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88

www.mydailysentinel .com

Thursday. July 12, 2007

Red Mosque leader
predicts 'Islamic
revolution' in Pakistan;
Musharrafvows
to crush radicals, A2

· Alzheimer's group
.holds activities, A3

•

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,) lt(I~IS•\t•l .,-,h , "\4L ...! l :!.

11{11)\\ , ,lll, t ; t .: '41 ( J-·

\ \ \ \ \ \ t m d . t t h "\' lllltH· I \ ol\1

Antidegradation application filed with OEPA by AMP-Ohio:

SPORTS
• Reds open second ha~
with loss. See P• 81

BY BEnt 5ERGENr
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

LETART FALLS ~American
Municipal Power-Ohio (AMP-Ohio) of
Columbus has filed an application for
an "antidegradation project" with the
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency
(OEPA) for operations related to its proposed coal flred ~wer plant, the
American Municipal Power Generation
Station.
The filing comes less than a month
after Gatling Ohio tiled its lll!tidegradation application with OEPA concerning
its proposed coal mine in Yellowbush
Road. Although the companies are

independent of each other, the filings lxxly, and only allow a lowering of
demonsttate the ever changing eco- water quality when it is necessary to
nomic landscape of the Great Bend SupP?fl what the EPA cans "important
SOCial and economic development.''
area
.
According to thl:: OEPA, antidegraIn regards to the AMP-Ohio ~licadalion "refers to provisions that must be lion, the ."receiving water~" IS ideofollowed before authorizing any tified ll)' the OEPA as the Ohio River. .
incteased activity on a water lxxly that
The OEPA's public notice "action
may result in a lowering of water quali- date" on the application is July 5 which
ty including an increa.le in the discharge means concerned residents have 30
of a regulated poUutant, or activities tlwt days·from that date to submit comments
may si~cantly al1er the physical or request a public hearing on the applihabitat.'
cation. All comments should be made in
The antidel!;llldation rule is required writing and sent to: Hearing Clerk,
by the Clean Water Act and federal reg- Ohio Environmental . Prolection
ulations. The antidegradation rule must Agency, P.O. Box 1049, Columbus,
protect the existing use of the water 43216-1049. For further instructions or

Page AS
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The Meigs County Community
Coalition, led by Stacy Dodson of the
Meigs County Juvenile Court, hosted a
Com(llunlty Fun Day' in Middleport'S
.General Hartinger Park on Thursday.
Swimming in the Middleport Pool and
batting practice in the batting cages
were free, and sporting tournaments
including basketball and volleyball
were organized. Free food and entertainment were also offered, including
a concert by the young "Missing in
· Affection " band and OJ Rockln'
Reggie. The Abstinence Builds
Character Program was also involved
In coordinating the activities.
Bdan J. Reed/photos

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Wilson lends
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college aid
legislation

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Detail• on Page .t.s

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'",,,"''

INDEX

.

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~ SEcnONS- 16 PAGES

IIIII II

II

.-

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to deale1!

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Calendars
Classifieds

A3

Comics
Annie's Mailbox
Editorials
Faith • Values
A6-7
Obituaries
As
B Section
Sports
Weather

As

© 2007 Ohio Valley Puhlilihing Co.

WASHINGTON - U.S.
Rep. Charlie Wil son has
voted to approve legislation
that would make the single
largest investment in·college
financial aid since the 1944
GI Bill, helping millions of
students and families pay for
college - and doing so at
no new cost to U.S. taxpayers.
The legislation, the
College Cost Reduction Act
of 2007 (HR 2669), which
the House passed by a vote
of 273-149 on Wednesday,
would boost college financial aid by about $18 billion
Please see Wilson, AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

,

HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

·

POMEROY - Everything frmrl
the effect of the drought on flower$
to Sternwheel Festival participa~
tion was discussed at th1s week's
meeting of the Pomeroy Merchants
Association.
:
It was . noted that some of thi;
flowers planted in the downtown
are being adversely affected by tlui
lack of rain, despite regular water; •
ing. Replanting of some areas w~
discussed along with purchasing a
soil mix better able to hold moisl
ture. It was noted that some of the
br9ken pj~tic flower container~ .
around ·l)lirking meters have been
removed.
John Musser announced the
Stemwheel Festival for Sept 12,
14 an 15 and sought input from the
members on a teen dance from 7 to
10 p.m. on Saturday night of the
·festival. More effective handling
of vendor parking · along Main
Street in the upper business block
during the festival was requested
by Jane Harris of Dan's who said it
adversely affects her weekend
business.
Musser said traffic through town
continues to increase, but merchants have indicated that wasn't
translating into an increase in business. The need to get more merchants involved in the association
for input on promotions was discussed.
·
Michelle Donovan of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce
office, spoke of making more
effort to get an excursion boat to
stop in Pomeroy, although she
pointed out that· boats "have to·
have more reasons than shopping
to dock here."
,
The need for expanded docking
facilities, particularly for large
boats, was mentioned by Musser
who indicated some work is being
done in that direction but acknowledged there's no time frame on
when it could happen. Another
possible historic tour by Mike
Gerlach was mentioned. ·

OBITUARIES

2006 Saturn Ion

me

Merchants discuss:;
town beautification}
upcomingfestival ;

Fun Day in the park

• Humidity helps
firefighters tame huge
cam. wildfire, but blazes
bum in other Western
states. See Page A2
• Suspect in UK terror
plot was shy,
brilliant - and teased,
teachers and fellow
students say.
See Page A2
• Holzer announces
employee of month.
See Page A3
• Be professional,
but not chummy.
See Page A3
• liny Tech to re-open
at Middleport church.
See Page AS
• Bible School fun.
See Page AS
• Top law enforcer
authorizes home security'
sy~em for deputy.
see Page A&amp;
• Meigs County Court
News. See Page A8

questions can 1-614-644-2129.
,
The OEPA has no set crileria on how
many letters/requests detennine a publie hearing on the matter. If it's delermined by the OEPA that a public hearing is necessary, the meeting woultl
consist of a question and answer period
about the application followed by for,
mal comments recorded for the record
from residents. These comments wi)J
later be transcribed into an official transcript with the OEPA addressing
comments in writing at a later dale as
part of the review process.
For those wishing to be on t1x1
PIHII 1H AM~. AS
::

Pool fundraiser
Beth Gloeckner of
Beth's Place in
Middleport presented a
$1,300 donation to
Middleport Pool
Manager Dale Riffle to
assist with pool operations for the remainder
of the season.
Gloeckner organized a
July 4 benefit motorcycle poker run and hosted a party afterward s.
Local businesses
donated items for auction and the popular
local band, Strange
Kandy, performed a
free concert following
the run. Band
Members Jenny Walker
and Mark Ward, who
donated their performance fee s to benem
the pool , are also pictured.
Brlan J. Reed/ photo
----------------------~··-----

•

�\

'

The Daily Sentinel

Pag~A2:

NATION •

Friday, July 13. 2007

Suspect in UK terror plot
was shy, brilliant--- and
teased, teachers and
.· fellow students say

•

BY KHAUD TANVEER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAST!
ABDULLAH,
Pakistan - Officials let a
jailed cleric attend the burial of his slain brother
Thursday, and he turned 'the
funeral oration into a fiery
denurtciation of the government for the bloody siege at ·
Islamabad's Red Mosque
and called for an "Islamic
revolution."
Hours later, Pakistani .
President Pervez Musharraf
went on national television
to vow that his government
will crush extremists across
the country and move
strongly against religious
schools like those at the Red
Mosque that breed them.
Musharraf also said security forces along the border
with Afghanistan will get
tanks and other modern
weapons soon to bolster the
campaign against militants.
The frontier region is a
haven for al-Qaida and
Taliban, and the U.S. has
been pushing Pakistan . to
root them out.
"Terrorism and extremism has not ended in
Pakistan," Musharraf said.
"But it is our resolve that we
will eliminate extremism
and terrorism where.ver it
exists. Extremism and terrorism will be defeated in
every corner of the country."

In apparent revenge for
the eight-day battle at the
Red Mosque that left 108
people dead, a suicide
bomber attacked a government office near the Af$han
border Thursday and k1lled
two officials. Thousands of
tribesmen,
meanwhile,
angrily mourned three mili• tants killed at the mosque.
The army's a&amp;sault on the
Red Mosque militants has
given hard-liners a new rallying cry and sparked calls
from al-Qaida and Taliban
Jea!)ers for revenge auacks.
But the crackdown also has
raised Musharraf's standing
among moderate Pakistanis
· worried about extremism in
their nation.
Musharraf urged those in
charge of madrassas, or
Islamic religious schools, to
eradicate hatred and violence from the minds of

BY MUNEEZA NAQVI
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

DAVANGERE, India Kafeel Ahmed didn't seem
the least bi.t an~ry as a
young eng•neermg student.
Instead, according to
former teachers and students, the 28-year-old
Indian engineer - who
today is in a Scottish hospital with cdtical burns
after ramming a Jeep into
the Glasgow airport was a brilliant but shy
young man who. could be
~~ced to tears by teas-,

I4P photo

Supporters of Islamic militants who were killed by government forces during an operation
against Islamabad's Red mosque, pray for them in Peshawar, Pakistan, Thursday. The cap.
tured chief cleric of the Red Mosque was allowed to lead funeral prayers for his slain broth:
er Thursday, and forecast that the death of the mosque's-militant defenders would push
Pakistan toward an "Islamic revolution."
their students.
"We will never all.fw any
madrassa or mosque to be
misused like the Red
Mosque or the . Jarnia
Hafsa," he said, referring to
the Islamabad mosque's
school for women.
The president promised
five years ago to regulate
Pakistan's thousands of religious schools, but concern
had only grown that some
are being used as sanctuaries or training sites for
·
extremists.
Army commandos captured the Red Mosque in a
35-hour battle that ended
WednesdaY.. Among .the 85
people k1lled during the
final assault was cleric
Abdul Rashid Ghazi, who
led the mosque's increasingly violent vi¥ilante antivice campaign m the capital.
Ghazi's brother, chief
cleric Maulana Abdul Aziz,
was arrested last week
while trying to slip out of
the mosque disguised as a
women. He was allowed to
attend Ghazi 's burial at his
ancestral village in Punjab
province Thursday, a tradi-

tiona! practice for Pakistani
prisoners.
"Whatever happened in
the past days is not hidden
from anyone. God willing,
Pakistan will have im
Islamic revolution soon,"
Aziz said before leading
prayers attended by about
3,000 people. "There are
many Ghazis living to be
martyred."
Ghazi's wooden coffin
was surrounded by hundreds of mourners, many
with tears in their eyes, as 11
was carried to a madrassa
for burial. One man broke a
small ~lass window on the
coffin s cover through
which a deceased's face can
be viewed.
ln Islamabad, crews put
the remains of dozens of
slain militants into temporary graves, while the army
took journalists to the
mosque complex to show
off weapons amassed by the
extremists
and
the
makeshift bunkers and other
fortifications erected at the
holy site.
Concrete and white plaster walls were pocked by
gunfire and interiors were

scorched.
Chunks
of
masonry had been tom from
the mosque's two white
minarets, and daylight
shone through hundreds of
bullet holes in the roof.
According to official
reports, I 08 people died in
eight days of fighting
around the rnos~ue. The
government hasn t given
precise figures, but says
most of the dead were
armed extremists.
Some opposition figures
claim the death toll was
higher, but none has offered
any evidence. Qafi Hussain
Ahmed, president of the sixparty opposition United
Action Forum, charged at a·
news conference that
between 400 to 1,000 peo·
pie were'killed.
In the eastern city of
Lahore, prayers . were
offered for Ghazi by more
than 2,000 lawyers and
opposition activists who
hold weekly protests against
Musharraf.
Many of the protesters
chanted "Go, Musharraf,
go" and "Musharraf is a
dog."

Humidity helps firefighters tame huge Cali£
wildfire, but blazes·burn ~n other Western states
BY SllDHIN THANAWALA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

FRESNO, Calif. - After
a week of battling high temperatures, gusting winds and
lightning, firefighters caught
enough of a break from a
storm system to tame
California's largest wildfire.
The blaze in California's
Inyo National Forest was in
"mop-up mpde" after blackening nearly 55 square
miles, and officials there
were sending the fire crews
to help out elsewhere, fire
information officer Jim
Wilkins said.
Wildfires were still burning elsewhere in California
and II other western states
on Thursday, according to
the National Interagency
Coordination Center.
Five of the top priority
wildfires were in Utah,
where crews are fighting the
biggest blaze in state history,
which had spread across 514
square miles by Wednesday.
authorities said. The fire
about 120 miles south of
Salt Lake City was 30 percent contained, officials
said. National Weather
Serv'ice forecasters said they
expected more high winds
Thursday, which could hamper containment efforts.
In southeastern Utah, the
nation 's top-priority fire
burned 3 square miles near
gas wells and within a halfmile of one of Utah 's deepest coal mines. Officials sa1d
it was about 50 percent contained Wednesday night. .
In Arizonl\. a fire that had
burned about II square
miles and threatened buildings at the Kitt Peak
National Observatory near
Tucson was,80 percent contained Thursday, and the
telescope complh was

expected to reopen for scientific observations Friday.
Nevada's largest blaze near the Idaho line - had
grown to about 128 ·square
miles Thursday and was 70
percent contained, Elko
Interagency Dispatch Center
Manager Bill Roach said.
In southern Idaho, more
thap 230 firefighters had an
81-square-mi]e fire about 40
percent contained.
Crews in South Dakota

The Daily Sentinel

w~re hoping cool
and and 90 percent containment
cloudy weather would help on a wildfire further north in
them battle .a blaze that Okanogan County.
killed one homeowner and
destroyed 30 houses. The t More record heat was
blaze had covered more than forecast in the Northwest,
15 square miles and was 40 adding to the problems
percent
contained faced by crews battling the
Wednesday.
fires in Washington. High
In Washington, authorities temperatures up to 107
said they had I00 percent
containment on two wild- degrees were forecast for
fires near Wenatchee, about Thursday and Friday in
100 miles east of Seattle, south-central Washington.

Ahmed was painfully
nervous during his first
month at the University
Brahmappa Devendrappa
Tavanappanavar College
of Engineering, said K.V.
Arun, who studied at the
school with Ahmed and
now teaches there.
The first weeks of
school are a time when
many Indian college · students face hazing, known
here as "ragging." In some
schools the hazing can be'
brutal, ranging from physical assaults to sexual
abuse, but there was nothing like that in this south
Indian town.
"The ragging here is not
yery serioys ... mostly askmg new students to smg or
dance. But he was always
very nervous durin$ that
time and once or tw1ce he
even started crying," said
Arun. "But," Arun added,
"no one can deny that he
)vas brilliant."
·
Ahmed's college record
shows he ranked fifth in a
graduatinl! class of nearly
400, earmng a degree in
mechanical engineering in
2000.
In most ways, though,
he wasn't memorable.
"He was .very quiet and
didn't ·really mingle much
with students or teachers
outside the classroom,"
said D. Abdul Budan, head
of the school's mechanical
engineering department.
"He was a simple and
well-behaved boy ... really
there were no signs that he
may tum to terror," said
P.M. Prabhuswamy, who
taught Ahmed in the ·second of his four years at
this tree-lined campus.
He seemed innocuous,
and the photograph on his
college application shows
a serious, bespectacled
young man just shy of his
18th birthday.
·
Ahmed 's religious views
may have turned radical
later, but people saw no
sign of it here.
"I didn't even realize he
was Muslim initially ...
only later, when I learned

•

•

his name, I found out that
he
was
Muslim," .
'Prabhuswamy added.
·
British prosecutors say ·_
Ahmed is suspected of
crashing a Jeep Cherokee
loade(j with gas cani·sters
and gasoli!le into · the
Glasgow airport June 30
- a day after police founo;l
two unexploded car bombs ,
in London. Ahmed set ·
himself on fire after crash-· '
ing into the airport. No
one else was badly
injured.
His alleged accomplice
in
the
Jeep,
Bilal ,:
Abdullah, is a 27-year-old ·
doctor born in Britain and .
raised in Iraq. They are .
alleged to have carried out . ;
the attempted .bombings in .
London before returning .
to Scotland where
Abdullah worked - and
attacking the airport.
Abdullah re"lains the '
only person charged :
among suspects detained : .
in the failed attacks in .
London and Glasgow,
accused by prosecutors of
conspiring to set off ,
explosions. Eight people ,
were detained immediatl:- ·:
ly after the botched ··
attacks; one· of them, the
only woman, was freed on
Thursday.
Kafeel's brother, Sabeel
Ahmed, 26, a doctor, was .
arrested in Liverpool and ,·
is being ques'tioned by ·
police. A third Indian,
Muhammad Haneef, was ··
arrested in Australia on ·~
July 2 as he was boarding .;
a flight to India. He is a ~
distant cousip of the ...
Ahmed brothers.
·
Kafeel
and
Sabeel
Ahmed were raised in a
cosmopolitan and moder&amp;tely religious family, but
after the brothers moved
to Britain to study they :~
stopped going to their ::
mosque ·::
neighborhood
during visits home, local :
religious leaders said.
:

• No OWl-

Community Calendar
Public meetings

'•

BYTHEBEND

Friday, July 13
POMEROY
-Meigs
County Commissioners, I
p.m., instead of Thursday.
Tuesday, July 16
RUTLAND -. Rutland
Villa~e Council regularmeetmg, 7 p.m., council
chambers.

Clubs and
organizations
Friday, July 13
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club
members to meet at 9:25
a.m. at Twin Oaks to carpool for' a trip to Lily fest.
· Saturday, July 14
I'IOMEROY - Shade
River Coon Club to meet at
7 p.m. at the fairgrounds .
MIDDLEPORT- Bethel
62,
Middleport,
International Order of Job's
Daughters, will have its
semi-annual installation of
officers, 6 p.m. at the
Middleiport
Masonic
Temle. Honored Queenelect Deidra Peters and her
officers will be installed as
well as. the newly apipointed council members. The
installation is open to ·the
public.
SALEM CENTER Star Grange #778 and. Star
·Junior Grange #878 meet
with a potluck supper at
6:30 p.m., followed by
meeting at 7:30p.m. Racine
Grange will visit.
Saturday, July 14
RACINE
- Meigs
Citizens Action Now, regular . meeting, 4:30 p.m.,
Racine LibtBJI}', call 9492175 for more information.
RACINE - Scottish Rite
Valley of Columbus and
Pomeroy/Racine Masonic
Lodge fourth annual community picnic, with yard
sale, at the lodge. Picnic
will begin at noon.
Children's activities · to

Friday, July 13,

.,

2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

include Castle Moon Walk Bible school will be held at
and other games. Free to the the St. Paul Methodist
public .• Guest speakers. All Church in Tuppers Plains
mterested in the Scottish July 16 to 19, with sessions
Rite or the Masonic Lodge 6 to 8:30 p.m. each day.
and the public invited.
Theme will be Avalanche
Ranch. Children kinderMonday, July 16
garten through sixth grade
MIDDLEPORT
are invited. On Tuesday a
Special
meeting
of horse and cart will be there
Middleport Lodge #363 , to provide rides for -the chilF&amp;AM, 7:30p.m., for work dren.
in Fellowcraft degree and
POMEROY - · Hysell
examination
returns . Run Community to host
Refreshments.
Avalanche Ranch vacation
Bible school , July 16-20,
Tuesday, July 17
classes, 6 to 8:30 p.m. All
CHESTER
- Past children welcome. For more
Councilors Club, Chester information call 742-3171
Council 323, DofA, 6:30 or 742-3153.
·p.m. Masonic hall.
PQ~ROY
-Bible
school wi II be held at the
Rocksprings
United
Methodist
church, ·
Friday, July 13
l~omeroy, July 16-20, 6 to
POMEROY - Acommu: 8.15 p.m. Monday through
nity dinner will be held T~ursday, 6 to 9 p.m.
. from 4:30 to. 6 p.m. at the Fnday. Theme~ Avalanch
Pomeroy United Method~YRanch.
Kmdergarten
Church. A chicken dinn{; throu~h teens clas~e. Fnday
will be served. The public is hay nde ato the fmrgrounds
invited .
where there wtll be a horse
MIDDLEPORT _ . First show for the children.
Church,
Presbyterian
Sunday, July 22
Middleport, Bible School.
RACINE
Racine
July 13, to 8 p.m. and July
United
Methodist
Church
14, 9 a.m. to I p.ITJ.
will observe friends and
LONG BOTTOM
Gospel sing at the Faith Full family day, II a.m. with an
Gospel Church, S.R. 124, outdoor worship service at
~ng Bottom, 7 p.m. featur- the picnic shelter behind the
mg ~ontemporary Christian church. Dress 1s casual.
tuUSIC
by
"Portal." Take a lawn chair. Meat and
drinks provided, take side
Refreshments.
dishes and dessens to share.
Water slide for kids of all
.
Saturday, July 14
ages,
2 to 5 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT
- A
benefit gospel sing will be
held at the Old Bethel
Freewill Baptist Church on
Route 7 at 6 p.m. Singers
Monday, July 16
will be the Grimm Family,
REEDSVILLE
Priscilla Doddrill and Ann Eastern youth football
Sayre, Melissa Jackson, signups will be held July 16
Thurman and Annette and 18,6 to 7:30 p.m. at
Holliday, and Brian and eastern High School footFamily
Connection. ball field. For more inforProcr.eds will go for the fall mation call 740-696-1245,
harvest in October. Ralph leave message.
Butcher is pastor. For more
information call 985-3495,
Monday, July 23
RACINE - " Southern
Monday, July 16
football camp, July 23- 27,
TUPPERS PLAINS
for graes 7 to 12,6 to 9 p.fll.

Church events

Youth events

Alzheimer's group holds activities

""*" •FaE S11uP Scaw1rt

tiE-nllll~

fiii!Elldnicll Q.lpp;ri

""'
PageA3

lill . . . .l

Be professional, but not chummy
8r KAntY

by your desk; it's OK to say in response to "Hurt Father
hello, but you should · be in Indiana,"· whose daughbusy, signifying that you ters wanted to treat Mom to
Dear Annie: I have don't have time to chat. dinner to celebrate her
worked for "Tim" for nearly There is no need to be chum- retirement , but . expected
20 years. During all that my, and it is hardly rude to Dad to pay his own way. 1
time, he has been happily be doing your work when can't fathom inviting either
of my parents to dinner and
married to "Patty," and they you're on company time.
have raised three sons. I've
Dear Annie: My husband expecting one of them to
met Patty on many occa- and I will soon be celebrat- pay. If a child can't afford to"
sions and found her to be ing our fourth anniversary. pay for both parents, maybe &gt;
pleasant, wltiy, friendly and From the day we were mar- they should rethink the gift ·
a devoted wife-and mother. ried. we have been asked by and opt tor a bouquet or--.
Seven months ago, Tim numj!rous acquaintances flowers or a gift card for ·
found out that Patty has been when we plan to have chi!- Mom.
.
having an affair for several dren, We used to brush off
I know how hard my _Dad
years with a married man. these awkward questions , worked and would never
Tim and his family have because
I believe 11 is inach.
1m to continually
been devastated by these Propnate to share Wl.th ot _ expect
coug h up money for outmgs.
·
·
p
·
ded
ers
our
personal
situation.
·
reveIatmns. atty en
her
f
•·
I have footed the bill tor ··
affair, but has continued to
A ter multiple miscar- both parents on Mother's .
"date" men she meets riages, we recently learned 0
d F h ,
.
Sh
we mos
. ·t likely will never be ay an
at er s Day and '
I
on me. e says she's· J. ust able to have chl'ldren of' our many oth er t'lmes. -r•oo many .· ·
&lt;.
.nends with them. Tim and own. We are sick of being fathers get the short end of'
Patty are currently working
uestioned by ceopJe we the St.IC k• an d 1 th.tn k. h.e'S "
through the divorce process. qhardly know w o, assume r1'ght t0 1·ee 1 s1·1g1He d. Everyone in our office we are too selfish to have Lo ve B nth p arcn ts ·'" '
knof;s about Tim's marital h'ld
Of
h
Chula Vista, Calif.
problems. Here is our dilem- c 1 ren. ten, t ese peop1e
Dear Chula Vista : We ·
rna: Patty comes into our try to convince us we are
wasting our lives by not think it's a loving gesture for· ·
office two or three times a joining the parenthood club. ch'ld
· parents · ·
I ren to treat thetr
month to see Tim, and she 1. s How should we respond to on th ese occastons.
·
but ,·
friendly and chatty to all of people who are too insensi- when ktds treat one parent _us. I do like Patty, but I find live 10 consider the personal d1ffer~ntly than the other: ·
her behavior deplorable. · situations of others? And there IS usually a reason. We
When I hear her VOice in the since when is it a crime not · ·hope "Hurt Father" linds out ·
hallway outside my office, I to have children?
what it is.
quickly pretend I am on the Childless Not by Choice In
Annie's Mailbox is writphone so I can just wave Minnesota
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
without making small talk.
Dear Minnesota: Whim Marcy Sugar, lougtime ediPatty's personal life is someone asks when you are tors ofthe Atm Latlders colnone of my business, but I going to have children, the umn. Please e-mail your
cannot bring myself to act as polite shut-down is, "I can't questions to allltiesmailif I am not offended by her 1magine why you need to box@comcast.llet, or write
behavior. Is there a way to know such personal infor- to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
brush her off without being mation." A few years ago, Box 1/8190, Chicago, JL
totally rude? - Not My we asked our readers to 606JJ. To fiud out more
Style
· '
come up with responses, and about Auuie 's Mailbox, a11d
Dear Not My Style: Treat they ~ertainly complied. Our read features by other
Patty in a professional man- favonte was the woman who Creators Syndicate writers
ner, as befits your status as sliid, "We'd never do that. and cartoonist$, visit the
an employee of her bus- We're vegetarians!"
Creators Syndicate Web
band's company. If she stops
Dear Annie: I had to write page at www.creators.com.
MITCHElL
AND MARCY SliGAR

Holzer announces employee of month
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Home Health Services
announces their June spotlight employee of the month,
Jean Petrie, a home health
aide for Holzer Hospice.
·
Born in Gallipolis, and a
1976 graduate from Nor(h
Gallia High School, Petrie ·
joined Holzer Hospice in
· 1997.
Prior to joining
Hospice,
Petrie
was ·
employed by a local home
health agency where she
obtained her cenification as
a home health aide.
Currently, she · resides in
Vinton with husband, Bill,
and daughter, Andrea, and
has two other children, Aavon
and Bmd, and four grandchildren, Hayley, Sammy, Ben
and Brady. She is a member
of the Fellowship Chapel
Church in Vinton, Ohio. Her
Jean Petrie
hobbies include panicipating
in church activities, sP.Cnding Meigs and surrounding call locally at (740) 446time with her fam1ly and counties. For more informa- 5074 or toll free at 1-800playing in Fantasy Football tion about Holzer Hospice, 500-4850.
Leagues. ·
When asked what she likes
best about working at Holzer
Hospice, Petrie said, "The
wonderful people I work
with, and having the opportunity to impact the lives of
the patients we serve. 1serve
in a compassionate and loving atmosphere."
Holzer Hospice cares for
patients with a life-limiting
illness in Gallia, Jackson,

Tile Oraeemen
Southern Gospel Quartet

Submitted photo

ey M0,ms and Dads, Grandmas and Grandpas and Aunts and Uncles... .
.•-. In the Daily Sentinel

Among th~ many activities of the Partner's in Care Alzheimer's group at the Meigs Senior
Cen~er thts w~ek has been pickle making. Here Doris Eastman, Pauline Hysell and Louise
Hamson, asststed by Kathy McDaniel, program coordinator, work on the project.·There are
still openings in the Partners in Care program. For more information call the Senior Citizens
Center at 992-2161.
.
·

•
•

"•

~

ASpecial supplement to highlight babies,
Ages newborn to four years old.
•

r--------~-------------,

I Baby's Name
I
·

Your Baby's
Age
Parents Names Here

Baby Edition
to be published
Friday, July 27
•

1
1 Simply send your baby's

_
photograph along with the coupon
I to the leftllith your payment of
$10, and we'll do the rest

IAge
I Parents
I

I
I

I Address
1Phone
I
·
I Address will

I
II
1

Mail or deliver to:
BABIES! The Daily Sentinel.
Box 729, Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Deadline for submission,
20

Ill Court St Pomeroy, OH

•

•

•

Morris (lead);
W~. Ml

OH (baritone);

N Kitchen, Gra=tenor);
Rick PoBng, BarbOursville, WV (pianist, manager)

The Daily
L----------------------J Sentinel
not be published

Bob Wintz, Ona, wv (bassh

IN CONCERT
Date fuly 15, 2007
11me 10:30 AM
Place Cheshire Baptist Church
with Pastor Steve littte

�\

'

The Daily Sentinel

Pag~A2:

NATION •

Friday, July 13. 2007

Suspect in UK terror plot
was shy, brilliant--- and
teased, teachers and
.· fellow students say

•

BY KHAUD TANVEER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAST!
ABDULLAH,
Pakistan - Officials let a
jailed cleric attend the burial of his slain brother
Thursday, and he turned 'the
funeral oration into a fiery
denurtciation of the government for the bloody siege at ·
Islamabad's Red Mosque
and called for an "Islamic
revolution."
Hours later, Pakistani .
President Pervez Musharraf
went on national television
to vow that his government
will crush extremists across
the country and move
strongly against religious
schools like those at the Red
Mosque that breed them.
Musharraf also said security forces along the border
with Afghanistan will get
tanks and other modern
weapons soon to bolster the
campaign against militants.
The frontier region is a
haven for al-Qaida and
Taliban, and the U.S. has
been pushing Pakistan . to
root them out.
"Terrorism and extremism has not ended in
Pakistan," Musharraf said.
"But it is our resolve that we
will eliminate extremism
and terrorism where.ver it
exists. Extremism and terrorism will be defeated in
every corner of the country."

In apparent revenge for
the eight-day battle at the
Red Mosque that left 108
people dead, a suicide
bomber attacked a government office near the Af$han
border Thursday and k1lled
two officials. Thousands of
tribesmen,
meanwhile,
angrily mourned three mili• tants killed at the mosque.
The army's a&amp;sault on the
Red Mosque militants has
given hard-liners a new rallying cry and sparked calls
from al-Qaida and Taliban
Jea!)ers for revenge auacks.
But the crackdown also has
raised Musharraf's standing
among moderate Pakistanis
· worried about extremism in
their nation.
Musharraf urged those in
charge of madrassas, or
Islamic religious schools, to
eradicate hatred and violence from the minds of

BY MUNEEZA NAQVI
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

DAVANGERE, India Kafeel Ahmed didn't seem
the least bi.t an~ry as a
young eng•neermg student.
Instead, according to
former teachers and students, the 28-year-old
Indian engineer - who
today is in a Scottish hospital with cdtical burns
after ramming a Jeep into
the Glasgow airport was a brilliant but shy
young man who. could be
~~ced to tears by teas-,

I4P photo

Supporters of Islamic militants who were killed by government forces during an operation
against Islamabad's Red mosque, pray for them in Peshawar, Pakistan, Thursday. The cap.
tured chief cleric of the Red Mosque was allowed to lead funeral prayers for his slain broth:
er Thursday, and forecast that the death of the mosque's-militant defenders would push
Pakistan toward an "Islamic revolution."
their students.
"We will never all.fw any
madrassa or mosque to be
misused like the Red
Mosque or the . Jarnia
Hafsa," he said, referring to
the Islamabad mosque's
school for women.
The president promised
five years ago to regulate
Pakistan's thousands of religious schools, but concern
had only grown that some
are being used as sanctuaries or training sites for
·
extremists.
Army commandos captured the Red Mosque in a
35-hour battle that ended
WednesdaY.. Among .the 85
people k1lled during the
final assault was cleric
Abdul Rashid Ghazi, who
led the mosque's increasingly violent vi¥ilante antivice campaign m the capital.
Ghazi's brother, chief
cleric Maulana Abdul Aziz,
was arrested last week
while trying to slip out of
the mosque disguised as a
women. He was allowed to
attend Ghazi 's burial at his
ancestral village in Punjab
province Thursday, a tradi-

tiona! practice for Pakistani
prisoners.
"Whatever happened in
the past days is not hidden
from anyone. God willing,
Pakistan will have im
Islamic revolution soon,"
Aziz said before leading
prayers attended by about
3,000 people. "There are
many Ghazis living to be
martyred."
Ghazi's wooden coffin
was surrounded by hundreds of mourners, many
with tears in their eyes, as 11
was carried to a madrassa
for burial. One man broke a
small ~lass window on the
coffin s cover through
which a deceased's face can
be viewed.
ln Islamabad, crews put
the remains of dozens of
slain militants into temporary graves, while the army
took journalists to the
mosque complex to show
off weapons amassed by the
extremists
and
the
makeshift bunkers and other
fortifications erected at the
holy site.
Concrete and white plaster walls were pocked by
gunfire and interiors were

scorched.
Chunks
of
masonry had been tom from
the mosque's two white
minarets, and daylight
shone through hundreds of
bullet holes in the roof.
According to official
reports, I 08 people died in
eight days of fighting
around the rnos~ue. The
government hasn t given
precise figures, but says
most of the dead were
armed extremists.
Some opposition figures
claim the death toll was
higher, but none has offered
any evidence. Qafi Hussain
Ahmed, president of the sixparty opposition United
Action Forum, charged at a·
news conference that
between 400 to 1,000 peo·
pie were'killed.
In the eastern city of
Lahore, prayers . were
offered for Ghazi by more
than 2,000 lawyers and
opposition activists who
hold weekly protests against
Musharraf.
Many of the protesters
chanted "Go, Musharraf,
go" and "Musharraf is a
dog."

Humidity helps firefighters tame huge Cali£
wildfire, but blazes·burn ~n other Western states
BY SllDHIN THANAWALA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

FRESNO, Calif. - After
a week of battling high temperatures, gusting winds and
lightning, firefighters caught
enough of a break from a
storm system to tame
California's largest wildfire.
The blaze in California's
Inyo National Forest was in
"mop-up mpde" after blackening nearly 55 square
miles, and officials there
were sending the fire crews
to help out elsewhere, fire
information officer Jim
Wilkins said.
Wildfires were still burning elsewhere in California
and II other western states
on Thursday, according to
the National Interagency
Coordination Center.
Five of the top priority
wildfires were in Utah,
where crews are fighting the
biggest blaze in state history,
which had spread across 514
square miles by Wednesday.
authorities said. The fire
about 120 miles south of
Salt Lake City was 30 percent contained, officials
said. National Weather
Serv'ice forecasters said they
expected more high winds
Thursday, which could hamper containment efforts.
In southeastern Utah, the
nation 's top-priority fire
burned 3 square miles near
gas wells and within a halfmile of one of Utah 's deepest coal mines. Officials sa1d
it was about 50 percent contained Wednesday night. .
In Arizonl\. a fire that had
burned about II square
miles and threatened buildings at the Kitt Peak
National Observatory near
Tucson was,80 percent contained Thursday, and the
telescope complh was

expected to reopen for scientific observations Friday.
Nevada's largest blaze near the Idaho line - had
grown to about 128 ·square
miles Thursday and was 70
percent contained, Elko
Interagency Dispatch Center
Manager Bill Roach said.
In southern Idaho, more
thap 230 firefighters had an
81-square-mi]e fire about 40
percent contained.
Crews in South Dakota

The Daily Sentinel

w~re hoping cool
and and 90 percent containment
cloudy weather would help on a wildfire further north in
them battle .a blaze that Okanogan County.
killed one homeowner and
destroyed 30 houses. The t More record heat was
blaze had covered more than forecast in the Northwest,
15 square miles and was 40 adding to the problems
percent
contained faced by crews battling the
Wednesday.
fires in Washington. High
In Washington, authorities temperatures up to 107
said they had I00 percent
containment on two wild- degrees were forecast for
fires near Wenatchee, about Thursday and Friday in
100 miles east of Seattle, south-central Washington.

Ahmed was painfully
nervous during his first
month at the University
Brahmappa Devendrappa
Tavanappanavar College
of Engineering, said K.V.
Arun, who studied at the
school with Ahmed and
now teaches there.
The first weeks of
school are a time when
many Indian college · students face hazing, known
here as "ragging." In some
schools the hazing can be'
brutal, ranging from physical assaults to sexual
abuse, but there was nothing like that in this south
Indian town.
"The ragging here is not
yery serioys ... mostly askmg new students to smg or
dance. But he was always
very nervous durin$ that
time and once or tw1ce he
even started crying," said
Arun. "But," Arun added,
"no one can deny that he
)vas brilliant."
·
Ahmed's college record
shows he ranked fifth in a
graduatinl! class of nearly
400, earmng a degree in
mechanical engineering in
2000.
In most ways, though,
he wasn't memorable.
"He was .very quiet and
didn't ·really mingle much
with students or teachers
outside the classroom,"
said D. Abdul Budan, head
of the school's mechanical
engineering department.
"He was a simple and
well-behaved boy ... really
there were no signs that he
may tum to terror," said
P.M. Prabhuswamy, who
taught Ahmed in the ·second of his four years at
this tree-lined campus.
He seemed innocuous,
and the photograph on his
college application shows
a serious, bespectacled
young man just shy of his
18th birthday.
·
Ahmed 's religious views
may have turned radical
later, but people saw no
sign of it here.
"I didn't even realize he
was Muslim initially ...
only later, when I learned

•

•

his name, I found out that
he
was
Muslim," .
'Prabhuswamy added.
·
British prosecutors say ·_
Ahmed is suspected of
crashing a Jeep Cherokee
loade(j with gas cani·sters
and gasoli!le into · the
Glasgow airport June 30
- a day after police founo;l
two unexploded car bombs ,
in London. Ahmed set ·
himself on fire after crash-· '
ing into the airport. No
one else was badly
injured.
His alleged accomplice
in
the
Jeep,
Bilal ,:
Abdullah, is a 27-year-old ·
doctor born in Britain and .
raised in Iraq. They are .
alleged to have carried out . ;
the attempted .bombings in .
London before returning .
to Scotland where
Abdullah worked - and
attacking the airport.
Abdullah re"lains the '
only person charged :
among suspects detained : .
in the failed attacks in .
London and Glasgow,
accused by prosecutors of
conspiring to set off ,
explosions. Eight people ,
were detained immediatl:- ·:
ly after the botched ··
attacks; one· of them, the
only woman, was freed on
Thursday.
Kafeel's brother, Sabeel
Ahmed, 26, a doctor, was .
arrested in Liverpool and ,·
is being ques'tioned by ·
police. A third Indian,
Muhammad Haneef, was ··
arrested in Australia on ·~
July 2 as he was boarding .;
a flight to India. He is a ~
distant cousip of the ...
Ahmed brothers.
·
Kafeel
and
Sabeel
Ahmed were raised in a
cosmopolitan and moder&amp;tely religious family, but
after the brothers moved
to Britain to study they :~
stopped going to their ::
mosque ·::
neighborhood
during visits home, local :
religious leaders said.
:

• No OWl-

Community Calendar
Public meetings

'•

BYTHEBEND

Friday, July 13
POMEROY
-Meigs
County Commissioners, I
p.m., instead of Thursday.
Tuesday, July 16
RUTLAND -. Rutland
Villa~e Council regularmeetmg, 7 p.m., council
chambers.

Clubs and
organizations
Friday, July 13
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club
members to meet at 9:25
a.m. at Twin Oaks to carpool for' a trip to Lily fest.
· Saturday, July 14
I'IOMEROY - Shade
River Coon Club to meet at
7 p.m. at the fairgrounds .
MIDDLEPORT- Bethel
62,
Middleport,
International Order of Job's
Daughters, will have its
semi-annual installation of
officers, 6 p.m. at the
Middleiport
Masonic
Temle. Honored Queenelect Deidra Peters and her
officers will be installed as
well as. the newly apipointed council members. The
installation is open to ·the
public.
SALEM CENTER Star Grange #778 and. Star
·Junior Grange #878 meet
with a potluck supper at
6:30 p.m., followed by
meeting at 7:30p.m. Racine
Grange will visit.
Saturday, July 14
RACINE
- Meigs
Citizens Action Now, regular . meeting, 4:30 p.m.,
Racine LibtBJI}', call 9492175 for more information.
RACINE - Scottish Rite
Valley of Columbus and
Pomeroy/Racine Masonic
Lodge fourth annual community picnic, with yard
sale, at the lodge. Picnic
will begin at noon.
Children's activities · to

Friday, July 13,

.,

2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

include Castle Moon Walk Bible school will be held at
and other games. Free to the the St. Paul Methodist
public .• Guest speakers. All Church in Tuppers Plains
mterested in the Scottish July 16 to 19, with sessions
Rite or the Masonic Lodge 6 to 8:30 p.m. each day.
and the public invited.
Theme will be Avalanche
Ranch. Children kinderMonday, July 16
garten through sixth grade
MIDDLEPORT
are invited. On Tuesday a
Special
meeting
of horse and cart will be there
Middleport Lodge #363 , to provide rides for -the chilF&amp;AM, 7:30p.m., for work dren.
in Fellowcraft degree and
POMEROY - · Hysell
examination
returns . Run Community to host
Refreshments.
Avalanche Ranch vacation
Bible school , July 16-20,
Tuesday, July 17
classes, 6 to 8:30 p.m. All
CHESTER
- Past children welcome. For more
Councilors Club, Chester information call 742-3171
Council 323, DofA, 6:30 or 742-3153.
·p.m. Masonic hall.
PQ~ROY
-Bible
school wi II be held at the
Rocksprings
United
Methodist
church, ·
Friday, July 13
l~omeroy, July 16-20, 6 to
POMEROY - Acommu: 8.15 p.m. Monday through
nity dinner will be held T~ursday, 6 to 9 p.m.
. from 4:30 to. 6 p.m. at the Fnday. Theme~ Avalanch
Pomeroy United Method~YRanch.
Kmdergarten
Church. A chicken dinn{; throu~h teens clas~e. Fnday
will be served. The public is hay nde ato the fmrgrounds
invited .
where there wtll be a horse
MIDDLEPORT _ . First show for the children.
Church,
Presbyterian
Sunday, July 22
Middleport, Bible School.
RACINE
Racine
July 13, to 8 p.m. and July
United
Methodist
Church
14, 9 a.m. to I p.ITJ.
will observe friends and
LONG BOTTOM
Gospel sing at the Faith Full family day, II a.m. with an
Gospel Church, S.R. 124, outdoor worship service at
~ng Bottom, 7 p.m. featur- the picnic shelter behind the
mg ~ontemporary Christian church. Dress 1s casual.
tuUSIC
by
"Portal." Take a lawn chair. Meat and
drinks provided, take side
Refreshments.
dishes and dessens to share.
Water slide for kids of all
.
Saturday, July 14
ages,
2 to 5 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT
- A
benefit gospel sing will be
held at the Old Bethel
Freewill Baptist Church on
Route 7 at 6 p.m. Singers
Monday, July 16
will be the Grimm Family,
REEDSVILLE
Priscilla Doddrill and Ann Eastern youth football
Sayre, Melissa Jackson, signups will be held July 16
Thurman and Annette and 18,6 to 7:30 p.m. at
Holliday, and Brian and eastern High School footFamily
Connection. ball field. For more inforProcr.eds will go for the fall mation call 740-696-1245,
harvest in October. Ralph leave message.
Butcher is pastor. For more
information call 985-3495,
Monday, July 23
RACINE - " Southern
Monday, July 16
football camp, July 23- 27,
TUPPERS PLAINS
for graes 7 to 12,6 to 9 p.fll.

Church events

Youth events

Alzheimer's group holds activities

""*" •FaE S11uP Scaw1rt

tiE-nllll~

fiii!Elldnicll Q.lpp;ri

""'
PageA3

lill . . . .l

Be professional, but not chummy
8r KAntY

by your desk; it's OK to say in response to "Hurt Father
hello, but you should · be in Indiana,"· whose daughbusy, signifying that you ters wanted to treat Mom to
Dear Annie: I have don't have time to chat. dinner to celebrate her
worked for "Tim" for nearly There is no need to be chum- retirement , but . expected
20 years. During all that my, and it is hardly rude to Dad to pay his own way. 1
time, he has been happily be doing your work when can't fathom inviting either
of my parents to dinner and
married to "Patty," and they you're on company time.
have raised three sons. I've
Dear Annie: My husband expecting one of them to
met Patty on many occa- and I will soon be celebrat- pay. If a child can't afford to"
sions and found her to be ing our fourth anniversary. pay for both parents, maybe &gt;
pleasant, wltiy, friendly and From the day we were mar- they should rethink the gift ·
a devoted wife-and mother. ried. we have been asked by and opt tor a bouquet or--.
Seven months ago, Tim numj!rous acquaintances flowers or a gift card for ·
found out that Patty has been when we plan to have chi!- Mom.
.
having an affair for several dren, We used to brush off
I know how hard my _Dad
years with a married man. these awkward questions , worked and would never
Tim and his family have because
I believe 11 is inach.
1m to continually
been devastated by these Propnate to share Wl.th ot _ expect
coug h up money for outmgs.
·
·
p
·
ded
ers
our
personal
situation.
·
reveIatmns. atty en
her
f
•·
I have footed the bill tor ··
affair, but has continued to
A ter multiple miscar- both parents on Mother's .
"date" men she meets riages, we recently learned 0
d F h ,
.
Sh
we mos
. ·t likely will never be ay an
at er s Day and '
I
on me. e says she's· J. ust able to have chl'ldren of' our many oth er t'lmes. -r•oo many .· ·
&lt;.
.nends with them. Tim and own. We are sick of being fathers get the short end of'
Patty are currently working
uestioned by ceopJe we the St.IC k• an d 1 th.tn k. h.e'S "
through the divorce process. qhardly know w o, assume r1'ght t0 1·ee 1 s1·1g1He d. Everyone in our office we are too selfish to have Lo ve B nth p arcn ts ·'" '
knof;s about Tim's marital h'ld
Of
h
Chula Vista, Calif.
problems. Here is our dilem- c 1 ren. ten, t ese peop1e
Dear Chula Vista : We ·
rna: Patty comes into our try to convince us we are
wasting our lives by not think it's a loving gesture for· ·
office two or three times a joining the parenthood club. ch'ld
· parents · ·
I ren to treat thetr
month to see Tim, and she 1. s How should we respond to on th ese occastons.
·
but ,·
friendly and chatty to all of people who are too insensi- when ktds treat one parent _us. I do like Patty, but I find live 10 consider the personal d1ffer~ntly than the other: ·
her behavior deplorable. · situations of others? And there IS usually a reason. We
When I hear her VOice in the since when is it a crime not · ·hope "Hurt Father" linds out ·
hallway outside my office, I to have children?
what it is.
quickly pretend I am on the Childless Not by Choice In
Annie's Mailbox is writphone so I can just wave Minnesota
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
without making small talk.
Dear Minnesota: Whim Marcy Sugar, lougtime ediPatty's personal life is someone asks when you are tors ofthe Atm Latlders colnone of my business, but I going to have children, the umn. Please e-mail your
cannot bring myself to act as polite shut-down is, "I can't questions to allltiesmailif I am not offended by her 1magine why you need to box@comcast.llet, or write
behavior. Is there a way to know such personal infor- to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
brush her off without being mation." A few years ago, Box 1/8190, Chicago, JL
totally rude? - Not My we asked our readers to 606JJ. To fiud out more
Style
· '
come up with responses, and about Auuie 's Mailbox, a11d
Dear Not My Style: Treat they ~ertainly complied. Our read features by other
Patty in a professional man- favonte was the woman who Creators Syndicate writers
ner, as befits your status as sliid, "We'd never do that. and cartoonist$, visit the
an employee of her bus- We're vegetarians!"
Creators Syndicate Web
band's company. If she stops
Dear Annie: I had to write page at www.creators.com.
MITCHElL
AND MARCY SliGAR

Holzer announces employee of month
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Home Health Services
announces their June spotlight employee of the month,
Jean Petrie, a home health
aide for Holzer Hospice.
·
Born in Gallipolis, and a
1976 graduate from Nor(h
Gallia High School, Petrie ·
joined Holzer Hospice in
· 1997.
Prior to joining
Hospice,
Petrie
was ·
employed by a local home
health agency where she
obtained her cenification as
a home health aide.
Currently, she · resides in
Vinton with husband, Bill,
and daughter, Andrea, and
has two other children, Aavon
and Bmd, and four grandchildren, Hayley, Sammy, Ben
and Brady. She is a member
of the Fellowship Chapel
Church in Vinton, Ohio. Her
Jean Petrie
hobbies include panicipating
in church activities, sP.Cnding Meigs and surrounding call locally at (740) 446time with her fam1ly and counties. For more informa- 5074 or toll free at 1-800playing in Fantasy Football tion about Holzer Hospice, 500-4850.
Leagues. ·
When asked what she likes
best about working at Holzer
Hospice, Petrie said, "The
wonderful people I work
with, and having the opportunity to impact the lives of
the patients we serve. 1serve
in a compassionate and loving atmosphere."
Holzer Hospice cares for
patients with a life-limiting
illness in Gallia, Jackson,

Tile Oraeemen
Southern Gospel Quartet

Submitted photo

ey M0,ms and Dads, Grandmas and Grandpas and Aunts and Uncles... .
.•-. In the Daily Sentinel

Among th~ many activities of the Partner's in Care Alzheimer's group at the Meigs Senior
Cen~er thts w~ek has been pickle making. Here Doris Eastman, Pauline Hysell and Louise
Hamson, asststed by Kathy McDaniel, program coordinator, work on the project.·There are
still openings in the Partners in Care program. For more information call the Senior Citizens
Center at 992-2161.
.
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IN CONCERT
Date fuly 15, 2007
11me 10:30 AM
Place Cheshire Baptist Church
with Pastor Steve littte

�'O PINION .

The Daily Sentinel

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_______________

TODAY IN HISTORY
Friday, July 13, the I94th day of2007. There are
171 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 13. 1793, French revolutionary writer Jean-Paul
· Marat was stabbed to death in his bath by Charlotte Corday,
who was executed four days later.
· On this date:
·· In 1787, Congress enacted an ordinance governing the
·Northwest Territory.
In 1863, deadly rioting a~ainst the Civil War military
· draft erupted in New York City. '
In 1878, the Treaty of Berlin amended the tenns of the
Treaty of San Stefano, which had ended the Russo-Turkish
War of 1877-78.
In 1886, Father Edward Joseph Flanagan, the founder of
Boys Town, was born in County Roscommon, Ireland.
· In 1960, John F. Kennedy won the Democratic presiden. tial nomination at his party's convention in Los Angeles.
In 1967, race-related rioting that claimed some two
· dozen lives broke out in Newark, N.J.
In 1978, Lee lacocca was frred as' president of Ford
Motor Co. by chainnan Henry Ford U.
In 1985, "Livp Aid," . an mtemat,ional rock concert in
· London, Philadelphia, Moscow and Sydney, took place to
raise money for Africa's starving people.
Ten years ago: Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
returned to ner Jewish roots in the Czech Republic, finding
the names of family members killed by the Nazis inscribed
on a Prague synagogue wall. (News reports revealed that :
Albright, who had been raised a Roman Catholic, had
· Jewish relatives, many of whom had died in the Holocau$1.)
· Five years ago: The nation's ~overnors opened their sum. mer meeting in Boise, Idaho, with high health care costs thC
main topic. Photographer Yousuf Karsh died in Boston at
·age 93.
'
·. · . · '
One year ago: Israel imposed a ·nava1 blockade against
- Lebanon and blasted .the Beirut ~rt and army air bases;
Hezbollah fued dozens of rockets mto Israel. Former CIA
• officer Valerie Plame ~ued Vice President Dick Cheney,
presidential adviser Karl Rove and other White House offi·
Cials, saying they orchestrated a "whispering campailln" to
·destroy her career. Actor-comedian Red Buttons died in
Los Angeles at age S7.
.
Todats Birthdays: Fonner Housing Secretary Jack
Kemp IS 72. Actor Patrick Stewart is 67. Actor Robert
Forster is. 66. Actor Harrison Ford is 65. Singer-guitarist
Roger McGuinn (The Byrds) is 65. Actor-comedian
Cheech Marin is 61. Actress Daphne Maxwell Reid is 59.
.Actress Didi Conn is 56. Singer Louise Mandrell is 53.
Actor-director Cameron Crowe is 50. Tennis player Andds
Jarryd is 46. Rock musician Gonzalo Martinez De La
Cotera (Marcy Playground) is 45. Country singer-song·writer Victoria Shaw is 45. Bluegrass singer Rhonda
:Vincent is 45. Actor Michael Jace is 42. Country singer
:Neil Thrasher is 42. Singer Deborah Cox is 34. Rock musi:cian Will Cluunpion (Coldplay) is 29 . .
Thought for Today : "There are people who want to be
everywhere at once, and they get nowhere." - Carl
Sandburg, American writer ( 1878- 1967).
Todayi~

The rumor spread across
Pakistan in a blitz of text
messages on· cell phones.
There was a killer virus
on the loose, and all you had
to do to catch it was answer
a call from an infected number. The virus dido 't hurt
cell phones, but would eyewitnesses confirmed this
- cause users to drop dead.
The
Pakistan
Telecommunication
Authority was forced to
issue a denial telling users
that it was safe to turn their
phones back on.
Then ihere were messages
claiming that. Israeli trucks
were carrY.ing a million
HIV-infected melons ' to
Arab consumers in a new
biological-warfare
plot.
This was not to be confused .
with other urban legends
about a "Western-Zionist
conspiracy" to use polio
vaccines and other medical
means to sterilize the 'next
generation of Muslims.
"The
contemporary
Muslim fascination for conspiracy theories often limits
the capacity for rational discussion of international
affairs," argued Husain
Haqqani
of
Boston
University, at a conference
in Istanbul titled Fact vs.
Rumor: Journalism in the
21st Century. This recent
gathering of journalists and
scholars was· organized by
my colleagues at the Oxford
Centre for Religion and
Public Life.
Haqqani stressed that the
"Muslim world's willingness to believe rumors is not

The Daily Sentinel
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Terry
Mattingly

a function of the Islamic
religion.
Like
other
Abrahamic faiths, Islam
emphasizes truth and righteousness. The Koran says:
'0 ye who believe! Fear
Allah, and (always) say a
word directed to the Truth. '
And one of the sayings
attributed
to
Prophet
Muhammad ... specifically
forbids rumor-mongering:
'It is enough to establish
someone as a liar that he
sprc;ads what he hears without conflnning its veracity."'

Nevertheless,
these
rumors roll on, creating a
cycle of fear and bigotry.
The result is a climate of
confusion and cynicism that
prepares millions of people
to believe the next round of
rumors, often with violent
consequences· in an age in
which ancient prejudices
and modern technology
merge seamlessly.
The results can be seen in
recent WorldPublicOpinion.org
surveys in Egypt, Morocco,
Pakistan and lndonesia, said
Haqqani, who is an active
Muslim. As a rule, participants
had positive attitudes about
globalization, freedom of
religion and democracy. Yet
roughly three put of four

surveyed said that Muslim Muslims.
nations should strictly
Yet this painful fact is not
enforce Sharia, or lsl!imic, the only source of this prelaw as part of. efforts to disposition to embrace conreject sinful "Western val- spiracy
theories , said
ues."
Haqqani. After all, the digiLarge majoritirs affinned tal consumers who use their
the belief that the United cell phones to spread ridicuStates is trying to "weaken lous text messages are not
and di vide" the Muslim illiterate.
world and slightly smaller
"What we are seeing is
majorities said America's - not just a crisis rooted only
goal
is
to
"spread in religion or education,"
Christianity in the region."
said Haqqani. "This is a cuiThe impact of the rumors ture-wide crisis of politics
can, perhaps, be seen in and economics and technolanother paradox seen in ogy and education, and it is
these surveys, said Haqqani. easy to see the role of reli.Large majorities in Egypt, gion because of the powerIndonesia and Morocco. ful role that fai~h plays in
(results were mixed in the lives of millions of peaPakistan) agreed that vio- pie.
.
lent groups that kill civil"The greatest fear of most
ians are guilty of violating Muslims is that their sodthe "principles of Islam." eties ·will be over run by the
However. less than a quarter Western world. ... They
of those polled believed that believe that modernity
Osama bin Laden and al equals
Westernization,
equals
Qaeda were responsible for Westernization
the Sept. II attacks.
promiscuity and licentious"Many Muslims seem to ness, and all of that equals a
believe that 9/11 was a great loss of faith. We cannot
achievement, but that change that overnight. It is a
Osama didn't do it," he said. project of a century or more,
"They are confused by all in 'which millions of people
the rumors."
must learn that the modern
Leaders in the West must world is built on values,
understand that almost half laws and tolerance, not just
of the world's Muslim pop- highways, airplanes and cell
ulation
is
illiterate. phones."
Meanwhile,
'the
57
(Terry Mattingly is direcOrganization of the Islamic tor · of the Washington
Conference nations contain Journalism Center at the
about 500 colleges and uni- Council for Christian
versities, compared ·with Colleges and Universities
more than 5,000 in the and
leads
the
United States and 8,000 in GetReligion.org project to
. India. That is one university study religion and · the
for every 3 million news.)

'.

'

•

·;"'

' ''

'
'

.

'

'
. .!. \'_;
,., ~f~
"

'

":,·. 't.-:,,

,,
..... ·,· ·'
:~

..' .

,.
'')

.

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
:than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be
:Signed, and include address and telephone number. No
:unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of.
.thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept·
·ed for publication.

,..

2007

,•

LETTERS TO THE
·EDITOR

-~

Friday, July t3,

A ·took at the damage wild rnmors do in the Muslim world

The Daily Sentinel

'•

PageA4

. .'53.55
. .1 107.10
. ' 214.21

•

0 .

Watch out for Gore
With all due respect to my
fellow election observers. I
don't think nearly enough
attention is being paid to the
plans and potentialities of
former Vice President AI
Gore.
Gore is a man who, less
than seven years ago, won
the votes of over half a million more Americans than
the ultimate winner of the
presidential
election,
George W. Bush. If Gore's
votes had been a little differently distributed in the
Electoral College, he would
have become president and
might currently be rounding
out his second tenn.
But it dido 't work out that
way. Instead, Gore returned
to private life, put on some
extra weight and found a
new, and highly popular,
cause: the supposed dangers
of global Waf!lling. In the
last few years, Gore has
moved into the leadership of
the national and international crusade against this
alleged menace, a highly
popul ar cause, especially
among the liberals and leftists who dominale the
Democratic Party. This
quest has enabled Gore to
travel the globe in a seem-

William
Rusher

ingly nonpolitical campaign
to save humanity frnm all
sorts of perceived perils,
which may very well winhim a Nobel Prize later thi s
year.
That's quite a comeback
for a defeated presidential
candidate. It makes him
look like an indefatigable
battler for the good of the
whole human race. Even if
he is wrong (and he probably is) about global warming, who can deny that he
seems sincerely devoted to
the best interests of
mankind?
But, without in any way
questioning the sincerity of
his concern, note that Gore's
environmental campmgn
also has had the important
political side effects of"
keeping him high in the public eye by certifying hi s
devotion to a thoroughly
nonpolitical etTort for the

benefit of humanity. As the before the primary season
Democratic nomination bat- opens in early 2008, that
tle seems to be settling down Americans might iike a difto an ugly slugfest between ferent choice - a wellHillary Clinton and Barack known and highly experiObmna, one would have to enced former vice president,
be a pretty embittered freshly endowed with new,
Republican not to admit that worldwide, nonpolitical lauGore looks positively attrac- rels?
tive as a possible alternative .
Unlike Clinton, Gore
What are his negatives? would not inspire the
It's hard to think of many. · Republicans to the heights
His name and conventional, of frenzy that would be genly liberhi-Democratic views erated against . the Ice
are almost universally well Queen. And his record as an
known. Experience? He was office-holder, let alone globa U.S . senator, who then al do-gooder, would simply
served eight years as Bill overwhelm Obama's pitiful
Clinton's vice president. His three empty years in the
background appears to con- Senate.
ceal no scandals, and his
It may be o6jected that ·
health seems robusl at 59 Gore has been around too
years old .
long. while Clinton and
Gore hasn't declared .his Obama haven't yet had their
candidacy for president in chance at the Oval Office.
2008 and says he has "no But ·Americans have short
plans" to do so, the politi- memories. and recollections
cian 's stock phrase for keep- of Gore as a politician will
ing all options wide open . be at least eight years old by
Wh y on earth shou ld he the prim~ry. obscured by his
wade into the fra y now1 newer fame as Savior of the
Why not just keep on win- Planet. Republicans will
ning kudos for his battle neglect him at our own periL
again st global warming
(William Rusher is a
while letting Clinton and Distinguished Fellow of the
Obama beat each other to a Cla remont lnstitme for tile
pulp for the rest of this year. Study of Statesmanship and
Then he can decide, no! long Political Philosophy.)

: Friday, July 13, 2007

·www.mydailysentinel.com

· Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

Bible School fun.

Charles F. Ingels
· EDINBURGH, IND. - Charles .F. Ingels, 90, passed
. away July 9, 2007.
, He is survived by his wife Edith Mae Belcher.
. . Graveside services are at 10:30 a.m. today at Gravel Hill
Cemete_ry~ Cheshire. Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
.. W.Va., 1s m charge of arrangements.
·

. The Carmel-Sutton,
Morning Star and
Dorcas Bethany United
Methodist Churches
,. a long with their pastor, John Gilmore, unit·
ed for Vacation Bible
School this week with
a "waterworks" theme
at Carmel-Sutton. The
children are learning
Bible stories containing
water and having a little fun with some
water guns and water
games. Pictured is the
· red team making
"wa'ks • with a tarp
representing the ocean
and sponges representing fish .

Local Briefs
Picnic Day at Peoples Bank
. POMEROY - Today is Picnic Day at Peoples Bank
. ·beginning at II a.m. to I :30 p.m. The bank is serving a luncheon special of two hot dogs, chips and a drink for $3. All
. proceeds go toward People for Peoples/Coat~ for Kids.

Immunization clinic
POMEROY - The Meigs County Health Department
will conduct a childhood immunization clinic from 9-11
. a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesday. Bring child's shot recnrds
and medical card if applicable. A $7 donation appreciated
but not required for services.

Unda McTumerjplloto

Address correction

BY

•

Attorney General· Brian .
Laliberte, 33, said he
received a. strange call at
work on June 29. The deep
voice of a male caller saiil:
"Karma is a b, what goes
around comes around." As he
was · hanging up, Laliberte
said he thought he heard the
caller say, "You're dead."
Laliberte oversees Dann' s
criminal division.
"I'm just very grateful the
attorney general has extended ·
this protection to my family
and I know he'd do the saine
for someone under similar
circumstances," he said.

Local weather
Friday ... Partly sunny. A
slight chance of showers and
thunderstonns in the morning ... Then a chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the !rl'ternoon. Highs in
the upper 70s. West winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
rain 40' percent.
nighLPartly
Friday
cloudy. A chance of showers
and thunderstorms in the
evening. Lows in the mid
50s. Southwest winds
around 5 mph in the
evening .. .Becoming light
and variable. Chance of rain
30 percent.
Saturday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 80s.
Southwest winds 5 to I 0
mph.
Saturday night...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower

BRIAN J.

PageA1

REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Toplaw enforcer authorizes
··home .'security system for deputy
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
· top assistant to Ohi0 Attorney
General Marc Dann has
received a $3,700 home secu. rity system at state expense
· after receiving a telephpne
· threat.
The system "is to be
installed by state agents, then
· monitored by the attorney
general's Bureau of Criminal
Identification
and
lnvestigatic:&gt;n rather than by a
private contractor. The total
cost to the state of equipment,
labor and monitoring is not
yet known.
Deputy · First Assistant

AMP
!rom

Tzny Tech to re-open at Middleport church

GALLIPOLIS - Due to an error, the address for
Beatrice Morgan, who recently joined the. Ohio National
. Guard, was partially incorrec! m Wednesday's SentineL
Her correct mailing address is SPC Beatrice Morgan, D
Co 1-34, INF Reg 3 PLT "Wardawgs," Fort Jackson, S.C.
29207 .

c

60s. Southwest winds 5 to
10 mph .
Sund_~y
through
Monday ... Partly clOudy.
Highs in the upper 80s.
Lows in the lower 60s .
Monday nlght...Mostly
cloudy in the evening ... Then
becoming partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 60s.
Thesday ... Mostly sunny.
A chance of showers and
thunderstorms in the afternoon. Hot with highs around
90. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Thesday night through
Thursday ... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows in
the upper 60s. Highs in the
mid 80s. Chance of rain 30
percent.

MIDDLEPORT
Renov.ations are planned
at the Freedom Cent~r
Ministries in Middleport,
as plans proceed to reopen the Tiny · Tech
Preschool.
Mindy Chancey, herself
a "graduate;" of Tiny Tech,
has been named admnistrator of the pre-school,
which will operate from
the church building, located at 873 South Third Ave .
Chancey is a graduate of
Meigs High School .and
recently graduated from the
University of Rio Grande
with a bachelor's degree in
early childhood education.
Tiny Tech is set for a tentative opening date of Sept.
4, and will begin pre-aditussian interviews on Monday.
The pre-school will offer
two classes, with 12 students
in each class, from 9 to 11 :30
a.m. and 12:30 to 3 p.m.,
Monday through Thursday.
Children must be three years
old on or before Aug. 30,
four or five years old in order
to be enrolled in the school.
Students will be provided
with daily hands-on learning
experiences,
including
language arts, math, science, imaginative play,
manipulative play and
technology,, with
an
emphasis on physical
activity and exercise.
Isaac Bradford, music pastor, and Jordan Bradford,
the church's assistant pastor, will give students regular music experiences.
The renovation of the
Tiny Tech facility is part of
an ongoing church-wide
renovation pwgram. It will
include cosmetic improvements and improvements to
the kitchen area, where

OEPA's interested parti~s
mailing list about this application, a written request
should be made within 30
days of July 5 to Ohio EPADivision of Surface Water,
ATTN : PPU, 50 W. Town
Street, P.O. Box. 1049,
Columbus, 43216-1049.•
In regards to Gatling.
Ohio's antidegraclation application, residents have 30
days from June 20 to file
written requests for a public
hearing. Gatling's "receiving
body of water" as identified
by the OEPA on its ·antidegradation application is
Yellowbush Creek and
Jennie Watts Run subsequently to Cabin Creek.
These water bodies are
categorized by the OEPA
as "general high quality
waters."

Comments on Gatling
Ohio's
application should
.
also be sent to Hearing
""" ...
Clerk, Ohio Environmental
Protection A,gency, P.O.
Box 1049, Columbus,
•,··· ......
43216-1049. In addition,
those wishing to be on the
.. '._....
:•.;.
OEPA's interested parties
mailing
list
about
.. ..
Gatling's
application
should send a written
request within 30 days of
June 20 to Ohio EPADivision of Surface Water,
B~llfl J. RHd/plloto
Music Minister Isaac Bradford and Administrator Mindy ATTN: PPU, 50 W. Town
Chancey review plans for a new playground outside the Street, P.O. Box I 049,
Freedom Center Ministries in Middleport, where the Tiny Columbus, 43216-1049.
Tech Pre-School will reopen in September.
.'

.

.

..

:,..

daily snacks are served to
An open house will be
the students, and a new held at 7 p.m . on Aug. 23.
playground. •
~-o'AN C~,p
Those interested in additional information about
J'o~
Tiny Tech, or who wish to
~
7 .
p
proceed with a pre-admis"'
'
'"'
~ y···' ' .::-: .. tj
sion interview may contact
Chancey at the school, at
992-3824, or by e-mail at
Disney's 101
tinytech@suddenlink.com.

'. '

$-vA.,I

Dalmatians Kids

Live Musical Adventure!
and 224,615 Ohio students and families by the cost of l)al law enabled'7.S million
July 14, 15,21 &amp; 22
alone could benefit from the college, including:
veterans of the Second
Sat ut 8 pm, Sun at 3 pm
increase in the Pell Grant.
• Tuition assistance for World War to participate in
$10 &amp; $7
The legislation would also excellent undergraduate stu- education or job training
from Page A1
Sign up now for special
cut interest rates in half on dents who agree to teach in programs.
"PUPPY PARTIES"
need-based student loans, the nation's public schools;
A broad coalition of stupresented prior toeaeh show
·.over the next five years.
reducing the cost of those
• Loan forgiveness for col- dent advocacy groups and .
$5 per child
The legislation pays for loans for millions of student le&amp;e graduates that go into labor organizations support 1----===:::....---f
the College Cost Reduction
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
itself by reducing excessive borrowers.
public service professions;.
Act,
Wilson
said.
Gallipolis,
OH (T40) 4411-ARTS
Like legislation passed by
federal subsidies paid to
• Increased federal loan
· lenders .i n the college loan the House earlier this year, limits so that students won't
·industry by $19 billion. It the College Cost Reduction have to rely as heavily on
·also includes nearly $1 bil- Act would cut interest rates costlier private loans;
lion in federal budget deficit . from 6.8 percent to 3.4 per- .. • New tuition cost conreduction. The Senate is cent in equal steps over the tainment strategies; and
expected to vote on similar next five years. Once fully
• Landmark investments
legislation this month.
phased-in, this would save in historically black colleges
. "College shouldn't be an the typical student borrower and universities, Hispanicopportunity available only - With $13,800 in need- serving institutions and
, for the elite. I'm thrilled based student loan debt minority-serving institu_ we're making hi!)her educa- $4,400 over the life of the tions.
tion more accessible to hard loan. About 6.8 million stuPresident Franklin D.
working American families dents take out neet;l-based Roosevelt 'signed the Gl Bill
' like those in Ohio," said loans each year. In Ohio into law in 1944. The origiwhose
Sixth 173,312 students take out
Wilson,
Congressional
District need-based loans each year
· includes Galli a County.
at four-year public schools.
Under the legislation , the
In addition, the legi slation
· maximum value of the Pell would prevent student barCLEARANCE SALE
Grant scholarship would rowers from facing unman. increase by $500 over the ageable levels of federal stu- ·
next five years. When com- dent debt by guaranteeing
bined with other Pell schol- that borrowers will never
. arship increases passed or have to spend more than 15
proposed by Congress this percent of their yearly disyear, the maximum Pell cretionary. income on loan
Grant would reach $4,900 in repayments and by allowing
Thur"'•v- Ladies Night w!OJ
Monday- 50~ Doaft
2008 and $5 ,200 in 20 II, up borrowers in economic
$1 .00 cover 9pm- 2am
Tuesday - Karaoke · with Kip
from $4,050 in 2006, thus hardship to have their loans
SOQ
off all drinks · 10pm· 2am
Wfdneaday- Mens Night -Poollournament
restoring the Pell's purchas- forgiven after 20. years.
Erldu
· Karaoke
$5.00 entry e pm
ing power.
· The
College
Cost
Saturday · Live Bands
SOQ ofl all drinks 10pm- 2,am
About 6 million low- and Reduction Act includes a
Sunday - $ 1.00 Beer · $ 1.25 Coronas
992-7028
moderate-income students number of other provisions
across the coumry would that woulq ease the tinancial
6 MOS. S.A.C. WITH APPROVED CREDIT
Mon-Fri 9-5 • Sl g..1 , Closed Sund•y
benefit from this increase, burden imposed on students

Wilson·

********************

Goo Times
Welcomes ....

SUMMER

HABIT
av

IV 14th

-j

7

�'O PINION .

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy,-Ohlo

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:: free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
.. : of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
~ . people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
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:; -The Firat Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

_______________

TODAY IN HISTORY
Friday, July 13, the I94th day of2007. There are
171 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 13. 1793, French revolutionary writer Jean-Paul
· Marat was stabbed to death in his bath by Charlotte Corday,
who was executed four days later.
· On this date:
·· In 1787, Congress enacted an ordinance governing the
·Northwest Territory.
In 1863, deadly rioting a~ainst the Civil War military
· draft erupted in New York City. '
In 1878, the Treaty of Berlin amended the tenns of the
Treaty of San Stefano, which had ended the Russo-Turkish
War of 1877-78.
In 1886, Father Edward Joseph Flanagan, the founder of
Boys Town, was born in County Roscommon, Ireland.
· In 1960, John F. Kennedy won the Democratic presiden. tial nomination at his party's convention in Los Angeles.
In 1967, race-related rioting that claimed some two
· dozen lives broke out in Newark, N.J.
In 1978, Lee lacocca was frred as' president of Ford
Motor Co. by chainnan Henry Ford U.
In 1985, "Livp Aid," . an mtemat,ional rock concert in
· London, Philadelphia, Moscow and Sydney, took place to
raise money for Africa's starving people.
Ten years ago: Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
returned to ner Jewish roots in the Czech Republic, finding
the names of family members killed by the Nazis inscribed
on a Prague synagogue wall. (News reports revealed that :
Albright, who had been raised a Roman Catholic, had
· Jewish relatives, many of whom had died in the Holocau$1.)
· Five years ago: The nation's ~overnors opened their sum. mer meeting in Boise, Idaho, with high health care costs thC
main topic. Photographer Yousuf Karsh died in Boston at
·age 93.
'
·. · . · '
One year ago: Israel imposed a ·nava1 blockade against
- Lebanon and blasted .the Beirut ~rt and army air bases;
Hezbollah fued dozens of rockets mto Israel. Former CIA
• officer Valerie Plame ~ued Vice President Dick Cheney,
presidential adviser Karl Rove and other White House offi·
Cials, saying they orchestrated a "whispering campailln" to
·destroy her career. Actor-comedian Red Buttons died in
Los Angeles at age S7.
.
Todats Birthdays: Fonner Housing Secretary Jack
Kemp IS 72. Actor Patrick Stewart is 67. Actor Robert
Forster is. 66. Actor Harrison Ford is 65. Singer-guitarist
Roger McGuinn (The Byrds) is 65. Actor-comedian
Cheech Marin is 61. Actress Daphne Maxwell Reid is 59.
.Actress Didi Conn is 56. Singer Louise Mandrell is 53.
Actor-director Cameron Crowe is 50. Tennis player Andds
Jarryd is 46. Rock musician Gonzalo Martinez De La
Cotera (Marcy Playground) is 45. Country singer-song·writer Victoria Shaw is 45. Bluegrass singer Rhonda
:Vincent is 45. Actor Michael Jace is 42. Country singer
:Neil Thrasher is 42. Singer Deborah Cox is 34. Rock musi:cian Will Cluunpion (Coldplay) is 29 . .
Thought for Today : "There are people who want to be
everywhere at once, and they get nowhere." - Carl
Sandburg, American writer ( 1878- 1967).
Todayi~

The rumor spread across
Pakistan in a blitz of text
messages on· cell phones.
There was a killer virus
on the loose, and all you had
to do to catch it was answer
a call from an infected number. The virus dido 't hurt
cell phones, but would eyewitnesses confirmed this
- cause users to drop dead.
The
Pakistan
Telecommunication
Authority was forced to
issue a denial telling users
that it was safe to turn their
phones back on.
Then ihere were messages
claiming that. Israeli trucks
were carrY.ing a million
HIV-infected melons ' to
Arab consumers in a new
biological-warfare
plot.
This was not to be confused .
with other urban legends
about a "Western-Zionist
conspiracy" to use polio
vaccines and other medical
means to sterilize the 'next
generation of Muslims.
"The
contemporary
Muslim fascination for conspiracy theories often limits
the capacity for rational discussion of international
affairs," argued Husain
Haqqani
of
Boston
University, at a conference
in Istanbul titled Fact vs.
Rumor: Journalism in the
21st Century. This recent
gathering of journalists and
scholars was· organized by
my colleagues at the Oxford
Centre for Religion and
Public Life.
Haqqani stressed that the
"Muslim world's willingness to believe rumors is not

The Daily Sentinel
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Terry
Mattingly

a function of the Islamic
religion.
Like
other
Abrahamic faiths, Islam
emphasizes truth and righteousness. The Koran says:
'0 ye who believe! Fear
Allah, and (always) say a
word directed to the Truth. '
And one of the sayings
attributed
to
Prophet
Muhammad ... specifically
forbids rumor-mongering:
'It is enough to establish
someone as a liar that he
sprc;ads what he hears without conflnning its veracity."'

Nevertheless,
these
rumors roll on, creating a
cycle of fear and bigotry.
The result is a climate of
confusion and cynicism that
prepares millions of people
to believe the next round of
rumors, often with violent
consequences· in an age in
which ancient prejudices
and modern technology
merge seamlessly.
The results can be seen in
recent WorldPublicOpinion.org
surveys in Egypt, Morocco,
Pakistan and lndonesia, said
Haqqani, who is an active
Muslim. As a rule, participants
had positive attitudes about
globalization, freedom of
religion and democracy. Yet
roughly three put of four

surveyed said that Muslim Muslims.
nations should strictly
Yet this painful fact is not
enforce Sharia, or lsl!imic, the only source of this prelaw as part of. efforts to disposition to embrace conreject sinful "Western val- spiracy
theories , said
ues."
Haqqani. After all, the digiLarge majoritirs affinned tal consumers who use their
the belief that the United cell phones to spread ridicuStates is trying to "weaken lous text messages are not
and di vide" the Muslim illiterate.
world and slightly smaller
"What we are seeing is
majorities said America's - not just a crisis rooted only
goal
is
to
"spread in religion or education,"
Christianity in the region."
said Haqqani. "This is a cuiThe impact of the rumors ture-wide crisis of politics
can, perhaps, be seen in and economics and technolanother paradox seen in ogy and education, and it is
these surveys, said Haqqani. easy to see the role of reli.Large majorities in Egypt, gion because of the powerIndonesia and Morocco. ful role that fai~h plays in
(results were mixed in the lives of millions of peaPakistan) agreed that vio- pie.
.
lent groups that kill civil"The greatest fear of most
ians are guilty of violating Muslims is that their sodthe "principles of Islam." eties ·will be over run by the
However. less than a quarter Western world. ... They
of those polled believed that believe that modernity
Osama bin Laden and al equals
Westernization,
equals
Qaeda were responsible for Westernization
the Sept. II attacks.
promiscuity and licentious"Many Muslims seem to ness, and all of that equals a
believe that 9/11 was a great loss of faith. We cannot
achievement, but that change that overnight. It is a
Osama didn't do it," he said. project of a century or more,
"They are confused by all in 'which millions of people
the rumors."
must learn that the modern
Leaders in the West must world is built on values,
understand that almost half laws and tolerance, not just
of the world's Muslim pop- highways, airplanes and cell
ulation
is
illiterate. phones."
Meanwhile,
'the
57
(Terry Mattingly is direcOrganization of the Islamic tor · of the Washington
Conference nations contain Journalism Center at the
about 500 colleges and uni- Council for Christian
versities, compared ·with Colleges and Universities
more than 5,000 in the and
leads
the
United States and 8,000 in GetReligion.org project to
. India. That is one university study religion and · the
for every 3 million news.)

'.

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•

·;"'

' ''

'
'

.

'

'
. .!. \'_;
,., ~f~
"

'

":,·. 't.-:,,

,,
..... ·,· ·'
:~

..' .

,.
'')

.

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
:than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be
:Signed, and include address and telephone number. No
:unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of.
.thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept·
·ed for publication.

,..

2007

,•

LETTERS TO THE
·EDITOR

-~

Friday, July t3,

A ·took at the damage wild rnmors do in the Muslim world

The Daily Sentinel

'•

PageA4

. .'53.55
. .1 107.10
. ' 214.21

•

0 .

Watch out for Gore
With all due respect to my
fellow election observers. I
don't think nearly enough
attention is being paid to the
plans and potentialities of
former Vice President AI
Gore.
Gore is a man who, less
than seven years ago, won
the votes of over half a million more Americans than
the ultimate winner of the
presidential
election,
George W. Bush. If Gore's
votes had been a little differently distributed in the
Electoral College, he would
have become president and
might currently be rounding
out his second tenn.
But it dido 't work out that
way. Instead, Gore returned
to private life, put on some
extra weight and found a
new, and highly popular,
cause: the supposed dangers
of global Waf!lling. In the
last few years, Gore has
moved into the leadership of
the national and international crusade against this
alleged menace, a highly
popul ar cause, especially
among the liberals and leftists who dominale the
Democratic Party. This
quest has enabled Gore to
travel the globe in a seem-

William
Rusher

ingly nonpolitical campaign
to save humanity frnm all
sorts of perceived perils,
which may very well winhim a Nobel Prize later thi s
year.
That's quite a comeback
for a defeated presidential
candidate. It makes him
look like an indefatigable
battler for the good of the
whole human race. Even if
he is wrong (and he probably is) about global warming, who can deny that he
seems sincerely devoted to
the best interests of
mankind?
But, without in any way
questioning the sincerity of
his concern, note that Gore's
environmental campmgn
also has had the important
political side effects of"
keeping him high in the public eye by certifying hi s
devotion to a thoroughly
nonpolitical etTort for the

benefit of humanity. As the before the primary season
Democratic nomination bat- opens in early 2008, that
tle seems to be settling down Americans might iike a difto an ugly slugfest between ferent choice - a wellHillary Clinton and Barack known and highly experiObmna, one would have to enced former vice president,
be a pretty embittered freshly endowed with new,
Republican not to admit that worldwide, nonpolitical lauGore looks positively attrac- rels?
tive as a possible alternative .
Unlike Clinton, Gore
What are his negatives? would not inspire the
It's hard to think of many. · Republicans to the heights
His name and conventional, of frenzy that would be genly liberhi-Democratic views erated against . the Ice
are almost universally well Queen. And his record as an
known. Experience? He was office-holder, let alone globa U.S . senator, who then al do-gooder, would simply
served eight years as Bill overwhelm Obama's pitiful
Clinton's vice president. His three empty years in the
background appears to con- Senate.
ceal no scandals, and his
It may be o6jected that ·
health seems robusl at 59 Gore has been around too
years old .
long. while Clinton and
Gore hasn't declared .his Obama haven't yet had their
candidacy for president in chance at the Oval Office.
2008 and says he has "no But ·Americans have short
plans" to do so, the politi- memories. and recollections
cian 's stock phrase for keep- of Gore as a politician will
ing all options wide open . be at least eight years old by
Wh y on earth shou ld he the prim~ry. obscured by his
wade into the fra y now1 newer fame as Savior of the
Why not just keep on win- Planet. Republicans will
ning kudos for his battle neglect him at our own periL
again st global warming
(William Rusher is a
while letting Clinton and Distinguished Fellow of the
Obama beat each other to a Cla remont lnstitme for tile
pulp for the rest of this year. Study of Statesmanship and
Then he can decide, no! long Political Philosophy.)

: Friday, July 13, 2007

·www.mydailysentinel.com

· Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

Bible School fun.

Charles F. Ingels
· EDINBURGH, IND. - Charles .F. Ingels, 90, passed
. away July 9, 2007.
, He is survived by his wife Edith Mae Belcher.
. . Graveside services are at 10:30 a.m. today at Gravel Hill
Cemete_ry~ Cheshire. Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
.. W.Va., 1s m charge of arrangements.
·

. The Carmel-Sutton,
Morning Star and
Dorcas Bethany United
Methodist Churches
,. a long with their pastor, John Gilmore, unit·
ed for Vacation Bible
School this week with
a "waterworks" theme
at Carmel-Sutton. The
children are learning
Bible stories containing
water and having a little fun with some
water guns and water
games. Pictured is the
· red team making
"wa'ks • with a tarp
representing the ocean
and sponges representing fish .

Local Briefs
Picnic Day at Peoples Bank
. POMEROY - Today is Picnic Day at Peoples Bank
. ·beginning at II a.m. to I :30 p.m. The bank is serving a luncheon special of two hot dogs, chips and a drink for $3. All
. proceeds go toward People for Peoples/Coat~ for Kids.

Immunization clinic
POMEROY - The Meigs County Health Department
will conduct a childhood immunization clinic from 9-11
. a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesday. Bring child's shot recnrds
and medical card if applicable. A $7 donation appreciated
but not required for services.

Unda McTumerjplloto

Address correction

BY

•

Attorney General· Brian .
Laliberte, 33, said he
received a. strange call at
work on June 29. The deep
voice of a male caller saiil:
"Karma is a b, what goes
around comes around." As he
was · hanging up, Laliberte
said he thought he heard the
caller say, "You're dead."
Laliberte oversees Dann' s
criminal division.
"I'm just very grateful the
attorney general has extended ·
this protection to my family
and I know he'd do the saine
for someone under similar
circumstances," he said.

Local weather
Friday ... Partly sunny. A
slight chance of showers and
thunderstonns in the morning ... Then a chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the !rl'ternoon. Highs in
the upper 70s. West winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
rain 40' percent.
nighLPartly
Friday
cloudy. A chance of showers
and thunderstorms in the
evening. Lows in the mid
50s. Southwest winds
around 5 mph in the
evening .. .Becoming light
and variable. Chance of rain
30 percent.
Saturday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 80s.
Southwest winds 5 to I 0
mph.
Saturday night...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower

BRIAN J.

PageA1

REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Toplaw enforcer authorizes
··home .'security system for deputy
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
· top assistant to Ohi0 Attorney
General Marc Dann has
received a $3,700 home secu. rity system at state expense
· after receiving a telephpne
· threat.
The system "is to be
installed by state agents, then
· monitored by the attorney
general's Bureau of Criminal
Identification
and
lnvestigatic:&gt;n rather than by a
private contractor. The total
cost to the state of equipment,
labor and monitoring is not
yet known.
Deputy · First Assistant

AMP
!rom

Tzny Tech to re-open at Middleport church

GALLIPOLIS - Due to an error, the address for
Beatrice Morgan, who recently joined the. Ohio National
. Guard, was partially incorrec! m Wednesday's SentineL
Her correct mailing address is SPC Beatrice Morgan, D
Co 1-34, INF Reg 3 PLT "Wardawgs," Fort Jackson, S.C.
29207 .

c

60s. Southwest winds 5 to
10 mph .
Sund_~y
through
Monday ... Partly clOudy.
Highs in the upper 80s.
Lows in the lower 60s .
Monday nlght...Mostly
cloudy in the evening ... Then
becoming partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 60s.
Thesday ... Mostly sunny.
A chance of showers and
thunderstorms in the afternoon. Hot with highs around
90. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Thesday night through
Thursday ... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows in
the upper 60s. Highs in the
mid 80s. Chance of rain 30
percent.

MIDDLEPORT
Renov.ations are planned
at the Freedom Cent~r
Ministries in Middleport,
as plans proceed to reopen the Tiny · Tech
Preschool.
Mindy Chancey, herself
a "graduate;" of Tiny Tech,
has been named admnistrator of the pre-school,
which will operate from
the church building, located at 873 South Third Ave .
Chancey is a graduate of
Meigs High School .and
recently graduated from the
University of Rio Grande
with a bachelor's degree in
early childhood education.
Tiny Tech is set for a tentative opening date of Sept.
4, and will begin pre-aditussian interviews on Monday.
The pre-school will offer
two classes, with 12 students
in each class, from 9 to 11 :30
a.m. and 12:30 to 3 p.m.,
Monday through Thursday.
Children must be three years
old on or before Aug. 30,
four or five years old in order
to be enrolled in the school.
Students will be provided
with daily hands-on learning
experiences,
including
language arts, math, science, imaginative play,
manipulative play and
technology,, with
an
emphasis on physical
activity and exercise.
Isaac Bradford, music pastor, and Jordan Bradford,
the church's assistant pastor, will give students regular music experiences.
The renovation of the
Tiny Tech facility is part of
an ongoing church-wide
renovation pwgram. It will
include cosmetic improvements and improvements to
the kitchen area, where

OEPA's interested parti~s
mailing list about this application, a written request
should be made within 30
days of July 5 to Ohio EPADivision of Surface Water,
ATTN : PPU, 50 W. Town
Street, P.O. Box. 1049,
Columbus, 43216-1049.•
In regards to Gatling.
Ohio's antidegraclation application, residents have 30
days from June 20 to file
written requests for a public
hearing. Gatling's "receiving
body of water" as identified
by the OEPA on its ·antidegradation application is
Yellowbush Creek and
Jennie Watts Run subsequently to Cabin Creek.
These water bodies are
categorized by the OEPA
as "general high quality
waters."

Comments on Gatling
Ohio's
application should
.
also be sent to Hearing
""" ...
Clerk, Ohio Environmental
Protection A,gency, P.O.
Box 1049, Columbus,
•,··· ......
43216-1049. In addition,
those wishing to be on the
.. '._....
:•.;.
OEPA's interested parties
mailing
list
about
.. ..
Gatling's
application
should send a written
request within 30 days of
June 20 to Ohio EPADivision of Surface Water,
B~llfl J. RHd/plloto
Music Minister Isaac Bradford and Administrator Mindy ATTN: PPU, 50 W. Town
Chancey review plans for a new playground outside the Street, P.O. Box I 049,
Freedom Center Ministries in Middleport, where the Tiny Columbus, 43216-1049.
Tech Pre-School will reopen in September.
.'

.

.

..

:,..

daily snacks are served to
An open house will be
the students, and a new held at 7 p.m . on Aug. 23.
playground. •
~-o'AN C~,p
Those interested in additional information about
J'o~
Tiny Tech, or who wish to
~
7 .
p
proceed with a pre-admis"'
'
'"'
~ y···' ' .::-: .. tj
sion interview may contact
Chancey at the school, at
992-3824, or by e-mail at
Disney's 101
tinytech@suddenlink.com.

'. '

$-vA.,I

Dalmatians Kids

Live Musical Adventure!
and 224,615 Ohio students and families by the cost of l)al law enabled'7.S million
July 14, 15,21 &amp; 22
alone could benefit from the college, including:
veterans of the Second
Sat ut 8 pm, Sun at 3 pm
increase in the Pell Grant.
• Tuition assistance for World War to participate in
$10 &amp; $7
The legislation would also excellent undergraduate stu- education or job training
from Page A1
Sign up now for special
cut interest rates in half on dents who agree to teach in programs.
"PUPPY PARTIES"
need-based student loans, the nation's public schools;
A broad coalition of stupresented prior toeaeh show
·.over the next five years.
reducing the cost of those
• Loan forgiveness for col- dent advocacy groups and .
$5 per child
The legislation pays for loans for millions of student le&amp;e graduates that go into labor organizations support 1----===:::....---f
the College Cost Reduction
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
itself by reducing excessive borrowers.
public service professions;.
Act,
Wilson
said.
Gallipolis,
OH (T40) 4411-ARTS
Like legislation passed by
federal subsidies paid to
• Increased federal loan
· lenders .i n the college loan the House earlier this year, limits so that students won't
·industry by $19 billion. It the College Cost Reduction have to rely as heavily on
·also includes nearly $1 bil- Act would cut interest rates costlier private loans;
lion in federal budget deficit . from 6.8 percent to 3.4 per- .. • New tuition cost conreduction. The Senate is cent in equal steps over the tainment strategies; and
expected to vote on similar next five years. Once fully
• Landmark investments
legislation this month.
phased-in, this would save in historically black colleges
. "College shouldn't be an the typical student borrower and universities, Hispanicopportunity available only - With $13,800 in need- serving institutions and
, for the elite. I'm thrilled based student loan debt minority-serving institu_ we're making hi!)her educa- $4,400 over the life of the tions.
tion more accessible to hard loan. About 6.8 million stuPresident Franklin D.
working American families dents take out neet;l-based Roosevelt 'signed the Gl Bill
' like those in Ohio," said loans each year. In Ohio into law in 1944. The origiwhose
Sixth 173,312 students take out
Wilson,
Congressional
District need-based loans each year
· includes Galli a County.
at four-year public schools.
Under the legislation , the
In addition, the legi slation
· maximum value of the Pell would prevent student barCLEARANCE SALE
Grant scholarship would rowers from facing unman. increase by $500 over the ageable levels of federal stu- ·
next five years. When com- dent debt by guaranteeing
bined with other Pell schol- that borrowers will never
. arship increases passed or have to spend more than 15
proposed by Congress this percent of their yearly disyear, the maximum Pell cretionary. income on loan
Grant would reach $4,900 in repayments and by allowing
Thur"'•v- Ladies Night w!OJ
Monday- 50~ Doaft
2008 and $5 ,200 in 20 II, up borrowers in economic
$1 .00 cover 9pm- 2am
Tuesday - Karaoke · with Kip
from $4,050 in 2006, thus hardship to have their loans
SOQ
off all drinks · 10pm· 2am
Wfdneaday- Mens Night -Poollournament
restoring the Pell's purchas- forgiven after 20. years.
Erldu
· Karaoke
$5.00 entry e pm
ing power.
· The
College
Cost
Saturday · Live Bands
SOQ ofl all drinks 10pm- 2,am
About 6 million low- and Reduction Act includes a
Sunday - $ 1.00 Beer · $ 1.25 Coronas
992-7028
moderate-income students number of other provisions
across the coumry would that woulq ease the tinancial
6 MOS. S.A.C. WITH APPROVED CREDIT
Mon-Fri 9-5 • Sl g..1 , Closed Sund•y
benefit from this increase, burden imposed on students

Wilson·

********************

Goo Times
Welcomes ....

SUMMER

HABIT
av

IV 14th

-j

7

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pj\STQR,

- possibly the reaction the man
wanted. My sc;cond reaction
was to be offended. How dare
he wear that shirt into my
sanctuary!!! Then my thinl
reactioo {coming several days
later) was more compassionate. Pemaps the young man in
question has never lived in an
environment where such language . js, considered rude.
After all; it is a word increasingly heard in all types of public places - schools, shopping
centers, concerts, at the county
fair, etc. It is often used in
movies, and in family rooms
thanks to premium channels
on cable and satellite TV.
Maybe in this man's house,
such language is common and
accepted.
But even if he comes froln
such an environment, wearing
that shirt into a chun:h is still
rude. But what should' I do
with his rudeness? That is the
vital question!! Most of the
time, we respond in the same
manner - rudeness for rudeness. Bull don't think that's
what Jesus would have done.
Nor do I think that's what
Jesus would have us to do.
The Apostle Paul gives us
soroe very helpful defmitions
of what love is and what it is
not: "Love is patient Love is
kind. It does not envy. It is not
rude, it is not self-seeking. It is
not easily angered, it keeps no
record of wrongs" {I
Corinthians 13:4-5).
I do not know if that young
man is a Christian; however, I
am a Christian: Therefore, the
ex~tation ai:ld God-given
ability to live that kind of love
is mine - not necessarily his.
If I am to take this scripture
seriously, I must fOigive the
man lor his rudeness and let it
go. I must pray for him and
look for the ways we can connect with each other in spite of
our ditTeiences. I pray that
God will use me in some way
to reach out to people like this
young ~ and ~ve him_l~v­
mg attention wtthout gJVmg
into the shock.
We can stand up for respect.
appropriate arlin: and language. But we must also reach
out to those who don't follow
our rules in the ways we want
them to follow. I think the
really shocking thing is to not
turn away the shock jocks, but
to embrace them. Give them
unconditional love and watch
the miracle God has in store
for them to unfold.
Kerry Wood is the pastor of
Racine United Methodist
Church. 818 Elm Street in
Racine. Sunday worship is at
1I a.m. Pastor Kerry can be
reached at racineumc@ suddenlink.net

UNITED

METHODIST CHURCH

Some people are into shocking others. Think Howard
Stern. Paris Hilton. Madonna.
The more flamboyant something is, the rtJore those types
of people like it. But not every
"shock jock" is a famous personality. Some are right here
· with us in southeastern Ohio.
I got abig shock last weekend. Our church hosted the
funeral for John Holsinger.
The funeral home across the
street from the church didn't
have enough room in its
chapel, so we allowed them to
use our larger space. And we
needed all that room and
more! People were packed
into the pews, stood along both
side aisles from front to back,
and they were even three-deep
along the back of the sanctuary. I have never seen the
church so full!
I dido 't know John well. We
met last fall at a Southern High
School football game; f must
admit I was somewhat leery of
him. John and I looked nothing alike - and our background~ were totally dissimilar. John was a tattoo artist and
a huge Harley-Davidson
motorcycle fan. I'm a preacher who wishes he had a new
Honda Accord. He was into
music that I sometimes didn't
even experience as music. But
as we talked, I discovered that
we had something in common
that trnnscended the shocking
coritmsts betw~ii us: our
desire to follow Jesus and be
more like him.
The crowd who came to
John's funeral included a large
number of bikers. Many of
them are members of the
Christian Motorcycle Riders
Club. They love their Harleys,
leathers, piercings, tattoos,
wild hair, etc. - and Jesus
Christ most of all.
There were some other bikers in the crowd. And one
young man caught my attention - and not because his hair,
l;itttoos or piercings were more
oulrdgeous than others. It was
his t-shirt. Written in huge letters across the front was this
message: "I'm not Mr. Right,
but I'll I
I you until he
comes along."
I cannot repeat the message
more explicitly. It used language that is not fit to print in
this family newspaper, and it's
a word that I do not use at all.
So why was this young man
wearing such a shirt, and why
was he wearing . it IN
CHURCH???
My first reaction was shock

"

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Friday, July 13, 2007

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Christian frat sues University of
Florida, claiming discrimination

•

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) - A
Christian fraternity sued the
University of Florida on Tuesday,
claiming the university is discriminating against theni by refusing to
recognize the fraternity as a registered student group.
University officials have told Beta
Upsilon Chi that it can't be registered on ·campus because only men
are allowed to join, which amounts
to prohibited 'sex discrimination,
according to the lawsuit filed in U.S.
District Court in Gainesville.

Beta Upsilon Chi is not allowed to
join the off-campus Greek system of
fraternities and sororities because
the rules governing UF's Greek system bar religious di scrimination,
according to the law suit. The fraternity requires its members to be
Christians.
Without official recognition, the
fraternity is deprived of benefi ts
including access to meeting space ·
and the ability to advertise and
recruit members on campus, the suit
said.

ww

others.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Randi 's "coming out" as a
skeptic essentially arrived on
FORT LAUDERDALE, a 1972 episode of "The
Fla. - James Randi has Tonight Show" - he helped
escaped from a locked coffin Johnny Carson set up Uri
submerged in the sea, and Geller, the Israeli performer
from a straitjacket dangling who claimed to bend spoons
over Niag3rd Falls. If you with his mind. Randi ensured
chose a word from a 200- the spoons and other props
page book, he could guess it. were . kel't from Geller's
Pick an object, he'd make it hands until showtime to prefade.from sight.
vent tampering. The result
He gave up performing as was an agonizing 22 minutes
The Amazing Randi years in which Geller was unable
ago, but his words to the to perform any tricks.
In the years since. he has
audience at the end of each
show foreshadowed his next garnered a prestigious
act.
MacArthur . fellowship,
"Everythin~ you have seen established his namesake
here is tricks, ' he would say. James Randi Educational
''There is nothing surma!- Foundation and become
ural involved here. hope guardian of a $1 million
you 'II accept my word for prize earmarked for anyone
that. Thank you and good who can prove supernatural
evening."
powers.
It
remains
For more than two unclai'med.
decades; Randi has been the
Randi will go to great
country's skeptic-in-chief, limgths to expose. All of it
aiming his arrow of rational- has earned him countless
ism at psychics and faith fans, and countless other
healers, mediums and men- enemies.
talists. He finds Ills targets so
Michael' Shermer, the pubpreposterous and those lisher of Skeptic magazine
fallmg for them so desperate and executive director of the
that he has become obsessed. Skeptics Society, notes
"Ifs important," he says, Randi has taken on the role
"because any misinforma- another famous magician,
lion like this - of people Houdini, once held.
claiming they can ·subvert
"It takes a magician to
natUre, they can do real rnir- know how people deceive
acles wid they want to be purposely. Scientists are not
paid for it ... that's a very lrdined to detect intentional
negative influence on soci- deception," Shermer said. "If
ety:"
you care about reality, Randi
Toronto-born
Randall ts a lens through which to see
James Hamilton Zwinge's how these claims are put to
cal'eer as a magician and the test."
escape artist came after he · Randi's parents raised him
dropped out of hi~h school Anglican, but he said from
and left home to jom the car- childhood, he never found
nival. His stage routine gave the existence of God believway to a nagging need to able. He doesn't draw much
speak out against those · of a distinction between
whose work he regarded as mainstream religious groups
nonsense - not just people and other spiritual figures on
who read palms and minds. the fringe. The only differHe also took aim at chico- ence, he said, is more estabpractors, homeopaths and lished faiths have much

VanZandt and Ward Rd., Pastor: James
Miller, Sunday School - 10:3() am.,

UF spokesman Steve Orlando said
the university does not comment on
pending litigation .
The advocates who filed the lawsuit, the Christian Legal Society and
tlie Alliance Defense Fund , had sued
the University of · Georgia in
December because the school
wouldn't recognize a chapter of the
fraternity because of the religious
discrimination issue. The suit was
settled two days later whe.n the university changed its policy and
allowed the fraternity to register.

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·'

more power.
Still, Randi has focused
many of his efforts on nontraditional faith leaders.
Once, he showed messages
television faith healer Peter
Popoff claimed to be getting
from God about his audience
were 1actually coming from
his wife through an earpiece.
Another time, he spent days
camped out in his car, eating
1\vinkies and drinking Pepsi
as he waited for the chance
to go through the trash of
another faith healer, W. V.
Grant, looking for signs of
fraud.
He talks freely about death
and what he believes will
happen after.
"I think that the same way
a computer dies when you
put a bullet through it after
pulling the plug out, I don't
think that we live beyond the
grave at all," he said. "I doJI't
see any compellin~ evidence
to support that behef."
For all the imalysis Randi
puts into everything, he still
finds delight in observing
magic he knows is a stunt or
watching a film that is just
fantasy. He talks about the
crushing feelings of having a
dying friend and speaks of
the magic of love, though he
has always been single.
At 78, Randi is 5-foot-6,
with gold-rimmed glasses, a
bald head and bushy white
eyebrows and beard. He drives a light blue Mazda Miata
with "Amazing" on . the
license plate. Peacocks can
be heard and seen on the
lawn outside the foundation's office and they leave
their droppings on the path to
the front door. Everyone
calls him Randi.
·
He is energetic and lucid,
quick with a joke, and looking back on his life he can' I
help feeling some frustration. No matter what fraudbusting light he casts on purveyors of the .paranormal,

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Eve ning · 7:30 p.m.
RiverVII~y

River Valley Apo;tolic

•

(Be ali'MCe Uftll JUurseV)
The Serenity Pr•yer, by Reinhold Niebuhr, reads in put:
God. give us Gr.tl:l! to ac&lt;;ept wilh serenity the things lha!
cannot be changtd. Coorage to change the things which

should be changed. and the Wisdom to distinguish the
one from the other. This beautiful prayer applies
to oor.iel ves as miEh a'i it does to the world OUiside
of us. That is, after trying lo change what we can,
we should accept with serenity who ~e are.
Sometimes. it is extremely diflicult to know what
we can change, and part of this is di scovering who
we truly are. St. Paul apparently had round this
serenity, because in his letter tu the Philiwian.'i
he tells us lha! he has learned to be satisfH:d wilh
whmever he has. He has 1eame&lt;1 the secret to
being at peace with himself in all situations.
Paul goes on to say thai he has the strength
to face all conditions by the power lha! am.
gives him (Philippians 41. So perllaps,
we should reflect &lt;kcply on who we are,
and after Lrying to change the things we can,
be at peace with who we are.
God love'!! us just the way we are.
and we should also love ourselves.

&amp;&gt;

arrl teli~ ~ 1~ Go:::l. ms for us. Qrl i s l01Je, arrl
heo.m abicE.s in love abides in Q:d, ard G:d abid=s in him.
R.S.V. l Jdm 4 ol 6

'I.e krv.o.r

We Sell Homes at

TEAFORD REAL ESTATE

Assembly of God
Uberty ~bly ol God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane , Mason .
W.Va.. Pa!itor: Neil 'IC:oolll1t, Sunday
Services- 10:00 a.m. and 1 p.m.

MambetS of ·the MLS and REALTOR"

Pick up a color Brochure!
216 East Second ~t. • Pomeroy

740-992-3325
www.teafordrealesfate.net

Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes ·
Ken and Adam Youn

Ponooroy Chu ..... oiCbrlot
212 W. Main St., Sunday Scbool • 9:30
a.m., Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday ServiceS - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Wesulde Cburcll of Onilt
3~226

Children's Home Rd. , Sunda¥
School- 11 a.m.. Wol'!lhip - IOa.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servk:es - 7 p.m.

~ 70 Grant St., Middleport, Sunday sc hool
• 9:30 liJU ., Wonhip • II a:m. and 6 p.m.•
Wedne~ay St:rv ice · 7 p.m. Pastor: Gary

Mtd...port Cllunb ol Cbrlot
and· Main, Pastor: AI Hart!oo,
Cbildrent Director; Sharon St~yrc , Teen
Direelor: Dodget Vaugban, Sunday School
- 9:l0 a.m., Worship- 8:1.5, 10:30 a.m., 1
p.m., Wedne sday Services - 7 p.m.
~ th

Ellis
RuU•nd Fint Bapl.itt Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.·. -Wonhip \0:45 a.m.

Pomeroy Flnt Baptist
· Pastor Jon Brod~cn , East Main St.,

Keao CbUKb of Christ
Wonhip - 9:30 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace, ht and
3rd &amp;unday

Sunday Sch. 9:30am, Worship 10:30 am
Fll'lt Soutbem BlptiJt
41872 Poii'ICtoy Pike , Pat ter: E. Lt.mu
O'Bryant , '"sunday SchoOl - 9:30 a.m.,
Wonhip . 8:1!J a.m., 9:4!5 am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
WednesQay Service•· 7:00 p.m.

lloliwdow llldp CbURb ol Cluill
Putar:Bru~:o Terry, Sunday School ·9:30

Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service• ·6:30p.m,

Flm BaptlJI Cbun:b
Pastor: Billy Zu1pan 6th and Palmer St. ,
Middleport, Sunday School - 9 :1 ~ a.m ..
Worship - KI:U a.m., 7:00 p.m.,

Zloa Cbun:b of Cbrilt
Pome"roy, Harrisonville Rd . (Rt.l43),
Pa11or: RoJer- Wataoa. Sunday School •
9:30 a.m., Wonblp • 10:30 a.m .• HlO
p.m., Wednesday Services - 7 p,m,

Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Racine First Baptist
Pastor: Rym Eaton, pastor • Sunday

'lllpptn Ploln Cbun:b .. Chrlol
Instrumental , Worship Service - 9 a.m.,
Communion - 10 a.m., Sunday School 10:1 5 a.m ., Youlb- 5:30 pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wednesda}' 1 pm

School - 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:40 a.m.,
7:00 p._m. , Wed nesday Services - 7:00

p.m.

[.

Slb·er Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swanson , Sunday School JOa .m., Worship - \l a.m., 7:00 p.m.
.Wed nes~y Services- 7:00 p.m.

Minister: Tom Runyon, 39.558 Bradbury
Road, Middlepon, Sunday S(:hopl • 9:30

a.m .
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Rutland Clwr&lt;b ol Chrill
Su nday School - 9: 30 a.m., Worship and
Communion - 10:30 am., Bob l WelT)',
Minister

Belhlellem Blptlst Chun:h
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH ,
Pastor: Ed Carter, Sunday Schoo l - 9:30
a.m., Sunday Wors hip - 10 :30 a.m.,
. Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00p.m.

Bradford Chun:b ol CluUI
Comer of St . Rt . 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd ..
Minister: Doug Shamblin, Youth Minister:
Blll Amber&amp;«, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m.,Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Old lktbd Fm Wlll Baotbl CbOU&lt;b
2860 1 St. Rt. 1, Middleport . Sunday
Service - 10 a.m., 6:00 p.m.• Tuesday
Services -6:00

Hkkory Hilla Churdl of Cbrtlt
Tuppers Plains , Pastor Mike Moon:, Bibte
clau, 9 a.m. Sunday : worship 10 a.m.
Sunday; worship 6:30 pm Sunday; Bible
clliSs 1 pm Wed ,

Hillside Baptist Church
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7, Pastor: Rev.
James R Acree, Sr., Su nday Unified!
Service. Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Serv ices -7 p.m.

·I

Reedsville Chwd orcbrkt
PMtor: Philip Stunn . SU.ndaY School: 9:30
a.m., Worship Servke: 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.

Vk:tor}' Baptist Indeptndent
525 N. 2nd St. Middlepon. Pastor: James
E. Kee see. Worship - IOa.m., 7 p.m.,
Wed nesday Services· 7 p.m.

Dexter Ch..-ch or Christ
SUTKla)· §C:hool 9:30a.m.. Sunday worship
- !0:30a .m.
Tbe Cburdl nl Christ or Pomeroy
Intersecti on 7 and 124 W, Evan&amp;elist:
De nnis Sargent , Sunday Bible Study ·
9:30 a.m., Wo~hip: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
.P .m.•Wednesday Bible Study - 7 pm.

Faith Baptist Church
Railroad St .. Mason, Sunday School · 10
a. m.. Worship - I I a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m

Christian Union
llartl'..-.1 Cbrcb of Christ In

Mt.·Moriah Boptlst

A1mosphere

u-

Chrilttan
Hartford . W.Va., Pastor:Dav id Greer,
Sunday School ~ 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday
Services - 7:00 p.m.

Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport , Sunday
School · 9:30 a.m., Worship · 1 0 :4~ a.m.

Mi!fie s !l{estaurcmt
1

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a.m.. Worshi p 10:45 a.m.. Sunday Eveni ng - 6:00 p.m.,
Pastor: Ooo Walker

Ho•t Cooud MM&amp; &amp; I)IJUy Sptcla/s

!lyncaM nr.t Ch...., ol God
Apple and Second Stl .. Pastor: Rev. O.vid
Ruue ll, Sunday School and Wonhip- 10
a.m. Eveain a Services- ' 6::JO p.m .,
Wednesday Serv ice~ - 6:30 p.m.

Chur&lt;b "God oll'Npbe&lt;y
OJ . White Rd. off Sl. Rt . 160 , Putor: PJ.
Chapmla, Sunday School - 10 .a.m.,
Wonhip - ll a.nl., Wednelday Services - 7
p.m.

'

Congregational
'IHniiJ Clnndo
Second &amp;. Lynn, Pomeroy, Putor: Rev.
JOnathan Noble , Worship l0:2S am ..
Sunday Sc;hool 9: l ~ a.m. •

Episcopal
Gnee [pillcopd Cbun:b
326 E. Main St ., Pomeroy. Sunday School
and Holy Euchariat 11:00 am . Rev.
Edward Payne

Holiness
C..........,Chud!
. Pas10r: Steve Tomek , Main Street ,
Rutland, Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m ..
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

Church of God

Clrlnon loltnlenomla.tloul Chard
Kinasbury Road. Pastor: Robert Vlace,
Sund ay School · 9:30 a.m., Wonhip
Service 10:30 a.m., Even ing Service 6

Wedoelday Services - 7 p.m.

PIUtor: Oeazil Null. Worship - 9:30a.m .
Sunday School - 10:30 am.

LoqSu nday School - 9:30 a.m., Wonhip 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30 a.m., Sunday Scbool ·
10:30 a.m.• Fint Sunday of Month · 7:00
pm. sery-ice
'lllppon Plolnl SI. Pool
Pastor: Jim Corbitt, Sunday School - 9
a.m ., Worship - 10 a.m.. Tlx:sday Setvict'!
• 7:30 p.m .

C.Oinlet-.
Asbwy (Syracuse), Pastor: Bob Rnbinlon ,
Sunday School - 9:45am., Wonhip - II
am., Wednesday Services -7 :30 p.m.

'Eo""""

Pastor: Arlmnd King, Sunday School 10:30 a.m.. Wonhip - 9:30 a.m .. Bible

,........,.

~ Cbul&lt;boltboN.,.,.,..

Pastor: Jan Lavender, Su nday School 9:30 un ., Worship • 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wedac:sday Services - 7 p.m.

Bald Knob . on Co . Rd .'31 . Pwor: Rlv,
Roger Willford : Sunday"SdlOol - 9:30
a.m. Wonhip- ? p.m.

Cbelter Cburth or the NIZIIftllt

Pallor: Rev. Herbert Orate, Sunday School
- 9:30 a.m., Worship - I I a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wed!aday Setviccl - 7 pm .
Rutlud Clourdo oltbo N.....,.
P11tor. Isaac Slwpe , Sundly School - 9:30
a.m., Wonhip - 10:30 a.m ., 6:30 p.m.,
Wcdnelday Serv ice• • 7 p.m.

WbUc's Chapd Wale,an
Coolville Road, Pu tor: Re". Chitin
Martindale, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m .. Wednesday Service
- 7 p.m .

Other Churches

Fatnitw IUble Chufth

Rt . I, Pastor: Brian May,
Sunday School - 9:30a .m., Wonhip -7:00
p.m ., Wedac:sday Bible Srudy · 7:00p.m.
Fahb Ftllowdlip CJ"UUttt f« Chrllt
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens, Serv i(:e:
friday. '1 p.m .

Letart , W.Va.

S,...... CG!ulllllty Cbttn:b
2480 Serond St., Sy111e111t, OH
Sun. SchoollO am. Sundy nialu 6:30 pm
Pastor: l0111 Owina
A New Jleabm1nc ,
(Full GolpdCinu'dl) Harrisonvilk ,
Puton: Bob and Kay Marshall ,
SundaYService. 2 p.m.

Col•ory Blbk Clnudo
Pome roy Piki, Co. Rd .. Paslor: Rev.

Swdy Wed. 7ol0

Pastor: Keilh Rader, Sunday S«: bool - 10
a.m., Worship - If a-!11.

u..111 &lt;MWdloportl
Pastor: Briu Dunham , Sunday School •
9:30 a.m., Wonbip - 11:00 a.m.
Putor: Bob Robinmn , Sunday Schobl - 9
a.rn ~, Wonhip-

10 a.m.

PartCbopel
Suaday 5(:hool - 9 a.m., Won hip -

I~

a.m.

Col&lt;ory Pllarlm Cbopet

l'emm&gt;y

· Hatrisooville Road, Pastor: Owlea
McKenzie, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,
Wonhip - ll a.m., 7:00p.m., WedaeMtay
Service·· 7:00p.m.

Putor: Brian Dunham, Worship - 9:30
a.m ., Sunday &amp;hool· 10:35 a.m.

Roae ~ Sbuoa HotiiMII Cburc'
l.ading C..U Rd., Rutland. ~ Rev. .
Dewey Kina. Sunday sc~l- 9: ~ am.,
Sunday wonbip -7 p.m., Wectneaday

prayer mcetinJ· 7 p.m. .
Pille Gr.,. Blblo H.u- CbaRh
1/2 mile off Rl. 32.5, Putor: Re~. O'DeU
·-~y. Sundo)" School • 9ol0 o.m.,
Wonhi'P .- 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Service. 7:30p.m.

u.-

Wtoloyoa Btble
Churdl
75 PCirt St .. Mlddlop&lt;DI. Puler. lllok
Bourne, Sunday S&lt;:hool· 10 a.m. Wonllip
· 10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve , 7:00 p.m.,

Woclaeoday Savioe. 7ol0 pm.
Bytdl RUD C..,.uliJ Cllurdl
Pastol: Rev. ~...airy Lemley; Sunday School
- 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m.,
Thunday Bible Study and Youth · 7 p.m.

Lounl Cltlll'nc Metbodkt Cbur&lt;b
Pu tor: Glenn Rowe, SunclliY &amp;hool 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.,Wednc:aday SCrvicc -7:00p.m.
1

Latter-Day Saints
1beCbaRhotJ....
Cbrill of LoUer-Day Solnll

RockS.....
Pator. Keith Rader, Sunday School- 9 : 1~
a.m., Worship - 10 a.m., Youth
fellowship, Sunday - 6 pm .

Sdvm:viUe CommUDIIy Church
Sunday SchooiiO:OO am , Sunday Wonhip
II :00 am , Wednesday 7:00 pm Pastor:
Bryan &amp;: Mi ssy Dailey

Oooto Clutollon Followlblp
(Non-denominational fellowship)
Meeting in the Mci&amp;s Middle School
Cafeteria Petor: Clui! Stewart
10:00 am.· Noon Sunday; lnf0111'llll
Worship , Otildrcn'a ministry

Ponlud-Raciac: Rd., Pas1or: Jim Proffin.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m., Wedne&amp;day Serv ices - 7:00
p.m.

Clllloa 1'lbmlado CbaRh
·Clifton, W.Va., Sunday School · 10 a.m.,
Wonhip - 7 p.m., Wednesday Service - 7

Betbd Wonblp Cenll:r
39782 S.R. 7, R*'sviUe , OH 45772 , 112
mile north of Eastern Schools on SR 7. A
Full Gospel Church , Pastor Rob Barber,
Associate Pastor Karyn Davis, Youth
Putor Suzie Francis, Sunday services
10:00 am worship. 6:00 pm Family Lire
Clusea, Wed. Home Cell Groups 7:00
p.m ., Outer Limits Cell Group at the
church 6:30'pm to 8:30pm

p.m.

_,

Putor. lobrt Gilmore. Sw.tay Sobool • 10
a.m., Wonhip ~ 9 a.m ., Wednellday
Servicu - !Oa.m.

F.U Goopol Church
oltbo LIYIDtl Savio&lt;
Rt.338, Antiquily, Pastor: Jesse Morris.
Service•: Satwday l :OO p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., MomlnJ
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m. 4 7:00 pm ,
Wednnday Service • 7:00 p.m., Youth
Servlce-7:00 p.m .

Carmel &amp;: Buhan Rds . Racine. Ohio,
Pa1tor: John Gilmore, Sunday School 9:45 a.m., Worship - 11 :00 a.m . , Bible
swdy w~d. 7:30p.m.

Moral01Stor
Pulor: John Gilmore, SUnday School - ll
a.m., Worsh.lp - 10 a.m.

-Lolart

SlleniC...,.unllyCinudo

~Lilt Ctol&lt;r

..Puii..Oolpel 0\urch" , Puton John A
Play Wodo.60) Sot:oadA". M!I00 ,773·
.5017, Scnlce time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.,

Wednaday7pm

~ Cburcb

Lolli Bottom, Pastor: Steve Reed , Sunday
School • 9:30 a.m. Worship - 9:30 a.m.
ud 7 p.m., Wednesday - '1 p.m., Friday ·fellowship !lervice 1 p.m.
llirrilonvWe Cotamunll)' Cb~b
Putor: Theron Durham, Sunday • 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m., Wednelday - ?p.m.

Ml'' port Coamuulty Churth
Peul St., Middlepon , Pastor: Sam

Pastor: Bill Marshall Sunday School •

.57~

St. Rl. 160, 446·6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday School !0:20-11 a.m .. Rel ief
Society/Priesthood 11 :05- 12:00 noon ,
Sa(:ramerit Ser vice 9- IO: IS a.m.,
Homemaking meeting , h t 1bun. - 7 p.m.

9a.m., Wonhip - 10 a.m., ht Sullda)'
every month eve ning aervi~;e 7:00 p,m.;
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Andersoa, Sunday SchOo l 10 a .m.,
Evening . 7:30p.m. . Wodnelday Service 7:30pm.

Lutheran

Putor: Kerry Wood , Sunday S&lt;:hoo\ - 10
a.m., Wor11hip - II a.m.Wcdnesday
Services 6 pm; Thur Bibk Study 1 pm

Foltb VolloJ- Churcb
Bailey Run Road . Pu1or: Rc~ . Emmett
Rawson, Sunday Evening 1 p.m.,
Thunday Service - 7 p.m .

81. JoiiD LalbcnD Cll..-b
Pine Grove, Wonhip · 9:00a.m., Sunday
School- 10:00 a.m. Pastor:

Our Saviour Lutheran Clnlrtb
WalnUI and Henry Sts,, RavenswOOd,
W.Va., Pllitor: David Russell , Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m., Wonllip - II a.m .
St. Paul Lutbenn Chueb
Corner Syc a~re &amp; Second St., Pomeroy,
Sun . School - 9:45 a.m., WorJhip · II a.m.

United Methodist
Graham United Mttbodlll
Worship- l t a.m. Pastor: Ri(:hard.Neuc
lledatel Unllod Melhodkt
New Haven , Richard Nease, Pastor,
Sunday worship 9: 30 a.m. Tues. 6:30
prayer and Bible Study.

Mt. (Mhe United Metbodbl
Off 124 behind Wilkesville, Pastor; Re v.

Ralph Spires, Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m., llmnday
Service8 -7 p.m.
Melp Coepenlln: Paisb
Northeul Cluster, Alfred , Pastor: Jim
Corbitt, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .,
Worsbip - llun.,6:30p.m.

-

Cool&gt;lloUnltodMftbodkt,....

s,.....,.._

Putor; Helea Kline, Coolville Church ,
Main&amp;. Fifth St.. Sun. School - 10 a.m.,
Worship - 9 a.m., Tues. Serv ices · 1 p.m.

Ji ll Bridgeman St., Syracuse, Sunday
School - 10 a.m. Evening · 6 p.m.,
Wednelday Service - 1 p.m.

lkdMIC!roldt

Conuollllty Chufth
Off Rt. 12-4. Pastor: )\dsel Hart , Sunday

Thwnship Rd., 4611C, Sunday School · 9
a.m, Worship - 10 a.m.• Wednnday
Services - 10 a.m.
Hril-Cburdl
Orand Street, Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. Pastor Pbillip Bell

-Cllordl
Co. Rd . 63, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 un.

Nazarene
Mlddloporl Chardo ol tbo'NPastor: /\lien Midnp , Sv.nday School 9:30 a.m .,Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.,
Wedne ulay Services - 1 p.m., Pastor:
A.llen Midcap

R-FollowJhlp
Cbun:h of the Nazueoe, Pastor: Runell
Carwn , Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wmhip - 10:4' a.m., 7 p.m., Wednelda}'
Services - 7 p.m .

et.......
Pastor: Jim Corbitt, Won hip - 9 a.m.,
Sunday Sc hool - lO a.m. , Thunday
Services- ? p.m.

Syi'ICUit Cbllld ~ tbt Nazanmt
- 9:30
a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,

Pa~tor Milz Adkim , Sunday School

a-.cbrlotlln r-pClludo

Hert::bet

Davil, . Sunday serv ice. 10 a.m., ·
Wodnelday lei'Vict , 7 p.m.

' Foltb hll

BKt of West Columbia, W.Va.om Uevlnc
Road, Pastor: Charltl Rouah (304) 675·
2181, Sunday Scbool 9:30 am. SunUy
cveninJ service 7:00 pm, Blbly Shldy
WtdDcaday Hl'\li~ 7:00pm

Pastor:
White , Sv.nday School·
10 am, Sunday Church aervlct- 6:30pm
Wcdo&lt;odoy 7 pm

AlMID&lt;IIDI G.... R.F.I.
92) S.'I1IW St., Mlddlopot1 , Pollorl... u

Conooi&amp;-

-CbriltloaFoltowoblp
9365 Hooper Road, Athenl, P111or:
Lonuie C0111, Suaday Wonhip 10:00 tm,
Wednesday: 7 pm

u- o1 H..... Mlnlolrlol
St. Rt. 124 Ltnpvllle, OR
fu ll Gospel, Cl Pastors Rober1 A Roberti
Musser, Sunday Scllooi 9:30 1m ~ ,
Wonhip 10:30 am - 7:00 pm , Wed.
Service 7:00pm

Teua 1.... Mtmotrieo
Meeting in the Mull:~eny Community
Center Gymnasium. Pasror Eddie Bacr,

Service every Tuesday 6:30pm

Pentecostal
Penlo&lt;ollal ......loly
Pastor: St Rt. 124 , Racine. Tomatlo Ret.
Sunday School ~ 10 a.m.. Eveninx · 7
p.m., Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Harrtson•Ulo l'r&lt;lllyleriu CbaRh
Pascor: Robert Crow, Worship · 9 a.m.

School- 9:30 1.m., Worship · IO:JO a.m .,
7:30p.m.
lly&lt;Pillo CtMO.....tiJ CbU&lt;b
Sunday School - 9:30 a.in., Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Mono Chapel CbSunday school - 10 a.m.• Wonhip - I I
a.m ., Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Ftltb Goopet Cbufth
Lona Bottom, Sllllday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10 : 4 ~ a.m .. 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday ?:30 p.m .
Mt. OHvt COIMiaDitJ Cluudl
Pastor: Lawrence Bush, Sunday School 9:30a.m ., Evening - 6:10p.m., Wedneday
Service - 7 p.m.
run GoopetlJPII'l 3045 Hiland ROid, Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy
Hunlel', Sunday School - 10 a.m., E ~ening
7:30p.m ., 1\Jetd.ay &amp;.lbun. - 7:30 p.m.

Mlddloport Pmbyllriu
Putor: Junea Snyder, Sund1y School 10
a.m ., worship service II am.

Seventh-Day Adventist
s....o..o., ......dol
Mulberry Hts. Rd ., Pomeroy, Saturday
Services : Sabbath School - 2 p.m.,
Wonhip • 3 p.m.

••

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

•

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your lighr so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men, rharrhey may see your
• th at they may see
Tlitcan yo• dtum, chnt whoiiU good works and glorify your
.....e2-l1l1
1 5 ,,vu work s and glori fy
PlWl_.._
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Father in heaven."
IFatber in heaven :·
499 Rlcbtud Avenue,Aihens
•11111111..... ,_...._
Pomeroy, OH 45769 •.
Matthew 5:16
Matthew 5:1
740·594-6333
t-80().451-9806
1411124444
740-992-6606

I!' a.n.t c Tuas Community 36411 Wickham Rd,
Putor: Peter Martindale. Sunday Sthool ·
9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Service! - 7:00 p,m.
Youth group meeting 2nd &amp;. 4th Sundays
7 p.m.
Eden United Bretbml .. Cbrlll

State Rou te 124, between Reedsville A
Hockingport. Sunday School - 10 a.m..
Sunday Worship - 11:00 a.m. Wednelday
Sen iccs - 7:00 p.m., Pastor- M. A.dam

Middlepon, OH

740.992-6128
Local source for trophies,
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words abide in you, ye shall
Products+ ask whal ye will, and it shall
~~~~!~~ be done unto you.
John 15:7

.

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INSURANCE
SERVICES ~
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2~~5~;~n
Pomeroy

PHARMACY
he gave his only
We Fill Doctors'
lbi~JIG•tten
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Pomeroy

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ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

1·740-667·3156
"StUI s/IUIU
wcare"

or ee: OrmadeY

t ndth I'S

S re

"
perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

1)1:!
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.,

Will

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Godsolovedthe world
f th f m
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'·

Mt.lltrmoa Untied Bretlftll

Soodt Botbo1 C.....,.Jty Cb"""
Silver Ridse· Pu lor Lind• Damewood,
Sunday School - 9 a.m., Worship Service
10 a.m . 2nd and 4th Sunday

.# ' •
.#
_.
ti9tr _.
unttaJlh
Rome
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your li ght so shine befo~e l

'·

United Brethren

1/ ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shaU
ask whaJ ye will, and il shall
be thine unto you.
John JS:7

..

Ntw Life Victory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road . Oallipolis, OH
Putor: Bill State n. Sunday Services • 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wedac:sday - '1 p.m. &amp;:
Youth 7 p.m.

Alb Stnet Clnmh

SlleniCu.....
- . Wlllllm . K. Mmhall, S-y
School · 10:15 a.m., WonJUp • 9:1$ a.m.,
Bible SrudyoMonday 7:00pm
5aow&gt;tllo
.
Suaclay School · 10 a.m., Woraldp • 9a.m.

..

Rejokiq Ufe C•urtb
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middlepon . Pastor:
Mike Foreman, Pastor Emeritus Lawrence
Fortman, Worsh ip- 10:00 am
Wedne sday Sen-ices- 7 p.m.

398 Aab St., Middleport-Putor Jeff Smith
Pastor: Rick Bourne , Sunday School 9:30a.m .• Wonbip - 10:30 a.m .. Tbllnday
Servloel - 1 p.m.

...

Blackwood , Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wors hip 10 :30 a.m .. 7:.30 p.m.,
Wednesday Service- 7:)() p.m,

Amulq Gnu Commonlty Church
Putar: Wayne Dunlap, Stile Rt. 681,
Tuppm Plains , SWI. Worship: 10 am a:
6:30pm , Wed. Bible Study 7:00p.m.

FORI&amp; R1111
Pulor: Bob Robinson, Sunday School - 10
a.m ., Worship - 9 a.m.

..._

p.m

Communlty of Cbrilt

DanvllleHalaelsCinudl
3! 057 State Route 325, Langsvllc, Pastor:
Benjamin Crawford, Sunday school - 9:30
a.m ., Sunday worship - 10:30 am. &amp; 7
p.m., Wednesday prl.yer service · 1 p.m.

Brodbuy Cburdo of Cbrilt

ML Unkln Bapllsl
Pastor: Denni ~ Weaver Sunday School9:45 a.m., Eveni ng - 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Servk:es - 6:30p.m. '

I

Putor: Ron Heath, Sunday Worship · 10
a.m., 6 p.m.. Wednesday Services - 7
p.m .

a.m.

Forest Run Bapdst- Pomeroy
Rev. Juseph Woods, Sunday School - 10
a. m.,Worship - 11:30 a.m.

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Study· ! pm.

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Sizes available 5x 10 to 10 x 20

740-985-3561
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Hemlock Grove Chrlltlao Cburdl
Minister: Llli'I'Y Brown, Wonhip • 9:30
a.m . Sunday School - l0:30 a.m., Bible

Cloesblre Boplld Ch..-b
Pastor: Steve LitOe, Sunday School: 9:30
am, Morning Worship: 10:30 am ,
Wednesday Bible ·study 6:30pm ; choir
practice 7;30; youth and Bihle Buddies
6:30 p.m. Thurs. I pm book sNdy

Director of Marketing and Admissions

Open 7 days a week
740·992-n13

The Appliance man

'33226 Chiklren's Home Rd, Pomeroy, OH
Contacl 740-441 -1296 Sunday mornin g
10:00, Sun morn_i ng Bible study;
ronowinJ worship , Sun . eve 6:00 pm,
Wed bible swdy 7 pm

Carpenter Baptist Chun:b
Sunday School - 9:30am, ~hing
Servke !0:30am , Evcnin&amp; Service
7o00pm, WedneSday Bible Srudy 7:00 P,lll •
Interim Preacher · Floyd Ross

Michelle Kennedy

"A Home Bank for
Home People"

740.949-2217 .

WetUide Cllun:b otCbrilt

Pqtvllle Fftewll Baplli!ll C burcb
Pll5tor: Mike Harmun, Sunday School
9:30to 10:30 a.m. Worship service 10:30
to II :00 am. Wed. preaching 6 pm

~~

Homemade Desserts Made Dally

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

Church of Christ

Baptist

r

740·949-2210

Hills Self Storage

. S.:rtd Heart Calbolk: C bun-b
161 Mulberry Ave.: Pomeroy, 992-$891.
Pasror: Rev. W1dter E. Heinz, Sat. Con.
4 : 4VU~ p .m . ; Man - ~ : 30 p.m., Sua.
Con. -8:4$,j):l!i a.m... Sua. Mus- 9:30
a.m., Daily Malit· 8:30a.m.

Thun . 7:00p.m., PliStor Marty R. Hunorr

l

Mile Hi ~l Rd., .Racine, Pastor. James
Slltcrfteld, Sunday School - 9AS a.m.,
Evenina: - 6 p.m., Wednesday Services · 7
pm .

Catholic

Services: Sun 10:00 a.m . .t. 7 :30 p.m..

HilmJ fn'endly

209Thlrd
Racine, OH

Center,

Emmuud Apootolk libcmoch:lnt.
Loop Rd off N¢w Lima Rd . Rutland ,

I

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

Wo ~hip

873 S. Jrd Ave .. Middlepon. Rev.
Michael Bradford, Pascor, Sunday, 10:30
a.m. TUes. 6:30 pr1yer. Wed . 7 pm Bible
Study

they seem to pull off.escape
acts of their own, continuing
to wiri new followers and to
earn checks Randi says are
cashed at the expense of realism.
''I'm not able to do the
things that I want to do," he
said. "The true believers will
not pay any attention to evidence that does not show that
they believe to be untrue."
His voice grows as he
begins the litany of offenders
- Geller and Popoff and so
forth. "I'm very angry," he
.said. "I should be able to get
them brought to justice."
Geller, who remains a target on Randi's Web site,
acknowledges his appearance on · ~The Tonight Show"
was a "humiliation" but
notes his career has soldiered
on.
· "I thought, 'This is it. I'm
finished .' But exactly the
opposite happened," Geller
said. "People like Randi ·skeptics - actually made
my career. They did for me
what a PR man would have
asked a million dollars for."
Randi is not the least bit
shaken talking about death.
He nearly died last year,
undergoing double bypass
surgery and remaining hospitalized for two months.
Some might credit God for
their survival, but not Randi.
He has seen no proof.
Envelopes continuously
arrive at Randi's office seeking to take him up on his
seven-digit challenge, seeking to prove the unprovable.
None of the entries has made
him question his beliefs, but
his certainty, he acknowledges, always comes with a
sprinkling of uncertainty,
too.
"I am probably right. But
I'm always only probably
right," he said. "Absolutes
are very hard to find."

rr

Rudud .....
Blptlot
Salem St., Pastor. , Sunday Scbool•- 10
a.m., ·E~eninJ - 7 p.m., Wodncaday
Sen'icea - 7 p.m.
So&lt;oad Blpllll Cb.....
Raventwood , WV. S\IIIday ScboollO am' MomiDa worship II am Evening • 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 p.m.
rtm &amp;apttot Cb- or-. wv
(Independent BIJ:tist)
SR 6S2 and Anderson St. Pastor: Robert .
Grady, Sunday ~ebool 10 am , Morning
dmrch II am , Sunday evening 6pm, Wed.
Bible Study 7 pm

CbaRh oil""' Cbrlot Apootolk

Abramdabra! Magician-turned-skeptic aims to expose frauds
BY MAn SEDENSKY

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

WORS1'HP GOD THIS
WEEK
,_

Friday, July 13, 2007

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

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

••

Shocking Language
Requires Shocking Love
BY KERRY WooD

PageA6 ~

FAI'i'H. VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

•

.

P.O. Box 683

Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

. - .. .

"

�"

pj\STQR,

- possibly the reaction the man
wanted. My sc;cond reaction
was to be offended. How dare
he wear that shirt into my
sanctuary!!! Then my thinl
reactioo {coming several days
later) was more compassionate. Pemaps the young man in
question has never lived in an
environment where such language . js, considered rude.
After all; it is a word increasingly heard in all types of public places - schools, shopping
centers, concerts, at the county
fair, etc. It is often used in
movies, and in family rooms
thanks to premium channels
on cable and satellite TV.
Maybe in this man's house,
such language is common and
accepted.
But even if he comes froln
such an environment, wearing
that shirt into a chun:h is still
rude. But what should' I do
with his rudeness? That is the
vital question!! Most of the
time, we respond in the same
manner - rudeness for rudeness. Bull don't think that's
what Jesus would have done.
Nor do I think that's what
Jesus would have us to do.
The Apostle Paul gives us
soroe very helpful defmitions
of what love is and what it is
not: "Love is patient Love is
kind. It does not envy. It is not
rude, it is not self-seeking. It is
not easily angered, it keeps no
record of wrongs" {I
Corinthians 13:4-5).
I do not know if that young
man is a Christian; however, I
am a Christian: Therefore, the
ex~tation ai:ld God-given
ability to live that kind of love
is mine - not necessarily his.
If I am to take this scripture
seriously, I must fOigive the
man lor his rudeness and let it
go. I must pray for him and
look for the ways we can connect with each other in spite of
our ditTeiences. I pray that
God will use me in some way
to reach out to people like this
young ~ and ~ve him_l~v­
mg attention wtthout gJVmg
into the shock.
We can stand up for respect.
appropriate arlin: and language. But we must also reach
out to those who don't follow
our rules in the ways we want
them to follow. I think the
really shocking thing is to not
turn away the shock jocks, but
to embrace them. Give them
unconditional love and watch
the miracle God has in store
for them to unfold.
Kerry Wood is the pastor of
Racine United Methodist
Church. 818 Elm Street in
Racine. Sunday worship is at
1I a.m. Pastor Kerry can be
reached at racineumc@ suddenlink.net

UNITED

METHODIST CHURCH

Some people are into shocking others. Think Howard
Stern. Paris Hilton. Madonna.
The more flamboyant something is, the rtJore those types
of people like it. But not every
"shock jock" is a famous personality. Some are right here
· with us in southeastern Ohio.
I got abig shock last weekend. Our church hosted the
funeral for John Holsinger.
The funeral home across the
street from the church didn't
have enough room in its
chapel, so we allowed them to
use our larger space. And we
needed all that room and
more! People were packed
into the pews, stood along both
side aisles from front to back,
and they were even three-deep
along the back of the sanctuary. I have never seen the
church so full!
I dido 't know John well. We
met last fall at a Southern High
School football game; f must
admit I was somewhat leery of
him. John and I looked nothing alike - and our background~ were totally dissimilar. John was a tattoo artist and
a huge Harley-Davidson
motorcycle fan. I'm a preacher who wishes he had a new
Honda Accord. He was into
music that I sometimes didn't
even experience as music. But
as we talked, I discovered that
we had something in common
that trnnscended the shocking
coritmsts betw~ii us: our
desire to follow Jesus and be
more like him.
The crowd who came to
John's funeral included a large
number of bikers. Many of
them are members of the
Christian Motorcycle Riders
Club. They love their Harleys,
leathers, piercings, tattoos,
wild hair, etc. - and Jesus
Christ most of all.
There were some other bikers in the crowd. And one
young man caught my attention - and not because his hair,
l;itttoos or piercings were more
oulrdgeous than others. It was
his t-shirt. Written in huge letters across the front was this
message: "I'm not Mr. Right,
but I'll I
I you until he
comes along."
I cannot repeat the message
more explicitly. It used language that is not fit to print in
this family newspaper, and it's
a word that I do not use at all.
So why was this young man
wearing such a shirt, and why
was he wearing . it IN
CHURCH???
My first reaction was shock

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Friday, July 13, 2007

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Christian frat sues University of
Florida, claiming discrimination

•

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) - A
Christian fraternity sued the
University of Florida on Tuesday,
claiming the university is discriminating against theni by refusing to
recognize the fraternity as a registered student group.
University officials have told Beta
Upsilon Chi that it can't be registered on ·campus because only men
are allowed to join, which amounts
to prohibited 'sex discrimination,
according to the lawsuit filed in U.S.
District Court in Gainesville.

Beta Upsilon Chi is not allowed to
join the off-campus Greek system of
fraternities and sororities because
the rules governing UF's Greek system bar religious di scrimination,
according to the law suit. The fraternity requires its members to be
Christians.
Without official recognition, the
fraternity is deprived of benefi ts
including access to meeting space ·
and the ability to advertise and
recruit members on campus, the suit
said.

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others.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Randi 's "coming out" as a
skeptic essentially arrived on
FORT LAUDERDALE, a 1972 episode of "The
Fla. - James Randi has Tonight Show" - he helped
escaped from a locked coffin Johnny Carson set up Uri
submerged in the sea, and Geller, the Israeli performer
from a straitjacket dangling who claimed to bend spoons
over Niag3rd Falls. If you with his mind. Randi ensured
chose a word from a 200- the spoons and other props
page book, he could guess it. were . kel't from Geller's
Pick an object, he'd make it hands until showtime to prefade.from sight.
vent tampering. The result
He gave up performing as was an agonizing 22 minutes
The Amazing Randi years in which Geller was unable
ago, but his words to the to perform any tricks.
In the years since. he has
audience at the end of each
show foreshadowed his next garnered a prestigious
act.
MacArthur . fellowship,
"Everythin~ you have seen established his namesake
here is tricks, ' he would say. James Randi Educational
''There is nothing surma!- Foundation and become
ural involved here. hope guardian of a $1 million
you 'II accept my word for prize earmarked for anyone
that. Thank you and good who can prove supernatural
evening."
powers.
It
remains
For more than two unclai'med.
decades; Randi has been the
Randi will go to great
country's skeptic-in-chief, limgths to expose. All of it
aiming his arrow of rational- has earned him countless
ism at psychics and faith fans, and countless other
healers, mediums and men- enemies.
talists. He finds Ills targets so
Michael' Shermer, the pubpreposterous and those lisher of Skeptic magazine
fallmg for them so desperate and executive director of the
that he has become obsessed. Skeptics Society, notes
"Ifs important," he says, Randi has taken on the role
"because any misinforma- another famous magician,
lion like this - of people Houdini, once held.
claiming they can ·subvert
"It takes a magician to
natUre, they can do real rnir- know how people deceive
acles wid they want to be purposely. Scientists are not
paid for it ... that's a very lrdined to detect intentional
negative influence on soci- deception," Shermer said. "If
ety:"
you care about reality, Randi
Toronto-born
Randall ts a lens through which to see
James Hamilton Zwinge's how these claims are put to
cal'eer as a magician and the test."
escape artist came after he · Randi's parents raised him
dropped out of hi~h school Anglican, but he said from
and left home to jom the car- childhood, he never found
nival. His stage routine gave the existence of God believway to a nagging need to able. He doesn't draw much
speak out against those · of a distinction between
whose work he regarded as mainstream religious groups
nonsense - not just people and other spiritual figures on
who read palms and minds. the fringe. The only differHe also took aim at chico- ence, he said, is more estabpractors, homeopaths and lished faiths have much

VanZandt and Ward Rd., Pastor: James
Miller, Sunday School - 10:3() am.,

UF spokesman Steve Orlando said
the university does not comment on
pending litigation .
The advocates who filed the lawsuit, the Christian Legal Society and
tlie Alliance Defense Fund , had sued
the University of · Georgia in
December because the school
wouldn't recognize a chapter of the
fraternity because of the religious
discrimination issue. The suit was
settled two days later whe.n the university changed its policy and
allowed the fraternity to register.

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more power.
Still, Randi has focused
many of his efforts on nontraditional faith leaders.
Once, he showed messages
television faith healer Peter
Popoff claimed to be getting
from God about his audience
were 1actually coming from
his wife through an earpiece.
Another time, he spent days
camped out in his car, eating
1\vinkies and drinking Pepsi
as he waited for the chance
to go through the trash of
another faith healer, W. V.
Grant, looking for signs of
fraud.
He talks freely about death
and what he believes will
happen after.
"I think that the same way
a computer dies when you
put a bullet through it after
pulling the plug out, I don't
think that we live beyond the
grave at all," he said. "I doJI't
see any compellin~ evidence
to support that behef."
For all the imalysis Randi
puts into everything, he still
finds delight in observing
magic he knows is a stunt or
watching a film that is just
fantasy. He talks about the
crushing feelings of having a
dying friend and speaks of
the magic of love, though he
has always been single.
At 78, Randi is 5-foot-6,
with gold-rimmed glasses, a
bald head and bushy white
eyebrows and beard. He drives a light blue Mazda Miata
with "Amazing" on . the
license plate. Peacocks can
be heard and seen on the
lawn outside the foundation's office and they leave
their droppings on the path to
the front door. Everyone
calls him Randi.
·
He is energetic and lucid,
quick with a joke, and looking back on his life he can' I
help feeling some frustration. No matter what fraudbusting light he casts on purveyors of the .paranormal,

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Eve ning · 7:30 p.m.
RiverVII~y

River Valley Apo;tolic

•

(Be ali'MCe Uftll JUurseV)
The Serenity Pr•yer, by Reinhold Niebuhr, reads in put:
God. give us Gr.tl:l! to ac&lt;;ept wilh serenity the things lha!
cannot be changtd. Coorage to change the things which

should be changed. and the Wisdom to distinguish the
one from the other. This beautiful prayer applies
to oor.iel ves as miEh a'i it does to the world OUiside
of us. That is, after trying lo change what we can,
we should accept with serenity who ~e are.
Sometimes. it is extremely diflicult to know what
we can change, and part of this is di scovering who
we truly are. St. Paul apparently had round this
serenity, because in his letter tu the Philiwian.'i
he tells us lha! he has learned to be satisfH:d wilh
whmever he has. He has 1eame&lt;1 the secret to
being at peace with himself in all situations.
Paul goes on to say thai he has the strength
to face all conditions by the power lha! am.
gives him (Philippians 41. So perllaps,
we should reflect &lt;kcply on who we are,
and after Lrying to change the things we can,
be at peace with who we are.
God love'!! us just the way we are.
and we should also love ourselves.

&amp;&gt;

arrl teli~ ~ 1~ Go:::l. ms for us. Qrl i s l01Je, arrl
heo.m abicE.s in love abides in Q:d, ard G:d abid=s in him.
R.S.V. l Jdm 4 ol 6

'I.e krv.o.r

We Sell Homes at

TEAFORD REAL ESTATE

Assembly of God
Uberty ~bly ol God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane , Mason .
W.Va.. Pa!itor: Neil 'IC:oolll1t, Sunday
Services- 10:00 a.m. and 1 p.m.

MambetS of ·the MLS and REALTOR"

Pick up a color Brochure!
216 East Second ~t. • Pomeroy

740-992-3325
www.teafordrealesfate.net

Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes ·
Ken and Adam Youn

Ponooroy Chu ..... oiCbrlot
212 W. Main St., Sunday Scbool • 9:30
a.m., Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday ServiceS - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Wesulde Cburcll of Onilt
3~226

Children's Home Rd. , Sunda¥
School- 11 a.m.. Wol'!lhip - IOa.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servk:es - 7 p.m.

~ 70 Grant St., Middleport, Sunday sc hool
• 9:30 liJU ., Wonhip • II a:m. and 6 p.m.•
Wedne~ay St:rv ice · 7 p.m. Pastor: Gary

Mtd...port Cllunb ol Cbrlot
and· Main, Pastor: AI Hart!oo,
Cbildrent Director; Sharon St~yrc , Teen
Direelor: Dodget Vaugban, Sunday School
- 9:l0 a.m., Worship- 8:1.5, 10:30 a.m., 1
p.m., Wedne sday Services - 7 p.m.
~ th

Ellis
RuU•nd Fint Bapl.itt Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.·. -Wonhip \0:45 a.m.

Pomeroy Flnt Baptist
· Pastor Jon Brod~cn , East Main St.,

Keao CbUKb of Christ
Wonhip - 9:30 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace, ht and
3rd &amp;unday

Sunday Sch. 9:30am, Worship 10:30 am
Fll'lt Soutbem BlptiJt
41872 Poii'ICtoy Pike , Pat ter: E. Lt.mu
O'Bryant , '"sunday SchoOl - 9:30 a.m.,
Wonhip . 8:1!J a.m., 9:4!5 am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
WednesQay Service•· 7:00 p.m.

lloliwdow llldp CbURb ol Cluill
Putar:Bru~:o Terry, Sunday School ·9:30

Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service• ·6:30p.m,

Flm BaptlJI Cbun:b
Pastor: Billy Zu1pan 6th and Palmer St. ,
Middleport, Sunday School - 9 :1 ~ a.m ..
Worship - KI:U a.m., 7:00 p.m.,

Zloa Cbun:b of Cbrilt
Pome"roy, Harrisonville Rd . (Rt.l43),
Pa11or: RoJer- Wataoa. Sunday School •
9:30 a.m., Wonblp • 10:30 a.m .• HlO
p.m., Wednesday Services - 7 p,m,

Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

Racine First Baptist
Pastor: Rym Eaton, pastor • Sunday

'lllpptn Ploln Cbun:b .. Chrlol
Instrumental , Worship Service - 9 a.m.,
Communion - 10 a.m., Sunday School 10:1 5 a.m ., Youlb- 5:30 pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wednesda}' 1 pm

School - 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:40 a.m.,
7:00 p._m. , Wed nesday Services - 7:00

p.m.

[.

Slb·er Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swanson , Sunday School JOa .m., Worship - \l a.m., 7:00 p.m.
.Wed nes~y Services- 7:00 p.m.

Minister: Tom Runyon, 39.558 Bradbury
Road, Middlepon, Sunday S(:hopl • 9:30

a.m .
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Rutland Clwr&lt;b ol Chrill
Su nday School - 9: 30 a.m., Worship and
Communion - 10:30 am., Bob l WelT)',
Minister

Belhlellem Blptlst Chun:h
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH ,
Pastor: Ed Carter, Sunday Schoo l - 9:30
a.m., Sunday Wors hip - 10 :30 a.m.,
. Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00p.m.

Bradford Chun:b ol CluUI
Comer of St . Rt . 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd ..
Minister: Doug Shamblin, Youth Minister:
Blll Amber&amp;«, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m.,Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Old lktbd Fm Wlll Baotbl CbOU&lt;b
2860 1 St. Rt. 1, Middleport . Sunday
Service - 10 a.m., 6:00 p.m.• Tuesday
Services -6:00

Hkkory Hilla Churdl of Cbrtlt
Tuppers Plains , Pastor Mike Moon:, Bibte
clau, 9 a.m. Sunday : worship 10 a.m.
Sunday; worship 6:30 pm Sunday; Bible
clliSs 1 pm Wed ,

Hillside Baptist Church
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7, Pastor: Rev.
James R Acree, Sr., Su nday Unified!
Service. Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Serv ices -7 p.m.

·I

Reedsville Chwd orcbrkt
PMtor: Philip Stunn . SU.ndaY School: 9:30
a.m., Worship Servke: 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.

Vk:tor}' Baptist Indeptndent
525 N. 2nd St. Middlepon. Pastor: James
E. Kee see. Worship - IOa.m., 7 p.m.,
Wed nesday Services· 7 p.m.

Dexter Ch..-ch or Christ
SUTKla)· §C:hool 9:30a.m.. Sunday worship
- !0:30a .m.
Tbe Cburdl nl Christ or Pomeroy
Intersecti on 7 and 124 W, Evan&amp;elist:
De nnis Sargent , Sunday Bible Study ·
9:30 a.m., Wo~hip: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
.P .m.•Wednesday Bible Study - 7 pm.

Faith Baptist Church
Railroad St .. Mason, Sunday School · 10
a. m.. Worship - I I a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m

Christian Union
llartl'..-.1 Cbrcb of Christ In

Mt.·Moriah Boptlst

A1mosphere

u-

Chrilttan
Hartford . W.Va., Pastor:Dav id Greer,
Sunday School ~ 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday
Services - 7:00 p.m.

Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport , Sunday
School · 9:30 a.m., Worship · 1 0 :4~ a.m.

Mi!fie s !l{estaurcmt
1

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 a.m.. Worshi p 10:45 a.m.. Sunday Eveni ng - 6:00 p.m.,
Pastor: Ooo Walker

Ho•t Cooud MM&amp; &amp; I)IJUy Sptcla/s

!lyncaM nr.t Ch...., ol God
Apple and Second Stl .. Pastor: Rev. O.vid
Ruue ll, Sunday School and Wonhip- 10
a.m. Eveain a Services- ' 6::JO p.m .,
Wednesday Serv ice~ - 6:30 p.m.

Chur&lt;b "God oll'Npbe&lt;y
OJ . White Rd. off Sl. Rt . 160 , Putor: PJ.
Chapmla, Sunday School - 10 .a.m.,
Wonhip - ll a.nl., Wednelday Services - 7
p.m.

'

Congregational
'IHniiJ Clnndo
Second &amp;. Lynn, Pomeroy, Putor: Rev.
JOnathan Noble , Worship l0:2S am ..
Sunday Sc;hool 9: l ~ a.m. •

Episcopal
Gnee [pillcopd Cbun:b
326 E. Main St ., Pomeroy. Sunday School
and Holy Euchariat 11:00 am . Rev.
Edward Payne

Holiness
C..........,Chud!
. Pas10r: Steve Tomek , Main Street ,
Rutland, Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m ..
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

Church of God

Clrlnon loltnlenomla.tloul Chard
Kinasbury Road. Pastor: Robert Vlace,
Sund ay School · 9:30 a.m., Wonhip
Service 10:30 a.m., Even ing Service 6

Wedoelday Services - 7 p.m.

PIUtor: Oeazil Null. Worship - 9:30a.m .
Sunday School - 10:30 am.

LoqSu nday School - 9:30 a.m., Wonhip 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30 a.m., Sunday Scbool ·
10:30 a.m.• Fint Sunday of Month · 7:00
pm. sery-ice
'lllppon Plolnl SI. Pool
Pastor: Jim Corbitt, Sunday School - 9
a.m ., Worship - 10 a.m.. Tlx:sday Setvict'!
• 7:30 p.m .

C.Oinlet-.
Asbwy (Syracuse), Pastor: Bob Rnbinlon ,
Sunday School - 9:45am., Wonhip - II
am., Wednesday Services -7 :30 p.m.

'Eo""""

Pastor: Arlmnd King, Sunday School 10:30 a.m.. Wonhip - 9:30 a.m .. Bible

,........,.

~ Cbul&lt;boltboN.,.,.,..

Pastor: Jan Lavender, Su nday School 9:30 un ., Worship • 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wedac:sday Services - 7 p.m.

Bald Knob . on Co . Rd .'31 . Pwor: Rlv,
Roger Willford : Sunday"SdlOol - 9:30
a.m. Wonhip- ? p.m.

Cbelter Cburth or the NIZIIftllt

Pallor: Rev. Herbert Orate, Sunday School
- 9:30 a.m., Worship - I I a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wed!aday Setviccl - 7 pm .
Rutlud Clourdo oltbo N.....,.
P11tor. Isaac Slwpe , Sundly School - 9:30
a.m., Wonhip - 10:30 a.m ., 6:30 p.m.,
Wcdnelday Serv ice• • 7 p.m.

WbUc's Chapd Wale,an
Coolville Road, Pu tor: Re". Chitin
Martindale, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m .. Wednesday Service
- 7 p.m .

Other Churches

Fatnitw IUble Chufth

Rt . I, Pastor: Brian May,
Sunday School - 9:30a .m., Wonhip -7:00
p.m ., Wedac:sday Bible Srudy · 7:00p.m.
Fahb Ftllowdlip CJ"UUttt f« Chrllt
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens, Serv i(:e:
friday. '1 p.m .

Letart , W.Va.

S,...... CG!ulllllty Cbttn:b
2480 Serond St., Sy111e111t, OH
Sun. SchoollO am. Sundy nialu 6:30 pm
Pastor: l0111 Owina
A New Jleabm1nc ,
(Full GolpdCinu'dl) Harrisonvilk ,
Puton: Bob and Kay Marshall ,
SundaYService. 2 p.m.

Col•ory Blbk Clnudo
Pome roy Piki, Co. Rd .. Paslor: Rev.

Swdy Wed. 7ol0

Pastor: Keilh Rader, Sunday S«: bool - 10
a.m., Worship - If a-!11.

u..111 &lt;MWdloportl
Pastor: Briu Dunham , Sunday School •
9:30 a.m., Wonbip - 11:00 a.m.
Putor: Bob Robinmn , Sunday Schobl - 9
a.rn ~, Wonhip-

10 a.m.

PartCbopel
Suaday 5(:hool - 9 a.m., Won hip -

I~

a.m.

Col&lt;ory Pllarlm Cbopet

l'emm&gt;y

· Hatrisooville Road, Pastor: Owlea
McKenzie, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,
Wonhip - ll a.m., 7:00p.m., WedaeMtay
Service·· 7:00p.m.

Putor: Brian Dunham, Worship - 9:30
a.m ., Sunday &amp;hool· 10:35 a.m.

Roae ~ Sbuoa HotiiMII Cburc'
l.ading C..U Rd., Rutland. ~ Rev. .
Dewey Kina. Sunday sc~l- 9: ~ am.,
Sunday wonbip -7 p.m., Wectneaday

prayer mcetinJ· 7 p.m. .
Pille Gr.,. Blblo H.u- CbaRh
1/2 mile off Rl. 32.5, Putor: Re~. O'DeU
·-~y. Sundo)" School • 9ol0 o.m.,
Wonhi'P .- 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Service. 7:30p.m.

u.-

Wtoloyoa Btble
Churdl
75 PCirt St .. Mlddlop&lt;DI. Puler. lllok
Bourne, Sunday S&lt;:hool· 10 a.m. Wonllip
· 10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve , 7:00 p.m.,

Woclaeoday Savioe. 7ol0 pm.
Bytdl RUD C..,.uliJ Cllurdl
Pastol: Rev. ~...airy Lemley; Sunday School
- 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m.,
Thunday Bible Study and Youth · 7 p.m.

Lounl Cltlll'nc Metbodkt Cbur&lt;b
Pu tor: Glenn Rowe, SunclliY &amp;hool 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.,Wednc:aday SCrvicc -7:00p.m.
1

Latter-Day Saints
1beCbaRhotJ....
Cbrill of LoUer-Day Solnll

RockS.....
Pator. Keith Rader, Sunday School- 9 : 1~
a.m., Worship - 10 a.m., Youth
fellowship, Sunday - 6 pm .

Sdvm:viUe CommUDIIy Church
Sunday SchooiiO:OO am , Sunday Wonhip
II :00 am , Wednesday 7:00 pm Pastor:
Bryan &amp;: Mi ssy Dailey

Oooto Clutollon Followlblp
(Non-denominational fellowship)
Meeting in the Mci&amp;s Middle School
Cafeteria Petor: Clui! Stewart
10:00 am.· Noon Sunday; lnf0111'llll
Worship , Otildrcn'a ministry

Ponlud-Raciac: Rd., Pas1or: Jim Proffin.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m., Wedne&amp;day Serv ices - 7:00
p.m.

Clllloa 1'lbmlado CbaRh
·Clifton, W.Va., Sunday School · 10 a.m.,
Wonhip - 7 p.m., Wednesday Service - 7

Betbd Wonblp Cenll:r
39782 S.R. 7, R*'sviUe , OH 45772 , 112
mile north of Eastern Schools on SR 7. A
Full Gospel Church , Pastor Rob Barber,
Associate Pastor Karyn Davis, Youth
Putor Suzie Francis, Sunday services
10:00 am worship. 6:00 pm Family Lire
Clusea, Wed. Home Cell Groups 7:00
p.m ., Outer Limits Cell Group at the
church 6:30'pm to 8:30pm

p.m.

_,

Putor. lobrt Gilmore. Sw.tay Sobool • 10
a.m., Wonhip ~ 9 a.m ., Wednellday
Servicu - !Oa.m.

F.U Goopol Church
oltbo LIYIDtl Savio&lt;
Rt.338, Antiquily, Pastor: Jesse Morris.
Service•: Satwday l :OO p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., MomlnJ
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m. 4 7:00 pm ,
Wednnday Service • 7:00 p.m., Youth
Servlce-7:00 p.m .

Carmel &amp;: Buhan Rds . Racine. Ohio,
Pa1tor: John Gilmore, Sunday School 9:45 a.m., Worship - 11 :00 a.m . , Bible
swdy w~d. 7:30p.m.

Moral01Stor
Pulor: John Gilmore, SUnday School - ll
a.m., Worsh.lp - 10 a.m.

-Lolart

SlleniC...,.unllyCinudo

~Lilt Ctol&lt;r

..Puii..Oolpel 0\urch" , Puton John A
Play Wodo.60) Sot:oadA". M!I00 ,773·
.5017, Scnlce time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.,

Wednaday7pm

~ Cburcb

Lolli Bottom, Pastor: Steve Reed , Sunday
School • 9:30 a.m. Worship - 9:30 a.m.
ud 7 p.m., Wednesday - '1 p.m., Friday ·fellowship !lervice 1 p.m.
llirrilonvWe Cotamunll)' Cb~b
Putor: Theron Durham, Sunday • 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m., Wednelday - ?p.m.

Ml'' port Coamuulty Churth
Peul St., Middlepon , Pastor: Sam

Pastor: Bill Marshall Sunday School •

.57~

St. Rl. 160, 446·6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday School !0:20-11 a.m .. Rel ief
Society/Priesthood 11 :05- 12:00 noon ,
Sa(:ramerit Ser vice 9- IO: IS a.m.,
Homemaking meeting , h t 1bun. - 7 p.m.

9a.m., Wonhip - 10 a.m., ht Sullda)'
every month eve ning aervi~;e 7:00 p,m.;
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Andersoa, Sunday SchOo l 10 a .m.,
Evening . 7:30p.m. . Wodnelday Service 7:30pm.

Lutheran

Putor: Kerry Wood , Sunday S&lt;:hoo\ - 10
a.m., Wor11hip - II a.m.Wcdnesday
Services 6 pm; Thur Bibk Study 1 pm

Foltb VolloJ- Churcb
Bailey Run Road . Pu1or: Rc~ . Emmett
Rawson, Sunday Evening 1 p.m.,
Thunday Service - 7 p.m .

81. JoiiD LalbcnD Cll..-b
Pine Grove, Wonhip · 9:00a.m., Sunday
School- 10:00 a.m. Pastor:

Our Saviour Lutheran Clnlrtb
WalnUI and Henry Sts,, RavenswOOd,
W.Va., Pllitor: David Russell , Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m., Wonllip - II a.m .
St. Paul Lutbenn Chueb
Corner Syc a~re &amp; Second St., Pomeroy,
Sun . School - 9:45 a.m., WorJhip · II a.m.

United Methodist
Graham United Mttbodlll
Worship- l t a.m. Pastor: Ri(:hard.Neuc
lledatel Unllod Melhodkt
New Haven , Richard Nease, Pastor,
Sunday worship 9: 30 a.m. Tues. 6:30
prayer and Bible Study.

Mt. (Mhe United Metbodbl
Off 124 behind Wilkesville, Pastor; Re v.

Ralph Spires, Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m., llmnday
Service8 -7 p.m.
Melp Coepenlln: Paisb
Northeul Cluster, Alfred , Pastor: Jim
Corbitt, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .,
Worsbip - llun.,6:30p.m.

-

Cool&gt;lloUnltodMftbodkt,....

s,.....,.._

Putor; Helea Kline, Coolville Church ,
Main&amp;. Fifth St.. Sun. School - 10 a.m.,
Worship - 9 a.m., Tues. Serv ices · 1 p.m.

Ji ll Bridgeman St., Syracuse, Sunday
School - 10 a.m. Evening · 6 p.m.,
Wednelday Service - 1 p.m.

lkdMIC!roldt

Conuollllty Chufth
Off Rt. 12-4. Pastor: )\dsel Hart , Sunday

Thwnship Rd., 4611C, Sunday School · 9
a.m, Worship - 10 a.m.• Wednnday
Services - 10 a.m.
Hril-Cburdl
Orand Street, Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. Pastor Pbillip Bell

-Cllordl
Co. Rd . 63, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 un.

Nazarene
Mlddloporl Chardo ol tbo'NPastor: /\lien Midnp , Sv.nday School 9:30 a.m .,Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.,
Wedne ulay Services - 1 p.m., Pastor:
A.llen Midcap

R-FollowJhlp
Cbun:h of the Nazueoe, Pastor: Runell
Carwn , Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wmhip - 10:4' a.m., 7 p.m., Wednelda}'
Services - 7 p.m .

et.......
Pastor: Jim Corbitt, Won hip - 9 a.m.,
Sunday Sc hool - lO a.m. , Thunday
Services- ? p.m.

Syi'ICUit Cbllld ~ tbt Nazanmt
- 9:30
a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,

Pa~tor Milz Adkim , Sunday School

a-.cbrlotlln r-pClludo

Hert::bet

Davil, . Sunday serv ice. 10 a.m., ·
Wodnelday lei'Vict , 7 p.m.

' Foltb hll

BKt of West Columbia, W.Va.om Uevlnc
Road, Pastor: Charltl Rouah (304) 675·
2181, Sunday Scbool 9:30 am. SunUy
cveninJ service 7:00 pm, Blbly Shldy
WtdDcaday Hl'\li~ 7:00pm

Pastor:
White , Sv.nday School·
10 am, Sunday Church aervlct- 6:30pm
Wcdo&lt;odoy 7 pm

AlMID&lt;IIDI G.... R.F.I.
92) S.'I1IW St., Mlddlopot1 , Pollorl... u

Conooi&amp;-

-CbriltloaFoltowoblp
9365 Hooper Road, Athenl, P111or:
Lonuie C0111, Suaday Wonhip 10:00 tm,
Wednesday: 7 pm

u- o1 H..... Mlnlolrlol
St. Rt. 124 Ltnpvllle, OR
fu ll Gospel, Cl Pastors Rober1 A Roberti
Musser, Sunday Scllooi 9:30 1m ~ ,
Wonhip 10:30 am - 7:00 pm , Wed.
Service 7:00pm

Teua 1.... Mtmotrieo
Meeting in the Mull:~eny Community
Center Gymnasium. Pasror Eddie Bacr,

Service every Tuesday 6:30pm

Pentecostal
Penlo&lt;ollal ......loly
Pastor: St Rt. 124 , Racine. Tomatlo Ret.
Sunday School ~ 10 a.m.. Eveninx · 7
p.m., Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Harrtson•Ulo l'r&lt;lllyleriu CbaRh
Pascor: Robert Crow, Worship · 9 a.m.

School- 9:30 1.m., Worship · IO:JO a.m .,
7:30p.m.
lly&lt;Pillo CtMO.....tiJ CbU&lt;b
Sunday School - 9:30 a.in., Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Mono Chapel CbSunday school - 10 a.m.• Wonhip - I I
a.m ., Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Ftltb Goopet Cbufth
Lona Bottom, Sllllday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10 : 4 ~ a.m .. 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday ?:30 p.m .
Mt. OHvt COIMiaDitJ Cluudl
Pastor: Lawrence Bush, Sunday School 9:30a.m ., Evening - 6:10p.m., Wedneday
Service - 7 p.m.
run GoopetlJPII'l 3045 Hiland ROid, Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy
Hunlel', Sunday School - 10 a.m., E ~ening
7:30p.m ., 1\Jetd.ay &amp;.lbun. - 7:30 p.m.

Mlddloport Pmbyllriu
Putor: Junea Snyder, Sund1y School 10
a.m ., worship service II am.

Seventh-Day Adventist
s....o..o., ......dol
Mulberry Hts. Rd ., Pomeroy, Saturday
Services : Sabbath School - 2 p.m.,
Wonhip • 3 p.m.

••

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

•

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Let your lighr so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men, rharrhey may see your
• th at they may see
Tlitcan yo• dtum, chnt whoiiU good works and glorify your
.....e2-l1l1
1 5 ,,vu work s and glori fy
PlWl_.._
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Father in heaven."
IFatber in heaven :·
499 Rlcbtud Avenue,Aihens
•11111111..... ,_...._
Pomeroy, OH 45769 •.
Matthew 5:16
Matthew 5:1
740·594-6333
t-80().451-9806
1411124444
740-992-6606

I!' a.n.t c Tuas Community 36411 Wickham Rd,
Putor: Peter Martindale. Sunday Sthool ·
9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Service! - 7:00 p,m.
Youth group meeting 2nd &amp;. 4th Sundays
7 p.m.
Eden United Bretbml .. Cbrlll

State Rou te 124, between Reedsville A
Hockingport. Sunday School - 10 a.m..
Sunday Worship - 11:00 a.m. Wednelday
Sen iccs - 7:00 p.m., Pastor- M. A.dam

Middlepon, OH

740.992-6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues !·shirts and more

words abide in you, ye shall
Products+ ask whal ye will, and it shall
~~~~!~~ be done unto you.
John 15:7

.

•
AG ENCIES Inc

INSURANCE
SERVICES ~
..

2~~5~;~n
Pomeroy

PHARMACY
he gave his only
We Fill Doctors'
lbi~JIG•tten
Prescriptions
sonJ~hn 3:16
992·2955
Pomeroy

..

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

1·740-667·3156
"StUI s/IUIU
wcare"

or ee: OrmadeY

t ndth I'S

S re

"
perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

1)1:!
ANDERSON
FUNERAl HOM~

f'ii:',

(740) '.192-3279
~
Tol Free 1·877-583-2433

.,

Will

L-------l~~~!!!!!!l!!!!l1:2!!!.-;,
t:--'"""""'::::::::---+s=w;;;1~1=uH~ER;=;&amp;~L~O;wH;SErl-~.--:, ---"1-M~er~a~ce;isis
sufficient
Davls-QulckelAgenc:ylnc. 1'fye abide in Me , and My Brogan·Warner
Godsolovedthe world
f th f m
Full li ne ot
Insurance

'·

Mt.lltrmoa Untied Bretlftll

Soodt Botbo1 C.....,.Jty Cb"""
Silver Ridse· Pu lor Lind• Damewood,
Sunday School - 9 a.m., Worship Service
10 a.m . 2nd and 4th Sunday

.# ' •
.#
_.
ti9tr _.
unttaJlh
Rome
_ _ ....,..... 7 l•

your li ght so shine befo~e l

'·

United Brethren

1/ ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shaU
ask whaJ ye will, and il shall
be thine unto you.
John JS:7

..

Ntw Life Victory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road . Oallipolis, OH
Putor: Bill State n. Sunday Services • 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wedac:sday - '1 p.m. &amp;:
Youth 7 p.m.

Alb Stnet Clnmh

SlleniCu.....
- . Wlllllm . K. Mmhall, S-y
School · 10:15 a.m., WonJUp • 9:1$ a.m.,
Bible SrudyoMonday 7:00pm
5aow&gt;tllo
.
Suaclay School · 10 a.m., Woraldp • 9a.m.

..

Rejokiq Ufe C•urtb
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middlepon . Pastor:
Mike Foreman, Pastor Emeritus Lawrence
Fortman, Worsh ip- 10:00 am
Wedne sday Sen-ices- 7 p.m.

398 Aab St., Middleport-Putor Jeff Smith
Pastor: Rick Bourne , Sunday School 9:30a.m .• Wonbip - 10:30 a.m .. Tbllnday
Servloel - 1 p.m.

...

Blackwood , Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wors hip 10 :30 a.m .. 7:.30 p.m.,
Wednesday Service- 7:)() p.m,

Amulq Gnu Commonlty Church
Putar: Wayne Dunlap, Stile Rt. 681,
Tuppm Plains , SWI. Worship: 10 am a:
6:30pm , Wed. Bible Study 7:00p.m.

FORI&amp; R1111
Pulor: Bob Robinson, Sunday School - 10
a.m ., Worship - 9 a.m.

..._

p.m

Communlty of Cbrilt

DanvllleHalaelsCinudl
3! 057 State Route 325, Langsvllc, Pastor:
Benjamin Crawford, Sunday school - 9:30
a.m ., Sunday worship - 10:30 am. &amp; 7
p.m., Wednesday prl.yer service · 1 p.m.

Brodbuy Cburdo of Cbrilt

ML Unkln Bapllsl
Pastor: Denni ~ Weaver Sunday School9:45 a.m., Eveni ng - 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Servk:es - 6:30p.m. '

I

Putor: Ron Heath, Sunday Worship · 10
a.m., 6 p.m.. Wednesday Services - 7
p.m .

a.m.

Forest Run Bapdst- Pomeroy
Rev. Juseph Woods, Sunday School - 10
a. m.,Worship - 11:30 a.m.

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Study· ! pm.

Hope Bapdst Chlll'th (Soothe...)

Sizes available 5x 10 to 10 x 20

740-985-3561
992-1550

Hemlock Grove Chrlltlao Cburdl
Minister: Llli'I'Y Brown, Wonhip • 9:30
a.m . Sunday School - l0:30 a.m., Bible

Cloesblre Boplld Ch..-b
Pastor: Steve LitOe, Sunday School: 9:30
am, Morning Worship: 10:30 am ,
Wednesday Bible ·study 6:30pm ; choir
practice 7;30; youth and Bihle Buddies
6:30 p.m. Thurs. I pm book sNdy

Director of Marketing and Admissions

Open 7 days a week
740·992-n13

The Appliance man

'33226 Chiklren's Home Rd, Pomeroy, OH
Contacl 740-441 -1296 Sunday mornin g
10:00, Sun morn_i ng Bible study;
ronowinJ worship , Sun . eve 6:00 pm,
Wed bible swdy 7 pm

Carpenter Baptist Chun:b
Sunday School - 9:30am, ~hing
Servke !0:30am , Evcnin&amp; Service
7o00pm, WedneSday Bible Srudy 7:00 P,lll •
Interim Preacher · Floyd Ross

Michelle Kennedy

"A Home Bank for
Home People"

740.949-2217 .

WetUide Cllun:b otCbrilt

Pqtvllle Fftewll Baplli!ll C burcb
Pll5tor: Mike Harmun, Sunday School
9:30to 10:30 a.m. Worship service 10:30
to II :00 am. Wed. preaching 6 pm

~~

Homemade Desserts Made Dally

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

Church of Christ

Baptist

r

740·949-2210

Hills Self Storage

. S.:rtd Heart Calbolk: C bun-b
161 Mulberry Ave.: Pomeroy, 992-$891.
Pasror: Rev. W1dter E. Heinz, Sat. Con.
4 : 4VU~ p .m . ; Man - ~ : 30 p.m., Sua.
Con. -8:4$,j):l!i a.m... Sua. Mus- 9:30
a.m., Daily Malit· 8:30a.m.

Thun . 7:00p.m., PliStor Marty R. Hunorr

l

Mile Hi ~l Rd., .Racine, Pastor. James
Slltcrfteld, Sunday School - 9AS a.m.,
Evenina: - 6 p.m., Wednesday Services · 7
pm .

Catholic

Services: Sun 10:00 a.m . .t. 7 :30 p.m..

HilmJ fn'endly

209Thlrd
Racine, OH

Center,

Emmuud Apootolk libcmoch:lnt.
Loop Rd off N¢w Lima Rd . Rutland ,

I

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

Wo ~hip

873 S. Jrd Ave .. Middlepon. Rev.
Michael Bradford, Pascor, Sunday, 10:30
a.m. TUes. 6:30 pr1yer. Wed . 7 pm Bible
Study

they seem to pull off.escape
acts of their own, continuing
to wiri new followers and to
earn checks Randi says are
cashed at the expense of realism.
''I'm not able to do the
things that I want to do," he
said. "The true believers will
not pay any attention to evidence that does not show that
they believe to be untrue."
His voice grows as he
begins the litany of offenders
- Geller and Popoff and so
forth. "I'm very angry," he
.said. "I should be able to get
them brought to justice."
Geller, who remains a target on Randi's Web site,
acknowledges his appearance on · ~The Tonight Show"
was a "humiliation" but
notes his career has soldiered
on.
· "I thought, 'This is it. I'm
finished .' But exactly the
opposite happened," Geller
said. "People like Randi ·skeptics - actually made
my career. They did for me
what a PR man would have
asked a million dollars for."
Randi is not the least bit
shaken talking about death.
He nearly died last year,
undergoing double bypass
surgery and remaining hospitalized for two months.
Some might credit God for
their survival, but not Randi.
He has seen no proof.
Envelopes continuously
arrive at Randi's office seeking to take him up on his
seven-digit challenge, seeking to prove the unprovable.
None of the entries has made
him question his beliefs, but
his certainty, he acknowledges, always comes with a
sprinkling of uncertainty,
too.
"I am probably right. But
I'm always only probably
right," he said. "Absolutes
are very hard to find."

rr

Rudud .....
Blptlot
Salem St., Pastor. , Sunday Scbool•- 10
a.m., ·E~eninJ - 7 p.m., Wodncaday
Sen'icea - 7 p.m.
So&lt;oad Blpllll Cb.....
Raventwood , WV. S\IIIday ScboollO am' MomiDa worship II am Evening • 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 p.m.
rtm &amp;apttot Cb- or-. wv
(Independent BIJ:tist)
SR 6S2 and Anderson St. Pastor: Robert .
Grady, Sunday ~ebool 10 am , Morning
dmrch II am , Sunday evening 6pm, Wed.
Bible Study 7 pm

CbaRh oil""' Cbrlot Apootolk

Abramdabra! Magician-turned-skeptic aims to expose frauds
BY MAn SEDENSKY

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

WORS1'HP GOD THIS
WEEK
,_

Friday, July 13, 2007

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

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

••

Shocking Language
Requires Shocking Love
BY KERRY WooD

PageA6 ~

FAI'i'H. VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

•

.

P.O. Box 683

Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

. - .. .

"

�..
Page A&amp;

COMMUNfl'Y

Th.e Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 13, 2001

Meigs County Court News
r
I

l

POMEROY Meig s
County
Court
Judge
Steven L. Story recently
processed the following
cases:
Ri cky
D.
Adkins.
Pomeroy, $200 and costs,
I 0 day s in jail , se ven suspended, probation , no
operator's
Iiscence;
Andrew
J.
Aken ,
Sandusky, $30 and costs,
speeding;
Stanley
J.
Alexander,
Longwood,
Fla., $30 and costs, speeding ; Natan D. Argabright ,
Langsville, $20 and costs,
unreasonable speed for
cond. ; Maksym Artemyev,
Proctorville, $30 and costs,
speeding; Scott Ashcraft,
Coolville, $20 and costs,
display plates/valid sticker; Allison E. Avery, Solon,
$30 and costs, speeding;
David T. Barstow, Albany,
$50 and costs, probation,
disorderly conduct.
Roger
L.
Bissell,
Coolville, $30 and costs,
seat belt violation; Dan A.
Blazer, Rutland, $90 and
costs, illegally taking deer;
David
L.
Broadnax,
Columbus, $30 and costs,
speeding; Kelly R . Brock,
Syracuse, $100 and costs,
:dtsorderly
conduct;
Amanda J. Buck, Rutland,
$30 and costs, seat belt
violation; Leo G. Burns,
·Columbus, $50 and costs,
speeding;
Armada A.
Buzzelli, Pittsburgh, Pa.,
$100 and costs, headlights;
Ronald A.
Campbell,
.Dexter, $100, illegally taking deer; Steven M.
Campbell, Vinton, $50 and
costs, speediil(!; Jessica K.
Capehart, Racme, $30 and
costs, seat belt violation .
Laci E. Carsey, Albany,
$30 and costs, speeding;
Richard K. Cavender, New
Albany, $30 and costs,
speeding;
Allison
A.
Chinchar, Mandfield, $30
and
costs,
speeding;
Terrence L. Clark, Racine,
$50 and costs, speeding; N.
M. Clelland, Albany, $30
and costs, speeding; Jessie
M. Cline. Long Bottom ,
. $20 and costs, failure to
control; Jerry D. Colley,
Patriot, $50 and costs,
speeding; Maurice D.
Cotterman, Hopewell, $30
an9
costs,
speeding;
Jeremy
D.
Council,
Rutland, $200 and costs,
10 day s in jail, seven suspended, probation, no o.l.;
L.
Counts,
We ston
Syracuse, $20 and costs,
seat
belt
violation;
Jonathen
Cowdery,
Reedsville, $30 and costs,

AEP (NYSE)- 48.06
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 88.66
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 65.84
Big Lots (NYSE)- 30.76
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) '
37.92
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 92.35
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-65.90
Champion (NASDAQ)- 6.78
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 11.0~.

City Holding (NASDAQ) 37.93
Collins (NYSE! - 73.37
Dollar General ( NVSE) 21.97
DuPont (NVSE) - 51.50
US Bank (NYSE)- 33:13

"

c.

c

abuse, costs, probation.;
failure to control ; Jennif~
L. Laudermilt, Pomero~.
$30 and costs, seai belt
violation;
Richard J(
Laudermilt,
Cheshire)
)'$800 and costs, 180 days
in jail, 170 suspended, probation. DUI; Johnny W.
Lawson, Mason, W.Va.~
$350 and costs, 30 days in
jail, 24 suspended, proba~
tion, DWI and/or drugs of
a· buse,· Robert L. Leach,
Woodlawn, Pa. , $20 and
. costs, speeding; John E;
MacDonald, Coshocton;
$30 and costs, speeding •,

D

''Here's
My
Card''

Special advertising supplement found
onlyJn the.
--~ -:A&lt;~ V'

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

"''~autpoU~ latlv 'rihunr

f)oint ~lra~ant l\egi~trr

Rockwell (NYSE) - 73.45
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 17.53
Royal Dutch Shell - 85.47
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 155.09
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 48.83
Wendy's (NVSE) - 37.13
Worthington (NYSE) - 23.00
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for July 12, 2007,
provided by Edward Jones
nnanclal ad111sors Isaac Mills
In GaiHpolls at (740) 441·
9441 and Lesley Marrero In
Point Pleasant at (304) 6740174. Member SIPC.

This
a special sized supplement · which will be
published Wednesday, July 25th.. Do you know how
many phone calls the Area Chamber of Commerce, as
well as the newspapers and other businesses receive
asking for the name of a plumber, contractor, carpet
cleaner, car repair shop, etc. This special section will be
easier to use than a regular directory and cards will be
arranged by category.
We will be glad to use the information on your business
card or we can create one for you.
Think how long it would take you to hand out 14,000
business cards. We can do it in just ONE DAY. All you
need to do is call 740-992-2155
Ask for Dave or Brenda.
(Ad deadline is

Friday, July 13, 2007

July 18)

season

or·Gall-circuit

Tri-

INSIDE

Bv fRANK CAPEHART
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

POMEROY - The fiilal
scoring round of play for 2007
in the Tri-County Junior Golf
Tour decided all age group
champs as the young players
toured the Pine Hills course in
Pomeroy.
Again, it was close competition, but no play-off will be
necessary to decide bracket
top spcits. However, sevc!ral
deadlocks resulted in second
and third places.
Only two players competed
in the 15-17 age group as Will
Garrison of Pomt Pleasant
fired a three-over 37 for low
round of the day to nail down
first place. David Greene of
Mason fashioned a 46 ·for the

Melissa
L. . Manley,
Mi!ldleport, $100 and
costs, 30 in jail, suspen&lt;l.:
ed, probation, use/posses~
sion drug parapherna;
Brandi
).
Marcum,
Gallipolis, $20 and costs;
failure to
··

B

Gannett (NYSE) - 55.14
General Electric ( NYSE) 3!1.00
Hailey-Davidson (NYSE) 62.19
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 49.53
Kroger (NYSE) - 29.03
Limited Brands (NVSE( 27:55
Norfolk Southern ( NYSE) 55.79
Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)
-22.29
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. ( NAS.
DAQ)-25.01
BBT (NYSE) - 41.17
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 26.37
Pepsico (NYSE) - 66.94
Premier (NASDAQ) -16.10

Sroreboanl, Page B2
B4dlbam buzz, Page B4

I

seat belt violation.
bation , FRA suspension; Pomeroy, $100 and costs, un; to control ; Pamela A.
Codi
Crippen, Shawn
D.
Gilmore, 10 days in jail, suspended, Jeffers, Pomeroy, $25, lefl
Zanesville, $30 and costs, Racine, $50 and costs, probation, unauthorized of center; Jay R. Johnson,
seat
belt
violation; speeding, $30 and costs, use of property, $50 and Wilkesville, $20 and costs,
Rochell e
Cummins, seat belt vwlatwn; Larry costs, 10 days iojail, seven failure to register; Shirley
RaGine, $100 and costs, L. Goosman, Ellensboro, suspended, probation, no A. Johnson, Portland, $30
consuming beer in vehicle; N.C ., $30 and costs, speed- · operator's liscence, costs. and costs, speeding; Gary
Barry P. Day, Morehead · mg ; Robert G. Greeger, probation, failure to con- W.
Joy,
Parkersburg,
City, N.C., $30 and costs, Reedsv1lle, .$30 and costs, trol.
W.Va., $30 and costs,
speeding: Laurie K. Deal, seat bel~ vwlatwn; D1ane
Timothy M. Hubbard, speeding; Sand~a Kanaan ,
Athens , $30 and costs, K. Grover, Logan, $30 and Pomeroy costs 30 days in Concord, N.C., $30 and
speding; Todd A. Dill, costs~ speedmg; Debra S. jail 29 ~uspended proba- costs, siX:edin~; Warren A.
Pomeroy~ $200 and costs, GUidi, . West Cester. $30 tio~ , unauthorized' use of Kelly, Scwtovllle, $30 and
l 0 days m Jail ~ seven sus-. and
speed
R costs,
b
B mg. H· 1
proper ty; A aron . H un t , · costs, speeding,· Nicholas
1
d
d
b
0
0 ert
pen e • ~ro atlon, . no · · •
·
a ey, Clairsville, $30 and costs, V. King, Racine, $20 and
Joseph Dillon, Racme •. $30 Pomero~, $200 and costs, speeding; Daniel P. Hysell, costs, display plates/valid
and costs, seat belt v1ola- 20 days 111 Jail , 18 suspend- Pomero $SO nd co t
sticker;
Katherine
E.
lion:. Laura E. Diprima, ed, probation, DUS - 12 pt. 1·m ro y,
a
$ls3s0, Kington, Hilliard, $50 and
Rale1gh , N.C .. $30 and suspension, $30 and costs,
P per taggmg,
.
costs. speeding; Susan E. probation, seat belt viola- and ~osts.' •ll~gally takmg costs, speeding.
Ditmer, Jackson, $20 and tion; Brian D. Hankins, de~r, Gary E. Hysell,
Natalya A. Kovbasyuk,
cos ts,
traffic
cont. Huntington, w.Va ., $30 Middleport,. $30. and com, Harrisonburg, $30 and
dev./signs; Andrew J. and costs, speeding; David seat belt vwlatwn; K.e•th costs, speeding; Bobby D.
Dittenhofer, Athens, $100 A.
Hansen,
Elkview, R. James, Jacksonville, Kuhn, Racine, $350 and
and costs, headlights.
w. va.. $30 and costs, !".C., $30 and costs, speed- costs, 30 days in jail, 27
Shelli D. Dunn, Racine, speeding; Abby J. Harris, mg;. Shyla E. Jarre~l. suspended,
probation,
$20 and costs, failure to Middleport, $20 and costs, Racme, $20 and costs, fall- DWI and/or drugs of
con trol ; Brandi N. Dye, display plates I valid stickHartford, W.Va., $30 and er; Danny K. Harrison,
costs, speeding; Troy G. Rutland, $300 and costs,
Edwards,
Cheshire,$30 30 days in jail, suspended,
and costs, seat belt viola- probation, phy. cont. veh.
tion; Steven C. EJ.liot, mtox.; Jonas C . Hart,
Bidwell, $30 and costs, Racine, $30 and costs,
seat belt violation; James speed ing ;
Thomas E.
R. Ellis, Middleport, $30 Harton, Racine, $30 and
and costs, speeding, $30 costs, speeding; Rona)d E.
Middleport,
and costs, seat belt viola- Hawkins,
tion; Robert J. Evans, $190 and costs, improper
' Pickerington, $30 and tagging/waterfowl, $430
costs, speedi ng; Brian K. and costs, improper tagFields, $20 IQ!d costs, ging, $430 and costs,
overwidth
violation; improper tagging, $190
Jeffery
E.
Fowler, and · costs,
improper
Pomeroy, $30 and costs, 60 records/taxidermist; Keith
days in jail, suspended, W. Hedges, Marshalls
probation, illegally taking Creek, Pa., $50 and costs,
deer, $50 and costs, 30 speeding; Gretchen E.
days in jail, suspended, Heil, Columbus, $30 and
probation, hunting without costs, speeding.
special permit, $30 and
Dale
J.
Herman,
costs, 30 days in jail, sus- Reedsville $100 and costs
p~nde.d, pr?bation, hunting 10 days i~ jail, seven sus:
Wltout vahd NR hscence, pended, probation, no
.. ;
$1.30 and costs, 60 day~ in operator's
liscence;
Jail, suspended, probation, Kennith W. Hickman
illegally taking deer, $50 Cheshire $200 and costs'
.and costs, 60 days in jail, 10 days in jail, seven sus:
suspended, probatiOn, die- pended, probation , no
operator's
liscence;
gaily takmg deer.
Debbie
J.
Frame, Terrence J. Hill, Sarnia,
• -·Zanesville, $30 and costs, $30 and costs, · speeding,
seat
belt
violation; Timothy A. Hill, Long ·
Matthew
R.
Frank, Bottom, $30 and costs,
Pomeroy, $30 and costs, speeding;
Sheryl
H.
speeding; Carol L. Gainer, Holdren, Little Hocking,
Norton , $30 ' an'd C'&lt;TSts, $30 and costs, speeding;
speeding; Brittany M. Karen
D.
Holley,
Gates, Albany, $100 and Reedsville, $20 and costs,
costs, 30 days in jail, 29 failure to yield 112 road- ·
suspended,
probation, way;
Robert
J.
domestic violence; Mara H o I l i· n g s h e a d ,
i,s
G. Gerlach, New Haven, Jacksonville, $30 and
$30 and costs, speeding; costs, speeding; Patricia K.
Mark W. Ghee, Bidwell, 50 Horne, Chesapeake, $30
and costs, speeding; James and costs, speeding; Jack
R. Gillenwater, Gallipolis, R. Horner, Belpre, $20 and
$200 and costs, I 0 days in costs, assured clear dis jail , seven suspended, pro- tance; Casey N. Hubbard,

Local stocks

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

runner-up Fruth Trophy and
pulled into a tie with Chris
Long for second overall.
In the 13-14 bracket, Nick
Saunders of Gallipolis carved
out a nice 39 to capture the
Fruth Pharmacy fJrSt place
weekly award and solidified
his.hold on the overall crown.
Close behind at 41, Opie
Lucas of Point Pleasant snared
runner-up honors and also
earned second overall. Steven
Theiss of Gallipolis carded 47
for third and earned third overall, while Montana Wamsley
of Point recorded 50 and
David Michael of Crown City
collected a 52.
The large group of 11-12
year olds prOduced exciting
competition. Robert Canaday
from Gallipolis fired 45 to

• BALCO leaker
sentenced to prison time.

earn the weekly frrst place
Fruth trophy, barely one stroke
ahead of runner-up Gus Slone
of Gallipolis at 46. Close
behind for third spot came
Eric Allbright of Point
Pleasant at 48, while Jacob
Leach from Cheshire, Brady
C~ and Bryce Saxon of
Gallipolis also posted a 50
each for a three-way lie at
fourth . .J\lst behind the leaders
came Wyatt Wamsley of
Point. Denver Thomas of
Leon, Jarod Martin from
Gallipolis and Griffen Stanley
of Gallipolis.
In tlie keenly contested
bracket, Allbright earned
championship honors with 28
points, just ahead of Cuny at
26, while Slone, Saxon and
Canaday tied for third.

Five players competed in
the 10-anil-under category
where Dares Hamid earned
the Fruth first place trophy on
a good 42, while Jacob
Hoback of Meigs was second
with 50. The fmal three of
Ryan Schenkelberg.of Meigs,
Tare Hamid of Gallipolis and
Jonah Hoback of Meigs tied
for third on identical scores of
58.
In the overall bracket race,
Hamid was winner on 30
points, while Schenkelberg
and Hoback tied for second,
plus a tie for third . found
Massile and T. Hamid dead-

locked.
For the young ladies,
Morgan Nottingham of
Mason won the weekly Fruth
trophy on 53. Libby Leach of

MaJor League Baseball

SeePageB8

SPORTS BRIEFS

Men's softball
tourney planned
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. New Hope
Church softball team is
holding a men's softball
tournament on July 27, 28
at Harmon Park and
Ordnance fields in Point
Pleasant.
There will also be a cornhole bag toss tournament
on July the 28 at the same
location.
The entry fee is $115 and
balls will be provided. All
proceeds will go to a benefit fund for Wendy Rollins,
a local lady battling cancer.
A home run derby is also
planned as well as concessions with homemade
baked goods. For information people may caJI 304675-2970. If no answer
please leave a message and
someone will call back.

Hafner .and
Indians agree to
$57 million, 4year extension

New York
Mets'
Lastings
Milledge (44)
runs to beat
the throw to
home plate
as Cincinnati
Reds catcher
David Ross
waits for the
ball during
the fifth
Inning of
baseball
action
Thursday in
New York.
APphoto

Baseball Returns
Reds start second half of season with loss to Mets

CLEVELAND (AP)
Travis Hafner and the
Cleveland Indians agreed
Thursday to a $57 million,
four-year contract extension through the 2012 season.
Hafner, the Indians' designated hitter, was making
$3.95 million this year, and
Cleveland had a 2008
option for a minimum
$4.95 million. Under the
new deal, he will receive
more money next year. The
new agreement includes a
team option for 2013.
"Not only is Travis
Hafner among the elite hitters in major league baseball today, but he will now
have the opportunity to
establish himself as one of ·
the great players in the
proud history of the
Cleveland Indians organization," Indians general
manager Mark Shapiro
said. "This contract is both
a credit to Travis's offensive performance and a testament to who he is as a
· teammate, his relentless
work ethic and hi s strong
desire to help bring a
championship
to
Cleveland ."

BY HAL BoCK
ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK Jose
Reyes and Ruben Gotay
opened with consecutive
home runs, the first time
that's happened in the 46season h1story of the Mets,
and New York beat the
Cincinnati
Reds
3-2
Thursday.
Reyes, fresh off his
three-hit performance in
the All-Star game, led off
the bottom of the first with
his fifth homer and Gotay
followed with his fourth,
Bronson
both against
Arroyo (3-10). It was the
third time this season that
the Mets hit back-to-back
homers but the first time
ever the team opened that
way.
It was a strong start in
the first game since New
York dismissed hitting
coach Rick Down and
added Rickey Henderso n
to the coaching staff. It has
not been decided whether
Henderson or first base
coach Howard Johnson
will replace Down, but
Johnson filled the role
against Cincinnati.
New York also jettisoned
48-year-old Julio Franco,
who hit only .200 in 50 at·
bats with one home run
and eight RBis, and proCoNTAcrUs ·
moted Lastings Milledge.
from the minors .
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.·1 o.m.)
Orlando Hernandez (5-4)
allowed three hits and two
n 40·446-2342 ext. 33
runs in six innings to earn
Fex- 1·740-446-3008•
the win in the first game
E-mail - sports 0 mydailysentinel.com
after the break. He struck
Soort• Sllllt
out seven and walked
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor three.
(740) 446·2342. ext. 33
Scott Hatteberg hit a
bsherman@m~dallytribune. com
two-run sing~e in the second to tie it at 2 but the
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
Mets went in front for
(740) 446·2342. ext. 23
Ierum 0 mydailyregiste r.com
good in the fifth .
·
Milledge,
who
got
the
Bryan Walters, Sp.o rts Writer
off
start
in
left
field,
led
(740) 446·2342. ext. 33
with
a
s
ingle
.
Arroyo
then
bwallersC my~ i l ytribune .com

_____

.

___:

retired Hernandez and
Reyes before Gotay's drive
fell just in front of diving
center fielder Ryan Freel.
Milledge circled the
bases and barely beat the
play at home, touching the
plate with his hand ahead
of catcher David Ross' tag.
Hernandez retired the
last 12 batters he faced.
Joe Smith worked a perfect
seventh, Pedro Feliciano
pitched the eighth and
Billy Wagner got three
outs for his 18th save in 19
chances.

Brandon Phillips led off
the ninth with a single,
ending a streak of 18 consecutive hitters retired by
New York. He advanced on
a groundout but was
caught off second when
Edwin
Encarnacion
bounced to Reyes at shortstop.
Encarnacion stole second before Jeff Conine
grounded out to end the
game. "
Cincinnati finished with
just four hits and fell to 52 under interim manager

Pete Mackanin, who took
over for Jerry Narron earlier this month.
Notes: Reyes' drive was
his ninth career leadoff
homer, a Mets franchise·
record. He had been tied
with Len Dykstra and
Tommie
Agee.
.. .
Hernandez's stolen base in
the second inning was the
second steal of his career.
... Milledge' s single was
· his first hit of the season
for the Mets . He had been
0-for-3 in a brief stay in
April.

Cheshire posted 56 for runnerup, just one stroke back at 57
came Kelsey Allbright of
Point Pleasant for third, just ·
one stroke ahead of Caroline
Thompson from Mason in
fourth, plus Shiloh Wamsley
of Point close behind the lead-

ers.

In the fiilal overall bracket
standings, AUbright won fJrSi
place honors, Leach was second while Nottingham anq
Miriam Gordon tied for third~ .
Now the finale Fun Day
Roundup comes Monday at
Hidden Valley in Point
Pleasant. This mne hole round
will be played with handiCSE
counts. Plaques will be (ll'6sented to age group winners. ::
Signups will be at 8:30a.m:
with tee-off at 9 a.m.
·

Redmen
secure
Rock Hill's:
Murnahan ·
BY MARK WtwAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
Redmen baseball prograrri
continued with its busy,
recruiting season by adding
the versatile tC. Murnahan
of Rock Hill High School:
He can play catcher, firs\
base, third base, and eveq
the outfield.
.
M umahan said he doesn '!
care where he plays, he just
wants 'to stan. "I don't care
where I play as long as I'ni
on the field. I'm happy as
long as I get to play,' saic!
Murnahan.
It was the versatility of
Mumahan that caught Rio
Grande head coach Brad
Warnimont's eye. "J.C. is
more than just a catcher.
He's an athlete," Warnimont
said:"He's not your atypical
catcher. He runs a 6.8 (sec·
ond) 60 (yard dash), he can
play the outfield as well as
third base. His big thing is
flexibility. I want to put my
nine best players on the
field."
Murnahan was an all-district and. All-Ohio Valley
Conference the last two seasons as a junior and senior,
He hit .482 this year with
four home runs and struck
out only five times in 129
at-bats over a three 'year
period. Murnahan's career
batting average was .504
and he had a .537 on-base
percentage.
Warnimont
said
Mumahan has the necessary
tool s to play various posi-

Pleue -

Reclmen. Bl

Wes Lieving, DO
Internal Medicine
Office:
2007 Second Avenue
Mason, WV 25260
PLEASA

HOSPITAL

'fk, f'a.trt~ of P~fultP/fO.ft

_______________

,_ Appointments:

(304) 773-5179
~----~~...:.... ._.-

-

I
. -

-··""

�..
Page A&amp;

COMMUNfl'Y

Th.e Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 13, 2001

Meigs County Court News
r
I

l

POMEROY Meig s
County
Court
Judge
Steven L. Story recently
processed the following
cases:
Ri cky
D.
Adkins.
Pomeroy, $200 and costs,
I 0 day s in jail , se ven suspended, probation , no
operator's
Iiscence;
Andrew
J.
Aken ,
Sandusky, $30 and costs,
speeding;
Stanley
J.
Alexander,
Longwood,
Fla., $30 and costs, speeding ; Natan D. Argabright ,
Langsville, $20 and costs,
unreasonable speed for
cond. ; Maksym Artemyev,
Proctorville, $30 and costs,
speeding; Scott Ashcraft,
Coolville, $20 and costs,
display plates/valid sticker; Allison E. Avery, Solon,
$30 and costs, speeding;
David T. Barstow, Albany,
$50 and costs, probation,
disorderly conduct.
Roger
L.
Bissell,
Coolville, $30 and costs,
seat belt violation; Dan A.
Blazer, Rutland, $90 and
costs, illegally taking deer;
David
L.
Broadnax,
Columbus, $30 and costs,
speeding; Kelly R . Brock,
Syracuse, $100 and costs,
:dtsorderly
conduct;
Amanda J. Buck, Rutland,
$30 and costs, seat belt
violation; Leo G. Burns,
·Columbus, $50 and costs,
speeding;
Armada A.
Buzzelli, Pittsburgh, Pa.,
$100 and costs, headlights;
Ronald A.
Campbell,
.Dexter, $100, illegally taking deer; Steven M.
Campbell, Vinton, $50 and
costs, speediil(!; Jessica K.
Capehart, Racme, $30 and
costs, seat belt violation .
Laci E. Carsey, Albany,
$30 and costs, speeding;
Richard K. Cavender, New
Albany, $30 and costs,
speeding;
Allison
A.
Chinchar, Mandfield, $30
and
costs,
speeding;
Terrence L. Clark, Racine,
$50 and costs, speeding; N.
M. Clelland, Albany, $30
and costs, speeding; Jessie
M. Cline. Long Bottom ,
. $20 and costs, failure to
control; Jerry D. Colley,
Patriot, $50 and costs,
speeding; Maurice D.
Cotterman, Hopewell, $30
an9
costs,
speeding;
Jeremy
D.
Council,
Rutland, $200 and costs,
10 day s in jail, seven suspended, probation, no o.l.;
L.
Counts,
We ston
Syracuse, $20 and costs,
seat
belt
violation;
Jonathen
Cowdery,
Reedsville, $30 and costs,

AEP (NYSE)- 48.06
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 88.66
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 65.84
Big Lots (NYSE)- 30.76
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) '
37.92
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 92.35
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-65.90
Champion (NASDAQ)- 6.78
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 11.0~.

City Holding (NASDAQ) 37.93
Collins (NYSE! - 73.37
Dollar General ( NVSE) 21.97
DuPont (NVSE) - 51.50
US Bank (NYSE)- 33:13

"

c.

c

abuse, costs, probation.;
failure to control ; Jennif~
L. Laudermilt, Pomero~.
$30 and costs, seai belt
violation;
Richard J(
Laudermilt,
Cheshire)
)'$800 and costs, 180 days
in jail, 170 suspended, probation. DUI; Johnny W.
Lawson, Mason, W.Va.~
$350 and costs, 30 days in
jail, 24 suspended, proba~
tion, DWI and/or drugs of
a· buse,· Robert L. Leach,
Woodlawn, Pa. , $20 and
. costs, speeding; John E;
MacDonald, Coshocton;
$30 and costs, speeding •,

D

''Here's
My
Card''

Special advertising supplement found
onlyJn the.
--~ -:A&lt;~ V'

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

"''~autpoU~ latlv 'rihunr

f)oint ~lra~ant l\egi~trr

Rockwell (NYSE) - 73.45
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 17.53
Royal Dutch Shell - 85.47
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 155.09
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 48.83
Wendy's (NVSE) - 37.13
Worthington (NYSE) - 23.00
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for July 12, 2007,
provided by Edward Jones
nnanclal ad111sors Isaac Mills
In GaiHpolls at (740) 441·
9441 and Lesley Marrero In
Point Pleasant at (304) 6740174. Member SIPC.

This
a special sized supplement · which will be
published Wednesday, July 25th.. Do you know how
many phone calls the Area Chamber of Commerce, as
well as the newspapers and other businesses receive
asking for the name of a plumber, contractor, carpet
cleaner, car repair shop, etc. This special section will be
easier to use than a regular directory and cards will be
arranged by category.
We will be glad to use the information on your business
card or we can create one for you.
Think how long it would take you to hand out 14,000
business cards. We can do it in just ONE DAY. All you
need to do is call 740-992-2155
Ask for Dave or Brenda.
(Ad deadline is

Friday, July 13, 2007

July 18)

season

or·Gall-circuit

Tri-

INSIDE

Bv fRANK CAPEHART
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

POMEROY - The fiilal
scoring round of play for 2007
in the Tri-County Junior Golf
Tour decided all age group
champs as the young players
toured the Pine Hills course in
Pomeroy.
Again, it was close competition, but no play-off will be
necessary to decide bracket
top spcits. However, sevc!ral
deadlocks resulted in second
and third places.
Only two players competed
in the 15-17 age group as Will
Garrison of Pomt Pleasant
fired a three-over 37 for low
round of the day to nail down
first place. David Greene of
Mason fashioned a 46 ·for the

Melissa
L. . Manley,
Mi!ldleport, $100 and
costs, 30 in jail, suspen&lt;l.:
ed, probation, use/posses~
sion drug parapherna;
Brandi
).
Marcum,
Gallipolis, $20 and costs;
failure to
··

B

Gannett (NYSE) - 55.14
General Electric ( NYSE) 3!1.00
Hailey-Davidson (NYSE) 62.19
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 49.53
Kroger (NYSE) - 29.03
Limited Brands (NVSE( 27:55
Norfolk Southern ( NYSE) 55.79
Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)
-22.29
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. ( NAS.
DAQ)-25.01
BBT (NYSE) - 41.17
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 26.37
Pepsico (NYSE) - 66.94
Premier (NASDAQ) -16.10

Sroreboanl, Page B2
B4dlbam buzz, Page B4

I

seat belt violation.
bation , FRA suspension; Pomeroy, $100 and costs, un; to control ; Pamela A.
Codi
Crippen, Shawn
D.
Gilmore, 10 days in jail, suspended, Jeffers, Pomeroy, $25, lefl
Zanesville, $30 and costs, Racine, $50 and costs, probation, unauthorized of center; Jay R. Johnson,
seat
belt
violation; speeding, $30 and costs, use of property, $50 and Wilkesville, $20 and costs,
Rochell e
Cummins, seat belt vwlatwn; Larry costs, 10 days iojail, seven failure to register; Shirley
RaGine, $100 and costs, L. Goosman, Ellensboro, suspended, probation, no A. Johnson, Portland, $30
consuming beer in vehicle; N.C ., $30 and costs, speed- · operator's liscence, costs. and costs, speeding; Gary
Barry P. Day, Morehead · mg ; Robert G. Greeger, probation, failure to con- W.
Joy,
Parkersburg,
City, N.C., $30 and costs, Reedsv1lle, .$30 and costs, trol.
W.Va., $30 and costs,
speeding: Laurie K. Deal, seat bel~ vwlatwn; D1ane
Timothy M. Hubbard, speeding; Sand~a Kanaan ,
Athens , $30 and costs, K. Grover, Logan, $30 and Pomeroy costs 30 days in Concord, N.C., $30 and
speding; Todd A. Dill, costs~ speedmg; Debra S. jail 29 ~uspended proba- costs, siX:edin~; Warren A.
Pomeroy~ $200 and costs, GUidi, . West Cester. $30 tio~ , unauthorized' use of Kelly, Scwtovllle, $30 and
l 0 days m Jail ~ seven sus-. and
speed
R costs,
b
B mg. H· 1
proper ty; A aron . H un t , · costs, speeding,· Nicholas
1
d
d
b
0
0 ert
pen e • ~ro atlon, . no · · •
·
a ey, Clairsville, $30 and costs, V. King, Racine, $20 and
Joseph Dillon, Racme •. $30 Pomero~, $200 and costs, speeding; Daniel P. Hysell, costs, display plates/valid
and costs, seat belt v1ola- 20 days 111 Jail , 18 suspend- Pomero $SO nd co t
sticker;
Katherine
E.
lion:. Laura E. Diprima, ed, probation, DUS - 12 pt. 1·m ro y,
a
$ls3s0, Kington, Hilliard, $50 and
Rale1gh , N.C .. $30 and suspension, $30 and costs,
P per taggmg,
.
costs. speeding; Susan E. probation, seat belt viola- and ~osts.' •ll~gally takmg costs, speeding.
Ditmer, Jackson, $20 and tion; Brian D. Hankins, de~r, Gary E. Hysell,
Natalya A. Kovbasyuk,
cos ts,
traffic
cont. Huntington, w.Va ., $30 Middleport,. $30. and com, Harrisonburg, $30 and
dev./signs; Andrew J. and costs, speeding; David seat belt vwlatwn; K.e•th costs, speeding; Bobby D.
Dittenhofer, Athens, $100 A.
Hansen,
Elkview, R. James, Jacksonville, Kuhn, Racine, $350 and
and costs, headlights.
w. va.. $30 and costs, !".C., $30 and costs, speed- costs, 30 days in jail, 27
Shelli D. Dunn, Racine, speeding; Abby J. Harris, mg;. Shyla E. Jarre~l. suspended,
probation,
$20 and costs, failure to Middleport, $20 and costs, Racme, $20 and costs, fall- DWI and/or drugs of
con trol ; Brandi N. Dye, display plates I valid stickHartford, W.Va., $30 and er; Danny K. Harrison,
costs, speeding; Troy G. Rutland, $300 and costs,
Edwards,
Cheshire,$30 30 days in jail, suspended,
and costs, seat belt viola- probation, phy. cont. veh.
tion; Steven C. EJ.liot, mtox.; Jonas C . Hart,
Bidwell, $30 and costs, Racine, $30 and costs,
seat belt violation; James speed ing ;
Thomas E.
R. Ellis, Middleport, $30 Harton, Racine, $30 and
and costs, speeding, $30 costs, speeding; Rona)d E.
Middleport,
and costs, seat belt viola- Hawkins,
tion; Robert J. Evans, $190 and costs, improper
' Pickerington, $30 and tagging/waterfowl, $430
costs, speedi ng; Brian K. and costs, improper tagFields, $20 IQ!d costs, ging, $430 and costs,
overwidth
violation; improper tagging, $190
Jeffery
E.
Fowler, and · costs,
improper
Pomeroy, $30 and costs, 60 records/taxidermist; Keith
days in jail, suspended, W. Hedges, Marshalls
probation, illegally taking Creek, Pa., $50 and costs,
deer, $50 and costs, 30 speeding; Gretchen E.
days in jail, suspended, Heil, Columbus, $30 and
probation, hunting without costs, speeding.
special permit, $30 and
Dale
J.
Herman,
costs, 30 days in jail, sus- Reedsville $100 and costs
p~nde.d, pr?bation, hunting 10 days i~ jail, seven sus:
Wltout vahd NR hscence, pended, probation, no
.. ;
$1.30 and costs, 60 day~ in operator's
liscence;
Jail, suspended, probation, Kennith W. Hickman
illegally taking deer, $50 Cheshire $200 and costs'
.and costs, 60 days in jail, 10 days in jail, seven sus:
suspended, probatiOn, die- pended, probation , no
operator's
liscence;
gaily takmg deer.
Debbie
J.
Frame, Terrence J. Hill, Sarnia,
• -·Zanesville, $30 and costs, $30 and costs, · speeding,
seat
belt
violation; Timothy A. Hill, Long ·
Matthew
R.
Frank, Bottom, $30 and costs,
Pomeroy, $30 and costs, speeding;
Sheryl
H.
speeding; Carol L. Gainer, Holdren, Little Hocking,
Norton , $30 ' an'd C'&lt;TSts, $30 and costs, speeding;
speeding; Brittany M. Karen
D.
Holley,
Gates, Albany, $100 and Reedsville, $20 and costs,
costs, 30 days in jail, 29 failure to yield 112 road- ·
suspended,
probation, way;
Robert
J.
domestic violence; Mara H o I l i· n g s h e a d ,
i,s
G. Gerlach, New Haven, Jacksonville, $30 and
$30 and costs, speeding; costs, speeding; Patricia K.
Mark W. Ghee, Bidwell, 50 Horne, Chesapeake, $30
and costs, speeding; James and costs, speeding; Jack
R. Gillenwater, Gallipolis, R. Horner, Belpre, $20 and
$200 and costs, I 0 days in costs, assured clear dis jail , seven suspended, pro- tance; Casey N. Hubbard,

Local stocks

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

runner-up Fruth Trophy and
pulled into a tie with Chris
Long for second overall.
In the 13-14 bracket, Nick
Saunders of Gallipolis carved
out a nice 39 to capture the
Fruth Pharmacy fJrSt place
weekly award and solidified
his.hold on the overall crown.
Close behind at 41, Opie
Lucas of Point Pleasant snared
runner-up honors and also
earned second overall. Steven
Theiss of Gallipolis carded 47
for third and earned third overall, while Montana Wamsley
of Point recorded 50 and
David Michael of Crown City
collected a 52.
The large group of 11-12
year olds prOduced exciting
competition. Robert Canaday
from Gallipolis fired 45 to

• BALCO leaker
sentenced to prison time.

earn the weekly frrst place
Fruth trophy, barely one stroke
ahead of runner-up Gus Slone
of Gallipolis at 46. Close
behind for third spot came
Eric Allbright of Point
Pleasant at 48, while Jacob
Leach from Cheshire, Brady
C~ and Bryce Saxon of
Gallipolis also posted a 50
each for a three-way lie at
fourth . .J\lst behind the leaders
came Wyatt Wamsley of
Point. Denver Thomas of
Leon, Jarod Martin from
Gallipolis and Griffen Stanley
of Gallipolis.
In tlie keenly contested
bracket, Allbright earned
championship honors with 28
points, just ahead of Cuny at
26, while Slone, Saxon and
Canaday tied for third.

Five players competed in
the 10-anil-under category
where Dares Hamid earned
the Fruth first place trophy on
a good 42, while Jacob
Hoback of Meigs was second
with 50. The fmal three of
Ryan Schenkelberg.of Meigs,
Tare Hamid of Gallipolis and
Jonah Hoback of Meigs tied
for third on identical scores of
58.
In the overall bracket race,
Hamid was winner on 30
points, while Schenkelberg
and Hoback tied for second,
plus a tie for third . found
Massile and T. Hamid dead-

locked.
For the young ladies,
Morgan Nottingham of
Mason won the weekly Fruth
trophy on 53. Libby Leach of

MaJor League Baseball

SeePageB8

SPORTS BRIEFS

Men's softball
tourney planned
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. New Hope
Church softball team is
holding a men's softball
tournament on July 27, 28
at Harmon Park and
Ordnance fields in Point
Pleasant.
There will also be a cornhole bag toss tournament
on July the 28 at the same
location.
The entry fee is $115 and
balls will be provided. All
proceeds will go to a benefit fund for Wendy Rollins,
a local lady battling cancer.
A home run derby is also
planned as well as concessions with homemade
baked goods. For information people may caJI 304675-2970. If no answer
please leave a message and
someone will call back.

Hafner .and
Indians agree to
$57 million, 4year extension

New York
Mets'
Lastings
Milledge (44)
runs to beat
the throw to
home plate
as Cincinnati
Reds catcher
David Ross
waits for the
ball during
the fifth
Inning of
baseball
action
Thursday in
New York.
APphoto

Baseball Returns
Reds start second half of season with loss to Mets

CLEVELAND (AP)
Travis Hafner and the
Cleveland Indians agreed
Thursday to a $57 million,
four-year contract extension through the 2012 season.
Hafner, the Indians' designated hitter, was making
$3.95 million this year, and
Cleveland had a 2008
option for a minimum
$4.95 million. Under the
new deal, he will receive
more money next year. The
new agreement includes a
team option for 2013.
"Not only is Travis
Hafner among the elite hitters in major league baseball today, but he will now
have the opportunity to
establish himself as one of ·
the great players in the
proud history of the
Cleveland Indians organization," Indians general
manager Mark Shapiro
said. "This contract is both
a credit to Travis's offensive performance and a testament to who he is as a
· teammate, his relentless
work ethic and hi s strong
desire to help bring a
championship
to
Cleveland ."

BY HAL BoCK
ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK Jose
Reyes and Ruben Gotay
opened with consecutive
home runs, the first time
that's happened in the 46season h1story of the Mets,
and New York beat the
Cincinnati
Reds
3-2
Thursday.
Reyes, fresh off his
three-hit performance in
the All-Star game, led off
the bottom of the first with
his fifth homer and Gotay
followed with his fourth,
Bronson
both against
Arroyo (3-10). It was the
third time this season that
the Mets hit back-to-back
homers but the first time
ever the team opened that
way.
It was a strong start in
the first game since New
York dismissed hitting
coach Rick Down and
added Rickey Henderso n
to the coaching staff. It has
not been decided whether
Henderson or first base
coach Howard Johnson
will replace Down, but
Johnson filled the role
against Cincinnati.
New York also jettisoned
48-year-old Julio Franco,
who hit only .200 in 50 at·
bats with one home run
and eight RBis, and proCoNTAcrUs ·
moted Lastings Milledge.
from the minors .
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.·1 o.m.)
Orlando Hernandez (5-4)
allowed three hits and two
n 40·446-2342 ext. 33
runs in six innings to earn
Fex- 1·740-446-3008•
the win in the first game
E-mail - sports 0 mydailysentinel.com
after the break. He struck
Soort• Sllllt
out seven and walked
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor three.
(740) 446·2342. ext. 33
Scott Hatteberg hit a
bsherman@m~dallytribune. com
two-run sing~e in the second to tie it at 2 but the
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
Mets went in front for
(740) 446·2342. ext. 23
Ierum 0 mydailyregiste r.com
good in the fifth .
·
Milledge,
who
got
the
Bryan Walters, Sp.o rts Writer
off
start
in
left
field,
led
(740) 446·2342. ext. 33
with
a
s
ingle
.
Arroyo
then
bwallersC my~ i l ytribune .com

_____

.

___:

retired Hernandez and
Reyes before Gotay's drive
fell just in front of diving
center fielder Ryan Freel.
Milledge circled the
bases and barely beat the
play at home, touching the
plate with his hand ahead
of catcher David Ross' tag.
Hernandez retired the
last 12 batters he faced.
Joe Smith worked a perfect
seventh, Pedro Feliciano
pitched the eighth and
Billy Wagner got three
outs for his 18th save in 19
chances.

Brandon Phillips led off
the ninth with a single,
ending a streak of 18 consecutive hitters retired by
New York. He advanced on
a groundout but was
caught off second when
Edwin
Encarnacion
bounced to Reyes at shortstop.
Encarnacion stole second before Jeff Conine
grounded out to end the
game. "
Cincinnati finished with
just four hits and fell to 52 under interim manager

Pete Mackanin, who took
over for Jerry Narron earlier this month.
Notes: Reyes' drive was
his ninth career leadoff
homer, a Mets franchise·
record. He had been tied
with Len Dykstra and
Tommie
Agee.
.. .
Hernandez's stolen base in
the second inning was the
second steal of his career.
... Milledge' s single was
· his first hit of the season
for the Mets . He had been
0-for-3 in a brief stay in
April.

Cheshire posted 56 for runnerup, just one stroke back at 57
came Kelsey Allbright of
Point Pleasant for third, just ·
one stroke ahead of Caroline
Thompson from Mason in
fourth, plus Shiloh Wamsley
of Point close behind the lead-

ers.

In the fiilal overall bracket
standings, AUbright won fJrSi
place honors, Leach was second while Nottingham anq
Miriam Gordon tied for third~ .
Now the finale Fun Day
Roundup comes Monday at
Hidden Valley in Point
Pleasant. This mne hole round
will be played with handiCSE
counts. Plaques will be (ll'6sented to age group winners. ::
Signups will be at 8:30a.m:
with tee-off at 9 a.m.
·

Redmen
secure
Rock Hill's:
Murnahan ·
BY MARK WtwAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
Redmen baseball prograrri
continued with its busy,
recruiting season by adding
the versatile tC. Murnahan
of Rock Hill High School:
He can play catcher, firs\
base, third base, and eveq
the outfield.
.
M umahan said he doesn '!
care where he plays, he just
wants 'to stan. "I don't care
where I play as long as I'ni
on the field. I'm happy as
long as I get to play,' saic!
Murnahan.
It was the versatility of
Mumahan that caught Rio
Grande head coach Brad
Warnimont's eye. "J.C. is
more than just a catcher.
He's an athlete," Warnimont
said:"He's not your atypical
catcher. He runs a 6.8 (sec·
ond) 60 (yard dash), he can
play the outfield as well as
third base. His big thing is
flexibility. I want to put my
nine best players on the
field."
Murnahan was an all-district and. All-Ohio Valley
Conference the last two seasons as a junior and senior,
He hit .482 this year with
four home runs and struck
out only five times in 129
at-bats over a three 'year
period. Murnahan's career
batting average was .504
and he had a .537 on-base
percentage.
Warnimont
said
Mumahan has the necessary
tool s to play various posi-

Pleue -

Reclmen. Bl

Wes Lieving, DO
Internal Medicine
Office:
2007 Second Avenue
Mason, WV 25260
PLEASA

HOSPITAL

'fk, f'a.trt~ of P~fultP/fO.ft

_______________

,_ Appointments:

(304) 773-5179
~----~~...:.... ._.-

-

I
. -

-··""

�.,age ~2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tampa

43 43 - .500
43

45

.489
.432

38 50
Boy 34 54 .386
Centnll Dlvielon
W

Doiron
Cteveland

52
52

L

Pet

.605
.591

34

36
46 43
40 47
36 50

Minnesota
Chicago
Kansas City

.517
.460
.432

Weat Dlvlalon
W

L

Pet

53 35 .602

Los Angeles
Seattle
Oakland
TelCas

49 36
44 45

BASKETBALL
USA BASKETBALL-Named Tony

38 50

Ronzone director of international player
personnel.
National Baaketball Association

GB

DALLAS MAVERICKS-Re-signed G-F
Devean George to a one-vear contract.
DETROIT PISTONs-Re-signed F Amir

10
11
16

Johnson to a three-year contract.
ORlANOO MAGIC-Agreed to terms
I with C Owtght Howard on a tive-year
contract extension_
1

20

GB

SAN ANTONIO SPURS-Re-signed G

t

FOOTBALL
OAKLAND RAIDER5-Signed LB

7'.
12~,

Nadonal Football League

15
GB
2 '~

.494
.432

9:,

Isaiah Kacyvenski . ReJeased DE Bryant
McNeal and LB Kurt CamP.bell.

HOCKEY
Notlo""l Hockey League

ANAHEIM DUCKS-Signed 0 Joe

15

Callahan to one-year qontract and C

Brandon Segal to a two-year oontract.
ATLANTA THRASHEA$-Re·signed F

l undqvist to a two-year contract

Fridey's Gamea

I EDMONTON

I Sheldon Souray.

I

o
a
L.A. Angels I TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING-5ignod D
' Mike Lundin to a two-year contract.
'

I

Toronto at Boston, 7:05p.m.
Kansas City at Cleve~nd, 7:05p.m.

49 39 .557

47
44
42
36
central

Washington

I

GB

42

.528

44
47

.500

2 11r
5

.472

7\1.

Chicago

St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Houston
Cincinnati

40 45

471

40 48

455

American Confelwnee

67
Mondsy, July 11?"1:hicago

National Confenlnce

saturday, Jul~ 14: Columbus at Georgia,
1
American Conre..nce
Saturday; July 14: Chicago at San Jose,
4p.m.
·

p.m.

ArenaBowl
At New Orluns

Sunday, July 29:TBA, 3 p.m.

PRo SoccER
EASTERN CONFERENCE
WLTPtsGFGA
NewYork
7 5 3 24 25 20
D.C.United 7 5 2 23 23 18
New England
Kansas City
Columbus
Toronto FC
Chicago

p.m.

I
I
I

I · PRo BASKETBALL .
Women's Basketball Association

BASEBALL

EASTERN CONFERENCE

·Major League Baseball
MLB-Suspended San Diego LHP
David Wells lor seven games and fined
him $3,000 for inappropriate actions in a
game against Atlanta on July7.
Amaric1n League
BALTIMORE
ORIOLE5-Activated
RHP Oanys Baez from the 15-day DL.
Assigned LHP Kurt Birkins to Norfolk

Indiana -'
Detroit
New York
Connecticut
Chicago
Washington

'

t

W L

Pet

15
14
1o
8
a·
7

.789
.737
.526
.421
.400
.368

4
5
9
11
12
1:2

GB
1
5
7
7 i~

a

WESTERN CONFERENCE
WL
Pet
GB
San Antonio
12 6 .667

(IL).
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Recalled RHP
Charlie Haeger from Charlotte (IL).
CLEVELAND INDIANS-Signed DH

i

Thursday's Game
Ch
uston at
lcago, 9 p.m.
Saturday's Gamea
FC Dallas at D.C. United, 7:30p.m.
New England at New York, 7:30p.m.
Real Salt Lake at Kansas City, a p.m.
Columbus at co Chivas USA, 10:30
p.m
Sunday's Glmt
Toronto FC at Houston, 8:30p.m.
Thursday, July 19
MLS All-Stars vs. Celtic FC at
comm'erce City, Colo., 9 p.m.
sunda~. July 22
Houston at New England, 4 p.m.
D.C. United at New York, 5 p.m
Toronto FC at Columbus, 5 p.m.
Colorado at Ka nsas City, 8 p.m.

Ho

Thursday's Sports TrsnaactlonB

Travis Hafner to a four·yea r contract
eMtension .
OAKLAND ATHLETIC$-Piaced RHP
Rich Harden on the 15-day DL. retroactive to July 8. Placed INF Donnie Murphy
on the bereavement list. Recalled INF
J .J. Furmaniak from Sacramento (PCL).
Purchased the contract of AHP Andrew
Brown from Sacramento. Transferred
AHP Justin Duchsctlerer from the 15· to
the 60-day DL.
National League
CHICAGO CUBS-Agreed to terms
with INF Anthony Thomas and INF
Darwin Barney.
CINCINNATI REDS-Placed OF Josh
Hamillon on the 15-day DL, retroactive to
July 8. Purchased the contract of C Chad
Moeller from Louisville (IL). Claimed LHP
AlelCander Smit ofl waivers from
Minnesota.

18 24
13 22

NOTE: Three points for victory, one
point for tie.

Saturday's Games
Houston at Chicago Cubs, 3:55p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco. 3:55
p.m.
St. Louis at Philadelphia, 3:55 p.m.

'

18
16

1

L.A. Dodgers (Billingstev 5-0 or Lowe 8·
8) at San Francisco (Cain 3-9), 10:15

'

7 3
7 4

WESTERN CONFERENCE
WLTPtsGFGA
Houston
9 5 :2 29 21 10
FC Dallas
962292121
Chivas USA 6 5 3 21 18 15
Colorado
4 8 5 17 14 22
Angeles 3 5 4 13 17 18
I Los
Salt Lake
1 7 6 9 12 23

at Arizona

TRANSACTIONS

3 5 23 25 17
6 5 4 ' 22 26 :22
5 4 7 22 20 21
6

5
4

Sacramento
Phoenix
Seattle
Los Angeles
Houston
Minnesota
I

HOUSTON ASTR05-Actlvated RHP

Brad Lldga from the 15-day DL.
Optioned LHP Mark McLemore to Rolnd

Rock (PCL).
NEW YORK MET5-Doslgnated INF·

OF Julio Franco for asalgnment.
Recalled OF Lastlnge Milledge from
Binghamton (EL) . Agreed to terms with
INF Marion Anderson on a minor league
contract and .uslgned l'iim to New

Orleono (PCL).

ST. LOUIS CAAOINAL$-Actlvated SS
David Ecketein from the 15-day OL. ,
Placed RHP TOdd Wellemeyer on the 15·
day DL. Optioned INF Brendan Ryan to
MemphiS (PCL). Recalled AHP Andy
Cavazos from .Memphis. Announced the
promOtion of OF Chris Grossman and C
Luke Gorsett to Ftalm Beach (FSL) from
Quad Cities (MWL) . Assigned OF
Antonio DeJesus. 39 Arnoldi Cruz and C
Nick Derba to Quad Cities.

~

12 7

.632

11 9
119
7 12
6 14

.550
2
.550 · 2
_368
5~
.300
7

5

.238

16

Wednesday 's Games
Connecticut 76, Seattle 63
San Antonio 87, Phoenix 77
Thurad1y'a Games
Houston 87, Minnesota 77
Indiana 79, New York 63
Detroit 78, Chicago 65
Friday's Games
No games scheduled
Saturdly'a Game11
No games scheduled ·
Sunday's Game
AII·Star game at Washington

AUTO RACING
2007 NIXIII Cup
Driver Stlndlngl
1. Jeff Gordon, 2,773
2. Denny Hamlin, 2,496
3. Matt Kanselh , 2,390
4. Jimmie Johnson, 2,366
5. Jeff Burton, 2,345
6. Carl t:dwards, 2,308
7. Tony Stewart. 2.234
B. Kyle Busch, 2,190
9. Kevin Harvlck, 2.172
10. Martin Truex Jr.. 2,157
11. Clint Bowyer, 2. 142
12. Date Earnhardt Jr., 2,040
13. Jamie McMurray, 1,9G1
14. Ryan Newman, 1,979
15. Kurt Busch, 1,919

16. Greg BIHie, t,836

17. J.J . Vele~. 1,804
18. Mar~ Marlin. 1,774
19. Caeey Mears, 1,761

20. Bobby Lal&gt;onte.

1.743

BY DAM GELSTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS
PHILADELPHIA
Tubby Smith hit the road
shortly after taking the job at
Minnesota, sharing his
vision of what the Gophers
will be about and hoping
that everyone liked his pnch.
Only instead of prized
recruits, Smith met with
people from all over
Minnesota as part of a
coaches' caravan
that
allowed him to reach out to a
depressed fan base that,
much like the program he
inherited. was sorely in need
of revitalization_
What Smith found out was
that the kind of winning percentage that caused grumbling in Kentucky earned
him a welcome worthy of a
returning native son from
the disillusioned fans .
''There's a sense of people
wanting to be excited,"
Smith said_"I needed a new
challenge and something to
really get the bloo&lt;:l going
again. This is it. Minnesota's
that place."
·
Smith was one of more
than 50 coaches to take a
new job this offseason and
easily the highest in profile,
with a national champi·
onship at Kentucky and 14
straight 20-Win seasons. All
had their reasons - heading
home, more money, better
program :- but all had one
thing in common:
"It is always hard," said
John Beilein, who left West
Virginia for Michigan. "But
sometimes it's just refreshing to start anew."
All the coaches scouting at
this .'week's elite Reebok
high school basketball camp
at Philadelphia University
looked straight out of a merchandise catalog with school
logos and names stitched all
over their polo shirts, only it
seemed sfightl y off to see
the coaches wearing them.
Only months ago, Kansas '
Bill Self chat with Bob
Huggins and Billy Gillispie
in the bleachers may as well

one of the tour busses like
Smith had in Minnesota.
"I'm looking forward to
meeting every single person
in Kentucky if I get a chance
to," he said_
Well, he shouldn't expect .
a
welcome
mat
in
Louisville.
Beilein, who paid $1.5
million to .West Virginia for
taking the job at Michigan
with five year6 remaining on
his deal, said those same
fans who are happy now
with a fresh face and a new
voice could be the same
ones
setting
up
firecoach.com Web sites
when the wins don't come as
quickly as they'd like.
"People. who have won
nation!tl.
championships
before, I think their patience
line 111ight be different;" he
said. -'
·.
.
S'mith .knows all about
coaching under the weight
AP photo of .impatient fans. He won't
Bob Huggins, basketball coach at West VIrginia , talks on his get !hili in Minnesota where
cell phone as he watches a basketball camp game Tuesday the Gophers went 9-22 last
in Philadelphia. Huggins is enjoying a happy homecoming In . season and suffered throqgh
the academic fraud scandal
his return to West Virginia.
under Clem Haskins and
have been an impromptu Big impact, quickly signing one only one NCAA tournament
12 coaches conference . of the final blue-chip high in seven-plus seasons under
Instead, Huggins bolted school prospects available. Don Morison. There are no
from Kansas State after one Without playing a game, immediate Big Ten . title
year to fill B,eilein 's. spot at Gillispie is already a winner exgectations for now.
West Virginia lind Gillispie at Kentucky only instead of
I think they're a little
·left his blossoming Texas topping the Top 25, he's a hit · more realistic than that,
A&amp;M J?IOgram for the more · on ·the public opinion polls coming off the year we had,"
prestigious Kentucky job on ltlternet message boards Smith said. "They did win
vaca~ by Smith.
.
and blogs.
nine games. They have some
Wh1le the demands of "I&gt;like expectations, I like solid kids returnmg."
Huggins is enjoying a
appeasing an often ,finicky P,li5Sion,' 1 Gillispie s.aid.
fan ~as~•..along with five ' 'T)lat passion has enabled ' happy homecoming in his
double-d~g~l.los~ ~asons .1~ ··~~ to.win the most ~ames return to West Virgil!'a. He
the last e•ght ~e~ ..s~ ~ m coll~gebasketbaJl. history was a former captam and
wear on South, Gillisp~ ts.. llll~ hoJ:?_efully'that passion is two-time academic Allrea~y ~or. the challenge. · '. ' gomg'.to help us Will."
American during his 1975G•ll•sp•e has made h1s
While all the coaches 1977 playing days, and
~ark rebuilding programs insisted ' they're recruiting spent the first year of his
hke UTEP from 2002-04 from .-the s.~ .JJO?l of top coaching career with the
and then at Texas A&amp;M, recru1ts, G!lhsp1e likes how Mountameers as a graduate
where he just-led the Aggies easier some of those stars assistant.
·
to the NCAA tourname~t's .IU'C now looking back at him . Huggins is finding it easy
round of ·16 far the first lime and his school.
to reconnect with old friends
in 27 years. The expecta- , "You might be received a and fans.
lions are hi~her at Kentucky little bit better when you're
"I was there for five years,
and Gtllisp1e knows he can at the University of so ,you take four years on
return the ~rogram to among Kentucky because of the tra- either side and it's like 13
the nation s elite.
dition,': he ~~· . •
. years of ~ople yo~ wen~ to
He made an instant
~_!!I Gdhsp1e needs 1s school with,' Huggms smd.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

.. If you have a question. or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week. r;o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC -28053
NEXTEL CUP SERIES

~

"

8'1,.

Red.men
Plane in Fla. crash
not prepared to land
SANFORD, Fla. (AP) The landing gear and flaps
of a twin-engme plane that
crashed into a central Florida
neighborhood were not
deployed, suggesting the
pilot was not prepared to
land, a federal official said
Thursday.
Still, investi gators have
not found any clear signs to
explain exactly why the
Cessna 310 dove into the
residential area Tuesday,
killing five people and
destroying two homes. said
Robert Sumwalt, vice chair(

man of the National
Transportation and Safety
Board.
Crews from the agency
wrapped up their on-scene
collection of evidence on
Thursday.
Sumwalt said it fs still
unclear who was piloting the
plane: Dr. Bruce Kennedy, a
Daytona Beach plastic surgeon and husband of a
prominent NASCAR official, or Michael Klemm, a
NASCAR aviation pilot.
NASCAR has said Kennedy
was at the controls.

tor as a freshman."
,
Murnah-an had plenty of
options including playing
football at the college level.
from PageBl
But, he couldn't pass up the
opportunity
to play baselions. "He runs the bases
ball.
"It's
the
game I've
well. He's a r uy who can
loved
since
I
was
six,'' said
get bigger. He s got the arm Murnahan.
strengTh and the speed. You
Warnimont has made the
can't teach athletic ability,''
.County area a
Lawrence
Warnimqnt said.
main
target
of hi s recruiting.
The former Rock Hill "We've signed
seven kids
Redman and current Rio from Southeast Ohio and
Grande Redman is expect- Northern Kentucky. I want
ing to come ·up and see time to get the best kids out of
on the field. "I'm expecting Southeast Ohio and we're
to step in and play," doing
that,"
said
Murnahan said. "I want to Warnimont.
prove myself in the fall and
Murnahan plans to major
step in and play in the in pre-med and eventually .
spring . I just want to step up attend postgraduate school
and play and be a contribu· to become an optometrist.

I

'

Casey= ,

• Race: Built Ford Tough

225
• _,., Kentucky

Speedway, Sparta (1.5

miles), 150 laps/225

e

miles . .• When: Saturday, July 14
• LMt ,.... - : Ron

HO&lt;naday Jr.

• Qtllllf)lnl-: Bill

Lester, Toyota.178.141
mph, July 9. 2005.
•R-NCOid:Mike
Bliss, Chevrolet, 143.515
mph, July 13, 2002_
• lMt race: Travis Kvapll
drove a Ford to victory at

Memphis Motorsports
Park, bumping past Toyota's Brad Kosetowskl

c
JAMIE McMuRRAY

.

v

No. 26 CROWN ROYAL/IRWIN FORD

NEXTEL CuP SERIES

E
R

· Stewart

s
u
s

Hamlin

Tony SteWart

n. Dennr Hamlin
The Joe Gibbs Racing teammates were runn ing,i -2 early in
the Pepsi 400 when , inexpl icably,
they wreckEd. Stewart, who was
running beh ind Hamlin whe n contact wa s made, expressed his
anger at his teammate. Hamlin
seemed mystified by Stewart 's criticism but said he'd take the blanie
if Stewart sa id so.

.•Jiie rear.

;1&gt; The manufacturer dominancepi CMwl&gt;let has·BISO dlmln-

,l$1leq. The last four races have
pr!)dUCed two Fonts, a Dodge
and Chel.y In Victory lane.
1&gt; The ~1400 didn't tndude Its

··ras- quallflol. nnilned before

time trials.could be oompleted. At

NASCAR Thlo Woek'o Monte
Dutton Clveo hlo toke; "Regardless

ille tme. llCrls 5ald was on the
pol8 for the second straight year_

·~ ~ session was washed
out,~ ""'fYO!Oe could get a
~.the rules dictated that
Said dlcln1 make the ftekl.
1&gt; At the time of the ralnout, the
six fastest qualifiers were drivers who hod to make the fleld
bil&lt;!peed . Why? It was "an ImpOund race," and all the drivers

race Setups
during qualifying.
•
IIi' ~-\WO closest finishes of the .
sei!Sorl have occurred at D'l'f '

of whether Hamlin's car s lowed
suddenly or Stewart rammed it, this
was sensel8ss . Joe Gibbs, who has
enough problems to dea l with in
the nation's ca pltiil. tri ed hi s best
to play down the rift between hi s
drivers."

Jllmle McMUI'I11Jr ri&amp;Irt, - the 2002 fall race at low's Motor s,lldWJ In his -..d start. When he U, by a law Inches aver Krte Busch; 185 races had passed beb:een the two llclurles.

John Clar11/NASCAR Thts _ ,
the Pwpsl·400 last Satur·

&gt;

Bonds record will draw interesting reaction on road
SAN FRANCIS€0 (AP) Hammerin' Hank began and all-time in 2004, No. 700 anybody says, they're going
- If Barry Bonds doesn't ended his career.
·
later that season and No. to come. They want to see it
splash his 756th home run
While Bonds gets booed 715 last year to move past happen."
ioto the bay, the record- at almo'st every opposing Babe Ruth.
·
Including some of Bonds'
breaker could come in Hank ballpafk because of his
About the only notewor- · opponents.
Aaron's old hometown. Or prickly personality and aile- thy homer to come outside
San Diego pitcher Greg
at the home of the Giants' gations of steroid use, a eel- of San Francisco occurred Maddux said he was a little
biggest rival. Or maybe a . ebration could be particular- just across the bay in disappointed that Bonds
ballpark where fans usually Iy strange in Milwaukee.
Oakland. With plenty of wasn ' t in position to set the
"Obviously he's a light- Giants fans in the stands last record late last month when
throw back balls.
And that ~ould be pretty ning rod," Sheets sai(j. "It's year, Bonds tied Ruth with the Padres came to San
awkward. Picture a major an honor that should be eel- No. 714.'
Francisco. He could another
moment in sports taking ebrated not taken away
When Aaron broke Ruth's chance to see it when the
place in front of a crowd from. I'm not sure people record in 1974, the Braves Giants visit San Diego the
that didn 't want to see it will appreciate what just tried to make sure he did it first weekend in A,ugust.
happen.
happened . At least yotJ at home.
That series comes after the
"I can't imagine they know in San Francisco that
Aaron hit the record-tying Giants play three games at
wouldn 't want that to hap- people will be there to honor shot on opening day in Dodger Stadium.
pe.n at home anyway," what just 'happened. I don't Cincinnati and then sat out
Cubs
first
baseman
Milwaukee pitcher Ben know what would happen in the following game as the Derrek Lee also wants to see
Sheets said at the All-Star Milwaukee. It's Hank Braves tried . to guarantee the historic shot.
game. "That's a big record. Aaron's record. I just don't the record would be set in
· "I'm checking the paper
You almost need to give it think it would be a good Atlanta.
Commissioner
Bowie every day to see if he hits a
its due_The only place you idea."
Kuhn
ordered
the
team
to home run,'' Lee said. "It's
can really give it its due is at
Brewers shortstop J.J.
home. Make sure you tell Hardy admitted he wouldn't play Aaron in the series unbelievable that he's hit
him that, too."
mind witnessing hi story, finale against the Reds and 750-sDmething home runs.
Bonds ente"rs a three-game provided his team won the Aaron did not homer. Selig I'll be tuned in when he's
said earlier this week he about to break it."
weekend series at home game.
But what if it came next ·
"I think it would be unbe- ·didn't think there would be
against the Los Angeles
Dodgers with 751 homers, lievable to see it ," Hardy a similar issue with the week against the Cubs?
"That's a tricky question,"
four shy of tying Aaron. said.
. Giants and Bonds.
Bonds said he doesn 't Lee said. "I don' t know the
A:fter th!s week, the Giants . If the past is any indicaVISit Wngley Fteld for four lion, Hardy's best chance have the time at his age to answer. I won't be upset if
games against the Chicago might not be until the· worry about where his he breaks the record against
Cubs, then travel to Brewers come to San biggest
record-breaking us. Hopefully it won ' t be a
Milwaukee to play the Francisco on Aug. 24.
home run comes, but is pret- ninth inning, game-winner
Brewers three times.
Starting with career ty sure people will want to type of thing. Hopefully it's
Milwaukee is the home&gt; homer No."SOO, nearly every see it wherever it happens. a blowout if he does it ."
town of commissioner Bud milestone shot Bonds has
"They boo, but all them
The interesting question
Selig, a close friend of hit has come at home.
cameras flash eve~ time I will be whether the fans at
Aaron's_ Selig still hasn' t
That list includes homer swing, don 't they? ' Bonds Wrigley Field throw back a
said whether he'll be in' No. 71 that broke the single- said. "Boo, but click, click, ball that could fetch big
attendance when Bonds season record in 200 I, No. click, click, click, click. The bucks on the auction scene.
breaks the record. There are 600 the following year, the fan s like baseball, guys.
"They'd be crazy to throw
also ~lenty of Aaron fans sh?t~ that tied and passed Fans enjoy the game of it back," Lee said. "l·know I
left . m the city where W1lhe Mays for third place baseball. Regardless of what wouldn' t"

• . , USG Duro&lt;:k 300
• Roce: USG Sheetrock 400
earlier, a caution flag didn't
• Wllere: Chlcagolan&lt;l Speedway, freeze the order. This time,
·• ; Chlcagoland
Joliet, lit (1.5 miles). 267
though, the drivers ""re McMur- Speedway, Joliet, Ill, (1.5
miles), 200 laps/300
laps/ 400_5 miles·•. rtJ;I and Buscti, not ~arvick' and
• Wltoll: Sunday, July 15
Mertln: McMurray prevented Kyle miles.
• LMt ,..._ : Jeff Gordon BUsch from wlnnlng two racas In • When; saturday. July 14
• Qwllr,~c- : Jimmie
the ·same Hair, arid the f1lrd drlv- •LMt_.__,
Johnson, CheVJ'olet,188.147
er did ~ by the commanding marm;&gt;h. July 8, 2005.
gin of .005 or a second, tying for •Qt·......,:Ryan
Newman, Dodge,
• Race record: Kevin Harvick,
the second closest finish in Cup
186.438 mph, Juty 9,
Chevrolet, 136.832 mph, July
history. At the flnish, Kyle
14, 2002.
Busch's best ally was his broth- 2005.
• LMt ; It was nighttime,
er. Kurt. who flnished third. Me• R- : Kevin Harvlck, Che111'01et, 130.340
and the ""ather .was hot, but
Murray graciously off8fed his
mph, July 9, 2005.
otherwise, Jamie McMurray won
thBnks to Carl Edwards, who finthe Pepsi 400 with a sense of
lshed fourth behind McMurray,
• LMt ; Kyle Busch,
In a Chevy, held off Kevin
d6ja vu. As w~h the Daytona
Kyle Busch and Kurt Busch.
Harvlck to win the Winn500, the finish was side-by-side, Fifth-place finisher Jeff Gordon
DIKie 250 et
and as with the 500, cars were
summed up the ending: ult was
Daytona.
wrecking behind the leaders. A.s
nuts out there, man."

near the end .

with guaranteed spots used

Major League Soccer

7:05p.m.

Pittsburgh at Atlanta, 7:05p.m.
Colorado at Milwaukee, 7:05p.m.
Washington at Florida, 7:05 p.m.
Cincinnati at N.Y. Meta. 7:10p.m.
San Diego at Arizona, 9:40p.m.
Sunday's Games
Pittsburgh at Atlanta, 1;05 p.m.
Washington at Florida, 1:05 p.m.
Cincinnati at ~ .Y. Mets. 1:~0 p.m.
Colorado at M1_1waukee , :2:05p.m.
Housto n at Ch~eago Cubs, 2:~0 p.rT) .
L.A . Dodgers at San Franc1sco, 4:05
'PSm.
A.
.
an 01 ego at _nzona, 4.40 p. m.
St. Louis at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m.

Los

CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIP

39 50 .438
36 53 .404

(Sheets 10·4), 8:05p.m.
San_ Diego (~actdux 7-6)
(DaVIS 5-10), 9.40 p.m.

112."

I Angeles 20

Thursday's Game
N.Y. Mets 3, Cincinnati 2
Frlday'a Gamaa
Houston (Jennings 1·4) at Chicago
Cubs (Zambrano 10-7), 2:20p.m.
Washington (Bergmann 1·5) at Florida
7-7),
St. Louis (K.Wells 3·11) at Philadelphia
(Kendrick 3-0 or Moyer 7-7), 7:05p.m.
Cincinnati (Harang 9-2) at N.Y. Mets
(Maine 1Q-4). 7: 10p.m.
Pittsburgh {Snell 7-5) at Atlanta
(T.Hudson 8·5), 7:35 p.m.
Colorado (Francis 8·5) at Milwaukee

(Willis

.

Saturday, July 7: San Jose 79, Colorado

W11t Dlvlalon
W L
Pet
GB
San Diego
49 38 .563
Los Angeles 49 40 .551 · 1
Arizona
47 43 .522 3l.
Colorado
44 44 .500 5~
Sen Francisco 38 48 .442 10%

1!'

City
Monday. July 2: Los Angeles
42
DIVISIONAL ROUND
Natlon11 Conference
Saturday, July 7: ColumbUt 66, DallaS ·
59
.
.
Sunday, Juty 8: Georgia 6~. PliMadolphla
39

52 .40Q 13
Division
W L Pet
GB
49 39 .557
44 43 .50£

Milwaukee

Arena Football Playorta
WILD CARD
. Natlonll Confe.-.nce
Friday, June 29: Philadelph ia 41 ,
Orlando 26
Saturday, June 30: Columbus 56, Tampa
Bay 55
American Conference ·
Saturday, June 30: Co lorado 49, Kansas
42
84, Utah

NotlonoiL.ugiHI
East Oivlalon
W L Pct

PR F
0 OOTBALL

I

Chicago White Sox at Baltimore, 7:05
p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 7:10p.m.
Oakland at Minnesota, 7:10p.m .
Texas at L.A. Angels, 9:05p.m.
Detroit at Seattle, 10:05 p.m.
Sund1y'1 Gllmtl
Kansas City at Cteyetand, 1:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Baltimore, 1:35
p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 1:40 p.m.
Toronto at Boston, 2:05 p.m.
Oakland at. Minnesota, 2:10p.m.
Texas e.t LA. Angels, 3:35p.m.
Detroit at Seattle. 4:05 p.m.

Atlanta
Philadelphia
Florida

OILERS- Signed D

MINNESOTA WILD-Signed G Anton
Khudobin .
NEW YORK ISLANDERS-.-Signed D
Aaron Johnson to a one-year contract.
PITISBUAGH PENGUINs-Re-signed
AW Colby Armstrong to a two-year contract. Signed C Chris Minard and C
Nathan Smith.
PHOENIX COVOTE5-Signed C Peter
Mueller. Re-signed
Brendan Bell to
one-year contra'ct

1
1

(Jer.weaver 6-5), 10:05 p.m.
_
Satur:day'a G1rn11

New Yorf&lt;

Jesse Schultz.
DALLAS STARS-Sig ned C Mike
Ribeiro to a one-year contract and C Joel

1

Toronto (Marcum 4-3) at Boston
(Tavarez 5-7). 7:05p.m.
Kansas City (Perez 4-8) at Cleveland
(Westbrook 1-4), 7:05p.m.
Ch~ago White Sol( (Buehrle 6-4) at
Balt1more (Bedard 7-4), 7:05 p. m
N.Y. Yank~es {Clemens 2·3) at Tampa
Bay (Kazm1r 5·6), 7:10p.m.
t?akland (Kennedy 2-7 or Haren 1C&gt;-3) at
Mmnesote. (J.Santana 11).6), 8:10 p.m.
Detroit (Sonderm an 9-1) at Seattle
(Washburn 8·6), 10:05 p.m.

ot

to

multiyear contracts.

1

ThUrsday's G1mes
Boston 7, Toronto 4
Chicago White So~~: 9, Baltimore 7
N.Y. Yankees 7, Ta mpa Bay 3
Minnesota 6, Oakland 2 ,

Texas (Millwood 6-7)

Jacque Vaughn and F Matt Bonner

I

.576

www.mydailysentinel.com

Gillispie, Huggins adjusting to riew teams

PRo BASEBALL

Boston
NewYork
Toronto
Battimore

Friday, July 13, 2007

Friday, July 13, 2007

I

Scoreboard
American league
East Divltlon
W L Pet
54 34 .614

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

to"J!, yef attendance was off.

T~e. ?"'&lt;'lale~tlmete was
.1150,000, but'lhe crowd was
priitiilbty closer to 130,000, and
the sparsely plipulated back. '!rtri\l&amp;!!':'!lnind&amp;botds InclUded
Biii!Cf1 seiles tlcketholders who
:wei8c
..dmltted
, .;, free .
. .. I
. .
., ..,. Dflljt,El!mhartlt Jr. hes signed
ptiribnal.endol'sement deals
with' two mlljO&lt; lntematlonel corpOtations within a span of three
weeks, Sony and Adldas are
putting major marketing efforts
In place to ~ 'their relationship with the NASCAR star.

.. WbO'I'IIOt
- Jamie Mc;.,
Mu!Tayen~

awlmess :, .
stre~of165

race's. ... :carl.

· EdWilnls fln-

isl\ill.fuurl!t,
•n&lt;l l?"slled
. hi818enf
m8te across
' th8 finish II~,
".

.

'·' ; --~-

~

~

.,

Tony Stewart
lai!W tlri a grand scale In his

·~·!loll·-

bla ri&gt;r thrut! sttlllfhl Pilpsf
• ,4(I(f•vrctorlas .... Scott Rlqs
.o,!j!xJiill\l~ !h9 ~ ~. II

rJtJ$\l'iU:!d he :"(lund up 40!!1.

I

I

m1n

1me

McMurray snaps 165-race drought with victory at Daytona
By Monte Dutton

NASCAR This Week
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. - Jamie
McMurray waited a long time for his
second Cup victory. He's managed to
be both an overnight sensation and a
comeback story during his career.
Substituting for the injured Sterling
Marlin, McMurray won the 2002 fall
race at Lowe's Motor Speedway in his
second start. When he won the Pepsi
400 on July 7 by a few inches over
Kyle Busch, 165 races had passed between the two victories.
"Well, I've never finished well in
the Daytona 500, but I've always run
pretty well in the July race," said Me·
Murray, who finished second in 2005.
In his second season driving one of
Jack Roush's Fords, McMurray finds
himself in contention to make the

Chase for the Nextel Cup. The victory
enabled him to close the margin between himself and 12th-place Dale
Earnhardt Jr. to 49 points. ·
"You work very hard for something,
and Ldon't know that there's anyone
who has went from the season that I
had last year to getting a win at Daytona. That's an emotional time. It's
hard to explain to somebody that feeling of not only seeing your team work
hard, but also you."
As noted, McMurray's first season
with what is now known as Roush Fenway Racing was a bitter disappoittment. He rededicated himself to wmning, adopting a strict workout regimen and trying to learn ·more about
the cars mechanically.
"Everyone knows the story about me
buying a shock dyno because I wanted
to learn more about that, and it didn't

help my racing career at aU,'' said Me·
Murray. "Not even a little bit. It cost
me 50 grand, and I still have it and
that's kind of all there is to that story.
.,''I worked really hard this year to
get my mind and my body better. I did
everything I could, and when you
work out every day, and you do all
that stuff and you're not winning _, ·
it's a little bit emotional, and it's be·
cause you worked so hard for something, and you finally get it. It's hard
to explain to somebody, the feeling
that you have."
"There was never a question in my
mind that Jamie could drive a race
car," said crew chief Larry Carter.
"He's a fantastic driver."
Want to read more from Monte
Dutton? Check out http:l/www.gastongazette.com/sections/sportslnascar/

r..jitr~~

, --·~ .·
.. t;,:( [jeff:Goid'on ' '
;·a.
•. ~~~ '
' ,I I' ;Milt! ,.,_.,
~~"·..-~ JQtvlson

.l:t ;,_.r.lf, 1!\wton

-583
· eQ1

::~! ~~.'CkJ;,

~ clint Bowyer '
,11. Dale ·Earnhardt Jr.

'

Df.vld Raaa~·

· 27L
-383

· 465 '
- 539

t, Tony SteWart .
• ' ~J!uSCI\

llullcltlillll
1. &lt;;Brl Edwa.nls
a. - · Harvlck
3. .Diiild Reutlmann
.•• DiJve Bl11118y
5. ...,.. Leffler

2,773

• 401 '
•. 428:

\. •9;.: .cat·EitrOIII'Ill'

e.

.

f. l!iilltrt Hanil~on Jr.·

· 616

· 631
. 733

2,966
-798
-871
: 910
- 933

-956

-983
8, Marcos Ambr'ose• -1,079
9. , Stephen Leicht
-1,100
10. Grea Billie
-1.121
CRAFTSMAN TRUCK 5ER!ES

1. Mike Skinner
2. Ron Hornaday Jr.
3. Todd Bodine
4. Travis Kvapil
5. Riel&lt; Crawford
e. Jotmny Benson
7. Jack Sprague
8. Aaron Flke*
9. Matt Crafton
10. Ted Musgrave
• rool&lt;le

Pete Hamilton, from Dedham,

Mass. , was a big star for a relat'ively
short time . His entire career at
NASCAR's top level consisted of six
seasons and 64 races . But Hamilton won three timeS in 1970, cap-

turing the Daytona 500 and both

races at Talladega while driving a

NO. 40 Plymouth Superbird and

teaming with Richard Petty. Oriving
for Cotton Owens. Hamilton also
won one of t he qualifying races prior to the following year 's Daytona

500.

Drtvera' contracts are
seldom made public
I know the drivers all s ign big
contra cts, but what about the prize
money? Do th e~ get a cer tain per centage of it? What about the
crews and owners? Do t hey get
prize money?

Jack Cre&amp;ttan
M antua. N.J.

The

contracts are private.

Most. if

not all, drivers ger a percentage of
earnings, and some crew chiefs may
also ger a share. but that 's a marrer
of negotiation between them and
the ir employers. The details aren't a
matter of public record.

-f:m,f;;·:L uJ;,l"P ~U.rf.:Jill.

.

lt8nlllton's st...._
bltCidiY for • Httle while

2,043
-103
-228
-263
-385
.-443
-538
-556
-587
-612

Two more teams penalized for minor violations
By Monte Dutton

NASCAR This Week
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla . Because they perceived no in·
tent to circumvent the rules,
NASCAR officials were rather
mild in penalties handed out
last week to the teams of driv·
ers Kyle Busch and Johnny
Sauter based on irregularities
after the New Hampshire
race.
Both Chevrolets - Bu sch's
No_ 5 and Sauter's No. 70 were found to have used unap·
proved parts and failed to meet
minimum front car heighls.
The punishment? Fines of
$25,000 to crew chiefs Alan
Gustafson and Robert (Bootie)
Barker, along with probations
through Sept. 19, and deductions of 25 driver and owner
points from each team.
I

What next with plates? Dri·
vers are divided on the issue of
whether or how the Car of Tomorrow will change restrictorplate racing_

The Pepsi 400 marked the fi.
nal appearance in a plate race
of the chassis design that is being supplanted by the COT. The
COT will be used for the first
time at a "restrictor-plate
track" in the fall at Talladega.
Denny Hamlin, who got his
first win two weeks ago, thinks
the COT will make a considerable difference.
"It's just going to make them
like the truc k races, really,
where the guys are just all
packed tight together, where
now our cars are so slick that
they're not handling the race
track thHt well and we're start,
ing to spread out," said Hamlin.
"Now we're kind of going to
take a step back and be back
where we were. With the Car of
Tomorrow, I think they're going to suck up to each other so
much that you're just going to
have a huge wad."
Jeff Burton wasn't so sure.
"I don't know," he said. "Ask
me after Talladega. It 's too early to tell. I haven't driven the
Car of Tomorrow on a su per-

speedway (i.e., a plate track). I
certainly haven't been on a
race track with 42 other guys. I
don 'I know what to expect I
don't have an opinion on that. I
don't have enough information
to have an opinion."
I

Sbakeup - Ray Evernham
has put Scott . McDougall in
charge of Elliott Sadler's struggling No. 19 Dodge team.
McDougall, previously affili·
ated with Evernham Motor·
sports truck and ARCA teams,
is now team director, replacing
Ji&gt;sh Browne. Evernham
prefers not to call the head of
each of his teams a "crew
chief."
Browne is returning to the
organization's engineering
staff_ Evernham said Browne
is "better suited to help the or·
gan ization as a whole from an
engineering perspective and
our efforts in that area."
I

Corporate mumbo-jumbo -

Dale Earnhardt h, who announced one major, international corporate endorsement
(Sony) deal two weeks earlier,
announced another on July 6
at the track. He is now a major
corporate voice for Adidas,
the shoe and apparel manufacturer.
Earnhardt again insisted he
is endorsing Adidas because he
likes Adidas and has been
wearing its sneakers since he
was in high school.
"When I'm approached about
this stuff, what I think is 'cool.'
That's the way I think," he said.
He then acknowledged the
entry into the room of Kelley
Elledge, his sister and business
manager.
"They have business avenues
they're always thinking about,"
said Junior, "and that's what I
pay them for."

predecessor, has been named ·
Senior Vice President of Business Operations for International Speedway Corporation,
Talladega's parent compan y.
Humphrey has been vice president and general manager at
the·track since 2002.
I

Unlikely pair
Kevin ,
James, most noted for his role
in the television series Ki ng of
Queens , was the race's grand
marshal. Republican presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani .
was a ceremonial race official ·.
and was in the pace car when
the Pepsi 400 took the green
flag.

•

Royal birthday
Richard .a
Petty, NASCAR's all-time
leader in both overall victories
I
(200) and official (i.e., pointsTalladega prez - Rick awarding) wins at Dayton/
Humphrey has been named (10), turned 70 on July 2. Petty
president of Talladega Super- won a record seve n Daytona
speedway.
500s and three times in the
Grant Lynch, Humphrey's summerl ime race.

�.,age ~2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tampa

43 43 - .500
43

45

.489
.432

38 50
Boy 34 54 .386
Centnll Dlvielon
W

Doiron
Cteveland

52
52

L

Pet

.605
.591

34

36
46 43
40 47
36 50

Minnesota
Chicago
Kansas City

.517
.460
.432

Weat Dlvlalon
W

L

Pet

53 35 .602

Los Angeles
Seattle
Oakland
TelCas

49 36
44 45

BASKETBALL
USA BASKETBALL-Named Tony

38 50

Ronzone director of international player
personnel.
National Baaketball Association

GB

DALLAS MAVERICKS-Re-signed G-F
Devean George to a one-vear contract.
DETROIT PISTONs-Re-signed F Amir

10
11
16

Johnson to a three-year contract.
ORlANOO MAGIC-Agreed to terms
I with C Owtght Howard on a tive-year
contract extension_
1

20

GB

SAN ANTONIO SPURS-Re-signed G

t

FOOTBALL
OAKLAND RAIDER5-Signed LB

7'.
12~,

Nadonal Football League

15
GB
2 '~

.494
.432

9:,

Isaiah Kacyvenski . ReJeased DE Bryant
McNeal and LB Kurt CamP.bell.

HOCKEY
Notlo""l Hockey League

ANAHEIM DUCKS-Signed 0 Joe

15

Callahan to one-year qontract and C

Brandon Segal to a two-year oontract.
ATLANTA THRASHEA$-Re·signed F

l undqvist to a two-year contract

Fridey's Gamea

I EDMONTON

I Sheldon Souray.

I

o
a
L.A. Angels I TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING-5ignod D
' Mike Lundin to a two-year contract.
'

I

Toronto at Boston, 7:05p.m.
Kansas City at Cleve~nd, 7:05p.m.

49 39 .557

47
44
42
36
central

Washington

I

GB

42

.528

44
47

.500

2 11r
5

.472

7\1.

Chicago

St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Houston
Cincinnati

40 45

471

40 48

455

American Confelwnee

67
Mondsy, July 11?"1:hicago

National Confenlnce

saturday, Jul~ 14: Columbus at Georgia,
1
American Conre..nce
Saturday; July 14: Chicago at San Jose,
4p.m.
·

p.m.

ArenaBowl
At New Orluns

Sunday, July 29:TBA, 3 p.m.

PRo SoccER
EASTERN CONFERENCE
WLTPtsGFGA
NewYork
7 5 3 24 25 20
D.C.United 7 5 2 23 23 18
New England
Kansas City
Columbus
Toronto FC
Chicago

p.m.

I
I
I

I · PRo BASKETBALL .
Women's Basketball Association

BASEBALL

EASTERN CONFERENCE

·Major League Baseball
MLB-Suspended San Diego LHP
David Wells lor seven games and fined
him $3,000 for inappropriate actions in a
game against Atlanta on July7.
Amaric1n League
BALTIMORE
ORIOLE5-Activated
RHP Oanys Baez from the 15-day DL.
Assigned LHP Kurt Birkins to Norfolk

Indiana -'
Detroit
New York
Connecticut
Chicago
Washington

'

t

W L

Pet

15
14
1o
8
a·
7

.789
.737
.526
.421
.400
.368

4
5
9
11
12
1:2

GB
1
5
7
7 i~

a

WESTERN CONFERENCE
WL
Pet
GB
San Antonio
12 6 .667

(IL).
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Recalled RHP
Charlie Haeger from Charlotte (IL).
CLEVELAND INDIANS-Signed DH

i

Thursday's Game
Ch
uston at
lcago, 9 p.m.
Saturday's Gamea
FC Dallas at D.C. United, 7:30p.m.
New England at New York, 7:30p.m.
Real Salt Lake at Kansas City, a p.m.
Columbus at co Chivas USA, 10:30
p.m
Sunday's Glmt
Toronto FC at Houston, 8:30p.m.
Thursday, July 19
MLS All-Stars vs. Celtic FC at
comm'erce City, Colo., 9 p.m.
sunda~. July 22
Houston at New England, 4 p.m.
D.C. United at New York, 5 p.m
Toronto FC at Columbus, 5 p.m.
Colorado at Ka nsas City, 8 p.m.

Ho

Thursday's Sports TrsnaactlonB

Travis Hafner to a four·yea r contract
eMtension .
OAKLAND ATHLETIC$-Piaced RHP
Rich Harden on the 15-day DL. retroactive to July 8. Placed INF Donnie Murphy
on the bereavement list. Recalled INF
J .J. Furmaniak from Sacramento (PCL).
Purchased the contract of AHP Andrew
Brown from Sacramento. Transferred
AHP Justin Duchsctlerer from the 15· to
the 60-day DL.
National League
CHICAGO CUBS-Agreed to terms
with INF Anthony Thomas and INF
Darwin Barney.
CINCINNATI REDS-Placed OF Josh
Hamillon on the 15-day DL, retroactive to
July 8. Purchased the contract of C Chad
Moeller from Louisville (IL). Claimed LHP
AlelCander Smit ofl waivers from
Minnesota.

18 24
13 22

NOTE: Three points for victory, one
point for tie.

Saturday's Games
Houston at Chicago Cubs, 3:55p.m.
L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco. 3:55
p.m.
St. Louis at Philadelphia, 3:55 p.m.

'

18
16

1

L.A. Dodgers (Billingstev 5-0 or Lowe 8·
8) at San Francisco (Cain 3-9), 10:15

'

7 3
7 4

WESTERN CONFERENCE
WLTPtsGFGA
Houston
9 5 :2 29 21 10
FC Dallas
962292121
Chivas USA 6 5 3 21 18 15
Colorado
4 8 5 17 14 22
Angeles 3 5 4 13 17 18
I Los
Salt Lake
1 7 6 9 12 23

at Arizona

TRANSACTIONS

3 5 23 25 17
6 5 4 ' 22 26 :22
5 4 7 22 20 21
6

5
4

Sacramento
Phoenix
Seattle
Los Angeles
Houston
Minnesota
I

HOUSTON ASTR05-Actlvated RHP

Brad Lldga from the 15-day DL.
Optioned LHP Mark McLemore to Rolnd

Rock (PCL).
NEW YORK MET5-Doslgnated INF·

OF Julio Franco for asalgnment.
Recalled OF Lastlnge Milledge from
Binghamton (EL) . Agreed to terms with
INF Marion Anderson on a minor league
contract and .uslgned l'iim to New

Orleono (PCL).

ST. LOUIS CAAOINAL$-Actlvated SS
David Ecketein from the 15-day OL. ,
Placed RHP TOdd Wellemeyer on the 15·
day DL. Optioned INF Brendan Ryan to
MemphiS (PCL). Recalled AHP Andy
Cavazos from .Memphis. Announced the
promOtion of OF Chris Grossman and C
Luke Gorsett to Ftalm Beach (FSL) from
Quad Cities (MWL) . Assigned OF
Antonio DeJesus. 39 Arnoldi Cruz and C
Nick Derba to Quad Cities.

~

12 7

.632

11 9
119
7 12
6 14

.550
2
.550 · 2
_368
5~
.300
7

5

.238

16

Wednesday 's Games
Connecticut 76, Seattle 63
San Antonio 87, Phoenix 77
Thurad1y'a Games
Houston 87, Minnesota 77
Indiana 79, New York 63
Detroit 78, Chicago 65
Friday's Games
No games scheduled
Saturdly'a Game11
No games scheduled ·
Sunday's Game
AII·Star game at Washington

AUTO RACING
2007 NIXIII Cup
Driver Stlndlngl
1. Jeff Gordon, 2,773
2. Denny Hamlin, 2,496
3. Matt Kanselh , 2,390
4. Jimmie Johnson, 2,366
5. Jeff Burton, 2,345
6. Carl t:dwards, 2,308
7. Tony Stewart. 2.234
B. Kyle Busch, 2,190
9. Kevin Harvlck, 2.172
10. Martin Truex Jr.. 2,157
11. Clint Bowyer, 2. 142
12. Date Earnhardt Jr., 2,040
13. Jamie McMurray, 1,9G1
14. Ryan Newman, 1,979
15. Kurt Busch, 1,919

16. Greg BIHie, t,836

17. J.J . Vele~. 1,804
18. Mar~ Marlin. 1,774
19. Caeey Mears, 1,761

20. Bobby Lal&gt;onte.

1.743

BY DAM GELSTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS
PHILADELPHIA
Tubby Smith hit the road
shortly after taking the job at
Minnesota, sharing his
vision of what the Gophers
will be about and hoping
that everyone liked his pnch.
Only instead of prized
recruits, Smith met with
people from all over
Minnesota as part of a
coaches' caravan
that
allowed him to reach out to a
depressed fan base that,
much like the program he
inherited. was sorely in need
of revitalization_
What Smith found out was
that the kind of winning percentage that caused grumbling in Kentucky earned
him a welcome worthy of a
returning native son from
the disillusioned fans .
''There's a sense of people
wanting to be excited,"
Smith said_"I needed a new
challenge and something to
really get the bloo&lt;:l going
again. This is it. Minnesota's
that place."
·
Smith was one of more
than 50 coaches to take a
new job this offseason and
easily the highest in profile,
with a national champi·
onship at Kentucky and 14
straight 20-Win seasons. All
had their reasons - heading
home, more money, better
program :- but all had one
thing in common:
"It is always hard," said
John Beilein, who left West
Virginia for Michigan. "But
sometimes it's just refreshing to start anew."
All the coaches scouting at
this .'week's elite Reebok
high school basketball camp
at Philadelphia University
looked straight out of a merchandise catalog with school
logos and names stitched all
over their polo shirts, only it
seemed sfightl y off to see
the coaches wearing them.
Only months ago, Kansas '
Bill Self chat with Bob
Huggins and Billy Gillispie
in the bleachers may as well

one of the tour busses like
Smith had in Minnesota.
"I'm looking forward to
meeting every single person
in Kentucky if I get a chance
to," he said_
Well, he shouldn't expect .
a
welcome
mat
in
Louisville.
Beilein, who paid $1.5
million to .West Virginia for
taking the job at Michigan
with five year6 remaining on
his deal, said those same
fans who are happy now
with a fresh face and a new
voice could be the same
ones
setting
up
firecoach.com Web sites
when the wins don't come as
quickly as they'd like.
"People. who have won
nation!tl.
championships
before, I think their patience
line 111ight be different;" he
said. -'
·.
.
S'mith .knows all about
coaching under the weight
AP photo of .impatient fans. He won't
Bob Huggins, basketball coach at West VIrginia , talks on his get !hili in Minnesota where
cell phone as he watches a basketball camp game Tuesday the Gophers went 9-22 last
in Philadelphia. Huggins is enjoying a happy homecoming In . season and suffered throqgh
the academic fraud scandal
his return to West Virginia.
under Clem Haskins and
have been an impromptu Big impact, quickly signing one only one NCAA tournament
12 coaches conference . of the final blue-chip high in seven-plus seasons under
Instead, Huggins bolted school prospects available. Don Morison. There are no
from Kansas State after one Without playing a game, immediate Big Ten . title
year to fill B,eilein 's. spot at Gillispie is already a winner exgectations for now.
West Virginia lind Gillispie at Kentucky only instead of
I think they're a little
·left his blossoming Texas topping the Top 25, he's a hit · more realistic than that,
A&amp;M J?IOgram for the more · on ·the public opinion polls coming off the year we had,"
prestigious Kentucky job on ltlternet message boards Smith said. "They did win
vaca~ by Smith.
.
and blogs.
nine games. They have some
Wh1le the demands of "I&gt;like expectations, I like solid kids returnmg."
Huggins is enjoying a
appeasing an often ,finicky P,li5Sion,' 1 Gillispie s.aid.
fan ~as~•..along with five ' 'T)lat passion has enabled ' happy homecoming in his
double-d~g~l.los~ ~asons .1~ ··~~ to.win the most ~ames return to West Virgil!'a. He
the last e•ght ~e~ ..s~ ~ m coll~gebasketbaJl. history was a former captam and
wear on South, Gillisp~ ts.. llll~ hoJ:?_efully'that passion is two-time academic Allrea~y ~or. the challenge. · '. ' gomg'.to help us Will."
American during his 1975G•ll•sp•e has made h1s
While all the coaches 1977 playing days, and
~ark rebuilding programs insisted ' they're recruiting spent the first year of his
hke UTEP from 2002-04 from .-the s.~ .JJO?l of top coaching career with the
and then at Texas A&amp;M, recru1ts, G!lhsp1e likes how Mountameers as a graduate
where he just-led the Aggies easier some of those stars assistant.
·
to the NCAA tourname~t's .IU'C now looking back at him . Huggins is finding it easy
round of ·16 far the first lime and his school.
to reconnect with old friends
in 27 years. The expecta- , "You might be received a and fans.
lions are hi~her at Kentucky little bit better when you're
"I was there for five years,
and Gtllisp1e knows he can at the University of so ,you take four years on
return the ~rogram to among Kentucky because of the tra- either side and it's like 13
the nation s elite.
dition,': he ~~· . •
. years of ~ople yo~ wen~ to
He made an instant
~_!!I Gdhsp1e needs 1s school with,' Huggms smd.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

.. If you have a question. or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week. r;o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC -28053
NEXTEL CUP SERIES

~

"

8'1,.

Red.men
Plane in Fla. crash
not prepared to land
SANFORD, Fla. (AP) The landing gear and flaps
of a twin-engme plane that
crashed into a central Florida
neighborhood were not
deployed, suggesting the
pilot was not prepared to
land, a federal official said
Thursday.
Still, investi gators have
not found any clear signs to
explain exactly why the
Cessna 310 dove into the
residential area Tuesday,
killing five people and
destroying two homes. said
Robert Sumwalt, vice chair(

man of the National
Transportation and Safety
Board.
Crews from the agency
wrapped up their on-scene
collection of evidence on
Thursday.
Sumwalt said it fs still
unclear who was piloting the
plane: Dr. Bruce Kennedy, a
Daytona Beach plastic surgeon and husband of a
prominent NASCAR official, or Michael Klemm, a
NASCAR aviation pilot.
NASCAR has said Kennedy
was at the controls.

tor as a freshman."
,
Murnah-an had plenty of
options including playing
football at the college level.
from PageBl
But, he couldn't pass up the
opportunity
to play baselions. "He runs the bases
ball.
"It's
the
game I've
well. He's a r uy who can
loved
since
I
was
six,'' said
get bigger. He s got the arm Murnahan.
strengTh and the speed. You
Warnimont has made the
can't teach athletic ability,''
.County area a
Lawrence
Warnimqnt said.
main
target
of hi s recruiting.
The former Rock Hill "We've signed
seven kids
Redman and current Rio from Southeast Ohio and
Grande Redman is expect- Northern Kentucky. I want
ing to come ·up and see time to get the best kids out of
on the field. "I'm expecting Southeast Ohio and we're
to step in and play," doing
that,"
said
Murnahan said. "I want to Warnimont.
prove myself in the fall and
Murnahan plans to major
step in and play in the in pre-med and eventually .
spring . I just want to step up attend postgraduate school
and play and be a contribu· to become an optometrist.

I

'

Casey= ,

• Race: Built Ford Tough

225
• _,., Kentucky

Speedway, Sparta (1.5

miles), 150 laps/225

e

miles . .• When: Saturday, July 14
• LMt ,.... - : Ron

HO&lt;naday Jr.

• Qtllllf)lnl-: Bill

Lester, Toyota.178.141
mph, July 9. 2005.
•R-NCOid:Mike
Bliss, Chevrolet, 143.515
mph, July 13, 2002_
• lMt race: Travis Kvapll
drove a Ford to victory at

Memphis Motorsports
Park, bumping past Toyota's Brad Kosetowskl

c
JAMIE McMuRRAY

.

v

No. 26 CROWN ROYAL/IRWIN FORD

NEXTEL CuP SERIES

E
R

· Stewart

s
u
s

Hamlin

Tony SteWart

n. Dennr Hamlin
The Joe Gibbs Racing teammates were runn ing,i -2 early in
the Pepsi 400 when , inexpl icably,
they wreckEd. Stewart, who was
running beh ind Hamlin whe n contact wa s made, expressed his
anger at his teammate. Hamlin
seemed mystified by Stewart 's criticism but said he'd take the blanie
if Stewart sa id so.

.•Jiie rear.

;1&gt; The manufacturer dominancepi CMwl&gt;let has·BISO dlmln-

,l$1leq. The last four races have
pr!)dUCed two Fonts, a Dodge
and Chel.y In Victory lane.
1&gt; The ~1400 didn't tndude Its

··ras- quallflol. nnilned before

time trials.could be oompleted. At

NASCAR Thlo Woek'o Monte
Dutton Clveo hlo toke; "Regardless

ille tme. llCrls 5ald was on the
pol8 for the second straight year_

·~ ~ session was washed
out,~ ""'fYO!Oe could get a
~.the rules dictated that
Said dlcln1 make the ftekl.
1&gt; At the time of the ralnout, the
six fastest qualifiers were drivers who hod to make the fleld
bil&lt;!peed . Why? It was "an ImpOund race," and all the drivers

race Setups
during qualifying.
•
IIi' ~-\WO closest finishes of the .
sei!Sorl have occurred at D'l'f '

of whether Hamlin's car s lowed
suddenly or Stewart rammed it, this
was sensel8ss . Joe Gibbs, who has
enough problems to dea l with in
the nation's ca pltiil. tri ed hi s best
to play down the rift between hi s
drivers."

Jllmle McMUI'I11Jr ri&amp;Irt, - the 2002 fall race at low's Motor s,lldWJ In his -..d start. When he U, by a law Inches aver Krte Busch; 185 races had passed beb:een the two llclurles.

John Clar11/NASCAR Thts _ ,
the Pwpsl·400 last Satur·

&gt;

Bonds record will draw interesting reaction on road
SAN FRANCIS€0 (AP) Hammerin' Hank began and all-time in 2004, No. 700 anybody says, they're going
- If Barry Bonds doesn't ended his career.
·
later that season and No. to come. They want to see it
splash his 756th home run
While Bonds gets booed 715 last year to move past happen."
ioto the bay, the record- at almo'st every opposing Babe Ruth.
·
Including some of Bonds'
breaker could come in Hank ballpafk because of his
About the only notewor- · opponents.
Aaron's old hometown. Or prickly personality and aile- thy homer to come outside
San Diego pitcher Greg
at the home of the Giants' gations of steroid use, a eel- of San Francisco occurred Maddux said he was a little
biggest rival. Or maybe a . ebration could be particular- just across the bay in disappointed that Bonds
ballpark where fans usually Iy strange in Milwaukee.
Oakland. With plenty of wasn ' t in position to set the
"Obviously he's a light- Giants fans in the stands last record late last month when
throw back balls.
And that ~ould be pretty ning rod," Sheets sai(j. "It's year, Bonds tied Ruth with the Padres came to San
awkward. Picture a major an honor that should be eel- No. 714.'
Francisco. He could another
moment in sports taking ebrated not taken away
When Aaron broke Ruth's chance to see it when the
place in front of a crowd from. I'm not sure people record in 1974, the Braves Giants visit San Diego the
that didn 't want to see it will appreciate what just tried to make sure he did it first weekend in A,ugust.
happen.
happened . At least yotJ at home.
That series comes after the
"I can't imagine they know in San Francisco that
Aaron hit the record-tying Giants play three games at
wouldn 't want that to hap- people will be there to honor shot on opening day in Dodger Stadium.
pe.n at home anyway," what just 'happened. I don't Cincinnati and then sat out
Cubs
first
baseman
Milwaukee pitcher Ben know what would happen in the following game as the Derrek Lee also wants to see
Sheets said at the All-Star Milwaukee. It's Hank Braves tried . to guarantee the historic shot.
game. "That's a big record. Aaron's record. I just don't the record would be set in
· "I'm checking the paper
You almost need to give it think it would be a good Atlanta.
Commissioner
Bowie every day to see if he hits a
its due_The only place you idea."
Kuhn
ordered
the
team
to home run,'' Lee said. "It's
can really give it its due is at
Brewers shortstop J.J.
home. Make sure you tell Hardy admitted he wouldn't play Aaron in the series unbelievable that he's hit
him that, too."
mind witnessing hi story, finale against the Reds and 750-sDmething home runs.
Bonds ente"rs a three-game provided his team won the Aaron did not homer. Selig I'll be tuned in when he's
said earlier this week he about to break it."
weekend series at home game.
But what if it came next ·
"I think it would be unbe- ·didn't think there would be
against the Los Angeles
Dodgers with 751 homers, lievable to see it ," Hardy a similar issue with the week against the Cubs?
"That's a tricky question,"
four shy of tying Aaron. said.
. Giants and Bonds.
Bonds said he doesn 't Lee said. "I don' t know the
A:fter th!s week, the Giants . If the past is any indicaVISit Wngley Fteld for four lion, Hardy's best chance have the time at his age to answer. I won't be upset if
games against the Chicago might not be until the· worry about where his he breaks the record against
Cubs, then travel to Brewers come to San biggest
record-breaking us. Hopefully it won ' t be a
Milwaukee to play the Francisco on Aug. 24.
home run comes, but is pret- ninth inning, game-winner
Brewers three times.
Starting with career ty sure people will want to type of thing. Hopefully it's
Milwaukee is the home&gt; homer No."SOO, nearly every see it wherever it happens. a blowout if he does it ."
town of commissioner Bud milestone shot Bonds has
"They boo, but all them
The interesting question
Selig, a close friend of hit has come at home.
cameras flash eve~ time I will be whether the fans at
Aaron's_ Selig still hasn' t
That list includes homer swing, don 't they? ' Bonds Wrigley Field throw back a
said whether he'll be in' No. 71 that broke the single- said. "Boo, but click, click, ball that could fetch big
attendance when Bonds season record in 200 I, No. click, click, click, click. The bucks on the auction scene.
breaks the record. There are 600 the following year, the fan s like baseball, guys.
"They'd be crazy to throw
also ~lenty of Aaron fans sh?t~ that tied and passed Fans enjoy the game of it back," Lee said. "l·know I
left . m the city where W1lhe Mays for third place baseball. Regardless of what wouldn' t"

• . , USG Duro&lt;:k 300
• Roce: USG Sheetrock 400
earlier, a caution flag didn't
• Wllere: Chlcagolan&lt;l Speedway, freeze the order. This time,
·• ; Chlcagoland
Joliet, lit (1.5 miles). 267
though, the drivers ""re McMur- Speedway, Joliet, Ill, (1.5
miles), 200 laps/300
laps/ 400_5 miles·•. rtJ;I and Buscti, not ~arvick' and
• Wltoll: Sunday, July 15
Mertln: McMurray prevented Kyle miles.
• LMt ,..._ : Jeff Gordon BUsch from wlnnlng two racas In • When; saturday. July 14
• Qwllr,~c- : Jimmie
the ·same Hair, arid the f1lrd drlv- •LMt_.__,
Johnson, CheVJ'olet,188.147
er did ~ by the commanding marm;&gt;h. July 8, 2005.
gin of .005 or a second, tying for •Qt·......,:Ryan
Newman, Dodge,
• Race record: Kevin Harvick,
the second closest finish in Cup
186.438 mph, Juty 9,
Chevrolet, 136.832 mph, July
history. At the flnish, Kyle
14, 2002.
Busch's best ally was his broth- 2005.
• LMt ; It was nighttime,
er. Kurt. who flnished third. Me• R- : Kevin Harvlck, Che111'01et, 130.340
and the ""ather .was hot, but
Murray graciously off8fed his
mph, July 9, 2005.
otherwise, Jamie McMurray won
thBnks to Carl Edwards, who finthe Pepsi 400 with a sense of
lshed fourth behind McMurray,
• LMt ; Kyle Busch,
In a Chevy, held off Kevin
d6ja vu. As w~h the Daytona
Kyle Busch and Kurt Busch.
Harvlck to win the Winn500, the finish was side-by-side, Fifth-place finisher Jeff Gordon
DIKie 250 et
and as with the 500, cars were
summed up the ending: ult was
Daytona.
wrecking behind the leaders. A.s
nuts out there, man."

near the end .

with guaranteed spots used

Major League Soccer

7:05p.m.

Pittsburgh at Atlanta, 7:05p.m.
Colorado at Milwaukee, 7:05p.m.
Washington at Florida, 7:05 p.m.
Cincinnati at N.Y. Meta. 7:10p.m.
San Diego at Arizona, 9:40p.m.
Sunday's Games
Pittsburgh at Atlanta, 1;05 p.m.
Washington at Florida, 1:05 p.m.
Cincinnati at ~ .Y. Mets. 1:~0 p.m.
Colorado at M1_1waukee , :2:05p.m.
Housto n at Ch~eago Cubs, 2:~0 p.rT) .
L.A . Dodgers at San Franc1sco, 4:05
'PSm.
A.
.
an 01 ego at _nzona, 4.40 p. m.
St. Louis at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m.

Los

CONFERENCE CHAMPIONSHIP

39 50 .438
36 53 .404

(Sheets 10·4), 8:05p.m.
San_ Diego (~actdux 7-6)
(DaVIS 5-10), 9.40 p.m.

112."

I Angeles 20

Thursday's Game
N.Y. Mets 3, Cincinnati 2
Frlday'a Gamaa
Houston (Jennings 1·4) at Chicago
Cubs (Zambrano 10-7), 2:20p.m.
Washington (Bergmann 1·5) at Florida
7-7),
St. Louis (K.Wells 3·11) at Philadelphia
(Kendrick 3-0 or Moyer 7-7), 7:05p.m.
Cincinnati (Harang 9-2) at N.Y. Mets
(Maine 1Q-4). 7: 10p.m.
Pittsburgh {Snell 7-5) at Atlanta
(T.Hudson 8·5), 7:35 p.m.
Colorado (Francis 8·5) at Milwaukee

(Willis

.

Saturday, July 7: San Jose 79, Colorado

W11t Dlvlalon
W L
Pet
GB
San Diego
49 38 .563
Los Angeles 49 40 .551 · 1
Arizona
47 43 .522 3l.
Colorado
44 44 .500 5~
Sen Francisco 38 48 .442 10%

1!'

City
Monday. July 2: Los Angeles
42
DIVISIONAL ROUND
Natlon11 Conference
Saturday, July 7: ColumbUt 66, DallaS ·
59
.
.
Sunday, Juty 8: Georgia 6~. PliMadolphla
39

52 .40Q 13
Division
W L Pet
GB
49 39 .557
44 43 .50£

Milwaukee

Arena Football Playorta
WILD CARD
. Natlonll Confe.-.nce
Friday, June 29: Philadelph ia 41 ,
Orlando 26
Saturday, June 30: Columbus 56, Tampa
Bay 55
American Conference ·
Saturday, June 30: Co lorado 49, Kansas
42
84, Utah

NotlonoiL.ugiHI
East Oivlalon
W L Pct

PR F
0 OOTBALL

I

Chicago White Sox at Baltimore, 7:05
p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 7:10p.m.
Oakland at Minnesota, 7:10p.m .
Texas at L.A. Angels, 9:05p.m.
Detroit at Seattle, 10:05 p.m.
Sund1y'1 Gllmtl
Kansas City at Cteyetand, 1:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox at Baltimore, 1:35
p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 1:40 p.m.
Toronto at Boston, 2:05 p.m.
Oakland at. Minnesota, 2:10p.m.
Texas e.t LA. Angels, 3:35p.m.
Detroit at Seattle. 4:05 p.m.

Atlanta
Philadelphia
Florida

OILERS- Signed D

MINNESOTA WILD-Signed G Anton
Khudobin .
NEW YORK ISLANDERS-.-Signed D
Aaron Johnson to a one-year contract.
PITISBUAGH PENGUINs-Re-signed
AW Colby Armstrong to a two-year contract. Signed C Chris Minard and C
Nathan Smith.
PHOENIX COVOTE5-Signed C Peter
Mueller. Re-signed
Brendan Bell to
one-year contra'ct

1
1

(Jer.weaver 6-5), 10:05 p.m.
_
Satur:day'a G1rn11

New Yorf&lt;

Jesse Schultz.
DALLAS STARS-Sig ned C Mike
Ribeiro to a one-year contract and C Joel

1

Toronto (Marcum 4-3) at Boston
(Tavarez 5-7). 7:05p.m.
Kansas City (Perez 4-8) at Cleveland
(Westbrook 1-4), 7:05p.m.
Ch~ago White Sol( (Buehrle 6-4) at
Balt1more (Bedard 7-4), 7:05 p. m
N.Y. Yank~es {Clemens 2·3) at Tampa
Bay (Kazm1r 5·6), 7:10p.m.
t?akland (Kennedy 2-7 or Haren 1C&gt;-3) at
Mmnesote. (J.Santana 11).6), 8:10 p.m.
Detroit (Sonderm an 9-1) at Seattle
(Washburn 8·6), 10:05 p.m.

ot

to

multiyear contracts.

1

ThUrsday's G1mes
Boston 7, Toronto 4
Chicago White So~~: 9, Baltimore 7
N.Y. Yankees 7, Ta mpa Bay 3
Minnesota 6, Oakland 2 ,

Texas (Millwood 6-7)

Jacque Vaughn and F Matt Bonner

I

.576

www.mydailysentinel.com

Gillispie, Huggins adjusting to riew teams

PRo BASEBALL

Boston
NewYork
Toronto
Battimore

Friday, July 13, 2007

Friday, July 13, 2007

I

Scoreboard
American league
East Divltlon
W L Pet
54 34 .614

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

to"J!, yef attendance was off.

T~e. ?"'&lt;'lale~tlmete was
.1150,000, but'lhe crowd was
priitiilbty closer to 130,000, and
the sparsely plipulated back. '!rtri\l&amp;!!':'!lnind&amp;botds InclUded
Biii!Cf1 seiles tlcketholders who
:wei8c
..dmltted
, .;, free .
. .. I
. .
., ..,. Dflljt,El!mhartlt Jr. hes signed
ptiribnal.endol'sement deals
with' two mlljO&lt; lntematlonel corpOtations within a span of three
weeks, Sony and Adldas are
putting major marketing efforts
In place to ~ 'their relationship with the NASCAR star.

.. WbO'I'IIOt
- Jamie Mc;.,
Mu!Tayen~

awlmess :, .
stre~of165

race's. ... :carl.

· EdWilnls fln-

isl\ill.fuurl!t,
•n&lt;l l?"slled
. hi818enf
m8te across
' th8 finish II~,
".

.

'·' ; --~-

~

~

.,

Tony Stewart
lai!W tlri a grand scale In his

·~·!loll·-

bla ri&gt;r thrut! sttlllfhl Pilpsf
• ,4(I(f•vrctorlas .... Scott Rlqs
.o,!j!xJiill\l~ !h9 ~ ~. II

rJtJ$\l'iU:!d he :"(lund up 40!!1.

I

I

m1n

1me

McMurray snaps 165-race drought with victory at Daytona
By Monte Dutton

NASCAR This Week
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. - Jamie
McMurray waited a long time for his
second Cup victory. He's managed to
be both an overnight sensation and a
comeback story during his career.
Substituting for the injured Sterling
Marlin, McMurray won the 2002 fall
race at Lowe's Motor Speedway in his
second start. When he won the Pepsi
400 on July 7 by a few inches over
Kyle Busch, 165 races had passed between the two victories.
"Well, I've never finished well in
the Daytona 500, but I've always run
pretty well in the July race," said Me·
Murray, who finished second in 2005.
In his second season driving one of
Jack Roush's Fords, McMurray finds
himself in contention to make the

Chase for the Nextel Cup. The victory
enabled him to close the margin between himself and 12th-place Dale
Earnhardt Jr. to 49 points. ·
"You work very hard for something,
and Ldon't know that there's anyone
who has went from the season that I
had last year to getting a win at Daytona. That's an emotional time. It's
hard to explain to somebody that feeling of not only seeing your team work
hard, but also you."
As noted, McMurray's first season
with what is now known as Roush Fenway Racing was a bitter disappoittment. He rededicated himself to wmning, adopting a strict workout regimen and trying to learn ·more about
the cars mechanically.
"Everyone knows the story about me
buying a shock dyno because I wanted
to learn more about that, and it didn't

help my racing career at aU,'' said Me·
Murray. "Not even a little bit. It cost
me 50 grand, and I still have it and
that's kind of all there is to that story.
.,''I worked really hard this year to
get my mind and my body better. I did
everything I could, and when you
work out every day, and you do all
that stuff and you're not winning _, ·
it's a little bit emotional, and it's be·
cause you worked so hard for something, and you finally get it. It's hard
to explain to somebody, the feeling
that you have."
"There was never a question in my
mind that Jamie could drive a race
car," said crew chief Larry Carter.
"He's a fantastic driver."
Want to read more from Monte
Dutton? Check out http:l/www.gastongazette.com/sections/sportslnascar/

r..jitr~~

, --·~ .·
.. t;,:( [jeff:Goid'on ' '
;·a.
•. ~~~ '
' ,I I' ;Milt! ,.,_.,
~~"·..-~ JQtvlson

.l:t ;,_.r.lf, 1!\wton

-583
· eQ1

::~! ~~.'CkJ;,

~ clint Bowyer '
,11. Dale ·Earnhardt Jr.

'

Df.vld Raaa~·

· 27L
-383

· 465 '
- 539

t, Tony SteWart .
• ' ~J!uSCI\

llullcltlillll
1. &lt;;Brl Edwa.nls
a. - · Harvlck
3. .Diiild Reutlmann
.•• DiJve Bl11118y
5. ...,.. Leffler

2,773

• 401 '
•. 428:

\. •9;.: .cat·EitrOIII'Ill'

e.

.

f. l!iilltrt Hanil~on Jr.·

· 616

· 631
. 733

2,966
-798
-871
: 910
- 933

-956

-983
8, Marcos Ambr'ose• -1,079
9. , Stephen Leicht
-1,100
10. Grea Billie
-1.121
CRAFTSMAN TRUCK 5ER!ES

1. Mike Skinner
2. Ron Hornaday Jr.
3. Todd Bodine
4. Travis Kvapil
5. Riel&lt; Crawford
e. Jotmny Benson
7. Jack Sprague
8. Aaron Flke*
9. Matt Crafton
10. Ted Musgrave
• rool&lt;le

Pete Hamilton, from Dedham,

Mass. , was a big star for a relat'ively
short time . His entire career at
NASCAR's top level consisted of six
seasons and 64 races . But Hamilton won three timeS in 1970, cap-

turing the Daytona 500 and both

races at Talladega while driving a

NO. 40 Plymouth Superbird and

teaming with Richard Petty. Oriving
for Cotton Owens. Hamilton also
won one of t he qualifying races prior to the following year 's Daytona

500.

Drtvera' contracts are
seldom made public
I know the drivers all s ign big
contra cts, but what about the prize
money? Do th e~ get a cer tain per centage of it? What about the
crews and owners? Do t hey get
prize money?

Jack Cre&amp;ttan
M antua. N.J.

The

contracts are private.

Most. if

not all, drivers ger a percentage of
earnings, and some crew chiefs may
also ger a share. but that 's a marrer
of negotiation between them and
the ir employers. The details aren't a
matter of public record.

-f:m,f;;·:L uJ;,l"P ~U.rf.:Jill.

.

lt8nlllton's st...._
bltCidiY for • Httle while

2,043
-103
-228
-263
-385
.-443
-538
-556
-587
-612

Two more teams penalized for minor violations
By Monte Dutton

NASCAR This Week
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla . Because they perceived no in·
tent to circumvent the rules,
NASCAR officials were rather
mild in penalties handed out
last week to the teams of driv·
ers Kyle Busch and Johnny
Sauter based on irregularities
after the New Hampshire
race.
Both Chevrolets - Bu sch's
No_ 5 and Sauter's No. 70 were found to have used unap·
proved parts and failed to meet
minimum front car heighls.
The punishment? Fines of
$25,000 to crew chiefs Alan
Gustafson and Robert (Bootie)
Barker, along with probations
through Sept. 19, and deductions of 25 driver and owner
points from each team.
I

What next with plates? Dri·
vers are divided on the issue of
whether or how the Car of Tomorrow will change restrictorplate racing_

The Pepsi 400 marked the fi.
nal appearance in a plate race
of the chassis design that is being supplanted by the COT. The
COT will be used for the first
time at a "restrictor-plate
track" in the fall at Talladega.
Denny Hamlin, who got his
first win two weeks ago, thinks
the COT will make a considerable difference.
"It's just going to make them
like the truc k races, really,
where the guys are just all
packed tight together, where
now our cars are so slick that
they're not handling the race
track thHt well and we're start,
ing to spread out," said Hamlin.
"Now we're kind of going to
take a step back and be back
where we were. With the Car of
Tomorrow, I think they're going to suck up to each other so
much that you're just going to
have a huge wad."
Jeff Burton wasn't so sure.
"I don't know," he said. "Ask
me after Talladega. It 's too early to tell. I haven't driven the
Car of Tomorrow on a su per-

speedway (i.e., a plate track). I
certainly haven't been on a
race track with 42 other guys. I
don 'I know what to expect I
don't have an opinion on that. I
don't have enough information
to have an opinion."
I

Sbakeup - Ray Evernham
has put Scott . McDougall in
charge of Elliott Sadler's struggling No. 19 Dodge team.
McDougall, previously affili·
ated with Evernham Motor·
sports truck and ARCA teams,
is now team director, replacing
Ji&gt;sh Browne. Evernham
prefers not to call the head of
each of his teams a "crew
chief."
Browne is returning to the
organization's engineering
staff_ Evernham said Browne
is "better suited to help the or·
gan ization as a whole from an
engineering perspective and
our efforts in that area."
I

Corporate mumbo-jumbo -

Dale Earnhardt h, who announced one major, international corporate endorsement
(Sony) deal two weeks earlier,
announced another on July 6
at the track. He is now a major
corporate voice for Adidas,
the shoe and apparel manufacturer.
Earnhardt again insisted he
is endorsing Adidas because he
likes Adidas and has been
wearing its sneakers since he
was in high school.
"When I'm approached about
this stuff, what I think is 'cool.'
That's the way I think," he said.
He then acknowledged the
entry into the room of Kelley
Elledge, his sister and business
manager.
"They have business avenues
they're always thinking about,"
said Junior, "and that's what I
pay them for."

predecessor, has been named ·
Senior Vice President of Business Operations for International Speedway Corporation,
Talladega's parent compan y.
Humphrey has been vice president and general manager at
the·track since 2002.
I

Unlikely pair
Kevin ,
James, most noted for his role
in the television series Ki ng of
Queens , was the race's grand
marshal. Republican presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani .
was a ceremonial race official ·.
and was in the pace car when
the Pepsi 400 took the green
flag.

•

Royal birthday
Richard .a
Petty, NASCAR's all-time
leader in both overall victories
I
(200) and official (i.e., pointsTalladega prez - Rick awarding) wins at Dayton/
Humphrey has been named (10), turned 70 on July 2. Petty
president of Talladega Super- won a record seve n Daytona
speedway.
500s and three times in the
Grant Lynch, Humphrey's summerl ime race.

�'

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www:~ydailysentineLeom

Friday, July 13, 2007

Friday, July 13, 2007

. The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

t!Cribune - Sentinel -.

's

I
•

LOS ANGELES - The
Los Angeles Galaxy's Web
site has been counting down
the days, hours, minutes and
se conds until superslar
David Beckham joins tlie
Major League Soccer team.
But does anyone !besides
· bard-core soccer fans,
: admirers of the dashing and
: fashionable Englishman or
· paparazzi care in a country
where interest in the sport
known overseas as football
. has never registered more
: than a blip?
.• "I'm not quite sure wby,
:: but Americans think soc:: cer's boring," said Doug
· Wood. a 25-year-old stock
: broker from Los Angeles.
.. Converting hearts and
; minds about a sport called
·· "'The Beautiful Game" will
:: likely be Beckham's No. I
·challenge.
"He knows soccer isn' t
~ huge in America yet and
: he's hoping to change that,"
:: his wife Victoria said. "He's
::so passionate about what he
i:loes and he's excited to get
:. there apd do what he can."
• Six months of waiting
:ends
Friday
with
- Beckham's introduction at
.-the Galaxy's stadium in
. Carson, Calif. He's set to
·-play his first game July 21,
exhibition
against
. an
Chelsea of the English
· Premier League. Beckham
signed a five-year contract
in January worth $32.5 million.
.
The early buzz on the guy
famous for his bending free
;kicks, ever-changing hair
:and clothing styles and
stick-thin pop singer wife is
mixed.
People seem to . fall into
three groups - those who
don' t know about soccer
. and wouldn't attend games
· if the tickets were free ;
those
intrigued
by
Beckham's celebrity aura,
especially women; and true
soccer fans who wonder if
the 32-year-old midfielder
can elevate MLS to the
same level as Europe's
more respected leagues.
"If he can do some stuff
like Ronaldinho,' then 1' II
definitely, be watching

lAP photo

Photographers wait for the arrival of England soccer player David Beckham and his wife Victoria at los Angeles
International Airport Thursday. David Beckham is traveling to the United States where he has signed to play for Major
League Soccer team Los Angeles Galaxy.

e very game," said Greg
Oden, the No. I pick in the
recent NBA draft who is a
fan of the Brazilian soccer
star.
Beckham joins an A-list
of Hollywood transplants
that
mcludes
Wayne
Gretzky, Shaquille O'Neal
and the Dodgers - all of
which made an indelible
mark on the cit}-'s· sports
landscape.
"He's ahead of the game
than when I flfSI came to
L.A. because he's so worldrenowned," &amp;aid Gretzky,
who arrived from Canada in
1988 and helped popularize
hockey in warm-weather
cities.
"The one thing I ~arned
was that one person can' t
make or break it. The
Galaxy organization, the
ownership, everyone has to
rally around."
Count Alexan,dra

Gillardo
.

.

among .women interested said. ·
simply
because
of
Apparently
Gretzky 's
Beckham's blond looks and wife agrees.
engaging smile.
"I don't know very much
"I hate soccer. It takes for- about soccer other than my
ever to score a goal. It's kids love it and my wife
boring," said the 30-year- loves David Beckham," he
old admissions counselor said.
from Diamond Bar who has
Even with the addition of
already bought Galaxy tick- Beckham, soccer is a tough
ets. "But he's something sell to Rick Redlich, a 38nice to look at. He's got a year-old anomey from Los.
great body, a great butt. Sex Angeles who played tlie
sells."
sport through high school
Cheryl Rubinstein of Los but would rather spend his
Angeles said she'd attend a money at the racetrack.
Gafaxy game only "to . see
"I think the most exciting
him and his wife and what thing about soccer is when
the Hispanic announcer
she's wearing."
"He brings a lot of yells ' Gooooaaaall!'" he
European mystique to L.A. said. "For the L.A. market,
He's coming here with an there are so many other
intact image - a good mar- things to do, so soccer has
riage, beautiful kids, and he an uphill battle."
seems to make good deciWood, the Los Angeles
sions. He's a great athlete. stock. broker, thinks the
He's great to look at. He has. Galaxy .have their·. work cut
the whole package," sb'!l ·. O)lt in trying. to attract more
p

•

-

•

•

watching soccer for fi ve
years, but said he wouldn ' t
attend games . unless the
Galaxy jmported Brazili:ms
whose fluid ball-handltng
style be admires.
"Then you ' d say that
MLS is on a par with some
of the European leagues,"
the 27 -year-old youth counselor from Long Beach said.
"That's what it's about in a
crowded market like this legitimacy and entertainment value. And right now,
the MLS doe sn't have
either."
Soccer is one of Los
Angeles Dodgers third
baseman
Nomar
Garciaparra's
favorite
sports, and not just because
his wife Mia Hamm starred
on the women's U.S .
national team.
But he knows most
American sports fans are
turned off by low-scoring
games, which are common
in soccer.
.
"There has to be that
understanding that you can
watch a 0-0 game and walk
away and say, 'That was a
beautiful soccer game,"' he
said. "To get soccer mainstream like the~e other
sports is going to be difficult."
Mo Hassan of Irvine, who
plays soccer and follows the
English Premier League ,
hopes Beckham's presence
lures other foreigners to
MLS, which began more
than II years ago.
"MLS hasn't been really
competitive," Hassan said.
"He's going to set the bar
higher, definitely. He's
going to encourage the
other players to get up to
that level. It's going to be
great. The next few years
are going to he much more
exciting."
Wood predicts Beckham
will make a big splash initially . .
"More people will watch
this season than ever
before," he said. "But after
that it will fall off. It will be
a total fad unless it is promoted in the way I
described."

fan s to the games. He said
the team needs cheap tickets, cheap alcohol, and an
advertising budget that
rivals the NFL's.
~·1 don't think guys are
really ' that interested in
watchipg a really goodlooking guy play soccer,"
he said. "They' d have to
hype the hell out it so that it
became an event that my
friends wanted to go to, like
tailgating at a football
game."
Rodolfo Rios, a Peru
native who follows soccer,
would ·rather have a Latino
hero join the struggling
Galaxy, who are 3-5-4.
"We need more young
players
from
South
America," said the 45-yearold auto mechanic from San
Pedro. "Somebody coming
from my country, I would
like to see that."
AP Writer Amanda Beck
Kokayi Barnes 'las been contributed to this report.

•

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day untlllully paid; and (6) 3
OEPA within 30 day1 of
In the 1um of $2,686,87
I nuance of the prowith ln18rast thereon et
P,&lt;&gt;sed action. WriHen
lhe rate of t 2% per
Public Notice
comments, roqueats
annum until lully paid,
lor public meetings,
In order to foreciOio Public Notice
and edjudlcilllon hear·
upon a mortgogo upon County: Meigs
lng raqliOota mull be
located II The lollllwing appllca- IOnl to: Hetlriflll Cieri&lt;,
real Oak
Grove
Road, Ilona an!l/or verified Ohio
Environmental
Racine,
OH45771, complalntl
wore Protection
Agone¥,
being approximately received, and the to~ P.O.
Box
1049,
t4.666 acrea In SuHon lowing draft, proposed, Columbus,
Ohio
Townahlp and 4.288 or final actlono were 4 3 2 I 6 • 1 0 4 9
acres In the Vlllade ol 111ued. by The Ohio (Telephone: 614-644Racine, Melga County, En v Iron men I a I 2129). " Final Actions:
Ohio, which Is more Protection
Agency Are actions ol the
fully deecrlbed in deed (OEPA) last week. director which are
To:

The

W.tedoo Coli Co., Inc. Holra, Neort of Kin,
of P.O. Bo1 626, DoviiHo, LegatHa,
• - . OH45640 PH A d m I n I o t r a t o r o ,
7&lt;40-2111 5833 hH oub- Executors, Suceea1ora
mlttwd • ,.,_, appll- Aaslgna of Randy
cation tor cool mine K. PyiH,
perlllit o.GeM to the •nd lhe Eo..ta of
Ohio Dopl. of IU!unll Rlncly K. Pylel whOle
- . Division ol IIIIMI and a d d -

-sed.

Mi111r11l
Resources
1118111g1manl.
per·
ml .... Is In
llelgl
County,
S.llabury Township,
Lola 312, 315, 318
(1Wp. IN; Range 13W),
on tho po apeny of Jelm
En181 p!llll
penni
contolna 12.8 Acres
INI le local8cl on the
: CIIHhlre 7 112 minute
· USGS
Quadflngle
Map, appn~xlmetely 2
mllel
North
of
Cheahlre, Ohio. The
renewal
applicetlon
will 1llow Wotarloo
. Cool Co., inc. to COnlinue the mining operalions on o.G6!18 lot up
to live years peat the
eoplratlon
date of
Auguat 25, 2007.
The renewal eppllca. lion II on file at the
Malg•
County
. Recordore
Office,
Courthoul8, Pomeroy,
Ohio lor public viewlng. Written comments
or raquoat1 lor an
Informal conference
may be Hnl to the
Dlvllion of Mineral
R • a o u r c e a
Monagement,
2045
.Morse Road, Bldg H-3,
Columbuo, OH 4322&amp;8883, within thirty daya
olthe last dale of publlcatlon of 11111 notice.
(7) 6, 13, 20, Z1

n.

n.

Public Notice

rn

Es-

-roy.

. IN
THE
COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Farmer•
Bank
•Savings Company
Plaintiff
va
Chlttoa Keith Pyles, a
minot', by and through
hla molller and next of reCorded in VOlume
kin, AlmM Pyles, et al 219, Page 419, Meigs
Defendant.
County
Official
No.
cv 063
Racorda, snd coats of
NOTICE BY PUBLICA· thlo action; that the
noN
mortgage be tore-

ca.

rn

•

•

Environmental Review
Appeals Comml11lon
(ERAC)
(Formerly
knas
the
Environmental Boord
of R.vlew) by a peraon
who a perty to a·

proceodlng before tile
director by filing an

within 30 dayo
of notice of the llnal

appeal

action. Pursuant· to
Ohio • Revised C'ode
Section 3745.07, A
Final Action latulng,
denying, modHylng,
revoklng, or renewing
a permit, lie ante, or
variance which 11 not
preceded by a propol8d action, may be
appealed to the ERAC
by Ullng an appeal
within 30 day a of
laauance of the final
action. ERAC oppea11,
accompanied by a $70
filing IN which lh
acommluion In ft ellacretlon may reduce
by atllclavft the appe~
lant demonttrates that
payment of · tho lull
amount of tho lee
would caute eortreme
hardship,
mull be
filed
with:
Envlronmen..l Review
Appealo Commlaeion,
309
South
Fourth
Street, Room 222,
Columblle; Ohio 43215.
A ccipy of the appeal
mull be served on the
director Wfthln 3 daya
alter filing the appeal
with the EAAC.
Final
issuance
of
NPDESpennll
Rovenawood
WV

n

WWTP

Varioul Countl~ OH
Action date: 0612912007
Receiving Wales : Land
Appllcetlon
Facility Description:
Waotawater
ldontlllcotlon No. :
SINOOOOt·A
This final action not
preceded by proposed
action
and
Ia
appealuble to ERAC.
This final action not
preceded by proposed
aclion and Is appeal·

"Action a" Include the upon Issuance or a able.
stated effective date. (7) 13

adoption, modHicatlon.
or repeal of orders
(other than emergency
orders); the lsauance,
denial, modification or

Pu,..uant
to
Ohio
Reviled Code Section
3745.b4, A final action
may be appealed lo the

'

Public Notice
The Annual Ananctal
Report· Form 4502 of
the
Eastern Local
School District
the
!local year ended June
30, 2007 has been completed. Form 4502 1s
available lor public
Inspection In the,,....
ourer'a office located
at 50008 SR 681,
Reedsville,
Ohio,
betwHn the houra of
8:00 a.m. to 4;00 p.m.
Monday
through
Friday.
Lisa M. Ritchie
(7) 13

!Or

Public Notice
The Eastern Local
School
Board
Is
accepting quoin lor
the
following:
Transportation petroieum products luel tires
and tubes. 'Cal~terla
supplies
Including
food, dairy products
and bread products.
Specificationl can be
obtained by calling
740-667·3319 or 740667-6079.
Sealed
quotes will be opened
In the treasure's office
located at 50008 sA
681 ReedsviRe Ohio
at ' 12:00 noon on
Monday July 23 2007
Lisa M. Ritchie •
•
Eastern
Local
Treasurer
7 40-867-3319

Rodney
L.
Davia,
Trustee of the Trust
Created Pursuant to
the will of George H.
Davis, Deceased.
Unlesa exceptions are
Hied thereto, said
account will be set lo.r
hearing before said
Court on the Monday,
August t3, 2007, at
wlilch
lime
said
account will be consldered and continued
from day to day until
finally clapoled of.
Any person 1m-ted
~ file wriHen excepUon to said account or
to mattera pertaining
to the execution of the
trust, not leal'than live
days prior to the date
eel lor hearing.
J. S. Powell
Judge
Common Pleas Court,
Pro~ Division
Meigs County, Ohio
(7) 13

E-mail
dassified@ mydailytribune .com

'

e

ca~r;:.::v.

...

.

• Excellent Pay

• Mileage Reimbursement
• Flexible Scheduling
· Ap plicatio ns will be acce pted 9:00 a.m. to
3:00 p.m. M-F at 1011 Viand St ..
Pt. Pl easant. WV o r appo intments ca n be
scheduled at anoth er location by calling
304 -675-7 404 or 1-866-992-69 16. Applicants
may also contact this number for questions.

(7) 13

A A/EOE

--------------

r ~ Ir

· Ohio Volley
Pp[llllhlng

reaenreo

tho right to edH,
rljtcl or CIIICOI lny
ad II any time.

Errors lluat
od on the fl
of pubilcllton a

.frlbune-Sontlnel
agister
will
ponolblo lor
than the COli
apace occupt
lhl orror and on
filii In-Ion.
hall not be

Accounts and vouchof the following
named fiduciary has
been flied In the
Probate Court, Meigs
County,
Ohio
tor
approval and seHie·

ment.
ESTATENO. 2005 3

The First Account

I

Now you can have borders and oraphlcs
IlL..&gt;
added to your classified ads
lr1'o
Borders$3.00/perad
U...
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for larQe

Diso!ay Ads

t.:iL

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon z
Bu•ln••• Day• Prior To
Publication

~"!'!d-~ In-Column: 1:00 p.m. Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00
For sundaya Paper

Thursday for sunday•

• All ada must be prepaid"

POUCIES: Ohio Val.,. PubUehlng rfleA'H the right to ..tit, retect. or CMlcet .-.y lid M .ny time. EITOfs mull be NpOr'ttd on the first c:lly
Trlbune-8tntiMI-Regl..., Mil be r~lble for no moN than tht cott ol the"*" occllfMd bV·the wror and only the first lnHftion. W.
q 1oM or l!li*'M lhlt
tM publleltlon or omllllon ot en lldvertiMmtnt. CorNCion wm be mHt In the ttrtt IVIIIIblt Mitton. •So•
. . lllwlyl COiilkMtitlll. • Cumnt Fill Clfd . . . . . • All rMI ~ Hvll'tiMIMIU . . IUbflct 10 1hl fiCtlrll FIJr Houllnt Acl of 1111. • Ttill -~~;;~
~only t.tp wanted adl mMtlng EOE Nndlnl•. We wilt no1 knowingly accept
ldverti1lng In vloldon ol tM law.

""""'from

r. .

kltncarlyteOcomcast.net

YAIIIlSAU-

•

GIVFAWAY

Moving! Tara Apartment

technical
duties for
College
of L.ibforal
Artsthe
ond
SCiences including
providing scheduling
assistance to dean, choir,
school secretaries and
faculty, performing various
receptionists' duties;
answering the phone, taltlng
messages, handling office
mail, maintaining fiscal,

402.
Friday-Sunday,
Clothes, Toys, Furniture,
8 wk old female kitten black Home lntert~r. Loogaberger,
&amp; wMe 304-882·292fi
Tons of great thlngsl
Buck stove Insert 740·446· Multi lamlly · Sat July · 14.
9972 Slate Royle 7 South

1420
.:..:::.:c.._
_ _ __

Free Blacl&lt; Lab w1 ~nted
ears, been spayed. loves
water, needs room to run.
Cat174Q-388-oo69
.

Box number ada e

Mu~-F8mH~ Sat, Ju~ 14ti1,
789 N SR' 7- Or. .Strauss'
parking lot B-4. household
items, boys &amp; girls clot111ng.

FREE DIRT. About 4·5 tons Yard Sale: 656 SR 650 near
oi clay/sand mix. Call304- Rodney.Bam,Sai.July14111..
, 5;31·5849.
Glassware, Anliques, Oak

lwaya conftlftntlll.
Current

7 - 13
t~~

~!~!op
=~~~~a~::
. ·
·
·

Free lab. mlx·puppes 11

Ilea.

weeks
• 3 tomales,
1 male
_ 3-6
r 3-44
74
304 59 202 0 59

Kn~es.

U)I411Hf

www.comlcs.com
@ 2007 by NEA, Inc.
L..._..;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;:.;;;;;:...:;.:.:.;::;.:;.;;;~

Etc. Several Guns

=:.:::.:::::.:::..:::::...;..::..:....

and Accesson.. for 5ale.
Free puppleslo good home. · Call (740)245·5229
Black w/ bits of whhe, very r4
y
SAUPoi ARD_'""--·~
:cu::t•::·.:.740-:;:::2::5B:_·1;::0::59:___

,,

..

IlitO' lf1luo WAl'm'D

.

...•

•

1·.

.

Mmro~~~

Giveaway- free cats all difcounside Bar &amp; Grill now
ferent kinds, to good home July 13-14.l.ouks residence hiring experl8nced wait st(lff
7 720
5:-6
below EBS!irn High SChool. iserwrs. Apply In person or
l..arrAND
19: 00to ?. Raln~ls.
calltoscheduleaninterview.

3():!-6

r

FouNo

LOST DOG ,• Small Greg &amp;
Whfte Female Dog, Lost
near 3rd Ave, Galll.polo's · Sun
6/24. Answers to Katie,

!

~~~~~~~~R~ewa~rd~=Ofle~
red~~
- (6-14~)2~7,1·
5888

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4X4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antlquea ... - ......... - ......... ;............................. 530
Apartm.,telor Rent.. ................................. 440
Auction and Flea Market .............................
Auto Parts &amp; Acceaaorles ............... ........... 760
Auto Repalr ........... ........................ ............... no
Autos for Sale ............:.................................710
Boato l Motors lor Sale ....................... ...... 750
Building Suppllea........................................550
aua1n111 and Bulldlnga ......................;.,.... 340
Bualneaa Opportunity .................................210
Bualnau Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campara&amp;MotorHomea .. .................... ..... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Clrcla of Thanki.................... ~..................... 010
CtilldfEiderly Care ....................................... 190
ElectricaVRefrlgeratlon .. ............... ..............840
Equipment for Rent ........ .................... ......... 480
Excavltlng .. ................... .............................. 830
Farm Equ IP~ I.......................................... 810
Farms tor Rent............................................. 430
Farms for Sale ................................... .......... 330

oeo

,

Homes for Sale ........... ................................. l 10
Houaehold Ooods ....................................... S10
Houses for Rant .......................................... 410
' In Mamorlam ................................................ 020
lnaurance ........... ................... ....................... 130
Layrn a Garden Equlpmant ........................ 660
Llveatock...................................................... 630
Loat and Fo un d .......... ......, .... .... ~............ ..... 060
Lots &amp; Acreaga ............................................ 350
Miscellaneous.......... ............... .............. ....... t70
Miscellaneous Merchandlse ........... ..... ...... .540
Mobile Home Rapl Ir.................................... 860
Mobile Homes for Rent. .............................. 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ................................ 320 ·
Money to Loan ...................................... ....... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
" · Mualcallnatrumenta ................................... 570
005
·
Peraona I

Johns.:,:~ Uncoln ~~~.t~mc;n~r~:,~~
preletred. Send resume to
CLA Box 100 c/o GalllpoHs
Dally Trtbune, ·po Box 469,

- - - - - - - - -~40-44l ·937 1
Yard Sale 8oneUt, Friday, - - - - - - - July 13 0 Enterprise u.u. FT Cake Decorator. Must

Consultant. We are looking

Gallipolis, OH 45631 .

Church parking lot on
Enterprise Road, off Route
8'33. Fundralser for Aliyah
Gantt to attend Junior

•-rofessional.
w
' e ha\10 one
t'
of the best compensation

Mason County EMS Is
accepting applications fot
Medics and EMT's for more
information ca/1675-6134

have good personaI'1ty.
would be greet 11 you have
some training but will train.
Send resume to: JacKson
National Young Leaders Hewitt 1828 Eastern Ave,
Conference,
9am·5pm, Gallipolis Oh. 45631
Sponsored by the church.
Full time &amp; Pert time po~YARD•
n. -~
: AU-··-lions availa~e at The Karat
Patch Diamonds-N -Gold,
Pt r~ 1
Gallipolis, Ohio. looking lor
individuals that are outgoYard Sate Frt &amp; Sat R1 2 at
·
ing, self-moti\'Bted and prelhe end of Jericho 8·7
'·ssl I A
&amp;
I'
'" ona . esumes app •·
t'
ted 1'n pe son
Yard Sale Saturday July c:.:o;s ~cef~P.
fax ;
40
14th 8·? 0 11 H8wthome
~ear~ue Of
•
46
Lane (behind Armory) Baby __
• __
· ----clothes, swing, high chair, GOOD PAYING CAREER
stroller, ect.
OPPORTUNITY- Local Oil
A
.
and Gas Company looking
. ~ , ~~=
to fill posillono!Lan~man Of
____
• Land Agent in SE OH and
Weslern EV. Ideal candidate
Cross Creek Auct ion Buffalo is a self starter with basic
Auction Saturday 6pm computer knowledge, strong.
Building Is full of used communication and negotiaMerchandise, &amp; Trailer toad lion skitls who is willing to
of used merchandise from
travel within the region .
At 34.
O&amp;M Distributors Knowledge of legal descripfrom Northern Virginia. lion, prior sales experience,
Building is Air Conditioned. familiarity with the region

I

r.

!

r

I

~~~ ~~~.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ~: ~~~6M~~terhGardA(30:)

For Sale or Trede ......................................... 590
Fruits&amp;: Vegetablee .............. ....................... 580
Fumlahad Rooms ........................................450
General H~llng ...... .....................................860
Glveaway......................................................040
Happy Ade ....................................................050
Hay &amp; Graln ............. ........................ ............. 640
Htlpw.nted................. ................................ 110
Hom.lmp'ovemlnl. ................................. .. 8to

r.l1'lit&amp;:------.,~~11o
IIJilJ' WANI'EII
liEu&gt; WANnD
.·
Needs three Individuals
thatereinterestedina
career as an Automotive

and local courthouse are a
ee Y plus. tl you are interested In
1639
finding out more about this
New Middleport Flea Markel rewarding career, please
every Sat. &amp; Sun, between contact Dan Stevenson @
Dollar Store &amp; . Park, 740 . 740-446·8800 or Ia~~: resume
to 740-446-6802
645- 7889
d
11
Handymanneede 1or rena
nANil.D
Property. 740-645· 5953
TO BUY
Harris Steak house
H"
13041675 9726
Absolute Top Dollar: u.s. 1n.ng. .
Silver and Gold Colna, lnatructor
~eedld
Proofsets, Gold Rings, Pre- Gallipolis Caleer College is
1935
u.s. Currency, seeldlig a ful1·1ime instructor
• ·re Oiamonuo·
•· M·TS
Solna1
· · fo r Its Office Administrali\'e
· Shop, t 5t Secon d programs. The qualified
Co•n
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740446- applica nt must ha\le experl
2642.
ence In a munitude Of1 office•

•

ep en

i "'

Now

- - - - - - --'-

ons.
K.mo stove bu rns ooa1 and administrative
A minimum of applicati
a Bachelors
wood, used Kennel and Dog
house 304-675-4243
Degree is r~uir~dk· :en~
resumes 10 I anlc 1 ga ·

::~a~e1~~o~=~~mpik:~

110

1

Suite 312. Gallipoli!. OH
4563 1·

HD.P WANfFJl
1.

.

IRS JOBS

1.00 WORKERS NEEDED

$19.46-$32.60/hr.. now hir-

Assembte crafts , wood
items.To $480/wk Materials
provided. Free Information
pkn. 24Hr. BO t -428-4649

ing. Paid Training is provid·
ed. For application and lree
go\'ernment JOb info. ca ll
American Assoc. of labor I·
9t 3-599·8244, 24Jt,rs. emp.

v

An EJCcellent way to earn
money. The New Avon.
C liM .
1
3048822645
a an ~n
·
·
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. ShirleY Spears, 304 _
675-1429.

-'"-"'-·- - - - - -

S e e k i n g
Paramed•c.'EMT/CNA
to
work with patients with heart
disease 1n a physicians
office in P"'nt
Pleasant.
"'
Basic EKG skills a musl.
Cosmototogist!Bartler. Hair Temporary pari-lime. Mon·
Stylist wanted for booth Friday shift. $11+/hr Send
rental at Michael &amp; Friends. resume to PO BOX 997,
379-9145 or 446·0698
Huntington. wv 25713

lor Individuals that are ool
going, sell motivated and

plans in tt1e industry and a
benefits package that has
health insurance. 401K
retirement, dlsabiUry and loo
insurance. If you want to
ears an excellent living and
better yourself, contact Pat
HI!! or Brian Ross.

Need responsible person lor
childcare.S/various
days
week, will include some Sat
and Sun. 645·1304

Office Aulstllnl:. The Ohio
S!ate University Extension,
a
.- •
Meigs County office, cur·••·• ··~--~ t1.· ...... . .......
rentty has an opening for an
- - . , . . . - - . . , . - - - - office assistant. As a memJohn Sing Ford uncoln bor of a teem, you will be
Mercury
responsible lor secretarial
Has a posltton open for an ar.d accourttln~. duties. For
Automotive Technician. We complete POSitiOn descrlpare looking for an indiviOOal, lion, qualifications, additionlhat hasawellrounded
al information and/or to
knowledge about automo· apply on line go to: ~
live repair. Ford Motor
sato!"' com an~ Search
Company training witl be
f&gt;ost1~ by Job T1tle: Office
provided and is 011 going. A ~ s 1 s t a n t - 0 S U E
We offet' a competitive com· ~etosJPomeray. To build .a
pensalo'on plan and our ~n- d1verse workforce on
_ 10
IJ':I
efit package include.s health State enc~ra~s appil~ainsurance, 401 Kretirement. lions from IndiViduals With
disability insurance and life disabilities, minorities, velar-

.IM

:::pl~~r.women.

monitoring and updating
ooul'98 offering&amp; and
enrollment numbers each
semester aod·otherdutles
as needed.
Must ha\IEI
high school
diploma or equivalent.
Associate Degree prelerroo.
Must have knowledge of
,omputers,lncludlng word
proc..slng, G·mall and
Internet usage, One-three
years previous office
experience prelarred. Good
oral and written
communication .skills
requlred.
All Appltcants must submit
a letter of Interest and
resume Including names
and
addresses ot three
references on or before July
25. 2007 to
Ms.Phyllis Mason, SPHR
Oirectof of 11uman Res.
University of Rio Grande
P.O.Box 500
Rio Grande, OH 45674
e-mail! pmasonOrlo.edu
fax: 740·245·4909
EEOIAA EMPLOYER

Avg. Pay $20/11r or
$57K annually
Including Federal Benefits
and OT,Paid Training,
vaCations·FT/PT
1·866·542·1 531
_ _ _u_s_w_A_ _ _
R&amp;J Trucking Leading The

~~Y A~J Tr~ckmg~ow
nng a our ew
en,
WV Terminal. ~or Regional
H 1o
o 1 ,...
tU'Iar
au s- ump IV.
OTR verifiable exp. Call 1·
800-462-9365 ask for Kent

JiJfiilllll

sa

Department of Education
cert ification/licensure and
have or be eligible to obtain
Early Childhood tntel\lention
Specialist validation . Send
resume and a copy of teach·
1ng license by July 19th to:
Carleton School, 1310
Carleton Street, P.O. Bo~
307. Syracuse. OH 45n9

~==OPPoltnJNnY====~

dOllarswee~y.
per signature
&amp; up to·
$500
Cat! 740·251
7591 &amp; ask for Chris or
e.mall
dbenasOcralg·

•NOTICh

group.com

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
that )'OU do business wtth
people you know, and
HOT to send money
tnrough the mall until you
have investigated the

The Craig Group needs out·
going indMOOals to help with
state·wide .campaign. Make
$1-$2 per signature &amp; up to
$500 weekly. PleaSe call

Chris at 74()..251 ·7591 or :olf:•rt:ng:·= = = = : : : :
e
m
a
I
I
dbanas Ocratggroup.com
MilNE\'

j

Wanted:
a'IBII&amp;t*l
to
assistPositions
Individual!
with
mental retardation at two
group hornealn Bidwell:
1) 35hrs: 2·10p M/TuNI/Th
2) 35hrs: 3:30-t 1_p,W/Th
2·11 P Fn. toa,gp Sat
3) 35hrs: 11p-8:30&amp; Th,
11p.9&amp; FrVSat, 7po9a Su
41 27.5hrs: 4·10:301) Frl, 9a·
7p Sat, 9.,-Sp Sun
Mu::rt haY&amp; high school dlploma!GEO. valid drivers
license and three years
good driving ·experience.
$7.50fhr. Pre-employment
Drug Testlng. Send resume
to: Buckeye Community
Services, PO Box 604,
JackSOn. OH _.5640 or email
to: be~ecservOyahoo.com.
Deadline lor applicants:
07120/07 ..Equal Opportunity

ro• "'•~

~====I.A1=~=,=~
••NOTICE••
Borrow Smert. Contact
the OhiO Dlvleiorl ot
Financial
lnadtUtlon's
Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you rofl·
nance your home or
olltaln a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
ldvance payments of
lees or Insurance. Calt the
Office ol Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1·866·
278-0003 to learn If the
mortgage broker,.~ or
tender
Is
proper!~
ficensed (This Is a pu~~
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Pu~iehing Company)

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING

insurance. If you are tlffl'd of
EEO/AA_ RE CEPTIONIST needed for
working lor someone that is
.
busy otlice in Gallia County.
not working for you or want
WiH be· responsible lor
to better yourself, contact Part-time Nanny/Babysitter answering phones, provldService Manager Jim
to care lor two special little ing customer service. basic
Thomas.
boys In· my home 2-3 days data entry and other general
per week. Flexible hours and clerlcai duties. Must have a
da1ts. Also looking for part- good attitude. be ._.ery
~"·"~ -w•··•"I1me housekeeper. Pt ease dependable, friendly and
'' ...... . . ......
~ (740)64 S- trustworthy. Computer skills
caII Tsmmy ~
~--::---:--:--- 2292 or Ange la @ {7 40)446- requir9CI. Resumes must be
~
E
~ L
7268
t d
d
1 · 1
~aborer. arn as ou earn.
JP~ an
pro ess1ona, .
1
IBrt building for future now - -- - - - - - Re resu.me o:
by jOlning our· PrOfessional Personal Care Giver lor
eceptiomst
Team and learn the skills to male . Evenings &amp; nights PO BOX 63 ·
.
become a High Pressure only 740.446-4597 or 304· Gallipolis, OH 45631
Cleaning
Maintenance 593-(}.458
- -- - - - Technician All positions
Retail Managerial Personnel
roqulreweekly TRAVEl out- - -----c-:..,--c- position ·available.
CLA Bo Send
JJU
side of AREA. Company TEACH ING POSITIONS. resumes to
x
.
·
t rans- Th e Me1gs
· caunrv
prov1'de6 lodgmg.
., Board of c/o Gallipolis Tribune, PO
portation, and Per Diem. Mental
Retardation
&amp; Bo)( 469, Gallipoli s, OH
AVERAGE Sta rting wage Developmental Disabilities 45631 Must have valid drivwMh cost of benelits 1 n.clud~ has the following positions ers license, auto insurance
is $205.00 per field day availabl e:
Multiple and drug test required.
worked, with s chance to Disabilities Teacher. Must
advance up to $263.00 per have current valid 0 hlo Scenic Hills Nursing Center
field day worked_ We pro· Department of Education is accepting applications for
·vide paid training and ce rlilicalionflice nsure and STNA's tor eveni ngs and
EXCELLENT BENEFITS. have or be eligible to obtain midnfnhts. ff interested,
Pre-Employment
DRUG Intervention Specialist vall- please!I'
contact
Diana
TEST and a valid Drivers dation in the are a ot Harless at 740-446·7150.
License Is a plus, bu'.,,not Moderate/Intensive educa· EOE
required. WE WILL BE TAK- tional needs.
Early - - - - - - - lNG APPLICATIONS AND Childhood
Special Security OHicers needed io
INTERVIEWING ON JULY Education Teacher. Must New Haven, WV $7.66 per
23 AT THE BEST WEST· have
current
Ohio hour, all shifts. F.T &amp; P.T.
EAN INN. 701WMAINST.,
RIPlEY W.Va. FROM 9':00
A.M. TILL 5:00P.M. Please
Bring two types of idenlificalion With ~~nu
,- . Send work
history and day time pllOne.
number to TECHICIAN
TRAINEE, P.O. BOX 565,
MARIETTA, OHIO 45750
EOE

·I

®

..,

fo

WANm&gt;
To Do

Hlll'WANml

Security Officers needed In Wanted· deanlng jobs, '""
New Haven, WV. $7.66 per · dean houses &amp; offices &amp; will
hour, all shifts, F.T.&amp;P.T. also mow SJllall ya~ &amp; sit
Must have clean record, with elderly at night, In
pasa a drug screen and Rutland, ·
Pomeroy,
The University ol Rio
Grande invites applications background check. Call 1· Middleport &amp; Chester Ohio
for the 'position of secretary 800-275-8359, M·F, 8:30 to &amp; in Ravenswood &amp; Mason
WV. call (74,0)949·2515
to the Dean and facl.ity of 5:00. EOE PNFIDIV
the Sdlool of Uberal Arts - - - - - - - - please klave meSBage
and Sdencas.
The Craig Group needs out·
11\\'\r 1\1
Responsiblities include, but going Ohio resldenta to help
are not limited to general with statewide campaign.
secretarial. clerical,
Each person will make 1to 2 rtO
JluiiNiss

bielor any Olhar debts pther 4 tamly Ju~ 13-14. Rodney
than my own.
Community Center. lots of
baby lteme · and mise,
Opening lor Craftars.Craft tirea/wheets1or F-150 4x4 ·
. .
.
sale Sapt. t 5111 at Llgllthouse
Assembly of God In Garuge
Sale
1314
Gallipolis. $20.00 e !lllece. Neighborhood Rd. Tues
Call0eborah,740·38&amp;3340. 7117-Fri 7120 9-5.

I
r
Lw------.,1.
II-

_.IIItO

to_IIEI_J'_W_ANIID
_

. As o1 July 9th, r Vau11&gt;n L. L--GiiliAUJI'OUSiOiillliiiiio_.l
French will not be responsi- ..,

•P•

ers

/}eatll1iru

Monday-Frld•y for ln•ertlon
In Next Day'• P•per

YARDSA.t.li:

r

~

992-2157

'I KIT &amp; CARLYLE

\'\\(11 \t I \I I \I',

Pets for Sale ........................................ ........ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng ............................. ....... 820
Profeaalonal Services................................. 230
Ir............................... 160
RI dlo, TV • CB R
Real Eltlle Wanted ........... ..........................300
Schoolalhatructlon .......................... ........... lSO
Seed ' Plant &amp; Fertilizer ... ............... ............ 650
Situations Wanted ............. ... - ............... ...... 120
Spec. lor Re nt ............................................. 460
Sporting Gooda ....................... :................... ~~g
SUV's for Sale..............................................
TrucksforSI!IIe ............................................ 715
Upholatery .................................................. . 870
Vans for Sale ................. ..............................730
Wanted to Buy ................ 1... . ........................ 090
Wanted Io B uy- Farm Supp. Ilea .. ................ 620
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180 ·
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
YardSa... Galllpolla ................................ .... 072
Yard Sai•Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
Yard Sai•Pt· Pleasant.. .................:............ 076

IN
THE
COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PRO·
BATE DIVISION MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
COURT MEIGS COUN·
TV, OHIO

Or Fax To

• Start Your Ado With A Keyword • Include Com......
DeecrlptiOn • Include A P~ • Avokl Abbrevlltlon8
• lndude Phone Number And Add,_ When Needed
• Ads StMMikt Run 7 D~

1.....................................................

Public Notice

446-3008

Monday thru Friday
:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m

Nurse Assistants

year e"perience or received a nursing assistant

Or Fax To

O.l,ly ln-Colu~n: 1:00 p.m.

*POLICIES*

Register ·

(740) 446-2342 (74o) 992·2156 (304) 675-1333

•••

~

Websjtes:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel .com
www.mydailyregister.com

Sentinel

Worcl Ads

Help Wanted

certificate of lraining or be state tested nursing
assistant

~ribune

To Place

Help Wanted

Pleasant Valle y Hospital i s
accepting applications for pur;uing
assi stants to provide home care to
clients residing in M eigs. Mason. Gallia and
Athens Counties. Applicants should have one

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

WANTED: Part-time position
available to assist an individual
with mental retardation in Shade.
3-12pm M!Tu/W. Must have high
school diploma or GED, valid
driver's license, three years good
driving experience and adequate
automobile insurance. $7 .50/hr.
Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box 604 Jackson, OH 45640
or e-mail to
beyecserv@yahoo.com.
Deadline for applicants: 7/20/07.
Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.
·Help Wanted

Meigs County, OH

Gallia
County
OH

.

Help Wanted

ste

Must have clean record,
pass a drug screen and
baCkground checK. Call t 800·275·8359, M-F 8:30 to
5:00 EOE M/FION
·

JUDGMENT?
Did you collect it? We
www.oaliDo~~e~reerconege.com
specialize in the
~~~~~e:. 1~,;,~ c~= enforcement of judgments.
and Sehoul&amp; 121&lt;tB.
CaM us to see how we can
a.•.........,., . . ... .. ..:vu ....
assist ou at 740-388-8247
1 ,.~r.,vu;,
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAl. SECURfTY /SSt?
3 piece crib set, tight oak in No Fee Unless We Win!
color&amp; goOd cond.. crib
t -~·562·33&lt;15
w/mattress. weudrobe &amp;
chest, when purchased paid
ld \ I I " I \ I I
$, 000. asking $200. far iiiiiii=;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
complete set Call 304-458H~
2047 after Som .
L--oii'OIIiiliioiiSA.t.li:iiiii;;.•
·

I

ll76

I

riO

IUKJ

WANJ'ID

To Do

A·OK-Corrala &amp; Barns
Metal Roofing, Shingles,
Concrete,
R,modelin~,
Decks,
Pole
Barns,
Garages.Free estimates Call
304-633-1230
- - -- - - - G80fge's Portable Sawmill,

don1 haul your L~s to the
Milt just call304-675-1957.
Guitar lessons-Instructor
Larry Roush available lor
'summer lessOns. 740-4460947
- -- - - - -Lawn mowing. Rates by the
lOb. not the hour, Free
Estimates. Call Paul @
(304)675-2940.
-------Lawn-Care Service, Mowing
&amp; Trimming. Call (740)441 1333 or 1740)645•0546
Mature. female will babysit in
my
smoke- free hOme.
Ft ex1'bt e hours. Da·l1Y or
wee kly rates. Reterence6
available. 304-674·3251
-------Michele's Daycare now
· ages t 8 mon ths
accepting
to.13 yrs., Hours Mon-WedFn 6am B
pmTues· &amp; Thurs
Sa~
· to
pm.
5
R tland/Hanisonville Eire~
~~ { )
ask for
740 698 0214
ca
M. h I
.
IC e e

FIND AJOB OR ANEW CAREER
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

0 Down Mn with kiss than
perfect credllls availablit on
this 3 bedroom. 1 bath
home. Corner lot. fireplace,
modern kitchen, jacuzzi tub,
Payment around $550 per
month. 740·367-71 29.
___ __ _ __
3 Bedroom . 2 Bah
t ,
Fireplace, 40x60 Barn,
PleaseniVeMey Ad near Rio
Grande. _ acres available
18
f
1
1
585 000
h:~~;g9· 11:6
,
.
4 BR hoose. 2.5 baths, 1
acre, 1 car garage, gazebo,
motor
home
hookup.
Morning Star Ad in Racine.
Asking $1 35,000. Call 225·
264·10SS
5 room house and ground

1 740 -379 -22

loMov e tn on t he d~ you pay
r r.

~

5bd
21&gt;1
Golllpoll•
Foreclolurel Buv for
$&amp;1,11001
5%dn,
20yrw01%. Moro hornM
from 1Ht9imol For local
llaUngo coli BD0-559-41 09
xF:!M
Attention!
local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
grams for you to buy your
home tnltNd of renting.
• 100% financing
• Less than perlect credit
acceptEKI
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Loca tors.
Mor tgage
1740)367·0000

�'

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www:~ydailysentineLeom

Friday, July 13, 2007

Friday, July 13, 2007

. The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

t!Cribune - Sentinel -.

's

I
•

LOS ANGELES - The
Los Angeles Galaxy's Web
site has been counting down
the days, hours, minutes and
se conds until superslar
David Beckham joins tlie
Major League Soccer team.
But does anyone !besides
· bard-core soccer fans,
: admirers of the dashing and
: fashionable Englishman or
· paparazzi care in a country
where interest in the sport
known overseas as football
. has never registered more
: than a blip?
.• "I'm not quite sure wby,
:: but Americans think soc:: cer's boring," said Doug
· Wood. a 25-year-old stock
: broker from Los Angeles.
.. Converting hearts and
; minds about a sport called
·· "'The Beautiful Game" will
:: likely be Beckham's No. I
·challenge.
"He knows soccer isn' t
~ huge in America yet and
: he's hoping to change that,"
:: his wife Victoria said. "He's
::so passionate about what he
i:loes and he's excited to get
:. there apd do what he can."
• Six months of waiting
:ends
Friday
with
- Beckham's introduction at
.-the Galaxy's stadium in
. Carson, Calif. He's set to
·-play his first game July 21,
exhibition
against
. an
Chelsea of the English
· Premier League. Beckham
signed a five-year contract
in January worth $32.5 million.
.
The early buzz on the guy
famous for his bending free
;kicks, ever-changing hair
:and clothing styles and
stick-thin pop singer wife is
mixed.
People seem to . fall into
three groups - those who
don' t know about soccer
. and wouldn't attend games
· if the tickets were free ;
those
intrigued
by
Beckham's celebrity aura,
especially women; and true
soccer fans who wonder if
the 32-year-old midfielder
can elevate MLS to the
same level as Europe's
more respected leagues.
"If he can do some stuff
like Ronaldinho,' then 1' II
definitely, be watching

lAP photo

Photographers wait for the arrival of England soccer player David Beckham and his wife Victoria at los Angeles
International Airport Thursday. David Beckham is traveling to the United States where he has signed to play for Major
League Soccer team Los Angeles Galaxy.

e very game," said Greg
Oden, the No. I pick in the
recent NBA draft who is a
fan of the Brazilian soccer
star.
Beckham joins an A-list
of Hollywood transplants
that
mcludes
Wayne
Gretzky, Shaquille O'Neal
and the Dodgers - all of
which made an indelible
mark on the cit}-'s· sports
landscape.
"He's ahead of the game
than when I flfSI came to
L.A. because he's so worldrenowned," &amp;aid Gretzky,
who arrived from Canada in
1988 and helped popularize
hockey in warm-weather
cities.
"The one thing I ~arned
was that one person can' t
make or break it. The
Galaxy organization, the
ownership, everyone has to
rally around."
Count Alexan,dra

Gillardo
.

.

among .women interested said. ·
simply
because
of
Apparently
Gretzky 's
Beckham's blond looks and wife agrees.
engaging smile.
"I don't know very much
"I hate soccer. It takes for- about soccer other than my
ever to score a goal. It's kids love it and my wife
boring," said the 30-year- loves David Beckham," he
old admissions counselor said.
from Diamond Bar who has
Even with the addition of
already bought Galaxy tick- Beckham, soccer is a tough
ets. "But he's something sell to Rick Redlich, a 38nice to look at. He's got a year-old anomey from Los.
great body, a great butt. Sex Angeles who played tlie
sells."
sport through high school
Cheryl Rubinstein of Los but would rather spend his
Angeles said she'd attend a money at the racetrack.
Gafaxy game only "to . see
"I think the most exciting
him and his wife and what thing about soccer is when
the Hispanic announcer
she's wearing."
"He brings a lot of yells ' Gooooaaaall!'" he
European mystique to L.A. said. "For the L.A. market,
He's coming here with an there are so many other
intact image - a good mar- things to do, so soccer has
riage, beautiful kids, and he an uphill battle."
seems to make good deciWood, the Los Angeles
sions. He's a great athlete. stock. broker, thinks the
He's great to look at. He has. Galaxy .have their·. work cut
the whole package," sb'!l ·. O)lt in trying. to attract more
p

•

-

•

•

watching soccer for fi ve
years, but said he wouldn ' t
attend games . unless the
Galaxy jmported Brazili:ms
whose fluid ball-handltng
style be admires.
"Then you ' d say that
MLS is on a par with some
of the European leagues,"
the 27 -year-old youth counselor from Long Beach said.
"That's what it's about in a
crowded market like this legitimacy and entertainment value. And right now,
the MLS doe sn't have
either."
Soccer is one of Los
Angeles Dodgers third
baseman
Nomar
Garciaparra's
favorite
sports, and not just because
his wife Mia Hamm starred
on the women's U.S .
national team.
But he knows most
American sports fans are
turned off by low-scoring
games, which are common
in soccer.
.
"There has to be that
understanding that you can
watch a 0-0 game and walk
away and say, 'That was a
beautiful soccer game,"' he
said. "To get soccer mainstream like the~e other
sports is going to be difficult."
Mo Hassan of Irvine, who
plays soccer and follows the
English Premier League ,
hopes Beckham's presence
lures other foreigners to
MLS, which began more
than II years ago.
"MLS hasn't been really
competitive," Hassan said.
"He's going to set the bar
higher, definitely. He's
going to encourage the
other players to get up to
that level. It's going to be
great. The next few years
are going to he much more
exciting."
Wood predicts Beckham
will make a big splash initially . .
"More people will watch
this season than ever
before," he said. "But after
that it will fall off. It will be
a total fad unless it is promoted in the way I
described."

fan s to the games. He said
the team needs cheap tickets, cheap alcohol, and an
advertising budget that
rivals the NFL's.
~·1 don't think guys are
really ' that interested in
watchipg a really goodlooking guy play soccer,"
he said. "They' d have to
hype the hell out it so that it
became an event that my
friends wanted to go to, like
tailgating at a football
game."
Rodolfo Rios, a Peru
native who follows soccer,
would ·rather have a Latino
hero join the struggling
Galaxy, who are 3-5-4.
"We need more young
players
from
South
America," said the 45-yearold auto mechanic from San
Pedro. "Somebody coming
from my country, I would
like to see that."
AP Writer Amanda Beck
Kokayi Barnes 'las been contributed to this report.

•

'

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..

CLASSIFI-- ED

·'

PUBLIC NOTICE

Unknown cloud Mel that the niiiOC8IIon Dl lice,...,
lions and/or 1 - permn., " ' " " · varlIn or on said property, anceo, or ~:
If any, be marah81ed and the opproval or
and the ,.., Utlo' dlsopproval of plana
quleled end said fMI and
opeclflcallona.
property aokl In the "Draft Actlono" are
lot eclooura action and wrllllln of
all
amounta
due the
director
of
Ptalntlll be paid from E n v I r o n m e n I a I
.,. unkoown.
the proceeds of the P r o t e c t I o n ' 1
You.,. hereby notified lillie.
(Director'•) Intent with
!hilt you have been You are required to respect ·
to
the
named Dllendan.. In an.-r the complaint lnuance, denial, etc.
the llcllon entitled whhln
twenty-eight of a permit, llcon11,
Formers
Bank
I (28) day• after the last order, ole. lnt.,.lled
S.vlfllll
Company, publication of thla peraono may 1ubmlt
Plaintiff, vs. Chartae Notice, wlllch will be permit, llcenle,
Keith PyiH, a minor, by publllhed O'\"t ••ch order, ate. lntoroated
and thruugh hie molh- WMk lor llx (6) ouc- persona may 1ubmlt
ar 1nd next of kin, ceoolve WHkl. The wrtHen comments or
Alrneo Pyle1, et 11., last publication wiU be l'aquMI a public - Dofendlnta. . Thlo made on the 31'd day of lng regarding draft
action
hill
been Auguot, 2007, and the actions. Commenta or
·•aatgnod Cl10 No.
twenty-eight (28) daya public
meeting
CV 063, and le pending lor an110er will com- requeats muat be 1ubIn
the
court
of """""' on lhll dale. In milled within 30 days
Common
Pleao of the cno of your failure of notice of the draft
Mllga County, Ohio. to a n - or othorWII8 action. · "Propoaed
Tho object of the respond IS requested Actlona" are written
Compl1int dornanclo by the Ohio Rules of a.. teme~ts
of the
judgment agalnat the Civil Procedure, juctg- director 1 Intent with
Dolendanta,
The mant by ~uft will be reopect
to
the
Unknown Holra, Next rendered agalnat you lsauance, denial, modi·
of
Kin,
Devl-a, and lor the relief llcatlon, revocation, or
L o g 1 I o e 1 , demonded
In
tho renewol of a permit,
AdmIn 11 t ret ora , Complaint.
llcenoe, or varlonce.
Eucutora, S.occNIOfS ~ lhla 11th day of Wrlllen comments 1nd
end Aulgna of Rendy June, 2007.
requHts lor a public
K. Pyles, Dec aHed- Douglu
W. , LIHie meeting regarding a
the
of Rlncly K. (0007537)
proposed action ·may
Pylel, In the oum of AIJornl¥ lor Plalntlll
be 1ubmllted within 30
$29,081.68 with I!Ur- LmLE, SHEETS &amp; days of notice of the
est thereon at the rate WARNER
proposed action. An
of $5.35814 per day P.O. Box 686
adjudlcetlon hearing
until lully peld; In the
OH45769
may be held on a proltlm of $1 ,700.39 with Telephone: (740) 992· poeod action If a hoor·
lntereet thereon at the 8689
Ifill request or objacrate of $0.61369 per (6) 29, (7) 6, 13, 20, Z7, lion to received by the
day untlllully paid; and (6) 3
OEPA within 30 day1 of
In the 1um of $2,686,87
I nuance of the prowith ln18rast thereon et
P,&lt;&gt;sed action. WriHen
lhe rate of t 2% per
Public Notice
comments, roqueats
annum until lully paid,
lor public meetings,
In order to foreciOio Public Notice
and edjudlcilllon hear·
upon a mortgogo upon County: Meigs
lng raqliOota mull be
located II The lollllwing appllca- IOnl to: Hetlriflll Cieri&lt;,
real Oak
Grove
Road, Ilona an!l/or verified Ohio
Environmental
Racine,
OH45771, complalntl
wore Protection
Agone¥,
being approximately received, and the to~ P.O.
Box
1049,
t4.666 acrea In SuHon lowing draft, proposed, Columbus,
Ohio
Townahlp and 4.288 or final actlono were 4 3 2 I 6 • 1 0 4 9
acres In the Vlllade ol 111ued. by The Ohio (Telephone: 614-644Racine, Melga County, En v Iron men I a I 2129). " Final Actions:
Ohio, which Is more Protection
Agency Are actions ol the
fully deecrlbed in deed (OEPA) last week. director which are
To:

The

W.tedoo Coli Co., Inc. Holra, Neort of Kin,
of P.O. Bo1 626, DoviiHo, LegatHa,
• - . OH45640 PH A d m I n I o t r a t o r o ,
7&lt;40-2111 5833 hH oub- Executors, Suceea1ora
mlttwd • ,.,_, appll- Aaslgna of Randy
cation tor cool mine K. PyiH,
perlllit o.GeM to the •nd lhe Eo..ta of
Ohio Dopl. of IU!unll Rlncly K. Pylel whOle
- . Division ol IIIIMI and a d d -

-sed.

Mi111r11l
Resources
1118111g1manl.
per·
ml .... Is In
llelgl
County,
S.llabury Township,
Lola 312, 315, 318
(1Wp. IN; Range 13W),
on tho po apeny of Jelm
En181 p!llll
penni
contolna 12.8 Acres
INI le local8cl on the
: CIIHhlre 7 112 minute
· USGS
Quadflngle
Map, appn~xlmetely 2
mllel
North
of
Cheahlre, Ohio. The
renewal
applicetlon
will 1llow Wotarloo
. Cool Co., inc. to COnlinue the mining operalions on o.G6!18 lot up
to live years peat the
eoplratlon
date of
Auguat 25, 2007.
The renewal eppllca. lion II on file at the
Malg•
County
. Recordore
Office,
Courthoul8, Pomeroy,
Ohio lor public viewlng. Written comments
or raquoat1 lor an
Informal conference
may be Hnl to the
Dlvllion of Mineral
R • a o u r c e a
Monagement,
2045
.Morse Road, Bldg H-3,
Columbuo, OH 4322&amp;8883, within thirty daya
olthe last dale of publlcatlon of 11111 notice.
(7) 6, 13, 20, Z1

n.

n.

Public Notice

rn

Es-

-roy.

. IN
THE
COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Farmer•
Bank
•Savings Company
Plaintiff
va
Chlttoa Keith Pyles, a
minot', by and through
hla molller and next of reCorded in VOlume
kin, AlmM Pyles, et al 219, Page 419, Meigs
Defendant.
County
Official
No.
cv 063
Racorda, snd coats of
NOTICE BY PUBLICA· thlo action; that the
noN
mortgage be tore-

ca.

rn

•

•

Environmental Review
Appeals Comml11lon
(ERAC)
(Formerly
knas
the
Environmental Boord
of R.vlew) by a peraon
who a perty to a·

proceodlng before tile
director by filing an

within 30 dayo
of notice of the llnal

appeal

action. Pursuant· to
Ohio • Revised C'ode
Section 3745.07, A
Final Action latulng,
denying, modHylng,
revoklng, or renewing
a permit, lie ante, or
variance which 11 not
preceded by a propol8d action, may be
appealed to the ERAC
by Ullng an appeal
within 30 day a of
laauance of the final
action. ERAC oppea11,
accompanied by a $70
filing IN which lh
acommluion In ft ellacretlon may reduce
by atllclavft the appe~
lant demonttrates that
payment of · tho lull
amount of tho lee
would caute eortreme
hardship,
mull be
filed
with:
Envlronmen..l Review
Appealo Commlaeion,
309
South
Fourth
Street, Room 222,
Columblle; Ohio 43215.
A ccipy of the appeal
mull be served on the
director Wfthln 3 daya
alter filing the appeal
with the EAAC.
Final
issuance
of
NPDESpennll
Rovenawood
WV

n

WWTP

Varioul Countl~ OH
Action date: 0612912007
Receiving Wales : Land
Appllcetlon
Facility Description:
Waotawater
ldontlllcotlon No. :
SINOOOOt·A
This final action not
preceded by proposed
action
and
Ia
appealuble to ERAC.
This final action not
preceded by proposed
aclion and Is appeal·

"Action a" Include the upon Issuance or a able.
stated effective date. (7) 13

adoption, modHicatlon.
or repeal of orders
(other than emergency
orders); the lsauance,
denial, modification or

Pu,..uant
to
Ohio
Reviled Code Section
3745.b4, A final action
may be appealed lo the

'

Public Notice
The Annual Ananctal
Report· Form 4502 of
the
Eastern Local
School District
the
!local year ended June
30, 2007 has been completed. Form 4502 1s
available lor public
Inspection In the,,....
ourer'a office located
at 50008 SR 681,
Reedsville,
Ohio,
betwHn the houra of
8:00 a.m. to 4;00 p.m.
Monday
through
Friday.
Lisa M. Ritchie
(7) 13

!Or

Public Notice
The Eastern Local
School
Board
Is
accepting quoin lor
the
following:
Transportation petroieum products luel tires
and tubes. 'Cal~terla
supplies
Including
food, dairy products
and bread products.
Specificationl can be
obtained by calling
740-667·3319 or 740667-6079.
Sealed
quotes will be opened
In the treasure's office
located at 50008 sA
681 ReedsviRe Ohio
at ' 12:00 noon on
Monday July 23 2007
Lisa M. Ritchie •
•
Eastern
Local
Treasurer
7 40-867-3319

Rodney
L.
Davia,
Trustee of the Trust
Created Pursuant to
the will of George H.
Davis, Deceased.
Unlesa exceptions are
Hied thereto, said
account will be set lo.r
hearing before said
Court on the Monday,
August t3, 2007, at
wlilch
lime
said
account will be consldered and continued
from day to day until
finally clapoled of.
Any person 1m-ted
~ file wriHen excepUon to said account or
to mattera pertaining
to the execution of the
trust, not leal'than live
days prior to the date
eel lor hearing.
J. S. Powell
Judge
Common Pleas Court,
Pro~ Division
Meigs County, Ohio
(7) 13

E-mail
dassified@ mydailytribune .com

'

e

ca~r;:.::v.

...

.

• Excellent Pay

• Mileage Reimbursement
• Flexible Scheduling
· Ap plicatio ns will be acce pted 9:00 a.m. to
3:00 p.m. M-F at 1011 Viand St ..
Pt. Pl easant. WV o r appo intments ca n be
scheduled at anoth er location by calling
304 -675-7 404 or 1-866-992-69 16. Applicants
may also contact this number for questions.

(7) 13

A A/EOE

--------------

r ~ Ir

· Ohio Volley
Pp[llllhlng

reaenreo

tho right to edH,
rljtcl or CIIICOI lny
ad II any time.

Errors lluat
od on the fl
of pubilcllton a

.frlbune-Sontlnel
agister
will
ponolblo lor
than the COli
apace occupt
lhl orror and on
filii In-Ion.
hall not be

Accounts and vouchof the following
named fiduciary has
been flied In the
Probate Court, Meigs
County,
Ohio
tor
approval and seHie·

ment.
ESTATENO. 2005 3

The First Account

I

Now you can have borders and oraphlcs
IlL..&gt;
added to your classified ads
lr1'o
Borders$3.00/perad
U...
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for larQe

Diso!ay Ads

t.:iL

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon z
Bu•ln••• Day• Prior To
Publication

~"!'!d-~ In-Column: 1:00 p.m. Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00
For sundaya Paper

Thursday for sunday•

• All ada must be prepaid"

POUCIES: Ohio Val.,. PubUehlng rfleA'H the right to ..tit, retect. or CMlcet .-.y lid M .ny time. EITOfs mull be NpOr'ttd on the first c:lly
Trlbune-8tntiMI-Regl..., Mil be r~lble for no moN than tht cott ol the"*" occllfMd bV·the wror and only the first lnHftion. W.
q 1oM or l!li*'M lhlt
tM publleltlon or omllllon ot en lldvertiMmtnt. CorNCion wm be mHt In the ttrtt IVIIIIblt Mitton. •So•
. . lllwlyl COiilkMtitlll. • Cumnt Fill Clfd . . . . . • All rMI ~ Hvll'tiMIMIU . . IUbflct 10 1hl fiCtlrll FIJr Houllnt Acl of 1111. • Ttill -~~;;~
~only t.tp wanted adl mMtlng EOE Nndlnl•. We wilt no1 knowingly accept
ldverti1lng In vloldon ol tM law.

""""'from

r. .

kltncarlyteOcomcast.net

YAIIIlSAU-

•

GIVFAWAY

Moving! Tara Apartment

technical
duties for
College
of L.ibforal
Artsthe
ond
SCiences including
providing scheduling
assistance to dean, choir,
school secretaries and
faculty, performing various
receptionists' duties;
answering the phone, taltlng
messages, handling office
mail, maintaining fiscal,

402.
Friday-Sunday,
Clothes, Toys, Furniture,
8 wk old female kitten black Home lntert~r. Loogaberger,
&amp; wMe 304-882·292fi
Tons of great thlngsl
Buck stove Insert 740·446· Multi lamlly · Sat July · 14.
9972 Slate Royle 7 South

1420
.:..:::.:c.._
_ _ __

Free Blacl&lt; Lab w1 ~nted
ears, been spayed. loves
water, needs room to run.
Cat174Q-388-oo69
.

Box number ada e

Mu~-F8mH~ Sat, Ju~ 14ti1,
789 N SR' 7- Or. .Strauss'
parking lot B-4. household
items, boys &amp; girls clot111ng.

FREE DIRT. About 4·5 tons Yard Sale: 656 SR 650 near
oi clay/sand mix. Call304- Rodney.Bam,Sai.July14111..
, 5;31·5849.
Glassware, Anliques, Oak

lwaya conftlftntlll.
Current

7 - 13
t~~

~!~!op
=~~~~a~::
. ·
·
·

Free lab. mlx·puppes 11

Ilea.

weeks
• 3 tomales,
1 male
_ 3-6
r 3-44
74
304 59 202 0 59

Kn~es.

U)I411Hf

www.comlcs.com
@ 2007 by NEA, Inc.
L..._..;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;:.;;;;;:...:;.:.:.;::;.:;.;;;~

Etc. Several Guns

=:.:::.:::::.:::..:::::...;..::..:....

and Accesson.. for 5ale.
Free puppleslo good home. · Call (740)245·5229
Black w/ bits of whhe, very r4
y
SAUPoi ARD_'""--·~
:cu::t•::·.:.740-:;:::2::5B:_·1;::0::59:___

,,

..

IlitO' lf1luo WAl'm'D

.

...•

•

1·.

.

Mmro~~~

Giveaway- free cats all difcounside Bar &amp; Grill now
ferent kinds, to good home July 13-14.l.ouks residence hiring experl8nced wait st(lff
7 720
5:-6
below EBS!irn High SChool. iserwrs. Apply In person or
l..arrAND
19: 00to ?. Raln~ls.
calltoscheduleaninterview.

3():!-6

r

FouNo

LOST DOG ,• Small Greg &amp;
Whfte Female Dog, Lost
near 3rd Ave, Galll.polo's · Sun
6/24. Answers to Katie,

!

~~~~~~~~R~ewa~rd~=Ofle~
red~~
- (6-14~)2~7,1·
5888

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4X4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antlquea ... - ......... - ......... ;............................. 530
Apartm.,telor Rent.. ................................. 440
Auction and Flea Market .............................
Auto Parts &amp; Acceaaorles ............... ........... 760
Auto Repalr ........... ........................ ............... no
Autos for Sale ............:.................................710
Boato l Motors lor Sale ....................... ...... 750
Building Suppllea........................................550
aua1n111 and Bulldlnga ......................;.,.... 340
Bualneaa Opportunity .................................210
Bualnau Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campara&amp;MotorHomea .. .................... ..... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Clrcla of Thanki.................... ~..................... 010
CtilldfEiderly Care ....................................... 190
ElectricaVRefrlgeratlon .. ............... ..............840
Equipment for Rent ........ .................... ......... 480
Excavltlng .. ................... .............................. 830
Farm Equ IP~ I.......................................... 810
Farms tor Rent............................................. 430
Farms for Sale ................................... .......... 330

oeo

,

Homes for Sale ........... ................................. l 10
Houaehold Ooods ....................................... S10
Houses for Rant .......................................... 410
' In Mamorlam ................................................ 020
lnaurance ........... ................... ....................... 130
Layrn a Garden Equlpmant ........................ 660
Llveatock...................................................... 630
Loat and Fo un d .......... ......, .... .... ~............ ..... 060
Lots &amp; Acreaga ............................................ 350
Miscellaneous.......... ............... .............. ....... t70
Miscellaneous Merchandlse ........... ..... ...... .540
Mobile Home Rapl Ir.................................... 860
Mobile Homes for Rent. .............................. 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ................................ 320 ·
Money to Loan ...................................... ....... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
" · Mualcallnatrumenta ................................... 570
005
·
Peraona I

Johns.:,:~ Uncoln ~~~.t~mc;n~r~:,~~
preletred. Send resume to
CLA Box 100 c/o GalllpoHs
Dally Trtbune, ·po Box 469,

- - - - - - - - -~40-44l ·937 1
Yard Sale 8oneUt, Friday, - - - - - - - July 13 0 Enterprise u.u. FT Cake Decorator. Must

Consultant. We are looking

Gallipolis, OH 45631 .

Church parking lot on
Enterprise Road, off Route
8'33. Fundralser for Aliyah
Gantt to attend Junior

•-rofessional.
w
' e ha\10 one
t'
of the best compensation

Mason County EMS Is
accepting applications fot
Medics and EMT's for more
information ca/1675-6134

have good personaI'1ty.
would be greet 11 you have
some training but will train.
Send resume to: JacKson
National Young Leaders Hewitt 1828 Eastern Ave,
Conference,
9am·5pm, Gallipolis Oh. 45631
Sponsored by the church.
Full time &amp; Pert time po~YARD•
n. -~
: AU-··-lions availa~e at The Karat
Patch Diamonds-N -Gold,
Pt r~ 1
Gallipolis, Ohio. looking lor
individuals that are outgoYard Sate Frt &amp; Sat R1 2 at
·
ing, self-moti\'Bted and prelhe end of Jericho 8·7
'·ssl I A
&amp;
I'
'" ona . esumes app •·
t'
ted 1'n pe son
Yard Sale Saturday July c:.:o;s ~cef~P.
fax ;
40
14th 8·? 0 11 H8wthome
~ear~ue Of
•
46
Lane (behind Armory) Baby __
• __
· ----clothes, swing, high chair, GOOD PAYING CAREER
stroller, ect.
OPPORTUNITY- Local Oil
A
.
and Gas Company looking
. ~ , ~~=
to fill posillono!Lan~man Of
____
• Land Agent in SE OH and
Weslern EV. Ideal candidate
Cross Creek Auct ion Buffalo is a self starter with basic
Auction Saturday 6pm computer knowledge, strong.
Building Is full of used communication and negotiaMerchandise, &amp; Trailer toad lion skitls who is willing to
of used merchandise from
travel within the region .
At 34.
O&amp;M Distributors Knowledge of legal descripfrom Northern Virginia. lion, prior sales experience,
Building is Air Conditioned. familiarity with the region

I

r.

!

r

I

~~~ ~~~.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ~: ~~~6M~~terhGardA(30:)

For Sale or Trede ......................................... 590
Fruits&amp;: Vegetablee .............. ....................... 580
Fumlahad Rooms ........................................450
General H~llng ...... .....................................860
Glveaway......................................................040
Happy Ade ....................................................050
Hay &amp; Graln ............. ........................ ............. 640
Htlpw.nted................. ................................ 110
Hom.lmp'ovemlnl. ................................. .. 8to

r.l1'lit&amp;:------.,~~11o
IIJilJ' WANI'EII
liEu&gt; WANnD
.·
Needs three Individuals
thatereinterestedina
career as an Automotive

and local courthouse are a
ee Y plus. tl you are interested In
1639
finding out more about this
New Middleport Flea Markel rewarding career, please
every Sat. &amp; Sun, between contact Dan Stevenson @
Dollar Store &amp; . Park, 740 . 740-446·8800 or Ia~~: resume
to 740-446-6802
645- 7889
d
11
Handymanneede 1or rena
nANil.D
Property. 740-645· 5953
TO BUY
Harris Steak house
H"
13041675 9726
Absolute Top Dollar: u.s. 1n.ng. .
Silver and Gold Colna, lnatructor
~eedld
Proofsets, Gold Rings, Pre- Gallipolis Caleer College is
1935
u.s. Currency, seeldlig a ful1·1ime instructor
• ·re Oiamonuo·
•· M·TS
Solna1
· · fo r Its Office Administrali\'e
· Shop, t 5t Secon d programs. The qualified
Co•n
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740446- applica nt must ha\le experl
2642.
ence In a munitude Of1 office•

•

ep en

i "'

Now

- - - - - - --'-

ons.
K.mo stove bu rns ooa1 and administrative
A minimum of applicati
a Bachelors
wood, used Kennel and Dog
house 304-675-4243
Degree is r~uir~dk· :en~
resumes 10 I anlc 1 ga ·

::~a~e1~~o~=~~mpik:~

110

1

Suite 312. Gallipoli!. OH
4563 1·

HD.P WANfFJl
1.

.

IRS JOBS

1.00 WORKERS NEEDED

$19.46-$32.60/hr.. now hir-

Assembte crafts , wood
items.To $480/wk Materials
provided. Free Information
pkn. 24Hr. BO t -428-4649

ing. Paid Training is provid·
ed. For application and lree
go\'ernment JOb info. ca ll
American Assoc. of labor I·
9t 3-599·8244, 24Jt,rs. emp.

v

An EJCcellent way to earn
money. The New Avon.
C liM .
1
3048822645
a an ~n
·
·
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. ShirleY Spears, 304 _
675-1429.

-'"-"'-·- - - - - -

S e e k i n g
Paramed•c.'EMT/CNA
to
work with patients with heart
disease 1n a physicians
office in P"'nt
Pleasant.
"'
Basic EKG skills a musl.
Cosmototogist!Bartler. Hair Temporary pari-lime. Mon·
Stylist wanted for booth Friday shift. $11+/hr Send
rental at Michael &amp; Friends. resume to PO BOX 997,
379-9145 or 446·0698
Huntington. wv 25713

lor Individuals that are ool
going, sell motivated and

plans in tt1e industry and a
benefits package that has
health insurance. 401K
retirement, dlsabiUry and loo
insurance. If you want to
ears an excellent living and
better yourself, contact Pat
HI!! or Brian Ross.

Need responsible person lor
childcare.S/various
days
week, will include some Sat
and Sun. 645·1304

Office Aulstllnl:. The Ohio
S!ate University Extension,
a
.- •
Meigs County office, cur·••·• ··~--~ t1.· ...... . .......
rentty has an opening for an
- - . , . . . - - . . , . - - - - office assistant. As a memJohn Sing Ford uncoln bor of a teem, you will be
Mercury
responsible lor secretarial
Has a posltton open for an ar.d accourttln~. duties. For
Automotive Technician. We complete POSitiOn descrlpare looking for an indiviOOal, lion, qualifications, additionlhat hasawellrounded
al information and/or to
knowledge about automo· apply on line go to: ~
live repair. Ford Motor
sato!"' com an~ Search
Company training witl be
f&gt;ost1~ by Job T1tle: Office
provided and is 011 going. A ~ s 1 s t a n t - 0 S U E
We offet' a competitive com· ~etosJPomeray. To build .a
pensalo'on plan and our ~n- d1verse workforce on
_ 10
IJ':I
efit package include.s health State enc~ra~s appil~ainsurance, 401 Kretirement. lions from IndiViduals With
disability insurance and life disabilities, minorities, velar-

.IM

:::pl~~r.women.

monitoring and updating
ooul'98 offering&amp; and
enrollment numbers each
semester aod·otherdutles
as needed.
Must ha\IEI
high school
diploma or equivalent.
Associate Degree prelerroo.
Must have knowledge of
,omputers,lncludlng word
proc..slng, G·mall and
Internet usage, One-three
years previous office
experience prelarred. Good
oral and written
communication .skills
requlred.
All Appltcants must submit
a letter of Interest and
resume Including names
and
addresses ot three
references on or before July
25. 2007 to
Ms.Phyllis Mason, SPHR
Oirectof of 11uman Res.
University of Rio Grande
P.O.Box 500
Rio Grande, OH 45674
e-mail! pmasonOrlo.edu
fax: 740·245·4909
EEOIAA EMPLOYER

Avg. Pay $20/11r or
$57K annually
Including Federal Benefits
and OT,Paid Training,
vaCations·FT/PT
1·866·542·1 531
_ _ _u_s_w_A_ _ _
R&amp;J Trucking Leading The

~~Y A~J Tr~ckmg~ow
nng a our ew
en,
WV Terminal. ~or Regional
H 1o
o 1 ,...
tU'Iar
au s- ump IV.
OTR verifiable exp. Call 1·
800-462-9365 ask for Kent

JiJfiilllll

sa

Department of Education
cert ification/licensure and
have or be eligible to obtain
Early Childhood tntel\lention
Specialist validation . Send
resume and a copy of teach·
1ng license by July 19th to:
Carleton School, 1310
Carleton Street, P.O. Bo~
307. Syracuse. OH 45n9

~==OPPoltnJNnY====~

dOllarswee~y.
per signature
&amp; up to·
$500
Cat! 740·251
7591 &amp; ask for Chris or
e.mall
dbenasOcralg·

•NOTICh

group.com

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
that )'OU do business wtth
people you know, and
HOT to send money
tnrough the mall until you
have investigated the

The Craig Group needs out·
going indMOOals to help with
state·wide .campaign. Make
$1-$2 per signature &amp; up to
$500 weekly. PleaSe call

Chris at 74()..251 ·7591 or :olf:•rt:ng:·= = = = : : : :
e
m
a
I
I
dbanas Ocratggroup.com
MilNE\'

j

Wanted:
a'IBII&amp;t*l
to
assistPositions
Individual!
with
mental retardation at two
group hornealn Bidwell:
1) 35hrs: 2·10p M/TuNI/Th
2) 35hrs: 3:30-t 1_p,W/Th
2·11 P Fn. toa,gp Sat
3) 35hrs: 11p-8:30&amp; Th,
11p.9&amp; FrVSat, 7po9a Su
41 27.5hrs: 4·10:301) Frl, 9a·
7p Sat, 9.,-Sp Sun
Mu::rt haY&amp; high school dlploma!GEO. valid drivers
license and three years
good driving ·experience.
$7.50fhr. Pre-employment
Drug Testlng. Send resume
to: Buckeye Community
Services, PO Box 604,
JackSOn. OH _.5640 or email
to: be~ecservOyahoo.com.
Deadline lor applicants:
07120/07 ..Equal Opportunity

ro• "'•~

~====I.A1=~=,=~
••NOTICE••
Borrow Smert. Contact
the OhiO Dlvleiorl ot
Financial
lnadtUtlon's
Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you rofl·
nance your home or
olltaln a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
ldvance payments of
lees or Insurance. Calt the
Office ol Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1·866·
278-0003 to learn If the
mortgage broker,.~ or
tender
Is
proper!~
ficensed (This Is a pu~~
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Pu~iehing Company)

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING

insurance. If you are tlffl'd of
EEO/AA_ RE CEPTIONIST needed for
working lor someone that is
.
busy otlice in Gallia County.
not working for you or want
WiH be· responsible lor
to better yourself, contact Part-time Nanny/Babysitter answering phones, provldService Manager Jim
to care lor two special little ing customer service. basic
Thomas.
boys In· my home 2-3 days data entry and other general
per week. Flexible hours and clerlcai duties. Must have a
da1ts. Also looking for part- good attitude. be ._.ery
~"·"~ -w•··•"I1me housekeeper. Pt ease dependable, friendly and
'' ...... . . ......
~ (740)64 S- trustworthy. Computer skills
caII Tsmmy ~
~--::---:--:--- 2292 or Ange la @ {7 40)446- requir9CI. Resumes must be
~
E
~ L
7268
t d
d
1 · 1
~aborer. arn as ou earn.
JP~ an
pro ess1ona, .
1
IBrt building for future now - -- - - - - - Re resu.me o:
by jOlning our· PrOfessional Personal Care Giver lor
eceptiomst
Team and learn the skills to male . Evenings &amp; nights PO BOX 63 ·
.
become a High Pressure only 740.446-4597 or 304· Gallipolis, OH 45631
Cleaning
Maintenance 593-(}.458
- -- - - - Technician All positions
Retail Managerial Personnel
roqulreweekly TRAVEl out- - -----c-:..,--c- position ·available.
CLA Bo Send
JJU
side of AREA. Company TEACH ING POSITIONS. resumes to
x
.
·
t rans- Th e Me1gs
· caunrv
prov1'de6 lodgmg.
., Board of c/o Gallipolis Tribune, PO
portation, and Per Diem. Mental
Retardation
&amp; Bo)( 469, Gallipoli s, OH
AVERAGE Sta rting wage Developmental Disabilities 45631 Must have valid drivwMh cost of benelits 1 n.clud~ has the following positions ers license, auto insurance
is $205.00 per field day availabl e:
Multiple and drug test required.
worked, with s chance to Disabilities Teacher. Must
advance up to $263.00 per have current valid 0 hlo Scenic Hills Nursing Center
field day worked_ We pro· Department of Education is accepting applications for
·vide paid training and ce rlilicalionflice nsure and STNA's tor eveni ngs and
EXCELLENT BENEFITS. have or be eligible to obtain midnfnhts. ff interested,
Pre-Employment
DRUG Intervention Specialist vall- please!I'
contact
Diana
TEST and a valid Drivers dation in the are a ot Harless at 740-446·7150.
License Is a plus, bu'.,,not Moderate/Intensive educa· EOE
required. WE WILL BE TAK- tional needs.
Early - - - - - - - lNG APPLICATIONS AND Childhood
Special Security OHicers needed io
INTERVIEWING ON JULY Education Teacher. Must New Haven, WV $7.66 per
23 AT THE BEST WEST· have
current
Ohio hour, all shifts. F.T &amp; P.T.
EAN INN. 701WMAINST.,
RIPlEY W.Va. FROM 9':00
A.M. TILL 5:00P.M. Please
Bring two types of idenlificalion With ~~nu
,- . Send work
history and day time pllOne.
number to TECHICIAN
TRAINEE, P.O. BOX 565,
MARIETTA, OHIO 45750
EOE

·I

®

..,

fo

WANm&gt;
To Do

Hlll'WANml

Security Officers needed In Wanted· deanlng jobs, '""
New Haven, WV. $7.66 per · dean houses &amp; offices &amp; will
hour, all shifts, F.T.&amp;P.T. also mow SJllall ya~ &amp; sit
Must have clean record, with elderly at night, In
pasa a drug screen and Rutland, ·
Pomeroy,
The University ol Rio
Grande invites applications background check. Call 1· Middleport &amp; Chester Ohio
for the 'position of secretary 800-275-8359, M·F, 8:30 to &amp; in Ravenswood &amp; Mason
WV. call (74,0)949·2515
to the Dean and facl.ity of 5:00. EOE PNFIDIV
the Sdlool of Uberal Arts - - - - - - - - please klave meSBage
and Sdencas.
The Craig Group needs out·
11\\'\r 1\1
Responsiblities include, but going Ohio resldenta to help
are not limited to general with statewide campaign.
secretarial. clerical,
Each person will make 1to 2 rtO
JluiiNiss

bielor any Olhar debts pther 4 tamly Ju~ 13-14. Rodney
than my own.
Community Center. lots of
baby lteme · and mise,
Opening lor Craftars.Craft tirea/wheets1or F-150 4x4 ·
. .
.
sale Sapt. t 5111 at Llgllthouse
Assembly of God In Garuge
Sale
1314
Gallipolis. $20.00 e !lllece. Neighborhood Rd. Tues
Call0eborah,740·38&amp;3340. 7117-Fri 7120 9-5.

I
r
Lw------.,1.
II-

_.IIItO

to_IIEI_J'_W_ANIID
_

. As o1 July 9th, r Vau11&gt;n L. L--GiiliAUJI'OUSiOiillliiiiio_.l
French will not be responsi- ..,

•P•

ers

/}eatll1iru

Monday-Frld•y for ln•ertlon
In Next Day'• P•per

YARDSA.t.li:

r

~

992-2157

'I KIT &amp; CARLYLE

\'\\(11 \t I \I I \I',

Pets for Sale ........................................ ........ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng ............................. ....... 820
Profeaalonal Services................................. 230
Ir............................... 160
RI dlo, TV • CB R
Real Eltlle Wanted ........... ..........................300
Schoolalhatructlon .......................... ........... lSO
Seed ' Plant &amp; Fertilizer ... ............... ............ 650
Situations Wanted ............. ... - ............... ...... 120
Spec. lor Re nt ............................................. 460
Sporting Gooda ....................... :................... ~~g
SUV's for Sale..............................................
TrucksforSI!IIe ............................................ 715
Upholatery .................................................. . 870
Vans for Sale ................. ..............................730
Wanted to Buy ................ 1... . ........................ 090
Wanted Io B uy- Farm Supp. Ilea .. ................ 620
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180 ·
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
YardSa... Galllpolla ................................ .... 072
Yard Sai•Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
Yard Sai•Pt· Pleasant.. .................:............ 076

IN
THE
COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PRO·
BATE DIVISION MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
COURT MEIGS COUN·
TV, OHIO

Or Fax To

• Start Your Ado With A Keyword • Include Com......
DeecrlptiOn • Include A P~ • Avokl Abbrevlltlon8
• lndude Phone Number And Add,_ When Needed
• Ads StMMikt Run 7 D~

1.....................................................

Public Notice

446-3008

Monday thru Friday
:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m

Nurse Assistants

year e"perience or received a nursing assistant

Or Fax To

O.l,ly ln-Colu~n: 1:00 p.m.

*POLICIES*

Register ·

(740) 446-2342 (74o) 992·2156 (304) 675-1333

•••

~

Websjtes:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel .com
www.mydailyregister.com

Sentinel

Worcl Ads

Help Wanted

certificate of lraining or be state tested nursing
assistant

~ribune

To Place

Help Wanted

Pleasant Valle y Hospital i s
accepting applications for pur;uing
assi stants to provide home care to
clients residing in M eigs. Mason. Gallia and
Athens Counties. Applicants should have one

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

WANTED: Part-time position
available to assist an individual
with mental retardation in Shade.
3-12pm M!Tu/W. Must have high
school diploma or GED, valid
driver's license, three years good
driving experience and adequate
automobile insurance. $7 .50/hr.
Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box 604 Jackson, OH 45640
or e-mail to
beyecserv@yahoo.com.
Deadline for applicants: 7/20/07.
Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.
·Help Wanted

Meigs County, OH

Gallia
County
OH

.

Help Wanted

ste

Must have clean record,
pass a drug screen and
baCkground checK. Call t 800·275·8359, M-F 8:30 to
5:00 EOE M/FION
·

JUDGMENT?
Did you collect it? We
www.oaliDo~~e~reerconege.com
specialize in the
~~~~~e:. 1~,;,~ c~= enforcement of judgments.
and Sehoul&amp; 121&lt;tB.
CaM us to see how we can
a.•.........,., . . ... .. ..:vu ....
assist ou at 740-388-8247
1 ,.~r.,vu;,
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAl. SECURfTY /SSt?
3 piece crib set, tight oak in No Fee Unless We Win!
color&amp; goOd cond.. crib
t -~·562·33&lt;15
w/mattress. weudrobe &amp;
chest, when purchased paid
ld \ I I " I \ I I
$, 000. asking $200. far iiiiiii=;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
complete set Call 304-458H~
2047 after Som .
L--oii'OIIiiliioiiSA.t.li:iiiii;;.•
·

I

ll76

I

riO

IUKJ

WANJ'ID

To Do

A·OK-Corrala &amp; Barns
Metal Roofing, Shingles,
Concrete,
R,modelin~,
Decks,
Pole
Barns,
Garages.Free estimates Call
304-633-1230
- - -- - - - G80fge's Portable Sawmill,

don1 haul your L~s to the
Milt just call304-675-1957.
Guitar lessons-Instructor
Larry Roush available lor
'summer lessOns. 740-4460947
- -- - - - -Lawn mowing. Rates by the
lOb. not the hour, Free
Estimates. Call Paul @
(304)675-2940.
-------Lawn-Care Service, Mowing
&amp; Trimming. Call (740)441 1333 or 1740)645•0546
Mature. female will babysit in
my
smoke- free hOme.
Ft ex1'bt e hours. Da·l1Y or
wee kly rates. Reterence6
available. 304-674·3251
-------Michele's Daycare now
· ages t 8 mon ths
accepting
to.13 yrs., Hours Mon-WedFn 6am B
pmTues· &amp; Thurs
Sa~
· to
pm.
5
R tland/Hanisonville Eire~
~~ { )
ask for
740 698 0214
ca
M. h I
.
IC e e

FIND AJOB OR ANEW CAREER
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

0 Down Mn with kiss than
perfect credllls availablit on
this 3 bedroom. 1 bath
home. Corner lot. fireplace,
modern kitchen, jacuzzi tub,
Payment around $550 per
month. 740·367-71 29.
___ __ _ __
3 Bedroom . 2 Bah
t ,
Fireplace, 40x60 Barn,
PleaseniVeMey Ad near Rio
Grande. _ acres available
18
f
1
1
585 000
h:~~;g9· 11:6
,
.
4 BR hoose. 2.5 baths, 1
acre, 1 car garage, gazebo,
motor
home
hookup.
Morning Star Ad in Racine.
Asking $1 35,000. Call 225·
264·10SS
5 room house and ground

1 740 -379 -22

loMov e tn on t he d~ you pay
r r.

~

5bd
21&gt;1
Golllpoll•
Foreclolurel Buv for
$&amp;1,11001
5%dn,
20yrw01%. Moro hornM
from 1Ht9imol For local
llaUngo coli BD0-559-41 09
xF:!M
Attention!
local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
grams for you to buy your
home tnltNd of renting.
• 100% financing
• Less than perlect credit
acceptEKI
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Loca tors.
Mor tgage
1740)367·0000

�Friday, July 13, 2007
,ALLEYOOP
llioutitul

~

style-2• bed- ' Older lrame home. 3BR .
room, 2 bath, 2 car garage, 1BA, LR, DR, Galley
basement,
2 112 acras 3 miles 1mm kitchen.
f'llint Ploasam on Rt 62~..25acres, C/lJheat Call .
Motlva1ed Seller. Jlovlng 446-6271
lrorn Ares. All oiler&gt;~
ored $128,000 304-e75· Syracuse4235
bdrom, 2
Beautifui·Middlepor1 home!
38R. 2BA. full basement.I
112 car garage with a room
above. Many NEW features!!
Must see this onel 740--4161548

Gt
- ·...

All tell t1tltt ldYirthlng
in thlt IMWIIN'J* II
tubjtct to the FedtNI
Fslr Housing Act of 1168
wlllcll- .,..,.,to
ptiiiiiiiGI, tlmhltton Of

d*rtrNnstlon -.ct on
· COlor, ~'&amp;ion....
t.mitllsl ltaltus Of ndonlll
CH'igtn, or .-.y lnlltniiDn to
-

miiM any such
pt .... lla, llmltatlon or

dltcrimlnollon."

.•__.. .

knowlntlyoccop1

eltete which II In
vlolltlon ot the IIW. Our

, ,..

,

~

ct.olllnp-ln
11\iii'IIWtPII*AA
• •••11.._ on sn eq1111l

--11y-.

tor sale by owner, 5 room &amp;

:;:~~m':, ca"':~::':.'::

From $1,800 cfown
-

.,~

MolluFOR

.,.....

~
~7 ~ 00 a

.

SPECIAL FHA FINANCE

lms &amp;
ACREAGE

I. r~

r•o

Must see to apputclate.
Asking $19900. 740.4460826 or64fr.1296
..,

2007 Clayton

The Home Show
Alhland, KY
8881128-3428 .

2007 Cl _....n
ur•v

SBR/3BA 2000 Sq.Ft

A'""""

llrua
FOR RliNf

FOR RliNT

..lllJU . .

=

-""1111

WfO Hookupe, Ffee wtre1eaa depoatt ~ references, no
Interne~ (740)845-4946
pet&amp;, (740)992-01116

Ho"'..

2BR near- Rio G/Drande,haa
trtdge. stove, W • water,
trash
sewer 2BR In
$17&gt;1/mot Buy 3bd HUO GatltPous haa · ~ldge/II&lt;Ml.
homo! 5%dn, 20yra 0 8%.. 0Uot areas. No pets. Ref.
For lllllnga 600-559-4t01 Req. 740-446-1 271 or 7091701
"
•
1857

New

28A

w..tter/dryor

apartment&amp;

hookup:

AI.,..

I

Tara
Apartmenls. v.yTownhouse
Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
dryer, large wrap around
Bs!h, Aclil Pool 1 Bsloy
porch, 1u11 basement, 1 car 30opBr.,'!'5t::: ~PI: Pool, Palio, S1art $425/Mo.
garage, tolal elac1rlc wl1h
., ·
.
. No Pots, LeaS8 Plus
central air. very spaciOus , . Racine. 740-247--4292.
Security llepoolt Required,

$250-$600.
(740)367-neo
- ---..,--:-Red Reg. percenlago boer
blly goalS. 75% $125. 50%

FRANK &amp;EARNEST

Guttering

~=~~==:==~~~~~~~=~

Insured &amp; Elondlld
L::7:40-653-==965=7=~

r

Stanley Tree-

..'

lirlmming
&amp; Removal

S1ar1ng at $33.00/sp.H.I
NO DOWN 1'1\YMENT
1o qualified
The
Homeboyers.
Show-

--'II

r'•

c

••'

BARNEY

•'

I

'.•

OL.NE
OYL

'
. '

.

.'

"

CARPENTER

SERVICE

Full Service Auto Repair
Oil Change, 1\me-Up, Engine
Diagoostic's, Full Brake Service, Air
Conditioning Red!arge &amp; Repair,
. AUgnment, CustOm Exhaust

r

'"''Yi8

Rocky Hupp-0,..,...

ot.--

.......
2008

'-

==- -- - -

j

I

porches .

A.LO~R!

•

Pomeroy Eagles
Club 2171
Annual Picnic
and Golf Outing

Sunday, July 22
8:30a.m.
Limited to 40 golfers
Must sign up by 7/15
Free Food &amp; Beverages
to Eagles Members
Covered Dishes
Welcomed
Motorcross Race
$at. 7114107
6:00PM
Mason Co. Fairgrounds
At. 62 N. Pt. Pleasant, WV
(Practice 3:30PM)

Send Resume To:
P.O. Bolli 303
Gallipolis, OH
Attention: Mike
Tunica, Mississippi
THE GRAND CASINO
September 5·7, 2007
$295/person
Based on double occupancy
Includes flight, hotel accom·
modations, luggage &amp;transfers
Pnvate je11eaves lrom Cha~eston, WV

Must be 21 years of age
Cash, credit cards, chstks, money
orders and payroll deduction
accepled. No refunds
LIMITED SEATS!
To make reservations please
call PVH Community Relations:
(304) 675·4340, ext. 1326

Mizway Tavern

79 1 ton Cab &amp; Chassis, 8:!
Chevy Plct&lt;up, 62 Chavy
St.,.ns 28ga. Single banel Van. Call after 5pm
sho"- gun. model 940A. (740)446-3243. (740)446-

PeANUTs

..
'
)

533-3870

j~

!

7

• New Homes
; Garages

'

H1 ll s Selr
Storage

-

FOR,...,_

Ir
:==~==~~I
M&lt;mJ11s
•

David Lewis
740-992-6971

CKC I:Aacll
Cocker
Spaniel
pup- 2000 Hondo 350 Ranohor.
pies
&amp; buff
304-1l754243
Electric shift, gen)~ ' rode,
a&gt;cellen1 C»r1di11on, $2400.
For sale 2 Cocbtelts M&amp;F. Call 740-245-5934
,.;1f1 cage &amp; misc. $120.00 - - -:-=-'7-:--:-call304·5t2-9371 or 1·256· 2005 H.O. Road King

~Ide
ca~
~ ·
· ~•·

Sleeps 4-li

Manley• a

$5900. Gallip area. 740·
245-9214 or 645-0&amp;73

"~Yellowstons
·-~·"·- · ···~
740 ·
97
travel trailer
~"~::
256-::.:6.::
138:.:...__ _ _ _
AT
CHESHIRE: 2004
Nomad-North Trail 34' with

Extended section.
Camper nearly as new,
606-1198.
Custom Deluxe wl··backrest 51 2,500 Neg. Call David,
and windshield. 2700 actual
...
For sal~ Beagle hound pup- miles. $IS500.-645_7441
{606)571-9448, Mussell, KY
pies, tJHOior, makl &amp; _ __:._·
' I 1~' I( I "
tamale, more Info. (740)742· 2005 H.O.Fat Boy custom .,,..._ _ _ _ _.,

.Recycling

ARIES (M- 21-Aprll 19) - Yaw to
rMke a new beginning when It comee to
ettuaflOnl or people who hav. been
~

wfambossed

sage
lla'mes, 1 of 200 made,SOO
lab ~ puppi es for Sale miles
since new,prlce
Wormed &amp; shots. 7 wke , $19,000 OBO call for
bloc!&lt; &amp; ·brown 304-895· delalls-740-949-2217.
3274 or ~ - 593-3702
2005 Honda 250 Recon, 2
Must SelL Price drastically wheel drive four wheeter,
reduced. AKC Reg. Shrtzu BKCOIIent shape, hard~ rid·
pupplas for sale. S350 740· den, $2BOO. (740)256·9323
388·8477
or (740)339-0544

_,_,

r10 ~. ...!!~~

amnru-. ~.....,. .. .. ..,

'""·By ·-glng

TAURUS (Apr11 20-Miry 201 - H lo o pro-

I__

I

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF1NG
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. local references fur·
nishect Est ablished 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460670, Rogers Basement
We1erprooli ng.

.. you•

you- lromloolng _.,--.con

hyd.,

--=----

among

your peers could be aubetentlally
enhanced. Thlo ptOIIIge "" put you
In - - - t o r being_,.-..Otyoudldn1toovo-...
CANCER (June 21 -July 221 lnto...tlng -rllllp tranoltionl ... opt
10 plooo during !hie 1lmo lrwme. 'lbu
ooukt '-asked to P'IY a ma111gerlal fda
In HYtJal lltuatlonl. You'll do well handling fNery""" ol!hern.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - 11 belooovos
~ to get in touch with two or three lndlvlduall who have been hoiplul In 1ho
pelt, ...,..,.,~ ff you hove """"""lng on
tho burner In \\'hiCh 1hoy could play •
PI'~- They'l Ill right ln.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 221 - Condition•
are exceptkM ~ally conducive for taking
positive action toward malclng your
. _ and goola o rNilty. H you move
lheael wtth determination ll1d auur·
enoa, good thing~ can happen.
UBRA (Sept 23-0cl. 231 - Don'1 bo
afraid to estabKah some ~ that
are far above your UIUII uplrations,
because you're wry muc:t1 up 101M cha lltnge thotwlll- ywr goola.
SCORPIO (Oct. ...Nov. 221 Kl iOIMtl ~gl you'W acqund In thl pat
- but .,_, ~ bo ...aly
who11a roqulrod to provide ... odgo yoU
need to ldwanca an endeaww ttwt takal
brainpcMef end kncM-how.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 2t) Sometting lnterwtlng could oocurthat, If
put to won.:, can benefll you gru.tly In
material waya. li'val all sffail'l with sn

ooclally.

FINAU-Y, 50MI!! 11M!!!
10 Be ALONE! ...

·

11ery
n..._l
Pulls wl 112 ton •
'4'
"'"

Oool

meet

4

1992 Hanev Davidson
'
•vlow mileage,
Schnauzer
puppies $400. Sprinnar,
•Ro""" 7/21107. 740·3S8· O&gt;coltent s" - , new tires,
937.}'
call anytime, (740)992-6027

speda ~ng. '""" llllo&gt;ube, lhen Cillo tor

tteceUH 1111 a better-lnan-UIUlll time to
new people .no could become
~rtant to you bolh pe1'100811y and

GARFIELD

Boston Terrill' female $150 L..iioillii'~iiiiiiiiioo-il 95 Coachman· 24ft Sltr
740-367·7933
wheeler w/ht1d1 Ind. Dining

:.::::=_:~=--:-:-::--:-AKC R""'slored Miniature

IIIBrted with a llve-oard euH. (With two
spades rsmalntng, East would retum his
~· cartl.) So, lha contrac1 lo ssfa N
South wfn8 II&amp; ,trlctc wltl1 hla

ltnlnc:et.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mort:ll 20) - Ge1 OU1
and drculste In new ....,.,..., It you e~~n ,

111411 mo. pd

AKC Reg.. Blact&lt; Lab
FOR SAlE
Puppies. $150,00... 740-74292 Four winds ctass c rrlotor
2966, It no answer, ptea&amp;e 95 Plymouth van, air, auto V· home. $12500. Call for more
leave message.
6 900 080. 740..256·1652 information. 245-9418 or
MlmiRCY&lt;Ull/ 81 2·201 -3682
AKC reglstared a yr old
_ w~-

from a lhort auh, Eoot'l lf)lde-two
return a1 t11ck two .. flat West

right note with IOI"'"t8t8Ie who aeu things
...aly .. you do.
AQLIARIUS (Je.n. 20-FIIb. 19} - Thel'l
8 1'1 frwh dlangn In thtl wlndl that could
o. quill helpful where your WOfk or
CWMf ts concerned. UN theM fresh
opportun1t1ee to further your potlllon and

26 Years Experience

VANS

pltloul.,_ to put intO action • number of

N-11f-1111S
..
,.,_
.--

idlal you'YI been m•rely puehlng
oroond " your_._Stop ......,piO!Ing
1M p altl \lttiM and get moving on 1M

:FI~~~~-~~!'~~~!-~:II:Il~J
...
- · . . .......
::-:·
.. . . . .
• • _
.................

I Playground

1lhout

........

p...,..

flam

10 lmpolrment
for pllnt
12 Bogi1o11r 45 Walho•lll

60
81 KJc-.ko

17
DtmoiiiMd 45 ......
11 -aldoy
Nh
21 Rocllll
47 Romon

DOWN

22

1 flrollcl

.

43

l't • •
2 T~nnor
31 FM e
- Hogon
Cllflldrll
3 Peollcopt
-.
....
:sz Long ccl:t1 4 crowd In

~10
5 Sa:lucted
33 ~
wllly
34 8uninlta
I Filmli1!111
31 llnDnwe. 11
llllnclpltout
7 lla4td
lltiHa 38 8wfnllull
8 Hit tflb'-

=to-

....

23 ~

45

~::,...

....

4t lt~llt

24 Alpha

.......,

you haYI.
GEMINI (Miy 2f-Juno 20)- tllvo prior·
tty to mattn that tnvoNa your fln1nolal
well-bolng - - lhlo could bo o vwy
flvoratH lime 1D engage In endMYOrw
thtl oan adv.nce your Income or
eolld conoeptl

·;
••

GRIZZWELLS

mourcoo.

SOUP TO NUTZ

~i!~~!
Dltl )bU JU5"f

SEtA

6\~EilS\\EAD
MM-1 ~\'\
~~~~?

_ ,..,...

______ _

,

51 Compel~
53 Caomlc
forc8
Tripoli II 54 DNdly ·
2t Souullla'o
..,...

.,

·-

28 Praently
28 wt.....
~

. 55 B~Wn

30 Shorp blow
35 Mind XL
37 Get 1W1Y

..,..,_,
,.

'

two, tha original doclarar

......., on a handshake, have the potential
o1 1oot1r&gt;o1 o long time . 'lbu'lt hK fut1 tho

740-MII-2217

Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

21 CuiUtfllll
lliiiMnl

hie apat1o lick. Woo! winning
wl1h hie queen and cllaltng the """·
South Jilt ... clt.CIIult, brlr9ng rNy•
one down 1o ftW card~. but WNI clacaidtd well, Mljllng two tplldllllllclln
tempo bltrrldng 1111 hesrt ~ng. When
diCialor lhen trted the hesrt ,._,
Woot lOOk the trlctc and Cllhod two
tplldlllor doWn one.
''Sorly,' eald ~- 'Maybe I ol1ould
flao.oa guesaed thai West had como down
to a llngloton hesrt tWig.' Do you 19ft?
Unloeo Woo! hU made a llllnge load

l1fl toward bt.lslneU lnd u a means 10
rnoldngrnonoy.
CAPRICORN (Osc. 22-Jsn. 19) ~ and prumllet you moko,

,

lloA'IS &amp;

I

.

..

SUNSHINE CLU8

Racine, Ohio
4sn1

FOR8Au:

i

\

-·

29670 Bashan.Road

Various guns tor ssle. Call 19911 Mercury Mounta-r. ·--iiiiiiiiio-rl
tor iyp&lt;IS and prices, 245- 4WO. 102,000 miles, E&gt;c. 40 HP Mercury Outboard
9416or8t2·201-31182
Cond.. Sunrool, - • r
Conlrols and
l'Eili
Laa1her Seats, $6200
FOR SAu:
. 740 245-0344 ausr 5:

0528. no answer leave rnes- maroon

Pool Tournament every Thurs pm
Karaoke Every Fri. 9 pm
Saturday July 14th
9 Year Anniversary Party
K &amp; D DJ &amp; Karaoke Services 9 pm

SUVs
~ .. ~

~-·

J

EKCOient Plus $210. Also 1!4338tlr-""'::::'::::"'--,

BaU
t/2 740pint
greenperfect
jar. ...Masoo
rce $185.

TJ.IEN A VOICE SA'iS'TD ME!T(.IIS 15
60tN6 W TAKE M011.E TAAN ONE NliHT"

SOI&gt;\ETIMES I UE AWAKE f:J N16~, AND
I ASK!W(.IfRE HAVE I 60NE WRON6?"

·I

Stnp &amp;Compare

At trick

8y llomloe -

70 Pine Slftet • GaUipoUs
446-0007

J'••e ...,
-&amp;·1m

57 Sllrdlno
halclar
5I Clear.

fanriod

-

Your charisma and domlnlnce

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

P•modeling

se r..

tne..

. CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Clm(IDI .
n.t:M:t\1111.-ln ciJNr
Jot nlllr.

Colltdy Cli'W Oii*90IO

M _ , ....._._ pU

N

aiCII

INi-

Torlly'8 cu:X eqt/0 K

"NAWKTSP OTRXK (MB T AMHG
AERK) FWC

DZG

AGWCD

NOIIYAGUC. WIDGO

MB UK

W FZTAG

RMEAI ZWHG NZIISGI OTRXK

T
TS . '

·IGCT WOSWJ
PREVIOUS solUTION - 'Painting is so poetic, while sculf)IUra Is more
logical and sclentlfk: andrnakas you worry abo&lt;.t gravity.' · Damian Hinll

. ..
WOlD

lloluodoy, ""'" 14. :j007

REPO'!i Allen BUILDINGS-HUGE SAVINGS. 2006

lnquiftoOnty. eon
TOO., I
866-33-1-1&gt;469

20

W~r:f!,

BIG NATE

&lt;7tunihJ··~.~£"t'l'!1r!:ij!P.!j":

• Complete

~~Rod, wllh

"out"
15 Nalollclwocl 41 llunch
11 llenu
50 Not .....
he l'hO
52 ,_port
11 Hot pi8Ca

~Astro-

•

We Deliver To You!
• Home Oxygen
• Portable 'Oxygen
• Hometill System
• Hellos System

-.tel

Jctn Ounf1er, ajoumalel and 1111 who chclln 1970, pointed out thai Counl
HormaM Koyaorllng (founder of lha
St:hool of In 1820) onco lllld
lhallha (10Meal- .......
-bollelinllctl.
Rlllha ---IC!dtr! ! a l i t and 1811 Ffltlly lha 13th altha jill'. Meal
. . . who, ...... dill, ll'f lhallhay
""' "'*'&lt;::iy - nol. Unillr the mlctoIQOPI, thly m'lf'I)WI or ~tdld.
In thtl dill, South " In throe no-tru-...
WN1 lofldl 1111 flltrtl1.l1lghM IPidl to
EIII'IICI, and lht epedl twoCOIMI tly·
lng blc:k. HOw ohould South plan lha
play?

&lt;Unmy'a speda nina. WN1 may lab his
lhrae tilcktl In lha suit, but muat than
load Into one of daclaret'l rackutl holdIngs. conceding a ninth trick.

r'!i

RDuoediSeri0118

a-&lt; '(QUit.

Reliable &amp; Experienced
Call Dennis Bryant
(74()) 742·23n

--=-·=-=-

3 Left.ll5'lr4a'x4o'xs6'
No-ble Olrer

&amp;.cor-\IW:. ~LEt&gt;

:lUCCE~!

and SidewalkS.

Ellm VIew
Apartments·

Bartender And
Bar Manager
Positions Needed

~T

•

All concrete flatwork

including· patios, driveways

-Stratu--.-.

Chevy Colorado,
Almos1 New, Warranty, 1300
miles, PS, PB, POL, Keyless
Emry, 4&lt;2. Can after 4pm,
(740)446-2415

~oo ~t:..ljeR "'E:E.t&gt;to w~?

"SIC.I·\... 11~ !-lOT (M'{ &amp;I~~

tum

r;:~7;42:·;-23~3~2:;.:;~

CONVENENTLY

\

Jo« Blutll, Mia...,-

construction on
key, single
hOUSeS anO duplexes, garages,

1

•

LOSER

. ConlraCI9r1Vallllble for quaUiy

.Construction

HUGE

THE

I

J&amp;L

toado9·to--"""'!

..

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

r-----.,..-'1

N«&lt;li Eul
Allpw

SNT

A IUpt~ltloul day
for an unlucky deal

..

SeamtessGunero
Roofing, Siding, Gutters

.. ,.

Pus

Opening lead: • 7

740--416-1698 .

H&amp;H

Apl..haaWID, NoPots,Oep. Gorgeous Palomino Mare,

Wa1er~rashlsewar740-682·
paid,

740--992--5929

740-387-o536

·-v-•

Weal

!.NT

48

Doctor

211...,..
27 ltoult

Vuloerable: Neither
lliul~

41 ICMnol

=.-r 44=1ho

13 Oriinllh
14 8cHI

=

• Q 10 5 I

All types.;, concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

pnva1e dnve wl1h parldng. 4RM &amp; Bslh. atovo ,lridgo, (740)448-348 1•
·
Craftsman Riding Mowar,
$1 '100 per monlh, serious utill11as paid, up..,;lrs, 46
.
t6HII. Kohler Engine. « *Prompt and Quality
calls only (740)949-2303
01!1'8 St. No peta. 1Win
Riven! Towertor
Ia aa:opt·
Inch
"'ork
porch wl1h railing with
1ng app~ca~~o~
wolllng
t cut, $500. (740~n•
10
75 2
French doors, bade rpatio,
2 BR house In Kanauga. $,450/month. 448-39-45
tilt fol Hud-subslzed, 1· br,
*Reasonable Rates
concrete lnground pool,
Aahland, KY
$425/month + $4251...._•
•n-·~r,lor
lha
••• 4•~
...,....,
~- •·~·
*Insured
15~~: 30, new flIter. new pump,
and utlities. 441-2707
elderly/disabled call 875A
.
small porch on bacll wllh - - - :--:-::---. 6679 . Equal
Houolng
~~.
• *Experienced
sliding doors, new central
.2007 Doubtewkle
3 Bedroom House ln
Oppor1unity
,.
Lw--·-~~~.....,_iiii;;._.l References Available!
heat &amp; cooling, road
3BR, 2BA,
Syracuse. $500/month +
..,
C II G S 1 @
lronlaga 1.28 &amp; ac., carpo~. Delivered &amp; Ss1 $39,999. deposH No Pat!l. (3041675!hO!
-~1988 Pontiac Grand Prix,
a
ary tan ey
lree gas. 3 gas wens.
l1le Home Show,
5332 weekend ~ 740·591 ·
MIRRiiNT
. also a riding lawn mower.
740--742-2293
1740)992·5818, 112 mile off
Ashland, Ky.
0285
::1
Ask tor Jr. Phone 256-)-102
Please leave messa e
Kingsbury, $120,000
T,;i- lreo 988·928·3426
A HIDDEN :rREASUREI COmmercial building 'For - - - - - - - 3 bedroom, 2 tun baltl, 2 Laurel
Commons Rsn1" 1800 oquantloe1, oil t994 Plymouth Acclaim,
For salo/land contract. 3 BR
story houee, hall acre yard, Apartments. Larges1 In tho 6, _ ~ Gras! loco- 75000 rnlleo. ~ Go-It
YOU NG'S
house In Gallipolis, WID
2007 Dooi:Aewide
lUll ba8emem, oentral ale, areal Beoutlfutly ranoveted lklnl
Third A......, In car. Exc. Condl $2500 OBO.
749
connec11on $1500 dOwn
3BR. 2BA,
hardwood !loon!, plenty ~ lhroughout lncludng brand Gallipotll. Rent $325/mo. Moving "'""""" &amp; MUST
$400/mo 01 rent $475/mo. Deliveredlset$39,999. parking, $735 per month, now kitchen and both. CaiiW-(404)4580002 SEUI.Cal .740-794-0290·.
AEo 1 BR In Gallipolis $750
The Home Show,
(740)949-2303
S1ar10ig at
_Call todayl
'
5405
Room Addlllone a
down · $200/mo or rent
Ashland, Ky.
Pnmt Comm-lpaoo loi 1998 Eagle Talon 920® . Rem
J ling
4 bedroom, 2 otory house, (3041273-3344
$250/mo.Colt Wayne 404T,;l- ~.. 888·928·3426
rent at l!prlngwfloy Plaza. miles, 1 owner. Excelleht
-Qorqn
.
456-38021or Info.
very speclaos &amp; dean, new Accep11ng apptlcallo&lt;~ tor 2 CaD 645-2192.
coudltlooo $4000 IIOGOilal&gt;lo. Eleotrlal l PlUMbing
carport, large bedroom, eat· BR, 1 BA apt, S10Va, fridge,
245·5466
-lGUIIOrO
HUD HOliESt 3bd oniJ B4 Schul1z. 3 BR, 1 112 BA. In kltchon with new cabinets, WID lno&gt;uded. Water &amp;
~------- VInyl Biding l Polnllnfl
P.tlo lnCII Porch DHII.I
$21 ,900. - . t-4bd $7500 _339-4510 a"er 5pm. $665 per month, (740)949- GarbaUe paid. No pef!i.
I
1998 Olda 66, 4 Door,
Wv0311725
11omeo ovalleblol lfom
2303
nice, clean &amp; al1rac11V8.
'~
St995, (740)882-751Q
V
C
YOUNG Ill
1
Stlllllmol
5%dn, 93 Clayton 2 Bd., 2 bath
$500/mo, 1st mo + $500 .,_ _ _
...........
~---'
20yno08%. For tlottntJI
. A-t.
Sec.dep. required. Available
200t Ford focus $3200.
1 dish sh
' '
range, re "
wa sr, new Local company ollonng "NO
--43
304-882-3338
BONB-4108 xF144
carpet, mint cond. $11 ,500 DOWN PAYMENT" pro- 7/18107. Apply nmoln. 17
For sale: Kitchen range &amp; - - - - - - -In Point Pleaasnl, 2 BR, full Firm. Sertoos calls only.740- grams for I"" 10 boy you• CantOflBry Rd, Gallipolis. No hOOd $250, 2 mep!O bar 2001 JNp Grsnd Cherokee
basemem, gamge. No Land 645-0072,or.740-441·9320. homo instead of renting.
. Phone Calls l"'easestools $35, GIOI cabinet Larado, Good Condition,
1125
7
Contracts 740-388-9309 or
' ·100%llnanclng
Apartment tor rent. 1·2
' Cafl 40-441-821l9
Low Milas, $950(1, (740)845304-{)75-4317
Great used 2005 3 bedroom • Lesa than perfect credM Bdrm., rarnodelod, ,_car- Full Sla - . . 1 BIS, 8328
pel, stove &amp; trig .• water, 51110. Solo lt.ovoseM sets ,._-,-:-~--=-=-=
In Syracuse - · 2800sq.ft. 1exso with vlnyVahlnglo. accepted
Muat
sell,
On~
$25,995
wl1h
•
Payment
o:ould
be
the
sewer.
truo11 pd. Mlddoport. 1400: Dr1v11 a t1t11a- save ~ 2004 Ford Muatsng GT,.5 VInyl Sid""'
quaii1y_oom ~ bricl&lt;
delivery CaH 1740)385-4367 same as mnt.
$425.00. No Pets. Rot. lo1 Mottohan 202· Clark """"',leathor,52kmltes,teat •
"'"
home, maintenance Jree.
Mor1gage
Locators.
required.
740-843-5264.
Chill*
Rd,
8fdwolt.
_
her.
~ras
•Wiilepn~dowiiCII
ment
388
Nice qulol neighborhood. 340_l37_"'"'"'__
4 bedroom~ 2 112 bath wl1h
(7401367-oooo
o173
L.
to-'lsi._Cal_•_l7_
-.alul
Apll.
Roofing
hardwood trim throughout
For renl or tor asle 2 BR Eotat... 52 Wootwootl Konmora smooth-top .ango 2008 Toyola Malrlx tsqotl • DICb
NEW
4 Bed
u-sh8Jied ki1chen wl1h 40' of
Nice Remodeled Homo In Drive, trom $385 lo $660. VII DV!1n. Laea lhan 1 yr Old. mltoil. Exc. Cond. 81111 under
cabinets. Wood burning ftretown. No Pols, Renoveted; 740-448-2668.
Equal While, greet condition. warranty. Powor ......-ythlng. • Ga"gil
place. 2 112 car detaChed
All · now carpel, Can Housing Opportuni1y. This Movtng.....-..andMUST $17000. Moving overuu. •Polel!lulldlnga
garage. Nicely landocaped
(740)446-7425
lnsll1utlon Is an Equal SELl! $350 080 Cd 740- MUST SELL! . Call 740- o i1oo!n Addtltons
60 .acres lot. lmmaciJiate
-Opportunity Provider and ~rij~a;;~S] 794-o2tiO
Ownw:
condition. Low utilities.
In Pomeroy HOOJI!O tor rentl 3 Ernployel.
- ---:--:-:-:-:-:-::::::
~lng pllc:e $219,000. Call
Bd.,2 belh. newly r es Ponllac Sunii-e $1500 JamuKeeHell
740·441-5171. Shown by
T
1•121"11 eled. lolal eleotrlc. 740-943LOCAT·
080.
98 Cavaler
5284.
ED I AFFORDABLE!
OBO. 01
Cavolor $2200
$3650
mymldw..thomt.c:om
"""' only.
Townhouse
apartments,
Coupon
080.
OQ
GT
Mustang $7000
11500
J
, _ _ _ _ _ _. .
MOIIIUi Hot.ml and/or small houses FOR
oeo. 251H! 69
1
Middleport-In town, out ~
FORRiiNf
RENT. Call (740)441·11tt
Hoi'MIOilllotl
$35AScoop
llood plana Briel&lt; Home New 3 Bedroom homes lrom ~~--iiiiiiiiii;,..,t. lllr appllcanon &amp; lntormalion. Top QualltyNiananty Milton aut
- o.- e-lr-.- - 51500
E&gt;celent Location. .6 Aero '"14.3S per month. lrdudes '
Flea Mid SIS 1106-326-0m 99
T-Post
6ft. $3.29
••c: Very n1ce.
OBO. 740-256-1233
Ap&gt; 4000 sq ft 8Rms 3 Br 2 -many upgrades, delivary &amp; 2 Br , ~
Wide
Variety
ol
112 B1h 2 fire Places 2· sst-up. (740)385·2434
Johnson Mobile _Home Pari&lt;.
JET
COOK M&lt;JIORS
Lawn
Seed,
Garages Lois ol Slorage.
740-446-2003 or 446-1409
AERATION MOI'ORS
Jad&lt;8on Pike GaDipolla
Details Call 740-992-4197.
Repaired, New &amp; RebuiD In 328
•
Fertilizer and
3 BA MH in Cheshire. Total •2&amp;3 bedroom apartments Stock. Gall Ron Evans, 1• Quality cars, trucks and
New Haven, 4+ acres, 3 br.,
Showmasler
Show
800-S37-9S2B
vans with warranty. 2002
elec .
$425/month
+ •Central heat &amp; NC
2 ba , lolal elect., gas log
$425/deposit and utilities. •Washer/dryer I'\OO!wp
Focus 43,015 mNes $3900.
fireplace, lng., s1ove. &lt;fish- =:--:::-:-:--:-== 441 -2707
NEW AND USED !mEL 19911 Tracker $3500. Many
•Tenantpayae~ric
washer, hot tub outside, OIC Modular (LXM503}
S1eol Beams, Pipe RobOr otllers In stock. Stop or can
great
view,
$53,000, special
order
only Beautiful River View In
(304)882-3017
For
Conaete,
Angle, 740-446-0103
304882-3021,740-441·9331 5Z.840.00delivered to your Kanauga- ldeal ~for 1 ·O f 2
Channel, Flat Bar, Sr~
,
location. Cole'a Mobile people, references, No pets,
Grating
for
Drslrl'; Uvely'a Auto Sslso._ _911
New Haven, 4+ acres, 3 br., Homo 4 miles East ol loc. s mL from Gavin.
OrNowayo &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l Hyunda Elantra SW, 4cyl.
2 ba., total elect.. gas log Athens on R1 50132. PH: (740)441 -0181
Scrap Metals Open Monday, au1o w/00, $1000. 91 Ford
fireplace, frig., stove, dish· 800-4e6-4687 Of 592·1972. - - - - - - - Tueoday,
Wednesday
&amp; Ranger
V6, $1000. · - - - - - · ·
washer, hot tub outskte, M·F. 8·7, Sat. : 9 to 4. MobNe homes for rent , - - - - - -Friday, Bam-4:30pm.
Clceed
368-9300PU,
9 to3.0
7 M·Sst.
great
view,
$53,000, ~where you gel your Middleport area, no 1J9te, Modem 1 Bedroom apt. Call
Thursday
_ I Saturday &amp;
TRUCKS
304882-3021,740-441 ·9331 money's wonh" •
(740)992-5858
446-0390
Sundoy. (740)448-7300
,
FOR 8.uE
s1ove, lreezer, new lron1

Co-11~1111

"'24 '11ot11v

Dealer: South

F-EIII-

raforauces. 740-992.0185. ~
2 bedrporn executive house, 2BR apta, 8 mi rrom Holzer. &amp;
~::::::::::::.:.7=::.:=
~ M••Alire. ·~~patoloosarldo,
~-

new cons1rucllon
, tully turniShed,
new rolrigerator,
$400/mO+dep.

70 Pine Street • Oallipolis
740-446-0007 ToO ·Free 877-66!1--41007

7 411-367--()544

L~------·
7 AOHA ........,ored Quanor

-

40

23 'N:Oadmt· 58 Sannllldn

A KJ s
or A Q 8
+AJ 7

&amp; .DICAL EQUIPMENT

LIICIII Contnlc:tor

s1owlrefrlgerator Included. Honles tor ssle or lnlda. Cal
Also, unlla on SR 160. Pols after 7pm. 740-21!6-8003
Welcome! (740)441.0194. • - - - - . , - - - New Havon 1 Br. Fumllhed Gontle2yroldQua~orf'llny.

81,., dishwasher, washer &amp; 9243 or 988-6130

I 7
• Q II
•AKJIS
Weol
Eul
• Q 10 8 7 4
A AI
or K 5 I
" J 10 .81 2
+K 5I
+ 10 9 8 I
• 72
•&amp;a

{]tuniJ1J (t)$1dl:.

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

07-!H'I

or

•MONTHLY OXY:GEN-VISITS

Kiefer - - Valley-Bison·
and
Uvestoct&lt;
Trill~·
. Loadmu- .
Gooooolo&lt;:t&lt;. Oo!)'lPO, &amp;
U11111y·
Aluminum
.....,. B&amp;.W Gooaei18Ck
Hitches- Trailer . ~,._
Cormlchael
n.llora.
(740)448-2412

~

~~ ~

;'SERVICE-•
FREE. DELIVERY
.

=-Rat~~
E~
(7&lt;10)44&amp;-241 2.
:::-c-·~---:::--

i

SALES -

=tie

39-

IOUnd
42 .......

bird

Roof/IIIJ, Siding,
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
Sofflr, Decks.
menta. lurnl8hOd 4"d untur- ........,... ' .
.,
·
Doom, Windows,
nlshed. and houoea In ~ .,.., .. ,~Pomeroy and Middleport, paid. dspoolt &amp; '"""'ICSO·
Electric, Plumbing.
SICUfity depoatt req.jred, no no peta. (740~..0165
New Holland 273 tqu•e
Drywall,
·
pets, 740-992·2216.
Middlopoot Nortt141h Avo., 2 baler, good COndHIOO. RemcxleHng, Room
Additions
1 BR Apt in Spring valey, br. tumlahed opor1men1, ~$27Nr00;;;·.;.740-..,.25&amp;&lt;,...,."".22--,

I

• Nactumol

11

z

Houolng ()ppom.Qiy. .
l'l!macutole 2 bocllopm
New corjoet •
- 1 1 , traohly pointed &amp;
docora1ed, WID _
hoOkup.
Beautiful country sectlng.
Mull oeo to appraclale.
$400/mo. (6141585-7773 or
1-800-788-4686.
. - - . . ·Bsedl Sl 2 t.

hoW

::::local+

1 11111 2 " - -

I

Al'lumiENrs

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom ~
lor Rent, MeigS County, In
town, No Pill, Depoatt
Required, (7401992·5174 or
(740)441.0110.

1982 FioS1a 14 X 70. 3 Br., t
..
baltl. Good Condition. 304· 2 trailer lo1s lor rent near
773-5525 aHer 1 P.M.
Racine, $250 &amp; month,
(740)992-2458
1990 Clay1on MH, loco1ed at
157 Green Terrace, can 5 Acres Mil. along Old
leave MH
!hero
a1 CoYerad Bridge A&lt;!-Located
lch In Ewlngton, Vinton County,
141
S /month lol rent wh
OH. CaD 606-353-0990
lnclude6 .wa1erllrqsh. newly
remodeled, new carpet, new 55 acres mof'l or leu,
GE stove and fridge, FP, 2 $69,000. Cal 740-256-9247
la'lfO BR w/ 2 lull BslhS.

5BAI3BA 2000 Sq.FI.
S1artlng at $33.00/sp.ft.l
NO DOWN 1'1\YMENT
to qualified buyers.

Phillip
Alder

Pnqwn $0 Down, ff you Trailer lor ...-., 3 bedlllam., Bedroom ~- ot Vlltogo
own Land or use Family 2 balh, , _ - 1400 o Manor oi&gt;d - - Apto. ln ~ Fl,..ng- 36
Land We own thoBank yoo- _IIIQfllb, .M® ...®lm!L-.,..n, from $32,...w -lllloto ApprOYOd 606-4 74-113110
(740)992·2~
$5112. 740-1192•5064. E&lt;JJol 0oere Trau..., 111mo &amp;

I. r

underpinning. Has front
and bacf( porch, 2 metal out
buildings 8&gt;10 and 14x20.

ACROSS

1117 or 304-6IIG-8101 A.., 5pn

Go ;I

,

NEA Croaaword Puzzle
•

BRIDGE

Nk:e c1eon 2 t.. 1 bo. 1n aoqgo ..... ~ 11w, luly
, _ . -...._ $4!11l\ooo!"
Harttord, dol&gt;- I . rfll. _...._ - · - 10Wb np;;;;;;;;~;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;j

Soon (740) 828-275()
.

The Daily Sentinel • Pipe 87

Nice 2 BR turnlined tiolor FurnllhoOI Apt, 2nd Avo,
water paid, no peta. GeHipona, Upetelrs, 1
$375/month + $375/depoolt. Bsdooom. No Pato. All Ulll·
Cal4&lt;11-oe:dl
tloopeld.(740)448-11523

NANCING

QWN
A
Nlce3/2 ~

baautllul 4
bath house,

This nn..,.,., will not

lldvertiHti'ICiftb for ....

EA

~.------

secluded, yet close 1o
"""""" 1 _ ,, Iorge above
groond pool w/dodt, call
now won'1 laS1 long,
(7401992-2&gt;129

r

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www.mydallysentlnel.com

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someone else think that

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make

both of

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Comple"' lho d!uclolo
by fllllrov In lho missing - •
· !'0• d....,lop from ..P No. 3 btlaw.

~ PRINT NUM8E RED l l ITERS I

'&lt;# IN THESE SQUARE S

I

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UNSCRAMBlE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
•

·

·

SCRAM-lm ANSWERS
Appeal - Embed - Hutch - Shield - HELP THEM
Gramps 1o yotmgster, "Don't tell your friends anything ·
neg8tive:·Tell them only thingsthat will HELP THEM." -

ARLO&amp;JANIS

�Friday, July 13, 2007
,ALLEYOOP
llioutitul

~

style-2• bed- ' Older lrame home. 3BR .
room, 2 bath, 2 car garage, 1BA, LR, DR, Galley
basement,
2 112 acras 3 miles 1mm kitchen.
f'llint Ploasam on Rt 62~..25acres, C/lJheat Call .
Motlva1ed Seller. Jlovlng 446-6271
lrorn Ares. All oiler&gt;~
ored $128,000 304-e75· Syracuse4235
bdrom, 2
Beautifui·Middlepor1 home!
38R. 2BA. full basement.I
112 car garage with a room
above. Many NEW features!!
Must see this onel 740--4161548

Gt
- ·...

All tell t1tltt ldYirthlng
in thlt IMWIIN'J* II
tubjtct to the FedtNI
Fslr Housing Act of 1168
wlllcll- .,..,.,to
ptiiiiiiiGI, tlmhltton Of

d*rtrNnstlon -.ct on
· COlor, ~'&amp;ion....
t.mitllsl ltaltus Of ndonlll
CH'igtn, or .-.y lnlltniiDn to
-

miiM any such
pt .... lla, llmltatlon or

dltcrimlnollon."

.•__.. .

knowlntlyoccop1

eltete which II In
vlolltlon ot the IIW. Our

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,

~

ct.olllnp-ln
11\iii'IIWtPII*AA
• •••11.._ on sn eq1111l

--11y-.

tor sale by owner, 5 room &amp;

:;:~~m':, ca"':~::':.'::

From $1,800 cfown
-

.,~

MolluFOR

.,.....

~
~7 ~ 00 a

.

SPECIAL FHA FINANCE

lms &amp;
ACREAGE

I. r~

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Must see to apputclate.
Asking $19900. 740.4460826 or64fr.1296
..,

2007 Clayton

The Home Show
Alhland, KY
8881128-3428 .

2007 Cl _....n
ur•v

SBR/3BA 2000 Sq.Ft

A'""""

llrua
FOR RliNf

FOR RliNT

..lllJU . .

=

-""1111

WfO Hookupe, Ffee wtre1eaa depoatt ~ references, no
Interne~ (740)845-4946
pet&amp;, (740)992-01116

Ho"'..

2BR near- Rio G/Drande,haa
trtdge. stove, W • water,
trash
sewer 2BR In
$17&gt;1/mot Buy 3bd HUO GatltPous haa · ~ldge/II&lt;Ml.
homo! 5%dn, 20yra 0 8%.. 0Uot areas. No pets. Ref.
For lllllnga 600-559-4t01 Req. 740-446-1 271 or 7091701
"
•
1857

New

28A

w..tter/dryor

apartment&amp;

hookup:

AI.,..

I

Tara
Apartmenls. v.yTownhouse
Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
dryer, large wrap around
Bs!h, Aclil Pool 1 Bsloy
porch, 1u11 basement, 1 car 30opBr.,'!'5t::: ~PI: Pool, Palio, S1art $425/Mo.
garage, tolal elac1rlc wl1h
., ·
.
. No Pots, LeaS8 Plus
central air. very spaciOus , . Racine. 740-247--4292.
Security llepoolt Required,

$250-$600.
(740)367-neo
- ---..,--:-Red Reg. percenlago boer
blly goalS. 75% $125. 50%

FRANK &amp;EARNEST

Guttering

~=~~==:==~~~~~~~=~

Insured &amp; Elondlld
L::7:40-653-==965=7=~

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Stanley Tree-

..'

lirlmming
&amp; Removal

S1ar1ng at $33.00/sp.H.I
NO DOWN 1'1\YMENT
1o qualified
The
Homeboyers.
Show-

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BARNEY

•'

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OL.NE
OYL

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CARPENTER

SERVICE

Full Service Auto Repair
Oil Change, 1\me-Up, Engine
Diagoostic's, Full Brake Service, Air
Conditioning Red!arge &amp; Repair,
. AUgnment, CustOm Exhaust

r

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Rocky Hupp-0,..,...

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.......
2008

'-

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porches .

A.LO~R!

•

Pomeroy Eagles
Club 2171
Annual Picnic
and Golf Outing

Sunday, July 22
8:30a.m.
Limited to 40 golfers
Must sign up by 7/15
Free Food &amp; Beverages
to Eagles Members
Covered Dishes
Welcomed
Motorcross Race
$at. 7114107
6:00PM
Mason Co. Fairgrounds
At. 62 N. Pt. Pleasant, WV
(Practice 3:30PM)

Send Resume To:
P.O. Bolli 303
Gallipolis, OH
Attention: Mike
Tunica, Mississippi
THE GRAND CASINO
September 5·7, 2007
$295/person
Based on double occupancy
Includes flight, hotel accom·
modations, luggage &amp;transfers
Pnvate je11eaves lrom Cha~eston, WV

Must be 21 years of age
Cash, credit cards, chstks, money
orders and payroll deduction
accepled. No refunds
LIMITED SEATS!
To make reservations please
call PVH Community Relations:
(304) 675·4340, ext. 1326

Mizway Tavern

79 1 ton Cab &amp; Chassis, 8:!
Chevy Plct&lt;up, 62 Chavy
St.,.ns 28ga. Single banel Van. Call after 5pm
sho"- gun. model 940A. (740)446-3243. (740)446-

PeANUTs

..
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533-3870

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7

• New Homes
; Garages

'

H1 ll s Selr
Storage

-

FOR,...,_

Ir
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M&lt;mJ11s
•

David Lewis
740-992-6971

CKC I:Aacll
Cocker
Spaniel
pup- 2000 Hondo 350 Ranohor.
pies
&amp; buff
304-1l754243
Electric shift, gen)~ ' rode,
a&gt;cellen1 C»r1di11on, $2400.
For sale 2 Cocbtelts M&amp;F. Call 740-245-5934
,.;1f1 cage &amp; misc. $120.00 - - -:-=-'7-:--:-call304·5t2-9371 or 1·256· 2005 H.O. Road King

~Ide
ca~
~ ·
· ~•·

Sleeps 4-li

Manley• a

$5900. Gallip area. 740·
245-9214 or 645-0&amp;73

"~Yellowstons
·-~·"·- · ···~
740 ·
97
travel trailer
~"~::
256-::.:6.::
138:.:...__ _ _ _
AT
CHESHIRE: 2004
Nomad-North Trail 34' with

Extended section.
Camper nearly as new,
606-1198.
Custom Deluxe wl··backrest 51 2,500 Neg. Call David,
and windshield. 2700 actual
...
For sal~ Beagle hound pup- miles. $IS500.-645_7441
{606)571-9448, Mussell, KY
pies, tJHOior, makl &amp; _ __:._·
' I 1~' I( I "
tamale, more Info. (740)742· 2005 H.O.Fat Boy custom .,,..._ _ _ _ _.,

.Recycling

ARIES (M- 21-Aprll 19) - Yaw to
rMke a new beginning when It comee to
ettuaflOnl or people who hav. been
~

wfambossed

sage
lla'mes, 1 of 200 made,SOO
lab ~ puppi es for Sale miles
since new,prlce
Wormed &amp; shots. 7 wke , $19,000 OBO call for
bloc!&lt; &amp; ·brown 304-895· delalls-740-949-2217.
3274 or ~ - 593-3702
2005 Honda 250 Recon, 2
Must SelL Price drastically wheel drive four wheeter,
reduced. AKC Reg. Shrtzu BKCOIIent shape, hard~ rid·
pupplas for sale. S350 740· den, $2BOO. (740)256·9323
388·8477
or (740)339-0544

_,_,

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amnru-. ~.....,. .. .. ..,

'""·By ·-glng

TAURUS (Apr11 20-Miry 201 - H lo o pro-

I__

I

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF1NG
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. local references fur·
nishect Est ablished 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460670, Rogers Basement
We1erprooli ng.

.. you•

you- lromloolng _.,--.con

hyd.,

--=----

among

your peers could be aubetentlally
enhanced. Thlo ptOIIIge "" put you
In - - - t o r being_,.-..Otyoudldn1toovo-...
CANCER (June 21 -July 221 lnto...tlng -rllllp tranoltionl ... opt
10 plooo during !hie 1lmo lrwme. 'lbu
ooukt '-asked to P'IY a ma111gerlal fda
In HYtJal lltuatlonl. You'll do well handling fNery""" ol!hern.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - 11 belooovos
~ to get in touch with two or three lndlvlduall who have been hoiplul In 1ho
pelt, ...,..,.,~ ff you hove """"""lng on
tho burner In \\'hiCh 1hoy could play •
PI'~- They'l Ill right ln.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 221 - Condition•
are exceptkM ~ally conducive for taking
positive action toward malclng your
. _ and goola o rNilty. H you move
lheael wtth determination ll1d auur·
enoa, good thing~ can happen.
UBRA (Sept 23-0cl. 231 - Don'1 bo
afraid to estabKah some ~ that
are far above your UIUII uplrations,
because you're wry muc:t1 up 101M cha lltnge thotwlll- ywr goola.
SCORPIO (Oct. ...Nov. 221 Kl iOIMtl ~gl you'W acqund In thl pat
- but .,_, ~ bo ...aly
who11a roqulrod to provide ... odgo yoU
need to ldwanca an endeaww ttwt takal
brainpcMef end kncM-how.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 2t) Sometting lnterwtlng could oocurthat, If
put to won.:, can benefll you gru.tly In
material waya. li'val all sffail'l with sn

ooclally.

FINAU-Y, 50MI!! 11M!!!
10 Be ALONE! ...

·

11ery
n..._l
Pulls wl 112 ton •
'4'
"'"

Oool

meet

4

1992 Hanev Davidson
'
•vlow mileage,
Schnauzer
puppies $400. Sprinnar,
•Ro""" 7/21107. 740·3S8· O&gt;coltent s" - , new tires,
937.}'
call anytime, (740)992-6027

speda ~ng. '""" llllo&gt;ube, lhen Cillo tor

tteceUH 1111 a better-lnan-UIUlll time to
new people .no could become
~rtant to you bolh pe1'100811y and

GARFIELD

Boston Terrill' female $150 L..iioillii'~iiiiiiiiioo-il 95 Coachman· 24ft Sltr
740-367·7933
wheeler w/ht1d1 Ind. Dining

:.::::=_:~=--:-:-::--:-AKC R""'slored Miniature

IIIBrted with a llve-oard euH. (With two
spades rsmalntng, East would retum his
~· cartl.) So, lha contrac1 lo ssfa N
South wfn8 II&amp; ,trlctc wltl1 hla

ltnlnc:et.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mort:ll 20) - Ge1 OU1
and drculste In new ....,.,..., It you e~~n ,

111411 mo. pd

AKC Reg.. Blact&lt; Lab
FOR SAlE
Puppies. $150,00... 740-74292 Four winds ctass c rrlotor
2966, It no answer, ptea&amp;e 95 Plymouth van, air, auto V· home. $12500. Call for more
leave message.
6 900 080. 740..256·1652 information. 245-9418 or
MlmiRCY&lt;Ull/ 81 2·201 -3682
AKC reglstared a yr old
_ w~-

from a lhort auh, Eoot'l lf)lde-two
return a1 t11ck two .. flat West

right note with IOI"'"t8t8Ie who aeu things
...aly .. you do.
AQLIARIUS (Je.n. 20-FIIb. 19} - Thel'l
8 1'1 frwh dlangn In thtl wlndl that could
o. quill helpful where your WOfk or
CWMf ts concerned. UN theM fresh
opportun1t1ee to further your potlllon and

26 Years Experience

VANS

pltloul.,_ to put intO action • number of

N-11f-1111S
..
,.,_
.--

idlal you'YI been m•rely puehlng
oroond " your_._Stop ......,piO!Ing
1M p altl \lttiM and get moving on 1M

:FI~~~~-~~!'~~~!-~:II:Il~J
...
- · . . .......
::-:·
.. . . . .
• • _
.................

I Playground

1lhout

........

p...,..

flam

10 lmpolrment
for pllnt
12 Bogi1o11r 45 Walho•lll

60
81 KJc-.ko

17
DtmoiiiMd 45 ......
11 -aldoy
Nh
21 Rocllll
47 Romon

DOWN

22

1 flrollcl

.

43

l't • •
2 T~nnor
31 FM e
- Hogon
Cllflldrll
3 Peollcopt
-.
....
:sz Long ccl:t1 4 crowd In

~10
5 Sa:lucted
33 ~
wllly
34 8uninlta
I Filmli1!111
31 llnDnwe. 11
llllnclpltout
7 lla4td
lltiHa 38 8wfnllull
8 Hit tflb'-

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23 ~

45

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....

4t lt~llt

24 Alpha

.......,

you haYI.
GEMINI (Miy 2f-Juno 20)- tllvo prior·
tty to mattn that tnvoNa your fln1nolal
well-bolng - - lhlo could bo o vwy
flvoratH lime 1D engage In endMYOrw
thtl oan adv.nce your Income or
eolld conoeptl

·;
••

GRIZZWELLS

mourcoo.

SOUP TO NUTZ

~i!~~!
Dltl )bU JU5"f

SEtA

6\~EilS\\EAD
MM-1 ~\'\
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51 Compel~
53 Caomlc
forc8
Tripoli II 54 DNdly ·
2t Souullla'o
..,...

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28 Praently
28 wt.....
~

. 55 B~Wn

30 Shorp blow
35 Mind XL
37 Get 1W1Y

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,.

'

two, tha original doclarar

......., on a handshake, have the potential
o1 1oot1r&gt;o1 o long time . 'lbu'lt hK fut1 tho

740-MII-2217

Hours
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

21 CuiUtfllll
lliiiMnl

hie apat1o lick. Woo! winning
wl1h hie queen and cllaltng the """·
South Jilt ... clt.CIIult, brlr9ng rNy•
one down 1o ftW card~. but WNI clacaidtd well, Mljllng two tplldllllllclln
tempo bltrrldng 1111 hesrt ~ng. When
diCialor lhen trted the hesrt ,._,
Woot lOOk the trlctc and Cllhod two
tplldlllor doWn one.
''Sorly,' eald ~- 'Maybe I ol1ould
flao.oa guesaed thai West had como down
to a llngloton hesrt tWig.' Do you 19ft?
Unloeo Woo! hU made a llllnge load

l1fl toward bt.lslneU lnd u a means 10
rnoldngrnonoy.
CAPRICORN (Osc. 22-Jsn. 19) ~ and prumllet you moko,

,

lloA'IS &amp;

I

.

..

SUNSHINE CLU8

Racine, Ohio
4sn1

FOR8Au:

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29670 Bashan.Road

Various guns tor ssle. Call 19911 Mercury Mounta-r. ·--iiiiiiiiio-rl
tor iyp&lt;IS and prices, 245- 4WO. 102,000 miles, E&gt;c. 40 HP Mercury Outboard
9416or8t2·201-31182
Cond.. Sunrool, - • r
Conlrols and
l'Eili
Laa1her Seats, $6200
FOR SAu:
. 740 245-0344 ausr 5:

0528. no answer leave rnes- maroon

Pool Tournament every Thurs pm
Karaoke Every Fri. 9 pm
Saturday July 14th
9 Year Anniversary Party
K &amp; D DJ &amp; Karaoke Services 9 pm

SUVs
~ .. ~

~-·

J

EKCOient Plus $210. Also 1!4338tlr-""'::::'::::"'--,

BaU
t/2 740pint
greenperfect
jar. ...Masoo
rce $185.

TJ.IEN A VOICE SA'iS'TD ME!T(.IIS 15
60tN6 W TAKE M011.E TAAN ONE NliHT"

SOI&gt;\ETIMES I UE AWAKE f:J N16~, AND
I ASK!W(.IfRE HAVE I 60NE WRON6?"

·I

Stnp &amp;Compare

At trick

8y llomloe -

70 Pine Slftet • GaUipoUs
446-0007

J'••e ...,
-&amp;·1m

57 Sllrdlno
halclar
5I Clear.

fanriod

-

Your charisma and domlnlnce

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

P•modeling

se r..

tne..

. CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Clm(IDI .
n.t:M:t\1111.-ln ciJNr
Jot nlllr.

Colltdy Cli'W Oii*90IO

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AERK) FWC

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NOIIYAGUC. WIDGO

MB UK

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RMEAI ZWHG NZIISGI OTRXK

T
TS . '

·IGCT WOSWJ
PREVIOUS solUTION - 'Painting is so poetic, while sculf)IUra Is more
logical and sclentlfk: andrnakas you worry abo&lt;.t gravity.' · Damian Hinll

. ..
WOlD

lloluodoy, ""'" 14. :j007

REPO'!i Allen BUILDINGS-HUGE SAVINGS. 2006

lnquiftoOnty. eon
TOO., I
866-33-1-1&gt;469

20

W~r:f!,

BIG NATE

&lt;7tunihJ··~.~£"t'l'!1r!:ij!P.!j":

• Complete

~~Rod, wllh

"out"
15 Nalollclwocl 41 llunch
11 llenu
50 Not .....
he l'hO
52 ,_port
11 Hot pi8Ca

~Astro-

•

We Deliver To You!
• Home Oxygen
• Portable 'Oxygen
• Hometill System
• Hellos System

-.tel

Jctn Ounf1er, ajoumalel and 1111 who chclln 1970, pointed out thai Counl
HormaM Koyaorllng (founder of lha
St:hool of In 1820) onco lllld
lhallha (10Meal- .......
-bollelinllctl.
Rlllha ---IC!dtr! ! a l i t and 1811 Ffltlly lha 13th altha jill'. Meal
. . . who, ...... dill, ll'f lhallhay
""' "'*'&lt;::iy - nol. Unillr the mlctoIQOPI, thly m'lf'I)WI or ~tdld.
In thtl dill, South " In throe no-tru-...
WN1 lofldl 1111 flltrtl1.l1lghM IPidl to
EIII'IICI, and lht epedl twoCOIMI tly·
lng blc:k. HOw ohould South plan lha
play?

&lt;Unmy'a speda nina. WN1 may lab his
lhrae tilcktl In lha suit, but muat than
load Into one of daclaret'l rackutl holdIngs. conceding a ninth trick.

r'!i

RDuoediSeri0118

a-&lt; '(QUit.

Reliable &amp; Experienced
Call Dennis Bryant
(74()) 742·23n

--=-·=-=-

3 Left.ll5'lr4a'x4o'xs6'
No-ble Olrer

&amp;.cor-\IW:. ~LEt&gt;

:lUCCE~!

and SidewalkS.

Ellm VIew
Apartments·

Bartender And
Bar Manager
Positions Needed

~T

•

All concrete flatwork

including· patios, driveways

-Stratu--.-.

Chevy Colorado,
Almos1 New, Warranty, 1300
miles, PS, PB, POL, Keyless
Emry, 4&lt;2. Can after 4pm,
(740)446-2415

~oo ~t:..ljeR "'E:E.t&gt;to w~?

"SIC.I·\... 11~ !-lOT (M'{ &amp;I~~

tum

r;:~7;42:·;-23~3~2:;.:;~

CONVENENTLY

\

Jo« Blutll, Mia...,-

construction on
key, single
hOUSeS anO duplexes, garages,

1

•

LOSER

. ConlraCI9r1Vallllble for quaUiy

.Construction

HUGE

THE

I

J&amp;L

toado9·to--"""'!

..

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

r-----.,..-'1

N«&lt;li Eul
Allpw

SNT

A IUpt~ltloul day
for an unlucky deal

..

SeamtessGunero
Roofing, Siding, Gutters

.. ,.

Pus

Opening lead: • 7

740--416-1698 .

H&amp;H

Apl..haaWID, NoPots,Oep. Gorgeous Palomino Mare,

Wa1er~rashlsewar740-682·
paid,

740--992--5929

740-387-o536

·-v-•

Weal

!.NT

48

Doctor

211...,..
27 ltoult

Vuloerable: Neither
lliul~

41 ICMnol

=.-r 44=1ho

13 Oriinllh
14 8cHI

=

• Q 10 5 I

All types.;, concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

pnva1e dnve wl1h parldng. 4RM &amp; Bslh. atovo ,lridgo, (740)448-348 1•
·
Craftsman Riding Mowar,
$1 '100 per monlh, serious utill11as paid, up..,;lrs, 46
.
t6HII. Kohler Engine. « *Prompt and Quality
calls only (740)949-2303
01!1'8 St. No peta. 1Win
Riven! Towertor
Ia aa:opt·
Inch
"'ork
porch wl1h railing with
1ng app~ca~~o~
wolllng
t cut, $500. (740~n•
10
75 2
French doors, bade rpatio,
2 BR house In Kanauga. $,450/month. 448-39-45
tilt fol Hud-subslzed, 1· br,
*Reasonable Rates
concrete lnground pool,
Aahland, KY
$425/month + $4251...._•
•n-·~r,lor
lha
••• 4•~
...,....,
~- •·~·
*Insured
15~~: 30, new flIter. new pump,
and utlities. 441-2707
elderly/disabled call 875A
.
small porch on bacll wllh - - - :--:-::---. 6679 . Equal
Houolng
~~.
• *Experienced
sliding doors, new central
.2007 Doubtewkle
3 Bedroom House ln
Oppor1unity
,.
Lw--·-~~~.....,_iiii;;._.l References Available!
heat &amp; cooling, road
3BR, 2BA,
Syracuse. $500/month +
..,
C II G S 1 @
lronlaga 1.28 &amp; ac., carpo~. Delivered &amp; Ss1 $39,999. deposH No Pat!l. (3041675!hO!
-~1988 Pontiac Grand Prix,
a
ary tan ey
lree gas. 3 gas wens.
l1le Home Show,
5332 weekend ~ 740·591 ·
MIRRiiNT
. also a riding lawn mower.
740--742-2293
1740)992·5818, 112 mile off
Ashland, Ky.
0285
::1
Ask tor Jr. Phone 256-)-102
Please leave messa e
Kingsbury, $120,000
T,;i- lreo 988·928·3426
A HIDDEN :rREASUREI COmmercial building 'For - - - - - - - 3 bedroom, 2 tun baltl, 2 Laurel
Commons Rsn1" 1800 oquantloe1, oil t994 Plymouth Acclaim,
For salo/land contract. 3 BR
story houee, hall acre yard, Apartments. Larges1 In tho 6, _ ~ Gras! loco- 75000 rnlleo. ~ Go-It
YOU NG'S
house In Gallipolis, WID
2007 Dooi:Aewide
lUll ba8emem, oentral ale, areal Beoutlfutly ranoveted lklnl
Third A......, In car. Exc. Condl $2500 OBO.
749
connec11on $1500 dOwn
3BR. 2BA,
hardwood !loon!, plenty ~ lhroughout lncludng brand Gallipotll. Rent $325/mo. Moving "'""""" &amp; MUST
$400/mo 01 rent $475/mo. Deliveredlset$39,999. parking, $735 per month, now kitchen and both. CaiiW-(404)4580002 SEUI.Cal .740-794-0290·.
AEo 1 BR In Gallipolis $750
The Home Show,
(740)949-2303
S1ar10ig at
_Call todayl
'
5405
Room Addlllone a
down · $200/mo or rent
Ashland, Ky.
Pnmt Comm-lpaoo loi 1998 Eagle Talon 920® . Rem
J ling
4 bedroom, 2 otory house, (3041273-3344
$250/mo.Colt Wayne 404T,;l- ~.. 888·928·3426
rent at l!prlngwfloy Plaza. miles, 1 owner. Excelleht
-Qorqn
.
456-38021or Info.
very speclaos &amp; dean, new Accep11ng apptlcallo&lt;~ tor 2 CaD 645-2192.
coudltlooo $4000 IIOGOilal&gt;lo. Eleotrlal l PlUMbing
carport, large bedroom, eat· BR, 1 BA apt, S10Va, fridge,
245·5466
-lGUIIOrO
HUD HOliESt 3bd oniJ B4 Schul1z. 3 BR, 1 112 BA. In kltchon with new cabinets, WID lno&gt;uded. Water &amp;
~------- VInyl Biding l Polnllnfl
P.tlo lnCII Porch DHII.I
$21 ,900. - . t-4bd $7500 _339-4510 a"er 5pm. $665 per month, (740)949- GarbaUe paid. No pef!i.
I
1998 Olda 66, 4 Door,
Wv0311725
11omeo ovalleblol lfom
2303
nice, clean &amp; al1rac11V8.
'~
St995, (740)882-751Q
V
C
YOUNG Ill
1
Stlllllmol
5%dn, 93 Clayton 2 Bd., 2 bath
$500/mo, 1st mo + $500 .,_ _ _
...........
~---'
20yno08%. For tlottntJI
. A-t.
Sec.dep. required. Available
200t Ford focus $3200.
1 dish sh
' '
range, re "
wa sr, new Local company ollonng "NO
--43
304-882-3338
BONB-4108 xF144
carpet, mint cond. $11 ,500 DOWN PAYMENT" pro- 7/18107. Apply nmoln. 17
For sale: Kitchen range &amp; - - - - - - -In Point Pleaasnl, 2 BR, full Firm. Sertoos calls only.740- grams for I"" 10 boy you• CantOflBry Rd, Gallipolis. No hOOd $250, 2 mep!O bar 2001 JNp Grsnd Cherokee
basemem, gamge. No Land 645-0072,or.740-441·9320. homo instead of renting.
. Phone Calls l"'easestools $35, GIOI cabinet Larado, Good Condition,
1125
7
Contracts 740-388-9309 or
' ·100%llnanclng
Apartment tor rent. 1·2
' Cafl 40-441-821l9
Low Milas, $950(1, (740)845304-{)75-4317
Great used 2005 3 bedroom • Lesa than perfect credM Bdrm., rarnodelod, ,_car- Full Sla - . . 1 BIS, 8328
pel, stove &amp; trig .• water, 51110. Solo lt.ovoseM sets ,._-,-:-~--=-=-=
In Syracuse - · 2800sq.ft. 1exso with vlnyVahlnglo. accepted
Muat
sell,
On~
$25,995
wl1h
•
Payment
o:ould
be
the
sewer.
truo11 pd. Mlddoport. 1400: Dr1v11 a t1t11a- save ~ 2004 Ford Muatsng GT,.5 VInyl Sid""'
quaii1y_oom ~ bricl&lt;
delivery CaH 1740)385-4367 same as mnt.
$425.00. No Pets. Rot. lo1 Mottohan 202· Clark """"',leathor,52kmltes,teat •
"'"
home, maintenance Jree.
Mor1gage
Locators.
required.
740-843-5264.
Chill*
Rd,
8fdwolt.
_
her.
~ras
•Wiilepn~dowiiCII
ment
388
Nice qulol neighborhood. 340_l37_"'"'"'__
4 bedroom~ 2 112 bath wl1h
(7401367-oooo
o173
L.
to-'lsi._Cal_•_l7_
-.alul
Apll.
Roofing
hardwood trim throughout
For renl or tor asle 2 BR Eotat... 52 Wootwootl Konmora smooth-top .ango 2008 Toyola Malrlx tsqotl • DICb
NEW
4 Bed
u-sh8Jied ki1chen wl1h 40' of
Nice Remodeled Homo In Drive, trom $385 lo $660. VII DV!1n. Laea lhan 1 yr Old. mltoil. Exc. Cond. 81111 under
cabinets. Wood burning ftretown. No Pols, Renoveted; 740-448-2668.
Equal While, greet condition. warranty. Powor ......-ythlng. • Ga"gil
place. 2 112 car detaChed
All · now carpel, Can Housing Opportuni1y. This Movtng.....-..andMUST $17000. Moving overuu. •Polel!lulldlnga
garage. Nicely landocaped
(740)446-7425
lnsll1utlon Is an Equal SELl! $350 080 Cd 740- MUST SELL! . Call 740- o i1oo!n Addtltons
60 .acres lot. lmmaciJiate
-Opportunity Provider and ~rij~a;;~S] 794-o2tiO
Ownw:
condition. Low utilities.
In Pomeroy HOOJI!O tor rentl 3 Ernployel.
- ---:--:-:-:-:-:-::::::
~lng pllc:e $219,000. Call
Bd.,2 belh. newly r es Ponllac Sunii-e $1500 JamuKeeHell
740·441-5171. Shown by
T
1•121"11 eled. lolal eleotrlc. 740-943LOCAT·
080.
98 Cavaler
5284.
ED I AFFORDABLE!
OBO. 01
Cavolor $2200
$3650
mymldw..thomt.c:om
"""' only.
Townhouse
apartments,
Coupon
080.
OQ
GT
Mustang $7000
11500
J
, _ _ _ _ _ _. .
MOIIIUi Hot.ml and/or small houses FOR
oeo. 251H! 69
1
Middleport-In town, out ~
FORRiiNf
RENT. Call (740)441·11tt
Hoi'MIOilllotl
$35AScoop
llood plana Briel&lt; Home New 3 Bedroom homes lrom ~~--iiiiiiiiii;,..,t. lllr appllcanon &amp; lntormalion. Top QualltyNiananty Milton aut
- o.- e-lr-.- - 51500
E&gt;celent Location. .6 Aero '"14.3S per month. lrdudes '
Flea Mid SIS 1106-326-0m 99
T-Post
6ft. $3.29
••c: Very n1ce.
OBO. 740-256-1233
Ap&gt; 4000 sq ft 8Rms 3 Br 2 -many upgrades, delivary &amp; 2 Br , ~
Wide
Variety
ol
112 B1h 2 fire Places 2· sst-up. (740)385·2434
Johnson Mobile _Home Pari&lt;.
JET
COOK M&lt;JIORS
Lawn
Seed,
Garages Lois ol Slorage.
740-446-2003 or 446-1409
AERATION MOI'ORS
Jad&lt;8on Pike GaDipolla
Details Call 740-992-4197.
Repaired, New &amp; RebuiD In 328
•
Fertilizer and
3 BA MH in Cheshire. Total •2&amp;3 bedroom apartments Stock. Gall Ron Evans, 1• Quality cars, trucks and
New Haven, 4+ acres, 3 br.,
Showmasler
Show
800-S37-9S2B
vans with warranty. 2002
elec .
$425/month
+ •Central heat &amp; NC
2 ba , lolal elect., gas log
$425/deposit and utilities. •Washer/dryer I'\OO!wp
Focus 43,015 mNes $3900.
fireplace, lng., s1ove. &lt;fish- =:--:::-:-:--:-== 441 -2707
NEW AND USED !mEL 19911 Tracker $3500. Many
•Tenantpayae~ric
washer, hot tub outside, OIC Modular (LXM503}
S1eol Beams, Pipe RobOr otllers In stock. Stop or can
great
view,
$53,000, special
order
only Beautiful River View In
(304)882-3017
For
Conaete,
Angle, 740-446-0103
304882-3021,740-441·9331 5Z.840.00delivered to your Kanauga- ldeal ~for 1 ·O f 2
Channel, Flat Bar, Sr~
,
location. Cole'a Mobile people, references, No pets,
Grating
for
Drslrl'; Uvely'a Auto Sslso._ _911
New Haven, 4+ acres, 3 br., Homo 4 miles East ol loc. s mL from Gavin.
OrNowayo &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l Hyunda Elantra SW, 4cyl.
2 ba., total elect.. gas log Athens on R1 50132. PH: (740)441 -0181
Scrap Metals Open Monday, au1o w/00, $1000. 91 Ford
fireplace, frig., stove, dish· 800-4e6-4687 Of 592·1972. - - - - - - - Tueoday,
Wednesday
&amp; Ranger
V6, $1000. · - - - - - · ·
washer, hot tub outskte, M·F. 8·7, Sat. : 9 to 4. MobNe homes for rent , - - - - - -Friday, Bam-4:30pm.
Clceed
368-9300PU,
9 to3.0
7 M·Sst.
great
view,
$53,000, ~where you gel your Middleport area, no 1J9te, Modem 1 Bedroom apt. Call
Thursday
_ I Saturday &amp;
TRUCKS
304882-3021,740-441 ·9331 money's wonh" •
(740)992-5858
446-0390
Sundoy. (740)448-7300
,
FOR 8.uE
s1ove, lreezer, new lron1

Co-11~1111

"'24 '11ot11v

Dealer: South

F-EIII-

raforauces. 740-992.0185. ~
2 bedrporn executive house, 2BR apta, 8 mi rrom Holzer. &amp;
~::::::::::::.:.7=::.:=
~ M••Alire. ·~~patoloosarldo,
~-

new cons1rucllon
, tully turniShed,
new rolrigerator,
$400/mO+dep.

70 Pine Street • Oallipolis
740-446-0007 ToO ·Free 877-66!1--41007

7 411-367--()544

L~------·
7 AOHA ........,ored Quanor

-

40

23 'N:Oadmt· 58 Sannllldn

A KJ s
or A Q 8
+AJ 7

&amp; .DICAL EQUIPMENT

LIICIII Contnlc:tor

s1owlrefrlgerator Included. Honles tor ssle or lnlda. Cal
Also, unlla on SR 160. Pols after 7pm. 740-21!6-8003
Welcome! (740)441.0194. • - - - - . , - - - New Havon 1 Br. Fumllhed Gontle2yroldQua~orf'llny.

81,., dishwasher, washer &amp; 9243 or 988-6130

I 7
• Q II
•AKJIS
Weol
Eul
• Q 10 8 7 4
A AI
or K 5 I
" J 10 .81 2
+K 5I
+ 10 9 8 I
• 72
•&amp;a

{]tuniJ1J (t)$1dl:.

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

07-!H'I

or

•MONTHLY OXY:GEN-VISITS

Kiefer - - Valley-Bison·
and
Uvestoct&lt;
Trill~·
. Loadmu- .
Gooooolo&lt;:t&lt;. Oo!)'lPO, &amp;
U11111y·
Aluminum
.....,. B&amp;.W Gooaei18Ck
Hitches- Trailer . ~,._
Cormlchael
n.llora.
(740)448-2412

~

~~ ~

;'SERVICE-•
FREE. DELIVERY
.

=-Rat~~
E~
(7&lt;10)44&amp;-241 2.
:::-c-·~---:::--

i

SALES -

=tie

39-

IOUnd
42 .......

bird

Roof/IIIJ, Siding,
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
Sofflr, Decks.
menta. lurnl8hOd 4"d untur- ........,... ' .
.,
·
Doom, Windows,
nlshed. and houoea In ~ .,.., .. ,~Pomeroy and Middleport, paid. dspoolt &amp; '"""'ICSO·
Electric, Plumbing.
SICUfity depoatt req.jred, no no peta. (740~..0165
New Holland 273 tqu•e
Drywall,
·
pets, 740-992·2216.
Middlopoot Nortt141h Avo., 2 baler, good COndHIOO. RemcxleHng, Room
Additions
1 BR Apt in Spring valey, br. tumlahed opor1men1, ~$27Nr00;;;·.;.740-..,.25&amp;&lt;,...,."".22--,

I

• Nactumol

11

z

Houolng ()ppom.Qiy. .
l'l!macutole 2 bocllopm
New corjoet •
- 1 1 , traohly pointed &amp;
docora1ed, WID _
hoOkup.
Beautiful country sectlng.
Mull oeo to appraclale.
$400/mo. (6141585-7773 or
1-800-788-4686.
. - - . . ·Bsedl Sl 2 t.

hoW

::::local+

1 11111 2 " - -

I

Al'lumiENrs

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom ~
lor Rent, MeigS County, In
town, No Pill, Depoatt
Required, (7401992·5174 or
(740)441.0110.

1982 FioS1a 14 X 70. 3 Br., t
..
baltl. Good Condition. 304· 2 trailer lo1s lor rent near
773-5525 aHer 1 P.M.
Racine, $250 &amp; month,
(740)992-2458
1990 Clay1on MH, loco1ed at
157 Green Terrace, can 5 Acres Mil. along Old
leave MH
!hero
a1 CoYerad Bridge A&lt;!-Located
lch In Ewlngton, Vinton County,
141
S /month lol rent wh
OH. CaD 606-353-0990
lnclude6 .wa1erllrqsh. newly
remodeled, new carpet, new 55 acres mof'l or leu,
GE stove and fridge, FP, 2 $69,000. Cal 740-256-9247
la'lfO BR w/ 2 lull BslhS.

5BAI3BA 2000 Sq.FI.
S1artlng at $33.00/sp.ft.l
NO DOWN 1'1\YMENT
to qualified buyers.

Phillip
Alder

Pnqwn $0 Down, ff you Trailer lor ...-., 3 bedlllam., Bedroom ~- ot Vlltogo
own Land or use Family 2 balh, , _ - 1400 o Manor oi&gt;d - - Apto. ln ~ Fl,..ng- 36
Land We own thoBank yoo- _IIIQfllb, .M® ...®lm!L-.,..n, from $32,...w -lllloto ApprOYOd 606-4 74-113110
(740)992·2~
$5112. 740-1192•5064. E&lt;JJol 0oere Trau..., 111mo &amp;

I. r

underpinning. Has front
and bacf( porch, 2 metal out
buildings 8&gt;10 and 14x20.

ACROSS

1117 or 304-6IIG-8101 A.., 5pn

Go ;I

,

NEA Croaaword Puzzle
•

BRIDGE

Nk:e c1eon 2 t.. 1 bo. 1n aoqgo ..... ~ 11w, luly
, _ . -...._ $4!11l\ooo!"
Harttord, dol&gt;- I . rfll. _...._ - · - 10Wb np;;;;;;;;~;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;j

Soon (740) 828-275()
.

The Daily Sentinel • Pipe 87

Nice 2 BR turnlined tiolor FurnllhoOI Apt, 2nd Avo,
water paid, no peta. GeHipona, Upetelrs, 1
$375/month + $375/depoolt. Bsdooom. No Pato. All Ulll·
Cal4&lt;11-oe:dl
tloopeld.(740)448-11523

NANCING

QWN
A
Nlce3/2 ~

baautllul 4
bath house,

This nn..,.,., will not

lldvertiHti'ICiftb for ....

EA

~.------

secluded, yet close 1o
"""""" 1 _ ,, Iorge above
groond pool w/dodt, call
now won'1 laS1 long,
(7401992-2&gt;129

r

::======~

I

www.mydallysentlnel.com

I

'I

GELGCr,G.

S PURU

I P. I I 1·
~-I

I

s,..(-rf-il

..,..P;:--;;rjr;-;.

Il-...,

...

~

"Cbann," the etiquettt instnM:tor
announced, " is tbc ability to

I
..;_r,,7,..:.1r-l

WH R N E C

.....;..;,,;..,.;..
1 1 1

someone else think that

youarevery -····"

A
V

make

both of

~u01od

Comple"' lho d!uclolo
by fllllrov In lho missing - •
· !'0• d....,lop from ..P No. 3 btlaw.

~ PRINT NUM8E RED l l ITERS I

'&lt;# IN THESE SQUARE S

I

I I I I I I I I

UNSCRAMBlE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
•

·

·

SCRAM-lm ANSWERS
Appeal - Embed - Hutch - Shield - HELP THEM
Gramps 1o yotmgster, "Don't tell your friends anything ·
neg8tive:·Tell them only thingsthat will HELP THEM." -

ARLO&amp;JANIS

�•

P~e

88 • The Daily Sentinel

I

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, July 13, 2007;

LMNG

ALONG THE RivER

'

A dog's life
Shaggy belongs to everyone
in downtown Pomeroy, C1

I want to ride my bicyclette
Paris launches new,
eco-friendly bike service, Dl

....•

Hometown News for Gama &amp; Meigs counties
( )!Jio \ .t lit'\ I ~11hl i . . h i ~~~ ( o.

SPORTS ·.
• Indians puii9~Y&gt;'.i~. in ·
ninth. See Page 81

l'onu:ro~

• \I iddlq)Od • ( ;;tlhpoli .., • .J ul~

~

1 J. :.!.• u ,-

1.,)0 • \ ol. -11 . :\ o . :.!,)

HMC: Decision
pending.on
pediatric
floor
.
BY MICHELLE MILLER

MMILLER®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS -. Is the
pediatric wing of Holzer
Medical Center Gallipolis
closing? That's the question
that has been taking over
the rumor mill as of late.
According to HMC officials, the hospital is not discontinuing pediatric care,
but is considering whether
dedicating a floor to it year
around is cost effective. ·
"The pediatric service at

Holzer Medical Center is
not closing," said HMCGallipolis President Jim
Phillippe. "We are however
considering options that
might enable us to provide
the service more efficiently,
such as possibly locating
the unit as a sub-unit of
some other nursing department in designated rooms
on another nursing unit."
Phillippe said if the rooms
are moved to another wing,
the current security mea·
sures .in place on the pedi·

Transfer offonds
approved for sheriff
BY BRIAN

J.

atric floor wo11ld be moved
. to accommoaate the new
location, that the children
would be cared for by nurses trained and experienced
in pediatric care.
'He also said the pediatric
floor may only need to be
closed during times of the
year when the number of
patients is down.
"In no instance would a
!Wdiatric patient be placed
iii a room with an adult,"
said Phillippe. "In all cir·
cumstances, children would

be cared for by nurses
trained and experienced in
pediatric care."
Much of the hospital's
cutbacks can be blamed on
the growing gap between
medical costs and reimbursement rates which,
according to Phillippe, has
resulted in increased unre·
imbursed costs of more than
$2 million per year.
"Over the last five years,
Medicare payments have
increased at a rate of
approximately 2.6 percent

per year, while Medicaid
payments have increased at
a rate of approximately 1.2
. percent per year," said
Phillippe. "During that
same lime period, medical
inflation, the cost to Holzer ·
of increasing expense for
such items as salaries, benefits, supplies and equipment
has been increasing at a rate
of five to seven percent." .
· According to Phillippe,
though
reimbursement

Pleue see HMC. A2

BASS TOURNEY REIURNS TODAY

REED

BREE!l@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Information from: The
He" aId· Dispatch ;
http: 1/Www;he ra ld-dis··
patch. com

..·

POMEROY Meigs·
County
Commissioners
approved a $25,000 transfer
for salaries in the sheriff's
department,
allowing
S~eriff Raben Beegle to
continue operating with a
OBITUARIES
full staff, .
Meeting Friday, commisPage AS
sioners reduced Beegle's
• Rev. Samuel
request for a $50,000 transfer to $25,000, but said
W. Basye Jr.
additional funds will trans• Mary LOuise Rinehart
ferred if needed later in the
•
• Audrey V. Altizer
year.
Commissioner Jim Sheets
• Virginia Lee Hawthorne
said
Beegle should experio Gerald Mooney
ence no difficulties in main• Paul Snyder
taining full staff through the
remainder of ..the year,
o Sylvia Jean McCoy
.ile&lt;;ause
of low .expense;~. to
·-· ....
date, in medical costs for
prisoners and outside housINSIDE
mg .
. Sheets said Beegle has
"done
well" in distributing
o Diles Scholarship
his appropriation for wages
goes to PPHS graduate.
and has access to overtime
grant fun~s and discreSeePageA2
tionary funds, which can ]:&gt;e
Don't discriminate
used to supplement his
because of health history. salaries budfet.
..
SuiMnltted photo
Additiona funds in genSeePageA3
eral
fund line items will also Bass ·fishermen from all over will again take to the Ohio River to test their luck and skill for a $1,000 cash prize. The to~­
• Tainted food imports
nament, sponsored by American Electric Power Gavin Plant will officially kick of at 6:20a.m. today. Weigh in will be at 2:~
PleaH see Funds, A1
and new Congress revive
p.m. at the First Avenue Public Access Area. People are invited to come see what they reel 1n.
~·".

"'

'1

•

stalled food lab81ing law.
SeePage AS
• Iraqi PM shrugs off
doubts about gevemment,
says U.S. troops can leave
'any time they wanf.
See Page AS
• Board reverses
decision to release inmate
serving lije sentence.

Alcoa drops hostile
bid for rival Alcan
BY DANIEL LoVERING
AP BUSINESS WRITER

See Page AS
• Pools scurry to find
enough lifeguards.

See PageA6
1007 DOOGE DAKOTA
ST QUAD CAB4WD
COtMf\IENCE GROUP,

V6POWER

2007 DODGE
Nlll!D SXT 4WD
l. 7 V6 POW£ R,

WEATHER

SPEED CONTROl

File pll'!,lo

2007 JEEM
COMPASS UMJTllD
lEATHER SEATING . flOWER
SUNROOF, SIRIUS SATElliTE RADIO

1007 DODGE RAM
. 1500 QUAD CAB4WD
20 INCH ALUMINUM WHEELS.
Afo.NFM CD 6 DISC CHANGER

The 144th anniversary of the Battle of Buffington Island will take place July . _21-22 In
Portland.
Detail• on Paee .\6

INDEX
4

....

Jeep

SECTIONS -

Living histocy takes field next weekend
BY BETH SEROENT
BSERGENTI!!'MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

24

PAGES

PORTLAND - The Yankees and the
Around Town
A3
Rebs go at il again for the !44th anniverCelebrations C Section sary of the Battle of Buffington ISland on
D Section" Sunday. July 22 in Portland al the ·
Classifieds
Island Battlefield Park.
insert Buffington
Comics
In addition to the battle reenactment,
Editorials
A4 there are events all weekend long, including
skirmish on Saturday, July 21 meant to
Movies
cs acelebrate
Ohio 's only significant Civil War
Obituaries
A.5 battle.
A2
Hosted by the 91 st Ohio Volunteer
Regional
Infantry
reenacting unit, the weekend will
B Section
Sports
feature Civil War mili tary camps open to
A6 the public.
Weather
"This free educational event features
© 2007 Ohio Valle )' Publhihlng Co.

..

activities for the whole family," said Mike
Harbour, event coordinator. "A tent city
containing period merchants and a black·
smith will also be on site."
What is the Battle of Buffington Island
you ask?
•
On July 13, 1863, Confederate cavalry
under Confederate Brig. Gen . John Hunt
Morgan crossed into Ohio from Indiana at
Harri son. · They were being pursued by
Union cavalry. under the directi on of
Generals Henry M. Judah and Edward H.
Hobson. On July 19, Union force s caught
up to Morgan's raiders and the Battle of
Buffington Island was fought near Portland
on the Ohio River.
Ple•H see Isfand, Al

•

PITTSBURGH
Aluminum producer Alcoa
Inc. has withdrawn a $28
billion hostile takeover bid
for Canadian competitor
Alcan Inc. after mining
giant Rio Tinto entered a
. significantly higher bid.
The
Pittsburgh-based
company relinquished its
offer less than a day after
Rio Tinto and Alcan jointly
announced the competing
$38.1 billion cash bid that
would create the world's
largest aluminum company.
Alain . Beida, Alcoa's
chairman and chief executive, said the AngloAustralian miner's offer
"strongly reinforces our
view of the underlying value
in the aluminum industry
and its bright prospects for
the future. "
"However, at this price
level, we have more attractive options for delivering
additional value to shareholders," he said in a statement.
Rio Tinto ·s bid iS' 65.5
perceiu higher than Alcan 's
closinjl share price before
Alcoa s May 4 takeover bid,
and nearly 33 percent higher
than Alcoa's offer, accord·
ing to Rio Tinto and Alcan.
Alcoa and Alcan were the
world's top two aluminum
makers until March , when
the Moscow-based United
Company Rusal surpassed
Alcoa as the leading producer after l)ei ng. formed
through a three-way merger.

Alcan's
operations
include
a
plant
in
Ravenswood, W.Va., ¢at it
acquired when it bought
French aluminum producer
Pechiney in 2003. Alcan
Rolled Products employs
about 1,100 people, making
it the largest employer in
Jaqkson County, W.Va.
Beida said Alcoa will continue to "make targeted
growth investments, trim
underperforming businesses
and further enhance returns
to shareholders by resuming
our share-repurchase program," which was suspended amid the Alcan offer.
"That is a better path forward for our shareholders,
our employees and our communities," he said.
Alcoa approached Alcat1
shareholders with its bid il)
early May, after nearly t....;o
years of private talks failc;d
,to produce a negotiated
a~reement . Alcan repeated!£
d1smissed the offer as inade·
quate and fraught with reg'!:
latory and other risks.
.:
Alcoa 's proposal faced
review by antitrust authod•
ties in Canada. the Europe'!!~
Union. Australia and Brazil;
as well as foreign invest:
ment clearance in Canada1
France and Australia. U.s:
antitrust authorities !ail
week issued a second
request for informatioti
about the offer.
.
To sati sfy regulators;
Alcoa would likely have to
divest from certain aerospace and alumina oper~Piease see Alcoa. A2 · .

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