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Yesteryear essay '
conteSt winners, A3

Rockiri' with
the Reds, AS
·"'·

Printed on 100%
Recycled Newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Oh io

~

D.,-

.I

• Arroyo leads Reds
past LA. See Page 81

ODOT has no jurisdiction over billboards
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Accordipg to the Ohio
Department
of
Transportation. it has no
jurisdiction over whether
two billboards can be
placed
in Pomeroy,
despite those bi II board
being placed along one of
Ohio's scenic byways.
"I researched this
through our legal department and through our
advertising
devices
department and found
although this route is part
of a scenic byway. it is
not on the National
Highway System nor
federal aid system, therefore ODOT does not
have jurisdiction as to

permitting advertising
devices on that route,"
Dave Rose, spokesperson
for ODOT District I 0
said yesterday.
Rose went on to
explain in order for
ODOT to have any jurisdiction concerning the
placement of the billboards it was not enough
the billboards are being
placed along a designated scenic byway. That
scenic byway designation must come with the
route also being located
along an Interstate and/or
National
Highway
System in order for
ODOT to approve or
deny placement of the
billboards.
ODOT
became
involved in this local

controversy when a resident living near one of
the billboards brought
the issue of the scenic
byway before Pomeroy
Village Council. The resident said she spoke to
Robert Young, historian
and scenic byways project manager for the Ohio
Department
of
Transportation. who in
turn told her the placement of the billboards is
in violation of the Ohio
Revised Code, section
5516.06 "Designation of
scenic byways - advertising devices."
However.
after
researching the issue further, and finding Ohio
833 met only one of the

Please see ODOT, Al

Beth SergenVphoto

This billboard on West Main Street is one of two
approved to go up in the Village of Pomeroy. The other
is on East Main Street near Plum Street.

INSIDE

Site named
for Gallia Co.
VA clinic

• For the Record.
See Page A2
. • Better Livestock
4-H Dairy Club meets.
See Page A3
• Shawnee
announces dean's
list. See Page A3
• A Hunger for More.
Page A6
you want to
to Egypt?
See Page A7
• Woman indicted
for drugs in suitcases.
See Page AS

B Y ANDREW CARTER
MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

WEATHER
Submitted photos

Mary Powell, front left, and Kevin Fick, Eastern technology coordinator, worked with Eastern students, Cassidy
Cleland, Tyler Barber, Tanner Jenkins, Maddie Rigsby, Lindsay Rigsby, front, left to right; and students Kendra
,
Fick and Halleigh Bush, and teacher, Krista Johnson on the video project.

I~ESSON

High: i.J;:&gt;per 80s.
Low: Lower 60s.

•

IN IJISTORY•
Eastern l.Jocal stude11ts heln tvitlt video
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGES

Calendars
A3
Classifieds
Bs-6
Comics
B7
Editorials
A4
Faith
As-7
B8
NASCAR
Sports
B Section

Above : Cassidy Cleland and
Tyler B,arber pour over sheets
of information as they work on
the video about the salt industry in Meigs County.

'C) 20to Ohio \'alley Publishing Co.

.lli.I!IJ J,I!I.!I! I.

Left: This 1800s kettle was
the centerpiece for a video on
Meigs County's salt industry.

267

18
59

29
129

•
- ,

Please see Clinic, Al

B Y CHARLENE HOEFLICH

INDEX

1

GALLIPOLIS - A
site in Gallia Count} has
been chosen to house the
proposed
Veterans
Administration
Rural
Health Outreach Clinic.
according to a press
release issued by U.S.
Rep. Charlie Wilson.
Wilson.
D-St.
Clairsville, and Edward
H. Seiler, director of the
Huntington (W.Va.) VA
Medical
Center,
announced jointly on
Wednesday that the clinic
will be housed in an
unused banquet facility
located inside Dave's
American Grill at 323
Upper River Road in
Gallipolis. Wilson said
the clinic is expected to
open
sometime
in
September.
'Tm so pleased that the
veterans in this area will
have care closer to
home." Wilson said.
Seiler said local veterans who currently travel
to Huntington for care

CHESTER - Eastern Local media students got
a lesson in history recently when they volunteered
to assist the Chester-Shade Historical Association
in developing a video about the salt industry in
Meigs County.
The gpal of Mar; Powell. a Chester Courthouse
volunteer, was lfo prepare an infonnational video
on a salt kettle from the 1800s and its relevance to
the thriving salt industry in Meigs County during
that time period. The kettle was donated b)
George Hausser to the Courthouse Museum to be
added to a growing collection of historical artifacts alread; on exhibit there .
The studeots working alongside their teacher.
Krista Johnson. and the school's technology coordinator, Kevin Fick. with assistance from Powell
developed the video which \\ ill soon become
available for use by the public in research and
other educational pursuits
The project taught the students not only about
the history of pioi1eer life here in those early days
and the industry which supported it, but reinforced
skills needed to develop an informational Yideo .

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Post reports
accidents
B Y BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
A
spokesperson from the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the
Ohio State H ighwa)
Patrol recently released
the following information on recent accidents
under investigation.
On Frida). June 11 . a
two-vehicle accident sent
three people to local hospitals for treatment.
According
to
the
spokesperson. the accident occurred on Ohio 7

Please see Wrecks, Al

2008 TOYOTA PRIUS
TOURING
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�~~--------------

~

-- ----

.... -·-~~---

Friday, June 18, 2010

The Daily Sentinel • Page A.2

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

For the Record

CEO: Ohio pension fund

Dissolution

not political on Lehman

... . Meigs
An action for dissolution of marriage was fi led in
County Common Pleas Court by Angela N.
Stanley and Kevin 0. Stanley.

Bv JULIE CARR

campaign
Kasich ,
spokesman Scott Mtlburn
to pension fund executive
COLUMBUS - The Carol
Nolan
Drake
head of an Ohio pension offered suggestions on
fund whose Lehman the best way to explain
Brothers losses have the losses to reporters.
become an issue in the
" He's free to write or
governor's race · said respond with anything he
Thursday that his staff wants," DeRose said.
ignored politics when "We. of course. ignored it
calculating and distribut- and didn't take his
ing loss information.
advice. We don't need his
O hio
Public advice. Many people on a
Employees Retirement regular basis are attemptSystem Chief Executive ing to give us advice. and
Chris DeRose also said in I think the record shows
an Associated Press that no action was taken."
interview that advice
In a subsequent e-mail
offered through e-mail by to Milbun1's released
a campaign operative for Thursday. Drllke forRepublican
candidate warded his comments to
John Kasich to a pension the retirement system's
executive was • neither lawyer, Julie Emch
Becker. with an ''FYI"
solicited nor followed.
Kasich is running notation.
Democratic State Rep.
against Democratic Gov.
Ted Strickland in one of Todd Book, who chairs
37 gov~rnor's races the Ohio Retirement
nationwide. Democrats Study Council. which
are seeking to use oversees state pension
Kasich's time as a man- funds, questioned the
aging director at Lehman appropriateness of the eBrothers against him in mail and the potential for
it to lead to a "deliberate
the campaign.
The May 3 e-mail from undervaluing of the fund's
SMYTH

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Divorce
Ac;tions for divorce were filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Becky E. Davidson vs. Carl
R . Davidson. Jr.; Carrie Carpenter vs. Roger
Carpenter, Jr.

Foreclosure
An action for foreclosure was filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Wells Fargo Bank
vs. Bryan J. Wolfe. Sheryll L. Wolfe, Racine.

All other civil
A civil action was filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Brewce Martin. Rutland vs. Shawn
Lambert I Rutland St!rvice Center.

Dog spots gator in
Ohio parking lot puddle
COLUMBUS (AP)- A dog that normally perks up
for birds alerted its owner to something more unusual
outside an Ohio business: a 4-foot alligator.
Sales manager Jeff Colucy had his 5-year-old
Weimaraner named Cobalt in the parking lot at a
Columbus company that makes office fixtures when
the dog went "on point"'Wednesday morning. Colucy
told his boss the dog was foc used on an alligator hunkered down in a puddle.
Reptile wrangler Chris Law captured the gator by
grabbing it at the tail with his bare hands. He didn't
have his usual gear because he was about to leave on
vacation.
Law says people often buy alligators as pets. then
dump them when they get big. He picks up about 40
a year and turns them over to wildlife rescue groups.
Colucy says Cobalt was trained as a birddog. for
hunting.

losses." DeRose satd no
one at any political campaign played a role in the
loss calculation - $ 111
million - which he said
is based on the fund's own
financial inforn1ation. The
$59 billion fund ts one of
the largest in the state and
nation. serving tens of
thousands of state retirees.
";Ne · re a nonpartisan.
independent organization," DeRose said. ··we
were just trying to put out
the numbers.''
Milburn
said
on
that
he
VVednesday
intended the message
only to urge the pension
fund to provide an accurate. thorough picture to
reporters who were writing about the losses.
In it, he told Drake:
·The media will not get
the full picture unless
you explain it: not all of
this money was tossed as
a result of the Lehman
bankruptcy."
Book said the pension
fund still needs to explain
why Democrats' earlier
attempts to get Joss information were rejected.

Becker told the AP on
Thursday that a party
researcher interpreted the
December request a
being tied to an
ing state lawsuit . S
-;aid the pension fu nd
consulted with the state
attorney general and
determined the information fell under attorneyclient privilege.
DeRose said Drake
called Milburn on the
morning of May 3 at the
same time other staffers
were assigned to call
other parties with interest
in the loss data about to
be released. That included some' who had made
formal requests and two
who had not: Strickland
and Kasich.
··we were trying not to
play favorites." he said.
DeRose said the fu nd
began working to calculate losses to its Lehmanmanaged investments in
April. The move came
after U.S. Rep. Mary Jo
Kilroy, a Democrat ,
released separate loss ca.
culations made b} th
Democratic state treasurer.

'

'
'

CliniCrromPageAl

0 DOT from Page Al
two criteria for ODOT to intervene, Rose said yesterday: "At this point the issue falls into the jurisdiction
of the village."
Since the village zoning committee granted variances/permits for both billboards. one on West Main
and one on East Main Streets. it appears the advertising devices are here, at least for awhile.
Councilman Vic Young said at this week's meeting
of Pomeroy Village CounciL it was his understanding the double-decker structures have a I0 year
lease in the village.
Kanawha Valley Advertising , which is placing the
billb.oards. told council the billboards are worth
around $40.000 each. Income from these billboards is
estimated at $25-$30,000 per year. according to
Kanawha Valley Advertising representatives during.
their initial presentation to council last year.

Wrecks from Page At
in the Five-Points area of Pomeroy. A Ford Excursion
driven by William Howard, 41, Bidwell. was traveling northbound on Ohio 7 while a 2008 Nissan
Maxima driven by Nathan Kalka, 28, CeciL Pa., was
traveling southbound on Ohio 7 . ·
According to the accident report. Kalka was
attempting to make a left turn into a gas station par~­
ing lot and failed to yield to Howard. Howard's vehtcle then Struck Kalka's vehicle: Howard's vehicle
continued on, going off the right side of the road
where it overturned.
Howard was transported by Meigs EMS to Holzer
Medical Center, Kalka and passenger Alicia Moore,
29, Morgantown. W.Va .. were transported by Meigs
EMS to St. Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va. Air
medical helicopters were alerted but inclement weather prevented them from taking off: All were wearing
seat belts . Both vehicles were totaled. The report listed "charges will be supplemental'' though none were
listed at this time.
On Monday, Kevin Rexroad, 44. McDem1ott. was
traveling westbound on CR 46 in a Chevy pickup
when a 2004 Ford Mustang driven by Brandon
Walker, 2 1, Reedsville, failed to yield at a stop sign
and struck Re.xroad's pickup. Walker was transported
for treatment of his injuries to Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital. Parkersburg, W.Va., by Meigs
EMS and later cited for fai lure to yield.
A motor vehicle accident was reported to Meigs 9 11
at around 2 a.m., Thursday morn ing on Ohio 124.
Details were pending on this accident but not available at press time.

will have another choice
once the clinic opens its
doors.
"Veterans from the
Gallia County area who
currently receive their
health care at the
Huntington VA Medical
Cente{ will be given the
opportunity to transfer
their primary care services to the new clinic in
Galli a County," said
Seiler. ''Those patients
will be identified by the
' medical center and contacted by letter.''
According to the press
release, Wilson has been
working with the VA for
several months to ensure
that the clinic would be
based in Gallipolis.
··rm proud that this
clinic will be staffed by
VA personnel and will
give our veterans the
healthcare the} deserve."
he said. "These men and
women sacrificed for our
country and served us •
well. and I think it is only
right that we provide
them with an accessible
option for the quality

medical
care
they
earned."
The Gallia County
clinic will serve patients
two days a week initially.
but its hours and days of
operation
could
be
expanded depending on
the response and needs of
local veterans. Primary
care services will be provided on an outpatient
basis.
According David K.
Smith, owner Dave's
American GrilL renovation of the former banquet space is expected to
begin this summer after
approval of a building
plan is secured from the
State of Ohio. He said he
has been working with
the VA since January
2009 to find a location
for the facility in Gallia
County.·
"[ think this is a great
asset to our community
and now my job is to
remodel and deliver this
facility to the VA to provide needed medical services to veterans of
Gallia County and sur-

rounding areas,'' Smith
said.
Smith also said that his
restaurant will remain
open.
The Gallia County
Board of Commissioners
welcomed the news of
the clinic during its regular meeting on Thursday.
"The Gallia County
Commission is &gt;ery
grateful to Congressman
Wilson on his work on
this." said Gallia County
Comission
Vice
President Justin Fallon.
"On behalf of the people
of Gallia County we're
pleased to have this here.
We look forward to serving our veterans a little
closer to home."
Jim Cozza. president of
the Gallipolis Cit) Board
of Commissioners and a
veteran of the u.S. Air
Force. said he was
pleased that the VA chose
Gallipolis as the location
of the clinic.
"Veterans in Gallia
County have \.\aitcd a
long time for this clinic
and \Ve are glad that the

VA made the decision to
locate it in the City of
Gallipolis," Cozza said.
··we hope that it will be
used to the fullest and
remain here for a long
period of time."
Currently.
the
Huntington VA Medical
Center serves about 2,500
veterans from Gallia and
Lav,:rence
counties,
according to information ,.
provided by the VA .

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Meigs Center Summer 2010 Schedule
~ ~--------~------COURSE I
CLASS DESCRIPTION
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INStRUCTOR

SECTION ROOM HUMBER

~~~
Date

START/END

SUMMER 10m~
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WILCOXON
ISGRIGG
ISGRIGG
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......_
SOOief
STAFF

•

•

6:00 PM.a:&amp;fM
9:00PM-9:50PM

�---,-~~-~-- ---·

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-~

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--~---~--~---~--c---

Pa1!-~

.The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June 18, 2010

GHEEN BIRTH
LONG BOTTOM .Tim and Brey Gheen of
·Long Bottom announce
the birth of a son, Manuel
Ivan ··Kole'' Gheen, born
May I 9 at CAMC
Women and Children's
tal in Charleston,
The
infant
4 pounds, 14
ounces.
Maternal Grandparents
are Rocky and Saybra
Pearson
of
West
Columbia, ·W.Va., and
maternal great-grandmother
is
Anna
Watterson of Milton,
WVa. Paternal grandparents are Manuel and

Manuel Ivan
"Kole" Gheen
Barbara Gheen of Long
Bottom. The Gheens
have a daughter. Kyra.

Shawnee announces dean's list
PORTSMOUTH
Two Meigs County students were listed on the
spring semester dean's
list at Shawnee State
University released today
by Dave. Todt. Ph.D.,
provost and vice pres~­
dent for academic affairs.
To be named on the

list. students must be full
time and achieve a grade
point average of 3 .5 or
better.
Making the list were
Sarah Jenkins of Rutland,
fine arts major; and
Jeremy
Blackston,
Pomeroy, majoring in athletic training, sport studies.

ASK DR. BROTHERS

• Her dad does not
agree with her fiance
Dear Dr. Brothers: My
fiance and my dad get
along just fine. That is.
until politics come up. My
future husband is as liberal as you can be, while
Dad is a dyed-in-the-wool
Republican. Sometimes
over Sunday dinner they
get into very heated arguments. They're both fine
afterward - but I could
see how this would look
like a bare-knuckled
brawl to an outsider. The
wedding is coming up
soon. and I'm worried that
this show may take place
at the reception. What can
I do?- B.Y.
ar
B.Y.:
gratulations on your
ming new family
tellation - it sounds
like you are in for a wild
ride! It's a good time to
address some of the relationship issues that may
come up, and to make sure
the focus of your wedding
is the two lovebirds - not
a battle designed to be the
most popular YouTube
video by the next day.
What is very interesting to
me is that you don't
declare where you fall on
the political spectrum and it leads me to believe
that you are somewhere in
the middle of the road.
just trying to get out of the
way. If this is the case, it
may be good, because you
will be less likely to take
sides and add to the general clamor when the political talk get-; started.
It also may be that your
is used to arguments
this - he has a dad of
own, right? This may
be a strange way of bonding with his new father-in' law, but your remark about
how they always are able
to put the battle aside by
the end of the day is a very
encouraging one. It shows
that it might be just a
mutual manly flexing of
muscles and that your dad
and your fiance will 1evei ·
op a very perso.:1~ conne~­
tion. However. thts doesn t
mean that you shouldn't
sit down with the t\VO of
them together at your next
opportunity and lay down
: the law! Tell them that politics and arguing in general will be off-limits on
your wedding day. Period.
You go, girl!

l

•••

Dear Dr. Brothers:
The way my friend's hmband treats her makes me
to my stomach. I
to suspect she was a

Submitted photo

Yesteryear winners recognized for best essay on their experiences were from the left, front, Jordan Roush,
Jessica Coleman, Grace Adams, Sarah Dowell, and Marissa Johnson; and back, Amanda Cole, Josiah
Williams, Ross Boner, Elena Musser, county winner, Keira McCourt, Madison Dyer, and Jamie Starcher.

Yesteryear essay contest winners
POMEROY
Students winning the
Yesteryear essay contest
were given recognition in
a program held recently
at the Senior Citizens
Center.
Students who attended
Yesteryear wrote essays
about their experience and

Leah and Bob Ord judged
the essays and selected the
best two from each fifth
grade represented.
Parents and volunteers
were invited to a presentation where the students
were recognized and
given trophies.
Students
recognized

were Amanda
Cole,
Josiah Williams, Ross
Boner, Elena Musser,
Keira McCourt. Madison
Dyer, Jamie Starcher. and
·Jordan Roush, Jessica
Coleman, Grace Adams,
Sarah Dowell and Marissa
Johnson, who attended;
and Raeline Reeves,

Crystal Unbankes. Allie
Shinn. Cody Bartrum.
Gage Zirkle, Morgan
Lodwick, Kylie Dillon.
Brendan Nuscis, Katelyn
Ashburn. Kayla Rowley.
Ashton Brauer. Abigael
Port. Katlyn Holsinger.
Mackenzie
Browning.
Brandon Peterson.

Better Livestock 4-H Dairy Club meets
Dr. Joyce Brothers
victim of domestic abuse,
but now I know for sure,
since she has confided in
me. She's the most giving and affectionate person I know, and getting a
new job seemed to make
her happy, but not her
husband. I guess she
stays with him because
they have a child together, but I've always wondered what possesses a
man to become such a
monster. - C.C.
Dear C.C.: It is good
that your friend has confided in you. as that may
be the first step she needs
to take in order to get
some help and distance
herself from her husband.
These things always are
very difficult for outsiders to understand, for
they know that the wife
doesn't deserve to have
anything bad happen to
her at the hands of a
loved one. and they also
may see the husband only
as the charming face he
puts on for others. It is
fear of him and fear of
the unknown that' have
kept your friend a prisoner of this relationship.
As to why he is a monster, you may have provided a clue in your letter.
When your riend got a
job. it may have severely
threatened the balance of
power in the relationship
and caused the insecure
husband to lash out at his
wife in order to keep
things the way they were
before she headed off to
work. Men who are abusive, according to some
new research from the
University of Granada,
ofte'tl are threatened by
changes in the relationship
with their spouses. and
may use violence as a way
to restore their idea of the
proper balance of power.
So your friend took quit.e a
risk when she took the JOb
- but this also ma~ be the
catalyst to her getting out.
(c) 2010 by King
Features Syndicate

740-992-7028

.,£

POMEROY - Plans
for the Meigs County
Fair were discussed during a recent meeting of
the Meigs County Better
Livestock 4-H Dairy
Club held at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.

were
Committees
named for the ice cream
booth, the fair booth, a
barn display and possible
trips this summer. Also
discussed
were 4-H
books. teen leaders meetings. a canoe trip, t-shirts,

CARPET
York Ingels, Owner

175 North 2nd Ave • Middleport, OH

report \\as presented by ·
Kiki Osborne. Hannah
Sharp and Sydney Grueser
had a health report and
Olivia Yost did a safety
report. The next meeting is
scheduled for June 23, and
the club will go canoeing.

Bradbury Road, near
WYVK radio station.
Friday, June 25
MIDDLEPORT- Fre.e
community
dinner,
Middleport Church of
Christ,
Family
Life
Center, Fifth and Main.
Doors open 4:30 p.m.
Chicken barbecue dinner
served 5 p.m.

Stewart at 992-7196, or
Bryan
and
Melissa
Colwell,
992-0565.
League play will begin in
August. Deadline to sign
up is Wednesday, June 30.

Community Calendar
Public
meetings
Monday, June 21
LETART FALLS
Letart Township Trustees,
regular meeting, 5 p.m.,
office building ..
Wednesday, June 23
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local Board of
Education, regular session, 6:30 p.m., Eastern
Elementary
Library
Conference Room.

Clubs and
organization
Monday, June 21
POMEROY
Pomeroy Chapter 186
OES, election of officers,
refreshments, 6:30 p.m.

Church events
Friday, June 18
SYRACUSE - Revival
Syracuse
services,
Community
Church,
Second
Street,
through
Syracuse,
Saturday, 7 p.m. each
evening. Rev. Markco
Pritt preaching. Special
music will be held as follows: Monday, Proclaim;
Tuesday, Church youth
choir; Wednesday, Truly

Thuffida~
Saved;
Delores Long; Friday,
Light of Hope; Saturday,
Debbie Powell.
POMEROY - Open
Concert at the riverfront
stage on the Pomeroy
parking lot featuring
"Truly Saved" and ''The
Sundermans" 7:30 p.m.
Free hotdogs and pop.
Take
lawn
chair.
Sponsored by the New
Beginnings U.M. Church.
In the event of rain the
concert will be moved to
the church.
Sunday, June 20
SYRACUSE
Community
Syracuse
Church, special singing
with "The Singing Byrds"
from Junction City, Ky.,
10 a.m.
Monday, June 21
MIDDLEPORT- "Sea
Quest" Vacation Bible
school, 6-8:30 p.m.,
today through Friday,
June 25, Victory Baptist
Church, classes for ages
two-three, kindergartensixth grade and an adult
class also offered.
BRADBURY
Bradbury Church of
Christ daily vacation
Bible
school,
21st
through June 25 10 a.m.
to
noon.
Theme,
"Discover the Christ."
Ages, 2 and up. Church is
located
at
39558

Other events
Sunday, June 27
POMEROY- Reunion
of descendants of Elbert
&amp; Della Gillilan at the
Kyger Creek power plant
club house. Family and
friends invited. Take covered dish for 12:30 dinner.
Monday, June 28
COOLVILLE - Faith
Harvest
Church,
Coolville, All Stars for
Christ Training Camp,
June 28, 29 and 30, 10
a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Ages 3
to 12 years of age.
Nursery provided. NFL
player Mike Bartrum
speaking on Tuesday.

-wa-RNER

·INSURANCE
SERVICES INC.

Grange

Saturday, June 19
TUPPERS PLAINS Donna Watson Brooks,
formerly of Tuppers
Plains, will observe her
80th birthday on June 19.
Cards may be sent to her
at
2203
fiill
St.,
Apartment E, Belpre,
Ohio 45741.
POMEROY Ziba
Midkiff of Pomeroy will
observe his 90th birthday with an open house
from 2-4 p.m. today in
the ·dining hall .of
Rocksprings Rehabiltion
Center, no gifts but
cards appreciated.

Friday, June 18
POMEROY
Any
church interested in playing in a fall co-ed softball
leagues, contact Mike

New Construction and
Replacement Vinyl Windows

CONTRACTOR WINDOW SUPPlY
&amp; MANUFACTURING. UC
AND SIDING INSTAllATION

#''/

RR2?AN

Birthdays

Youth events

WHEN'S THE LAST TIME
A CHECK-UP
SAVED YOU MONEY
n~

Insurance'""'

Dave White &amp; Michael Warner: Agents
CALL 740·992-6688 OR VISll
brogan·warner.webagebt4u.com

Speciali::.e In Replacemt'llt \\'indoll"s
For Older Homes &amp; Trai/en
No extra charge to replace metal frmne ll'illdows
Richard Smith
Co·Owncr'V•~e Pre"dent COQI\'illc.OH

..=.

UNIVUSllY OF

~q 9~~1TYCOLLEGE
\

INGELS

and a trip in July.
Andrionna Pullins conducted the meeting, Olivia
Yost led the 4-H pledge
and Sydney Grueser the
American pledge.
Roll call was by Brenna
Hayman and the treasurer

Your FUTURE within REACH.
MEIGS CENTER
www.rio.edu
42377 Charles Chancey Drive • Pomeroy, OH
740-992-1880 .

-.

7-'0-667-0306
9
Fa': 7-'0-667-032
~ Toll Free: 877-·US-8196

.~

([lark'~ Jetuelrp

Remember D~d on Father's Day
with a gift from Clark's Jewelry.

QRings,
1ounce Siver Eagle coins. Q
Chains and
Brace~ts.

DAD

Key Rings, Money Clips and Zippo Ughters.
113 &lt;..'OURT STREET, POMEROY~ OHI0••740-992·2054

�~--~~ ---·-------~--------..-ol!!!~------------.----------

Pagei\4.

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June

18, 2010

Sentinel
.The111 Daily
Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
·
(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

Tht. Ot-\t.

·~VVR~C\\ I
't\\L\.. W
)T/\tC~91
\$ IAACT\0~\

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cougrcss slw/1 makt• no /,Ill' respecting an
establishment o,J' rel~!!iou, or prohibiting tire free
e.wrcise tl~t·rco,f; or abrid.!!ing tlte freedom of
speech, or of the press; or tile r(!!ll t of the people
pet~ceably to assnnblt•, ami to petitiou the
Goa,t•rmm•m.fi'r a rcdre.~s of.!!riea•ances.
T h e First Amendment to th e U.S. C onstitutio n

TO J)AY I N HISTORY
Today is Friday, June 18, the 169th day of 2010.
There are 196 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in llistory:
On June 18, 1940, during World War II, British
Prime Minister Winston Churchill urged his countrymen to conduct themselves in a manner that
would prompt·future generations to say, "This was
their finest hour."
On this date:
In 1778, American forces entered Philadelphia as
the British withdrew during the Revolutionary War.
In 1812, the United States declared war against
Britain.
In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte met his Waterloo
as British and Prussian troops defeated the French
in Belgium.
In 1873, suffragist Susan B. Anthony was found
guilty by a judge in Canandaigua, N.Y., of breaking
the law by castmg a vote in the 1872 presidential
election. (The judge fined Anthony $100, but she
never paid the penalty.)
In 1908, Wilham Howard Taft was nominated for
president by the Republican nationa! convention in
Chicago.
In 191 0, former President Theodore Roosevelt
was honored w1th a ticker-tape parade in New York
following his return from visits to Europe and
Africa.
In 1945, William Joyce, known as "Lord HawHaw," was charged in London with high treason for
h1s Enghsh·language wartime broadcasts on
German rad1o. (He was hanged the following
January.)

In 1979, President Jimmy Carter and Soviet
President Leonid I. Brezhnev signed the SALT II
strategic arms limitation treaty in Vienna.
In 1983 astronaut Sally K. Ride became
America's first woman In space as she and four colleagues blasted off aboard the space shuttle
Challenger.
In 1984, Alan Berg, a Denver radio talk show
host, was shot to death outside his home. (Two
white supremacists were later convicted of c1vil
rights violations in the slaying.)
Ten years ago: Tiger Woods won the U.S. Open
by a record 15 strokes Ethiopia and Eritrea agreed •
to cease hostilities in a two-year·old border war.
Emmy·winning actress Nancy Marchand died in
Stratford, Conn. a day before her 72nd birthday.
Five years ago: U.S. Marines _and Iraqi forces battled insurgents in a restive western Iraqi province,
killing about 50 militants in the military's latest campaign to stop foreign fighters who were infiltrating
from neighboring Syria.
One year ago: Tens of thousands of protesters
filled the streets of Tehran again, joining opposition
I
leader Mir Hossain Mousavi to mourn demonstrators killed in clashes over Iran's disputed election.

Thought for Today: " The way of a superior
man is threa.fold; virtuous, he Is free from anxieties; wise, he Is free from perplexities; bold,
he Is free from fear." - Confucius, Chinese
philosopher (551-479 B.C.).

L E T T Eft S T O T HE E DITOR
Letters to the ed1tor should be hm1ted to 300 words. Allle:ters
are subject to ed1tlng, must be s1gned and tnclude address and
telephone number. No uns1gned letters will be published.
Letters should be m good taste, addressmg 1ssues. not person·
ahties. "Thank You" letters will not be accepied for publication.

Poll: Obamacare gaining suppor•
B Y RI CARD O ALONSO-ZALDIVAR
AND TREVOR T OMPSON

ASSOCIATED PRESS

The vital 'igns nrc imprO\ing for Pre,ident Barack
Obama ·~ health care plan.
The latest Associated Pre..,.,.
GfK poll on Obama's top
domestic achievement finds
support for the new overhaul
has nsen to 1ts highest point
since the :-.un cy started asking
pe..oplc about it in September
six months before it
became law.
The resul ts now: 45 pl'rcent
in favor, 42 percent opposed.
That's a significant shift in
public ~entimcnt considering
that opposition hit 50 percent
after Oban1&lt;1 ~igned the health
plan into Ia\\ in late .\larch
and that in .\1a), supporter~
v.ere outnumbered 39 percent
to 46 percent.
" I thought when people
began to realize what \\a!&gt; in
the health care package that
they would ~ce it's a good.
solid program and that would
dispel some of the nusinformation," said Brigham Young
University E nglish professor
Claudia Harris, 72. of Orem.
Utah.
Electrical contractor Kerry
Eislcy of Mosco\... Pa .. said he
thinks people arc starting to
get nuts-and-bolts ml'ormation
on how the law u!Tccts them.
" If we can insure more people across the United States
and !!Ct the cost of health care
do\v~. I think that's a better
thing ." said Ei..,Jc). 43. a
Republican who ~upport:-. the
plan. which passed \\ ithout
the 'ote of an) GOP lawmaker.
The poll found ..,upport
increased ~ince ~1av amon!!
men (from 36 pen:ent to 46
pe rcent). people 111 their prime
working year~ (from 35 percent to 49 percent among .\049 year-olds) and RqHJbl icans
(from 8 percent to 17 percent.)

The

uptick

among
even as
part) leaders are calling f&lt;)r
the law's repeal.
The chan!!e~ coincide "ith a
concerted e~ffort b) the Obama
administration, congressional
Democrats and their alltes to
sell the immediate benefits of
the law.
Among the selling points:
coverage for ) oung adults on
their parents' plan until they
turn 26; a $250 rebate ~heck
for older people with high
prescription costs; tax credits
for some small busine~scs that
CO\ er their cmploycl's. and
lederal mone\ to train m01e
primar) care doctors and nurses.
"The~ are clearl) making
progress in coil\ incing more
Americans that this bill IS the
right way to go," said Robert
Blcndon.
a
Hanard
Univer~ity
public
health
~chool professor '' ho tracks
opinion trends on health care.
De~pite the gains, the prognosis for Obama and the
Democrats is guard~:d.
"In In) 'ie\\~ the) can claim
'ictOI') if it geb a majorit) ,''
131cndon added. "The country
is so polarized. it just might
not make it."
The $1 trillion. 10-ycar
health care remake puts the
nation on a path to Cll\ crage
for all. Starting in 2014.
evet")one in the U.S. will be
re4uired to carry health in,urance. The government \\iII
provide tax~ credits to help
middle-clas., people not CO\ercd at work bu) a polic~
through
new
competitl\ e
health in~urance
markets.
Medicaid ''ill be expanded to
help low-income people. The
plan is paid for through a
combination of ~1edicarc cut
and tax increases.
One complication for the
president i~ that older people
remain opposed to the I~"'.
Just
last
week.
Obama •
Republican~ come~

am.wered question~ at a tele' iscd tO\\ n hall meeting in a
senior cemer. but his assurances 'eem to be ha\ ing little
effect. The poll found that 56
percent of people 65 and older
don't like the new" law.
·•j don't know if it's ~ustain­
able. and that's got us worried," said Audre)~Guillot. 69 .
whose famil) O\Vn~ a general
store in Pierre Part. La. ··Ho\\
muc:h can \Ve borrow? H ow
long before other countries
:.tart calling in our debts?
Medicare is ~1bout to go broke
when do you address that?
llo\\ many bridges to now here
can· \VC build?''
The poll found that 51 percent trust Democrats to do n
better job of handling health
care. an i ... ..,ue that more t~
three-fourth' rate as person
ly important to them. By co
pari on. 38 percent ~aid t
trusted Republican~.
Dame! LO\\er) . 23. a ~hip­
per at a LO\\e·, di~tribution
center in Ohio. -.aid he thinks
Democrab "arc headed in the
right dirl'ction. for the mo~t
part.'' But he complained they
havt•n't clcarl) explained how
the complex law work~.
"I think people would be
more lor it if they actually
cxplain~.:d what they're giving
us. bccau..,e I barel) know. and
I "atch news e\·er) da) : · sa1d
I O\\Cr). ''ho li\e~ in Fostoria.
south of Toledo.
The AP-GfK Poll involved
landline and cell phone imer' icw... "ith I .044 randomly
cho en adult~ and "a... conducted by GfK Roper Public
Affairs
&amp;
Corporate
Communication.., from J une 914. It has a mar!!in of sampling error of pl~s or mi .
4.3 percentage po111ts.

(AI) J\'e11 \ Survey Specialist
Dennis Juniu.' and Associated
Pre', writer Christine Simmons
colllributed ro rhi'' reporr. Online:
11'11'11 .aJJ·g.fkpoll.com .)

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

·(usPs 213-960)

Ohi o Valley Publishing Co.
Correction Policy
Our main concern 1n all stones 1s Published T1..esday through Friday,
111 Court Street, Pomeroy Oh10
to be accurate. If you know of an
Second-class postage pa1d at
error 1n a story, call the newsroom
Pomeroy
at (740) 992·2156
Member: The Assoc1ated Press
and •he Oh1o Newspaper
O u r m ain number is
Association.
(740) 992·21 56.
Po11tmaster: Send address O)rrecDepartment extensi ons are: t•ons to Tho Daly SentJnet PO
Box 729 Pof"leroy OhiO 45769

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Friday, June 18, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK
1 45a
~u ) E'cnuo~ 600p
I' or Don \\a er

F~IIO\\ShiP
Apostolf~

P
Dcnll )\u \\orsh p • 910 a"'
Sund y S.toool 10:30 I

xhoc

Nh rr \ulk)
Rl\er \alley AP&lt;&gt;SI lo, \I ljup Ccnt.r
71 S rd A1c \1 Jdlcport Re
\l11h !Bradford. l'ush•r. :&gt;unda), 10 JO
"m Iues 6 '&lt;l pm1cr, \\c" 7 pm lloblr
Soud)
Fmmanud \p•"lolir hoonnadt lnr.
l,oop Rd oft ~e11 Lorna ~d l{oul nd
Seno&lt;:c Sun 10.00 a n &amp; 7 lO p on
11!ur; 7:()() p '11, Pao \l&gt;n) R llun

Rutland f
\1 "lllaptJ;t
~
S I'; t Ed B;.me S da'
'ic
10 Ill E'enong 7 p.m
\\ed
y Se-\lees ;o
~nd llapli't Cburclo
Ra•-ro "•IOd \\\ Su ) Set. 1 10 am
M :nongv.orshop II am b~nong 7 pm
\\i:dne da) p
hr\lllaptht ('burch o( \Ia""'· \\\
(lnd~pendenlllJpl"t

SR 6S1 nd \n~er""' St. P•,tor J(~~n
(mod), Snnda) 'chool 10 am. \lorn•ng
church II ~m ~unda) e1emng 6 prn. \\ed
lhhle Soudy 7 '"'

Catholic

Assembly of God
M

\\

Pa t

Rutland l:hurrh ortiocl
Pastor Sh ne M llo11hng ~unday
\\ rsbop 101m 6 p on \\edne~ )
Mmees 7p.m
S&gt;rUCUil'l I I ( hureh u[ (,od
Apple nd Second S~ . P to R 1 J) ~~
Ru'&gt;c \unJ,I\ Sdoool un \\no !up Q
,, m hctHnJ Ser\l&lt;el (, 1!1 p m
1\cdncsd.w Sm 1&lt;e o 10 p n
nwrch ur c;ud ur !'~•Ph•·•· I
0 W'-ooc Rd off St Rt 1'\0, 1'4 1
Chapmi111 ~und ) S,hoo
10
\\or;hop II a 1 \\edne5d Sci\'
p.m

Pastor Re

flatwood'
P :o 01:\\ y~ ~tutUcr Suna..~ Schoo!
, )a.m \\oob p 11 am

fol'hl Run

Trlnlt1 &lt;hunh
J

\\~hip

i'agt•lllc frtt10ill Haptht Churrh
Pastor Flo 'd R ~
S&lt;

II '
0

Carpenter lndcpendml ll~pthl { hurrh
Sund I S,hool
9 lO.m ~ d n
&amp;r.
10 JO m, he n
Se 1 .e
7'&lt;JOom. \\cdncsda} Bob! Stud} 7 00 m.

r so r
( ht..,hire Haplosl ( hurrh
Pasoor 5t~l~ Lmle, 741- 11•7 7XOI I!
7.W 992 7&lt;42. (' 7~•1-MS 2&lt;27, Sunda1
S•hOI'I: 9.30 am, \lomong 1\orshoro lll. lO
arn. 'ouoh , Hoble lluduoes 6 10 pm
.boor practice ' !0. Spec 1d:.1 ot monlh
I l..odoe&lt; ol Clra~ 7 pm 2nd \lond ~·:
\len s Fe .. h p
'nl ru

Holiness
Hunlock t;nM ( hri•tian Church
\lmo ter aJT) llrnlln \\or&lt;;hop 'I JO
n1 Sund ) S.hool 1 3() a.m lloble
Stud\ 7 p m

Communi!) Chur&lt;h
~ ck
~ on Stmo,
Rutlar. Sunda) \\1 ho(Y' 00 • m,
Sunday Sc 11co p.m

l'uonmo) Chur&lt;:h or Christ
\Ialii So SunJJ) School 9. Jll
am \\or&lt;hop 10 lU am 6 p m •
\\edn~Mial s,mcc&lt;. 7 p m.

llao11 illr llnllnt-S-1 ( hun:h
.11057 So,uc Route 12~, 1•ng11llc,l'a"nr
llroan Haole.. SunJa1 sc ool •I '10 • m,
~und~) ~&gt;nrshop
10 •0 am &amp; 7 p m.,
\\eunc&lt;dav pr.l1Cr&lt;el'\ ee 7 p m

l'umert&gt;) \\&lt;St•ide Church of Chri•l
!·~26 Cho dre · Home Rd. Sunda)
'i&lt;hoo
\\orsh p 10 m. 6 p .,,
\\ednesday Sm ces 7 p n

l•h 31') l'il~rlm Chapd
Hamsomo .c R
P tcr Chari
\1, Kenz1e, Sunda&gt; Seh&lt;lc 'I 0 a.m

'I~ \\

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"

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7

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pm \\ed

lrd Sul~Q)

llfanl.lllo" Rid~&lt; Church o( Chri:l
P t r llru,e Tc,.,., Sunda) S,hoo -9·'!0
am
Wor.hop
10 10 am 6.30 p.m

Hr&gt;l U;opti't ( hun·h
Po~&gt;oor Rtll) Zusp.n Nh .ond Palmer So
\loddlepon Sunda1 ~,h&lt;l&lt;ll 9·15 a or..
\\orsh ~
10 I~ am . I 110 p m .
\\tdncsdal

&amp;"'iCe- ,()( p r.1

\\ronesd•1

00 p.rr.

Rutll!nd Hrstllaptkl Church
'i
l S&lt; 1 9 10
\\ hp
10 4~ .m
Porntro' Fint 113ptill

First 'outhern Bnpti&lt;l
41872 Pomeroy P e. Surdl\ s.~
9 30 a.m. \\orslup ~ 4~ •ra &amp; ~ p m
1\cdne day Senocc' 7 1lt p m P 'or:
OJ d Rmonaru

Zlun Chun:h of Chri't
.Pomero1 llarmonvollr RJ 1Rt 14')
Pastor: R er \\ t" n Sunda~ School
9 10 m , 1\of\hop 1 30 • m. 7 00
p.n- \\ronesd \ S ICCS 7 p
1uppm Plain Cbureb of Chrbt

I

9

Suodl) e1 n 6 pm
Rutl•nd {hurch of the ~nllr&lt;nt·
Pastor Gt rgt 5r.;dlrr, Su~d•) 5cltool
10 a 1 \\ "h p 1o 10 a m 6 'r
p '11 \\ d
•\ 'i&lt;n '
1 p.~•

Other Churches

9am.

Heatb ('liddleportl
1'2 I C;un Dunh3m ~Uilday S.boo
I
,\\ n~,., ll:«Ja.m
\sbUI) s,racu-.e
P !olor B b R b n~n. 'iulh&gt;J) Sctoool
9 lO .m \\ rshop I 30 a.m
l'l",.rl Chapel
~unda1 Scbocl ~ d rr. • \\'orshop 10 a.m

I'll,

Pint &lt;Jro•e Roble llolinm ( hurrh
12 nu e ff R 12~ Pa
S&lt;hool YlO

'•" lleginnine' Church
Pomtro)
l'n"ur. Rnan Dunham, \\or,hop • 9.25
• n1 Sunda) School· 10:45 am.
Ruck Spring&gt;
Paslnr. Dcwa) ne Soulier Sunda~ School •
Q:OQ a.m . Worsh1p • 10 am • rouoh
ftll ~·hop. Sunda} 6 p.n1 Earl) Sund y
v.~r.&gt;hop 8 '"' l.cnora Lcofheit
Rutland
P.:stor Joon Chap111.1n Sunda) School •
'I 10 a.m . \\onh p 10 30 a.m ThuMa)
)en
/p.m.
~altm Cmter
Pastor \\1
K \!.mhat. Sunday
S&lt;hool 10 15 a.m \\onlup. 9:1' a.m
B e Sud) Mond.l) 7c00 prn
Snow•ille
Sunda) School 10 am, Wol'lup • 9 a.n:
!let ban)
Pa&gt;oor John Rozev. ,z Sunda) S.hool
10 'II \lorsbop 9 am. \\i=d~sda)
Sen1tes IOa.rr.

\\cslt~lln

llihlo·llnlinrs, Chut&lt;h
S1 . M1ddle(Xlll I' tor l&gt;llU8
O;)x Sund.ty s,houo 10 .1 on \\urshop
10 4~ pIll, Sunda) l:1e b.IXl p.m
\\cdne&lt;da~ Senoce 7 ()II p on
7~ P~

ll~wll Run ('oonmunlh l'hureh
Pastor Re1 1.&amp;1'1') Lenole) Suoday S,hool
9 10 d 111.. \\ hop
4S a.m , 7 p m .
TllUNda) Boble Study and Youlh ' p m

Carmel-Sutton
( .tl"llt &amp; Ba•h.tn RJ,. Racmc, Oboo,
l'a110r John Rntewo.z, Sunda) School •
'I 45 a.m. Worsh1p : 11·00 a.m .• Bible
Soud) \\ed 7 10 p.m.
\lornin~ Star
!'astor John Roll , Su1 ~ ') Schoo •
II a:n,\\o:shp 104m

Ea11 Letart
B 'I Marshall Suod ) s,boo
10 m, 1st Sunday

l.aul'\'1 UifU m \lrthuclis l hurch
Su '&amp;hoo

10

2nd aod4th Sunda)

lOa

( arl:ton lnterdeoomlnalional Churrh
Ko
R
P
R ~n \
SII3)S
'lOam.\\
p
• he11ong Sel'\ oct 6
p
f rt't'dnon (,O'Ipel \li,&lt;lon
Bald Knob on Co Rd J, Pastor Re1.
Ro er Willford Sunu ) S,htoul II lO
am\\ &gt;hiP' 7p
\\hilt\ Chapel We,le)an
( onll·olle Road , Pa&gt;oor· Re1. Charles
\l.rt•pdalc, Sun School
9:30 am
\\ orshop· O· '!0 a.m •\\ ed Se" o.:e 7 p m

Cunonwn (,round \![s.,luo"
Pi' 10" Denno \loore &amp; K11• Lmle
Sunday PliO a11
l•·um.h"u'
!'astor l:ddJe llacr Sun \\ ~l11p II am
n3 Meehan • St P001troy
"•" ll•1&gt;t ( hurth
0 dAmen.: Le
113
Founb A • M dd tport Smda) ~ p m
:O.J nocuse (:ommunlt' Lhurrh
z~ Se..ond St
nt:usc 011
n 'i..hool 10 am 'lu ) ht6 lO prn
l&gt;ast;l Joe Gv.
A :"'e" Htglnnla;
(full Gosprl Churrhl HlfTISQIII le
Past Bob and Ka M
Thun 7p
\m:1'1ong Grace&lt; ommudt1 Churrh
Pastor \\a~ne Dun! p.Sute Ro 681
T ppm Plaln1 'iun \\ ~ p; 10 am &amp;
6 10 pm 1\ed lloble ~tudv 7«1 p.m

Stc~e

Struee

li.eno Churrh of Cbrisl
\\ rsh p 9 lO m Sunda} S.bool
10 a"' Past '. :'C)\\ !:&gt;..~ ht uod

\\me l 1e S od )
9 30. m \1
p 10" a

Re'

s,~ool

s

P or BOO Rob

lrn

Church of Christ

Baptist

P
m

Rtt&lt;k•llle
\\ hop 9 :lO .m Sunday S.hool
10 10 am font Sunda) of \lonth 7 00
p.m ltl'\ o(e Pa tor Gc~ Goodwon
1upprl'i Plain' ~I. l'aul
,
l'lc 1 lim rh!u S nd...) School 11
m \\ur~hn IC m. fueS(la• Sen &lt;t$
7 1(1 p Dl
Ctnlrol UU1lcr
Albul) &lt;Syr.cu.&lt;oe), Pa.stor Bob Rob'""'"·
~unday S.hool
14~ "m \\o"h•p II
a 11, \\rd~~•&gt; Scmees 7 10 p m

Congregational

9

s

Chc':\ltr ('buf'(h ur the 'v~rene

lup

pn-

Con
Sun

n

9 JO am. \\onhop 10 0 a.m and 6
(l.m • \\CdncYiay 'i&lt;n Ia'S pm

l on~:Bouom

=

Churrh of Jt5u&lt; ( hrbt A[IO\tolk
\ .onl.andt nd \\ ard R
J
\Iller .Sunda)
E•e ns 7l0r.rn

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page AS

&lt;&gt;•''

Chrhtiun 1tll••"hill
(\on d nQmnl&gt;llon 1, lo\\ h•p
\lwmg m the Mcog ~hcdk-Schooo
C11fetena l'o1~or ( hn&lt; Stcwan
'1:(1() am '&lt;non Sund.l\, lnf11nnal
l\1.&gt;"hip. Choldrtn \ ononosory
tonununit) or ( hrlst
Ponland R.r1ne Rd l'a•toc Jom l'•ollttr
\un o) S.hoo 9 JV a
\\o hop
'0 30 am. \\~Jn~ay Se"'•••• 7 00
pm
lkthtl \\nnhip ( (lll&lt;r
19782 St Rt 7. : 1 HOith of Tuppers
Plaon OB 'I; on denomo !Jon 1 ,.. •
Contempor&lt;U) Pratsc &amp; \\oN! p Pa&gt;tor
Rob B :-ber. A soc P or Karyn OJ'
Youth D t« tur B~tl) full Sund~)
scn.ru 10 am \\onh p &amp; 6 p F q
l1fr Clme\, \\ed &amp; Tho:r noght L ft
Grou
t 7 prn Thm mcrn1 g lad!e\
wfe Group at 10 Outer Lim t \ th Lo •
Group n \\ed. nmm from b 30 t lO
\IS I US 11ft liiC aiV.I&gt;V..bcthdv. Ofi
Ash Strrt't ('hurth
!98 A b So \hddlepon Paston Marl
\lorrov. &amp; Rodnc~ \\alkcr Sunday
School 9 30 1m , \l1.;rn g \\or&lt;hop •
10 JO a.m &amp; 6 10 pm. 1\~nesda) Sel'\ 1ce
6.30 p"' \outh Sen \"e· 7ro p.n1
.\gape I of~ C~nltr
"fuii-Go&gt;pel Church", !'as orJ John &amp;.
Pan~ W,tde, 603 Se&lt;ond A1e \lason. n1,
5017 S,en cc !lone Sund3y 10 31) u m,
\\edne~a) 7 pm

hinitl&lt; Rib!&lt; Church
Leoan, 'W \'a Rt 1 Pa&gt;tor Sn.lll \Ia~
Su y Schoo 9 30a.m V.orsh1p • 700
p.m Wcd~&gt;day Boble Study 7:00pm
fahh ftllo"sbip l'ru..adr for Christ
P tor Re Fran lm Dicltn.&lt; Sm rr
Fnda
Cah,a'l Bible Churrh
P e (. Rd Pastor
am 710 p'!l,
, !Op.m

sthemllle (ommunit) Church
Sunda) ~cbool :UO a: Sunday \\ orship
II 00 am \\ednesdav 7 00 pm Pa&lt;tor
lin"" &amp; \ 1'&gt;S) DaJ r)
RcjuidnR l.ifr Churrh
SOO \ 2nd A•e , M1d~ rpon. Pa.&lt;tor
\!1kr ~orcm311. P..slor Ementus Lav.rence
I uren1.1n, \\onhop 10.00 am
Wedn~sday Sen ~&lt;&lt;I 7 pm
Clifton lalll:rnacle Church
Cloflon, \\ \ . ~unday s.bool 10 a n
1\onhop
p.m \\ednesday Seme~ 7
pm
full lo&lt;Kpel Cbarrh
oftbe l.h1n2 Sa• lor
Rt 38. Anuq ty Pasto Jrue Mort's
Sm~~:es S.:
) 2:0011
Salem ( ommUDit) Chorch
bta. \\.\ .om Llcvont:
Road P t (. es R~ t !04) 6752288' Sund3) S,boo 9 10 am. Sunday
e~rn nt- ~n ocr 7 00 pm Bibl) Soud)
\\tdnesda) .se"'oce 7iMJ prn
&amp;cl of\\e&gt;o C

llotoon ( hro,tian Ftllo~~&lt;hip Church
P tor Hcrsc'lel \\ hne. SIUlda) S.liool·
om. Sunda) Cbur,h ltfY.,e 6:30pm
\\~nc~a)

Re,toration Chri~tian F'dlo,.,hip
Hooper Road. Athen' Pa.~or
Lunnoe c~ao,, Sunlit) \\o"hop 10:00 am.
\\,-.J~sda) 7 pm

9&lt;o\

IIOU'it or Healin2

\hundant (,rau
923 S ThordSt \I dd epon,PastorTercsa
Oa\1$ Sun~ ~ serv •t 10
m
\\edntsda)scntee'pm

\linbtrit•
St. Rt.l24 Lanes&gt;ille,OH
full Gospel. Cl Pi.SIOn Roben &amp; Roberu
Mu ser, Sund y School 9 30 :n •
\\onh p 10 '10 :n • 7 00 pm. \\ed
Smli.'C 7;00 prn

~J"-c7~pJil

~ Barr. Meeti

Pa&lt;

Latter-Day Saints
Thr l hurcb or JnU&gt;

Mt.llnion Bapti.t
Pastor Denno \\ea~er Su1da1 S,hool
~ 45 a rn
l•enong
p 'll •
\\ro~sda} ~nom 6 JOrm
R&lt;thlthtlll llaptbt ( hurrh
Great Bend, Rouoe 124 R cone 011.
l'ast ~ , Sunday School 9 10 am ,
Sunday Wo"hop 10.30 am \\edne d.t)
Btblc S!ud) 7·00 p !11
Old llrthd f rw 1\ illllapli't Chur(h
28601 St R• 7 ~l•ddlqwl, Sunda1
sm ~~. 10 am ~.)() pm l.oe;&amp;;.)
Sel'\ ICC&gt; 6.00

9

Ram

Hr.1dford Church of Chri't
Corne• of Sl Rt 124 &amp; Brudbuf) Rd.
\loou,trr lloug Shambhn. Youoh ~hnl\ler
llol ~mbergcr. Sunday S,'KAJ( 9.3li am
\\ rJh p &amp;00 am. 10:30 m 1.00
pn- \\:dll(•d •Se ,e, 700p'11

Lutheran
St. .luhn lnthnan ( hur&lt;·h
\\orsh p1 Q !Xl a • Sund )
Sd1&lt;10l 10 00 a no P.astor

Cooh !Ue l nlttcl \lethodi•t Parhb
Pa&gt;t r Helen K •ne. CIX'I•olle Church.
\J n .~ fofth St Sun s,hool - 10 a.m,
\\orshop 9 a m •Tu..-s. Semce&gt; · 1 pm

1',~ Gm1~

Our Su1iour l.uthnan ( 1urdo
W !nut and llcnr) Sts, RJ',eMIIot'&lt;l
\\\a .. Pa&lt;tor lla\ d Rus e I, Sunda)
S.h&lt;l&lt;&gt;l 1.) 00 ~ m . \\orlihop I n1

Bell)&lt;! Church
To"'"lnp RJ. 40&amp;( Sunda) School
.m. \\or&gt;h1p • 10 a.m .. \\'edne,da)
Scnu:e.'i 10 a.m

IIO&lt;kingport Church
Ktohr)n \\uC). ~unda) School • 9 30
m \\orshop • 10 10 am. Pa•oor Phtllop

United Methodist
&lt;.raham l niltd ~ltlho!l$1
Reed•• ille Churrb or Chri'&gt;l
BapiL\tlndrptndtnt
525 N 2nd St Middlrpon f 1 J
E Kc e \\ nh
1
\\C:dnesda Se
p '11

•

Faioh llaptl&lt;t Church
Rao.:road St I'
Sund ) S h 1 10
a n • \\ , &gt;hop
1 u . b pm
\\cd~&lt;da) Smot'C
7 p no
1'nrt1l Run llaplhl· l'nmtrnt
Re1 Joseph \\~'· \unda) Scbo 1
a m., \\o'lohtp I '10 m

ll

~unda1

Ontcr Cburrb or Christ
~oo 9 lO m ~unda• ~&gt;01' p

10
m
•The Churrh of l hri•t of P.uero)
lnlt"e"uon and 124 \\. Ll J!thst
Denno S rgent, Sunday Soble Stu )
9 l(• m \\orshop: 10 10 a.m ~nd 6· JO
p.m. \\ron, 'da&gt; Soble Soud~ . 7 p m

Christian Union

\It, \lnri11h llalllht
l·ounh &amp; .\lam So, \lo~" CfOM ~undal
S.:hool •)'3f • n1. \\or h•f 1• 4&lt; nPastor ~r1 ~hch el A 111emp n Sr

Church of Chri\1 in
( hrhtlan l nion
fl•nlorJ \\ \
Pastor \hkc Pucken
Sundav Sc'-ool 9·10 am \\onh p
\o l m 00 p m \\ed~&gt;da)

\ntlquit) Raptl11
Sunda) Schoo ')10 a rn \\

s.:n
hp

V.ooltip 11 a ~ st R~&lt;~.:.nl s~
Btthtrll nlted ~l&lt;lho&amp;t
"cv. H "" R chard \c
Pa t r
Sunda1 v.o h 9 30 1 m Tue 6 l()
pr.1
and Boblc Stud)
\lt. Olhe l nlted \lflhal&amp;l
Off 124 behond \\ ll.c ,,llt, Plsoor Re1
Ra ph ~pu-c • ~unda&gt; s.hool 9 10 a.m
\\or&lt;hlp 10 JO a m 7 p m Thursda)
Set\t&lt;"r&lt; 7 p n
\ltl~, ( '•••r•t·rath e l'arJ,h

\orohca&lt;l Clusoer, Alfl'\'
Good" in, Sunda) SdiOII(
Wor,hop 11 . m ld!l p.on

Pa•on~
Q

Gene
I() a on,

ll:~rlfnrd

e

Iorch (burch
Co R'il, 63 Sunda)
\\orsh p 1~ X. m

~hool

Hai'Thon•iUe l 'ommunlt! Churrh
Pastor 11K n Durio.
t;
1
9 10
am and~ p.m ~edllt'da1 ) pm
\loddlcport Communlt1 l hurch
57&lt; Pearl St . Moddlepon • Pastor S or.
Anderson, Sunda) S.~oo I an:
I vcnong • 7 10 pm \\cdncse } W\lct
7.3C m
Faith \aile) lahtrnurlr Chnr&lt;:h
Raok) Run Road. l'a,oor Rc&gt; ~mmen
Ra11son Sunda) hcnon, 7 p rn.
Thul'da) sen ''-r 7 p m
S)rdCIISt \Ji\,,iun

- 9 lC a.rr.

~azarene
Point Rock Church of the \azartlll'
Route 6!9 A n). Re• loyd Gnmm
p3Stor Sunda) S&lt;hool 10 am, worto.,op
Stn' ee II am t\t ng sem.e 7 ~ \\ed
pra) er merton 't&gt;m
\liddltport Church oftbe \a1&lt;1n:nc
Pastor Leonard P v.. I Sunda) S~ I
9 30 nm ,\\ 'IWp · 10 lOa '11. 6·'!0 p.m •
\\ednesda' Sei'IK't$. 7 p.m.,
Rt't'd" ille Fello\l•hip
Chun:h of thr \alarene. Pa&gt;tor Ru,•ell
Carson Sund•) School 9:.10 a.m ,
\\nrsh1p 10·45 J m., 7 p.m \\cdlfsd•)
Sen oces 7 p.m

Hazel Community Churrh
Off Rt 124 Pasoor lid llan Sunda)
choo 9 !0 a
\\ !tip 10: a
710p.rr.
ll)n\flltConununn) Ollll'th
:.uncia&gt; ~
1 9 l() m \\onh p
• 1010
'pm
\lorsc ( haptl ( hurch
Sunda) school I • m 1\crsh.p II
a.m \\edncs~ 'i&lt;r.,&lt;e 7 pm
f uith (;n,ptl ( hunh
(.(lng ll~uom. Sunda) ~.~lXII 9 '10 a no,
\\or•hop
10.45 am , • 10 p m
\\ednc-~la) 7 10 p m

l'lll&lt;lrr
ra.oor Jom (Qrhlll \\uf5hlll 9um.
s~~da) s,bool
10 n
Thunda)
Scr&lt; ee~·7pno

S)racuw Church of the \aurrnc
Sundav School 9 30 am .. \\orshop
10 10 a 'II 6 p.m \\(d Scvoce&gt; 7 p.n

Full ( ;o,pd 1 IKhthouw
3.JO.l5 ll•land Rood Pomero),P~&gt;Ior Ro)
llunl~r Sunda) S,buol 10 am &amp; 7 10
\\edncroa&gt; E•erung 7 30 pm

Jnpp3

Ponoero, Chur&lt;h of the :\;uarene
Pastor Jan L.nender Sunda~ School •

South lkthrl ( umnounit) Cburrh
S her Ridge· Pa lor Londa 0 mc"ood,
~und } s,!Jool 9 am \\'onh o ~m11-e

7()( ~m

Church of God

Mcth:lru~ 1ItC1

141 Bndgem n St ~yrac~~c-.c, Pastor
Re~ Rov Thomp n Sunda1 S.:hool 10
m, fverung 6 pm \\Cdooda&gt; Sel'\ &lt;T
pm.

Bell

\ ictor)

: 133
Po=&gt;· OH
Mnlet eltr) ~ Dal\ II 00 a

a.m

Fnda1

Rev \\ am M :;hal . S nda
S..ilool
10 a
\\mhlp
II
a.m \\C:dnesda~ Sen1.:es 6 prl'' Thur S blt
St &gt;7pm

RuJiand ( hun:h of Chrkt
~ nda• ~.hool 9 l{l m \\or;hop aa
( ommJnoo a
10 30 • m Da' d
\\ '11 n. \lonoster

l(l

r.

Sa.rament Sc 1 oce 9 0 S a m
llomcmal.o g 'llttl g.l t T'nu$ 7 ~.m

7 prn

Pentecostal
l'enttro•tal \--embly
Pastor ~t Rt 11~ Ractne 1 lll3do Rd
sunda s, I • I\ am f•erung •
p.m \\ednesda1 Stn11.1!S 7 p.ill.

Presbyterian
lhrro\ODI illr f'rl:,b~ terian Cborrh
Pa,tor Rr1 D 1 d l'au kncr. Wurshop
900 .01 Sunday
\liddlrport Presb)terian
Pnstor James Snyder Sunda) School 10
•.n• " r•hlp st"' icc II 3111

Seventh-Day Adventist
Se•rnth-Oa1 \d1entht
\lulberT) Jh; Rd, Pomeroy, So~tu Ja)
Stn oces S•bbatb Schoo
2 p tn •
\\ Jnh p 3 p.rr.

United Brethren
Mt. lltnnon l niltd Brtlhrto
In Chri•t Church
Tex Co
I\ 36-UI \\ ICklum Rd.
P or Petcr ~brtind31e. :.uodly S.:hoo
9 10 un \\Ors!t~ 10 30 a.rr. 7 'JO
p
\\ed~sd ) Sm ces • 7:()') p
\outh group meeM£ 2nd&amp;: 4th Sunda)•
p.m
•:den l nlted llrrthrcn in Chri•l
~t.ll~ Route 124. bel\leen Reed''
&amp;
Hill:lon0pon \und3) S,hool 10 m.
Sund~) \\orshop 11 00 a.m \\edneSC!3)
Senores 7 00 p.m. p, stor· M Ad m
\\t((

Church announcements sponsored by these area merchants
"Let }our ligltt so shine before
men, that the} rna) ~e
good \\Ork and gionfy
Father rn hea''en "
Marthe\\ 5 16

tSIJ~r. ~nbrrson.

JllcDantrl
jfunrralibomr

Middleport, OU

Bill Quickel

FuH line ol
Insurance
Products+
Financial
Services

740-992-51-U

Jamr- \ndtr'lln. \dam \ld&gt;anlrl·

499 Rithlnnd AH•nue.Athens
1-800-451-98116
11 1111 .karraud
.cum

7411-594-633~

s·Ouickel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Jfe, and My
A:-\Cl:

Let your lif!/11 w shine bejore
mei1, that the\ ma\' 1ee \Our
good 11 orks and glori() \OI4r
Father 111 hem en "
Matthew 5:16

l&gt;irtctol'

l'umero). OH

7~0-992-S-U4

992·6677

White Funeral Home ''l·or God '&gt;O loved the
Since 1858
\\ orld that he gave his one
9 Fifth Street
and only Son .. :·
Coolville, Oh1o
John 3:16
740-667-3110

Proverbs 16:3

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

CooMile, Ohro
Located Je, than 30 mmute' from
Athen,, Pomero\ or Parker,bur!!
1-7~0-667-3156
~

"Still ~mall

Commit thy works

words abide in you, ye shall unto the Lord, and thy
ask what ye ll'ill, and it shall
thoughts shall be
he done unto you.
established.
john I5:7

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

www. Thtl'harmacy4U.com

For God .\0 lorcd the 1
that he gare his only
begoTTen son ...
John J:/6

Prescription Ph. 992-2955

"So I strive always to keep
m) con,cicncc clear before
God and man.''

Acts24:16

~., ...""""''

potut your form~·
E.\t nguuhcrs • Spnntlm

Suppr~ton •

• Sl'I:UIJt)

172\ 2ndAH".l\1Illdlepon.OH
(800135J.OS37 Fax (740) 'Nl·-4"1lilJI

to care"

MY grace is sufficient
for thee: for mY
strength is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9
l'ht /.ore/ don not look at the thing~
mtmlook' at, man looh attht
Olltll'ard appmrance, the Lord /ooh
attht' heart.
1 Samurl/6-7b

~

�~------ --~~ -------~~----~~~-----~------

PageA6·

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June 18, 2010

A Hunger for M r
Gospel in
the Park

On Monday, June . 14,
Interstate 75 ... or in Rio
lightning struck the 62. . . or in a love! y pm) er
foot tall statue of Jesus
ganJcn outside a church
GALLIPOLIS - The
along Interstate 75 near
One might logically wnMonroe, Ohio. The fiberclude that it''thc God Who Gospel in the Park conglass and foam statue of
made the world and every- cert serie:- continues
Jesus burned down to the
thing in it ... does not live Friday. June 18 featurground leaving behind
in h.~~nples built by hands" ing God's Ambassador's
the
Farleigh
only its steel frame as
(Acts 17:24). then He does and
Brother~.
The
concert
well as the mair. church
not live in stone. wooden.
building and the adjacent
golden or steel-reinforced b~gin., at 7 p.m. in
Gallipolis Cit) Park.
women's shelter sponfiberglas~ statues of Jesus
The concert will be cansored by the church.
either.
But
if
"we
should
Thorn Mollohan
Naturally, the incident
not think that the divine celed in case of rain.
has drawn much atten •
hemg i,.., like oold or silver
tion and elicited various "take the hit" for all sinners or stone - arf image made
kinds of interpretations. (including me) who have by man's design and skill"
On the one hand it has placed their faith in Him.
(Acts 17:29), just where
fueled a barrage of sarBut the second fact that can we look to find Him?
WILKESVILLE
castic remarks by those we would be wise to
God's Word tells us that
United
who relish the supposed remember is that Jesus is ··He is not far from each Wilkesville
irony while on the other
Methodist Church \viii
one
of
us"
(Acts
17:27b).
not synonymous with the
the episode has served as
host a free clothing giveimages that we make of In other words. He is here
a reminder to some that
away from 11 a.m.-1
\vith
you
right
now
Him. We must not confuse
p.m., Saturday, June 19.
Jesus took the place of
symbols of Christianit) or although your eyes may Free hot dogs will also be
sinners and bore the
not
see
Him
and
your
ears
judgment that their sin even effigies of the Savior may not hear Him. And available.
deserved as He died on with Jesus Himself. It is He is not only present. He
tme that images of the
the cross of Calvary.
is acttvcly involved in
Lord
can invoke profound your life. loving you as
But before anyone
"sprains a brain muscle., feelings of the immediacy only God can. He is ready
striving to understand of Christ. but such por- and v.-aiting to intervene in
how to read the "omens'' trayals of the Lord do not your heartaches , struggles.
GALLIPOLIS - The
it would be pmdent to. actually bring Him any and sin if you will simply film .. Bella" will be
consider a few facts. First. closer than He already is. stop trying to live life on shown at 6:30 p.m ..
and less important, is the nor does the absence of a your O\Vn . The mind of Saturday. June 19 at St.
fact that this is not the first statue or painting of Him God is so great that He Louis Catholic Church in
time a statue of Jesus has mc&lt;m that He is any less both sees and compre- Gallipolis. The viev. ing
been hit by lightning. In present than when we set hend~ even the most is sponsored by Gallia
2007 the 33-foot high stat- one on a shelf in our lh ing remote sub-atomic par1ide County Right to Life.
ue of Jesus in Golden, rooms, hang it on the wall S\\irling through the
Colo., was hit by lightning in our halhvuys. or wear apparent endlessness of
knocking off an arm. and one fashioned of gold space , ) d the hea11 of God
then in 2008 it stmck the draped about our th;c)ats is so great that He both
sees and love ... you even if
world famous 130-foot on tine necklaces.
Maybe there is more you feel as though you are
high Christ Redeemer
KANAVGA - New
statue that stands above than one reason to feel lo~t unq swirling through Life Church of God will
Rio De Janeiro causing sorro\\ oveJ' one reporter's an apparent endlessness of host a free community
some minor damage to sarcastic remark that '·It pam or meaninglessness.
lunch from noon-2 p.m ..
H1s IO\e reaches for )OU Saturday. June 26. The
eyebrows and fingers. Of appears that God has ~ac­
course, statues of all vari- nticed His only Son ... because He longs fer vou church is located at 576
eties are hit periodically again:· aside from the to .. see,t: Him and . . . re'ach Ohio 7 N. The public is
throughout the world. ove1t irre\ercnce. I have out for Him and tind Him" invited.
Does it mean anything no doubt that treating (Act~ 17:27). Because
when these sorts of thirtgs lightly and even jokingly God desires that vou know
happen? Perhaps it does. the fact that God gave us Him and find H1m ;,s He
but unless one has a spe- so much in His Son is reveals Himself to the
through Jesus
cific word from God on gnevously belittling and \\orld
Christ. He urges you to
the matter, events of that offensi\·e to the Lord.
But it is also sad that come to Him throu!!h faith
sort will "mean" just
about
anything
the the one v. ho quips so ·in His Son v.hich Ts done
UNDATED
observer wants it to mean. carelessly about a love so not by bowing down to an Bethesda
United
A heart that does not wei- wondrous is simp!) igno- ima!!e of Him. but b\ Methodist Church will
come Christ will sec this rant of the love that God receiving Him in your host homecoming serrecent event as reinforce- has for him or her and is heart and living under His vices on Sunday. June 27.
ment for the rejection of perilously close to an banner of lordship in eveJ)' The C\ ent begins at 1
Him. But a heart that is eternity apart from Him facet of e\ l!IY da) .
p.m. Meat will be provid(T/wm Mollolwn and ed. Those plam)ing to
hungry for God will see a because he or she will
profound picture of grace. simply not humble him his fa mil) hm·e ministered attend should bring a
"It looks like Jesus took or herself to per~onall) in sowhem Ohio the past covered dish.
a hit for you last night." receive God's gift of for- 14 ·&gt; years and 1~ the
said Darlene Bishop of giveness and eternal life. awhor of 711e Fairy Tale
"In the past God over- Parables·. He is thC' pastor
Solid Rock Church to the
residents of the home for looked such ignorance, of Patlnmy Community
GALLIPOLIS - The
at-risk women next door but no\\ He command~ all Church and may he
Knights
of Columbus
people
everywhere
to
reached
{or
comments
or
who were likely grateful
meeting
is
that the house in which repent" (Acts 17:30 NIY). questions by email at pa:i- dinner
But. again, the real tort hom@ pat lnra.rga 1- planned for 6:30 p.m ..
they have been living was
Monda). June 2R at
not damaged or destroyed. Person of Jesus is not con- /ipolis .com.)
Lourdes Hall on the camCopyright© 2010,
This last point is well made tained within a statue reppus of St. Louis Catholic
Tlzom Mollohan.
because Jesus did indeed resenting Him along

Free clothing
giveaway

'Bella' film
presented

Community
lunch

Bethesda
UMC
homecoming

K of C dinner

Church in Gallipolis. All Web site: www.chapeiKnight~ are encouraged· hillchurchofchrist.org.
to attend.
.

Christ UMC
m~pting times

Patriotic
celebration

GALLIPOLIS
Christ United Methodi
Church in Gallipolis
meets for services every
Sunday and Wednesday.
Sunday school begins ...
at 9:30 a.m. Morning
worship and Children's
Church are held at I 0:30
a.m.
Sunday.
The ,
Wednesday Night Kids
meeting runs from 4 to 6 •
p.m. Bib.Je study is ~eld
from 6:30 to 8 p.m. each

CROWN CITY
Crov. n Cit) Wesleyan
Church will host a patriotic celebration from
9:30
a.m.-5
p.m ..
Sunday. July 4. E\ents
include a choir cantata.
picnic, games, etc. The
church • is located at
26144 Ohio 7. Crown
City. For information.
call (740) 256-6993.

Elizabeth
Chapel
weekly walk

Wedne~day.

Christ
United
Methodist Church is
located at 9688 Ohio 7. ·
south of Gallipolis. The
Rev. Kandy Nuce is the
senior pastor.

GALLIPOLIS
Elizabeth Chapel Church
invites the public to join
its weekly walking program. held at 7:30 p.m.
each Thursday. The
church is located at the
corner of Third Ave. and
Locust St. in Gallipolis.
Interested parties are
asked to meet at the
Third Ave. entrance.
Each participant will
recei\e a bottle of water.
For information. contact
Paul Saunders at 3792152.

Healing room
open at
Garden of ,
.
My Heart
BIDWELL- Garde.
of My Heart Holy
Tabernacle invites the
·public to it healing room.
which i~ open from 6 to
7:30 p.m. each Tuesday.
The church is located on
Ohio 850 in Bidwell. For
information. call 3880414 or (304) 675-0660.

Church
of Christ
meetings
, GALLIPOLIS - The ·
church of Christ in
Gallipolis meets 'at 234
Chapel Drive. Sunday
meeting times are: 9:30
a.m .. Bible class: 10:30
a.m , worship; 5 p.m ..
e\ening asscmbl). The
church meets at 7 p.m.
\\'ednesdav for Bible
study. Bill. Mead will be
speaking June 13.
In keeping with \lew·
Testament teachinl! and
example. the Lord's
Supper i~ remembered
each first day of the week
and singing is vocal. with
no instrumental accompaniment.
Free Bible cour~cs are
offered arc b) mail. or
there are Christians who
would ~e glad to study
the Bible '' ith ) ou personally in your home.
Send your name and
postal address to the
address above. or call
446- 1494 to take advantage of either service.

Gallipolis
church of
Christ
GALLIPOLIS - The ~
church of Christ in
Gallipolis meets at 259
Third Ave. Sunda) services include 10 a.m.
Bible studv. with classes
for all ages. and II a.m.
worship. Bible study is
also held at 7 p.m.
Wednesday.
.
The Lord's Supper
remembered the first d
of each week in keepil
with i\ew Testament
teaching and example.
The singing is \ ocal "" ith
no instrumental accom- ~
paniment.
Christian~ are aYailable •
to assist with Bible study
upon request. Send your
name and address to 259
Third A\e .. Gallipolis.
OH 45631. or cal~ (740)
446-1618.
The Web site addre~s is
WW\\ .gall ipoli schurchofchrist .net.

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

God's Silence or Man's
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Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8
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·--~--~------------

PageA7

The Daily Sentinel
.

Friday, June 18, 2010

So you -want to

What are we

•
"I gotta go potty!" ''I'm
hungry." ''Are we there
yet?" Those of ) ou who
have raised children
knov. only too well the
things they were prone to
sa) during one of )OUr
family outings.
Most
likel)
you
weren't far dov. n the
road. if C\Cn out of the
drivev. av before the
potty issu~ surfaced. And
so it began. and continued - \\ ith one of you
responding to some comment or question, or
intervening from time-totime to keep the peal'\.!
among those in the hack
seat.
It wasn't easy. I know.
However. no trip was
complete without some
~y of questions and
Wtplai11ts on the part of
the younger member(s)
of your family concerning thb sibling, or that
situation.
If the pOll) i-.sue didn't
immediatel) grab your
attention,
or
get
addressed right av. ay,
one which surel) did was
the statement b) your
progeny to the effect he
or she had to throw up.
Better still. the sound
of a child sudden I) retching caused you to give
him or her your full
attention. We're talking.
right now! (We never left
home without a dedicated "throw-up bucket" for
this very purpose.)
I've been reminded of

Tom Johnson
the logistics of our tnncis in da) s gone by as I
and se\ era! other:-. here at
Trinity Congregational
Churd1 have been examining the events pertaining to the Old Testament
Exodus event.
The travails any of us
ever experienced on any
gi\'cn expedition certainly pale in comparison to
what Moses had to
endure. as he led the e\'erbickering and complainjng Israelites throu!!h the
de';.ert
towards ~ the
Prombed Land.
His tra\ehng companions were far more
numerous than \\ e can
possibly imagine. The
Bible. howe,er. !!iH:s tb
a prett) good account of
the basic discontent of
the Israelites, never mind
the many malcontents in
the group of those who
left Egypt for some fardistant land said to be
"flowing with milk and
honey."~

Yeah. right. Hardl) had

thev entered the ckscrt h~td a much better place
wh~n the compl,unt~ in mind for the Israelites.
started.
The1r getting to "the
"\Ve'rc tlllfst) !" "Why Prt~nHSL'd . Land,'' and
arc we out here in the thcrr cr&lt;?s~m¥- the Jordan
middle of nowhere!" to enter m!o rt, would be a
"God wants us to te~t of therr faith and obeWHAT?!?"
dience. As th: l_3iblical
The whole issue boiled account of therr JOume)
down to the prm erbial plainl)
states.
the
"tntst and obey •· - God. lsrnelites' memories were
that is. Of course, to do more entrenched than was
this the braelitcs first had their ovemll trust in
to set a~ide their memoB,ut are \\:e Amer~cans
ries of v. hat they had tod,l) reall) any dtfferback in Egypt.
cnt'!!'? I think not.
Sure. food and v. uter There's a reason many
had been a\ailablc to foreigners think of us as
them: that much was bei~g "de~adent" - i.e..
true. Still. they weren't were .sporled. and used
fr~e. and everything had
to havmg our own way!
been dependent upon the
There arc those who
limited largesse of their 'sa) our hope an? help
Egyptian o\wlord..,.
l'omes from Washmgton.
In fact. the\ had been D.C. Do tell: how can it
slaves. entirel) ~ub­ he that the poli~i~ians and
servient to their cruel and secular authonties there.
dominant masters. That man) of whom themv.as "omething many of sehes are morally- and
the lsraehtcl&gt; seemed ethically-challenged. will
con' enientlv to have for- resolve our various
gotten as in ·the drsert the dilemmas'? Our na'iYete
going progre~ hely got empO\\ers them.
tougher.
. Since \\hen have those
There b an old saying 111 go'e~nment become
whkh postts that, "\Vh~n more rmportant and
the going gets tough the influential than the Lord?
tough get going." ~lany In ''hom do we trust
of the Israelites were all more - God. or the
for abandoning Mo:-.es, other mere mortals we
and going back ''honk'·· dect to govern us? There
to Egypt.
rs only o~nc correct, "final
Except that Eg) pt was- answer." There's. been
n't the home God intend- enough talk: now, it's
ed for them. It was okay time to walk the talk.
for Eg) ptians, and had
(Rel'. Thomas Johnson
been
-.i nee
time ;.,. pastor oj'Trinity Church
immemorial. but God in Pomeroy. Ohio.)

SJod.

litay strong despite sorrow
It is the beaten-est
thin!! we ha\e :-ecn in a
long time. After Emn's
crash in 2002. we had to
buy another car. and
eventually settled on a
1999 Buick Park Avenue.
It has been a good car
these eight years of ownership. But. lately. it has
been beaten-up quite a
bit. We have chuckled at
the sequence of accidents
that have happened to it.
Terr) usuall) parks the
car on Main Street in
Potnt Pleasant for her
work dav. About two
weeks ago, a utili!)
repairman working on
O\erhead lines dropped a
screw driver onto the
. which inflicted a
. pointed dent. Days
. while parked in thl.!
same space. someone
backed into the right side
of the front bumper. We
do not know who did it.
This past Saturday Jamin
backed the car into the
back bumper of one or
our trucks, and smashed
in the back quarter-panel
and back door of the
Buick on the passenger
side.
Our poor or Buick has
undergone some constant
sorrO\\ in the past two
weeks. but, it ttll keeps
on running despite its
dents. dongs, and dings.
Nonetheless. it rather
inspires a spiritual consideration "hich stands

~

Ron Branch
at the heart of perse\ erance in Christ1an lh in g.
.\lany people who hi,e
had assOCiation \\ ith the
Church often hold the
belief
that
gettin!!
invohed
~ with
Christumitv diminates
all the ha~d trmes that
confront us in life.
.Nothin!! could be farther
from th~e truth. As a matter of fact. Jesus assured
u-. that "in the world you
shall have tribulation ... It
is a fact ·of life that
Christians often suffer.
Apostle Peter pointed
out in poignant manner
that bad thin!!s sometimes happen ~to God's
people. Peter referenced
seasons in whrch we suffer grief m many kind:-- of
trials. Sometimes our
faith is tested as though
as b) fire. Fiery trials do
not feel \\ell to the ,out,
do they?
Apostle Paul pointed
out the sorrows his ov. n

Chrhtian life cxperi
Yet.
He" waiked
enced. He one~ wrote to onward in committed
the Church at Corinth and persevering fashion
about the "perils" he through Hii&gt; earthl) mincon~tantly faced with
istr), even to the Cross
people anJ fro1.n the on" hich He died. He is
forces nl' nature. lie told the supreme example for
about his \\Cariness. his us to ~ecp rn mmd as we
pains. his times of being deal at times v. ith a barhungry, and his timl.!s of rage of sorrows and
being. thir..,ty. He got grief.
weak. he got offended.
With what sorrows and
and he got burned, he grief have you been dealpointed out.
ing recently'? You can
You can tell sometimes hme confidence in Christ
when people .~re heat up that He will undergird
\\ ith constant sornm. )OU and bring )OU out
Thcv do not lcel good victoriousl). Confidenc~
becauo;e of the wcari~ness in Chrbt i:-.. according to
of it all. Their daih ener- the writer of Hebre\\s. a
g) runs slack. Ii rs as commitment you ..:-.hould
though the countenance not ~a-.t av. a),'' because
become:-. carred b) the such :-.pecified confithing5 which bring bruis- dence "has great recomes to the hcar1. soul. and pense of re\\ ard:·
mind. As a con..,cqucnce,
In the mean time.
peopll' sometimes feel Jamin ha-. completed the
exposed and cl f-con- cvclc for all the Branch
scious how things appear. brothers. As things now
But. remember, you do stand. all the Branch sons
not have to hil\'e a good have wrecked the Branch
look to have a good run.
parcnts' vehicles. But.
This is wh~.·~e it pre- unlike
his
brothers.
vails upon us to make a Jamin got two with one
sprntual and Scriptural shot. It will be a distincbee-line to Jesus Christ. tion about \\hich his
He knew exact!\ v. hat it hrothcrswillhecarefulto
,., as like to have· constant rcmmd him rn due'
sorrO\'\. The Scnpture course.
sa) that He was ··n man
"Do Tern and I looked
of sorrows, and acqumnt- strcs~edT i ask as I try to
ed with grief.'' Because compose m)
of His ph) sical suffer- hand .
ings, Hi~ .. , isagc and
(Rev. Ron Branch is
form "ere matTed more pmtor of Faith Baptist
Citurch in Malon. W.H1.)
than an) other man."

considL·ring the corH.lition of the church in its
1 d octrrne,
·
· ·
·rn
posrtron
societ). theology and
much
more.
1
Challenging our helief
system with the question/rcmark: What nrc
we doino?
I The v.~rid is desperatel)
looking
for
ansv. crs and un fortunately, the American
I church has lost the
touch
in pro\ iding
~ answers to l.ife's issu7s
, due to an mcrea~c tn
' man-made
doctrinal
1 issues that violate the
\alidity
of
the
Scriptures while in the
process confusing the
unchurched.
Church life ought to
be deep. fun. challengino
filled
v. ith
an~~·ers. confrontational. yet lo\ ing in nature.
It is impcrati'e that
we remember '" ho God
e:-.tablished in the earth
to rule and ·•run the
~ho\\" in the world.
Belie\e it or not. it's
the church - His Bod\
_ ) ou and I. But
ha\en't been. So what
are \\ e doing'?
We have allowed
man-made go' ernment
to dictate our lhcs.
What are we doing? We
have allow1:d "profcssional preachers/speakers/pulpitccrs/or puppeteers" to interpret the
scriptures for us. while
making them the priests
of our homes leading
our families - what
are we doing? The
scriptures teaches u:-.
the \\ e are the kings
and pncsts unto God.
according to Revelation
I :6. God ha. called us
Ambas..,adors of HIS
1 Kingdom. Belie\ers are
Ro) al Priesthood. That
just ) ou and I - not
anyhod) else. So v. hat
I are \\C doing? Arlo! \\C
practicing and living as
such'? What are we
doing?
Having raised all
kinds of questions that I
am sure have created
all sorts of emotional
responses, I want to
• establish a couple of
things as to who \\e arc
and~,., hat we arc suppo-.ed to b~ doing.
~umber
one: We
(Bom
Again
Christians) arc the
Bod) of Chri-.t according to Scripture.
Number two: We arc
mon: than conqueror-..
Ambassadors. Royal
Priesthood, kings and
priests untO God and
ministers of the Gospel
of the Kingdom. not
only the gospel of salvation. (a vet') important point).
NumbL'r three: We
ha\ e the ans\\ crs to
man's problems. The
ansv.crs arc found in
the Bible.
~umber four: We ,m:
responsible to teach our
children and f,1ture
generations the Word of
God. the prinl'iples of
God and educate them
in ever) da) life.
1\'obody else b responsible for this.

I

we

Alex Colon
Kumber five: We are
the salt of the earth. We
provide good seasoning
to life.
Number six: We are
free moral agents with
God·:-. empowerment to
choose to live for God
and to govern our lives
according to Scripture.
Number seven: We
arc to be humble loving
people. honest and
filled with high. strong
moral
values
that
resembles
the
Character of Christ.
You and I are God's
people chosen of God
to
establish
His
Kingdom on earth.
Jesus prayed: "Thy
kingdom come. Thy
will be done. on earth
as it is in heaven." In
other words. Jesus
asked Father to make
earth
like
heaven
because it is His will.
So why aren't we
working
on
that?
Instead we're working
on building our own
weak kingdoms, trying
to have the biggest and
successful
churches,
while some look successful and others think
that you must be poor
in order to be spiritual.
What are we doing?
I tell \OU what we're
doin!!. ·We've been
doing to our society
\\hat "e have been all
along
confu sed!
We're a confusing society. My friend. we have
the truth. Let's study. it.
let's level \\ith each
other. Let's be what
were called to be: The
full ~ospel church of
Jesus Christ and none
other We have the King
of K111!!s and all of
he a' en 7n our disposal.
You are more than a
conqueror. You are a
person of faith. Believe
it. t:se it. Knov. who
)Oll are in Christ. As we
knov. \\ ho we are in
Christ \\ e will operate
more hke Him and
more the way we're
suppo...ed to operate.
I hope that the last •
few
anicles
have
sparked a strong desire
to sed. after God ·s
Truth. lo\e people. 10\e
God and connect the
two while
in the
process hungering for
more
of
Him.
Remember this life we
li\e ts all about l;lim
and not about us. Nov.,
it's your turn to ask:
What are we doing'?
And move forward with
God!
Make it a great ''eek 1
(Rev.

Alex Colon ;s

p{l,\fOf'

of Lighthouse

Assembly of God in
Gallipolis, Ohio. On the
flltt'rnet at www.lagohio.org.) '

�Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, ~une t8,

2010

Calif. woman indicted
for drugs in suitcases

Rockin' with the Reds

- COLUMBUS (AP) Federal authorities ~ay a
California woman who
flew on a private jet to
Ohio with 506 pounds of
marijuana stashed in 13
suitcases has been indicted.
Authorities formalized
the drug charges against
28-year-old Lisette Lee on
Thursday in U.S. D.strict
Court in Columbus .
The
Los · Angeles
woman faces one count

of conspiracy and one of
pm.-.es-.ion with intent to ·
distribute more than 100
kilograms of marijuana.
Authorities say Lee
was
arrested
at
Columbus
airpo
Monday night after the
Drug
Enforcement
Administration
was
tipped off that she was
traveling with a suspicious amount of luggage.
She is in custody pending a friday hearing.

Meigs County Forecast

J uly 18 is "Meigs County Day" at the Great American Ballpark, home of the Cincinnati Reds. Rick Ash presented Meigs County Commissioners Mike Bartrum, Tom Anderson, Mick Davenport a resolution on behalf of
WMPO, declaring "Meigs County Day" at the park. "Meigs County Day" allows local residents to purchas~ a
variety of tickets at half price, allowing some residents to get into the park for as low as $5 each. Also, the f1rst
10,000 fans under the age of 14 entering the gates will receive a replica batting helmet. Gates open at 11 :40
a.m. and the game against the Colorado Rockies is at 1:10 p.m. Call 513-765-7600 or visit reds.com/middleport to find out intormation or purchase tickets.

Man convicted of killing 4 says he wants to die
BY TODD RICHMOND
ASSOCIATED PRESS

JEFFERSON, Wis. Edward W. Edwards'
admission that he murdered two young couples
decades ago in Wisconsin
and Ohio only netted him
a life behind bars. Now
he ·s aiming for a date
with the executioner.
The
77-year-old
Kentucky con man told
The Associated Press in a
jailhouse
interview
Wednesday that he lured
a 24-year-old man he
considered a foster son to
a secluded cemetery near
his home in Burton, Ohio,
in June 1996. shot him
twice in the chest with a
shotgun and buried him
in a shallow grave.
"I went on home as if
nothing had happened,"
Edwards said nonchalantly from a wheelchair
in Jefferson County jail.
·Tm responsible for it. It
uiun 't work on my conscience. I spent the
money. I was having a
good time .... you do it,
forget it was done and go
about your business until
next time."
He said he was confessing to the slaying
because his family wants
him to come clean about
his past and because he· d
rather die than spend his
remaining years rotting
in prison.
It's an attempt at ''courtassisted suicide," Geauga
County Prosecutor David
J. Joyce said.
Edwards only began
speaking about Dannie
Boy Edwards' death
when he realized he
wouldn't receive a death
sentence for confessing
to murdering a young
couple in Norton. Ohio.
in 1977 or to murdering
two 19-year-old sweethearts near Sullivan.
Wis .. in 1980, Joyce said.
"He wants to dictate
where he's brought to.
When he couldn't get the
death penalty ..• suddenly
he remembered things
about ours," Joyce said.
He said investigators
would move cautiously
to corroborate claims
from a man who admitted
he has lied all his life.

Edwards told the AP
that he killed Dannie Boy
Edwards because he
stood to collect some
$183,000 in life insurance payments upon his
death
and
because
Dannie Boy was stealing
from
his
children.
Edwards and his wife,
Kay Edwards, had taken
Dannie Boy in. and the
young man felt close
enough to the family that
he legally changed his
name from Dannie Law
Gloeckner.
Edwards pleaded guilty
earlier this month to
killing William Lavaco.
21, of Doylestown, Ohio,
and Judith Straub. 18. of
Sterling, Ohio, by shooting each of them in the
neck in a Noxton park in
1977.
He got two life sentences for those slayings.
Ohio has the death penal- ·
ty. but Edwards wasn't
eligible for it because a
U.S. Suprerne Cou11 ruling invalidated the punishment between 1974
and 1978.
He also pleaded guilty
to killing 19-year-old
Wisconsin sweethearts
Tim Hack and Kelly
Drew in 1980. He faces
mandatory life sentences
when he's sentenced in
Jefferson County on
Monday.
He said he only killed
five people in his life.
"There
is
nothing
else," he said. "His is the
last one."
Edwards
said
he
returned to Dannie Boy's
grave about a year after
the slaying to find animals had torn his head
from his body. He said he
picked up the 5kull.
stuffed it in a feed sack
and hid it. He promised
to show prosecutors
where if they moved him
back to Geauga County.
Authorities found the
body in 1997.
Geauga County Sheriff
Dan McClelland said
detectives had spoken to
Edwards many times
about Dannie Boy's
death.
"Each time he talks. we
get a sliver more. You get
enough of those slivers.
pretty soon you have a lot

of
information,"
McClelland said.
Edwards said he has a
pacemaker, diabetes and
can no longer walk, and
that he would rather die
than live out his last days
in prison. He said if sentenced to death, he
wouldn't appeal and
would fight any eff01ts to
keep him alive.
It's unclear, however. if
Edwards would qualify
for the death penalty. To
recommend a · death sentence, Ohio juries must
find offenders guilty of a
serious
, secondary
offense - such as rape,
arson or aggravated robbery - in addition to
aggravated murder.
Joyce
confirmed
Edwards collected the
insurance money. but
many of the details
Edwards related about
Dannie Boy's demise
were public knowledge
after the body was found.
He said Edwards only
began discussing the
1996 slaying with prosecutors recently by phone.
Kay Edwards did not
immediately return a
phone
message
Wednesday seeking comment. One of his daughters, Jeannine Davis, of
Le Roy. N.Y.. said only,
·'He is my dad and I love
him."
Edwards steadfastly
refused during the interview to discuss the
Wisconsin couple. saying
he was scheduled to be
sentenced for those slayings on Monday. He did.
however, describe for the
first time publicly how he
killed the Ohio couple.
Edwards said he met
Lavaco at ''beer bashes"
Edwards held at the family's
farm
near

Doylestown. Ohio. and
that at some point. he
decided to kill him. He
said he confronted Lavaco
at a park in N01ton after
the bars closed one night,
and told Straub to stay in
the car while he and
Lavaco argued. He said
she didn't listen and
walked up to them, so he
shot them both in the neck
\\ith a shotgun.
Straub's brother, Jeff.
said he doesn't believe
anything Edwards says.

Friday ...Patchy dense
fog in the morning.
Sunn;. Highs in the
upper 80s. Southeast
winds around 5 mph.
Friday night...Mostly
clear. Low'&gt; in the lovv·er
60s. Southeast winds
around 5 mph.
Saturday ... Most! y
sunny. A slight chance 9f
showers and thunderstorms in the afternoon.
Hot with highs in the lo.,.,·er
90s. South winds 5 to 10
mph ...Becorning ~outh­
west in the afternoon.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Saturday night ...Pmtly

cloudv \VJth a slight
chance of showers ind
thunder-.tonn-.. Lows in
the upper 60s. Southwest
winds 5 to 10 rnph.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Sunday
through
Monday ...Pa1tly cloudy.
Hot. Highs around 90.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Monday night and
Tuesday...Mostly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Highs in the upper 8~s . •
Tuesday
mgh
through
Wednesday
night. ..Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Highs in the upper 80s.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 34.00
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 55.30
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 54.86
Big Lots (NYSE) - 34.85
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 27.47
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 41.09
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 10.07
Champion (NASDAQ)- 1.77
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 4.13
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 32.51
Collins {NYSE) - 58.27
DuPont (NYSE) - 37.80
US Bank (NYSE) - 23.06
General Electric {NYSE) 15.91
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 27.24
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 38.44
Kroger {NYSE) - 20.75
Limited Brands (NYSE) 25.03
Norfolk Southern {NYSEI 58.66

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 18.91
BBT {NYSE) - 29.72
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 14.36
Pepsico {NYSE) - 64.49
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.29
Rockwell (NYSE) - 53.82
Rocky Boots {NASDAQ) 8.12
Royal Dutch Shell- 54.76
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 77.75
Wai-Mart {NYSE)- 51.41
Wendy's {NYSE) - 4.33
WesBanco (NYSE)- 18.26
Worthington (NYSE) - 13.64
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for June 17, 2010,
provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills
in Gallipolis at (740) 441-94411
and Lesley Marrero in Point
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Inside

B1

The Daily Sentinel

Sports Bri~fs, Page 82
l\lets take down Tribe, Page 83
,Carroll: NCAA off base, Page 84 ,.

Friday, June 18, 2010

~~~u~

l11gh school varsoty sportong events
rwolvong teams from Mason Meogs and
Qalloa countoes.

AMERICAN LEGION BAStBALL
Saturday.~

Post 39 at Lancaster (DH), 1 p.m.
Su~~

Parkersburg at Post 39 (DH). 1 p.m.
~~
Manetta at Post27, 6 p.m.
~..JJJ.M..22
Post 39 at Athens, 6 p.m.
~...!u.n.e_2_5

Post 39 at Chillicothe, 6

p.m.

Sooners to
visit Bearcats
in 2011-12
NORMAN. Okla. (AP)
- Oklahoma's contract
to bring in Cincinnati as
its opponent in this year's
College
Classic
udes an agreement
•
for a retum trip to Ohio
during the 20 11-12' season.
The Sooners are to face
the Bearcats at the offcampus U.S. Bank Arena
in downtown Cincinnati
on a date to be determined later, in exchange
for the meeting scheduled Dec. 18 at the Ford
Center in Oklahoma 'City.
That will be the first
game between the programs since 1999.
Oklahoma's football
team is also scheduled to
play the Bearcats this fall
at
the
Cincinnati
Bengals' stadium. The
Sooners beat Cincinnati
52-26 in Norman in
2008.
Oklahoma State will
face Alabama in the first
game of the All-College
eheader.

l

up's campaign
ed at keeping
James with Cavs

CLEVELAND (AP)
- A gr.ass-roots group of
Cavaliers fans has started
·a "More Than a Player"'
:campaign aimed at keep:ing LeBron James 1n
·CJe\'eland.
: • Fans say the campaign
on broadcast outlets,
buses and billboards in
Cleveland and Akron
:"'focuses on words that
:demonstrate why LeBron
·is more than a player to
the fans of northeast
0hio:· Among them are
·:loyalty,"
···commitment," and '"family."
The group also asks
fans to sign up for James'
• "'King for Ktds" bike-athon that benefits charities in Akron.
e 25-year-old James
mes a free agent on
J y I , and is expected to
entertain offers from sev• •era! teams.
Sports
; Cleveland
Commission pres1dent
David
Gilbert says
_Cleveland is the best
place for the star to "contmue his career and to
continue to . build his
legacy:·

f

OSU hires Beals
as baseball coach
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP)- Greg Beals, head
coach at Ball State the
past eight years, has been
hired as Ohio State's ne\\.
basebaU coach.
The school announced
the hirii1g on Thursday.
The Kent State graduate replaces Bob Todd.
who announced his
retirement
late this
. Beals becomes
e third head coach
hio State in the last
48 years. He led Ball
State to 1ts first MidAmerican Conference
tournament title and
three West Division
titles.
Beals is known as a
solid recruiter. Twentyone of -his Ball State
players have been selected in the MLB draft.
including four players in
2006 and three each in
2009 and 20 I0.
\

Pyles steps down as URG softball coach
9-33 record in 200 I.
Pyles' first season was
his only year under the
.500 mark as Rio Grande
posted a 16-22 record in
that initial season.
In 2010 Pyles completed his ninth season as
head coach of the
University of Rio Grande
softball
program.
Beginning with the 2003
season Rio Grande qualified for post-season play
every year. The 2004 season was Pyles· best campaign. setting a school
record for wins (40) and
advancing to the NAIA
National
Tournament
after winning the Region
IX title. Rio finished seventh at the national tournament that season.

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
- The end of June will
officially mark the end of
the David Pyles regime
as head softball co~ch at
the University of Rio
Pyles
has
Grande.
stepped down as head
coach after nine very successful seasons piloting
the program.
Pyles came to Rio
Grande as a coaching
novice after spending
many years as an umpire.
He had umpired numerous games at Rio Grande
in the years leading up to
his hire. He took over
for Dan Shane, who
coached Rio Grande to a

P y Ies
e nj o y e d
three 30win campaigns,
including
this past
sea s on
when the
'-----~ RedStorm
Pyles
went 3023.
Rio '
finished fourth in its first
season in the Mid-South
Conference with a league'
record of 17-11 this past
spring.
The 2006 season saw
the program have a 3.75
grade point average,
which earned the team
the highest softball GPA
in the nation, leading all
collegiate divisions. Rio

Grande repeated that feat
in 2007.
. Pyles compiled an
impr~ssive overall record
of 242-152 (.614 winning percentage) in his
nine seasons. During
those nine years. Rio
Grande won one NAIA
Region title (2004) and
tied for the regular-season American Mideast
C @ n f e r e n c e
Championship
twice
(2006, 2008).
Pyles feels good about
his time as Rio coach and
the fact that he can leave
on his own terms.
"Fortunately I wasn't
run out of town," he said.
"It's been a good run.
I've really enjoyed my
time here at Rio Grande.

I've had a lot of nice
players and made a lot of
good friends over the
years."
Coming from the
umpiring ranks and never
having any prior coaching experience before
heaaing up the Rio
Grande program, Pyles
really had no idea how
his career would go when
he started.
"That first year was
extremely rough, I didn't
have any coaching experience. other than just lit~
tie league and things like
that. And coming from an
umpiring background I
had some knowledge of
the game, but didn't real-

Please see Pyles, 82

Arroyo leads Reds oyer Dodgers 7-1
CINCINNATI (AP) Pitching.
Hitting.
Defense.
Bronson
Arroyo did it all.
The lanky right-hander hit the first of
Cincinnati's
three
homers off rookie John
Ely. pitched
seven
inni,ngs and completed
three double plays while
covering first
base
Thursday, playing the
leading role in up a 7-1
victory over the Los
Angeles Dodgers that
salvaged the final game
of a disappointing
homestand.
"Bronson stopped the
bleeding against a pretty
good team," man.ager
Dusty Baker said.
Arroyo's
three-run
shot in tht: :&gt;t:t:untl
inning made Ely (3~4). a
star at nearby Miami
Unhersity, double over
in disgust. Joey Votto
added a two-run homer,
and Brandon Phipips
had a solo shot.
Arroyo's first homer
in two years was the
highlight of his allaround
impressive
game.
"Hitting's more fun,''
he said. "I had the worst
stuff I've had in a while.
The only thing I had was
a sinker. l tried to stay
down in the zone and
get ground balls. I was
fortunate. Those (double) plays changed the
game, especially the
first one. That shows
how funny this game
is."
Arroyo (6-3) i.ssued a
career-high six walks
and allowed five hits,
but helped himself on
defense. He was on the
back end of three double
plays, covering first for

Cavs' confused
on coaching
search after lzzo

John Sleezer/Kansas City Star/MCT

Cincinnati Reds starting pitcher Bronson Arroyo works in the first inning
against the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri,
Saturday, June 13, 2009.

the relay throw. All
three ended rallies.
The Reds moved a
half-game ahead of idle
St. Louis in the NL
Central. It's the latest
Cincinnati has been in
first place since June 17,
2002, the final season at

Cinergy Field.
Cincinnati went 4-6
on its longest homestand
of the season, but managed to stay tied or
alone in first place
throughout because the
Cardinals struggled, too.
The
Dodgers

outscored the Reds 18-2
while winning the first
two games of the series
against a team it has
dominated like no other.
Los Angeles is 25-7
against Cincinnati since

Please see Reds, 82

Akron throwing
appreciation party
for LeBron James
the
University
of
Akron's campus, across
from Rhodes Arena,
where James played as a
high school star and
where he accepted his
second straight MVP
award last month.
The city's free celebration for James will
feature family friendly
activities, sky divers,
bands and a LeBron
look-a-like contest. The
award-winning documentary "More Than A
Game," which chronicles James' rise to fame
and his bond with four
childhood friends, will
be shown.
James will be presented with the first annual
Akron Hometown Hero
Award to honor "the
dynamic and positive
impact he has had on the
Akron
community.''

AKRON. Ohio (AP)
LeBron
James'
· hometown is throwing
him a big party. Nobody
knows if it"s a farewell
bash yet ~ or if he's
even coming.
James' contributions
to Akron will be celebrated on Saturday at
''LeBron Appreciation
Day," an event organized by community
leaders to show the local
superstar how much he
is loved as he approaches NBA free agency on
July I.
Organizers said James
is aware of the event,
but don't know if he'll
attend.
A message seeking
comment about a possible appearance by James
was left with his publi
cist.
The three-hour rally
will
be
held
at
JnfoCision Stadium on

Please see James, 83
f

CLEVELAND (AP)
- Tom Izzo's rejection
has left the Cleveland
Cavaliers
feeling
unwanted.
And LeBron James,
without saying or doing
anything, isn't helping.
Izzo, who spumed up
to $30 million from
Cleveland to stay at
Michigan State, was
owner Dan Gilbert's No.
1 choice to replace Mike
Brown as the Cavs'
coach. a position that
might stay vacant until
James. the superstar and
free-agent-on-deck s1gns
in Cleveland - or elsewhere.
decision
Izzo 's
Tuesday to remain with
the Spartans has further
muddled a complex situation for the Cavs, who
are preparing for next
week's NBA draft and
the July 1 opening of free
agenc) without a coach
or a front-running candidate and they have no
idea of James' plans.
Last week, general
manager Chris Grant said
the club's mantra is
patience during a search
that is showing no signs
of ending anytime soon.
"We' 11 wait as long as
we have to wait.'' he said.
It was assumed if Izzo
turned them down that
the Cavs would initiate a
possible fallback plan:
Byron Scott. But other
than a one-hour phone
interview by Grant, the
Cavs have not gone any
deeper with Scott, the
former New Orleans and
New Jersey coach working as a TV analyst during the finals.
Gilbert and Grant are
not commenting during
the search, so it is not
known if they intend to
bring Scott in for a meeting.
Scott's agent. Brian
Mcinerney, deferred all
comments to the team
about its interest.
Scott would like!) talk
to Gilbert. but it's doubtful he'll commit to ammie before seeing ho·"
things progre'l- bet'' een
Phil Jackson and tht' Los
.\ngeles l akers after the
sea~on. Jackson. \\IW
" ill be 65 tn Scpt~.·mber.
ma\ retire 01 ::1t' ma\ Ill)!
\\ ailt to ~.·ome h.l~o~k. i •·
o\\ tK'r

ktT\ Hu~" \)11.'&lt;.'"

h11n t&lt;.) take" :1 p:n 1.'\lt
s~.·ott \\on thrt'l' dt:llllP"'ll"l\1 ')S

h)J\1\,\) \ ·,

~ l.H!k
h.ld\.~'\'llrt

;\'

p.lllll\.'1'
\)I\
l .
"Sh~,,,, tinw'' t~.·am'

Paul Tople/Akron Beacon Journai!MCT

LeBron James poses with his mother Gloria James,
right, after the presentation of the NBA Most Valuable
Player Award at the University of Akron Rhodes Arena
on Sunday, May 2, in Akron, Ohio.
\

\ .. '
.md

n.h dt't'.\lncd of ~,·~.)adtin~
on 1h'lh '' n~,,J ·, ... tn~t~.
s~.·~.,tt ha; a 'trotH' r~.:Ia­
twnshtp \\ llh ~ 1\.&lt;.\ht:'
Bn ant. '' htbe cndor,ellK'nt could mean C\ en:
thing to Buss
•

Please see Cavs, 83

�-------- - ------ ---

- ~--- -- - -- ~·-~ -~-~--~-~-......,...._...-----~-------------...-

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Griffey Sr. urges prostate testing to save lives
CINCINNATI (AP) Ken Griffey Sr. wasn't
entirely surprised when he
was
diagnosed
with
prostate cancer in 2006.
He knew that it ran in the
family, with four uncles
succumbing to the disease.
Early detection and
surgery ·saved Griffey's
life. Now, he's urging men
to get past their unease and
get tested for it.
The former Big Red
Machine outfielder has
joined a campaign against
prostate cancer sponsored
by
Kimberly-Clark's
Depend brand. Now 60
years old, he has been cancer-free for several years.
He's also back in unif01m,
working as the Reds' batting coach at Class A
Dayton for the ftrst time.
His son, Ken Griffey Jr.,
recently retired from the
Seattle Mariners.
Griffey acknowled~ed
during a phone interview
Thursday that ifs taken
awhile to get over the
operation that saved his
life.
''The f1rst year was a
really tough situation for
me because I couldn't do
anything,"
he
said.
"Nothing was going right.
I was having problems all
The
doctor
around.
explained to me that over
time it would get better.
I'm in my fornth year now.
Everything has gotten real
good since then. My family has been behind me the
whole time."
Griffey played right
field on the Reds teams
that won back-to-back
World Series titles in
1975-76. He was a three• time All-Star, winning the
game's MVP honors. He
ended his career in Seattle
in 1991 playing with his

Pyles
fromPageBl
ly know all the ins-andouts and everything that
was
involved
with
recruiting and travel and
scheduling," Pyles said.
"After that first year I
didn't know how long, it
was a struggle. we had a
lot of issues and a lot of
things to deal with, but
being able to bring in that
first recruiting class, and
looking back, I didn't
realize actually how
good of a class it turned
out to be.''

Reds
from PageBl
2006.
The Dodgers had a
chance to get back into
the game in the eighth,
when they loaded the
bases with two outs on a
pair of singles and a
walk.
Left-hander
A rthur
Rhodes
got
pinch-hitter
Manny
Ramirez to ground out,
keeping the lead at 7-1.
The 24-year-old Ely
attended college a 35minute drive away and
had numerous college
coaches and friends in
the stands, leaving him a
little extra excited.
Facing the Reds for the
first time, he had the
worst showing in his 10
b ig league starts.
"I had some folks in
the stands, and it would
have been nice to throw
up a better outing for
them," Ely said.
His worst moment
came in the second
inning, when Arroyo
came up with two outs
and two runners aboard.
With a 1-1 count. he
tried to throw a fastball
inside. Instead. it wound
up right down the middle, belt high. Ely doubled over on the mound
as soon as the ball left
the bat, knowing it was
gone.
" I knew he could
swing the bat," Ely said.
"I didn't know he was
going to hit a bomb."
Arroyo's fifth career
homer - his first in two
years - made it 3-1.
" It's
pure
luck,"
Arroyo said.
Ely lasted 4 1-3
innings, giving up seven
runs, eight hits and three

'

Friday, June 18,

2010

Sports Briefs
Big Bend Youth Football signups
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio - T he Big Bend Youth
Football League will be holdin~ sign ups for the 2010
football season every Saturday m July from 11 a.m. to ,
I p.m. at the Veterans Memorial Stadium in
Middleport, Ohio. All interested players and cheerleaders are encouraged to sign up. Players will be fit- •
ted for equipment at that time.
Football and Cheerleading Camp will begin A
2.
For more infonnation· contact Dave at 304-6745178, Sarah at 740-698-4054. or Regina at 740-698- •
2804.

Co-Ed Softball Tournament
SYRACUSE, Ohio -A co-ed softball tournament
will be held to benefit the BBYFL on July 17 and 18
at the Syracuse Ball Fields. Teams will be five and
five with a $ J50 entry fee. To register a team or for
more information contact Regina at 740-698-2804 or
Sarah at 740-698-4054. The top two teams will
receive prizes.

Southern basketball camps
Joe Burbank/Orlando SentlneVMCT

Former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani (right) greets baseball great Ken
Griffey, Sr. during a community leadership forum at the Orange County Regional
History museum in downtown Orlando, Friday, May 18, 2007.
son.
said. "The doctor told me nosed. Griffey's experiHe had only two major it wasn't life-threatening. ence prompted him to get
health issues during his That was the big thing."
involved m the Depend
19-year career. He broke a
Griffey had been a spe- campaign. encouraging
kneecap in 1979 and had cial assistant to the Reds others to get tested. He
two vertebra in his neck since 2002. He had to take knows it's not a comfortfused in 1991. ending his it easy after the operation able subject.
and deal with the side''Men are totally shy,''
playing career.
Because of the history effects, letting his body he said. ''They won't talk
about it at all. They don't
of prostate cancer in his heal.
family, Griffey went for
"The first year is a mon- want to admit they have
regular checkups. A test in ster," he said. "You don't that kind of a problem."
Griffey is looking forAugust 2006 indicated he know what to expect, all
might have the disease. the changes you go ward to another Father's
The same week, his ex- through. And to be honest, Day, a chance to continue
wife, Birdie, was diag- you don't think things are a family tradition. Since
nosed with colon cancer. A going to get better. But Junior was a• youth, he has
biopsy later confirmed his over the last year, every- given his father a bottle of
cancer.
thing has gotten three Old Spice and underwear
every year.
"It was a depressing sit- times better.''
uation, but at the same
"Now he has the grandGriffey and his ex-wife
time I was up because we are both cancer-free four kids doing it," Griffey
had discovered it." Griffey years after they were diag- said.
"I've really got to give
that class and those girls
that stuck with me that
second year the credit for
turning things around
here,'' Pyles added. "It's
been a good. long run,
but I couldn't have foreseen (the success) and I
don't have a clu.e how
many wins I had . that's
never been really an
important part for me.''
"I've always tried to
have teams prepared
toward the end of the
season and strived to do
well in our conference
tournament, but to me it's
been more important seeing these kids get an e'ducation and building good

relationships with them
and things like that," he
said.
Pyles also talked about
the relationships he
formed with the opposing coaches over the
years.
''I'm going to miss a lot
of people. As the season
went on I tried to bring it
to some of the coaches'
attention that 1 wouldn't
be back and ii was hard,"
he satd. ''There are a lot
of good competitors,
obviously when step
between the lines. you
want to beat them, but at
the same time that doesn t mean you can't be
friends with them."
.

"It's been really quite
enjoyable to make the
relationships I've made
with some of them,"
Pyles added. ''I'm sure
I'll stay in contact with
some of these coaches.''
Pyles' immediate plans
are for he, and his wife
Connie, to move to
Nashville, Tennessee to
be closer to their daughter, who resides there.
The search for a
replacement for Coach
Pyles is already underway and the hope is to
have a new coach in
place by the end of the
month when Pyles' contract
will
officially
expire.

walks. The three homers
allowed matched the
total he allowed in his
nine previous starts
combined.
"He's a youngster,"
manager Joe Torre said.
"It's unfair to expect
things. We have to see
how emotionally he's
going to be able to handle bouncing back. He's
going to get the opportunity to do it.''
Besides
supplying
most of the pitching and
offense, Arroyo became
an integral part of the
NL's
second-best
defense. The Dodgers
grounded into double
plays in the first, fourth
and seventh. All three
started with grounders
to Votto, who threw to
second and watched
Arroyo cover first for
him on the relay.
NOTES: Ely singled
home LA's run, the first
RBI of his career. ...
The Dodgers put SS
Rafael Furcal on the
bereavement list so he
could be wi th a sick
family member in the
Dominican Republic.
SS Chin-lung Hu was

called up from Triple-A
Albuquerque.
Ramirez got a day out
of the starting lineup
following a night game .
He' 11 return to Boston
on Friday for an interleague series, his first
appearance there since

he v. as traded to the
Dodgers in 2008 .... The
Reds make their first
West Coast trip of the
season. They were 2-7
on the West Coast last
year and are only 13-32
there during the last
four seasons.

RACINE. Ohio - The Southern basketball program will be hostmg a basketball camp this summer. '
The camp is for boys and girls entenng the second
through sixth grades. fhe camp will run from June
21-24 from 9 a.m. to Noon daily. The camp will be
conducted by head coach Jeff Caldwell with help
from assist coaches. as well as, current and former
varsity players. Fundamentals will be stressed and
awards presented for 3 on 3. "HORSE". and free
throw competitions.
Cost is $40 for one camper or $65 for two campers ·
from the same family: Each camper will receive. a
camp T-shirt. Regi~tration is from 8:30a.m. to 9 a.
on the first day ot camp.
For further information about tpe camp contact
coach Jeff Caldwell at 740-949-3129.

SHS Volleyball Camp
RACINE, Ohio - Southern High School will be
offering a volleyball camp for girls goin~ into grades
3-8 from August 2-5. in the high school gym. This
learning experience will be a chance for girls to interact with high school coaches and players and develop
an understanding of volleyball mechanics and fundamentals through drills, matches, games, and contests.
Each camper will receive a free T-shirt and have the
opportunity to win several other prizes.
The camp will by split in to two groups. with girls
from 3rd to 5th grades from 9 to 11:30 a.m. and girls
6th to 8th grades from l to 4 p.m. There is a fee of •
$35 per camper or $60 for a family of twp. Campers
are asked to bring knee pads and a water bottle, and
are asked to arrive early on the first day for registration.
To preregister call Coach Dickson at 740-525-2500.

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Friday, June 18, 2010

Blue Jackets upbeat about draft, future
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) - The mood is
upbeat these days around
the
Columbus
Blue
Jackets front office.
T he NHL draft is a
week away and the club
has the No.4 pick in the
first round along with
ven other selections .
coach Scott Arnie!
settling into the job
r being hired last
. . And prized left
mg Nikita Filatov is
making plans to attend
training camp this fall
after spending most of
last winter in his native
Russia.
General manager Scott
Howson credited the
prospect of getting new
prospects for the bounce
in his step.
'The draft is an exciting t1me," he said on
Thursday. ''It's one of the
only days in the season
where you feel like
you've gotten better
without giving up anything. It's an exciting day
and this is a really important draft for us."
The Blue Jackets. who
took a step back in missing the playoffs last season after making the
tseason for the first
•
e a year earlier, have
taken some calls from
teams wanting to acquire
their first pick. The seri-

ous talk won't come until
next week. Regardless,
Howson has no plans to
trade the selection.
Taylor Hall. a quick
and talented forward out
of Windsor of the Ontario
Hockey League, and
OHL rival Tyler Seguin,
a center for Plymouth!,
are considered the top
two players available.
Edmonton has first dibs.
followed by Boston. then
Florida.
"The draft itself is deep
in that there ·s many good
players throughout:' said
Don Boyd, the Blue
Jackets director of player
personnel.
"There· s
fewer dropoffs."
Potential players the
Blue Jackets might tab in
the first round include
defensemen Cam Fowler
and Erik Gudbranson and
forwards Brett Connolly,
Brandon Gormley. Ryan
Johansen, Jeff Skinner
and Nino Niederreiter.
Fowler, a 6-foot-2,
195-pound puck-mover
who was a teammate of
Hall's last winter, is the
consensus choice to go to
Columbus.
The Blue Jackets took
defensemen with four of
their first five picks a
year ago - including
John Moore at No. 21 of
the first round - but that
should have no bearing

19 years old, he was
on this year's draft.
The Blue Jackets also frustrated and homesick.
Eventually, the Blue
have two picks in the second round (Nos. 34 and Jackets loaned Filatov to
55), two picks in the CSKA Moscow of the
fou1th (Nos. 94 and l02) Continental
Hockey
and one in each of the League.
Hitchcock was fired
fifth, sixth and seventh
on Feb. 3 and the·47rounds.
Like a lot of NHL year-old Arniel was
teams, Columbus could hired a week ago after
use some depth at center spending the last four
and right wing on the big seasons
developing
club and in its farm sys- players at Manitoba of
tem. But that doesn't the American Hockey
mean the B Iue Jackets League.
Now Columbus is cerwill try to fill those holes
at the drMt June 25-26 in tain that Filatov will be
Los Angeles.
in preseason camp and
''You draft the skill and might even arrive soonfor conditioning
you trade (for) the posi- er
work . He would be a
tion,'' Boyd said.
In other words, teams huge addition - if he
take the best player avail- grows into his lofty
and
able. regardless of posi- expectations
becomes a two-way
tion.
Filatov was impres- player - for a team that
sive with four goals in was 28th of the 30 N HL
an eight game trial dur- teams in goals.
The Blue Jackets
ing the 2008-09 season,
putting up three goals in should also be a bidder
one game. He made the for free agents. Howson
team out of camp last is around $10 million
fall but fo1,.1ndered over under the cap right now.
"We'll kick some
the next month. His
playing time was limited tires,'' he said of t~e
by
coach
Ken search for reinforceHitchcock, and Filatov ments. "I don't think
had difficulty finding we'll be overly aggreshis way. The sixth over- sive as we have been in
all pick in the 2008 the past, but we'll cerdraft, he had just two tainly be aware of what
goals in 13 games for our needs are. And we'll
the Blue Jackets. Only be out there."

Thunder Jam brings big lineup to Kanawha Valley June 19
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE-COM

SOUTHS IDE. W.Va.
- One June 19, the
most talked about family motorsports show on
earth
returns
to
Kanawha
Valley
Motorsports Park for the
annualThunderJam
Over the past decade
the Kanawha Valley
Thunder Jam has grown
into one of the largest
events in the state and
one of the biggest
oder Jarn's on the
edule. Thousands of
11 seeking fans pour

I

Cavs
from P~ge

Bl

Gilbert has shown a
willingness to go beyond
his comfort zone to land
his man, and an offer like
the one he discussed with
Izzo. a coach with no
NBA experience. would
certainly pique Scott's
interest.
It's also possible the
Cavs could make another
run at Duke's Mike
Krzyzewski and former
New York and Houston
coach Jeff Van Gundy.
But Krzyzewski recently
said he'll never leave the
college game, and Van
Gundy has made it
wn that he enjoys the
•
broadcast booth and

into the Southside track
each year and this year
will be no different with
an incredible lineup of
over-the-top drag racing
action.
Headlining the onenight only thrill shoe is
the most talked about
exhibition vehicle in
racing today the
20,000 horsepower "XTreme Machine" jet
semi. The single-engine
jet semi packs quite a
punch thanks to a combination· of 20-foot
flames spewing from its
engine and an earth
shaking launch that

leaves first-time viewers
asking "did that really
just happen?"
Also on hand will be
the return of the world's
only
wheelstanding.
supercharged school bus
the ·~ool Bus," a full
field
of
insane
"Supercharged
Warriors'' doorslammers
and
dragsters,
the
Thunder Jam debut of
the wheelstanding golf
cart, the T hunder Fest
pit party, West Virginia's
best bracket racers and
much more.
Along with all the ontrack action fans will

also be invited to participate in the Thunder
Fest Pit Party prior to
the start of the main
event. Fans will be able
to meet the stars of
Thunder Jam. take pictures, get autographs
and enjoy a great family-friendly party beginning at 5:30 p.m.
Tickets for the June 19
event are just $20 for
adults and $5 for children. D iscount coupons
good for a free child
ticket can be found at
www .thunderjam .com
T he show will begin at
7 p.m.

isn't ready to rush back
into coaching at the sake
of family stability.
'' l m iss a lot of parts
of coaching, not all
parts, but a lot of them,"
Van Gundy said during
the
Celtics-Lakers
finals. "But that doesn't
mean it's right timing
when there are kids
involved. So when people say that (he should
be coaching). I think
they forget that if you
were single the decision
might be one way. but if
you
have
chi ldren
involved it might be a
different way."
T here are candidates
to choose from. The bigger issue for the Cavs.
though, remains James.
They can't promise a
potential coach that the
two-time MVP will be

on their roster after July
1. so it's possible
Gilbert will wait for a
decision from James
before hiring his next
coach . It's not ideal, but
it may be Cleveland's
best and only option at
this point.
Cleveland has had
informal
discussions
with Milwaukee assistant Kelvin Sampson
and former Atfanta
coach Mike Woodson.
both of whom could get
interviews. But the Cavs
only spoke with them as
a safety net in case the
whirlwind
courtship
with Izzo dissolved.

It did, and Izzo admitted the uncertainty about
James' future was a
major factor.
Izzo didn't speak
directly with James. but
got some needed information from people
close to the All-Star.
" I felt comfortable
with the things I needed
to know," Tzzo said. •·If
L eBron
would've
stayed. that doesn't
mean that 1 would have
been there. It was not
the only factor. Was it a
big factor? Sure it was."
And for any other
prospective Cavs coach,
it still is.

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The Daily ~ntinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Dickey pitches surging
Mets to 7th straight win
CLEVELAND (AP) R.A. Dickey won his fifth
straight stmt and the New
York Mets stretched their
winning streak to seven
games by beating the
Cleveland Indians 6-4
Thursday night.
Jose Reyes had three hits
and scored twice, while
rookie Ike Davis drove in
two runs for Nev. York.
The surging Mets have
won 18 of 23 to go from
last place to a half-game
behind NL East-leading
Atlanta. They have six
consecutive road wins for
the flrst time since a sixgame run in August 2008,
and have won a teamrecord eight in a row in
interleague play.
The Mets are 8-1 against
AL teams entering a threegame Subway Series at
Yankee Stadium starting
Friday night. They took
two of three at home May
21-23 from their crosstown
rivals.
Dickey (5-0) tied a club
record for a Mets starter by
winning his first five decisions.
Bobby
Ojeda
( 1986), Armando Reynoso
( 1997) and Kenny Rogers
(1999) also did it.
The 35-year-old knuckleballer allowed three runs
- two earned - and
seven hits over six innings.
He struck out seven and
walked two in his sixth
start since being called up
May 19 from Ttiple-A
Buffalo.
Reyes' RBI triple in the
eighth inning put New
York ahead 6-4.
Shin-Soo Choo had
three hits for Cleveland.
losers of four in a row.
After totaling seven doubles in an 8-4 win
Wednesday night. the Mets
got six singles in the first

inning off Jake Westbrook
(4-4) to take a 3-0 lead. It
nearly became their fowth
five-run innine: in four
games - during which the
Mets got 58 h1ts and 32
rum..
Davis and Henry Blanco
had
run-scoring
hits
around a sacrifice fly by'
Jeff Francoeur. The rally
ended when Chris Carter
tried to score from second
on a single by Jesus
Feliciano. but was thrown
out by left fielder Shelley
Duncan.
Westbrook might not
have yielded any runs if
second baseman Luis
Valbuena • had tagged
Reyes on a pickoff play.
Westbrook had the Mets'
speedy leadoff man nailed,
but Valbuena dropped the
ball - and appeared to
spike Reyes on the right
hand.
Jhonny Peralta's RBI
single in the second got •
Cleveland within 3-l. ~
The Indians got an
uneamed run in the third
when Choo singled and
scored from second base
when Met-; second baseman Ruben Tejada mishandled a grounder by
Hafner for an error.
David Wright had a runscoring woundout and
Da\ is follOwed with an
RBI single in the Mets ·
fourth for a 5-2 lead.
Hafner had run-scorino
groundouts in the fifth off
Dickey and in the seventh
against reliever Pedro
Feliciano to make it 5-4.
Westbrook allowed five
runs and II hits over seven
innings. The right-hander.
who missed last season
and much of 2008 after
Tommy John surgery. was
4-1 over his previous
seven starts.

-James

him. but James is
expected to entertain
offers from
several
teams
including
Chicago. New York and
New Jersey.
James has kept a relatively low profile since
the Ca-.. s were knocked
out of the playoffs by
Boston. He did a sitdown interview with
Larry King and made an
appearance
at
a
Cleveland event. but has
mostly stayed out of the
limelight in the weeks
leading up to free
agency.

fromPageBl
James has held a charity
bike-a-thon in his hometown for several y-ears
and has donated time
and money to help other
children's programs.
All the LeBron-related
hoopla comes less than
two weeks before James
becomes a free agent.
The 25-year-old recently said that Cleveland
has ·•an edge" to re-sign

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�Page B4 • 'I he Daily Sentinel

Friday, June 18 ,

www.mydailysentincJ.com

2 010

Carroll: NCAA off base in sacking USC
RENTO~. Wash. (AP)
tics. "I felt the tenor of
- Da) s after the ~CAl\ the
hearnH!s.
~eYer
trampled
his
former \\ ould ha\ c thought that
Southern
California they would have come to
Trojan~.
coach
Pete as harsh sanctions and
Can·oiJ's mindsct remains conclusion-. as this."
the same from afar.
He he.1rs \keptic-. who
Fight on!
scoff at hearing he didn't
Carmll says the NCAA know
about Bush's
had no basis lor unntir improprieties.
and "real! y. real! y harsh" . "It looks like. 'Why
sanctions on USC.
, would )ou not know?'
"There's
nothing Well.
Reggie
Bush
there:· he said Tuesday of became Reggie B~1sh in a
the investigation into hi~ matter of' a fe\\ months.
program\ kmm ledge of \\eeks," Carroll said.
former Trojans running mentioning Bush wasn't
back Reggie
Bush's a starter until his juniOI
improper bl!nefih and sca-,orL "LenDale White
relationship with an '-Cored 54 touchdowns in
the same time that Reggie
agent.
.. ~0\\ the word 's out.
was there .... And Man
You can do this," he said. Leinart was the quarter'"One person can do thb. back - and he wa... the
go aflcr a uni\cr it) and a Hcisman Trophy winner.
kid. And nothing has to So there was a lot of stuff
be true . NOTHING has to going on. a lot of acclaim.
be tme. The) just ha\'e to
"We were in the midst
make claims, ami then the of an undefeated \ear. ...
When vou look back in
investigation~ and all that
hindsig-ht. it's a much difarc under Wa) .
"1 just hate the thought ferent view than when
that that can !&lt;Ike place you are in the middle of
and we can do nothing tr') ing to win games."
Carroll also offered
about it."
Can·oll says he' didn't this rebuttal. without
leave USC six month-, ~l!ing asked: 'The quesago to escape imminent tion comes up why I left
and all. My coming to
'JC AA penalties.
..Wh) wouldn't I haYe Scattll! was for one realeft some other time (dur- son: Thb was an extraoring the ~CAA's li\ e-year dinary opportunity. It's
probe)?" the Seahawks'
pO\\'erful. ne\\ coach
a ...ked.
He was facing que tions for the first time
fRIDAY PRIMETIME
since the governing bod)
for college sports on
Thursda\' banned USC
from bO\\·ts for two years
and took away 30 scholarships over three years.
main!\ for \\hat Bush
received during Carroll's
tenure.
"I thought I would
never leave USC, but this
is just too good an opportunity to pass up," he
said. t·eitcruting what he
said in Janua1").
He sa) s his notoriously
open program at USC had
nothing to do \\ ith an
agent reaching Bush. that
..99 percent" of those
who came to practices
\\ere
communit) -conscious people - such as
youth and church groups
and friends of the Trojans
- and that USC cleared
their access. He said the
atmosphere made USC
unique and fun: and was
part of ib rampant success.
He also railed against
the NCAA ruling current
Trojans arc now free to
leave the national power,
calling it a potentially
devastating "fire sale''
akin to NFL free agency.
USC's pending appeal
of the sanctions will drac
through his first season in
Seattle. his fiN in the
NFL since 1999. Yet
Carroll says it \\ill not
distract him, hecause he
won't be that imolved in
it.
''l'\e already told them
everything I can tell
them." he said of the
NCAA. "It wtll lll~t be
rooting from the side-

Former USC
coach Pete
Carroll. now the
head coach of
the NFt.:s
•
Seattle
Seahawks,
reacts to a call
in this 2009 file
photo. Carroll
believes the
sanctions handed down by the
NCAA on the
Trojans were
too harsh .
Wally Skalij/
Los Angeles
Times/MCT

an NFL dream opportunity for me. and it haJ
nothing to do with anything that was going on at
th'-\_t time. The ongoing
in"cstigation was fi\'L'
year~ in thl! making . anyway."
He says he hasn't
talked to Bush recentlv.
But he has talked often io
current Trojans &lt;:OfH.:h
Lane Kiffin.

''These are \ erv tou!!h
times for him,"' Carroll
said of one of hi~ former
USC assistants. "The
hante~t thing about it is
schools can come after
his players. they can take
juniors and seniors right
now. It's like free agency.
it became like the ~NFL.
Thl!re 's a tire "ale on his
players right no\\ ...
He called on the

NCAA to join unhersitie-, and e\ en high
~chools to ha've a nation·
at promotional campaign
to stop out::;idcrs from
influencing college ath·
lctes.
"Unfortunatclv,
it's
about
H\\ &lt;lrcm:ss,"
Ca1TOII said. "Thb issue
in pm1icular J!&gt; not like
am of the other ca,es
that":. come along. lt i

about one person in a
communit) where a kid
came from who decided
to take advantage of his
potential good fortune.
And he found a way in to
make that happen - outside of am of the univer~11)' 1ssues and settin. o
und all that.
"The) didn't want an.
one else to kno\\. And we
didn't knm' ...

FRIDAY TELE.VISION GUIDE

lines.~

"There isn't an) pn:ccdcnt in this exact situation. so they arc going to
try and reconstruct the
reasoning. I think you
will sec transcripts that
come out eventually, '-O
you will sec all the questions that w~rc asked ...
And ) ou "II under... tand
that from the star1 of the
im·estigation )Cars ago
- I'\ e said this alt along
- there is no information
that backs the claim...:·
Carroll was 97-19 and
won se\ en consecutive
Pac-JO titles plus t\\O
national championships
at USC from 2000-09.
He ~aid "" hl'ad coach
he \\as rcsponsibll! for all
that happened there. but
that there was no \vay for
him to know Bush was
being wooed by an otTcampus agent.
"We couldn't do anything about it - because
we didn't kno\\,.. he said.
The NCAA found that
in itself an inexcu~ablc
lack of institutional 0\ crsight. ·
·
.. Unfortunately, I was
probably more su1 prised
than most people, and I
wa~ at the hearings,"
Cnrroll aid of the penal-

�Friday, June 18, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel· Page 85

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~ribune

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CLASSIFIED

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In One Week With Us
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Meig~ County,

OH

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Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 . (304) s1s-1aa3 •
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 44e-3oos
or Fax To (740) 992·2157
Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

m

/)utllitu
Word Ads
Display Ads
Daily

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

500

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To
Home)
Call Today! 740·446·
4367
1·800·214·0452
galhpoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member
Accredit rg Counctl tor
ndependent Colleges and

Schools 12748
700

Agriculture

• Ads Should Run 1 Days

EBY1
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVESTOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAD
MAX
EQUIPMENT
TRAILERS,
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp;
HOMESTEAD:R
CARGOICONCESSIO
N TRAILERS
B+W
GOOSENECK
FLATBED
$3999'
VIEW OUR ENTIRE
TRAILER INVENTORY
AT
WWWCARMICHAELT
RAILERS.COM
740·
446·3825

900
Merchandise
Have you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surprised! Check out
Want To Buy
our used inventory at
www.CAREQ.com'.
Absolute Top Dollar
Carmichael EqUipment silver/gold coins. any
740-446-2412
10K/14K/18K
gold
jewelry. dental gold. pre
1935 US currency,
proof/mint
sets,
diamonds. MTS Coin
Shop. 151 2nd Avenue.
Gallipolis. 446·2842
Recreati.onal
Vehtcles

Real Estate
Rentals

Apc~rtment•/

=====;;;;i;;;=

1000

Houses For. Rent

Seeking
a
retired
RV
Service
at couple or person to rent
Carmichael
Trailers a 2 Br farmhouse $400.
mth. $400/dep.
no
740·446·3825
smoking, kids, or pets,
~~~~~~~ please.
Serious calls
Motorcycles
only 740·645·4523 or
740·245-9212.
2007 Harley Davidson
Ultra Classic, loaded, 4000 Manulactu~ed
Hous1ng
many
extras,
all
genuine H.D
never
down, like new 14,000
Rentals
miles over $ $25,000.
invested must sell call
On corner of
2BR.
740·339·0~~2
Bulaville
Ptke/554.
$17.000.
dep&amp;ref req.
$325.
740·388·1100.
3500

Townhouses

Sales

Second floor 1 B.A.
apartment overlooking
Gallipolis City Park,
L.A. ,Kitchen/dinning
area. bath. washer &amp;
dryer $400.00 mo. call
740·446·4425 or 740446·2325.

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WHEW

Fer IM'IV8tll PIII'IY
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SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia Co OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans Jackson, OH
800-537-9528

For
Everyone
In

Security

A.QI
Free Home
Security
$850 Value
with purchase of
alarm monitoring
services from ADT
Security Services.
Call1-888-274·3888

The...

Tax I Accounting

AMERICAN TAX
BELIEF

CLASSIFIEDS!!
Employment

Medical

,.,

ONLINE
ONLY

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
SSI
No Fee Unless We
Win!
1·888·582·3345

There's
Soniething

6000

Classifleds

v
v
v
v
v

Professional Services

'The Procto'rville
Difference"
$1 and a deed is all
you need to own your
dream home. Call Now!
Freedom Homes
888·565·0167

Jordan
Landing
Apartments
Campers I RVs &amp;
all
3 br. available
Trailers
electric. no pets
Ask
.About
Our
Rent
RV
Service at Carmichael Specials • call for
details 304·674·0023
Trailers
or 304-610·0776
740·446-3825

fjt;rJ

Now you can hove borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
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m
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$ t .00 for large

1w

POUCIES Ohio llallty PubUahlng reee"'ee tht ~hi to edit. re)eel or cancel any ad at any time. ErrCIIt mull be reported on tne first day ot pubt~ll'fl an&lt;! the
Trlbme-Senllnet·A!lljister will be responsible ror oo more tM!l llle colt otthe space oocuple&lt;l bf tile error and ooly the lrrst fnseniOn. We ar.lt not be liable for
any lOse or expense thtlt results trom the publicatiOn or omissiOn of an advertltefM!ll. Correctron Y!ill be mid• In tht tlrSI avalleble ednlon. • eo~ number Ida
are aiY18ye confldtntlel • C~;rrent rate Cllro appllea • All reel estm lldvemsementa are tubjeet to tht federal Fatr Housing Act ot18e8 • Thlt ~I*
~ts only help wanted adt mettlng EOE standardt. We will oot knoNingly acceptllO)ItdvenrC~ng In v101a11oo of the law. WI" not be reepon91ble for any
erro'rs Inan ldtaken over the phone.

Campers I RVs &amp;
Trailers

Farm Equipment

Farm Equipment

SELL YOUR
EXCESS
ITEMS
WITH A
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AD

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Business Days Prior To

• All ads must be prepaid"

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Description • Include A PriCe • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Numbtr And Addren When Needed

Education

Business &amp; Trade
School

9:00 a.m.

Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Publiecltion
Sunday In ..Column: 9:00 a.m. Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
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GET YOUR CLASSIFJED LINE AD NOTICED

YARD SALE
fflr private pal'ty
lingle 1m1 multi·
fQiyaalu
4 ltnel. 8 diiYI

Notices

Basement
Attention
L&amp;L
Waterproofing
Scrap
Metals
Recycling, Inc. will Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local
be closed Monday
references turnrshed.
June
21st.
thru Established 1975. Call
Friday June 25th for 24 Hrs. 740·446·0870,
employee's vacation.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing
We will reopen on
Monday, June 28th.
Lawn Service
We are sorry for any
inconvenience
this Yard work, mowing,
may cause. Thank tree work, will haul
You
off unwanted items,
or
7 40-367-7550
Pictures that
7 40-367-0291 .

Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center is
currently
accepting
resumes
tor
the
position
of
activity
d1rector. The qualified
applicant will possess
the
following
requirements:
Must
have strong written and
oral
communication
skills,
must
have
excellent organizational
skills, knowledge of
have been
MDS and State/Federal placed in ads at
regulations, must be
the Gallipolis
creative
and
haye
experience working in • Daily Tribune
an activity program or must be picked
have
an
activity
within 30 days.
Please
certification.
Any pictures
resumes
to
·send
that are not
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center,
picked up will
Attn: Charla Brown·
be
McGuire, 333 Page
discarded.
Street, Middleport. Oh
45760.
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center is
Personals
an
EOE
and
a
partictpant rn the Drug
will
not
be
Free
Workplace resposible tor any
program.
debt
or
credit
charges
made
200 Announcements against me as of
6/15/2010, Billy G.
Combs
Lost &amp; Found
Wanted
Found- sm. bl./wh,
mix, J
collie/spaniel
&amp; J Painting
near
A-spring Interior/exterior
740-416- power
Nursing,
washing
2863
homes garages barn.
Free Est. have ref.
Notices
304·812·7689
NOTICE
OHIO
VALLEY PUBLISHING
CO. recommends that
you do business with
people you know. and
NOT to· send money
through the mail until
you have tnvestigating
the oHering.

Home lmprovemenb

400

Financial

Financial Services

CREDIT CARE
BELIEF
Burled in Credit
Card Debt?
Call Credit Card
Relief for your free
consultations.
1-877-264-8031

• Money To Lend
Best Lawn Care 740645·1488
NOTICE Borrow Smart
COntact
the
Ohto
Division of Financial
Other Services
Institutions Off1ce of
Consumer
Affairs
Pet Cremations. Call
BEFORE you refinance
740.446·3745
your home or obtain a
BEWARE
of
loan.
requests for any large
DIRECTV
advance payments of
For the best TV
tees or 1nsurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
experience,
upgrade from cable Affiars toll tree at 1866·278·0003 to learn
to
if the mortgage broker
DirecTV today!
or lender is properly
Packages start at
licensed. (This is a
$29.99
public
service
1-866-541-0834
, announcement from the
Oh10 Valley Publishing
Company)

QlSH

NETWORK
Save up to 40% off
your cable bill! Call
dish Network
today! 1-877-2742471

Life lock

------GREEN
LAWN Are You Protected?
Mowing
304 -675 • An Identity Is stolen
1610 or 304·593every 3 seconds.
1960 No jOb too big Call Life lock now to
or small!
protect your family
------free for 30-days I 1·
300
Services
877·481-4882
Promocode:
SAVE; thousands on
10
General Repairs
Steel
Buildings.
Three left 20x26x12
SUMMER SPECIAL
VJ}J::IAGE
,30x34x12 Sold for
1. Driveway Seal,
Unlimited local
balance Owed! Ask
Coating &amp; Repatr,
about our Display
and long
2. Gutter's cleaned,
Promotion' Call Now
distance
repaired &amp; installed.
1-866-352-0469
3. Painting &amp; yard
calling for only
work &amp; mtsc. odd
$24.99 per
jObS.
month.
Senior discount,
Get rellnble llhono
licensed &amp; bonded.
setYICO from
Home ph. 304-882Von.1ge
3959
Call Today!
Cell ph. 304·812·
1-877-673·3136
3004

FIND A JOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Settle IRS Taxes for
a fraction of what
you owe. If you owe
over S15,000 in
back taxes call now
for a free
consultation. 1-877258-5142

600

Ani mals

Pets
Jack
Russell
&amp;
Oashhound
mtxed
puppies 8 weeks old
$50 740-379·2282

Lost Dog, George's
CreeK area, around
June 10
7L)Ibs
yellow, long haued,
740·645·51

ss

Coc.l\er
~~\:'" el
Pupptos for snle S 5

Full Bk''lded bull
actor, 740 J$8 0401
t\KC
yorl\te pup
MALE 9 \~ks old \elY

sm:tll Mom 71bs Dad
t·cup2
1 21bs
$500.00
304·675·
79 16 before

p.m.

10:00

�-

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Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

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www.mydailysentinel.com

I

•

•

:

I

I

~~~~~~~~~~~
700

Farm Equipment
STIHL Sales &amp; Servtce
Now
Available
at
Carmichael Equtpment
740-446-2412
900

Yard Sale

Agriculture

Merchandise

Furniture
.;;;..--==For Sale-Curio Cab.
solid oak 4 shelf 2
door call 304-6751687 or 304-67 4·
3882

2000

Buckeye Vine &amp; Co.
Community
Consignment Shop
241 3rd. Ave. 446
0214.
Qver 400 QQnsign_eet
Clothing,
housewares,
antiques,
baskets.
bears,
purses,
books, corn hole
bags,
baby1tems
collectables &amp; mor .
Open mon thru Thur
11-6 Sat 11-4
Come On ln.

hammerless
looks
unfired $200 740· 6451 St. At. 141 lots
533-3870.
of Kids stuff, girls
and boys.
1OamComplete set "24 4pm 6/17-6/18
coins" Peace type
silver dollars nice Garage Sale rain or
ones $950.
740- sh1ne At 7 South 3
533-3870.
miles Bladen Rd. Fri
and Sat

Want To Buy

In Memory

=

===A•TV•s==Talon
GSA
150
Carter
Go
Cart,
asking $975. $3500
new 740-31!:!-!::1515,
740-339-2043.

2005 Jayco Eagle
Gooseneck
Hitch,
sleeps six. Excellent
condition.
Asking
$19,900.
See
photos
at
www.carmjcha_eltrai.!e
t~c..run
740-4462412
2000 Sandpiper, 33
feet long. ex. con.,
asking $11 ,000 or
OBO. 740-992-1424

In Memory

Remembering

Joe Kirby Sr.
on Fathers Day
With love always
Josepliine· Joe Jr.
Stephanie- Owen
Card of Thanks

Card of Thanks

The familly of

Raymond (Honey.)
Russell
would like to thank the
Middleport Fire Dept. for a
service well done.
Special thanks to Don Stivers
and Joe Anthony and all the
firemen that attended our
fathers service.
Daughters
Betty Co · and Cathy Bauer '

Help Wanted

.."--Real Estate
3000
Sales

Attractive,
unfurnished,

6000

one

bedroom apt. 2nd
f'"or corner Second
and Pine No pets,
References requ1red.
Secunty
deposit,
$325 per month.
water included. call
740-446-4425
or
740 446 3936
Modem 1 BR apt.
740-446-0390.

Middleport 1 &amp; 2 br.
furntshed
apt. No
14x60 Mobile home
good shape central pets, dep. &amp; ref ,
air reasonable offer 740-992-0165
304-675-7070
Pleasant
Valley
3 bedroom 2 bath, Apartments is now
located on the corner taking
applications
of
Second
&amp; for 2, 3. &amp; 4 br HUD
Worchester St near Subsidized
Hubbard's
Apartm~nts.
greenhouse
in ApplicatiOns
are
Syracuse. All major taken Monday thru
appliances included. Thrusday
9:00amNewly
installed 1:OOpm. Office is
healing &amp; cooling located
at
1151
un11.
Contains
a Evergreen
Drive.
recently constructed Point Pleasant, WV.
20x24 single vehicle (304) 675-5806
garage.
Interested
buyers may contact - - - - - - us at 740 _ _
Spring Valley Green
992 1820
Apartments 1 BR at
Real Estate 5395+2 BR at $470
3500
Rentals Month. 446-1599.

=

Campers / RVs &amp;
Trailers
======2006
Dutchman
Bunkhouse, Slideout,
like new, ct.airlheat
sleeps 10. 740-339Announcements 2697

William Harmo11 ;, no
longer a•sociated "nil
Harmon Heat mg and
Cooling. I am no longer
an officer with this
compan&gt; and will not
be held responsible
financial!), legally, or
for the craft&gt;manship.
I currently hold the WV
Contractor's license and
EPA certific~tion 'o as I
step down. tho&gt;&lt;'
certifications w1ll no
longer be ''alid f&lt;&gt;r the
company.

1995 NISS&lt;~n ~entra,
o oo work c
:?c
mies
left
on
transferable eng1ne
warranty,
$1500
OBO; 1988 Chevy
Caprice new tires,
$SOO 080 740 949
2727

------CARPORT
SALE1917 Maxwell Ave.
Fri June 18 &amp; Sat ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
19th 9:00-?
Apartments/
Townhouses
Recreational
1000
Vehicles
1Br/bath apartment
~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; nice across Post

Oiler's Towing, Now
buying junk cars
w/motors or w/out.
740-388-0011
or
740-441-7870.

As of Monday. June. 7,

Autos •

Apartments/
Townhouses

Houses For Sale

5
Family
, 177
LeGrande
Blv.
Jet Aeration Motors furniture,
clothing,
misc. Thurs 17- Fn
repaired, new &amp;
rebuilt In stock. Call 18
Ron Evans 1·800537-9528
Large, somehing for
everyone, St. At.
Savage Model 220-B 588, Rio Grande,
shotgun,
12 Ga. June 18 &amp; 19.
Miscellaneous

Rem. mod 700 BDL
22-250
(varminter)
w/Bausch &amp; Loub 624 power scope, two
sets RCB5 loading
dies. 150 cases, 300
bullets. $750.00
Browning A-Bolt 12
ga slug gun has E.R.
shaw custom rifled
barrel, w/ Leupold
VX 11 2•7 power
scope, 4 box sabot
slug $ 650 call 740446-3'105 after 6pm.

Automotive

Help Wanted

IMMEDIATE OPENING
District Circulation

Sales Manager
Responsibilities include recruitmg and
training carriers, cu~tomer service and
meeting sales goals. If you have a positive
atlitude. arc self-starter. and a team pla)Cr 11c
would like 10 1alk to you. Musl be dcpend&lt;tble
and have reliable transportation. Posilinn
offers all company bcnelih including health.
dental. vision and I if~ msuran•&lt;-'.
401 K, paid vacation. and personal days.
Please send resume to:

PAM CALDWELL
Gallipolis Dail) Tribune
825 'l11ird Ave. • Gallipolis, OH 45631
Or email to
pcaldwcll@heartlandpublications.com

·

Houses For Rent

-.. ·

Drivers &amp; Delivery

~;;];;}
~

Reg1onal Dump and
Pneumatic
Tanker
Drivers R&amp;J Trucking
Co 1n Marietta,OH is
search1ng
for
qualified
CDL·A
drivers for reg1onal
dump and pneumatic
tanker
positions.
Qualified applicants
must be at least
23yrs have a mtn. of
1 year of safe
commercial driving
expenence in a truck.
HazMat cert. clean
MVR &amp; good stability.
We offer competitive
benefits &amp; 401 K &amp;
vac. pay. Contact
Kent AT 800-4629365 to apply or go
to
v.ww rjtrucking.com
EOE

-..

Cake

30-l-882·.'060
... , .104-882-.108!)

• llouw \\1udu\\ Replanmt·nl
• '\lir1·ors t ut l o Onlt•l· • Mnhilt• Sci" I~&lt;''

BULLETIN BOARD

9000

Servic_e I Bus.
01rectory

lawn Care
M &amp; A Lawn Care,

Free Estimates. call
740-853-1474.

Misellaneous
Si!lo on Baler Tw1ne
9000
S1sal
Tw1ne
$34.75,
16000 Sisal Twme $
31 /6, whtlo supplies
last.
JIM'S
FARM
EQUIPMENT
740446.;g777

Commercial &amp; Residential
E2J::.i • Room additions • Roofing • Garages
• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Horse
Barn~ • Yin) I &amp; Wood Fencing
Foundations
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH

740-985·4141

740·416·1834

•I.O&lt;.·ully Ollnl-d ~ 0p&lt;'111lt•d

Full) insured
Free estimates- 25+ )Cars experience
(:\nlaffilialed "lth ~like \larcum.J(oofin~ &amp; Hrmnd&lt;·hnAI

HRS Repa;n.. 1·740-992-3061
20+yrs exp

YOUNG'S

• -\CCCj11l:t.i h.l ~~~ lft"II":IIICl'S

• All \\ ork Gua1 .antc;-&lt;1

Service-, Y'lost Heating &amp;
Cooling System (including
Heatpumps) and Controls
Tankless Hot Water Heater
Change-outs/ Replacement,;;.
Whole House Water Purifiers
(helps against C8 intake)
flat 45.00 hrl} Rate+ 10.00 Trip Chrg.

L----------------1

•

"

CARPENTER SERVICE
• Room Additions.&amp; Remodeling
• ~cw Garages • Electrical &amp;
PlulJlbing • Roofing &amp; Gutters
• \ inyl Siding &amp; Painting • Patio and
wv 036725
Porch Decks

V.C. YOUNG Ill
·

992-6215 740-591-0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
36 Years Local Experience

ROBtRT BISS[LL
CONSTRUCTION

Help WontedGeneral

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

.

(3aft Marcum Construction

Ripley Auto Glass
Hart(orctJ Inc.

Wanted

Experience
Decorator
Apply Within

29 Pike .~·treet
HmtjiJrd, WV

~

Food Services
Help

To place an ad

_.:; · c811 740~992-2155

OTR Driver needed.
Must have 2 vrs
Expenence Flat Bed
experience reqwed.
Call740-286-3558

1BR. nice.PP area
Valley
Pleasant
$325-Homestead
IS
Reality Ask for Nancy Apartments
304-675-5540
or accepting
for
Office No pets No 675-0799
applications
smoking
Deposit
maintenance
-1
--304-675 -3788 After BR-house
in personell. Must have
Nice
5P M
expenence
in
· ·
Gallipolis. Walk to carpentary, electrical,
painting.
2BR
APT.Ciose
to everything you need. plumbing
Holzer Hosp1tal on SR Very clectn unit, with drywall, grounds care
160 CIA. (740) 441· new paint, $275 per and
all
around
0194
mo/$100 sec. dep. general
CONVENIENTLY
Sorry no pets. Call mafntenance. Only
LOCATED
&amp; Wayne
' lor experienced
AFFORDABLE!
Information 404 · 456- individuals
need
Townhouse
3802.
apply.
Applications
apartments,
and/or
are
available
at
small houses lor rent ""'B""'R-,-R
...o_d_n-ey--ar-e-a, Pleasant
Valley
Call 740-441-1111 lor
application
&amp; WID ref, stove inc. Apartments
1151
information.
NO pets, dep &amp; ret.' Evergreen
Drive.
req'd. Call 740-446- Po1nt Pleasant, WV,
Free Rent Special 1271 or 740-709- 2550 304-675-5806
!!!
1657
E')E.
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up, Central Air. WID - - - - - - - Now
hiring
FIT
hookup. tenant pays Home for Lease in p:)sitton; ability to
electric. Call between Rio Gande city limits. handle
animals,
lhe hours of sA-SP
2 story, 3200 sq ft. people
general
EHO
Rent $1500. Gall off1ce duties. Must
Ellm VIew Apts.
7 40-645-3980 for an be able to work
(304)882-3017
appointment
&amp; flexible
hours
Twin Rivers Tower ts applications.
(evenings
and
accepting applications cedarvalleyestates.n weekends)
submit
lor wa1ting list lor HUD et
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L-=====~
-

Public Notice
The Rutland Town·
ship Trustees will
hold a public hear·
ing on the 2011
budget on Monday,
July 5, 2010 at 5
p.m. at the Rutland
Fire Station. The
budget is available
for review by ap·
pointment with the
clerk.
Opal Dyer, Clerk
Rutland Township
(6) 18

Public Notice
The Meigs Local
School District has
a vacancy for a
FULL TIME SECRE·
TARY/LUNCH
CASHIER
AT
MEIGS
MIDDLE
SCHOOL
Salary is commensurate with the
Board
Adopted
Salary
Schedule
and experience.
Interested candl·
dates should send
a letter and resume
to
Rusty D. Bookman
Meigs Local School
District
41765
Pomeroy
Pike
•Ohio
Pomeroy,
45769
Deadline for applyIng Is June 25,
2010.
(6) 18, 20, 22

• Hometown News
•Area Shopping
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Calendar
r.f3 ~r-vv:\ ... and much more.

l!JJ U1!l11.8J

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~oint ~~leas'nnt l\rgister

The Dail) Sentinel
~uubap [unrs -~L\ntintl

�--~~----

Friday, June 18, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE ·

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun
~~~~~~~~~~

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Showed
1nterest
6 Print units
11 C ream of
the crop
12 Take on
13 Bugs
bugs him
14 Score
speed
15 Deplore
16 Do better
than, in
stores
18 Hurler's
stat
19 Compass

YOU GOT THE WI-IOL.E
COMPANY CONFINED
TO THE 9ARRAc~5
ALL WEeK!

pt.
20 Charge

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

HAGAR T H E H ORRIBLE

Chris Browne

, .P~PLE 6A Y
;I AC-7 '1'PO
TOUGH.,

HI &amp; LOIS

21 Skilled
2 3 Some
exams
25 Keg
piece
2 7 Bond,
e.g.
2 8 Leader of
the Pacemakers
30 "
brillig

JOSEPH
43 Shakespeare's
A the nian
44 Okra dish
45 Perfume
46 Clarifying
words
DOWN
1 Fume
2 Charm
3 Sammy
Cahn
song
4 Salt Lake
City
player
5 Juan of
A rgentina
6 Spiels
7 M a rch
time
8 Sammy
Cahn
song

TodaV's Answers
9 Orchard
crop
10 Fancy
wrap
17 Dos
p recede r
22 Road
goo
24 Gifted
26 Roll-call
a nswer28 Pesto
ing redient

29 Singer
Sumac
31 Living cell
32 Noted
strongm an
33 Flings
35 Eel , on a
sushi
menu
38 File
stand-in
42 Ring up

----

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4.75 (checklm o.) to
Thomas Joseph Book 1, P.O Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475
10

33 Train part
34 Running
bird
36"Believer"
3 7 Skilled
worker
39 Huck's
pal
4 0 Pizzeria
buy
41 Fire
aftermath
6-18

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell
How Do You

NO,THANKS, MOOCH,
r ·M C HEWI NG

COMPET E W ITH

ON AN ICE C UBE .

THAT!?f )
~-

\

ZITS

Jerry

"COLD COMFORT FOOD AGAIN?"'

I iAPPY BlR II IDA! for friday, June
more expertise than you. Tonight
18, 2010:
Balance your budget. Pay bills.
'I his year, you witness many
Scott and Jim Borgman
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
changes. You could be uncomfortable
Your plans could be put on
with ~me of what you see occurring
hold, as last-minute demands and •
within your immediate {'Crsonal or
requests come fom arc!. Be diligent in '
doml"stic circle. You might often feel
vour follow-through, and you might
overwhelmed, as if you hav(' no choice
be able to "escape" somewhat earlier
or alternative as events unfurl. You do,
than one might pn_&gt;dict. lake Monday
but it might take centering first. If you
off, too! Tonight: Better late than not at
are single, others find you alluring and
all.
attractive. Easily, you could be swept
LIBRA (Sept. 2&gt;0ct. 22)
up in a whirlwind romanc&lt;.&gt;. Don't
You might want to play the
have any expectations, as it cot.lld end
. recluse for a while, at least at work, if
as quickly as it bt..&gt;gan. Give thic; bond
you want to clear out early. People
the test of time. If you are attad1ed, the
from a di'it.mce might be waiting to
two of you could experience a lot more
hear from you or wanting you to join
energy and exdterncnfbetween you
them. Make sure you get out early.
than you have in quite a while. VTRC..O
Tonight: Vanic;h quickly.
often can challenbre the living daylights
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
outofvou.
.lcro in on what you want
by Dave Green
•
The Stnrs Shml' tile Kmd of Dny You'll
and what you think would work best
+
•
llm•t': 5-D~tnmwc; 4-Po~ithx; 3-A•-.·mgc;
Supporters appear among friends and
2-Sc&gt;-~o; 1-Diffintlt
'
associates. A partner could test your
ARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
limits. Let go and let events and time
Keep conversations moving,
work for you. Tonight Where the gang
~
though you could hit a o;nag as far as
is,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
" perspective. Gearly others have other
~ ideas. Try opening up to another plan
Others S&lt;..'Cm to d1allenge
.;;
of action. You can express your dbyour ideas, making it even more diffi!!
comfort with another idea. 'lonight:
cult to dear out work and get a project
I~
~
Slowdovm.
off the ground. It seems you are in an
TAURUS (April2G-May 20)
~
eitherI or situation. Do what vou k-el is
...
You might be challenged .
most effective. Tonight Burning the
;
Do you take on a risk or not? Can you
Q
candle at both ends.
afford this risk? You might want to
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
understand what it takes to break
You r grasp of the differen t
"' through to a new level of creati\;tv
ic:sucs might be more complete than
and understanding. Vi;;ualizc mor&lt;.'.
~
many other people~s perspectives. You
e Ibnight Ftm time. It is Friday night!
t.mder.;tand the pmject at hand, yet
0
GEMINI (M,w 21-June 20)
P.
you sec the \'alue of a different
Stav anchored and direct.
approach. Help others see the situation
Others might have difficulty underin a similar rnilnnet: It:might: Opt for
standing just how sure vou ilre.
~omcthing diffcn?nt.
-¥¥-¥-¥ P'~ I &lt;II"·'!JI'&lt;I
..
• Unfortunately, they could test }UUr
A Q UARIUS Qiln. 20-Feb. 1R)
SCJ1Sl' of diiL'Ction. You get !o 'it.'C how
****It partner or ilsso&lt;.iatc domi~
directed aAd sure )'&lt;1tl arc. !(might
nates. ,\ny feedback seem'&gt; to f,1ll on
Ordcrin.
.
d&lt;•af cars. Now is not the ti me. Focus
~
CANCER Qunc 21-july 22)
on ~ving this pet~on as much support
a.-. pu,.,ible. &amp;ht:t.lule d dbt:u~~ion for
OthcP.i :'i&lt;.'rt"C thc1l YOU dlt!
holding back and not rewa lin~ everylater today lonight Find a fa,·orite
thing you know. Also, realize t11at by
J:.1Cl'SOn.
~
holdin9. bnck, vou ,'\lso could Cc1USC
Pisces (feb. 19-l'"larch 20)
you.rsctf a pmblem or be more \ ulneraOthers might not intend to
~
ble than need be. Tonight Make phone
pressure you, but somehow they do.
calls.
You al&lt;&gt;Ocould feel like vou OCI..&gt;d to
~
LEO Quly 21-Aug. 22)
cocoon some.'Staying out of office poliEve a financial situation with
tics c&lt;&gt;uld take a lion's share of disd~
a toud1 more reality. \I\'hat you wish
plint•. 1onight Sort through ~ugges­
1 - - --was happening might not be what is
tion".
~
actually happening. Know when to
back off. Get more fe\.'Ciback. FL'Cl free
Jncquclme Bigar is Oil tltt.' Iutemel
to tl.&gt;st an idea on someone who has
at ltttp://www.jacqltrliltclligm:cmlt.

****

**

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

-.
-"'

~

4
5 3

" We voted and o n Father's D a y Daddy
gets to pla y with u s ALL DAY!"

7

1

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6 3

Hank Ket chum

DiJhcult) Lew!
81

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------

'

�I

Page BS • The Daily Sentinel

www.myda ilysentinel.com

Friday, June 18,

2010

NASCARTHIS EE

.

..

SPRINT CUP SCHEDULE
AND STANDINGS

Feb. 6- x-13uc:two1ser Shootout (Ktlllln HaiVick)
Feb. 11 - x-Gat001de Duel 1 (Jommie Johnson)
Feb. 11 - x-GatOO!de Duel 2 (Kasey Kahne)
Feb. 14-Daytona 500 (Jamie McMurray)
Feb.. 21 - AU1o Club 500 (Jtmmle JOhnson)
Feb.. 28 - Shelby Amencan. Las Vegas (J1mmie John-

.

x-non"fX&gt;Ints race
2010 Drtver Standings
1.1&lt;evin Harvicl&lt;, 2.169
2. Kyle Busch, 2.147
3. Denny Hamlin, 2,122
4. Kurt Busch, 2.051
5. Matt Kenseth. 2,019
6. Jimmie Johnson, 1,999
7.JeffGordon, 1,987
8.Jeff Burton. 1.945
9 Greg B&lt;ffle. 1.8&amp;5
10. Cari E&lt;tNards, 1,856

NATIONWDE SERIES
SCHEDULE AND STAtfJNGS
Feb. 13- DRIVE4COPO 300 (Tony Stewart)
Feb. 20- Stater Bros. 300 (Kyte Busch)
Feb. 27 -Sam's TOM\300, Las~ (K!Mn HaMck)
MaiCh 20- Sootts Turt Buider 300 (Justll'l Allgaier)
Api 3- Nasnvlle 300, lebanon, Tenn. (Ke.M HaMck)
April9- Bashas' $upermeJ1&lt;eiS 200. A\OOdale. Ariz
(Kyle Busch)
Api 19- OAeily foU.o Parts 300, Fort Wol1h, Texas
(Kyle Busch)
Api 25- Aa!M's 312. Taladega.. Ala. (Bmd KeselcMoslo)
Api 30 -ll&lt;ilba Burger 250. RociYnond. Va. (Brad
KeselcMoslo)
May 7 - Roy'8l Purple 200, Dartr1glon. sc. (Demy
Hamlin)

May 15- Heluva Good! 200, Dover. Del. (Kyle Busch)
May29- Tech-Nel t&gt;.Ao Senlice300, Conoold. NC.
(Kyle Busch)
.A.ne 5 - Feda&lt;atad Auto Parts 300. Lebanon, Tenn.
(Bmd l&lt;e.&lt;leloNslo)
..k.ne 12-Meijer 300. SpMa. Ky (Joey Logano)
..k.ne 19- Bucyrus 200, El&lt;harti.Jike. WIS.
..k.ne 26- New England 200. Loudon, NH,
July 2- S&lt;bNay JalapenO 250 PQwered By Coca-Cola.
Daytona Beach, Fla.
July 9- Dolar Geneml 300 PQwered By Coca-Cola. ~
ot.ll.
July 17 - Missour&gt;lllinois Dodge Dealers 250, Madson.
ll
July 24- Kroger 200, lndianajlolis
July 31 -Iowa 250, Newlon. Iowa
Aug 7- Zfipo 200 at The Glen, Watl&lt;ns Glen. N Y
Aug. 14- Catfax 250. Brooidyn, Mdl
Aug. 20- Food City 250. 8ri51ol. Tenn.
Aug. 29- ~ A/.Jo Parts 200, Monlreal
Sep. 4 - Atlanta 300, Hampton, Ga.
Sep. 10-Vllgll'lla 529 Colege SaVIngs 250. RociYnond,
Va.
Sep. 25- Dover 200. Dover. Del.
Ocl2- Kan$as Loclety 300, Kansas City, Kan.
Oct. 9- Camping Wo&lt;td 300, Fontana. Caif
Oct. 15- Dollar Geneml300, Conoord. N.C.
Oct. 23 - GateNay 250. Madson, II.
NOll 6 - OAeily AI.Jo Parts Chalenge, Fort WJr'41.
Texas
NOll. 13-Altzooa 200. A\IOndale, Anz.
NOll. 20- Ford 300, Homestead. Fla.
2010 Or1ller Standings
1. Brad Keselowsi&lt;i, 2.306
2. CaltE&lt;tNards, 2.034
3.Justii'IAiga&gt;er.1.993
4. Kyle Busch, 1,945
5. KeJil HarVIck. 1.852
6 Pa&lt;A Menard. 1'745
7.Joey~ 1.593
8 ~ walaoe. 1.536
9. Btendan~ 1.520
10.Jason Leffler. 1,450

CAMPING WORLD TRUCK
SCHEDULE AND STANDINGS
Feb. 13- Nex!Eia Energy Resources 250 (T~
Peter.;)

•

MaiCh 6 - E-Z-&lt;30 200 (l&lt;elm Harvid&lt;)
MaiCh 27- Kroger 250. Marti'lsl4e. Va. {KsWl Harvid&lt;)
Api 2- Nashville 200, LebMon, Tenn. (1&lt;)19 Busch)
May 2-ORally Auto Parts 250, Kansas City, Ken.
(Jolnly Sa&lt;Ae&lt;)
May 14- Dowr 200, Dover. Del. (M: Amrola)
May 21 - Nonh Carorna Educallon Lollely 200. Conoord. N.C. (1&lt;)19 Busch)
,U1e 4 - WrlStar World Casoo 400k. Fort WJr'41. Texas
(Todd Bodine)
..k.ne 12 -1/F"N 200, Brooidyn, Mich. (Arc Arnlrola)
July 11 - Lucas 01 200, New1on. Iowa
July 16-Campi'lgWOIId200. Madson. II.
July 23- AAA lnsl.ranoe 200, lncianapolis
July 31 - Pbcono Mcultai1S 125, Long Ft&gt;nd, Pa
Aug. 7 - NashVIIe 200 (&amp;mne!), Lebanon. Tenn.
Aug. 14-Too Toug"l To Tame 200. Dal1i1glon. SC.
Aug.18-0Aeily200,8ris1ol. Tenn.
Aug. 27- Chcagoland 225, JoleC. I.
Sep. 3- Bult Ford Toug"l 225, SpMa. Ky.
Sep. 18-New ~200. Loudon, N.H.
Sep 25- Las Vegas 350, Las~
Oct. 23- Kroger 200, Marti'lsl4e, Va
Oct. 30- Mwllail Dew 250. TaJadega. Ala.
NOll. 5- L.ong1om 35()&lt;, Fort Wol1h. Texas
NOll. 12- Lucas Oi 150. A\OOdale, Ariz.
NOll. 19- Ford 200, Homestead. Fla.
2010 Or1ller Standings
1 Todd Bodne, 1,443
2. Arc Amrola. 1.31!8
3.T~Peters.

1Zl8

4. Ron Hornaday Jr. 1.273
5. Jol'nny Sauter 1 179

'

Rutlan

.

·.

.

:;:..

-

.

•

-

Dodge, Penske on upsWing ·
BY WILL GRAVES

son)

March 7 - Koba~ Tools 500 (Kurt Busch)
March 21 -Food City 500, Bris1ol, Tenn. (J111m1e
Johnson)
March 28._Goody's Fast Pa1n Ret10f 500, MartinsVIlle. Va. (Denny Hamlin)
Apri11 0 - Subway Fmsh Frt 600, AIIOndale. Ariz.
(Ryan Newman)
Apnl 18- SamsiXlg Mobile 500. Fort Wonh. Texas
(Denny HamliO)
Apnl 25 - Aaron's 499, Talladega. Ala. (Kevin HaMc:k)
May 1 - Heath Calhoun 400. Riclmond, Va. (Kyle
Busch)
May 8- Southern 500, Dariington, S.C. (Denny HamW1)
May 1~- Autism Speaks 400, Dowr, Del. (Kyle
Busch)
May 22- x·Sprint Showdown, Conoold. N.C. (Martin
TruexJr.)
• •
May 22 - x-NASCAR Sprint AP-Star Race, Conoold,
N C. (Kurt Busch)
May 30- Coca.cota 600, Conoold. N.C. (Kurt Busch)
June 6- Gkte FuSIOn ProGIIde 500, Long Pond
Pa (Denny Hamkn)
June 13- Heluva Good' Sour Cream Dips 400.
Brook1yn, MICh. (Denny Hamlin)
June 20 - Toyo«a/Saale Mart 350. Sonoma, Cald
June 27- Lenox lndustnal Tools 301. Loudon, N H
July 3 - Coke Zero 400 Powered By Coca-Cola Daytona Beach, Fla.
July 10- Ufelocl&lt;.oom 400, Jot.ec, Ill
July 25 - Brickyard 400. Indianapolis
Aug. 1 - Pennsylvania 500, Long FWd. Pa.
Aug. 8 - Hetuva Good! Sour Cream Dips at The Glen,
Watl(lnsGien, NY
Aug. 15- Carfnx 400, Broclk¥1, MICh.
Aug. 21 - hW1n Tools N~t Race. Bristol, Tenn.
Sep. 5- Labor Day Classic 500, Hampton, Ga
Sep. 11 .,- Richmond 400. Riclmond, Va.
Sep. 19- Sylvania 300, Loudon. N.H.
Sep. 26- AAA 400, Oo'o'er, Del.
Oct. 3 - Price Chopper 400, Kansas CAty, Kan.
Oct 10- Pepsi Max 400, Fontana, Calrt.
Oct. 16- NASCAR Banking 500, Conoold, N.C.
Oct. 24- TUMS Fast ReNef 500, Martll'lsville, Va
Oct 31 -AMP Energy 500, Talladega. Ala.
N011. 7- Lone Star 500, Fort Worth, Texas
NOll. 14 - Arizona 500. AIIOndale. Ariz.
NOll. 21 -Ford 400. Homeslead. Fla

'

ASSOCIATED PRESS

BROOKLYN. Mich.
Dodge president and CEO
Ralph Gilles records every
NASCAR Nationwide and
Sprint Cup race in an effort to
keep tabs on his company's
most visible car salesmen.
If Gilles can avoid being told
who
won
longtime
N A SCAR
owner
Roger
Penske often texts him results
- he makes sure to carve out
time in his packed schedule to
drink in one of racing's more
remarkable survivor stories.
A year after parent company
C hrysler needed a roughly $15
billion bailout to stay in business and Richard Petty
M otorsports' defection to Ford
left Penske Racing as Dodge's
last
major
foothold
in
NASCAR, things are looking
up both in the showroom and
on the track. Way up.
Klilt Busch is fourth in the
Cup standings heading into
Sunday's race in California
and already has two wins this
season, three if you throw in
the All-Star race.
Teammate Brad Keselowski
is
dominating
at
the
Nationwide leveL where he
has a healthy 274-point lead
over Carl Edwards. Justin
Allgaier is third in points and
picked up the first Nationwide
win of his career at Bristol in
March.
Toss in the highly anticipated debut of the company's
new
Challenger-based
Nationwide car next month at
Daytona, and it's all Gilles
can do to sit still long enough
to take in the laps.
"I'm on the edge of my seat
every weekend watching this
stuff,'' Gilles said. "It's great to
see, and I think our brand is
getting a lot of air time, which
is fantastic.''
Sudden ly, Dodge's woeful
2009 seems like a long time

ago.

.

Save for Busch's solid
fourth-place 'inish in the
Chase last fall. 2009 was a disaster for the company that first

favorites Jimmie Johnson a
Denny Hamlin when the Chase
begins in September.
Things are a bit more crmvded in Natiom.vide. where
Kesclowski and Allgaier have
become the circuit's most
potent one-two punch .
And it's at that level where
Dodge hopes its resurgence on
the track could translate into
cars driving off the lot.
Nationwide's new cars.
\Vhich will race for the, first
time at Daytona on July 2. are
in essence a return to
NASCAR's roots. They are.
designed to more closely
resemble the factory cars
they're based on and create the
kind of brand recognition
that's been missinc for vears.
particularly in cup. where
David Eulltt/Kansas City Star!MCT often the only way to tell
Roger Penske watched his driver Ryan Briscoe during the Road Toyota from a Ford from a
Runner Turbo Indy 300 at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Dodge is to steal a glimpse at
whatever sticker is plastered to
Kansas, on Sunday, April 26, 2009.
the grille.
Dodge's :\ationwide entrY.
reached Victory Lane in to becoming. in esse,pce, a facwill be based off th.
NASCAR 57 years ago.
tory team .
Penske's other two cars, the
"Ifl had a choice. I'd like to Challenger. and Gilles hopes
No . 77 driven by Sam Hornish be the only one with the manu- the new de~ign will help the
Jr. and the No. 12 split between facturer because I know I'd get car cain fans. If Penske's
and
David all the attention," Penske said. Natio~w,.ide program can susKeselowski
Stremme, combined for just 'T m the prettiest girl in town tain its momentum when the
series transitions into the new
seven top-lOs, all of them by right now I guess."
Hornish.
The lack of a competitor cars. that c;,houldn't be a probT hings were hardly better on within the brand has simplified lem.
While Gilles kno\vs the drithe business side of things. the line of communication.
Sales lagged during the eco- Penske has no concerns about vers are the star-.. the
nomic downturn and compa- P odge holding back or favor- Nationwide initiative will allow
nywide financial restructuring ing another team. The compa- the cars to "share the limelight."
For an industry slow!) on the
slowed funding to RPM, which ny is all in with Penske. · .
· went through two rounds of
''1 know people thought hav- rebound - Gilles said sales
layoffs and payroll adjust- ing one team would mean we for the Challenger during May
ments. RPM managed to were less committed. and it's w·ere the best since the car was
squeak Kasey Kahne into the actually the opposite:' Gilles reintroduced 2? yeai·s ago Chase, but he faded to 1Oth said. "Now we do not have to it's a welcome development.
Despite Pcnske 's strong
and the performances seemed divide our attention so much."
rote once the team announced
One disadvantage. howe\er. showing. however. Dodge has
is that Busch qfte'n finds him- no plans to expand it's
it was moving to Ford.
involvement.
Gilles, a former sports .car self as the only Dodge driver in NASCAR
and motorcycle racer, stressed the top 10 during a given Penske is so pleased with the
the company was committed to weekend. Sorry. but help usu- arrangement he has no plans of
looking elsewhere and anticistaying - and winning - at ally isn't coming.
"You always feel like you're pates working on a contra~
the Cup 1evel when he took
over last fall.
running an uphill battle." he extenston at some point. ·
"With the success we've h·
Penske says he's never con- said.
sidered looking elsewhere
It's one Busch has been able in both sene-;, it would be ·
despite the carmaker's finan- to handle. He swept the All- advantage for Dodge to sta)
cial struggles. Part of it was Star race and the 600 at with us and support us in the
out of loyalty. Part of it was Charlotte last month and could future:· he said. "That\ my
because he saw an advantage be a dark horse behind expectation ...

a

In The Pits: Hamlin must avoid Buschlike collapse
BY JENNA FRYER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Kyle
Busch bolted out of the gate in
?008, racking up eight quick
wins while moving to the top of
the Splint Cup Series standings.
But when the title was on the
line, he crumbled.
Busch stumbled in the Chase
for the Sprint Cup championship opener. He declared his
title hopes over after the second
of 10 races, and he finished
I Oth in the final standings.
Two years later, teammate
Denny Hamlin needs to make
sure that doesn't happen to him.
It's Hamlin that Joe Gibbs Racing
now has hitting on all cylinders,
and Sunday's win at Michigan
International Speedway was his
career best and series-leading fifth
of the season.
If the Chase began today,
Hamlin would be the top seed
with a 20-point advantage over
four-time defending series
champion Jimmie Johnson.
That, however, assures little.
Busch learned that firsthand in
what had been shaping up as a

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dream first season with JGR.
He won 21 races spanning
NASCAR 's top three series
that year. He was so unstoppable it seemed he could win
. anywhere. That included
l nfineon Raceway, a road
course that had vexed Busch
every year and the first two
days of his visit there in 2008 .
But his No. 18 crew threw
everything at the Toyota that
weekend . and Busch broke
through for his first victory on
a road course .
It's similar to what Hamlin
and his No. II team experienced at Michigan last weekend when their car was junk
through two days of practice .
Crew chief Mike Ford made
significant ch&lt;fnges heading
into race day, and the result
was a rocket ship that built
leads of nearly 10 seconds.
"We made probably more
changes than we have all year,"
Ford said. "Friday we were
what I consider honible . We
weren't a top- 15 team . We made
some big adjustments going into
Saturday. Really didn't think we
had a shot to win."

In winning, Hamlin proved
he's a legitimate title contender. He's just got to avoid
the same pitfalls that sabotaged
Busch. And, so far. Hamlin
seems on the right track.
For starters. JGR seems
much improved. Busch and
Hamlin have a combined seven
victories through 15 Cup races
this season and are second and
third in the standings Busch
trails series leader Kevin
Harvick by 22 points while
Hamlin is 47 back.
Meanwhile, third JGR driver
Joey Logano is showing steady
improvement in his second season in the series. With four consecutive finishes of 13th or better. he ·s 17th in the standings.
That company wide consistency can make JGR only
stronger in the long run and
when the stakes are highest someth ing the organ ization
struggled with in 2008.
When Busch lost the championship. he had a mechanical
problem in the Chase opener
and a motor fa ilure the next
week. Last season , when
Hamlin was making a run at

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the title. he had tv.·o engine
failures in the Chase.
JGR knows ho\v to win
championships - t,he team did
it in 2000 with Bobbv Labonte
and in 2002 and ioos \\ ith
Tony Ste\' art. The trick is figuring out ho'' to do it "'ith
more than one contending driver without sacrificing anything in equipment reliability.
That's \'.here Ford comes in.
He is as even-tempered as
the) come in the garage, and
he does a tremendous job of
keep1ng his cre\\' focused. Few
outside
distractions
a~­
allowcd inside the No.
hauler. which sometimes
seems as if it's operating as a
smgle ·car team.
After an accident that left
Hamlin and Stewart \.vith
wounded race cars during
Da) ton a Speed\\ eeks two
years ago. it seemed as if most
of the additional JGR personnel on hand attended to the
repairs on Stewart's ~o. 20 car.
Half a garage awa). the No. II
team worked alone, almost
preferring to take an usagainst-the world attitude.

W

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