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''

Al-Qaida in Iraq
terrorist blueprint
shows a weakening
insurgency, A7

Pets, and more ways
to pamper them,
featured in parties, AS
.

'

Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Entertainment '
. Briefs

www.mydailysentinel.com

Performing at Ariel

FAC exhibits
photographer's
regional display

Thursday, June 15,

2006

•

'

Guitar masters
take Fur Peace
stage Sa~day

POMEROY - Three guitar
masters . One night One
admission. That's this year's
Guitar Summit at Fur Peace
GALLIPOLIS T,he
Station, the concert hall .at
French Art Colony is hosting
Jorma Kaukonen's. Fur Peace
the photography exhibit "Out
Ranch near Darwin in M iegs
&amp; About in Southern Ohio"
County, just south of Athens.
by artist )\Jan Davis from
The players are . David
June 2-25 . This show is spon· Lindley, G.E. Smith and
sored by Dr. E. John Strauss
Fareed Haque .
.
Jr., Carter Plumbing aild
Noted as the featured ·accomWilliam Thomas, optometrist.
panies! for Jackson Browne and
Born in Boston, Davis
as leader of his own band, El
learned to aprreciate . nature
Rayo-X, Lindley effortlessly
early by way o many camping
combines American folk, blues,
trips and · gardening with his
and bluegrass traditions with
family. Through these experielements from African, Arabic,
ences, he developed a mature
Asian, Celtic, Malagasy and
appreciation for not only the
Turkish musical sources.
beauty in · large landscape
The Emmy-winning Smith
'scenes, but also in the smaller
is well known to television
details that surround him.
viewers as the.longtime leader
"There is beauty all around
of the band on the "Saturday
us," Davis said. "The ability to
Night Live" program, as well
see that beauty. whether in the
as lead guitarist with Hall &amp;
details of the veins of a leaf or
Oates. He began working as a
in the ovemll perspective of a
professional musician in his
cloudy mountain scene, is a
early teens, and is now in hot
great gift given to its by our
demand for live perfor'mance
creator. I hope to share the
and session work.
ability to see that beauty with
Guitar virtuoso Fareed·
others through my work."
Haque enjoys a career that .
The French Art Colony is
spans the spectrum of musical .
Submitted photo
located at 530 First Ave.
styles. Moving11asily between
French Colony Chorus, Gallipolis Chapter of Sweet Adelines International, will appear in a guest spot during the concert
Gallery hours are from I0 a.m.
jazz and classical guitar, he
by the French City Chorus men 's barbershop group on Saturday June 17, at the Aiiei-Ann Carson .Dater Performing Centre.
until6 p.m. on Tuesday through
ha~ performed all ?f the rna)or
Fresh from a successful competition of Region 4 Sweet Adelines choruses from Ohio, .Kentucky, West Virginia and Indiana,
_Friday, and from I to 5 p.m. on
guitar
concertos, IS an active
French Colony Chorus is directed ~Y Susan Russell of Gallipolis, and has members from the tri-county region. From left,
Sunday. Admission is free.
transcriber
of baroque. as well
first row, are Ellie Alderson, Linda Lane , Maury Burnette, Nancy Stevens and Dorothy Musgrove; second row, Susan
More information about the
as
South
American
music and
Russell, Jeanie Runyan, Sonya Call, Mary Madsen and Donna Patrick; third row, Amy Sprague, Sue P.riest, Nan Heiskell,
. FAC and irs upcoming events
has had numerous modern
Toni Ford and Sharo"n Anderson; fourth row, Bev Alberchinski, Suzy Parker, Alva McCoy, Marti Edelmann and . Sherrie
can
be
found
at
works dedicated to him.
Fenderbosch.
http://f.acarr home .zoomnet .net
Tickets for .the concert are
or by calling (740) 446-3834.
· still available at $22 when purchased in advance and $25 at
the gate. Advance tickets may
be purchased at Blue Eagie
Our
f
r
h
h
1
MASON, W.Va. - A free praetor Joey Wilcoxon, ol- p.m. and cartoons characters a ter c urc
at
p.m . .Music ahd Haffa 's Records in
concert by Adam D. Tucker of lowed at 8:30 by Two River will be thereto mingle. Ronald Residents are invited to bring a Athens, Ace · in the Hole in
McDonald will meet with chi!- picnic lunch to the park, or pur- Columbus, and Rt. 60 Music in
GALLIPOLIS - The Our Charleston will highlight the Junction.
House Museum , 432 First three-day event marking the
Saturday's events begin at II dren at 2 p.m., followed by the chase one from the food ven- Barboursville, W.Va.; online at
Ave., opened for the season Town of Mason's .ISOth birth- a.m., with a parade going from Mark Wood Fun Show at 3:30 dors. While eating, attendees www.furpeacestation.com; and
on May 31. Tour hours are 10 . day.
the Mason Car Wash to the p.m.
canenjoyamagicshowbyPhil by phone at (740) 992-6228.
Tucker, of Charleston , is an park. Line-up begins at 10:30
A talent showcase will be Luckeydoo. At I :45 p.m ., free .The gate will open at 7
a.m. until 4 p.m. Wednesday
through Saturday, and I to 4 up~and-coming country artist, a.m.and all are encouraged to held at 6 p.m. featuring local birthday cake will be _given p.m., with the show beginning
at 8 p.m.
.
p.m. Sunday.
who has opened for . country JOID m.
residents who want to "show out, while supplies last
Fur Peace Station is located
Following the parade at off' their talent The show is
A gospel sing, under the
Summer events include: greats such as Tracy Byrd,
• Colonial Day for Darryl Worley, Trace Adkins, noon , there will be an opening open to all sorts of acts, such as direction of Aaron Grate, will at the end of St. Clair Road , off
Wednesday, June 21, and Joe Diffie, Julie Roberts, ceremony with a flag raising singers, dancers, instrumen- begin at 2 p.m. Scheduled to Route · 20 one mile east of
Wednesday, July 19, 10 a.m. JoDee
Messina,
Tracy s~rvicebytheStewart-Johnson tals, porn porn groups, or any sing are Grate. Mercy, Route 33 in Darwin, just 15
unti12 p.m. for girls ages 8-12. Lawrence and Charlie Daniels. VFW Post9926. At 12:30 p.m., others that are in good taste.
Together for Christ, and the minutes south of Athens and
Lunch is included for the $15 Hewillsin.gSaturday,June 17, "Rockin'Ronnie"Spencerwill
Following Tucker's 8 p.m. Evelyn
Roush
Family. just four miles north of Route 7.
charge. The event features cos- at8p.m.atthetownparkonthe emcee a karaoke contest that concert, a candlelighteeremo- Children can enjoy the many .
.
tutnes, crafts, games and man- levee.
will feature cash prizes for the ny for v.eterans will be held by · games set to take place begin-.
ners of colonial times. Call for
The park is the site for the winners in both the children the VFW at 9:30 p.m, At 10 ning at 2 p.m. also. The celereservations at 446-0586.
entire celebration, which will and adult divisions.
p.m., a fireworks display will bration will end with a com• History Day Army Can~[ begin Friday,June 16, with a 7
Bounce houses will be avail- be held over the Ohio River.
niunity ·church service in the
in the museum courtyar . p.m. concert by local chiro- able to children from I to 6
Sunday's events will begin park at 6:30p.m.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. Friday, July 7 from 10 -a.m. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . ; , _ _ ,_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Art and utility unite-with tile
West Virgima Division of
Culture and. History's annual
teacher is Eugene Huffman.
exhibition,
Quilts and Wall
There is a $10 fee. Call 446GALLIPOLIS
Hangings
2006,
in the Great
0586 for reservations.
OHIO CHAUTAUQUA 2006
Chautauqua is coming to
Hall and Art Gallery of the
Gallipolis June 20-24 under the
Thesday, June 20
Mother of Invention?" Explore ways that Cultural Center, State Capitol
sponsorship of the Ohio
10:30 a.m. ..,.. Karen Vuranch, "Stories of war creates technology which has profound Complex in l:harhiston.
Humanities CounciL It will be Peace and Justice." Featuring a story about a effects in peacetime.
.
The crowd-pleasing jtiried
held in the Gallipolis City Park, little girl whose mother and father are conBossard Library - Adult Workshop.
exhibition features 61 exquisite
with workshops for youngsters ductors in the Underground Railroad, helpUnder tile Ohio Chautauqua Tent at quilts and wall hangings repreVINTON - The Bill and adults planned at the ing slaves escape into Ohio.
Gallipolis City Park:
·
sentin~ the talents of .west
Hawks Country Band will per- Bossard Memorial Library.
Bossard Library ~ Youth Workshop .
6:45p.m. - Entertainment.
Virgirua quilters. Quiltmaking
form at the Dakota Steakhouse
2:30p.m. - Michael Hughes, "When the · 7:30p.m.- "An Evening With Ernie Pyle." is one of West Virginia's oldest
Gallipolis is the second of
in Chillicothe on · Saturday, five tours Chautauqua will War Was on the Wire." A look at the works of
Friday, June 23 ·
and most treasirred art forms,
June 17 from 7:.30 to 10:30 inake around Ohio , starling 10 celebrated men and women who reported
10:30 a.m. -Hank Fincken, "If I Had Been and this annual display . has
p.m., and at the Paramount with Delaware June 1.4-18. World War II .
.
Born An Inca." Discussion/slide presentation become a tradition with visitors ·
:Arts Center, Ashland, Ky., on After Gallipolis, the presentaBossard Library - Adult Workshop.
sharing discoveries about life in.J!eru.
from all over the United States
Friday, June 30 from 8 to 9 tion will be in Mansfield June
Under the Oh10 Chautauqua Tent at tile
Bossard Library - Youth Workshop.
and abroad. l;he wall hangings
p.m. Dax ·Hill will perform 27-July I,Geauga County July Gallipolis City Park:
2:30 p,m. - Gene . Worthington, "White . will be on display through Aug.
with the band at this show. . 12-16,andSalemJuly 18-22.
6:45p.m. - Entertainment.
• House Firsts." . Details innovative changes 20 while the quilts can be seen
For information, contact
7:30
p.m.
'.
'
An
Evening
with
Chief
· Theodore Roosevelt made in the White House. until Sept. 4. .
At the tum of the century,
Bill Hawks at 388- I 566.
·
Bossard Library - Adult Workshop.
Chautauqul! was known as a Cornstalk."
Prizes were awarded in four
Under the Ohio Chautauqua Tent at categories: Pieced quilts,
Wednesday, June 21 •
national forum for the open
10:30 a.m. Gene Worthington, Gallipolis City Park:
discussion of the latest thinkappliqued qu·itts, mixed/other
"Exploring
the
Natural
World." Take a nature
6:45 p.m. - Entertainment.
ing in politics, economics,
quilts and wall hangings. First7:30 p.m. - "An Evening With Clara ($500), second-($4!10), and
McARTHUR ..,. Do you international relations, litera- walk to observe and learn more about tile
Barton.'
· . ·
.
have the prettiest - · or tigli- ture, science and religion.
, world in which·we live .
third-place ($300) awards were
·Bossard
LibraryYouth
Workshop;
Saturday,
June
24
est, the fastest - or slowest,
During its best years,
made in all four categories. In
2:30 p.m. - Dan Cutler, "The American
10:30 a.m. - Michael Hughes , "Every addition, fourth-($200) and
the biggest - or smallest air- Chautauqua was a forum for
plane, truck, car, motorcycle, political oratory, high-quality Revolution: lndi:in Style." Examine .the no- Child a Partner: American and British fifth-place awards ($1 00) were
boat or ;my other piece of dance·, theater, recitation, win situation in which Cornstalk and others Children in World War II .'' Explore how made in the wall hanging category. The Division also made
machinery that might be of music and mimedt was a venue founJl themselves as the two "superpowers" young Americans helped win World War IL
, Bossard Library - Youth Workshop.
two purchase awards, one quilt
interest and that you would for progressive public discuS'- of that time prepared for war.
2:30 p.m. - Hank Fincken, "America and one Wall hanging, and the
Bossard Library - Adult Workshop.
like a lot of people to see?
sions of topics like race rela- .
Under
the
Ohio
Chautauqua
Tent
.
at
the
Today:
Fighting to Maintain the Peace.'' A judge designated a Best of
Drive, fly, or trailer it to the lions , prison refon'n and educa- ·
City
Park:
slide
lllustrated
exploration of contemporary Show prize of $1 00.
Gallipolis
Vinton
County
Airport tiona! Ianning, and it was an
'6:45"
p.m.
Entertainment.
.
life
in
Peru.
Sunday, June 18 for the First arena for that particular mix of
Anita
Shackleford
of
7:30p.m."An
Evening
With
Francisco
Bossard
Library
-Adult
Workshop.
Bucyrus,
Ohio,
was
the
judge
Annual Big Boy Toy Day:
optimism, faith and values.that
Under. the Ohio Chautauqua Tent at for this year's exhibition. She
. There will be · Iawnmower we associate with the early Pizarro."
Thursday,
June
22
Gallipolis
City Park:
·
has been certified ,with the
races; circuit and drag , a twentieth century in America.
10:30
a.m.
Dan
Cutler,
"Adopted
by
the
6:45p.m.
Entertainment.
National Quilting Association
Hyundai Car Rally with 50 to
ChaYtauqua is a word with
Indians."
Sharing
information
about
Indian
7:30
p.m.
"An
Evening
With
Teddy
(NQA) since 1982, ilnd has been
70 cars expected, a "who has many meanings . It is a lake in
involved in judging shows at
the loudest car stereo" contest New York, a religious and cui- life, culture and entertainment; discussing why Roosevelt.''
In case of inclement weather, evening per- local, regional and national levand much more.
,tural institution that began Cornstalk and others adopted white children.
.Jormances will be held in the Ariel-Dater els. She currently is the program
Bossard Library -Youth Workshop.
There will .be food all day, there in 1874, a literary society
2:30 p.m. - Karen Vuranch, "Is War the · Performing Arts Centre.
coordinator and serves on the
airplane rides , and so many · tqat provided the first extenfaculty for the NQA:s Quilt
different activities that they sion education in the · United
cannot all be listed.
States, a company of canvas calls up a simpler American tures humantities scholars in these showcases of humari Judging Seminar. Her quilts'.
have been exhibited in shows
The Vinton County Airport tents that toured the American past. It denotes enlightenment,. ass1,uning the costume and char- history.
The
popularity
of across the United States and in
acter of historical figures .
·
is located six miles l!Orth of heartland in the ·early 1900s, community and respect.
Since the South Dakota Chautauqua has spread like Australia, winning many awards
McArthur just off Ohio 93 O(l and a forum for oratory by the
The tr~veling tent chauAirport Road. Pilots fly to 221. likes of William Jennings tauquasdiedoutwiththeadvent Humanities Council began wildfire . Folks . across the including 12 Best of Shows .and
For more information, call Bryan, Teddy Roosevelt, ofmotion'picturesandtheauto- presenting the · "modern" nation regularly attend and others .for workmanship.
For more information about
Vinron County Pilots and Clarence Darrow and Mark ~ · mobile. However, chauta.uquas Chautauqu~ in 1976, many appreciate these thought-proQuilts
and Wall Hangings
voking
and
entertaining
living
across
tl"\e
humanities
councils
Boosters President Nick Twain. Chautauqua is a word ·quickly regained popularity in
2Q06,
call
(304) 558-0162.
Rupert at (140) 357-0268.
of nostalgic associations. It theirmodemrevival,whichfea- country have also participated his tory programs.

Middleport • -Pomeroy, Ohio
.

Annual quilt
exhibit opens

~~~i~B~i~t~· ~~~:1~~cahge~~~

ww\\.mydail)&gt;&lt;mtincl..c om

Commissioners support CSI tactics to·keep children safe

SPORTS
•·Heat even series.
~PageB1

BY BETH SERGE..T
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - . Meigs
County will soon be stepping
into the high-tech realm of
digital fingerprints and ON A
swabs to .help identify the
county's children through a
voluntary ·program slated to
kick off at this year's Meigs
County Fair.
The details of the program
were explained at yesterday's
meeting of the Meigs County
Commissioners.

Chris Shank and Jane
Banks from the Meigs County
Department of lobs and
Family .Services (DJFS)
explained children throughout
the c.ounty will be offered an
opportunity to receive the free
profiles that would &gt;then be
given only to their parents.
These profiles will consist
of the child's photo, digital
fingerprints, a DNA sample
and other pertinent information ·such as contact phone
numbers and a listing of med.
ications.

The DNA sample consists
of a cotton swab that the parenls can rub on the inside of
their child's mouih . While the
swab is still wet 'it · is then
applied to a DNA card included in the profile kit. The swab
is then thrown away and the
DNA sample card is ready to
be used for years to come.
Shanks' said the DJFS felt
the profile kits were a good
idea because they go hand in
hand with the agency's promotion of child welfare.
"This will"be used as a pro-

,

.

.I

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
. PIJge AS
• Robert L Barton
...

~.~;,; ..."'&lt;;·,~ , · \ '

-,bfsiDE~,.;- ..
'i' ,.

l,

'1'.

,,1

• The Galloways to
..

perform. See ·Page A2
• Court annuls lawyer's
license, orders restitution.
See Page M
• RACO distnbutes ·
scholarships of $9,600 ·
to SHS grads.
See Page A6

Chautauq··ua brings to_uring program to Gallipolis

Local band
plans shows

Buckley reported that a total of
309 random tests were given
last year with several positive
results and referrals to treatment programs. He suggested
the board consider expanding
the program to include not only ·
atJ:\letes but student drivers. The
cost for-the testing is about $26
a student, he reported.

POMEROY - The possibly
of expanding drug testing at
Meigs High School ·was discussed in preparation for revising and adopting a policy for
Ule 2006-07 school year at this
week's meeting of the Meigs
Local Board of Education.
Superintendent
William

Ple11se see .Revlews, AS

Gallipolis man dies .in
. §ingle c~r aq;ident
\'1.• ,

. STAFF REPORT 1.
NEWS®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.coM

•

Th~ C¥

,·r ~

tJle'n , caught fire.
The Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
Department was dispatched
·GALLIPOLIS- A one-car almost immediately to the
accident early Thursday on scene with two trucks and II
Bulaville Pike has taken the firefighters, who were there
life of a Gallipolis man, the for almost 4-1/2 hours.
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
The Ohio · State Fire
Highway Patrol reported.
Marshal's office ·was also
Jonathan B. Pennjngtori, contacted and on the scene,
23, was proi)OUriced dead at and the patrol" was also assistthe scene of the. crash, which ed by the Gallia County
the patrol said occurred · Sheriff's Department. The
around 5 ·a.m., about a mile . car. which sustained heavy
·
north of Ohio 160 and around damage, was towed.
I ,000 feet past the U.S. 35
The accident remains under
overpass.
.
.
investigation,
said
Lt.
Troopers said Pennmgton Richard Grau, the G-M Post
waws southbound when the commander. It marks the third
2904 Chevrolet. Malibu _he traffic fatality in Gallia
operated ~ent oft the left Side County this year.
of the road and struck several
The victim has been
pilings before striking a tree released to the Willis Funeral
and coming to a stop.
Home for arrangements.
.

Beth Sergeni;phOto

Meigs County Transfer Facility Site Manager Lynn Melton gets to work processing tons of trash.
For the fourth year in a row the facility is donating its trash processing services to River Sweep
·2006 which takes place tomorrow across the county.

Pitching in to make River Sweep a success.
BY. BETH SERGENT
lected in the sweep.
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM
Lynn Melton, site manager
for the Meigs County
. ROCKSPRINGS
Transfer Faci lity said the
Tomorrow's River Swe.ep · company has donated thi s serrequires volunteers pitching vice to River Sweep for the
in to collect the trash but it last three vears.
also requires a place for the
Melton: who is also from
trash to go, namely the Meigs Pomeroy, hopes to offer free
County Transfer Facility dumpster services to next
which .is once again donating year's. Gold Wings and Ribs
their processing services for Festival and this yeM 's
up to· five tons of irash col- Sternwheel Festival as part of

•

'

the company's service to the
community.
Despite being in ii s location at 34878 Rock springs
Road for the past seven years,
the Meigs County Transfer
Facility is not well known by
residents.
Owned · · by Kilharger
Construction of Logan . the
facility sees approximately 30
Please see River.

AS

Five Meigs Countians ·

conVicted of poaching·
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

WEATIIER

Big Boy Toy Day

.... .

tective devic.: in the event a DJFS will be in contact with
child is missing or worse," the county's school districts to
Shank explained. "With the off~r the voluntary profile kits
kits we' ll have something to to students with parents being
go by."
give n ,the documentation for
Commissioners
Mi ck safe keeping .
Davenport and Jim Sheets . In other business:
agreed and approved a conA bid award for the
tract between the DJFS and Middleport Lighting project
the Meigs County Sheriff 's was approved for $8,120 from
Office for $5,724 for assis- Rainbow Ridge located in
llince from a deputy in pro- Eagle Ridge . The fundin g for
cessing the profiles when it thi s project comes from
comes to the collection of dig- money remaining from the
. ita! fingerprints.
Shank and Banks said the
Please see ladies, AS

Meigs Board reviews
policies,
hires personnel
..

Activities surr9und
Mason's
birthday
·

Summer events
at
Ho.use

FRIDAY • •JUNE 16 , :!006

SO CENTS • Vol.;;;, , :-.in. :!14

Detail• on Pap A8
Beth SergentjphOto

INDEX
2 SI!Cl10NS - 16 PAGES

Proving vacation Bible school isn't just for kids anymore, these seniors and their teachers,
spent the week at the Meigs County Senior Center's First Vacation Bible School which will hopefully become a yearly tradition.
·

Seniors turn out for their oum vacation Bible school

Calendars
. A6
BY BETH SERGENT
Classifieds
B4-6 BSERGENT®ty1YDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Comics
B7
. POMEROY - Vacation
A6 Bible schoq_J isn'tjust for kids
Dear Abby
anymore.
·
.
Editorials
A4
This week around 25 adults
Faith • Values
A2-3 . attended the Meigs . County
Senior ' Center's · Vacation
Obituaries
As Bible School to join in fellowship . and revisit what
B Section made vacation Bible school
Spans
to them when they
AB special
Weather
were younger.
, .
© ao06 Ohio Valley Publl•hlns Co.

.

•}

Volunteer (RSVP) Maxine
Little led the activities at this
week's school along with help
from
volunteers
Alice
Wamsley, June Kloe~. Thelma
Jeffers and Ruth Ward.
Little said one of the differences between vacation Bible.
school for children and adults
is that, "Maybe ours goes at a
slower pace but it's very
rewarding."
However, the vacation
Bible school experience
Ohio Retired and Semor wouldn't be an authentic one
'{

without cookies. Kool-Ai d
and crafts which the senior
center's·schobl most certainly
had . There were even a few
little ones (so nie of them
grandchildren) that aHended
this week's classes .
'
Wamsley, who was
111
charge of' the
musi'c.
explained tbis wec.k's activities involved not only singing
of the old Bibl e songs like
"Abraham" and "Deep and
Please see VBS, AS

~

and $700 in court costs. In addi-.
lion, the y~mnger Williamson
was sentenced to serve 90 days
POMEROY - . An 18-month in jail. with 80 suspended. His
investigatio-n ·by state wildlife hunting rights were suspended
officers intn alleged white- for fiw years and he. was
tailed deer poaching in Meigs ordered to serve I50 hours of
Countyended June I with the community service and live
convictions of five individuals years of•probatinn.
on a total of 37 misden1eanor Danny Gheen. 35. of Long
charges, accordmg_to tlie 01110 Bottom. pled guilty to three tagDepartment
ot , . Natural ging-related violations and paid
Resources (ODNR) DiviSIOn of · tines totaling $365.
WI)dhte.
..
Ryan Rowe. 29. of Rutland,
Meigs County Court J\1dge was ordered to pi1y $370 in
Steven Story levied sentences .fines and court costs on two ·
against the tive, who . were · charges. , .
.
accused of a vanety of wildlife
Charles E. Williamson , o3, of
violations, including . spotli!lht- Rutland was ordered to pay
.mg, hunhng deer With a rifle $590 in tines and c"ow1 cos'ts on
and improper tag~i~g.
four charges.
Charles B. ~1lhamson, 40, of
State Wildlife· Investigator
Rutland was found gmlty of 18 Charles Stone and Wildlife
wildlife violations. Benwse of Officer Kei th . Wood began
pnor wlldhte conv1ct1ons dnt- receiving information about the
ing !rom 2CX)4, eight of the men's activities in January
charges were elevated to tirst- 2005. Thev ti:Jund thaf 17 bucks
·degree
mi&gt;demcanors. were illegally h'irvested, nine. of
Williwnson was ordered to pay which were spotli ghted and
$2,320 \11 fines and $1,260 111 taken with a rille. The olhers
co!-lrt costs, In addition,. were in1properly tagged or
Williamson was sentenced to taken wiih a hunting implement
90 days in jail, with 76 sus· not legal for the particular seapende~ , His hunting rights were son:
·
suspended for fiye years and he
Three mounted bucks 'and 13
was ordered to serve 150 hours racks seized as pan·of the invesof community service and live· tigati"on·were ordered forfeited
ycm·s probl(tlon.
.
·by the cmu1 . With two excepCharles B. Williamson, Jr., tions, the illegally harvested
20, of Rutland was founq guilty · deer were at least 2.5 years old
of 10 wildlit~ violati?ns. and all can·ied eight-point or
ordered to pa)( $1,000 111 lmes larger racks.
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know how to give good gifts
to your children, how much
more will the heavenly Father
give the Holy Spirit to those
who ask him!" (Luke II. 13,
NRSV)
How many of us would like
to go to bed each night without
worry and sleep in peace?
How many would like to wake
up each and every morning
happy and full of love and joy?
And would it not be rather nice
to go through the day without
anger, malice and resentment?
How many of us, deep down
inside, would really like to be
.known as (and actually be) an
enjoyable, good and benevolent individual? Gertainly we
would agree these are essential
· qualities of an upstanding and
truly respectable person.
Rather than living in enmity,

.,

F!!llowship
Apostolfc

.

Holy Spirit. It is the working
of the Spirit of God Himself
who transforms and changes
us and begins producing in us
the fruit of that new and
unending life we have through
Jesus Christ our Lord.
To the extent we are filled
with the Holy Spirit of God,
then, to that degree we will
live and enjoy the ·life
described above ... but this is
something we must' deeply
strife and jealousy would we desire and for which we must
not rather be patient thoughtful, compassionate ami self- pray. As the Lord clearly indicontrolled? Are these qualities cates in the Gospel of Luke,
we must ask!
of life not preferable to living
The 19th century Anglican
in dissonance, contention, con- bi shop of Liverpool, J. C.
stant resentment and the like?
Yes, of course, this really is Ryle, notes in his coli)JIIentary
on the Gospel of St. Luke:
the life for which, deep down
'"The Holy Spirit is beyond
inside, we all · hunger and doubt the greatest gift which
thirst. Is it possible, though? God can bestow on men and
Or is this . kind of life littl~ women. Haying thi~ gift. we
more than a pipe d~eam · · have all !lungs - life, light,
Unfortunately many Chrisuans hope and heaven. Having this
:-vould ~swer that, though gift, we have God the Father's
ideal~ 1t 1s n_ot actuai!Y atta10- boundless love, God the Son's
able 10 this ume 10 this world. atoning blood, and full comYet what. w_e are talking munion with all three Persons
a~ut here IS life lJearjng the of the blessed Trinity. Having
ftults of the Spmt. (See this gift we have grace and
Galatians 5 . 22~23) .. And our peace in the world that · now
~rd Jesus ,s3ld, . Whoever exists, and glory and honor iq
· ~b~des 10 me and I 10 hlffi.' h~ the world to come. And yet
1t IS that bears much .fru1t... this mighty gift is held out by
(Jo!'m 15.5) ~~t fru1t? The our Lord Jesus Christ as a gift
fruit of .th~ Spm~ of course. to be obtained .by prayer!"
~d if. lt IS ~ss1ble to bear
We have to' long for, fray
this fruit - and _1t 1s unles~, ?f for and ask for the gift o the
course. Jesus ned.- then n IS Holy Spirit ... and not just
also poss1ble to hve the life once but continually, every
this fru1t represents.
. . day. As pastor .and writer,
We sunply have to ab1de 10 Andrew Murray so brilliantly
Christ and have Christ abiding illustrated:
' ·
in . us. _And how does Christ
"Just as the branch, already
ab1de 10 us? Our Lord . and filled with the sap of the vine,
Savior resides in us by the is ever cl'ying for the coolinindwelling of His Holy Spirit. ued and increasing flow of
· (See, for example, ~omans that sap, that it may bring its
8.9 where the Spirit of God is fruit to perfection, so the
also referred to as the Spirit of believer, rejoicing .in the posChrist.)
session of the Spirit, ever
This being true, then, why thirsts and cries for more."
are 5o many of us hvmg w1th
Amen and Amen. We all,
so much stress and tension, each of us, need to thirst and
fear and. anxiety, despair and cry for more. And when we
unhappiness, and whatnot? In do, what might we expect?
other words, what are so many Well, the Lord Himself tells us
of us living lives that fall woe- what to expect: Our heavenly
fully short of what God has Father will give the Holy
promised in His Word to all Spirit to those who ask Him ...
who believe?
lJ.Ild not only that but how
The answer lay, I believe, in much more. How so ·very
the person and work of the much more.

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FATHERS
One thing that everyone has in common is that we all
have, or have had, a father. Fathers should be
considered
as a gift from God and a reflection of His heavenly
love for us. Nol too many years ago, it was only
the father who was out working to support his
farilily while the mother was home caring for
their children and 'the needs of their
home . Today, many fathers and mothers
share the many different aspects of
raising a fruruly, including wQrking
outside of the home, which is good
because it seems that.fathers today
are more involved with their children
and their activities: Fathers who love,
·support. and encourage their children
are helping to develop a healthy family,
and it is essential that they never
discourage their children from confiding
in them with their problems. Fathers who
speod time with their families seem to be more
at peace with themselves, and families that get
along well in good times are most often better able
to handle the bad times. It is easy to become a father,
but quite difficult to ,become a good father, and
a good father who loves his family is truly a blessing
from God.
I will be a father to you, and you will be My sons and
daughters, says the Lord Almighty.

. .

drained the population.
Those who remained in the
Soviet orbit came under
pressure to abandon Jewish
culture
and
traditions.
Today, there are an estimated
70,000 · Jews across the
Balkans - in addition to
thousands of Israelis who
started arriving in !he 1990s
in search of business opportunities.
"The entire Jewish culture
of the Balkans has been
. slow\y wiped away for
decades . In many places,
there were Jews but no
Jewish life," said Chris Ezri,
21, a Jewish community
in
Oradea,
organizer
Romania, where groups are
hoping to rebuild the city's
century-old synagogue . "We
.have to turn on the memories ."
At the meeting, young
Jewish leaders described
other projects - including
training rabbis in Serbia for
communities without any
religious leaders and plans
for a Jewish center in
Skopje, Macedonia.
'
"We see· ourselves like tl\e
phoenix,"
said
Lela.
Sadikario, a 24-year-old
Jewish leader in Skopje.
"We will rise from the
ashes."

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ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

First Baptbt Ch'u n:h
Pastor: Bill y Zoapan 6th and Palme r St.,
Middl epon. Sunday Sc hool - 9:15 a.m..
Wor sh ip • 10 : 15 a:m .• 7:00 _p.m.,
Wedneiday S e~ice.- 7:00 p.m.
Radne First Baptbt
Pastor. Joseph Godwin . interim pas1or ,
Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m., Worship 10 :40 a.m., 7:0 0 p.m., ' Wednesday
Services · 7:00p.m.

'·

Sliver Ru.n BaP.lllt
Pastor: John Swanson, Sunday School •
IOa.m., Worship - lla.m., 7:00 p.m.
.Wednesdny Scrv!ces- 7 :00p.m.

M1. Union B•ptlst
Pastor: Denni a Wea 'o'er Sunday School9 :45 a .m., Eve ni n g - 6:30 p .m.,

ll&lt;llolehan ll.optlst Cburdl

f

Gre11 Bend, Route 124, Rat: ine . O H. .
Pulor: Ed Car1 er, Sunday School - 9 :30
11.m., Sunday Wo rship - 10:30 a .m..
Wednesday Bible Study - 1:00 p.m.

Old Bethel r ... \VIII Baptist Chun:h
28601 St. Rl. 7, Middleport, Sundt~ y
Service - 10 a.m., 6 :00 p.m., Tuesday
Services -6:00

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I

HW.Id~ B•ptill Chorda
Rt. 143 just off Rt . 7, Poslor: Re ....
James R. A.creC, S r., Sunday Unified
Service , Wors~ ip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wedneiday Services -7 p.m.

St.

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Victory S.ptlst lndcpeqdrnt
S2S N. 2nd St. Middlepor1. Pastor: James
E. Keesee , Worship - I Oa.n1 ., 7 p.m ..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.rn .

Michelle Kennedy,
Admissions and Marketing .
Director
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center
"A Celebration of Uf~"

~alth

·'

333 Page Street
(740) 992·6472
Mlddle.;nrt OH Fax t74o\ 992· 7.M

Hours

•·o~

R•n Rapdst
Pastor ; Ariu s Hurt, Sunday S1= hool - 10
a.m .. Wmh1p - II a.m.
Mt. Morbth Bapti!t
Fourth &amp; Ma in St .. Middleport . P~ s tor :
Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr., Sunday School 9 :30a.m .• Worsl1ip - 10:4 5 a.m.

6 am · 8pm

Atrn osphe~

Baptist Church

Railroad St .. Mason , Sunday School .: to
a.m., Worshi p - II a .m., 6 p m,
Wed~eMia y Service ~ - 7 p.m.

C

'Jvli{{ie's 1{estaurant
Open 7 days a week
740-992-7713

Ttre Hppllance man
740-985-3561
992-1550

your lighl so shine before
:lrn•en, that they may see
;lg&lt;Jod works and glorify
':IIFather in heaven."
Matthew 5:16

Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn
MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

Ohio 45769

~

(740) 992-3279
'-!!V
Tol Free 1-1177-583-2433

•

t 90 N. Second St.

&amp; TEES

Worship ,- J'O· JO a .m .. 6 :3 0
Wedncsduy S ervi..-es 6 :30p.m.

p. m.

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
.Coolville, Ohio
74o'-6ey7 -311 b

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
An Accounting &amp;
financial Services Firm
618 E. Main Street • Pomeroy
(740) 992-7270

.

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W~leyan Bible Uolln ess (:hunch
75 Pearl St., Mi dd l.eJXm . Pa~ wr· · Ric k
Bourne; Sllndny School - Hl u.m. Worship·
- 10 :4 5 p.m., Sunduy Ev!!. 7.00 p m.,
Wed ne sday Sl!rvice- 7.30 p.m.

Ziun Chun.:h or Christ
Pomeroy, Harris on,·il lc Rd . (Rt . l4 .\ J,
P a ~ tnr: Rnger Wiltson, Su nd11y .Schon! 9: 30 a.m., Wo r~ hi p - 10. .~0 a .m., 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Services. 7 p.m.

Hyse ll Hun Communlly Church
Pastor: Re\'. Larry U!mley; Sunday School

Tuppeni Plain Church u( Christ
Instru menta l. Worshi p Service - 9 a .m..
Commun ion - 10 n.m., Sunday School 10: 15 11.m., Youth· 5:30pm Sunda y, Bible
St udy Wednesday 7 pm

- 9:30a.m.. Wor.;hi p - 10:43 a. m., 7 p.m..
Thursd11y Bibl e Study and Youth • 7 p.m. .
Laurel Cliff FrM ~1tthodisl Church
Pastor: Glen':! Rowe, Sunday School •
9 :30a.m., Worsh ip - 10::\0 a.m. and 6
p.m.,Wedflesduy Servke " 7:00 p.m.

Bradbury C hurth or Chr ist
Mi nister: Tom Runyon. 3 95~8 Br.Jdbury
Ro ad ~idd ltport , Sunday School - 9:] 0
a.m.
Worshi p - 10:30 n.m.

Latter-Day Saints
The Churrh or Je!li U5
Chrl.!lt or Latter-Ouy Saints
St. Rt . 160, 446-6247 or 446 -7486 .
S unday Schoo l 10:20· 11 a.m., Reh ef
Socie1 y/Pri cst houd 11:0 5- 12.00 noon,
Sac nune nt Serv ice 9 -1 0 : 15 a.m ..
Homcmnking mer li ng, 1st lJlun;. · 7 p.m.

Rutl11md Churth M Chrisl
Su nday Sc hool - 9 30 a.m.. Wors hip and
Co mmumon - 10:30 a.m . lloh J. Werry,
Minister
Bl"ffdtord Church of Chris l
Co mer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradb ury RJ.,
Minister: Doug Shambl in. Youth Mi nister.
Bill Amherger, Sunduy Schoo l - 9 :30 a.m.
Wo r ~ h i p - H:OO a.m., 10 ·30 a.m., 7:00
p.m.,Wed nesduy Service s - 7.00 p.m

·Lutheran
SL John Lutheran Church
Pine Gro ve, Wo rship - 9 :00 a. m., Sunday
Schoo l - 10:00 a .m. Pa stor: h m es P.
Urady

Hltkory IIUI!l Church of Chris t .

Our Sa,·Jour L.ulhtran Churth
Walnut ~ nd ' Hc r1ry Sts .. R OI'e n~w ooU.
W.Vu., Pustor: Dav1d Russe ll. Sun day
Schooi - IO:fXlu .m . Worship - I I a.m.

1\Jppers Plain s. Po:-~lor Mi ke Moor.::. Bible
· cl a~s. 9 a.m . Su nd tty, wou lfi p 10 ;t m
sUnday; worship 6:.:\0 pm Sunday.; Bi l'l lc
clu s~ 7 Plll'Wcd.

St. Paul l.uthenm Church
Comer Sycamo re &amp; Second St.. Pomeroy.
~ u n . Sr ho...1l - 9:4S a.m., Worship - I I a.m.

or

Reed sville Church Christ
l'aslor: llh ili p St4rm . Stmday SchoOl : 9:30
a.m., Worship Service: IOj o a.m .: Ditlle
Stud y, Wednt:sday. 6:.~0 p.m.

United Methodist
G r11l1Hm Unllt'd Method lsi
Worship - II u.m. Pastor: Ric hurd Nea .~e
Rcrhte-l ll nited Mdhod i!lil
New Hu v~.: u , Ric hard Nc a s~o:, Plllitu r,
Su ndny worsh ip 9 :]0 u.m. Tues. 6:30
prayer mid Bih k Stutly

Ottxter Chun:h of Chris t
Sum1ay sehnol 9:30 3.!11 .. Sunda y worship
- HU O a.m.
The Chun:h of Chrisl or Pomt' rv.t·
lntersectim,l 7 and 124 W. Eva nge list:
Dc n n i ~ Sa rgent. Su nd ay H1hk Study - .
9. 30 11:111., Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6 :30
p.111 , Wedne sd ay lJih tc Study- 7 p.m.

Mt. Olil'e llnlted Meth!Jdid
on' 124 behi nd, Wilk e~vill e. Pastl•r: Rev
Ra lph S pire~. Sunduy Schoo l - 9:30 a.m ..
Wors hip - 111:30 ru n ., 7 p.m.. Thursclay
Services . 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartrn rd Churt·h or Chris l in
Christian Union
Hartfo rd. W.Va .. Postnr :David Greer.
Su nday Schoo l ~ I.J :J tl ~1. 111 .• Worlih lp ·
1 0:~ 0 a .m ., 7;0 0 p.m .. Wcd.ucsd&lt;
1Y
Serv icl!s - 7 :00 p.m.

Church of God
MI. Motiuh Church or C od
Mil e l·llll Rd., lhd nc, Pus to r: J &lt;Jm c .~
Suuerfiel d, Sun~ \1)' s~h ool - 9:4 5 a.lll .,

1

Mt lg!&lt;&gt; Coo pe rathr- Pari.~ h
North ea~t Cl u~ t c r, Alfred , Pastor: l &lt;t ll l'
Be att ie , Sui}Ja y Sc hoo l
9 :30 a.m.,
Worl&gt;hip · J I 'lu n., 6:}0 r .m.
·
Chester
Pas tnr: Jane 1\ eall\1', Wmsh,1p ·- I.J
Sund:ly Scho(l l · 16 a. m. ·. TilU rslluy
Scr.•ir.-cs · 1 p.m.

u.m!

·7

.:fllbn' .:funtralJiomt

....,.-. . ....
··--···· .....
....,....

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M!IINM1

41111 Richland A&gt;enue. Athens
740~p94-6333
1·800·451·9806

Mill!...

0

Middleport, QH

74D-992·612B
Local spurce for trqphies,
Ia ues !-shirts nd more

.

Pine Gmn Klble Holin ~ Chunch
1/2 mile off Rt. J2 S. P:tstor: Rev. O'De ll
Manley, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ..
Wor§hip - I0:30 a.m., 7:30 p m.,
W~.:dnc sd ay Service- 7::\0 p.m.

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc, If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
Full line ot
.
Insurance words abide i11 you, ye shall INSURANCE ·
Products+ ask what ye will, and it shall
SERVICES
1
..
Financial
214 E: Main G-;)
be
done
unto
you.
ENCIES Inc : Services
992·5130
'
.
John 15:7
Pomeroy

MIDDLEPORT

TROPHIES

Rose of Sharon llollnet~!l C.'hu rth
Creek Rd ., Rutland, Pustor: Rev.
Dewey King. Sunda y school· 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday worshi p -7 p.m . Wedne klay
prayer meeting - 7 p'. m.
L: adi n ~

Bear wallo w Ridge Church of C h rist
Pastor: Bruce Terry, Sunday $('hoo t -9:30

in

Sizes available 5x10 to 10 x 20

Carvary l'iJgrlm t:ha p'el
1-farri sonville Road , Pa~ t(•r: Charb
McKenzie, Sunday School 9:.:\0 a.m ..
Worship · I I &lt;un . 7.011 p m.. Wednesday
Service · ~:00 p.'m.· · · ·

' ~lddleport C h11rrh of C hrist
5th an d M a in, · Pastot : A I Hartson,
Ch ildrcns Dircclor; Sharon Sayre, Teen
Director: Dodger Va uglkm, Sunday School
- 9 :30 a.m., WQ rsh ip- !US, !0:30a.m .. 7
p.m .. Wedne sdll)' Services· 7 p.m.

!'•d!ll'i&lt;lu1 Serv ices

If ye abide Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

Danville Hollnrss Chu rch
3 1057 Slale Routt' .\15, Langsvlle, Pastor:
Victor Roush , Sunday ~ hoo l - 9:30 a m.,
S unday worship · IO:JU a.m . &amp; 7 p.m.,
Wcd ne~d~y prayer S~: rv i c~· - 7 p.m.

..

Homt Cooked Meah &amp; Daily Specials

740-949-2217

"

Holiness ,
l:ommun lty Churth
Paswr: St!!\'e Tomek. Mam Street.
Rutl and. Sunduy Wo r...hi p-- 10:110 a m .
Sunday Scrv icc-7 p .m

'
Pomeroy Weslllide
Chun:h or C hrist
33226 Children 's Horne Rd .. S unday
School · 1'1 a.m ., Wnrship - lOa m., b p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
'

a.m.

"A Home Bank for
Home People"

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

.

Episcopal
( ;ract' E1,iwopal Chu rch
326 F.. Main St. , Pomeroy, Sunduy School
and Holy Euchanst 11 tiO a m. Re''·
Edward Payne

Pomeroy Churth of Christ
2 12 W. Mai n St. , S un d ~y Sc hnol - !HO
a. m., Wors hip- 10:30 a.m., 6 p. m..
Wednesdny Services - 7 p.m.

Flnt Southern Baplill
41872 Pomeroy Pike, Putor: E. Lamar , ·
O'Br.yant, Sunday Sc h ool - 9:30 a.m.,
Wors~ip - R:l ~ a .m . , 9 :45am &amp; 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Services- '7 :00p.m.

Sund ay Sc hool - 9 :30 a.m., Wo rship -

'

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.Tri nlly Church
Second &amp; Lynn, J&gt;omeroy. Pastor. Re,·.
Jonathan Noble. Wor~hip 10 ·25 a.m.,
Sunda)' Schnul 9 :15a.m.

llen)lock Grove Chrlstill Q Cburt'h
M i ni ~te r· L~n)' Rro wn, Wnrsh ip - 9 . ~0
a.m. Sunda y St:hool - 10:30 a.m .. Bi hk
Stud y · 7

Keno (;hurt"h or Chris t
Worship - 9 :30 a.m., Sunduy Sc hool 10:30 a.m.. Pru;tor-Jelfre y Wall ac~, ls i and
3rd Sunday

740-949-2210
Hills Self Storage

,,

Congregational

I

Ruti1nd Fint Baptist Church
Sunda)l School · 9:30 a .m., Wo_rsh ip 10:45 1\-m.
Pomeroy Fint Baptist
Pastor Jon Brockert. Eu l Main St.,
Sunday Sch. 9:30a m. Worshi p !0:30 am

AntJqulty BaptiR

507 Mulberry Heights

• e

Worship - I I tu n .. Wcd n c'4t&lt;~y Serv i Le ~ . 7
p.m .

Ell i~

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

P~meroy,

Churc:h o~ God or Prophecy
O.J . White Rd. uff St. Rt. 160. Pastor: PJ.
C'hupm:m, Sunday Schoo! - W :un ..

Westside C hurch or Christ
B226 Chil dren 's Home Rd, l'omerny, 01!
Contocl 740-44 1- 1296 Sunday m o m1ng
10 :00. S un morni ng Bible study :
fol lowing w orship, Sun . i:v..: 6:-oo pm,
Wed bible stud y 7 pm

Hope Baptist Church (SoUthern)
5.70 Grant St. , Middleport , Sunday school
-9:30 a.m., Worship - 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Serv ice • 7 p.m. Pastor: Gary

Wedneiday Smic&lt;s - 6J Op.m.

Warm Fritndly

209 Third
Racine, OH

-New K.}. Y.2 Corinthians 6:18

SyracUSt flrs l Church of God
App le and Scc"nd Sts .• Pastor: Rev. Dll\'ld
Ru ~sc!l, Su nday Schuol llnd Worsh1p-- 10
a.m. Eve ning Services- 6.30 p.m.,
Wed nesday Services ~ 6 30 p.m.

Church of Christ

Chabire Baptbt Cburch
Pu cor: S1eve Liule, Sunday School: 9 :30
am, Morning Worship:_ 10:30 am,
Wednesda y Bible Study 6:30pm; choir
practice 7;30: youth and Bibl e Budd1es
6:30 p .m. Thuat.. l pm book study

J11b
ANOt' RSON
fUNERAL HOM£

174 Layne Street • PO Hox 270
Ntw
WV 1.5265
•·unenll Director
Fumnl Phmn ing

Jupp11
Pastor: Bob R:md olp h. Worship - 9:30
a.m. Sunduy School - HHO a.m

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5.

Lo ng Bonom
Sunday School - 'l JO a.m., Wnr!&gt;h1p IO :.lll a.m.

Chester C hurt h or the Nal..llrent
Pastor: Re\'. l lerbtn Grate, Sunday School
- 9:30 a. m., Worship - II a. m., 6 p.m.,
Wedne'&gt;day Services - 1 p.m .
Rutland Church or the Nlln~ ~ne '
S~nd ay Sl·hutl l - 9:30 a .m., Worsh ip 10 :30 a. m., 6 :30 p.m .. Wednesday
Services - 7 p.m. R ~v. Mike ~la rk

Reed~ ville

Worshi p • 9:30 a.m.• Sunda&gt; School 10 m am . h r&lt;;t Sunt.lay of \1onth . 1 O(J
p.m. s.:rvicc

. :1\•p peN~ Plalns1St. Pa ul
Pastor l ane B!.!attie, Sunday Sc llool - 9
a.m .. Worshi p · 10 :u n.. Tucflday Serv1ces
-7:30 p.m.

Ridcrwur. Su nday Sdwul • !J:30 :1. 111 ,
Worsh ip - 10;30 ll.lll., Wcd nc,J uy S.:n rcc
• 7 p.m.
Fairview Bible C hun:h
Leta rt . W.Va . Rt. I, Pa~hlr' Hr1an May.
Su nd ~ y School - 9JO a.m.. Wvr~lup - 7:00
p.m.. WedneM.hty Bible Study - 7:!.~1 p m.
Foilh Fellows hi p Cru!iadc l'or Ch rist
Pil~ t o r . Rev. Franklin I)Kkcn ~. Ser \ ICl'
Friday. 7 p.m.

A Ne w Begl nnin a
!Full Gospel Ch urch) !Iarrison viiie,
Pastors: Bob and Kuy Man;hall ,
Sunday Serv1ce, 2 p.m.
A. mazing G raee t:omm un lty Church
Pa~tur: Wayne Dunlap, State Rt. 68 1.
Tuppers Plains. Sun. Worship: 10 urn &amp;
{d O pm.. Wed. Bible Study 7:00 p.m.

E nlrrprise
Pastor: Arl an'd King, SunJa;y Sd10o l 10 :30 a.m., Worship · 9·30 a.m .. Bihle
~ t u dy Wed. 7:30
Fht twoods
. Pa!&gt;tur: Keith Rader, Sunday School -. 10
tu n., Wor'ihi p - II a.m.

Cah ill()' llible t:hurch
PornC"roy Pik e, Cu. Rd .. P:l \ tnr·. Rc"
Blackwood. Sunda~ School - 1J:]O u.m ..
Wor sh ip l0 :3U u 111 .. 7 : ~ U p m .
Wednesday Scrvi.:e - 7 J() p.m.

Oasis Christian Felltmship
(Non-dcoominational fel1 owsh1pl
Meeti ng in the old American Legion Hall
South Foun h A\·enue, Middleport
Pastor: Chris Stcwan 10:00 am Sum.lay
Other meetings in homes

··om;t Run
Pastor . Boh Rohinson. Sullday Sc hool - ID
a. m . Wmsh1p - ll a.m.

Sti vers,·llle Cnmmuni ly Aptl!ilolic
Churt·h
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewe ll . Su nl\ u ~· wo1ship
- 6:00p.m .. Wednesday fl:\111 p.m. 11\ hle
Study

Community or Chrl!lt
Ponland-Ra&lt;: ine Rd ., Pastor: Jim Proffitt,
Sunday Sc hoo l - 9:JO a.m .. WOfsh!p 111:30 a.m., Wedn ~sd 11y' &amp;erv it:es · 7 00
p.m.
Bethel Worship Center
J9782 S. R. 7, Reedsvil le. OH 45772. 1/2
mile nonh of Eas1ern Sc hools on SR 7. A
Full Gospel Church, Pastor Rob Barbt:r,
Assocnlte Pa sto r Kary n Da\'1S , Youlh
Pastor Su:t ie Franci s, Sunday se rv ices
10:00 am \\oO r~ h ip , b:OU pm Fami ly Li fe
C lasses. Wed . Home Cell Groups 7:011
p.m. Out er Lim its Ce ll Group ut thl'
church f:dO pm to 8::\0 pm

lleath 1Middlepor1 r
!-'astor: IJ ri ~ n Dunhom. Sund;1y Sdmol •
9::\0 a.m.. Won;hip- 1! :00 a. m.
Minenn·IIJt.
Pastor: Bob Rob inson, Sunday Sc hool - 9
a.m., Worship - 10 a.m.
Peaui Chapel
Sunda y S.:hool - 9 a.m .. Worship - 10 n. m.
Pomeroy
Pa stor: Bria n Dl! ll harn. Worshi p - 9.JO
a. m., Sun ~lay Sc hoo l- \U:l"i a.m

Rejoicing U fe C hu rc h
500 N. 2nd A•·e .. Middl!!jKlrl. P &lt;t ~ t u r:
Mike Fore man, Pastor Emeritus lawreill'e
Foreman. Wor.~hip- !li:OO u.m
Wellnesday Sl"r.'iccs. 7 p.m
Clifton Tabernacle Chu rch
Cl ifton, W.Va., Sunday St:holll - IU a.m.,
Worshi p - 7 p.m.. , W~ d nes day Servin: - 7
p.m
Nr-" · Lift• Vi,c tor)' Ccnlt· r
3 77 .~ Gt:orges Creek RuaU, G a lli pu li ~. OH
Past,;r· B\11 Staten. Sunday S, • r\'ice~ - 10
a.m &amp; 1. p.m
Yout h 7 p.m.

Ash Street Church

Rotk Sprin ~s .
Pasw : Keith R11dcr. Sunda y School - 9: 15
a .m., Wors h ip - 10 a .m .. Youth
Fell owship . Su nday. 6 p.m.·

~9 8 Ash St.. 'Middlepon -Pastor Jeff Sm1th

Sunda)' School - 9 :30 a.m., Morlll ng_
Worship - 10 :30 a.m. &amp; 7:00 pm .
Wednesday Service • 7: 00 p.m., Youth
Service- 7:00 p.m .
Agape Llrt &lt;::en1er
"Full -Gos pe l Chu rch", l'astors Joh n &amp;
Patty Wade, 603 Second Ave . Mason, 77 35017, Service ti me : Sunduy !0: 30 a.m ..
Wednesday 7 pm

Rutland
Pastor: Rick Bou rne. Su nday School ·
IJ Jl l a.m.. Worship - 10:.'0 a.m., Th ursday
Sl!rvkcs- 7 p.m.
Salenl Center
Pastor· William K . Marshii ll , Sunday
School - 10.15 a.m., Womhip - 9: 15a.m.•
Bible Study: Mond lty 7:bo pm
Sno"' ville
Su m.la) Sdn)o l - 10 :u n., Worshi p - 9

:~ .m .

Wedi'IC"lby - 7 p m. &amp;

Full Gospt'l Church

ur the Li ving S~:~v i u r
Rt .3 38, Ant iLJ Uily, Pa~ tor : J c~se Morris,
SerV1ces· Satu rday 2·1 Ml p.m

Abundllnt Grace R . t~ I.
92 3 S. Thi rd St ,•Middl e[Kln . l'a ~ t nr Teres~
Da vi s . Su nd ll )' se r\l icc, 10 a. m.,
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Salem Commllnit)' Chu rth
Back of Wcsi Cn lumhi11, W Va m11 Llt.'\'i ng
Roi:ld, Pasto r Clmr b R u u ~ h (304! 675 2288. Sun day Scho( 1) 9·.lo' ;1111. Sunday
eve mng serv ice 7. 0{) pm , l-l 1h l) Study
Wt.-dntstluy ~ c n· icc 7 Oil pm
Hobson Christian l&lt;"ell ow!lhi~ Chu rrh
Sc: hu11l ·
10 am. Sunday Church sen•Ke t'dO pm
Wcdnesrla)l 7 pm
P~J s tor : H c r ~ l:hc l W h it ~. Sun d ;• ~

Bt'thany
· Pastor: John Gilmore, Sunday Sc hool - 10
u. m .. Worship - ') a.m ., Wcdne.'Miay
Services- 10 u.m

Faith l&lt;ull Gu1.1~l Church
Long Bottom, Pastor: SV'\'c Ri:ed, Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m, Worsh ip · 9 ~ 30 .t.m.
and 7 p.m., Wednesday - 7 p.m., Friday fellowship service 7 p.m.

Carmti- Sulton
Carmel &amp; Ba .~ h a n Rdli. Rue ine, Oh\IJ,
Puswr: John Gilmore. Sunday School_. ' 11:30 :1:m.. Worshi p " 10:45 a.m.. . Bible
Study w~d 7: 00 p,m.

Hturisonvllle Community Church
Pastor: Th~ rqn Durham . Sunday - 9 :30
a.m. and 7 p.m . Wednesday- 7 p.m.
Middleport Community Churth
575 . Pcarl St, Middle port , Pastor: Sam

Mornln wStar
Pastm : JDhn Gd mtu c, Suml ny School - II
a.m .. Worshi p- 10 1r.rn.

Ande rso n. Sun day Sch?o l . 10 a.m .
Evening - 7.30 p.m., Wednesday Service 7: 3o- p.m.

Ea!d l.d•rl

Pas tor. Bill· Marshall Su 11d:1y Sdmol 'J a. n; ., Wo rship - 10 a.m .. h t Sunday
e.,ay mnnth eveni ng 11e rv 1Ce 7:00 p.m.:
Ws.:dm:~tlil y- 7 p.m.

Faith Valley T~tbenutde Church
Bni lcy Run Rood, Pa stor: Rev. Em me ll
Raw son, Sunday Ev eni ng 7 p .m.,
Thursda)' Service - 7 p.m.

Racine
Pastor: Kerry Wood , Sunt.1:1y Schoo l - 10
a.m.. Wrm hip - I I 1u n.

Syracuse Ml!i!ilon
14 11 .B ridgeman St., Syrac use, Sunda y
Schoo l - 10 11.111 . ~v e n in g - 6 p.m ..
Wcdneidny Scn ·Ke • 7 p.m.

Coolvllle United Methodist Parish
Pnstnr · Helen Kline_. Coolvilk ~h Lm· h.
Mam &amp; Fi ft h St. , ,Su n. SchOo.)] - 10 a.m..
Worship - 9 'u m., T\ies. Sc f'.·kcs - 7 p m.

H11zel Commu .. il)' Churth
Off Rt 124, Pus tor: Edsel Hart , Sunday
School -9:30 a.m., Wo rship- 10:30 a.m ..
7:3 0 p.m.

l&amp;ethel Church
Township Rtl ., 468C. Sum.lay Sc hool - 9
a m. · Wurs hip - 10 11 m .. Wcdncsdny
Service.' - 10 a.m.

Dyesville Community Church
S unday School. - 9:30 a. m.. Worship ·
10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m

Uocklngport Church
Grautl S1rcct. Sunday St:hoo l - 9:30 a. m.•
Worship - 10:30 ll.lll., Pa~10 r Phillip Bel l

Mor!H! Ch.apel Chul't"h
- 10 a.m ., Worship ·
a. m.. Wednesday Sef'.·ice - 7 p.m.
S u n da~· s~: h oo l

Ton.:h Churth

11

•\ tith Gospel Chun: h
Long Bottom, Sunduy Sc hl)(l l - IJ::IO a. m ,
WtHShip - 10·45 " m .• 7:.l 0 p m ..
WeLlnesJay 7:.l0 p m.
Mt. Olive Comntunily Chun:h
Pa~ to r · Lawrl' iK(' !lush, Sund:1y Sr hnH I 9:30 a.m.. Ev C n m~ · (dO 11 m., Wed netl:1y
Ser.·ice- 7 p.m.

Co . Rd. 6:\ , Sunday Schm11 · 9·.'0 a.m.,
Wu r.~ h 11 l

· I()· ~ II 11.111.

Nazarene ·
MidfllePQrl C hu n;h o( t11e Na t.ttrtne
P!lstof: Allen MHkap. Sunda y Scl11)(ll ? · .~o 11:m.. W11fshir .- 10 :.\0 a.m.. (J:.\0 p.m..
Wc&lt;l nesday S crv i.:C~ . 7 p.m ._ P a~ t o r ·
A. lkn Midcap

)'ull Gospel tight house
Ht1a nd Road. Ptll\lei\Jy, Pa~ t m : Roy
Hu nter. Sunday Schnol · 10 ru 11., l: v~m ng
7:30 p.m .. Tuesda)· &amp; Thu r~ - 7..\0 p.m.
33 04 ~

Ret"dsv illr Fe llowship

,

Ch u r~· h of 1hc NuJ.an·nc, Pastor: , Sunday '

Schon! · 'J:JO a.m., Worsh1p - 10:4.5 u.m.,
7 p.m., Wcdntsday Servkl·s - 7 p.m.
Sy,rac u.se Chu rth nf the Nazartne
Pa,ror Mil e AJ lim . Sll nday S..:hool · Q:.,.l()
:un ., Worsh ip · 10:30 run ., (1 p.m..
'woo11t~doy Scr. icc~ - 7 p.m.

l.angsvllle t.:hristi a n ( 'hurr h
P:~swr
Rohen Mu~ s t'r,

Go~ p el ,

Sunday Schoo l !JJI/ um . . W11r~ h ip I!UO,
am - 7:011 pill. Wrd. Sc rvice ·7:110 pm

Pentecostal ·
Pentecostal Assemhl y
St. Rt . ,1 24 , Raci ne, Tornado Rd. :; uml:1y
Sl·hool - 10 u.m , F.\'c ning - 7 p.m..
Wcd nc ~ a )' Sc m ce.~ - 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
H.arriwnville l'l'l"ShJ terian Ch un:h
Pastor: Robcn Crov. . \1/ur~ h i p - Y a. m.
Middlf' port l'n:sbyh•rian
PaStor: James Snl•Jc r. Sundtly Sdmul
am .. wo rship ~rvi..:c II am

1p

Seventh-Day Adventist
Se venth· I&gt;&amp;)' t\d l'Citlist
Mul bt rry Ht s. Rd . p,, meru}:· p ,, ~tt•l.
Bennett Luck iesh, S:Htud ay Sc•n kc~ :
Snbhath Sc hoo l · ::! p.m.. Wor;hii) - .\p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hrmton Unitt-d Hrclh n:n
in ( 'llri!'&gt;t Churd1
Tc xil~ CtJrmnunu y .l ()olll Wid.ho~IH Kll .
Pastor: Peter Martmdak . Sund,1 ~ :-.,hnui Q: JO a.m, Wu"hrp . 10 ll/ ;r m . 7 riO
p.m., Wctl ne~da .\ s~'l\i l'l'' ·7 tH ) p.m
Youth gn )up nwctu1~ 2ml ,1,: 4th Sund:l)~
7 p.m.
Edcn United Rrt•thn ·n in Chr.iM
Sq1 te RruJt l' l~o.l . ht't\ll'en K~t· t l \li l il' &amp; '
Hod ingpru t, S u J il.i , , ~ Sdu•ol ] I) .l..lll.,
Su ndil~ Worsh ip - II :0(1 a.m Wl.'lhll'~d:1y
ServiL'CS - 7.011 r 11 \., Pu~ t m 1\1 i\dnm
Will

exlttend.eAawa

Soulb lklhcl Community Chu rch
Silver Ri dge · P a~t nr Lindu Da mewood .
Sunday St:hoal - 9 a.m , W&lt; &gt;r~h tp Se n 11.:c
Ill a.m. 2nd nnd 4t h Sund:l)'
Carl elon lnterdenominatlonMI C hunh

1'rands Florist

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your light so shine h~fo re
REHABILITATION CENTER men, (hat /hey may see your

M eigs Coumy's OIJl!\1Flori :-.1

352 East M ain

The Care yo11 deserve, close to laom e good works and g/orif.v you r
36759 Rocks prings Rd .
Father in hem·en."
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Ma11l1ew 5: 16

Pomeroy, Oh

740-992-6606

1:!._

W

740-992-2644 740-992-6298

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy
"So 1 stri ve al ways to keep
my conscience clear hefore
God a nd man.'"

MY 2race is sufficient
for thee: for mY
stren2th is made
Perfect in w,eakness.
II Cor. 12:9

God so loved tl1 e world
he gave his on ly
Jh&lt;' fi £11/t'/1 SOil ...

John 3:16

~'Let
~

""' fumi(y n•(p
prottctyour jllmifrj •

li1

Office Service &amp; Supply
137-C N. 2nd.Ave.
Middleport, OH
992·6376

S upp rc~~ion • Ex ling ll i!&gt;hco. • Sp n n~ lc rs

Acts 24: /6

I•

'Reslorati on Christian Fr llowshi p
Hooper Kn ad, A. thcn,, Pa ... lur·
L(liHJic Coats, Sunday Wu r ~hi p 10:00 .un.
Wedne~ay: 7 pm

11 36~

Full

• Scc ll ri ty

172 N. 2nd Ave . Middlcpon, OH

•

...

White's Chapel Wt'li l c~am
Coohi llc R ll fnl , p~, l ur · R1'\' Phrllrp

Other Churches

Cenl ral Cluster
Asbury (Syracuse), Pastor: Bob Robi nson.
Sunday School · 9 ·45 a.m.• Worshi p . I I
a.m. Wednciday Servi ce~ . 7 : ~0 p.m.

''

•

Kingsbury Road. l'll.~lm: N.c11k:rl V:.~net•
Sunday Sch~1ol · IJ ·J(l am .. w~~~~hip
Scnir.;o IO:JO a.m.. bC'ntng Sl'r\ll'C 6
p.m.
1-'rtoedom Gospel Ml ~si on
Bald Knoll , on Co Rd .'I. Pa'\lllr: Rev
Roger Wlli ford, SunUa~ Sl'huol - 1Vl0
am Wor\h ip- 7 p m

Pomeroy Chu rth of th• NnaRne
P.otstor: Jan Lavender, Sunday Sc hool . 9 :30 a.m.. Worsh ip • 10:30 a.m. and fl
p m.. W!'!d ~lklay Semceti - •1 p.m.

p.m.

n-m.

1-740-667-3156
"Still SIIUIU enough to care"

'.

of God

C•rpmter B•plbt Chureh
Surlday School - 9:30am. Preaching
Serv ice
!0:30a m, Evening Service
7:00pm, Wednesday Bible Study 7:00 pm,
Interi m Preacher - Floyd R.955

·Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Pllrkersburg

P.O. Box683
Pomero Ohio 45769·0683

•

Baptist

The.sponsors of this church page do so with pride in.our community
Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God; ·
Matthew 5:8

Emm•nuel ApostoUc: T•bemade fnc.
Loop Rd off N~w Lim a Rd . Ru tland,
Serv ic~s: Sun 10:00 • .m. &amp; 7:30 p.m.,
Thun . 7:00p.m.. Pastor MartyR. Hutton

16 1 Mulberry Av~ .. Poffieruy. 992 -58lJK.
Pasto r· ReV. Walter E. Hc in:t. , Sal. Cnn
4 : 4 ~ - ~: 1 5p. m .; Mass- 5:3 0 p. m ., Su n.
Con. -8:45-9: 15 a. m... Sun. Mass - 9:JO
a.m ., D~ i ly Mass-8:30a.m. .

P.tevllle FreewtU Baptist Church
Pastor : Mi ke Hannon, Sunday School
9 :30 to 10:30 am, ·Wot-ship service 10 :30
to 1-1 :00 am. Wed. preaching 6 pm

faith, talent with their passion Scharlene and Earl met while
for Southern Gospel to deliv- singing with local artists.
er quality IJCrformances. The They have been married 22
group is dnven by a desire to years and are joined by their
bring the positive message of daughter Brittany, pianist
salvation. The story of The · Kendall Turnbough and
Galloways began
when sound engineer Rusty Josey.

(

Sacred Heart Cathollt Church

Serv ices- IO:OO'a.m. and 7·p.m.

,.

f

Pastor: Ron Heath, S u nd&lt;~y W11¥Ship. 10
a.m ., fl p.m .• Wc i,fn ~:sday Se r vice~ - 7

Catholic

Liberty AISembly of God
P.O. BoK 46?, Dudd ing Lane. Mason,
W.Vt., . Pu lor; Neil Tennant, Su nday

The Galloways to perform
RUTLAND
The
Galloways will be performing
their own brand of Southern
Gospel Music at 7 p.m.
tonight at Rutland Free Will
Baptist
Church.
The
Galloways combine strong

Ro lland Church or God

River Valley
River V1 1!e~ Apostolic Worship Center.
873 S. 3rd
Av~.. Middlepon , R~.
Mi chael Bradford, Pastor, Sunilily, 10:30
a.m. Tu Cs. 6:30 prayer, Wed. 7 pm Bible .
Stud y

Assembly

business
course
for
teenagers and an Internet
chat room. Volunteers take
part in an outreach program
for Gypsies, also known as
Roma, one of the most discriminated groups in the
region. They, too, were targeted in the Holocaust.
"Our experiences have
taught us what it's li~e to be
a persecuted minority,"
Oscar said.
Judaism has been present
in the Balkans since antiquity, but a major immigration
began in the late 15th century when Jews expelled from
Christian Iberia traveled to
the · European footholds of
the Ottoman Empire, where
Muslim rulers were generally more tolerant. By the
early 20th century; there
were more than 2 million
Jews across the Balkans and
som~
Cities, such as
Thessaloniki , were regarded
as important centers of
Jewish culture and commerce.
The Holocaust wiped out
entire communities and even
in places generally spared such as Nazi ally Bulgaria,
which resisted sending Jews
to concentration camps postwar emigration to Israel
and the United States

The Daily Sentinel• Page A3

~.m.

Rulland Ff'ft Will Baptis t ·
Salem St .. Pustor: Jamie Fortne r, Sunday
School - 10 a. m .. EYc ning - 7 p. m..
Wedn!!sday Serv ices· 7 p m.
Second Ba ptist Church
Ravenswood, WV, Sund ay School 10 am. Morn ing wo rship I I am Evenin g - 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 p.m.

VanZandt and Ward Rd., Pastor: Jamea
10:30 a.m.,
M11ler, Sunday School
Evening - 7:30p.m.

AP RELIGION WRITER

Rev.
Jonathan
Noble

10:45 a.m., Sunday Eve1dng · 6.00 p.m.,

Pastor: Don Walker

Cln1rdl of htUI Christ A.poriiOi k

BY BRIAN MURPHY

play matchmaker. Inter-religious marriage and emigration has cut.' deeply into
HANIOTI, Greece - The many Jewish communities
beach cl ub scene was in full from the Danube River to
swing: people dancing bare- the Aegean and Black seas
foot, flirting and ordering - leaving them with popurounds of cool drinks. lations that range from up to
Welcome to a gathering on 15,000 in Romania to just
reviving Jewish culture in 250 in Macedonia.
the Balkans.
"Sure, we hope to spark
"We try to think young. It some
romance,"
said
all depends on young people Omique , a Pari s-based liaito make it happen," sa1d Yair son for the J~wi s h Joint
Kamaisky. one of the direc- Distribution
Committee,
tors of a program to rebuild which runs the Balkan proJewish culture and religious ject with funding assistance
life across Europe's most from the Harry and Jeanette
unstable corner.
Weinberg fioundation based
The effort - overseen by in Owings Mills, Md.
an international Jewish
"I guess you could say the
group - is one of many base for any revival is
campaigns to assist strug- Jewi sh couples rai sing
gling Jewi sh comm11nities in Jewish children with Jewi sh
the former Eastern bloc and traditions."
other nations such as Greece
B~t other issues require
and Turkey. But the style of more pressing attention.
this program sets a new
Jew1sh groups across the
course by aiming at a specif- Balkans have waged legal
ic demographic - young battles to reclaim property
and 'influential professionals , once held by Holocaust vicor as one participant tims or confiscated by govdescribed it, "yuppies with ernments . In one of the most
yarmulkes."
high-profile
cases ,
"These are the people who Bulgaria's highest court
have the energy and interest opened hearings in May on a
to lead a Jewish revival," suit filed by a Jewish organisaid Kamaisky during a zation for nearly half ownerthree-day meeting known as ship rights to a prominent
a "gesher" .- Hebrew for hotel in Sofia. In 1943, the
"bridge" - in May at a sea- Bulgarian government conside resort village in north- fiscated most Jewish properem-Greece.
ty, including a Jewish school
It was a mix of Spring that formerly occupied the
Break, spiritual retreat. cul- hotel site.
tural immersion and highThere also are worries of
energy networking.
anti-Jewish sentiments being
The music blasting at the fed by extremists groups
hotel pool drifted from rap such as Serbia's National
by 50 Cent to Israeli folk Order neo-Nazi faction ·and
songs. On the Jewish sab- Greece's ultra-nationalist
bath, more than 300 young Golden Dawn.
people in their 20s and 30s
"Yes, there are old prejuobserved customs that forbid dices and beliefs about
use of electricity or machin- Jews." said Dr. Alek Oscar, a
ery beginning at Friday sun- 26-year-old neurologist in
down. For many, it was the Sofia, Bulgaria, the hub for
first taste of a fully orthodox the nation's nearly 7,000
Shabbat. ·
remaining Jews. "But we are
Earlier, at a beach club not about looking back. We
down the road, singles took are about trying to create a ·
part in · a version of "The new model and new network ·
Jews
across . the
Dating Game."' The reason, for
said meeting coordinator Balkans."
Diego Ornique, . is exactly
A group that Oscar helps
what it seems: a chance to direct, Shalom, has started a

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·WORSHIP GOD THIS .WEEK

'

JEWISH GROUP LOOKS TO YOU1H TO
REVIVE FADING CULTURE IN BALKANS

"If you then, who are evil,

·

Friday, .J~e 16, 2006
I

The Holy Spirit:
How much more?

Frldav. June 16, 2006

PageA2

FA11'H. VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

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'

�'

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel·
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157

repairs

Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
I

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

Friday, June t6,

, Friday, June 16, 2006

2006.

Dear Editor:
We the residents of
County Road 19 (Peachfork
Road) have a petition for
action to the Meigs County
Highway
Depanment
requesting they do their job
in correcting the problem s
that are on the road. They
have patched a number of
holes but have neglected to
clean out the ditches or mow
the roadsides and/or right of
way for the past two years. ,
The road IS so rough with
potholes and washbOard that
II is nearly impossible. 'Fhe
residents of CR 19 pay taxes
just like everyone else and

therefore deserve the . same
services or. other taxpayers
in the county.
Donald R. Smith
Pomeroy

can .give for the benefit others.
Wayne Searles
Jackson ville, Fla.
Former Rutland resident

Moving

Agreed

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Readers' views
Road needs

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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OPINION

111 Court Street• Pomeroy, Ohio
www.mydallysantlnal.com

PageA4

Robeit L Barton

hope is that people like the
woman from Texas will
organize protests and weaken our resolve to see the war
on terrorism through to a sat·
isfactory conclusion.
We can't have it both
ways. Yes, many of us have ·
Dear Editor:
Dear Editor:
friends and relatives serving
I was quite moved by the
It is my intention to con- in Iraq . Yes, we want them to
acts of Dr. John and Anita vey my sincere appreciation . get home safe and sound. Do.
Strauss in donating back . to · Bob Weedy for his we want them to leave.
their prize (of $25 ,000 or a insightful, well written, let- before the job is done?
new · $35,000
Harley ter entitled, "Don't listen .to
Davidson motorcycle) to the the polls." His advice should Absolutely not! I don't want
Children's Center.
be taken to heart.
· my grandchildren, or yours,
Such generosity in an "all
I arri going to focus on to live in fear of a bunch of
about me" society is worthy only one aspect of his mes- radical extremists. So be
of much praise and admira· sage which IS, the insurgents patient and, in the words of
tion. They well exemplify arc
on
us Bob Weedy, "Don't listen to
counting
the truth that life isn't about Americans to waiver, know- the polls."
Craig Wehrung
what you can acquire, but ing we never sustain anyrather, life is about what you thing very long. Their only
Middleport

'REEDSVILLE - Robert L. Barton, 79, of Reedsville, died
Frida~, Ju!le 9, 2006 at tbe home of a son , Barry "Mike" Barton
and his Wife Beverly in Newark, Ohio.
. ·
He was born on June II , 1926 in Reedsville and was a former
resident of Chester. He was preceded in death by his wife,
Gearldene Barton, and two sons , Gearld Barton and Ernest
Barton, both of Marietta.
He is survived by seven sons, Barry "Mike" Barton and wife
Beverly Barton, Newark; Jack Barton, Marietta; Randall Barton,
Vincent; Donald Barton and wife Joan Barton , Coal Run , Ohio;
Mark . Barton, Vincent; Robert Barton ; Vincent; and James
JJ.arton and wife Amy Barton of London, Ohio; three daughters,
Wendy Barton, Marietta; Mary Stevens, Marieu; and Gwen Hall
and husband Mark Hall of Long Bottom; 15 Grand Childrem,
and six great-grandchildren.
Grave side services will be held adt I p.m. Saturday, June 24,
at the Mount Olive Cemetary. Friends and family will be welcomed at the home of Gwen and Mark Hall following services.

Local Briefs
Swimming lessons offered

'

· - The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

MIDDLEPORT - Anyone interested in swimming lessons is
asked to gather at the Middleport Pool at II a.m. Monday.
Lessons will be arranged at that time for different age categories
and times for the lessons wiU be set. The lessons will .cost $25 a
week and will be offered all summer long. On" Friday and
Saturday at the pool there will be free hotdogs compliment~ of
fund~ raised by the Free Spirit Tavern.

TODAY IN HISTORY

.

Today is Friday, June 16, the I67th day of 2006. There are
198 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
On June 16, 1858, in a speech in Springfield, TIL, Senate
. candidate Abraham Lincoln said the slavery issue had to be
resolved. declaring, "A house .divided against itself cannot
stand."
On this date:
In 1897. the government signed a treaty of annexation with
Hawaii.
In _l23l. President Hoover and Vice President Charles
Cunis were renominat~d at tne Republican Nat\onal
Convention in Chicago.
..
'
In 1933, the National Industrial Recovery Act became law.
(It was later struck down by the Supreme Coun.)
. In 1943, comedian Charles Chaplin married his fourth wife,
18-year-old Oona O'Neill, daughter of playwright Eugene
O'Neill, in Carpenteria, Calif.
In 1955. Pope Pius XII excommunicated Argentine
President Juan Domingo Peron- a ban that was lifted eight
years later.
. In 1961. Soviet ballet dancer 'Rudolf Nureyev defected to
the West while his troupe was in Paris.
In 1963, the world's first female space traveler, Valentina
Tereshkova, was launched into orbit by the Soviet Union
aboard Vostok 6. ·
In 1976, riots broke out in the black South Africa'! township
.
of Soweto.
In 1978, President Carter and Panamanian leader Omar
Torrijos exchanged the instruments of ratification for the
Panama Canal treaties.
'
. Five years a~o: Face to face for the first time, President
Bush and Russian President Vladimir Putin pledged during a
meeting in Slovenia to deepen their nations' bonds and to
explore the possibility of compromise on U.S. missile defense
plans. City lawmakers elected Klaus Wowereit Berlin's first
openly gay mayor.
One year ago: On the eve of Iran's presidential election.
President Bush said the voting was designed to keep power in
the hands. of a few rulers "through an electoral r,rocess that
ignores the basic requirements of democracy. ' European
Union leaders put on hold plans to unite their 25 nations under
a single constitution. Masked gunmen took dozens of toddlers
hostage at an international school in Siem Reap, Cambodia,
killing a 3-year-old Canadian boy before they were overpowered by the police.
Today's Birthdays: Author Erich Segal is 69. Author Joyce
Carol Oates is 68. Country singer Billy "Crash" Craddock is
67 . Songwriter Lamont Dozier is 65. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Eddie Leven is 64. Actress Joan Van Ark is 63.
Rhythm-and - blu~ singer James Smith (The Stylistics) is 56.
Boxer Roberto Duran is 55. Pop singer Gino Vannelli is 54.
Actress Laurie Metcalf is 51. Model-actress Jenny Shimizu is
39. Actor Eddie Cibrian is 33. Actress China Shavers is 29.
Actress Missy Peregrym is 24. Actress Olivia Hack is 23.
Singer Diana DeGarmo ("American Idol") is 19.
Thought for Today: "We seldom stop to think how many
people's lives are entwined with our own. It is a form of seJf:
1shness to imagine that every individual can operate on his
own or can pull .out of the general stream and not be missed."
- Ivy Baker Priest, former U.S. treasurer (1905-1975).

.

•

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. EDITOR
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ters will be 'published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

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THIS IS

MHS grade cards ready .

AMERICA ...

" POMEROY - Report cards are ready to be picked up at the
office of Meigs High School, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through
Friday.

·SPEAK ENGLISH

Boil order lifted
RlJfLAND - The Leading Creek Conservancy District has
Jifted the boil advisory for the following areas: Bradbury Road
from Noble Summit up Middleport Hill, Meiers Road, Murray
Hill, Stewart Hollow, Mill and Rutland Streets.

Reviews
from PageA1

fOLlOASADO

I.

·Situation in Iraq looking better
June 8 was a particularly
bad day for The New York
Times. The very first para- .
graph of its lead editorial
that Thursday read, in full,
as follows:
"Almost six months after
Iraqis voted for their first
full-term government, two
of the most essential jobs in
that government remain
unfille.d: the interior minister, who oversees the
police, and the defe.nse
minister, who oversees the
army. That would be a serious politic_al crisis in any .
country. It is little short of
calamitous for Iraq." '
On the opposite (or Op
Ed) page, columnist · ~ob
· Herbert; who easily wins
the title of Calamity Jane
among the Times's herd of
liberal propagandists, complained for the umpteenth
time that "Abu Musab al ~
Zarqawi, AI Qaeda's man
in Iran'; remains at large."
The trouble, of course,
was that Times readers,
digesting these sage obser~
vations over their morning
coffee, could also learn (if
the television was on) that
Abu Musab ai-Zarqawi had
just been killed by an
American air raid on one of
his supposedly "safe"·
houses, and th at Iraqi
Prime Minister Nuri f&lt;amal

direction . If the Iraqi government survives and succeeds, everything that has
gone wrong there in the
past three years will.scarcely
matter - a major tri·
William
umph indeed for President
Rusher
Bush.
The death of Zarqawi is
obviot~sly welcome, for a
whole host of reasons . It
al·Maliki had that very day removes from the scene a
named the country 's new formidable leader of the
interior and defense minis-, insurgency, whom it will be
ters.
difficult if not impossible
Such, to be sure, are the to replace. It pokes a huge
vicissitudes of daily jour- hole in the scabrous reputanalism . But it was kind of tion of the insurgents for
fun to see the Times upend'· irresistability. And it makes
ed twice in the same iss ue, monkeys out of the bug-out
as it made its daily trip to advocates
in
the
the Wailing Wall.
Democratic pariy, like
Of the two events, the Congressman John Murtha
mini sterial appointments of Pennsy lvania, whose
may well turn, out, in the advice, if America had fol fullness of time, to be the lowed it, would nave left
more important . .They are Zarqawi alive and well in
indeed crucial posts, and Iraq today, joyfully watch·
the viability of the new ing our craven departure.
·Iraqi government fljay .well
But it would be foolish to
turn on how successfully hope too much from the
they are administered by death of one man, however
the new appointees - one evil and howe1,1er compe·
a Shiite and one a Sunni, as tent. Perhaps the most dambefits a regime poised pre- aging effect of his death
cariously between rival wi II be the ,poisonous
Islamic ~ec ts . All we can do uncertainty his colleagues
is wait and see, but certain- must now feel , in the light
ly the filling of these final , of the assertion that his
critical portfolios was a whereabouts were betrayed
major step iu the right by a disloyal supporter.

,,
\

True or false (and the statement may well have been a
deliberate act of disinformation), the worm of suspicion has now been inserted
in the apple.
The
Washington
Democrats Ieacted to the
double dose of good news
in a rather ingenious way.
They have responded to
each piece of bad n~ws
frof!J Iraq in recent months
by suggesting, with growing confidence, that it
merely strengthened their · .
proposal that we begin
withdrawing our troops.
What, then, about ,the good
news? According to John
Kerry and Nancy Pelosi, it.
merely strengthens their_
proposal that we begin
withdrawing our troops!
On the contrary, it
demonstrates that bad news
is ·not inevitable; that with
persistence, successes are.
still achievable; and that
the Iraq invasion is by no
means doomed to end in ,
disaster. It may yet be the
central development in a
process that will transform,
democratize and pacify the
Middle East.
(William · Rusher i,s . a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
St!tdy of Statesmanship and·
Political Philosophy.)

'

'

He noted that students are
selected randomly for testing
and said the testing is not done
j&gt;n a preannounced schedule or
on a particular day of the week.
'Buckley also suggested a
review of the suspension and
expulsion rules as they relate to
testing positive for drugs and
bringing drugs to schooL
During the meetin~ the
Board accepted a donation of
$500 from the Tri-County
Vending Co. for the Mei~s
Local General Scholarshtp
Fund.
. Insurance issues · discussed
and approved was renewal of
vision insurance with Vision
Plus,
the
Workers'
Compensation Group Rating
Risk Management Program,
and the Software Service
agreement. Buckley and treasurer Mark Rhonemus were
authorized to renew the proper. l}', fleet and liability coverage
through the Metropolitan
Educational Council Insurance
Program with an annual premium of $85,167 to include a $5
million umbrella coverage.
: The Board also approved an
overnight out-of-state field trip
for vocational students to
atteml the Skills USA competition in Kansas City, Mo., June
18-24. The students going are
those who won both district
and stale competition with their
projects.
, . A resolution of intent to com~:k with state regulations by
· pting a school wellness policy was adopted by the Board.
_ Vocational courses of study
·IIPProved by the board incuded .
health technologies, legal ·
office management, horticul·, tore/agriculture technolo~ies,
tech prep automotive, agncul- ,
ture busmess and producton
systems, engineering and electrical technologies, marketing
and management research,
construction
technologies,
medical office management
and informaton technology.
Personel action
During the meeting the resignations for retirement purposes
cif. Marjorie Fetty and Janet
Hoffman were acceipted. Other
resignations accepted included
Shawn Bush and Vicki Chaney,
elementary guidance coun. selors; Melanie rvfyers, high
school french , and Rick
Morris. substitute custodian.
Hired to work in the summer
program were Steiphanie Ash,
math; Joe Bailey, English;
Carrie Towne, English; Henry
Sanders rn, social studies; and
t,(athy Hudson, science.
• Hired as teachers for the
2006-07 school year were
Nicole Mount, primary music
teacher, Lisa K. Ord, primary
special education; Lena R.
Yoacham, middle school ian. guage arts teacher, and Michael

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Former Sen. Danforth
Court annuls lawyer's
says Episcopalians too license, orders restitution
focused on church politics Bv PAM RAMSEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Bv RACHEL ZOLL

On Thursday, the House of
Deputies, comprised of lay
people and clergy, approved a
COLUMBUS
John · resolution on a voice vote
Danforth, an Episcopal priest affrrming their commitment to
and former U.S . senator, remain within the commuwarned Thursday that the nion. The measure now goes
church risked irrelevancy by before the House of Bishops
focusing on divisive issues for their consideration.
such as gay clergy and sameThe outcome of the conven·
gender couples.
tion, which runs through
Instead, Danforth said the Wednesday, will be a key facdenomination should tum tor in how the Anglican felaway from the "inside base- lowship fares . Overseas archball" of church politics and bishops have asked the
put its energy behmd reconcil- Episcopal Church for a moramg a world increasingly torium on electing gay bish-.
polarized by politics and reh- ops and on creating official
~ion.
•
prayer services to bless gay
"For 99 percent-plus of peo- couples. However, the main
ple, they really couldn't care proposal before the convenless who the bishop of dioces~ tion does not include a mora'X' or 'Z' is," Danforth said, torium.
during the church's national
Instead, it asks dioceses to
legislative meeting .' "Nor · "exercise very considerable
could they care less whether a caution" in electing leaders.
liturgy for blessing same-sex The measure also includes a
unions is available .in a prayer temporary bar on same-genbook or over the Internet."
der liturgies, but uses Wording
If the Episcopal Church that leaves an opening for
breaks apart, · "we' ll be one individual priests to conduct
more little splinter, one more the Ct1remonies informally.
tiny wedge in the world of
Robinson and other gay
wedges," he warned.
advocates have urged deleDanforth made the com- gates not to create new barriments at the General ers for homosexuals for the
Convention, where delegates sake , of . unity.
But
are deciding whether they Episcopalians with traditional
should stop electing gay bish- vtews of Scripture have comops for now and put restric- plained that the proposals are
tions on same-sex blessing meaningless and fail to go far
ceremonies to appease irate enough toward addressing
fellow-Anglicans around the conservative concerns.
. world.
The
Pittsburgh-based
Danforth· said he knew Anglican
Communion
almost nothing about how the Network, which represents 10
convention operates and could Episcopal dioceses and moi;C
not advise delegates on how thari 900 parishes that
they should vote.
opposed Robinson's election,
Simmering disagreement on has a meeting set for the end
gay issues erupted over the of July to discuss their future
2003 consecration · of New plans . The network remains
Hampshire Bishop V. Gene part of the Episcopal Church
Robinson, who is gay and for now, but could ultimately
lives with his longtime part-· attempt to replace the denomner.
ination as the American memThe Episcopal Church is the ber of the communion.
US. arm of the global
The committee shepherding
Anglican Communion , and the legislation through the
the majodty of overseas convention
is deciding
Anglican leaders believe gay whether to am~mt lbe ..mearelations violate Scripture. sures in light of comments at
Archbishop of Canterbury several public hearings over
Rowan
Williams
has the last few days . Delegates
expressed concern that the can also revise or reject the
communion could break apart legislation during · floor
debate.
over the issue.
AP RELIGION WRITER

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
The state Supreme Court on
Thursday
annulled
a
Morgantown lawyer's license
and ordered him to repay
more than $2 mi !lion that he
received from the estates of
two clients.
The court rejected lesser
penalties
recommended
against John Patrick Ball by a
State Bar disciplinary panel ,
ruling that he had violated his
duty to his clients. ,
"To permit Mr. Ball to retain
any of the proceeds of his
unethical conduct would send
a chilling message to the public and, because of the amount
of money .involved, would be
an incentive for other clawyers
to engage in similar conduct,"
said the court's decision written by Chief Justice Robin
Davis.
·
Ball was exeeutor of the
estates of two sist~rs , Vivian
D. Michael and Gla-dys G.
Davis,
whose
wills
bequeathed $18 .4 million to
the West Virginia University
Foundation, one of the largest
gifts in school history. The
court said Ball charged excessive· executor's fees and
manipulated the wills to benefit himself and his family.
The wills, which Ball drafted, gave him 7.5 percent of
each total gross estate as
executor.
He
received
$785,996 from Michael's
estate and $847 ,362 from
Davis' estate. The typical
executor's fee was .5 percent
when the wills were drafted in
1996, the court said.
The wills also bequeathed
$64,000 worth of personal
property, · including an auto·
mobile and jewelry, to Ball
and his wife. After Michael
died, Davis made Ball's two

'

adult children the beneficiaries of an annuity she owned.
Ball
also
received
$336,889.61 from the WVU
Foundation to oversee the
funds bequeathed to it.
"Although Mr. Ball's con·
duct did not technically con~
stitute misappropriation of
clients' funds , the practical
effect of his conduct was no
different from that of misap·
propriation ," the court said.
Ball argued that he did not
know his actions violated the
Rules
of
Profess ional
Conduct, and that he was following .his clients' wishes.
The court said Ball , who
was . a lawyer for 30 years
before retiring , should have
known the rules, which cannot
be waived to satisfy a client.
"The Rules of Professional
Conduct speak for themselves.
To the extent that a lawyer
ignores the well-reasoned pro- .
hibitions and duties under
those Rules, he/she does so at
his/her own peril." the court
said. "Mr. Ball chose to ignore
the rules. He now allempts to
cloak his misconduct in the
guise of innocent mistakes.
We find Mr. Ball's position to
be insulting to the integrity of
the Rules and to this Court.
"

The disciplinary panel had
recommended that Ball not
practice Jaw for f1ve years,
reduce his annual fee for overseeing the funds bequeathed
to the WVU Foundation and
pay the foundation $500,000
after being reinstated to practice law.
The court said that was not
sufficient. It annulled Ball's
law license and ordered him to
make full restitution , includin~ no less than $785,996 to
Michael's estate, no less than
$837,362 to Davis' estate and
no less than $336,889 to the
WUV Foundation.

Barnette, midde school special
education teacher. David Hawk ·
was hired as a tutor for a special needs student effecttve
June 8 at the rate of $2Q an hour
not to exceed five hours a
week.
Employed as substitute
tea~hers for next school year
were Eleanor Blaettnar, lise
Burris, Heidi DeLong, Dennis
Flaherty, Jeanell Grate, Melissa
Holman, Allen Midcal',
Delmar
Pullins,
L1s
Schenkelberg, ,Angela Weeks,
COLUMBUS (AP)
sions at Petrb's request. twice
Roxanne Williams, Todd
Attorney General Jim Petro for 60 days and most recently
Evans, Michael Struble, Grant
asked
Gov. Bob Taft on for six months. Spirko origi- .
Abbott, Troy Weaver, Cindy
Thursday
to delay for the nally was to die Sept. 19 , ·
Parker, Manhew Ash; Misty
fDurth time the execution of a 2005, for the 1982 abduction
Rogers, Amber Baker.
_man
convicted of killing a and slaying of Betty Jane
Camille
Bolin,
John
so investigators Mottinger, 48, the postmistress
postmistress
Chilmonik, Bill Downie,
Andrea . Gallaway, Vicki
p.m., Monday-Friday, and 9 can try to match DNA evi- in Elgin .in northwestern Ohio.
. Spirko asked Petro for DNA
a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on dence to other suspects.
Griffin, Jessica Macum,
Petro
asked
Taft's
legal
staff
testing
on hair found on duct
Saturdays, Melton said she
Beatrice Morgan, Nathan
from Page A1
just hoP.es people will realize to postpone for 120 days, and tape that was wrapped around
Robinette, Ryan Sleight, H.
possibly longer, the execution . the tarp in which Mallinger's
the facility is out there.
Cr.tig Wehrung, Mila Woods,
of
John Spirko, 60, who wa.s to body was fouiid. On March
Volunteers are still needed
Dorthy Faulkner, Joshua Will, refuse trucks and processes
Ladonna Stewart, James around 50 to 80 tons of trash for River Sweep 2006. be executed July 19. Taft 13, he reqllested testing on
Participants will meet at 9 spokesman Mark Rickel said additiomil evidence, including
Essick, Ryan Hill, Keslie in one day.
Trash
apparently
is
big
a.m.
tomorrow at the the governor decide on · the 30 to 100 cigarette. butts recovChewning, Rachel Clark.
business and in addition to Pomeroy Amphitheater, Dave request soon.
ered from the Elgin post
Brittany Free.
'
servicing
several
villages
and
Diles
Park
in
Middleport
and
Taft
has
delayed
the
execuoffice, where ·Mottinger was
Cara Bullington,Amy Clark,
townships
irl
Meigs
County,
.
the
Old
Ferry
Landmg
Park
tion on three previous occa- kidnapped.
James Ewing, Judy Gimore,
Kathie , Hoffman,
Barry the facility also accepts trash · in Racine (boat ramp).
This year's local River
horse· drawn su rrey.
McCoy, Shirin Nuggud, Misty from parts of Athens, and the
New
Sweep
is
a
cooperative
effort
cities
of
Ravenswood,
The idea for the school
Rossiter, , Angela Smith,
Haven
and
Spencer,
W.Va.
between
the
Meigs
County
came
from the seniors
Pamela White, Cathy Crow,
from
PageA1
In
addition
to
servi
ng
busiOffice
of
Recycling
and
themselves who have· had to
Robyn Hawk, P.eborah Wood,
nesses
the
facility
provides
Litter
Control
and
the
Meigs
get creative about entertainCathy
l.entes,
Andrea
Wide" but the meaning ment at the center due to
services
for
individuals
such
Soil
and
Water
Conservation
Kt:awsczyn, Autumn Lisle,
behind them.
a place to dump drywall District(SWCD).
financial cutbacks . The
Joni · as
Christopher Light,
and other construction debris ·· To register yourself or a
Littl~ in turn taught three
sen iors went to the center's
Daniels, and Michelle Smith.
for a fee. It also accepts tires, group for the River Sweep, Bible studies that ranged in activities director, . Debbi e
Substitute bus drivers hired appliances, box springs, mat- call Raina Fulks at the Meigs topics from "Clouds," to 'Jones , who then 'coordinat·
were Wetzel Bailey, Stacy tresses and couches for an SWCD at 992-4282 or just "The Prodigal Son," to ed the school through the
Gilmore, Tonya Lavender, extra fee .
show up tomorrow at one of "And the Lord came RSVP volunteers.
Linda Morris, David Casci ,
down ."
Open from 7 a.m . !() 4:30 the River Sweep locations.
The sc hool was free to
Darla Boggs, Darla Hanning,
Along with the songs,the seniors and made possible
Carlos McKnight, Oliver
studies and of course those through donations .
care centers: Cara Hall cookies, came the personal
Norris, Penny Hysell, James
"They 've asked us to
Day care Inc., Middleport, stories, such as the students continue having the school
Durst, David Lljmbert, Rhell.
First Friends Child Care, sharing their childhood. next year and Lord willing.
Millione , Sandra Walzer, and
Albany, French City Child experiences in vacation we will ... Lillie exp lained .
from:
page
A1
Clyde Gaus.
Care,
Gallipolis , Athens· Bible school. One student.
Hired as substute cooks were
village's
Community
Meigs
ESC
HOY Expansion, who is now in his 90's, said
Tammy Jarvis, Fhonda· Young,
Development
Block
Grant
,
or
Middlepon,
Hocking College he remembered going to his
Tana Kennedy, Deborah
ELC, Nelsonville; University vacation Bible schoo l in a ·
McCoy, Tammy Andrus, Lori distress grant .
Commissioners
approved
of
Rio Grande CDC, Rio
Patterson, and Bonnie Cleland.
a
Meigs
County
Emergency
Graqde,
T.J .'s Child Care,
Employed as substiiute cusSemces
(EMS)
Gallipolis.
Medical
todians were Wetzel Bailey,
Commissioners _ also
Gary King, Jr., Mark Thomas, gasqliile credit card . resolu- ·
tion.
Allached
to
the
resolusigned
their support to a
II , David Hysell, Robert
lion
were
29
names
of
EMS
proclamation
sponsored by
Moore, Donald Karr, Oliver
personnel
authorized
to
use
·the
Ohio
River
Trails ,
Norris, and John Gomez.
Hired as substitute secre- the credit cards for emer- · Organization 10 designate
tov.:ns along the Ohio River ·
vehicles.
taries were Donna Carr, gency
Commissioners
approved
as
Federnlly Designated
Heather Harris, Sherri Sisson, the DJFS entering into·a con- Heritage
. The proclaMelissa
Conde, · Angela tract with the Meigs County mation is Areas
meant to promote
Hoalcraft, Melissa Yulish, ·Juvenile Court for a Meigs history and tourism along the
Joyce Frye, Cynthia Enright, County Juvenile . Court · Ohio River.
Carrie Wickline and Tammy Diversion Officer's position·
S6~
Also approved was a
Zirkle .
for $35 ,500. The contract request from Meigs County
Starting At
yd.
Named substitute aides were begins on. July I and ends Engineer Eugene Triplett to
Beverly
Allen , Cynthia June 30,2007.
allow him to ,dispose of
Cotterill, Angela Hoalcraft,
Commissioners
also unneeded and unfit personal
Karen
Mullins, Cynthia approved the DJFS enteril)g property belonging to .the
Stanley, Belinda Adams. into a contract with the county . i.e ., scrap met~!.
Vickie Billingsley, Melanie Athens- Meigs Educational This county property cannot
Blevins, Linda Dunlap, Tammi Service Center (ESC) for an be valued in excess of $2,500
Lavender, Diana Sue Philliips, amount not to exceed with any money from the
JoAnn Willford. Penny Hysell , $29,842 for services offered scrap metal going into the
Joyce Frye, Michele Vanaman , by the. Adult Basic and county highway fund .
Melissa Conde, Kolleta Literacy Education (ABLE)
Joining Davenport and
Fridley~ Billie Jo Marcinko, program.
Sheets at the meeting was
Connie Soulsby, Julie Zirkle,
At the DJFS request. com- Clerk Gloria Kloes and
Kelly J. Miller, and Dawn missioners approved the fol - Representative
Jimm y
Kopec .
lowing ·state certified day Stewart (R-Meigs) .

Petro asks for 4-month
delay of execution

:Rl·ver

Tactics

Berber Carpet

6 Months
Same As Cash

�..

•••

PageA6

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD
Al -QAIDA IN IRAQ TERRORIST BLUEPRINT Homeland Security s~ys

·Woman sgender clulnge shocks the 1111ln she dated

Submitted plloto

Scholarship recipients at the recent RACO dinner were left to right, front, Jenny Warner, Derek
Teaford, Selena Spencer, Chelsea Smith, Amoer Holsinger, Kristiina Williams, and be~ck, Brad
Couch, John Bentz, Ryan Amberger, Josh Smith, and Dustin Bringer. Nicole McDaniel, a recipient, was not present.

RACO distributes scholarships of $9,600 to SHS grads
BY

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTIN&amp;:L.COM

RACINE - Scholarships
totaling $9,600 were awarded
at the recent Racine Area
·community Organization's
annual dinner held at the
Racine Baptist Church.
Guests for the dinner were
the scholarship reCipients and
their families, the yard sale
volunteers 'who helped rai se
money, Carol Adams· and
Marvin Hill.
Two
Ja.mes
Adams
Memorial Scholarships were
awarded by Carol Adams who
spoke briefly about how she
chose the scholarship recipients, and shared memories of
her husband and some he
shared with her during his
years as principal of Southern
High School.
·
Each of the James Adams
Memorial Scholarships was
$500. Mrs. Adams presented
the first scholarship to Brad
Couch, who will be attending
Ohio University. Also receiving the scholarship will be
Nicole McDaniel, who will be
attending Hocking College,
but was unable to attend the
dinner due to iII ness.
Marvin Hill preseined the
first of many scholarships, he
said, from the Cruisi'n'
Saturday Nite Car Show
Scholarship Fund, sponsored
by Hill's Classic Cars and
Home National Bank.
He spoke of the applicants
that they chose for the scholarships. and presented $600
each · to Brad Couch and to
Josh Smith , both of whom
will be attending Hocking

College. He also stated that
the Second Annual Cruisin'
Saturday Nite Car Show will
be held on Sept. 9 with the
proceeds going to scholarships for the graduates of the
class of 2007 of Southern
High School.
On behalf of the i'rank
Cleland Family, Kathryn Hart
presented the Frank Memorial
Scholarship of $500 to Brad
Couch. She stated that this
scholarship will also be presented to a Southern High
School graduate ne~t spring.
Hart also presented the
David B. Sayre Memorial
Scholarship of $400 to Derek
Teaford, who will be attending Hocking College. She
noted that David and Dorothy
Sayre had contributed to the
RACO yard sales for years
and this was a way for the
family to remember the things
he did for the organization.
Hart presented the Edison
Brace Memorial Scholarships
of $500 each to Chelsea
Smith, Kristiina Williams,
and John Bentz, who will be
attending the University of
Rio Grande. She spoke of
how important it was to her
father that each senior should
have a chance to further their
education. This is the third
year the family has presented
scholarships.
On behalf of RACO, Hart
prese nted the RACO Yard
Sale Scholarships of $500
each to Brad Couch, Nicole
McDaniel, Chelsea Smith,
Kristiina Williams , John
Bentz, Dustin Brinager,
Amber Holsinger and Selena

Spencer, who will be attending the University of Rio
Grande; Jenny Warner, who
will go to Ohio University;
and Ryan Amberger, to
Washington State Community
College.
She. told the graduates how
the scholarship committee
chose them to receive money
for college and how proud the
organization is of the·.. class.
She said tbe group bad a yard
sale in May of this year and
will be having' one in
September for the class of
2007. She praised the many
individuals that had donated ·
over the years so that the
scholarships could be presented.
She then introduced Paul
and Marylyn Harris, Charles
McLain, Irene Dill, . Opal
Diddle, , Joe and Evelyn
Foreman, Jim and . Betty
Proffitt, Mildred Hart, Mabel
Brace, Victor and Alice
Wolfe, and Gerald and
Shirley Simpson who were
volunteers that helped IQ
make the yard sale a success.
Also volunteering 1\Jis year
and unable to attend were
Ruth Simpson, Emma Lee
Bird, Lillian Hayman, Vinas
Lee, Adam Lee, Terry Shain,
Jennifer Hoback,
Trish
Wagner, and Sandra Snider.
RACO members attending
the dinner were Libby Fisher,
Melanie - Weese, Lillian
Weese, Tonja and Doug
Hunter, Sherri and Jamie
O'Brien, Betty Sayre, Mary
Ball, Dl)vid ·and Ann Zirkle,
Dan and Donna Jean Smith ,
and Dale and Kathryn H_art.

DEAR ABBY: I recently met
a ~orgeous woman I' II call
"Gtselle." After we had datetl
for a couple of months and
became physically involved,
she told me she had had gender
reassignment surgery and used
to be a man! I was, to say the
least, shocked and deeply disturbed.
I did not.punch out Giselle as
I would have liked to - which
brings me to my question. What
is the etiquette regarding physically confronting someone like
that? Is it the same as hitting a
girl? We're roughly the same
size.- DISTRESSED IN VIRGINIA
DEAR
DISTRESSED:
Because Giselle is now a
female, it would, indeed, have
been the same as hitting a girl,
and I'm glad you restrained
yourself. I have a feeling that
she was probably more hurt that
you stopped seemg her than any
flbysical blow you might have
inflicted. As to the "etiquette"
regarding hitting her, if you hit
someone of either gender, it is
assault and battery - or possibly worse - and it's a crime
that can land you in jail. Be glad
. you controlled your temper.
DEAR ABBY: My wife, to
whom 1was happily married for
20 years, has become infatuated
and besotted with a .certain
North American. poet, songwriter and entertainer. She talks
about him constantly and sings
his songs moming, noon and

Ohio's top utility regulator proposes Forked Run day
renewable power program
trip for seniors .
BY JOHN McCARTHY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRIT.ER

COLUMBUS -As energy.
prices hover at record levels,
Ohio should consider adopting an experimental program
to use wind, the sun and other
renewable resources for 4 percent of its overall power use,
the state's top regulator said
Thursday.
Ohio, like the rest of the
country, is too dependent on
foreign sources of energy and
must look into wind power,
solar power, landfill gases and
other renewable sources, Alan
·Schriber, chairman of the
:Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio, told a Senate subcommittee on energy.
Schriber said a five-year
pilot program could work if
.J:lig energv producers don't
:reduce the price of their
·power to drive the alternatives
away. R!!newable energy
sources provide less than I
percent of Ohio's power, most
of that from hydroelectric
plants along the Ohio River.
"Let's see how it works.
Let's see how we use it. Let's
see if it's cost-effective after
five years," Schriber said
after the bearing.
Schriber
and
Ohio
Consumers' Counsel Janine
Mi~den-Ostrande~ said they
believe tht;. proJect would
work . Four percent is too
small a market share to lead
large utilities to try to .stop it,
and the growth of r.ower use
over five years hkely will
weaken the program's market
share, Migden-Ostrander said.
"'This is an issue that the
consumers' counsel has been
pushing · for two yeatS and
we're glad to see policy-makers considering it," Migden- ·
Ostrander said.
Under such a program, the
6

state would be encouraged to'
provide startup money or tax
breaks for wind farms, ·solar,
panel fields.. or hydroelectric
plants, Schriber and subcommittee Chairman Sen. Robe.rt
Schuler said. The cost would
be determined later, Schuler
said.
"I think we need to look at
all those things, subsidies or
ta~ breaks. Some of those
things need to ·happen that
will kick it," said Schuler, a
Cincinnati Republican.
Schuler said he wants to
complete work on his bill,
whi'ch would ~et a state energy policy, in September . if
lawmakers meet then, or after
the November election.
The legislation is a priority
for Senate President Bill
. Harris·and House Speaker Jon
Husted, but Harris said it's
likely its passage by both
chambers won't be completed
by the end of the current session in December. The bill
was introduced in March, but
hearings on energy policy
have been held for more than
a year.

REEDSVILLE
-Get
your fishing pole ready and
pack
.your
sunscreen
because the Meigs County
Senior Center is headed to
Forked Run State Park for a
day trip. . .
The bus leaves at 8:30
a.m. on Monday, June 26
from the Meigs County
Senior Center for the park
and will return later that day.
The cost is $1 0 if you
require transportation, this
price . includes your lunch.
The price for,those who are
driving
themselves
to
Forked Run is $5 to pay for
their lunch .
Lunch will · be straight off
the grill.
There will be activities
for every ·age and ability
including
fishing.
and
games.
If you're interested in
going on the outing get your
name on the list by calling
Bryan Hoffman at the senior
center, 992-2161, extension
233.
The trip is open to all
seniors.

Community Calendar
Public ·meetings

c"H\ROPRA!

Auto Accide.nts
Worker's Compensation
• Sport ~ lnjurie~
• Medicare
• Acupu11cturc

• Most Insurances

• Same duy ippt.

Monday, June 19
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees will meet at
5 p.m. at the office building.

'fuesday, June 20
RU1LAND Rutland
Village Council, regalar session, 7 p.m., Rutland Civic
Center.
Thursday, June 22
SYRACUSE - Carleton
Co).lege Board of Trustees will
have its !41st annual meeting,
7 p.m. at · the Syracuse
Community Center:

Youth events
Monday, June 19

Clubs and
c;&gt;I'Qcinizations

Church events

Other events

G INSURGENCY

Bv PATRICK QUINN

,,
'

BY LARA JAKES JORDAN

BAGHDAD, Iraq - A document purportedly captured in
.. an al-Qaida hideout )lllrtrays
· the insurgency in Iraq as being
jn "bleak" sha(ie, saymg that it
.is losing strength and proposing ways to stir up trouble
between the U.S. and Iran to
divert American attention.
. American and Iraqi forces
have killed I04 insurgents in
452 raids nationwide since aiQaida in Iraq leader Abu
,Musab al-Zarqawi was killed
last week, the U.S. military
said.
·
Arrests, weapons seizures
and inoney shortages are tak'ing a heavy toll on al-Qaida's
insurgency in Iraq, according
to the three-page transcript
released Thursday by the Iraqi
government, which said it
reflects al-Qaida policy and
,the terror organization's coopAP Photo
eration with groups loyal to An Iraqi soldier mans a checkpoint in central Baghdad, Iraq Thursday. Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri
,Saddam Hussein.
ai,Maliki pressed forward Thursday wit~ his carrot and stick approach of cracking down on vioThere was no way to con- lence in Baghdad while promoting national reconciliation with those wil li ng to cooperate with
,ftrm the . authenticity of the the political process , as Iraqis endured a second day of checkpoints and traffic jams.
information attributed to al.Qaida, and U.S. and Iraqi offi- Shiite cleric:
Mustafa Alani, a terror group was concerned about
It suggests ·carrying out a expert at the Gulf Research disorganization within its cells
, cials offered conflicting
.accounts of when and where it range' of terrorist acts for Center in Dubai , said he did in the capital area, with one
was'seized.
which it will fal~ly implicate not believe the document was e~tre mi st describing them a~
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Iran, including 'bombings in authentic.
simply "a daily annoyance" to
al-Maliki's office said Iraqi ·the West and kidnappings. It
"I wonder why they would the Iraqi government.
·
forces found the document in also recommends declaring put their strategy down in
Despue the document's pesal-Zarqawi's hideout after the •the existence of a relationship writing, even on a computer. simistic assessment and a
June 7 U.S, airstrike that between lrari and terrorist These people learned a ~ood fresh security crackdown in
.killed him.
groups, and disseminating lesson a long time ago, ' he Baghdad, new violence erupt. , However, U.S. Maj . Gen. bogus confessions showing said, recalling that one of al- ed in the capital Thursday and
' .William Caldwell said the that Iran has weapons of mass Zarqawi 's computers was at least 24 killings were
document had been taken destruction.
seized earlier.
reported throughout the counfrom a computer in a raid durVice President Dick Cheney
Terror consultant Evan try.
A bomb in a parked car. deting the three-week operation said the document, if authenti- Kohlmann called AI ani's criti, to·track down al-Zarqawi.
cated, shows the terrorists cism "simplistic"
onated in a southwest .
,. Caldwell said sweeps across know they are losing the war.
"they do have to write Baghdad
neighborhood,
Iraq since ai-Zarqawi's death ' The words "are fascinating these ideas down somewhere. killing at least three civilians
led to 28 significant arms because they do reveal - . At a certain point, you have to and wounding 14. Tn an ·even
.caches. He said the raids obviow\Iy whoever wrote have written records," said deadlier auack, gunmen shot
,includOO 255 joint ore'fations them, . assuming . they are Kohlmann, the New York- and killed I0 men riding a bus
and 143 by Iraqi forces alone. authentic - somebody who based founder of globalterro- in the industrial area of
Baqouba, close to where al:. The al-Qaida document said believes they ,are on the losing ralert.com.
its insurgency was being hurt end of the engagement,"
But, Kohlmann said, "it's Zarqawi was killed.
The U.S. military said Abu
by an increase in U.S.-trained Cheney said on the Sean impossible to . say" Whether
the document is authentic . Ayyub al-Masri, an Egyi?tian
Iraqi forces, by widespread Hannity radio show.
arreits . and · seizures of - "I think the psychological "Without knowing the author, with ties to Oslima bin
.weapons, and by a crackdown business here is really enor- it's really impossible to know Laden's . al-Qaida network,
.on financial outlets.
mously important as well, too. the document's credibility, its has taken over from al, , According to a translation Somebody said the other day relevance and its signifi- Zarqawi as head of al-Qaida
in Iraq. AI -Masri apparently is
provided by National Security that ... the way we win is cance.''
The U.S. military has in the the man that the terrorist
Ad.viser Mouwafak.al-Rubaie, when ... the terrorists finally
the document ·said the best become convinced that we past released documents it group identified in a Web
way to overcome the "current won't quit."
·
said were seized from Al- posting last week as its new
Qaida
in Iraq, including one in leader - Abu Hamza albleak situation" would be to
Al-Rubaie called it "the
involve U.S. forces in a "war be~inning of the end of al- February . 2005 reportedly Muhajer, a nom de guerre,
'
. against another country" or Qa1da in Iraq."
written by al-Zar.qawi com- said CaldwelL
The military sl!owed a pic.hostile group.
·
"Now we have the uP.per plaining that if the msurgency
, Th~ way to do this, the·doc- hand," he told reporters. 'We fails to prevent the handover ture of ai-Masri - who was
.ument said, "is to try and feel that we know their loca- of sovereignty; "then there named in a most-wanted list
inflame the situation between tions, the names of their lead- will be no choice to pack our issued in February 2005 by
America and Iran" or between ers, their whereabouts, their bags and move to another the U.S. command and who
now has a $200,000 bounty
the U.S. and followers of · movements, through the doc- . land ..."
In May, documents were on his hea\1- wearing a traGrand Ayatollah Ali al- uments we found during the
released that showed the ditional white Arab headdress.
Sistani, Iraq's most influential last few days."

l

•

Happy
Father's
Day
Ryan Barnes

Chris
Weaver

'

;~

Happy
·Father's
Day
Charlie .
Williams

'

· Love You,
•
Carl, Camie,
·Melissa, Keith &amp;
Kay/a

Love You,
Amber Weaver

I

Choice of 2 sides, Loaf of Homemade Bread or Cornbread

'

~ YOUR CHOICE OF ANY OF THE THREE DINNERS FOR ONLY $8.99

' Love You,
Sava.nnah

WE ARE GIVING ALL FATHER'S A FREE ICE CREAM SUNDAE WITH PURCHASE
OF ONE OF THE ABOVE DINNER SPECIALS.

COOL SPOT #2

Member of Americitn

T11 ers P/ai11s, Ohio

Copl Spot #2
We se ll the coldest beer in town
7 Oays a Week at State Min imum Prl&lt;;es

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Restaurant Hours:
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7AM-9:30PM , 7 days a week
US 50 Sl Rt7, Coolville, Ohio

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Choice of 2 sides, Loaf of Homemade Bread or Cornbread
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Happy
Father's
Day
P~ul

Ray
Searls

Love You,
Olivia Searls

'

· Board of Forensic ·
Proftssionals
20 yr!l" experience
Member nf American

disaster warnings and other
· alerts to the public.
' • Failing to designate a '
clear chain of command during major disasters.
"Most review participants
have demonstrated that they
are able to successfully maltage· commonly experienced
incidents, yet are not fully
prepared for a catastrophic
event," the review conduded. It .called i:J11i gaps cause
"for significant national concern."
But it found that 18 humcane-prone state·s, from
Maine to Texas, appeared to
be better prepared for disas~ers than the rest of the country.
. Those states hugfing the
Atlantic and Gul coasts
were judged by peers to have
emergency plans "that were
more likely to be rated sumcient ... than other states,"
the review noted. Plans by
Hurricane Belt states to manage resources, he.alth and
medical issues and communications were "noticeably
stronger" in comparison, 11
found.
Similarly, , . ctl!es
m
Hurricane Belt states also
were rated more likely to be
prepared in issuing warnin~s,
managing resources, distnbuting emergency public
information and mass care.
But in a glaring exception,
the cities were judged as
comparatively not sufficient
in planning for evacuations.
The review is the latest in a
series of government and
expert analyses since Katrina
slammed into the Gulf Coast
last Aug. 29. Nearly all have
found lacking preparedness
levels for large-scale disasters. The Sept. II .commission and other panels have
also found shortcomings in
preparedness for. another tetronst attack. .
The latest report was
released as the Senate sent
President Bush a $94.5 billion emergency spending bill
that included funds for new
aid for Oulf Coast hurricane
victims.
The review noted several
failings on the federal government's part, citing a need
for clearer guidance and upto-date preparedness data to
state and local officials. It
also urged better collaboration with private. businesses
to help evacuate disabled
people .and with charities and
other non-governmental secvices to stockpile aid for disaster victims.

II
.~

!

Choice of 2 sides, Loaf of Homemade Bread or Cornbread

Ravenswood, WV

---------WASHINGTON - Most
American cities and states
remain unprepared for catastrophes, a government
analysis concludes, calling
the shortcomings in emergency planning a cause "for
significant national concern."
Nearly five years after the
9/11 attacks and 10 months
after Hurricane Katrina, the
Homeland
Security
Department concluded that
nationwide response plans
for major disasters are antiquated and often inclusive..
Although emergency plans
appear to be stronger in 18
states along the nation's
"Hurricane Belt," the analysis cited preparedness gaps in
131 state and city emergency
response plans. Planning for
evacuations, too, remain ~·an
area of profound concern,"
the review found.
"We rely to a troubling
extent on plans that are crealed in isolation, are insufficiently detailed and are not
subject to adequate review,"
concluded the department's
160-page review of findings
and annexes that was delivered to Congress on
Thursday evening. A copy of
the review was obtained by
The Associated Press.
"Time and again, these factors extract a 'severe penalty
in the midst of a cris1s: precious time is consumed in
the race to correct the misperceptions of federal, state
and local responders about
roles, -responsibilities and
actions," the review found.
"The result is uneven performance and repeated and costly operational miscues."
President Bush ordered the
revjew of state and city
emergency plans in a speech
in New Orleans last Sept. 15,
weeks after Katrina ravaged
the city. It analyzes response
and evacuation procedures
for all 50 states, the nation's
75 largest cities and six U.S.
territories.
Documents made available
to the AP did not cite individual cities or states, and a
Homeland Security official
suggested that port1on of the
report will ll.e released later.
It criticized the states and
cities in several key areas,
including:
• Failing to address emergency needs for sick, elderly
or poor people unable to help
themselves.
• Being. too slow to issue

•

Happy
Father's
Day

I
·~

4 '

• Sirloin Beef Tips &amp; Onions

Ch.iroprnctur uf the year
1998
V. P: WV Chi ro(iractic
Soc iety

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.'i

'

•
i

J

~

'

'
••

t

'

2006

states and cities still not
ready for catastrophes

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

FATHER'S DAY SPECIALS
AT COOLSPOT IN COOLVILL.E

Speciafs June 18tfi On{y

Friday, June 16,

SHOWS A

Birthdays

304-273-5321 ~
'

Reunions

Saturday, june 24
CHESHIRE - Women's
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Retreat
at Cheshire Baptist
Chl!!Ch of the Nazarene, vacaChurch,
9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
tion Bible school, 6-8:30 p.m.,
Registration
and continental
· Syracuse Community Center,
"The First Action . Heroes" breakfast begins ·at 8 a.m.
Thursday, June 15
Theme is ''Growing in God's
theme.
POMEROY
Meigs
Love" Reservations due by
County American Cancer
June 20.
Society Task Force, regular
meeting, noon, Pomeroy
Friday, June 16
· Librnry, lunch provided, call
POMEROY
-Annual sum992.-6626, ext. 24 for informa· Monday, June 19
mer
gospel
meeting
to be held
tion and to RSVP.
TUPPERS
PLAINS - TB
RACINE - Sonshine Circle June I 6-o 18 at the church of Clinic staff at Thppers Plains
p1cruc, 6 p.m., Marvin Christ at . Pomeroy. Services firehouse, 4:30-5:30 p.m., to
McKelvey camp. Bring lawn will be held at 7 p.m. Friday administer skin tests, returning
chair, covered dish or dessert. and Saturday: 9:30 and 10:30 Wednesday to read tests.
;
Meats, buns, iced tea, · paper a.m. and I:30 p.m. on Sunday.
'
products, games provided by Paul Curless of Bradyville,
Tenn. will be guest speaker.
hosts.
RACINE - Ohio River
Sunday, June 18
Sunday, June 18 , .
Producers, Racine Southern ·
.
TUPPERS
. PLAINS -:
· MIDDLEPORT The
FFA Alumni, regular meeting,
7 p.m., Southern Vo-Ag room. Bakers of Kentucky will be Ethel Carson, former ~f
singing at 10:30 a.m. at the Thppers Plains, now residing at
Middleport Churcl. of the Arbors of Marietta, will be L12
Monday, June 19
POMEROY Pomeroy Nazarene. A Father's Day din- Sunday. Cards may be sent to
Chapter 186, Order of the ner will follow to honor all her at Arbors of Marietta, 400
Seventh Street, Marietta, Oljo
Eastt:m Star, will meet at 6:30. fathers.
MIDDLEPORT - Revival 45750.
New officers will be elected.

Acupui)Ciure

316 Washington St

services will be held at tl'\e
Victory Baptist Church, 525 N.
Second
St., Middeport, Sunday
Thesday, June 20
POMEROY
Meigs through Wednesday. Dr. Jerry
Eagles Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. Cheney. will have services at
I 0 a.m. Sunday and 7 p.m.
Thesday.
nightly. There will be special
music. Pastor James Keesee
invites the public.
·
.
POMEROY - Revival serSaturday, June 17
vices at the Pomeroy Nazarene
MID£?LEPORT
- . Church, June 18-21, with Dr.
· Cunningham/l.mboden Ray LaSalle of Bucyrus, evanreumon, 2 p.m., Hartmger Park. gelist, speaking. Services, 6
p.m. Sunda~. 7 p.m. Monday,
Sunday, June 25
Thesday and Wednesday.
'
HENDERSON, W.Va.
Descendantsdof Sam and
Wednesday, June 21
Melvina Birchfield annual
MIDDLEPORT - Revival
reunion, at the Henderson Services, 7 p.m. through June
·Community Building. Basket 25, at the Hobson Christian
luncheon at noon.
Fellowship Church. Special
singing. John Elswick. evangelist.
'
P&lt;;&gt;tluck refreshments.

Friday, June 16
MIDDLEPORT -Village
of Middleport ordinance committee meets at 3 p.m., council
chambers.

RAVENSWOOD
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER

Of,~tl.~~

emotionally abandoned you.
Her crack about "having sex
with him in a moment" if she got
the chance was uncalled for. As
far as I'm concerned, your feelings are valid, and she has some
Dear
fences to mend.
Abby
DEAR ABBY: I'm a 16-yearold girl who fell in love with a
19-year-old guy. I care about
him very much- in fuct, I love
him. He said he &gt;:ares about me;
night. Every conversation too, but doesn't want a relationsomehow involves him. She lis- ship. I can understand that, but
tens exclusively to his music sometimes I feel as if he used
both in the car and at horfle, and me for hi s own needs. He's not
constantly remarks how se~y. the type of guy who does that,
attractive and "briUiant" he is. but it crosses my mind.
She openly tells me she would
Now he has moved three
have sex with him in a moment. ·states away, leaving me. here to
She uses his picture as a screen- rot alone. Should l tell h1m how
saver on her computer at work . I feel, so maybe he will come
and is constantly surfing for back? Or do I move on and not
infonnation about him.
find out what I mean to h1m? At tirst, I tried joking about it; LOST IN MISSOURI
then became somewhat angry,
DEAR LOST: Tell the young
and have now given up and man how . you feel , but 1f he
stopped objecting. I feel this doesn't g1ve you the answer
man has taken over my mar- you're looking for, please be
riage. My wife says she loves fully prepared to move on. It
me and adores me, and that I'm would be a mistake to sit around
being silly, immature and jeal- waiting for the person you
ous and have to get over it. "think" might be Mr. R:~ght
Please help. - LOUIS IN when . the RJ?AL Mr. Rtght
. HOLLYWOOD, FLA.
could be nght m front of you .
DEAR LOUIS: You may be
Dear Abby is written by
jealous, but the person who is Abigail Van Buren, also known
acting silly and immature is as Jeanne PIJillips, and was
your wife. lt is one thin~ to foun~ed bl . her .mother,
enJoy, adnme and. be cunous · P~ulme Ph11l1ps, Write Dear
about an entertainer. But your Abby at www.DearAbby.com
wife appears to have become so or P.O. Box 69440, Los
fixated on this man that she has Angeles, CA 90069.

PageA7

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, 'June 16,2006

i

'

Happy
Father's.
Day .

.

•

J
&lt;

,,

Joey Coates

"

~

Love You,
Zach, Trey
Britney, Alexus
&amp; Tessa

�0

The Daily Sentinel

Pagel\8

10

Friday, June 16, 2006

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Scoreboard ............ B2
US Open . . ........... B3

'

Pets, and more ways to pamper
them, featured in parties ·
CINCINNATI (AP)
Pricey shampoos, treats and
strollers for pets are among
the products people check
out at "puppe(Ware" parties
for owners and the pets
th~y're buying for.
The rarties. usually held in
people s homes, combine the
venerable pastime pioneered
by Tupperware products with
the trend of pet-pampering.
Home parties of all kinds
generate $30 billion in annual sales, estimates the Direct
Selling
Association ,
a
D.C.-based
Washington ,
trade group. And people
spent $36.3 billion on their
pets in 2005, according to the
Greenwich,
Conn.-based
American Pet Products
Manufacturers Association .
At a recent evening party at
the Paw's Palace groom spa
in nearby Silverton, about 16
dogs, from poodles to golden
retrievers, sniffed around and
played with toys while their
owners discussed products
such as $5 Ulti-Mutt candy
bars and Aromutt Therapy
shampoos, spritzers and candles. .

''I think it 's great. There are
so many times you go to a
feed store or a pet supply
store and you don't get to try
things out," Candace Gates,
51, of Blanchester said.
Gates bought a $12 bottle
of orange mango ~sce nted
foaming cleanser for her dog,
Roxie:
"She has a tendenc:fto roll
in everything nasty she can
find," she says.
Entrepreneur
Andrew
Shure founded Shure Pets,
which puts on pet product
. parties, in 2002 after taking
note of how people treated
pets as family members and
spent freely on them.
His company boasts more
than
I ,200 consultants
aro(ond the country, a number
that 's more than doubled
since last year, he said.
Lane Nemeth
started
Pleasant Hill, . Calif. -based
Petlane in 2003. Petlanc has
500 advisers across the country who sell items including._
. holistic food and groomi ng,
health and safety products for
dogs, cats and birds at what
the company calls "Pet

Friday, June 16, :!Oo6

Pawties."
Gale Wulker, 46, of suburban Blue Ash, put on the
party at Paw's Palace l~&gt; a
Shure Pets consultant.
''I'm not into jewelry or
cosmetics pr cookware, but
pets (are) something J can
do," she said.
Marilyn Newman, 54, of
Silverton, buys something at
every pet product party she
attends for her bichon frise,
Susi. She no longer buys
from pet stores.
She uses Shure Pets' emu
oil spray and shampoo that
she says leaves Susi's fur free
of mats. She' s also bought
spritzers, a reflective leash
and collar, and a paw mitt.

LocAL ScHEDULE
"

GALLIPOLIS-:- A achedu\e of upcoming COllege
and hlojl 8Choof Vlllf'llty sporting events iovoMng

teams from Gltlllll, Meigs and MaKlfl counti8a.

Fddly'• Nm••

Legion BaHball
Feeney Bennett at Waverly 142, 6 p.m.
Amo~!"'~

Meigs Juniors

Tourney. TBA
·

S.turdav'J gamu
American Legion Baseball
Feeney Bennett at Pickerington 283
(DH), I p.m.
Meigs Juniors at Logan Wooden Bat

AP Photo

Karen Freidman plays with Tristen, a sheltie and her pet Teddy, right, a German Spitz curing a
Pupperware Party at Paws Palace in Cincinnati Wednesday. Pricey shampoos, treats and
strollers are among the products folks gathered to check out at the pupperware party for owners and their pets.

Tourney, TBA.
Sunday'• gam11
Am•rlcen Leglqn Baeeball
' f'.lhens 21 at Feeney Bennett (DH), 1
p.m
Meigs Juniors at Logan ·wooden Bat

Tourney, TBA
Mondw. Juna 19

ArMrlcan Legion Baaebell
Gallipolis at Athens (DH} •.6 p.m.

Tut•day. June 20
American Legton Baaeball
Gallipolis at Feeney Bennett. 6 p.m.

Wednllday. June 21
American Leglo~ Baseball
Feeney Benne« at McArthur 303, 6 p.m.

Local stocks
ACt- 41.32
AEP-34.45
Akzo- 51.88
Ashland Inc. - 61.62
BU-16.28
Bob Evans - 28.88
Bor,Wa111er - 62.65
CENX- 34.98
Champion - 9.31
Channing Shops '- U.42
City Holding - 36.67
Col- 53.73
DG-14.40
DuPont - 40.93
Federal Mogul - .43
USB- 31.30
Gannett - 55.50
Q~aral Electric - 34.11
QKNLY- 4.65
Halley Davidson - 52.12
JPM -40.60
Kroger - 19.76

Ltd.- 26.07

NSC-50.82
Oak Hill Financial - 26.99
OVB- 25.24
BBT -42.78
Peoples- 29.85
Pepsico - 59.08
Premier - 15.08
Rockwell - 65.68
Rocky Boots - 21.98
Sears- 157.05
Wai-Mart - 48.66
' Wendy's - 59.90
Worthington -17.69
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. closll!g quotas of the
previous day's transactions,
provided by Smith Financial
Advisors of Hilliard Lyons In
GalliPI!Ils.

Local weather

'

Southwest winds 5 to I0
mph .
Saturday night.. .Mostl y
clear. Lows in the mid 60s .
South winds around 5 niph.
Sunday and
Sunday
night...Partly cloudy .. Highs ·
in the upper 80s. Lows in
the mid 60s.

PITTSBURGH (AP) Be.n Roethlisberger apoJo,
g'ized to the Pittsburgh
Steelers,
fans and his
family
on
Thursday,
hours after
b e i n g
relea se d
from a hos- .
pita!, saying
· he was fonu'---" nate to be
Roethllliberger alive
and
pledging to
wear a helmet if he ever
again rides. a motorcycle.
"In the past few days, I've
gained a new perspective on
. life," the Super Bowl-winning quarterback said in a
statement released by the
team. "By the grace of God,
I'-m fortunate to be alive ... "
:: Roethlisberger, 24, who
wrecked his bike and cracked
his head on a car windshield
bp Monday, was discharged
late Wednesday night.
The youngest quarterback
ever to win a Super Bowl was
not wearinll a helmet when
he crashed tnto a car that was
turning left in front of his
motorcyc;le. Pennsylvania's
mandatory helmet law wa'
repealed in 2003.
But Roethlisberger said in
the statement that if he ever
rides a motorcycle again "it
certainly will be with a hel-

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Side Alrbags,
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'Jl,BiiB·

to Big D.
Wade, who xsaved Miami's
season with 42 points in an
epic Game 3 comeback, fol lowed up with a performance
just as tmpressiye. Although
the lightning-quick guard didn't have his usual bounce off
the floor, he fired in jump
sliots from every corner of
AmericanAirlines Arena, the
South's white house which
will host Game 5 on Sunday.
" I think ~his is our first
almost-good game ," O'Neal
said. "We're picking it up.

AP pholo

Miami Heat guard Dwyane Wade (3) gestures after he fell to
the ground with Dallas Mavericks guard Devin Harris, left. in
the third quarter in Game 4 of the NBA basketball finals in
Miami Thursday. At right is Mavericks' Adrian Griffith .

Kanawha VallEy Motor5ports Park

Larry Crum/OVP lite
Dan Sullivan in the Chl~ago Rush jet dragster shows the fire power behind h.is 3000.horsepower ride at last year's Night of Fire event at Kanawha Valley
Motorsports Park. Two other jet dragsters will be in attendance at this year's Thunder Jam, along with an evening full of motorsports entettainment.

KVMP preps for night of thunder and fire
Motz. When fired up, the the track where near disaster
truck produced an incredible left his truck in pieces as he
tire trail' with an engine that attempts to conquer the 1/8
sounded like a sonic boom 111ile
Kanawha
Valley
when taking off as the ·motor . MotorSports Park once again.
ate. 50 gallons of fuel per 1/8
Along with Motz, two more
mile run.
jet
dragsters
named
His run last year left the fans Cannonball Express and
standing on their feet, but for Super Chief will make runs
Motz, it was not his shining down the track, along with the
moment. As his chute failed to Super Charged Thunder divicompletely open, Motz hit the sion and the Red Wagon
sand pit at the end of the track Wheelstander which stands on
at nearly 150 mph, breaking its back wheels and drags
the steering arm and leaving sparks down the track. If all
fans ·wondering if he would be goes as planned, new promotall right.
er Ronnie Smith could have
Fortunately, Motz was all quite a show on his hands.
right and was able 'to make a "The phone has rung off the
·Second, much slower run for hook, it has been heavily prothe fans.
mot.ed and the tnick is in the
This year, Motz returns to best shape it ha~ ever been as

BY lARRY CRUM
OV~

MOTORSPORTS WRITER

far as appearance, ·shape, we talked to me this week twice
have been working for a week about, if things go the way
and a half nonstop to ret thi s they think it will go, there
place to look its best,' Smith might be bigger things for us."
said.
;
Saturday's racing action will
Being a new promoter, · begin at 1 p.m. with time trials
Smith hopes that this year's and . elimination 's for the
Thunder 'Jam will only be the weekly regulars leading liP to
beginning of better things for the big show which begins at 7
the .track and for Mason p.m. There will be three runs
Co~nty .
by each ofthe attractions star"When we can do some- ing at 7p.m .. with two more
'thing like this it shows the showings a; 8JO p.m. and
value to the county, to the 9:45 p.m., fDIIowed by the
economy of the area as to finals for the weekly regulars
what we bring in," Smith said. around I 0 p.m.
"In my opinion. our first year
The cost is $20 for adults
is really to get our feet planted and $5 for ch ildren 12 and
and it will ta.ke about three under which includes all da y
years to get it where I envision admission, parking and pit
it. '
passes to see the cars up dose
"The IHRA has already and personaL

DUNBAR, W.Va. - If
Saturday's Thunder Jam goes
anything like last year, then
fans are in for a night where
anything is possible.
Last year's event at
Kanawha Valley MotorSports
Park brought out the largest
crowd in track histo?' and the
racing action didn t disappoint. The Super Charged
Thunder division produced an
exciting night of racing, along
with two jet dragsters which
reached speeds nearing 220
met."
mph on the 1/8 mile track.
Doctors have said two
But the big event last year
rounds of tests showed no was the 20,000 horsepower,
brain injuries, although there · three ton semi driven by Bob
was a mild concussion.
Doctors used small titanium
plates and screws td reassemble Roethlisberger's broken
jaws and repaired other broken facial bones. He also lost
BY JOE KAY
two teeth and chipped several
ASSOCIATED PRESS
others. doctors said.
In
the
statement,
CINCINNATI - Carson
Roethlisberger sqid that he Palmer dropped back to pass
realizes he has a responsibili- Thursday and decided to take
ty to safeguard his health iri it easy, protecting his rebuilt
Bv HilL BocK
.the offseason ·so he can con' left knee while flinging the
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
tinue to lead the team.
ball to a receiver during a
The
Pennsylvania minicamp drill.
NEW YORK · Todd
Department
·
of
With that one mundane
Hollandsworth knew the
move, the Cincinnati Bengals
numbers: 3-for-39, 0-for- 19
quarterback showed how fa)'
Plaills• IH StHien. B4
- a slump of rather substanhe has come and how much
ti al dimensio ns. Still , he
progress he has to make in
broke tlut · of his skid
order to mee( his goal of playThursday with a double and a
CoNTACfUS
ing in the season opener.
homer, driving in four runs in
"Now we've got a couple of
OVP Score Line ,(5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
Cleveland's 8-4 victory over there." he said. "I look at thi s
months," Palmer said after his '
' 40-446-2342 ext 33
1-7
the Ne\il York Yankees .
as an opponunity.
most ambitious workout since
"l-Ie's. got a lot of pop."
His first ' hance ~a me in the
having reconstructive surgery
or 992-5287 (Meigs Co.)
Indians
manager
Eric
Wedge
second
inning when !1e delivJan . I0. "I wish we had a couF.. - 1-740-446·3008
said.
''HI!'s
strong
and
hi
s
crcd
the
third or three straight
ple of more months for me
E-mili- sports@mydallysentlnel.com
timing
is
a
lillie
better
as
he
double
&gt;
against Yankees
personally. But, when you
'sports Staff
plays 'l little more."'
slarler Mike Mu "i na (8-2)
look at the flip side, iF I am
AP photo
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
Hollandsworth
figures
to
·
for " quick Cleveland lead.
ready to P! 3 Y that day,_. t~f' Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer throws a pass get more swings now that the Ronnie Belliard ami Jhonny
(740) 446-2342, ••t 33
.
bSherman 0 mydallytrlbune.com
game h~~n t come qutc Y , during a football minicamp practice at Paul Brown Stadium in Indians have placed outfield- Pe~alta; whlJ Sll_ilppcd his own
enoug .
c· . t· Th d
.
..
•
cr Casey Blake on the d1s- 0-lor-17 sltde, ·slurtecl the
Bryan Wa,lters, Sports Writer
· Palmer has been immersed mcmna 1 urs ay.
(740) 446-2342, ••t 23
in his comeback since the the Pittsburgh Steelers' play- . cruciate and medial collateral abled ·Jist with a strained mus- rally with doubles and had
bwa tters C mydaHytribune .comr
operation, which came iwo otf victory in Cincinnati.
ligaments. Dr. Lonnie P;~ulo s, cle in his side. And that's fine seve n hits hetwcen them.
Hollandswotth's double made
larry·Crum, Sports Writer
days after
Kimo von
After the surgery, the who performed the operation , with Hollandsworth .
''
You
feel
more
comfortable
•
(740) 446-2342, eKI. 33
Oelhoffen slammed into the Bengals acknow ledged only
the
more
time
you're
out
Please
see
Indians.
B:Z
rerum 0 mydailyraglster.com
Ple~se see Palmer, B:Z
quarterback's left knee during that Palmer tore the anterior

Palmer passing, return un~ertain Hollandsworth breaks
out of slump, leads
lndi~s past Yankees

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Friday ... Patchy fog in the
morning. Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 80s. Light
and variable winds. ' ·
Friday
night...Most ly
clear. Lows in the upper 50s.
Light and variable winds .
Saturday ... Mostly Sl!nny.
Hot with highs aro~pd 90.

1

'

Different series now, 2-2."
After iwo dominant doubledigit victories at home, Dallas
came to town thinking it could
wrap things up on the road:
The Mavericks had won their
three previous playoff series
away from home, including a
dramatic Game 7 in San
Antonio that went into overtime.
Now, the Ma vs are somewhat of a wreck. They scored
just seven points in the fourth
quarter, a record low for the
NBA tinals.
Jason Terry scored i 7 points
to lead Dall as and Dirk
Nowitzki added 16, but rolled
his left ankle taking a jumper
with nine minutes left in the
fourth quarter and favored it
the rest of tbe way.
· Please see Finals, B:Z

Big Ben
apologizes
·to Steelers

BY MATI LEINGANG

t'

MIAMI (AP) - Dwyane
Wade's tender knee held up
fine, and so did home-court.
advantilge for the Miami Heat.
The NBA finals aren 't over
- not even close. They 've
only just begun.
Wade, barely abh; to walk on
a badly banged-up left knee 24
hours earlier, scored 36 points
and big buddy Shaqui lie
O'Neal added 17 and 13
rebounds as the Heat downed
the Dallas Mavericks 98-74
Thursday night to even the
series 2-2.
·
Remember a few days ago
when the runnin ' and gul]nin'
Mavericks were in contr.ol and
possibly on their way to a
sweep?
Well, they've taken a Texas
two-step sideways as the oncelopsided finals are a dead heat
and guaranteed to be returning

frldiV. Juot 23
American Legion Baae~all .
Logan at Feeney Bennett, 6 p.m.
McArthur Juniors at Gallipolis, 6 p.m.

Plan to expand program for high
school students raises concerns
school district had 461 stuASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
dents enrolled in college
courses in 2004, and
COLUMBUS - Gov. Bob Columbus had 75, according
Taft's plan to expand a pro- to state data. But the Ansonia
gram allowing high school school district in rural western
students to take courses at Ohio had two.
near.by colleges has some
E~panding the program is
education experts worried that just one part of Taft's "Ohio
the . work isn't tough enough Core" plan, which i~ mainly
and some schools couldn 't focused on setting a tough
afford to offer the option.
new set of graduation requireAbout I0,800 high school ments.
students took advantage of
If approved
by the
the program in 2004,- accord- . Legislature, high school stuing to the latest available data. dents would have to take four
To participate, students must years of math and English ,
have at least a 3.0 gr~~e-point , three years -of science and
average in the subject they' social studies and two years ·
wtsh to study. In ~orne ~ases, of a foreign language beginthe,college credtt ts apphed to ning in fall 2007 .
!herr..high school graduauon .. State Sen. Joy-_. Padgett, a
requ_•trements.
,
.
Coshocton Republican who is
The state does!J t exhausd ·
1.
tivel track the course work, ~n a state .Pa~e st~ ymg co so i/s difficult to know if the lege credit. lor htgh school
students are being challenged, students, satd she wo~ld hke
said Nancy Taylor, a senior every student to be able t.o
policy
officer
with earn at least a set:nester s
C i n c i n n a t i _ b a s e d worth of college credtt before
KnowlegeWorks Foundation, th7,Y grad,uate htgh school.
a nonprofit agency that studThere s a · strong demand
ies education reform and was from st~dents and thetr fam•.~
selected by the 's tate to help hes for .these programs,
.
draft a report oh the program. · Padgett satd. . . .
Also, school districts . have
The panel, whtch mcludes
to pay part of their state fund- Ohto Board of Education
ing to the colle~es for stu- Pr~s tdent Sue Westendorf,
dents who enrollm the cours- · tsn t scheduled to make a Iores and that bothers some mal recommendation on how
school officials who complain to expand the program until
they are subsidizing higher later thts summer.
education, Taylor said.
Stephame Goldscher, a
'The state has to address counselor for gtfted students
this financial burden if it's at Cleveland Heights High
going to expand the pro- School, said II of her stugnun," Taylor said.
dents took college courses
Also, high school st ud~nts this past academic year, mostlocated in rural areas may not ly at Cuyahoga Commumty
have the same opportunities College and Cleveland State
as those in . urban areas, whe(e · University.
colleges and universities are
"We're expanding it as
more prevalent, she said. · much as we .can," Goldscher
. For example, the Cleveland said.

e.t Logan Wooden Ba.t

Heat

To•"· tovs, tlrle foos n~a. Rebo" induded In !Ole price ol new vohldeloled whore appli&lt;ab~ . On appoa•ed cndil.

On sile&lt;led models • W'dh spe&lt;iol GM !rode 115.Sisl offer )'ltkh lncludes· ~ading o'99 01 new outo ...WIIh Canquesl
Trode Rebolo. Soe dealer for delails..Nol responsible for typOgropi1ical arran. Prices goad June l51h through June'l81h.·

'

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CN•Y•t.• ..

, Jeep .

47 5 South Church Street, Ripley • Monday · Saturday 9 am • 8 pm • Sunday I pm- 7 pm
.'
'

. ' I'

'

''

r

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•

Page Bz • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

OVP Scoreboard
Soccer

I

1 place, 11 a.m.

W.at Dlvltlon
Game 50
W L Pet
GB
1
At leipzig, Germany
Loa Angeles
36 30 .545
. 2001World Cup'
Group C winner v&amp;. Group D second Arlzo na
35 31 .530 1
AtAQtonc.
place. 3 p.m.
Colorado
34 32 .515 2
(x.. ,.,.nc,.aldd to ucond round)
Sundl)', Juno 25
San Diego
34 32 515 2
FIRST ROUND
Game !51
San Francisco
34 32 .515 2
GAQUPA
At Stungort, Qannony
W .L T GF GA Pts
Group B winner vs. Group A second
Wedneaday's Gamea
•·Ecuador
2 0 05 0
6
place, 11 a.m.
Cincinnati 3, Milwaukee O, 11 1nnings
:.-Germany
2 0 0 5 2 6
G•ma 52
Florida 6, Atlanta 5, 10 innings
Pollnd
02 0 0 3 0
At .. ~remberg, O.nnany
Pittsburgh 9, St. Lo uis 7
'
Coote Rica
02 0 2 7 0
Group D wmner vs. Group C second N.Y. Mats 9, Philadelphia 3
Frtcloy, June 8
place , 3 P m.
ColoraOO 14, Washington 8
At Munich, Germony
Monday, Junt 28
1 Houston 5, Chicago Cubs 4
Germany 4, Costa Rica 2
Game 53
San Francisco 11. Arizona 4
At Gal_,klrchtn, Garmony
At kel~eraleutem 1 Germany
San Diego s. L A Doclg~rs 3
Ecuador 2, Poland 0
Thuradey'a Gemee
Group E w1nner vs. Group F second
-Midi)', June t 4
place, 11 a.m.
St Louis 6, Pittsburgh 5
At Dortmund, Germany
Gema 64
N.Y. Mats 5. Philadelphia 4
Germany 1, F&gt;oland 0
At Cologne, Germany
Colorado 8, Washington 1
Thurodl)', June 15
Group G winner vs. Group H second Homlton 3, ChiCago Cubs 2
At Homburg, Germony
place, 3 P m.
L.A. Dodgers 7, San Diego 3
Ecuador 3, Costa R•ca o •
TuHdey, June 27
San Francisco 8, Arizona 2
Tuellday, June 20
Game 55
Florida 3, Atlanta 2
At Berlin
At Dortmund, Germany
Frlday'l Game•
Ecuador at Germany, 10 a.m.
Group F winner vs. GrOup E second Detroh (Robert son 6·3) at ChiCago Cubs
At Henover, Germany
place, 11 a.m.
{Rusch 2·6), 2:20 p.m
Costa Rica vs. Poland. 10 a.m.
Game H
Minnesota (Uriano 5·1 ) at PiHsburgh
At Hanover, Germany
(Sne 11 7 -3) . 7 :05 p.m.
GROUP B
G roup H wInner vs. Group G second N.Y
Yankees (Wright 3-4) at washington
W L T GF GA Pts
place , 3p.m.
(HIII t -1), 7.05p.m.
• ·England
2 0 0306
Tampa Bay (Shields 2~) et Philadelphia
Sweden
1 0 1 10 4
'OUAATEAFIN&amp;L$
(Hamels 1-1), 7:05 p.m.
Frkll)', Juno 30
Trinidad
0 t 1 0 2 1
O•ma 57
Baltim~re (Bedard 5·6) at N.Y. Mets (Soler
Paraguay
020020
AlB rll
2·1),7.1 0 p.m
Soturthty, Juno to
n
Chicago White Sox (Garcia 7· 4) at
AI Fr8nkfurt, Germany
G ame 49 winner v1. IGame
50 winner, 11 Cincinnati (Ciaussen·3-7 ), 7:10 p m.
England I , Paraguay o
Game 58
Boston (LUter 0·0) at Atlanta (Hudson 6·
a.m.
At Dortmund, Germany
4 ). 7 '35 p.m
lHnldad and Tobago 0. Sweden tie
AI Homburg, Gormony
Thurldly, June 15
Game 53 winner vs. Game 54 winner, 3 Toronto (Taubenhetm 0·3) at Florida
Pm
(Olsen 5·3), 7:35 p.m.
AI Nu..mborg, Germany
England 2, Trinidad and Tobago 0
· ·
Salurdoy, July 1
Claveland (Sabalhla 5·2) at Milwaukee
GlfiN! 59
(Capuano 6·4). 8:05p.m .
AI Borlln
S - n t , Paraguay 0
At Gelsenkirchen , Germany
Arizona (Webb 8· 1) at Texas (Millwood 7Tuaday, June 20
Game 5~ winner vs . Game 52 winner, 11 3) , 8:05 p.m .
a.m.
..
Kansas City (Eiarton 1-8) at Houston '
At Cologne, Garmany
(W. Rodrl~ u ez 8·3), 8:05 p.m .
Sweden vs. England, 3 p.m
Game 150
Colorado (Cook 5·6) at St Lou ts (Marq uis
At Kli1Mf'811uttm. Geru11ny
At Frankfurt, Germeny
8·4), 8.t0 p.m.
Paraguay vs. Trin idad and Tobago, 3 p m
Game 55 winner vs. Game 56 winner, 3
LA Dodgers (Tomko 5·5) at Oakland
p.m.
GROUP C
( Z~o 7·3). 10:05 p.m.
San
Francisco (Lowry 2·4) at Seattle
WLTGFGAPts
SEMIFINALS
Argentina
1 0 0 2 1
3
(F.Hernandez 6·6). 10'05 p m.
Tueei!ley, July 4
Netherlands
1 0 0 1 0 3
San Diego (Hensley 4-51 at L.A Angela
At Dortmund, Germany
Ivory Coast
o 1 a 1 2 o
Game 57 winner vs Game 58 winner, 3 (Jeff Wealr'er 3-9), 10:05 p.m.
Sarbla·Mont.
0 1 0 0 1 0
p.m.
Saturday, June 10
Amlrlcan League
Wedne.aday, July 5
At Hamburg, Germeny
East Dlvlelon
At Munich, Germany
Argentina 2, Ivory Coast 1
WLPciGB
Game 59 wmner vs . Game 60 winner, 3
Sundl)', Juno t t
New York
37 27 .578
p.m.
At Leipzig, Germany
Boston
36 28 .563 1
Netherlands 1, Serbla·Montenegro 0
Toronto
37 29 581 1
THIRD pLACE
Frldly, Juno 16
Baltimore
' 30 38 .44 t 9
Soturdoy, July 8
AI GaiHnkl,.hen, Garmony
Tampa Bay
27 40 403 11 112
At Stuttgart, Germany
Argentina vs. Serbta-Montenegro, 9 a.m.
Central Dlvlllon
Semifinal losers, 3 p.m.
•
AI Slullgon, Garmany
WLPctGB
Netherlands vs. Ivory Coast, Noon
Detroit
43 24 .642
CHAMPIONSHIP
-nelday, Juno 21
Chicago
41 25 e21 1 1/2
Sundl)', July 9
At Fr~nkfurt, Germany
Cleveland
31 ' 34 ·477 11
At Berlin
Netherlands vs. Argentina , 3 p m.
Minnesota
31 34 .477 11
1 Semifinal w1nners, 2 p.m
At Munich, Germany
Kansas City
11 47 .266 24 112
Ivory Coast vs. Serbia-Montenegro, 3
• Wool Dlvlolon
Major League Soccer
pm.
' WLPctGB
Eaatarn Conferanca
35 3t .530
W L T PtsGF GA Oakland
GROUP D
Texas
35 32 .522 112
7 1
4 25 25 t1
D.C. United
WLTGFGAPts Kansas City
Seattle
31 37 .456 5
5 4 2 17 14 13
Mexico
100 3 1 3
Los Angeles
29 36 .446 5 112
2 14 10 16
Columbus
4 5
12ortugal
10 0 1 0 3
New England 3 4
3 12 13 13
Angola
0100 1 0
WednHdlly'l Game1
Chicago
2 3
5 . 11 13 15
Iran
0 1 0130
Tampa Bay 5, Detroit t, 12 Innings
NewYork
1 2
7 10 13 t6
Sunday, June 11
N.Y. Yankees 6, cteveland 1
Weatern Confarenca
At Nuremberg, Germany
Toronto 6, Baltimore 3
W L
T Pts GF GA
Mexico 3, vs. Iran 1
Texas 8, Chicago White Sox 0
FC Dallas
7 2
3 24 24 16
At Cologne, Germany
Minnesota 8, Boston 1
Houston
5 3
3 18 18 15
Portugal 1, AnQola 0
Oakland 7, Seattle 2
Colorado
5 4
2 17 15 17
Frldl)', Juno 16
Kansas City 4, L.A. Angels 3
CDChivas USA4 5
1 13 11 16
At Hanover, Germany
Real Sail Lake 3 6
2 11 15 17
Thuraday'l Game•
MexiCo vs . Angola, 3 p.m
21
Toronto 4, Baltimore 2.
Los Angeles
2 9
2 8 9
Saturday, Ju~ 17
Detroit 6,_Tampa Say 2
At Frankfurt, Germany
NOT5: Three points for victory, one pmnt
Cleveland 8, N.Y. Yankees 4
Portugal vs. Iran, 9 am .
for t1e.
Oakland 9, SeaHie 6
Wodneodl)', Juno 21
Ch1cago White Sox 8, Texas 2
At CloiHnklrchen, Garmony
Seturdlly'a Game•
Minnesota 5, Boston 3
Portugal vs. Mexico, 10 a.m.
D.C. Unned at New England, 6 p.m
Kansas City at LA Angels, 10:05 p.m.
AI Leipzig, Garmony
Los Angeles at New York, 7.30 p.m
Frlday'a Gamee
Iran vs Angola, 10 a.m.
Chicago at Kansas C1ty, 8·30 p m .
Detroit (Robertson 6·3) at Ch1cago Cubs
Real Satt l ake at Houston, 8:30 p.m
(Rusch 2-6), 2·20 p m
GROUPE
Sunday'a Game
Minnesota (Lirlano 5·1) at Pittsburgh
W L T GF GA ,Pts
Columbus at CO Chlvas USA, 10 p m.
(Snell 7·3), 7:05pm.
3
Czech Republic t 0 0 3 0
W.dneaday, June 21
N. V Yankees (Wright 3-4) at Washington
Italy
1 00203
Chicago at D.C. United, 7:30 p.m .
(Hi111-1), 7·05pm .
Gbana
0 1 .o 0 2
0
New England at Columbus, 7.30 p m.
Tampa Bay (Shields 2·0) at Philadelphia
. Uni ted States
o 1 o · 0 3
0
CD Chives USA at Colorado, 9·30 p.m.
(Hamel&amp; 1-1). 7:05p.m.
Monday, June 12
Solurdl)', Juno 24
Baltimore (Bedard 5·6) at N.Y Mets
At Geleenklrchen, Germany
CD Ch1vas USA at Columbus, 7:30 p.m
(Soler2-1), 710pm.
Czech Republic 3. United States o
Kansas C1ty at D.C. United, 7.30 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (Garcia 7·4) at
At Hanover, Germany
Colorado at FC Dallas, 8· 30 p m
Cirn::innatl {Claussen 3·7), 7:10p.m.
Italy 2. Ghana
New England at Real Salt lake, 9 p.m.
Boston (lester 0-0) at Atlanta (Hudson 6Saturday, June 17
Houston al Los Angeles, 10 30 p m.
4), 7:35 p.m.
At Cologne, Germany
Sunday, June 25
Toronto (Taubenhelm 0·3) at Florida
Czech Republic vs Ghana, NooJ')
New York at Chicago, 7 p.m.
(Olsen 5·3), 7'35 p m.
At Kalurslautam, Germany
Cleveland (Sabath1a 5·2) at Milwaukee
Italy vs . United States, 3 p m.
(Capuano 6·4), 8·05 p.m
Thuraday, June 22
Arizona (Webb 8· 1) at Texas (Millwood 7At Hemburg, Germany
3), 8:05 p.m.
Czech Republic vs Italy, 10 a m
Woman'• National Baaketbell
Kansas C1ty (Eiartan 1·8) at Houston
At Nurwmberg, Germeny
Aaaoclatlon
(W.Rodriguez 8-3). 8:05p.m.
Ghana vs Umted States, 1 o a.m
EASTERN CONFERENCE
L A Dodgers (Tomko 5-5) at Oakland
W L Pel
GB
(ZIIO 7-3), t0:05 p.m.
GROUp F
Connecticut
7 1 .875
San Francisco (Lowry 2·4) at SeaHie
WLTGFGAPIS
Indiana
7 3 .700
1
{F.Hernandez 6-6), 10·05 p m
Australia
1 0 0 31
3
Washi ngton
6 3
667
1'h
San Diego (Hensley 4·5) at L.4.. Angels
Brazil
10010 3
Detroit
4 4 .500 3
(Jeff Weaver 3·9) , 10 05 p m
0 10 0 1 0 Croatia
Charlotte
2 6
250 5
0 1 0 't 3
0
Japan
2 7 .222
5~
Naw York
Monday, June 12
Ch1cago
1 9
100 1
At Kalurateutem, Germany
WESTERN CONFERENCE '
Australia 3, Japan 1
WLPct
GB
National Hockey Leegul!l
Tuaad.y, June 13
Houston
' 7 3 .700
Playoff Glance
At Berlin
Los Angeles
6 3 .667
',
STANLEY CUP FINALS
Brazil 1. Croatia 0
Seattle
6 5 545 1 ~t
(8011·01·7)
Sundoy, Juno t8
4 4 .5002
Sacramento
Carolina vs. Edmonton
At Nuremberg, Germany
445002
San Anton1o
Monday, June 5: Carolina 5, Edmonton 4
Japan vs Croatia, 9 a.m.
Minnesota
4 5 .444 2 ~
Wednesday, June 7
Carolma 5,
At -Munich, Germany
Phoenix
2 5 286 3~
Edmonton o
Brazil vs. Australia, Noon
Saturday, June 10: Edmonton 2, carolina
Thuraday, June 22
Wedneeday'e Gamet
1
At Dortmund, Germany
Seattle 74 , Minnesota 66
Monday, June 12. Carolina 2. Edmonton
Japan vs. Braz1l, 3 p.m.
Houston 73 , Sacramento 66, OT
1
At Stuttgort, Garmany
Thuraday's Game•
W~dne s day. June 14: Edmonton 4,
Croatia vs. Australia , 3 p m.
Washmgton 96, Charlotte 77
Carolina 3, OT, Carolina leads series 3·2
Seattle 74 , Chtcago 61
Saturday, June 17: Carolina at
GROUP G
f"riday'a Gam11
Edmonton , 6 p.m.
W L T GF GA· Pts
Indiana at Detro1t, 7 30 p m
Monday, June 19 Edmonton at Carolina,
· South Korea
1 0 0 2 1 3
Houston al New York , 7.30 p.m.
8 p.m. , If necessary
" France
001001
M1nnesota at San Antomo, 8 p m.
Switzerland
0 0 1 0 0
1
Connecticut at Phoenix. 10 p.m.
Togo
0101 2
0
Saturday'• Game•
1
"'"dey, June 13 -~,
Seattle al Sacramento, 4 p m.
AI Frankfurt, Garmany
New Yor~ at Washington , 6 p.m
Thuraday'e Sportt Trane~~etlona
South Kor~a 2. Togo 1
Houston at Detroit. 7:30pm.
FOOTBALL
At Stuttgart, Garmany
San Antonio at Chicago, 8 p m.
Natlonel Footbaii 'League
France 0, Switzerland 0, tie
Connecticut at Los Arl getes. 10·30 p m
KANSAS CITY CHIEF5-Signed WR
Sunday, Jt.ine 18
Sunday'e Gamee
Scott McCready. Announced the retireAt LaiPJ,:Ig, Germany
Phoenhc at Minnesota, 6 p m
ment of OL John Wetbourn
France v1 South Korea, 3 p m.
Charlotte at Indiana, 6 p m.
MIAMI DOLPHIN$-Signed G Bennie
Mondoy, June 1 9
Sacramento at Los Angeles, 9· 30 p m.
Anderson to a two -year contract. Waived
At Dortmund, Germany
C Dominic Furio and C Chris McNeil.
Togo vs. Switzerland, 9 a.m.
National Batke1ball Aaaoclatlon
MINNESOTA VIK ING$-Stgned DE
F.rldey, June 23
Ployoll Glance
Khreem Smith.
AI Cologne, Gormony
N(~Aoo~~t~)S
NEW YORK JETS- Signed LB Al~nzo
Togo vs France, 3 p m.
,..
Jackaon Waived LB Michael Brown Jr
At Hanover, Germany
Dollu ''~· Mloml
PITTSBURGH STEELERS-Relaased
Switzerland vs. South Korea, 3 p.m.
Thursday. June 8: Dallas 90, Miam180
LB Matt Farrior, LB Malcotm Postell and s
Sunday, June t 1· Dalles 99, M1am1 85
Jamar Landrom ..
GROUP H
Tuesday. June 13: Miami 98. Dallas 96
HOCKEY
W L T GF GA Pts
Thursday, June 15: Miami 98, Dallas 74,
National Hookey LHgue
Spoln
t 0 0 4 0 3
ssrleslled 2-2
BOSTON BRUIN8-Acqulrad the rlghto
Soudl Arablo
0 0 1 2 2 1
June
18:
Dallas
at
Miami,
9
p.m.
to
F Patr Tenkrat from Toronto tor a 2006
Sunday,
0 0 1 2 2 1
1\Jnlolo
Tuesday, June 20 Miami at OaUaa, 9 p m. ltventh•round draft pick and signed him
0 I 0 0 4 0
Ukreina
Thursday, June 22: Miami at Dallaa, 9 to 1 one·ytar contract.
Wldnaadl)', June 14
p.m
.. Wnecel!ary
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS-Ro·
AI Lelpolg, Gormony
olgnad F Jody Shelley 10 o two-year con.
Spoln 4. Ukrolno 0
·
tract.
At Munich, Germany
FLORIDA PANTHER5-0ocllnod to
1\mltlo 2. Saudi Aroblo 2. tlo
I IMtrOIII
their option on G Jamie
National Le1gue
Mandl)', Juno 18
Mcl tnnan. Announotd D Sean· HIU t)ltr·
At Hombur;, Oormony
lool Dlvlolon
c laed hll player option for the 200&amp;-07
Sludl Arebla va Ukrelne, Noon
W L Pel
GB
IIIIOn.
'
New York
42 23 '.846
At ltuttvorl, CIO"!'I"Y
Phllodolphlo
NEW YORK RANGERS- Agreed to
Speln VI. 1\Jnltla, 3 p.m.
33 33 . ~00
9'1
terms with F Colton Orr.
Atlanta
Prtdl)', Juno at
30 37 .448
t3
Withington
30 38 :441 - 13 ~
COLLEGE
AI tortln
Ukraine va. Tunlala, tO a.m.
BROWN- Nomed Craig Robln..,n mon'o
Flo ride
26 37 .413
15
Centrel Dlvl~on
bu ketball coach.
AI KIIHroloutom, Gormtny
CAMPBELL-41omed Dale Stoole tootSaudi Arabia va. Spain , 10 a.m.
W L Pet
GB
ball coach.
St. Loulo
39 26 .600
IICQND ROUND
Cincinnati
37 29 661
2~
DEPAUW- Announced the reilgnallon of
Houaton
Solurdl)', Juno 24
35 32 .522
~
Tim Rogero. lootbol~ coach . Named MoH
Mllwauk'ee
32 35 .478 8
Walker football coach.
Clomo 48
At Munich, Gormony
Chicago
26 39 .400
13
SHAw-- Announced the realgnatton at
26 41 .388 14
~
Group A winner va. Group B second 7 ttaburgh
Doondri Clark, tootb all co•f'·

..,.t...

I

I

I

Friday, June16, 2oo6

Friday,June16,2oo6

violation of the policy.
Several of those schools
have since changed team
names and mascots or won
appeals after local tribes came
to their defense. In UNO's
case, though, the NCAA
rejected the appeal and told
the school it may not use the
Fighting Sioux nickname and
Indian-head logo during
NCAA postseason tourna·
ments, nor host 11 tournament
if it continues to use them.
Stenehjem complained that
the NCAA's decision was
delivered by a committee that
used constantly changing
standards.
Teams that have continued
using Indian nicknames with

the NCAA's blessing include
the Florida State University
Seminoles, Central ,Michigan
University Chippewas and the
University of Utah Utes.
NCAA President Myles
Brand has said the NCAA
defend its policy "to the
utmost."
The lawsuit will be paid for
out of private funds, not taxpayer money, offi cials said.
A number of Indian tribes
and students want the university to drop the nickname and
logo. One official with the
Standing Rock Sioux Tribe
wrote a letter supponing the
university,
but
another
opposed the nickname .

Finals

was knocked to the floor by
Stackhouse - the Mavs forward risking life and limb by
taking on the Deisel.
Face first on the floor,
O' Neal attempted to get up
and retaliate when Wade
pushed down on his teammate
as players on both teams
exchanged dirty - looks and
dinier words.
·
O' Neal made two free
throws - he finished a 5-of10 from the line - and two
by Wade gave Miami a 20point lead with 6:23 left in the
period.
'fl\e Mavericks used an 8-0
run to close within 78-67
entering the fourth, but MiaJili
finally put Dallas away with
seven straight points, the last
coming on Antoine Walker 's
3-pointer with 4:21 left that
ml!de it 92-72.
That's when Heat fans
began stripping the white covers off their seat cushions and

celebrated Miami's tOOth
playoff · game in style. Less
than a· minute later, Wade
came out to a thundering ovation.
Wade picked up w~re he
left off in Game 3, ~conng 24
points in the firSt half as the
Heat opened a 54-44 lead. He
wasn't Aash as much as he
was Finesse, choosing to
shoot jumpers rather than go
airborne to the hole.
Wade didn 't appear· to be
slowed by the knee injury in
the first quarter, scoring 14
points -. nine on jump shots
- as the Heat opened a 30· 25
lead after one despite playing
most of the period with
O'Neal sitting OQ. the bench
. with two fouls.
Only twice did Wade, wearin~ pads over both knees, dare
drive to the basket on Dallas'
defense. Instead, he hung
around the perimeter and took
aim from the outside.

Jordan part-owner
Happy return for Monty, not so for Ttg~r of Charlotte Bobcats

Hollandsworth said. "He
tried to get it away and did·

runs stranded at second and
third.
The Indians tacked on two
mo~e in the ninth on RBI hits
by Victor Maninez and
Belliard, who scored ·three
times.
Cleveland ,
which
improved to 3-14 at Yankee
Stadium since ·the stan of
2002. won for only the fourth
time in 12 games overall.
Notes: Yankees pitcher
Randy Johnson was suspend·
ed five games by the commissioner's office for intentionally
throwing
at
Cleveland's Eduardo Perez
the night before. Torre . was
suspended for one game .
Johnson and Torre were fined
as well. Johnson is expected
to appeal. Torre will serve his .
suspension Friday night,
when the Yankees open an
interleague
series
in
Washington. ... Indians LF
Jason Michaels made a diving catch to rob Johnny
Damon of a hit in the first
inning and crashed into the
fence attempting to catch
Williams ' homer in the seventh. Michaels left the game
with a sprained ri~ht ankle .. .
Yankees 2B Robmson Cano
extended his hitting streak to
13 games with a double in the
ninth .

BY DouG

FERGUSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

o

Pro Basketball

Pro Hockey

Transactions

1

Pro Baseball

----- ..,._ --

fromPageBl
Leading by 10 points at
half, the Heat pushed their
lead to 20 midway through the
third quaner when tempers
flared after Jerry Stackhouse's
hard foul on 0' Neal and
Miami coach Pat Riley and
Dallas' Avery Johnson had to
run on the floor to help restore
order.
After · Wade scored six
straight points, O'Neal, criti·
cized for not dominating in
Games I, 2 and 3 despite con·
stant double·teaming, spun on
the baseline for a three-point
play to give Miami a 68-51
lead.
On a steal and breakaway,
Miami's Jason Williams wait·
ed for a trailing O'Neal, who
as he was gathering himself
for a backboard-bending dunk

Indians

n 't."

fromPageBl
it 2-0.
"I was just trying to hit the
ball hafd, act out a fi;ame
plan," Hollandsworth satd.
So was Mussina.
"I don't care what the num·
hers say," he said. "The bottom of the lineup really beat
me up today. These guys are
professional hitters. I tried to
make the best pitches. When
· I made a mistake, they
jumped on it."
Mus~ina's biggest mistljke .
came m the sixth, again to
Hollandsworth. The rightbander retired the first two
batters, but hits by Belliard
and Peralta brought up.
Hollandswonh.
New York ·manager. Joe
Torre visited Mussina on the
mound and was convinced
his pitcher ~ould get the third
out. It never happened.
Hollandswonh hit a l-0 pitch
into the black batter 's eye
section of bleache~s in dghtcenter, becoming the 11th
opposing player to reach that
· area of Yankee Stadium since
it was remodeled 30 years
ago.
"It was a slider or a cutter,"

Palmer
fromPageBl
told The Associated Press
that the damage was more
extensive and included torn
tissue around the kneecap
and car~ilage damage that
was repaired.
The team acknowledged
the full extenf of Palmer's
injury for the first time
Thursday,
confirming
Paulos' account. Trainer Paul
Sparling said the tom tissue
atound the kneecap - which
dislocated during the ·tackle
- has healed and is no
longer a concern.
Palmer is aiming to return
for the season opener Sept.
!0 in Kansas City - exactly
eight months after the knee
was rebuilt.
"It certainly is cutting it
close," Sparling said. "I
much rather would have a lit·
tie bit more time. But that
being said, given the position
he plays. given the successful
surgery. that's been done so
far. given the fact that he's
had an uneventful rehab, it's
very conceivable."
Sparling said Palmer hasn't
had a significant setback in
his comeback. The worst
problem has beeh soreness
and some swelling that

The home run made it 6-1,
a comfortable lead for Cliff
Lee (5-5), who won for just
the third time since April 26.
Lee limited the Yankees to
five hits - · three of them
homers over 6 2-3
innings. Melky Cabrera had
his first career home run in
the founh inning ·and Alex
Rodriguez
and
Bernie
Williams connected against
Lee in the seventh.
· Roddguez 's homer :was
sa~dw1ched between a patr of
stnkeouts. on .a 1-for-4 . day
t~at left h1m with three htts m
h1s last . 20 a~-bats . and
dropped hts batung average
to .277. It also left Yankee
Stadium fans booing him
again.
.
"Whatever you want to
say, the. way I'm going now,
you'd probably be right,"
Roddguez said. "Go ahead
and rip away."
The homers cut New
York's deficit to 6-3 . In the
eighth, the Yankees loaded
the bases with none out but
managed just one run on a
grounder by Jason Giambi.
Fausto Carmona struck out
Rodriguez and Jorge Posada,
leaving the potential tying

will

.:=g~~m~~~r.b:aJ~~aap~~~
·30-foot birdie putts and abunch

'

prompted him td rest for a opens late next month.
day.
"If we're going to make a .
He was cleared to throw to . mi stake, it's .going to be by
receivers during 7-on-7 drills holding him back too long,
Thursday morning, when not ~u s hing . him out too
defensive backs covered the soon, '
Sparling
said.
receivers but no one rushed "There's too much riding on
the passer. He al so briefly ran this. He knows it, we know it,
the offense at the end of prac- and we're not going to ~
tice. Palmer was rusty and foolish about it ."
'
off-target, which was to be
Palmer said he's staning to ·
expected.
get a feel for how much the
He moved cautiously and knee can handle . He won't
was careful not to put too put himself in position to take
much stress on the knee.
a hit until he's confident the
"It's something in the back knee ~ and his psyche of my mind and something I will be intact when he gets
need to be. aware of," Palmer off the ground.
_
said. "And as soon as I feel
"You n~..ver look forward to
my body is ready take over getting hit, but I'll be fine,"
and I'm ready to play, I need .he said . "I 'm going to make
· to wipe all that out and just sure that my body is fine, that
play football."
kn · h
Barring a setback, that my ee ts ealthy and I'm
point could come sometime ready to roll . Getting hit in
during
training
camp. that game or whichever game
Palmer 's teammates are curl· it is that I'm back will be just
ous. to see how he responds like getting hit in any other
game."
the first time he's playing for
Notes :
MLB
Odell
real.
Th
"How will he be able 10
urman was excused from
adjust to the hits?" receiver minicamp for personal reaChad Johnson said. "Will it sons. Coach Marvin Lewis
affect hi s,knee? 1 think that's declined to comment funher.
the only thing we have to .. · RB Chris Perry, who had
wo~ about, because there's ~urgery. to clean out his knee
nothmg wrong with his arm." m Apnl, sat out the team
The Bengals won 't rush workouts. .. . Palmer will
him. Sparling wouldn't spec· .return to California and conulate about whether Palmer · tinue his rel)_abilitation there
will be cleared to fully panic- before training camp opens in
ipate &gt;~Jhen training camp Georgetown, Ky., on ful~ 29.

BY

JENNA FRYER
ASSOCIATED PR ESS

,

1

of shon ones for par that proved
·equally imponant. He wound
up at even-par 70, along with
Jtm Furyk, David Howell,
.Mi_guel Angel Jimenez and
Steve Stricker. ·
Howell managed to make six
;birdies and was 4 under par
with four holes to play. But he
staned missing fairways, which
inevitably left him testy putts
for par, and dropped four shots
· down the stretch, three-putting
for double bogey on the 18th.
. "Once I calm down a bit, it's
still level par and it's a good
round of golf," Howell said.
'"But right now I'm frustrated,
.and I'm fed up." •
. ~l!ckelson di?n't even bother
,.trYI!Ig to f'l\Pll!19., 1the ~~~ of
.\lifficulty at winged Foot,
:where 22 players shot in the
80s .. The averag~ scor~ was
.pushmg SO. the highest m. the
~tround~Jfl\Y·,S . Opensmce
Shinnecock Hi,lls in 1986.
. "You've had to go play it to
'grasp it," Lefty said. "It's the
toughest test we have all year."
I~ surely .was a test of
:pattence, . mcludmg
for
. Montgome~e.
.
· He was 2 over after his first
three holes. then holed a 10foot par putt on the par-5 fifth
.that turned. h1s fonunes. He
·staned find1~g the shon gra~s
·and kept h1s .ball below the
hole, and fimshed atop the
_Ieaderboard ~n tht: U.S. Open
for the fu:st time sl_nce 1997 at
CongreSSIOnal. s~n. the 42· ~ear-oldScotkeptttmperspec·
ti~~·
•
. alkMyd God,'v we ve .onir,
w e
.se en , rru1~s .
Montgomene s~\1. 'There s a
longway .togo.
,
. It felt ~e a marathon, players ploddmg. along as they
looked for rehef from a course
·that demanded accuracy 'offthe
tee precision to the greens and
no time to breathe easy until the
ball was in the hole.
· Vija Singh, coining off his
first vktory of the season last
week at Westchester, had a
steady round of 71 10 join former Masters champion Mike
. Weir, John Cook and Fred
Funk, who celebrated his 50th
birthday on Wednesday.
Mickelson was wild at the
; start of his .round in the moming, under cool, overcast skies.
·'He missed six consecutive .
greens, but left himself in
d~nt shape to· sa_ve par and ·
did that five stratght times.
Then came a 30-foot birdie on
his ninth hole No. 18 which
showed how ,Duch his prepam.lion paid off.
·He started the ball well to the
·right, and watched the severe
slope guide it back toward· the
.hole until it disappeared, setting
·off a raucous cheer from the
·New · York f~s who again
made the Califol'Qian feel at
home.
"I had hit that putt a bunch in
practice and th,e first couple
.times I ~troked it, I missed 11 2
feet left or low and 3 or 4 feet
shon " Mickelson said. "I
ended up playing about 8 or 10
'feet of bl'ellk and it swung right
in there."
That . was one of the few
thrills on this day at Winged
·Foot.
Ernie Els saved a pedestrian
' I

•

I

UUBCPTS

MAMARONECK, N.Y. The U.S. Open gave Tiger
Woods a rude welcome back
Thursday.
For Colin Montgomerie, it
. was a surprisingly happy
return.
· Playing for the first time
since his father died Woods
ended a nine· week layoff with
bogeys on his first three holes
that sent him to his highest stan
ever in the U.S. Open. He had
to play the fmal six holes I
under par to escape with a 6over . 76. leaving him seven
shots behind Montgomede in
· the toughest first round of this
major in 20 years.
·
Woods looked somber at
.times, although that was more
·likely a product of Winged Foot
that memories of his father.
, "Everyone wa:; looking. for .
me to be more emotional," he
said. "But I'm trying to put the
ball in the hole and win the
championship."
. No one did that better than
.-Monty.
· A perennial contender at the
:U.S. Open in his prime,
Montgomerie overcame a
rugged stan by relying on his
strength - fairways and greens
- and his 1-under 69 was the
AP photo
only round under par.
Tiger Woods lines up a btrdie putt on 16 during the ftrst round of the U.S. Open golf tournament
Masters champion Phil at Winged Foot Go lf Club in Mamaroneck, N.Y. Thursday. Woods missed the s hot.
·Mickelson got off to a solid

I

o.

The Daily 5entinel • Page B3

PGAunited states open ~----------.--

North Dakota to sue NCAA
over university's nickname
WILLISTON , N.D. (AP)
State officials voted
Thursday to sue the NCAA
for penalizing the University
of North Dakota over its
" Fighting Sioux" nickname
and Indian-head logo.
Following a meeting with
state Attorney General Wayne
Stenehjem, the Nonh Dakota
Board of Higher Education
voted 8-0 to authorize the
lawsuit, which would be handled by Stenehjem.
The NCAA last year
announced a ban on ethnically or racially "hostile" or
"abusive" nicknames, mas·
cots and imagery at championship events. It found 18
schools, including UNO, in

www.mydailysentinel.com

CHARLOTTE, N.C.
Michael Jordan is back in the
NBA, resuming his basketball
.
career in the state where it
\ ' ...
staned .
Jordan became part-owner
of the Charlotte Bobcats on
Thursday in a deal that gives team president and 'CEO Ed
him a stake in most of majori- Tapscott, fo llowed by the tir·
ty panner Robert Johnson's mgs of the top marketing and
ve ntures.
operations officers.
Jordan's investment makes
Johnson gave no rea,nn for
him second only to Johnson as the removals. but was believed
the,largest individual owner of to be unhappy with the busi·
the Bobcats.
ness-stde of the franchi se
Johnson, who spent $300 because he was losing money
million on the expansion and had a very small seasonBobcats in 2002. said Jordan ticket base.
will be the managing member
With Jordan now in the mtx.
of basketball operations.
he' ll have one of the most
"Ever since I acquired the beloved sports figure in state
Bobcats franchise. one of my history by his side. But in givgoals has been to get Michael mg Jordan the fina l say in basJordan to become my partner ketball decisions, he'·s riskjng a
in operating the team," repeat of the same mistakes
Johnson said. "I don't think I Jordan made with the
have to make the case for Washington Wizards from
Michael's basketball expertise, 2000 to 2003.
his knowledge or his competi- - Jordan became part owner
tiveness as a player.
and president of the Wizards•
"I am very excited to have a baske!ball operations in 2000,
native Nonh Carolinian be a · and was criticized for selecting
pan of the Bobcats and excited high schooler Kwame Brown
to have a friend of mine - - with Washington's fi rst overall
who I have absolute confi- pick in the 200 I draft .
dence in - oversee our basHe also came out of retireketball persormel decision ment and played two seasons
making process."
for the Wi zards. failing to
Jordan, who led the Chicago .make the playoffs before retirBulls to six NB A champi- ing agai n.
1
onships and won fi ve MVP
He assumed he would retu rn
•·
•
·
·
• 1
,
,
•
, MA;MARONECK, N.¥. (AP) - Th!l kit;l ' Someone wondered· why he'.s trying so hard awards, bought into Johnson's. to his front ollice job, but
existing portfolio. The founder owner Abe Poll in instead II red
w~ a bi~ smile, even after s.hQ9ting an 81 to hone his game, when no one would blame
-of
BET has financial interests him - Jordan's first basketball
that' didn t ·include a single birdie. ;radd him if he coasted until his 50th birthday.
·,
·
F)ljikawa made his"If I'm going to try and be competitive on in several media, entenain- setback since he was cut from
., ..,
OP~AI.- tory at~ U.S. Ope!! . the Champio~ Tour, I'd better be good ment and financial services. the varsity high school team
·Y. ·
«;;~~
on Thursday; and It because l certainly don't want to go out there and became the fi rst black a sophomore in Wilmmgton
Johnson, who met Jordan at
. •j
s
had nothi~ to do ~nd just walk around and finish 40th every. owner in the NBA when he
beat
out
a
Larry
Bird·backed
a
Bulls game almost 17 years
'
' ~~
_wjth a' lackluste~ week," .be said.
•
.
·;,~
~uild · that inciuded · Coote .~ate~ losing, and h~ has no ~sifl; to group for Charlotte's new ago and struck up a lasting
friendship. offered Jordan any
··. "'~"
·
'three double bogeys. embarrass hims~lf by entenng a touroament team.
He tried from the get-go to job he wanted wi th his basket·
'· · ¥.'' . · · · · ·
'· The.USGA'initial· .without the proptlr mind-set - or ,P.fCpara#on,
\~. NoteL.~~k
ly . said the Hawaii
"I've been competitive all my life, and .I've bring · Jordan into the fold, ball team that same day.
Jordan mulled tt over for
·' ·,
". ~
high-schoojer would bba:t a lot of those guys a lot oftimes. l'm'-not offering him any position he
close to four months before
wanted with the team . ''
be the setontl- ' gding' to go out there and sleepwalk mY way
yoUngest plarer to participate in an-OP!n, thrqugh it," he insisted. "You'd better bring a except majority owner. Jordan passing on the offe r. He also
6ehind only Tyrell · Garth Jr., who played in lot of g31Jle with yo11- or they' re g0irig to beat eventually passed, citmg h1 s tried to purchase a majority
desire to pursue ownership in inlerest in the Mil waukee
. 1941...
,
• your brains.in."
his own· team.
Bucks, but Sen. Herb Kohl
,J)ut after ~ontactlng GaM at his home in . Cook sure brought his game.
Now, with Johnson in the ultimately decided not to sell.
Texas Qn W¢~~esday, the USGA had 19 amend- "I made. some quality birdies," he said. "I
midst
of a major management
Jordan had been largely out
1_1;\Ci rec9«1 ~k. Thrns out Garth ~as 15 years; ~ ~~d some· opportunities for more., bu~ tht:~e; s
shake-up
on
his
fledgling
of
sight since then. But now
' IWlnUl~ .and 27 ~ays 'VbeJI he playedrThat'IS'· Jtls~not mlitb .out there."
, .. , ., ; : · .
team.
he's
bringing
in
the
that
he's back, he' ll have to
actUally older than Fujikawa, who. is 15 years; · 1 • :
*** · ,
·. '
!'l'pwgtbs,17 day,s. , ';'' .' ~. ' . : .. " BEYOND THE NUMBERS: The numpey greatest NBA player ever to rebuild a fan base still bttter
over the Hornets• departure to
, ,' fujik!!-wa 1 WhQ, stands: Hoot-,1 and,' weigbs ,on ThOJ,l\llll Bjom;s scorecard was a routine 4 help.
"I'm
excited
to
join
Bob,
and
New Orleans in 2002 and tix
:~~~~ '1:3~ J?PUnds, officially put ;til~ narne'i.n ,.:on the par-4' II th bole. It was far fr!&gt;m routipe,
invest
alongside
one
of
the
several
of Johnson's earl y misi.l{fJ~rd!19,9~Whe.nhe~.Qfi!lHJ.l2a!m.l tliough!:l&lt; ,~;·' ·
• ' · •· · ,:: :,
1
most
astute
businessmen
I
steps.
Gllt~ ~!ted No. 1 illlj routti
doUble' '' .B.Kn'J:Ilb(QCked his lee ~hot so far to therigbt
b'oaey
added ~ : more ..()S'f~ that I. that l! w'enr beyond the rough ·and intp )'l1e ·know," Jordan said. "I am also The Bobcats ranked 28th in
'J)ef'ofe W · g' off the dj~ with absOI~telY. · galleiy. Iutruck a waist-high l)oulder'and car- looking . forward to providing attendance after their fi rst sean6 complaints.
. •
'
. onled another 40 ~ards to the right under a my advice, where needed, to son in the outdated Charlotte
,'"It was a'lot of fun· out ~'lere, actually," he tree. Bjorn couldn t play out under the Iimtis Bobcats management in order Coliseum, then moved into a
said: "I l;lit a f9t Qf great shOts. I thii)k l!J!issed · because .he faced 50 yards of mangled grass, to put the ~st possible team on new $265 million arena last
season that has yet to secure .
lr .couple '!ri.Yes ·that ~st me p coupfe of ·so1he hit 11 w¢ge and hoped for the be~t. and the coun."
Jordan
's
involvement
was
naming rights. Though the
·&lt;!Oul&gt;le b98eys, (but) my · score ·didn't really •the· liall'~~lbppt;&lt;l in~ firSt cut on tHe opposite
across
arena
received rave reviews.
largely
welcomed
tell'hovv-rnf aay went.". '
· • · · ''
si~ .of the-fairway:
,
NBA
.
the
Bobcats
out only
·nte point was thar he't•was a 15-year'-01d ilis thifd shot was almost as bad as the first,' Commissmner David Stem seven of 4 1 ~asold
mes and a&gt;erplaying in the U.S. Qpen,- and that in itself was right and weU short of the g~n. Bjorn ijung
said
he
was
"elated
to
have
aged
16,366
tans,
22nd in the
'reili!Oil to•bt}'proud. · ' , ·" .'
,. &lt;, · ·his·head.as he wall&lt;ed to the ball. But alli was
Michael
back
in
the
league,"
NBA.
~&gt;o'"litst",:bews liere and• having' 'ifi'e'' ~w~~ well•when he chipped across the green and the
while Dallas Mavericks owner
Even worse was their season
~nd·-9ou ·find suppoxtip~ ydtl; •it s'b really'. l:itlll b\utged the flag and disappeared for par.
Mark Cuban offered up some ticket sales, which is believed
fe61ing,'1•he said. ''It'lHJ1~ U.S. ~n 1 so r: 1\'ttl\is point,' Bjorn started laughing.
immediate
advice.
to be right around 5.000 and
1
better have fun. No matter wHat I sl!oo!, I'll
He finished with a 72.
·
"Welcome to my wo rld, third worst in the NliA. In
bilve fun." ' ; I
f l
~
• ,,,
• ' '·
***
Michael," he said . "Get out the response. Johnson announced
' Fujikawa said he wasn't netvous, even · LO€AL BOY MAKES GOOD: Andrew
checKbook."
the team would lower season
!bough he'd neyer before played in front of.So 'Svoboda bas been playing Win~ed ·Foot since
Charlotte guard Raymond ttcket prices for next year
'many people 'or in such a 'presligio'ls tnlll!lla- 1 he- WIIS 10; but all that expenence· couldit't
Felton,
like Jordan a North
Charlotte 's prod uc! on the
J'ilent..
' • ·
.• '
· ,·
· · nave prepated him for what he, faced in: bis
Carolina
alum
:
was
hopeful
!loor
is-also poor. The Bobcats
'' l;lls·mothel'"hung around.well aftc\r tl!e tound ' fitst U.S. Open.
·
that
Jordan
's
involvement
wi
ll
went
18-64 in thCH tirs1 seallpdsaidTaddWisliedhe'd'iio~ 'better. ,.
'"As the first player ·to tee off at Not I, he
carry
over
onto
the
coun.
son.
but
improved to 26-56 and
y;!'But .he:s ·not' down or anytl)ing," Lop received applat~se that compared to the ovaThe move comes two weeks closed last year wtth a four"-·'ikawa said "He J·ust wants to get ' out there lion Phil·Mtckelson received an ·hour later at
after Johnson began a house- game winning streak lb pite
f;'lll(!·
al "
· .
"' 10
·· , ·
!O~~rrow .~ try ag ,*n;; ,;
-' ·~ ,. '·'?.· - -~·
,
: , ·, '. , cleaning
that ousled numerous injunes.
l": '
' .· · ·
·' . . , ,
It ~- somt thing when they apnoqnced, q~r,
: NO SENIO,ItDISCOUNT: AI a IJ.Wq)Y)t9fl- l'"nnlnib,;;oand thep there was such a loud cheer, '
hll could ~ ~nldng ljbout getting. te;t!IY' fM l ~tt~ 1said. "That definitely got my hean going."
dl~· Ch~p1bns_ To~r, John Cook ts ,P.Iay!~&amp;.•• ~ 26-year-old Svoboda .figures he av~r­
.'!&lt;tth th~ deter'mination of a man .half hts.age: ag~ ,150 rounds a year at Wll!ged Foot .while
1 Jbe 48-year·~ld C,oo~ s~ot.an tm~sstve 1- grolfmg up. That proved of little h~lp m ~e
.o-.:er,7l, ~akin~ ·fou,r birdies m one ot the best first fO~l)d of the ,Open, when he made orne
t'oljrl&lt;IS Qf the day.
"; .
boJeYSand four btr~es en route to a 75.

Fujikawa'lias .aball, despite shooting·St
'-.C:.•

as

28 ·. "'- ·06

tJ

an

t\fl!

¥'

round of 4-over by holing out
from the ninth f~irway for eagle
and a 74. Tw~-11me U.S. Qpe~
~hamp10n Rettef G09sen dtdn t
fare as well . f athng to make a
smgle btrdte tn hts rotmd of 77.
It was a stem !est, bul there
wert; few complamts that tt was
unfatr.
·.
Furyk was so close to the hp
of a bunker on No. 3 that he
used his putter to get out to' the
rruddle of the sand, and he was
all too glad to make bogey. The
'03 U.S. Open champion is
playing well this year and has
been mentioned as one of the
favontes.
"It looks good, suits my ~;ye,"
be satd of Wmged Foot. But
that's a small pan of the battle.
The \)ther pan is hittinjl the
shots and executmg, whtch ts
difficult to do out here."
Par had not been so hard to
beat in the first round since ' 86
at Shinnecock. No one did it
then.
"You just try to play for par
here, whether it's Thursday or
Sunday," Mickelson said.
"Even is a good score."
Woods gladly wou ld have

settled for anything near that.
green, llubbed the next on~ ·and
He last was seen inside the had to make a 6·footer to save
·
ropes on Sunday at the Masters, bogey.
where a balky putter kept him
The biggest damage ~an1e at
from making a charge. and he the 640-yard 12th. when his
had to settle for a tie for third. upproach went into a bunker
More than two months later, and he flew that over the green,
not much changed.
making double bogey. But he
Woods hit onl y three fair- ·was solid the rest of the way.
ways but was hun more' by and "'!hile history is hardly on
missing par putts of 8 feet,. 7 ht s side, he was n't ruling htmfeet and 6 feet on his opening self out quite yet.
holes. He satd the greens were
We&lt;xls has won only one of
slower than he expected for a hi s 10 majors when he shoots
U.S. Open and he fai led to over par in the ftrst round .
adjust.
·
opening with a 74 at the
"The first three holes ... I cost Masters last year.
myself three shots;" Woods
"''ve just got to plod along;
satd. "Just ~ot off to a bad start. shoot . under par the next two
With the Wtl')d blowing as hard days, I' ll be right there," he
as it was, it was going to be said.
hard to make up shots. And I Considering there was only
one round under par Thursday,
didn 't. I lost ground "
Woods hit one tee shot so far that m1ght be a tall order.
to the righl at No. 9 that he Woods was told that only Ben
chose to play a sweeping hook · Hogan in 1951 at Oakland Hills
with a 9-iron from 195 yards and Jack Fleck in 1955 , at
arou nd !he trees, over a corpo- Olymptc Club had struted with
rate tent 'and illlo the grand- a 76 tlnd gone on to W ill the
~l tmd to the right of the gree ns, Open. That brought a rare
which allowed him a free drop. smile.
"It's been done before, hasn't
Everything worked perfectly
until he flew ~ i s chip over the it?" he said.
.
\

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..
•

�Page 14 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, June 16, 2006

Friday, June 16, 2006

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Markkanen evens things up in goaltending deparbnent 'Juan Castro
BY PAUL NEWBERRY ··
ASSOCIATED PRESS

EDMONTON , Albt!rta - Jussi
Markkanen tilted his head, rubbed the
blond beard sprouting from his chin
and let out one of those smiles that
says: C' mon, what do you think?
No way he saw this coming.
Markkanen· spent more than three
months either banished to the
Edmonton bench, where the only thing
he tended was the door for player
changes,· or exiled to some faraway
perch above the ice, where he squinted
to watch the game in street clothes.
"If you hao asked me two weeks ago
did I think I would be playing in the
Stanley Cup finals," he said, pausing
for effect, "no, I don't think so. I don't
think anyone else thought I would be
playing, either."
Markkanen isn'tjust playing- he's
thriving. Amazingly, this 31-year-old
journeyman of a goalie is a major reason the Oilers are still alive in the
Stanley Cup finals against the
Carolina
Hurricanes,
tho~;~g h
Edmonton does trail 3-2 going to
Saturday's Game 6.
The Oilers took a major blow in the
opener when Dwayne Roloson; the
star of their unprecedented run
through the playoffs, sustained a
series-ending knee injury. Backup Ty
Conklin gave up the winning goal in
the final minute after botching a play
behind the net.
When it became apparent that
Roloson was done, coach Craig
MacTavish played a most unusual
hunch. He called on his third-string
goalie to handle the job the rest of the
series, eve n though Markkanen had
not played since Match I and struggled through a disappointing regular.
season.
"Obviously I had doubts, especially
before my first game,'.' Markkanen
said Thursday, a day after the Oilers

I

I

kept the series going with a 4-3 overtime win in Raleigh, N.C.
Once he got on the ice, Markkanen
quickly got over his jitters. Not even a
5-0 loss in his fust playoff start shook
hi s confidence - three of the goals
were off deflections, and MacTavish
said he was impressed with the
replacement goalie's demeanor and
assurance in handling the puck.
Since that dismal start, Markkanen
has been superb. He stopped 63 of 69
shots over the last three games, a .913
save percentage that's a big improvement on his .880 mark during the regular season . Most important, he hasn't
given up any shaky goals that might
rattle his ~onfidence or tum his teammates into doubters.
While Carolina has its own rock in
the nets, 22-year-old old rookie Cam·
Ward, the Hurricanes acknowledge
that Markkanen is a major reason that
Edmonton is still alive in the best-ofseven series.
"He's played great," said Mark
Recchi, who managed ·to score the
wimiing goal in Game 4 against
Markkanen. "He came in when he was
really needed and was sharp right
away. That says a lot about the way he
stayed ready, even when he wasn't
playing."
·
·
Markkanen was Edmonton 's No. I
goalie early in the season, winning
five straight games at one point. But
his erratic play caused MacTavish to
juggle three goalies in a desperate
attempt to find a go-to starter. When
that didn 't work, the Oilers were
forced to give up a No. I pick at the
trade deadline to acquire Roloson
from Minnesota.
Roloson started 19 s trai ght games to
help the Oilers sneak into the playoffs
as the No. 8 seed.
All Markkanen did was sit aro11nd.
In that last appearance on the first day
of March, he gave up three goals on I 0
shots in a loss to lowly St. Louis. The

returns to
Reds in trade

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

AP pholp

Edmonton Oilers goalie Jussi Markkanen, of Finland, fails to make the stop as·
Carolina Hurricanes' Cory Stillman, right, watches the puck go into the net on
a shot from teammate Eric Staal during the second period of Game 5 of the
. NHL Stanley Cup Finals hockey in Raleigh, N.C. Wednesday.
line the rest of the way: 12 games as
the backup, II games in which he didn't even dress, zero' minutes played.
It was more of the same in the playoffs. Roloson played every minute in
three straight upsets. over higherranked teams. making Edmonto n the
first eighth-seeded team to reach the
finals under the current format.
But when Roloson went down ,
Markkanen was ready.
"He continued to work hard in practice. He continued to get be\ter every
day," teammate Chris Pronger said .
"The way he handled the tough times
showed his .character. You have to be
ready because you never know what's
going to happen in the playoffs."
Markkanen has looked vulnerable at
times, especially on his frequent trips
away from the net to handle th e puck.
The Hurricanes want to create more
havoc around him.
"He does like to tome out of the net

Steelers

believed such an accident ing and will not release their
would not happen to me."
findings until 'their accident
"People are knocking him reconstruction is complete,
for not wearing a helmet and spokeswoman ~ammy Ewin
from Page 81
all of that, but the guy is hurt- said. Police have finished
inspecting Roethlisberger's
Transportation, c1tmg confi- ing,"
Cincinnati
Bengals
quarterSuzuki
Hayabusa motorcycle
dentiality laws, has refused to .
back
Carson
Palmer
said
and the car, b~ut Ewin would
confirm media reports that
those
cnlic1zmg
not elaborate on that part of
Roethlisberger does not have
wearRoethlisberger
for
not
the
investigation.
a valid Pennsylvania motor'
ing
a
helmet
should
back
off.
. A st;cretary for Di strict
cycle license.
"He
went
through
seven
Oscar Petite Jr., who
Justice
Roethlisberger appeared to
hours
of
surgery
and
the
last
has
jurisdiction
where the
address those reports in his
ne~ds
right
now
is
·
thing
he
crash occurred, said no cita·
statement.
"'I never meant any harm to guys banging on .him for not tions or other charges have
others nor to 'break any laws," wearing a helmet," Palmer been filed.
The car 's driver, a 62-yearRoethlisberger said. "I was . said at Bengals' minicamp in
old woman, did not immediconfident in my ability to ride Cincinnati.
Police were still investigat- ately return a telephone mesa motorcycle and simply

a lot," said Eric Staal, Carolina's star
center. ''If we can get some pressure
on him, hopefully he' ll cough the puck
U]J and make some mistakes."
Notes : As expected, .Carolina coach
Peter Laviolette had nothing to say
about the status of C Dou~ Weight or
D Aaron Ward, both hurt m Game 5.
Weight went off favoring .his right
shoulder after Pronger and Raffi
Torres sandwiched him on a check
early in the third period. Ward sustained a vague "upper-body" injury in
the second period and took a slap shot
off his skate in the third. "I have no
upd ate on them," said Laviolette,
always tightlipped about injuries....
The children's show "Dora The
Explorer" was supposed to be ht;.ld at
Rexall Place this weekend. When the
playoff schedule came out, Dora and
her monkey sidekick, Boots, were.
bumped to a smaller Edmonton arena,
the Northlands AgriCom.

sage Thursday . .
The Steelers have not given
a
timetable
for
Roethlisberger's return, but
hope he will be ready for their
Sept. 7 opener against Miami.
Players
who
visited
Roethlisberger in the hospital
belie ve he will return to
action soon, with no ill
effects.
"I look forward to being at
training .camp in Latrobe and
winning football games this
season," Roethli sberger said
in the statement.
·
The Steelers are 27-4 with
Roethlisberger at quarterback
and have .Played in two AFC

championship games and
won a Super Bowl during his
two seasons as a starter.
Bengals receiver Chad
Johnson hopes the accident·
does not cause teams to
impose more contractual limits on dangerous activities by
players.
,.
.
"They to(!)k away the
(touchdown) celebrations .
Now we can't enjoy ourselves
outside of the' facility? That's
not fair," Johnson said.
"If you're going to do it, do
it very cautiously. If you' re
going to ride a bike, ride it the
right way. Don't speed. Do it
for enjoyment: If you're

CINCINNATI (AP)
Infielder Juan Castro returned
to the Cincinnati Reds · on
·Thursday in a trade that sent a
minor league outfielder to the
Minnesota Twins..
·
Castro, 33, played for th&lt;; ,
Reds for five years before :
signing with the Twins as a
free agent after the 2004 season. Trying to upgrade their
infield defense, the Reds got
him back in exchange for
Brandon Roberts.
Cincinnati is arnon~ the .
worst defensive teams m the .
National League, and Castro ·
is known as a sol id fielder at :
every infield position.
Reds ~eneral mana!\er :
Wayne Knvsky was an ass1s- :
tant with the Twins when they ·
signed Castro after the 2004 :
season.
He , negotiated :
Castro's two-year contract.;
which incluc:jes a base salary .
of $ 1 million this season and :
a team option for 2007 at $1 :
million with a $500,000 buy- ·
out.
.
·
The Reds transferred right·:
bander Pau I Wilson to the 60-:
day disabled list to open a ·
spot for Castro on the 40-man :
roster. Wil son had shoulder ;
surgery a year ago and has
been on the disabled list all :
season.
The Reds will open a spot :
. on the 25,man roster for ·
Castro before a game Friday :
against the Chicago White :
Sox.
Castro was hitting .231 ·
with one homer for the Twins. ,
going to bun gee jump, have :
two cords in case oqe snaps. I :
don't ride anything. I just talk'
trash. That's it."
Although Roethlisberger:
was able to sneak out of the ·
hospital Wednesday night, :
Mercy Hospital officials did ·
not confirm his release until :
Thursday morning at the :
request of his family.
It was unclear where
Roethlisberger went when he
left the hospital. A bodyguard
Roethli sberger's
outside ·
home did not say if the player 'I
was inside, but Several vehicles wer~ par!Ced in the clrive'
way and.on the street nearby.

Every Tuesday
&amp; Saturday

6:30pm

(

Rio Bravo Mexican Restaurant
At. 62 Mason, WV
304-773-51 00
BUY ONE MEAL
GET ONE FREE
(Expires 7112/06)

Rio Bravo Mexican Restaurant
At. 62 Mason. wv 773-51 oo•
.Sunday Special
Kid s Meals 99¢
12 and under· no su9strtutions

Monday ·
Bar .Appetizer 99¢
Domeslic or Import

w/meal purchase

Tuesday
Bar Appetizer $ 1.50

Rocks or Frozen
Many Flavors

Wednesday
Any Two Combo meals

$8.99

Thursday
De sserts 1/2 pnce

,. w/meal purchase

Reach
.

.

.

'

.

~'

QCrtbune

To Place

.·

Your Ad. (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call .Today•••
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234
'992-2157
Or Fax To
'

Oftfei ·~~ow&lt;-~

Now you con hove borders and graphics

.~

Monday thru Friday

""

s:oo a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE A!'i AD
Successful Ads
Should ·Inctade These Items
To Help Get Response •••
\\\01 \ (I \ II \ I '

~hloValtey

*

Publishing raoervas
the right to edH,
reject or cancal any
ad at any Umo.
l&gt;E'rrors Must

• Start Vour Ad• Wtth A KeywOrd • lndude complete
Descrlptlod' • Include A Price • Avoid Abb reviations
• Include Phone Number And Addre111 When Needed
• A,d• Should Run 7 Days

r~mm;rs I

r

r

'.

' Place

F~day,

Jun.e 30, 2006 to
Sunday, July 2, 2006
$200/person
Price includes airfare and
two nights at
Harrah's Casino &amp; Resort
Private jet from ·
· Charleston, WV
Contact PVH Community
Relations (304) 675-4340,
Ext. 1326 to make.
reservations
LIMITED SEATS I
Gladly accept credit cards,
personal checks and cash

The Daily Sentinel

(740)446-2342

(740) 992-2155

~- -~

'

.tiD

"fi-IJiO f&gt;~~IL-~ 6f' t&gt;R.I?,$11\161 till "f'H-Iir
GA'&lt;'.t..'f IV\O~IN~ l&gt;Aft~Ne'h :

GIVEAWA\'

1.u&gt;$-e-

r

f'L&lt;ii~S

~!VIa1£3VT
"f~-teY !:&gt;or-J'T '5~Bil1

/a

YARD SALE·

8 puppies. Part German
GALLIPOUS
shepard-lab,-rotweUer. Very
ger'llle good with kids. Call
5 family yard sate, adult-pre·
(740)742·0805
anytime ,
ernie-ST. baby .assc., tools,
leave Gnessage.
ex t. June 15- 17, Roush
Kitte ns. 2 yellow and white, 1 Lane, Cheshire.
grey tiger.
weeks old .
(740)446·7484 or (7401 441 · 6116-6118, in beautiful down· ,
town Rodney, 6644 Ate 588,
7411 .
8 :00-? Furniture. household,
Looking for a good home: clothing, baby itorns.
Part Pu ~C hlh uahua, while.
Also
cats
&amp; . kittens. Annual yard sale· 1686
(740)379·2641
Cha&gt;lla, Lincoln Pike, Gallipolis,
Saturday the 17th. Lots of
Mary.
brand name, like . new men's
.
AUC'OQNANJ&gt; . .
1
Pretty Kittens. litter trained
and women's clothing. Baby/ "-·
to giveaway (304)675·6720 toddler girl clothe s/shoes, '
toys, ride one. movie's, TV, .Cross Creek Auction Buftalo
bike crafts. holiday decora· Friday, Night 7pm 1st time
Hons, all In excellent to like eve ry at Cross Creek
new condi tion. All priced to Auction
Bev
from
Found: Me.ie Rat Terrier. vary sellll Rail) cancels until fol· Portsmouth, OH. Trailer
fri endly, probably Indoor lowing weekend.
loaded. new merchandise.
dog. Call (740)339·3944 _ _:_ _ _ _. - . - Small businesses and Flea
Brand name clot_
h 1ng, G1rls Marketers
welcome
leave message.
0· 12mo, boys SIZOS 5·!0, 1304)937·2 1 18 o• 1304)550·
·Found: ·Small black dog Baby ltAms SA 141 . FrVSat. . 1616
found on 4th Ave. Call
6-4.
WAN! 'ED
(740)446· t 400.
Bring your yard sale stuff to
ro Buv
our annual flea market/yard
sp!e.Juna 24th . Stop by CVS
Absolute Top Dolla r: U.S.
Pharmacy in Gallipolis and
4x4's For Sale ...........................,.................. 725
Si lver and Gold Coins,
siQn up today. It's huge II ll's
Announcemeni ........... ........... ,.....................030
Proofsets, Gold Rings, Pre·
freel
Antlqueo ....................................................... 530
1935
U.S.
Currency,
Aparbnenla lor Rent ................................... 440
Estate Sale (Indoor sale) Solitaire Diamond s· M .T.S.
Aucllon and Flao Market............................. 080
Thursday, Friday &amp; SatUrday Coin Shop, 151 Second
Auto Parts &amp; Acceaoorlea .......................... 760
9·5pm
. electric piano, fu rni· Av::mue, Gallipolis, 740-446Auto Repalr ..................... :............................
ture,
pi
clures, rugs, dishes, 2842 .
.Autos lor Sate.................. ;: ...... ,................... 710
bedding &amp; more. 958 Porter
Boals &amp; Motors tor Sate ............................. 750
1 will buy Juoll !:&lt;.ala. C~ll
Rd., Bidwell, Ohio.
Building Supplles ........................................ sso
(740)388·9303.
Buslneos and Buildings ............................. 340
Garage sale 3632 State Ate
I "\ 11 '1 (I ' \ II \ 1
Business Opporjunlty ....... :.........................210
850. 0·9 month. baby stuff,
Buotneaa Training ....................................... 140
"I H\ II I ..,
Kerr and blue jars, pressure
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
cannier. New sluff daily.
Camping Equipment ... ,;.............................. 780
151h·26th.
Carda al Thantis .......................................... 01 0

5oT~ 7if~

ri6&gt;+?.

e

lrl!lll'_:-'______..,

rrroo:o I

Child/Elderly Core ....................................... 190 ,
EltclrlcoVRalrlgeratlon ............. ,................. B40
Equipment lor Ranl ..,.................................. 480
E;xcali81lng ................................................... 830
Farm Equtpmant.......................................... 610
Farma lor Rent ............................................. 430 .
Farms lor Sale ........................ :.................... 330
For Laaoe ..................................................... 490
For Sate.:.............................. ........................ 58S
For Sate ,o r Trado ......................................... 590
Fruita &amp; Vogtlabloa ....................... ..............SBO
Fumlohed Rooma........................................450
Qttnaral Hautlng...........................................BSO
Gtvoaway .....................................................040
Happy Ads .. ...................................................oso
Hay &amp; Graln ....................:.............................640
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
Home tmprovomonls ................................... 810
Homeelor Sale .............................: .. ............-310
HOUMhold Gooda ................. ;....... ,............ ,510
Houuslor Renl ....... ........... ,.... :.................. 410
I~ Memortam ................................................ ~o
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpmenl ......................... 660
t.:lvaatock .......................................................630
Loti and Found ............................. .............. 060
~011 &amp; Acr..jjo ............................................ 3SO
Mlecollaneoua ..............................................170
JII.C.ttoneoue Merchandloe.......................540
Mobtle Home Ropatr ....................................860
Mobile Homaolor Renl ...............................420
Mobile Homoo lor Sale ................................320
Money to Loen .............................................220
Motorcyclee &amp; 4 Whoelera ..........................740
Mualcallnatrumenle ................................... 570
Paroonala ........................................ .............oos
Pale lcir Sale .................................... ........... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng ....................................820
Proleulonal Bervlcea .................................. 230
'f!edlo, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 180
Real Eelalo wontad ...............,..................... 380
Schooletnatrucllon ..................................... ISO
8ead , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 850
Slluatlone Wenlad .......................... .-............ )20
'space lor Rant ............................................. 460
Sporting Gooda ........................................... S20
SUV'elor Sale .. ;........................................... 720
Trucks lor Stile ............................................ 715
Upholetery ..... .............................................. 870
Vane For Sala ..... ........................................ ,.730
Wanted to Buy .. ........................................... 090
Wonted 10 Buy- Farm Supplloa ........;........ 62Q
Wonted To I;Jo .............................................. ISO
. Wonted to Renl ............................................ 470
'lord Sale· Gelllpolla ......... ........................... 072
Yard Sole-Pomoroy/llllddle .....•.:.................074
· Vord Sale-Pl. Ploaeanl.. .............................. 076

.'

Large yard sale 619 &amp; 6110.
Firat tlme this · ye~r at 10544 · 100 WORKERS NEEDED
.State Route 141 .
Assemble crafts,
wood Items.
Yard sale 944 First Ave,
To $460/wk
Gallipolis. 16th and 17t, ,
Materials provided .
9am-4pm.
Free InfOrmation pkg. 24Hr

ra ~v~~,E I___

ao_1_-4_2_8_
·4_64_9_ _

• An E~~:cellent . way lo earn
m'oney. The New Avon .
1 Mile Neighborhood Sale· 4 Call Marilyn 304·882·2645
to 5 houses. Rained out last
week 3 miles N. ot Ch8ster, - Attention Drivers:
A&amp;J
June 17th.
Trucking is looking for

-.

GarageSale ~· Friday, 16th·8·

Orivers
w/ 1 .. yr OTR ,
EXperience lor Regional

r

YARD SALE·

· Pr. Pl..J!As..\Nr

3-Family Yard Sale Sunset
Lane 4 1/2 'miles out
Sandhill Ad. Boys&amp;Girts
ct 'othes,
books ,
kn ick
knacks. June. 16 &amp; 17th
9am-5pm

mid 50's H ome every
Weeke nd
call
Kent
(800)462·9365
- - - - - - -- AVON I All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304675· 1429.

with good com munication
skill, gOOd anitude &amp; self·
motivated. Should apply ..$1.1
Budget Inn, Jackson Pike,
G&amp;illpolis. No ph one calls,
please.
·

DIRECTOR OF

NURSES
At SCenfc Hills Nursing
Center, a Tandem Health
Care facility. we set the stan·
dard for comprehensive,
individualized care. Our col·
atmosphere
laboraUve
makes our 95-bed skilled
· 1 ·1·1y th
1 e
nursmg ac11
eonepac
to grow a satisfy ing career.

a Director of Nursing in. LTC
and/or sub-a cute care. A
true dedication to patientcente red, outcome-oriented
care and dynamic employee
relalio ns skills are e!Jsentlal.

' NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY

• FLU ·TIME CLASSES
' COL TAI\ININ O
• FIN-'NCINQ ,a,VAILA BLE

Hug, 3-Famlly Yard Sale
T.hurs June 15th , Friday
June 16th. La st Hq!fse on
Sandhill Rd. at Letart, w~tch
tor algns, Antique · vanity
Furniture some collectibles.
Yard Sale 2419 Llncoln.Ave.
Pt. Pleasan t. Friday and
Saturday June 16th and
17th 6am·5pm

standing opportunity for a
proven team leader to oversee th e efforts of our talent·
ed Nursing team . Qualified
candldat&amp;s will have curran!
AN Professional U c9nse

0 - - - - - - - , and 2+ vears' experience as

©!PJIL.

• JOB PLACEMENT
• ENAOLLINO NOW

ALLIANCE

-

Tandem provides competl·
tlve salary and a supportive
atmosphere !hal encour·
ages _
growth and sa1isfac·
lion. Please apply online or
send your resume to:

TRACTOR ·TRAIL ER
TRAIN ING CENTERS

tendamhllithcare.com

WYTHEVI LLE, VA

Scenic Hlllo Nursing

1·800-334-t203
,• l•nc.lractcrtndler.com

Home Health Aide
Yard Sale Fri&amp;Sat West
Cla. .ea
Columbia . 1 112 mile out
Now accepting applicati ons
Lievlng Ad . Toots, Misc. 8· 1
for CHHA c lasses to be gin
(304) 773·6003
July 2006 . Also hiring
STNA'o, CNA 'o, CHHA'o &amp;
PCA'Iimmedletely . Plea se
call (740)441 · 1377 tor more
Information.

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
,,

'

'

,

I

~·

L.lt.IO;._
_ _ __.lll170 MlscELl.ANWUS
. .,
HF.LP W.&lt;\NlFJJ .

Nursing Assistant Classes
beginning July 10, 2006. If
you enjoy elderly people and
want to become a member
of our health care team ,
please stop by Rocksprings
Rehabilitat ion Center al
36759 Rocksprings Road,
Pome~oy. Ohio 45769 and till
out an application lor the
classes.
Extendicare
Health Services, Inc. is an
equlil Opportunity employer
that encourages workplace
diversity. M/F ON
OverbroOk Ceriter currently
has operiings lor AN's, If you
are a caring and compas·
sionate -person, who enjoy's
working With the elderly, we
would love to have you as
part of our team. We are
now offer ing new per diem
pay rates. Please stop In and
fill out an application or call
Hollie at (740)992·6472 tor
' more information. EOE

Personal mail boxes lor' busi·
ness or apt building. 740·
742·2878

180

WANTEil

To Do
POSITION
ANNOUNCEMENT
Posting Date: May 30, 2006

ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
BUSINESS
MANAGEMENT

Affordable Computcr Repair.
Expert Ser·Jice . {740)9 92·
2395
George's Portable Sawmill,
don'! haul your Log s lo the
Mill lust call 304·675·1957 .

Will take care of the Elderly
in their home . have 10 years
The University Of Rio
experience call (304) 675·
Grand.
announces an
3264
opening for a nine-month
ll\\ \ 11\1
one year teaching position in
the field of , business man· ~~;:;;~;:;;;:;;;:;;~
agement.
riO
BLISINE$

OPPOKJlJNm

The ideal candidate wHI "--tollitiiiiiiioiiiii!tiiO.,l
have a commitment to excel· . .--!'!'!!'!!!'!'!!'!"_ _,
lance in teach ing and inter·
•NOTIC E•
est or e)lperience in teach· OHIO VALLEY PUBLI SH
ing business management lNG CO. rec_
0mmend s tha
ou do busi nes s with peo
and courses .
le you know, and NOT t
A Master's in Business ~&amp;end money through thE
Administration and previous ~ail unlil you have lnvesli
.
professional teCtching e)lpe~ bated the oHerina.
rlence is required .

WANlliD ..

- - - - -- - - Expanding home health
agency has
immedia te
opening for PT/FT home
heallh aides in Gatlia Co.
competitive benefit package .
Fax resume to: (740)534·
9918 or call Kim (740)534·

9908.
Experienced COL driver for
trasn company. Knol/Aedge
Must. Pay
ol Gallia Co.
according to e)lperienc9.
(740)388·9686.

a

FEDERAL

POSTAL JOBS
$15.67-$26.19/hr., now hiring. For appli cation and free

·
governement job Into, call
5 (SA 248 , 3 rd House on . Hauls. Average. pay 40's to We currently
have an out~ , American Assoc. of Labor 1·
Left-Top
Chester
Hill)
Women's, Men's, Boy's ,
G ir l's
Clothing,
Bed
Spreads, Home Decor, Baby
Swing, Walker, Play Gym, &amp;
Bicycles.

u~·-m

.... ......;.
amr "~"
~

Overbrook Center·is current·
ly accepting applications tor
a Full Time AN Manager.
This is a 3PM· 1i PM shift. All
r.ll':liOI'"'"-------,~~IIO
.
Interested applicants shou ld
· HELPWAN'IED
pick up an appllc~ lio n at 333
Page Street, Middleport, 0t1
IIFJ..p
For · additional information
Domino's Pizza Now Hiring please co ntact Michelle
~liver The
Charteeton (Jazette
Safe
Drivers.
Point Gilmore, Director ot Nursing
Pleasant,
Gallipolis · &amp; at (740)992·6472 EOE
Evans to Leon
Earn up to $1WO month ly Pomeroy locations Apply In
before expenses.
Person
Approximately 3 to 4 hours
Drtverw Needed:
a day
CDL {Ciass B) Drivers will·
Dependable vahlcle
ing to drive for local readya muat
mix-concret e company.
CALL H!OO·WVA·NEWS
Experience is prete rred but
Ext. t709
- - - - - - - - not necessary Med. insur·
ance &amp; other benefits availDeliver The
able after walling period.
Charleston Gazette
Driver
must be willing to do
11'1 Th e Town Of
pre-maintenance on trucks
Point Pl aasanl
G. equipment, yard work &amp;
Eam up to $900 monthly
other miscellaneous chore s.
before e)lpenses.
Appro)limateiy 2 to 3 liours Experience operating equip·
ment &amp; extra skills such as
a day
·
welding a p(us.
Dependable vehicle
Call
Robertsburg
a must
(304)937-3410
CAL L' H!OO·WVA·NEWS
or Lakln(304)773-5234 ,
E&lt;t. 1709
Located in Mason Counly
near Buftalo WV.
Desk clerk needed. Person
Center is currently accepting

-·FLEA--MAIIKE"r---.... .

lnaurance ..........................................., ......... 130

19alltpolts latlp lrtbune

l

6008

2006

"'

POUCIES: Ohio Valley Publlll'llng ffltef'WI the right to ed it, rej.ct, or ctncitl tny G It tny time. Error• mutt be reponed on the flrlt day of
wlll be retpontlble tor no more lhtn the coat of the tpece occupied by the el'l"or and on!)' the first inser11on. We ahall not be II
any loae or expense that rH Lt!ta from the publication or omlulon of an advertl1ement. Correc:l lon will be made In the first available edition. • Bo x new''"''~'
are alwtyl confktentltl. • Current rile card appUu. • All real utate edvertlaemants are tubject to tho Federal Fair Houalng Act o! 1968. • This
acCepta only help w1nted ldt
tlandllrde. We will
I
In violation of the lew.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

:t:Big : : :
Jack
Russell In Le~ar.t wearing a
I, Carolyn Moore, am not bright orange collar. Missing
responsible tor any debts since 6·3 call anylime
besides my own as of June (304)692·3654 or (304)674·

added to your classified ads
(!orders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
• S1.00 for Iorge

Trlbune-Senllnei-R~Itter

l..olTAND

no

'

County, OH

~egtgter

Sentinel

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Pomeroy Nazarene Church
Sunday Evening
June 18-21
Dr. Ray LaSalle
Bucyrus, Ohio
' : Evangelist
Pastor Jan Lavender
Invites the publip
Services begin
Sunday Eve. 6:00p.m.
Mon-Weds 7:00

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/.. . ,
(.

M~lp

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

iiii!:i,~'""!':":'"'--....,

2 free
packs/additional
packs $5.00
. First 60 people
eligible for door
prize.

ATLANTIC CITY

CLASSIFIED

t

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Middleport
American Legion

'QCrtbune - Sentinel - ~e

Center

311 Buck~dgo Rood ·
Bidwell, OH 45614
Ph: (740)«8·7150 .

""" (740)448--2438

.~. ~~~
SFIDF/EOE
HRettndtmftHithOtre.com

applications lor part time _ ___:_ _ _ __
LPN's. Available shifts are
7A-7P and 7P·7A. All inter·
ested applicants should pick
up an application at 333
Page Street, Middleport , Oh.
For fur ther information,
pl ease contact Hollie at
(740·)992·6472 . EOE

wanted
Guitarist
and
vocalist for Rock Band ,
{740)992· 9904 , 740..41 6·

1090
--.,-----~­

ISI\11

fl10

Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center is currently accepting
applications for lull-ti me and .
part·lime STNA's, All shifts
are avail able. Interes ted
applicant s should till out an
app lication at 333 Page We have openings tor e n l ~ u ·
siastic, dedicated prole.!Street,
Middlepor t.
No
sionals who onjoy working
phone call s please. EOE
with people in a fast paced
Part,time position to Manage environment, who e~~:hibits
Country Homes rental com· leadership an d desi re to

• 9nrs. emp. muni1y 1n Shade Area•
913 59 8042 241
serv
Includes a house to live in.
::..:..___ _ _ _ __
Send resume to Country
Growin g
Home. Health Homes , PO BoJ( 1033
Agency has Full-Time posi· Logan, Ohio 431 38.
hon lor an AN or LPN . - - -- - - - Competitive wag es, bonus ~ Parts Salesperson wanted.
es, &amp; benefits. Contact Computer experien ce and
Home H9alth Care of SEC knowledge of farm equip·
Toll Free at 1 ·866-368·1100. mont preferred. Salary
nagotiabl e depending on
HOME HEALTH AIDES· experience.
Healt h
SIGN ON BONUS . Homo Insurance Provided . Send
Health Care of SE Ohio fs resume to: CLA Box 5.§2 c/o
currently hiring home health Gallipolis Tribu ne, PO Boll
aldes ·competltive wages. 469, Gallipolis. OH 4563 t .
Call 740·662·1222.
TOWB OAT PILOT
HVAC Company Is lookJng
WANtED
to r experienced Installer.
Must have 1 or more yea rs
MCCliNNIS, INC. A prou d
e~~:perlence In residential.
leader In the Marine Industry
Pay
on
expet.len ce.
Is se&amp;+.;ing an experienced
TechniCal a plus. Call for
Pilot tor h8rtx&gt;r work on the
applicatio n (740 )441· 1236
Ohio Rive r. Applicants must
or fa ~e resume to (740)441 ·
hav e USCG license and
1266.
have a solid nav1ga!ional
Ohio Valloy Home Health, record. Competiti ve pay
Inc. hiring tor CNA. STNA. along with excellent bene·
CHHA, PC A. Competitive Ills. Qualified applicants may
wages, mileaQe and benefits calr740· 377·4391 ex tension
including health Insurance. 57 tor additional information
App ly al 1480 Jackson Pike, or send a re sume to
Gallipo lis or 2415 Jackson McGinnis, Inc. PO Bo1&lt; 534
Avenue, Point Pleasant, WV South Poinl Ohio 45680
or phone toll free 1·666-44 1· attention Port Captain.
1393.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SS t?
No f ee un,ess We Win l
1·888·582·3345
HI \I

HoM•-s
lllH SA I.E

2 Bedroom house m
Pomerojl wtlh beautifu l r1ve r
v1ew. $39,000 or reason flble
offer 992 ·5502.
- -- - - · - - 29 12. Ann1ston Dr , Pt
Pleasant. 3BR. 2BA . LA.
FR. Garage. Nice neighbor·
hood.(304)U75·36;l7 days;
(304)675·2355 evenings

build management skills. II 3BD. 2Ba, fireplace. 40x60
this de scribes you and
you 're ready . to grow, we barn, 6 flat acres. Ple asant
Valley Ad., Rio Grande.
offer you the opportunity.
$120,000. (740)709· 1166.
We offer !he opportun ity and
the loliowing benetils: Blue
Cross
"Blue
Shield
Insurance ,
Dental.
Prescription ca rd. 401 K.
paid va r:alions . fi\le day work
week and un1forms
t1 interested appl y at Burge r
King, 65 Upper R i ve ~ Road
in· Gall ipolis, OH or mail
resum e to: 32 10 Washington
Blv d.
Hunting ton ,
WV
25705. EOE .

.4 year old Co10n1a1 on 3
acres. a ppr o~~: . 1.900 sq. ft 3
bdr. 2 baths, ~ ca r garage,
ma sler bdr 1s 28x24 with a
jacuzzi ' tu b. $1 25.000.
(740)446-7029.

l!IO lr6rR
I
·
lL..---iiU
i iCilON
iiiiiliilil_.l
SalOOI.S

Conce aled Pisto l Cias5
Ohio. WV, , July 8, 2006,.
$7 5.00 .
9:00am. VFW
Mason WV. Ph . (740)8435555,
Gall ipolis r-areer College
(Careers Close To Home}
Call Today! 740-446-4367,
I ·600·2 14·04 52

4BR . Foreclosure. on ly
$20 ,900 For li stin gs call
800·391·52:28 OM t. F254.

653 Th ird Gallipolis. :2/3 BA,
,.New Bath, AC. Carport.
Detache d Garage. Cily
,Schools. 740-441·0614·
AAA MOO ULAR 1anch
mode ls $5 5.t1:\· 1.11-.iwest
Homes (740).8-c:IJ·..- ·~~J

For Sale House 2317 MI.
Ve rnon Ave. newly remold
Acc rtdl111d Membe r A.ccreclltlng
Council lor ll"'ld~erldenl College• led convenient location call
(304)675-8872
and &amp;lhOOI6 127 46.
"l'fWW glll tpOh lell ree rcol l~ .com

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

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t.,.rm_...~_SW!.
_ _...,I
ATTEN110N WORKING

www.mydailysen_~inel.com

r ~s~ l..,r·.o--~-RENr......,., ;:;;:::ln=Me=m=o~ry::::;;;::;
14x55-'97 Fleetwood MH·

Jn Loving

4U.mlonl

2BA, 1 bath, elec. heat/AC· Local compaily offering ~0
Great house for busy moms goodcondiUon $10,500. Call DOWN PAYMENr pro11ue 1o convenient location &amp; (740}446-3644 tor eppt
grams for ~ou to buy your
low maintenance. 3 bed home instead of renling.
room , 1 112 bam. cia. ges 1999 16x80 Schul1z mobile • HlO% financing
rurnace . recently remod- home. Vinyl siding. shingle • Less than perfect credit
MOMS

eled, loce.ted In Pomeroy
just minutes !rom lhe
schools &amp; shopping, must
see to appreciate, $70,000,
· 1740}992-2609 or 7404160691 .

roof, 2x6 outside walls. gas
heat &amp; central air, 8x12
porch, 8K12 shingled roof,
mini barn, $23,000 or make
olfer. (6~0)988-0866 or
740
1084
1 1256 '

Memory

,_ £. _

St:aTc;ru:;T
on

his 70 h Birthd

ay

He will always be in
our hearts and

• Payment could be the
same Bl!l rent.
Locators.

memories. We love
and missy_ou.

(740)367-oooo

Nice Country setting 3br,
good condition used 2ba
anached
garage.
local company offering MNO mobile homes, 1997-2000 Central-heat/COOling. Many
DOWN PAYMENr
pro- models, 14 &amp; 16 wide, 2-3-4 e)Clras for retired-couple Ret
grams tor you to buy your bedrooms. all with central Dep. No-Pets(304)675-51 62
air. Spec1al 1997 14x70,
home instead of renting.
2BR. -2 bath, $16,500. Pomeroy 4 bedroom, 2 bath,
• 100% financing
(740)388-0000, total electric. $650 mo.;
• Less than perfect credit Daytime
evening (740)388-8017.
Pomeroy 2-3 bedroom, 1
accepted
bath, $500 mo., (740)843• Payment could be the 83 Nashua 14x70, large 5264
same as rent
expando, 3br, 2 bath, comMortgage
Locators. ple tely remodeled , new Pomeroy Large 4 bedroom
(740)367-()()()()
stainless appl1ances. total newly remodeled, new carelectriC, 10x16 deck. Call pet_, W/0 hook-up. $875 per
month. 740 ·949-2303 or
(140}388-Q010.
740·591.·3920 .
'86 Crestrige 14)(70 2BR/ 2
bath , $6,995. Call (740)385- Rent or Sale 4br in
Syracuse, $600/month &amp;
9948.
Water/Sewer
Deposit.
'8S SkYline '1ront kitchen. included, No Pets (304)675·
Cash price $8.995. Will 5332 or(740)591-0265
Central air. full basement. deliver Call (740)385·9948.
Stop renting Buy 3 bedroom
hardwood floors, detached
9/10\h ot an acre lor sale on loredosure $14,900. For li st·
garage, covered patio.
143 2 mobile homes. 740- ings 800- 39 1-5228 ext.
fenced b.ack yard , newly
992-5858.
1709.
remodeled , 3 or 4 bed-

Your wife

6

Attention!

t

Wanted

Help

&amp; children

30x40 all metal building supplied and Installed $16,!)00.
Call for additional sizes
(740) 258-9137

s

i
:_FH~A~--M-id_w_es_I_H_o_m_e_s

All rut eltllte adv,rtlaing
In this newspaper Ia

~

(740)828-2750

aubj.ct to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which mllltea It illegal to

~10BFORllEn~~
.........

preference, limitation or
dlacrlminatlon baMd on

1
•

2000 14 7

$22,572

familial atatua or national
origin, or any Intention tg

make any auch
preference, limitation or

discrimination."

r

Thla newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertleemente for real
eetate which Ia In
violation of the law. Our
reader. are hereby
Informed that all
dwelling• ldvertleed In

--

r

this newspaper lllre

ACREAGE

4 Sale large almost an acre
com merical lot in town ol Pl .
HANDYMAN
Pleasant w/1 rental belew
- SPECIAL
. d I
ood b
appra.se va ue a g
uy
Bring the finishing, too ls, (304)548-7323 after 6pm
3bdrm Ranch, w/2 baths, in
drywall stage. Hquse never
lived in. Sits on 2 beautiful
acres. City water at road ,
about 20 mins. south of
Athens ,
OH .
$74,500
Owner financing. {740)469·
9146 _
--:-------HaUse in Camp Conley
2000 sq _ ft 3 br. 2 ba,
appro)(. 1 acre , w/rentaltrailer.
Asking
$80,000
(304)593-3072 al so garage
full of mise for sale ca lf for
items
Jackson County Home. 7
rooms, 3 BR. 1 1/.2 baths,
hardwood floors, full base·
ment, 2 112 car garage, 2
barns,
1 t .27
acres,
$145,900. Cell (937)5158670 Home (740)286-7212.

Mason~ 3rd Street, 2 BA. 1
ba, great. starter home or
investment
property.

JU.l'll

•

I
·---iiiitiiii0.-r'·
~~n: '

Brand

new

2

Bedroom

CJlb'EHOIJ) .

·---~----,.1

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ONTH

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Auto &amp; Truck

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

Repair
3 miles west of
Pomeroy,OH
on State Rt. 124

740-949·2217

1114/ 1 mo. pd

Jake &amp; Josh
Venoy's
Summertime

owned Appliances starting (740)794-0078.
al $75 - &amp; up all under
CKC Miniature Pinscher
Warranty, also have '!!COO· pups, OOB·S/31/06. Taking
ditioned Big Screen TV's deposits. AKC Red MinPin.
by Ron'a TV (304)67&gt;' Ready for stud service.
7999
(740)388·8788.
~--:--:---~-- - - - - - - - - For sale: Rainbow vacuum Female Umbrella Cockatoo
·cleaner. Less than one year with ·cage .. Very affoclionate.
old. Call (740)368-0001 and $450.00 080.
Also, 7
leave message.
Month male 3/4Pyrenees1/48order Collie. Neutered,
Thompsons Appliance &amp; extremely gentle with chURepalr-675-7388. For sale, dren. $50,00. Call·- 1-877re-conditioned automatic 358-9201 .
·
washers &amp; dryers, relrigerators, gas and electric For Sale COCkatiel w/cage.
ranges, air conditioners, and Nanday Conure w/cage.
wringer washe rs. Will do Blue Front Amazon w/cage
repairs on major brands in (304)773-5052 or leave
shop or at your home.
message.
Used Furniture Store, 130'
Bulaville Pike. Stop by.
(740)446-4782. Gallipolis,
OH Hrs. 11 _3 (~·F)

cc----:--'-'-'---:--'-

German Shepherd puppies.
Both parents can be seen.
Father is
Pollee K-9.
Black/tan,
whitelbrJndle.
Asking $200. c'all (740}367·

r
i:

PJI!
L
___

Am1QUES

Home grown tomatoes.
Picked dally. No Sunday
sales, 10 miles west of
Anliques; Repaired an d Gallipolis on SA 141 at
Refinished. Also, Buy and Yodel's Greenhouse ~0321
Se ll.
Lumber for Sale. SA 141 G Ill 11
Glbbs
Waod
and
Restoration Shop, 49985
Tornado Road, Racine. Call
949·2246.
FA.UU
~,.
Buy
or se ll.
Riverine
Antiques , 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740· 1970 135 MF live power, 4
992 2526 A
M
.~
·
uss
oore, new tires , looks like new.
owner.
1:="~:"'"-----, $4.800 or trade. (740)388·
MJSrnlANEOU'i 18014 MEKaJANDlsE
Have some hauling 10 do?

rw

EQuiPMENT

r

18cu. ft. Ke11more retrlgerator/freezer with ice maker
$100. Spinel piano, good
cond ition
$550.
Cal!
(740)446-4525.
-------24 bulb Zephyr Tanning Bed,
e)(cellent condition $1,000
(304)675·5754

Carmichael
Equipment·
your source lor quality
goosenecks, dumps and utllilies. Your 1dealer for Prostar
and load Trail trailers.
(740)446·2412.

•

•

'$2'7.00 'ert
'

.

The pany Ser;;t!inel

992-2155 ,.

Quality John DHre Hay
Equipment lor less·round
balers, square balers &amp;
mower conditioners 04.7%
Fixed for 48 months through
John
Deere
Credi t.
NEW AND USED STEEL,
carmichael
Equipment
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
(740)44 6-2412 _
For
Concrete,
Angle.
.n,~---..---,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For ,
Drains,
UVESIOC'K
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
""~------...
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday, Saturday
&amp;·
Sunday. (740)446-7300

r

Tim McGraw &amp; Faith Hill
. Tickets $140. Conce rt in
Charleston, July 2. 2006
(304)675-5 754

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
26 Years Experien~

David Lewis ·

JAIL.~
.

740·992·6971

.

• •

,,"

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"
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"

1Ji'j"P
All 'YJHI• Of rooffng:

:: BARNEY

HardWood Cabinewr And FurnitUre

SOMEONE GOT HITCHED,
SOMEONE GOT BORNED
AN' SOMEONE GOT BUSTED !!

www.dmberctreekcablnney,..,m

.740.446.

Renting
A• JIIIII Stange
••

192 11391
992·2272

j

4X4

FOR SALE:
1,~--lliiiioiiliii_...

2002 Yamaha Vstar 1100
Clj:isslc, 5,500 miles, black ,
drag pipes, leather bags,
50mpg , $5,500. (740)2455934.
2003 V-Star Classic 1100
with extras. 3500 miles
$6,200 (304)675-4843
2003 Vulcan Classic RS
Kawasaki 800, V-Twln ,
Liquid cooled. 2.800 OI'Qinal
miles. $5,300 (304)5935100 (~)593- 8553

2003 Yamaha Rl spor1blke. ~
3100 miles, Yoshimura' carbon fiber race e)Chaust,
97 Old s AchOMI,
'
4 cy,1 co ld 'many extras, calt (740)590air, $800 down !200 month; 3722.
94 ·Ford Tempo, 4 cyl., cold
2004 Yamaha Vstar Classic
air, $600 down $200 month;
~ 100, 5400 miles, custom
M&amp;J Auto, At. 160, Vinton ,
Oh, 2 pm-Spm, 740 _3$&amp;· paint, tons chrome, · $6600
MUST SELL 740-709-1503
9693 or 740-742 •2662
98 Ford Ranger Splash . 94 CBR, 600 F2 , $2,700 call
(304)593-6385 or (304)593·
Super Cab 4X4. 4.0 V6, Air
Sharp $6495.00. 99 Chevy 8132
1o EKI Cab 4X4, 4.3V6
BoATS &amp; 1\JOTORS
Auto, Nice $8995.00. 99
~
FORSALE
_
GMC Sonoma 4 cyl. 5 spd.,
Air, $3695.00. Many More
1999 Marada Boat with trailCarS and Trucks to choOse
er. 18ft excellent condition
from . Riverview Motors, 1
$7 800 304 675-5754
Block above McOpnalds ,
Pomeroy, OH. (740)992CAMPERS &amp;
3490.

I

i

1989 Ford Bronco. EKceUenl
condillon
$2,500. Call
(740}388·0034 attar 7pm.

Deli &amp; Bakery
Bologna $3.05lb.
Colby $4.501b.
Fresh Mozzarella $6.591b.
Hummus $5.591b
Amish Potato Salad $3.451b.
Pasta Salad $3.Sotb.
Cannoli $1.7"5 ·
' Breakfast Bale's $1.75
Breakfast Tornados 2/$2.00

, THE BORN LOSER

2006 Jayco 27' trav~ trailer.
Used twice . Queenflull/twin
beds &amp; sofa, lg. shower, s~.:~r­
round sound. Was $18,000,
Now $14,000 . (740)446 2800

. _, I

I~ \

~

4x4 ,
FooSALE

1999 Chevy Silveradc -4WD
P/U, 85 ,000 miles. 5.3 V8 ,
all options, short bf;KJ with
topper. Excellent Conditibn,
' $11 ,000. (740)645-0626.

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS·

. f-\( !'&lt;OW JU~T
NJTOMM'IcALLY
(01&lt;\f..S E\IE:.Il..'(
F~\1&gt;1\'{ 1'\IGI-\T!

"·~

'
t.r.

IMPORTS
Athena

~2u~f.~4
Chuck Wolfe
Owner

---

--

PEANUTS

• New 11omes • Additions
• Remodeling

DID '(OU KNOW TI-IAT
BLACKBEARD, TI-lE PIRATE,
BURIED ALL HIS GOLD
I-I ERE IN THE DESERT?

Licensed Home Builder

(740) 992-0496

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $54 PER
MONTH

..

AND THAT BLACKI3EARD
ONCE SPENT THE N161-IT IN
A MOTEL IN NEEDLES?THAT'5
WHAT SOMEONE TOLD ME ..

'(OU DON'T
BELIE \IE
AN't'TI-IIN6,

DO '1'0U?

- ..

•
~ SUNSHINE CLUB

~

&lt;;::ornerstone
,~ r;;. Iil Construction
Residential• Commercial • Ge~erol Contracting
Painting • Doors • Windows •

Dc~:k s

'

·

• Siding • Roofing • Rooni Additions • Remodeling
WY 038992
• Plumhing • Elecrricnl 740·367~544
OH 38244
• A~,;coustic Ceiling
740-338-3412

''
'
•"

11&lt;VII\X? 10 ~(H
WI-lD WAS.
MARRIED -p BUJTI(

•

,,
.,.
...

Beef$8.25
Beef $8.75
Corn $7.251Bag
!.Cracked Corn $8.25/Bag

.,,
?&lt;

,,'

$~3.25/Bag

~

Hog Feed $9.50

Why Drive Anywhere Else?

WHA1" ARtS o,&gt;OU, ANYWAY?
A CARP ? ,__,~.____,.

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N •

Ohio 45769

·-

·-••

.,

1-4 BR Houses I Apts.
1 Luxury- Also HUD

e

I"M A (.IFf C€R1"1FICA1"E
FOR A NEW HIP

0

'

Also Commercial Space
,740-416·5547
:lll 1 1 1 1iU;tlil[~

YOUNG'S

MINlE~S

CARPENHR
SERVICE

SELF STORAGE
97 Beech Street
Middlepo"" OH
IO_
x 10x10x20
992-1194
or 992-6635
"Middloport's only
Self-Storage•

WV036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992621 rl
Punwrny () r,,,

'}_,Yio1r&lt;i l o

"

,,

,IIIli"'"~'

,,

_ _ _ _ !..,_,~_

~--

-

-

-

-

a!Aipt

25 lllv-bltly

26 Trial run
28 "111e~

Cartoon

DOWN

IUppller ,

35 Slangy hats

Pass

4•

All pass

37 Not daffy
39 Sc~lt
Doclor

+2

West. should realize lhat W South has a
club loser, it cannot evaporate unless he
can set up dummy's spade suit But since
that requires two ruffs in the South hand,
he needs three dummy entries. And lhere
they are - those hean honors. So, West
should ruff his partners wtnner at trick
three and shiM to a trump, prematurely
removing one of those entries. Now whatever South'• hand, if me oontract can be
defeated, il will be.

,AstroGraph
'lt&gt;ur~:

Saturday, June17, 2006
By Bernice hd• Otol
Considerable emphasis Is likely to be
placed on your talents and skills in the
year ahead. Your possibllilies for success
look especially good because yo u'll use
them, along with industriousness, to real·
ize your desires.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- You have a
special aptitude to both org'anize and rear·
ganize things tor yourse lf and/or oth_ers. It
lookS like your talents could get a real
workout at thi s time.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - If there is a
special endeavor. which is meaningful to
you linancially. make it a priority and milk it
for all it's worth. You 're Bill to be very successlul with it now.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - Even thOugh
you'll be endowed With e)Ccellent leadership qualities, others may be more appre·
dative of your talents than you are. Don't ·
let self-doubts dilute your enthu siasm and
drive.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - It's not a
good idea to just let pent-up energy
seethe with in you, whether it ls negative or
positive. Dissipate this energy by finding
some hard work to do - and really get
into it
.
LIBRA _! Sept. 23-0 ct. 23) - If you enjoy
your friends lor what they ·are and not lor
what th ey can do lor you, a pleasant sur·
pnse may come your way when they
shower you with lavors. Ask not and you
shall receive.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Don't be
heSitant to disclo se your secret ambiiions
to persons you believe can help you. Once
!hey know about your wishes, they are apt
to dlscovet.ways to ass is t you.
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21)- There
is something ol substa ntial value that you
can learn from your dealings with friends
and associates. It behoo\les you to care·
fu lly pay atlentlon to what others do or say,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. ~ 9) - Your
· probabilities tor achieving your objectives
look very good, but they might require
either imaginative thinking or a second
effort. II you lall behind, employ one or
both.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - You could
be lar more effective than usual when it
co mes to your dealings with others on a
one·on-o ne basis. This Is because .you 'll
have the ability to view things from their
perspective.'
PISCES (Feb. 20..March 20) - You are
now in an e)Ccellent productive cycle, arid
you snou ld be able to accomplish even
· your more dilflcult Jobs with ease. Apply
your skills, knowledge and creativity to the
job at hl=ind .
ARIE S (March 21-April 19) - Obligatory
socia l activities with l rle nds are likely to be
more enjoyable II they are conducted outside of the home ...Chocse an Inexpensive,
fun venue that everyone will like.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20)- Sometimes
It -is unwise to attempt to do th ings that
requ ire concentrated energy, bu t thl•
might be perfect tor you. Working on thlnga
thai require careful lttchnlquea are what
you need.

ca~lt
S&lt;:&gt;iooL...

22 Pnnormol,
to oome
23 More then

1 Thud

menial

East

a

83 Fntlghter

9 Vamoooa
10 Lalrd' a
houoahold
. 12 Thick
19 Spray can
21 Yen

2 Environ·

bur
34 Water

North

f&lt;lllt ar

51 Plumbing

FoUow upon 61 Overly glib
24 Homer·
62 -H~
hiller Mel .:.
ahrub

\fest

T&gt;le~ ~

p...t

50 l&gt;llkl cloMr

horizon

22

33

'SOUP TO NUTZ

Room Addltlona &amp;
Remodeling
New Garal)e'a
Electrical • Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gunara
VInyl Siding &amp; Palntlnt
Pallo and Porch O.Cke

Tevem"

bend
52 H.ove dinner
honorific
54 AQulrlum
17 Moat ot 1M
fleh
earth
5I IV • XIII
1B Sketch
58 H.od • meal
20 Above the 60 DHiroy

wants
24

ft:'
.. :rub
Soften

27 Hoople
upltttve

3 Cod~re·

4

40 Gala
41

7 Nobody'•

Valhalla

hOlt
42 4gont'e

percenlllge

VIew
25 Doll'•

prafl•

5
up
.6 -out
(rtlaxt

Portuguese premier Anillal Cavaco Silva
said, "Everyone \VOS tired with tha oldstyle politicians and their flowery rhetoric.
I just told them there are Iough times
ahead, but that they would be less tough
with me in charge."
Th is deal is tough. Any pair who found the
winning defense against four hearts
deserves to be seleeled tor your club
te am. How should the delense proc6Bd,
West leading his singleton diamond? ·
East opens with a weak two· ~d .- showing
a decent six-card suit and 6-10 hlgh-oard
points.
East wins the first trick with 'his diamond
jack, cashes the diamond king, and leads
the diamond ace. There is a natural incli nation lor West to ask tor a club ShiH, dis·
carding first the club eight, then the club
two. But if East buys into that request, the
contract should make. South wins w~h his
club ace, unblocks the ace and king ot
spades, playa a trump to the board, ruffs
a ~pade in his hand, returns to me
dummy with a heart, ruffs another spade,
crosses back to the board w~h a trump,
and cashes the esta~ished spade jack,
discarding his club 10.
·

e

-·'

FOR RENT- MEIGS COUNTY

1994 Chevy S-10. 2.2L,
automatic, Toneau cover,
American Racin g wheels ,
nice truck, $1 ,900 OBO.
(740)258-1537.
Handy Man. Home Services
98 Ch ... role1 S-10 truck 1or and Repairs. Call (740)645 7524.
$3800, (740)667·3655

WC'IJ£ CAU£1&gt;'"'~
SO MI»NY T\t&gt;\f.S
I~ TI-\E. P~\,

0\&lt;0CI?. "' •
PIZZ"- .,
l&gt;\1&gt; ~
YOU?

.

H I . .,

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references furnished. Established , 1975.
all 24 Hrs. (740) 446 0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

·r I&gt;\;""'""~

G.Lf&gt;-'i&gt;YS! Tl-\&lt;.11.~~
"- PI 2 Zi&gt;-~
C&gt;ELI'JEJZ:.Y &amp;JY
P\T Tf-\E 1&gt;001?.!

Brownies .1St

M&lt;YTOR HoMES

c

i

COST YA A QUARTER !!

2459 St. Rt 160 •

s

s

·-~

••

and So'ns

I

2001 Stratus $4,900; 1997
""1
$1 900 '99" Nl
eurus '
; t .., ssan
ext
c'ab $3 200
1999
·
·
;
Plymouth Voyag8r van
$3,500; 1988 Blazer 4)(4,
$~ .600 . Satums, Cava~ers,
Sunflres, Neon, GrandAms,
VOiswagon and others In
stock. Prices on Windshield
of vehicles. Cook Motor•.
328 Jackson Pike, (740)446·
0103
--------2003 PT Cruiser, 4 eyl.,
runs &amp; looks great, good gas
mileage ,
7 , 200 _ Call
(740)368·0140.

.

t1 YHml for
t3 Bordw .
14 Not welt
15 Saunter
16 Tu.....,.

Pinal'' *.Ill

2+

Antwer to Pf'IVkiUI Puule

1 Complaint
- Willet
5 VCR IIIUaU 47 "The
8 Fttl·lood
kmlld

32 Mother lode

The tough should
be in charge

Hl Writes&amp;I •

{740) 949-1405

10 8 3
A 10

Opening lead :

:;.;;:;;;;;;~

Exterior,
Ivory
leather ti res.
$1 ,200
080.
I
.
Wh'
I
(740)709·6072.
ntereor,
lie viny top.
Nice driver, 390Ci engine, r~
VAN.~
atuto . lrarismlssion, bpowker
FoR SALE
seenng, power
re e, ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,..
power window, power seat.
Price $9,500.00.
Hill's 1997 As1ro Van aU wheel
Automotive Classic Car drive, excellent condition, ell
Restoration &amp; Parts, Inc., new !ires. $4,500. (74())25629670
Bashan
Road, ~6i;i14~8:;.
- ~..................~,
Racine, Ohio 45n1; Phone: · i410 MOI'ORCYaB
740·949-2217: Fax: 740 7
4 WHEELER'i
949-1957: Pictured on
•
wwwthunderbjrdcenlercom
·
1996 Honda CBR 'eoo F3.
t 996 Ford Windstar LX. Runs exceltent, very fast.
Runs/looks good, cold A/C, Must sell $2,000 OBO.
loaded. Must sell $1 ,500 (740)645·3727·· (740)388OBO.
(740)645-3727 0528.
(740)388.0528.
2001 Kawasaki , Ninja 500,
1998 Buick Skylark 96,000 sharp, only 3826 miles,
miles, excellent condition. $2,700 (304)675·3275
$2,800. Call (740)388·9645
2001 Yamaha Grizzly 600
1999 Ford ' Taurus 42,800. 4x4 w/winch runs great.
Call (740)446.,{)425 after $2,800 call (304)593·6139

John Deere 10ft. No Til Drill
for
rent.
CarmiChael
"Collectorl Car"
Equipment (740)446-2412. 1986 Monte Carlo luxury'
sport, ~Nevada Car" (zero
Baldwin Plano Aeroeonlc . John Deere Mlnl Exb{lvator/ body rust) over $1,200 In
Good condition. Oak wood. Tractor loader Backhoe/ parts, have r~ip1s tor al1. 1
Price $1 ,000 Brass plano
Skid SteerS, Carmichael All Edelbrock V·8. Just
lamps $20, 6 Maple dining EqUipment (740)446-2412
needs a drive shaft, $1 ,700
chairs. (304)675-5366
firm or trade for Moto-cross
,
N~w John Deere Compacts bike equal value. (304)576JET
and 5000 Series Utility trsc- 4195
AERATION MOTORS
tors CliO% Fixed tor 36 ·.mr;.-~---....,
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt ~~ . month•
through
John
TRUCKS
Stock. Call Aon Evans, 1- Deere Credit. Carmichael
FOR SALE
800-537-9528.
Equipmen1 (740)448-2412
.._. ._tiiiiiitiiiiiii;,;._.,i

Looking for a Farm for
Hunting •
privileges.
(606)739-8523 or (304)5444211

South

Free

j15

-AS LOW

•
•

• Leave a message

Stop &amp; Compare

FREE
ESTIMATES

"' 10 3
• 4 2 .

• 2
+ AKJ9 5 4
.K87 5 42
"' J 9 6
South
.AK
• Q 10 9 8 6 5

Call Gary Stanley
740-741·2293

740-992-l&amp;n

New or Repair
Seamless Gutter
1
Oownspou

!16- 1~

Dealer: East .
Vulnerable: Both

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

79 Jeep CJ7·. 258 6 cyl. runs
-19_6_2_T_h_u-nd_o_r~bl_rd_;_B_Iu-e good, needs paint, new

-~----., _ap_m-----~--

$100$; dryefr $9F5F: 72;;i6BF.
eet;t. range 125: re rig .. ,
$150; upright 'freezer $150;
MUSICAL
solid wood dresser $80; cof.
• .. ___..,n..n:ovn:!
.IN."JtKvl'u.l!ol"'.l~
fee table $50; entertainment
center, new $100; tabie &amp; 4 New Blue Acoustic Guitar
chairs $~00; book shelf $75 ;
Bissell bagless sweeper with Gig Bag and pitch pipe
tuner.
Mint condition.
$40.
.Skaggs App.
12 16 Eastern Ave
(740)446-73913.

7 3

• New Homes

-.

$5001 Police Impounds!
Cars from $500. For listings
800-391-5227 ext 3901

•

COISTRICTIIII

• Mowing,
Trimming, Etc.
• Let us see what
we cando
for you.
CALL 992-5422

I

•--tiiiiiitiiiiiii;,;.-.,1

Q9 6 5

• References

West

ROBERT
BISSELL

Help

&amp; males. Ready to go.
(740)388-9932 leave mas·

Appliance

•

• Free Estimates
"Insured''
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Nor1h
. J 8 7 42
• i\ K J
• Q7 6
"'Q s
E•st

• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates

Hours

43 Ettct~c flth

45 ActOf

cheln

Available

992-5682

weekS old, Male Puppy, 2
shots, $300. 1740)258-1498 Good mixed Hay $2 a bate
(304)675-n65
AKC Minla1ure Pinschers. 3 - - - - - - - - females, blacWtan, $300. Tobacco Plants for sale. Call
Ready June 17. (740)368- (740)446-7843or (740)645·
•8124 no answer leave mes- 1660.
sage.
----~---Wire-tieQ straw tor sale in
AKC Reg . Lab puppies, field. Customer brush hogchocolate &amp; black, females ging. Call (740)256·6011.

-.

!'o

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

ROGER HYSEll . Hill·s Self
GRRfiGE
Storage

(304)743-5400

~~

ACROSS

Alder
'' '

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
Phillip

' I"

Nelsons Meat , Processing.
Smoke House working :
No
Beat, Hogs, Deer.
Appointments necessary.

Ml~on, WV

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

.J(

_so_g_e_.- - , - - - - - - lli'll10r""-~A·uros----, ~;:::::;::;:::~
AKC regiStered English ,
FOR SALE
f!!l

~r/dryer w1'a sher

.:.::c~_:_·&lt;:c_:.:1_:__:-:=.::.~---

t

H

Mini Dachshund, 9

Bulldogs, male $1200, tak·
ing deposits now, cash only,
Warehouse _
17_4_01_99_2_-7_8_64_ _ _ _ _
1BA apt for rent in Spring
Valley.
WID
hookups.
AKC Shih Tzu puppies tor
DepcsitJreferences required . in Henderson, WV. Pre- sale. (740)446-1523 or,

Prudential Bunch Realtors,
Ahpa'rtments Washf
Bobby
Muncy,
Realtor ,
ookup, stove1re ngerator
. (740)7.09·0299 or (304)525·
included.
Need to se ll your home?
7761 .
Also available units State
Late on payments, ·divorce,
Route 160. Call for details
'bNre•_cwk h3ombede-frooromsa,le2 ·,nbeR1h,·o'
(740)441-0194 or (740)441 ·
_11-='8.,-4_
. ===-:--:-:-c::Grande . Call (740)379-26~5 and quick dosing. 740-41 6· =
3130.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAl~
Priced to sell. Very nice
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
3BR, bath upstairs, furTownhouse
apartments,'
and/or small houses FOR
nished 1BR apt. downstairs,
furniture store in r9ar. Car lot ~r~~~1011""-·H~O·U·SE'l--...., RENT. Call (740)441 · 111 1
on side . All on 112 ac . lot at
for application &amp; information.
130
·Bulaville
Pike .
FOR RENT
Gallipolis. OH. Call to see
Furnished apt. 3 rooms &amp;
(740)446-4782
(2) 3br Houses . 1-in New bath, upstairs. clean, no
Haven $400/month . 1-in pEHs. Ref/dePosit required .
Ranch Style, 3 Bedroom,
Mason $425/month , $300 (740)446· 1'5 19.
2 Bath, 2 Car Ga rage, 9
Deposit eac h, No Pets :__:::.;___:___:_.::__ _ _;_
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedfniles
from
Holzer
(304)882-3652
room apartments at Village
Hospital/C linic. 1 acre
mil, beautifu l landscap1800
Chestnut " S!reet Manor
and · Riverside
i~g . screened-in back
Gallipolis, OH, 3 bdrm , ~ AFpartm$e2n91
5S$4in44Micddlllepo74rOt.
deck with hot tub, View
ba th, carport, fenced back
rom
"
· a
·
yard, heat pump, WID 992 -50e4. Equal Housing
on line
photos/info
hookup, refridg &amp; stove Opportunities .
www.orvb.com
Code
included.
$500/mo. -N'--'--2-B-R--,-W-1--R-.5286 or call (7 40)388ew
ap s. 8 son u .
0140.
S400Jdeposit, no pets. Ref. &amp; Rodney Plke/850 area
·
Deposit
security
ck.
required . Refe rence /
Recently remodeled two !304)675-2525.
required, no, pels. (740)446"
story home in Merce rville.
_3-_4_;B_R_ h_o_m_e_
, _Ge_o__-C-ree-k 12 7 1 7 40 709 1 6 57
Walking distance ol s9hools.
hunting
nearby Ad.· Non Smoking rental· Nice 2br APartment located
Public
· Point
Pleasant
$68,900. Adjacent income $700/mo. sec. dep. Call In
(740)446·3644.
Aefridge/Kitchen
Range
lurproperty available. priced
nished. FOrced Air Gas
separately. Immediate occu· 4
5650 Heat &amp; AC . $300/month.
pancy. (740)256- 1965 or BA t'\Ou se for rent,
7401446 ' $200/deposiL
mo.
plus
dep.
Call
1
(304)6751(661)331-6672.
3644 fer info.
7828

'

r·o

1 BR apVcabln, all utilities
paid. Call {740)441-0117,

:'n~~Ynsyl:~r~o~e~e:l~hc?as~

"

'
Attention Construction work·
ersl Private Rooms available, fully equipped ld1chen.
Washer/Dryer.
lnfo. ·Call
740·742- 134&amp; or 740-9922062

required, no pets, 740·992·
2218.

49.5 acres by Tycoon Lake. Call
(740)446-0834
or
(740)645·4846 or (740)339Call (740)709-1166 .
6acres+
16001!.
road 0362.
frontage, water &amp; elect. 4 rooms &amp; bath, stove/ref,
installed . Three entantes, Ut ilities . paid. $450/mo,
two limestone. one black Upstairs, 46 Olive St. No
pets. (740)446·3945.
top. $35,000. Visit or write:
J&amp;M Farm s, 9BO McC ully Accepllng applications for 2
bedroom apartmen1, $500
Ad., Gallipolis, OH 4 563 1Approx 15 a'cres, Brumfield month, kilchen appliances &amp;
Rd.
Mercerville area. WJD furnished, water &amp;
(740 )245 •5416 if no answer garbage included, no pets,
leave message
1st month , security deposit
&amp; lease required. (740)446At Glenwood wv. 7 acres, 1 9585.
·
mile oH At 2 on Glenwood
Ad. Well. sePtic Tank, con· BEAUTIFUL
APART·
crete drive ready to put MENTS
AT
BUDGET
mobile home on or build PRICES AT JACKSON
house or unfi nished gara'ge. ESTATES, 52 We stwood
$29 ,900 call 16 141877 _2394 - Drive from $344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; mo~ les. Call
Wanted- land to lease lor 740-446·2568.
_Equal
hunting in. Meigs County
Housing Opportunity.

r

FuRNISIIEil

n-- I

Very clean 14x64 2 bed·
room . Only $7,995. Call 1 and 2 bedroom apart·
(740)385-0698.
ments, fu rnisheddtnd unrur·
Lors &amp;
nished, security deposit

aval ..ble on an equal
opportunity bases.

iL..---iiRiii()()M';iiiiit;,;._... :~~-

3

Midwest Homes --~-x-0-CI e_y1_o_n_~-b-r,
:_17_40cc)_82_8_-2_7_50_
. _ _ _ _ 2ba for Rent or Sale or Land
Nice 14x70 3 t?edroom on ly Con1ract. (304)675-661 9
$10,995. Will help with deliv·
Mobile home si1es for up 1o
ery. Call (740)385-962 1.
16)(80 in Country Homes.
REPO ' S &amp; USEO from (740)385-4019.
$1,900
down _ Midwest
APi\RThiENTS
Homes (740)828-2750
FOR

race, color, religion, sex

pups, lull blooded, $150'

www.mydailysentinel.com

OOP

T \ piC1CP &lt;"111 ttcl
(.-,'II
CJCj')
i
, . '-- ?1 ,'"
H)

Twin Rivers Tower i~ aCcept- (304 )675·5984 leave mes· Quality horse and livestock
trailers now available at
Ing applications for wal11ng sage or {304)593·2928
list for Hud-subslzed, 1- br,
Carmichael Equipment. New
3 Pil Bull puppies (female) dealer · tor Valley and
apartment, call 675· 6679
304 1593•1034
Kieferbu lll
Horse
and
Equal Housing Opponunity $50 call {
AKC beautiful healthy coop- Livestock Trailers. Many
Two Bedroom Apt. for er Beagle's. Parents proven options available- steel, alurent/utilities paid. No Pets. hunters on premises. Shots, minum , dressing rooms, liv· ·
74,0-992-5858.
wormed . (304)675-211.3. lng quarters. (740)446-2412.

NEW 3 br doublewides from 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, No Pets,
$269 mo. Midwest Homes
Reference
Requi red .
(740)828-2750.
$4p0/mo, $400 deposit.
NEW
SINGLEWIDE- (740)367-7025

advertise "any

•

Tracy's Apt (304)67S·2288

Friday, June 16, 2006

Business Services

For sale: Two Appaloosas,
4YO s1ud $300 and 3YO
ma(e $400. Inquiries at 740·
256·1253 after 8 p.m.

rooms , close to schools , AAA MODULAR 'ran ch
PETs
Point Pleasant, $69, 500 . models $55,836. M idw~st ' Two bedroom, ~ bath duplex Single Bedroom $300 month
FORSAIE
(740)709-1382.
Homes (740)826·2750
on Kingsbury Ad . near + $300 deposit. 2 br Apt.
Brand
new
.
wide
Hamsonville , ·$425 per $350 a month $300 deposit. 2 male Mini Dachshund,
16
vinyl/shingle 161 /mc. Call month plus ulilities. Security
(740)385· 767 1.
and water deposits required .
:__~:_____:______ No
pets, no smokin g,
LAND ' &amp; HOME PACK· (740)742-3033
AGES- 1st time bUyers &amp;

Wanted

2 year old Paint stud. Very
gentle, $350 080. Call
(740)258-9031 or (740)2561233.
-

Block, brick, sewer pipes,
windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande. OH
Call740-245-5121 .

•
•

WANTED: Part-time WEEKEND
position available to assist an
individual with mental
retardation in Chester (Meigs
County); Friday llpm thru Bam
Monday; sleep-over required.
Must have hidt school diploma or
GED, valid driver's license, three
years good driving experience and
adequate automobile insurance.
$7.25/hr. Send res\lmes to:
Buckeye Community Services,
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640
or email to lieyecserv@yahoo.com.
Deadline for applicants: 6/23/06.
Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer

of

S t:anfey 'E.

accepted

Mortgage

Help

Friday, June 16, 2006

furloue

44 PI-of

46

IOUrce
48 Director
- Kazan
49 Stilled
50 Elect 111¥1
53 ...... near

PlkH Peak
55 Oompeh--

56 Frel letter
Nope

29 Book genre 57

(hyph.)

·

fn':tlv•

47 Iodine

anceetor

30 SCiired· fool
looking
8 Dateendtr. 31 Motel tlgn
, often

38 Mike

oppoellll

38 o.IICIIICIIII

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celebrity ~ ayptograma lilt aedlld 1mm quotatioM.tJv famous pt(IJ:M, past IRI !"lert
Eldlle!llt h fle CIJ)tlef 8Widi!Or ai'IOihllr

' TodBy's.~: A equals U

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I

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Painting is its own language, and when you try to
talk about ~. it's like an Interior translation. · ~ Francis Bacon

-'~~:.~'
~©\\(}~-~t.~s·
::::
•
NtH to., ClAY I. POllAN-....:.·- - 0 Reorra•

letters o1

lovr xrombltd ""'rds bo
low 10 form lour slmplo words

~ _ For a speciredaloccasion' ~~edbusblntlh
t-Tf-"r'-T~-l.O
sent me 17 roses. I...,. w _y
I~
he sent such an odd number. He
'--"--...1..-t...-L--1~ replied, sheepishly, "It was the
G l AEU E
minimwn amount I could _;_:•
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. you

$

Comolt•o the ehuc:klo auol-.1

by filling in the m1uing word1
dovolop from ~•P No_3 below.

PRINT NUM!ER!O lETIERS IN

THESE SQUARES

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GEl ANSWER

IC:RAMLm ANIWIRI 811!1108
Differ- Elude- Hiker- Sni~Gh- FIND IT
Finding kitchen gadgetS can be 1 real chore. especially in
rn)' house. Gnnny says that gadget5 usually perform taslu
. in halftbe time that illakes to FIND IT.

ARLO &amp;JANIS
GE.~&amp;TAAT&amp;
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Friday June 16, 2006

'QJ:br ltlail!' &amp;enttnrl • Page 8 8

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

ALONG THE RIVER
Blooming out all over
Gallipolis prepares for competition judging, Cl

... If JOU have a
-

Nf X l t - l

Speedway. Brooklyn (2 miles),
200 lapsf 400 miles.
• Wl)en : Sunday, June.1B
• Laet year's w"-t: Greg B1ffle
• Quallfylnc NConl: Ryan Newman, Dodge, 194 .232 mph. June
'18. 2005.
• R- record: Dale Jarrett, Fo rd ,
173.997 mph; June 13, 1999.
•Laet _
, Denny Hamlin became the 169th driver to win a :.

spOrt&amp;

• could operats in
a fashion?
; 1&gt; One CMflcul ad ~IBCI of TcyOII'a lmpendin&amp; entry Into Nextel
• CUp ill d)e f8el that li:'a goin&amp; to
~ II _ , harder for the ~true111111_.. to l'l'l8ka It into the
ltll'lln&amp; lletda. Start~Tayolll '
-'Ions- Team~ Bull, for
• lnatence - ooui&lt;l M\18 the Immediate !lffeCt of runnlnjl some
·, IOI!eti&lt;Cieams out of bllillness.
There's only so rllldl room - 43
oars - In the starting fields.
1&gt; The Cup circuit shifts from a·
, track that broke the mold - triaf~CJ~ar l'ocono - to the one
thit fonned k. The design of
Mlentcln lntemallonai SpeedWflt led dlreetly to Similar deslflls_ln California, Illinois and
Kansas, among others. Mich•
&amp;an waa even buill in duplicate
at the very outset. Its origlnel
slstar trac1&lt; wes Texas WOrld
Speedway. which last hosted a
major NASCAR race in 1981.
1&gt; NASCAR's youn&amp;ar generation
Is vividly Into tile vldeoj(ame
e&amp;a· Denny Hamlin won the pole
for the l'ocono 500 six hours at- ·
rer his first look at the track and
after only 151aps of practice.
Hamlin, however, had been · racing.. on the track via computer
simulation all week.
1&gt; Mobility Is the key in the
Busch Series right now. Last
week the eight drivers who com·
pete In both Cup and Busch series had to commute back and
forth between l'ocono and
Nashville. This week they'll be
going back an~ forth between
Mlchl&amp;an and Kentucky.
1&gt; Naw ""!'re prelty sure that
Michael WoNnp, Dale Jarrett and
Brian Vickers will an 'be dri~ng
T~s next year. Who's next?
Whet's the status of Dave Blaney.
who's driving at Bill Davis Racing
under 8 ~r contract?
• One of the hot topics in the
sport right now Is a supposed
. ahon8J18 oftlllent. Oh, yeah? If
thai's true, how oome Ward Burtoo isn't Out there every wal,k?
1&gt; Tor¥ Stewart's shoulder Injury
has focused attention on the Issued whelher Of no1 NA$CAR
~riWnl ouat11 to be
to
oompele while injured. On the one
hand, slnoe It's a drivers cft!!mpi·
008111p, ~ CYght to be the driver
who competes in each taoe In order to win ~- On the other, it's

""owed

downri~ d~s

to have a

drM!r rl&amp;k further if1ury. Hqw's
tills lor a oompromisa? Dun~ the
flrsl26lliCOis, oount on~ the best
23 flniahes In the standil1f!l&lt;.
WHO'S HOT "
•
· AND WHO ' S NOT •

1&gt;

Wllo._ hOt -

Denny Hamlin's

In poettlon to meke the Chase.

• TOIY! Stewart's healthY ti~~ln. .

·• WIID-.IIOl-

Amllzl!lliY. aa of

• tlia .... Jeff
.

·

. Goldon'S hot in

pOiftiOn to lnake

· ~~~e~.and

. : Dale EJimhertll;
Jr. Q\:lj)ped two
• poeilioM tt tile
~l'tom

fou1lh to IUI!Il.

.

This Week , "., Th• Ga ston

enc1ng quite the success story of

his ow-n Sir\Ce his shoutder is still
healing from' injuries suffered .at
LOwe's Motor Speedway. Hamlin
led 83 of the 200 laps and probably would '~ led twice that many
had it not been an incident on the
52nd lap In which he 50un afte&lt; a
left-rear t ire went not. ~took him
51 laps to regain the lead. but no
one seriously challenged h1m in
the fioal segments ot the race. Of
the 25 lead changes, only three

MARTIN TRUEX JR.

• Race : Con-way Freight

Presented by Of!!o .

200

• Where: Ken tuck~
SpeedWay, Spa•1a {1 .5

• Where: Michigan
International Speedway,

mile), 200 laps/ 300

Brooklyn (1.5 mile). 100
laps/200 miles.
• When: Saturday, Ju ne

miles .

• When : Saturday. June

- IN THE SPO

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

• Race : Meijer 300

17
• lui year's w -:
Carl EdWards
• QuolifyiRC ""'onl: Carl
Edwards . Ford, 181.287
mph, Jun e 18. 2005.
race in NASC.I\R's premier series
occurred as a tesult of actual
• Race ,.cord: Bobby
With a victory in the Pocono 500. It · passes. The rest were all a conse·
Hami lton Jr.. Ford,
was h1s first appearanoe of any
quence of pit stop s and/ or caution 136:173 -mph , June 14,
kind et Pocono Raceway. where he
flags. Hamlin won an unofficial
2003.
also won the pole. Kurt Busch fi nrace. t he SuONeiser Shoo1out , in
• Laat week: Ford dri1,1er
iShed second. giviilg his flickering
February. He has also won .tv..:ice in · Carl Edwards won the
ch an~s of making the Chase a
the Busch Series thi s yeaf. Before
Federated AUto Parts
boost . Tony Stewart, Hamlif!'S
this, his Cup rookie season. he
300 at Nashville Superteammate, fini shed third, e~perihad never won in either senes.
speedway.

·

-

Gazette, P.O. Box 18 93 ,. Gastonia , NC 28053

CRAFl6MAN lfWOK

C;ttf"' !'-olo··Ht•· s

• Race : 3M Performance 400
• WheN : Michigan Int ernational

Woukln't

question _or a comment, write: NASCA.R

No.

LIGHT

1

'.
&lt; )hio \alit'\

o.

SPORTS

17
• lui year's winner:
Jack Sprague
• Qu.llllylnc reconl: Kyle
Busch, Chevrolet,
181.612 mph, June 17,
2005 .
• Race record: ·Brendan
Gaughan. Dodge.
154.044 mph, July 26,
2003.
• Lalt _,k : Toyota driv-.
er Todd Bodine won the
Sam's Town 400k at
Texas Motor Speedway.

• High school football
schedules. See Page 81

FEUD OF fHE WEEK •

·

v

BASS PRO SHOPS/TRACKER CHEVROLET

E
R

Martin Truex Jr., a
driver with Dale
Earnhardt, Inc., is
dming In his first
Nextel Cup Series ·
season. Though
last year's Busch
Series champion
says his team is
taking a little bit
longer to adjust,
the driver has
consistently run In
the top 20
through 14 races.

s
Denny

u

•
'

~

....

·.

J '·
.• !I

.

.'

j

Tony

· Stewart
Danny Hamlin
Tony Stew.-t

Hamlin

S

va.

What's going on here? For the
third week in a row, the weekly feud
is pretty much·in jest . Hamlin sal d he
teamed how to race at Pocono be. cause he •raced the tra ck ~ in 'tlideo
games , and Stewart poked ,fun at
that view. "Denny plays video games ..
for t he rea son I did when I ·was 18 or .
20years old ," said Stewart , now 35.
' He's a kid. Trust me. He didn't beconle an overnight whiz at POcono because of 'iideo games . He wan ·for

John Clark.j
NASCAR This Week

th e same reason I did wh en I was a

rookie. He's got a good car, and he's
taking advantage of the opport unity."

NASCAR Thlo -k'a Monte
Dutton gives hit bike: · Regardl ess
of the reason, Hamli n's showing was
pretty rem ar kable. He also won the
pole. A year ago. in the same race.
Carl Edwards won the first time he
ever competed at this track . Coinci·
donee? Probably. But rt g(ves us
somethi ng to write about."

•

·

tage and a disadvantage.
"As far as communication goes, yes;
it's been really good," he said. "Nothing has really changed there. It's
helped me feel real comfortable with
the team .. , but it probably didn't help
with the learning curve. We're all new
By Monte Dutton
at it, instead of just me, so it's taken
t-JASCAR This Week
us a little bit of time to kind of figure
out the things we need to do and the ,
LONG POND, Pa.- Wben the sea- . things that work for us with these Cup
son began, -the favorite in the cars. They're a little bit different than
Raybestos Rookie of the Year compe- what we're used to, and it's taken us a
tition was Martin Truex Jr.
little bit of time to get used to it."
Why? Truex was coming off back"We're still trying to figure out what
to-back championships in the Bu sch to do with these cars to make them run
Series. He is a close friend and team- better. We've been rimning competi·
mate of Dale Earnhardt Jr., and the lively, I think. We've had a tQugh
two have much in common. Earnhardt month and a half or so and lost a lot ef
Jr., for instance, also won. back-to- points. We've been running decent, top
back championships in the Busch Se· 20 most every week, which is not easy
ries: Earnhardt was runner-up to Matt tQ do in this series. We've been pretty
Kenseth in 2000, when he debuted proud of that. We've had some rough
fulltime in what is no.w Nextel Cup.
races in the past month and a half that
It's too early to count out Truex, but he have really bu·rt us in the points, but
has gotten off to u slow stil.rt. The Mayet- there's nothing you can do about that.
That's just racin g. As long as we're
ta, N.J., native will tum 26 on June 29.
When Truex moved up to Cup, so running competitively, we'll be happy."
did his team, which is both an ad vanTruex made occasional Cup appear-

FAN TIPS

·

Travis KvaplllettiOC a

...ot at the . W I - n

I
Former Busch champ
is making most of
first Cup racing year

l'uhli,hiflg (

ances before this year, but he's discov·
ered that week-to-week competition
carries with it additional challenges.
He can't pick and choose the tracks
where he feels comfortable.
"It's definitely been a little bit of a
wake-up call," 'lhlex admitted. "We're
still learning a lot from the ·'8' team
(Earnhardt Jr.). They've been really run·
ning well and doing a lot of things. We're
just trying to learn what we need to do
to run well. Sometimes we find that we
try the same stuff, and it doesn't work
for me, for whatever reason, whether
our cars are different or what, so we're
still just kind of feeling it mit and trying
to find all the stuff that works for us."
But Truex said he never expected it
to be easy. .
"I kind of knew coming in what it was
going to be," he !IBid. "I knew it wasn't
going to be running in the top five every
weekend and having a shot to win every
race like it was (in the Busch Series}. I
was realistic in my approach, but it's
humbled me a lot, that's for sure."
Contact Monte Dtlf!on

at hmduttan50@aol.com .

Ne&lt;tel Cup driver Travis Kvapil will
make an appearance on the CBS soap
opera "Guiding Ught" on June 28 . Tho
show recently taped a segment on lcr
cation at Hi ckory {N.C.) Motor SpeedYMI- The story line revolves around
Reva Shayne Lewis , played by Kim Zimmer, and her battle with breast cancer.
Thanks to encouragement from Dr. Col·
in McCabe {Paul Fitzgerald) and Kvapll,
Reva gets a chance to take the wheel
of Kvapil's stock car. In the story, Revs
remembers a list she made as a
young girl that contained 1D Items she
wanted to do before she died. Driving
a t:ace oar was one of. them.

l.EGENOS AND LORE ·

Hylton's

liMn_,...

.,mile
This is James Hylton 's final ye9r.

·OBITUARIES
Page A6
• Maida Naomi Long
• Kenneth W. McDaniel II
• Jonathan B. Pennington
• Wanda L. Hill Thompson

INSIDE .
• June donations to
fund. See Page A2
• Century Aluminum,
unio.n-8ldeAd contract.
.continue talks: ..

.See PageA2

.. : • Local Briefs.

SeePage AS
• Simulators train tutu re
coal miners about
underground dangers.
See Page AS
• Lengthy history
surrounds locally-grown
produce. See Page A8

WEATHER

What? You thought Hylton had long departed the !l(ock-car-raclng scene?
Think again. AI the aile of 70 - he
turns 71 on .r.ug. 26- Hylton finished
21st in the .r.utomoblle Racing Club of

America race at Pocono on Ju·ne 10, ·
driVI ng a Ford painted lri a sim ilar fast&gt;

ion to the Mercury in which he won the
Talladega 500 on Aug, 6, 1972 . He
last competed in NASCAR's premier
~ries In 1003. but Hylton finished .
second in the points standings three
~mes - 1966, 1967 •nd 1971 and thirtl four times. For the rest of the
year, Hylton plans to compete in ARCA
races driving cars painted to mimic
cars he drave back during his prime, •
when he won twice and fi nished in the
top 10 a whopping 301llmes .

l'ollHTO\ •

Donna Knapp, a friend of the
family, said. "She .would do
anything for you."
MASON, W.Va. - Three
Knapp said that Roush was
people were taken to the hos- a neighbor of her mother's.
pital and one woman was
Roush and her family were
killed after a CSX train returning home from the
struck the car they were trav- !50th Birthday Celebration
eling in Saturday afternoon.
of lhe Town of Mason
Mary Roush, 80, was pro· Parade when the accident
nouilced dead at the scene · happened . Around I p.m., a
while her daughter, Karen CSX train was going
Johnson, 57, was taken to through the area when it
Cabell Huntington Hospital struck the car and drug it for
by HealthNet ll helicopter. about a quarter of a mile.
Johnson is the wife of Mason
Members of the Mason
Volunteer Fire Department VFD rushed to the scene and
Chief Paul Johnson.
found the victims still in the
Two other people, a juve- · car. Assistant Chief C.R.
nile girl and an adult male Blake called for immediate
Who was driving the car, were Jssistance from law enforce· taken to Pleasant Valley · ment and EMS. Trooper W.S.
Hospital by Mason County Snyder of the Mason County
Emergency Medical Services. Detachment of the West
The · accident happened Virginia State Police is lead. behind Bob's Market and ing the investigation into the
Greenhouse.
Plu-s e see Train, Al
"Mary was so sweet,"
BY DIANE POTTORFF

DPOTTORFF@MYDAILYREG ISTER . CO ~

Pottorfl/pholo
Trooper First-Class B.M. Keefer and Trooper W.S. Snyder of the West Virginia State PC?Iice begin
their investigation into a train versus vehicle accident in the Town of Mason Saturday.
.

Blasting ~t
River Sweffp cleans up Ohio River
Pomeroy Bridge
Volunteers met
on Saturday to
approach likely _
participate in
the 18th annual
to continue
River Sweep, a
cleanup of the
Ohio River and
through summer
it's tributaries.
•

Bv

I

BETH SERGENT

POMEROY . -· Altho!tgh the
Ohio Department of Transt\ortation
(ODOT) is unsure exactly when
blasting will be complete near the
Pomeroy Bridge approach, it will
likely' continue· through the summer, this according to ODOT
Public Information Officer for
District 10 Stephanie Filson.
Although Filson could only make
an educated guess based on the
infonnation she bad, one thing is
certain, the process to clear less
than one acre of land above where
·the approach will set presents its
own set of unique challenges.
In addition to dealing with an
extremely vertical rock face that
contains a layer of shale that deteriorates quickly when exposed to
moisture, the actual blasting is tak·
ing place near a b\ISY intersection
Please see Brldp, Al

•

'BY MICHELLE MIUER
NEWS®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Around Town
A.3
Celebrations
C4
D Section
Classifieds ,
insert
Comics
Dear Abby
A.3
Editorials
A4
A6
Obituaries
A2, A5,A8
Regional
B Section
Sports
AS
Weather

BIDWELL - Gallia County officials received notice Friday that the
county was awarded $383,000 from
the
Economic
Development
Contingency Fund for the ·new gas
line to the Dan Evans Industrial Park.
That's the good news.
.
The bad news is, the county
applied for $479.425 , which means
the county is still $96,425 shy of the
total $737,576 needed for the project.
· The county secured $258 , 151
from the Southern Ohio Agri&lt;;u lture
and Community Development
Foundation fund earlier this year.
The setback hasn't discouraged
County Commiss ioners' President
Harold Montgomery. "We will find

© 20ob Ohio VaUey PubUohlng Co,

Pleese see Gas line,' Al

INDEX
. 4 SECI10NS- :18 PAGES

Dione

Country
legend Daniels
gears for
June 24 show
BY MtCHEUE MIUER
NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

Hundreds of
GALLIPOLIS - In 2003,
pounds of
the Gallia County J\Ulior Fair
"!garbage and
experienced a record-breakdebris were
ing attendance when The
pulled from the
Charlie Daniels Band took
water and banks the stage.
of the river as
Local fans will have the
crews worked
chance to see lhem again
diligently to
Saturday, June 24 at 7:30p.m
beautify the
· at the Kanauga Dri_ve-ln.
area. Here,
The COB was formed in
Shanika Cordell, 1972 and has been going
12, of Gallipolis strong since, earning numerposes near
ous awards from groups like
some of the
the
Gospel
Music
refuse removed
Association, the Chri stian
from the river
Music Association, Country
during the
Music Association and a
sweep.
Grammy in 1979 and 1996.
Joy Kocmoud/photo
· Please see Daniels, Al

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Gallia gets goqd
news on gas line
on Paa• A8

:! 1

Mason woman dies after train hits car

PB&amp;Jkicks

senes

Artists from around the country some perennial favorites, others new
to Me1gs County - bring versatility
POMEROY - The Pomeroy Blues
in the style of music being presented ,
and Jazz Society's summer music
this year at the Rhythm on the River
and the Big Bend Blues Bash.
· series starts Friday with artists in conJackie Welker, president, says a lot
cert ~t Pomeroy 's Riverfront
of
plannin~ and effort has gone into
Amphitheater weekly until July 28-29
making th1s year's offerings· bigger ·
when it all concludes with the Big
and bener. "There arc lots of new per-·
Bend Blue Bash.
formers thai everyone should love."
The first of the five 8 p.m. Friday
He rroied lhal four qf the five per·
night perfonnances will feature blues
formers in the Rh ythm on the R1ver
singer Nora Jean Bruso who ·grew up
se
ries are newcomers. "I'm really
in the Mississippi Delta, left for ·
pleased
with not only the lineup for
Chicago as a teenager to Join a blues
Rhythm.
but also .rhe Bl}1.es Bash.
band, and is now hailed by many musiBoth have somethmg to appeal lo
cians as the next "qtieen of the blues."
everyone.
We have reall y outstanding
Singing the blues was a natural for
entertainers
coming in. - more talent
the daughter of Bobby Lee Wallace, a .
and
better
talent."
professional blues singer -and share·
Again this year all of the Rhythm on
cropper, and the niece of Henry "Son"
the River concertS arc free. as' well as
Wallace, a blues singer and guitar
the "Party in the Park" music which
player of renown. Love of the blues
starts at 6 p.m. and continues until the
was infu sed in her soul from birth .
Nctra Jean Bruso, blues alncer
amphitheater program begins at 8 p.m.
- Other artists featured in the Rhythm
"What we're doing •is encouraging · &lt;
on the River series are Bob July 7; Teddy Morgan and the Pistolas people to ·bring a picnic basket and
Thompson, legendary piani st per· with Americana rhythms and lyrics, enjoy it to the music in the park before
forming funk and jazz on June 30; The Jul y 14 ; and Lil' Dave Thompson and
Plu.se see Music, Al
·
Chicago Rhythm and Blues Kings. Bi g Love. July 21.
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Delllllo

s t .:;o • \ ol. -1" - ' " ·

\liddkporl • (;a)lipoli' • .Jum· tX, :!ooh

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

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