. Sunday
school at 9:30 · a.m., followed by I 0:45 a.m . worship service. Dinner before
run. Special singing by Just
for Now. Speaker Bryan
Saturday, June 23
Lawrence. Information at
HARRISONVILLE
667-3197.
Harrisonville
Masonic
Monday, June 25
Lodge #411 will hold a
MIDDLEPORT
friendship night at 7 p.m.,

Church events

Clubs and
organizations

for anyone interested in
learning about Masonry and
how·to become a member.
Saturday, June 23
RACINE - Meigs CAN
meets, 4-6 p.m., Racine
Library. Viewing of documentary, "Siudged," highlighting issues with sludge
impoundment like that proposed by Galling Coal. 9492175 for infonmation.
Tuesday, June 26
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Coin Club, 7 p.m., Pomeroy
Library.
RACINE - Racine Area
Community Organization.
6:30 p.m., Star Mill Park.
Potluck.

Other events ·
Monday, June 25
TUPPERS PLAINS Meigs County TB staff at
Tuppers Plains firehouse, 56 p.m. Tests read 5-6 p.m.
Wednesday.

Drawing
for
patriotic
afghan
,..------

Betty Johnson of
Racine (left)
recently made a
patriotic afghan
ar:td donated it to
the Retired
Senior and
Volunteer
Program (RSVP)
to raise funds for
the RSVP's community activities.
Tickets for a
chance at the .
afghan are $1
each or six for $5
at the Meigs
County Senior
Center. The ·draw·
ing wi ll be held at
11:15 a.m., July
3 at the center.
Pictured with
Johnson, who is
also an RSVP vol- .
unteer, is Debbie
Jones, activities
director at the
senior center.

.""'&lt;I""""

Submitted photo

Budget director to testify · Holzer Hospice to host
before legislative committee teen volunteer orientation

computers, which control
orientation and oxygen production, crashed but they
were revived several days
later after cosmonauts
Fyodor Yurchikhin and
Oleg Kotov used a cable to
bypass a circuit board.
While docRed to the station,
astronauts con served the
shuttle's power in case they
needed to spend an extra
day at the outpost.
"When we left, they had
the computers up and running," said Sunita "Suni"
Williams, who was returning
on Atlanti s after spending
more than six months at the
space station. "I think there
are some tixes they are going
to need to do, but the station
is fine right now. It's back to
its nonmal condition."
Like any polite houseguests. Atlantis' astronauts
did their best to clean up
· after themselves and fol - .
lowed the instructions of
their hosts in Mission
Control before landing.
"The dirty towels can be
put in a laundry bag and
stowed in the airl oc k,"
Mission Control wrote in
in structions sent to the c~ew .
. While Sturckow got .a
haircut from Yurchikhin
before leaving the space station, Williams said a haircut
was the one of the many
things she was looking forward to back on the ground.
Williams, whose nest of
raven tresses defied gravity
at the space station, set the
record for longest single
. spaceflight by a woman . ·
. ''I'm looking forward to
going to the beach and
hopefully taking a walk
with my husband and my
dog on the beach," she said .
"I can't wait for a good
piece of pizza."

Special Spot COLOR pages
kicking off the summer season.
•

First Page- Week of June 24th
for four weeks thru week of July 15th
·•FREE house spot color in your ad!
•Sign up for 4WEEKS and get
aFifth Week FREE

COLUMBUS (AP) on
The
Legislature
Wednesday scheduled hearings for a joint HouseSenate committee seeking
to . resolve differences
between the two chambers'
proposals for the $52.3 billion budget for the two
years beginning July I.
The two chambers .aren 't
that far apart and could have
a final biU ready. by early
next. week.. satd . Sen.
Prestdent Btll Harns, an
Ashland Republican. .
The budget mu.st be Signed
~y Gov. Ted Stockland. and
m place by July I. He~ngs,
set b~ House FI~ance
Commmee
Chatrman
Matthew Dolan, a suburban
Cleveland Republican, are
scheduled for Thursday,
Friday, Sunday and through ·
next week.
A problem emerged June
12 when· the nonpartisan
Legislative
Service
Commission said the budget could be $200 million to
$300 milli'on · out of balance . Strickland:s budget
(lirector, Pari Sabety, . was
expected to give the administration's latest revenue
estimates when she testifies
before the joint COJilmittee
on
.
Thursday.
Representatives of LSC are
also expected to be called,

Dolan's office said. .
.
Both chambers have
selected committee mem- .
bers. House Speaker Jon
Husted
chose
Dolan,
Republican Rep. Larry
FlowersofCanaiWinchester
and Rep. Michael Skindell
of Lakewood, the House ·
Finance Commiltee's rank.lng Democrat.
Harris
selected · his
finance chairman, Sen. John
Carey of Wellston, Sen.
Tom Niehaus a New
Richmond Rep~blican and
Sen. Dale ·Miller · of
Cleveland , the · Senate
Finance Commiltee's ranking Democrat.

VISitors, ass1stmg with
fundraising activities, and
office support. The program
also proves a good solution
for teens who have school
community serv.ice hours to
fulfill.
Holzer Hospice serves
patients with a life-limiting
illness, regardless of their
ability to pay in Gallia,
Jackson, Meig~ and surrounding counties. If you or
a community group would
like more information about
the Teen Volunteer program
at Holzer Hospice, please
call locally. (740) 446-5074
or toll free, 1-800-5004850.

23rdAnnual

Community
Health and
Wellness Fair

Saturday, June 23, 2007

· • Bone Density
• Health Information
·And Much Morel
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Unfulfilling job only
part·of trade-off
.

BY

KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I am an ISyear-old boy who just graduated high school and will
be attending a great university in the fall. I expected
the freedom of finding a
summer job on my own ,
but I thought wrong. My
father told me he still
expects me to work at his
store this summer.
For the· past five years,
I've spent every summer at
my father's building supply
store doing menial labor I0
hours a day. The work is ·
hard, especially since I'm
outside the entire time, and
around here, the heat index
exceeds I 00 degrees. To say
the least, I do not enjoy it,
and I'd like .never to work
there again.
My father says he'll pay
me more than I could get
anywhere else and that the
strenuous exercise will do
me good. The job also gives
me the freedom to take
entire weeks off at a time
for my church youth camp,
family vacation and a concert I am planning to attend
with friends.
I still can' t help but feel
· my father is controlling me.
I don' t see why I can't
challenge myse lf to find a
job in a different business.
Am I being .unreasonable,
or should my father give
me some freedom? I detest
this job more than anything. - Frustrated in
Mississippi
Dear Frustrated: We
understand that this job is
unfulfilling, but you do realize it will be nearly impossible to find another paid
position that will allow you
time off for family vacations, youth camp and concerts. Decide if you want to
earn money or not. and if
you are willing to give up
all that free time- because
that's the trade-off. This
also is probably the last
sumrner you will feel forced
to work for Dad. Once you
are in college, you can make
arrangements for a summer
job on your own.
Dear Annie: My husband and I have two small
boys. ages 2 and 4. We li.ve
in a small town close to my
. parents. Dad is a retired
mechanic and has turned
his garage into a workshop.
He repairs neighbors ' cars
and small engines . He
loves to have my boys
"help" him in the garage,
but he forgets it's a dangerous place for kids.
·

'I

As Dad gets older, he
seems more reckless with
the boys. Last summer, he
took our oiliest son for a
ride in his golf cart. He went
up a steep hill in their back- .
yard and the cart flipped
over. My son suffered a broken arm and numerous
bu.mps and bruises. I
thought that would wake
Dad up and he would be
more careful, but it hasn't
changed a thing.
When I ask Dad not to do
something with the children
because it's too dangerous,
his feelings get hurt and he
sulks. I love my father dearly and want him to be part
of my boys' lives. How can
I make him understand he
needs to think more about
their safety ? Baby·
Sitting for Grandpa
Dear Baby-Sitting: Your
children's welfare is more
·important than Dad's feelings, period. He cannot be
trusted in this area, and he
may not be able to change.
If your mother is not an
effective guardian, your .
father should not be permit- .
ted to play with the boys .
without . your supervision.
Please don't wait for a
tragedy to happen.
· Dear Annie: I have a sug- .
gestion for "Depressed and ·
Disappointed," who discovered her husband had a per-·
sonal profile on an online
dating agency so thai he
could get free porn.
She should tell him she is .
going to have her own per- ·
sonal profile to see if there
are any good-looking guys
in their neighborhood. He'd
probably call her every ·
name under the sun, none of
which you could print.
Then, and only then, he
might realize how unreasonable his own behavior is.
Ladies - don't get mad,
just get even. - D.
Dear D.: We certainly
hope he wouldn' t find it a
turn-on. Or worse, that she
finds someone else online.
But thanks for the suggestion.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann lAnders
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmail·
box@comcasi.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
atld read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.
.
.

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GALLIPOLIS _ Holzer
Hospice will host a Teen
Volunteer Orientation on ·
Thursday, June 28, from 1
10 3 p.m. at the Holzer
Hospice Office located at
2881 State Route 160 in
Gallipolis.
Any teenager ages 13 to
20 intt;rested in becoming a
teen volunteer for Holzer
Hospice is invited to attend
this free orientation. Preregistration by Monday,
June 25, is required as seating is limited. Activities
performed by teen volunleers
include · visiting
patients, cooking and baking, providing activities for

1

~~~~~~:so;

Practitioner at the
Center for Cancer Care

SWISHER • LOHSE

Pharmacy

appointment necessary!
mammogram voucher witt be given to any client
meets the medlcalguldettnes •• attpulated In the
Susan Komen Breast Cancer Grant.
Life Ambulance will provide FREE
hot dogs and hamburgtre from
11:00AM·1:00pm.
Questions? Call (74G) 44&amp;-5679.

1

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Thursday, June

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

'

Weather may not cooperate as space shuttle
Atlantis prepares for return to Earth
BY MIKE SCHNEIDER

Public meetings

Page·A3

BYTHEBEND

·The Daily Sentinel

fi
'

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Rlffie R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
112 East Main Street
Pamerov, Ohio

HOURS
Mon - Frl8am - 8pm
Sot. Bam· 5 pm
Sun. CLOS.ED

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�•

The Daily Sentinel

ACROSS THE NATION

PageA2
Thursday, June 21, 2007

Community Calendar

BUSh
BY DEB RIECHMANN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

· WASHINGTON
Vetoing a stem cell bill for
the second time, President
. Bush on Wednesday sought
to placate those who di sagree. with him by signing
an executive order urging
scientists toward what he
termed "ethically responsible" research in the field .
Bush announced no new
federal dollars for stem cell
research, which supporters
say holds the promise of
disease cures, and his order
would not allow re searchers
to do anything they couldn' t do under existing
restrictions.
Announcing his veto to a
roomful of supporters, Bush
said, "If this legislation
became law, it would compel American taxpayers for
the first time in our history
to support the deliberate
destruction of human
embryos. I made it clear to
Congress and to the
American people that I will
not allow our nation to cross
this moral line."
He vetoed similar embryonic stem cell legislation
last July.
His executive order
encourages scientists to
work with the government
to add other kinds of stem
cell research to the list of
projects eligible for federal
funding ~ so long as it
does not create, harm or
destroy human embryos.
Democrats
dismissed
Bush's veto as a moral.
affront, and his executive
order as a meaningless gesture meant to trick people
into thinking he had
advanced stem cell research.
They said they would hold
votes to try to override the
· veto - or at least si ve the
issue more air time.
"We also intend to contin·
ue bringing this up until we
have a pro-stem cell presi·
dent . and a pro-stem cell
Congress," satd one .of the
House's chief sponsors, Rep.
Diana DeGette, D-Colo.
Senate Democrats were
expected to begin the process
by trying to add embryonic
stem cell legislation this
week to a must-pass appropriations bill for the Labor
and Health and Human
Services departments.
The provision, proposed
by Sen. Tom Harkin, dlowa, would allow taxpayer

expanded order directs. the Health and .:
encouraged
Services ·
embryonic
stem
cell Human
research . His veto was over- Department to promote
turned.
'
research into cells that Most ·of the Democratic I ike human embryonic stem
candidates have urged Bush cells - also hold the potento expand the research.
tial of regenerating into dif- :
The president is "defer- ferent types of cells that ·
ring the·hopes of millions of might be used to battle di sAmericans who do not have ease and make them eligible
the time to keep waiting for for federal funding.
the cure that may save or
The order also renames
lives,"
said . the NIH's Embryonic Stem
extend
Democratic
presidential Cell
Registry
·the
hopeful Sen. Barack Obama Pluripotent Stem Cell ·
of Illinois.
Registry so that it reflects
Sen. Hillary Clinton, D- what the stem cells can do,
N. Y., said if she is elected in stead of their origin.
president, she will lift restric_. Pluripotent stem cells are
lions on stem cell research.
ones that can give ri se to
"This is just one example any kind of cell in the body
of how the president puts e~cept those required to ·
ideology before science, develop a fetus.
politics before the needs of
"Destroying human life in
our families ," she said.
the hopes of saving human
Scientists were first able life is not ethical, and it is not .
to conduct research with the only option before us," ·
embryonic stem cells in said Bush, who appeared on
1998, according to· the stage
with
Kaitlyne
National
Institutes of McNamara of Middletown,
Health. There were no fed- Conn.; who was born with
eral funds available for the spina bifida, and is benefiting
work until Bush announced from what he caller;! "ethical
on Aug. 9, 200 I, that his stem cell research."
administration would spend
Sean Tipton, president of
tax money for research on the Coalition . for . the .
· tines of cells that already Advancement of Medical ·
were in ~xistence .
..
Research, expressed anger
Currently, states and pri- and
.disgust at the veto and .
vate organizations are penmitBush's
order.
ted to fund embryonic stem
cell research, but federal support is limited to cells that
existed as of Aug. 9, 2001.
The latest bill was aimed at
lifting that restriction.
Bush urged support of
legislation · sponsored by
Sen. Norm Coleman, RMinn., which passed the
Senate but has not yet been
• PWIW7!M!Inlool._.
taken up by the House.
•~- kMp ""'lloMf""'
Coleman says his measure
•10""*11ddrwenwlthWIIImlll
supports federal funding for
• CIIIIDM ltlrtPttt • MWI, ~&amp; mort1
c •• .
embryonic
stem
cell
(Surf 1/fJ 10 6)(, _ . ,
_)
research methods that do
not harm embryos, "It pro- ·
lien Up Onllnol www.LOIIINtl.vides for ethically responsi·
blc stem cell research soon·
er rather than later,"
Colelnan suid.
Bush said his executive

AP photo

President Bush speaks about embryonic stem cell research. Wednesday, In the East Room
at the White House. At left Is Kaltlyne McNamara of Middletown, Conn. who was born with
spina blflda, and her father Mike McNamara, left.
·
dollars to be spent on
research on human embry·
onic stem cell lines derived
before June IS. 2007 moving the dute of Bush's
bun on public funding for
such research up by nearly
six years. Research on stem
cell lines derived in the
interim would be eligible
for federal funding. The
new provision also would
add ethical standards to be
used for selecting embryos
to be studied, according to a
draft of the provision.
By the 2008 elections,
Democrats
predicted ,
Bush 's veto of new public
funding for embryonic stem
cell .research would be a top
priority of voters in the con-

as the shuttle tlew 214 miles
above the state.
"Wc're glad to hear the
CAPE CANAVERAL, weather looks good from
. Fla. -Atlantis' heat shield there," Mission Control
is safe to return to Earth, responded. ''We'll continue
mission managers decided to watch ·it over the next 24
Wednesday,
day befo~e hours."
the space shuttle was
Atlantis has seven opp6rtuplanned to land in Florida. nities to land over four days.
A forecast for thunderMi ssion Control said
storms appeared to be the landing opportunities at
main obstacle for its return. Kennedy, th~ primary landThe shuttle's first landing ing site , look slightly better
opportunity at I :55 p.m. on Friday and Saturday. A
EDT on Thursday had thun - backup landing site in
derstorms predicted to be California would be considwithin 34 miles of the land- ered on Friday. That backup
ing strip at Kennedy Space site plus another in New
Center and clouds within Mexico would be activated
8,000 feet. both violations Saturday if necessary.
. . Atlantis has enough
of night rules.
Before signing off on the power for its systems to
landing, mission managers orbit until Sunday, but man·held an unusual , last-minute agers want the shuttle to
meeting to clear up three land by Saturday. The flight
remaining technical issues. would .. onl y be extended to
Material known as gap filler Sunday if there were techniappeared to be sticking out cal problems that needed to
of a wing, a thermal blanket be fixed.
had peeled back during the
During the crew's I ~-day
June 8 launch ami debris mission to the internatwnal
was found floating after space station, the astronauts
Atlantis undocked from the installed a new truss seginternational space station mem, unfurled a new pair of
· on Tuesday.
·
power- generating
solar
Engineers had wanted to arrays and activated a rotatmake sure the gap filler ingjoint that allows the new
could withstand the heat and solar arrays to track the sun.
aerodynamics of re-entry . The mission was extendand recheck data on the ther- ed by two days to gi ve them
mal blanket. Mission man- time to repair the thermal
agers have said the debris blanket on the shuttle that
may have been ice.
· peeled back during lift off.
"We were just trying to be Astronauts Danny Olivas
completely thorough," said stapled down the blanket
mission management team with a medica,! stapler durchairman John Shannon. ing a spacewalk. Sturckow
"The engineering and safety said he was confident the
teams believe there is no repair job would hold' up.
risk at all during re-entry."
"Everything looks great,"
Atlantis commander Rick he said Wednesday in an
Sturckow told Mission interview with reporters on
Control in Houston that the the ground.
.
weather look~d fine to him
During their stay, Russian
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

a

Thursday, June 21
POMEROY Meigs
County Commissioners will
meet at 9 a.m. Thursday
instead of I p.m.
Monday, June 25
POMEROY
-Meigs
County · Veterans Service
Commission, 9 a.m., 117
Mem~rial Dr., Pomeroy.

Reunions
Saturday, June 23
DARWIN - Milhoan
family reunion, II a.m. to 3
p.m., Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly. Meat provided.
Bring salad, vegetable or
dessert and drink. 992-3921
or 446-3296. All descendants of Marion Aldo and
Lucy
Belle
Hoselton
Milhoan invited.
Sunclay, June 24
REEDSVILLE- Biram-

gressionul and presidential
elections.
Public opinion polls show
strong support for the
research.
Republican presidential
hopefuls are split on the
scope of federal involve·
ment in embryonic stem cell
research . Sen. John McCain
of Arizona and former New
York Mayor Rudy Giuliani
have broken with Bush and the GOP's social con- ·
servatives- in backing the
expansion of federal funding for such research. At the
Republican debate on May
3, Giuliani s~id he supported such an expansion with
limits, "as long as we're not
creating life in order' to

destroy it, as long as we're
nor having hum tm cloning."
Rivuls Mitt Romney und
Sen. Sum Brownbuck of
Kunsus oppose the expansion. As governor ot'
Massachusetts, Romney
tried to stop leghlution that

Hayman reunion will be
held at Forked Run . State
Park, I p.m. basket dinner
in shelter #2.
HENDERSON, W.Va. Reunion of descendants of
Sam
and
Melvina
Birchfield, with basket dinner at noon, Henderson,
W.Va.
Community
Building.

Vacation Bible School,
Bradford Church of Christ,
9 a.m. - II :30 a.m. through
June 28 . Classes for
preschool through teens.
POMEROY - Vacation
Bible School, sponsored by
Enterprise U.M.C. and
Pomeroy Church of Christ
will be held from 9-11 a.m.
through June 29. The location has been changed to
Pomeroy Church of Christ,
West Main Street.
MIDDLEPORT
Sunday, June 24
REEDSVILLE - · Biker Vacation Bible School,
Sunday and 6th Annual Middleport Church of
Josh Adams Memorial Run Christ, 9 a.m. to noon,
at Fellowship Church of through June 29.
the Nazarene. Sunday
school at 9:30 · a.m., followed by I 0:45 a.m . worship service. Dinner before
run. Special singing by Just
for Now. Speaker Bryan
Saturday, June 23
Lawrence. Information at
HARRISONVILLE
667-3197.
Harrisonville
Masonic
Monday, June 25
Lodge #411 will hold a
MIDDLEPORT
friendship night at 7 p.m.,

Church events

Clubs and
organizations

for anyone interested in
learning about Masonry and
how·to become a member.
Saturday, June 23
RACINE - Meigs CAN
meets, 4-6 p.m., Racine
Library. Viewing of documentary, "Siudged," highlighting issues with sludge
impoundment like that proposed by Galling Coal. 9492175 for infonmation.
Tuesday, June 26
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Coin Club, 7 p.m., Pomeroy
Library.
RACINE - Racine Area
Community Organization.
6:30 p.m., Star Mill Park.
Potluck.

Other events ·
Monday, June 25
TUPPERS PLAINS Meigs County TB staff at
Tuppers Plains firehouse, 56 p.m. Tests read 5-6 p.m.
Wednesday.

Drawing
for
patriotic
afghan
,..------

Betty Johnson of
Racine (left)
recently made a
patriotic afghan
ar:td donated it to
the Retired
Senior and
Volunteer
Program (RSVP)
to raise funds for
the RSVP's community activities.
Tickets for a
chance at the .
afghan are $1
each or six for $5
at the Meigs
County Senior
Center. The ·draw·
ing wi ll be held at
11:15 a.m., July
3 at the center.
Pictured with
Johnson, who is
also an RSVP vol- .
unteer, is Debbie
Jones, activities
director at the
senior center.

.""'&lt;I""""

Submitted photo

Budget director to testify · Holzer Hospice to host
before legislative committee teen volunteer orientation

computers, which control
orientation and oxygen production, crashed but they
were revived several days
later after cosmonauts
Fyodor Yurchikhin and
Oleg Kotov used a cable to
bypass a circuit board.
While docRed to the station,
astronauts con served the
shuttle's power in case they
needed to spend an extra
day at the outpost.
"When we left, they had
the computers up and running," said Sunita "Suni"
Williams, who was returning
on Atlanti s after spending
more than six months at the
space station. "I think there
are some tixes they are going
to need to do, but the station
is fine right now. It's back to
its nonmal condition."
Like any polite houseguests. Atlantis' astronauts
did their best to clean up
· after themselves and fol - .
lowed the instructions of
their hosts in Mission
Control before landing.
"The dirty towels can be
put in a laundry bag and
stowed in the airl oc k,"
Mission Control wrote in
in structions sent to the c~ew .
. While Sturckow got .a
haircut from Yurchikhin
before leaving the space station, Williams said a haircut
was the one of the many
things she was looking forward to back on the ground.
Williams, whose nest of
raven tresses defied gravity
at the space station, set the
record for longest single
. spaceflight by a woman . ·
. ''I'm looking forward to
going to the beach and
hopefully taking a walk
with my husband and my
dog on the beach," she said .
"I can't wait for a good
piece of pizza."

Special Spot COLOR pages
kicking off the summer season.
•

First Page- Week of June 24th
for four weeks thru week of July 15th
·•FREE house spot color in your ad!
•Sign up for 4WEEKS and get
aFifth Week FREE

COLUMBUS (AP) on
The
Legislature
Wednesday scheduled hearings for a joint HouseSenate committee seeking
to . resolve differences
between the two chambers'
proposals for the $52.3 billion budget for the two
years beginning July I.
The two chambers .aren 't
that far apart and could have
a final biU ready. by early
next. week.. satd . Sen.
Prestdent Btll Harns, an
Ashland Republican. .
The budget mu.st be Signed
~y Gov. Ted Stockland. and
m place by July I. He~ngs,
set b~ House FI~ance
Commmee
Chatrman
Matthew Dolan, a suburban
Cleveland Republican, are
scheduled for Thursday,
Friday, Sunday and through ·
next week.
A problem emerged June
12 when· the nonpartisan
Legislative
Service
Commission said the budget could be $200 million to
$300 milli'on · out of balance . Strickland:s budget
(lirector, Pari Sabety, . was
expected to give the administration's latest revenue
estimates when she testifies
before the joint COJilmittee
on
.
Thursday.
Representatives of LSC are
also expected to be called,

Dolan's office said. .
.
Both chambers have
selected committee mem- .
bers. House Speaker Jon
Husted
chose
Dolan,
Republican Rep. Larry
FlowersofCanaiWinchester
and Rep. Michael Skindell
of Lakewood, the House ·
Finance Commiltee's rank.lng Democrat.
Harris
selected · his
finance chairman, Sen. John
Carey of Wellston, Sen.
Tom Niehaus a New
Richmond Rep~blican and
Sen. Dale ·Miller · of
Cleveland , the · Senate
Finance Commiltee's ranking Democrat.

VISitors, ass1stmg with
fundraising activities, and
office support. The program
also proves a good solution
for teens who have school
community serv.ice hours to
fulfill.
Holzer Hospice serves
patients with a life-limiting
illness, regardless of their
ability to pay in Gallia,
Jackson, Meig~ and surrounding counties. If you or
a community group would
like more information about
the Teen Volunteer program
at Holzer Hospice, please
call locally. (740) 446-5074
or toll free, 1-800-5004850.

23rdAnnual

Community
Health and
Wellness Fair

Saturday, June 23, 2007

· • Bone Density
• Health Information
·And Much Morel
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Unfulfilling job only
part·of trade-off
.

BY

KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I am an ISyear-old boy who just graduated high school and will
be attending a great university in the fall. I expected
the freedom of finding a
summer job on my own ,
but I thought wrong. My
father told me he still
expects me to work at his
store this summer.
For the· past five years,
I've spent every summer at
my father's building supply
store doing menial labor I0
hours a day. The work is ·
hard, especially since I'm
outside the entire time, and
around here, the heat index
exceeds I 00 degrees. To say
the least, I do not enjoy it,
and I'd like .never to work
there again.
My father says he'll pay
me more than I could get
anywhere else and that the
strenuous exercise will do
me good. The job also gives
me the freedom to take
entire weeks off at a time
for my church youth camp,
family vacation and a concert I am planning to attend
with friends.
I still can' t help but feel
· my father is controlling me.
I don' t see why I can't
challenge myse lf to find a
job in a different business.
Am I being .unreasonable,
or should my father give
me some freedom? I detest
this job more than anything. - Frustrated in
Mississippi
Dear Frustrated: We
understand that this job is
unfulfilling, but you do realize it will be nearly impossible to find another paid
position that will allow you
time off for family vacations, youth camp and concerts. Decide if you want to
earn money or not. and if
you are willing to give up
all that free time- because
that's the trade-off. This
also is probably the last
sumrner you will feel forced
to work for Dad. Once you
are in college, you can make
arrangements for a summer
job on your own.
Dear Annie: My husband and I have two small
boys. ages 2 and 4. We li.ve
in a small town close to my
. parents. Dad is a retired
mechanic and has turned
his garage into a workshop.
He repairs neighbors ' cars
and small engines . He
loves to have my boys
"help" him in the garage,
but he forgets it's a dangerous place for kids.
·

'I

As Dad gets older, he
seems more reckless with
the boys. Last summer, he
took our oiliest son for a
ride in his golf cart. He went
up a steep hill in their back- .
yard and the cart flipped
over. My son suffered a broken arm and numerous
bu.mps and bruises. I
thought that would wake
Dad up and he would be
more careful, but it hasn't
changed a thing.
When I ask Dad not to do
something with the children
because it's too dangerous,
his feelings get hurt and he
sulks. I love my father dearly and want him to be part
of my boys' lives. How can
I make him understand he
needs to think more about
their safety ? Baby·
Sitting for Grandpa
Dear Baby-Sitting: Your
children's welfare is more
·important than Dad's feelings, period. He cannot be
trusted in this area, and he
may not be able to change.
If your mother is not an
effective guardian, your .
father should not be permit- .
ted to play with the boys .
without . your supervision.
Please don't wait for a
tragedy to happen.
· Dear Annie: I have a sug- .
gestion for "Depressed and ·
Disappointed," who discovered her husband had a per-·
sonal profile on an online
dating agency so thai he
could get free porn.
She should tell him she is .
going to have her own per- ·
sonal profile to see if there
are any good-looking guys
in their neighborhood. He'd
probably call her every ·
name under the sun, none of
which you could print.
Then, and only then, he
might realize how unreasonable his own behavior is.
Ladies - don't get mad,
just get even. - D.
Dear D.: We certainly
hope he wouldn' t find it a
turn-on. Or worse, that she
finds someone else online.
But thanks for the suggestion.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann lAnders
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmail·
box@comcasi.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
atld read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.
.
.

Q..UALtTY Pf&lt;tSCRtPTWN
StRV,C£
AT COI\/\P£T,TIV£ Pl&lt;K£S.
. We honor most third party
prescription plans.
Your Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacists, Chuck and Ken
are here to fill your
prescription needs.

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HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
8:00AM- 12 Noon

• Non-Fasting
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Call for more information· Space is Limited

21, 2007

··: -- ~· -- -COUPON- ---·-·::;,)

• Blood Pressure

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GALLIPOLIS _ Holzer
Hospice will host a Teen
Volunteer Orientation on ·
Thursday, June 28, from 1
10 3 p.m. at the Holzer
Hospice Office located at
2881 State Route 160 in
Gallipolis.
Any teenager ages 13 to
20 intt;rested in becoming a
teen volunteer for Holzer
Hospice is invited to attend
this free orientation. Preregistration by Monday,
June 25, is required as seating is limited. Activities
performed by teen volunleers
include · visiting
patients, cooking and baking, providing activities for

1

~~~~~~:so;

Practitioner at the
Center for Cancer Care

SWISHER • LOHSE

Pharmacy

appointment necessary!
mammogram voucher witt be given to any client
meets the medlcalguldettnes •• attpulated In the
Susan Komen Breast Cancer Grant.
Life Ambulance will provide FREE
hot dogs and hamburgtre from
11:00AM·1:00pm.
Questions? Call (74G) 44&amp;-5679.

1

'- .;,,. ;,.- .. _t~P!'!,S !'!~7- _'-~"'-&amp;.'V

Sandy Corbin, BSN, CNP
I Holzer

Limit 1 per customer, per prescription.

~ . Swisher &amp;Lohse Pharmac., ;

. Free Screenings

•The·page goes on-line for a
week on our popular web site!

Thursday, June

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

'

Weather may not cooperate as space shuttle
Atlantis prepares for return to Earth
BY MIKE SCHNEIDER

Public meetings

Page·A3

BYTHEBEND

·The Daily Sentinel

fi
'

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Rlffie R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
112 East Main Street
Pamerov, Ohio

HOURS
Mon - Frl8am - 8pm
Sot. Bam· 5 pm
Sun. CLOS.ED

Open Weeknights 'TillS • Friendly Service

•

�---------....----

... . -----:--.,..,....--........

•

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
'{tWW.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an.
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
frte exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of tl1e press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

Page.A4

.OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

VIEW

Tradition
Fireuvrks appropriatefor Fourth
Dear Editor:

Soon it will be 'time to celebrate our Independence Day
again. Time to bring out the fireworks. Now should ~ a
good time to start putting out measures of safety from
emergency management again.
Law enforcement could help by making announcements
of legal rights and who is responsible when people put on
fireworks shows in a neighborhood where there are other
residents and property nearby.
Since we are . getting some funds from Homeland
Security for a safer life, we should all be entitled to that
protection and security. I believe everyone should be
encouraged and supported to ·attend controlled fireworks
celebrations. Remembering the talks last year from
Middleport, I feel our forefathers would be proud of us
remembering that day and would not say a word if the fire.
works were set off from the cemetery. Several of deceased
fought for our freedom and probably would be pleased to
still be part of the celebration.
Shirley L Miller
Pomeroy

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, June 21, the 172nd day of2007. There
are 193 days left in the year. Summer begins at 2:06 p.m.
EDT.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 2 i, 1788, the United States Constitution went into
effect as New Hampshire became the ninth state to ratify it.
On this date:
In I834, Cyrus Hall Mc&lt;::ormick received ·a patent for his
reaping machine.
In 1907, i 00 years ago, American . newspaper publisher
E. W. Scripps founded the United Press Associations, a forerunner of United Press Intematiorial.
fn 1932, · heavyweight Max Schmeling lost a title fight
rematch in New York by decision to Jack Sharkey, prompting
Schmeling's manager, Joe Jacobs, to exclaim: "We was
robbed!"
Thought for Today: "In America, to look a couple of years
younger than you actually are is not only an achievement for
which you are to be congratulated, it is patriotic." - Cynthia
Propper Seton, American writer ( i 926- I 982).

I '

Thnrsday, June 21, 2007

SEC tentatively .agrees to ease accounting rule
.for foreign companies that trade in US.
Bv MARCY GORDON
AP BUSINESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
Federal regulators on
Wednesday took the first
controversial step on a path
that could. lead to the acceptance of a single, global
accounting standard for
public companies.
In tentatively agreeing to
ease an accounting requirel)lent for foreig n companies
',Vith U.S.-traded shares, the
Securiti es and Exc hl)nge
Commission ope ned the
way for a related change
that would allow ail public
companies. when reporting
fi nancial results. to choose
between international and
U.S. accou nting standards.
Some experts said the
direction the SEC is heading in · may not best serve
investors' interests.
"How comparable are
firms going to be if we give
a choice?'' asked Paul
Chaney, a professor of
management at Vanderbilt
University in Nashville.
"The question is, will

mandate for theni ''Will signal the (SEC's) commitment to both investors and
to the global capital markets," John White, director
of the SEC's corporation
finance division, said
before the vote.
Over the longer term,
Commissioner Kathleen
Casey said, the agency's
ultimate goal is development of a single set of global accounting standards.
Agency chief accountant
Conrad Hewitt acknowledged that "is not an easy
proposition."
SEC
Chairman
Christopher Cox
told
reporters, "We are proceeding cautiously," calling
Wednesday 's move a "step
along the road map."
In an age of increasingly
globalized financial markets, the SEC commissioners are treading a delicate
line between the desired
goal of luring foreign companies to U.S. markets and
the need to uphold stan~ostly.
Eliminating the GAAP dards and protect investors.

investors suffer because it's
going to be much harder to
compare."
·
The SEC commissioners
also formally adopted rule
.changes allowing investors
to choose between receiving annual proxy materials
from companies on paper or
electronically, starting in
2008. Companies would be
allowed to continue sending
paper materials to shareholders provided that they
also post the information
online.
On the issue of accounting standards, the SEC
commissioners voted 5-0 to
propose eliminating a
requirement that foreign
companies "reconcile" their
financial results with U.S.
standards called generally
accepted accounting principles, or GAAP. Foreign
companies, which already
adhere to international
financial reporting standards, or IFRS, say the SEC
mandate is burdensome and

Their deliberations come
after months of intense public debate over corporate
internal-control rules under
the Sarbanes-Oxley antifraud law that arose from
the 2002 business scandals.
The change for foreign
companies, which awaits
formal adoption after a 75day public comment period,
would apply to their 2008
annual reports, which are
submitted in early 2009.
The IFRS system is generally considered more
flexible, and giving companies the choice co.uld ~ pell
the end of GAAP, experts
believe. The international
standards .are deemed espe- ·
cially desirable for large
U.S. companies with foreign subsidiaries, which
now must maintain two different sets of books.
Eliminating the required
squaring with GAAP standards "could help to make
U.S. markets · more attractive to foreign companies,"
Commissioner Paul Atkins
said.

.

SUMMER ACTIVITIES ...

Thursday, June 21,

2007

www.mydailysentinel.com .

Deaths
Connie B. Black
S~RACUSE- Connie B. Black, 7 I, o.f Syracuse, born
Apnl 13, 1936, formerly of Rutland, passed away unex pectedly a! her. home on Sunday, June 17. 2007.
There Will be an mterment of her ashes by her family and
close friends at Miles Cemetery. at 2 p.m. on Saturday followed by. a memonal celebratiOn of her life at Rutland
Nazarene Fellowship Hail.

Avalanche Ranch Bible School
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Church of Christ will
host it's Avalanche Ranch Vacation Bible School from 9 a.m.
to ~oon each day, from Monday, June 25 through June 29.
This year's western theme is said to be a "celebration of
God:s love filled with stampeding cattle, yapping cattle dogs, .
soanng eagles, and a whole herd of friends.' There will also
.be Bible point crafts, games, Bible stories, snacks and music.

Family movie night
POMEROY - · The Meigs County District Public
will be holding "Family Movie Night" at 6 p.m.,
Fnday at the Pomeroy Library. The featured film will be
"Bridge to Terabithia" with popcorn and lemonade being
provided. Admission is free.
·
Li~rary

Program on turtles, reptiles .
POMEROY - Nancy the "Turtle Lady" will return to
·the Pomeroy· Library at 5 p.m. tod11y to present her program
on turtles and other reptiles. There will be live animals for
children to experience and learn about in the basement conference room of the Pomeroy Library. The viSit is part of
this year 's Children's Summer Reading Program c·alled
"Get a Clue @ Your Library." ·
·
'

OVCS.announces
scholarship winner
r

.....

0 HIKIN6
D FISHiNG
0 SWIMIY\ING
0 CLltrlBfNG
D EASEBALL
.

"'"'

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

GALLIPOLIS -Andrew
David Scouten, son of
David Scouten and ~uEllen
Scouten of Gallipolis a
recent graduate of Ohio
Valley Christian School,
was awarded the Wayne and
Gladys Amsbary Memorial
Scholarship. This scholarship worth $200 is given
each year to a senior from
· OVCS who plans to continue their Christian education
at a Christian college.
He attends First Baptist
Church where he is active in
his church youth group.
Pro-Teens. He has attended
OVCS since kindergarten .
Drew was active in soccer.
basketball, student government, and 4-H. He was a
member of Wlio,s Who
Among Amer.ican High
School Students and the
American Christian Honor
Society. He received the

..... ......

"""'

"'

~

"""

.)

GAME PLA'fE R

Shooting up a hornet~ nest

During the Cold War,
sentence, reporter Robin
To ponder this hallucinaMoscow had two major
Wright informs us that tory mindset in all its full"(m)ore than 50 of the ness, I recommend neoconnewspapers. Propagandawary Russians joked bittercountry's leading econo- servative elder statesman
ly that "There is no Pravda
mists wrote an open letter to Norman Podhoretz's recent
in Izvestia, and no Izvestia
Ahmadinejad this week ·Wall Street Journal op-ed
Gene
in Pravda" ("There is no
warning that he is ignoring "The Case for Bombing
Lyons
truth in News, and no news
basic economics and endan- · Iran." Seemingly unaware
in Truth.") .People didn ' t so
gering the country's future." that Iran's constitution gives
much read the press as
So which is it. police state President Ahmadinejad no
LETTERS TO THE
attempt to decode it.. Who
or open dissent? Editors are authority whatsoever over
wants me to believe what, United Nations touting least apt to notice contradicEDITOR
its armed forces, Podhoretz
Saddam Hussein's apoc- tions like that when they ' re
and why?
portrays him as the new
We' re not there yet,' but · ryphal WMDs.
taking dictation.
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be Less
Hitler,
a demented madman
This time, · the Decider
Writing from Cairo,
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be we ' re definitely headed that
signed, and include address and telephone number. No way. When The New York himself, George W. Bush, is Time's Scott Macleod sup- poised to obliterate Israel,
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in Times and Washington Post described as having until plies some needed perspec- convert Europe to "the religood taste, addressing issues, not pasonalities. Letters of feature same-day, front- "next spring ... to decide tive: As even a royalist exile gio-poiitical culture of
through
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- page articles stressing the whether to take military group · headed by Re1:a lslamcifascism"
ed for publication.
nuclear
blackmail,
leading
White House's unhappi ness action." At the e1tpense of Pahlavi, son of the deposed
to
his
stated
goal
of "a
with Iran, it's definitely no being hopelessly old-fash-. · Shah, has warned, the Bush
coincidence. Like the ioned, exactly where in the administration's announce- world without America."
Gee, I wonder how yo11
proverbial turtle on a fence- U.S. Constitution does it ment of a $100 million plan
say
"blitzkrieg" in Persian?
post, somebody put them say the president can unilat- to fund Iranian dissenters
(USPS
213-960)
.
To date, Bush administraeraily declare War? Does could only . backftre. Leery
there.
·Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
Ah, but who? The Times anybody
believe
this of U.S. interference ever tion attempts to drum up a
Co. ·
·
Correction Polley
cites anonymous "senior Congress will al:low Bush to sirice the 1953 ·CIA-spon- casus belli against Iran have
Our main concern ln all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
administration officials," on bequeath to his successor sored coup that installed the fallen flat. No sooner do
through Friday, 111 Court Street
both sides of a passionate yet another misbegotten dictatorial Shah, Iran's U.S. spokesmen claim that
be accurate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
second-class
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in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
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Member: The Associated Press and
- make that Vice-President larger than neighboring traitors. Tehran has its own Afghan officials call it non- ·
the Ohio Newspaper Association .
Postmaster: Send address correcDick Cheney and Secretary Iraq?
equivalents of the Dixie sense. Similar allegations
Our main number is
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court ~ of State Condoleezza Rice.
And
with
what
army,
pray
Chicks, although the stakes have been dismissed by
(740) 992·2156.
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Needless to say, Cheney 's tell?
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government.
Department extensions are:
keen to bomb the Persians
The
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having
the
slightest
knowlInternational
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back to the Savafid Dynasty consisted of an· astonishing- edge of the domestic politi- Energy
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One month
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there's no graver insult 'in U.S. analysts" liken condi- armies occupying Iraq ·and
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Mall Subscription
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The failure of President Israel bristling with. nuclear . (Arkansas
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
prating about "mushroom Mahmoud Ahmiulinejad's weapons, and U.S. Sens. Gazetre columnist Gene
13 Weeks
- ' 32 .26
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
clouds"
over American economic policies, we're John McCain and Holy Joe Lyons is a national · maga26 Weeks
' 64 .20
52
Weeks
'1 27.11
an\)
Secretary of . told, have necessitated sti- Lieberman . calling for pre- zine award winner and cocities,
E-mail:
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news@ mydailysentinel.com
Outside Meigs County
the cautious voice of mod- iar, after students at a against the Tehran regime, the President" (St. Martin's
, 13 Weeks
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eration.
We ali recall how Tehran universi ty booed it's supposed to be we Press, 2000). You c~n e26 Weeks
' 107.10
Web:
.
t
hat
ended,
wilh Powell's him. So how bad is Iran's Americans who go to bed at mail Lyons at gene52 Weeks
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www.mydailysentlnel.com
lamentable speech to the economy? In the very next !light fearing mighty Persia. lyons2@ sbcglobal.net.)

The Daily Sentinel

•

-·-,...·

- - ~···

MEIGS HONOR ROLLS ANNOUNCED
'

POMEROY Honor
rolls · for the final nineweeks grading period have
been released by the office
of Superintendent William
· Buckley. Students making a
grade of B or above in all '
subjects to be listed on the
honor roll are as follows:

Meigs
Intermediate
School

Local Briefs

from PageA1
dishes of chicken and ham
as well as homemade nooples and roll s. Bikers and
. all visitors are invited to
'each lunch'. After lunch is
finished, Biker Sunqay
·shifts into the Sixth Annual
Josh Adams Memorial Run
to benefit youth programs
at the church.
Adams was a member of
the Fellowship Church of
. the Nazarene who was
:killed in an automobile
accident.
Adams
was
involved in the church's
_youth programs so for the
.past six years, the run helps
benefit his legacy in the
church as well as the youth.
The run costs $5 per rider
and leaves from the church
after lunch, making its first
,stop at Memorial Gardens
where Adams is buried. The
run then goes to the new
roadside rest on US33, goes
back on Ohio 681 and into
'the old Tuppers Plains
Elementary School bus
garage and back to the
church. At each stop, riders

Metts, Bre Mitchell, Kerri
Moon,
S\U'a
Morgan,
Kaylee Nelson, Beth Norris,
Lindsay Patterson, Wesley
Patterson, Ty Phelps, Anna
Reynolds,
Brooke
Reynold~,
Bobby Rice,
Courtney
Robinson,
Deshawna
Robinson,
Hailey
Roush, Adam
Russell, Zachary Russell,
Ryan
Schenkelberg,
Matthew Smallwood, Caleb
Smith, Christian Spaun,
Arryn Stout, Breahna
Thompson,
Tanner
Vanaman,
Mikayla
VanMatre, Victoria Walke~.
Issac Watson, Kacie Welsh,
Brianna Will, Chris Wise,
Austin Wolfe, Collen
Young.
Grade S: Josiah Beha,
Dillon Blankenship, Bre
Bonnett, Cody Brockert,
Kimberly Casci, Brett
Casto, Hannah Conley,
Olivia Cremeans, Anna
Cundiff, Trevor Cundiff,
Kimberly
Cunningham,
Michaela Davidson, Alyson
Dettwiller, Devan Dugan,
Brittany Durst, Jarret Durst,
Meredith Gaul, Paul Gibbs,
Chase Hayes, Bradley
Helton, · Taylor Hood,
Abigail Houser, Jamee
Johnson, Sara Klein, Erin
Korn, ·Brandon Mahr,
Morgan Mamati, Daniel
Morman, Josh Myers, Caleb
Pearson, Blaine Perry,
Brody Peyton, Trenton
Prater, Selena Reynolds,
Cassidy Rose, Adrianna
Rowe, Kaylee Rowe, Taylor
Rowe, Morgan Russell,
Briana Smith, Eric Smith,
Samantha Sj&gt;ires, Katlynn
Stanley, Caroiann Stewart,
Cariy Taylor, Anthony
Vance, Shannon Walker,
Tara Walzer-Kuharic, Nikki
.Wayland, Cody White,
Darrin Will.

Grade 3: Halley Barnes,
Lauren Booth, Dylan Darst,
David Doerfer, Haiden
English, Courtney Evans,
Tyler Fields, Sadie Fox,
Evan George, Kaitlyn
Gilkey, Miranda Gillilan,
Matthew Hawkins, Dylan
Haynes, Austin Hendricks,
Tracy Herdman, Cameron
Hettinger,
. Alexandra
Houdasheit. Skyiar Jenkins,
Jackie Jordan, Macenzie
Kennedy, Brayden Kopec,
Jake Korn, Austin Life,
· Colton , Lilly.
Ausiin
McClintic, Dustin McGhee,
Trey McWnliams, Shawn
Molden, Coltin Neutzling,
Adriahna Patterson, Lara
Perrin, Brittany Powell,
Kelsie Powell, Gregory
Priddy, Chase Scarberry,
Cory Scarberry, Ciara
Scholderer,
Kalynn
Seymour, Breanna Smith,
Cody Smith, Jack Starcher,
Madison Stewart, Aiden
Tacke tt,
Bradley
Thompson,
· Jacob
Wandling, Ben Wilson,
Haley Wilson, Jaden Wolfe,
Shawn Yeauger, Sonja
Young.
Grade 4: Chaisty Abbott,
Brook Andrus, J&lt;)rdyn
Arnold,
Sammy Ash,
McKayla Barrett, Tyni
Boothe, Sariah Brinker,
Brittany Cochran, Alexis
Coleman, Shaun Coleman,
Kenny · Cox,
Amber
Davidson, Emily Deem,
Jamie Elliott, Matthew
Foster,
Gage
Gilkey,
Grade 6: Casi Arnold,'
Cheyenne
Gorslene, Bra(!en Bake'r, Matthew
Marissa Hall, Sierra Hall, Casci, Kayla Conlin, Alyssa
Rheanna Harmon, Orville Cremeans, Joshua Dunham,
Hill, Mitchell• Howard, Megan Dyer, Tyler Eblin,
Kelsey H,udson.. Katelyn Delilah Fish, Mercadies
Hysell. Stephame Kauff, George, Lee Gillman,
Haley Kennedy, Brennan Shana Gorslene, Michelle
Klein,. A. J. Kopec, Amber Henry, Justin Hettin~er,
Laudermilt,
Dylan Corey KmJi. Hannah Kmg,
Lavender, Samantha Loar, Adam Ltttle, Anthony
Keely · Mankin, Mitchell McCollum,
Kirsten

Meigs Middle
School

Andrew Scouten
President's · Award for
· Educational Achievement
and the school's citi zenship
award. He plans to auend
Cedarville University and
major in the medical field.
The Amsbary Memorial
·Scholarship was founded by
the. family of Gladys and
Wayne Amsbary.

will make a scripture draw
which is simiiaP but an
, alternative to a poker run
where playing cards are
drawn at each ·stop. In a
. scripture draw,' you draw a
card with Biblical scripture
and if you draw Isaiah
40:3 I and the "40" is highlighted, you get 40 points.
The memorial run, like
the entire Biker Sunday is
open to all who wish to
attend, not just bikers. Mary
Lance of the church said
there are a few cars which
will be riding in the memorial run, one being Adams'
parents.
Christian · Motorcycle
Association Chapters from
several counties, including
Meigs are expected to
attend with recognition of
youngest and oldest riders.
Mary Lance of Fellowship
Church of Nazarene said the
idea behind Biker Sunday is,
"To bring people of the
world to know Jesus Christ.
it doesn't matter how they
get there either on- two, four,
six or 18 ·wheels, He' ll take
what he carr get."
Sunday dress is as welcome as jeans, T-shirts and
leathers.

McGuire, Tyler Pabon, · Jar.me Vaughan, Tabatha
Shawnella
Patterson, W1lls, Carrie White, Jose·
Rachel Payne, Emma Whitlatch.
Perrin, Tess Phelps, Tyler
Price, Keana Robinson,
Ashleigh . Sayre, Maggie
Smith, Bethany Spaun,
Kyrie Swann, Autumn
Tackett, Madelyn Thomas,
Freshman:
Tyler
Dustin Ulbrich, Jesse Andrews, Lauren ·Barnes.
Vaughan, Hilley Will.
Jacob
Dunn, Autumn
Grade 7: Cheyenne Ebersbach, Dale Ellis,
Beaver, Bruno Casci. Olivia Shawntay Garnes, Darby
Cleek, Charles R." Crow, Gilmore, Alyss Green, Scott
Danielle Cullums, Michael Kennedy, Bobby King,
Davis, Tyler Dunham, Jessie~ Might
Chelsey Eads, · Rebecca
Sophomore: Jl!Jilie Bailey,
Fortner, Tiffany Francis, Brittany Black, Clayton
Emalee Glass, Paige Gusler, Bolin, Chad Bonnett, Megan
Cody Hannin~, Savanna Bush, Crockett Crow,
Henry, Stephanie Hoalcraft, Kenneth Delong, Jennifer
Marlee Hoffman, Nicholas Fife, Amanda Gilkey, Amber
Hudson, Morgan Johnson, Hockman, · Lian Hoffman,
Taylor Jones,
Jeffrey Jessica Holliday, Matthew
Kimes, Amelia King, Austin Hosken, Lilly Jacks, Morgan
King, Samantha King, Kennedy~
Christopher
Steven Mahr, Tanisha Kimes, Cara Lawless,
McKinney, Misty Morrison, Morgan Lentes, Max Little,
Kassandra Mullins, Kasey Jahnna .Lydic, Courtney
Napper, Brady Norville, Mayes, Shayna Morgan,
Timothy Parsons, Nicole Lindsey Myers, April Oiler,
Prunty, Ben Reed, DiJaun Erin
Perkins,
Ripley
Robinson,
Jennifer ~aubenoit, Calee Reeves,
· Robinson, Nathan Rothgeb, Brian . Rice, · Chelsea
Jeffrey Roush, Michelle Smallwood, Caitlin Swartz.
Satterfield, Zachary Sayre, Kimberly Swisher, Eric
Kayla Shane, Evelyne Tolar, James Welsh, Catie
Sindle, Cayelynn Smith, · Wolfe
Colton Stewart, Heather
Junior: Michael Ball ,
Stewart; Travis Tackett, Jacob Barnes, Amy Barr.
Ryan Taylor, Victoria Talisha Beha, Brittany
Wolfe, Victoria Zeigler.
. Chapell, Mason Conde,
Grade 8: Alaine Arnold, Emily Davis, Brandon
Shellie · Bailey, Olivia Dodson, Robert Foreman Jr,
Bevan, Cameron Bolin, Rebecca Hanstine, Kyle
Brianna Buffington, Suretta Hoover, Haakon Jahr.
Cade, Hannah .Cleek, Bradley Jones, Jacob Jones,
Valerie Conde, Frederick Kirk Legar, Shane Milhoan,
Crow, Nicole Davis, Meisha Brian
Pullins, Joseph
Deiwert, Taylor Dowler, Rosier, Amanda · Smith,
Joshua
Fetty,
Emily Merissa Snyder, Steven
Freeland, Nathaniel Gilkey, Stewart, James Story; Alexa
Miranda Grueser, Kelsey Venoy,
Patti
Vining,
Howell, Lindsay Hysell,' Richard Well, Eric Wood
Justin Jacks, Kyle Johnson,
Senior: Natane Adams,
Justin Justis, Colt Kerr, Dakota Arms, Daniel
Brandon King, Julia Lantz, Bookman, Ashley Demoss,
Christopher
Marnati, Charles
Eblin,
Dane
Marissa
McAngus, Eichinger, Andrew Garnes,
Shannon
McLaughlin, Kayla Grover, Jessica
Tyson Morris, Jeremiah Haggy, Brittany Haning,
Myers, Joelan Nutter, Heidi Keilah Jacks, Kyle Kinnan,
Pasquale,
Chelsea Gabrielle Kruskamp, Sarah
Patterson, Katey Patterson, Lantz, Jessica Lyons,
Braden Prater, Savannah Christina Miller, Shawn
Pullins, Garrett Riffle, Ogaz,
David
Poole,
Kasey Roush, Carlee Smith, Raymond
Reynolds,
Brenton Southern, Chandra Amanda Schartiger, Bobbi
Stanley, Connor Swartz, Smith, Jessica Smith..
Stitt,
Michae l
· Tanner Tackett, Sarah Krysta
Thomas,
Michelle Wheeler, Kasey Winter,
Unbankes, Paula Vanmeter, Ashley Zielinski.

Meigs High
School

Japan changes name.oflwo Jima to shore
up tradition in face of Hollywood onslaught.
Bv HANS GREIMEL

Sundays

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

TOKYO - Japan has
returned to using the prewar
name for the island of I wo
Jima - site of one of World
War Il's most horrific battles - at the urging of its
original inhabitants, who
want to reclaim an identity
they say has been hijacked
· by high-profile movies like
Clint Eastwood's "Letters
from lwo Jima."
The new name, lwo To,
was adopted Monday by the
Japan ese
Geographical
Survey Institute in consultation with Japan's coast
guard.
Surviving islanders evacuated during the war praised
the move. but others said .it
cheapens the memory of a ·
brutal campaign that today
is inextricably linked to the
words Iwo Jima.
Back in I945, the small,
volcanic island was the vortex of. the fierce World War
II battle immortalized by
the famous photograph by
Joe Rosenthal of The
Associated Press showing
Marines
raising
the
American flag on the islet's
Mount Suribachi. ·
Retired Marine Maj . Gen.

Fred Haynes, who'was a 24year-old captain in the regiment that raised the flag on
Mount Suribachi, was surprised and upset by the
news.
"Frankly, I don't like it.
That name is so much .a part
of our tradition, our legacy," ·
said Haynes.
Haynes, 87, heads the
Combat Veterans · of Iwo
Jima, a group of about 600
veterans that travels to the
island every year for a
reunion. He IS working on a
book about the battle called
"We Walk by Faith: The
Story of Combat Team 28
and the B.attle of lwo Jima."
He doesn 't ·plan to change
the name.
"It was Iwo Jima to us
when we took it," said
J:iaynes. "We' II recognize
whatever the Japanese want
to call it but we'll stick to
Iwo Jima."
Before the war, the isolat·ed spit of land was called
Iwo To·- pronounced "eewoh-toh"- by the I ,000 or
so people who lived there.
In Japanese, that name
looks and means the same
as Iwo Jima ~ Sulfur
Island - but it has a different sound.

The civilians were evacuated in 1944 as U.S. forces
advanced across the Pacific.
Some Japanese navy officers who moved in to fortify the island mistakenly
called it Iwo Jima, and the
name· stuck. After the war,
civilians weren't allowed to
return and the island was
put to exclusive rriilitary use
by both the U.S. and Japan,
cementing its identity.
Locals were never happy
the name lwo Jima took
root. But lhe last straw came
this year with the release of
Eastwood's "Letters from
lwo Jima" and "Flags of
Our Fathers," war films that
only reinforced the misnomer.
·
In March, Ogasawara, the
municipality that administers Iwo To and neighboring
islands, responded by
adopting a resolution making Iwo To the official
name. Ogasawara residents
and descendants of lwo To
evacuees petitioned the central government to follow
suit.
"Though we' re happy for
Iwo To, which has been for~otten by history, 'the
Islanders are extremely
grieved every time they

Hendrix Heating &amp; Cooling

·Cooling
from PageA1
by physician documentation
from a medical professional
will .be qualified to receive
one air conditioner, providing they did not receive one
in the last three years, and
'may receive one payment
for a current electric bill or
·PIPP, whichever is more,
but not to exceed $175. No
· ·disconnect required.
If the client does not quai-

ify for an air conditioner,
they may still receive one
payment for the electric bill
as described above. ·
An
income eli gible
household with a member
who is 60 or older is eligible
to receive one payment for
electric bill up to the c'urrenl
bill or PIPP. whichever is
more . but not to exceed
$175. Again, no disconnect
is required.
Eligible clients must bring:
Proof of income (income at
· or below i 75 percent of the
federal poverty guidelines);
names, birth dates and social

.security numbers of all
household members; current
electric bills; medical documentation if applicable; and
new this year, the primaty
customer must present their
birth certificate.
Edwards said applications
will be taken 8:30 a.m. to II
a. m. and I p.m. to 3:30
p.m., Monday through
Thursday in the Gallipolis
office, 859 Third Avenue;
the Cheshire office, 80 I0 N.
Ohio 7; and the Middleport
Office, I369 Powell St. No
applications will be taken
on Friday.

Heating, Cooling,
Refrig,ration,
Restaurant
. ~~~o~~t~•-.c.,.._
Equipment,
Plumbing, Electrical

hear Iwo To referred to as
lwo J ima," the local
Ogasawara newspaper quoted the resolution as saying
of the Eastwood movies.
The government agreed;
an official map with the new
name will be released on
Sept. i.

A!!~
Vegas Weekend
June 29&amp; 30

Call now for tickets and details
Casino Night June 29 7-1 0 pm
win great prizes!
Movie "Viva Las Vegas"
June 30 at 2 m
Vegas Legends Concert
June 30 at 8 pm
featuring Dwight Icenhower
&amp;more
Box Ollice: 428 2nd Ave.
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Monday,

.June 18, ~007

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•

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
'{tWW.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an.
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
frte exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of tl1e press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

Page.A4

.OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

VIEW

Tradition
Fireuvrks appropriatefor Fourth
Dear Editor:

Soon it will be 'time to celebrate our Independence Day
again. Time to bring out the fireworks. Now should ~ a
good time to start putting out measures of safety from
emergency management again.
Law enforcement could help by making announcements
of legal rights and who is responsible when people put on
fireworks shows in a neighborhood where there are other
residents and property nearby.
Since we are . getting some funds from Homeland
Security for a safer life, we should all be entitled to that
protection and security. I believe everyone should be
encouraged and supported to ·attend controlled fireworks
celebrations. Remembering the talks last year from
Middleport, I feel our forefathers would be proud of us
remembering that day and would not say a word if the fire.
works were set off from the cemetery. Several of deceased
fought for our freedom and probably would be pleased to
still be part of the celebration.
Shirley L Miller
Pomeroy

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, June 21, the 172nd day of2007. There
are 193 days left in the year. Summer begins at 2:06 p.m.
EDT.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 2 i, 1788, the United States Constitution went into
effect as New Hampshire became the ninth state to ratify it.
On this date:
In I834, Cyrus Hall Mc&lt;::ormick received ·a patent for his
reaping machine.
In 1907, i 00 years ago, American . newspaper publisher
E. W. Scripps founded the United Press Associations, a forerunner of United Press Intematiorial.
fn 1932, · heavyweight Max Schmeling lost a title fight
rematch in New York by decision to Jack Sharkey, prompting
Schmeling's manager, Joe Jacobs, to exclaim: "We was
robbed!"
Thought for Today: "In America, to look a couple of years
younger than you actually are is not only an achievement for
which you are to be congratulated, it is patriotic." - Cynthia
Propper Seton, American writer ( i 926- I 982).

I '

Thnrsday, June 21, 2007

SEC tentatively .agrees to ease accounting rule
.for foreign companies that trade in US.
Bv MARCY GORDON
AP BUSINESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
Federal regulators on
Wednesday took the first
controversial step on a path
that could. lead to the acceptance of a single, global
accounting standard for
public companies.
In tentatively agreeing to
ease an accounting requirel)lent for foreig n companies
',Vith U.S.-traded shares, the
Securiti es and Exc hl)nge
Commission ope ned the
way for a related change
that would allow ail public
companies. when reporting
fi nancial results. to choose
between international and
U.S. accou nting standards.
Some experts said the
direction the SEC is heading in · may not best serve
investors' interests.
"How comparable are
firms going to be if we give
a choice?'' asked Paul
Chaney, a professor of
management at Vanderbilt
University in Nashville.
"The question is, will

mandate for theni ''Will signal the (SEC's) commitment to both investors and
to the global capital markets," John White, director
of the SEC's corporation
finance division, said
before the vote.
Over the longer term,
Commissioner Kathleen
Casey said, the agency's
ultimate goal is development of a single set of global accounting standards.
Agency chief accountant
Conrad Hewitt acknowledged that "is not an easy
proposition."
SEC
Chairman
Christopher Cox
told
reporters, "We are proceeding cautiously," calling
Wednesday 's move a "step
along the road map."
In an age of increasingly
globalized financial markets, the SEC commissioners are treading a delicate
line between the desired
goal of luring foreign companies to U.S. markets and
the need to uphold stan~ostly.
Eliminating the GAAP dards and protect investors.

investors suffer because it's
going to be much harder to
compare."
·
The SEC commissioners
also formally adopted rule
.changes allowing investors
to choose between receiving annual proxy materials
from companies on paper or
electronically, starting in
2008. Companies would be
allowed to continue sending
paper materials to shareholders provided that they
also post the information
online.
On the issue of accounting standards, the SEC
commissioners voted 5-0 to
propose eliminating a
requirement that foreign
companies "reconcile" their
financial results with U.S.
standards called generally
accepted accounting principles, or GAAP. Foreign
companies, which already
adhere to international
financial reporting standards, or IFRS, say the SEC
mandate is burdensome and

Their deliberations come
after months of intense public debate over corporate
internal-control rules under
the Sarbanes-Oxley antifraud law that arose from
the 2002 business scandals.
The change for foreign
companies, which awaits
formal adoption after a 75day public comment period,
would apply to their 2008
annual reports, which are
submitted in early 2009.
The IFRS system is generally considered more
flexible, and giving companies the choice co.uld ~ pell
the end of GAAP, experts
believe. The international
standards .are deemed espe- ·
cially desirable for large
U.S. companies with foreign subsidiaries, which
now must maintain two different sets of books.
Eliminating the required
squaring with GAAP standards "could help to make
U.S. markets · more attractive to foreign companies,"
Commissioner Paul Atkins
said.

.

SUMMER ACTIVITIES ...

Thursday, June 21,

2007

www.mydailysentinel.com .

Deaths
Connie B. Black
S~RACUSE- Connie B. Black, 7 I, o.f Syracuse, born
Apnl 13, 1936, formerly of Rutland, passed away unex pectedly a! her. home on Sunday, June 17. 2007.
There Will be an mterment of her ashes by her family and
close friends at Miles Cemetery. at 2 p.m. on Saturday followed by. a memonal celebratiOn of her life at Rutland
Nazarene Fellowship Hail.

Avalanche Ranch Bible School
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Church of Christ will
host it's Avalanche Ranch Vacation Bible School from 9 a.m.
to ~oon each day, from Monday, June 25 through June 29.
This year's western theme is said to be a "celebration of
God:s love filled with stampeding cattle, yapping cattle dogs, .
soanng eagles, and a whole herd of friends.' There will also
.be Bible point crafts, games, Bible stories, snacks and music.

Family movie night
POMEROY - · The Meigs County District Public
will be holding "Family Movie Night" at 6 p.m.,
Fnday at the Pomeroy Library. The featured film will be
"Bridge to Terabithia" with popcorn and lemonade being
provided. Admission is free.
·
Li~rary

Program on turtles, reptiles .
POMEROY - Nancy the "Turtle Lady" will return to
·the Pomeroy· Library at 5 p.m. tod11y to present her program
on turtles and other reptiles. There will be live animals for
children to experience and learn about in the basement conference room of the Pomeroy Library. The viSit is part of
this year 's Children's Summer Reading Program c·alled
"Get a Clue @ Your Library." ·
·
'

OVCS.announces
scholarship winner
r

.....

0 HIKIN6
D FISHiNG
0 SWIMIY\ING
0 CLltrlBfNG
D EASEBALL
.

"'"'

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

GALLIPOLIS -Andrew
David Scouten, son of
David Scouten and ~uEllen
Scouten of Gallipolis a
recent graduate of Ohio
Valley Christian School,
was awarded the Wayne and
Gladys Amsbary Memorial
Scholarship. This scholarship worth $200 is given
each year to a senior from
· OVCS who plans to continue their Christian education
at a Christian college.
He attends First Baptist
Church where he is active in
his church youth group.
Pro-Teens. He has attended
OVCS since kindergarten .
Drew was active in soccer.
basketball, student government, and 4-H. He was a
member of Wlio,s Who
Among Amer.ican High
School Students and the
American Christian Honor
Society. He received the

..... ......

"""'

"'

~

"""

.)

GAME PLA'fE R

Shooting up a hornet~ nest

During the Cold War,
sentence, reporter Robin
To ponder this hallucinaMoscow had two major
Wright informs us that tory mindset in all its full"(m)ore than 50 of the ness, I recommend neoconnewspapers. Propagandawary Russians joked bittercountry's leading econo- servative elder statesman
ly that "There is no Pravda
mists wrote an open letter to Norman Podhoretz's recent
in Izvestia, and no Izvestia
Ahmadinejad this week ·Wall Street Journal op-ed
Gene
in Pravda" ("There is no
warning that he is ignoring "The Case for Bombing
Lyons
truth in News, and no news
basic economics and endan- · Iran." Seemingly unaware
in Truth.") .People didn ' t so
gering the country's future." that Iran's constitution gives
much read the press as
So which is it. police state President Ahmadinejad no
LETTERS TO THE
attempt to decode it.. Who
or open dissent? Editors are authority whatsoever over
wants me to believe what, United Nations touting least apt to notice contradicEDITOR
its armed forces, Podhoretz
Saddam Hussein's apoc- tions like that when they ' re
and why?
portrays him as the new
We' re not there yet,' but · ryphal WMDs.
taking dictation.
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be Less
Hitler,
a demented madman
This time, · the Decider
Writing from Cairo,
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be we ' re definitely headed that
signed, and include address and telephone number. No way. When The New York himself, George W. Bush, is Time's Scott Macleod sup- poised to obliterate Israel,
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in Times and Washington Post described as having until plies some needed perspec- convert Europe to "the religood taste, addressing issues, not pasonalities. Letters of feature same-day, front- "next spring ... to decide tive: As even a royalist exile gio-poiitical culture of
through
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- page articles stressing the whether to take military group · headed by Re1:a lslamcifascism"
ed for publication.
nuclear
blackmail,
leading
White House's unhappi ness action." At the e1tpense of Pahlavi, son of the deposed
to
his
stated
goal
of "a
with Iran, it's definitely no being hopelessly old-fash-. · Shah, has warned, the Bush
coincidence. Like the ioned, exactly where in the administration's announce- world without America."
Gee, I wonder how yo11
proverbial turtle on a fence- U.S. Constitution does it ment of a $100 million plan
say
"blitzkrieg" in Persian?
post, somebody put them say the president can unilat- to fund Iranian dissenters
(USPS
213-960)
.
To date, Bush administraeraily declare War? Does could only . backftre. Leery
there.
·Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
Ah, but who? The Times anybody
believe
this of U.S. interference ever tion attempts to drum up a
Co. ·
·
Correction Polley
cites anonymous "senior Congress will al:low Bush to sirice the 1953 ·CIA-spon- casus belli against Iran have
Our main concern ln all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
administration officials," on bequeath to his successor sored coup that installed the fallen flat. No sooner do
through Friday, 111 Court Street
both sides of a passionate yet another misbegotten dictatorial Shah, Iran's U.S. spokesmen claim that
be accurate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
second-class
debate between factions crusade against a Middle · hardliners see dissenters Iran's arming its hereditary
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
loyal to radical cleric- urn Eastern country three times taking U.S. cash as potential enemy the Taliban thail
992-2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
- make that Vice-President larger than neighboring traitors. Tehran has its own Afghan officials call it non- ·
the Ohio Newspaper Association .
Postmaster: Send address correcDick Cheney and Secretary Iraq?
equivalents of the Dixie sense. Similar allegations
Our main number is
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court ~ of State Condoleezza Rice.
And
with
what
army,
pray
Chicks, although the stakes have been dismissed by
(740) 992·2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohlo.45769.
Needless to say, Cheney 's tell?
·
are far higher. "Anyone Iraq's
government.
Department extensions are:
keen to bomb the Persians
The
Post's
contribution
having
the
slightest
knowlInternational
Atomic
Subscription Rates
back to the Savafid Dynasty consisted of an· astonishing- edge of the domestic politi- Energy
By carrier or motor route
Agency
head
(1502- i 736), while "friends iy self-contradictory piece cal situation in. Iran would
News
One month
'1 0.21
Mohamed
EIBaradei
and associates" say Condi 's about the Iranian regime's ne.~er have created this proEdHor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
One year
'115.84
Dally
.50'
"increasingly moved toward "sweeping crackdown" on gram," one reformer told describes attacking Iran as
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
"an act of madness."
Senior Ciiizen rates
the European position," i.e. . domestic di ssent. On one Time.
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13 •
Indeed so. To bomb Iran
One month
'10.27
the sane one, although hand,- "both Iranians and
Meanwhile, with U.S.
One year
'103.90
now
would ·be like taking a
there's no graver insult 'in U.S. analysts" liken condi- armies occupying Iraq ·and
StbsaibeiS should rem~ iri advance
Advertising
the neoconservative lexi- lions in Iran to "a cultural Afghanistan (Iran's neigh- shotgun to' a hornet's nest,
direct to the Daily Sentin~l. No subOutside Sales: Dave Harris, E&lt;t. t 5
con.
revolution" aimed at steer- bors to the east and west), doing a whole lot of random
scription by, mail permiHed in areas
Outolde Salts: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where ·home carrier service is avail ~
We' ve all seen this movie ing "the oil-rich theocracy two U.S. carrier groups killing without eliminating
CloooJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
able.
before, during the run-up to back to. the rigid strictures deployed in the · Persian the problem, and infuriating
invading Iraq, with Cheney of the i 979 revolution."
. Gulf, hostile Pakistan and the survivors. ·
Mall Subscription
D~mocratbeating war drums. Rice
The failure of President Israel bristling with. nuclear . (Arkansas
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
prating about "mushroom Mahmoud Ahmiulinejad's weapons, and U.S. Sens. Gazetre columnist Gene
13 Weeks
- ' 32 .26
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
clouds"
over American economic policies, we're John McCain and Holy Joe Lyons is a national · maga26 Weeks
' 64 .20
52
Weeks
'1 27.11
an\)
Secretary of . told, have necessitated sti- Lieberman . calling for pre- zine award winner and cocities,
E-mail:
State Colin . Powell cast as fling academics in particu- emptive bombing attacks author of "The f!unting of
news@ mydailysentinel.com
Outside Meigs County
the cautious voice of mod- iar, after students at a against the Tehran regime, the President" (St. Martin's
, 13 Weeks
'53.55
eration.
We ali recall how Tehran universi ty booed it's supposed to be we Press, 2000). You c~n e26 Weeks
' 107.10
Web:
.
t
hat
ended,
wilh Powell's him. So how bad is Iran's Americans who go to bed at mail Lyons at gene52 Weeks
· '214.21
www.mydailysentlnel.com
lamentable speech to the economy? In the very next !light fearing mighty Persia. lyons2@ sbcglobal.net.)

The Daily Sentinel

•

-·-,...·

- - ~···

MEIGS HONOR ROLLS ANNOUNCED
'

POMEROY Honor
rolls · for the final nineweeks grading period have
been released by the office
of Superintendent William
· Buckley. Students making a
grade of B or above in all '
subjects to be listed on the
honor roll are as follows:

Meigs
Intermediate
School

Local Briefs

from PageA1
dishes of chicken and ham
as well as homemade nooples and roll s. Bikers and
. all visitors are invited to
'each lunch'. After lunch is
finished, Biker Sunqay
·shifts into the Sixth Annual
Josh Adams Memorial Run
to benefit youth programs
at the church.
Adams was a member of
the Fellowship Church of
. the Nazarene who was
:killed in an automobile
accident.
Adams
was
involved in the church's
_youth programs so for the
.past six years, the run helps
benefit his legacy in the
church as well as the youth.
The run costs $5 per rider
and leaves from the church
after lunch, making its first
,stop at Memorial Gardens
where Adams is buried. The
run then goes to the new
roadside rest on US33, goes
back on Ohio 681 and into
'the old Tuppers Plains
Elementary School bus
garage and back to the
church. At each stop, riders

Metts, Bre Mitchell, Kerri
Moon,
S\U'a
Morgan,
Kaylee Nelson, Beth Norris,
Lindsay Patterson, Wesley
Patterson, Ty Phelps, Anna
Reynolds,
Brooke
Reynold~,
Bobby Rice,
Courtney
Robinson,
Deshawna
Robinson,
Hailey
Roush, Adam
Russell, Zachary Russell,
Ryan
Schenkelberg,
Matthew Smallwood, Caleb
Smith, Christian Spaun,
Arryn Stout, Breahna
Thompson,
Tanner
Vanaman,
Mikayla
VanMatre, Victoria Walke~.
Issac Watson, Kacie Welsh,
Brianna Will, Chris Wise,
Austin Wolfe, Collen
Young.
Grade S: Josiah Beha,
Dillon Blankenship, Bre
Bonnett, Cody Brockert,
Kimberly Casci, Brett
Casto, Hannah Conley,
Olivia Cremeans, Anna
Cundiff, Trevor Cundiff,
Kimberly
Cunningham,
Michaela Davidson, Alyson
Dettwiller, Devan Dugan,
Brittany Durst, Jarret Durst,
Meredith Gaul, Paul Gibbs,
Chase Hayes, Bradley
Helton, · Taylor Hood,
Abigail Houser, Jamee
Johnson, Sara Klein, Erin
Korn, ·Brandon Mahr,
Morgan Mamati, Daniel
Morman, Josh Myers, Caleb
Pearson, Blaine Perry,
Brody Peyton, Trenton
Prater, Selena Reynolds,
Cassidy Rose, Adrianna
Rowe, Kaylee Rowe, Taylor
Rowe, Morgan Russell,
Briana Smith, Eric Smith,
Samantha Sj&gt;ires, Katlynn
Stanley, Caroiann Stewart,
Cariy Taylor, Anthony
Vance, Shannon Walker,
Tara Walzer-Kuharic, Nikki
.Wayland, Cody White,
Darrin Will.

Grade 3: Halley Barnes,
Lauren Booth, Dylan Darst,
David Doerfer, Haiden
English, Courtney Evans,
Tyler Fields, Sadie Fox,
Evan George, Kaitlyn
Gilkey, Miranda Gillilan,
Matthew Hawkins, Dylan
Haynes, Austin Hendricks,
Tracy Herdman, Cameron
Hettinger,
. Alexandra
Houdasheit. Skyiar Jenkins,
Jackie Jordan, Macenzie
Kennedy, Brayden Kopec,
Jake Korn, Austin Life,
· Colton , Lilly.
Ausiin
McClintic, Dustin McGhee,
Trey McWnliams, Shawn
Molden, Coltin Neutzling,
Adriahna Patterson, Lara
Perrin, Brittany Powell,
Kelsie Powell, Gregory
Priddy, Chase Scarberry,
Cory Scarberry, Ciara
Scholderer,
Kalynn
Seymour, Breanna Smith,
Cody Smith, Jack Starcher,
Madison Stewart, Aiden
Tacke tt,
Bradley
Thompson,
· Jacob
Wandling, Ben Wilson,
Haley Wilson, Jaden Wolfe,
Shawn Yeauger, Sonja
Young.
Grade 4: Chaisty Abbott,
Brook Andrus, J&lt;)rdyn
Arnold,
Sammy Ash,
McKayla Barrett, Tyni
Boothe, Sariah Brinker,
Brittany Cochran, Alexis
Coleman, Shaun Coleman,
Kenny · Cox,
Amber
Davidson, Emily Deem,
Jamie Elliott, Matthew
Foster,
Gage
Gilkey,
Grade 6: Casi Arnold,'
Cheyenne
Gorslene, Bra(!en Bake'r, Matthew
Marissa Hall, Sierra Hall, Casci, Kayla Conlin, Alyssa
Rheanna Harmon, Orville Cremeans, Joshua Dunham,
Hill, Mitchell• Howard, Megan Dyer, Tyler Eblin,
Kelsey H,udson.. Katelyn Delilah Fish, Mercadies
Hysell. Stephame Kauff, George, Lee Gillman,
Haley Kennedy, Brennan Shana Gorslene, Michelle
Klein,. A. J. Kopec, Amber Henry, Justin Hettin~er,
Laudermilt,
Dylan Corey KmJi. Hannah Kmg,
Lavender, Samantha Loar, Adam Ltttle, Anthony
Keely · Mankin, Mitchell McCollum,
Kirsten

Meigs Middle
School

Andrew Scouten
President's · Award for
· Educational Achievement
and the school's citi zenship
award. He plans to auend
Cedarville University and
major in the medical field.
The Amsbary Memorial
·Scholarship was founded by
the. family of Gladys and
Wayne Amsbary.

will make a scripture draw
which is simiiaP but an
, alternative to a poker run
where playing cards are
drawn at each ·stop. In a
. scripture draw,' you draw a
card with Biblical scripture
and if you draw Isaiah
40:3 I and the "40" is highlighted, you get 40 points.
The memorial run, like
the entire Biker Sunday is
open to all who wish to
attend, not just bikers. Mary
Lance of the church said
there are a few cars which
will be riding in the memorial run, one being Adams'
parents.
Christian · Motorcycle
Association Chapters from
several counties, including
Meigs are expected to
attend with recognition of
youngest and oldest riders.
Mary Lance of Fellowship
Church of Nazarene said the
idea behind Biker Sunday is,
"To bring people of the
world to know Jesus Christ.
it doesn't matter how they
get there either on- two, four,
six or 18 ·wheels, He' ll take
what he carr get."
Sunday dress is as welcome as jeans, T-shirts and
leathers.

McGuire, Tyler Pabon, · Jar.me Vaughan, Tabatha
Shawnella
Patterson, W1lls, Carrie White, Jose·
Rachel Payne, Emma Whitlatch.
Perrin, Tess Phelps, Tyler
Price, Keana Robinson,
Ashleigh . Sayre, Maggie
Smith, Bethany Spaun,
Kyrie Swann, Autumn
Tackett, Madelyn Thomas,
Freshman:
Tyler
Dustin Ulbrich, Jesse Andrews, Lauren ·Barnes.
Vaughan, Hilley Will.
Jacob
Dunn, Autumn
Grade 7: Cheyenne Ebersbach, Dale Ellis,
Beaver, Bruno Casci. Olivia Shawntay Garnes, Darby
Cleek, Charles R." Crow, Gilmore, Alyss Green, Scott
Danielle Cullums, Michael Kennedy, Bobby King,
Davis, Tyler Dunham, Jessie~ Might
Chelsey Eads, · Rebecca
Sophomore: Jl!Jilie Bailey,
Fortner, Tiffany Francis, Brittany Black, Clayton
Emalee Glass, Paige Gusler, Bolin, Chad Bonnett, Megan
Cody Hannin~, Savanna Bush, Crockett Crow,
Henry, Stephanie Hoalcraft, Kenneth Delong, Jennifer
Marlee Hoffman, Nicholas Fife, Amanda Gilkey, Amber
Hudson, Morgan Johnson, Hockman, · Lian Hoffman,
Taylor Jones,
Jeffrey Jessica Holliday, Matthew
Kimes, Amelia King, Austin Hosken, Lilly Jacks, Morgan
King, Samantha King, Kennedy~
Christopher
Steven Mahr, Tanisha Kimes, Cara Lawless,
McKinney, Misty Morrison, Morgan Lentes, Max Little,
Kassandra Mullins, Kasey Jahnna .Lydic, Courtney
Napper, Brady Norville, Mayes, Shayna Morgan,
Timothy Parsons, Nicole Lindsey Myers, April Oiler,
Prunty, Ben Reed, DiJaun Erin
Perkins,
Ripley
Robinson,
Jennifer ~aubenoit, Calee Reeves,
· Robinson, Nathan Rothgeb, Brian . Rice, · Chelsea
Jeffrey Roush, Michelle Smallwood, Caitlin Swartz.
Satterfield, Zachary Sayre, Kimberly Swisher, Eric
Kayla Shane, Evelyne Tolar, James Welsh, Catie
Sindle, Cayelynn Smith, · Wolfe
Colton Stewart, Heather
Junior: Michael Ball ,
Stewart; Travis Tackett, Jacob Barnes, Amy Barr.
Ryan Taylor, Victoria Talisha Beha, Brittany
Wolfe, Victoria Zeigler.
. Chapell, Mason Conde,
Grade 8: Alaine Arnold, Emily Davis, Brandon
Shellie · Bailey, Olivia Dodson, Robert Foreman Jr,
Bevan, Cameron Bolin, Rebecca Hanstine, Kyle
Brianna Buffington, Suretta Hoover, Haakon Jahr.
Cade, Hannah .Cleek, Bradley Jones, Jacob Jones,
Valerie Conde, Frederick Kirk Legar, Shane Milhoan,
Crow, Nicole Davis, Meisha Brian
Pullins, Joseph
Deiwert, Taylor Dowler, Rosier, Amanda · Smith,
Joshua
Fetty,
Emily Merissa Snyder, Steven
Freeland, Nathaniel Gilkey, Stewart, James Story; Alexa
Miranda Grueser, Kelsey Venoy,
Patti
Vining,
Howell, Lindsay Hysell,' Richard Well, Eric Wood
Justin Jacks, Kyle Johnson,
Senior: Natane Adams,
Justin Justis, Colt Kerr, Dakota Arms, Daniel
Brandon King, Julia Lantz, Bookman, Ashley Demoss,
Christopher
Marnati, Charles
Eblin,
Dane
Marissa
McAngus, Eichinger, Andrew Garnes,
Shannon
McLaughlin, Kayla Grover, Jessica
Tyson Morris, Jeremiah Haggy, Brittany Haning,
Myers, Joelan Nutter, Heidi Keilah Jacks, Kyle Kinnan,
Pasquale,
Chelsea Gabrielle Kruskamp, Sarah
Patterson, Katey Patterson, Lantz, Jessica Lyons,
Braden Prater, Savannah Christina Miller, Shawn
Pullins, Garrett Riffle, Ogaz,
David
Poole,
Kasey Roush, Carlee Smith, Raymond
Reynolds,
Brenton Southern, Chandra Amanda Schartiger, Bobbi
Stanley, Connor Swartz, Smith, Jessica Smith..
Stitt,
Michae l
· Tanner Tackett, Sarah Krysta
Thomas,
Michelle Wheeler, Kasey Winter,
Unbankes, Paula Vanmeter, Ashley Zielinski.

Meigs High
School

Japan changes name.oflwo Jima to shore
up tradition in face of Hollywood onslaught.
Bv HANS GREIMEL

Sundays

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

TOKYO - Japan has
returned to using the prewar
name for the island of I wo
Jima - site of one of World
War Il's most horrific battles - at the urging of its
original inhabitants, who
want to reclaim an identity
they say has been hijacked
· by high-profile movies like
Clint Eastwood's "Letters
from lwo Jima."
The new name, lwo To,
was adopted Monday by the
Japan ese
Geographical
Survey Institute in consultation with Japan's coast
guard.
Surviving islanders evacuated during the war praised
the move. but others said .it
cheapens the memory of a ·
brutal campaign that today
is inextricably linked to the
words Iwo Jima.
Back in I945, the small,
volcanic island was the vortex of. the fierce World War
II battle immortalized by
the famous photograph by
Joe Rosenthal of The
Associated Press showing
Marines
raising
the
American flag on the islet's
Mount Suribachi. ·
Retired Marine Maj . Gen.

Fred Haynes, who'was a 24year-old captain in the regiment that raised the flag on
Mount Suribachi, was surprised and upset by the
news.
"Frankly, I don't like it.
That name is so much .a part
of our tradition, our legacy," ·
said Haynes.
Haynes, 87, heads the
Combat Veterans · of Iwo
Jima, a group of about 600
veterans that travels to the
island every year for a
reunion. He IS working on a
book about the battle called
"We Walk by Faith: The
Story of Combat Team 28
and the B.attle of lwo Jima."
He doesn 't ·plan to change
the name.
"It was Iwo Jima to us
when we took it," said
J:iaynes. "We' II recognize
whatever the Japanese want
to call it but we'll stick to
Iwo Jima."
Before the war, the isolat·ed spit of land was called
Iwo To·- pronounced "eewoh-toh"- by the I ,000 or
so people who lived there.
In Japanese, that name
looks and means the same
as Iwo Jima ~ Sulfur
Island - but it has a different sound.

The civilians were evacuated in 1944 as U.S. forces
advanced across the Pacific.
Some Japanese navy officers who moved in to fortify the island mistakenly
called it Iwo Jima, and the
name· stuck. After the war,
civilians weren't allowed to
return and the island was
put to exclusive rriilitary use
by both the U.S. and Japan,
cementing its identity.
Locals were never happy
the name lwo Jima took
root. But lhe last straw came
this year with the release of
Eastwood's "Letters from
lwo Jima" and "Flags of
Our Fathers," war films that
only reinforced the misnomer.
·
In March, Ogasawara, the
municipality that administers Iwo To and neighboring
islands, responded by
adopting a resolution making Iwo To the official
name. Ogasawara residents
and descendants of lwo To
evacuees petitioned the central government to follow
suit.
"Though we' re happy for
Iwo To, which has been for~otten by history, 'the
Islanders are extremely
grieved every time they

Hendrix Heating &amp; Cooling

·Cooling
from PageA1
by physician documentation
from a medical professional
will .be qualified to receive
one air conditioner, providing they did not receive one
in the last three years, and
'may receive one payment
for a current electric bill or
·PIPP, whichever is more,
but not to exceed $175. No
· ·disconnect required.
If the client does not quai-

ify for an air conditioner,
they may still receive one
payment for the electric bill
as described above. ·
An
income eli gible
household with a member
who is 60 or older is eligible
to receive one payment for
electric bill up to the c'urrenl
bill or PIPP. whichever is
more . but not to exceed
$175. Again, no disconnect
is required.
Eligible clients must bring:
Proof of income (income at
· or below i 75 percent of the
federal poverty guidelines);
names, birth dates and social

.security numbers of all
household members; current
electric bills; medical documentation if applicable; and
new this year, the primaty
customer must present their
birth certificate.
Edwards said applications
will be taken 8:30 a.m. to II
a. m. and I p.m. to 3:30
p.m., Monday through
Thursday in the Gallipolis
office, 859 Third Avenue;
the Cheshire office, 80 I0 N.
Ohio 7; and the Middleport
Office, I369 Powell St. No
applications will be taken
on Friday.

Heating, Cooling,
Refrig,ration,
Restaurant
. ~~~o~~t~•-.c.,.._
Equipment,
Plumbing, Electrical

hear Iwo To referred to as
lwo J ima," the local
Ogasawara newspaper quoted the resolution as saying
of the Eastwood movies.
The government agreed;
an official map with the new
name will be released on
Sept. i.

A!!~
Vegas Weekend
June 29&amp; 30

Call now for tickets and details
Casino Night June 29 7-1 0 pm
win great prizes!
Movie "Viva Las Vegas"
June 30 at 2 m
Vegas Legends Concert
June 30 at 8 pm
featuring Dwight Icenhower
&amp;more
Box Ollice: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

Now-Open
For Business
Monday,

.June 18, ~007

uryant ,

Residential &amp; Commercial

74o-&amp;67-3316. 800~853-3110
.Tuppers Plains, OH

OH#32596

ruhw

WV#028439

Portland Plant
McDade Rd.
Portland, OH
1-740-843-5293

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

AROUND THE WORLD

Thursday, June

Thursda)', June 21,2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

·The Daily Sentinel • Page A7

21, 2007

Research
(fh.e "adfc.on.t
BY AUDRAANG
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BElJING - China has
overtaken the United States
as the world's t.OP producer
of carbon dioxide emissions
. - the biggest man-made
contributor to global warming - based on the latest
· widely accepted energy
consumption data, a Dutch
research group says.
According to a report
released Tuesday by the
Netherlands Environmental
Assessment Agency, China
overtook the U.S. in emissions of C02 by 8 percent in
2006. While China was 2
percent below the United
States in 2005, voracious
coal consumption and .
increased cement production caused the numbers to
rise rapidly, the group .said.
"It's an expression of
their fast industrial production activities and their fast
development," Jos G.J .
Olivier, the agency's senior
scientist who compiled the
figures, said Wednesday.
The agency is independent
but paid by the Dutch government to advise it on
environmental policy.
The study said China,
which relies on coal for
two-thirds of its energy
needs and makes 44·percent
of the world's cement, produced 6.2 billion metric
tons of carbon dioxide in
2006. In comparison, the
U.S., which gets half its
electricity from coal, produced 5.8 billion metric
tons of cof, it said.
The group's analysis
makes serise ·and had been
predicted to happen by 2009
or 2010, said experts from
the United Nations and the
U.S. Energy Information
Administration, and.outside
academics.
Bert Metz, a senior
researcher at the Dutch
agency and a leading expqt
on efforts to battle global
warming, said the analysis
was done using methods
and data that "are the best
currently available."
This means that "Chinese
contributions to global C02
emissions are getting .more
important," Metz said in an
e-mail to The Associated
Press.
Telephone calls to China's
State
Environmental
Protection Agency and the
National Development and ·
Reform Commission, the
Cabinet-level
economic
planning agency, were not
answered Wednesday,
Earlier figures indicated
China would likely surpass
.the U.S. in greenhouse gas
emissions as early as 2009,
although other predictions
said .it could happen . this
year.
Chinese environmental
officials have said that

while total emiSSIOns are They also do not include
going up, they are still less methane from fuel producthan one quarter of those of tion and agriculture and
the United States on a pet nitrous oxide from induslr)l.
Fatih Biro!, chief econocapita basis. · Because
China's population of 1.3 mist of the · Pari s-based
Energy
billion people is more than International
four times that of the United Agency also said the findStates, China spews about ings were not surprising,
I0,500 p!Junds of carbon give n China's economic
dioxide per person, while in growth of more than 9 perthe United States it is nearly cent annually over the past
42,500 pounds per person.
25 years.
His agency had estimated ·
Olivier said there was not
much chance China will China would overtake the
now lose its lead.
U.S. before 2010; in
"China's growth will sat- November it sharpened the
urate at some point," he forecast to 2007 or 2008.
said. But" for now, we don 't
But the issue isn't just
see a trend (toward) this sat- current emissions, but caruration yet." .
bon dioxide stuck in the
Olivier said the research atmosphere, where it lingers
was based on data on fossil . for about a century trapping
fuel consumption from BP heat below, said Jay Apt, a
PLC's Review of Energy professor of engineering,
2007 , compiled by th e business and public policy
British oil company, and at
Carnegie
Mellon
cement production data University in Pittsburgh.
through 2006 published by
Apt and a colleague calthe U.S. Geological Survey. culated the share of carbon
John Christensen, head of dioxide now in the atmosthe U.N. Environment phere that can be attributed
Program's
Center
on to each country and deterEnergy,
Climate
and mined that the United States
Sustainable Development in is responsible for 27 perDenmark, said the figures cent, European nations condid not i:oine as a surprise. · tributed 20 percent and
"The Dutch agency China only 8 percent.
referred to BP statistics,
"The, planet does not
which is the standard refer- respond to emissions, the
ence tool. .We have no rea- planet responds to the
son to doubt that the num- amount of carbon dioxide in
bers are right. We have no the · atmosphere," said Apt.
reason to doubt the method- "It means the U.S. will have
ology," Christensen said. the lion's share of carbon
"It's been stated many times dioxide in the atmosphere
that China will overtake the for the foreseeable future. In
U.S. in emissions."
fact, even if China's expoOther sources of carbon nential growth continues,
dioxide, such a~ deforesta- China will not surpass the
tion and the flaring of gas in U.S. in the numbers of caroil and gas production, are bon dioxide atoms in the
not included in the data. atmosphere, that. is concen-

J)Ln;ett {t JJalce't!}.
.I

BLIZZARD OF THE MONTH
CwranwJ,

,_ ...... al . . .

~~~- ..Willi
HI IIIII

Ctru~
Waffle cone pieces. rich
chocolate c/wnks and
caramel blended with
em/Ill}' l'allilla soft sme.

AP photo

A cyclist wears a face mask whi le cycling through pol.luted air in Lanzhou , in Chinas western Gansu Province, in this Dec. 5, 2006 file photo. Visibility fell to only 300 meters in the
morning. China has overtaken the ·United States as the world's top emitter of carbon dioxide, an environmental research group said Wednesday driving home dire warnings of the
country 's hefty contributions to global warming.

tration, until at least 2050,
which is too late to start
anything." .
The International Energy
Agency's Biro! said the key
message from the emission
figures isn't who is No. I,
but the need to slow growth
in C02 emissions. "The rest
of the world with the help of
China needs to find ways
for China to reduce C02
emissions," Biro! said.
China has come under
growing international pressure to take more forceful
measures to curb releases of
greenhouse gases.
This
month, China
unveiled its first national
program to combat global
warming with promises to
rein in greenhouse gas production. While the program
offered few new concrete
targets for greenhouse gas
emissions, it ·outlined steps
the country would take to

Restaurant
·Dine Out Page
Weekly Winner
Noba Sauhbury
Won A$30
Gift Certificate To
Hometown Market

228 W Main, Pomeroy
992-5432 .

·~~~~~~~~~~¥¥~¥·
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·

Restaurant
Dine Out Page
Weekly Winner
Roberta Swisher
Won A$30
Gift Certificate To
Pizza Plus

Taste Mom's Gooood Cook'in!
• Daily Lunch and Dinntlr Sp«Ws.
*We~kly Piu.a Specials
.
*Sandwlchfs, Hot Subs, Salmh, Dinners,
Piu.a &amp; Clllwne
• Now Semngl!and Dlppld let~ C,_!

" ~·New Ownenhlp

*New Decor, Friendly Atllloapherl

Accepting New Patier:-tts with No Wait Time, Call Us Today

•

E23rd
811 Elm Street
.beside Cre11eans Funeral Home
IRRICIRe
' Girls Md llllft clldllng, bOOkS, IOVS.IIII
mere. Ole ll•strasllll 111t11er 1111's
tre•re. 1111 lid seen 111 CIIJ n111

vear treasire.

\

Furniture, Appliances, Household Items.

49491 St Rt 681
· Tuppers Plain

New Haven,

Local Carl~·

Yard Sale

HUGE 3 Family Yard Sale
June 18-25

Antiques, collectables, glassware
tables and more great stuff! .
Some linens &amp; clothing.

Women, men &amp; children clothing
&amp; much more. Rain or shine.

Fri. Jun. 22 - After 12 pm
Sat. June- 23 9-2 pm
S. 2nd Middleport, OH

3 miles out SR 143, first drive

way to the left. Look for signs
1\

Maaon

I!()Urs: Mtlllday·Thunday II :3f.lam,-9JMI,_
Frlday 11:30tmf·l0f1111,
SahmlayJOant.JOpm
Catlin DeliYery onlen
bqln@9am

.............
···-

RDAY

URI

8am-3pm

DELIVERY TO:

Medical Exce/Jena.

• • • •••• • •••• ••
• There Is such a thing .as a
• FREE LUNCHt
•

•¥~~~~~¥~¥~¥¥~¥·

•
•
•
•

•·
Enter here for a
•
$30 Gift Certificate •
• .firocery &amp; Catering
for GREAT FOOD!' •

••

•
•
•
•
• at One.Of These Fine Establishments
• Drawing every week
•
•

·. J08 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OH 4§611
740·441•9J71

• • •••• • • • • ••• • •
•• There Is such a thing as a •
• FREE LUNCH! •
•

•

•
• Name
• Phone
•

•

•

•
Enter here for a
•
•
• $30 Gift Certificate •
••
•
• for GREAT FOOD! •
• ·at One Of These Fine Establishments •
• Drawing every week •
•
•
•
•

• • •••• •• •••••••

(/A IItt•/1 1 'ifltt' ()u/y //tiiJJ-2plll)

O.ll"any one item
at II orll .\" &amp; II alo .\·
Bouli€/lle

5()%

-l

I

o~*'

Oft ally food
_pur~~ ~~a~·e iil tire Co/i.\·etllll
.
Grill or Tropic.:al
·
·
Terrace!!
.

, FUN FOR EVERYONE
IN THE FAMILY ·

- ' /!olar :'it n il(' Croamen' Ice Cn•rlm
Uo,.n.•· mul Ha{().~ /JoulilfliC

•

4t

J.VIail ·To: Let 7 s Dine Out
•
c/o GaiUpo)Js Dally Trlbunee
P . O. Box 469
•
Gaillpolls. OH 45631
•

e

•• •••••••••••••
.

•

•
.1 \ll.ail To: Lct•s Dine Out
•
ec/o Gallipolis Daily Tribunee
P.O. Box 469
•
Gallipolis. OH 45631.
•

•
Service
•
• Big ·m· Sritnll• Homestyle MPals ~
ltl-.
Call Fbt Menu
•
• Name--------- •
Middleport, OH
•
•
• Phone--------

I

·~~~~~~~~~~~A~~·

OPEN
7 Days A Week
10:30 am • 9:00 pm

.Travis R. Neely, MD, MPH

I

\lah1 I liT' \\ tdnt•stla.l Sp1·ri;rl
11 ith .t ""IWPP.' I undr\ Pork Chop ~and11i1 h'"
or IIlii. "'' n I~· hr Sl•ll\ Roa.,ll'!llhtk!•d 'it tal-.

CROW'S
KFC &amp;Long·John Silvers

-

EVERY WEO!'ii::SDA Y

for an hour! I
A WHOLE PORK C HOI'
Lightly battered, nat grilled &amp; served on " him
with homemade mcatsuucc, homcnmdc colcslau,
· ·
onions, tumutu &amp; mu~tard

2208 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant,WV
304-675-5427

meet
a
previously
Yang A.ilun of Greenpeace
announced goal of improv- China called on the country
ing . energy efficiency in · to take more steps to protect
2010 by. 20 percent over the environment. "Due to
2005 's level.
the · urgency · of climate
Beijing also indicated an change, China has the
unwill ingness to enforce responsibility to take immemandatory emissions caps. diate actions to reform its
Ma Kai, the minister energy structure and curb.its
National C02 emissions," Yang said
heading the
Development and Reform in a statement.
Commission, said econoinic
·She noted that Western
development is a priority consumers use products
for China, but efforts would niade jn China.
be made to raise awareness · "All the West has done is
export a great "slice of its
about gl_obal warming.
China signed the 1997 carbon footprint to China
Kyoto Protocol, which caps and make China the world's
the amount of carbon diox- factory," she said. "This
ide that can be emitted in trend has ·kept the price of
industrialized countries. But projects in the West down,
because China is·considered but led to a climate disaster
a developing country it is in the long term." .
exe mpt from emission . Associated Press writer
reductions - a situation Arthur Max in Amsterdam
often cited by the Bush and Science Writer Seth
administration and Australia Borenstein in Washington
for not accepting the treaty. contributed to this report. ·

.

.

You c1m now cnjo~ this North Carolina rawrite
(Without driving to Mt. Air,·&amp; shmdin~: in line

If

304.675.4498 Pt. Pleasan
740.446.5371 Gallipolis
7 40.992.0060 Pomeroy
740. 395.8805 Jackson

June 22 &amp; 23

.' '

JUlNDAVE.
CALL•IN

lllltllaf .. ......

..... ,.1ft!

HOLZER
CLINIC

Moving Sale

-

Lllwe ..... ,..,..........~

At ·Holzer. Clinic, Pediatrics
are Our Seecialty...
.

.

740-992·3471
Fax: 740·992·5976

.' ia/ou /'O .' i/1 ami
0 11 m t.&gt; R t&gt; om
Hutu·s: Sundu~· 1.2·9Jllll

·

'lon·Thurs 11-JOpm
Fri-Sat I I -llpm

WE DELIVER!

www.honwtowmnkt,(•om ·
'

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

AROUND THE WORLD

Thursday, June

Thursda)', June 21,2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

·The Daily Sentinel • Page A7

21, 2007

Research
(fh.e "adfc.on.t
BY AUDRAANG
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BElJING - China has
overtaken the United States
as the world's t.OP producer
of carbon dioxide emissions
. - the biggest man-made
contributor to global warming - based on the latest
· widely accepted energy
consumption data, a Dutch
research group says.
According to a report
released Tuesday by the
Netherlands Environmental
Assessment Agency, China
overtook the U.S. in emissions of C02 by 8 percent in
2006. While China was 2
percent below the United
States in 2005, voracious
coal consumption and .
increased cement production caused the numbers to
rise rapidly, the group .said.
"It's an expression of
their fast industrial production activities and their fast
development," Jos G.J .
Olivier, the agency's senior
scientist who compiled the
figures, said Wednesday.
The agency is independent
but paid by the Dutch government to advise it on
environmental policy.
The study said China,
which relies on coal for
two-thirds of its energy
needs and makes 44·percent
of the world's cement, produced 6.2 billion metric
tons of carbon dioxide in
2006. In comparison, the
U.S., which gets half its
electricity from coal, produced 5.8 billion metric
tons of cof, it said.
The group's analysis
makes serise ·and had been
predicted to happen by 2009
or 2010, said experts from
the United Nations and the
U.S. Energy Information
Administration, and.outside
academics.
Bert Metz, a senior
researcher at the Dutch
agency and a leading expqt
on efforts to battle global
warming, said the analysis
was done using methods
and data that "are the best
currently available."
This means that "Chinese
contributions to global C02
emissions are getting .more
important," Metz said in an
e-mail to The Associated
Press.
Telephone calls to China's
State
Environmental
Protection Agency and the
National Development and ·
Reform Commission, the
Cabinet-level
economic
planning agency, were not
answered Wednesday,
Earlier figures indicated
China would likely surpass
.the U.S. in greenhouse gas
emissions as early as 2009,
although other predictions
said .it could happen . this
year.
Chinese environmental
officials have said that

while total emiSSIOns are They also do not include
going up, they are still less methane from fuel producthan one quarter of those of tion and agriculture and
the United States on a pet nitrous oxide from induslr)l.
Fatih Biro!, chief econocapita basis. · Because
China's population of 1.3 mist of the · Pari s-based
Energy
billion people is more than International
four times that of the United Agency also said the findStates, China spews about ings were not surprising,
I0,500 p!Junds of carbon give n China's economic
dioxide per person, while in growth of more than 9 perthe United States it is nearly cent annually over the past
42,500 pounds per person.
25 years.
His agency had estimated ·
Olivier said there was not
much chance China will China would overtake the
now lose its lead.
U.S. before 2010; in
"China's growth will sat- November it sharpened the
urate at some point," he forecast to 2007 or 2008.
said. But" for now, we don 't
But the issue isn't just
see a trend (toward) this sat- current emissions, but caruration yet." .
bon dioxide stuck in the
Olivier said the research atmosphere, where it lingers
was based on data on fossil . for about a century trapping
fuel consumption from BP heat below, said Jay Apt, a
PLC's Review of Energy professor of engineering,
2007 , compiled by th e business and public policy
British oil company, and at
Carnegie
Mellon
cement production data University in Pittsburgh.
through 2006 published by
Apt and a colleague calthe U.S. Geological Survey. culated the share of carbon
John Christensen, head of dioxide now in the atmosthe U.N. Environment phere that can be attributed
Program's
Center
on to each country and deterEnergy,
Climate
and mined that the United States
Sustainable Development in is responsible for 27 perDenmark, said the figures cent, European nations condid not i:oine as a surprise. · tributed 20 percent and
"The Dutch agency China only 8 percent.
referred to BP statistics,
"The, planet does not
which is the standard refer- respond to emissions, the
ence tool. .We have no rea- planet responds to the
son to doubt that the num- amount of carbon dioxide in
bers are right. We have no the · atmosphere," said Apt.
reason to doubt the method- "It means the U.S. will have
ology," Christensen said. the lion's share of carbon
"It's been stated many times dioxide in the atmosphere
that China will overtake the for the foreseeable future. In
U.S. in emissions."
fact, even if China's expoOther sources of carbon nential growth continues,
dioxide, such a~ deforesta- China will not surpass the
tion and the flaring of gas in U.S. in the numbers of caroil and gas production, are bon dioxide atoms in the
not included in the data. atmosphere, that. is concen-

J)Ln;ett {t JJalce't!}.
.I

BLIZZARD OF THE MONTH
CwranwJ,

,_ ...... al . . .

~~~- ..Willi
HI IIIII

Ctru~
Waffle cone pieces. rich
chocolate c/wnks and
caramel blended with
em/Ill}' l'allilla soft sme.

AP photo

A cyclist wears a face mask whi le cycling through pol.luted air in Lanzhou , in Chinas western Gansu Province, in this Dec. 5, 2006 file photo. Visibility fell to only 300 meters in the
morning. China has overtaken the ·United States as the world's top emitter of carbon dioxide, an environmental research group said Wednesday driving home dire warnings of the
country 's hefty contributions to global warming.

tration, until at least 2050,
which is too late to start
anything." .
The International Energy
Agency's Biro! said the key
message from the emission
figures isn't who is No. I,
but the need to slow growth
in C02 emissions. "The rest
of the world with the help of
China needs to find ways
for China to reduce C02
emissions," Biro! said.
China has come under
growing international pressure to take more forceful
measures to curb releases of
greenhouse gases.
This
month, China
unveiled its first national
program to combat global
warming with promises to
rein in greenhouse gas production. While the program
offered few new concrete
targets for greenhouse gas
emissions, it ·outlined steps
the country would take to

Restaurant
·Dine Out Page
Weekly Winner
Noba Sauhbury
Won A$30
Gift Certificate To
Hometown Market

228 W Main, Pomeroy
992-5432 .

·~~~~~~~~~~¥¥~¥·
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·

Restaurant
Dine Out Page
Weekly Winner
Roberta Swisher
Won A$30
Gift Certificate To
Pizza Plus

Taste Mom's Gooood Cook'in!
• Daily Lunch and Dinntlr Sp«Ws.
*We~kly Piu.a Specials
.
*Sandwlchfs, Hot Subs, Salmh, Dinners,
Piu.a &amp; Clllwne
• Now Semngl!and Dlppld let~ C,_!

" ~·New Ownenhlp

*New Decor, Friendly Atllloapherl

Accepting New Patier:-tts with No Wait Time, Call Us Today

•

E23rd
811 Elm Street
.beside Cre11eans Funeral Home
IRRICIRe
' Girls Md llllft clldllng, bOOkS, IOVS.IIII
mere. Ole ll•strasllll 111t11er 1111's
tre•re. 1111 lid seen 111 CIIJ n111

vear treasire.

\

Furniture, Appliances, Household Items.

49491 St Rt 681
· Tuppers Plain

New Haven,

Local Carl~·

Yard Sale

HUGE 3 Family Yard Sale
June 18-25

Antiques, collectables, glassware
tables and more great stuff! .
Some linens &amp; clothing.

Women, men &amp; children clothing
&amp; much more. Rain or shine.

Fri. Jun. 22 - After 12 pm
Sat. June- 23 9-2 pm
S. 2nd Middleport, OH

3 miles out SR 143, first drive

way to the left. Look for signs
1\

Maaon

I!()Urs: Mtlllday·Thunday II :3f.lam,-9JMI,_
Frlday 11:30tmf·l0f1111,
SahmlayJOant.JOpm
Catlin DeliYery onlen
bqln@9am

.............
···-

RDAY

URI

8am-3pm

DELIVERY TO:

Medical Exce/Jena.

• • • •••• • •••• ••
• There Is such a thing .as a
• FREE LUNCHt
•

•¥~~~~~¥~¥~¥¥~¥·

•
•
•
•

•·
Enter here for a
•
$30 Gift Certificate •
• .firocery &amp; Catering
for GREAT FOOD!' •

••

•
•
•
•
• at One.Of These Fine Establishments
• Drawing every week
•
•

·. J08 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OH 4§611
740·441•9J71

• • •••• • • • • ••• • •
•• There Is such a thing as a •
• FREE LUNCH! •
•

•

•
• Name
• Phone
•

•

•

•
Enter here for a
•
•
• $30 Gift Certificate •
••
•
• for GREAT FOOD! •
• ·at One Of These Fine Establishments •
• Drawing every week •
•
•
•
•

• • •••• •• •••••••

(/A IItt•/1 1 'ifltt' ()u/y //tiiJJ-2plll)

O.ll"any one item
at II orll .\" &amp; II alo .\·
Bouli€/lle

5()%

-l

I

o~*'

Oft ally food
_pur~~ ~~a~·e iil tire Co/i.\·etllll
.
Grill or Tropic.:al
·
·
Terrace!!
.

, FUN FOR EVERYONE
IN THE FAMILY ·

- ' /!olar :'it n il(' Croamen' Ice Cn•rlm
Uo,.n.•· mul Ha{().~ /JoulilfliC

•

4t

J.VIail ·To: Let 7 s Dine Out
•
c/o GaiUpo)Js Dally Trlbunee
P . O. Box 469
•
Gaillpolls. OH 45631
•

e

•• •••••••••••••
.

•

•
.1 \ll.ail To: Lct•s Dine Out
•
ec/o Gallipolis Daily Tribunee
P.O. Box 469
•
Gallipolis. OH 45631.
•

•
Service
•
• Big ·m· Sritnll• Homestyle MPals ~
ltl-.
Call Fbt Menu
•
• Name--------- •
Middleport, OH
•
•
• Phone--------

I

·~~~~~~~~~~~A~~·

OPEN
7 Days A Week
10:30 am • 9:00 pm

.Travis R. Neely, MD, MPH

I

\lah1 I liT' \\ tdnt•stla.l Sp1·ri;rl
11 ith .t ""IWPP.' I undr\ Pork Chop ~and11i1 h'"
or IIlii. "'' n I~· hr Sl•ll\ Roa.,ll'!llhtk!•d 'it tal-.

CROW'S
KFC &amp;Long·John Silvers

-

EVERY WEO!'ii::SDA Y

for an hour! I
A WHOLE PORK C HOI'
Lightly battered, nat grilled &amp; served on " him
with homemade mcatsuucc, homcnmdc colcslau,
· ·
onions, tumutu &amp; mu~tard

2208 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant,WV
304-675-5427

meet
a
previously
Yang A.ilun of Greenpeace
announced goal of improv- China called on the country
ing . energy efficiency in · to take more steps to protect
2010 by. 20 percent over the environment. "Due to
2005 's level.
the · urgency · of climate
Beijing also indicated an change, China has the
unwill ingness to enforce responsibility to take immemandatory emissions caps. diate actions to reform its
Ma Kai, the minister energy structure and curb.its
National C02 emissions," Yang said
heading the
Development and Reform in a statement.
Commission, said econoinic
·She noted that Western
development is a priority consumers use products
for China, but efforts would niade jn China.
be made to raise awareness · "All the West has done is
export a great "slice of its
about gl_obal warming.
China signed the 1997 carbon footprint to China
Kyoto Protocol, which caps and make China the world's
the amount of carbon diox- factory," she said. "This
ide that can be emitted in trend has ·kept the price of
industrialized countries. But projects in the West down,
because China is·considered but led to a climate disaster
a developing country it is in the long term." .
exe mpt from emission . Associated Press writer
reductions - a situation Arthur Max in Amsterdam
often cited by the Bush and Science Writer Seth
administration and Australia Borenstein in Washington
for not accepting the treaty. contributed to this report. ·

.

.

You c1m now cnjo~ this North Carolina rawrite
(Without driving to Mt. Air,·&amp; shmdin~: in line

If

304.675.4498 Pt. Pleasan
740.446.5371 Gallipolis
7 40.992.0060 Pomeroy
740. 395.8805 Jackson

June 22 &amp; 23

.' '

JUlNDAVE.
CALL•IN

lllltllaf .. ......

..... ,.1ft!

HOLZER
CLINIC

Moving Sale

-

Lllwe ..... ,..,..........~

At ·Holzer. Clinic, Pediatrics
are Our Seecialty...
.

.

740-992·3471
Fax: 740·992·5976

.' ia/ou /'O .' i/1 ami
0 11 m t.&gt; R t&gt; om
Hutu·s: Sundu~· 1.2·9Jllll

·

'lon·Thurs 11-JOpm
Fri-Sat I I -llpm

WE DELIVER!

www.honwtowmnkt,(•om ·
'

�Th~ Daily Sentinel

Page A~

OHIO..

Investigators in woman's disappe~ance
search home of /Canton police officer

· 'Thursday, June 21, 2oQ1

Bl

The Daily ·Sent~nel .

Inside
Sosa hits 600th HR, Page B2
Oden works out for Portland, Page B4

Local Weather
Today's Forecast City~"

High I Low temps
Forecast for Thursday, June 21
Davis' cell phone records,
which are being reviewed,
ASSOCIATED PRESS \\fAlTER
~·
'
!/JCH
. Perez said .
Authorities also said
CANTON - For the secToledo•
Wednesday that DNA tests
ond time in three days.
85' I 58'
wou ld not be finished until
investigators searched the
next week on a newborn
home of a Canton police
baby girl left on a porch
officer who.fathered the son
about
45 miles away from
and unborn daughter of a
Mansftetd •
Davis'
home. Authorities are
woman who went missing .
85' 154'
~
trying to determine if the
leaving the 2-year-old boy
f! '
infant, less than 24 hours old
home alone.
when it was found Monday
Sheriff's deputies blocked
*Columbua
: Dayton•
evening in Wooster, is relatoff about a I 00-yard stretch
r +
157.,
85"155"
ed to Davis. A bottle and can
of the street in front of Bobby
of formula left in the basket
· Cutts Jr.'s home as FBI
with the newborn were sent
agents and deputies carried·
·f
Cincinnati
for testing for fingerprints or
more than a dozen boxes and
.• l •86' 155'
any other evidence.
three l~e blaclo bags.
.'
Cutts, who also has two
Investigators continue to
I· .~ ' POI'Ismouth •
children with his wife,
talk with Cutts and are evalu~
1 56'
Kelly, said he. and his wife
ating geographic areas before
'"
are separated but have not
launching another search for
.fi&lt;Y.
filed for divorce and that
Jessie Davis, Stark County
she knew he had a relationsheriff's Chief Deputy Rick
Cloudy ~ ~;- ~ Flu'rieo · ~
too _
ship with Davis .
Perez said at a news conferPartly
~~ ~
~
He said he last spoke with
ence Wednesday.
Cloudy
Showers ~
.Rain
• •
Snow
•••• •
Davis at 8 p.m. on June 13,
At Cutts' home Wednesday
Woathor lkldo~g&lt;I!IIOd • AP
about 90 mmutes. before she
evening, neighbors watched
last spoke with her mother.
from their yards and the
Saturday and Saturday
Thursday ... Widespread
Miller
and . Texas
street as more than a dozen
night
... Mostly cloudy. A
dense
fog
in
the
morning.
AP photo/The Plain Dealer, John l&lt;untz EquuSearch reached an
FBI agents and sheriff's
chance
of showers and
Mostly
sunny.
Highs
in
the
deputies spent more than Whitney Davis, sister of missing woman Jessie Davis, agreement Wednesday with upJier 80s. West winds 5 to thunderstorms. Highs in the
three hours in their search. leaves a news conference outside the Stark Gounty Safety the FBI and Stark County 10 mph.
mid 80s. Lows in the mid
Upon their departure several Building near Canton Wednesday where she pleaded for Sheriff's Office to conduct
Thursday night ... Partly 60s. Chance of rain 40 perpeople, who appeared to be anyone who knows anything to call in and help find her preg- their search, and asked vol7· cloudy. Lows around 60. cent.
unteers to gather near a.
friends or family members, nant sister, who disappeared last week.
Sunday... Partly sunny.
winds around 5 mph.
church
by Davis' home . in: West
entered the home.
Friday ...Partly
sunny Highs in the mid 80s.
Reporters approached the
While law enforcement found her grandson. his dia- rural Lake Township at 8:30 with a chance of showers
Sunday night through
·
· and thunderstorms. Highs .in Monday
house after authorities left and hadn't announced any further per dirty, · alone at Davis' a.m. Thursday.
night .. .Partly
"We're probably looking the mid 80s. West winds 5 cloudy. Hot. Lows in the
a man who identified himself searches, a volunteer group, house , some furniture
as Cutts' father opened the Texas EquuSearch, made askew. A pool of bleach was at somewhat of a miracle in to I0 mph. Chance of rain mid 60s. Highs around 90.
door and told reporters to get plans to use community on the bedroom floor, and this case. We also know if 40percimt.
Tuesday and Tuesday
otftbe property. He wolj)d not helpers, drone airplanes and the contents of Davis' purse that person is deceased out
Friday nlght ... Mostly nlght ...Mostly cloudy. Hot.
comment on what authorities sonar equipment to search were scatted in the kitchen. there it's very important we cloudy with a chance of Highs around 90. Lows in
had taken.
Thursday for Davis, 26, who Her cell phone and a com- find them as quickly as we showers and thunderstorms. the upper 60s.
.
Three private property, no disaPJ)e31'ed last week.
forter- were missing.
can find them so they can Lows in the lower 60s.
Wednesday ... Mostly
Investigators say th~y determine cause of death," ·. South winds around 5 mph . sunny. Hot with highs
trespassing signs were posted
"We're holding. onto that
in the front yard and a woman hope that maybe she's still have no suspects. On its said Miller, who has worked '&lt;Chance of rain 40 percent.
around.90.
shouted from an upstairs win- alive out there and that Web site, the FBI lists the on hundreds of missing perdow to reporters who lin- ·would be the greatest thing case as a kidnapping. But sons cases. including the
spokesman Scott disappearance of IS-yeargered on the lawn that she in the world, but realistical· FBI
planned to call police.
. Jy we know after a period of Wilson in Cleveland said the old Natalee Holloway of
Cutts told a newspaper he ttme that that normally label is standard whenever Alabama, reported missing
had nothing to do with . doesn't happen," said Tim foul play is a possibility, and . in Aruba in 2005.
Davis's younger sister, AEP (NYSE) - 43.96
Davis' disappearance and Miller, the group's director. the agency doesn 't know if
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) Whitney'
Davis,
said Akzo (NASDAQ)- 83.56
that he has slept little and
Davis, due to deliver a Davis was abducted or not.
55.13
.
The FBI is offering a EquuSearch's involvement Ashland inc. (NYSE) had no appetite since she girl July 3, hasn't been
Oak Hill Ananclal (NASDAQ)
vanished.
·
-23.44
he31"d from , &amp;inCil: a pltone $10,000 reward for jnfo~- ... soll)es '!s ,.~. relief 19•. \reir
K~'t!ts (NYS~-:.!"9.32
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS"The last five days have call with Iter mother June mation . leading to Da¥is' family.
DAQ)- 25.25
"They're going to ~lp us Bob Evans (NASDAQ) been a nightmare . It won't 13. She was reported miss- whereabouts.
BBT (NYSE) _; 41~ 79
A legal order allowed find Jessie, hopefully, bring 36.88
end," Cutts told The . ing on hidlly . when . her
.SOrgWerner,(NYSE)_- 83•.70 Peoples (NASDAQ)- 26.92
mother, Patncia Porter, investigators to get so'riie
' hi!t back
safe."'
·she
said.
·
·
Repository .on Tuesday.
......
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) Pepsico (NYSE) - 65.52
Premier (NASDAQ) - 16.32
-54.50
Champion (NASDAQ) - 7.06 Rockwell (NYSE) - 68.48
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
-11.77
16.55
City Holding (NASDAQ) Royal Dutch She!! - 78.38 .
BY JOHN McCARTHY
ences in their spending a subject of ongoing discus- psychologist.
Sears
Holding (NASDAQ) - ·
38.27
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
plans'. The pilot program sion. The governor is conState
Sen.
Kevin Collins (NYSE) - 7.1.26
172.12
would cap participation at 3 ·cerned about any expansion Coughlin, a Cuyahoga Falls Dollar General (NYSE) Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 48.59
COLUMBUS - Students percent of those in sJiecial of vouchers," Dailey said.
Republican, called special 21.76
Wendy's (NYSE)- 36.85
in special education pro- education programs
The program is intended education "the next battle- DuPont (NYSE) - 52.16
Worthington (NYSE) - 20.49
grams would be e,ligible for about 8,000 students.
for children with behavioral ground in school choice."
Dally stock reports are the 4.
US Bank (NYSE)- 33.96
as much as $20,000 to find
The budget · bill must problems, limited language
p.m. ET closing.quotes of
Maria Sentelik, executive Gannett (NYSE) - 54.71
schools that fit their needs signed by Gov. Ted skills, visual . or hearing director of Ohio Valley General Electric (NYSE) transactions for June 20,
under a pilot voucher · pro- Strickland in time for the July impairments or poor com- Voices, a school in Cincinnati 39.07
2007, provided by Edward·
Jones financial advisors Isaac
gram proposed Wednesday I start of the. new budget year. munications skills. It is sim- where deaf children can learn Harley-Davidson (NYSE) Mills In Gallipolis at (740)
by House Republicans.
Strickland is opposed to the ilar to a scholarship program to speak, said her school was 59.58
441-9441
and Lesley
JP
Morgan
(NYSE)49.46
Speaker Jon Husted, a sub- statewide voucher program that offers school choice to
a
good
example
of
a
nunpubMarrero
In
Point Pleasant at
Kroger
(NYSE)
30.20
urban Dayton Republican, for all public school students children with autism that 's
lic
school
helping
children
(304)
674-0174.
Member
Limited
Brands
(NYSE)
.
held a discussion with col- in distncts in academic diffi- been in place since 2003 and
SIPC.
27.19
with
special
needs
..
leagues, special education culty, but he dido 't publicly serves about500 pupils.
teachers, students and their complain when the House
Aisha · Saunders
of
parents on Wednesday to removed his effort to block its Columbus said public schools
"help us better understand expansion. He does support had targeted her son Nathan
the value of this and carry it the pilot program in Cleveland as a troublemaker, ·even
back to our colleagues."
because he believes it's work- . though he was not. Nathan
The House added the plan ing. Strickland has not yet Saunders, a 19-year-old gradto the state's two-year, $52.3 taken a position on the special uate of Columbus South High
billion budget and begins education
proposal, School, said he would attend
meetings with the Senate on spokesman Keith Dailey said. Central State University with
Thursday to resolve differ"It's certainly going to be the goal of becoming a child

•

Thursday, June 21, 2007

BY JOE MILICIA

~

0

l

,n.,.

.

¥

locAL ScHEDULE
POUEROY - A sct'ledule of upcoming college
and higl 9Chool varsity sPortng eveols ilvotmg
te&amp;rTS frum Gallia and Meigs COI.I'ltles.

Today's game

Legion Baseball
Athens Jr. at Gallia, 6 p.m.

fdday's

a•mu

Legion Bauball
Meigs at Logan, 6 p.m.

Seturdey'e aamee
LeglonBaHball
Gallla at McArthur (OH), noon
Meigs at Parkersburg {DH) . 1 p.m.

Wtdotllll"' Junt 27
· Legion Ballball
Gallia at Meigs, 6 p.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

~

b

6

'''''

·Local Stocks

·or·

Plan would give more special ed students voucher money

.:.:;·

Middleport Little
League Tourney
set for July 7
MIDDLEPORT - There
will be a double-elimination
. little league baseball tournament held in · Middleport
starting on Saturday, July 7.
All participants will
receive a t-shirt and there
will be both individual and
team. trophies presented.
No traveling teams or allstar teams will be permitted
into the tournament.
There will also be a
Homerun Derby on the last
day of the tournament for
anyone who hits a homer
during the tournament.
For information contact'
Dave Boyd at '590-0438;
Tanya Coleman at 9925481; Mike Miller at 4165301; or Tim Ebersbach at
416-7934.

Tribe blasts Phillies
CLEVELAND (AP) Casey Blake is more relalled
since his 26-game hitting
streak ended - and still
coming up with timely hits:
Blake put Cleveland
ahead with a two-run single
in an eight-run .sixth inning
and the Indians beat the
Philadelphia Phillies 10-6
Wednesday night.
"I was kind of hoping. that
hit would lead to something
bigger," said Blake, · whose
streak - longest in the
majors this year - was
stopped Monday. "If I wein
up m that situation needing a
hit to keep the streak alive, I
have to admit it would be in
the back of my mind. I was
more
more
focused,
relaxed."
C. C. Sabathia (I 0-2)
pitched six innings to help
Cleveland take two of three

and remain tied with Detroit
for the AL Central lead.
Sabathia
joi ned
Josh
Beckett of Boston and John
Lackey 0f the Los Angeles
Angels as the majors' only
I0-game winners.
The left-bander also
matched Hall of Farner
Addie Joss as the only pitchers in Indians history with
I 0 or more victories in
seven consecutive seasons .
Joss did it in 1902-09.
"If I win 20 and we get to
the · playoffs, I'm very
happy," Sabathia said. "If I
only win one more and we
get to the playoffs; 1'.111 still
happy."
· '
Victor Martinez, Jhonny
Peralta, Trot Nixon and Josh
Barfield also drove in two
runs apiece for Cleveland,

Please He Tribe, Bl

AP phOto
Cleveland Indians' C.C. Sabathia delivers a pitc;h to Philadelphia Phillies' Aaron Rowand in
the sixth inning of a baseball game Wednesday in Cleveland. Sabathia gave up four runs
in six innings and left trailing by two, but his teammates scored eight runs in the .bottom
of the sixth to go on to a 10-6 victory and get Sabathia his 10th win of the season.

Buckeyes'
Lighty ·
pleads
guilty

Pomeroy baseball
tourney set for
July 10

.w., __If·,.

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Youth League will
be hosting a baseball tournament starting Tuesday,
July I 0 for all boys ages 910. For more information
caiLKen at 740-992-5322 or
740-416-6648; or Tony at
740-992-4067.

Southern wefght
room now open
RACINE
The
Southern High School
AP photo
weight room is now open
from noon to 2 p.m., Cincinnati Reds' David Ross , left. tags out Oakland Athletics' Mark Kotsay at home in the fifth inning of a baseball
·
Monday-Friday and all game on Wednesday in Oakland, Calif.
. football players are urged to
attend.

Wahama 3-on-3
hoops tourney
MASON, W.Va. - -The
Wahama Athletic Boosters.
are sponsoring a 3-on-3 basketball tournament at
Wahama High School on
Saturday, July 14.
There is a girls division
(9- 12), as well as boys divisions (6-8, 9-12) and an 18and-uver division.
Contact Lisa Gardner at
304-882-2082. Space is
limited.

Rotary Mile
returns this July
to Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS The
Gallipolis Rotary Club will
sponsor its annual Fourth of
July Rotary Mile on
Wednesday, July 4.
Runner will meet 5:30
p.m. at the Shake Shoppe on
2nd Ave., and each competi"
tor must have a completed ·
registration form with them.

CLEVELAND (AP) ~
Ohio State basketball player
David Lighty pleaded guilty
to a misdemeanor assault
charge and was tined $250
in a case involv ing a jogger
• .
who
was
~
shot with a
!...•&amp; .,.... BB gun last
"' n11~m o year.
.
~ ~.~ .' .
Two
of
Lighty's former team.
mates at Vil111 Angela-S t.
Joseph Hi gh School in
Cleveland also en tered
pleas in Cuyahoga County
Common Pleas on Tuesday.
Jimmy McLeod and Darryl
Rushton each were fined
$100 after pleading gui lty to
disorderly conduct. a mmur
misdemeanor.
James Nugent. 55. was
not. seriously hurt last June
when he was hit Ill the back
by at least one plastic BB
whil e jogg ing &lt;in the VAS.I
track. In Cleveland. BB and
pellet guns are considered
firearms and it is illegal to
have them in public places.
Nugent said Tuesday that
he had forgiven the 19year-o ld defendants an J
thought the se ntences handed down by Juuge Kennet h
Callahan were fair.
Aft er he was se nt enceu.
Lighty shook Nugent \
hand. Lighty told the judge ·
he wanted to apologize ''tll
Mr. Nugent, to my fami ly.
my · communi ty and my
school."
Lighty. a 6-foot-5 guard forward . sta rted seven
games last season as thl'
Buckeyes. se t a 'schoo l
record for victuties wi th "
· 35-4 reCDrd.

Athletics slide past .Cincinnati, 5-3
BY

JANIE McCAULEY
AP SPORTS WRITER

.OAKLAND, Cal if.
Dan Haren felt out of sorts
- and he still won.
That's how good the
Oakl:;~nd ace has been ·this
season, The Athletics have
found some interesting ways
to pull out close games, too,
with Haren the latest beneficiary.
Nick Swisher drew a
bases-loaded walk to tie the
score in the seventh inning,
then Eric Chavez followed

with a sacri fice tly ' in
Oakland's 5-3 victory over
the Cincinnati Reds on
Wednesday.
That saved the day for
Haren, who won his ninth
straight decision and third
consec utive start despite
giving up two home runs in
a game fur the second time
this year.
.
"''m more proud of it after
the game!'" Haren said. " I
really didn't have good stuff.
I was fighting myself. I put
us in a hole."
Shannon Stewart added a

solo homer in the eighth.
Jack Cust's two-run shut in
the fourth put the A's on the
board, and Oakland took
advantage of its chances
once Reds starter Mall
Belisle was out uf the game.
. Mark Kotsay walked to
load the bases against Jon
Coutlangus in the seventh.
then Swisher drew another
free pass to force home
Bobby Crosby. Chavez followed with his sac ritice tly.
Marcus McBeth (1 - 1) took
the loss after giving up rally
starting si ngles to Crosby

and Mark Ellis.
"We need to get big outs
late in the ballgame from
so meone besides Dave
Weathers," Reds manage r
Jerry Narron said. "We're
very close to being a good
ballclub. We just need to &amp;ct
outs when we need them.'
· Oakland bounced hack
from a disappointing interleague series loss to the St.
Louis Cardinals last weekend with its 22 nd victory of
2007 by two or fewer runs .

Adam 'Pacman' Jones to face
2 felony ,charges in Las Vegas
Bv

tum themselves in, and if
they don't, police Will go
looking for them," Roger
LAS
VEGAS
said at a news conference.
Suspended NFL player
NFL spokesman Greg
' Adam "Pacman" Jones must Aiello did not say if the Las
surrender to authorities here Vegas charges would .affect
to face two felony charges in Jones' suspe nsion for the
a strip club melee that pre- upcoming NFL season.
ceded a triple shooting in . "As we have stated, his
February.
status wiII be reviewed after
CONTACI'US
· Two other people police the Titans' lOth regular-seaOVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.) ideptified as part of the trou- son game," Aiello said.
bled Tennessee Titans corJones agreed this month
1·740·446·2342 ext. 33
nerback's entourage also not to appeal the suspension.
will face felony charges in and officials said Jones had
Fu -1-740-446-3008
the
fracas inside the Minxx . a chance to be rein stated
E·mall - sports@mydailysentinel.com
club,
Las Vegas police said after I0 games if he adhered
Sports StaH
Wednesday:
to team restriction's and had
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
Clark County District no further "adverse involve(740) a46-2342. e•t 33
Attorney David Roger said ment with law enforcebsherman@mydailytribune.com
arrest warrants were being ment." Missing the entire
sought for Jones, Robert season would cost Jones hi s
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, e&gt;rt. 23
"Bi~ Rob" Reid of Carson, salary of nearly $1.3 miltcrumOmy~allyregister.com ·
Cahf., and Sadia Morrison !ton.
No one was identified as
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer of New York.
"They'll
be
give
n
a
reathe
. shooter in a cri minal
(7 40) 446-2342, ••t 33
bWfl!ters 0 mydallytribune.com
sonable
amount
of
time
to
complamt
ftled Wednesday
.
KEN RITTER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

in Las Vegas Justice Court.
But police released an image
of a man who Capt. James
Dillon called a "person of
interest re lated to the shooting." Dillon said investigators wanted to identify and
talk · with the man, who
police said may live on the
East Coast.
·
Tennessee Titans owner
K.S. "Bud" Adams Jr. said
the team was focused on the
2007 season and would have
no comment about Jones '
legal trouble.
"We ·are moving forward
as a team and do not expect
to comment on any future
matters concerning him umil
his suspension is completed," Adams said.
Dillon said Las Vegas
police contacted Atlanta
police, who said this· week
they wanted to que stion .

Please see Reds. Bl

Tenness ee
Titans corne r ba ck
A

d

a

m

"Pacman"
Jones · is
shown during footb all
traini ng
camp
tn
Clarllsville .
Tenn. Aug.
4.
2006.
Auth ori tie s
in Las Vegas
s

a

i

d

Wednesday
that Jones
has
been
charged with
two counts
of
felony,
coercio'!
stem min~
from
;&gt;
melee inside
a Las Vegas
strip club in
February. '
AP photo

Please see Pacman, Bl

~

•

�Th~ Daily Sentinel

Page A~

OHIO..

Investigators in woman's disappe~ance
search home of /Canton police officer

· 'Thursday, June 21, 2oQ1

Bl

The Daily ·Sent~nel .

Inside
Sosa hits 600th HR, Page B2
Oden works out for Portland, Page B4

Local Weather
Today's Forecast City~"

High I Low temps
Forecast for Thursday, June 21
Davis' cell phone records,
which are being reviewed,
ASSOCIATED PRESS \\fAlTER
~·
'
!/JCH
. Perez said .
Authorities also said
CANTON - For the secToledo•
Wednesday that DNA tests
ond time in three days.
85' I 58'
wou ld not be finished until
investigators searched the
next week on a newborn
home of a Canton police
baby girl left on a porch
officer who.fathered the son
about
45 miles away from
and unborn daughter of a
Mansftetd •
Davis'
home. Authorities are
woman who went missing .
85' 154'
~
trying to determine if the
leaving the 2-year-old boy
f! '
infant, less than 24 hours old
home alone.
when it was found Monday
Sheriff's deputies blocked
*Columbua
: Dayton•
evening in Wooster, is relatoff about a I 00-yard stretch
r +
157.,
85"155"
ed to Davis. A bottle and can
of the street in front of Bobby
of formula left in the basket
· Cutts Jr.'s home as FBI
with the newborn were sent
agents and deputies carried·
·f
Cincinnati
for testing for fingerprints or
more than a dozen boxes and
.• l •86' 155'
any other evidence.
three l~e blaclo bags.
.'
Cutts, who also has two
Investigators continue to
I· .~ ' POI'Ismouth •
children with his wife,
talk with Cutts and are evalu~
1 56'
Kelly, said he. and his wife
ating geographic areas before
'"
are separated but have not
launching another search for
.fi&lt;Y.
filed for divorce and that
Jessie Davis, Stark County
she knew he had a relationsheriff's Chief Deputy Rick
Cloudy ~ ~;- ~ Flu'rieo · ~
too _
ship with Davis .
Perez said at a news conferPartly
~~ ~
~
He said he last spoke with
ence Wednesday.
Cloudy
Showers ~
.Rain
• •
Snow
•••• •
Davis at 8 p.m. on June 13,
At Cutts' home Wednesday
Woathor lkldo~g&lt;I!IIOd • AP
about 90 mmutes. before she
evening, neighbors watched
last spoke with her mother.
from their yards and the
Saturday and Saturday
Thursday ... Widespread
Miller
and . Texas
street as more than a dozen
night
... Mostly cloudy. A
dense
fog
in
the
morning.
AP photo/The Plain Dealer, John l&lt;untz EquuSearch reached an
FBI agents and sheriff's
chance
of showers and
Mostly
sunny.
Highs
in
the
deputies spent more than Whitney Davis, sister of missing woman Jessie Davis, agreement Wednesday with upJier 80s. West winds 5 to thunderstorms. Highs in the
three hours in their search. leaves a news conference outside the Stark Gounty Safety the FBI and Stark County 10 mph.
mid 80s. Lows in the mid
Upon their departure several Building near Canton Wednesday where she pleaded for Sheriff's Office to conduct
Thursday night ... Partly 60s. Chance of rain 40 perpeople, who appeared to be anyone who knows anything to call in and help find her preg- their search, and asked vol7· cloudy. Lows around 60. cent.
unteers to gather near a.
friends or family members, nant sister, who disappeared last week.
Sunday... Partly sunny.
winds around 5 mph.
church
by Davis' home . in: West
entered the home.
Friday ...Partly
sunny Highs in the mid 80s.
Reporters approached the
While law enforcement found her grandson. his dia- rural Lake Township at 8:30 with a chance of showers
Sunday night through
·
· and thunderstorms. Highs .in Monday
house after authorities left and hadn't announced any further per dirty, · alone at Davis' a.m. Thursday.
night .. .Partly
"We're probably looking the mid 80s. West winds 5 cloudy. Hot. Lows in the
a man who identified himself searches, a volunteer group, house , some furniture
as Cutts' father opened the Texas EquuSearch, made askew. A pool of bleach was at somewhat of a miracle in to I0 mph. Chance of rain mid 60s. Highs around 90.
door and told reporters to get plans to use community on the bedroom floor, and this case. We also know if 40percimt.
Tuesday and Tuesday
otftbe property. He wolj)d not helpers, drone airplanes and the contents of Davis' purse that person is deceased out
Friday nlght ... Mostly nlght ...Mostly cloudy. Hot.
comment on what authorities sonar equipment to search were scatted in the kitchen. there it's very important we cloudy with a chance of Highs around 90. Lows in
had taken.
Thursday for Davis, 26, who Her cell phone and a com- find them as quickly as we showers and thunderstorms. the upper 60s.
.
Three private property, no disaPJ)e31'ed last week.
forter- were missing.
can find them so they can Lows in the lower 60s.
Wednesday ... Mostly
Investigators say th~y determine cause of death," ·. South winds around 5 mph . sunny. Hot with highs
trespassing signs were posted
"We're holding. onto that
in the front yard and a woman hope that maybe she's still have no suspects. On its said Miller, who has worked '&lt;Chance of rain 40 percent.
around.90.
shouted from an upstairs win- alive out there and that Web site, the FBI lists the on hundreds of missing perdow to reporters who lin- ·would be the greatest thing case as a kidnapping. But sons cases. including the
spokesman Scott disappearance of IS-yeargered on the lawn that she in the world, but realistical· FBI
planned to call police.
. Jy we know after a period of Wilson in Cleveland said the old Natalee Holloway of
Cutts told a newspaper he ttme that that normally label is standard whenever Alabama, reported missing
had nothing to do with . doesn't happen," said Tim foul play is a possibility, and . in Aruba in 2005.
Davis's younger sister, AEP (NYSE) - 43.96
Davis' disappearance and Miller, the group's director. the agency doesn 't know if
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) Whitney'
Davis,
said Akzo (NASDAQ)- 83.56
that he has slept little and
Davis, due to deliver a Davis was abducted or not.
55.13
.
The FBI is offering a EquuSearch's involvement Ashland inc. (NYSE) had no appetite since she girl July 3, hasn't been
Oak Hill Ananclal (NASDAQ)
vanished.
·
-23.44
he31"d from , &amp;inCil: a pltone $10,000 reward for jnfo~- ... soll)es '!s ,.~. relief 19•. \reir
K~'t!ts (NYS~-:.!"9.32
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS"The last five days have call with Iter mother June mation . leading to Da¥is' family.
DAQ)- 25.25
"They're going to ~lp us Bob Evans (NASDAQ) been a nightmare . It won't 13. She was reported miss- whereabouts.
BBT (NYSE) _; 41~ 79
A legal order allowed find Jessie, hopefully, bring 36.88
end," Cutts told The . ing on hidlly . when . her
.SOrgWerner,(NYSE)_- 83•.70 Peoples (NASDAQ)- 26.92
mother, Patncia Porter, investigators to get so'riie
' hi!t back
safe."'
·she
said.
·
·
Repository .on Tuesday.
......
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) Pepsico (NYSE) - 65.52
Premier (NASDAQ) - 16.32
-54.50
Champion (NASDAQ) - 7.06 Rockwell (NYSE) - 68.48
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
-11.77
16.55
City Holding (NASDAQ) Royal Dutch She!! - 78.38 .
BY JOHN McCARTHY
ences in their spending a subject of ongoing discus- psychologist.
Sears
Holding (NASDAQ) - ·
38.27
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
plans'. The pilot program sion. The governor is conState
Sen.
Kevin Collins (NYSE) - 7.1.26
172.12
would cap participation at 3 ·cerned about any expansion Coughlin, a Cuyahoga Falls Dollar General (NYSE) Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 48.59
COLUMBUS - Students percent of those in sJiecial of vouchers," Dailey said.
Republican, called special 21.76
Wendy's (NYSE)- 36.85
in special education pro- education programs
The program is intended education "the next battle- DuPont (NYSE) - 52.16
Worthington (NYSE) - 20.49
grams would be e,ligible for about 8,000 students.
for children with behavioral ground in school choice."
Dally stock reports are the 4.
US Bank (NYSE)- 33.96
as much as $20,000 to find
The budget · bill must problems, limited language
p.m. ET closing.quotes of
Maria Sentelik, executive Gannett (NYSE) - 54.71
schools that fit their needs signed by Gov. Ted skills, visual . or hearing director of Ohio Valley General Electric (NYSE) transactions for June 20,
under a pilot voucher · pro- Strickland in time for the July impairments or poor com- Voices, a school in Cincinnati 39.07
2007, provided by Edward·
Jones financial advisors Isaac
gram proposed Wednesday I start of the. new budget year. munications skills. It is sim- where deaf children can learn Harley-Davidson (NYSE) Mills In Gallipolis at (740)
by House Republicans.
Strickland is opposed to the ilar to a scholarship program to speak, said her school was 59.58
441-9441
and Lesley
JP
Morgan
(NYSE)49.46
Speaker Jon Husted, a sub- statewide voucher program that offers school choice to
a
good
example
of
a
nunpubMarrero
In
Point Pleasant at
Kroger
(NYSE)
30.20
urban Dayton Republican, for all public school students children with autism that 's
lic
school
helping
children
(304)
674-0174.
Member
Limited
Brands
(NYSE)
.
held a discussion with col- in distncts in academic diffi- been in place since 2003 and
SIPC.
27.19
with
special
needs
..
leagues, special education culty, but he dido 't publicly serves about500 pupils.
teachers, students and their complain when the House
Aisha · Saunders
of
parents on Wednesday to removed his effort to block its Columbus said public schools
"help us better understand expansion. He does support had targeted her son Nathan
the value of this and carry it the pilot program in Cleveland as a troublemaker, ·even
back to our colleagues."
because he believes it's work- . though he was not. Nathan
The House added the plan ing. Strickland has not yet Saunders, a 19-year-old gradto the state's two-year, $52.3 taken a position on the special uate of Columbus South High
billion budget and begins education
proposal, School, said he would attend
meetings with the Senate on spokesman Keith Dailey said. Central State University with
Thursday to resolve differ"It's certainly going to be the goal of becoming a child

•

Thursday, June 21, 2007

BY JOE MILICIA

~

0

l

,n.,.

.

¥

locAL ScHEDULE
POUEROY - A sct'ledule of upcoming college
and higl 9Chool varsity sPortng eveols ilvotmg
te&amp;rTS frum Gallia and Meigs COI.I'ltles.

Today's game

Legion Baseball
Athens Jr. at Gallia, 6 p.m.

fdday's

a•mu

Legion Bauball
Meigs at Logan, 6 p.m.

Seturdey'e aamee
LeglonBaHball
Gallla at McArthur (OH), noon
Meigs at Parkersburg {DH) . 1 p.m.

Wtdotllll"' Junt 27
· Legion Ballball
Gallia at Meigs, 6 p.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

~

b

6

'''''

·Local Stocks

·or·

Plan would give more special ed students voucher money

.:.:;·

Middleport Little
League Tourney
set for July 7
MIDDLEPORT - There
will be a double-elimination
. little league baseball tournament held in · Middleport
starting on Saturday, July 7.
All participants will
receive a t-shirt and there
will be both individual and
team. trophies presented.
No traveling teams or allstar teams will be permitted
into the tournament.
There will also be a
Homerun Derby on the last
day of the tournament for
anyone who hits a homer
during the tournament.
For information contact'
Dave Boyd at '590-0438;
Tanya Coleman at 9925481; Mike Miller at 4165301; or Tim Ebersbach at
416-7934.

Tribe blasts Phillies
CLEVELAND (AP) Casey Blake is more relalled
since his 26-game hitting
streak ended - and still
coming up with timely hits:
Blake put Cleveland
ahead with a two-run single
in an eight-run .sixth inning
and the Indians beat the
Philadelphia Phillies 10-6
Wednesday night.
"I was kind of hoping. that
hit would lead to something
bigger," said Blake, · whose
streak - longest in the
majors this year - was
stopped Monday. "If I wein
up m that situation needing a
hit to keep the streak alive, I
have to admit it would be in
the back of my mind. I was
more
more
focused,
relaxed."
C. C. Sabathia (I 0-2)
pitched six innings to help
Cleveland take two of three

and remain tied with Detroit
for the AL Central lead.
Sabathia
joi ned
Josh
Beckett of Boston and John
Lackey 0f the Los Angeles
Angels as the majors' only
I0-game winners.
The left-bander also
matched Hall of Farner
Addie Joss as the only pitchers in Indians history with
I 0 or more victories in
seven consecutive seasons .
Joss did it in 1902-09.
"If I win 20 and we get to
the · playoffs, I'm very
happy," Sabathia said. "If I
only win one more and we
get to the playoffs; 1'.111 still
happy."
· '
Victor Martinez, Jhonny
Peralta, Trot Nixon and Josh
Barfield also drove in two
runs apiece for Cleveland,

Please He Tribe, Bl

AP phOto
Cleveland Indians' C.C. Sabathia delivers a pitc;h to Philadelphia Phillies' Aaron Rowand in
the sixth inning of a baseball game Wednesday in Cleveland. Sabathia gave up four runs
in six innings and left trailing by two, but his teammates scored eight runs in the .bottom
of the sixth to go on to a 10-6 victory and get Sabathia his 10th win of the season.

Buckeyes'
Lighty ·
pleads
guilty

Pomeroy baseball
tourney set for
July 10

.w., __If·,.

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Youth League will
be hosting a baseball tournament starting Tuesday,
July I 0 for all boys ages 910. For more information
caiLKen at 740-992-5322 or
740-416-6648; or Tony at
740-992-4067.

Southern wefght
room now open
RACINE
The
Southern High School
AP photo
weight room is now open
from noon to 2 p.m., Cincinnati Reds' David Ross , left. tags out Oakland Athletics' Mark Kotsay at home in the fifth inning of a baseball
·
Monday-Friday and all game on Wednesday in Oakland, Calif.
. football players are urged to
attend.

Wahama 3-on-3
hoops tourney
MASON, W.Va. - -The
Wahama Athletic Boosters.
are sponsoring a 3-on-3 basketball tournament at
Wahama High School on
Saturday, July 14.
There is a girls division
(9- 12), as well as boys divisions (6-8, 9-12) and an 18and-uver division.
Contact Lisa Gardner at
304-882-2082. Space is
limited.

Rotary Mile
returns this July
to Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS The
Gallipolis Rotary Club will
sponsor its annual Fourth of
July Rotary Mile on
Wednesday, July 4.
Runner will meet 5:30
p.m. at the Shake Shoppe on
2nd Ave., and each competi"
tor must have a completed ·
registration form with them.

CLEVELAND (AP) ~
Ohio State basketball player
David Lighty pleaded guilty
to a misdemeanor assault
charge and was tined $250
in a case involv ing a jogger
• .
who
was
~
shot with a
!...•&amp; .,.... BB gun last
"' n11~m o year.
.
~ ~.~ .' .
Two
of
Lighty's former team.
mates at Vil111 Angela-S t.
Joseph Hi gh School in
Cleveland also en tered
pleas in Cuyahoga County
Common Pleas on Tuesday.
Jimmy McLeod and Darryl
Rushton each were fined
$100 after pleading gui lty to
disorderly conduct. a mmur
misdemeanor.
James Nugent. 55. was
not. seriously hurt last June
when he was hit Ill the back
by at least one plastic BB
whil e jogg ing &lt;in the VAS.I
track. In Cleveland. BB and
pellet guns are considered
firearms and it is illegal to
have them in public places.
Nugent said Tuesday that
he had forgiven the 19year-o ld defendants an J
thought the se ntences handed down by Juuge Kennet h
Callahan were fair.
Aft er he was se nt enceu.
Lighty shook Nugent \
hand. Lighty told the judge ·
he wanted to apologize ''tll
Mr. Nugent, to my fami ly.
my · communi ty and my
school."
Lighty. a 6-foot-5 guard forward . sta rted seven
games last season as thl'
Buckeyes. se t a 'schoo l
record for victuties wi th "
· 35-4 reCDrd.

Athletics slide past .Cincinnati, 5-3
BY

JANIE McCAULEY
AP SPORTS WRITER

.OAKLAND, Cal if.
Dan Haren felt out of sorts
- and he still won.
That's how good the
Oakl:;~nd ace has been ·this
season, The Athletics have
found some interesting ways
to pull out close games, too,
with Haren the latest beneficiary.
Nick Swisher drew a
bases-loaded walk to tie the
score in the seventh inning,
then Eric Chavez followed

with a sacri fice tly ' in
Oakland's 5-3 victory over
the Cincinnati Reds on
Wednesday.
That saved the day for
Haren, who won his ninth
straight decision and third
consec utive start despite
giving up two home runs in
a game fur the second time
this year.
.
"''m more proud of it after
the game!'" Haren said. " I
really didn't have good stuff.
I was fighting myself. I put
us in a hole."
Shannon Stewart added a

solo homer in the eighth.
Jack Cust's two-run shut in
the fourth put the A's on the
board, and Oakland took
advantage of its chances
once Reds starter Mall
Belisle was out uf the game.
. Mark Kotsay walked to
load the bases against Jon
Coutlangus in the seventh.
then Swisher drew another
free pass to force home
Bobby Crosby. Chavez followed with his sac ritice tly.
Marcus McBeth (1 - 1) took
the loss after giving up rally
starting si ngles to Crosby

and Mark Ellis.
"We need to get big outs
late in the ballgame from
so meone besides Dave
Weathers," Reds manage r
Jerry Narron said. "We're
very close to being a good
ballclub. We just need to &amp;ct
outs when we need them.'
· Oakland bounced hack
from a disappointing interleague series loss to the St.
Louis Cardinals last weekend with its 22 nd victory of
2007 by two or fewer runs .

Adam 'Pacman' Jones to face
2 felony ,charges in Las Vegas
Bv

tum themselves in, and if
they don't, police Will go
looking for them," Roger
LAS
VEGAS
said at a news conference.
Suspended NFL player
NFL spokesman Greg
' Adam "Pacman" Jones must Aiello did not say if the Las
surrender to authorities here Vegas charges would .affect
to face two felony charges in Jones' suspe nsion for the
a strip club melee that pre- upcoming NFL season.
ceded a triple shooting in . "As we have stated, his
February.
status wiII be reviewed after
CONTACI'US
· Two other people police the Titans' lOth regular-seaOVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.) ideptified as part of the trou- son game," Aiello said.
bled Tennessee Titans corJones agreed this month
1·740·446·2342 ext. 33
nerback's entourage also not to appeal the suspension.
will face felony charges in and officials said Jones had
Fu -1-740-446-3008
the
fracas inside the Minxx . a chance to be rein stated
E·mall - sports@mydailysentinel.com
club,
Las Vegas police said after I0 games if he adhered
Sports StaH
Wednesday:
to team restriction's and had
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
Clark County District no further "adverse involve(740) a46-2342. e•t 33
Attorney David Roger said ment with law enforcebsherman@mydailytribune.com
arrest warrants were being ment." Missing the entire
sought for Jones, Robert season would cost Jones hi s
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, e&gt;rt. 23
"Bi~ Rob" Reid of Carson, salary of nearly $1.3 miltcrumOmy~allyregister.com ·
Cahf., and Sadia Morrison !ton.
No one was identified as
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer of New York.
"They'll
be
give
n
a
reathe
. shooter in a cri minal
(7 40) 446-2342, ••t 33
bWfl!ters 0 mydallytribune.com
sonable
amount
of
time
to
complamt
ftled Wednesday
.
KEN RITTER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

in Las Vegas Justice Court.
But police released an image
of a man who Capt. James
Dillon called a "person of
interest re lated to the shooting." Dillon said investigators wanted to identify and
talk · with the man, who
police said may live on the
East Coast.
·
Tennessee Titans owner
K.S. "Bud" Adams Jr. said
the team was focused on the
2007 season and would have
no comment about Jones '
legal trouble.
"We ·are moving forward
as a team and do not expect
to comment on any future
matters concerning him umil
his suspension is completed," Adams said.
Dillon said Las Vegas
police contacted Atlanta
police, who said this· week
they wanted to que stion .

Please see Reds. Bl

Tenness ee
Titans corne r ba ck
A

d

a

m

"Pacman"
Jones · is
shown during footb all
traini ng
camp
tn
Clarllsville .
Tenn. Aug.
4.
2006.
Auth ori tie s
in Las Vegas
s

a

i

d

Wednesday
that Jones
has
been
charged with
two counts
of
felony,
coercio'!
stem min~
from
;&gt;
melee inside
a Las Vegas
strip club in
February. '
AP photo

Please see Pacman, Bl

~

•

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

wwW .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Finchem urges tours Sosa becomes fifth player in 600-homer club
t0 .~work together
on d.rug·policy
BY STEPHEN HAWKINS

He has never been penalized for U positive steroids
test, however, and was not
involved in the BALCO
scandal that has dogged
Bonds.
"I'm quite sure a lot of
people were skeptical about
him for -many reasons,"
Rangers manager Ron
Washington said. "But he
showed us he was serious
about coming back."
Besides the consecutive
homers, Marquis (5-4)
walked four ·batters that
scored without a hit. Those
runs came on tw o errors, a
double-play grounder and a
groundout. The right-hander is 0-3 in eight starts
since a three- hit shutout
against Pittsburgh on May .
9 that was his fifth straight
victory.
N:ameron Loe (3-6), coming off eight shurout ·
innings against the Pirates
in a start Thursday that
ended his six-game losing
streak, allowed three runs
over 6 2-3 innings.
Alfonso Soriano was 3for-4 with two doubles and
his 12th homer, a solo shot
with two outs in the fifth .
for the Cubs' first run.
Koyie Hill ,· the starting
catcher after Michael
Barrett was traded earlier
Wednesday, hit a two-run
homer in the seventh. ·
So sa is the only player
with three 60-homer seasons. He hit .308 with a
career-high 66 homers and
158 RBis in his 1998 MVP
season for the Cubs- and
was pan of that memorable ·
home run chase with
McGwire, the · first major
leaguer to hit 70 homers.
Sosa holds , the major
league record by hitting .
homers in 45 ballparks,
adding Rangers Ballpark in
Arlington and two other
stadiums to that list this
season. He also homered
for the first time at
Cleveland's Jacobs Field .
and at Disney World in a
series against Tampa Bay. ·
The slugger was 16 when
Texas signed him out of the
.Dominican Republic . in
1985. He was still a lanky
kid in 1989 when he made
his major league debut and
hit his first home run, the
only one he had in 25
games for the Rangers ·
before he was traded to the . ·
Chicago White Sox and
later to the Cubs.

.

APSPORTSWRITER

It

ARLINGTON, Texas · Sammy Sosa's 600th homer
rese mbled so many that
CR.OMWELL,
Conn. that we have a legitimacy to came befo re.- except this.
· (AP) - The PGA Tour. is the rule."
time the Chicago Cubs
getting closer to a rule on
The
LPGA
Tour were on the ot her side .
Playing for the Texas
performance -e nhancing announced last year it would
drugs, and with testing like- stan drug testing in 2008. Rangers after a year out of
ly to follow, commissioner Commissioner
Carolyn baseball , Sosa became the
Tim Finchem says golf brga- Bivens said the tour would fifth member of the 600,
nizations around the world develop its policy through homer club Wednesday
should make sure they ' re on the National Center for Drug night when he connected
the same page.
Free Sport, which man;tges against his former team.
Even with Tiger Woods testing programs for the
Mter driving a 1-2 pitch
among those in favor of NCAA and other organiza- to right-center for a solo
drug testing to prove golf is . tions.
shot in the fifth inning of
clean, Finchem has defendThe penalty for testing Texas'
7-3
victory,
ed the tour's lack of plan positive would be 25 tourna- Siammin ' Saminy bounced
because he has found no evi- ments for the first offense,
dence of performance- 50 tournaments for the sec- out of the batter's box with
enhancing drugs or evidence ond offense and a lifetime his trademark hop and
thrust his right fist into the
of players using them.
ban for a third violation.
air
before reaching first
He conceded, however,
European Tour chief execbase.
·He was mobbed at
that drug testing in sports utive George O'Grady said
home
plate by his teamhas become a reality.
last month that his tour
mates
while
the scoreboard
"It's unfortunate that these would have a drug policy in
realities are with us, but they January, and he urged that showed pictures of all five
are,"
Finchem
said the golf world unite on imy members of the elite club:
AP pholo
Wednesday at the Travelers such policy. ·
Hank Aaron, Barry Bonds, Texas Rangers ' Sammy Sosa acknowledges cheers from
Championship. "And we
"I personally don 't thiok Babe Ruth , Willie Mays fans after connecting for his 600th career home run against
have to deal with them, and we've sot a drug problem in and Sosa.
Sosa played for the Cubs Chicago Cubs pitcher Jason Marquis in the sxith inning of a
I think it's important that professtonal golf. I haven 't
golf deal with them collec- met anybody yet who thinks from 1992-2004, winning baseball game in Arlington, Texas on Wednesday.
tivl:ly."
we have," O' Grady said. the ' 98 NL MVi&gt; award and about a month was tlipped the series · began. "It's
Woods said last summer "But we work with govern- making seven All-Star from 599 to 600 - and a maybe apropos that here
that he didn 't thiQk anyone ments in so many different teams while hitting 545 new banner was unfurled in the Cubbies are in town and
was using steroids, but it countries. They are insisting homers with Chicago. ·
center field congratulating Sammy is going for his
could be a · problem in the on a wider list."
·No. 600 came off Jason Sosa for joining the 600- 600th home run. He was an
future. Asked when he
In amateur golf, the Royal Marquis, the 364th pjtcher homer club.
·
icon in Chicago for a "lol)g
would like to see a drug- &amp; Ancient Golf Club and the 3~-year-old Sosa has
Chants of "Sam-my! . time, was loved." · . ,
testing plan, Woods replied, U.S. Golf Association homered off in his 18 major Sam-my!" prompted a secWhen Sosa returned to
'"';omorrow would be fine which govern ~olf around league seasons.
ond curtain call from Sosa. the majors, · he insisted he
with me."
the world -'- dtd a sample
It was So sa's 12th homer
The cheering hadn't even was CQ~t~ing back for more
Finchem has moved a lit- test' at the World Amateur in 62 games this season subsided before Frank than the 12 homers he
tie slower.
Team Championship in
since signing a minor Catalanotto followed with a needed to 'reach 600,;
The PGA Tour policy South Africa late last year, league
deal and making the homer, the 75th of his
"I'm goihg to go beyond
board in November autho- and all 12 golfers came bact&lt;
roster in ,spring training career, to give the Rangers that. · rm . not going to· stor
rized the tour to develop a clean.
with
Texas,· the franchise a 6-1 lead. .
·
there," he • reiterated this
list of prohibited substances,
Finchem recommended
that
gave
him
·
his
start.
He
While
S.
o
sa
has
had
an
week. .
along with creating. an edu- that all golf organizations
.
hit
·his
first
big
league
impressive
comeback
this
A tumultuous 2005 seacation program to inform develop a single standard on
homer
with
the
Rangers
in
season,
his
·pursuit'
of
600
son
almost drove Sosa out
players about ·how they what to test for and how.
1'989.
homers
was
overshadowed
.
o
f
the
game for good.
might get into the body, the
"In Europe, in particular,
Sosa also has 52 RBis, by the Rangers (27-44) .It started during spring.
health risks, potential testing and in certain other areas of
and possible penalties.
the world, the idea of testing . which ranks seventh in the having the worst {ecord in training that year when he
"We don't have a rule on in athletics is just a reality, American League. He has baseball and Bonds' chase testified before Congress
performance-enhancin~ because it's goyernment homered against' every to catch Aaron atop the about possible steroi\1 use'
in baseball, and it didn't get
major league team in his career home run list.
drugs; we never have had, ' required," he said.
Finchem said. "We're getJ.J. Henry, back in career.
Bonds has 748 homers- mucp better from there. He
After going into the seven 'shy of Aaron's mark hit .221 with 14 homers and
tin~ close on that. I suspect Connecticut defending his
we II be done with that cer- first tour win last year, said dugout with his teammates, - .with' only three in his 45 RBis in 102 games with
he doesn 't think testing will Sosa came out for a curtain last 97 at:bats. Ruth is third Baltimore before goiqg
tainly this year."
Finchem said he is work- have a· big impact on the call. He blew kisses to the on the home run list with home to the DQminican•
ing with other golf organiza- sport. .
crowd and acknowledged 714 and Mays is fourth Republic, where he stayed
tions "to see if we can't
"A lot of people have the Cubs' dugout with a with 660.
.
for more than a year.
move forward 'together with talked about that integrity pump of his fist, and
Sosa had a simi-la1 homer
Like Mark McGwire and
respect to what a rule is, and and honesty of ~olf is what Chicago manager Lou drought. No. 600 was only Bonds, Sosa is suspected of
then beyond that, in terms of makes it so spectal," he said. Piniella pointed
back his second in 22 games- a using steroids before · they
the execution of the rule."
"I'd like to think there's toward the slugger. Sosa span of 83 at-bats in which were banned by baseball,
He said that likely would none of that going on out had never faced the Cubs his only other homer was a and he was caught with a
mean a testing program "so here, to be honest 'with you." before the series · opener grand slam Friday- at corked bat in front of his
Tuesday night. '
Cincinnati.
home crowd when · he
A
countdown
banner
that
"Sammy's
had
a
great
played for the Cubs in
would represent Jones, Reid
.
has
hung
in
ri,ght
field
for
career,"
Piniella
said
before
2'003.
and Morrison if charges
were tiled, was expected to
from Page Bl
contact police to arrange
"I wouldn't think s.o ; but
Rod Barajas put the Manuel said.
their surrender. Langford
we ' ll have to wait and see," Phillies ahead in the third · Barfield's RBI double
did not respond to repeated
he said.
with a two-run homer, his made it 4-3 in the bottom
Jones about a shooting early messages Wedm;sday seekLieber
from
PageBl
was
replaced
by
fourth.
Barajas is 6-for-14 half. Then Grady Sizemore
Monday after a fight at an ing comment.
Atlanta strip club.
y,
.Michael Zagurski. who (.429) with three homers in was walked intentionally to
The . Las Vegas gunfire
A Las egas police report
. gav~ up an RBI single to his career against Sabathia . bring up Blake.
.
occurred Feb. 19 outside a says
Jones
showered which is only 9-10 in June Martinez and walked Travis
"He
always
wears
me
.
Philadelphia's
Shane
club several blocks offthe dancers on stage with but has not been out of first Hafner to load the bases.
out," Sabathia said. "It's Victorino extended his hit- ·
Strip near the end of NBA money from a black plastic place since April 24.
Peralta
hit
a
two-run
dounot even a weird deal. He ting streak to 13 games with
Jon Lieber (3-5) left due
All-Star weekend. A bar trash bag - an act of tipble
against
right-hander
always
hits bullets employee was paralyzed ping known as "making it to a strained right ankle Yoel Hernandez. One out homers and doubles. He's a two-run double in the seventh against Tom Mastny.
and two others suffered less rain." When two dancers after yielding Blake's hit later: Nixon\ two:run dou- got my number."
Notes: A note on the
between
short
and
third
that
serious wounds.
began fighting · over the
ble to right-ce nter made it
Cleveland
put
two
runIndians
' clubhouse mes- ·
put
Cleveland
ahead
5-4.
The 23-year-old Jones money, Jones allegedly
1.0-4.
ners on with none out in sage board reminded them '
"I
twisted
it
more
than
faces two counts· of felony grabbed one by the hair and
" He made some bad three of the first four to wear suits and ties this
punched her.
anything," said Lieber, who
pitches
to Peralta and innings, but Lieber allowed Friday for a tour of the
coercion stemming from
Jones is accused of stumbled as he ran off the
Nixon,"
Phillies
manager only two runs .. Martinez White House and Capitol.
allegations he bit a bar swinging. . his fists and mound to back up home
bouncer on the ankle and
Charlie Manuel said. "You had an RBI groundout in
threatened 10 kill club threatening the life of club plate. "I had it looked at and don't have· to give them
Cleveland will play an
the third aod Barfield tied it interleague
emp.loyees, according to the employees who police said everything i,s stable. I iced it something to hit there." .
series
in
with a sacrifice fly in the
tried
to
intervene,
and
is
and
I'll
ice
it
again
tomorWashington - their last
criminal compl ai nt.
Sabathia gave up four fourth.
Reid, 37 , who police seen .on videotape punching row.
game
there was a 3-2 loss
runs and five hits'to win for
Ryan Howard's two-out
identified as Jones • body- a man who police identify
"I was worried. It didn 't the first time in three starts RBI double put the Phillies on Sept. 22, 1971 before
. e.
fe1ony as his own business man ag- feel that good. I hadn:t had
oauard , f ac s 0 ne
since a tive-hit, 1-0 triumph ahead. 3-2 in the sixth. the . Washington Senators
something
pop
like
that
in
a
cOercion charge alleging he erA police report says Jones
over Kansas City on June 5. Howard, who scored on mo ved ·to Texas and
attacked · a bouncer who
long time."
The left-bander struck out Aaron Rowand 's soft single became the Rangers in·
tried to restrain Jones.
was see n walking away
Lieber gave up seven runs four and walked one, to right, has 35 RBis in his 1972. .. . Sabathia has
Morrison , 25, faces from the strip club with a and 10 hits over 5 1·-3
pitched at least six innings
improving to 7-1 at Jacobs last 31 games.
· 1 d.
man wearing a baggy black
h
c arges me u mg coercion, T-shirt and blue jeans. innings and said he was not Field. He has only walked
in
15 of 16 starts. He went
·"We had to hold them
felony assault with. a deadly
sure if he would miss tris I0 in 92 1-3 innings since right there, but we've had fiVe 1nn1ngs May 21
weapon and battery stem- Minutes later, police say a next start.
April 15.
trouble holding them," against Seattle. ·
ming from allegations that similarly dressed man
she hit a bouncer i~ the head standing next to a palm tree
with a champagne bottle fired five or six shots
Haren had allowed only by Swisher to get Kotsay. the first time in his career,
and attacked several other toward people at the fron't of
six
home runs all year and who had doubled for the allowed two runs , one
·
the club.
'
A bouncer who Jones
came in with the majors ' second time in the game.
club employees with a chair
earned, and four hits. He
and a stanchion.
from
PageBl
lowest
ERA
at
1.64
before
The
Reds
won
their
first
walked four.
·
.
fought with was wounded in
·
Coercton
giving up the two homers. , regular-season game against
ts the act of the chest and left forearm,
"I have to co ntrol the
threatening or physically Another bouncer, Thomas
Adam Dunn and Josh The Boston Red Sox also the A's in eight tries with a. long ball a little more," he
inter(ering with a person Urbanski, was shot in the Hamilton capitalized on two hit two against him June 4 5-2 victory Tuesday night sa id. "My ball was. running
trying to do something that . left hand and the torso, and rare mistakes by Haren (9- in the Coliseum - by and appeared headed for right off the pl \tte and I was
he or she has a right and
David Ortiz and Wily Mo another one after Belisle trying to be too fine. I
responsibility 10 do.
was left paralyzed from the 2) in the fourth. Dunn hit a Pen a.
pitched
SIX
effective shouldn't do that."
and
If convicted, Jones faces a waist down. A female club solo home, run
"I think I might have lost innings.
Notes: Griffey's first Kin
. maximum of up to 12 years patron was wounded in the Hamilton added a two-run my edge for a minute or·
Now, Cincinnati contin- the first imiing was No. 500 ·
in prison and a $10,000 head, police said.
drive two batters later.
two, and that's ail it takes," . ues· its 11-day, nine-game
fine, authorities. said.
Langford has called the
But Haren recovered and Haren said. "Maybe I was road trip with a visit to of Haren's career. ... The
The charges are slightly melee "a glorified bar · the Oakland offense did just being a little bit of a baby Seattle starting Friday. It A's activated ·RF Milton
different from those police fight," and said nothing enough to keep him from about it."
will be Ken Griffey Jr.'s Bradley from his third stint
sought in March· against linked Jones with the his first loss since a 2-1
, The right-hander got a 1- first return to the Emerald on the disabled list thi s seaJones, Reid and Mortison. · shooting outside. He said defeat to the rival ·Los 2-3 first inning featuring City in eight seasons with son and he was back in the
Roger declined to file those Jones cooperated with Angeles Angels on April 7 two strikeouts bitt didn't the Reds since leaving the starting lineup. Oakland
·charges, asking police for police on DNA compar- in his second start of the have another perfect inning Mariners after the 1999 sea, made \Oster room by
more information and to isons that failed to show year.
optioning . infielder J.J .
until the fifth .
son,
identify a shooter. ·
.
the NFL star was responsi"Dan 's always going to
Alan Embree worked two
Griffey went 0-for-4 with Furmaniak to Triple-A
"We wanted to make sure ble for a bite injury report- keep us in the game," Cust perfect innings with three two strikeouts a day after he Sacramento. .. . The Reds
we had a lock-tight case ed by a bouncer,
said. "It's uncharacteristic strikeouts for hi s eighth hit his 582nd .career home and A's split their two
before we started filing
that he let up three runs save in nine opportunities.
run and No. 19 this season. World Series meetings,
charges and releasing
AP Sports Writer Teresa early. After that happens,
Reds right fielder Norris He will have Thursday's off with Oakland winning in
reports," Roger said.
M. Walker contributed to it's definitely nice to pick Hopper saved the potential day in Seattle to catch up seven games in 1972 and
Las Vegas lawyer Robert this report from Nashville, him up and get us back in tying run witti a great throw with old friends.
Cincinnati sweeping four
Langford, who .has said ~e Tenn. ·
the game."
home in the fifth on a single
Belisle, facing the A's for games in 1990.

Pacman

Tribe

Reds

'

·'

Page B3 • The Daily Sentinel

--

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June 21,

2007

....

Big time wrestling comes to Portland
PORTLAND When
you think of professional
wrestling you may not
think of Portland at first,
but on Friday the Portland
Community Center will
turn into a summer slam
of seven matches featuring
wrestlers from Pure Impact
Wrestling (PIW).
Tickets will be $10 for
adults and $5 for kids at
the door. The show starts
at 7 p.m. at the center.
PIW will present " Dawn
of the Fed," which is a
night of hardcore wrestling
matches including a tag
team match, three-way survival match and the main
event
where
Vance
Desmond will take on
Brandon Morgan for the
PIW heavyweight title.
The entire night will be
filmed for a later DVD
release.
In addition to those

ICENHOWER JOINS
.VEGAS LEGENDS CONCERT

GALLIPOLIS
The
excitement of Vegas-style
ente~nt is coming to the
.
Ariel-Ann Carson Dater
Performing Arts Centre, as pan
of the Ariel's Vegas Weekend
June 29 and 30.
Elvis tribute artist and local
favorite, Dwi~ht Icenhower
will headlinp the Ve~as
Legends Concert perfomung
as 'The King of Rock &amp; Roll."
nationallyPlloto courtesy of Vance Desmond Additionally,
known
performers
lrv
Cass and
Wrestler Vance Desmond flies through the air during a
recent match and hopes to bring the same level of intensi- Matt King, will also be perty to the upcoming PIW matches scheduled for Friday at the forming.Cass performs as Tom
Jones, and King as Roy
·
Portland Community Center.
Orbison.
matches, the night promises The object of the " unlucky
The Vegas Legends Concert
even more wrestling may- 13" is to staple 13 $1 bills will serve as the grand finale to
hem with what's called the
the Ariel's Vegas Weekend. The
" unlucky 13 staple gun onto the other wrestler and concert will perform on
match"
featuring
the whoever reaches 13 tirst Saturday, June 30 at 8 p.m.
Juggulator vs. .Sam Hane. wins the match.
Additional Vegas Weekend
events include a casino night .
fund-raiser on Friday, June 29
from 7 to I0 p.m., and a showing of the classic movie "Viva
Las Vegas" on Saturday, June
living history presentations, on ticket prices or lodging, 30 at 2 p.m. Icenhower is
children's activities, banjo call (3~ 872-6853.
scheduled to introduce ihe clasand fiddle contests, and many
June19-23
sic movie.
.. sessiOns.
. ' .
Jam
The Vegas Legends Concert .
Admission is free. For inforMADISON, W.Va~
is sponsored, in pan by Sunny
Celebrate coal and' its her- mation, contact (304) 46293.1, Big Country 99.5, The
June21-24
itage in the coal capital of the 5000, information@wvfol.kRiver I01.5 and Pepsi.
festival or visit www.wvfol.kstate.
Vegas Legends Concert seatCHARLESTON, W.Va.
Dwight Icenhower as. Elvis
Activities available include festival.org.
ing
is currently on sale at the
- Enjoy a weekend celeequipment displays, arts and
bration of the arts· music, Ariel-Dater Hall box office at Tickets may be purchased via through the Ariel website,
·· crafts displays, a carnival,
dance, theater, visual art and 428 Second Ave., Gallipolis. telephone during these hours, ww w. ar i e It he a tre. org.
Box office hours are 9 a.m. until
gospel music entertainment,
film. While Festiv ALL will 4 p.m., Tuesday through Friday. by calling (740) 446-2787. Reserved seating is available
a miners' memorial service,
Tickets )nay also be purchased for $35, $25 and $15. ·
feature artists of world-class
fireworks and a grand.parade.
Jurie21-24
stature, local artists and arts
The Coal Museum in
organizations
will also be
downtown Madison will be
SUMMERSVILLE, W.Va. showcased.
open during the festival. For - Experience four big days
Most events are free and
details, visit www.wvcoal- of jamming from 9 a.m. until
others
require tickets. For
museum.org or call ioy midnight at the West Virginia
ATHENS - Come cele- University Mall by entering walk sales through the 'day. ·
tickets,
call (304) 561-3570,
Underwood at (304) 369- Nazarene
Camp's long on to www.theclaycen- brate Appalachia Ohio's the main entrance on East
The Ngoma Drum Circle ·
3391.
Summersville Music Park.
creative
industries
this
comState
Street.
Athens
area
led
by Jane Palmer and
ter.org, or drop by the Clay
Around II bands will be
ing
Saturday
in
Athens
at
'
shoppers
can
first
stop
at
Karen
Gunter-Seymour is
playing each day. Food will Center box office.
the University Mall. As pan the open air Athens Farmers the
·featured
music
Tickets to many events of its 2007 launch, Art of Market then.come inside for act. 'Onlookers will be
be available; camping space
June21-24
is free and electricity is avail- can also be purchased at Ohlo.com will host an art more food, fun and shop- encouraged to participate ·
able at an extra cost. Children Taylor Books and at the exhibit and "buy local" ping at An of Ohio and mall and learn how to drum with ·
WVSU Capitol Center in man for community mem- sidewalk sales.
GLENVILLE, W.Va.
under 12 are.free.
a variety of different sized
downtown
Charleston. For bers to learn more about the
This annual festival, founded
Tickets are required for all
This Saturday, artists will African drums from the
to preserve traditional, un- events. The charge is $130 at information, visit www.fes- website, visit with area be on hand to showcase Ohio Valley International
amplified mo_untain string the gate for all four days, or tivallcharleston.com, or artists and buy · direct or their painting and prints, Council (OVIC).
·
music, will feature crafts, a $45 for a full day ($20 after contact Larry Groce at ldig- , place orders at the man.
pottery, jewelry, wood · For more information
quilt show, square dancing, 6:30 p.m.). For information gy@hotmail.com.
A project
of the products, blown glass, about the drum circle, conAppalachian Center for stained glass, hand-painted tact Jane Palmer at (740)
Economic Networks, Art of tiles, enamel work and gar- 594-7710. The Athens
Ohio.com captures our den art. Additional activi- County Convention and
regional flavor of distinc- ties include an demonstra- Visitors Bureau (ACCVB)
tive art and anisari prod- tions, a quilt show, food will be available to share
$20 plus $5 stock fee, while chicken dinner, soft drink and ucts, unique home furnish- sampling from local food information on one-tank
ings, decor and apparel and entrepreneurs and live day trips throughout the
'
all entries are $40 plus $5 dessert.
stock fee per rider. Entry
Tickets are $20. Call Sue at homegrown specialty foods. music from area fiddlers region for great ideas for
GALLIPOLIS
The Art of . Ohio.com and . drummers.
Bon- summer family fun.
signups
close
at
6
p.m.'
·
(740)
417-0156 or Jennifer at
Photographer and Gallia
event
will
run
from
10
a.m.
Ton/ElderBeerman
,
For more information,
Admission
is
$7
for
adults,
(740) 418-3306. Split the Pot
County native Larry Rood
to
2
p.m.
Visitors
will
find
Maurice's,
and
Bath
&amp;
contact
Paulette Halliday at
$5
for
children
aged
7-12
and
and a silent auction will be
will display his talent and eye
the
exhibit-mart
inside
the
Body
Works
will
host
sideACEnet,
(740) 592-3854.
for photographic opportunuty free for children 6 and under. held. This is a fan club fundTo reach the rodeo site . raiser.
witli a display of his work at
from
Point Pleasant, take
the French Art Colony June
W.Va.
2 south toward
1•27.
Huntington
for 15 miles, then
The display consists of
turn
left
onto
Jerry's Run
photos of his tour through
Road.
four
miles
on the left.
GALLIPOLIS The
Paris and Provence.
For infomtation, call (304)
Ariel-Ann
Carson
Dater
DAVIS, W.Va.- Within July20and 21.
CHILLICOTHE -Adena
. 576-2243.
Visitors will enjoy the Performing Arts Centre is
Mansion and Gardens, driving distance of the sumChillicothe, will present 'The mer heat and humidity of sounds of West Virginia's planning a casino night fundMurder of Lindsey Woolsey," most Eastern seaboard and rich musical heritage pre- raiser as part of the Ariel's
a mystery dinner theater, at Midwestern cities, you can sented by Roy Scott, the leg- Vegas Weekend, June 29 and
Casino Night will take
GALLIPOLIS -:- Family the site at 6 p.m. Saturday, find a real change of pace in endary star of the world 30.
GALLIPOLIS -· The FAC
place
on Friday, June 29, ·
Dance Studio at 59 Court St., Addiction , ·Community June 30. Doors will open at a high altitude resort nestled · famous WWVA Jamboree from 7 to 10 p.m.
in the highest valley east of and MGM recording artists.
Services 5:30p.m.
Gallipolis, is offering yoga Treatment
The Ariel's volunteer team
the
Rockies.
•
.
Scott
appears
Friday
Adena
is
the
restored
home
(FACTS/New
Alternatives)
is
instruction under Lynne
and
staff are planning an
Timberline Four Seasons evening and Saturday
Allen. Oasses will be in the providing a fishing event for of Thomas Worthington, conevening
full of activities .and
morning/early afternoon, and youth ages 6 and up at the . sidered to be the father of Resort, located on the evening with Jan and Lori of prizes for its summer fundEa.stern Continental Divide Harmony Scott, who have
you can register at the FAC, Bob Evans Farm at Rio Ohio statehOod.
in
north central West been featured on Nashville raiser. Guests will have the ·
'The Murder of Lindsey
530 First Ave., Gallipolis, Grande on Friday, beginning
opportunity to take pan in
during normal business hours at II a.m. and lasting until. 3 Woolsey" is loosely based on Virginia, is not located near Network and have per- numerous games, including
an actual event that occurred any large town or city, in formed with national acts
(Monday through Friday, 9 · p.m.
black jack, kerchinca, keno. a
The event will be held at at Adena in 1880, when fact, the closest location on such as Mel Tillis, Roy Texas
a.m. until 5 p.m.).
Hold 'Em Tournament
Worthington, your map is the small village Clark, Janie Fricke and
Classes are offered on . the shelterhouse across from James
and more. Prizes include a
Thomas's son, was living on of Davis, located I0 miles Marie Osmond.
Wednesdays, starting June the restaurant.
32-inch
flat-panel television, a
There is no cover charge
Those planning to attend the estate. Guests will hear away.
20, 27, July II and 18, and
pair
of
Amis.h rockers, two
On Friday, June 22 and for the performances.
Aug.l and 15. The cost is $60 will need to bring their own gossip about the murder in the
collectable Morgan .Silver
On Aug. 3 and 4, visitors Dollars, a 50-gallon gas cerJune
23,
pole, and let FACT~ know if recreated village in the visitor Saturday,
for the summer session.
Timberline
will
host
the
at
Timberhne will go back in tificate and many more.
this
is
a
problem.
To
register
center. James Worthington
Offered is Wake Up Yoga, 8
' until 9 a.m.; Beginners Yoga, ·or for more information: call and his son, Richard, will annual summer Celtic Music time for a weekend in the
Music, food, and drinks
Festival, Friday from 8, p.m. Old West at annual Frontier will complete thi s event for
9:15-i0:15 a.m.; and Fitness 446-7866 or (740) 286-1589. welcome them to Adena.
Parents must sign · a release
At the mansion and garden, untilmidnight and Saturday Weekend. Visitors will see guests aged 21 and older.
Yoga, 10:30-11:30 a.m.
· witnesses and suspects will from 3 p.m. until midnight. an authentic cow camp and Admission is $25, which
Contact the .French Art for participation.
The increasingly popular chuck wagon complete with includes , $500 in stan-up
provide clues and · red herColony at (740) 446-3834 to
register. Class space is limitrings for the guest sleuths to Celtic music will be present- all the appropriate gear and .gaming ' money. Winning
ponder. At the close of a ed by recognized Celtic a live shoot out on horse gaming money will be used ·
ed.
catered dinner featuring artists. The program will back. During the weekend at the end of the evening to
steamship carved roast beef include traditional Irish there will be trail rides, bar- bid
on
the
prizes.
all jus and chicken basil, the songs·, both vocal and instru- becue, square dancing and Additionally, a door prize will
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. lWo for the Road, featuring murderer's identity will be mental, quintessential Celtic old Western and mountain be given away every 15 minsounds on mandolin., fiddle music live by the Saddle · utes from 7 to 10 p.m.
Elvis Presley tribute artists revealed. ·
Tramps.
Price is $40 per person, or and guitar.
Dwight Icenhower and Chris
APPLE GROVE, W.Va. Tickets are limited, and
Late · evening perfor- · Motor bike races complete advance reservations are su~- ·
will
perform $32 per person for Ohio
. Ranch and Rodeo . will pre- Solano,
sent championship rodeo on Saturday, June 23 at the HistoriCal . Society and mances will highlight Irish with entertainment, food gested. However, tickets WID ·
American Legion in New Friends of Adena members. rock both Friday and and beverage, trail rides, and be sold at the .door, if availSaturday, June 23 at 7 p.m.
Advance reservations are Saturday. There is no cover evening live entertainment able, the evening of the
Events include bareback, Haven.
.
required and can be made by charge for any of the perfor- will on occur the weekend event. Advance tickets may
·Doors
open
at
6:30
p.m.,
team roping, steer ri~ing, barof Aug. I0 and II .
rel racing, calf ropmg, steer with dinner being served at 7 phoning (800) 319-7248 .· or mances.
lie purchaled at the Ariel wrestling, bull nding and p.m. The two-hour show (740) 772-1500 by June 25.
Timberline's annual suinFor more itiformation. Dater Hall box office, 428 ·
. begins at 8 p.m.
Cowgirl BreakA-W.
For more information, visit mer mountain and country call (304) 304-4801 or visit Second Ave., Gallipolis, or by
Entry fees are steer riding,
Ticket price includes show, www.ohiohistory. org.
music festival will be held www.timberlineresort.com. · calling (740) 446-2787.

West Virginia events

Coal Festival .

FestivALL

Bluegrass
Festival

Art c~lebration slated·Saturday.

Folk Festival

Entertainment briefs

FACdisplay

Adena offers
mystery dinner

Yoga class
slated

Rodeo slated .
for Saturday

' 1.

Timberline Resort hosts Celtic
Music Festival this weekend

Ariel plans Casino
Night fund-raiser

Fishing event

TWo for Road
performing·

I
';ill

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

wwW .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Finchem urges tours Sosa becomes fifth player in 600-homer club
t0 .~work together
on d.rug·policy
BY STEPHEN HAWKINS

He has never been penalized for U positive steroids
test, however, and was not
involved in the BALCO
scandal that has dogged
Bonds.
"I'm quite sure a lot of
people were skeptical about
him for -many reasons,"
Rangers manager Ron
Washington said. "But he
showed us he was serious
about coming back."
Besides the consecutive
homers, Marquis (5-4)
walked four ·batters that
scored without a hit. Those
runs came on tw o errors, a
double-play grounder and a
groundout. The right-hander is 0-3 in eight starts
since a three- hit shutout
against Pittsburgh on May .
9 that was his fifth straight
victory.
N:ameron Loe (3-6), coming off eight shurout ·
innings against the Pirates
in a start Thursday that
ended his six-game losing
streak, allowed three runs
over 6 2-3 innings.
Alfonso Soriano was 3for-4 with two doubles and
his 12th homer, a solo shot
with two outs in the fifth .
for the Cubs' first run.
Koyie Hill ,· the starting
catcher after Michael
Barrett was traded earlier
Wednesday, hit a two-run
homer in the seventh. ·
So sa is the only player
with three 60-homer seasons. He hit .308 with a
career-high 66 homers and
158 RBis in his 1998 MVP
season for the Cubs- and
was pan of that memorable ·
home run chase with
McGwire, the · first major
leaguer to hit 70 homers.
Sosa holds , the major
league record by hitting .
homers in 45 ballparks,
adding Rangers Ballpark in
Arlington and two other
stadiums to that list this
season. He also homered
for the first time at
Cleveland's Jacobs Field .
and at Disney World in a
series against Tampa Bay. ·
The slugger was 16 when
Texas signed him out of the
.Dominican Republic . in
1985. He was still a lanky
kid in 1989 when he made
his major league debut and
hit his first home run, the
only one he had in 25
games for the Rangers ·
before he was traded to the . ·
Chicago White Sox and
later to the Cubs.

.

APSPORTSWRITER

It

ARLINGTON, Texas · Sammy Sosa's 600th homer
rese mbled so many that
CR.OMWELL,
Conn. that we have a legitimacy to came befo re.- except this.
· (AP) - The PGA Tour. is the rule."
time the Chicago Cubs
getting closer to a rule on
The
LPGA
Tour were on the ot her side .
Playing for the Texas
performance -e nhancing announced last year it would
drugs, and with testing like- stan drug testing in 2008. Rangers after a year out of
ly to follow, commissioner Commissioner
Carolyn baseball , Sosa became the
Tim Finchem says golf brga- Bivens said the tour would fifth member of the 600,
nizations around the world develop its policy through homer club Wednesday
should make sure they ' re on the National Center for Drug night when he connected
the same page.
Free Sport, which man;tges against his former team.
Even with Tiger Woods testing programs for the
Mter driving a 1-2 pitch
among those in favor of NCAA and other organiza- to right-center for a solo
drug testing to prove golf is . tions.
shot in the fifth inning of
clean, Finchem has defendThe penalty for testing Texas'
7-3
victory,
ed the tour's lack of plan positive would be 25 tourna- Siammin ' Saminy bounced
because he has found no evi- ments for the first offense,
dence of performance- 50 tournaments for the sec- out of the batter's box with
enhancing drugs or evidence ond offense and a lifetime his trademark hop and
thrust his right fist into the
of players using them.
ban for a third violation.
air
before reaching first
He conceded, however,
European Tour chief execbase.
·He was mobbed at
that drug testing in sports utive George O'Grady said
home
plate by his teamhas become a reality.
last month that his tour
mates
while
the scoreboard
"It's unfortunate that these would have a drug policy in
realities are with us, but they January, and he urged that showed pictures of all five
are,"
Finchem
said the golf world unite on imy members of the elite club:
AP pholo
Wednesday at the Travelers such policy. ·
Hank Aaron, Barry Bonds, Texas Rangers ' Sammy Sosa acknowledges cheers from
Championship. "And we
"I personally don 't thiok Babe Ruth , Willie Mays fans after connecting for his 600th career home run against
have to deal with them, and we've sot a drug problem in and Sosa.
Sosa played for the Cubs Chicago Cubs pitcher Jason Marquis in the sxith inning of a
I think it's important that professtonal golf. I haven 't
golf deal with them collec- met anybody yet who thinks from 1992-2004, winning baseball game in Arlington, Texas on Wednesday.
tivl:ly."
we have," O' Grady said. the ' 98 NL MVi&gt; award and about a month was tlipped the series · began. "It's
Woods said last summer "But we work with govern- making seven All-Star from 599 to 600 - and a maybe apropos that here
that he didn 't thiQk anyone ments in so many different teams while hitting 545 new banner was unfurled in the Cubbies are in town and
was using steroids, but it countries. They are insisting homers with Chicago. ·
center field congratulating Sammy is going for his
could be a · problem in the on a wider list."
·No. 600 came off Jason Sosa for joining the 600- 600th home run. He was an
future. Asked when he
In amateur golf, the Royal Marquis, the 364th pjtcher homer club.
·
icon in Chicago for a "lol)g
would like to see a drug- &amp; Ancient Golf Club and the 3~-year-old Sosa has
Chants of "Sam-my! . time, was loved." · . ,
testing plan, Woods replied, U.S. Golf Association homered off in his 18 major Sam-my!" prompted a secWhen Sosa returned to
'"';omorrow would be fine which govern ~olf around league seasons.
ond curtain call from Sosa. the majors, · he insisted he
with me."
the world -'- dtd a sample
It was So sa's 12th homer
The cheering hadn't even was CQ~t~ing back for more
Finchem has moved a lit- test' at the World Amateur in 62 games this season subsided before Frank than the 12 homers he
tie slower.
Team Championship in
since signing a minor Catalanotto followed with a needed to 'reach 600,;
The PGA Tour policy South Africa late last year, league
deal and making the homer, the 75th of his
"I'm goihg to go beyond
board in November autho- and all 12 golfers came bact&lt;
roster in ,spring training career, to give the Rangers that. · rm . not going to· stor
rized the tour to develop a clean.
with
Texas,· the franchise a 6-1 lead. .
·
there," he • reiterated this
list of prohibited substances,
Finchem recommended
that
gave
him
·
his
start.
He
While
S.
o
sa
has
had
an
week. .
along with creating. an edu- that all golf organizations
.
hit
·his
first
big
league
impressive
comeback
this
A tumultuous 2005 seacation program to inform develop a single standard on
homer
with
the
Rangers
in
season,
his
·pursuit'
of
600
son
almost drove Sosa out
players about ·how they what to test for and how.
1'989.
homers
was
overshadowed
.
o
f
the
game for good.
might get into the body, the
"In Europe, in particular,
Sosa also has 52 RBis, by the Rangers (27-44) .It started during spring.
health risks, potential testing and in certain other areas of
and possible penalties.
the world, the idea of testing . which ranks seventh in the having the worst {ecord in training that year when he
"We don't have a rule on in athletics is just a reality, American League. He has baseball and Bonds' chase testified before Congress
performance-enhancin~ because it's goyernment homered against' every to catch Aaron atop the about possible steroi\1 use'
in baseball, and it didn't get
major league team in his career home run list.
drugs; we never have had, ' required," he said.
Finchem said. "We're getJ.J. Henry, back in career.
Bonds has 748 homers- mucp better from there. He
After going into the seven 'shy of Aaron's mark hit .221 with 14 homers and
tin~ close on that. I suspect Connecticut defending his
we II be done with that cer- first tour win last year, said dugout with his teammates, - .with' only three in his 45 RBis in 102 games with
he doesn 't think testing will Sosa came out for a curtain last 97 at:bats. Ruth is third Baltimore before goiqg
tainly this year."
Finchem said he is work- have a· big impact on the call. He blew kisses to the on the home run list with home to the DQminican•
ing with other golf organiza- sport. .
crowd and acknowledged 714 and Mays is fourth Republic, where he stayed
tions "to see if we can't
"A lot of people have the Cubs' dugout with a with 660.
.
for more than a year.
move forward 'together with talked about that integrity pump of his fist, and
Sosa had a simi-la1 homer
Like Mark McGwire and
respect to what a rule is, and and honesty of ~olf is what Chicago manager Lou drought. No. 600 was only Bonds, Sosa is suspected of
then beyond that, in terms of makes it so spectal," he said. Piniella pointed
back his second in 22 games- a using steroids before · they
the execution of the rule."
"I'd like to think there's toward the slugger. Sosa span of 83 at-bats in which were banned by baseball,
He said that likely would none of that going on out had never faced the Cubs his only other homer was a and he was caught with a
mean a testing program "so here, to be honest 'with you." before the series · opener grand slam Friday- at corked bat in front of his
Tuesday night. '
Cincinnati.
home crowd when · he
A
countdown
banner
that
"Sammy's
had
a
great
played for the Cubs in
would represent Jones, Reid
.
has
hung
in
ri,ght
field
for
career,"
Piniella
said
before
2'003.
and Morrison if charges
were tiled, was expected to
from Page Bl
contact police to arrange
"I wouldn't think s.o ; but
Rod Barajas put the Manuel said.
their surrender. Langford
we ' ll have to wait and see," Phillies ahead in the third · Barfield's RBI double
did not respond to repeated
he said.
with a two-run homer, his made it 4-3 in the bottom
Jones about a shooting early messages Wedm;sday seekLieber
from
PageBl
was
replaced
by
fourth.
Barajas is 6-for-14 half. Then Grady Sizemore
Monday after a fight at an ing comment.
Atlanta strip club.
y,
.Michael Zagurski. who (.429) with three homers in was walked intentionally to
The . Las Vegas gunfire
A Las egas police report
. gav~ up an RBI single to his career against Sabathia . bring up Blake.
.
occurred Feb. 19 outside a says
Jones
showered which is only 9-10 in June Martinez and walked Travis
"He
always
wears
me
.
Philadelphia's
Shane
club several blocks offthe dancers on stage with but has not been out of first Hafner to load the bases.
out," Sabathia said. "It's Victorino extended his hit- ·
Strip near the end of NBA money from a black plastic place since April 24.
Peralta
hit
a
two-run
dounot even a weird deal. He ting streak to 13 games with
Jon Lieber (3-5) left due
All-Star weekend. A bar trash bag - an act of tipble
against
right-hander
always
hits bullets employee was paralyzed ping known as "making it to a strained right ankle Yoel Hernandez. One out homers and doubles. He's a two-run double in the seventh against Tom Mastny.
and two others suffered less rain." When two dancers after yielding Blake's hit later: Nixon\ two:run dou- got my number."
Notes: A note on the
between
short
and
third
that
serious wounds.
began fighting · over the
ble to right-ce nter made it
Cleveland
put
two
runIndians
' clubhouse mes- ·
put
Cleveland
ahead
5-4.
The 23-year-old Jones money, Jones allegedly
1.0-4.
ners on with none out in sage board reminded them '
"I
twisted
it
more
than
faces two counts· of felony grabbed one by the hair and
" He made some bad three of the first four to wear suits and ties this
punched her.
anything," said Lieber, who
pitches
to Peralta and innings, but Lieber allowed Friday for a tour of the
coercion stemming from
Jones is accused of stumbled as he ran off the
Nixon,"
Phillies
manager only two runs .. Martinez White House and Capitol.
allegations he bit a bar swinging. . his fists and mound to back up home
bouncer on the ankle and
Charlie Manuel said. "You had an RBI groundout in
threatened 10 kill club threatening the life of club plate. "I had it looked at and don't have· to give them
Cleveland will play an
the third aod Barfield tied it interleague
emp.loyees, according to the employees who police said everything i,s stable. I iced it something to hit there." .
series
in
with a sacrifice fly in the
tried
to
intervene,
and
is
and
I'll
ice
it
again
tomorWashington - their last
criminal compl ai nt.
Sabathia gave up four fourth.
Reid, 37 , who police seen .on videotape punching row.
game
there was a 3-2 loss
runs and five hits'to win for
Ryan Howard's two-out
identified as Jones • body- a man who police identify
"I was worried. It didn 't the first time in three starts RBI double put the Phillies on Sept. 22, 1971 before
. e.
fe1ony as his own business man ag- feel that good. I hadn:t had
oauard , f ac s 0 ne
since a tive-hit, 1-0 triumph ahead. 3-2 in the sixth. the . Washington Senators
something
pop
like
that
in
a
cOercion charge alleging he erA police report says Jones
over Kansas City on June 5. Howard, who scored on mo ved ·to Texas and
attacked · a bouncer who
long time."
The left-bander struck out Aaron Rowand 's soft single became the Rangers in·
tried to restrain Jones.
was see n walking away
Lieber gave up seven runs four and walked one, to right, has 35 RBis in his 1972. .. . Sabathia has
Morrison , 25, faces from the strip club with a and 10 hits over 5 1·-3
pitched at least six innings
improving to 7-1 at Jacobs last 31 games.
· 1 d.
man wearing a baggy black
h
c arges me u mg coercion, T-shirt and blue jeans. innings and said he was not Field. He has only walked
in
15 of 16 starts. He went
·"We had to hold them
felony assault with. a deadly
sure if he would miss tris I0 in 92 1-3 innings since right there, but we've had fiVe 1nn1ngs May 21
weapon and battery stem- Minutes later, police say a next start.
April 15.
trouble holding them," against Seattle. ·
ming from allegations that similarly dressed man
she hit a bouncer i~ the head standing next to a palm tree
with a champagne bottle fired five or six shots
Haren had allowed only by Swisher to get Kotsay. the first time in his career,
and attacked several other toward people at the fron't of
six
home runs all year and who had doubled for the allowed two runs , one
·
the club.
'
A bouncer who Jones
came in with the majors ' second time in the game.
club employees with a chair
earned, and four hits. He
and a stanchion.
from
PageBl
lowest
ERA
at
1.64
before
The
Reds
won
their
first
walked four.
·
.
fought with was wounded in
·
Coercton
giving up the two homers. , regular-season game against
ts the act of the chest and left forearm,
"I have to co ntrol the
threatening or physically Another bouncer, Thomas
Adam Dunn and Josh The Boston Red Sox also the A's in eight tries with a. long ball a little more," he
inter(ering with a person Urbanski, was shot in the Hamilton capitalized on two hit two against him June 4 5-2 victory Tuesday night sa id. "My ball was. running
trying to do something that . left hand and the torso, and rare mistakes by Haren (9- in the Coliseum - by and appeared headed for right off the pl \tte and I was
he or she has a right and
David Ortiz and Wily Mo another one after Belisle trying to be too fine. I
responsibility 10 do.
was left paralyzed from the 2) in the fourth. Dunn hit a Pen a.
pitched
SIX
effective shouldn't do that."
and
If convicted, Jones faces a waist down. A female club solo home, run
"I think I might have lost innings.
Notes: Griffey's first Kin
. maximum of up to 12 years patron was wounded in the Hamilton added a two-run my edge for a minute or·
Now, Cincinnati contin- the first imiing was No. 500 ·
in prison and a $10,000 head, police said.
drive two batters later.
two, and that's ail it takes," . ues· its 11-day, nine-game
fine, authorities. said.
Langford has called the
But Haren recovered and Haren said. "Maybe I was road trip with a visit to of Haren's career. ... The
The charges are slightly melee "a glorified bar · the Oakland offense did just being a little bit of a baby Seattle starting Friday. It A's activated ·RF Milton
different from those police fight," and said nothing enough to keep him from about it."
will be Ken Griffey Jr.'s Bradley from his third stint
sought in March· against linked Jones with the his first loss since a 2-1
, The right-hander got a 1- first return to the Emerald on the disabled list thi s seaJones, Reid and Mortison. · shooting outside. He said defeat to the rival ·Los 2-3 first inning featuring City in eight seasons with son and he was back in the
Roger declined to file those Jones cooperated with Angeles Angels on April 7 two strikeouts bitt didn't the Reds since leaving the starting lineup. Oakland
·charges, asking police for police on DNA compar- in his second start of the have another perfect inning Mariners after the 1999 sea, made \Oster room by
more information and to isons that failed to show year.
optioning . infielder J.J .
until the fifth .
son,
identify a shooter. ·
.
the NFL star was responsi"Dan 's always going to
Alan Embree worked two
Griffey went 0-for-4 with Furmaniak to Triple-A
"We wanted to make sure ble for a bite injury report- keep us in the game," Cust perfect innings with three two strikeouts a day after he Sacramento. .. . The Reds
we had a lock-tight case ed by a bouncer,
said. "It's uncharacteristic strikeouts for hi s eighth hit his 582nd .career home and A's split their two
before we started filing
that he let up three runs save in nine opportunities.
run and No. 19 this season. World Series meetings,
charges and releasing
AP Sports Writer Teresa early. After that happens,
Reds right fielder Norris He will have Thursday's off with Oakland winning in
reports," Roger said.
M. Walker contributed to it's definitely nice to pick Hopper saved the potential day in Seattle to catch up seven games in 1972 and
Las Vegas lawyer Robert this report from Nashville, him up and get us back in tying run witti a great throw with old friends.
Cincinnati sweeping four
Langford, who .has said ~e Tenn. ·
the game."
home in the fifth on a single
Belisle, facing the A's for games in 1990.

Pacman

Tribe

Reds

'

·'

Page B3 • The Daily Sentinel

--

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June 21,

2007

....

Big time wrestling comes to Portland
PORTLAND When
you think of professional
wrestling you may not
think of Portland at first,
but on Friday the Portland
Community Center will
turn into a summer slam
of seven matches featuring
wrestlers from Pure Impact
Wrestling (PIW).
Tickets will be $10 for
adults and $5 for kids at
the door. The show starts
at 7 p.m. at the center.
PIW will present " Dawn
of the Fed," which is a
night of hardcore wrestling
matches including a tag
team match, three-way survival match and the main
event
where
Vance
Desmond will take on
Brandon Morgan for the
PIW heavyweight title.
The entire night will be
filmed for a later DVD
release.
In addition to those

ICENHOWER JOINS
.VEGAS LEGENDS CONCERT

GALLIPOLIS
The
excitement of Vegas-style
ente~nt is coming to the
.
Ariel-Ann Carson Dater
Performing Arts Centre, as pan
of the Ariel's Vegas Weekend
June 29 and 30.
Elvis tribute artist and local
favorite, Dwi~ht Icenhower
will headlinp the Ve~as
Legends Concert perfomung
as 'The King of Rock &amp; Roll."
nationallyPlloto courtesy of Vance Desmond Additionally,
known
performers
lrv
Cass and
Wrestler Vance Desmond flies through the air during a
recent match and hopes to bring the same level of intensi- Matt King, will also be perty to the upcoming PIW matches scheduled for Friday at the forming.Cass performs as Tom
Jones, and King as Roy
·
Portland Community Center.
Orbison.
matches, the night promises The object of the " unlucky
The Vegas Legends Concert
even more wrestling may- 13" is to staple 13 $1 bills will serve as the grand finale to
hem with what's called the
the Ariel's Vegas Weekend. The
" unlucky 13 staple gun onto the other wrestler and concert will perform on
match"
featuring
the whoever reaches 13 tirst Saturday, June 30 at 8 p.m.
Juggulator vs. .Sam Hane. wins the match.
Additional Vegas Weekend
events include a casino night .
fund-raiser on Friday, June 29
from 7 to I0 p.m., and a showing of the classic movie "Viva
Las Vegas" on Saturday, June
living history presentations, on ticket prices or lodging, 30 at 2 p.m. Icenhower is
children's activities, banjo call (3~ 872-6853.
scheduled to introduce ihe clasand fiddle contests, and many
June19-23
sic movie.
.. sessiOns.
. ' .
Jam
The Vegas Legends Concert .
Admission is free. For inforMADISON, W.Va~
is sponsored, in pan by Sunny
Celebrate coal and' its her- mation, contact (304) 46293.1, Big Country 99.5, The
June21-24
itage in the coal capital of the 5000, information@wvfol.kRiver I01.5 and Pepsi.
festival or visit www.wvfol.kstate.
Vegas Legends Concert seatCHARLESTON, W.Va.
Dwight Icenhower as. Elvis
Activities available include festival.org.
ing
is currently on sale at the
- Enjoy a weekend celeequipment displays, arts and
bration of the arts· music, Ariel-Dater Hall box office at Tickets may be purchased via through the Ariel website,
·· crafts displays, a carnival,
dance, theater, visual art and 428 Second Ave., Gallipolis. telephone during these hours, ww w. ar i e It he a tre. org.
Box office hours are 9 a.m. until
gospel music entertainment,
film. While Festiv ALL will 4 p.m., Tuesday through Friday. by calling (740) 446-2787. Reserved seating is available
a miners' memorial service,
Tickets )nay also be purchased for $35, $25 and $15. ·
feature artists of world-class
fireworks and a grand.parade.
Jurie21-24
stature, local artists and arts
The Coal Museum in
organizations
will also be
downtown Madison will be
SUMMERSVILLE, W.Va. showcased.
open during the festival. For - Experience four big days
Most events are free and
details, visit www.wvcoal- of jamming from 9 a.m. until
others
require tickets. For
museum.org or call ioy midnight at the West Virginia
ATHENS - Come cele- University Mall by entering walk sales through the 'day. ·
tickets,
call (304) 561-3570,
Underwood at (304) 369- Nazarene
Camp's long on to www.theclaycen- brate Appalachia Ohio's the main entrance on East
The Ngoma Drum Circle ·
3391.
Summersville Music Park.
creative
industries
this
comState
Street.
Athens
area
led
by Jane Palmer and
ter.org, or drop by the Clay
Around II bands will be
ing
Saturday
in
Athens
at
'
shoppers
can
first
stop
at
Karen
Gunter-Seymour is
playing each day. Food will Center box office.
the University Mall. As pan the open air Athens Farmers the
·featured
music
Tickets to many events of its 2007 launch, Art of Market then.come inside for act. 'Onlookers will be
be available; camping space
June21-24
is free and electricity is avail- can also be purchased at Ohlo.com will host an art more food, fun and shop- encouraged to participate ·
able at an extra cost. Children Taylor Books and at the exhibit and "buy local" ping at An of Ohio and mall and learn how to drum with ·
WVSU Capitol Center in man for community mem- sidewalk sales.
GLENVILLE, W.Va.
under 12 are.free.
a variety of different sized
downtown
Charleston. For bers to learn more about the
This annual festival, founded
Tickets are required for all
This Saturday, artists will African drums from the
to preserve traditional, un- events. The charge is $130 at information, visit www.fes- website, visit with area be on hand to showcase Ohio Valley International
amplified mo_untain string the gate for all four days, or tivallcharleston.com, or artists and buy · direct or their painting and prints, Council (OVIC).
·
music, will feature crafts, a $45 for a full day ($20 after contact Larry Groce at ldig- , place orders at the man.
pottery, jewelry, wood · For more information
quilt show, square dancing, 6:30 p.m.). For information gy@hotmail.com.
A project
of the products, blown glass, about the drum circle, conAppalachian Center for stained glass, hand-painted tact Jane Palmer at (740)
Economic Networks, Art of tiles, enamel work and gar- 594-7710. The Athens
Ohio.com captures our den art. Additional activi- County Convention and
regional flavor of distinc- ties include an demonstra- Visitors Bureau (ACCVB)
tive art and anisari prod- tions, a quilt show, food will be available to share
$20 plus $5 stock fee, while chicken dinner, soft drink and ucts, unique home furnish- sampling from local food information on one-tank
ings, decor and apparel and entrepreneurs and live day trips throughout the
'
all entries are $40 plus $5 dessert.
stock fee per rider. Entry
Tickets are $20. Call Sue at homegrown specialty foods. music from area fiddlers region for great ideas for
GALLIPOLIS
The Art of . Ohio.com and . drummers.
Bon- summer family fun.
signups
close
at
6
p.m.'
·
(740)
417-0156 or Jennifer at
Photographer and Gallia
event
will
run
from
10
a.m.
Ton/ElderBeerman
,
For more information,
Admission
is
$7
for
adults,
(740) 418-3306. Split the Pot
County native Larry Rood
to
2
p.m.
Visitors
will
find
Maurice's,
and
Bath
&amp;
contact
Paulette Halliday at
$5
for
children
aged
7-12
and
and a silent auction will be
will display his talent and eye
the
exhibit-mart
inside
the
Body
Works
will
host
sideACEnet,
(740) 592-3854.
for photographic opportunuty free for children 6 and under. held. This is a fan club fundTo reach the rodeo site . raiser.
witli a display of his work at
from
Point Pleasant, take
the French Art Colony June
W.Va.
2 south toward
1•27.
Huntington
for 15 miles, then
The display consists of
turn
left
onto
Jerry's Run
photos of his tour through
Road.
four
miles
on the left.
GALLIPOLIS The
Paris and Provence.
For infomtation, call (304)
Ariel-Ann
Carson
Dater
DAVIS, W.Va.- Within July20and 21.
CHILLICOTHE -Adena
. 576-2243.
Visitors will enjoy the Performing Arts Centre is
Mansion and Gardens, driving distance of the sumChillicothe, will present 'The mer heat and humidity of sounds of West Virginia's planning a casino night fundMurder of Lindsey Woolsey," most Eastern seaboard and rich musical heritage pre- raiser as part of the Ariel's
a mystery dinner theater, at Midwestern cities, you can sented by Roy Scott, the leg- Vegas Weekend, June 29 and
Casino Night will take
GALLIPOLIS -:- Family the site at 6 p.m. Saturday, find a real change of pace in endary star of the world 30.
GALLIPOLIS -· The FAC
place
on Friday, June 29, ·
Dance Studio at 59 Court St., Addiction , ·Community June 30. Doors will open at a high altitude resort nestled · famous WWVA Jamboree from 7 to 10 p.m.
in the highest valley east of and MGM recording artists.
Services 5:30p.m.
Gallipolis, is offering yoga Treatment
The Ariel's volunteer team
the
Rockies.
•
.
Scott
appears
Friday
Adena
is
the
restored
home
(FACTS/New
Alternatives)
is
instruction under Lynne
and
staff are planning an
Timberline Four Seasons evening and Saturday
Allen. Oasses will be in the providing a fishing event for of Thomas Worthington, conevening
full of activities .and
morning/early afternoon, and youth ages 6 and up at the . sidered to be the father of Resort, located on the evening with Jan and Lori of prizes for its summer fundEa.stern Continental Divide Harmony Scott, who have
you can register at the FAC, Bob Evans Farm at Rio Ohio statehOod.
in
north central West been featured on Nashville raiser. Guests will have the ·
'The Murder of Lindsey
530 First Ave., Gallipolis, Grande on Friday, beginning
opportunity to take pan in
during normal business hours at II a.m. and lasting until. 3 Woolsey" is loosely based on Virginia, is not located near Network and have per- numerous games, including
an actual event that occurred any large town or city, in formed with national acts
(Monday through Friday, 9 · p.m.
black jack, kerchinca, keno. a
The event will be held at at Adena in 1880, when fact, the closest location on such as Mel Tillis, Roy Texas
a.m. until 5 p.m.).
Hold 'Em Tournament
Worthington, your map is the small village Clark, Janie Fricke and
Classes are offered on . the shelterhouse across from James
and more. Prizes include a
Thomas's son, was living on of Davis, located I0 miles Marie Osmond.
Wednesdays, starting June the restaurant.
32-inch
flat-panel television, a
There is no cover charge
Those planning to attend the estate. Guests will hear away.
20, 27, July II and 18, and
pair
of
Amis.h rockers, two
On Friday, June 22 and for the performances.
Aug.l and 15. The cost is $60 will need to bring their own gossip about the murder in the
collectable Morgan .Silver
On Aug. 3 and 4, visitors Dollars, a 50-gallon gas cerJune
23,
pole, and let FACT~ know if recreated village in the visitor Saturday,
for the summer session.
Timberline
will
host
the
at
Timberhne will go back in tificate and many more.
this
is
a
problem.
To
register
center. James Worthington
Offered is Wake Up Yoga, 8
' until 9 a.m.; Beginners Yoga, ·or for more information: call and his son, Richard, will annual summer Celtic Music time for a weekend in the
Music, food, and drinks
Festival, Friday from 8, p.m. Old West at annual Frontier will complete thi s event for
9:15-i0:15 a.m.; and Fitness 446-7866 or (740) 286-1589. welcome them to Adena.
Parents must sign · a release
At the mansion and garden, untilmidnight and Saturday Weekend. Visitors will see guests aged 21 and older.
Yoga, 10:30-11:30 a.m.
· witnesses and suspects will from 3 p.m. until midnight. an authentic cow camp and Admission is $25, which
Contact the .French Art for participation.
The increasingly popular chuck wagon complete with includes , $500 in stan-up
provide clues and · red herColony at (740) 446-3834 to
register. Class space is limitrings for the guest sleuths to Celtic music will be present- all the appropriate gear and .gaming ' money. Winning
ponder. At the close of a ed by recognized Celtic a live shoot out on horse gaming money will be used ·
ed.
catered dinner featuring artists. The program will back. During the weekend at the end of the evening to
steamship carved roast beef include traditional Irish there will be trail rides, bar- bid
on
the
prizes.
all jus and chicken basil, the songs·, both vocal and instru- becue, square dancing and Additionally, a door prize will
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. lWo for the Road, featuring murderer's identity will be mental, quintessential Celtic old Western and mountain be given away every 15 minsounds on mandolin., fiddle music live by the Saddle · utes from 7 to 10 p.m.
Elvis Presley tribute artists revealed. ·
Tramps.
Price is $40 per person, or and guitar.
Dwight Icenhower and Chris
APPLE GROVE, W.Va. Tickets are limited, and
Late · evening perfor- · Motor bike races complete advance reservations are su~- ·
will
perform $32 per person for Ohio
. Ranch and Rodeo . will pre- Solano,
sent championship rodeo on Saturday, June 23 at the HistoriCal . Society and mances will highlight Irish with entertainment, food gested. However, tickets WID ·
American Legion in New Friends of Adena members. rock both Friday and and beverage, trail rides, and be sold at the .door, if availSaturday, June 23 at 7 p.m.
Advance reservations are Saturday. There is no cover evening live entertainment able, the evening of the
Events include bareback, Haven.
.
required and can be made by charge for any of the perfor- will on occur the weekend event. Advance tickets may
·Doors
open
at
6:30
p.m.,
team roping, steer ri~ing, barof Aug. I0 and II .
rel racing, calf ropmg, steer with dinner being served at 7 phoning (800) 319-7248 .· or mances.
lie purchaled at the Ariel wrestling, bull nding and p.m. The two-hour show (740) 772-1500 by June 25.
Timberline's annual suinFor more itiformation. Dater Hall box office, 428 ·
. begins at 8 p.m.
Cowgirl BreakA-W.
For more information, visit mer mountain and country call (304) 304-4801 or visit Second Ave., Gallipolis, or by
Entry fees are steer riding,
Ticket price includes show, www.ohiohistory. org.
music festival will be held www.timberlineresort.com. · calling (740) 446-2787.

West Virginia events

Coal Festival .

FestivALL

Bluegrass
Festival

Art c~lebration slated·Saturday.

Folk Festival

Entertainment briefs

FACdisplay

Adena offers
mystery dinner

Yoga class
slated

Rodeo slated .
for Saturday

' 1.

Timberline Resort hosts Celtic
Music Festival this weekend

Ariel plans Casino
Night fund-raiser

Fishing event

TWo for Road
performing·

I
';ill

�'

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June iu, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June 21, 2007

'

Oden works out for Trail Blazers Ban Pacman for good, and make sure
he takes his posse tvith him
M' SPORTS COLUMNIST

You know you're a big time 'a thlete when
you've got a posse to do your dirty work for
you. As posses go, Pacman Jones has a pret.t y good one, full of guys equally adept at
picking up dollar bill s showered on the strip
.club stage as they are trading shots with
whoever gets in their way.
Pacman 's entourage was at it again the
other night in Atlanta, where police say they
were involved in a shooting after an altercation at, yes, a strip club. This is a posse that
seems to travel well, mixing it up on both
sides of the country in the name of their
man .
The timing of the shooting was a bit awkward, coming less than a week after Jones
pledged to NFL commi~sioner Roger
Goodell that he was going to tum his life
around and become productive citizen so
he coukl play in the league once again.
It could be Jones thought the best way to
become that new person was to make sure
Atlanta strippers had enough money for taxi
fare home . Or maybe he just wanted to give
the posse one last night out for old times
sake.
It doesn 't much matter now, because
Jones has far more serious problems. And
there's not a lot the posse can do about it,
unless it mcludes a good criminal defense
lawyer or two.
If Las Vegas prosecutors have their way,
the next time you see Jones with a number
on his uniform, it will be prison garb, not an
NFL jersey.
They charged Jones with two felonies
Wednesday stemming from a shooting over
NBA All-Star weekend in February that left
a strip club manager paralyzed·. Jones faces
a possible 12 years m prison on coercion
charges for his role in the melee in the early
morning hours of Feb. 19 at the Minxx
Gentlemen's Club just off the Las Vegas
Strip.
The court, of course, presumes that Jones
is innocent until proven guilty. That's a
basic tenet of the legal system that serves
our country so well , and Jones will have his
day to defend himself.
But the NFL is free to judge things by a
diffe rent standard. The league doesn't need
proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
With that in mind, maybe it's time for
Goodell to begin rethinking the one-year
suspension he handed down recently to
Jones.
Maybe it's time to make 11 a lifetime ban.
Goodell certainly has the power to do just
that, and there couldn't be a better candidate
to remove from the game than Jones . He
and his posse have wreaked havoc everywhere they 've gone, and when he 's booked
in Las Vegas it will be his ·sixth arrest since
he was drafted by the Titans in April 2005.

a

AP photo
Ohio State center Greg Oden (20) shoots over Flonda's AI
Horford (42) in the first half dunng their men's championship basketball game at the Final Four in the Georg1a
Dome m Atlanta Monday, April 2. Oden worked out for the
Portland Trail Blazers, who possess the No. 1 pick in this
year's NBA Draft, on Wednesday. .
'
titles before advancing to
their first national championship game since 1962,
where they lost to two-time
champion Florida. In the
championship game, Oden
had 25 points and 12 ·
rebounds .
After his workout with
Portland, Oden was asked
whether he likened himself
more to Shaquille O'Neal or
Bill Russell. Without hesitation he answered," Russell ."
"Ten fingers. II rings ." he
explained.
Both funny and personable , the 19-year-old smiled
broadly
after
jokingly
telling reporters that he'd
cry if he wasn't the top pick
in the draft.
Oden says he and Durant
are pals and trade text messages.
" We ' re pretty cool," he
said. "This year we realized
we were going to be connected for a long time ."

Oden said he felt immediately
welcome
m
Portland.
Roy
and
Aldridge met Oden and his
mother at the airport.
Fellow Oh10 State freshman Mike Conley Jr. has
also declared himself eligible for the draft. Oden is
represented by Conley's
father , Mike Conley Sr. ,
who won the Olympic gold
medal in the triple jump at
the
1992
Games
in
Barcelona.
' Pritchard said the organizat1on IS keeping an open
mind when it comes to its
selection. None of the
Blazers' bra~ s was indicating which way the team
might be le a ning.
" This gives us an incredible
opportunity
to
improve our franchi se for
the next decade , so you
have to be extremely careful ," Allen sa1d. " But it's a
lot of fun."

NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said
Wednesday the league would not speculate ·
any further on Jones' future at this time. One
read of the Las Vegas polic;e report, though,
should be all Goodell needs to bounce Jones
from the league forever.
In it, police detail the events of the morning , which began when Jones and a half
dozen members of his posse went to the
strip club to watch some of their favorite
dancers . They sat in a private booth with a
garbage bag full of money so they could
"make it rain" by throwing money on the
women.
'
A couple of the dancers began fighting
over the money at one point, and witnesses
said Jones grabbed one of them by the hair
and punched her in the face several times. A
melee broke out when club bouncers tried to
break it up, and Jones and his entourage
were finally escorted outside.
A cocktail waitress told police an angry
Jones threatened to kill the bouncers before
walking away with a man in a black T-shirt.
A man in a similar shirt came back moments
later with a semiautomatic handgun and
began fuing, hitting three people.
One of those shot was Tommy Urbanski,
a former professional wrestler who worked
as a real estate broker during the day and as
the manager of the club at night to earn
extra income to send his wife to law school.
Urbanski is paralyzed, a 9 mm bullet permanently lodged in his spine.
Urbanski told The Associated Press last
month that he couldn't believe it when
Jones took out an full-age ad in a Nashville,
Tenn., paper that said learning he would be
suspended from the NFL "was one of the
worst moments of my life ."
"That's the worst moment in his life?"
Urbanski asked. "Try being put in a wheelchair for the rest of your life . This changes
everything ."
Police have yet to identify the man who
shot Urbanski and two others . They haven't
gotten a great deal of help in solving the
mystery from Jones or his posse.
They're charging Jones with two counts
of felony coercion, and also charging his
bodyguard and a female posse member. The
charges might be difficult to prove, but
there's also a chance they might loosen
some tongues.
Jones, meanwhile, has already violated
the conditions Goodell put on his one-year
suspension just two months ago. He's being
questioned in Atlanta about one shooting,
and faces arrest in Las Vegas in another.
He's a thug who should be banned from
the NFL for good.
Just make sure he takes the posse with
him when he leaves .

.

'

m;rtburie - Sentinel - l\e

CLASSIFIED

M' SPORTS WRITER

BY TIM DAHLBERG

-' •.-

I

~

BY ANNE M. PETERSON

PORTLAND, Ore.
Greg Oden a dmitted he was
out of breath after his workout Wednesday for the
Portland Trail Blazers. By
no means was the 7-foot
draft prospect coasting in on
his reputation.
" Really, I'm trying to sell
them on me, not the other
way around," the forward
from Ohio State said after a
v1gorous solo workout.
The Portland Trail Blazers
have the No. I selection in
the June 28th draft. Oden
figures to be one of the top
picks along with Kevin
Durant, a forward out of
Texas , who is scheduled to
visit the Blazers on Fnday.
" All I can do is be me,"
Oden said.
A couple dozen fans stood
across the street from the
Trail Blazers practice facility south of Portland hoping
to catch a glimpse of the Big
Man. The med1a turned out
in droves.
Team owner Paul Allen ,
the billionaire co-founder of
Microsoft , sat and watched
the workout with general
manager Kevin Pritchard .
Several players , including
Zach Randolph , Rookie of
the Year Brandon Roy, and
LaMarcus Aldridge also
looked on.
"What caine out is that
he's a really good · person
who cared about how he did
in the workout ," Pritchard
said. "He's a unique talent.
To have an opportunity to
get a kid like this is a great
opportunity for this organization."
Said Allen: "Seeing Greg
in person, it 's not just his
size, it's his amazing athleticism. You can see the potential there."
Oden was scheduled to
meet with team doctors later
Wednesday.
After gettmg a late start in
his freshman year at Ohio
State because of a wrist
mJUry, Oden led the
Buckeyes in scoring (15 .7)
and rebounding (9 .6) and
topped the Big Ten m shooting percen,tage (.616).
The Buckeyes went 35-4
and won the Big Ten's regular-season and tournament

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TUPPERS
PLAINS·
CHESTER WATER DISTRICT
MEIGS COUNTY
LEGAL NOTICE- INV~
TATION TO BID
sealed Bids will be
received lor furnishing
all labor, materials and
equipment nocenary
to complete a project
known sa Water Line
Replacement
and
MPRV
at
the Upgrade
Tuppers Project
PlainsChester Water District,
at their District Office
located st 39561 Bar 30
Road, Reedsville, Ohio
45772 Olllce, until
10:00 a.m. local time
on July 6th, at said
lime, publicly opened
and read aloud. Bids
maybemalledordellvored In advance to tho
TPCWDat the above
addreu.
The projact conelata of
constructing 1,630 feet
of 6" waterline 380 feet
or 4" waterll...;, valves,
hydrants,
hydrant
reconnecting
and
other
necee 11 ry
appurtenances.
Bid
Documents
Include
the
Bid
Requtromonta
and
Contract Documents
(that Include all bid
oheeta, plana, epecll~
cations, and any
addenda) can be
obtained from M-E

Companies, Inc., 5085
Tile Plant hoad, New
Lexington, Ohio 43764
wllh a non-refundable
payment of $75.00 per
set. Checks should be
made payable to M-E
Companies. Inc.
Blddere must comply
with the prevall!ng
wage rates on Public
Improvements
In
Meigs
&amp;
Athens
Counties as determined by the Ohio
Department
of
Commerce; Division ot
Labor and Worker
Safety- Wage and Hour.
The Engineer's est!·
mate lor this protect Is
$210,000.
Tuppers
Plains·
Chester Water District
reserves the right to
waive any Informalities
or frregutarltles as the
best bidder lor the
District will be chosen.
Tuppers
Plains·
Chester Water District
reserves the right to
reject any or all bids or
to
Increase
or
decrease or omit any
Item or Items and/or
award the bid to the
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,....,_"'right

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Male Kttten, 6 wks old tray
and whtte, kept tndoors, hee
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Tunica, Mississippi
THE GRAND CASINO
September 5-7, 2007
$295/person

Emily Wolfe Birlhday Party
Fair Plain Jamborree - WV
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June 22
Free Admission All Welcome

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r

RegiStered
nurse lawn-Care Servtce. ~owmg
Rocksprings Nursmg and &amp; Tnmmtng Call (740)44t Rehabtlttat1on ~ Center IS 1333 or (740)645-0546
looking for a few dedtcaled
$300 Hiring
people to become a part of Need someone to take care
Bonus
our team We are a 100 bed of you or a roved one lhen
40 hours • week
· sk1iled facility located 5 call (740)446·7165 or
Up to S8.501hour + bonuses mtles from Pomeroy Thts 1s (740)4-4t -9232 I have good
a 20 m1nuta commute from references.
Make calls you believe tnt Athens a11d Albany We JUSt
11\\,(1\1
can on behalf ot conservatrve
recently tnstalled a state of ....,,..._..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,
Potitk:al orgamzatiOI'IS
the art on ttne documents !!i:ro
B~
Paid vacations, paid holi- 1lon system lor tile nursing
ass1stants which reduce
OPPolnuNm
days and paid training
paper
work
t1me
constderFIJIbenefits package and
ably. We offer compettltve
401-K
•NOTICE•
rates, health, dental, and
$300 Hlrlng Bonus
viston tnsurance as well as a OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
40~K plan. We are a low ltft
Call today to schedule an faCility whiCh has reduced that you do bus1ness with
lntervtew
our back 1njunes to almost 0 people you know, and
1-877-46U247
We have 2 positions opened NOT to send money
ext. 2321
for regtstered nurses 1 tS through the matl unhl you
tor everyother week Clld 1 have tnvesttgated the
WWW lnfOCISIOn.com
full ttme posttton for day and offertng.
- - - - - - - - eventng
NURSING
ASSISTANT - - - - - - - M
ADD· Rockspnngs Nurs1ng Super 8 Motel accepllng
~
and Rehab11ltat10n Center 1s appltcattons for part ltme "--..,;TOOioiiiiiiANiiioo-·
lookmg for a few dedtcated desk clerk. Mtlintght and
people to beCOme a pan of ENening shifts are requtred .
HNOTICE**
our team We are a 100 bed Please apply in person NO
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a 20 minute commute from The Metgs Local School the Ohto Otv 1 ~ton of
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recently tnstalled a state of apphcattons from certtfted OffiCe of Consumer
the art on lme documents- applicants lor Boys' VarSity Atfatrs BEFORE you raft,
tlon system lor the nursmg Basketball Coach, Boys' nance your home or
asststants whtch reduce ASSIStant VarSity Basketball obtain a loan BEWARE
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vtston insurance as well 88 Coach (2 positions), Offtce of Consumer
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our back rnjurtes to almost o, Applrcants must certtficallon mortgage broker or
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10 PM shtft and 1 on 10 to puptl activity supervtsor and licensed (Thts ts a publiC
6AM shift Stop by and ftll CPA Deadhne for appltca- servtce announcement
out an applicatiOn and ttons is June 25, 2007 from the Ohto Valley

~
2007 by NEA. Inc.

www.comlca.com

©

"--------,.1

Desk Clerk needed at
Budget Inn 260 Jackson
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for a person
who Looktng
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6123 Sa,noon, 101 Basltant II.. '
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clothes (baby 6mon-18omn)
lots more•
'I,

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Has a posllion open for an
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We oHer a competitive rompensat1on plan and oor benetit pacKage rncludes health
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9,4, Ravenswood Care
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Thurs. Frt. Sat, Bam-? 4409
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CLASSIFIED INDEX
Bulav1lle Ptke 5 ptece bed(304)273-9236
FAX
4x4's For Sale ........................................... 725
room sutte. kttchen table Earn S8.50/hr FT + References Requtred.
to :~~~TyohMomu~~..
:~.·e~~~!d =~;han ~~:~~ewb~;~:~ :~~or: ~~~~~r~~t~~te~=s~u!~ ~P:u:bl:"h:'n:g:C:o:m:p•:rtt:l::~
Announcement ............................ ---------·-----·030
and 4 padQed chairs, metal Week 'YBonus Potential
I
9AM an.-1-. , 4PM R·"·sprlngs
Wilham
Buckley,
.
C
Antiques ...................................................... 530 storage btns, tw1n tubs. tool
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VV\
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dL. no
8
PR~ONAL
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equal
opportumly
upertnlen
enl.
r
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OIC
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Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440 box for ptck'up, metal wheel.
272,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
Ol.tbound
employer.
Auction and Flea Ma•ket.. ........................... 080 lot of rmsc
I
I tng
Cente rtscurrentyaccep
1:111:
Auto Porte\ Accessories .......................... 760
applications for Nutntton
Wanted Patnters, pay due to
TURNED DOWN ON
,_. '
•
• ... ....
Overbrook Center IS current- Expenence, PTIFT Send
Auto Aopalr .................................................. 770
Aide/Meet Transporter and
~ 111 " . , ...
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
10
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Now. S!iirl Suun' substitute cook Must have - - - - - - - - ly seeking a beauttctan
Autoalor Safe ....... ........................ .............. 710
resumes
to
Box
TSC20
c/o
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1·888 IMC-PAIU
Boate &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
valid drwers license and LFN's Rockspnngs Nurstng work part time tn the factlity'S Pomt Pleasant Regtster, 200 No Fee Unless We Wtn'
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Building Supplies ....................................... 550
11-888-&lt;162 -7298)
Insurable nsk Must be able Nurstng and Rehabilitation beauty salon Candidates Matn Street, Pt Pleasant,
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t00 WORKERS NEEDED
Camping Equlpment ................................... 780 El
" Apply·. ed 5 m1ios from Pomer~ru should camp1e1e an appItca- L,_..,;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioi_.l
ectrtc scooIer, household Assemble crafts, wood drlv.r and COOk Eo·c.
"' ton at 333 P
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r ' Galflpolle Career Coli-sa• 0 Down evan wtlh less than
Child/Elderly Care ...................................... 190
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OH
60 (CareersCioseToHome)
perfect credtl ts avatlable on
Ka
E0 E
·
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Clalhpollll.
Oh
45631
Phone
just
reoently
Installed
a
state
·
Call Tooayl 740-446-4367, thiS 3 bedroom, 1 bath
Equipment lor Aent ..................................... 480
- - - - - - - pkg 24Hr 801 428-4649
home Corner lot, fireplace
otthe art on line document&amp;· Part and Full Ttme
~ -800·2~ 4,0452
Excavatfng ................~ ................................. 83D -Yard sale, 6/21-6122 (Thurs - - - - - - - - 740-446-7000
tlon
system
for
the
nursing
Paramedics
and dispatch, wwwgatiiiXII,~«~r&amp;ercottegocom modern kttchen. JaCUZZI tub
Farm Equlpment ......................................... tlO &amp;Frtday), 9am-?, 35670 SA A Ott &amp; Gas Broker Help wanted at Darst Adult ass' !Slants which reduce
.
ers, great wages. call NicK Accredited Member Accrediting Payment around $550 per
Farmolor Rent............................................. 430 7, lots at m1sc
Co mpany ts Iooktng fo r an Cl roup Horne, some ift tng, paper work ttme consider,
COUncil tor tnDepenOent Colleges month 740-367-7129
Fanne for Safo .................. .-............. ............. 330 ~...;.;":":'...;.;~--., admtn asst forthe Ga•lpolts 7-5 shift, 740·992-5023.
at 740-446-7930 or apply and SCI\0016 1214e
8
6
YARD SALE..
office Cand1dates should be
ably We are low hft factllty oo person at t770 Jackson - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - For Leaae ..................................................... 490
For Salo ........................................................ 585
Pr. PI..F.ASANI'
self starters and posses lnt'l Coordinator needed to whtch has reduced our baWck Ptke, Galltpolls
STUDENTS FOR THE NA 104 Tatum Dr New
lace and supervtse us injuries to almost 0
e
P.ROGRAM R......!.. . . . r1ngs Haven WV 3bdl2ba Ranch.
For Sale or Trade ........................................ 590
P
gooci organtzattonal sktlls, aged exchange students''tn have 1 poSiton
"""""
1- oo 2 to 10 part ttme secretana1 he1P Nursing and Rehabtlttalton
lg sunroom, 2 car gar great
Frufle &amp; Vagetables ..................................... 580
W E
Furnished Rooma ........................................ 450 Yard Sale June 2.2-23· proficient m ord, Keel and your com munity For more PM 8 hift and 1 on,10 to 6AM nee ded at J 0 Drt Ill ng Center ts located 5 miles area 0, 304·675-3637 E,
,..,.. Company, Aactne, 0 hto, from Pomeroy and 20 m1n- 304-882-2334
General Haullng ................ :..........................850 Galltpohs Ferry across from Outlook Knowledge of land Info call ~nn1e · 1 ••• ·2tH shift 1or a lieensed pract~•l
Beale School 9-3 saveral descnphons and Itile exp. IS
..... .,
Stop by and I'llnurse.
1
vu1• an secretanal sktlls &amp; computer utes from
Athens and - - - - - - - Giveaway ..................................................... 040
9933- - - - - - - application and receive an knowledge are reqwed,
ttems from 50's &amp; 60's
a plus Must have a htgh Happy Ade .................................................... 050
A
lbany,
W
e
currently are 3 BR 1 BA on abo ut 11
d1Plom. and SOme Coli ege
IRS
JOBS
mtervtew
Monday
through
apply
In
person
to
hU out an
Hay &amp; Graln .................................................. 640
WANllill
eKperlence
preferred.
M nd
_J.
seek1ng mdtvtduals rnterest- acres tn Green Twp Jackson
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
TO BUY
Please call Andrea Healy at $18 46-$32 60/hr, now htr- Friday between 9 A a 4 apph(.;(ltton, No phone calls, ed tn attendtng our 75 hour Ptke, Galltpolts School
Home Improvements.................................. 810 ____
mg Patd Tratmng is p'rovtd- PU or call and ask for 107 North Third St , Aacme. Nursing Assrstant Program Drslrtct Gas heat 446-7525
740-446·6800
or
lax
to
740·
Homes lor Sole ............................................ 3t0
6- ad
ed For appllcanon and tree Debbie Wayland Staft1ng Ohio
____ _ _ _ _ whtch wtll start June 4,
Houeehold Goods ....................................... 510 Absolute Top Dollar U S 44-6-2- - - - - government )Ob tnfo, call Coordinator. Aocksprmgs 15
2007 Thts class ts tree of 3 BR 1BA, large Famtly
POST OFFICE NOW
Stiver
and
Gold
C'orns,
Housaelor Rent .......................................... 410
I oppor Ium ty
Amencan
Assoc of Labor ~, an
equa
charge
and begms wtth 2 Room, fndge, WID. Large
HIRING
Proofsets, Gold Rmgs, Pre- AVONt All Areas• To Buy or
lot Close to Holzer Call
In Memo•lam ............................................. ... D20
pi oyer
913-599-8244,
24/hrs
emp
em
A
vg
Pay
$20ihr
or
volunteer
da~s that wtll allow
1935 U S Currency, Sell Shtrley Speers. 304·
lnaurance •....... ., ...... "'''''''''"'''""'''"""""''"'''''"'"130
serv.
$SlK annually
you to see what the JOb con- 441-5826 or 446-9664
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpmont. ....................... 660 Solttalre Otamonds- M T S 675-1429.
Llveatock.:.................................................... &amp;30 Cotn Shop, 151 Second - - - - - - - - John ~ng Ford lincoln MACHINIST For manual lncludtng Federal Benefits ststs of ftrst hand We allow
Mercury
lathes, milhng machines
and OT,Paid Tratntng,
12 students per class so
Avenue. GaU!pohs. 740-446- Bartender needed Pomt
Loota~d Found ........................................... 060
Vecatoons-FT/PT
they f1h up qutckly Please
Pleasant Moose Lodge Needs three lnchVtduals saws, radial drills Must be
Lola &amp; Acreage ......................................... 350 2842
able to hold tolerances to 1-aoo-se4• 1775 Ext #6923 come m and complete an
Miscellaneous .............................................. t 70
apply tn Person
that are rnterested ln_a
00005• tn ftne work and
USWA
apphcatton tl tnterested
Wanted
Scrap
metal
cars,
Mlocellaneous Merchandise ...................... 540
career as 8n Automottve accurately cut venous male,
Aockspnngs rs an equal
Mobile Home Repalr.................................... 860 buses, ptpe. farm eQutp, CASHIER WANTED sl Tw1n Consultant. We are looking female and buttress threadS R&amp; ~ ck
J .ru 1ng leading The oppo rt umly empIoyer
Mobile Homee lor Rent .............................. 420 etc . Wtlt ptck-up and pay Oaks Gas Statfon, Ftve tor lndtvtduals that are out
read drawtngs and Way R&amp;J Truckmg now ii)
W
Mobile Homes for Salo ................................ 320 304-593·1904
Pomts,
Restaurant going, self motrvated and Must
make parts to specification Htrlng at our New Haven,
,... Do
Money to Loan ..... ........................................ 220
Expenence
Preferred
&amp;
I \11' 1 in \ II \ I
profeSSional We have one G·CodiJ"' desired Ul truck
_
3 Of 4 bedroom b1-level, ltv1,
Motorcycles &amp; 4 W~aelera .......................... 740
Helpful , Mrntmum wage, of the best compensation operation plus. UTRON, "{{' re~mmal DFor Regional
rng room, tamtly room 2 112
'-IIIHit
I"
8
1
Musical Instruments ........ ,................... ..... 570
(740·992·4250)
plans tn the tndustry and a Inc- www.utromc com FAX 0~~s- u~~ •v
year A-OK-Corrals &amp; Barns
bath. 6 mtles south of
Pereonala ..................................................... 005
10
benefits padc:age that has
veri e exp Call 1Galhpohs. Askmg $105,000
Palo for Sale ................................................ 560
HELP WANliD
Computers 4 u 1s seekmg a
703.369-5298
800-462,9365 ask tor Kent Metal Roohng, Shtngles.
health tnsurance, 401K - - -- - - - Concrete, Aemodelmg,(_7_40..:.)4_4_t-_0_18_5_ _ __
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Computer
Tech
forwork
part lime
-• Nursa al Mason Decks.
Proleosfonol Services ............................... 230 ~------·
~
1ead1ng 10 lull
time
You retirement, diSability and life SOCIAL
WORKER. AegiSierw
Pole
Berns. -3bd
GALLIPOLIS
Rldlo, TV &amp;CB Repalr ............................... 16D An Excellent way to earn must be proftclent tn com- tnsurance 11 you want 10 Overbrook Center IS now County Health Department Gbrages Free asttmatesCalt Forecloeurel Buy for
Rill Eststo Wanted ..................................... 360 money The New Avon
puler repatr, dependable an ears an excellent living and accepting resumes for the APP1tea110ns an d JO b 304·633· 1230
$50.900! Only $404/mo , 5%
Schoololnatructlon ..................................... t50 Call Mantyn 304-882-2645 · honest' Bnng resume 1n better yourself, contact Pat pos~rons of Director of descnptton can be obtan"led - - - - - - - - dn. 20yrs@ So/o For ltsttngs
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
----~--- person to Computers 4 U,
HtU or Brian Ross
Sooal Service&amp; The quail- at 216 Sth St Pt Pleasant Carpentry, patnttng, drywall, call 600-559-4109 xF254
SHuetlona Wanted ....................................... t 20
Jif~ I.. ,
f1ed candidate must possess EOE
.,.~ ~5 yewo~~e~:PencedFor' qsumeahl-l
ELEC CONTROLS ENGI- Inc 303 Matn Street, Point
Space tor Rent ............................................. 4&amp;0
Pleasant,
wv
25550
or
call
strong
verbal
and
wntten
'1 ,..,,....,_,,.
Attention! ·
Sporting Goodl ........................................... 520 NEER Defense program for ljtrectlons at 304,675- ___....
_ ;_._..._. _._..._...__ communication
skttls, Wanted Direct Su~ ';t:~~~llfi• Sflve at 1740 )388· Local company offerrng "NO
needs
hands-on
engmeer
emplOyees
to
oveiSOII
,..,...
'11011
•
·
SUV's for S.le.............................................. 720
Truck Dnvers COL Class A MediCaid, Madtcare and youth 1n a staff sectl'8'~ _,__
. ----:--~ DOWN PAYMENr proTrucks for S.le ............................................ 715 lor PLC programmtng 5282
Reqwred, mimmum of 5 MDS knowledge Long term dential environment pJJ.{ 0o you need a 'Handy Man grams tor you to buy your
IRSLogiK I RSVIew), high
Uphototery ................................................... 870
drlvtng
exp care experience preferred pass phystcal training 10 flx Porches, Roofs, Water home tnstead of rentmg
vans Fqr S.le.............................................. 730 speed data acqUtsillon, etec- Courtstde Bar and Gnll now years
on but not required. Qualified requirement Pay based 00 Pipes AJac:k--of·aii-Trades · 100% ftnanctng
WMtld to Buy ............................................. 090 tncal test equtpment, heavy seekmg full lime gnll and fry Expenence
WMtld to Buy- Fann Suppllee .................. 620 equtpment and automated cooks Great pay m a great Overde1mensional loads candidates may send axpertence Call (740)379- So to Speak Call me at 304, · Less than perlect cred!l
accepted
' Wonted To Do ..........................:................... teo control systems BSEE + envtronment Must be hard Must have good driving resumes tb Charta Brown- 9083 between 9-3 Mon-Fn 675-5657
• Payment could be the
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
related elCpertence or equtv- working and rehSble. Apply record Earn up to $2,000 McGuire, AN, LNHA,
weekty
For
appltcanon
Call
Admlmslrator,
333
Page
Rooters
Metal
roofmg,
SidLawn
mowrllQ
Rates
by
the
same as rent
• Yard S.le- Galllpolle .................................... 072 alent destred UTAON. Inc 1n person at 308 2nd Ave or
Locators
M-F Street, Middleport, OH. lng and EPDM Top pay and job, not the hour Call Paul Mortgage
: Yard S.le-PotMroyllltlddle ......................... 074 www untrontc eom FAX 703- call 441-9371 to set up an (304)722-2t84
8.30am-4pm
45760 E.O.E
benefits 724-229-8020
0 (:304)675-2940
(740)367-0000
.. Yard S.le-Pt. Pteaunt ................................ D76 369-5298
intervi'9W
I

•&gt;·

I

I,

-~

on

Help Wanted

ffiuWANml

i

Pupptes to gtveaway 304 4 Famtty Garage Sate 214 ~~~,1~0~-----.,
Magnoli a Dnve behtnd
HFJJ' WM'tEil
675-5361
Dommo's Ptzza, June 21st
To good home only, lull 22nd, 23rd Ram or Shtne -.
blooded Stbenan Husky 1 Fn/Sat 6/22-23, 9·4 103
year Old male Needs room lincoln Ptke Bass Wood.
$300.00
lj;ao~ru;;;n;.4;.46~·;;;
22;;;8,;.4- - - , lures stove. household
HIRING BONUS
~~ ANil
Items, )ewelry elc

i

111'1_. . . . . . . . . . ..
Iro
lr"-80-W-T~.:,:,Do~_.l

Now Hiring I

r

3 Famtly sale at 40 Pecan
Dr Spnng Valley Fn &amp;Sat
9-5. guns. pottery, ~1r hockey. ITIISC

the..-,.

l!!i

SAVINGS

=======

t!

Week Old kittens to good
YARD SALE
homes. 256-8884
L,~------_.1
-F,-ee-k,,-,."'ns_=_9_6_&amp;_4_w_e_ek-sr
~!!!r'~y:o:ARD-~S!:"ALE----,
old, l11ter lramed, LONG
GAUJPOUS
HAIRED,
EASY TO HAN· · - - - - - - ·
OLE
740-985-4244
1st sale Old 160 Porter Rd
Male Bnndle 4-5 month old across from Foodland Btg
Free to Good Home 304- vanety farm machtnery
glassware, ltnens. etc
562·82t6

6

Now you can have borders and graphics
lL-'
addedtoyourdassifledads
(.~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!,iilll
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for large

POUCIES: Ohio ¥lilly Publtatmg
to edtl. retect. or cancel any ldlt any Umt. Errors mnt bt ,.,ned on the ft1'1t day ot
Tribun1 S.ntlnel A a· ' wll bt"""
HI tor no men IMn the co.t of
occupied bV the tn'Of 1nd only the first lnMIIkHl. We
eny louorupeftN
frOfft thep
llolt Of omlellon of lf'IIChatl..,..il Comc:lon ... bt rMdlln the first tvlilabte edition
IN....,. OCMtldlcilllll. •Current rMI CMt ..,.... •AI Nil .............,........ ~ to the Fedrnl Flir Houtlng Ae1 ot 1tu.
....... ....,holp _ _ _ _ _ ......... _ _

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Lost· 6 yr old male Beagle
on Rocksprmgs Ad , reward
2 beauttful tame kittens oHered for return. (740)992brother &amp; SISter, 4-5 wks old 2762 leave message
to a good home very playful
304-675-2634
Lost 6 month old black male
pup-recently neutered-near
3 1G-week old kittens ~ Crank's Vet Clinc/RI,35
mate/2 females Indoor answers to 'ttl Bit"· call674·
tr81ned 740·843-513t leave 3085
messaged no answ8f
-------LOST· Man's Gold Weddtng
Band ncar Ractne Post
Office
PLEASE CALL 7403 kittens. 10 weeks old.
949-2385111
(740)949·9217

-.
Lost In Middleport on 6/13,
,,.,,,,JI mullrcolored 4# female StithTzu, fam1ly pet reward.
(740)992·2954

lowest, responsive and
responsible bidder.
"Domestic Steel uses
requirements as spectfled In section 153.011
of the revised code
apply to this project. 11"-~c,'",·
Copies ·of section
153.011 of the revised
code can be obtained
from any of the offices
of the department of
administrative servlces."
By order oflheTPCWD
located at3956t Bar 30
Road, Readsvllle, Ohio
43772, County of
Meigs, this 18th day of
June.
(6) 21 , 26 (7) 2

:r VlrmR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Dlsglav Ads

• Start Your Ads Wtth A Keyword • lndude Complete

\\\Ill\( 1 \ 11 \ t ....

992-2157

sssssssssssssssssssss Betng Accepted For An LPN
~L.--ioFilo~UNil--_.1 Mov&gt;ng Sale, 6/22 8a·4p &amp;
Compettttve Starling Pay

Public Notice
Notice of Availability
The
Syracuse
Volunteer Firefighters'
Association, Inc. hos
filed Its annual return
of an exempt organlzalion, Form 990, with the
Internal
Revenue
Service lor the calendar year 2006. In accor·
dance wllh Internal
Revenue Code Section
6104, thlslonn Is available lor public fnspec·
lion at t 2.47 Church St.,
Syracuse, DH 45779
during the 1BD-day
period beginning May
16,2007.
(6) 21
------Public Notice

l\egtster

Sentinel

.....------,------_:O:::r_:F;;a:_;xTo (740) 446-3008

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

NOTICE TO CONTRAC- Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
TORS
Attention of bidders Is
Sealed propoaala for called to all of the
conthe Pomeroy Dlatreaa requirements
Ciearence
Project, talned In this bid packMelge County, Ohio el, particularly to the
will be received by the Federal
Labor
Meigs
County Standards PfQvlstons
Commlaaloners at the and
Davis-Bacon
Meigs Courthouse, Wages, vsrloue lnaurPomeroy, Ohio 45769 ance requirements,
until
t :00
p.m. various equal opportu.
Thursday, July 5, 2007 ntty provisions, and
and then at 1:15 P.M., tho requirement for a
at said office opened payment bond and perand read aloud lor the lormance bond lor
following:
100% of tho contract
This fa a Prevailing price. No bidder may
Wage project.
withdraw his bid within
See speclllcation,e In thirty (30) daye alter
bid packet
the actual date of the
Specifications, and bid opening thereof. The
forme may be secured Metge
County
at tho office of Meigs C o m m I s s Ion e r s
C o u n t y reserve the right to
C o m m I s s I o n e r s , reject any or all bide.
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Mlck
Davenport,
Ohio 45769 Phone President
740-992-2895.
Meigs
County
A deposit of 0 dollars Commissioners
will be required lor (S) 21, 26, 29
each set of plana and
apecllfcatlons, chock
made payable to- . The
Public Notice
lull amount will be
returned within thirty SHERIFF'S SALE
(30) days alter receipt 10:00 a.m. Saturday,
ol bids.
July 7, 2007 on the lot
Each bid must be beside the Sheriff's
led b I h 0
accompen
or sold
Ill coat there
be
a bid bond yIne t an
Public will
Auction
amount of 100% of the to the best and highest
bid amount with a bidder tho following :
surety satisfactory to t-t 997 Ford Crown
lha aforesaid Meigs VIctoria min bid $500
C o u n I y 3· t 998 Ford Crown
Commlsafoners or by VIctoria min bid $550
certified
check, t-1999 Ford Crown
caehlers check, or let- VIctoria (pollee Intertar of credit upon a aof- captor) min bid $700
vent bank In the t-1999 Ford Crown
amount of not less VIctoria (maroon) min
than 10% of the bid bid $2,500
amount In favor of the t-2000 S10 Chevrolet
Meigs pickup 4-wheel drive
aforeeald
C o u n I Y wHh topper (drug forCommlealoners. Bid felture vehicle) mtn bid
Bonds ehall be accom- $32,000
panled by Proof of Several air conditionAuthorlty of !he olltcfat ere min bid $20
or agent . signing the Vehicles may be - n
bond.
by contacting the
Bide shall be sealed Sherlll'e Olllce
and marked as Bid lor Vehtclll sold "AS IS"
Pomeroy
Dlstrees Cash day of aale
Sidewalk Replacement Rober! E. Beagle
pl'O(acl and mailed or Sherfll
delivered to:
Melgo County
Mtlge
County (6, 21, 28, (7) 5
Commtestoners
Courthouse

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

ca•T;~dai... (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Tim Dahlberg is a national sports columnist for Tile Associated Press. Write to him
at tdahlbergap.org

l"'uhllc Nollce"" In Ne'WSIJ.lt
Your Right to Know. [)cllvered RiJ(hl to Your

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Sears
3 Day Sale
Thursday 6/21 - Sat 6/23
•In Home Appliances customers w111
rece1ve 12% cash back after ma1!-1n
rebale or t2 mo. No Interest, No Pmt

Community Relations Secretary

w1th Sears Card and free dehvery after

Pleasant Valley Hospiial is currently
accepti ng resumes for a Commumty
Relatwns Secretary. Expe(lence m word
processing applicallons, grap hic design
applicUtions and other general computer
sk1lls. General secretarial ex perien~e
required. General knowledge of
photography. Supenor communi catiVe
and inlerpersonal sk1 lls . Musl be able to
work weekends, evenings and hohdays 1f
needed.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Dnve
Poml Pleasant. WV 25550
fax to (3041 675-6975 or apply online at
www.pvalley.org.
AAIEOE

ma11-1n rebate on any appliance over

$399
• Strong offer 1n Lawn &amp; Garden Wllh
t 5% off all Craftsman Lawn &amp; Garden
equ1p. PLUS tO% cash back after
ma1!-ln rebate on your total Craftsman
Lawn &amp; Garden purchase
• The offer 1n Home Electromcs
contmues w1th 18 mos No Interest on
total electronics purchases over $399

2200 Eaetom Ave. Galllpolle, OH

740-446-1546..,..,..,.....,.

Based on double occupancy
State room taxes will be applied to
credit card at check-In
Includes flight, hotel accommodations, luggage &amp; transfers
Private jet leaves from Charleston,
WV Must be 21 years of age
Cash, credit cards, checks,
orders and payroll deduction
accepted. No refunds
LIMITED SEATS!
To make reservations pleace
call PVh Community Relations,
(304) 675-4340, ext. 1326

20% off Massages
Continued NOW
through the Regatta for

Customer Appreciation
Debi Adkins @ All About You
201 B 6th St. Pt. Pleasant, WV

304-675-1411

Iro

r

·OOQ-

I;J"t·

i

r

t..------,.1
ANilDO

r

SPECIAL PVH SPEAKER
David Felder, MD
PVH Orthopedic Surgeon
Mason County Senior Center
Tuesday, June 26, 2007
1?:30 pm
Topic: Total Joint
Replacements for
Hips&amp; Knees
Public is invited
For more information please
call, (304) 675-4340, Ext.

i

. ..., . .

•

·-

·r~-----·

�'

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, June iu, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June 21, 2007

'

Oden works out for Trail Blazers Ban Pacman for good, and make sure
he takes his posse tvith him
M' SPORTS COLUMNIST

You know you're a big time 'a thlete when
you've got a posse to do your dirty work for
you. As posses go, Pacman Jones has a pret.t y good one, full of guys equally adept at
picking up dollar bill s showered on the strip
.club stage as they are trading shots with
whoever gets in their way.
Pacman 's entourage was at it again the
other night in Atlanta, where police say they
were involved in a shooting after an altercation at, yes, a strip club. This is a posse that
seems to travel well, mixing it up on both
sides of the country in the name of their
man .
The timing of the shooting was a bit awkward, coming less than a week after Jones
pledged to NFL commi~sioner Roger
Goodell that he was going to tum his life
around and become productive citizen so
he coukl play in the league once again.
It could be Jones thought the best way to
become that new person was to make sure
Atlanta strippers had enough money for taxi
fare home . Or maybe he just wanted to give
the posse one last night out for old times
sake.
It doesn 't much matter now, because
Jones has far more serious problems. And
there's not a lot the posse can do about it,
unless it mcludes a good criminal defense
lawyer or two.
If Las Vegas prosecutors have their way,
the next time you see Jones with a number
on his uniform, it will be prison garb, not an
NFL jersey.
They charged Jones with two felonies
Wednesday stemming from a shooting over
NBA All-Star weekend in February that left
a strip club manager paralyzed·. Jones faces
a possible 12 years m prison on coercion
charges for his role in the melee in the early
morning hours of Feb. 19 at the Minxx
Gentlemen's Club just off the Las Vegas
Strip.
The court, of course, presumes that Jones
is innocent until proven guilty. That's a
basic tenet of the legal system that serves
our country so well , and Jones will have his
day to defend himself.
But the NFL is free to judge things by a
diffe rent standard. The league doesn't need
proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
With that in mind, maybe it's time for
Goodell to begin rethinking the one-year
suspension he handed down recently to
Jones.
Maybe it's time to make 11 a lifetime ban.
Goodell certainly has the power to do just
that, and there couldn't be a better candidate
to remove from the game than Jones . He
and his posse have wreaked havoc everywhere they 've gone, and when he 's booked
in Las Vegas it will be his ·sixth arrest since
he was drafted by the Titans in April 2005.

a

AP photo
Ohio State center Greg Oden (20) shoots over Flonda's AI
Horford (42) in the first half dunng their men's championship basketball game at the Final Four in the Georg1a
Dome m Atlanta Monday, April 2. Oden worked out for the
Portland Trail Blazers, who possess the No. 1 pick in this
year's NBA Draft, on Wednesday. .
'
titles before advancing to
their first national championship game since 1962,
where they lost to two-time
champion Florida. In the
championship game, Oden
had 25 points and 12 ·
rebounds .
After his workout with
Portland, Oden was asked
whether he likened himself
more to Shaquille O'Neal or
Bill Russell. Without hesitation he answered," Russell ."
"Ten fingers. II rings ." he
explained.
Both funny and personable , the 19-year-old smiled
broadly
after
jokingly
telling reporters that he'd
cry if he wasn't the top pick
in the draft.
Oden says he and Durant
are pals and trade text messages.
" We ' re pretty cool," he
said. "This year we realized
we were going to be connected for a long time ."

Oden said he felt immediately
welcome
m
Portland.
Roy
and
Aldridge met Oden and his
mother at the airport.
Fellow Oh10 State freshman Mike Conley Jr. has
also declared himself eligible for the draft. Oden is
represented by Conley's
father , Mike Conley Sr. ,
who won the Olympic gold
medal in the triple jump at
the
1992
Games
in
Barcelona.
' Pritchard said the organizat1on IS keeping an open
mind when it comes to its
selection. None of the
Blazers' bra~ s was indicating which way the team
might be le a ning.
" This gives us an incredible
opportunity
to
improve our franchi se for
the next decade , so you
have to be extremely careful ," Allen sa1d. " But it's a
lot of fun."

NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said
Wednesday the league would not speculate ·
any further on Jones' future at this time. One
read of the Las Vegas polic;e report, though,
should be all Goodell needs to bounce Jones
from the league forever.
In it, police detail the events of the morning , which began when Jones and a half
dozen members of his posse went to the
strip club to watch some of their favorite
dancers . They sat in a private booth with a
garbage bag full of money so they could
"make it rain" by throwing money on the
women.
'
A couple of the dancers began fighting
over the money at one point, and witnesses
said Jones grabbed one of them by the hair
and punched her in the face several times. A
melee broke out when club bouncers tried to
break it up, and Jones and his entourage
were finally escorted outside.
A cocktail waitress told police an angry
Jones threatened to kill the bouncers before
walking away with a man in a black T-shirt.
A man in a similar shirt came back moments
later with a semiautomatic handgun and
began fuing, hitting three people.
One of those shot was Tommy Urbanski,
a former professional wrestler who worked
as a real estate broker during the day and as
the manager of the club at night to earn
extra income to send his wife to law school.
Urbanski is paralyzed, a 9 mm bullet permanently lodged in his spine.
Urbanski told The Associated Press last
month that he couldn't believe it when
Jones took out an full-age ad in a Nashville,
Tenn., paper that said learning he would be
suspended from the NFL "was one of the
worst moments of my life ."
"That's the worst moment in his life?"
Urbanski asked. "Try being put in a wheelchair for the rest of your life . This changes
everything ."
Police have yet to identify the man who
shot Urbanski and two others . They haven't
gotten a great deal of help in solving the
mystery from Jones or his posse.
They're charging Jones with two counts
of felony coercion, and also charging his
bodyguard and a female posse member. The
charges might be difficult to prove, but
there's also a chance they might loosen
some tongues.
Jones, meanwhile, has already violated
the conditions Goodell put on his one-year
suspension just two months ago. He's being
questioned in Atlanta about one shooting,
and faces arrest in Las Vegas in another.
He's a thug who should be banned from
the NFL for good.
Just make sure he takes the posse with
him when he leaves .

.

'

m;rtburie - Sentinel - l\e

CLASSIFIED

M' SPORTS WRITER

BY TIM DAHLBERG

-' •.-

I

~

BY ANNE M. PETERSON

PORTLAND, Ore.
Greg Oden a dmitted he was
out of breath after his workout Wednesday for the
Portland Trail Blazers. By
no means was the 7-foot
draft prospect coasting in on
his reputation.
" Really, I'm trying to sell
them on me, not the other
way around," the forward
from Ohio State said after a
v1gorous solo workout.
The Portland Trail Blazers
have the No. I selection in
the June 28th draft. Oden
figures to be one of the top
picks along with Kevin
Durant, a forward out of
Texas , who is scheduled to
visit the Blazers on Fnday.
" All I can do is be me,"
Oden said.
A couple dozen fans stood
across the street from the
Trail Blazers practice facility south of Portland hoping
to catch a glimpse of the Big
Man. The med1a turned out
in droves.
Team owner Paul Allen ,
the billionaire co-founder of
Microsoft , sat and watched
the workout with general
manager Kevin Pritchard .
Several players , including
Zach Randolph , Rookie of
the Year Brandon Roy, and
LaMarcus Aldridge also
looked on.
"What caine out is that
he's a really good · person
who cared about how he did
in the workout ," Pritchard
said. "He's a unique talent.
To have an opportunity to
get a kid like this is a great
opportunity for this organization."
Said Allen: "Seeing Greg
in person, it 's not just his
size, it's his amazing athleticism. You can see the potential there."
Oden was scheduled to
meet with team doctors later
Wednesday.
After gettmg a late start in
his freshman year at Ohio
State because of a wrist
mJUry, Oden led the
Buckeyes in scoring (15 .7)
and rebounding (9 .6) and
topped the Big Ten m shooting percen,tage (.616).
The Buckeyes went 35-4
and won the Big Ten's regular-season and tournament

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TUPPERS
PLAINS·
CHESTER WATER DISTRICT
MEIGS COUNTY
LEGAL NOTICE- INV~
TATION TO BID
sealed Bids will be
received lor furnishing
all labor, materials and
equipment nocenary
to complete a project
known sa Water Line
Replacement
and
MPRV
at
the Upgrade
Tuppers Project
PlainsChester Water District,
at their District Office
located st 39561 Bar 30
Road, Reedsville, Ohio
45772 Olllce, until
10:00 a.m. local time
on July 6th, at said
lime, publicly opened
and read aloud. Bids
maybemalledordellvored In advance to tho
TPCWDat the above
addreu.
The projact conelata of
constructing 1,630 feet
of 6" waterline 380 feet
or 4" waterll...;, valves,
hydrants,
hydrant
reconnecting
and
other
necee 11 ry
appurtenances.
Bid
Documents
Include
the
Bid
Requtromonta
and
Contract Documents
(that Include all bid
oheeta, plana, epecll~
cations, and any
addenda) can be
obtained from M-E

Companies, Inc., 5085
Tile Plant hoad, New
Lexington, Ohio 43764
wllh a non-refundable
payment of $75.00 per
set. Checks should be
made payable to M-E
Companies. Inc.
Blddere must comply
with the prevall!ng
wage rates on Public
Improvements
In
Meigs
&amp;
Athens
Counties as determined by the Ohio
Department
of
Commerce; Division ot
Labor and Worker
Safety- Wage and Hour.
The Engineer's est!·
mate lor this protect Is
$210,000.
Tuppers
Plains·
Chester Water District
reserves the right to
waive any Informalities
or frregutarltles as the
best bidder lor the
District will be chosen.
Tuppers
Plains·
Chester Water District
reserves the right to
reject any or all bids or
to
Increase
or
decrease or omit any
Item or Items and/or
award the bid to the
------Help Wanted

,....,_"'right

hi,_,..

kltncarlyle8C:omcaat.nat

Male Kttten, 6 wks old tray
and whtte, kept tndoors, hee
neulertng, please call 304895 8854
.

Vf-1-oll- I
--rt-~IN~ I 1-lt::AR[)
-rt-~t;;" CI-\AIR,

Bul&lt;:.f'.

Tunica, Mississippi
THE GRAND CASINO
September 5-7, 2007
$295/person

Emily Wolfe Birlhday Party
Fair Plain Jamborree - WV
7:00 pm-1 0:00 pm
June 22
Free Admission All Welcome

-=======:..:==~===:;
r

RegiStered
nurse lawn-Care Servtce. ~owmg
Rocksprings Nursmg and &amp; Tnmmtng Call (740)44t Rehabtlttat1on ~ Center IS 1333 or (740)645-0546
looking for a few dedtcaled
$300 Hiring
people to become a part of Need someone to take care
Bonus
our team We are a 100 bed of you or a roved one lhen
40 hours • week
· sk1iled facility located 5 call (740)446·7165 or
Up to S8.501hour + bonuses mtles from Pomeroy Thts 1s (740)4-4t -9232 I have good
a 20 m1nuta commute from references.
Make calls you believe tnt Athens a11d Albany We JUSt
11\\,(1\1
can on behalf ot conservatrve
recently tnstalled a state of ....,,..._..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,
Potitk:al orgamzatiOI'IS
the art on ttne documents !!i:ro
B~
Paid vacations, paid holi- 1lon system lor tile nursing
ass1stants which reduce
OPPolnuNm
days and paid training
paper
work
t1me
constderFIJIbenefits package and
ably. We offer compettltve
401-K
•NOTICE•
rates, health, dental, and
$300 Hlrlng Bonus
viston tnsurance as well as a OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
40~K plan. We are a low ltft
Call today to schedule an faCility whiCh has reduced that you do bus1ness with
lntervtew
our back 1njunes to almost 0 people you know, and
1-877-46U247
We have 2 positions opened NOT to send money
ext. 2321
for regtstered nurses 1 tS through the matl unhl you
tor everyother week Clld 1 have tnvesttgated the
WWW lnfOCISIOn.com
full ttme posttton for day and offertng.
- - - - - - - - eventng
NURSING
ASSISTANT - - - - - - - M
ADD· Rockspnngs Nurs1ng Super 8 Motel accepllng
~
and Rehab11ltat10n Center 1s appltcattons for part ltme "--..,;TOOioiiiiiiANiiioo-·
lookmg for a few dedtcated desk clerk. Mtlintght and
people to beCOme a pan of ENening shifts are requtred .
HNOTICE**
our team We are a 100 bed Please apply in person NO
sktlled factltty located 5 PHONE CAllS
mtles from Pomeroy Thts IS --'-----~- Borrow Smart Contact
a 20 minute commute from The Metgs Local School the Ohto Otv 1 ~ton of
Athans and Albany We ]List Dtstnct ts current!~ seektng Ftnanetal Institution's
recently tnstalled a state of apphcattons from certtfted OffiCe of Consumer
the art on lme documents- applicants lor Boys' VarSity Atfatrs BEFORE you raft,
tlon system lor the nursmg Basketball Coach, Boys' nance your home or
asststants whtch reduce ASSIStant VarSity Basketball obtain a loan BEWARE
paper work ttme conSider, Coach. Boys' Juntor Varsity of tequests for any large
ably. We offer competitive Basketball Coach, Boys' advance payments of
rates, health. dental anc:t Mtddle School Wrestling fees or Insurance Call the
vtston insurance as well 88 Coach (2 positions), Offtce of Consumer
8 401 K plan We are 8 low Wrest~ng Coach and ~tddle Affatrs toll free at 1-866lift faclity whtch has reduced School Wrestling Coach 276·0003 to learn •t the
our back rnjurtes to almost o, Applrcants must certtficallon mortgage broker or
We have 2 postllons on 2 to requirements of Ohto for lender ts propS:rly
10 PM shtft and 1 on 10 to puptl activity supervtsor and licensed (Thts ts a publiC
6AM shift Stop by and ftll CPA Deadhne for appltca- servtce announcement
out an applicatiOn and ttons is June 25, 2007 from the Ohto Valley

~
2007 by NEA. Inc.

www.comlca.com

©

"--------,.1

Desk Clerk needed at
Budget Inn 260 Jackson
Prlle
for a person
who Looktng
1s mottvated.
dreat
oommumcatton sktlls and a
posittve attrtude Please
apply wtthm
fi....LEN Appltcalions Are

6123 Sa,noon, 101 Basltant II.. '
Dr Galltpohs, cOfner of 4th &amp;
Basttanr Dtshes, linens, HI.
Chtstmas decor. paho furn. II.
clothes (baby 6mon-18omn)
lots more•
'I,

John Sang Ford Lincoln

Mercury

Has a posllion open for an
Automotive Techn1C181l. We
are looktng for an mdtvtdual
that has a well rounded
knowledge about automottve repair Ford MotOf'
Company tratning wtll be
provided and IS on going
We oHer a competitive rompensat1on plan and oor benetit pacKage rncludes health
insurance, 401 K retirement,
dtsabtlity Insurance and lite
Insurance If you are tired of
working for someone that IS
not working for yoo or want

Paid Vacation, Patd MealS,
Dtscounts.
Insurances
Available
Interested
I; I
Applicants May Apply Da1ly
9,4, Ravenswood Care
I I Iii:
Center, 11 ~ 3 Washmgton
Thurs. Frt. Sat, Bam-? 4409
St , Ravenswood, WV
CLASSIFIED INDEX
Bulav1lle Ptke 5 ptece bed(304)273-9236
FAX
4x4's For Sale ........................................... 725
room sutte. kttchen table Earn S8.50/hr FT + References Requtred.
to :~~~TyohMomu~~..
:~.·e~~~!d =~;han ~~:~~ewb~;~:~ :~~or: ~~~~~r~~t~~te~=s~u!~ ~P:u:bl:"h:'n:g:C:o:m:p•:rtt:l::~
Announcement ............................ ---------·-----·030
and 4 padQed chairs, metal Week 'YBonus Potential
I
9AM an.-1-. , 4PM R·"·sprlngs
Wilham
Buckley,
.
C
Antiques ...................................................... 530 storage btns, tw1n tubs. tool
Cl aII ta CounIy ounct on
VV\
s
dL. no
8
PR~ONAL
lnb0und &amp;
Agtng/Sentor
Resource
is
an
equal
opportumly
upertnlen
enl.
r
.
OIC
5F..RVIC£S
Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440 box for ptck'up, metal wheel.
272,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
Ol.tbound
employer.
Auction and Flea Ma•ket.. ........................... 080 lot of rmsc
I
I tng
Cente rtscurrentyaccep
1:111:
Auto Porte\ Accessories .......................... 760
applications for Nutntton
Wanted Patnters, pay due to
TURNED DOWN ON
,_. '
•
• ... ....
Overbrook Center IS current- Expenence, PTIFT Send
Auto Aopalr .................................................. 770
Aide/Meet Transporter and
~ 111 " . , ...
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
10
Apply
Now. S!iirl Suun' substitute cook Must have - - - - - - - - ly seeking a beauttctan
Autoalor Safe ....... ........................ .............. 710
resumes
to
Box
TSC20
c/o
' I
1·888 IMC-PAIU
Boate &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
valid drwers license and LFN's Rockspnngs Nurstng work part time tn the factlity'S Pomt Pleasant Regtster, 200 No Fee Unless We Wtn'
1·888·582-3345
Building Supplies ....................................... 550
11-888-&lt;162 -7298)
Insurable nsk Must be able Nurstng and Rehabilitation beauty salon Candidates Matn Street, Pt Pleasant,
Rockspnngs Ad Fn
1{1\11
.... 1\11
. Buolnesa and Buildings ............................. 340 370t9
Job ext . 1931
.to read, write and follow Center IS looking for a few shouk:l possess a vahd man- wv 25550
· Buefnees Opportunlty ................................. 2tO June 22, 9-?, lots of
dtrecttons
Needs
to asstst in dedtcated people to become agtng cosmetologtstltcense ;.;.;,.;;;;;;;;.,---.... ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
WWW.i r1fO CISIOr1 COil\
· Buef""o Training .......... ............................ 140 clot ~1es , JUntor, womens,
food preparation, clean up a part of our team We are a Salary IS based 00 commls- r:IO
SCHoou;
HOMES
· Campers ,&amp;Motor Homes ........................... 790 mens, turn and m1sc ttems
and be a substitute meal t00 bed skilled facti tty locat· Slon Interested candidates
iNs'IRucnoN
FOR SAl£
t00 WORKERS NEEDED
Camping Equlpment ................................... 780 El
" Apply·. ed 5 m1ios from Pomer~ru should camp1e1e an appItca- L,_..,;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioi_.l
ectrtc scooIer, household Assemble crafts, wood drlv.r and COOk Eo·c.
"' ton at 333 P
St eet
Carde of Thanka .......................................... oto tterns,
baskets and more Items To $ 480/wk Matertals Senior Resource Center Th1s is a 20 mmute commute 1
age 457
r ' Galflpolle Career Coli-sa• 0 Down evan wtlh less than
Child/Elderly Care ...................................... 190
rr St . Syracuse Fn &amp; provtded Free mformatton 1165 State Route 160, fromAthensandAI:Iany We Middleport.
OH
60 (CareersCioseToHome)
perfect credtl ts avatlable on
Ka
E0 E
·
ElectrlcaVRefrlgeralfon .............................840 Sat g.?
Clalhpollll.
Oh
45631
Phone
just
reoently
Installed
a
state
·
Call Tooayl 740-446-4367, thiS 3 bedroom, 1 bath
Equipment lor Aent ..................................... 480
- - - - - - - pkg 24Hr 801 428-4649
home Corner lot, fireplace
otthe art on line document&amp;· Part and Full Ttme
~ -800·2~ 4,0452
Excavatfng ................~ ................................. 83D -Yard sale, 6/21-6122 (Thurs - - - - - - - - 740-446-7000
tlon
system
for
the
nursing
Paramedics
and dispatch, wwwgatiiiXII,~«~r&amp;ercottegocom modern kttchen. JaCUZZI tub
Farm Equlpment ......................................... tlO &amp;Frtday), 9am-?, 35670 SA A Ott &amp; Gas Broker Help wanted at Darst Adult ass' !Slants which reduce
.
ers, great wages. call NicK Accredited Member Accrediting Payment around $550 per
Farmolor Rent............................................. 430 7, lots at m1sc
Co mpany ts Iooktng fo r an Cl roup Horne, some ift tng, paper work ttme consider,
COUncil tor tnDepenOent Colleges month 740-367-7129
Fanne for Safo .................. .-............. ............. 330 ~...;.;":":'...;.;~--., admtn asst forthe Ga•lpolts 7-5 shift, 740·992-5023.
at 740-446-7930 or apply and SCI\0016 1214e
8
6
YARD SALE..
office Cand1dates should be
ably We are low hft factllty oo person at t770 Jackson - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - For Leaae ..................................................... 490
For Salo ........................................................ 585
Pr. PI..F.ASANI'
self starters and posses lnt'l Coordinator needed to whtch has reduced our baWck Ptke, Galltpolls
STUDENTS FOR THE NA 104 Tatum Dr New
lace and supervtse us injuries to almost 0
e
P.ROGRAM R......!.. . . . r1ngs Haven WV 3bdl2ba Ranch.
For Sale or Trade ........................................ 590
P
gooci organtzattonal sktlls, aged exchange students''tn have 1 poSiton
"""""
1- oo 2 to 10 part ttme secretana1 he1P Nursing and Rehabtlttalton
lg sunroom, 2 car gar great
Frufle &amp; Vagetables ..................................... 580
W E
Furnished Rooma ........................................ 450 Yard Sale June 2.2-23· proficient m ord, Keel and your com munity For more PM 8 hift and 1 on,10 to 6AM nee ded at J 0 Drt Ill ng Center ts located 5 miles area 0, 304·675-3637 E,
,..,.. Company, Aactne, 0 hto, from Pomeroy and 20 m1n- 304-882-2334
General Haullng ................ :..........................850 Galltpohs Ferry across from Outlook Knowledge of land Info call ~nn1e · 1 ••• ·2tH shift 1or a lieensed pract~•l
Beale School 9-3 saveral descnphons and Itile exp. IS
..... .,
Stop by and I'llnurse.
1
vu1• an secretanal sktlls &amp; computer utes from
Athens and - - - - - - - Giveaway ..................................................... 040
9933- - - - - - - application and receive an knowledge are reqwed,
ttems from 50's &amp; 60's
a plus Must have a htgh Happy Ade .................................................... 050
A
lbany,
W
e
currently are 3 BR 1 BA on abo ut 11
d1Plom. and SOme Coli ege
IRS
JOBS
mtervtew
Monday
through
apply
In
person
to
hU out an
Hay &amp; Graln .................................................. 640
WANllill
eKperlence
preferred.
M nd
_J.
seek1ng mdtvtduals rnterest- acres tn Green Twp Jackson
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
TO BUY
Please call Andrea Healy at $18 46-$32 60/hr, now htr- Friday between 9 A a 4 apph(.;(ltton, No phone calls, ed tn attendtng our 75 hour Ptke, Galltpolts School
Home Improvements.................................. 810 ____
mg Patd Tratmng is p'rovtd- PU or call and ask for 107 North Third St , Aacme. Nursing Assrstant Program Drslrtct Gas heat 446-7525
740-446·6800
or
lax
to
740·
Homes lor Sole ............................................ 3t0
6- ad
ed For appllcanon and tree Debbie Wayland Staft1ng Ohio
____ _ _ _ _ whtch wtll start June 4,
Houeehold Goods ....................................... 510 Absolute Top Dollar U S 44-6-2- - - - - government )Ob tnfo, call Coordinator. Aocksprmgs 15
2007 Thts class ts tree of 3 BR 1BA, large Famtly
POST OFFICE NOW
Stiver
and
Gold
C'orns,
Housaelor Rent .......................................... 410
I oppor Ium ty
Amencan
Assoc of Labor ~, an
equa
charge
and begms wtth 2 Room, fndge, WID. Large
HIRING
Proofsets, Gold Rmgs, Pre- AVONt All Areas• To Buy or
lot Close to Holzer Call
In Memo•lam ............................................. ... D20
pi oyer
913-599-8244,
24/hrs
emp
em
A
vg
Pay
$20ihr
or
volunteer
da~s that wtll allow
1935 U S Currency, Sell Shtrley Speers. 304·
lnaurance •....... ., ...... "'''''''''"'''""'''"""""''"'''''"'"130
serv.
$SlK annually
you to see what the JOb con- 441-5826 or 446-9664
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpmont. ....................... 660 Solttalre Otamonds- M T S 675-1429.
Llveatock.:.................................................... &amp;30 Cotn Shop, 151 Second - - - - - - - - John ~ng Ford lincoln MACHINIST For manual lncludtng Federal Benefits ststs of ftrst hand We allow
Mercury
lathes, milhng machines
and OT,Paid Tratntng,
12 students per class so
Avenue. GaU!pohs. 740-446- Bartender needed Pomt
Loota~d Found ........................................... 060
Vecatoons-FT/PT
they f1h up qutckly Please
Pleasant Moose Lodge Needs three lnchVtduals saws, radial drills Must be
Lola &amp; Acreage ......................................... 350 2842
able to hold tolerances to 1-aoo-se4• 1775 Ext #6923 come m and complete an
Miscellaneous .............................................. t 70
apply tn Person
that are rnterested ln_a
00005• tn ftne work and
USWA
apphcatton tl tnterested
Wanted
Scrap
metal
cars,
Mlocellaneous Merchandise ...................... 540
career as 8n Automottve accurately cut venous male,
Aockspnngs rs an equal
Mobile Home Repalr.................................... 860 buses, ptpe. farm eQutp, CASHIER WANTED sl Tw1n Consultant. We are looking female and buttress threadS R&amp; ~ ck
J .ru 1ng leading The oppo rt umly empIoyer
Mobile Homee lor Rent .............................. 420 etc . Wtlt ptck-up and pay Oaks Gas Statfon, Ftve tor lndtvtduals that are out
read drawtngs and Way R&amp;J Truckmg now ii)
W
Mobile Homes for Salo ................................ 320 304-593·1904
Pomts,
Restaurant going, self motrvated and Must
make parts to specification Htrlng at our New Haven,
,... Do
Money to Loan ..... ........................................ 220
Expenence
Preferred
&amp;
I \11' 1 in \ II \ I
profeSSional We have one G·CodiJ"' desired Ul truck
_
3 Of 4 bedroom b1-level, ltv1,
Motorcycles &amp; 4 W~aelera .......................... 740
Helpful , Mrntmum wage, of the best compensation operation plus. UTRON, "{{' re~mmal DFor Regional
rng room, tamtly room 2 112
'-IIIHit
I"
8
1
Musical Instruments ........ ,................... ..... 570
(740·992·4250)
plans tn the tndustry and a Inc- www.utromc com FAX 0~~s- u~~ •v
year A-OK-Corrals &amp; Barns
bath. 6 mtles south of
Pereonala ..................................................... 005
10
benefits padc:age that has
veri e exp Call 1Galhpohs. Askmg $105,000
Palo for Sale ................................................ 560
HELP WANliD
Computers 4 u 1s seekmg a
703.369-5298
800-462,9365 ask tor Kent Metal Roohng, Shtngles.
health tnsurance, 401K - - -- - - - Concrete, Aemodelmg,(_7_40..:.)4_4_t-_0_18_5_ _ __
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Computer
Tech
forwork
part lime
-• Nursa al Mason Decks.
Proleosfonol Services ............................... 230 ~------·
~
1ead1ng 10 lull
time
You retirement, diSability and life SOCIAL
WORKER. AegiSierw
Pole
Berns. -3bd
GALLIPOLIS
Rldlo, TV &amp;CB Repalr ............................... 16D An Excellent way to earn must be proftclent tn com- tnsurance 11 you want 10 Overbrook Center IS now County Health Department Gbrages Free asttmatesCalt Forecloeurel Buy for
Rill Eststo Wanted ..................................... 360 money The New Avon
puler repatr, dependable an ears an excellent living and accepting resumes for the APP1tea110ns an d JO b 304·633· 1230
$50.900! Only $404/mo , 5%
Schoololnatructlon ..................................... t50 Call Mantyn 304-882-2645 · honest' Bnng resume 1n better yourself, contact Pat pos~rons of Director of descnptton can be obtan"led - - - - - - - - dn. 20yrs@ So/o For ltsttngs
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
----~--- person to Computers 4 U,
HtU or Brian Ross
Sooal Service&amp; The quail- at 216 Sth St Pt Pleasant Carpentry, patnttng, drywall, call 600-559-4109 xF254
SHuetlona Wanted ....................................... t 20
Jif~ I.. ,
f1ed candidate must possess EOE
.,.~ ~5 yewo~~e~:PencedFor' qsumeahl-l
ELEC CONTROLS ENGI- Inc 303 Matn Street, Point
Space tor Rent ............................................. 4&amp;0
Pleasant,
wv
25550
or
call
strong
verbal
and
wntten
'1 ,..,,....,_,,.
Attention! ·
Sporting Goodl ........................................... 520 NEER Defense program for ljtrectlons at 304,675- ___....
_ ;_._..._. _._..._...__ communication
skttls, Wanted Direct Su~ ';t:~~~llfi• Sflve at 1740 )388· Local company offerrng "NO
needs
hands-on
engmeer
emplOyees
to
oveiSOII
,..,...
'11011
•
·
SUV's for S.le.............................................. 720
Truck Dnvers COL Class A MediCaid, Madtcare and youth 1n a staff sectl'8'~ _,__
. ----:--~ DOWN PAYMENr proTrucks for S.le ............................................ 715 lor PLC programmtng 5282
Reqwred, mimmum of 5 MDS knowledge Long term dential environment pJJ.{ 0o you need a 'Handy Man grams tor you to buy your
IRSLogiK I RSVIew), high
Uphototery ................................................... 870
drlvtng
exp care experience preferred pass phystcal training 10 flx Porches, Roofs, Water home tnstead of rentmg
vans Fqr S.le.............................................. 730 speed data acqUtsillon, etec- Courtstde Bar and Gnll now years
on but not required. Qualified requirement Pay based 00 Pipes AJac:k--of·aii-Trades · 100% ftnanctng
WMtld to Buy ............................................. 090 tncal test equtpment, heavy seekmg full lime gnll and fry Expenence
WMtld to Buy- Fann Suppllee .................. 620 equtpment and automated cooks Great pay m a great Overde1mensional loads candidates may send axpertence Call (740)379- So to Speak Call me at 304, · Less than perlect cred!l
accepted
' Wonted To Do ..........................:................... teo control systems BSEE + envtronment Must be hard Must have good driving resumes tb Charta Brown- 9083 between 9-3 Mon-Fn 675-5657
• Payment could be the
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
related elCpertence or equtv- working and rehSble. Apply record Earn up to $2,000 McGuire, AN, LNHA,
weekty
For
appltcanon
Call
Admlmslrator,
333
Page
Rooters
Metal
roofmg,
SidLawn
mowrllQ
Rates
by
the
same as rent
• Yard S.le- Galllpolle .................................... 072 alent destred UTAON. Inc 1n person at 308 2nd Ave or
Locators
M-F Street, Middleport, OH. lng and EPDM Top pay and job, not the hour Call Paul Mortgage
: Yard S.le-PotMroyllltlddle ......................... 074 www untrontc eom FAX 703- call 441-9371 to set up an (304)722-2t84
8.30am-4pm
45760 E.O.E
benefits 724-229-8020
0 (:304)675-2940
(740)367-0000
.. Yard S.le-Pt. Pteaunt ................................ D76 369-5298
intervi'9W
I

•&gt;·

I

I,

-~

on

Help Wanted

ffiuWANml

i

Pupptes to gtveaway 304 4 Famtty Garage Sate 214 ~~~,1~0~-----.,
Magnoli a Dnve behtnd
HFJJ' WM'tEil
675-5361
Dommo's Ptzza, June 21st
To good home only, lull 22nd, 23rd Ram or Shtne -.
blooded Stbenan Husky 1 Fn/Sat 6/22-23, 9·4 103
year Old male Needs room lincoln Ptke Bass Wood.
$300.00
lj;ao~ru;;;n;.4;.46~·;;;
22;;;8,;.4- - - , lures stove. household
HIRING BONUS
~~ ANil
Items, )ewelry elc

i

111'1_. . . . . . . . . . ..
Iro
lr"-80-W-T~.:,:,Do~_.l

Now Hiring I

r

3 Famtly sale at 40 Pecan
Dr Spnng Valley Fn &amp;Sat
9-5. guns. pottery, ~1r hockey. ITIISC

the..-,.

l!!i

SAVINGS

=======

t!

Week Old kittens to good
YARD SALE
homes. 256-8884
L,~------_.1
-F,-ee-k,,-,."'ns_=_9_6_&amp;_4_w_e_ek-sr
~!!!r'~y:o:ARD-~S!:"ALE----,
old, l11ter lramed, LONG
GAUJPOUS
HAIRED,
EASY TO HAN· · - - - - - - ·
OLE
740-985-4244
1st sale Old 160 Porter Rd
Male Bnndle 4-5 month old across from Foodland Btg
Free to Good Home 304- vanety farm machtnery
glassware, ltnens. etc
562·82t6

6

Now you can have borders and graphics
lL-'
addedtoyourdassifledads
(.~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!,iilll
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for large

POUCIES: Ohio ¥lilly Publtatmg
to edtl. retect. or cancel any ldlt any Umt. Errors mnt bt ,.,ned on the ft1'1t day ot
Tribun1 S.ntlnel A a· ' wll bt"""
HI tor no men IMn the co.t of
occupied bV the tn'Of 1nd only the first lnMIIkHl. We
eny louorupeftN
frOfft thep
llolt Of omlellon of lf'IIChatl..,..il Comc:lon ... bt rMdlln the first tvlilabte edition
IN....,. OCMtldlcilllll. •Current rMI CMt ..,.... •AI Nil .............,........ ~ to the Fedrnl Flir Houtlng Ae1 ot 1tu.
....... ....,holp _ _ _ _ _ ......... _ _

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Lost· 6 yr old male Beagle
on Rocksprmgs Ad , reward
2 beauttful tame kittens oHered for return. (740)992brother &amp; SISter, 4-5 wks old 2762 leave message
to a good home very playful
304-675-2634
Lost 6 month old black male
pup-recently neutered-near
3 1G-week old kittens ~ Crank's Vet Clinc/RI,35
mate/2 females Indoor answers to 'ttl Bit"· call674·
tr81ned 740·843-513t leave 3085
messaged no answ8f
-------LOST· Man's Gold Weddtng
Band ncar Ractne Post
Office
PLEASE CALL 7403 kittens. 10 weeks old.
949-2385111
(740)949·9217

-.
Lost In Middleport on 6/13,
,,.,,,,JI mullrcolored 4# female StithTzu, fam1ly pet reward.
(740)992·2954

lowest, responsive and
responsible bidder.
"Domestic Steel uses
requirements as spectfled In section 153.011
of the revised code
apply to this project. 11"-~c,'",·
Copies ·of section
153.011 of the revised
code can be obtained
from any of the offices
of the department of
administrative servlces."
By order oflheTPCWD
located at3956t Bar 30
Road, Readsvllle, Ohio
43772, County of
Meigs, this 18th day of
June.
(6) 21 , 26 (7) 2

:r VlrmR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Dlsglav Ads

• Start Your Ads Wtth A Keyword • lndude Complete

\\\Ill\( 1 \ 11 \ t ....

992-2157

sssssssssssssssssssss Betng Accepted For An LPN
~L.--ioFilo~UNil--_.1 Mov&gt;ng Sale, 6/22 8a·4p &amp;
Compettttve Starling Pay

Public Notice
Notice of Availability
The
Syracuse
Volunteer Firefighters'
Association, Inc. hos
filed Its annual return
of an exempt organlzalion, Form 990, with the
Internal
Revenue
Service lor the calendar year 2006. In accor·
dance wllh Internal
Revenue Code Section
6104, thlslonn Is available lor public fnspec·
lion at t 2.47 Church St.,
Syracuse, DH 45779
during the 1BD-day
period beginning May
16,2007.
(6) 21
------Public Notice

l\egtster

Sentinel

.....------,------_:O:::r_:F;;a:_;xTo (740) 446-3008

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

NOTICE TO CONTRAC- Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
TORS
Attention of bidders Is
Sealed propoaala for called to all of the
conthe Pomeroy Dlatreaa requirements
Ciearence
Project, talned In this bid packMelge County, Ohio el, particularly to the
will be received by the Federal
Labor
Meigs
County Standards PfQvlstons
Commlaaloners at the and
Davis-Bacon
Meigs Courthouse, Wages, vsrloue lnaurPomeroy, Ohio 45769 ance requirements,
until
t :00
p.m. various equal opportu.
Thursday, July 5, 2007 ntty provisions, and
and then at 1:15 P.M., tho requirement for a
at said office opened payment bond and perand read aloud lor the lormance bond lor
following:
100% of tho contract
This fa a Prevailing price. No bidder may
Wage project.
withdraw his bid within
See speclllcation,e In thirty (30) daye alter
bid packet
the actual date of the
Specifications, and bid opening thereof. The
forme may be secured Metge
County
at tho office of Meigs C o m m I s s Ion e r s
C o u n t y reserve the right to
C o m m I s s I o n e r s , reject any or all bide.
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Mlck
Davenport,
Ohio 45769 Phone President
740-992-2895.
Meigs
County
A deposit of 0 dollars Commissioners
will be required lor (S) 21, 26, 29
each set of plana and
apecllfcatlons, chock
made payable to- . The
Public Notice
lull amount will be
returned within thirty SHERIFF'S SALE
(30) days alter receipt 10:00 a.m. Saturday,
ol bids.
July 7, 2007 on the lot
Each bid must be beside the Sheriff's
led b I h 0
accompen
or sold
Ill coat there
be
a bid bond yIne t an
Public will
Auction
amount of 100% of the to the best and highest
bid amount with a bidder tho following :
surety satisfactory to t-t 997 Ford Crown
lha aforesaid Meigs VIctoria min bid $500
C o u n I y 3· t 998 Ford Crown
Commlsafoners or by VIctoria min bid $550
certified
check, t-1999 Ford Crown
caehlers check, or let- VIctoria (pollee Intertar of credit upon a aof- captor) min bid $700
vent bank In the t-1999 Ford Crown
amount of not less VIctoria (maroon) min
than 10% of the bid bid $2,500
amount In favor of the t-2000 S10 Chevrolet
Meigs pickup 4-wheel drive
aforeeald
C o u n I Y wHh topper (drug forCommlealoners. Bid felture vehicle) mtn bid
Bonds ehall be accom- $32,000
panled by Proof of Several air conditionAuthorlty of !he olltcfat ere min bid $20
or agent . signing the Vehicles may be - n
bond.
by contacting the
Bide shall be sealed Sherlll'e Olllce
and marked as Bid lor Vehtclll sold "AS IS"
Pomeroy
Dlstrees Cash day of aale
Sidewalk Replacement Rober! E. Beagle
pl'O(acl and mailed or Sherfll
delivered to:
Melgo County
Mtlge
County (6, 21, 28, (7) 5
Commtestoners
Courthouse

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

ca•T;~dai... (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Tim Dahlberg is a national sports columnist for Tile Associated Press. Write to him
at tdahlbergap.org

l"'uhllc Nollce"" In Ne'WSIJ.lt
Your Right to Know. [)cllvered RiJ(hl to Your

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Sears
3 Day Sale
Thursday 6/21 - Sat 6/23
•In Home Appliances customers w111
rece1ve 12% cash back after ma1!-1n
rebale or t2 mo. No Interest, No Pmt

Community Relations Secretary

w1th Sears Card and free dehvery after

Pleasant Valley Hospiial is currently
accepti ng resumes for a Commumty
Relatwns Secretary. Expe(lence m word
processing applicallons, grap hic design
applicUtions and other general computer
sk1lls. General secretarial ex perien~e
required. General knowledge of
photography. Supenor communi catiVe
and inlerpersonal sk1 lls . Musl be able to
work weekends, evenings and hohdays 1f
needed.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Dnve
Poml Pleasant. WV 25550
fax to (3041 675-6975 or apply online at
www.pvalley.org.
AAIEOE

ma11-1n rebate on any appliance over

$399
• Strong offer 1n Lawn &amp; Garden Wllh
t 5% off all Craftsman Lawn &amp; Garden
equ1p. PLUS tO% cash back after
ma1!-ln rebate on your total Craftsman
Lawn &amp; Garden purchase
• The offer 1n Home Electromcs
contmues w1th 18 mos No Interest on
total electronics purchases over $399

2200 Eaetom Ave. Galllpolle, OH

740-446-1546..,..,..,.....,.

Based on double occupancy
State room taxes will be applied to
credit card at check-In
Includes flight, hotel accommodations, luggage &amp; transfers
Private jet leaves from Charleston,
WV Must be 21 years of age
Cash, credit cards, checks,
orders and payroll deduction
accepted. No refunds
LIMITED SEATS!
To make reservations pleace
call PVh Community Relations,
(304) 675-4340, ext. 1326

20% off Massages
Continued NOW
through the Regatta for

Customer Appreciation
Debi Adkins @ All About You
201 B 6th St. Pt. Pleasant, WV

304-675-1411

Iro

r

·OOQ-

I;J"t·

i

r

t..------,.1
ANilDO

r

SPECIAL PVH SPEAKER
David Felder, MD
PVH Orthopedic Surgeon
Mason County Senior Center
Tuesday, June 26, 2007
1?:30 pm
Topic: Total Joint
Replacements for
Hips&amp; Knees
Public is invited
For more information please
call, (304) 675-4340, Ext.

i

. ..., . .

•

·-

·r~-----·

�www.mydailysentinel.com
In Memory
Beauti!ui-Middlepon home! DOuble lot 16J60, 2Q06
38R , 2BA, full basement.1 Trailer 2br. 2ba, laundry
1"12 car garage with a room Aoom. Porch. Heat PURl~,
above. Many NEW features!! Garage.
port. Slomge
·' Must see this one! 740-416- building, Fenced corner lot.
1 bloct.; from Mason Levy
1548

3BR. 2BA, Appliances, Near 2 BR Apt near Roc:tley area.
Holzer
$650fmo
plus WID, !ridge, stove included.

Great used 2005 3 bedroom
16x8 0 with vlnyUshingle.
P-Just sell, On ly $25.995 with
deli,.r;. Call 1740)385-4367

All real fttate llldvertlslng

In this newspaper 11

IUbfect to the Federal
F~r Housing Act of 1968

which mekes it Illegal to

lldvertise "any
preference, limitation or
discrimination based on
race, color, religion, aex

fllmlllal•tatu• or nattonal
origin, or any Intention to
make any_such
ptWftnnce, limitation or
discrimination. "

New 3 Bedroom homes from
$214.36 per month. l nctudes.
many upgrades, delivery &amp;
set-up. 1740)385-2434 ,

Nice used 3 bedroom 'home
vinvVshingle. Will help with
delivery. 740·385·4367
Morttjage
740 367
OWNER FINANCING
Nice 312 singl e~ides
From $1,800 down
pay ment
Scott 1740) 828·2750

P.8PeJ will not

_.,gly occ:opt

NveriMiil&amp;ilts tor real
Mtadl which Is In
vfolatlon of the law. Our
ruder~

.,. ntreby

lnlomedthlllll
-lings - . . d i n
thie newapaper are
lni"bbt on •n equal

r

ACROSS

.Phillip
Alder

r = I ro. ~~

HIDDEN TREASURE! - -

RENT.

Clean quiet spacious 1BR,
stovelfrig, country setting,
no pets/smoking, tirsl/lasl
mot-dep $350 992-3543
- - ' -- - - - CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·

$69,000. can 740-256-9247

2 Br , AIC, Very nice,
40K80
Horse
Prop.
Johnson Mobile Home Park.
lnsulated&amp;heated barn w/ 10 740-446-2003 or 446-1409
boK stalls/ 4 BR lhting quarters; 43 acres .446-3844l.M 3 BA. 14x70, Addaville
School district. ?40-367Mobile Home space in Rio 7762 Of 367-7272
Grande. Will take up to - - - - - - - Prc
I ad re du ce d , 12 room
38A on family park. Water
16x80. 446.3617
House, 2 baths, 2 lots, ck&gt;se .
and trash service included.
to Schools, built in Kitchen .
REAL FsrA..,:
No pets. Deposit required.
Call304.jl75-4208
~·
WANIID
740-441-7033

..,... 1740)441-11 11
Call

Ellm View
Apartments

-

--

•

1 &amp; 2 Bedtoom Aparln\en1s

•

to qualified buyers.
Ashland, KY
88H2&amp;-3426

Renl. Meigs County, In
town, No Pets, Deposit
Required , (740)992·5174 or
. ___
515Simol Buy 4bd HUD _17_4_0)_44_1_-0_11_0_
homel5% dn, 20yrs@ 8% .
1 and 2 bedroom apartFor Listings 800·559-4 109
ments, furnished and unfurK1709
nished , and houses in
-3-B-ed_ro_o_m--Ho-u-se--in 'Pomeroy and Middleport,

.

S

.
$5001
th
U1
yracuse.
mon
+
675
3BR, 2BA,
deposit No Pets. (304)
:
Delivered &amp; set $39,999. 5332 weekends 740·591·
The Home Show,
0265
Ashland, Ky.
3' 4 b drm. 2 bath, slave,
• I I
8.88 928 3426
.a • rea
•
.
1.
ld • k
poot and
reng, w "oo up,
outbuilding: $650 mo. plus
SPECIAL FHA FINANCE utilities and $650 deposit.
Program $0 Down, 11
Shorl or lonn term lease
~
own Land or use Family available.
References
Land We own the Bank your required . NO PETS. 740·
·
379-23 17 tor application.
Approvad 606-474-6380
2007 Dou"'ewo'de

you

~re ,yoU
\,'

Free Estimates

74Q-367-0536

6t5

*Pr · t
d
omp an
Work

Vulnerable:

Wise Concrete

tw-llllliiiiitiiiiiitt_.l

Call Gary S1anley @

YOUNG'S

740-742-2293

4x4

v~

--

vOR Su ~

• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing 6 Guners
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting .
• Patio and Porch Decks

WV036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

c•

tu..~:.

I
•

95 Plymouth van, a1r, auto V6 , $1500 060 740·256·
1652

9925215
PUilll'WY OtiiU
.::J rear~ LLJC.l' 1::

1prr1( 1cc

Pass

-=~"'"~--~~..,
A
C••~ &amp; · ~

i

~·~~

~-lliMioiiii(1f()R-iiliHii~iitiiiiittP

90 Hy-line camper. 31ft
, Stove/fridge/mi crowaveNri/D
. $4000, OBO. Call 304·675·

0366

I

r
.

I

1.,.-..,;.ilji,iiiiiiit-.-J·
--.
CommercIaI bUl'ld'mg 'For
Aenr 1600 square feet, off·
street parking. Great locationl 749 Third Avenue In
Gallipolis. Rent $375/mo.
Call Wayne 1404)456-3802

c.lalltpoH• llatl!' ~ribunt

Prime commercial space for
r~nt at Springvalley Plaza.
call645-2 192.

r

~otnt ~lea•ant ~tli•ttr

The Daily Sentinel
6unbll!' tttme•·-6entintl
P••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••-

1
I

Subscriber's Name _____ _ _

~~

1

LAN DOWN EAS - NEED
EXTRA FARM INCOME ?
We have responsible sportsmen looking to lease hunting
property in this area.
MidWest Trophy Leases Inc.
(304)532-6015 or 1-800·.
698- 1073
\ IIIH II \\ llhl

r

: Address----:---- -- - - I

: City/State/Zi~ -------~

I

I

I

I

I

Phone_ ________ _ __

I

1

I .

Resume's being
received by local
conservative church
.ror part-time ' 'Student

Ministries Director"

05 Starcraft 26ft, large slid·
ing awning, new condition ,
S1 3800. 304-638·805B or
638-5800

(Youth Director).
·
Sa1ary and bours to be
discussed, according to
ability and time

-------n L ay1on b Y
2006 ls 11

aVailable. Resume's

Sky lme, t ag-a- long, sleeps
8, ful ly self contamcd .
$R ,500 tlnn 304-675-SH42

may be sent to
PO Box 453,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

740.446.9200

r

:

with a copy of your photo ID to

1
1

1 Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631 :
I

.

·---------~-~--~--------·------I

I

OH . 1740)388·0 173

previously unliamed
show values there; a cue-bid In an

su~. This deal contains
·Northerly cue-bids.

'I'EP !! THAT'S TH'

TROUBLE II

1wo dilfe1ent
·

·
·

Norlh'a two-spade cue-bid opposite a

AWFUL PURTY II

takeout double only shows a strong
hand: alleas1a good 12 points opposite
a balmng double. On lilt

neXt

round,

Norlh's lhree-&amp;pade cue·bid Is an

Bul
when Souih proves noi to have e spade
stopper, North is left .with little attemative
btrtlo place 1he contract in five .~ubs.

Rt. 7, Tuppers Plains, OH

II

Wes1

by L~ls Campos

plays ou1 his three top spades,
1he last one low, ceshes

Celll:rity Cipher CfW.Ogrll!ls are created lrOm qootat~ns bylamoLS peoj:le. pas and p-esert
E~ le:ler lllheelpher !llan&lt;ls !Or amther

dec~rer ruffs

Full Service Auto Repair
. Oil Change, Tune-Up, Engine
Diagnostics, Full Brake Service, Air
Conditioning Recharge &amp; Repair,
Alignment, Custom Exhaust
Rocky Hupp-Ownor .

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Wes11eads the spade ace.

740-667-3177
THE BORN LOSER
17't-.1-.1 1-.L&amp;.RTP.. CL\f'Pt.IZ.I~
S\o.IE.EPit-16 1\CROSS..TI\E.
C.KE.I-.1 L~KES ...

ooq· P"LUNir-.1&amp; UP\0 TWO FEET Of~

SNOW IN ITS W~, FroM
CLE.VELANP '1'0 BUFFp.J.Q!

'TI-lt: LOC/I.l. \olti\T~ PE:~
I!&gt; IC:E:PLf&gt;..'&lt;INC. 1-\\S ~E:.I\IES!'
1-\IT:'l !

the club king (since only 12 poinls ate
missing , West mus1 have the club
queen), and finesses in clubs 1hrough
Wes1 to make his contract.
A more resourcelul West spo1s one
chance k&gt;r the defense - il East can

dUb

ptoduce lhe
four. Ahet cashing lwo
spade 1ncks, Wes1 leads a low spade,

Jeff BiSS&lt;II, Manager

ROBERT
BISSEll '
CDimiCIIDI
• New Homes

e~pecled

Mushroom

Today's due: Jequa!s V
"KS

RVL

ELTRV

DKSCZZF
RVLHL

NO

ZLCHSLE

ZCF

MOPPLH . "

CS
•

IKSRLH,
RVCR

K

IKRVKS

PL

KSJKSGKYZL

CZYLHR ' GCPOM

6R. $3.29

~Astro-

Wide Variety of
Lawn

Seed,

V~!T!:

Ferlillzer and

• Garages

BIG NATE

Showmasler Show

• Complete

FOOds

~t SN ICKER. 1. ;'~l ... A.~P

I LOI/E
PRANK OAY~

I JlJH
THit.EW A

WATEtt ML·

I.DOtl

iNTO
T\1E COPIEI'-

I
SWITCHED
THE S I6~S
ON THE
&amp;OYS AND

GIRLS

r

TOOK A RECORI&gt;1N&amp;
OF PRti\KlPAL NiCHoL5
SIN&amp;IN6 KAR/IOKE ANI&gt;
PRO&amp;RAMMED IT TO
PLAY. OVE!l- THE · INTER·
COM IN E~ACTL'( ...

LoCt&lt;EI&lt;
ROOMS!

~E

SPAC.E

cowso'i....

(IEANUTS
SNOOP'{ ! SWIMMING
LESSONS DOWN IN THE
LAKE RIGHT AWAY!

AREN'T '((JU 601N6

TO UNPACK'?

•

SUNSHINE CLUB

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

740-949-2217

J&amp;L

Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing

·Decks
• Garegea
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
JamesK8819811
742-2332

Manley's
Recycling.
513

.,It.

GARFIELD
1'H15 Bet' IS FUL.I.
Of COOKIE CRUMBS!

lllllhlln. 8145110
Jt1J.992·3814

... fllnUV.frlllllf 9:08 1111-5:11 ••

.......-.............
IIIIUIIIft.ll-12... 1• .

PIYIIIG TOP PIICES F11

· One Bedroom A~art11ents ·
El~bili~ RilEd on Income

CIIIIIIIC Cllttlrtn • C.•

llflllnlllllllrll
11:111 fir Clrrlll Jrlclll .

~l Years of Aie or Ol~er, Han~itappedJDilabled

GRIZZWELLS

Regartli!Sl of A1e

~1\..1. YcU ~p 1\IAT A~HoY\1--1~
~A1\\1~~ ~~~ 'ktif;t ft'ptffi-1 ?

Handka~ped ALm~iMe

On ~ile Manager &amp;Maintenance

'--oiFUI!iiiiiiSALF.iiii••. _,

Washer &amp; Dyer excellent 03 Ford Taurus, 54,000
condition $ t 50 tor both or . miles. $5900 OBO. 7 40 _ _
256
OBO 304-675·2086 or 304·
1618
593-0876

1' •

PEOf&gt;LE

CALL 1'\E THE

lt.0011'

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
· • Homefill System
• Helios System

Hill's Self
Storage

ol him. II East does ruff wi1h -

uppercu1 with - the club four, West
rrust win a trump trick for down one.

$35AScoop
T-Post

O

.

YEAH, BUi THEY .
SNORE ARE

2459 St Rt. 160 • GalUpoDs

~~------

Pullets for Sale ·3 months
old, White Roc ks. ·. Silver
l aced Wyandottes, Golden
laced
Wyandottes,
Ameraruailas. Black Jlants
304-593-5073

r

bu1

opponent's su~ asks k&gt;r a stopper in lha1

TAKE IT FROM ME,
JAMEY, GIRLS AIN'T
NUTHIN' BUT ..
TROUBLE !!

• ...-ww.dal-ali~~Ntq. oom

--wum"l'f't•

Mall or drop off this coupon along

BARNEY

HiH'drold bbiiletry And Fnlaft

HELP WANTED

6 Donkeys -5 female , 1 white
male. Call 740-256-9247 o r
740 -256-6504

Reg Quarter Horses lor sale
Peppy Sanbager and Klng
breeding. Call 740-256-6003
Dining set including table &amp; after 7pm.
6 chairs and hutch buffet t:r:O-""'!~-='-~
$350. GE FrldgO in excellent
HAY &amp;
condition . white. · side by '"~---GiitRAiiloiN
__,..
side, ice and water In the •
dOOr. $450. Call 675-4921. or Livestock Feed. shelled corn
740-416-5555. leave mes- $5.20/50 lb. &amp; horse crunch
$7 .22150 lb., &amp; mo,e .
sage.
Par;ne--740-698-0911.
Moll ohan Furniture . Great _
seleCtion for a Great price.
Drive a little, save a loti 202
Clark Chape l Rd, Bidw.;l ,
AUIOS

su~s

-;;He;:l~p~W;:an;t;e;d;:::=;
r

Llv.sfOCK

HoUSiliiOLD
Gooos

smooth
40 lmponant

. at the threa-level 'in

I· - - - - - - - -

Horse
and
Livestock Great Shape $10500. 740·
TralleraLoadmaxG'ooseneck, Dumps, · &amp;
Utility- Atuma Aluminum

TraUert- B&amp;W Gooseneck
HitchesTrailer
Parts.
Carmichael
Trailers.
1740)446·24t2
-------New Holland 850 Chain
Bailer works good. $1 ,200.
740 -742-2773 or 740-7427918.
- - - : - : -- :-::--:--:Tractor Mitsubushi Buck S470, 4-wh.dr.,18HP,diesel,
Compact Tractor, very good
cond .. $2,200. 992-3085 .

38 Make

our partnership s1ill has all lour eyee
squarely on three no-trump. Then, bids

446-0007

SPACE
FOR RF.l'IT

nom

From one cue-bid
to two cue-bids

perltaps !here is a minot·su~ mesh,

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

A

The key bid •sualy occurs at the threelevel. No major-su~ fit has bean found,

&amp; 'MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

apartment,for
tile
elderly/disabled call 675·
6679
Equal
Housing
Opportunity

sure mea•·

:15 Loud kiu
37 Stovetop

. heading into that despised conttact: live
of a minor.
·

~ .~~••PI:"J~1~a·a~:""•

Twin Rivers Tower is accept- with sprlnkle•s. 1740)373·
ing applications for waiting 4360
Maxum 23ft, V8 alpha 1. 94,
list lor Hud-subsized, .1· br, cK-Ie~ter -:B:-u:-11!- :-v:-al:-ley--~BI-son-- open bow. below book.

All pass

finding out ~three no-trump is a pl~abla
contract. and v.tten ~ proves not lo be,

740-992-1m

r

Pass

·

This week, we are loolting at w~s o1

we Deliver To You!

lir o · ,.

Grant ap-

proval
31 Vory pale
:12 A1111 code
:13 Tire pres-

Pass
Pass

Opening lead: •

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Fatewell

25 Plugged in 52 Before, In
26 Rain forest
verse
parrot
53 Arm the
27 Signs one' a
alarm
name to
29 Raises
a bet
34 Cancun
toast
36 Darning
39 Dunce
43 Take a flier
44 Qom's land
45 Asia' s

hoping lhat East will realize what is

r404W::~::'~o~....,
M~cv~ ·~ ' I
~

5•

4•

Remodeling

t,________

r

3•

34

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

·Room Additions &amp;

I

puppies tor sale. 1st shots &amp;
d $
3B8 03 Dodge Dakota SXT 4x4,
200· 740 ·
worme
• 9000
11 1
-:a
5
mMes, eKCe en con·
874o
$
8 2
- - -- - - - - dition, 10900. 388· 1 5
AKC Golden Retriever

Pass
2•

Owner- Rick Wise

CARPENTER
SERVICE

.......

FOR SALE

Obi.

28

:10

ieedcaM

crossers

4 Steak
throwaway
5 Rabbit dish
6 NBA team
7 Frutt cooter
8 Hong 9 Reasoner's
word
10 Bug
repellenl
14 Level
IS Cider
source
11 Hat designer

attempl 10 get into three no-lrump.

FURSAU:
·TroyBuiltHoarse. AWrox56 Hrs total use. Asking
$1500. 446-3634
04 Nissan XTerra 49000
miles. $10900. 740-256·

Ii~16!11';:.8--~~-

W
rl

North· East

nose

ckilng?"

Eut-

Wesl

1•
Pass
Pass

* R easonable Rates
* Insured
*E
·
d
xpenence
References Available!

wings
25 "How--

South

A !I types of concrete

Qua l 1't y

0

.

Dealer: West

19 Kind
Sahara
of casselte 46 Towel wwcl
20 Dirty Harry 47 Great Lakn
22 Reindeer
port
herder
49 Melli fabric
24 Ave.
51 Prickly

1 Toothpaste
choice
2 Eg~s. to
Ovtd
3 Pierre 's

23 House

• A Q5

Pine Street • .G allipolis
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

DOWN

spell

A 6 4 :J

•KJ10 3

70

Stanley TreeTrim
' ml'ng
&amp; .AemOV8. I

Pole
Barns
30x40x 10' Toyota EKI Cab, 4cyl., Auto,
Delivered &amp; Erected S8,5Q5 Alr, Runs Great, $1500, Call
plus Sales Tax. Call after 5pm, (740)245-5946,

p~-

•

740-653-9657

1937)718-1471 www.nation· iiceliillrl'7~40•645-;;:,;3;;,743;;:;;,.-.....,
widepolebams.com
SUVs

Middleport, from $327 to
$S92 . 740.992. 5064 . Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and

• J 7

_____.:.c.__ ~:;:=====::::::: :=~~======~~~:::=~

Please leave messa e

- -- -- - - P£rs
Graclouo Living 1 aoo 2
FUR SAU:
.
Bedroom Apts . at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in AKC female Boston Terrier

South

Insured &amp; Bonded

marked ' Knts Hill Dairy Kits 2000 Toyota Tacoma, EK!.·
Hill. Ohio' rare $225 . 740- .
Cab, Auto, 4x4, 4cyl., BB ,OOO
533•3870
miles, New tires; 1994

g ·e r.

• 8 4 3

Seamlf!ss Gutters
Roofing , Siding, Guners

.

East
• • 4
.1098 5 2
• 9 7 6 2
• 4 2

• Q• •

·Dote on
Leu ambitious

15 Get oven
for
16 Alligator
habllats
18 Landed
19 Play pari
21 Address
part
Z2 Breathing

I~

A 1 6 5

• J 7

.Guttering

Black 2005 Pontiac G6.
loaded, warranty, less that
13000 miles. $t 7soo. 740·
" •• _
•
24 9880174
~
~ 5 2336

K Q

West
A KQI(I J

H&amp;H

11

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

1

Books

r

·Senior_Discount*

1

74Q-367-0544

•

•

&amp;MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

1989 Yamaha Venture,
Remodeling
t 300cc, full dress, excellent
Shade Rive r
condition . $3,975 1304)675· 97 Hitchhiker Discovery 34
Ag Service
45.10
112ft. 5th wheel car:nper
',t. IIi.;
- - - - - - - - made by NU-WA. 1 Double
Stop &amp; Compare
( hnh-r
1994 Honda 300 Founrax . slide anQ 1 single slide plus
'
~ll
- 1 1-'i:' ·.1:''1.' I
2WD. Grea1 Shapa. $1800: extras that will go with this • • • • • • • '
br. furnished apartment, 386-=-9-~~--..., 2004 Kawasaki KX100, 2 unit. EKcellent shape. Asking
deposit &amp; references, no
MUSICAL
stroke, Excellent Sllape, $16,500 . Call after 6pm 740.
pets, 1740)992-0165
INsrRUMEIITS
$1400. Call after 5pm 208-0507 or 256· 1243
Modern 1 BR Apt Call 446- tw-titiiiiiiiiiioiiiiotiiloP 1740)245-5946,
cell
7
7
40
74
3 36
Hollon H378. Intermediate _1_ _164_5_·3__3_
. _ __
'' I{\ It I "'
New 2BR
apartments. French Horn for sale. 2001 Kawasaki' Eliminator
Washertdrver
hookup. Excellent condition . 5 1300 125, garage kept, mint ~r:::~--::-,_-..,
stove/retrigerator included.
080, call446-7?83
cond., 682 miles, $2000;
~
· Also. units on SA 160. Pels
{740)949· 1006 ·
IMPROVEMEI\'fS
We~omel 1740)441-0194.
i'l:-"_"'!'_ _ _.., 2005 H.D.Sofl Tail custom
New Haven, 2 br. 'furnished 1
FARM
maroon
.w/embossed
BASEMENT
apartment, references &amp;
EQuiPMENT
flames, I of 200 made,BOO
WATERPROOFING
deposit, no pets, (740)992· ·--ifiiiiiiiiiiiii;,.,.,l. miles
since
new,price
0165
$21,500, call fordetalls-740· Unconditional llletime guar0% Financing- 36 Mos.
_
,.
antee . Local references lyr949 2217
Tara
Townhouse available noW on John - - - - -- - - nished. Established 1975.
Cali 24 Hrs. 1740) 446- .__ _ _...,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,__.
Apartments, Very Spacious, Deere Z Trak zerO TUm a &amp; 2007 Honda Foreman 4K4
2 · Bedrooms , CIA, 1 1/2 5.99% Fixed Rate on John
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
144 miles , ramps included 0870, Rogers Basement
Deere Gatofl Carmichael and ca1go bag · $4 700 304 Waterproofing.
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
• •
·
Equipment 1740)446-2412. 675 2086
No Pets, Lease Plus
iiiji,;.~;...."!"!"!"-~
security DepoSit Aequwed, -Fo_r_sa-le. -ap-p-,. -24-00
- le-et
BoA!!!&lt;s~~
(740)367-7086.
.2"x3' portable irrigation line ··ll"vn I'U.&lt;L
•

If so, you qualify for a

I

Local Contractor

&amp; vans with warranty. Priced

security deposit required, no Employer.
pies. $200. 740-643-2234
p9ts, 740-992-2218.
_.:....;__ _ _ _ _
Honeysuckle
Hills AKC Mini Pinscher puppies,
2 bedroom apt, stove , Aparlments n~· accepting ·
•c M.
""
red, Cl'lOC ., bl ; Ar..
lni
refridg.,
water,
trash . applications for 1 and 2BA Dauschund puppies. br.
Deposit required, Rent apts . No rental assistance d
I bl d ~ bl AKC
$350.
1740)446·7620,
app 9 • · ap"'9 • '
availat;e at lhis Hme. Rent Sh II'
I
12 males)
1740)441-9872, (740)709e oe puppes
starts at $310 month. Equal stw: AKC Standard Poodle
9519
- - - -- - -- Housing
Opportunity. puppies, bt , cr., apr.; all vet
2 BR , 1 1/2 bath on Jackson (740)446·3344.
. rhecked call for prices,
v
Pike. $450/mo + deposit. Middleport, Beech St ., 2 br. (740)696-1085
Ref. required. no pets. Call furnished apartment, utilities - - -- - -- 446""t'051
Registered
paid, deposh &amp; references, AKC
Weimaraner puppies. 3
Femate and 3 Males. Ready
no pels, 1740)992-0165
Middleporl, Nonh 4th Ave., 2 on 6/30. $350. · 30 4-593-

·· . 9r,:9~d¢r? ·
, .•

Additions

94 Ford Tempo, 4DR. blue.
AC. tinted windows. spoiler.
front wheel drive, rims.
excellent
gas
mileage
$2000. 740-645-6474 days,
740-256-1020 nights.

c

Saturday

MONTY

at $3,900 will accept $2,500 ~=:::;:;::;;::;::;==~
Call304.jl75· 1379
r

11eve a 1-quarl milk bottle

•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•central heat &amp;A/C

I

~

runs really well. Blue

Steel Beams, Pipe ARebar
g1
For
oncrete,
n e,
Channel. Flat Bar. Steel
Grattng
For
Drains,.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L

Thursday,

Sale by Owner, 3BR 2BA ,
Mobile homes for rent, •Washer/dryer hookup
newly remodeled house 'Wanted to Buy Property on Middleport area. no pets. •Tenant pays electric
(304)882-3017
wlbasement. 4 miles out Lower Five Mile Ad or Jim 1740)992-5858
218. $98000. 256-1336
. Hill Rd. area 304-593-3281

The H ome e:t.
~·OW

Doors, ••indows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywali,
R
" 1·
R
emoue lng, oom

"IP.!"_....,
r5' ' ___...,

r

FOR Rmr

'"

to sell. This iS our 12th
for applicat ion &amp; information. Sunday. {740)446-7300
Older model 48 H&amp;R 20 Ga. Anniversarv. Stop by or call
Efficiency aparlment lorroot
740-446-0103
Single barrel sh0191Jn, top
in Middleport, $250 a month break down. Excellent. still
TRUCKS
plus deposit, (740)992 -6849 has case coloring 511 s ; also
FOR SAU

TWJ). . on KinQ Ad ott
Neighborhood Rd. Approx
1200 sq.ft. 3 acres. m/12 BR
2 lull baths wlwhlrlpool tubs,
large LA . Asking 87 .500 .
74Q.446-7029

2007 Clayton
5BAI3BA 2000 Sq.Ft.
. Starling at $33.00/sp.n.t
NO DOWN PAYMENT

Soffit. Decks.

~~";!~~a:":~

Newly built home in Green

I==.:.c._____

"W·

i·----~--·I====--- r
ro H~. I:~r

;::

-ne.

s

MOIIIUH~
FOit S.uiL'

Roofing, Siding,

miles. 30mpg, sunroof,
spoiler. excellent condition.
$13000 . 388·9305 UM

8 6 5 2

•

12
13

06·21-07

•

• KJ

... • • • • · - - · ...

$ For Old Aula Batteries 1· 03 Subaru Legacy 74000

Scr••
Monday.
c- Motoro
ED • AFFORDABLE!
~ Metals "-n
"""
Tuesday, Wed~aeday &amp;
328 Jaci&lt;SOrl Pike
Townhouse
apartments, F
•·- • 30pm Ctosed
.
Qually cars. trucks and
ancvor.. e..... 11 houses FOR ridey, ~·~:

r

1

1

(]amihJ(•J:tlijMI

·~-------

'

sewer. trash pd. Middleport. Harley Davidson Golf Carl,
$425.00 . No pels. Rat. gas
runs"""" $900
"' 'V'
W'A""
requirad · 740·B43·5264 ·
304.jl7 5- 3824
'
lleoUIIful Apto.ll Jockoon - - . , . - - - - - - E•tates. 52 Westwood
JET
Drive. from $365 to $560.
AERATION MOTORS
740-446-2568.
Equal Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
Housing Opportunity. This · Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1institution is an Equal 800-537-9528.
Opportunity Provider 1-nd --:--:-:--:--:-:=:::Employer.
NEW AND USED STEEL

___·~-:--:--:--~

North

OH ....1

For listings t.jl00-559-4109
' F144.
. 10.66 acres. 1594 Northup - -- -- - Ad. in Green Twp. Gallia Co.. In Pomeroy House for rent! 3
Bd .. 2 bath, newty remoo24K48 barn, recent survey.
eled. total electric. 740-843no restrrct•ons. beaut•ful
52 64
For saleAand COf)trect. 3 BR house location . all utilities on
house in Gallipolis. WID srte. $79.900. (937)362- large 4 bedroom house. in
connection $ 1500 down . 4n5, (937)605-3581
Pomeroy. very dean, ne'lt"fy
$400/mo. Also 1 BA in
remodeled . new "tabinets,
Gallipolis
$750
down 3 acres ol Land for Sate on new carpet, (740)949-2303
404 Sandhill Rd. across from
·
" Krebs Chapel $30 ,000 304$200/mo.
Call
Wayne
MOBII.E HCNF.S
456-3802 for
information.
895·3929
fOR Roo
HUD HOMESI 4bd only
s1551mo 3bd
1a 1/mo 4 Acres located off Kemper
14 60
.•
.. Holklw Rd. Already has
X • HUD, 2 bd. """"· 1
More 1-4bd homes a'iail- waterle'··. Secluded area. bath. Air. eledricity. Water.
5% dn 20 yrs 0 8"
·
•
~. 74"3B8- "228
trash, &amp; sewer included. No
For listings 1-800-559-4109 -~~_:__v_____
ts $
•• ~
,.
pe · 325 · UQp. ~ 5 · 7_,..
x F144 ·
55 acres more or 1ess, 992.5639.

_...tty-..

oUt

RENT'i\'LS SALES
Wife-Lissy
...,_,•.
T~..:;-T
. ~ •SERVICE. FREE DELIVERY
.
Sons-Ralph,_Damon
;.;.;;,~.~
~;::::::::::&amp;::Fa~m;m=es:::;:;::::; ._.....':'....,E==-----; •MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

99 $2.50ea. 100+ $3.00ea.
area! Beaulifully renovated 250+ $4.00ea. THE BAT·
throughout including brand TERY TERMINAL 1·800·
new kItchen and bath . 7Q6.6797
Sterling at $405. can today!

I

ACREAGE

sounda

6 Crusted
over

10 10 15 small cars lor sale.
' -- ' - - - -- -- - ,1304=)2'-'73-=3344=---- - - - . -- - - - , Cavaliers, Escorts, Neon~
HUD HOMESI 4bd only ~
·
Apartment tor rani , 1· 2 For Sao~ WOOd &amp; Metal etc. Gas Savers! 74Q-44&amp;
1
3
8
$ SS/mo., bd $! 1/mo., Bdrm.. remodeled. new car- Shop Tools may trad e 727B
More 1·4bd homes avail·
able. 5% dn, 20 yrs 0 6%. pet. stove .a.. trig., water. . $3,000Firm304-576-2e67 - - - - - - - -

Lars&amp;

1 Pagoda

11 Tum inside

Johnson's Tree
Service

LApaaurrle~ents. Largec~~~~~=

-oooo ·

1 )
For rent Of for sale 2 BA
Nice Remodeled Home in
town. No Pets. Renovated ,
All new
carpet, Call
1740)446-7425

NEA Crossword Puzzle

on your birthday
6/21/1935. 11/10/2000

;I

l ocators. A

The Daily Sentinel • Page ~7
'
BRIDGE

Robert L. Fisher

--------'

4 Br., 2 bath home on 3 Rms &amp; bath. WID hookup,
Muberry Ave., central air, . c~. Nopet5. 446-1519
gas Ileal . Call 740-992·
4AM &amp; Bath, S!OYS ,lr\dge,
331 4
·
utilities paid, upstairs. 46
Attenttonl
ot;;,.J~; No pets.
. 446-3945
l ocal Ct&gt;rllJany offe ring "NO $4
DOWN PAYMENT" programs lor you to buy yair
home instead of renting.
·
• 100% financing
• le$5 than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.

call after Spm 304-773-51 09
"' 304.jl75-8893

~

n.11 new

-

In Memory

www.mydailysentinel.com ·

In Loving Memory
of

deposn.
1740)245-9880. No petsl can 446-1271 "'
1740)645-3836.
709-1657. Oepl1 st mon req.

ca,

Thursday, June 21, 2007
ALLEY OOP .

Thursday, June 21; 2007

15 11-IA'I' A

PII..L.OWCAS!:
1'01.1. Of' Mll.-1&lt;?

n

Friday, June 22, 2007
By Bernice Beda Oaol
You mlg~t be · e.Ktramety fortunate 1n
bringing one or more parties together for ~
a commercial purpose thai turns out tb
be quite sUccessful. In the proces·s. you'll
derive a large reward or _bonus of some
kind .
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - If you'r!3
too sell-involved, you coUd be unreasonably-angered by someone who is always
forgiving you .· later, when you review
your behavior, ·you'll wish you could take
it baCk .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Should you
have to make some adjustments in your
plans In order to accommodate another,
oon·t make a big thing of It and make this
person feel bad . Be gracious and kind.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -One of the
reasons you haven't been getting too
much mileage from -your paycheck lately
could be due in part to engaging in too
many frivolous activities.
'
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Be on your
best behavior because your image is a
trifle fragile, especially where your career
is concerned. Do nothing that would provide gossip for detractors to use against
you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22 ) - 'Wu could
run into a brick wall when another's
philosophical outlook proves to be diametrically opposed to yours. Don't
attempt to butt your way tl1rough to this
person's hard head.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dsc. 21) -You
may be a bit too curious about matters
that do not directly co ncern you . Do not
interfere or poke your nose .into places
where it doesn't belong , or you'll be askIng tor trouble .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . t9) - The
very persons whose advice you should
heed, you might Ignore. On the other
hand, persons whose counsel you'd be
wise to ignoie. you migh t heed.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20·Feb. 19) - It is best
~ to rely only upon yourself an~ not upon
those you merely anticipate will help you .
Tasks that you are eKpecting others to
handle for you aren't likely to be tended
to at all.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - II you're
smart , you won't take unnecessary risks
on someone else's ideas. especially if
the person you are trusting has bungled
things in the past. History coul'd repeat
itself.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - An issue
that you and your mate have disagreed
upon previously might rear its ugly head
again and become the major topic of
conversation. 11 you can't resolve it, drop
the subject .
.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - II you
would like to get others to be more cooperative With you, try making suggestions
instead of issui ng demands. Strong
assertiveness on yoyr part will invite
strong resentment
An
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) Impromptu Shopping excursion could
turn out to be a very expensive diversion
lor which you may momentarily find fun
- but regret When the bills come due.
Try to stay In control.
·

SOUPTONUTZ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -'There are yeats when nothing hapPens and years
in whdt cemurias happen.' • C a~os Fuames
·

'=~:t~~, scrn.tQ{llJ.;. ""E~s·

WGID

GAM!
......,----- fdliod bl (LAY I. POlLAN -,----__,-

0 Reorn::~nge

letters of the

four scromblod word• btlcw to form four simple word!.

I

SNINEG

II III

2

W'~~--:ii-1
t'"'f&gt;r-IW

M A S WP

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My buddy was always smiling.
Gramps told me that the

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t--,r.&amp;,.....,r-,.,-T,-r:,7rl Q
GL 1 WE G

who

pcrsou

smiles when no one else

was around really------- .

Comole1e tile chucklo quoted.
by filling in t~e mis.sing words
.___,.__....,_....__.._..__..- yov develop from step No. 3 betow.

•

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PRIN1 NUMBERED ll lTHS t
IN .JHfl f SQUARE S

~~;c:~~~~~ lETIE 1S

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6-2 o• o1
Velmin- MONEY
One not so smart fellow to liis pal, "I got a check back finm U1e
bank mari&lt;ed insufficien1 funds. How caa a billlk nO! bave mough

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

Peanut - Irony - Quota -

MONEY?"

ARLO &amp; JANIS
YOO ~R 1llil.l&amp;1

YOU !.OOK 11R£D!

-.""'.....~

�www.mydailysentinel.com
In Memory
Beauti!ui-Middlepon home! DOuble lot 16J60, 2Q06
38R , 2BA, full basement.1 Trailer 2br. 2ba, laundry
1"12 car garage with a room Aoom. Porch. Heat PURl~,
above. Many NEW features!! Garage.
port. Slomge
·' Must see this one! 740-416- building, Fenced corner lot.
1 bloct.; from Mason Levy
1548

3BR. 2BA, Appliances, Near 2 BR Apt near Roc:tley area.
Holzer
$650fmo
plus WID, !ridge, stove included.

Great used 2005 3 bedroom
16x8 0 with vlnyUshingle.
P-Just sell, On ly $25.995 with
deli,.r;. Call 1740)385-4367

All real fttate llldvertlslng

In this newspaper 11

IUbfect to the Federal
F~r Housing Act of 1968

which mekes it Illegal to

lldvertise "any
preference, limitation or
discrimination based on
race, color, religion, aex

fllmlllal•tatu• or nattonal
origin, or any Intention to
make any_such
ptWftnnce, limitation or
discrimination. "

New 3 Bedroom homes from
$214.36 per month. l nctudes.
many upgrades, delivery &amp;
set-up. 1740)385-2434 ,

Nice used 3 bedroom 'home
vinvVshingle. Will help with
delivery. 740·385·4367
Morttjage
740 367
OWNER FINANCING
Nice 312 singl e~ides
From $1,800 down
pay ment
Scott 1740) 828·2750

P.8PeJ will not

_.,gly occ:opt

NveriMiil&amp;ilts tor real
Mtadl which Is In
vfolatlon of the law. Our
ruder~

.,. ntreby

lnlomedthlllll
-lings - . . d i n
thie newapaper are
lni"bbt on •n equal

r

ACROSS

.Phillip
Alder

r = I ro. ~~

HIDDEN TREASURE! - -

RENT.

Clean quiet spacious 1BR,
stovelfrig, country setting,
no pets/smoking, tirsl/lasl
mot-dep $350 992-3543
- - ' -- - - - CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·

$69,000. can 740-256-9247

2 Br , AIC, Very nice,
40K80
Horse
Prop.
Johnson Mobile Home Park.
lnsulated&amp;heated barn w/ 10 740-446-2003 or 446-1409
boK stalls/ 4 BR lhting quarters; 43 acres .446-3844l.M 3 BA. 14x70, Addaville
School district. ?40-367Mobile Home space in Rio 7762 Of 367-7272
Grande. Will take up to - - - - - - - Prc
I ad re du ce d , 12 room
38A on family park. Water
16x80. 446.3617
House, 2 baths, 2 lots, ck&gt;se .
and trash service included.
to Schools, built in Kitchen .
REAL FsrA..,:
No pets. Deposit required.
Call304.jl75-4208
~·
WANIID
740-441-7033

..,... 1740)441-11 11
Call

Ellm View
Apartments

-

--

•

1 &amp; 2 Bedtoom Aparln\en1s

•

to qualified buyers.
Ashland, KY
88H2&amp;-3426

Renl. Meigs County, In
town, No Pets, Deposit
Required , (740)992·5174 or
. ___
515Simol Buy 4bd HUD _17_4_0)_44_1_-0_11_0_
homel5% dn, 20yrs@ 8% .
1 and 2 bedroom apartFor Listings 800·559-4 109
ments, furnished and unfurK1709
nished , and houses in
-3-B-ed_ro_o_m--Ho-u-se--in 'Pomeroy and Middleport,

.

S

.
$5001
th
U1
yracuse.
mon
+
675
3BR, 2BA,
deposit No Pets. (304)
:
Delivered &amp; set $39,999. 5332 weekends 740·591·
The Home Show,
0265
Ashland, Ky.
3' 4 b drm. 2 bath, slave,
• I I
8.88 928 3426
.a • rea
•
.
1.
ld • k
poot and
reng, w "oo up,
outbuilding: $650 mo. plus
SPECIAL FHA FINANCE utilities and $650 deposit.
Program $0 Down, 11
Shorl or lonn term lease
~
own Land or use Family available.
References
Land We own the Bank your required . NO PETS. 740·
·
379-23 17 tor application.
Approvad 606-474-6380
2007 Dou"'ewo'de

you

~re ,yoU
\,'

Free Estimates

74Q-367-0536

6t5

*Pr · t
d
omp an
Work

Vulnerable:

Wise Concrete

tw-llllliiiiitiiiiiitt_.l

Call Gary S1anley @

YOUNG'S

740-742-2293

4x4

v~

--

vOR Su ~

• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing 6 Guners
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting .
• Patio and Porch Decks

WV036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

c•

tu..~:.

I
•

95 Plymouth van, a1r, auto V6 , $1500 060 740·256·
1652

9925215
PUilll'WY OtiiU
.::J rear~ LLJC.l' 1::

1prr1( 1cc

Pass

-=~"'"~--~~..,
A
C••~ &amp; · ~

i

~·~~

~-lliMioiiii(1f()R-iiliHii~iitiiiiittP

90 Hy-line camper. 31ft
, Stove/fridge/mi crowaveNri/D
. $4000, OBO. Call 304·675·

0366

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1.,.-..,;.ilji,iiiiiiit-.-J·
--.
CommercIaI bUl'ld'mg 'For
Aenr 1600 square feet, off·
street parking. Great locationl 749 Third Avenue In
Gallipolis. Rent $375/mo.
Call Wayne 1404)456-3802

c.lalltpoH• llatl!' ~ribunt

Prime commercial space for
r~nt at Springvalley Plaza.
call645-2 192.

r

~otnt ~lea•ant ~tli•ttr

The Daily Sentinel
6unbll!' tttme•·-6entintl
P••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••-

1
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Subscriber's Name _____ _ _

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1

LAN DOWN EAS - NEED
EXTRA FARM INCOME ?
We have responsible sportsmen looking to lease hunting
property in this area.
MidWest Trophy Leases Inc.
(304)532-6015 or 1-800·.
698- 1073
\ IIIH II \\ llhl

r

: Address----:---- -- - - I

: City/State/Zi~ -------~

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Phone_ ________ _ __

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Resume's being
received by local
conservative church
.ror part-time ' 'Student

Ministries Director"

05 Starcraft 26ft, large slid·
ing awning, new condition ,
S1 3800. 304-638·805B or
638-5800

(Youth Director).
·
Sa1ary and bours to be
discussed, according to
ability and time

-------n L ay1on b Y
2006 ls 11

aVailable. Resume's

Sky lme, t ag-a- long, sleeps
8, ful ly self contamcd .
$R ,500 tlnn 304-675-SH42

may be sent to
PO Box 453,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

740.446.9200

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with a copy of your photo ID to

1
1

1 Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631 :
I

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·---------~-~--~--------·------I

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OH . 1740)388·0 173

previously unliamed
show values there; a cue-bid In an

su~. This deal contains
·Northerly cue-bids.

'I'EP !! THAT'S TH'

TROUBLE II

1wo dilfe1ent
·

·
·

Norlh'a two-spade cue-bid opposite a

AWFUL PURTY II

takeout double only shows a strong
hand: alleas1a good 12 points opposite
a balmng double. On lilt

neXt

round,

Norlh's lhree-&amp;pade cue·bid Is an

Bul
when Souih proves noi to have e spade
stopper, North is left .with little attemative
btrtlo place 1he contract in five .~ubs.

Rt. 7, Tuppers Plains, OH

II

Wes1

by L~ls Campos

plays ou1 his three top spades,
1he last one low, ceshes

Celll:rity Cipher CfW.Ogrll!ls are created lrOm qootat~ns bylamoLS peoj:le. pas and p-esert
E~ le:ler lllheelpher !llan&lt;ls !Or amther

dec~rer ruffs

Full Service Auto Repair
. Oil Change, Tune-Up, Engine
Diagnostics, Full Brake Service, Air
Conditioning Recharge &amp; Repair,
Alignment, Custom Exhaust
Rocky Hupp-Ownor .

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Wes11eads the spade ace.

740-667-3177
THE BORN LOSER
17't-.1-.1 1-.L&amp;.RTP.. CL\f'Pt.IZ.I~
S\o.IE.EPit-16 1\CROSS..TI\E.
C.KE.I-.1 L~KES ...

ooq· P"LUNir-.1&amp; UP\0 TWO FEET Of~

SNOW IN ITS W~, FroM
CLE.VELANP '1'0 BUFFp.J.Q!

'TI-lt: LOC/I.l. \olti\T~ PE:~
I!&gt; IC:E:PLf&gt;..'&lt;INC. 1-\\S ~E:.I\IES!'
1-\IT:'l !

the club king (since only 12 poinls ate
missing , West mus1 have the club
queen), and finesses in clubs 1hrough
Wes1 to make his contract.
A more resourcelul West spo1s one
chance k&gt;r the defense - il East can

dUb

ptoduce lhe
four. Ahet cashing lwo
spade 1ncks, Wes1 leads a low spade,

Jeff BiSS&lt;II, Manager

ROBERT
BISSEll '
CDimiCIIDI
• New Homes

e~pecled

Mushroom

Today's due: Jequa!s V
"KS

RVL

ELTRV

DKSCZZF
RVLHL

NO

ZLCHSLE

ZCF

MOPPLH . "

CS
•

IKSRLH,
RVCR

K

IKRVKS

PL

KSJKSGKYZL

CZYLHR ' GCPOM

6R. $3.29

~Astro-

Wide Variety of
Lawn

Seed,

V~!T!:

Ferlillzer and

• Garages

BIG NATE

Showmasler Show

• Complete

FOOds

~t SN ICKER. 1. ;'~l ... A.~P

I LOI/E
PRANK OAY~

I JlJH
THit.EW A

WATEtt ML·

I.DOtl

iNTO
T\1E COPIEI'-

I
SWITCHED
THE S I6~S
ON THE
&amp;OYS AND

GIRLS

r

TOOK A RECORI&gt;1N&amp;
OF PRti\KlPAL NiCHoL5
SIN&amp;IN6 KAR/IOKE ANI&gt;
PRO&amp;RAMMED IT TO
PLAY. OVE!l- THE · INTER·
COM IN E~ACTL'( ...

LoCt&lt;EI&lt;
ROOMS!

~E

SPAC.E

cowso'i....

(IEANUTS
SNOOP'{ ! SWIMMING
LESSONS DOWN IN THE
LAKE RIGHT AWAY!

AREN'T '((JU 601N6

TO UNPACK'?

•

SUNSHINE CLUB

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

740-949-2217

J&amp;L

Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing

·Decks
• Garegea
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
JamesK8819811
742-2332

Manley's
Recycling.
513

.,It.

GARFIELD
1'H15 Bet' IS FUL.I.
Of COOKIE CRUMBS!

lllllhlln. 8145110
Jt1J.992·3814

... fllnUV.frlllllf 9:08 1111-5:11 ••

.......-.............
IIIIUIIIft.ll-12... 1• .

PIYIIIG TOP PIICES F11

· One Bedroom A~art11ents ·
El~bili~ RilEd on Income

CIIIIIIIC Cllttlrtn • C.•

llflllnlllllllrll
11:111 fir Clrrlll Jrlclll .

~l Years of Aie or Ol~er, Han~itappedJDilabled

GRIZZWELLS

Regartli!Sl of A1e

~1\..1. YcU ~p 1\IAT A~HoY\1--1~
~A1\\1~~ ~~~ 'ktif;t ft'ptffi-1 ?

Handka~ped ALm~iMe

On ~ile Manager &amp;Maintenance

'--oiFUI!iiiiiiSALF.iiii••. _,

Washer &amp; Dyer excellent 03 Ford Taurus, 54,000
condition $ t 50 tor both or . miles. $5900 OBO. 7 40 _ _
256
OBO 304-675·2086 or 304·
1618
593-0876

1' •

PEOf&gt;LE

CALL 1'\E THE

lt.0011'

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
· • Homefill System
• Helios System

Hill's Self
Storage

ol him. II East does ruff wi1h -

uppercu1 with - the club four, West
rrust win a trump trick for down one.

$35AScoop
T-Post

O

.

YEAH, BUi THEY .
SNORE ARE

2459 St Rt. 160 • GalUpoDs

~~------

Pullets for Sale ·3 months
old, White Roc ks. ·. Silver
l aced Wyandottes, Golden
laced
Wyandottes,
Ameraruailas. Black Jlants
304-593-5073

r

bu1

opponent's su~ asks k&gt;r a stopper in lha1

TAKE IT FROM ME,
JAMEY, GIRLS AIN'T
NUTHIN' BUT ..
TROUBLE !!

• ...-ww.dal-ali~~Ntq. oom

--wum"l'f't•

Mall or drop off this coupon along

BARNEY

HiH'drold bbiiletry And Fnlaft

HELP WANTED

6 Donkeys -5 female , 1 white
male. Call 740-256-9247 o r
740 -256-6504

Reg Quarter Horses lor sale
Peppy Sanbager and Klng
breeding. Call 740-256-6003
Dining set including table &amp; after 7pm.
6 chairs and hutch buffet t:r:O-""'!~-='-~
$350. GE FrldgO in excellent
HAY &amp;
condition . white. · side by '"~---GiitRAiiloiN
__,..
side, ice and water In the •
dOOr. $450. Call 675-4921. or Livestock Feed. shelled corn
740-416-5555. leave mes- $5.20/50 lb. &amp; horse crunch
$7 .22150 lb., &amp; mo,e .
sage.
Par;ne--740-698-0911.
Moll ohan Furniture . Great _
seleCtion for a Great price.
Drive a little, save a loti 202
Clark Chape l Rd, Bidw.;l ,
AUIOS

su~s

-;;He;:l~p~W;:an;t;e;d;:::=;
r

Llv.sfOCK

HoUSiliiOLD
Gooos

smooth
40 lmponant

. at the threa-level 'in

I· - - - - - - - -

Horse
and
Livestock Great Shape $10500. 740·
TralleraLoadmaxG'ooseneck, Dumps, · &amp;
Utility- Atuma Aluminum

TraUert- B&amp;W Gooseneck
HitchesTrailer
Parts.
Carmichael
Trailers.
1740)446·24t2
-------New Holland 850 Chain
Bailer works good. $1 ,200.
740 -742-2773 or 740-7427918.
- - - : - : -- :-::--:--:Tractor Mitsubushi Buck S470, 4-wh.dr.,18HP,diesel,
Compact Tractor, very good
cond .. $2,200. 992-3085 .

38 Make

our partnership s1ill has all lour eyee
squarely on three no-trump. Then, bids

446-0007

SPACE
FOR RF.l'IT

nom

From one cue-bid
to two cue-bids

perltaps !here is a minot·su~ mesh,

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

A

The key bid •sualy occurs at the threelevel. No major-su~ fit has bean found,

&amp; 'MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

apartment,for
tile
elderly/disabled call 675·
6679
Equal
Housing
Opportunity

sure mea•·

:15 Loud kiu
37 Stovetop

. heading into that despised conttact: live
of a minor.
·

~ .~~••PI:"J~1~a·a~:""•

Twin Rivers Tower is accept- with sprlnkle•s. 1740)373·
ing applications for waiting 4360
Maxum 23ft, V8 alpha 1. 94,
list lor Hud-subsized, .1· br, cK-Ie~ter -:B:-u:-11!- :-v:-al:-ley--~BI-son-- open bow. below book.

All pass

finding out ~three no-trump is a pl~abla
contract. and v.tten ~ proves not lo be,

740-992-1m

r

Pass

·

This week, we are loolting at w~s o1

we Deliver To You!

lir o · ,.

Grant ap-

proval
31 Vory pale
:12 A1111 code
:13 Tire pres-

Pass
Pass

Opening lead: •

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Fatewell

25 Plugged in 52 Before, In
26 Rain forest
verse
parrot
53 Arm the
27 Signs one' a
alarm
name to
29 Raises
a bet
34 Cancun
toast
36 Darning
39 Dunce
43 Take a flier
44 Qom's land
45 Asia' s

hoping lhat East will realize what is

r404W::~::'~o~....,
M~cv~ ·~ ' I
~

5•

4•

Remodeling

t,________

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3•

34

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

·Room Additions &amp;

I

puppies tor sale. 1st shots &amp;
d $
3B8 03 Dodge Dakota SXT 4x4,
200· 740 ·
worme
• 9000
11 1
-:a
5
mMes, eKCe en con·
874o
$
8 2
- - -- - - - - dition, 10900. 388· 1 5
AKC Golden Retriever

Pass
2•

Owner- Rick Wise

CARPENTER
SERVICE

.......

FOR SALE

Obi.

28

:10

ieedcaM

crossers

4 Steak
throwaway
5 Rabbit dish
6 NBA team
7 Frutt cooter
8 Hong 9 Reasoner's
word
10 Bug
repellenl
14 Level
IS Cider
source
11 Hat designer

attempl 10 get into three no-lrump.

FURSAU:
·TroyBuiltHoarse. AWrox56 Hrs total use. Asking
$1500. 446-3634
04 Nissan XTerra 49000
miles. $10900. 740-256·

Ii~16!11';:.8--~~-

W
rl

North· East

nose

ckilng?"

Eut-

Wesl

1•
Pass
Pass

* R easonable Rates
* Insured
*E
·
d
xpenence
References Available!

wings
25 "How--

South

A !I types of concrete

Qua l 1't y

0

.

Dealer: West

19 Kind
Sahara
of casselte 46 Towel wwcl
20 Dirty Harry 47 Great Lakn
22 Reindeer
port
herder
49 Melli fabric
24 Ave.
51 Prickly

1 Toothpaste
choice
2 Eg~s. to
Ovtd
3 Pierre 's

23 House

• A Q5

Pine Street • .G allipolis
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

DOWN

spell

A 6 4 :J

•KJ10 3

70

Stanley TreeTrim
' ml'ng
&amp; .AemOV8. I

Pole
Barns
30x40x 10' Toyota EKI Cab, 4cyl., Auto,
Delivered &amp; Erected S8,5Q5 Alr, Runs Great, $1500, Call
plus Sales Tax. Call after 5pm, (740)245-5946,

p~-

•

740-653-9657

1937)718-1471 www.nation· iiceliillrl'7~40•645-;;:,;3;;,743;;:;;,.-.....,
widepolebams.com
SUVs

Middleport, from $327 to
$S92 . 740.992. 5064 . Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equal
Opportunity Provider and

• J 7

_____.:.c.__ ~:;:=====::::::: :=~~======~~~:::=~

Please leave messa e

- -- -- - - P£rs
Graclouo Living 1 aoo 2
FUR SAU:
.
Bedroom Apts . at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in AKC female Boston Terrier

South

Insured &amp; Bonded

marked ' Knts Hill Dairy Kits 2000 Toyota Tacoma, EK!.·
Hill. Ohio' rare $225 . 740- .
Cab, Auto, 4x4, 4cyl., BB ,OOO
533•3870
miles, New tires; 1994

g ·e r.

• 8 4 3

Seamlf!ss Gutters
Roofing , Siding, Guners

.

East
• • 4
.1098 5 2
• 9 7 6 2
• 4 2

• Q• •

·Dote on
Leu ambitious

15 Get oven
for
16 Alligator
habllats
18 Landed
19 Play pari
21 Address
part
Z2 Breathing

I~

A 1 6 5

• J 7

.Guttering

Black 2005 Pontiac G6.
loaded, warranty, less that
13000 miles. $t 7soo. 740·
" •• _
•
24 9880174
~
~ 5 2336

K Q

West
A KQI(I J

H&amp;H

11

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

1

Books

r

·Senior_Discount*

1

74Q-367-0544

•

•

&amp;MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

1989 Yamaha Venture,
Remodeling
t 300cc, full dress, excellent
Shade Rive r
condition . $3,975 1304)675· 97 Hitchhiker Discovery 34
Ag Service
45.10
112ft. 5th wheel car:nper
',t. IIi.;
- - - - - - - - made by NU-WA. 1 Double
Stop &amp; Compare
( hnh-r
1994 Honda 300 Founrax . slide anQ 1 single slide plus
'
~ll
- 1 1-'i:' ·.1:''1.' I
2WD. Grea1 Shapa. $1800: extras that will go with this • • • • • • • '
br. furnished apartment, 386-=-9-~~--..., 2004 Kawasaki KX100, 2 unit. EKcellent shape. Asking
deposit &amp; references, no
MUSICAL
stroke, Excellent Sllape, $16,500 . Call after 6pm 740.
pets, 1740)992-0165
INsrRUMEIITS
$1400. Call after 5pm 208-0507 or 256· 1243
Modern 1 BR Apt Call 446- tw-titiiiiiiiiiioiiiiotiiloP 1740)245-5946,
cell
7
7
40
74
3 36
Hollon H378. Intermediate _1_ _164_5_·3__3_
. _ __
'' I{\ It I "'
New 2BR
apartments. French Horn for sale. 2001 Kawasaki' Eliminator
Washertdrver
hookup. Excellent condition . 5 1300 125, garage kept, mint ~r:::~--::-,_-..,
stove/retrigerator included.
080, call446-7?83
cond., 682 miles, $2000;
~
· Also. units on SA 160. Pels
{740)949· 1006 ·
IMPROVEMEI\'fS
We~omel 1740)441-0194.
i'l:-"_"'!'_ _ _.., 2005 H.D.Sofl Tail custom
New Haven, 2 br. 'furnished 1
FARM
maroon
.w/embossed
BASEMENT
apartment, references &amp;
EQuiPMENT
flames, I of 200 made,BOO
WATERPROOFING
deposit, no pets, (740)992· ·--ifiiiiiiiiiiiii;,.,.,l. miles
since
new,price
0165
$21,500, call fordetalls-740· Unconditional llletime guar0% Financing- 36 Mos.
_
,.
antee . Local references lyr949 2217
Tara
Townhouse available noW on John - - - - -- - - nished. Established 1975.
Cali 24 Hrs. 1740) 446- .__ _ _...,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,__.
Apartments, Very Spacious, Deere Z Trak zerO TUm a &amp; 2007 Honda Foreman 4K4
2 · Bedrooms , CIA, 1 1/2 5.99% Fixed Rate on John
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
144 miles , ramps included 0870, Rogers Basement
Deere Gatofl Carmichael and ca1go bag · $4 700 304 Waterproofing.
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
• •
·
Equipment 1740)446-2412. 675 2086
No Pets, Lease Plus
iiiji,;.~;...."!"!"!"-~
security DepoSit Aequwed, -Fo_r_sa-le. -ap-p-,. -24-00
- le-et
BoA!!!&lt;s~~
(740)367-7086.
.2"x3' portable irrigation line ··ll"vn I'U.&lt;L
•

If so, you qualify for a

I

Local Contractor

&amp; vans with warranty. Priced

security deposit required, no Employer.
pies. $200. 740-643-2234
p9ts, 740-992-2218.
_.:....;__ _ _ _ _
Honeysuckle
Hills AKC Mini Pinscher puppies,
2 bedroom apt, stove , Aparlments n~· accepting ·
•c M.
""
red, Cl'lOC ., bl ; Ar..
lni
refridg.,
water,
trash . applications for 1 and 2BA Dauschund puppies. br.
Deposit required, Rent apts . No rental assistance d
I bl d ~ bl AKC
$350.
1740)446·7620,
app 9 • · ap"'9 • '
availat;e at lhis Hme. Rent Sh II'
I
12 males)
1740)441-9872, (740)709e oe puppes
starts at $310 month. Equal stw: AKC Standard Poodle
9519
- - - -- - -- Housing
Opportunity. puppies, bt , cr., apr.; all vet
2 BR , 1 1/2 bath on Jackson (740)446·3344.
. rhecked call for prices,
v
Pike. $450/mo + deposit. Middleport, Beech St ., 2 br. (740)696-1085
Ref. required. no pets. Call furnished apartment, utilities - - -- - -- 446""t'051
Registered
paid, deposh &amp; references, AKC
Weimaraner puppies. 3
Femate and 3 Males. Ready
no pels, 1740)992-0165
Middleporl, Nonh 4th Ave., 2 on 6/30. $350. · 30 4-593-

·· . 9r,:9~d¢r? ·
, .•

Additions

94 Ford Tempo, 4DR. blue.
AC. tinted windows. spoiler.
front wheel drive, rims.
excellent
gas
mileage
$2000. 740-645-6474 days,
740-256-1020 nights.

c

Saturday

MONTY

at $3,900 will accept $2,500 ~=:::;:;::;;::;::;==~
Call304.jl75· 1379
r

11eve a 1-quarl milk bottle

•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•central heat &amp;A/C

I

~

runs really well. Blue

Steel Beams, Pipe ARebar
g1
For
oncrete,
n e,
Channel. Flat Bar. Steel
Grattng
For
Drains,.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L

Thursday,

Sale by Owner, 3BR 2BA ,
Mobile homes for rent, •Washer/dryer hookup
newly remodeled house 'Wanted to Buy Property on Middleport area. no pets. •Tenant pays electric
(304)882-3017
wlbasement. 4 miles out Lower Five Mile Ad or Jim 1740)992-5858
218. $98000. 256-1336
. Hill Rd. area 304-593-3281

The H ome e:t.
~·OW

Doors, ••indows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywali,
R
" 1·
R
emoue lng, oom

"IP.!"_....,
r5' ' ___...,

r

FOR Rmr

'"

to sell. This iS our 12th
for applicat ion &amp; information. Sunday. {740)446-7300
Older model 48 H&amp;R 20 Ga. Anniversarv. Stop by or call
Efficiency aparlment lorroot
740-446-0103
Single barrel sh0191Jn, top
in Middleport, $250 a month break down. Excellent. still
TRUCKS
plus deposit, (740)992 -6849 has case coloring 511 s ; also
FOR SAU

TWJ). . on KinQ Ad ott
Neighborhood Rd. Approx
1200 sq.ft. 3 acres. m/12 BR
2 lull baths wlwhlrlpool tubs,
large LA . Asking 87 .500 .
74Q.446-7029

2007 Clayton
5BAI3BA 2000 Sq.Ft.
. Starling at $33.00/sp.n.t
NO DOWN PAYMENT

Soffit. Decks.

~~";!~~a:":~

Newly built home in Green

I==.:.c._____

"W·

i·----~--·I====--- r
ro H~. I:~r

;::

-ne.

s

MOIIIUH~
FOit S.uiL'

Roofing, Siding,

miles. 30mpg, sunroof,
spoiler. excellent condition.
$13000 . 388·9305 UM

8 6 5 2

•

12
13

06·21-07

•

• KJ

... • • • • · - - · ...

$ For Old Aula Batteries 1· 03 Subaru Legacy 74000

Scr••
Monday.
c- Motoro
ED • AFFORDABLE!
~ Metals "-n
"""
Tuesday, Wed~aeday &amp;
328 Jaci&lt;SOrl Pike
Townhouse
apartments, F
•·- • 30pm Ctosed
.
Qually cars. trucks and
ancvor.. e..... 11 houses FOR ridey, ~·~:

r

1

1

(]amihJ(•J:tlijMI

·~-------

'

sewer. trash pd. Middleport. Harley Davidson Golf Carl,
$425.00 . No pels. Rat. gas
runs"""" $900
"' 'V'
W'A""
requirad · 740·B43·5264 ·
304.jl7 5- 3824
'
lleoUIIful Apto.ll Jockoon - - . , . - - - - - - E•tates. 52 Westwood
JET
Drive. from $365 to $560.
AERATION MOTORS
740-446-2568.
Equal Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
Housing Opportunity. This · Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1institution is an Equal 800-537-9528.
Opportunity Provider 1-nd --:--:-:--:--:-:=:::Employer.
NEW AND USED STEEL

___·~-:--:--:--~

North

OH ....1

For listings t.jl00-559-4109
' F144.
. 10.66 acres. 1594 Northup - -- -- - Ad. in Green Twp. Gallia Co.. In Pomeroy House for rent! 3
Bd .. 2 bath, newty remoo24K48 barn, recent survey.
eled. total electric. 740-843no restrrct•ons. beaut•ful
52 64
For saleAand COf)trect. 3 BR house location . all utilities on
house in Gallipolis. WID srte. $79.900. (937)362- large 4 bedroom house. in
connection $ 1500 down . 4n5, (937)605-3581
Pomeroy. very dean, ne'lt"fy
$400/mo. Also 1 BA in
remodeled . new "tabinets,
Gallipolis
$750
down 3 acres ol Land for Sate on new carpet, (740)949-2303
404 Sandhill Rd. across from
·
" Krebs Chapel $30 ,000 304$200/mo.
Call
Wayne
MOBII.E HCNF.S
456-3802 for
information.
895·3929
fOR Roo
HUD HOMESI 4bd only
s1551mo 3bd
1a 1/mo 4 Acres located off Kemper
14 60
.•
.. Holklw Rd. Already has
X • HUD, 2 bd. """"· 1
More 1-4bd homes a'iail- waterle'··. Secluded area. bath. Air. eledricity. Water.
5% dn 20 yrs 0 8"
·
•
~. 74"3B8- "228
trash, &amp; sewer included. No
For listings 1-800-559-4109 -~~_:__v_____
ts $
•• ~
,.
pe · 325 · UQp. ~ 5 · 7_,..
x F144 ·
55 acres more or 1ess, 992.5639.

_...tty-..

oUt

RENT'i\'LS SALES
Wife-Lissy
...,_,•.
T~..:;-T
. ~ •SERVICE. FREE DELIVERY
.
Sons-Ralph,_Damon
;.;.;;,~.~
~;::::::::::&amp;::Fa~m;m=es:::;:;::::; ._.....':'....,E==-----; •MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

99 $2.50ea. 100+ $3.00ea.
area! Beaulifully renovated 250+ $4.00ea. THE BAT·
throughout including brand TERY TERMINAL 1·800·
new kItchen and bath . 7Q6.6797
Sterling at $405. can today!

I

ACREAGE

sounda

6 Crusted
over

10 10 15 small cars lor sale.
' -- ' - - - -- -- - ,1304=)2'-'73-=3344=---- - - - . -- - - - , Cavaliers, Escorts, Neon~
HUD HOMESI 4bd only ~
·
Apartment tor rani , 1· 2 For Sao~ WOOd &amp; Metal etc. Gas Savers! 74Q-44&amp;
1
3
8
$ SS/mo., bd $! 1/mo., Bdrm.. remodeled. new car- Shop Tools may trad e 727B
More 1·4bd homes avail·
able. 5% dn, 20 yrs 0 6%. pet. stove .a.. trig., water. . $3,000Firm304-576-2e67 - - - - - - - -

Lars&amp;

1 Pagoda

11 Tum inside

Johnson's Tree
Service

LApaaurrle~ents. Largec~~~~~=

-oooo ·

1 )
For rent Of for sale 2 BA
Nice Remodeled Home in
town. No Pets. Renovated ,
All new
carpet, Call
1740)446-7425

NEA Crossword Puzzle

on your birthday
6/21/1935. 11/10/2000

;I

l ocators. A

The Daily Sentinel • Page ~7
'
BRIDGE

Robert L. Fisher

--------'

4 Br., 2 bath home on 3 Rms &amp; bath. WID hookup,
Muberry Ave., central air, . c~. Nopet5. 446-1519
gas Ileal . Call 740-992·
4AM &amp; Bath, S!OYS ,lr\dge,
331 4
·
utilities paid, upstairs. 46
Attenttonl
ot;;,.J~; No pets.
. 446-3945
l ocal Ct&gt;rllJany offe ring "NO $4
DOWN PAYMENT" programs lor you to buy yair
home instead of renting.
·
• 100% financing
• le$5 than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.

call after Spm 304-773-51 09
"' 304.jl75-8893

~

n.11 new

-

In Memory

www.mydailysentinel.com ·

In Loving Memory
of

deposn.
1740)245-9880. No petsl can 446-1271 "'
1740)645-3836.
709-1657. Oepl1 st mon req.

ca,

Thursday, June 21, 2007
ALLEY OOP .

Thursday, June 21; 2007

15 11-IA'I' A

PII..L.OWCAS!:
1'01.1. Of' Mll.-1&lt;?

n

Friday, June 22, 2007
By Bernice Beda Oaol
You mlg~t be · e.Ktramety fortunate 1n
bringing one or more parties together for ~
a commercial purpose thai turns out tb
be quite sUccessful. In the proces·s. you'll
derive a large reward or _bonus of some
kind .
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - If you'r!3
too sell-involved, you coUd be unreasonably-angered by someone who is always
forgiving you .· later, when you review
your behavior, ·you'll wish you could take
it baCk .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Should you
have to make some adjustments in your
plans In order to accommodate another,
oon·t make a big thing of It and make this
person feel bad . Be gracious and kind.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -One of the
reasons you haven't been getting too
much mileage from -your paycheck lately
could be due in part to engaging in too
many frivolous activities.
'
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Be on your
best behavior because your image is a
trifle fragile, especially where your career
is concerned. Do nothing that would provide gossip for detractors to use against
you.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22 ) - 'Wu could
run into a brick wall when another's
philosophical outlook proves to be diametrically opposed to yours. Don't
attempt to butt your way tl1rough to this
person's hard head.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dsc. 21) -You
may be a bit too curious about matters
that do not directly co ncern you . Do not
interfere or poke your nose .into places
where it doesn't belong , or you'll be askIng tor trouble .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . t9) - The
very persons whose advice you should
heed, you might Ignore. On the other
hand, persons whose counsel you'd be
wise to ignoie. you migh t heed.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20·Feb. 19) - It is best
~ to rely only upon yourself an~ not upon
those you merely anticipate will help you .
Tasks that you are eKpecting others to
handle for you aren't likely to be tended
to at all.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - II you're
smart , you won't take unnecessary risks
on someone else's ideas. especially if
the person you are trusting has bungled
things in the past. History coul'd repeat
itself.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - An issue
that you and your mate have disagreed
upon previously might rear its ugly head
again and become the major topic of
conversation. 11 you can't resolve it, drop
the subject .
.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - II you
would like to get others to be more cooperative With you, try making suggestions
instead of issui ng demands. Strong
assertiveness on yoyr part will invite
strong resentment
An
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) Impromptu Shopping excursion could
turn out to be a very expensive diversion
lor which you may momentarily find fun
- but regret When the bills come due.
Try to stay In control.
·

SOUPTONUTZ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -'There are yeats when nothing hapPens and years
in whdt cemurias happen.' • C a~os Fuames
·

'=~:t~~, scrn.tQ{llJ.;. ""E~s·

WGID

GAM!
......,----- fdliod bl (LAY I. POlLAN -,----__,-

0 Reorn::~nge

letters of the

four scromblod word• btlcw to form four simple word!.

I

SNINEG

II III

2

W'~~--:ii-1
t'"'f&gt;r-IW

M A S WP

I 1J' J
1

~

c.
I

l A VUT

~

I I I Is

N

I

"'

My buddy was always smiling.
Gramps told me that the

I
t--,r.&amp;,.....,r-,.,-T,-r:,7rl Q
GL 1 WE G

who

pcrsou

smiles when no one else

was around really------- .

Comole1e tile chucklo quoted.
by filling in t~e mis.sing words
.___,.__....,_....__.._..__..- yov develop from step No. 3 betow.

•

8
@)

.

.

_

.

PRIN1 NUMBERED ll lTHS t
IN .JHfl f SQUARE S

~~;c:~~~~~ lETIE 1S

I [I I I •

rI

6-2 o• o1
Velmin- MONEY
One not so smart fellow to liis pal, "I got a check back finm U1e
bank mari&lt;ed insufficien1 funds. How caa a billlk nO! bave mough

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

Peanut - Irony - Quota -

MONEY?"

ARLO &amp; JANIS
YOO ~R 1llil.l&amp;1

YOU !.OOK 11R£D!

-.""'.....~

�Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, June 21, 2007
'-

Through the Years
historical edition
inside today's Sentinel
.

Save Up
To $4,000
On New
07 Buick
Lu.c.erne.'
'

'

.
'

.

.

'

.,

...

I

Save

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

·$3500

.) 0

on·

('I :\ I s • \

0

I. .)h. :"J o .

SPORTS
• Griffey makes first
trip back to Seattle:
SeePage 81

New07

rand Prix

We
Discount.'•07-'"
on,iac Solstice
In Stoc '

~- '""

.

.

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llplander

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:! :.! • :.!() ()"7

\\ \\ \\ Ill \

BY BRIAN

J. REED

regional representative of the
Governor's Office, presented
the company with a
$250,000 grant from lhe
Ohio
Department · of
Development for use in completing a feasibility study for
the site. The study is expect·
ed to take six to eight months
to complete, and will include
a conceptual design of the
facility, environmental per·
mits and a market analysis.
The grant award is subject to
acceptance of the state's
terms by Rentech.
Rentech CEO Hunt
Ransbottom said the company's technology, which
dates back to the 1920's,
can convert coal, natural gas
or even municipal solid
waste into very clean,
biodegradable fuels. The
fuel products will include
ultra-low sulfur and trans·
portation fuels. Other prod·
Ucts available from the
process include waxes, feed
stock, and synthetic lubricant base stock.

BREE!JiiiMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
A
Colorado-based company is
considering a site in Lebanon
Township for construction of
a facility that converts coal.
into diesel fuel.
Rentech, Inc. is a company that owns and licenses
chemical processes that
gasify coal and turns it into
fuel, chemicals and polymers. The company holds
an option on a 400-acre site
in- Lebanon Township. The
site is privately owned and
was once. marketed as a
_potential site for the U.S.
Department of Energy's
FutureGen project, but was
ultimately rejected.
Representat.ives of the
company attended a luncheon with members of the
Meigs County Community
Improvement Corporation,
elected officials and repres.entatives of state agencies
Thursda~ . to discuss the

Brian J. RMd/philto

Christi Lynch-Mash. representing the office of Ohio Gov. Ted
Strickland, !')resented a $250,000 feasibility study grant to
Hunt Ramsbottom, CEO of Rentech, Inc., to assist the com·
pany In locating Its proposed coal to diesel conversion facil·
ity In Lebano.n Township.
process involved in convert·
mg coal to fuel, and to
encourage local support for
the · proposed project.

Roscoe Mills hosted the
briefing and luncheon at his
home near the site.
Christi Lynch-Mash, a

So happy together

Page AS ·
• Cliffortf Kirk, Jr., 81

. .wc

' ,J lJ ~I · ,

INSIDE
.• Meigs ColJnty 4-H ..
News. See Page A2.
• A Hunger For More.
See Page AS
• Local Briefs.
See Page A8

..

--

. ""'"'""'!"'" "r /

•

-

;fl

-·

::~

..r.:

'

.

.,.,.

KKELLY@MYOAILYTRI8UNE.COM

-...-...Ma
$11,.9JJ
.'
05

• Rre destroys
two buildings at
fireworks company.
See Page A8

WEATHER

Detallo on Page AS

INDEX

CRUISE IN
THIS SATU RDAY,
JUNE 23rd
lO:OOam - 2:00pm

2 SECJ'IONS -

~tall rebates
~· ::

(~ll i·

, ...

1900 Eastern Ave. • Gallipolis, OH

weal

I

Annie's Mailbox
A3
Calendars
A3
Classifieds ·
B4-6
Comics
B7
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
A6-7
Movies
As
NASCAR
B3
Obituari_es
As
Sports
B Section
Weather
A8
© 2007 Ohio v.uey l'ubllshlnA eo.

to dealer

"New Car Ph~IDB Are
For IHustraUon llnly

-'I'IIU Free J-1177-4411-2282

16 PAGFS

GALLIPOLIS·- . Robert
L. "Bob" Evans, a farmer,
businessman, conservation·
ist and symbol of a multistate restaurant and food
products chain employing
more than 35,000 people,
died Thursday in · the
Cleveland Clinic at age 89.
Evans died about 12:30
p.m., his family told Bob
Evans Farms Inc., the
Columbus-based company
that bore his name.
He had been in the clinic
since June 8 and was being
treated for pneumonia. In
February, he suffered a
stroke and was treated at a
The turtles and
Huntington, W.Va., hospi·
Nancy the Turtle
tal. He was recuperating
Lady are so happy
from the effects of the
togettier and even
stroke at his home near
happier to make a
Gallipolis prior to his being visit to the children's
sent to Cleveland.
summer reading pro"Bob Evans was a true gram
at the Pomeroy
original,"
Gov.
Ted
Library.
Yesterday,
Strickland said. "His life's
nearly
90
visitors
work was bringing the
were
allowed
~0 get
warmth, hospitality and
up
close
and
person-.
good food of Ohio to the
al with not only tur·
rest of the nation.
ties but snakes,
''I've appreciated the
toads
and bearded
opportunity to know Bob
dragons
pictured
personally and greatly
with
both
Nancy
and
admired his wit, his intellectual curiosity and his deep five-year old Tessa, a
.love for his native state," Sulcata turtle native
to Africa. The next
added Strickland, who rep. visitor to the sumresented southern Ohio in
Congress for near! y 12 mer reading program
is Inspector Magic
years pridr to his election.as
Davi(l Henning at 2
governor. "We here in Ohio
are all' proud of him, and we
p.m. on June 30 at
are all deeply saddened by the Pomeroy Library.
his passing."
After both summer
"Bob Evans' mind ·moved
reading programs
at warp speed;: said Jeffrey
and storytimes, all
E. Smith, president and .children are treated
chief executive officer of to meals and snacks
Ohio Valley Bank, whose from the Appalachian
relationship with Bob Evans
Nutrition Network.
Farms spans more than 50
Beth Sefllellt/photoo

The primary issue facing
the company and the use of
its technology is how to
deal with the carbon dioxide
emissions created by the
process. The process
Involves sequestration, or
underground release, and
some·of the carbon dioxide
can be sold to companies
that use it, such as fertilizer
manufacturers and soft
drink bottlers.
"Unless we can sell the
. C0-2, it presents a cost to
the operation of the project," Ransbottom said.
Ransbottom said the
Congress is now considering issuing tax credits for
sequestration, which would
make the process more
competitive in the energy
industry.
"A project like this takes a
lot of local support,"
Ransbottom said. "Having
local champions drives a
project."
'fhe company estimat~s

~

Please ... Company, A5

Boy who
allegedly
cried 'wolf'
caused
a 'mess'

Please see 'Mess; AS

Teacher
pleads guilty
to drug charge
Bv

BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYOAILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY Nathan .
Hansen of Pomeroy entered
guilty pleas to charges of
corrupting another with
drugs and contributing to
the delinquency of a minor
Wednesday.
Hansen, 32, is _a nine-year
teacher at Meigs High School,
and was accused of providing
marijuana to an underage girl.
He wa~ placed on administrative leave when he was ftrst
charged In February.
Hansen appeared in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
before Judge L. Scon Powell,
who was sitting on ·the case
by assignment. His sentencing .was set for August 6. The
charge of corrputing another
with drugs is a fourth-degree
felony, carrying a maximum

Pluse see Evans, A5

Please see Teacher, AS
'

•

'

H I 11

SYRACUSE -A 17year old Syracuse boy has
been . charged in Meigs
County Juvenile Court with
inducing paniC as well as
underage dril)king and could
face additional charges after
five volunteer fire depart·
· ments from both sides of the
Ohio River launched rescue
boats into the water early
Thursday morning .
According to Racine
Police Marshal Curtis
Jones, the saga began
around
II . p.m. on
Wednesday when officers
from Racine and Syracuse
were assisting the fylei~s
County Sheriff's Office In
searching for a suspect
involved in an alleged ·
· domestic dispute in the village of Syracuse. While
searching for the suspect
near the . boat ramp in
Syracuse, Jones and a resi·
dent heard 'someone calling
"help" from the water as
well &amp;s splashing. To make

. BY K.EVIN KEUY

.

.... II I II It I '

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTIN(LCOM

Evans·
8189

"

d' I I h

Alternative fuel company eyes Lebanon To~hip site·

·OBITUARIFS

,, .

.,.,/~~.

p~a

11'

Racine/Southem
alumni gather
for reunion, A3

~~
·~---

-,.

..

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