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                  <text>New shelter
house,A3

Rhythm to feature
a rising star, A3

•
Printed on IOOlk
Rcc,cled ~e~sprin l

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
"!".:''

D.,

~

•

~~ www.rn\'llailv.scniincl.t:um
I

SPORTS
• Cavaliers reach
deal to retain Varejao.
See Page Bl

Fi:.,.. . _ ·,

·~

•'

• -

.~

'

Coon orders suppression·
of Rizer statemem portion

Arrest in
high-speed
chase
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY Judge
Fred W. Crow III has granted a motion to suppress part
of a statement made by
Paula Rizer to the Ohio
Bureau
of
Criminal
, Identification
and
Investigation. made ju~t
hours after she was arre~ted
for murderinl! her husband.
·Rizer Is charged with the
aggravated murder of her
husband. Kenneth Rizer. Sr.
He died at the couple\
Lovett Road home from
multiple gunshot wounds to
the chest on April 3.

OBITUARIES
. Page A3
• Hattie Sellers

INSIDE
• Health care overhaul
suffers another setback.
Ae Pa~e A2
..Senate votes to keep
Bush era illegal worker
rule. See Page A2
• Land Transfers.
See Page A3
• 50 Methodist bishops
·agree to cut their pay.
See Page A6
• Christian spirituality:
What does it mean?
See Page A7
• Good Shepherd UMC
celebrates 45 years.
See Page A7
• Forestry creates
partnership with SWCDs
including Meigs.
See Page AS
• O'Bieness offers
refresher course for older
drivers. See Page AS

WEATHER

Details on Page AS

INDEX
2

Srcno:-;s -

16 PAGf'.S

Bv BETH SERGENT

~

Ohio Valley Puhllshing Co.

. liJJIJI.I !I!I.!1!11

according to Carson, hut she
later invoked her rights
under the Mirdanda Act.
According to Carson's
motion. Agent Willis of the
BCI did not cease questioning. persisted and carried on
with the questioning after
Ri1er ~aid she did not wish to
answer any more questions.
On ~londay. Prosecutor
Colleen S. Williams and
Carson al!reed that the
defense motion be ~ranted
and that Rizer·s statement·
made from the time she
invoked her Miranda rights
be suppressed from evidence to be pre~ented at her
trial next month.

A tran~cript of the ~tate­
POMEROY - A male
men! has been made nnd is
who alleged I) led the
subject
in the hands of both sides in
Pomeroy
Police Dt!panm~.:nt
the trial, but it has nor been
and/
the
Ma~on County
made a part of the public
Department
on a
Sheriff's
record of the ~.·ase.
If con\ icted. Rizer could high-speed chase Tuesday
face a possibk' sentence of evening and then fled on
life without parole, life with foot ~was arrested in
parole e1igibility after 20 Pomeroy yesterday morning.
Pomero) Chief of Police
)Cars, 25 )Cars or 30 year~ .
~lark E. Proffitt said Emest
The indictment against RiLer
also contain::. a firearm~ Roach. 31. Reedsville, was
specification. adding a arrested inside a residence at
mandatOI)' three-year sen- Pomeroy Cliff Apartments
tence m addition to any other based on infonnation the
sentence, if she is convicted. depa11ment received from
an anonymous tip. Proffitt
Rizer has waived her right said
initially resisting
to a speedy trial. A jm) trial arrest.after
Roach
did comply
has been set for Aug. 18.
with officers and was taken
into custody by Proffitt. Cpt.
Jim Webster and Patrolman
Shane Bell.
Proffitt said drugs were
also found in Roach's pos·
session at the time of his
arrest. Roach was then
turned over to the Meigs
Countv Sheriff's Oftice.
Proffitt said in addition to
facing pending charges
from his department, Roach
had an outstanding warrant
for failure to appear m
.Mci~s Count\ Common
Pleas Court. tt \\arrant for
alleged assault in Meigs
Countv Court and an
unspecified warrant from
Athens Count\ .
The Tuesday evening
pursuit began on West Main
Street in Pomeroy, extended
into ~vlason Cdunty, W.Va.
onto W.Va. 6~. then onto
Lie.ving Road in West
Columbia, W.Va . Accordmg
to Ma~on County Sheriff
David Anthony. Roach wa~
pursued by Sgt. Steven
Greene and during that
high-speed
chase
the
department's cruiser was
damaged when a deer ran
out in front of Greene .
Roach·., "chicle eventually
' carne to a stop and he fled in
the ~lt. Alto. W.Va. area.
Anthony reported Christin
D Will. 34. Pomero) . \\ ho
was in the vehtcle \\ ith
Roach. was arrested by Sgt.
Greene. on a fugtti\e from
justtce \\arrant out of
Kentuckv and then taken to
the Western Regional Jail in
Barbour~ ville, W.Va. Proffitt
reported the vehicle Roach
was driving had stolen. Ohio
tags while Anthony reported
a loaded gun. also all~gedly
stolen. was found tn the
vehicle. Anthony ~aid Roach
will be facing a charge of
felony fleeing in Mason
Countv.
"This type of behcl\ ior put
a lot of innocent bvstanders
and police officc1~s at ri~k
durin!! the high-speed chase
and that absolutely will not
be tolerated." Proffitt said.

AMP air pe~t hearing postponed

Annie's Mailbox
AS BSERGENTOMYDAJLYSENTINELCOM
AB COLUMBUS
Calendar
the
Ohio
Classifieds
B4-6 Yesterday
Environmental
Review
B7 Appeals Commission ruled
. nics
the de novo hearing regardEditorials
A4 ing an appeal of the
Faith
As-7 American Municipal Power
Generation Station's air
Obituaries
A3 permit set for August has
been "indefinitely postSports
B Section poned,"· according to
\\leather
AB Shannon Fisk. attorney for
• 200&lt;l

Rizer's attorney, Public
Defender Herman Carson of
Athens, asked Crow to
supress a statement she
gave to a BCI agent on the
day of her husband's death.
The specific content of
Rizer's statement in question ha~ not been outlined.
but she was reportedly
questioned by Deputy Scott
Trus~ell and an Ohio BCI
agent on April 3, just after
she was m:rested for her
husband's death.
Trussell administered the
required Miranda ad\ bory
to Rizer, and Rizer said she
understood her right to
decline to ans\\er questions,

the Natural Resource~
Defense Council.
Fisk ~aid the commi'ssion
bsued the order because the
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency has not
finished the Maximum

"\\'e are pleused that I) agreeing "ith AMP, and
Achievable .
Control era! and state clean air stanTechnology modifications dards to protect public Oh10 EPA is going to be disagreeing with opponents,
modifying the permit in that carbon dioxide should
required for the air permit. health.
Fisk said the ~RDC was order to include ~1ACT lim- not be considered as part of
A hearing on these MACT
modifications to AMP's air told after the MACT modi- its for hatardous air pollu- Best A\ ailable Control
permit was held in June fications and analysis are tants." Fisk added . ''We're Technolog) standard in the
because one of the rules finished and revie\\cd. the :tlso pleased the commis- air permit.
In the original appeal,
relied upon in the original parties will then meet to ~ion will give us time to
permit is no longer applica· reschedule the hearing with fully evaluate whHtevcr opponents said tht• air perblc on a federal level.
the commission which told Ohio EPA OOl's and deter- mit-to-install unreasonably
The origi nal air permit- Fisk it would try to work mine whether or not it Ii\'es and unlawfully docs not
to-install relied upon the "expeditiously'' to place the up to the latest require- include a BACT limit for
carbon d1oxidc emissions.
Clean Air Men.:ury Rule hearing back on its docket. ments ...
Carson said the Ohm
The
NRDC.
Ohio
later vacated by the govern- Kent Carson. communicaCouncil,
ment in favor of MACT tions director for American EPA and AMP voluntarilv Environmental
requirements related to the Municipal Power, took started the process concen1- Sierra Club and National
Conservatiqn
emissions of Hazardous Air issue with the phrase ing the inclusion of ~1ACr Parks
Pollutants. MACT is meant ''indefinitely postponed,'' analysis. Carson also said in Association located 10
to establish emission limits saying ERAC obviously addition to the hearing !&lt;noxvill~, T~ntl. tai'C: ap~J9al­
for the AMP power plant; indicate~ the hearing will being postponed. ERAC mg AMP s a1r pcrnut tso; 1ed
limits which arc desi~ned to eventually take place by usc also granted a summary by the Ohio EPA in
ensure compliance Wtth fed- of the word "expeditious!).'' judgment yesterday basical- February 2008.

�~-----------------.....--.;------...--~ -- ~· ·~-

-

-

Page.A2

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 10,

.

Health care overhaul suffers another Setback

WASHlNGTO]'; (AP) The drive to remake the
natwn 's health care system
suffered yet another setback
in Con!!re~s on Thursda}
\\hen a~ pi ,·oral group of
House Democrats demanded
changes in legislation the
leadership was drafting on a
fast track.
The emerging bill "lacks a
number of elements essential
to preserving what works and
fixing what is broken," 40
members of the Blue Dog
Coalition of moderate to conservative Democrats wrote
pa11y leaders. To win their
support. they ~aid, any legislation would need to be much
more aggressive in reining in
the growth of health care as
~veil a:-. in addressing a disparity in Medicare payments they
:;aid adversely affects rural
providers.
. A group of the moderates
'met into early evening with
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
and Majority Leader Steny
Hoyer and arranged to sit
down with committee chairmen on Friday to go over proposed changes. Officials said
the public release of the bill.
originally set for Friday,
\vould occur no earlier than
_
Monday.
· It was the second setback in
three days for President
Barack Obama 's top domestic
priority. although it was
unclear whether it would
amount to anything more than
a brief delay for a bill of enormous complexity and controversy.
· There \x.as upheaval earlier
in the week in the Senate,
where the Democratic leadership is intent on scuttling a
proposed tax on health care
benefits that has long been
key to attempts at a bipartisan
compromise. At the same
time, Senate Majority Leader
Hany Reid and others went
out of their way during the
day to emphasize eagerness
for Republican support.
As an alternative to the ben-.
efits tax, Democrats are con-

-

sidering raising taxes on
wealthy investors to help pay
for. health care legtslation,
along with numerous other
options. according to officials
,.,·ho spoke on conditton of
anonymity. The propo~al to
e.:--tend the cunent I .45 percent Medicare payroll tax to
capital gains earned by highincome taxpayers would bring
in art estimated $100 billion
over 10 years.
In ~h~ ~ouse, Hoyer sought
to mmtmtze the day's developments. which occurred as
Democrats on one commtttee
were making final decisions
on provisions to pay for the
legislation.
"Let me make it ver) clear
that everybody in that room
thinks we ought to pass health
care reform," the Maryland
Democrat said.
One
conservative
Democrat, Rep. Mike Ross,
D-Ark., said he believes no
House vote should take place
until September. That is well
past a midsummer informal
deadline set by Pelosi. DCalif.
"I promised the president
that we would have legislation out of the House before
we went on an August break."
Pelosi said earliet in the day.
''That is still my goal.··
Despite some success the nation ·s hospitals agreed
to a cut of $155 billion in projected Medicare and Medicaid
payments - progress has
been scant and internal differences magnified.
In general, any bill that
emerges from Congress is
expected to follow Obama 's
blueprint for reining in health
care costs overall while
extending coverage to 50 million who lack it.
Another objective is to
make sure that in~urance
companies can no longer deny
coverage or raise premiums to
unaffordable levels to indi\iduals with pre-existing medical
conditions.
But literally hundreds of
details are involved in draft-

2009

Senate votes to
keep Bush era
illegal worker rule
BY SUZANNE GAMBOA

•

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHlNGTO'\ - The Senate want&lt;&gt; to force
the Homeland Security Department to stick with a
proposed Bush administration poltcy requiring
employers to fi~.e i~igrant \\'~)fkers whose names
don't match thetr Soctal Secunty numbers.
By voice vote Thur,day. the Senate approved an
amendment to stop the department's plan to dump
the so-called "no-match" rule.
Sen. David Vitter. R-La .. sponsored the amendment to the Homeland Security Department spending bill. The measure forbids the department from
using any money to cancel the rule.
The 2007 pol icy was designed to root out undocumented workers through so-called no-match letters. which the Social Security Administration
sends employers when a worker's name and Social
Security number don't match in the government's
database.
There are various reasons for a mismatch:
Records are not updated when a woman changes
her name after marrying or after a person becomes
a U.S. citizen. typos and errors. or a person submrts a fake or someone else's Social Security
number.
Vitter called the vote '"a message to the Obama
administration that we will not allow weak im· ·gration laws." He called illegal immigration as
ous concern for the country and said "we should
doing all that we can to fight this growing prob-

AP photo

Vice President Joe Biden speaks about a White House deal
with hospitals to help pay for President Barack Obama's overhaul of health care, Wednesday, in the Eisenhower Executive
Office Building in Washington At left is Health .and Human
Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.

ing legislation, and gaintng a
consensus
even
among
Democrats is proving to be
remarkably - if predictably
- difficult. despite their large
majorities in both houses.
As an example. some
Democrats are demanding
legislation that permits the
government to sell insurance
in competition with private
companies. Republicans over\\.helmingly oppose such a
plan. deeming it a stalking
horse for uni versa! govern
ment-run insurance. and
many Democrats have concerns, as well.
Some Democrats prefer a
plan for a nonprofit cooperative to take the place of government in competing with
private companies. Others
favor a government role only
in cases in which consumers
lack a choice in coverage.
Similarly, Democrats arc
di\ ided on paying for the bill.
some prefening more tax
increases than· others, some
favoring more cuts in
Medicare and Medicaid.
"We've • just got a lot of
question and the top of the list
'.vould be how to pay for it."
said Rep. Marion Berry. DArk., one of the Blue Dogs.

"l don't think ""e have s ignificant
cost-containment
mechanisms in the proposal
yet." said Rep. Adam Schiff.
D-Calif. He said he favors
provisions aimed at preventing overtreatment of patients
and overpayments to doctors.
hospitals and other providers.
A dispute over tax increases
was at the core of upheaval in
the Senate earlier in the week.
Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont..
and chairn1an of the Finance
Committee, has been working
for months with Republicans
in hopes of gaining suppott
for a bipattisan bill that can
command 60 votes.
Efforts to raise money to
pay for subsidizing the cost of
insurance had focused on a
tax on health care benefits for
workers with high-cost coverage provided by their employers.
Baucus and Republican
supporters argued it would
also have tended to reduce the
cost of health care overall, as
well as offset the cost of the
bill. But the Democratic leadership stepped in forcefully.
citing poor public polling.
opposition of organized labor
and concerns about taxing
~
middle-income workers.

lem.''

Homeland Security Department spokesman •
Matthew Chandler said the Senate endorsement of
Vitter's measure. prevents real progress on immigration enforcement and is "a reflection of the old
administration's strategy: all show. no substance."
In contrast. the Obama administration is trying to
implement effective enforcement. he said. "We
hope that the smarter strategy will prevail in the
end. because the country deserves a system that
works:· Chandler said.
The American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit that prevented the rule from being implemented. Employer~. business groups, labor unions and
others also opposed the rule.
"Social Security no-match letters were never
designed to be immigration enforcement tools. and
they cannot and will not solve the problem of illegal immigration," said Joanne Lin. ACLU legislative counsel.
The House version of the spending bill does not
include the provision. A conference committee
made up of members of both chambers will iron
out differences in the different versions of the bill.

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�- ··

----------~-~-~~---------------------------------------· --·-

Friday, July to, 2009

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

www. mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

~----~--~

New shelter house

Hattie Sellers
Hatttc E. Seller~. Middleport. passed a\\ a) on Jul) 8.
2009. at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant. W.Va .
She was bom on April 12, 1933.
Besides her parents. she \\as preceded in death b) her
husbands. Roy E. Powell and Gerald "Buzz" Sellers:
u~~tcr: .Mildred Marie P.owcll: and sisters. Icy Daile)
d Iesste Wells.
•
She is survived by her ch1ldrcn: Shirley and John Dunlap ,
Roger and Shirely Powell. Ernest and Carolyn Powell,
Terry und Mary Powell. Ron and Patty Powell. Beverley
and Holmer Hill. Lawrence and Nannette Powell. Ruth and
Russell Robinson: 24 grandchildren, 26 great grandchil dren. and ~evcml great great grandchildren: brothers and
sisters: Marion and Jo Congo. Hubert and Bonnie Congo,
Anna Mac Davis and Ernestine Elliott. all of East
LiYcrpool: and special friends. Ron and Velma Wood .
Service will be held at II a.m . on Saturda). July II .
2009. at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy
\\ ith Pastor Don Roach officiating. Burial will be in Meigs
~1cmory Gardens.
Friends may call from 6-8 p.m. on Friday at the funeral
home.
An on-line registry is available at www. andersonmcdanieLcom .

•

Submitted photo

Summer is here, and just 1n t1me for res1dents of the Holzer Assisted Living, Gallipolis, to enjoy a beautiful new picnic shelter house. The
Shelter House is a product of a tundraising campaign by the staff, residents. families and friends or Holzer Assisted Living. Through
memorial donations, various raffles. and basket bingo, the funds were rc.ised to build the structure. Holzer Assisted Living plans to use
the shelter house for p1cnics, activities. and invite the residents and their families to use it for events. The current fund raising project IS a
walking path for the residents. Those who might like to make a donation are asked to contact Peggy Williams at 441-9633.

Land Transfers
POMEROY
Meigs
County Recorder Kay Hill
n.·po11ed the foliO\\ ing tran ... fers of n.:al estate:
Terri L . !lawley to
Thomas A. Hawley. deed.
Chester.
Charles F. Chance\. Karah
M. Chance) .
Four
Brothers Properties. deed.
Village of Po men)\.
i'ii1a J. Hanson~ David F.
Hanson, to Ja)mc L. Hill,
Dean V. Ifill. ea:-.ement,
Lebanon.
Tina L. Stanley, Tina Lee,
Dave E. Stanle). to Don :-.1.
King. deed, Rutland.
John R. Hunnell. .John E.
Hunnell. to Meigs County
Comn1unity Improvement
Corporation. deed. Village
of Pomeroy.
L.
lkuvcr,
Wunnru
dccea~ed, to .John I. Bemer.
deceased. affidavit, Village
of Pomeroy.
John Beaver. deceased.
John L. Beaver. deceased. to
Cot) D. Curtis. Beverly J.
Smith John C Bemer affida\ it 'village ~f Pomer~y.
'ch~rlcs
E.
Sa) re.
deceased to Chra Sayre
'
'
'

to

Eilen Jewell

• • star
RJtytJ1-1'11 to fieature a YlSlna
0

OMEROY- Eilen Jewell, a rising start in a new gention of roots musicians. will be appearing in the river•
nt amhitheatcr tonight (Friday) as the third performer in
the Pomeroy Blues &amp; Jazz Society's Rhythm on the Ri\er
.summer concerts.
Je\\ell has been described as singing with a timeless
voice - haunting. yet familiar as she presents folk. blues
and old country rag. The Boston Globe has heralded her as
'"aching!) good" and The Word in the UK described her as
"having a voice of real distinction that manages to transcend some powerful influences."
Jewell not only .sings insighful songs with a rugged blend
of Americana stvle but also writes them.
The free concert :-.tarts at 8 p.m.

I

affidavit. Salisbury.
Roger Karr. Susan Karr, to
Valerie Lloyd, Gregory
Llovd. deed, Chester.
Limy Goodnite, Christina
Goodnite. to Gatling Ohio.
LLC. deed. Letart.
Ralph
Larry
Durst.
deceased. to Christopher M.
Roush. deed. Letart.
Troy C
Sigman to
Christina S. Sigman, deed.
SuttorL Yillage o! Syracuse.
Brian Kent Mulliner. The
Lian Mullmer. to Edward D.
Lampton. Mary Jo Milillo.
deed. Scipio.
Paul F. Riggs to Patricia J.
Riggs. deed, Salisbury.
Patricia D. Humphrey to
Loren J. Humphrey, Jamie L.
Humphrey, deed, Salisbury.
Russell Tucker, Connie
Mae Tucker, to Justin C.
Connolly. deed, Letart.
Lisa Pratt to Leon Henson,
Carolyn S. Henson. deed,
Bedford.
Fannie Mae. Federal
~ational Mortgage Co.. to
Cary W. Null, deed,
Columbia.
Barbara Gheen Painting to
McClure and Sons. Inc ..

deed. Village of Pomeroy.
Mary M. Hood. deceased.
to Marilyn J. Hinson, certificate of transfer. Letart.
·
Calvin
Ray
Dowell.
decaesed, to Sheryl E. Dowell.
certificate of transfer, Chester.
Trenton T. Roush. Candace
L. Roush, to Charlie D.
Eblin, Brittany L. Cremeans.
deed. Village of Pomeroy.
Robert K. Mays to
Columbus Southern Power.
easement. Olive.
John Cary Betzing. Kim
Bctzing, to Ohio Power Co..
easement. Village of Pomeroy.
Ted Smith. Krista Smith.
to Columbus Southern
Power. easement, Sutton.
Gregory P. Garretson II to
Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative. right of way,
Columbia/Salem.
David L. Elkins. deceased,
to Judith C. Elkins. affidavit,
Olive.
Judith C. Elkins to Sari
Suttle. deed. Olive .
Harley Eugene McDonald
to Ted L. Dexter. deed.
Salisbury.
Virginia Ha) man, Clarence
E. Hayman. Jr., to Brian

Bass. right of way, Letart.
George Connolly. Brian
Connolly. Angela Connoll).
George Brian Connolly, to
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District right of way, Letat1 .
Paul W. Hayes, Katrina
Hayes. to TP-CWD. right of
way. Letart.
Tonv M. Hutton, Michelle
L. Hutton. to Jennifer G.
Richards. Dee Jav Richards.
deed. Rutland. ·
Ronald Bryan Harris to
Kath) A. Ritchie. deed,
Lebanon.
Jane Price. deceased. to
Ross Kent Price. affidavit.
Scipio.

•

Scouts from Page AI
Ridenour also gave a lesson Emily
Zeiner. Ashle)
on just \vhat kind of crea- Deem. Catherine Grady.
tures inhabit the Shade Lindsey Putman. Cassie
River. The scout:; also had Rou~h.
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Adults attending camp
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a'&gt;h ceremony.
Debi King, Jerem) and
The camp proviaed Bobbi Gillian , Dawna
plenty of activities and Arnold.
Cecilia
Harri s.
Jo)
opportumties f&lt;?r the ·girls
•to keep the1r scout's Rhodes. Bridget Heldreth.
&gt;mbe which is as fol- Isabelle Dill. ~Cindy Durst .
• vs: ''On m) honor, I will Shannon Tavlor. Mert and
try to serve God and my Glenn Zeiner
country. to help people at
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Big Bend Day Camp
were
Susan
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The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 10, 2009

Matters iffaith and religion

The-Daily Sentinel

i"ear the end of Dan
BrO\vn's AngrJ., &amp; Demons,
the beautiful
scientist
Yittoria Vetra da~hes \\ ith a
Vatican oflicinl who in!)isb
that the day researcher~
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Terry
prove how God acted in Crl·Mattingly
Dan Goodrich
ation is "the day people stop
Publisher
needing faith."
"You mean tht.! day tlll:y
Charlene Hoeflich
stop needing the church,"
General Manager-News Editor
she shoub, weaving togeth- ed a global firestorm
er
the novel\ main themes. because of its depiction of
Pam Caldwell
"But the church is not the Jesus as a brilliant, charisAdvertising Director
only enlightened soul on the matic and ultimately misunplanet! We all seck God in derstood morral man who
•1 different wav~ ....
Congress slrall make tro law respectittg atr
married the brilliant, charis"God
not
~ome matiC and misundcrstllod
establislrm eut of reli.._(!iOtr, or prohibitittg the
omnipotent authority look- Mal) ,\ltagdalene and had a
free e:xercise th ereof; or abridging the f reedom
ing down from above .. child with her before his
threatening to throw u.., into untimely death. This power
of speech, or of tlae press; or the rigltt of the
a pit of fire if v.c disohe). coupfe \ goal was to create
people peaceabl)' to assemble, attd to petition
God is the energy that flows an inclusive, dogma-free.
tire Gor,ertmr eut for a redress ofgrievatrces.
through the synapses of our sexuallv enlightened faith.
nervous system and the But. alas. the pm,er-htmgi)
chambers
of our hearts! patriarchs who created
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
God is in ull things!" Thb. Christianity - especially
long speech i" not in the the Roman Catholic Church
movie based on Brown's - conspn·ed to \\reck and
first novel ubout the dashing bury their work
D1rector Ron Howard,
Today is Friday. J uly 10, the 191st day of2009. There are Harvard professor Robert
Langdon. who uses his who also directed The Da
174 days left in the year.
encyclopedic knowledge of Vinci Code movie. admits
· Today's Highlight in History:
Five hundred years ago, on July 10, 1509, French theolo- att. religion. history, litera- that large parts of Angel.\ &amp;
gian John Calvin. a key figure of the Protestant ture. architecture and arche- Demons were scrapped and
Reformation, was born Jean Cauvin in Noyon. Picardy. ology to crat:k through lay- rewritten while turning the
ers of ancient conspiracies prequel . into a sequel.
france.
that bedevil modem human- Brown gave his ble..,sing
On this date:
since the book'~ major
ity.
In 1890. Wyoming became the 44th state.
Thb is. however. a speech themes remained intact.
In 1919. President Woodrow Wilson personally delivered
As v. ith The Da \r,nci
the Treaty of Vcrsai lies to the Senate. and urged its ratifica- that - as a sennon by the
Code,
Howard is cominccd
author
offers
insights
tion. (Howe\ er. the Senate rejected it.)
that
he
has not created an
the
world\
ie\\
behind
into
In 1929, American paper currency was reduced in size as
th~ government began issuing bills that were approximate- Angels &amp; Demons and the anti-Catholic film. His goal.
he ~aid. was to raise quesnovel that followed it.
ly 25 percent smaller.
tions
about the nature of
of
course.
wa
The
That,
In 1940. during World War II. the Battle of Britain began
a" i':azi forces began attacking southern England by air. Da Vinci Cocle, which ignit- faith.
(The Royal Air Force was ultimately victorious.)
In 1951 . armistice talks aimed at ending the Korean War
began at Kaesong.
~
In 1962. the Tel star I communications satellite was
launched from Cape Canaveral. Fla.
In 1973, the Bahamas became fully independent after
three centuries of British colonial rule.
In 1979. conductor Arthur Fiedler, who had led the
Boston Pops orchestra for a half-century, died in Brookline,
~1 a:-.s., at age 84.
In 1989. Mel Blane. the "man of a thousand voices."
including such cartoon characters as Bugs Bunny. Daffy
Duck and Porky Pig. died in Los Angeles at age 8 I .
In 1991. Boris N. Yeltsin took the oath of office as the
first elected president of the Russian republic.
Ten years ago: The United States women's soccer team
won the World Cup. beating China 5-4 on penalty kicks
after 120 minutes of core1ess play at the Rose Bo\\ I in
Pasadena. Calif.
Five )Cars ago: President George W. Bush said in his
weekly radio address that legalizing gay marriage \Vould
redefine the most fundamental institution of civilization,
and that a constitutional amendment was needed to protect
traditional marriage.
One year ago: President George W. Bush signed a bill
overhauling rules about government eavesdropping and
grantmg immunity to telecommunications companies that I
helped the U.S. spy on Americans in suspected terrorism I
cases. The Senate handily confirmed Gen. David Petraeus
,,s the top commander in the Middle East. Former White
House adviser Karl Rove defied a congressional subpoena,
refusing to testify about allegations of political pressure at
the Justice Department.
Today's Birthdays: Eunice Kennedy Shriver is 88.
Fonner boxer Jake LaMotta is 88. Writer-producer Earl
Hnmner .Jr. is 86. Former New York City Mayor David N.
Dinkins is H2. Actor William Smithers is 82. Broadway
composer Jerry Hem1an is 78. Director Ivan Passer is 76.
Actor Ul\\ renee Pressman is 70.
Thought for Today: "A concept is stronger than a fact.''
- Charlotte Perkins Gilman. American economist and
feminio;t ( 1860-1935).
With the nc\\s dominated
by Iran, health care. and
L E TTERS TO THE
Sonia Sotomayor, you
not have noticed \\hat
might
EDITOR
could become the fiN scanLetter.\ to the editor are a·elcome. Thev should be Jess dal. or at least mini-scandal,
Byron
than 300 worcls. All letter.s are .mbject to. editing. must be of the Obama White House.
York
It concerns AmeriCorps,
• signed, (mel include: address and telephone number. No
umignecl leuer.\ ll'ill be published. Letters· should be in one of President Burack
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of Obama 's favorite federal
thanks to organizalions and indil·iduals will not be accept- programs. A few week~ ago.
the president was bt.!aming
Because their work often
. ed j(n· publication.
as he signed a $5.7 billion irritates the politically
bill that will triple the site appointed higher-ups in
of the domestic volunteer their deparrmclus - someagency. Now. there arc times even in the \Vhitc
questions about whether he House - Congress has
Reader Services
(usPs 213-960)
tried to meddle with an given inspector~ general
Correction Policy
Ohio Valley Publish ing Co.
investigation into allega- special job protectionl.o.
Our main concern in all stories ts 10 Pubhsh~d every morntng. Monday
tions
of waste and fraud
In 2008, lawmakers
be accurate II you know of an error through Fnday, 111 Court Street.
there.
passed
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Inspector
in a story, calllhe newsroom at (740) Pomeroy, OhiO. Second-class postage
On the evening of General Refom1 Act. The
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June
10. law sa) s that if a pre..,tdcnt
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Our main number is
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News
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Editor: Charlene Hoemch. Ext. 12
Subscription Rat es
Reporter: Bnan Aced, Ext 14
B y carrier or m otor r oute
in::.pector general with overThe Act wa" co-sponReporter: Beth Sergent Exl 13
4 weeks •••.••.•••••.•' 11.30
~ight of AmeriCorps. to tell
sored
by then-Sen. Barack
52 weeks .•....•.••.•'128.85
Walpin he \\as heing fin~d.
Advertising
Ohama. So tt was quite a
Dally .•...•..•..........50'
Advertising Director: Pam Caldwell,
"He said, 'Mr. Walpin,the surprise when the inspector
Senior Cit izen rat es
740·446·2342. Ext. 17
president wants me to tell general of a favorite Ohama
26 w eek s .•.... • .•..•.159.61
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you thut he really appreci- agency received n call, out
Retail: Brenda Dav1s. Ext 16
Subscnbers should remrt 1n advance
ates
your s:.:rvicc. hut It's of the blue, from the \Vhitc
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
direct tO The [)ajiy Sentinel. No BUb·
time to move on,'" Walpin I louse telling him he had an
scnpllon
by mail pennitted in areas
Circulation
recalls. "Eisen said. 'You hour to decide whether to
where home carrier service Is available.
Circulation Manager : David Lucas,
can eithCI' resign, or I'll tell resign or be fired.
740-446·2342. Ext. 11
Mall Subs cription
you that we 'II have to termiDistrict Ci rculation Manager :
That complete!) tlcw in
Insid e Meig s Co unty
M1ke Whitt
you.'"
the
face of what the Ia\\nate
12 Weeks • • • • ...•• .'35.26
There arc inspector~ gen- makers who \\rote the
26 Weeks ••..•••••.• .'70.70
General Manager
eral in C\Cr) federal agency Inspector General Reform
52 Weeks .•..•.••..• .'140.11
Charlene Hoefl1ch. Ext. 12
intended. Walpin
and department. Their job is Act
E·mall:
O ut s ide Meigs Co unty
to investigate allegation~ of refused to re5ign. and onl)
mdsnews C mydailysentlnol com
12 Weeks ..•..•..... .'56.55
waste, fraud and other mis- then did the White House
26 Weeks •••••••• .'113.60
Web:
deeds
involving federal tax notify Congre~s. as the hi\\
52 Weeks .......... .'227.21
www mydaRyscntlnel.com
required.
dollars.
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
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www.mydallysentinel.com

is

TO I) AY IN HISTO R Y

PageA4

"I bche\c in God, yes. I do.
I'm not a member of a church
at the moment,'' he told
reJXlilCh, before "Angels &amp;
Demons" reached theaters.
"There 1s no personal
struggle. for me. hetween
my beliefs and religion.
Basically. in a nutshell, I
bl·lie\l.' that our intelligence,
and our cunosity. and our
tlri \C' to know more are a
part of the plan .... But I
haven't worked to directly
"-Ort of inject m) personal
spirituality and belief system into the story."
The goal. while spinning
another con piracy-theory
thn ller, \\as to focus on "the
threat that ome in the
Vatican may feel about ''hat
cicnce represents. \\hat it
propo c~ to say .1bout the
origin of the uni,•erse and
the origin~ of man:· he said.
The plot begins with the
sudden death of a ··progre~­
sive and bclmcd pope.''
Then, all hell breaks loose
as o;omconc claiming to repre~cnt a scnet .sodety of
fn.:cthinkcr~
called the
"Illuminati'' kidnaps what
the bonk describes as the
four "I ibcral :· reform-minded cardinal&lt;&gt; '' ho were the
top candidates to become
pope and begins murdering
them in puolic rituals.
As the coup•de grace. thb
mystenou&lt;&gt; killer has arranged
to steal n container of antimatter produced at the CERN
Large Hadron Colhdcr on the
S\\ ISs-French
border.
Langdon and Yetm have to

rush around - call it ''24"
meets a papal conclave - and
find this missing ''God particle" stuff before it explodes
~md vaporizes Vatican City.
By the time it's all ovea
Langdon and company ha9
solved a papal-murder mystery. saved the en lightened
cardinal who ultimately
becomes pope and. literally.
saved the throne of St. Peter
from being captured by a
madman who is. of course,
the ston's most articulate
conservative Catholic.
This villain "feels that the
church 1s going down the
wrong path" a., it pur:::.ues
peace with science and
modernity. noted actor
Ewan McGregor. "He
thinks that the~ church is
becoming watered do\\ n
and is becoming weaker and
weaker.... He's trying to put
it back on course."
The key is that Angels &amp;
Demons offers a Vatican
that contains good Catholics
and bad Catholics. By the
end of the film. said
Howard. Langdon has
gained a "more complex
•
view of the church.''
In the end, there arc goo
Catholics and bad Catholics.
and Brown and Howard get
to determine who i~ who.
(Terry Mauingly is director
oftlw \\rzshington Joumalism
Cenrer at the Council for
Christian Colleges ancl
Universities and leads the
GetReligion.org project to
.\tlld\' religion and the news).

I

Will Congress iizvestigatefi~1111J' busitless at A n1eriCorps?

The Daily Sentinel

Why did it happen? It turns
There was a lot of presout \\'alpin had angered the sure in the city for the
of Johnson han to he lifte~
top
management
AmcriCorp~ b) investigating And there wa::. pressure •
Sacramento. Calif.. mayor the top ranks of AmeriCorps
Kevm Johnson. a prominent to stop the investigation that
friend nnd supporter of the wa.-. causing discomfort for
president.
a high-profile Obama supBefore being elected poner. So a deal was cut mavor last No\'embcr. Johnson agreed to pay back
.lolins('l1, a former NBA star. some of the AmeriCorps
ran a non-profit educational money. and the ban was
group called St. HOPE. thrO\\'n out.
recch cd
about • Walpin. the man who had
which
SHSO.OOO
in
federal found the misuse of federal
AmcriCorps funds.
money in the first place. was
Last )Car. Walpin's office not consulted. When he
got a up that Johnson was learned about it. he was plcnmisusing some of the ty mad - and he let the
mone). After an il1\ estiga- AmeriCorp~ board of direc- :
tion. Walpin found that. to~ know about it. He also let:
indeed. St HOPE had lhed members of Congress know. •
f e d e r a I 1 ) - f u n d c d And not long after. he got that :
AmeriCorps staff for. '·)ou·,·e got one hour" call:
:
among other thmgs, ..dri- from the White Hou.,e.
'ing (Kevin Johnson) to
;-\ow, Republicans in •
per~onal
appointments. Congress are calling for an :
washing hi" car. and run- inYesti!!ation of \\'alpin's:
ning per onal errands.''
firing.~ and even some:
Walpin came to the con- Democrats have questions. •
elusion that .Johnson and St.
When he got the ultima-:
HOPI· should he banned tum from the White llou .• .
from recei\ ing any more Walpin told Norman Eis,
federal nwne\.
the official who called him •
That crc.ltL;ll an awkward that the timin~ seemed:
siruatiun, to say the least, "very interesting.· gi\en the;
especially after Congress controvers\
over
the;
passed the $7'({7 hillion S~cramentt) investigation.:
stimulus hill. The bill raised E1~en. according to Walpin. •
hopes in Cities across the responded that it was •·pure
country that local govern- coincidence."
•
ments would be ghen zit~laybe so. But to find out,:
lions of federal dollars. Con!!ress will need to:
What \\Ould it mean for demand some answers.
'
(Byron York is chief polit- •
Sacramento if its mayor
''ere banned from rece1ving ical correspondellf for The
fedcml mone)?
\Va,-l!ington E.xaminer).

�WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK
Pa.lor. Don \\ alker

F~llowshiP
Apostolf~

Church or j,.,.u.&lt; l hti\1 Apostolk
VanZandt und \\ dl'd Rd P toc J.:me&lt;
\lolltt. \unda) School • : '!0 • m
n•cmnt • 7 30 r m
lth~r \ullc~

Ra,-cr \Iilley Ap&lt;Nohc \\or&lt;;htp Center
1\71 S lrd
~\e. Maddi~PQn Mev
~t•.:hacl llradtnr.t. l'a~tor. SundJ)• 1(1.10
a.m 1\tcs. ldll pt.t}cr. W,·J 7 pm Bt~k
Stull•

•

~.nummurl

.\Jl&lt;"lnlic luh.:rnadr In•··

Scr\l&lt;:e,. Sun IU·II() a.m "
'!0 p m.
Thurs 7"00 p m • Past(JC Man) R llutt•m

Assembly of God
l.iMrt~ '"•tmhll ol (;oo
PO Bo\ 467. Duddmg Lane, Ma.son
W \'a Pastor ~cal Tennant ~unda~
Sen ,,-es· I0:00 a .m and 7 p m

Baptist
Pn~ ill&lt; f rtt\1 Ill

Baptist Church
Pastor: Floyd R~&lt;. Sunday School Q ~Ill
10'.30 om. Wurslup semce IC 30 to 1. :00
am \\ i:d preaclung 6 pm
l'ai"Jl&lt;'nlcr Jndtpcndrntllnptl~t ( bun:h
Sunda) S~hool • Q&gt;Oam. Prtachmg
Sm ace IO·'lOam, l·vcnmg Sen .-e
7 OOpm. \\cd~y Btble Study 7 00 pm.
Pastor
Ch~'hlrr llupli'l Chun·h
I'•'! or· SIC\ c I.Htlc 740 367 '80 I, H
740-'1&lt;11· 7S42, C 7.UJ-t&gt;l5 2527 Sunda)
Set out 9.30 am. \l&lt;Jmrng \\nNht(l' 10.30
.n
Youth &amp; Brhlc llud.t!CO&gt; 6 30 pm.
&lt;hOir piacrree 7,3() Spccral da~ ol month
I. l.&amp;hc&lt; of Grao:c 7 pm 'ed Monda) 2
\lens FcUO\Islup 7 pm 3rd fue1

Hope Bapti't Churdt\Southtrn)

570 Grant sr , ~~ ddlepon Sunday ~bool
• 9. JO ~.m. \\or&lt;lup II a '!I and 6 p.m
V.ednesday S~~« - 7 r.m Pas!Ol' Gar)
Elhs
Rutland •1rst Jiaptisl Church
Sanda) School 9 30 a.m. \\on.tup
10:4&lt; o.m
Pomrro~ flrst Rupll5t
P.olStor Jon Bro.:lcrt, EJ.&lt;t Mam St •
Sunday Sch. 9 30 am. \\orshtp 10 lOam

•lnt Soulhrro Jlaptlst
41872 Pomewy Ptle, Sund~y School·
9 30 am .. W~l11p 9 4~ am &amp; 7:00p.m ..
Wr.tn~day Sen rces • 7 00 p m

Rutland f'rff \\ tU llapti&gt;t
St .. Pastor fA Bamc) , Sunda)
s,hool
10 am E'en.ng • 7 p.m.
\\ td~&lt;da) Semce• - 7 p.m.
s.:-.... nd Baptht Church
Ra\en'"ood \\'\, Sunda) S.:hooliO llm·
, Mommg \\orshap II am £, emng • 7 pm,
\\ ~:~e&gt;&lt;la) 7 p m.
t 1N llapti't Church of \t~'on, \\ \ '
(lnJcpcn.trm Bapthll
SR (152 ,,n,l .\nllcr,on Sr. Pa,rur· Ro~n
COr.td)'. Sunda) &gt;chool 10 um Morntng
chur&lt;h II am. Sun.Ja} t!\'emng 6 pm, Wed
llihlc Study 7 pm

Catholic
s~~n'&lt;l

lleurt Catholic Church
161 \lull:lerf) A\e., Pomero) 9&lt;Jl-~~QS,
Pasror Rc\ \\alter E Hemz, Sat. Con
4 45-~ \5p m :1.1a"· 5.30 p.m., Sun
Con -8:45-9.15 am ... Sun \ta" Q.JO
am ,Daily Mass· 810 a Ill

Church of Christ
w..,t,idr Church of (hrl't
33226 Chl!drcn &lt; Home R&lt;l, l'omcro). OH
Contad 740 992 3S47 Sunda) momtng
10.00 SU"l mom10g Brble SIUd):
fo' O\\tng "Orship. Sun C\c 6.00 pm.
\\td btblc \IUd} 7 pm

Pa,ror· Rilly zu,pan Nh Jrt&lt;ll'.tlmer St..
MtddlePQrt, Sundny Sdt&lt;lol • •us a.m.
Wor&lt;hrp - 10·1 S n.m 7 00 p.m •
\\cdnc~a~ Sen tee· 7·00 p.m.
Racine hol Dat&gt;tbt
Pa,tor. R)an !laton. pa&gt;lrr , Sunda)
S.:hoo! 9·30 a.n1, V.orshtp • 10 40 am.
6:00 p.m , \\ednesda) Se'Vrees • ,1 00
p.m
.Sihcr Run Baptbt
Pasror: John \~&gt;110~. 'lunda) School •
lla.m '00 p.m
IOa.m , \\orshlp
,Wednesday smrce&lt; 700pm
;\lt. Union Baptist

Old Beth••l trt·t· \\illllnptl,t Church
28(&gt;() I St. Rl 7 \ftddleport. \unda)
Service • 10 a.m , t,·OO p m. Tuesda)
Servtce' -b:OO
Hill,ide Rapti.\t &lt;hurcb
James R Acree S·. Su da) l nrf d
Scrvtce. Wor&lt;hrp 10 'lll ~ m 6 p.m •
\\~y Servt~s 7 p m
\'ktor~ Jlapt~tlnd•·pcndrnl
52.~ ~

2nd St Mtdd cpon. Pastor James

E Keesee, \\onhrp • lOan: 7 p ~ ,

hhh lluptlst ('huttb
Railroad St • Mason. Sunda) Sc~ool 10
am .. \\orshrr
II n m , o p m.
\\tdn~y Srmces 7 p.m
f'on'\t Run Hapti&lt;l· l'onl\·ro)
Re\' Jo~ph Wood.,, Sunday School
a m , Worsh•p • II 'loa m

10

Mt. \Jorlnh llapti~t
Founh &amp; Matn Sr , ~1tddleport, Sumla)'
School 9,30 un. \\orshrp ll~4S d m
Paswr Rc\ \1t(h3el A fhompsun. Sr
Antlquil) llupll~l
Sunday School • 9. 'lO J m \\ roup
10.45 am , 'lunda~ l \enmg 6 00 p.m ,

Trlnit~ Chun:h
Pastor· Re\, Tom Johnsen. Second &amp;
Lynn. Pomeroy. Pa\lor: • \\or&lt;lup 10 25
a.m.,

Episcopal

Grace t:plscupal Church

326 E. \lam St , Pomeroy.
Hoi}
EtJ~harist II 30 am Sunday &amp; S:30 pm

Pomcro~

We..tside Church of Chrht
l:12lb Chilllrcn·, Home RJ., Sunday
S~hool • II am, \\Of\htp IOa.m .. 6 p.m.
\\,'&lt;1nc&lt;da) Sen11~ • 7 p.ll!
Middl•port (burch of ('hri.'t
Sth and M:l:!n Pastor· A Hanson,
Chtldrens Drre"'r. Sharon ~&gt;a)re. Teen
Dtrector: O.&gt;dgcr \'aughan.Sunday School
• 9.10 n m \\orship- S: 15, 10.30 a.m. 7
p.m W,-dncsday SenlCe' • 7 p.m.

1\tno Church of Chrhr
\\onhtp • 9:10 am, Sunday S.hool •
10 30 a.m, Pa:.ror-Jeflrey \\llll3ce. ht and
3rd SWlday
llear .. allo"' Ridge Church or Chri't
Pa,ror:Bru.:c Terry. Sunday School -9:30
n~n.

Ziou Church of Chri't
Pontew). Harrtwnville Rd . (Rr.t-13).
Pastor· Roger \\'at,on. Sunday School •
1/:30 a.m , Wor,hip · 10:30 a.m 7:00
p.m .. Wedne-.da) Serv~ee' • 7 p.m

( 'ah nr} Pilgrim C'hnpcl
Jlamson\llle R•&gt;a.t !'astor: Charles
,\kKen11e, Sund.ty Sd10ol 9 30 am
\\or.~htp • II am .• 7:00 p m • \\&lt;'&lt;inesda)
Sct\icc • 7 00 pm
Ro-e of Sharon Holinrs.&lt; (.'hun:h
Leading Creel Rd.. Rutland, Paslor. Re'
De"ey Kmg, Sunday \Chool· 9'30 a.m .•
Sunday "orshJP -7 p.m, \\edllesda)
pra)a mtttmg- 7 p m.
Pine Gro'• Bible Hotines&gt; (hurt:h
112 mile off Rt. 325. Pl"tor. Rev O'lkU
\lanlc) . Sunda) School • 9.30 a.m.
Wo~lup •
10_'(1 am, IJ·OO p.m .•
\\'tdnesday Scrvt&lt;:e- 7:00p.m
\\'l..,lc)lln Dible lllllin&lt;&gt;• Church
75 Pearl ~· -· Mtddlcpon. P~t&gt;tor Doug
Cox Sunda\' s,·h&lt;IOI • 10 a.m. Wor;htp •
10:45 p.m Sunday be. 6:00 p.m ..
Wcdnc&gt;da\ Service·· 7:00p.m.
Hy&lt;oell Run Community Church
Pa,lor: Rev, IJ•rry Lemley: Sunllay School
• 9:30am. wnr,h•P. 10.45 -•n• .. 7 p.m ..
Thursday Brble Srud) and Youth 7 p.m.

\

l'uppe..., Plain Church or Cbril.t
ln$trumental. \\'or&gt;htp Sen·tcc • Q a.m.,
Communion 10 a.m • Sunda) School •
10.1.5 am~ Youth· .5·30 pm Sunday, Btblc:
&lt;;rudy Wcditcsday ~ pm
Brad bur~ Church of Cbri't
Mmtster· Tom Runyon. 39558 Bradbury
Road. "hddlcpon. Sunday School • 9.~
\\or:hip- 10:'10 a.m.
Rutland Church of &lt;:brist
School 9:30 a.m.• V.or,hop and
CoptmuntOn - 10:30 a.m. David
\\"tseman. ~1m.,ter
Bradford Church of Chrht
Corner of St. Rr. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd ..
Mmisrer: Doug Shamblin, Youth Mini\ler·
Btll Aml'&lt;'q;cr. Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - ~·00 a.m .. 10.30 a.m., 7:00
p.m .•Wcdnesda) Sen ices ·7:00 p.m.

Hilh Church of Chri't
Tuppe" Plams, Pastor ~like ~loore. Bible
clas&gt;, 9 am Sunday: "orsh•p 10 a.m.
:)unday; \IOr&gt;htp 6.30 pm Sunday: Bible
class 7 rm \\cd.
Refll"ille Church oCChrl'l
Pastor: Jnd. ColgrO\t, Sunda) School:
9 30 am , \\orslup Sen'ice· 10:30 am •
B !lie Swdy, Wednesday. 6:30p.m
0..\ler Church of Chrh1
'iunday s.:hool9.30 a.m .. Sunda) "o"htp
-103ltam
£he Church of Christ or Pomtro~
l~t&lt;rsectton 7 and 1!4 W 1:.\angchst·
Denno&lt; !&gt;areent. Sunday Bible Study •
9·30 am. \\·or,hop: 10:30 a.m. tlnd 6:30
p.m .. Wednesday Btble SIUdy • 7 p 01 .

Christian Union
Hartford Church of Christ In
Christian Union
Barrford, W.Va., Pa,tor: Mike Pucken.
Sund;ry Srhool 9· 30 am Wo"htp •
J(J,lO a.m., 7:00 p.m .• Wedne&lt;.da)
&lt;:en tees • 7 00 pn1.

Pa'tor tknzL '\aU, V.orshtp • 9·10 am
Sundav School 10. 'lO a.m
•
Loog Bollom
Sunda) School • 9.30 a.m • Worship •
IOJOa.m.

\\Orshtp • 9.30 am , Sunday Sdto61 •
IO.lO am • Ftf\1 Sunday o! \lonlh • 7:00
p.m ~en•ce
Thppt?rs Plain' St. Paul
Pn'ror. Jim Corbttt, Sunday School • 'I
a.m., Wor;hrp- 10 a.m, Tucsda) Servtce'
• 7·30 p.m.
Central Cluster
A~bury (S&gt;n"u'el, Pastur: Bob Robm\tm,
Sunda) School • 9:45 a.m .• Worsh1p • II
a.m .. Wednesday Sen •.:e' ·7:30p.m
Flatwoocb
Pastor lk••ayne Stu tiler, Sunday School •
10 a.m .. \\orshtp • II a.m.
forest Run
Pastor Bob Robinson. Sunday School· !0
a.m .• \\'()r;hip- 9 a.m
Hcalh (~tiddleporll
Pastor: Bn:m Dunham. Sunda) School •
0:30am Worslnp • 11:00 a.m.
~tiner.\ille

Pomero) Church of Chrl•(
~lam St.. Sunday School· 9:30
•un .. Worship- 10:30 a.m . 6 p.m ..
Wrdnc~a) Service'· 7 p.m
212 \\

\\edllesda) Scn'ICCS • 7 p m

•

Congregational

Onnvlllt llolint" Church
.ll057 'irate Rulllc '25, L;~ng" lie, !'astor
llnan llailcy, Sunda) school • •UO a.m ..
Sunda} """'hip - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m
Wednc~ay prayer "'rvtce • 7 p.rn.

Hickor~

51 R1 143 JUSt off Rt 7. Pasror Rc•

Churd1uf (;od of l'nlphtc)
OJ Whnc Rd on Sr. Rr 160, Pa,ror· PJ
Ch,tpman, Sund.t)' Schuol • 10 am ..
\\tmhr" II a.m , Wcllnesdty Sct\t&lt;e&lt; 7
p.m

(ummunit) Chun:h
f'a,tor: Steve Tomel. Mam Str~l.
Rutland, Sunday \\'of5htp-l0 00 a.m ..
Sunda) Sef\ti.'C 7 p.rn.

Sunda~

llethlehem lluptist ( burch
Great Bend, Route. 124, Racrnc OH
Pastor· , Sunday School • '1: 10 a "' •
Sunday Worsbtp • 10.'\0 am" \\cdne&lt;da)
Bthle Stud) • 7:(1(1 (Jill

S)rdi'U\t .iN Church of Gnd
Arple and Second su .. l'asrur Re\ Da\ til
RINell, Suntla) Schoollutd \Vu~hip· 10
a 111 l.venong Scr\lce&lt;· 11:.10 p.m ..
Wedn~d.l) Senr~c' • b: 3U p.m.

Hemlock Grll\t Chri,li~n Church
l.11rry Bro~&gt;n. Wof\htp 9:30
am. Sund.) School • 10:30 am, Btble
Stud} • 7 p.m.
~h~&gt;tcr

are

Pastor. lknms \\ea,-er ~unday School9:45 a.m E\Cnmg • 6 30 p m •
Wednesday Servtees 6 JOp m

Htll Rd • Racme. Pastor Jame'
Satterftrld. Sunda) School 9 45 am ..
E\ening 6 pm. \\Cdnesday Scnrcc~ • 7
p.m.
Rutland ('hurt·h of &lt;lod
Pastor. Shane M R()\\ hng. liunda)
\\orshrp - 10 un , 6 p m , \\Cdnesd3)
Sel'\1CC' • 7 p 01

Holiness

W&lt;tt\htp - IO· 30 a.m , 6:30 p m.
W~dnc,da} Scr.ice' ·6:30p.m.

Fir&lt;.l llapti't Chur&lt;h

•

~hie

S~lem

Loop Rd off \c" I ·na Rd Ru· •nd

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page AS

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Friday, July 10, 2009

l.aun:l Clih t'n:t• \ldhudisl Church
Pa&lt;tor Glen McClung. Sunday School •
9·'0 am. Worshtp • 10 30 a.m and 6
p.m Wednesday ~ntce• 7f!Jp.m

Latter-Day Saints
lbe Chunh of Jrsu'
Chrbt of l.atlrr·Oa) Saints
Sr Rt 160 446 6247 or 446-7486.
Sunda) School 10·20 II am , ReJtef
Socrctv/Pncsthood II 0.5·12 00 noon
Sacro~c~t :;en tee 9·10 l ~ a.Jll •
Homrm:llmg rncc~,g. Ist Thurs.· 7 r.m

Lutheran
St. John lutheran Church
Ptne Ciro\C, \\o~hrp ·'IOU a.m, Sunda)
School ·1 0:00 a.m. PaMnr

Pastor: Bob Robin&gt;On, Suml.a) ,School 9
am .. Worship· 10 am.
Pearl Chapt?l
Sunda) School· 9 am., Wof\htp • 10 a rn.
:\e~&gt;

Beginning&gt; Church
Pomero)
Pa,ror· Brian Dunham. Wor,hip • 9:25
a.m .. Sunday School· 10:45 a.m.
Rock Spring:,
Pastor· Dc\\ayne Stuller. Sunday School •
9:00 a . \\of'hip
10 a.m .. Youth
Fel o"' ip. Sunda) 6 pm Early Sunda)
"orshtp R.. " Lenora Lcttheir
Rutland
Pastor John Chapman, Sunday School •
'1-'lOam. Wo~rp-i0·30a.m .. Tbunday
Serv1ces • 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pa'tor: w,mam K MAr&lt;hall, Sunday
S.:hool 10:15 am Worsrup- 9:1S a.m .•
Bible Stud~ '!''""- , ";()() pm
Sno.. ,ille
Sunday Scl-oo U ' n., WOf\hip 9 a.m.
Bethan)
Pa&gt;tor. Jobn Rozewrct. Sunday School •
10 a.m .. Worship • 9 a.m . Wedne&lt;da)
Scn·icc' • 10 a.m.
Carmel-Sutton
Cannel &amp; Bashan Rd&gt; Racine. Ohio,
Pa.ror: John Rolewicl. Sunday School •
9:-15am, Wo"bip • 11:00 a.m .• Btble
Study Wed. 7:30p.m.
:\torning Star
Pa.,ror· John Rozewtcz. Sunday School •
II a.m. Worship. 10 am.

£a,l Letart
Paslor. BtU Mar,hall Sunday School
9a.m • Worshtp • 10 am .. lsr Sunday
e\ et)' mooth evemng "'rv1ce 7:00 pm :
\\i:dncsda) • 1 p.m.

Radne
Pastor Re' William :\lmhall, Sunday
School • 10 a.m. \\or&lt;hip • II
a.m.Wc~y Scmces 6 pm; Thur Bible
Srody7pm
Cool&gt;ille liniled ~lethodist Pari'h
Pa,ror· Helen Kline. Cool-.,le Church.
Matn &amp; Fiuh Sr .. Sun. School- 10 a.m~
Wor&gt;hip- 9 a.m .. Tue,. Service&gt;· 7 p.m.
Bethel Church
Township Rd .. 468C. Sunda)· S&lt;hool • 9
a .m, Worship • I0 a.m.. Wcdne$d3)'
Sen ice'· 10 a.m.

St. Paull.uth&lt;l'lln Church
Comer S)camore &amp; Second Sr, P&lt;'meroy.
Sun School - 9 45 a m Worslup • II a.m

llockini!JlOrt Churt:h
Kathl') n Wiley, Sunday School 9:30
a.m .. Wor&gt;htp • 10:30 a m • Pastor Ph1lhp
Bell

Graham { nill-d \ltthodlst
\\orshtp. II a.m Pastor Rtchllfd ~case
ll«htell nhtd \lcthodl-1
:Se,. llaven Rtchard "'ease: Pastor,
Sunday "orshrp 9·10 am. Toes 6.30
pra)e~and Btble Stud)
\II, OliH·l nittd \ltlhudiu
Off 124 behrnd \\tlles\1 e, p.._,tor. Rev

Ralph Sp~s Sunday School • 9 30 a.m •
Wohhtp • 10:'0 a.m .. 7 p m. Thu.nda)
Serv~&lt;:c' • 7p m
;\ftigs l'onptralhe Parbh
"orthea'r Clu,ter, Alfred, Pa&gt;tor: Jrm
Corbtll, Sunday School • 9 30 a.m .•
Worshtp· II a.m., 6:30p.m
Che.,t~r

l'a&lt;ror. Jtm t'orhltl, Wor'hlp 'I a.m.,
Sunda~ Sehoul - 10 a.m. , lllursda)
Services· 7 p.m.

Church of God

Sther Ridge- Pastor Linda Dame\\ood,
Sunda) School • 9 n.m. \~orslup Sen rce
10 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sunda)

p m..

Pnmtro~ Church orthe :'\aiJtrtnr
Pastor: Jan La\cndcr, Sunday S~hool •
9 30 am • Worshtp - 10 30 a m and 6
p m , \\edncsday ~rvtces • 7 pJll

Carleton Interdenominational ('hurt:h
Kmgsbury Road. Pastor. Roher! Vance,
Sunda\ School
9·10 om .. \\or&gt;bip
Sel'\tc~ 10.30 a.m, E\entnj! Servtcc 6
pm
freedom Go,pel \fi"ion
Raid Knob, on C(l. Rd .31 l'a,tnr. Re\,
Roger Willford, Sunda)' School 'I .30
:t.m. Worshtp- 7 p m.

Che.ttr Church nrtbc -"a1.arenc
Rev C'urt.s Randolph. Sunday
School- 910 a.m .. Worl-hrp 10::10 a.m ..
Slllld•y cvenmg 6 pm
Rutland Church oft he l'iataf\!ne
Pa,tor: Geof'!le Sr.rdler Sunday School •
9:30 11.1n . Wor,hip - 10:30 am .. 6:30
p.rn .. WedneMlay Senr.:e' • 7p.m.
I'Uitlr'

White'&lt; Chupd We,IC)lln
Cooh ille Road. Pa,tor. Rev. Chnrle'
\lanindale, Sunday School • &lt;JJO o.m
Wor&lt;hip. IO:JO am .. Wednesday '&gt;crvtce
·'p.m.

Other Churches
:&gt;le~&gt; llope Churt:h
Old Amencan Lcgi&lt;&gt;n Hall,
l·ounh A, e .. M1d.tkPQn. SundayS p.m.
S)racust Communi!~ Church
2480 Second St , Syracuse:, OH
Sun. SchooiiO 1101, Sundy ru;;hr6·30 pm
Pa.\IOI" Joe Gwmn
.-\ \ew Begmning
1Full GMpel (burch) Hamson\lllc.
Pa5tm Bob and Kay ManhaU.
Thurs. 7 p.m

fainiew Dible c·hur.h
Letart, W.\'a. Rt I. Pastor: Bn:m ~Ia).
Sundav S.:hool - 9· 30 a.m , Worshtp 7:00
p.m .• "~S&lt;by Bi,ble Stud) ·7:00p.m
t'alth fello"'hlp Cru..ade Cor Chrlsl
Pastor: Re,· Frontl :1 Ot&lt;~en.~ Sttvtee·
friday. 7 p.m.
•
Cal•ar) Bible Church
Pomero} Pike. Co Rd., Pastor. Rev.
Black\\ood, Sunday School 9 30 am •
Worshtp 10 30 a m.. 7;30 p .m
\\Cdne,;da~ Sen ICC • 7 30 p.m

,\mating Gn1cc Communi!) Church
Pastor \\&amp;)'De Dunlap. State Rt 681,
Tltppcrs Pl;un~. Sun. \\ot\htJ': 10 am &amp;
6.10 pm .. Wed. Btble Stud) 7·00 p.m.

Stl\ers,ille Communi!) Church
Sunday SchooliO:OO 11m. Sunday \\orshop
11.00 am. \\i:dne,Jay 7:00 pm Pastor·
Bryan &amp; /1-b~y Oatley

Oa&lt;t' Chrlstiu fellowship
tN•&gt;n-&lt;lenomin~uonal

Our Sa\•h•ur l.utherun Church
Wuluut uud lleury St&gt;, R.-cr"""""·
W Va .. Pastor; David Ru"rll Sunllay
School- 10.00 a.rn .. Wol"hrr ·I~ am.

United Methodist

am • Worshtp
10 30 am , 6
\\ednesday ServiCeS • 7 pm

TorchChunh
Co. Rd. 63. Suoda) School • 9·30 u.m.
Wor&gt;htp 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene
Point Rock Chorch of lhe ~az.vtne
Route 689. Albany, Re' Uoyd Gnmm
paslor, Sunda) School 10 am; worhsrp
servtce II am.c•emn!J sel"lice 7 pm. \\i:d.
pra)&lt;r meellnt 7 pm
,\fiddleporl Church 'lf the :"iazartnc
Pas1or· Leonard Powell. Sunday School·
9:30 a.m.,Wol"'hip · 10:~ am., 6:30p.m.
Wedne;day Services· 7 p.m ..
Ree&lt;I$\Tille fellowship
Church of the NaLarene, Pastor Ru,...,ll
Car,on • Sunday S.:hool • 9:3~ a rn •
Wor,hip - 10:-15 a.m., 7 p.m .. Wednc,da)
' Sentct&gt; • 7 p.m.
S)racu&lt;e Church of the :-iazarene
Pa.,lor :l.hke Adlons, Sunda) School· 9:30

fello")htp)
\lecung 111 1~ M&lt;ig' Middle School
Caferetta Pa&gt;tllr C'hn' Srewan
10:00 am • Noon Sunday: Informal
Wol"hlp, Child...,n'' mini'rry

Rejoicing life Church
500 \ 2nd ·\ve.. Mtddlcpon, P.t&gt;tor.
~hke Foreman, Pa,ror Ementu' L;l\\rcnce
Foreman. Wor5hrp- 10:110 am
Wednesday Set\rCe&gt; · 7 p.m

ComniUnll~ or Chrht
Ponland·Racmc Rd. Pastor· Jrm Proftill.
Sunday School • 9;30 am Worship •
10:30 am .. Wednesday Scrvtce' • 7:00
p.m
Bethel Wol"ihip Center
39782 Sr Rr. 7, 2 milc.s 50\lth of Tuppers
Platns. OH "on-denommauonal \\llh
Contemporary Prane &amp; Worship. Pastor
Rob Barber, Anoc Pastor KM)n Da"'·
Youth Dll'ector Belly Fulks Sunda)
scnrces. I0 am Worshtp &amp; 6 pm Family
Ltfe Classes. Wed &amp; Tbw rught Ltf~
Group.s at 7 pm. Thurs morrung ladies'
Ltfe Group 11 10. Ouler Umits Youth Life
Group on Wtd. t\tning from 6:30 to 8;30.
\ mt us online a1 "'"'" bethei\\C org.

CUfton Tabernacle Church
Clifton. W Va • Sunday School 10 am.
Wor&lt;hip • 7 p m , \\~dnesda) Servrce • 7
p.m.
The \rk Church
3773 George' Creel Road. G ' ·polis Olf
Pa,tor JamJe \\U"eman, Sunday Servtces
10:30 am. WcdneS&lt;by • 7 p.m ThuNday
Prayer &amp; Praise at 6 pm. Classes for all
age&gt; e\ er~ Sunday &amp; \\Cdne&gt;da)
W\\v. Jheari:churcb.net
full G&lt;»pel Church
of the Lhing Sa,lor
Rt3l8 Ant.qwt) P.stot. Jes"' \lorn•.
Sri'\ ices. S. !Urllay 2:00 p m.

\'h Stl'fft Church
398 A•h Sr.. ~1 iddleport ·Pastors Mark
Morrow &amp; Rodne) Walker Sunday
S'hool • 9.30 a.m .. :&gt;1omtng Wor,hrp •
IO:JO a.m. &amp; 7:00pm, Wedne,da) Servrce
- HIO p.m .. Youth Service· 7:00p.m.
Agape J.tft Center
"f'uii·Gospel Church", Pa"or' John &amp;
P•IIY Wade, 603 Second Ave. Mason, 7735017. Ser.1cc lime. Sunday 10.30 a.m.,
Wcdnesdll)· 7 pm

Salem Communi!) &lt;:burch
Back of West Columbra. W.Va.oon L.ienng
Road. Pa\IOr: Charles Rou&lt;h (10-11 675·
2288. Sunday School 9: ~0 am. Sunda)
evening service 7:00 pm, Bibly Stull)'
Wednesday ser.ice 7·00 pm
Ho~on Christian FeUowship Church
Pastor: Her.chel \\'hue. Sunda) SchO&lt;•l·
101101. Sunda~ Church '&gt;a\ tee· 6·30 pm
'!\"edne&lt;day 7 pm

\hundant Grace
923 S Third Sr • M.t!dleJ'&lt;)I't. Pastor ftte,a
Davts, Su~day •ervrce. 10 a .m •
Wcdntsda) ~n tee, 7 p m.

Re:o.toratioo Chri,tian f'ello""hip
9365 Hooper Road, Athens, Pastor·
l.onntc Coah, Sunda) Worshtp 10.00 am,
\\edne&lt;.da): 7 pm

fulth • ull G~prl ( hurch
Long Bottom. Pastor: Ste•c Reed. Sunda)
School • 9:30 am, Worshtp 9:30 am.
and 7 pm .. Wednesday • 7 p.m Fnday •
fellowship ~rce 7 p.m

HoU&gt;e of Healing \linhtri&lt;-s
St. Rt. 124 Lans:"illt. 011
Full Gospel, Cl f'a,tors Roben &amp; Robcna
Mw;...,r. Sunda) Sc-hool 9 30 nm, •
7:00 pm. Wed
\\orsbip 10:30 am
Serv ke 7 "00 pm
Team Jesll!o ~lini,tries
\lecung 333 \techanr~ Street, Pomero~.
OH Pastor Eddte Bacr, Sen ce e\'ery
Sunda) 10:00 a.m.

llarrhumllle ('ommunlt) Church
Pastor: Theron Durham, Sunda) 9:30
a.m and 7 p m • Wtdnesda) 7 p.m
~liddlt(lllrl

Communi!} Churt:h
Pa~ror· Sam
Ande"on, Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evenmg. 7:~ p.m , Wr.tnesda)' ScTVt~e •
7·30p.m

S75 Pearl St., Mrddletx•rl ,

Pentecostal
Penlt!Co,tal Assembly
PaSlor: Sr Rr . 12-1. Racine, Tornado Rd.
Sunday School • 10 a.m. hening 7
p.m. Wednesda) Sem.:es • 7 p m

•·nlth Valle} Tabrrnacle Church
Bailey Run Road. Pa,ror: Rev. Emmeu
Raw,on, Suntla)· Evening 7 p.m ..
Thur-.tay Ser. icc· 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Ha.rrisom llle Presb)ttrian Church
Pastor· Roben \lan.hall, Worshrp • 9·00
a.m. Sunday

S)rucu•c ;\1"&gt;1on
1411 Bndgcman Sr., Syracuse, Pa\rorRev Roy Thompson. Sunday School • 10
1 m, Evemng • 6 p m , \\l:dnesda) Service
·7p.m.

:\liddleporl rr...h~lerian
James Sn)der. SWlda) School 10
a.m .. wOf"bip sen·~ II am.
Pa&lt;~or

Haltl C&lt;tmmunity Churt:h
Off Rt 124 Pastor:: Edsel Han, Sunda}
~hool • 9·30 am., \\Onhip • 10:30 a.m.
7;30pm

Seventh-Day AdHntist

D)e&gt;'ille Communi!) Churt:h
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m .• \\onh1p •
10;30 a.m •7 p m
\lorse &lt;:hapcl Church
Sunda) school • 10 am., Worsh1p - II
a.m .. Wrtln.:sday S~t\lce • 7 p.m.
Faith Goo.ptl Church
IAJng Bvttom, Sunda) School· 9:l0 am.,
Wor&gt;hrp
10:45 a.m .. 7 30 p m ..
Wedne&gt;&lt;luy 7:.1U p.m.
l'ull

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Sen tee,: Sabbath School • 2 p.m ..
W=hip • 3 p.m.
Mulbe~

United Brethren
:\lt. Hermon tnited llrt:lhrcn
in Christ Church
Texas Commumty 16-111 Wickham Rd,
Pa,tor: Peter Mantndale. Sund:ly Sch,M&gt;I •
9:30 a.m .. \\'or,hip 10:.10 am , 7:01l
p.m .. Wednesday Service' • 7'110 p.m
Youth group meeung !nd &amp; 4th Sunday'
7p.m
Eden l'nited Brethl't'n In Chri"
• Stare Route 12-1, l:ler\\ecn Reed\\llle '"'
Hockin~pon. Sunda) Sch01•l
10 am.
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Church

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man looks at, man louh a1 tlrl'
outward appearance, the /.ord looks
at the heart.
1 Samuel16·7h

'

�PageA6
The D aily Sentinel

Friday, July 10, 2009

· 50 Methodist bishops agree to cut their oav
Bv

low bishops kno\\ their
church is hurting.
T\\O United ~1ethodh.t
hoards have cut more th,;n
1.:\DIA!'\APOUS - One
90 jobs, and the denominaof th~.: nation ·s largest
tion 's publishing house will
Christmn lknnminations is
not distribute payments to
1tdllressmg thl· nation's
retired clergy for th~ first
tilhtncial crisis \Vith what it
time in 50 years. Only 17 of
hopes will be a spiritua l
the 63 regional U.S.
tem:hing moment as well as
Methodist conferences pnid
a co~t-s:\\ cr.
their full share of the
Fifl) United .Methodist
denominatiOn \\ide ex pens:Church hishops in the
e!'&gt; last year. down from 23
~nitcd States ''ill roll back
in 2007.
thetr salaries h) 4 percent
The bishops' salaries will
next year in ''hat Bishop
fall back about $4 700
Gregor)
Palmer
of
AP photo/Seth Perlman
Springfield. 111.. pre..,ident of In this June 8 photo, Bishop Gregory Palmer poses for a annually to their 2008 l~\el
the Council of Bishops .. a)
photo in Springfield, Ill. Fifty Unrted Methodist btshops in $120.942. on Jan . I fron;
~s a ge~ure of solidarit\
the United States will roll back their salaries by 4 percent $125.658 currently. The
~' ith others hurt by the glot)- next year in what Bishop Palmer, president of the Council annual pa). based on a forpl economic do\\1tturn.
of Bishops, says is a gesture of solidarity w1th others hurt mula. is set b) the denomination's General Council on
• The salaf) cut is one of by the global economic downtum.
Fmance
and
the .:;trongest statements
taken )et b) a faith group as that churches are hurting about six. eight. nine Administration. . which
:C.S. churches re..,pond to a too and there's less mone\ months ngo.'' said Darcie \Oted in Ma~ to accept the
;recession that has left grow- to go around. But some Chamberlain
of bbhops · recommendation.
lng number~ of people job- \-tethodists said the bish- Indianapolis, a 49-)ear-old The money comes out of
jess and hungry. Other ops· action would have been sales representative who's denomination coffers.
"None of us bishops arc
denominations have elimi- more effective - and might been out of '' ork since
gomg to starve ... but it is a
nated jobs, fro:ten salaries have saved some church JamHH').
or can~eled mission trips.
Bishop Michael Coyner eoood remmder that man)'
jobs - tf it had come earli United 1\tethodist leaders cr.
of Indianapolis', one of fou r people, many pastors. and
sa\ th~: 1110\ l' , approved in
"Some of these things bishops on the finance many congregations arc
~\la). is an acknowledgment should have been thought council, said he and his fd- going through tough times ,"
K EN K USMER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Co)ner said m a note to his
Indiana pastors and In)
leaders.
O t her denominations
and faith ~roups ha\c also
made cuts:
•
The
E\·angelical
Lutherun
Church
in
America has l'Ut cxecuti\'e
salnries, tired 25 people and
en(kd a weekly radio program.
•
The
Presbyterian
Chtuch (USA) has frozen
..,alaries.
furloughed
emplo)ees for a \\eek and
cut department budget~.
• A Southern Baptist
Coll\ention board su~pcnded ..,ome oversea:&gt; mis..,ion
assignmenb bccau~e of
}oy,er donations.
• The Episcopal Church's
headquarters staff offered to
take pay cuts last falL but
the executive.., Y.ho O\er..,ee
church finances rejected the
offer, !'&gt;aying the) didn't
\\'ant to bnlancc the budget
on the backs of ...raff.
• 'Roman Catholic Jioceses have fn)len salaries for
priests and lav staff, amonu
other austerity mm es.
~
Th~.: cuts don't necessari -

I) rdlect l&lt;m~r gi"inp by
churchgo_(!rs. 1 he i\at10nal
A ...socwtwn of Church
Bu~inc:-.s Admimstratinn ,
whic~ has tracked church
sa lanes ~or more than •
) ears. satd 46 perc~nt
the congreg~t10ns 1t has
· ~urveyed th1s ye.nr have
tnuen or cut salane~. even
t}wugh 70 percent smd they
l!tred . as ':"ell or bctt~r
tmanctally m 2008 than 111
2007 ·

The
Gi\ ing
USA
Foundation's annual philanthropic sun'C) relea cd in
June showed religious
group!' received $ 106.89
billion last year. up 5.5 percent from 2007 .
The church busine s
group's annual !-&gt;Urve) of
more than 700 congregations show!'&gt; senior pastor:-.
of Methodi:-t congregation
wtll earn an average of
about $120.090 thi:- ) ear.
compared With $108.000
for a!l Prote:-tant se1~ior pastors m. the sur~·ey. l·?r conuregatiOlls With I ,)00 or
m01:e members. the &lt;~\eragc
semor pastor pay nscs to
~

~

S 141 .000.

A Hunger For More
he funeral sen ice
memorializing
Michael Jackson on
!ruesday at the Staples
tenter in Los Angeles ''as
\er)
illuminatinu.
According to the Los
Angeles Times. O\er 30 million people watched it on
tele\ i&lt;::ion. Add to that the
19 million people who
watched the e\ ent through
Ji\e online video streams
mer i\lSNBC.com. the 10.5
million over CNN .com and
the 3.4 million who viewed
it o\·cr FoxNews.~om and
we've got a total of 62.9
million people who were
watching it (not counting
other, less popular means of
dO\\nloading li\e media).
The funeral service aside.
C\ en word of his death
began an unprecedented
flurry of discussion and. for
some. h) ::.teria. Some people
inten iewed by nC\\ s stations lamented that their
'' orld had crumbled and that
their dreams of seeing
Mi~hael Jachon again in
concert ''ere d.tshed leaving
them empty and '' ithout
hope.
Such reactions leave one
absolutely stunned But then
one consider:-. the scope of
Michael Jackson-.; achievements: record sulcs as high
as 750 million worldwide,

T

Pastor
Thorn
Mollohan

over a dozen Grammy
Awards. and induction into
the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame ... twice. It seems safe
to say that somehow his
astonishing success and tlair
for performance have made
him more than an epic legend. but a person that countless individuals consider
worthy of worship.
Perhaps one reason \\ hy so
man) folks are utterly shattered by his death is that :-o
much of the traged\' of his
life. particularl) the "last two
decades. remains unresoh ed
and apparently meaningless.
Just \\h) have the hearts of
countless people seeming!)
been dra\\ n into such devotion to Michael Jackson that
their worlds have now
turned into a gloom of
despair? Is it because he
never seemed quite happy no
matter that he not only made
more money than most of us
can imagine but also spent it
faster than he made it? Was it

thnt his e' idcnt lack of satisfaction '" ith who he .,., as (in
spite of being the mo..,t popular entertainer\\ ho has ever
lived) somehow truck a
nene \\ith countless people
around the country echomg
their O\\ n emptine nnd tcndcnc) for elf-loathing?
Mavbe. But it could abo
be that Berrv Gonl\, the
founder
o"f
M()tO\\ n
Records, was right when he
called Michael Jackson not
nll.!re I) the "king of pop"
but the ··gr~.:at~.:st entertainer
who has ever lived."
~1ichael Jackson is gone.
but it cannot be disputed
thnt he entertained the
\\ orld. first as a pcrfonner
on stage and then as man
'ami) trying to navigate the
torms of contro\ ersy and
scandal. I suspect that in the
final anai)Si we \\ill have
to conclude that people
lo\ed Michael Jackson
bccau.;;e he ga' e them what
they y,anted but were dc\astatcd because he could not
gh e them what the) needed. He could entertain them.
but he couldn't gi" c their
lives menning any more
than he ga' e meaning and
fulfillment to his own life.
He has hccome, as I heard
someone say recently, a
"secular messiah."
The multitudes who now
find themselves distraught

and depressed perhaps
could be comp 1red to a
crowd that thought the)
lo\ ed Jesus but didn't quite
!!et where He wa!'&gt; coming
from or \\hat the\ real h
needed from Him. •
·· ..The crowd ... got into
the boats and went to
Capcrnilum in search of
Jesus. When they found
Him on the other side of the
lake. they asked Him,
"Rabbi, when did You uet
here?' Jesus answered, 'I trll
you the truth, ') ou are looking for Me. not because you
sa\\ miraculous signs but
because you ate the loaves
and had your fill. Do not
work for food that spoils. but
for food that endures to eternal life. which the Son of
Man will ghe )OU. On Him
God the Father has placed
His seal of approval.' Then
thev asked Him. ·what must
\\ e ·do to do the works God
requires?' Jesu:-. answered.
'The \\Ork of God is this: to
believe in the One He ha..,
sent" (John 6:24-29 NIV).
In the days of Jesus' earthly ministry people were &lt;h
prone as people are today to
focusing on temporary concerns at the expense of longterm matters of graYe imiX?rtance. The ''felt needs" of the
5,000 people to whom Jesus
had given bread and fish consumed their minds as thor~

oughly as their mouths had Me. ~o one has seen the
consumed \\hat he had Father except the One Who b.
from God: onl\ He has seen
pa~scd out to them . And
while Jesus was genuinely the Father. l tell you the truth.
mo\ ed to comp.t" ion to feed he who bclie,·e:-. ha.-., cverlastthem with literal bread ( ee in!! life. I am the bread of
John 6:1-14). He \\as pas- life.... I am the Ji, ing bread
sionate about their need to that came down from heaven.
recehe from Him spiritual If am one eat" of this hread,hc
bread that '" ould Ia t far will in e forever. This bread is
bc)ond the next meal but pre- .\f) tle ...h, \\ hich I gi\ c for the
serve them for etemit\ . B) life of the world" (John
G(xl's grace. manv of those 6:43b.45b-48. 51 NIV ).
who initially followed Jesus
Jesus dill not come to
focused on temponuy things, entertain or even to simply
were ·•awakened'' by His satisfy our basic physical
Spirit to their own spiritual needs. He came to make a
need and tinall) found the ''a) for us to reach the
"bread of life'' (John 6:35) Father in heaven . He came
that comes onl) in placing that we might consume
our unreserv\'d faith m Jesu" through fatth His gift of
to sa\e us from both the lo\e, His own life for ours.
penalty of sin and its po\\ er. We 'imply need to turn our
Michael Jackson has died heart" to Him , n:~ceh e '
and it is a sad conclusion to gtft b) trusting His pron
a tragic life . Those who of forgh eness and then .,., •
ha\ e cho en to spend their in obedience to Hi \\Ord ,
li\e~ in devotion to :\lichael aliO\\ing Him to be not only
Jack on. or any other ",ccu- Sa\ior. but Lord a" Y.ell!
lar me siah" for that matter.
(Thom Mollohan and hi&lt;:
"ill find that their hope has family haa•e ministered in
been built on emptme &lt;; ~ . southern Ohio the past J.l
Jesus suffered and died for years and is the aut/tor o.f
our sin but I le abo rose "The Fain• Tale Parable.'i.''
again and conlJucrcd death. He is the pastor of Pathway
Only He pro\ ides an eternal Communill' Church and
hope for those who dare to may be reached for comrccci\c God's gift of for- ments or questions by egiveness and ctcl·nnllifc.
mail at pastorthom@path"Jesus answered,· Evciyone waygallipolis .com).
who lbtcns to the rather and
COPYRIGHT &lt;Cl 2009,
!cams from Him comes to
"fHOM MOLLOHAN

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

Counsel the .Doubtful
The tlurd spmtuaJ '1\:0rk 01 •mercr is to
cuunsel the doubtfuL We are hereby
m~tructed to bohter the faith and
~onfidence of those who doubt. This may
involve rca:;suring others that God cares
about them and that He has everything
under wntrol, or it may involve an ewn
more bilStC assuran ...e that God exists. On
the other hand, if ~omeone is convinced
that God does not exr~t. counseling the
doubtful may sunply involve telling them
that God cares about them nonetheles~.
and that His love for them is not
condthOned upon thetr belief in Htm.
Sometirces a person's dou,ts are of a
rnore personal nature; many of us suffer from
low (elf-esteem and a lack of confidence 111 our
own abilities. CowtSeling these people may
sunp)}' anV&lt;rlve tellmg 'them to trust themselves.
$eli-doubt can be cnpplmg, and a reassuring pat
on the back and some v;ords ofencouragement
from a trusted lnend or fanuly member may
oftrn be all that b needed to melt a\\ay any
lmgering doubts. As always. we should &lt;:(Junsel
others \\'ith tad and discretion. remembermg
that our advke. ~pe.:ially if.unsolicited, may
not always be welcomed. Therefore. we should
carefully retle...t on how we might ~..ounsel tJH•
doubtful in order to best restore their taith and
confidctt~:e.

And com•ince some, who doul1t.
R.S. \~ Jude 22

Blessed are the pure
ill heart; for they
slzall see God.
Matthew 5:8

~

()~~

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29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
mk what ye ll'i/1, and it .\hall
be done umo you.

740-949-2217

John 15:7

Sizes avat!able 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

The ftppliance man
~

740·985-3561
992-1550
Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
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�•

PageA7

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 10, 2009

Christian spirituality:
What does it mean?
BY PASTOR JANICE V. SMITH

c hcur :1 lot ahnut "spirituality" and books abound
on the subject. ls there guidance on this subject for
Chri:-.tians'? What is Chrbtian spirituality? Is it a
process of transformation that a belie\'er in Christ goes
through as they gnm in Christ and yield themselves more
and more to the work of the Holy Spirit who dwells within
our hearts? For most Christians. "growth in Chri:.;t" is the
most common way they describe their Christian spiritualit\'.

·Caution: merely lightins a. candle and meditating is
dangerous! Religious med1tat1on and and religious wor:-hip practice" must be centl!red in God's Word. It 1s not
Chri:-;tian spiritualit) 1f it is pract1ced apart from
Chri:o-tian doctrine and beliefs. Can Christians light a
candle and meditate? Absolutely! Can Christians pra\
and \\Orship out under a tree'? Absolutely! But, a true
child of God i:-. careful to make sure that their devotional life is centered and grounded in God's Word. Their
experiences of \\Orship ari ...e from their relationship to
Jesu:- Christ, whether it is public worship with other
believers in the church, or private worship in their
homes. cars. in the park, etc.
Christian .spirituality begins the moment we are saved or
"born again." lt bccin:- b) understanding that God Himself.
through the Holy Spirit, is actually living in us! Christian
spirituality is about our relationship with our Creator, God
our Savior. God creates for us a relationship with Him. As
we mature in our faith, we open ourselves more and more
to His spirit and are able then to feel His presence in a
. &lt;?nger way.
WJ.!Ur spiritual growth depends upon our ever-growing
and continual attentiveness to God through prayer, worship and studv. Growth also happens as we trust our God
through our tests and trials! In dtscovenng ways that we
can love and sen c· others, we, ourselves, are deeply
blessed and our pmtual growth n compassion is the
result.
The practice of Christianity i:- never meant to be boring
or unc,entful! A Christian's life is made vibrant and vigorous through the work and power of the in-dwelling
Hol) Spirit. An ever-deepening love of God and love of
neighbor tran:.;fonn::.u ... more and more into the image of

;p~~:~~~~~~ ~:~~''fe~'ld:x~l~l~;e~J~~~~~~~~e ~~~ecf~~s~i:t}

(called peace) in that ''e can finally accept ourselves and
forgive ourselves, because Christ loves us and forgives
us!
Christian spirituality requires that we walk in the
Spirit, yield to thl' Spirit. and obey the Spirit. Yes. and
because we do not want to grieve the Holy Spirit. we do
not yield to the patterns and deeds that were a part of our
former Iives.
The apostle Paul boldlv proclauns that the spiritual person is a "new creation." Christian spirituality is a process in
which "e are transformed as we yield to the Holy Spirit.
The ways of.the. old life fa~e and the ways of the ne\\ life
gr~\~ as Ch1:1~t IS for~ncd ,1 11 us through the pO\ver of the
1
Spmt .. : so ~~~~t the can~lc ·
-.
. .
~lat.lans .,-:·-O.Ps. 29.2, Ps . 9).6.' Re.,vclauons 4.11 and
hpp1ans.-.IO and 11, and John 4.Il--l are suggested as
e dm~ scr~ptur~s. .
. .
.
.
..
(lame~ \. ~mah zs pa.stm of Hetghts Umred Methodtst
Church m Pomt Pleasam).

•

Tribute to my brother
(Harold Joseph Lanier)
Bv

DOROTHY WHITTINGTON

My brother Harold was a very clean living brother. He never &lt;&gt;mokcd. he never cursed. he honored
his God and hi~ mother.
He was kind to everyone; I especially remember
he always had a loving &lt;;mile of tendemess for
everyone - hts :si&lt;;ters. his brother, all family and
neighbor members.
Well. he was called to :-erve in World War II and
a pre~ious girl he was going with - deserved to get
mamed. he told her - not now. If I don't come
back, my mom "ill get my pension to carry her
through. You ~ee. 01) dadd) died when I was either
8,9 or 10. and there \\ere two other sisters and four
brothers left form) mother to love, to cloth. to take
care ofthem.
A song we teamed in Gallia Academy High
School wa . ''We'll honor you where ere we
go/And hope to .111 the world to sho\\Ifhat we are
loyal yet to you Oh school of colors white and
blue." Well, my tribute to my brother Harold, 1
want to say, we honor on this July month freedom
month and day. I'm sure my brother is looking
down from heuvcn. He'd say. keep honoring. walking "ith Jesus, The Truth, The Life, The Way.
I also believe he'd :-.ay to all the people on earth.
Keep love in your life. for the Great 1 am - Jesus,
and keep going to church, and ringing on the bells
of freedom for the USA ~·ou are livim! in.
Well now, "i-;ter Dorothy Whittington would like
to leave this message from her heart: Honor God
the Father. Jesus Chnst, H1s Son who loved us, and
honor the man&gt; soldiers in variou~ wars \\ ho gave
their Ji, es to g1vc us a '' onderful start.
(Dororhv Whiumgton resides in Gallipolis).

Good Shepherd United Methodist Church

Good Shepherd UMC celebrates 45 years
at which lime it ''as approved and the name Good
ShephcrJ was chosen.
The :-ite of 19 J a~: res located on W.Va. 2 in the Aatrock
community was purchased m June 1962 to be the future
Good Shepherd EUB Church and parsonage. The Lutton
Brothers were the contractor for the nev.· building.
On March 10.1963. the groundbreaking sen ice was
held. The fir:-.t service was held in the new building on
Feb. 2. 1964. The dedication senice was held on July
12. 1964. On July II. 1976, the 12th anniversary of
the dedication, the mortgage-burning servke was
held.
Pastors past and pre:-.ent are the Rev Donald Lockhm1.
1964·66; the Rev. Parker Hinzman. 1966-67: the Re\.
Russcil Crawford, 1967-68: theRe\. Earl Perkins. 1968-75:
the Rev. Ray Conrad. 1975-77: the Re\. John Icenhower.
1977-l:i4: the Re,·. J. Emmett Ferrell Jr.. 1984-89; the Rev.
R.C. Browning. 1989-94: the Rev. Paul Suder. 1994-96: the
Rev. Jus tin ~I oran. 1996-200 I: and the Rev. l\1atthew
Dotson, 2002-present.

FLATROCK, W.Va. - Good Shepherd United
:\tethodist Church will be celebrating the -+5th anniversary of its dedication this Sunday '' ith the morning :;ervice at 9:30a.m .. followt:d \\ ith Sunday School.
A potluck' dinner is planned at noon. The Tri-County
Dulcimers will be the aftemoon music. E\eryone is im ited to attend the day's acti\ ities.
Good Shepherd UMC. formerly Good Shepherd
Evangdical United Brethren Church. was founded as a
pilot project in rural church unification after the We:-.t
Virginia Conference and other officials determined that
the Point Pleasant Circuit (Mount Olive, Mount Zion.
Greer and Eckard EUB churches) would be the logical
charge for the project.
On Oct. 5. 1961. a committee of conference officiab
and three rcpresentati\'es of each church and the pastor of
the char!!e, theRe,·. Donald Prim!le. met to formulate the
plan and basis of union. On Dec. 7. 1961, a meeting of
the four churches v. a-; held at Eckard Church to discuss
the proposed union. The plan and basis of union was :.ubmitted to a '-Ole of the congregation on ~larch 18, 1962.

ChrlS· tzane
· ese ' chur.chz·anz·ty or roazz·ty?
I

It has always amazed me
at the approach of the "reli·
gwus
crowd" when invaded
or vis1ted by the reality of
the Gospel of Christ. In the
four gospels, Matthew.
Mark, Luke and John (the
first four books of the New
Testament), you find different scenarios where Jesus
im aded the environment of
the Pharisees and the religiou~ crowd of His day.
! Evef) time Jesus showed
up the Pharisee.;; and others
became offended by the
challenge placed before
them. Jesus came with a
new approach, different
from men's traditions. His
approach and power wa&lt;;
contradictory to that of the
religious crowd. He was a
Kingdom man, not a religious man.
If you read those four
books. you'll discover that
Jesus approached the sinners with love and spoke
their language. not the religious language with a ton of
King James scriptures that
even His followers would
not C\'en under:-.tand. That
approach is what I call
"christianeese.'' But when
approaching the religious
crowds - "churchianity"
He faced them head on '' ith
the realit) of thc Word of
God and the po\\er and wisdom of God.
It is interesting to note that
whenever Jesus enter:- the
scene in any given area.
either in the first century or
in the 21st centur) the

Pastor
Alex
Colon

response is the exactly the
same. People are asronished! The unbelievers realize their need of Jesus and
become
born-again.
Miracles take place every" here: healings and prophecies ·are a lifest) le for those
who operate in the gifts provided bv Jesus. living the
full gospeL and lives arc
transformed. However. for
those who have just churchianity. or what the Bible
calls: "a form of religion
power,"
they
without
become offended because of
their
own
Pharisee
Syndrome, when God is
moving by His Spirit and the
reality of the Word of God.
Pharisees become offended at the appearance of
Jesus. When miracles take
place. when others receive
the baptism of the Holy
Spirit. and when Prophesie:oare ever present. the
Phari!'&gt;ees !!O to work and
begin toll)~ to interfere with
the presence of God.
It's one thin!! to have differences even in the church.
but \\hen the church begins
to attack the church. that is

I L

I

•

nothing more than the spirit relevant to the Corinthians
of Pharisee, and not the he would have come with
Spirit of GoJ. And can I tell ··excellence of speech and
you that the early church wisdom." After all. that i"
'experienced the power of what they were used to
God in a mighty way? Even hearing. They lived just a
this area is filled with testi- few miles south of Athens,
monies and stories of the the greatest intellectual cenearly church back in the ter of that day. Paul truly
I HOOs and early Jl)00s with came against the Pharisee
tremendous revivals that Syndrome. at Corinth.
God wants men and
trul) changed lives and
many went on into the min- women to realize the reality
istry as a result of such of the Go~pel. The Gospel
mO\'es of God.
is about tran!'&gt;forming lives
empowering
or
Religion and man's tradi- and
tions ha\ e hindered the enabling men and women to
original purpose of the do the work of the Kingdom
church. but Jesu~ is creatin!! of God. The gospel brings
a :.;hift in the atmosphere freedom. love. peace, joy
and in the church where we and power over all the powwill find ourselves in one of ers of the devil. That's what
God's cycles experiencing I love about Lighthouse
the book of Acts again (that AIG, we believe and experiis the 5th book in the ~ew ence the reality of the
Testament)
gospel of Jesus.
In I Corinthians 2: 1-5. the
When you experience the
apostle Paul addressed the power of the Cross, which is
Corinthian church that the
hinge
of
true
received revelation from Christianity. along with the
God b) the Spirit, but they infilling of the power of the
were in their own human Sprit of God you do away
minds. "being mindful of with churchinitv and christhe things of men.'' Surely tianeese and \ ou become a
Paul's address to them was part of the reality of Christ.
shocking as the) read it, which is the Kingdom of
~
because he was telliJH!. them God!
that he was out of hi~ mind
Make it a !!reat week!
and gone into the mind of
(Alex Colon i\ pasror and
Christ.
evangelist at Lighthouse
Paul was apparentl) per- Assembly of God, 4976
suaded that the onlv solu- Ohio 160. Gallipofi.,, 1-1/2
tion to the Corinthian ·s miles north of flol;;er
many problems \\as a radi- ,\:fedical Cewer. He can he
cal call to the power of the comacted by phone at 7-10eros~. If Paul had been
-146-9281 or 937-386-3340.
attempting to be culturally or at www.lagohio.mg).

We are to be His witnesses
B Y THE Rev.
CHARLES MARKER

Why
are
we.
as
Christians, so reluctant to
tell others about Him'? We
arc more than willing to talk
about any subject that v. e
know anything about, but
when it come!'&gt; to Jesu:.;, \\C
are mum most of the time.
The last thing that Jesus
told His disciples before He
ascended to heaven was that
they would be His \\ itnes~cs

to all the world. and that commandment included us. What
the world needs is not criticism. but love. They need us
to tell them that Jesus loves
them and that we Jove them.
I met a young man the
other day with tattoos on his
bodv and a can of beer in his
hand. He had a bi!! i!a:-.h on
his hand that whe had
received in a clash with
someone at a bar somewhere. ~1) first impube was
to lash out at him {md tell

•

him just how dumb he was.
I did not do that. but rather I
felt pity for him. Had I not
met Jesus a long time ago. I
could just as easily have
gone down the same road as
many others have gone.
That is all the more reason
I must :.tav tme to Him and
be more v.:illing to share my
faith with others. I pray that
God v. ill help me to follow
His command and he the
witness I Jc wants me to be
so thnt others will come to

know the joy I cxpcnence
because someone led me to
Him during my adolescent
years. I cannot put mto
words what that experience
has been like. but it has
been \VOnderful.
Won't vou be the witness
He wants you to be'?
(The Rev. Clzarlc•.\ Marker
is retired pa.\tor of the
Church of the Na::.arene and
is secretar) oj the Mason
Coullfv
J\1/inisteria/
Association).

�•

Page AS

:The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 10, 2009

Community Calendar

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Poor risk for.
future commitment

Public meetings
l'ucsday• .July 14
Meigs
County Hoard of Ekc:tions.
8:30 a.m. meeting at the
office.
Wednesday, .July 15
PAGEVILLE - S&lt;.:ipio
Township Trustees, budget
meeting,
6:30
p.m.,
Pagcvillc Town Hall.
PO~mROY

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I am a 60-year-old widow, dating a man
I met on the ]ntL·rnct two year:&gt; ago. We've had our up~
and down:-. but care dc~.·ply for ~nch other. I spend most
nights ut his apartment. "Fdmund'' told me he \\US
divorced t\\ icc. However, I have ~mce di~covered that
he is separated from his second '' ife. not d1vorced.
They have an excellent relationship and have dinner
together once a \\eck. He claims the' never sh&lt;.1tlld
ha\'c manied in the first place.
•
'1\lesday, .Jul) 14
Edmund says he is not the t) pe to con~tantlv tell a
SYRACUSE
- Syracuse
woman that he loves her. and he rareh sa\s it- to me.
Community
Ct'nter
Board
Rec.ently, hb c&lt;_&gt;mputcr had a \ irus. and\\ hen 1 \\ ent to
of
Directors.
7
p.m.
t· fix 1t, h1s c-ma1ls were opened. I \\as curious and read
· HARRISO~VILLE
some of his messages and found out he had told his ex
Harrisonville
O.E.S. #255
he hoped they'd get back together. He is also commumeeting. Refreshments at
nicating \\lth other \\omen, telling them he loves them
6:30 p.m.: meeting at 7:30
and wants to get together.
p.m.
Dllling one of.the times \H' were aparL Edmund conThursday, July 16
fess~d w ha.vmg female fn~nds. but said they meant
nothmg to h1m. 1 have no problem \\ ith friends of the
opposit~? scx. but if you have a steady girlfriend.
shouldn't the other women knov. about her? Othetwise,
he is just setting up these: women to be hurt. Ho•v
. ATHENS
O~io
should I approach him? - Unsure in Florida
rorcstr)
Coopcrat1~e
De~r Unsure: Ecl!nund hu~ you and his not-quite-ex
announces new p~lrtnershtp
hnvenng around whllc he seduces other women. If vou•
and funding ~vit~ Soil a~d
are looking for a future commitment. he is a poor Fisk.
Water
Dtstr.tcts
10
You arc also tcdmil:ally dating a married man '' ho
Southeastern
_Oiuo.
_
doe..,n 't seem particulatl) mterested in divorcing.
The
Oh10
l•orestry
Unless the two of you have an agreement to be excluCooperati,·e
based
in
sive. he,., ill continue to play the field. (In fact. \\C sus~nnol!nc:ed
a
n~w
Athens
pe_ct he'l! do it regardless.) Decide what you want from
partnership th1s week \\tth
th1s relanonsh1p because emotional and phvsical fidelithe
Natural
Resource
ty aren't like!) to be part of it.
C?nservation
S~rvice
Dt;ar Annie: 1 a~t Christmns,l :-em a gift to m) nephe\\
(r"RCS) .an~ area _S_ml and
a~d 1t \\as not aclmowledged. It was one of many times
Wate~ Dts.tnct&gt; 1 hts partth1s has happened, so after a month, I sent an e-mail a--knersh1p wlll gtvc members
ing whether the gift had been received. ~o response_ A
of the . Ohio Forcstr.y
week later, I called and left a messal!e saving l \Va.' wor&lt;;ooperall\·e access to addtlied the package got lost in the mail~Severar davs later I
!1onal cost-share funds durreceh·ed an e~mail thanking me for the gift. In April: I
mg. 2009 that had not been
sent a haby g1ft to a lllece and have heard nothing. Last
a\'allable
pre\'iously.
week, I handed someone a graduation card with a check
Co-or members who
and have received nn ..thank you... fo~ t~at. either.
apply for cost-share proThese are decent, rc~ponstblc tndtvtduals. and I feel
gra1~1s
such
as
t_he
awkward calling to sec whether a gift was received. r
Envu·&lt;?nmental
Q~ahty
always taught my kid!&gt;. tn send thank-you notes because
Incentt~·es_ progra~11 (~!QlP)
they should respect that someone took the time and wus
intere..,ted enough to get them something. Am I expect- .1 &lt;:nd W1ldhle Hab1tat mccnttves P!·'?gram (WHIP)_have
ing ton much? -:- Disappointed Aunt
1 an a?dtttonal opportunitY. to
Dear Aunt: It is a sad fact that gift redpients are otten not
con,idcrate enough to Sa) ''thank you" many fonn. B' all I recen'e these funds outs1de
means, keep calling ore-mailing to fmd out whether }our
gifts were received. Maybe they'll be embarlfused enough
to rememtx!r their manners. If they are repe.at offenders, feel
free to stop sending them gifts altogether, saying you
assume they arc no longer interested in rccei\ ing them.
Dear Annie: 1 had to chuckle when I read the letter
from "Holding My Breath m North Dakota:· who
sa1d a \\Oman in her Pilatcs clas~ passed ~as
I teach Pilates and yoga and can tell you ~thts is quite
commol}. With the Y&lt;triety of positions, movement~ and
twisting. there is compression and pushing on the muscles and intestinal tract. Consequcutly. this is eftectl\ e
in relic\ ing ''.trapped ga~.'' Burping can also occur I do.
ATHENS - O'Bicncss
however. belte\e that. yes. she could have said a simple
..excuse me:· - Linda
Memorial
Hospital
in
Athens will offer a classDear L~n~a: ~!any_ reade~·s were quick to point out
room course aimed at helpthat cxerctsmg, L'Spec,ally Pllates, can cause gas emising older people to refresh
sions. Sonll' suggested "Holding" move her mat elseand improve their driving
where. \\'e'rc cet1ain anyone who has done this will be
~
skills.
relieved to know how common it is.
O'Bleness is offering the
Annie's i\.-lailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
AARP
Driver
Safety
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
Program
!-.Cssion
on
column. Please e-mail your questions to amziesmailThursday, July 23. from
bo'Xcomcast.net, or write to: Annie's JUailbox, P.O.
noon to
4 p.m. in
Box 118190, Chicago, II.. 60611. To ji11d out more
O ' Bieness' Lower Level
about Annie's Mailbox, and read features by other
Room 0 I 0. All dri\ er~. espeCreators Syndictlte writers aud cartoonists, l'isit tlze
cially those who are 50 years
Creators Syndicate Web page lll www.creators.com.
1
or older, arc invited to
'-· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 old
participate in the program.
Developed
by
the
American Association of
Retired Persons (AARP).
the comprehensive classFriday... Mostly · s unny.
Sunday...Pa1tly sunny room refresher course is
Highs in the mid 80s. South with a chance of showers geared 1oward the specific
winds around 5 mph.
and thunderstorms. Highs in needs of drivers who are 50
Friday
night. .. Partly the lower 80s. Chance of years
old
or
older.
cloudy. Lows in the upper rain 40 percent. ·
According to AARP. the
60s. South winds around 5
Sunday
night
and course helps drivers update
mph.
Monday ...Partly cloudy. their driving knowledge and
Saturday...Partly sunny Lows in the lower 60s. skills, prevent tranic crashwith a chance of showers Highs in the mid 80s.
es and violations, and mainand thunderst01ms. Highs in
tain mobility and indepenMonday
night
and
the upper 80s. Southwest
dence.
winds 10 to 15 mph with Tuesda_y...Mostly cloudy. A
Wanda Llewellyn, AARP
gusts up to 25 mph. Chance chance of showers. Lows m driver safety instructor, will
the
lower
60s.
Highs
in
the
of rain 30 percent.
present information about
Saturday night ...Mostly mid 80s. Chance of rain 30 normal changes in vision,
cloudy with a chance of percent.
hearing and reaction time
Tuesday night ...Mostly associated \\ ith aging and
showers and thunderstorms .
in
the provide practical technique!&gt;.
Lows jn the mid 60s. West cloudy
winds I 0 to 15 mph \\ ith C\'Cning ...Then becoming to compensate for these
gusts up to 25 mph. Chance partly cloudy. Lows in the changes. The following topupper 60s.
of rain 50 percen.t.
ics will also be covered:
defensive driving techniques. problem situations
~uch as left turns. right-ofway. interstate traffic. trucks
AEP (NYSE) - 28.59
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS1 and blind spots. how to
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 42.80
DAQ) - 29.59
.
safely use as anti-lock
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 24.84
BBT (NYSE) - 20.86
. brakes. air bags and safety
Big Lots (NYSE) - 19.99
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 16.19
belts, and much mqrl.!.
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 27.95
Pepsico (NYSE) - 54.68
BorgWarner (NYSE)- 30.17
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.10
The cost is $ 12 for AARP
CentUiy Aluminum (NASDAQ) - 5.20
Rockwell (NYSE) - 30.70
membcrs
and S 14 for nonChampion (NASDAQ) - 1.52
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 3.90
members.
Call
AARP
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) Royal Dutch Shell - 47.24
instructor Wanda Llewellyn
3.74
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)- 58.13
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 29.23
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 48.08
at (740) 707-2063 to register.
Collins (NYSE) - 38.81
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.12
Participants must bring
DuPont (NYSE) - 24.50
WesBanco (NYSE) - 14.60
driver'~ license and
their
US Bank (NYSE)- 16.62
Worthington (NYSE)- 11.19
AARP membership card.
Gannett (NYSE)- 3.19
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
General Electric (NYSE) - 10.86
closing quotes of transactions for
Some auto insurance
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)- 15.67
July 9, 2009, provided by Edward
agencies offer discounts.
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 33.62
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills
Consult ) our insurance
Kroger (NYSE)'- 21.43
In GaHlpolls at (740) 441-9441 and
agent
for further informaLimited Brands (NYSE)- 10.89
Lesley Manero in Point Pleasant at
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) - 36.23 (304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.
tion.
~

Clubs and
organizations

_

1

PO:V1EROY - Meigs
Count\' American Cancer
Society Advisory Board
meeting. noon. Pomeroy
Library, new member'
welcome. lunch provided.
call 992-6626. ext. 24 to
RSVP.
SaturdaJ, July 11
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge #411 .
F&amp;AM welcome dinner ror
one-day class members.
Open to members and their
families.

Star ~I ill Park, p1g in a poke
auction.

Church events

·F riday, July 10
LONG B01TOM
Gospel sing featuring
Miller Family. 7 p.m., Faith
Full Gospel Church. Ohio
124.
Monday, .July 13
POMEROY - Vacation
Bible School. Hysell Run
"Jerusalem
Church.
Market Place,''
6-8:30
p.m .. ~tarts today through
Frida).
Saturday, July 11
COOLVILLE - Kids'
RACINE _: Charles and Rible camp "Cmising the
Fanme (Wolfe) Beaver Word". July 12-16. 6 to 8
reunion. 12:30 p.m. at the p.ni. for children. three to
Star Mill Park in Racine. . 12 ) cars of age. also adult
Take covered dish. Famil) class, Faith Han·est Church,
and friends welcome.
Coolville. For more inforSunday, July 12
mation call 740-667-6973.
RACINE
- Theiss
Friday, .Juh 17
MIDDLEPORT.
Reunion. lunch at I p.m ..

Reunions

Vacation Bible School. 6-X
p.m. today and 9-4 p.m.
tomorrow
at
First
Presbyterian Church, theme
is ··camp EDGE."

Other events •
Saturday, July 11
MIDDLEPORT
"Singing in the Street'"
bluegrass gospel concert. 10
a.m. to 6 p.m .. at Corner
Restaurant, South Third
Avenue at Main Street. Free.
742-3106 for information.

Birthdays
Saturday, July 18
- Bill
:V1atlack will observe his
93rd birthda} on July I 8.
Cards may be sent to him
c/o George Dallas. 29918
rolling Ridge Drive. Agoura
Hills. Calif. 9130 I.
P0~1EROY

~Forestry creates partnership with SWCDs including Meigs

J

?f the normal county fund-

mg bec~use of a grant
opportumty called the
Co?perative ~o.ns~rvation
Partnershtp Intt~atJve that
was made avatlable this
year.
President of the Ohio
Forestry · Cooperative,
Tern Jeffers said that "this
gran"t opportunity provides
a firm relationship with
:-.JRCS and local soil and
water districts that will
allow a greater number of
people to participate in
cost-share programs. The
Cooperati\ e Conservation
Partnership Initiative will
also serve as a marketing
tool for services provided
through the Ohio Forestry
Cooperative."
The
Ohio
Forestry
Cooperative formed in
2004 originally named the
Ohio
Premium
Pine
Cooperative trans itioned
into a service based coop-

.

erative in 2008 that
believes in the principles
of "Land Cure·· which is a
land management philosophy that emphasizes long
term stewardship of farm
and forestlands through
investment in conservation
practices.
community
involvement and job ereation, education and outreach, and marketing a
wide range of fore::.! products as the land permits
them to be harvested.
In order to participate in
the
Cooperative
Con::.cn at ion Partnership
Initiative. land owner~ must
qualify for cost-share funding under the same guidelines that your local Soil and
Wuter District requires and
live in Athens. Vinton.
Metgs. Morgan, Perry.
Hocking. or Washington
counties. Additionally~ the
Ohio Forestry Cooperative
has a locnl ~coring sheet that

O'Bleness
offers
refresher
course for
older drivers

--------------------....1
.Local Weather

Local Stocks

.

I

will a11ow them to prioritiLe
projects over the next year
Interested
landown::A
should attend one of th;:p
informational sessions that
are being offered later this
month.
Athens County - Tuesday.
July 21. 7 to 8 p.m. Athens
Library, 30 Home Street.
Athens:
~1organ County - Friday.
July 24.7 to 8 p.m .. Reicker
Bldg.. 155 E . !\lain St.,
McConnellsville:
Vinton
County
Saturday. July 25. 9 to 10
a.m.. Community Bldg.,
31935 State Route 93N
McArthur:
To learn more about the
Ohio Forestry Cooperative
or CCPI Grant residents can
call (866) 699-7463 or visit
w\vw.ohioforestrycooperative.com or contact the
Meigs County Soil and
Water Conservation District
office.

Spinnln
Classes
Low ·Impact
Tuesdays@ 10:30 a.m.
Mondays at 5:30p.m.
at the Kountry Resort Campground
Cost: $5.00 per person

All ages and fitness levels are
welcome.

High Impact
Tuesdays@ 4:30 p.m.
Wednesdays @5:30 p.m.

Indoor cycling with a
"Kick~'.

(740) 992-2161

Tuesdays at 6:00 p.m.
Thursdays at 6:00 p.in.
Saturdays at I0:00 a.m.
Classes are located at the
Kountry Resort Campground
(For directions call992-6488)

"Enjoy tlze same couifortable
atmosphere a11d the same great
workout."
Times of Portland locatiot1 to be announced
at alater date. Contact tlze Meigs Wellness
Ce11tet at 992-2161 for more details.

�Inside
Sakk reitrt'S, Page B2
1\IASCAR's new policy, Page 83
LGPA commissioner's exit, Page B4

Bl

The Daily ·Sentinel

Friday, July 10, 2009

Phelps breaks 100 fly World
record at US nationals

Eury Jr.

calls split
with Junior
the right one
JOLIET. Ill. (AP) - Hb
race day results with Dale
Earnhardt Jr. in a stead)
decline, crew chief Tony
Eury Jr. lost confidence in
his setups and strategies.
He .quit talking with
Earnhardt on the radio
because every brief com·ersation was dissected by critical fans and media.
Earnhardt can fed the
weight of NASCAR and its
fans on him at times as the
Art's most popular driver.
~ when he failed. it \vas
bis cousin and loyal crew
chief who often took: the
often unfair hit.
When team owner Rick
Hendrick pulled the plu~ on
the unproductive relatiOnship in late May. Eury was

•

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Michael Phelps broke the
world record in the I 00meter butterfly at the U.S.
national
championships
Thur~day. giving him ownership of five individual
world marks.
The J4. time Olympic gold
medalist swam the two-lap.
final in 50.22 seconds at the
Indiana
University
Natatonum . He lowered Ian
Crocker's mark of 50.40 set
at the 2005 world championships in Montreal.
Phelps led at 50 meters
with a split of 23.83. just
three-tenths off worldrecord pace. Known for his
strong finishes, he pulled
clear down the stretch to
beat Tyler McGill. who
touched in 51.06. Aaron
Peirsol was third in 51.30.
"Crock had a ton more first
50 speed than I did. That's
something I've real!) been
working on." Phelps said.

''I've always been able to
come home pretty strong. I
finally got the front half a little
bit faster. If I can get that even
fa-;ter. I'll be in better shape."
Phelps
holds
worla
records in the I 00 and 200
flys. 200 and 400 individual
medleys. and the 200 free.
Phelps had owned the 100
fly mark for a day at the
2003
world
meet
in
Barcelona. But Crocker took
it from him a day later, then
lowered it twice more.
"I still remember the day
at worlds when I broke it
and the next day Crock
broke it and Cmck's had it
ever since." he said. "To
finally be able to get it
tonight means a lot."
Last month, Phelps won
the event at a meet in
Montreal with a then-personal-best of 50.48.
"Crock actually texted me
after and wished me all the
luck and telling me that was

my record:~ he said. ''Th&lt;~t
meant a lot. from a competitor and a friend and a classy
guy. We ha~ amazing battles
back and torth. Those are
somethino
e I definitelv
• miss.''
Crocker hasn't swum
competitively since loo;ing
the 100 fly to Phelps at the
Bejing Olympics. where
Phelps won a record eight
gold medals.
Phelps' victory gave him a
spot in the event at the world
championships later this
month in Rome. He already
qualified in the 200 fly and
200 freestyle as he continues
his transformation from
swimming middle distances
to sprints.
Rebecca
Soni,
the
Olympic silver medalist.
won the I00 breaststroke in
an American-record time of
I :05.34. She erased the
mark of 1:06.20 set by
Jessica Hardy at the 2005
world championships.

AP photo

Michael Phelps celebrates after setting a world record of
50.22 seconds in the finals of the men's 100-meter butterfly at the U.S. National Swimming Championships in
Indianapolis, Thursday.

;:~:l&gt;i~!~%~epEi~hi";, ·~~J Shoppach hils slam, leads Indians past WhRe Sox Riverside
Ope posts

say. 'Is it worth it?'" Eury
said. "And it wasn't."
CHICAGO (AP)- Kelly
Eury was back at the truck Shoppach hit a grand slam
Thursday for the tirst time and had a career-high five
since the longtime duo were RBis. and the Cleveland
separated with Earnhardt in Indians built a big lead
the midst of one of the worst Thursday before holding on
starts of his career. He 'II be for a 10-8 victory over the
crew chief for Brad Chicago White Sox.
Keselowski 's
Hendrick
Five Cleveland relievers
Motorsports
team
for combined for 4 2-3 scoreSa~urday night's race at Jess innings against a
Ch1cagoland Speedway -.a Chicago club that has
less pressure-packed post· scored 96 runs in its last 15
tion than working \Vith games. The Indians' bullpen
enterc::d with a 5.13 ERA.
Earnhardt.
,ry was excited,.relax.ed ~Tony S1pp (1-0). who
·~!ked abou~.rac.mg Wtth retired the only two batters
nmg to Jo~e thts week- he faced. earned his first
e~d. a s~arp dtfference fr~m major league win. Kerry
hts
fmal
races wtth Wood oot four outs for his
Earnhardt.
11th sa~·e.
. Earnha~dt
and . Eury
Ryan Garko had four hits.
stgned With Hendnck last two runs scored and an RBI
season in one o~ !~e mo_st for the Indians, who won for
ballyhooed acgm~Ition~ Ill only the sixth time in 23
NAS~AR
histo~y. All games since June 13. They
Hendnck got for hts money had been outscored 38-16 in
was one victory in 48 ra7es losing their previous five
and endless specu!ation games against the White
abo~t ,the .state . ot the Sox.
cousms relattOnshtp.
Chicaao
pitchers com0
Their season morphed bined to walk 10 batters and
from slow start I? prolong~d hit another. The White Sox
slump. to a. scnes_ of nus- also made two errors in lostakes and di~trac.tions that ing for just the third time in
f~rced He~dnck t~to shuf- their last 12 games.
flmg the hneup. Eury was
With the score 2-all in the
moved into a research and second. White Sox starter
development role, and Clayton Richard (3-3) folLance Mc~rew took. over as lowed Garko 's single by
Eam~ard.t s c~ew chief.
walking Jamey Carroll and
. He s sho\\ n flas~es of Ben Francisco. Shoppach
Improvement,, but hts final sent Richard's next pitch
results ~aven t bee~ much into the left-field seats for
tter smce the switch, as hb first career grand slam.
~ardt. has gone from I Richard was relieved by
.. m pomts to 21st. .
D.J. Carrasco, who gave up
A lot of people put him three third-inning runs. The
on a pedestal., he does~'t first scored when he walked
~eed to be on. Eury sat~. Shoppach with the bases
Th~y put a lot of pressUI.e loaded. another on a doubleon hu~ to be sor~ebody he s play grounder and the third
not gomg to be.
While Eury remamed
Please see Victory, 84
positive he could spark
Earnhardt into a Chase for
the championship contender, the results showed it
was time for a change. He
b.ad mixed feelings about
the decision. On one hand
R.e was ready to leave the
daily scrutiny that comes
?Vith the job. On the other.
CLEVELAND (AP) Eury felt he let down his The Cleveland Cavaliers
cousin by not living up to and Anderson Varejao - the
the lofty expectations.
energetic big man with long.
"Dale Jr. is a great race curly hair known to the
car driver. but I just think team's fans as "Wild Thing"
that he's ~ot ~o much pres- - have agreed on a multisure on htm that he doe~n 't year contract.
enjoy it right now," Eury
Cavaliers
General
said . "I told him, 'Man. you Manager Danny Fe_rry
just need to start enjoying announced the sigmng
self more.' That's kind Thursday afternoon, though
here I was at.''
• terms were not disclosed.
•
So Eury escaped the The 6-11 center/forward
weekly grind of the from Brazil has played five
t-J'ASCAR circus, not even years 111 the NBA, all with
watching Cup races his tirst the Cavaliers.
£ew weeks off. He spent
The deal was first reported
fime "chilling a lot," but by The Plain Dealer late
was thrilled when the Wednesday. Agent Dan
chance came to call the Fegan told the newspaper
shots for a pronl!Stng that the club and Varejao
prospect in rookie Cup w·n- aereed on a six-year contract
ner Keselowski. ·
worth up to $50 million.
Eury's
father
is Fegan did not return mesKeselowski's crew chief in
sages Thursday from The
Associated Press.
Please see Nascar, 84
Ferry said that after

i:

fl

•
C,
tee timeS
10f
firrst -r:ound
l.'

MASON. W.Va. - The
following is a list of
Saturday's tee times for the
first round of Riverside
Golf's Riverside Open first
' round:
Fields,
McCauley
I Brent

I

De•ncl&lt;. Yonker

Jon

1;3.0 JIJl1,
Scott Hussell. M1ke Stgler, Sterlrng
Shtelds, Sean G1bbs
~

Fred Bryant, Curt•s Roush. Dr. Robert
Tayengo. Curry Haggerty
~

Roy Johnson .Jr.. Roy Johnson Sr , Ryan
Norris. Jeff Caldwell

U!!...a.m.

Tom Dotson, Larry Whobrey, M1ke
Ralston, Steve Safford
S;,SQ AJil.
Joseph Rogers. Jeremy Vallet. Jefl
Bryant, Garrett Humphrey

Urn.

Jimmy Anderson. Camero,... Bonham.
Matt Moore, Joey Gossett

s..:..1.0....a.

Dave Nibert. Craig Simpkins
Anderson, Gabe Scott

J•m

9..:20a.m.

i

1

I

Pat Clay. Aaron Hunt•ng. Ned Webber,
Todd Fugate

9_;30JI..m.

Chris Johnson, Garret{ R1fe
lucas. Gary Richards

Terry

~m.

Cart King. Jason King, P.J. G•bbs, Jeff
Arnold
9:5~La.m•

NaJee Muhammad, B1ll Wlllan, Vanco
Dawson

1lla...m.
Mike· Haynes, Aaron B1ckle. Morgan
Dobbins, John McDonald

AP photo

Cleveland Indians Kelly Shoppach, right, gets congratulated by Jamey Carroll after his
grand slam during the second inning of a baseball game against the Chicago White Sox
Thursday, in Chicago.

·Cavaliers reach deal
to retain Varejao

•

:U!ta.m..

Varejao did not exercise his
option on a $6.2 million
contract for next season,
making him an unrestricted
free agent. both sides wanted to reach a new deal to
keep him with the Cavaliers.
''From the ~tar1 of free
agency, Anderson made it
clear he wanted to be a part
of our future and that he
loved being in. Cleveland,"
Ferry said. ''He brings many
valued contributions to our
team on and off the court
and plays with relentless
passion and energy every
play. He is an elite defender
and we want to continue
building our strong defensive identity.''
Known for hi:. hustle,
Varejao posted career-highs
with 42 starts. 8.6 points per
game and a field-goal percentage ~f .536 last ~eason.

Please se~ Varejao, 81

10;_1.QJLm.
Jim Freeman, Bruce Wetherholt. Reid

Please see Tee times, 84

In this May 16, 2008 file
photo, Cleveland
Cavaliers' Anderson
Varejao, from Brazil, celebrates after a basket
against the Boston
Celtics in the third quarter of Game 6 of the NBA
basketball Eastern
Conference semifinals in
Cleveland. The Cleveland
Cavaliers and Anderson
Varejao reportedly have
agreed on a six-year contract that could be worth
as much as $50 million.
Agent Dan Fegan told
The Plain Dealer late
Wednesday that the club
and Va'rejao have agreed
on a new contract. The
team would not confirm
the report Thursday
morning.
AP photo

�--~------------------ - -

-~

- - ---~-.,..._~------:----~~-

· Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel .

Friday, July 10,

www .mydailysentinel.com

Sports Briefs
EHS' first
annual5K Road Race
TUPPERS PLAINS
The Ea.'tem High
School Athletic Boosters wtll be hosting the
First Annual Eagcl 5K Road Race on August l
at St. Pau United Methodist Church in Tuppers
Phuns. Ohio.
Registration begins at 7:30 a.m. in the
Cheaper Place parking lot (across the road
from Annie's Place). Pre-registratton is $12
(received by July 30), and the cost is $15 to
registration on race day.
The race will be!!in and end at St. Paul
United Methodist Church and will run on the
surronding roads and streets. The top three
male and female overall finishers will receive
awards along with the top three male and
female one mile fun run finishers. T-shirts will
be provided for the first 5 registrants.
The age division for both males and females
are as follows: 14 and under. 15-18. 19-25.2635. 36-49. and 50 and o,·er.
For more information please contact Josh
Fogle, (740) 667-9730. Registration checks
may also be sent to Fogle at 2038 Campbell
Street. Coolville. Ohio 45723.

PPJSHS wrestling booster
meeting

Mason County Youth
Football League

Cliffside Golf is offering a free golf clinic each Saturday at 9 a.m.~
~
For information and sign up call 4./6GOLE. Adults and children welcome.

Fans turn out to honor slain
ex- NFL QB McNair
NASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP)
- Fans turned out by the
'thousands Thursday. donning their Tennessee Titans
gear or their finest clothes
on a steamy hot day for the
chance to honor slain exNFL quarterback Steve
MeNan's accomplishments
and charity work.
They lined up outside a
funeral home to view the
closed silvery-gray casket
topped with white lilies
next to a portrait of the former Titans star. A helicopter prov1ded live TV
footage as McNair's body
was taken by hearse to his
church for a memorial service planned for Thursday
night.
. Jean Ryan got in line near~y two hours before doors
opened at Mount Zion
Baptist Church for a threehour visitation to say goodbye to the man she had followed since the NFL team
moved to town in 1997.
· "I love him. and he was a
beautiful man and I will
'remember not the circumstances of his death but the
great things he did for the
Titans and the community,"
she said, wearing a Titans'
pin and crying at what she
~ailed the "utter sadness."
:. Titans
owner
Bud
·1-.dams. Tennessee Gov.
Phil Bredesen, and many
of McNair's current and
former teammates were
expected to attend the
'memorial
service.
Derrick Mason, who

played with McNair in
both
Tennessee
and
Baltimore. -was scheduled
to speak along with
Titans coach Jeff Fisher.
Attorney Roger May.
who represented McNair in
his two drunk driving
arrests, said he didn't
anticipate anyone from the
McNair family making any
statements Thursday. With
people lined up on a hill
beside the church behind
h tm. the attorney said people responded to McNair.
"They not only respect
what he did on the field but
what he did in the community," May said.
Church officials anticipated up to 5,500 attending the
memorial
service
and
opened up overflow areas
for seating.
T he T itans estimated
approximately 9.000 people had visited L P Field.
where fans cou ld reminisce about his career.
between Wednesday and
midday Thursday. A couple of radio stations were
broadcasting from the
stadium where the shop
had sold out all of its
McNair
merchandise
except for a few chil dren's shirts.
Derrick
Lewis
said
McNair "put the Titans on
the map."
Lewis, wearing a Titans
jersey, said he and his family were devastated when
they learned of McNair's
death. Police have said

McNair. 36, was shot four
times Jul) 4 by a girlfriend
who then krlled herself in a
condo McNa1r shared with a
friend.
''Myself and my family
were completely shocked
and some of us were crying
because you almost feel like
you are related," Lewis said.
But Lewis said the details
of the killing haven't
changed his opinion of
McNair.
''I will always remember
him for the good things that
he did for the community
and the Tennessee Titans,"
Lewis said. "Nobody's perfect."
Annetta Moore brought
her grandson, Darrien
James. 9. and granddaughter
Olivia Cole, 11. to the funeral home and said she
planned to take them to LP
Field for another public
memorial Thursday and visit
his restaurant.
Moore said it wasn't
uncommon to see McNair
hanging out around town.
"I think he just blended
right in with everybody."
Moore said.
Loretta Lang said the
details of the death should
be a private family issue and
shouldn't take away from
his charitable work.
''He's definitely going to
be missed because he gave
back like many of the original Houston Oilers that
became the Tennessee
Titans." she said after viewing the casket.

Varejao

Oklahoma City Thunder.
and other potential signand-trade offers from other
teams without salary-eap
space. Fegan said several
teams were willing to offer
Varejao contracts that averaged $10 million per season.
A new Varejao deal is a
sign any previous animosity
between the player and
Cavaliers management is no
long an issue. The two sides

bickered over a contract in
2007. and Varejao missing
the first pm1 of that season
in a holdout.
The deal reportedly will
keep Varejao 's salary cap
number to a little more than
$7 million for the 20 l 0-11
season, which could help
Cleveland's position next
summer. when Cavaliers
superstar LeBron James
potentially could be a free
agent.

14

against the •
Carolina
Hurricanes
during the second period of a
hockey game
in Denver.
Sakic, the
Avalanche's
longtime captain who led
the team to
two Stanley
Cup titles, will
retire on

Cliffside to offer free golf clinic

WELLSTON - The Wellston Ohillco
Society will hold the annual Toni Parsons Mega
Summer Classic on Friday, July 17, through
Sunday, July 19, at Veterans Memorial Park.
There is a $200 entl) fee for the l 0-andunder and 12-and-under divisions in baseball, -while there will be a $300 entry fee in
softball for the 10-and-under. 12-and-under.
14-and-under and 16-and-under divisions.
There is also a $150 entry fee for the 8and-under age groups in both baseball and
softball.
Each team will be guaranteed 4 games.
Awards will be given to the top two teams in
division. A $100 non-refundable deposit
Point Pleasant Junior High each
must be paid prior to the draw on July 15.
Soccer
Each team must furnish two approved
balls and only 36 teams will be accepted.
Contact Jason Wilson at 740-357-8471 or
There will be a Point Pleasant Junior High
School soccer meeting on Monday, July 13 John Derrow at 740-710-5069 for more
at 6 p.m. in the PPHS commons area. This information, or email jsderrow@aol.com

when the Cavs won a
league-high 66 regular-sea~on games but were eliminated in the Eastern
Conference
finals
by
Orlando.
: The signing is the second
)najor offseason move by
the Cavaliers, who completed a blockbuster trade June
25 to acquire center·
Shaquille O'Neal from the
Phoenix Suns.
: "Andy wanted to stay in
Cleveland." Fegan told The
flain Dealer. ''He f~els there
is unfinished business - to
win an NBA championship."
: Varejao had interest from
several teams. including the
Portland Trail Blazers and

puck up the ice

The Mason County Youth Football
League will be holding footban and checrleadi ng sign-ups for ages 6-12 as S-n ·S
Window Tinting Monday through Friday
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
A birth certificate and registration fee of
$40 are required.
The MCYBL camp -will be held July 2024 at Harmon Park. 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m ..
sign-ups will run during that time as well.

POINT PLEASAI'\iT - There will be a
PPJSHS wrestling booster meeting July 14 at
5 p.m. in the wrestling room behind Saunders
Football Field. Anyone interested in running
for an officer's position for the high school
ueeds to be at this meeting.
Nominations can also be taken by phone
call or in letter form.
All parents both Jr. High and High School
are encouraged to attend.
For more inforn1ation please contact John
Bonecutter at (304) 593-1562.

fromPage Bl

In this Dec. 11 ,
2006, file
photo,
Colorado
Avalanche center Joe Sakic
moves the

!Tieeting is for all boys and girls. grades 6·8.
mterested in playing junior high soccer. All
players and parents are encouraged to attend.

Wellston to hold youth.baseball and softball
tournaments

T~ursday,

and end his
20-year NHL
career.

Sakic steps away after
DENVER (AP) - Stoic Joe
Sakic finally cracked. allowing
for a rare show of emotion.
Delivering a speech that had
kept him up most of the night
fretting. th~ tOngtime Colorado
Avalanche captain broke down,
his voice betraying him as he
stared into a room packed with
family, friends and teammates
-even the governor of the state.
Sak.ic officially hung up his
skates Thursday. ending his
standout 20-year career. Try as
he might. he simply couldn't
get through his prepared
speech without choking up.
"So many great memories,"
Sakic said, fighting back tears.
The price of Burnaby.
British Columbia. Sakic had
hoped to play one more season.
possibly culminating his career
by suiting up for Canada at the
2010 Vancouver Olympics.
His body simply wouldn't
allow tt.
Sakic rni~sed most of the
2008-09 season ow ith an aching
back that required surgery to
repair a herniated disk. He
tried to make his way back
onto the ice before the end of
the season. but couldn't.
That's when he suspected
his career was finished.

AP photo

20~year

"I didn't think I could be the
player I wanted to be," said the
40-yC&lt;1r-old Sakic. who has been
the face of the fr-anchise since the
team moved to Denver in 1995.
"1 always said to myself that the
minute I thought I'd slipped, and
not be the player I wanted to be.
it was time for me to go."
Sctkic announced his retirement in the same room of a
Denver hotel \Vhere John Elway
did. Only fitting. since both were
icons in the Mile High City.
''We can't put into words what
he meant to this franchise and to
our hockey fans," Avalanche
president Pierre Lacroix said.
Sakic's No. 19 sweater will
also be retired. getting raised to
the Pepsi Center rafters during a
ceremony at the season opener,
which is not yet scheduled. It will
be just the third in the 14-year
history of the Avalanche.joining
Patrick Roy (33) and Ray
Bourque (77). TI1e organization
also retired fow· when they were
the Quebec Nordiques.
"He's such a great leader.
He made the team top-notch,''
Paul Stastny said.
Sakic once played alongside
Paul Stastny's father. Peter.
the two on the same powerplay unit in Quebec.

career

··He was a complete player
and one of the greatest in history." Peter Stastny said i.
statement.
Sakic ce11ainly had an
impressive resume.
He wore the captain's "C" for
16 su'aight seasons and guided
the team to Stanley Cup titles in
1996 &amp;nd 2001, won league
MVP honors in 2001. was a 13time A11-St.:1r and led Canada to
an Olympic gold medal in 2002.
Sakic also won the Lady
Byng Memorial Trophy for
sportsmanship in 200 I , showing his true character by handing the Stanley Cup over to
Bourque after winning the title
and letting the longtime
defenseman hoist the trophy.
It was a moment that friend
and longtime teammate Adam
Foote mentioned in his speech
Thursday.
,
''A humble superstar that you
are. you stood back, you let a
gray-bearded. 22-yeru· seasoned
veteran. who \vas waiting
patiently like a young boy on
Ch1istma'i morning, hoist his~ ·
Stanley Cup," Foote said.·
class act of yours might go do
in history a-; one of the NHL's
most memorable moments that
united the entire hockey world."

Goming The 2009 5aby 5entin_
T he Daily Sentinel
Baby E dition is a Special
E dit ion filled with
photographs of local
children- ages newborn to
5 year s old. The Baby
E d ition will appear in
July 22nd issue. Be s
your child, grandchild
relat ives involved!
Complete the form below
and enclose a snapshot or
wallet size picture. Enclose
payment with picture.

Send To:

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�-----------:--":'"""':'~-~--':"":"""------------..----~---~-------

Friday, July to,

· Mayfield case puts spotlight on
NASCAR drug policy
COLORADO SPRINGS,
Colo. (AP) Although
NASCAR contends it has the
st anti-dopmg procedures
sports, some experts see
•
ws in the policy and question whether drivers are getting a fair shake in the Jab or
a safe ride on the track.
The debate between outfits
that run Olympic-style testing
programs and leagues that
enforce their own
NASCAR. baseball and the
1\IFL among them - has
been going on for a while, but
it's taking on new relevance
in the wake of Jeremy
Mayfield's case against
NASCAR.
NASCAR suspended the
40-year-old driver May 9,
eight days after failing a random dmg test. NASCAR has
said Mayfield tested positive
for methamphetamine. but he
has denied ever using the illegal drug.
.
Last week, a federal JUdge
issued an injunction and overturned the chug suspension to
Jet Mayfield to compete.
NASCAR is appealing the
ige 's ruling, saying that
•
owing "a proven methamphetamine user" back on the
track could lead to fatal consequences for other competitors and fans.
The Mayfield case "will be
used m: Exhibil 1 of what can
go horribly wrong when you
don't have an effective policy
in place," said Travis Tygart,
the CEO of the U.S. AntiDoping Association. which
oversees America's Olympic
athletes.
"The truly clean drivers,
frankly. should be outraged,''
Tygart said. "Because you
either have a d.mg user who got
off on a technicality due to poor
policy, or you have a clean athlete who is falsely accused.
Either way, I'd be ~ared to
death if I were a driver.''
NASCAR
spokesman
Ramsey Poston conceded the

policy wasn't perfect. and
that NASCAR is alwa)s
looking for places to make
improvements.
But nobody. he said. should
question the intent. A big difference between NAS CAR
and other sports is NASCAR
must be on the lookout for
drugs that enhance perfor~ance and those that impair
It.
"Our spott is different, and
that's why, again, maybe the
whole issue is so simple it
confuses people," Poston
said.
Despite being cleared to
race, Mayfield couldn ·t find a
ride for the Pepsi 400 in
Daytona. and on Thursday,
his attorney said he would not
be in Chicago for this weekend's race.
Expe1ts from the World
Anti-Doping Agency and the
Anti-Doping Research lab m
Los Angeles joined Tygart in
flagging a number of elements in the NASCAR polic~
that don't confonn to standards used by Olympic
sports .
Among the flaws. they
said, was NASCAR's lack of
a published list of banned
substances for drivers.
''Unfathomable," said Gary
Wadler. who helps design
WADA's list of banned substance~. "I can'L conceive of
any athlete who was going to
be drug tested and not know
what drugs they can take and
are not allowed to take. It
makes no sense to me. The
whole program is a nonstarter
without a list.''
NASCAR disputes that.
saying there is, in fact. a list
that was distributed to teams
at the beginning of the season
when they were required to
have their crews drug tested.
That list was nowhere as
detailed as the list WADA
puts out, but NASCAR has a
reason for that. as well.
'·I wish someone would

look. up that WADA list and
attempt to tell me if it educates them on what they can
or cannot take." said David
Black. CEO of the Aegis
Sciences Corp .. which runs
NASCAR 's program. "Eve!)
participant has my cell phone
number. Any pmticipant is
allowed to call me about any
issue related to a supplement,
a prescription. I do speak with
them. They're all given that
opp01tunity." .
Tygrut also said testing progrruns should be transparent,
independent from the spmt.
and should include effective
sanctions that are clearly
spelled out, along with a fair
process for those who are
being punished.
NASCAR 's 5 1/2-page policy lays out a path to reinstatement for banned drivers
but calls only for "indefinite"
suspensiOns, with no specific
time frames. Cases run by
WADA and USADA call for
a two-year ban on a first
offense and a lifetime ban on
a second. with a clearly
defined appeals and arbitration process. along with
opportunities for reductions
due to unusual circumstances.
Don Catlin. the founder of
Anti-Doping Resemch who
used to lead the WADAaccredited lab at UCLA.
agrees with NASCAR in saying that WADA standards
ru·cn 't the onI) ones that are
acceptable. But he said he
finds it troubling whenever a
spmt administers its own
drug-testing program.
Aegis. based in Nashville,
Tenn., tests samples and
advises NASCAR on its policy. Final decisions are made
by NASCAR officials in consultation with Black.
"Programs need to involve
people who don't have a
stake in it, who don't really
care and will try to see the
facts as the&gt; are." Catlin said.
'·Independence is the word.

~uestions, confusion suit U.S.
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) It's suit madness at the U.S.
national championships.
Swimmers are experimenting with - and sometimes
tearing - various models at
$500 a pop. An inspector
makes sure everyone is wearing only one suit and it's on a
list approved by swimming's
world governing body.
Manufacturers' reps are
fielding compliments, complaints and questions about the
sleek suits that have brought
faster times and controversy to
the sport.
"This is a very suit-oriented
meet," Olympic sprinter
Cullen Jones said Thursday.
The favorite query on
Hollywood's red carpets who are you wearing?- is a
frequently asked question on
!deck and in the small room
where swimmers are .required
report before therr races.
s week, ~ey have to show
~p a few mmutes early so an
• tnspector can double-check
that what th.ey're w~aring
matc.hes the ~nd of smt they
previ.ously srud they would
race m.
.
At a glance. an .mspector
can see a postage-size FINA
stamp on the back of suits that
have been deemed legal by the
sport's governing body.
The inspection is part of
USA Swimming's effort to
implement FINA's rules on
approved suits at its sanetioned events, beginnmg this
week.
Jones is sponsored by Nike,
but the company got out of the
competitive swimsuit business
last year. So he has their permission to try other suits,
including those by Arena and
laked.
"I'm just trying to get the
feel right because the last
thing l want to think about is
suit." Jones said. "I've
~ted three suits so far."
•
Getting into the skintight
suits is a challenge in itself.
with swimmers needing extra
time to dress. They're using
plastic bags to slide the material over their feet and donning
gloves to ease their hands and
atms inside some models.
Another pair of hands is needed to Lip and unzip them.
"l don't like the rubber
suits," said Olympic bronze
medal-winning sprinter Cesar
Cielo of Brazil, who tried

t

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

2009

Arena's X-Giide. "I just want
to make sure everyone is on
the same level as far as equipment. It's the situation we're
living in right now."
Aaron Peirsol was wearing
the once-banned X-Glide
when he reclaimed the I00meter backstroke world record
on Wednesday.
Speedo allows its contracted
athletes to wear whatever suit
they want while racing,
according to Craig Brommers.
vice president of marketing.
Allison Schmitt qualified
for the world championships
this week wearing a Jaked for
the first time. She usually
wears a Speedo LZR. "I feel
like the suits are the same. but
I likeo really it." she said. "But
I really liked the LZR. too.''.
The various suits have their
pros and cons.
Garrett Weber-9a1e said l~e
could feel the zipper on his
Speedo LZR br~aking as ~e
bent on the startmg blocks m
the 50-meter freestyle heats
Thursday.
.
The laked polyurethane S~It
has ~aused a ~uzz because .m
certaJ~ colors It appears qUite
reveal mg. It's no longer legal
to wear a so~called modesty
suit underneath.
"It leaves little to the imagination, but you do teel fast in
it," Jones said. smiling.
USA Swimming mandated
that manufacturers be in
Indianapolis
with
their
approved swimsuits available
for all swimmers on a purchase, loan, giveaway or other
basis. Because Speedo is a
USA Swimming sponsor. it is
allowed to set up inside the
Indiana
University
Natatorium.
Other manufacturers are
handing out suits from a large
white tent behind the building,
although reps have been given
deck passes.
Specdo brought 1,000 suits
to nationals, Brommers said.
Superstar Michael Phelps
wears various versions of the
company's LZR Racer, to
which he hac; unlimited access
because of his endorsement
deal.
Phelps, like many other
swimmers, has grown tirt.!d of
being asked about &lt;&gt;uits.
"You can ask me as many
times as you like:· ht.! said.
"I'm here to swim."
This week, swimmers like

You' go back to the Mitchell
Report, with baseball. In
there. you find a lot of.iu.~tifi­
cation for independence .
Black. however, said he has
never seen a conflict of interest between the recommendations he gives NASCAR and
the decisions NASCAR
makes. Though NASCAR's
drug policy became more
widely publicized this year
when it added random testing, the racing circuit has
been testing drivers on reasonable suspicion for two
decades, Black said.
"In the 20 years I've consulted with NASCAR. I have
never sensed that there is anything other than a sincere
desire to put in place the best
poss1ble program," Black
~aid. 'T ve never run into a
disagreement with NASCAR
with regard to application of
the policy, no matter who the
person was that was determined to be the dmg user."
Now. however. some possible tlaws are being exposed
as the Mayfield case winds its
way through the federal coUit
system.
When athletes sue. judges
almost always refuse to take
cases involving WADA mles
because the clearly defined
appeals
and
arbitration
process ends at the Court of
Arbitration for Sport, based
in Lausanne, Switzerland.
Cases decided there are. like
any. subject to lawyering, but
are nonnally decided by people with more background on
doping issues than most state
or federal judges.
"They've opened this
Pandora's box, and now
they're stuck with it." Catlin
said. ''They can play it out in
whatever court it's going to
play out in. There are people
who can sort it out for them,
but the way the program is
structured, I don't see anyone
sticldng their neck out to get
involved."

swim nationals well

2004 Olympian Dana Vollmer
and Dagny Knutson, a 17year-old rising star from N01th
Dakota, have chosen to wear
Speedo's LZR. although they
aren't under contract.
Then there's Fred Bousquet.
the French sprinter who wore
a Jaked suit when he set the
50-meter freestyle world
record of 20.94 seconds in
A'pril. The mark wao; ratified
Thursday by FL"lA.
RousCJuet\ Spe.edo contr;Jct
ended last year, and he's now
signed with Mizuno. the
Japanese company that's just
getting into high-tech suits.
Italian
star
Frederica
Pellegrini has also signed on.
and Bousquet said Mizuno
wants to expand into Europe.
"It's good and we're still
working
on
it."
said
Bousquet. who plans to travel
to Japan to help refine the
suit's technology.
TYR brought 800 suite; to
nationals, including· two
Tracer models - the mostly
polyurethane Rise and the
mostly neoprene A7. according to team and promotions
director
Matt
Zimmer.
Olympians Matt Grevers and
Amanda Weir. along with

national team member Mary
DeScenza, are among its paid
endorsers.
The California company has
had four other designs rejected
by FINA and is asking a
French court to appoint an
independent legal expert to
detennine why some similar
suits from other manufacturers
were approved by FINA and
TYR's were not.
"We thought it was wild a
year ago when polyurethane
started to come out with the
LZR and the world records
started going down," Zimmer
said ...This is a whole new
level. It's a very troubled deck."
Last month, FINAapproved
202 suits and rejected 10 others for this month's world
championships in Rome.
FINA put the suits through
laboratory tests for thickness,
buoyancy and water resistance, and sent back 136 models to mantifacturers who were
given 30 days to resubmit
modified designs.
The United States and
Australia have expressed disappointment with FINA's
decision to approve modified
versions of suits initially
rejected for competition.

Sports Shorts
Ochoa, Kerr out front early
at Women's Open
BETHLEHEM, Pa. (AP) - Top-ranked Lorena Ochoa,
2007 champion Cristie Kerr and qualifier Jean Reynolds
each shot a 2-under 69 to share the eru·Iy lead in the opening round of the U.S. Women's Open.
.
Birdies were hard to come by Thursday on the slick,
undulating greens and narrow fairways of Saucon Valley
Country Club, which played at its full length of 6,740
yards.
Ochoa, looking for her first Women's Open title, had. t~o
birdies and two bogeys on her first nine, including a b1rd1e
putt of more than 50 feet on the second hole.
Kerr hit 15 greens and 10 fairways in a round of three
birdies and a bogey.
Reynolds, a two-time winner on the Futures Tour, had
four birdies and two bogeys.
Defending champ Inbee Park is among the afternoon
statters.

Bengals sign FB Fui Vakapuna
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cincinnati Bengals said
Thursday they have signed fullback Fui Vakapuna (FOO'ee vah-kuh-POO' -nuh) of Brigham Young.
Vakapuna is the first of the Ben gals· three seventh-round
picks, and the fifth of the team's 11 picks to sign.
Terms of the contract were not released.

Busch says Stewart
'dumped him' at Daytona
JOLIET, ILL. (AP) - Kyle Busch says Tony Stewatt
caused him to wreck on the last lap at Daytona
International Speedway last week, and questioned if drivers
should be allowed to win if they cause an accident that lets
them take the lead.
Busch says a driver should be black-flagged if he triggers
a wreck late in the race and goes on to win. Busch says he
has no problems with a driver bumping the one ahead of
him out of the way if it doesn't cause an accident.
At Daytona. Busch took the lead on the next-to-last lap
and tried to fend off a hard-charging Stewart. He successfully blocked Stewart once, but when he tried to do it again
Stewart hooked Busch's right rear fender instead, sending
Busch into the wall a few hundred yards from the finish.

Victorino, Inge elected by fans
to All-Star game
NEW YORK (AP) - Philadelphia Phillies outfielder
Shane Victorino and Detroit Tigers third baseman Brandon
Inge have been elected by fans to Tuesday's All-Star game
in record-shattering voting exclusively on MLB.com. the
official Web site of Major League Baseball. and the individual club sites.
Victorino received 15.6 million votes and was followed
by San Francisco's Pablo Sandoval, Arizona's Mark
Reynolds, the Los Angeles Dodgers' Matt Kemp and
Washington's Cristian Guzman.
Inge got 11.8 million ballots, finishing ahead of Texas'
Ian Kinsler, the Los Apgeles Angels· Chone Figgins.
Tampa Bays' Carlos Pena and Toronto's Adam Lind.

Treat Gently wins Belmont feature
NEW YORK (AP) - Treat Gently, a stakes winner in
France, won her U.S. debut Thursday in the $48,000
allowance feature for fillies and mares on the turf at
Belmont Park.
The trailer in the six-horse field at the top of the stretch,
Treat Gently angled off the rail to the far outside to launch
the strong rally that carried her past Cable by a half length.
The time was 1:41.67 for the 1 1-16 miles on firm turf.
Ramon Dominguez was aboard for his third winner of the
day. Trained by Bobby Frankel, the British-bred 4-year-old
improved to 3-for-8.
Treat Gently paid $5.30.$3.10 and $2.90. Cable returned
$3 and $2.60. Viva La Flag paid $2.90 to show.

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�BETI-ILEHE,\1. Pa. (AP)LPGA commis,ioner Carolyn
Bivens reportedly is on the
wU) out a' leader of the tour
aficr calls for her resignation
b) key play crs.
Golf Digest and Goltweek
:vtagazinc ~reported on their
'Ncb sites Thursday that the
embattled commissioner will
be repl.tced.
Golf Digest cites multiple
...ourcc~ saying BiYens's four}ear tenure could end as soon
a' next \\eck.
Bi\ ens has 18 months left
on a three-year contract extension signed in early 2008.
Citing a source in toumament
management. Golf Digest
repm1cd that a general agreement on financial tem1s was
reached with Bivem late
Wedne~av.

A faction of tour players
had sent a letter to the LPGA
Tour board seekin!! Bi\'ens'
ouster In the lettcr.the group
said the toUJ· 's problems can't
be blamed on a poor economy
and u nc\v leader is needed.
All that remains to be determined nO\\. according to Golf
Dige,t. is \\hen Bivens leaves.
,-:-She\ gone. It's just a question of whether it's a firing or
,, rc"ignation:· one veteran
player. described as a Bivens
supporter. told Golf Digest.

Nascar
fromPageBl
the
second-tier
Nation\s,ide Series.
When Tony Eury Sr won
'the :\'ationwide race with
Ke,eJO\\ ski
at
Dover
International Speedway, he
became choked up as he
dcfcntled his beleaguered son.
Eur) Jr. and Earnhardt
exchanged some texts and
emotional phone calls after
the move, but their more
recent talks have been about
any thing but racing. They
planned hunting trips and
other acth ities far removed
from the track.
"In no way. shape or
form. am I going to let this
sport get in between me and
Dale," Eury said.
Neither one appeared to
handle the barrage of media
coverage and fan dissatisfaction a~ \\ell as they could
ha\C. Eury blamed the media
pressures several times for
Earnhardt's erratic performance, and said he eventual
ly tired of what he felt was
nothing but negativity.
Earnhardt
told
The
Associated Press in an interview last month that it was
hard for the pair to get beat
up so much from the outside.

Tee times
~20JLJII.

Craig

1~

J R Jones, Shawn Armstrong, Tim
Mul ns Bart Wllhs

10;40JLm.
Jason Goad, Steve Pay. tan Patrick
~Oa.m..

Oenry Humphrey
J mmy Stewart

''There's a lot of journalism out there that disappoints
you. and there's a lot of stuff
that was really, really hard on
Tony Jr. and affected him
personally:· he said.
What pained Eury· even
worse v.as the idea that he
failed his father and the late
Dale Earnhardt as the DEI
leaders.
"They wanted me and
Dale Jr. to go racing and we
wanted to be the front of the
co~pany,"
Eury
said.
''Them two wanted to retire
and kick back and watch us.
Losing Ode Sr. was a big hit
on all three of us. We \s.ere
trying everything we could
to •make Dale Jr. successful
and it just ,., asn 't enough. I
kind of felt like I let everybody down, to a point."
On
Thursday.
Eury
returned to a more gracious
reception. He was applauded and cheered by some former crew members of the
Dale Earnhardt Inc. organization when he finished a
media session.
The maligned crew chief
knows a solid finish this
weekend with Keselowski
could offer a small dose of
redemption.
"I'm just glad Rick put
me in a f?OSition where I
could have a little bit more
fun and do a little bit more.''
he said.
ll.aJn.

Steve Ross. Steve Thacker
Clagg, Joe Ramella

Danny

11:20e m.
Jeremy Tucker, Anthony Reale, Ed
Coon. Jerry Tuci&lt;er

Carroll Steve Fox
M1tch Roush Trent Ro~sh.
Brumf old Joe Doddridge

"And she doe:-n 't deser\'e any
of it.''
l.PGA Tour spokesman
Da' id Higdon reiterated his
statement from earlier in the
week. saying the tow· will not
comment on internal matters.
1111.! LPGA Tour has lost
seven tournaments smce
2007. and there have been a
number of controversies under
Bivens' tenure.
In 2008. she proposed &lt;m
1-:0glish-only policy for tour
players, but it was never instituted. The LPGA includes 121
international players from 26
countries. including 45 from
South Korea.
In October 2006. she was
accused by officials of the
now-defunct tour event near
Atlantic Cit}, r\ 1 .. of backing
out on a promise to maintain a
longtime event.
The news that Bivens will
soon lea\e the organization
came ncar the completion ot
the tirst round of the U.S.
Women's Open- the biggest
weekend of the season in
women's golf.
But players have 'pent the
week sidestepping questions
about the brouhaha. forced to
deal with the controversy as
much as the golf course
The letter sent to the LPGA
Tour board was reportedly

11:10 a.m.
Tony Brown, Nathan Kerns. Ryan
Stewart

from PageBl

Charles Abslen

11:30 am.
Colby James, ~n Palmer Jeff Harper

12'10 o.m.
M1ke Koreski, T1m Mounty, Doug !son
12:20 p m
Heath Rickard. Tom Cremeans. Jake
Vanoy
12:40 p.m.
Tony Dugan, John Ridcmour Dav1d

Reed II, Rav1d Reed

record.
The Indians added a run
in the sixth when Jhonny
Peralta doubled. took third
from PageBl
on right fielder Jermaine
Dye's error and came home
on Victor Martinez's RBI on a single by Garko, who
~ingle to make it 9-2.
has a nine-game hitting
After batting .261 with 21 streak.
homers and 55 RBis in
NOTES: Richard was
200ft his first full major used on three days of rest
league season. Shoppach is because White Sox manager
hitting only .199 with seven Ozzie Guillen wants to use
home runs and 24 RBis this John Danks, Gavin Floyd
and Mark Buehrle at
year.
D~pite the big lead he
Minnesota this weekend ....
was given. Indians starter White Sox SS Alexei
David Huff couldn't earn the Ramirez was 0 for 5, includwin because he lasted only 4 ing a strikeout when he
1-3 innings. He allowed four couldn't check his swing
runs in the third. capped by while being hit by one of
Chris Get.(s two-run double; Huff's pitches. ... Indians
Getz had four hits. Huff gave LF Shin-soo Choo. who had
up two more runs in the fifth. batted .342 in his previous
mcluding AJ. Pierzynski's 15 games, went 0 for 4 with
homer,
before
getting three strikeouts. He also
yanked.
overthrew the cutoff man in
Cleveland starters have a the fifth .... It was the first
5.58 ERA, a big reason the time in 15 games that
&amp; . appointing Indians are in Chicago never held the
last place with a 34-52 lead.

Victory

Friday, July 10,

www.mydaily~cntinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

signed b) more than a do.ren
players. Golf\Veek ~ 1agwjnc
reported when it broke the
story ~1onda).
Golf Digest reported the
letter was signed by marquee
tour players Paula Creamer.
Morgan Pressel. Lorena
Ochoa, Cristie Kerr. Se Ri
Pak. Suzann Pettersen nntl
1\latalic Gulbis, among others.
In tt. the players called for the
installation of temporary
leadership while a search is
conducted for a new commbsioner. the magazine reported.
A source involved with
tournament ownership told
Golf Digest. "No confidence
by the players ts a dagger in
her heart."
Two-time Women's Open
champion Meg ~fallon \\anted the tour's trouble
addressed. but would ha\ c
mther waited until after the
season.
"It's a very sad thing that is
going on." Mallon told The
Associated Press after her first
round of the Open. and before
news of Biven's apparent
demise was reported. "I "'as a
proponent of ha\ ing the prob!ems solved after the end of
the year.... As far as that goes,
I wish it wa-;n't happening
right now."

I

~EW 't ORK (AP) Sho\\ time b putting the 11nal
touches on a six-man super
middleweight round-robin
toumamcnt that will include
two cuiTCnt champion' and
three fom1er U.S. Olympians.
Two people with k.nowiL'dge
of the discussions told The
Associated Press on Thursday
that the details. possibl)
mcluding sites and date,, are
being \\orked out this week
The people spoke on condition of an om mit\ because
negotiations were ongoing.
1be tournament is expected
to include WBA champion
Mikkcl Kessler and WBC
champion Carl Froch along
with IBF middleweight titleholder Arthur Abraham . 'I11e
three Europeans ,., ill be joined
by fom1er U.S. Ol)mpians
Jcmmin Ta\ lor. Andre Ward
and Andre Dirrell.
Showtime issued a statement saying all six fighters
would be in ~ew York on
Monday for a "groundbrcaking boxing announcement:·
but declined to elaborate. Thev
have a combined record of
161-4-l with 117 knockouts .
Abraham. foroch , DiiTell
and Ward ha\e ne\cr been
beaten.
Showtirne ha-. made a big
imcstment in the 168-pound

di\ iston. attempting to build
name recognition for many of
the paiticipanb. Froch knocked
out Ta) lor in the 12th round in
Apiil. Ward beat Edison
Miranda in .f\lay. and Abraham
~at Mahir Oral last month.
Unlike cl imination toumaments, the format would
reward fighters with points
b.tsed on the decision. r\ 'ictory \\Ou1d earn t\\O points,\\ ith
a honus point for a knockout,
and a dra\\ "ould be '' Oith
one point. The four fighters
\\ ith the most pomts at the end
of the round-robin would
advance to seeded scmilinals.
''I've got a lot to say on
cvet) subject. (but) give me a
few days to give you something to talk about." said Dan
Goossen. who promotes
Ward. when asked about the
toumament.
The first scheduled fights
"'ouid pit Dirrel I. a 2004
01) mpic bronze medalist,
t~gainst Froch for the WBC
title: with Abraham moving
up in weight to fight 'Htylor.
The toumamem could be
precisely what boxing needs
after a summer in "hich several big fights were po~t­
poned. the hea\) \\Cight dh ision remained a mess and
mixed martial arts kept cutting into the s!J(m' stagnant

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2009

�Friday, July 10, 2009 ·

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$1 .00 for large

DJspLa.y..Acls

Dally :rn-Column: 9:00a.m.
Monday-Friday for :rnsertton
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-column: 9:00a.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

Mond ay thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

GEIYOURCLASSIEIED LINE AD NOJICED

Call

Professional Services

~DN~f2. IF II~ A
6.oo'V ~\Nb W-Ht;;'(\lt'M

J2tf~D1o ~'I
'fr\IS G.W ./(:; A

Financial

500

'1-10

www.comics.com

600

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1·800·214·0452
galhpoliscareercollege.eclu
Accreclrted Member Accrec!rt·
rng Cooner! for lnclepenclent
Colleges and Schools 12748

Animals

Livestock
7 Angus Bulls reduced
price top blood lines and
pertormance.
$1000
Slate
Run
Angus.
740·286-5395
www.slaterunangus.com
Pets

~

~

2009 by NEA, Inc

Garden &amp; Produce

Want To Buy

Home Grown Vegetables
and
Raspberries
now
available. McKean Farm.
556
Centenary
Rd.
740·446·9442
r.========~
New crop of 112
Runners &amp;
Blue
lake &amp;eans $10.00
a bushel , come &amp;
pick your own call
304-675-6908.

Absolute Top Dollar • sit·
verlgold
coins,
any
10KI14KI18K gold jewairy, dental gold, pre
1935
US
currency,
proof/mint
sets,
diamonds, MTS Co1n Shop.
151 2nd Avenue, Galli·
polis. 446·2842

Instruction ~ Training

Kittens to a good home
only some are mitten
Elementary paws. 441·0797
Certified
teacher will tutor, lor info
call 304-593·4923.
2 Male Yorkies 12 wks
old, vet checked will be
. CLASSIFIED INDEX
small 3·5 lbs $650 each
Legals...........................................................100 Recreational Vehlcles ............................... 1000
1 yr old male Yorkie
Announcements .......................................... 200 ATV ............................................................. 1005
Blrthday/Annlversary:................................. 205 Bicycles ......................................................1010
weighs 3 lbs. 446·3398
Happy Ads ....................................................210 Boats/Accessories .................................... 1015
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215 CamperiRVs &amp; Trailers ............................. 1020
Adorable
kittens
free,
Memoryffhank You ..................................... 220 Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Notices ......................................................... 225 Other ..........................................................1030
(740)992-0309
Personals ..................................................... 230 Want to.buy ...............................................1035
........................................................ 235 Automotive ................................................ 2000
Found on Sandhill Rd fe·
....................................................... 300 Auto Rentai/Lease ..................................... 2005
male
Black
Lab
Service ....................................... 302 Autos .......................................................... 2010
mix,304-674·3085
'!1:11tn•nntiv" .................................................. 304
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Building Materials ....................................... 306 Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Business ...................................................... 308 Parts &amp; Accessorles ..................................2025
Free
Beagapoo has
Caterlng ........................................................310 Sports Utlltty.............................................. 2030
been kept outside, very
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312 Trucks .........................................................2035
Computers ................................................... 314 Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
playful 304·675· 7625 ask
Contractors .................................................. 316 Vans ............................................................ 2045
for Mary
Domestics/Janitorial ................................... 318 Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Electrical ...................................................... 320 Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Free: 4 cute kittens 3
Flnanclal .......................................................322 Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
gray and white; and 1 all
Health ...........................................................326 Commerclal ................................................301 0
Heating &amp; Cooling ....................................... 328 Condominiums ..........................................3015
gray
very
playful
Home Improvements 330
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
740-446-7644
lnsurance ..................................................... 332 Houses for Sale .........................................3025
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334 Land (Acreage) ..........................................3030
700
Music/Dance/Drama .................•.................• 336 Lots ............................................................3035
Agriculture
Other Servlces............................................. 338 Want to buy................................................3040
Plumbing/Eiectrical .....................................340 Real Estate Rentals ...................................3500
Professional Servlces................................. 342 Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Fann Equipment
Repalrs ......................................................... 344 Commerclal ................................................351 0
Rooflng ......................................................... 346 Condomlnlums .......................................... 351 5
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
Security ........................................................ 348 Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
KIEFER BUILT,
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350 Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
TraveVEntertalnment ..................................352 Storage .......................................................3535
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
Ftnanclal.......................................................400 Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
STOCK
TRAILERS,
Financial Servlces .......................................405 Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
Insurance .................................................... 410 Lots .............................................................4005
MENT
TRAILERS,
Money to Lend .............................................415 Movers........................................................4010
CARGO
EXPRESS &amp;
Educatlon ................................,.................... 500 Rentats ....................................................... 4015
HOMESTEADER
Business &amp; Trade School. .......................... 505 Sales ...........................................................4020
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510 Supplies ..................................................... 4025
CARGO/CONCESSION
Lessons ........................................................515 Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
TRAILERS.
B+W
Personal ....................................................... 520 Resort Property ......................................... 5000
GOOSENECK FLATBED
Anlmals ........................................................ 600 Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
$3999. VIEW OUR EN·
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605 Resort Property fOf rent ........................... 5050
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
Horses ..........................................................610 Employment...............................................6000
TORY AT
Livestock......................................................615 Accountlng/Financlal ................................ 6002
Pets...............................................................620 Admlnlstrative/Professionat .....................6004
WWW.CARMICHAEL·
to buy .................................................. 625 Cashler/Cierk ............................................. 6006
TRAILERS.COM
................................................... 700 Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
740·446·3825
O'n •u lnn,.ont ••••••••••-••••••••••••·•••••••······--··705
Clerical ....................................................... 601 o
uce......................................710 Construction ..............................................6012
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715 Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
For. sale 1954 'Ferguson
Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720 Education...................................................601 6
30" small farm tractor
Want to buy..................................................725 Electrical Plumblng...................................6018
Merchandise ................................................ 900 Employment Agencles ..............................6020
304·937-2705.
Antiques .......................................................905 Entertalnment ............................................ 6022
Appllance ..................................................... 910 Food Servlces............................................6024
Have you priced a John
Auctlons .......................................................915 Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Deere lately? You'll be
Bargain Basement .......................................920 Help anted- General .................................. 6028
Cotlectlbles .................................................. 925 Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
surprised! Check out our
Computers ................................................... 930 Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
used
inventory
at
EqulpmenVSupplles....................................935 ManagemenVSupervlsory ........................ 6034
www.CAREQ.com.
Car·
Flea Markets ................................................ 940 Mechanlcs..................................................6036
michael
Equipment
Fuel Oil Coei/Wood/Gas ............................. 945 Medlcal ....................................................... 6038
740·446·2412
Furniture ...................................................... 950 Muslcal ....................................................... 6040
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport ....................................955 Part-Time-Temporaries ............................. 6042
Kid's Corner................................ :................960 Restaurants ............................................... 6044
STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Mlscellaneous ..............................................965 Sates ........................................................... 6048
Now Available at CarmiWant to buy .....................: ............................970 Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
chael
Equipment
Yard Sale ................................... ,................. 975 Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052
740-446·2412
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Winl
1·888·582·3345

Camp

Conley

S 18.000

.~675-6628 .

3 bed 2 bath new con·
struction on +I· 5 acres
$525 month. Owner fi·
nance
available.
740·446·3570
.;..;.;;...;.;B;.;;.
ed.;;.2;;.;.;;.B_a_lh_ _H_U.;.D •

Campers I RVs &amp;
Trailers

Education

Business &amp; Trade
School

2br 2 car garage. 125~90 comer lot on Fa1rview Rd

Boat For Sale 18 1/2 Vi·
sion Fish &amp; ski 150 hsp
outboard Mercury Motot
Exc. shape garage kept
must see Lots of ex1ras
$?500
OBO. homes!Onlyl99.'amon.!5'k
dwn.l5 yrs. at 8'} for l"t. ·
740-446·7490
800·620-4946e\ H61

''~I ~p~~IN."

Money To lend
~~;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Ohio Divi·
sion of Financial lnstilu·
lions Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or ob·
tain a loan. BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance
payments of
fees or insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
Affiars
toll
free
at
1·866·278-0003 to team
if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly li·
censed. (This is a public
service
announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

1989 Four Winns 170
freedom 17ft. 130 hp.
in board wl Four
Winns
89
trailer
$3500. 304·674-3638.

1

"'!"'......,......,..____...,.....,.
400

Houses For Sale

Boats / Accessories

900

Yard Sale
3 lam. Yard Sale Sat.
July 11 114 Howard St.
New Haven

Merchandise

3415 Buckeye Hills Rd
Thurman Fri &amp; Sat 7/10
&amp; 7111 from 9·5. Quality
Antiques
clean clothes Jr. · Plus.
Antiques, trunks. coke Computer, Furniture, Unsign,
books,
scales, ens, 32 • lawn sweeper,
show cases, glass ware, 2 cycle blowervac.
oil lamps, Farberware,
July 8·11 7-2 Lincoln
brass fire extinquisher,
Pike
Cross
Northup
oak piano stool, misc., by
Bridge furniture, Home
appt. 740·992·4192
Interior too much to list.
Auctions
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Auctions &amp; Flea Markets
We have several mixed
pallets of merchandise
for sale. 740·446·7327
Computers
Computer
Dell-precision
530 duet Xeon 1.7GHz
processors, 2GB Ram
2120 GB hrd-drvs, new
Geforce
graphics-card,
windowsXP professional.
(tower·onty)$250.00
304·593-8974
Hobby I Hunt

&amp;Sport

Gun Show • Chillicothe,
July 18 9·5 &amp; July 19
9-3. Ross Co. Fair·
grounds St Rt 23 to St At
104 follow the signs. 6'
tbts $35. 740·667-0412

Miscellaneous
24 It above ground pool
$600. Newer one and a
half horsepower pump
and sand filter. Needs
liner Pool located in Gal·
lipolis. 740-891·0490

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
In stock. Call Ron
Evans 1-800-537·9528
Barg1n Tools· RT 554
buying- mech &amp; carpen·
ter tools, lawn &amp; garden
tools mowers, weed eat·
ers, chain saws also, lap·
tops
computers,
cell
phones,
tpods,
Black
Berrys, GPS &amp; ets.
Home 740·388·1515 Cell
794-1188

LeGrande
Blvd.
3BR
brick, hardwood floors,
FR, 2 full baths, central ;
92 Southwind 30' motor air, 10X14 metal build·
home wl air, power gen· ing, 5 mins from town,
erator wl awning, fully $B9,000. 740·709·1858
contained
asking Mason area. 4 bd room
self
$7900. 740·256·6346
ranch 1700 sq. 11. with
full basement, enclosed •
RV
breezeway with attached •
Service at Carmichael
2 bd apartment, lot size ..
Trailers
$85.000,
170'x156',
740-446-3R25
(304)773·5839
•
RV Service at Carmi·
chael
Trailers 3BR, 1 bath in City,
740·446-3825
School Dist.!Green. Has
Foyer, 2 car garage,
newly remodeled on 3.5
2000
Automotive
acres, secluded setting.
$82,500. 740-446-9278
Autos

6372 SR 7 S River Prop·

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= ertyl Gallipolis I LR, kit, ,

Suv's, Trucks, Cars from
$1600 to $5900 with warranty. Cook Motors 328
Jackson
Pike.
740-446..0103

DR. Oen, 3 BR, 2 full
bths. Basement I 2 car
gar. $189,000 or OBOI
BUILDING
LOT
FOR
SALE. ..(beside th1s prop·
~~!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~ erty) river frontage inCommercial I Industrial cluded ...S50,000
Call •
740-709·1171
• or :
J.D. 350 Dozer, all re- 446·0538.
built, great shape. Call
740-256-9200
Parts &amp; Accessories
Used rebuilt transmis·
. Lots
sion, manual lock out
hubs, for Ranger pick up 2 tots tor sale· Roush •
truck 4 . wheel drive. Street. Mason, 150'x152' 245·5677 or 645·7400
$20,000,(304)773·5839
Sports Utility
2003 Geo Tracker, 4 dr.,
auto, air, 4 cyl. 4x4
740-256·6890.
-------2004 White Buick Rainer
fully
loaded,
66.000
miles, exc. cond., new
tires, sun root, heated
seats
$15.500.00
304•674.3638.

Lot tor sale, Mason area.
170.x 1SO',
app.
$24,000,(304}773·5839
3500

Real Estate
Rentals

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
!:

4371 Cherry Ridge Rd.
Apartments/
Fri 7/10 9·4 Sat 7111 9·?
Townhouses
Girls clothing, newborn &amp;
up all sizes, pottery &amp;
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=
home
Int.
eel. !!!!!!~~~~~~~ 1 and 2 bedroom apts.,
740-379·2805
Utility Trailers
furnished
and
unfur·
nished, and houses rn
127 Hilda Dr. 2 Family, 2005 fifth wheel two car Pomeroy and Middleport.
glassware,
cookbooks, trailer,inside
box
45' security deposit required,
clothing, books,
Christ· 1
h'
no pets. 740-992-2218
11
mas decor, pictures, &amp; ong,
w ite,
exce en1
condition, with three side - - - - - - - much morel
doors, electric wench ,
bedroom apt. fur·
Bike carrier, mower deck
Price $9,500 call for nished. References re· •
tum.
curtains,
toys, more
information quired. 740·446·8519
clothes-cheap!
2208 (740)949-2217
1600 sq. ft. beautiful, un·
McCormick Rd off 588
furnished, 2BR apt., 2nd
Fri. &amp; Sat., 8•2. 28581
Want To Buy
floor, LR, DR, 1 1/2
St. Rt.
143, Albany,
baths, downtown Gallipo·
swing set, tools. house· Want to buy Junk Cars, lis, ideal for professional
hold items.
call 740 •388•0884
couple. References re·
qulretl. no pets, security
deposit, $600 per month.
July 9·11, at 822 Johns
Rd. Racine, Glasgo resi·
Call
446·4425
or
dence 9·5, all kinds of
446·3936
items, new i:ems every·
Cemetery Plots
2br apt. Rodney area. No
day
pets. Dep/Ref requrred.
Yard sale, lots of misc.. 2 4 Cemetery plots 1n Gar- 740·446·1271
miles out S~. At. 143, den of Devotion at Ohio
June 8th-11th
Valley Memory Gardens. 2BR APT.Ciose to Hot·
$595 each. 446·3227
zer Hospital on SR 160
Garage Sale at 203 Ki·
CIA (740) 441·0194
neon Dr. Fri &amp; Sat 9·3.
For Sale By Owner
2br.
stove/refr. fur- •
Oven, tools, baby items,
nlshed, CIA $385.00 a
changing table, more.
For sate by owner- Mid.·
_..-..;:..;.;.~..,...... mon.
+
dep.
Garage Sale Fri 7110 and dleport, brick, all electnc, 304 _675 •7783.
comer lot, wooded area, ;.;...;...;;.;..;;..;.;.;;.;;;..._ __
Sat 7111 7am·4pm at
LO·
80
Windsor Dr.
off new roof, new 35' patro CONVENIENTLY
&amp;
AFFORD·
Bulaville Pike. Clothes, awning, out of flood GATED
home decor, ' 2 window plane, 8 rooms, 3 br&gt;&lt; 2 ABLE! Townhouse apart· '
kitchens, 2 112 bth, 2 lire ments,
and/or
small '
air conditioners, misc.
places. hot water heat, houses lor rent. Call
Huge 3 tam. Yard Sale water softener, 2 lots, 2 740·441-1111 for , appli· ,
Miller St. Mason WV July garages, 740·992-4197
cation &amp; rnformation.
9th-11th
Free Rent Special !II
Houses For Sale
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
Recreah.onal
1000
Vehrcles +· 46 acres wl new 4 bed up, Central Air, WID '
tenant
pays •
21/2
bath.
POSSible hookup.
electric. EHO
owner finance 446·3570.
Ellm View Apts.
Boats I Accessories
2 bed 1 bath $249
(304)882-3017
1984 Thunder craft ella· month. 740·446·3384
·N-c_e...;..
3B-R~P-t_G_a_ll_lp-ol-is
lion 17 ft. fiberglass.
140hp, inboard $2800.00 4 Bed, 2 Bath! Only City Part. Fum. WID ~
$25.000.
for
listings some util. 1nct. No Pets.
304·675-3328.
800·620-4946 ex R019
$595/mo. 740·591-5174

1

�Help Wanted

Help Wanted

I

GRAPHICS DESIGNER
IMMEOIATE OPENING
Progressive company with a great
work atmosphere is currently accepting resumes for a Graphics Designer to
create. design &amp; prepare ads for a
ne\\ spaper and the web sites. The fol·
lowing skills are highly desirable:
• QuarkXPress
• Photoshop
• ;\lulti-Ad Creator
• Adohe Acrobat
• :\Jicrosoft office &amp; power point
• and be familiar with Macs.
Should also have knowledge of fourcolor and spot-color separation. Fulltime position with benefits. Paid vacation, bealthcare/dentalhision, paid
holidays, 401k.
Send resumes to:
Pam Caldwell
AdYertising Director

The Gallipolis Daily Tribune
P.O. Box 469. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or e-mail
caldwell@' heartland ublications.com

Apartments/
Townhouses

Apartments/
Townhouses

Twin Rivers Tower is ac·
ceptmg applications for
w81ting list for HUD subsiq1zed, 1·BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled,
call675-6679

New Haven 1 br. fur·
mshed apt. no pets, dep.
&amp;
rei.
required.
(740)992·0165

Aportmenh/
Townhouses

Spacious
second/third
floor
apt. overlooking
Gallipolis City Park and
River L.R. den, lrg.
Kitchen-dining area with
'4: ' " " 'room
------ all new appliances &amp;
apt
w/stuvt1/fridye,
utilitie~ cupboards. 3 BR, 2
pd. upstairs, no pets at .baths,
laundry
area.
46 Olive St. 45o/roo + $900 per .month. Call
446-2325 or 446·4425
&amp; 2BR renovated dep. 740 •446 _3945
downtown apts. includes
new
appliances
lam. Beautiful Apts. at Jack· Tara
TQwnhouse
flooring water sewer &amp; son Estates. 52 West· Apartments • 2BR, 1.5
included.
1BR wood Dr., from $365 to bath, back patio, pool,
trash
$375/mo. 2BR $575/mo. $560.
740-446·2568. playground, (trash. sew·
740-709·1690
Equal Housing Opportu- age,
water
pd.)
Oily. This InStitUtiOn IS an $425/rent,
$425/sec.
3 room and bath down- Equal Opportunity Pro· dep. Call 740-645-8599
stairs f1'rst
th
mon s rent &amp; vider and Employer.
deposit. references re·
Commercial
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=
quired• N0 p ets and ~-:-------Gracious Living 1 and 2 •
clean. 740·441·0245
Office/
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Warehouse/Storage
NOW LEASING Jordan Manor
and
Riverside Great Location 749 Third
Landing, 2 &amp; 3BR Avail· Apts. in Middleport, from
Ave.• Gallipolis!
able No Pets. Tenant S327
to
$592.
$399/month for 1800
Responsible for Rent &amp; 740·992·5064.
Equal sqft. Build-out negotiable
Electric 304·674-0023 or HouSing Opportunity.
Call Wayne
304-617·9986
~-------404-456-3802
Island View Motel has
vacancies
$35.00/Night. -P-rim
_e_ C_o_m_m_e-rc-ia-l -spa_c_e
3 br.. $400 a mo. plus 740-446·0406
for rent at Spring Valley
utilities, plus deposit. 3rd
Plaza.
Please
call
St., Racine, No pets. Jordan Landing Apart· 740_ 6.34 for details.
81
44
740-247·4292
ments
2.3.4· br· ava·lable
11
Houses For Rent
'
• a
Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 br. fur·
electric, no pets call for
nished apt., no pets. dep details 304.
_
or ~19&lt;J'mo! 4 bed. 2 t-mh,
&amp;
ref.
required, 304·610-0 674 0023
Bank Repo! !5~~ down. 15
776
(740)992·0165
&gt;~""· 8'1' APR) for li,ling'
M00-620-4&lt;146 ex R027

15)

s

1 bdrm poss 2 w/ 1 full
bth. Lg kitchen washer
dryer hookup ctrl ate gas
heat no pets allowed
1940 Eastern Ave. Rent
$500 See. Dep. $500
740-446·3481

3BR, 1 bath, stove &amp; refrig. fum. Gas heat, CIA,
No Smoking. W/D hook
up. No Pets. $600/mo +
deposit. Nice location.
Gallipolis. Call 446·3667

Classl fleds
r ad

ni ne

~~

lii::i

}J~!V

.

1\ Do-lt-yourself classified ads

Save time and money. Go to www.mydailysentiriel.com
and click on Classifieds and follow the user-friendly steps
to place your ad.

v
v
v
v
v

Do-it-yourself convenience
Easy to use
Upload photos and graphics
Print and Online options
.
7 great packages to choose from

Very nice home tor rent
1r1
Middlepodrt,
good
neighborhood. Newly remodeled.
New
appli·
ances, 2 bedrooms, 1
bath. central air &amp; heat,
large deck on back, ga·
rage
available,
call
740-992-9784
or
740-992·5094 lor more
details
5 bdrm ranch style 3 full
bth w/ laundry rm.. out•
door pool, approx. 5000
sq. ft. ctrl ale heat on St.
Rt. 160. $1000 rent
$1000 sec. dep. No pets
allowed 740-446-3481
4000

Manufactured
Housing
Rental$

Newly remodeled 3BR 2
bath on farm $500 mth.
540-729-1331
2BR 1 Bath all elect. No
Pets.
1624 Chatham.
740-446-4234
or
740·208-7861

The Daily Sentinel

3BR dble-wide furnished,
SR 143 • Pomeroy. $625
mo. incl. most utilities &amp;
lawncare. 740-591-5174

www.mydailysentinel.com

~~-~

PUBLIC
NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICE
Estate of Allee C. Chapman, whose last place
of residence is known
as 39615 State At 143,
Pomeroy, OH 457699756 but whose present place of residence
is unknown, Unknown
Heirs at Law, Devisees,
and Legatees, of Allee
C.
Chapman,
Deceased, whose last
place of residence Is
Unknown, and John
Doe, Unknown Spouse,
if any, of Alice C. Chapman, whose last place
of residence is known
as 39615 State At 143,
Pomeroy, OH 45769·
9756 but whose present place of residence
is unknown, will take
notice that on May 29,
2009, Select Portfolio
Servicing, Inc, filed Its
Complaint in Foreclo·
sure in Case No. 09-CV·
066 in the Court of
Common Pleas Meigs
County, Ohio alleging
that t he Defendants,
Estate of Alice C. Chap·
man, Unknown Heirs at
Law, Devisees, and
Legatees, of A llee C.
Chapman, Deceased,
and John Doe, Un·
known Spouse, if any,
of Alice C. Chapman,
have or c laim to have
an interest in the real
estate located at 39615
State At 143, Pomeroy,
OH 45769-9756, PPN
#1401201000. A complete legal description
may be obtained with
the Meigs County Auditor's Office located at
100
East
Second
Street, Room 201 ,
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
The Petitioner further
alleges that by reason
of default of the Defendant(s) In the payment
of a promissory note,
according to its tenor,
the conditions of a con·
current mortgage deed
given to secure the
payment of said note
and conveying the
premises described,
have been broken, and
the same has become
absolute.

The Petitioner prays
that the Defendant(s)
named above be required to answer and
set up their interest in
said real estate or be
forever barred from asserting the same, for
foreclosure of said
mortgage, the mar·
shalllng of any liens,
and the sale of said real
estate, and the proceeds of said sale ap·
plied to the payment of
Petitioner's claim In the
property order of its
priority, and for such
other and further relief
as Is just and equitable.
THE DEFENDANT(S)
NAMED ABOVE ARE
REQUIRED TO AN·
SWER ON OR BEFORE
THE 23rd DAY OF AUGUST, 2009.
BY: THE LAW OFFICES
OF JOHN D. CLUNK
CO., L.P.A. Charles V.
Gasior #0075946 Attorneys for Plaintiff-Petitioner 4500 Courthouse
Blvd.
Suite 400
Stow, OH 44224
(330) 436·0300 - telephone (330) 436·0301 facs i mile
requests@johndclunk.
com
(7) 10, 17, 24
-------Public Notice
-------NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARINGS
The Village of Pomeroy
will hold a public hearing on July 13, 2009
and July 27, 2009 at
6:30p.m. in the council
at
the
chambers
Pomeroy Village Of·
flees at 320 East Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
for the purpose of al·
lowing
citizens
a
chance to voice any
concerns and/or ques·
tions about the opera·
tlon and management
plan for the Village's
Natural Gas Aggregation Program. Copies
of the plan are available
at the Village Office,
320 East Main Street.
(7) 10, 24

· Friday, July 1 0, 2009

, www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Rentals
Nice 2 BR mobile home.
water pa1d, no pets. S375
mo. $375 dep. Call
740-441-0829
Smail 2br mobile home
at
Johnsons
Mobile
Home Park. Water &amp;
trash paid, no pets.
740-645-(1306
Sales
1997 Horton 14x80 2 br
2 ba.
needs
work
$80CO.OO
OBO
30~·576·2017
or
304·542·0280.
199S
Schultz double·
wide. 3br. 2ba. sitting on
1/2 acre Sandhill Rd
area 304-675-1280 or
304-675·1762
2003
Clayton
14x70
3br.,2 ba. walk-in closets. garden tub, must be
moved asking pay off
$19.000.
304·675-8056
after 5pm.

Public Notice
Request for Proposal
The Meigs County De·
partment of Jab and
Family Services Is
seeking proposals to
provide a core Workforce
Development
Program to the universal customers in Meigs
County, provisions of
the federal Workforce
Investment Act (WIA),
and related federal and
state regulations. Ser·
vice providers are expected
to
link
programs with local
labor needs. Services
include: Customer Service, Job Development,
and Capitalization Development. The program will be awarded
and program cost must
not exceed $25,000
(subject to available
funds) and shall be for
the period of July 1,
2009 to June 30 2010.
Administrative
cost
may not exceed 10% of
the
total
contract
award. A copy of the
Request for Proposal
may be picked up from
Theresa Lavender or
Jane Banks at The
Meigs County Job and
Family Services, 175
Race Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760.
Proposals should be
submitted to Theresa
Lavender,
Meigs
County Department of
Jab and Family Services, 175 Race Street,
Post Office Box 191 ,
Middleport,
Ohio
45760, no later than
Monday, July 13, 2009
at 12:00 p.m. All submissions must be re·
ceived by mall or hand
delivery by the above
date and time. No materials received after the
date will be included In
previous submissions
nor be considered. The
department reserves
the right to reject any
or all proposals. In ac·
cordance with 29 CFR
part 31, 32, Meigs
County Department of

Job and Family Services is prohibited from
discrimination ·on the
basis of race, color, national origin, sex, age,
religion, political beliefs, or disability.
(6) 26 (7) 3, 10

Public Notice

co.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Commercial•
Residential
• f 'r ec Estimates
(740) 992-5009·
Custom Home Building
Steel Frame Buildings
B1nlding. Remodding
General repair
W\\ " .bankscclb.com
_ _ _ _ _ _ _.....
=~~~~~:;=~
Help Wonted - General
Local

Home
Health
now
hiring
STNA's, HHA's &amp; PCA's.
Flexible scheduling. If in·
terested
call
740-441-1377
-2 Cosmetologists.
....- - - - full
-or

~------- Agency

Country living, 3·5BR,
2·3 BA on property.
Many floor plans' Easy
Financmgl We own the
bank.
Call
today!
866-215-5774

. . , . . - - - - - - - part time in busy local

I .I.'UI . ~
I ~·H ' lllf-1I~ I
I Ii

Roofing, Siding.
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric. Plumbing.
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor

7 40-367-0544
Free Estimates

740-367-0536

S&amp;L
Trucking
Dump Truck

Service
We Hau l Gra\'el.

Limestone . Coal.
Compost. Top So i l
Call Walt or Sandy

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7 :00am· 8:00pm

YOUNG'S
Carpenter Service
· Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
· New Garages
· Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
·VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
· Pallo and Porch Decks
wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

992·6215
76 Holley 14X70 3BA 1 · salon &amp; tanmng, 60%
740-992-3220
bath
$6000
OBO. commiSSIOn, send re·
740·591·0195
740·256-6321
sume to 33105 Hyland
Pomeroy, Ohio
or7400-59I-3726
Rd., Pomeroy, Oh 45769
30 Years Local Experience
FULLY INSURED
Cell
Government Loans. sin- .be_fo_r_e_Ju..ly;..3_o_th_. _ __
gle wide &amp; double wide Care Giver is needed. , . . - - - - - - - - - - - - . , . - - - - - -....
homes. Call to pre4ual- This is a FULL TIME po·
ify. 866·215·5774
sition, meanmg you will
~~------ be liv1ng here as if it
Land/home
packages were your home. This is
available with payments NOT a daytime or night
startng around S600imo. time only position. Sleep
call
to
prequailfy. here at night and do nor866'215.5774
mal
household duties
~~------­ thru the day. Person
Har4g~od
78 Elcona Trailer 14X70 needing assistance is
-www.timbercree.kcabhlmry.com
good shape you move @ mobile and can function
635
Paxton. on her own.
FREE
740-645·1646
or RENT&amp;
FREE UTILI·
740·446-2515.
@7200 TIES plus small salary.
OBO
740·367·7129
2459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis
- - - - - - - - =~~~~~~~
The BIG Sale
Mechanics
1..---~~~~~==-~i..!!.!..!l:l.!~~--.JI
Used Homes &amp; Owner
.Service Technician posiFinancing - New 2010
tion available for diesel
Ooublewide $37,989
and hydraulics. Experi·
Ask about $8,000 Re·
ence
necessary.
bates
Health/Retirement
&amp;
mymidwesthome.com
Benefits. Fax resume to
740-828·2750
740-446·9104 or e-mail
"The Proctorville
to LLC@CAREQ.COM
Difference"
Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
$1 and a deed IS all you
Medical
need to own your dream
home. Call Nowl
RN needed at a Home
Cell: 740-416-5047
Owners:
Freedom Homes
Health Company • Silver
ema il:
888·565·0167
Bridge
Plaza.
Jon
Van
Meter
&amp;
_ _...,....;..;..;....;.;.._ _ 740·446·3808
or
jrshadf rm @ao l.com
Paul Rowe
800·759·5383 call for an
600 0
Employment interview.

Ca!)JneifY j\tJ!J Furs1Jture

740~446.9200

MIKE MARCUM
ROOFING &amp; REMODEUNG Co.

Child/ Elderly Care
Wanted, full time baby
sitter/nanny to work 1n
our home. Applicants
mus: have experience
caring for and working
with multiple children.
Excellent pay. Weekends
off. Looking for an experienced
Mother/Grand·
mother tyue of a person.
Call 740·416-0241 dur·
ing
the
day
and
740-416·6301 in the eve·
ning.
Help Wonted . General

P ublic N o t ices in News papers.
Your Right to Kmn•, D e li v ere d Ri~ht to Your Door.

BANKS
C ONSTRUCTI0:-.1

The Holiday Inn of Gallipolis IS now accepting
appl1cations for dining
room servers. Morning &amp;
evening shifts available.
No experience neces·
sary smiles mandatory.
Pick up applications at
front desk, No Phone
Calls Please.

Rubber Roofing, Room Additions, Decks, Shingl~s,
Siding, Windows, Pole Barns, Garages,
Insurance Work. Residential &amp; Commercial ,·
740-245-0437
t
Licensed &amp; Bonded
30 Years.
Free Estimates
ExperiencC. .

NOMATT£R
WHAT YOUR

STYLE. ..

~

te)
... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS

SOMETHING
FOR YOlJ!!
~·

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Chester Township
Trustees will hold a AVON! All Areas! To Buy
public hearing on the or Sell Shirley Spears
proposed Budget for 304-675-1429
2010 on July 14, 2009,
7:00 pm at the Chester
Town Hall.
Public Notice
Gel Your Message Across With ADa~ly Sentme1
Debra Chevalier, Fiscal
· Officer
PUBLIC NOTICE
Chester
Board
of
NO riCE: Is hereby Trustees: Blair Windon,
given that on Saturday, Alan Holter, Elmer
1 3'~column 1nch weekdays
July 11 , 2009 at 1Q:OO Newell
22"' column 1noh Sunday
a.m., a public sale w ill (7) 10
CALL
OUR OFF'CEAT 992·2155
be held at 211 W Sec·
ond St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
Public Notice
The Farmers Bank and
Savings Company is IN
THE
COMMON
selling for cash In hand PLEAS COURT, PRO·
or certified check the BATE DIVISION MEIGS
following collateral:
COUNTY, OHIO
1998
Dodge
Ram IN THE MATTER OF
Now open Mon-Sun
3B7HF13Y6WG187158 SETTLEMENT OF ACTues Corn Hole Tourn 6:30
The Farmers Bank and COUNTS,
PROBATE
Pool Tourn Thurs 7:30
Savings · Company, COURT
MEIGS
Fri. Karaoke 9.00·1.00
Pomeroy, Ohio, re- COUNTY, OHIO
Sat. Anniversary party K&amp;D OJ &amp;
serves the right to bid Accounts and vouchKaraoke 9·1 Free Food &amp; No Cover
at this sale, and to with· ers of the following
draw the above collat· named fiduciary has
eral prior to sale. been filed in the Pro·
Pomeroy Eagles Club
Further, The Farmers bate
Court,
Meigs
Bank and Savings County, Ohio for ap·
Welcomes
Company reserves the proval and settlement.
right to reject any or all ESTATENo. 30482·2008
bids submitted.
Account filed Mary
The above described Arnold Long and Laura
collateral will be sold Arnold Hodge. Co·
" as is-where is". with Trustees of the Trust of
no expressed or im- Elizabeth A. Cutler, Deplied warranty given.
ceased.
For further information, Unless exceptions are
8:30 pm • 12:30 am
or for an appointment filed thereto, said acEveryone Welcome
to Inspect collatera l, count will be set for
prior to sale date con· hearing before said
Come out &amp; enjoy the band
tact Cyndie or Ken at Court on the 11th day
992-2136.
of August, 2009, at
(7) 8, 9, 10
which time said ac- - - - - - - - count will be consid·
ered and continued
__P_u_b_l_ic_N_o_t_ic_e__ from day to day until finally disposed of.
PUBLICNOTICE
Any person interested
The Sutton Board of may file written excepTrustees will have their tion to said account or
Sunday, July 12th
July Budget Hearing to matters pertaining to
meeting on Friday, July the execution of the
11
:00·1
:30 (at the post)
10th at 7:00p.m. at the trust, not less than five
Adults
$8.50
Syracuse Mun. Build· days prior to the date
lng.
set for hearing.
Children under 12 $4.50
Board of Trustees
J. S. Powell
Larry Eberbach
Carry out available
Judge
992·5400
Common Pleas Court,
740-667-6253
(7) 8, 9, 10
Probate Division
Meigs County, Ohio
(7) 10

J&amp;L
Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
· Decks
· Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

H&amp;H
Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding. Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653-9657

BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT?
BANKRUPTCY?

We can help!

Call out Toll Free
866-564-8679

LUV HOMES
Fresh "iorth Carolina
SHRI:\IP
(7-tOl 7-t2-2563
l,wrxr. ne,er frolt'll, hl·dd' on
$ 10 per lb Cash only

Pmt '' required m ad' ance
Shipment' arrive every
other Frida ·

Advertise
in this
space
for

$70
per
month

BULLETIN BOARD

Tallahassee
Freight Band

Now Selltng:
• Ford &amp; \1otorcraft
Parts • Eneine,.
Transfer Ca~e~ &amp;

Transmissions
• Aftermarket
Replacement Sheet

Mt:tal &amp; Component~
For All \.lake' of \ehicb

Racine, Ohio
740-949-1956

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete

Remodeling

740-992-1611

Gallipolis, O H 45631
Ins ured, Free
Es timates. 20yrs Exp.
740-441-9387
Rick J ohnson-Owner

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

All Types Of
Concn•te Work
29 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971

Stop &amp; Compare

Sat. July 11 , 2009

Tuppers Plains
Ladies Auxiliary
Baked Steak Dinner

Johnson's Tree
Ser vice

wv

Replacement
Windon s and
Vin)l Siding
Specialists, LTD
(740) 74 2-2563
• Siding • Vinyl
Windows • ,\Ictal
and Shingle Roofs
• Decks • Additions
•Electrical
• Plumbing
• P ole Ba rn'i

2182

ln,urcd
Free f.,timates

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
~Prompt

and

Work
.,Rea~onable

Rates
*Insured
*Expenen.:cJ
Reference~ A\ ail able!
Call Gary Stante; @
740-591-8044
Please leave

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions, Remodeling, \leta! &amp;
Shingle Roofs, 'iew Homes. Siding, Decks.
Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp; Insured
WV#040954

Cell740·416·2960

740·992·0730

�Friday, July 10, 2009

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEY OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
BRIDGE
ACROSS

Phillip

Arder

:\orth
•

07·10.09

J 10 9

Q

¥KQJIO
t K J 7
... Q 3

NOr A QIANCE'.,

OI.ITIL. YOO iE.I..l.. US
WHERE. YOO'Ve HIDDEN
AMOS 6ROI4SON!

Wt&gt;st

East

•
.,
t
"-

•

52
7 4

A 6 3

¥ 8653
•

86542
AKJ4

3

... 98652

South

•~&lt; 8 7 4

¥ A 9 2
t A Q 10 9
... 10 7

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West
South

Wrsl

l A

Pass

t+

Pas~

North
1¥
4A

East
Pass
Nl pass

Opening lead: "- A

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

~PeCIA~
7bt&gt;AY;~ I

w~AT veG~TAI~~

.rellvet&gt;

Play thoughtlessly
and err consistently

IS

Indian philosopher Jiddu Knshnamurti,
whc died in 1986, said, ·A consistent
thin&lt;er is a thoughtless person, because
he conforms to a pattern; he repeats
phrases and thinks in a groove."
That does not apply to bridge experts.
They think consistently, in a groove. and
make thoughtful. not thoughtless, plays.
This deal sorts out the thoughtful from
the unth10k1ng.
Look at only the West and North hands.
You are defending against lour seades.
You lead the club ace: three, two, seven.
What would you do next?
Note North's rebid. With game values
and four-card spade support, he jumps
to game. A raise to three spades would
on I~ invite game. promis1ng 10-12 support points
Most defenders would. cash the club
kino, then look around lor the next
mo~e. But at that point there would be
nothing they could do to defeat the contract.
When dummy comes down with three
dianonds. West should realize that his
par1ner has at most a singleton. (South
woLid open one diamond with only three
cards in the suit when he had exactly 44-3·2 distribution. If he had had that
han:!, he would have raised hearts on
the second round, not rebid one spade.)
So, there are three ways to win by shifting to a diamond at trick two: Partner
might ruff immediately, or have the singleton diamond ace. or hold an early
trump trick.
As you can see. this defense defeats the
con:ract. East wins the first (or second)
round of trumps, puts you on lead with
the carefully preserved club king, and
receives the contract-killing diamond
ruff

WIT~ T~AT?

FOAPkli-L

BARNEY
ENNYTHIN' I CAN HALP
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AS WELL BELOW

AVERAGE.

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PEANUTS
YES, M~AM .. IS THIS THE

EMER6ENCI{ ROOM? WELL,
M'{ ELBOW HURTS !=ROM

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AstroGraph
'Your 'Birthday:

Saturd;y, July 11, 2009
By Bernice Bede Osol
The year ahead should be a pleasant
one, though you may be luckier in some
areas than others. One happy circumstance could involve meet1ng a new
friend- which could prove quite promising lor the unattached.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Because
your praise and enthus1asm toward
another lacks your customary s1ncerity,
you may feel bad about 1t later. An apology will help.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Be careful
about offering more advice than help
when someone comes to you for subslantial assistance. II money IS needed,
parting with your funds could be painful.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - It'll be a
shame if you don't recogn1ze your excellent leadership abilities and take charge
of a situatior1' that truly needs direction.
Don't just stand there and let everyone
flounder.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Feeling
sorry for yourself is a b1g waste of t1me,
energy and emotion. The quickest way to
snap out of the doldrums is to do things
that are helpful to others.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Don't
foolishly attempt to d1scuss something
w•th a negative Individual. Th1s person's
dark perspective w11i overshadow your
enthusiasm.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- Pick
your protects judicially, or you could work
hard for something only to discover an
insignificant payoff. There will be no grat·
1f1caton for all your efforts.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)- fl you
don'l have 1a1th in your tdeas, don't
expect others to be enthUSiaStic about
them, either. Believe 1n your cause. and
they'll believe 1n you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)- Unless
you are reahstic about what you can
expect from others. they are likely to
severely disappoint you. Analyze their
needs carefully, and you'll get a better
perspective of their actions.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Even
though you inwardly support your loved
ones, unless they realize 11, you'll only
receiVe a lukewann response from them.,
Let 1our feelings be known. and you
won1 be left standing alone.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)- Allhough
your heart might not be In what you need
to accompliSh, you won't neglect these
responsibilities. Having a good altitude
makes life much easier to take.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -You may
not like everyone to whom· you're
exposed. b(Jt to your credit, you'll treat all
people tn a pleasant and civil manner.
You'l make yourself proud with those
wno are aware of your feelings.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Sometimes ills hard not to be overly protective of those in your charge, and this
could be one of those days. Although
your intentions are good, be careful not
to tie those restraints too tight.

1 Chick's
parent
4 Interstate,
for example
8 NFL scores
11 Curly
cabbage
12 Dust devil
13 SteP. on it
14 White lies
15 Bump
16 Ukecrudites
17 Make a
rattling
noise
19 Locks up
21 1865 yielder
22 Hire a caddie
23 March sign
26 DisP.roves
28 Whitney invention
29 Duck or hue
31 Quarry
33 Herr von
Bismarck
35 Climb the
ladder
37 Geological
period
38 Hair color
40 Restrains
42 Atom fragments
43 Comic-strip
prince

44 Later than
46 Subcontractor
50 Big Ben
numeral
51 Go over
proofs
53 Diva
- Gluck
54 Rock
network
55 By oneself
56 Kind of
pump
57 Weathervane
dir.
58 Informal
10 Bastes
wear
11 Pizza Hut
59 Maunaalternative
18 Part of SAT
DOWN
20 Grad
1 Crop hazard 22 Thickens
23 Earlier
2 Place of
exile
24 Moreno or
3 Cuddle
Rudner
4 "Walk
25 Having
Away-"
keen ins Skunk's
sight
defense
26 Downpour
6 Recipe
27 Condeword
scending
7 Salon
one
request
30 Makes a
(2 wds.)
mistake
8 More
32 USN rank
economical S4 Reed
9 Gauge
instrument

36
39
41
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
52

Light tan
Disquiet
Reveal
Low voices
Objectives
By-and
starts
Stack
Like
larksp1,1r
Madame
Bovary
Hip·hop
music
Female
deer

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebr.ty C pl'er cryptograms are createa lrorn QuotatiOOS by la"10US peop•e pas: and o•esent
EliCh le«er :n the cipher stanos •or anottle(.

Today·s clue.· 8 equals K

"NVMMTNN
ARVX
FW

FN

WPIFKA,

ARV'XT

VH."

ARVX

•

UCPG

CPHHA

PMGRX

WXFTJLN,
ARV

UCTJ

IFMCPTK

LA ,
ARV

PJL
UPBT

HFGG

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "What a delightful th1ng is the conversation of
specialists1One understands absolutely nothing. and it's charming." - Edgar
Degas

THAT DAI~Y
PUZZUR

S©~~"tJ-~t~S®

WORD

GAMf

- , - - - - - - i:ditoc! by CLAY R. ?OII.AN

A

letters of the

Rea:range

oe-

""'lour scromblea

words
1cw :o for~ four slmple wo·ds.

DRETOJ
1

1

I

I

I

I lz _

~
UliJJ
Lovesick teen to mom. ··tf love
b the answer. can the question be
•••••··•·?''

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SCRAM·LETS ANS\\ ERS 7:'9JJ9
Unsure- Baron - Women - Lastly- AS the RULES
"To get along in sockt;,'' gramps lectured, "you should
know the exceptions as \veil AS the RULES."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

SOUP TO NUTZ

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

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TNT
Nationwide Series
Dollar General 300
Powered by Coca-Cola,
7:30 p.m., Hiday

-

1=11"1 1

Truck Series
Built Ford Tough '225 Jifiil_
lf
Prt!stmted l.Jy the
V
__
l'Uli
_ 1'UL!J
Greater Cincinnati Ford
Dealers. 6:30 p.m.,
Saturday, July 18

•
~

,.._ Most observers said the ast·
lap crash was 'just ractng • At
"Daytona and Talladega, tt most
certatnly is.
• Havmg Tony Stewart and Kyle
Busch racing for the v1ctory on
the last lap at Daytona is like
'tossing a firecracker into a fuel
tank.
• Ownership has been good for
Stewart. He seems like a new
man and is emerging as the
most formidable obstacle in the
path of Jimmie Johnson to a
fourth straight championship.
• Daytona didn't shake up the
competition for making the
Chase. It strung it out. Only five
drivers - Mark Martin, David
Reutimann, Jeff Burton, Clint
Bowyer and Brian Vickers - are
within 200 points of 12th place.
• For those whose Chase spots
are secure, attention now turns
to bonus points, which can only
be gamed by winning.
,.._ Martin, meanwhile, is in danger
of having bonus points (30, for
three victories) he can't use.
They don't mean anything unless
he makes the Chase. If he
makes the Chase. they mean
·everything.
• Juan Pablo
Montoya's road
to the Chase
runs through Indianapolis,
Pocono and
Watkins Glen. If
he fares well at
~.:.....-"-.=.--.~ all three of
: MoNTOYA
those tracks,
he will probably
make it.
11&gt; Stewart's victory may have
been messy, but at least fuel
mileage wasn't the deciding factor.
• The problem with "lucky dogs·
and ·wave-arounds," as Joey
• Logano proved in New Hampshire, is that they might just win
races for no good reason.
• No one is better than Kyle
Busch at winning races. What
Busch has to prove is that he
can win the Sprint Cup champtonsllip.

11&gt; Who's

hot:
Already the
points leader,
Tony Stewart is
turning h1s at·
tention to the
Chase, where
bonus points
for winning are
important. ...
Kurt Busch

continues to
•
display admirable consistency, in contrast
with his younger brother.
11&gt; Who's not:
Mark Martin
fell out of the
top 12.... A
Daytona crash
really buried
Dale Earnhardt
Jr. ·n the sea·
son standings.

EARNHARDT JR.

...

If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, cjo The Gaston Gazette, P.O.

Sprint Cup

Nationwide

Camping World Trucks

Race: Ufelock.com 400
the season. Stewart padded his
Where: Chicagoland Speedway, Sprint Cup points to a seasonJoliet, Ill. (1.5 mi.), 267
high 180 over Jeff Gordon. It was
laps/400.5 miles.
actually Jimmie Johnson, not
When: Saturday. July 11.
Busch, who finished second. "I
Last year's y.'lnner: Kyle Busch, can't say anything." said Busch's
Toyota.
crew chief, Steve Addington. ''I'm
Qualifying record: Jimmie John- not pointing any fingers at Tony.
He was trying to win the race. Kyle
son, Chevrolet, 188.147 mph,
July 8, 2005.
was trying to block him for the
win, and we got turned around."
Race record: Kevin Harvick,
The Fourth of July fireworks that
Chevrolet, 136.832 mph, July
14,2002.
undid Busch's run came when a
late caution flag (for debtis) set up
Last week: Kyle Busch took the
a double-file restart with just four
lead on the white-flag lap but
Ia~ remaining. Stewart's margin
failed to take the checkered beof victory over Johnson was .110
cause he couldn't successfully
of a secor'ld, while Denny Hamlin,
block fanner teammate Tony
Carl Ect.vards and Kurt Busch
Stewart. When Busch's Toyota
rounded out the top-five. Marcos
veered CNer in front of Stewart's
Ambrose. Brian Vickers, Matt
Chevrolet, the two made contact,
Kenseth, Juan Pablo Montoya and
a tremendous crash ensued.
Elliott Sadler comprised the reStewart went along, mostly undamaged, to his second victory of mainder of the top 10.

Race: Dollar General 300
Powered by Coca-Cola
Where: Chicagoland
Speedway, Joliet, Ill. \1.5
mi.), 200 laps/300 miles.
When: Friday, July 1C.
last year's winner: Kyle
Busch. Toyota.
Qualifying record: Ryan
Newman, Dodge, 186.438
mph. July 9, 2005.
Race record: Kyle Busch,
Toyota. 144.443 mph, July
11.2008.
Last week: Cltnt Bowyer,
in a Chevrolet, won at Daytona, his first victory of
the season, by holding off
Kyle Busch's Toyota.
Busch did, however, extend his point lead to 172
over fourth-place finisher
Carl Edwards.

Race: Build Ford Tough 225
Presented by the Greater
Cincinnati Ford Dealers
Where: Kentucky Speedway, Sparta (1.5 mi.), 150
laps/225 miles.
When: Sunday, July 18.
Last year's winner: John·
ny Benson Jr., Toyota.
Qualifying record: Bill
Lester, Toyota, 178.141
mph, July 9, 2005.
Race record: Mike Bliss,
Chevrolet, 143.515 mph,
July 13, 2002.
Last race: Ron Hornaday Jr.
won for the second year in
a row- and third time
overall - at Memphis Motorsports Park. and did it in
overwhelming fashion by
leading 175 out of 201
laps in his Chevrolet. Brian
Scott took second in a Toyota.

~

CLINT BOWYER

e

July 11

'

SPRINT CuP

No. 33

CHEERIOS/HAMBURGER HELPER CHEVROLET

ern

Kyle Busch
Stewart
Tony Stewart
vs. Kyle Busch
Busch tried to block Stewart on
the final lap of the Coke Zero 400.
The result was a crash by Busch and
a victory by Stewart. Most observers
assigned no particular blame. Stewart
said he didn't enjoy winning like that
but said he didn't think it was either
driver's fault. Busch left the trac~
without discussing the incident.
NASCAR This Week's Monte Out·
ton gives his take: "Kyle Busch isn't
going to express any public animosity
because he has no great reason. What
wtll increase is the rivalry between him
and Ste....-art. It's kind of like the old
Western where 'this town isn't big
enough' for the both of th~m."

Bowyer's got
to keep up with
Chase or else
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

Clint Bowyer finished 29th in the
Coke Zero 400 at Daytona International Speedway. He can't afford another
misstep in the eight races leading up
to NASCAR's Chase for the Sprint Cup.
After the first six races of the season, Bowyer ranked second in points.
Now he's 16th and has eight weeks to
work his way into the top 12 and make
the Chase. Kasey Kahne presently occupies 12th place. Bowyer trails him
by 135 points. He's still got time, but
it's not going to be easy.
'IWo years ago, Bowyer finished third
in the Chase. Last year he was fifth. At
age 30, Bowyer is one of NASCAR's
bright young drivers. He came up driving the dirt tracks near his hometown,
Emporia, Kan. He won races in Loudon,
N.H., in 2007 and Richmond, Va., in 2008.
Now, however, Bowyer faces a stern
challenge. Ayear ago his team, Richard
Childress Racing, placed all three of its
drivers in the Chase. This year, at least
for now, all four (Casey Mears was
added) are outside the top 12. What's it
going to take to make the Chase?
"Just be consistent," said Bowyer.
''I'm fairly confident we can get at
least two of us in. You know, (Jeff)
Burton has been on a little bit of a
down slide, but I feel like we, with the
'33' team, have really capitalized on
learning some things and had a good,
at least a solid, last few weeks.
"I think we've stopped the bleeding,
so to speak, on the bigger race tracks,
the mile and a halves (like the next
stop, Chicagoland Speedway) .... We
had some bad luck and had 250 or 300
points wiped out from right underneath
of us there within a month, and it takes
a while to get those points back."
Bowyer, by the 'lay, is a fan of
NASCAR's new "double-file restarts"
rule.
"We are all about our fans," he said.
"We can't do this without our fans, and

NASCAR This Week welcomes letters to the editor, but please be aware
that we have room for only a few each
week. We'll do our best to select the
best, but individual replies are impossible due to the bulk of mail received.
Please do not send stamped and self- '
addressed envelopes with your /etters,
which should be addressed to:
NASCAR This Week
The Gaston Gazette
P.O. Box 1538
Gastonia, N.C. 28053

A lesson and
a tongu&amp;lashing for 'Shrub'
Dear NASCAR This Week,
I'm a fan of Dale (Earnhardt) Jr.,
and I had to write in (on) Kyle
Busch's remark that the problem is
with Junior, not the crew chief
He is not happy because Junior replaced him. but each driver should not
blame the other, but instead offer support like good sportsmanship should
be. If Kyle has a problem, wonder if he
accepts the blame and (doesn't) put it
on his crew chief. Also, that is not a
good personality to have.
•
Richard O'Ne
Princeton, W.
Thanks for letting us know how
you feeL

John Clark I NASCAR This Week

A bad finish at the Coke Zero 400 won't keep Clint Bowyer out of theChase, but the Kansan
native needs to keep up. He trails Kasey Kahne by 135 points for eighth place and he's still
got time with eight races left before NASCAR's version of the playoffs.

.
we've got to make sure that we are
putting on a good show for them. If
they are enjoying our show and our
product on race day, that's what it's all
about.
"So I feel like it's added a new level

~

of excitement and kind of given
NASCAR a wake-up call .... Those double-file restarts will definitely pick up
the pace a little bit."
Bowyer hopes it's his pace and not
just the sport's in general.

Dear NASCAR This Week,
I believe if the driver of the '18' car
(Kyle Busch) is not stopped, you will
lose more fans than you can count.
I believe if my ~year-old had done
what he (Busch) did on Saturday night,
June 6, 2009, he would not have been
_able to sit down for a while. This dtiver
gives racing a bad name. Been a race
fan for 50 years. It's falling short.
Mary Osborne
Centerburg, Ohio
Here's hoping that if Kyle Busch is
·stopped," it won't be because of attendance or fans' views. Everyone has
the right to his or her opinion, but popularity shouldn't have any effect on the
outcome of races. We assume you are
referring to the guitar-smashing inci·
dent in Nashville, and we sympathize
with your feelings there. He didn't
mean to be disrespectful, but he was.

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