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p

Page 86 • !he DruJy Sentinel

Monday, June

·www .mydailysentinel.com

-

Matt ·Kenseth rallies to win at Dover
-

BY DAN GELSTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DOVER, Del. Matt
Kenseth and Jamie McMurmy
made it a 1-2 finish for Roush
Racing.
And what u thrilling finish it
was.
·
McMurray was the driver to
beat, holding the lead for most
of the fmal 90 laps Sunday until
the patient Kenseth made his
move , passing two drivers late
before the leader was firmly in
view.
Kenseth reached McMurray
in lapped traffic, raced side-byside, then dipped low on a clean
pass off the fourth tum with
three laps left .and pulled away
to win at Dover International
Speedway.
"They were leavin~ me plenty of room to pass.' Kcnseth
said. "l just caught him iJ.I the
right time and was able to just
barely squeeze in front."
Kevin Harvick fmished third,
followed by Jeff Burton and
Kyle Busch. Jimmie Johnson
maintained the points lead. finishing sixth after starting a sea'
son-worst 4 2nd.
McMurray seemed poised to
win for the second .time in his
Nextel Cup career. after taking
the lead with 98 laps left in the
Neighborhood Excellence 400 .
One day after• turning 30.
McMurray's belated birthday
present to himself was so close
to being a trip to Victory Lane.
Kenseth spoiled the party.
His No. 17 Ford started nipping
at the leaders with about 30 laps
· left in the caution-marred race.
First, he passed Burton. then
Harvick. All that was left was
McMurray.
With three laps to go.
Kenseth got by McMurray after
the leader was slowed a bit by
Michael Waltrip;s lappeq car.
With one lap to go, Kenseth
pulled away for' his second win
of the season and 12th of his
career.
"It was really exciting,"
Kenseth said. "1 feel bad for
Jamie."
The win earned him a small
boost in the points standings.
Kenseth sliced Johnson's lead

s. 2oo6

New contacts designed:
to give athletes an .edg~.

Solana arrives mTehran
carrying EU incentives
package, hoping to
defuse nuclear crisis, A2

.

·
AP photo
NASCAR driver Matt Kenseth races his car through turn one during the Neighborhood
Excellence 400 Sunday at the Dover Speedway in Dover, Del. Kenseth won the race.
from 109 points to 74.
McMurray still finished with team and the move has seem" I never thought about the one of the best perfomtances of ihgly paid off.
point~ at all today. We're think- hi s c.ar~r. McMurray hasn't
"What
about
Jamie
ing about winning races," been m Vtctory Lane smce wm- McMurray? Was that not aweKen seth said . ·"It's early nmg hts second career Nextel some today?" Roush' said.
enough in the year. We're [n a fup race m October 2002. ·
"Jamie was certainly the underpretty solid position in the
"It's been a long time ." dog given the season he's had.
,points."
McMurr~,Y said. ·:1 thought I Until Matt had passed Jamie. I
. Injured defending \:hamp had htm.
was standing beside Bob
Tony Stewart completed 38
McMurray took the .lead on Osborne in the 26 pit rooting
laps before Ricky. Rudd t~e 302nd lap on the rrule .track, for him as hard as I could."
Maybe not hard enough.
replaced him. Stewart drove gtvmg him more laps led m thJs
w1th a broken shoulder blade race than he had all season (25).
Only 15 laps were run under
suffered last week at Charlotte, He satd he knew he had no caution . through 269 laps, but
and had trouble lifting his right chance to wm once he was that quickly deteriorated with
arm before he was eased into P~~~·
.d
M tt six more cautions for 36 laps
his car.
. en 1 ,cou 1 see. · 3
the rest of the way.
·s
.
d
. k x't catchmg Kevm, l knew 11 was
JJ v
h't th
. . tewart_ rna e a qutc e 1 , : going 10 make it interesting," . . .e1ey 1 e wa11 on 1ap
hltmg h1mself halfway out McMurraysaid."Jjustgottight 284 and did it again after the
already unstrapped andwtth hts at the end ."
restart. Anoti!Cr caution came
helmet off before he was gently
McMurrav did record his out with 101 laps left when
pulled out the. rest of the way. second stralght top-IO finish Elliott Sadler hit the wall after
Stewart sa1d he never felt attd jumped three spots to ISth losing control on some oil on
comfortable a~d complamed of in the points race.
the track left by Kevin Lepage.
"Making the chase is a huge
McMurray never stopped
some soreness.
"I was glad we got the cau- deal " he said. "If we can run a~ and took the lead on 302, and
tion when we got it," he said.
well' as we did today, we'll stayed out on the last yellow
Rudd came out of a self- make the chase."
flag.
'
He· surely needed the confiKenseth, who started 19th,
imposed. one-year break to
race for the ftrst It me thts sea- dence boost. With McMurray recorded his ninth top- I 0 finish
son !n. the Nextel ~up senes. struggling early in his ftrst sea- and won for the first time since
He hmshed 25th, two laps off son w1tjl Roush Racmg, owner California in the·second race of
the lead.
Jack Roush ordered a shakeup the season. He made his Nextel
"That was fun, sitting right designed to jump-start thetr Cup debut at Dq_ver in .l998 as
there, being in the hunt and struggling team. Bob Osborne, a substitute for Bill Elliott.
being able to run with some of who was Carl Edwards' crew
"Everythingjustkindofwent
those guys," Rudd said.
chief, took over McMurray's right for us," he said.

BREN1WOOD, Tenn . .(AP)
- When Camille Walters plays
soccer, her normally brown eyes.
have a spooky red tint.
That's because the 15-yearold wears tinted ·contact lenses
that block certain wavelengths
of . light and help athletes see
IJ&lt;;tter. Oh, and they look cool,
too.
.
"lt gives me more confidence
because you feel intimidating
and bigger and stron~er, kind of
an ego-booster," smd Walters,
who plays for Father Ryan, a
Catholic high school in
Nashville.
·
Walters and a growing number of other athletes are wearing
the MaxSight lenses, which
were developed jointly by Nike
Inc . and contact lens maker
Bausch &amp; Lomb Inc.
The lens - large enough to
extend a ring around the ins __:
comes in two colors: amber and
grey-green.
The amber lens is fo( fastmoving ball sports, such as ten-·
nis, baseball, football or soccer.
Grey-green is better for blocking glare for runners or helping
a golfer read the contour of the
gro?:~1~ssional athletes tested
the lenses last year before they
were rolled out for general sales.
Golfer Michelle Wie and
baseball players Ken Griffey Jr.
and A J. Pierzynski wear
MaxSight lenses, along w,ith
members of Manchester Umted,
the U·S· men •8 soccer team and
the Texas Longhorns football

Irian riders and tennis players.
'The firSt reaction from the .
fust two ~ople I fit i.n ~is, they
went out,lde and srud, Thts 1~
really cooL It's like wearing
su!tglasses out, ide,"' Kegarise
smd.
Even though the amber lens is
intended for outdoor use, he has
an Arena Football League player who used them indoor~
because of the· bright lights.
·
Walters, who plays both for
her high school and on a travel
team, is farsighted and us~
MaxSight prescription lenses,
but they also come in a non-corrective version.
"It cut out some of the sun, so
it wasn't as bright," Walter,~
said. "It was easier to pick out
where the ball was at times
when it was in the air."
.:
But' does the MaxSighl lens
give some athletes an unfair
advantage? The associations
that govern high school and e&lt;;&gt;flege sports don't think so, but
they're keeping an eye on th,e
lenses.
·
Jerry Diehl, assistant director
of the National Federation of .
State High School ~sociations
in Indianapolis, said his group
doesn 't believe the lenses provide the competitive advantage
that Nike claitns.
· The federation allows the ·
lenses and puts them in the same
category as sunglasses or corrective lenses. The NCAA also
allows the sports lemes because
it considers them similar to .,~unglasses .
te~e bulk of the business we . But Diehl said he's worried
expect will be with the college, about the perception of an unfair
high school type athlete who is advantage.
·
really looking for that edgy,"
"If one affluent ream can get
Nike spokeswoman Joanie this, it forces everybody else to
Komlos said. "We've seen that Ro out and do that," Diehl said.
sales are far exceeding our Is it really something that
expectations,and we're going to makes a d1fference? In this
continue to roll out distribu- instance, at this juncture anylion."
way, it doesn't seem to be any'
The sport lenses can be pur- better or any worse than allowchased only through a doctor's ing what is already under the
office at a cost of $80 per box, ruTe."
$160 if the prescription for each
Dr. ·william Jones. of
eye varies.
Nashville said price will keep
Dr. Jeff Kegarise, an some athletes from buying the
optometrist whose office is in lenses, but he expects them to be
Brentwood, has already pre- popular on high school athletics
scribed the lenses for college teams in wealthier school disbao;eball players, golfers, eques, trict~.

'

Trophy winners, A3
•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;;on·:NTS•Vol.-;-; , No.:!o(,

TI ' ISIJ\\

··

"

II ' I· (

'·

• "~~

·•

. , , _no

(

" \ \ \\ .m~thtil~,t.·ntjnel,t•om

t

Commissioners seek.end to ·missing money inve~tigation~~

SPORTS
• Hurricanes storm back.
See Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Commissioners have
called for a final resolution of.
the state investigation into the
theft of cash evidence from
the Meig s County -Sheriff's
office, so the county can
recover the money from its
insurance carrier.
Sheriff Robert Beegle said
Sunday ·the commissioners
have asked him to request a
conclusion of the Ohio Bureau
of Criminal Investigation' s

case, whether or no·t suspects
are identified.
According to Commissioner
Jim Sheets, the in surance
company will not pay the
county's claim for the stolen
money until the investigation
is closed. The county stands to
recover $11,070 of the
$20,000 reported stolen a year
ago.
'
"We have asked the sheriff
to contactthe BCI investigator
and to ask for a conclusion of
the case," Sheets said.
Beegle first discovered the

money was missing fr~m the
department's evidence room
and a locker in the county jail
on May 6, 2005. Part of the
money - $11 ,070 - · was
being held as evidence in -a
county-level felony drug case.
The rest of the cash had been
stored ·at the sheriff's depanment by Middleport Police
Depanment personnel without
his knowledge, Beegle said.
Beegle asked the state's
major crimes unit to investigate the case and interview
suspects because, he said, he

Deputies· arrest 23 for.
non-payment of fines
. STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Beegle said.
"They had learned that
deputies had been to their
POMEROY
-Meigs ·homes on Friday and came in
County sheriff 's deputies to pay them," Beegle said.
arrested 23 people and colBeegle said another "roundlected over $2,200 in old up" is planned in early July.
fines during a "round-up" on
"We will continue to exeFriday.
c ute the warrants issued
Shenff Robert Beegle said against people paying their
32 warrants for unpatd fines old fines," Beegle said.
were served, and those arrestBeegle saitl he has also
ed appeared. before County · begun a program of sending
Court Judge Steven L. Story. postcards to those who have
Others who were not served not paid in an an attempt to
learned of the collection collect fines and to encourage
effort and reported to court on those with unpaid fines to
Monday to pay on their fines , make payment arrangements.

.OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Otto A. Marcinko ·
• Doris Augusta Koenig

INSIDE
MODEL LT 1040
LAWN TRACTOR

RZT42
ZERO-TURN RIDER

• 42" huvy-duty t'Nin·bladt niowlnt dtd
• 18 HP' Kohlor" Courop" OHV ...lno.
• Potontod SmlrtJol• hilh·-•w• dt&lt;k .
wuhlnf oyolom
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ZE
SALE S1,499'*

wanted no appearance of a case .
Beegle has said emp loyees
conflict of interest in the
investigation. BCI will not of his department have subcomment on the status of the mitted to polygraph examinacase, because the . investiga- tions re lating .to . the case:
lion is considered ongoing.
while others have refused.
The county's case against Middleport village employees
Elisha "Lacey': Dickens of have also been subjects of the
Middleport has now been con- · i-nvestigation , because part of
eluded and the defendant sent the missing cash originated
to prison. She.ets $aid a deter- from a Middlepon cri minal
mination mu st be made as to case.
how the money. once received
The. balance of the missing
from the insurance company. money is MiddlePQt1's to colwill be used, because of it s lect, Sheets said, and is not a
connection to that cr.iminal part of the county's claim.

..•~.Negotia!Q@ to m!!et.on,. ·

1~q;;hi:trricarn&amp;'l'l!llf
fy~9ing bHI. S...P.ge A2 .

• 42" twln-bladt 3-ln~t mowlna dKk

• 17 HP' KeNt,- CourtJt"• OHV eosine
• Pivotlns 1nd arus•bl• froot axle

• Class of 1954
celebrates anniversary.
See Page A3

z

·

·

Beth Sergent;phota

Brother and sister Madison and Tyler Fields (background) take turns trying to win a game of
cornhole whtle Noah HaJIVand (foreground. left) attempts to keep score along with Kristen
Chevalier, staff mer.nber of the county Abstinence Buildings Character Program which is hostIng free youth events at both the Syracuse and General James Hartinger Parks. Events are from
9 a.m. to noon, and 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., Monday-Friday, all summer long.
·

SALE sz,599"

•

SUMMER LONG YOUTH
EVENTS KICK OFF IN MEIGS
HANDHELD PRODUCTS
• Variety of premium 11rin1 trimmtrt
fnd Wowtf1 •VIIItblt
• /\Ilk oboulolhor Iauth handhela pt'Odur;tt

trom Cull Ctdot

a

BY BETH SERGENT
Center.
every week, creating kind of
BSERGENT&lt;il'MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
The evenls are organized roaming community center
and under the direction of atmosphere near the pools,
SYRACUSE - Yesterday staff from the county giving kids an alternative to
was the officia] kick off to Abstinence Builds Character sitting on the couch aH sumsummer youth events planned (ABC) Program .
mer.
for both the Syracuse and
According
to
ABC
Yesterday kids partic;ipatGeneral James Hartinger Activities Coordinator Danny ing in the . event s at the
Parks for county youth. ·
Thomas this week's youth · Syracuse Park were going
These free youth events are activities in both Syracuse back and forth between the
from 9 a.m. to noon, and l and Middleport include uhi- ga mes and a dip in the
p.m. to 4 p.m., ·Monday - mate f~isbee, basketball ,. soc- London Pool.
·
Friday, throughout the sum- cer, and cornhole which is
Many of the children qualmer. In the event of rain the similar to horseshoes but itied for free pool passes disevents will be mt&gt;Ved to the played with bean bags.
tributed through the ABC proSyracuse Community Center
Thomas said different
and Middleport's Family Life activ.ities will be planned
Pleese see Youth,·AS

CC989
3 ~1N-1 SELF-PROPELLED MOWER ·
• Z1" atHI mow1n1 dec:k with 'cyctoCut"' srstem

• 5.5 HP' ftond ../1\RCS enelno
• 3-in-1 'onwtrtlblt cu"i"' 'Y'''m with front

caater wheela

,

• Clinic wins 2006 Aster
Award recognition.
See Page A3
• Governor signs bill
limiting government
. spending. See Page AS

STARTING AT S169.. SALE s399··

WEAmER

Bob Evans Farms shows Ohio~ coal mining roots .
BY MtCHELLE MtLLER
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

YOUR LOCAL~Y OWNED
CUB CADET RETAILER KNOWS
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INDEX
SEcnoNsCalendars
2

Classifieds
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ct.JrpJWill bt n~.,. "'' Jlro"'~ P'""r.lw!&amp;• ~~ 1~&gt;'&gt;$11'~ 1!1 'I", P"l tl'ol ;&lt;910!0 p-.l' t hn~ krf.o.,/1111'1 ~ ...ili:n li !Tll)fll ~. tnol,lliJfl ~ IW'l *""en Cu. foe mi111T m nmt!!lf;lt~ Mill'; ntho!r wiMt M "")'&lt;U'•t.:oxl,llll j ,.u It I to lllct"' Mhtr t oncillllll, d$1*-a.J "'"~o !erlfl
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Editorials
Obituaries

'

Sports
Weather

12 PAGES

A3
83-4

Bs
A3
A4
As
BSection
As

@ 2006 Ohio V,a ll cy Publishing Co.

'.

RIO GRANDE - Deep in
the bowels of Ohio's hill country, men and women have long
depended on mining coal, also
known as "black diamonds,"
·for their lively hood.
Bob Evans Farm Homestead
Museu·m honors the long history of mining in their newest
exhibit "Diamonds in the
Rough: The Legacy of Coal
Mining in Ohio's Hill
Country."
Located in their rotating display, an area that last year
housed an exhibit on., the
Underground Railroad, the
mining exhibit displays arti.
Michelle Miller/photo
facts and historical tidbit s Pictured is an authentic canary cage used by miners . Acanary
ranging from the beginnings of was taken into the mine as an early warning system for a buildthe coal mining industry to up of deadly gases, such as methane.
present day.
Bob Evans Fi!.rms teamed up of Black Diamonds Council in the early days. Miners arc
with Ohio's 'Hill Country, provid~d the histoi:ical text. often pictured c&lt;u;rying their
Wayne
National
Forest All of the ani facts come from pails at the elbow, a necessity
Service, and Little Cities of an anonymous donor's per- when ~rawling through the
Black Diamonds. The forest sonal collection.
tight passages of a coal mine.
service provided most of the . 'Someoftheartifactsinclude
Plene see Coal, AS
pictures. while the Little Cities lunch pails carried by miners

~

'

-- ---L- -.....---,- - - - --

Charlene Hoenlch/ photo

Jenn ifer Payne displays some of ·the materials she has
received about the People to People Ambassador Programs in
preparation for he r upcoming trip to Austral ia.

Meigs student sel,ected for
Student Ambassador program
Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
MlDDLEPflRT - Jennifer
Payne of Middleport. ~vho
will enter her freshman year
at Meigs High School in the
fall , has been selected for participation in the People to
People Student Ambassador
Program.
The program is described as
a 20-day adventure - this
year tak111g place in Australia
·. It is for junior high and middle ·school students selected to
participate on the basis of
the ir
academic
skill s.
Jennifer. 14, ·rhe daughter
of Kimhcrl y· Payne of
Ernest
Middleport
and
Mundell of Bidwell. said that
she will be _ traveling to
Australia with groups from
Ohio. We st Virginia and
Penn sy lvania. They will leave
from Charleston. W. Va . on

-----,.

,,

Jtily 14.
The emphasis of the
Ambassador program i' on
providing international educationa.l opportunities where
journeys are combined with
hands-nn cultural experience,
behind the scene access to
fascinating people and places,
and outdoor adventures.
The schedule call s for a
wide variety of experience
including ~norkeling ; taking a
gondola into the rainforest,
i..nteracting wi th the local
Aboriginal people about theit
culture and traditions, v.isiting
a wi ldlife park, learning about
the government, . explorin g
old shipwrecks, v1ewmg. the
cos mopolitan city of Sydney,
and working with a marine
biologist.
The students will be living
in private home s with local

Please .see Student. AS
•I

�'

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•

The Daily Sentinel

II

Page.A2-

NATION • WORLD
Negotiators to meet on Iraq,
in
EU
hurricane relieffunding bill
crisis.
to

Tuesday, June 6, 2006

Public meetings
Tuesday, June 6
ALFRED Orange
Township Trustees, 7:30
p. m, at the home of Clerk
Osie Follrod.

Management
Agency's
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Disaster Relief Fund.
The overall limit has meant
WASHINGTON - Hoping dumping o; dramatically sealto speed approval of war ing back Senate initiatives like
fund s, House-Senate negotia- $4 billion in agriculture disasters were to meet Tuesday ter assistance to farm'ers to
evening on legislation to pay help them deal with high fuel
for the missions in Iraq and prices and damage from
Afghanistan and for hurncane floods and droughts last year.
relief alon~ the Gulf Coast. .
The move promises to dismay
After llllS~mg a Me~onal Senate GOP sponsors of the
Day deadhne, negottato~s . farm aid such as Conrad Burns
hope to seal agreement this · of Montana, embroiled in a.
week. ~e Wh1t~ House sa:~:s a very difficult re-election bid..
money crunch. ts threatenmg . An additional $648 million
!fiihtary operattons ~d tram- obtained by Sen. Robert Byrd,
mg accounts, espectally for D-W.Va., to beef up security at
the Army, and could slow U.S. ports is to be dropped,
trammg and equtppmg of lraqt . h'l $! 2 b'IJ'
· 'd 'or
soldiers
w I e . I ton m at ''
"It's. · imperative
that .the Gulf Coast fishing and
Congress finish its work and seafood industry obtained by
get this to the president 10 Sen. Ricltard Shelby, R-Ala.,
sign,"
said
Pentag9 n will be sharply scaled back.
spokesman Bryan Whitman .
Meanwhile, a conservative
.. "T!ris S!lpplemental went up in group announced an ad camFebruary. It's now June." He paign· in three· states aimed at
said the Army will impose a ,pressuring Senators to drop
civilian hiring freeze Tuesday several controversial homesand has cut spending on spare tate projects from the bill. Top
AP Plloto
The European Union fore ign policy chief Javier Solana, talks to the media upon arrival at parts, transportation and trav- among · the ,targets of
Americans for Prosperity is a
Mehrabad airport in Tehran as Germany ambassador in Iran Baron Paul Von Maltzahn,right, looks el.
House
Appropriation s $700 million Senate plan to
on. Monday. Solana arrived in Tehran late Monday, carrying a Western incentives package
Committee
Chairman
Jerry pay CSX Transportation to
designed to coax Iran to stop its uranium enrichment program and told reporters at Tehran air·
Lewis,
R-Calif.,
and
Senate
abandon a recently repaired
port that the West wanted "to start a new relationsh ip on the basis of mutual respect and trust."
counterpart Thad Cochran, R- freight rail line to Mississippi
'
Miss., are leading the talks and to use the right of way for a
•
that could be reprocessed for Iran might have caught rei Monday.
nuclear anns and a guaran- Tehran's top officials off . Iran is the world's fourth- . have agreed to live· within a new East-West highway.
teed supply of fuel as well as guard.
largest oil exporter and the White House demarid that the
President second-largest producer 'in emergency fundin~ bill be
Iranian
an offer to supply Eun;&gt;pean
Airbus aircraft for Tehran's Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, the
Organization
of limited to $92.2 bilhon for the
normally a hardline critic of Petroleum
civilian fleet.
· Exporting Iraq and Afghanistan wars and
hurricanes- plus $;l.3 billion
Diplomats
revealed the Uriited States who insists Countries.
to
combat bird flu.
Monday that Washington has that Tehran has a right to
In Washington, White
The underlying bill would
sweetened the offer original- enrichment-, said over the House spokesman Tony
ly drawn up by France; weekend that a breakthrough Snow urged reporters to provide ·about $66 billion for
Britain and Germany by say- in negotiations was possible withhold
judgment
on Pentagon costs such as miliing it will lift some bilateral and welcomed the U.S. offer Khamenei's remarks until tary oper&lt;)tions . '\"d mainteFREE Mf7 Technical Support
sanctions on Tehran such as to join talks, while rejecting Iran has had a chance to ' nance, weapons procurement, . •• Instant
Me!168glng- keep ~r buddy list!
personnel and an initiative to
a ban on sales of Boeing pas- preconditions.
• 10 e-mail &amp;ddrMses with WebmaWI
weigh the package.
. senger aircraft and · related
But Iran's supreme leader
"Let people look at it," he locate and disarm roadside · • Custom Start Page. news, weather &amp; moral
parts if Iran agrees to an Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said. "I understand why bombs. Another approximatethreatened to disrupt the commodities markets may be ly $20 billion would go for
enrichment freeze. ·
One of the diplomats also world's oil supply if Tehran unsettled by a comment like hurricane relief and reconSign Up Online! www.Loe~~INet.com
said in the package agreed is punished over its nuclear that, . but over time, if this struction, including new and
on Friday, Washington would program, reflecting Tehran's succeeds, the commodities rebuilt flood control projects
Ce ll Today &amp; Savel
for New Orleans, ,bousing aid
be prepared to take some nervousness.
markets are going to be very
"dual-use" technology off its
Kharnenei on the weekend happy and so should we all for Louisiana an&lt;( replenishing
the
Federal Emergency
banned list of exports to Iran. said the United States and its be."
The tenn is used for products allies would be unable· to
and material that have mili- secure oil shipments passing
tary as well l!S civilian uses. out of the Gulf through the
Iranian officials have sent strategic Strait of Hormuz to
conflicting signals on the ini- the Indian Ocean.
Although other Iranian
tiative, reflecting a possible
struggle within the leader- ·officials have repeatedly
ship on how to react. ruled out using oil as
Additionally, the -U.S. offer weapon, his comments proto join in direct talks with pelled oil prices to $73 a bar-

BY NASSER KARIMI
TEHRAN , ,Iran - The
European Union foreign policy chief brought a Western
packa~e of incentives and
penalties to Iran Monday ni
an effort to coax the hardline government to .stop uranium enrichment and defuse
an international crisis.
· Javier Solana told reporters
at Tehran airport that the
West wanted "to start a new
relationship on the basis of
mutual respect and trust."
' He was to meet Tuesday
with
Iranian
Foreign
Minister
Manoucbehr
Mottaki and chief nuclear
negotiator Ali Larijani.
·
Mottaki, who returned
from Oman short! y before
Solana arrived, said the EU
and Iran would launch what
he tenned "shuttle diplomacy" in an effort to overcome
differences about Tehran's
disputed nuclear program.
He did not elaborate.
Solana said he believed the
package of rewards and
threatened
punishments
would "allow. us to engage in
negotiations based on trust,
respect and confidence."
The six-nation package
offers economic and political
incentives if Tehran relinquishes domestic uranium
enrichment, which can be
used to generate power but
can also produce weaponsgrade uranium for nuclear
warheads.
The offer a~reed on in
Vienna on Fnday by the
· U.S., Russia, France, Britain
and China - the five pennanent U.N. Security Council
nations - plus Germany,
also contains the implicit
threat of U.N. sanctions if
Iran remains deftant.
.
· In a breakthrough last
week, the United States
agreed to join in multination
talks on the package if
Tehran suspends enrichment.
Details of the basket of
perks and penalties have not·
been made public. But an
earlier draft shared in part
with The Associated Press
offered help in building
nuclear reactors that produce
reduced amounts of waste

Clubs and
organizations
Tuesday, June 6
MIODLEPORT
·
Middleport
Loge
363
· F&amp;AM, 7:30p.m. with wmk ,
in entered apprentice degree. 1
Members to take non-perish-

\
I
I

I

, .

BY KIM GAMEL

. ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER .

..

.,

L

Elbert and Della
Bever Gillilan family, noon
to 4 p.m. at the Kyger C(eek
Club House. Take covered
·dish. Lunch is at l p.m.

Church events

Friday, June 9
MIDDLEPORT
Widow's Fellowship potluck
picnic, noon. Dave · Diles
Park.
·

Reunions ·
Sunday, June 11
CHESHIRE Reunion

Tuesday, June 6, 2006 -

Birthdays

Thursday, June 8
REEDSVILLE - Lillian
Pickens of Reedsville will be
89 on T hursday. Cards may
be sent to her at the Arcadia
Nursing Home, East Main
Street, Coolville,
Ohio
45723.

DEAR ABBY: I am a 36' '
separated from her husband tO..
year-old female. I ' have been
two years. Although she seem.s
dating this guy I'll call "Louie"
' me and my son.
10 care a 1ot .or
for more than two years. He
she has not yet ac:.cep1ed my
·never told me he had anyone
proposal of marriage.
else. But one day he let it slip
Dear
Her husband comes around
that he had been living with this
several times a month 10 do
woman, "Grace," for more than
Abby
work around the house and
10 years.
even balances her checkbook
I'm not the type to break up a
home. Had 1 known, r never
for her. They own several pieces
would have dated him. By the
of property together and botll
time I found out, I was in love Lo · ·gh 1d PI
h1
have good incomes_
.
ute mt
o. ease e P me.
I have expressed my con.with Louie, and he said he felt - CONFUSED IN TEXAS
the
about me.
DEAR CONFUSED: By cerned aboul what is keeping
I never knew exactly where lhow, [hope you realize that the . h~r from gomg ahead ,wtth . ~
Louie lived or had his home father of your child is married. d1vorce. She clmms she s wall-,
phone number, but I did have There were many flashing red mg for, her husband lo •file - .
his cell phone number. lights in your romance with and ,he s not ready yet 1 I say
Whenever I'd call, it was either Louie - the first ones beino they re both hangmg on to each
turned off or he wouldn't that you didn't know where h~ other because neither of I hem is
answer, finally, I called infor- lived and his unwillingness to ready. to move on with their
mation and got his home num- give you a working phone num- lives_ Should I wait? Or should
her, but I have never used it.
ber. That's when you should I give up and hope to meet
Now, two years later, we have have refused to become further · someone who is available for a
a · child together. None of his involved.
.
nice gt1y who has a lot oflove to family members know about
I urge you to mail the papers share ' - PATIENT IN CALl"
our little girl. He says he does you have filled out to the court FORNI A
not want anyone to know right 'f9DAY. Do .i! for your little
DEAR PATIENT: Your lady
now - especially Grace. He glfl, because tt s the. only way friend may be separated, but she
says she would leave him, take her deadbeat father w1ll meet sounds very married 10 me. If
half his be)opgings and sue him hts obhgauons to her: Do not be she were in love with you, she:
for a!inlony.
surpnsed ~hen Lou1e pretends would have' already gone aheail
He has given me less than to be the m;ured pany. Dunng
.hh .
.
.
$360 in child support since I this entire ume he has thought Wit . er dt vorce_My advice to
gave birth. Louie says if J sue only about himself Also, you IS to move on. At the rate
him for child support, things because he has threatened you, lhts romance ts gomg, you
will get nasty. He says he will you need a lawyer to advise could wmt forever.
make my life a living hell . I you. You may have to go to the
~ea~ Abby is written by
hardly ever see him anymore. police to make sure his threats Ab1gml Van Buren, also
What is a woman supposed to . are on record. It's a first step to known as Jeanne Phillips, and
do? I think he's afraid of Grace. getting a restraining order was founded by her mother,
I want. to sue him for child sup- should you need one.
Pauline Phillips. ffiile Dear
port, and I have the papers filled
DEAR ABBY: For the last Abby at www.DearAbby.com
out and sealed, but haven't year I have been involved with or P.O. Box 69440, Los
mailed them yet for fear of what a lovely wm:nan who has been Angeles, CA 90069.

same

Busy Memorial Day in Portland, pie
contest and horse show Tesults posted

Work Without Limits

Mosa called on ai-Maliki to
did nothing."
Another
transportation use his constitutional authority
worker, Amjad Hameed, said to fill the posts.
BAGHDAD,
Iraq
15 cars rushed into the area
The State Department also
Gunmen in police unifonns and the random seizures stressed the im{Xlrtance of .fillstaged a brazen daylight raid began, "We asked them why ing the positions to complete
on bus stations in central but nobody replied," he said.
al-Maliki's government of
Baghdad on Monday, kidnapThe
Shiite-dominated national unity, which took
ping at least 50 people, includ- Interior Ministry, which over- · office just over two weeks ago.
mg . travelers, merchants and sees the police and has been
"I know that there are very
vendors selling tea and sand- accused of backing militias in active discussions under way
wiches.
· sectarian violence, denied its right now to fill those posiThe operation was a direct forces were behind the attack. , lions. We think that that is
challenge to Prime Minister
' AI-Mohamedawi and ihe important We hope that that,
Nouri ai-Maliki's efforts to ministry said at least 50 people in fact, occurs in the very near
restore security ·in the capital, were abducle&lt;:!.
future," State Department
which has . been hard hit by
There have been other mass spokesman Sean McCormack
Sllicide attacks, roadside kidnappings in Iraq. In a simi- said.
.
{B:lmbs and sectarian death larly audacious attack, gun"That will send an important
squads.
men dressed as Interior signal to the Iraqi people that
Gunmen arrived at mid- Ministry commandos stonned they have a full government
morning Monday and began into the al-Rawafid Security working on their behalf, esperandomly ' grabbing people in Co.'s east Baghdad headquar- cially in those positions where
the shabby business district, ters and took away 50 people, you woulq have individuals
where several transportation many of them fanner military that would be free from the
companies are based and personnel from Saddam taint of association with mili-·
buses pick up pass~ngers Hussein's regime. Those lias," he added.
bound mostly for Jordan, workers have not ~n heard
The Bush · ·administration
Syria and Lebanon, Lt. Col. . from since the March 8 auack. hopes a unity goveinment will
Falah al-Mohamedawi said.
Monday's kidnapping was drain support fer the Sunni-led
Both Shiites and Sunnis work the ll\test in a series of setbacks · insurgency and restore order in
-in the area.
for al-Maliki. The Shiite prime Baghdad and elsewhere in the
The attackers blocked the minister has also been frustrat- country, enabling the United
roads ancl beat people before ed in his efforts to crack down · States to begin withdrawing its
putting bags on the captives' on sectarian and militia vio' forces.
heads and leading to vehicles lence in the oil-rich southern·
In the meantime, about
one-by-one, a witness told an city of Basra, where auacks 1,500 U.S. combat troops have ·
Iraqi television station. They have been unabated despite his been moved from Kuwait to
herded their victims into more declaration of a state of emer- Sunni-dominated
Anbar
than a dozen vehicles, accord-,, gency on Wednesday. .
province some 70 miles west
And ai-Maliki still has not of Baghdad to help restore
ing to witnesses and officials.
·
"They took all the workers been able to reach consensus order.
On Monday, U.S.-Ied forces
from the companies and neai" among Iraq's ethnic and secby shops," said Haidar tarian parties on candidates for fired artillery at the train staMohammed Eleibi, who interior ·and defense minister tion in Anbar's provincial capw.orks
for
the
Swan - posts he must fill to imple- · ita! of Ramadi, ''largeting four
Transportation Co. in the ment his ambitious plan to . military-aged males unloading
take control of Iraq's security a weapons cache." ·
Salibiya area.
,
A hospital official', Dr. Omar
He said his br,p'ther and a from U.S.-led forces within IS
al-Dule1mi, said , American
cousin were among those months.
, Fonner Prime Minister Ayad forces killed five civilians and
taken .away, along with merchants, passers-by and even Allawi's secular Iraqi List wounded 15. The U.S. military
men ·selling tea and sand- party criticized the latest delay said the mission had "positive
in 'lfiOOII!ICing the new minis: effects on the target," but it
wiches.
: "They did not give any ters, insisting "they should be · denied that civilians were
reason for it;" he said. national independent figures." killed or injured in the city
"P.olice came afterwllfd and Lawmaker Hameed Majid west of the capital.

&lt;if the

Tuesday, June 13
·
POMEROY
Meigs
Wednesday, June 7
' Wednesday, June 7
County
Chamber
of
PAGEVILLE
- Scipio
GUYSVILLE -Revival
Township Trustees, regular Commerce, business minded with
Encoumgers from
meetmg, 6:30p.m., Pageville luncheon, noon, Pomeroy · Elkview, W.Va., 7 p.m.
Library, catered by Pomeroy
.Town Hall.
Evangelizing
for
Jesus
RACINE
- - Financial McDonalds, choice of sand- Worship Center, off Route
wich
wrap
and
salad,
RSVP
Planning and Supervision
. Commi ssion meeting for 992-5005 by June 9 for 50 between Parkersburg,
W.Va. and Athens, 3 4110
Southern Local Schools , salad preference. ·
mile. 667-6040.
I 0:30 a.m., Southern High
Wednesday,
June
7
Tom
BRADBURY
School.
·
·
TUPPERS PLAINS Shelton, a gospel singer and
RACINE
Southern
Meeting
of
Eastern
Athletic
evangelist, will · be at the
Local School Board, special·
Meigs
aoosters
to
discuss
Bradbury Church of Christ,
meeting to discuss personCounty
Fair
oooth
and
its
7
p.m. A freewill offering
nel, 8 p.m.; Southern High
continuation,
7
p.m.,
football
will
be taken.
School.
field. Questions to 667-3316.
Saturday, June 10
Thursday, June 8
Thursday,
June
8
VINTON - Clark Chapel
. MIDDLEPqRT
CHESTER - Shade River Free Will Baptist Church
Middlepo11 Vtllage Council
finance committee, · ~ p.m,, Lodge 453 to hold meeting, service announced for June
7:30 p.m . at the hall. I0 for a family get-together
council . chambers.
Refreshments_
has been canceleo. Services
TUPPERS PLAINS Thesday, June 13
will be held each Saturday
POMEROY - . Bedfard VFW Post 9053, meal at evening after June 10 at 6:30
Township Trustees, 7 p.m. at 6:30 p.m ., followed by 7 p.m.
p.m. meeting.
the town tutll.
•

.·Dozens
kidnapped in Baghdad
.
In new challenge to government
..

able food items for Grand.
Master's food program.
Refreshments.
CHESTER
Chester
Council 23, 7:30 p.m. at the
Chester Masonic Temple.

PageA3

Woman should call the bluff ofdeceptive deadbeat dat:Z

Community Calendar

Bv ANDREW TAYLOR

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BY THE. BEND

The Daily Sentinel

'

New Holland Skid Steer

I

PORTLAND - Memorial
Day in Po11land was a busy
one with . musical ·entertainment. a memorial service,
antique tractors, a pie contest
and horse show sharing the
· spotlight in the small but
busy community..
The majority of the events
Look place at the Portland
Community Center which
was the. place to be as th~
bluegro~ss group Never Too
Late took · the stage in the
gymnasium. ,
Outside, in the new horse
show ring, a large crowd
gathered for the Ohio River
Producer's Horse Fun Show.
The Ohio River Producers
are a group of alumni from
the Southern Racine FFA .
The results for the horse
fun show are as follows: Flag
race, Shannon Brown; egg-nspoon, Emi ly Manuel; four
corners, Matthew Jackson;
speed and control, Miranda
McKelvey ; catalog race,
Michelle Sayre; down and
back, Miranda McKelvey;
walk trot, Madison Scott;
western · pleasure, Ashley
Savage; youth poles, Mallory
Hill; cones and · barrels,
Miranda McKelvey; pee-wee

Submitted photo

Those attending the PHS Class of '54 afternoon party before the al~mni banquet on Memorial
Day weekend Included from, the .left, front, Gloria Mcintosh , Joanne Vu(lhan, Martha Serve,
Rosalie Story, Lela Ervlrl, and Madeline Painter; and back, Richard Vaughan , Earl White, Richard
Leifheit, Don Yeauger, Don Reuter, Ray Hines and Howard Kitchen , Not in the photo but attend:
ing was Anne Chapman.
'

Class of 1954 celebrates anniversary:
Undo McTumer/plloto

The bluegrass group Never Too Late with Carole and Cheryl
.Hackett and Steve Wise take the stage during the Portland
Community Center's Memorial Day Celebration.
barrel (I 0 and 1lnder) Russen
Beegle; youth barrel (Il-lS
years), Mallory Hill ; open
poles. Mallory Hill, first
place, Todd Tripp, second
place; open barrels, Miranda
McKelvey,
first
place,
Mallory Hill, second place.
Lyndee Sulton was the
judge for the walk-trot and
western pleasure classes.

The ribbons and awards
were sponsored by a variety
of area businesses who supported the horse fun . show
and made the .event possible.
Winners in the Portland
Community Center's pie
baking contest were, Donna
Bogart who took both first
and third place, and Wanda
Teaford who placed second.

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy High School Class of
1954 held a party in celebration
of its 52nd graduation anniversary on May 27 at Bradford
Church Activity Center prior to
the PHS Alumni banquet.
.The afternoon was spent
reminiscing.about school days.
Class members enjoyed look-

ing at pictures and reflecting on
people
and
activities.
Members unable to . attend or
deceased were remembered .
It was noted that there were
52 graduates in the class, 14 of
whom attended. Seven ·are
deceased.
.
A table of memorabil ia
included a photo album bought

in memory of Martha Stowe
Dudding now filled with
school memorabilia and pictu res.
Door prizes were won by .
Don Yeauger and Joanne
Vaughan. Refreshments were
served and plans were discussed for a party again next
year.

Clinic wins 2006 Aster Award recognition

GALLIPOLIS
The well as honored in the Marketing Heallhcare Today,
Aster Awards, hosted by May/June issue of the . magazine.
Marketing Healthcare Today - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . , .
and Creative Images Inc., is a
national level healthcare marketing awards program recognizing healthcare institutions
and advertising agencies for
excellence in advertising.
Holzer Clinic was honored ·
with a Bronze award in this
year's
compehtton .
With nearly 2,500 entries,
participants in the Aster
Awards compete against similarly-sized . organizations
from all across the United
States. Judging criteria
include creativity, layout and
design, typography, production quality, knowledge
transfer and overall excelBUY ONE m· 'I'H~:S..: LANE RJo:i:::LINiRS GET
lence.
ON f. OFTHF.s[ C~ JM R CHI:l iT FKEI!:! '
Participants receiving a
perfect score of I00 percent
receive the .coveted Judge's
Choice award.
·
"UL4.STER''
"Holzer Clinic exhibited
Hocker Recliner
outstanding · excellence in
healthcare marketing.scoring·
in the top 16 percent of the
'
juclging , process. It was an
BUY A.NY ON~-':
l 'HESE LA!o/IL Rl·:f'IJNF'kS
honor to have Holzer Clini c
&amp; GF.T ONE OF'TH£SE TABLE ntt'.J-~
participate in this year's
competition producing such
world-class marketing materials," said Randy Luca s,
Charlene Hoeftlchfphoto
corporate director of the
Second and third place' trophy winners in the Gold Wings and R[bs Festival motorcycle show · Aster Awards.
'
judging were from the left, John Shuler of Rutland, 1500 class, &lt;,~nd Kim Roush, Mason, open
The Aster Awards is the
class. both seconds; and Bill Keeton , Sandwich, Ill., trik class. Chris Weaver, open class. and fastest growing healthcare
awards programs in the
Dick Smith, 1500 class, all third places in their respective categories.
nation . Entries were judged
by a prestigious punel of
'Son sr6w for dtttaWs
'
individuals, who ate al l
experts in the fie ld of heal Ill care marketing. All winners
~~ ~ ~~ ~l .th ~~~~utv - • l u~'l'l'l' Pl.11n"' 111 1
are posted on the official web
It
nil' \],ndll
I , , d11
I•Hill
•, I . , '
The Daily SentiAel • Subscribe ~oday • ' 992-2155 • www:mydailyaentinel.com
s
i'
1
e,
I -H00-20lHOO.'i or (7-!()) bh7-7.&gt;HH o ~
(www.AsterAwards.com), as L'T •I

Trophy winners

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Co11rt Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

·TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, June 6, the I 57th day of 2006. There are
208 days left m the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On June 6, 1944, the "D-Day" mvasion of Europe took
place during World War II as Allied forces stormed the beach·es of Normandy, France.
On th1s date
In 1606, French dramatist Pierre Corne lile was born in
Rauen.
In 1844, the Young Men's Chnstian Association was founded in London
In 1918, the World War I Battle of Belleau Wood, which
resulted in a U.S. victory over the Germans, began in France.
In 1925, Walter Percy Chrysler founded the Chrys ler Corp.
In 1934, the Secunties and Exchange CommiSSIOn was
established.
In 1966, black activist James Meredith was shot and
wounded as he walked along a Mississippi highway to
encourage black voter registration
In 1968, Sen. Raben F. Kennedy d1ed at Good Samaritan
Hospital in Los Angeles, a day after he was shot by Sirhan
Bishara Sirhan
·
Five years ago: Democrats lormally assumed control of the
U.S. Senate; the unprecedemed sh1ft m power came about
after the decision of Vermont Republican James Jeffords to
become an independent. AJury in Los Angeles awarded more
than $3 !Jillion to lif.elong smoker Richard Boeken, deciding
that tobacco giant Philip Morris was responsible for hts incurable lung cancer. (The jury award was reduced by a Superior
Coun judge to $100 Jmlhon, then cut to $50 million by an
appeals coun; the U.S. Supreme Court retused m March 2006
to consider tossing out .the award altogether; Boeken died in
2002.)
One year ago: The Supreme Court ruled 6-to-3 that people
who smoke marijuana because their doctors recommend it to
ease pain can be prosecuted for violating federal drug laws . A
judge upheld Democratic Gov. Christme Gregoire's victory
-by 129 votes- m Washington state's 2004 election. Actor
Russell Crowe was arrested for throwing a phone that hit a
hotel employee in New York City; he late1 pleaded guilty to
third-degree assault Death claimed actress Anne Bancroft at
age V3 and actor Dana Elcar at age 77 .'
Today 's Binhdays· Actress Billie Whitelaw is 74. Civil
nghts activist Roy lnms 1s 72. Smger Levi Stubbs (The Four
Tops) is 70. Singer-songwriter Gary "U.S." Bonds is 67.
Country singer Joe Stampley is 63 Actor Raben Englund is
57. Folk singer Holly Near is 57 Smger Dwight Twilley IS 55.
Playwright-actor Harvey Fierstein 1s 52. Comedian Sandra
Bernhard is 51. Tennis player Bjorn Borg is 50. Actress
Amanda Pays is 47 Comedian Colin Quinn is 47. Record producer Jimmy Jam i's 47. Rock musictan Steve Vm IS 46. Actor
Jason Isaacs Js 43. Rock musJcJan Sean Yseult (White
Zombie) is 40. Actor Max Casella is 39 Actor Paul Giamatti
is 39. Rhythm-and-blues smger Dammn Hall (Guy) JS 38.
Rock musicmn Bard1 Martin ts 37 Rock musician James
"Munky" Shaffer (Korn) is ·36. Country singer Lisa Brokop is
33. Rapper-rocker Uncle K~acker 1s 32 Actress Staci Keanan
is 3l.
Thought for Today: "To wm without risk is to triumph without glory."- Pierre Corneille, French dramatist ( 1606-1684).
I

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EDITOR
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adcJressing i.Hues, nut perwnalitws. Leiters of thanks to organizations and individuals wtllllol be accepted for publication.
'

I

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PageA4

Tuesday, June 6, 2006

Morton
Kondracke

National
Center
for
Women and Information
Technology, the percentage of women enrolled as
university computer-sci . ence maJors has reached
an all-time low despite
burgeoning opportunities
in the field
Regardless of the fact
that
computerization
accounts for much of
America's improved productivity- and is a growmg field of international
competition despite the
earl~ecade "tech bust"
- Sanders said a-pplications for college computerscience programs have
dropped 40 percent among
both men and women since
1990.
Girls represent only 15
percent of young people
takmg
Advanced
Placement tests in computer science, she said. And
girls make up less than 10
percent
of
computer
entrants in the Intel
Science Fair compet1twn
and 15 percent of bachelor ~s degree award~es at
~aJar res~arch unJversJt1es, she said .
"Women are entering
other science fields in
large numbers," she told
me. "But we're losing out
m 111formauon technology.
We've got to change its
image from 'geeky' to
'challenging."'
That's
not
strictly
Congress' business, of
course. Sanders' group is
backed by the Natwnal
Science FoundatiOn and
I0~ co~puter companie~,
umve~ sJttes and nonprofit
orgamzatwns that are trying to change school curricula and get girls to

..

I

enroll in computer camps
It also held a town meeting in Washington, D.C.,
earlier this month to devel op new strategies to get
women and rninonlles
involved 111 informati6n
technology.
On ·the larger issue of
overall U.S . competitiveness, it has finally gotten
through to Congress and
the Bu sh administration
over the past year that the
United States is in danger
of falling behind other
natiOns. especially China
and India, which are
devotmg major efforts to
sCJenti fie research , educallon and mdustrial development.
Sens. Lamar Alexander,
R- Tenn .,
and
Jeff
Bingaman, D-N .M .. triggered the new interest by
asking· for a National
Academy of Sciences
study, "R1sing Above the
Gatl1ering Storm ," warning that lhe United .States
was 111 danger of losmg its
technological
pre-emtnence.
Studies h~ve exploded
one widely repeated statistic included in that study
- that China graduates ·
600,000 new engmeers
each year; Indi a, 350,000
and the Un1ted States, on ly
. 70,000
One study showed th&lt;1l
the actual numbers arc
137,000 in the United
States; 112,000 111 India ,
and 350,000 in China, giving the United States the
lead in engineers per milhan of population. Still,
no one has challenged the
basic finding that China
and Jnd1a are swiftly
upgrading their sc1ence
and research programs and that represents a longterm threat to the United
States.
by
After
appeals
Alexander and several
House members, Bush
included a competitiveness
initiative in hi s State of the
Union address, ealling for
a doubling pf the budgets
of the National Science

Foundation and other
physical-science research
p1ugrams over I 0 year s
and expandi ng sc tence'
educallon
After the latest NAEP
scores we1e released ,
Alexander said they "Illus trate the urgency for.,
Congress to pass compre;:
hensive co mpetitivenes s
legislation th1s year."
Hi s
legJsl&lt;ltJOn ~
Protecting
Amenca·~
Competitive Edge Act, ha s·
70 co-spo nsors, but It ha s
yet to be marked up 1n the:
Senate Health , Education:!
Labor
and
Penswn s,'
Committee S1mliar legis:;
latJon ts scheduled fo(
markup in the House'
Science Committee afte1·,
the Memonal D&lt;~y recess ,
Meanwhile, even thoug~ .
the NAEP results show \1
sharp fall-off 111 science '
performance an)ong high:
sc hool students. similar tu:
'scores 111 math and read -"
1ng, Congress and the:
adnunistratJon have no
plans this year to revtvt;,
effolls to extend th~
NCLB
testing
ana·
&lt;fccountabliily
requ1re-·
ments to h1gh schools.
The adm1mstration made
an ill-fated stab at that in
200 I, but Jl was rebuffed
by Congress under pres::
sure from the natiOnal'
vocational
education·
lobby, whose funding theadm ini stratio n tri ed to
elimtnate to pay for
NCLB .
The Senate's immtgration bill contain s provi :.'
sions to attract foreign sc1!
entJsts and g1 aduale stu "
dents to the United States.
w1th green cards, ancl
that's good. But whaf
America needs is to educate its own kid s - boy s
and girls - to love &lt;tnd do,
science. R1ght now, we're:
still faJhng.
'"
(Morto11 Ko11dm cke t.l~
executive editm· oj Rolt
Call, the newspaper of
Capitol Hill.)
,,' '

Nat

Hentoff

the
Khartoum-dtrected
Janjaweed relentless
murderers and rapists attacked two villages in the
north of Darfur. As a New
York Times headline the
prevtous day all too accurately proclaimed: "Truce
Is Talk, Agony Is Real in
Darfur War."
That story told of ho\Y
the Janjaweed again broke
the so-called peace treaty,
attacking . the village of
Menawashie. They "killed
one woman, wounded six
villagers and raped 15
women."
"They told us," said a
villager, "you are slaves,
we will finish you. We will
not allow you to move
from Menawash1e, not one
kilometer." Added another
surv ivor,
Aish
Adam
Mou ssa: "They always say
peace is coming, but we
are still waiting."
· The core hole in the
quickly unraveling peace
treaty IS the promise of
Sudan President Omar
Hassan ai-Bashir to demobilize the Janjaweed fully,
and with verification, by
' mid-October
.
Says lsmael Haran m the
, Gaga refugee camp 111
Chad: "We know Omar
Hassan al-Bash1r. We have
seen him make agreements
and then break them 10
minutes later." , .
And tf the JanJawced
keep murdering and raping

lion human beings . i~
Dartur and (in refugee·
camps) pf easte rn Chad .
In essence, the victim s of
genocide are being askedto trust that the perpetra...
tors of genocide will d1s;.
arm and
restrain them-~
,
....
I
se ves
,.If, Reeves insists, thereIS not "a meaningful Inter::'
national Ioree" deployed to'
p1 otcct the surv ivors 111.'
Darfur. the international~
community w1ll sigh toO:
lat e and say,' alas , thah
peace treaty was ·'a mean;;
1ngless p1ece of paper" ~
My own view is that,
unless there Js a willin!f,
coalition of nations going;
outside the United Nations:;
and mto Darfur to rescue:
those sti ll waiting for.
delive1an ~e.
.1
message
will be se nt to other
nations who destroy their
own people. And president
al-Bashir WJII become the
patron saint of these future
perpetrat01 s of genocide.
George W. Bush , mo1e;
than any other world~
leader, has done a lot,
though not enough, to prevent the extermination of
the black Muslims of
Darfur. With that record :.
he can - . despite all his'
other problem s - glon-'.
ously enter hi story bY"
moving to exterminate th1s:
genocide by helping to.
organize a coa liti on of.
willing nation s while theJe ,
is still tune .
,
(Nat Hentoff '·' a nat ton alfy renow11ed authority 011
th e First Amendm ent · and
the Btl/ oj Rights and
l/Utlwr of many book.\,
i11cluding "The War 011 the
Bill of Right.\ and the
Gathenng
Resistance"
(Seven
Stories
Press.
2003 ! )

MEIGS COUN1Y COURT NEWS

REEDSVILLE - Otto A. Marcinko of Reedsville died
Saturday, June 3, 2006, in San Angelo, Texas. Funeral
arrangements are pend111g.

Doris Augusta Koenig
POMEROY- Dons Augusta Koenig, 94, Pomeroy, passed
away on Sunday, June 4 , 2006, at the Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center 111 Pomeroy.
'
She was born on July 9, 1911 in Keno to the late Peter A
.and Vida Myers 'Weber. She was a homemaker and a cook.
She attended the Church of Christ in Keno and was a member
of the United Methodist Church m Tuppers Plains. She was
also a member of Chester Council323, Daughters of Amenca.
She is survived by children, Dorothy (Bruce) Myers of
Long Bottom, Elsie (Donald) Hawk of Belleville, Ohio, and
Rick Koenig of Tuppers Plains; sist~rs, Wilma Haught of
Florida and Barbam Sargent, Pomeroy; and daughters-in-law,
Janette Koemg of · Mansfield, Norma Koenig of Little
Hocking, and Sandy Koenig of Chester; 16 grandchildren, 30
great-grandchildren, and 12 great- great-grandchildren.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her husband, Leonard Koenig, Sr., a daughter, VirJean Louise
Koenig, sons, Lloyd, Leonard and Donald Koenig, grandchldren, Lloyd Melvin Koenig, Jr, and a granddaugher, Chris
Ann Salser.
Funeral services will be held on Thursday, June 8, 2006 at
II :30 a.m. at the Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy with the
Rev. Jane Beattie officiatmg. Burial will followat the MasserKoenig Cemetery. Visitation will be held from 2-4 and 6-9
p.m. on Wednesday, June 7, at the funeral home.

Local Briefs
Plan reunions
POMEROY - The Cunmngham/lmboden family reunion
will be held at 2 p.m. on June 17 at General Hartinger Park.
Middle pan.
The Biriam-Hayman reunion will be held at I p.m. on June
25 at Forked Run State Park, shelter 2.

Bike winner
POMEROY - Sonny Reynolds of Point Pleasant took a
first place award 111 the motorcycle show open class at the
Gold Wings and Ribs Festival Saturday. H1s win was not ear'
lier announced.

Local weather

r

Daifur's continued killing and raping _
for months lo come - and
beyond October - who
will stop them ? After all,
al-Bashir has, for three
years, earnestly inSISted he
would
disarm
the
Janjaweed.
As of th1s· writing, the
United Nations has agreed
to send a U.N. force to bolster the greatly inadequate
African Umon momtors in ·
Darfur. but it Will take
months to organize a nd
provide for these U.N.
peacekeepers . And in the
village of Menawashie, the
survivors will still be wa1ting.
·
Reporting for the past 10
years 6n Khartoum's horriftc cnmes 1\gainst its own
people in the South, and
then 111 Darfur, I contmually keep reading, and talk111g to, the most authoritative c hroni cler of these
atrocities, Eric Reeves of
Smith
College
in
Massachusetts, who - as
Nicholas Kri staff noted in
the May 7 New York Times
- has financed h1s ceaseless campaign to. inform
the world of this genocide
"by taking a loan on his
house ."
As
Kristoff
adds,
Reeves, while trying to
· save untold lives in Darfur,
"has been fighting for h1s
(own) life, struggling in a
battle with leukemJU." But
I still can reach him on his
Web
site
and
(SudanReeves.org)
sometimes on the phone.
His analyses can also be
read
on
SudanTnbune.com. And in
the May 10 New Republic,
Reeves wrote that the May
5 peace agreement "at face
value amounts to an extraordinary gamble with th ~
lives of more than 3.8 mJI -

Obituaries
otto A. Marcinko

"

You may have believed
that a purported peace
treaty signed on May 5 by
Sudan's Khartoum government and a ma1n rebel
force 111 Darfur signaled, at
last, the end of the genocide 111 Darfur, and the displacement of 2.4 million
largely black Mushm survivors - alive for the time
betng. The facts on the
killing fields , however, are
that this treaty is a tragtc
illusion.
Two · weeks after the
signing, U.N . SecretaryGeneral Kofi Annan wrote
in the French daily, Le
Figaro, that "there is not a
second to lose .. the region
is undergoing the worst
humanitarian crisis gnp__.
ping the planet."
On the same day, Jan
Egeland,- the U.N.'s relief
coord inator, emphasized
on the Sudan Tribune's
Web site: "The next few
weeks will be make or
break. We can turn the corner toward reconciliatioo
and reconstruction, or we
see an even worse collapse
of our efforts to provide
protection and relief to
mi Ilions
of
people."
Earher, he had warned :
"The alternative to peace
through this agreemen t is
too horrendous for any of
us to contemplate " But on
May 18, the Sudan Tribune
reported that Khartoum
had "detained" two wellknown Sudanese humanrights activists " ... incommunicado, puttmg them at
of
torture
...
risk
Detainmg them sends a
clear message to VIctims of
rape and torture that no
one 111 Darfur who attempts
to stand up for the rights of
the victims JS sate."
Meanwhile, on May 15,

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Tuesday, June 6, 2006

New 'report card' shows Congress must act on science
Dismal new results on
U.S. student performance
in science ought to spur
Congress to pass President
Bush's competitiveness
agenda this year - and to
extend his "No Child Left
Behind'' program to high
schools
competitiveness
The
agenda - wh1ch includes
scholar&gt;'hips aimed at producmg I 0,000 mor,e science teachers per year as
well as increases 111 U.S.
research funding - has
bipartisan support but is
moving slowly through
Congress
Markups of key legislation have yet to take place
111 the House or Senate,
and leaders have yet to
schedule floor time for the
bills, which could represent a major success for
Congress this year
The need for actwn,
shown 0 ver and over by
poor U.S. student performance on national and
111ternational tests in math
and science, was demonstrated again las t week
w1th results of the latest
"national report card" on
science.
The
National
Assessment of Education
Progress showed a slight
improvement in science
test scores by fourth ·
graders from 1995 to
2005. no improvement by
eighth-graders
and
a
decline for 12th -graders.
I,t showed a narrowing of
traditional performance
gaps between white students and minorities in the
fourth grade, but no
improvement in the eighth
and a widening in the 12th.
Girls consistently performed slightly below
boys in all three grades.
Bills in both the House
and Senate corltain provisions to expand minority
participation in science,
but there's reason to think
extra steps should be taken
to get women into computer science.
to
Lucy
Accordmg
Sanders, CEO of the

www.mydailysejltinel.com

Tuesday ... Patchy fog in
the morning. Mostly sunny.
Highs around 80. East winds
around 5 mph ... Becoming
north around 5 mph in the
afternoon.
Tuesday nlght... Mostly
clear. Lows in the mid 50s.
North winds around 5 mph
in the evening ... Becoming
light and variable.
Wednesday ... Partly cloudy
with a slight chance of
showers and thunderstonns .
Highs around 80. North
winds around 5 mph .
Chance of rain 20 _percent.
Wednesday nlght...Partly
cloudy with a slight chance
of showers and thunder-

storms. Lows in the upper
50s. Nonh winds around 5
mph. Chance of rain 20 percent.
Thursday
~
through
Friday night...Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Lows in the lower 60s.
Saturday
through
Sunday ... Mostly
clear.
Highs m the lower 80s.
Lows in the upper 50s.
Sunday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
60s.
Monday ... Partly cloudy
with scattered showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the
1\pper 80s. Chance of rain
30 percent.

Local stocks

!

'

ACI-47
AEP-34.35
Akzo- 53.80
Ashland Inc. - 61.82
BLI-15.81
Bob Evans- 27.84
BorgWamer - 63.29
CENX- 39.89
Champion - 9.98
Channing Shops - 11.58
City Holding - 35.04
Col- 53.97
DG -15.55
DuPont - 42.43
Federal Mogul - .51
USB -31.26
Gannett - 53.66
General Electric - 34.22
GKNLY - 5.15
'
Harley Davidson - 49
JPM -42.97

Kroger - 19.77
Ltd.- 26.54

NSC- 51.80
Oak Hill Rnanclal - 27.21
OVB -25.20
BBT- 41.78
Peoples - 28.13
Pepsico - 59.75
Premier - 15.45
Rockwell- 87.40
Rocky Boota - 23.71
Seara - 159.44
Wai-Mart- 47.19
Wendy's - 58.81 .
Worthlncton -17.39
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions,
provided by Smith Rnanclal
Advisors of Hilliard Lyons In
Gallipolis.

POMEROY
Me1gs tJOn , dnving wh1le intoxicated
County Coun Judge Steven L. over .I 0; Ashley N. Floyd,
Story recently processed the Proctorville, $30 and costs,
following cases:
speeding ; Kenneth Foster,
Michael
L.
Adkms, Galloway, $30 and costs,
Syracuse, $200 and costs, speeding; Dennis D. Gillispie,
probation, no operators Shady Spring, W.Va., $30 and
license;
Rene
Armer, costs, seat belt viol11tion.
Charlotte, N.C., $30 and
Juanita Green, Shade, $30
costs, speeding; Donald D. and costs, seal belt violatiOn;
Arnold. Las Vegans, Nev. $30 Paul M. Grinch, Charlotte,
and costs, seat belt violation; N.C. , $30 and cost.~. speeding;
Fadi Asbahi, Gahanna, $20 David A. Hanes, Lowell, $30
and costs, improper passing; and costs, speeding; Gregory
Jason W. Atkinson, Charlotte, T. Hayman. Long Bottom.
N.C., $30 and costs , seat belt $30 and costs, seat belt viOlaviolation; Shawn L. A'Ztrip, tion; Matthew B. Haynes ,
Ashland , Ky., $30 and costs, Rutland, $30 and costs, seat
seat
belt
violation; belt VJOlanon; David A. Henl,
Chnstopher R. Ball, Long Pickerington, $50 and costs,
Bottom, $150 and costs, 180 probation, speeding; Robert
days 1n jail , 177 suspended, B. Hill, Athens, $50 and costs,
probation , no operator's speeding. Enc D. Hodgson,
license; Mta C. Bass, Columbus, $30 and costs,
Thomas
Syracuse, $20 and costs, stop speeding ;
s1gn; John R
Beaver, Holhngshead,
Kissimme,
P1ckenngton, $30 and costs, Fla., $50 and costs, speeding;
speeding; James M. Bradford, Erin S. Holman, Racine, $30
Allen, Okla., $30 and costs, and costs, 'seat belt violation;
se~t belt violation ; Davtd P Luke R. Holman, Syracuse,
Breece, Coll.lmbus, $30 and $90, 30 davs 111 jail, 27 suscosts, seat belt vtolaiion; pended, prObation, disorderly
Jeremy L. Brickles, Pomeroy, conduct, Jerry C. Horner,
$100 and costs, 20 days in Stockpon, $20 and costs, trafJail, 19 suspended, probation, fie coot dev./signs; Jessica E
disorderly conduct; Jennifer Hupp, Long Bottom, $20 and
S. Bump, Fulton, $30 and costs, assured clear distance;
costs, speeding; Arthur S. David P. King, Woodsfield,
Bumett, Boardman, $40 and $30 and costs, seat belt violacosts, speeding; Bret B. Bush, tion;
Lisa
M.
Koch,
Athens, $150, 20 days in jail, Gallipolis, $20 and costs,
suspended, probahon, no failed to y1eld; Nada
Kopcz111sky, Pomeroy, $150
operator's !Jcense,
Benjamin D. Carroll, and costs. stopped school bus
Ponland, $100 and cost:s, 180 violation; Jerry D. Lawson ,
days in ja1l, 177 suspended, Portland, $30 and costs,
probation, no operator 's speeding; Roger L. Layfield,
license ; William Cevallos, Parkersburg, W.Va., $30 and
Columbus, $30 and costs, costs, seat belt violation; Lori
speeding,
Joseph
P. A. Leasure, Pomeroy, $150,
Chandraraj, Columbus, $30 30 da~s ·in Jail, suspended,
and costs, speeding; Paul probation, attempted possesChodak, Granville, $50 and sion; James P. Lee, Marietta,
costs, speeding; Brett T. $30 and costs. speed111g;
Collins, Pomeroy, $30 and Jonathan W. Lee, Albany, $30
costs, seat belt violation; and costs, seat belt violation,
Anita M. Corrova, Columbus, $20 and costs, display plates I
$50 and costs, speeding; va!Jd stkker; Steve A.
Jason E. Counts, Syracuse, Lenigar, Pomeroy, $20 and
$125 and costs, I0 days in costs, failure to control, Linda
jail, suspended, probation, no A Leonard, South Point, $30
operator's license; Melvin R. and costs, speedmg; Carey L.
Dailey, Long Bottom, $10 and Loar, Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
costs, open container in .M.V.; seat belt violation ; Stanley E.
John L. Daniels, Albany, $20 Lonck, Ctrcleville, $30 and
and costs, failure to re,gister; costs, seat belt violation;
Allen
E.
Davidson, Corey A. Luce, Gallipolis,
Langsville, $30 and costs, $30. and costs, speeding;
speeding; Scott J. Davis, Raben B. Lutes, Toledo, $50
Harrison, Maine, $50 and and costs, speedmg; Joshua A.
costs, speeding; Mark j:':. Manley, Middleport, $150
Defeyter, Reynoldsburg, $30 and costs, 30 days in jail, susand costs, speeding; David M. pended, probation, disorderly
David
Mata,
Demming, Marysville, $30 conduct:
and costs, speeding; Raben F. Columbus, $30 and costs,
Dickens, Pomeroy, $50 and ·speeding; Eric D. McClung,
costs, probation, disorderly Davisville, W.Va., $40, probaconduct; Ernest W. Dorsey, tion, speeding, $150, 180
Pataskala, $30 and costs, days in jail, 177 suspended,
speeding; William L. Dowell, probation, no operator's
Gordonsville, Va., $30 and license .
Thomas A. McDamel,
costs, speeding; Casey S.
Dunfee, Pomeroy, $250 and Shade, $20 and costs, failure
costs, 30\lays in Jail, suspend- to control, $20 and costs, use
ed, probation, disorderly con- pf unauthorized plates;
duct; Natalie C. Durnwald, Timothy M.
McDaniel,
Fremont, $30 and costs, Cheshire, $30 and costs, seat
speeding; Joseph P. Duty, belt violation; Micah L.
Little Hocking, $95, no oper- . McDowell, Archdale, N.C.,
ator's license; Josh A. Farley, $200 and costs, equipment
Charles
W
Glouster, $200, 180 days 111 misuse;
jail, 177 suspended, proba- McKinney, V111ton, $30 and
tJon, drivmg under suspended costs, seat belt violation ;
I revoked license; Denms W. Gabnel Z M1guel, Racine,
Faught, Tuppers Pla111s, $90, $200 and costs, three days 111
probation, disorderly conduct, jail, probation. no operator's
$90; three days 111 pli, sus- license, $30 and' costs, probapended, probation, cnmmal t1on. seat belt violation,
tre spass, $350. 180 days 111 Ashley
M.
Miller,
jail, 174 suspended, proba- Ravenswood, W.Va., $30 and

es the industry's adverse
impact on the env1roment.
Ptctures of orange brown
streams
turned ac1dtc by seepfrom PageA1
age from the mines are shown.
then a few weeks ago was Miners faced many dangers It also show s what measures
notified that she had been on a da1ly basis, which includ- have been taken to repmr that
accepted into th~ Australian ed the build up ot deadly gases damage. At one nme.
in the mimng shafts An "Raccoon Creek was basicalprogram.
(rom PageA1
The cost for students to authentic canary cage JS on ly destroyed:" R.1y McKmniss
attend is $7,000 which display. wh1ch housed the said
The exhibit will run through
families for the most part, includes the fl1ght and all canary used by m111ers to
December Hours for the
Jennifer said. The experience expenses incurred while m detect gas build up.
Desplle
mining's
contnbumuseum
are I 0 30am to
Australia.
Currently
the
qualifies students for high
tlon
s,
the
d1splay
also
discuss5,:30pm.
seven
days a week.
Paynes
are
in
the
process
of
school credit.
The process of getting raising the money.
The People to People proaccepted into the program
hopes more k1ds w1ll come
gram
was started
by
began last November when
out to partiCipate 111 the free
Dwight
D
Jenmfer had her first inter- President
activities
view at Ohio Umversity after Etsenhower in 1956 and
Bullington sa1d more supfrom
Page
A1
being contract by mail and since has taken thou sands of
plies are on the way lor more
telephone by Ambassa~or young people across internaactivities that mclude dodge
officials. A second Interview tional borders.
gram . Those passes are st ill ball, volley ball , tether ball
One of the goals is to teach available at both the London and ·other 1ndoor games
took
piace . later
at
Parkersburg.
She
was people the concept that "we and Middleport Pools tor shou ld ll nun
required to submit three let- live together in one small children of any income in
The ABC stall are
ters of recommendation, and world."
grades SIX through 12. th1 s employed through an Athensmcludes privately e&lt;;iucated Meigs Educatumal Sprvice
Ce nter grant d1 stnbuted
or home schooled children.
"I think it's nice that they through the Me1 gs County
(the ABC program) did this," Depa,rtment of Jobs and
Southern High School stu- Family Se1 v1ces (DJFS )
}he pool passe' are Iunddent
Jordan
" Dougie"
The DailY: Sentinel ·
ed
through the Temporary
P1ckens smd while usmg h1s
Asmtance to Needy Families
free pool pass
Subscribe today • 992-2155
program with monie s d1st1 JbABC
Coordmator
Cara
IVWw.myda,ilysenti!U!I.com
Bullington smd yesterday's uted through the Meigs
,, kick off was a success but she County DJFS
'
•

Coal

Student

I

Youth

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

•'

costs. 'feeding ; Kenneth F.
Mitchel , Langsville,' $250
and costs, 180 days in jail,
177 suspended, probation,
dnving under suspended I
revoked license; Michelle D.
Montgomery, Pomeroy, $75
and costs, probatiOn, menacing ; Anandan Neelan, Dublin,
$50 and costs, speeding; Amy
L Norman, Racine, $30 and
costs, seat belt violation;
Joseph
E.
Nottingham,
Racine, $20 and costs, fmlure
to
control;
Betsy C.
Olshenski, Pitt sburgh, Pa .,
$30 and costs, speeding; Scott
A. Ours, Racine , $30 and
costs. seat belt violation;
Jenmng s L. Page, Apple
Grove, W.Va. , $20 and costs,
permit VJolatJon , $20 and
costs, properly secured loads;
Donald L. Parry, Coolville,
$30 and costs, seat belt violation; Charles J Pennington,
Rutland, $100 and costs, 10
days in Jail, probation. no
operator's license, $30 and
costs, probation, seat belt VIOlation, $100 and costs, proba- ·
tion, failure to control; Brian
G. Peters, Caldwell, $30 and
costs, &gt;peedmg; Benton C.
Phillips, Rutland, $150 and
costs, 30 days in jail, suspended, probation, reckless operaliOn ; Roy L. P1erce , Racine,
$70, probation, use I possession drug paraphernalia, $70,
probation, speeding, $350 and
costs, I0 days m jml, seven
suspended, probauon, dnving
while under the influence
and/or drugs of abuse, $70, 10
days in jail, probation, driving
under supsended I revoked
license, $70, probatmn, use of.
unauthorized plates, $150 and
costs, 30 days m JUII, suspended, probation, no operato_r's
license, $70, probation, failure to control.
Andrew J. Plants, Cutler,
$50 and costs, speeding;
Nicholas
R.
Playko,
Pickerington, $30 and costs,
seat bell violatiOn; Susan E
Redfeather, Surfside Beach,
S.C., $65 and costs.t. speeding,
Andrew S Reed, Keedsville,
$100 and costs, probation, no
operator's license; Joseph E.
Rife, Middleport, $7Q, probation, disorderly conduct ;
Michael D. Rubens. Ashland,
Ky., $30 and costs, seat belt
violation; James T. Rooker,
Logan, $30 and costs, speed·
ing;· Edward R Roush,
~acine, $30 and costs, seat
)lelt violation; Thomas A.
Schoonover, Middlepon, $20
and costs, assured clear distance; Richard A. Schwager,
Bexley, $50 and costs, speeding; Howard A. Shamblin,
Ripley, W.Va., $150, 30 days
in jail, suspended, probation,
use I possession drug paraphernalia, $20, seat belt-passenger; David J. Smith,
Greenboro, N.C., $50 and
costs, speeding; Ruth A.
Smith, Reedsville, $100 and
costs, 30 days in jail, suspended, probation, dnvmg under
fra. I susp.. $70, probation,
fa1lure to control; Travis R.
Sm1th, Racine, $30 and costs,
seat belt violation, Angela S.
Spangler, Pomeroy. $35 and
costs, probation, fatl to eontine vicious dog; Thomas D.
Starkey, Charleston , V'f.Va ,
$50 and costs, speedmg,
Anthony
P.
Stephens,
Parkersburg, W Va, $30 and
costs, speedmg. Chnt L
Stewan. Rmland. $100 and
costs, probation. reck less
operation, $30 and costs., probation, seat belt violatiOn ;
Jolin D. Stumbo. Pomeroy,
$2,690, 30 days in jail, suspended, pJObation, disorderly
conduct, Rene Tl,unacazoui,

Nashville, Tenn. , $20 and
costs, stop sign; Sarah L.
Triplett, Long Bottom, $20
and costs, stop sign: Jeff L.
Turner, Dublin, $30 and costs,
speeding; Jon ·S. Turner,
Albany, $30 and costs, speeding; Kent A. Varney, Long
Bottom, $20 and costs, display plates I valid sticker;
Tric1a
J
Wallace,
Wonhmgton, $50 and costs,
speedmg; Richard A. White,
Pomeroy, $30 and costs, seat
belt violation, Jacob A.
Wilson , Pomeroy, $200 and
costs, 180 days in jail, 177
suspended, probation, driving
under suspended I revoked
hcen se, $10 and costs, probation, stop sign; Rebecca S . .
Wolfe, Racine , $25, failure to
control; Alicia M Woods,
Ponland, $20 and costs, failure to control; Henry Young,
Athens, $30 and costs, speedin~; Kenneth E. Zuspan,
M1ddlepon, $150 and costs,
30 days in Jail, suspended,
probation, no operator's
license, $70, probation, use of
unauthorized plates

Governor signs ·
bill limiting
government
spending
COLUMBUS (AP)- Gov.
Bob Taft s1gned a bill
Monday that kills a ballot
issue some saw as the biggest
hurdle to his pany's candidate
for governor.
The bill limiting state
spendmg was fashiOned by
the
GOP-controlled
Legislature as a substitute for
Republican nominee Kenneth
Blackwell's
mcreasingly
unpopular government-limiting issue that was slated for
the Nov. 7 ballot
Republican leaders feared
the issue would drag down
Blackwell - and candidates
funher down the llcket against. Democratic n,ominee
Ted Stnckland.
Democrats have their best
chance in more than a decade
to take control of the bellwether state engulfed in
Republican scandal.
After resisting similar caps
for years, lawmakers took less
than a week to craft and
approve the restrictions, and
to adjust state statutes to
assure Blackwell's amend·
ment could legally be with- .
drawn.
The ballot Issue has been
the target of a well-organized
opposition campaign and two
pending coun challenges.
Local government leaders,
libranans, teachers' unions,
sportsmen, and university ·
boards were among those who
had begun hning up against it.

A!l!~l·

.

Auditions for Showboat 5123
6em
HUMC Religious Mystery
Pia~

614

The Weatherfords 6/9
Emersog Drive 6114
Barbershop Concert 6117
Summer Classes Begin Soon!
.
Register now for Acti~g,
Dance &amp; Strine
The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH
740-446-ARTS. 12787l

�~

..

.

)
I
d"}
" }.com
·/
www.my . ru ysentine

Tuesday, June 6, 2006

The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

•

.The Daily Sentinel

•·

'B l

NEWS ABOUT
SENIOR CITIZENS IN MEIGS COUNTY
'

Tuesday, Jwte 6, 2006

June'06

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM
The Senior Nutrition.Meal is served.Daily at 1,1:45

Maloney extends lead in Riverside Senior Men's League

Menu is Subject to Change

'

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYOAILVTRIBUNE.COM

For lngredllnla Contact Sharon

orThensa

Unda

Menuprepnd

R.D.LD.

LocAL SCHEDULE
GALLIPOLIS ___:__ A schedule o1 upcoming college
and h~h school varsity sportJlg eV80ts invoiYiflll
teams from Gatlia, Meigs and Mason counties .

Chicken Nuggets
Au Gratin Potatoes ,
California Vegetables
Apricots
Wheat Bread

Breaded Fish Patty
Oven Brown Potatoes
Perfection Salad
Hot Spiced Pears
Bun

Thank you for your support.
Suggestad donations for seniors

60 and older Is $2.00.
We require $4.00 for those
under age 60.

Tuesday's gam&amp;A

American legion Baeebull
Logan at Gallipolis (at GAHS}, 6 p.m.
WBdnaaday'• gamee
American Leglol] Saaaball
Feeney Bennett at Athens, 7 p.m.
Athens Juniors at Meigs Juniors, 6 p.m.
Thyraday'a QIUIIU
American Legion Baeeball
Lancaster at Gallipolis (at Rio Grande), 6

p.m.
Feeney Bennett
p.m.

Rummage Sale Today II 9
Salsibury Steak
Mashed Potatoes
Scalloped Com
Fruit Cocktail
Dinner Roll

Chicken Salad with tomatoes &amp;

Beef Roast

Mozzarella Cheese Slices
3-Bean Salad
Strawberry Shortcake
Bun

Parsley Boiled Potatoes &amp; Carrots
Broccoli/Gauliflower Mix
Rasp~rry JeHo w\ Pears
Bread

I

Frida~··

Senior League Standings
1. Jack Maloney t1i5; 2. Mlck Winebrenner 109.5; 3. Pat Willia'mson 95.5; 4.
ClarK Greene 93.0; 5. Paul SomeNille 89.5; 6. Qary Mirlton 88.0; 7. Bill Yoho 87.0;
8. Don Waldie .80.5; 9. Jack Fox 80.0: 10. Dick Ot1gan 78 .0; 11 . Ken Whited n .S;
12. Gary Bates n .o; 13. (tie) Harley Rice and Don Fields 76.5; 15. BIH Pethel74 .5;
16. Harvey Blain 73.0; 17. Jim CapeMrt 70.0; 18. Russ Holland 69.0; 19. Curtis
Grubb 68 .5; 20. Bill Winebrenner 68.0; 21 . (tie) t&lt;enny Greene and Don Wilson 67.0;
23. (tie) George Muter and Tom Fisher 66.5; 25 . (tie) Jim Gordon and Claude Proffitt
65.0: 27. Gene Gray 64 .0: 28 . Bob Hysell63.5; 29. (tie) Chet Thomas, Tom N1,1nnery
and Wes Paterson 62.0; 32. Cecil Minton 61 .5; 33, Clyde JaN is 60.5; 34.' Jim .
·sawman 59.0; 35. Earl Johnson 58 .0

Sayre, Nick Salem and
Darwin Clark and the team of
Billy Jewell, Ray Jewe ll, Bub
Stivers and Russ Holland.
· The ·c losest to the pin win-

Duke to
bring back
lacrosse
next season

American Legion BaHball
Feeney Bennett at Lancaster (DH), 1
p.m.
Meigs Juniors at Ashley (DH) , 1 p.m .
SundaY. June 11
Amarl~n

Legion Baatball
Meigs Juniors vs. Sandusky {at Newart-;},
11 a.m.
Meigs Juniors at Newari&lt;., TBA

'

'

Meat Balls

Fish Fillet
Lima Beans
Spinach
Sunshine Salad
Bun

Baked.Steak w/Onlons
Mashed Potatoes
Green Beans
Pears
Wheat Bread

Spaghetti
Tossed Salad
Grapes
Garlic Bread

~SiDE

Glazed Ham Loaf '
Scalloped Potatoes.
.'
Cole Slaw
. Pineapple Juice
Roll

21
Creamed Chicken over Biscuit

Polish Sausage

Creamed Tomatoes

Mashed Potatoes

Sauerkraut

Italian Green Be~n1s
Com Bread
Watennelon

Peas w/ Pearl Onions
Spiced Cinnamon Applesauce

Tiny Whole Potatoes

MC~Caroni

&amp; Cheese

Oatmeal Cookies , ,"··

Meat loaf
'

'

Fresh Plums
Apptesauc;o,C,@ke ..,: ....
Wheat

.

'~-'·

Hamburger

Ham

Potato Salad
Carrot &amp; Celery Sticks
Strawberry Fluff

Scalloped Potatoes

Baked Potato

Cauliflower
-Ambrosia FruH Salad

Succotash
Peach Cobbler

~

~

Scalloped Potatoes

Noodles

Broccoli
Pear Cobbler
Roll

Brussel Sprouts

'

Country Frtl!d Steak
·
. '

Roll
Prescription Drug Plan.
Golden.Bu-l•eye
'Loft
No Medicare drug plan is
Card lnfonnation . permitted
to ask an individual
with Medicare for personal or
and Kinship . bank
account information. No
one should provide this inforlnfonnation mation to a caller. If you
To apply for the Golden
Buckeye card you must be an
Ohio resident and 60 years of
age or older or an· Ohio resident age 18-59, with a total
and permanent disability and
unable to work.
Kinship care is an arrangement, in which a relative or
non-relative adult has taken
over the care of a child when
the child's parents cannot, or
' will not, care for their child or
children.
The Kinship Navigator
Program offers information
and referral services .to individuals in this situation to
assist them in meeting their
needs.
For more information about
either of these programs,
please contact Kathy Goble at
(740) 992-2161.

lhe •$299 Ring'
SCheme

believe that someone is trying
to obtain this information
from you in an illegal manner
you should report them to
your local police department.
In regards to selecting a
Medicare drug plan Medicare
beneficiaries should remember the following:
•No one is to ask for personal information while they
are marketing their products.
•Protect your Medicare card
information in the same way
you would protect all other
private inform~tion.
•If you have questions about
Medicare, contact Medicare
directly at 1-800-MEDICARE

Senior Vacation
Bible School
The Center will be llosting
our first Senior Vacation Bible
School on June 12-15 from 911:30 a.m ..
Maxine and Bill Little will
be in charge of the bible study
and there will be other· activities such as crafts, singing
hymns, and good old fashioned fellowship. Please register with Debbie Jones by
calling (740) 992-2161.
We need cookies bakes for
each day for snack time SO, if
you would like to bake some,
please let Debbie know which
day you will bring them, You
can't have bible school without cookies and kool-aid!

Medicare has reportedly .
received complaints about this
scam in several states, complaints have been made
against more than one company but it is believed that the
companies are the same and
are typically based outside the
United States.
The name of this scheme
comes from the fact that this
is the amount Medicare benec
ficiaries are being asked to
withdraw from their checking
accounts for this, fraudulent
prescription
drug ·plan .
Apparently individuals are
contacting Medicare beneficiaries asking for money and
checking acco~nt information
The Meigs M.ultipurpose
to assist the individual with
enroilment in a Medicare Center is open Monday-

Activity Schedule
forMayand ·
June2006

••

..

'Mp

Fun, Fun;·Fun!

Support Groups
and Something
for Everyone

lbis and lhat

••

..

1.; •

~· Bl~ .,

,... ..,;,:. :' . .:

.~

.... •

.

Tuna Salad

Baked
. Beans
Com Confetti
Nectarine
Bread

Tomato Wedges
Fresh Mixed Fruit
Cottage Cheese
Bread

answering phones. assisting
public with literature and
wigs. A computer will be
available for use and training
will be- pr.ovided on Internet
use.
The Resource Center is
located in the Mulberry
Center (the old Pomeroy
Elementary School.) The
hours you work are up to you.
Contact me at 992-2162 for
more information.

Rummage Sale
June 9 and 10 ·
Are you doing your spring
cleaniQg and wondering what
to do with all of the stuff that
you don't .want or need anymore?
We have the perfect solution for you - donate it ti the·
Rummage Sale at the CenJer..
We will be having our
Rummage Sale on Friday,
June 9, and Saturday, June I0.
The Rummage Sale will be
open 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. on Friday
and 9 a.m. - I p.m. on
Saturday.
· We will be accepting clean,
used, and new items the week
of June 5.
We will also be having a
bake
sale during the
Rummage S~le and we need
baked items.
If you would like to make
something for the bake sale,
please drop it off at the Center
on Thursday or Friday.
Saturday will be the $1 per
bag sale - this includes only
clothing.
Call Debbie Jones at the
Center at 992-2161 for more
information, if needed.

•

• Wand Cup info.
. See Page 82

'

BBQChlcken

Friday from 8 a.m. - 4:30
p.m.. Regularly scheduled
acti"ities held throughout the
week include sewing, knitting, euchre, working puzzles;
Ther~ is still time to sign
bingo, and much, much mote! up! This trip will be scheduled
Line dance practice is held for late September.
each Monday at I p.m .. The
The cost for the trip will be
cost is $1 per session.
·
1 $50
h· h
The Knitting Circle meets approximate Y
' w IC
will include a family style
on Wednesday from 10 ' a.m. dinner, a visit to the . cheese
until noon.
All ages are invited to factory and shopping at some
..
h d of the local shops. •
attend the' activ1ttes sc e Call some friends and tell
uled. Lunch is served daily at them about his one. It is a
II :45 a.m.. The suggested.
·
donation for the noon meal is great one day trip for sightseeand shopping.
$ 2 for those age 60 an d older. ingPlease
let Debbie Jones,
Center
Activity
The charge for those under 60 Senior
is !\epresentative from the Director, kn?w by June 10 so
Athens Social Security Office , the preparations can be made:
will be at the Meigs Senior
Center to assist people with
Social Security problems
and/or to prov1de informaBingo will be held on June
tion from 10-11 a.m. on June 20, sponsored by the
14 and 28.
Rocksprings Rehab Center at
No. appointment is needed, 11 a.m ..
but be sure to sign in at the . Euchre is played every
Thursday at 10 a.m., .or any
Front Desk.
other day you )'!ant to come.
Paint class i~ held every
Friday at 9 a.m. with Michelle
Musser as the instructor.
There is a fee associated with
this class.
Come and get in on the fun
The C.aring and Sharing playing dominoes. We have a
Support Group will meet .on group that plays every
June 22 at I p.m .. Lenora Tuesday and Thursday before
Leifheit is the coordinator and after lunch.
for the group. This group is
for caregiver&amp; and their familie's to share their stories
with others in the same sit!lWelcome to the followin g
ation.
new
volunteers: Ora Bass,
The Stroke Support Group
Linda
Campbell,
Larry
will meet on June 13 from
Eblin,
1-2:30 p.m .. Lia Tipto~ , Ebersbach , Barb
Fisher,
Mary
from Holzer Rehab Center IS Gordon
Robinson,
and
Delbert
Sn1ith.
the host
Volunteers are needed for
The diabetes Support
Group will meet on June 15 the following jobs:
Cancer ·Resource i Center
at 10:30 a. m.. Jane Staley,
from PVH , is the coordina- Assistant - training will be
provided by American Cancer
tor.
Society
staff.
The support gro ups meet
Duties could
include :
in the Conference Room.

Amish Country

Peaches

~-

I'" . • h·~.&gt;~;~-

.. \

Beef Tip~

"

SPORTS BRIEFS

Softball All-Star
game to be held
at Rio Grande

a.m .. They always bring all of
the supplies and fun things to
work on.
Birthday Party - June 22
will be the date for the monthly birthday pa.ty. Come celebrate your birthday with us.
Come celebrate your birthday
with us.
Bible Study is held every
Wednesday at · I0 a.m. in the
Conference Room. The group ·
is led by Bill and Maxine
Little.
The Crochet and Knitting
Circle ·
meets
every
Wednesday at 10 a.m .. Bring
your yarn and needles and you
will be in "stitches" before·
you leave.
The TOPS group meets at
the Center every Tuesday
from 4:30-7:30 p.m ..
Yoga is held every Monday
at 6 p:m. here . at the Center.
For mpre inforn1ation on the
class, contact Joy Bentley at
992-2365.

lbank You for
Your Donations

We appreciate the fmancial
support received from the following churches, organizations,
and
individuals:
Tuppers · Plains Church of
Christ, Southern United
Methodi st Church Men's
Group. First Baptist Church
of Racine· Ladies Missionary
Fellowship, Racine Baptist
Sunday School Class 4,
Hemlock Grove Church,
Raci ne United Methodi st
Women.
In Memory of Ruth Taylor:
Marilyn and Terry Powell ,
Hilda Hunt and Fmnily. In
Memury Qf Nancy Shaw:
Charles Newton F:amtly,
David
Schatz,
William
Johnson, Betty Spencer, Carol
The girls from the Pomeroy and Kenny Pierce. In Memory
Library will be at the Center nf Don Maurer: Betty
on J.une 8 to do crafts at II Speni:er.

Other Bits and
Pieces

•

RIO GRANDE - The ·
inaugural Subway State
Softball Showdown will be
held 3 p.m. Wednesday at the
University of Rio Grande .
The games will pit s&lt;;&gt;me of
the top high s.chool seniors
from Ohio.against their cou.nterparts from West Virginia.
The teams will face off in two
lline-inning games.
Admission will be $4 for
adults.
Among the local participants will be Point Pleasant
pitcher Kay Ia Shobe.
'

PVH FIAG FOOIBALL
EAirly Polringo
S.turdoy, Juno 10
Point Pleaunt MooN LOdge flelde
Be early for t~ plcturn
Rain or shine

aa.m.

.

Fie-ld A -

X·Tremes vs .. Holzer Clinic

Field B - Bennlgana vs. Antf1ony J.
McEldOwney, MD
•
Flold C - ~redrlc LaCarbonara. MD
VB.

AP photo

Carolina Hurricanes' Justin Williams celebrates scoring past Edmonton Oilers goaltender Dwayne Roloson in the third period
during qame 1 of the Stanley Cup ho.ckey finals Mohday in Raleigh, N.C.

Hurricanes storm ba
With overtime looming. Conklin went ·Maybe a few more people· will flip
behind the net to play the puck on a over after the Oilers and Hurricanes put
seemingly routine play. But he appeared on a stirring di splay with all sorts of
to cross up teammate Jason Smith with a twists and turns.
Edmonton's Chris Pranger scoreil 'the
backhanded pass, the puck dellecting off
Smith's stick and sliding in front of an first penalt~ shot goal in final s history,
open net.
helping· the Oilers build their three-goal
Brind'Amour scored his second goal .lead. Carolina finally scored late in the
of the night - and he:ll never get an eas- second period. then strung together three
ier one. Smith dove in a futiiJ: attempt to · rapid-fire goal s in the third. Ju s·tin
knock the puck away and Conklin was Williams put the Hurri canes ahead for
still co.ming around from behind the net the first time on a shortha nded breakwhen it crossed the line.
away goal with 9:58 remaining in reguGame 2 is Wednesday night in lation .
Raleigh : Then, the s~ries shifts to
The Oilers We ren ' t don~. either. After
Edmonton for the next two games.
Carolina goa lie Cam Ward made a brilWith two small-market finalists and an liant stop on Shawn Horcoff, flinging hi s
obscure cable network televising the first body back across the crease to somehow
ti&gt;{.O games, . the Edmonton-Carolina get an arm on the puck, Edmonton tied it
matchup was expected to draw minus- up on a power-pl ay goal by Al,e s Hemsky
cule television ratings.
with 6:29 to go.

BY PAUL NEWBERRY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

RALEIGH, N.C. - After a stirring
comeback, the Carolina Hurricanes won
Game I of the Stanley Cup,finals with a
gift. of a goal.
·Rod Brind'Amour scored off a llukey
mistake with 31.1 seconds remaining
after Edmonton's backup goalie botched
an exchange behind the net, and the
Hurricanes. after falling behind 3-0, rallied to beat the Oilers 5-4 Monday pight.
Ty Conk! in had to take over in goal for
Edmonton with just under six minute s
remaining after Dwayne Roloson , the
star ofthe eighth-seeded Oilers improbable playoff run, was injured in a collision that knocked the net off its moorings. That proved to be the deciding
factor.

Shamblin

Field D- Wai·Mart vs. Norna Northup

ea.m.

Field A - Bad Attnuda VB. Robert
McCleary, MD '
.
Field B - Valdya Urology Center vs.
Rile·Aid
Field C - Simon's Pain Train vs. John

Wiltz, MO
FJeld D - Tolliver's Pra.Qwn9d Auto
Center vs. Flair Fumltu~e

CoNTAcT US
OVP

ners were Tom Fisher on hole
No. 7 and Bruce Jenkins on
hole No. 14. There was a total
of seven first time players at
Tuesday's session,

gamaa

Saturday. June 10

1

Baked Turkey w/~ravy
Bread Dressing
Mixed Vegetables
tomato Juice
BenyCrisp

Beverly (DH}, 5:30

.

American Legion Baseball
McArthur at Meigs Juniors, 6 p.m .

Pimento Cheese Spread
Cream of Tomato Soup
Banana
Pudding
Wheat Bread

Oven Fried Chicken
Oven Brown Potatoes
Peas
Cantaloupe
Biscuit

~;~t

MASON , W.Va. ·._ Jack
Maloney of Gallipolis has
taken an eight point lead over
Mick Winebrenner of Racine
in the Riverside Senior Men 's
Golf League.
Maloney has 117:5 points to
Winebrenner's 109.5 for the
young season. A distant Jhird
place belongs
to Pat
Wi IIi am son of New Haven,
W.Va. with 95.5 points after
last week's third place player

the Tuesday session of the
league with 16 teams of four
and two teams with three
players to make 18 points
available for the day. The
winning score of 58 was shot
Gary Minton dropped three by the team of Rick . Ash,
places in the standings.
George Stewart, Ray Oliver
Rounding out the top five in and Bill Winebrenner.
points are Clark Greene
In second place with a score
(93.0), Paul Somer:nlle of 59 was the team of Bill
(89.5), Minton (88.0), Bill Yoho, Barry Alfred, Don
Yoho (87.0), Don Wald1e · Fields and Don Wilson while
(80.5), Jack Fox (80.0) and a tie existed for third place
Dick Dugan (78.0).
with a score of 60 between the
A total of 70 players were at teams of Maloney, Ralph

Score line (5 p.m.·1 a.m.)

1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

or 992-5287 (Meigs

Co.)

Fax - 1-740·446·3008
E-mail - sports@mydallysenlinel.cor'n ·

Sport• 1&gt;.1@11

!Jrad Sherman, Sport• Editor
1740) 446·2342, ext 33
bsherman@mydailytribune.com

Bryan W.altera, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, ext 23
bwalters@ mydallytrlbune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342. ext. 33
Ierum@ mydai lyreg ister. com

Reds pull closer to division'-leading .Cards
hitter Chris Duncan hit two-run
. home runs and Yadier Molina
- - - - - - - - - - - also homered for the Cardinals,
ST. LOU IS - · Ken Griffey who are 1- 1 since Albert Pujol s
Jr. hit a go-ahead three-run went on the disabled li st with a
homer off Jason lsringhausen pulled muscle in his right side.
in the ninth inning to help the They:vc scored 16 runs withCincinnati Reds beat the St. out h1m .
Griffey's second homer
Louis Cardinals 8-7 Monday
denied Suppan, who allowed
night.
Griffey a)so hit a solo shol in three runs m six innin ~s. his
the fifth off Jeff Suppan, tying IOOth career victory in h1s third
a major lea~ ue record . by attempt.
Felipe Lopez doubled off
homering in h1s 43rd stadium.
He hit his IOth homer with one lsringhausen with one out in
out in the ninth to erase a 7-5 the ninth for .his fourth hit of
deficit for the Reds, who have the game. Rich Aurilia fol won live straight.
lowed with a walk and the run·ners
moved up on a wild pitch.
Isringhal!sen (1.3) \eads the
NL w1th · 18 saves but has Grilfey's homer came on a full
allowed four homers in 23 count.
innings and has hlown saves in
By homering in the new
two of his last three appear- Busch. Stadium, Griffey tied a
ances.
major league record set by
Juan Encamacion and pincn- Fred McGriff, and has conBY

R.B. fALLSTROM

ASSOCIATED PRESS

__ _______
.

,

..

'

·-

nected in every existing ballpark . He was on the disabled
list ifi mid-April when the Reds
played at new Busch for the
first time.
Esteban Yan ( 1-0) allowed
one run in two innin ~s. a
homer by Yadier Molina m the
eighth that put the Cardinals
ahead 7-5. Todd Coffey got the
last three outs for his third save
in four chances.
Griffey has 53 career multihomer games and is 12th on
the career homer list. 1\~o
behind Mike Schmidt. He also
doublt;d in the third and ha'
I,0 17 career extra-base hits.
two ahead of Schmidt for 22nd
place.
Encarnacion, who moved up
to fourth in the order Monday,
, has four hits and f(1ur RB!s the
last two games and his eighth
homer gave the Cardinals a ..J -3

lead in the ti fth.
Duncan. the son of pitching
coach Dave Duncan, was
recalled
from
Triple-A
Memphis on Sunday to replace
Pujol s. He has 1wo homers and
live RBis in only seven at -hats
afler connecti ng off Rick
White in the sixth to put the
Cardinals ahead 6-3.
'
Jitll Edmonds
rcpla~ed
Pujob at Iirst base for the second .straight game and was 0for-3 with a walk. Scott Rolen.
whose been in Pujols' third slot
in bolh games since the injury,
had an RBI s,ingle in the lirsl to
extend 'his hitting streak to 10
games and walked twi ce.
So Taguchi, who has started
eight of the last nine games in
center ticld for St. Louis, saved
a run in the fourth when he
threw out David Ross trying to
score on Lopez' two-out .sing le.

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - ·
Duke University's troubled
lacrosse team will play next
season, but under strict rules
and close monitoring after ·
three players were charged
with rape, scpool President
Richard
Brodhead
said
Monday.
"I am, I know, taking a risk
in reinstating men's lacrosse,"
BrOdhead said in a statement.
"The
reinstatement
1s
inevitably probationary."
Brodhead canceled the
team's season April 5 after an
exotic dancer who had been
hired to perform at a March 13
team party told police she was
raped by three team members
at ~n off-campus house.
A university investigation
also found a history 9f di scipli nary problems involving team
members, including underage
drinking and public urination.
Brodhead said Monday that
he and the school's athletics
administrators would rethink
their decision to reinstate the
lacrosse team if they see any
repeat of "patterns of irresponsible, individual or team
behaviors tamiliar from the
past."
A faculty committee had recommended the team be
allowed to resu me play but that
its members should be strictly
monitored.
Brodhead called the decision
"a gamble." but said the players·should be .allowed to move
past the scandal:
" It seems to me if you say,
'I' Ill s.orry, r II never trust these
people until the end of time,'
that's one idea," he said. "I
think it 's a rather unrealistic
and inhumane idea."
Brodhead said he did not
decide Ia reinslllte the team
until this weekend, after all
remaining players agreed to a
mission stalement that emphasizes academics, tolerance and
a code of conduct !hilt, among
other things. prohibits under.age drinking, university officials said.
A tirst infraction of the conduct code will result in ai least
it 'warning and community service, the university said. A second infraction will ·earn a
three-game suspension; a third
a season-long suspension. The
players came up with the code
themselves, he said.
Assistant coach Kevin
&lt;;:assese, a two-time Duke captain and U.S. national team
player. will serve as interim
coach of the team while the
school searches for a permanent coach. Brodhead said.
Longtime lacrosse coach
Mike Pressler resigned the day
Brodhead canceled the season
and wi II not be considered for '
the job. ath ictics director Joe
Alleva said. ·
Lanos~c
player
Matt
Danowski. 20. said his temmates were "really exc'ited to
~et back to a sense of nomlal:-y. and what we came to do,
\vhich is compete for a national championsh ip,'' he said. "It's
not goi ng to be easy."
The canceled season followed up a year in which Duke
sci an NCAA record with 17
victories and were contenders
for the national championship.
The Blue Devil s nad been considered title contenders again
this year.

�I

•

'www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

3 2 TEAM 5.

OROUP A

(Homo • away jersey)

12 V EN U E S , ONE ' GOAL ;

WORLD CUP 2008

Germ1ny
Ranl&lt;lngs

·

1e

loly '92

11

:liliPIC:. II
Ca.ta Rica

FOR

""''r

"llllrd-place finish INs lime shows
. aging stars may be past their prime .

THE

CLASSIFIED

Czech
Republic

'

Seomo lo lacl&lt;11le quality .....aed 10
emu&amp;ate Its runner-up spot from 2002.

m::rtbune - Sentinel -

O R OUP E

Aanklngs

Thirty-two teains from across the globe will compete
in th is year's World Cup in Germany between June
9 and July 9. The championship has been awarded every
four years since the first tournament in 1930 (except in
1942 and 1946 due to World War II ). However, it is more
of an ongoing event as the qualifying rounds of the
competition take place over the two-and-a-half years
preceding the monthlong championship finals. Six
continents are represented and six of the seven past
winners will take part. including hosts Gell11any, who head
the 14-strong European contingent, and holders Brazil
who lead the South American challenge.

Mly'OII

2

May '02

16

lllr 1111

a

Jan Koller, Tomas R06icky and Milan
Baros are sure to trouble defenses.

United

States
18f'OII'

Ma~ '02
MIY·J !OA..J L
C a!lia Co ll!llf, OH

Must &amp;f&gt;Jw lhey can win i1 Euicpo, wiYlilg
two ol11

games under' Bruce Arena.

Italy
!laY'dl !3

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

6

May '02

May 'Ill! •tl
Oualffied strongly froo1 a weak group;
unliKely to get past rhe first round.

Finished third in tts qualifying group.
t.Aay struggle ir1 k)w.-altitude Genneny.
GROUP B

Underachiever since winning its only
title. Habit of fallering in knocko&lt;Jt stages.

Sweden

-~~-.0!!2=!!1t1
9

Francesco Totti, Arloolo cassanoand lual

..
r... cu.

(

Toni may spur team to rival past deedS.

'

Ghana
Mii..'OII ill

lllrllcllllhiS

······ ··

·······

Countries from as
far south as
Argentina and as far
east as Japan Will
field lheirbest
plar"ni in the
, competition. While
Europe ftas the most
nations In FIFA's top
m &lt;Tii¢Um!ilint ···· • .

M '!)'~

52

-

0§)

--

~egtster
To Place
m::rtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad, . (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

If Miehael Essm Shines, could surprise.

... ·

TOday...

OROUP F"

··~-·~w·

·!tuftfe;favorite as ;•
the No. nankedi
~ea~n: in the warld . .;
The t:J.s, is aiso a '
: COf!ll!etltqr at No. s•
'

"~

Will find It difficult to reach the seco nd
round for the third straight time.

~'

,.

Cup:
Pop.; 278,000

35

·M :ll!l Ml

Gross Capach,y; Q3,804

'

Anything other than three straight

defe.ats will be a surpn&amp;e.

.....
O~OUP

()

'

C

Netherlands

I!![,.

-~

May '02

9

,

Pop.:

Investment: $305,9 million

... A . .. .•. . •••••••••• ••• • •• •••• •••••• •••••

.~?P.:.: ._1 :~;.':".'!~~?~ ............:..()

May lack the experience needed to ~in
the country's first Wortd Cup title.

Gross Capacity: 74,220

FIFA Cologne Stadium &gt; J
Gross Capacity: 46,120

!!li:l!!lj;!ft

-~~P. ; ~9~!~

3

'

~'02

he

-~qualify and 18 ~r.;;;
Strugg~

f'iftZ:waiiei-siliiion

0
::~ii:~c;;;

Investment $61 .0 mflllon .•

.. . ······· ......... ................ .

Gross Capacity: 43,450

.

to
be the torce It once was.

()

··· .()

Investment: $63.2
million.
.........................
.............

Serbia &amp;

Gross Capacity: 41,926

Montenegro

All
Real Eotol
dvertleemente
ar

Will &gt;ely on eplrlt ~ """""' 10 boaI Turf&lt;ey
in playofts to get It past first round.

~;.; "
M~y '02.

@

ubloct lo lho Fodent
air Houelng Act o
1968.

'

).This
newapape
ccepts only hel
anted ads meetln
OE standarda.

~9

46

May '05

Pop.: 1.3 million

WY'!l'!' i\6'

(}

Woo qualifying group ahead of Spain,

.FiFA Miiiiii:ii ·siiiiiiiiiii

but may struggle against bigger teams.

investment: .$353.9 million

GROUP D

....

000

Pop : 650!

Mexico·

Giiiii.i'CiiiiBciiY:ss:oi6 ,

..... ()

FIFA Frankfurt Stadium

l!lfil . ,..,
May '02

0

Investment: $159.3 million

7
-~

Wilt be a big surprise If It mal(es It oul
ollhe first round.

We will not knowln
y accept any adver
laement In vlollll
f lhelow.

GROUP H

Extertded

() Modernized
() New

r

May lack the discipline to win, but it has
the talent.

~~~tar

In 2002, Germany's dynamic goalie
Oliver Kahn received 25 percent of
the media's vote on who was the most
outstanding player. Ronalda was second.

Iran
23
30

MIL18. il2

YEAR

HOSTIS)

Ronalda

,~

=~ ...

'90

Italy

'~

Salvatore Schillaci Italy
Italy

.... x·=

,

'82

Spain

.•

..

'"""

Wf~~
34

·Mar ·o2

•• -a

Don 't expect them 10 make waves in

•~

Gennany.

~""""""' ·F'!! ·~")'.

''-. ""''•
·;,:; o·.or.: ....

' ,.

.Paolo Rossi

lt'aly

Oliver Kahn, goalie for Germany, 1n 2002 World Cup

· QuaUflecl ahead of Nigeria, but not

Saudi
Arabia

TEAM GOALS

SiiJII'
~..

~
'-&gt;Citiit
'98 France
Oavor Suker
-. Croatia
6
·94 ~ lliita \1'.
' ~ If~,,,......,. · II
.
•
•",,.;
A
''"' "'""...,..., ~ '""" %•..=
0 "'90 ltalv
Salvatore Schillaci
Italy
6
\,ji~r --~-·~·'"""'
~
&lt;d~"""'-"'
.... , .itJ!j

~

Paolo Rossi

PLAYERjS)

'02
!&lt;-.=)
.
.• """'""-~

·ee~.ltib~ ~ ~ ~
'82 • Spain

Silva dos Santos a~ Jose Clayton.

YEAR HOSTIS)

'~
Brazil

: ..
. .. ll'iii:ll'£.
~ .......'"'"'"''"'""!"'"' . •
'98 France

· Improved with Brazinan-bom players

forward Ronalda captured the prize -in
2002 by booting in eight goals. It was the first time
in 28 years the highest scorer had more than six
goals. He scored in eve,Y match.
·

TEAM

PLAYER

'02 ~JB! .'9!!iti.~

6

Ronoldo,
forward tor
Brazil, in 2002
World Cup

Not considered a serious contender lor
ltle title; couk:l upset a team or two.

expected to make it OI:JI of first round.
JUNE

9

Sunday In-Column: 1 : 00 p.m.

friday For Sundays Paper

M"TCHES
10

11

12

16

18

17

24

ROUNDOF16
25
26
27

28

QUARTER
30

SEMI

JULY

2

3

4

rI

FINALS

STADIUM

GEA Germany

CAC Costa Rica
POL Poland
ECU Ecuador

Berlin
. "!""

Dortmund

ENG England
PAR Paraguay
TAl TrinJTobago
SWESweden

Frankfurt

AAG Arg8ntina
CIV Ivory Coast
SCG Serbia/Mont.
NEq Nelhef1ands

Gelsenkirchen
Hamburg

MEX MexiCO
IAN Iran

ANG Angola

Hanover

POR PortugoJ

IT" ' Italy
GHA Ghana

Kalserslautem

us" u.s.
CZE Czoon Aop.

Cologne
BR" Brazil

CRO Ciootla
AUS ""otraJia

.....

JPN Japan.

Leipzig

tA

FRA Franco
SUI Switzerland
KOA SOuth Korea

28

TOO Togo,

Munich

......

Nuremberg

10

2C I

ESP Spein
UKR Ukraine

&amp;1
18

TUN Tunisia.
KSA S.,..rabia

""·
2A

~ -j

Andy Fowle and Nicolas Aapp w1th Brian Trusdell• AP

SOURCE: Federation lntematiOna.Je de Football Assooarlon

I

Stuttgart

I

r

f

~ -

·--·-· -- ·------ -

.,.,......,.~

Of canc.l any ad at any time. Errors must bt reported on the first
will be reaponllble tor no more than the coal oltke apace occupied by the error and on ly the firs t lnae rtlo,n.
any ION or upenM that rnulta from thl publl~tlon or omlulo Qof an advfltlaement. Correction wil l be made in the first evallsble ed ition.
are alwaya contkltntla\. • Cuml'll rate card appJIM. • All rul ea.. te adveni ..menta are aubject to the Fede ral Fair Housing Act of 1968.
ac~a only help
1 EOE atand..-da. Wa will not
accept
advertising In violation ot the law.

Tribu,....S.ntl~~-t.r

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
GIVEAWAY

PmioNALS
1.~--------,.1

1

.

kltncarlyla@comcaat.net

' wanted .
Parts Salesperson
Computer · expenence and
knowl edge of farm equipment preferred . Salary
negoti able depending on
e:.;peri ence .
He alth
Insuran ce prov ided Send
re sume to: CL A Box ~ clo
Gallipolis Tribune , PO Box
469. Gallipo lis. OH 4563 1.

r

2 yellow 6 wk old Kittens The Pere nnial
1304)882·2925

0
0

Cat Shelter

2kitten s tma le 1female.
mother part Him alayan .
Short
haired , . white
w/orange tipped ears/tall ,
37 kittens now available for
blue eyoa. (740)il92-2099.
ad option . PLEASE RES·
5 yetlow and whfte kittens, CUE US. Please c all
six weeks old and \lery cute. (740) 645-7275 to give us a
Call (740)446-6890 afte r 5 home.
or anytime weekends.
To a good home· AKC
Golden
Retrie\ler, s years
Couch &amp; Chair to g iveaway,
green in col or. (740)245· old , male Good "''ith chil·
~ron . (740)682·4105.
~3 7 after 5 weekdays, after

2 weekends.

r

llELP WANrED

11
•.

I

Attention Drivers :
R&amp;J Employment Opportunities.
Trucking is looking · tor
The ~eigs County Board of
Retardation
&amp;
"Drivers
w/1 yr
OTA, Mental
Experien ce tor Regional
Developmental Disabilities
Hauls. Average pay 40's to
is accepting applications tor
mid SO's Home every
the following posi tions:
Weekend
call
Kent
Multiple Disabilities Teacher.
(800)482·9365
•
Must haw current \/&amp;lid Ohk&gt;
Attention Mechanics: - Now Department of Education
taking applications for expe- certification/licensure and
riences Truck Mechanic. have or be eligitHe Ia obtain
Mail resume to
A&amp;J Intervention Speciali st vallTru cking 14530 St. At dation In the area of
Moderate/Intensive educa?,Marietta, OH 45750
tional · needs. Instructional
AVON! All· Areas! To Buy .or Aides to work with students
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· with multiple diseblilties.
675· 1429.
Experience and/or train ing
Come , and join our team! preferred. Must be eligible
The Holiday Inn of Gallipolis tor an Aide Certificate from
seeks to hire a lull time dish- the Ohio Department of
· Parawasher. Please apply in per- Educati on.
son. No phone· calls please. Professional Ce rtificat ion
preferred. Subm1t applicaDeliver The .
tion or resume by June 14th
Charleston Gazette
to: Carleton SChool , P.O.
Evans to Leon
Box 307 , 1310 Carleton
Earn up to $1100 monthly Street,
_Syracuse,
OH
before exPenses.
45n9.
Appro:.C imately 3 to 4 hours
Fam•ly Senior Care Inc. now
a day
hiri
ng 1 full time LPN for the
Dependable vehlc:le
Jackson &amp; Gallia areas.
a muat
Please call (740)441 -1377
CAlL 1-800-WVA-NEWS
ask for D1ana 9r Teri.
EKI. 1709

Pitbull.
·Last see n on
To mbleson Run in Letart
wearing a brighl orange collar with tag. (304)895-3845
1304)67 4-6008 1304)674·
51 50

r
r

Gara ge Sate June 5th thur
9th. 3 112 miles -Of\ Jetrys
Run Ad. lots of clothes all
siies from adult to baby
sizes. Dishes a little brt of

Dental Assista"'nt Needed
Part·tlme Dental Assistant
needed for Progressive
Gallipolis Dental Office.
Experience
and
Radiographer's
U cen5;e
Preferred. Fax resumes and
reference&amp; to (740)446·
4840.
besk cl~rk needed .

Person

w1th good communicati on
. skill. gOod attitude &amp; selfAbsolute Top Dollar: U.S. motivated. Should apply at
Silver and Gold Coi ns, Budget Inn, Jackson P1ke,
Proofset s. Gold Rings . Pre· Gatllpolis. No phone calls,
U.s:
Cunency, please.
·
1s3 5
Solitai re Diamonds· M .T.S.
Co in Shop, 151 second Direct
Sales
Fantastic
Ave nue , Gallipolis, 740-44&amp; Opport'Unity,
50K
no
Problem. Must be Molivatecl
2842 .
and Self Starter. Catl Ken
I will bu~ Jllnll Cm. Call (740~992-7440
1740)388· 9303.
Domino's Plua Now Hlrlng
1 \ 11'111\ \ tl \ 1
Safe
Drivers.
Poin t
.,. I 1{\ II I .,.
Pleasant ,
Gallipolis
&amp;
Pome roy kx:ations Apply In
HELPWANI'ED . P~J rso n

=---- - - -- - -

I

100 WORKERS NEEOED
Assemble crafts,
wood items.
To $480/Wk
Materials pro\ltdecl.
Free InfOrmation pkg. 24Hr.
801 -428-4649
An Excellent way to earn
money. The New Avo n.
Call Mar11yn 304·88 2·264 5
Application's being acce pted
for
· Fuil
Time
Secretaty!Recptionist. J.O.
Drilling Co mpany, 101 N ort h
Third Street. Ra cine , OH.
rv,ust have knowledge of
C omputers. apply in person

(Careers Close To Hom e}
Cell Tod ayl 74()-446·4367,
1·800·2 14·0452

www.comlcll.com

11110
'.
HEIJ' WANI'ED . .
~-----·

Reward Missi ng Tan &amp; Wh ile

immed l ~te l y.

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now hiring an experie nced
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cook and ca shi er. Applv in
pers on 6/12:6/16 2·4 pm 112 Ple asant Stree t. Pomt
only at the URG cafeteria.
Pleasant , WV (30~(6 75·
4034 or ·(304)675·0418 : 3
Super Motel now accept· bedroom, 1 1/2bath , famil y
mg "app lication s lor part -time room, di nin g roo m. new winfront desk . Mu st be able to dows. new AC . new water
wo rk rotating shifts. Apply in tank , fe nced yard .
person . No phon e calls
please.
360. 2Ba. fireplace , 40"60
barn, 8 fl at acre s. P leasant
150
ScHooLs
Valley Rd ., Rio G rande.
_.INs,.mtiiilulii
· cniiiii&lt;lilNi.
. _..~ ·s120,ooo. (740)709· 1 t66.
1

"WWW.gal111)91i$car&amp;ercollege.com
Accredited Member Accrediti ng

11':.11"'-------, ll'lill"'-------,
110

lho

Missing I Since May 1, 2bos.
Hus kie/German Sh epherd
dog . Reward $300 . Call
1740) 398-0446.

1to

310

Galllpolla Career College

C 2006 by NEA, Inc.

Counc ~ tor Independent ·Colleges
aOO School s 12748

llELP WAMllD

HVAC Co~any is looking
for. e)Cperienced lnstaRer.
Must have t or more years
exp&amp;rlence in res idential.
Pay
on
experience:
Technical a plus . Call for
appl icati on 1740)441·123 ~
or fax resume to (740)441 -

1266 .
Loca l .Insurance Agency
sa&amp;king full tlme Customer
Service
Aeprese ntatiw.
Weekday hours, paid \lacation. P &amp; C license helpful,
but not required. Submit
resume to Box TSC·31 cJo
Point P leasant Register, 200
Main Street, Poinl Pleasant,

wv

255!j0

ad verti se "&amp;ny
preierenc e, li mitation or
discrimination based on
race, color, relig ion, sex
familial statu s or national
origin, or l.ny Intention to

make any such .
preference , limitation or
discrimination."
Th ll!l newspaper will not

knowingly accept
adve.rtiaements for real

estate whi ch IS in
\llol atlon of the lew. Our
reader s are hereby
lnform ad that all
dwelling s advertised In
th is newspaper are
available on an equ al
opportunUy bases.

House for Sale in Syracuse;
two -bedroom wi th bath ,
attached garage and base An estate safe .
4 year old Colonial on 3 ment.
$70 ,000. Phone 992-3690.
acres, app rox 1,900 sq . fl 3
bd r, 2 bath s, 2 car garage. MOTIVATED Seller !. Sand
maste r bdr. is 28x 24 with a H1ll Ad. nice. stick-built modjacuzzi
tub
5 125.000. ular hOme. meets N C hurri·
(740)446-7029
cane specs
3BFI 2 full

r'O

MlscELIANUJ\JS

15

........-...,

'86 Creslrige 14x70 2BRI 2
bat h. $6.995. Gall (740)36 5·
9948 .

Wltl care lor your loved one
m my home. Prl\lato Room,
3 hoi meals. Galll740)3880118

'86 Skylin e trent k1tchen.
Cash pnc e SB 995 Wdl
dehv'?l C&lt;t_ll 17401..&gt;85-9443

Will take care of the Elderlv
in their home. have 10 years
experience call (304 )675-

9/1Oth ol an acre fo - sale on
143 2 mob1if' homt-s 740992·5858 .

3264
II ' \ " 1\1

new
I 6'
W1de
Brand
vinyllshmgle 5181 /mo Call_
(740)385· 767 1.

serv
Floor cleaning, must have
driwrs license. Serious
.
-c all ers only. Cqmmerclal
FlOOr Ca~e (740)367-0255.
For a limited lima make 50%
selling Avon. Call l740)446-

N1ce 14Jt70 3 bedroo m only
$10 .995. Will help With dell "v erv. Cf~ ll. (740)385·9621.

•NOTICE•

·3358.
Fjll·ln

s ubject to the Fed t~ ral
Fa ir Housi ng Act of 1968
which ma kes it Ille gal to

rms. batll. ups ta1rs. New 3 bedroom 2 oa th.
Furni shed 1 BR apt. down· brick home tor sale m R1o
Gran de. Call (7 40)379-261 5
Personal mail boxes lor busi· sta1rs. Furn1tu re Store m rear
ness or apt. building. 740· 1/2 ac. lot, commerc•al, at
MOBILE HO~U:S
t 30
Bulaville
Pike,
992 _2878 _
FOR SALE
r,;:~;:.;o::O::~
Gallip olis , OH (740)4461180
WANnD
4782
To Do
14x55 ·'97 Fleetwood MH·
AltenUont
·
2BR. 1 bath. elec. heaVA.C·
Affordable Computer Repa ir\ LOcal company offenng "NO good conQition $10.500. Call
PAYMENr
pro· (_7 40)446-3644 for appt.
E~~:pert Service. (740 )992· DOWN
gram
s
for
you
to
buy
your
2395
14x60. 2br. 1 lull bath. All
home instead of renting.
El ectric for sa le {304)576·
•
1
00"·~ financ1ng
George's Portable Sawmill,
2934
don't haul your l ogs to the ' Less tha n pertect credit
accept
ed
6 good cond 111on use o
Mill just call 304·675· 195 7.
• Pay m~n t could be the mol:lile homes, 1997-2000
Roofing, Decks, Pole Ba rn s, sam e as rent
models, 14 &amp; t G w1de. 2·3·4
Locators .
Garages , New Co nstructi on.
bed rooms. all w1th centra 1
Top
Notch
Building
ai r Special 1997 14x70 .
Contractors . WV 11 036667
2BR , 2 ba th, $16 ,500 .
(304)675-3042 or ( 304~ 5 93·
Day time
(740~388-0000 .
11 15
evening (74p)368-8017 .

$15.87·$2il.19/hr., now hir·
ing. For application and free
governement }ob into, call
American Assoc. of LabOr 1·
913-599-8042, 24/hrs. amp.

FT

All real estate advertising
In this newspaper Is

0\/erbrook Rehab Cent er
will be holding STNA class·
es during the month "of June .
Please stop by and Yill out an
application to be considered
tor the cl asses. No phone 48R. ForeCioJsu re. only oath s oa!t lo.1 t~.;hen ~...~b1n ets.
calls please. E.O.E.
S20.900 For IIStlflgS call 1.21 acres uu!ntu.:J1nq J04·
675·23 19
800·391· 5228 +:t:-; 1 F2S4.

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS

L pN . ·

Applications Are Be tng
Accepted For A FT, Fill-In
LPN . Competitive Wages .
Paid Va!18~on . Paid Meals,
Health Insurance Available .
Interested Applicant&amp; Mav
Apply
Daily
9· 4 .
Ravenswood Care Cente r.
1113
Wash ington
S t .,

HoM ~:S

IOHSALE

IH \I I ""I\ II

L , ._

"'----~~~---·

1

n)

0

10

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Ur,less We W in I
1·888 -582·3345

a

0

0

White Great Dane miw. .
Female, very personable &amp;

Female Saint Barnard ( full
lOving Great pet. N9eds a
blooded) . Two yoars old,
good
hOme. current on an
short hair, outside dog, good vaccination
s.
(740~245·
with Children. 740·949·3151
5186.
;
.
I...u,i· ANO
. Female weiner dog to give to
FOUND
a good home. black a nd tan
4yrs old (740)992·2099 .
Found small tan male dog
Free 8 week old black &amp;
on May 27 around Hartford
white kltts ns, to a good
ar ea . Call
to Identify
trained.
uuer
home.
.
(304)675·2823
(740)379-2815.

I'ROFI;5SIONAI..
St:RVICES

llELP WANU.IJ

Kittens. 2 yellow, 1 white. 2
'
gray tiger. Some lonQ haired.
S.W.F. lo.o king tor S .W.M . 6 weeks old. (740)446·7464 .
age 40·60 write to : PO Box O&lt; (740)441·7411.
871 , Eleanor, WV 25070
O ne 3 ye ar min Border
Co llie female.
Great
GIVEAWAY
Personality. Free to good
hom e, (740)992-5232
t2 Puppies, mixed , cute
Puppies, ha ~ Red Tick han
med.slze, 5 weeks old , lov·
Mountain Feist. 1st shots &amp;
ing. Call after 6:00 . 740·
wo rmed. Call (740)245·
843·5106.
9094.

sao

5

Publication
Sunday Dleplay: 1:00 p.m .
Thur•day for Sundays

• All ads muet ba prapald'

• Start Your Adl With A Keyword • Include Complete
Deacrl.,tlon e Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
• Include Phone Number And Addre•• When Needed
• Ad• Should Run 7 Daya

4x4's ForSele ................ ......•....••.••...••.......•.•725
Announcement .... .........................•..•........••. 030
Antlquea ................ : ...................................... 530
Apartments lor Rei1t ................................... 440
Auotlon and Flea Markat.............................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accassorlas .....; .................... 760
Auto Repair ....................................... .. .........770
Autos lor Sale ................... .......... ................. 7t0
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................ 550
Business and Bulldlnga ..............., ••.•....•••.• 340
Buslnaas Opportunlty.................................. 2t 0
Business Trlllnlng .............. :.........••.•.....••.•.• 140
Campers I Motor Homes ... ........................ 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanka ................................ .. ........ Ot 0
Child/Elderly Care ..•........ :..... ....... ............... t90
Electricai/Ralrigaratlon ..••...••.•..•.......... .......840
Equipment lor RenL ............................ ...... 480
EKcavatlng .....•••..•••.•.•.......... ,...... .. .... .. ..... .. .. 830
Farm Equlpmant ..................................... .. ... &amp;IO
Farms lor Rent ............................................. 430
Farms lor Sole ....•.....•••: ............................... 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sala ... .................:.:................................. 515
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .....................................
Furnished Aooms ........................................450
General Haullng .......... ..... ............................850
Giveaway ...... .. ............................ .......c..........040
Happy Ads ............................. .. .....................050
Hay &amp; Graln ........................ ..........................640
Help Wantad .................................... ............. 110
Home lmprovementa .................. ..........••.....810
Homos for Sale .. ........ ... ...... .. .. ..................... 3t0
Household Goods ... ................... ,................ 510
Houses for Ront ..... .... ..... ............................ 410
In Memoriam ............................. .. .. ........., .•.•. 020
lnsurance ....... .. ... .. ....................................... t30
Lawn &amp; Gorden Equlpmant ........................ 660
Llveslock ...................................... .... .. .. ........ 630
Lo st and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage .................... ........................ 350
Mlscellanaoua..................., ...................... .... 170
Mlscallanaoua Marchandloe.......... .•...,.. ..... 540
Moblla Home Repair .................................... 860
Mobil' Homaa lor Aant ............... : .......... .. .. . 420
Moblla Homes lor Sale............................ .. .. 320
Money to Loan .•.••............., ..................... .... . 220
Motorcycles I 4 Whealara........... ..............740
Musical Instruments .............................. .. ... 570
Personals ...........~.; ................................ ..... .. . 005
Pets for Sale ................................ .. ............ .. 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng ............................... ... .. B20
Profeeolonal Sarvlceo ....................;............ 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... t60
Real Estate Wantacl ......................................360
Schools lnatructlon ... .... .. ... .........................150
seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer •.••..••••..•....., .......... :650
Situations Wanled ....................................... t20
Space lor Rent. .. .... ....... ... ............................460
Sporting Gooda .......... ................................. 520
SUV'alor Sale ... ... ....... .. ...............................720
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ Tt 5
Upholatory ... ...... ........ ..... ..•.•.••....................• 870
Vans For Sole .................... ............ .... :.......... 730
Wanted to Buy ....................... ...................... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppllea ...., ............. 620
Wanted .To Do .... .. ,............. .. ..... ................... tao
Wanted to Rant ........................ .................... 470
Yard Sale· Galllpolls :......................... .. .. .. ... .072
Yard Sole-Pomaroy/Middle ......... .. ..... .. ... .... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant... ............................. 07&amp; .

World Cup regulars .

Now you can hOve borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads
£•~~
1m
Borders$3 .00/perad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

' :~.~~=:~:;~~! :'r~:;T~·

In Next Day•• Paper

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Thf:t most famous uncterachiever of all

() Reconstructed

GROUPS

r.

\"\."\. Ot \( I \ 11 \ I"'

992·2157

DisPlay Ads

Dally ln-Colui"Y'n : 1:00 p.m .
Monday-Friday for lnaertlon

Gross Capacity; 48,132

With few players wrth European experiem:e, not likely to go all the way.

~:A!!
May' 02

ilr~t . lnsertlon .

hall not be liable fo
ny lo~sa or expena
hat results from th

'

'

I

Pop.; 100,000

' Best African team to repeat Senegal's ,
quarterfm.l performance from 2002 .

l!lii!Ull

•

Groos ciiiiBciY:«: 199
•

Ivory Coast
,I4JII'OII 3111

lil iitff

I

Investment: $114.5 million

. Believed to be one of the few teams
that can beat Brazil.

46

·eliminatiOn from 2002.

Zentrllllldlon

l'illl '" ... .

May '02

Publishing reaerves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errore Uu1t B
eported on the fir•
ay of pubtkoatlon an
he Trlbune~Sentlnel
eglater
will
b
eapon1lble ior n
ore .than the eoat o
he. apace occupi
y lhe error and on

· South
Koi'BI

- ~-~-~-~~~-~-~-~:- -~~~~:~ ~~~~-~- ~.

Argentina
May '02

A

3.4 million

iiiimi&gt;liiotaiiion ···· ······v

OhloValloy

Should Improve on ltsllrst-round

Capacity In each stadium
ranges from nearly 41 ,000 · . ~stralla
in Nuremburg to about . May ,02 48
75,000 in Beriin. While
iliW ·
·
most were reconstructed,
Taking 1he Aussles far would be a minor
extended or modernized,
live were built from the. miracle for Coach Guus Hlddink.
GROUP G
ground up.
France

Fii'i. ·Geiliiiiiiirciion siiiii1iiiii
Investment $241 .4 million
.........................................

li!W.:l!t 'Bl
May '02

*POLICIES*

·-~t·~~---

I••

Trinidad
&amp;!_!lba_J!O

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

or Fax To

POUCIES: Ohio V1llly Publlahing reHI'\IM tht right to edh, reject,

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

.Could make It to second round despite
playing without homefield advantage.

.

Word Ads

Monday thr.u Friday
8:00a.m~ to 5:00p.m.

~ion BrSzlt ls l ~

Otten outperforms higher ranked and
more favored nations at Wortd Cup.

446-aoos ·

or Fax To

Offtee llo«P-~·

Favorite yet again: expected to have
easy time reaching fourth atraighlllnal.

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Tuesday, June 6, 2006

Tuesday, June 6, 2006

Marine MechaniC Needed.
Must Have Experience.
7&gt;W-992·6520.

Overbrook Center Is now
a&amp;epting applications lor a
full tlme office assistant. If
you are Interested in becOm·
ing a part at our team please
Raven-swood,
WV. fill oul an application today
Page Street ,
333
(304)273-9236
FAX . at
Dnvorw-od;
Mlddlepo",
OH
. N o phone
References AGqulred .
CDL(Ciass B) Drivers wHI·
calls please. EOE
Home
Health
ing to drive fo1 local ready· Growing
Agency has Full-Time pool·
mi ~~; -concrete company.
Paid Train ing
E~~;perlenc e Is preferred but tlori tor an AN or LPN. Individuals willing to train lor
not necessary Med. Insur- Competittve wages. bonus· clerical or driving positions .
ance &amp; other benefits avail· es. &amp; beneiUs. Contact Mus1 bo AGE 55 OR OVER
Home Health Care of SEQ and meet eligibility requireabl e attar waiting period.
Driver must be willing to do Toll Free al1-808·388· 1100. manta. Addit ional training
pre-maintenance on trUct.:s HOME HE,,..LTH AID ES· positions available. Call the
Senior Employment Center
&amp; equipment ya rd work &amp;
SIGN ON BONUS. Home
(868)7 34·2301.
other miscellaneous chores.
Health Care of SE Ohio ra
Exper i e~ operating equip·
currently hiring home heahh
Part time pcsitk)n to Manage
ment &amp; extra skills such as
aldes-com pet ltiwe wa ges .
COuntry_Homes rental com ·
welding a plus.
Cai17&gt;W-662-1222 .
munity In Shade Area·
Cali Robertsburg
(304 ~937·34 1 0
Uve·in Caregiver and com · Includes a house to live in.
Pa nlon tor seni or couple . Send resu me ' to Country
or Lakln(304)773-5234
Locatao In Mason County " Gallipolis area. (740)446· Homes, PO Box , 033
Logan, Ohio 43138.
near BuffalO WV.
4208.

HIO VA LLEY PUBLI SH
NG CO. recommends tha
u do business w1th peo
le you know, and NOT t
end money through th
ail until you have 1rwestl
ateCI the ofterin

Ve_ry cteari 14x64 2 bed ·
roo m Only $7 .995 . Cah
(740)385- 0698

Central air, full base ment ,
hardwood floors, detached
R EALf SIH£
garage, covered
pa1io
W Ar&lt;m·l l
fenced ba ck yard . newly
Party. Supply Store tor sale re modeled , 3 o r 4 bed - Need ~ sen y_our home ')
In Pomeroy (304 )675:5332
rooms. close to schools,
Late on paym ents d1vorce
Po1nt Pleasant $69 .500
JOb transter or a death' t
(740)709-t 382.
can l:luy your helme A ll castand QUICI&lt; ClOS ing 7 40 -4 16·
10 UlAN
R anch Style. 3 Bedroom.
3130.
2 Bath. 2 C a r Ga rage. 9
IU \I \I..,
m iles
trom
Hol zer
uNOTICEu
Hosp1tat/ Ciintc . 1 acre

r

Borrow Smart. Contac
he Ohio Division. o
in ancial
lnstil utlon·
Office o.l
Consume
Atfalrs BEFORE you refi
an ce your hom e o
~bla i n a loan. BEW,..RE
f requ8s ts for anv larg
dvance payments a
ee&amp; or insurance. Cal
he Ofl1ce ol Consume
A.ffarrs toll free at 1-866
76-0003 to l ea r"~ •' th
mortgag e
t&gt;ro ~ e r
o
ende r
IS
p roperl
icensed. (Th is is a public
ervice anl} ouncemen
rom the Ohi o Val le
Publishing Company~

r

0

mil, beautiful landscapH&lt; ~
1
ing . screened-In back •
f;"I"UI n. ,. "T'
deck with hot tub, V1ew
~--·v nii"'"'iiiiii"i.lllllr'
photos/into
online
'
Code
1BA hous e- 11 Gart 1eld Ave.
www.or\lb.corp
5286 or call (740)388·
Gall ipolis. $350 mof11h. Call
0140 .
for details (740)441 ·0 194 or
(740)441 · 11 84

HANDYMAN

2 BA Muse wnh basemem
ha rdwood floors . m1l e trom
$450/rno 'dep
B npg lhe tm,shmg , toots town
3txlrfTI Rarch. w"2 bAths. 1n {740)441 -0 460 9-5, M·F

SPECIAL

Jl'f'-'lell Sl:I:JP. Ho u:.;e 'lever 3 br, 1 1120" 'u'' l ,1!:&gt;emer·
INed 1n S11s, on 2 t&gt;eauutul · on Jen cho Rt1
(3::»1 )206
acre's. City • water at road, 8813
about 20 mins south ot ::.:..-'---~---,-­
Athens .
OH.
$74 ,500. 48R house for rent. $650
Owne r financing. (740)489· ' mo plus dep. Call (740)4469146.
'3644 tor info.

" .

�..

. '-

- ..

'

Tuesday; June 6, 2006

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 6, 2006
ALLEYOOP

APAliJMtlii1S
FORRmf
•No USED s.....r:EL
NEW ~
'~
Beams.
PI~ Rebar
St••l
......,
,.....
Angle/
Concrete'
For
I Fl 8 t Bar Steel
Channa '
'
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
SCrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Fdday, 8am,.:30pm. ClOsed
S
da
&amp;
Thursday,
atur Y
Sunday. (740)446-7300

bedroom unfurnished
3br. 1ba. Country Home on
Soard Rd. Letart, WV upstairs apartment. Air,
retrigeralor, disposal,
tull basement, lawn
&amp; iJanjen. (304)675-2484 or garage. Deposit &amp; references required. 136 First
(304)593-t-'Bt
"Ave.
rear,
Gallipolis.

New John Deere Compacts
and 5000 Series Utility tractors 00% Fixed for 36
through
John
month.
Deere Credit Carmichael
E~"~uipment (740\.AA.S-2412
"'~
,Quality John Deere Hoy
Equlpmonl for tess-round
&amp;
balers, square balers
mower conditioners 04.7%
h
111 th
Fixed lor 48 mon 8 roug
J 0hn
Deere
Credit
'
Carmichael
Equipmant
(740)440-2412.

r

L---Sui'I'!JlSiiiOiiiiii--'

1!11!""------,
i

Ray Martl'n

r:

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Nortb
• A J 8

MONTY

-tp ,1O:X30'

J NES'

South
1•
3•

·6·•
'

MY "''~

I
A

ti~ON

~)CPIIl~l&gt; W~~N ~

'

Hai'CIWtod Cabinetry And FurntNre

l&gt;llOVe ,
INTO TtiiS
(.LDV~IlLtAff

r ::~toes:

r

""'l!:--~~:-""""1

t:R~

r

I

I

3
Pomeroy, OH
State Rt. 124

.

AUTOGRAPH
SESSION
·· Players .from the Hu'ntington
Heroes Arena League Football
Team· will be 11-vailable from
10 am to Noon on
Saturday, June 10, 2006
at the PVH Coed Flag
Football Tournament.
The. event will take place in
the large picnic shelter at the
Point Pleasant Moose Lodge.
Fans of ALL ages are
encouraged to attend. The_n
stay to cheer on your favorite
flag football team!

8

~~U-~~~~~~
THE BORN LOSER

f'i'I'&lt;\C.Oi'~\~I~C,e.J'H~ ~ '""~ •
i'U:W Dlf.T f:,()OK.-1'1 PFOio\~&lt;;
l'U.·LOSE. TW£t&lt;r'l'

P"

P"N.l.OW tJ{.

John Deere Mini Excavator/
'
•
Tractor Loader Backhoe/
Skid Steers. Carmichael
Equipment (740)446-2412

2002 Honda VLX/600CC, red
with low miles very good
ld •condition. It wou
.....,. a
w ·u 11
great starter bike.
1 se .
37 2733
for $3,000(304)9 •

,(7,~40::::)2:-56-6=:-::2::5:::1:'-.~:-;:;::-;::;;; 2003
Artie Cat 90cc Youth
ATV, 2004 Kawasaki V-Force
1998 Buick Skylark 96,000
70Dcc ATV Phone (304)882miles, .excellent condition.
$2,800. Cetr'(740)388-9645 3160

CI .ASSIFIEDS
EMPLOYMENT

.

'

IIS WOKTI\ P... Sl\.01-

TOPO~

.....
P...T T~ENT'I'

I'OJ~~ f&gt;.. II\ON'h\ :,fl,E

. r\" ~OK '&lt;OIJ!

c.ot-\f'LETQ'(

POO~t&gt;~IN

C.OUU&gt;

t&gt;IS~PE.I&gt;R 11'\l..E!&gt;S

Tl-l"'!-1 C«E. YE~ !

J

"tN:~-rm!

)

4,.;4 excellent
(304)675-2359

r

'

... RE...I&gt;'( TO K.t!OC.K

THI',T liRA INIAC. GIN,O,.
OFF HER PEDESi...L
FOR ONC.E tN H Elt.
SN&lt;&gt;e&amp;'&lt; "!"11 SMARTER
TAAN
AAI'-"

I

t850 S.C. Crestliner Fish

Shoretande' Traitor. Motor
.Guide Trolling Motor bought
in 2003 never used due to
sickness.
Call 740-99 2•
7462--9:00AM to 5:00PM .
Daily.

..

•
PEANUTS

-

.

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $54 PER
MONTH

.3994
IIJa ";::"'~~:-:::=:::::::1

Evinrude
Hawk
Boat ,01 150Motor.
HP

LIFE!

WVt039714

condition.
)674
(304 , -

lloATSFOR&amp;SMALE(J)'()RS

BIG NATE

,.1111!'"•

(740) 992-0496

$6,200. Gall (740)379-9392.
94 Yamaha Timer wolf 250,

A

!~:::;;;;==:::;;:=====~~~~:;
Cornerstone .
Construction

1984 Bayliner. 19 1/2 ft.
Cuddy Cabin, Votvo/Penta.
$3,000. Call (740)367' 0314.

tM~~~
02 Wildcat 28ft 5th wheel,
slide out, fiberglass sides,
$17,500. Excellent condition, clean. (740)245-9109,
(740)441 -7632.
1976 Holiday Rambler, good
condition, new tires, some
remodeling
$1,200.
(740)388-o301 .
1996' Terry 28' c81TJper
w/s lide out. $7,500 060.
(740)245·01 83, (740)208-

6340.
2006 Jayco 2T travel trailer.
· Used twice. Oueeru1ullltwin
==~':Ill beds &amp; sofa, lg. shower, surround sound. Was ·$tH.'Ooo.
Now $14,000. (740)446 2800

SUNSHINE CLUB

Residenti81• Commc~ial•. C~nentl CQidradina
Pamlin g • [)nms • Window s • Deck. ~
• Siding • Rou1in g • ROillll Addi1iun s • Rc,;n~rw.lding
WV 038992
• Plumbing • Elcc1rical 740-367.()544
OH3S244
•A(·n,uslicCciling
740-339-3412

-Economy Beef $8.25
·Shade R1ver Beef $8.75
-Whole/Shell Corn $7 .25/Bag
-Cracked Com $8.25/Bag
-Soybean Meal $13.25/Bag
-Shade River Hog Feed $8.85

GARFIELb

Why Drive.Anywhere Else?

ANP

Shade River AG.Service, Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985-38 1
'

t

PON'T EVEN TI-IINK
IT'&amp; ILL.E&amp;-AL I

'

FOR RENT- MEIGS COUNTY
1·4 BR. Houses &amp; Apts.
1 Luxury- Also HOD
Also Commercial Space
740-416-5547

...,, 1n 11 1 "'

Now Available At

Handy Man. Home Services
and Repairs. Call (740)645-

;::!l:::::l:ll::a.!l

Pass
Pass

1•
2 NT
4•
Pass

P~s

East
Pass
Pass
• Pass
Pass

52 Snllllllown
13 Demure
55 Body part
15 Lo- 56 Verne
graphics
skipper
16 Dice throws 57 Bradley or
17 Hurry
Sharif
18 Sherlock
58 She-lobster
Holmes'
59 Wi111clsm
streel
60 Strong,
20 Greasy
as venison
21 Tract of land 61 Go downhill
23 Urge on
24 Eight quarls
DOWN
Faucet
hookup
1 . Hop,. skip. .
29 By way of
or ]ump
32 Dell loaves
2 Survey
33 Room p rice
llndlng
~Yale grad
3 Assigned
35 Prince
work
Valiant's
4 Houston
eldest
pro
36 Musical
5 Sporty truck
·
sound
6 Duryea
Fuae
or Marino
36 Got
7 - and outs
acquaintad
8 Leal of
39 Maneuvlf
graai
slowly
9 Asian river

:rr

"Taki11g The Sti11g Qut Of
Hard Work!"

Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

7524 .

-------

-----

--·----·---·--- ---........·- : - -

10 Congenial
14 Avg.lllze
19 Tundra
dlinlzens
20 Molding
22 Neck pari
23 Honor
24 ' Tot 's
wheels
25 Bronte
govameas
26 llDilll'hcllon
28 Feedbag
moraela
29 Number two
30 Pandora'•
boxful
31 Whi1e
Houae

37 Stay ,_r

the lhoN
41 Dlapenae
43 Hostile
44 - and YIIIG
ol5 Pari of an
AagendllMu
......
46
~,....
48 Contlnled
murmufll
49 Hike
50 Science
maguine
52 Soggy
g_round
53 .,..,. Flclan"

n.r.

54 Run Into

atelier

36 Unhlp one

Michel de Montaigne, a French ·&amp;ssa0sl
who died in 1592, wrote, "Nature should '
have been pleased lo have made this age
miserable, willlout making if also ndicu·
tous." He was relerring lo the "111h luster,"
01 55 - his own age then.
In bridge, you should try lo lind the best
line ol play to make your conlract If lhal
is 100 percen( ·perlect; ff less, It Is miserable il it fails, pleasing ff il succeeds.
tn this deal, you plunge into six spadesa six-level conlract on 06-06-06. What is
lhe best line of play aMer West leads a
low frump?
Norlh's second•round jump-rebid ol two
no-trump showed a balanced hand with
1 19 or a poor 20 poinls: loo much lor a
one-no-trump opening bul insufficient for
a two-no-trUmp opening. His third-round
jump lo four spades •1'11leunced a parlicularly good hand for the t\Jclion so far.
Since you mighl to~e a Irick in each side •
suit,. you must use dummy's h·ear·t suit to
provide . discards. Pull trumps, then run
lhe hearl10 . II will lose to Easl's queen
Let's suppose East shills to a diamond.
You lake lhe .Irick wilh the board's ace,
play a club to your king, lhen lead a haart
to dummy's eight When il holds, you discard your remaining ,diamond on lhe
heart ace, ruff a heart in hand, play a cl ub
lo lhe board's ace. and cash lhe eslablished heart jack, lhrow1ng away your cl ub
10. You collect these 12 tricks: live
spades , lhree hea~s. one diamond and
three clu bs.
One.ollwo finesses (should) work some
three·quarlers Ql lhe lime.

. CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher crypt,grarns art created from QUOiations t7t famouli ~.past arv:l ~
Each letter in 1M cipher stands lor 1oother,

Today's clue: L equals G

"FZO

1 NOfiCE IIOU'RE N01'
INNOCENCE

PROF'~&amp;IN~

WIHDOR

IW

APHHOJNOHON;
WHODNIC
-

WBX

YHORTNQJF

LOHCVJX
FZO

VBB

WBVLR
IMOH

ZVHHX

R.

ZVMO
IW

OPHlYO ."
FHPCVJ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' I was a medium-level juvenHe delinquent, "class
clown: - S/laquilla O'Neal , recalling his elementa ry school days

T:~~:t:~'

S© tt4illA- ~ r. ~s

------

~~!T!,

·

0

1~;,.4 ~y

WOlD
fl

OAMI

Cl,tY I. POLLAN

Rearrar~g• !tHen of lht
lour JCrambltd wonls bo-

low fO form four simple wordJ.

w::-::,~':':~-:;;.7c,!0: .h

Collective ventures will not be w1t out
promise in the year ahead. However, your ,
greatest successes are more likely to
come from situations where you are able
to perform independent of•others.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Usually
you're a rather friendly and tactful person,
but you cou ld unwittingly say something
that might be quite offensive to another.
especially if you're tired or under stress.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Chances
are your financial p~ture could be looking
reasonably good. but, it there is a leak you
have failed to · plug, that might be shortlived. Nip things in the bud now.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - You may be far
more tolerant with outsiders than you will
be with your family or lo\19d ones. Just
rememtler. II you start snapping at them,
expect the same treatment in return.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Should a
companion's behavior anger you, don't
keep the issue to yourself. Bring it out in
th e open in a reasonable manner and
resolve your differences.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- Your desire tor
possessions could be stronger than usual
now. so be very careful in involvements
that require a cash outlay. You might be
setting yourself up for a future tack of
funds.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - When it
comes to career situations, you must be .
careful not to come on too aggressively or
to oversell once your customer is con- .
~tinced your wa~e!l are wonhy. You could
quickly lose him.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21)--. There
isn't likely to be an~hing wrong with your
assessmen t of what needs to be ctpne, but
when it comes to e,.;ecuting your "to do~
lis!, you might be slopped short. Follow a
game plan .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - An
acquaintance might be a trifle too curious
about something you consider private and
personal. and want to keep it that way. Be
on guard to lend off sUch a person from
prying.
·
·
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - II you
don' t have it In you to stand up to pressures, someone with whom you're closely
associated may take it upon his/herself to
use you. Don't let yoursetf b~ pushecl
around .
PISCES (Feb. 2Q-March 20) - Someone
with whom you'll team up to handle an
SS!Iignment might be too independent to
I:MI a good oo-worker. Assess co-workers
more carefully.
ARIES (March 21-Apnl19)- Oon't mi~n­
terpret a friend's preoccupation with
his/her own Interests as a sign or disloyal- ·
ty to you. Your pal II merely trying to keep
his/her own priori1i81 in order.
·TAURUS (April 20.May 20) - Chancot
are any disruptions that occur on the home
lront wilt be due to members of· the family
failing to cooperate with one · enothar.
Unlortunat~ly, you r:nay be a principal

SOUP TO NUTZ

Scorpion Tractors

now"

or Kenton

o nenc:t;•r~

GRIZZWELLS

BAlJl\1 LU!\IBER
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
uncOrlctitlonal lifetime guarantee. Loc81 references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers ~asement
Waterproofing.

Nortb

Anewer to P111vlou1 Puzzle

neighbor
41 Landocape
• or portra~
42 l n l u 44 ~
47 Gt:OOvy
51 "-dolor

rr

J 7
K Q 10 2

West

period
12 Getz

~Astro-

WOLFE

CON STRUCTION

StocK. Call AOfl Evans, 1- Holland Carousel setter 1994 Mustang GT conv,
800..537-9528. $1,350 firm . (740)379-2789. sharp $4,900. 1999 Pontiac
Grand Am nice $3,900. 1999
10ft. No Til Drill
John ~--re
~
Mercury
Cougar,
nice
h
Car miChael
rent.
lor
$4,500. All vehicles ave
Enulpment
(740)446-2412.
"'
free t
year warran1y.

Saturday, July 1, 2006
1'1 a.m.
Begins at large parking lot
beside of Wellness Center
$20 pre-registration
$25 same day registration
$15 for a passenger
Fees include·a
. commemorative sl')irt.
All proceeds l)enefit PVH
Foundation &amp; Hospice.
· For more information please
call the Community Relations
Department (304) 675·4340,
Ext. 1326 or 1492

i

IMPORTS

992-5682
F..,
a·-· I

•4

40 Neve

·
Winery calk
Autob.hn
vehicle
Ice meltlf
Hlslorlcal

a,

Auto &amp; Truck
•Repair

Licensed Home Builder

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

I

DIN'T'CHA
SAY so !!
C'MON IN !!

ROGER HYSEll
GHRHGE

i

MEKC1-IANIJN.

I

Il

I

{~4

r

A WAY
I GUESS
IT IS !I

J

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992·6635

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

FREEDOM RIDE
MOTORCYCLE RUN

WAY IT
SOUNDS
LIKE
,GAMBLIN'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

l41-992-1m

4

1.--·FORiiiiitiiioRFM-~-r'·

~PU~T~TKA:::T~~W~E~LL~.-=IN~~-;~:-flJr~WEL~~L~,~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~"~~~

r

r

7

From a nonfinesse
to a needed finesse

i15

I

3 2
6
9 8 5
8 4 3

Opening lead: • 4

Hl Wrh. .I

E

A 7 6

Vulnerable: Neither

1 T 'm
Top • ..
5tump l:n"lnd"lng
Bucket Truck

ROBERT
BISSELL
.STRUCTIOM

A 2

•

Dealer: North

Tree Service

I

AJ984

•

•

~~~:::::::~;~~~~~=====1

i

.

•

:~:;;:;==::;~; ~i;;;::"i'"~';mo~·;
pd~~~~~~t5ii
I

~---•Gooo;·
·-----

M-06-0&amp;

West
East
• 54 ..
• 6
¥ K 7 52
• Q
. KIUS43
• Q
• 9 5
• J
Soutb ·
• K q· 10 9
• 10 3

iiiii·s•x10'

r

• 1
•

8
11

Hill' s Self
Storage

"Carpet Guy"

NEA Crossword. Puzzle -

BRIDGE

-oooo

s

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

1995 Pontiac Bonne\11119
93 000
3800 V6, 20 mpg.
•r- .-~ .600
mileS, all power, ~ • .x;,
)2 5 5934
OBO. (740 4 •
.
-----::---;-:::1996 Chevy Camaro V6,
Ssp, T-top&amp;, red, looks sharp,
runs great $3,900. (740)2566251 , (740)645-1393.

THE MAPLES APART·
MENTS tOO Memorial Drive
East
740-992-7022
Subsidized
Residential
Housing for SO vears of aoe
and older. Priority Given To
Applicants With Income AI
4 Room~.. near Hlgh •(740)446·2561.
0r Bek&gt;w $10,900.00 for 1
5choot cart t304)675-24-4t 4 rooms &amp; bath, stove/ref.
$12 450 oo tor 2
STANLEY TREE
person or
,
.
Buick Park Avenue.
1997
- - - : - : - : - - : - - - - Utilities paid
$450/mo. persons. Maximum IncomeTRIMMING &amp;
leather, loaded, all mainteAtllntlont
Upstairs, 46 Olive St No 1 person $18 ,150.00 or
Free
Measurements
GENERAL
nance retards, well malnLac$ company oflaring "NO pets. (740)446-3945 .
••o,7oo.oo for 2 persons.
CONTRACTING
~
-tained, 116k, asking $4,600.
•
DQWN PAYMENr P'O·
Must meet HUD/20218 cr~eBululiNG
(740)245-5934.
gnmo for you to buy your
• Prompt &amp;·quality
29670 Bashan Road
Accepting appticalions lor 2 &lt;Ia lor htcusehold compostInstaller
home Instead of renting.
work
Racine, Ohio
bedroom apartment. $500 tion.
MANAGED By
it'~!';...------, 1998 Neon 4 door, air, auto,
• t 00% Nnenclng
•
Affordable
Rates
45771
Realty 30,.;40 all metal building supLIVESTOCK
$1 ,500 OBO. (740)256-1652
Carpet .
month, kitchen appliances &amp; Sdverheels-A
'" less than perfect credit
74()..949-2217
•
References
W/0 lurnlshed. water &amp; Company · Equal Housing plied and Installed $16,900. L~-------• or (740)25EI-1233
Ceramic
Tile
accepted
garbage Included, no pets, Opportunity.
Call for additional sizes '
-'--'-----,--Available
• Payment could be the 1st month , security deposit
7
year
old
Colt.
Part
2001 Z-24 sunroof 53.900;
Hardwood • Vinyl
913
1
4 256
I
•
Free Estimates
same as rent.
(7 0)
&amp; lease required . (740)446- r;
Palomino . $400 OBO. Call 2000 Stratus 40 sunroof
Carpet Restretch
I
"Insured"
·locators.
Mortgage
'&lt;;!M-y;;,.. .
9585.
FOR LEASE
Blo&lt;K, brick, sewer pipes. (740)256·1233.
$3,500; 1997 Tahoe 4x4
Laminates .
Call
Gary Stanley
(740)367
__
windows, lintels, etc. Claude '---'--::--:-::--:-- $6,900; 1999 Toyota Corol!a
Hours
740-742·2293
BEAUTIFUL
APARTWlnlers, Rio Grande, OH
Boer Goott tor oate
$4,200; t999 Taurus SE
740·517·3704
·.00
AM.
&amp;·.OO PM
BUDGET 30 acres to lease for farming Call7 0-245·5121.
7
New 2 BR house, central air, MENTS
AT
740-992·0650
6,full blood, 1 year o td re gl S· $3,700; 1997 S10 $2 ,900 ·
4
laundry room , in Gatupolis. PRICES AT JACKSON .. nd/or graz1ng. Please call jft;;.,;.;.;.;;,;,;.::-....- - , tared males. Ready to ·Sunfires, Saturns, Honda,
71
ITfs
breed. Championship blood- Grand Am &amp; others in stock.
(740)441-o194 or (740)44t· ESTATES, 52 Westwood (859)363- 4S lor further
344
1184.
to $442. information
FOR SALE
lines. Call (740)245-0485.
3 months/3,000 mile warran·
:-"11:
_• .
Please Adopl A
Drive lrom
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
ty. SOO Carl or Rodney at
~. :~
Equal
For Sale: Two Appaloosas, COOk Motors, 328 Jackson .
Dog
740-446·2568.
Pomeroy Large 4 bedroom
3 female Pyrenees puppies. 4y 0 stud $300 and 3YO
C
newty remodeled, new car- Housing Oppo,tunity
riO
HOll'if]l()U) .
1st sh01s and wormed. No mare $400. Inquiries at 74Q- Pike (740)446-o103.
Meigs ounty
1
pet, WID hOok-up. $900 per
' n
CAT
papers. Bweeksold. Makes 256-t253after8p.m.
2003 PT c·r uiser, 4 cyl.,
DogPound
CONVENIENTLY LD
•
good watch dog. $200 each
Gotdon Re!riem - Mix m'l'
emo,'VO " rl
month. 740-949¥2303.
runs &amp; looks great, good gas
Eo • •ffORDASLEt
w ~
Black Lab - Mix mule
~-·
To.,.;nhouse
ai\Artments. Air conditioner 10,()()() BTU Cal cell- (7 40)208-o518 as k Miniature Oonkles tor sale, mileage,
$7,200.
Call
•
r~
$95; refrigerator 17 cb. ft . for Kelly
Babies $225 each, Jack
Yellow chow- Mix male
Rent or Sale 4br in and/or small houses FOR nice $150; washer $95 dryer - - -·- ---,--.,--,- $300, Jenny $500, pregnant (740)388-0140.
Hu.&gt;ky mil spayed ,-c-ry timid
441 1111
Syrar;;u&amp;e, $600/month &amp; RENT. Call (7 40)
·
sgs. Gene's Appliances, 76 6 .week old full bl'ooded Lab Jenn~ $600. (740)446•0118. 97 Olds Acheiva, 4 cyl, ·cold
RetrieYer bca);!c mix
Deposit.
Wate rfSewer for application &amp; information. v ·,ne St. back 01 Mollohan.'s puppies. Chocolate and
air, $800 down $200 month;
3Jut:k Ru'~sdl - Mix
Inc! ·dad No Pets (304)675
Nelson. s Meat Processing.
- C 0·It
Gallipolis Carpet.
(740)446 -7100 black, males1 and females,
H
wo~lng· 94 FOrd Tempo, 4 cy l., e;:old 2 Australian Shepherd Mix
u
'
1'n
1 0265
•
5332 or(740)59 age
ouse
rr.
' air, $600 down $200 month:
of'emale
2Pm $200/each. (740)245-5815.. Smoke
Deposit ahd references 10am-2pm , after
Beef, Hogs, D.eer.
No
r
1
M&amp;J
Auto,
Rt.
160,
VInton,
Britmny
S
puuid
-mix- emu e
6
788
Rental 2BR. 480 Paxton Rd. required. No pets. Call (740)367 ·'
a week old Registered Shih· Appointments necessary.
Many pupr,ies to chOOse
- - - - -- - -Oh, 2pm-6pm. 740-388·
$350/deposit $350Jmonth,
9693 or 740 _742 .2662
(740)446·246a.
Tzu
pups.
1
fema
le,
1
male,
Milton,
WV
(304)743-5400
rom
s1ove. ref sup. W/0 hookup.
$400 beg. (740)441-9047 or
991-3779
1 and 2 bed·
Quality horse and livestock
1
G a ·o s t·v,·ng
Ready now, 6 month lease.
·
(740)645·4951 .
r Cl u
Must Sell Moving . ., 2004
..
room apartments at Village
A 1.
trailers now available at
W
t
..
Hud accepted. Some pets
.
PP
lance
Carmtc' hael Enuipment. New GMC Envoy, .
arran y,
Manor
and
Riverside
AKC
Golden
Retriever
pup"'
o,OOO/miles,
On5tar,
allowed . Cell (304)8122
pies. $275 females, $250 dealer for Valley and ioaded. KBB's $21,000 will
• •
2236, Home (740)446-2515. Ap!!rtments in Middleport.
From $295-$444. Call 740Warehouse males (304)882-2391
Kieferbuilt
Horse . and sell $17,000/firm (740)6B5:
lid~~~~~
992-5064. Equal Housing
Livestock Trailers. Many
Stop renting Buy 3 bedroom Opportunities.
in Henderson, wv. Pre- AKC Mini Dachshund, 9 options available- steel, aiU- 5737
...............
foreclosure $14,900. For list- - ----:--:-:--- owned AppUances starting ·weeks old, Male Puppy, 2 minum , dressing rooms, livTRtJCKS
~
ings 800·391-5228 e,.;t. Immaculate 2 bedroom at $
toUR SALE
--..75 &amp; up all under shots, $300. (740)256-1498 ing quarters. (740)446-2412.
t7D9.
apartment in the country. Waminty, also have reconC
Reg . OH gelding. 16 pfus ·--iliiiiiiiiii__..
Alltypeaofrooflng:
Beagle "TYpe Puppies. ute
New or Repair
New ca rpet &amp; cabinets,
Seamless Gutter
W8st Columbia At 62, '2br, freshly painted &amp; decorated, ditioned Big Screen TV's and Healthy. Call George han ds, gentle .. broken, 8 yrs. 1987 Ford 350.Rotlback exc.
roan · dorsal stripe, white ;.ond
. $8,500. 1998 Jeep
Downspout
··'I'!'WW&gt;ftalber.....,ltoablnet:l'y.com
lg. Deck, lg. Kitchen, Full W/Dhookup. Beautilut coun- by Ron '• · TV '(304)675~ M''ller 74Q-742-1024·
"'
socks, white · blaze. $800 Grand
Cherokee,
nice
Basement $500/month plus
try setting . Must see to 7999
Blue Healer pups both par- firm , must see. (740)441 - $4,900. 1995 Chevy Blazer
Utilities (:io4)773-9167
appreciate .
'$:400/mo.
I' ·
ents at Farm (304)675-3927
994 s 10 4 4 ex
(614 )595 _7773 or 1--800- low prices- complete 1v1ng
S251.
$2,600. 1
x
.
room set, dining table, 4 Miniature Donkies lor sale,
d A
b Us 1or cab, $2,900. 1995 S-10 ex.
798 -4686.
chairs, etc. miscellaneous.
Registere
ngus u
cab 4 cyl. $2,600. .All v9hiH
MOBILilRFNrOIIIDi
--------:Babies $225 each, Jack sale Call (740)446-9856
.
I
Must
see.
(740)339-7400.
·
·
cles have free 1 year warA
fUK
New 2 Bedroom part mens
$300, Jenny $500, pregnant
.
ILI:GRAIN
:V &amp;
ranty (740)256 6251
Washer/dryer
hookup, Thompsons Appliance &amp; Jenny $600. (740)446-0118.
2 bedroom, a11 electric, AJC, stove/refrigerator included. Repair-675-7388. For sale,
-YOUNG'S
XLT,
t986-Ford- 150
very nice, in Gallipolis. starting at $400/mo. Call for re-conditiOned
automatic One 6 week old female
75,000/mi. includes Tommy
Phctne: (740 ) 446 _2003 or details (740)441 -01 94 or washers &amp; dryers, relrigera- Sheltle and min . Collie Orchard grass. other mixed
Gate, Tool bo,.;es, original tail
(740)441-1184.
tors, gas. and electric mixed. For Sale $150.00 No hay,
(740)448- 1409.
barn-stored ,. easy gate and rear bumper.
and
papers.
Female.
Parents
on
.,.
access, square or round $2,400 (304)675-4546
Room Additions &amp;
.
New 28A apts. Watson Rd. ranges. air cond I lOners,
premises. First shots g1ven bales.
Flemodeling
EK~ellent quality •
97 Beech Street.
3 bedroom mobile home _in Rodney Pike/850 area. wringer washers. Will do
. Serious Calls Only. Janet
New Gar8Q8•
(304 )562-7397 -or·(304 )895·
SlNs
Middleport, all electric, c/e, Reter.ncel
Depos it repairs on major brands 1n
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• New Homes
Middleport. OH
Jeffers at 740-992-5232.
3333
IURSALE
$425 month plus deposit, required , no pets. (740)446- shop or at your hom~ .
Rooting &amp; Gutters
•
Garages
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
74Q-416·1354
12'7 1 (740)709·1657
SroHTI~
Poodle Puppies Toy, 2· male, Tobacco Plants tor sale. Call
Pallo and Porch Oecka
·Complete
'
·
·
Gooo&lt;i
white, 6 M old , CKC (740)446,7843 or (740)645· 2002 Ford Exp. XLT e1 ,000
WV036725
Original
miles.
V6,
condition
3 bedroom. 2 bath, in co un.Remodeling
L
~-------·
Registered. $250.00 OBO. 1660.
V.C. YOUNG Ill
is ·A-1 inside and " out,
try, B miles to Pomeroy, 12
740-742-2380
SoloJiex exercise machjne ,
II&lt;\ '\ \ I'! IR I \Ill l \
$11,995.00. 740-416-1354
miles to Albany, $475 per
992 62 15
butterfly leg &amp; dip attach ~
or 74Q-99~·3094
Pome r o~r O l11n
"Middleport's only
month plus depoSit &amp; utili·
FRum;
&amp;
1
ments . Gold's Gym Olympic
Stop &amp; Compare
'11 Yearslo:a Ex,Jcncnc£!
lies, (859)806-4354
Self·Storase"
4x4
dumbbell &amp; curling bar outfit
riO
FOR SALE
with weights &amp; plate rack . All :-me
3 bedroom, 2 bath, room
to ' $400 OBC. (740)245·
additiOn with large back
Picked daily. No Sunday $500! Police Impounds!
Jeep Wrangler 4 cyl. 5
0611 .
sales. 10 miles west of cars from $500. For listings 1993
deck. No pets. $4_25fmo.
Gallipolis on SA 141 · at 8D0-391·5227 ext. 3901
speed,
$3,750.
Call
$425 deposit (740)446 Yoder's Greenhouse 10321
(740)446-4044.
7322.
SA 141, Gallipolis.
1962 Thunderbird; Blue 2001 Dodge Durango Sport,
3BDA, 2Ba. doublewide
d
F
S
Exterior,
Ivory
leather . black,
4WO,
95 _000 ,
Antiq ues; ~ Repaire d an
OR ALE
Interior, White vinyl top.
close to RVHS. $450 month,
Refinished. Also, Buy and
Nice driver. 3 90cl engine, $10,500. (740)446-8957.
$450. dep., ref. required. No
Sell.
Lumber for Sale _
·:ZC
..- .-..n l
i&gt;ets. (740)367-7025.
auto transmission, power r~ WM
. ~~UBY
Gibbs
Wood
and lincoln ·welder AC225 5x8 steering,
power brak_
e,
~
•
miles west of
~oersntaodraot~~ads, ~:·in: 9 ~~~ tra)ter. Like new 100,000 power window, power seat.
Mobile home sites for up to
Townhouse . ~·49-2246.
BTU furnace- new, 3 ton A/C Price $9,500.00.
H~l's 1998 Honda Goldwing. 25k
16x80 in Country Homes. Tara
Automotive Classic
ar miles, black $10,000. can
Apartments, Very Spacious. ------::--;:::-:-;:-.:
(740)365-40t9.
on
' 2 Bedrooms. CIA. 1 112 Buy 01' sell
RIVerine
Restoration &amp;h Parts,Rin~, (74Q)441·0638.
Athens
er:::~r-~~~~~""'1~ Bath , Adult Pool &amp; Baby Antique~, 1124 East Main
29670
Bas an
oa , :__::__ _ _ _ _ _-:E Pomeroy, 740"Racine, Ohio 45n1 ; Phone: 1998 Kawasak i Valcan sad·
APARTMENTS
Pool, PatkJ, Start $425/Mo. on SA
No Pets, lease Plus 992-2526. Russ Moore. r10
FARM
1740-949-2217: Fax: 740- die bags, wlndshi131d, ·exc.
'
Security Deposit Required, owner.
~
EQuiPMENT .
949-1957;
Pictured on cond. sharp. (740)2 56-6251 .
1 and 2 bedroom apart- (740)367-7086.
--,
wwwthunderbjrdcentercgm
M
men1s, furni shed and unfurMtscFLIANOOUS
1999 Black Harley Davidson
4 w~~ JUJI
.
nished,' security deposit
For Sale Farmai-M.Puiling i982 Dodge Aires 400. 4 Fatboy Lets ol chrome and L,.;:.;,;;~--~z~---r·
L--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil_.· ~ractor
Excellent Condition door, auto, 4 cyl, 8300m. extras 9, 400 m1es.
1
CaII ·
lllill~
required, no pets,740-992· Twin Rivers Tower
.
f is accept·
Tng
"
1
ing . applications or wat
'c , ., an d all weights' . 1-7 40-742- Runs great. Asking ~- (740)446-9954 or (740)339-· 2003 HD Ultra ctassk:, black
·
(740)379-9297.
2218.
list for Hud-subsized, 1- br, Collection of local
ats 2750
Ch
k Wolfe
3528. ·
anniversary, loaded, 12,000
UC .
apartment. call 675-6679 Meows. approx 40 pes.
7 room apt plus 2 bath. Equal Housing Opportun1·ty· Budweiser beer ste1ns
·
11 Have
· some hauling to do? t986
Monte Carlo •· 305 V8 • 2000 Honda 100, Di rt Blke.' miles $17,500.
·
Owner
Central AJC. Overlooks City
1
desk · Carmichael
Transmission, Good
Cond·1
.t 10
s9po 2002 HD Fatboy,slch
· impact
. n
pes. 51 ee Icase 0ff·ce
Equipment- 1'1• utomat!c
Park, deck, $675 mo. Greg Two Bedroom Apt. .lor (740)245-0183, (740)208.
Clean, runs Good. $4,700
)
• 3 or {304)674~ blue, k&gt;ts of extra
rome.
1304 675 65 1
your source for qua.!,11Y
·
·
20 000 miles, $14,500.
Smith
· (740)446-7313. rent/utilities paid. No Pels 6340.
goosenecks, dumps and util· (304)675-1687
5708
2005 Timerwotf t8h. motor(740)645-2890.
740-992-5858.
---:-=---lt'les. Your dealer lor Prostar 1987 Old5 T1 onado exc
·
·
JET
or
· 2001 HD '883, 1,000 miles, cyde trailer, hold&amp; 4 bike,
AERATION MOTORS
and Load Trail trailers. work car. Very good co'nd. black, some extras, likf! new . black
with
chrome.
24_1_2 _
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In _
17_4_0)446
__-_
· - - - - $2,000. (740)441-7390.
S5,200, (740)441 -5251.
Customized. Used twice .

ranoe.

www.mydailysenti nel.com

.

·r,-,r'
E.,.M..,...C...,.E,..B.,.O_r-11·
11 I· .
1 12 1 1

._...__.__,__,__.__.

K WlS H
l

Sign I noticed in my
psychologist's otftc:e, "A
Despicable Foe Can Be aCurse.
Bula Pretended Friend Will-·
f,-16

. ., .;.O. ;,X,.-R.,.T,_H.,. ,~,. . .,. , ::~:mplo~t ckuc~te
-il

.'"•

Quolod

. V' by filf,ng "' tht rMs1n9 word•
you doYOiop lrom ~•P

No. l btlow.

ICRAIILETI AHIWUS 1/1101

Blun- Owner ~ Myself - NEVER BUY
Granny to her teenage grandson, "To feel tUlly
rith. start counting lhe things you have that money
.:an NEVER BUY ."
Trivcl ·-

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�)

Page 86 •The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June 6, 2006

www .mydailysentiriel .com

ElOOii Mlttm6l.!H, Ul: SPEciAl AIMRTASfMENT ftATUI&lt;E

WVERTISEMENT

UNIVERSAL MEOlA SVNDfCA.T t

Area schools to
benefit from Elks
Lodge donation, A2

3939lvet~e Rd., NW Cantoo OH 44709

Pharma,cists now armed With a powerful
weapon that delivers real nt comfort

StudentS donate
gifts to O'Bleness
Birth Center, Aa

Luck of the draw gives local readers 56 hour window to be the first to get the new pills
.

~

.

'

i

8Y G. W. NAPIER

directly to their homes.
Otherwise, tbo6e who miss the deadline and
everybody else living in other'parts of the country ·
Scieatill:ll and 'doctors have developed an will be bard pressed to Jl'l!t it.
am•ring nliw oral tablet called Trigosamine. It's . So, even witb the clock ticking local readers
10 impn!S&amp;iw tbat .one key ingnidient hils ttle
still have the advantage of being among the jjrst
ability to retain nuid up to 1000 time6 its own to get their bands on this new medical Qreaknlgbt, with the potential to increase lubrication ; !trough: •
··
for the joints allowing them to move with ease.
"Uaang Trigosamine is like taking a con of oU
md applying it directly. to your joints• S!lid Dr.
Joeepb Dietz, Chief o( Health Sciences.'
Until all pharmacies are fully stocked the
And thanks to the luck of the draw, re·aders national distribution of new trlgosamine is
of tl!is publication will be among the first to get being conducted on a state by state basis.
it. That's because this area has already been Those living in the states listed below with a
I!Migned a toll free Regional Health Hotli!'e,
next to it are authorized to have it sent
but the catch is the hotline is set to closeinjust
directly to their home by calling The Reg ional
68 hours.
Health Hotline now.
"We reco111mend that those living in tbis area
· call now to get their share first:' said Matthew :J.
Regio nal Hotline Approval Code: TG895
Woods, Director of The Regional Health Hotline.
Call1·800·782·8750
"Rigbt now we're shipping out everything ~
have
a first come first served basis. We may
LINES OPEN at 9:00am today
not be able to meet everyone's demands as word
continues to spread aeross the country," he said.
AlABAMA: must wait
1'ri!Josamine contains one of the most promisALASKA: must wait
Ing joint nutrients known to man. Researchers
ARIZONA: call n·ow - 56 hour deadline
refer to it as HAl3.
ARKANSAS: must wait
Tbia important nutrient is a building bli:lck of
CALIFORNIA: must wait
naturally occurring joint oil wbich is medically
. COLORADO: must wait
known ,as synovial fluid. Tbis fluld reduces fric CONNECTICUT: must wait
tion in tbe joinblallowing for effortless motjon.' It
DELAWARE: call now · 56 hour deadline
not only lubricate6 the joints but it also ·acts as a
FLORIDA: must wait
comfortable ·shock absorber.
GEORGiA: must wait
"As the body ages the prOduction of synovial
HAWAII: must wait
lluld declines which forces the joints to grind
IDAHO: must walt
together resulting in nagging discomfort," Dr.
ILLINOIS: call now · 56 hour deadline
Dietz said.
INDIANA: call now · 56 hour deadline
"HA13 baa been abown to be absorbed into the
IOWA: call now · 56 hour d11adline
body and made available to the join~s. That means
KANSAS:
must wait
it bas the potential to replenish the ultra slippery
KENTUCKY: call now · 56 ho.ur deadline
synovial fluid which allows joints to slide freely
LOUISIANA:
must wait
md amootbly,"' said Dr. Dietz.
MAINE: must wait
Now for the first time ever the Trigosarnine
MARYLAND:. call n0w • 56 hour. deadline
brand combines HAl3 with the essential blend of ·
MASSACHUSETTS: must wait
Glucosamine and Chondroitin.
It bas been clinically shown that tbis essential
MICHIGAN: call now · 56 hour deadline·
blend .of glucossmine and chondroitin helps to
MINNESOTA : must wait
buUd healthy cartilage in the joints and allows
MISSISSIPPI: must wait
for increased flexibility and range ot motion.
MISSOURI: must wait
This impressive combination works to alleviate
MONTANA: must wait
uncomfortable jojnt dysfunction which results in
NEBRASKA: must wait
amaZing comfort.'
· NEVADA: must "Vail
A clinical study ·conducted by the United
NEW HAMPSHIRE: must wait
States government found that glucosamine
NEW JERSEY: must wait
and chondroitin, similar to those present in
. NEW MEXICO: must wait
Trigossmine, had a remarkable 79.2% effec- ·
NEW YORK: must wait
tive rate for those with moderate to severe
NORTH CAROLINA: must wait
joint discomfort.
· NORTH DAKOTA: must wait
It was also announced at The American
OHIO: call now · 56 hour deadline
College of Rheumatology' meeting that Ute com'
OKLf\HOMA: must wait
bination of glucosamine and chondroitin showed
OREGON: must wait
promise 11100ng persona with moderate to severe
PENNSYLVANIA: call now · 56 hour deadline
discomfort.
RHODE
ISLAND: mustwait
, "'nte clinical trials have been consistent. The
SOUTH CAROLINA: must wait
essential blend like the one present in new .
SOUTH DAKOTA: must, wait ·
TrigosamiiiJ! has been ,proven sare and is
TENNESSEE: must walt
extremely effective," Dr. Dietz said.'
TEXAS: must walt
·One of the reasons Trigosamine is receiving
so much attention is because it Is derived from
UTAH: must wait
natural sources. Tbe ingredients are com- ·
VERMONT: must wait
blned to make a revolutionary new formulaVIRGINIA: must wait
tion that is t~ken orally just once a day withWASHINGTON: must wait
out a prestription.
·
WASHINGTON D.C.: must walt
The tough part now is how to get it.
WEST VIRGINIA: call now · 56 hour deadline
· "Everybody wants it,'' Woods said.
WISCONSIN: must wait
"The first drugstores to get this new formula
WYOMING: must wait
couldn't keep it on the shetves.•
.IMPORTANT: You may be able to find
That's wby CVS/Pbilrmacy bas already stockTrigosamine
at a CVS/Pharmacy since they
piled the first available shipments. The down
lide is the other drugstores may not get their are getting the first shipments. Otherwise, If
you do ·not live in a state with a '*: next to it
shipments Until later this year.
That makes the next 56 hours so critical for you must wait to call. Apublic announcement
everyone living in the local a~a . Those who confirming your states eligibility will be pubget through to the Regional Health Hotline lished within 90 days.
before the deadline will get Trigosamine sent
www.trigo'samine.com
U-...J Medu. Syndica~

Middleport • Pomeroy, .Ohio
:;o Cl·. :\ IS • \ 'ul. .),) . :\o .

SPORTS ·

Here's ·how to get it

•

• Ohio Basketball Hall
of Fame inducts Francis,
Oliver, URG teams of
1952-54 in inaugural
class. See Page B1

*

*=

on

*
*

*
*
*

INSIDE

*

• AEP says W.Va.
regulators should
approve plant ahead of
Ohio. See Page A2
•. Martin named loan
· officer at Fanner's Bank. ·
See Page A2
• Volunteers needed
···..ftlr'l!)hie Aiver.~eep.
Sie Page AS
• Local briefs.
See Page AS
• Students complete
communi)Y service
project. See Page A6

*
*

*

• HEALTHY '.JOiNJS: Dia~tlc

x-rays' ....,.1 humin joints that ~ t1te ~
amounti of r.yftovlill lluid to lubrtcatJ.the joints and act as· • conofortable shock
absorb.,; The .,.,.tjful fluid aHows for comfortable and effortless motlorr.

*

'

.

'

'

.

.

..

. HOW Trigalamiile·W0RKS
Trigosamine is a once daily oral tablet with a, mechanism of .action
with three powerful Joint nutrients put Into place to provide comfort.
L Hyaluronate·HA13·: ............- .........._ ........................................
This remarkable cOfl'4lOlJI1(! Is present in the body's syrovial
i
fluid Which acts as a shock.abscrller and .makes the joints
'
extremely slipP,eOY allowing them 'to slide smoothly over
;
·one another.'
2. Glucosamlne Hydrochlortde-GH15: - ... _ ................. ..
Thls clinically proven cQmpound helps build and maiDtain
. ...~. .
cartilage to reduce joint dysfunction.'
. ,
,1
3•.ChQnC!rlJitln Sulfate..CSU: .... _ .. ~ ......................:..... ~ ...- .........!
·Clinically proveQ compound helps improve flexibillty .and
prOI\IOtes increas~ range of motion.'
·

i,

*

Dr. Jose·pn C. Diet z. PhD (Urret~tly conduc::ts fuiHime joint care and nubc.&lt;:eutlcal resea,rch on Trigosamlne ..
for Pah!fltHEALTH, LLC. Statements herein ilre based uwm publls.he.d publtc inforrna t ion and 'do not Imply
affiliation, spon'iorsrl'i p ot endor sement o f Tri gosarrilne"" by the American College o f R!leumalology,

1

' T HESE STATE\ oENTS HAVE NOT BEEN EVALUAHD BY THE fOOD AND ORUG AOMANISTRATION .
THIS PRODUCT IS NOT ' INTENDED TO DIAGNOSE , TREAT. CURE OR PREVENT ANY DISEASE .

• Going for the perfect
dive. See Page ·A6

WFATIIER

· ' Universal Media SyndiCiJ1e

(UMS) One Million Dollars in

unclaimed rare currency sheets is
now up for grabs.
And those who are getting it say
U feels like winning the Lottery.
Here's how it's being tendered to
the public.
,
Thousands of crisp new full uncut
aheets of $1, $5, $10 and $20 dollar
buts ~re recently left unclaimed,
not with t:pe government, but at the
central vaults of the private World
Reserve Monetary Exchange.
·
•Just before Christmas hundreds or
thoueands of people beat the National
48 hour deadline to get the money.
But some were left out in the cold
because of incomplete billing and
lliipping information. As a result,
thole rare cilrrency sheets could not
be shipped and were lett sitting in our
vault. Amazingly, it adds-up to over a
milllon dcUars,• conf'IJ'IDed Stephen S. .
Speakman, National Director of
Currency Operations.
The unclaimed full uncut sheets of
real money are now beiug given up, ..

•

not to banks, pot to dealers and not
just to the rich and famous, but
directly to the general public. · J'!
But the only way to claim these left.

..

over currency sheets now Is through a. already passed. Now the unclaimed
special worldwide web connection set - trl()ney is only being offered tbrougb
up to diatribute the unclaimed money.
"The phone deadline for calling has

...

-·

• A SEA OF ·uNCLAIMED CASH: One Million Dollars in Unclaimed rare curren·
cy sheets are now available to the public. A Seeurlty Officer logs in thousands of
crisp new uncut sheets of $1, $5, $10 and $20 that are now being offered to the pub·
lie. The uncut sheets of' real money are so hard to find, banks don't even have them.

the special website, on' a first come
first served basis. But when it is gone,
they will have to be turned away,"
Speakman confirmed.
·•
"Just think what ·these currency
sheets could be worth years from
now. Values always fluctuate. It's difficult when you are comparing
apples to oranges, but according to
. the 0/fu:IDl Stand4rd Guide to U.S.
Paper Money which provides valuations, some unclreulated 1928 one
doliar bills have increased in value
by over 6,400%. In fact, a full uncut
dozen of 1928 dollar bills sold for
$18,400.00," Speakinan said.
"You would expect to see these
uncut money sheets on display in
the.Oval Office or under guard at
tbe Smithsonian," he said.
'
Until now, only those lucky
enough to be 'in the know' could
get their hands on 11ncut sheets ot
real money. In fact, banks don't
even hove them. But now you can
gel/ them direct by logging on to
the special website.
"You ~an actually spend it. It's

real money. But anyone would be
an absolute fool to cash them in
because they're worth so much ·
more," Speakman conflrm.ed.
There's going to be a lot of exclted people when they get their
hands on these Vl!luable unclaimed
sheets of money. It's a ton of
money when you see all {Qur
sheets of $1, $5, $10 and $20 dollar
bills in the full Banker's Stack.
But readers better be sure ~ g~t
plenty now because if they try to get
more later, they may be out of luck.
When they~re gone, they're gone.
That's why it is important that
the general public now log on to
the special website that is listed
below to beat the rush.
· So, on your mark, get Set, go.
Hopefully, you'll be the first to get Y\)Ur
share of the unclaimed money. •

Here's how to get-the
Unclaimed Money
I'

Log onto the web at:
www.moneysheets.com

..

n'''' · '""l.•il ~ ,.,,liut•l.t ou •

:! CHt()

Truck hits house, dr.iver dies in accident
Bv 'DIANE PoTTORFF
DPOTTORFF@MYDAI LYREGISTER .COM
MASON, W.Va. - Walter
Roush and his brother-in-law,
John Harrah, were sitting 011
the front porch of Roush 's
Second Street . home in
Mason Tuesday, and · were
shocked to see a truck driver
was driving through lawns
across the street.
They didn 't know that a
quarter of a mile away from
them, Gary R, George, 49,
of Langsville, apparently
had a heart attack , which
caused him to veer off the
roadway.
The 1997 Ford six-ax le
dump truck, owned by Three
Inc.
of
R
Industries
Langsville, first struck a 1999
Jeep Cherokee driven by
John Calvin Fields, '30, of
Hartford, veered off the left
Diane Pottorff/photo
side of the road, then struck a Firefighters inspect th.e truck for danger as investigators look into the accident in Mason.
utility pole. It then traveled
(Market
and
through three yards and two on W.Va. 62, which is also there was a loud 'boom,"' Bob 's
Greenhouse)," Roush said.
fences before striking a house Second Street in Mason, Roush said .
,Bob's
Market
and
Other witnesses said that
that had been owned by the Taylor said. He was making a
children
who
were
playing
Greenhouse
is
just
one
block
to
American
delivery
of
stone
late Irene Justice, said Chief
Derrick Taylor of the Mason Electric Power's Mountaineer several blocks. away heard away from the accident scene.
what sounded like an exploMembers of the Mason
Plant in New Haven.
Police Department.
sion
and
went
to
ask
their
Volunteer
Fire Department and
The
accident
happened
George was pronounced
·parents
what
happened.
Mason
County
Emergency
around I: 15 p.m. Tuesday.
dead at the scene.
''I'm just glad it didn't hit Service rushed to the site in an
"W hen it hit the house,
He had been heading north

attempt to help George.
Emergency crews were on the
scene for at least two hours.
Also, employees with the
Town of ·Mason Water · and
Sewer
Services
and
Mountaineer Gas were at the
scene to tum off utilities 'that
were st ill on at the home.
George's body was taken to
. Pleasant Valley Hospital~ and
later will be taken to the West
Virginia Medical Examiner's
Office in Charleston for an
autopsy.
Rex Shenefield, who shared
ownership in the truck which .
George was driving, said that
everyone who knew George
loved him and he was going to
be.greatly missed by his family, friends and co-workers.
"He was full of humor," he
said. "There was never a dull
moment when he was around."
Taylor said he is continuing
his investigation into tlle
accident .
He was assisted at the scene
by Sgt. E.B. Starcher of the
Mason County Detachment of
the West Virginia State Police, ·
Cpl. Wes Bumgarner of the ·
Mason County Sheriff's
Department and Patrolman
Bruce ·Adkins of the New
Haven Police Department.

Racine Council
making a
'naughty li~t'
BY BETH SERGE~T
BSERGENT®MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM ·

RACINE - We all know
Santa Claus has bot-h a
naughty and nice list, and .
now so does the village of
Racine when it co mes to
property OWncfS with abandoned cars, yards fu II of
"junk" and high grass.
Starting this week members of Racine Council will
be writing down . alleged
offenders who will then be
notified by certified letter of
the offense (high grass, abandoned cars, etc.) and then that
offender will have 30 days to
come into compliance or possibly face a $155 fine and
Charlene Hoetllch/photot
court' costs in Racine
Campers assist Margaret Parker in preparing "pigs in a blanket" fo r the luncheon fare at the
Mayor's Court .
The decision to crack down · Museum day camp Tuesday. Trenton Cook, standing at the end of the table with Karl Arnold,
on compliance violations were arriong·the helpers .
came at this week's· meeting
of Racine Village Council.
"We're striying to present .
Racine in a positive format to
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
get involved "(ith the scenic ·
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
byway to bring people in,"
Councilman Tom Reed said
POMEROY - . Everything.
at the meeting. "We want to
from candle making to creative dancing are on the
Pl~se see bclne, AS .
schedule .of activities for the
. annual three-day camp program being held this week at
the Meigs Museum .
Geared for children who
have completed the second,
•
third and fourth grades, the
programs are being carried
BY CHARLENE. HOEFliCH
out by volunteers of the Meigs
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
County \1istorical Society.
. Tuesday the campers
POMEROY - In celebramixed clay and then molded
tion of the I30th anniversary
it into various shapes. They
of the Meigs County Historical
studi&lt;;d about genealogy,
Society several awareness proenjoyed music fron1 an earligrams anc,l events ·geared
er era learned some pioneer
toward educating and sharing
style dance s, and had a waterMeigs County's history are
melon seed spitting conte st,
being held.
They tie-dyed !-shirts. and
Kicking off the programs
assisted in preparing "pigs in
this week is a day camp cura blanket" for lunch.
. .
rently underway in the
Today"s projects included
Museum annex. Third..-founh
candlemaking. designing a
and fifth graders met there
family tree wall hanging. makyesterday and today and voling yam dolls and preparing a
unteers arc working with
take-along
snack
for
them on heritage skills.
Thursd&lt;iy's visit to a historical
crafts, games, history and
site. This year's trip will be to
cooking . The day camp will
Blennerhasset Island in the
climax tomorrow when the
Ohio
River
south
of
group travels to the hi storic
Parkersburg. The dozen or so
Blennerhas set Island' for a
children will be taken to
tour of the mansion .
Parkersburg where they will
The annual Heritage Dinner Meredith Gaul and Danifi!lle Cline enjoy tie-dying !·shirts board a boat to go to .
will take place at 7 ,p.m. under the watchful · eye of Historical Society ~olunteer Blennerhassetto lour ·the 1nan-,
sion ~nd expl\}re the island. ·
Robyn Parker.
Ple•se see Society. AS

Musemn·day cWnp in full swing

.Unclaimed Cash:-$1Mill handover of rare money sheets now underway
.BY MARY BETH ANDREWS

\\'I•. Dl\I ·.SI&gt;AY , .JllNE ......

:!0....

Historical Society
observes 130th
anmversary

Debita on Pace A8

1

INDEX
2 SEcriONS -

'" PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

BS

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© 2006 Ohio Valley PubliShing Co.

•

(

,

Middleport
parade tq
include
'heroes unit'
BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
-The
committee organizing the
Independence Day parade in
Middleport is seeking to honor
service men and women who
have served in Iraq and
Afghanistan with a "heroes
unit" in the holi.day parade.
Tue~day,
Meeting
Middleport
Community ·
Association continued to finalize plans for the village's July
4 activities, which will center
around General Hartinger
Parle and the Middleport Pool.
The parade will feature
Philadelphia Eagles {llayer and
Meigs County nauve Mike
Banrum and hts wife, Jennifer,
as grand marshals, and a special parade made up of local
men and women who have
served ·in the Middle East.
Jeff Bassett of Huntington,
W.Va., an employee of
Peoples Bank in Middleport,
will lead the unit. He served in
Iraq. Association President
Brenda Phalin said the Anny
National Guard will be asked
to participate in the parade
with a special military vehicle.
Local veterans of the current conflicts are asked to call
Paul Gerard at 992-6371 for
additional information.
Marching bands ~iciplt­
ing in the parade will stop at
the flagpole in Hartinger Park
to perform patriotic numbers. , ·
The parade will begin at Dave
Diles Park this year, and will
step off up Mill Street, down
South Third Avenue to General
Hartinger Parkway and conclude · at Hartinger Park..
Lineup will hegin at 5:30p.m.
The traditional program will
begin at 7 p.m. with commentS
from MayQr Sandy Iannarelli,
public ofticials and the grand
marshals. and will include
local singers and dancers.
Park management plan to
organize a day 's worth of
games and other activities
begi nning at 10 a.m. and
continuing up to parade time ·
at6 p.m.
The slate ,of entertainment
and activities for the holid.ay
wi II be finalized at a
Community
Association
meeting on June 27.

,,

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