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                  <text>: Page 86 •

The Daily Sen,_mel

www.mydailysentinel.oom

Thursday, May lU, 2009

Browns' Ciibbs wants new ·deal

'

First Baptist Church
Memorial Day
observance, A7

Payday lenders
close many Ohio ·
offices, A2

CLEVELAND (AP)
said in a phone interview. Randy Lerner, has ever
Browns wide receiver and " All we are asking is to have made any promises to Josh
return specialist Josh Cribbs meaningful talks. Anything Cribbs with regard to his
is not attending Cleveland's would be acceptable to J?sh contract status ."
.
voluntary minicamp as he other !hail, ' You are plarmg. Rickert said Cribbs is no!
tries to g~t the team to rene- with your current deal."
demanding to be traded and
gouate h1s contract.
Cribbs is scheduled to has not told the Browns to ·
Cribbs, who has four years make $620,000, $635,000, use Devin Hester's fourremaining on a six-year, $650,000 and $790,000 over year, $40 million extension
$6 .7 million contract he the next four years.
·
with $15 million guaranteed
Rickert said members of as a template for talks.
signed in 2006, wants a new
deal and his agent , J.R. the Browns ' organization
"Josh IS not saying, 'Give
Rickert, said the club's pre- made previous assurances to me a deal or else,'" Rickert
vious management team Cribbs that his contract said ;
Browns
coach
Eric
made promises to renegoti- would be reworked.
ate with the former . Pro
"Some of them are still Mangini is expected to comBowler.
here , some are not~d. menton Cribbs' situation on
Rickert said he has had ''They told him his contract Thursday, the final day of
the mimcamp and the only
some pialogue with the · would be addressed ."
The Browns said in a · one open to media.
team, but said talks "have
not been meaningful."
statement that "no one from
Mangini has discussed the
"I don't think we're being the current Browps organi" possibility of using Crjbbs
unreasonable at all," Rickert zation , including owner on defense next season . /

•

•

~

Printed on tOO%
Rec:ycl&lt;d NewspriQt ~·

SPORTS
•.
'

• District Roundup.
·See Page Bl

Vick out of prison, heads for home in Virginia
APphoto

New England Patriots backup quarterback/Kevin O'Connell drops back to pass during foot·
ball practice at the team's training facility in Foxborough, Mass., on Wednesday.

Patriots on field, but no Tom Brady
FOXBOROUGH , Mass. that."
Cassel stepped in when
still the backup quarterback Brady was hurt in the first
for the New England half of the first game and led
Patriots.
New England to an 11-5
' This time it's:intentional. record. The Patriots missed
.O'Connell moved up from the playoffs on a tiebreaker.
No. 3 to No. 2 last year .0 Connell played in two
when Tom Brady was games last season while
· i!ljured in the season opener backing up Cassel, complet.
and Matt Cassel was pro- ing ·4 of 6 passes for 23
moted to starter. Cassel was yards . When Cassel was
traded to the Kansas City traded to the Chiefs along
Chiefs this offseason, and with linebacker Mike Vrabel
now O'Connell will be the for a second-round pick, it
c;me who steps in if Brady is was a sign .to Patriots fans
hurt.
·
that Brady .was expected to
"Last year was an unfortu- be fully recovered from the
nate situation. but I was able knee injury that kept him
to get a lot of repetitions that virtually the entire season.
I wouldn 't have gotten as a
And when the Patriots
third
quarterback," decided, not to bring in an
O'Connell said Wednesday experienced backup, it was a
after the team wrapped up a si~n that they trusted·
v.oluntary, three-day mini- 0 Connell to do the job.
camp. "No matter bow far
O'Connell said he hopes
back I am on the depth chart, he can learn from Brady, a
I' just have to be ready. Matt two-time Super Bowl MVP
was a good example of and ·the 2007 NFL MVP, the
(AP) - Kevin O'Connell is

way Cassel did.
"He's working as hard as
everybody else around
here," O'Connell said. ''He's
doing everrthing he can. I'm
just look•ng forward to
working with him the rest of
the season."
Brady was spotted with ·
new wife Gisele Bundchen
at a charity gala on Tuesday
night, but he was not at practice on Wednesday. Brady
had been working out at the
stadium this week, a·Patriots
spokesman said, but the
organized team activity was
designed for rookies and
free agents who needed the
time to get used· to the playbook.
"I'm learning the system,
so I 'Can compete without
hesitation,'' said free agent .
running back fred Taylor,
who spent his first 11 years
with
the
Jacksonville
Jaguars. "I don't want to feel
like a rookie out there."

..Vick needs mone~ but does ·the
NFL need Vick?
Michael · Vick hit the
highway on his first day of
semi-freedom, setting off
on a I ,I 76-mile road trip
from Kansas to his Virginia
home, where he will make
the transitipn· from prisoner
to his new career as day
l!!borer/Humane Society
.
orusader. ·
For some strang(1 reason
Vick brought along a videographer to re~ord the trek,
bathroom pit stops and all.
There was security, too,
j\ISI in case some deranged
PETA sort lurked at a
Waffle House along the
Way.
; There's a good chance
)'OU can read all about it in
the near future. The whole
sordid Vick saga may even
make the big screen someday, if plans for book and
movie deals pan out.
· Expect a lot of tears, and
not JUSt from those sad~~~ned by what Vick and his
poss~ liked to do with the}r
fightmg · dogs . No, th1s
would be a tale of redemptl' on and ·rebirth about a
man who once had e'veryihing and now has nothing .
· Nothing. that is, if you
fd1et the two lavish homes
lin . three luxury cars that
ate still in the stable . But
tflose could go , too, if a
federal · bankruptcy judge
·d-oesn't like what he sees
when Viele appears before
him next month with a new
plan to pay the millions
owed his creditors.
' The man who once disririssed a $1 ,000 gift to his
rnother as "chump change"
will need to work three
weeks in his new construefion job to earn that much
after .taxes. His other duties
lfith the Humane Society
have yet to be agreed upon,
tiut the payoff from them
will come in a diffe rent
form of currency.
Together, the two gigs
won't be enough to pay the
ii}ectric bill or fuel up the
!lange R~ver. They won't
even bcgm to make a dent
in the !;8 million or so the
bankruptCY judge estimates
Yick will need to make

They will be the people
holding up pictures of
maimed annuals outside of
stadiums if Vick is allowed
· to play in the NFL again.
They 're the ones who will
rally around calls by animal
activists to boycott anything that Vick is involved
in.
But, just as I think it is
over each of the next three inevitable Roger Goodell ·
years to pay everxone off. · will reinstate Viele's right to
Granted, a book or movie play, it's just as certain that
could help. But, really, some team will risk offenddon't we know enough ing sponsors and fans and
about Vick already? Would take a chance on him .
anyone reach into their
lt probably won't happen
pocket to leam more?
this sea.Son. Goodell says
My guess is no. And that he won't ·even speak to
means any chance Vick has Vick until his semi-house
of emerging from his finan - arrest ends July 20, a· few
cial mess . depends on one days before training camps
t·hing .
open.
He has to make it on the
It shouldn't happen this
football field.
season . lt's too soon and, as
The
question
then l pointed out the other day, ,
becomes , will someone the ·wounds are still way
give him that chance?
too raw.
Ask the players around
But it will happen. As
the NFL, as various sure as someone like Jerry
Associated Press writers Jones or AI Davis still owns
·
did on Wednesday,
and the a team • 1't w•'IJ happen ·
unanimous opinion is that
The usual list of suspects,
of
some team should. To a
. course • beg•·ns and ends
man , tliey . said Vick has. w1~h the c;owboys and
paid a huge price for h.is ·Ra1ders
v r · Ne1ther tea m h,as
misdeeds and should be e e. been able to res1st
w I
d b k .
h addmg a "problem" to the
e come
ac mto t e roster, and Vick would like:eeargue, the sooner the bet- ly be· available cheap, at
·
least at first
"He ' s pat'd h'IS debt," Sal'd
. teams could
A few other
49ers ktck returner Allen be in the mix , perhaps the
Rossum, who play~d thr~ Redskins or the Dolphins .
seasons .. with V•ck ID Most others, though, will
Atlanta .. He . deserves an wash their ·hands of it all.
opportun..ty hke anybody either taking the moral high
else. He s. ~ . ~ood guy at ground or saying they're
heart and 1t s lime for peo- happy with the quarter- .
pie to let him move on wi~h backs they have.
his hfe and get ~ack m th1s
Vick 's long joume.y back
game, where he s one of the began Wednesday with a
best play~rs out there. I've long drive home , his future
known h1m for five years. no more certain than it was
He's a good guy." .
before he 'was sent to
':' lot .of dog owners prison . People who have
m•ght d1spute that. So talked to him say he seems
might others sickened by genuinely remorseful , and
the report of a confidential eager to try to show that
informant who said that in he's not the monster a Jot of
.addition to killing dogs, Americans believe he is .
Vick . and others would
If he's able to do that,
sometimes toss household getting someone to pay him
pets in with their · fighting to play football might
dogs just for the fun of it. become a lot easier.

HAMPTON, Va. (AP) - ·on condition of anonymity that will depend more on
Michael Vick is out of because the person was not deeds than words.
· prison. and headed home, authorized to comment on
"It goes beyond, 'Has he
broke and reviled for run- the matter. The person did paid his debt to society?'
ning a dogfighting ring, out not know the reason for the Because I think that from &lt;I
hopeful for a second video~rapher.
·
legal standpoint and· financhance at his once-charmed
Avotding the media will ciallr and pe!sonally. h~
· life as a star NFL quarter- be tougher in Hampton, has,' Blank sa 1d at an NFL
back .
where he will serve two owners'
meeting
The suspended quarter- months iii home confine- · Wednesday.
back served 19 months in ment . His five-bedroom
Part of Vick's problem
prison on the dogfighting brick house is at the end of was the company he kept i
conviction that capped one a cul-de-sac, where at least Blank .said, and weeding
of the most astonishing a half-dozen satellite trucks out the bad influences and
falls in sports history - and several reporters and associating with people
one that stole his wealth camera crews awaited his who have his best interests
·
return. Out back , between at hea(t will be a key to
and popularity.
"Football is on the back- the. house and a pond, redemption and a possible
burner for now,'' said agent mamtenance . workers got return to the NFL.
· Joel Segal, who negotiated the swimming pool ready. ·
·~There's the expression
Vick's 10-year, $130 milVick was sentenced to 23
lion contract with the months in federal prison for 'you are what you eat .' To ·
Atlanta Falcons but will be financing a dogfigh'ting some e)(tent, you are who
asking for substantially less · conspiracy. He 'won't be you bang with too, and that'
if his tarnished client's sus- released from federal cus- does have an·effect on lives
pension is lifted by NFL tody ·until July 20, but his for all of us,'' he said.
Commissioner
Roger departure
· . from
Viele's
NFL
future
Goodell.
. Leavenworth begins a new remains a mystery.
"Mike's already paid his
Falcons owner Arthur chapter. .
"It's a happy day for him dues," Falcons receiver and
Blank said Vick deserves a
second chance, but it won 't to be startm~ this part of former teammate Roddy
be with Atlanta, which has the process,' said Larry White said Wednesday. "He·
severed ties with its former Woodward ,
Viele's w~nts . to play foo.tball . l
star.
Virginia-based attorney, .th1nk 1f he gets rernstat7d
Vick , who turns 29 in said. " He looks forward to before the season, there 11.
June, left the federal peni- meeting the challenges he be a couple of teams .that
teiltiary in Leavenworth, has to meet."
will be after him and giv~&lt;
Kan.,
by
car early
His ultimate goal .is a· him a chance to play." . .
Wednesday, undetected by return to the NFL ,. .but
People for the EthiCal
hordes of reporters · who Woodward said Vick's first Treatment of Animals said ·.
had staked out the prison . . priority "is spending time Vick lloesn't deserve tha~
· He was accompanied on with his childrtn and his chance until he passes psy•
the I ,200-mile ride by his loved ones ."·
chological tests proving be
Chief among his chat- is capable of feeling gen.
fiancee, Kijafa Frink, a
videographer and several· Ienges is rehabilitating his uine remorse. ·
·
members ofa security team image and convincing the . "Our position would be
assembled
by
Vick 's public and Goodell that he .the opportunity to play in ·
lawyers and advisers, a per- is truly sorry for his crime, the NFL is a privilege, not a
son familiar with the plans and that he is prepared to right ;" PETA spokesman ·
told The Associated Press live a different hfe - g_oals Dan Shannon said.

•

J. REED

Lafleur, 23, also of Athens Cpunty,
BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
were each charged with murder,
aggravated burglary and robbery
POMEROY
The • Meigs and face aggregate sentences of 15 ·
County Grand Jury has indicted an years to life plus 18 years,
Athens County man and woman on Prosecuting Attomey Colleen S.
charges relating to the .murder of ail Williams said.
Albany man earlier this month.
. Both are in jail in lieu of$500,000
Trinity Whitcraft, 29, Stewart, · and $250,000 cash bonds, respecalso known as Ty Tolley, and Nicol tively, after initial appearances in

BY BRIAN

f

•

•

•

Meigs County Court a week ago .
They were· arrested after using a
debit card allegedly stolen from the
victim, Winfield Hardiman of
Darst Road, at several Albany-area
businesses.
·
Investigators from the Ohio Bureau
of Criminal Identification and
Investigation believe Whitcraft. and
Lafleur intended to rob.Hardiman.An

autopsy determined that Hardiman
died of blunt force tnluma.
Williams said the BCI; sheriff and
prosecutor's staff made the arrests·
as the result of a "determination to
follow every lead ." .
Both Whttcraft and Lafleur have
prior criminal convictions in Athens
County Common Pleas . Court,
Williams said .

Special
. ,prosecutor
expected in
police shooting
investigation ·
BY BRIAN

Pag, A3

~ .Howard English sr:, at

.• BObby Joe WoHe•.74

IN'sii&gt;E .

POMEROY - Athens ·
County ·
PrOsecuting
Attorney C. David Warren
will be appointed special
prosecuting attomey . n'l the
case of a police office( discharging a firearm during
his employment, resulting in
the injury of another person.
Me1gs
County ·
Commissioners.
and
Prosecuting ·
Attorney
Colleen Williams have asked ·
Judge Freid W. Crow lli to
request Warren's appoi~J.t·
ment; . . Commissioners
approved · t.he · reques.t at
Thursday's regular.meeting.
The request does not name
the officer involved in the
investi~ation , but on April
IS, M1ddleport Patrolman
Steven Koebel fired two
shots at James Gray lV,
Gallipolis·, . who has since
been tndicted for fleeing and
operating a motor vehicle
Iinder the .influence.

• ·Ariel to.offer theater .·
wor~h9P· See Pllge :Al
• Uotjl she admits rieed
.
.
.
.
. Charlene
for help, she's a ticking
These students were recipients of scholarship awards at the Meigs High School awards assembly Thursday. They are left
to rigtlt, front, Ashley l;lell,.Devon S0ulsby, Noah Hajlvandi, Sarah Hubbard1Jahanna Lydic, Sam9:ntha Pridemo~. Jessica
bomb. See Page A2
• House panel advances Holliday Jamie Bailey, Ruebel Davis, and Adrian Bolin; second· row, Je.~nifer Fife, Ama~da Gilkey, Clay Bolin, Amber
Hockman, Lian Hoffman, Morgan Lerites, Kim Swisher, Calee Reeves, Pliirla Meadows; third row, James Welsh, L.lfldsey
global warming bill.
Lyons, Courtney Mayes, Matt Hoskeri, Caleb 6evan, Catie Wolfe, KerriVan.Reeth, Ashley Life ; fourth row, Aaron Oliphant,
SeePageAJ
Eugene .PatteiSon, Kelsey SauteiS, ~ndrew O'Bryant, Mason Metts, Ripley Raubenolt; b~ck row, Morgan Kennedy,
Chelsea
Smallwood, Briari Rice, Chris ·l&lt;!rig, Catlin Swartz, Crockett Crow, Zachary Story.
~ 1stclass gmduates
·
,
·
:tram Ohio early college
0
· school, See Page A3
· Investigation has led the ·
... Giving credit
where credit's due.
·
.See Page A6 .
Bv CHARU§NE HOEFLICH •· Presidential . · Scholarship · valued ·at $26,000; and Kimberly Swisher;
Koebel is back at work, but
• A Hunger For More.
HOEFliCHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
valued.at $54,000; Matthe'!" Brian Rice, four-year schol.Buckeye Rural .Electric ..iuse - ·Prosecutor, A3
See Page A6
Hosken who was awarded a arship to Miami University .Cooperative Scholarship,
· • SUpport concert for .
POMEROY - Thursday 'four-year scholarship by valued at approximately $750, Clay Bolin;
at
·Meigs High School was a Rio Grande · Community $27,000.
Dennis
Bo~gs! Adam
band slated Tuesday at
Grande
Scholarships awarded, ,the Grim Scholarship, $30Q, Southern.
day of · recognition for College/Rio
:.RVHS. See Page A7
scholastic excellence and University a · scholarship amounts, and the recipients Devan Soulsby;
approv~s
•• Church plans Puppet
Friday
Businessmen
the awarding of 'over valued at $45,000; Clay · were as follows; Archery
$400,000 in scholarships to Bolin, a four-year scholar- scholarship, $2;000 to Jacob KS~holarship, $500, · Chris
•KalliOke Theatre show.
ship and grant7from Riffle; archery scholarships
tmes;
graduating seniors .
..;See
• ·Page. A7 .
College,
valued
of
$500,
Chelsea
Heidelbe(g
College Bv Bl'Tit SERGENT
Heidelberg
Top scholarship awards
and .!vlatt Presidential Scholarship, BSEAOENTOMY!lA.ILYSENTINEL.coM
went to James Ernie Welsh at $47 ,200; Chris Kimc;s, 8 Smallwood
.

eigs High a.·. ch.ie.·vers receive recogn.ition
· Thousands given Ill scholars~ip awards ·~~~~$h1~:Brya~;?,!i~
M.

II!!!!!!!!.:=====

J. REED·

BREEDOMYOAilYSENTINEL.COM

.. I

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·

Memorial
Day Horse
Show set

Detelta on Page A2

INDEX
a 'SilCI'IONS ~ 16 PAGES ·.

Annie's Mailbox

A2

A2
¢alendars
&lt;;:lassifieds
.• ,89-6
.·. )37
Comics
•·
.. :~
Editorials .
Faith
AS-7
88
NASCAR
'
Obituaries
A3
Sports
B Section
Weather
A2
'

who received the Dr. James full tuition music scholar- Haskin; Mason ·Metts, a $10,000 a Jears for four
··
·f
years, an
Heidelberg
RACINE - Personnel
H. and Nellie Rowley ship · (no value announced) ~,our year tu1hon
grant rom . College University Grant,
Jewell-Manasseh Cutler from Marshall University; Wilmngton College valued $I ,800 a year fodouryears, Qlatters were front and center at the most recent meet·
Scholars Award to Ohio Catie . Wolfe, , Malone at $26,000;
Clay Bohn;
University, valued at over .University, four-year schol·
Bedford
Township
Holzer CliniC Science ing of the Southem Local .
$80,000; Amber Hockman arship, valued at $60,000; Scholarships, $500, Ruche! award, $300, Jennifer Fife; Board of Education.
The Board accepted the ·
and
Samantha
who re.ceived a four-year Mason Metts, an award Davis
PluH ,..·Ac:hleven, A3 resignation of Carla Shuler
College . from Wilmington College Pridemore; ·
Muskingum
as a teache-r at Southern
High School due to retire- .
Prosecuting
ment . Shuler taught · at
Attorney
.Southern Local for 38 years .
Colleen
The Board also approved
Williams prehiring the following on sup·
pl~mental contracts for the
sents the
2009·J 0 school year with
."Golden .
salaries reflecting . the
Handcuff"
Bv BETH SERGENT
Southern
Local Education
award to Sgt.
BSEAGENTOMYOt.ILYSENI'INELCOM
aJiY:ement:
Association
Danny
Leonard of the Alan Crisp, athleuc diteetor
PORrLAND - For the
and head girls basketball
sheriff's
fourth year, the Ohio River
coach , Jeff Cald'!Vell, head
department
Producers, a group comboys basketball coach, Kyle
Sheriff Robert
prised of Racine Southern
Wickline, reserve boys baspeegle and
FFA Alumni, are putting on
ketball
coach,
Chad
.Assistant
an annual Memorial Day
Hubbard,
eighth
grade
girls
Prosecuting
Horse Show which is one of
basketball
coach,
Kati
· Attorney are
the largest in the ORP's
Hubbard, seventh gra(le
also pictured.
.
girls
basketball coach.
yearly schedule .
Sublll- ~1&gt;1110
Board member Don Smith
The ORP hold the horse
voted against the motion,
shows monthly from spring
Richard Cooksey, J.oe
until October but tnlditionCornell , Jon . Sargent,
ally the Memorial Day
"Danny worked very hard Rashel Yates were hired to
. "It is· a way to thank and
Horse Show is the largest. STAFF REPORT
COM
recognize officers who on these cases," Williams work the summer science
This year's show will once MDSNEWSOMYIJol\llYSENT1NEL
'
exhibit
professionalism and said. "On behalf of the child and math enrichment camp.
again be held at the show
excellence
in the perfor- . victims especially, we just The stipend for the camp is
POMEROY
Sergeant
ring behind the Ponland
mance
of
'
t
heir
duties, and wanted to thank him in this
Community Center. Warms Daniel Leonard of the extraordinary dedication to public way ·and let him $500. The follbwing certified personnel were hited to
ups begin at I0 a.m. and the Meigs County Sheriff's the public ," Williams said.
know that we appreciate bis work summer school at
Department
has
been
named
show starts at IJ a.m. on .
Leonard is a 20-year vet- efforts."
the fitst recipient of the
Southern Elementary for
Monday. There is a $3 "Golden
The name of eaeh recipient $23 per hour, not to ex~
Handcuff Award." eran county employee. He
grounds fee and most events
Prosecuting · Attorney was chosen for the award will be engraved on a tillvelare .$2 except for the more Colleen · S. Williams .has for his work on a number of ing plaque, and each recipi- $1 ,288: Carolyn Robinson,
Pluse,.. Southem. A3
ent will receive a certificate.
Plnse see Horse~ AJ begun the quarterly award. child sexual abuse cases.

')

~ t009 Ohio Valley Publlshlng Co.

•

·teonard honored with prosecutor's award.

'

.'

�PageA2

BYTHEBEND
Until she a4mits need for Ariel to offer theater workshop

The Daily Sentinel

GALLIPOLIS - Area during a series of challengyouth, entering grades 3-12. ing, imaginative activiti~.
with a flair for the dramat- Workshop attendants will
ics,
are encouraged to attend be cast in a variety of roles
BY KATHY MITCHELL
'.'Ben," who is very loving
"Monster
in the Closet for the production "Monster
AND MARCY SUGAR
and treats her well. The
Theater
Workshop."
in the Closet".
problem is, Frannie and Ben
·
The
6
week
workshop
Their hard work will result
Dear Annie: My adult el)joy· going out with large
daugh ter \ behavior is caus- gFoups of people whom my will be .held at the Ariel - in 3 performances of
Hal on Tuesdays, Monster in the Closet,
in~ a great deal of emotional
husband and I don't enjoy Pater
Wednesdays,
and including a performance for
pam in my family .."Carole" being with. Frannie is conThursdays.
June
9
-July
19 the local area daycares at a
. has a " olellt temper that vinced that the reason we with daytime performances
reduced rate. Workshop
makes everyone - even her don) socialize with them is on July 12th , 16th, and attendants
also have the
sweet-tempered husband because I don't approve of 19th. The workshop will be opportunitywill
to
be
involved in
cower in fear. About six her and Ben.
presented
by
Gallia
County
·
several
outreach
and promomonths ago. our entire famiI have told her that we
Joseph Wright.
tional activities including the
ly attendec.l a large party she love spending time with the Native,
The Monster in the Closet annual River Recreation's
and her husband. were giv- two of them, but hinted that workshop will provide Fourth of July Parade.
mg. The mormng after. their friends are a little too approximately 20 area youth
·The show "Monster in the
Carole got into . a raging, rough around the edges for the opportunity to study and Closet:' is about a little girl
swearing screaming match . us (they hang out in bars. panicipate in the various . named Emily and she has a
with her father, which left . smoke and ride motorcycles aspects of producing a show. big problem. Not only is she
him in rears. Since then, - which my husband and I . Students will explore the sent to bed just as she reachthere has been no contact don't enjoy). But she con- theater world through· a es the highest level of her
between them.
· tinues to invite us to join number of interactive acting new video game, but there's
Carole has tried to manip- . them with these people aild
creative dramatic activi- a monster in her closet!
ulate me into j)eing on her then gets upset when I and
ties and games.
What she doesn't know is
side in this argument, but I refuse. Am I being selfish
Students will explore that Murray, the closet moowork hard to stay neutral. A and snobby? - Running character
development, ster, doesn't mean any harm
few days ago, .I received a Out of Excuses
vocal projection and enun- - he only wants to play
long e-mail from her saying
Dear Running: Of ciation, physical acting, Emily's new video game.
she has been waiting six course not. Are these Ben's production elements, and Murray's boss, the Dream
months for some sign from friends? lf so, Frannie may more. Students will work on King, has heard about his
her father that he wants her be trying to fit in, in which solo and ream performances goofmg off on ihe job, and
in his life . I forwarded the case; she may actually be
e-mail to my husband, asking for your support
thinking maybe tnis was the when she socializes with
opening he's been hoping them. Otherwise, issue your
for. He picked up the phone own invitations to Frannie
and called her. As soon as and Ben so she can see that
CINCINNATI (AP) - ·
she heard his voice, she you warit to spend time More than a third of the
went into ·yet another rant with the two.of them, but on payday lending . offices . in
about how he has ruined her your terms . .
Ohio have closed since the
life and then slammed
!)ear Annie:
"Just industry lost a November
down the phone. He was Curious" asked if it would ballot fight to overturn
devastated.
be good manners for her to restrictions on bow much
. My first loyalty is to my go to the funeral home to interest lenders can charge.
husband. I know I should see her ex-husband of 36
There were about 1,600
'try to keep in touch with years when he dies.( under- retail locations across Ohio
Carole , even though her stand the need not to upset when the new interest rules
behavior is totally unacceP.t- the widow or create a dis- went into effect. last year,
able. But solnetimes I'd ltke turbance. But visiting hours state officials said. About
to walk away and never deal are for the convenience of 960 remain, and those are .
with her again. I've suggest- the family. Anyone can go under fire from critics who
ed counseling, but" . she to a funeral home and view want to enact even t.ougher
refuses, always saying ·the a body at times other than rules beyond the 28 perCent
problem is with the other what . is specified in the cap on interest.
person, not herself. Can you newspaper.
Interest rates on payday
suggest a way for me to get
Unless "Curious" specifi- loans used to range up to
cally wants to be seen l;ly the almost 400 percent when
through this mess? Carole's Mother .
new wife and others, she
on an annual
Dear Mother: Carole could pay her respects early, computed
··
basis.
sounds like a handful, and cry her eyes out or cuss him .
Payday
loans
work
this·
we'd guess she has s~me to the skies, and no one
way: A borrower goes to a
mental health Issues. If your .would be the wiser. check-cashing
company and
. •
•
.
M~~
husband wants to re-estab- Florida Grandma
writes
a
check.
The compa- · This Nov. 6, 2008 file photo shows a customer entering a Payroll Advance location in
!ish contact, he should write
-Annie's Mailbox is writ·
Carole a letter - not to ten by Kathy Mitchell and ny gives the person cash, Cincinnati. More than il third of the payday lending offices in Ohio have closed since the
rehash the . argument or Marcy Sugar, longtime edi- minus a fee, and agrees not industry lost a November, 2008 ballot fight to overturn restrictions on Interest rates that
chastise her, but to simply tors of. the Ann lAnders to cash the check until his or used to range up to almost 400 .percent.
say he loves her and hopes column. Please e-maUyour her payday.
Payday lenders had said :i# ,; ..
week loan, which would be
they can be closer. All questions to anliiesmail·
the
limits
enacted
by
the
·
,
'
the equivalent of a 391 perfuture
communication ·box@comcast.net, or write
Legislature
last
year
wo.uld
,;t
,
·
cent
annual interest rate.
should tle kept superficial to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
put
them
out
of
business.
The
industry says its.
and brief. Carole is a tick.ing Box 118190, Chicago, JL
In
November,
Ohio
voters
loans
are
designed to be
bomb, and until she admits 60611. To find out more
the
state
law
that
upheld
shan-term,
so annualizing··
she needs help, it serves no about Annie's Mailbox,
annual
interest
rate
on
caps
the cost is bogus. Payday
purpDSe to set her off.
· and read features by other
lynders say .if consumers
Dear Annie: I have been Creators Syndicate wrilers payday loans and limits the
want to include fees in
· friends with "Frannie" for . and canoonists, visit the number of loans per custo
four
a
year.
tomer
interest
calculations, bank
over20 years. She recently Creators· Syndicate Web
"The
change
has
been
a
fees
for
overdraft charges
began dating a ·great guy, page at www.creators.com.
can soar into quadruple:
· company,"
tremendous · blow
the · 2~~~l~~~:~
said ro Ted
digits.
Saunders, chief executive
Some customers still say'
A,ttorney ·
of
Columbus-based
that
payday loans are best
are . taking ·
CheckSmart. "I've closed
for their needs.
similar to · "Are you going to loan
Friday...Mostly
sunny. winds around 5 mph. Chance 10 or 15 stores, and I've got
Interest
up .· me $200 for two weeks for
more on the watch list. We
Isollted showers and thunder- of rain 20 percent.
: :t- $30? I don't think so," said
storms in the afternoon. Highs
Sunday and Sunday were on a growih spurt until
this
happened."
Linda Coleman, 28, a
in the mid 80s. Light and vari- night...Partly cloudy. Highs
Saunders said he's cur it also restricted payday by Ohio have resulted in the machine operator and .nui'sable winds .. .Becoming south- in the lower 80s. Lows
about.
100 jobs statewide lending.
elimination of jobs, store ing student from suburban
.east around 5 mph in the around 60 .
and
now
employs
about
750
Other
chains
have
taken
closures and ·impacted cus- Colerain Township.
'
afternoon. Chance of rain 20
Memorial Day~ ..Panly
in
Ohio
and
about
I
,400
similar
aCtion.
Fort
Worth,
tomers.
It's
a
disservice
to
She
was
&lt;lt
a
CheckSmart
.
percent.
. · sunny with a chance of
total.
The
chain
has
215
Texas-baseq
Cash
America
families · in Ohio · who store
. ·in
suburban
Friday
night •••Panly showers and thunderstorms.
including
closed
24
of
its
Casbland
stores
altogether,
unell.pected
Kenwood
·
borrowing
·
encounter
cloudy. A slight chance of Highs in the lower 80s.
95
in
Ohio.
·
stores
after
the
law
took
.
expenses
and
have
fewer
money
to
cover
her
quar-.
thunderstorms with isolated Chance of rain 40 percent. .
rerly water bill, and saiq
Monday night.;.Mostly . Advam;e America, based effect, leaving it with .114 options."
. showers in the evening.
in
Spananburg,
S.C
.,
is
Ohio
stores.
Check
'n
Go,
Supporters of payday she uses short-term loans
Lows around 6&lt;1: East winds cloudy with a chance of
Ohio
s
biggest
payday.
based
in
suburban
Cincinnati,
said it sometimes about once a month.
lending
around 5 mph in tbe showers and thunderstorms.
but
plans
to
close
a
dosed
44
of
its
Ohio
stores,
lender
was
the
only source of
Johney Easterling, 47, a
evening ...Becoming light Low's in the lower 60s.
Its
stores,
about
leaving
it
with
28.
quarter
of
for
people
with
maintenance
worker from
quick
cash
and variable; Chance of rain Chance of rain 30 !'l!rcent.
60,
by
the
end
of
the
year
"The
long-tertn
viability
credit
problems.
Opponents
.
suburban
Deer
Park, said he
· Tuesday and Tuesday
20 percent.
because
the
operation
no
of
our
remaining
Ohio
said the high rates made borrows money about five
Saturday...Mostly sunny night ...Mostly cloudy with
longer
is
profitable.
stores
will
continue
to
be
victims of borrowers and times a year and doesn't
with a chance of slrowers a. chance of showers and
"We
may
need
to
close
all
assessed
based
upon
consometimes
kept them in
object 10 the fees.
and thunderstorms.. Highs in · thunderstorms. Highs in the
of
our
centers
in
Ohio,"
the
sumer
demand,
cost
of
cycle
of
borrowing
they
.
"I think it's a pretty good'
the mid ·80s.. Southwest upper 70s. Lows around 60.
company
said
in
its
last
doinf!
business
and
other
could never escape.
service when you need a lit-·
wind s around 5 mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Check
'n
Go
quanerly
financial
report.
factors,''
said
Payday
lenders
used
to
tie change, you can get it,"
Wednesday
·. and
Chance of rain 30 percent.
The
company
shut
its
nine
.
spokesman
Jeff
Kursman.
charge
about
$15
for
eve,
r
y
.
he said. "If you can aff~
Saturday night ...Partly · Wednesday nlgbt •..Mostly
stores
in
New
Mexico
after
"Clearly
the
actions
taken
$·100
borrowed
on
a
two·
it, do it." .
cloudy·with a slight chance of cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms. showers and thunderstonns.
Lows around 60. Northeast Highs in the upper 70s. ·

help, she's a ticking bomb

Payday .lenders close many Ohio oflices ·

·Local Weather

a

AEP (NYSE) - 25.05
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 47
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 25.39
Big Lola (NYSE) - 24.14
Bob Evana (NASDAQ) - 25.05
BorgWamM (NYSE) - 29.66
.Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

-6.28
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.65
Channing Shops (NASDAQ) -

3.14
Ctty Holding (NASDAQ) - 31 .V2
Cottlnt (NYSE) - 39.78
DuPont (NYSE)I- 27.30
US Bonk (NYSE) - 18.11
Gannett (NYSE) - 4.47
-~Electric

(NYSE) - 13.n

Horr.y-Davklton (NYSE) - 16.75
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 34.110
Krogt&lt; (NYSE) - 22.32
Limited Brandt (NYSE) - 11.76
llor!olk Southern (NYSE) 34.43

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

www .myditilysentinel.com

Friday, May 1&amp;2, 2ooii

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Local Stocks

Friday, May 22, 2009

.•..

Community Calendar
..,.

·Birthdays
Ohio Yalley Bane Corp. (NAS,.
OAQ)- 22.25
BBT (NYSE) - 20.98
Peoptea (NASDAQ) - 15.10
Pepsico (NYSE) - 51.49
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.05
R-11 (NYSE) - 30.47
Rocky 800111 (NASDAQ) - 3.90
Royal Dutch Shell - 51.32

s.... Holding (NASDAQ) -

50.19
Wai-Mort (NYSE)- 49.11
Wendy't (NYSE) - 4.38
Wealllnco (NYSE) - 15.82
Worthington '(NYSE) - 13.04
Dally IIOCII reports are 1M 4.

p.m. ET cloalng quota o f -·

· actlona lo&lt; May 21. 2009, provided by EciWaAI Jones ftnanclal
edllltore laailc Mitis In Gatilpotla
at (740) 441-9441 and t..oar.y
Marrero In Point Pteuant ot
(304)674-0174, Member SIPC.

•

Friday, May 19

MIDDLEPOJU - Alpba

at · the district office at
3310 I Hiland Road.
'

Youth events

· Bailey will observe her 90th
. Satutdtiy, May l3
binhday on May Z9~ Cards
MIDDLBPORT
may be sent to her at
Overbrook Rehabilitation Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Center, 333 Page St., American Legion baseball
Middleport, Ohio, Room 102.. team tryouts, 3 p.m.
Satunday and Sunday, Meigs
High School. Rain or shine.

Clubs and
organizations

Congratulations
Nikki!
May 22nd, 2009
Meigs High School Graduate
Proud that you are mine
. XXOO Grandma Nancy XXOO

To see more newsphotos
from our photographers go to
www.mydailysentinel.com
You can order reprints and
~pl1oto gifts ofyolir favorite
photos there too.

Church events

Sunday, May l4
Thursday, May 28
POMEROY
The ' SYRACUSE - Earthen
Meigs Soil and Water Vessels performing at 6
Conservation District Board p.m. , Syracuse Mission
of Supervisors, 11 :30 a.m., Church .

)\

' :

•

Obituaries

House panel advances global warming bill-

WASHINGTON (AP) enacted into law, we will
Only 6J1e Republican with imported oil , with .the
Legislation imposing the fiTS! break our dependence on Rep. Mary Bono Mack of loss of JObs overseas, with
nationwide limits on the pol- foreign oil, make our nation California - crossed party the pollution that is causing
lution
blamed for global the world leader in clean lines in support of the bill. greenhouse gas warming on
Howard Lewis English
warming advanced in the energy jobs and technology, Four Democrats voted our planet ," said Rep .
Sr., 81, of Pomeroy, died
House late Thursday, clearing and cut global-warming pol- against it. She said that Edward Markey. D-Mass., a
Wednesday afternoon, May
a key committee Mspite lution," said Waxman.
20, 2009, at his residence.
while she had concerns co-sponsor of the bill .
strong Republican opposition.
Born Jan. II, 1928, in
House Speaker Nancy about the biii, including its
Republicans argued that
The Energy and Commerce Pt;losi, · D-Calif.. · has cost, the country can't wait the pollution cuts would
Pomeroy, he was the son of
the late Gilbert and Mae
Committee approved the . promised to press for passage "to make needed changes to lead lo soaring energy
Watson English.
sweeping climate bill 33-25 of climate legislation this our energy policy."
pnces anct threaten economafter repel,ltedly turning back year, but prospects remain
Howard was the eldest. of
Waxman had vowed to IC growth by imposing new
four siblings, Gilbert "Buddy"
GOP attempts to kill or weak- uncertain, especially in the get the 946-page bill out of costs on energy intensive ·
English Jr., Mary Ann
en the measure during four Senate. President Barack his committee before industrie s already facing
Isabelle. aild Kathern Sleet.
days of debate.
Obarna has told Congress he Memorial Day. Pressure on economic hardships.
Howard was preceded in
The panel's action increas- too wantS a bill this year, lawmakers to leave for the · ··we don't want to put the
death by his parents, and his
es the likelihood that the full ahead of international cli- holiday recess pushed the economy in jeopardy," said
loving wife of 60 years,
House for the first time will mate talks in December.
committee to wrap up late Rep. Joe Barton of Texas,
Phyllis Armstrong English;
address broad legislation to
The House bill requires Thursday after considering the committee's ranking
his youngest son, Jeffrey
tackle climate change later factories. refineries and more than 80 amendments, Republican . He offered an
Douglas English; and a
this year. The Senate has yet power plants to reduce 56
of
them
from alternative that would have
to take up the. issue.
· emissions of carbon dioxide Republicans . and many scrapped the cap on greenHoward L. English Sr.
granddaughter, St.ephanie
Jill English .
Rep. Henry Waxman, D- and six· other greenhouse designed to weaken or kill ltouse gases and pollution
He leaves four surviving sons, Howard English Jr. of Calif., the panel's chairman, gases.by roughly 80 percent the bill.
trading scheme , provide
Pomeroy, William (Becky) English . of Middleport, said the bill represents ''deci- by mid-century and hasten
"The American people are more incentives 'for nuclear ·
Kenneth (Angie) English of Bidwell, and Andy (Brenda) sive and historic action" to the nation's energy shift o~erwhelming calling for a energy and bolster research
English of Pataskala; and numerous grandchildren and increase America's energy away from fossil fuels by new direction ... to take into cap~uring carbon from
great-grandchildren.
security and deal with global ·puttmg a price on carbon action in a way ihat changes · coal-burning power plants.
Howard retired after 26 years of service from the Kyger warming. "When this bill is dioxide releases.
forever our relationship It was defeated 35-19 .
Creek Power Plant. He was a member of Mount Moriah
Baptist Church in Middleport.
·
Services will be noon Tuesday,. May 26, 2009, at the·
Page At
Mount Moriah Baptist Church, Fourth Avenue and Main
Street, Middleport. Friends may cali at the church on
Louise Morehart Grant
Ohio High School basket- and four years full tuition, recognized as WSAZ Best' of
Monday, May 25, 2009, from 6 to 8 p.m.
.Music
Scholarship,
$1,500,
ball
Coaches Associat.ion, $45.000, Matthew Hosken;
the Oass, perfect attendance
. In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the
Chris
Kime.$;
$1,000 Catie Wolfe;
Shawnee State Un·iversity awards went to Amanda
Mount Moriah Baptist Church.
Malone
University
Ohio State University Professor's Scholarship, Gilkey, Ja$on Morris and·
An online guest registry is available at waugh-halley"
Academic
Scholarship, Freshman
Foundation $750, Counney Mayes;
·Andrew O'Bryant.
"
wood.com.
$6,000 a year for four years Scholarship, $3,000, and
Student
Council
Recipients of awards of
and Malone University . the Ohio State Univerity Scholarship, $100, Aaron merit were Jamie Bailey,
Athletic
Scholarship, Provost
Scholarship, OliP.hant •.and $150 to Noah Crockett Crow, Amanda
$9,000 a year for four years, $2,100, Kimberly Swisher; HaJivandi . and
Kerri Giolkey, Amber Hockman,
: Bobby Joe Wolfe, 74, of.Racine, passed awa~ Thursday, Catie Wolfe;
·
Ohio State University VanReeth; .
Jessica Holliday, Matthew ·
May 21,2009, in the Jackson General Hospital,Ripley, W.Va.
Marshal.l
• University Office of Minority Affairs
The
Lost
Brothers Hosken, Morgan Lentes;
: Born Aprill9, 1935, in Meigs County, he.was the son of Music Scholarship. full · Scholarship, $3,000, Jamie Scholarships,
$! ,000 Jahnna Lydic, Linds~y
. ~he late Robert W. and Myrtle Mae Pickens.
tuition for four years, Chris Baile~;
.
·
'Ruche! Davis and $1,000 t.o . Myers, ·Kimberly· Swisher.
He was a veteran of the- Vietnam Era serving with the Kimes; ,
. Ob10 State University Ashley Bell;
Students who will be recipiU.S. Army. He retired from the Meigs County Highway
Mason VFW Post 9926 , Trustee
Scholarship,
Jewell Manassa Cutler ents of honors diplomas at
Dept. after serving 23 years as a mechanics assrstant. ,
$500, to Jamie Bailey.
$1,050. to Jennifer Fife, and Scholarship,
full . graduation were announced
· He is survived by his son, Craton Wolfe, Racine, and
Maude
·Sellards Jamie Bailey; .
tuition/room and board, and include Jamie Bailey,
daughter: Vonda (Roger) Robinson, Hockingpon; grand- Scholarship, $100 each to
OU
Bobcat Award, four years, Ernie Welsh;
Clay Bolin, Crockett Crow,
children, Jody Wolfe, Racine, and David (Sharlene) Wolfe, Amber Hockman and $1,800, and OU Gateway
Tri County Vending Jennifer Fife, Amanda
Pomeroy; step grandchildren, Brenda (Steve) Kimes, Kimberly Swisher;
Bobcat Award, $l.f00, Schlarship, $500, .Eugene Gikey, Amber Hockman,.
Elkhart, Ind., Mike (Teresa) Laudermilt. Pomeroy. Melissa
·Meigs High Faculty · LindseyMyers:
Patterson;
·Lian Hoffman, Jessica
Teaford, Florida, Chris Meldau, Charleston, W.Va.; rother: . Scholarship; $400 to Jessica
OU Edwin and Ruth
Eagle Scout Achievement Holliday. Morgan Lentes,
Jack Wolfe, Racine; sister, Mary Kesterson, Pomeroy; sister Holliday; ·
Kennedy Sesquicentennial · Awards, $I 2~ to Mason Mason- Metts,
Calee
. jn law, Leota Wolfe, Racine; special nieces, Judi Flowers,
Meigs. High School Scholarship, $700, Amanda Metts, and $127 to Caleb ' Reeves, Kimberly Swisher;
Pt, Pleasant, W.Va. and Estie Fisher, Wellsville, Ohio.
. Alumni Scholarship. $500 Gilkey;
Bevan;
and James Welsh.
: Also· surviving are numerous nieces and nephews, addi- ·each, Amanda Gilkey,
OU Gatew;~y Excellent
William Slack .Memorial
Special recognition went
tional adopted .\lreat-grandchildren, step children, and step- Morgan
Lentes , Kim Scholarship $8,907, Calee Scholarship; $500, to Clay to Josie · VanMeter, for
great grandchildren, along with special friends, Jim Swisher. . and
Amber Reeves;
Bolin;
. chemistry
achievement,
(Midge) Satterfield, Racine, Grover (Sue) Batey, Charlotte, Hockman;
OU
Gateway
Wilmington
. College Calee Reeves as the mosl
N.C. and Jim (Linda) Diddle, Racine.
Miami Univ~i'sity College Scholarships, $2,000, Lian Achievement
Award, outstanding chemisry stu: hi addition to his parents he was preceded in death by his ·Opportunity
Grant' Hoffmlln and Morgan $6,500 a year forfour years, dent; Ripley Raubenolt, the
;.vife, Tessie J. Grady Wolfe on Jun~ 26, 1991; ~rothers. Supplement, $2,496 a ear Kennedy; $500 Morgan Mason Metts;
marketing educcaion stuCharles Wolfe, Paul Wolfe. and twm brother Billy Roe for four years or full ttlition, Lentes; and $J500 Ernie
VFW Post 9926, $500 dent of the year; Brittany
Wolfe at birth, step daughter. Helen Wills; step son Terry and Miami Univerity Grant, . Welsh;
·
scholarship, to Jamie Bailey. Collins. DECA member of
. Williams and Step'grandson, Marvin Teaford.
$2,750, both for fo11r years,
OU King/Chavez/arks
·Achievement Awards
the year; Jessica Holliday;
· Graveside Services will be held Sunday, May 24, 2009, Brian Rice;
·
Award, $7,000, Chelsea · Achievement award win- . top anatomy/physiology.
2:30 p.m. in the Letart Falls Cemetery with -Rev. Jim · Milestone
benefits Smallwood;
· ners presented certificates sdtudent; Kim Swisher;
Satterfield officiating. Visitation will be at the Cremeens Scholarship, $500 each, to
OlJ King/Chavez/Parks included: Chad Bonnett and senior English highest averFuneral Home, Sunday, May 24,2009 from 12-2 p.m.
Caleb Bevan, Adrian Bolin, Award, $7,000 Chelsea Whitney Johnson, Archie age. Receiving awards for
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by Crockett Crow,
Noah Smallwood;
·
Griffin
Sportsmanship drama were Dan Stewart;
visiting www.cremeeensfuneralhm:nes.com.
Hajivandi, ·
Amber
OU Ray W. Heslop Awards; Clay Bolin and Brittany Collins, Kerri
Hockman, Morgan Lentes, SesquicentenniaiScholarship, Kimberly Swisher, U.S. VanReetb, Matt Hoskins,
Ashley Life, Jahnna Lydic, $300,Amanda Gilkey;
Army Reserve National Stacy Macumber .Jessica
Ripley
Rubenolt,Caitlin
OU Richard E. Jones Scholar/Athlete Awards; Holhday got the best actress
Swartz and Kerri VanReeth; Scholarship, $550, Jessica Mason Metts .· and Catie award, and Nick Engles and
MLTA Scholarships of Holliday;
Wolfe, U.S. Marine Corps best actor award with Brian
$300 each, Sarah Hubbard .· OU
Special
Russ · Distinguished
Athlete Rice being named the most
and Caleb Bevan. •
Scholarship,
$1,000, Awards; Amber Hockman, outstanding theater and arts
Muskingum · · College Morgan Ken,nedy;
.
U.S.
Marine
Corps student. Drew Webster Post
MIDDLEPORT - Rumpke waste collection service will
Achievement 39 American Legion recognot occur on Monday due to the Memorial Day holiday. Presidential Scholarshi'p, · Parker Long Scholarship, Scholastic
1'3
,500
a
year
for
four
$
$500,
Zachary
Story;
·
Award,
and
Eugene nized Morgan Lentes,
Service.will be delayed one day during the week. Regular
years,
Amber
Hockman;
·
R,io
Grande·
Community
Patterson,
U.S.
Marine Crockett Crow, Scott
.
collection will resume June I.
Nathaniel
Joslin
College/Rio
Grande
Corps
Semper
Fidelis Kennedy and Kayla Taylor
Questions may be directed to Rumpke's customer serMemorial
·
Scholarship.
University
Scholarship;
two
Award.
Amber
Hockman
as winners in .the governvice. at {888) 786-7531.
·
$100, Maria Meadows.
years, $6,000 Kelsey Sauters, and Kimberly Swisher Were ment essay contest.

Howard Lewis English Sr.

Achievers rrom

Bobby Joe WoHe

Local Briefs

Collection schedule

Racine observance
RACINE -Racine American Legion Post 602 will have
Memorial Day services a 10 a.m. Monday at the Post home.

Riversweep at Forked Run
· REEDSVILtE - Riversweep in Forked Run State Park
will be held oidune 6. Those participating will meet at 9
a.m. at the first shelter house. T-shins will be given and
food and beverages provided.

Legion schedule announced

Southern rrom Page Al .·
April Freeman, Beth Bay,
Lori Hill , Christy Essick,·
Rachel
Hupp,
Jen11y
Manuel, Misty Rogers,
Evelyn Stanley (IDEA
funded), Joy Neal, Donna
Sayre. The following classified personnel were hired to
work summer school for
Southern Elementary for
$10 per hour, not to exceed
$56!J: Launa Teaford, Julie
Zirkle. Andrea Teaford was
hired on a bne.year contract

MIDDLEPORT - Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American
Legion, will hold the following Memorial Day tribute ceremonies on Monday: 8:45 a.m., Middleport levee; 9 a.m.,
Middleport Riverview Cemetery; 9:15 a.m .. Bradford
Cemetery; 9:30 a.m., Middleport Hill Cemetery; I0: 15
a.m.,Addison Cemetery; 10:30 a.m., Cheshire Gravel Hill
Cemetery; · II .a.m.. Middleport Gravel Hill Cemetery;
11:15 a.m:, Stewart/Bennett Park, Middleport; 12:30 p.m.,
complex trail class. Ribbons
Howell Hill Cemetery; 1:10 p.m., Burlingham
Cemetery.
.
.
are given to the . fi~t six
.
places and each ribbon carries a number of points to be
added up at the end of the
season fer the ORP's
awards banquet.
The ORP's· Horse Show
TOLE\DO (AP) '-- Lauren Merrell already is half way Series is becoming a tourist
through college and she's just finishing h.igh school.
event in Meigs County,
Merrell is valedictorian of the first .class at Toledo Early attracting .equestrians from
College High School, a public school on the University of not only within the county
Toledo campus that allows students to take their first two but neighboring counties
years of college courses in high school ..
such as Athens and Gallia
"I think it's so amazin~ we get this opportunity because Counties and JackSon, Wood
it really is life-changing,' she said. "I don't think I would
have blossomed and found my caree.r path without it."
• Toledo Early College High School opened four years ago
behind a $400,000 grant from Knowled.\leWorks
Foundation. The Cincinnati-based foundation specializes in
performing dispatching work
· education reform.
until
the incident is resolved.
• There are several· similar early college schools around
Koebel told Sheriff Robert
Ohio, including ones in Dayton. Youngstown and Elyria.
: Dayton's Early College Academy graduated its first class Beegle he chased Gray's
vehicle from Middlepon to
fwo yeais ago.
.
· Toledo schools· SUI,lfrintendent John Foley said the pro- the intersectimi of Union
gram has gotten positive results and that it was important Avenue and Ohio 7 outside of
for the district to have options for students who are looking Pomeroy, and fired at Gray
.because he believed Gray was
for sometbing different.
.

.

1st class graduates froin ·
Ohio early college school

due to the sabbatical leave COG-SEOVEC .
Selfrequest of another teacher.
Funded Deilt.al Insurance
Kathy Miller and Charlie Program with CoreSource
Wolfe were approved as bus for July 1-June 30, 2010.
dfivers for the summer Also approved was the conschool and enrichment pro- tinued membership in the
gram at $12 per hour,ltot to Ohio Hij&gt;h School Athletic
exceed $1,200. This amount Association. The Truck and
includes the trip to the Tracker
Software
Columbus Zoo. Pamela Maintenance and Technical
Boyd was hired as a substi- · Support Agreement was
tute bus driver. .
also approved for $665.10,
The Board approved con- good June 3-June 3, 2010.
tinued membership in the
The Board agreed to pur-

chase a security system for
the bus garage from James
· Alarm for $1.300. Also purchased was a zero turn
mower. from Baum Lumber:
Present for the meeting
were Southern Local Board
of Education member&amp;
Smith, Dennie Hill, Denny
Evans, Peggy Gibbs. The
Board's next meetin~ is at 8
p.m., June 22 m the
Southern High School
media room.

.Horse Show rrom PageAt
and Mason Counties in West
Virginia. Bruoe McKelvey, ·
ORP member, said the show
has something for both adults
and children who ride .
"We·want to keep it entry
level, keep kids interested,
keep it .affordable and keep ·
it a fun show," McKelvey
said. "We don't look at
these people as contestlllltS
but as friends."
McKelvey said this year's
show will also see the dedication of a grandstand at the

show ,ring. The grandstand
will be dedicated t.o the late
Dick ·Sterrett who was an
ORP member. McKelvey
said Sterrett's widow Lois
donated $1,000 to the ORP
to use as they saw fit and
they decided to buy the
materials for the grandstand
and donate their labor.
McKelvey' said in addition ·
to ltonoring Sterreu, the
Memorial Day Show will
recognize veterans by passing small American Flags

Prosecutor from Page At
ror

reaching
a gun when \le Warren has agreed to serve
got out of his vehicle. Gray as special prosecutor .at no
received facial and dental . charge to the county.
. injuries from one of the shots. Williams said the close
Gray has denied being working
relationship
armed that night, but has between her office and local
· admitted to other incidents law enforcement makes it
w,ith the police.
· necessary for her to step
Commissioners
said • aside from any prosecution.

out to them.
As for _if the ORP plan to
do anything different with'
this year's horse show series;
McKelvey said. "if it's not
broken we don't try to ftx it.''
Concessions will also be.
sold during the show at the
Ponland Community Center
which is just off US 33 ori
Ohio 124. For more information call 843-5216 of
590-9936.

·-·--··-·-

·----"-~

Adam McDanld
&amp; Jamc~ AncJerwon
DIRECTORS

.

�PageA2

BYTHEBEND
Until she a4mits need for Ariel to offer theater workshop

The Daily Sentinel

GALLIPOLIS - Area during a series of challengyouth, entering grades 3-12. ing, imaginative activiti~.
with a flair for the dramat- Workshop attendants will
ics,
are encouraged to attend be cast in a variety of roles
BY KATHY MITCHELL
'.'Ben," who is very loving
"Monster
in the Closet for the production "Monster
AND MARCY SUGAR
and treats her well. The
Theater
Workshop."
in the Closet".
problem is, Frannie and Ben
·
The
6
week
workshop
Their hard work will result
Dear Annie: My adult el)joy· going out with large
daugh ter \ behavior is caus- gFoups of people whom my will be .held at the Ariel - in 3 performances of
Hal on Tuesdays, Monster in the Closet,
in~ a great deal of emotional
husband and I don't enjoy Pater
Wednesdays,
and including a performance for
pam in my family .."Carole" being with. Frannie is conThursdays.
June
9
-July
19 the local area daycares at a
. has a " olellt temper that vinced that the reason we with daytime performances
reduced rate. Workshop
makes everyone - even her don) socialize with them is on July 12th , 16th, and attendants
also have the
sweet-tempered husband because I don't approve of 19th. The workshop will be opportunitywill
to
be
involved in
cower in fear. About six her and Ben.
presented
by
Gallia
County
·
several
outreach
and promomonths ago. our entire famiI have told her that we
Joseph Wright.
tional activities including the
ly attendec.l a large party she love spending time with the Native,
The Monster in the Closet annual River Recreation's
and her husband. were giv- two of them, but hinted that workshop will provide Fourth of July Parade.
mg. The mormng after. their friends are a little too approximately 20 area youth
·The show "Monster in the
Carole got into . a raging, rough around the edges for the opportunity to study and Closet:' is about a little girl
swearing screaming match . us (they hang out in bars. panicipate in the various . named Emily and she has a
with her father, which left . smoke and ride motorcycles aspects of producing a show. big problem. Not only is she
him in rears. Since then, - which my husband and I . Students will explore the sent to bed just as she reachthere has been no contact don't enjoy). But she con- theater world through· a es the highest level of her
between them.
· tinues to invite us to join number of interactive acting new video game, but there's
Carole has tried to manip- . them with these people aild
creative dramatic activi- a monster in her closet!
ulate me into j)eing on her then gets upset when I and
ties and games.
What she doesn't know is
side in this argument, but I refuse. Am I being selfish
Students will explore that Murray, the closet moowork hard to stay neutral. A and snobby? - Running character
development, ster, doesn't mean any harm
few days ago, .I received a Out of Excuses
vocal projection and enun- - he only wants to play
long e-mail from her saying
Dear Running: Of ciation, physical acting, Emily's new video game.
she has been waiting six course not. Are these Ben's production elements, and Murray's boss, the Dream
months for some sign from friends? lf so, Frannie may more. Students will work on King, has heard about his
her father that he wants her be trying to fit in, in which solo and ream performances goofmg off on ihe job, and
in his life . I forwarded the case; she may actually be
e-mail to my husband, asking for your support
thinking maybe tnis was the when she socializes with
opening he's been hoping them. Otherwise, issue your
for. He picked up the phone own invitations to Frannie
and called her. As soon as and Ben so she can see that
CINCINNATI (AP) - ·
she heard his voice, she you warit to spend time More than a third of the
went into ·yet another rant with the two.of them, but on payday lending . offices . in
about how he has ruined her your terms . .
Ohio have closed since the
life and then slammed
!)ear Annie:
"Just industry lost a November
down the phone. He was Curious" asked if it would ballot fight to overturn
devastated.
be good manners for her to restrictions on bow much
. My first loyalty is to my go to the funeral home to interest lenders can charge.
husband. I know I should see her ex-husband of 36
There were about 1,600
'try to keep in touch with years when he dies.( under- retail locations across Ohio
Carole , even though her stand the need not to upset when the new interest rules
behavior is totally unacceP.t- the widow or create a dis- went into effect. last year,
able. But solnetimes I'd ltke turbance. But visiting hours state officials said. About
to walk away and never deal are for the convenience of 960 remain, and those are .
with her again. I've suggest- the family. Anyone can go under fire from critics who
ed counseling, but" . she to a funeral home and view want to enact even t.ougher
refuses, always saying ·the a body at times other than rules beyond the 28 perCent
problem is with the other what . is specified in the cap on interest.
person, not herself. Can you newspaper.
Interest rates on payday
suggest a way for me to get
Unless "Curious" specifi- loans used to range up to
cally wants to be seen l;ly the almost 400 percent when
through this mess? Carole's Mother .
new wife and others, she
on an annual
Dear Mother: Carole could pay her respects early, computed
··
basis.
sounds like a handful, and cry her eyes out or cuss him .
Payday
loans
work
this·
we'd guess she has s~me to the skies, and no one
way: A borrower goes to a
mental health Issues. If your .would be the wiser. check-cashing
company and
. •
•
.
M~~
husband wants to re-estab- Florida Grandma
writes
a
check.
The compa- · This Nov. 6, 2008 file photo shows a customer entering a Payroll Advance location in
!ish contact, he should write
-Annie's Mailbox is writ·
Carole a letter - not to ten by Kathy Mitchell and ny gives the person cash, Cincinnati. More than il third of the payday lending offices in Ohio have closed since the
rehash the . argument or Marcy Sugar, longtime edi- minus a fee, and agrees not industry lost a November, 2008 ballot fight to overturn restrictions on Interest rates that
chastise her, but to simply tors of. the Ann lAnders to cash the check until his or used to range up to almost 400 .percent.
say he loves her and hopes column. Please e-maUyour her payday.
Payday lenders had said :i# ,; ..
week loan, which would be
they can be closer. All questions to anliiesmail·
the
limits
enacted
by
the
·
,
'
the equivalent of a 391 perfuture
communication ·box@comcast.net, or write
Legislature
last
year
wo.uld
,;t
,
·
cent
annual interest rate.
should tle kept superficial to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
put
them
out
of
business.
The
industry says its.
and brief. Carole is a tick.ing Box 118190, Chicago, JL
In
November,
Ohio
voters
loans
are
designed to be
bomb, and until she admits 60611. To find out more
the
state
law
that
upheld
shan-term,
so annualizing··
she needs help, it serves no about Annie's Mailbox,
annual
interest
rate
on
caps
the cost is bogus. Payday
purpDSe to set her off.
· and read features by other
lynders say .if consumers
Dear Annie: I have been Creators Syndicate wrilers payday loans and limits the
want to include fees in
· friends with "Frannie" for . and canoonists, visit the number of loans per custo
four
a
year.
tomer
interest
calculations, bank
over20 years. She recently Creators· Syndicate Web
"The
change
has
been
a
fees
for
overdraft charges
began dating a ·great guy, page at www.creators.com.
can soar into quadruple:
· company,"
tremendous · blow
the · 2~~~l~~~:~
said ro Ted
digits.
Saunders, chief executive
Some customers still say'
A,ttorney ·
of
Columbus-based
that
payday loans are best
are . taking ·
CheckSmart. "I've closed
for their needs.
similar to · "Are you going to loan
Friday...Mostly
sunny. winds around 5 mph. Chance 10 or 15 stores, and I've got
Interest
up .· me $200 for two weeks for
more on the watch list. We
Isollted showers and thunder- of rain 20 percent.
: :t- $30? I don't think so," said
storms in the afternoon. Highs
Sunday and Sunday were on a growih spurt until
this
happened."
Linda Coleman, 28, a
in the mid 80s. Light and vari- night...Partly cloudy. Highs
Saunders said he's cur it also restricted payday by Ohio have resulted in the machine operator and .nui'sable winds .. .Becoming south- in the lower 80s. Lows
about.
100 jobs statewide lending.
elimination of jobs, store ing student from suburban
.east around 5 mph in the around 60 .
and
now
employs
about
750
Other
chains
have
taken
closures and ·impacted cus- Colerain Township.
'
afternoon. Chance of rain 20
Memorial Day~ ..Panly
in
Ohio
and
about
I
,400
similar
aCtion.
Fort
Worth,
tomers.
It's
a
disservice
to
She
was
&lt;lt
a
CheckSmart
.
percent.
. · sunny with a chance of
total.
The
chain
has
215
Texas-baseq
Cash
America
families · in Ohio · who store
. ·in
suburban
Friday
night •••Panly showers and thunderstorms.
including
closed
24
of
its
Casbland
stores
altogether,
unell.pected
Kenwood
·
borrowing
·
encounter
cloudy. A slight chance of Highs in the lower 80s.
95
in
Ohio.
·
stores
after
the
law
took
.
expenses
and
have
fewer
money
to
cover
her
quar-.
thunderstorms with isolated Chance of rain 40 percent. .
rerly water bill, and saiq
Monday night.;.Mostly . Advam;e America, based effect, leaving it with .114 options."
. showers in the evening.
in
Spananburg,
S.C
.,
is
Ohio
stores.
Check
'n
Go,
Supporters of payday she uses short-term loans
Lows around 6&lt;1: East winds cloudy with a chance of
Ohio
s
biggest
payday.
based
in
suburban
Cincinnati,
said it sometimes about once a month.
lending
around 5 mph in tbe showers and thunderstorms.
but
plans
to
close
a
dosed
44
of
its
Ohio
stores,
lender
was
the
only source of
Johney Easterling, 47, a
evening ...Becoming light Low's in the lower 60s.
Its
stores,
about
leaving
it
with
28.
quarter
of
for
people
with
maintenance
worker from
quick
cash
and variable; Chance of rain Chance of rain 30 !'l!rcent.
60,
by
the
end
of
the
year
"The
long-tertn
viability
credit
problems.
Opponents
.
suburban
Deer
Park, said he
· Tuesday and Tuesday
20 percent.
because
the
operation
no
of
our
remaining
Ohio
said the high rates made borrows money about five
Saturday...Mostly sunny night ...Mostly cloudy with
longer
is
profitable.
stores
will
continue
to
be
victims of borrowers and times a year and doesn't
with a chance of slrowers a. chance of showers and
"We
may
need
to
close
all
assessed
based
upon
consometimes
kept them in
object 10 the fees.
and thunderstorms.. Highs in · thunderstorms. Highs in the
of
our
centers
in
Ohio,"
the
sumer
demand,
cost
of
cycle
of
borrowing
they
.
"I think it's a pretty good'
the mid ·80s.. Southwest upper 70s. Lows around 60.
company
said
in
its
last
doinf!
business
and
other
could never escape.
service when you need a lit-·
wind s around 5 mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Check
'n
Go
quanerly
financial
report.
factors,''
said
Payday
lenders
used
to
tie change, you can get it,"
Wednesday
·. and
Chance of rain 30 percent.
The
company
shut
its
nine
.
spokesman
Jeff
Kursman.
charge
about
$15
for
eve,
r
y
.
he said. "If you can aff~
Saturday night ...Partly · Wednesday nlgbt •..Mostly
stores
in
New
Mexico
after
"Clearly
the
actions
taken
$·100
borrowed
on
a
two·
it, do it." .
cloudy·with a slight chance of cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms. showers and thunderstonns.
Lows around 60. Northeast Highs in the upper 70s. ·

help, she's a ticking bomb

Payday .lenders close many Ohio oflices ·

·Local Weather

a

AEP (NYSE) - 25.05
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 47
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 25.39
Big Lola (NYSE) - 24.14
Bob Evana (NASDAQ) - 25.05
BorgWamM (NYSE) - 29.66
.Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

-6.28
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.65
Channing Shops (NASDAQ) -

3.14
Ctty Holding (NASDAQ) - 31 .V2
Cottlnt (NYSE) - 39.78
DuPont (NYSE)I- 27.30
US Bonk (NYSE) - 18.11
Gannett (NYSE) - 4.47
-~Electric

(NYSE) - 13.n

Horr.y-Davklton (NYSE) - 16.75
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 34.110
Krogt&lt; (NYSE) - 22.32
Limited Brandt (NYSE) - 11.76
llor!olk Southern (NYSE) 34.43

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

www .myditilysentinel.com

Friday, May 1&amp;2, 2ooii

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Local Stocks

Friday, May 22, 2009

.•..

Community Calendar
..,.

·Birthdays
Ohio Yalley Bane Corp. (NAS,.
OAQ)- 22.25
BBT (NYSE) - 20.98
Peoptea (NASDAQ) - 15.10
Pepsico (NYSE) - 51.49
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.05
R-11 (NYSE) - 30.47
Rocky 800111 (NASDAQ) - 3.90
Royal Dutch Shell - 51.32

s.... Holding (NASDAQ) -

50.19
Wai-Mort (NYSE)- 49.11
Wendy't (NYSE) - 4.38
Wealllnco (NYSE) - 15.82
Worthington '(NYSE) - 13.04
Dally IIOCII reports are 1M 4.

p.m. ET cloalng quota o f -·

· actlona lo&lt; May 21. 2009, provided by EciWaAI Jones ftnanclal
edllltore laailc Mitis In Gatilpotla
at (740) 441-9441 and t..oar.y
Marrero In Point Pteuant ot
(304)674-0174, Member SIPC.

•

Friday, May 19

MIDDLEPOJU - Alpba

at · the district office at
3310 I Hiland Road.
'

Youth events

· Bailey will observe her 90th
. Satutdtiy, May l3
binhday on May Z9~ Cards
MIDDLBPORT
may be sent to her at
Overbrook Rehabilitation Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Center, 333 Page St., American Legion baseball
Middleport, Ohio, Room 102.. team tryouts, 3 p.m.
Satunday and Sunday, Meigs
High School. Rain or shine.

Clubs and
organizations

Congratulations
Nikki!
May 22nd, 2009
Meigs High School Graduate
Proud that you are mine
. XXOO Grandma Nancy XXOO

To see more newsphotos
from our photographers go to
www.mydailysentinel.com
You can order reprints and
~pl1oto gifts ofyolir favorite
photos there too.

Church events

Sunday, May l4
Thursday, May 28
POMEROY
The ' SYRACUSE - Earthen
Meigs Soil and Water Vessels performing at 6
Conservation District Board p.m. , Syracuse Mission
of Supervisors, 11 :30 a.m., Church .

)\

' :

•

Obituaries

House panel advances global warming bill-

WASHINGTON (AP) enacted into law, we will
Only 6J1e Republican with imported oil , with .the
Legislation imposing the fiTS! break our dependence on Rep. Mary Bono Mack of loss of JObs overseas, with
nationwide limits on the pol- foreign oil, make our nation California - crossed party the pollution that is causing
lution
blamed for global the world leader in clean lines in support of the bill. greenhouse gas warming on
Howard Lewis English
warming advanced in the energy jobs and technology, Four Democrats voted our planet ," said Rep .
Sr., 81, of Pomeroy, died
House late Thursday, clearing and cut global-warming pol- against it. She said that Edward Markey. D-Mass., a
Wednesday afternoon, May
a key committee Mspite lution," said Waxman.
20, 2009, at his residence.
while she had concerns co-sponsor of the bill .
strong Republican opposition.
Born Jan. II, 1928, in
House Speaker Nancy about the biii, including its
Republicans argued that
The Energy and Commerce Pt;losi, · D-Calif.. · has cost, the country can't wait the pollution cuts would
Pomeroy, he was the son of
the late Gilbert and Mae
Committee approved the . promised to press for passage "to make needed changes to lead lo soaring energy
Watson English.
sweeping climate bill 33-25 of climate legislation this our energy policy."
pnces anct threaten economafter repel,ltedly turning back year, but prospects remain
Howard was the eldest. of
Waxman had vowed to IC growth by imposing new
four siblings, Gilbert "Buddy"
GOP attempts to kill or weak- uncertain, especially in the get the 946-page bill out of costs on energy intensive ·
English Jr., Mary Ann
en the measure during four Senate. President Barack his committee before industrie s already facing
Isabelle. aild Kathern Sleet.
days of debate.
Obarna has told Congress he Memorial Day. Pressure on economic hardships.
Howard was preceded in
The panel's action increas- too wantS a bill this year, lawmakers to leave for the · ··we don't want to put the
death by his parents, and his
es the likelihood that the full ahead of international cli- holiday recess pushed the economy in jeopardy," said
loving wife of 60 years,
House for the first time will mate talks in December.
committee to wrap up late Rep. Joe Barton of Texas,
Phyllis Armstrong English;
address broad legislation to
The House bill requires Thursday after considering the committee's ranking
his youngest son, Jeffrey
tackle climate change later factories. refineries and more than 80 amendments, Republican . He offered an
Douglas English; and a
this year. The Senate has yet power plants to reduce 56
of
them
from alternative that would have
to take up the. issue.
· emissions of carbon dioxide Republicans . and many scrapped the cap on greenHoward L. English Sr.
granddaughter, St.ephanie
Jill English .
Rep. Henry Waxman, D- and six· other greenhouse designed to weaken or kill ltouse gases and pollution
He leaves four surviving sons, Howard English Jr. of Calif., the panel's chairman, gases.by roughly 80 percent the bill.
trading scheme , provide
Pomeroy, William (Becky) English . of Middleport, said the bill represents ''deci- by mid-century and hasten
"The American people are more incentives 'for nuclear ·
Kenneth (Angie) English of Bidwell, and Andy (Brenda) sive and historic action" to the nation's energy shift o~erwhelming calling for a energy and bolster research
English of Pataskala; and numerous grandchildren and increase America's energy away from fossil fuels by new direction ... to take into cap~uring carbon from
great-grandchildren.
security and deal with global ·puttmg a price on carbon action in a way ihat changes · coal-burning power plants.
Howard retired after 26 years of service from the Kyger warming. "When this bill is dioxide releases.
forever our relationship It was defeated 35-19 .
Creek Power Plant. He was a member of Mount Moriah
Baptist Church in Middleport.
·
Services will be noon Tuesday,. May 26, 2009, at the·
Page At
Mount Moriah Baptist Church, Fourth Avenue and Main
Street, Middleport. Friends may cali at the church on
Louise Morehart Grant
Ohio High School basket- and four years full tuition, recognized as WSAZ Best' of
Monday, May 25, 2009, from 6 to 8 p.m.
.Music
Scholarship,
$1,500,
ball
Coaches Associat.ion, $45.000, Matthew Hosken;
the Oass, perfect attendance
. In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the
Chris
Kime.$;
$1,000 Catie Wolfe;
Shawnee State Un·iversity awards went to Amanda
Mount Moriah Baptist Church.
Malone
University
Ohio State University Professor's Scholarship, Gilkey, Ja$on Morris and·
An online guest registry is available at waugh-halley"
Academic
Scholarship, Freshman
Foundation $750, Counney Mayes;
·Andrew O'Bryant.
"
wood.com.
$6,000 a year for four years Scholarship, $3,000, and
Student
Council
Recipients of awards of
and Malone University . the Ohio State Univerity Scholarship, $100, Aaron merit were Jamie Bailey,
Athletic
Scholarship, Provost
Scholarship, OliP.hant •.and $150 to Noah Crockett Crow, Amanda
$9,000 a year for four years, $2,100, Kimberly Swisher; HaJivandi . and
Kerri Giolkey, Amber Hockman,
: Bobby Joe Wolfe, 74, of.Racine, passed awa~ Thursday, Catie Wolfe;
·
Ohio State University VanReeth; .
Jessica Holliday, Matthew ·
May 21,2009, in the Jackson General Hospital,Ripley, W.Va.
Marshal.l
• University Office of Minority Affairs
The
Lost
Brothers Hosken, Morgan Lentes;
: Born Aprill9, 1935, in Meigs County, he.was the son of Music Scholarship. full · Scholarship, $3,000, Jamie Scholarships,
$! ,000 Jahnna Lydic, Linds~y
. ~he late Robert W. and Myrtle Mae Pickens.
tuition for four years, Chris Baile~;
.
·
'Ruche! Davis and $1,000 t.o . Myers, ·Kimberly· Swisher.
He was a veteran of the- Vietnam Era serving with the Kimes; ,
. Ob10 State University Ashley Bell;
Students who will be recipiU.S. Army. He retired from the Meigs County Highway
Mason VFW Post 9926 , Trustee
Scholarship,
Jewell Manassa Cutler ents of honors diplomas at
Dept. after serving 23 years as a mechanics assrstant. ,
$500, to Jamie Bailey.
$1,050. to Jennifer Fife, and Scholarship,
full . graduation were announced
· He is survived by his son, Craton Wolfe, Racine, and
Maude
·Sellards Jamie Bailey; .
tuition/room and board, and include Jamie Bailey,
daughter: Vonda (Roger) Robinson, Hockingpon; grand- Scholarship, $100 each to
OU
Bobcat Award, four years, Ernie Welsh;
Clay Bolin, Crockett Crow,
children, Jody Wolfe, Racine, and David (Sharlene) Wolfe, Amber Hockman and $1,800, and OU Gateway
Tri County Vending Jennifer Fife, Amanda
Pomeroy; step grandchildren, Brenda (Steve) Kimes, Kimberly Swisher;
Bobcat Award, $l.f00, Schlarship, $500, .Eugene Gikey, Amber Hockman,.
Elkhart, Ind., Mike (Teresa) Laudermilt. Pomeroy. Melissa
·Meigs High Faculty · LindseyMyers:
Patterson;
·Lian Hoffman, Jessica
Teaford, Florida, Chris Meldau, Charleston, W.Va.; rother: . Scholarship; $400 to Jessica
OU Edwin and Ruth
Eagle Scout Achievement Holliday. Morgan Lentes,
Jack Wolfe, Racine; sister, Mary Kesterson, Pomeroy; sister Holliday; ·
Kennedy Sesquicentennial · Awards, $I 2~ to Mason Mason- Metts,
Calee
. jn law, Leota Wolfe, Racine; special nieces, Judi Flowers,
Meigs. High School Scholarship, $700, Amanda Metts, and $127 to Caleb ' Reeves, Kimberly Swisher;
Pt, Pleasant, W.Va. and Estie Fisher, Wellsville, Ohio.
. Alumni Scholarship. $500 Gilkey;
Bevan;
and James Welsh.
: Also· surviving are numerous nieces and nephews, addi- ·each, Amanda Gilkey,
OU Gatew;~y Excellent
William Slack .Memorial
Special recognition went
tional adopted .\lreat-grandchildren, step children, and step- Morgan
Lentes , Kim Scholarship $8,907, Calee Scholarship; $500, to Clay to Josie · VanMeter, for
great grandchildren, along with special friends, Jim Swisher. . and
Amber Reeves;
Bolin;
. chemistry
achievement,
(Midge) Satterfield, Racine, Grover (Sue) Batey, Charlotte, Hockman;
OU
Gateway
Wilmington
. College Calee Reeves as the mosl
N.C. and Jim (Linda) Diddle, Racine.
Miami Univ~i'sity College Scholarships, $2,000, Lian Achievement
Award, outstanding chemisry stu: hi addition to his parents he was preceded in death by his ·Opportunity
Grant' Hoffmlln and Morgan $6,500 a year forfour years, dent; Ripley Raubenolt, the
;.vife, Tessie J. Grady Wolfe on Jun~ 26, 1991; ~rothers. Supplement, $2,496 a ear Kennedy; $500 Morgan Mason Metts;
marketing educcaion stuCharles Wolfe, Paul Wolfe. and twm brother Billy Roe for four years or full ttlition, Lentes; and $J500 Ernie
VFW Post 9926, $500 dent of the year; Brittany
Wolfe at birth, step daughter. Helen Wills; step son Terry and Miami Univerity Grant, . Welsh;
·
scholarship, to Jamie Bailey. Collins. DECA member of
. Williams and Step'grandson, Marvin Teaford.
$2,750, both for fo11r years,
OU King/Chavez/arks
·Achievement Awards
the year; Jessica Holliday;
· Graveside Services will be held Sunday, May 24, 2009, Brian Rice;
·
Award, $7,000, Chelsea · Achievement award win- . top anatomy/physiology.
2:30 p.m. in the Letart Falls Cemetery with -Rev. Jim · Milestone
benefits Smallwood;
· ners presented certificates sdtudent; Kim Swisher;
Satterfield officiating. Visitation will be at the Cremeens Scholarship, $500 each, to
OlJ King/Chavez/Parks included: Chad Bonnett and senior English highest averFuneral Home, Sunday, May 24,2009 from 12-2 p.m.
Caleb Bevan, Adrian Bolin, Award, $7,000 Chelsea Whitney Johnson, Archie age. Receiving awards for
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by Crockett Crow,
Noah Smallwood;
·
Griffin
Sportsmanship drama were Dan Stewart;
visiting www.cremeeensfuneralhm:nes.com.
Hajivandi, ·
Amber
OU Ray W. Heslop Awards; Clay Bolin and Brittany Collins, Kerri
Hockman, Morgan Lentes, SesquicentenniaiScholarship, Kimberly Swisher, U.S. VanReetb, Matt Hoskins,
Ashley Life, Jahnna Lydic, $300,Amanda Gilkey;
Army Reserve National Stacy Macumber .Jessica
Ripley
Rubenolt,Caitlin
OU Richard E. Jones Scholar/Athlete Awards; Holhday got the best actress
Swartz and Kerri VanReeth; Scholarship, $550, Jessica Mason Metts .· and Catie award, and Nick Engles and
MLTA Scholarships of Holliday;
Wolfe, U.S. Marine Corps best actor award with Brian
$300 each, Sarah Hubbard .· OU
Special
Russ · Distinguished
Athlete Rice being named the most
and Caleb Bevan. •
Scholarship,
$1,000, Awards; Amber Hockman, outstanding theater and arts
Muskingum · · College Morgan Ken,nedy;
.
U.S.
Marine
Corps student. Drew Webster Post
MIDDLEPORT - Rumpke waste collection service will
Achievement 39 American Legion recognot occur on Monday due to the Memorial Day holiday. Presidential Scholarshi'p, · Parker Long Scholarship, Scholastic
1'3
,500
a
year
for
four
$
$500,
Zachary
Story;
·
Award,
and
Eugene nized Morgan Lentes,
Service.will be delayed one day during the week. Regular
years,
Amber
Hockman;
·
R,io
Grande·
Community
Patterson,
U.S.
Marine Crockett Crow, Scott
.
collection will resume June I.
Nathaniel
Joslin
College/Rio
Grande
Corps
Semper
Fidelis Kennedy and Kayla Taylor
Questions may be directed to Rumpke's customer serMemorial
·
Scholarship.
University
Scholarship;
two
Award.
Amber
Hockman
as winners in .the governvice. at {888) 786-7531.
·
$100, Maria Meadows.
years, $6,000 Kelsey Sauters, and Kimberly Swisher Were ment essay contest.

Howard Lewis English Sr.

Achievers rrom

Bobby Joe WoHe

Local Briefs

Collection schedule

Racine observance
RACINE -Racine American Legion Post 602 will have
Memorial Day services a 10 a.m. Monday at the Post home.

Riversweep at Forked Run
· REEDSVILtE - Riversweep in Forked Run State Park
will be held oidune 6. Those participating will meet at 9
a.m. at the first shelter house. T-shins will be given and
food and beverages provided.

Legion schedule announced

Southern rrom Page Al .·
April Freeman, Beth Bay,
Lori Hill , Christy Essick,·
Rachel
Hupp,
Jen11y
Manuel, Misty Rogers,
Evelyn Stanley (IDEA
funded), Joy Neal, Donna
Sayre. The following classified personnel were hired to
work summer school for
Southern Elementary for
$10 per hour, not to exceed
$56!J: Launa Teaford, Julie
Zirkle. Andrea Teaford was
hired on a bne.year contract

MIDDLEPORT - Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American
Legion, will hold the following Memorial Day tribute ceremonies on Monday: 8:45 a.m., Middleport levee; 9 a.m.,
Middleport Riverview Cemetery; 9:15 a.m .. Bradford
Cemetery; 9:30 a.m., Middleport Hill Cemetery; I0: 15
a.m.,Addison Cemetery; 10:30 a.m., Cheshire Gravel Hill
Cemetery; · II .a.m.. Middleport Gravel Hill Cemetery;
11:15 a.m:, Stewart/Bennett Park, Middleport; 12:30 p.m.,
complex trail class. Ribbons
Howell Hill Cemetery; 1:10 p.m., Burlingham
Cemetery.
.
.
are given to the . fi~t six
.
places and each ribbon carries a number of points to be
added up at the end of the
season fer the ORP's
awards banquet.
The ORP's· Horse Show
TOLE\DO (AP) '-- Lauren Merrell already is half way Series is becoming a tourist
through college and she's just finishing h.igh school.
event in Meigs County,
Merrell is valedictorian of the first .class at Toledo Early attracting .equestrians from
College High School, a public school on the University of not only within the county
Toledo campus that allows students to take their first two but neighboring counties
years of college courses in high school ..
such as Athens and Gallia
"I think it's so amazin~ we get this opportunity because Counties and JackSon, Wood
it really is life-changing,' she said. "I don't think I would
have blossomed and found my caree.r path without it."
• Toledo Early College High School opened four years ago
behind a $400,000 grant from Knowled.\leWorks
Foundation. The Cincinnati-based foundation specializes in
performing dispatching work
· education reform.
until
the incident is resolved.
• There are several· similar early college schools around
Koebel told Sheriff Robert
Ohio, including ones in Dayton. Youngstown and Elyria.
: Dayton's Early College Academy graduated its first class Beegle he chased Gray's
vehicle from Middlepon to
fwo yeais ago.
.
· Toledo schools· SUI,lfrintendent John Foley said the pro- the intersectimi of Union
gram has gotten positive results and that it was important Avenue and Ohio 7 outside of
for the district to have options for students who are looking Pomeroy, and fired at Gray
.because he believed Gray was
for sometbing different.
.

.

1st class graduates froin ·
Ohio early college school

due to the sabbatical leave COG-SEOVEC .
Selfrequest of another teacher.
Funded Deilt.al Insurance
Kathy Miller and Charlie Program with CoreSource
Wolfe were approved as bus for July 1-June 30, 2010.
dfivers for the summer Also approved was the conschool and enrichment pro- tinued membership in the
gram at $12 per hour,ltot to Ohio Hij&gt;h School Athletic
exceed $1,200. This amount Association. The Truck and
includes the trip to the Tracker
Software
Columbus Zoo. Pamela Maintenance and Technical
Boyd was hired as a substi- · Support Agreement was
tute bus driver. .
also approved for $665.10,
The Board approved con- good June 3-June 3, 2010.
tinued membership in the
The Board agreed to pur-

chase a security system for
the bus garage from James
· Alarm for $1.300. Also purchased was a zero turn
mower. from Baum Lumber:
Present for the meeting
were Southern Local Board
of Education member&amp;
Smith, Dennie Hill, Denny
Evans, Peggy Gibbs. The
Board's next meetin~ is at 8
p.m., June 22 m the
Southern High School
media room.

.Horse Show rrom PageAt
and Mason Counties in West
Virginia. Bruoe McKelvey, ·
ORP member, said the show
has something for both adults
and children who ride .
"We·want to keep it entry
level, keep kids interested,
keep it .affordable and keep ·
it a fun show," McKelvey
said. "We don't look at
these people as contestlllltS
but as friends."
McKelvey said this year's
show will also see the dedication of a grandstand at the

show ,ring. The grandstand
will be dedicated t.o the late
Dick ·Sterrett who was an
ORP member. McKelvey
said Sterrett's widow Lois
donated $1,000 to the ORP
to use as they saw fit and
they decided to buy the
materials for the grandstand
and donate their labor.
McKelvey' said in addition ·
to ltonoring Sterreu, the
Memorial Day Show will
recognize veterans by passing small American Flags

Prosecutor from Page At
ror

reaching
a gun when \le Warren has agreed to serve
got out of his vehicle. Gray as special prosecutor .at no
received facial and dental . charge to the county.
. injuries from one of the shots. Williams said the close
Gray has denied being working
relationship
armed that night, but has between her office and local
· admitted to other incidents law enforcement makes it
w,ith the police.
· necessary for her to step
Commissioners
said • aside from any prosecution.

out to them.
As for _if the ORP plan to
do anything different with'
this year's horse show series;
McKelvey said. "if it's not
broken we don't try to ftx it.''
Concessions will also be.
sold during the show at the
Ponland Community Center
which is just off US 33 ori
Ohio 124. For more information call 843-5216 of
590-9936.

·-·--··-·-

·----"-~

Adam McDanld
&amp; Jamc~ AncJerwon
DIRECTORS

.

�•

I

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

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

u.s..Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. May 22, the 142nd day of 2009. There
are 223 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On May 22 , 1969. the lunar
module of Apollo 10, with Thomas P. Stafford and Eugene
Ceman aboard, flew to within nine· miles of the moon's surface in a dress rehears~! for the first l.unar landing. ·
On this date: In 1813, composer Richard Wagner was
born in Leipzig, Germany.
.
.
·
In 1859, author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the creator of
Sherlock Holmes, was born in Edinburgh. Scotland.
. In 1868, a major train robbery took place near
Mlu"shfield, Ind., as members of the Reno gang. made off
.
with $96,000 .in loot.
In 1907, actor-director Laurence Olivier was born in
Dork.ing, Surrey, England.
In 1939. the foreign ministers of Germany and Italy,
Joachim von Ribbentrop and Galeazzo Ciano, signed a "Pact
of Steel" committing the two countries to a military alliance.
In 1947, the Truman Doctrine was enacted as Congress
appropriated military and economic aid for Greece and Turkey.
In 1972. President Richard Nixon began a visit to the
Soviet Union, during which he and Kremlin leaders signed
the Anti-Ballistic Missile T~aty. The ish,md nation of
Ceylon became the republic of Sri Lanka.
.
. ln 1979, Canadians voted in parliamentary elections that
put the Progressive Conservatives in power, ending the 11year tenure of Prime Min.ister Pierre Elliott Trudeau.
fn 1992. after a reign lasting nearly 30 years, Johnny
Carson hosted NBC's "Tonight Show" for the last time.
Ten years ago: Columbine High School .seniors wearing
blue-and-silver gowns marched single file in a graduation
ceremony that mixed celebration of the day with sorrow for
victims of the recent massacre.
·
One year ago: A Texas appeals court said the state had no
right to take more than 400 children from a polygamist sect's
ranch. (After the Texas Supreme.Court upheld the ruling, the
children were returned to their parents.) Britain's Conservative
Party won a special election that was viewed as a barometer of
the popularity of Prime Minister and Labour Party leader
Gordon Brown. Indiana Jones returned to the big screen in
"Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull."
Today's ·Birthdays: Movie reviewer Judith Crist is 87.
Singer Char.les Aznavour is 85. Actor Michael Constantine
is 82. Conductor Peter Nero is·75. Actor-director Richard
Benjamin is 71. Actor Frank Converse is 71. Actor Michael
Sarrazin is 69. Former CNN anchor Bernard Shaw is 69.
Actress Barbara Parkins is 67. Songwriter Bernie Taupin is
59. Actor-producer AI Corley is 53. Singer Morrissey is 50.
Country musician Dana Williams (Diamond Rio) is 48.
Rock musician Jesse Valenzuela is 47. R&amp;B singer Johnny
Gill (New Edition) is 4~. Rock m11sician Dan Roberts
"(Crash Test Dummies) is 42. Model Naomi Campbell is 39.
Actress Anna Belknap is 37. Actress Alison Eastwood is ·
37. Singer Donell Jones is 36. Actress A.J. Langer is 35.
.Olympic gold-medal speed skater Apolo Anton Ohno is 27.
Thought for Today: "It is often said that men are ruled by
their imaginations; but it would be truer to say they are .
govemecJ by the weakness of their imaginations." _;_ W;tlter
Bagehot, English editor and economist (1826-1877).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. Tirey sho ..ld be less
than 300 words. All leiters are subject to editing, must be
signed, a11d include address atrd telephone nzmrber. No
"nsigned letters will be published. Letters should be i11
good taste, addressing isslle.r, 11ot personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for pllblication.
·

The ·Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction

Polley

(UsPs 213-9601
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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PageA4

OPINION

Friday, May 22, 2009

.friday, May 22, 2009

.

Terry
Mattingly

mused, in his one-foot-inthe-grave voice. "that God
had to cut my throat?" Then
he heard the harsh commandments for his new life.
"I adored my wife and
children, so I tried,"
Eszterhas told the audience
at CBS Studio Center. "I
stopped smoking . .I stopped
drinking. I was trying my
best to stay alive . I was try·
ing my best not to die, but I
knew that I couldn't do it."
Thus begins the wild conversion story he has shared
many times,.reading from his
book, Crossbearer: A
Memoir ofFaitfr. The turning
point arrives with a weeping
sinner on his knees. his lieart
skipping beats, his hands
shaking, his voice moaning
thro.ugh his tracheotomy
tube. Then Eszterhas hears
his own voice mumbling
strange words.
"I didn·'t know why I had
said it. 1 had ne'fr said it
before," he said. "then !listened to .myself say it again
and again and again.
'Please, God, help me.'
'Please , God, help me.'
'Please, God :," help me' ... I

thought to myself, 'Me,asking God, begging God? Me,
praying?" Then his pain
was gone and he was staring
into a bright light. He decided that, with God's help, "I
could defeat myself and
. win, if I fought very hard
and if I prayed. ... God
saved me from me."
· Condensed into the
punchy talking points that
sell s~;reenplays, Eszterhas
said his life has gone from
"Malibu to Ohio, from
booze to diet Sprite, from
Spago to McDonald's, 'from
Sharon Stone to Jesus."
Now he walks five 5 and
prays for an how every day.
With his Second· wife and
their four sons, he worships at
Holy Angels Catholic Church
in Chagrin Falls, Ohio; where
he volunteers to carry the
cross in Sunday Mass.
·
"The twisted little man"
. who wrote his scripts still
lives in his head , he said,
but is rio longer in charge.
The big , question was
whether Eszterhas could
W{ite without the tobacco,
alcohol and deadly darkness
that fueled his 16 screenplays,
which
became
movies that grossed more
than $1 billion.
Eszterhas said he sat
· frozen at his old typewriter,
fee ling ".like Jack Nicholson
in. 'The Shining.'" He faced
a complete mental block
until he pounded out: "This
is how I found.-God or how
God found me."

.

Pastor: Don Walktt

The memoir !lad to come
first. Since then, Eszterhas
has written two scripts,
including a "narco-terrorism" thriller he thinks
would fit Nicholson. He
also wants to write a smallbudget movie about Our
Lady of Quadalupe. In an
age in which Hollywood
keeps remaking old blockbusters, he wonders why no
one has produced spectacular digital versions of ''The
Silver Chalice," "The
Robe" or "Quo Vadis ." ·
While he wants to keep
working, what Eszterhas
can't imagine is writing the
kinds of scripts that made
him rich and famous.
·
"My head's not really in
that place. I mean, the
thing thfll I would like to
do very much, in the time
that l have left , in terms of
my own screenwriting, is
to ,.. write some things that
reflect my faith," he said.
The goal would be to put
"the same kind of energy ...
into doing faith-based
films that! think can really
be · commercially viable.
that I put into other films
of a different sort that
became commercially successful.''
(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Jrmrnalism Center at the
Council for Christian
Colleges ·and Universities
and
.leads
tire·
GetReligiorr.org project to
study religio11 and the n.ews).

•

Clturdt of JtsU.'i Cbrkt Apesaolk
Vinlandl and Ward Rd .. Putor: James
Miller, Sunday School - 10:30 a.m..
E..-ening · 7:30p.m.
Riftt Valley
River Valley Apo$toljc Worshtp Ctnter.
873 S. 3rd Ave .. Middkpon . Rev.
Michael Bradford. P~Htor, Sunday. 10:30
'a.m . T'ues, 6:30 prayer, Wed. 7 pm B'ible
SIUdy

-adA-

Taber..... Inc.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd, Rulland ,
sCrvices: Sun 10:00 ~ .m. ·&amp; 7:30 p.m ,

,•

••
'

1bun.1 :00 p.m·.• Pa.ctorMarty R. Hulton

Assembly of God
Ubort} .._,blf ol God
P.O. Box 467., Dudding Lane, Ma.son ,
W.Va ., Pattor: Neil Tennanl, Sunday.
Sc:rvkt!l- 10:00 a.m. and 1 p.m.

Baptist .
Pq..tlle Freewill Bllpllot Chunio .
Pulor: Floyd Ross. Surtday khool .9:30 to
10:30 lUll, Worihip sc:rVi~:t 10;30 to 11 :00
' am. Wed: preaching 6 pm

.,

C..-ptnltr r.deptndtot Bap'4t Churth
. Sunday School · 9:30am. Preaching
Service 10:30am, EYening Service
1:00pm. Wednesday Bible Study 7:(1()-pm.
Pa!itor:

CWUn Bapdtl Cburch
Pastor: Sieve Uute, 7.40-367-7801, H.
740· 992· U42, C. 740-645-2527, Sunday
School: 9:30 wn. Morning Worship: 10:30'
am. 'tooth &amp;. Bible Buddies 6:30 pm.
choir p1actic;e 7;30; Spedil days of month
I. Ladle~ of Grace' 7 pm 2nd Monday, 2.
Meu's FetrowshiP 7 pm )rei Tues.

·~

•·

Hope BlpdJi Cburrh (Southem)
~70

''
·'
•

•.

Grant St., ~iddleport. Sunday school
- 9:30a.m.. Worship - II a.m. and 6 p.m.,
Wedne&amp;day Service · 1 p.m. Pistor: Gary
Ellis
kuUand Flnt BlpUst Church
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:45 a.m.
Pasrar Jon Bl't)Cken, East Main St.,
Sunday Scl1. 9:30am. Worship 10:30 am

Rutland fl'fJl! WHIIllpllst
Salem St .• Pastor: Ed Dame)· • Sunday
ScOOol - 10 a.m . Evenin&amp; - 7 p. m..
Wednesday Snvicn - 7 p.m.
Stt-ond ....... Ol.n:h
Ra"'ensw()fj)d , WV, Suoday SchOOl \0 am' Morning .worstup II am Eve11ing • 7 pm.
Wednesday 7 p.m.
Flrst B1pdst O.rch {f(Masoa, WV
· (JndepCndent Elup!:ist)
SR 652 ll.QrJ AmletSOIJ St. Pastor: Robert
Grady , SundJiy SL:hool .10 am , MOJ'ning
church II am . Sunday evenint 6 pm, Wfll .
Bible Study 1 pm

Catholic •
Samd U.m Catbolk: C.wt,b
161 Mulberry A\le., Purt'leroy, 992-5898,
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz. Sat. Con.
4:45-5: ISp .m.; Mass· 5:30 p.m., Sun .
Con. -8 :45-!US a.m ... Sun. Mus· 9:JO
a.m...Daily Mass. 8:30 a-!fl.

Church of Christ
Wc:stlidt Churtlt oftbtht
33216 Children's Home Rd. P0mer(ly, OH
Contact 740-441 · 1296 Sundi!Y morniog
10:00. Sun mornins Bible study :
following wo~hip. Sun . eve !"rOO pm .
' Wed bible Study 7 pm
Hemlock Grove Cbri!ldan Church
Mini51tr: Larry Brown, Wqrship - 9:30
a.m. Sund.iy School - 10:3U a.m.. Bible
Study · 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Church ot Christ
212 W. Main St .. Suoday School · 9:30
a.m., Worship- 10:30 ' a.m., 6 p .m..
Wed~sday Services - 1 p.m.

Pomeroy Wt5tslde Cburch Ur Christ
33226 Children's Hotilll Rd., Sunday
School - H a.m .•. Worship·IOa.m.,6 p.m.
Wednesda)· ~f'\lkU · 1 p.m.

Middleport Church ofCbrilit
5tb and M11in, Pastor: AI Hartson ;
Childrens Director; S~aron SAyre, T~n
Di~or : Dodger VaugUn. Sunday School
- 9:30 a.m .. Worship- 8:15. 10:30 a.m.. 7
p.m .. Wednesday Smites · 7 p.m.

Keno Church of Christ
Worship: 9:3~ un .. Sunda~ Schoo! •
10:30 a.m., Pllstor-Jcffrey Wallace. ht11nd
3rd S\Diday-

Flnt Soutltern BIPU§I

41872 Pomeroy Pike, Sunday School-·
9:30 am .. 'Worship • 9:45am &amp; 7:00 p.m.1
Wed. ~sday Services · 7:00p.m.

'·

F1nt Baptist Church .
Pastor: Billy Zuspan 6th lllld Palmer St.,
MiddlepOrt. Surld11y School · 9:15. a.m.•
Wonhip • IO:B a.m.. 7:00 p.m ..
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

Radnt First Bap:llst
P_astor: Ryan Ea1on, pagtnr , Sunday
School • 9:30a.m.. Worship - 10:4Q a.m ..
~:00 p:m.. We~dnosday Services - 7:00
p.m.

SUvrr Run B'p~l
· Pa~tor: John SwaMOf1, Sunday School IOa.m., Worship - lla.m., 7:00 p.m.
-,Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

MICHAEL VICK

Mt. Union Baptht
Pastor: Dc:nnls Weaver Sunday School. 9:45 a.m.. EveninJ1 • 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Sen".ices - 6:30pJR.

·RELEASED
--

-

Bethlehtm Btptllt Cburcb

Oreal Bend, Route 124. Racine. OH.
Pastor: , Sunday Sch.qol • 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday Worship- 10:30 a.m.,; Wednesday
Bible Study· 7:00p.m.

0111 Betbti frH WID Baptist Churc:h
28601 St . Rt . 1, Middleport, Sunday
Service - 10 a.m .. 6:00 p.m .. Tuesday
Services -6:00
HHtaide Bapil$1. Church ·
St. Rt. 1:43 just off Rf. 7. Pastor: Rev.
'Jamos R. A.cree. Sr., Sunday Unified
Service . Wonhip · lO:Jb a.m., 6. p.f1J .,
Wednesday Sel'\'ices -7 p.m.

Rosy report can't hide stimulus problems
On May 13. the White
House released its first
quarterly report .on the
American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act, better
known as the $787 pillion
stimulus bill. Reaction on
Capitol Hill was swift:
Republicans think it's a
joke. while Democrats don't
want to talk about it.
The report was unveiled
not by President Obama.but
by Vice President Joe
Biden, who said it "shows
early progress providing
imm~diate financial relief
for American families · and
jump·starting billions of
dollars in job-creating projects.'' In a sress release,
Biden claime the stimulus
has so · far · "created or
·saved" 150,000 jobs. and ·
that "over 3.000 transportation-construction projects
have been funded in 52
states and territories ...
You do~'t have to look
too hard to find problems
with Biden 's work. First, no
one seems to know precise,
ly · where the · figure of
150,000 jobs comes from.
When President · Obama
used it in a speech on April
29 ,
the
Web
site
FactCheck.org pretty much
demolished the · claim.
Previewing the Biden report
on May II, a "senior admin·
istration official" held a
conference
call
with
ieponers and seemed unprepared ~hen asked where the
created-or-saved jobs actu·

Byron
York

ally are. "In terms of exactly where and in what sec-.
tors, that's not something I
have numbers on." the official said, "because, precisely, we don't yet have any of
the reporting:: ·
As far as the 3.000 transportation-construction proJects are concerned , tl)ere
ar11 certainly some under
way, but no one .seems able
to confirm a number so
large. 'Til buy lunch for the
first person who can get a
list of those transportation
projects ;· one
Senate
Republican aide told me,
"That's absolutely not true."
The real news about the
stimulus is buried inside the
Biden report. It says that as
of May 5, $88 billion has
been "obli~ated" for spend·
ing. "Obltgated" is federalese for money that has
been committed but not yet
spent. A much s·maller number. $28.5 billion, has actually been shoved out the
door - that is. $28.5 bil·
lion out of tlie stimulus total
of $787 billion has so far
been spent..
And where did it go?,

More than 95 percent has that makes .traffic lights is
ended up ·in just two said to be rehiring three
places: the Depanment of .laid-off employees. A
Health
and
Human South Carolina county is
Services
and
the goi.ng to receive jobDepartment of Labor. The retraining money.
Human Services money · The stimulus is generatwas poured into a .program ing other anecdotes, too.
called FMAP, or Federal Recently WBAL-TV in
Medical"
Assistance Baltimore, Md., reported
Percentages, where it was that a local man, 83 years
given to the states to help old. received a $250 Social
pay their Medicaid bills. Security stimulus check.
The Labor money has gone The only problem: It wasn't
for ex.tended unemploy- for him - it was for his
ment-insurance benefits.
mother, who died on
·The report also shows that Memorial Day in 1967.
Health and Human Services WBAL said Social Security
will distribute . by far the officials "blame the error on
largest chunk of sti~ulus the strict mid-June deadline
n\oney over the next year. · of mailing out all of the
The mopey has gone to checks, which didn't leave
HHS because it is the easi- officials much time to clean
est place to spend lOis of up all of their records."
cash fast. But all that S1milar stories are now popMedicaid and sodal-ser" . ping up around the country.
vices money. much of
At one point in the repon,
which will be used by state Biden \)oasis that the govgovernments to cover their ernment has ·made commitown spending excesses, is ments for $1.1 billion in
considered among me least stimulus spending every
stimulative parts of the day since the $787 billion
stimulus bill.
bill was signed into law in
The rest of the report is a February. At that pace, it
. series of anecdotes, which · will take the admimstration
Biden calls "Reports From nearly two years to come up
the Field." Some of the with concrete plans to
stories are well-worn . The spend all the money - and
Chicago window factory longer still to actually get it
that has often figured in out the door.
Obama-Biden discussions
And even then. we still
and photo-ops
it's might be trying to find out
urt'der new ownership and where it all went.
( Byrort York is chief politreportedly planning to
rehire some laid-off' work- · ical correspondent for The
ers. A Delaware company Washington Exa11\i11er).
'·

The Dally Sentinel • Page A5

WORSJllP GOD THIS WEEK

I

. I

Eszterhas writes iffinding God
Screenwriter
Joe
Eszterhas knows all about
strange plot twists, and he is
convinced that God often
sends big messages in the
tlnal acts of people's lives.
Once
a
scandalous
Hollywood insider, the
author of twisted thrillers
such a; "Basic Instinct" and
"Jagged Edge" can quote
chapter and verse about life
and death in Tinseltown.
Consider the ruthless m~vie
mogul who died during a
beach vacation when r a
metal bar fell from a construction crane and pieced
his heart. Or how about the
Casanova actor whose reputation made his testicular
cancer a bit too ironic? ..
Eszternas will name
names,. when confessing his
own sms.
The screenwriter's ego·
maniacal tantrums were the
stuff of legends , along with
his appetite for alcohol,
cocaine and first-person
research for the lap-dancing
scenes in "Show girls." Then
there was his foul, blasphemous mouth. ·
It was tempti,ng to con:
nect the dots when he was
diagnosed with throat can- ·
cer in 200 I, said Eszterhas,
during his blunt and mildly
profane testi many at Biola .
University's annual conference-on faith' and the entertainment industry. The
resulting surgery claimed
80 percent of his larynx .
"Was it possible," he .

www.mydallysentlnel.com

..
•..

.,

Vktory B•ptbllodcpendont
!125 N. 2nd St. Middleport, Pastor: Jumc:s
E. Keesee , Worship • IOa.m., 1 p.m.,
Wednesday Scn'i~s • 7 p.m.

Faldl Baptl!l Ch~
Railroad St.. Mason, Sunday School . 10
a.rri., Worship • II a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesdly Servi~ - 7 p.m.

~

F~Rua.ptitt-Pom$y

Joseph Woods, Sunday Scltool .' ~0
a.m., Wonhip • 11 :30 un,
Rt\1.

. MI. Moriah Bapdst
Founh il. M1in St., Middleport. Sund8y
School - 9:30 1.m.• Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Pastor: ReY. Mich~~el A Thompson, Sr.
Attlto(ult} llaptht
Sunday School - Q:JO a.m:. Wonhip JQ:4S a.m .. S11nday Evening · 6:90p.m.,

Bearwallow Rldp: Cburcll·or Christ
Pastot:Broce Terry, Supduy School -9:30

a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m ., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesda)' Ser\'icei · 6:30p.m.

Zion ChuKh otCJUolst
Pomeroy. Harrisonville Rd . (Rt.I4J).
.Pastor: Rogc:r Watson , Suo~ay Scllool ·
9:30 a.m .. Wonhip • 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Servkes · 7 p.m .

. Thppen Plain Chun:h ol Chrflt '
Instrumenlai, Worship Service - 9 a,. m.,
Communion - ·10 a.m .. Sundily Schoo l 10:15 P.m .• Youth- 5;30 pm Sunday-. Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm
· .
llradbtiry Churtb of Christ
Mini~ter: Tom Runyon, 39558 'Bradbury
Road, Middleport, Sunday School.- 9:30
a.m;
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Rulltmd Cburth orChrilit
·Sunday SchOO! -11:30 a.m., Worship and

Communion - 10:30 n.m., Dli\'id
Wisenum. Minister ·

Bradford Churth ofChrlst
Comer of St. Rt:l24 &amp; Bradbury · Rd ..
Minisler: Doug Shamblin. Youth Minister:
· Bin Ambr'iJer, Su nday School· 9:30a.m.
. Worsh!P • 8,:00 'a.m.• 10:30 a.m., ~:00
pJn ..~dnesday Servlct~ ·7:00p.m.
Hkkory HUis Chun:h of Chrlit
Tuppers Plains, Pastor Mike Moore. Bible
class. 9 a.m. Sunday: worship 10 a.m.
Sunday;_ worship 6:30 pm Sunday; Bible

R-'lle Churcll ol Christ
Pastor: Jack Colgr&lt;Jve. Sunday School:
9:30 a.m .. Wmship Sel'\'ke: 10:30 a.m.• '
· Bible Suxly. Wednesday. 6:30p.m.
Dexter Churdt of Cbri!R
Sl.lat.lay U:hool 9:30a.m., SurvJ~y warship

• 10:30 a.m.
The Churda or Chrl!il ol Pomeroy
Intersection 7 and 124 W, Evangelist
Dennis Sargent. Sunday Blbl~ Study . 9:30a.m.. Warship: lO:JO ~ .m . and 6:30
p.m .. Wednesday Bible Study- 7 p.m.

Syraruse ffm Ch1,1rcb olGod
Apple and Second ·sts .• Po.\t(J(: Rev. D.a\lid
Rus~II •.Sunday School and Worstlip- 10
a.m. E"'ening Serv ices- 6:30 p.in ..
Wednesday Service ~ • 6:30p.m.
Churdo ol God ol l'rot&gt;IN&lt;y
O.J. Whik Rd . off St. Rt. 1~ . Pastot&lt;. PJ .
Chapman , Sunday School • tO a.m..
Wonbip • JI a.m., \\'ednesda)' Services · 1
p.m.

Congregational
Trinilf Chun:b
PMtor- Rev . Tom Johnson , Sewod &amp;
Lynn. Pomeroy. Pastoc , W~hip 10:25
IIJJ).,

Insurance

Products+
Financial

AGENC:IES Inc.

Bill Quickel

Selvices

lloliness
. ClllllDiunUy Church
Pastor: Steve Tomek . Main Street.·
Rutland , Sunday W~hip-Jb;OO a.m.,
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

Danvtllt HoUIHS!i Churth
31057 Sta~ Route J2.5, Lan~:svlle. Pastor:
~rian Bail~y, Sunday Kbool • 9:~ a.m.,
Sunday wonhip - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 1 p.m..
Wetlnesda,- prayer scrvi&lt;:e • 1 p.m.
Calvary PHgrlm·cbapel
Ham~n. . Hle Road. Pastor: Charles
McKcm~ie. Sund11y Sl;hoo\ 9:30 ·a.m .•.·
Wol'lhip- ll a.m., 7:00 p.m.. Wedl'lc:sda)·
Scnir.-c: - 7:00p.m.

·\

·

· ROllC or Sharon HollntM Cburt:b
Pw_rir: Rev.
DeWey Klng, Sundlly school- 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday worship -7 p.m.. Wednesday
. prayer meeting· 7 p.m.
t.iadin~ Creek Rd., Rl.llland,

~itt

Grol't Bible Hollnell Church

.Jfl· mile off Rt. 325, Pastor: Rev. O'Dell

Manley, Sunday School • 9:30 11.m.,
Worship - l0:30 a.m., 6:00 p.m.,
Wednesday ~rvl'ce -1:00.p.nl.

WnleY.IIJlBib~ uoiln.;q Churtb
Cox, Sunday School • W. a.m. Worship •
10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve. 6:00 p.m.,
· Wednesday Sel'\lict - 1:00 p.m.

Hy!iCU Run Commualty Churcb
Pastor: Rev. Lany Lemley:·SI!llday School
- 9:30a.m., Wofllhip · 10:45 aJTJ:, 7 pJll.,
Thursday Bibl_e Study and Youlh • 7 pm.

Laurel CHft'Free Methodist Churdl. ·
Pastor: Glen McClung, Sunday School 9:30 n.m. , ,Worship - 10:30 a.m·. und 6.
pm.,Wednes0a)'
ice •·1:00 p.m.

Sen:

Latter-Day Saints
The Church of Jctll:l
Clirill ofLaUer-.Day S'alntll
St. Rt . 160, -4411-6247 or 446-1486,
Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m ., Relief
Society/Priesthood. II :05-12:00 noon.
Sacrament Service 9-10:\.S a.m. .•
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Llltheran Ch11rch
Pine OmYe, Worship ~ 9:00a.m .. Suitday
School - 10:00 a.m. Pastor: ·

·Our SK"ktur ~lhtnn ~hun:h
Walnut and H~nry St,., Ravcn~wootl,
W.V»,., Plstor~ David Russell, Sun~ay
School • IQ:OO a~ . , Worship· II a.ro.

St. Paul L!Jther.i..n.Churth
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St .. ·Pomeroy.
Sun. School · 9:4S a.m .. Wol'lhip · II a.m .

Graham United Methodist
W~hip • II a.m. Pa!lor! Rkhard.Nea9e
Becbtd United Mtlhodlst
New Hnven. Richard Neue. Pastor.
Sunday worsh ip 9;3{) a.m. Tues. 6:30 '
prayer.nnd Bible S1udy.
ML Olh-e United· Ml!lb~lltt
Otf 124 behind WHk~svllle, Putor: Rev.
Ra.lph Spi~ . Sunc'tay Sci!Qol · 9:30a.m.,
Worship ·-· 1[);30 a.m.. 1 p.m..' ll\Ursday
Services - 7 p.m.

Meigs Cooptnth•e Pariah

Pastor: Jim Corbitt, Worship - 9 a.m.,
Sunday ScbOQI • tO a.m. , Th~ay
Servi!.'C$ - 7 p.m.

Church of God

Joppa

o .....

CentniiC.._,r
Asbury (S)·*u~) . Pas!Ot Bob Robin1011 ,
_Sunday School · 9:45 ~Jn., WuniUp - tl
aJU., Wtdot:sday Services · 7:30pm.
flttwooch
Pastor. Dtwayne Stunlcr, Sunday School 10 a.m.. Worship - It a.m.

Foratlao
PaJtor; Bob Robmsoo. Sunday Scbool : 10
a .m., WOI'!Ihip- 9 a.m.

Roath (Middleport)
Pastor: Brian Dunham. Sunday School •
9:30 a.m.:.WorV!ip • II :00 a.m.
Minmvlllt
Pastor: Bob Robinson. Sunday School • 9
a.m.. Worship , 10 a.m.

Mlddltpoo1, OH 740-992-5141
,..,., Alld&lt;rsoo,Atlam McDuiet-

499 Richland Avmue, AIhens
740-594-6333
1-800o&gt;IS 1-9806

DIR&lt;ton

Pomerof, OH 740-99~·5444

Brogan-Warner
words abide in you; y. shaU iNSURANCE
SERVICES
wh/JJ ye will, and il shall
214 E. Main
done unto you.

~~~

1.m .. Wonhip · IO·JO a .m .. 6 p .m .•
W~ySetvices - 7p.m

Carttlftllllll:rdt:Mmlnatioa-' Cllurdl
Kmgsbury Road , Pastor· Roben Varn.
Sunday School - 9:}(} a.m.. W1lBhip •
Sel'wce JOJO a.m.. Evening Servtce 6
pm
t"rtftlom Gosptl Mhsltlu
Bald Knob. on Co Rd . 3l. Putar: Rev.
Roger Willford . Sunday Scbool · 9:30
;~~ .m . WoMip- 7 p.m.

CIMIIa"Ciuudloltlto N Pastor: Rev. Curtis Randolph. Sunday
Sebool - 9: 30a.m. ~ Wmbip·· 10:30 a.m ..
Sunday eveniqg 6 pm
Rudand Cburdo ottltoN...,...
Putot: Oc:orit Stadler~ Suodly Sc~l ·
9:30 a.m.. Worsbap • 10:30 a.m ., 6:30
pm .• Wednesday Serviees • 7 p.m.

Wblte'sCb.pd Waieyllll
Coot... ille Road .· !'astor: .Re .... Chiirles
ManindAie . Sunday School . 9;30 a.m.•
Wooh ip · 10:30 a.m.• Wedne-sday Sen~

Other Churches

· 7~.m

"""'Cboudl
Old American Legion Hal1,
New

..........,

Pastor: Brian Dunltam. Wot!i hip un .. Sunday School- 10:45 a:m.

Ldan. W.Va. Rt. I, Pastor. Brian May.

Synt&lt;UO&lt;C...,u.ollyCitur&lt;b
2480 Second St .• Syral:ust, OH
Sun . School 10 am. Sundy lligb16:30 pm
Pastor: Joe Gv.riitD
ANewllqj.. log
(full Gwpd tburdr) HarriSQilvil)c:,
PutOI1: Bob and Kay Manhall,
Thun. 7 p.m.

Sunday School · ~ : 30 a.m.. Wonhtp -1:00

-p.m.,Wednesday Bible Study • HMJ p.~p .
foltlt Ftllowthlp Cnuade for Chrla
Putm: Rev. Friil)klin Dicken ~. Service:
Fridly, 7 pm.
~IIVIU')' BUlk Cbun:h
Pomeroy Pike , Co. Rd .. Pastor: Rev.
Blackwood. Sund~y School • 9:30 a.m.,
Wors:bip 10:30 a .m.. 7:30 p.m..
Wednetday krvice - 7:30p.m.

Amutna c~ cemm.blt}Churdt
Pastor: Wayne Dunlap. Sfalt Rt. 681',

Tuppers Plains, Sun. Worship: tO am A

SU•emlllt Coaunually Clwn:b
Sunday School 10:00 am. Sunda): Worih1p
. 11 :00 am, Wc:dn~sdly 7:00pm Pa!tor:
Bry.lf' &amp; Miuy Dailey

.-Cbrlltlao F.uo...hlp

Cafeter)a Pastor: Qris Ste'wart
9 ~ 2~

Rock Sprinp )
Pastor: Dewayne .Stufler1 Sunday School .
a.m.• WQrship · 10 ~.m .. You1h
·Fellowship, Sunda)' • 6 p.an. Earl)' Sunday
worship 1t am. Ltnora Lt:ithrit
9:00

Rutland
P'astm: iohn Chapman, Sunday· School 9:30a.m.. Wol'lbip · 10:30 a.m., Thunday
S'etl'icu • 1 p.m.
Salem Center
Pa.~tor: Willilim K. Marshall, Stmd.ay
School - 10:15 a.m .• WotShip · 9:15a.m.•
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm

SOIW¥ille .
~unday

/
Falrritw Billie Church

FourtbA~ .• MKki~.Sunday 5 p.rh .

(Non-denomiJwionaJ fellowship)
Meeting in the Meig' Middk School

New llrgillllbtp Churdl·

Silto'tr Ridge- PaS1or Lmda DlUIICwood.
SLI.Ilda)' School · 9 a.m.. Wonhip Service
lOam. 2od and 4th Sunday

Pomeroy Cluurlt .tthe NuattM
Putor: Jan Laveodu , Sumilly School 9:30 a.m., Worship · IO:JO a.m. and 6
p.m., \\'edneiday Setvices · 7 p.m.

6:30pm .. Wed; Bible Study 7;00 p.m·.

PeartChaprl
Sunda)' School - 9 a.m .. Woiship • 10 a.m.

School - 10 il_m., Worship - 9 a.m.

llfPI•riy
Past~r: John. Rozewh:z, Sunday SchDOI - ' ,

10 a.m., W9rshlp· - 9 a.m., Wednesday
· 10 a..m.

S~ices

Cartnei-Suttoa
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rcls . Racine. Ohio,
Pastor: John Rozewkz, Sunday SchQOI •
9:45a.m., Worship. · 11:00 a.ni. , Bible
. Study Wed. 7:30p.m.

Mornloi Star
Paitor: John Roztwicz, Sunday SchOol •
· 11 a.m., \VQilhip • 10 a.m.
. EU l.tllrt.
Blll Marshall Sundtty' Sehool ·9a.m.• Worship • JO a.m.. l.st Sunday
eYery month e.,.ening service 7:00 p.m.;
Wednesday· 1 p. m.
Pu~ror:

Rtclnt
Pastor: Rev. William Mmhall, Sund11y
School - 10 a.m., Worship - II
a.m.Wedne!lda)' ServiCes 6 pm; Thur Bible
Study 1 pm

. IO :OOam - NoonS~y:lnfonnal
Worship, Childml's mini5try
COIMmunttyofCbrllt
Portland-Racine :Rd .. Past(lf: Jim Proffill,
Sunday Schoo_! .- 9:30 a.m ... Wonhip ~
10:30 a.m .. Wednesday Services - 7:00
p.m.
Deibel W-lp Cenl«
39782 St: Rt. 1. 2 milts south of Tuppers
Plains, OH. Non-deuohiinatioOal with
Coniempomy Praise &amp; Wonh.ip. Pas10r
Rob B~•.Assoc. Pastor Karyn DaYi,.
Youth Dlret-tor Betty Fulks. Sunday
services: 10 am Worship &amp;. 6 pm Family
Life Classe~, Wed &amp; Thur· night L-ife
Groups at 7 pm. Thurs morning ladies'
Life Group 111 10. Outtr Limits Youth Life ·
Oroup on Wed. evening from 6:30 tci 8;30.
Visit us ~line at www.betbelwc.org.

Alt. Street Chur.:h
J98 Ash ·St., Middleport-Paston Mark
Morrow &amp; Rodney Welker s 'unday
School • 9:3.0 · un., Mofnlng Worship •
10:30 a..rn: &amp; 7:00-pm, Wednesday Service
· 7:00p.m .• Youtl\ Smke- 7:00 p.m.
Appe Lifr C"'(cr
·
..Full-Gospel Church", ~astors Joh!l &amp;
Patty Wade, 603 Second Ave. Ma~. 773·
5017 , Sen"ice time: Sunday 10:30 a.m..
Wedne5day 7 pm

Cl1fiM l l o - Ch.,.lt
Clifton ..W.Vi..• Sunday Sc:boql • 10 ai.Jll ..
Won;hip - 7 p.m., WedneWay SerViCe • 7
p.m.

3n3 Oeoq:es Cret!k: Road,GaUipolis, OH
Pastor: Jamie Wireman. Sunday ServiC¢1 •
10;')0 a.m. Wednc'sda~ -7 .p.in. Thursday
Prayer &amp;: Pniae at 6 pm. Clls~ fOr all
ages every Sunday &amp;. Wednesday.
www.thearlcchLRh .net
F•U Goopd Clturcb
of the Ll....._ Snior
Rt.l38, Antlctuit:y. Pastor: Jesw Morris,
Servia•: Saturday 2:00p.m.

Salem C&lt;.mumty Cbun:ti
Bac~ ofWe~1 Columbia. W.ya.om Lievins

Road, Pastor: Charles Roush (304) 67$·
2288, Sunday School 9:30 am. Sunday
e\'ening se~ice 7:00 pm, Bibly S1udy
Wednc:Jday service 7:00pm

Hobloa Cbrildan fellowshtp Churc.b
Pastor: Hers~:kel White , Sundiy School10am: s~yChurthscn~-6:30pm ·~
~ednesday 7 pm

Abaadlnt Grac!e
923 S. Third St., Middleport, Pas10r TercH
Davis. Su n~ay servk~. 10 a.m. ,
WtdllC'sday service, 7 p.m.
F~thFul ""'pel Churdl .
Long Bottom. PastOr. Stevr Reed; Sunday ·
' School - 9:30 a.m. Worship • 9:30 n.m.
and 7 p.m., Wednesday · 7 p.m .. Friday •
· fellowship sc:rvi~ 7 p.m. ·

Hafruon¥11lt CGIDJilllllli, Churtb
Pastor: Theron Durham. Sunday • 9:)0
a.m. and 1 p.m., W~y • 7 p.m.

ReJokln11Jir Ch.....
500 N. :Zad Ave., Middleport, Pastor:
Mike ForellWl, PukJr Ematitu' Lawrence
ForciTWI, Worship- 10:00 am
Wednem&amp;y Service' .7 p.m. •

RHtoradon Cbrladan Fellow!blp
9l6S Hooper Rood, Athens. Pastor:
Lonnie Coats, Sund~ Worship 10:00 am.
WC\Ine!iday: 7 ~m
·I

HoUH ot HeaU01 Mlnlslrlfl ·
St. Rt. 124 Lan&amp;nUte, OH
Full Oospel. Cl Pasuws R~bert &amp;. Robt:rta
MI.I&amp;Ser. Sunday School 9;30 am. ,
Worship 10:30 am . 7:00· pm. - Wed.
Sc:Nic;e 7:00 pm
~J-Miniltrleo

CoOMUe UaJted -Methodili Pariah
Pastor:-J:iclen Kline, Coobille Church,
Main &amp;: fifth St .• Sun. SChool • 10 a.m.,
Worship- 9 a.m., Tues. Services · 7 p.m.

Bethel Chun:b
ToWnship Rd., 468C. Sunday Sch~l - 9
a.m . Worship · 10 a.m ... Wednesday
Servil.-es- 10 a.I,TJ.
HoddnJPort Durdt
Kathryn Wiley. Sunda~ School • 9!30
a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m.. Pllstor Phillip
Bell

Middle~

CollllDillilty C~udl
S1S Pearl St., Middlopon , Pastor: Sam
Anderson. Suadiy School 10 a.m.,
EYening • 7:30 p.m. , WedDCsday Service·

Co. Rd . ~.-Sunday School . 9:30 a:m.•
Worship . 10:30 a..m.

Pea·tews~ AIIStmbly .

Putor: St. RL 124, Racine, Toinado Rd.
Sund11Y S~hool ~ 10 a.m .. Evening • 1.

Syncutt Million
1411 Bridgeman St.. Syracu,e. Pa!tor •
Re". Roy Thomp$01!., SundaY School- 10
a.m 1 Eveftln8 • 6 p.m., Wednesday Service

HarrbuaYille Pmbyierlaa Cbllrtb
Pa51~r: Roben Marshall, Worship · 9:00
a:.m. Sunday

·

l\.tkldlt!por:t Churtll ofthe. NUINnt
Pa~w: Leona~ Powell, Sunday School •
9:30 a.m.,Wonhip - I0:30a.m .• 6:30p.m.,
Wednesday Servil;n - 7 pm ..

R-llieFolo-p
Church of the Na~, ~astor: Runell
Canon · . S.ut!.daY School • 9:30 a.m.•
Worship - 10:4!1 a.m., 7 p.m., Wedne:sday
Services - '1 p.m.··

SyracusoCJou&amp;ochollbtNPa$(0( Mil.:e Adkins, Su~y Sc~l· ~:Jq

·

Hud C-iyCboreh

36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

SWISHER
&amp; LOHS£

Dymlllt Comm•nity Chua \
sunday Schoo.I • 9:30
WorshiP ~
10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Mont Chilpel Cbun:h.
Sunday school • 10 a.m .. Worship : II
a.nl ., Wed.nesday Sc:rv~ · 1 p.m.

a.m ..

Fallb Gospel Chttreh
· Long Bmtom. Sunday School · 9:30am ..
Worship - 10:45 a.m .. 7:30 p.m. ,
Wednesday·7:30 p.m:
·
l"uU Gospel Uab-.e
33045 Hiland Road, Pnmero~ . Pastor. Roy
Hun1er. Sunday School - 10 a.m .. Evening
7:30p.m .. Tuesday~ Thurs. · 7:30p.m.

Mlddltport Pfttb)UriiiD

Seventh-Day Adventist
~vtnlh-Dty Advendll · .
Mulbeny Hts. Rd ..' Pomeroy, SatUrday
Ser\licts: Sabbat" School • · 2 p.m.,
WOI'flhlp - 3 p.m.

United BreUaren
Mt. H•nnon United Brettn.
In Christ Cbun:h
Te~u

Community 3641 I Wickham Rd.
Pastor: Ptter Martindale , Sunday SchooJ..
9 :30 a.m., Worship • 10:30 a.m .• 7:00
p.m.. Wednc:!iday Services • 7:00 p.m.
Youth group meetin&amp; lnd &amp; 41h Sundays
7p.m.
Edm UlihN Brelbrea.ln- Cbrist
Statt Roote 124, betWeen 'Reedsville &amp; .
Hodrin.apon. Sunday School • lO ·1\.nt., '
Sundiy Worship - 11:00 a.m. Wednesday

Soltb ~~ C~unlty c•urw:h

Let your light so shine before

CENTER 111en,that they may see your

nt rcuo you dtstiW, rlost fo ho111t

Presbyterian

James Snyder. Sunday School 10
a.m .. worship service I l am.

7:3qp.m.

Rllute 68?. Albany, Rev . Lloyd Grimm.
· pastor. Sunda.y SchoOl 10 am; wurh!i.ip
service 11 am , evening sc:rvice 1 pm. Wed,
prt~yer mtelins 7 pm

p.m .. Wednesday Service~· 7 p.m.

P~tar:

School· 9:30a.m.. Wors~ip- 10:30 a.m.,

Point Rode Clitu:rh ortht Naurtne

Pentecostal

Faltb Valley 1\lbtl'nKie·qwrch
Bailey Run .R(Iad, Pastor~ Rev. .Em_mert
Rawson, · Sunday .Evening ., ,. p.m ..
Tnunday Service - 7 pm. ·

Off Rt. 12ol., Pa$ior: Edsel Hart, Sunday

Nazarene

_Mettina 333 Mecbanic Street, Pomeroy.
OH . PUIOf Eddie 8aer, Service t\le!')' ·
Sunday lO:OO a.m.
'

7:30p.m.

. 7p.m.

Thrdl Chu"h.

!nber!l':on~.:=~rwi6ROCKSPRINGS

.
.funeral J)ome

Joh11 15:7,
1112.-77

Tuppm; f'lainf Sl. Paul
Pasror· Jim Corf:titt. Sunday School • 9
a.m.. worship · 10 a.m., Tue~y Services
- 7:30p.m..

Gratt Episoopal Church

32&amp; E. Main St .. · Pomeroy,
Holy
Eucharist 11:30 a.m. SUnday &amp;: 5:30 pm
Wed. Rtv. le!ilie Flemming

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc. lfye !lbUh in Me, and My
Full line ol

p . m . ~l'\lll"c:

Episcopal

Hartford, W.Va .. Pas1nr: Mil.:t Puckett.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.• WOf!!hip ·
IO : ~ll a .m .. 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Servke~ • 7:00p.m.

works and glorify
Matthew 5:

Wonbip · 9:3() a.m., Sunlilay School ·
10:30 a,m., F'~nt Sunday u£ Mtxnh • 7:00

Hartford Cburtb otChrb:lln

·III"'II· that they may see
heaven."

Services - 7 p.m.

Church or God
Pastor: Shatle M. Bowling, Sunday
Worship · 10 a.m., 6 p.m.. Wednesda}'

Notthcast Cluster, AlfRd , Pa$toc Jim
COrbin, Sunday School - 9:30 a.tn .,
Wonhip- 11 ~.m ., 6:JO p.m.

Christian Union

._ ...._

R~tbncl

United Methodist

d~7PffiWed.

Pastor. lknzal Null. Worship· 9:30a.m.
SuOOay SchUQI · 10:30 a.m.

Sunday Schbol - 9'10 a.m .• Wonhip ![)o.\Oa.m.

pm.

15 · Pearl St.,· Middlepot1 . Putor: Doug

your light so shine bef&lt;lrel
IF:IIIhc~rin

.
Mile Hill Rd .. Rac1ne, Pastor: lamt'l
SatttrfiCld . Sunday School · 9:4S a.m.,
E\ening - 6 p.m .. Wednesday Stmces- 7

good works and glorifiyour
Farher in heaven."
Matthew 5:16

God so loved tile world
he gave his only
lbE·gotten son ...

John3:16

White Funeral Home "For God so loved the
Blessed are the pure "So I strive always to keep
Since 1858
•., f-il!l Mp
world that he gave his one
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9 Fifth Street
God and man."
and only Son ..."
Suwression • Exlinguishen. • Sprinklers
shall
see
God.
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John 3:16
Acts 24:
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Matthew
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�•

I

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

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

u.s..Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. May 22, the 142nd day of 2009. There
are 223 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On May 22 , 1969. the lunar
module of Apollo 10, with Thomas P. Stafford and Eugene
Ceman aboard, flew to within nine· miles of the moon's surface in a dress rehears~! for the first l.unar landing. ·
On this date: In 1813, composer Richard Wagner was
born in Leipzig, Germany.
.
.
·
In 1859, author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the creator of
Sherlock Holmes, was born in Edinburgh. Scotland.
. In 1868, a major train robbery took place near
Mlu"shfield, Ind., as members of the Reno gang. made off
.
with $96,000 .in loot.
In 1907, actor-director Laurence Olivier was born in
Dork.ing, Surrey, England.
In 1939. the foreign ministers of Germany and Italy,
Joachim von Ribbentrop and Galeazzo Ciano, signed a "Pact
of Steel" committing the two countries to a military alliance.
In 1947, the Truman Doctrine was enacted as Congress
appropriated military and economic aid for Greece and Turkey.
In 1972. President Richard Nixon began a visit to the
Soviet Union, during which he and Kremlin leaders signed
the Anti-Ballistic Missile T~aty. The ish,md nation of
Ceylon became the republic of Sri Lanka.
.
. ln 1979, Canadians voted in parliamentary elections that
put the Progressive Conservatives in power, ending the 11year tenure of Prime Min.ister Pierre Elliott Trudeau.
fn 1992. after a reign lasting nearly 30 years, Johnny
Carson hosted NBC's "Tonight Show" for the last time.
Ten years ago: Columbine High School .seniors wearing
blue-and-silver gowns marched single file in a graduation
ceremony that mixed celebration of the day with sorrow for
victims of the recent massacre.
·
One year ago: A Texas appeals court said the state had no
right to take more than 400 children from a polygamist sect's
ranch. (After the Texas Supreme.Court upheld the ruling, the
children were returned to their parents.) Britain's Conservative
Party won a special election that was viewed as a barometer of
the popularity of Prime Minister and Labour Party leader
Gordon Brown. Indiana Jones returned to the big screen in
"Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull."
Today's ·Birthdays: Movie reviewer Judith Crist is 87.
Singer Char.les Aznavour is 85. Actor Michael Constantine
is 82. Conductor Peter Nero is·75. Actor-director Richard
Benjamin is 71. Actor Frank Converse is 71. Actor Michael
Sarrazin is 69. Former CNN anchor Bernard Shaw is 69.
Actress Barbara Parkins is 67. Songwriter Bernie Taupin is
59. Actor-producer AI Corley is 53. Singer Morrissey is 50.
Country musician Dana Williams (Diamond Rio) is 48.
Rock musician Jesse Valenzuela is 47. R&amp;B singer Johnny
Gill (New Edition) is 4~. Rock m11sician Dan Roberts
"(Crash Test Dummies) is 42. Model Naomi Campbell is 39.
Actress Anna Belknap is 37. Actress Alison Eastwood is ·
37. Singer Donell Jones is 36. Actress A.J. Langer is 35.
.Olympic gold-medal speed skater Apolo Anton Ohno is 27.
Thought for Today: "It is often said that men are ruled by
their imaginations; but it would be truer to say they are .
govemecJ by the weakness of their imaginations." _;_ W;tlter
Bagehot, English editor and economist (1826-1877).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. Tirey sho ..ld be less
than 300 words. All leiters are subject to editing, must be
signed, a11d include address atrd telephone nzmrber. No
"nsigned letters will be published. Letters should be i11
good taste, addressing isslle.r, 11ot personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for pllblication.
·

The ·Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction

Polley

(UsPs 213-9601
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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. be accurate. If you knoW of 8n enor through Frid&amp;y, 111 Court Street,
in a story, call the newsroom at (74Q) l'l&gt;meroy. Ohio. Secomk:las6 -

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Our !YIIIIn number Is
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Department •-•Ions are:

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•

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PageA4

OPINION

Friday, May 22, 2009

.friday, May 22, 2009

.

Terry
Mattingly

mused, in his one-foot-inthe-grave voice. "that God
had to cut my throat?" Then
he heard the harsh commandments for his new life.
"I adored my wife and
children, so I tried,"
Eszterhas told the audience
at CBS Studio Center. "I
stopped smoking . .I stopped
drinking. I was trying my
best to stay alive . I was try·
ing my best not to die, but I
knew that I couldn't do it."
Thus begins the wild conversion story he has shared
many times,.reading from his
book, Crossbearer: A
Memoir ofFaitfr. The turning
point arrives with a weeping
sinner on his knees. his lieart
skipping beats, his hands
shaking, his voice moaning
thro.ugh his tracheotomy
tube. Then Eszterhas hears
his own voice mumbling
strange words.
"I didn·'t know why I had
said it. 1 had ne'fr said it
before," he said. "then !listened to .myself say it again
and again and again.
'Please, God, help me.'
'Please , God, help me.'
'Please, God :," help me' ... I

thought to myself, 'Me,asking God, begging God? Me,
praying?" Then his pain
was gone and he was staring
into a bright light. He decided that, with God's help, "I
could defeat myself and
. win, if I fought very hard
and if I prayed. ... God
saved me from me."
· Condensed into the
punchy talking points that
sell s~;reenplays, Eszterhas
said his life has gone from
"Malibu to Ohio, from
booze to diet Sprite, from
Spago to McDonald's, 'from
Sharon Stone to Jesus."
Now he walks five 5 and
prays for an how every day.
With his Second· wife and
their four sons, he worships at
Holy Angels Catholic Church
in Chagrin Falls, Ohio; where
he volunteers to carry the
cross in Sunday Mass.
·
"The twisted little man"
. who wrote his scripts still
lives in his head , he said,
but is rio longer in charge.
The big , question was
whether Eszterhas could
W{ite without the tobacco,
alcohol and deadly darkness
that fueled his 16 screenplays,
which
became
movies that grossed more
than $1 billion.
Eszterhas said he sat
· frozen at his old typewriter,
fee ling ".like Jack Nicholson
in. 'The Shining.'" He faced
a complete mental block
until he pounded out: "This
is how I found.-God or how
God found me."

.

Pastor: Don Walktt

The memoir !lad to come
first. Since then, Eszterhas
has written two scripts,
including a "narco-terrorism" thriller he thinks
would fit Nicholson. He
also wants to write a smallbudget movie about Our
Lady of Quadalupe. In an
age in which Hollywood
keeps remaking old blockbusters, he wonders why no
one has produced spectacular digital versions of ''The
Silver Chalice," "The
Robe" or "Quo Vadis ." ·
While he wants to keep
working, what Eszterhas
can't imagine is writing the
kinds of scripts that made
him rich and famous.
·
"My head's not really in
that place. I mean, the
thing thfll I would like to
do very much, in the time
that l have left , in terms of
my own screenwriting, is
to ,.. write some things that
reflect my faith," he said.
The goal would be to put
"the same kind of energy ...
into doing faith-based
films that! think can really
be · commercially viable.
that I put into other films
of a different sort that
became commercially successful.''
(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Jrmrnalism Center at the
Council for Christian
Colleges ·and Universities
and
.leads
tire·
GetReligiorr.org project to
study religio11 and the n.ews).

•

Clturdt of JtsU.'i Cbrkt Apesaolk
Vinlandl and Ward Rd .. Putor: James
Miller, Sunday School - 10:30 a.m..
E..-ening · 7:30p.m.
Riftt Valley
River Valley Apo$toljc Worshtp Ctnter.
873 S. 3rd Ave .. Middkpon . Rev.
Michael Bradford. P~Htor, Sunday. 10:30
'a.m . T'ues, 6:30 prayer, Wed. 7 pm B'ible
SIUdy

-adA-

Taber..... Inc.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd, Rulland ,
sCrvices: Sun 10:00 ~ .m. ·&amp; 7:30 p.m ,

,•

••
'

1bun.1 :00 p.m·.• Pa.ctorMarty R. Hulton

Assembly of God
Ubort} .._,blf ol God
P.O. Box 467., Dudding Lane, Ma.son ,
W.Va ., Pattor: Neil Tennanl, Sunday.
Sc:rvkt!l- 10:00 a.m. and 1 p.m.

Baptist .
Pq..tlle Freewill Bllpllot Chunio .
Pulor: Floyd Ross. Surtday khool .9:30 to
10:30 lUll, Worihip sc:rVi~:t 10;30 to 11 :00
' am. Wed: preaching 6 pm

.,

C..-ptnltr r.deptndtot Bap'4t Churth
. Sunday School · 9:30am. Preaching
Service 10:30am, EYening Service
1:00pm. Wednesday Bible Study 7:(1()-pm.
Pa!itor:

CWUn Bapdtl Cburch
Pastor: Sieve Uute, 7.40-367-7801, H.
740· 992· U42, C. 740-645-2527, Sunday
School: 9:30 wn. Morning Worship: 10:30'
am. 'tooth &amp;. Bible Buddies 6:30 pm.
choir p1actic;e 7;30; Spedil days of month
I. Ladle~ of Grace' 7 pm 2nd Monday, 2.
Meu's FetrowshiP 7 pm )rei Tues.

·~

•·

Hope BlpdJi Cburrh (Southem)
~70

''
·'
•

•.

Grant St., ~iddleport. Sunday school
- 9:30a.m.. Worship - II a.m. and 6 p.m.,
Wedne&amp;day Service · 1 p.m. Pistor: Gary
Ellis
kuUand Flnt BlpUst Church
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:45 a.m.
Pasrar Jon Bl't)Cken, East Main St.,
Sunday Scl1. 9:30am. Worship 10:30 am

Rutland fl'fJl! WHIIllpllst
Salem St .• Pastor: Ed Dame)· • Sunday
ScOOol - 10 a.m . Evenin&amp; - 7 p. m..
Wednesday Snvicn - 7 p.m.
Stt-ond ....... Ol.n:h
Ra"'ensw()fj)d , WV, Suoday SchOOl \0 am' Morning .worstup II am Eve11ing • 7 pm.
Wednesday 7 p.m.
Flrst B1pdst O.rch {f(Masoa, WV
· (JndepCndent Elup!:ist)
SR 652 ll.QrJ AmletSOIJ St. Pastor: Robert
Grady , SundJiy SL:hool .10 am , MOJ'ning
church II am . Sunday evenint 6 pm, Wfll .
Bible Study 1 pm

Catholic •
Samd U.m Catbolk: C.wt,b
161 Mulberry A\le., Purt'leroy, 992-5898,
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz. Sat. Con.
4:45-5: ISp .m.; Mass· 5:30 p.m., Sun .
Con. -8 :45-!US a.m ... Sun. Mus· 9:JO
a.m...Daily Mass. 8:30 a-!fl.

Church of Christ
Wc:stlidt Churtlt oftbtht
33216 Children's Home Rd. P0mer(ly, OH
Contact 740-441 · 1296 Sundi!Y morniog
10:00. Sun mornins Bible study :
following wo~hip. Sun . eve !"rOO pm .
' Wed bible Study 7 pm
Hemlock Grove Cbri!ldan Church
Mini51tr: Larry Brown, Wqrship - 9:30
a.m. Sund.iy School - 10:3U a.m.. Bible
Study · 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Church ot Christ
212 W. Main St .. Suoday School · 9:30
a.m., Worship- 10:30 ' a.m., 6 p .m..
Wed~sday Services - 1 p.m.

Pomeroy Wt5tslde Cburch Ur Christ
33226 Children's Hotilll Rd., Sunday
School - H a.m .•. Worship·IOa.m.,6 p.m.
Wednesda)· ~f'\lkU · 1 p.m.

Middleport Church ofCbrilit
5tb and M11in, Pastor: AI Hartson ;
Childrens Director; S~aron SAyre, T~n
Di~or : Dodger VaugUn. Sunday School
- 9:30 a.m .. Worship- 8:15. 10:30 a.m.. 7
p.m .. Wednesday Smites · 7 p.m.

Keno Church of Christ
Worship: 9:3~ un .. Sunda~ Schoo! •
10:30 a.m., Pllstor-Jcffrey Wallace. ht11nd
3rd S\Diday-

Flnt Soutltern BIPU§I

41872 Pomeroy Pike, Sunday School-·
9:30 am .. 'Worship • 9:45am &amp; 7:00 p.m.1
Wed. ~sday Services · 7:00p.m.

'·

F1nt Baptist Church .
Pastor: Billy Zuspan 6th lllld Palmer St.,
MiddlepOrt. Surld11y School · 9:15. a.m.•
Wonhip • IO:B a.m.. 7:00 p.m ..
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

Radnt First Bap:llst
P_astor: Ryan Ea1on, pagtnr , Sunday
School • 9:30a.m.. Worship - 10:4Q a.m ..
~:00 p:m.. We~dnosday Services - 7:00
p.m.

SUvrr Run B'p~l
· Pa~tor: John SwaMOf1, Sunday School IOa.m., Worship - lla.m., 7:00 p.m.
-,Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

MICHAEL VICK

Mt. Union Baptht
Pastor: Dc:nnls Weaver Sunday School. 9:45 a.m.. EveninJ1 • 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Sen".ices - 6:30pJR.

·RELEASED
--

-

Bethlehtm Btptllt Cburcb

Oreal Bend, Route 124. Racine. OH.
Pastor: , Sunday Sch.qol • 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday Worship- 10:30 a.m.,; Wednesday
Bible Study· 7:00p.m.

0111 Betbti frH WID Baptist Churc:h
28601 St . Rt . 1, Middleport, Sunday
Service - 10 a.m .. 6:00 p.m .. Tuesday
Services -6:00
HHtaide Bapil$1. Church ·
St. Rt. 1:43 just off Rf. 7. Pastor: Rev.
'Jamos R. A.cree. Sr., Sunday Unified
Service . Wonhip · lO:Jb a.m., 6. p.f1J .,
Wednesday Sel'\'ices -7 p.m.

Rosy report can't hide stimulus problems
On May 13. the White
House released its first
quarterly report .on the
American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act, better
known as the $787 pillion
stimulus bill. Reaction on
Capitol Hill was swift:
Republicans think it's a
joke. while Democrats don't
want to talk about it.
The report was unveiled
not by President Obama.but
by Vice President Joe
Biden, who said it "shows
early progress providing
imm~diate financial relief
for American families · and
jump·starting billions of
dollars in job-creating projects.'' In a sress release,
Biden claime the stimulus
has so · far · "created or
·saved" 150,000 jobs. and ·
that "over 3.000 transportation-construction projects
have been funded in 52
states and territories ...
You do~'t have to look
too hard to find problems
with Biden 's work. First, no
one seems to know precise,
ly · where the · figure of
150,000 jobs comes from.
When President · Obama
used it in a speech on April
29 ,
the
Web
site
FactCheck.org pretty much
demolished the · claim.
Previewing the Biden report
on May II, a "senior admin·
istration official" held a
conference
call
with
ieponers and seemed unprepared ~hen asked where the
created-or-saved jobs actu·

Byron
York

ally are. "In terms of exactly where and in what sec-.
tors, that's not something I
have numbers on." the official said, "because, precisely, we don't yet have any of
the reporting:: ·
As far as the 3.000 transportation-construction proJects are concerned , tl)ere
ar11 certainly some under
way, but no one .seems able
to confirm a number so
large. 'Til buy lunch for the
first person who can get a
list of those transportation
projects ;· one
Senate
Republican aide told me,
"That's absolutely not true."
The real news about the
stimulus is buried inside the
Biden report. It says that as
of May 5, $88 billion has
been "obli~ated" for spend·
ing. "Obltgated" is federalese for money that has
been committed but not yet
spent. A much s·maller number. $28.5 billion, has actually been shoved out the
door - that is. $28.5 bil·
lion out of tlie stimulus total
of $787 billion has so far
been spent..
And where did it go?,

More than 95 percent has that makes .traffic lights is
ended up ·in just two said to be rehiring three
places: the Depanment of .laid-off employees. A
Health
and
Human South Carolina county is
Services
and
the goi.ng to receive jobDepartment of Labor. The retraining money.
Human Services money · The stimulus is generatwas poured into a .program ing other anecdotes, too.
called FMAP, or Federal Recently WBAL-TV in
Medical"
Assistance Baltimore, Md., reported
Percentages, where it was that a local man, 83 years
given to the states to help old. received a $250 Social
pay their Medicaid bills. Security stimulus check.
The Labor money has gone The only problem: It wasn't
for ex.tended unemploy- for him - it was for his
ment-insurance benefits.
mother, who died on
·The report also shows that Memorial Day in 1967.
Health and Human Services WBAL said Social Security
will distribute . by far the officials "blame the error on
largest chunk of sti~ulus the strict mid-June deadline
n\oney over the next year. · of mailing out all of the
The mopey has gone to checks, which didn't leave
HHS because it is the easi- officials much time to clean
est place to spend lOis of up all of their records."
cash fast. But all that S1milar stories are now popMedicaid and sodal-ser" . ping up around the country.
vices money. much of
At one point in the repon,
which will be used by state Biden \)oasis that the govgovernments to cover their ernment has ·made commitown spending excesses, is ments for $1.1 billion in
considered among me least stimulus spending every
stimulative parts of the day since the $787 billion
stimulus bill.
bill was signed into law in
The rest of the report is a February. At that pace, it
. series of anecdotes, which · will take the admimstration
Biden calls "Reports From nearly two years to come up
the Field." Some of the with concrete plans to
stories are well-worn . The spend all the money - and
Chicago window factory longer still to actually get it
that has often figured in out the door.
Obama-Biden discussions
And even then. we still
and photo-ops
it's might be trying to find out
urt'der new ownership and where it all went.
( Byrort York is chief politreportedly planning to
rehire some laid-off' work- · ical correspondent for The
ers. A Delaware company Washington Exa11\i11er).
'·

The Dally Sentinel • Page A5

WORSJllP GOD THIS WEEK

I

. I

Eszterhas writes iffinding God
Screenwriter
Joe
Eszterhas knows all about
strange plot twists, and he is
convinced that God often
sends big messages in the
tlnal acts of people's lives.
Once
a
scandalous
Hollywood insider, the
author of twisted thrillers
such a; "Basic Instinct" and
"Jagged Edge" can quote
chapter and verse about life
and death in Tinseltown.
Consider the ruthless m~vie
mogul who died during a
beach vacation when r a
metal bar fell from a construction crane and pieced
his heart. Or how about the
Casanova actor whose reputation made his testicular
cancer a bit too ironic? ..
Eszternas will name
names,. when confessing his
own sms.
The screenwriter's ego·
maniacal tantrums were the
stuff of legends , along with
his appetite for alcohol,
cocaine and first-person
research for the lap-dancing
scenes in "Show girls." Then
there was his foul, blasphemous mouth. ·
It was tempti,ng to con:
nect the dots when he was
diagnosed with throat can- ·
cer in 200 I, said Eszterhas,
during his blunt and mildly
profane testi many at Biola .
University's annual conference-on faith' and the entertainment industry. The
resulting surgery claimed
80 percent of his larynx .
"Was it possible," he .

www.mydallysentlnel.com

..
•..

.,

Vktory B•ptbllodcpendont
!125 N. 2nd St. Middleport, Pastor: Jumc:s
E. Keesee , Worship • IOa.m., 1 p.m.,
Wednesday Scn'i~s • 7 p.m.

Faldl Baptl!l Ch~
Railroad St.. Mason, Sunday School . 10
a.rri., Worship • II a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesdly Servi~ - 7 p.m.

~

F~Rua.ptitt-Pom$y

Joseph Woods, Sunday Scltool .' ~0
a.m., Wonhip • 11 :30 un,
Rt\1.

. MI. Moriah Bapdst
Founh il. M1in St., Middleport. Sund8y
School - 9:30 1.m.• Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Pastor: ReY. Mich~~el A Thompson, Sr.
Attlto(ult} llaptht
Sunday School - Q:JO a.m:. Wonhip JQ:4S a.m .. S11nday Evening · 6:90p.m.,

Bearwallow Rldp: Cburcll·or Christ
Pastot:Broce Terry, Supduy School -9:30

a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m ., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesda)' Ser\'icei · 6:30p.m.

Zion ChuKh otCJUolst
Pomeroy. Harrisonville Rd . (Rt.I4J).
.Pastor: Rogc:r Watson , Suo~ay Scllool ·
9:30 a.m .. Wonhip • 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Servkes · 7 p.m .

. Thppen Plain Chun:h ol Chrflt '
Instrumenlai, Worship Service - 9 a,. m.,
Communion - ·10 a.m .. Sundily Schoo l 10:15 P.m .• Youth- 5;30 pm Sunday-. Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm
· .
llradbtiry Churtb of Christ
Mini~ter: Tom Runyon, 39558 'Bradbury
Road, Middleport, Sunday School.- 9:30
a.m;
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Rulltmd Cburth orChrilit
·Sunday SchOO! -11:30 a.m., Worship and

Communion - 10:30 n.m., Dli\'id
Wisenum. Minister ·

Bradford Churth ofChrlst
Comer of St. Rt:l24 &amp; Bradbury · Rd ..
Minisler: Doug Shamblin. Youth Minister:
· Bin Ambr'iJer, Su nday School· 9:30a.m.
. Worsh!P • 8,:00 'a.m.• 10:30 a.m., ~:00
pJn ..~dnesday Servlct~ ·7:00p.m.
Hkkory HUis Chun:h of Chrlit
Tuppers Plains, Pastor Mike Moore. Bible
class. 9 a.m. Sunday: worship 10 a.m.
Sunday;_ worship 6:30 pm Sunday; Bible

R-'lle Churcll ol Christ
Pastor: Jack Colgr&lt;Jve. Sunday School:
9:30 a.m .. Wmship Sel'\'ke: 10:30 a.m.• '
· Bible Suxly. Wednesday. 6:30p.m.
Dexter Churdt of Cbri!R
Sl.lat.lay U:hool 9:30a.m., SurvJ~y warship

• 10:30 a.m.
The Churda or Chrl!il ol Pomeroy
Intersection 7 and 124 W, Evangelist
Dennis Sargent. Sunday Blbl~ Study . 9:30a.m.. Warship: lO:JO ~ .m . and 6:30
p.m .. Wednesday Bible Study- 7 p.m.

Syraruse ffm Ch1,1rcb olGod
Apple and Second ·sts .• Po.\t(J(: Rev. D.a\lid
Rus~II •.Sunday School and Worstlip- 10
a.m. E"'ening Serv ices- 6:30 p.in ..
Wednesday Service ~ • 6:30p.m.
Churdo ol God ol l'rot&gt;IN&lt;y
O.J. Whik Rd . off St. Rt. 1~ . Pastot&lt;. PJ .
Chapman , Sunday School • tO a.m..
Wonbip • JI a.m., \\'ednesda)' Services · 1
p.m.

Congregational
Trinilf Chun:b
PMtor- Rev . Tom Johnson , Sewod &amp;
Lynn. Pomeroy. Pastoc , W~hip 10:25
IIJJ).,

Insurance

Products+
Financial

AGENC:IES Inc.

Bill Quickel

Selvices

lloliness
. ClllllDiunUy Church
Pastor: Steve Tomek . Main Street.·
Rutland , Sunday W~hip-Jb;OO a.m.,
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

Danvtllt HoUIHS!i Churth
31057 Sta~ Route J2.5, Lan~:svlle. Pastor:
~rian Bail~y, Sunday Kbool • 9:~ a.m.,
Sunday wonhip - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 1 p.m..
Wetlnesda,- prayer scrvi&lt;:e • 1 p.m.
Calvary PHgrlm·cbapel
Ham~n. . Hle Road. Pastor: Charles
McKcm~ie. Sund11y Sl;hoo\ 9:30 ·a.m .•.·
Wol'lhip- ll a.m., 7:00 p.m.. Wedl'lc:sda)·
Scnir.-c: - 7:00p.m.

·\

·

· ROllC or Sharon HollntM Cburt:b
Pw_rir: Rev.
DeWey Klng, Sundlly school- 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday worship -7 p.m.. Wednesday
. prayer meeting· 7 p.m.
t.iadin~ Creek Rd., Rl.llland,

~itt

Grol't Bible Hollnell Church

.Jfl· mile off Rt. 325, Pastor: Rev. O'Dell

Manley, Sunday School • 9:30 11.m.,
Worship - l0:30 a.m., 6:00 p.m.,
Wednesday ~rvl'ce -1:00.p.nl.

WnleY.IIJlBib~ uoiln.;q Churtb
Cox, Sunday School • W. a.m. Worship •
10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve. 6:00 p.m.,
· Wednesday Sel'\lict - 1:00 p.m.

Hy!iCU Run Commualty Churcb
Pastor: Rev. Lany Lemley:·SI!llday School
- 9:30a.m., Wofllhip · 10:45 aJTJ:, 7 pJll.,
Thursday Bibl_e Study and Youlh • 7 pm.

Laurel CHft'Free Methodist Churdl. ·
Pastor: Glen McClung, Sunday School 9:30 n.m. , ,Worship - 10:30 a.m·. und 6.
pm.,Wednes0a)'
ice •·1:00 p.m.

Sen:

Latter-Day Saints
The Church of Jctll:l
Clirill ofLaUer-.Day S'alntll
St. Rt . 160, -4411-6247 or 446-1486,
Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m ., Relief
Society/Priesthood. II :05-12:00 noon.
Sacrament Service 9-10:\.S a.m. .•
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Llltheran Ch11rch
Pine OmYe, Worship ~ 9:00a.m .. Suitday
School - 10:00 a.m. Pastor: ·

·Our SK"ktur ~lhtnn ~hun:h
Walnut and H~nry St,., Ravcn~wootl,
W.V»,., Plstor~ David Russell, Sun~ay
School • IQ:OO a~ . , Worship· II a.ro.

St. Paul L!Jther.i..n.Churth
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St .. ·Pomeroy.
Sun. School · 9:4S a.m .. Wol'lhip · II a.m .

Graham United Methodist
W~hip • II a.m. Pa!lor! Rkhard.Nea9e
Becbtd United Mtlhodlst
New Hnven. Richard Neue. Pastor.
Sunday worsh ip 9;3{) a.m. Tues. 6:30 '
prayer.nnd Bible S1udy.
ML Olh-e United· Ml!lb~lltt
Otf 124 behind WHk~svllle, Putor: Rev.
Ra.lph Spi~ . Sunc'tay Sci!Qol · 9:30a.m.,
Worship ·-· 1[);30 a.m.. 1 p.m..' ll\Ursday
Services - 7 p.m.

Meigs Cooptnth•e Pariah

Pastor: Jim Corbitt, Worship - 9 a.m.,
Sunday ScbOQI • tO a.m. , Th~ay
Servi!.'C$ - 7 p.m.

Church of God

Joppa

o .....

CentniiC.._,r
Asbury (S)·*u~) . Pas!Ot Bob Robin1011 ,
_Sunday School · 9:45 ~Jn., WuniUp - tl
aJU., Wtdot:sday Services · 7:30pm.
flttwooch
Pastor. Dtwayne Stunlcr, Sunday School 10 a.m.. Worship - It a.m.

Foratlao
PaJtor; Bob Robmsoo. Sunday Scbool : 10
a .m., WOI'!Ihip- 9 a.m.

Roath (Middleport)
Pastor: Brian Dunham. Sunday School •
9:30 a.m.:.WorV!ip • II :00 a.m.
Minmvlllt
Pastor: Bob Robinson. Sunday School • 9
a.m.. Worship , 10 a.m.

Mlddltpoo1, OH 740-992-5141
,..,., Alld&lt;rsoo,Atlam McDuiet-

499 Richland Avmue, AIhens
740-594-6333
1-800o&gt;IS 1-9806

DIR&lt;ton

Pomerof, OH 740-99~·5444

Brogan-Warner
words abide in you; y. shaU iNSURANCE
SERVICES
wh/JJ ye will, and il shall
214 E. Main
done unto you.

~~~

1.m .. Wonhip · IO·JO a .m .. 6 p .m .•
W~ySetvices - 7p.m

Carttlftllllll:rdt:Mmlnatioa-' Cllurdl
Kmgsbury Road , Pastor· Roben Varn.
Sunday School - 9:}(} a.m.. W1lBhip •
Sel'wce JOJO a.m.. Evening Servtce 6
pm
t"rtftlom Gosptl Mhsltlu
Bald Knob. on Co Rd . 3l. Putar: Rev.
Roger Willford . Sunday Scbool · 9:30
;~~ .m . WoMip- 7 p.m.

CIMIIa"Ciuudloltlto N Pastor: Rev. Curtis Randolph. Sunday
Sebool - 9: 30a.m. ~ Wmbip·· 10:30 a.m ..
Sunday eveniqg 6 pm
Rudand Cburdo ottltoN...,...
Putot: Oc:orit Stadler~ Suodly Sc~l ·
9:30 a.m.. Worsbap • 10:30 a.m ., 6:30
pm .• Wednesday Serviees • 7 p.m.

Wblte'sCb.pd Waieyllll
Coot... ille Road .· !'astor: .Re .... Chiirles
ManindAie . Sunday School . 9;30 a.m.•
Wooh ip · 10:30 a.m.• Wedne-sday Sen~

Other Churches

· 7~.m

"""'Cboudl
Old American Legion Hal1,
New

..........,

Pastor: Brian Dunltam. Wot!i hip un .. Sunday School- 10:45 a:m.

Ldan. W.Va. Rt. I, Pastor. Brian May.

Synt&lt;UO&lt;C...,u.ollyCitur&lt;b
2480 Second St .• Syral:ust, OH
Sun . School 10 am. Sundy lligb16:30 pm
Pastor: Joe Gv.riitD
ANewllqj.. log
(full Gwpd tburdr) HarriSQilvil)c:,
PutOI1: Bob and Kay Manhall,
Thun. 7 p.m.

Sunday School · ~ : 30 a.m.. Wonhtp -1:00

-p.m.,Wednesday Bible Study • HMJ p.~p .
foltlt Ftllowthlp Cnuade for Chrla
Putm: Rev. Friil)klin Dicken ~. Service:
Fridly, 7 pm.
~IIVIU')' BUlk Cbun:h
Pomeroy Pike , Co. Rd .. Pastor: Rev.
Blackwood. Sund~y School • 9:30 a.m.,
Wors:bip 10:30 a .m.. 7:30 p.m..
Wednetday krvice - 7:30p.m.

Amutna c~ cemm.blt}Churdt
Pastor: Wayne Dunlap. Sfalt Rt. 681',

Tuppers Plains, Sun. Worship: tO am A

SU•emlllt Coaunually Clwn:b
Sunday School 10:00 am. Sunda): Worih1p
. 11 :00 am, Wc:dn~sdly 7:00pm Pa!tor:
Bry.lf' &amp; Miuy Dailey

.-Cbrlltlao F.uo...hlp

Cafeter)a Pastor: Qris Ste'wart
9 ~ 2~

Rock Sprinp )
Pastor: Dewayne .Stufler1 Sunday School .
a.m.• WQrship · 10 ~.m .. You1h
·Fellowship, Sunda)' • 6 p.an. Earl)' Sunday
worship 1t am. Ltnora Lt:ithrit
9:00

Rutland
P'astm: iohn Chapman, Sunday· School 9:30a.m.. Wol'lbip · 10:30 a.m., Thunday
S'etl'icu • 1 p.m.
Salem Center
Pa.~tor: Willilim K. Marshall, Stmd.ay
School - 10:15 a.m .• WotShip · 9:15a.m.•
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm

SOIW¥ille .
~unday

/
Falrritw Billie Church

FourtbA~ .• MKki~.Sunday 5 p.rh .

(Non-denomiJwionaJ fellowship)
Meeting in the Meig' Middk School

New llrgillllbtp Churdl·

Silto'tr Ridge- PaS1or Lmda DlUIICwood.
SLI.Ilda)' School · 9 a.m.. Wonhip Service
lOam. 2od and 4th Sunday

Pomeroy Cluurlt .tthe NuattM
Putor: Jan Laveodu , Sumilly School 9:30 a.m., Worship · IO:JO a.m. and 6
p.m., \\'edneiday Setvices · 7 p.m.

6:30pm .. Wed; Bible Study 7;00 p.m·.

PeartChaprl
Sunda)' School - 9 a.m .. Woiship • 10 a.m.

School - 10 il_m., Worship - 9 a.m.

llfPI•riy
Past~r: John. Rozewh:z, Sunday SchDOI - ' ,

10 a.m., W9rshlp· - 9 a.m., Wednesday
· 10 a..m.

S~ices

Cartnei-Suttoa
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rcls . Racine. Ohio,
Pastor: John Rozewkz, Sunday SchQOI •
9:45a.m., Worship. · 11:00 a.ni. , Bible
. Study Wed. 7:30p.m.

Mornloi Star
Paitor: John Roztwicz, Sunday SchOol •
· 11 a.m., \VQilhip • 10 a.m.
. EU l.tllrt.
Blll Marshall Sundtty' Sehool ·9a.m.• Worship • JO a.m.. l.st Sunday
eYery month e.,.ening service 7:00 p.m.;
Wednesday· 1 p. m.
Pu~ror:

Rtclnt
Pastor: Rev. William Mmhall, Sund11y
School - 10 a.m., Worship - II
a.m.Wedne!lda)' ServiCes 6 pm; Thur Bible
Study 1 pm

. IO :OOam - NoonS~y:lnfonnal
Worship, Childml's mini5try
COIMmunttyofCbrllt
Portland-Racine :Rd .. Past(lf: Jim Proffill,
Sunday Schoo_! .- 9:30 a.m ... Wonhip ~
10:30 a.m .. Wednesday Services - 7:00
p.m.
Deibel W-lp Cenl«
39782 St: Rt. 1. 2 milts south of Tuppers
Plains, OH. Non-deuohiinatioOal with
Coniempomy Praise &amp; Wonh.ip. Pas10r
Rob B~•.Assoc. Pastor Karyn DaYi,.
Youth Dlret-tor Betty Fulks. Sunday
services: 10 am Worship &amp;. 6 pm Family
Life Classe~, Wed &amp; Thur· night L-ife
Groups at 7 pm. Thurs morning ladies'
Life Group 111 10. Outtr Limits Youth Life ·
Oroup on Wed. evening from 6:30 tci 8;30.
Visit us ~line at www.betbelwc.org.

Alt. Street Chur.:h
J98 Ash ·St., Middleport-Paston Mark
Morrow &amp; Rodney Welker s 'unday
School • 9:3.0 · un., Mofnlng Worship •
10:30 a..rn: &amp; 7:00-pm, Wednesday Service
· 7:00p.m .• Youtl\ Smke- 7:00 p.m.
Appe Lifr C"'(cr
·
..Full-Gospel Church", ~astors Joh!l &amp;
Patty Wade, 603 Second Ave. Ma~. 773·
5017 , Sen"ice time: Sunday 10:30 a.m..
Wedne5day 7 pm

Cl1fiM l l o - Ch.,.lt
Clifton ..W.Vi..• Sunday Sc:boql • 10 ai.Jll ..
Won;hip - 7 p.m., WedneWay SerViCe • 7
p.m.

3n3 Oeoq:es Cret!k: Road,GaUipolis, OH
Pastor: Jamie Wireman. Sunday ServiC¢1 •
10;')0 a.m. Wednc'sda~ -7 .p.in. Thursday
Prayer &amp;: Pniae at 6 pm. Clls~ fOr all
ages every Sunday &amp;. Wednesday.
www.thearlcchLRh .net
F•U Goopd Clturcb
of the Ll....._ Snior
Rt.l38, Antlctuit:y. Pastor: Jesw Morris,
Servia•: Saturday 2:00p.m.

Salem C&lt;.mumty Cbun:ti
Bac~ ofWe~1 Columbia. W.ya.om Lievins

Road, Pastor: Charles Roush (304) 67$·
2288, Sunday School 9:30 am. Sunday
e\'ening se~ice 7:00 pm, Bibly S1udy
Wednc:Jday service 7:00pm

Hobloa Cbrildan fellowshtp Churc.b
Pastor: Hers~:kel White , Sundiy School10am: s~yChurthscn~-6:30pm ·~
~ednesday 7 pm

Abaadlnt Grac!e
923 S. Third St., Middleport, Pas10r TercH
Davis. Su n~ay servk~. 10 a.m. ,
WtdllC'sday service, 7 p.m.
F~thFul ""'pel Churdl .
Long Bottom. PastOr. Stevr Reed; Sunday ·
' School - 9:30 a.m. Worship • 9:30 n.m.
and 7 p.m., Wednesday · 7 p.m .. Friday •
· fellowship sc:rvi~ 7 p.m. ·

Hafruon¥11lt CGIDJilllllli, Churtb
Pastor: Theron Durham. Sunday • 9:)0
a.m. and 1 p.m., W~y • 7 p.m.

ReJokln11Jir Ch.....
500 N. :Zad Ave., Middleport, Pastor:
Mike ForellWl, PukJr Ematitu' Lawrence
ForciTWI, Worship- 10:00 am
Wednem&amp;y Service' .7 p.m. •

RHtoradon Cbrladan Fellow!blp
9l6S Hooper Rood, Athens. Pastor:
Lonnie Coats, Sund~ Worship 10:00 am.
WC\Ine!iday: 7 ~m
·I

HoUH ot HeaU01 Mlnlslrlfl ·
St. Rt. 124 Lan&amp;nUte, OH
Full Oospel. Cl Pasuws R~bert &amp;. Robt:rta
MI.I&amp;Ser. Sunday School 9;30 am. ,
Worship 10:30 am . 7:00· pm. - Wed.
Sc:Nic;e 7:00 pm
~J-Miniltrleo

CoOMUe UaJted -Methodili Pariah
Pastor:-J:iclen Kline, Coobille Church,
Main &amp;: fifth St .• Sun. SChool • 10 a.m.,
Worship- 9 a.m., Tues. Services · 7 p.m.

Bethel Chun:b
ToWnship Rd., 468C. Sunday Sch~l - 9
a.m . Worship · 10 a.m ... Wednesday
Servil.-es- 10 a.I,TJ.
HoddnJPort Durdt
Kathryn Wiley. Sunda~ School • 9!30
a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m.. Pllstor Phillip
Bell

Middle~

CollllDillilty C~udl
S1S Pearl St., Middlopon , Pastor: Sam
Anderson. Suadiy School 10 a.m.,
EYening • 7:30 p.m. , WedDCsday Service·

Co. Rd . ~.-Sunday School . 9:30 a:m.•
Worship . 10:30 a..m.

Pea·tews~ AIIStmbly .

Putor: St. RL 124, Racine, Toinado Rd.
Sund11Y S~hool ~ 10 a.m .. Evening • 1.

Syncutt Million
1411 Bridgeman St.. Syracu,e. Pa!tor •
Re". Roy Thomp$01!., SundaY School- 10
a.m 1 Eveftln8 • 6 p.m., Wednesday Service

HarrbuaYille Pmbyierlaa Cbllrtb
Pa51~r: Roben Marshall, Worship · 9:00
a:.m. Sunday

·

l\.tkldlt!por:t Churtll ofthe. NUINnt
Pa~w: Leona~ Powell, Sunday School •
9:30 a.m.,Wonhip - I0:30a.m .• 6:30p.m.,
Wednesday Servil;n - 7 pm ..

R-llieFolo-p
Church of the Na~, ~astor: Runell
Canon · . S.ut!.daY School • 9:30 a.m.•
Worship - 10:4!1 a.m., 7 p.m., Wedne:sday
Services - '1 p.m.··

SyracusoCJou&amp;ochollbtNPa$(0( Mil.:e Adkins, Su~y Sc~l· ~:Jq

·

Hud C-iyCboreh

36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

SWISHER
&amp; LOHS£

Dymlllt Comm•nity Chua \
sunday Schoo.I • 9:30
WorshiP ~
10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Mont Chilpel Cbun:h.
Sunday school • 10 a.m .. Worship : II
a.nl ., Wed.nesday Sc:rv~ · 1 p.m.

a.m ..

Fallb Gospel Chttreh
· Long Bmtom. Sunday School · 9:30am ..
Worship - 10:45 a.m .. 7:30 p.m. ,
Wednesday·7:30 p.m:
·
l"uU Gospel Uab-.e
33045 Hiland Road, Pnmero~ . Pastor. Roy
Hun1er. Sunday School - 10 a.m .. Evening
7:30p.m .. Tuesday~ Thurs. · 7:30p.m.

Mlddltport Pfttb)UriiiD

Seventh-Day Adventist
~vtnlh-Dty Advendll · .
Mulbeny Hts. Rd ..' Pomeroy, SatUrday
Ser\licts: Sabbat" School • · 2 p.m.,
WOI'flhlp - 3 p.m.

United BreUaren
Mt. H•nnon United Brettn.
In Christ Cbun:h
Te~u

Community 3641 I Wickham Rd.
Pastor: Ptter Martindale , Sunday SchooJ..
9 :30 a.m., Worship • 10:30 a.m .• 7:00
p.m.. Wednc:!iday Services • 7:00 p.m.
Youth group meetin&amp; lnd &amp; 41h Sundays
7p.m.
Edm UlihN Brelbrea.ln- Cbrist
Statt Roote 124, betWeen 'Reedsville &amp; .
Hodrin.apon. Sunday School • lO ·1\.nt., '
Sundiy Worship - 11:00 a.m. Wednesday

Soltb ~~ C~unlty c•urw:h

Let your light so shine before

CENTER 111en,that they may see your

nt rcuo you dtstiW, rlost fo ho111t

Presbyterian

James Snyder. Sunday School 10
a.m .. worship service I l am.

7:3qp.m.

Rllute 68?. Albany, Rev . Lloyd Grimm.
· pastor. Sunda.y SchoOl 10 am; wurh!i.ip
service 11 am , evening sc:rvice 1 pm. Wed,
prt~yer mtelins 7 pm

p.m .. Wednesday Service~· 7 p.m.

P~tar:

School· 9:30a.m.. Wors~ip- 10:30 a.m.,

Point Rode Clitu:rh ortht Naurtne

Pentecostal

Faltb Valley 1\lbtl'nKie·qwrch
Bailey Run .R(Iad, Pastor~ Rev. .Em_mert
Rawson, · Sunday .Evening ., ,. p.m ..
Tnunday Service - 7 pm. ·

Off Rt. 12ol., Pa$ior: Edsel Hart, Sunday

Nazarene

_Mettina 333 Mecbanic Street, Pomeroy.
OH . PUIOf Eddie 8aer, Service t\le!')' ·
Sunday lO:OO a.m.
'

7:30p.m.

. 7p.m.

Thrdl Chu"h.

!nber!l':on~.:=~rwi6ROCKSPRINGS

.
.funeral J)ome

Joh11 15:7,
1112.-77

Tuppm; f'lainf Sl. Paul
Pasror· Jim Corf:titt. Sunday School • 9
a.m.. worship · 10 a.m., Tue~y Services
- 7:30p.m..

Gratt Episoopal Church

32&amp; E. Main St .. · Pomeroy,
Holy
Eucharist 11:30 a.m. SUnday &amp;: 5:30 pm
Wed. Rtv. le!ilie Flemming

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc. lfye !lbUh in Me, and My
Full line ol

p . m . ~l'\lll"c:

Episcopal

Hartford, W.Va .. Pas1nr: Mil.:t Puckett.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.• WOf!!hip ·
IO : ~ll a .m .. 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Servke~ • 7:00p.m.

works and glorify
Matthew 5:

Wonbip · 9:3() a.m., Sunlilay School ·
10:30 a,m., F'~nt Sunday u£ Mtxnh • 7:00

Hartford Cburtb otChrb:lln

·III"'II· that they may see
heaven."

Services - 7 p.m.

Church or God
Pastor: Shatle M. Bowling, Sunday
Worship · 10 a.m., 6 p.m.. Wednesda}'

Notthcast Cluster, AlfRd , Pa$toc Jim
COrbin, Sunday School - 9:30 a.tn .,
Wonhip- 11 ~.m ., 6:JO p.m.

Christian Union

._ ...._

R~tbncl

United Methodist

d~7PffiWed.

Pastor. lknzal Null. Worship· 9:30a.m.
SuOOay SchUQI · 10:30 a.m.

Sunday Schbol - 9'10 a.m .• Wonhip ![)o.\Oa.m.

pm.

15 · Pearl St.,· Middlepot1 . Putor: Doug

your light so shine bef&lt;lrel
IF:IIIhc~rin

.
Mile Hill Rd .. Rac1ne, Pastor: lamt'l
SatttrfiCld . Sunday School · 9:4S a.m.,
E\ening - 6 p.m .. Wednesday Stmces- 7

good works and glorifiyour
Farher in heaven."
Matthew 5:16

God so loved tile world
he gave his only
lbE·gotten son ...

John3:16

White Funeral Home "For God so loved the
Blessed are the pure "So I strive always to keep
Since 1858
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world that he gave his one
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and only Son ..."
Suwression • Exlinguishen. • Sprinklers
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137-t N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

�•

I

The Daily Sentinel

1

In the fo urth season of
·'The Andy Griffith Show."
there i' an episode called
··Citizen\ Arrest'' in which
Gomer Pyle. the both physically ~nd socially clumsy
attend:lnt of Wally's gas stati9n. is ghlen a ticket by
Deputy Barney Fife, everyone's favorite stickler for the
rules. The ci tation is for making an illegal u-turn in downtown Mayberry and is given
in spite of Gomer's protests.
his appeal for mercy from
Barney, and his claim on
Barney for friendship.
The matter would have
then-been laid to rest, Gomer
would have paid his two dollars. Barney would have gone
back to his patrol, and Andy
would have had a moment's
Peace if It were .not for the
fact that Barney, no mauer his
zealousness regarding the
keeping of law and order .by
others, excused his own culpability (responsibility for
wrong. guilt) and also made
an illegal .a-tum (he wa,, as
wa1 pointed out in the show,
NOT on an emergency run
and therefore not supposed to
be making a u-tum) .
Of course he was then
caught in a net of his own
making . Gomer, standing
haplessly by still holding the
freshly written ticket that
Barney had given him . witnesses Barney's infraction
and begins shouting at the
top of his lungs, "Citizen's
arrest! CitiLen's arrest!"
A situation then unfolds in
which a crowd gathers, Andy
appears to sort things out,
and the altercation between
Gomer and Barney ~calates
to the point that Barney not
only resigns as deputy but, in
refusing to pay his fine, locks
himself in the "slammer"
(one of the few times he did
it on purpose) , all in an
attempt to hurt Andy who, in
trying to be just, was forced
to hold B!U11ey to the same
standard that Barney had
held against Got)1er.
I remember the episode
clearly from childhood,
Gomer's loud chanting of
~Citizen 's arrest! Citizen's
~rrest!" making an impression upon me. lt was a very
funny show. It was troubling, too, to watch Bamey's
pride get the.better of him to
the point that he very near! y
ieemed to have lost all ability to be reasonable and act
rationally. It was painful to
watch him render almost
irreparable harm to his lifelong friendship with Andy
as well as very nearly flushIng his own career down the
proverbial drain.
·
: On the one hand, this was
just ·another one of those

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PageA6

FAITH • VALUES
Giving credit where credit's due;
For More
Friday, May 22,

Pastor
Thom
Mollohan

completely
off-the-wall
things that Barney did. ''I'm
not like him . I would never
do that." we might think.
And so it seems surreal and
we're safe ly " better than
him ."' But really, the creators
of his character were trying
to create an overt e~ainple
of what we are beneath the
surface. We tend to know
people that remind us of him
but overlook the subtle
things in us that are perhaps
more like him than we imagine or can appreciate .
As Christians. we often
have issues with our pride ,
for example. Perhaps the
problem manifests itself
when ~e feel compelled to
put someone else in his or her
place or when we criticize
others with caustic remarks.
We might even be inclined to
run after someone in order to
give him his ticket (a visible
or audible rebuke that makes
it clear that he is morally inferior to us).
But pride isn't our only
problem. We each also have
other areas of ineptitude,
places or things in which we
can't quite handle the job, so
to speak, and need help.Some
folks are clumsy with their
words, some with their relationships, some with money,
some with their physical wellbeing, ·and all of us when ·it
comes to the deep truths of
God (to one degree or another). I've no doubt-that some
reading this will be offended
in my comparing them to
Barney Fife. but simply know
that I am applying a universal
truth to each of us (myself
included). No one measures
up to the standards of God.
Vv'hether in our actions, our
words, our thoughts, or in the
attitude of our hearts, we cannot measure up to the pure
and righteous standard that
holiness requires.
But this, of course, is
where grace comes in. Our
clumsiness is swallowed up
by God's grace when we
turn to Him through faith in
His Son , Jesus Christ.
If you have ever seen the
episode "Citizen's AITest,"
you may recall that Andy
required Barney to apply. the
same standard to himself as
he did to Gomer, but then
Andy offered to pay his fine

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2009·

I got a credit card invitaPhilippi to put asi~e their:
him,elf out of his own pocktion
in
the
mail
recently.
On
personal
arguments m favor;
et. Andy knew he had to be
of God's perspective. We_.
just, but his desire for ongo- the outside, exclamation
don't
know much about;
points
proclaimed
I
was
ing friendship with Barney
Euodia
and Syntyche - not)
pre-approved
for
a
platinum
compelled h1m to make a
·Pastor
even
how
to pronounce,
with
a
special
rate
for
card
sacri11ce in order to preserve
Kerry
names
I But we do:
their
balance transfers . On the
and perfect that friendship.
Wood
know what Paul su~gests to:
What was the one thing inside, r read the .fine print.
them
in dealing W1tb their;
That
special
rate
was
standing in B-arney's way
problems.
~
11.5%
for
two
years,
then
it
though? Again, it was that
First
,
rejoice
in
GodC
automatically
jumped
to
recunring pride of his. His
Rejoicing in anything else)
pride not only refused the prime plus 18%. If I missed
the
payment
deadline
even
in
sOciety's
best
interests.
- good jobs, money in the'
gift of grace his friend
once
,
the
special
rate
imrneBut
SQmetimes
governmenbank
, respect and leadership:
offered,. but deliberately
diately
jumped
to
36%!
And
·
tal
involvement
only
makes
in
the
community - is a;
chose instead the alternathe
deadline
for
payment
things
worse.
Governmental
short-term
experienc~
tives of punishment, the loss . was VERY specific: by 9:30 interes(s, left unchecked, are
Winning
an
argument
is no~
of his livelihood, the harvest
· h111
· 26 d
f
h
also
not
in
society's
best
for God'sjoy. :
of humiliation that his a.m . Wit
ays 0 t e interests. So who does the a substitute
Second,
do
not be anXIous;
statement
date.
choices brought to him, and
Since
most
people
sit
checking
on
both
gavemabout
anything.
There iS:
the ending of his long d
ment and business?
nothing
to
fear
when
God is~
friendship with Andy.
own and pay bills a couple '
We do. As consumers, and
near.
Differences
of
opin-;
of times a month - usually
Was Barney technically in around
a payday ~ that 26 as citizens, we are responsi- ion , skin color, accent,.
the wrong for giving Gomer days was a sneaky way to ble for making the .rules for
income. etc., don't have to;
the ticket? Nope. We might charge me far a "late pay - business and government. be
feared anymore. We can;
sympathize with Gomer, ment" even if 1 made regu- We make up society, and so
associate
with those not like:
who felt somewhat burt for
lar
monthly
payments.
And
on!~ we can maintain sod- us and become better people
getting a ticket from his
because of it!'
s b!:st interests.
friend , but Barney was just in that is exactg the kind of .etyBut
what is in our sociThird, pray about whatev-.
offer
that
ongress
and
giving it and in doing so was President Obama want to ely's best interests? Every er leaves you anxious or in,
fulfilling the responsibility
controversial issue we face· disagreement. Don't stew
_ from broad economic
given to him in being an protect us from receiving.
over ir, or gossip about it, or
Credit card reform is the
·
agent for peace and law and latest
10
business arena to stimulm packages
ran- take it to court. Give it to
order for Mayberry. What
dom dll!g tests, from speed God and be patient enough
. was unjust, however, wa~ hi&amp; which our federal govern- limits to definitions of life to experience God's way of
attitude of moral superiority ment has set its sights. And _ has differing points of finding the resolution.
.
are a lot of things that
·
h , ·
·
and his notion that.the same ,Ithere
Finally, choose to think
like about the legislation VIew on w at •s fight for our
rules did not' apply to him. ·
society.
··
right things. MuciJ,
I wish I had an easy answer aboutthe
. By the way, God DOES being considered. .
of what bothers us comes.
For example, rigllt now, to this dilemma, but I do not. from thinking about the
allow u-tums. In fact, He
loves it when we turn from credit card compani_es can Instead, 1 can only turn to . wrong things. But when we
our pride, our selfish ambi- · automatically boost the· Scripture for guidance:
to think on things
"I plead with Euodia and I choose
lions, and our sin and begin interest rate charged on
that
are
true, noble, right,
walking with Him .. -"As remaining balances if a per- plead with Syntyche to pure, lovely, admirable,
surely as I live. declares the son pays late. That makes agree with each other in the excellent or praiseworthy.
Sovereign LORD, I take no sense. When a person - Lord. Yes, and I ask you, - we won't have time to
pleasure in the death Uudg- begins paying late, it's a loyal yokefellow, help these spend thinking up bad cred-.
ment) of the wicked, but sign that the person 's women who have contended it card offers or responding
rather that they turn from finances are out of control. at my side in the cause of the to them. We won't need to
their ways and live . Tum! That p_erson b_ecomes a · gospel, along with Clement overprotect society because
Tu1n from your evil ways! ~1gher fiSk of default, so the and the rest of my fellow we transform society from
Why will you die?" mter~st rate .sh?uld reflect workers, whose names are · the inside out.
·the nsk the credit c;u:d com- in the book of life . .
(Ezekiel 33: II NIV).
I like to think of Paul's
"Rejoice in the Lord conflict resolution plan as
And, once we have made pan~ t~kes by leavmg the
alv.:ars. 1 will say it again: " givin~ credit where credit
that u-turn and begin wal~ing cred1t lme open.
However, once the person ·ReJOICe! Let your gentle- is due. ' When we give God
with Him in the direction of
His will for our lives, we do who wa~ late gets back on .ness be evident to all . The the credit, then . everything
not become like Barney with track With payments , the Lord is near: Do not be anx- else seems to eventuallY.
his ever-ready ticket book mteres~ rate, under current ious about anything, but in work out - even if thai
and wailing siren, but live regulatwns , never has to be everything, by prayer and working out occurs on the
humbly in the forgiveness returned to. the lo~er rate. petition; with thanksgiving , other side of death. Are you
offered us through God's So the credit fiSk IS less to present your . requests to willing to accept that offer?
·sacrifice. in His Son. Through t~e company; but they con- God. And the peace of God,
(Ke"y Wood is no·w asso-.
faith in Jesus we are empow- tmue to treat the customer which transcends all under- ciate pastor· at Grace
ered to become messengers as a high risk_. Th~t:S wrong, standing , will guard your United Methodist Church
of grace, ready to not given and the legislation would heans and your minds in in ferrysburg, Ohio after
Christ Jesus .
tickets but words of hope and f1x that.
serving Racine United
On
the
other
hand,
how
"Finally, . brothers, what- Methodist Chu'rchfor three
warning to those who also
need to turn ... turn to God's much protectiOn do we real- ever is true, whatever is years. He can be reached
ly need li'?m bad credit ca,rd noble. whatever is right, through
grace and be made new!
his website:
offers
hke the one I whatever is pure; whatever http://pursueholiness.blogs
(Thom Mollohan and his
family lzave ministered in received'/ I read the fine is lovely, whatever is pot.com).
southern Ohio the past 13- pnnt, then shredded the admirable - if anything is
112 years and is the author of offer and dropped it into the excellent or praiseworthy
"The Fairy Tale Parables." trash. It was certainly an - think about such things.
He is the pastor of Paihway offer that I could refuse. And Whatever you have learned
Community Church and I didn't need Uncle Sam to or received or heard from
may be reavhed for com- stand over . my shoulder me , or seen in me - put it
into practice. And the God
mems or questions by e-11U1i/ before I could do it.
This is the dilemma: we of peace will be with you." r .' ;:.The q~ity Srnrlri'e( . '\
al pastorthom@~htilaygal­
face right now. Business (Philippians 4:2-9)
. ·sub~cribe'!od~Jj • 9$12-~1:55 ·~
lipalis.com).
mterests, left unchecked, are
Paul is pleading with · \)vW...inydaii:Ysi(lllnel:corn &gt;:
.
COPYR'I.GHT 10 2009.
. ' ... ·· ·... ·~: . : ' ,,;. ·''- '· . hll
clearly not capable of being leaders in the church in
THOM MOLL,OHAN

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PROuD TO BE A •
.PART ORYOUR LIFE;·'

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The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

How to Be a Lady
The
American
Heritage
Dictionary defines a lady as "a
well-mann.er and considerate
woman with high standards of
proper behavior," the exact
female corre late of the
gentleman. Thus t~e American
Heritage Dictionary provides ·
the following usage note: "Lady,
a social term, is properly
us~il as a pa ra llel to
gentleman to emp~asize the
non:ns expected in civil·
society or In situations
requiri ng civil courtesies ..."
But. because the terms
"lady" and "gentleman"
often have connotations of
refi nement and per~aps being overly concerned with protoco l or etiquette,
we may easily lose sig~ t of !he true essence of t~ese terms, which is a
genuine considerati on lor the feelings of others. A lady is son1eone who is
well-mannered and considerate because she truly cares about the feelings
of others and their well-being. And, is this not the same as Christian love'
· Th:Js, the ti'\Je Christian woman is always a lady, be£ause these ar.e. really
one and the same. So, a woman who is a good Christian by being .
well-mannered, considerate, and having high moral standards, is well on
her way to bel ng a lady.
Do not let your adomment be merely oatward, arranging the
hair, wearing the gold, or putting on fine apparel, rather let It
be the hldde~~ penon of the heart, with the lnciiiTuptlble
beauty of a ge~~Oe and quiet spirit, whlth Is ~ry predous In
the li&amp;lll of Cod.

New K.J.V. 1 Peter l:l-4

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lfye abute in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
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John 15:7

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•....
..•
•'

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St.

Middleport, OH
•740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
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(740)

992-6451

~

'

A'
~

•.

•

•

•

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@
P.O. Box 683

Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

The Daily Sentinel

•
"

•

FAITH • FAMILY

PageA7
Friday, May 22,

2009

Support concert for band
slated Tuesday at RVHS
CHESHIRE - River Valley High School Fellowship of
Christian Athletes is sponsoring a support concert for the
contemporary Christ1an band , Roma ns Highway. on
Tuesday, May 27 in the Raiders' gymnasium.
River Vall.ey's FCA has. rn:en one of the strongest supporters of thts group from 1ts.mcephon . The band functions
on a very low budget and th•s event will allow for n10nies
to go directly to ~he ministry f!rovided by these young men.
Members of th!s band are R•cky and Ryan Jackson , Chris
Mohr, Rex McKinness and Seth Montgomery_. The concert ·
wi!J open with music by Kari McFann . Kari will open at 8.
p.m. Tuesday.
Cost for the event is $3 for students and $5 for adults.:
Children not yet in kindergarten are not charged admittance,

For information, call Cindy Graham , Ron Hammo11d or
Aaron Walker at RVHS,
(740) '367-7377.
.
'

.

Church plans Puppet
Karaoke Theatre show
.

SubmiUad photo

Participants in Sunday's annual Memorial Day tribute at Firs! Baptist Church in Gallipolis are, from left, larry Marr, R()ger
Hood, Jon lynch, Harold Walker, Ed Edelblute, Fred Henderson, CleeiSnd Willis, Jeff Bassett, Cliff Thornton and Jennings
Ferguson. ·
'

First Baptist Church Memorial Day observance is Sunday
GALLIPOLIS - . The . members .of · First Baptist, · ing his master's in anesthesia family. He joined the Marine
annual Memorial Day are this year!s special Speak- in 2003, he began serving as Co'J's. in 2002! training as a
. observance at First Baptist ers .. Tile Rev. Alvis Pollard, a CRNA, being depl&lt;ly!-'d to basic 1rtfantry rifleman.
Church honoring all who senior pastor at First Baptist, ·active duly since 9111. He is
In 2003 , he joil:led the 4th.
have sei'Ved or are serving will close the ·service with a CI!J:Tently attached. t() a. unit Combat Engineer Battalion
their country is Sunday at . brief message. · .
• . based · In Atlanta. Ga., Alpha
Company;
lOa.m.
. SteyensoJI'S. Army caieer ·. deployed as _neede~ .with Charleston, W.Va., and., was
This year's theme-is "Blood began 10 1990 at . Fort umtsshortmh•sspec1alty.
deploy_ed to Iraq :from
Bought Our Freedom.''
BeJ!iling, Gl\- Over the next . He resides with •his wife, January to October 2005. He
. In addition to recognizing 19 YearS, Stevenson's career Coral , and family in . WaS discharged in 2007 with'
all veterans · il) · attendance, included specialty traininl; in Southside, W.Va., and is the rank of sergeant, and is
the service will include a anti-tank warfare. Leavmg employed by Pleasant currently the office managef
presentation of seven flags active duty in 1993 to begin Valley Hospital. .
for Gallipolis Peoples Bank.
representing the United college, he enlisted in a medBassett, a graduate of He is pursuing an MBA speStates. pfisoners. of war, ical · unit of the Army Indiana Wesleyan University cializing in 11nance. ·
Army, Navy,. A1r Force, Reserve, an,d graduated in ·with · bachelor:s degrees in · All area veterans are
1995 as a registered nurs~. · management and finance, invited to attend the service,
Matines. and Coast Guard.
As a ,second lieutenant in · currently resides in Crown , wh~re they will receive a.
Capt. Fletcher Stevenson
and Sgt. Jeff Bassett, both the Anny Reserve; complet• . City with his wife, Kathy, and free U.S . flag lape1 pjn. ·· . .

· fe.el b.runt
· . · 0 f. No. tre·Dam_e_·, upr_.·O.·. a_ r_..
.Cat. h0 t•lC ·co lleges
..
Bv RACHEL ZOLL
WRITER

GALLIPOLIS - Havedou -ever wanted to be on stage,
but ·were too embarras:j(: to stand out thero in front of
everyone?
.
Pathway Community Church offers you a risk-free
chance to make your dream come 11\le. At. 6 p.m. on,
Sunday, May 3J., Pa:tjlway Family .Movie Night will show
a classic "Veggie Tales" movie, followed by a repeat df the
popular Puppet Karaoke Theatre.
·
Choose your puppet, choose a song, and get behind the
velvet curtain of the Pathway Puppet Stage. Try your hand
at. "lif synching" to a parody of a popular song, even more
fun i you bring your friends,
Puppet Klll'aoke participation is opef! to all -short or
tall. Pathway Community Church, located at the corner or
· Tllird AVenue and Locust Street iri Gallipol!s, offers family
films and . refreshments to the commmi1ty on th.e last
Sunday of each rttQ)lth. · '· . ··.
..· '
. ·,
.•. A ~,uggested d(_&gt;nalion .of $1 per pef!lot)1 ~elps cover the .
costs of the evcnmg. . .
,
• .
.
Call(740)446-7~3foi-lrwteinfotlfltlt/on :

church hog roast is.Saturday·
NORTHUP - Eli.-;abeth Chapel's third annual hog roast
and gospel sing will be held Saturday, May 23, at Graham
.
.
Blessing Farm in Northup.
Trap shooting will begm at;! p.m., and various activities.
including swimming, fishing, volleyball and cornhole tour,,
naments go throughout the afternoon.
.
.
Thesouthern gos~l · group Earthen Vessels will sing from 'S
to 6 p.m. Dmner w1ll be served at 6. Another southeril gospel
group, For~iven 4, will perform from 6:30 ,to 7:30 p.m., aiJd
Rollllii)SH•ghwayflmshes .theeveqmgstartmgat ·8p.m. ·
Roast hog, prepared by Grady Jghnson; will be served,
All paper J?roducts are p~vided; and those ~!tending are.
· asked to bnng a .covered. dtS)l and dessert. Bn!lg your own
chairs to watch the concerts.
.. .
· ·A love Qffering will be taken to benefit the family of
Todd Deei.The farm is located 1.771 miles off Blessing
Road in Northup.
·
· .
.
: ,

address last Sunday.
asspciation will discuss com- most prominent" Catholic
' Still, the unprecedented . mencement speakerS in lig]:lt lawmakers · who . support
clamor in the weeks leading · of the Notre Dame contro· legalized abortion in any way
The. protests over the · up to the event emboldened versy in a . meeting next often find themselves without
Universtty of Notre Dame's watchdoggroups.A,sjust?n~ - month. Yanikos~, a consul- · an invitation to .a Catholic
commencement invitation example, the · Cardtnal . tanttothe U.S. b1shops' edu- collejle graduation. The
to President Barack Obama . Newman Society, an indepen- catiori committee, expects Cardtnal Newman Socie~y
will have an impact beyond qent Catholic organization the panel will also take up the has said the ·number of
. the. South Bend campus and that monitors Catholia col- issue, although probably not . protests launched over com~
far lol)ger than graduation leges and universities, said it until their next scheduled menceme,nt speakers has
season.
collected more than 367 ,DOD meeting in November.
dropped from 24 in 2006 to
While the drubbing signatures for an online petiTensions have erupted 13 m 2007, then to eight last
focused on the nation's tion condemning Obama's . regularly
among
the ~ear. In several · ~ases, the
most prestigious Roman role in the ceremony.
schools, · bishops
and , 10Vited speaker Withdrew 10
·Catholic school, the ct;iti"Given the high-profile Catholic activists since response tothe OP.P&lt;Jsition.
cism also served as a warn- nature of the Notre Dame sit- · .1967, when Catholic ilcadeThis year, Archbishop
ing to all Catholic colleges uation, one would think.these mics released the "Land Alfred .Hughes of New
and universities about the colleges and universities 0 'Lakes Statement on the Orleans boycotted compotential for opposition to would back off anyone prob- Nature of the Contemp,orary men cement . at ·xavier
their own polictes. . .
lematic," said Patrick Reilly, Catholic University.' The University because the uni- . r11t'''liil"'~
The U.S. Conference of thes(X:iety's president.
leaders affirmed .the col: · versity honored Donna
Catholic Bishops has said
Even more importantly, · leges' role of serving the ]J~azile, a Democratic
that Catholic schools should the nation's bishops showed o;:hurch, ,but declared .some strategist · who supports
not give . awards or plat- a n,ew willingnesno $peak autonomy from tile Catholic abortion rights,
. ·
forms to those who ''act hi out when they believe. a · hierarchy, so that the . Bishop Joseph Martino of
defiance of our fundamental decision by a Catholic col- schools could be guided by Scranton, Pa., condemned
moral principles.''
lege . or university under· professional leadership, not the choice of U.S. Sen ..Bob
"There have occasionally mines the church.
JUSt the religious orders that Casey as graduation speaker
been tensions between an
Bishops generally stay created them.
at King's College in Wilkesindividual bishop and . a silent and defer to a local
"In the earlier period, Barre. Martino called it "an
Catholic institution within prelate about any trouble people didn't think, ' What affront to all who value the
his diocese, usually related mside his own diocese, does it mean to be a sanctity of life."
to some public misrepresen- includit)g conflicts with Catholic university? What
The
Pennsylvania .
tation of or dissent from schoolS' in his jurisdiction. is the mission of a Catholic Democrat opposes abortion . ·
Catholic teaching, or-some Yet, more than 75 of the universit~?' It was · fore- rights, but Martino has criti- ·.
professor considered to' pe roU:glily 265 active U.S. gone," sa1d William Portier, Cized him for voting .to con·
at odds with the church's bi~hops critici:ted Notre· a theologian at . the firm Kathleen Sebelius as
doctrine, but nothing of this Dame for honoring Obama . .. .University of Dayton , a Secretary of . Health. and
scale," said the Rev. David Outside the Notre Dame Marianist school in Ohio. Human Services. Sebelius,
O'Connell, president of The graduation, Bishop John "Bul after the 1960s, it was a Catholic, suppons legalCatholic University of D'Arcy of Fort Wayne- . i,mportant to reflect on that:" ized abortion. Casey voted
In 1990, Pope John Paul to confirm her because he
America, Which was found· South Bend, Ind., who boyed by the nation 's bishops.
cotted the event, celebrated II released the document believed it .would be irre- ·
"When one of the more a Mass at a rally for anti- "On Catholic Universities ," sponsible to leave the health
prominent Catholic institu- · abortion protesters.
saying the schools must position
vacant,
his
tions does this, the bishoP.s
"This is an iinpact that is adhere to church teaching spokesman has said.
grow concerned that it W1ll likely to be felt for some peri- · on faith and morals. The
Yanikoski said that most
signal approval or the per- od of time," said Richard Vatican took further action schools in his association
ception of approval of such · Yanikaski, president of the in· 2002, requiring theolo- · have full-time mission officantrary positions. and that Association of Catholic gians at Catholic schools to cers who help guard Catholic
other Catholic universities .Colleges and Universities, receive a "mandatum·," or _identity on campus,including
or colleges will follow suit." which is based in Washington mandate, from a local bish- · strengthening the review of
Obama, who · supports and represents more than 200 op, attesting that they fol· major honorees. However, he
abortion rights , received U.S, schools. "It's certainly low church .doctrine.
noted that "the bishops have
standing ovations . when he - but one doesn't know
Yet, the debate usually become much more sensitive
was awarded an honorary exactly how - helpin? to flares most dramatically dur- · to this matter" in recent years,
degree and gave the Notre . shape public perception .'
ing commencement season.
leading to conflicts . su9h as
Dame
commencement · The board of the college
As a result, the nation's the one at Notre Dame.
AP RELIGION

..

�•

I

The Daily Sentinel

1

In the fo urth season of
·'The Andy Griffith Show."
there i' an episode called
··Citizen\ Arrest'' in which
Gomer Pyle. the both physically ~nd socially clumsy
attend:lnt of Wally's gas stati9n. is ghlen a ticket by
Deputy Barney Fife, everyone's favorite stickler for the
rules. The ci tation is for making an illegal u-turn in downtown Mayberry and is given
in spite of Gomer's protests.
his appeal for mercy from
Barney, and his claim on
Barney for friendship.
The matter would have
then-been laid to rest, Gomer
would have paid his two dollars. Barney would have gone
back to his patrol, and Andy
would have had a moment's
Peace if It were .not for the
fact that Barney, no mauer his
zealousness regarding the
keeping of law and order .by
others, excused his own culpability (responsibility for
wrong. guilt) and also made
an illegal .a-tum (he wa,, as
wa1 pointed out in the show,
NOT on an emergency run
and therefore not supposed to
be making a u-tum) .
Of course he was then
caught in a net of his own
making . Gomer, standing
haplessly by still holding the
freshly written ticket that
Barney had given him . witnesses Barney's infraction
and begins shouting at the
top of his lungs, "Citizen's
arrest! CitiLen's arrest!"
A situation then unfolds in
which a crowd gathers, Andy
appears to sort things out,
and the altercation between
Gomer and Barney ~calates
to the point that Barney not
only resigns as deputy but, in
refusing to pay his fine, locks
himself in the "slammer"
(one of the few times he did
it on purpose) , all in an
attempt to hurt Andy who, in
trying to be just, was forced
to hold B!U11ey to the same
standard that Barney had
held against Got)1er.
I remember the episode
clearly from childhood,
Gomer's loud chanting of
~Citizen 's arrest! Citizen's
~rrest!" making an impression upon me. lt was a very
funny show. It was troubling, too, to watch Bamey's
pride get the.better of him to
the point that he very near! y
ieemed to have lost all ability to be reasonable and act
rationally. It was painful to
watch him render almost
irreparable harm to his lifelong friendship with Andy
as well as very nearly flushIng his own career down the
proverbial drain.
·
: On the one hand, this was
just ·another one of those

r r

PageA6

FAITH • VALUES
Giving credit where credit's due;
For More
Friday, May 22,

Pastor
Thom
Mollohan

completely
off-the-wall
things that Barney did. ''I'm
not like him . I would never
do that." we might think.
And so it seems surreal and
we're safe ly " better than
him ."' But really, the creators
of his character were trying
to create an overt e~ainple
of what we are beneath the
surface. We tend to know
people that remind us of him
but overlook the subtle
things in us that are perhaps
more like him than we imagine or can appreciate .
As Christians. we often
have issues with our pride ,
for example. Perhaps the
problem manifests itself
when ~e feel compelled to
put someone else in his or her
place or when we criticize
others with caustic remarks.
We might even be inclined to
run after someone in order to
give him his ticket (a visible
or audible rebuke that makes
it clear that he is morally inferior to us).
But pride isn't our only
problem. We each also have
other areas of ineptitude,
places or things in which we
can't quite handle the job, so
to speak, and need help.Some
folks are clumsy with their
words, some with their relationships, some with money,
some with their physical wellbeing, ·and all of us when ·it
comes to the deep truths of
God (to one degree or another). I've no doubt-that some
reading this will be offended
in my comparing them to
Barney Fife. but simply know
that I am applying a universal
truth to each of us (myself
included). No one measures
up to the standards of God.
Vv'hether in our actions, our
words, our thoughts, or in the
attitude of our hearts, we cannot measure up to the pure
and righteous standard that
holiness requires.
But this, of course, is
where grace comes in. Our
clumsiness is swallowed up
by God's grace when we
turn to Him through faith in
His Son , Jesus Christ.
If you have ever seen the
episode "Citizen's AITest,"
you may recall that Andy
required Barney to apply. the
same standard to himself as
he did to Gomer, but then
Andy offered to pay his fine

r r r

2009·

I got a credit card invitaPhilippi to put asi~e their:
him,elf out of his own pocktion
in
the
mail
recently.
On
personal
arguments m favor;
et. Andy knew he had to be
of God's perspective. We_.
just, but his desire for ongo- the outside, exclamation
don't
know much about;
points
proclaimed
I
was
ing friendship with Barney
Euodia
and Syntyche - not)
pre-approved
for
a
platinum
compelled h1m to make a
·Pastor
even
how
to pronounce,
with
a
special
rate
for
card
sacri11ce in order to preserve
Kerry
names
I But we do:
their
balance transfers . On the
and perfect that friendship.
Wood
know what Paul su~gests to:
What was the one thing inside, r read the .fine print.
them
in dealing W1tb their;
That
special
rate
was
standing in B-arney's way
problems.
~
11.5%
for
two
years,
then
it
though? Again, it was that
First
,
rejoice
in
GodC
automatically
jumped
to
recunring pride of his. His
Rejoicing in anything else)
pride not only refused the prime plus 18%. If I missed
the
payment
deadline
even
in
sOciety's
best
interests.
- good jobs, money in the'
gift of grace his friend
once
,
the
special
rate
imrneBut
SQmetimes
governmenbank
, respect and leadership:
offered,. but deliberately
diately
jumped
to
36%!
And
·
tal
involvement
only
makes
in
the
community - is a;
chose instead the alternathe
deadline
for
payment
things
worse.
Governmental
short-term
experienc~
tives of punishment, the loss . was VERY specific: by 9:30 interes(s, left unchecked, are
Winning
an
argument
is no~
of his livelihood, the harvest
· h111
· 26 d
f
h
also
not
in
society's
best
for God'sjoy. :
of humiliation that his a.m . Wit
ays 0 t e interests. So who does the a substitute
Second,
do
not be anXIous;
statement
date.
choices brought to him, and
Since
most
people
sit
checking
on
both
gavemabout
anything.
There iS:
the ending of his long d
ment and business?
nothing
to
fear
when
God is~
friendship with Andy.
own and pay bills a couple '
We do. As consumers, and
near.
Differences
of
opin-;
of times a month - usually
Was Barney technically in around
a payday ~ that 26 as citizens, we are responsi- ion , skin color, accent,.
the wrong for giving Gomer days was a sneaky way to ble for making the .rules for
income. etc., don't have to;
the ticket? Nope. We might charge me far a "late pay - business and government. be
feared anymore. We can;
sympathize with Gomer, ment" even if 1 made regu- We make up society, and so
associate
with those not like:
who felt somewhat burt for
lar
monthly
payments.
And
on!~ we can maintain sod- us and become better people
getting a ticket from his
because of it!'
s b!:st interests.
friend , but Barney was just in that is exactg the kind of .etyBut
what is in our sociThird, pray about whatev-.
offer
that
ongress
and
giving it and in doing so was President Obama want to ely's best interests? Every er leaves you anxious or in,
fulfilling the responsibility
controversial issue we face· disagreement. Don't stew
_ from broad economic
given to him in being an protect us from receiving.
over ir, or gossip about it, or
Credit card reform is the
·
agent for peace and law and latest
10
business arena to stimulm packages
ran- take it to court. Give it to
order for Mayberry. What
dom dll!g tests, from speed God and be patient enough
. was unjust, however, wa~ hi&amp; which our federal govern- limits to definitions of life to experience God's way of
attitude of moral superiority ment has set its sights. And _ has differing points of finding the resolution.
.
are a lot of things that
·
h , ·
·
and his notion that.the same ,Ithere
Finally, choose to think
like about the legislation VIew on w at •s fight for our
rules did not' apply to him. ·
society.
··
right things. MuciJ,
I wish I had an easy answer aboutthe
. By the way, God DOES being considered. .
of what bothers us comes.
For example, rigllt now, to this dilemma, but I do not. from thinking about the
allow u-tums. In fact, He
loves it when we turn from credit card compani_es can Instead, 1 can only turn to . wrong things. But when we
our pride, our selfish ambi- · automatically boost the· Scripture for guidance:
to think on things
"I plead with Euodia and I choose
lions, and our sin and begin interest rate charged on
that
are
true, noble, right,
walking with Him .. -"As remaining balances if a per- plead with Syntyche to pure, lovely, admirable,
surely as I live. declares the son pays late. That makes agree with each other in the excellent or praiseworthy.
Sovereign LORD, I take no sense. When a person - Lord. Yes, and I ask you, - we won't have time to
pleasure in the death Uudg- begins paying late, it's a loyal yokefellow, help these spend thinking up bad cred-.
ment) of the wicked, but sign that the person 's women who have contended it card offers or responding
rather that they turn from finances are out of control. at my side in the cause of the to them. We won't need to
their ways and live . Tum! That p_erson b_ecomes a · gospel, along with Clement overprotect society because
Tu1n from your evil ways! ~1gher fiSk of default, so the and the rest of my fellow we transform society from
Why will you die?" mter~st rate .sh?uld reflect workers, whose names are · the inside out.
·the nsk the credit c;u:d com- in the book of life . .
(Ezekiel 33: II NIV).
I like to think of Paul's
"Rejoice in the Lord conflict resolution plan as
And, once we have made pan~ t~kes by leavmg the
alv.:ars. 1 will say it again: " givin~ credit where credit
that u-turn and begin wal~ing cred1t lme open.
However, once the person ·ReJOICe! Let your gentle- is due. ' When we give God
with Him in the direction of
His will for our lives, we do who wa~ late gets back on .ness be evident to all . The the credit, then . everything
not become like Barney with track With payments , the Lord is near: Do not be anx- else seems to eventuallY.
his ever-ready ticket book mteres~ rate, under current ious about anything, but in work out - even if thai
and wailing siren, but live regulatwns , never has to be everything, by prayer and working out occurs on the
humbly in the forgiveness returned to. the lo~er rate. petition; with thanksgiving , other side of death. Are you
offered us through God's So the credit fiSk IS less to present your . requests to willing to accept that offer?
·sacrifice. in His Son. Through t~e company; but they con- God. And the peace of God,
(Ke"y Wood is no·w asso-.
faith in Jesus we are empow- tmue to treat the customer which transcends all under- ciate pastor· at Grace
ered to become messengers as a high risk_. Th~t:S wrong, standing , will guard your United Methodist Church
of grace, ready to not given and the legislation would heans and your minds in in ferrysburg, Ohio after
Christ Jesus .
tickets but words of hope and f1x that.
serving Racine United
On
the
other
hand,
how
"Finally, . brothers, what- Methodist Chu'rchfor three
warning to those who also
need to turn ... turn to God's much protectiOn do we real- ever is true, whatever is years. He can be reached
ly need li'?m bad credit ca,rd noble. whatever is right, through
grace and be made new!
his website:
offers
hke the one I whatever is pure; whatever http://pursueholiness.blogs
(Thom Mollohan and his
family lzave ministered in received'/ I read the fine is lovely, whatever is pot.com).
southern Ohio the past 13- pnnt, then shredded the admirable - if anything is
112 years and is the author of offer and dropped it into the excellent or praiseworthy
"The Fairy Tale Parables." trash. It was certainly an - think about such things.
He is the pastor of Paihway offer that I could refuse. And Whatever you have learned
Community Church and I didn't need Uncle Sam to or received or heard from
may be reavhed for com- stand over . my shoulder me , or seen in me - put it
into practice. And the God
mems or questions by e-11U1i/ before I could do it.
This is the dilemma: we of peace will be with you." r .' ;:.The q~ity Srnrlri'e( . '\
al pastorthom@~htilaygal­
face right now. Business (Philippians 4:2-9)
. ·sub~cribe'!od~Jj • 9$12-~1:55 ·~
lipalis.com).
mterests, left unchecked, are
Paul is pleading with · \)vW...inydaii:Ysi(lllnel:corn &gt;:
.
COPYR'I.GHT 10 2009.
. ' ... ·· ·... ·~: . : ' ,,;. ·''- '· . hll
clearly not capable of being leaders in the church in
THOM MOLL,OHAN

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PROuD TO BE A •
.PART ORYOUR LIFE;·'

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The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

How to Be a Lady
The
American
Heritage
Dictionary defines a lady as "a
well-mann.er and considerate
woman with high standards of
proper behavior," the exact
female corre late of the
gentleman. Thus t~e American
Heritage Dictionary provides ·
the following usage note: "Lady,
a social term, is properly
us~il as a pa ra llel to
gentleman to emp~asize the
non:ns expected in civil·
society or In situations
requiri ng civil courtesies ..."
But. because the terms
"lady" and "gentleman"
often have connotations of
refi nement and per~aps being overly concerned with protoco l or etiquette,
we may easily lose sig~ t of !he true essence of t~ese terms, which is a
genuine considerati on lor the feelings of others. A lady is son1eone who is
well-mannered and considerate because she truly cares about the feelings
of others and their well-being. And, is this not the same as Christian love'
· Th:Js, the ti'\Je Christian woman is always a lady, be£ause these ar.e. really
one and the same. So, a woman who is a good Christian by being .
well-mannered, considerate, and having high moral standards, is well on
her way to bel ng a lady.
Do not let your adomment be merely oatward, arranging the
hair, wearing the gold, or putting on fine apparel, rather let It
be the hldde~~ penon of the heart, with the lnciiiTuptlble
beauty of a ge~~Oe and quiet spirit, whlth Is ~ry predous In
the li&amp;lll of Cod.

New K.J.V. 1 Peter l:l-4

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190 N. Second St.

Middleport, OH
•740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues !-shirts and more
(740)

992-6451

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@
P.O. Box 683

Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

The Daily Sentinel

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FAITH • FAMILY

PageA7
Friday, May 22,

2009

Support concert for band
slated Tuesday at RVHS
CHESHIRE - River Valley High School Fellowship of
Christian Athletes is sponsoring a support concert for the
contemporary Christ1an band , Roma ns Highway. on
Tuesday, May 27 in the Raiders' gymnasium.
River Vall.ey's FCA has. rn:en one of the strongest supporters of thts group from 1ts.mcephon . The band functions
on a very low budget and th•s event will allow for n10nies
to go directly to ~he ministry f!rovided by these young men.
Members of th!s band are R•cky and Ryan Jackson , Chris
Mohr, Rex McKinness and Seth Montgomery_. The concert ·
wi!J open with music by Kari McFann . Kari will open at 8.
p.m. Tuesday.
Cost for the event is $3 for students and $5 for adults.:
Children not yet in kindergarten are not charged admittance,

For information, call Cindy Graham , Ron Hammo11d or
Aaron Walker at RVHS,
(740) '367-7377.
.
'

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Church plans Puppet
Karaoke Theatre show
.

SubmiUad photo

Participants in Sunday's annual Memorial Day tribute at Firs! Baptist Church in Gallipolis are, from left, larry Marr, R()ger
Hood, Jon lynch, Harold Walker, Ed Edelblute, Fred Henderson, CleeiSnd Willis, Jeff Bassett, Cliff Thornton and Jennings
Ferguson. ·
'

First Baptist Church Memorial Day observance is Sunday
GALLIPOLIS - . The . members .of · First Baptist, · ing his master's in anesthesia family. He joined the Marine
annual Memorial Day are this year!s special Speak- in 2003, he began serving as Co'J's. in 2002! training as a
. observance at First Baptist ers .. Tile Rev. Alvis Pollard, a CRNA, being depl&lt;ly!-'d to basic 1rtfantry rifleman.
Church honoring all who senior pastor at First Baptist, ·active duly since 9111. He is
In 2003 , he joil:led the 4th.
have sei'Ved or are serving will close the ·service with a CI!J:Tently attached. t() a. unit Combat Engineer Battalion
their country is Sunday at . brief message. · .
• . based · In Atlanta. Ga., Alpha
Company;
lOa.m.
. SteyensoJI'S. Army caieer ·. deployed as _neede~ .with Charleston, W.Va., and., was
This year's theme-is "Blood began 10 1990 at . Fort umtsshortmh•sspec1alty.
deploy_ed to Iraq :from
Bought Our Freedom.''
BeJ!iling, Gl\- Over the next . He resides with •his wife, January to October 2005. He
. In addition to recognizing 19 YearS, Stevenson's career Coral , and family in . WaS discharged in 2007 with'
all veterans · il) · attendance, included specialty traininl; in Southside, W.Va., and is the rank of sergeant, and is
the service will include a anti-tank warfare. Leavmg employed by Pleasant currently the office managef
presentation of seven flags active duty in 1993 to begin Valley Hospital. .
for Gallipolis Peoples Bank.
representing the United college, he enlisted in a medBassett, a graduate of He is pursuing an MBA speStates. pfisoners. of war, ical · unit of the Army Indiana Wesleyan University cializing in 11nance. ·
Army, Navy,. A1r Force, Reserve, an,d graduated in ·with · bachelor:s degrees in · All area veterans are
1995 as a registered nurs~. · management and finance, invited to attend the service,
Matines. and Coast Guard.
As a ,second lieutenant in · currently resides in Crown , wh~re they will receive a.
Capt. Fletcher Stevenson
and Sgt. Jeff Bassett, both the Anny Reserve; complet• . City with his wife, Kathy, and free U.S . flag lape1 pjn. ·· . .

· fe.el b.runt
· . · 0 f. No. tre·Dam_e_·, upr_.·O.·. a_ r_..
.Cat. h0 t•lC ·co lleges
..
Bv RACHEL ZOLL
WRITER

GALLIPOLIS - Havedou -ever wanted to be on stage,
but ·were too embarras:j(: to stand out thero in front of
everyone?
.
Pathway Community Church offers you a risk-free
chance to make your dream come 11\le. At. 6 p.m. on,
Sunday, May 3J., Pa:tjlway Family .Movie Night will show
a classic "Veggie Tales" movie, followed by a repeat df the
popular Puppet Karaoke Theatre.
·
Choose your puppet, choose a song, and get behind the
velvet curtain of the Pathway Puppet Stage. Try your hand
at. "lif synching" to a parody of a popular song, even more
fun i you bring your friends,
Puppet Klll'aoke participation is opef! to all -short or
tall. Pathway Community Church, located at the corner or
· Tllird AVenue and Locust Street iri Gallipol!s, offers family
films and . refreshments to the commmi1ty on th.e last
Sunday of each rttQ)lth. · '· . ··.
..· '
. ·,
.•. A ~,uggested d(_&gt;nalion .of $1 per pef!lot)1 ~elps cover the .
costs of the evcnmg. . .
,
• .
.
Call(740)446-7~3foi-lrwteinfotlfltlt/on :

church hog roast is.Saturday·
NORTHUP - Eli.-;abeth Chapel's third annual hog roast
and gospel sing will be held Saturday, May 23, at Graham
.
.
Blessing Farm in Northup.
Trap shooting will begm at;! p.m., and various activities.
including swimming, fishing, volleyball and cornhole tour,,
naments go throughout the afternoon.
.
.
Thesouthern gos~l · group Earthen Vessels will sing from 'S
to 6 p.m. Dmner w1ll be served at 6. Another southeril gospel
group, For~iven 4, will perform from 6:30 ,to 7:30 p.m., aiJd
Rollllii)SH•ghwayflmshes .theeveqmgstartmgat ·8p.m. ·
Roast hog, prepared by Grady Jghnson; will be served,
All paper J?roducts are p~vided; and those ~!tending are.
· asked to bnng a .covered. dtS)l and dessert. Bn!lg your own
chairs to watch the concerts.
.. .
· ·A love Qffering will be taken to benefit the family of
Todd Deei.The farm is located 1.771 miles off Blessing
Road in Northup.
·
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address last Sunday.
asspciation will discuss com- most prominent" Catholic
' Still, the unprecedented . mencement speakerS in lig]:lt lawmakers · who . support
clamor in the weeks leading · of the Notre Dame contro· legalized abortion in any way
The. protests over the · up to the event emboldened versy in a . meeting next often find themselves without
Universtty of Notre Dame's watchdoggroups.A,sjust?n~ - month. Yanikos~, a consul- · an invitation to .a Catholic
commencement invitation example, the · Cardtnal . tanttothe U.S. b1shops' edu- collejle graduation. The
to President Barack Obama . Newman Society, an indepen- catiori committee, expects Cardtnal Newman Socie~y
will have an impact beyond qent Catholic organization the panel will also take up the has said the ·number of
. the. South Bend campus and that monitors Catholia col- issue, although probably not . protests launched over com~
far lol)ger than graduation leges and universities, said it until their next scheduled menceme,nt speakers has
season.
collected more than 367 ,DOD meeting in November.
dropped from 24 in 2006 to
While the drubbing signatures for an online petiTensions have erupted 13 m 2007, then to eight last
focused on the nation's tion condemning Obama's . regularly
among
the ~ear. In several · ~ases, the
most prestigious Roman role in the ceremony.
schools, · bishops
and , 10Vited speaker Withdrew 10
·Catholic school, the ct;iti"Given the high-profile Catholic activists since response tothe OP.P&lt;Jsition.
cism also served as a warn- nature of the Notre Dame sit- · .1967, when Catholic ilcadeThis year, Archbishop
ing to all Catholic colleges uation, one would think.these mics released the "Land Alfred .Hughes of New
and universities about the colleges and universities 0 'Lakes Statement on the Orleans boycotted compotential for opposition to would back off anyone prob- Nature of the Contemp,orary men cement . at ·xavier
their own polictes. . .
lematic," said Patrick Reilly, Catholic University.' The University because the uni- . r11t'''liil"'~
The U.S. Conference of thes(X:iety's president.
leaders affirmed .the col: · versity honored Donna
Catholic Bishops has said
Even more importantly, · leges' role of serving the ]J~azile, a Democratic
that Catholic schools should the nation's bishops showed o;:hurch, ,but declared .some strategist · who supports
not give . awards or plat- a n,ew willingnesno $peak autonomy from tile Catholic abortion rights,
. ·
forms to those who ''act hi out when they believe. a · hierarchy, so that the . Bishop Joseph Martino of
defiance of our fundamental decision by a Catholic col- schools could be guided by Scranton, Pa., condemned
moral principles.''
lege . or university under· professional leadership, not the choice of U.S. Sen ..Bob
"There have occasionally mines the church.
JUSt the religious orders that Casey as graduation speaker
been tensions between an
Bishops generally stay created them.
at King's College in Wilkesindividual bishop and . a silent and defer to a local
"In the earlier period, Barre. Martino called it "an
Catholic institution within prelate about any trouble people didn't think, ' What affront to all who value the
his diocese, usually related mside his own diocese, does it mean to be a sanctity of life."
to some public misrepresen- includit)g conflicts with Catholic university? What
The
Pennsylvania .
tation of or dissent from schoolS' in his jurisdiction. is the mission of a Catholic Democrat opposes abortion . ·
Catholic teaching, or-some Yet, more than 75 of the universit~?' It was · fore- rights, but Martino has criti- ·.
professor considered to' pe roU:glily 265 active U.S. gone," sa1d William Portier, Cized him for voting .to con·
at odds with the church's bi~hops critici:ted Notre· a theologian at . the firm Kathleen Sebelius as
doctrine, but nothing of this Dame for honoring Obama . .. .University of Dayton , a Secretary of . Health. and
scale," said the Rev. David Outside the Notre Dame Marianist school in Ohio. Human Services. Sebelius,
O'Connell, president of The graduation, Bishop John "Bul after the 1960s, it was a Catholic, suppons legalCatholic University of D'Arcy of Fort Wayne- . i,mportant to reflect on that:" ized abortion. Casey voted
In 1990, Pope John Paul to confirm her because he
America, Which was found· South Bend, Ind., who boyed by the nation 's bishops.
cotted the event, celebrated II released the document believed it .would be irre- ·
"When one of the more a Mass at a rally for anti- "On Catholic Universities ," sponsible to leave the health
prominent Catholic institu- · abortion protesters.
saying the schools must position
vacant,
his
tions does this, the bishoP.s
"This is an iinpact that is adhere to church teaching spokesman has said.
grow concerned that it W1ll likely to be felt for some peri- · on faith and morals. The
Yanikoski said that most
signal approval or the per- od of time," said Richard Vatican took further action schools in his association
ception of approval of such · Yanikaski, president of the in· 2002, requiring theolo- · have full-time mission officantrary positions. and that Association of Catholic gians at Catholic schools to cers who help guard Catholic
other Catholic universities .Colleges and Universities, receive a "mandatum·," or _identity on campus,including
or colleges will follow suit." which is based in Washington mandate, from a local bish- · strengthening the review of
Obama, who · supports and represents more than 200 op, attesting that they fol· major honorees. However, he
abortion rights , received U.S, schools. "It's certainly low church .doctrine.
noted that "the bishops have
standing ovations . when he - but one doesn't know
Yet, the debate usually become much more sensitive
was awarded an honorary exactly how - helpin? to flares most dramatically dur- · to this matter" in recent years,
degree and gave the Notre . shape public perception .'
ing commencement season.
leading to conflicts . su9h as
Dame
commencement · The board of the college
As a result, the nation's the one at Notre Dame.
AP RELIGION

..

�ACROSS THE NATION

TheDailySeutinel
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Page AS

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Friday, May 22,

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2009

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Senate passes $91.3 billion war funding bill
last week on companion
legislation.
Obama is sending more
WASHINGTON - The than 20.000 additional troops
Senate on Thursday passed there and, for the first time
a $91.3 billion military next year, the annual cost of
spending bill, shorn of · the war in Afghanistan is
money President Barack projected to exceed the cost
Obama wants to close the of fighting in Iraq.
Guantanamo Bay prison but
With support forces, the
allowing him to significant- number of U.S. forces in
ly ramp up the U.S. waf in Afghanistan is expected ·to
Afghanistan.
be about 68,000 by the end
The Senate voted 86-3 to of the year - more than
pass the bill, whieh provides double the size of the U.S.
money for military and force at the end of 2008.
diplomatic operations in Iraq
Among the few cautionand Afghanistan, setting up ary voices was Sen. Barbara
House-Senate talks on a Boxer, D-Calif.
compromise measure to pre"I ~ant' to give this administration ... the resources it
sent to Obama next month.
The spending measure needs to successfully end
closely . tracks Obama's . these wars," Boxer said. "I
request for war ' funds, don't support an open-ended
although the $80 million he commitment of ·American
. Was seeking to close the troops to Afghanistal). And
U:S. · naval prison at if we do not see measurable
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, progress, we must reconsidwas dropped Wednesday.
er our engagement and stratA three-day' Senate debate egy there."
oil the bill featured little of
Debate pretty · much fizafter Democrats
tl)e angst over the situation zled
il) Afghanistan that perme- retreated and moved to
ated debate in the House delete from the bill money
BY ANDREW TAYLOR

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

to close Guantanamo, where also adds $2.2 billion to
about 240 terrorism sus- Obama's request for foreign
pects still are held. The aid, much of which appears
companion House bill had to be designed to get around
already taken that step.
spending limits for 20 lO.
The underlying war fundThe Senate measure coning measure has gotten rela- tains less for .weapons protively little attention, even curement and foreign aid,
thoJJgh it WQuld boost total setting up potentially nettleapproved spending for the some negotiations .
Iraq and Afghanistan wars
The Senate the floor was .
above $900 billion. .
often empty Thursday as
The Penta~on would senators wrestled wivately
receive $73 billion under the over what final add-ons
legislation, including $4.6 would make it into the bill.
billion to train and equip
In the end, several amendAfghan and Iraqi security ments were added, including
forces; $400 million to train one . by Sens. Joseph
imd equip Pakisian 's securi- Lieberman, 1-Conn., and
ty forces, and $21.9 billion Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., to
to prQCure new mine-resis- block· the re.lease under the
tant vehicles, .. aircraft, Freedom oflnformation Act
weapons and amniunition, of government photographs
among other items. . .
showing the · abuse of
The House version adds detainees. Tbe administra•
$11.8 billion to Obarna's tion is fighting the American
req~est, including almost $4 Civil Liberties Union in fedbilhon for new weapons and eral court over the release of
military equipment such as the photos; and the move
ei!ihl C-17 cargo planes, was intended to bolster ·the
rome-resistant · veb,icles, government's legal position.
Bradley Fighting Vehicles
Sen; Bob Corker, Rand Stryker anhored vehi- Tenn.,
won
approval
cles. The House measure ·Thursday of an amendment

reqmnng the president to John Kerry, D-Mass., along,
set forth U.S. objectives in with Sen. Judd Gregg, RAfghanistan and Pakistan N.H .• who said the IMF
and issue quarterly reports funding was critical to
detailing whether those avoiding financial instabili- .
ty in the world that could
goals were being met.
The Senate bill includes harm the U.S. economy:
"The fact is .that i~ [lhose
$1.5 billion as. cautionary
funding to fight a possible emerging markets Slllrt to
flu pandemic, including the fade, not oruy do we lose
current outbreak ·or H1N1 . the economic upside of
swine flu.
those markets but we also
The bill also contains run the risk that govem$350 million for various ments fail," Kerry said.
security programs along the
Both Kerry and Gregg said
U.S.-Mexico border. But .the true cost to taxpayers
the money would not be · wouldbesmall,sillC!ltheU.S.
awarded to the Pentagon, as govc;mment is ~ven intere5tObama requeste&lt;l.
bearing assets m return and
By a 64-30 vote earlier has never lost money on
Thursday, the Senate reject• investments in. me IMF.Uley .
ed an amendment by Sen. said even the $5 billion cost
Jim DeMint, R-S.C., to kill ·estimate by the Congressional
afroposed $100 .billion line Budget Office was too~·
o credit for the IMF to . House
Appropriations
shore up the ability of coun- Committee Cha1rman David
tries around the ~lobe cope Obey, D-Wis., said .again
with financial cnses, along Thurs!1ay that he's "very,
with $8 billion for existing very reluctant" to support
commitments.
any additional IMF smce
DeMint earned a b!parti- . European countries have
san rebuke from the Senate been slow to take deficitForeign
Relations financed steps to stimulateCommittee chairman, Sen. their economies.

Inside

Bl

·The Daily Sentinel

takers take loss, Page B2
Reds fall to Pbillies, Page B3
tear I.Jidicted, Page B4
xxxxxxxxxxxx,
Page xx
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Friday, May 22, 2009
'

LoCAL SCHEDULE
IPO~EROV - A.tchtdu1• of upcoming high
&amp;ll_hool 11arelty eportlng •Y•MJ Involving

fhmt from Melgt end Gl,iila (loufltlel.

frldo¥11or22
llocllond Field
DivisiOn Ill finals .at ()ak Hlft HS. 5 p.m.
.

!ll!urday, Nor 23

Lady Knights beaded
back-tostate tourney
Bv ANNA JESSMER .

.
.
.
· ·' "Qte contest began with a

SCOreleSS fJrSt irtning, each.
.
. . . team evenly matched in
Dll1lk:l8oHboll
1n their offens1ve and defenPOINT
PLEASANT
Southern va- Whiteoak at Lucasville
a game filled ·with bl()()(j, sive' effotts.
Valley HS, 1 J&gt;m.
· •.
Dlltrlcl - I I
s~eat, tears, ';irama, and. a . -T be second inning marked
Esstorn vt Fol~lsld at Minford HS,. 11
.
tnum{lhant
fimsh, the ladies ·.the ~t and only run of the
a.m.
·
Eutern·Falrtleld winner vs Green at
of Po!nt Pleasant put on an: game for .the Lady Eagles
follnfo'!l High School, 3 p.m.
a!fiazt.ng . ~how . Thursday . who got on base by a hit
nrght 1.n ~he1r 12-mmn~ con- batsman that · worked her .
test ag~un~ the ladleS ·Of way around the bases until
Magn?ha H1gh School.
. she collided . with Point's .
Je.·~or
While · ther~ were a fe.w · Anna Sommer, capitalizing
11
moments du!:Jng the soft~a)l on the collision by stealing
marathon that, seemed .hke home for the run.
.OC3• . 0
the Lady Knights weren~t
That would be the one and
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) . going to make it, the only ruir that the Lady
strength and talent of the Kmghts . would allow on
-;- Ryan Newman knows
p
t
th R d h · h
rf
how to win poles at Lowe's women re resen 11:{ • e e I e1r . orne tu · ..
Motor Speedway. Now . ~ Blac-ib trumpe all other
The game lma~ne~ a
··, :
'fl."in' Ryan' wants to get ac ors. ey n&lt;:ve.; gave up heated stag~ti)l ead~ng mto
'
J
and they sure .didn. t surren- the sixth·. mn.rng with the
!\tat elusive victory at the der, concludmg . the 12- ladies Of Point Pleasant takAn1111 J ...mer/phOio
'!i~\u. ·ght depend o;&gt;n get- inning ba.ttle with a·3·1 vic- ing the plate. ,
.
The Lady Knig/lts pose for a picture after being awarded the Region I Championship Title
tory over the Lady Eagles to
. .··
,
tlng through the first lap: .· . clinch the Regional title.
. PI••• see !'Oint. B4
Thursday night. Point defeated Magnolia 3~ 1 in.12 innings to clinch the win.
· Newman turrted a lap at · ,
,...
·
C88.475 mph Thursday · -~---'--"-'--'----,--.,.---.,.----,..-----..,.;--~---'-----'--~----------. riighrto grab the top s\arting
Division
IV district baseball
.
spot for the Coca-Cola 600.
,;
··
It was Newman's eighth
. Career ·.pole .at LMS - . the
111ost of any active driver l\fld the
Stewart-Haas
Southern
Racing driver's 44th overstarter
all.
·
Michael
, Kyle. Busch will start secManuel, left,
qnd Sunday in NASCAR's
delivers
a.
longest race after a lap of
pitch during
188 .258, and points leader
the
third
Jeff Gordon qualified third.
Inning
of
- Newman·, Busch · and ·
Th!Jrsday
Gordon were involved in a
night's
three'wide wreck last weekDivision IV
end at ·the track in the wild
district semlfi- ·
closing segment of the Allnalbaseball
~tar
race. . It . ·helped
.contest
Newman's teammate, Tony
Siewart, get the win.
against Paint
' "As of right tiow I'm
Valley at
·
. going to call a meeting at
Lucasville
the NASCAR hauler for all
Valley High ~ .
threi(felims to sit down and
School in
talk about · the first lap,''
Lucasville·.
Newman said, joking. "It's
Manuel and
kind of ironic how things
the Tornadoes ·
work -out." .·
advanced to '
Newman was on the pole .
their third confor both points races af
secutive D-4
LMS in 2007. He didn't
district final by
grab a pole here last year,
rallying for an
but got his first of the Sprint
B-6 victory.
Cup season in what's been a
successful run. for the driver
lryenwenera
of the No. 39 Chevrolet.
/photo
Sitting eighth . in the.
standings, 238 · · points
behind Gordon, Newman
rock~ted around the track
that he's mastered whim .it
was bumpy and now also
after the repaving project in
.
.
2006.
The hosts took their first
The
third-seeded trict championship game at by Brad BroWn on a bunt
BY BRYAN WALTERS
But while Newman is just
BWALTEASOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM TornadOeS ( 12-12) overcame Lucasville
lead
of the evening in the
led
to
the
first
out
of
the
that
Valley
High
six poles shy of David
as ·Kaleb Reed
fourth
a 6-3 deficit during that piy- School at 1 p.m. WHS game. Michael Manuel folPearson's track record of
LUCASVILLE - The otal seventh frame ; pound- shocked top-seeded Eastern lowed by being hit by a reached base with a single,
14, he's winless in 16 points
number
five and Southern ing out five hits in that late Thursday night with a 7-5 pitch, then Jordan Taylor then advanced to third on an ·
races at .Charlotte.
were perfectly rally that led to a two-run decision at the University of brought Whittington home error. Nathan Parker ground·
baseball
"This is the weekend
linked
.
Thursday
night cushion. Reliever Kyle Rio Grande. in another D-4 with a sacrifice fly to right ed into a fielder's choice that
we're going.to try to change
allowed Reed to score for a
for a 1-0 .advanulge.
against Paint Vlliley in a. Cunni)lgham closed the door districl semifinal·.
that," Newman s.aid.
Although Southern had to
the
second-seeded
That lead held firm until 2-l e~ge.
Busch went out 35th of 48 Division IV district semifi- on
the
Purple
and
rally
back,
the
bottom of the third, when . That lead, however. was
nal,
as
the
Torna,does
rallied'
Bearcats
in
the
bottom
half
cars and after the track has.
first
bf()()(j
on
Gold
struck
PVHS
put together enough short-lived as SHS plated
five
ru111'
in
the
top
of
the
of
the
seventh,
retiring
the
for
• cy:&gt;oled. ·Busch was on pace
offense
to knot things up at two scores in the top of the
Thursday
after
playing
fun19 set the top ~peed, but was seventh to capture their fifth side in order and allowing
upset about h1s perfonnance consecutive district touma- SHS to reach its third con- damental baseball in its one. Ryan Lemaster was fifth to reclaim the lead at3opening at-bat.
issued a walk, then later 2. Greg Jenkins led the
in the final two turns. A loud ment victory during an 8-6 secutive district final.
J.D.
Whittington
led
the
scored
on a single by Ben inning off with a Walk, then
triumph
at
Lucasville
Valley
The
Tornadoes
will
take
cheer erupted . when the
game
off
with
a
double,
then
Krech
for
a one-ali contest
School
in
Scioto
on.
fourth-seeded
Whiteoak
High
. scoreboard
showed
PINse see Seuthetn. B4
was
sacrificed
over
to
third
through
three
complete.
on Saturday in the D-4 disNASCAR 's top villain did- County.
n't knock Newman from the
· 1locll ond Flotcl
CWfslon II finals at Oak Hill HS; 11 a.m.

UQASPoATstMY"'ILYAEOISTER.COM

.
.
...Yan..Newman
R

.wms
·. •· .·po·.
...·
C C Ia 600

'

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raiiV past Paint

10

I

P.I~~~ard to ·: beat Flyin'

Division IV district softball

~yan,"

Dealership .-ot responsible for misprints,
Photos for Illustration purpose only.

CHEVROLET • CA'DI LLAC • PONTIAC • BUICK • GMC
308 East Main • 1-740·992-6614 or 1-800-837-1094 • Ponteroy, OH
Hours: Mon.-Thur. B-7; Frl.1·6; Sat. 9.5; Sun. 12·4 • Saturday Senke B-1 • Open Suaday

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.. , ·- -.. -~

·-·

...

.,

"* ..

'

Busch said.
-:Mark Martin qualified
lllurth and Jimmie Johnson
ltfth; j?ining Gordon to give
Sendrick Motorsports three
tlf the top five starting spots.
• Gordon, who went out
t\fth of 48 cars, held the t0 p
spot for a while before the
!lack cooled and Newman
took it.
: · "Ryan is always a real
threat for the pole,'' Gordon
S)lid. "lb end up third is fantastic. I'm very pleased with
that."
: Defending
champi9n
)$:asey
Kahne
nearly
brushed .the wal I but still
qualif~ed sixth. Mike Bliss .
\\'ill start seventh, followed
by· Brian Vickers, Juati,
Pablo Montoya and Bill
Elliott.
Needin~ to qualify on
•
speed, Elhott blazed to a lap
of 187.169 in the No. 21
Ford. That means the I988
Cup champion wi II make
Bryan w.ltwalpholo
his SOOth career start on
Eastern second baseman Megan Carnahan, left, touches first base for an oU) during
Sunday.
Thursday night'!&gt; Division IV district softball semifinal against Fairfield at Minford High
Pluse ... N••••n.B4 School in Minford. EHS pitcher Kasey'Tur1ey (31) watches the play being made.

•'f

-- -

1

~

Lady Eagles, Fairfield
still scoreless after 12
three by the Lady Lions. .
EHS, however, has also
stranded II runners on base,
MlNFO~ - After 12 compared to eight left
complete innings, 72 outs stranded by the hosts.
and a combined 91 at-bats,
FHS has also committed
both Eastern and Fairfield three errors in the contest,
still have Some unfinished one more than the Lady
business in their Division rv Eagles' total of two.
district semifinal softball
Eastern starter Kasey
game _111 Minford High Turley has allowed only
School.
· ·
three hits abd three walks
The. contest Thursday over a dozen fram&lt;~s of
night was postponed due to work, striking out nine in
darkness at the completion the process.
of the 12th inning, with both'
Brenna Holter currently
teams still looking to break a leads EHS with two hits
scoreless tie.
followed by Turley, Brook~
Tills game will resume in · Johnson; Hayley Gillian
the top of the 13th Saturday Sami CulllJI!.ins and Megm
at II a.m.; with the Lady Carnahan w1th one apiece .
Eagles coming to the plate.
The semifinal winner on
Over . the first dozen Saturday wil.l play top-seedframes, the - Lady Eagles ed Green m the district
have pounded out seven hits championship at 3 r ·m. at
- in comparison. to only Minford High Schoo .
BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERSOMYDAIL'fllliBUNE.COM

I

�ACROSS THE NATION

TheDailySeutinel
. -r• ~ l!jj ' ,a,;
I

Page AS

\

.

:

Friday, May 22,

.

.

2009

.

Senate passes $91.3 billion war funding bill
last week on companion
legislation.
Obama is sending more
WASHINGTON - The than 20.000 additional troops
Senate on Thursday passed there and, for the first time
a $91.3 billion military next year, the annual cost of
spending bill, shorn of · the war in Afghanistan is
money President Barack projected to exceed the cost
Obama wants to close the of fighting in Iraq.
Guantanamo Bay prison but
With support forces, the
allowing him to significant- number of U.S. forces in
ly ramp up the U.S. waf in Afghanistan is expected ·to
Afghanistan.
be about 68,000 by the end
The Senate voted 86-3 to of the year - more than
pass the bill, whieh provides double the size of the U.S.
money for military and force at the end of 2008.
diplomatic operations in Iraq
Among the few cautionand Afghanistan, setting up ary voices was Sen. Barbara
House-Senate talks on a Boxer, D-Calif.
compromise measure to pre"I ~ant' to give this administration ... the resources it
sent to Obama next month.
The spending measure needs to successfully end
closely . tracks Obama's . these wars," Boxer said. "I
request for war ' funds, don't support an open-ended
although the $80 million he commitment of ·American
. Was seeking to close the troops to Afghanistal). And
U:S. · naval prison at if we do not see measurable
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, progress, we must reconsidwas dropped Wednesday.
er our engagement and stratA three-day' Senate debate egy there."
oil the bill featured little of
Debate pretty · much fizafter Democrats
tl)e angst over the situation zled
il) Afghanistan that perme- retreated and moved to
ated debate in the House delete from the bill money
BY ANDREW TAYLOR

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

to close Guantanamo, where also adds $2.2 billion to
about 240 terrorism sus- Obama's request for foreign
pects still are held. The aid, much of which appears
companion House bill had to be designed to get around
already taken that step.
spending limits for 20 lO.
The underlying war fundThe Senate measure coning measure has gotten rela- tains less for .weapons protively little attention, even curement and foreign aid,
thoJJgh it WQuld boost total setting up potentially nettleapproved spending for the some negotiations .
Iraq and Afghanistan wars
The Senate the floor was .
above $900 billion. .
often empty Thursday as
The Penta~on would senators wrestled wivately
receive $73 billion under the over what final add-ons
legislation, including $4.6 would make it into the bill.
billion to train and equip
In the end, several amendAfghan and Iraqi security ments were added, including
forces; $400 million to train one . by Sens. Joseph
imd equip Pakisian 's securi- Lieberman, 1-Conn., and
ty forces, and $21.9 billion Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., to
to prQCure new mine-resis- block· the re.lease under the
tant vehicles, .. aircraft, Freedom oflnformation Act
weapons and amniunition, of government photographs
among other items. . .
showing the · abuse of
The House version adds detainees. Tbe administra•
$11.8 billion to Obarna's tion is fighting the American
req~est, including almost $4 Civil Liberties Union in fedbilhon for new weapons and eral court over the release of
military equipment such as the photos; and the move
ei!ihl C-17 cargo planes, was intended to bolster ·the
rome-resistant · veb,icles, government's legal position.
Bradley Fighting Vehicles
Sen; Bob Corker, Rand Stryker anhored vehi- Tenn.,
won
approval
cles. The House measure ·Thursday of an amendment

reqmnng the president to John Kerry, D-Mass., along,
set forth U.S. objectives in with Sen. Judd Gregg, RAfghanistan and Pakistan N.H .• who said the IMF
and issue quarterly reports funding was critical to
detailing whether those avoiding financial instabili- .
ty in the world that could
goals were being met.
The Senate bill includes harm the U.S. economy:
"The fact is .that i~ [lhose
$1.5 billion as. cautionary
funding to fight a possible emerging markets Slllrt to
flu pandemic, including the fade, not oruy do we lose
current outbreak ·or H1N1 . the economic upside of
swine flu.
those markets but we also
The bill also contains run the risk that govem$350 million for various ments fail," Kerry said.
security programs along the
Both Kerry and Gregg said
U.S.-Mexico border. But .the true cost to taxpayers
the money would not be · wouldbesmall,sillC!ltheU.S.
awarded to the Pentagon, as govc;mment is ~ven intere5tObama requeste&lt;l.
bearing assets m return and
By a 64-30 vote earlier has never lost money on
Thursday, the Senate reject• investments in. me IMF.Uley .
ed an amendment by Sen. said even the $5 billion cost
Jim DeMint, R-S.C., to kill ·estimate by the Congressional
afroposed $100 .billion line Budget Office was too~·
o credit for the IMF to . House
Appropriations
shore up the ability of coun- Committee Cha1rman David
tries around the ~lobe cope Obey, D-Wis., said .again
with financial cnses, along Thurs!1ay that he's "very,
with $8 billion for existing very reluctant" to support
commitments.
any additional IMF smce
DeMint earned a b!parti- . European countries have
san rebuke from the Senate been slow to take deficitForeign
Relations financed steps to stimulateCommittee chairman, Sen. their economies.

Inside

Bl

·The Daily Sentinel

takers take loss, Page B2
Reds fall to Pbillies, Page B3
tear I.Jidicted, Page B4
xxxxxxxxxxxx,
Page xx
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Friday, May 22, 2009
'

LoCAL SCHEDULE
IPO~EROV - A.tchtdu1• of upcoming high
&amp;ll_hool 11arelty eportlng •Y•MJ Involving

fhmt from Melgt end Gl,iila (loufltlel.

frldo¥11or22
llocllond Field
DivisiOn Ill finals .at ()ak Hlft HS. 5 p.m.
.

!ll!urday, Nor 23

Lady Knights beaded
back-tostate tourney
Bv ANNA JESSMER .

.
.
.
· ·' "Qte contest began with a

SCOreleSS fJrSt irtning, each.
.
. . . team evenly matched in
Dll1lk:l8oHboll
1n their offens1ve and defenPOINT
PLEASANT
Southern va- Whiteoak at Lucasville
a game filled ·with bl()()(j, sive' effotts.
Valley HS, 1 J&gt;m.
· •.
Dlltrlcl - I I
s~eat, tears, ';irama, and. a . -T be second inning marked
Esstorn vt Fol~lsld at Minford HS,. 11
.
tnum{lhant
fimsh, the ladies ·.the ~t and only run of the
a.m.
·
Eutern·Falrtleld winner vs Green at
of Po!nt Pleasant put on an: game for .the Lady Eagles
follnfo'!l High School, 3 p.m.
a!fiazt.ng . ~how . Thursday . who got on base by a hit
nrght 1.n ~he1r 12-mmn~ con- batsman that · worked her .
test ag~un~ the ladleS ·Of way around the bases until
Magn?ha H1gh School.
. she collided . with Point's .
Je.·~or
While · ther~ were a fe.w · Anna Sommer, capitalizing
11
moments du!:Jng the soft~a)l on the collision by stealing
marathon that, seemed .hke home for the run.
.OC3• . 0
the Lady Knights weren~t
That would be the one and
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) . going to make it, the only ruir that the Lady
strength and talent of the Kmghts . would allow on
-;- Ryan Newman knows
p
t
th R d h · h
rf
how to win poles at Lowe's women re resen 11:{ • e e I e1r . orne tu · ..
Motor Speedway. Now . ~ Blac-ib trumpe all other
The game lma~ne~ a
··, :
'fl."in' Ryan' wants to get ac ors. ey n&lt;:ve.; gave up heated stag~ti)l ead~ng mto
'
J
and they sure .didn. t surren- the sixth·. mn.rng with the
!\tat elusive victory at the der, concludmg . the 12- ladies Of Point Pleasant takAn1111 J ...mer/phOio
'!i~\u. ·ght depend o;&gt;n get- inning ba.ttle with a·3·1 vic- ing the plate. ,
.
The Lady Knig/lts pose for a picture after being awarded the Region I Championship Title
tory over the Lady Eagles to
. .··
,
tlng through the first lap: .· . clinch the Regional title.
. PI••• see !'Oint. B4
Thursday night. Point defeated Magnolia 3~ 1 in.12 innings to clinch the win.
· Newman turrted a lap at · ,
,...
·
C88.475 mph Thursday · -~---'--"-'--'----,--.,.---.,.----,..-----..,.;--~---'-----'--~----------. riighrto grab the top s\arting
Division
IV district baseball
.
spot for the Coca-Cola 600.
,;
··
It was Newman's eighth
. Career ·.pole .at LMS - . the
111ost of any active driver l\fld the
Stewart-Haas
Southern
Racing driver's 44th overstarter
all.
·
Michael
, Kyle. Busch will start secManuel, left,
qnd Sunday in NASCAR's
delivers
a.
longest race after a lap of
pitch during
188 .258, and points leader
the
third
Jeff Gordon qualified third.
Inning
of
- Newman·, Busch · and ·
Th!Jrsday
Gordon were involved in a
night's
three'wide wreck last weekDivision IV
end at ·the track in the wild
district semlfi- ·
closing segment of the Allnalbaseball
~tar
race. . It . ·helped
.contest
Newman's teammate, Tony
Siewart, get the win.
against Paint
' "As of right tiow I'm
Valley at
·
. going to call a meeting at
Lucasville
the NASCAR hauler for all
Valley High ~ .
threi(felims to sit down and
School in
talk about · the first lap,''
Lucasville·.
Newman said, joking. "It's
Manuel and
kind of ironic how things
the Tornadoes ·
work -out." .·
advanced to '
Newman was on the pole .
their third confor both points races af
secutive D-4
LMS in 2007. He didn't
district final by
grab a pole here last year,
rallying for an
but got his first of the Sprint
B-6 victory.
Cup season in what's been a
successful run. for the driver
lryenwenera
of the No. 39 Chevrolet.
/photo
Sitting eighth . in the.
standings, 238 · · points
behind Gordon, Newman
rock~ted around the track
that he's mastered whim .it
was bumpy and now also
after the repaving project in
.
.
2006.
The hosts took their first
The
third-seeded trict championship game at by Brad BroWn on a bunt
BY BRYAN WALTERS
But while Newman is just
BWALTEASOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM TornadOeS ( 12-12) overcame Lucasville
lead
of the evening in the
led
to
the
first
out
of
the
that
Valley
High
six poles shy of David
as ·Kaleb Reed
fourth
a 6-3 deficit during that piy- School at 1 p.m. WHS game. Michael Manuel folPearson's track record of
LUCASVILLE - The otal seventh frame ; pound- shocked top-seeded Eastern lowed by being hit by a reached base with a single,
14, he's winless in 16 points
number
five and Southern ing out five hits in that late Thursday night with a 7-5 pitch, then Jordan Taylor then advanced to third on an ·
races at .Charlotte.
were perfectly rally that led to a two-run decision at the University of brought Whittington home error. Nathan Parker ground·
baseball
"This is the weekend
linked
.
Thursday
night cushion. Reliever Kyle Rio Grande. in another D-4 with a sacrifice fly to right ed into a fielder's choice that
we're going.to try to change
allowed Reed to score for a
for a 1-0 .advanulge.
against Paint Vlliley in a. Cunni)lgham closed the door districl semifinal·.
that," Newman s.aid.
Although Southern had to
the
second-seeded
That lead held firm until 2-l e~ge.
Busch went out 35th of 48 Division IV district semifi- on
the
Purple
and
rally
back,
the
bottom of the third, when . That lead, however. was
nal,
as
the
Torna,does
rallied'
Bearcats
in
the
bottom
half
cars and after the track has.
first
bf()()(j
on
Gold
struck
PVHS
put together enough short-lived as SHS plated
five
ru111'
in
the
top
of
the
of
the
seventh,
retiring
the
for
• cy:&gt;oled. ·Busch was on pace
offense
to knot things up at two scores in the top of the
Thursday
after
playing
fun19 set the top ~peed, but was seventh to capture their fifth side in order and allowing
upset about h1s perfonnance consecutive district touma- SHS to reach its third con- damental baseball in its one. Ryan Lemaster was fifth to reclaim the lead at3opening at-bat.
issued a walk, then later 2. Greg Jenkins led the
in the final two turns. A loud ment victory during an 8-6 secutive district final.
J.D.
Whittington
led
the
scored
on a single by Ben inning off with a Walk, then
triumph
at
Lucasville
Valley
The
Tornadoes
will
take
cheer erupted . when the
game
off
with
a
double,
then
Krech
for
a one-ali contest
School
in
Scioto
on.
fourth-seeded
Whiteoak
High
. scoreboard
showed
PINse see Seuthetn. B4
was
sacrificed
over
to
third
through
three
complete.
on Saturday in the D-4 disNASCAR 's top villain did- County.
n't knock Newman from the
· 1locll ond Flotcl
CWfslon II finals at Oak Hill HS; 11 a.m.

UQASPoATstMY"'ILYAEOISTER.COM

.
.
...Yan..Newman
R

.wms
·. •· .·po·.
...·
C C Ia 600

'

~-

raiiV past Paint

10

I

P.I~~~ard to ·: beat Flyin'

Division IV district softball

~yan,"

Dealership .-ot responsible for misprints,
Photos for Illustration purpose only.

CHEVROLET • CA'DI LLAC • PONTIAC • BUICK • GMC
308 East Main • 1-740·992-6614 or 1-800-837-1094 • Ponteroy, OH
Hours: Mon.-Thur. B-7; Frl.1·6; Sat. 9.5; Sun. 12·4 • Saturday Senke B-1 • Open Suaday

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•

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'

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'

Busch said.
-:Mark Martin qualified
lllurth and Jimmie Johnson
ltfth; j?ining Gordon to give
Sendrick Motorsports three
tlf the top five starting spots.
• Gordon, who went out
t\fth of 48 cars, held the t0 p
spot for a while before the
!lack cooled and Newman
took it.
: · "Ryan is always a real
threat for the pole,'' Gordon
S)lid. "lb end up third is fantastic. I'm very pleased with
that."
: Defending
champi9n
)$:asey
Kahne
nearly
brushed .the wal I but still
qualif~ed sixth. Mike Bliss .
\\'ill start seventh, followed
by· Brian Vickers, Juati,
Pablo Montoya and Bill
Elliott.
Needin~ to qualify on
•
speed, Elhott blazed to a lap
of 187.169 in the No. 21
Ford. That means the I988
Cup champion wi II make
Bryan w.ltwalpholo
his SOOth career start on
Eastern second baseman Megan Carnahan, left, touches first base for an oU) during
Sunday.
Thursday night'!&gt; Division IV district softball semifinal against Fairfield at Minford High
Pluse ... N••••n.B4 School in Minford. EHS pitcher Kasey'Tur1ey (31) watches the play being made.

•'f

-- -

1

~

Lady Eagles, Fairfield
still scoreless after 12
three by the Lady Lions. .
EHS, however, has also
stranded II runners on base,
MlNFO~ - After 12 compared to eight left
complete innings, 72 outs stranded by the hosts.
and a combined 91 at-bats,
FHS has also committed
both Eastern and Fairfield three errors in the contest,
still have Some unfinished one more than the Lady
business in their Division rv Eagles' total of two.
district semifinal softball
Eastern starter Kasey
game _111 Minford High Turley has allowed only
School.
· ·
three hits abd three walks
The. contest Thursday over a dozen fram&lt;~s of
night was postponed due to work, striking out nine in
darkness at the completion the process.
of the 12th inning, with both'
Brenna Holter currently
teams still looking to break a leads EHS with two hits
scoreless tie.
followed by Turley, Brook~
Tills game will resume in · Johnson; Hayley Gillian
the top of the 13th Saturday Sami CulllJI!.ins and Megm
at II a.m.; with the Lady Carnahan w1th one apiece .
Eagles coming to the plate.
The semifinal winner on
Over . the first dozen Saturday wil.l play top-seedframes, the - Lady Eagles ed Green m the district
have pounded out seven hits championship at 3 r ·m. at
- in comparison. to only Minford High Schoo .
BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERSOMYDAIL'fllliBUNE.COM

I

�I
The Daily Sentinel

Page 82 •

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, May 22,2009

F.riday, May 22, 2009

Nuggets beat Lakers 106-103 in Game 2
LOS ANGELES (APJ The Lakers' 24-year playoff
dominance of the Denvq
Nuggets dissipated over the
final 29 seconds of the
fourth quarter.
That's when Kenyon
Manin hit a layup in traffic
and /Chauncey Billups made
3 or 4 free throws to give
Denver a 106-103 victory in
Game 2 on Thursday night
to even the Western
Conference finals.
Los Angeles owned an 11 0 record over the Nuggets
dating to 1985, the secondlongest postseason winning
streak against one team in
NBA history.
.
Carmelo Anthony had 34
points and 14 rebounds,
Billups had 27 points and 16
rebounds and Linas Kleiza
added \6 points for the
Nuggets. Nene finished with
six points, nine rebounds
and six assists.
Kobe Bryant had 32
points, including making all
10 of his free throws , Trevor
Ariza scored a career playoff-high 20 points and Pau
Gasol 17 points and 17
rebounds for the Lakers,
who dropped to · 7-2 at
Staples Center in the playoffs this season.
"To get one on the road is
always toughc We came ,tn
and got it." Anthony satd.
"We 're mentally tough and
we showed that in this game
coming off the loss that ·we
gave away in Game 1."
Game 3 is Saturday in
Denver.
. "I .think this is going to l&gt;e
a long series," Denver coach
George Karl &gt;aid.
The Nuggets recovered
from poor free throw shoot-

ing in a two-point loss in
Game I to make 17 consecutive foul shots until Billups
missed one with 4 seconds
remaining. He hit the second
to seal the victory.
Derek Fisher launched a 3pointer from the right corner
that missed as time expired.
Tied at 101 ,.Martin made
the layup off Nene 's assist
that gave the Nuggets the
lead for good.
·
Bryant dribbled upcourt
and got into traffic, .with
Nene tipping the ball away to
earn a jump ball with 18 seconds left. Gasol controlled
the tip to Ariza, but the ball
squirted away and Fisher
fouled Billups. He made
both for a 105-1 0 I lead.
Martin fouled Gasol, who.
made both before Billups.
got fouled.
·
· The Lakers were .shaky on
free throws in the fourth ,
making 9 of 14, while
Denver didn't blink at the
line.
Kleiza 's 3-pointer early in
the fourth quarter gave the
Nuggets an 85·82 lead, their
first since the game's opening minutes . Billups followed with two free throws
and Anthony hit two baskets
in a row to extend Denver's
lead to 91-84.
. Bryant missed a jumper,
but he .came up . big on the
l,.akers' next possession, hit·
ting a 3-pointer with
Anthony's hand. in his face.
Shannon Brown tossed in a
3 and Lamar Odom n'lllde
two free throws as part of an
II-2 run that put the Lakers
back in front 95-93.
Denver regained the lead
before Bryant's 3-pointer,
again with Anthony guard-

ing closely, tied the game at
99 with I :59 remaining.
Billups made two free
throws before Bryant's
jumper tied it at 10 I.
"We kind of changed our
fourth-quarter philosophy on
Kobe ," Karl said. "We
weren't going to jump him,
but we dido 't want to· give
him the 3·ball."
Ariza briefly gave the
Lakers some breathing room
in a tight third quarter by
scoring ,seven consecutive
points for a 71 -64 lead .
Bryant hit a streaking Ariza
with a long pass for ·a fastbreak layup. He got fouled
and made the free thrOw.
But Denver stepped lip its
defense and rebounding _
while outscoring the Lakers
16-10 to trail 81-80 )leading
into the . final 12 minutes.
Billups and Anthony had six
points each, but the Nuggets
missed two free throws in .
that stretch that .;:ould have
given them the lead.
The Lakers Ope)led a 14point lead eru:ly in the second quarter. Anthony began
a run of 14 consecutive
points for the N~ggets io get
them to 51-40. I
. That was the spark ~nver
needed. From there, they
outscored the Lakers 14-2 to
end the half trailing 55-54 .
. Notes: Anthony became the
fll'St Denver ptarer to score 30
or more points m five consecutive playoff games since
1976. He had 39 in the Game
1 loss. .. . Faoes in the crowd
Camielo Anthony, right, reacts after Los Angeles Lakers cen~
included Tom Cruise and his - Denver l\luggets
ter
Pau
Gasol,
left,
of
Spain
got called for a foul during the second half of Game 2 in their
'Top Gun" co-star Val Kilmer,
NBA
Western
conference
fmal
basketball series, Thursday, May 2.1 , 2009. in Los Angeles:
Will
Ferrell,
Denzel
The
Lakers
won
106-103.
'
Washington, Jack Nicholson,
Adam Levine and Maria ·
.
Shriver.

Greinke gets no-decision, Indians beat KC 8-J
· KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
- In a battle ofbullpens, fate
favored the guys with all the
blown saves.
Cleveland's Luis Vizcaino,
Matt Herges and Rafael
Betancourt kept Kansas City
at bay Thursday after Royals
· ace Zack Greinke departed
with a one-run lead. Victor
Martinez had three RBis and
the Indians pulled away for an
8·3 victory.
"We faced a pitcher who's
at the top of his game every
time out and we wore him out,
I think," said Cleveland starter
Carl Pavano (4-4), who
matched his more celebrated

opponent nearly pitch for
pttch. "It looked like he was
kind of laboring and we got
him out of there and were able
to get to the bullpen."
'
Greinke's record stayed at
7-1 with his ftrst no-decision
in nine starts. He went six
innings, gave up a seasonhigh eigbt hits and left with a
3-2 edge. H(s major leagueleading ERA crept up to 0.82
from 0.60.
·
The Indians tied it 2-all with
two run in the third and
loaded the bases before
Greinke escaped by st:ril9ng
out Mark DeRosa and Ben
Francisco.

"I just wasn't real cri~p. It
was really stupid pitching for
that whole .inning probably,"
Greinke said. "J started throwing two-seamers to get ground
b;Uls and it's not really how I
pitch. I got behind on everyone because I was throwing
the two-searner, It was just
stupid, really stupid."
Asdrubal Cabrem had four ·
hits and two RBls as
Clevciland beat the same
opponent two times in a row
for the fll'St time this season.It
was the fu-st time they beat the
same team two straight.
Pavano went six innings,
giving up three runs and six

hits while striking out eight: · fut save in three chances.
expeeted to be a strength thi~
"We !J)lide (Greinke) work
Shin~Soo Choo had three year have allowed 10 rims on
hard and they made Carl work hits and two RBis . He Said he 14 hits and three walks.
:
hard," Cleveland manager thoug)u Greinke's fastball was . "You can have all the good
Eric Wedge said. . .
better than the last tune he arms you want, but if yoq
Coming in, the Cleveland f~ him.
don't locate and command
bullpen was a mess, with nine . "II was still96-97 (mph) but pitches you're notgoing to get
blown.saves in 17 opportuni- everything was moving," he quality major league hitters
ties. Closer Kerry Wood, after said. "There was no straight out," Royals manager Trey
working the past two nights, fastball today."
Hillman said.
·
was not available.
Greinke handed a 3~2 lead
The Indians added four off
. "It was left up to the bullpen to Horacio Ramirez (0-2) . Juan Cruz in the eighth on
and our guys really stepped starting the seventh and the back-to-hack RBI doubles b):
up. It should be a big boost for left-bander immediately got in Cabrera and Luis Valbuena
them," said Wedge.
· trouble, giving up an RBI sin- and a two-run double by
. Betancourt came in with the gle to Choo and a run-scoring Martinez.
bases loaded and none out in double to Jhonny Peralta.
Martinez went 2-for-5 anc:t
ihe.ninth and got a popup and
In their last six innings,' kept his major league-leading
a double-play grounder for his Royals relievers who were average at .400.

Indians prospect pitches Double-A perfect game
·

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) Cleveland Indians prospect
Jeanmar Gomez had ·been
nearly perfect since being
promoted to · Double-A
Akron.
On Thursday, he was.
Gomez pitched the first
perfect game in franchise
history, shutting down
Trenton 3-0 in the Eastern
League.

Wilh his pitches breaking
in every direction, the 21year-old righty retired all 27
·batters without much trouble and struck out eight. He
is 4-0 with an 0.31 ERA
since moving up from Class
A earlier this season.
"It was a great ex peri,
ence," Gomez said through
interpreter and pitching
coach Ruben Niebla. "The
ball hit by the last batter, I
didn't see · until I turned
around and he had it in his
glove. i' ve never experience this before. It's beautiful."
Left fielder Matt McBride
made a diving catch . on
Kevin Smith's liner leading
off the ninth inning.

~~--------~----------------

"I was going to dive no
matter what, even if it was
20 feet away," McBride
said. "Luckily, I made the
play. I felt I could get to it.
There was a lefty up and
the ball was tailing back to
me. I was just going at it
hard and realized as I got
closer that I had a shot at
making the ~atch. It was
al"lazing to be part of that."
Gomez then struck out
Jose Gil and · got Justin
Snyder on a fly ball to
McBride, setting off a wild
pileup on the mound.
The crowd of 6,344 at the
home of the New York
Yankees' affiliate applauded
Gomez's effort.
The 6-foot-4 Gomez has

allowed one .earned run in thing you call, in or out, he · "I · knew · what was' hap~
29 innings since joining the · was going to hit his spot. He pening, . hut didn't thin!\
Aeros. He has given up nine did for nin'e innings . .It was about it until the last hitter.
hits and one walk while uribelieyable."
·
Then 1 saw the finish line:
striking out 27 ·
The game started at 11:05 and 1 felt pressure to exe'
· Gomez fanned five of the
final eight Trenton batters. a.m . and by early afternoon, cute a pitch. I was happy to,
get it"
Gomez threw first-pitch Gomez was done .
strikes to 21 hitters.
Cleveland .signed him as
an undrafted free agent
from Venezuela . He is 2319 in a four-year pro
career. Gom~z was 2-2
with a 2.63 ERA at Kinston .
· of the Carolina League eartier this season.
"This is most exciting
game I've ever been a part
For Info Call: DsveDoetferst
of, ·and l had the best seat," .
catcher Damaso Espino sa.id. l~-E_:_::::,:.;~~~~~;~'lo~'4().~99=2..00::~2~6~!J
"It's fun to know that every-

Childress says · Steelers'
Roethlisberger
Brett Favre
remains retired denies cancer
EDEN. PRAIRIE, Minn. Web rumors

(AP) - Brad 'Childress says
PITI'SBURGH (AP) ·
Brett Favre· "was worth a Pittsburgh Steelers quarterconversation," but · the back Ben Roethlisberger is
Vikings coach insists the vet- telling a newspaper that
eran quarterback remains social networking Web sites
retired - as far as he knows. that claim to have news
Chi !dress addressed the about him are bogus.
. 'ubject Thursday after the
Roethlisberger says he
ream practiced at Winter doesn't have skin cancer,
Park. He says the last time despite art on)ine post by ·
he spoke with Favre was on someone claiming to be
the phone sevbral weeks him .
Roethlisberger tells the
ago.
Asked if he could com- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette that
pletely rule our the possibility he is not active on
signing the 39-year-old Facebook, MySpace . or ·
Favre, Childress declined. Twitter. His agent; Ryan
But the coach says he's not Totlner, says he's actively
currently "entertaining" the working to get those impos·
idea and is more focused on tors and the misinformation
the players cujrently on the they spread off the Internet.
Roethlisberser says he
learn.
Tarvaris Jackson and Sage has one offictal Web site,
He
Rosenfels are competing for www.BigBen7 .com.
the staning quanerback's job, used to blog on that site, but
provided Favre stays retired. hasn't since August.
~

The Daily Sentinel· Page B3

www .mydailysentinel.com

Utley's 4 RBis lead Phillies over Reds 12-5
: CJNCINNATI'(AP)- Four
!10mers. Twelve runs. The
NL's hi~st-scoring offense
took
advantage of the
Jiiendly dimensions at Great
· t&gt;merican Ball Park, then set
off to see what it can do in the
1\L's newest launching pad,
: How will the Philadelphia
Phillies take to the )lew
:Yankee Stadium?
: "It's a new, expensive ballpark," said Chase Utley, who
drove in four runs during a 12li victory Thursday over the
Cincinnati Reds. "It's a great
place to hit, so I'm excited to
~et started there."
· . The defending World Series
champions ale up-and-run)ling on offense as they head
into their first interleague
8eries. The pitching? That's
lmother matter, As they have
for· much of the season, the
fhitlies spent the day · overcoming another · subpar start
!.vith superb hitting.
: Utley had a two-run single
and a double off Mtcah
Dwings (3-5), who got nine
buts and showed the strain of
throwing a lot of innings lately. 'Utle~ also had one of the
Phillies four solo homers -

run

Greg Dobbs, Ryan Howard
and Raullban~zconnected ,as
well.
.
Jimmy Rollins had four hits,
scored twice 'and drove in a
run.'The top three hitters in the
order - Rollins, Utley and
Raul Ibanez- went 9·for-15,
scored five runs and drove in
eight
·
"We couldn't keep Jimmy
Rollins off the bases, and
Utley and their big boys hil'the
·ball out of the ballpark," Reds
manager Dusty Baker said. .
"You knew they were going to
erupt, and they erupted today.
Everybody knows they can
hit."
That's not the problem.
Joe Blanton · (2-3) got the
win despite letting m!)St of a
six-run lead slip away. The .
right-hander gave up five. runs
in five innings, including a
three-run homer hy Brandon
Phillips that forced the Phillies
to use their bullpen early.
Philadelphia's starting rotation has a 6:3 I ERA that's
worst in the majors and has
given up 46 homers, the most
in the majors. The Phillies
have spent the first two
months of the season trying to

outscore their opponents.
For the most part, they've
pulled it off. The Phillies have
\liOn six of their last seven
games, all on the road, as they
get set to visit the Yankees'
new place.
.
"Going into New York was
always something special
because the old Yankee
Stadium had a real feel to it,"
manager Charlie Manuel said.
"I'm sure this one is going to
have a good feel· because of
the way they built it. They are
hitting a lot of home runs
there. Hor,efully we can tee off
on some.'
The Reds , · who host
Cleveland in their annual
interstate series starting
Friday, have dropped tlve of
six while watching their ·starting staff take a few hits.
Edinson Volquez had to leave
a game Saiurday in San Diego
becai.lse of back spasms that
landed him on the disabled
list. That game turned into a
16-inning loss·, with Owings
coming in on three days of rest
t,o.,throw 5 2-3 innings.
Owings looked tired on
Thursday. He needed 71 pitches to get through three rough

innings, leaving with a 5.{)
deficit. Utley's solo homer off
Ramon Ramirez made it 6-0 in
the fourth .
"Micah didn't have his best
stuff, and you knew be wasn't
going very long because he
pitcl)ed six innings the other
day," Baker said.
Utley added a sacrifice fly in 'the sixth that blunted the ·
Reds' comeback. Howard led
off the seventh inning with his
fourth homer in the last seven
games, and the Phillies scored
three more in the inning,
pulling away. ·
.
· Note;: The Phillies are 14-5
on the road, the be!.1 winning
percentage in the rna~ ....
Utley's career hi~ is SIX_RBls
last May 26 agamst Colorado.
....JbanezhasfiveholilersiJ)the
last seven games. ... Blanton
has struggled in his last three·
starts, giving up 15 nms in 18
innings.... Phillies RHP Chan
Ho Park made his first appearance ·since being demoted to
the bullpen on. Thesda~
... Reds
IB Joey Votto was ·
with an inner ear i ection.
He'll work out with the team
on Friday and could return over
the weekend.

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds pitcher Micah OWings (33} talks with catcher Ryan Hanigan during their 12·5 loss to the Philadelphia
Phillies In a baseball game, Thursday, May 21, in
Cincinnati. Owings was the losing pitcher In the game.

~eBron,

Delaware court hears sports
Cavs get first
taste of playoff adversity betting arguments

: CLEVELAND (AP) - ence semis, feel as if they're fourth quarter that became so
DOVER, Del, (AP) - because the bill .· has ticipated in Thursday's oral
:rhe 24-second ·shot clock has not being ·given a chance to severe he was forced to call The . Delaware Su\'reme already been signed into arguments.
been fixed. The Cleveland win this series and advance to timeout for treatment. He Court may. }Veigh m on law and, more importantly,
"I think the NFL' is going
Cavaliers ·are next oh the the finals for the · fiiSt time blamed part of his· fatigue on whether a · sports betting that the administration has to wait to see wbat the
repairs-to-do Jist.
since 1995.
the long layoff since the Cavs lottery complies with the yet to adopt specific Supreme Court will do,"
· The Orlando Magic caused
"I don't even think most of swept Atlanta, saying it was state constitution, with jus- games.
Kenneth Nachbar. whQ
some extensive collateral the nation knows that we're in impossible to replicate the tices oil Thursday listening
Markell said the estimat- argued on behalf of the
damage with their stunning this series;' Orlando coach game-day adrenaline rush dur- to oral arguments on rea- ed $53. niillion the betting league, said wh11n asked
win in Game 1 of the Eastern Stan Van Gundy said after the ing practice .
sons they should issue an bill would bring to the state about the possibility of !iiiConference fmals. ·
Magic's light workout at
Jlil)l\)S said he was physical- opinion.
next year througb . wager- gation.
They exposed Cleveland's · Quicken Loans Arena. "This ly fine and mentally refreshed.
Gov. Jack Markell's has ing,- licensing fees , and a . The justices, who could
depth; shredded its defense, is the 'Cleveland Cavaliers
"I hate to lose, so I was sick requested the court's view higher take of slot machine issue a collective or sepasnatched home-court advan- and LeBron James series.· · after the game," he said. "But on ,the bill he signed J_ast revenue, is one key to clos- rate opinions, gave no inditage and put the NBA's top- Who they are playing against today is a new day. I'm fine." week
under
whtch ing a projected budget cation on when those might
seeded team in an unfamiliar is incidental.
With their superstar's shot Delaware ·would become shortfall of more than $600 be ready.
·
position - behind in a series
"It dpesn't bother me and I· dropping, the Cavaliers revert- the only state east of the million.
"We will work as ~uickly
~d despemte for a win h~ad· don't think it bothers our guys. ed to a bad habit they had
Rocky Mountains offering
"The sports lottery pre- as humanly possible,' Chief
mg into Game 2 on Fnday That's the way it is. Look, they seemingly abandoned. ~ sports wagering.
sents a huge opportunitr, Justice Myron Steele said. ·
night. · .
won 66 games. They swept stretches of the second
,
An attorney for the NFL, for the state of Delaware,'
As
envisioned
by
·· "We're looking at it as a through two rounds of the James' teammates stood which opposes the lottery, · said Andre Bouchard, .an Markell, the sports lottery
must win," MVP LeBron playoffs. They've got the most around on offense and watched said the league would wait attorney
tasked
with would allow straight bets
James said before practice on valuable player in the league him. 'There was little motion; fur the justices' opinions .defending the state's pla_n. on the outcome of athletic
'ijlursday.
. .
· ... But it doesn't matter. .
ball movement or strategy.
before deciding w~ether to
But sports wagenng · events ; using a . point
"It's obvious;" Cavs guard
'The bottom line is this is · It was all LeBron, all the challen!!e .the wagering could face legal challenges spread or money line to
Mo Willia.tru&gt;said, echoing the not the BCS, where people get . time.
• legislation
in
court. before it's barely_out of the ensure roughly equal
must-win sentiment. "My to vote for who the _pest teams
The Cavs weren't much bet- Delaware is one of only gate.
.· .
amounts of wagers on eaciJ
grandma knows that. Yeah, it's . are. We actually get to play on ter on defense as Howard four states grandfathered
The NFL, which claims side; over/under betting on
a must win. Hell yeah."
. the-court to decide that."
pounded them inside and tinder a 1992 federal law sports betting would tar- the total score of a game;
Behind a torrent of clutch 3The Magic, a mercurial Lewis, who went 5-for·5 in that bans sports gambling. msh the irnage of athletics and parlay bets in whicH
pointers - the winner by squad that can dazzle one the fourth, k:illed them from
The five justices listened and lure young people mto players must select two or
to court-appointed aUor- gambling, has staunchly more elements, such as the
Rashard Lewis with 14.7 sec- mi!lute and disappear the next, the perimeter.
onds left - and ·Dwight fell behind by 16 points in the
Howard was 14-of-20 (four neys to help them deter- fought the idea. Atto~eys winner of two or games or
Howard'sbroadshoulders,the fiiSt quarter of Game I and ofhisshotswereblocked)and mine whether they should for the NFL submttted two or more over/under
Magic muscled their way into were down 15 at halftime . But Lewis finished 9-of-13, hitting even issue an opinion briefs to the court and par- bets.
Cleveland's noisy arena and urged by the fiery Van Gundy, his game-winning jumper
rallied for a stunning 107-l()(i they kept chipping aw.ay and with · Cleveland's Anderson
· viCtory that may have altered fighting, and in the .second Vatejao charging at him.
· tlje perception that the half their shots began to fall.
"Rashard was the X-factor," .
Cavaliers are the team to beat
Orlando shot 59 percent said James, who may find
in the postseason. ·
· after halftime, went 7-of-13 himself guarding Lewis in
This is no smoke-and-mir- on 3s .and outscored the Cavs Game 2. "He was huge, He hit
rors Magic act. Orlando is the 59-43. Now 9-3. in their last 12 every shot in the fourth quarter
real deal.
games against Cleveiand, the and every big shot: transition
. Howard set the tone by Magic survived an ungodly 3s, pull-up 2s, he nailed
busting one of the shot clocks playoff performance by James them."
with a vicious dunk in the (49 points. 8 assists and · 6
Orlando now wants to nail
opening minutes, a we're- rebounds) to hand the Cavs down Game 2. The Magic
here-to-play moment that their fiiSt loss in nine postsea- won the series opener at
~tunned a Cleveland -crowd son games.
.
·· Boston, but didn't bring the
Jhat, later shuffled out of the. James has often maintained same energy the next game
Clualfleda.
building wondering , · what that a series doesn'' t . truly and were beaten by 18.
i.vent wrong after .seeing the begin until one team wins on
"We can't take this win for
.._ Place a neWSP~Jper ad
Cavs lose on their home floor the road. .
granted," Lewis said. "We
Plac&amp; an on lin!&gt; ad
for just the third time in_46
So, LeBron. is this one on? .have to come out more hungry
~antes.
.
"Yep;' he said . "It's already and humble to tty and get
• After Thursday's practice, started."
another one."
lioward, standing near the
The Cavaliers seemed to
If they can, the Magic, who
~e basket, was asked if he have shaken off any shock played in the shadows of the
)Was done breaking things.
from the loss when they ~ath- Celtics and Cavaliers, will
"No," he said, flashing a ered at their suburban traming have everyone's att~ntion.
smile. ''Not yet."
· facility to prepare for Game 2.
"I think people are staning
; Despite the win, the Magic, The mood was typically loose to recognize that we are a
· who beat Philadelphia in the during the portion open to the good team, that we are for real ·
opening round and eliminated media.
and that We are C\)nlenders for
the defending champion
In the opener, James was an NBA champibnship,'~
Save time and money. Go to www.mydailysentinel.com
Boston Celtics in the confer- bothered by leg cramps in the Lewis said.
&gt;

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AP photo

brlando Magic's Dwight Howard talks to reporters at Quicken Loans Arena _in Cleveland
after a team meeting Thursday, May 21. The Mag1c play the Cleveland Cavaliers In Game
2 ol the NBA Eastern Conference basketball finals Friday night.

I

)

·'t

• .' l

The Daily Sentinel
www.mydailysentinel.com

�I
The Daily Sentinel

Page 82 •

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, May 22,2009

F.riday, May 22, 2009

Nuggets beat Lakers 106-103 in Game 2
LOS ANGELES (APJ The Lakers' 24-year playoff
dominance of the Denvq
Nuggets dissipated over the
final 29 seconds of the
fourth quarter.
That's when Kenyon
Manin hit a layup in traffic
and /Chauncey Billups made
3 or 4 free throws to give
Denver a 106-103 victory in
Game 2 on Thursday night
to even the Western
Conference finals.
Los Angeles owned an 11 0 record over the Nuggets
dating to 1985, the secondlongest postseason winning
streak against one team in
NBA history.
.
Carmelo Anthony had 34
points and 14 rebounds,
Billups had 27 points and 16
rebounds and Linas Kleiza
added \6 points for the
Nuggets. Nene finished with
six points, nine rebounds
and six assists.
Kobe Bryant had 32
points, including making all
10 of his free throws , Trevor
Ariza scored a career playoff-high 20 points and Pau
Gasol 17 points and 17
rebounds for the Lakers,
who dropped to · 7-2 at
Staples Center in the playoffs this season.
"To get one on the road is
always toughc We came ,tn
and got it." Anthony satd.
"We 're mentally tough and
we showed that in this game
coming off the loss that ·we
gave away in Game 1."
Game 3 is Saturday in
Denver.
. "I .think this is going to l&gt;e
a long series," Denver coach
George Karl &gt;aid.
The Nuggets recovered
from poor free throw shoot-

ing in a two-point loss in
Game I to make 17 consecutive foul shots until Billups
missed one with 4 seconds
remaining. He hit the second
to seal the victory.
Derek Fisher launched a 3pointer from the right corner
that missed as time expired.
Tied at 101 ,.Martin made
the layup off Nene 's assist
that gave the Nuggets the
lead for good.
·
Bryant dribbled upcourt
and got into traffic, .with
Nene tipping the ball away to
earn a jump ball with 18 seconds left. Gasol controlled
the tip to Ariza, but the ball
squirted away and Fisher
fouled Billups. He made
both for a 105-1 0 I lead.
Martin fouled Gasol, who.
made both before Billups.
got fouled.
·
· The Lakers were .shaky on
free throws in the fourth ,
making 9 of 14, while
Denver didn't blink at the
line.
Kleiza 's 3-pointer early in
the fourth quarter gave the
Nuggets an 85·82 lead, their
first since the game's opening minutes . Billups followed with two free throws
and Anthony hit two baskets
in a row to extend Denver's
lead to 91-84.
. Bryant missed a jumper,
but he .came up . big on the
l,.akers' next possession, hit·
ting a 3-pointer with
Anthony's hand. in his face.
Shannon Brown tossed in a
3 and Lamar Odom n'lllde
two free throws as part of an
II-2 run that put the Lakers
back in front 95-93.
Denver regained the lead
before Bryant's 3-pointer,
again with Anthony guard-

ing closely, tied the game at
99 with I :59 remaining.
Billups made two free
throws before Bryant's
jumper tied it at 10 I.
"We kind of changed our
fourth-quarter philosophy on
Kobe ," Karl said. "We
weren't going to jump him,
but we dido 't want to· give
him the 3·ball."
Ariza briefly gave the
Lakers some breathing room
in a tight third quarter by
scoring ,seven consecutive
points for a 71 -64 lead .
Bryant hit a streaking Ariza
with a long pass for ·a fastbreak layup. He got fouled
and made the free thrOw.
But Denver stepped lip its
defense and rebounding _
while outscoring the Lakers
16-10 to trail 81-80 )leading
into the . final 12 minutes.
Billups and Anthony had six
points each, but the Nuggets
missed two free throws in .
that stretch that .;:ould have
given them the lead.
The Lakers Ope)led a 14point lead eru:ly in the second quarter. Anthony began
a run of 14 consecutive
points for the N~ggets io get
them to 51-40. I
. That was the spark ~nver
needed. From there, they
outscored the Lakers 14-2 to
end the half trailing 55-54 .
. Notes: Anthony became the
fll'St Denver ptarer to score 30
or more points m five consecutive playoff games since
1976. He had 39 in the Game
1 loss. .. . Faoes in the crowd
Camielo Anthony, right, reacts after Los Angeles Lakers cen~
included Tom Cruise and his - Denver l\luggets
ter
Pau
Gasol,
left,
of
Spain
got called for a foul during the second half of Game 2 in their
'Top Gun" co-star Val Kilmer,
NBA
Western
conference
fmal
basketball series, Thursday, May 2.1 , 2009. in Los Angeles:
Will
Ferrell,
Denzel
The
Lakers
won
106-103.
'
Washington, Jack Nicholson,
Adam Levine and Maria ·
.
Shriver.

Greinke gets no-decision, Indians beat KC 8-J
· KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
- In a battle ofbullpens, fate
favored the guys with all the
blown saves.
Cleveland's Luis Vizcaino,
Matt Herges and Rafael
Betancourt kept Kansas City
at bay Thursday after Royals
· ace Zack Greinke departed
with a one-run lead. Victor
Martinez had three RBis and
the Indians pulled away for an
8·3 victory.
"We faced a pitcher who's
at the top of his game every
time out and we wore him out,
I think," said Cleveland starter
Carl Pavano (4-4), who
matched his more celebrated

opponent nearly pitch for
pttch. "It looked like he was
kind of laboring and we got
him out of there and were able
to get to the bullpen."
'
Greinke's record stayed at
7-1 with his ftrst no-decision
in nine starts. He went six
innings, gave up a seasonhigh eigbt hits and left with a
3-2 edge. H(s major leagueleading ERA crept up to 0.82
from 0.60.
·
The Indians tied it 2-all with
two run in the third and
loaded the bases before
Greinke escaped by st:ril9ng
out Mark DeRosa and Ben
Francisco.

"I just wasn't real cri~p. It
was really stupid pitching for
that whole .inning probably,"
Greinke said. "J started throwing two-seamers to get ground
b;Uls and it's not really how I
pitch. I got behind on everyone because I was throwing
the two-searner, It was just
stupid, really stupid."
Asdrubal Cabrem had four ·
hits and two RBls as
Clevciland beat the same
opponent two times in a row
for the fll'St time this season.It
was the fu-st time they beat the
same team two straight.
Pavano went six innings,
giving up three runs and six

hits while striking out eight: · fut save in three chances.
expeeted to be a strength thi~
"We !J)lide (Greinke) work
Shin~Soo Choo had three year have allowed 10 rims on
hard and they made Carl work hits and two RBis . He Said he 14 hits and three walks.
:
hard," Cleveland manager thoug)u Greinke's fastball was . "You can have all the good
Eric Wedge said. . .
better than the last tune he arms you want, but if yoq
Coming in, the Cleveland f~ him.
don't locate and command
bullpen was a mess, with nine . "II was still96-97 (mph) but pitches you're notgoing to get
blown.saves in 17 opportuni- everything was moving," he quality major league hitters
ties. Closer Kerry Wood, after said. "There was no straight out," Royals manager Trey
working the past two nights, fastball today."
Hillman said.
·
was not available.
Greinke handed a 3~2 lead
The Indians added four off
. "It was left up to the bullpen to Horacio Ramirez (0-2) . Juan Cruz in the eighth on
and our guys really stepped starting the seventh and the back-to-hack RBI doubles b):
up. It should be a big boost for left-bander immediately got in Cabrera and Luis Valbuena
them," said Wedge.
· trouble, giving up an RBI sin- and a two-run double by
. Betancourt came in with the gle to Choo and a run-scoring Martinez.
bases loaded and none out in double to Jhonny Peralta.
Martinez went 2-for-5 anc:t
ihe.ninth and got a popup and
In their last six innings,' kept his major league-leading
a double-play grounder for his Royals relievers who were average at .400.

Indians prospect pitches Double-A perfect game
·

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) Cleveland Indians prospect
Jeanmar Gomez had ·been
nearly perfect since being
promoted to · Double-A
Akron.
On Thursday, he was.
Gomez pitched the first
perfect game in franchise
history, shutting down
Trenton 3-0 in the Eastern
League.

Wilh his pitches breaking
in every direction, the 21year-old righty retired all 27
·batters without much trouble and struck out eight. He
is 4-0 with an 0.31 ERA
since moving up from Class
A earlier this season.
"It was a great ex peri,
ence," Gomez said through
interpreter and pitching
coach Ruben Niebla. "The
ball hit by the last batter, I
didn't see · until I turned
around and he had it in his
glove. i' ve never experience this before. It's beautiful."
Left fielder Matt McBride
made a diving catch . on
Kevin Smith's liner leading
off the ninth inning.

~~--------~----------------

"I was going to dive no
matter what, even if it was
20 feet away," McBride
said. "Luckily, I made the
play. I felt I could get to it.
There was a lefty up and
the ball was tailing back to
me. I was just going at it
hard and realized as I got
closer that I had a shot at
making the ~atch. It was
al"lazing to be part of that."
Gomez then struck out
Jose Gil and · got Justin
Snyder on a fly ball to
McBride, setting off a wild
pileup on the mound.
The crowd of 6,344 at the
home of the New York
Yankees' affiliate applauded
Gomez's effort.
The 6-foot-4 Gomez has

allowed one .earned run in thing you call, in or out, he · "I · knew · what was' hap~
29 innings since joining the · was going to hit his spot. He pening, . hut didn't thin!\
Aeros. He has given up nine did for nin'e innings . .It was about it until the last hitter.
hits and one walk while uribelieyable."
·
Then 1 saw the finish line:
striking out 27 ·
The game started at 11:05 and 1 felt pressure to exe'
· Gomez fanned five of the
final eight Trenton batters. a.m . and by early afternoon, cute a pitch. I was happy to,
get it"
Gomez threw first-pitch Gomez was done .
strikes to 21 hitters.
Cleveland .signed him as
an undrafted free agent
from Venezuela . He is 2319 in a four-year pro
career. Gom~z was 2-2
with a 2.63 ERA at Kinston .
· of the Carolina League eartier this season.
"This is most exciting
game I've ever been a part
For Info Call: DsveDoetferst
of, ·and l had the best seat," .
catcher Damaso Espino sa.id. l~-E_:_::::,:.;~~~~~;~'lo~'4().~99=2..00::~2~6~!J
"It's fun to know that every-

Childress says · Steelers'
Roethlisberger
Brett Favre
remains retired denies cancer
EDEN. PRAIRIE, Minn. Web rumors

(AP) - Brad 'Childress says
PITI'SBURGH (AP) ·
Brett Favre· "was worth a Pittsburgh Steelers quarterconversation," but · the back Ben Roethlisberger is
Vikings coach insists the vet- telling a newspaper that
eran quarterback remains social networking Web sites
retired - as far as he knows. that claim to have news
Chi !dress addressed the about him are bogus.
. 'ubject Thursday after the
Roethlisberger says he
ream practiced at Winter doesn't have skin cancer,
Park. He says the last time despite art on)ine post by ·
he spoke with Favre was on someone claiming to be
the phone sevbral weeks him .
Roethlisberger tells the
ago.
Asked if he could com- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette that
pletely rule our the possibility he is not active on
signing the 39-year-old Facebook, MySpace . or ·
Favre, Childress declined. Twitter. His agent; Ryan
But the coach says he's not Totlner, says he's actively
currently "entertaining" the working to get those impos·
idea and is more focused on tors and the misinformation
the players cujrently on the they spread off the Internet.
Roethlisberser says he
learn.
Tarvaris Jackson and Sage has one offictal Web site,
He
Rosenfels are competing for www.BigBen7 .com.
the staning quanerback's job, used to blog on that site, but
provided Favre stays retired. hasn't since August.
~

The Daily Sentinel· Page B3

www .mydailysentinel.com

Utley's 4 RBis lead Phillies over Reds 12-5
: CJNCINNATI'(AP)- Four
!10mers. Twelve runs. The
NL's hi~st-scoring offense
took
advantage of the
Jiiendly dimensions at Great
· t&gt;merican Ball Park, then set
off to see what it can do in the
1\L's newest launching pad,
: How will the Philadelphia
Phillies take to the )lew
:Yankee Stadium?
: "It's a new, expensive ballpark," said Chase Utley, who
drove in four runs during a 12li victory Thursday over the
Cincinnati Reds. "It's a great
place to hit, so I'm excited to
~et started there."
· . The defending World Series
champions ale up-and-run)ling on offense as they head
into their first interleague
8eries. The pitching? That's
lmother matter, As they have
for· much of the season, the
fhitlies spent the day · overcoming another · subpar start
!.vith superb hitting.
: Utley had a two-run single
and a double off Mtcah
Dwings (3-5), who got nine
buts and showed the strain of
throwing a lot of innings lately. 'Utle~ also had one of the
Phillies four solo homers -

run

Greg Dobbs, Ryan Howard
and Raullban~zconnected ,as
well.
.
Jimmy Rollins had four hits,
scored twice 'and drove in a
run.'The top three hitters in the
order - Rollins, Utley and
Raul Ibanez- went 9·for-15,
scored five runs and drove in
eight
·
"We couldn't keep Jimmy
Rollins off the bases, and
Utley and their big boys hil'the
·ball out of the ballpark," Reds
manager Dusty Baker said. .
"You knew they were going to
erupt, and they erupted today.
Everybody knows they can
hit."
That's not the problem.
Joe Blanton · (2-3) got the
win despite letting m!)St of a
six-run lead slip away. The .
right-hander gave up five. runs
in five innings, including a
three-run homer hy Brandon
Phillips that forced the Phillies
to use their bullpen early.
Philadelphia's starting rotation has a 6:3 I ERA that's
worst in the majors and has
given up 46 homers, the most
in the majors. The Phillies
have spent the first two
months of the season trying to

outscore their opponents.
For the most part, they've
pulled it off. The Phillies have
\liOn six of their last seven
games, all on the road, as they
get set to visit the Yankees'
new place.
.
"Going into New York was
always something special
because the old Yankee
Stadium had a real feel to it,"
manager Charlie Manuel said.
"I'm sure this one is going to
have a good feel· because of
the way they built it. They are
hitting a lot of home runs
there. Hor,efully we can tee off
on some.'
The Reds , · who host
Cleveland in their annual
interstate series starting
Friday, have dropped tlve of
six while watching their ·starting staff take a few hits.
Edinson Volquez had to leave
a game Saiurday in San Diego
becai.lse of back spasms that
landed him on the disabled
list. That game turned into a
16-inning loss·, with Owings
coming in on three days of rest
t,o.,throw 5 2-3 innings.
Owings looked tired on
Thursday. He needed 71 pitches to get through three rough

innings, leaving with a 5.{)
deficit. Utley's solo homer off
Ramon Ramirez made it 6-0 in
the fourth .
"Micah didn't have his best
stuff, and you knew be wasn't
going very long because he
pitcl)ed six innings the other
day," Baker said.
Utley added a sacrifice fly in 'the sixth that blunted the ·
Reds' comeback. Howard led
off the seventh inning with his
fourth homer in the last seven
games, and the Phillies scored
three more in the inning,
pulling away. ·
.
· Note;: The Phillies are 14-5
on the road, the be!.1 winning
percentage in the rna~ ....
Utley's career hi~ is SIX_RBls
last May 26 agamst Colorado.
....JbanezhasfiveholilersiJ)the
last seven games. ... Blanton
has struggled in his last three·
starts, giving up 15 nms in 18
innings.... Phillies RHP Chan
Ho Park made his first appearance ·since being demoted to
the bullpen on. Thesda~
... Reds
IB Joey Votto was ·
with an inner ear i ection.
He'll work out with the team
on Friday and could return over
the weekend.

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds pitcher Micah OWings (33} talks with catcher Ryan Hanigan during their 12·5 loss to the Philadelphia
Phillies In a baseball game, Thursday, May 21, in
Cincinnati. Owings was the losing pitcher In the game.

~eBron,

Delaware court hears sports
Cavs get first
taste of playoff adversity betting arguments

: CLEVELAND (AP) - ence semis, feel as if they're fourth quarter that became so
DOVER, Del, (AP) - because the bill .· has ticipated in Thursday's oral
:rhe 24-second ·shot clock has not being ·given a chance to severe he was forced to call The . Delaware Su\'reme already been signed into arguments.
been fixed. The Cleveland win this series and advance to timeout for treatment. He Court may. }Veigh m on law and, more importantly,
"I think the NFL' is going
Cavaliers ·are next oh the the finals for the · fiiSt time blamed part of his· fatigue on whether a · sports betting that the administration has to wait to see wbat the
repairs-to-do Jist.
since 1995.
the long layoff since the Cavs lottery complies with the yet to adopt specific Supreme Court will do,"
· The Orlando Magic caused
"I don't even think most of swept Atlanta, saying it was state constitution, with jus- games.
Kenneth Nachbar. whQ
some extensive collateral the nation knows that we're in impossible to replicate the tices oil Thursday listening
Markell said the estimat- argued on behalf of the
damage with their stunning this series;' Orlando coach game-day adrenaline rush dur- to oral arguments on rea- ed $53. niillion the betting league, said wh11n asked
win in Game 1 of the Eastern Stan Van Gundy said after the ing practice .
sons they should issue an bill would bring to the state about the possibility of !iiiConference fmals. ·
Magic's light workout at
Jlil)l\)S said he was physical- opinion.
next year througb . wager- gation.
They exposed Cleveland's · Quicken Loans Arena. "This ly fine and mentally refreshed.
Gov. Jack Markell's has ing,- licensing fees , and a . The justices, who could
depth; shredded its defense, is the 'Cleveland Cavaliers
"I hate to lose, so I was sick requested the court's view higher take of slot machine issue a collective or sepasnatched home-court advan- and LeBron James series.· · after the game," he said. "But on ,the bill he signed J_ast revenue, is one key to clos- rate opinions, gave no inditage and put the NBA's top- Who they are playing against today is a new day. I'm fine." week
under
whtch ing a projected budget cation on when those might
seeded team in an unfamiliar is incidental.
With their superstar's shot Delaware ·would become shortfall of more than $600 be ready.
·
position - behind in a series
"It dpesn't bother me and I· dropping, the Cavaliers revert- the only state east of the million.
"We will work as ~uickly
~d despemte for a win h~ad· don't think it bothers our guys. ed to a bad habit they had
Rocky Mountains offering
"The sports lottery pre- as humanly possible,' Chief
mg into Game 2 on Fnday That's the way it is. Look, they seemingly abandoned. ~ sports wagering.
sents a huge opportunitr, Justice Myron Steele said. ·
night. · .
won 66 games. They swept stretches of the second
,
An attorney for the NFL, for the state of Delaware,'
As
envisioned
by
·· "We're looking at it as a through two rounds of the James' teammates stood which opposes the lottery, · said Andre Bouchard, .an Markell, the sports lottery
must win," MVP LeBron playoffs. They've got the most around on offense and watched said the league would wait attorney
tasked
with would allow straight bets
James said before practice on valuable player in the league him. 'There was little motion; fur the justices' opinions .defending the state's pla_n. on the outcome of athletic
'ijlursday.
. .
· ... But it doesn't matter. .
ball movement or strategy.
before deciding w~ether to
But sports wagenng · events ; using a . point
"It's obvious;" Cavs guard
'The bottom line is this is · It was all LeBron, all the challen!!e .the wagering could face legal challenges spread or money line to
Mo Willia.tru&gt;said, echoing the not the BCS, where people get . time.
• legislation
in
court. before it's barely_out of the ensure roughly equal
must-win sentiment. "My to vote for who the _pest teams
The Cavs weren't much bet- Delaware is one of only gate.
.· .
amounts of wagers on eaciJ
grandma knows that. Yeah, it's . are. We actually get to play on ter on defense as Howard four states grandfathered
The NFL, which claims side; over/under betting on
a must win. Hell yeah."
. the-court to decide that."
pounded them inside and tinder a 1992 federal law sports betting would tar- the total score of a game;
Behind a torrent of clutch 3The Magic, a mercurial Lewis, who went 5-for·5 in that bans sports gambling. msh the irnage of athletics and parlay bets in whicH
pointers - the winner by squad that can dazzle one the fourth, k:illed them from
The five justices listened and lure young people mto players must select two or
to court-appointed aUor- gambling, has staunchly more elements, such as the
Rashard Lewis with 14.7 sec- mi!lute and disappear the next, the perimeter.
onds left - and ·Dwight fell behind by 16 points in the
Howard was 14-of-20 (four neys to help them deter- fought the idea. Atto~eys winner of two or games or
Howard'sbroadshoulders,the fiiSt quarter of Game I and ofhisshotswereblocked)and mine whether they should for the NFL submttted two or more over/under
Magic muscled their way into were down 15 at halftime . But Lewis finished 9-of-13, hitting even issue an opinion briefs to the court and par- bets.
Cleveland's noisy arena and urged by the fiery Van Gundy, his game-winning jumper
rallied for a stunning 107-l()(i they kept chipping aw.ay and with · Cleveland's Anderson
· viCtory that may have altered fighting, and in the .second Vatejao charging at him.
· tlje perception that the half their shots began to fall.
"Rashard was the X-factor," .
Cavaliers are the team to beat
Orlando shot 59 percent said James, who may find
in the postseason. ·
· after halftime, went 7-of-13 himself guarding Lewis in
This is no smoke-and-mir- on 3s .and outscored the Cavs Game 2. "He was huge, He hit
rors Magic act. Orlando is the 59-43. Now 9-3. in their last 12 every shot in the fourth quarter
real deal.
games against Cleveiand, the and every big shot: transition
. Howard set the tone by Magic survived an ungodly 3s, pull-up 2s, he nailed
busting one of the shot clocks playoff performance by James them."
with a vicious dunk in the (49 points. 8 assists and · 6
Orlando now wants to nail
opening minutes, a we're- rebounds) to hand the Cavs down Game 2. The Magic
here-to-play moment that their fiiSt loss in nine postsea- won the series opener at
~tunned a Cleveland -crowd son games.
.
·· Boston, but didn't bring the
Jhat, later shuffled out of the. James has often maintained same energy the next game
Clualfleda.
building wondering , · what that a series doesn'' t . truly and were beaten by 18.
i.vent wrong after .seeing the begin until one team wins on
"We can't take this win for
.._ Place a neWSP~Jper ad
Cavs lose on their home floor the road. .
granted," Lewis said. "We
Plac&amp; an on lin!&gt; ad
for just the third time in_46
So, LeBron. is this one on? .have to come out more hungry
~antes.
.
"Yep;' he said . "It's already and humble to tty and get
• After Thursday's practice, started."
another one."
lioward, standing near the
The Cavaliers seemed to
If they can, the Magic, who
~e basket, was asked if he have shaken off any shock played in the shadows of the
)Was done breaking things.
from the loss when they ~ath- Celtics and Cavaliers, will
"No," he said, flashing a ered at their suburban traming have everyone's att~ntion.
smile. ''Not yet."
· facility to prepare for Game 2.
"I think people are staning
; Despite the win, the Magic, The mood was typically loose to recognize that we are a
· who beat Philadelphia in the during the portion open to the good team, that we are for real ·
opening round and eliminated media.
and that We are C\)nlenders for
the defending champion
In the opener, James was an NBA champibnship,'~
Save time and money. Go to www.mydailysentinel.com
Boston Celtics in the confer- bothered by leg cramps in the Lewis said.
&gt;

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AP photo

brlando Magic's Dwight Howard talks to reporters at Quicken Loans Arena _in Cleveland
after a team meeting Thursday, May 21. The Mag1c play the Cleveland Cavaliers In Game
2 ol the NBA Eastern Conference basketball finals Friday night.

I

)

·'t

• .' l

The Daily Sentinel
www.mydailysentinel.com

�Page 84 •

The Daily Sentinel

2009

friday, May 22, 2009

www.mydailysentlnel.com

'GI:ribune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

Magnolia's Tori Thorp off the field and out of the trend
going.
sendi!!g
Sommer home and. finaliztossed out two strikeouts game.
With a coach down and a ing Point's total at three
with her fellow Lady Eagles
.
earning the other out to stop tied game, the Lady Eagles runs.
from PageBI
In the bottom of a very
the Lady Knights from took the plate to defend
against Point Pleasant. After decisive inning for the Lady
advancin!!.
Point's Jennifer Wickline
The
Lady
Knights two strikeouts and an out at Knights, Tessa Wyant
got the inning off right with responded with their ·own first, Magnolia took to the · pushed through the pressure
Davis said Leaf is suspected a single that pur the Lady blockade, g'etting two outs-a tield in what would be their and fatigue of a 12-inning
of breaking into a Canyon Knights in motion to score. first and another out via a fly second-to-last attempt to contest
to
strikeout
apartment on Oct. 30 and Teammate Devin Cottrill out.
end the game with a win- Magnolia's first batter. Their
stealing the painkiller followed that up by making
The ninth inning was no luck. Point posted a ~ou.- . second batter didn't make it
Hydrocodone, which had contact with the ball to again a held match, each ble play and tagged a ,tun- too far either, being called
been prescribed to an advance Wickline to second team advancing to the ninth ner, preceeding wh't would ' out at first. Two outs.• no one
injured football player.
base with a sacrificed out.
inning with one run apiece.
be the highlight ' of the · on. Wyant winds up to pitch.
James Farren, Rundall
Lady Knight pitcher Tessa
The tenth inning seemed match up- the twelth and Strike one, strike two, strike ·
County criminal district Wyant then stepped up to as though the Lady Knights final inning.
three- and the game i$
attorney. said Leaf has been bat. With one goal in mind, were going to break the tie,
Point's Ruby Schwartz done.
·
unde(going drug rehabilita- Wyant knocked out a triple with two on and one out, but was able to walk to first base
After almost three hours
tion in British Columbia, the to sepd Wickline .home, again, the Magnolia defense after teammate Regan of play, the Regional
Amarillo·
Globe-News tying I up the match and stepped up their game to Cottrill was struckout by Championship came to a
reported . Farren told the bringing Point Pleasant back hofd the Red and Black at . Magnolia's Thorp. With one victonous end for the Lady
· newspaper that efforts were into the game.
.
one.
out and one on, Lady Knight Knights who sealed the
under way to try to.convince · Point Pleasant held the
The bottom of the tenth Emily Sommer made con- game with a 3-1 total. The
Leaf to return to the United bottom of the sixth with an was quite possibly one of tact with the ball , sending ladies were then presented
States on his own.
out made by Miranda the more dramatic portions Schwartz to second but with the Class AA Region I
It was not clear whether Thompson's outfield catch, of the 12-inning marathon. being called out at first. Two plaque by Athletic Director
Leaf had an attorney.
an infield out by Anna Magnolia goes up to hit - · outs, a runner on second, Chip . Wood, who · was
Sommer, and a strikeout by double. Magnolia steps up and bleachers full of earnest ·almost drowned out by the
Wyant.
to bat again- runner steals fans hoping and rooting for immense cheers and celeThe Lady Knights came third. Magnolia comes to the Red imd Black softball pro- bration made by the dediclose to clinching the victo- plate ajlain- hit. In a teeth- vided the backdrop for what cated fans who stayed with
ry in the seventh mning with clenchmg moment, the Lady would be a key hit for their
Lady
Knights
EmilY. Jones and Re~an Knigh.ts break out into a Point's Anna Sommer.
throug· bout the entire game.
Cottnll on second and th1rd, fluid of motion that follows
With two strikes on the
the Lady Knights are
but the Magnolia defense with a throw to Devin count, Sommer .knocked a , now set to continue to
managed to be the blockade Cottrill who tags the ruril(.e[ ball mto left-field that w~s . defend their title of State
that kept the Red and Black out at home and follows dropped by the . Magn?ha Champions against the
from breaking their tie.
for
.
.
allowmg
with a throw to get player,
Point Pleasant responded Magnolia's other runner in a Schwartz to run home and Regron II champ10n, ne~t
to the Magnolia defense rundown that resulted in her the tie to finally be broken, Wednesday, May 27, 10
2-1. Sommer continued the Parkersburg·
witli some defense of their being tagged out.
own by Lady Knight Wyant
The Lady Eagle who was two-out rally by stealing
P1' PLEASANT 3, MAG!'lOLIA 1
throwing three stnkeouts to tagged out proceeded to fall third,J'utting her in. position
complete regulation play.
on the ground which· result· to ad to the Lady Knight PP ooo 001 000 002 - 3.5 1
M 010 oOo ooo ooo ..., 14o
With a 1-1 tie the contest ed in Magnolia's coach lead .
went into extra innings with entering the field and then · Wick! ine stepped up to bat · POINT:Te .. a Wyan1; DeYin COt1riL
Point Pleasant at bat. quickly after being escorted and hit a double to keep the MAGNOLIA: Tori Thorp; Marsha Booloy.

Former NFL QB
·Ryan Leaf indicted
CANYON. Texas (AP) Former NFL quarterback
Ryan Leaf has been indicted
~y a Randall County grand
JUry on drug and burglary
charges.
.The indictment was handed up Wednesday in
Canyon. It charged the 33year-old former San Diego
Chargers quarterback lind
forrner West Texas A&amp;M
quarterbacks coach with one
count ·of burglary to a habitation , seven counts of
obtaining a controlled substance by fraud and delivery
of a simulated controlled
substance.
Canyon police Lt. Dale

Friday, May 22,

www .mydaiJysentinel.com

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pm:iou. baby. llxpoos., S~~~r:.e:E~:~~SI .
paid.
Kim · &amp;
Russ
No Faa Unless We Win!
@1-888-212-8420 www.ou1-888-~8.2-3345

nu:.ioptionprofiJ.c.com

CLASSIFIED INDEX
' Logill.................."..........._... -............. -... -.100 IIII:INikirllll'lhlcloo"'''-"'-··-··· .. ··········1000
Allllii1U1Ct-.......,-....-..·-·· ....,_......... -.i00 · ATV-........ _,,,_,,, ....-..·-·····..·-··-····•·""''""1005
~/AMiwrt~rr

-·-111·-··-.. . .:. ,_.,_. . . .

..........._............. _...... aos BJcvc:lls....--..........................-..................1010

Hippy Ado._ .._,,_.. ,_,,.,,,._..,_.,.-....... ,_ .....210
1015
Loot I Found ..................-...-.....,_,........ -.211 Ctmpoo/RYs I Tralltrl ............-............. -1020
~nlr You .................................-.. :120 llo1orerc:llt .. -..-········· .................._.. ,_..... 1025
......... --·-..··---'··-................ --····.. 226 Olhlr .... -: ....... -..... ,....... -... _,_..................1030

SATURDAY TEl.EVISION

GUff)F~

•. -

.... . ...........-........ _........ -... -.230 Wontlo buy ..................... --··-··-.............. 1035

:: =·:::::::::::::::: : : :::::: :::::::::::~::::::::::. :=:vt;u·.: ·.:·.:::::::::::.:::·.~:~.:::·.::::

• A!&gt;PI- Strvtct.-..-.............. -···-···-... -.302 llutoo, .._..,_........ -..............c.""'""'" "''-·"·2010

.....

AutOmOtive ...:............. -···-···-··................... 304 Cllio!ciAn11quu.............-....,~... -... -.... 2015

CommtiCii~U--.........,,.,:.,_,,_,,,_2020
-.3111 ·~-111
-·······-···-···202$
. eotorfnt-................. -... -···-···"'"'''-·····-····310 Spolto U111lty.. -... ~... -.. ·-··· ..··-···-·........ ~: Chi!IMlkllrly COrt .. -............. -···~·-........... 312 nuclll.... --..··~··-.................. -.. -···--·-··'2035
. CompU1Inl ....-..- •. ·-··-········ ..···-··-····-· .... 314 Utlllly Trolltrs .... -............. _,_.,_ .... -... -.... 21110
c:ontrtctorl ...........;............ - ...........! ...........311 Ylnt ........................................- ................. 2046

8uldint -

.. -........ -.......-···-···-· ..... 3GI

. Bu-·-····-···-·--........-.. -..-.............

· OonliiiiCWJa:nttoriii ....................... - .........S.t l Want to buy ...• .,......................................... 2050

: Elsctrlcll ..-........-... -... -.................-... -..... 320· Rul Et11tt$11oo .............. _ ..................... 31100
. Fiollnclll.. ...............................,_,, ...... -.........322 Cematrroy Plato ... -... -...~ ..-... -..-· ..... -..... 3005
• HIIIJth ...........................................................321 Comrnerc:UI ............................................... :ta10
· -.sg a Coollng ........ - ... -......................-328 Condomllllumt...-..............._,_,_,,_.. ,,... 3015
:
.
·
:

Horra lllptONtlllfltl330
lnlur111C1 ..... ,_,_......................................332
Loom Strvtct.:_,_,_,,_,_,..,_ .... ., .... ,_ ..-334
~-'"'"-""' __,,_,._.... 3jll

For Slit by Owner .....................................3020

Houllllor a........................... -............ 3025
. ~ (Ac-)-·-·-""'"'-·-·"-""'"""':1030
Lolo .. - -............. -... --·-·-""""_,_,,..3031
. Ollw_,;. ___""'·-·-..··-··-....... 338 Wlnllo bUy,_............. -·-·..·-·---......... _.IIIMO
' -~........... _..,_,.,_,, ........... 340 lloii·Et11tt
35(!Q
P&lt;O~IIIonsl ... -.. ., .... _.,._,....... -... 342 .lplrtmtn1&amp;TTownlloUIOI ........--..·-·····-· 3505

Rtn""".""'"""·--····-.............

' 111Jr11!1 ........... _.. ,_,.•_..,,"............ ___,........ 344

.eom-clll...... _.. ,_,,_.,,..,,,_,._..,.........,...3510
: Roofiftg . -...·-·.. -········-· ..........................-... 346 Cond0mlnlumo.... "............. _..................... 3515
. Blc:urlty.-....·-·-... -.......-... -...-... -.........,_. ~ Hou... lorRonl .. -... -... -............ _.,.....-... 3520
Tu/A_.ung ............-...-.........._,,.... -.... 350 L.ond (Ac-1 .................... -·-·········"·····3525

•· Flnonclll-···-····-··-........
~.::::::::::::::::::::::::::: =:r.iiiiit::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::lli
_....... - ..405
.... _,_ .................... MlmrflctllroCIHou~ng

-

.........,_____,....-..... _... _........ 410 LoJI .. _.,: ..........,.. _........-......,__ ...,.. _.._.....015
Monty 10 ~................-...........- -....... ,_... ,. ....._........ _..................-·-··-·····... -«110

...... _,_, ...,.,_..,_.,_,..,,_,_,,,_,_.. 1110 ..... -·····-···-···-····..··---········"···-·«111
au"""' aTrade School... -................:.-..1105 Sllll..-........" ...-...-...-···-······-··-..........«120 .

.-

.

~

()

j

Q

Aliloo.

-

0

· - . ......·-······--.. -....·-·-...................... 1110
Anlmil Suppllil .... -......___ ......................1105

·. -·--·-"·"-""""'"""'"'-""'-"'"'"'"'610
u-tocL ....--··-·"-··-"""'"-'"'"'-'""'''-·515

Pltl...............................................................820

Wlnllo t~uv ... -.. - ... _.._, .......... ,_ ..,_...........625
.~Fouftul1 ........-"'"''"''"''"'-···-·-·····-......700

Cot111tr/tltrk.................... _.,_ ....... -···-··-Cblld/Eidtrty t:are ........... _,,, ..•..... _........ _5006
, , _ Equlpmtnl-···-···-""'····"· ..................705 Cltrlcal ...._.....,.. -...........,.._.. _...................5010
GlnllnlProducl............ -... ·-··"··..····-··•·710 C-ru&lt;tlon·-·····-·-···-··· ..···-··..········"····5012
11oy Ftod.- Groin ........................... _,,715 Drlvtrll Dollftry .............,_-............ _.....1014
. Hooodlng l ~:·--··-·· .. -·....·-···-···-···-·· 720 Edur:ollon ..................... -....... -···--···········5016
WlniiO ""'·-·"·-·""'-·-···-·-·-"-'"""_,_,725 Plumblng".... -...... ,-·"·--·--....1016
!Itt""' - ·--..·-·..·-·....--···---······1110 . Emp~oymto~AvonciH·-·-·-· ·····-··-···-····1020
Anllqull ..-....- .. ---~·----·...
E--~
- ·-·-·11122
~·-··--......-····-···-..··-·-······· .. -·.-·$10 - - ............. --···--·-·-·-····--

-·-·--lllll

.- .·- -.·- ·-.

- ...-......................._ .._..,_,,, ..........-111 Govommontl Ftclerol.lobl.-·-·""'""''"1021
8tfglln a.rr-.M...................... - ............ :.920 Help •nliO- Gtner.~ .................................. eoa
~blll·--·-·· .. -····..·-···-···-··...........-!25 Low Enlon:omont ...-..·-·········..·-···"'"""''~·····-···-·-··-... -... -·-·-....... -..-·130 M o i - l c ........ ,_.._,,_ ..,...... IIOU

!cluiP ,..$'St I I P ............- ..,_,_.......135 ...........~ ........................ 1034

l'llllrlooblo·---·-·-"·-..-.........,.... _,_,IMO
FuoiOI CDtVN-.. -.......... -...... _,_,IJ45

TRAILERS..

GOOSENECK

atW fromg.·s.

NOW LEASING Jonlan:
1978 MGB C&lt;lnvartlble, Landing, 2 &amp; 3BR Avall78,o0o miles $4,5(10. ilblo No Pets. Tonanf
needs mlno·r tune· up Aespc)nsl»&gt;e tOr Aeill &amp;
.
Electnc 304-874.0023 or
304~75_2454
304·617-11986
2006 Cho'Y . Malibu, ~-=-:~-=-:="":::=
good
coriO!tloo. Call 3 br., $400 a. mo. plus

740-446·~

740·441·5826 after 5pm. or
02 E•p!Ortr sport, black,
IBn lealhor Interior. 4WO,
·2 &lt;»or, 142,000 mi.
$5500. Call339·9559

3rd
O&lt;tp.

St, noRacine,
utllllles.
pats,

N. 3rd Ave..

lr1

Middle-

port. 1 br. fumlshetl apt;
ref. &amp; Oap., no pell,

740·99a·01~
.
.
Sw's, Trucks, cars tun
size and compsC!S, all lltou!Hul Ap)o. II Jock•
l1h
ty
aan EltiiCH 52 West ,
w warren . ro~oa
. .
otartlng al $1!100. Stop or. wOOd Or., 1rom $365 to.
Call Cook Motors 326 $51!0.
740-446-2~.
Jackson
Pike.. Equal Housing opporru:
nlty. Thlo lnotllullon Ia an
740-448.0103
Equal Opportunity Pro98 Chevy Blszer ZR·2LS vtclerandEmployer.
. ·
13..1-'A

clothing
boV8
6-14,
women plus size, pBCk- 4x.4,2 dr.,new llres, fr.esh
aged
old , M9Conaldl tune up $2200. 080 For

FLATBED

&amp;

ioi740;:;;·24~7~·4292~~~~

$3999. VIEW ·ouR EN- 3 family garagQ . s.ale at
1·600·214.()452
TiRE TRAILER INVEN· 441 Le Grande May 21, toys, com hole, foo... 3()4.j!82-824i.
,.n~ 1 ,.•"_,.. .......1kAn.oo,fdu TORY AT
22. 2.3 Thur, Frl &amp; Sat ball, etc.
,..... ....... '""' ._..
AccrediledM.mbllrAccr-.dH· ~.CARMICHAEL~
9·4. Couch, table, coffee
ingCounciltorlnctependenl:
TRAIL.EAS.COM
table, freezer, dog ken· Sst. May 23 from 9 ·? l_t.
CoiJegas and Schoala 127AB
-446-3a2S
nel, sheets, blankets .&amp; 656 State Rt 850, near
740
-._.._.~~~= .ClJrtalns. glass &amp; kltoi'en AOII~Y· Lots of chi~
Have you prlceO a John were, leo~. Onll jack, Oren ° clolhlng, 10)'8•
H011,.. For $ale
r.oo
·, r•
Deere lately? You'D be holiday &amp; home decOr, computer parts. ·~· 3
Htro
sorprtsedl Check out our kerosene heater clothes,. toots, knives,. guns; lo 8
Bed.2 . Bioth
used
.
Inventory
at women ·1o-1e. girls 3-12. of misc. Items
bomes!OnlYI 99 .!amon.~ S'll
\h

;Ieise: ~e anre~

live 3 bedroom, unfur•
nlshed 2nt1 floor apt. .I..A
.......~... City Park In
OV8nuv""
Gallipolis. Utlllti9i not In•.
eluded .. No pets allowed.

Reforon&lt;:eo required. SO!
eurlty Deposit $800/mo.
Call· 44~-4.t25
or
446-3938
or
c:ell
441·5539

dwn .l5 )ln . at R% for Hs1. ~~'"-!~--~~
www.CAAEO.com.
Car.. months &amp; 4-5, boyS 24 Yard Sale Slrurday May 800-620-4946uT461 .
GJ'JCIOul Uvlng 1 and 2
6 yr Old Painl Horse ·well michael
Equlpme':'t months-2T
and
much 23 81 64 Fairfield lane
Bedroom Apts.. at Vlllagi
more. 446·1297
from 9-noon. Complete 3 bedroom, 2 full bath, Maflor
end . Rlveralde
broke w/ . new brlddle &amp; 740-446-2412

Hones

!""""'~;;;;;;~~~

. new SBlfOio $600. 6 yr
·okt Quarter HOfSe well
brOke gentiO w/ children
wl coft. New "bnddle &amp;
· .now sadOie, ·$600. Catl
Iar-In aa..Melody ·
Eblin
· ...740·388·0115
. Giveaway: L.ehover yard
u..atock
sa-. ilems. You· haul
-;;;;;;;;i;;;"!"-=.'!"1~ away. 740·366-8217
2.. 6 week old mate
,. __ M--'--'~
pigmy 'goats, S_40 each or
rwu III'UA
$65 both. (740)992.5200
Sth annual CYS PbllnUac)'

Fn· Pooee Drum set, LOnga·
315 .Johnson """'a
' ""'!ill
berger, Stampln' .Up!
dey &amp; Saturday
·
Salll,
Vera Bradley
May 23-24 918 Spires pul80s, r.4lsc. clOthing,
Ad. SA 160 Nto .Morgan Misc. Kitchen ~ams and
canter Rd. 2 mi. Small .housewares
kids clolhklg, misc. 9·5
Wed, ThU\1, Fn 20-21·22
10AM-4PM. Old quilts,
otO
diShes. lumltuie,

2300 aq. n. mall\' lm· Apts. In MIOdltpon, fiorri
1.88 . rtcres 5327
to
$59~.
Ambroola,
$125,000 740·1192•5064.
· Eqllll

provements,

~8754995

l:lou~ngOpportunlty.

House for ilale by owner . · . ·
·
In Cimp COnley, Pt. IslaM View Molal hn
Pleasan1 wv 675-6495 vaeancle&amp; $35.00/Night.
740-44~.()406
or 740-38e-8751
·
·LeOriiOOe Blvd. ~R Modem .1BA apt. ~II
·brick, hardWOOO floors, 740-446.()390
FA, 2 fuU bath&amp;, ·central Spacious
floor ap1.

crocket Items part of an

&amp;slate. WooOiand
· Dove. a-/ ~-••rltl air, . 1OX14 rhotal bUil&lt;lN it
dded dally
flea mkllyard sale brillg ew ems a .
Fll\ler lot for rent, electrk:. lng, 5 mtna. ~ tQWn.
Pela
you&lt;S&lt;uff
Friday 05122/09, Satur·
$10V;OOO. 740-709-1656
Mini Dachshunds CKC s,.. lofaY 311 8·1 ' '"' "'"'· ~~.~3101115 &amp; MonFOJ"rfldaeldy
4 Bed; 2 llatht . Only
mg I !ems to stll for Relay v;MI;iJft.l~
~I RVt •
$25,000.
tor listings
rog. ·5 short halreo S300 Foe Lif• '75·100 boo"'• '·
Lenel
off ConiOnary
Trahn
110().62()'4946 ex R0!9
1 ion~ haired $350 1ot
Road : Bab)l Items,
shots

Furniture

wormed.

&amp;

W!·6445 or 645-2386'

may lea~ Message.

-:::-:'"~"""l~~-::'::::0::::=
Cocket ·spaniel puppies
full blOOded bUff color 7
week.s old. 388-0401

SHIPS

AHOY:!

Vintage

Virginia house Maple . 4
PC BA sel w/o bed. Fur·
niture has carved anchors &amp; shil'la dlspta·""'
'""
Boston Terrier and Eng- on each PC. Very Rare.
!Ish ·Bulldog mix puppies Must sea to appreclc;'te.

6

wks

old . $300. Male 446-3968 afler 6:00PM.

secOnd/third

Gallpol• . City
lllver. . L.A.

-""

~~~-.
den,

and
lrg.
Kftd\Orl'dlnlilg rirea wllh
all new aPpU&amp;nces &amp;
cupboards, 3 BR, 2
belha, launOry area.

household Items. youth &amp; ~ 998 Rockwood Caniper Ooublewidc: .for sale ln Hart- $900 per month. . Call
a&lt;lutt clolhi•g ·eet
23ft
A!C $5000 fonl. Jbr.lba. oak I&lt; , .. 446·~325 or 446-4425 .
'

.

'

ntw

. ramie tloorina. knotty pine

2 Famity Yard 5ale lass
May 740·245-o390

ceilings. 2 car gar.new heat
22 &amp; 23 9AM-5PM g
•
pump 1/]
acre
asking
ware, clothes, mens· 3X, 1992 Southwlnd 30 ft 565.000 304-8112-3901.
w omens ptus sizes, M~tor )-lome,fully self
,'l,
r '' '
mise ilams 2285 5cenic oontaln8d
454
Che'IY
Of. Vinton OH
motor NC power gen. ,I,('(
'
4 lami~v ua..o~ sale, sat. tratof,
awning, asking
- - - ----·- --., , '"
•••~ 2..... 6

..

Tara

Townhouse

Aparunerus · 28R, 1.6.
bath, back . patio, pool,
plevground. (trash, -

aue.

water

·

pd.)

$425/Nnt,
$425/sec .
dep. Cal1740-645-8599

Ma.y 23 · at TPC Water ~· ~
~~~~':"'~~
.,.
740·379-2467 or Giveaway. Large ea¥)1 Olfiee on St Rt7. 9-5
2007 USed 1~ ft . Shadow ;;;;;;~T~o;•;oloa~u=-;.~
W11111DBuy-...... --..·-·'·-···-·-"·"·""'''"'- .$50.
fl!'letal deak with chair. · 4 miles out SA 143 'fhur. Cruiser travel trailer . wl.
Commercial Space. fQr
- l'loporty, ... -..·-···-··-"·-···"''-''""!1000 740-645-6046
!"""~~~~~~ 740·256-6800
FM &amp; Sat, nowbom to 4T queen bed up from l~ht 1 and ~ bedroom opts... Rent fully equipped Sa·
Pooperty loru~ ......... ,_.._,,_.,.,.,502l
-Property for fllll - .. -..................-5050
Free 2· beagle dogs, ~- Table
and
4 chairs, girts clothes, slrofler &amp; weigttl. roof mount A/C rum+sned
and
untur- IOn or office spBce avail·
1
Employmon1.-....,_,_,,..... ___,, ..........,......IIOOO lri-oolored,
matching cttina cabinet, carseat combo,
many unit.
gas
furnace, nished, and houses in able.
S400t'rno. 2000
AccOIIIHng.flnoncfo!.,..... _.. _..,..... -.........6002 copper·nose, bolh run- clar1( wood, excellent baby Items, pictures, old AMJFMICD/DV'D plaver, Pomeroy a·nd Middleport, 6QI1t 703-501-4808 ·
Admlnlltrltfvw1ltoftwlonel .................... .6004
ning 304-675-7167.
cond. $595. 446-3596
books. bod &amp; mattress, TV &amp; antenna, micro- ·soeurlty depos~ required, ---:=-~--

lrlliructlon al'rllnlng ....-... _................:..... 110 Sapplioo: ..... --·-·'·-···-..·---......._..,..... _..ou

. ~...-... ·····-·--·--·-···-"""-"'""....515
- 1.-................_,.,_..,_....,"'"""'""'"520

Colltgt
{Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl?o40-446- 4367

av~l.
dep.
or·

+

740-418-5288

TRAILERS, (740)992-7536
bookS, tre~nHII, sofat&gt;ed
LOAD MAX EQUIP· .
....,_. &amp; T~ . "~
MENT
TRAILERS,
Yard·" -•Rain/shine Sat, 4 1om
,..__ roae
CARGO EXPRESS . &amp;
...,.
sale 1.8 ml out Georges
Pot
Creri'lations. .Call ;;;;;~~Sch~oo~l=-~
'
HOMESTEADER
1S14 Neighborhood Ad crk • housahOld ' toot s.
,::740-44i!!i!!!Q!;·3!!7!!45;;,!!!!~!!!!
Qelllpolla Coroor
CARGO/CONCESSION Fn 5122 lhru Men 5125 LOngaberger, palnltlal~.

nuturiDg home' awaits .your

;::~~~".""!'~~·

Contact the ·ooo Dlvi·

STOCK

,r_._! ___1

~

·. . ..

~ea:ll:7:40.i:64:i.::5-:74:7:1::::: 28R
apl8 ..6 mi. from Hoi·
;;;;
zer. soma utilities pd. or

""'

=Pro....Knn hrticet

Davklson Twin Rivers Tower Is ac ..
1200 ~pllng appllcatiofls _for
Eagle kit In· wa~ng list !6r HUD sub·
With

carkty apple red. 2 seats,
solo &amp; double, lots, of
chrome · extras. $9000

~~ii-i~&amp;~.-.
NOTICE Borrow ·Smart.

Basement Waterproofing.
•
Olfttr S.rvao

S.&lt;kioi &lt;oodopto
•
Fun loving, fmancially ~~e-

Hartey
Hugger

' Screaming
stalleo. custom paint Job a!Oized. t·BA apartment
aiBO Includes the or~nel 1or !he elderly/disabled,:
factory lank 8. fanciers In eall675-6679
,,

.,, propeny
wnhln 30 days.
Homtlmpi'O'Itl11tnlt lencfer
wlho mortgage
broKer orII· ::ww~w~.c~oimllc~o~.c~om~:;:E~;O.~~==;~~~;~
Any pictures
w=~D
eensecl, (This Is a public ~'=""..;.:""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
that are not
Unconditionallile1lmo :~the ·~~~ncr:.:;
Fonn Equipment
Mllcslaneouo ~~~Y;;ani~S~al~·~~
guarantee. Local refer·
~
·
up
Will
be
.
.
oncos fumishe(j. Estab· Publl$hlng Company)
ElY,
INTEilRtTY, Free wooden front dOor. Fn 5122 and Sat 5123 at
Picked.
"sll'" 1975. Call24 Hrs.
KIEFER BUILT,
SeK80 wfframe, hinges &amp; 43 Ann . Dr, Galllpollo
rded
.
'
740·.46-0870,
Rogers
VALLEY
HORSE/liVE·
alii, wood screen cloor. 9•4. Boys Ok:&gt;theS, Joys,
disc.
II

·Ei.LM VIEW APTS

exc.oond.,rare Carbon fi- 2&amp;3B~ and up, Central
· ber·COior, bike is beaut!· Air, W/0 hookup, Jenan1·

•• lu.A1"'
Y'l1\
L"""'ll ?
....l\7 \NC:.\~ 7'1'~
1\
V

V·Mu '"'"!!'!'!~t=~:==--

. 15,500 ·miles. · gar. kepi,

A,./A~
I
1V , '!:' -

Ron·

;,;;;,;;;,~~~~~" 3 RBPO'D 2fh. • 25x30 home or office windows,
sellina:

Yamaha

2000

Evans . Jackson, OH
Monily lournl a! .RACO Hugd••iog•
800-537-11528
yard sale, call 1o 10, STEEL ARCH BUlL[). ~~~~~-740-949-2296
INGS
,
BusyBeeCI~aning
24

NOTICE · OHIO VALLEY call &lt;odor! 86fo.l'l.o469.
PUBLISHING co. rec·
·
.omnienos that you Oo O.ltd I Eldotly Ccn
business with people you
know, and NOT to send '¥1 year old stay at ~ome
money through the f11811 Morn will provide child
unttl you have investlgat- care. Summer lull · 01
planned aet~111es. Cell'
•XI'•il•ojl lngtheofferlng.
740-367.()536
for
an
~~~!!!~~S!'I!!!!aft""'' IQtervlew.
..,
· ·
.
Will ca~e forlstt with eldhave been
orty. I am very depend·
....t·
.
j
n
ad
.. 8 at
able, honest ano 1ruslPla~
worthy.
Coli
.
oa
· lllpoll
740·256-1035
the
S Will oo summer ~bysit·
'.J
Daily TilbUile . . ling
In my home in New
Haven
WV
..., p1Cked. 304-674·3365.
JnUst .Ill'

Southern

·

o1!111Mt Yo•""'- 41Goywonl• ....... ~
llolalJIIIolloJoc-4-•A_.....,.
..
obt-PMHII
_ _ _ W_ _

Notice~

·Newman

OrFaxTo

WQ.r.d.Ad.•

:::!~~~~~~~

Mayfield, failed to qualify
for the race with a lap of
184.093. The team still
searching to .qualify for its
fromPageBl
first race since Mayfield
· Stewart had a poor lap of was suspended for failing 'u
185.778 mph in a different. random drug test.
car than he won in last · David Starr, Todd Bodine .
weekend and will start 28th. and Mike Garvey also failed
He'll be right next to Dale to qualify.
Joey Logano qualified
Earnhardt Jr. , who struggled
14th,
giving him a good
at 185 .829 mph, leaving
starting position when he
him 27th.
JJ. Yeley, filling in for starts Sunday on his 19th
suspended driver Jenejlly birthday.

YOUB AD NOW. ONLINE

To

ume.

Bryan Walteralphoto
Southern's J.D. Whittington is congratulated by teammates
by being slapped on the helmet after scoring the
Tornadoes' first run Thursday night in a Division IV district
semifinal baseball game against Paint Valley at Valley High
School in Lucasville.
a one-run deficit. Zach Ash
continued .the momentum
with the big hit, a single that
plated both Brown and
fromPageBl
Manuel for a 7-6 edge.
Holter followed Ash with
Taylor Deem singled to give an RBI single that plated
the guests two baserunners Eric Buzzard - a courtesy
with nobody out.
runner for Taylor - to
Brown was hit by a pitch make it an 8-6 game headed
with one away to load the into the final at-bat.
bases, then Manuel delivCunningham,
who
ered a single that plated entered in relief during the
both Jenkins and Deem for sixth, retired the side 1-2-3
a one-run advantage.
in the seventh, · securing
The Bearcats, however, Southern's
in a third
countered quickly in their consecutiveplace
district final.
half of the fifth, scoring
Cunningham was the win'
three times for a 5-3 edge. ning
.Pitcher of record,'
)osh Long started the rally allowiJ;1g zero hits over 1.1
with a leadoff double, the.n innings of work while fanLemaster reached on an ning one. Manuel started for
error. Josh White followed SHS. allowing nine hits, six
with a single that plated runs and three walks over ·
. Long for ,a three-all contest. · 5.2 innings on the mound
· Krech liit a sacrifice fly to while striking out three.
center
that
allowed
Long, who went the disLemaster to cross the plate . lance for Paint Valley, took
for a 4-3 lead, then Mike the tough-luck loss. Long
Hami Iton singled home allowed 10 hits, eight runs
Krech for the two-run edge and three walks over seven
through five complete.
innings while fanning two.
The score remained that
Manuel, Holter and
way until the bottom half of Deem Jed the Tornadoes
the sixth, as PVHS tacked with two hits apiecei folon another run to pad its lowed by Whittington,
advantage to three scones. Brown, Taylor .and Ash
With two outs, Long dou- with one safety apiece .
bled and then later scored Manpel, Taylor and Ash
on an error to make it a 6-3 each drove m a team-best
contest after six full innings two R.Bls, followed by
of play.
Ht!ll!er with one.
And that's when Southern
Long led . Paint Valley
made its tina! charge.
with three hits, followed by
Deem started the rally Krech and Reed with two
with a one-out single, then each. White and Hamilton
Whittington followed with . also had a safety apiece in
a walk to put the tying SHS the setback.
run at the plate . Brown proSouthern
committed
duced a single in that at-bat, three errors in the contest, ·
leaving the bases loaded while PVHS made only one
with still just one away.
Manuel reached. safely on miscue.
an error in the next at-bat, SOUrHERN 8, PAINT VALLEY 6
allowing Deem to score for
a 6-4 contest. JQrdan Tl/8clrj.;) Southom 100 ·o2o' s · - 8 10 3
followed with a single.~ ~ "'~~~~~~~~ 001 131 0 - 891
viog home Whittington for
WP- Cunningham: LP - Long.

~

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�Page 84 •

The Daily Sentinel

2009

friday, May 22, 2009

www.mydailysentlnel.com

'GI:ribune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

Magnolia's Tori Thorp off the field and out of the trend
going.
sendi!!g
Sommer home and. finaliztossed out two strikeouts game.
With a coach down and a ing Point's total at three
with her fellow Lady Eagles
.
earning the other out to stop tied game, the Lady Eagles runs.
from PageBI
In the bottom of a very
the Lady Knights from took the plate to defend
against Point Pleasant. After decisive inning for the Lady
advancin!!.
Point's Jennifer Wickline
The
Lady
Knights two strikeouts and an out at Knights, Tessa Wyant
got the inning off right with responded with their ·own first, Magnolia took to the · pushed through the pressure
Davis said Leaf is suspected a single that pur the Lady blockade, g'etting two outs-a tield in what would be their and fatigue of a 12-inning
of breaking into a Canyon Knights in motion to score. first and another out via a fly second-to-last attempt to contest
to
strikeout
apartment on Oct. 30 and Teammate Devin Cottrill out.
end the game with a win- Magnolia's first batter. Their
stealing the painkiller followed that up by making
The ninth inning was no luck. Point posted a ~ou.- . second batter didn't make it
Hydrocodone, which had contact with the ball to again a held match, each ble play and tagged a ,tun- too far either, being called
been prescribed to an advance Wickline to second team advancing to the ninth ner, preceeding wh't would ' out at first. Two outs.• no one
injured football player.
base with a sacrificed out.
inning with one run apiece.
be the highlight ' of the · on. Wyant winds up to pitch.
James Farren, Rundall
Lady Knight pitcher Tessa
The tenth inning seemed match up- the twelth and Strike one, strike two, strike ·
County criminal district Wyant then stepped up to as though the Lady Knights final inning.
three- and the game i$
attorney. said Leaf has been bat. With one goal in mind, were going to break the tie,
Point's Ruby Schwartz done.
·
unde(going drug rehabilita- Wyant knocked out a triple with two on and one out, but was able to walk to first base
After almost three hours
tion in British Columbia, the to sepd Wickline .home, again, the Magnolia defense after teammate Regan of play, the Regional
Amarillo·
Globe-News tying I up the match and stepped up their game to Cottrill was struckout by Championship came to a
reported . Farren told the bringing Point Pleasant back hofd the Red and Black at . Magnolia's Thorp. With one victonous end for the Lady
· newspaper that efforts were into the game.
.
one.
out and one on, Lady Knight Knights who sealed the
under way to try to.convince · Point Pleasant held the
The bottom of the tenth Emily Sommer made con- game with a 3-1 total. The
Leaf to return to the United bottom of the sixth with an was quite possibly one of tact with the ball , sending ladies were then presented
States on his own.
out made by Miranda the more dramatic portions Schwartz to second but with the Class AA Region I
It was not clear whether Thompson's outfield catch, of the 12-inning marathon. being called out at first. Two plaque by Athletic Director
Leaf had an attorney.
an infield out by Anna Magnolia goes up to hit - · outs, a runner on second, Chip . Wood, who · was
Sommer, and a strikeout by double. Magnolia steps up and bleachers full of earnest ·almost drowned out by the
Wyant.
to bat again- runner steals fans hoping and rooting for immense cheers and celeThe Lady Knights came third. Magnolia comes to the Red imd Black softball pro- bration made by the dediclose to clinching the victo- plate ajlain- hit. In a teeth- vided the backdrop for what cated fans who stayed with
ry in the seventh mning with clenchmg moment, the Lady would be a key hit for their
Lady
Knights
EmilY. Jones and Re~an Knigh.ts break out into a Point's Anna Sommer.
throug· bout the entire game.
Cottnll on second and th1rd, fluid of motion that follows
With two strikes on the
the Lady Knights are
but the Magnolia defense with a throw to Devin count, Sommer .knocked a , now set to continue to
managed to be the blockade Cottrill who tags the ruril(.e[ ball mto left-field that w~s . defend their title of State
that kept the Red and Black out at home and follows dropped by the . Magn?ha Champions against the
from breaking their tie.
for
.
.
allowmg
with a throw to get player,
Point Pleasant responded Magnolia's other runner in a Schwartz to run home and Regron II champ10n, ne~t
to the Magnolia defense rundown that resulted in her the tie to finally be broken, Wednesday, May 27, 10
2-1. Sommer continued the Parkersburg·
witli some defense of their being tagged out.
own by Lady Knight Wyant
The Lady Eagle who was two-out rally by stealing
P1' PLEASANT 3, MAG!'lOLIA 1
throwing three stnkeouts to tagged out proceeded to fall third,J'utting her in. position
complete regulation play.
on the ground which· result· to ad to the Lady Knight PP ooo 001 000 002 - 3.5 1
M 010 oOo ooo ooo ..., 14o
With a 1-1 tie the contest ed in Magnolia's coach lead .
went into extra innings with entering the field and then · Wick! ine stepped up to bat · POINT:Te .. a Wyan1; DeYin COt1riL
Point Pleasant at bat. quickly after being escorted and hit a double to keep the MAGNOLIA: Tori Thorp; Marsha Booloy.

Former NFL QB
·Ryan Leaf indicted
CANYON. Texas (AP) Former NFL quarterback
Ryan Leaf has been indicted
~y a Randall County grand
JUry on drug and burglary
charges.
.The indictment was handed up Wednesday in
Canyon. It charged the 33year-old former San Diego
Chargers quarterback lind
forrner West Texas A&amp;M
quarterbacks coach with one
count ·of burglary to a habitation , seven counts of
obtaining a controlled substance by fraud and delivery
of a simulated controlled
substance.
Canyon police Lt. Dale

Friday, May 22,

www .mydaiJysentinel.com

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740·441·5826 after 5pm. or
02 E•p!Ortr sport, black,
IBn lealhor Interior. 4WO,
·2 &lt;»or, 142,000 mi.
$5500. Call339·9559

3rd
O&lt;tp.

St, noRacine,
utllllles.
pats,

N. 3rd Ave..

lr1

Middle-

port. 1 br. fumlshetl apt;
ref. &amp; Oap., no pell,

740·99a·01~
.
.
Sw's, Trucks, cars tun
size and compsC!S, all lltou!Hul Ap)o. II Jock•
l1h
ty
aan EltiiCH 52 West ,
w warren . ro~oa
. .
otartlng al $1!100. Stop or. wOOd Or., 1rom $365 to.
Call Cook Motors 326 $51!0.
740-446-2~.
Jackson
Pike.. Equal Housing opporru:
nlty. Thlo lnotllullon Ia an
740-448.0103
Equal Opportunity Pro98 Chevy Blszer ZR·2LS vtclerandEmployer.
. ·
13..1-'A

clothing
boV8
6-14,
women plus size, pBCk- 4x.4,2 dr.,new llres, fr.esh
aged
old , M9Conaldl tune up $2200. 080 For

FLATBED

&amp;

ioi740;:;;·24~7~·4292~~~~

$3999. VIEW ·ouR EN- 3 family garagQ . s.ale at
1·600·214.()452
TiRE TRAILER INVEN· 441 Le Grande May 21, toys, com hole, foo... 3()4.j!82-824i.
,.n~ 1 ,.•"_,.. .......1kAn.oo,fdu TORY AT
22. 2.3 Thur, Frl &amp; Sat ball, etc.
,..... ....... '""' ._..
AccrediledM.mbllrAccr-.dH· ~.CARMICHAEL~
9·4. Couch, table, coffee
ingCounciltorlnctependenl:
TRAIL.EAS.COM
table, freezer, dog ken· Sst. May 23 from 9 ·? l_t.
CoiJegas and Schoala 127AB
-446-3a2S
nel, sheets, blankets .&amp; 656 State Rt 850, near
740
-._.._.~~~= .ClJrtalns. glass &amp; kltoi'en AOII~Y· Lots of chi~
Have you prlceO a John were, leo~. Onll jack, Oren ° clolhlng, 10)'8•
H011,.. For $ale
r.oo
·, r•
Deere lately? You'D be holiday &amp; home decOr, computer parts. ·~· 3
Htro
sorprtsedl Check out our kerosene heater clothes,. toots, knives,. guns; lo 8
Bed.2 . Bioth
used
.
Inventory
at women ·1o-1e. girls 3-12. of misc. Items
bomes!OnlYI 99 .!amon.~ S'll
\h

;Ieise: ~e anre~

live 3 bedroom, unfur•
nlshed 2nt1 floor apt. .I..A
.......~... City Park In
OV8nuv""
Gallipolis. Utlllti9i not In•.
eluded .. No pets allowed.

Reforon&lt;:eo required. SO!
eurlty Deposit $800/mo.
Call· 44~-4.t25
or
446-3938
or
c:ell
441·5539

dwn .l5 )ln . at R% for Hs1. ~~'"-!~--~~
www.CAAEO.com.
Car.. months &amp; 4-5, boyS 24 Yard Sale Slrurday May 800-620-4946uT461 .
GJ'JCIOul Uvlng 1 and 2
6 yr Old Painl Horse ·well michael
Equlpme':'t months-2T
and
much 23 81 64 Fairfield lane
Bedroom Apts.. at Vlllagi
more. 446·1297
from 9-noon. Complete 3 bedroom, 2 full bath, Maflor
end . Rlveralde
broke w/ . new brlddle &amp; 740-446-2412

Hones

!""""'~;;;;;;~~~

. new SBlfOio $600. 6 yr
·okt Quarter HOfSe well
brOke gentiO w/ children
wl coft. New "bnddle &amp;
· .now sadOie, ·$600. Catl
Iar-In aa..Melody ·
Eblin
· ...740·388·0115
. Giveaway: L.ehover yard
u..atock
sa-. ilems. You· haul
-;;;;;;;;i;;;"!"-=.'!"1~ away. 740·366-8217
2.. 6 week old mate
,. __ M--'--'~
pigmy 'goats, S_40 each or
rwu III'UA
$65 both. (740)992.5200
Sth annual CYS PbllnUac)'

Fn· Pooee Drum set, LOnga·
315 .Johnson """'a
' ""'!ill
berger, Stampln' .Up!
dey &amp; Saturday
·
Salll,
Vera Bradley
May 23-24 918 Spires pul80s, r.4lsc. clOthing,
Ad. SA 160 Nto .Morgan Misc. Kitchen ~ams and
canter Rd. 2 mi. Small .housewares
kids clolhklg, misc. 9·5
Wed, ThU\1, Fn 20-21·22
10AM-4PM. Old quilts,
otO
diShes. lumltuie,

2300 aq. n. mall\' lm· Apts. In MIOdltpon, fiorri
1.88 . rtcres 5327
to
$59~.
Ambroola,
$125,000 740·1192•5064.
· Eqllll

provements,

~8754995

l:lou~ngOpportunlty.

House for ilale by owner . · . ·
·
In Cimp COnley, Pt. IslaM View Molal hn
Pleasan1 wv 675-6495 vaeancle&amp; $35.00/Night.
740-44~.()406
or 740-38e-8751
·
·LeOriiOOe Blvd. ~R Modem .1BA apt. ~II
·brick, hardWOOO floors, 740-446.()390
FA, 2 fuU bath&amp;, ·central Spacious
floor ap1.

crocket Items part of an

&amp;slate. WooOiand
· Dove. a-/ ~-••rltl air, . 1OX14 rhotal bUil&lt;lN it
dded dally
flea mkllyard sale brillg ew ems a .
Fll\ler lot for rent, electrk:. lng, 5 mtna. ~ tQWn.
Pela
you&lt;S&lt;uff
Friday 05122/09, Satur·
$10V;OOO. 740-709-1656
Mini Dachshunds CKC s,.. lofaY 311 8·1 ' '"' "'"'· ~~.~3101115 &amp; MonFOJ"rfldaeldy
4 Bed; 2 llatht . Only
mg I !ems to stll for Relay v;MI;iJft.l~
~I RVt •
$25,000.
tor listings
rog. ·5 short halreo S300 Foe Lif• '75·100 boo"'• '·
Lenel
off ConiOnary
Trahn
110().62()'4946 ex R0!9
1 ion~ haired $350 1ot
Road : Bab)l Items,
shots

Furniture

wormed.

&amp;

W!·6445 or 645-2386'

may lea~ Message.

-:::-:'"~"""l~~-::'::::0::::=
Cocket ·spaniel puppies
full blOOded bUff color 7
week.s old. 388-0401

SHIPS

AHOY:!

Vintage

Virginia house Maple . 4
PC BA sel w/o bed. Fur·
niture has carved anchors &amp; shil'la dlspta·""'
'""
Boston Terrier and Eng- on each PC. Very Rare.
!Ish ·Bulldog mix puppies Must sea to appreclc;'te.

6

wks

old . $300. Male 446-3968 afler 6:00PM.

secOnd/third

Gallpol• . City
lllver. . L.A.

-""

~~~-.
den,

and
lrg.
Kftd\Orl'dlnlilg rirea wllh
all new aPpU&amp;nces &amp;
cupboards, 3 BR, 2
belha, launOry area.

household Items. youth &amp; ~ 998 Rockwood Caniper Ooublewidc: .for sale ln Hart- $900 per month. . Call
a&lt;lutt clolhi•g ·eet
23ft
A!C $5000 fonl. Jbr.lba. oak I&lt; , .. 446·~325 or 446-4425 .
'

.

'

ntw

. ramie tloorina. knotty pine

2 Famity Yard 5ale lass
May 740·245-o390

ceilings. 2 car gar.new heat
22 &amp; 23 9AM-5PM g
•
pump 1/]
acre
asking
ware, clothes, mens· 3X, 1992 Southwlnd 30 ft 565.000 304-8112-3901.
w omens ptus sizes, M~tor )-lome,fully self
,'l,
r '' '
mise ilams 2285 5cenic oontaln8d
454
Che'IY
Of. Vinton OH
motor NC power gen. ,I,('(
'
4 lami~v ua..o~ sale, sat. tratof,
awning, asking
- - - ----·- --., , '"
•••~ 2..... 6

..

Tara

Townhouse

Aparunerus · 28R, 1.6.
bath, back . patio, pool,
plevground. (trash, -

aue.

water

·

pd.)

$425/Nnt,
$425/sec .
dep. Cal1740-645-8599

Ma.y 23 · at TPC Water ~· ~
~~~~':"'~~
.,.
740·379-2467 or Giveaway. Large ea¥)1 Olfiee on St Rt7. 9-5
2007 USed 1~ ft . Shadow ;;;;;;~T~o;•;oloa~u=-;.~
W11111DBuy-...... --..·-·'·-···-·-"·"·""'''"'- .$50.
fl!'letal deak with chair. · 4 miles out SA 143 'fhur. Cruiser travel trailer . wl.
Commercial Space. fQr
- l'loporty, ... -..·-···-··-"·-···"''-''""!1000 740-645-6046
!"""~~~~~~ 740·256-6800
FM &amp; Sat, nowbom to 4T queen bed up from l~ht 1 and ~ bedroom opts... Rent fully equipped Sa·
Pooperty loru~ ......... ,_.._,,_.,.,.,502l
-Property for fllll - .. -..................-5050
Free 2· beagle dogs, ~- Table
and
4 chairs, girts clothes, slrofler &amp; weigttl. roof mount A/C rum+sned
and
untur- IOn or office spBce avail·
1
Employmon1.-....,_,_,,..... ___,, ..........,......IIOOO lri-oolored,
matching cttina cabinet, carseat combo,
many unit.
gas
furnace, nished, and houses in able.
S400t'rno. 2000
AccOIIIHng.flnoncfo!.,..... _.. _..,..... -.........6002 copper·nose, bolh run- clar1( wood, excellent baby Items, pictures, old AMJFMICD/DV'D plaver, Pomeroy a·nd Middleport, 6QI1t 703-501-4808 ·
Admlnlltrltfvw1ltoftwlonel .................... .6004
ning 304-675-7167.
cond. $595. 446-3596
books. bod &amp; mattress, TV &amp; antenna, micro- ·soeurlty depos~ required, ---:=-~--

lrlliructlon al'rllnlng ....-... _................:..... 110 Sapplioo: ..... --·-·'·-···-..·---......._..,..... _..ou

. ~...-... ·····-·--·--·-···-"""-"'""....515
- 1.-................_,.,_..,_....,"'"""'""'"520

Colltgt
{Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl?o40-446- 4367

av~l.
dep.
or·

+

740-418-5288

TRAILERS, (740)992-7536
bookS, tre~nHII, sofat&gt;ed
LOAD MAX EQUIP· .
....,_. &amp; T~ . "~
MENT
TRAILERS,
Yard·" -•Rain/shine Sat, 4 1om
,..__ roae
CARGO EXPRESS . &amp;
...,.
sale 1.8 ml out Georges
Pot
Creri'lations. .Call ;;;;;~~Sch~oo~l=-~
'
HOMESTEADER
1S14 Neighborhood Ad crk • housahOld ' toot s.
,::740-44i!!i!!!Q!;·3!!7!!45;;,!!!!~!!!!
Qelllpolla Coroor
CARGO/CONCESSION Fn 5122 lhru Men 5125 LOngaberger, palnltlal~.

nuturiDg home' awaits .your

;::~~~".""!'~~·

Contact the ·ooo Dlvi·

STOCK

,r_._! ___1

~

·. . ..

~ea:ll:7:40.i:64:i.::5-:74:7:1::::: 28R
apl8 ..6 mi. from Hoi·
;;;;
zer. soma utilities pd. or

""'

=Pro....Knn hrticet

Davklson Twin Rivers Tower Is ac ..
1200 ~pllng appllcatiofls _for
Eagle kit In· wa~ng list !6r HUD sub·
With

carkty apple red. 2 seats,
solo &amp; double, lots, of
chrome · extras. $9000

~~ii-i~&amp;~.-.
NOTICE Borrow ·Smart.

Basement Waterproofing.
•
Olfttr S.rvao

S.&lt;kioi &lt;oodopto
•
Fun loving, fmancially ~~e-

Hartey
Hugger

' Screaming
stalleo. custom paint Job a!Oized. t·BA apartment
aiBO Includes the or~nel 1or !he elderly/disabled,:
factory lank 8. fanciers In eall675-6679
,,

.,, propeny
wnhln 30 days.
Homtlmpi'O'Itl11tnlt lencfer
wlho mortgage
broKer orII· ::ww~w~.c~oimllc~o~.c~om~:;:E~;O.~~==;~~~;~
Any pictures
w=~D
eensecl, (This Is a public ~'=""..;.:""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
that are not
Unconditionallile1lmo :~the ·~~~ncr:.:;
Fonn Equipment
Mllcslaneouo ~~~Y;;ani~S~al~·~~
guarantee. Local refer·
~
·
up
Will
be
.
.
oncos fumishe(j. Estab· Publl$hlng Company)
ElY,
INTEilRtTY, Free wooden front dOor. Fn 5122 and Sat 5123 at
Picked.
"sll'" 1975. Call24 Hrs.
KIEFER BUILT,
SeK80 wfframe, hinges &amp; 43 Ann . Dr, Galllpollo
rded
.
'
740·.46-0870,
Rogers
VALLEY
HORSE/liVE·
alii, wood screen cloor. 9•4. Boys Ok:&gt;theS, Joys,
disc.
II

·Ei.LM VIEW APTS

exc.oond.,rare Carbon fi- 2&amp;3B~ and up, Central
· ber·COior, bike is beaut!· Air, W/0 hookup, Jenan1·

•• lu.A1"'
Y'l1\
L"""'ll ?
....l\7 \NC:.\~ 7'1'~
1\
V

V·Mu '"'"!!'!'!~t=~:==--

. 15,500 ·miles. · gar. kepi,

A,./A~
I
1V , '!:' -

Ron·

;,;;;,;;;,~~~~~" 3 RBPO'D 2fh. • 25x30 home or office windows,
sellina:

Yamaha

2000

Evans . Jackson, OH
Monily lournl a! .RACO Hugd••iog•
800-537-11528
yard sale, call 1o 10, STEEL ARCH BUlL[). ~~~~~-740-949-2296
INGS
,
BusyBeeCI~aning
24

NOTICE · OHIO VALLEY call &lt;odor! 86fo.l'l.o469.
PUBLISHING co. rec·
·
.omnienos that you Oo O.ltd I Eldotly Ccn
business with people you
know, and NOT to send '¥1 year old stay at ~ome
money through the f11811 Morn will provide child
unttl you have investlgat- care. Summer lull · 01
planned aet~111es. Cell'
•XI'•il•ojl lngtheofferlng.
740-367.()536
for
an
~~~!!!~~S!'I!!!!aft""'' IQtervlew.
..,
· ·
.
Will ca~e forlstt with eldhave been
orty. I am very depend·
....t·
.
j
n
ad
.. 8 at
able, honest ano 1ruslPla~
worthy.
Coli
.
oa
· lllpoll
740·256-1035
the
S Will oo summer ~bysit·
'.J
Daily TilbUile . . ling
In my home in New
Haven
WV
..., p1Cked. 304-674·3365.
JnUst .Ill'

Southern

·

o1!111Mt Yo•""'- 41Goywonl• ....... ~
llolalJIIIolloJoc-4-•A_.....,.
..
obt-PMHII
_ _ _ W_ _

Notice~

·Newman

OrFaxTo

WQ.r.d.Ad.•

:::!~~~~~~~

Mayfield, failed to qualify
for the race with a lap of
184.093. The team still
searching to .qualify for its
fromPageBl
first race since Mayfield
· Stewart had a poor lap of was suspended for failing 'u
185.778 mph in a different. random drug test.
car than he won in last · David Starr, Todd Bodine .
weekend and will start 28th. and Mike Garvey also failed
He'll be right next to Dale to qualify.
Joey Logano qualified
Earnhardt Jr. , who struggled
14th,
giving him a good
at 185 .829 mph, leaving
starting position when he
him 27th.
JJ. Yeley, filling in for starts Sunday on his 19th
suspended driver Jenejlly birthday.

YOUB AD NOW. ONLINE

To

ume.

Bryan Walteralphoto
Southern's J.D. Whittington is congratulated by teammates
by being slapped on the helmet after scoring the
Tornadoes' first run Thursday night in a Division IV district
semifinal baseball game against Paint Valley at Valley High
School in Lucasville.
a one-run deficit. Zach Ash
continued .the momentum
with the big hit, a single that
plated both Brown and
fromPageBl
Manuel for a 7-6 edge.
Holter followed Ash with
Taylor Deem singled to give an RBI single that plated
the guests two baserunners Eric Buzzard - a courtesy
with nobody out.
runner for Taylor - to
Brown was hit by a pitch make it an 8-6 game headed
with one away to load the into the final at-bat.
bases, then Manuel delivCunningham,
who
ered a single that plated entered in relief during the
both Jenkins and Deem for sixth, retired the side 1-2-3
a one-run advantage.
in the seventh, · securing
The Bearcats, however, Southern's
in a third
countered quickly in their consecutiveplace
district final.
half of the fifth, scoring
Cunningham was the win'
three times for a 5-3 edge. ning
.Pitcher of record,'
)osh Long started the rally allowiJ;1g zero hits over 1.1
with a leadoff double, the.n innings of work while fanLemaster reached on an ning one. Manuel started for
error. Josh White followed SHS. allowing nine hits, six
with a single that plated runs and three walks over ·
. Long for ,a three-all contest. · 5.2 innings on the mound
· Krech liit a sacrifice fly to while striking out three.
center
that
allowed
Long, who went the disLemaster to cross the plate . lance for Paint Valley, took
for a 4-3 lead, then Mike the tough-luck loss. Long
Hami Iton singled home allowed 10 hits, eight runs
Krech for the two-run edge and three walks over seven
through five complete.
innings while fanning two.
The score remained that
Manuel, Holter and
way until the bottom half of Deem Jed the Tornadoes
the sixth, as PVHS tacked with two hits apiecei folon another run to pad its lowed by Whittington,
advantage to three scones. Brown, Taylor .and Ash
With two outs, Long dou- with one safety apiece .
bled and then later scored Manpel, Taylor and Ash
on an error to make it a 6-3 each drove m a team-best
contest after six full innings two R.Bls, followed by
of play.
Ht!ll!er with one.
And that's when Southern
Long led . Paint Valley
made its tina! charge.
with three hits, followed by
Deem started the rally Krech and Reed with two
with a one-out single, then each. White and Hamilton
Whittington followed with . also had a safety apiece in
a walk to put the tying SHS the setback.
run at the plate . Brown proSouthern
committed
duced a single in that at-bat, three errors in the contest, ·
leaving the bases loaded while PVHS made only one
with still just one away.
Manuel reached. safely on miscue.
an error in the next at-bat, SOUrHERN 8, PAINT VALLEY 6
allowing Deem to score for
a 6-4 contest. JQrdan Tl/8clrj.;) Southom 100 ·o2o' s · - 8 10 3
followed with a single.~ ~ "'~~~~~~~~ 001 131 0 - 891
viog home Whittington for
WP- Cunningham: LP - Long.

~

www.mydallylllbune.com
wwW.mydaliy8entlnel.com
www.mydallyreglster.com

- · - ·-·-·-......,_ ..__............ _,,,_..,_

llodlcll .-...-... -... --.. -.. -··-·"'""'"""-""'1038
F -......- ... ··-··.. --"'"-·-··-···-..-·1150 Mu"""-·-·-"'""'-'""""""'"'-.. -···-···-... 6040
lloblly.!lunt a Sporl.....-............. _..,_ .._....1155 Port· Tlmt-Ttm~ ... ,_.......---···-·· 5042
Kid'• Corner.................................................960 Rlltlurtntr ....... - ......_ ... .., ..................... 6CM4
....... _,,,, __,.,_,._,.-......... _.. ,165 So!n ........ ,.,_,.,_ ... -.. ·-···-···-·"···········--..Wintlo bur-·-......:.......-............................J7o Tchnlcllllllllo ............ -.......-.. -............ 6050
Yn"" ·-..·-·---·-.. -· .. -·.-·:...... -···-····175 T-ICIOIJ ............. -... -··-·············-··5062
I
I

BoKe( about a veer old

Toy Poodles CKC Reg.

Tails docked.
740·446·2455

$350. Hobby/ Hunt &amp; Spool
' or
740·645·9008
Remington.
HOO.
~~~~~~= can1irever rifled
barrel,
soopa, $550. Highpom
45 aq&gt; $150. Knl!1't
Disc so cal S300.

fcom1 Equ;p-t

~;;;;;i~~~~~

Case' 580C Backhoe/trid
loader lOW hours excel·
lent conditloo 3 buckets.
'388-87&amp;7
or

•••ttl/

h

~

74Q.:2~56-~1;7~395~~;
Mil CIIIIRIOUI
Jet Aeration MotOf'l
repaired, new a rebuilt

old milk bOttles, misc.

Frida /Sat
Garage soloY ·
urday
May
22,
23,
9-5/!H Slit, Taylors
Drive ofl SR 7 b)lpass.
Mlddlepoot across from
Leac1ing c- Ad, tovo.
&gt;NOmen's clothes, men's
clothes, basebell cards.
DVD's, video's, · CO's,

wave over 2 burner gas no pelS. 740·992·22f8

many chael

kniCk-knacks, ·
misc. item

OlftcW

range lop. Lg roll oU1
Woro~
awning. Asking · $6500. 2BR APT:Ciose 10 Hoi· Groat Location 749 Thlnl
256-1738
zer HoSpital on SA HIO .
Ava., GallipOlis!
,......,...,_ _ _ _ CIA. (740) 441.0194
$3991m01ltl for 1800
RV
sqft Bullrklut nogotiable
Sarvlee at carmiChael 2l&gt;r, wl yaro, stove/refr.
~n wayne
Trailers ·
tumlshed, CIA 5385.00 a ;..,~~;;;•s~~jil:3;g~=802
740-446-3825
mon.
+
dep ....
,30&lt;1~~:;!75-li'n~83~.~-~
ttouo. far bool
RV serviCe at C.rml· 'CoNVENIENTLY
LO~ ::::~~~~~~
740-446-3825

Trailers CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD· ~199/mo! &lt;1 bid. 2 "-h.
ABLE! Townhouse apart- Bani Rcpof (YJ, down, 15
ments, and/or small yean. ~~ -A.PR) for Listings.

Sa
oft'
In,..........
C.ll Ron
Ttw,rs,
Fri., t. tum
M:atorcpd.
call 800-620-4946 c~ R027
~....~
Rt7 onto 143 go 2 miles
houses tor rent.
304:541·m9
Evons1-800-537-9528 comer 01 t~31Bai1By Run 2003 Harilllge Soft TaR 740-441·1111 lor appl&gt; ;2br::-~home~~~-1 ear gerage
calion &amp; information.
·
·
Classic
Anrnversary
snHL Sales &amp; se~ Premier walk·irl bath Ro
wl liver frontage located
Now Avaitab'e at Carmi· complete. used 2 112 Huge garage sare 5at mode!, extra chrome, ex. Clean 1 br. fum. apart- in New Haven wv

dmel

740-4&gt;46-2412

Equipment

1

afs

~ng(740)992-7029

Lloyd 5123

a-3 105 Ann Or. condiUon, silver &amp; black~ ment, dep. Ret rect. call 304-934-7462

. Rain!" Shine. 446-0686

eaR 740-949-2497

304-675·2970.

304·57~.

or

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

HouiUForRent

&amp;ales

Sol••

Holp Wanfod •

· Friday, May 22, 200~.

Gen...,

Friday May 22, 2009
ALLEY OOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www.mydailysentlnel.com
ACROSS

BRIDGE

2BR no .pels $450/mo
plus deposit Reference
reqwred. 740.446-3870 .

40 Purchue
41 Loudnotoe
42 U!Uo creeka

.

Answer to Previous Puz.i:le

1 Btolle .
5 Comie-ttrlp 44 Mournful

Phillip
Alder

poem

blrk

I Otrtobe&lt;

47 Shovel or

tndlng

rake

48 Winery call&lt;
1011rce
50 Owl'• call
13 Sign before 52 Indulge,
Virgo
plus
12 Amuon

North

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

4000

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

Manulallured
Hous 119

Local Contractor
.7 40-367-0544
FrH Estimates
740-367-0536

•

Hill's Self
Storage

Accounting/ Financial

Dump truck

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp;

•
•
•

service .
We do driveways

Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp;

We Haul
Limestone- Gravel
Dirt· Ag-Lime

Painting
• Patio and Porch

We Haul Gmvel,

Limestone, Coal.
Compost. Top Soil
Call Walt or Sandy

740-992-3220

740·985·4422

•
•

Sou&amp;h

1

99~·62b

30

vcar~

Loc,l

E.xpcr·cnc·~

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Sea1111ess Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Guners
lnsursd &amp; Bonc/rJd

Repair

740-653·9657

.~~tlmtamaeJleabtUtr7.eom

740.446~9200
1fiO •
2459 St. Rt.

YOU BET,
MIZ
P~UNELLY !!

JUGHAID.L CAN YOU TELL

ME TH' .uiFFERENCE
'TWEEN A

· VERB
AN' A

A'DV&amp;RB

r

Galllpolls

educallon

74().985•4384
'

Talk with other Ameri- ·
cans to promote conser· ·
vative ·valuils. Also raise
funds for conservative
causes, Influential po!i1ica1leaders and interest
groups.
1

I

, ,..•1/a'

.e.,; II' )

Now Selling:
• Ford &amp; Motorcrnft
Parts • Engines,
Transfer Cases &amp;
Transmissions
• Aftennarket 1

Slarting Wage $8.80/nr

· Replacement Shel!t

FT

Melal &amp; ComponeniS

1 Week~ Pay &amp;
Bonuses
1 Onsite Doctor

For All Mnl.: es of \!Chicles

Racine. Ohio
740-949-1956

1 Complete Benefi'ts

Package
1 Free' NRA membership

can Today I

&gt; &lt;:

7

AU rOIVlr.:.J t I V F

Hiring Evening Shift

.

/

(U$11(tAIJ:IllfOIAftiiJ61UrS '

Posi~ons

1

THE BORN LOSER

Offer!

we pay up to $12.25/hr
after six rnonths

CUTTING EDGE
LAWN€ARE
Commercial &amp;
Residential
Estimates
• Lawn Maintenance
• Landscaping
• Power Washing
Seth Carleton
(740) 5t7-5432
Jelf Stetbem
(740) 517-6883

Free

Nata's tree

Service

.

·Interview Tomorrow!
Start work May 26th!
1-88&amp;4MC·PAYU
Elrt. 2a21
Apply online:

Tree removal, planting,
.lawn care, and all your
landscaping needs.
Residential and Commercial
Fully lqstJred

http:J.1obt.lnlocitlon.c:om

Racine, Ohio 740•247-2019
Owners:
Jon .Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe ·

ri\OW I~ OUil. ~
T
'
'

£G.C, t&gt;OI~ 1

/1\E.i~~ :..

Cell: 74D-416-5047

~t-.'&lt;! .'

1

·

Announced
09· Cobalts

B. 09 Impalas

O.Oo/oAPR
Friday, July 17, 2009
j;l .jCihartertld Coach Transportation ·
to Four Ohio Wineries,
ALL TASTINGS INCLUDED,
Lunch &amp; Dinner
Only $1 30/person
Cash, check and credit cards
accepted
LIMITED SEATS AVAILABLE
Payment due at time ol
reservation
Coach leaves PVH lower level
parking lot at 8 a.m.
Coach returns at approximately
,..
· 10:30 p.m.
·
Please call
PVH Community Relations
to reserve a seat,
675-4340,Ext. 1326

WV State Farm
Museum Annual
Board Meeting
June 9th q pm
All dues must be paid in
full prior to meeting.

for 72 Months
$5,000 Bonus Cash on all
New Silverado Ext. Cabs
&amp; Crew Cabs.
Offer good thru May 26th

Smith
Superstore
Gallipolis, Ohio
'·

-

·•

..
·'

Quality

Join Us

In

OutstanQing,
Care

To

Lucy Goff, .Siaff Develop·
ffient
Coordinator
Al(740)992 •54n. EOE &amp;
PartK:ipant. Of
The
Drug-Free
. WorkPlace

Program
·Nephrologist. . nOOcled
work in Pt Pleasan1

to

and

Huntington WV must be
ec in internal medicine,

and
og;

BCIBE in Nephml·
$$1SO.Kiyr. Full

time position. Send

I.) I'm so lame, nly

J&amp;L
Construction ·

lul.&lt; .m

frie~d

•mr.e my list of25

• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement

·

IS

PRETTY 2.) Pius, !still
L"'f'\E. 'baven't realized
·
that IH:'s chirging
me by the word.

Owner:
Jamos Keesee II

Memorial Day
Monday, May 25th
11:30 am
Chester Volunteer Fire
Department Chester, Ohio

Pie Donations Welcome

Beagle SIZe &amp; features with
co·loring. Went missing
Edmondson Rd. between Dan vi lie &amp;
V

·
M d
mfon somet1me on ay evening

(5/ 11 /09)

lffound please call 740-992· 7710

cv

return .

Help Wanted

Sales Manager position
available. Sales e)(peri·
ence required. Apply in
person ay Sparkle Sup·
ply Company 683 State
Route- 7 N orth GallifM&gt;'is,

OH .

No

phone

calls

please ,

FIND
AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Help Wanted

®

LICENSED ~RACTICAL NURSE
AND/OR MEDICAL ASSISTANT
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting applications for a full-time
licensed Practical Nurse and/or Medical
Asst LPN's must have .current West
Virginia license. Previous medical office
experience or hospital related expreience
preferred.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
Or fax: · 304·675-6975, or apply on-line
at WWW.IIY•IIey.orc
•
AA EOE

will' make

you a S1rOOQOr

only

Pmt is reqUired in advatlce

ShipmCms arrj·ve·evcrv

'(\l.u~. 23-Aug.

· LEO

HTE C

and

r ..
0 AI EL

22) -

ee

!Bke.

•

'

' L?~,;:~s!';.'~~:Oct 23)..,. Even 11 your
oerta}n .tnlrtgs , don't try to dO It all by

.,

CQWandBOY

. ~ou!Mif. For lhe .."" ol making your

' eqhof't$ feel I!JVOIV&amp;d, let them do what.

'"•i o:an.

.
This Is
ooeolllio&amp;e days where you may creale
SCQFIPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) -

I'VE' 11EALIZED

. 89ffi8 needless probl8'ms, especially II
yo\l're too rigid or overtearl~ In your
deS lings with others. Don't be officious or

Replacement

Windows and
Vinyl Siding
'Specialists, LTD

(740) 742-2563

I I Ill'

• Siding • Vinyl
WindOws • Metal
and Shingle Roofs
• Decks • Additions

•Eie&lt;:trical
•J!Iumbing
• Pole Barns

~

i~~~~i;~~ii~

II
! 0\\IIU t 1111\

.__ _ _ _ _ _.....;:

Insured
Free Estimates

*Insured
*Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591 -8044
Please leave messa e

3

o1

s

I III I I It
•

•

•

•

•

·

SCRAM·!El'S ANSWERS S/21

•

•

•
KINKY!
'/E'R't
KINKY.'

~/YOI/4/1

WITH T/lf

C,fOjj· Pli'J'~71N6

Geyser -Willdy -Mecca - Ignite· DRAGG!N
m•;p
someone sent me, ~·I've entered.tbe
.,snapdragon plltt of my life. Part of me has snapped and
the rest of me-is 'DRAGGIN' ."
ARLO ·&amp;.JANIS

. A little

SO.UP TO NUTZ
'

(l?JXI?'?

..TAlCtWG

~IT

.

BLL. "fie

NeGaTIVe 'll«&gt;.leH'IS eND
·Rl&gt;JLNI!.6S ~ 'ltlUi: IJ)fly,
SOUL ...

1

I

~

109

Although you ara
likelybe
ro do
a number
praiseWonhy
things,
careful
not of
to
toot your own hom. Walt for the acoolades to oome from others.

Room Additlons, Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding, Decks,
Bathroom RernodeUng. Licensed &amp; Insured
740 992 0730

-:;;;

@ P~INT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
::::=T~H;tS~f=S:::Q;U=A~R;fS~:=:::-:;::=;==*~=;==*::=~:{
@) uGNEr5 C:.~MsJ~EER tE1T!RS 10
is.

and Judicial.
.
·CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -

PSI CONSTRUCTION

Cell740 416 2960

Complete Ina ehuddo &lt;luoted .
by filling In Jht misslng words ·
";::;';:;:;~;:~~~~yo~u~d~l!'l~o~lo~p~f~rom~lle~·~p~N~a~.!3!bo~l~"'''i:,···.
•

' At:;lUAfUUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) _. A long·
time assistant could back off if.tlD or She
realizes that the. favor you'rt!! asking is
something you can easily do 'toursalf. It
might put an end to always coming to
your aid.
PISCES ~Feb . 20~Mar(:h 20) - YoU gel
plenty of consideration and notice, so
· don't get upset or jealous if someone
ck:lse to you gets more atteotlon than
you. lt's simply his or her tu'tn.
ARIES (March 21·Apri/19) - Financial
conditions In general look good, but this
could be your downfall. Knowing you're
OK could cause you to spend 1ooHshly
and recklessly.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - You're
qulle perceptiye and should be able to
dlsce m When an~;ither Is not telling the
truth. Yet when It comes to Someone who
Is glib, you might buy anything he or she
says tnd do aomethlng foolls ti :

GARFIELD

David Lewis

*Prompl and·Qu11liry
Work
*ReusonabJ~ Rarcs

!

•

who may be invotved. Be discriminating

( 0\( 10

Stanley TreeTrimming .
&amp; Removal

.

SAGITIARIUS (Nov.- 23-Dec. 21) Genlng In too deep wfth a friend's problem could cause you to lose your oblectivity and ability to get along with others

Free Eslimntes

740·992-6971

I I.T I1.·..ZIR·.H·1E16 IO·--.• . .

hlghhan~.

o.ffilialed with Mike Marcum Roofing &amp; Remodeling

740-992-lm

'

·

yqu are careless ll'i your COOices, vou
i:c1ul!lond up w.ot&gt; someon.a.w.ho saddlas

.

......'

I" I I

·;their;:~~~~~:~
~~;;-!=:~~v;~; ·
8nd ask for nothing of others. If

Cell: 740-416-1834

· 29~· *Experience ;
Years

0

carerul

~y

PROBLEMS.

Stop &amp; Compare

I I

about letting some klnCI of recent sltua·
. UOn · Qiue8 you to prejudge S()meone ·
· who has· nothing to do with your past
, experi•?CO· You could make a bed mie·

RETRIEVER .. .

740-985-4141

.·~~

,.

1 lr.-a

more attractive person.

o~o
:""" l&lt;noV." yqu're an easy mark
might trY tO·put the bite on yQu.

THAT YOU CAN'T ID4
FfiOM SOCIETYS .

•New Homes
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

cu.r R. •o· · ... - - - -

hlr"i/ll'r"'.. lr--lr-1

coUld u· naer~ .an eilteratio(lln your attl· .
tuCie In ltte ;ye&amp;r ahead, ellher by choice ·
or .circumstances. Tills pe~sonafity

t

47239 Riebel Road. Long B~uom , OH

WV11N0954

' V, A R C 0 T

' By Bo'!'k:o B . 0001 '
,
There are strong .lhdlcoll.ono that: you

change

ILfhd"'

::::

form lcur,slmple words. .

. iow·to

·. -· tJker. '
. CANCg~ (June 21·July 221- Financial

L.arJe, Btvu fmt.ell, h~ad!l on

Concrete Removal '
and Replacement ,

· .

Overheard at tonvention,
"Abn
t
fter d'.tnner
·
OS every ft
81...1~ you manage lor youreoll eouiO
has ft bappjl ending.
' speech
'· be do;'ig better than they have In a long
·
"' · Everyone· is g)Jid when - is·
11""'. tfo-or, because ol lhis, some- · r--::-::-::-:~,-.,,....._,

(740) 742-2563
$10 per·lb Cash

•

0 four
Rtorronge':
''"""words
of lila
acr&lt;trnbJild
b..

thli'lga are going well, you're apt to be a
. bit more genorous with your trtends.. This
can be good or bad, depending on how
far you go 'Nhen It comes to dealing will')

·Garages .

ROBERT
BISSEll

on her nose, inOUth.
chest &amp; paws. 45 LBs.

--.,..----'-

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Because

• Room Additions

KHKWTZFXAU."

'~i~~'S@)\4{\}A-"~~Se

$ilu~y. Moy 23. zooi.

TH"'T

Windows

• Pole Buildings

'aAE

... at the',bildge' llllila, make ~ hi~ •PAEVIOUS'SOLUTION: 'I never boUghI into lhe Idea that onlert~nors owe
. fX!Ints, especially. ~on on dt!lenae, "' l'iOffllig to their aoolence except a good pellormaneo.· ·Pat Boone
·
as' declarer ·attar 11 opponent tlaS
·
··
·
·
·

• Rooling
·Decks

25+ years experience

via
e-mail
Kumarmd @gmail.com
or

faw 666-625-0070.

Chicken &amp; Ribs BBQ
and
Ice Cream

MISSING
10 yr. old Female
Beagle/Lab mix nameu
. Black wl\"hile

Ctiebtky Qpltr~ BJfC!Nttd'!IQill qutUIIOI'e by IIIOOUI pqJ~t, pHIIOO p!VB11. .
. Eactlllller In lhf C!Jihlf ltll'lllllor 11'\011181'.
.

Today 's due Requals l

e: .

LOST

1;ss;~~~~s;~~~~~~~~

J

.....
·.r. !PI,
• .. . G

MilE W. MIRCUM.IWNER

Residents.
StopApplication
Ely And ~
Fill
Out · An
M·F 9AM·5PM. Conlacl

by Luis Campos

A. st·r·o-

• Porches • Decks • Garages·• Horse Barns • ·
&amp; Wood Siding • Roofing • Chain Link
Wood Fencing &amp; General Home Maintenance

j

CELEBRITY CIPHER

You have four potential · loser1: one
heal). one diamond and two clubs. II
-lobks-as W
.you nnd the ,heart ft~ to
· work, .However. 1~,at ca~ wait .tor· a
moment First cl\ed&lt; the polnta. There
are onty_· 1·8 mi.ssing, . B.e~8J.IEI8 e,st ·;

. ei&gt;mpanlono knOw you are an expert on

Our .

word

&amp; Kind deod1 31 Mild cheese
9 Screpod by 33 CEO aldeo

Actreu -

Hagen
51 GQ(f peg

•. I hi~~ttlf. ~"'!,~_!'P~ · 'f W)B A'P · N. D .··
, QIY•-,n:· . vw,...w,-~,p·~.•~ .. , .. ,• .....
.

.·

g;~~;~lebr;::~er, L: ::===;~~~~~~ii~~l ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Providing

ly (3 Wdl.)

49

37 Hoagi.S
39BIOQH

·- ~~l:~=::d'!':.';, BJI~; VBUKJ

J-T.

email:
lrshadlrm@aol.com '

Modi&lt;al

titudes To

Hse~

':s

W~·AT? I DON'T

RN '7P-?A To Join Our
Friendly And Dedicated
Staff. Applicant's Must
Be Dependable, Team
Players With Positive At·

TKO official

' O()enod,WestsuroJy·canr)flthiveboth .' "X.' ·e . ~X . PK ZN WKBE B SNNP ...
the diamond ~ce. ai.t ftiiart 1\fng:·Artrlcii ·
.· . , . ·
.
.,...;:
·
...-,......,--.,· 'two,,lelld your diamo'nct · ~ng1: \Yhe~ ':. X' ' H ~ A KH ,J( W W K Be B S N N P
0\Jil. ~TI~~~f..t~l
. .OUII:ti!E.~TE(:{:&gt;~
W~t~sup ~h t~e~,:Eai ·ljiutt ,. K"y N WK. X MAe K W J Z B A E . Z F K T
Wtl..L TO\&amp;.'(()IJil-0,.
' _.......11 . 1 :· ~~~~/.."'t:&gt; ..
hiv,l\lf.-king. ~P.flpi(l~. . .
.
.·
.

. T~INK TI-IAT'5
'• A:60LDEN

cations FOr A Full Time

6

36 Organ valva

•
~

· {cu KNow ·

At . 333 Page J
AVON! All. Areas! To ~uy cated
Street, Middleport, Ohio
or Sell Shirtay Spears
Is Pleased To Announce
304·675·1429
.
We • Ate Accepl~g Appli·

dancer

(hyph.)
46 Egg part
47 NFL scoreo

7 Very cheep- 20 lllglclan's

openedlhebidding.

742·2332

Help Wantocl • General

amenity
42 Tree anchor
43 Woe bit
45 Kind ol

35 Vlllege

own.

1£.!."--f

Limited Time

our areal

honey

41 ·Pork

self w~h a quiet raise to two spades,
, . . . - - - - - - - - - , · North would· havo given his own gentle
raise to three hearts. which would have
JEST TWO
1.1'1. .LETTERS II made it easy tor you to go folN'. But when
West juJnped to lhree .._des, promising
tour frumps and little e119, Nonh was not
strong enough lo raise to lour hearll.
4'ckiv. though, VQU hill! sutliclent play·
· ing Strength tO bid lour hearts Oft VOIJr

Come havett
•canned ,t or free

opponunttles In

ment

39 Hoedown

hearts. After winning trick one with your
spade ace, how would you proceed?
The bidding highlights why nowadays
jump raises are pre-emptive In competitive auctK&gt;ns.lf West had conte,nled him·

engine light ori?

employer, committed
to offering 1!11ploy-

. England

Keep track ot tho 40 hlgh-oard polnta
and you will never feel like Custer. This

I• your check
Come work for a top

another

38 Big wave

Joe !i. Lewis, a comedian and actot' who
died in 1!m , said, "I've been on such a
losing slfeak that if I had been around, 1
would have raken General Custer and
given pq!nts.•
I

liJARNEY

Hardnof Cabllleiry And furnHure

'l'otal Auto
Tran•mf••lon

36 One way or

explosive
19 Isle of-,

deal is a IJOOd example. You are in lour

740-44t-?387

·. GuHering

1t High

1 EMT

. brown

The points often
point the way

(740) 992-5009
Custom Home Building
Sreel Frame Buildings
Building. Remodeling
Geneml repair
www.bankscclb.rom

Rick Johnson-Owner

GRAND OPENING
Cha•tar Tlr•
Center .a

Pass

OpeQing lead: • 10

lnsu'"'d, Free ·
EsUmates, 20yrs Exp.

F:..ILLY "4SUREO

Pass

Pass

35 Serving
dish

••a

East

Pas$

~ss

co.

Gallipolis,OH 4563t

Pomeroy. l.lhr()

·3•

4•

Trig

function

2t Pinches ott
technique 24 VCR button
l!dc!24 Laughable · 2 Low-down 25 Slangy
27 AnllhHthe
uy
refusal
(hyph.)
lob (2wdt.) 3 uno lor a
30 Scintilla
diva
26 Number ol
4 · 'Uke ttrong
Musea
31 OccupiOs,
oniona
27
Rovoro'
pool
32 Fall mo.
5 Watch
planet
feature.
28 A law34 Grayllh-

I.

North

.......

10

DOWN

·~Nightmare"

23 Army

K 6
A 75

West

2•

Johnson's Tree
Service

740-59 1-0195

22

to t o 4 a

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: Both

WV036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

• 8 52
• K Q J 10

• QJ

Hours
7:00am ·8:00pm

Pomeroy, Ohio
Commercial •
Residential
• • Free Estimates

• Kl

4A

.· hto t0'!131l'

Dump Truck

55 Play the
17 Volceno
56 Sidellneo
fluure
cry
'18 Pub brew · 57 Came to
20 llatlery poll

South

s.-

abbr.

18 t::orthaue
loc.

.

.KJ852

tO 9 7 6
7 2
A J tO 9

• 'a a

z:o-949-2217
.
5' .J( 10'

S&amp;L
Trucking

!4 2
Eul

Weot

53 Common

15 Pulltn,asa 54 Looks!
hcae
amorously

• Q70

29625 B!llihan .Road ·
Racine; OH 45n1

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION ·

S~rvice

t4 Quite
limlllr

A 8 5

•

I

R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

0$-22-ot

• Q 43

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

"""'••'" 1 '"

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

HouiUForRent

&amp;ales

Sol••

Holp Wanfod •

· Friday, May 22, 200~.

Gen...,

Friday May 22, 2009
ALLEY OOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www.mydailysentlnel.com
ACROSS

BRIDGE

2BR no .pels $450/mo
plus deposit Reference
reqwred. 740.446-3870 .

40 Purchue
41 Loudnotoe
42 U!Uo creeka

.

Answer to Previous Puz.i:le

1 Btolle .
5 Comie-ttrlp 44 Mournful

Phillip
Alder

poem

blrk

I Otrtobe&lt;

47 Shovel or

tndlng

rake

48 Winery call&lt;
1011rce
50 Owl'• call
13 Sign before 52 Indulge,
Virgo
plus
12 Amuon

North

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

4000

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

Manulallured
Hous 119

Local Contractor
.7 40-367-0544
FrH Estimates
740-367-0536

•

Hill's Self
Storage

Accounting/ Financial

Dump truck

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp;

•
•
•

service .
We do driveways

Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp;

We Haul
Limestone- Gravel
Dirt· Ag-Lime

Painting
• Patio and Porch

We Haul Gmvel,

Limestone, Coal.
Compost. Top Soil
Call Walt or Sandy

740-992-3220

740·985·4422

•
•

Sou&amp;h

1

99~·62b

30

vcar~

Loc,l

E.xpcr·cnc·~

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Sea1111ess Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Guners
lnsursd &amp; Bonc/rJd

Repair

740-653·9657

.~~tlmtamaeJleabtUtr7.eom

740.446~9200
1fiO •
2459 St. Rt.

YOU BET,
MIZ
P~UNELLY !!

JUGHAID.L CAN YOU TELL

ME TH' .uiFFERENCE
'TWEEN A

· VERB
AN' A

A'DV&amp;RB

r

Galllpolls

educallon

74().985•4384
'

Talk with other Ameri- ·
cans to promote conser· ·
vative ·valuils. Also raise
funds for conservative
causes, Influential po!i1ica1leaders and interest
groups.
1

I

, ,..•1/a'

.e.,; II' )

Now Selling:
• Ford &amp; Motorcrnft
Parts • Engines,
Transfer Cases &amp;
Transmissions
• Aftennarket 1

Slarting Wage $8.80/nr

· Replacement Shel!t

FT

Melal &amp; ComponeniS

1 Week~ Pay &amp;
Bonuses
1 Onsite Doctor

For All Mnl.: es of \!Chicles

Racine. Ohio
740-949-1956

1 Complete Benefi'ts

Package
1 Free' NRA membership

can Today I

&gt; &lt;:

7

AU rOIVlr.:.J t I V F

Hiring Evening Shift

.

/

(U$11(tAIJ:IllfOIAftiiJ61UrS '

Posi~ons

1

THE BORN LOSER

Offer!

we pay up to $12.25/hr
after six rnonths

CUTTING EDGE
LAWN€ARE
Commercial &amp;
Residential
Estimates
• Lawn Maintenance
• Landscaping
• Power Washing
Seth Carleton
(740) 5t7-5432
Jelf Stetbem
(740) 517-6883

Free

Nata's tree

Service

.

·Interview Tomorrow!
Start work May 26th!
1-88&amp;4MC·PAYU
Elrt. 2a21
Apply online:

Tree removal, planting,
.lawn care, and all your
landscaping needs.
Residential and Commercial
Fully lqstJred

http:J.1obt.lnlocitlon.c:om

Racine, Ohio 740•247-2019
Owners:
Jon .Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe ·

ri\OW I~ OUil. ~
T
'
'

£G.C, t&gt;OI~ 1

/1\E.i~~ :..

Cell: 74D-416-5047

~t-.'&lt;! .'

1

·

Announced
09· Cobalts

B. 09 Impalas

O.Oo/oAPR
Friday, July 17, 2009
j;l .jCihartertld Coach Transportation ·
to Four Ohio Wineries,
ALL TASTINGS INCLUDED,
Lunch &amp; Dinner
Only $1 30/person
Cash, check and credit cards
accepted
LIMITED SEATS AVAILABLE
Payment due at time ol
reservation
Coach leaves PVH lower level
parking lot at 8 a.m.
Coach returns at approximately
,..
· 10:30 p.m.
·
Please call
PVH Community Relations
to reserve a seat,
675-4340,Ext. 1326

WV State Farm
Museum Annual
Board Meeting
June 9th q pm
All dues must be paid in
full prior to meeting.

for 72 Months
$5,000 Bonus Cash on all
New Silverado Ext. Cabs
&amp; Crew Cabs.
Offer good thru May 26th

Smith
Superstore
Gallipolis, Ohio
'·

-

·•

..
·'

Quality

Join Us

In

OutstanQing,
Care

To

Lucy Goff, .Siaff Develop·
ffient
Coordinator
Al(740)992 •54n. EOE &amp;
PartK:ipant. Of
The
Drug-Free
. WorkPlace

Program
·Nephrologist. . nOOcled
work in Pt Pleasan1

to

and

Huntington WV must be
ec in internal medicine,

and
og;

BCIBE in Nephml·
$$1SO.Kiyr. Full

time position. Send

I.) I'm so lame, nly

J&amp;L
Construction ·

lul.&lt; .m

frie~d

•mr.e my list of25

• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement

·

IS

PRETTY 2.) Pius, !still
L"'f'\E. 'baven't realized
·
that IH:'s chirging
me by the word.

Owner:
Jamos Keesee II

Memorial Day
Monday, May 25th
11:30 am
Chester Volunteer Fire
Department Chester, Ohio

Pie Donations Welcome

Beagle SIZe &amp; features with
co·loring. Went missing
Edmondson Rd. between Dan vi lie &amp;
V

·
M d
mfon somet1me on ay evening

(5/ 11 /09)

lffound please call 740-992· 7710

cv

return .

Help Wanted

Sales Manager position
available. Sales e)(peri·
ence required. Apply in
person ay Sparkle Sup·
ply Company 683 State
Route- 7 N orth GallifM&gt;'is,

OH .

No

phone

calls

please ,

FIND
AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Help Wanted

®

LICENSED ~RACTICAL NURSE
AND/OR MEDICAL ASSISTANT
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting applications for a full-time
licensed Practical Nurse and/or Medical
Asst LPN's must have .current West
Virginia license. Previous medical office
experience or hospital related expreience
preferred.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
Or fax: · 304·675-6975, or apply on-line
at WWW.IIY•IIey.orc
•
AA EOE

will' make

you a S1rOOQOr

only

Pmt is reqUired in advatlce

ShipmCms arrj·ve·evcrv

'(\l.u~. 23-Aug.

· LEO

HTE C

and

r ..
0 AI EL

22) -

ee

!Bke.

•

'

' L?~,;:~s!';.'~~:Oct 23)..,. Even 11 your
oerta}n .tnlrtgs , don't try to dO It all by

.,

CQWandBOY

. ~ou!Mif. For lhe .."" ol making your

' eqhof't$ feel I!JVOIV&amp;d, let them do what.

'"•i o:an.

.
This Is
ooeolllio&amp;e days where you may creale
SCQFIPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) -

I'VE' 11EALIZED

. 89ffi8 needless probl8'ms, especially II
yo\l're too rigid or overtearl~ In your
deS lings with others. Don't be officious or

Replacement

Windows and
Vinyl Siding
'Specialists, LTD

(740) 742-2563

I I Ill'

• Siding • Vinyl
WindOws • Metal
and Shingle Roofs
• Decks • Additions

•Eie&lt;:trical
•J!Iumbing
• Pole Barns

~

i~~~~i;~~ii~

II
! 0\\IIU t 1111\

.__ _ _ _ _ _.....;:

Insured
Free Estimates

*Insured
*Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591 -8044
Please leave messa e

3

o1

s

I III I I It
•

•

•

•

•

·

SCRAM·!El'S ANSWERS S/21

•

•

•
KINKY!
'/E'R't
KINKY.'

~/YOI/4/1

WITH T/lf

C,fOjj· Pli'J'~71N6

Geyser -Willdy -Mecca - Ignite· DRAGG!N
m•;p
someone sent me, ~·I've entered.tbe
.,snapdragon plltt of my life. Part of me has snapped and
the rest of me-is 'DRAGGIN' ."
ARLO ·&amp;.JANIS

. A little

SO.UP TO NUTZ
'

(l?JXI?'?

..TAlCtWG

~IT

.

BLL. "fie

NeGaTIVe 'll«&gt;.leH'IS eND
·Rl&gt;JLNI!.6S ~ 'ltlUi: IJ)fly,
SOUL ...

1

I

~

109

Although you ara
likelybe
ro do
a number
praiseWonhy
things,
careful
not of
to
toot your own hom. Walt for the acoolades to oome from others.

Room Additlons, Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding, Decks,
Bathroom RernodeUng. Licensed &amp; Insured
740 992 0730

-:;;;

@ P~INT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
::::=T~H;tS~f=S:::Q;U=A~R;fS~:=:::-:;::=;==*~=;==*::=~:{
@) uGNEr5 C:.~MsJ~EER tE1T!RS 10
is.

and Judicial.
.
·CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -

PSI CONSTRUCTION

Cell740 416 2960

Complete Ina ehuddo &lt;luoted .
by filling In Jht misslng words ·
";::;';:;:;~;:~~~~yo~u~d~l!'l~o~lo~p~f~rom~lle~·~p~N~a~.!3!bo~l~"'''i:,···.
•

' At:;lUAfUUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) _. A long·
time assistant could back off if.tlD or She
realizes that the. favor you'rt!! asking is
something you can easily do 'toursalf. It
might put an end to always coming to
your aid.
PISCES ~Feb . 20~Mar(:h 20) - YoU gel
plenty of consideration and notice, so
· don't get upset or jealous if someone
ck:lse to you gets more atteotlon than
you. lt's simply his or her tu'tn.
ARIES (March 21·Apri/19) - Financial
conditions In general look good, but this
could be your downfall. Knowing you're
OK could cause you to spend 1ooHshly
and recklessly.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - You're
qulle perceptiye and should be able to
dlsce m When an~;ither Is not telling the
truth. Yet when It comes to Someone who
Is glib, you might buy anything he or she
says tnd do aomethlng foolls ti :

GARFIELD

David Lewis

*Prompl and·Qu11liry
Work
*ReusonabJ~ Rarcs

!

•

who may be invotved. Be discriminating

( 0\( 10

Stanley TreeTrimming .
&amp; Removal

.

SAGITIARIUS (Nov.- 23-Dec. 21) Genlng In too deep wfth a friend's problem could cause you to lose your oblectivity and ability to get along with others

Free Eslimntes

740·992-6971

I I.T I1.·..ZIR·.H·1E16 IO·--.• . .

hlghhan~.

o.ffilialed with Mike Marcum Roofing &amp; Remodeling

740-992-lm

'

·

yqu are careless ll'i your COOices, vou
i:c1ul!lond up w.ot&gt; someon.a.w.ho saddlas

.

......'

I" I I

·;their;:~~~~~:~
~~;;-!=:~~v;~; ·
8nd ask for nothing of others. If

Cell: 740-416-1834

· 29~· *Experience ;
Years

0

carerul

~y

PROBLEMS.

Stop &amp; Compare

I I

about letting some klnCI of recent sltua·
. UOn · Qiue8 you to prejudge S()meone ·
· who has· nothing to do with your past
, experi•?CO· You could make a bed mie·

RETRIEVER .. .

740-985-4141

.·~~

,.

1 lr.-a

more attractive person.

o~o
:""" l&lt;noV." yqu're an easy mark
might trY tO·put the bite on yQu.

THAT YOU CAN'T ID4
FfiOM SOCIETYS .

•New Homes
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

cu.r R. •o· · ... - - - -

hlr"i/ll'r"'.. lr--lr-1

coUld u· naer~ .an eilteratio(lln your attl· .
tuCie In ltte ;ye&amp;r ahead, ellher by choice ·
or .circumstances. Tills pe~sonafity

t

47239 Riebel Road. Long B~uom , OH

WV11N0954

' V, A R C 0 T

' By Bo'!'k:o B . 0001 '
,
There are strong .lhdlcoll.ono that: you

change

ILfhd"'

::::

form lcur,slmple words. .

. iow·to

·. -· tJker. '
. CANCg~ (June 21·July 221- Financial

L.arJe, Btvu fmt.ell, h~ad!l on

Concrete Removal '
and Replacement ,

· .

Overheard at tonvention,
"Abn
t
fter d'.tnner
·
OS every ft
81...1~ you manage lor youreoll eouiO
has ft bappjl ending.
' speech
'· be do;'ig better than they have In a long
·
"' · Everyone· is g)Jid when - is·
11""'. tfo-or, because ol lhis, some- · r--::-::-::-:~,-.,,....._,

(740) 742-2563
$10 per·lb Cash

•

0 four
Rtorronge':
''"""words
of lila
acr&lt;trnbJild
b..

thli'lga are going well, you're apt to be a
. bit more genorous with your trtends.. This
can be good or bad, depending on how
far you go 'Nhen It comes to dealing will')

·Garages .

ROBERT
BISSEll

on her nose, inOUth.
chest &amp; paws. 45 LBs.

--.,..----'-

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Because

• Room Additions

KHKWTZFXAU."

'~i~~'S@)\4{\}A-"~~Se

$ilu~y. Moy 23. zooi.

TH"'T

Windows

• Pole Buildings

'aAE

... at the',bildge' llllila, make ~ hi~ •PAEVIOUS'SOLUTION: 'I never boUghI into lhe Idea that onlert~nors owe
. fX!Ints, especially. ~on on dt!lenae, "' l'iOffllig to their aoolence except a good pellormaneo.· ·Pat Boone
·
as' declarer ·attar 11 opponent tlaS
·
··
·
·
·

• Rooling
·Decks

25+ years experience

via
e-mail
Kumarmd @gmail.com
or

faw 666-625-0070.

Chicken &amp; Ribs BBQ
and
Ice Cream

MISSING
10 yr. old Female
Beagle/Lab mix nameu
. Black wl\"hile

Ctiebtky Qpltr~ BJfC!Nttd'!IQill qutUIIOI'e by IIIOOUI pqJ~t, pHIIOO p!VB11. .
. Eactlllller In lhf C!Jihlf ltll'lllllor 11'\011181'.
.

Today 's due Requals l

e: .

LOST

1;ss;~~~~s;~~~~~~~~

J

.....
·.r. !PI,
• .. . G

MilE W. MIRCUM.IWNER

Residents.
StopApplication
Ely And ~
Fill
Out · An
M·F 9AM·5PM. Conlacl

by Luis Campos

A. st·r·o-

• Porches • Decks • Garages·• Horse Barns • ·
&amp; Wood Siding • Roofing • Chain Link
Wood Fencing &amp; General Home Maintenance

j

CELEBRITY CIPHER

You have four potential · loser1: one
heal). one diamond and two clubs. II
-lobks-as W
.you nnd the ,heart ft~ to
· work, .However. 1~,at ca~ wait .tor· a
moment First cl\ed&lt; the polnta. There
are onty_· 1·8 mi.ssing, . B.e~8J.IEI8 e,st ·;

. ei&gt;mpanlono knOw you are an expert on

Our .

word

&amp; Kind deod1 31 Mild cheese
9 Screpod by 33 CEO aldeo

Actreu -

Hagen
51 GQ(f peg

•. I hi~~ttlf. ~"'!,~_!'P~ · 'f W)B A'P · N. D .··
, QIY•-,n:· . vw,...w,-~,p·~.•~ .. , .. ,• .....
.

.·

g;~~;~lebr;::~er, L: ::===;~~~~~~ii~~l ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Providing

ly (3 Wdl.)

49

37 Hoagi.S
39BIOQH

·- ~~l:~=::d'!':.';, BJI~; VBUKJ

J-T.

email:
lrshadlrm@aol.com '

Modi&lt;al

titudes To

Hse~

':s

W~·AT? I DON'T

RN '7P-?A To Join Our
Friendly And Dedicated
Staff. Applicant's Must
Be Dependable, Team
Players With Positive At·

TKO official

' O()enod,WestsuroJy·canr)flthiveboth .' "X.' ·e . ~X . PK ZN WKBE B SNNP ...
the diamond ~ce. ai.t ftiiart 1\fng:·Artrlcii ·
.· . , . ·
.
.,...;:
·
...-,......,--.,· 'two,,lelld your diamo'nct · ~ng1: \Yhe~ ':. X' ' H ~ A KH ,J( W W K Be B S N N P
0\Jil. ~TI~~~f..t~l
. .OUII:ti!E.~TE(:{:&gt;~
W~t~sup ~h t~e~,:Eai ·ljiutt ,. K"y N WK. X MAe K W J Z B A E . Z F K T
Wtl..L TO\&amp;.'(()IJil-0,.
' _.......11 . 1 :· ~~~~/.."'t:&gt; ..
hiv,l\lf.-king. ~P.flpi(l~. . .
.
.·
.

. T~INK TI-IAT'5
'• A:60LDEN

cations FOr A Full Time

6

36 Organ valva

•
~

· {cu KNow ·

At . 333 Page J
AVON! All. Areas! To ~uy cated
Street, Middleport, Ohio
or Sell Shirtay Spears
Is Pleased To Announce
304·675·1429
.
We • Ate Accepl~g Appli·

dancer

(hyph.)
46 Egg part
47 NFL scoreo

7 Very cheep- 20 lllglclan's

openedlhebidding.

742·2332

Help Wantocl • General

amenity
42 Tree anchor
43 Woe bit
45 Kind ol

35 Vlllege

own.

1£.!."--f

Limited Time

our areal

honey

41 ·Pork

self w~h a quiet raise to two spades,
, . . . - - - - - - - - - , · North would· havo given his own gentle
raise to three hearts. which would have
JEST TWO
1.1'1. .LETTERS II made it easy tor you to go folN'. But when
West juJnped to lhree .._des, promising
tour frumps and little e119, Nonh was not
strong enough lo raise to lour hearll.
4'ckiv. though, VQU hill! sutliclent play·
· ing Strength tO bid lour hearts Oft VOIJr

Come havett
•canned ,t or free

opponunttles In

ment

39 Hoedown

hearts. After winning trick one with your
spade ace, how would you proceed?
The bidding highlights why nowadays
jump raises are pre-emptive In competitive auctK&gt;ns.lf West had conte,nled him·

engine light ori?

employer, committed
to offering 1!11ploy-

. England

Keep track ot tho 40 hlgh-oard polnta
and you will never feel like Custer. This

I• your check
Come work for a top

another

38 Big wave

Joe !i. Lewis, a comedian and actot' who
died in 1!m , said, "I've been on such a
losing slfeak that if I had been around, 1
would have raken General Custer and
given pq!nts.•
I

liJARNEY

Hardnof Cabllleiry And furnHure

'l'otal Auto
Tran•mf••lon

36 One way or

explosive
19 Isle of-,

deal is a IJOOd example. You are in lour

740-44t-?387

·. GuHering

1t High

1 EMT

. brown

The points often
point the way

(740) 992-5009
Custom Home Building
Sreel Frame Buildings
Building. Remodeling
Geneml repair
www.bankscclb.rom

Rick Johnson-Owner

GRAND OPENING
Cha•tar Tlr•
Center .a

Pass

OpeQing lead: • 10

lnsu'"'d, Free ·
EsUmates, 20yrs Exp.

F:..ILLY "4SUREO

Pass

Pass

35 Serving
dish

••a

East

Pas$

~ss

co.

Gallipolis,OH 4563t

Pomeroy. l.lhr()

·3•

4•

Trig

function

2t Pinches ott
technique 24 VCR button
l!dc!24 Laughable · 2 Low-down 25 Slangy
27 AnllhHthe
uy
refusal
(hyph.)
lob (2wdt.) 3 uno lor a
30 Scintilla
diva
26 Number ol
4 · 'Uke ttrong
Musea
31 OccupiOs,
oniona
27
Rovoro'
pool
32 Fall mo.
5 Watch
planet
feature.
28 A law34 Grayllh-

I.

North

.......

10

DOWN

·~Nightmare"

23 Army

K 6
A 75

West

2•

Johnson's Tree
Service

740-59 1-0195

22

to t o 4 a

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: Both

WV036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

• 8 52
• K Q J 10

• QJ

Hours
7:00am ·8:00pm

Pomeroy, Ohio
Commercial •
Residential
• • Free Estimates

• Kl

4A

.· hto t0'!131l'

Dump Truck

55 Play the
17 Volceno
56 Sidellneo
fluure
cry
'18 Pub brew · 57 Came to
20 llatlery poll

South

s.-

abbr.

18 t::orthaue
loc.

.

.KJ852

tO 9 7 6
7 2
A J tO 9

• 'a a

z:o-949-2217
.
5' .J( 10'

S&amp;L
Trucking

!4 2
Eul

Weot

53 Common

15 Pulltn,asa 54 Looks!
hcae
amorously

• Q70

29625 B!llihan .Road ·
Racine; OH 45n1

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION ·

S~rvice

t4 Quite
limlllr

A 8 5

•

I

R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

0$-22-ot

• Q 43

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

"""'••'" 1 '"

�'
Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, May 22, 2009 .

1MNG

ALONG THE RivER
Always a river
Meigs County's I~
asset is its oldest, Cl

Flavors of the Week
Bricks bring speed to whole
chicken on the grill, 01
I

tm

•

• II you hiMI a question ilr a comment, wrtte: NAS;CAR This Week, c;o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC 26053

~

Clmplngv.rtd Tnlcks
•Race: Coca-Cola 600
said Kensetll.ls the new car so •Race: Carquest Auto
•Race: AAA Insurance
• Whenl: Lowe's Motor Speed- unwieldy tl1at drivers won't rea• Parts 300
·
200
Wfll, Concord, N.C.(1.5 mi.),
ly race ft until there are 10 laps
•Whenl: Lowe's Motor
•White: ll&amp;ier (Del.)
400 laps/600 miles.
to go? With a million bucks on · · Speedway, Concord, N.C. International Speedway
•When: Sunday, May 24.
the line? For three of the four
_11.5 mi.), 200 laps/300
(1.0 mi.), 200 laps/miles.
•Last year's wtnner: Kasey
segme0ts, the 21 drivers in the miles.
•When: Friday, May 29.
Kahne. Dodge.
·'
field competed as if they were
•When: Saturday, May 23. •Last year's winner:
•Qulllfrlne NCO!d: Elliott
ice skating instead of racing.
•Last yq'slllfnner: Kyle Scott Speed, Toyota.
Sadler, Ford, 193.216 mph,
Then everything changeq, Jim- · Bu~h. Toyota.
•QuaHIJ'IC NConl: David
Oct. 13, 2005.
mie Johnson crashed on the
• Q!UIIIIylng NCO!d: JimSlarr. Chevrolet, 157.5.77
• Race ~: Bob~ Lab&lt;)nte, first lap of the final segment.
mie Johnson; Chevrolet,
mph, June 2, 2005.
Pontiac, 151.952 mph, May 28, having been cuffed about as an 187.735 mph, Oct.14,
• Rice NCO!d: Mark
1995.
. indirect result of Kyle BUSch's
2005.
Martin, Ford, 120.200
•Last -k: Tony Stewart did- headlong cha.ge. Athree-wide
•Race reconl: Mark Mar· mph, June 2, 2006.
n't mind it a b~ that.his first vic- battle between Bu~h. Ryan
tiri, Ford, 155.799 mph,
•Last -k: Ron Hornatory·as a team owner -.as inan Newman and Jeff Gordon sent · . · May 25, 1996.
day Jr., in a Chevrolet, held
unofficial race. He took over
Gordon's Chevrolet bouncing off •Lillt race: Matt Kensetll, off Kyle Bu~h in a Toyola ·
what is now Stewart-Haas Rae· the -.all near the start-finish
ina Ford, captured the Dia- at Lowe's Motor SpeedlOg intile offseason. Barely a
line. Fifteen minutes after the
mond Hill 200 at Da~lng. Wfll. Even though it was
factor in the al~star spactaeu- start of the final segment, two
ton Raceway, giving him25 his first victory of the sealar's first three segments, Stew- laps had been completea. The · oareer victories in these- son, Hornaday took the .
art's Che'lrolet roared past Matt · final torrid battle -'- and tile
ries. Tire failure prevented series points lead,
Kensetl1's Ford on llle 99th of battles were only torrid In the fe Kyle Busch from having a
100 laps. 'I just got too ijght. nal segment- -.as between
shot at a fourth victory this
and Tony came on at the end,· Stewart and Ken seth.
year.

c
.~

as

i
j
.-=:.. NASCAR refuses
:.~ Mn to its drivers, a

cases.

the mcmentum

a runtler-up finIsh provded.
" WliO'I nvt:

1'he three dri¥.ers who led the
most laps In tile
AII'Star Race-.,. .
Jimmie Johnson.llyle Busch ani!: ·
Jell GordOn _; ·
. . ~ craslled In

.

' '

· ToNY STEWART ·

.• D-3 district track meet.
&amp;ePageBl

u
Jell Go111on

S

Kyle llulch

Jeff Gordon
VI. Kyle luldl

Photos by John Clar~ / NASCAR This Week

.

Gonion,~ Stewrirt bas raced 1o the Top-5 and al&amp;1ltliiP'1D finishes this season.

A~er three'relatively uneventful
segments, tensions boiled over the
Sprint AI~Star Race's final, 10-lap
shootout: Gordon took a wild ride alter getting together with Bu~h .­
"Kyle (Busch) got to the outside of
me,' Gordon recalled, "and from that
point on, I was just fighting hard. ... I
!elf li~e Kyle (Busch) probably could
have given m.e a IHtie' bit more room
and we might have been all right. But
Ithink he was a little bit surJ)rlsed
that the No. 3~ (Ryan Newman) was
outside of him, too.'

NASCAII This Week'l Monte
Dutton give• 1111 taka: 'In the In-

NASCAR TRIVIA
1. What other spilrt regularly takes

place at Dover International Speed-

New owner/driverTonyStewart gets first win of awesome season
'

.· .

By Monte Dutton

NASCARThis Week

RIO
GRANDE
Members of tlui 'Class of
2009_ at Gallia Academy
High School were .banded
not only a diploma Friday,
but also congratulations
and. advice on .living life
•
past the cllfssroom and .
PageAS .
playing field.. .
·
"Here's · my .n:~otto: Be
•Paul W. Bartee ·
there when you're supposed
·• Margie Benedum
to be there, be .there on tiine.
· • Ernestine BoStwick
and lloing what Y!&gt;\1' re sup'
posed to do," Gallipolis
:•.Ethel Belle Hossler
City
· · ·
Schools
·• Millon R. 'Mick' Massie
Superintendent Jack Payton
• David Clydl:l Sizemore · offered the 14~ graduate~ as
the commencement ceremo·
ny opened fortli~ last ~enior
class to have attended the
old Gallia A.t:il4emy . building oli · Fourth Avenue, . in
Gallipolis, ·· H·J,, ·:. . . .

.

.

PleaH IH Contract, AJ

way?
2. What is

Ooveri nickname?
3. What Is ·the name of Dover's mascot? .
. 4. Who won the firSt Cup race_after the
terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001?
5. Who was stock-car racing's most
successful car owner in ·its formative
years?
.
6. How many times has Sam Hornish
Jr. won the Indy Racing League championship?
7. When Buddy Baker won Charlotte's
National 500 In 196 7, what was his
car number?

:•rrackhoe

Eleven races into the season, Stewart ter a slow start, Newman has risen
is second in the Sprint Cup standings, to eighth place in the point stand·
but he hasn't won an official race yet. ings.
·
The Sprint All:Star Race isn't "a
For all those years at JGR, Stewart
points race."
had one crew chief, Greg Zipadelli,
He became only the second driver· now paired with Logano. [!arian
owner to win the All-Star Race. The . Grubb, formerly at Hendrick Motor·
first was Geoff Bodine in 1994.
sports, n(lw leads Stewart's teain.
For IO 'years, Stewart competed
"They'll basically have that monkey
for _Joe Gibbs Racing, where he has off their .back," said Grubb of the
been succeeded by rookie Joey team after Stewart's victory. "We
Logano. This year Stewart hired don't want to lose the monkey. We
Ryan Newman as his teammate. Af· want him to hang out with us."

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Principal ·B~e Wilson
Be~~:utiful," and Payton announ~ed the · traditiotit~l
offered his thanks·to ~du­ key awards given to ·outates • families for· the love standing seniors in ·subject
and support that· got their
PIIIH- GAHS, AJ .
ch~ldren to this point.

"'America . .the

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Meigs
~d~tes 148
• Friday CoDBllencement:'
ID
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11M • ~~~~~ lltloa Ill tile
track? Geta
lntematlonal Speec!tlay Corporation (ISC) has pannered wfth lnStadi·
umSolutions to implement a text·
message-based ~mmunication system at all of its 12 major motorsports facilities. The service debuted
· at Darlington Raceway on .M!Iy 8-9.
The text messaging system allows
fans to communicate directly with
the race track's command post if assistance is needed in deanng ·with
any special needs Inside the facility.
Texting instructions will be placed
prominently throughout each facility
via slatic signage and will be regularly broadoast through audio and video
public ann?uncements.

-

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.

Bv CHARLt;NE HOEFLICH

'Ja)SUOV&gt;j 941 S9i!V&gt;I '£
·auw Jalsuow a4J. ·~
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· To an .to ward 61t)CJ~e ..; ·
prognuns
Qf the higb temperature rn _ . ,
the gymnasi.u.m . of _Lyne · . , ... _
. . . . .. ; ·
Center at theUmverslly ()f . theJr fellow -gtaduates -r·
Rio Grande/Rio · Grande Hacke.tt w1th apoem, D!lyti'l
Community College, senior ·with a traditioiipl narrati;lr,e': .·
class representatives Kamal , ·Along . wiih selections ·
Dayal and Michael Hackett · perf11rmed . by the OA.HS
offered words of .inspiration
Madrigals; Chelsea Lemley
.
.

• Local Briefs.
SeePage AS
• GAHS gtaduates
net Scholarships. ,
:See Page AS
falls through
· floor. See Page A6

-

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them as they move-from high ·
HOEFLICHo'MYOAILVSENTINEL.COM
school into the adult world.
Hockffian compared those
POMEROY - The chal· changes to a horse race .
lenges faced · in dosing old
"Up to this point we have
doors and opening !lew ~~es been l'reparif!g for th~ r~~Ce . .·
while travehng on unfamtliar . Htgb schoolts when we get
roads was the theme of th!l the horse into the right gate,
valedictorians' speeches at and today is w"en tile gale
the Meigs High School ~ad· . flings open." She spoke of
uation program Friday mght . the expectations of Pm:'lnts·
Valedictorians ·; Amber and teachers for' the class of ·
Hockman ~d Kimi Swisher · 2009, and . her •¢onfidence .
spoke to the·l48 members of - that hard worll: by the·gradu. the 2009 grad11a,ting class ates Will pay off. ·
·
about lifestyle changes f~~Cing . "To give anything less than
Please n8 Melp, AJ
· ·.

D Section

insert

·-·~itopals
~bituaries ·

~ports

-..:,-;.

Cherlarte Hoefll~h/phototl
Above: Kimi Swisher, left, and Amber Hockman, ilaledicto·
rlans of.the Meigs .High School Class of 2009iead the pro·
cession of 148 graduates IOW!\rd the Larry R. Morrison
Auditorium. Just behind them were Jennifer Fife, left, and
Calee Reaves, class salutatorian.
Left: Noah Hajivandi brought his Class of 2009 · dog to
graduation for his fellow graduates to autograph. Here, Karri
VanReeth adds her signature as Ernie Welsh waits his turn.

B Section

.

· ~SlaTher ·

A6

i;}&amp;oo, Ohio V.Uey Publloliln&amp; Co.

:·:~Ul!l"l.

I 1 1

KEVIN KELLY

MDTNEWSOMVO~ILYTRIBUNE.COM

auC!j~:ru&lt;e fm1tl~nli -~~~~~:;!g,~~~~:~

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defense, includin~ court · cost
increases, license remstatement .fees
and a new surcharge on appearance ·
bOnds , Alge said. The state's reim,
.bursement rate for these setvices to
counties will likel)l increase froni
25 percent this fiscal year to 42 pel'- ·

and ;~ttomey Herman Carson of
Athens, who works through the
office, met with commissioners
Thursday to review a proposed contract for indigent defense setvices.
Gov. Ted Strickland's executive
budget for the FYI 0-11 biennium
contains several initiatives that
increase state funding for indigent

QBpuARIFS

• Justin time. ·

tense, winner-take-all mentality of
the Sprint All-Star.Race, what hap. pened was just&lt;par lor the course."

CONCORD, N.C."- The inevitable
finally happened.
Ever since his rookie season, 1999;
the Sprint All·Star Race has seemed
ideally suited to the driving style of
Tony Stewart. Stewart, the only driver
to date who has won championships
·· under both the former system {2002)
and the Chase_format {2005), finally
won Lowe's Motor Speedway's all·star
event in his 11th try.
·~There are a lot of races I still
hften't won,'' said Stewart, "but it's a
i'tl*'6 race to win. Nobody holds anytb'ilig back.
"This is a special race. You know it's
different. You know it's going to be
more difficult because of that. We al·
ways, in the past I0 years here, good
on long runs and always good late in
the race. This kind of format never fil
the package that we bad."
Stewart, who turned 38 on May 20,
roared to the front, passing Matt
Kenseth With less than two laps remaining in the fourth and final segment.
This year Stewart became a car
owner, acquiring a majority share in
what is now Stewart-Haas Racing.

BR,EDOMYDAJLV.SENTINEL!A)M

I

. The budget for the county's pub·
lie . defender program will · be up
frOm this .year. from $85,792 to
$102,705, bunhe county's share of'
the budget will be $59,568 , down
from $64,344 this ye,ar.
Administrative Director John
Alge;Olenn T. Jones, director of the
Athens Branch Office of the OPD, ·

v

No. 14 OFFICE DEPOT CHEVROLET

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POMEROY -Meigs County's
new contract with the Ohio Public
Defender could provide. more ser·
vices for less money. if tbe state .
budget as proposed is approved .
later this summer.

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SPRINT CuP

Hometown News for Gallia '&amp; Mei.wJ. counties

( •hiu \ alit•\ l'tdJit..,IJing ( o .

of

·. ·blinned substances, citing p!iva•. cy ooncerns and the difficulty of
,· ·policing the sport. ~AR's ~
· · sHion is that its drivers should
check with Dr. Da)'id Black, the
ruling body's substance.abuse
expert, to make sure they have
his approval.
" Meyfeld's defense is that,
when his allergies gave him serl·
.ous trouble at Richmond, he
. mixed a subslance pre~ribed
• by his doctor with over-thecounter ~ion, which he
• identified as two Clari!in-0 pills.
1&gt; NASCAR officials contend that
:. Mayfield Is lying.
" The rousing·Sp!int AI•Siar
.~ Race finish overshadowed the
· action In three mundane 5eg.
.·. • ments. The first lull-speed lead
• 'change didn't occur until the
· ; 81st ol100 laps. Then every. thing changed.
: ·1&gt; The All-Star Race winner, Tony
· Stewart, said the Lowe's Motor
: Speedway tract&lt; surface gets be~
.' teras the treck cools and grip lm. proo;es. He predicted that the
· Coc&amp;eola 600, which also erids
: ai night, willlfOduoe more action.
·..,.All-Star Weekend wasn't a
·; pleasant one ror Kyle Bu~.
· though he was second in the
Camping Wortd Truck Sertes race
·. ·and seventh in the main event.
Bu~h was involved in the crash
· · that eliminated Jeff GOrdon from
, contention and declined to com~- ment about .it afterward.
, li- Mike Skinner walked away
from a frightening crash during
' the North Carolina Eduoation
• Lotter}' 200; the Truck race held
: the niSht before·ihe Sprint AI"
. Star Race.
· · · .

.. . .
· the filial ~egment.

•

Nationwide

Sprint Cup

•

.I .

GALLIPOLIS·
Nominations are in and the'
first 15 individualsto·bedesignated "everyday hei:&lt;Jes"
by the Gallia County Chapter
o{ the American Red Cross
· have been selected. ·
· They will be n:cpgnized at .
the Everyday Heroes break·
fast on Thursday, June 18 at
7:30a.m. in the Gallia County
Senior Resource Center.
Chosen as the military
hero was veteran and Gallia
. CoUnty Veterans Funeral ·
Det~il
member Henry
·Myers , while the education
. hero is Karen Wright, retir·
in,\l teacher
at River
VaHey
Mtddle
Scl:lool..
·
. . · .;
Keith Ellioti, a former .
lieutenant with Gallipolis · ·
City Polic;e and now with ··
the State Fi're Marshal '.s ;
office, was chosen the law ·
enforcement hero. Mark
Johnson ofthe Greenfield
Township Volunteer Fire
Department is the fire hero,
and the lifesavin~ hero is
split between Galha County .
sheriff's deputies Kevin ,
Werry .and Scott Darst,'
Gallipolis volunteer fire·
fighter Brett Saxon and.
Trooper Nicholas Hoffman ·
of the State Highway PatroL
The blood drive hero is
longtime Gallipolis · blood •.
drive volunteer Ellabelle
McDoitald, and the . blood
·donor hero · is Raymond .
Weiher. Youth hero is Santa
Claus (aka Mike Polcyn), ·.
while Jessie- Payne is the .
senior citizen hero.
Alva and Bill McCoy are.
the Good Samaritan beroes;
and David West is the com·
munity hero. . · ·
Modeled on a successful ·
effort in Athens, Everyday ,
Heroes was lau·nched bf the .
local Red Cross to hail mdi- ·
viduals who have not only
done something brave or
extraordinary, but have _
made a difference in the
community.
·
The breakfast, local Red
Cross volunteer Ollie Paxton
said, ·''will honor that long. standing tradition of heroism ·.
by recognizing local individ· ·
uals whose extraordinary
· acts of courage or !Qndness ·
make them a hero.
,·
"Peilple in Gallia Count)i
make a difference. in the.
lives of others every day," ·
she continued. "They show
kindness and compassion
and give .of themselves .in
unexpected ways." .

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