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                  <text>Page B8 • 1he Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 6, 2~

www.myclailysentinel.com

Phone home and
call likely answered
on the cell, A5

Tiger is back, bUt without the same power
. PONTE VEDRA BEACH, importance of not stretching
Pia. (AP) - So much about the ligament
Tiger Woods after major knee
He noticed the difference his
surgery looks the same.
first tournament back in
He won at Bay Hill with a Arizona.
' birdie putt on the last hole !hat
"I just dido 't have the pop in
everyone knew he was going my body, nor shOiild I," he
to make. Even when his swing said. "It takes time for anyone
was out of sorts last week at who has a reconstruction (of
Quail Hollow, he somehow the ACL) to come back and
was i.n the thick of contention get the speed back and the
until the fmal two holes.
agility and all those different
But this . is not the same things. Most athletes take over
Tiger Woods .
a year to get back. With my
He is missing his power, sport, I've been able to get
whether it's off the tee with a back sooner lhan !hat, just
driver or from the fairway because of the nature of my
with irons !hat are sometimes siJort."
two more clubs !han what he
Distance is not an issue at
used before surgery iast Jljne The Players Championship,
to rebuild his left kliee. I
where the TPC Sawgrass is
The power shortage was only 7;215 yards. · Like most
never more evident !han the property in Plorida. it's all
fmal round of the Masters, about location. Even so,
playing with Phil Mickelson, Woods bristled at the sugges1\'hen Woods usually was the lion from NBC Sports analyst
first to hit from the fairway. Johnny Miller !hat he would
Even his rival couldn't help . be better off using a 3-wood to
but notice.
navigate the Stadium Course.
"I kept having to wait for
Remember, he used only
him to hit;' Mickelson joking- oiie driver in winning the
ly said Thesday.
British OJ?en · at Royal
TI!at wasn't the case the last Liverpool 10 2006. Then
time they played together .at again, !he links course.was dry
Augusta National, !he fmal and brown, and !he only water
round in 200 I, when on some on the course was in bottles for
holes WoodS hit it farther with drinking:
a 3-wood than Mickelson did
"We've got par 5s out here.
wilh a driver:
You've got to .be able to use
·, More .evidence came . last it," Woods said. "If Johnny
week at Quail Hollow.
says you can't hit drivers on 9
By measuring .drives on the and 11, you're giving up two
56 holes !hat were not par 3s, opportunities to get close to
Mickelson's average tee shot the green."
·
was · nearly 14 yards longer
The last guy to leave a dri-·
than Woods' . Statistics can be ver out of his bag was
misleading. especially over Mickelson last summer at the
the first two rounds because U.S. Open, when he playeil
they" played on opposite ends the first two days with Woods.
of the draw. But in !he lhird Bef6re !hat. the last time they
round, when they were sepa- were ·paired togelher was at
rated by one.group, Mickelson the
Deutsche
Bank
was longer off the tee on II of Championship,
where
!he 14 driving holes. Lefty's Mickelson beat him in the
average drive was 317.6 final round.
yards, Woods was at 300.5
Asked about Augusta last
yards.
monlh , Mickelson didn't
Woods has an answer for his notice anything out of !he
sudden loss of length.
ordinary - except !hat Woods
"I've been away from the was ftrst to hit. ·
game for a long time," he said
"It seemed like he was playTuesday, referring to his eight- ing like he normally did,"
month layoff after the U.S. Lefty said. "It seems like he
()pen. "And it's going to take has as much speed as.hewants
a 1in!e bit of time before my to have. Wilh that being said,
body gets back to where I can I've been able to increase my
hit the ball the same distances. speed a little bit this year, as
I don't hit the ball the same well. And even lhou!P! I've
distance with my irons or my ·weakened mr, iro!lS a. degree
driver."
or two,l'm sull hitting lhem5,
What he doesn't have an 6 yards longer than I did last ·
answer for is when he will get year. So I've almost gained!O,
it back.
.
·
. 12 yards with my irons with"Hopefully, soon," he said. out trying."
·
Woods said at Quail Hollow
Is tiger shorter?
that he was just starting to get
Or is Phil longer?
some "pop" back in !he swin~J.
Mickelson has always been
which had been missing earl1- more infatuateil wilh length
er in the year. He spoke about . !han Woods, althou~ Woods'
!he rotation required to gener- aura has been built around
ate speed in his swing, and the power.
·

Woods is having to make do
wilh less at 'the moment,
which is OK with him. He has
been experimenting wilh different shafts and lengths of his
driver, although he keeps
going back to what he had.
The Players Championship
will be the fourth straight tournament !hat Mickelson has a
chance to replace Woods at
No. I in the world rariking.
Lefty would have to win and
have Woods fmish worse !han
fourth place alone for that to
happen .
Is change imminent? Geoff
Ogilvy isn't so sure.
"Every time that there's
been this talk about, 'He's vulnerable,' and 'He's not where
he was,' he goes and wins
eight of the next 12 tourna,
.
APphoto
ments," Ogilvy said: "So I Tiger Woods hits from the ninth tee
during a practice round for the Players Championship
don't think anyone out here is golf tournament at the TPG Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., Tuesday. .
;
concerned that Tiger is not
going to be Tiger anymore."

~:~: ~~f~~r~re illegally deprived of

."The Yankees have a history of bullying people ~y disagree
1
w 1h," Brodsky said afterward. Under the financial arrangement, their tax money pays their mortgage, he said.
Schiller said Brodsky was wrong, !hat there's no $4 billion
subsidy. Carpinello said the assemblyman was bulljing them.
"Thecostofthe bonds !hat wereissuedbrtheiDAare being
paid by private investors, not by the public,' Schiller said. "The
land on which the stadium is built is city land and the stadium
belongs to the city, so the payments that are m* under these

____,....·.

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• Brewers top Reds.
.SeePageBl

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREEDIIMYDAILYSENTINELCdM

POMEROY '- A proposed increase
in
Pomeroy's income tax was
defeated in Tuesday's general election by nearly 68
percent, according to un?f·
ficial results from the Me1gs
County Board of Elections.
Voters approved the village's .participation in a gas

aggregation program by just
two votes - 83 to 8 I.
The proposed quarter-percent tax increase was rejected with Ill votes against, •
and · 53 for. The increase
would have generated another $80.000 for village services and operaling expenses, ~ayor John Musser said
earlier this week. Without
the additional income, layoffs may be necessary.

A one-percent tax is paid
by all village residents and
those who live elsewhere
but work in Pomeroy.
The vote was closer on a
proposed issue issue aJiowmg the village to participate
in a gas aggregation program and act as head of a
buying group for residents
who wish to participate in
the; program. The village
council ·says the program

will allow the village to purchase natural gas at a
reduced rate on behalf' of
natural gas customers, but
participation will 'not be
mandated.
Two · candidates for
Pomeroy Village Council ,
Republican George Stewart
and Democrat Victor C.
Young lli will advance to
lhe general election in
November. They were
'

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BSEAGENTOMYDAIL¥SENTINELCOM

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9

RACINE
The
Southern Local School
Board approved the followc
!ng personnel changes dur:
mg 1ts most recent meetmg.
The following substitute
teachers were approved:
Jamie Denlinger, Matthew
Gibson, Hannah Sandburg,
Kelli Dawkins. The follow.ing certified personnel were
approved on a one-year contract for the 2009-10 school
year: Joseph Cornell, Nick
Dettwiller, Chad Dodson,
. John Sargent, Jennifer
.Roush, William Berry,
Jel\llifer Hoi( Raebel Hupp.
Misty Rogers, · MafCla
Weaver, Tonya ·Smith, Lisa
Scheokelberg,
Angela
Smith, Brent Smith, Rashel
Yates, Patricia-Taylor. .
The following certified
.
Charlene Hoelllc11{phcl!oa personnel were approved ori
Meigs Intermediate School fourth grader, Jared Kennedy, was the first of 54 students pre- a continuing contract for the
sented a certificate or plaque in recognition of academic achievement at the awards ban· 2009-10 s.chool year: Jeff
Caldwell, Ryan Lemley,
quet Prin9lpal Rusty 13ookman made the presentation.
Jody Norris with Board
Member Peggy Gibbs voting no ·on the ·motion. The
board approved the .nonrenewal of the following
personnel due to their posi- ·
tions'"being long term substitute positions effective at
the end of the 2008·09
school year: Kyle Wickline,
Autuinn Lisle . The following classified personnel
were hired on a two-year
contract for the 2009-10
school year: Jodi Cummins,
Elizabeth Johnson. The
board ·approved the follow. ing exempt personnel on a
two-year contract effective
March 24: Christi Hendrix.
The Board hired Jennifer ·
Holt on a supplemental con•
tract
as
the
VLA
Coordinator for the 2009-10
school year for $1 ,500
payable 'as $500 for summer
school coordinator a!ld
Morgan .Lentes of Meigs Higti School, recipient ·of the Franklin B. Walter All-Scholastic $1 ,000 for the regular
Award, . was recognized at the Meigs County academic awards banquet and presented a school year. The Board
plaque by Kim Allen, director of gifted servlcas. Emina Hunter, right. was the nominee from accepted the resignation of
.Southern High School. ·
·
Richard Cooksey as high
school
track coach effective .
superintendents, . . Rick "Tony Deem of Southern.
the World Around."
Edwards of Eastern, Bill · Theme of the banquet
For additional photos , March 30. The resignat\o.iJ
of Brent Smith was acceptStickley of Meigs, and was "Opportunities Abound plfase see page A6.
ed as junior high track
.
.
.
coach for the 2009' season
and then he was hired on a
supplemental contract as !he
high school track coach for
to help With transportation an accurate reading) , the 2009 season in the
e 0 nsu, ~ Vl.Sl.'(. costs
to the appointment. To Dexoscan bone density test,
amount of $2,100. Holt was
days if it stops at the Meigs make an appointment call health snacks and nutrition also hired on a supplemenCounty Cancer Initiative's Norma Torres at 992-2161 education information, fit- tal contract for the 2009
Women's Health Day held arid if no one is !here, leave ness evaluatimis, cardiovas- season as junior high track
on Thursday, May Jl at St. ;t message :·· Appointments cular health and diabetes coach for a con.tract in the
Paul's Umted Methodist must be made by Monday at information, clinical breast amount of $1 ,400.
Church in TuPJII:rS Plains. !he latest to ensure the new exams by a nurse practition- . Carla Teaford was hired
MCCI's
Thmk
Pink van will be at Women's er, an "ask a nurse station" on a supplementaJ contract
Program offers free mam- Heallh Day.
where a nurse will be avail- · as assistant softball coach
mograq15 for those Meigs
Women's Health Day will able for health rel'ated ques- for the 2009 season in !he
County women that qualify offer not only free mammo-. lions and do pulse and amount of $1 ,400. Nick
through its grant from the grams to those that qualify blood pressure readings."
Dettwiller was approved as
Susan G. Komen Breast but a battery of free heallh
The Women's Health Day a volunteer assistant baseCancer Foundation.
screenings and tests for aU; screenings start at9:30 p.m. ball coach and Dennis
The i-ncome guidelines tests that may cost hundreds and . those !hat want to run Teaford was approved as a
make many mammograms of dollars at some health thrOugh the whole series of volunteer assistant softball
free and available to women care facilities. Those free free tests offered should be coach for .the 2009 season:
who work, have insurance tests include non-fasting there by 2:30p.m. at the (at- The Board approved a sabbut have a high deductible glucose and cholesterol est to begin.
batical leave for Ann
or bave no insurance. blood tests, (it's recom·The next women's health .Ohlinger for the 2009-10 .
Women who ~ualify also mended that you don't eat day will be on Aug. 25 at
get a $20 gasoline voucher two hpurs before the test for Portland Community Center. Pleut lee South.m, As

.d n
• tme. t
ClJlPOln
n s need d t

12 PAGES

'

Classifieds

BY BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENTIIMYOAILVSENTINELCOI.I ·

OSU's new mammography van to stop, maybe

i\nnie's Mailbox
Calendars

BOXES

'LAYS

2 SECJ10NS -

1111111
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1

TUPPERS PLAINS ..:...
The maiden voyage of !he
new The Ohio State
University's James Cancer
Center
Mobile
Mammography Van is.
scheduled to stop in Meigs
County on Thursday, May
II, if, there. are enough
clients.booked for the visit.
The van will stop if there
are a minimum of 15 people
scheduled for mammograms. So far, on! y five
have
been confirmed.
The
new state-of-the-art
mobile
unit will literally have been
on !he road for ·only lhree

unopposed in their prillllll)'
bids Tuesday. ·
According to unofficial
results of the Meigs
County Board of Elections.
,only 14 percent of
Pomeroy's registered voters - 164 - visited the
polls Tuesday . As of
Monday, only eight ·cast
ballots during the early
voting period of 30 days
prior to the election.

Southern
approves ·
personnel

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

POMEROY
The
accomplishments of 54 top
scholars in Meigs County .
schools and the selection ·of
Morgan Lentes was the
.recipient of the Franklin B.
Walter All Scholastic Award ·
was celebrated at the 25th
annual academic awards
banquet held Tuesday at
Meigs High School.
Lentes described as the.
"best and brightest of the
Class of 2009, recently
attended the Franklin B.
Walter · . All-Scholastic
Awards program bel~ in ·
Columbus at the conference
· center at NorthPointe in
Columbus. She was accompanied by hermolher, Cathy ..
. Lentes, John D. Costanzo,
superintendent · . of: ·. the
· Athens Meigs J;ducat,ional·
Servica Center, and Mike
Wilfong and Travis Abbott,
Meigs High School staff.
Frances Strickland wife of
Governor Ted Strickland
was the speaker.
At the county "banquet
I.entes spoke about her passion for writing and of her
plan to attending Ohio
University and pursue a
degree in journalism. ·She
mlked about the importance
of dreams., of setting goals, of
believing in yourself, and of
persistence in following !he
palh until dreams come true.
Other nominees for the
Walter award were · Emma ·
Hunter of Southern High
. School and Kyle Sargent of
Eastern High School. The
goal of the _program estab·
lished in 1989 where one
outstanding senior in each
county is selected for the
award, is .to recognize and
promote student achievement
and
academic
achievement.
.
Kim Allen, Meigs County's
director cif gifted service; pre·
sented a plaque to Mary
Hawk, principal of Meigs
Middle School, in recognition
of an all-girls team which
placed fiflh in an Ohio
University math contest. .
· Each of the scholars at
. the ·banquet was presented
a certificate or plaque by
the principal of the respective schools after being
introduced by the district

~

Prinled on lfiO%
Rec:yded Newsprint~·

tax

SPORTS

700W.MalnSt.
(7 40) 992-2891

__ ____

bonds which
are in islieu
of taxes.
he mixes
that upthetostadi~;"
make his ·
point.
false,
!hat "fAild
public
is financing

•

Pomeroy,OH

Yankees ask court to quash .
subpoena on stadium
.ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) -The New York Yankees urged a
state judge Tuesday to quash the subpoena from two Assembly
committees invesugating !he use of public funds to help build
the team's new stadium, saying !he issue already has been fully
aired publicly.
· Attorneys for the basebalr team said Assemblyman Richard
Brodsky, a Westchester Democrat, is exceeding his authority
and harassing the Yankees wilh legal actiort. The new stadium
in the Bronx was the s·ubject of 21 local, state and federal
approvals and 22 public hearings, they said.
·
"It's one of the most exhaustively ·reviewed and approved
public projects in the state and in the country involving a sports
team," attorney Jonathan Schiller said after Tuesday's COUI1
hearing. He estimated it would cost !he Yankees between
$600,000 and $12 million to comply wilh Brodsky's subpoena·for private information from the past nine years.
. Attorney George Carpinello argued in court !he subpoena
also was "grossly overbroad" and would require culling !he
elecn:onic and ·paper documents ~f more .than I00 people.
Carpmello added !hat the relevant InformatiOn 1s held by !he
New York City Industrial Development Agency and said the ·
Yankees already have provided the coiJunittees chaired by .
Brodsky and Assemblyman James Brennan with thousands of
pages of documents plus testimon}'.
Brodsky countered that the Yankees are using $4 billion of public-supported financing for the new stadium, which opened
m April across the street from the old one, while raising prices
beyond the reach of many taxpayers. He said the team should
be forced to disclose information so lawmakers can clarify !he
facts and whether the governing laws should chan~e.
''We have a right to know the trulh," Brodsky smd.
At State Supreme Court Justice John Egan Jr.'s suggestion,
both sides mlked. behind closed doors for more than two bows,
then Egan set the next hearing for May 27 to consider the subpoena and motion to quash it.
.
In coon documents, Brodsky said unresolved issues include
whether the Yankees .paiticipated in manipulation of property
tax assessments, how many new jobs were created at what
wages, how many New Yorkers have been exclll!led by higher

8 charged with point
·shaving at Toledo, Bt .

e · "'

�•
'

·~ ~
LIFE•

........

t
aylth &amp;
Amencan
Cancer

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RELAY

FOR UFE•
I

·~

.

r "''" '
\

" I 'f

'

MEIGS COUNTVRELA YFOR LIFE ACTIVITY
FOR ·THE PERIOD .

·"Of a{{ tlif forces tfiat maR! for a better
UJor{,£ none is Sj powerful as fwpe.
'Witfi fiope, one can tfiint_ .one can
wort, one can dream. If you fiave fwpe,
you fiave everytfii'ng. "

•

5:00 ·

Survivors Regtstration

6:00

Welcome· Opening Ceremony
Salute to American Flag
"National Anthem" • Karen Grimth
Introduction and Parade of Survivors

6:30

Survivors Receptionhosted by Rae Moore

I

I
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--------~------~ ___,.

There is something for
everyone at Health
Promotions!

~-- -

~

·'

,_

.,

'

::•

•

-

rl

•

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..

Health Promotions is a major focus of Relay
tor Life and a primary goal of The American
Cancer Society. ·. Education regarding
prevention and early detection of cancer is a
key factor in reducing cancer incidence and
. mortality.
.

7:15

· Still Sll!nding

8:00

Alexis HiD

8:30

\

.· Julie ·
·campell

· Recognition of Sponsors .
Tammy Matson and Sharoo Hawl~y

8:45
9:ln

. Recognition of Caregivers

Dusk

Luminary Service
Prayer- Fat)ler Walter Heinz
. Song-llrenda Phalin
Speaker. Sharon Harvey. Nurse, Holzer
Cancer Center
Jeri Hill· Racine United Methodist
Church Signing Team
Lighting of "Candle of Hope"
Lap In Sllente
·
Song- Brenda Phalln .

"Early Detection Saves Lives."

At Relay for Life, this infonnation is
presented in fun and creative way for all ages.
For the younger .folks, a. coloring contest
illustrating healthy lifestyles wins a prize for
all participants. Kids . of . all ages can
participate in . the games · at the ·Health
Promotions Tent.
Blood pressure
and body
fat screenings will .
..
.
be offered. Infonnation .on various types of
cancer wilL be available, with registered
nurses present to answer any questions you
may have. Numerous · local health
organizations will be represented.

SURViVORS RECEPTION 2009

Recpgnitlon of 'reams

6:45

Moonlight Madness

10:00

Saturday

Breakfast to be served by Middleport•
Pomeroy Roll!ry Club 7:00a.m.· 9:()0 a.m
'11:00-12:00 Closing Program

The Meigs County Relay for Life Planning .
Committee coordinated the third Meigs
County .Cancer Survivor Dinner on"March
20 , 2009 at the Mulberry Community
Center. God's Net volunteers, under the .
direction of Ron Vance, Director; prepared
and served the meal. Approximately 100
were in attendance.
Survivors- BE PROUD ofthe fact that
you have survived cancer. Relay for Life
1 offers something for everyone- from the
newly diagnosed, to caregivers and .
friend&amp;_, to long-term survivors. Relay for
.Life represents that those who face cancer
will .be supported, that those lost to cancer
will never be forgotten and that one day
caricer will be eliminated.

RFMFMTJFR THIS 15 A SMOKE FREE. AlCOHOl FREE,

This is why we Relay. .

AND NTFREE EVENT. THIINK YOU

·2009 Relay for Life Committee

'":.'.

JoAnn Crisp· Courtney Slm, Chairpersons
Hilary Patrick, Income Developm~nt Director

.·THINKPINK
The Meigs Coun'Y cancer Initiative,
Inc . will present th~ "Thin)&lt;. Pink"
project which makes mammograms
and travel vouchers available to Meigs
County women ages 35 -64 who are
under I uninsured arid income eligible:
MCCI , Inc . will also have information available oq
breast health . Plan on taking a few laps through the
Health Promotions area and see what we all have to
offer!

Steve Beha
Paula Clark ·
Gladys Cumings ·
Terri Fi(e
Dave Harris
Melissa Lambert
Christy Lavendar

John &amp; Sue.Lightfoot
. Linda &amp; Donnie Mayer
Rae Moore
Sherri Sisson
· Jerry &amp; Linda Vanlnwagen
Brenda Venoy.
.Mary Wqlfe

· ThankYou
To the Meigs County Agricultural Society and Shade
RiverCoo(lhuntersfor use of their facilities

•

Pancake ·
Breakfast .
Sponsored by: Middleport ·Pomeroy Rotary
Meigs County Fairgrounds
May 9, z009
Suggested Donation: Adults $5.00 Kids 12 &amp; under $1.00
·
All you can eat.
·
All proceeds benefit Meigs County Relay For life
Tickets may be purchased at the event •

'

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Thank you, ~kiw&lt; County, t&lt;&gt;r your ..;jlp&lt;'&gt;rt~"r
21K~ 1\lcig&gt;&lt;
&lt;~ ' tunt~ Jh· l:~~- lf•r J~ifc . Your Al~ ncruslty and-caring c:on~nm." tn
.. him.- tks p ll l ' t llC ~t· Jifftc ul r economic time •. We ~fc WcJ_K'd ro
ha\·L· ::ot.u:J1 w«Jndc rflJ I nd~h~ and frkl'ldtc. join usl'n · thi~
cunu nut:d f~h' a~a~n~t cancer. c:~,ngraru~ _I&lt;.• the American
&lt;: ~ nn•r - Snci~ty 's Rcl:\y f(l r l.ift for 2S YCiml ofccleb.nting

d.•.

:o:: t t rvi\·~· )rlt. n~ n-u,-mbcrin~ th~)ltc k 1~ t tt~ c~mc..:r ~nc.l ~ ~:r· alluwing U !\
Til ti~ht hllc k ~g:1in~t rhill·...Ji~casc.

•

'

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.

-

In Honor of Cancer Survivor I. jean Sim

·

Racine, 0~H

112 E. Memorial Drive, Suite A

Prot&lt;Ji•1

Pomeroy

992-6451 .

E. .\l•r('AIMriatlf C«ffCW'Socirty Ccr"""' lftwlfrt:f Ctilrm

•

..

985-3301
Chester,.Ohio

Pomero

Pomeroy

. 992-6611 ·
Middle.p ort, OH

/rtf.,.,.,....., IHwlth ""*"for •«·~ C.••IJ midrwa,

Pomeroy, Ohio

992·2955

AUTO • HOME • BUSINESS • HEALTH
LIFE • RETIREMENT

190 East Second St. • Pomeroy, OH
992-3381

Jeff Warner .
Insurance

bar

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Pomeroy, OH 45769 .
740-992-6626
www.meigscountyhcalth.com
H•~ofiiN Fmwt1,

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Established 1807
I. Fred W. Crow, SA (1879· 1957)
Fred W. Crow (1915- 1995)
I. Carson Crow

,.

740-992-7028

·leallll
. •••••C•a•ty
va
Departa•t

'·

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Baum Lumber

175 North 2nd Avenuewe'~~c·o;,tslf,CUSE Middleport, .OH

992·5627 •N2nd Middleport, OH g ~:=~~

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992-5132

.

. Ingels Carpet

Shoe Place·

CROW Law
Offices
110 W. 2nd Pomeroy

992-9784

99::t•,ll36 • Pomeroy, OH
985-3385 • Tuppers Plains; OH
446-ZU.S • Galllpoll!!. OH
· 304-773-6400 • Mason, wv
304-674-8200 • . Pleasant, WV

992·2635 • Middleport, OH ·

The

. Providing a world of choice in inslll'8l)ce.

Pomeroy

•·~ F!!!~!i..!lallk

P1cture Gallery·&amp;Jewelry

The Vaughan Agency
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Your Bank j&lt;ve /4e...

·. l~gels Electronics

Hope to ..,t_you on May 8-9 arrbt fairgrounth for a
~lebration of lifet

I

~

J

MEIGS COUNTY RELAY
May 8-9, 2009
, Meigs County Fair Grounds
Emcee- Steve Beha

e

As spring arrives, tens of thousands of volunteers are
lacing up their sneakers in preparation for the American
1998-2008
Cancer Society's Relay for Life.
2008
1
Relay is a ,life-changing event for all who take part. Every
2001
step taken at our local event will help raise money to 2
2006
60000
support our cancer-fighting mission .. ... .funds we will 3
2005
·..
50000
invest in research, patient services and programs to teach 4
'
2004
5
40000 '
all of us how to reduce our risk of cancer.
'
2003
30000 1
WHAT HAPPENS .AT RELAY? Relay for Life is a 6
2002
2000() 1
fun-filled, overnight event. Teams gather at local schools, · 7
I
2001
10000 I
colleges or public parks, striving to keep at least one team 8
.
.2()0()
!
_______
0 '·------:...·member walking the track at all times. The first lap of 9
- -- 1 2 ~ ····s 6 1 a 9 . 10 u
1999
every Relay honors cancer survivors of all ages, who walk 10
1m
to the cheers of family, friends and fellow Relayers; .A 11
-.
.
special ceremony also honors those who have provided
care for cancer patients. Friends, family and caregivers are
· Notes progress of Meigs Relay over the past ten yea.-.. . .' · ·.· ,
welcomed to take part..
.
·
.· ...__________,...______. __._ .._._.;.·.,........,_.
• ..
. As the sun goes down, scores .of luminaria " each
...
·.· TEAMS
'·
· designed to depict the lifestyle and/or hobbY. of a loved •
one touched by cancer -light the track to remind Relayers Relay for Life is a fun team event to fight cancer. Til~ str~ngth of .
people coming together for a common cause is greater than ·the ·
of the power we share in pursuing a cure.
. When they are not walking, Relayers enjoy a host of fun . strength of one. In 2009, approximately 20 teams have .~en fund- .·
raising to benefit.th~ American Cancer Society, As Relay be~:ins1;•·
activities and food provided by_the teams. You will also.. teams pitch t~nts (often decorating their campsite) $d setol!t foo,d.·
find live music at our event. .
. .
··· · ga!'fi~S and sleeping bags that will keep them going overnight.
F1GHTING CANCER 365 DAYS A YEAR! Although, . .
.
.
.
Relay events take · place from. April through ·August;· The 2009 Meigs·CO~nty Relay for Life Planning Committee would
Relayers know that fighting cancer is a ·year-round .job: .like to express siilcerest i\ppreciation ~our. faithful Team Captains,
This year they will have the chance to prove their who devote a significant. ~ount of time and energy toward
walkets and coordinating 'fund-raisers to benefit the
commitment by making · personal pledges to . support · recruiting
American Cancer Society. You are the heart and soul of Relay!
cancer prevention arid awareness. They could mean . Thank you. , , ~ .
·
helping a friend quit smoking, encquraging others to get
. .
.
tested for cancer or seeking a . healthier lifestyle f,or
·,
·sPONSORS
themselves.
·
·
.SII,YER
~~fs~~~~lK~!rECOMESURVIVORS . I~'; .. , PJ;A,'gMJM .
· Beha Insurance Agency
Thap.ks for all you are doing to fight cancer and make . · Powell's FoQd Fair
Downing Childs Insurance
the joUrney ofcancer patientsa little easier. .·. •
Family Healthcare, Inc.
Gold
2009 Meigs County
Relay for Life Committee
.
·· Home National Bank . · ·
.
.
AEPGavin
Meigs
Industries, Inc.
.
.
AEP Mountaineer
Cancer touches each of us
Middleport/Pomeror Rotary ·•
evecy day 'in some way. We all . AEP Sporn
Swisher &amp; Lohse
•
can "make a difference". ·The . D. V&gt;Weber Construction ·
In Rememberence
.. Committee works hard all year
of
· · long for that one moment in . Fanners Blink
IN-KIND
SPONSORS
.
.
.
time when )1\'e ~an make a U
Holz~ Center for Cancer Care
Meigs County Agricul~ural ·
. .. '
difference to a cancer survivor
Holzer Clii:lic ·
Society .
and their family. We urge ea,ch
Center
. of you to volunteer for :·HolzerMedi~~
.
Shade.River Coon Hunters
something that is close to your
Karr Contracting
Association
heart and in~e a "difference in
O'Bleness Health Systems
•
WYVKK92FM
. your community". The "heart
· PDK Construction .
Daily Sentinel .
that. gives gathers

43969 Hartinger Rd . .
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-7393
Owner: Bill Sim

I /l.ro., · •to; •n J•
"II (\,,l r"'... ~, ,

Remember Celebrate Fight Back

CELEBRATE, REMEMBER, FIGHT BACK

Arch•y

FORUFE•

I'

-

(Rain or Shine, Inside Roush-Thompson Building)

nve Paints

.

a team event to
fight cancer

fu••• "' , ,,

,
For Life
s County Fairgrounds

Soc:u.~ty

;• .. ,

RELAY

RELAY
FOR LIFE

eigs County

•

... •

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Join Us For

RELAY
FOR

..

. 1I www.myda1'Iysenune
. I .com

Page A2 - The Dail) Sentinel

.. 992-5432

992-5479

Pleasant Valley Hospital
304-675-4340

'I

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

I

I

PageA4
Thursday; May7,

· Thursday, May 7,

2009 ·

Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel Make ftiendship pay: Get Twitter, Facebook deals :
BY CANDICE

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

Congress shall make no law. respecting an
establishinent of religion, or prohibiting the
free extrt:ise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
!peech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievan~es.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

CHOt

retailer Zappos.com period- to individual interests.
to commenters by matching
AP PERSONAL FINANCE WRIT~R
ically gives passes for free
But before you sign up to clues in postings to the comovernight sh1pping through follow a company, be sure pany's database of customet
NEW YORK - Could a both Facebook and Twitter. you know whether it's run phone numbers and e-mails:
$10 coupon code buy your
Some companies also use I:)Y a fan or the company. It's Otherwise, CorneaS! reps'
friendship?
giveaways on the sites to usually fairly easy to tell if a may post a reply to the comIt's a proposition worth generate a buzz. This win- page Is maintained by the plamt online.
.
considering as more retailers ter, Burger King created a brand, and Facebook says it
Facebook and Twitter can
dangle exclusive discounts minor stir when it offered rakes down unofficial pages · also be used to get answers to
and perks on social nerrork- free Whopper coupons to if the company requests.
a broader range of questions:
ing sites such as Facebook anyone who deleted 10
CUSTOMER SERVICE The team that manages·
and Twitter, where people friends from Facebook.
Posting questions and con- Dell's Twitter account, foF
stay connected by posttng
Rather than troll for any cems on a public forum such instance, fields questions· on'
frequent updates about what di scounts you can find. as Facebook or Twitter can topics including environthey're doing.
check to see if your favorite provoke. a speedy response mental initiatives, new prodJ
You can also get the first .products
have
pages. for obvious reasons.
ucts and charitable programs.
word on special promo- Keeping up with a few · "You might get a lot more
"It runs the· gamut: .
tions, help resolving cus- brands you love might be a su~cess than waiting on a . (Twitter) opens up more of a.
tomer service disputes, or better strategy. since you phone call or in line for a dialogue than the traditional"
even friendly checkups on never know when companies help desk ,'' said Adam customer service line," .said·
how you're dojng.
will offer coupons and deals. Cohen, a partner with . Richard Binhammer, a Dell
In one recent Twitter post.
The frequent updates on Rosetta's consumer goods spokesman.
Kmart asks about a poster's Facebook and . Twitter can and retail practice.
LIFESTYLE
recent shopping trip, "which also be useful in jumping on . Users are often surprised by
Just as with a favorite TV ·
(stor.e) did you go to? let me limited-time offers.
how quickly they get respons- · show or sports team, you
know about your trip!"
That might be useful wilh es from Kmart and Sears to might choose to follow a:
Not ev~ry company is sites such as Dea!News.com, posts on . the sites, said company simply becausi
involved in social network- where about a third of listed spokesman Tom Aiello That you love the brand.
.:'
ing and many are still figur- sales expire within 24 hours, applies to even minor quesMadewell , the clothing'
ing out how to best use the said Dari de Grandpre, the tions, not just complaints . . · chain owned by J.Crew, uses
sites, but there 's no doubt site's chief executive·.
When one · Twitterer Facebook to keep shoppers'
more are getting into the act.
Even if a promotion lasts recently 'wondered why there informed of in-store parties
Out of 100 major retailers, several days, quick action was no layaway at Kmart's and events such as "Denim
59 had Facebook accounts in might mean snagging the New York City store, the After Dark." The idea is
September 2008. That ':"as size,color or mocjelyou want. company's posted this reply: make people feel they' re a
almost double the number JUS!
Companies
generally
"hmmm. I'll (at) you part of the brand.
four months earlier, according know better than to deluge when I connect with the lay- · "It's where people get theto Rosetta, a market research . fans with updates, too.
away team,"
first won! on .what we're'
fm:n based in Princeton, NJ.
Coupons.com,
for . In Twitter speak, (at) is doing;• said Gigi Guerra, head.
Here's how you can get instance, only updates its shor.thand for directing a of marketing at Madewell. .
the most savings and cus- Twitter account every two response to a particular user. · · Of
course,
public:
tomer
service
from to four hours, said Steven
Not every company moo- Facebook or Twitter pages·
Face book and Twitter.
Boal, the s·ite 's founder and itors the We.b for com- vary in sophistication. Some
SAVINGS:
chief executive.
·· plaints •. but they're general- companies create pages that, ·
The discounts on Facebook
"We wanted to be very ly gettmg more savvy as remain static for weeks at a.
and Twitter often inimic those careful. You don 't wanL to shoppers increasingly head time. Others use the sites tO:·
sentine:mail newsletters. But inundate people with infor- · online to air concerns, said engage shoppers.' in discus-.
compan1es also offer exclu- mation ," he said.
Rosetta's Cohen. .
sions and keep them con-.
sive deals on the sites.
To help avoid that prob- . Some ·com]ian;es have nected to the brand.
·
Sears, for instance, some- . !em, Dea!News .com plans entire s.·taffs devoted to pol.ic"People don't go to these
times gives $10 coupons to to segment its feed into cat- ing their online reputattons. sites to shop, they go to
people who become fans on egories such as women's
In 2007, cable provider in.teract," Cohen said. :•so if
Facebook. Dell posts dis- clothing and ele~tronics ·comca.~t formed a team to . all (the company is) doin~ is
count codes for online pur-. within the next tew weeks . scour Web postings for com- broadcasting specials, 1t's
chases on Twitter. Shoe The idea is to tailor updates plamrs. The team reaches out not going to work."

· Today is Thursday. May 7, the I 27th day of 2009. There
are 238 days 1eft in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 7. 1915. pearly 1.200 people died when a
German torpedo sank the British liner RMS Lusitania off
the Irish coast.
On thi s dare:
In 1789. the first inaugural ball was.held in New York in
honor of President George Washington and his wife, Martha.
In ]833, composer Johannes Brahms was born in
Hamburg, Germany. .
.. .
In 1840, composer Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky was born· in
Votkinsk. Russia.
·
In 1909, Edwin H. Land, inventor of polarizing filters and
Polaroid instant photography, was born in Bridgeport, Conn.
In 1945 . Germany signed ail unconditional surrender at
Allied headquarters in Rheims , France.
In f954 , the 55-day Battle of Dien Bien Phu in Vietnam
ended with Vietnamese insurgents overrunning French forces.
In 1960. Leonid Brezhnev replaced Marshal Kliment
Voroshilov as president of the Presidium of the Supreme
Soviet.
In 1975. President Gerald R. Ford formally declare()
end to the "Vietnam era." In Ho Chi Minh City - formerly Saigon -'- the VietCong celebrated its takeover.
·
In 1977, Seattle Slew won the Kentucky Derby, the first
of his Triple Crown victories. (On this date in 2002, Seattle
Slew died.)
.
In 1984, a $180 million out-of-court settlement was
anno~nced in the Agent Orange class-action suit brought
by Vtetnam veterans who charged they'd suffered injury
from exposure to the defoliant.
· Ten years ago: NATO jets struck the Chinese embassy in
Belgrade, killing three people and injuring 20; President
Bill Clinton called the attack a "tragic mistake." A jury·in
Pontiac , Mich ., ordered "The Jenny Jones Show" to pay
$25 million to the family of Scott Amedure, a gay man who .
was shot to death after revealing ·a crush on Jonathan
Schmitz, a fellow guest on the talk show. (However, the
. Michigan Court of Appeals later overturned the award, and
fhe Michigan Supreme·Court refused to hear an appeal.) .
Five years ago: Army Pfc . Lynndie England, shown in
photographs smiling and pointing at naked Iraqi prisoners,
.was charged by the military with assaulting the detainees
and conspiring to mistreat them. (England was later convicted of conspiracy, mistreating detainees and committing
~n indecent act, and sentenced to 36 months; she served
·.
half that term.) Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld
offered "my deepest apol()gy" to abused Iraqi prisoners and
Willlled that videos and photos yet to come could further
.
,
.
.
inflame worldwide outrage.
One.year ago: Preside~! Geor~e W. Bush, addressing the
Having stampeded his ill· ''Cheney's Cheney," badgered well-debated, policy decision,
Council of Amencas, sll!d Cuba s post-F1del Castro leader. the CIA to endorse two fixed . made in the proper places .. ,
.ship had made only "empty gestu~s. at reform" as he reject- · informed predecessor into a
ideas: . that Saddam Hussein by the proper officials."
.•
ed calls for easmg of U.S. restnct1ons on the communist series of catastrophic blunisland. Dmitry Medvedev was sworn in as Russia's president. ders, it appears that Dick
possessed nuclear weapons,
That's the Washington
Thovght for Today: "We all live in suspense, from day to Cheney has declared open
and meant to use them on Post"smincingarbiterof~
day, from hour to hour; in other words, we are the hero of bureaucratic war - the only
behalf of Osama bin Laden. priety David Broder. God for-.
Gene
The inconvenient fact that no bid we should criminalize
ou.r own story." - Mary McCanhy, American ..author kind he's ever known how to
~1912-1989).
Lyons
evidence existed only caused decisions made by insiders;
fight - upon President
Barack Obama. After
them to redouble their efforts. better to junk the Constirution·
Thus, it increasingly than create awkwardness at
decades bullying the CIA
LETTERS TO THE
and other intelligence· agenappears to have been the Washington dinner parties. ·
cies to ·affirm his crackpot hulk of the Soviet Union as cause of the United States'
Ali Soufan, the FBI agent
EDITOR
worldviews, he's trying to verging upon imminent sickening descent into tor- responsible ·for questioning
Leiters to the editor are welcome. They should be less pull the same routine on the .world domination.
rure. Experienced Hll inter- Zubaydah, has broken 1\
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be White House to redeem his
After the Berlin Wall's ·col- rogators who'd extracted cru- seven-year silence in a New
stgned, and tnclude address and telephone number: No own shattered reputation. Or lapse proved that the belea- cial evidence from captured York Tunes op-ed asserting
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in 1S it somethin~ more sinister? guered CIA had actually dra- AI Qaeda function'ary Abu there was "no actionable intelgood taste. addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
As the longtnne leader of the matically overestimated Soviet Zubaydah - including the ligence gained from liSing
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- Republican Party's Chicken might, Cheney; Rummy. identity of 9/11 mastermind enhanced interrogation tech-.
ed for publication.
Linle faction , Cheney's career Wolfie aqd the gao&lt;&gt; found a Khalid Sheikh Muhummad niques on Abu Zubaydah." ·
testifies to his skill at backstairs new obsession. Styfutg them- - were unable to confirm
Equally crucial, SoufaJi
mtrigue. Longtime allies have selves the "Project for a New Cheney'sobsessions.
defendshisCIAcolleaguesas
speculated that his health Prol&gt;: American Century," they
The result, beginning in "people who felt as I did
lems. followed by the 9/11 urged Bill Clinton to invade August 2002, was Justice about the use of enhanced
attacks, drove him around the Iraq in 1999. Next would come Department memos dis- techniques: It is un-American;
Reader Services
cusPS 213-9601
bend. Gen. Brent Scowcroft, Iran, and an American empire missing as "quain(' the ineffective and hannful to our
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Pubtlllhlng Co.
national security adviser to two from the Mediterranean 10 the Geneva Conventions, and national security."
Our main concem ln aft stories is to Published every morning. Monday
Pe accurate: If you know qf an enor through Friday, 111 COurt Street,
GOP presidents, told the New Himalayas.
.
authorizin~ waterboarding,
It's this last that's given
· in a story, call the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy, Ohio. Seoond-class postage
Yorke.~,"ldon'tknowhimany•
Perennially
wrong,
but
~leep
deprwation
and
beat~
observers
like me pause:
992-2156.
paid a1 Pomeroy.
more.
never in doubt, Cheney and mgs falhng short of "organ Prosecuting career CIA
Member: The AssocMlted F'ress and
Col.
Lawrence
Wilkerson
h1's
c1'rcle first pooh-poo
· hed . failure and death," speciti- agents wh'1 le Chene d
Our main number Is
the Ohio Newspaper Assodalion.
Colin Powell's cht'ef of' the AI Qaeda terrorist thre&lt;\t. cally against Zubaydah.
uoes
guest shots with Sean :y
Hannity
Potitmaater: Send address correc1740) 992-2156.
staff, was quoted in Jane then panicked after 9/11 _
It's the timeline that's sig- and Rush Limbaugh accusing
Department extensions are: tions to The Daily Stntinot P.O. !lax
729, Pomeroy. Onlo 45769.
Mayer's Tlte Dark Side as quickly magnifying a band nificant: All this took place Obama
of
weakel\ing
saying that "Cheney was of stateless fanatics with an preo:;isely as the Bush White America's defenses, all but
News
Subscription Rates
traumatized by 9/11. The . appetite for mass murder into House began its 2002 pre- openly hoping for a successEdllor: Charlene Hoeflich, E&gt;&lt;t. 12
By carrier or motor route
Reporter : Brian Reed. Ext. 14
poor guy became paranoid. yet another e~istential threat election propaganda cam- ful terror strike with the
· - · ..............'11.30
Roporler: Be1h Sergent. E&gt;&lt;t . 13
... I can't fault the man for to the nation ·s survival.
paign urgmg war with Iraq: potential to restore his faction
5 2 - · ............'121.85
O.lly ...................50'
wanting to keep America
They aq,'Ued that the real "mushroom clouds," yel- to power, would be a grave
Senior Clttun nteo
Ad1(ertising
safe, But he was willing to threat to America wasn't lowcake uranium, ere.
moral and political em&gt;r.
•
Dulaldot !;Illes: Dave Harris. E&gt;&lt;t. 15 2 1 - · .............'5g.61
·corrupt the whole country in Osama bin Laden, but Saddam · Was it truth or useful fie- · This isn't a fight Obama
Dulaldo Sale.: Brenda Davis. Ext 16 5 2 - • .......... ..'116.90
order to save it."
·
Hussein, demanding that the tion Cheney's thugs were has wanted, but Cheney'S
Clesa.ICin:.: Judy Clartc, E&gt;&lt;t. 10
~"""'
oi10uld '"""' in A less charitable view CIA produce ironclad evi- after? Authoritarian regimes making it one he cannot
&lt;ha
b Tho lloiY - . No sub·
scription t':f mall pennilled if1 areas
might be that maneuvering · dence that the attacks on New . have always used torture to avoid. Nothing shon of
Circulation
where hom&amp; carrier S8Nice is 8'ol8ilable.
his
way into the vice presi- York and Washington were secure false confessions.
full-scale investigation can
Cl......llon . . . . _, David Lucas.
dency finally gave Cheney masterminded in Baghdad.
The FBI. believing the cauterize this wound.
·
740'446·2342. Ext. 11
Malt Sub8cnptton
the power to bend the CIA to Analysts who pointed out that orders illegal, actually with(Arkansas
DemocratInside Melga COUnty
his will. He'd been pestering Iraq and AI Qaedaweremc:xtal drew from the investigation Gatette columnist Gene
1 2 - ... . ........ .'36.26
General
26 Wileb . ....... .....'70.70
Charleoe Hoeflich. Ext 12 .
the agency to report that the enemies were met with deri- - a development convenient- L vons is a National
5.2 Weeks ........ ... '140.11
sky was falling since the sion. bullying and threats.
ly overlooked by establish- Maga:::ine Award winner
E-mllil:
1970s.
first
as
an
acolyte
of
According
to
Mayer's
brilment Beltway pundits now and co-author of "Th~
Outside Me!go County
mdsnewsOmydailysentinel.com
"Team B." next the · tiantly reported.boolc Cheney bleating like sheep thai despite Hunting of the P~sidem·~
12 Weeks ........ . ....'56.55
26 Weeks ............' 113.60
"Committee on the Present and his staffers. particularly their shamefulness, the (St. Marti11's Press. 2000).
52 Weeks •.......... '227.21
www.mydailysentinel.com
Danger" - well-financed one
David Addinglon. "memos on torture represent- You can e-mail Lwms at
effons to dc;pict .the decrepit described by many as ed a deliberate, and internally eugene/yons2@yaltoo.com);

an

.

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(

•

.

Pomeroy High School Alumni tickets on sale

Pamela G. Gordon

· LETART,
W.Va.
Pamela G. Gordon , 44,
I,..etan, W.Va ., went to be
with the Lord on May 6,
2009 at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
. She was born on Jan. 12,
~965 to Delores (Fife)
Riggs of Letart, W.Va ., who
survives and the late Jack
B; Riggs . She was also preceded in death by a son,
Timmy Gordon . .
Other survivers include
daughters, Kelly (Chris)
Yonker of Hartford, W.Va.,
Bobbi (Brandon) Carpenter
Pamela G. Gordon
of Letart, W.Va .; a sister,
Teresa (Zach) MacKnight of Letart, W.Va., J11ckie Riggs
and friend, Sue Crump, also of Letart, and special friends ,
Allison Sayre, Jamie Knapp, Elizabeth Gerlach, and many
. aunts, uncles , nieces and· nephews.
.
Funeral services will be held Saturday, May 10, at I
P..m: at Foglesong-lucker Funeral Hqme with burial in
Zerkle Cemetery. Officiating at the service will be Pastor
Jason Simpkins. Friends may call at the funeral home
from 6 to 9 p.m·Friday.
.
·· E-mail condolences can be sent to foglesongtucker@verizon.net.

Joseph Lawrence
· BELPRE - Joseph D. "Joe" Lawrence, 70, of Belpre,
died · Wednesday May 6 , 2009, at Camden-Cfark
Memorial Hospital.
.
· He was born in Meigs County, a son of the late James .
and Hattie (Hayman) Lawrence. He retired from the
Carpenters Local 650 in Pomeroy, and also worked for
Locals in Aiken, S.C. and Madison, Ind. He . enjoyed
woodworking and gardening.
.
.
.·
.
· He is survived by his wife, Shelia Lawrence; claughters,
Nancy Wilford (Tbeodore) of Long Bottom, Debra Drake
(Thomas) of Racine, Kathy Francis (Manual) of
Cottageville, W.Va., and JoEIIen Wolfe of Wellston; sons:
Robert Lawrence (Julie) and Timothy Lawrence (Kenda),
all of. Long Bottom; daughter, Pamela Pierce. of
Ravenswood; stepdaughter, Peggy Tucker of Belpre; stepson Robert B¢ll (Stacy) of Belpre; several grandchildren
and great grandchildren; sisters-in-Jaw, Jva ·Lawrence and
JoAnn Vaughan; and several nieces and nephews.
.
· · In addition to his parents be was preceded in death by
four brothers: Charles, Norman; Howard, and Clarence
Lawrence; and two infant grandchildren.
. ·
.. Service will be at 2 p.m, Friday at Leavit\.Funeral Home,
Belpre. Entombment will be at Sunset Memory Gardens.
Vis1tation will he 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. ThurSday.
Online condolences may be sent to the family at
www.LeavittFuneralHome.com.

Local Briefs

Scholarship application deadline nears

Gardeners get tips on container plants
REEDSVILLE - Hal grown in a cont;liner.
Kneen, · Meigs County
Following his presentaAgriculture &amp; Natural tion, .buffet-style refresh'Resources Educator, · was. .ment course was hosted by
guest ·speaker at a recent Kila Frank, Janice Young
meeting of the Riverview and Janet Connolly.
Garden Club, held at the St.
A short business meeting
Paul U. M.. Building in was conducted b,Y Young
Tuppers Plains.
with Connolly givmg devoHe presented an interest- tions, reading ·.from Ideals,
inl! and informative J?rO- . "Spring Fever," "All thing
gram
on
"Contamer Bnght and Beautiful," and
Gardening," giving hints on "Little Dandelion." .
proper soil, fertilizer and
Memhers responded to roll
watering for care of plants call by namiitg a favorite

bedding plant. Minutes were
read and approved and treasurer Margaret Cau!hom
gave her report. Patty
Grossnickle also repOrted on
the flower fund.
Frances Reed announced
a container party to he held
by the fire dep311ment. .
A day trip for the month ·
of June was discussed and a ·
committee
of
Nancy
Wachter, . Grossnickle, and
Delores Spencer w~s selected to plan ·for the trip. A

Public .meetings · at ~~T~AN~ _ Revival . ~;:,~;;red Hit~
Thursday, May 7
SYRACUSE _ Syracuse

services at the Rose of
Sharon Holiness Church,
Rutland, through May 10, 7
Village Council, regular ~·.m ..each _.· evening. ·Ricky
meeting , 7 p.m., village
1·
Th
hall.
.
ose, evange 1st,
e
Thesday, May 12
Roses, singers. Rev. Dewey
SYRACUSE .... · The King, pastor.
POMI!.ROY - Revival
Syracuse Community Center services at the Calvary
Board of Directors ..yill meet Pilgrim Chapel, State Route
at 7 p.m. at the Commumty . 143, Pomeroy, 7 p.m.
Center conference room. _. through May 10. Monty
POM~ROY - Bedford . Hurst, ~vangelist, with the
Hurst
Family
Township
· ·7 Trustees,
t regular
hall
·
· · ~rovidin~ s~meetmg, p.m., own
. c1al n,m.slC: ev. C ares
McKe~~,p~~· 992·.2952 ·

Church events ,

School.
Student

Council.

Motorcyclists to meet
POMEROY - The Christian Motorcycle Association,
Meigs County Chapter Delivered, will have theii regular
monthly meeting Saturday, May 19 at Colilmon Grounds;
Highland Road, Pomeroy. Meeting times have been
changes to .9 a.m. fodhe summer months. ·
.· . ·
'

Kids fishing day announced

·· CHES'TER - The annual fishing dayfor kids, sponsored
by the Meigs County Fish and GI!IIle Association, will be
beld from 8 a.m. to noon.on West Shade River. Directions
.
will be posted.
, The evem is for children 15 and under and each one must
be accompanied by a parent. Door prizes will be awarded
and children must be present to claim a I?rize. Hot dogs,
chips and drinks will he served. For more mformation call
.Dave Doerfer, 992.0026.

Local Weather
.
. ·'

•

Thursday•..Mostly cloudy. of thunderstonns. Highs in
A slight chance of showers in the mid 70s. Southwest
the moming ...Then a chance winds around 5 mph.
of showers in the afternoon. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Friday night ••.Mostly
~puthwest winds 5 to !0 cloudy with a chance of
mph. Chance of rain 30 per- showers and thunderstorms.
cent.
Lows in the mid 50s.
.: Thursday night ••.Mostly Chance of rain 50 percent.
f!loudy with a chance of
Saturday and Saturday
showers with . a slight night ••.Mostly cloudy. A 30
. chance of thunderstorms. · percenrchance of showe.rS.
J.,ows in the . mid 50s. . Highs in the lower 70s.
Southwest winds 5 to . I0 Lows in the upper 40s. .
~ph . Chance of rain ~perSunday and .Sunday
cent.
night ••.Partly cloudy. Highs
· · Friday••.Cioudy
·with in the upper 60s. Lows ,in
shower.i likely with a chance the upper 40s.
· ..

Local Stocks
. AEP (NYSEI - 26.18
AklO (NASDAQ) - 44.79
Ashland Inc. (NYSEI - 26.03
Big Lots (NYSEI - 27
Bob EYllns (NASDAQ} - 25.$9
lioogwomer (NYSE) - 30.64
Century Alumlllum (NASDAQ)

'-7.13
Chllmplon (NASDMI) - 1.74
Channing Shop&amp; (NASDAOI3.51
City Holding (NASDAOI - 32.71
Cottlnt (IIYSEJ - 38.78

buPont (NYSE) - 28.711
US Blintc (NYSE) - 21.29

GMne11 (NYSE) - 5.35
G.nenot Elocblc: (NYSEI - 13.67
IIINIIIV OW.klloit (NYSEI- 21.15
JP lo1otpn (NYSEI- 37.22
~ (NYSEI- 21.MI
Uml1edlkln&lt;IS (NYSEI- 13.21
37.70

Soutliem (NYSE) -

Ohio v.lley Blinc Coop. (NAS. .
DAQ)- 21 .78
BBT (NYSEl - 27.70
Pe&lt;lpiM (NASDAQ) - 18.56
Pllpslco !NYSEI ..,. 49.72 .

-(NASDAQ)- 5.211.
!lw*w.a (NYSE) - 31.13
.Roc:lty llools (NASDAQ) - U3

Clubs and
organizations

Friday,.May 8 ,
RUTLAND - Kenneth
Thursday, May 7
Kent, Sr., Rutland, will eel·
· b
h' 80 h b. hd
TUPPERS
PLAINS
e rate ts · I
1rt ay;
Auxiliary,
VFW
905-3, 7
Cards may be sent to 34843
·p.m. at the hall.
~h~ 4~~~~ .Rd., Rutland,
. The
CHESTER
Wednesday, May 13
Chester-Shade Historical
REEDSVILLE _ Annie Association will meet at 1
ca1away WI'II observe her p.m. at the courthouse.
. 85th birthday on Ma 13.
REEDSVILLE
Cards may be sent to be.r at Eastern Music Boosters. 7
48184. S.R. 681, Reedsvtlle, p.m. at the high schoolband
room. New officers to be
Ohio 4S772.
. POMEROY - ·Charles installed. ·
· Blakeslee, longtime Meigs
Thursday, May 14 ,
County Extension Agent,
CHESTER
Shade
will observe his 99th birth- River Lodge 453, 7:30 p.tn.
· day on May I 7. Cards may at the hall. Refreshments.

. · . . · ts
Other .even
.

Friday, May 8
.. . .
LONG BOTTOM - .
Wednesday, May 7 ·.
Faith Full Gospel Church, . TUPPERS PLAINS State Rout.e 124, · singing American Red Cross blood'
by the Peacemakers, 7 ·p.tn' mobile, 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.,

Pho11e home and call likely answered on the _cell.
WAsHINGTON - &lt;' In a
high-tech shift accelerated by
the . recession, 1he nlimber of
. U.S. households Opting for
only ·cen .phones has for the
first time surpassed those that
just have traditional landlines.
It is the freshest evidence
of the ·growing appeal of
wireless phones.
·
Twenty perCent of households had only cells during
!he.last hillf of 2008, ~­
i)lg to a Centers for Disease
Control ll!ld Prevention survey released. Wednesday.
Thatwas an increase of nearly 3 percentage points oyer
the first half of the
the
largest · six•month mcrease
since the government staited
gathering such data in 2003.
The 20percent of homes
with only cell phones c.om·
pared with I7 percent with
landh'nes but no cells .
That ratio has changed
starkly in recent years: In
the first six months of 2003,
just 3 percent of households
were wireless only, while 43
percent stuck with only
landlines.
~tel?hen Blumherg, senior
scientist at the CDC and an
author of the report, attributed the growing number of
cell-only households in part
to a recession that has forceq
many families to scour their
budg~:ts for savings. People
who live in homes that have
only Wireless service tend to
he disproponionately lowincome. young, ·rentc;rs and
Hi . . s.
.
·~o expect that with
the recession, we'd see an
increase in the prevalence of
wireless only households,
ab.ove what we might have
expected had there been no
recession," Blumberg said.
Six in 10 households have

rear.

oc-

· .!"".&amp;~• .,._

ln l~ls .k.dy 1, :2ooa file phot.o~ Austin
moblle,phoneaccessoriesln Los Angeles. . . llrstllme,
the number of l,J.S, households Opting for only
outnumber those that just have tradijional land lines In a
high-tech shill accelerated by the recession.
both landlines a:nd ·cell
phones. Even so, industry
analysts emphasized the public's growing love affair with
the versatility of cell phones.
which can perform functions
like receiving text messages
ll!ld are also mobile.
· "The end 'game is consumers are paying two bills
for the same service,"' said
John Fletcher, an. analyst for
the market research 6nn SNL
Kagan, referring to cell and
landline phones. "Which are .
they going to choose?They'll
choose the ooe they can lake
· with them in their car."
In ooe illustration o[ the
impact !helle changes are.baving, 'kriz.oii CommuniC!IIions
Inc. bad 39 million hmdline
tel~ne
c~~rs · in
Man:h 00011 but 3S million a
year later. o-- the same period, its wireless customers '
grew from 67 million to 87
million, though 13 million of
the added lines came from the·
firtn.'s acquisition of Alltell

Southern frOm PageAl

school yeac in accordance
·with the Sriuthem Locill
Education Association's
41.011
negotiated agreement.
s-.
61.07 - · !NASDAOIRoberta Salyer was hired
(NYSE)- 49.51
as
TAG reacher for the gift-.c!J'a (NYSEI- 4.91 ·
ed grant retroactive to Dec,
(NYSE)- 1t.70
~ (NYSE)- 15.53
I, 2008 at an hourly rate .of
Dlllly _
_ . . _ .....
$23
that is paid from grant
p.m. ET -..g quDIII o l - .
funds.
The Board accepted
for M8y S, 20011,......,....
ed by Ednrd Jones nawnc'..
the resignation of Judy
tauc -In GloUipQOa Gilmore as a kinderganen
• (740) 441-9441 .......,
teacher effective at the ,end
Marrero in Point Pt111•11t
of the 2008-00 school year.
(304) 17~174.111111ber StPC.

""""OuWt - .:.

be ;;ent to him at 3400 West
Rillgewood
Drive,
Rockport, !tid. 47635.

. Birthdays

..

CLIFTON - Special singing will be held at 6 p.m•.at the
Clifton United Methodist Church on May 30. Music will be·
by His Own of Ashland, Ky.; and the Gospel Bluegrass
Gentlemen. For more·information ca11304-77~-5559. · .

card was signed for Ila
Westfall and Connolly read
scripture.
·
The May meeting will he
held at the U.M. Church in
Reedsville and hostesses
will be Cauthorn, Spencer
and Marilyn Hannum .
Grossnickle and Wachter
received the door prizes .
·Those attending besides
the ones named· · were
Maxine Whitehead, Mary
Ann Harris, and Margaret
·
Grossnickle.

Commwlity Calendar

BY ALAN fRAM

Singing at church

tion, current photo and
information on relationship
to the graduate, to the
alumni association at the
above address.
The Charles Gibbs scholarship is available to graduates living in Pomeroy
and going into the educational field .

line for submitting applications for one of the three
POMEROY - Tickets Pharmacy or Francis Florist $800 Bob Roberts scholarfor the annual Pomeroy in Pomeroy, or by sending a ships to be given to either a
High School ·Alunnni ban- check and self-addressed, child or grandchild of a
quet and -dance will be on stamped envelope to the Pomeroy High School
sale through May 15.
Pomeroy High ')chool graduate.
The price is $15 and the Alumni Association, Box
Those applying are to
tickets can be purchased at 202, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. send a resume, transcript of
Swisher
and
Lohse
May 15 is also the dead- grades, letter of applica-

AS$.0CIAT£P P.RESSWRlTER ·

Cheney's pairiful·war for torture .·

·The Daily Sentinel

Ma,....

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Www.mydailysentinel.com

2009

FMLA leave was approved

for Jody Norris effective
March 30 and for Amy
Roush effective April 15.
The Board approved the
position of athletic trainer
for the 2009-10 school yeac
not to exceed the amount of
$5.000. Board member
Richard Hill voted against
the motion.
The Board's next meeting
is at 8 p.m., May 18 in the
high school medta room.

.

Coq&gt;., according to figures
provided
by · Verizon
spokesman Bill Kula.
Another •
Verizon
spokesman, Eric Raile, said
he wasn't sure the overall
drop in latidliileswas di11!Ct·
ly related to the stalled
economy, although he said
the company has lost some
landline business customers
because companies are closin§ some of their locations.
'For so~ebody who's
.

.

mobile and not planning to
he in the same apanment for
more .than a yeur, it's ve~
appealing tO go with a cell, '
· Rabe said.
·
Further underscoring the
. public's
diminishing
reliance on landline phones,
ihe federal survey found that
15 percent of households
have.b.oth landlines and cells
but take few or no calls on
their
landlines, often
· becauSe they are wired into
computers. Combined with
wireless only homes, that .
· means .that 35 percent of
· households - more than
. ·one in three - are basically
' ·reachable only on cells.
; .The changes are· impor. tail! for pollsters, who fof
; years relied on reaching
people on their landline ·
telephones. Growin~ num·
hers of "surveys now mclude
calls to f?COple on their cells,
which 1s more expensive
partl;r: because federal laws
prohibit pollsters from ·
using computers to place
callno wireless phones.
About a third of people
age !8 to 24 live in households with only cell phones,
the federal figures showed,
making them far likelier
than older people to rely
exclusively on cells. The
same is true of f.out in !0
people age 25 to 29.

+
NURSES WEEK
SPECIAl .

20%-off
All HMpital Apparel
Mav 6th • Mtrt 13th.
M-1\1-Wed 9:30- 5; Sat. 9:30-1
Closed Thor &amp; Sun

'S

•

ll4 E. Mlin Street • Pomeroy. OH

74D-992·3684
•

�PageA6

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 7, 2009

.ANNIE'S MAILBOX ,

.

...

SCHOLARS RECOGNIZED Many ways .to provide assistance~
help. Mom may not like it,
but you have to take care of
your mental health.
Dear Annie: My mother
Dear Annie: I would be
has always been· a strong grateful if you pass along
presence in my life. to your readers some helpGrowing up, I couldn't do ful hints when leaving a
anything right. She took voice mail message, espe·
things away From me and cially on a cell phone. I'm
redid them, or stood over · a Realtor and receive sevme and directed.
era! such messages every
Three . years ago, my day. Many . people leave
husband suggested we long, rambling messages
move my parents in with and then say their phone
us because their neighbor- . number sq quickly I can't
hood bad become drug and gei it the first time . I then
gang infested and we have to go back and listen
feared for their safety. Dad to the whole message
has
Alzheimer's
and again. Be.ca"use a lot of the
Parkinson's, which have cell phone calls are transgreatly slowed his move- · -ferred through my office,
ments, but he is still able "there is no original call log
to feed, bathe and dress number to check and make
himself. However, living this easier.
Please tell your readers
with my mom is a night·
mare. She pokes her head when leaving a voice mail
into our bedroom many message to keep it short, say
times a day and · stands · your phone number slowly
over me in the kitchen, and then repeat the number. •
often ·gettii)g between me It would be greatly appreciand whatever I'm doing. I ated by those of us who rely
have tried talking to her on our cell phones for a liv·
about it, but · it doesn't ing. - Realtor in Orange
help.
·
Park, Fla.
We recently bought a
Dear Rejiltor: This goes
house in another city. I for any voice mail, whether
would Jove to get my par- cell phone ·or landline
ents set up in their own answering
machine.
place now, but . Mom has Sometimes thl(· connection
repeatedly . said she can't is scratchy, and no matter
t~e care -of my father by how many times you play
herself. I feel so f1l!pped·and back the message, the numguilty. What do [ do? ber is barely audible.
Wilting in the South , ..
Repeating it slowly would
· Dear Wilting: There are help. Please, readers, keep
ways to help your mother this in mind. It could
care for Dad without sacri- explain why some of your
ficing your happiness and phone messages haven't
independence. Look into been returned.
·
assisted-living
facilities
Dear Annie: Thank you
close enough for you to visit for VJe support you've
often. Check out home shown in regard to organ,
health care options,' includ- tissue and eye donation , I
·ing . the Vtsiting 'Nurse would like to correct some ·
Association (vnaa.org) at outdated information · in
900 19ih St., NW, Suite the . ":lessa~e .fro"? "Dr.
200, Was!lington, D.C. Lon m M1chtgan,' who
20Q06. C~ll the Eldercare -said the donor's wishes
Locator (eldercare.gov) at may be overridden by the
1-800-677-1116 and ask for family. .
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

.

Ch1r!ene Hoelllchlphot.,.

Meigs Intermediate and Middle School students honored at the academic banquet were
from 1he left, seated, Jared Kennedy, Dillon Mahr, Elena Musser, Raeline Reeves and Jake
Roush, grade 4; and standing, Amber Davidson. Haley Kennedy, Maloney Victory, Collen
Young, sixth grade; and Megan Dyer and Emma Erviin, grade 8. Recognized but not present were McKayla Barrett, Ty Phelps, Haley .Roush, Delilah Fish, Kristen McGuire, and
Tyler Pabon.
·

Honored for academic excellence from Meigs High School were from .the left, seated,
:Alaine Arnold, Olivia .Beven, Shannon Mclaughlin, ·Kasey Roush, Connor Swartz, grade
t 0, and Jennifer File, grade 12; and standing, Amanda Gilkey, Amber Hockman, Llan
Hoffman, Morgal'l Lentes, Jahnna Lydic, Galee Reeves and Kiml)erly Swisher. Cecil Bolin
did not attend. .
·
·
.
· .
· . ·

The laws on organ donor
cards and donor registrieS
vary from state to state, bu(
in many states, a person'~
documented donation wish
now takes priority over the
family's preference. I(
works similarly to a legat
will - if your wish to
become an organ imd tissue
donor is legally document~
ed, your family cannot
change it. However, it i~
still important to shan)
your w1shes with your
family so they are .not sur'
prised. Their cooperatioq
and support make. th~
process fo much mor~
smoothly.
.
To find out how \O siglj
up as an organ and tissue
donor in your state, please
visit Donate Life America
(www.donatelife.net) ;m~
click on "Commit to
Donation." . Readers in
Canada should contact
their local organ recovery
organization to learn ho~
to ·sign up in their
province. On behalf of the
more
than
100,000
Americans awaiting a life.saving organ transplant,
thank you. - Jennifet
Tislerlcs, Gift of Life
Michigan
·
. Dear Jennifer Tislericsi
We appreciate the clarifica~
tion. Any readers interested
in . making a lifesavin~
donation should check youi
website.
:

Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi,
tors 6;{ the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to ·anniesmau;
box@comcast.net, or writtl
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O:
Box 118190, Chicago, II.;
60611 . .To find out morB
about Annie's Mailbox:
and read features by o!het, . ·
Creators Synd1cate write~
and cartoonists, visit thB
Creators Syndicate Weli
page at www.creators.com.:

.
'

lliside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Bengali ftlease OT Jones, Page B2
Jpdians scalp Boston, Page B2

~eltks down Magic, Page B6

Thursday, May 7' ~

Two schools get
postseason bans
for bad grades
INDIANAPOLIS · (AP)
,.... Centenary's men's basketball
team
a.n d
Tennessee-Chattanooga's
football team will miss
the NCAA's postseason
tournaments next. season
,.- no inatter how well
they do on the field. · ·
· The NCAA handed
· down postseason bans to
both teams for subpar acaaemic scores Wednesday,
the first time college
sports' governing body
has instituted a penalty it
said it never wanted to
use.
If scor~s'don't improve
hext year, those teams
could face an even harsher
sanction - the loss of
Pivision I ·membership in
·
all sports.
. Scores are calculated
based on data from the

.Prep Baseball Roundup ·

Rebels down ~rvest Christian; Eagles rally past Athens
,•

.

,

K

I

· nine~run decision .
Harvest Christian Academy. out te ail early 1-0 lead after
MDSSPORTSO MVDAllVSEfffiNELcot.f
South Gallia knocked out- The game was called· after · the top·of the third, but the
. ro
· RTSMOUTH
.
_ _,.;;._ 10 bitS in the triumph, with six innings due to darkness. Bullddgs (fl-5) countered
5uuu• . dine 4if{erent players conwith three runs in their half
SOUTH GALLIA t1, HARVEST
of that frame for a 3-1 cushGallia baseball ·moved back tributilig at least one of those
over the .500 mark on the safeties. Ctuis Fooce led the
CHRISTIAN 2
io.n after three complete . ·
season Tuesday night wjth a way with two hits, followed sa
200 405 - 11 10 1
The score remamed that
convincing I I,2 victory over by Zach }Jaislop, .Brandon HC
002 ooo - 2 6 6
way until the seventh. when
llost · Harvest . Christian · Hamson, Cory Haner, BJ. wP-,Halsiop: Lp-Fan~
AHS literally self-destrUctAcademy during a non'coJl~ ·Stanley, Heath White, Jacob H~' SG- B.J. Stanley (first mning. one ed . .Eastern scored its three ,
ference matchup.
Dotson, Danny Matney and on).
runs that inning thanks to a
The Rebels (7-6) never Nick Lyon with one each.
EAGLES RALLY PAST
pair of errors and a passed
SJan)ey had a team-high
ATHENS
ball on a third strike, as well
trailed in the. contest, jumping out to a 2-0 advantage three RBis,, thanks in large
a~ one hit.
A
Eastern managed six hits
after one .complete inning. part to a twocrun homer in. . THE PL INS
HCA countered with two the first inning.
. A
- . three- in the triumph, led by Kyle
scores in the bottom of the
Haislop was Jhe winn·ing run seventh ultimately Connery with two hits and
.
hid
kn
h
t r to
ot t mgs up at pitcher of record, allowing allowed the Eastern baseball · two runs . scored . . N•'ck
two,. but SGHS blew the six hits and zero walks over team to sneak away from Brannon Derek . Griffin
game Wide open in the six innings while striking · host Athens Tuesday night · Zach He~drix and Andre~·
fourth with four scores for a out II. Falls took the loss for with a come-from-behind 4- Benedum -also added a safe6-2 cushion.
the hosts.
3 victory during a Tri- Valley ty each to the winning cause.
. The Rebels tacked on five
SGHS committed only Conference interdivisional
At~ens - which had only
· insurance runs in the sev- one error in the triumph, in mat~hup.
·· ·
three hits in the setback enth, helping round out·the comparison to six by
The Eagles (15-5) stormed got one safety apiece from
· $TAFF REPORTS

Ar
R
h
r~~~u;~~;:':;rini:se~~s~ ·
royo, eds ammered by Brewers

Pach, Detter and Zoucek.
Both teams had two errors
apiece in the game.
Ben Buckley was the winning pitcher of record, working two innings of rerfect
relief with one stnkeout.
Titus Pierce started'the game
and went five innings in !hi:
no-decision. Summers · took
the loss for AHS in ot\e
inning of relief.
EASTERN 4. ATHENS 3

Eastern
Athens

oo1 000 3 _
003

ooo o '--

• e2
332

wP-&amp;uekley; LP-Summe...
ALEXANDER DOUBLES UP
SOUTHERN

RACINE
The
Alexander Spartans axed the

Please -

S.seiNIH. 12

Lady Eagles
blank Athens

ter in 2008. Each athlete
.
'
.
.
receives one point per
CINCINNATI (AP) _
STAFF REPORT
semester . for remaining Ryan Braun hit his second
· MOSSPORTSGMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
academically eligible .and . career · grand slam off
another point each. semes- Bronson Arroyo, who
THE
PLAINS
ter for remaining. at that couldn 'I make it through the
Pitching and defense go a
· ~chool or graduating.
second inning Wednesday
long way in softball, as
A mathematical formula night, and the Milwaukee
was the case for . Eastern
is used to correlate a final Brewers rolled to their most
Tuesday night during a 3team score, with 1,000 lopsided victory of the sea0 victory over host Aihens
points being perfect. son, .15-3 . over
the .
Teams that fall below 925 Cincinnati Reds.
in
a
Tri- Valley
Conference interdivisionC;in be subjected. to immeJ .J . Hardy also ha\'1 a
tliate penalti~s. Those three-run hom(!r off Arroyo
al matchup in Athens
County.
·
falling• below 900 consis- (4-2), who failed to retire a
lently, such as Centenary batter in the second inning
The Lady Eagles ( 11-3)
and
Tennessee- and left with a 9-0 deficit. It
limited the Lady Bulldogs
Chattanooga, can be . hit . matched the shortest start of
(7-9) to just two hits over
the harshest sanctions.
the fight-bander's career.
seven innings , but found
. State's
Milwaukee's
biggest
: Jacksonville
themselves in a scoreless
football team also could offensive splurge of the sea- .
tie after six complete.
fai:e .a 'poslseasoll,ban .but son helped Manny Parra (1·
Then in .t he top of the
ha~. reque~teil ' a· waiver to ...~~.his four-gaine l~s~ ..
seve11th, EHS hit paydirt
with th~ee hits and a walk
a void that .peitalty. Tfie
The Brewers .topped it oil
.
- which led to three t'!lns ·
NCAA has not announced with five runs in the ninth
for a 3-0 advantage.
when a · decision
be off shortstop Paul Janish ;
All i.e Rawson.started the
who moved to .the·.mound to
made. ,
rally with it one-out dou· The list of underachiev- save Cincinnati's pitching
ble, then Kasey Turley
ing-u:.ams showed .a dis- staff. Janish hit 92 mph on.
tinct delineation between the radar gun and struck out
walked
arid
Britney
those programs, with a lot Hardy to open the inning,
Morrison singled to load
of .money and tho~ with . then .found tougher going.
the
bases .
Cassie
less money.
Braun singled home two
Randolph hit into a field: Of the 85 teams penal- runs, ~iving· him a careerer's choice to plate
ized in football and men's hi~h stx RBis , overall, and
Rawson for a 1-0 edge.
Fielder had a twobas· ·k·et ba11 ' on1Y 10 came r·Prince
. . Sami Cummin~sing!ed
un homer" off Jan
· t'sb·.
trom the six traditional
one batter later, allowmg
power conferences, and . 'Milwaukee fmished with a ·
both Turley and Randolph
none of those received the season-high 20 hits.
· · to score for the final
After a slow start, the
three-run outcome. ·
two harshest penalties ~ ~rewers . have ~one i 2-3
EHS had five hits in the
a reduction in ' practice witli 'solid ritchtng and an
triumph, with' Cummins,
time or a· postseason ban . offense that samong theNL
Rawson, Turley, Morrisorl
One hundred .seventy· . leaders in home runs. Their
and Megan Carnahan · pro~
sevep teams overall were . lineup bad· its · way with
viding one each: Both
penalized.
Arroyo, who was coming
teams had one error in the
Fooiball and 'm en's bas- off one of his 'best perforcontest.
ketball accounted for 76 mances - eight shutout ··
teams, mfnus Jacksonville innings ·in Pittsburgh on.
Turley was the winning
State's football': pi:ograin. Friday.
pitcher of record, allow. Ten schools were .offend- · This time, lie was gone
ing. two hits and one walk
ers in both sports, but after.on!~ 46 pitches .
·
over seven innings while
only two - AlabamaHardy s homer made· it 5striking out nine . Sarah ·
Birmingham and New 0 in the first inning, when
Da1.1gherty took the l9ss
Mexico State _ play in the Brewers sent eight batfor the hosts.
the
Football
Bowl ters to the plate . Arroyo
Subdivision. UAB was the · gave up a pair of singles and
EASTERN 3. ATHENS 0
,,.,
. .
, ' AP photO
a walk that opened the secEaslero
000 000 3 - 351
only school i·n the ond. inning and •brought _up Cincinnati Reds starter Bronson Arroyo (61) talkS with catcher Ryan Hanigan, left, and
Athens
000 .000 0 - 021
Football
Bowl
pitching coach Dick Pole In the second inning ol a b~seball: game against the Milwaukee
Subdivision to receive a
Pluse see Reds, 12
WP - Tulley: LP- Dougherty.
BrewerS on Wednesday in Cincinnati.
'
reduction in practice
times in both sports.
· : The SEC led the six
l&gt;iggest conferences with
five ·, te.a ins · penalized.
.
Mississippi was the only
letes"to
meet
with the gam- ities to take the lead on the
BCS school sanctioned in
DETROIT (AP) - Two tests by bribery.
bler,
accordiug
.to documents investigation. No current
football and could · face Detroit-area businessmen
The · pair bet . about
filed in U.S . .District' Court players are thought to be
.
were charged with paying $407,000 on Toledo basket"
inDetrolt.
·
potential scholarship los~ . and giving gifts. to basketball ball
games
between
mvoived in the allegations . .
University
spokesman
A message seeking coin·
!=S next season.
·
and football players at the November
2005
and
ment was left WednesdaY. Lawrence Burns said the
· The Big Ten was next Uni;versity of Toledo to take December 2006, according
with Manni's ·attorney, Net! school's athletic program
with three - Indiana, part in a point-shaving to the indictinent.
Pink . Karam could not be has undergone a thorough
Purdue and Ohio State. scheme, according to a fed- · The six players also were
reached
for comment. ·
review since the allegation
All fell short i)l bas.ketball era!
indictment
filed charged wtth conspiracy to the 1004-05 and 2005-06
Manni
has
repeatedly
said
first surfaced and adminisand face .scholars~ip loss- Wednesday.
· influence sporting contests seasons. He has not entered
!:S next season, although
Six former Toledo players by bribery.
a plea, but he is scheduled to that be knew many football trators believe that its founand basketball players at the dation is solid.
the Hoosiers already also were accused of taking
The indictment charges be sentenced in June.
'.'In our minds, it's really
school,
but they did not fix
Charges
against
ll'llplemented their penalty part in the alle!!ed scheme three ·former football playbehind
us," he said. "It's cerany
!lames.
Ciuring the 2008-09 school .by e1ther affectmg the out- ers: · Adam Cuomo, ·31, McDougle were dropped
Tnplett
said
two
years
ago
tainly
very
serious and we
~fear.
comes in games or giving Harvey ·
"Scooterd" two years as the investigathat
he
knew
Mann1,
but
was
take
it
senous."
: The Big 12 had two the two businessmen infor- McDougle Jr., 24, an tion continued . McDougle
never asked to shave points.
The school notified the
teams . on the list _
mation ~so that they could Quinton Broussard, 25. Also has denied involvement.
attorney;
Ray
Triplett's
NCAA
on Wednesday about
Documents
unsealed
last
Colorado in men 's basket.· place wagers on ~e ga"?-es. charged· were for:mer b~sket­
Richards.
said
Wednesday
the
indictments
, Bums said.
month
in
federal
court
ball and Oklahoma State . · The FBI began mvesllgat- ball players Ketth Tnplett,
ing point shaving at Toledo 29, Anton Currie, 25, and accused Cuomo of recruiting the former Toledo player is "At this point, we' re not
in. women's basketball . four years ago. They said the KashifPayne. 24 .
aware of any ramifications
his teammates . and basket· innocent.
Deorgia Tech's men's bas- scheme began in the fall of
Until now, only .three for- ball players at the school to · "At this point I have not that may come about
l&lt;etball team was the lone 2004 and continued until mer players at the school take part in the alleged read indictment so I really because of this," he said.
don 't have too much infor'{\CC representative .
2006.
bad been linked to the aile· scheme. · .
The football and basketCuomo told investigators mation ," Richards said . ball coaches who were at
· McNeese State led all
Ghazi Manni, 52, of gations.
schools with eight tl!ams Sterling
Heights
and
Former basketball player he gave information about Triplett is currently playing Toledo when authorities say
the scheme took place are
sanctioned,
while Mitchell Karam, 76, of Troy Sammy
Villegas
was upcoming games to the overseas. he said.
and
that
he
Detroit
gambler
Athletic
officials
at
Toledo
Nicholls State was · next were charged with conspira- charge&lt;! last June with shavwith six.
cy to influence sporting con- ing points in games during introduced numerou's ath· have allowed federal author-

will

Recognized for excellence .from Eastern were from the left, seated. Matthew Frank, grade 4;
AbigaH Collins and Kristen.King, grade 6; Rebeoca Chadwell, grade 8, and standing, Larissa
Riddle, grade 8; Devon Baum, Brady Bissell and Megan Carnahan, grade 10, and Tina
Drake, grade 12. Unable to attend were Kyle Sargent and Amber White and Larissa Riddle.

Wheeling
OhaaneiDraln

-..............

Only Available Col..,.:

.,.,....,. ••, lled, . .rth ........

_ ____ ___

Eight charged in point sha~i:ng . sca,ndal at Toledo

.. X X

Students from Southern recognized were from the left, seated, Daniel Dunfee and Siena
Cleland, grade 4; Caitlyn Hoher and Tristan Wolle, grade 6; and standing, Kody Wolfe,

s
BJ
Jnrxc"xl"
...........
&amp;

lllldiWIId•

1111111··· ··
149

,

grade 8; TltMir Flint, grade 10, and Emma Hunter, Jaime Warner and Chelsea Papa, grade·
.1;!. Not attending were Joe Smith and Zachitry Manuel.
·

Widow-widowers support group session offered
.ATHENS - O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital in
Alhens will host a widow:widowers' support group
~on 1\Je~ay, 6 to 7 p.m.
· at Toscano s Restaurant, 4
Depot St.. Athens.
· 1\is free support session is
open to the public. Facilitator
AJiCz Hawthorne. director of

O' Bleness social service
department, will lead · the
meeting and discussion.
Topics for discussion include
grief, bereavement, and
recovery from the loss of a
spouse or life panner. These
sessions are intended to aid
in the healing~ for the
widows and widowers.

Anyone is welcome
regardless of age, religious
or sexual affiliation, and
there are no membership
dues or fees to participate.
For more information
please
contact
Alice
Hawthorne at O ' Bleness'
social service department at

(740) 592-9337.

Sh•ts

..........
1/2........

.......

10" 12•
aAO a.oo 3.80

IIMII!"'

3.110

....
.........,

-

4.80

e.oo
8.00

a.eo
. 3.2S

&gt;

C.O'T

4.20

SAO e.30

7.11.0

....

lUl8

, .·

~

'

l

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

ThursdAy, May 7, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

Bengals terminate Pavano strong
contract of OT Jones

as

Thursday, May 7,' ~009

www.mydallysentlnel.com

beat Red sox, 9·2

BOSTON (AP) - Carl
Pavano endured four injuryplagued years in which he
gave the New York Yankees
CINCINNATI (AP) - 94 games for the Bengals: very linle for thetr $39.95
Left tackle Levi Jones was He started 15 games plus milliQn.
rdeased Wednesday by the their playoff loss to
So far he'&gt; been a big barCincinnati Bengal&gt;. who · Pittsburgh in 2005. enjoymg gain for the Cleveland
'pent their first-round dmft one of his best seasons.
Indians.
pick on his replacement.
The Bengals gave him a
Pavano pitched his third
Jones has been bothered six-yearextenswn before the strong game in three weeks,
by knee and leg problems in 2006 season. H ~ was pa1d Victor Martinez homered and
recent years. The club noti- $21 million ov~r the fiist drove in four runs. and the
fied him before the draft that three years of the deal. Last Indians ended the Boston Red
it planned to trade or release season, he missed the final Sox's nine-game home winhim. The Bengals took tack- six games because of injury. ning streak with a 9-2 victory
le Andre Smith from
The decision to release Wednesday night.
"The things I've been
Alt~bama with the sixth over- . Jones · leaves the Bengals
through
the last (ew years
all pick in the draft.
with little margin for error
with
the
injuries,
I was able to
'·Now he can son of sit on the offensive line, which
put
it
behind
me," said
back and wait for a good was hit hard by injuries last
opportunity," said Jones· season The Bengals had the Pavano, who signed a oneagent. Ken Zuckerman.
worst offense m the NFL. year, $1 .5 million contract as
The move makes i clean unable to run or throw · the a free agent.
He allowed two runs in six
break with the tackle tandem ball in large pan because of
mnings
and lowered his ERA
that helped the Bengals the line's.struggles.
in
his
last
four games to 3.75.
reach the playoffs in 2005.
The Ben gals expect Smith
It
was
16.71
after his other
when they had their only to step into a starting role
two
stans.
In
his previous
winning record in the last 18 quickly. They IQst right tackstan
on
May
I.
he allowed
.
APphoto
years. The Bengals released le Stacy Andrews to free
two
runs
in
7
1-3
innings at Cleveland Indians' Victor Martinez (41) celebrates with Mark DeRosa after Martinez
right tackle Willie Anderson, agency after the season, and
their first-round pick in have little ·experience or Detroit.
scored on a single by Shin-Soo Choo in the fifth inning of a baseball game against thE!
Pavano (2-3) had spent
1996, shonly before the start depth at the tackle spot.
Boston
Red Sox on Wednesday in Boston.
of . la&gt;t ;eason when he Rookie Anthony Collins, a most of the previous four seathere, he took the loss in
"Old-school save, three final run.
declined to take a pay cut foutth-round draft pick las~ sons on toe .disabled.list with
shoulder
and
elbow
probinnings,"
Wedge
said.
·"It
was
Montreal's 15-0 loss.
,
Justin
Masterson
(2-2)
got
,md remain as a backup.
year, took over at left tackle
!ems.
making
only
26
starts
good
that
we
could
get
him
But on Wednesday, Pavano
Park
his
first
loss
at
Fenway
Jane; was the lOth overall after JQnes got hurt last seaand
missing
the
entire
2006
out
there
right
away."
retired
eight of his last nine
after going 7-0.
pick in 2002 and played m son.
season.
Pavano allowed both runs
"Just disappointed ... that batters and finished with four .
"We felt like he finished in the second.
it's a Joss," he said. strikeouts and three walks.
!ast year healthy ~d he came
"We bad chances to add on "Whatever the record was He was helped by double
bling allegations.
111 great and then, kind of like Pavano coming in and having the one play grounders in the first and
mto
s~nng
trammg
Manni and Karam also shape,' Cleveland manager d.d (' h. ) 1
· h
were charged Wednesday Eric Wedge said. "He built 1 m IS ast outmg, e got loss now, it was bound to hap- second and gave up just two
hits in his last four 1rtnings.
along with a former jockey himself like a veteran starting comfortable," Boston manag- pen some time."
fromPageBl
Pavano's
track
record
"The elbow .hasn't been an
in a separate, 19-count pitcher would."
er Terry Francona said.
issue,"
he said." I'm not satagainst
the
Red
Sox
has
been
indictment accusing them
Cleveland's beleaguered
Cleveland pulled to 2-1 on
isfied
where I'm at righ\
poor
.
.
In
his
last
stan
against
now gone. Athletic officials of fixing races at a Tampa, bullpen got a boost from its Asdrubal Cabrera's RBI sinh~ve- satd thctr departures Fla., horse track and else- newest
member, · ~aron gle in the third before scoring them, he allowed five runs in now."
His roughest inning was the
were not tied to the gam- where. ·
Laffey.. He had .been sched· three in the · fifth on 32-3 innings ina 17-llossin
second
when the first three
New
York
on
May
28,2005.
uled to start Thursday night, Martinez's two-run double
batters
reached base on a
And
in
his
other
two
stans
at
bill the Indians moved him to and Shin-Soo Choo's RBI
walk
to
Jason Bay, a double
Fenway,
he
was
0-2
with
a
Ash knocked home the a relief role and he allowed single.
by Mike Lowell and a walk. to
seconp run for the 3 -I SHS two. hits in three scoreless
In · the seventh, Maninez 24.75ERA
lead.
In his last previous stan at Jason Varitek that loaded the
innings for his first career singled in a run and Mark
· The Spartans had a spar- save. He is 2-0 this year and . DeRosa hit a two-run homer. Fenway when he was with bases . Bay scored on Jeff
from Page Bl
tan inning of four . runs in. all 29 of his previous major Martinez added a leadoff Florida, he allowed six runs Bailey's double play and
the sixth when three errors,
without retiring a batter in a Lowell came in on Jonathan
Southern Tornadoes 8-4 a two-run -Cody Lawson league appewdllces were as a ·homer in the ninth before Ben
Francisco singled home the 25-8 loss. In his other start Van Every's single.
Tuesday night duri.ng boys' double , a fielder's ·choice, staner:.
non-league baseball action and Linder single plated
at.Southem's Star Mill Park. four Alexander runs to push
Southern falls to I0-9 on the the visitors ahead 5-3.
season and plays at Federal
Alex scored three more in
Hocking
tonight the seventh when two errors
ST. LOUIS (AP)
against the Pirates in five two hits, an RBI and a steal eight chances, -part of a
(Wednesday) for the last and singles by Lawson and Albert Pujols homered for games this season and .371 for
Pittsburgh,
which parade of five relievers who
league game in the TVC
Dirk Malone each singled the fourth time in five for his career with 37 stranded nine runners and limited Pittsburgh to two
Hocking Division.
hits.
for an 8-3 Alex lead . games and Chris Duncan 's homers and 109 RBls in 490 has lost eight of nine.
Southern started out well Southern plated a run in the two-run triple in tiJe fourth at-bats. The only blemish to
Pujols homered . for the
The St. Louis bullpen shut
in the firs t inning in taking bottom of the seventh. inning was the ~o-ahead hit his day came when he was down the Pirates after rook- second straight at -bat when
a 1-0 lead when Michael Brown led off with a walk, as the St. Lou!s Cardinals easily thrown out at third ie ' Mitchell Boggs threw lined a first-pitch fastball
Manuel reached on an
advanced on a passe.d ball, beat the Pittsburgh Pirates trying to steal with two · on more balls (43) than strikes well over the left-field wall
~ITOr and Jordon Taylor
(43) in 4 1-3 innings.
with two outs in the first.
4-2 to snap a three-game and none out in the sixth.
slammed an RBI single Ash drew a one-out walk, losing streak Wednesday
Kyle
McClellan
(2-1)
He's
batting .500 against
Pirates
starter
Zach
Duke
then a strike out, and ~Q
after Manuel had stolen walk to Taylor Deem and night.
(3-3) gave up four runs in 5 allowed a hit and a walk in l Duke (14 for 28) with two
·
second, the score 1-0.
Pujols went 4 for 4 and is 1-3 innings, his shonest out- 1•3 · innings and Ryan homers.
Chris Holter walked to put ensuing balk brought liome batling .6 11 ( 11 for 18) with ing of a strong start to the Franklin worked a perfect
Pujols has 26 games in his
runners on first and sec- Brown before a pop out two homers and three RBls · season. Nyje_r Morgan had ninth for his eighth save in career with at least four hits.
ond, but a pop- up ended ended the inning, the ~core 1
8-4.
the inning.
Cunningham s\lffered the
Southern's
Kyle
other grand slam was Sept. ·his left side, injured on a
games.
loss
for Southern despite
Cu nningham
and
25 off Pittsburgh's Jesse swing Monday. He will be
12
batters
Arroyo
faced
Alexander's Trey Bennett . pitching well. Cunningham
overall
and
retired
only
two
in the lOth inning of examined · a¥ain
on
Chavez
had locked horns in a great fanned five and walked
a
5-l
win
....
Reds
3B
Thursday
of
them
Rickie
Weeks
....
Rehever
David
from Page Bl
pi tching, ~attle as Southern three. Southern made six
was thrown out at the plate Edwin EncarnaCion had the Weathers made his 906th
held a 1-0 lead into the cost! y errors. Beqnett and
in the first inning. The nght- cast removed from his left career appearance, matchIn the fourth Dirk Malone combined for Braun , who hit a! hanging 1- bander gave up seven hits arm and was fitted with a ing Cy Young for 19th on
fo urth .
inning, with two out, the win'· with 10 strikeouts. .2 pitch to left-center field and walked three .. The nine removable
splint.
He the career list. .. : Janish was
Casey Doudna reached on and seven walks.
for
a
9-0
lead.
.
runs
allowed
were·
one
shy
chipped
a
bone
the first Reds position playin
his
left
Southern hitters were
an error. then Cyle Linder
Braun missed a pait of of his career high.
wrist on a swing April 27 er to pitctr in a game since
hammered a double to tie Zach Ash with two singles, games· over the weekend
and
went on the DL. ... SS infielder Lenny Harris
Notes:
The
start
of
the
Taylor Deem a single,
the game at 1-1. ·
minAlex
Gonzalez got treat- . threw an inning in San
with
a
sore
back.
He
has
game
was
delayed
46
Southern took a 3-1 lead Jordan Taylor a single, Brad five homers in his last 14 utes by rain .... Braun's ment for strained muscles in Francisco on June I, 1998.
in the fifth when Taylor Brown a single. and Dustin
walked, Brad Brown sin- Salser a double.
~led and the two advanced
ALEXANDER B, SOUTHERN 4
on an error to second and
third with courtesy runner Alexander 000 104 3 - B 9 2
Southern 100 020 1 - 4 6 1
Adam Warden eventually
&gt;coring on a miscue . Zach WP - Malone; LP - Cunnmgham.

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preciOus
baby. · E~penses
p~ud.
Kim
&amp;
Russ
, 12-84"u
~ www.ou@ I· 888 ·-

· Child I Elderly Care

Borrow Smart.
Ohio Di\11·
slon of Flnanctal tnstltU·
lions Office or Consumer
Affairs BEF'ORE you refJ·
nance your home or ob·
tall) a loan. BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance
paymen1s of
fees or insurance. Call
the Office ot Consurner

37 year old stay at home
Mom will provide child
care. Summer full of
planned activities. Call
740-367-()536
for
an

Affiars
toll
free
at
1·865·278·0003 to tearn
,.n the mortgage bro ke r or
lender IS properly II·
cense d. (Thl s 1s a pu bl'1c
service
announcement

Other Sorvlcoo
Pet
Cremations. · Call
740-446-3745

S00

We can save
you money on
your h'ealth
insurance!

,.30,.•,.
·5.76.·3·3-53,..- - 2002 red Monte Carlo,
97.000 miles, v~ , auto,
very
nice
conditiol1,

6

1•800·214-0452
galilpoiiScamereolle~a. &amp;du

Acc:reditad Member Accred~­
lngCourx:ll for lndependem

92 Chevy Lumina E:uro,
runs good, nice car.
2000 Yamaha V-MAX
Garage
Kept
304·812-5021
304-593·5613
95 Mercury Sable $ 1750

~;~;~;;;;;-:;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;w;w:w;·;•o;m;l;•;•·;c;o;m;,

--

;,;;,;,:;;;;,;,;;;;;;;;,!!!!"""

buy ...............................................

.........

a

Emp1oyment Agenclu .............................. 8020
Entertalnment ............................................ 8022
Food Servlceo ............................................6024
Government I Feclllral Joba .... ~............... 602$

c:r~t~bl:.~.~~-~~::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::: 925 ~!: :::::_.or:_r:~~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

Fuel 011Coai/Woodl0es ............................. 945
Furniture ......................... ............................. 9SO
Hobby!Hunt &amp; Spon ..... -.............................. 95&amp;
Kid's Corner-................................................ 960

Malnt.nenceiDomestiC .............................6032
Mlnagement/SUpervlaory ... -.................... 6034
Mochanlco .................................................. 6036
Madlcel .............................................. ......... 6038
Mualcel ....................................................... 6040
Part~Tlme-Temporarlet ............................. 6042
Restaurante ......................................, ........ &amp;Oo&amp;4

Yard Sell! ...................................................-8TS

TutUeiiFactory ......................................... 60S 2

Equlpment/Suppllea...............................-.... 935

Flea Matkot• ................................................ 940

=~~:!:=~~ ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::= ~:;iC;i·;:;;;;a·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

to Hoi·

CONVENIENTLY
LO•
CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD·
A6LE' Townhouse apart·
ments,
and/or
small
houses for rent. Call
740-441.-1111 tor appU·
cation &amp; Information.

I!LLM VIEW APTS

2&amp;3BR and up, Central
Clonic / Armque1 ' A1r, WID l'lookup, tenant
pays electric EHO Elm
72 Ford Tonno, garage v1ew
Apts . ·
kepi, classic, all original, (304)882·3017
$12,500
080, ~:.:;~;:.;,.--(740)444·1366
Twfn Rivers Tower Is ac· .
~·~-~~~~~""" ceptlng applications tor

waiting list Jor HUD subsidized, 1·BR apartmijnt

.,......;Poll~=-- -;;;;,;FI;;oaaMiiooiiirbb'"'"'-"'" ~;;;;;;;;;Y":ard~Sa=l•=~ ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
•
"
::
Comolery Plots
AKC male Yorkie tor Vendors warned at Rio Garage Sale at Dale

stud, black &amp; tan, walQht Flea Market R10 Mini
approx 7-8 Lb. can Bartl Mart parking lot. Every
740-444·2092
·
weekend. S20 for Fn.
·TURNED DOWN ON
.
Satl Sun or $10 a dav.
(i(ll)
All lltil ls
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
Free- male blackJwhlle Tab e provided for extra
:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; party Cockerspanlel 6 space $5. Spaces lim·
No ~~=~~~:t'lln! Uveatodt
month old, 740-41 6· 1693
iledt Just getting started!
-;;;;=;;;iii~;;;;'-=•
Call
Winston
Sheets
~SE~PTI~C~-~PU!!!M~P,.IN~G ~
740-3679-9255
Angus
Bulls,excellent
Gallla
Co. OH
and blo:odllnes,
Priced
MlacellantOUl
Mason Co. WV. Ron Reasonably.
Evans.
J ac kson,
OH www.steterunangus com·
Farm Equl-nt
1 Molors
.....,..
JetAeratan

Legele ...........................................................100 Recreellonal Vehlclea ............................... 1000
Announc:emente .........-...........-.................... 200 , ATY ............................................................. 1005
Blrthday/Annlver•ary.................................. 205 Blcyclea...,...........,............... :...................... 1010
Happy Ada.....~ .............................................210 Boat11Accenorlel .................................... 1015
LoSl:&amp;Found ............................................... 215 campar/RVa6Trallefl ............................. 1020
Memory/Thank Vou ..................................... 220 Motorcyclea ............................................... 1025
Notlcea ......................................................... 225 Other .............. &amp; .......................................... 1030
Peraonala ..................................................... 230 Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Wanted ........................-............................... 235 Automotlve ................................................ 2000
8ervlc:n ....................................................... 300 Auto Rentalll.eaae .... ,........................... ,.... 2005
Appliance Servlce ......-....... :........................ 302 Autoa .....................................,.................... 2010
Automotlve .................................................. 304 Claaalc/An11qun ....................................... 2015
Building Materlata ........................................ 306 CommerclaVInduatrlal ........•...................... 20120
Bualn......................................................... 308 Perta &amp; Acce~aorl ....................................2.025 _
Caterlng ........................................................ 310 $porte Utlllty......., ............................ ,......... 2030
ChlldiEidarly Care ....................................... 312 Trucka ...........,....::........ ,.............. :...............2035
Computer• .. ~··- ............................................. 314 · Ullllty Trallera ............................................ 2040
Cont.ractora ..................................................318 Vana ......._...................................~ ...............2046
Wanl to
2050
Electrlcal ...................................................... 320 RHI eat.te Seln ...................................... 3000
FlnanclaL ....................................................322 Cemetery Plot8 ......................................... :3005
Health ........................................................... 32ti Commercl81 ................................ ................3010
Heating &amp; Coollng ....................................... 321 COndomlnlum8 ..................'........................ 3015
Home Improvements 330
For Sale by Owner-...................................3020
lnauran~e ..................................... ................ 332 Hot.taeafor Sela .................................. ; ...... 3025
Lawn
334 Land (Acreega) .......................................... 3030
Mu..ciDancatDrama .................................... 336 LoW ............................................................ 3035
Othar Servlcea .............................................338 Want to buy ................................................3040
Plumblng!Eiectrlcal. ................. ~ ................. 340 Real Eatata Rantala...................................3500
Profeaalonal 5erY~t .................................342 ApartmentiiiTownhouaea ......................... 3505
Aepalra ..........................................:.............. 344 Commerclal ................................................3510
Rootlng ..........................................................'346 Condomlnluma .......................................... 3515
SeGurlty ........................................................ 348 Houaeafor Rent .,...................................... 3520 .
Tax/Acc:ountlng ........................................... 350 Uu'KI(Acreage) ..........................................3525
T111veLIEntertalnment ..................................352 Slorege ........................................................ 3535
FFIIR8na"nccllaall.;;:::;:;l·c··....··;······ .. ••• ...........................440005 WMant ,t~!·..'!~"H
I.................................. 34000540
~,,.
.................... ,..................
anu -·u,~ ou• ng.............................
lnauren&lt;:e .................................................... 410 Lota .... - ....................................................... 4005
Money ta Lend .............................................. 41S Movere.........:......................,....... -............... 4010
Educatlon .....................................................500 Rtntela ....................................................... 4015
Buslnetl Trade School ........................... 505 S.lea ...........................................................4020
lnatructlon &amp; 'tralnlng ................................. 510 SUpplies ..................................................... 4025
Lealons ........................................................515 Want to Buy .................. ,............................ 4030
Per1onat ............. ..........................,.............. :520 Reaort Property ......................................... 5000
Anlmels ..... 1.. -................. .. ............................ 8GO Resort Property tor aale ................ :.......... 5025
AnlmetSuppllea .......................................... 605 AeaortProperty.forrent ........................... 5QSO
Horaes .......................................................... 610 Employment ............................................... &amp;OOO
Llveetoc;k ..:...................................................615 Accountlng/Financlal ................................6002
Pet$...............................................................620 Admlnlatrattve1Pr~1elllonal. ...............! ..... 6004
Wanttobuy ..................................................825 C8ahler1Cierk ............................................. l5006
A.grlcutture ...................................................700 Child/Elderly Cere ..................................... 8008
FermEqulpment ..........................................705 Clerlcat .......................................................8010
Garden &amp; Produce .......................................710 Conatructlan ..............................................6012
Hay, Faad, Seed. Grain ............................... 715 Drlvllrl &amp; Oellnry: ..................................... 6014
Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720 Educatlon ................................................... 8018
Wanttobuy ..................................................725 Electrfci11Piumblng ....................................8018

mshed, and houses 1n
Pomeroy and Middleport,
secunty depos1l requtr&amp;d,
no pets. 740-992- 2218

Cal1740·446·4816

College! and SchOOl&amp; 1274B

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Computers ................................................... 930

Re• tdl!i

080, 28R APT.Ciose
zer Hospital on SA 160
CIA (740) 441.0194

%5,000
740.742-2357.
740·416·7513

f dL C.1tiOP1

Galllpollo Coreer
Collage
(Careers Cloee TQ Home)
Call Todayl740·448·4367

Real Esta!P.

2004 Honda Ci~lc LX 4 ;;;;;;;;;;Ti;;oi;;wn;;;h;;;o;;•;;;";;';;;;;;;;;
34mpg 1 and 2 bedroom apts.,
cyt., 5 sp
108 000 miles $7600.00 furnished
and
unlur·

NOTICE

Contact the

~~~~~~~~":do:p:tio:op:ro:fi;l•:&lt;o~m~:-::;8~00.~53~7:-9:5:28~:---~(7~40~)~28~6~-5=39=5---~or
===~=;;;;.;=
41 8·0 6 33
EBY,
INTEGRITY,

:uctlins~......................................................:~

:J'iOO

Apar!monh/

interview.
;;;;;;;;;,;..,""'""'""'""" from the Ohio Valley
Homo lmprovt~montt Publis.hlng Company)
easement
Wat•prootlng
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee L.ocal rater·
ences tumlshed. Established 1975. Call 24 Hrs
740·446-0670, R090rs
Basement Waterproofing.

Auwmotrvc

Money To Lend

IIIIi....

Lost· Black Lab w/white Goodlimes Bar Is looking
paws/cllest 50# has un- lor someone with resta1.1·
derbite, 740·6~0299
rant &amp; management Skills
to operate kitchen at
Lost- large black German C,?oodtlmes bar during
Shepherd.. 1 112 yr old, business hrs, groat oplast seeo May lSI wear- portunlty tor Interested
thQ dark nylon collar, call person
call
740-965-3853
304·549-5696.

.. n se ................................................-.vv
Marc,•-dl
Antlqun .........................................................I05
Appllanoe ..................................................... 910

/,u(./ln/ n,_ohl~o".Hifi JrtHtl

Phone: (740)992-9784
fax: (740)992-7980

Loti &amp; Found

he space occupte

y the error and onl
he flr&amp;t lnaerUon. W
hall not be liable fo

?000

Armour'C('I "IllS

Sarvlce...............................................

Receive a
Purse 25% off

i .The Vaughan Agency

Trlbun
llnel.flaglster wll

C,!

Borders$3.00/perad
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for Iorge

• • sta~t"Vour-.. Wlllt Aw.tywerd elncldeCIMIIiete

Domeatlcs/Janltartal ................................... 311

Buy a Card

~t

the

responsible for n
ora ttlan the coat o

Reds

Efust in 6J1me fOP

200

Errors .Must' B

mlsalon

m

'

Ohio Valley
Publlahlng r"erves
the right to edl~
reject or cancel any.
ad at any time.

Pujols, bullpen help Cards end slump vs. Pirates.

·

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

«POLICIES«

nd

DG:it

.

How you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtayourclassifledads
fa~

~j~~~~E~J1;;~i··oo . . .

;,

JUST SAY

. ,YO.UR.CWSIFLED LINUD NOTICED

{)u&amp;,.,

Monday thru Fri~ay
8:00 a~m. to 5:00 p.m.

BasebaD

THURSDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

www.mydallytrlbune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydallyreglster.com

.N_QW ONLINE

Toledo

'

Web.Sile.s:

KIEFER BUILT,
VAlLEY
HOASEAJVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS
LOAD
MAX
EOUtP'
E T
TRA
S.
M N
ILEA ·
CARGO EXPRESS '&amp;
HOMESTE'ADEA
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
53999 . VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER tNVEN-

TORY AT
www.cARMICHAEl·
TAAILERS.COM
740·446-3825
....,_ _ _ _ _ _
For
John Deere
tractor a loader, 2· 500
lbs. BlaCk 1\ngus hailer
calves 304-675·3300.

sate

Have you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
$Urptisedl Check ou1 our
used
inventory
at
www.CAREO.com.
Car·
michael
Equipment
740-446. 2412

Harts. 1018 Yellowbush
Road, Racine on May
7~8
from 9-4,
diSh·
washer, table &amp; chairs,
new quilts, new Barb1es.
old dishes, ant1que tabla
and rockers. radiOS, tots
ot mlsc All proceeds go
to RACO/Brace Memo·
nat
scholarship
fund
Thanks for yor support.

reptllred,
new a rebuilt
In arock. Call Ron

Huge yard. sale Friday
May 8 &amp; Saturday May~
at Robert ,Jeffers resi·
Evono1-IIQ0-537-9528
. ; . . _ _ _ _ _ _ dence, lrd ;:,1. , svracuse
4
93
Molloh '9 c
1 9- Friday, • Saturdav
an
arpet
ua • ~~~-~':""'~
ity at Low Prices• 13'6" Multl·famlly yard sale,
Berber carpet tn s1ock on May 9th, 9.2 , 703 Vine
sale Now. Eastem Ave. St., Racine, dlshes, holl·
Gall~llsto 446-7444
d
d
ti
&amp; 11
ay ecora pns
ags
Hot Tllb Outlet, Top movies, games, books,
Quality, Free Delivery, mens,.. womens, children
Save 50%. nkl Tube, &amp; baby clothes, scrubs,
601-326-0777
lots of mise rain [:B.ncels

·a

Want Ta Buy
I
t
Dol!
'I
bso ute op
ar · S1·
vertgold
coins,
any
10K/14K/t8K gold iewelry, dental gold, pre
1935
US
currency,
prootfmmt
sets,
dia·
monds. MTS Coin Shop
151 2 nd Averwe, 13 a IIi •
A

•
Fri &amp; Sat May 8·9, 9-5
130 Magnolia Dr Bikes,
nice
jewelery,
ladies
dresses, camping gear.

:,;,;;!!,:;,;,..;;""'""'"""'

th&amp; p1nes, Spnng Valley
area,Qalllpolis,
Ohio
bath, LA , OR, FA,
eat 1n. k1t. screened
porch, glass sun porch. 4
decks, hot tub. 2 car ga·
heat ump wl a
rage,
P
g s.
2
AC. g~~dFP6 ~ir~le ~~·
storage
g
a or ·
rectiorts.
740-441-9531
or celt 740·441·5239 or
gotowebsileforpicsat
www.OAVB.com ·

3br, a

1

w1111

Ll d R d
am
QY
esJ ence
at 2219 Easl Bethel
Church
Rd.
Beautiful
White brick, country set·
ling, please call Paul
Uoyd. 740-418·3860

R.&amp;.CO Scholarship Yard
Sale at Star Mill Park,
Racin&amp; on May 12-13
from 9·4 and May 14
from 9·2pm May 14
clothing $1 a oag and
other
items
one·hall
· Houdl for Sale
Clolh'ng to s 111 --;;;;~~~!""';;;:;~
Ft:~. cr~ft , s~pPh~s.
Bed.2
Bath HUD
h
100 ty$1991
1
shoes,
fum ture,
yard omes
.. amon.,

3

SnHL Sales &amp; ServiCe 4 Family Yard sate- Sat.
Now Available at ·carmi· Mey 91 h 9_3 at D~. ,Marchael
Equipment glo Lawson's o•,~. 106

".....

740-446·2412
1'yree Blvd ' Radne, Oh,
~~--...----~ antiques. clothes. mater·
htor traclor less than 3fJl nity
clothes,
dresser,
desk booJ(
tabl &amp;
hn. .4J-41 63hp .~uper 4-~h. ch ,
case. I e
dr. Ze:ror loack:r-spear 5(-.hei &amp;Irs, other
umiture,
be:nmaher nllaf) mower. 7 many more Jtems
f1 cu16 disc .~ -675-15&lt;15
May
8
&amp;
9.
Chester·Shade Histoncal
Hay, fud, SHcl, Grain AssociatiOn , 2 112 miles
north ot Ch.estef' on RT
household items.
7,
Clearview Farm Clean b b
t
pereo 1
40.50 lb wife lied bales
I ems,
mas,
of
straw
tor
sale new Window semens.
S3 50fbale (; II
I . Ple.lCiglas, small appll·
·
a evenngs ances, furniture
craft
446-2974
, supplies
.

'Y

College Ad
May
· 7~·
loveseat,

TV.

antique
wicker grt.locahon15%dwn.15
settee, tots of m1sc. yrs. at 8%
ror istngs
Thanksforyoursupport.
800·620..4946exT461.
..----,---':"":~~
~ ~M~"":'""::'~ 3 bedroom, 2 tun bath.
8
9
~ ;:m~: YP: ; ~~ 2300 sq . tt. manv im·
pro11ements, 1 88 acre9:
mile rrom SR 7. Fum, Ambrosia.
5125 .000
Home Interior, womens 304 _675 •4995
&amp; childrens clothes, ap· ,.,.,~--~,...pllances. Rain or shine · 3BR 2 bath $349 per
...,,...,...,.,..~...,....,.,.. month. 446-3093

6

1500

~
~

4 tots at Me1gs Memory ~~~;·;·~~-­
Gardens. call Marilyn or NOW LEASING Jordan ·
Tom
Anderson, Land1ng. 2 &amp; 3BA Ava1l·
(740)992~3348
able No Pets. Tenant
Responsible lor Rent &amp;
Fo~ Sale By Owner
Electric 304-674·0023 or
304-617-9986
For Sale by owner: 7.5 ::::;:;::.:,:.;::::::::,._~acres w/ horse barn
bedroom apartment.
50'x120', plus 50'x20' at· very clean, 10 Mlddlepon,
740·9:;;
1821
92;;.·.;,;
!ached garage, country ;;;::.;;
:;;.:.,- - style hOlJS&amp; 11 yrs ofd, 3 br., 5400 a mo. plus
cedar sld1ng·hldden in dep. &amp; utiNtles, no •pets,

~PO;;;"o;
• !!ii4;;;46;;·2!!842
;;.!!!!...,""' Items,

=
-;;;=;;;;Yi;;a:;,rd;.;.Sa=lo'-=

~~~ 6~~;~derly/d~abled.

1

~

3rd
St..
Racine
740·247·4292"
Room In country, n~e &amp;
quite to plant or con·
structlon
worker,
no
740 992-Q174
smoklnR,
•
'
N 3rct Ave .. In MiOdle·

port, t br. furnished apt ..
ret &amp; dep
no pets
74 Q. 99~_ 01 65'
;;:::;;::,:::;;;:,:,:;:.--,....
Beautiful Apls •. at Ja&lt;:k-,
son Eltates. 52 Westwood Or., from S365 to
$560.
740-446-~568

'

Equa~ Hous1ng Opportu·
Oily hiS InStitution 1$ an
Equal Opportunity Pro-

~vl;o:d•;:;•~ano:d;,;E~mg~loy~;•~r-~

Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor
and
Riverside

A$3p2t~

in

M~dleport. S~m2.

740-992-5064.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.
:.;;;;;;;;.:,;:::;;;;,;;;;;;.;:;.- .
Island View Molal has
11aca.ncies
$35.00/Night
,.74~0;;:·4;::46::;.0::;4~00=-~~~
Mooem tBA apt. Call
c;;:;;:;::::;::;~--:~
4 44

~ 0· 6·0390

Specious
second/third
apt
overlooking
Gallipolis City Patk and
River. L.A. den. lrg .

floor

S Family. May 8th &amp; 9th. Great
Deal
asking Kitchen -dining area with
First hOuse on Georges $225,000 for a 300K all new apptlemces &amp;
~C::'""::k!!:,O::H::R::I:7::
.
home. 3500 Sq Fl. e,g cupboards, 3 BA. 2
batl1s.
laundry
area.
g~:~rage,
wrap around $9QO per month . Call
porch, on 25 acres . tO 446·2325 or 446-4425
:;;;;;;~;;;;;; minutes below Gallipolis. ~;;:;:::::.;:;.;;;;~~~
!
Big Oak K1tchen to much Tara
Townnouse
Camn.rs/RVI&amp;
tb 11s1 bull! to last. Apartments · 2BR. 1 S
r-740·645-5928
bath. back paho pool.
"'!'~;;;;T;;;;rail;;;;.i;""==- ~"'::'~--:::-:-~::::: playground. (lrash. sew"'!
LeGrande
Blvd.
3BR age.
water
pd.).
1977 Airstream Argossy bnctk' hardwood floors. 542 5!renl.
s42 5/sec.
28 fl . exc. cond. ready to FR 2 full baths central
9
go camping
•
. OX14
'r b ld dep.Call740·645-85 9
$4700. 304-882·3959 or 81t, 1
meta tJt celt 304-675..()()45
ing. 5 mins lrom town. --;;;;.,.;C.;.on;;;d;;•;;;m;;ln;;;iu.;.m;,•...,.
$109.000 740-709-1858
~
rtl rd WV River front 3br 2 tun
HouseinHao
, OBO,, baths. basement. water
RV
575 .000
Syracuse se K;e at carmiChael
and sewer pel. Central
couch' T ~le
·
~17..;4 0,;;1"'.,_'-.'3;;;6.;.6::-...-~ AC . $600 sec
$600
oak
4 Bed, 2 Bath! Only ~reo;;;t!;,7;,;40;;;;·•;;;•6;;,·348;;,;';,.,"""
3825
7

ni

=

===

:.:6~--::~-~~~

cab«let, chanoaller,clothing, marble top dresser. AV Service at Cjlrmi·
Auctions
miSC.
chaet
Trailers
740-446·3825 ·
Friday &amp; Saturda~ 9·5 .
AUCTION·
MOdular 48868 Riggs Crest Rd .
MotorcydM
House at 12:00 Noon on took for s1gns ot1 Rt 7 1op ~~...-~~;;;;;;~
May 9. 2009. Buckeve of Eastem Hill, multi famHarley H,ugger 1200

;,;;;,..,;;,;;;;;;;,""'""'=

tractor,

92

dep.

»st~ngs

S2S.OOO.
tor
8()()..620-4946 ex R019

Land IAcroogo)

Hou... For Rent

--;;;;~;;;;;~-"=

~lqt} 'n w'

~ h..--d. ~ hath.

ltml Rl'l''~ 1' '\ 'k'"'"· 1~
R1o Grande · 18 Acres ~&lt;'M'- w~ .-\l'R I "'r h·ung'
on pavee! road. 1 112 "
- -''.";.
:!&lt;'_.,_"'_"_'.'.;R.o.;' 1.""!'_
ml~ f(om · uS
35.
room house al 44 DINe

5'

stovMeludge

Hitls Career Center. RIO ity, gravely
lots ot 21.000 mites, call fof de- County
water
MObile St
Has
Grande,
Otuo
(740} variety, all S goes to t811S, niCe 304-675-6411 home
O.k.
$12.500. S4251ren1 plus depos.ll.
2~5·5334
Chultll Camp
'
,. 304-674·3070.
388-755-5596
No pets. 446·3945

•

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

· Thursday, May 7, 2009

"""-For lont
Nice dean economtcal 2
br. wlbasemet1t &amp; garage

BULLEnM BOARp .

S. Prk Dr. refJ dep. no
pets ~675· 5162 .

..:oon

The Daily Srntinel • Page .BS

·www.mydailysentinel.com

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

W CUR OFfiCI! AT ~116

Hou5111q

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

..

':13"CIIUm n:tl WB • ...,..
"JZ' IIIIUnn iiCh Sufldty

M.lm.t~~ :ured

•

I

Thursday, May 7, 2009
ALLEYOOP

48
50
54
55

1 Duos
6 Broolc
11 Tlllk-ohaw
......

Rontalt .
2 Br water and trash included. No pets At John·
son 's Mobile Home Park.
Cali740·+645.Q506

COMMUNITY
HEALTH FAIR .

2 bedroom 2 bath trailer
for rent. Nice &amp; J:lean,
. $450 month $450 ~e·
poSit 367-7762

1999

Redmond

Friday, May 8, 2009

OPEN TO THE PUBliC
Various screenings,
demonstrations
&amp; educational and technology
literature

bedrooms. Owner will fi·
nance. Call today lor pre·
qualillcation.

(866)215·5774

866·215·5774

Meet the Artists
Reception

· Front of PVH Wellness Center

Couotry living 3, 4, &amp; 5

6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Public is cordially invited
Refreshments will be served
409 Maih Street
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
For more information
please call,

740-367-0536

Iron Gate Grille
Open
Mother's Day

$1and a deed is an you
need to own your dream
home. Call Now!
Freedom Homes

Guttering

866·565·0167 .

·'

'~t

Fri-Sat- Sun
May a, 9, 10

'

French 500
·Flea Market

Sunday, May 10, 2009
Emp oyment

Prime Rib Special

Gallia County fairgrounds

$9.99

Dealers Welcome

Accounfing I Financial

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp;
Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp;
Painting
·Patio and Porch

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Guners
.Insured &amp; Bonded

740·653·9657
-,
I

counting office in Ga!lipo· ' """""""""""""""'""""""":' """"""""",;,"""""""""' ""'"""""""""""""""....,;

11s lor lmmedia1e employ· Help Wantod • Gonerlll Holp Wantod. G,neral

ment. Accounting degree .
aitd experience required. 20 oaysnltt Employes
Must have good organ·
Needed
izationai skills and the · Professional, oflice·tike
· ability to work independatmosphere
e"ntly w1th strong attenConducting Interviews
lfon to detail. Please
·
· Nbw
send resume and refer·
1·677·463·6247
ences to
Mention ext. 2659
mail to CLA 101 . PO
Box 469, Gallipolis. OH

45631

~~""'""""""""'"""'
Clerical

Immediate opening for
Clerical Worker • ·must
be a Notary. Office · work,
must work on Saturdays.
Call 740 _446 _7529

AUTOMOrtVI"'"

·e-.~

,..·1f&lt;M"

Now Selling:
• Ford &amp; Motorcrarr

Pa"rts • Engines,
Tr.artsfe r Cases &amp;

WV036725

45631.

29625 Bashan Road
Racine, OH 45n1

.

Wool
• K Q J9
• Q J 10 7

MONTY

740-949-2217 . • .
t'

I,

South
• A3
• $ 4 2
•AKQ 9863

•"
•
•

•

::=====::::l.

Dump Truck

Service
We Haul Gravel.
Limestone, Coal,
Compost , Top Soil
Call Wall or Sandy

740-992-3220
or 1400-591-3726
Cell

co.

•

Pomeroy, Ohhl
Commercial •
Residential
• Free Estimates
(740) 992-5009

,.

Holp Wanltd. General

Here't Your Chance
For a

.

Better Employment
Opf)ort~nity!

ployer

1-888~MC.PAYU

Ex1.2454

Dirt Busters is looking for ·

Apply online:

E~ual

Opportuni1y
ployer M\F\0\V

Em·

Moc:hanica

Choalar Tire
C.nlera
Tolal Aula
Tranli'nlaalon

·

•

Custom Home Building •

~

TO£.!&gt; YOU wE

SHOUl-D tMVt
/ GOTTtN Ttt

~·

•

Rapatr ·

Is your. check
· engine llghl on?
Como have il
.•canned for fr.H
Limited Time
Offer!

S-7

Johnson's Tree .
Service

Gal~i,\';'~~d~~.!6J 1
Estimales,20yrs E•P·
. 740-441-9387
Rick Jotinson-Owner

~

--........

CUTTING EDGE
LAWN CARE
Commercial'&amp;
Residential
Free Eslimates

http:lljobi'Jnlodllon.com

Member FDIC

application or resu~e to·
available In the Mason Pt. Pleasant office.
·
County
area.
Hours
Carleton
SchooVMeigs 11: 30am-B:OO pm MonIndustries
dayFriday
call
1310Carleton Street .529.7378 or . toll free This
304
Po Bo 307
position requires
'
sa• 305· 7378 tor more cash
S
Oh. 45779
&lt;r
handling experi·
yracuse,
10
details.

....,..,..,....,.,.,.,!!!!!!!

BARNEY

Nata's Tree
Sl.l viCI

au branch operations, In- serviCe Technician post·
eluding supef'!iSion and tion availi;lble for diesel

ach'nn lo fou r em
co 1 •
r
· and hydraulics. Experl·
ployees
ence
nece.ssary.
ence, 12 mon1hs cus· • Make and service mort- ~ea11h!Aellremen1
&amp;
"""',.---, 1orher servl~e and sales gage, commercial , and Benellts. Fax resume 1o
· skms,
basic desktop installment loans
740.446-9104 . or e-mail
compuler skills and ex· ' Fac11ila1B 1he opening 1o LLC@CARECl.COM
cellent
c:ommunic:atlon of new deposit accounts
skl11s. Pre~ous 1ellar OX· • Execule business de·
Modioal
IR4!SidE~n1tistl
perience Is preferred. velopment strategies, In- ;;;;...i;;io~ioiii;;,;;;;;.._
Sales expE;~rience a plus.
eluding the enhancement Overbrook Rehabilitation
o1 customer rel~tionshlps Center is cUrrently ac·
'
·
via outbound Calling and ceptlng ~pplications for

Tree removaI pIantJng
•
'

.

'

·lawn care, and aiJ your
landscaping needS,
and Commercial
Fully Jqsure~

31 Glnza
""""'""
32 But It ft.:..?
33 VIrus
fnlectlon
35 Dangerou•
1111
37 Amt.
31 s.. dogs
40 h lillY bt

6 Styl'-h
7 Pm oltor
Jimmy
8 Sovoi'eld ol
tho news
9 li, In Avila
10 Pon:.ptlve
i4 Plllfl1lor
"trillion"

15 Hill

optlcod

•

41 Winged
,_,
42.Cathedral

~

www.U.lsu w e'ekoaltlaft1o)'.oom

THE BORN LOSER
I'"'AAf.'(OV ~~£ '\'OU ~ Wt*l~ ~""t ~~I:&gt;E.R ,..._'iSE.L.fQUITE""" P"'T~I~ F~ n~ ~ Wl-\0"'I
Tf\CIJC:&gt;I\'1" '1'1\E.. PN:.IF.IC.
~ t:,l(\'tRT
11\fl..l PNtl
fl\f. 10 /&gt;.W::~t\1'~'\'

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
Cell: 74D-416-5047

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

;(OUCtn~l~

email:

"'-Y",-..""

w.~.-

. Of T~E.

ro ·.

...____,n

JI\P~?

,.....,......,"""'1!"-ml~

lordng. The opener ha1112·ptus points,

the resPonder h~ IQ..plua, aOO both

ship could h.,e1he high-wd values to•
game.

'TQT
··' lr'

6l.06€. !

. ~·"' ~ Pf&gt;Jtl Of fl..
._ v-...~ ~l(f.TBfi..LL
~OOPII'\

AAWI'-.11 I

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

declarer casheS his diamond ace. When
West discards, declarer must be careful
to ditch dummy's.10, If d~y retains

1he 10, tha sui1 Ia lrrapa•abty blocked
. and the contract dee (unlese South Is
playing agains1 a fanilly member sitting
East, who cova.S 1he diamond 10 with
his jack!):

da·mond, 10, playa a heart to 1ha king,
Declarer, after li.lmplng dummy's

finesses his diamond nine,.and c:taims
an overirick.
Always take a· doee look &amp;1 the spol·

Ce!etrity Clp1ef ~ p cr.-ed1rc:tr~ (JIJiabooJ toy l.oout PIOPt pU..-d JQWt

Ea:h letttr in lheci~.,- si8MI fOr MJ!hlr,

TIX18y'S Clue: Vequals 8

" U()JNJ DR

TMUODTL

I T M F A 0 M F U M V J G N . 8 T 0 G K K D T J A R'

FDUO EMBNGLJ. " • RJTJEG
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I would never have amoui11ad to anylhl'lJ w8!e ~ nQI
for ad'le•~ly. Iwas lorcod 10 coma up lho hOld way.' • J.C. Penney
·

cards. Maybe there Is a suit blockige

d /1ii"' S\ '\.. .( - f) -{1 t.'l Cl, t

THAT DAILY

\:jl.!j ~QU ).'VJ&gt;.

~
ld11td by CLAY R. POl'

.

Rearrange 01tor1 of tho
0 four
Kr&lt;imbleO wcrdo b..
low 10 form four simple wordt

I SYGLIR

.J&amp;L
Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Raplacament
Windows
·Roofing
• Decks
• Garages
• Pole 8uildlngs

Fresh North Carolina
SHRIMP
(740) 742-2~63

·Room Addition&amp; .·

WJ~. nner lnlm~, hrtldJon

Owner:
James Keesee 11

Pmt is required in adyance

742·2332

I

r

1 I' 1 1

SIO per lb Cash only

Shipments arrive every

other Frida

PEANUTS

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

·.· IF 'f"OII'RE T~AT TIRED,! \AIPVLD
lliAT 't'OU 60 TO ~ED TOHIG~T AT 51)( u~~V(.,I'.

I
.

T~006f.IT I WAS
IN

BED..

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

..

.·

740-985-4141
'.

·Cell: 740·416·1834
Nut affiliated with Mike Maocum Roofing &amp; Remodeling

15+ years experience

J

Free Estimatts
I I \II\

ROBERT
BISSELL
C8111STRUCn81

((1\(1{11 1
t 0\,110 ( 110\

••.•

•New Homes

• Garages

GARFIELD

• Complete

29 Years Experience

Remodeling

David Lewis :

740-992-1m

740·992!6971

Stop &amp; Compare

Public Ko~=;~
Your Righ11o Know.Dtli,ered
A 1 :~=~::D ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
Replacement

tton Permit n'-'mb8red undermined

Recorder's Office, 100
Wast 2nd Street,
Pomeroy, Ohfa 45769
tor public Inspection.
Written comments, objectlons orreques'- tor

encom- an Informal conference

0·2317-2 to tile Ohto pa818s 155.5 ecru and may be sent to the
Department af Natural Is located approxl· Ohio Dapartment of
Reaoun:el, Division of ma'-ly1 .3mllesSouth· Natural Resources, Of-.
Mineral

The Daily Sentinel .
www.mydailysentinel.com

Re1ourcea east of the corporation vision of Mineral Ae-

Management. The proposed coal mining and
....:lamation operations
will be In lots 275,276
&amp; 836, Sutton Township, Township 2,
Range 12 and In Lol
274 and Section a,
Letart Township, Townshlp2, Ranga12Melga

limits ol Racine, Ohio. sourc" Managemen1,
This coal mining oppll· 2045 Morse Road,
cation will remove coal ·Building H-3, Colum·
using the underground bus, Ohio 432211-6693,
mining
methods, wtthln j30t thirty days
s(HO!:ifically tho room of tho last data ot puband pillar method.
~ llcation ol this notice.
This application Is on (4t 30, (5t 7. 14, 21
file at the Molgs Coun1'f
Court h o u a a ,

1

Windows and
VInyl Siding
Specialists, LTD

Insured :
Free Estimates :

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

p;.;;;;;;,..=.- ----:-;.~::'J

$

0
0

'
·'

0

*Promp1.and Quality
Work
•Reasonable Rates
*Insured
*Experienced.
R~fcrences Available!
Call Gary S1anley @
740-591 ·8044
Please leave meSsa e

(740) 742-2563
• Siding • Vinyl
Windows • Metal
and Shingle Roofs
• Det:ks • Additions
. •Eie&lt;trlcal
• Plumbing
• Pole Barns

Room Additions, Remodeling, Melal &amp; ·
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding, Det:k5,
Ball! room Remodeling. Licensed &amp; Insured
CPII7.l04162%0

.

~

CAN'T WI! At..t.. ~~ ~T At..ONW?

"'.:.

e

.,_,......,,
HAH/
0
0
0

•

SOUP .TO .NUTZ

PSI CONSTRUCTION

WV:t0409:il

OTHeR 5Pti:IER9 10 APP!:AL. 10

l

0

!W BEeN APPOINTSP B'o' THS

~

YOUR 56N5e OF .1-fUMANifY.

74UY9&lt;"C7ll'

.

'.

DT UOJ FMNWX

Ail ZBEO GXZDNJX GR G ZGT FOM

PUmtt

Lj Place an -on Hnct ad

County, Ohio.
The area Is located on
the New Haven 7 112
minute u.s .G.S. Quadan UndergrOund Coal rangle map. The pro·
Minlng arid Reclama· posed area to. be

. buy

·player makes a takeoul double. What
does it mean if the responder redoubles
the first round and bidS a new suit 01'1
the second round?
.B•idgo logic means this rebid mus1 be

threatened.

47239 Riebel Road .long Bonom, OH

Gatling Ohio, LLC., 430
Harper Park Drive,
Beckley, Wut VIrginia,
25801 has aubmlttad

· plone

39 Nursery

Opener bids one of a 1\Jft and 1he t'eitl

rio-lrump. H"ow should S.U1h plan tho
play?
After winning the second (or first) spade,

MilE W. MARCUM. DWIIEI

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

·

trUmp finesse to get home.
··
Westlead9'lhe spade king against three

For: • Room Additions • Patios
• Porches • Dec~s • Garages • Horse Barns •
Vinyl &amp; Wood Siding • Roofing • Chain Link &amp;
Woo~ Fencing &amp; General Home Mainlenance

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

hn

36 Meeting

mond lead. And ~ West guessatllo lead

Call:

;·~o-it-yourself classified ads

26 Fumltura 51 Yucld
wood
U o,cont
27 On cloudgilde
29 Rur, to
~ Subway
Pcpeye . ·
·Oj)POii!el
34 Aepair-1&gt;111
·

17 Nubflll
43 Tug
19 Noc
44 pc.....,
touching ·
.,....,
·town
20 Windy ··
45 Borg
43 SJdppy rival .' 22 ltooll8llr .48 F.. to
48 UpotCHiate
- O'Nool
catch

pticants shoutrJ pick up
an application at 333
Page Street, Middleport,
Oh. For further lnforma. tion . please contact Lucy L.:.:.::::.:::=,:.,.::;::;::~-------1
a1 (740)992·6472. EOE

;\)

~

dl-

the heart queen againsl five diamonds,
South Would have to 1ake a first-round

community outreach pro- part lime LPN's Avallabie
shifts
are· 7A-7P &amp;
7P-iA. Ali interested ap~

Clasalfleds

49

hand and he had a defin~e preference
for spades over the Qther lwo Unbid
suits. North'a three-apado cua·bld uko&lt;!
South to call three nO-trump :with a
spade S1opper.
Note lha1 five duba woutd fail 011 a dia·

ror

bilities Include:
740-384-4211 to request
an application
• Supervise and manage _ _ _ _ _ _;....

=:T!"
: =:""'
25 : : for cyclo
alfr
relrein

47 "Foncy"

spade. He was known to have a weak

in

someone to clean· Mon- ~;,;;;;~~;.;;,;,;;;;,:~
day &amp;" Thursday's from PART·TtME
BANK
=
10:30PM
1:30AM, TELLER
driver license, drug test P'!· PLE~SANT

Redouble first,
new suit second

Autocrot
....,....
Umfted
Lyricol
DOWN
Bubleto
In tho pu.I 1 School
Ghtlte gao or clolphlno
Boot lin_. 2 T......,
Hatchel&amp; . compenton ·
Craving
3 CPA
"-lovl118,
lf!lllloYor
24 Knight's

In 1hls auction, ~as1 was right lo bid one

740-985-4422

r--------, r:::;;::;;;;:=l

Pass .

30

1

could have many more. So the partner·

We do driveways
We Haul
Limestone- Gravel
Dirt- Ag-Lime

740·985·43a4

Redbl.

13
15
16
18
19
21
22
23
25
28

An- to Previous Puulo

on

MAINnNANC,E
. AGil~EMtNT.

Hardwood Ca.,neCry And FumHure
.R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
Dump truck
•
servace

Eul

Opening lead: • K

For All Mukes of Vchfcfc~

SuperviiOI')"

Paso
Pau

3•
3NT

Me1al &amp; Components

GRAND OPENING

.

North

••
•• ,uPass .....
.....

Pass

Replacement Shiel

,.,;,.,..,..,..,.!!!!!!!
Management/

West
Obi .

Soulb
I 0

•

Steel Frame Buildfngs
Building. Remodeling
General repair
w\t·w.bankscdb.c:om

3

Dealer; S.ulh
Vulnerable: Both

BANKS
,,
CONSTRUCTION

S&amp;L
Trucking

• 10 • 7 5 1

• 98 3
• J 7 5. •
• I

A7642

',1.o:;.;:;o:,.....;

7:00 am- 8:00 pm

• A K 6
• 10 2
• K Q J 10 9 8
Eul

-

.

• Aftermarket

Experienced
Heavy
• Lawn Maintenance
Equipment Mechanic •
Advertise
.
• Landscaping
Night Shift and El(perr•
Power Washing
enced
Tractor
Trailer this space
Management I
~ Seth Carleton
Supervfaory
~hanic.
Competi tive
$35 .00 per
(740) 517-5432
and I background check City NatJooa\..8 •, nk, one -..;;;;;;;;;;;.~;..~ wages,
good
benelits.
Jeff Stethem
required. 88~·517·2549 ' ot West Vi rgrma s 1argest~ ~
Financial institullon
In Send resume to Sands
month
.
commun.tty
banks, Is Athens County seeks ex- Hill Mi~ing lLC, P.O.
(740) 517·6883
d H' h s h 1 Full
time
maid looking tor a highly moti·
·
Box 65Q, Hamden .· bH
~~~~~~aa~r G~gD S~b:t service/cleaning positiQn 11ated individUal for our ~~:~nceF''!tm~~d~~s~~s~: 45634
or
call ,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;....,

Pr0gr8.m
substitute~
needed to work ilt Carte·
ton School &amp; Meigs In·
. dustries . Witt be wotil:ing
with children and adults
with dev•1opmental dis·
abilities. Must have a
valid Ohio Drivers Li·

Ettlniates

OU7-09

• 6.

Storage

Transmi~sions

We offer .a competitive g(ams in the branch 'marrate and · incentive plan. ket area
II you wish to join the The prefElfred candidate
bank that's going places, is a business professend your resume t~:
sional who Is self·ll'_lqtlNow Hinng ALL Shifts
vated and ·committed to
working effectiv8ly with
Employees are needed
senio~ man'agement, the
to provrde customer • City National Bank
DetiveryM'aretlouse perBoard
ot Directors and
son needed, lull lime, im- · service over the phone
employees
under his/ller
mediate opening, must
Human Re~urces
managemen!.
Salary
1
'Weekly
Pay
+
Bonus
have good driving reAt1n: Tellers - Pt ?teas· commensurate with ex1 Paid Tr~ining
cord. Apply-Lifestyle Fur·
ant
perience.
niture 856 Third Ave,
1 Onslte Doctor
To apply, sent letter ol
Gallipolis, 9;30·5:00 No
1 Complete Benems
P. D. Bo&lt; 1527
Phone Calls
Package .
Interest and resume to:
;,;;;;,;;.,;;;;;;;;;.._ _~
Lender Position, PO Box
Now hiring management
Ashland ,
KY 4847, Athens. Oh 4570t
lor tUn service casual
Let us show you wMt
41105·1527
by Friday May 15. 2009.
dining lor local restau- makes lnfoCision a great
.
Equal Opportunity Em·
place to worlcl
rant Send resumes to
CLA Box 100, PO Box
469,
Gallipolis,
Oh

Educatian

I

•

North

Racine, Ohio
740-949-1956

Full·time
position "With busy ac-

or

I
I

~IC:(AI.I!tfOlUJ(Mf,J'AI'fl

Ac:co~ntant :

gallipolisaccountant@
gmall.com

Hill's Self

Hours

.

..~

~,;,

Di fference~

bOOU

F~

. (304) 812-4625
. ..i!J
~::::;:::::::::::::==::::::;~ :· , .L...,-.,.._.,.,.,..-..-,---.,~.
304,675-4340, Ext. 2004

jlllrt12 Gymneotic8 56 Log~rt1 1
llppttiiiUI 57 Coolco&lt; rt

Local Contracta.-·

740-367-Q544

.

For more information please
caii.'PVH Education ,

"The ProctorviHe

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doo;s, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Adpitions

presents

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Friday, May 8, 2009 .
8 a.m. to Noon

16x72

Country ~vrng- 3·5BR,
2·3 BA on · property.
Many floor plans! Easy
Financing! We own the
~ank .
Call
todar.

Gallery at 409 .

Sponsored by

3br.2ba. w/11replace must
move 304·675·2897.

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

t-

Cream puH
Gather '
Tooth peril
Cream

P((' \:1

. WOiD

UMI
.

�Page 86 •

Thursday,
May 7, 2009
.

• www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

NFL hopes that Miami ~ Bowl' will be fan~friendly ·
MIAMI (AP) - It's reality:
Not everyone _can get Super
Bowl tickets. A more accessible Pro Bowl may provide
fans some consolation.
With the game still nearly
nine months away, the NFL
and the South Florida Super
Bowl
Host Committee
unveiled plans Wednesday to
make the Pro Bowl - which
will be played in the continental United States for the first
time in three decades - perhaps more appealing than
ever before. There will be a
free open practice on the day
befure the Jan. 31 conteSt and
most tickets priced below
$100.
The NFL decided to move
the Pro Bowl to Miami for
2010 from Hawaii, where it
will return for 2011 and 2012.

It was played in a 50,000seat stadium in Honolulu; the
capacity at the Miami
Dolphins' home stadium wilJ.
be about 72,000 for next
year's All-Star game between
AFC and NFC standouts - at
least the ones who won't'be
playinjl in the Super Bowl at
Mianu the followmg week.
"The Pro Bowl is really
meant to be oren to everyone
an~ the who e idea was to
bnng more fans to .the Pro
Bowl and more fans to the stadium than we've ever been
able to do," said Frank
Supovitz, the NFL's senior
vice president for events. "So
economically, we don't see
that being a conflict. We see
that I!S a great positive."
The NFL does not ·know
what sort of impact the Pro

Inside Today's Sentinel

•

•
:;o ( 1.\ IS • \ ul. .)ll. :'\u . 21 :~

QOSTON (AP) - Rajon
Paul Pierce of the Celtics
Rondo took the pass from scored tlu'ee points in 16
Eddie House and bolted for minutes, hitting a 3-pointer
the basket. cutting between for tho: first basket of the
6-foot· 11 D~ight Howard . game but he picked up two
and 6- 10 Rashard L!lwis for fouls in 50 seconds early in
a thunderous dunk.
the first quarter and headed
- In a crucial game for the to the bench. He played just
, Boston Celtics, the little 2 more minutes in the second quarter before picking
guys came up big.
Rondo had 15 points, 18 up his third foul, and lasted
assists and II rebounds for 4:07 into the third before
his third triple-double of the drawing his fourth _and sitplayoffs, and House scored ting back down.
a career high-shattering 31 By the time he came back
points on Wednesday night in - to give House a rest to lead Boston to a 112-94 Boston was nursing a douvictor)l over the Orlando hie-digit lead in the last 4
Magic that evened the minutes and the crowd was
Eastern Conference semifi- chanting "Eddie!" for the
nals.
backup who helped them
Howard had 12 points and open a 26-point lead and ·
. 12 rebounds and uwis had coast to victory.
17 points and 10 rebounds
House went II for 14
for the Magic , who siole from the field, making all
Game I and home-court four of his 3-point attempts
advantage on Monday night and adding four 2-pointers
despite blowing almost all from at least '20 feet in 27
of a 28-point lead.
minutes - the most he's
Game 3 is Friday night in played in a playoff game
Orlando.
since he was a rookie with
Rondo had 12 assists Miami in. 2001. In the last
without a turnover at the three games, House Is 18 for
half and finished one assist 24 from the field and 10 for
short of his career high. The 12 from 3-point range.
Notes: Celtics legends
only time the 6-1 point
guard has had more than 18 Bill
Russell,
Tommy
assists was the triple-over- Heinsohn, JoJo White, John
time Game 6 of the first- Havlicek and Kevin Garnett
round
series
against watched the game from
Chicago in which he played courtside .... The Celtics had
57 112 minutes.
never beaten the Magic in a
"He ficked up where he · playoff game in Boston,
· left of ll!SI game," liouse having previously met in the
said of Rondo.- "He had a lot best-of-five first round .in
of energy on both ends of 1995. ,.. Orlando's J.J.
the court."
Redick was ejected from the
Ray Allen scored 22 game after he fouled out
points and Kendrick Perkins with 4:45 left. ... Boston put
had 16 points and nine together a 15-5 run in the
rebounds for the defending second quarter and led by as
NBA champions, who many as 19 points before
avoided heading to Orlando taking a 61-46 halftime lead.
down 0-2 and .assured them· ... Orlando had won its pre·
selves of at least one more vious three playoff games ·
game in Boston.
~
by an average of 14 points.

Deserves The Best...
ome On Over to Bob's~
.

the board before Monday's
general election deadline
for independent candidates,
Four council membets will
be elected:
.
All candidates for council
in Middleport will run as
independents, and all are
incumbent members of council there. H. Craig Wehrung,
Martha Jean Craig, Mary Rae

as

Moore and Sandra F. Brown board was still calculaiing
will appear on the Novernber the cost of Pomeroy's prigeneral election ballot for the mary. That cost must be
four council seats open.
borne · by the villaj;e •
Those Middleport council because Tuesday's electiOn
ine:nbers said prior to the pri- was not a county-wide pri,
mary they would run as inde- mary. It will be particularly
pendents to save the village expensive in that the prothe cost of a primary election. posed
quarter-percent
. A spokesperson for the income tax increase on -the
Board of EJections said the ballot was soundly rejected. ·

'

.

BSERGENTCMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

szsoo
'
'
2
or
Mlr

(S8It I!XCIIIts'BostDif 6: lti81CltD ~#ntld

Bob's BetterBlooms
Premium Vegetatiren.••••••..,

4 112 ineh pots

$2. 98 .
.

Btautiful "Extra Largt"
Combination Banging Basket• _

Gi-,e a Ros~ that
Blooms All Sum111ert

Jaclcae11 Perki11s

.

'

.

POMEROY - Though it passed by
the narrowest of margins, 83 to 81 votes,
the issue to allow Pomeroy's participation in a gas aggregation program did
pass but what does that now mean for
village residents?
.
With the issue passing, this allows t)ie
village. to · act as the head o'f a buying
group for residents who wish to partici"
pate iR the program . Participation is not
mandatory. Village officials feel that by
acting as the head of a large buying group
they can secure lower natural gas rates
for residents.
·
. 1
_
According to the Ohio Consumers
Counsel, after the ballot issue passes, a
plan must be developed to address hqr.
the aggregation program will work and
how the . local government will oversee
the process . At least two public hearirigs
must be held to give residents a chance to
comment on the plan. The · village must
. th~~ . become _ce~tified b~ the Public
Ullhlles Comi111ss1on of OhiO to be authorized to contract with customers and/or
electric or natural gas supplies.
Using the bargaining power of its aggregated residents and businesses, the local
go~ernment shops for an attractive rate
and negotiates other important terms and
conditions. After the local government
decides to purchase the energy directly or
chooses a- supplier,· a notice containing
supplier information. (if applicable) rates,
terms and conditions must be ·sent to the
consumer. In opt-out communities like
. Pomeroy, this notice must also specify
how t!Je consumer can choose "to opt-out
or withdraw from the aggregation program. Typically, this involves the consumer return_ing ~ postcard _or letter.
Customers w11l ex.1stmg suppher agree-.
ments will not be switched automatically.
If a consumer decides to participate in an
aggregation program, their new supplier

OBITUARIES

lfliltclt ·

each or

$2200

Flat ofB
(Mix or Match

Limited
Supply

Blooming Tropical
Pottea Plants
• Hibiscusr__.---1
• Manaevil
• Oleanae

Page A3
.• John Beaver, 92
• Jerry A Haner,.69
• Elizabeth ·aee· Lee; 79
1 Michael.J. Williams, 62.

INSIDE ·
Despite snubs, try
·to maintain contact.
See Plige A2
• Ayers crowned
Miss Teen West Virginia.
. See Plige A2'
, • Meigs students
: named Cutler Scholars.
· See Plige A3 ·
'
'
1 Local Briefs.
·see Page A3
• New yOuth pastor at
Bethel Worship Center.
See Page AS
1 Disappearing
brands, labels, and
; more. See Page A7
• 1 A Hunger For More.
' ; See Page. A7
1

Please see Pomeroy, A~

·•

Pomeroy reports
accidents, vandalism

· WEATHER

· BY BETH SERGENT

Pre111ium Roses
a11d K11ockout Rosts

·PHOENIX (AP) - Big 12 coaches have rejected a proposal to change the controversial tiebreaker thatgave Oklahoma
the nod over Texas in the three-way tie in the Big 12 South last

season.

. Meeting at a resort on Wednesday, they voted to keep the
Bowl Championship Series standings as the method to break
~ Jletween ·more than two .teams. Under that rule, the
be~ged the Longhorns l;&gt;y 13' thousandths of il point in

-, Stop
• M•ll.Stt4
• S11fl Potfltoes
. • Oaioa Stts

.,..,,, s••,,,

~rottt~

Vtftlll61t l'le111t:

$100 Cash!

'*•' ......

Lt. Gov. Fisher
is Saturday
keynote speaker

/11 til win ...

a hanging basket given
away each hour
all day Saturday
and the
GraJtd Prize of
5

Dp.Mp7r t•

'kJ1M

TWO CONVENIENT I.OCATJONS:
l400 Eastern An.
Gallipolis, OH
(740) 446-1711

-What's next
for Pomeroy's
natural gas plan?
BY BETH SERGENT

10» Flowering
Hanging Baskets
Er Regular Betiding Flats

Big 12 coaches vote to keep tiebreaker

· DALLAS (AP) - Court records show the company that
built the Dallas Cowboys' collapsed training facility iilso manufactured at least three other buildings that have fallen in
heavy weather since 2002.
The other tentlike facilities manufactured by Allentown,
Pa.-based Summit Structures LLC or its related company,
Cover-All Building Systems, were warehouse-type buililings
in Philadelphia and upstate New York and an indoor arena for
borse competition in Oregon. All the bUildings fell in weather
conditions that included heavy snow, according to records and
interviews.
A Summit spokeswoman didn't immediately return a call or
email seeking comme.nt Wednesdar
·
•
The collapse of the Cowbo;rs facility in heavy winds
Saturday leff.12 people il)jured, mcluding a 33-year-old team
staff member who 1s paralyzed from the waist down. The ·
Qccupatil!nal Safety 3!10 Heilltb Administration has opened an
investiganoil mto the mctdent.
·

J. REED

"""·"')dail)"-'ntirH"L~om

· ,.

.

·o-,r·so Varieties of

Records show problems for facility buil!}er

Ill and Repul;&gt;lican George F.
Stewart, Jr., will advance to
the ·general election .after
POMEROY- Six'candi- their unopposed nominations
dates for Pomeroy Village in Tuesday's party primaries.
Council and four candidates Only the Village of Pomeroy
for · Middleport Village had an election TueSday.
Council will appear on the
Jim
Sisson, Joseph
November general election Banihart, William
A.
Barnhart, and Jackie R.
ballot.
Democrat Victor C. Young Welker filed petitions with
BY BRIAN

BREEDIIMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

•

.Sports Shorts

oaches had considered adopting a three-team tiebreakwould eliminate the lowest-milked team in the BCS
$tandings, then go to the head-to-head result of the remainiilg
two teams. If that had been in place last year, Texas Tech
would have been eliminated, and Texas would have emerged
·-as the division champion because it had defeated Oklahoma.
The coaches' recommendation will be forwarded to Big 12
athletic directors, who still may decide to change the rule.

l •KII&gt;AY. :\L\\',8, :!009

SPORTS

. APpholo

Rondo, House come
up big in Celtics win

-~

Printed on tOO%
Recycled Newspr~t ~411

Middlt)port • Pomeroy, Ohio

• Ramirez.handed
50-game suspension. _
See Page Bl

. Boston Celtics' Rajon Rondo tips in a rebound over Orlando
Magic's Hedo Turkoglu. during the second half of Boston's
112·94 win in Game 2 of an NBA basketball Eastern
Conference semifinal series in Boston on Wednesday.

Sportsmen's club
donates,A2

Nursing edition

'

.Bowl will have on the Miami month to decide the 20 13:
economy. The league ~sti· Super Bowl site, which means,
matesthat'asmany as 150,000 that if the game returns to
people could flock to South South Florida for what would
Florida for Super Bowl week- be an lith time. the Pro Bow(
end, but acknowledges that could be returning as well that:
the Pro Bowl will draw a dif· year.
ferent, more-regionally based
"All options are on the table.
audience.
as far as where the Pro Bowl
"There was a perfect stonn goes and whether it lives iJ1
here," Supovitz said, "We are the same city or not as th(
in Sooth Florida. Great oppor- · Super Bowl," Supo.vitz sa~id.
:•
tunity to host ~ Bow} playOite option riot on the
ers, make the1r expenence
'gh
·
tremendous, brit)g it to more in any rea1sense n t now: ·
fans who have always sup- Super Bowl in London.
i
ported the Super Bowl and the
Just as NFL commissiooe;
NFL. Now we've ·got an Roger Goodell said · las.~
opportunity for them to come month, Supovitz reiterated
to the stadium and really that the league has never h~
enjoy somethin~J world-class any serious talks with ~d&lt;llf
that ·was ~rev10usly 6,000 about hostmg the game;
· miles away.'
although he acknowledg~
Owners will vote later this _ "conversations" took place. _;

1/4 Mile North
Bridge of Honor

Mason, WV
(304) 773·53l3

Dlllaila on Page A8

INDEX
.
:

2 SECTIONS -

16 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
A2
A2
Calendars
.
Bs-6
CJ.assifieds
Comics
B7
Editorials
A4
faith
As-7
BB
NASCAR
Obituaries
A:3
B Section
Sports
AS
Weather
'

© aw9 Ohlu V~lley Publishing Co.

'

Prom.candidates

BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM ·

POMEROY - · Traffic accidents and a
report of vandalism are just a few of the
recent cases the Pomeroy Police
Department is investigating, according to
Police Chief Ma.rk E. Prolfl tt.
BY BRIAN J. REEQ
Vicki Hanson of. 311 Condor Street. ·
BAEEOCMYDAILYSENTINELCOM
-recently reported damage ·done to the
glass door of hilT residence. The door was ·
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
stillltx:ked and there was no' sign of entry: .
County Democratic Party is
There is a suspect in the case.
.
finalizing plans for its
A vehicle driven by Charity Holstein,
Jefferson-Jackson Dinner
Middleport, allegedly pulled out of the
Saturday.
Save-A-Lot parking lot on West Main
Lieutenant Governor Lee
Street and struck a vehicle driven by
Fisher will be the keynote
Roma I. Warmer, Middleport who was
·
speaker, ·
traveling east. There was damage done on
P a r I y
the entire right ·side of Warmer's vehicle
Chairman
and Holstein 's bumper fell off. Holstein 's
H e n r y
vehicle was towed- away by Searl's
Hunter said.
Towing. Holstein was cited for failure to
The dinner
yield. There were no injuries reported.
will
be
Patrolman Jon Kulchar is investigating .
served at 6
A vehicle driven by James W. Ohlinger,
p.m. at the
Pomeroy, allegedly struck a parked vehiLeeFisher Riverbend
cle on Mulberry Avenue owned by
Arts Council
Breeana S. Thomas, Pomeroy. There were
in Middleport. A soeial hour
no injuries. Kulchar is also investigating.
will begin at 6, and the proA vehicle driven by Erick Sydenstricker,
gram will be ·at 7 p.m.
Pomeroy, allegedly pulled into the path of
The Jefferson-Jackson
and struck a vehicle driven by Brian K.
theme celebrates the ideals
Fields, Hartford, W.Va. The accident
of Presidents Thomas
occurred on West Main Street near Auto
Jefferson . and Andrew
Zone . Donna Back, Hartford , W.Va., a
Jackson. Hunter said other
Brtan J. Reed/photo passenger, complained of injuries and was
Democratic officeholders Candidates for Eastern High School Prom Queen and King are Cayla Scyoc, transported by Meigs EMS to Pleasant·
and their representatives Tesla Maynard, and Chelsie Smith, fron\, and Derek Griffin, Zach Hendrix Valley Hospital. Sydenstricker was cited
for failure to yield.
and Ben Buckley. The prom is Saturday.
·
•.
Pleue see Fisher, A;l
1-

.

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